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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 1, issue 16</text>
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            <text>Budget cuts to not mean termination of faculty</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Storing the raw materials of history&#13;
~oUgh rou won't find Great-Aunt&#13;
gatha S dressmaker's form or&#13;
Uncle Elwood's World War II&#13;
fOOtloc~er there, the collection&#13;
does Include SUch his tori&#13;
memorabilia as the "g ~~~&#13;
plate~" shovels used in gro:nd&#13;
break~ng cerembnies for various&#13;
ParkSIde ~uildings.&#13;
Although the first stUdents&#13;
came .to the new campus less&#13;
than fIVe, years ago, records in&#13;
the archives date back to the&#13;
1830s.&#13;
The apparent paradox is due to&#13;
Archives:&#13;
Universities call their attics&#13;
ar.-;ruvesand store in them the&#13;
raw materials of history.&#13;
Though Parkside is relatively&#13;
young as an institution, its archives&#13;
are already a bustling&#13;
place where records and&#13;
memorabilia are sorted,&#13;
cataloged and stored awaiting&#13;
some future historian seeking&#13;
perspectives on its growth and&#13;
development.&#13;
Actually,Parkside's "attic" is&#13;
located in the basement of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center and,&#13;
the fact that Parks ide's archives&#13;
also function as one of 13 Area&#13;
Research Centers maintained by&#13;
the ~ta te Historical Society on the&#13;
vanous UW campuses. Each&#13;
center holds manuscripts and&#13;
local public records pertaining to&#13;
the rebion it serves and thus the&#13;
musty leather-hound ledgers of&#13;
the past sit side by side with the&#13;
records of the university 10 their&#13;
neat, new, uniformly sized&#13;
cartons.&#13;
Presiding over boLh the&#13;
University Archives and the Area&#13;
Research Center IS •',cholu C.&#13;
Burckel, a 29-year-old historian&#13;
"ith a PhD degree from Uv.,&#13;
~ladison He werked In the&#13;
Univer ity Archive at Lh&#13;
~tadison campu before&#13;
as uming hts duties a&#13;
Parkside's first arch"".t and&#13;
thus . ecuring a mall pot In th&#13;
hi.,tor;· or the !le" In. lllUllon for&#13;
him. If.&#13;
One of the archivist's major&#13;
challenges, BurckeJ said, I 10&#13;
determine what materials WIIJ be&#13;
useful to researchers 2S or 50 or&#13;
The Parkside!- _&#13;
RANGE&#13;
Chess players such as these create havoc in Main&#13;
Place during the lunch hour. It is not uncommon to see&#13;
people with trays of food waiting for chess players to&#13;
finish a game so the table can be used.&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
SGAelections scheduled&#13;
P.S.G.A. spring elections will&#13;
be heid on March 5,6,7. There will&#13;
be openings for Recording&#13;
Secretary along with 7 senate&#13;
seats. All candidates must fill out&#13;
petitions, requiring 25 signatures,&#13;
and turn them into lhe P.S.G.A.&#13;
office or to spring elections&#13;
chairman Michael Wickwar~.&#13;
These petitions must be turned In&#13;
before Feb. 21. .&#13;
All prospective candidates&#13;
should be willing to dev.ote&#13;
enough time and effort mto&#13;
helping P.S.G.A. attain its goal of&#13;
student representation.&#13;
Wedne day, F bruar 7, 197&#13;
01. I 1 o, 16&#13;
FacuIty Senate question&#13;
Budget cuts do not mean&#13;
termination of faculty&#13;
by Terri Gogolo&#13;
As the 1973-75 budget now&#13;
stands, the limitations imposed&#13;
will not result in the termination&#13;
of any faculty member prior to&#13;
the expiration term of appointmenl.&#13;
Vice chancellor Otto&#13;
Bauer answered this and other&#13;
questions regarding the hudget at&#13;
a recent meeting of the Parks ide&#13;
Faculty Senate.&#13;
William Morrow, ProCessor of&#13;
Psychology here, submitted&#13;
several questions to the Chancellor.&#13;
In the Chancellor's absence,&#13;
Bauer responded to the&#13;
questions. He stressed that&#13;
producti vi ty requi rements.&#13;
enrollment changes, required&#13;
savings, program review and&#13;
development, budgetary reviews&#13;
by central administration are&#13;
factors that affect staffing levels&#13;
at Parkside,&#13;
For the 1973-74 term there are&#13;
noanticipated reductions In filled&#13;
positions beyond resignations&#13;
and non-renewals not based on&#13;
budgetary consi?erations A&#13;
reduction of ten filled pesiuons&#13;
for the 191'1·75 term IS anticipated.&#13;
Appropriated adjustments&#13;
will be made a factors&#13;
change.&#13;
Morrow inquired ,,:bether&#13;
unfilled positions wi ll be&#13;
protected while currently ernplayed&#13;
faculty members are&#13;
fired. According to Bau~r: there&#13;
is a need for vacant POSltI~~S 10&#13;
the budget. These pOSItions&#13;
provide a place to store funds for&#13;
required salary savings and .r0r&#13;
needs of part time instrucu?n.&#13;
But fundamentally they prov!de&#13;
the ability to respond to changmg&#13;
enrollment demands and the&#13;
academic growth of new&#13;
programs, , ed&#13;
The next questIOn discuss&#13;
was how much discrebtoiodni do various campus Caculty es. or&#13;
admI.O.IStrators have as to which&#13;
s cinc faculty positions are cut&#13;
opre Yo' h'Iob faculty members aerIe&#13;
fired. Bauer said that ~l lev s&#13;
are involved in extensive con·&#13;
sultation 3 a rt of ronllnuou&#13;
budget development "Ith the&#13;
objective being to involve each&#13;
level of campus admiru tratlon in&#13;
deciSions appropriate lo I level&#13;
The Chancellor . ets broad&#13;
policy guidelines for budget&#13;
reduction . Arter con uUation&#13;
w tth those '" ho report to lh VIC&#13;
Chancellor, more guld lIn are&#13;
prepared. The main objecuv of&#13;
this to allows each I v I •&#13;
significant range of discr lion 10&#13;
" nd&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board Is sponsoring a concert&#13;
by Abadingi on Friday, Feb. 9 at 8p.m.&#13;
The concert featuring warm, human love songs sung&#13;
by Aliza is full of exciting, throbbing folk music of South&#13;
Africa and Rhodesia plaintive protest songs. Allza.&#13;
whose full name is Aliza Thandeka Ngono, was born In&#13;
Vryburg, Cape Providence, South Africa. She was&#13;
brought to the United States by an American couple who&#13;
taught the school she attended In Rhodesia .&#13;
The musicians of Abadingl have their roots and birthplaces&#13;
in South Africa. Rhodesia, and Trinidad.&#13;
The concert is to be held In the Student Activities&#13;
Buildina There is a S1.5Oadmission charge.&#13;
Archives: Storing th . e raw ntat e r 1a&#13;
universities call their attics&#13;
arr.hives and store in them the&#13;
raw materials of history.&#13;
Though Parkside is relatively&#13;
voung as an institution, its archives&#13;
are already a bustling&#13;
~ace where records and&#13;
memorabilia are sorted&#13;
cataloged and stored awaiting&#13;
some future historian seeking&#13;
perspectives on its growth and&#13;
development.&#13;
Actually, Parkside's "attic" is&#13;
located in the basement of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center and,&#13;
to~ rou won't find Great-Aunt&#13;
ga a s dressmaker's f&#13;
Uncle Elwood's World :m or&#13;
footlocker there th II ar . II&#13;
d · ' e co ection oes mclude such h. .&#13;
memorab·1· 1st0nc&#13;
I ia as the " old&#13;
plated" shovels used . g -&#13;
b k' m ground&#13;
rea mg cerembnies for var·&#13;
Parkside cuildings. ious&#13;
Although the first students&#13;
came _to the new campus less&#13;
than five_ years ago , records in&#13;
the archives date back to th&#13;
1830s. e&#13;
The apparent paradox is due to&#13;
The Pa rks ide-- - ----&#13;
RANGER n ru r&#13;
Chess players such as these create havoc in Main&#13;
Place during the lunch hour. It is not uncommon to see&#13;
people with trays of food waiting for chess players t o&#13;
finish a game so the t able can be used .&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
SGA elections scheduled&#13;
P.S .G.A. spring elections will&#13;
be held on March 5,6, 7. There will&#13;
be op e nings for Recording&#13;
Secretary along with 7 senate&#13;
seats . All candidates must fill out&#13;
petiti ons, requiring 25 signatures,&#13;
and turn them into the P .S.G.A.&#13;
office or to spring elections&#13;
chairman Michael Wickware .&#13;
These petitions must be turned in&#13;
before Feb. 21.&#13;
All prospective candidates&#13;
should be willing to devote&#13;
enough time and effort into&#13;
helping P .S.G.A. attain its goal of&#13;
student representation .&#13;
Faculty Senat&#13;
B udget cuts do n&#13;
termination off a cul&#13;
by Terri Gogolo&#13;
no&#13;
ed&#13;
con-&#13;
The Parkside Ac l vit es Board spon o i ng&#13;
byAbadingi on Fr day, Feb. 9a Sp . m .&#13;
The concert featuring arm, human lo e on ung&#13;
by Aliza is full of exciting , throbbing fol mu l e of Sou&#13;
Africa and Rhodesia pla i ntive prate f ongs . Altz ,&#13;
whose full name is Aliza Thande a gono, a born n&#13;
Vryburg, Cape Providence, South Africa. Sh was&#13;
brought to the United States by an American couple ho&#13;
taught the school she a ended in Rhodesia.&#13;
The musicians of Abadingl have their roots and birthplaces&#13;
in South Africa, Rhodesia, and Trfn dad.&#13;
The concert is to be held in the Student Activities&#13;
BuildinQ There is a Sl.50 admission charge.&#13;
d•• Feb. 7. 1973&#13;
GER&#13;
EditoriallOpi nion&#13;
r 'ant n d&#13;
r ntati•on&#13;
up 01 m ny eonsctenttoes&#13;
,r lob s to represent the&#13;
cally elected. There are&#13;
nee structure there are&#13;
y re the Athlellc Board.&#13;
Admissions Policy&#13;
Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
• Un, erstty Committee.&#13;
omlnatlons Committee.&#13;
• L brary Committee.&#13;
tural Sclenlilic Areas&#13;
ty otal students on&#13;
re represented on&#13;
s a careless term in the first&#13;
• The taculty senators are working&#13;
y can wor all the more lor the&#13;
Ir colleagues join uSIn support 01 a&#13;
rnmen.&#13;
Issue again next eek.&#13;
( Vi Il'__ ......&#13;
b)· Gary Huck&#13;
EDITOR'S&#13;
OTEBOOK&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Editor·in.Chief&#13;
A temble feeling is having $23&#13;
,n ,tate check but still being&#13;
ubroke" because they can't be&#13;
cashed I experienced that last&#13;
A elk ca. hUlg service should&#13;
made 8\ ailable through the&#13;
"'" on office for faculty. staff&#13;
and ,tudent Payroll checks&#13;
sbould be able to be cashed on&#13;
een n &lt;Ia,. bul a small check&#13;
let" hOuld be in operation on&#13;
'" davs Personal checks of up&#13;
to .IS :.t.ould be cashed at the&#13;
small check service&#13;
If the. rvrce had existed last&#13;
\Ii I wouldn't have had to&#13;
r'TO\\ a dollar from two of my&#13;
Irtends so that 1 could eat lunch&#13;
and dinner :\Iany students spend&#13;
their \\ hole da~ here and if they&#13;
run out of mone~·they are out of&#13;
luck. even If they are carrying a&#13;
check book&#13;
The check cashing service is&#13;
not too much to a k, though I'm&#13;
sure It will take some time to&#13;
cevelcc the service. There is no&#13;
ume like the present to begin.&#13;
There i also no time like the&#13;
present for students to complete&#13;
their financial aids forms and get&#13;
them to the Financial Aids Office&#13;
as sooo as possible, The deadline&#13;
I feb. 15 and applications&#13;
received alter that date will not&#13;
be given first consideration.&#13;
And as you fill out your application.&#13;
just think how much&#13;
mcer it would be if you could cash&#13;
the checks you hope to get on&#13;
campus.&#13;
the&#13;
THORN By Konkol&#13;
They're at it again. It's t~e time of year when faculty are being&#13;
served their terrnlOatIon notices. . . .&#13;
It is again the time w~en the cr-iteria for .~etentto?, or cancellation of&#13;
faculty must be examined. Faculty are graded on three points:&#13;
teaching ability, research and service to the cor:nmumty. There are no&#13;
hard and fast rules on how I?uc~ each of these 15 to be weighed. Each&#13;
division works on its own 10 this. .&#13;
It is apparent to any student that the only on~ which should count at&#13;
all is teaching ability. The pur~ose. of.a school 15 to te~ch the stUdents.&#13;
If a university insists on dls.ml~smg com~eten.t mstructors and&#13;
retaining the incompetent, then l~Will.turn out inferior students.&#13;
A university which turns out inferior students tends to get a bad&#13;
reputation. Schools with bad reputations tend to have their&#13;
enrollments drop. Schools with dropping enrollments tend to have&#13;
their funding cut. .&#13;
Too much emphasis is put on the subject of research. Those in.&#13;
structors who spend much time on research have less time for&#13;
students and teaching. Less time spent on students means the students&#13;
are getting cheated out of at least part o~their educations.&#13;
While outstanding researchers do bring some sort of reputation to&#13;
their schools by their reputations, the. ma~n purP.Dseof the university is&#13;
still to teach. Those who are outstanding in the field of teaching should&#13;
not also be required to research in order to keep their jobs. After all&#13;
they were hired to teach.. '&#13;
Conversely, if there exists an outstanding researcher, he should not&#13;
have to spend time away from those researches doing a job whichhe&#13;
resents because it takes him away from his project. Full time&#13;
researchers should not have to teach, nor should full time teachers be&#13;
required to do research as welL&#13;
There exists a problem in the university not being able to hire full&#13;
time researchers. Some sort of solution could be worked out similar to&#13;
that of those division officers which carry light teaching loads in order&#13;
to better handle the responsibilities of their offices.&#13;
The third point taken into consideration, service to the community,&#13;
has often been misused in terminations. Sometimes this point is&#13;
twisted to mean how well does the faculty member get along with&#13;
others, and the others turn out to be those who must pass on his&#13;
qualifications for renewaL&#13;
aturally, if an instructor has only his outstanding teaching ability&#13;
going for him and prefers to spend more time on his students and less&#13;
on research, and a member of the reviewing board either dislikeshim&#13;
personally or resents his popularity and emphasizes his lack of&#13;
rbeesefairrecdh. and community se'r."vice, that outstanding teacher .i.s Sloirul to \R,j-,-'i'\&#13;
~at is why the entir.e review system must be changed. Teaching&#13;
ability should be the prime concern of the reviewing body, and since&#13;
students spend more time with their teachers than the reviewers, they&#13;
are more qualified to judge teaching than the reviewers themselves.&#13;
Th~ student opinion should be the prime consideration in faculty&#13;
reVIew.&#13;
The Parkslde Ranger is ubI' h d&#13;
year by the students of IS e ~ee~y throughout the academic&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140 T~;f' UmversIty of Wisconsin·Parkside,&#13;
Learning Center, Telepho~e (4i~)e~5~'~~9;ocated at D·194 Library·&#13;
The Parkslde Ranger is an i d '&#13;
reflected in columns and . ,n ependent newspaper, Opinions&#13;
view of The University of ~~~torlal~ are not necessarily the official&#13;
Letters to the Ed't Isconsm·Parkside,&#13;
I,nterest to students I fosrcualrte encourag ed. All Ietters on any subJect of&#13;
less, typed and dO~bl.. s :..~r staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and gool; t ~,T~e editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address, phone number andas~edA ilellers must be signed and include&#13;
be, withheld upon request Thu en. status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
prmt any letters, ,e editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
Classified and display ad rates . .&#13;
EDITOR_IN CHIEF: Rud L' Will be furlished upon request&#13;
MANAGING EDIT V lenau •&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: GOR Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EOITO~f BlaeSing.&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR . !ane Schl,esman&#13;
BUSINESS M.A.NA~~~~ KOCh, Kathryn Wellner&#13;
AOVERTISING MANAG Ke~ Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MA,NAG~R. Jerry Murphy&#13;
WRITERS, Ken Konkol G R: Kathrvn Wellner&#13;
Blah08 ' ary Jensen, MarilYn Schubert ..&#13;
CARTOONIST G ,Jeann,"e S,psma, Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHE:~V ~uCk&#13;
ADVERTISING STAF ~n Konkol. AI Craig, Bill NOli D .&#13;
AOVISER Dor1 K .F. Fred Lawrence. Ken K 'k ennIS Doonan_ Greq Syston&#13;
Opr'V08 on 01, RUdy Lienau&#13;
, . ,l..PlISINTID POI NATI -- National Educatio 1AdoNAL ~t:VIJI,TISING IY .~ 16O1.0 ' na verllSing Serv ices Inc&#13;
Iinaton Avt" New York, N, " lOOt; • 1&#13;
ID GE .• F b. 7, 73&#13;
ER&#13;
Edi or" 1/0pi n ion&#13;
irs&#13;
Ing&#13;
e&#13;
o a&#13;
r · Hu k&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
THORN By Konkol&#13;
They're at it a~ain_. It's t~e time of year when faculty are being&#13;
erved their termmation notices.. . .&#13;
I&#13;
. g · n the time when the criteria for retention or cancellation or&#13;
t 1s a a1 ult " d d" hr facultv mu t be examined. Fae . y are gra e ?n t ee points:&#13;
teaching ability, research and service to the coi:nmuruty. ~here are no&#13;
hard and fast rules on how i:nuc~ each of these 1s to be weighed. Each&#13;
divi ion works on its own m this. .&#13;
lt i apparent to any student that the only on~ which should count at&#13;
all i teaching ability. The purI?os~ of_ a school is to te~ch the students.&#13;
If a university insists on d1sm1ssmg competent mstructors and&#13;
retaining the incompetent, then i~ will _turn out inferior students.&#13;
univer ity which turns out mfenor s_tudents tends to get a bad&#13;
r putation. chools with bad repu~ations tend to have their&#13;
enrollments drop. Schools with droppmg enrollments tend to have&#13;
their funding cut. .&#13;
Too much emphasis is put on the subJect of research. Those in-&#13;
. tructor who spend much. time on research have Jess time for&#13;
tud nts and teaching. Less lime spent on st1;1dents m~ans the students&#13;
are getting cheated out of at least part o! their educat10ns.&#13;
While outstanding researchers do brmg some sort of reputation to&#13;
their chools by their reputations, the_ ma!n pur~se of the university is&#13;
·till to teach. Those who are outstandmg m the field of teaching should&#13;
not al O be required to research in order to keep their jobs. After all,&#13;
they were hired to teach.&#13;
Conversely, if there exists an outstanding researcher, he should not&#13;
ha\'e to pend time away from those researches doing a job which he&#13;
r ents because it takes him away from his project. Full time&#13;
r ·earcher should not have to teach, nor should full time teachers be&#13;
reqwred to do research as well.&#13;
There exists a problem in the university not being able to hire full&#13;
time researchers. Some sort of solution could be worked out similar to&#13;
that of those division officers which carry light teaching loads in order&#13;
to better handle the responsibilities of their offices.&#13;
The third point taken into consideration, service to the community,&#13;
ha often been misused in terminations. Sometimes this point is&#13;
twisted to mean how well does the faculty member get along with&#13;
others, and the others turn out to be those who must pass on his&#13;
qualifications for renewal.&#13;
aturally, if an instructor has only his outstanding teaching ability&#13;
going for him and prefers to spend more time on his students and Jess&#13;
on research, and a member of the reviewing board either dislikes him&#13;
personally or resents his popularity and emphasizes his lack of&#13;
research and community service, that outstanding teacher is aoiruz to&#13;
be fired. R '"~&#13;
That is why the entire review system must be changed. Teaching&#13;
ability should be the prime concern of the reviewing body, and since&#13;
students spend more time with their teachers than the reviewers, they&#13;
are more qualified to judge teaching than the reviewers themselves.&#13;
The student opinion should be the prime consideration in faculty&#13;
review.&#13;
i(:aANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is pub!' h d&#13;
year bv the students of T is e :,vee~y throughout the academic&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140 g;f' University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Learning Ce~ter, Telepho~e (41~t ~s:~~ 9&#13;
;~cated at D-194 Library-&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is . d&#13;
reflected in columns and _an. m ependent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
\iew of The University of ~e~tor1al~ are not necessarily the official&#13;
Letter to the Ed"t isconsm-Parkside.&#13;
interest to students&#13;
1&#13;
::c:te encouraged. All letters on any subJect of&#13;
less, typed and do~ble-s i.c or sta ff m~st be confined to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and goJ t ~- The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address, phone number and~~ ed Al; letters must be signed and include&#13;
be_ withheld upon request. T u en_ status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any letters. he editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
l!D1T:l:s1 sicfiHed1EaFndR·~splay ad rates will be furnish&#13;
'M AGI G uuy L1enau d UpOn request,&#13;
EWS EDITi~.l~OR Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE ED eott Blaes,ng&#13;
SPORTS EDIT~~O~ !•ne Schliesman&#13;
BUSI ESS MANAGE~s ~och, Kathryn Wellner&#13;
ADVERTISING MAN en Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MAN:i:; Jerry Murphy&#13;
WRITERS Ken Konkol G Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Bia a ary Jensen, Marilyn Schub&#13;
CARTOO IST ert, Jeannine S,psma, Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
Gary Huck&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS Ken&#13;
ADVERTISI G STA Konkol, Al Craig, Bill Noll D .&#13;
ADVISER Don K FF . Fred Lawrence, Ken Ko 'k lenn,s Doonan Gre g Sys ton&#13;
opriva n o , Rudy L,enau&#13;
'&#13;
,llPUSINTID J10a. N -&#13;
N1t1on1l Educatio lAdONAL ~~VUT1s1NG BY ·1&#13;
360 Le . na vertmng Services Inc&#13;
a:1n1ton Ave,, New York, N. ,·. 10017' , i&#13;
We get letters ...&#13;
Letters to the Editors are enCOur d&#13;
tney be conti ned to 250 words or Ie age . We ask that&#13;
typed and double-spaced. All must bess.and that they be&#13;
address and phone number and stud sigtnetdineand' Iude&#13;
junior, sophomore, freshma. ) or teeenIt s atus (seni.Or,&#13;
will be withheld upon request The edlt y rank. Names&#13;
right to refuse to prit],t any I~tters. I ors reserve the&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I feel obligated to respond to&#13;
your editorial of Jan. 31, at least&#13;
insofar as the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Assn. is concerned.&#13;
Upon reading of this diatribe&#13;
against Stude!1t Government, I&#13;
must conclude that you are either&#13;
woefullyignorant of the activities&#13;
of PSGA, or you are deliberately&#13;
attempting to engender empty&#13;
controversy so that you may fill&#13;
pages in your paper.&#13;
It is stated that the winter&#13;
carnival is "the first thing PSGA&#13;
has done for the school." It is&#13;
further implied that this is the&#13;
first "constructive" thing ever&#13;
done by PSGA. Apparently, you&#13;
consider such things as faculty&#13;
evaluation, voter registration,&#13;
student health insurance, student&#13;
appointments to university&#13;
committees, the 1972 Symposium,&#13;
work on the new student&#13;
union and bookstore contract,&#13;
and various dances and social&#13;
events (all PSGA projects) to be&#13;
"unconstructive" (or destructive?)&#13;
or insignificant. I, for one,&#13;
consider these and other ac·&#13;
tivities to be of some importance&#13;
to Parkside.&#13;
By a curious twist of logic, you&#13;
congratulate Student Government&#13;
for arranging the winter&#13;
carnival, but then say we should&#13;
not do it! Perhaps you understand&#13;
this position, but those&#13;
of us in Student Government find&#13;
it incomprehensible. It is not&#13;
uncommon for student&#13;
or~anizations tn sponsor social 11/1.1 J')A.&gt;o&gt;/ '.&lt;..(T·'1='4'f IJt ''''r'~'-.", •.••~ ........ ac IVltles.&#13;
You also contend that PSGA is&#13;
"unrepresenta ti ve." Wha t&#13;
constitutes representativeness?&#13;
Wethink, with good reason, that&#13;
Student Government most&#13;
closely approximates a&#13;
representative student body on&#13;
this campus, as we were chosen&#13;
in open elections.&#13;
I strongly encourage your&#13;
efforts to bring all elements of the&#13;
campus community together,&#13;
although your means are&#13;
questionable. My PSGA&#13;
colleagues and I urge you,&#13;
however, to put your brain in&#13;
gear before you write. Write on 1&#13;
Mark R. Harris&#13;
Senator, PSGA&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
By the time this is printed the&#13;
Viet Nam cease~fire will have&#13;
begun, While those of us who&#13;
have worked for ending the war&#13;
are glad,this,has been pulled off,&#13;
on.e major ISSue is very con-&#13;
~PICUOUS by its absence. And that&#13;
IS the question of amnesty for&#13;
draft resistors currently jailed by&#13;
. the government or who have fled&#13;
to Canada and Sweden.&#13;
Ifavor total amnesty for all but&#13;
deserters and even the latter&#13;
should not be prosecuted across&#13;
the. board but have their cases&#13;
reviewed individually. Those who&#13;
acted out of perhaps a late&#13;
realization that killing is immoral&#13;
should be pardoned. Those&#13;
who deserted for reasons not&#13;
relating to conscience must be&#13;
made to do alternate service. The&#13;
m&lt;ijor anti-amnesty arguement&#13;
is the ,line that those who fought&#13;
and died took their raps so why&#13;
should others get out of it? Now&#13;
that the war. at least most most&#13;
American involvement is over&#13;
this no longer applies. After othe;&#13;
wars in the past, amnesty was&#13;
granted to heal the divisions&#13;
created by conflict.&#13;
The term amnesty implies&#13;
forgiveness for an earlier wrong&#13;
doing. But the truth is that the&#13;
courageous youths who respect&#13;
all human life as their own at the&#13;
hands of organized tyranny have&#13;
done no wrong. All of us who are&#13;
into the "peace movement" must&#13;
begin working for support of&#13;
FREEOOM fro draft resistors. ...~.tiley 'air are' our brothers and&#13;
need our help. And to put&#13;
priorities straight we should&#13;
declare amnesty for the Pen~&#13;
tagon and the Kennedy~Johnson-&#13;
Nixon administrations,&#13;
David Myer&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I .would like to thank Ken&#13;
Konkol of the Ranger for relating&#13;
the facts behind the story of my&#13;
stolen book which was found but&#13;
unrecovered. I must say it was a&#13;
completely accurate account of&#13;
my experiences encountered with&#13;
having a book stolen, and then&#13;
trying to do something about it.&#13;
The only advice I can give to my&#13;
fellow students is to watch your&#13;
books closely, because if you get&#13;
them stolen, you'll have to take it&#13;
as a "lesson learned."&#13;
Thanks again Ken.&#13;
Tom Geb -~Parkside student&#13;
The Cartoon Strip&#13;
Reporter&#13;
clarifies&#13;
'stolen book'&#13;
article&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
!n the last issue of the Ranger,&#13;
this reporter wrote that Parkside&#13;
student Tom Geb reported I\' had&#13;
a book stolen from him. Geb went&#13;
to the bOOkstore and found the&#13;
book. He said that the handwriting&#13;
in the book proved the&#13;
book was his and told the. tore&#13;
manager. After ensuing&#13;
problems Geb bought the book&#13;
back.&#13;
The article brought a reacuon&#13;
from the Parkside seeur-itv force.&#13;
Security detecti\'e Saul Gordon&#13;
investigator of the ca.-e, took&#13;
exception to certain parts of the&#13;
story. Gordon said that the&#13;
?riginal s!ory contained glaring&#13;
inaccuracies. He said that his&#13;
im'estigation showed Geb's name&#13;
had never been in the book, had&#13;
not been erased, and that there&#13;
was no hand\\Titing in the book to&#13;
distinguish it.&#13;
Gordon, in the presence of gt.&#13;
Donald Krogh and this reporter.&#13;
explained to Geb tbat there was&#13;
insufficient proof to prosecute the&#13;
case. Gordon brought out hi&#13;
original reJXlrt to \'erify that&#13;
there had been no distinguishing&#13;
marks in the book, The original&#13;
report had not been \'erified by&#13;
Geb.&#13;
The original story did nol intend&#13;
to imply laxity on the part of&#13;
security. The story was based&#13;
upon an interview with Geb and&#13;
expressed his dissatisfaction In&#13;
the action taken,&#13;
Student&#13;
handbook&#13;
available&#13;
Student handbooks are&#13;
ava i lable in the Student&#13;
Activities Office, Room D&#13;
197, LLC. Students&#13;
desiring a copy may pick&#13;
them up.&#13;
Covered in the handbook&#13;
are such items as student&#13;
services, university&#13;
facilities, information and&#13;
university regulations.&#13;
A limited quantity of the&#13;
handbook has been&#13;
printed. The handbook will&#13;
be in use through the 1975·&#13;
76 school year.&#13;
SAY!! WCJ.)t!J VA LIKE"i:&gt; 60&#13;
WIn&lt;ME 1b A _C£ 'TIj1S&#13;
FRiD4Y "~~"!&#13;
Wed., Feb. 7. 1973THE PARKSIOE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' \ott'; "The 'Io\tm nt" ~ill bfo rtKular It turf' in&#13;
Rangrr, to dral \\Ilh tht ftmmist a peet r lift In toda,' wi t\.&#13;
Gue~1 wruers art in\i~d. .&#13;
By Lorri Tommerup&#13;
Thls:j to Introduce ~QU to thE' Par uk Women' C ueus The&#13;
purpose or the Women' alK'USon the Par de mJ 10 en&#13;
courag women to fulfill tbemselv (.' and th lr careers briar and a&#13;
araduauon lIe hope the Caucu can enobl om n to "id !belr&#13;
1m elvement be)ond th.,r personalhi mto their hind om&#13;
rnunuy In oedcr (0 do Ou we first n to \ lop a tTU5Land unit&#13;
among women Hocpfully thro h the Caucus Par d \uxn n&#13;
and \\ III gam a mort" POSllJ\ e \ il 01 lh m lv omen and&#13;
\\ orkul~ members or thl rommumt&#13;
We 3. ,,"om n mu I becom a .. arr 01 nd BUt'mpt to nil I t&#13;
"omen ~problem ...and IK'C'd both 011 campus and In th mmuOlt)&#13;
The II omen. Caucus will brIng bout th waren ) 11""1'''''''5.&#13;
d,o,c", . 10", panel.. rap 10 e Tonlat" e1) planIlt.'d lor th&#13;
..:em~l('r are partiCipatIon In tht' F ruar) Ii I m J of th&#13;
Wlsconsm CoordlO3lmg Council 01 \\ omen In Higher 1'-:du lion in&#13;
WhIle'l4aler lurth('r t'ar chnl pattert'k'd aller Ibt 0 heJd La&#13;
t"m~le-r. and ~haps anolhtr Worn 'fl' Da~ \\ e In 11 )Iou to tend&#13;
our announC't"d meelJnR lhlS ~m ter If )"OU are toler ted n 1m&#13;
derstanchnR more a t }OUf'S('l( 8.! a 'oman&#13;
Point of .I W&#13;
Anti-Lib cartoon?&#13;
By Jane Schleismen&#13;
b Bb ohan&#13;
..,CA~ 1 BoRRouJ SOME.&#13;
PAPER F"~OM You?!!&#13;
..wHA1' l.&lt;JA.5Tt-IE ASSIGNM~N"'"&#13;
FoR !.AS, MONDAy?1&#13;
CAN I I'OR!lOw SOME -&#13;
M.ONEY FoR LUNCI·{'r!l!&#13;
.,. GoT A !l:,JCI L t CAf'J&#13;
USE?!!&#13;
RUOFF&#13;
YDKU!&#13;
." - " ,&#13;
We get letters ...&#13;
. Letters to the Editors are encoura e&#13;
tney be confined to 250 words or les g d . We ask that&#13;
typed and double-spaced. All must be ssia~d that ~hey be&#13;
address and phone number and studengt :!: nd incl~de&#13;
junior, sophomore, freshma, ) or tac It us (sen i o r,&#13;
will be withheld upon re:quest The edu.ty rank . Names&#13;
• . , ors reser th&#13;
right to refuse to pr111t any letters. ve e&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I feel obli g ated to respond to&#13;
your editoria l of J a n . 31 , a t l east&#13;
insofar as the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Assn. is concerned .&#13;
Upon reading of this dia tribe&#13;
against Stud ent Gov e rnment, I&#13;
must conclud e' that you are either&#13;
woef ully ignorant of the activities&#13;
of PSGA, or yo u are deliberately&#13;
attempting to engender empty&#13;
con tro ve rsy so that you may fill&#13;
pages in your paper.&#13;
It is stated that the winter&#13;
ca rnival is "the first thing PSGA&#13;
has done for the school." It is&#13;
further implied that this is the&#13;
fi rst "constructive" thing ever&#13;
done by PSGA. Apparently, you&#13;
consider such things as faculty&#13;
evalua tion , voter registration,&#13;
student health insurance, student&#13;
appointments to university&#13;
co mm ittees, the 1972 Sympos&#13;
ium, work on the new student&#13;
union and bookstore contract ,&#13;
and various da nces a nd social&#13;
ev ents (all PSGA projects) to be&#13;
" unconstructive" ( or des tructive?)&#13;
or insignificant. I , for one,&#13;
consider these and other activities&#13;
to be of some importance&#13;
to Parkside.&#13;
By a curious twist of logic, you&#13;
congratulate Student Government&#13;
for arranging the winter&#13;
carnival, but then say we should&#13;
not do it! Perhaps you understand&#13;
this position, but those&#13;
of us in Student Government find&#13;
it incomprehensible. It is not&#13;
uncommon for student&#13;
. ,O£~r.m~.,~~\2n ~., tq J P.Qn~-~~. ~!&gt;S'.&gt;3.l.&#13;
acllvmes.&#13;
You also contend that PSGA is&#13;
"unrepresentative. " What&#13;
constitutes representativeness?&#13;
We think, with good reason, that&#13;
Student Gov e rnme nt mos t&#13;
closely approx ima tes a&#13;
representative student body on&#13;
this campus, as we were chosen&#13;
in open election s.&#13;
I strong ly e nc ourage your&#13;
effor ts to br ing all elem ents of the&#13;
cam pus commun ity togeth er,&#13;
a lthough your means are&#13;
quest ionable. My PSGA&#13;
co ll eagues and I urge you,&#13;
however, to put your brain in&#13;
gear before you write. Write on!&#13;
Mark R . Harris&#13;
Senator, PSGA&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
_By the time this is printed the&#13;
Vie t Nam cease-fi r e will have&#13;
be gun . While those of us who&#13;
have worked fo r endi ng t he war&#13;
are glad . this _has been pulled off,&#13;
on~ maJor issue is very con~&#13;
p1c uous by its absence. And that&#13;
is th e question of amnesty for&#13;
draft resistors currently jailed bv&#13;
. the government or who have fled&#13;
to Canada and Sweden.&#13;
I favor total amnesty for all but&#13;
deserters and even the latter&#13;
should not be prosecuted aero s&#13;
the board but have their cases&#13;
reviewed individually. Those who&#13;
acted out of perhaps a late&#13;
realization that killing is immoral&#13;
should b~ pardoned Those&#13;
who deserted for reasons not&#13;
relating to co nscience must be&#13;
made to do alternate service. The&#13;
m,1jor anti-amnesty arguement&#13;
is the line that those who fought&#13;
and died took their raps so why&#13;
shoul d other s get out of it? ow&#13;
tha t the war, at least most most&#13;
Am e rica n invol vement is over&#13;
this no longer applies . Afte r othe;&#13;
wars in th e past, amnesty was&#13;
granted to heal the di visions&#13;
created by conflict.&#13;
The term amnesty implies&#13;
forgiveness for an earlier wrong&#13;
doing . But the truth is tha t the&#13;
courageous youths who respect&#13;
all human life as their own at th e&#13;
hands of organized tyranny have&#13;
done no wrong. All of us who a re&#13;
into the " peace movement" must&#13;
begin working for support of&#13;
FREEDOM fro draft r esistors .&#13;
~-- t fiey ali are . our br othe rs a nd&#13;
need our help. And to put&#13;
priorities straight we s hould&#13;
declare amnesty for the P entagon&#13;
and the Kenn edy-JohnsonNixon&#13;
a dmini strations.&#13;
David Myer&#13;
To the Editor :&#13;
I . would like to thank Ken&#13;
Konk ol of the Ranger for relating&#13;
the facts behind the story of my&#13;
stolen book which was found but&#13;
unrecovered. I must say it was a&#13;
completely accurate account of&#13;
my experiences encountered with&#13;
having a book stolen. and then&#13;
trying to do something about it&#13;
The only advice I can give to m~&#13;
fellow students is to watch your&#13;
books closely, because if you get&#13;
them stolen, you'll have to take it&#13;
as a "lesson learned.··&#13;
Thanks again Ken.&#13;
Tom Geb -- Parkside student&#13;
The Cartoon Strip&#13;
... CAN l 90RROW SOME&#13;
PAP!:,R F~Or-1 You?!!&#13;
.. lllHAi' ~s itiE ASSl6NME'N-f&#13;
FoR LASi' ~ONDAY ?!&#13;
CI\N I EoROOvJ SOME -&#13;
t-\Ot-l EY f'oR. L.IJ,JCl·H'!//&#13;
.. . GoT A ~ ,-le i L I CAr.J&#13;
USE ?!!&#13;
Reporter&#13;
clarifies&#13;
'stolen book&#13;
article&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
Student&#13;
handbook&#13;
available&#13;
Student handboo s are&#13;
available in the Studen&#13;
Activities Office, Room D&#13;
197, LLC. Studen s&#13;
desiring a copy may pie&#13;
them up.&#13;
Covered in the handboo&#13;
are such items as s ud n&#13;
services, univ rs,&#13;
facilities, information nd&#13;
university regulations.&#13;
A limited quantity of the&#13;
handbook has been&#13;
printed. The handboo Ill&#13;
be in use through the 1975&#13;
76 school year.&#13;
Wed., F b. 7, 1973 TH PARKSIDE RA N G 3&#13;
the&#13;
Mov&#13;
Sy Lorri Tomm rup&#13;
t&#13;
By Ja ne Sc h le,sm n&#13;
? ,: .&#13;
h 11&#13;
p "&#13;
SIDE RA GER ed .• Feb. 7. 1973&#13;
W&#13;
il •••&#13;
8y ATHRY ELL ER&#13;
••• nd iolence&#13;
By JEANNI E SIPSMA&#13;
Folksinger&#13;
Judy Godfrey&#13;
to appear here&#13;
sturdev'&#13;
Folk. ,nl:er Judy Godfrey.&#13;
ter ••n.lav. of Vic Godfrey.&#13;
Counlr) coach, ....iIl appear&#13;
for t 0 ~ram- on the eyemng&#13;
of. l..-da&gt; Feb. \0 at Talenl&#13;
Hall ",.. Ii .t program ....,II tart&#13;
tiP m and the second at&#13;
I 15 pm A=mp"ny,ng her&#13;
:ill be RUIt.an~t ~Ike Kr~eg~r&#13;
from tht" lJnl\e~lt): of IllinOIS.&#13;
rman Club r- ~poosor,"g the&#13;
pI"'f'SC"1tallC.'~&#13;
Judy Godfrey&#13;
•trs Godfre)i's road lours&#13;
tarted one year ago after she&#13;
completed her !irsl LP album&#13;
• 'other's Pra\"er" inee then&#13;
1M response to her programs has&#13;
taken her tbrough several&#13;
mll;!v.e5lem and eastern stales.&#13;
Herpa.. ...raudiences ha\"e included&#13;
college and military coffee&#13;
hou.ses. educational institutions.&#13;
church funcuOIlS. and various&#13;
Ct\"lC organizations.&#13;
The programs on feb. 10 will&#13;
mclude a blend of folk, gospelfolk,&#13;
and ITarohonal spirituals.&#13;
The gospel-folk songs '" ~l consist&#13;
of original numbers by the&#13;
performer. other contemporary&#13;
arrangements. and older&#13;
traditional songs. The musical&#13;
background for all songs will be&#13;
combmations or six and 12-string&#13;
gu\lar ....ork&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
is blowing and Hawkwind has. arrived to co?tinue in the&#13;
The bre.e~~ fascist music. The exploration of. space IS again unfight&#13;
agat ad . g a mania whenever the stylus IS engaged with this&#13;
derwav pr uC~~ha weakness for electronic ecstasy may be saturized&#13;
di~- ~nyo;~ W'ynthesiser adds the final element necessary for the&#13;
WIth )OYi'on o~~ife to heart pounding bea~. .&#13;
complet&#13;
B&#13;
. ter-m" comes along. Hawkwmd picks up the search for "The rams f . .&#13;
th t h S never been reached before. Z ew minutes lOto the&#13;
t.he note a theasiser notes cut through rea ther brraaims, feathers which JOUr.nety,shyenl'copter propellers. VO.ices .III the deep a re aIso recogni.zed turAn mtwoellve string acoustI.c' br-ings f.orth spar kl'mg runru.ng water.&#13;
rela'n "Space is Deep." A beautiful meldoy. Bubbles float Up&#13;
y&gt;gg voices from ghosts and releasmg them as they burst. At the carryin ..'&#13;
d nthetic orchestra leaves Its tmpressron.&#13;
en"Laordsyof Light" calls forth more V.IS.IOns,spurrmgina i1d.eas t0 be. PUton&#13;
paper. Hawkwind ~n do the same for anyone, Here ISa reminder of&#13;
UtAe nboatshserof12H-satwriknwg ~ISnd. . " . " . cutting Down Through The Nlgh~: Here IS the&#13;
A tune that causes mortals to bow down and say yes o·mighty&#13;
gHeamw,kwind you are magm ifileen t!," . , "&#13;
The time has come to listen to a space·~ge chant. This IS Time We&#13;
Left This World." The Cherokee Nation returns as a band of&#13;
psychedelic savages.&#13;
It is a good idea to occassionally absorb on~'s self in Hawkwind. ltil&#13;
sure to produce interesting results. HawkwlOd should be taken as a&#13;
substitute for acid, . .&#13;
o bummers, no lousy crashes are a part of thIS trIp. Hawkwindhas&#13;
earned the right to be heard.&#13;
&lt;Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Jazz ensemble provides&#13;
7 minute&#13;
OIL CHA E&#13;
Sl99&#13;
s&#13;
PIT STOP&#13;
I 5 Sl&#13;
e en&#13;
PART n E&#13;
ORIC&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
Main Racine&#13;
Special&#13;
londa\' thru&#13;
Thurda\' 11-&#13;
633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15¢&#13;
er ing Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foo_ball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air ConditlOnon.il Pinball Machine&#13;
• • Cold 5,:&lt; Packs To Go : •••••••••••••••• •• I •• I·••• I ••&#13;
noon entertaIn• ment&#13;
By Jane S~hliesman&#13;
"You Don't Know What Love 11."&#13;
An exciting delivery of SlaD&#13;
_ Ktb.een.tsobn'rsov~"M~a~li~guania" .e.nded&#13;
Th1j!j'fa'S"o~ifp6li1'!elt&#13;
most current arrangements on&#13;
the market for stage bands are&#13;
watered down, so the Parkside&#13;
group uses arrangements&#13;
directly from the big bands-&#13;
Woody Herman, Stan Kenton,&#13;
Counl Basie and Buddy Rich.&#13;
This is very difficult but lbe&#13;
results are well worth heari~.&#13;
Those who missed it, as well as&#13;
those who wish to hear it again,&#13;
will be able to appreciate a&#13;
similar concert on Friday, Feb.&#13;
23, from noon until 1 p.m.&#13;
Meanwhile, a Iijpe of last week's&#13;
concert is available in the&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
The Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
provided lunch-time entertainment&#13;
last Friday with a&#13;
free concert in the Student Ac·&#13;
tivities BUilding. A large crowd of&#13;
students, faculty and staff were&#13;
on hand to hear them, and State&#13;
Assemblyman R. Michael&#13;
Ferrall was also in the audience.&#13;
Their performance included&#13;
"Sweet Georgia Upside Down," a&#13;
Count Basie tune called "The&#13;
second Time Around," "Soul&#13;
Lady," ?riginally recorded by&#13;
Buddy RIch, "Light Vibrations,'''&#13;
and a Stan Kenton ballad entitled'&#13;
M9N. &amp; TUES. EVENING. 5:00-8:00&#13;
$1.75&#13;
\~~~YfJM(]{'lj1~k~i1f!il;&#13;
(Ndomatter how much of our pizza,chicken, potatoes&#13;
an.. salad you eat, the pnce is only $1.75)&#13;
Children under 3 Free _ Ctlildren 3-9,10 Cents a year SRI"Ai In'YIelIPAusl'lAC lLhOIUISIe&#13;
lathrop and 21st (Almost)&#13;
ID G ., . 7, 7&#13;
••&#13;
E&#13;
II&#13;
lk in r&#13;
Jud· dfr&#13;
t pp ar h r&#13;
Judy Godfrey&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15¢&#13;
Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
2 p&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
. blowing and Hawkwind has_ arrived to co~tinue in the&#13;
Th bre_eze 1 ci t music . The exploration of space 1s again un.&#13;
fi ht agair: fa g a mania whenever the stylus is engaged with this&#13;
d_ r\\ 3 Y ~r ~:~ha weakness for electronic ecstasy may be saturized&#13;
~ - c. ~\~)O;he vnthesiser adds the final element necessary for the&#13;
ith JO. . of life to heart pounding beats.&#13;
completion . t m'' comes along. Hawkwind picks up the search for&#13;
.. The Bram or f z f · · th t h never been reached be ore. ew minutes mto the&#13;
~h 'n __ a th:S~ser notes cut through feather brains, feathers which&#13;
ourn ' , n · · th deep a 1 · h. 1- pter propellers. Voices m e re a so recognized&#13;
turn mto e ico · f th kl' · tw 1 ·e ·tring acoustic brmgs or spar mg runrung water&#13;
.. ace i Deep ." A beautiful meldoy. Bubbles float up&#13;
r~layi_ng .01Yces from gho ts and releasing them as they bur t. At the&#13;
carnm \: . . ·&#13;
nd a ynthetiC orchestra leaves It~ !mpreSSIOn_- .&#13;
" Lord of Light" calls forth more v1S1ons, spurring 1~eas to~ put 011&#13;
per. Hawkwind can do the same for anyone. Here 1s a reminder of&#13;
th ba: of Hawkw!nd . . " . ,, .&#13;
th r 12.string 1s cutting Down Through The Night. Here 1s the&#13;
no\ tune that causes mortals to bow down and say "yes o-mighty&#13;
em. , 'f. t'" Hawk'&gt;"ind you are magm icen . . . " .&#13;
Th time ha come to listen to a space-~ge chant. This 1s Time We&#13;
Left Thi world ." The Cherokee Nation returns as a band of&#13;
ps ·chedelic avages. , . .&#13;
It i a good idea to occassionally absorb on~ s self m Hawkwmd. It la&#13;
ur to produce interesting results. Hawkwmd should be taken as 1&#13;
ub titute for acid. . .&#13;
• •0 bummers, no lousy crashes are a part of this trip. Hawkwind hat&#13;
am d the right to be heard.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Jazz ensemble provides&#13;
noon entertainment&#13;
By Jane S~htiesman&#13;
The Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
provided lunch-time entertainment&#13;
last Friday with a&#13;
free concert in the Student Activities&#13;
Building. A large crowd of&#13;
students, faculty and staff were&#13;
on hand to hear them, and State&#13;
Assemblyman R. Michael&#13;
Ferrall was also in the audience.&#13;
Their performance included&#13;
"Sweet Georgia Upside Down ," a&#13;
Count Basie tune called "The&#13;
Second Time Around," "Soul&#13;
Lady," originally recorded by&#13;
Buddy Rich , "Light Vibrations,"&#13;
and a Stan Kenton ballad entitled&#13;
" You Don ' t Know What Love II.&#13;
An exciting delivery of Stan&#13;
Kenton's "Maliguania" ended&#13;
the show.&#13;
Thoma on poillte(f&#13;
most current arrangements on&#13;
the market for stage bands are&#13;
watered down , so the Parkside&#13;
group uses arrangements&#13;
directly from the big bandsWoody&#13;
Herman, Stan Kentoo&#13;
Count Basie and Buddy Rich .&#13;
This is very difficult but the&#13;
results are well worth heariJI.&#13;
Those who missed it, as well as&#13;
those who wish to hear it again,&#13;
will be able to appreciate a&#13;
similar concert on Friday, Feb.&#13;
23, from noon until 1 p.m.&#13;
Meanwhile , a tape of last week'&#13;
concert is available in the&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
Lathrop and 21st ( Almost)&#13;
" ,&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
GuyS&amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at National Parks.&#13;
Priva~e Camps, Dude Ranches&#13;
and Resorts throughout the na·&#13;
tion. Over 35,000 students aided&#13;
last year. For Free information on&#13;
student assistance program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED envelope&#13;
to Opportunity Research,&#13;
Dept. SJO. 55 Flathead Drive,&#13;
Kalispell, MT 59901,&#13;
....YOU MUST APPLY EARLY.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA ACROSS fROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
1f!JtJj(a;rft,,Wild&#13;
,!JI~' "Wk,,£g..df:: if on&#13;
owl "''i)&#13;
- 80TH UNDER SAME OWNERSHIP ~&#13;
In Four Size. 9" . 12'" . 14" _ H,'&#13;
. ~~Wc· SPA~~~TI • CIiICW-l&#13;
• HAMIF~O~A~I~;~~wLI~HSE~GNA&#13;
C,6,RRY.OUTS DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING.. WE BRING"&#13;
657·9843 or 658.4922&#13;
5140 61h AVE&#13;
Photo by Douglas Doonan&#13;
:J&#13;
1I&#13;
3V&#13;
SJ.NV~1nSNOJ HJHV3S3U 1V.'IIOI~V.).lQ3 ,V.)IH31\ \&#13;
a3.LNYM SU0J..)3UIO V3HV&#13;
a:ooz ·:&gt;·O'·qseM.&lt;t\N '''AV e!Ue·\IA5UUCld 0Ct~&#13;
(;-GI IHito-S9L OC:li-ot:6 -res (roll IJj-uo,,,&#13;
S}f;)V9H3dVd ~,\lnO;)510 035n O\V \\3:'1.&#13;
~Nlan';)NI&#13;
S'VIH3~V~~ ";)11\13531:1,VNOIJ.V.Jn03 ::1J3'dl\..O.)&#13;
SJ.~\I~,nSNOJ IIJ1:IV3S31:1,V:'\,"OUV.),10::1,VJIH3l'1. V&#13;
"psst...&#13;
heykid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
. 31 W~ldo Wlnchesler, who IS~ Stube tor. toc~1 d.'ty&#13;
I hear it most reliably from a p, d f pporlunllles for cu,s ,nd dolls on r.p Jill&#13;
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yar 5 "h" ''''''re In the newspJpeJ rnhl-JI cll'l'ICe&#13;
over the country. He say S Ihere ISa rea b0e p.u..l.tlni Ihe arm on some of Ihe ItIs .f 01•&#13;
to make some decent scratch. while rnlJ: Waldo you un nol help bul hne Ine ,ui k_&#13;
terra firma. With a high-class monIcker Ie_ "&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... d~, not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker' Check It out.&#13;
"The race is not always to the swift&#13;
Damon Runyon once wr~te, tong _but it's a good way to bet."&#13;
or the battle always to t e s r&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
~"ANGER&#13;
,)&#13;
1I&#13;
3&#13;
~&#13;
Wed" Feb, 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
p,~ sturJents now bI''''9 toec~.. for&#13;
Pt"'VJlle I~ 1n Rtoe..... by 9!'"4ldu,a'. OIl&#13;
Ind, ... Umyen, ly'S Ar\usiC S&lt;:hool Cell 6J4&#13;
411 tcw .Iud lIOn&#13;
\\ ..\.'TED -, wdt'nt ~ho h. car&#13;
and 'tun 1.0 (' rn II perc: nl&#13;
cemml i n etue .d\ trli In&#13;
for tht" R :\GI-:H I), .h&#13;
kno\\ Ihdot' .ft'a \\ I hl\f'.&#13;
~~al pponu.nh)', If Inl ff' It'd&#13;
call m-ms or lOp rn a, L1.C II·&#13;
191and a for Jrrr, '1urph~ U&#13;
h' not there .. l \f')0 r n m&#13;
and 1f'1 ph ne number,&#13;
FOR ALE&#13;
1901 ~f't ITftP&lt;JII... « IIvtornJll C&#13;
frllrt'm,u,Of'l Po..."" brllll..S. Po.... !'"&#13;
S'Hf"'"CI tf9S »ot 9'2\61&#13;
SEWINODOHI:&#13;
Smoc:ks. "1I'lin. ,...".... ewt.*-&#13;
.... ,.. ceu ""'nJI.I.t (1) 7 .,. ••&#13;
·w •&#13;
You haye a speciel&#13;
someone somewhere,&#13;
whether II'S your mom&#13;
or your sweetheart,&#13;
hoping YOU'll remember&#13;
her with Uowers on&#13;
Valentine's Dey,&#13;
Send herlhe FlO·&#13;
loyeBu OOle.A&#13;
bnght and beaulilut&#13;
bouquet ollresh&#13;
flowers In a special&#13;
conteiner All&#13;
dealgned With&#13;
fFebruary 1.th&#13;
(nmlnd.&#13;
Ut:uJ1 ..... ' II&#13;
IOf .... an&#13;
Find out how easy it lito send the right nOw'l"Ilhe FTO&#13;
way. Drop 1ft lor your FREE Selecllon GUld •. Wh.rever&#13;
you see the famous FTO symbol. (Or wnt FTO. 900&#13;
Wesl Lafa)'etl., OeIfOIl. Michigan, ~28) MOlt FTO&#13;
Florists acceptrnaJor credIt card,&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
50~OFF ON ANY&#13;
~&#13;
/-~ PIZZA&#13;
Q~ ITAllAN FOOD A SPECIAL TV&#13;
, ~, SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
.""'... DRINKS AVAILABLE FROM THE BAR Feb. 14,&#13;
Coming ••••••&#13;
-- ,', 1"llll" , I' ~l.rrir _I" Jo(-'&#13;
Featuring&#13;
AUZA&#13;
Exciting, Throbbing Folk Music&#13;
of South Africa and Rhodesio&#13;
FRI.-FEB.9 - 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Adm. '1.50&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
SpoO'.ort"d b~ Ih",&#13;
'Iarksidt" :\l'lh iii.....Hoard&#13;
•&#13;
SUMME R JOBS&#13;
Guys&amp;. Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at National Parks&#13;
Private Camps, Dude Ranche~&#13;
and Resorts throughout the na:'&#13;
on. Over 35,000 students aided&#13;
8st year . For Free information on&#13;
student assistance program send&#13;
slelf -addressed STAMPED enlleop&#13;
e to o · D pportunity Researc h&#13;
ept. SJO 55 F · ' K 1 • lathead Dnve&#13;
a ispell, MT 5 9901 '&#13;
YOU MUST APPLY EARLY .... .&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
tf/4/J'{a«b #iJ'd&#13;
1tttJ~!~;.,&#13;
'wketcg~o~· 1,,1 alt&#13;
c.id jJ'-JJ'1&#13;
- 80r,; UNDER SAME OWNERSHIP -&#13;
In four S ... , 9" · 12". 14" . 16 "&#13;
· ~~b~scH1 SPAG1*~~TI • CH ICKEN&#13;
• SEA F~oiA~l ~!~~w\~H\~G'NA&#13;
CARRY OU ·· vou· .,/s . DELIVERY 6 C · · . WE BRING"&#13;
57·98 43 or 658-4922&#13;
S14Q 6th AVE&#13;
Photo by Ke n Konkol&#13;
Photo by Douglas Doon n&#13;
SJ.NVJ.10SNO::&gt; H ::&gt;llV3 3 ll 1\''-0I.L .J.103 -.;\ .&gt;111:U\\&#13;
0 3 J. NVM Slfo.L}3lll0 \ '3ll\&#13;
Lrooz · ::&gt;·a··4seM,"' ,MV e1ue.~JASU1Jad ottl&#13;
Z-ill llSlrSIIL 0£ s« 6&#13;
·1es 1roi:i 1.y-uo1&#13;
S)l::&gt;V8ll3 d VdJ.N 0.)SIO 03 ,1 O" \\3 '!&gt;!&#13;
1.10,11.)~ I&#13;
S'1Vlll3 J.Vl~ H::&gt;llV3S3ll 1\'-.; 0 IJ.\'.).103 3J..fld l\0 &gt;&#13;
S.LNV J.10SNOJ HJ llV3S3 ll 1V~OIJ. 103 , \ .)tll :U\\&#13;
'' t pss ...&#13;
ll&#13;
:¾&#13;
\&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who 1s a scroll• for a I ca ,&#13;
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportun1t1es for eu~s and dol so r,p a&#13;
over the country. He says lhere 1s a real hot future 1n th• ntwspapff r,c et-• c a ct&#13;
to make some decent scratch, while maybt putt,ne the arm on som• ol • ol&#13;
terra f,rma . With a high-c lass monocker ltke Waldo you can not htlp but •• t ru&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one&#13;
hundred percent a suc ker! Check it out."&#13;
The~ Rut1.,-o,,ew 00•1.,- 11.lflsl.tte'd. .-&#13;
the t,tne h.H ~ t,MnbHte,,ft&gt;.,l'lflO-IO,r1&#13;
fo,- frN anfor~.otl ,lbOut fOU",...,,_ ~ .-Id&#13;
schobnh•P, -A·utf' to fhot ~ Fllll'ld 1111 0&#13;
9o,. 300. P,,roc,tton I'll..- _....5'tY Ol!IS40&#13;
conuct vour ~• •.wtp,,. ~ VOUI" """'°°'&#13;
~~ .Nh·--&#13;
Damon Ru n yon once wrote, "The race is not always to the s 1ft&#13;
or the battle alway s t o the st rong- but ifs a good way to bet •&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
~/f'RANGER&#13;
Wed ., Feb. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
L&#13;
Coming ..... .&#13;
~~ llllL! ll ~l&#13;
Featuring&#13;
ALIZA&#13;
Exciting, Throbbing Folk Music&#13;
of South Africa and Rhodesia&#13;
FRI.-FEB. 9 - 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Adm. '1.50&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Spon,orrd b~ thr&#13;
Park!.idr :\cti\itir,, Hoard&#13;
p SID A GER F b 1. 1973&#13;
PPE&#13;
•&#13;
•••&#13;
•&#13;
UW-Parkside E pane&#13;
Special ,.&#13;
I G&#13;
•&#13;
;\ladison - University center&#13;
and technical institute students&#13;
at Fond du Lac are sharing&#13;
classrooms, libraries, playing&#13;
fields and a student center.&#13;
president John C. Weaver of&#13;
the Unhoersity System said that&#13;
the UW Regents are expected to&#13;
approve a format agreement next&#13;
week to continue cooperative use&#13;
in 1973-74 of the adjacent UW&#13;
Center and Moraine Park&#13;
Technical Institute campuses at&#13;
fond du LaC_&#13;
The agreement was approved&#13;
unanimously Tuesday by the&#13;
Stale Board of Vocational,&#13;
Technical and Adult Education .&#13;
"This is an encouraging&#13;
example of efficient joint use of&#13;
facilities by the university and&#13;
technical systems while each&#13;
carries on its special programs&#13;
(or its students," weaver said.&#13;
"In both systems we are working&#13;
together at the governing board&#13;
and administrative levels to&#13;
coordinate our educational efforts"&#13;
" The agreement for fond du Lac&#13;
provides:&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
95&#13;
Easter Break&#13;
APRIL 21-29&#13;
Only S245&#13;
• Round Trip Je&#13;
• luxury Apartment&#13;
• Dolly Cor Ren 01&#13;
• Sangria Par'&#13;
:.. All T~s &amp;-Tr.ansfers Tr.\~I(" (0f'l'0I&lt;1 nlff'" LLC D-lti&#13;
SoU-ttit&#13;
i,~r'"'' ..\rt hive 1S in&#13;
1 Education&#13;
1970. of rhe&#13;
rn"..r'''n The) also&#13;
o .. 1-19--il and&#13;
o 8 8-16-71 of&#13;
o n) ODt" \\ ho has&#13;
of these paper&gt; bring&#13;
the' l n vetSlty ArchiVes.&#13;
LLC&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST fEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658·2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAL OFFICE, CAPITOl COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KnCHEN&#13;
Chiclctn &amp; ltalilln Siluslige Bomhers&#13;
Free Delivery to P,rks'., VIII,ge&#13;
son ID11t A""·"fl.' PIt,n, 6S7-S191&#13;
TfIY OUR HOME COOK/Ne'&#13;
The Best in the County • "COUNTRY&#13;
'"CHEN" One Mile North&#13;
01 Campus on Hwy. 31&#13;
~ ""~&#13;
H,,,,,-,,,,,,&#13;
'READ&#13;
0-&#13;
Open 7 Days a Week 8 10 I SUNDAY'S SPECIAL. R a.m. 8 p.m.&#13;
..,. 31· 'I'~&#13;
--full time use by the&#13;
Park Technicallnstitule Moralllt&#13;
of seven classroom " (1PTt&#13;
Center" s In the l&#13;
--Use of another 14 .&#13;
classrooms by MPTY""C...&#13;
when not scheduled f . tudtt1&#13;
classes. Or unl\'&#13;
--Use of available UW&#13;
classrooms for MPT e..t..&#13;
adult classes, I "'....&#13;
--Use of the UWst de&#13;
by MPTI students u f nl ,....,&#13;
MPTI will pay the ' or&#13;
as those paid b&#13;
S3m&#13;
(&gt; cha&#13;
students: $15 fo~ unl\&#13;
students or $1.25 per full 1&#13;
--Use of the UW credit.&#13;
th MPT&#13;
gymnaSi&#13;
e I two night&#13;
--Sharing by all st~ a \\&#13;
MPTI softball diamon~e~ "&#13;
football field and the La;:&#13;
courts and outsid«&#13;
courts. bask&#13;
--Sharing by all stud.&#13;
MPT! and UWlIibran."lool&#13;
--Use by MPTI of&#13;
faculty conference t ....o&#13;
A&#13;
" rooms&#13;
c --tads"srgnment of one us Ian to work at&#13;
Center and be paid by ~&#13;
'lrFlRST I&#13;
OF RACIIE&#13;
• No minim••&#13;
balance req.iri&#13;
• No Iimil to '"~&#13;
number 01 cbecb&#13;
you write&#13;
AT FIRST IAl.&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECI'&#13;
IS&#13;
~&#13;
AT FIRST MATI"&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free --&#13;
account.so_liI-_';'&#13;
First NatlOIP""&#13;
and Trust COfl1paJ1Y&#13;
.... 0""" ,_.~ ~.~"".,_-.&#13;
500 Wisconsin All·&#13;
l&#13;
I G&#13;
•&#13;
M di on - niversity center&#13;
and technical in titute tudents&#13;
at Fond du Lac are hari ng&#13;
cla -room . libraries. p layin g&#13;
fi Id and a tudent center .&#13;
Pre ident John C. Weaver of&#13;
the ni\·ersity ystem aid that&#13;
th W Regents are ex pected t o&#13;
ppro,·e a formal agreement next&#13;
\l" k to continue cooperative use&#13;
in 1973-74 of the adjacent W&#13;
Center and loraine P a rk&#13;
Technical Institute campuses at&#13;
Fond du Lac&#13;
The agreement was approved&#13;
unanimow ly Tuesday by the&#13;
·tate Board of Vocational,&#13;
T hnical and Adult Education .&#13;
" Thi. 1 · an encouraging&#13;
ample of efficient joint u e of&#13;
f c1liti by the university and&#13;
t hmcal ystems while each&#13;
carrie on its sp cial programs&#13;
for it tudents." Weaver said.&#13;
' ' In both ·y ·terns we are working&#13;
o ther at the governing board&#13;
and administrative levels to&#13;
coordinate our educational effort.:&#13;
·."&#13;
1 he agreement for Fond du Lac&#13;
provide· :&#13;
Co lege Educations Start at&#13;
EST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
A O FF IC E: CAPITOL COU RT MILWAUKEE&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
C icke &amp; Italian Sausage Bombers&#13;
Frtt Delivery to Parksl•• VIiiage&#13;
, I OZf lfHj A 11• 1 P/,on, 611-1191&#13;
TRr OUR HOME COOKINIJI&#13;
The Best in the County •&#13;
''COUNTRY&#13;
KffCNEN"&#13;
One Mile North&#13;
of Campus on Hwy. 31&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance req1ir1&#13;
• No limit to ~,&#13;
numb er of cbecb&#13;
you write&#13;
AT FIRST NAT III&#13;
Of RACINE&#13;
AT FIRST NATIIII&#13;
Of RACINE&#13;
Open your free&#13;
account so•• i&#13;
~IJY The PaIk,51sideoe- _ ~rr~&#13;
RANGER SCHEDULED Sports&#13;
Speaking of&#13;
Sports&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Parkside has been puton th,e r:tap as far as weightlifting is concernedby&#13;
lifters ~oe Gemignani, ~lm~reco, ~nd Chu.ckS~.Pi~rre.&#13;
At the wtsconsm State Ch.ampwns,hlp NOVIce Welghthghtmg meet&#13;
heldJan. 27,the three men hfted theIr way to fOUftrophies and three&#13;
State records.&#13;
Gemignanitook first in the 181 lb. weight class, benching 355,&#13;
squatting 4t5, and deadlilti,ng 530, for a total of 1300. He also broke the&#13;
State records in the bench press, deadhlt, and total. This outstanding&#13;
performance won Gemignani the "Best Lifter" trophy.&#13;
Both Greco and St. Pierre took third in their weight classes, Super&#13;
Heavy and242lb. respectively. Greco bench pressed 300, squatted 325,&#13;
and deadlilted 465 for a total of n05, edging out another competitor by&#13;
five pounds. St. Pierre benched 340, squatted 400, and deadlifted 400&#13;
for a total of 1140.&#13;
Now that Parkside is known for its fine weightlifters I feel that I&#13;
ought to congratulate our men fo~ their e~fo:ts. Weig~l~fting. is&#13;
something which I have done only In very limIted quantItIes, like&#13;
benching 90 lbs., and feeling as though my arms were breaking. Iam&#13;
quite impressed by the accomplishments of our lifters.&#13;
The lifters will be training every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday&#13;
from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., and are happy to answer any questions&#13;
about the sport, assist those interested, and help beginners start their&#13;
training.&#13;
J,1mGreco, Joe G"emlngnanl and Chuck St Pierre. 0&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Vard'ty Club&#13;
~ 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha, WI Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
PIZZA - ITALIAN FOODS&#13;
• NOON LUNCHES&#13;
• FISH FRY - FRIDAY&#13;
• POTATO PANCAKES calCH&#13;
STOP Phone 551 - q q99&#13;
1543 22nd Avenue Kenosha :: * : * : ~:*i:t:i::;:;:::;;;;;;; ; --&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
Feb. 8, 4 p.rn .&#13;
Feb. 10, 1p.m ..&#13;
Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Feb.17,2p.m ..&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Feb. 10, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 13, ..........&#13;
Feb. 17,7:30.&#13;
Swimming&#13;
Feb. 10 .&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
Feb. 10 .&#13;
Feb. 17.&#13;
Wed., Feb, 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGE ...&#13;
Uw-Lar'rcsse . Home&#13;
Eastern Illinois, ~tichigan Tech - Home&#13;
. UW.Q;hkosh • Home&#13;
.University of Illinois Chicago Circle - Home&#13;
. Carroll· Home&#13;
Lake Forest- Lake Forest, 1ll1llOlS&#13;
Uw-Oreen Bay - Home&#13;
Northern Illinois • DeKalb. IlhnoL!io&#13;
W tevens Point - evens POlOt&#13;
Tritton lnvitational- River Grove, Jlhno'&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb. 9 Tri-State . Angola. [ncHana&#13;
Feb. 10 Wisc.-Madison, Michigan Slate - East LaOSUlg, ,lichJgan&#13;
Feb. 17 .... Beloit, Wayne State, IllinolS' Champaign, lUinois&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
Feb.l1.. .. .lIlinoisatChampaignFeb 17TilanOpenalO IIko. h&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Track&#13;
Swim ClUb&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday &amp; Wednesday&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Saturday, .&#13;
Sunday .&#13;
Gym&#13;
foAonday thru Friday&#13;
Hilndball Caurh&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
S"turd08Y&#13;
Sunday&#13;
AUTO &amp;&#13;
TRUCK&#13;
PARTS&#13;
TEAM PRACTICE&#13;
330600&#13;
'-00 • 00&#13;
330600&#13;
Doy&#13;
Do"&#13;
Do,&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
U)OI.1O&#13;
"]10710&#13;
1IJ03)o&#13;
, .. 10&#13;
SlO '00&#13;
'(0)(100&#13;
lOoaSOO&#13;
lJOlOOO&#13;
10 JIG 1 10 'COlr,ort,. 0P«'l1&#13;
]1)0 ,. 00 11 alUM ClC*\)&#13;
'00 '0 OllIlr""r&gt;tl~pl.,1&#13;
.00.", 0 pm&#13;
to lO " OOfClt'c .....&#13;
100500&#13;
100 .. 00&#13;
1400~lJlwaukee Ave&#13;
GORDON AUTO PARTS, INC,&#13;
'¥\CIn r::r 1:JO' 00 !Wf..tl'll.,., s. s.. ,.., 00&#13;
Complete Machine Shop Service&#13;
Paint &amp; Body Shop Supplies&#13;
High Performance Work.&#13;
Discount to Parkside Students&#13;
~~1)j$tount Record~ and Ta&#13;
~-". ~wni.s5.'S for 3.7 If&#13;
ROAc.H C~P.$&#13;
W'ATIRBE'1&gt;5&#13;
8LAc.~LI~TS&#13;
T,VfSTTY&#13;
JEWHP.Y&#13;
Grappl r&#13;
o. Ii hi&#13;
d&#13;
an&#13;
Th ParksltW" tllng m&#13;
scored IU (IrM du Im \ klory&#13;
0( tile .ason I I • lurd _'. scorina a 27·22 \lo In 0\ .. orthft"n&#13;
•hchlgan t'ntve II)'&#13;
Park 'e!&lt;' too lJle f. I f"&#13;
" ight cia , four of !h m&#13;
pn . and !hen I !h fa\" up", ...&#13;
drvrsron " Ight cI J t"o by&#13;
pm"&#13;
Wmntn for the Rang on&#13;
pm "ere grappl r RICO&#13;
Sa\"a&amp;1I0 (9·11, B,II II I 1Ill-II,&#13;
Ken .Iartm 112·11, and K)I&#13;
Bam (7·2' H,ck . haurn •&#13;
dc'CI 'one&lt;! hI oppontnl for II&gt;&#13;
oth r Park,id ....1.0&#13;
Park. Ie!&lt;'now II a 1-3,1 d I&#13;
m -t record on llIe n&#13;
The Ran r wrestl laM •&#13;
hom land lomorrov. "hen the~&#13;
meet lll-La C at 4 pm&#13;
Then on • tunla) llIe) go up&#13;
aga' lllIe tn" .1) 01Ea '''''''&#13;
IIhOOlS and . !Ichlgan T h I 1&#13;
P m Both m w,ll be mIlle 1'1::&#13;
Bu,ldmg&#13;
Gymna t third&#13;
in tri m et&#13;
Park ad partlclpatC'd n a&#13;
tnong'" m t F I 01 0&#13;
o.nk""h 1001&lt;f. 1",111 14170. I&#13;
Cloud""I. "a ~d 13Il0, ond&#13;
Park 'd&lt;&gt; Ihlrd ~.111 104&#13;
Top pia ... for Park Ide '"&#13;
Ke\ 10 0', . II In ld h and&#13;
nngs. and BI')OIl P'I how on&#13;
hIgh bar&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch C,.1ttcI&#13;
SaHwiclltt &amp;&#13;
~.,coal Steab&#13;
IIlrl' .. Silt' Shri.,1 U.&#13;
SMOKE A&#13;
CORAllO&#13;
SAVINElli from&#13;
~&#13;
,~T'GUC"QJ)JI(J.fT n tr.1 '1ft:&#13;
Reg, Size&#13;
'31 '0&#13;
Jumbo&#13;
'42'"&#13;
~ ,, The Parkside Wed., Feb. 7, 1973 THE PA KSID RANG 4&gt;/"~ RANGER SCHEDULED&#13;
Sports&#13;
Speaking of&#13;
Sports&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Parkside has been put . on th_e i:iap as far as weightlifting is conerned&#13;
by lifters Joe Gem1gnam, Jim Greco, and Chuck St. Pierre.&#13;
c At the Wisconsin State Ch_ampions_hip Novice Weightlighting meet&#13;
held Jan. 27, the three men lifted their way to four trophies and three&#13;
State records . . . .&#13;
Gemignani took first m the 181 lb. weight class, benching 355,&#13;
squatting 415, and deadlifting 530, for a _total of 1300. He also broke the&#13;
State records in the bench press, deadhft, and total. This outstanding&#13;
performance won Gemignani the "Best Lifter" trophy.&#13;
Both Greco and St. Pierre took third in their weight classes, Super&#13;
Heavy and 242 lb . respective1y . Greco bench pressed 300, squatted 325,&#13;
and deadlifted 465 for a total of 1105, edging out another competitor by&#13;
five pounds. St. Pierre benched 340, squatted 400, and deadlifted 400&#13;
for a total of 1140.&#13;
ow that Parkside is known for its fine weightlifters I feel that I&#13;
ought to congratulate our men fo~ their e~fo:ts. Weig~l~fting _ is&#13;
something which I have done only m very hm1ted quantities, hke&#13;
benching 90 lbs., and feeling as though my arms were breaking. I am&#13;
quite impressed by the accomplishments of our lifters.&#13;
The lifters will be training every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday&#13;
from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p .m. , and are happy to answer any questions&#13;
about the sport, assist those interested, and help beginners start their&#13;
training.&#13;
J. • • d Chuck St Pierre. 1m Greco, Joe Gemingnan1 an •&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
• 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha, ,,&amp;J" Wisconsin Phone 654 -0774&#13;
PIZZA - ITALIAN FOODS&#13;
• NOON LUNCHES&#13;
• FISH FRY - FRIDAY&#13;
• POTATO PANCAKES CDICH&#13;
STOP 551 - 9999 Phon e&#13;
1S43 22nd Aven ue Ke no s ha y # X % ~::::::::+ ::::::::::::+&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
Feb. 8, 4 p.m . . . . . . . . . . ..&#13;
Feb. 10, l p.m. . ........... Ea:tern lllinoi ·&#13;
Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m. . . . . . . . . ....&#13;
Feb. 17, 2 p.m. . . . . . . . . . . . . nive&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Feb. 10, 7:30 p.m&#13;
Feb. 13, .... . .......... .&#13;
Feb. 17, 7:30 . ........... .&#13;
Swimming&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 11 .&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedul&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Track&#13;
Swi m Club&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday &amp; Wednnday&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday&#13;
Friday .••&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednnday&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Saturday •..•&#13;
Sunday • . .•• •&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday .&#13;
AUTO &amp;&#13;
TRUCK&#13;
PARTS&#13;
RECREATIO ALHOURS&#13;
GORDON&#13;
AUTO PARTS, INC,&#13;
0a&#13;
0a&#13;
Complete Machine Shop Service&#13;
Paint &amp; Body Shop Supplies&#13;
High Performance Wor •&#13;
Discount to Parkside Students&#13;
.......::~Distovnt Record~ and Ta&#13;
~c.onlsS. &lt;J 8 for 3. 7Cf&#13;
RoAc.H CL.19~ IT1c1' tJ$6&#13;
WATlRBED~ OIL 1.,.)1\&#13;
SLACK Ll'GiHTS c~wd \ £S&#13;
TAPF5TTY "'PosTt~~&#13;
JE'WEL~Y Px.PES&#13;
P,,,-c.~~s&#13;
fl'Pf $&#13;
AND&#13;
Mu c..H&#13;
MoRE&#13;
O"&gt;(AG •&#13;
OPEN&#13;
ts th ire:&#13;
l&#13;
SMOKE A&#13;
CORALLO&#13;
SAVINELLI from&#13;
Reg . Siz&#13;
'31 so&#13;
Jumbo&#13;
1 42 5&#13;
• TH PA SIDE AA GER • F~ 1. 1 13&#13;
ers romp over tWO foes&#13;
I&#13;
I n&#13;
n •In&#13;
...._...i.c. an State Bank&#13;
}J c ing&#13;
oil g&#13;
Fl1 CC tints&#13;
or tudents&#13;
Phon 65 ·25 2&#13;
&lt;-&#13;
2129 IlO1 RD. KENOSHA 551-7171&#13;
1I""",1U'l 510 E. BAlt. 01NING ltooM&#13;
•&#13;
frcm the [Joor and sank twa of&#13;
free thfO\\ for a 67 per~ent&#13;
a\; from the charity stnpe&#13;
~ Rang pla)'ed ~liIton&#13;
() Jast ",gilt and will. be&#13;
turd:!y' night agamst&#13;
~ College before Ira-'eling&#13;
F t 111 next Tuesday&#13;
to take on Lake Forest&#13;
Coli Par .side .. ill then mum borne f r a game agamst&#13;
U .&lt;;..,... Bay on turday, Feb.&#13;
n&#13;
Park ide 90,&#13;
ip n ~16&#13;
'!be Ra r cagers played one&#13;
d. tbe1r r games of the year&#13;
Tuesda' night stomping the&#13;
R&lt;dtUen 9CH6. The Redprobably&#13;
redIaced&#13;
lbc me, because they saw&#13;
.nd e ely even point lead&#13;
inis/led to a H·39 turnaround&#13;
trume The second half """...s to be no belter for Ripon&#13;
!bey ,. ere dow n by as many as&#13;
1a.llb I than seven&#13;
tes to pia)&#13;
", Ranger hooting pere&#13;
as red-hot from the&#13;
del and also good from the&#13;
rt) .tripe Parkside made 38&#13;
10 5-1 attempts (or a torrid 70&#13;
rct'1l1 while lulling 14 of 2Q&#13;
Irun thelreethrow line also good&#13;
I... 70 percent&#13;
R poD "as also hot from the&#13;
rl&lt;!d. although not quite hot&#13;
mougb. meslung31 0161 shots for&#13;
a 50 percent treak along with&#13;
""'''''''Ill 1D on 14 of 18 charity&#13;
for a 77 percent average.&#13;
Ripon opened with a quick&#13;
barrage of shots and took an&#13;
carl. 2S-IB lead, but after a&#13;
Redmee timeout the Rangers, led&#13;
b) Gary Cole and Chuck&#13;
Chambliss, outscored the oppooenls&#13;
I, to one to take a 3&gt;-26&#13;
le&amp;d that was never relinquished.&#13;
After that point it was all&#13;
Rangers as Coacb Stephens&#13;
substituted regularly and watdled&#13;
his team protect their lead.&#13;
The Ranger attack was l~ by&#13;
Gary Cole who has a perfect night&#13;
hitting 13of 13attempts from the&#13;
field and three of three frOID. the&#13;
free throw line for 2? points,&#13;
Chuck Chambliss who rimmed 20&#13;
. ts Joe Hutter who also shot&#13;
po0rn00h,itting 5 of 5 from the fiield&#13;
I, d 2 of 2 from the stripe. Bill&#13;
aSnobanski meshed 13 and M'1k e&#13;
Hanke hooped 9.&#13;
High point man for the Redmen&#13;
was AI Scheels who connected for&#13;
29 points, 10Ilowed by teammate&#13;
Mike Del-any who gunned for 20.&#13;
The Rangers received some&#13;
strong rebounding from th~ir big&#13;
men with Gary Cole sweepmg 14&#13;
boards, Bill Sobanski stealing&#13;
nine and Mike Hanke who&#13;
hrouaht down seven.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
swimmers&#13;
drop close dual&#13;
to Chicago St.&#13;
The Parkside swim team&#13;
traveled to Chicago for a dual&#13;
meet Jan. 29. The final score was&#13;
close; Chicago State University&#13;
5, and Parkside 52.&#13;
Bob Tesch stroked his way to&#13;
three firsts: 50 and 500 freestyles&#13;
and 200 butterfly. Bob Kueny took&#13;
first in the 200 breaststroke and&#13;
second in the 200 individual&#13;
medley. Rich Hamm, Jim Rey,&#13;
and Tom Bergo took seconds in&#13;
the 1000and 200 freestyles and 200&#13;
backstroke, respectively.&#13;
In diving, Frank Szarzynski&#13;
placed first in both one and three&#13;
meter.&#13;
Also taking first was the 400&#13;
freestyle relay team of Bergo,&#13;
Hamm, Kueny, and Szarzynski.&#13;
The last home meet will be held&#13;
tonight at 4.&#13;
Mike Wooland&#13;
Kettner fight i~&#13;
bel t di vision&#13;
Parkside&#13;
judokas&#13;
win 12 till&#13;
in judo to&#13;
3315·5W&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Sets Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
en per word up to 25 words for . .&#13;
PaYable· d each Insertion.&#13;
• In a vance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business OUice&#13;
D-I94LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
KenOSha, Wis. 53140&#13;
DATES(S}TO RUN_-'"&#13;
To find your cost, mol:&#13;
number of words&#13;
cents. Multiply that&#13;
NAME =::=- .....; L_.th.iet .nto.u.fmun.b. .e.r.o..fiSS.U.es.yoI",":::&#13;
ADDRESS _&#13;
DATE __ --&#13;
C ITY ----;O~ne w;ocrdtp;e;r ;sp:ace ;;;;;;:;_:~---- PHONE NO, __ -&#13;
Donot skip space between words to shoWspaciJC&#13;
CHECK ENCLC6ED fOR&#13;
Ads lllust b . .&#13;
e submitted one week before publication.&#13;
p over two foes&#13;
The Ranger attack was 1~ by&#13;
Gan· Cole who bas a perfect rught&#13;
h1ttfng 13 of 13 attempts from the&#13;
field and three of three from_ the&#13;
free throw line for 2.9 pomts,&#13;
Chuck Chambliss who rimmed 20&#13;
nts Joe Hutter who also shot f° 1&#13;
hitting 5 of 5 from the field&#13;
a~d 2 of 2 from the stripe. ~ill&#13;
banski meshed 13 and Mike&#13;
Hanke hooped 9.&#13;
High point man for the Redmen&#13;
"a . Al cheels who connected for&#13;
29 points. followed by teammate&#13;
tike OeLany who gunned for 20.&#13;
' The Rangers received some&#13;
trong rebounding from the_ir big&#13;
men with Gary Cole sweeping 14&#13;
board , Bill Sobanski stealing&#13;
nine and Mike Hanke who&#13;
broueht down seven.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
swimmers&#13;
drop close dual&#13;
to Chicago St.&#13;
The Parkside swim team&#13;
traveled to Chicago for a dual&#13;
meet Jan. 29. The final score was&#13;
clo e; Chicago State University&#13;
55 and Parkside 52.&#13;
Bob Tesch stroked his way to&#13;
three firsts: 50 and 500 freestyles&#13;
and 200 butterfly. Bob Kueny took&#13;
first in the 200 breaststroke and&#13;
econd in the 200 individual&#13;
medley. Rich Hamm, Jim Rey,&#13;
and Tom Bergo took seconds in&#13;
the 1000 and 200 freestyles and 200&#13;
backstroke, respectively.&#13;
In diving, Frank Szarzynski&#13;
placed first in both one and three&#13;
meter.&#13;
Also taking first was the 400&#13;
freestyle relay team of Bergo,&#13;
Hamm, Kueny, and Szarzynski.&#13;
The last home meet will be held&#13;
tonight at 4.&#13;
Mike Wooland&#13;
Kettner fight i~&#13;
belt division&#13;
Parkside&#13;
judoka&#13;
win 12 titl&#13;
in judo to&#13;
3315 -521111&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
5&#13;
la ified Advertising Rate&#13;
cen r word up to 25 words for . .&#13;
Pa\able in ad . each insertion. CHECK ENCLOOED FOR&#13;
· \ a nee by check or cash to:&#13;
The Pa~kside Ranger&#13;
Bu mess Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
Ads must b e submitted one week before publication.</text>
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