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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 2, issue 2</text>
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            <text>Kenosha teachers continue striking</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Some Bookstore prices higher&#13;
Price survey done&#13;
on school supplies&#13;
TheParksidlec--------&#13;
Book ~o~ RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1973Vol. II No.2&#13;
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.ee&#13;
..&#13;
ttr n _ tiM ...,tnt&#13;
Kenosha teachers&#13;
'1' •• dd _ oM tine 1nt WO.edlUl11 01nt&#13;
... or ~eu"t _ .... e I1IrouJrt. color&#13;
'~'Chu'.". ren;ta&#13;
Owl-8 _t". colo ••&#13;
!l"". (a ...-"ll 8 fluid ouncea)&#13;
typing paper. Anyone buying continue striking paper ~tthe Bookstore. then, has&#13;
no choice of the varied prices&#13;
afforded by different paper&#13;
manufacturers. This same notion&#13;
holds true for index cards&#13;
staplers, ringbinders, file folders:&#13;
and other needed student supplies.&#13;
This ~oes not in any way imply&#13;
that all Items are most expensive&#13;
at the Bookstore. The convienient&#13;
location of the Bookstore on&#13;
campus makes it easier and less&#13;
time consuming to purchase&#13;
supplies. Students are advised&#13;
how~ver. to shop around if they&#13;
a.re mterested in saving money.&#13;
In order to help students save&#13;
as much money as possible while&#13;
going through school, RANGER&#13;
r«ently did a price survey to&#13;
diRCl students to stores in which&#13;
schOOlsupplies were found to be&#13;
least expensive.&#13;
Although University Bookstore .&#13;
priceS were higher in the items&#13;
cbarted the prices corresponded&#13;
with those same items at office&#13;
suppliers, However, it was found&#13;
1IIatoffice supply stores carried a&#13;
variety of brand names while the&#13;
Bookstore relied, for example,&#13;
ooIy on NATIONAL for filler 'and&#13;
notebookpaper and EATON for&#13;
Dtsputes sucbas thls one belw..... neaotl.t .... 1ft&#13;
the Kenosha Slnke ore not lmusual ~ teod1e'&#13;
COIllr.et negoti.tions first began last December&#13;
26th, there's been • gr.dual &lt;leterior Uon in&#13;
bargOlntng. Some 23 JreVlOUl 10IlJ and&#13;
meettngs ..,th media"'" Hennon Toro&amp;lOn lAna 22,&#13;
23. and 24) had resuItoe! 1ft. lAnck&gt;{f tween the&#13;
School Board .nd Kenosh. Educ.tlon.1&#13;
Associatioo&#13;
On september 4th. 3;lS •.m., alter ex~&#13;
proposals for over seven hours w,th th KEA team.&#13;
Gerlach reportedly "b1e.. up .t • KEA count -&#13;
proposal" .nd ..,therew au board pro from&#13;
the Llble.&#13;
In • SUltement ma&lt;le later, GerlKh den&gt;-ed thit&#13;
report. saying It was • miSUDderstandlng beI..--.&#13;
hun and AngiIo Romano. spo man for KEA, 1ft&#13;
..1uch Gerl.ch SOld,"I will ..,thd,..", au propsoll If&#13;
the teachers Sb"'ike."&#13;
The KEA membershIp m June hod .uthon"'" th&#13;
negotiating team 10 call • stnke If nee ry.&#13;
The t2 KEA oIfical were particularly upoel O'er&#13;
the fact that only 1\&gt;'0 board memben were preoent&#13;
at the negoti.tJons. Gerlach .nd Frank Falduto&#13;
". hooI Board member Jaclry Ball had told&#13;
Jamce Verlee (president 01 KEAl that a full boaI&#13;
.. ould be present .t the Labor Day m ling." d&#13;
Anderson, "BUI then she tumoe! .round and told&#13;
board memben not 10 sho ~ ....I ° calloe!&#13;
"These actions by the School Board n oli ling&#13;
commIttee e feel, control the bargairung and do&#13;
not acc tely tdl OIher hoard members what&#13;
proposals were being ma&lt;le." And n chOl'lloe!&#13;
Ball IS responSIble for .ppomtlng the&#13;
memben for th n ouallng committee m.de up of&#13;
1\&gt;'0 board members and three .dml1llStret .....&#13;
Gary Cobellic. public relations, Jerry Uellc per_&#13;
sonnel man.ger. and John Ho&amp;mabC, vic&#13;
supenntendent of schools.&#13;
continued on page 4&#13;
by Mich•• 1OlDy!&lt;&#13;
The Kenosha Education Associatioo was 10 meet&#13;
Monday morning at 6 a.m. with teacbers to consider&#13;
the latest School Board proposals in the four day old&#13;
teachers' strike.&#13;
Afinal meeting of both si~ with Morris Slavney,&#13;
chaIr.person or the Wisconsin Employment&#13;
Relations, 00 Saturday. culminated in • two year&#13;
contract proposal made by James Gerlach, School&#13;
Board negotiating committee chairman.&#13;
The contract specified a 300 dollar increase in pay&#13;
the first year, bringing Kenosha teachers' salary to&#13;
8,050 dollars. and anOlher 300 dollar increase the&#13;
second year. plus additional benefIts.&#13;
This scbool year's calender was also tentatively&#13;
shortened a day, thus ending Friday June 7th, 1Ilstead&#13;
of the following Monday. Students ..'OU1dcome&#13;
back the first Thursday in september and have&#13;
Easter vacation a week. earlier that school year&#13;
Gerlach said he was hopeful that the teachers&#13;
would authorize a setUement, although KEA offiCIals&#13;
were dissatisfied with the offer.&#13;
"From information gathered, I believe IIIpercenl&#13;
of the teachers would adopt the COIllraClif their&#13;
bargaining team ",'OU1dpresent our proposals,"&#13;
Gerlach commented.&#13;
He sited KEA as ''unwilling 10 setUe this thmg"&#13;
by not meeting WIth their memberslup \IIltil Monday.&#13;
A staff member of the WlSCOIlsinEducation&#13;
Association, Jan Anderson, contested Gerlach's&#13;
notion, staling that there wasn't enough time after&#13;
Saturday'S meeting (ended at .:30 p.m.! 10 call&#13;
together the teachers on Sunday.&#13;
Anderson was also pessimistic ahout Gerlacb's&#13;
figures on confirmation of the contract, saying, "It&#13;
was impossible to determine the teachers' voli.r.1g.&#13;
until it occurred. II&#13;
photo by Dave Daniels&#13;
TwoKen .. ha public school students make the most of their extended&#13;
~r vacation while their teachers voted to reject a new offer by&#13;
Jbe K..... ha School Board.&#13;
KEA strike affects&#13;
Parkside students&#13;
For .he purpose 0( .ddlng&#13;
da est tM LUMDt Rf'~&#13;
orftce '" ill be opetI Loda~ rrom&#13;
a.m. lO p.m. Toda) tlle I. t&#13;
da to add II cb '" IthOUl Lbe&#13;
COI1.$("Qt 01 the in trudOt'.&#13;
Thf' r'f' tar mt ttr hours or&#13;
lh~ \WInl R orcl "let art&#13;
7:·U •. m. ~ 11:U a.m. and 12:..&#13;
p.m.·. '31 pm. \land. tIlr p&#13;
Friday.&#13;
some&#13;
by Debra Friedell would not reply. Both she and her cooperating ~ -J&#13;
teacher are crossing lines at Bradford.&#13;
Parkslde students who are either practice or One Parkside graduate of two years, who is now&#13;
.... teaching in Kenosha area public schools have employed by the Kenosba School District at a junior&#13;
-Instructed to stay "neutral" by both UW-P and high school, is a member of the KEA and OIl the&#13;
Jbe Wl8COllsinImprovement Program of Madison picket line. She said that it would be bard not to be&#13;
1I'tichisthedirecting office to state intern teachers. bitter after the strike towards teachers who are&#13;
By staying "neutral," the practice or intern crossing lines. "They will be receiving the same&#13;
~ must stay off of school district property if benefits as those of us who are marching now-when&#13;
lIIaI' Cooperating teacher (supervisor from the the strike is over /' she said. The priocipal of that&#13;
IlIlool in which they are teaching) is marching the junior high was said to have given a cocktail party&#13;
"'t lines. The student must make the decision on Friday night for teachers in his school who were not&#13;
lbetberor not to cross lines however, if his or her honoring the strike. "The only contact I have with&#13;
~ating teacher is. in 'the classroom. Most those who cross is to either say 'we coold use your&#13;
Paibide students find themselves sitting the strike support out here' or I say nothing at aJllO teachlh&#13;
~ at home while their cooperating teacher is who I don't feel can be swayed."&#13;
PlQeting. . Most Parkside students working this semester as&#13;
Tremper High School interns and practice practice or int~rn te~~ers are anxious to begin but ':::,ers heard talk of the strike the day before sympathize WIth stnking teachers and feel that If&#13;
!be . were to start. One intern said that although they had not been instructed to remaon "neutral"&#13;
.~~nnclpa.l had told them to go which every way they would be marching. "Striking is ~. only way"&#13;
__ CO d b were the words spoken by many ondlVlduals who&#13;
bard f nsc,ences dictated and there woul e no 0Ube certified teachers soon and may at some&#13;
" .eelmgs, there were rumors that the WI " .- I" stand&#13;
'OQIOSllaSchool District Director of Personnel had time be faced with taking an unneuu a. .&#13;
~to d aU int.erns and practice teachers to show Although they cannot join a teachers umon until&#13;
.,. tea h Th f d becoming certified, most felt they would become her aU c.' IS particular intern, however, oun m~mbers of a union when they ~gm their teachmg&#13;
''Ibeir eglance was with the striking teacI.JT8. eers It was the general aWlude that the KEA&#13;
boon demands are fair ," she said, "and they have hcaa~legiiimate gri.pes to which the School Board had&#13;
_ getttng such small increases in the past&#13;
""4IIPared to oth f d 'k nyone not been responsive. ch tho er pro essions. I on t now a Neither intern, practice, nor Kenos~ Lea en&#13;
'llti'Ntc'ks harder. I will always honor a strike." etting paid while they are outsIde. of the&#13;
~ altitude was contradicted by a pradice are goo e intern has taken up a JOb al a&#13;
iIIrted ~t Bradford Jlil!h School. who neIther classroom, s ,PThe kids" he said "who come in&#13;
'ktAl'1th the str.iking Kenosha teacher's umon grocery ulsJ~::~are less about the strike or going to&#13;
'"'"Ii nor felt that teachers should ever strike. h;~~~O They just don't want to have to m~,ke up&#13;
~:ked If she thought legitimate demands Sthese~issed school days later m the year.&#13;
. '. ,',\let Withgut a strike tl;1epracti.e teach~~.,&#13;
, " -J,', ,-_, &lt;'~"':' :t~&lt;.,i.1 ~:,&lt;., , '~", , '. " ' .&#13;
Racine bus schedule&#13;
-&#13;
A study IS being done to determine where the Racme bus mlers are&#13;
located, m preparation for • possIble route change to ser"e students&#13;
better and hopefully merease ndership. Jewel Echelbarger ass! lant&#13;
dean of students. says the bus may SWlllg IDto neighborb~ ..'here&#13;
there are a nwnher of nders. to shorten the eIlstonce theae people ho"e&#13;
togo to reach the bus. Sheernpbasized that while thIS may also IIlvolve&#13;
a schedule change. the)' will be careful to see that the bus does reach&#13;
everyone.&#13;
0 rne Bookstore prices higher&#13;
Price survey done&#13;
on scho6l supplies&#13;
The Parkside·--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1973 Vol. II o. 2&#13;
Kenosha teachers&#13;
In order to help students save&#13;
as much money as possible while&#13;
going through school, RANGER&#13;
recently did a price survey to&#13;
direct students to stores in which&#13;
school supplies were found to be&#13;
Jeast expensive.&#13;
- typing paper. Anyone buying&#13;
paper ":t the Bookstore, then, has&#13;
no chmce of the varied prices&#13;
afforded by different paper&#13;
manufacturers. This same notion&#13;
holds true for index cards&#13;
staplers, ringbinders, file folders:&#13;
a~d other needed student sup- plies.&#13;
continue striking&#13;
Although University Bookstore ·&#13;
prices were higher in the items&#13;
charted the prices corresponded&#13;
with those same items at office&#13;
suppliers. However, it was found&#13;
that office supply stores carried a&#13;
variety of brand names while the&#13;
Bookstore relied, for example,&#13;
only on NATIONAL for filler and&#13;
notebook paper and EATON for&#13;
This d_oes not in any way imply&#13;
that all Items are most expensive&#13;
at the Bookstore. The convienient&#13;
location of the Bookstore on&#13;
c_ampus makes it easier and less&#13;
time consuming to purchase&#13;
supplies. Students are advised&#13;
how~ver, to shop around if they&#13;
are mterested in saving money.&#13;
--J__&#13;
photo by Dave Daniels&#13;
Two Kenosha public school students make the most of their extended&#13;
summer vacation while their teachers voted to reject a new offer by&#13;
the Kenosha School Board.&#13;
The Kenosha Education iat.Jon a to m t&#13;
1ondaymorningat6a.m. "thteacbersto id&#13;
the latest chool Board pro in the four da&#13;
teachers' trike.&#13;
A final meeting or both sid :ith torris la rn&#13;
chair_Person or the 'i ·con in Emplo;ment&#13;
Relation , on Saturday. culminated in a t 'O } r&#13;
contract proposal mad by Jam ~rlach.&#13;
Board negotiating committee chrurm n.&#13;
The contract pecified a 300 dollar inc&#13;
the first year, bringing Ke teach&#13;
8,050 dollars, and another dollar in&#13;
second year, plu.s additional benefi .&#13;
This school year's calend al tent.au ·el)&#13;
shortened a day, thus ending Fnda) June 7th mstead&#13;
of the following . 1onday uden 1)U]d come&#13;
back the first Thursda) in September and ha ·e&#13;
Easter vacation a week earlier that school year.&#13;
Gerlach said be "'a hopeful that th t.eac:ners&#13;
would authonze a Uement alth h KE&#13;
ficials were dissatisfied ith the offer.&#13;
"From information gathered , I beli ·e pen:en&#13;
of the teachers \\ould adopt the contr ct&#13;
bargaining team \\ould p rnnnc11k&#13;
Gerlach commented.&#13;
He sited KEA a "unwilli to&#13;
by not meeting ,..,,th their mem&#13;
day.&#13;
A staff member of the&#13;
Association. Jan And n cont&#13;
notion, stating that there asn t&#13;
Saturday' meeting (ended at 4:&#13;
together the teachers on unda) .&#13;
Anderson "'a also pess1M1 • c a&#13;
figures on confirmation of the contract. y&#13;
was impossible to determine th teacbe _' ·&#13;
lD'ltil it occurred.''&#13;
KEA strike affects sonte&#13;
Parkside students&#13;
by Debra Friedell would not reply. Both she and her coo&#13;
teacher are crossing lines at Bradford.&#13;
con lnued on p&#13;
Parkside students who are either practice or&#13;
Item teaching in Kenosha area public schools have&#13;
been~structed to stay "neutral" by both UW-P and&#13;
the_ W1_sconsin Improvement Program of Madison&#13;
"'1ich 1s the directing office to state intern teachers.&#13;
By staying "neutral," the practice or intern =er must stay off of school district property if&#13;
One Parkside graduate of two years, who&#13;
employed by the Kenosha School Di trict at a jun or&#13;
high school, is a member of the KEA and on the&#13;
picket line. She said that it would be hard n t to be&#13;
bitter after the strike towards teachers who are&#13;
crossing lines. "They will be receiving the same benefits as those of us who are marching now-when&#13;
the strike is over," she said. The principal of that&#13;
junior high was said to have given a cocktail part)&#13;
Friday night for teachers in hi school who ere not&#13;
honoring the strike. "The only contact I ha,.·e ith&#13;
those who cross is to either say ·we could use your&#13;
support out here' or I say nothing at all to teach&#13;
who I don't feel can be swayed."&#13;
Racine bu ch&#13;
~ooperating teacher (supervisor from the&#13;
ldiool 1_n which they are teaching) is marching the&#13;
lleket hoes. The student must make the decision on&#13;
lbether or not to cross lines however, if his or her&#13;
COoperating teacher is in 'the classroom. Most&#13;
Parkside students find themselves sitting the strike&#13;
~ at home while their cooperating teacher is&#13;
llcketing.&#13;
Tremper High School interns and practice&#13;
:chers heard talk of the strike the day before&#13;
tJie ~ w_ere to start. One intern said that although&#13;
lbei~rtncip~l had told them to go which every way&#13;
hard cons~1ences dictated and there would be no&#13;
ken feelmgs, there were rumors that the&#13;
osha School District Director of Personnel had&#13;
~ted all in~erns and practice teachers to show&#13;
her teac~. This particular intern, however, found&#13;
'"lb ~llegiance was with the striking teacl.Jrs.&#13;
~ err de~ands are fair," she said, "and they have&#13;
COrn getting such small increases in the past&#13;
lllio Pared to other professions. I don't know anyone&#13;
'lbiWorks harder. I will always honor a strike.''&#13;
~ 8 attitude was contradicted by a practice&#13;
~ ,t Bradford High School, who nei~er&#13;
KF:Ai Ith the striking Kenosha teacher's union&#13;
"heri nor felt that teachers should ever strike.&#13;
~d ~Sked if_ she thought legitimate demands&#13;
Most Parkside students working thi seme ter a&#13;
practice or int~rn t~~ers are anxious to begm b~t&#13;
sympathize with stnking teachers and feel that if&#13;
they had not been instructed to remain ''neutral"&#13;
they would be marching. "Striking !s t?e. only -ay"&#13;
were the words spoken by many 1ndiv1dual ·ho&#13;
will be certified teachers soon and may at me&#13;
time be faced with taking an "unneutra!" ta~&#13;
Although they cannot join a teachers umon until&#13;
becoming certified, most felt the~· w~d beco~e&#13;
members of a union when they begin their teach eers It was the general attitude that the KEA&#13;
~!~ legitimate gripes to which the School Board had&#13;
not been responsive. Neither intern, practice, nor Kenos~ teachers&#13;
are getting paid while they are outside_ of the&#13;
1 ssroom so one intern has tak~n up a JOb at .a c a t' "The kids " he said "who com m grocery s ore. • .k · uld 't care less about the tri e or going to&#13;
h:~~~~ Th~y just don't want to_ have t_o ma:e up&#13;
:hese missed school days later m the ~ear. met Without a strike, the practice teachei: • ' \ \ 1 ~ ~·, -&lt; .... ' .\ .. .. • • • • . • . . .&#13;
a -&#13;
(!\'~Oil •&#13;
dul &#13;
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., sept. 11, 1973&#13;
'-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editoriol/Opinion&#13;
Students are last&#13;
in line again&#13;
As RANGE R has stated before, contrary to their&#13;
claims administrators do not appear to keep students in&#13;
mind when decisions are being made. This was proven&#13;
to us again in the instance of concert tickets for the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony concert, September 11. The&#13;
concert featured pianist and former Parkside artist-inresidence&#13;
Carmen Vila.&#13;
It was decided that: 1. Tickets would go on sale one&#13;
week before students were on campus for registration.&#13;
2. Choice seats would be given to Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and Bldlngers in Kenosha to sell. 3. That less than half of&#13;
the seats would remain on campus to be available to&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Later, when tickets were close to being sold-out at&#13;
Parkside and going slowly at the Cook-Gere and&#13;
Bidinger outlets, some of their choice seat tickets were&#13;
brought back to be sold on campus.&#13;
In no way were the ticket sales for this concert on a&#13;
first-come, first-serve basis. Students never&#13;
received a fair chance at purchasing tickets, and to add&#13;
to the Insult better seats were made available after&#13;
poorer ones were sold.&#13;
This concert marked the opening of our new theatre in&#13;
the new Communication Arts building. Students, faculty&#13;
and staff had as much right to attend as did people in the&#13;
community, and we feel an equal chance at tickets on an&#13;
honest first-come, first-serve basis should have been the&#13;
guiding philosophy. While handsight, of course, is better&#13;
than foresight, common sense dictates that in a&#13;
university which exists to educate and enrich the Iives of&#13;
Its students, its students should have at least as good an&#13;
opportunity to take advantage of a cultural event being&#13;
held on their campus as anyone el~e:_'- .&#13;
-'~&#13;
Shortages plague Ranger, Parkside&#13;
This week RANGER was forced to cut back to eight pages. Iwould&#13;
like to be able to say that this was a noble gesture on our part to conserve&#13;
newsprint in the present shortage, but that's not quite why we&#13;
did it. The truth is, the shortage affecting us the most right now is in&#13;
advertising. We are in desperate need of an advertising manager.&#13;
Production costs of this newspaper are met solely by ad revenues and&#13;
our business manager. Ken Pestka, has been trying almost&#13;
si~lebandedly to seU enough advertising to pay for printing 12pages,&#13;
while sJ~ullaneously managing our other business and attending&#13;
classes 10 between. Anyone who sells an ad for us does receive a&#13;
commission, and if you're interested in a title as well as a good amount&#13;
01cash then see Ken about the ad manager's position.&#13;
Along with all the other shortages people face these days, Parkside&#13;
students face a parking lot shortage and shortage of space in many of&#13;
tile classes they want to get into.There is also a shortage of&#13;
sophomores here this year-speculation on reasons why include the&#13;
lack of a sense of community among students. I agree that this place&#13;
doesn't really hang together like other universities where students live&#13;
on campus, SOit seems that the all-student picnic scheduled for this&#13;
noon !"ight be a good way to establish some connections. If nothing&#13;
else, It should take some of the pressure off in the cafeteria where&#13;
there is a shortage oltables. How about if we leave the food service&#13;
area to faculty and staff on Wednesday noons and go do our own thing&#13;
(or luoch on the lawn in trout of Greenquist? And for the sake of all of&#13;
us, let's hope thooe other shortages are remedied soon, before we lose&#13;
not only next year's sophomores but many of next semester's potential&#13;
students.&#13;
As lonlli.~ I'm mentioning shortages, I can't overlook the lack of&#13;
tick~ on81Da1l¥ consIgned to be sold on campus for' the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony-Carmen Vila concert. One 01 this week's editorials sums up&#13;
that poorly managed situation.&#13;
RANGER slilJ has a shortage in the area of personnel - we need&#13;
gutsy investigative reporters, imaginative feature writers, amy&#13;
layout persons, experienced obituary writers, friendly ad salespeople&#13;
quatified shutterbugs, safe drivers, and anyone else who wants us t~&#13;
discover their talents. There is another get together in our omce (LLC&#13;
0194) at 3:30 Wednesday afternoon, but we'U talk to people anytime&#13;
they venture into 0Uf madbouse so come when you ~an. \ ,&#13;
photo by Jay Salve&#13;
Unrealistic thinking&#13;
aggravates&#13;
parking situation&#13;
Parkside is commonly described as a commuter&#13;
camous. Our students, for the most part, arrive each&#13;
day from Racine, Kenosha, Milwaukee. Burlington,&#13;
northern Illinois and so on. They have purchased&#13;
permits which allow them to use campus parking&#13;
facilities, but there is a problem -- lack of adequate&#13;
parking space to accommodate all the students, faculty&#13;
and staff during peak periods. The result is chaos-cars&#13;
parked "illegally," people late for classes. frustration.&#13;
anger and hostil ity. The need for another lot is obvious,&#13;
but it will be constructed next year when the need is&#13;
extremely acute instead of this year when it is only&#13;
serious.&#13;
. Fortunately, some of the people involved in planning&#13;
_iJa,:¥e .ac;~09'tii!e.!i~,~£litl),a:t}-~.~!:1-: i~~~lP!"~~e.'Puc"F/;l~,y,.•P.ri~w"'M&#13;
workinq on solutions but fundIng·and l:iureauc~a~yane, "&#13;
causing the delays. The money collected from this&#13;
year's parking fees are being saved to buil'd the new,&#13;
permanent lot next year. It also goes to support the bus&#13;
service and maintain exlsrlnq lots.&#13;
Meanwhile, if you are parking in unmarked places you&#13;
are parking illegally. Ticketing was not done during the&#13;
first week of classes, but Ronald Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Safety and Security, indicated that warning tickets&#13;
would soon be issued. He said that violators were new'&#13;
freshmen who didn't know where the stalls were, and a&#13;
personal check by him had revealed plenty of spaces&#13;
available.&#13;
It seems strange that Planning and Construction&#13;
would be working to solve the parking problem if plenty&#13;
of spaces are avallable.lt seems strange that if a student&#13;
wants to yet to class on time and can't find a marked&#13;
stall in which to park he or she should be penalized for&#13;
parking wherever there is a paved place. It seems&#13;
strange that the administr"ation pushed for ever higher&#13;
enrollment while knowing full well that many students&#13;
would not be able to find a parking place.&#13;
The rationale was that once the students were&#13;
registered and found there was this problem, they would&#13;
form their own car pools or resort to buses. For&#13;
ecology's sake this is well and good, but students should&#13;
at least have been warned of the·University's ecological&#13;
mandate before they purchased parking permits. The&#13;
administrative staff knew of this situation well In advance,&#13;
for it affected scheduling of classes.&#13;
Once adds and drops are over, car pools formed, bus&#13;
ridership solidified and classes settling down. then a&#13;
thorough study of parking patterns will be conducted.&#13;
!hen additional parking space will be provided, much of&#13;
~tapparently in places where students are now parking&#13;
Illegally. Better late than never, but some realistic&#13;
thinking earlier rather than just hoping for the best&#13;
would have prevented much ill feeling towards the&#13;
University.&#13;
~.. {&#13;
... . "&#13;
, .&#13;
-, ', '_!~ , :"I., ~&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
........ ------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Students are last&#13;
in line again&#13;
As RANGER has stated before, contrary to their&#13;
claims administrators do not appear to keep students in&#13;
mind when decisions are being made. This was proven&#13;
to us again in the instance of concert tickets for the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony concert, September 11. The&#13;
concert featured pianist and former Parkside artist-inresidence&#13;
Carmen Vila.&#13;
It was decided that: 1. Tickets would go on sale one&#13;
week before students were on campus for registration.&#13;
2. Choice seats would be given to Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and Bidlngers in Kenosha to sell. 3. That less than half of&#13;
the seats would remain on campus to be available to&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Later, when tickets were close to being sold-out at&#13;
Parkside and going slowly at the Cook-Gere and&#13;
Bldinger outlets, some of their choice seat tickets were&#13;
brought back to be sold on campus.&#13;
In no way were the ticket sales for this concert on a&#13;
first-come, first-serve basis. Students never&#13;
received a fair chance at purchasing tickets, and to add&#13;
to the insult be1ter seats were made available after&#13;
poorer ones were sold.&#13;
This concert marked the opening of our new theatre in&#13;
the new Communication Arts building . Students, faculty&#13;
and staff had as much right to attend as did people in the&#13;
community, and we feel an equal chance at tickets on an&#13;
honest first-come, first-serve basis should have been the&#13;
guiding philosophy. While handsight, of course, is better&#13;
than foresight, common sense dictates that in a&#13;
university which exists to educate and enrich the lives of&#13;
its students, its students should have at least as good an&#13;
opportunity to take advantage of a cultural event being&#13;
held on their campus as anyone else.&#13;
horta e plague Ranger, Parkside&#13;
Thi w k R.\ 'GER wa forced to cut back to eight pages. I would&#13;
like to be able to y that this was a noble gesture on our part to conrve&#13;
n ·print in the pre ent shortage, but that's not quite why we&#13;
did it. Th truth is, the hortage affecting us the most right now is in&#13;
dv rti ing . \ e are in de perate need of an advertising manager.&#13;
Pr ct ion co of thi new paper are met solely by ad revenues and&#13;
our bu in manager, Ken Pestka, has been trying al~ost&#13;
in~leh . ndedly to ell enough ~dvertising to pay for printing 12 pages,&#13;
v.hil 1!11ultaneously managing our other business and attending&#13;
I · m between. Anyone who sells an ad for us does receive a&#13;
mmi 100, and if you're interested in a title as well as a good amount&#13;
of c sh then Ken about the ad manager's position.&#13;
Along with aJJ the other shortages people face these days, Parkside&#13;
tudents face a parking lot shortage and shortage of space in many of&#13;
the ct they want to get into.There is also a shortage of&#13;
sophomores here this year- peculation on reasons why include the&#13;
lack of a sense of community among students. I agree that this place&#13;
doesn't really hang together like other universities where students live&#13;
oo campus, so it seems that the all-student picnic scheduled for this&#13;
noon might be a good way to establish some connections. If nothing&#13;
, 1t should ta.ke some of the pressure off in the cafeteria where&#13;
there i a shortage of tables. How about if we leave the food service&#13;
area to faculty and staff on Wednesday noons and go do our own thing&#13;
for lunch on the lawn in front of Greenquist'1 And for the sake of aJJ of&#13;
us, let's hope thoee other shortages are remedied soon, before we lose&#13;
not only next year's sophomores but many of next semester's potential&#13;
tudents.&#13;
. Iona.~ I'm mentioning shortages, I can't overlook the lack of&#13;
bc.k_ ongrnally consigned to be sold on campus for.the Milwaukee&#13;
ymphony-Carmen Vila concert. One of this week's editorials sums up&#13;
that poorly managed situation.&#13;
R · ER till ha a hortage in the area of personnel - we need&#13;
gu y inv tigative reporters, imaginative feature writers, artsy&#13;
layout person , experienced obituary writers, friendly ad salespeople&#13;
quahfted hutterbugs, safe drivers, and anyone else who wants us t~&#13;
discover their talen There is another get together in our office (LLC&#13;
0190 at S:30 Wednesday afternoon, but we'll talk to people anytime&#13;
th y v ntur into our madbouse so come when you ':8"·&#13;
photo by Jay Salve&#13;
Unrealistic thinking&#13;
aggravates&#13;
parking situation&#13;
Parkside is commonly described as a commuter&#13;
campus. Our students, for the most part, arrive each&#13;
day from Racine, Kenosha, Milwaukee, Burlington,&#13;
northern Illinois and so on. They have purchased&#13;
permits which allow them to use campus parking&#13;
facilities, but there is a problem -- lack of adequate&#13;
parking space to accommodate all the students, faculty&#13;
and staff during peak periods. The result is chaos--cars&#13;
parked "illegally," people late for classes, frustration,&#13;
anger and hostility. The need for another lot is obvious,&#13;
but it will be constructed next year when the need ·is&#13;
extremely acute instead of this year when it is only&#13;
serious.&#13;
Fortunately, some of the people involved in planning&#13;
~ffa"': e ac~!:l9Y"'~-~cfa~P.:t~.a.!J~.~~Et·:i~:atpr~~~!:TI .:p;wY,.~f.lr.~ v, ... 1,1&#13;
working on solutions but funding ,and bureaucracy a~e· . ,&#13;
causing the delays. The money collected from this&#13;
year's parking fees are being saved to build the new,&#13;
permanent lot next year. It also goes to support the bus&#13;
service and maintain existing lots.&#13;
Meanwhile, if you are parking in unmarked places you&#13;
are parking illegally. Ticketing was not done during the&#13;
first week of classes, but Ronald Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Safety and Security, indicated that warning tickets&#13;
would soon be issued. He said that violators were new&#13;
freshmen who didn't know where the stalls were, and a&#13;
personal check by him had revealed plenty of spaces&#13;
available.&#13;
It seems strange that Planning and Construction&#13;
would be working to solve the parking problem if plenty&#13;
of spaces are available.It seems strange that if a student&#13;
wants to yet to class on time and can't find a marked&#13;
stall in which to park he or she should be penalized for&#13;
parking wherever there is a paved place. It seems&#13;
strange that the administr"ation pushed for ever higher&#13;
enrollment while knowing full well that many students&#13;
would not be able to find a parking place.&#13;
The rationale was that once the students were&#13;
registered and found there was this problem, they would&#13;
form their own car pools or resort to buses. For&#13;
ecology's sake this is well and good, but students should&#13;
at least have been warned of the -University's ecological&#13;
mandate before they purchased parking permits. The&#13;
administrative staff knew of this situation well in advance,&#13;
for it affected scheduling of classes.&#13;
Once adds and drops are over, car pools formed, bus&#13;
ridership solidified and classes settling down, then a&#13;
thorough study of parking patterns will be conducted.&#13;
:hen additional parking space will be provided, much of&#13;
~t apparently in places where students are now parking&#13;
illegally. Better late than never, but some realistic&#13;
thinking earlier rather than just hoping for the best&#13;
would have prevented much ill feeling towards the&#13;
University.&#13;
.. ' • &lt; ', &#13;
point of view&#13;
Communication gap&#13;
hurts students&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
"To the hest of our knowledge, the Film Society has been ,,~. tat t f can- celled. rms S ernen. came rom Ronald Gottesman, professor of&#13;
English and faculty advisor to the Parkside Film Society.&#13;
An extremely worthwhile student organization one that has offered&#13;
a valuable service to students in the past, is suspending its operati&#13;
f tho • 1 ons. The r.eason or IS seems s~mp e enough: no money. But the vital&#13;
question that must he asked IS why and who is responsible? This answer&#13;
is not SImple: It IS a very complex situation that has yet to be&#13;
resolved. .&#13;
The Film Society advisor produced from his files a copy of a&#13;
memorandum that was sent on May 9, 1973 to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee, the source of funding for student organizations. This&#13;
memo detailed attendance figures and revenues collected from last&#13;
year's film series. It also outlined a program and costs of films for&#13;
1973-74. This budget was proposed in the spring rather than the fall so&#13;
that the films, some of which are in great demand, could be ordered&#13;
early. The memorandwn received no reply. There then followed a&#13;
complex ~eri~ .o~additional memos, and telephone and personal&#13;
conversations initiated by Gottesman. Time passed and still the Film&#13;
Society received no reply as to what action was being taken on the&#13;
matter. Because no films could be ordered without funds, the Society&#13;
has been forced out of existence.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee, represented by its chairperson&#13;
Marion Mochon, tells a different story. Mochon stated that the Film&#13;
Society's memo of May 9, 1973 was, to her knowledge, never received.&#13;
Since the cee officially ends its sessions in April, Mochon explained,&#13;
some member other than herself may have received the memo and&#13;
filedit for consideration at the first fall session.&#13;
Mochon pointed out that the CCC had urged the Film Society in fall&#13;
1972 and winter 1973 to revise their admission prices so that they could&#13;
become a self-supporting organization. (The Society'S 73-74 budget&#13;
proposal is $1137.50'&gt; Gottesman's response to this idea was that the&#13;
admission price would be too high for students to pay. Using last&#13;
year's total attendance figures and this year's budget, a $1 admission&#13;
charge would approximately cover expenses. However, Gottesman's&#13;
understanding of the self-sufficiency proposal was that it was a&#13;
suggestion that was rejected because it was not financially feasible.&#13;
Somewhere in all of this confusion, a large misunderstanding has&#13;
been created by hoth sides. Admittedly, $1137.50 is a lot of money,&#13;
despite the obvious worthiness of the Film Society. And, of course,&#13;
otbwl1ilJldenU9I!g~nj1&lt;il.il&gt;1lIiiJ!a.eJWeand_ financial-boosting. But&#13;
somewhere lliong the line, the CCC has failed to be responsive, to&#13;
communicate openly with the Film Society people.&#13;
So, unfortunately for film-lovers, misunderstanding and bitter&#13;
feelings ahound between the Film Society and the CCC, and "The&#13;
Student" is once again the loser. •&#13;
Something must be done, and soon. The only reasonable solution is&#13;
for the Film Society people and the CCC to sit down tngether and talk&#13;
to each other, face-la-face, and get this horrible mess straightened&#13;
out. Even though the CCC can take no legal action on the money&#13;
problem (a quorum can't be raised), co~munication and rapport&#13;
must be re-established between these parties to ensure that serIOUS&#13;
mistakes like this do nol reoccur.&#13;
~H:.The~&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published wee~y throug~ut th.eacade~ic&#13;
year by the students of The UniverSity of Wlsconsm'Pa~kslde,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0-194 UbraryLearning&#13;
Center Telephone (414) 553-2295. . .&#13;
The Parkside' Ranger is an independent newspa,pe:rih OP~~lo.n~&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily e 0 ICla&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. b t f&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any IU jeC 0&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff m~st be confined~~ ~~Ot~ ~&#13;
less. typed pnd double-spaced. The editors reserve. nd include&#13;
letters for lenath and good taste. Allietten m~t ~ Sl':ne: ~ames will&#13;
address. phone number and studen.t status or acutJ ~ ht' to refuse to&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve t rl'&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
eDnOR.IN·CHIEF: Jane Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FeATURe EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
NeWS eDITOR: Kalhryn Wellner&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Oan Marry&#13;
COPY EOlTOR: Rebecca Eckh,,nd&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: Da"id Daniels k I Tom ()efOUW, Neil&#13;
WRITERS: Gary Jensen. RUdy lienau, Mllrilyn SchuberT. Ken KOI1 o.&#13;
SlIulr&gt;er&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jay Salvo&#13;
CARTOONIST: Amy Cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken PesIk/&gt;&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred.Lawrence Jim Magruder&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Ken peslkll. Fred Lawrence.&#13;
ADVISOR' Don Kopriva&#13;
,&#13;
,. } P'}'&#13;
~ '!f;~~-'-:'::"''.';&gt;:'''l~ . '. " 't&#13;
':', ,,:,,"" ...'...~.~ " .... ',&#13;
'_ • to&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
To Faculty and Students of UWParkside:&#13;
In the orientation issue of 8&#13;
August was a report entiUed&#13;
'PSGA starts fourth year'. in&#13;
which mention was made of the&#13;
student compiled teaching&#13;
evaluation form. lention was&#13;
made that results of forms from&#13;
the Spring semester would be&#13;
available at registration. nfortunately&#13;
they weren't,&#13;
Though it had been previously&#13;
understood that the speciallydesigned&#13;
forms could be read by&#13;
presently available computer&#13;
facilities, they could not be.&#13;
Neither could the manuals be&#13;
found to enable a new reader&#13;
program to be written. Thus the&#13;
sheets could not he translated&#13;
into the necessary language to be&#13;
read by the computer.&#13;
At the present time, manuals&#13;
have been found and the reader&#13;
program is being prepared.&#13;
Results will be sent to concerned&#13;
individual faculty when&#13;
available. Students will have the&#13;
opportunity to view all forms and&#13;
compiled results in the Archives&#13;
after submitting the proper&#13;
request.&#13;
Imust personally apologize to&#13;
all faculty and students for the&#13;
delay. I also, as chairman of the&#13;
sponsoring committee, accept&#13;
full responsibility.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Chairman, Academic Policies&#13;
Committee&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In order for Parkside to have a&#13;
Student Government involved&#13;
with the responsibilities of those&#13;
offi~es, the possibility of some&#13;
amount of money being paid for&#13;
those services hould be considered.&#13;
Relating to the article --&#13;
Juniors and Seniors getling a bad&#13;
deal, the students who have&#13;
progressed to the junior and&#13;
senior levels and who feel&#13;
themselves in need of financial&#13;
assistance could consider&#13;
another alternative for a source&#13;
of the money they need. The&#13;
boosting of their capacIty to&#13;
utilize whatever enhanced&#13;
knowledge and awareness they&#13;
may have gained so far. if&#13;
elected, would be of even greater&#13;
value to them&#13;
U there was a ca h incentive,&#13;
for once there would be an ali\·e.&#13;
competitive, meaningful running&#13;
for offices next elections&#13;
If office holders are paid for&#13;
their work the student body 'tself&#13;
would become mote sensluve and&#13;
justifiably critical of their per·&#13;
formances.&#13;
Would a few hundred dollars be&#13;
too much to pay for a tud nt&#13;
Government that finally served&#13;
the University?&#13;
Scott Laskis&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
English is not Hlstory and&#13;
History is not Science aDd&#13;
Science is not Art and Art is DOt&#13;
Music, and Art and Music are&#13;
minor subjects, and English,&#13;
History, and Science are major&#13;
subjects, and a subject is&#13;
something you "take" and, when&#13;
you have taken it, you have&#13;
"had" it, and if you have "had"&#13;
it, you are immune and need DOt&#13;
"take" it again. (The Vaccination&#13;
Theory of Education,)&#13;
from Teaching as a Su.bv~rsive&#13;
Acth'ity&#13;
- '-&#13;
Wed., Sept, 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Edilor' note: "The Mo\ emem" • regular le.tun in RA1' Eft. It&#13;
deal Ytit..hYtomtn and the taw of Ytomtn at PI.-u5de. in IOdfi .Dd&#13;
in bistor). Cue t "rit.en are lavil.ed.&#13;
by Jane l..U maD&#13;
"Being an artist of any sex 15 such a di.fficult busin tNt it&#13;
almost ungenerous and naieve to speak ol the specl8.l problema ollbe&#13;
woman artist. The problems of beceming an artist are the probl ms of&#13;
selfhood. Tbe reason a woman has greater problems becorning an&#13;
arust is because she has greater problems becoming a 11, he can't&#13;
believe in her existence past 30. She can't believe tn her own voice. he&#13;
can't see herself asa grown-up human mg, She can't leeve the room&#13;
without a big wooden pass." (from "The Artist as Housewife" by&#13;
Erica Jong. M , Dec. 1m)&#13;
Parallehng the Woman and the Arts program takIng place al&#13;
Parksroe Thursday evening and all day Friday, the tovernem column&#13;
this week offers a few renections on w·om n's place In the arusuc&#13;
culture of Amenka.&#13;
Culture is the social and aesthetic values of a iely and thelt expressions&#13;
as a maniIestation of group identity In the dominant culture&#13;
Amerika,the Importance of women as a group IS uereccgnued. for we&#13;
are identiCted by the roles we play or the men we associate with And&#13;
the status of many jobs is actually defIned by the which fdls them&#13;
Because Amerika does not esteem the arts, for example, women are&#13;
allowed to enJOYthem. "They can weave, POt. do stitchery. basketry,&#13;
copper enameling. water colors, poetry, to be doers or pa1l'Oll&gt;: uch&#13;
activity is a igned IitUe importance, has virtually no prestige, and&#13;
does not deflect our nation from Its 'true' course. But let "'omCfl&#13;
become serious 10 their creative urge, let them putlhetr own \\or of&#13;
art ahead of domesticity, child bearing or the numerous other rvtce&#13;
roles, and the cultural supports collapse," says Kathryn F. Clerenbach,&#13;
one of the founders of . 'OW and director of the Women's&#13;
Resource Center at the Uruverstty ol WIS.-Extension&#13;
Beyond that, women 10 artistic endeavors ha,,-e a serIOUS problem in&#13;
raising an authentic voice. To achieve authenticity you have to know&#13;
who you are and where you came from and why. "I" ha to m an&#13;
something. not only m lerms of role-playmg bUlatso w,th respecl to&#13;
mner feetmgs and betng. It is hard for women to grasp this authont.c&#13;
sense of self if they see themselves In dependency rol (w,fe, mother,&#13;
and so on) rather than as separate mdlviduals. As Erica Jong po It,&#13;
\\omen ha\le a built-in escape from idenuty.&#13;
Women also have a problem In coming to trust their 0" n VOle&#13;
One's f)"A'n expenence is not as convlOClng (.cceptabl ) as the lal·&#13;
cultural nonn. Women are often paralyzed, unabl to writ for&#13;
example. because they feel therr expene:nce IS trivial Wnhn&amp; outsld&#13;
of their exper'Cflce, they are condemned for not Ing authentic. 1&gt;0&#13;
matter how great theor achiev ment, they are called "wom n artis "&#13;
rather than artIsts,&#13;
Virgm,a Woolfonce wrote lhat the process ol d v lOPInga an artl t&#13;
means at some pomt tran ndlO ender-haVln mpaLhy ror boOt&#13;
sexes, being part of both halves of humaruty and recon~,ltng th m 'n&#13;
one' \\ork&#13;
''t'e are stuck \lrllh the words "m uhne" and "remlnll'K'," Jo&#13;
states. and we don't know what they really mean but a ume them to&#13;
he oppos,tes Jong beheve that radually '" w,lI redenn th m,&#13;
gradually soc,ety ",Ill change Its fal e nollons of male and fernal and&#13;
they "'III cease to he anllthe "Gradually, male xpen ne and&#13;
female expenence Willcease to be &lt;b parat • and then maybe '"&#13;
will not have to w'OlTY'.bout wom n und landing th ,r Own If·&#13;
hatred as a pre·reqw Ite to authentic tteatJv work:' Jon writ&#13;
But 10 the meanume~ Men and 'I4--omenin our 5OC.lety till do hay&#13;
dlHerent hfe patterns and expenCflces "houldn't ch be per·&#13;
mitted an authenuc exp Ion of Its own pe.rience'?," Jo&#13;
The artiSt., she replies, ha an answer. "The arti t is not fInally mil&#13;
or female, bUI both at once".The art.l t lart.S by exploring h h&#13;
partIcular sexual idenuty, bul thi 's only tbe heglMing. It' only a&#13;
necessary way mward. Once women wnters are able to wnle freely&#13;
about being women, they will be abl to wnte freely about in/l&#13;
buman. They will be able to explore the world Withthe confldCflco that&#13;
it really belongs to them-JUst as male wnters have always done It&#13;
Women artIsts cannot escape explonng theor own ualtty, Jo ..&#13;
concludes, because the con.neeuon between sex and InsplraUon is&#13;
intimate. "They are both forms ol mtense energy," she wnt "They&#13;
connect and COl ,espond. Tbe relationship between the artiat and lbe&#13;
luse is a sexual relatiOnship in which It IS impollSlble to tell who II&#13;
fucking and who ISbetng fucked. Ifsex and ~reativ.ty areof~n seen by&#13;
dictators as subversive activities, It's because they lead to the&#13;
knowledge that you own your own body (and with it your own vOl~e),&#13;
and that's the most revolutionary ins'ght ol all."&#13;
The dignity of all human lofe, respect for the talents ol all women,&#13;
mCfland children must become highly valued m cultw-e Amenka Thill&#13;
actually calls for creation of a new culture, growing oul 01 values o(&#13;
feminist culture. certamly the artistic inslght. the oo.man experi~e&#13;
whi~h will transcend masculone-femmine, as expressed in loterature,&#13;
an and music, must begin the re-educallon to a new American culture..&#13;
It must begin with an W'Iderslanding of where we are, women a.nd&#13;
men, leading to a vision of where we're going, bumanity.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Communication gap&#13;
hurts students&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
"To the best of our knowledge, the Film Society bas bee _&#13;
celled." This statemen~ came from Ronald Gottesman prore:socanf&#13;
English and faculty adv1s~r to the Parkside Film Society'. r 0&#13;
An extreme!)'. worthwhile s~dent organization, one that has offered&#13;
a valuable service _to students_ m the past, is suspending its operations.&#13;
The r_eason for this seems s~mple enough: no money. But the vital&#13;
question that_ must ~ ~sked 1s why and who is responsible? This answer&#13;
is not simple: 1t 1s a very complex situation that has yet to be&#13;
resolved. .&#13;
The Film Society advisor produced from his files a copy of a&#13;
memorandum that was sent on May 9, 1973 to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee, the source of funding for student organizations. This&#13;
memo detailed attendance figures and revenues collected from last&#13;
year's film series. It also outlined a program and costs of films for&#13;
1973-74. This budget was proposed in the spring rather than the fall so&#13;
that the films, some of which a_re in great demand, could be ordered&#13;
early. The memorandum received no reply. There then followed a&#13;
complex series of additional memos, and telephone and personal&#13;
conversations initiated by Gottesman. Time passed and still the Film&#13;
Society received no reply as to what action was being taken on the&#13;
matter. Because no films could be ordered without funds the Society&#13;
has been forced out of existence. '&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee, represented by its chairperson&#13;
Marion Mochon, tells a different story. Mochon stated that the Film&#13;
Society's memo of May 9, 1973 was, to her knowledge, never received.&#13;
Since the CCC officially ends its sessions in April, Mochon explained,&#13;
some member other than herself may have received the memo and&#13;
filed it for consideration at the first fall session.&#13;
Mochon pointed out that the CCC had urged the Film Society in fall&#13;
1972 and winter 1973 to revise their admission prices so that they could&#13;
become a self-supporting organization. (The Society's 73-74 budget&#13;
proposal is $1137.50.) Gottesman's response to this idea was that the&#13;
admission price would be too high for students to pay. Using last&#13;
year's total attendance figures and this year's budget, a $1 admission&#13;
charge would approximately cover expenses. However, Gottesman's&#13;
understanding of the self-sufficiency proposal was that it was a&#13;
suggestion that was rejected because it was not financially feasible.&#13;
Somewhere in all of this confusion, a large misunderstanding has&#13;
been created by both sides. Admittedly, $1137.50 is a lot of money,&#13;
despite the obvious worthiness of the Film Society. And, of course,&#13;
otb.ffl-litmlentto.1:ganj~Wi-UlEtSm",Ne andrneed. financial -boosting. Butsomewhere&#13;
along the line, the CCC has failed to be responsive, to&#13;
communicate openly with the Film Society people.&#13;
So, unfortunately for film-lovers, misunderstanding and bitter&#13;
feelings abound between the Film Society and the CCC, and "The&#13;
Student" is once again the loser.&#13;
Something must be done, and soon. The only reasonable solution is&#13;
for the Film Society people and the CCC to sit down together and talk&#13;
to each other, face-to-face, and get this horrible mess straightened&#13;
out. Even though the CCC can take no legal action on the money&#13;
problem (a quorum can't be raised), communication and rapport&#13;
must be re-established between these parties to ensure that serious&#13;
mistakes like this do not reoccur.&#13;
~ANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throug~out ~e acad'er:nfc&#13;
year by the students of The University of W1sconsm-Pa:kside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0 -194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295. . .&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspa_per. Op~~.10.n~&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the O ic,a&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. t f&#13;
Letters to the 'Editor are encouraged. All letters on any sub~ 0&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined ~o ~;0(0 ed~~&#13;
less, typed 11nd double-spaced. The editors reserve_ :cir~nd include&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be sign k N will&#13;
address phone number and student status or faculty ran · a~es t&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to re use 0&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EOITOR-JN .CHIEF : Jane Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debra Friedel!&#13;
NEWS EDITOR : Kathryn Wellner&#13;
SP'ORTS EDITOR , Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR : David Daniels I Tom oe,fOUW, N .. it&#13;
WRITERS: Gary Jensen, Rudy Uenau, Marilyn Schubert, Ken Konko ,&#13;
Seutner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : Jay Salvo&#13;
CARTOONIST: Amy Cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER : Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER : Fred _Lawrence imMa ruder&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Ken Pestka, Fred Lawrence, J g&#13;
ADVISOR : Don Kopriva&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
To Facultv and tuden~ of W- Park id ; ·&#13;
In the orientation I u or 8&#13;
August wa a report entitled&#13;
'PSGA tarts fourth ,:e r'. in&#13;
which mention wa ma·d of the&#13;
student compiled teaching&#13;
evaluation form. , lention a&#13;
made that results of form from&#13;
the pnng emester ould be&#13;
available at regi tration. Unfortunately&#13;
they weren't.&#13;
Though it had been pre\·10 ly&#13;
understood that the peciall_·-&#13;
de igned forms could be read b ·&#13;
presently a\"ailable compute·r&#13;
facilities, the could not be.&#13;
either could the manuals be&#13;
found to enable a w reader&#13;
program to be written. Thu the&#13;
sheets could not be tran lated&#13;
into the necessal') language to be&#13;
read by the computer.&#13;
At the present time. manuals&#13;
have been found and the reader&#13;
program is being prepared.&#13;
Results will be sent to concerned&#13;
individual fa cult when&#13;
available. Students will have the&#13;
opportunity to view all form and&#13;
compiled results in the Archives&#13;
after submitting the proper&#13;
reque t.&#13;
I must personally apologize to&#13;
all faculty and tudents for the&#13;
delay. I also, a chairman of the&#13;
sponsoring committee, accept&#13;
full responsibility.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Chairman. Academic Policie&#13;
Committee&#13;
Park ide tudent Go ·ernment&#13;
ociation&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In order for Parkside to have a&#13;
tudent Government involved&#13;
with the respon ibilities of tho&#13;
offices. the possibilit_· o some&#13;
amount of money being paid for&#13;
those en;ces hould be conidered.&#13;
&#13;
Relatrng to the article --&#13;
Junio and eniors getting a bad&#13;
deal, the tudent ·ho ha,·e&#13;
progressed to the junior and&#13;
enior level and who fe I&#13;
them elves in need of financial&#13;
a i lance could con ider&#13;
another alternati\'e for a ·ource&#13;
of the money they n ed. Th&#13;
boosting of their capac1t~ o&#13;
utilize whatever enhanced&#13;
knowledge and a ,·ar n th )&#13;
may have gained so far. if&#13;
elected, \:OUld be or even reat r&#13;
value to them .&#13;
If there wa a ca. h me nti\' ,&#13;
for once th re ould be an alh •&#13;
competitive. meaningful runmn&#13;
for office ne t electio ·&#13;
If office hold r.; ar pa id f r&#13;
their work the tud nt bod • 1 IC&#13;
would become more · n ·itive and&#13;
justifiably critical of th r performan&#13;
.&#13;
Would a f w hundred dollars be&#13;
too much to pa · for a tud l&#13;
Government that finall) n·ed&#13;
the ruve it ·?&#13;
!Las&#13;
Keno ha&#13;
English is not H1 tory and&#13;
History is not Science and&#13;
Science is not Art and Art is not&#13;
Music , and Art and 1us1c are&#13;
minor subjects, and English,&#13;
History, and Science are major&#13;
subjects. and a ub1ect 1&#13;
something you "take" and. when&#13;
you have taken it, rou have&#13;
"had" it, and if you have ··had,.&#13;
it, you are immune and need not&#13;
"take " it again . &lt;The \ accination&#13;
Theory of Education .)&#13;
from Teaching a a i;ibH~ h ~&#13;
Acth'ity&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
b &#13;
the 4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 "Three Lives" portrays&#13;
Kenosha teachers. • • female experience&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
"I have the utrnest trust and confidence in them "&#13;
she Slated. '&#13;
One board member, Carrol Rikli, said that he had&#13;
not been called for the Monday meeting and doubted&#13;
whether or not a full board would have everted a&#13;
strike&#13;
"Ithtnk it would have been pompous for a grown&#13;
man .to wait around another two hours Tuesday&#13;
m.ommg for a resolution when one's been negotiated&#13;
WIth them (KEA) over 400 hours the past year and&#13;
gotten nowhere," said Herbert Lepp, another board&#13;
member&#13;
Thus last Tuesday's (Sept. 4th) confrontation&#13;
resulted ~nSlavney meeting with the two parties, in&#13;
Ken ha s County Courthouse, Friday and Saturday&#13;
of la t week. The purpose was to determine if an&#13;
Impasse existed and i ue a fact·fincting report in&#13;
th event that the teachers do not settle on the two&#13;
year contract proposals,&#13;
where she had a baby, lived&#13;
luxuriously. surrounded by&#13;
servants in the Phillipines, tied to&#13;
a man more devoted to his job&#13;
than to their life together; and&#13;
her subsequent freedom&#13;
struggling to stay alive in New&#13;
York.&#13;
Lillian Shreve is a Wholesomely&#13;
reflective, middle-aged woman&#13;
the mother of one of the crew&#13;
mem?ers, who has been happily&#13;
married for twenty three years&#13;
after giving up her career as a&#13;
chemist. She recalls her unhappy&#13;
childhood as the daughter of an&#13;
Italian immigrant.&#13;
Robin Mide, a "liberated&#13;
woman," explains that she left&#13;
her Far Rockaway home when&#13;
she was seventeen to find absolute&#13;
independence in the&#13;
theatre, drugs, sex and her life.&#13;
She leads a completely transitory&#13;
existence, carrying her few&#13;
belongings in three suitcases&#13;
given to her by three lovers.&#13;
"Three Lives" is about the&#13;
complex truth of modern&#13;
womanhood, and does it with skill&#13;
and ~riginality in a medium long&#13;
dommated by the male vision.&#13;
The crew lived together for&#13;
three weeks, concentrating each&#13;
week on the life of one woman.&#13;
During that intense period they&#13;
experienced both the difficulties&#13;
of learning a new technology&#13;
while creating art, and the rapid,&#13;
overwhelming evolution of their&#13;
personal relationships.&#13;
The title of the film is taken&#13;
from Gertrude Stein's novella,&#13;
Three Lives, which dealt with the&#13;
experience of completely ord.inary&#13;
women, persons whose&#13;
lives are generally overlooked or&#13;
disregarded. In the film three&#13;
very different, intelligent, and&#13;
likable women simply present&#13;
themselves to the camera in a&#13;
• succession of autobiographical&#13;
monologues. They talk about past&#13;
conflicts, decisions, and the&#13;
consequences of their actions&#13;
which have led them to their&#13;
present realization of&#13;
womanhood.&#13;
The more "conventional" role&#13;
of women is presented by Mallory&#13;
Millett-Jones, Kate Millett's&#13;
younger sister, who describes her&#13;
experiences in a middle-class, St.&#13;
Paul school where nothing but&#13;
boys interested her; in marriage&#13;
Thursday evening, September&#13;
13, at 7:30 p.m., Parkside will&#13;
open its program on "Women and&#13;
the Arts" with the films "Three&#13;
Lives" and "Crocus."&#13;
"Three Lives" is directed by&#13;
Kate Millett, the author of Sexual&#13;
Politics and is produced by The&#13;
Women's Liberation Cinema&#13;
Company.&#13;
In the summer of 1970 Kate&#13;
Millett as director with a&#13;
volunteer, all-female crew set&#13;
about the making of "Three&#13;
Lives." Neither actors nor the&#13;
film crew had previous exposure&#13;
to movie-making. They shared,&#13;
however, an intense desire to&#13;
give real expression to the female&#13;
experience-what it feels like to&#13;
be a woman. To do this the lives&#13;
of three women were documented&#13;
with the intention that all women&#13;
might identify with their general&#13;
and very individual experiences.&#13;
The intention was to present the&#13;
lives of three individual women&#13;
with sympathy, understanding,&#13;
and reverence for their&#13;
humanity.&#13;
Women and the Arts-Schedule *&#13;
Workshop on "Women and Art"&#13;
by Beatrice Herr, award Winning&#13;
Milwaukee painter and co-owner&#13;
of a Lake Geneva gallery.&#13;
Workshop on "Women and&#13;
Music" including a performance&#13;
by Violinist Marla Mutschler and&#13;
Harpsichordist Francis Bedford,&#13;
assistant professors of music,&#13;
and soprano Lee Dougherty.&#13;
Lecture: "Making Cultural Institutions&#13;
More Responsive to&#13;
Social Needs:' by Grace Glueck,&#13;
assistant metropolitan editor in&#13;
charge of Cultural Affairs, The&#13;
New York Times.&#13;
Discussion on Glueck's lecture.&#13;
Workshop on "Women and&#13;
Theatre" by Penelope Reed of&#13;
the Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theatre who will portray a series&#13;
of women from "Spoon River&#13;
Anthology."&#13;
11:00-12:00 Thursday, September 13&#13;
7:30 p.m. Films, "Three Lives" and&#13;
"Crocus" will be shown and a&#13;
discussion led by the Women's&#13;
Caucus will follow.&#13;
Friday, September 14&#13;
9:00 a.m. Keynote on "Women and the&#13;
Humanities" by Deanna Me·&#13;
Mahon, visiting assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy.&#13;
9:3(HO:OO Discussion on keynote address.&#13;
10:00 - 11:00 Workshop on "Woman ~ as&#13;
Writer": including films on poet&#13;
Anne Sexton and novelist&#13;
V'rrginia WooU by Carole Gottlieb&#13;
Vopat, assistant professor of&#13;
English and receipient of a 1973&#13;
Kiekohofer-Steiger award for&#13;
teaching excellence.&#13;
11:00-12:00Workshop on "Woman as Writer:&#13;
Where Ha ve All The Flowers&#13;
Gone" by Dr. Vopat.&#13;
All udent Organizations which plan on&#13;
petitionlog the Campus Concerns Committee for&#13;
operating money are requested to prepare budgets&#13;
and send them to Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant&#13;
Dean of Students, in Tallent 284 by Friday, October&#13;
5. Echelbarger has budget forms available to assist&#13;
in this lJIsk. Organization representatives are also&#13;
encouraged to coetact ber or Tony Totero, coordinator&#13;
of Student Activities, in lLC D197for help in&#13;
drawing up their budgets if necessary. cee convenes&#13;
October 15 to begin deliberations on the&#13;
granting of these monies.&#13;
1:00-2:00&#13;
2:00 - 3:00&#13;
~~:.~~&#13;
• ~ •• '!""....&#13;
The Racine Symphony Orchestra is&#13;
*&#13;
trying to&#13;
locate playen in the Racine area. Auditions will be&#13;
held early in September-interested persons should&#13;
contact Marcella O'Leary at 633-4088. They will then&#13;
be notified of the place and limes for auditions. For&#13;
the auditions it is suggested a person playa part&#13;
from a composition which will display his or her&#13;
skill and tone quality. They will also be asked to&#13;
i t read from an orchestral selection.&#13;
3:00-3:30&#13;
3:30-4:30&#13;
Postal service available&#13;
on campus&#13;
A Postal Substation is now available for use by all students, faculty&#13;
and staff 10 the Central Mailroom, LLC D218. It can be reached by&#13;
going mto the Library and taking the main elevators down to the D2&#13;
level. The Central Mailroom is located through the door to your right&#13;
when you come out of the Mevator. The Postal Substation is open from&#13;
7:45 a.m, to 3:45 p.m. Monday through Friday.&#13;
~ong the services available are the following: Letters may be&#13;
mailed, packages may be mailed either via Parcel Post or United&#13;
Parcel Services, and stamps may be purchased (rolls and books onlysingle&#13;
stamps Will not be sold), Money orders will be available for&#13;
purchase by the end of September.&#13;
Payment for the above services must be made in cash' checks will&#13;
not be accepted. Information on limitations of weight' and size of&#13;
packages for UPS and how packages should be wrapped can be-obtamed&#13;
from the Central Mailroom.&#13;
Letters and packages are picked up by the Post Office at 4 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Friday. Packages sent via UPS are picked up daily at&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Ranger free classifieds&#13;
~NT~D: 5t~den! Wlt~ car to-prck me up at&#13;
a6gel' Bus Station tn Milwaukee every&#13;
;~e~day and Thursday at 9 a.m. and return&#13;
p.rn. ccntect Mrs. Groseclose at&#13;
Greenquisl 320. WlIl pay well.&#13;
FOR SALE, '71 Norton Commando· 3100&#13;
original miles, custom built··lake over&#13;
payments. Call 632·4183 after noon.&#13;
FOR SALE, Hoffner electric guitar, 90~&#13;
condition, semi.solid body. 540. Call 632...1&#13;
after noon.&#13;
WANTED· Persons with car to drive to .&#13;
III" on business for the RANGE-R W'I~lon,&#13;
$1.85 per trip Which is OJ r .' I pay&#13;
miles and t k PP oll.lrnately 35 tript;om p:r=:i::O~~:~~~:rurfor~her~Und&#13;
in or near Zion. Co~tact To :ersons !&#13;
IYin9&#13;
RANGER office, LLC D19~ etersen In the&#13;
FISHER SUPER GLASS skiis 200em. Never&#13;
used or mounted, S120. Ex. 2295ask for Dave&#13;
FOR SALE: 1963 Chey Daniels.&#13;
.&#13;
perfect runnin .. V II, 6 cvueeer, in&#13;
Call SS3-247J r~:l~~\tlon. Open to any offer.&#13;
Kenneth Weston. or 679-2862 (home).&#13;
.... , "~~'. ',.,,~. ' I ". '.'&#13;
. . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
,". ""'~"'.&#13;
'.'., ,&#13;
" "&#13;
,'" .&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973&#13;
Kenosha teachers.&#13;
t trust and confid nee in them,"&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
b em nt of&#13;
nt everal&#13;
• •&#13;
''Three Lives'' portrays&#13;
f eillale experience&#13;
the&#13;
Thursday evening, September&#13;
13, at 7:30 p.m., Parkside will&#13;
open its program on "Women and&#13;
the Arts" with the films "Three&#13;
Lives" and "Crocus."&#13;
"Three Lives'' is directed by&#13;
Kate , Iillett. the author of exual&#13;
Politic and is produced by The&#13;
Women's Liberation Cinema&#13;
Company.&#13;
In the summer of 1970 Kate&#13;
tillett as director with a&#13;
volunteer, all-female crew set&#13;
about the making of "Three&#13;
Lives." either actors nor the&#13;
film crew had previous exposure&#13;
to movie-making. They shared,&#13;
however. an intense desire to&#13;
give real expression to the female&#13;
experience-what it feels like to&#13;
be a woman. To do this the lives&#13;
o three women were documented&#13;
with the intention that all women&#13;
might identify with their general&#13;
and very individual experiences.&#13;
The intention was to present the&#13;
lives of three individual women&#13;
with sympathy, understanding,&#13;
and reverence for the~&#13;
humanity.&#13;
The crew lived together for&#13;
three weeks, concentrating each&#13;
week on the life of one woman.&#13;
During that intense pe~i~ th_ey&#13;
experienced both the d1fficulties&#13;
of learning a new technolo~&#13;
while creating art, and the rap1~, overwhelming evolution of their&#13;
personal relationships.&#13;
The title of the film is taken&#13;
from Gertrude Stein's novella,&#13;
Three Lives, which dealt with the&#13;
experience of completely ordinary&#13;
women, persons whose&#13;
lives are generally overlooked or&#13;
disregarded. In the film three&#13;
very different, intelligent, and&#13;
likable women simply present&#13;
themselves to the camera in a • succession of autobiographical&#13;
monologues. They talk about past&#13;
conflicts decisions, and the&#13;
conseque~ces of their actio~s&#13;
which have led them to their&#13;
present realization of&#13;
womanhood.&#13;
The more "conventional" role&#13;
of women is presented by Mallory&#13;
Millett-Jones, Kate Millett's&#13;
younger sister, who describes her&#13;
experiences in a middle-class, St.&#13;
Paul school where nothing but&#13;
boys interested her; in marriage&#13;
where she had a baby, lived&#13;
luxuriously, surrounded by&#13;
servants in the Phillipines, tied to&#13;
a man more devoted to his job&#13;
than to their life together; and&#13;
her subsequent freedom,&#13;
struggling to stay alive in New&#13;
York.&#13;
Lillian Shreve is a wholesomely&#13;
reflective, middle-aged woman,&#13;
the mother of one of the crew&#13;
members, who has been happily&#13;
married for twenty three years&#13;
after giving up her career as a&#13;
chemist. She recalls her unhappy&#13;
childhood as the daughter of an&#13;
Italian immigrant.&#13;
Robin Mide, a "liberated&#13;
woman," explains that she left&#13;
her Far Rockaway home when&#13;
she was seventeen to find absolute&#13;
independence in the&#13;
theatre, drugs, sex and her life.&#13;
She leads a completely transitory&#13;
existence, carrying her few&#13;
belongings in three suitcases&#13;
given to her by three lovers.&#13;
"Three Lives" is about the&#13;
complex truth of modern&#13;
womanhood, and does it with skill&#13;
and originality in a medium long&#13;
dominated by the male vision.&#13;
Women and the Arts-Schedule&#13;
Thursday, September 13&#13;
7:30 p.m. Films, "Three Lives" and&#13;
"Crocus" will be shown and a&#13;
discussion led by the Women's&#13;
Caucus will follow.&#13;
Frida , eptember 14&#13;
9:00 a.m. Keynote on "Women and the&#13;
Humanities" by Deanna McMahon,&#13;
visiting assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy.&#13;
9:30-10:00 Discussion on keynote address.&#13;
10:00 - 11:00 Workshop on "Woman as&#13;
Writer": including films on poet&#13;
Anne Sexton and novelist&#13;
Virginia Wooll by Carole Gottlieb&#13;
Vopat, assistant professor of&#13;
English and receipient of a 1973&#13;
Kiekohofer-Steiger award for&#13;
teaching excellence. 11:00-12:00 Workshop on "Woman as Writer:&#13;
Where Have All The Flowers&#13;
Gone" by Dr. Vopat.&#13;
11: 00-12: 00&#13;
1:00-2:00&#13;
2:00 - 3:00&#13;
3:00-3:30&#13;
3:30-4:30&#13;
Workshop on "Women and Art"&#13;
by Beatrice Herr, award winning&#13;
Milwaukee painter and co-owner&#13;
of a Lake Geneva gallery.&#13;
Workshop on "Women and&#13;
Music" including a performance&#13;
by Violinist Marla Mutschler and&#13;
Harpsichordist Francis Bedford,&#13;
assistant professors of music,&#13;
and soprano Lee Dougherty.&#13;
Lecture: "Making Cultural Institutions&#13;
More Responsive to&#13;
Social Needs" by Grace Glueck,&#13;
assistant metropolitan editor in&#13;
charge of Cultural Affairs, The&#13;
New York Times.&#13;
Discussion on Glueck's lecture.&#13;
Workshop on "Women and&#13;
Theatre" by Penelope Reed of&#13;
the Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theatre who will portray a series&#13;
of women from "Spoon River&#13;
Anthology."&#13;
Postal service available&#13;
on campus&#13;
Admission&#13;
with Parkside I.D.&#13;
A Postal Substation is now available for use by all students, faculty&#13;
and staff in the Central Mailroom, LLC D218. It can be reached by&#13;
going into the Librar·y and taking the main elevators down to the D2&#13;
level. The Central Mailroom is located through the door to your right&#13;
when you come out of the ~levator. The Postal Substation is open from&#13;
7:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. Monday through Friday.&#13;
Among the services available are the following: Letters may be&#13;
mailed, packages may be mailed either via Parcel Post or United&#13;
Parcel Services, and stamps may be purchased (rolls and books onlysingle&#13;
stamps will not be sold). Money orders will be available for&#13;
purchase by the end of September.&#13;
Payment for the above services must be made in cash; checks will&#13;
not be accepted. Information on limitations of weight and size of&#13;
packages for UPS and how packages should be wrapped can be- obtained&#13;
from the Central Mailroom.&#13;
Letters and packages are picked up by the Post Office at 4 p.m.&#13;
MR. BROWN&#13;
imt~-• Fri. • Sat.&#13;
Monday through Friday. Packages sent via UPS are picked up daily at&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Ranger free classifieds&#13;
Mark Barnhield, Proprietor&#13;
6 blocks E. of Hy. 31 on Hy. 50&#13;
Hot Sandwiches&#13;
WANTED: Student with car lo,pick me up al&#13;
lra'&lt;mei-- eus Station in Milwaukee every&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday at 9 a.m. and return&#13;
at 4 p.m . Contact Mrs. Groseclose at&#13;
Greenquist 320. Will pay well.&#13;
WANTED - Persons with car to drive to Zion&#13;
111., on busin_ess to~ the RANGER. Will pa; 52:85 per trip wh,ch is approximately 35&#13;
m_oles, and takes about one hour for the round&#13;
trip from P~rkside. Ideal for persons living 1&#13;
n or near Zion. Contact Tom Petersen in the&#13;
RANGER office, LLC 0194.&#13;
FOR SALE :_ 1963 Chevy II, 6 cylinder, in&#13;
perfect runn,ng condition. Open to any offer&#13;
Call 553-2473 (office) or 679-2862 (home). Kenneth Weston. ·&#13;
FOR SALE, '71 Norton Commando · 3IOO&#13;
original miles, custom buift .. take over&#13;
payments. Call 632-4183 after noon.&#13;
FOR SALE, Hoffner electric gui~ .. ~&#13;
32~~C:, condition, semi-solid body. $40. Ca&#13;
after noon.&#13;
FISHER SUPER GLASS skiis 200 cm. Never&#13;
used or mounted, $120. Ex. 229S ask tor oave&#13;
Daniels. &#13;
THE RANGER ASKS Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
•••&#13;
Do you think the Waterp'ate h .&#13;
0' earmgs are a good&#13;
thing for the country or a bad tliimg.?&#13;
It's what's&#13;
happening&#13;
Debby Robinson&#13;
Senior. Kenosha&#13;
I think it's a bad thing because&#13;
it weakens the country in&#13;
general, When your leader and&#13;
chief of your country is not doing&#13;
wbat he should do, and you find&#13;
he is involved in something like&#13;
this, you really don't know who to&#13;
turn to or who to trust.&#13;
John Delao&#13;
Junior, Racine&#13;
For myself, it brings out what&#13;
has been happening for quite a&#13;
while and helps me to understand&#13;
it a little better. It's very important&#13;
to expose people to the&#13;
occurances of such things. They&#13;
don't just happen on television or&#13;
in other countries. It's happening&#13;
here, but aht does not necessarily&#13;
mean that it's prevelant&#13;
throughout our government.&#13;
Dan Haley&#13;
Freshman, Racine&#13;
I think it's a good thing that&#13;
they're bringing things out into&#13;
the open. In the past few years&#13;
there has been a lot of misuse of&#13;
public offices. Also, they are&#13;
uncovering things that have been&#13;
covered up. It's not detrimental&#13;
to our political structure at all. I&#13;
think it will accomplish a lot.&#13;
Maybe nothing yet, but it will be&#13;
something to look back at in the&#13;
next five or ten years.&#13;
Do you think the news coverage&#13;
given hearings will make it less&#13;
likely for those being brought&#13;
to court to get a fair trial?&#13;
Bill Spree berg&#13;
Junior, Racine Student&#13;
Security Officer&#13;
I don't think it will make any&#13;
difference. The truth is coming&#13;
out and at least the public will&#13;
hear everything about it.&#13;
ThrOUgh radio and television&#13;
everyone will hear the truth.&#13;
Bill Mears&#13;
Sophomore, Racine&#13;
It shouldn't make any difference.&#13;
It's going to be a public&#13;
trial anyway. It will be covered&#13;
as it is now. People are going to&#13;
find it all out in the papers if they&#13;
don't find out on television.&#13;
DWight Kirby&#13;
Parks ide student, San Francisco&#13;
Making the effect of coverage&#13;
the central issue, I don't see as&#13;
the way to approach it at all. You&#13;
could spend endless amounts of&#13;
time finding different aspects to&#13;
the case that will have an effect&#13;
" ," " , " " ,,~, " ,,,,&#13;
Cornelius Gordon&#13;
Sophomore, Racine&#13;
On television some parts of it&#13;
seem like a joke. But, they are&#13;
getting to the point where they&#13;
are catching some people in lies.&#13;
on how these trials turn out. It:s&#13;
belaboring points that even their&#13;
relevence is ambiguous, Then&#13;
you get into all those little stalling&#13;
tactics and nonsense. Instead of&#13;
dealing with central Issues. The&#13;
issues are, who is guilty and w~at&#13;
has happened. Papers are gOing&#13;
to do their job just as good and&#13;
just as badly as everybndy else.&#13;
They will affect the situatIon In&#13;
II edne cia). pl. 1% All ludent pleruc 11 a m I p.rn., 10 lronl 01&#13;
Greenqw I Hall ram locaUo tudenl "Uvol' BI )&#13;
photos by Jay Salvo Iledoe clal. pLI%:R.~'GER taffm 10 .'30pm,R\&#13;
orfice tLLC 0194· All pe....... mte ted m "ortun on th&#13;
neV. paper \II lcome&#13;
Tho da) .. pi 13: Women and the Arta-falnu "Th&#13;
Kale .lillet, and. the short. "Croc "f&#13;
Lh&#13;
Frida). pI,I~:llomenandtheArtI;Dal f&#13;
, nday •. ept, II: \'e Clu m n. 7pm, ·tudent Aell III III&#13;
All vets \\ el orne.&#13;
"ooda~,~L.17:Women·scauc mee ,730pm,u..cDl14 11&#13;
mterested wcmee welcome.&#13;
TIIesd.). pl. 1 : Cro Country-&lt;:arthage,',&#13;
\I'M ater at Parils,,!e. ~ p m&#13;
Iledllhda). pl. It: Lecture bl" BIU ndel'S. 'III ..... Jourtllli&#13;
carteorust. 8 p.m., GR 103 Free.&#13;
PIMn, nnd&#13;
Debbie Olson&#13;
Junior, Racine&#13;
Ithink they're good because it&#13;
makes people aware of what is CO&#13;
going on. j'bere's lust too much MIN G UP&#13;
apathy and people should kno,,' Sunday,Sopt.23 B,cl'CleRally.t2noon, eo t parklO 101.. PGfI--ed&#13;
what is going on even if it ha b)' PAB-Ragtime Rangel'll&#13;
been happening for years and&#13;
years. Maybe it bas been, but ,t ncla). pi, 38: Harry Chapin concert. 8 pm, Phy. Ed BI&#13;
shouldn't have been and it's ,-Ti_clt_ets_on...,;sa_le_a_t_th_e_In_f_O_rma __ t,_on_c.._n_t_"'_';.$2~50~a.,;d_1·,:an;;,ce:.:.;;.::.:. .J&#13;
about time people realized iL -&#13;
Iledne ). pl. I': Soccer-ParJu,,,!e v Lewt ColI al&#13;
Parilside, 11 a m.&#13;
ational&#13;
poll reveals&#13;
feelings&#13;
on hearings RANGER&#13;
read the&#13;
In a recent Gallup POU in which&#13;
these two were among questions&#13;
asked, 52 percent believed lbat&#13;
the Watergate hearings were a&#13;
good thing for the country, 4 in 10&#13;
thought them bad, and 7 percent&#13;
were undecided.&#13;
Despite heavy media coverage&#13;
of the hearings, 56 percent&#13;
believed witnesses likely to get a&#13;
fair trail ir they were ever&#13;
brought to court.&#13;
Some reasons for the heanngs&#13;
being good for the country "ere&#13;
that they keep the public informed,&#13;
expose political&#13;
corruption, and help pre ..rent the&#13;
situation from recurring.&#13;
Those who thought the heanng&#13;
bad, gave as reasons such things&#13;
as the)' are bad for the morale or&#13;
the country. the)" are a we le of&#13;
lime - taking away rrom more&#13;
important issues and that&#13;
partisan politician are trymg to&#13;
discredit the ,'j, on ad~&#13;
ministration.&#13;
The enate committee in~&#13;
\'estigatlOg the Watergate and&#13;
other illegal campaign acth·llIes.&#13;
will start hearing Yo Itn~"Ses again&#13;
on September lith.&#13;
Thursday&#13;
evenmg&#13;
Sept. 13&#13;
All day&#13;
Friday&#13;
Sept. 14&#13;
the same way - good wa:-'s and&#13;
bad .....ays. The i ue is not 00""&#13;
the coverage i .it's about who I&#13;
goofing A series of programs for women Interested In lit.,&#13;
art, music, drama and film. Open free of charge&#13;
to students, faculty, staff and community. Denise Frenner&#13;
Junior. Kenosha&#13;
I don't lhink it .....HImake much&#13;
difference because the public i ~' The University of pretty much a.....are or what's .,"'"&#13;
been gOlOgon through the ne". Wisconsin-Porkside&#13;
mf"dia A fair trial will be~h~e~ld;'IIIII::::;;:;::::::::::::::::::;;~'"&#13;
...;&#13;
N£~h~~e;ib~&#13;
~Wttt ~bOppt&#13;
10 Ul. - 4 P.II. LLC LOWEI IIAI.&#13;
DAILY PUCE (easl)&#13;
THE RANGER ASKS&#13;
•••&#13;
Do you think the WaterP-ate h . o· earzng ar a od&#13;
thing for the country or a b d h. a t zng?&#13;
photos by Jay Salvo&#13;
Debby Robinson&#13;
Senior , Kenosha&#13;
I think it's a bad thing because&#13;
it weakens the country in&#13;
general. When your leader and&#13;
chief of your country is not doing&#13;
what he should do, and you find&#13;
he is involved in something like&#13;
this, you really don't know who to&#13;
turn to or who to trust.&#13;
Dan Haley&#13;
Freshman, Racine&#13;
I think it's a good thing that&#13;
they're bringing things out into&#13;
the open. In the past few years&#13;
there has been a lot of misuse of&#13;
public offices. Also, they are&#13;
uncovering things that have been&#13;
covered up. It's not detrimental&#13;
to our political structure at all. I&#13;
think it will accomplish a lot.&#13;
Maybe nothing yet, but it will be&#13;
something to look back at in the&#13;
next five or ten years.&#13;
John DeLao&#13;
Junior, Racine&#13;
For myself, it brings out what&#13;
ha~ been happening for quite a while and helps me to understand&#13;
it a little better. It's very important&#13;
to expose people to the&#13;
occ',ll"~nces of such things. They ?0 n t Just happen on television or&#13;
mother countries. It's happening&#13;
here, but aht does not necessarily&#13;
mean that it's prevelant&#13;
throughout our government.&#13;
Cornelius Gordon&#13;
Sophomore, Racine&#13;
On television some parts of it&#13;
seem like a joke. But, they are&#13;
getting to the point where they&#13;
are catching some people in lies.&#13;
Do you think the news coverage&#13;
given hearings will make it les&#13;
likely for those being brought&#13;
to court to get a fair trial?&#13;
Bill Spreeberg&#13;
Junior, Racine Student&#13;
Security Officer&#13;
I don't think it will make any&#13;
difference. The truth is coming&#13;
out and at least the public will&#13;
hear everything about it.&#13;
Through radio and television&#13;
everyone will hear the truth.&#13;
Bill Mears&#13;
Sophomore, Racine&#13;
It shouldn't make any difference.&#13;
It's going to be a public&#13;
trial anyway. It will be covered&#13;
as it is now. People are going to&#13;
find it all out in the papers if they&#13;
don't find out on television.&#13;
Dwight Kirby&#13;
Parkside student, San Francisco&#13;
Making the effect of coverage&#13;
the central issue, I don't see as&#13;
the way to approach it at all. You&#13;
could spend endless amounts of&#13;
time finding different aspects to&#13;
the case that will have an effect&#13;
on how these trials turn out. It'&#13;
belaboring points that even their&#13;
relevence is ambiguou . Then&#13;
you get into all those lit~le stalling&#13;
tactics and nonsense m. tead of&#13;
dealing with central i ue . The&#13;
issues are, who is guilty and what&#13;
has happened. Papers are going&#13;
to do their job just as good and&#13;
just as badly as every_bod)'. el e.&#13;
They will affect the s1tuat1on m&#13;
ational&#13;
poll r al&#13;
feeling&#13;
on hearin&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 5&#13;
It' what'&#13;
happenin&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
read the&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday&#13;
evening&#13;
Sept. 13&#13;
All day&#13;
Friday&#13;
Sept. 14&#13;
/;&#13;
Li.Ill!.&#13;
tli.~&#13;
The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Par side&#13;
. ~£~his ;e@itb~&#13;
35&gt;tueet ~boppe&#13;
10 A . . - P . . LlC LO E AIN&#13;
DAILY PLACE (east)&#13;
11 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., sept. 12, 1973&#13;
Volunteers&#13;
make&#13;
rehabilitation&#13;
Editor's note: This week RANGER begins a serialization or a sci-Ii&#13;
novel by a Parkside student.&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
personal utilities. Most likely&#13;
events and facts of your life will&#13;
come back gradually. Because&#13;
you feel weak, I advise you to&#13;
sleep for a while."&#13;
"That would be good," said the&#13;
bald man, putting his fingers on&#13;
his forehead.&#13;
"G&lt;Kx:I. We'll leave you here.&#13;
This is your own room, if you&#13;
don't remember."&#13;
The bald man turned his head&#13;
to watch the two leave. Both had&#13;
plain black clothing, like&#13;
uniforms. The door closed, and&#13;
lbe bald man sat up on lbe table.&#13;
Besides the long table on wbich&#13;
he had lain, lbe room had a single&#13;
bed, a dresser, a table with a&#13;
lamp, and a door leading into a&#13;
small bathroom. Otherwise it&#13;
was plain and undecorated.&#13;
The bald man slid off the table&#13;
and walked to lbe center of lbe&#13;
room. Feet together, arms at his&#13;
sides, and face staring straight&#13;
ahead, he closed his eyes.&#13;
"You will notice," said the man&#13;
at lbe controls, "that lbe subject&#13;
still sleeps in the same manner as&#13;
before the operation."&#13;
The man who had spoken was&#13;
one of lbose who had talked a few&#13;
minutes before wilb the bald&#13;
man. He now sat before a fourteen-inch&#13;
television screen,&#13;
adjusting dials to sharpen lbe&#13;
image. The picture on the screen&#13;
was of the' bald man standing in&#13;
the center of lbe room.&#13;
Three other men were in the&#13;
room watching the screen. All&#13;
wore. the same black uniforms.&#13;
"Doctor Branwood," one of the&#13;
men standing addressed lbe one&#13;
at tbe controls, "if he is sleeping,&#13;
will it be necessary to anesthetize&#13;
him?"&#13;
"Definitely," said the one&#13;
called Branwood. "We do not&#13;
know yet how deeply he sleeps, if&#13;
his present condition can be&#13;
termed 'sleep.' "&#13;
"Jones is' ready with the&#13;
drainer," said one of the men who&#13;
was watching a light on another&#13;
panel.&#13;
"Good," said Branwood. He&#13;
pushed a button. The men could&#13;
see, on the screen, two tablets fan&#13;
from the ceiling and burst open&#13;
into a steamy vapor. At the flick&#13;
of a switch, a fan buzzed into&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
work&#13;
Chapter one&#13;
"He has awakened."&#13;
'This was the first thing the man&#13;
heard when he opened his eyes.&#13;
He was lying on his back, on a&#13;
table. He gazed upward and saw&#13;
two faces, one on each side,&#13;
looking down at him.&#13;
"How are you?" asked one.&#13;
"You were caught in the ex-&#13;
~ plosion. Dr. Green was killed."&#13;
~ The man on lbe table looked&#13;
from one face to the other. He&#13;
~ was garbed in a featureless black&#13;
:J outfit and was completely bald.&#13;
to His lack of hair, however, did not&#13;
en make him look any older than&#13;
lbirty or so.&#13;
The bald man looked confused.&#13;
"What'?" he asked weakly. "I&#13;
don't remember ... any explosion&#13;
...."&#13;
The two faces hovering above&#13;
lbe man on lbe table glanced at&#13;
each olber. Then they looked&#13;
back down.&#13;
"Can you remember your&#13;
name'?" asked one.&#13;
"Your occupation?" asked the&#13;
other.&#13;
"Your age?"&#13;
"Your status?"&#13;
"Your identification number?"&#13;
"Your priority?"&#13;
The bald man blinked at his&#13;
interrogators. Sweat had begun&#13;
to bead on his forehead.&#13;
"No," he said. "Nothing. I&#13;
remember ...nothing."&#13;
Again lbe two men glanced at&#13;
each other. Then one bent closer&#13;
to lbe bald ooe.&#13;
"You have been hurt in an&#13;
explosion. Your associate, Dr.&#13;
Donald Green, was killed by lbe&#13;
blast. You were doing chemical&#13;
research with volatile'&#13;
hydrocarbons when one of lbe&#13;
solutions ignited. You work for&#13;
lbe Canadian government. You,&#13;
I, and twenty-three olbers work&#13;
in this laboratory on Bank's&#13;
Island in northern Canada." The&#13;
man paused for an instant. "Does&#13;
any of this bring back any&#13;
memories?' •&#13;
"No," replied the bald man. "I&#13;
feel so weak. Why is that?"&#13;
"You have been under a great&#13;
emotional strain," said the other.&#13;
"You seem to have almost total&#13;
amnesia. You remember how to&#13;
talk, obviously, and probably how&#13;
to eat, drink, and perform other&#13;
Ragtime Rangers' President Jim Ruffolo&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
feature fun&#13;
by Marilyn Scbubert&#13;
....ke to bicycle, dance, picnic,&#13;
and have run'? U you do,&#13;
Ragbm Rangers might be just&#13;
whal you're looking lor.&#13;
By lar the largest club 00&#13;
campus and probably one 01 lbe&#13;
m.. t ecuve, Ragtime Rangers&#13;
w organized LQ the winter of&#13;
1970.II was lirst organized as a&#13;
ski club, sponsoring Parkside's&#13;
learn in competitioo wilb olber&#13;
UW campuses. Since lben it has&#13;
evolved Into a general outing club&#13;
and has recently merged wilb&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Outing&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Some 01 the activities sponsored&#13;
in coojunction wilb PAB&#13;
and open to all Parkside students&#13;
.nclude a bicycle rally September&#13;
23,a bus trip 10 lbe Ohio State vs&#13;
Wisconsin lootball game October&#13;
13,a road rally October 21 aod a&#13;
weekend outing in Louisville,&#13;
tlend a&#13;
am 01 3-t hour&#13;
t the RaC.nt Oll,ce&#13;
rn, t30l Grand&#13;
b Prtllram will&#13;
y .~,&#13;
ptember It, t8, and 2$ from&#13;
7 ,)(1.10'00 pm Person&amp; rnC&#13;
rId In th ptember&#13;
tralNllll prGIram or lba.e Inled&#13;
In be~ informed of&#13;
llent 10.. are UI1ledto&#13;
/lOIJly lb Racine Off"", 01 Urban&#13;
Concern. 1lJ7''lS15&#13;
Kentucky. Bolb the rallies will&#13;
include free beer, food and a&#13;
party at !be finish. The Louisville&#13;
weekend features a hayride,&#13;
riverboat party. Churchill Downs&#13;
tour, horse racing and a football&#13;
game wilb a party at lbe&#13;
stadium. (For more details,&#13;
contact Student Activities Office&#13;
D-197 lLC or Ragtime Rangers&#13;
President Jim Ruffolo at 551-&#13;
8850).&#13;
In additioo to being an outing&#13;
club, Ragtime Rangers still&#13;
sponsors the Parkside ski team&#13;
and various events of its own. A&#13;
ovember ski fasbioo show, a&#13;
Colorado ski trip over semester&#13;
break, and two weekend ski trips&#13;
are being planned for club&#13;
members.&#13;
DllcOVertn. knowledge II&#13;
yond lIle power 01 tudentll and&#13;
II. in any c_, none01 lbeir&#13;
IlusIn.-&#13;
!rom T c:ltla. u • SO .... I••&#13;
Uvlty&#13;
The ski team has also made&#13;
progress over the year. In the&#13;
first season they won only one&#13;
race. Since then they have won&#13;
three races, finished second in&#13;
two and last year narrowly&#13;
missed placing third in the state&#13;
finals. Last year's team consisted.&#13;
of a men's "A" and a women's&#13;
"A" division. They hope for "B"&#13;
teams in both categories this&#13;
year, as well. According to&#13;
president Jim Ruffolo, "Anyone&#13;
who can ski can race. It doesn't&#13;
even matter if you've never&#13;
raced before. All you need is your&#13;
ski equipment and the desire to&#13;
learn the sport of ski racing, we'll&#13;
do the rest:'&#13;
STEAK&#13;
AT HAMBURGER&#13;
PRICES&#13;
SIRLOiN STRIP STEAK&#13;
RIB.EYE STEAK&#13;
\ T·BO~E STEAK&#13;
\ CHOPPED STEAK&#13;
\ STEAK SANDWICH&#13;
.. '.1[0 CHICI((H&#13;
.. $HllMP PLAnn&#13;
• 'I$H PLATTU&#13;
.. BO'",'U Btll:CER&#13;
• CHILD'S f'UTn:.R&#13;
.. CII£B£8L RCER&#13;
• PIES A"'D OTHER DESSERTS&#13;
,;•&#13;
Half-Price&#13;
Mixed Drinks&#13;
6 P.M. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
TIIURSDA1 NIHTS WITH P.U. 1.1.&#13;
10t Beers&#13;
CAll AHEAD FOR&#13;
OIltDERS TO co&#13;
652-8662&#13;
331.5 .521\4St.. At 34th A"e.&#13;
FELICE SCOZlARO, MGR.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973&#13;
olunt r&#13;
mk&#13;
rk&#13;
ti n&#13;
Editor' note: Thi week RANGER begins a serialization of a sci-fi&#13;
no,·el bJ a Parkside student.&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
Chapter one&#13;
"He has awakened."&#13;
This was the first thing the man&#13;
heard when he opened his eyes.&#13;
-o He was lying on his back, on a&#13;
~ table. He gazed upward and saw&#13;
2- two faces, one on each side, 0 looking down at him. !]° "How are you?" asked one.&#13;
"You were caught in the ex·&#13;
~ plosion. Dr. Green was killed."&#13;
~ The man on the table looked&#13;
from one face to the other. He&#13;
~ was garbed in a featureless black&#13;
::, outfit and was completely bald.&#13;
C'I&gt; His lack or hair, however, did not&#13;
1/1 make him look any older than&#13;
thirty or so. The bald man looked confused.&#13;
personal utilities. Most likely&#13;
events and facts of your life will&#13;
come back gradually. Because&#13;
you feel weak, I advise you to&#13;
sleep for a while."&#13;
"That would be good," said the&#13;
bald man, putting his fingers on&#13;
his forehead.&#13;
"Good. We'll leave you here.&#13;
This is your own room, if you&#13;
don't remember."&#13;
The bald man turned his head&#13;
to watch the two leave. Both had&#13;
plain black clothing, like&#13;
uniforms. The door closed, and&#13;
the bald man sat up on the table.&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
feature fun&#13;
"What? " he asked weakly. "I&#13;
don ' t remember ... any ex·&#13;
plosion .... "&#13;
The two faces hovering above&#13;
the man 6n the table glanced at&#13;
each other. Then they looked&#13;
back down.&#13;
Besides the long table on which&#13;
he had lain, the room had a single&#13;
bed, a dresser, a table with a&#13;
lamp, and a door leading into a&#13;
small bathroom. Otherwise it&#13;
was plain and undecorated.&#13;
The bald man slid off the table&#13;
and walked to the center of the&#13;
room. Feet together, arms at his&#13;
sides, and face staring straight&#13;
ahead, he closed his eyes.&#13;
306 DN91 Strttt&#13;
OLD T N RACINE&#13;
b) !aril '11 hubert&#13;
Kentucky. Both the rallies will&#13;
include free beer, food and a&#13;
parh' at the finish . The Louis ille&#13;
w · end features a hayride,&#13;
riverboat party, Churchill Downs&#13;
tour, horse racing and a football&#13;
game with a party at the&#13;
stadium. (For more details,&#13;
contact Student Activities Office&#13;
D-197 LLC or Ragtime Rangers&#13;
President Jim Ruffolo at 551-&#13;
8850).&#13;
In addition to being an outing&#13;
club, Ragtime Rangers still&#13;
sponsors the Parkside ski team&#13;
and variou.s events of its own. A&#13;
ovember ski fashion show, a&#13;
Colorado ski trip over semester&#13;
break, and two weekend ski trips&#13;
are being planned for club&#13;
members.&#13;
The ski team has also made&#13;
progress over the year. In the&#13;
first season they won only one&#13;
race. Since then they have won&#13;
three races, finished second in&#13;
two and last year narrowly&#13;
missed placing third in the state&#13;
finals. Last year's team consisted&#13;
of a men's "A" and a women's&#13;
"A" division. They hope for "B"&#13;
teams in both categories this&#13;
year, as well. According to&#13;
president Jim Ruffolo, "Anyone&#13;
·ho can ki can race. It doesn't&#13;
even matter if you've never&#13;
raced before. All you need is your&#13;
ki equipment and the desire to&#13;
learn the sport of ski racing, we'll&#13;
do the re t. "&#13;
STEAK&#13;
AT HAMBURGER&#13;
PRICES&#13;
• fll 10 ClllCl((H&#13;
• SHU P PLATTH&#13;
• flSH PLATTER&#13;
• ao, .\ Z.A. &amp;l RCER&#13;
"Can you remember your&#13;
name?" asked one.&#13;
' 'Your occupation?" asked the&#13;
other. "Your age?"&#13;
"Your status?"&#13;
"Your identification nwnber?"&#13;
"Your priority?"&#13;
The bald man blinked at his&#13;
interrogators. Sweat had begoo&#13;
to bead on his forehead.&#13;
"No," he said. "Nothing. I&#13;
remember ... nothing."&#13;
Again the two men glanced at&#13;
each other. Then one bent closer&#13;
to the bald one.&#13;
"You have been hurt in an&#13;
explosion. Your associate, Dr.&#13;
Donald Green, was killed by the&#13;
blast. You were doing chemical&#13;
research with volatile&#13;
hydrocarbons when one of the&#13;
solutions ignited. You work for&#13;
the Canadian government. You,&#13;
I, and twenty-three others work&#13;
in this laboratory on Bank's&#13;
Island in northern Canada." The&#13;
man paused for an instant. "Does&#13;
any of this bring back any&#13;
memories?"&#13;
"No," replied the bald man. "I&#13;
feel so weak. Why is that?"&#13;
"You have been under a great&#13;
emotional strain," said the other.&#13;
"You seem to have almost total&#13;
amnesia You remember how to&#13;
talk, obviously, and probably how&#13;
to eat, drink, and perform other&#13;
"You will notice," said the man&#13;
at the controls, "that the subject&#13;
still sleeps in the same manner as&#13;
before the operation."&#13;
The man who had spoken was&#13;
one of those who had talked a few&#13;
minutes before with the bald&#13;
man. He now sat before a fourteen-inch&#13;
television screen,&#13;
adjusting dials to sharpen the&#13;
image. The picture on the screen&#13;
was of the' bald man standing in&#13;
the center of the room.&#13;
Three other men were in the&#13;
room watching the screen. All&#13;
wore the same black uniforms.&#13;
"Doctor Branwood," one of the&#13;
men standing addressed the one&#13;
at the controls, "if he is sleeping,&#13;
will it be necessary to anesthetize&#13;
him?"&#13;
"Definitely," said the one&#13;
called Branwood. "We do not&#13;
know yet how deeply he sleeps, if&#13;
his present condition can be&#13;
termed 'sleep.' "&#13;
"Jones is ready with the&#13;
drainer," said one of the men who&#13;
was watching a light on another&#13;
panel.&#13;
"Good," said Branwood. He&#13;
pushed a button. The men could&#13;
see, on the screen, two tablets fall&#13;
from the ceiling and burst open&#13;
into a steamy vapor. At the flick&#13;
of a switch, a fan buzzed into&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
10t Beer Hall-Price&#13;
ixecl Drinks&#13;
HT&#13;
• CHILD ' Pl TTl:R&#13;
• cua EB R ER&#13;
• Pl ,n OTHER OC, CRTS&#13;
ID&#13;
P.U. I.D.&#13;
CALL AHEAO FOR&#13;
ORDERS TO CO&#13;
652-8662&#13;
331 S 52114 St . At 34th An.&#13;
FELICE SCOUARO. MGR &#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
The Raven&#13;
No.10&#13;
The Guess Who&#13;
RCA(APl1·0130l&#13;
"Take it off of My Shoulders," as the introduction to No. 10, is different&#13;
from the last few Guess Who album openers because it is not a&#13;
hard rocker. " ...Shoulders" is a country rooted tune and adds yet&#13;
another perfected style to the list of the wide variety of styles that the&#13;
Guess Who have already done with excellence. Another basically&#13;
country number that is included on No.lO is "Lie Down."&#13;
Hard rockers are still a foremost part of the Guess Who entity&#13;
however. "Musicione' " is a hard, thick boogie that ascends into th~&#13;
clouds in a stair climbing fashion and then settles down over "nor-.»&#13;
thern waters." To be found not far away is "Miss Frizzy," a good time,&#13;
good levin' rocker. "Self Pity" goes through a couple of verses as a&#13;
funky rocker then gives way to a brief orchestration that sounds likeNa&#13;
Na, Na Na, Na Na- followed by a psychedelic patch of "mystery&#13;
train fever," and then it repeats the cycle. Also of noble interest is a&#13;
rock-drama presentation entitled "Cardboard Empire" that hits us in&#13;
the faces with a chorus of "who are the people that you think are?"&#13;
I consider the Guess Who lyrically genius as well as musically&#13;
brilliant. I cannot help but identify myself with Burton Cummings'&#13;
emotional singing and all of the rest that is part of his aura. Burton&#13;
Cummings does what he wants when he wants to because he is tough&#13;
and he knows it because he tells himself so 20 times a day. But watch&#13;
out if you happen to forget the 19th, man it's instant nervous breakdown.&#13;
Egotists like Burton Cummings and myself, in order to alleviate&#13;
insecurity, try to get attention by doing such things as singing in rock&#13;
bands and writing record reviews (respectively, of course). We have&#13;
many beliefs and some often contradict each other like natural living&#13;
and drug taking.&#13;
The root of insecurity may be explained as a sort of "Death&#13;
Consciousness." This feeling is revealed frequently in many of the&#13;
Guess Who's lyrics (old and new), and such songs inserted ra-ndomly&#13;
in the midst of present consciousness songs, accurately portray a life&#13;
cycle that even further pressures my identification with Burton&#13;
Cummings.&#13;
One may realize possibilities for reaching tbe top of life's success&#13;
scale but may also think that by the time be gets there it's almost over.&#13;
One realizing this will probably know that any life time is but a grain&#13;
of sand in the vast desert of eternity. Still one being confused with&#13;
eternal concepts will probably try to elude the idea .by becoming absorbed&#13;
with noWconcerns- But still the feeling comes back like a dark&#13;
Shadow clutching at the back of your brain and the feeling is best&#13;
expressed in Burt's chorus of "Who makes the music when you die?"&#13;
which is from "Musicione."&#13;
Then the cycle may take a retrospective glance as in "Self Pity," a&#13;
spotty sketch of Burton Cummings' life. Now I bear him say that he&#13;
never got into rockin' " 'till somebody's singing Not Fade Away." Hey&#13;
man! He must be talking about Mick Jagger. Wow, just like me except&#13;
I never became a dedicated Stones' freak 'till I was zapped with&#13;
"Mothers Little Helper." Then he goes on with "If you were a lizard&#13;
then you might gone" which is a pertinent comment on Jim Morrison.&#13;
And finally he comes up with "Why mother water are the days all&#13;
gone," calling forth visions of the great unisex god, Br~an Jon~s.&#13;
Now back to the point, if there is one. What is the WISestthing to do,&#13;
forget about tomorrow and enjoy today, or screw up today worrying&#13;
about tomorrow? Someone says Christianity is where the answer ISat.&#13;
Read your bible, take a little blind faith, and the Holy Spirit will fill&#13;
your&#13;
Well, blind faith sounds like self-hypnotism. .,&#13;
Besides, all of this is old hat and everyone knows that Go~ ISmass~ve&#13;
charges of collected energy and the w.a~ to get to heaven IS by having&#13;
120volts of electric acupuncture administered through the lower part&#13;
of the ear lobes. . , I&#13;
Seriously now, let's make a deal. If you find out what truth IS you I&#13;
tell me and if! find out I'll tell you.&#13;
Aw forget it we probably wouldn't believe each other anyway.&#13;
Religi~n is an' infectious psychological disease and .should be&#13;
recognized as such by the individual so he may cure hlms~lf and&#13;
proceed to enjoy hi~self.. Y~ur mind is your own and you can t go to&#13;
hell if you don't believe 10 It. , b&#13;
Meanwhile, if you happen to rob a bank, make s~e don t gra any&#13;
ransom notes because this is all part of the game of life.&#13;
•&#13;
The Psychic&#13;
operation, sucking the gas out of&#13;
the room.&#13;
The young fellow pushing the&#13;
weird apparatus down the hall&#13;
appeared very composed. But&#13;
underneath, he was nervous.&#13;
Sweat glistened on his face in the&#13;
artificial lights, and his eyes&#13;
avoided the upper corners of the&#13;
hall where television cameras&#13;
peered down at him at intervals.&#13;
The contraption he pushed was&#13;
set on a wheeled table. It consisted&#13;
of a black cube adorned&#13;
with thin tubes. From the center&#13;
of one face ran a corrugated hose,&#13;
like that of a vacuum cleaner. It&#13;
was flexible and the same dull&#13;
color as the box. At the end of the&#13;
tube was a bowl, shaped as if to&#13;
fit a human skull.&#13;
In a small tray were a dozen&#13;
capsules of shiny metal, two&#13;
inches long and half an inch&#13;
thick. These were fit one at a time&#13;
into the proper aperature on the&#13;
black cube, Jones knew.&#13;
The machine was an energy&#13;
storer. It could store heat, light,&#13;
sound, and, in this case, mental&#13;
energy. Jones had done it before,&#13;
sapping mind power from the&#13;
bald man when he was unconscious.&#13;
Only this time a different kind&#13;
of operation was planned.&#13;
Jones opened the door. The&#13;
bald man stood motionless. He&#13;
wheeled the cart inside the room.&#13;
Jones put his hand to the&#13;
machine as if to make a&#13;
preliminary adjustment. He&#13;
reached under the top platform of&#13;
the cart and clicked a switch.&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
continued from page 6&#13;
Inside the control room, wbere&#13;
U1efour men were watching the&#13;
proceedings, the screen went&#13;
fuzzy. Branwood twisted dials,&#13;
but received no response.&#13;
Jones rushed to the bald man's&#13;
side, and held a small vial under&#13;
his nose. The hald man grunted&#13;
and opened his eyes.&#13;
"Listen! It said Jones urgently.&#13;
"You were robbed of your&#13;
memory purposely. The men you&#13;
talked to are your enemies. ow&#13;
listen!" Jones emphasized what&#13;
he said next. "You can do things&#13;
with your mind. Look at lhat&#13;
lamp." He pointed.&#13;
The bald man looked.&#13;
"You can destroy it by thinking&#13;
properly. Think. Concentrate!&#13;
Destroy the lamp!"&#13;
The bald man's forehead&#13;
wrinkled. He gazed at the lamp.&#13;
It popped and fell to pieces.&#13;
" ow come on," said Jones.&#13;
"There is one man you must&#13;
destroy, or at least put out of&#13;
action. Come on! If he finds&#13;
you're loose, he can put you right&#13;
back were you were!"&#13;
Jones led the bald man down a&#13;
curved hallway. The two ran side&#13;
by side.&#13;
«He's called 'Big X,'" said&#13;
Jones. "He's behind this whole&#13;
thing. He's trying to use your&#13;
menta] abilities to take over the&#13;
world! Here. Behind this door'"&#13;
The two had come to a broad,&#13;
rivet-studded door. They slopped.&#13;
Jones hit the door with his&#13;
palms. "But how-."&#13;
"Stand back," said the bald&#13;
man.&#13;
~Bill Sanders&#13;
to lecture here&#13;
"An editorial cartoonist should&#13;
be like a horsefly on the back of&#13;
public officials", says William&#13;
Willard Sanders, The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal's ornery and unorthodox&#13;
house cartoonist.&#13;
With that view of his job, and&#13;
with a graphic style suited to&#13;
driving it home, Sanders, 40, has&#13;
huilt a solid reputation among&#13;
readers of the Journal and 50&#13;
other newspapers that take his&#13;
syndicated cartoons, as a horsefly&#13;
whose stinging bite rivals&#13;
that of Herblock. "Sanders'&#13;
keenly honed editorial commentaries,"&#13;
the Saturday&#13;
Review said, "can make the&#13;
opposition gag onils breakfast."&#13;
His reputation for striking out&#13;
in all directions suits Sanders just&#13;
fine. "The serious editorial&#13;
cartoonists generally defy orthodox&#13;
classification," he says.&#13;
To Sanders, the generally divided&#13;
reaction to his cartoons shows&#13;
that his opinions are striking&#13;
home. "I believe," he says, "an&#13;
editorial cartoonist should be just&#13;
that: first an editorialist and&#13;
second a cartoonist. The only&#13;
special quality about us is that we&#13;
can draw. A good cartoonist&#13;
should damn well be able to write&#13;
a good editorial."&#13;
Sanders will be speaking here&#13;
on Wednesday, Sept. 19 at 8 p.m.&#13;
in GR 103. Tbe title of his talk will&#13;
be: "Run for tbe Oval Room,&#13;
They Can't Corner Us There!"&#13;
His lecture is free.&#13;
~Jf' TME UN'VERSITYOF .'SCQHSIN&#13;
... RKSIDE&#13;
WINTER BREAK&#13;
- JAN. 2-10.&#13;
S269 P'.'I1O ........ «e&#13;
84IS«I on 3 to. Room&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
• '2 DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETING&#13;
• GRO "'0 TRANSFER&#13;
• TOUR HOST SERVICES&#13;
• ALL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
Rw E1ppl,cafoan lo'm&#13;
• CAMPUS TIilAVEL CENTIER&#13;
Jones did so.&#13;
The bald man tared Intently at&#13;
the door. In one spot a hole appeared,&#13;
The metal around it&#13;
turned Iiqwd and dnpped to the&#13;
floor. The hole stretched until il&#13;
was large enough for a man to&#13;
step through.&#13;
"I'll go first," said the bald&#13;
man. He stepped Inside. Jones&#13;
followed.&#13;
No one was inside the offlcelike&#13;
room&#13;
"I felt a presence within just&#13;
before I opened the door. Tbere&#13;
may be a hidden extt." Tbe bald&#13;
man looked around tbe room,&#13;
finally focusing atlention on one&#13;
part of a wall. He moved closer.&#13;
"I sense a deep hollown ." he&#13;
said. He put his hands on the wall.&#13;
"Certain mechanisms," he&#13;
mused aloud, "which I can&#13;
controL .."&#13;
A panel lid upwards. A long,&#13;
seemingly endless tunnel was&#13;
revealed&#13;
"Big X probably wenl in here, II&#13;
said Jones.&#13;
"We will enter the tunnel As&#13;
we go, you will explain exaclly&#13;
what Lhe circumstances concerning&#13;
myself and my condiuon&#13;
are. Come."&#13;
Together, the two walked into&#13;
the tunnel and were consumed by&#13;
the gloom.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
....&#13;
~&#13;
.... en -=&#13;
:z- en :z- ::Ia !!to ~&#13;
-=&#13;
= "'" -:II:&#13;
CJ&#13;
...&#13;
-&#13;
....&#13;
CD&#13;
.... --&#13;
en&#13;
CD&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
..&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
No. 10&#13;
The Guess Who&#13;
RCACAPL 1-0130)&#13;
"Take it off of My Shoulders," as the introduction to No. 10, is different&#13;
from the last few Guess Who album openers because it is not a&#13;
hard rocker. " ... Shoulders" is a country rooted tune and adds yet&#13;
another perfected style to the list of the wide variety of styles that the&#13;
Guess Who have already done with excellence. Another basically country number that is included on No. 10 is "Lie Down."&#13;
Hard rockers are still a foremost part of the Guess Who entity, however. "Musicione' " is a hard, thick boogie that ascends into the&#13;
clouds in a stair climbing fashion and then settles down over "nor- •&#13;
thern waters." To be found not far away is "Miss Frizzy," a good time,&#13;
good lovin' rocker. "Self Pity" goes through a couple of verses as a&#13;
funky rocker then gives way to a brief orchestration that sounds like -&#13;
Na Na, Na Na, Na Na- followed by a psychedelic patch of "mystery&#13;
train fever," and then it repeats the cycle. Also of noble interest is a&#13;
rock-drama presentation entitled "Cardboard Empire" that hits us in&#13;
the faces with a chorus.of "who are the people that you think are?"&#13;
I consider the Guess Who lyrically genius as well as musically&#13;
brilliant. I cannot help but identify myself with Burton Cummings'&#13;
emotional singing and all of the rest that is part of his aura. Burton&#13;
Cummings does what he wants when he wants to because he is tough&#13;
and he knows it because he tells himself so 20 times a day. But watch&#13;
out if you happen to forget the 19th, man it's instant nervous breakdown.&#13;
&#13;
Egotists like Burton Cummings and myself, in order to alleviate&#13;
insecurity, try to get attention by doing such things as singing in rock&#13;
bands and writing record reviews (respectively, of course). We have&#13;
many beliefs and some often contradict each other like natural living&#13;
and drug taking.&#13;
The root of insecurity may be explained as a sort of "Death&#13;
Consciousness." This feeling is revealed frequently in many of the&#13;
Guess Who's lyrics (old and new), and such songs inserted randomly&#13;
in the midst of present consciousness songs, accurately portray a life&#13;
cycle that even further pressures my identification with Burton&#13;
Cummings.&#13;
The Psychic&#13;
operation, sucking the gas out of&#13;
the room.&#13;
The young fellow pushing the&#13;
weird apparatus down the hall&#13;
appeared very composed. But&#13;
underneath, he was nervous.&#13;
Sweat glistened on his face in the&#13;
artificial lights, and his eyes&#13;
avoided the upper corners of the&#13;
hall where television cameras&#13;
peered down at him at intervals.&#13;
The contraption he pushed was&#13;
set on a wheeled table. It consisted&#13;
of a black cube adorned&#13;
with thin tubes. From the center&#13;
of one face ran a corrugated hose,&#13;
like that of a vacuum cleaner. It&#13;
was flexible and the same dull&#13;
color as the box. At the end of the&#13;
tube was a bowl, shaped as if to&#13;
fit a human skull.&#13;
In a small tray were a dozen&#13;
capsules of shiny metal, two&#13;
inches long and half an inch&#13;
thick . These were fit one at a time&#13;
into the proper aperature on the&#13;
black cube, Jones knew.&#13;
The machine was an energy&#13;
storer. It could store heat, light, sound, and, in this case, mental&#13;
energy. Jones had done it before, sapping mind power from the&#13;
bald man when he was un- conscious.&#13;
Only this time a different kind&#13;
of operation was planned.&#13;
Jones opened the door. The&#13;
bald man stood motionless. He&#13;
wheeled the cart inside the room. Jones put his hand to the&#13;
machine as if to make a preliminary adjustment. He&#13;
reached under the top platform of&#13;
the cart and clicked a switch.&#13;
continued from page 6&#13;
In ide the control room. wh r&#13;
the four men were watching th&#13;
proceedings, the een w nt&#13;
fuzzy. Branwood twi ted dial .&#13;
but received no respon .&#13;
Jone ru hed to the bald man '&#13;
side, and held a mall ial und&#13;
hi nose. The bald man grunted&#13;
and opened his eye .&#13;
"Li ten ." said Jones urgentl . "You were robbed of our&#13;
memory purpo el •. The men ou&#13;
talked to are your enemies. , ·ow&#13;
listen !" Jones emphasized ·hat&#13;
he said next. "You can do thing&#13;
'w;th vour mind. Loo at that&#13;
lamp_;, He pointed.&#13;
The bald man looked.&#13;
"You can destroy it by thinking&#13;
properly. Think. Concentrate . Destroy the lamp!.,&#13;
The bald man ' forehead&#13;
wrinkled. He gazed at the lamp.&#13;
It popped and fell to piec .&#13;
' '. ow come on.'' said Jones.&#13;
"There is one man you mu t&#13;
destroy, or at least put out of&#13;
action. Come on ! If he finds&#13;
you're loose, he can pu you right&#13;
back were you were ."&#13;
Jones led the bald man down a curved hallway. The two ran ide&#13;
by side.&#13;
"He's called Big X, ' " said&#13;
Jones. "He's behind this whole&#13;
thing. He's trying to use your&#13;
mental abilities to take over the&#13;
world . Here. Behind this door'"&#13;
The two had come to a broad,&#13;
rivet-studded door. They stopped. Jones hit the door with his&#13;
palms. "But how-"&#13;
"Stand back," said the bald&#13;
man.&#13;
One may realize possibilities for reaching the top of life's success&#13;
scale but may also think that by the time he gets there it's almost over.&#13;
One realizing this will probably know that any life time is but a grain&#13;
of sand in the vast desert of eternity. Still one being confused with&#13;
eternal concepts will probably try to elude the idea _by becoming absorbed&#13;
with now concerns:' But still the feeling comes back like a dark&#13;
shadow clutching at the back of your brain and the feeling is best&#13;
expressed in Bures chorus of "Who makes the music when you die-? "&#13;
which is from "Musicione."&#13;
Then the cycle may take a retrospective glance as in "Self Pity," a&#13;
spotty sketch of Burton Cummings' life. Now I hear him say that he&#13;
never got into rockin' " 'till somebody's singing Not Fade Away. " Hey&#13;
man! He must be talking abol.¢ Mick Jagger. Wow, just like me except&#13;
I never became a dedicated Stones' freak 'till I was zapped with&#13;
"Mothers Little Helper." Then he goes on with " If you were a lizard&#13;
then you might gone" which is a pertinent comment on Jim Morrison.&#13;
And finally he comes up with "Why mother water are the days all&#13;
gone," calling forth visions of the great unisex god, Brian Jones.&#13;
I Bill . Sanders&#13;
to lecture here&#13;
Now back to the point, if there is one. What is the wisest thing to do,&#13;
forget about tomorrow and enjoy today, or screw up today worrying&#13;
about tomorrow? Someone says Christianity is where the answer is at.&#13;
Read your bible, take a little blind faith, and the Holy Spirit will fill&#13;
your&#13;
Well, blind faith sounds like self-hypnotism. . . Besides, all of this is old hat and everyone knows that Go? is mass~ve&#13;
charges of collected energy and the way to get to heaven 1s by havmg&#13;
120 volts of electric acupuncture administered through the lower part&#13;
of the ear lobes. h · 'll Seriously now, let's make a deal. If you find out what trut 1s you&#13;
tell me and if I find out I'll tell you. Aw forget it we probably wouldn't believe each other anyway.&#13;
Religi~n is an' infectious psychological disease and _should be&#13;
recognized as such by the individua! so he may cure h1ms~lf and&#13;
proceed to enjoy himself. Your mind 1s your own and you can t go to&#13;
hell if you don't believe in it. , Meanwhile, if you happen to rob a bank, make s~e don t grab any&#13;
ransom notes because this is all part of the game of life.&#13;
" An editorial cartoonist should&#13;
be like a horsefly on the back of&#13;
public officials", says William&#13;
Willard Sanders, The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal's ornery and unorthodox&#13;
house cartoonist.&#13;
With that view of his job, and&#13;
with a graphic style suited to&#13;
driving it home, Sanders, 40, has&#13;
huilt a solid reputation among&#13;
readers of the Journal and 50&#13;
other newspapers that take his&#13;
syndicated cartoons, as a horsefly&#13;
whose stinging bite rivals&#13;
that of Herbloclt. " Sanders'&#13;
keenly honed editorial commentaries.&#13;
" the Saturday&#13;
Review said, "can make the&#13;
opposition gag on its breakfast. "&#13;
His reputation for striking out&#13;
in all directions suits anders just&#13;
fine. " The serious editorial&#13;
cartoonists generally defy orthodox&#13;
classification," he ays.&#13;
To Sanders, the generally divided&#13;
reaction to his cartoons show&#13;
that his opinions are striking&#13;
home. "I believe," he says, "an&#13;
editorial cartoonist should be just&#13;
TheUNION&#13;
Wed., Fri., . &amp; Sun.&#13;
[ SEPT. 12, 14, 15, 16&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(fo rmerly Shokey's}&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
that: first an editorialist and&#13;
second a cartoonist. The only&#13;
special quality about us is that we&#13;
can draw. A good cartooni t&#13;
should damn well be able to write&#13;
a good editorial."&#13;
Sanders will be peaking here&#13;
on\ edne day. Sept. 19 t 8 p.m.&#13;
in GR 103. Th title of hi talk will&#13;
be : "Run for th o,·al Room,&#13;
They Can't orner Th r . "&#13;
His lecture i free.&#13;
\ I tTER BREAK&#13;
- J~·- 2-10.&#13;
$269 P vs S20 Tax &amp;. ~v c&#13;
Based on 3 o a Room&#13;
• ROt.; , D TRIP JET&#13;
• i :",IGHT 'TRIGGER&#13;
WET&#13;
• l1t DAY CITY TO 'R&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETI~G • GROU. ·o TR :'&lt; FERS&#13;
• TOUR HO T ERVICE&#13;
• ALL TIPS T XE&#13;
• Fbr apptica ion rm&#13;
. Cil.MPUS TRAVEL CE TE~&#13;
rCD&#13;
&#13;
-... en&#13;
a,&#13;
CD&#13;
-&#13;
=&#13;
c:t&#13;
::I&#13;
•&#13;
a,&#13;
-&#13;
,..,&#13;
-&lt;&#13;
31:&#13;
-&#13;
:a&#13;
&lt;&#13;
-&#13;
=-&#13;
ffi&#13;
I. A&#13;
acll.• &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12. 1973&#13;
Fencing hegins&#13;
soon&#13;
Soon the clashing of foils will be&#13;
heard in the Athletic Building as&#13;
the Parks ide fencing learn&#13;
prepares for another season.&#13;
Some of you students who read&#13;
yoW' home town newspapers&#13;
probably know of past su"",,""';&#13;
the team has had in previous&#13;
season~'.This year should be just&#13;
as excrttng.&#13;
With students gradualing&#13;
or. transrerring to other&#13;
uruversitles, there have been&#13;
opening positlons created on the&#13;
team. If fencing sounds interesting&#13;
to you, why not give it a&#13;
try. You might Uke it and become&#13;
another successful Parkside&#13;
fencer.&#13;
U interested, stop over to the&#13;
office of athletles and see Loran&#13;
Hein, he'll be happy to talk to&#13;
you.&#13;
Track meeting&#13;
Thursday&#13;
There wUl be an Important&#13;
meetll1ll for all people interested&#13;
in trying out for the track or&#13;
worn n' cross-ccuntr y team.&#13;
Th meeting wlJl be held in the&#13;
upstairs lounge of the P.E.&#13;
BUIldIng on Thursday September&#13;
13th, at 3:45 p.m. ff you cannot&#13;
attend tlus m ting, please get in&#13;
touch WIth Bob Lawson (553-&#13;
2153)&#13;
__________ RANGERsports-...J&#13;
Intramural sports&#13;
• •&#13;
SIgn-UpS In process&#13;
bowling are encouraged to sign&#13;
up (or the Parkside Intramural&#13;
League. Bowling will be every&#13;
Friday afternoon at 4:00 p.m, at&#13;
the Surf Bowl (on Hwy. 32 between&#13;
Kenosha and Racine)&#13;
starting Oct. 5. Interested&#13;
bowlers should try to form a team&#13;
(4 men and 4 women or mixed),&#13;
or sign up individually and be&#13;
assigned to a team. Bowling will&#13;
be based on a handicap system,&#13;
so the more experienced bowlers&#13;
will not have a big advantage.&#13;
Cost will be $1.50 per session.&#13;
Sign up at the PE Center or at the&#13;
Surf Bowl.&#13;
Sports enthusiasts should start&#13;
preparing themselves for a big&#13;
month of activities in October.&#13;
Championship tournaments will&#13;
be held in four sports: Golf,&#13;
Tennis, Archery, and Paddleball.&#13;
Sign-up sheets will be up shortly -&#13;
read the RANGER for more&#13;
information on these events and&#13;
watch the bulletin boards at the&#13;
PE Center.&#13;
For information on any intramural&#13;
activity contact Jim&#13;
Koch at the PE Center, ext. 2267.&#13;
Men interested in playing touch&#13;
football this fall should sign up&#13;
now, as the action starts next&#13;
Wednesday. September 19. Entry&#13;
blanks for teams are available at&#13;
the Physical Education Center.&#13;
Team Captains are asked to&#13;
complete the entry blanks and&#13;
return them before Monday,&#13;
September 17. Games will be&#13;
played from t2:30 to 1:30 daily.&#13;
Each team will play once a week&#13;
and possibly twice. Individuals&#13;
who are not on a team may sign&#13;
up at the PE Center and will be&#13;
assigned to a team.&#13;
Women interested in playing on&#13;
a touch football team are invited&#13;
to play with the Parkside&#13;
Powderpuff football team. The&#13;
team will practice once or twice a&#13;
week and then play some of the&#13;
other women's teams in the area.&#13;
Interested women sbould atlend&#13;
an organizational meeting&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 13, at 12:30, in&#13;
room 137 of the PE Building, or&#13;
contact Coach Vic Godfrey, ext.&#13;
2310.&#13;
Men and women interested in&#13;
R GER BEAR GOES AFRO! - Parksl&lt;lo's Ronger Bear bas gono&#13;
Afro! The Jcbool'J masc.ot. a pai.Dted OIl a wall in Rudy Collum's&#13;
ofllco III Illo Pby leal EdueaUon BuIIdlng. Is sbown here wilb&#13;
lie ketball u Itlanl Collum (Ie/I) ond bead coacb Seeve Stepbens&#13;
.... 01 whom are hoping tbat No. 13 might prove a lucky omen ,0:-&#13;
Park.alde cage fortunes th.lI year. The modificatioa is not an olncial&#13;
&lt;:bongo. lboul!&gt;.&#13;
NowAppeartng&#13;
IP.M.1O t A.M.&#13;
yUIU""'O Y-FRIDAY ·SAnJRI)AY&#13;
In ....&#13;
MARlNAROQM&#13;
"COLD DUCK"&#13;
AI ..&#13;
IGHTI.Y ENTERTAINME T&#13;
I" OUr Cocklall L~&#13;
FHl\1tlng&#13;
,...... "1 ... 1ttleplano&#13;
COLLEGE NlTE&#13;
Every Thunday&#13;
Plt&lt;:berof&#13;
Beef $1.00&#13;
wlttllO&#13;
of KMOSha&#13;
51256th Ave.&#13;
Overtootl.lng ttte Harbor!&#13;
Rugby Ball&#13;
Sat. Sept, 15&#13;
1st Home Game&#13;
followed by Dance&#13;
Parhidl Y.S. Ueiy. 01 Morthen III. 2:00 p.lII.&#13;
Athletic Field On Wood Rd.&#13;
Daeel IlaurieR TAG 9:00 - 12:45 p.••&#13;
Price $1.50 Parkslde 1.0. Required.&#13;
UW-P Ruggers&#13;
m tourney •&#13;
Labor Day weekend saw three&#13;
members of the Parkside Rugby&#13;
football club traveling to Windsor,&#13;
Ontario to participate in the&#13;
fourth annual Bordererts International&#13;
Rugby Tournament.&#13;
Ernie Llanas, Keith Bosman,&#13;
and Tom Bergo combined with a&#13;
team from Buffalo, New York to&#13;
advance to the semi-finals in the&#13;
26 team tournament before being&#13;
defeated. Llanas and Bosman&#13;
scored decisive trys in two of the&#13;
teams victories.&#13;
Parkside's first home game is&#13;
this Saturday when the&#13;
University of Northern Illinois&#13;
comes to Parkside for combat.&#13;
The game will be on the wood&#13;
road field and starts at 2 p.m.&#13;
Later in the evening the Rugby&#13;
Club will sponsor their second&#13;
annual Rugby Ball at the student&#13;
activities building with music by&#13;
Tag.&#13;
COMING&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
HERE&#13;
SEPT. 30. 1973&#13;
Tickets at&#13;
INFO. CENTER&#13;
(Main Place.-LLC)&#13;
( Spclflsored by P ABl&#13;
Booters defeat&#13;
Alumni 5-2&#13;
The youthful Parkside soccer&#13;
team, starting six freshmen,&#13;
initiated the 1973 Varsity&#13;
schedule by defeating an Alumni&#13;
team 5-2 in the First Annual&#13;
Parkside vs. Alumni soccer&#13;
match on the local Wood Road&#13;
field. Led by newly-elected&#13;
Captain, Junior Rick Lechusz of&#13;
Milwaukee, the Rangers showed&#13;
spurts of cohesiveness that Coach&#13;
Henderson is seeking to establish&#13;
by opening 'day,&#13;
SCoring for the Rangers were&#13;
Lechusz, Dieter Keifer (the only&#13;
Senior on the squad), Ray&#13;
Phanturat (Junior)," Mike&#13;
Kopczynski (Sophomore), and a&#13;
self-made goal by the Alumni&#13;
defense on a scuffle in front of the&#13;
net. Stan Markovic (a 1971&#13;
graduate) scored both goals for&#13;
the Alumni, as they battled the&#13;
younger Rangers to a 2·2&#13;
stalemate at halftime. However,&#13;
the everyday practice of the&#13;
younger Varsity began to show in&#13;
the second half as they pressured&#13;
the veterans with greater consistency.&#13;
In an attempt to find a positive&#13;
combination of younger and more&#13;
experienced players from the&#13;
returning eight lettermen, Coach&#13;
Henderson experimented and&#13;
freely substituted during the&#13;
second half, thereby getting a&#13;
better and longer look at many of&#13;
the 22 man squad now practicing&#13;
daily.&#13;
In hopes of finding the&#13;
strongest line-up for opening day,&#13;
scrimmages have been set up&#13;
with several of the stronger&#13;
amateur teams in the Milwaukee&#13;
area. The Rangers open athorne&#13;
on Wednesday, Sept. 19, at 3 p.rn.&#13;
against Lewis College from Lockport,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Sports shorts&#13;
Swimmen and Diven Needed!&#13;
Men and women who are interested in&#13;
swimming or diving, should contact Barb&#13;
LaWSOl'l in the P.E. Building, or Tom eercoswim&#13;
club presldenf. 654-6789. Your interest&#13;
will be greatly appreciated,&#13;
Hockey Club Meeting&#13;
Tomorrow!&#13;
Anyone interested in joining Parksides&#13;
Hockey Club, should attend this meeting&#13;
which will be held at 7:00 p.m. In the P,E.&#13;
Building. On the Agenda will be a dlscutsion&#13;
about the new hockey rink, schedules,&#13;
returning and new players, Anyone Who Is&#13;
not able to attend can get in touch with Vic&#13;
Godfrey, ext. 2310.&#13;
A Arl $u,,/ill&#13;
;JRICKSONIS COLOR CRAFT&#13;
I I~\ 3214 Washington Ave. ~ ,&#13;
Racine, 632-4162 ' r"~~/l.&#13;
'r'II~l':II&#13;
OILS, ACRYLICS, WATER COLORS,&#13;
Complete Line . f"&#13;
FRAMING,G~~,&amp;MA'ITING - ~,{ ~c&#13;
lTime&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
When you own a condominium, more time for relaxation and&#13;
entertaining _re included in the sales price. Someone else&#13;
~k8S.care of,dle lawn, does the exterior maintenance and&#13;
~m wlntef, will do the Inow showli",. Ask the folltl who&#13;
hve there, nodli"g'l easier than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24.500 to $27 000&#13;
Nll~h:.fir~t Bir~h:OOd Townhouses sold quickly and mure art under construction '&#13;
• A.i. ~~~:"in anch Stylt ho~es ale ready and they alll great values, too. Salt~ pricts include:&#13;
• Electric: r....,. ~ ~f ILUX,UrlOUSCII.!MtIl'\lil • Color coordinated iii.&#13;
• Dish....... • Fa:.-.::: ;;:-n I. Frot;t.fr-:- refrigwltor&#13;
• CMIrII FM/TV .nUrln. • R POUlid· Dr_,n; room • MoIcMd tub and show.&#13;
hM~ 01......... ilabl. J • pq -., stor.lr.. • Surf_ parking {indoor&#13;
• .... ~ Iwimming Pool • ~nll balcony or pa,1;0 • Privall "lIry&#13;
oum:ry ctubhouw, with MUFII ,&#13;
MORE BIRCHWOOD HOMES READY SEPTEMBER 15"'IIJ~·&#13;
: BeBeddrooTownhouses m $31,000 J Bedroom Townhouses $32 000 to $34 000 \~ ..•&#13;
room R.nch Style $19,500 to $23,000 ,,".&#13;
"""r "'m when roo Cln 0..." '"home&#13;
fO'lJbour the ... me month/v .o",yrrnrnr.&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
30th Avenue at BIrch Road&#13;
DECORATED AND FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends'l to 5&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE '-;-552-9339&#13;
", PARK5IDE REALTY INL&#13;
, Oe_JcPO&lt;l and Huollbv U s. G.~... I.I'I&lt;.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973&#13;
F n in&#13;
n&#13;
h gin&#13;
RANGER&#13;
OU&#13;
'I&#13;
___________ Sports __&#13;
Intramural sports&#13;
• • sign-ups zn process&#13;
top ver to the&#13;
and Lor&#13;
ppy to tal to&#13;
tin&#13;
1URD y&#13;
Al10&#13;
.'T&#13;
Rugby Ball&#13;
1 n and women intere ted in&#13;
COLLEGE ITE&#13;
Evwy Thu~ey&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beef St.oo With ID&#13;
of l(enoshe&#13;
Sll56th Ave&#13;
Overl00k1ng the Harbor•&#13;
pt. IS&#13;
1 tHomeGame&#13;
followed by Dance&#13;
Parkside Y.S. U1i,. of Nortltern Ill. 2:00 p.111.&#13;
thletic Field on Wood Rd.&#13;
Da ce feat1ri1g TAG 9:00 - 12:45p.&#13;
Price 1.50 Par id J.D. Required.&#13;
bowling are encouraged to sign&#13;
up for the Parkside Intramural&#13;
League. Bowling will be every&#13;
Friday afternoon at 4:00 p.m. at&#13;
the Surf Bowl (on Hwy. 32 between&#13;
Kenosha and Racine )&#13;
tarting Oct. 5. Interested&#13;
bowlers should try to form a team&#13;
(4 men and 4 women or mixed),&#13;
or sign up individually and be&#13;
assigned to a team. Bowling will&#13;
be based on a handicap system,&#13;
o the more experienced bowlers&#13;
will not have a big advantage.&#13;
Cost will be $1.50 per session.&#13;
Sign up at the PE Center or at the&#13;
Surf Bowl.&#13;
Sports enthusiasts should start&#13;
preparing themselves for a big&#13;
month of activities in October.&#13;
Championship tournaments will&#13;
be held in four sports: Golf,&#13;
Tennis, Archery, and Paddle ball.&#13;
ign-up sheets will be up shortly -&#13;
read the RANGER for more&#13;
information on these events and&#13;
watch the bulletin boards at the&#13;
PE Center.&#13;
For information on any intramural&#13;
activity contact Jim&#13;
Koch at the PE Center, ext. 2267.&#13;
UW-P Ruggers&#13;
•&#13;
m tourney&#13;
Labor Day weekend saw three&#13;
members of the Parkside Rugby&#13;
football club traveling to Windsor,&#13;
Ontario to participate in the&#13;
fourth annual Borderer's International&#13;
Rugby Tournament.&#13;
Ernie Llanas, Keith Bosman,&#13;
and Tom Bergo combined with a&#13;
team from Buffalo, New York to&#13;
advance to the semi-finals in the&#13;
26 team tournament before being&#13;
defeated. Llanas and Bosman&#13;
scored decisive trys in two of the&#13;
teams victories.&#13;
Parkside's first home game is&#13;
this Saturday when the&#13;
University of Northern Illinois&#13;
comes to Parkside for combat.&#13;
The game will be on the wood&#13;
road field and starts at 2 p.m.&#13;
Later in the evening the Rugby&#13;
Club will sponsor their second&#13;
annual Rugby Ball at the student&#13;
activities building with music by&#13;
Tag.&#13;
COMING&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
HERE&#13;
SEPT. 30, 1973&#13;
Tickets at&#13;
INFO. CENTER&#13;
(Main Place -LLC)&#13;
(Sponsored by PAB)&#13;
Hooters def eat&#13;
Aluinni 5-2&#13;
The youthful Parkside soccer&#13;
team, starting six freshmen,&#13;
initiated the 1973 Varsity&#13;
schedule by defeating an Alumni&#13;
team 5-2 in the First Annual&#13;
Parkside vs. Alumni soccer&#13;
match on the local Wood Road&#13;
field . Led by newly-elected&#13;
Captain, Junior Rick Lechusz of&#13;
Milwaukee, the Rangers showed&#13;
spurts of cohesiveness that Coach&#13;
Henderson is seeking to establish&#13;
by opening day.&#13;
Scoring for the Rangers were&#13;
Lechusz, Dieter Keifer (the only&#13;
Senior on the squad), Ray&#13;
Phanturat (Junior), . Mike&#13;
Kopczynski (Sophomore), and a&#13;
self-made goal by the Alumni&#13;
defense on a scuffle in front of the&#13;
net. Stan Markovic (a 1971&#13;
graduate) scored both goals for&#13;
the Alumni, as they battled the&#13;
younger Rangers to a 2-2&#13;
stalemate at halftime. However,&#13;
the everyday practice of the&#13;
younger Varsity began to show in&#13;
the second half as they pressured&#13;
the veterans with greater consistency.&#13;
&#13;
In an attempt to find a positive&#13;
combination of younger and more&#13;
experienced players from the&#13;
returning eight lettermen, Coach&#13;
Henderson experimented and&#13;
freely substituted during the&#13;
second half, thereby getting a&#13;
better and longer look at many of&#13;
the 22 man squad now practicing&#13;
daily.&#13;
In hopes of finding the&#13;
strongest line-up for opening day&#13;
scrimmages have been set up&#13;
with several of the stronger&#13;
amateur teams in the Milwaukee&#13;
area. The Rangers open at home&#13;
on Wednesday, Sept. 19, at 3 p.m.&#13;
against Lewis College from Lockport,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Sports shorts&#13;
Swimmers and Divers Needed!&#13;
Men and women who are interested In&#13;
swimming or diving, should contact Barb&#13;
Lawson in the P.E. Building, or Tom Bergoswim&#13;
club president. 654-6789. Your interest&#13;
will be greatly appreciated.&#13;
Hockey Club Meeting&#13;
Tomorrow!&#13;
Anyone interested In joining Parksldes&#13;
Hockey Club, should attend this meeting&#13;
which will be held at 7:00 p.m. in the P.E.&#13;
Building. On the Agenda will be a discussion&#13;
about the new hockey rink, schedules,&#13;
returning and new players. Anyone who Is&#13;
not able to attend can get in touch with Vic&#13;
GOdfrey, ext. 2310.&#13;
A All ,.,,,;,,&#13;
/'RICKSON'S COLOR CRAFT&#13;
~j ~~ 3214 Washington Ave. 1 i', . Racine, 632-4762 ~ -&#13;
"1,,~ OILS, ACRYLICS, WATERCOLORS,&#13;
)l \ BRUSHES, CANVAS, STRETCHERS ~ "•,&#13;
Complete Line ! ' '&#13;
Also .'!!3/r \~ c&#13;
FRAMING, GLASS, &amp; MATTING ~&#13;
Time&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
When you own a condominium, more time for relaxation and&#13;
enterUiining were included in the sales price. Someone else&#13;
takes_ care of _the lawn, does the exterior maintenance and&#13;
!"" winter, will do the snow shoveli1111. Ask the folks who&#13;
hve there, nothing's easier than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style ·&#13;
Condominium Homes $24 500 to $27 ODO&#13;
No;h:fo~t Bir~h;ood Townhouses sold quickly and more are u~der construction '&#13;
• Afr :...:::in anch St&#13;
yle homes are ready and they are great values, too. Sale; prices include:&#13;
e Electric ranoe ~ .!t-ct lux_ur,ous carpetint • Color coordinated tile&#13;
e Dishwaher • food -:,:r;: :,"" • Frost-fr~ refrtgef"ator&#13;
• Central FM/TV antenna • R Sf)OHI • Dr151ina room • Molded tub and shower&#13;
hMted ga,..._ available I • Pe ~ st0r-ve ar~ • Surface parking ( indoor&#13;
• ...._tld swimming pool • rsonC • cony or patio • Private entry ountry clubhousa. with NUna ,&#13;
MORE BIRCHWOOD HOMES READY SEPTEMBER 15 "•t., ~ ~ddroom Townhouses $31,000 3 Bedroom Townhouses $32 000 to $34 000 \ :{.,,_ - room Ranch Style $19,500 to $2J,OOO ' • '&#13;
...,,Y rent when you can own a home&#13;
for about the um. monthly payment.&#13;
IN KENOSHA 30th Avenue at Birch Road&#13;
Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE 1-552-9339 , PA.Rk51DE REALTY INC. Oev-eloPed and Bu,11 b,J US Gene,at, tnc </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 2, September 12, 1973</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64278">
              <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="64279">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64280">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64281">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64282">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="568">
      <name>bookstore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="618">
      <name>kenosha school board</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="62">
      <name>transportation</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="616">
      <name>wisconsin education association</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
