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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 18</text>
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            <text>For UW-P Union: Madison architect named</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>The Parkside Winter Carnival&#13;
continues this week&#13;
Wednesday, February 21, 1973 Vol. I, No. 18&#13;
For UW-P Unio„&#13;
Madison architect named&#13;
The firm of Peters and Martinsons&#13;
Architects, Inc., of&#13;
Madison has been selected to&#13;
design the $3.5 million Campus&#13;
Union.&#13;
Parkside officials were notified&#13;
of the choice by the State Bureau&#13;
ot Facilities Management in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
James Galbraith, director of&#13;
Planning and Construction at&#13;
Parkside, said he was hopeful&#13;
that construction could be started&#13;
within a year and the facility&#13;
opened by early 1975. The facility&#13;
was approved in the 1971-73&#13;
biennial building program.&#13;
The campus union will be&#13;
located in the central academic&#13;
area, just north of the loop road,&#13;
connected to the new classroom&#13;
building by an enclosed walkway&#13;
over the road.&#13;
The new union will have both&#13;
rathskellar and cafeteria-style&#13;
food service areas, a 400-seat&#13;
movie theater with stage, eight&#13;
bowling alleys, television lounges&#13;
and games rooms, all-purpose&#13;
meeting rooms, student&#13;
organization headquarters,&#13;
lockers, concessions and union&#13;
staff offices.&#13;
The cafeteria will feature&#13;
several service areas for different&#13;
types of foods rather than&#13;
the traditional continuous line.&#13;
The dining area associated with&#13;
the cafeteria will be able to accommodate&#13;
up to 600 persons for&#13;
banquets and other large events,&#13;
or be divided into several smaller&#13;
rooms. The rathskellar will be a&#13;
separate facility within the&#13;
building.&#13;
Galbraith expressed pleasure&#13;
with the choice of architects. He&#13;
said that Kent Peters of the&#13;
Madison firm "designs in the&#13;
same spirit" as Gyo Obata, internationally&#13;
known architect of&#13;
Hellmuth, Obata and Kassabaum&#13;
(HOK) of St. Louis, who designed&#13;
Parkside's new LibraryLearning&#13;
Center and Greenquist&#13;
and Tallent Halls. Galbraith said&#13;
Peters also is "totally sympathetic"&#13;
toward the architectural&#13;
guidelines of the&#13;
master development plan for the&#13;
campus which was designed bv&#13;
HOK. J&#13;
It's the week of the big band sound on campus with two&#13;
public performances scheduled by the Parkside Stage&#13;
Band and its Jazz Ensemble. The 20-member group will&#13;
play at a basketball "appreciation night " for the Ranger&#13;
team following the final home game on Tuesday, Feb.&#13;
20, and at a free progr am from noon to 1 p.m. on F riday,&#13;
Feb. 23, in the Activities Building. The group also has&#13;
scheduled several guest appearances at area high&#13;
schools. Robert Thomason, director, points out that the&#13;
group uses current arrangements directly from the big&#13;
bands-Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, Count Basie,&#13;
Buddy Rich-sinc e most stage band arrangementw are&#13;
"watered down."&#13;
Obata is known as "a master&#13;
organizer of space," according to&#13;
Galbraith. That "trademark" is&#13;
apparent in the Library-Learning&#13;
Center's impressive "main&#13;
place," the large tri-leveled open&#13;
space which rises four stories to a&#13;
skylight roof and which is flanked&#13;
on two sides by a three-story solid&#13;
glass wall looking out to a woods&#13;
and by ribbons of glass defining&#13;
four levels of the library.&#13;
Galbraith said he expects the&#13;
main entrance to the campus&#13;
union to reflect that design&#13;
concept, though on a much&#13;
smaller scale.&#13;
Buildings connected by singlelevel&#13;
pedestrian corridors which&#13;
widen into concourses containing&#13;
lounge and study areas within&#13;
each building is another spaceuse&#13;
concept of the master plan&#13;
which will be applied to the&#13;
campus union.&#13;
Such "convenience space" is&#13;
considered a key to fulfilling the&#13;
special needs of Parkside's many&#13;
commuter students who don't&#13;
have a dormitory or apartment to&#13;
return to between classes.&#13;
Winter Carnival continues this&#13;
week, culminating with the&#13;
"Snowball" dance on Saturday,&#13;
Feb. 24. The dance, in the Student&#13;
Activities Building, will feature&#13;
the Bob Writeman Rock Revival,&#13;
with rock songs of the 50's.'&#13;
Presentation of trophies for&#13;
carnival events will also take&#13;
"place at this time.&#13;
On Thursday, Feb. 22, at 2:30&#13;
p.m. on the "lake," the&#13;
B r o o m b all T o u r n a m e n t&#13;
Championship is scheduled. This&#13;
is followed by the Longest Kiss&#13;
Contest at 4 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building. The last three couples&#13;
to stop kissing shall receive&#13;
trophies. Lips must remain in&#13;
contact during the entire time or&#13;
the contestants shall be&#13;
disqualified. It is acceptable to&#13;
use elevating devices to compensate&#13;
for differences in height.&#13;
At 7 p.m. comes the judging in&#13;
the knee-painting contest. Knees&#13;
will be judged on design, relation&#13;
to the theme "Greasey Ice,"&#13;
color, and originality. Painting&#13;
shall be confined to an area&#13;
beginning six inches below the&#13;
knee and ending six inches above&#13;
with the design centered around&#13;
the kneecap.&#13;
7:30 p.m. is the time for the&#13;
Cherry Pie Eating Contest (in&#13;
honor of Washington's birthday),&#13;
where trophies will go to the first&#13;
three persons to totally consume&#13;
one whole cherry pie. The pie&#13;
must be swallowed. This is&#13;
followed by the Beer Dunking.&#13;
Contest at 9:30 p.m. Winners in&#13;
this event will be the three persons&#13;
who can keep their heads&#13;
submerged in a tub of beer for the&#13;
longest time. All these Thursday&#13;
events will be in the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
Haack resigns as&#13;
PSGA president&#13;
by Terri Gogola&#13;
Tom Haack resigned as&#13;
president of the student government&#13;
association last Tuesday.&#13;
His resignation, effective immediately,&#13;
came because of lack&#13;
of time to devote to studies, his&#13;
workstudy job, veteran's club,&#13;
the student government itself and&#13;
the fact that he will be attending&#13;
college out of state next year.&#13;
Haack's resignation places Joe&#13;
Harris, vice-president, as the&#13;
acting president of PSGA.&#13;
Haack's term would have expired&#13;
in October.&#13;
Spring elections will be held&#13;
March 5-7. In addition to the&#13;
office of president, seven senate&#13;
seats are open as well as the&#13;
positions of treasurer and&#13;
recording secretary. The ballot&#13;
will include a referendum concerning&#13;
constitutional changes. Tom Haack&#13;
Fine Arts, newspaper rates changed&#13;
Wyllie OKs fee distribution&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
The Segregated Fee&#13;
Allocations Committee dollar&#13;
amount distribution was accepted&#13;
by Chancellor Wyllie last&#13;
week. Two changes were made&#13;
over last year's rates.&#13;
One change cuts the present&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
rate from $2.00 to $1.50.&#13;
The fifty cents per capita difference&#13;
will be added to the&#13;
Student Activities area. The&#13;
committee also recommended&#13;
that $2500, out of the estimated&#13;
$6500 available for general&#13;
programming through summer&#13;
fees, be added as a line item for&#13;
the support of the student&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
The second section of the five&#13;
page report, written by William&#13;
Niebuhr. Coordinator of Student&#13;
Life and chairman of the committee,&#13;
"contains recommandations&#13;
that are of a nondollar&#13;
nature, but that the&#13;
committee nevertheless felt&#13;
important to mention in its&#13;
report."&#13;
The first four of the eight&#13;
recommendations concerned&#13;
what could be done with monies&#13;
in case of overages or shortages&#13;
of f ees resulting from fluctuating&#13;
enrollment. The committee&#13;
suggested that in the case of a&#13;
shortage $2500 for the Student&#13;
Newspaper should remain a&#13;
constant line item and that&#13;
Student Activities should take the&#13;
reduction in budget. If there is an&#13;
overage they suggested the&#13;
student newspaper could get up&#13;
to an additional $500.&#13;
The committee also suggested&#13;
in case of overages that the&#13;
money be given to the University&#13;
budget committee for their use to&#13;
off-set possible deficits experienced&#13;
in the other segregated&#13;
fee areas during the academic&#13;
year. If there are no deficits to be&#13;
off-set from the academic year&#13;
excess funds should be&#13;
distributed proportionately to all&#13;
segregated fee line areas.&#13;
The fifth suggestion was that a&#13;
new method of funding for&#13;
campus transportation be found.&#13;
$18 per person are presently&#13;
being spent. The committee felt&#13;
this to be a "heavy and unusual&#13;
burden on the fixed $88.00&#13;
amount."&#13;
The sixth suggestion was that&#13;
Faculty and staff who wish to use&#13;
physical education facilities&#13;
should share in their financial&#13;
support.&#13;
Similarly, the seventh&#13;
suggestion was that "faculty and&#13;
staff should be charged admissions&#13;
(in some degree greater&#13;
than those being charged&#13;
students) for all lecture and fine&#13;
arts events." The thinking is that&#13;
members of the faculty and staff&#13;
can "more easily afford the price&#13;
of admission and are receiving&#13;
the same benefits that ~'udents&#13;
are despite the fact tha students&#13;
are paying to support these&#13;
programs with their segregated&#13;
fee dollars while the faculty are&#13;
contributing nothing."&#13;
The last suggestion was that by&#13;
the 1974-75 academic year the&#13;
current faculty codified Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee should&#13;
be phased out and this function,&#13;
picked up by the Union&#13;
Programming (Student Activities)&#13;
Board. In doing this it&#13;
would be understood that there&#13;
still would be faculty input into&#13;
the selection of programs to&#13;
insure program stability in the&#13;
area of lecture and fine arts.&#13;
In a letter congratulating the&#13;
committee for doing "a thorough,&#13;
thoughtful, and responsible job,"'&#13;
the Chancellor said he would take&#13;
the recommendations under&#13;
advisement, particularly as they&#13;
relate to user fees for busing, use&#13;
of facilities, and admissions to&#13;
campus events. He will pass the&#13;
suggestion about the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee to the&#13;
University Committee for its&#13;
consideration. Because the first&#13;
four proposals rest on "complete&#13;
uncertainties the Chancellor said&#13;
he could give no assurances in&#13;
regard to them. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. Feb. 21, 1973&#13;
The ParkskieRANGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
We would like to congratulate the members of the&#13;
Segregated Fee Allocation Committee for a job well&#13;
done.&#13;
The members are: James Croxford,student/Thomas&#13;
Haack, former president of the PSGA; David Holle,&#13;
staff; Marion Mochon, assistant professor in anthropology;&#13;
Jerry Murphy, student; Duane Neuendorf,&#13;
business staff; Virginia Scherr, Special Assistant to the&#13;
Vice Chancellor; Donnie Snow, student; Susan Wesley,&#13;
President of t he Parkside Activities Board, John Zarling&#13;
assistant professor of e ngineering science and William&#13;
Niebuhr, Coordinator of Student Life and chairman of&#13;
the committee.&#13;
The recommendations which these committee&#13;
members made can help change the campus in a&#13;
positive way. Especially important are the suggestions&#13;
which the committee had in regard to long range&#13;
planning. The Chancellor has not committed himself on&#13;
most of the suggestions because most of them depend on&#13;
things which might happen. In regards to one item we&#13;
hope he takes action to make it a reality.&#13;
The committee proposed that the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee be phased out by the 1974-75 academic&#13;
year and that its duties be taken over by the Student&#13;
Activities Board. We see this as a very reasonable and&#13;
realistic change. As the committee argued in its report,&#13;
it would be much more appropriate for a student&#13;
oriented group to be responsible for developing lecture&#13;
and fine arts programs inasmuch as they are paying for&#13;
them.&#13;
The reason in this argument is quite easy to follow and&#13;
the added element of expertise in coordinating and&#13;
presenting programs of all natures should help in the&#13;
over-all production of the performances.&#13;
Faculty input will be necessary as the committee&#13;
pointed out, but the majority of the decision-making in&#13;
this area can be switched over to a student oriented&#13;
group.&#13;
May we suggest that this change begin as soon as&#13;
possible if th e Chancellor does indeed decide to take the&#13;
committee's advice. If t he phase out does not begin to&#13;
occur and if th ere are no indications that it will, we will&#13;
begin to look for solid rationale behind that policy.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
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So IMPORTANT&#13;
Student Government elections are coming up March 5, 6, and 7 to fill&#13;
those vacancies which have occurred since the last election which&#13;
°&#13;
CSince that election, vacancies have occurred in at least seven Senate&#13;
seats, the office of Recording Secretary, the office of President and the&#13;
office of Treasurer. m a . ,&#13;
I was going to put in some snide remark about the President of&#13;
PSGA not being able to Haack it, but I changed my mind Like other&#13;
Presidents in other universities before him, Tom Haack tried to take&#13;
too much on himself - and got burned out in the process.&#13;
Because of the late notice of the vacancies in the offices of President&#13;
and Treasurer, the deadline date for filing of candidate petitions has&#13;
been moved back to Friday, Feb. 23. Only willing workers need apply.&#13;
The last Student Government Election saw only 671 p eople or 15.4&#13;
percent of the student body cast ballots. That was pitiful. Because of&#13;
such a low level of s uffrage, some of the administrators on campus&#13;
have been insinuating that the Student Senate is truly not representative&#13;
of the student body.&#13;
In order to increase the effectiveness of the Student Senate, more&#13;
recognition is going to have to be given by the administration. To&#13;
really achieve this, it would be nice if we could get at least half the&#13;
student body to cast ballots. I do not consider this an unreasonable&#13;
request.&#13;
Volunteers are being sought to man the polling places. One poll will&#13;
be set up in Greenquist. If there are sufficient volunteers to man an&#13;
additional poll at all times, one may be set up in Kenosha. People&#13;
interested in assisting are asked to please contact Elections Chairman&#13;
Mike Wickware at the Student Government offices.&#13;
The next Student Senate meeting will be held Thursday, Feb. 22.&#13;
Prospective candidates and other interested persons are invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
There is something on the related topic of student governments&#13;
occurring at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.&#13;
There, the legality of university parking fines is being taken to court&#13;
by UW-0 students. A class-action suit against the Board of Regents,&#13;
the University of Wisconsin and the Oshkosh City Council was filed the&#13;
week of F ebruary 1.&#13;
Thanks to a story in the Oshkosh Advance-Titan written by Gail&#13;
Trowbridge, students at UW-O, and now students here at Parkside,&#13;
can be informed that only the judicial branch of government can&#13;
impose fines. Since the University has no judicial powers, parking&#13;
fines as now levied are constitutional.&#13;
Since the state constitution limits parking fines to a figure of $10,&#13;
additional punishments involving withholding of grades, suspension&#13;
and freezing of records, are also unconstitutional.&#13;
According to Oshkosh attorney Buz Barlow, who is representing the&#13;
students, the amount being sued for is in excess of $10,000. Should the&#13;
suit be successful at Oshkosh, you can bet that the other twelve&#13;
University campuses will follow suit.&#13;
In order to solicit establishment opinion on the situation, RANGER&#13;
contacted Parkside Director of Security Ronald Brinkmann.&#13;
Brinkmann had no comment to make on the suit itself ; he merelysuggested&#13;
the adoption of a "wait and see" attitude.&#13;
io ! gni;!&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
AAANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Geoff Blaesing&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch, Kathryn Wellner&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
.ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
WRITERS: Ken Konkol, Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
Bldhd&#13;
CARTOONIST: Gary Huck Bob Rohan&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ken Konkol, Al Craig, Bill Noll, Dennis Doonan, Greg Syston&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva i-&gt;enau&#13;
?&#13;
, REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
Nationtl Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Avt., New York, N. i. 10017&#13;
by Gary Huck &#13;
Wed., Feb. 21, 1 973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Love and a good 5&#13;
C contraceptive&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
What the world needs now is&#13;
love and a good 5 cent contraceptive!&#13;
&#13;
The Parkside chapter of ZPG&#13;
(Zero Population Growth) has&#13;
recently put out the 1973 edition of&#13;
the Parkside Birth Control Information&#13;
Pamphlet, which lists&#13;
some local services in the areas&#13;
of contraceptives, VD screening,&#13;
pregnancy testing, pregnancy&#13;
and abortion counseling and&#13;
referral, and vasectomy. In&#13;
preparing the pamphlet, the&#13;
group surveyed doctors, clinics&#13;
and hospitals in the area for their&#13;
views on contraception, whether&#13;
or not they would prescribe birth&#13;
control devices to females under&#13;
various circumstances, and the&#13;
services they offer. Twenty&#13;
doctors from Racine and&#13;
Kenosha responded, and they&#13;
constitute a private list with&#13;
names available upon request to&#13;
Parkside ZPG. This pamphlet, as&#13;
well as birth control handbooks,&#13;
buttons, bumper stickers and&#13;
information about ZPG, will be&#13;
available at a table in Main Place&#13;
on Feb. 21, 22 and 23.&#13;
ZPG is a nationwide non-profit&#13;
organization formed in 1968 for a&#13;
single purpose: to stop the&#13;
population explosion-first in the&#13;
U.S. and then in the rest of the&#13;
world. It urges immediate action&#13;
be taken to voluntarily reduce&#13;
our birth rate. By now many&#13;
people realize that one condition&#13;
for zero population growth is that&#13;
each couple must have an&#13;
average of two natural children,&#13;
thereby replacing themselves.&#13;
But not many are aware that&#13;
immediate and widespread&#13;
adoption of the two-child family&#13;
would not bring about a rapid end&#13;
to population growth in this&#13;
country. In short, instant twochild&#13;
families does not mean&#13;
instant zpg. It has been estimated&#13;
that, at best, it will take 70 years&#13;
to stabilize the population, due to&#13;
the relatively large number of&#13;
young people in the populace.&#13;
ZPG concentrates its efforts in&#13;
education, lobbying and in&#13;
support of population-informed&#13;
candidates. Through education,&#13;
ZPG is working to inform the&#13;
general public of the facts of the&#13;
population problem, and of the&#13;
threats it poses to the well-being&#13;
and very survival of humankind.&#13;
Through lobbying, ZPG is&#13;
working for greater awareness of&#13;
population and for legislation&#13;
that will help stop the population&#13;
explosion. Currently, Parkside&#13;
ZPG is interested in repeal of the&#13;
Wisconsin statute (450.11) on&#13;
contraceptives, and information&#13;
regarding this will also be&#13;
available at their table. (Also see&#13;
related article on this law in "the&#13;
Movement" column.) ZPG is,&#13;
among other things, urging a&#13;
letter-writing campaign to state&#13;
representatives and local&#13;
newspapers regarding this issue.&#13;
Membership in ZPG is $8.00 per&#13;
year for students and $15.00 per&#13;
year for non-students. All&#13;
members receive the ZPG&#13;
National Reporter monthly&#13;
magazine. For further information&#13;
contact Robert J.&#13;
Moore, faculty advisor to ZPG or&#13;
write Parkside ZPG, Box 127,&#13;
Student Organizations, UWParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, 53140, or visit&#13;
their table in Main Place this&#13;
week.&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In regard to your article&#13;
praising the Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee established by the&#13;
Chancellor; I would like to know&#13;
how you can conclude that a&#13;
committee appointed by the&#13;
Chancellor, or any one person in&#13;
a position of authority, can be a&#13;
microcosm of a truly&#13;
representative campus government?&#13;
&#13;
Would not some sort of election&#13;
process be in order to have a&#13;
representative committee?&#13;
As in the past, you have again&#13;
broken your supposed autonomy.&#13;
Any time administration initiates&#13;
something you view it positively,&#13;
but any suggestion or act that&#13;
comes from student sources you&#13;
draw negative connotations to it,&#13;
especially if that student source&#13;
happens to be the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Assn. There&#13;
is no other elected group on&#13;
campus for student representation.&#13;
There is no other vehicle&#13;
on campus that makes an attempt&#13;
at the democratic process.&#13;
The sooner you realize that your&#13;
anticipatory reference group is&#13;
not your reference group at&#13;
present, the better.&#13;
I would like to commend&#13;
Chancellor Willie for his foresight&#13;
in appointing a black student to&#13;
this committee. Most times&#13;
blacks are not considered in the&#13;
least at Parkside.&#13;
Joe Harris&#13;
Vice-president, PSGA&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would just like to express a&#13;
few words of appreciation to all&#13;
those connected with bringing the&#13;
tutorial service to Parkside. In&#13;
the three years I have been attending&#13;
school here, this is the&#13;
first program I have come in&#13;
contact with where the primary&#13;
purpose is to help you as an individual.&#13;
There are no lengthy&#13;
forms to fill out or permission&#13;
slips to get signed, and the best&#13;
part yet, the service is free.&#13;
Ison Fern who is in charge of&#13;
the program will do everything&#13;
possible to get you help in the&#13;
area you need and at a time that&#13;
will fit your schedule.&#13;
Mike Zizich&#13;
Junior, Kenosha&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am disappointed with the&#13;
quality of the editorials that have&#13;
recently appeared in the&#13;
RANGER. I have read accusations,&#13;
suggestions, and&#13;
predictions and yet none of them&#13;
have been backed up. Where are&#13;
the facts? I'd like to think that&#13;
they are intelligently derived at&#13;
and not based solely on personal&#13;
bias, but I have my doubts.&#13;
Parkside students are not mindless&#13;
receptacles. They deserve&#13;
much better than this. If these&#13;
are the best editorials the&#13;
RANGER can come up with, I&#13;
suggest that you replace them&#13;
with guest editorials, freeclassified&#13;
ads, or, if necessary,&#13;
shorten the paper.&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is with absolute disgust that I&#13;
receive the news that the Nixon&#13;
administration plans to cut aid to&#13;
our disabled veterans by 160&#13;
million dollars a year. This will&#13;
undoubtedly mean severe hardship&#13;
for many disabled veterans&#13;
and their families. Those hardest&#13;
hit would be veterans disabled in&#13;
Vietnam.&#13;
Following Nixon administration&#13;
economic precedent&#13;
the money stolen from the&#13;
disabled veterans will be absorbed&#13;
by economic aid&#13;
programs to both North and&#13;
South Vietnam. Or, perhaps, it&#13;
will be swallowed by our absurd&#13;
defense budget and used to create&#13;
a new genre of super-weapons.&#13;
Apparently Richard M. Nixon&#13;
expects our disabled veterans to&#13;
lift themselves up by their&#13;
bootstraps while he bolsters the&#13;
Swiss bank accounts of the dictators&#13;
in both North and South&#13;
Vietnam and virtually subsidizes&#13;
the defense industries.&#13;
Jeffrey A. Cook&#13;
the&#13;
Movement&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement is a regular feature in the Ranger&#13;
dealing with women's concerns at Parkside and in society in general.&#13;
Guest writers are invited.&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Do you think contraception is indecent?&#13;
Our state law says it is.&#13;
The Madison chapter of the NOW (National Organization of Women)&#13;
Task Force on Reproduction is, like many other groups and individuals,&#13;
working for total repeal of Wis. statute 450.11. They have&#13;
summarized the five parts of this law as follows:&#13;
1. Contraceptives are defined as "indecent articles."&#13;
2. No one may "offer or advertise any indecent article for sale," nor&#13;
may he (or she!) exhibit or display them.&#13;
3. Selling condoms in vending machines is a very bad no-no.&#13;
4. Sale of contraceptives to unmarried persons is prohibited, and&#13;
sale to married persons is limited to pharmacies and physicians.&#13;
5. Provides the penalty "shall be fined not less than $100 nor more&#13;
than $500 or imprisoned for not to exceed six months, or both."&#13;
The most oppressive provision of the law is certainly the prohibition&#13;
of contraceptives to unmarried persons. According to a decision of the&#13;
Supreme Court on March 23, 1972 in the Baird case out of&#13;
Massachusetts, a state cannot outlaw the distribution of contraceptives&#13;
to single persons when they are legally available to&#13;
married ones. When a state respects a married person's right of&#13;
privacy it cannot deny single people equal protection of the law by&#13;
treating them differently. Further, according to the majority opinion,&#13;
"If the right of privacy means anything, it is the right of the individual,&#13;
married or single, to be free from unwarranted government&#13;
intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a person as the&#13;
decision whether to bear or beget a child."&#13;
The Supreme Court decision in the Massachusetts case is not&#13;
necessarily applicable here unless a Wisconsin citizen brings suit to&#13;
test the constitutionality of our state law. And there are other serious&#13;
difficulties with this law that necessitate not just amendment or&#13;
liberalization, but complete repeal.&#13;
The ban on selling condoms in vending machines is another&#13;
problem. They are a packaged product, not needing the professional&#13;
touch of a pharmacist. Men frequently need them when drugstores are&#13;
closed. A law which restricts the sale of packaged contraceptives to&#13;
pharmacies only serves to limit their distribution and keeps prices&#13;
higher than necessary. Use of condoms is also a simple, effective way&#13;
to control the spread of VD. Thus, to impede their distribution&#13;
demonstrates lack of concern for the safety and welfare of citizens,&#13;
which is what laws are supposed to be about.&#13;
Likewise, limiting the sale of contraceptive creams, jellies and&#13;
foams only to drug stores is restrictive. Why shouldn't these items be&#13;
available in department and grocery stores as well? And no extra law&#13;
is needed to limit the sale of oral contraceptives ("the pill") to&#13;
pharmacies, since that is totally and clearly covered under existing&#13;
law on pharmacy (450.04).&#13;
The display prohibition, too, is archaic. A display of condoms or&#13;
contraceptive foam on a store counter is not going to hurt people; it&#13;
probably may help them avoid unwanted pregnancies. It does not'do&#13;
much good to stop calling contraceptives "indecent articles" if we still&#13;
must, by law, treat them as though they were indecent by hiding them&#13;
under counters. This prohibition is also too often interpreted to mean&#13;
there may be no education about contraceptives. There were over&#13;
6,000 illegitimate births in Wisconsin in 1971--education on contraception&#13;
has obviously been hindered.&#13;
This infamous statute has hampered Wisconsin women far too longwe&#13;
need to get rid of "the whole thing." Everyone can help by writing&#13;
letters to newspapers, contacting state legislature representatives,&#13;
and getting various groups-professional groups, social groups, church&#13;
groups, book clubs, any group-to endorse TOTAL REPEAL. Written&#13;
endorsements can also be sent to NOW Task Force on Reproduction&#13;
P.O. Box 2062, Madison, Wis., 53701.&#13;
The Cartoon Strip by Bob Rohan&#13;
OH r R .UNICED MY six WEEK- ^&#13;
EYAM.,.. T OWE FIFTEEM PEoPL^&#13;
MONEY foR MY BOOKS/; I LOST&#13;
TWO TgxT BOOKS N THE&#13;
last month!! 6ot fiftBO fHI&#13;
FROM MY fWPTT(ME 006..&#13;
MA PAN O FF WITH A TEACHER HERE&#13;
AT WRKSIDE AND FA O lEO OF SHOCK?&#13;
J LOST TWO OOLLARS IN "T HE SODA&#13;
MACHINE GOTTA RASH FROM THE&#13;
SECONP FIOOR LATRINE J &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Feb. 21, 1973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
There are several striking features of SPLIT ENDS that identifies it&#13;
from other current records. The number and duration of the cuts. The&#13;
quantity of other bands that are simulated. The lack of a total theme,&#13;
which in no way mars any quality of the sound.&#13;
On the album there are 12 songs, so naturally they are short. Each&#13;
song is in itself a complete trip. All the songs have the characteristics&#13;
of singles, each one being concise and having its own special attentiongrabbing&#13;
sounds attached. It does in a sense seem a justifiable means&#13;
for balancing out the other extreme or the tendency for songs to&#13;
become longer during the last several years. Of course, it's true that&#13;
neither long or short songs are necessarily better, the purpose should&#13;
dictate the length. However, when every other album appearing on the&#13;
scene has a 15-minute cut which consists mostly of solo turns from the&#13;
drums, bass and guitar; it is quite likely that you may find yourself&#13;
desiring to hear other musical ideas.&#13;
As far as the styles go the move on SPLIT ENDS, resembles many&#13;
different bands. In just the first song "Do Ya," at least four different&#13;
bands are simulated. At times they sound like the Kinks, the Beach&#13;
Boys, the Beatles, Alice Cooper, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis and&#13;
the Bee Gees. The Move seems to have the ability to adapt to any style&#13;
they desire with their instruments while their voices usually identify&#13;
them as the Move. The vocals are good harmonies which also take on&#13;
many styles except for the dominate styles like Mick Jagger an&lt;j Alice&#13;
Cooper. There are also several cuts done in the ancient madness style&#13;
of the ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA, a record which two members&#13;
of the present Move were part of.&#13;
There is no one thesis applying to the whole package. It is not&#13;
dedicated to politics, ecology or anti-humanism. Oh, the moods vary&#13;
along the manic-depressive scale but there is hardly anything too&#13;
serious. "The Minister" appears as the only song with a social&#13;
message, and truly no subject is worthier of attack.&#13;
SPLIT ENDS comes across as largely hard driving, and completely&#13;
magnificent vibrations with all its varying aspects. However, at this&#13;
point, a fear (maybe unjustifiable) arises from the Move trying to&#13;
grasp so many ideas at once.&#13;
Let me offer a parable: A brilliant philosopher is on the verge of&#13;
finding truth. His mind is comprehending more thoughts with each&#13;
passing second and he is beginning to correlate them. More and more&#13;
additions to the premise he is forming are constantly being realized.&#13;
He keeps on stretching his mind because he feels every detail is vitally&#13;
important. Finally his brain cells can no longer continue to expand&#13;
their function. The complete idea falls apart and all the pieces become&#13;
unrecognizable to him. There he sits on the floor, a babbling idiot, once&#13;
a full-fledged genius.&#13;
But this hasn't happened to the Move yet and SPLIT ENDS is good&#13;
time music.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
WWWWW4 C O U P O N 1AWWWVWWWWA&#13;
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PIZZA&#13;
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COUPON1400&#13;
Milwaukee Ave.&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 7:30-9:00&#13;
Saturday 7:30-5:30&#13;
Sunday 9:00-1:00&#13;
AUTO &amp;&#13;
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PARTS GORDON&#13;
^ AUTO PARTS, INC.&#13;
Complete Machine Shop Service&#13;
Paint &amp; Body Shop Supplies&#13;
High Performance Work.&#13;
Discount to Parkside Students&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. S PECIAL:&#13;
THIS&#13;
COUPON)&#13;
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off&#13;
ON ANY&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
GOOD THRU MARCH 2, 1 973&#13;
'Simon'&#13;
is Film Society&#13;
feature&#13;
SIMON OF THE DESERT,&#13;
Luis Bunuel's 1965 satire on&#13;
religion, based on the life of a 15th&#13;
century saint who withdrew from&#13;
the world to commune with God&#13;
atop a pillar in the middle of the&#13;
desert, is Parkside Film&#13;
Society's feature for Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 21. There will also be two&#13;
shorts: RAIN, a classic, lyrical&#13;
documentary by the famous&#13;
Dutch director and&#13;
cinematographer Ivor Ivens; and&#13;
PARIS QUI DORT, Rene Clair's&#13;
fantasy of what happens when a&#13;
"Crazy Ray" mesmerizes almost&#13;
everyone in Paris. The showings&#13;
begin at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
103, a nd admission is 60 cents.&#13;
Throughout his long career,&#13;
Luis Bunuel has constantly attacked&#13;
the Church, but never&#13;
without some element of humor.&#13;
SIMON OF THE DESERT is his&#13;
most outwardly comic work: a&#13;
relaxed, entertaining fable that&#13;
manages to attack Christianity&#13;
as savagely as have his more&#13;
serious films.&#13;
Critic Judith Crist has said of&#13;
it, "The brilliance of the Bunuel&#13;
film is given the added glitter of&#13;
laughter; it is, without doubt, the&#13;
sharpest and wittiest of his&#13;
savage insights on humans and&#13;
his ferocious forays against&#13;
religiosity...a taut and terse little&#13;
film, jammed with faces and&#13;
forms to provide the ultimate&#13;
scathing comment."&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA&#13;
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DELIVERY&#13;
WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 6th AVE.&#13;
"A picture shows me at a glance what it takes dozens&#13;
of pages of a book to expound, " the 19th century Russian&#13;
novelist Turgenev wrote in "Fathers and Sons." Alas,&#13;
poor Turgenev predated ultra-microfiche, a&#13;
photographic process capabl e of reducing 1,000 standard&#13;
size book p ages onto a 3x5 inch sheet of film and&#13;
then, through a "reader," blowing them up again a page&#13;
at a time to more than original size. UW-Parkside&#13;
student Jan Feifer illustrates how the system works&#13;
using as her example of the Library of American&#13;
Civilization collection which packs the equivalent of&#13;
20,000 books into the 30 f ile drawers surrounding the&#13;
reader. To read one of the film books, Miss Feifer&#13;
selects an envelope holding the film rof m the file, places&#13;
the film in the viewer and focuses the machine. The&#13;
system has cost and space advantages in addition to&#13;
making available rare and out-of-print material. Miss&#13;
Feifer, of 8414 26th Ave. , Kenosha, is a junior majoring&#13;
in Spanish. A part-time employee in the campus library,&#13;
she plans a career a s a teacher.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
******* A* A* A* A********** A* A* **************1 M&#13;
ULLETIN&#13;
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BOOKS • MAGAZINES •SUPPLIES&#13;
We also feature...&#13;
POSTERS, CANDLES, GREETING CARDS&#13;
GGLOT LfLE ELU EG EGGGG tfGLUG LGEGGIJGG G CUiB&#13;
TEXT BOOKS &#13;
UW takes steps to ensure&#13;
equal employment&#13;
Wed., Feb. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
MADISON, Wis. -- Steps to&#13;
ensure equal employment opportunities&#13;
to minorities and&#13;
women in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System were announced&#13;
Friday by System&#13;
President John C. Weaver.&#13;
In a memorandum to chancellors&#13;
of the 13 universities, the&#13;
center system and extension,&#13;
Weaver praised them for&#13;
progress already made on the&#13;
campuses and said:&#13;
"Just as we have historically&#13;
set precedents in academic excellence&#13;
and innovation, we must&#13;
continue to live up to our high&#13;
standards by making a more than&#13;
adequate response to the current&#13;
national emphasis upon equal&#13;
opportunity....&#13;
"It is not enough for me to&#13;
simply reaffirm that we will do&#13;
that which legally we must and&#13;
which morally we should.&#13;
Rather, it is my conviction that&#13;
this reaffirmation must carry&#13;
with it a broad outline of specific&#13;
objectives which will be applicable&#13;
to all units and pertinent&#13;
to all of the classes of individuals&#13;
whose right to equal employment&#13;
opportunity is protected by law&#13;
and dictated by good conscience.&#13;
"It is the policy of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
to provide equal opportunity in&#13;
employment through the&#13;
prohibition of discrimination&#13;
against all applicants and employees&#13;
because of age, race,&#13;
color, creed or religion, sex&#13;
handicap, ancestry or national&#13;
origin, and to take affirmative&#13;
action to eliminate any barriers&#13;
which have traditionally limited&#13;
employment, compensation and&#13;
advancement of women and&#13;
minorities."&#13;
Primary responsibility for&#13;
developing and implementing&#13;
policies on equal employment&#13;
opportunity is being placed by&#13;
Weaver with the chancellors and&#13;
with Donald E. Percy, a senior&#13;
vice president of the system.&#13;
Percy will serve as Equal Employment&#13;
Opportunity Officer to&#13;
oversee and coordinate aflirmative&#13;
action programs for&#13;
the entire system, Weaver said.&#13;
Sharing with Percy in the&#13;
leadership role Weaver has&#13;
assigned to the central administration&#13;
staff will be Joseph&#13;
W. Wiley and. Marian Swoboda&#13;
assistants to the president for&#13;
affirmative action for minorities&#13;
and women, respectively. They&#13;
will be responsible for providing&#13;
guidelines and technical advice&#13;
to the universities, center system&#13;
and extension.&#13;
Objectives set by Weaver for&#13;
the chancellors and for central&#13;
administration include:&#13;
1. Submission by July 15,1973 of&#13;
a written affirmative action&#13;
program.&#13;
2. Analysis of utilization of&#13;
women and minorities in each&#13;
department.&#13;
3. Determination of problem&#13;
areas and remedial action.&#13;
4. Setting specific goals and&#13;
timetables to overcome underutilization&#13;
of minorities and&#13;
women wherever it exists.&#13;
5. Pinpointing responsibility for&#13;
minitoring the effectiveness of&#13;
each affirmative action program.&#13;
Smith print&#13;
on display&#13;
Moishe Smith, visiting&#13;
professor of art at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, has been&#13;
notified that his print "Almonds&#13;
of Andalusia," currently on&#13;
display in the Eighth Dulin&#13;
National Print and Drawing&#13;
Competition at the Dulin Gallery&#13;
of Art in Knoxville, has been&#13;
chosen for a traveling exhibition&#13;
of 65 works.&#13;
The touring show is under the&#13;
auspices of The Smithsonian&#13;
Traveling Exhibition Service and&#13;
will be exhibited at the National&#13;
Collection of Fine Arts in&#13;
Washington, D.C., March 23&#13;
through April 22.&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
2nd National&#13;
( Formerly Shakey's)&#13;
Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
featuring&#13;
Live Entertainment &amp; Dancing&#13;
&gt;7 Nights a Week_&#13;
PRESENTING THIS FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY:&#13;
GLEN BENSON&#13;
&amp;&#13;
THE COUNTRY LEGENDS&#13;
; Starting at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
6208 GREEN BAY ROAD&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
John W. Harbeson, associate&#13;
professor of political science, is&#13;
the author of a new book, "Nation&#13;
Building in Kenya: the Role of&#13;
Land Reform," published by&#13;
Northwestern University Press.&#13;
A New York City art excursion&#13;
is planned for the weekend of&#13;
March 16-21. The cost of $90.55&#13;
includes three nights lodging,&#13;
Amtrak round trip and the art of&#13;
New York s Museums.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
Robert Cadez, instructor of art or&#13;
Mrs. Ella Toiggo of the&#13;
Humanities Office. Phone 553-&#13;
2331.&#13;
An orientation program will be&#13;
held Feb. 22 from 7:30-9 p.m. in&#13;
room 103 of Greenquist Hall.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present its first night time&#13;
Whiteskellar Thursday, Feb. 22.&#13;
The 7:30 show will feature Dave&#13;
Duffeck a rhythm and blues&#13;
artist. The show is free as&#13;
always.&#13;
Sigma Pi would like to announce&#13;
that on Thursday, Jan. 25,&#13;
new officers were elected for this&#13;
fraternal organization. The new&#13;
officers are as follows: President&#13;
(Sage) - Jay Fisher, 1st Counselor&#13;
- David Rohde, 2nd Counselor&#13;
- Tom Jennett, 3rd Counselor&#13;
- Gary Meyer, 4th Counselor&#13;
- Dan Duchesneau, and Herald -&#13;
"^at McDevitt. These newly&#13;
lected officers will preside&#13;
roughout the semester and into&#13;
ie summer months.&#13;
Tm h for st&#13;
^ent J^nhT • W1Shing t0 P^ctice&#13;
each during the Fall Semester,&#13;
1973, are due in the Division of&#13;
Education Office, Greenquist&#13;
Han 318, by Thursday, March 1,&#13;
Kubly named&#13;
writer&#13;
in residence&#13;
Herbert Kubly, professor of&#13;
English at Parkside, has been&#13;
named writer-in-residence for&#13;
the second consecutive summer&#13;
at The Rhinelander School of&#13;
Arts.&#13;
Now entering its tenth year, the&#13;
school has become one of the&#13;
major writers' workshops in the&#13;
nation. The school is sponsored&#13;
by UW-Extension Arts in&#13;
cooperation with the Wisconsin&#13;
Regional Writers Association the&#13;
Northern Arts Council and'the&#13;
Rhinelander Board of Education.&#13;
The 1973 program, which includes&#13;
creative writing, painting&#13;
and drawing, and creative arts&#13;
for children, will be held July 23&#13;
to August 3.&#13;
Kubly, who is widely known for&#13;
his travel books, including&#13;
"American in Italy" which won a&#13;
national book award, also has&#13;
credits as a fiction writer&#13;
playwright, critic and journalist.'&#13;
A native of New Glarus, he was&#13;
on the faculties of S an Francisco&#13;
State College, Columbia&#13;
University, The New School for&#13;
Social Research and the&#13;
University of Illinois before&#13;
coming to Parkside.&#13;
$&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
MON.&amp;TUES. EVENING, 5:00-8:00&#13;
(No matter how much of our piz2a, chicken, potatoes&#13;
and salad you eat, the price is only $ 1.7 5)&#13;
Children under 3 Free — Children 3-9,10 Cents a Year&#13;
PIZZA PA&amp;L0&amp;&amp;&#13;
ye PUBLIC house&#13;
Lathrop and 21 st (Almost)&#13;
SHEER&#13;
The Marine Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Team will be on&#13;
campus Feb. 26 and 27 t o inform&#13;
any interested students of the&#13;
programs ^leading to a commission&#13;
as a Marine Officer.&#13;
OHJ EXCUSE ME IF I CON'T GET (JPIl&#13;
808 ROHAN HERE WITH "THE CARTOON&#13;
CONTEST RE6ULTS!! SURE" WAS A HARD&#13;
SCRU0BIN6 DECISION.'! AFTER CLEAN/NG O UT&#13;
THE PlRTT ENTRIES, .&#13;
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»Se» KLEENEX.&#13;
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COLO ONES 11 6(?a_&#13;
OF LJIS.&#13;
ANDREA'S SINCE 1911&#13;
ONE OF ENGLAND'S&#13;
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GBD EBONY&#13;
Dark Matt •Take-off' Finish&#13;
$12.50&#13;
PENTHOUSE&#13;
Light and Dark Matt&#13;
Bowl, fancy Mouthpiece -&#13;
$10.00 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Feb. 21, 1973&#13;
Audio-Visual Review&#13;
Summer tuition&#13;
Learning by doing reduction»&#13;
announced here&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
I Do, I Understand, is a film in the Learning Center which deals with&#13;
learning by doing.&#13;
I hear and I forget&#13;
I see and I remember&#13;
I do and I understand&#13;
The children in the film are not sitting quietly in desks but are seen&#13;
standing around talking in groups. They had been given a problem and&#13;
were expected to work it out by trial and error. The teacher instead of&#13;
standing in front of the class and teaching like a drill sergeant was&#13;
walking around the room giving the students individual help.&#13;
According to the narrator, this teaching process is not interested in&#13;
right answers but in the student understanding what he's doing.&#13;
"Teaching by telling is unsuccessful. When you actually do it, it&#13;
sticks."&#13;
The idea of the film was good but the way in which it was presented&#13;
was far from stimulating. It was a black and white film that looked as&#13;
if it was somewhere around ten years old. It never came out of the&#13;
classroom. Most of the time was spent watching the children work.&#13;
As I said, this teaching process seems to be a good idea. The children&#13;
were having so much fun they didn't seem to realize they were actually&#13;
learning something.&#13;
In search of ancients&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Are we alone in the universe? There are many reasons to believe we&#13;
are not, and never have been.&#13;
"In Search of Ancient Astronauts," a video-taped television&#13;
program narrated by Rod Serling, explores the fascinating riddles&#13;
which our ancestors left for us to solve.&#13;
Were there ancient astronauts? The possibility is not unlikely. If life&#13;
can exist on this planet, why not on any of the billions and billions of&#13;
other planets whirling through space around us? If there is life, it may&#13;
as well be intelligent, and if man can invent space travel, why not&#13;
they, too?&#13;
We have the clues to these ancient riddles in the ruins left by Incas,&#13;
Mayans and Egyptians. Were the beings these people worshipped&#13;
actually gods, or spacemen?&#13;
Some of the Incan and Mayan gods were said to have come from the&#13;
sky. The legends tell of them teaching the people the use of their&#13;
fabulous calendar, the cultivation of corn, and then returning to the&#13;
sky, always with a vow to come back.&#13;
The most striking of all clues are those left carved in the rocks or&#13;
built with great stones. There are strange pictures and carvings on the&#13;
walls of caves and temples which resemble men wearing space gear.&#13;
One particularly graphic example is a carving in a Mayan temple&#13;
which depicts a man seated in what appears to be a space capsule. The&#13;
man is operating controls on a large instrument panel, and there is a&#13;
jet of flame coming out the back of the machine.&#13;
Another thought-provoking sight is a plateau upon which there are&#13;
many meaningless lines. Meaningless at least until one views them&#13;
from the sky, then the lines become clear pictures: one of a spider,&#13;
another of a peacock, still another of an eagle. Who made these lines?&#13;
For what reason? Are they the markings of an ancient airport?&#13;
Perhaps they are, because the tops of nearby hills have areas leveled&#13;
off which look like runways and landing strips.&#13;
I could not help feeling chills run up my spine as I viewed these&#13;
weird phenomena. This is partially due to Serling's spectral voice,&#13;
which is commonly associated with the "Twilight Zone." I do not feel&#13;
this quality detracts from the program, it enhances the mysterious,&#13;
thought-provoking effect.&#13;
While the narrative strongly suggests the possibility of Earth having&#13;
been visited, the program is not necessarily an attempt to prove that&#13;
we have been invaded. It is a highly interesting look at the curious&#13;
relics which have come down to us from antiquity.&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHUITZ BUICK-OPEL&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3S14&#13;
'2,373°&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
Substantial reductions in&#13;
tuition for the 1973 summer&#13;
session at Parkside were announced&#13;
last week.&#13;
Students who are Wisconsin&#13;
residents will pay from $12 to $20&#13;
less than last summer, depending&#13;
on how many credits they take.&#13;
Officials estimate the average&#13;
student will pay $16 less, a&#13;
savings of 20 percent from 1972.&#13;
The range of savings is from 8 to&#13;
49 percent.&#13;
Fees also have been reduced&#13;
significantly for out-of-state&#13;
students, although they will&#13;
continue to pay more than twice&#13;
that of Wisconsin residents.&#13;
The new fee policy will save the&#13;
more than 1,600 students expected&#13;
at Parkside this summer&#13;
approximately $26,000. Summer&#13;
enrollment last year was 1,547.&#13;
Parkside's summer fee&#13;
schedule is expected to be one of&#13;
the lowest among the 13 degreegranting&#13;
campuses in the UW&#13;
•System. The 1973 summer&#13;
schedule for state residents by&#13;
credits carried, with a comparison&#13;
to last year, is:&#13;
0-1 credit: $21 ($41); 2 credits:&#13;
$42 ($ 60); 3 credits: $63 ($79); 4&#13;
credits: $84 ( $98); 5 credits: $105&#13;
($117); 6-9 credits: $124 ($137);&#13;
over 9: $178 ($194).&#13;
The lower summer fee&#13;
schedule at Parkside results&#13;
from a combination of the UW&#13;
System Regents reducing the&#13;
instructional portion of the fee at&#13;
all campuses except those which&#13;
grant doctoral degrees, Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee, and the prorating&#13;
of the non-instructional&#13;
portion of the fee at Parkside&#13;
according to number of credits&#13;
carried. The non-instructional, or&#13;
segregated, fee is essentially a&#13;
user charge for such services as&#13;
health, student activities,&#13;
recreation facilities and parking.&#13;
College M en&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
CHICAGO - LONDON&#13;
May 28- July 13 $199&#13;
June 13 - July 11 $215&#13;
includes:&#13;
Round Trip 747 Charter Jet&#13;
Transfer to Downtown London&#13;
Applications available:&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
Parkside Trio&#13;
The Parkside Trio, a new faculty musical group, will&#13;
present its first public concert on campus at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 25, in Room 103 Greenquist Hall. Members&#13;
of the trio are Maria Mutschler, violinist; Harry Lantz,&#13;
cellist, and Edward Rath, pianist. They will play Trio in&#13;
C Minor, Op. 1, No. 3 by Bee thoven, Miniatures by the&#13;
20th century composer Frank Bridge and Trio in C&#13;
Minor, Op. 101 by Brahms. The program is free.&#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;
meoS&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage B ombers&#13;
Fret Delivery it Parkside Vil lage&#13;
5021 30th Anna* Phone 657-SI91&#13;
PISCES&#13;
Feb. 20 - March 19&#13;
MONDAY N IGHT&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
5&#13;
OLD TIME MOVIES .&#13;
CHESS-CHECKERS-CARDS 7^&#13;
REDUCED DRINKS&#13;
^Tuesday Night-Ladies'Night&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
FUNNIES&#13;
For the following two weeks: Five Blind Mice&#13;
Southeastern Wis. Number I Nitespot&#13;
ZodiaK&#13;
393145th St. OPEN 7 p.m. -1 a.m.&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK 652-8711&#13;
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"RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL&#13;
/t-u standings&#13;
(Through Sun., Feb. 11)&#13;
National Basketball League&#13;
Eastern Division&#13;
Olympians 3-1&#13;
Herblius Superblius 3-1&#13;
Rebels 2-1&#13;
Warriors 1-2&#13;
Privateers 1-3&#13;
Western Division&#13;
Flash 2-1&#13;
Big K 2-2&#13;
Sheeters 1-2&#13;
Sigma Pi 1-3&#13;
Rat Patrol 0-4&#13;
American Basketball League&#13;
Capitol Division&#13;
Bold Ones&#13;
Soccer Team&#13;
Starry Eyed Gang&#13;
Central Division&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
3-0&#13;
1-2&#13;
1-2&#13;
3-0&#13;
1-2&#13;
0-3&#13;
Individual&#13;
Ron Schmitz&#13;
Larry Wade&#13;
Dean Cristensen&#13;
Pete Wood&#13;
Sonn Tag&#13;
Tom Hart&#13;
Bob Moe&#13;
Bill Cairns&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Team&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Rebels&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Sigma Pi&#13;
Privateers&#13;
Total Points&#13;
59&#13;
58&#13;
55&#13;
50&#13;
50&#13;
48&#13;
31&#13;
30&#13;
Individual&#13;
Mitch Arents&#13;
Hal Henderson&#13;
Everett Hyde&#13;
Scott Nelson&#13;
P. Pevonka&#13;
John Pena&#13;
Ed Hopkins&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Team&#13;
Bold Ones&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Soccer Team&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Total Points&#13;
46&#13;
45&#13;
44&#13;
39&#13;
36&#13;
34&#13;
33&#13;
UW-P athletes vie for spots&#13;
By Helmut Kah&#13;
Parkside athletes are again&#13;
vying for positions as&#13;
representatives of the U.S. at the&#13;
1973 World University Games to&#13;
be held in Moscow, Russia,&#13;
August 15-25. The World&#13;
University Games are conducted&#13;
similar to the Olympics although&#13;
not as many sports are included.&#13;
The Games sports are track and&#13;
field, swimming and diving,&#13;
tennis, water polo, basketball,&#13;
volleyball, gymnastics, and&#13;
fencing. To be eligible a student&#13;
must attend a university and be&#13;
under 28 years of age. The Games&#13;
are held every two or three years.&#13;
The last World University&#13;
Games were in 1970 at Turin,&#13;
Italy. John Hanzalik of the&#13;
Parkside fencing team made the&#13;
U.S. team that went to Turin.&#13;
Hanzalik won two and lost three&#13;
matches.&#13;
Eligibility for the Games is&#13;
tough; take fencing for example.&#13;
A fencer wins eligibility points&#13;
through three tournaments: the&#13;
Martini-Rossi in New York, the&#13;
Chicagoland Open, and' the&#13;
Nationals for fencing. At the&#13;
Nationals the top 15 contenders in&#13;
each weapon (foil, epee and&#13;
saber) fence off. The top three in&#13;
each weapon, plus two chosen at&#13;
the discretion of the United States&#13;
Selection Committee for the&#13;
World University Games, will&#13;
compete at the 1973 Games in&#13;
Moscow. Eligibility is just as&#13;
tough in the other sports.&#13;
Coach Loran Hein of fencing&#13;
believes that the fencing team&#13;
has two or three good contenders&#13;
for the 1973 Games. The cost of&#13;
sending an athlete to Moscow is&#13;
estimated at $500. Since the&#13;
university does not give financial&#13;
assistance for supporting&#13;
athletes at the games, the money&#13;
must be raised by the persons&#13;
directly involved. Coach Hein&#13;
requests that interested students&#13;
help the athletes by purchasing a&#13;
patch or pin with the World&#13;
University Games insignia on it.&#13;
The price is $2. Patches and pins&#13;
may be purchased from Coach&#13;
Loran Hein or at the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg. issue room.&#13;
Wrestlers even season record&#13;
by Bruce Rasmussen&#13;
Parkside wrestlers evened&#13;
their season record with a pair of&#13;
dual meet victories this past&#13;
week. Parkside is now 5-5-1 on the&#13;
season.&#13;
Last Wednesday Parkside eked&#13;
out a narrow 24-20 victory over&#13;
Uw-Oshkoshatthe P.E. Building.&#13;
Leading the way over the Titans&#13;
lor Parkside were Rico Savaglio&#13;
and Randy Skarda who won their&#13;
matches on pins. Savaglio is now&#13;
12-1 for the season and Skarda&#13;
has won seven of his last eight for&#13;
a 7-4 record.&#13;
Bill Odders won his match at&#13;
134 pounds by a decision, and&#13;
John Savaglio won at 118 pounds&#13;
on a forfeit.&#13;
Ken Martin and Bill West were&#13;
each moved up a weight class for&#13;
this meet and Martin had to settle&#13;
for a draw and is now 15-1-1, while&#13;
West lost to undefeated Dick&#13;
Beattle for just his second setback&#13;
against 14 wins.&#13;
Last Saturday the wrestlers&#13;
took a small vacation as they&#13;
trounced the University of&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle 47-3.&#13;
Parkside won nine of the ten&#13;
matches. The 47 points were the&#13;
most ever scored by a Ranger&#13;
team.&#13;
Winning on pins for Parkside&#13;
were Rico Savaglio, West,&#13;
Martin, Arlyn Fredrick and Dave&#13;
Rohde. Scoring on decisions were&#13;
Odders, Skarda, Kyle Barnes,&#13;
Dave Baron and Joe Getty took&#13;
the heavyweight division on a&#13;
forfeit.&#13;
Chicago Circle had finished&#13;
19th in the NCAA College Division&#13;
national meet last year, but have&#13;
been hurting with injuries lately.&#13;
Next on the wrestlers agenda&#13;
will be the NAIA National&#13;
Tournament for the grapplers&#13;
who qualify. This years meet will&#13;
be held in Sioux City, Iowa,&#13;
March 8-10.&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch C reated&#13;
Sandwiches &amp;&#13;
Charcoal S teaks&#13;
North &amp; South Sheridan ltd.&#13;
lee's $uti&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER iy&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
T h u r s d a y 1 1 -8&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches!&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool 1 ables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
Wed., Feb. 21, 197 3 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
It has come to my attention that most people are unaware of what&#13;
kata is. This is not unusual, because most people do not practice judo&#13;
. As pointed out by my friend and co-editor Kris Koch, I am a judo nut&#13;
or in more proper terms, a judoka. All this really means is that I&#13;
practice judo. I also practice kata.&#13;
Kata is a formalized judo exercise. There are seven complete katas&#13;
in judo, the three with which I am familiar being Nage-No-Kata,&#13;
Katame-No-Kata, and Ju-No-Kata. Of these I am currently practicing&#13;
Nage and Katame.&#13;
Nage-No-Kata is the kata of the throws. In this kata there are five&#13;
categories of throws: arm, hip, foot and back and side sacrifices. Each&#13;
category contains three throws, done both left and right, for a total of&#13;
30 throws.&#13;
Nage is the first kata I became familiar with, seeing it demonstrated&#13;
at a tournament I attended. Kata is required of all judokas who&#13;
practice for any length of time and hope for rank advancement.&#13;
However, it is not as important for men as competition, unless they&#13;
have chosen to take the noncombatitive course of promotion. Women&#13;
frequently do not compete in areas other than kata, but shiai, combatitive&#13;
contest, is becoming more prevalent.&#13;
A kata team is a Tori, who does the technique; and an Uke, who&#13;
receives the action. These two people must learn their part of the'kata,&#13;
each as important as the other, and practice it together regularly!&#13;
When one watches kata, one rarely appreciates the work behind the&#13;
finished routine.&#13;
When I first began practicing Nage, I discovered how difficult it is to&#13;
coordinate the throws. There always seems to be something left over,&#13;
like an arm, or a leg, or a foot...or a body. After a certain amount of&#13;
frustration and practice, my Uke and I will have a fairly decent kata to&#13;
take to tournaments.&#13;
At a tournament, the team is evaluated on each partner's ability to&#13;
perform her part of the kata. Tori is graded on how well she carries out&#13;
the technique, and Uke on how well she puts up with it. No emotion&#13;
should be shown. This is difficult, especially when a technique really&#13;
gets messed up.&#13;
My partner and I also decided to practice Katame-No-Kata. In this&#13;
kata I am the Uke. I would pick that kata to be the Uke, too, because it&#13;
is a kata of mat techniques and chokes. I detest being choked.&#13;
I wish to extend my congratulations to Jackie Blaha and Nancy&#13;
Konecny, who recently placed second at the Wisconsin State Kata&#13;
championships, and wish them "Good luck" at the national tournament&#13;
in Atlanta, Ga.&#13;
Maybe with a heck of a lot of practice I'll be there next year.&#13;
Fencers lose three&#13;
to nationally ranked foes&#13;
UW-Parkside's fencing team&#13;
lost three matches last Saturday,&#13;
losing to the Big Ten leader&#13;
Illinois 16-11, to Detroit 20-7 and&#13;
to Wayne State 17-10 at Champaign,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Parkside's record on the&#13;
season falls to 8-7 after the&#13;
disastrous weekend of play.&#13;
Individual results in foil were&#13;
Kim Nelson 5-4, John Tank 4-5&#13;
and Mark Mulkins 0-9. In saber,&#13;
Don Koser was 4-5, Peter&#13;
Shemanske 2-7 and David&#13;
Baumann 1-8.&#13;
In epee, Bernie Vash was 8-1,&#13;
and- Mark Boatright and Bill&#13;
Schaefer each 2-7.&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
Live Entertainment &amp; Dancing&#13;
&gt;7 Nights a Weeki&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
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PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
Mon.-Fri.&#13;
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Sat. &amp; Sun. M89&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
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PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Mon.&amp;Tues. j-gg&#13;
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ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'FISH&#13;
FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed.&amp;Fn. *-gg&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
W MO-JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers &#13;
8 THE PARKSID E RANGER W ed., F e b. 2 1 , 1 9 7 3&#13;
Cagers lose 44-40 to Green Bay&#13;
Gary Cole (50) shows h is le aping ability by hitting&#13;
the boards against UW-Green Bay last Saturday night.&#13;
Bill Sobanski (52) is ready to rebound.&#13;
Merritt, Rosa take firsts&#13;
Keith Merritt and Lucien Rosa&#13;
grabbed first places for the&#13;
Parkside track team last&#13;
Saturday at the Titan Invitational&#13;
in Oshkosh.&#13;
Merritt, a junior, set a school&#13;
record in the triple jump with a&#13;
leap of 46-10% while Rosa took&#13;
top honors in the mile in 4:17.0&#13;
and two mile in 9:17.6.&#13;
M rritt also tied the school&#13;
mark in the pole vault, taking&#13;
third at 13-6 while teammate Tim&#13;
Martinson was fifth at 13-0.&#13;
7 minute&#13;
OIL CHANGE&#13;
$-|99&#13;
includes o il &amp; labor&#13;
PIT STOP&#13;
3314-52nd S t.&#13;
Other Ranger placers included&#13;
Herb DeGroot and Cornelius&#13;
Gordon, tied for fourth in the 440;&#13;
DeGroot, third in the 300; and&#13;
Chuck Dettman, second in the&#13;
880.&#13;
Parkside will compete in the&#13;
UW-La Crosse Invitational this&#13;
weekend.&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
The Ranger cagers smelled&#13;
upset in their rematch with UWGreen&#13;
Bay last Saturday in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. building, but they&#13;
couldn't quite pull it off, losing to&#13;
the Phoenix 44-40 in the final&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Green Bay, who had trounced&#13;
the Rangers in an earlier meeting&#13;
this year, met up with an&#13;
awesome defense this time&#13;
around that held them to one of&#13;
their lower offensive outputs of&#13;
the year. The score was tied with&#13;
2:00 left in the game when Mike&#13;
Hanke committed two personal&#13;
fouls that ended up in the four&#13;
point spread that the Phoenix&#13;
won by.&#13;
The Rangers started off the&#13;
'ame with some superb defense&#13;
i at held the visiting team to only&#13;
nine field goals in the first half.&#13;
The Rangers took a 25-20 lead into&#13;
the locker room at intermission.&#13;
The second half turned out to be&#13;
a different story though, as Green&#13;
Bay started to find the range that&#13;
they had lacked in the first&#13;
period. The Rangers saw their&#13;
lead vanish for the first time with&#13;
8:10 left in the game and after&#13;
that it was a see-saw battle. The&#13;
Rangers continued to put up a&#13;
stingy defense, but as Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens put it, "Our weak&#13;
spot was not being able to hit the&#13;
key basket."&#13;
It was still anybody's game&#13;
down until the final two minutes&#13;
when the four free throws by&#13;
Green Bay made the difference in&#13;
the final outcome.&#13;
The leading scorers for the&#13;
Rangers were Chuck Chambliss&#13;
with 13 and Bill Sobamski, who&#13;
pumped in 12.&#13;
The Rangers played The&#13;
College of Racine last night in&#13;
their last home game of the&#13;
season and they will face the&#13;
University of Missouri St. Louis&#13;
this Saturday in St. Louis and&#13;
their last game of the season will&#13;
be against UW-Milwaukee in&#13;
Milwaukee next Tuesday night.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
WANTED — Persons with car to drive to&#13;
Zion, III., on business for the Ranger. Will&#13;
pay $2.85 per trip which is approximately 35&#13;
miles, and takes about one hour from&#13;
Parkside. Contact Tom Petersen in the&#13;
Ranger office, LLC D194.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1972 Honda CB350, excellent&#13;
condition, $625. 1832 Clair St., Racine, after 8&#13;
p.m. weekdays or leave number to call.&#13;
WANTED — Student who has car&#13;
and wants to earn 10 percent&#13;
commission selling advertising&#13;
for the RANGER. Person who&#13;
knows Racine area would have a&#13;
great opportunity. If interested&#13;
call 553-2295 or stop in at LLC D194&#13;
a nd ask for Jerry Murphy. If&#13;
he's not there, leave your name&#13;
and telephone number.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $.&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.'&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
DATE.&#13;
PHONE NO.&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication.&#13;
Lake Forest College produced&#13;
yet another win for the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Rangers last Tuesday, Feb. 13.&#13;
The Rangers won the game quite&#13;
handily by a score of 63-52.&#13;
Parkside started off the game&#13;
as though it would be another&#13;
romp, jumping to a 22-8 lead with&#13;
over eight minutes left in the first&#13;
half. The Rangers took the&#13;
opening tip-off and scored five&#13;
unanswered points on a hook shot&#13;
by Bill Sobanski, a free throw by&#13;
Mike Hanke, and a tip-in by Gary&#13;
Cole. Lake Forest then started an&#13;
effective offense of their own,&#13;
coming back to within 10 at&#13;
halftime. The score at intermission&#13;
was 30-20.&#13;
During the second half, Lake&#13;
Forest began picking up&#13;
momentum and the Rangers soon&#13;
saw their 10 point lead dwindle to&#13;
four. With only 3:33 left in the&#13;
game, Parkside was up by 52-48.&#13;
This time the Rangers came&#13;
back, outscoring their opponent&#13;
11-2 in the final three minutes of&#13;
play.&#13;
Top scorers for Parkside were&#13;
Hanke with 19 points, Cole with 17&#13;
and Chuck Chambliss, who&#13;
rimmed 13.&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Feb. 23,7:30 p.m Missouri-St. Louis at St. Louis&#13;
Feb. 27,7:30 p.m UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee&#13;
Swimming&#13;
Feb. 21,4 p.m at Carroll College&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
Feb. 23,3 p.m Mankato State at Mankato&#13;
Mar. 2,3 p.m Tritton&#13;
Mar. 3,2 p.m at Macomb, 111.&#13;
Hockey&#13;
Feb. 24 at Loyola University&#13;
Feb. 25,6 p.m Northeastern Illinois at Wilson Park&#13;
Mar. 4,6 p.m Marquette at Wilson Park&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
Feb. 24 LaCrosse Invitational at LaCrosse&#13;
Mar. 3 Illinois Open at Champaign&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb. 24 Oberlin&#13;
Mar. 3 Milwaukee Tech at Milwaukee&#13;
Discount Records and Tapes&#13;
^Records5.?8 for 3.7?&#13;
</text>
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        <element elementId="50">
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64077">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 18, February 21, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64078">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
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              <text>1973-02-21</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="49">
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          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64082">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="64083">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="64084">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64087">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Text</text>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
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          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64090">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="648">
      <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
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      <name>gyo obata</name>
    </tag>
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      <name>james galbraith</name>
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      <name>winter carnival</name>
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