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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 12</text>
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            <text>Carmen Vila to entertain here</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>I&#13;
New Course offerings&#13;
Storie on page 5, 6, 7&#13;
The ParkSide~ _&#13;
RA Wednesday, December 13, 1972&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside's artist-in-residence&#13;
By CCC&#13;
Funds allocated&#13;
The report of the Ad Hoc Committee on Budgeting was reviewed ~nd&#13;
ratified at last week's Campus Concerns Committee (Cee) meeting.&#13;
The following list consists of all organizations who. requested.":oney,&#13;
their original request and the amount of money which was ratified for&#13;
dispersal from the student support fund to the group:&#13;
OrganizatIon BUdget Request Suggested Amount&#13;
$2050&#13;
1860&#13;
200&#13;
900&#13;
250&#13;
300&#13;
100&#13;
200&#13;
25&#13;
10&#13;
Ranger Newspaper&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Ch IId Care Center&#13;
Film Society&#13;
Veteran I 5 Club&#13;
Black Student Union&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity&#13;
Woman's Caucus&#13;
I-V Christian Fellowship&#13;
Chess Club&#13;
Young Republ ieans&#13;
Pre-Law Club&#13;
Swim Club&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Reserve Funds&#13;
Total&#13;
$3800&#13;
3093&#13;
600&#13;
990&#13;
335&#13;
6060&#13;
240&#13;
390&#13;
220&#13;
64.50&#13;
24.&#13;
15&#13;
175&#13;
2638&#13;
505&#13;
15&#13;
100&#13;
200&#13;
100&#13;
240&#13;
$20,149.50 $6.550&#13;
The Ranger was represented at the meeting by Don Kopriva,.&#13;
Adviser to Student Publications. He urged that. the .commltte:&#13;
reconsider its budget allotment for the Ranger, especIally III the are&#13;
of salaries. ted $500&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger Assistant Dean of Students, sugges .d&#13;
could be shifted from'the Student Government allotment. That I ea&#13;
Was discussed and dropped. Kubl&#13;
The Ranger budget will stay as it stands, but when Herb b d ~'&#13;
profeSsorof English made the motion to accept the suggest~ u gfe,&#13;
the proviso was add~d that the Ranger budget should remaIll open or&#13;
~siderntioo . WI&#13;
Oth . . . . d d th eating of Susan es y, er actron at the meetmg melu e e s . t f g&#13;
PreSident, Parkside Activities Board. She was seated WI thou vo m&#13;
POWer •&#13;
Th . 'f' d The Advisory Board e Ranger Advisory Board was also ratr Ie . . the 'ob of&#13;
w~screated by CCC and the board is presently underta~mg J&#13;
editor selection.&#13;
Pre-exam music program&#13;
Carmen Vila&#13;
to entertain here&#13;
"Music hath charms to soothe&#13;
the savage beast."&#13;
All you beasties gather round&#13;
charming Carmen Vila's piano on&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 14, from 1:30 lo 3&#13;
p.m. in Room 103 Greenqui t Hall&#13;
for some fun with Bach. Mozart,&#13;
Chopin, Gershwin, et al,&#13;
Parkside's artist.in-residence&#13;
has prepared a program&#13;
designed to entertain and to&#13;
alleviate pre-exam blues. During&#13;
her informal performance ~Ii&#13;
Vila will discuss five major&#13;
musical periods and perform&#13;
illustrative works. Students are&#13;
free to walk in and out as time&#13;
permits. A door to the per.&#13;
formance room will remain open.&#13;
The Spanish piamst will trace&#13;
the history of music from the&#13;
Baroque through ClaSSical,&#13;
Romantic, Impressionist and&#13;
;'\Iodern periods, playing works&#13;
by Bach, Mozart, Beethoven,&#13;
Chopon, Debussy and G rshwm.&#13;
election will include&#13;
Beethoven's Moonlight nata,&#13;
Chopon' Ballade, Debu sy'&#13;
Fireworks. and Ger hwtn's&#13;
Prelude.&#13;
Arti t-m-residene at Park Ide&#13;
SID e 1968. MISS Vila ha appeared&#13;
In concert throughout&#13;
Europe. the Middle East and&#13;
South America. The \h\l, York&#13;
Ttme-, called her "8 m~USIian'&#13;
pianist" after her J 70 appearance&#13;
at arnegr flail&#13;
On 'lay 10,. he \I ,II appear ona&#13;
L'ruversrty Art! Concert Serr&#13;
concert With lh \hl\\,8Uk e&#13;
. ~mphon~ Orche tra In&#13;
Park. Ide-' ney, Ccmmunicauen&#13;
Art. BUilding th atee . 'ext&#13;
s m ler. he ~III teach a one--&#13;
credit humanities cour e In&#13;
~1uslc Enrichment.&#13;
Admissions policies revised;&#13;
reference to ACT, SAT, rank dropped&#13;
Freshman admissions policies&#13;
at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
have been revised to&#13;
abandon all references to high&#13;
school class standing and ACT or&#13;
SAT test scores.&#13;
The new Parkside policy was&#13;
among those reviewed for each of&#13;
the UW campuses, effective&#13;
Augusl 1973. by the UW System&#13;
Board of Regents Friday.&#13;
In describing the new policy,&#13;
UW·Parkside Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
said it represented faculty and&#13;
administrative desire to&#13;
"maximize educational opJX)rtunity&#13;
and better serve the&#13;
educational needs of Parkside's&#13;
regional clientele."&#13;
The policy revision was considered&#13;
and approved by the&#13;
Parkside Admissions Policy&#13;
Committee, the University&#13;
Committee and the Faculty&#13;
Senate, and is supported by the&#13;
campus administration.&#13;
"It is a direct and consistent&#13;
response to a recommendation&#13;
from the UWSystem Regents last&#13;
July to all campuses to emphasize&#13;
Wisconsin's long-time&#13;
strong commitment to maximize&#13;
educational opportunity for all its&#13;
citizens." Wyllie said.&#13;
The new Parkside policies fit&#13;
within a system policy&#13;
established by the Regents al&#13;
that time.&#13;
The Parkside chancellor said&#13;
that in revising its admissions&#13;
policies. UW-P "was returning to&#13;
the historic policy of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin that&#13;
prevailed hefore World War If,&#13;
that of accepting high school&#13;
graduates WithOl!t reference to&#13;
class rank and te"t scores.&#13;
"It is the feeling of our Faculty&#13;
Senate that arbitrary cut-oH&#13;
points in class rank and test ore&#13;
requirements are inherently&#13;
artificial and somewhat&#13;
hypocrilocal, bearing lillie&#13;
demon trable relationship to&#13;
college performance or uccess,'&#13;
Wyllie said.&#13;
The new W-Parkside policy&#13;
requires that freshman applicants&#13;
be graduates of an accredited&#13;
high school or provide&#13;
evidence of satisfaclory com.&#13;
pletion of requirements for a high&#13;
school equivalency certificate or&#13;
diploma PreviouSly, entering&#13;
freshmen were ordinarily&#13;
required to rank In the top 50&#13;
percent of the,r high hool&#13;
graduating classes and to ubmlt&#13;
either ACT or SAT scores&#13;
Chancellor Wyllre also POinted&#13;
out that the new polrcy repres nts&#13;
a response to the recom.&#13;
mendation of examiners from the&#13;
j\;orth Central Association of&#13;
Colleges and econdary SChools&#13;
which granted Parkside unconditional&#13;
accreditation in&#13;
August.&#13;
"The examiners were of the&#13;
opi nion that we could not&#13;
properly serve our regional&#13;
clientele if we continued to be&#13;
hound to the top-half-of·the-elass&#13;
policy." Wyllie said. "As an&#13;
'opportunity campus' serving&#13;
many first generation college&#13;
students. the examiners fell that&#13;
we needed greater nexibility&#13;
than the old policy allowed."&#13;
Wyllie said the question of&#13;
"lowering standards" received&#13;
detailed examination at every&#13;
step of consideration.&#13;
"The consensus view emerging&#13;
from those deliberations_was that&#13;
true standards are not set in the&#13;
admissions process, but 'in the&#13;
intellectural challenges that are&#13;
pl. d before th Iud nts aft r&#13;
they have been admuted," Wylli&#13;
saId&#13;
The n w polr y also reduc th&#13;
minimum number Of n ademlc&#13;
um '" ht h stud 'nts re r rred&#13;
to Include In th ,r high hool&#13;
programs, from 16 to 9. and Iv&#13;
students a wider I mud 1"&#13;
hoosmg dl tnbuuon of tho&#13;
mne umt&#13;
In k epmg wrth arll r&#13;
Park ,de polrcy, thos \lho do not&#13;
me t standard r quir menl&#13;
may appeal for pe 'al con.&#13;
sid ration Partl ular con.&#13;
lderatlon will contlnu to be&#13;
gwen applicants who MV n&#13;
out of hIgh school for t\lO or mOr&#13;
:.·ears. I'm d rVI v t ran&#13;
\11th al I a t 180 d.y of a Uv&#13;
dUly, and tudent who hav n&#13;
d,sadvantaged as a resull of ub.&#13;
standard educaU n, family ,nCOmeIe"&#13;
lor thnoc background&#13;
Requrr ments for out-of-stat&#13;
tudents are th same as tho&#13;
for WiSCOnsinresid nis,&#13;
This is the final Ranger&#13;
of this semester. The first&#13;
issue of second semester&#13;
will be Jan. 17. We still&#13;
have a need for all kinds of&#13;
help and all kinds of&#13;
people. like sportswriters,&#13;
newswriters, feature&#13;
writers. photographers.&#13;
and especially, ad&#13;
salespeople. Join the&#13;
Ranger staff! YOu'll learn&#13;
something about&#13;
newspapering and&#13;
probably like it, too,&#13;
New course offerings&#13;
tori n pa 5&#13;
The Parkside,-------&#13;
R A dn ay m r :-J&#13;
Pre-exam mu ic program&#13;
Car1nen ila&#13;
to entertain h r&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside's artist-in-residence&#13;
By CCC&#13;
Funds a,llocated&#13;
The report of the Ad Hoc Committee on Budgeting was reviewed and&#13;
ratified at last week's Campus Concerns Committee (CCC) meeting.&#13;
The following list consists of all organizations who requested money,&#13;
their original request and the amount of money which was ratified for&#13;
dispersal from the student support fund to the group:&#13;
Organ i zat 1 on Budoet Request Suggested Amount&#13;
Ranger Newspaper . $3800 $2050&#13;
Student Government 3093 1860&#13;
Chi Id Care Center 600 200&#13;
Fi Im Society 990 900&#13;
Veteran's Club 335 250&#13;
Black Student Union 6060 300&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity 240 100&#13;
Woman's Caucus 390 200&#13;
1-V Christian Fellowship 220 25&#13;
Chess Club 64.50 10&#13;
Young Repub I i cans 24.&#13;
Pre-Law Club 15 15&#13;
Swim Club 175 100&#13;
Hockey Club 2638 200&#13;
Poetry Forum 505 100&#13;
Reserve Funds 240&#13;
Total $20,149.50 $6,550&#13;
The Ranger was represented at the meeting by Don Kopriva,_&#13;
Adviser to Student Publications. He urged that_ the _committee&#13;
reconsider its budget allotment for the Ranger, especially m the area&#13;
of salaries&#13;
Jewel E~helbarger Assistant Dean of Students, suggeSted ~SOO&#13;
could be shifted from' the Student Government allotment. That idea&#13;
was discussed and dropped. The Ranger budget will stay as it stands, but when Herb Kubly,&#13;
Professor of English, made the motion to accept the suggeSt&#13;
_ed budg~;&#13;
the proviso was added that the Ranger budget should remam open&#13;
consideration. ·&#13;
Other action at the meeting included the seating of ~usan We~~·&#13;
President, Parkside Activities Board. She was seated without vo g&#13;
P&lt;&gt;wer. •&#13;
w~s&#13;
The&#13;
created&#13;
Ranger Advisory Board was also ratified. The Ad_viso::e ~i~~~ by CCC and the board is presently undertaking J&#13;
editor selection.&#13;
Admissions policie re i&#13;
reference to ACT, SAT, rank dr p&#13;
Fre hman admi ion polici&#13;
at the Univer ity of Wi consinParkside&#13;
have been rev1 ed to&#13;
abandon all references to high&#13;
school cla standing and CT or&#13;
AT te t core .&#13;
The new Park id policy wa&#13;
among tho e reviewed for each of&#13;
the W campu e . effective&#13;
August 1973. by the \\' y tern&#13;
Board of Regents Friday&#13;
In describing th new policy,&#13;
V-Park ide hancellor Wyllie&#13;
aid it repre ented faculty and&#13;
admini trative de ire to&#13;
"maximize edu ational opportunity&#13;
and better erve the&#13;
educational need of Park id •&#13;
regional clientele."&#13;
The policy revi ion wa considered&#13;
and approved by th&#13;
Parkside Admi ion Polic_&#13;
Committee. the mver ity&#13;
Committee and the Faculty&#13;
Senate , and i upported by the&#13;
campus administration&#13;
"It is a direct and consi tent&#13;
response to a recommendation&#13;
from the \ System Regents la t&#13;
July to all campu es to emphasize&#13;
Wiscon in' long-time&#13;
strong commitment to maximize&#13;
educational opportunity for all its&#13;
citizens," Wyllie said.&#13;
The new Park ide policie fit&#13;
within a y tern policy&#13;
e tablished by the Regents at&#13;
that time. The Parkside chancellor said&#13;
that in revi ing its admi ion&#13;
policie . CW-P "wa returning to&#13;
the hi toric policy of the&#13;
L'niversity of \\'i con in that&#13;
pre,·ailed before World \\'ar IL&#13;
that of accepting high chool&#13;
graduate with0t1t reference to&#13;
cla rank and te-;t cores.&#13;
··It i the feeling of our Faculty&#13;
enate that arbitrary cut--0ff&#13;
u&#13;
"The examiners w r of th&#13;
opinion that we could not&#13;
prop rl_ rv our r ional&#13;
client I if we continu d to&#13;
bound to the top-half-&lt;&gt;f-th la&#13;
policy." Wylli id. "A ·&#13;
·opportunity campu • rv1n&#13;
many fi t gen ration coll&#13;
·tud nt • th e · amin r r It that&#13;
\\ e needed greater ne ibilit&#13;
than th old policy allowed." ·&#13;
\\"ylhe aid th qu tion of&#13;
'"low ring tandar " r c i ed&#13;
detailed e · ammation at ever ·&#13;
:tep of consideration.&#13;
··Toe con n u view emergin&#13;
from those deliberation .was that&#13;
true tandard are not et in the&#13;
adm1 ion proce . but in th&#13;
intellectural challeng that are&#13;
This is the final Ranger&#13;
of this semester. The first&#13;
issue of second semester&#13;
will be Jan. 17. We still&#13;
have a need for all kinds of&#13;
help and all kinds of&#13;
people, like sportswriters,&#13;
newswriters , feature&#13;
writers, photographers,&#13;
and especially, ad&#13;
salespeople. Join the&#13;
Ranger staff! You'll learn&#13;
something about&#13;
newspapering and&#13;
probably like it, too. &#13;
1 THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Dec. 13, 1971&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
Striving for better&#13;
In this, the IIrst semeste&lt;" of the Ranger, we have&#13;
ali mpted to proJect a philosophy of service to the&#13;
students, faculty and staff of this campus by communicating&#13;
Information, offering suggestions,&#13;
criticizing when criticism Is due, entertaining, allowing&#13;
public teedback through the "We Get Letters" column&#13;
nd polntg'lg out a good lob when one Is seen.&#13;
We hav done the best job we could wllh the resources&#13;
we h ve. Cooper tlon has played a key role In the success of&#13;
this young paper. The admittedly young staff has turned&#13;
out a weekly paper consistently for a semester. If we&#13;
h d not worked together In close cooperation, with our&#13;
dvlser and the many other student wrl\VrS, faculty and&#13;
st It we could not have sustained ourselves.&#13;
OUr Intention Is to amplify our goal in the future. We&#13;
must do a better lob.&#13;
We hope to put out a larger, more Interestin.9 .Pilper&#13;
next semester. We must strive to publish an enlarged&#13;
tw Ive page Issue as otten as possible. We must widen&#13;
our scope of coverage and cover everything better.&#13;
Since this Is the last Issue of the semester the Ranger&#13;
says th nks for your readership and may you have a&#13;
happy holiday season. __Rudy Lienau&#13;
Peace on earth&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
Usten when I ask genUy but hopefullY&#13;
That you remember,&#13;
Rernernber&#13;
That tIr child •• - - -_.-- ---&#13;
Crew into a young man who lived a strange&#13;
and glorious life&#13;
Who said once&#13;
(In that lime lorgollell,&#13;
That laded lime between the cradle aod&#13;
th eress)&#13;
'All men are brothers: and another time&#13;
"I'llou shall not loll'&#13;
d he knew that he would nol,&#13;
Could not,&#13;
For an)' f'U.$Oll.&#13;
KIll h brother," -JoanBaez&#13;
Christmas 1966&#13;
Imwn.... 'I'M..-.n 8M1 Chf'tstn\ft 5on9 ~ oopyrlght 1961 by Ryerson Music&#13;
l"\Alt8Mt'L In&lt;:.. H.,w Yor".&#13;
In the SlXyears Slnce these words were written, we have seen in this&#13;
country a gradual change inatlilude loward the Viet am war, insolar&#13;
n ever.inc"",SUlg proportion 01 the population is now openly&#13;
call lor Its end But can this be interpreted as an emerging conousn&#13;
that war IS immoral, because it lorces men to kill their&#13;
llroth • Or .. II merely a sign of latigue lor an old war that has&#13;
too much ernharrassment and been going 00 too loog to be&#13;
r stuonable ymOf'e'll&#13;
M uncomIortahle question, but perhaps this lime of year is&#13;
Dy filling to deal with it. We are asked at this lime to&#13;
remember a man who had perhaps the greatest effect 00 history 01&#13;
Y in the western world. His philosophy was a simple me 01&#13;
love lor our lello",' buman beings, but as life becomes ever more&#13;
C(II'Ilp .deal loot in a debwnanizing world. We do not see other&#13;
poop! a our llrothers aod sisters - buJn,anity is reduced 10 "them"&#13;
and "\II " We do not have to be concerned with "them" because they&#13;
..... len to us, part of the faceless, nameless masses of existence to&#13;
hIcb ..... blind and deaf. It becomes possible 10 kill "them" and&#13;
maim "them" and take away property belonging to "them" and even&#13;
not lO th.u\k 01 Hlhem," because. "them" become less than human&#13;
"I'hia. or eourw,.precludes "them" ever being considered kin lo "us.,:&#13;
1beq1l on IS, a..., mo...,ol us beginning 10 realize that our brothers&#13;
d "' a..., being murdered, not just in am but in the Middle East&#13;
Irtiand and Africa and America! The demand lor an end to the&#13;
r ohouId mean an Inc"",sing number of people will not tolerate&#13;
\'1Olence ainst any oflbeir lel\ow hUJlWl5.B~t many have indicated&#13;
thai they COO5!derwar a practical way of coocllc:ti.ng some inttmllllOllal&#13;
rebtiOJlll, not to mention violence on the domestic lmoL&#13;
We just made a ml5take in the CUe 01 Vie! am. This does not sound&#13;
Ilk ~&#13;
an awareness of the brother-an&lt;kisterbood of aU of us h~oo&#13;
_ to that cbDd who was destined to tive a "strange aod&#13;
Ilor!ous ble:' who inspire5 such ",isbes as peace 00 ea~. Would his&#13;
bl Ion er lhan thlrty·three years U be were in the world today!&#13;
\\ould he beecm the great man that history "nows him as, or would&#13;
only a another 01 these bearded. long-haired freak.s who&#13;
Utll&lt; about peace and love! Would he be assassinated on a spea!ter's&#13;
umor thrown tn Jail lor non-cooperationwith the draft!&#13;
Remember the cblld who grew into that man who said "aU men are&#13;
brolhen" and "thou shalt not loll." Remember thai man who could&#13;
not IillI h brother. And let us ask, "gently but hopefully," lor peace 00&#13;
eartb. oodwill 10 people.&#13;
We ~et&#13;
letters..•&#13;
To the Edilor:&#13;
Why is the physical educalion&#13;
huilding policy being administered&#13;
inconsistently and&#13;
unlairly? On Thursday, NoV.30, I&#13;
had reserved a handball court [or&#13;
a guest and myself lor 8 p.m. This&#13;
reservation was made two days&#13;
in advance. When we arrived, we&#13;
were informed that our names&#13;
had been erased from the&#13;
reservation roster by a coach in&#13;
the department and two other&#13;
students had taken the time&#13;
period.&#13;
When I inquired as to why this&#13;
was done, I was told that the&#13;
reservation had been made&#13;
improperly, in that it was phoned&#13;
in rather than being made in&#13;
person, and the full name of each&#13;
player was not given. I informed&#13;
the attendant that I had called an&#13;
attendant when I first hegan :&#13;
reserving courts and had been&#13;
told that I could reserve the&#13;
handball court hy phone and, in&#13;
lact, had done this on three different&#13;
occasions!&#13;
I was not only embarrassed&#13;
and angered, hut also I and my&#13;
guest had been inconvenienced&#13;
-hy -wasting our time' and effort&#13;
traveling to and lrom Parkside.&#13;
We should have been told when&#13;
we called for the court that we&#13;
could not reserve it in this&#13;
manner. Having rules for&#13;
students for using the phy-ed&#13;
building are fine; however, these&#13;
rules should be administered&#13;
with respect and consideration&#13;
lor students.&#13;
Robert Ward&#13;
Racine Student&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Speaking of thorns, there is one&#13;
Inmy side concerning statements&#13;
made in the paper about the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
I would like to know on&#13;
what information Mr. Konkol&#13;
based his estimate of $3,000 as&#13;
what the hudget 01 that committee&#13;
should be. Iwould also be&#13;
interested in knowing how many&#13;
programs Mr. Konkol thinks that&#13;
the committee could sponsor on&#13;
that budget and even come close&#13;
10 hreaking even.&#13;
We ar~ open to suggestions&#13;
concernIng our program&#13;
schedule Irom aD sludents. Or il&#13;
you have a legitimate gripe about&#13;
the committee in general let us&#13;
know. Despite the lact that the&#13;
laculty outnumber the students&#13;
on the committee, they are more&#13;
than willing to hear what the&#13;
student..shave to say. If anyone is&#13;
really .mterested in the Lecture&#13;
~d Fm.e Arts Committee, they&#13;
WIn . pIck. up one of our&#13;
questionnaires concerning next&#13;
year's. _ schedule in the&#13;
Humamties O££ice on GR Lower&#13;
Level 200. Remember any&#13;
stu~nl who doesn't care ~nough&#13;
to fill out a questionnaire doesn't&#13;
have th~right to complain about&#13;
our ChOice of a program or our&#13;
use of too many funds.&#13;
Ilene Levin&#13;
Student member 01 the&#13;
Lecture &amp; Fine Arts Comm.&#13;
Racine freshman&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view ----_&#13;
IP LiQu ThiNK&#13;
l1's !Jed WhtN&#13;
y&lt;lLl hiNt AP,~nD&#13;
~l.l.DtW"~€.r\ M&#13;
fOIl.~'),H L\ oLl&#13;
Wo.I&gt;+ AND 'f\1C'"&#13;
[X,tJ'T' r.tT IT?&#13;
!Jo,,/r CId +0&gt;0&#13;
De-press...! •&#13;
:r ~"ow&#13;
T'ni5 Duck&#13;
Thc.:\·s (3e.Q.N&#13;
A5Yi'Il'l~ foR.&#13;
Itece (;IA) &amp;.&#13;
G-ooJ W.11&#13;
lovJl\p.d mel\!&#13;
e"eP.4 Ch~I~Tfl'1AS"FOIl.&#13;
AIIII0)+ +w6 +h~l-le\&#13;
\1eC\ V'S, A I\c.I c.I 0&#13;
YOLI 't)VlO'" Tl1e&#13;
C \oS~~ A"'~OY\f:&gt;s&#13;
~en. COlVlQ. is&#13;
.. , Ie&gt; tj:-iv{ \i;1i-I 5cMC.&#13;
(; 01 J fIlA Nsirt-Qt6t&#13;
rtI"'lffh a r&gt;J A&#13;
o Rt.llVl ~ 010 I. I, tV/&lt;./J&#13;
-------by Gary Huck&#13;
~~ The ~SI:CJ4d8t------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkslde Ranger Is published weekly throughout the acadenU&lt;&#13;
year by th~ stud~nts of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Kenos~a, WiSCOnSin53140. Offices are located at D·l94 LibrarY·&#13;
Learmng Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Pa~kside Ranger is an independent newspaper· opini~&#13;
r~nected In colupms and editorials are not necessarily the offic:i&amp;l&#13;
VIew of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subit"1 d&#13;
mterest 10 students, laculty or stalf must be conlined to 250 wordsrt&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right 10 ll!rt&#13;
l~~ers lor length and good taste. Allletlers must he signedand includ!&#13;
a ress, phone number and student status or laculty rank. NamesoiP&#13;
be. Withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to ref"'" I.&#13;
prmt any letters.&#13;
. Classified and display ad rates will he lurnished upon requesL&#13;
EDITORS ANn WRIT~RS _Rudy Lienau Ken Konkol.TomPel.":.&#13;
Ilene L.evln, Jane Schliesman, Marilyn 'Schuhert, Jeannine SIP;&#13;
Craig Roberts, Pat Nowak . tbJ1'&#13;
SPORTS STAFF _ Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch, Dale MartiD.Ka&#13;
Wellner&#13;
REVIEWERS _ Bill Brohaugh,. Gary Jensen, Pat Nowak&#13;
CARTOONIST - Gary Huck oIJefiS&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS _ Larry Gunnell Pat Nowak, Craig R&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER - Ken Pestk~&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER - Kathryn Wellner&#13;
OFFICE SECRETARY - Bonnie Jack&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER - Fred Lawrence 1 PIt&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF _Ken Konkol Alex Marlis, Jerry MUrph ,&#13;
Nowak, qraig Rol;&gt;erts, Rudy Liena~&#13;
ADVISER - Don Kopriva&#13;
~...-.- __.----.::;~~ 'lit .t.I!PUSENTED fOI, NATIONAL ADV£J,TlSIN~ 8' Inc- l Nauonal Educational Advertising ServIceS,&#13;
3&lt;iO Lexi..-n Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017&#13;
~&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Dec. 13, 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
t • or better&#13;
larger, more interestin.9 paper&#13;
mu t strive to publish an enlarged&#13;
s o ten as possible. We must widen&#13;
r g and cover everything better.&#13;
last i sue of the semester the Ranger&#13;
dership and may you have a&#13;
-· Rudy Lienau&#13;
Peace on earth&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
g ntly but hopefully&#13;
,' and another time&#13;
-Joan Baez&#13;
Christmas 1966&#13;
1"7 by RYff'SOn Music&#13;
We get&#13;
letters ...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Why i the physical education&#13;
building policy being administered&#13;
inconsistently and&#13;
unfair! ? On Thursday, Nov. 30, I&#13;
had reserved a handball court for&#13;
a guest and myself for 8 p.m. This&#13;
reservation was made two days&#13;
in advance. When we arrived, we&#13;
were informed that our names&#13;
had been erased from the&#13;
r ervation roster by a coach in&#13;
the department and two other&#13;
tudent had taken the time&#13;
period.&#13;
When I inquired as to why this&#13;
wa done, I was told that the&#13;
reservation had been made&#13;
improperly, in that it was phoned&#13;
in rather than being made in&#13;
person, and the full name of each&#13;
player was not given. I informed&#13;
the attendant that I had called an&#13;
attendant when I first began ·&#13;
reserving courts and had been&#13;
told that I could reserve the&#13;
handball court by phone and, in&#13;
fact, had done this on three different&#13;
occasions!&#13;
I was not only embarrassed&#13;
and angered, but also I and my&#13;
guest had been inconvenienced&#13;
by wasting our time and effort&#13;
traveling to and from Parkside.&#13;
We should have been told when&#13;
we called for the court that we&#13;
could not reserve it in this&#13;
manner. Having rules for&#13;
students for using the phy-ed&#13;
building are fine; however, these&#13;
rules should be administered&#13;
with respect and consideration&#13;
for students.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Robert Ward&#13;
Racine Student&#13;
peaking of thorns, there is one&#13;
in my side concerning statements&#13;
made in the paper about the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
I would like to know on&#13;
what information Mr. Konkol&#13;
based his estimate of $3,000 as&#13;
what the budget of that committee&#13;
should be. I would also be&#13;
interested in knowing how many&#13;
programs Mr. Konkol thinks that&#13;
the committee could sponsor on&#13;
that budget and even come close&#13;
to breaking even.&#13;
We ar~ open to suggestions&#13;
concernmg our program&#13;
chedule from all students. Or if&#13;
you have a legitimate gripe about&#13;
the commit~ee in general, let us&#13;
know. Despite the fact that the&#13;
faculty outnumber the students&#13;
on the c_o~ittee, they are more&#13;
than willing to hear what the&#13;
studen1:5 have to say. U anyone is&#13;
really _interested in the Lecture&#13;
and Fme Arts Committee the ·11 • I y w1 pick up one of ti . our&#13;
ques 'onna1res concerning next&#13;
year . . schedule in the&#13;
Humanities Office on GR Lower&#13;
Level 200. Remember an&#13;
tudent who doesn't care ~nouJ&#13;
to fill out a questionnaire doesn't&#13;
have th~ right to complain about&#13;
our choice of a program or our&#13;
use of too many funds.&#13;
llene Levin&#13;
Student member of th&#13;
Lecture &amp; Fine Arts Comme&#13;
Racine freshma~&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view -----&#13;
~ ~uTh1~&#13;
t1'~ e~J Whqv&#13;
you htN+ AR&lt;Y-MD&#13;
ALI- Ot(.Ql"l\&amp;t(\ ~&#13;
foP-.~'J1H 4 °~&#13;
Wo.W\+ AND ~i0&#13;
~~,- b-tT ,r?&#13;
Dorv 'r \j(.1- + Q,o&#13;
De.presseJ •&#13;
I Know&#13;
This Duck&#13;
Thc..4-'s Be-QN&#13;
Asl&lt;I in~ fot\&#13;
rt~ce ow&amp;&#13;
G-ocJ w:11&#13;
lowAP.clt)'leN&#13;
eveR4 C,hi,~TlfA.6 f'~&#13;
Al~o)-t 4w6 +h~~&#13;
½eC,\rs. Ar\J do ~o~ };no"-&gt; T'n e&#13;
C \os~~ Arv'1ont: 's&#13;
~n coW'IQ. is ·· ro &amp;iv-r Vi;M 5cMc· .~,&#13;
(;old FaA~ire~,&#13;
ro"1rrh a ~d A&#13;
ORt.1"1 ~olo 1• I. &amp;i;&#13;
-------,by Gary Huck&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by th~ stud~nts of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Kenos~a, W1sconsm 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Li.brat)·&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295&#13;
The Parkside R g · · · o · ·&#13;
fl . an er is an mdependent newspaper. pllll&#13;
~ ected m col':1111ns. and editorials are not necessarily the offioal&#13;
ew of The Uruvers1ty of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject rJ&#13;
rterest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 word1 rt&#13;
1&#13;
esS, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
aet~ers for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
~ r~, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names&#13;
Pr. wtitbhel1&#13;
d upon request. The editors reserve the right to ref- t&#13;
m any etters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
EDITORS_AND WRITERS. Rudy Lienau, Ken Konkol, To~ pei._ersen,&#13;
Den~ Levm, Jane Schliesman, Marilyn Schubert, Jearuune Si~&#13;
Craig Roberts, Pat Nowak . tbt')&#13;
SPORTS STAFF · Geoff Blaesing Kris Koch Dale Martill, l{a&#13;
Wellner ' '&#13;
REVIEWERS · Bill Brohaugh, · Gary Jensen, Pat Nowak&#13;
CARTOONIST . Gary Huck&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS · Larry Gunnell, Pat Nowak, Craig Rol)el1S&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER· Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER. Kathryn Wellner&#13;
~FICE SECRETARY . Bonnie Jack&#13;
VERTISING MANAGER. Fred Lawrence rph p,l&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF · Ken Konkol Alex Marlis, J errY l\1U y,&#13;
Nowak C · ' ' raig Roberts, Rudy Lienau&#13;
ADVISER · Don Kopriva&#13;
~:-------------~~ • ,UPI.ESENTED FOi. NATIONAL ADVEJ.TISIN~ IY Ji,C. T National Educational Advertising Se~iceS, I&#13;
360 Lexiopon Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017.---------&#13;
More&#13;
letters •••&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On behalf of the UW-P Vets'&#13;
Club,I want to sincerely thank all&#13;
of you who so generously supported&#13;
the Blackwater Gold&#13;
dance to raise money for continuation&#13;
of Racine-Parkside bus&#13;
service.&#13;
Iam pleased to report that the&#13;
dance raised $500 after expenses.&#13;
Of that total, nearly one-third&#13;
carne in the form of donations&#13;
from Parkside staff, the rest at&#13;
the door.&#13;
Youshould know that the Vets'&#13;
Club will continue to be involved&#13;
in maintaining Racine·Parkside&#13;
bus service. As you are probably&#13;
aware, the Vets currently are&#13;
collecting passenger fares after&#13;
each run and plan a second&#13;
semester dance to guarantee the&#13;
continuation of the bus service.&#13;
Ken Oberbruner&#13;
Adviser, Vets' Club&#13;
Coordinator of Veterans' Affairs&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Christmas Paz:ty. for underprivileged&#13;
children· Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 16.&#13;
Time: 12-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Interested faculty, staff,&#13;
students, clubs and organizations&#13;
who wish to help contact: Barb&#13;
Kupper, D-197.&#13;
Help needed:&#13;
+ Transporting children from&#13;
Racine and Kenosha to Parkside&#13;
+ Wrapping gifts&#13;
+ Helping at the party&#13;
TERMPAPERS Researched and professionally typed.&#13;
All writers have a minimum BS, SA&#13;
Degree.&#13;
CALL COLLECT: 202-333·0201&#13;
ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
OUR TERMPAPER CATALOG&#13;
(OVER 3,000 ON FILE)&#13;
We will not send the same paper to the&#13;
same SChooltwice. ORDER NOW! Send&#13;
SlID cover postage and handling for your&#13;
catalog.&#13;
TERMPAPER LIBRARY, INC.&#13;
3160"0" Street, N.W.&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20007&#13;
r"A'B'O'RT'ioNS"'~&#13;
~FREEReferral to H.Y, Clinic. j&#13;
: 12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
CONTROLLED&#13;
~PARENTHOOD&#13;
"&#13;
(a non_profit organization)&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
Xmas Help&#13;
Men&#13;
---&#13;
652-3287&#13;
,~...-....&#13;
A Christmas Story&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
&lt;?nce upon a time there was&#13;
this university was a gr t a young university called Parkside In&#13;
called Main Place. Theree~a:pen space, an informal meeting a~ea&#13;
called apathy. However one faalso a great problem at this university'&#13;
students to participate 'togeth teful year the Opportunity came for all&#13;
(but actually very significa t~r In a small, seemingly unimportant&#13;
It was near Christm n endeavor.&#13;
c ld b . as, 1972 The great M . o rick and concrete th eli am Place suffered from&#13;
came and went, but n~ se~ss~osmal colors of rust and grey. Students&#13;
rnosphere. Then an organizaf f the season was apparent in the at.&#13;
actually joined SOmething) ha~~non campus (yes, a few people bad&#13;
honest-to-goodness 20 f t Chn Idea. It Would donate a real life&#13;
people muttered th~t the~owoul~lStmas tree for Main Place! A fe":&#13;
the law, and so on but Student :ver get away with it, it was against&#13;
would be legal. Th~s Si rna Pi rVlc~ checked it out and found it&#13;
bring in their tree Andgth fratermty was granted permission to&#13;
Club, offered to b·uild th en another campus organization, the Vets'&#13;
supply the lights (for youed~~ndd and the University said it would&#13;
Sigma Pi's plan was to ha~e aar cym~s, the tree was fireproofed&gt;.&#13;
campus. So on Sunday D 10 decorating ~vent for all the people on&#13;
follOWing week the d~co~~·tin'~eYkbrought m the tree and during the&#13;
cranberries to string and g 00 place. There was popcorn and&#13;
Many students had draftede~r~one br~ug~t ornaments from home.&#13;
Soon M· PI eir contributions themselves.&#13;
. am ace had a new air of w th d t .&#13;
aesthetic contribution of th tr arm an JOY about It. The&#13;
~~::e~~ithe~~~c~~i~~:d ~ro:h ;hv~~~~S:::n~n~r t~:e~~:~:&#13;
. as, W IC Was reserved for writing finals&#13;
many a dejected student came to Main Place after each exam was&#13;
ove~ and found solace in the quiet, peaceful joy emmating from their&#13;
Chnstmastree. The Spirit of Christmas had arrived at Farkslde.&#13;
AlternatIve ending: Scrooge won. No one bothered to bring any&#13;
decoranons for the tree, which looked rather silly sitting there naked.&#13;
Pe.ople co~plamed about Its very existence in Main Place, since it was&#13;
domg nothmg to entertain them. The whole thing proved once more&#13;
that people prefer passivity and spoon-feeding to participation.&#13;
You (yes, you - anyone and everyone) have a chance to support the&#13;
happy ending to this story. BRING YOUR TREE DECORATIONS TO&#13;
MAIN PLACE ON THURSDAY, DEC. 141&#13;
Bookstore annex&#13;
Entrance to the new bookstore&#13;
annex for book buy-back and&#13;
textboolv- sales, will he at., the&#13;
library entrance on lower lmain&#13;
place. This is at the D-1 level of&#13;
the library learning center just&#13;
off the food service area. Signs&#13;
will be posted to clearly mark the&#13;
·";a·y - to,: -this new bookstore&#13;
facility.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KnCHEN&#13;
Chielcen &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Free D.II_.ry to ',rbld. Viii".&#13;
Ion 10111At,ntl' ,",,,, 6S1-Sf9f&#13;
J&#13;
II&#13;
3&#13;
"&#13;
J&#13;
II&#13;
:-I&#13;
"&#13;
410 MAIN&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
On Our Screen&#13;
See Me - Feel Me&#13;
plus&#13;
History of Pornography&#13;
New Selections of Adult Books ~r:&#13;
n.... .. Dc·,lylTheatre Open Noon Itl lng .&#13;
Midnite. Book Store Open 11 a.m.&#13;
'til Midnite.&#13;
18 Years and ()yer Only!&#13;
OPEN tODAY&#13;
6.00 • 12:00 Mid.&#13;
ST~EET • DOWNTOWN&#13;
If you&#13;
prefer u'. our&#13;
Rear&#13;
Entrance&#13;
.,. " ~ .• _.,--~ •.••• &lt;. - ..... ~.~.&#13;
• i-'&gt; ... , • ~-&gt; '.'&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
State I.D.s expiring&#13;
The while slate identification&#13;
cards now in use as a proof of age&#13;
will expire Jan. I, 1973and will be&#13;
replaced by a new yellow and&#13;
blue state LO. card. The new&#13;
cards which are laminated are&#13;
available for those 18 and older at&#13;
the time ot application. These&#13;
cards can he obtained through&#13;
the Register of Deeds Office.&#13;
Wben making application for the&#13;
card a party Will need proof of&#13;
signature such as drivers license&#13;
SOCialsecurity card or dran card&#13;
and a certified birth certificate or&#13;
baptismal record if not born In&#13;
Kenosha County. Applicants&#13;
should provide two photomachine&#13;
slze black and wtute&#13;
photos of lhemselve. Identification&#13;
cards COIit$3.00 for an&#13;
original and $5.00 for a&#13;
replacement.&#13;
'Sanguine' grant accepted&#13;
A $36,000 federal gram to ex.&#13;
tend a study being conducted by a&#13;
team of researchers at Parkside&#13;
or the environmental effects of&#13;
the proposed project Sanguine&#13;
was accepled here recenUy by&#13;
the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
The Parkside team, consisting&#13;
of a biologist. chemist and&#13;
physicist, is seeking to determine&#13;
whether exposure to an etectromagnetic&#13;
field, such as that&#13;
generated by Sanguine wjIJ&#13;
produce changes in cell growth&#13;
and development of an organism&#13;
called Physarum PolycephaJum,&#13;
a slime mold found on decaying&#13;
vegetation.&#13;
The organism is common in the&#13;
forested northern Wisconsin area&#13;
where the Navy has proposed&#13;
building Sanguine, a con.&#13;
troversial underground radio&#13;
antenna system aimed at&#13;
establishing a world·wide&#13;
communications system, par·&#13;
ticularly useful (or contacting&#13;
submarines.&#13;
Eugene L Goodman, principal&#13;
investigator for the project and&#13;
assistant professor of life science&#13;
at w·p, said the additional&#13;
grant from the Office of Naval&#13;
Research will enable the team to&#13;
acquire additional Sanguine&#13;
simulators. similar to lh on&#13;
which has been 10 u e inee the&#13;
inception of the prOJ ct in&#13;
December, 1971, to analyz the&#13;
effects of electromagneuc lields&#13;
of different strength and In'&#13;
tensuies on the orgam rn,&#13;
Other angume projects were&#13;
funded at that time at CLA,&#13;
Minnesota, Georgia Tech, Rhode&#13;
Island. tame, Rochester.&#13;
orthern Illinois and WMadison&#13;
Other members 0( the mvesugauve&#13;
team are Michael T.&#13;
1arron, a istant professor of&#13;
chemistry and the team's&#13;
computer expert, and Ben&#13;
Greenebaum, assistant professor&#13;
01 physics, re ponstble for the&#13;
design and maintenance o( the&#13;
simulators.&#13;
The pre enl grant i in addition&#13;
to an inilial grant of almost&#13;
S33 000 and brings total federal&#13;
funding for l1Ie study Lo nearly&#13;
$69,000. The new grant also ,extends&#13;
support of the projeCt&#13;
through June 30, 1973.&#13;
Goodman added that the&#13;
research is not. cia ihed in any&#13;
way and the researchers have&#13;
been encouraged by their&#13;
sponsa to publish th ir findilll\s&#13;
regardless of th outcom of their&#13;
experiments.&#13;
TERM-PAPERS&#13;
CALL COLLECT - 215 - 3tJ.3112&#13;
OR WRITF TrR\1P"P1 R Mr I "RClll'&#13;
r 0 8&lt;&gt;'\ U2&#13;
"~trI"Jlon. P~. """,&#13;
GUARANTEE&#13;
"'RtTTf~ BY rltOFT:SSIO!'ilAl D£CIU fn Itl", AM('llrMS&#13;
In,oon 0 FILF&#13;
r-Ro"4 lOO,. P.&#13;
DELICATESSE&#13;
&amp; LIqUOR STORE&#13;
32nd Ave. and 52nd Sf.&#13;
• 24 Hot.Ir M..lllordrn&#13;
• Ou~hIY RMelorctl&#13;
Snt'1 1M "lft1(' i\lJleI 1010'1«&#13;
• LoOlo"C"U roolC-0&#13;
• 'Rnulu' CU;lI;lI'Il&lt;'&lt;'d&#13;
FREF. flF.SCRIPTIVE C\T\LOCt F.&#13;
(LJmil 1)&#13;
llwd '" o.lf.,rub&#13;
(TY'I n 1I'l ntlRMd (Qflll&#13;
OIollh thN"'~·hfltl .. " ronIMI(":')&#13;
~ ...u"d\ (Or r.n.\htd ~prll&#13;
1\ft('\l'11) ",,1-1«1.&#13;
LOC"""L '''1.-1 !io"'f H&#13;
• NLlOl.O •&#13;
• (-"1' 00 "' •.,. ~I •&#13;
Tenuta's COUPON&#13;
Parkside Student Special&#13;
Italian Swiss Colony&#13;
COLD DUCK $1~I!&#13;
Without coupon&#13;
COUpoD $1.79&#13;
Expire, Frl. Dec. 22, 1972&#13;
More&#13;
letters ...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
on behalf of the UW-P Vets'&#13;
Club, I want to sincerely thank all&#13;
of you who so generously supported&#13;
the Blackwater Gold&#13;
dance to raise money for continuation&#13;
of Racine-Parkside bus&#13;
service.&#13;
J am pleased to report that the&#13;
dance raised $500 after expenses.&#13;
Of that total, nearly one-third&#13;
came in the form of donations&#13;
from Parkside staff, the rest at&#13;
the door.&#13;
You should know that the Vets'&#13;
Club will continue to be involved&#13;
in maintaining Racine-Parkside&#13;
bus service. As you are probably&#13;
aware, the Vets currently are&#13;
collecting passenger fares after&#13;
each run and plan a second&#13;
semester dance to guarantee the&#13;
continuation of the bus service.&#13;
Ken Oberbruner&#13;
Adviser, Vets' Club&#13;
Coordinator of Veterans' Affairs&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Christm~s Party for underprivileged&#13;
children Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 16.&#13;
Time: 12-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Interested faculty, staff,&#13;
students, clubs and organizations&#13;
who wish to help contact: Barb&#13;
Kupper, D-197.&#13;
Help needed:&#13;
+ Transporting children from&#13;
Racine and Kenosha to Parkside&#13;
+ Wrapping gifts&#13;
+ Helping at the party&#13;
TERMPAPERS&#13;
Researched and professionally typed.&#13;
All writers have a minimum BS, BA&#13;
Degree.&#13;
CALL COLLECT: 202-333-0201&#13;
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(OVER 3.000 ON FILE)&#13;
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catalog.&#13;
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Total cost&#13;
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Xmas Help&#13;
Men&#13;
--- 652-3287 - ' " .... ..l. . • -,1,· ,, " ....... . • ••&#13;
A Christmas Story&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
Once upon a time th th· . ere was a young . is umversity was a gre t umversity called Parkside In&#13;
called Main Place. There !a:Pfn space, an informal meeting a~ea&#13;
called apathy. However, one fa~:; a great problem at this university:&#13;
students to participate togeth _ul year the opportunity came for au&#13;
(but actually very significante) r md a small, seemingly unimportant It was Ch . en eavor . near ristmas, 1972 The . . cold brick and concrete th di great Mam Place suffered from&#13;
came and went, but n~ se~ss: smal colors of rust and grey. Students&#13;
mosphere. Then an organizaf of the season was apparent in the atactually&#13;
joined something) ha;~o~d ca~pus (yes, a few people had&#13;
honest-to-goodness 20-f t C . I ea. It would donate a real life&#13;
people muttered th~t the;o ~~1stmas tree for Main Place! A fe~&#13;
the law, and so on but st:~~nt ~ve: get away with it, it was again t&#13;
w~uld be legal. Th~s Sigm p· f rVIc~ checked it out and found it&#13;
brmg in their tree And th a 1 ratermty was granted permission to&#13;
Club, offered to build theen another campus ~rga";i-z.ation, the Vets'&#13;
supply the lights {for you /t~\ and. the Umvers1ty said it would&#13;
Sigma Pi's plan was to ha~ ar cym~, the tree was fireproofed).&#13;
campus. So on Sunday Dec 10 ~ec~rating ~vent for all the people on&#13;
following_ week the d~coratin' t!k rought m the tree and during the&#13;
cranberries to strin g place. There was popcorn and&#13;
Many students had ~r=~~t~~r~one br?ug~t ornaments from home. Soon Main Place h d e1r contributions themselves.&#13;
aesthetic contribution aof ~;~'::ir of warmth and joy about it. The&#13;
communit h. h · was surpassed only by the feeling of&#13;
the week ~f IC C~_cr1ed from _everyone getting it together. And in . ore istmas, which was reserved for writin finals&#13;
many a deJected student came to Main Place after each ex!m wa '&#13;
ove: and found solace ~n. the quiet, peaceful joy eminating from their&#13;
Chnstmas_tree. T~e Spmt of Christmas had arrived at l-arkside.&#13;
Alter~ative ending: Scrooge won. No one bothered to bring any&#13;
decorations fo~ the tree, which looked rather silly sitting there naked.&#13;
P~ople con:iplamed about its very existence in Main Place, since it was&#13;
domg nothmg to entertain them. The whole thing proved once more&#13;
that people prefer passivity and spoon-feeding to participation.&#13;
You (yes, you - anyone and everyone) have a chance to support the&#13;
happy ending to this story. BRING YOUR TREE DECORATIO, S TO&#13;
MAIN PLACE ON THURSDAY, DEC. 14!&#13;
Bookstore annex&#13;
Entrance to the new bookstore&#13;
annex for book buy-back and&#13;
textbook-' sales., will be at-~ the&#13;
library e'ntrance on lower. main&#13;
place. This is at the D-1 level of&#13;
the library learning center just&#13;
off the food service area. Signs&#13;
will be posted to clearly mark the&#13;
-way to- this new book tore&#13;
facility.&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicke11 &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Free Deliiery to Parkside Vill191&#13;
SOit IOI/, At111111 P/,1111 6S1-Sf9t&#13;
.)&#13;
H&#13;
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03J./'l:\I,\\ HOJ..)3HIO \ ::!H\&#13;
l&amp;OOl :) 0 . 4se,~ ,,.., aA\I e1ue.,1.,suuad ot~i&#13;
i -01 1 l~t,-Slll ot ~-0£ 6&#13;
"111$ ( iol) ll.,f·UOI~&#13;
S&gt;l.)\lgH:,id\ldJ.S/10.) 10 03 .10\\ \13\&#13;
!&gt;SI0,11.)SI&#13;
~- JVIH'.-IJ.\'I~ Jl.)H\13S3H 1\''l;OIJ.V.).103 ::IJ.31dl\O.)&#13;
SJ,!'1:\'J.'l.1S!'l:0.) Jl.)H\13S3H 1\l.'l;OJJ.V.).103" IH:-111.\&#13;
If you&#13;
prefer&#13;
use our&#13;
Rear&#13;
Entrance&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
On Our Screen&#13;
See Me - Feel Me&#13;
plus&#13;
History of Pornography&#13;
New Selections of Adult Books ~~- . . Oa"i lyl Theatre Open Noon t,I riving · Midnite. Book Store Open 11 a.m.&#13;
'til Midnite.&#13;
18 Years and Over Only!&#13;
OPEN TODAY&#13;
6:00 . 12:00 Mid.&#13;
410 MAIN STREET • DOWNTOWN&#13;
}.I&#13;
3&#13;
,.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
State .D.&#13;
Th white I.at id tificati n&#13;
cards no in u a a proof of ag&#13;
will expire Jan. 1, 1973 and ill&#13;
r placed b a n w yello and&#13;
blue tate l.D. card. The n&#13;
cards which are laminat d ar&#13;
available for th 18 and old rat&#13;
the time of application. The&#13;
cards can be obtained through&#13;
the Regi ter of Deed Office.&#13;
\','hen maki application for th&#13;
•&#13;
'Sanguine' grant a&#13;
A $36 federal grant lo e •&#13;
tend a tudy being condu ted b a&#13;
team or re arch at Par , id&#13;
of the nvironm ntal err or&#13;
the propo ed proj t nguin&#13;
was accepted here rec nUy by&#13;
the \\ y tern Board of&#13;
Regen&#13;
The Par id t am, o i. tin&#13;
of a biologi t, chemi t and&#13;
phy ici t, i ing to d t rmin&#13;
whether exposure to an I c- tromagn tic field, uch a that&#13;
generated b anguine will&#13;
produce chang in cell growth&#13;
and developm nt of an organi m&#13;
called Phy rum Polyc phalum,&#13;
a lime mold found on decaying&#13;
\egetation.&#13;
Theorgani mi common in the&#13;
fore led northern V i on in ar&#13;
v. here th , a y ha proposed&#13;
building anguin . a controver&#13;
ial underground radio&#13;
antenna y tern aimed at&#13;
e tabli hing a world-wide&#13;
communication y tern , particularly&#13;
useful for contactin&#13;
ubmarine .&#13;
Eugene . t. Goodman, principal&#13;
mvestigator for the proj t nd&#13;
a i tant prof or of life I nc&#13;
at W-P. said the additional&#13;
grant from the Office or aval&#13;
Research will enable the team to&#13;
acquire additional anguine&#13;
TERM-PAPERS IUTTF: BY rtto&#13;
Rff. OE. RIPTl\l, , \ \I. :l F.&#13;
\LL . l.l.F .T - :!IS - H3, ll.!&#13;
OR \\'RITf II I&#13;
I',.&#13;
. .................... .&#13;
DELIC&#13;
L 4!UOB&#13;
32nd Ave. and 52nd St.&#13;
Tenuta's COUPON&#13;
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COLD DUCK $1 ~&#13;
,!&#13;
Without c oupon&#13;
Coupon $1. 79&#13;
(Limit 1) &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 13, 1972&#13;
The Raven&#13;
The magic experience produced by captain Beefhart and The Magic&#13;
Band is not sophisticated, althoogh it is largely enhancing and ef·&#13;
fective. These are not spells cast by an elaborate futuristic wizard&#13;
with criteria that is 2,000light years from home. captain Beefhart who&#13;
is identified as secretly being Don Van Vliet in disguise (a1tbough he is&#13;
probably more likely Howling Wolfs brother) is a rather old-time&#13;
sorcerer from deep in the asphalt·foondation American jungles. His&#13;
voice comes orr with insanity. sometimes singing and sometimes&#13;
appearing to he just reciting chants from his evil dialogue. The Big&#13;
Beefs voice is not frivolous, resigned or apathetic insanity; but is&#13;
aggressive growling insanity. Aggressive insanity that is let me say (if&#13;
I may he allowed to use my fantastic powers as critic to plug my&#13;
taves) comparable to greats like Mick Jagger, Jim Morrison and Alice&#13;
Cooper. The music is funky rock and sometimessooJIuI or bluesy, I'm not too&#13;
familiar with Captain Beefharl's previous creations, but he was&#13;
another Frank zappa discovery. I guess I could say that CLEAR SPOT&#13;
is not as W"Iconformed as his usual music or say in the words of another&#13;
reviewer that he is "merely trying to become more accessible to the&#13;
public."&#13;
By the way&#13;
By the time you get to the track "Clear Spot," you are into the more&#13;
sensational material on the disc. Tremolo guitar notes help to vividly&#13;
portray the captain who is now in the bayou swamps "trying to lind a&#13;
clear spot." Later on some background voices appear like apparitions&#13;
and also along comes a drunken girl with "Long Neck Bottles."&#13;
The climax comes with "Big Eyed Beans From Venus." The band&#13;
and the stormy voice together assemble into a ghastly essence which&#13;
is now encompassing you. By this time you should he amazed at this&#13;
Voo-Doo power, especially if you are really zonked. Captain Beefhart&#13;
now unwinds your mind with "GQlden Birdies" until he reaches the&#13;
center which is a "webcore." All I can say is that a tbought was lorming&#13;
in my mind, but the brain cells that were joining together to&#13;
create it were blasted apart by a larger dominating thought. I now&#13;
proceed to lile CLEAR SPOT in my collection of lunky-sool, acidrock&#13;
and blues records.&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
Mid-term graduation will be&#13;
held ol\JanUjlry 7. Hm, at) p"m.&#13;
in he physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
There are 115 candidates for&#13;
graduation this semester. According&#13;
to Rita Petretti, coordinator&#13;
of publications, this&#13;
will be a cap and gown&#13;
graduation and caps and gowns&#13;
can be ordered at the bookstore.&#13;
All candidates will receive&#13;
details on graduation activities.&#13;
The Student Union CommiUee&#13;
of Student Government will be&#13;
sponsoring a winter carnival&#13;
during the last week of February,&#13;
next semester. So far the&#13;
Swimming Club, Rugby Club,&#13;
Vets Club, and Sigma Pi and&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda Iraternities&#13;
have shown interest in&#13;
organizing. judging and supervising&#13;
one related event each. A&#13;
meeting will be held on Thur4&#13;
sday, Dec. 14,Irom 3-4 p.m. in D174&#13;
for all students and&#13;
organiz.ations interested in a&#13;
winter carnival. Presently the&#13;
committee consists of Jim Rea,&#13;
chairman, Tom Bergo, Gerard&#13;
Wielgat, Tom Jennett and John&#13;
Sacket.&#13;
There wil1 be group and in1701&#13;
. Main&#13;
dividual events, among those&#13;
•being ~o~sidered ar!' i'1l.ugly man&#13;
contest, beard -growing, -kissing.&#13;
broom ball tourney and swimming&#13;
frolics. The winter carnival&#13;
would he topped oIl by a dance at&#13;
which the awards will be given to&#13;
the winners. Student Government&#13;
will provide trophies and sponsor&#13;
the dance to help defray the&#13;
costs. Anyone interested who&#13;
cannot attend the meeting should&#13;
contact Jim Rea in the PSGA&#13;
Office (0-193).&#13;
A course called "Changing&#13;
Your Child's Behavior" will start&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 17, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
and Thursday, Jan. 18, at 1 p.m.&#13;
It will he held at Greenquist Hall&#13;
once a week for 10 weeks.&#13;
According to Caroline Cole&#13;
instructor of the course, this is fo;&#13;
parents of children ages 9-15who&#13;
are concerned about their child's&#13;
behavior. Some behavior&#13;
problems would include&#13;
daydreaming, temper tantrums,&#13;
skipping school, shyness, not&#13;
doing homework and not minding&#13;
parents. Mrs. Cole remarked that&#13;
one of the biggest problems is&#13;
children not doing their&#13;
homework.&#13;
The class will teach the parent&#13;
Racine 633-9421&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
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Thursday 11- 8&#13;
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CLASSIFIED&#13;
FOR RENT; Madison eeertment. excellent&#13;
campus location, newly furnIshed, 2.&#13;
bedrooms for 2 or 3 women. 608-256-.5992. Christmas ...&#13;
And because tradition has it a time of warmth&#13;
And joy .&#13;
I try and leel that my own expenence now&#13;
Finds it glortous as the Chamber of Commerce&#13;
Yet Christmas Eve Istill get a chill&#13;
Around inner warmth&#13;
When I hear a carol&#13;
Or see a lighted tree.&#13;
And new-fallen snow at night excites me.&#13;
ORIENTAL GIFTS&#13;
R &amp; A Enterprises&#13;
P.O. Box 26.01,Kenosha&#13;
Call Robbie652-3445&#13;
Christmas Eve during World War I&#13;
Troops in the trenches allies and enemies&#13;
Men lay down weapons,&#13;
Come together singing Silent Night&#13;
In German and English, Silent Night.&#13;
Is this a story heard at Grandpa'S knee&#13;
Or did I merely dream it? He must have told me ... did he dream it?&#13;
FREE Kittens. Female, utter.tretneo. B&#13;
weeks old. 553·2180 days, 634_6215nights.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Waitress &amp; Barmaids. Top wages. Full Of&#13;
part time. PUssycat Lounge, neetne. 632..&#13;
3785.&#13;
It matters not. Christmases past coalesce&#13;
In vague impressions&#13;
To serve the present.&#13;
Are we still creating memories&#13;
Or even dreams&#13;
To serve the future?&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Student from 2-5 p.rn., Mon.-Fri. Access to&#13;
car. Prefer Kenosha student. General office&#13;
work and delivering complaints. Hourly&#13;
wage and mileage. Milwaukee Journal, 5715.&#13;
8th Ave. Apply In person.&#13;
I worry about plastic trees&#13;
With canned pine scent&#13;
And cookies "like homemade"&#13;
In a box&#13;
And sales that start hefore Thanksgiving&#13;
Artificial snow&#13;
Santa Claus on every block&#13;
And Jesus locked in church.&#13;
All to save you precious time&#13;
In the hectic hoLiday rush.&#13;
I ne~ a ride ~o enc.o- from North&#13;
carcnne or etorroe. Will share expenses&#13;
and driving. Call 634·4665.&#13;
YOUNG DRIVW W1WIMf&#13;
INSURANCE fOR&#13;
AUTOS - CYCLES - SCOOT£RS&#13;
And save you from those moments of joy&#13;
That yesterday were Christmas.&#13;
It's not too late&#13;
Enough 01 us rememher that chill&#13;
Around inner warmth&#13;
When we hear a carol&#13;
Or see a lighted tree.&#13;
And new-fallen snow at night ... - J. Schliesman&#13;
All forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Service&#13;
With The Better Co's&#13;
Fire - life - Hospital 4 8011s&#13;
Package Polki,,,.&#13;
~DIAL If 652-3600] ,.JI'~,,,, ,..···111"'-·1&#13;
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modification and how to apply&#13;
them.&#13;
There will he a $15 fee, but il&#13;
there js...a~ancial problem, it&#13;
can be waived in part or full.&#13;
Anyone interested in this&#13;
program, sign.up by Jan. 5 at,&#13;
Tallent Han, 553-2312.II there are&#13;
any questions, contact Mrs. Cole,&#13;
634-2976.&#13;
J. R. MULlCH&#13;
CARL H. JENSEN&#13;
M1.....oiiiiTiTnT=rr·(!i!OJ r. .'&gt;1 •.&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
We are looking for a student to sell our&#13;
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8 track tapes. We are respected&#13;
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Pop, Oldies, Country &amp; Western,&#13;
popular, etc. 11 you are interested ceu&#13;
Melody Recordings, Inc. (201) 575·9430&#13;
and ask tor Mr. Jonas or Mr. Reid.&#13;
Phone 658.2573 58th sr. ot 6th Ave.&#13;
--------&#13;
MAIN OFFICE, CAPITOl COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
:; , .' .01\',&#13;
'r.-'; • 1\..... ' ..... : i!: ~ ... • ~; .&#13;
.\; •• J' .;..' , JJ ."';;\ "~w~ "'~'~" ". ~ • ~ " 'l-=';' :,' Vi' '&lt;: ~ \ .,' ~ •...:;:.'&#13;
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Incense Jewelry&#13;
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-Phone 654-5032&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 13, 1972&#13;
The Raven&#13;
1 2115&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
Th m gic xperience produced by Captain Beefbart and The Magic&#13;
Band i not sophi ticated, although it is largely enhancing and eff&#13;
uv . Th ar not pells cast by an elaborate futuristic wizard&#13;
with cnteria th ti 2,000 light years from home. Captain Beefhart who&#13;
i 1dentif1ed r tly being Don Van Vliet in disguise (although he is&#13;
pro bly more likely Howling Wolf's brother) is a rather old-time&#13;
r r r from d p in the phalt-fouodation American jungles. His&#13;
vo1 com off with insanity, sometimes singing and sometimes&#13;
p ring to be ju t reciting chants from his evil dialogue. The Big&#13;
&amp;- r voi i not frivolous, re igned or apathetic insanity; but is&#13;
r ive growling in nity. Aggre ive insanity that is let me say (if&#13;
I m y be llowed to use my fantastic powers as critic to plug my&#13;
r v ) comparabl to greats like Mick Jagger, Jim Morrison and Alice&#13;
oo r. Th mu ic i funky rock and sometimes soulful or bluesy. I'm not too&#13;
f mili r with ptain Beefhart' previous creations, but he was&#13;
other Frank Zappa discov ry. I gu I could say that CLEAR SPOT&#13;
i not wiconformed a hi usual music or say in the words of another&#13;
r vi w r that h i " merely trying to become more accessible to the&#13;
pubh ."&#13;
By th way&#13;
By the tim you g t to th track "Clear Spot," you are into the more&#13;
, tional m terial on the disc. Tremolo guitar notes help to vividly&#13;
portr y the C ptain who is now in the bayou swamps "trying to find a&#13;
cl r pot." Lat r on some backgrowid voices appear like apparitions&#13;
nd lso Jong com a drunken girl with "Long Neck Bottles."&#13;
Th clima come with "Big Eyed Beans From Venus." The band&#13;
and the tormy voice together a emble into a ghastly essence which&#13;
i now n ompa ing you. By thi time you should be amazed at this&#13;
Voc);Doo pow r, e pecially if you are really 1.onked. Captain Beefhart&#13;
now unwinds your mind with "Golden Birdies" until he reaches the&#13;
c nter which i a "webcore " All I can say is that a thought was forming&#13;
in my mind, but the brain cells that were joining together to&#13;
er ate it were blasted apart by a larger dominating thought. I now&#13;
proceed to file CLEAR SPOT in my collection of funky-soul, acidrock&#13;
and blu records.&#13;
Poetry Place&#13;
Christmas ... And because tradition bas it a time of warmth&#13;
And joy . I try and feel that my own expenence now&#13;
Finds it glorious as the Chamber of Commerce&#13;
Yet Christmas Eve I still get a chill&#13;
Around inner warmth&#13;
When I hear a carol&#13;
Or see a lighted tree.&#13;
And new-fallen snow at night excites me.&#13;
Christmas Eve during World War I&#13;
Troops in the trenches allies and enemies&#13;
Men lay down weapons,&#13;
Come together singing Silent Night&#13;
In German and English, Silent Night.&#13;
Is this a story heard at Grandpa's knee&#13;
Or did I merely dream it?&#13;
He must have told me ... did be dream it?&#13;
It matters not. Christmases past coalesce&#13;
In vague impressions&#13;
To serve the present.&#13;
Are we still creating memories&#13;
Or even dreams&#13;
To serve the future?&#13;
I worry about plastic trees&#13;
With canned pine scent&#13;
And cookies "like homemade"&#13;
In a box&#13;
And sales that start before Thanksgiving&#13;
Artificial snow&#13;
Santa Claus on every block&#13;
And Jesus locked in church.&#13;
All to save you precious time&#13;
In the bectic holiday rush.&#13;
And save you from those moments of joy&#13;
That yesterday were Christmas.&#13;
It's not too late&#13;
Enough of us remember that chill&#13;
Arowid inner warmth&#13;
When we bear a carol&#13;
Or see a lighted tree.&#13;
And new-fallen snow at night.. .&#13;
- J. Schliesman&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
FOR RENT : Madison apartment, excellent&#13;
campus location, newly furnished , 2 bedrooms for 2 or 3 women. 608-256-5'192.&#13;
ORIENTAL GIFTS&#13;
R &amp; A Enterprises&#13;
P.O. Box 264, Kenosha&#13;
Call Robbie 652-3445&#13;
FREE Kittens. Female, litter-trained. 1 weeks old. 553-2180 days, 634-6215 nights.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Waitress &amp; Barmaids. Top wages, Full or&#13;
part time. Pussycat Lounge, Racine, 632&#13;
3785.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Student from 2-5 p.m ., Mon.-Frl . Access to&#13;
car. Prefer Kenosha student. General office&#13;
work and delivering complaints. Hourly&#13;
wage and mileage. M ilwaukee Journal, 5715&#13;
8th Ave. Apply in person.&#13;
I need a ride !o and-or from North&#13;
Carolina or Florida. Will share eKPenses&#13;
and driving. Call 634-4665.&#13;
YOUNG DRIVERS W8.COME&#13;
INSURANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS • CYCLES • SCOOTERS&#13;
All Forms Of lnsuronct&#13;
Profession,I Service&#13;
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Fire • Life • Hospital • Boats&#13;
P1dc1ge Polici•c&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING ~DIAL ~&#13;
652-3600] =h~&#13;
1id-term graduation will be&#13;
held Of'I Janwiry 7, 1973, at 2 p, m.&#13;
in he Phy ical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
Th r are 115 candidates for&#13;
graduation this semester. According&#13;
to Rita Petretti, coordinator&#13;
of publications, this&#13;
will be a cap and gown&#13;
graduation and cap and gowns&#13;
can ordered at the bookstore.&#13;
II candidates will receive&#13;
detail on graduation activities.&#13;
Th tudent nion Committee&#13;
or tudent Government will be&#13;
ponsoring a winter carnival&#13;
during the la t week of February,&#13;
n t me ter. o far the&#13;
wimming Club, Rugby Club,&#13;
\ ' tub, and igma Pi and&#13;
Alpha Kappa L mbda fraterniti&#13;
have hown intere t in&#13;
organizing, judging and upervi&#13;
ing on related event each. A&#13;
m ting will be held on Thur-&#13;
. day, D c. I , Crom 3-4 p.m. in DIH&#13;
for a II tudent and&#13;
organizations inter ted in a&#13;
~mt r carnival. Pre ·ently the&#13;
comm1tt con i of Jim Rea,&#13;
ch irman. Tom Bergo, Gerard&#13;
Wi I at. Tom Jennett and John&#13;
ket.&#13;
Th re will be group and individual&#13;
events, among those&#13;
. being considered are ap_ ugly man&#13;
conte t, beard growing, -kissing,&#13;
broomball tourney and swimming&#13;
frolics. The winter carnival&#13;
would be topped off by a dance at&#13;
which the awards will be given to&#13;
the winners. Student Government&#13;
will provide trophies and sponsor&#13;
the dance to help defray the&#13;
costs. Anyone interested who&#13;
cannot attend the meeting should&#13;
contact Jim Rea in the PSGA&#13;
Office CD-193).&#13;
A course called "Changing&#13;
Your Child's Behavior" will start&#13;
Wedne clay, Jan. 17, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
and Thursday, Jan. 18, at 1 p.m.&#13;
It will be held at Greenquist Hall&#13;
once a week for 10 weeks.&#13;
ccording to Caroline Cole,&#13;
instructor of the course, this is for&#13;
parents of children ages 9-15 who&#13;
are concerned about their child's&#13;
behavior. ome behavior&#13;
problem would include&#13;
daydreaming, temper tantrums,&#13;
kipping chool, shyness, not&#13;
doing homework and not minding&#13;
parents. frs. Cole remarked that&#13;
one of the biggest problems is&#13;
children not doing their&#13;
homework.&#13;
The cla s will teach the parent&#13;
1701 ain Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thur day 11- 8&#13;
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Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
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to pinpoint the problem, learn&#13;
principles on behavior&#13;
modification and how to apply&#13;
them.&#13;
There will be a $15 fee, but if&#13;
there js a financial problem, it&#13;
can be waived in part or full.&#13;
Anyone interested in this&#13;
program, sign up by Jan. 5 at,&#13;
Tallent Hall, 553-2312. If there are&#13;
any questions, contaet Mrs. Cole,&#13;
634-2976.&#13;
We are looking for a student to sell our&#13;
B track tapes. We are respected&#13;
throughout the country as produc ing a&#13;
premium product. Have your own&#13;
thriving business. We carry over 700&#13;
selections of all types of music. Soul,&#13;
Pop, Oldi es , Country &amp; Western.&#13;
Popular. etc. If you are interested call&#13;
Melody Recordings, Inc. (201) 575-9430&#13;
and ask for Mr. Jonas or Mr. Reid.&#13;
J. R. MULICH&#13;
CARL H. JENSEN&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
Pipes&#13;
=-·R-oaG-h CI i ps&#13;
Candles Oil Lamps&#13;
Incense Jewelry&#13;
-Ph-one 654-5032 Black lights Papers&#13;
Posters Tapestry&#13;
and f-.i.ore &#13;
New course offerings&#13;
t&#13;
hat the spring semester timetables are finally&#13;
Now dts trvi nd many stu en are rymg to decide what to&#13;
_~a 1 ·th·t· h . 11 out our schedu es WI , I mig t be interesting to&#13;
II fly survey some of the new courses being offered&#13;
bneWhilespace prohibit .&#13;
lIS coverage of all of them or&#13;
. g intogreat detail on any of them, the Ranger has&#13;
~~:;mptedto highlight .sor:ne.of the more unusual ones&#13;
those which the disciplines are pushing at this&#13;
or e! Many of the courses will be of interest to nonurn&#13;
. . fi Id majors in the varIOUS ie s; others are more&#13;
technical.In all cases, you .are urged to check with&#13;
thefaculty member conducting the course if you want&#13;
further info.&#13;
Oceanography E . Th ' nVlronmental Geology e course offerings in E rth S .&#13;
semester inclUde "0 a cience second ceanography" ES 340 be taught by Gerald Fl" , to&#13;
science. This will ~:a~r, .~S~late professor of earth&#13;
origin of OCean b . w~ e f~rmt structure and&#13;
bl I . asins ; chemical physical and&#13;
10 ogicaj processes in th ' . .&#13;
re e oceans; mineral and f&lt;XXI&#13;
M~~r~;~io~~~~h~.~~uence of man.No prerequisite.&#13;
.A new Earth Science course is ES 330 HEn_&#13;
vlronmental Geology," which applies basic g;"'IOgiC&#13;
concepts to ~nvironmental problems. The emphasis&#13;
IS on geologic hazards, waste disposal, urban planContemporary&#13;
Ideas Modules ~ngd resource policy issues and environmental&#13;
Thenewthing in Life Science is the "Contemporary L:~ ~ a~ .rrogra.ms. This course is conducted by&#13;
Ideas Modules." These will emphasize the social.: MWF u10er30-S11&#13;
1&#13;
assistant professor of earth science. ,&#13;
f&#13;
Iif . P . . . 120 a m implications ole. SCIence. rtr:narlly. for non- . .&#13;
majors,each module IS concerned W.I~ a smgle topic.&#13;
The topics are: Human Reproduction, Population&#13;
control, Biological Recycling of Resources, Human&#13;
Heredityand Birth Defects, Population Growth and&#13;
Interactions and Water Pollution. Each module is&#13;
five weeks in duration and earns the student one&#13;
credit.They'will involve students in a broad range of&#13;
activities: listening to and-or viewing audio or video&#13;
tapes, films or slides, laboratory or field work,&#13;
reading articles, one-to-one conferences with the&#13;
instructor, seminars and participation in community&#13;
activities. Check timetable for dates and times of&#13;
eachmodule.&#13;
OtherLife Science offerings include "Physiology of&#13;
Environmental Stress," LS 315, which explains how&#13;
different stresses of the environment such as hot,&#13;
cold, low and high pressure, radiation and social&#13;
pressure can influence the normal functioning of the&#13;
body.Nolab or term paper, but check the timetable&#13;
for prereqs, Course' is taught by R. W. Moore, Chemistry inArt&#13;
asststar.t professor of life science. 'ITh 4-5:15 p.m. Art 490 will be jointly taught by John Murphy,&#13;
A course designed for Public Health workers, assistant professor of art, and Michael Marron,&#13;
peoplenow employed in hospitals, and students in assistant professor of chemistry. Entitled" Aesthetic&#13;
LifeScience is "Epidemiology," LS 365. The course Properties of Material," the course is also crosscoversprocedures&#13;
used in dealing with epidemics of listed under Chemistry. It will deal with the&#13;
disease. Omar Amin, assistant professor of life aesthetics and properties of glass, ceramic and&#13;
science, will be considering population patterns and glazes, metal, fabrication and aUoys, plastics,&#13;
circumstantial evidence as well as clinical findings in . buterates and epoxies. The material will be explored&#13;
his course. MW 7:45-9 p.m. . from actual experience in working with it, in con·&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewicz, associate professor of life junction with determining the chemical properties&#13;
science, will be teaching a course on "Plant (to know why one substance reacts one way and one&#13;
AIJptomy,"LS 323. Its purpose is to il&gt;cquaintstudents another). Th 9 a.m. to 12:50 p.m.&#13;
withthe structure and anatomy' of' a plant, utilizing . . ,&#13;
lightmic;:roscopeand scanning techniques. There is' Music, Math for Elementary Teachers&#13;
no other course which goes into such detail in In Music 490,Special Topics, section 2 is "Piano for&#13;
providing a knowledge of cells, tissues and organs the Elementary Classroom Teacher," taught by&#13;
and how they were derived. Lc MW 4:30-5:20 p.m.; Frances Bedford, assistant professor of music. '0&#13;
LaMW5:30-7:20 p.m. previous piano ~xperience ~s necessa.ry. Th~ emphasis&#13;
ison learmng to play Simple musIc effectively.&#13;
Students planning to take it should bave taken&#13;
"Fundamentals of Music" or its equivalent or be&#13;
concurrently enrolled in it. MW 10:30-11:20a.m.&#13;
Math 216 is for second-semester elementary&#13;
teachers. It is a continuation of 215 and covers approaches&#13;
to algebra and geometry as they are taught&#13;
at the elementary level. Samuel Fillipone, assistant&#13;
professor of mathematics, is the instructor. TTh 1-&#13;
2:15 p.m.&#13;
Histcrtes of Chemistry, Medicine&#13;
In ~heml,~tr~ the new Course is 410, "History of&#13;
Chemistry. It s a three-credit course in which the&#13;
developmentof concepts will be emphasized, rather&#13;
than memorl.zabon of specific dates. The development&#13;
~f atomic theories will be traced and the role of&#13;
~hemlstry in society explored. At least one field trip&#13;
~s ~l~nned. and there will be great opportunity for&#13;
individual investigation of a topic. Norbert Isenberg,&#13;
professor of chemistry, is conducting the course.&#13;
MWF 12:30-1:20 p.m.&#13;
"Medicine in Society Since Antiquity" is the course&#13;
name for History 303, taught by Frank Egerton,&#13;
assistant professor of history. His course will deal&#13;
~ith medicine from ancient times to the present,&#13;
including scientific developments as well as the&#13;
social interaction between the medical profession and&#13;
the needs of society. MWF 1:30-2:20 p.m.&#13;
Radioactivity&#13;
Physics, Chemistry and Life Science are jointly&#13;
sponsoring a course called "Isotope Tracer&#13;
Techniques" (course No. 370in each disciplin~). It'~a&#13;
lab course dealing with the handling of radIoactIve&#13;
materials and basic safety techniques. Eugene&#13;
Goodman,associate professor of life science, ~nd Ben&#13;
Greenebaum, associate professor of phySICS, are&#13;
teaching it. LcTTh 12:30-1:20 p.m.; La'ITh 1:30-5:20&#13;
p.m. Foreign Films ) h&#13;
Two new courses in Physics are upper level ThegoalofHumamlies490lstoteachpeope .owto&#13;
courses: Physics 309, "Intermediate Lab," is for view and judge f~lms.o~ th~lr own terms, With an&#13;
students who have had Physics 205. A.wide range of awareness of their distmcttve .element~ as an a~~&#13;
classical and quantum physics will be covered by' form. The course is "Introduction to Film Art ~I,&#13;
Morris Firebaugh associate professor of physics. and focuses its attention .onG~rman, French,. Itahan,&#13;
WF3:30-S'20p m Physics 442 "Nuclear Physics," is Japanese and other foreign cm~mas. ~reenmgs are&#13;
ajunior-s~nior'le~el course. T~ught by Greeneba~m, Tuesday nights from 73().-1O.DISCUSSIOns are Thurthe&#13;
Course will include structural nuclear phySICS,&#13;
elementary radioactivity and elementary particles.&#13;
11'h 8:30-9:45 p.m.&#13;
(continued on page 6)&#13;
CHAMPIONTERMPAPERS&#13;
636Beacon Sl. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
617-536-9700&#13;
:esearCh material lor Termpapers,&#13;
Qeports, Theses, efc. LOWEST PR ICES.&#13;
I&#13;
UICK SERVICE, For information,&#13;
P ease write or cal!&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
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quai~age,mailordercatalogof 2,300&#13;
$1 I Y research papers. Enclose&#13;
.00to Coverpostageand handling.-&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
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(213) 477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"Weneeda localsalesman"&#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;
Ni2ht&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
424 Lake Ave., Racine 637-8467&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Life Science experiments&#13;
with modules&#13;
By Mar; Iyn Schubert&#13;
Life Science is experimenting&#13;
with a new idea for next semester&#13;
(also see Ranger article 00 new&#13;
courses). Six five-week modules&#13;
will be o[[ered covering topics&#13;
such as human reproduction,&#13;
population control, biological&#13;
recycling of resources, human&#13;
heredity and birth defects,&#13;
population growth and interactions,&#13;
and water pollution.&#13;
The purpose o[ the modules is&#13;
threefold. First of aU, students&#13;
can choose to study what they are&#13;
really interested in while&#13;
avoiding being sidetracked by&#13;
things they already know or&#13;
which do not really concern&#13;
them. Secondly, since specific&#13;
topics are being dealt with,&#13;
teachers can relate the social&#13;
implications of a topic -&#13;
something which is not often&#13;
possible in a conventionaJ course.&#13;
LasUy, the size and struclure of&#13;
the modules make it possible to&#13;
try different teaching techniques&#13;
which are not. feasible in a large&#13;
semester course.&#13;
Another interesting feature of •&#13;
the modul is the ca With&#13;
which they ."apl to th individual&#13;
stu&lt;lenL Realizing that&#13;
studenlS come into a course WI!,h&#13;
a variety o[ e"ucatlonal&#13;
backgrounds, each module Is&#13;
structured so thaI the student can&#13;
do extra research into an area h&#13;
does not know much about or Is&#13;
specifically interesled In. This Is&#13;
accomplished through a large&#13;
bank of film strips, diagrams aod&#13;
tapes located In the Learning&#13;
Center wb.ichare r led beside the&#13;
relevant topic of class discu ion.&#13;
Altllough each modul deals&#13;
with a specific topic, all six are&#13;
somewhat relaled They are set&#13;
up so that a student can tase as&#13;
many as his interest and his&#13;
schedule permit.&#13;
Human Reproduction is being&#13;
offered here, as at many other&#13;
institutions o[ higher learning,&#13;
because of tbe ruliultion tha t&#13;
students. even those who are&#13;
[ccatanued on page 6)&#13;
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e: Glass . ~ gJ&#13;
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= ~ .... Geno Rome ~=&#13;
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RACINE&#13;
rEAOHER:&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Allenue&#13;
Racille&#13;
PHONE: 634-666&#13;
PARKS IDE CAMPUS QFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553·2150&#13;
-&#13;
MON. &amp; TUES. EVENING, S:OO-':OO&#13;
( 0 man .. i'OW much dour p..... chick&lt;n, po&lt;atne&lt;&#13;
,ndy,lad you ear, rhe pne&lt; IS only $1.7 5)&#13;
Chi!"ren under J Free -C~ildren 3·9.10 Cents a Year&#13;
sB'·mrJm,w.ali AA Ye PUBlic house&#13;
Lathrop and 21s1 (Almoll)&#13;
New course offerings&#13;
NoW that the spring semester t_imetables are finally&#13;
and many students are trymg to decide what to&#13;
here d l "th ·t · h · fill out our sche u es w1 ' 1 m1g t be m!eresting to&#13;
. fly survey some of the new courses bemg offered&#13;
bne h"b"t . While space pro 1 1 s coverage of all of them or&#13;
. g into great detail on any of them, the Ranger has&#13;
~~:~mpted to highlight _soi:ne. of the more unusual ones&#13;
those which the d1sc1plmes are pushing at this&#13;
~~e! Many of the c~urses ~ill be of interest to nonrnajors&#13;
in the various fields; others are more&#13;
teebnical. In all cases, you _are urged to check with&#13;
the faculty member conducting the course if you want&#13;
further info.&#13;
Oceanograph E . Th y, nv1ronmental Geology e course offerings i E th&#13;
semester include "O n ar Science second . taught b G ceanography," ES 340 to be&#13;
science. YThf:~tF~~t· .:sociate professor ~f earth&#13;
origin of ocean be . wi the f~rm. structure and&#13;
b. 1 . aSms; chemical physical d io og1cal processes in the oce . , . an resources· and th . fl ans, mineral and food&#13;
MWF 12 : 30-1: 20 em uence of man. No prerequisite. p.m. A new Earth s · . . c1ence course is ES 330 "Environmental&#13;
Geology," which applies basic ~lo ·c&#13;
~oncepts to ~nvironmental problems. The e~pha~is&#13;
I~ on geologic hazards, waste disposal urban planContemporary&#13;
Ideas Modules nmg, resource policy issues and ~vironmental . . L"f Sc" . . h trends and programs This . d The new thmg m 1 e 1ence 1s t e "Contemporary Lon R di T . · course 1s con ucted by&#13;
Ideas Modules." :r11ese. will emp~asi~e the social .. MWF ~~:3~1i2~s:1!itant professor of earth science.&#13;
irnplications of hfe. science. Pru~nanly for non- · ·&#13;
majors, each module 1s concerned w1~ a single topic.&#13;
The topics are: Human Reproduction, Population&#13;
Control, Biological Recycling of Resources, Human&#13;
Heredity and Birth Defects, Population Growth and&#13;
Interactions and Water Pollution. Each module is&#13;
five weeks in duration and earns the student one&#13;
credit. They will involve students in a broad range of&#13;
activities: listening to and-or viewing audio or video&#13;
tapes, films or slides, laboratory or field work,&#13;
reading articles, one-to-one conferences with the&#13;
instructor, seminars and participation in community&#13;
activities. Check timetable for dates and times of&#13;
each module.&#13;
~istories of Chemistry, Medicine&#13;
In ~hem1stry the new course is 410 "History of&#13;
Chemistry." It's a three-credit course' in which the&#13;
development_of ~oncepts will be emphasized, rather&#13;
than memon_zabon ~f specific dates. The development&#13;
~f at~m1c theories will be traced and the role of&#13;
~hem1stry m society explored. At least one field trip&#13;
~s ~l~nned_ and ~her~ will be great opportunity for&#13;
md1v1dual investigation of a topic. Norbert Isenberg,&#13;
professor of chemistry, is conducting the course. MWF 12:30-1:20 p.m.&#13;
"Medicine in Society Since Antiquity" is the course&#13;
na~e for History 303, taught by Frank Egerton,&#13;
assistant professor of history. His course will deal&#13;
with medicine from ancient times to the present&#13;
including scientific developments as well as ~&#13;
social interaction between the medical profession and&#13;
the needs of society. MWF 1:30-2:20 p.m.&#13;
Other Life Science offerings include "Physiology of&#13;
Environmental Stress," LS 315, which explains how&#13;
different stresses of the environment such as hot,&#13;
cold, low and high pressure, radiation and social&#13;
pressure can influence the normal functioning of the&#13;
body. No lab or term paper, but check the timetable&#13;
for prereqs. €ourse is taught by R. W. Moore, Chemistry in Art&#13;
assistar.t professor of life science. Tih 4-5:15 p.m. Art 490 will be jointly taught by John Murphy,&#13;
A course designed for Public Health workers, assistant professor of art, and Michael • farron ,&#13;
people now employed in hospitals, and students in assistant professor of chemistry. Entitled "Aesthetic&#13;
Life Science is "Epidemiology," LS 365. The course Properties of Material," the course is also crosscovers&#13;
procedures used in dealing with epidemics of listed under Chemistry. It will deal with the&#13;
disease. Omar Amin, assistant professor of life aesthetics and properties of glass, ceramic and&#13;
science, will be considering population patterns and glazes, metal, fabrication and alloys, plastics,&#13;
circumstantial evidence as well as clinical findings in. buterates and epoxies. The material will be explored&#13;
his course. MW 7:45-9 p.m. . from actual experience in working with it, in conEugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, associate professor of life junction with determining the chemical properties&#13;
science, will be teaching a course on "Plant (to know why one substance reacts one way and one&#13;
AI111tomy," LS 3_23. Its purpose is to ,1icquaint students another). Th 9 a.m. to 12:50 p.m.&#13;
with the structure and anatomy of a plant, utilizing&#13;
light microscope and scanning techniques. There is&#13;
no other course which goes into such detail in&#13;
providing a knowledge of cells, tissues and organs&#13;
and how they were derived. Le MW 4:30-5:20 p.m.;&#13;
LaMW 5:30-7:20 p.m.&#13;
Music, Math for Elementary Teacher&#13;
In Music 490, Special Topics, section 2 is "Piano for&#13;
the Elementary Classroom Teacher," taught by&#13;
Frances Bedford, assistant professor of music. , ·o&#13;
previous piano experience is necessary. The emphasis&#13;
is on learning to play simple music effectively.&#13;
Students planning to take it should have taken&#13;
Radioactivity "Fundamentals of Music" or its equivalent or be&#13;
Physics, Chemistry and Life Science are jointly concurrently enrolled in it. tW 10:30-11 :20 a.m.&#13;
sponsoring a course called "Isotope Tracer Math 216 is for second-semester elementary&#13;
Techniques" (course No. 370 in each disciplin~) . It'~ a teachers. It is a continuation of 215 and covers aplab&#13;
course dealing with the handling of rad1oact1ve proaches to algebra and geometry as the. are taught&#13;
materials and basic safety techniques. Eugene at the elementary level. Samuel Fillipone. a i tant&#13;
Goodman, associate professor of life science, ~nd Ben professor of mathematics, is the instructor. TTh 1-&#13;
Greenebaum, associate professor of physics, are 2:15 p.m.&#13;
teaching it. LcTTh 12:30-1:20 p.m.; LaTih 1:30-5:20&#13;
p.m. Foreign Film&#13;
Two new courses in Physics are upper level The goal of Humanities 490 i~ to teach people how to&#13;
courses: Physics 309, "Intermediate Lab," is for view and judge f~ms_ o~ th:1r own terms, ~,th an&#13;
students who have had Physics 205. A wide range of awareness of their distmctive element_ as an art&#13;
classical and quantum physics will be covered by form. The course is "Introduction to Film Art ~I."&#13;
Morris Firebaugh associate professor of physics. and focuses its attention on German, French._ Italian,&#13;
WF 3:30-5 :20 p.m. Physics 442, "Nuclear Physics," is Japan_ese ~nd other foreign cinemas. . reenmgs are&#13;
a junior-senior level course. Taught by Greeneba~m, Tuesday nights from 730-10 Discus ions are Thurthe&#13;
course will include structural nuclear physics,&#13;
elementary radioactivity and elementary particles.&#13;
TTh 8:30-9:45 p.m.&#13;
(continued on pag e 6)&#13;
CHAMPION TERMP APERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
R 617-536-9700 Research material tor Termpapers,&#13;
Q eperts, Theses, etc . LOWEST PR ICES.&#13;
UICK SERVIC E . For information,&#13;
Please write or call.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics ~28d for your_ descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
quai~age, mall order catalog of 2,300&#13;
$I I Y research papers. Enclose .OQ to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
Slg GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(2l3) 477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
-. "We need a local salesman"&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
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7P.M. TIL?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
R . 637-8467 Dancers 'Vanted Ave.' acine&#13;
Wed ., Dec. 13, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGERS&#13;
Life Science exp&#13;
with module&#13;
By Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Life etence i experim nli&#13;
with a new idea for n t m ter&#13;
(also see Ranger article on n&#13;
courses&gt;. 1 f1ve-w modul&#13;
will be offered covering topi&#13;
such a hwnan reproduction,&#13;
population control, biological&#13;
recycling of resourc , human&#13;
heredity and birth defect ,&#13;
population growth and interactions,&#13;
and water pollution.&#13;
The purpose of the modul ·&#13;
threefold. First or all, tuden&#13;
can choose to tudy bat t&#13;
really interested in while&#13;
avoiding being idetradted b&#13;
thing they alread kno or&#13;
which do not reall concern&#13;
them. econdly, ince pecihc&#13;
topics are being d alt ith,&#13;
teachers can relate the 1al&#13;
•&#13;
rm&#13;
implication of a topic -&#13;
something which · not often&#13;
possible in a conventional course.&#13;
La Uy , the ize and tructure of&#13;
the module make it possible to&#13;
try different teachin techniqu&#13;
"'hich are not fea ible m a large&#13;
semester course. (cond.nu d n&#13;
r;:FREE- REE-FR&#13;
~ Good for On&#13;
= J FREE oi~ r ~&#13;
=&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
at Geno Rome ~&#13;
~ f Thi i&#13;
I-FREE1200&#13;
52 t.&#13;
n&#13;
6)&#13;
::J&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS QFFIC&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553·2150&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634•66&#13;
MON. &amp; TUES. EVENING, S:00 1:00&#13;
( o matter much of our pu:za, chicltcn, and salad you cat, the pncc , on! 1.7 S)&#13;
Children under 3 Free-Ctiildren 3-9, 10 Cents a Year&#13;
Lothrop and 21st ( Almost) &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 13, 1972&#13;
(continued from page 5) ew courses... Gods. Spirits and Ghosts&#13;
sday lrom 1l'3O a.m to 12:15 p.m. or 7:45--9p.m. For "Man and the Supernatural," Anthropology 410, is&#13;
a Ii t 01 lilms to be shown contact Ronald Gattesman, a course being taught by John Van Willigan, assistant&#13;
prolessor 01 English, who is conducting the course. professor of anthropology. It will deal with the supernatural in a cross-cultural perspective, including&#13;
examples lrom both lilerate and non·literate&#13;
societies. Van Willigan says it's not really a rellgion&#13;
course. but be will talk about various definitions of&#13;
religion and roles of religious practitioners in different&#13;
types of societies. Topics will include magic,&#13;
witchcraft, medical uses of supernatural power.&#13;
types of religious organizations established in terms&#13;
of the supernatural, and various elements of the&#13;
supernatural world such as gods. spirits and ghosts.&#13;
MWF 2:36-3:20 p.m.&#13;
Richard Steffle, assistant professor of anthropology.&#13;
will be teaching Anthropology 475,&#13;
"Industrial Anthropology." He is interested in tbe&#13;
Poet and Gunmen expansion of industry into formerly nonJames&#13;
Liddy. visiting professor of English, will be industrialized areas. 'This includes regions of the&#13;
involved with his bomeland in English 415, "Studies nited States such as the southwest and rural areas,&#13;
in Contemporary Literawr-e: trish Revolution: Poets as well as undeveloped areas like Barbados and the&#13;
and Gunmen" Th aim of the course is to present the West Indies. The class will study the mutual adimag&#13;
. and ideas in the literature that renected the justment between new, decentralized industries and&#13;
Irl h trugg1e for independence and civil war from the society and culture of the new industrial workers,&#13;
191 1923.ft will stress the ambiguities of the period. since there is a conflict between a society's value&#13;
uch as alternating romanticism and realism. -aystem when it is oriented to agriculture or fishing&#13;
atlonali m as a phenomenon and as a force in and values brought by industrialization. TTh 1-2:15&#13;
ere tivity wlll be looked at. This will be a literary p m.&#13;
course. but some hi torlcal reading will be necessary.&#13;
TI'll 4-$:15 pm&#13;
Protest and Prophecy&#13;
" tudies in Amenean Lit.: Protest and Prophecy&#13;
11ll;;..1914"is the name of English 370 taught by&#13;
Gottesman The course will be a broad survey of the&#13;
impulses of "protest and prophecy" in American&#13;
thought and writing. Itwill also look at the dream and&#13;
rughtmare of American life as it approached the 20th&#13;
century. Both utopian proje&lt;:tions of the future as well&#13;
as apocalyptic predictions wiU be studied, and&#13;
protests against the status quo from such groups as&#13;
workers, immigrants. blacks, women and other&#13;
mInority elements. 'M'h tl&gt;-lI:15 a.m.&#13;
steer Design&#13;
Applied Science and Technology 490. section t, is&#13;
"Steel Design." This will study the design of beams,&#13;
columns. composite beams and connection by the&#13;
American Institute of Steel Construction Code. It is&#13;
taught by Michael O'Rourke, instructor in&#13;
engineering science. MWF 12:36-1:20 p.m.&#13;
onSlUut'onal Law, ommuni m. The Presidency&#13;
The major In Political Science has been revamped&#13;
so If that's your thing and you don't know about the&#13;
chang . better talk to a faculty member. New&#13;
coo 1hI semester include "Constitutional Law."&#13;
Pol I. 410. taught by William ~urin, assistant&#13;
prolessor of political science. The class will study the&#13;
nature and scope of constitutional government and&#13;
limitations on government. This will include judicial&#13;
review, separation of powers, federalism, the&#13;
commerce clause, taxation, contracts, due process,&#13;
equal protection, civil liberties and criminal&#13;
procedure MWF 9:36-10:20 a.m.&#13;
"Communist Political Systems" will be explored&#13;
by Frederick Becker, assistant professor of political&#13;
science in Pol. Sci. 332. This course will pay particular&#13;
attention to political and economic development&#13;
under Communism, as exemplified by China,&#13;
Russia and Yugoslavia. TI'll1l:3O a.m. to 12: p.m.&#13;
Robert Wrinkle, assistant professor of political&#13;
science, is teaching a course on "The Presidency,"&#13;
Pol. Sci. 312. 'Mae President's political, statesman,&#13;
social and ceremonial roles will be investigated. TTb&#13;
11&gt;-11:5 a.m.&#13;
Labor Economics. Business Management&#13;
"Wage and Salary Determination" is a course&#13;
listed under both Labor Economics 315 and&#13;
Economics 315. The objectives are to develop an&#13;
understanding of the role of reward and compensation&#13;
as it influences labor force and employment&#13;
behavior, to examine the forces determining&#13;
compensation levels, and to analyze&#13;
procedures for administration of compensation.&#13;
Taught by Ben Lowenberg, assistant professor of&#13;
management science labor economics, the class&#13;
meets MWF 9:36-10:20 a.m. or M 6-8:45 p.m.&#13;
In Business Management, Leroy Cougle, visiting&#13;
assistant professor of business management. is&#13;
teaching 338] uMet.hods of Industrial Training." This&#13;
will focus on the principles and development of a&#13;
number of methods and their industrial applications.&#13;
It will include the techniques of data gathering and&#13;
compilation for the methods. TIh 2:36-3:45 p.m.&#13;
"Behavioral Science Theories and Management,"&#13;
Business Management 340, is taught by Stanley&#13;
Orme, instructor in management science. The objective&#13;
of this course is to analyze theories of&#13;
behavioral science in terms of their history and&#13;
development, their operation within organizations,&#13;
and the environmental contingencies upon which the&#13;
success of the different theories depends. This will be&#13;
done through a seminar-discussion approach. TTh 10-&#13;
1l:50 a.m.&#13;
Intercultural Communication&#13;
Communications 490. a Special Problems course, is&#13;
entiUed "Intercultural and International Com·&#13;
munication" and is taught by Sheldon Harse!, instructor&#13;
in communicatiollS. It is a problem-oriented&#13;
course dealing with understanding between groups&#13;
and barriers or facilitators of communication. It will&#13;
explore political differences and relationships among&#13;
racial and ethnic groups. MWF 2:36-3:20 p.m.&#13;
Cultural Geography&#13;
In Geography, John Henderson, assistant professor&#13;
of geography, is teaching a course called "Advanced&#13;
Cultural Geography." It is divided into three parts:&#13;
aleography, a study of the domestication of plants&#13;
and animals, and environmental perception. The last&#13;
topic is concerned with the study of people'S images&#13;
of reality as opposed to what reality really is. TI'll11&gt;-&#13;
1l:15 a.m.&#13;
Business Law&#13;
A course in "Business Law'" Business&#13;
Management 490,section 3, will be taught by Kenosha&#13;
attorney Donald Baughs. The most important area to&#13;
be touched upon is contracts and the theories that go&#13;
into drawing them up. This will lay the foundation for&#13;
other areas, such as negotiable instruments and sales&#13;
transact!ons. M7-9:45 p.m.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Major employtl' throughout the&#13;
U.S. (pn ....tt &amp;. govemmtnl) are&#13;
tcwng '!ua1i6td c:oU~e mtn and&#13;
women 01 c:areer poIlliona with&#13;
lOp pay and oublanding bendita.&#13;
Excellent opportunitiea exitt in&#13;
many l~..For fREE informanon&#13;
on atudenl w'stanc:e and&#13;
plaeement _.P~ tend adf.&#13;
addreued ST M1PED envelope 10&#13;
Nanonal Ptaecment Reglstry&#13;
Dala.Tech Serviees. 1001 EMt&#13;
Idaho I.• KWpdI. MT 59901.&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
PREGNANCY nST&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
An Abortion (an be&#13;
arronged within 24 hours&#13;
You (on return home&#13;
the same day you leave.&#13;
CALL TOLL FREE&#13;
(800) 523·4436&#13;
2-4 HOURS&#13;
A Nort·P'of,10'9°"'1°"0"&#13;
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4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
K&#13;
E&#13;
N&#13;
o&#13;
5&#13;
H&#13;
A&#13;
Life Science ...&#13;
(continued from page 5)&#13;
married and have children, are&#13;
ignorant about some aspects of&#13;
human reproduction. Some of the&#13;
topiCScovered are both male and&#13;
female anatomy, functions of the&#13;
various reproductive organs,&#13;
coitus, pregnancy and lab?r.&#13;
Human Reproduction IS obviously&#13;
related to another&#13;
module, population control. In&#13;
this course, the pros and cons. of&#13;
various means of contraception&#13;
will be discussed. as well as the&#13;
social implications. including its&#13;
relevance to venereal disease.&#13;
Human Heredity and Birth&#13;
Defects is another related course&#13;
dealing with the causes, early&#13;
diagnosis, and remedies of&#13;
various birth defects. Some of the&#13;
topics to be covered are PKU, Rh&#13;
factor, mongoloidism and sicklecell&#13;
anemia.&#13;
population Growth and In'&#13;
teractions deals with growth as a&#13;
function of needs in the form of&#13;
minerals, food, air, water and&#13;
other necessities of life. Again in -'.&#13;
thi~ ~odu~e. ~s in others. the&#13;
soclallmphcatlons will be raiSed&#13;
such as discussion of a natlOnai&#13;
policy regarding popUlation&#13;
growth.&#13;
Biological Recycling or&#13;
Resource concentrates on the&#13;
role of reducers as opposed to&#13;
producers and consumers in an&#13;
ecosyst~m. The purpose of the&#13;
cour~e IS .to create an awareness&#13;
of biologica) recycling by scm&#13;
groups of organisms such a:&#13;
hacter ia, fungi ~nd others. Basi~&#13;
ecologIcal principles will also be&#13;
presented.&#13;
Water pollution is a detailed&#13;
study 01 one aspect of lhe general&#13;
pollution problem.&#13;
The contemporary idea&#13;
module is one of three ex~&#13;
perimental programs set up at&#13;
Parkside before the UW·WSU&#13;
merger. The program comes as a&#13;
result of a desire 01 the uw&#13;
system to improve the level of&#13;
undergraduate education and is&#13;
lunded by a grant from the Innovative&#13;
Undergratuate&#13;
Teaching Program.&#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;
\ 632~i565 \&#13;
RACINE, wise. 2909 DURAND AVE.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
"., ,,,1,0 Er(}(;, &lt;Ck.e.(;,I?ill&lt;g,,4..£f.plJ,J'M~ Xl·&#13;
for College Students&#13;
Phone 658-2582 3928 60th St.&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Pvna 11 \&#13;
!J14!iG" ~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD, KENOSHA 551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM,&#13;
422&#13;
MAIN STREET _ • .., 71&#13;
631·ltlt -&#13;
RACINE&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 13, 1972&#13;
(continued from page S) God , pirit and Ghost&#13;
••• m to 12: 15 p.m. or 7: - 9 p.m. For&#13;
ho n contact Ronald Gottesman,&#13;
Ii! h ho conducting the course.&#13;
". Ian and the upernatural," Anthropology 410, is&#13;
a course being taught by John \ an Willigan, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology. It will deal with the&#13;
upernatural in a cro -eultural perspective, in·&#13;
eluding amples from both literate and non-literate&#13;
societies. Van\ 'illigan sa it's not really a religion&#13;
course. but he will talk about arious definitions of&#13;
religion and roles of religious practitioners in different&#13;
types of societies. Topics will include magic,&#13;
witchcraft, medical uses of supernatural power,&#13;
type of religious organizations established in terms&#13;
of the upernatural, and various elements of the&#13;
upernatural world uch a god spirits and ghosts.&#13;
• J\ 'F 2:30-3:20 p.m.&#13;
Richard toffle, a istant professor of anthropol&#13;
y, rill be teaching Anthropology 475,&#13;
"Industrial Anthropolog ." He i interested in the&#13;
e pan ion or indu try into formerly nonindu&#13;
trialized area . Thi includes regions of the&#13;
nited tales uch a the southwest and rural areas,&#13;
a well a undeveloped areas like Barbados and the&#13;
W t Indi . The cla will tudy the mutual adJU&#13;
tment between new, decentralized indu tries and&#13;
the i ty and culture of the new industrial workers,&#13;
th mbiguitie of the period, . m e th re i a conflict between a society's value&#13;
Item tm rom ntt i. m and r Ii m •. y tern ·hen it i oriented to agriculture or fishing&#13;
ph nom non and a a r ce in and valu brought b ind trialization. TTh 1-2:15&#13;
1 d t. Thi will be a literary p m.&#13;
. but m hi toric 1 r din will be nee ary.&#13;
: I p.m.&#13;
lntercuJtural ommunicaUon&#13;
ommunication 4 • a pecial Problems course, is&#13;
tiU d "Jntercultural and International Com·&#13;
muni tion" and i taught by heldon Harsel, intructor&#13;
in communications. It is a problem-oriented&#13;
cour dealing with understanding between groups&#13;
nd barriers or facilitators of communication. It will&#13;
plore political difference and relationships among&#13;
r ial and thnic group . MWF 2:30-3:20 p.m.&#13;
lturaJ Geograph&#13;
In G raphy, John Henderson, a istant professor&#13;
or g raph), i teaching a course called "Advanced&#13;
ltural Geography." It is divided into three parts:&#13;
al aphy, a ud · of the domestication of plants&#13;
nd animal , and environmental perception. The last&#13;
t 1 1 cone rned with the tudy of people's images&#13;
of r lity a oppo ed to what reality really is. TTh 10-&#13;
11 : 15 .m.&#13;
in&#13;
Labor on mic , Bu in lanagement&#13;
"\ age and alary D termination" is a course&#13;
Ii led under both Labor Economics 315 and&#13;
Economic 315. The objectives are to develop an&#13;
understanding of the role of reward and compensation&#13;
a it influences labor force and employment&#13;
behavior, to examine the forces determining&#13;
compensation levels, and to analyze&#13;
procedures for administration of compensation.&#13;
Taught by Ben Lowenberg, assistant professor of&#13;
management cience labor economics the class&#13;
meets fWF 9:30-10:20 a .m. or M 6-8:45 p.m.&#13;
In Business lanagement, Leroy Cougle, visiting&#13;
a istant professor of business management, is&#13;
teaching 338, "Methods of Industrial Training." This&#13;
will focus on the principles and development of a&#13;
number of methods and their industrial applications.&#13;
It will include the techniques of data gathering and&#13;
compilation for the methods. TTh 2:30-3:45 p.m.&#13;
"Behavioral Science Theories and Management,"&#13;
Bu iness fanagement 340, is taught by Stanley&#13;
Orme, instructor in management science. The objective&#13;
of this course is to analyze theories of&#13;
behavioral science in terms of their history and&#13;
development, their operation within organizations,&#13;
and the environmental contingencies upon which the&#13;
success of the different theories depends. This will be&#13;
done through a seminar-&lt;liscussion approach. TTh 10-&#13;
11 :50 a.m.&#13;
Busines Law&#13;
A course in "Business Law," Business&#13;
lanagement 490, section 3, will be taught by Kenosha&#13;
attorney Donald Baughs. The most important area to&#13;
be touched upon is contracts and the theories that go&#13;
into drawing them up. This will lay the foundation for&#13;
other areas, such as negotiable instruments and sales&#13;
transaction . 17-9:45 p.m.&#13;
NOTICE FREE DELIVERY&#13;
INFORMATIO&#13;
PREGNANCY TEST&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
An Abortion con b e&#13;
arranged within 24 hours&#13;
You con return home&#13;
th same day you leave.&#13;
CALL TOLL FREE&#13;
(800) 523 - 4436&#13;
24 HOURS&#13;
A No" , P,of,t O,go"'1ot1on&#13;
K&#13;
E&#13;
N&#13;
0&#13;
s&#13;
H&#13;
A&#13;
M embe r Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Chili&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Life Science ..•&#13;
(continued from page S)&#13;
married and have children, are&#13;
ignorant about some aspects of&#13;
human reproduction. Some of the&#13;
topics covered are both male and&#13;
female anatomy, functions of the&#13;
various reproductive organs,&#13;
coitus, pregnancy and lah?r.&#13;
Human Reproduction 1s obviously&#13;
related to another&#13;
module, Population Control. In&#13;
thi course, the pros and cons_ of&#13;
various means of contraception&#13;
will be discussed, as well as the&#13;
social implications, including its&#13;
relevance to venereal disease.&#13;
Human Heredity and Birth&#13;
Defects is another related course&#13;
dealing with the causes, early&#13;
diagnosis, and remedies of&#13;
arious birth defects. Some of the&#13;
topics to be covered are PKU, Rh&#13;
factor, mongoloidism and sicklecell&#13;
anemia.&#13;
Population Growth and Interactions&#13;
deals with growth as a&#13;
function of needs in the form of&#13;
minerals, food, air, water and&#13;
other necessities of life. Again in&#13;
this module, as in other th&#13;
social implications will be r~i ed&#13;
such as discussion of a nationai&#13;
policy regarding population&#13;
growth.&#13;
Biological Recycling or&#13;
Resource concentrates on the&#13;
role of reducers as opposed to&#13;
producers and consumers in an&#13;
ecosystem. The purpose or th&#13;
course is to create an awaren&#13;
of biological recycling by som&#13;
groups of organisms such a&#13;
bacteria, fungi and others. Ba ic&#13;
ecological principles will also&#13;
presented.&#13;
Water pollution is a detailed&#13;
study of one aspect of the general&#13;
pollution problem.&#13;
The contemporary idea&#13;
module is one of three experimental&#13;
program set up at&#13;
Parkside before the UW-W&#13;
merger. The program com a a&#13;
result of a desire of the w&#13;
system to improve the Jev 1 or&#13;
undergraduate education and 1&#13;
funded by a grant from the In&#13;
novative Undergratuat&#13;
Teaching Program.&#13;
•BEER• SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A. M. - 9 P .M.&#13;
SUNDAY Tll 8 P.M.&#13;
632~1_5_6_5 _]&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.&#13;
An1erican State Bank&#13;
Ere~ Ck~f titzlI.wi-4.~f..P:U..tJlJ&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St.&#13;
422&#13;
MAIN STREET&#13;
-·..-: 7J 631·l¼4 -&#13;
RACIN E&#13;
Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F .D.I.C. &#13;
An unique feature of the&#13;
Physical Education Building is&#13;
the Human .Performance Lab.&#13;
This facility is modeled after.&#13;
exercise physiology labs across&#13;
the country. These labs are for&#13;
the most part located at colleges&#13;
which ofer a physical education&#13;
major, whereas Parkside offers a&#13;
·coaching sequence equivalent to&#13;
a physical education minor.&#13;
· According to Robert&#13;
Grueninger, asst. protessor of&#13;
physical education, one purpose&#13;
of the lab is the study of the&#13;
·human body under stress, known&#13;
as exercise physiology. Research&#13;
by faculty, students and staff is&#13;
already being conducted. and is&#13;
encouraged.&#13;
Another important use of the&#13;
lab is in the training of athletic&#13;
teams. Applying scientific&#13;
methods to training has the&#13;
advantage of actual physiological&#13;
evaluation of athletes' performances&#13;
and endurance. For&#13;
example, it is possible to test&#13;
cardiov_ascular endurance,&#13;
respiratory endurance and&#13;
strength or flexibility. There are&#13;
tests to determine the percentage&#13;
of body fat or water. Blood tests&#13;
can be conducted.. All of this&#13;
information can then be used in&#13;
an evaluation not only of the&#13;
athletes but also or the training&#13;
program itself.&#13;
Speaking of Performance&#13;
lab important&#13;
to P .E. progTam Sports&#13;
by KRIS KOCH&#13;
Withthe basketball season now at hand I thought it would be in the&#13;
interestof all you sports fans to hear what our hasketball coach has to&#13;
say about his amazmg, young team. When I asked Coach Steve&#13;
stephens to pick out the best player on the team, he said, "With the&#13;
team that we have this year It would be difficult to single out any individual."&#13;
.&#13;
But when I asked him for comments on individual players he was&#13;
morethen willing to pr~vide me with a multitude of information.&#13;
"Chuck ~ambhss IS o~ most consistent scorer; he is always&#13;
makingthe big play and looking for the open shot. Joe Hutter is a good&#13;
playmaker and draws a good foul. He is an excellent shot and shows a&#13;
lot of leadership."&#13;
BillSobanski is an excellent leaper and can hit from the outside as&#13;
wellas from the inside, and carries a lot of rebounding power which&#13;
showed up in the first two games. Gary Cole is a threat when it comes&#13;
to rebounding and blocking shots as well as providing some offensive&#13;
muscle," Stephens said. "Mike Hanke is a superb shooter and we are&#13;
expectinghim to become a top scoring threat. He also shows a lot of&#13;
hustle and hits the boards very well. Don Snow shows as much&#13;
potentialas anyone on the team. He is a good hustler; he can hit from&#13;
theoutside and is a good rebounder. Tim Dolan is a shooter and shoots&#13;
to score. He and Pat Mason also add depth to our team. This is&#13;
probablytbe most well balanced attack that we have ever had."&#13;
Ifany of you bothered to take in either of the first two games that the&#13;
Rangers played you could have seen for yourself the amount of&#13;
potential that this young team has.&#13;
Lookingahead game by game is the strategy that Stephens is using&#13;
because the schedule that the Rangers face this year is as tough as&#13;
they have ver had.&#13;
Sixofthe top nine players on this year's team are freshmen, but that&#13;
doesn't seem to hinder their spirit at all.&#13;
"Wehave real good depth and they are all here to play," Stephens&#13;
commented.&#13;
Personally, I was very impressed by the play of our collegiate&#13;
yearlingsin their first games. With the eagerness of the freshmen and&#13;
theexperience of last year's players, I think that this year's team has&#13;
great possibilities. This team looks as though it wants to reverse last&#13;
iyears4-18reccil'd;"I'Wll.tched-ooli&gt;"opening-games and was amazed at.&#13;
theteam work and clutch plays. We always seemed to make the important&#13;
play when it counted the most.&#13;
One point that both Stephens and I agreed on was that tbe team&#13;
neededmore moral support from students, because after all they are&#13;
here to play for you.&#13;
"Students don't realize how much they can build a teams spirit just&#13;
by coming to the games and cheering," Stephens said. "Tbe home&#13;
court is supposed to be an advantage because of the crowd effect."&#13;
Withthe young powerful team that we have this year, I'd think that&#13;
everyone would ;'ant to come out and see them play. You just might&#13;
be surprised at the potential of your team, so come on out and see them&#13;
sometime.&#13;
•&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
December 15 Southern illinois-Edwardsville at Parkslde&#13;
December 2!l-30 .. .. ... .. .Boyne County CIa lc at Par Id&#13;
(Michigan Tech, Lake Superior State, Ferris State)&#13;
January 6.. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .. . UW-Platteville at Platteville&#13;
January9 UW-GreenBayatGreenBay&#13;
January 13 . .Aquinas at Parkslde&#13;
January 16 .......•............. indiana State-Evansville at Parksld&#13;
January 20.. .. .. .. . . .... .. ... . ..... .. Wayne tate at Parkside&#13;
FE 'CING&#13;
January 13 Indiana, PUrdue, Illinois at Champaign, Ill.&#13;
January 19 . Lake Superior State at Parkslde&#13;
January 20 Air Force, Minnesota, Wiscomin·Madi50n atParkside&#13;
GYM ASTlCS&#13;
December 15 " ............... UW·Madison at Parksid&#13;
INDOOR TRACK&#13;
December 23 . . . . . . .. Olioogo Holiday Open at O1ioogo, III&#13;
January 4 .. .. .. .. . . . . ... .Chicago Track Club Open al ChIcago, Ill.&#13;
January 13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .... lrwitational Relays at Olioogo, Ill.&#13;
January 19-20 AlA Indoor Championships at Kansas CIty, 10&#13;
SWIMMI 'G&#13;
December 15&#13;
January 13 ..&#13;
January 20 ....&#13;
Whitewater at Parkside&#13;
Loyola at Cluoogo&#13;
Lake Forest at Parkside&#13;
WRESTLI 'G&#13;
December 15 . Graod Valley tate al Parkside&#13;
December 28, 29 . . lidlanclsatEvanston,llI&#13;
January 6-14 semester Break Training Trip at Baton Rouge, La.&#13;
January 11 Southwest Louisiana at Larayelte, La&#13;
January 13 Louisiana State University at Baton Roug ,La&#13;
Sid patrol certification will be&#13;
offered Monday evenings from 7-&#13;
8:50 p.m. at Wilmol with Hal&#13;
Henderson as instructor. Fees&#13;
are the same as for the skiing&#13;
courses. Prerequisite is First Aid&#13;
&amp; Medical Self-Help or Ihe&#13;
consent of the instructor.&#13;
Cross Country Sk.iing, or ski&#13;
touring, will be offered from 1:30-&#13;
3:20 p.m. on Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday with Glodfrey a the&#13;
instructor. Skis are available at&#13;
no charge. Pets and the Parkslde&#13;
trails are the sites for touring.&#13;
Karate will be offered from 7-&#13;
8:50 p.m. Mondays with Richard&#13;
Guttonnsen as instructor. The&#13;
coed course will be located in the&#13;
second Ooor fencing room in the&#13;
P.E. Building.&#13;
Tuesday, Dee. 12&#13;
• Pamlde V1 '0 Mid'll 1\&#13;
.Slturday. Jan IS&#13;
Pa rUlde \oJ AqUlNl&#13;
l\IM.ty. Jan ZJ&#13;
• P.rlc:51~ \01 Xnlft'&#13;
1\tesdaY. J'" 10&#13;
• P.rtu.I~ \0 Ripon&#13;
Saturday, F'~b :s&#13;
• Park Ide VI Purdue Cmtrat&#13;
Tuesday. F'rb I&#13;
• P'rUldt VI MillOn&#13;
.Slturday. Feb Ie)&#13;
Parlul(~ v Canoll&#13;
.Saturday, "-'~b 17&#13;
Parhuje v ~-G~n SI,.&#13;
Tu ..... y ..... b ..&#13;
• Park ~dt' VI R.clnt Dominion&#13;
• Tuesday. f'tb t7&#13;
P..r1c:5I~ VI W'Ul\1o''''&#13;
Wide variety offered&#13;
.in 2nd semester P.E.&#13;
A wide variety of courses for aU&#13;
tastes are being offered secood&#13;
semester by the Office of&#13;
Physical Education at Parkside.&#13;
Among them are courses in&#13;
scuba diving, karate and skiing.&#13;
Skiing, among the most&#13;
popular of physical education&#13;
courses in previous years at&#13;
Parkside, will be offered Monday&#13;
and Tuesday evenings at Wilmot,&#13;
with instruction on the beginning,&#13;
intermediate and advanced&#13;
levels.&#13;
Vic Godfrey is the course in·&#13;
structor for the sessions, which&#13;
will be offered under the lights&#13;
rrom 7 10 8:50 p.m. each night.&#13;
There is a $5.50 fee per session for&#13;
the ski lift and a $3 per session fee&#13;
for rental of ski equipment.&#13;
Personal ski equipment can be&#13;
used.&#13;
Scuba Diving is a new course&#13;
being offered second semester,&#13;
.Intercollegiate Gymnastics from 7--8:50p.m. 'l\Jesdays in the&#13;
Championships at Oshkosh Physical Education Bldg. pool.&#13;
Saturday. Kathy Kramer placed Local scuba enthusiasts James&#13;
third in the advanced optional Walters is the instructor.&#13;
vaulting and third in the ad- There will be a rental fee ror&#13;
vanced optional unev~ bars. use of equipment which will be&#13;
Kim Simonson finished 10 second applicable to the purchase or that&#13;
P&#13;
lace on the advanced optIOnal equipment should the student&#13;
ba Wleven rs. develop lhe interest.&#13;
E:'~;o~':~~.~~yu:,: ~~~::~lj~ .1=_= '~I."'.i'F'IIR"I'E,nnEIII':'F'REi:FiEE-FREE II II&#13;
or completely closed to activity&#13;
foran indefinite period beginning . 5=_ A_ Mon.J1f or T-If II Dec. 18because of installation of ,...,.&#13;
~~~~~~~l backboards for § FREEI !&#13;
THE RANCH I§ __..1 ,,,t ao' • "-"" th -., /I. II&#13;
Rita.. \;'1"- It. • E&#13;
R:nch :~::: 1_ ~".Train StationI&#13;
l'... , ~'i';:. 2703 63 St, .-ndlriches &amp;' -&#13;
Clot .... 1 Stet.. lBANDS- .... DS-Mll DS- S-Mll ••&#13;
.' S 11I1~ts kl&#13;
~.rt. &amp; SOlth Sheridan Rd,&#13;
Hours Jan. 7 Building closed at noon&#13;
Building open at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 9 Building closed at 4 p.m.&#13;
Basketball game at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 19 Gym closed at 4 p.m. .&#13;
Fencing meet that eveomg&#13;
Jan. 20 Pool closed at noon&#13;
Swimming meet that afternoon.&#13;
The champ!&#13;
Paris Wohlust is the new state&#13;
gymnastics champion in intermediate&#13;
compulsory vaulting.&#13;
She also placed third in intermediate&#13;
compulsory vaulting&#13;
at the Wisconsin State Women's&#13;
Gym closed&#13;
"VOICE OF&#13;
THE R GERS"&#13;
I"J'""," , • _UI.' ..&#13;
Kenosha's Own Musical QuIntet&#13;
playing for your entertainment!&#13;
AI ..&#13;
Nightly Entertainment&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
Featurin.c Pde Revelle,&#13;
Orlooi.t ODdVoal Styllit .'""'IJ............. w ....... r o.m. .. I'."&#13;
'.'.f.&#13;
(. o..,I .. ki,.. ,1MHer"rl ~&#13;
IfDl1:uuaU:I~"""&#13;
of Keno,h.&#13;
S12S 6th Av•.&#13;
-&#13;
Speaking of&#13;
Sports&#13;
by KRIS KOCH&#13;
With the basketball season now at hand I thought it would be in the&#13;
interest of all_ you spo~ts fans to hear what our basketball coach has to&#13;
say about h1~ amazmg, young team. When I asked Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens to pick out ~e best_ player on th_e ~m, he said, "With the&#13;
team that we have this year 1t would be d1fflcult to single out any individual."&#13;
.&#13;
But when ! ~sked him. for com~ents on _individual players he was&#13;
more then w1lhng to proVlde me with a multitude of information.&#13;
"Chuck Chambliss is ow: most consistent scorer; he is always&#13;
making the big play and lookmg for the open shot. Joe Hutter is a good&#13;
play maker and draws a good foul. He is an excellent shot and shows a&#13;
Jot of leadership."&#13;
Bill Sobanski is an excellent leaper and can hit from the outside as&#13;
well as from the inside, and carries a lot of rebounding power which&#13;
showed up in the first two games. Gary Cole is a threat when it comes&#13;
to rebounding and blocking shots as well as providing some offensive&#13;
muscle," Stephens said. "Mike Hanke is a superb shooter and we are&#13;
expecting him to become a top scoring threat. He also shows a lot of&#13;
hustle and hits the boards very well. Don Snow shows as much&#13;
potential as anyone on the team. He is a good hustler; he can hit from&#13;
the outside and is a good rebounder. Tim Dolan is a shooter and shoots&#13;
to score._ He and Pat Mason also add depth to our team. This is&#13;
probably the most well balanced attack that we have ever had."&#13;
If any of you bothered to take in either of the first two games that the&#13;
Rangers played you could have seen for yourself the amount of&#13;
potential that this young team has.&#13;
Looking ahead game by game is the strategy that Stephens is using&#13;
because the schedule that the Rangers face this year is as tough as&#13;
they have ver had.&#13;
Six of the top nine players on this year's team are freshmen, but that&#13;
doesn't seem to hinder their spirit at all.&#13;
Performance&#13;
lab important&#13;
to p .E. program&#13;
An unique feature of the&#13;
Physical Education Building is&#13;
the Human Performance Lab.&#13;
This facility is modeled after&#13;
exercise physiology lab across&#13;
the country. These labs are for&#13;
the_ most part located at colleges&#13;
which ofer a physical education&#13;
major, whereas Parkside offers a&#13;
· coaching sequence equivalent to&#13;
a physical education minor.&#13;
· According to Robert&#13;
Grueninger, asst. professor of&#13;
physical education, one purpo e&#13;
of the lab is the study of the&#13;
human body under stre , known&#13;
as exercise physiology. Research&#13;
by faculty, students and staff i&#13;
already being conducted and is&#13;
encouraged.&#13;
Another important use of the&#13;
lab is in the training of athletic&#13;
teams. Applying scientific&#13;
methods to training has the&#13;
advantage of actual physiological&#13;
evaluation of athletes' performances&#13;
and endurance. For&#13;
example, it is possible to test&#13;
cardiovascular endu ranee,&#13;
respiratory endurance and&#13;
strength or flexibility There are&#13;
tests to determine the percentage&#13;
of body fat or water. Blood tests&#13;
can be conducted. All of this&#13;
information can then be used in&#13;
an evaluation not only of the&#13;
athletes but also of the training&#13;
program itself.&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
B KETB LL&#13;
December 15 .......... .&#13;
December~30 ........ . ... Boyn&#13;
&lt; lichigan Tech, L&#13;
January6 ......•............•...........&#13;
January9 .....•...•........•..........&#13;
January 13 .............•••..........&#13;
January 16 ..........••......... Indiana&#13;
January 20 •••.••.......•••••.....•••&#13;
FEN I ·c&#13;
January 13 ............... Indiana, Purdue, l llino ·&#13;
January 19 ......................... Lake&#13;
January 20 ..... Air Force, • finnesota, Wi.&#13;
GY. 1. TI&#13;
December 15 •.•..•.•.•.•&#13;
WRE TLIXG&#13;
December 15 .....&#13;
December 28, 29&#13;
January 6-14 ••.&#13;
- la · n at P&#13;
January 11 . . . • • • . • • .. outhw l Loui ia&#13;
January 13 ........•.. Louisiana late niv&#13;
id&#13;
• 1 •&#13;
, La.&#13;
, La.&#13;
"We have real good depth and they are all here to play," Stephens&#13;
commented.&#13;
Personally, I was very impressed by the play of our collegiate&#13;
yearlings in their first games. With the eagerness of the freshmen and&#13;
the experience of last year's players, I think that this year's team has&#13;
great possibilities. This team looks as though it wants to reverse last&#13;
·years 4-18 recdrd:-•1-watched botA opening-games and was amazed at.&#13;
the team work and clutch plays. We always seemed to make the important&#13;
play when it counted the most.&#13;
Wide variety offered&#13;
in 2nd semester P.E.&#13;
One point that both Stephens and I agreed on was that the team&#13;
needed more moral support from students, because after all they are&#13;
here to play for you.&#13;
A wide variety of courses for all&#13;
tastes are being offered second&#13;
semester by the Office of&#13;
Physical Education at Parkside.&#13;
Among them are courses in&#13;
scuba diving, karate and skiing. "Students don't realize how much they can build a teams spirit just&#13;
by coming to the games and cheering," Stephens said. "The home&#13;
court is supposed to be an advantage because of the crowd effect." Skiing, among the mo t&#13;
popular of physical education&#13;
courses in previous years at&#13;
Parkside, will be offered 1onday&#13;
and Tuesday evenings at Wilmot,&#13;
with instruction on the beginning,&#13;
intermediate and advanced&#13;
levels.&#13;
With the young powerful team that we have this year, I'd think that&#13;
every one would ~ant to come out and see them play. You just might&#13;
be surprised at the potential of your team, so come on out and see them&#13;
sometime.&#13;
Hours Jan. 7&#13;
J an. 9&#13;
Jan. 19&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
The champ!&#13;
Paris Wohlust is the new state&#13;
gymnastics champion in intermediate&#13;
compulsory vaulting.&#13;
She also placed third in intermediate&#13;
compulsory vaulting&#13;
at the Wisconsin State Women's&#13;
Gym closed&#13;
The gymnasium in the Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. may be partially&#13;
or completely ciosed to activity&#13;
for an indefinite period beginning&#13;
Dec. 18 because of installation of&#13;
additional backboards for&#13;
basketball.&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch Created&#13;
Sandwiches &amp; ·&#13;
Charcoal Steaks&#13;
Narth &amp; South Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Building closed at noon&#13;
Building open at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Building closed at 4 p.m.&#13;
Basketball game at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Gym closed at 4 p.m. .&#13;
Fencing meet that evenmg&#13;
Pool closed at noon Swimming meet that afternoon.&#13;
Vic Godfrey is the course instructor&#13;
for the sessions, which&#13;
will be offered under the lights&#13;
from 7 to 8:50 p.m. each night.&#13;
There is a $5.50 fee per session for&#13;
the ski lift and a $3 per session fee&#13;
for rental of ski equipment.&#13;
Personal ski equipment can be&#13;
used. Scuba Diving is a new course&#13;
being offered second semester,&#13;
Intercollegiate Gymnastics from 7-8:50 p.m. Tuesdays in the&#13;
Championships at Oshkosh Physical Education Bldg. pool.&#13;
Saturday. Kathy Kramer pl_aced Local scuba enthusiasts James&#13;
third in the advanced optional Walters is the instructor.&#13;
vaulting and third in the ad- There will be a rental fee for&#13;
vanced optional unev~n bars. use of equipment which will be&#13;
Kim Simonson finished m s~ond applicable to the purchase of that&#13;
Place on the advanced optional equipment should the student&#13;
ba develop the interest. uneven rs.&#13;
:!,IIUIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIRlllll-llll 111 EE 11 I I !!FREE-FREE-FREE-FR i&#13;
I Any Mondlf or T NMIY I==&#13;
i I i ',,, "°' FREE. ,,_,,., a,,, i=&#13;
s 11° at the S • I&#13;
_ :. ~, rain talion i&#13;
i, • "::-1 ::,:"" 1&#13;
"'" 2703 63 St. i&#13;
i BAIIDS-BAIIDS-BAIIDS-BAIIDS-BANDS&#13;
1 • ~ s 111,~11 1 W11kl&#13;
•1111 11 tMIIIPllflHH&#13;
1 patrol certification will be&#13;
offered f.onda e ·emn from 7·&#13;
8:50 p.m. at Wilmot with Hal&#13;
Henderson a in tructor. Fe&#13;
are the same a for the kii&#13;
courses. Prerequ1 ite i First Aid&#13;
&amp; , fedical elf-Help or the&#13;
consent of the in tructor.&#13;
Cr Country tin • or ki&#13;
tourmg, will be offered from 1:30-&#13;
3:20 p.m . on Tu day and&#13;
Thursday with Glodfre a th&#13;
instructor ki ar av ilabl at&#13;
no charge. P and th Par id&#13;
trail are the ite for t.ounn .&#13;
Karate will be off red from 7-&#13;
8 : 50 p.m., tonda 1th Richard&#13;
Guttonn n a in tru tor. Th&#13;
coed co will be IOCJ1ted in th&#13;
second floor r cin room 10 th&#13;
P.E. Buildin .&#13;
,....,.~~~~~~i;,-.:-:~~~~~~~l:"..:-:~(,&gt;,)~OO&lt;t~O.."~, ... ,.:-;,&#13;
i, ~: N A ow ppear,ng r ~'&#13;
, I&#13;
. :, 8 P.M. to 1 A.M. ~ THURSDAY- FRIDAY-SATURDAY 1:&#13;
t,&#13;
I;&#13;
I ,,&#13;
q&#13;
Q&#13;
,,&#13;
,,&#13;
()&#13;
~&#13;
*&#13;
,,&#13;
~ ,,&#13;
,,&#13;
t,&#13;
,,&#13;
,,&#13;
I,&#13;
,,&#13;
t ,&#13;
MARI A ROOM&#13;
"Kenosha's New Harbor Nite Club"&#13;
FIVE WAY STREET&#13;
Kenosha's Own Musical Quintet&#13;
playing for your entertainment!&#13;
Alto&#13;
Nightfy Entertainment&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
Featurlnt Pele Revelle, Or,anist a.ad Voca.l Stylist.&#13;
II I ~f "-'•r-•&#13;
of Kenosh•&#13;
S 125 6th Ave.&#13;
Overl-kl1tt ••• Hera..,1&#13;
' ,,&#13;
(;&#13;
(.&#13;
I&#13;
' ~$&#13;
1,&#13;
,,&#13;
,,&#13;
,,&#13;
,,&#13;
r,&#13;
,,&#13;
,,&#13;
' &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 13, 1972&#13;
4fFiANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
Cagers drop 2&#13;
in North Dakota&#13;
Rangers' defensive game was&#13;
that Cole and Sobanski picked off&#13;
3\ rebounds berneen them. The&#13;
loss was the Rangers' first of the&#13;
season after two wins.&#13;
On Thursday the cagers&#13;
dropped their second game of the&#13;
year to. 'orth Dakota State. 90-69.&#13;
The score was only 33·28 at the&#13;
hall. but in the words or Coach&#13;
teve lephens. "We lost our&#13;
cool. the score sbouldn't have&#13;
been what it was."&#13;
Top scorers for the Rangers&#13;
were Sobanski with 19.Cbambliss&#13;
with 19. Cole with 10 and Tim&#13;
Dolan with eigbt.&#13;
The Rangers took on orthern&#13;
hchlgan last night and will (ace&#13;
Southern Illinois-Edwardsville at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Friday in the Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. The Rangers are&#13;
then off until Dec. 29--30wben they&#13;
compete in the Boyne County&#13;
(Mich.l Classic with Ferris tate •&#13;
Lake Superior State and&#13;
Michigan Tech.&#13;
The rirst home game in&#13;
January is scheduled for Jan. 13&#13;
against Aquinas couegv at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Physical Education&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
tn Park idl cagers lost a&#13;
tight ball~ame to . .crth Dakota.&#13;
'HiB, la t wednesday night The&#13;
ere \\ a bed at 68-t)8 with nine&#13;
-c-ond. le(t to play. but the&#13;
·n&lt;!.1k ent ahead by two on a&#13;
Jump shot and received two more&#13;
when th Range.,; turned the ball&#13;
over after failing to gel it in&#13;
bound. then with five seconds&#13;
1 ·ft ttl&lt;'y tol the ball and were&#13;
granted two charity hots which&#13;
totaled the s tx POints by which&#13;
Park Ide lost&#13;
Th Rangers had the lead with&#13;
sis lell in the game when Gary&#13;
Cole (ouled out o( the game and&#13;
('huck ambh s had already sat&#13;
out o( the game (or ix minutes&#13;
WIth (our fOUl..&#13;
Cb. mbh wa held to only 10&#13;
POints. Joe uuuer collected only&#13;
. even and ole recorded to. Top&#13;
. corers (or Parkside were Bill&#13;
Sobanskl with 18 and Mike Hanke&#13;
WIth 1~The 'ndaks were led by&#13;
Ri k Fischer with 15 points. Bill&#13;
Hawk with 13 and Don Genhus&#13;
w ,th I~ One bright spot in the&#13;
Perkside wrestlers and Mat Maids&#13;
Parkside's showing was earned&#13;
by eight of it's nine wrestlers&#13;
entered.&#13;
Champions for Parkside were&#13;
Rico savaglio at 126, Bill West&#13;
13~,and Ken Martin 142.Savagho&#13;
and West each won three&#13;
decisions and defeated&#13;
Whitewater wrestlers in the&#13;
finals.&#13;
Ken Martin, the Ranger's two&#13;
time Alt-Amer ican, had two&#13;
quick pins and an easy decision.&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
finished a very close second to a&#13;
strong Marquette team at the&#13;
Whitewater Invitational. The&#13;
Rangers scored 641&#13;
'2; points&#13;
behind the Warriors' 661&#13;
-'2:.&#13;
Following closely were Anderson&#13;
College, 62, and&#13;
Whitewater, 61. Other learns and&#13;
totals: University of IllmoisChicago&#13;
Circle 29, Elmhurst&#13;
College 21, and North Central 19.&#13;
VAPATION SCHEDULE&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING&#13;
Pool Hours Dec. 16-23,26-30&#13;
Monc;ay thru Friday: 12·2, 7·9 p.m. Saturday: 2-5 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 2·7 p.m. Dec. 24,25,31. Jan. 1: Building closed.&#13;
~NGER ~ATlON ',ULLETIN&#13;
URGENT URGENT UR ENT&#13;
WE'U BIN 10UR BOOKS BACK&#13;
FOR CAtH!&#13;
...... 16fl.,. Dee••• 2i&#13;
.. 1-2 lMI...Jilt .... the ......&#13;
CAP &amp; 80VlN&#13;
RENTAL ORDERS&#13;
MAY BE PLACED&#13;
DEC. 11 - DEC. 23&#13;
BACHELOR RENTAL fEE $625&#13;
TIE •• ElSEllIIOWER SILVER DOUAR Will&#13;
• CIIMOE ( OlE TO A CIISTOMER) VIIIILE"'·&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Dec. 13, 1972&#13;
Cagers drop 2&#13;
orth Dakota •&#13;
lll&#13;
By ris Ko h&#13;
Park ide wre tiers and Mat Maids&#13;
Wrestlers second in Warhawk&#13;
VAPATIO SCHEDULE&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING&#13;
Pool Hours Dec. 16-23, 26-30&#13;
onc;ay thru Friday: 12-2, 7-9 p.m. Saturday: 2-5 p.m.&#13;
Sunday: 2-7 p.m. Dec. 24, 25, 31, Jan. l: Building closed.&#13;
NGER&#13;
The Park ide wrestling team&#13;
fini hed a very clo e econd to a&#13;
strong . farquette team at the&#13;
Whitewater Invitational. The&#13;
Ranger cored 641'2 points&#13;
behind the Warrior ' 6612.&#13;
Folio ·mg closely were Anderson&#13;
College, 62, and&#13;
Whitewater, 61. Other teams and&#13;
totals; Universitv of IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle 0&#13;
29, Elmhurst&#13;
College 21, and orth Central 19.&#13;
Parkside's showing was earned&#13;
by eight of it's nine wrestlers&#13;
entered.&#13;
Champions for Parkside were&#13;
Rico Savaglio at 126, Bill West&#13;
134, and Ken Martin 142. Savaglio&#13;
and West each won three&#13;
decisions and defeated&#13;
Whitewater wrestlers in the&#13;
finals.&#13;
Ken Martin, the Ranger's two&#13;
time All-American, had two&#13;
quick pins and an easy decision.&#13;
His 16 second first round pin w&#13;
a new school record.&#13;
Consolation champions for th&#13;
Rangers were Kyle Barn , 150&#13;
and Rich Baron, 158. Eam1&#13;
fourth place were Rich&#13;
Schaumberg, 118; Ari n&#13;
Fredrich, 167; and Paul Par1c&#13;
Hwt.&#13;
The Rangers next see ac&#13;
Friday afternoon, Dec. 5 at 3 p.m&#13;
at the Physical Education Bl&#13;
Their opponent will be Grand&#13;
Valley State College.&#13;
URGENT URGENT UR .ENT&#13;
E'll BUY YOUR BOOKS BACK&#13;
FOR CAtHI&#13;
Nf 16 11111 Dee, •• 29&#13;
2 ........ JIii , •• tit, lit•-&#13;
'I&#13;
If&#13;
CAP &amp; GOWN&#13;
RENTAL ORDERS&#13;
MAY BE PLACED&#13;
DEC. 11 - DEC. 23&#13;
BACHELOR RENTAL FEE $625 </text>
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