<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2662" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/2662?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:41:33+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4490">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/9a229ff53a319cb63a13eac82519d391.pdf</src>
      <authentication>fc69f912fed14102352efe1f55a0f368</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="64359">
            <text>Volume 2, issue 9</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="64360">
            <text>Regents to hold hearing on UW-P's proposed mission</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="64367">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="89926">
            <text>~&#13;
i&#13;
SIeve Lott. left. who portrays Ajax, and Don Riotz h . ~&#13;
K bl' I "Th V' " h W 0 IS Larry 10 erHrt u Y spay e rrus re earse a Scene in .&#13;
. ht . Ti k preparation for e Thursday mg ...openmg. c ets are on sale at·L In! .&#13;
Lite ormation&#13;
TheParksidee------_&#13;
RA&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
GE&#13;
Oct. 31. 1973 Vol, II No,'&#13;
Regents to hold hearing on&#13;
UW-P's proposed&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
The proposed mission statement for Parkside has&#13;
been written and copies of the draft from Central&#13;
Administration are circulating among administration&#13;
and faculty. A public hearing on the&#13;
missionwill be held at Parkside on Friday morning,&#13;
Nov. 16, at which time persons will be able to voice&#13;
opinions on the document.&#13;
The language as it presently stands mayor may&#13;
not be the exact wording which will provide the&#13;
basis for the hearing; the terminology could he&#13;
changed at the Regents' meeting Nov. 8-9.&#13;
1bere are presently six clauses in the statement&#13;
which delineate the particular goals and responsibilities&#13;
of UW-P. They are:&#13;
(a) The University should offer a distinctive&#13;
academic program which includes liberaJ arts&#13;
degrees and provides specific educational support&#13;
for the economic, technological, scientific, and&#13;
culturaJ needs of an industrial society.&#13;
(It) The University should develop a distinct&#13;
programmatic focus on the economic,&#13;
technological, and managerial needs and interests&#13;
01 industry-based societies.&#13;
Ie) The University should offer undergraduate&#13;
lJ'O&amp;I'ams in engineering technology and business&#13;
adrninistration.&#13;
~d)The University should have a commitment to&#13;
II'OgI'ams directed toward meeting the manpower&#13;
Teaching grant proposals&#13;
• •&#13;
II1ISSIOn&#13;
Chancellor Wytlie&#13;
needs of industrial society and ass: tmg Its&#13;
economic growth.&#13;
(e) The University should support apphcahm of&#13;
problem-solving research to select area, of&#13;
knowledge, especially soctal technol cal a&#13;
environmental problems of modem Jndustnal&#13;
communities.&#13;
(r) The University should develop ba tc graduate&#13;
programs clearly associated wuh areas of un·&#13;
dergraduate emphasis, as justified b} approprlate&#13;
Disagreement caused delay&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
In last week's issue, RANGER reported that a&#13;
IIIIIlher of faculty members were "outraged". by&#13;
what was termed "withholding of information"&#13;
from them by Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
'I'be complaint arose at a Wisconsin Education&#13;
"-ociallon Council (WEAC) meeting, where it was&#13;
l!DeraUy agreed by the 20 faculty present that&#13;
IaIdDa action on grievances would he a more eflaetive&#13;
method of increasing m"",hership than a&#13;
IIllL'b... hip drive. (WEAC is an educator's union,)&#13;
"., major grievance brought forward at the&#13;
~ concerned a letrer from central AdlIllaIsIration&#13;
(CA) in Madison that announced the&#13;
hdabiJity of money for UlIlIerWaduate Teaching&#13;
........ ement Grants.&#13;
~letter, dated Aug. I~,1m,was released to the&#13;
accompanied by two memos and a number&#13;
of "REcEIVED" stamps.&#13;
Obe memo was from Vlce-Qlancellor BaIJtl' to&#13;
lleans Moy and Norwood and it required that&#13;
PI'OIramproposals for gra~ts he in Bauer's office&#13;
by Oct. 29. The othel' memo was from Dean Moy or&#13;
Nwwood to all faculty and it required program&#13;
Pn&gt;posaJs by Oct. 24.&#13;
The complaint made by the WEAC faculty&#13;
DM!mbers was that the original fetter was re~Yed&#13;
Aug. 17 by Chancellor Wyllie but was not receIVed&#13;
by faCUltymembers until Oct. 17, a delay of two&#13;
months, Faculty was left with only one week to&#13;
Jl'epare and submit their proposals for grant money&#13;
to the College or SMI office.&#13;
In an attempt to rill in that two-month gap.&#13;
IIi\NGER talked first with Vice-Chancellor Bauer,&#13;
then with Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Bauer stated that he had learned from Wyllie that&#13;
he (Wyllie) and a number of other chancellors&#13;
Clro\81dthe state were displeased with three poi.ots&#13;
about the manner in which the teaching lmIlI'ovement&#13;
grants were being handled by Central&#13;
Administration.&#13;
The points of disagreement were explamed by&#13;
Wyllie and Bauer:&#13;
LIn the letter, CA outlined the type of person "bo&#13;
should serve on campus screemng eemrmnees The&#13;
chancellors felt that they were more qualified than&#13;
'CA in the selection of comminee memben.&#13;
2. Campus screening committees are to r'"&#13;
proposals from their campus accordJlIl to their own&#13;
priorities, but CA IIltends to use its own lut!gmelt&#13;
about priorities. The chancellors wanted CJlmpus&#13;
committees' recornmendahOll! to be fUlal&#13;
3. The chancellors fel, that the granl mooey c:ouId&#13;
he hancled better if a c..-uin amount was llJveI1 to&#13;
each campus to &lt;lstribure as that campus committee&#13;
saw fit .&#13;
These disagreements were discussed _ CA by&#13;
a group of chancellors _"ne durinc tile fnt&#13;
two weeks of SepCember, (Wylbe did not atteDd )&#13;
CA agreed that point number one ...as reasonable&#13;
but that points two and Ulree were not because&#13;
campus committees might rend to support&#13;
traditional programs aDd not give 8 fau heannc to&#13;
innovative ideas.&#13;
Wyllie said that afrer the meehng WIth CA on&#13;
september. he was "waiting for cIwlges." He also&#13;
explained that copies of the ongmalletter from CA&#13;
should have been sent to Vice-Chancellor Bauer and&#13;
othel' people on campus, hut through some mix"""&#13;
they were not. This mistake was not di.scovered&#13;
immediately.&#13;
The deadline for program proposals has been&#13;
extended to Nov. I: they "'ill he due 10 College and&#13;
SMI orfices at that time.&#13;
Parkside's screening committee ~i.1J be made up&#13;
f six faculty members two adrmOlslrators. and&#13;
~wostudents. The total list includes professors Paul&#13;
Kleine. John Van Willigen, John zarhng. Stella&#13;
Gray Leroy Cougle and . JOlT'S FIrebaugh; admini~lratt)rs&#13;
Beecham Robmson and William. loy.&#13;
and students Arnold Pascale and Dlane Becker&#13;
I eIs of revt ..... and authoriJahOD.&#13;
,,"0 add,ll&#13;
lkasiz'C of the&#13;
of "In&lt;btria)&#13;
on c the&#13;
cultural In&#13;
of modom&#13;
Alan and&#13;
c.-............ II&#13;
Park.... _mc C:., fftlmf'ftC&#13;
0\ ociU10a fP. G. .&#13;
""........ lbo. aU noml ..&#13;
PtuLio ~ rUM Ia l-L( DIn by&#13;
".31 p rD.... 0\.' •• ,alp&#13;
_tn .m bfo heW 0\- .. It, ...&#13;
tl«tlooI 11I ~...... .\, It&#13;
•• 41 It.&#13;
Jazz Ensemble&#13;
goes on tour&#13;
The Parts&gt;de', Jaa ~bIe&#13;
I undeF !be dJrection of PI'of&#13;
Robeot -n.oma-. '101I1 embart ...&#13;
a nun"'our '"" I and 1 ,til&#13;
conce:rLs sl.t~d at two U&#13;
yslem campuses and the an...... 1&#13;
convention or 1M Wisconsin&#13;
Personnel and GUidance&#13;
Assoclahon IVl1'(;A)&#13;
On ,'"" I, the 12-member&#13;
ensemble will perform at the&#13;
liW's Marathon Count)· c..mJlUll&#13;
on Wausau and ,Iso,.ill appear at&#13;
the ~\-erung stSSlOll or tile WPGA,&#13;
On ,'0\' 2, the gnlUp ",til gl\.., a&#13;
concert at the L'W Baraboo-Sa&#13;
Count) Campus on Baraboo.&#13;
Thorn....... ,. bo also directs&#13;
l:W·P·s I~member Jazz Ensemble&#13;
II, said enrollment In the&#13;
jaU program at ParUide bos&#13;
doubled th year .Iemben of&#13;
both ensembles are selected on&#13;
the baSlS of audlhons and play&#13;
arrangements b~i sucb Jan&#13;
IlllnIUne.. tan 1C~"c...&#13;
Iluddy Ridl. C_ 8aIil! and&#13;
~J_&#13;
The ParUide I/'OlIP a~&#13;
IaIl Ina jou1t CGnl:'ftt til&#13;
the InternatIonally acclaImed&#13;
O'Oock Lab S8Dd ~,...&#13;
T a lair liRl cnlty, wtllcIl&#13;
pIOnttnd )au educa at the&#13;
unlverstty Inel&#13;
Thoma .... re&lt;:e'W&lt;1 .... master&#13;
of mu IC educahOn detl at&#13;
• 'orth Texas ~ he"'a a&#13;
member of the One 0 'Oode Lab&#13;
Band as well as the mphony&#13;
Orc:beslra. CODCtf1 Band and&#13;
Graduate Br Oloir&#13;
Thoma.... also played til&#13;
eral commun,ty ymphonlts&#13;
n Te IS and tAnh n~r.l&#13;
'name" dance bands mcluel, ..&#13;
the ....a.,..." Co\ ngton Dan«&#13;
Band&#13;
He )Olned the Parksiclt muolc:&#13;
facult m fall. 1m&#13;
T ePa s· e----------&#13;
'II&#13;
.,&#13;
i&#13;
Steve Lott, left, who portrays Ajax, and Don Rintz h . ~&#13;
Herbert K bl ' I "Th v· " h w O is Larr1.· 1n u y s p ay e rrus re earse a scene in P . ., · ht. · Ti k reparation for lhe Thursday mg opemng. c ets are on sale at th Inf . k e ormahon ki s '&#13;
RA&#13;
Regents to hold hearing&#13;
UW-P's. proposed m1ss1on • •&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
The proposed mission statement for Parkside has&#13;
been written and copies of the draft from Central&#13;
Administration are circulating among administration&#13;
and faculty. A public hearing on the&#13;
mission will b: he!~ at Parkside on Friday morning,&#13;
!'-ov. 16, at which tlffie persons will be able to voice&#13;
opinions on the document.&#13;
The language as it presently stands may or may&#13;
not be the exact wording which will provide the&#13;
basis for the hearing; the terminology could be&#13;
changed at the Regents' meeting Nov. 8-9.&#13;
There are presently six clauses in the statement&#13;
which delineate the particular goals and respon- sibilities of UW-P. They are:&#13;
(al The University should offer a distinctive&#13;
academic program which includes liberal arts&#13;
degrees and provides specific educational support&#13;
for the economic, technological, scientific, and&#13;
cultural needs of an industrial society.&#13;
(bl The University should develop a distinct&#13;
programmatic focus on the economic ,&#13;
tt-chnological, and managerial needs and interests&#13;
of industry based societies.&#13;
(cl The University should offer undergraduate&#13;
programs in engineering technology and business&#13;
administration.&#13;
&lt;dl The University should have a commitment to&#13;
programs directed toward meeting the manpower&#13;
Teaching grant proposals&#13;
Oiancellor \\'~llie&#13;
Disagreement caused delay&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
In last week's issue, RANGER reported that a number of faculty members were "outraged" . by&#13;
what was termed "withholding of information"&#13;
from them by Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
ere pl m by&#13;
on&#13;
The complaint arose at a Wisconsin Education&#13;
Association Council (WEAC) meeting, where it was&#13;
geo_erally agreed by the 20 faculty present that&#13;
laking action on grievances would be a more effective&#13;
method of increasing membership than a&#13;
membership drive. (WEAC is an educator's union.)&#13;
The major grievance brought forward at the&#13;
meeting concerned a letter from Central Administration&#13;
(CA) in Madisoo that ann~ the&#13;
availability of money for Undergraduate Teaching&#13;
Improvement Grants.&#13;
goes on 'tour&#13;
The letter, dated Aug.15, 1973, was released to the&#13;
fatuity accompanied by two memos and a number&#13;
of "RECEIVED" stamps.&#13;
One memo was from Vice-Chancellor Bauer to&#13;
Deans Moy and Norwood and it required that&#13;
Pfogram proposals for gra~ts be in Bauer's office&#13;
t&gt;r Oct. 29. The other memo was from Dean Moy or&#13;
orwood to all faculty and it required program&#13;
llroposaJs by Oct. 24.&#13;
The complaint made by the WEAC faculty&#13;
members was that the original letter was rece!ved&#13;
Aug. 17 by Chancellor Wyllie but was not received&#13;
by faculty members until Oct. 17, a delay of two&#13;
months, Faculty was left with only one week to&#13;
llrepare and submit their proposals for grant money&#13;
to the College or SMI office.&#13;
In. an attempt to fill in that two-month gap,&#13;
R,\. GER talked first with Vice-Chancellor Bauer, th n with Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Bauer stated that he had learned from Wyllie that&#13;
he (Wyllie&gt; and a number of other chancellors&#13;
around the state were displeased with three poi_nts&#13;
about the manner in which the teaching imPl'Ov~n:ient&#13;
grants were being handled by Central&#13;
Administration. &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 31, 1973&#13;
'-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
Communication&#13;
gap hurts&#13;
students&#13;
At a recent state-wide conference student leaders&#13;
were discussing problems they face on their campuses.&#13;
The one most frequently mentioned was lack of communication.&#13;
on three levels: student-student. studentadministration.&#13;
and institution-community. While all&#13;
three of these exist at Parks ide, a fourth and fifth&#13;
dimension of the problem was highlighted here&#13;
recently: adminlstration·admlnistration and admlnistration.faculty.&#13;
The ultimate victims of this&#13;
communication gap will be the students.&#13;
The specific issue Involved was the two-month delay&#13;
In notlfylng faculty of the availability of money for&#13;
Undergraduate Teaching Improvement Grants. Instead&#13;
of two monfhs to prepare their proposals to vie with&#13;
those of other campuses for funding, Parkside faculty&#13;
were left with a week. A one-week extension has since&#13;
been granted.&#13;
While one month of the delay can perhaps be parfially&#13;
justified by the negotiations some chancellors were&#13;
engaged in with central administration. to alter the&#13;
administrative details involved in dealing with completed&#13;
proposals. the ultimate excuse seems to be lack of&#13;
communication. Even If administrative matters were in&#13;
contention. faculty should have been notified of the&#13;
existing deadline set for submitting proposals.&#13;
The Chancellor apparently thought the ViceChancellor&#13;
and others on campus had received copies of&#13;
the letter announcing the grants. This in spite of the fact&#13;
that no one on campus was listed on his letter as being&#13;
among those receiving a carbon copy. The length of time&#13;
which passed prior to discovery of the error should also&#13;
be a source of great concern.&#13;
As an Institution. Parkslde claims to stress undergraduate&#13;
teaching excellence. Certainly Innovative&#13;
Ideas in undergraduate teaching are important if not&#13;
vital to that claim. When a situation such as this arises.&#13;
which potentially threatens funding of new approaches&#13;
to education at Parkside, it is the students here who wi II&#13;
suffer.&#13;
Comm. major&#13;
needs revamping&#13;
by Debra Frl&lt;.dell&#13;
In the specific mission statement Parkside eeceteed from Central&#13;
AdminLltration two weeks ago. and in general the mission statement&#13;
1M Umvenlly was founded upon in 1M mid-ros. 1M emphasis was and&#13;
IS to be aeadem'" "'ith the modern industrial society distinction.&#13;
In a modern Industrial society, a vital aod ever-growing field&#13;
te&lt;:hnololllcally, SCIefltificaUy, and culturally is thaI of com,&#13;
mUnications&#13;
Consider the folloWing lacts: I. ParllSlde's emphasis is to be undervaduale&#13;
programnting and education. 2. More specificaUy, the&#13;
undergraduate education is stressed in relationship to the modern&#13;
ulClustrlal society 3 CommuDlcations is vast and vital to this society.&#13;
Why does Parl,,"de conl1nue to have such a broad communications&#13;
major' '0 dlstincl programs or majors are offered in such areas as&#13;
journahsm, theatre. broadcasting. cmema, public relations, speech&#13;
"""apy, group tMory. and the lilte, within the broad communications&#13;
dosclpline.&#13;
It IS time to stop using the excuse thaI Parkside is a young and&#13;
growuJC mstJtuUon whenever we find ourselves deficient or negligent&#13;
,n an area It is a malure enough institution and lin. the faculty&#13;
potential, at thlltime, to break down disciplines into distinctive major&#13;
prolll'ams ,n aU 01 its HumanIStic, Social Science and Science&#13;
DiviSIOns&#13;
byJan'" S&lt;:hli"'IDlan&#13;
Last Thursday I received a call from a RANGER staffer to the effect&#13;
that the Russians were mobilizing, U.S. troops were on global ~l~rt,&#13;
and Secretary of State Kissinger. was at that moment. on television&#13;
I&#13;
. 'nO the situation Since this sounded rather serious, I rushed exp aml~"b . .,' . I d'&#13;
to the Learning Center par-kside s audurvlsua para ise, and&#13;
over 'ch K·· , . 'red about the nearest TV set to wat issmger s news con-&#13;
}~:~e. I was told I'd have to go to the Student Activities Building&#13;
down the hill. . C te t on i&#13;
Incredible! Iasked for a radi&lt;r-all the. Learning en r can ge on Its&#13;
di is FM which was playing very DIce muSICwhile for all I knew, ra101, "Ital" Walter Cronkite and fr-iends were doing lOS an an ysis on an mtemational&#13;
ultimatum.. . .&#13;
Do you realize that if president Nixon suddenly went on.nation-wide&#13;
TV to make some dramatic announcement about something or other,&#13;
most of us would not even know about it, and if we somehow found out,&#13;
we'd lose ten minutes getting down to th~ ."~earest TV set" in the&#13;
S.A.B.? If the Russians had been mobilizing and the U.~. had&#13;
retaliated with drastic action, we at parkside probably wouldn t have&#13;
known a thing about it 'tilwe left the campus. Since there are a few of&#13;
us, in the RAN~ER.offi.c~ and els~where, who pra~tica~~ live ?tit&#13;
here the situation IS ridiculous. I ve heard of UJ.1lversIties being&#13;
isolated Irom the real world, but it is absurd to think that with all&#13;
that's been happening in the news these days, a Parkside student must&#13;
be forced to be oblivious.&#13;
A talk with Beechum Robinson, Director of the Learning Center,&#13;
proved him sympathetic. He explained the problem was lack of an&#13;
antenna. A proposal had been made to position one on the theater&#13;
tower but it came too late and the structure IS Inadequate to support&#13;
the weight, The latest idea is to locate it in the w?"ds south 01 LLC&#13;
where it won't interfere with the architectural profile 01 the buildings&#13;
and also shouldn't be visible from outside the woods.&#13;
The problem, 01 course, is dollars. James Galbraith, who directs&#13;
Planning and Construction, estimates the cost at $8·10 thousand. It has&#13;
not been allotted lor in the current biennial budget, so unless the&#13;
University forks over the money from operating funds, it'll be a couple&#13;
of years yet before students can be at Parkside and still keep up with&#13;
the rest 01 the world. Why this wasn't thought 01 in initial planning is&#13;
hard to lathom, but why, now that it has been made apparent, can't&#13;
some provision be made?&#13;
When one considers not only its value in a fast-moving world where&#13;
news breaks at any hour, but also the other educational benefits&#13;
television is now beginning to provide, it seems a TV set in the main&#13;
complex of academic buildings, in an accessible place such as the&#13;
lounge next to the Learning Center, would be a logically provided&#13;
necessity. When one analyzes Ute money being well-spent to equip&#13;
Parkside with modern audio-visual aids and some of the latest in&#13;
communications devices, some expenditure on a method of keeping&#13;
abreast of the world outside would seem natural.&#13;
Robinson promised to check the feasibility of an AM tuner for the&#13;
Learning Center's radio, which is piped into the lounge next door. That&#13;
will help, if it is possible to get one. But some method of monitoring the&#13;
news periodically during the day would then be necessary, to know&#13;
when to switch to AM and let Parkside know what's happening.&#13;
If a way to finance it can be found, an antenna should be constructed&#13;
and a TV. set made available.&#13;
That leaves only one question-if yet another national crisis does&#13;
occur, how can the word be spread throughout the campus:&#13;
The Parkstee Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of wisccnsln-Parkside.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553·2295.&#13;
The Pa~kside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~necled 10 col~ns. and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of wisccnsln-Perkside.&#13;
. Letters 10the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250words or&#13;
less, typed find double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and 100d taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
addr~. phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be. Withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse 10&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.1N·CHIEF: Jane M. Schtiesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debrlll Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
~~~~~;~.":HIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
Hedd G andy BUSh, Stephen Gifftlrd. Barban Hanson Harvey&#13;
sorene;~ S~;:e J;"sen: Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schube'rt, John&#13;
PHOTOGRAPH~:~~n~an. Cerrie Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
Jim Ruffolo . on Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS' .&#13;
LAYOUT' Terri ~";y ~Undarl, Gary Huck, Bob ROhan&#13;
BUSINeSS MANA~:"~~nKe:,erry Knop, slaff&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGE Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGE R:: Amy Cundari&#13;
ADVERTISING STA . R: Gary Worthington&#13;
FF. Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
...&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
'--------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Communication&#13;
gap hurts&#13;
students&#13;
At a recent state-wide conference student leaders&#13;
were discussing problems they face on their campuses.&#13;
The one most frequently mentioned was lack of communication,&#13;
on three levels: student-student, studentdmlnlstrahon,&#13;
and Institution-community. While all&#13;
three of these exist at Parkside, a fourth and fifth&#13;
dim nsion of the problem was highlighted here&#13;
recently : adminlstration-administratlon and admintstr&#13;
tlon-faculty . The ultimate victims of this&#13;
communication gap will be the students.&#13;
Th specific issue Involved was the two-month delay&#13;
In notifying faculty of the availability of money for&#13;
Und rgraduate Teaching Improvement Grants. Instead&#13;
of two months to prepare their proposals to vie with&#13;
thos of other campuses for funding, Parkside faculty&#13;
r I ft with a week . A one-week extension has since&#13;
be n granted.&#13;
Whtie one month of the delay can perhaps be partiaUy&#13;
justlf d by the negotiations some chancellors were&#13;
ng ged In with central administration, to alter the&#13;
administrative details Involved in dealing with completed&#13;
proposals, the ultimate excuse seems to be lack of&#13;
communication. Even if administrative matters were in&#13;
contention , faculty should have been notified of the&#13;
xistlng deadllne set for submitting proposals.&#13;
The Chancellor apparently thought the ViceChancellor&#13;
and others on campus had received copies of&#13;
the letter announcing the grants. This in spite of the fact&#13;
that no one on campus was listed on his letter as being&#13;
among those receiv ng a carbon copy. The length of time&#13;
which passed prior to discovery of the error should also&#13;
be a source of great concern.&#13;
As an institution, Parkside claims to stress undergraduate&#13;
teaching excellence. Certainly innovative&#13;
ideas in undergraduate teaching are important if not&#13;
vital to that claim. When a situation such as this arises,&#13;
which potentially threatens funding of new approaches&#13;
to education at Parkside, it is the students here who will&#13;
suffer.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Comm. major&#13;
needs revamping&#13;
to _top ·ing the e cuse that Par ide is a young and&#13;
tution 1'ene r find ourselves deficient or negligent&#13;
rea . It · a mature enough institution and ba'S. the faculty&#13;
I. t th tim • to break down disciplines into disfinctive major&#13;
ll of Humanistic, Social Science and Science&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Last Thursday I received a call from a RANGER staffer to the effect&#13;
that the Russians were mobilizing, U.S. troops were on global ~!~rt,&#13;
and Secretary of State Ki~singer_ was at that moment_ on telev1s1on&#13;
l · · g the situation. Smee this sounded rather serious, I rushed&#13;
exp amm . , d" · I d" d&#13;
t the Learning Center Parkside s au 10-v1sua para 1se, an over o ' h K" · ' · . · ed about the nearest TV set to watc 1ssmger s news con-&#13;
~~~e. I was told I'd have to go to the Student Activities Building&#13;
down the hill. . . Incredible! 1 asked for a radio--all the_ Learm~g Ce~ter can get on its&#13;
d. ·s FM which was playing very mce music while for all I knew, ra 10 1 , d . · t t al · · Walter Cronkite and friends were omg ms an an ys1s on an mternational&#13;
ultimatum. . . . Do you realize that if President Nixon suddenly went on_ nation-wide&#13;
TV to make some dramatic announcement about something or other,&#13;
ost of us would not even know a bout it, and if we somehow found out,&#13;
:e'd lose ten minutes getting down to th~ ."?earest TV set" in the&#13;
s.A.B.? If the Russians had been mo~ilmng and the U.~. had&#13;
retaliated with drastic action, we at Parkside p~obably wouldn t have&#13;
known a thing about it 'til we left the campus. Smee the~e are ~ few of&#13;
us in the RANGER office and elsewhere, who practically hve out&#13;
he~e the situation is ridiculous. I've heard of universities being&#13;
isolated from the real world, but it is absurd to think that with all&#13;
that's been happening in the news these days, a Parkside student must&#13;
be forced to be oblivious. A talk with Beechum Robinson, Director of the Learning Center,&#13;
proved him sympathetic. He explained the problem was lack of an&#13;
antenna. A proposal had been made to position one on the theater&#13;
tower but it came too late and the structure is inadequate to support&#13;
the w~ight. The latest idea is to loca!e it in the w?Ods south ~f ~LC&#13;
where it won't interfere with the architectural profile of the bmldmgs&#13;
and also shouldn't be visible from outside the woods.&#13;
The problem, of course, is dollars. James Galbraith, who directs&#13;
Planning and Construction, estimates the cost at $8-10 thousand. It has&#13;
not been allotted for in the current biennial budget, so unless the&#13;
University forks over the money from operating funds, it'll be a couple&#13;
of years yet before students can be at Parkside and still keep up with&#13;
the rest of the world. Why this wasn't thought of in initial planning is&#13;
hard to fathom, but why, now that it has been made apparent, can't&#13;
some provision be made?&#13;
When one considers not only its value in a fast-moving world where&#13;
news breaks at any hour, but also the other educational benefits&#13;
television is now beginning to provide, it seems a TV set in the main&#13;
complex of academic buildings, in an accessible place such as the&#13;
lounge next to the Learning Center, would be a logically provided&#13;
necessity. When one analyzes the money being well-spent to equip&#13;
Parkside with modern audio-visual aids and some of the latest in&#13;
communications devices, some expenditure on a method of keeping&#13;
abreast of the world outside would seem natural.&#13;
Robinson promised to check the feasibility of an AM tuner for the&#13;
Learning Center's radio, which is piped into the lounge next door. That&#13;
will help, if it is possible to get one. But some method of monitoring the&#13;
news periodically during the day would then be necessary, to know&#13;
when to switch to AM and let Parkside know what's happening.&#13;
If a way to finance it can be found, an antenna should be constructed&#13;
and a TV.set made available.&#13;
That leaves only one question-if yet another national crisis does&#13;
occur, how can the word be spread throughout the campus?&#13;
ir.. lMPe#ka1111;side------&#13;
RAN GER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Pa_rkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~flected in col~ns_ and ed!torials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. ·&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subJect of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed ;ind double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste . All letters must be signed and include&#13;
addr~s, phone number and student status or faculty rank . Names will&#13;
be_ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR : Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
~~~;~~: ~H~C COORDINATOR : David Daniels&#13;
Hedden Ga/"/ Bush, Stephen GiflOrd, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
sorens~. Ste~e 5;:'s:~; Michae_l Olszvk, Marilyn Schubert, John&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHER~- Ran, Carr_,e Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
J,m Ruttolo . on Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS · amy C d . LAYOUT · Terr: G I . un an, Garv Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
BUSINEs·s MA~A~~~~e:errv Knop, staff&#13;
ADVERTISING MANA Pestka CIRCULATION MA GER : Amy Cundari&#13;
ADVERTISING STA~~GER : Garv Worthington . Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
Weget&#13;
T the Editor:&#13;
of years people of goodwill all&#13;
or b trvi the world have een ymg&#13;
OV~ng about One World where&#13;
~ as one human family. could&#13;
we, . Th . together 10 peace. e-&#13;
~n '1 th blemhas been to reconci e e&#13;
:;:erences of two worlds. Now,&#13;
al s RANGER headlmes report&#13;
~t' we have a Third World&#13;
Movement on our campus. The&#13;
organizers represent about two&#13;
reent of our Parkside World.&#13;
1':" boy...now we have three&#13;
orlds with which to deaL.. as&#13;
~gh two weren't enough!&#13;
It appears to me that everv&#13;
time someone whose skm IS&#13;
darker than mine burps some&#13;
campuS administrator jumps&#13;
through a hoop.&#13;
Shucks...whenever I burp all I get&#13;
is a dirty look. And I'm not only a&#13;
student here but I am also a taxpayer.&#13;
I don't like that kind of&#13;
discrimination. Maybe I don't&#13;
complain or demand loudly&#13;
enough but I find so little to&#13;
complain about here that it is&#13;
almost embarrassing. .&#13;
During the past year one of the&#13;
"hoops" through which liThe&#13;
Administration" has jumped was&#13;
to hire a person (Mr. Wayne&#13;
Ramirez and a nice fellow) to be&#13;
the counsellor for the Third&#13;
Worlders. I bope he sees his job&#13;
as being more than passing out&#13;
crying towels whenever one of his&#13;
constituents gripes about&#13;
something. I suggest that he get&#13;
his friends into the mainstream&#13;
of campus activities and not lead&#13;
up some dead-end creek. Where&#13;
were our black classmates when&#13;
they were selecting the cast for&#13;
''The Virus"? (What a turn-&lt;lff&#13;
titie lor a play! ...! just got over&#13;
one.) And, for that matter, where&#13;
were some of our white&#13;
classmates, if faculty people had&#13;
to take the leads?&#13;
Of course, the Third Worlders&#13;
have some understandable&#13;
complaints ... such as the&#13;
Parkside·Racine bus route not&#13;
going dose enough to where you&#13;
live. Well, maybe Mr. Ramirez&#13;
can arrange to use a Parkside&#13;
station wagon to make house-tobouse&#13;
pickups ...and stop at my&#13;
house on Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
when making the rounds.&#13;
Iheartily approve of the many&#13;
•pecial helps that are today&#13;
available to all students with&#13;
special problems and I cannot&#13;
help but wonder how my life&#13;
might have been different if such&#13;
services had been available to me&#13;
when for economic reasons I had&#13;
to drop out of Marquette Law&#13;
School back in 1921. I don't&#13;
begrudge anyone special help but&#13;
sometimes I wonder if it is appreciated.&#13;
I want all to know tha t I respect&#13;
the right of others to try to carry&#13;
on the "Lifestyle" of one's&#13;
I""'bearers. Personally, I gave&#13;
up my elfort to do so years ago.&#13;
My grandfather came over here&#13;
lrom Holland in the 18705.I tried&#13;
wearing wooden shoes and got&#13;
slivers in my feet so I said, "To&#13;
heck with it!"&#13;
Here at Parkside we have an&#13;
open SOCietywith room for all&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Panls&#13;
and things!&#13;
614-56IhStreet&#13;
letters&#13;
kinds of people and all kinds of&#13;
lIfestyles ...all colors, all [aces&#13;
a":d.cre.e~. l~ng hair, short hair,&#13;
mlm-mml skirts and pant suits&#13;
loud mouths and quiet mouths'&#13;
~lambouyant attire and blu~&#13;
Jeans. And .a~ open door to every&#13;
stu?ent aCtIvlty. With such a wide&#13;
lahtude of acceptance and&#13;
tolerance I ask ...Why encourage&#13;
a. movement which seems&#13;
disposed to set up its Own brand&#13;
of apartheid?&#13;
At le~s~ once a year 1 renew my&#13;
subscription to the premise that&#13;
mtel~lgence and ability have&#13;
nothing to do with the color of&#13;
one's skin ...I pray that this be&#13;
true and then I wonder ...if it is&#13;
true, then Why is it necessary for&#13;
Some to continually demand and&#13;
get special attention. That&#13;
routine has been going on for&#13;
quite a while now. Isn't it about&#13;
time someone got caught up?&#13;
Iam color-blind when it comes&#13;
to my friends on campus and off.&#13;
I admire the scholarship aod&#13;
goals of many whose skin happens&#13;
to be darker than mine.&#13;
Becoming well-educated is a doit-yourself&#13;
project accomplished&#13;
with the help of a lot of people.&#13;
However, getting a diploma&#13;
based on an assortment of Cs and&#13;
Ds doesn't necessarily make a&#13;
person "educated." And, believe&#13;
me, there is a Jot more to a&#13;
college education than learning&#13;
to shoot baskets.&#13;
Arthur M. Grubl&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In her letter to the RANGER of&#13;
Oct. 10, 1973, Stacy Postier raised&#13;
a number of issues which deserve&#13;
some consideration and&#13;
response. My concern, in this&#13;
letter, is limited to the question of&#13;
new admissions policies and their&#13;
possible effect on the academic&#13;
standards generally at Parkside.&#13;
The new admissions policy&#13;
grew out of a recommendation by&#13;
a faculty committee and was&#13;
adopted by the Faculty Senate,&#13;
after considerable study of and&#13;
reflection on the matter. The new&#13;
policy was then, finally, accepted&#13;
by the SUlte Board of Regents.&#13;
Parkside administration,&#13;
therefore, is not to be held&#13;
responsible for the new policy.&#13;
One of the major concerns in&#13;
the faculty debate was that 01 the&#13;
impact of lower admission&#13;
standards on academic standards.&#13;
Many argued, cogently I&#13;
believe, that academic standards&#13;
are ultImately strengthened or&#13;
weakened by what goes on in ~e&#13;
classroom and in the gradmg&#13;
processes, not by admiSSion&#13;
standards as such. After al.l, ~WMadison&#13;
had an open admlssloos&#13;
policy until 1963,and I think few&#13;
would argue that such a pohcy&#13;
turned Madison into an mstitution&#13;
which generally lacked&#13;
academic mtegnry, Such open&#13;
admlssl~ns policy may have&#13;
resulted. In a substantial rate of&#13;
drop-ou.t and nunk-oul, but&#13;
academic standards did DOtneed&#13;
to be sacrificed.&#13;
Academic standards can be&#13;
sUSlained-or raised or loweredat&#13;
Parkside depending on how we&#13;
as faculty respond to the present&#13;
situation. Many of us feel that the&#13;
question is not ODe of "00 you&#13;
have tbe credentials to get in?".&#13;
but "Do you have the stuff It&#13;
takes to do the job once you are&#13;
in?" I voted, in Faculty Senate. in&#13;
favor or the new policy. I did so&#13;
not believing that all wbo enter&#13;
will have the drive. interest, or&#13;
capacity to earn a degree, but I&#13;
was convinced that everyooe&#13;
with a high school diploma ought&#13;
at least have the opportunity of&#13;
giving the university scene a try&#13;
if they so desire.&#13;
Wayne G. Jobnsoo&#13;
Assoc. Prof. of Philosopb)'&#13;
Editor :&#13;
This letter concems my appointment&#13;
to the UrFA committee.&#13;
I and others feel that It&#13;
was a wise choice. My involvement&#13;
with both committees&#13;
eliminates the duplication of&#13;
presentations and my&#13;
hackground increases my scope&#13;
of the situation. The monies used&#13;
by this committee are taken Irom&#13;
the students' tuition but most&#13;
students are too apathetic to&#13;
care. In the past many of the&#13;
L&amp;FA students didn't even attend&#13;
the meetings.&#13;
Before the editors voice their&#13;
opinions on what goes 00 ....dth the&#13;
L&amp;F A they should send a&#13;
reporter to gather (acts that&#13;
opinions might be based on. The&#13;
next L&amp;FA meetIng will be&#13;
Friday, Oct. 23 (SIC I, at 3;30, an&#13;
interested students are mvited to&#13;
room 295 CA. Will the RASGER&#13;
be there'?&#13;
Greg Klema&#13;
Racine Sel1lClr&#13;
Editor's nott': R"\'GER ••&#13;
there but the meding.a D'l,lt i&#13;
scheduled for Frida~. 'O\.!, DOl&#13;
0&lt;:1. 21.&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Sond foryoulup-1.. cIot •. 1~1f&#13;
mad order eataloi Enclost $100&#13;
10 coyer poslaee delt.,ery I t 1$&#13;
Ifo 2 cloys).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE Bl'/ll. sum =2&#13;
LOS ANGElES. CAlif 'lOO25&#13;
12131471-3474", 4175493&#13;
Out "SUfe Nltf~I.S sOld for&#13;
rtse.n:h U~'S~t 0ftI1.&#13;
NOW PAYING 5.4%&#13;
(Compouds uullly te ~,~I%)&#13;
o REG L R&#13;
PASSBOOK&#13;
SAVI rGS&#13;
THREErom~lE\T LOrtTIUS:&#13;
II.W. Parkside -- Room 219. Talll'lt Hall&#13;
180 W. CIIestlut St .• BlI'lilltol&#13;
5200 Washilgtol ,t~e.. brile&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 31, 1"3 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' note: "TM '\toVftDe.... • l"e'l"u.larfe.tare- ill ~ CItR. It&#13;
deaJ -ilb"OIDftlucI omf.· C*I«,...... (J.llP ..f"bw. ....&#13;
history. Gu... wrlI .... an "'k«I. .&#13;
Why Michael ~rion Morrison&#13;
Beume John Wayne&#13;
loy Inve M,er&#13;
Idney Harris. a syndIc.oted coIum l did. column 00 the __ •&#13;
movement He sard •• m.... other ~. "Woman'. addPd tabla ill&#13;
the cceuag Ipost-industrial) .. orld could be. trom ndoua lnatnament&#13;
lor peace, lor more humane treatment of one lDOlhor. for tho ....&#13;
derstanding thot proser&gt;'alJOO of W. more Importlnt lbaa the&#13;
pursuIt of troplues So loog as we conllnu. to undo",...... pia&#13;
lpersonahsm and humallllm) women will .,mply tm. to ..........&#13;
'more hlte men,' hlell ..'OU1ddef t the "'_ ...."... of •&#13;
mearungfuJ hberatioo movement." He .rgus thot f.aunwn IhouId&#13;
mean thal men must acqUIr"e "femuune-' traits 01 UlUty, coopendoD.&#13;
gentleness. sensitiVIty, and nurturant lUUftlla. n- ~&#13;
bound traIts, of course, and OIlght to be ~ In ....&#13;
because "male" Inlla of ~, compebUGn. .nd&#13;
authontanamsm. also cuJlurH&gt;ound .... do"",roua .nd deItnJctlve&#13;
m thLSera of Tho Comb and nsmg '101ence oll over the world&#13;
A recent !dO'o'ement column \It'as wnttm by. VtOftLan chara~&#13;
men as an oppressor class and women as an opprea.ed c~&#13;
ibIS prermse she concluded thot hatred of the ~r c... Ia&#13;
healthy and a logICalresult of our roles. Th hatred she c1allUS __&#13;
feel will result 10 a "",oIullon creating. IOty lO .. iudI oll people ....&#13;
created equal. FlISt of aU. women.nd men upy.ll tionI ill the&#13;
class structure. &amp;yond thot If that not hate but • _hubon lIIat&#13;
men and .. omen both .... stunted pl)'dIoIOlPcolly by SUI'''' will lead&#13;
to a socIety ""thout restnctmg roI W. I."., to .. ell other .nd&#13;
make Judgments lU...laooo to our sex roI . W,1ban ."., to .....&#13;
can retate to ... ch other as "e actuall .~lndJ.,duala .. bo neod&#13;
acceptanre, love. "",ogJlIlJon .• nd a of bel ... ful RevoluUGn&#13;
then \\'oo't mean 8 change In the maRlRetneDt of our .nstIbitionI bW •&#13;
change lUIbe nature of our ,.. lues When our ,.. I cha"", U- InlJ'UlJons&#13;
also ",ll FemmLSm holds tbe grea t prom 01 mallbll&#13;
this a better and more humane let)'&#13;
On a concretedaHo-da~ Ie "'I, men.nd om&#13;
relalJOIlS A pmlCcupooon Wllb ma!!CUbm~'on&#13;
LSthe result 01 'OC1ll1 cond,uorung Th enta, ItIpp f r. InS&lt;!CUnty,and&#13;
t... rs FIlm and TV show men punc~, Itllhng.ltnalbll.&#13;
and brntall1IngeachothfftnlOmany,.a,: \hI .nd bualn_mea&#13;
and so man)' males ... elI otI&gt;er a competJUon fer pn m....,.&#13;
and "omen Tho off of a II IbLS a arped I . of humaa iDleracllon&#13;
and uallt) Why a bunch 01 .ad IJlClDo&#13;
laneou feehngs' The manly Ibl to do is bold •• I.n nd devdop&#13;
dn I~ problems, _JOlla! ha -u , u and ,mpot nc nd&#13;
then \lioeexpect "omen to adml~ ,&#13;
Women """et.m encoura thi so both rpelUlt It In&#13;
...ch of our 11., c.n chan ""","" ...... _ of put ...&#13;
culturatlon A the BeaU remmded In I.helr hit Rf'\oI.U. h' ou&#13;
telllD II s the IUSlJtUIJOn.ell. on k • you'd t.,. I your mind&#13;
Instead ..&#13;
c......... food &amp; vondong&#13;
*'"'.&#13;
~&#13;
CANTEEN&#13;
RANGER&#13;
IS ACCtPI. APPWTIIS FII TIl P8SI1_ If&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
Apphcants should be cour.g........ ont.lhgent, bard&#13;
.. orklng and cooperalJve&#13;
Job lO\'oh predormnantly campus co\ rage." llh some&#13;
loca I and state empha. lS&#13;
Pa)' is neghglble but onla~lble re ..·ards can be ~.t&#13;
SUbmit brief resume 01 expenence and-or reJe\·.nt&#13;
courses ta en to R.-\"GER, u.c 0194, b)' Fn ,'", 9&#13;
All applicants will be intervieWed.&#13;
~ANGER&#13;
We get&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
Tof years people of goodwill all or b tr . the world have een ymg 0ver&#13;
b ·ng about One World where to n ·1 uld 5 one human fami y, co we, a · e The . together m peac . ' 11ve -1 th blem has been to reconci e e&#13;
~~erences of two w~rlds. Now,&#13;
al RANGER headlmes report&#13;
th::· we have a Third World&#13;
1 ement on our campus. The&#13;
• ::nizers represent about two&#13;
~rcent of our Parkside World.&#13;
Oh, boy ... now ~e have three&#13;
. Ids with which to deal ... as wor , h' though two weren t enoug .&#13;
It appears to me that ~vei:y&#13;
ti. e someone whose skm is m . b darker than mme urps. some&#13;
campus administrator Jumps&#13;
through a hoop.&#13;
Shucks ... whenever I burp all I get&#13;
is a dirty look. And I'm not only a&#13;
student here but I am also a taxpayer.&#13;
I do_n't like that kind ~f&#13;
discrimination. Maybe I don t&#13;
complain or demand loudly&#13;
enough but I find so littl~ ~o&#13;
complain about here that it is&#13;
almost embarrassing.&#13;
During the past year one of the&#13;
"hoops" through which "The&#13;
Administration" has jumped was&#13;
to hire a person (Mr. Wayne&#13;
Ramirez and a nice fellow) to be&#13;
the counsellor for the Third&#13;
worlders. I hope he sees his job&#13;
as being more than passing out&#13;
crying towels whenever one of his&#13;
constituents gripes about&#13;
something. I suggest that he get&#13;
his friends into the mainstream&#13;
of campus activities and not lead&#13;
up some dead-end creek. Where&#13;
were our black classmates when&#13;
they were selecting the cast for&#13;
"The Virus"? (What a turn-off&#13;
title for a play! .. .I just got over&#13;
one.) And, for that matter, where&#13;
were some of our white&#13;
classmates, if faculty people had&#13;
to take the leads?&#13;
Of course, the Third Worlders&#13;
have some understandable&#13;
complaints .. . such as the&#13;
Parkside-Racine bus route not&#13;
going close enough to where you&#13;
live. Well, maybe Mr. Ramirez&#13;
can arrange to use a Parkside&#13;
talion wagon to make house-tohouse&#13;
pickups ... and stop at my&#13;
house on Tuesdays and Thurdays&#13;
when making the rounds.&#13;
I heartily approve of the many&#13;
pecial helps that are today&#13;
available to all students with&#13;
pecial problems and I cannot&#13;
help but wonder how my life&#13;
might have been different if such&#13;
rvices had been available to me&#13;
when for economic reasons I had&#13;
to drop out of Marquette Law&#13;
School back in 1921. I don't&#13;
begrudge anyone special help but&#13;
sometimes I wonder if it is appreciated.&#13;
&#13;
I want all to know that I respect&#13;
the right of others to try to carry&#13;
on the "Lifestyle" of one 's&#13;
fore bearers. Personally, I gave&#13;
up my effort to do so years ago.&#13;
My grandfather came over here&#13;
from Holland in the 1870s. I tried&#13;
wearing wooden shoes and got&#13;
livers in my feet so I said, "To&#13;
heck with it!"&#13;
Here at Parkside we have an&#13;
open society with room for all&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
614 - S6lh Street&#13;
letters&#13;
~inds of people and all kinds of&#13;
lifestyles ... all colors, all races&#13;
an_d _er~~- long hair, short hair,&#13;
miru-mim skirts and pant suits,&#13;
loud mouths and quiet mouths&#13;
~lambouyant attire and blu~&#13;
Jeans. And .ru:1 open door to every student activity. With such a wide&#13;
latitude of acceptance and&#13;
tolerance I ask .. . Why encourage&#13;
a_ movement which seems&#13;
disposed to set up its own brand&#13;
of apartheid?&#13;
At le~s~ once a year I renew my&#13;
subscription to the premise that&#13;
intel~igence and ability have&#13;
nothmg to do with the color of&#13;
one's skin ... I pray that this be&#13;
true and then I wonder ... if it is&#13;
true, then why is it necessary for&#13;
some to continually demand and&#13;
get special attention. That&#13;
routine has been going on for&#13;
quite a while now. Isn't it about&#13;
time someone got caught up?&#13;
I am color-blind when it comes&#13;
to my friends on campus and off.&#13;
I admire the scholarship and&#13;
goals of many whose skin happens&#13;
to be darker than mine.&#13;
Becoming well-educated is a doit-yourself&#13;
project accomplished&#13;
with the help of a lot of people.&#13;
However, getting a diploma&#13;
based on an assortment of Cs and&#13;
Ds doesn't necessarily make a&#13;
person "educated." And, believe&#13;
me, there is a lot more to a&#13;
college education than learning&#13;
to shoot baskets.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
ArthurM. Gruhl&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
In her letter to the RANGER of&#13;
Oct. 10, 1973, Stacy Postier raised&#13;
a number of issues which deserve&#13;
some consideration and&#13;
response. My concern, in this&#13;
letter, is limited to the question of&#13;
new admissions policies and their&#13;
possible effect on the academic&#13;
standards generally at Parkside.&#13;
The new admissions policy&#13;
grew out of a recommendation by&#13;
a faculty committee and was&#13;
adopted by the Faculty Senate,&#13;
after considerable study of and&#13;
reflection on the matter. The new&#13;
policy was then, finally , accepted&#13;
by the State Board of Regents.&#13;
Parkside administration ,&#13;
therefore is not to be held&#13;
responsibie for the new policr&#13;
One of the major concern m&#13;
the faculty debate was that of the&#13;
impact of lower a~mission&#13;
standards on academic tandards.&#13;
Many argued, cogently 1&#13;
believe that academic tandard&#13;
. are ultimately strengthen!d or&#13;
weakened by what goes on m ~e&#13;
classroom and in the gi:ad~ng&#13;
processes, not by admt s1on&#13;
standards as such . After al_!, . WMadison&#13;
had an open ad~i ion .&#13;
policy until 1963, and I thmk f~\\&#13;
would argue that such a poh_cy&#13;
turned Madison into an institution&#13;
which generally lacked&#13;
r m&#13;
bet re?&#13;
Editor' note : R&#13;
lher but lb m Nin&#13;
chtdul d ror Fr"&#13;
&lt;kt. - .&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
NOW PAYING 5.4%&#13;
(Compound . an 11} t ~-~1 )&#13;
0. REG L. R&#13;
P BOO&#13;
THREE f0~\E~IE'1 L \Tl ' :&#13;
I .ff. Parkside -- Room 219. all at H II&#13;
180 w. fbe tout St .. Barlia on&#13;
5200 Washington he .. Ruin&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31 , 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
0&#13;
on&#13;
H&#13;
ESD&#13;
RA G&#13;
IS&#13;
rd&#13;
nt&#13;
All applicants ill be int rvi ed. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Maynard Ferguson comina&#13;
Jau trumpeter Maynard Ferguson and his band will appear in&#13;
concert Nov. 8 (Thursdayl at Parkside.&#13;
The 8 p.m. coocert in the theater of the Communication Arts&#13;
b.lIldmg. will be preceded by an aftemooo workshop conducted by&#13;
Ferguson and hIS band for junior high, high school and college&#13;
ludenls.&#13;
Tickets are now on sale at Brandt's in Racine, Bidinger's in&#13;
Kenosha, and al !be Information Ki08k on campus, but Anthony A.&#13;
Totero, coordinalor 01 student programming, urged those desiring&#13;
tlcltets to act qUicltly. Tickets are $3 lor students and $4 for the public.&#13;
TIle workshop format will include opening and concluding sessions&#13;
WIth the entire orchestra, separated by sessions led by orchestra&#13;
members lealuring percussion, woodwind, brass and string sections.&#13;
TIle workshop will be held in the theater, from 1 to 4 p.m., and $t admISSion&#13;
will be charged to defray expenses. Those interested in the&#13;
workshop should conlact Totem at the Student Life Office, LLC 0197.&#13;
IhkcI World to meet for vote&#13;
On Thursday, Nov. 1, the Third World Organization coordinators&#13;
will present a constitulion to be approved by minority students. Attendance&#13;
01 all mlnority students is vital. Tbe meeting will take place&#13;
al noon in Gt'eenqUi t Hall, room 103.&#13;
UW-PARKSIOE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
and The Parkside Players In&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with to S1.SO(Nov.&#13;
23-4 Groups of 10 or more. lO:;4discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Ge're in Racine (.fter Oct. 17) and UW·P&#13;
tnformatlon Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
'nto Center only. Send starnped. serr-eeeresseo&#13;
envelOPe with check payable to UW.Parkside to&#13;
"vreus." UW.P Info Center. uw-Perkstee.&#13;
Kenosha. WI .sJ140.&#13;
P.A.B. FILM SPECIAL&#13;
WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDSI&#13;
DOCTOR ZHi'\1\GO&#13;
-(lWWN£ CWftJN .JUUEOiRISfIE ·lOM mRlOOY&#13;
MC~· ~!kI&lt;£NtiA.. RAJ.Hi ~&#13;
(JJAA 9-Wf !.'SZHmOOJ ROO S1mR .RITAl\.ffi1t'-ffiAM&#13;
TlIS., 1lIIY.6 &amp; WED.,lilY. 1&#13;
1::11 P.M.&#13;
e.. ARTS TllATRE ADM.$1.00&#13;
··UNION"&#13;
Wed .., Fri.,Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
Yearbook announces contest&#13;
Students involved in creating a Parkside yearbook have chosen the&#13;
American Yearbook Company from Cambridge, Maryland to do the&#13;
publishing.&#13;
A contest has been announced for choosing a name for the yearbook.&#13;
The prize is a lree yearbook. All entries must be submitted through&#13;
campus mail to the Yearbook, UW-Parkside. Deadline is Nov. 30.&#13;
There will also bea contest for the best photo submission. All photos&#13;
will become the property of the yearbook. In case of a tie, duplicate&#13;
prizes will be awarded. The prize is a free yearbook. Photos are to be&#13;
at least 5x7. The entry deadline is June t, 1974.&#13;
ASA hOlds recreqtion night&#13;
Recreation night, sponsored by Adult Student Association (ASAl&#13;
will be held on Sunday evening, Nov. 4, 6-9p.rn. at the Phy Ed building.&#13;
All adult students are invited to bring their families or friends to&#13;
relax and loll around the pool, play volleyball, tennis, handball, and so&#13;
on.&#13;
The shuttle bus will be available as well as parking in the lot across&#13;
lrom tbe Classroom building. Student J.D.s, swimsuit, cap and towel&#13;
are necessary.&#13;
Free concert today&#13;
Four Parkside music students will be soloists in a free public concert&#13;
at3:3O p.m. on Oct. 31in the Communication Arts Building, Room&#13;
~IIL .&#13;
They are Peggy Simmer, soprano, of Salem, a student of Lee&#13;
Dougherty, who will sing Marenka's Aria from Smetana's "The&#13;
Bartered Bride"; Mary Manulik, cellist, of 7830 38th St., Kenosha, a&#13;
student of David Littrell, who will playa movement from Brahms'&#13;
Sonata in E major, Op, 38,No.1; Jim Mize, trumpeter, of Great Lakes,&#13;
Ill., a student of Robert Thomason, who will play Barat's Fantasie in&#13;
E-nat; and Patrick Noel. guitarist, of 1301Villa St., Racine, a student&#13;
of James Yogbourtjian, who will play the sarabande and bourre from&#13;
Bach's First Lute Suite in E minor.&#13;
The vocalist will be accompanied by Jean Tashoff, a piano student&#13;
from Racine, and the cellist by pianist Steph-en Swedish of the music&#13;
faculty.&#13;
parking lot closes&#13;
Because there are no lights, no sidewalks, and because of the&#13;
pedestrian problem, the parking lot across from the heating and&#13;
cbilling plant will close to parking. Ronald Brinkman, Director 01&#13;
Safety and Security, assured RANGER that there were enough spaces&#13;
available in the Tallent and east lots, and should the need arise, the&#13;
area across from the beating and chilling plant will again open.&#13;
SAS craCksdown&#13;
Ronald Brinkman, Director of Safety and Security, said that this&#13;
year they are "following right straight through" in parking ticket&#13;
matters. An individual who receives a ticket must pay the fine within&#13;
five days or the fine will double. If someone has removed the ticket&#13;
from the windshield, the offender will receive a zo-dav notice. If not&#13;
paid, notices will again be sent the 40th and 60th day. Brinkman&#13;
warned that after 60 days without a payment, the ticket will be sent to&#13;
the Kenosha District Attorney where a warrant will be issued. for&#13;
arres~. At the present time, approximately 35 tickets "may very well&#13;
be going to the D.A.," said Brinkman.&#13;
Pom Pom squad organizes&#13;
There will be an organizational meeting of the Parkside Porn Porn&#13;
squad on Tuesday. Nov. 6 at 12p.m. in the upstairs lounge of the P.E.&#13;
building. Anyone who ISunable to make it should leave her name and&#13;
phone number with the P .E. office, extension 2245.&#13;
YWCAsponsors MeXico tour&#13;
Th~ Racine YWCAhas announced a tour to Mexico City Guadalupe&#13;
Teotihuacan, Cholula, Puebla, Cuernavaca, Taxco ~nd Toluca'&#13;
December t3-23. The cost of the trip for YWCA members is $395 and&#13;
for n~n-men:~rs, $405. The cost includes round-trip air fare on&#13;
Amencan Airlines, all hotel accommodations, sightseeing and entrance&#13;
lees as scheduled, baggage tips, accident insurance and&#13;
several meals. For more information contact the Racine YWCA. '&#13;
Wed•• Oct. 31&#13;
FREEAdmission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
Costume&#13;
North-South&#13;
exchange&#13;
oHers&#13;
unique&#13;
experience&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Students at Parkside and at all&#13;
other UW system campuses&#13;
have, for the past nine years, had&#13;
the opportunity to experience a&#13;
totally different academic&#13;
cultural and social lifestyle th~&#13;
that of their own experience and&#13;
background.&#13;
This unique experience is&#13;
provided by the North-Soutb&#13;
Student Exchange Program. This&#13;
program sends, at most, two&#13;
students from each campus to 8&#13;
black .lU1iversity in the South.&#13;
Parkside students selected this&#13;
fall will attend North Carolina&#13;
Central University in Durbam&#13;
for the spring semester. '&#13;
NCCU has a student population&#13;
of around 4,000; Durham has a&#13;
population 01 nearly 100,000.Also&#13;
located in Durham is Duke&#13;
University and the University of&#13;
North carolina is located in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill.&#13;
Students who participate in the&#13;
program are technically enrolled&#13;
at Parkside, so they pay regular&#13;
Wisconsin tuition. They will&#13;
receive transfer credits for aU&#13;
work taken at the exchange&#13;
campus. Participation in the&#13;
program will be noted on the&#13;
student's UW transcript, but no&#13;
grades will be recorded.&#13;
Students who will be freshmen&#13;
during participation are Dot&#13;
eligible and seniors are not&#13;
normally eligible. Juniors wiD be&#13;
given priority. Applicants should&#13;
have a cumulative Grade Point&#13;
Average of 2.5.&#13;
UW loans or grants can be used&#13;
for participation in the program,&#13;
except for work-study. The&#13;
Financial Aids Office generally&#13;
makes adjustments to replace&#13;
work-study with a loan or grant.&#13;
Every effort will be made to lind&#13;
campus employment at NeCU&#13;
for exchange students who must&#13;
have this in order to participate.&#13;
A round-trip airline ticket from&#13;
Milwaukee to Raleigh·Durham&#13;
will he provided by the program&#13;
for participating Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Further information about the&#13;
program, the exchange campus,&#13;
applications, and names of&#13;
current and former participants&#13;
can be obtained from Isom&#13;
Fearn, Tutoring Services Office,&#13;
Room 281, Tallent Hall. Applications&#13;
are due Nov. 2.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
classifieds&#13;
LOST-Book. of poetry. "return Me to MY&#13;
Mind" by Stanley Eldridge. 811.. PIImptl'"&#13;
Probably lost in library. Help return,""'"&#13;
offered. 694-2933&#13;
FOR SAL.E: 15 gal. fish tank wittl&#13;
cessortes. Sweepmaster electric bf'OOl'lo&#13;
instant hairseners and iron. till&#13;
i1fter S, or weekends.&#13;
I OCT.31; NOY. 2, 3, 4 1&#13;
Kenosha's Hewes' Hiresp"&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)·&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-~&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Maynard Ferguson coming&#13;
Third World to meet for vote&#13;
. 1, th Thmi World Organlzation coordinators&#13;
titut on to be appro ed b · minority tudents. AtII&#13;
m n ty tu is vital. The meeting will take place&#13;
n i t Hall, room 103.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
G rtrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
nd The Par side Players in&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Res rved ats SJ, Students with ID SI.SO (Nov.&#13;
2 3 4 Group of 10 or more, lOj(,discount)&#13;
Tic ts av II ble a Bldinger's In Kenosha,&#13;
Coo re In aclne ( f r 0c . 17) and UW-P&#13;
Inform tioo Cen r on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info C nter only. Send stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope with chec payable to UW-Parkside to&#13;
" Viru :• UW-P Info Center, UW,Parkslde,&#13;
Kenosh , WI SJl40.&#13;
P .A.B. FILM SPECIAL&#13;
WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS I&#13;
DOCTOR ZHiVAGO&#13;
(IRNl1 E OM.I · JULIE ~RISTIE · TO CURTENAY&#13;
NEC -~-· .... rn,~ -RAl?rl~&#13;
OOR s-Wilf lA5ZHMOOI ROO SlfilR. RITA 11.ffil~&#13;
TIIS., NOY. 6 &amp; WED., IIJY. 7&#13;
7:JI P.M.&#13;
ARTS THEATRE ADM. $1.(1)&#13;
Yearbook announces contest&#13;
Students involved in creating a Parkside yearbook have chosen the&#13;
American Yearbook Company from Cambridge, Maryland to do the&#13;
publishing. A contest has been announced for choosing a name for the yearbook.&#13;
The prize is a free yearbook. All entries must be submitted through&#13;
campus mail to the Yearbook, UW-Parkside. Deadline is Nov. 30. There will al o be a contest for the best photo submission. All photos&#13;
~ill become the property of the yearbook. In case of a tie, duplicate&#13;
prizes will be awarded. The prize is a free yearbook. Photos are to be&#13;
at least 5x7. The entry deadline is June 1, 1974.&#13;
ASA holds recreation night&#13;
Recreation night, sponsored by Adult Student Association ~A~A)&#13;
will be held on Sunday evening, Nov. 4, 6-9 p.m. at the Phy Ed building.&#13;
All adult students are invited to bring their families or friends to&#13;
relax and loll around the pool, play volleyball, tennis, handball, and so&#13;
on.&#13;
The shuttle bus will be available as well as parking in the lot across&#13;
from the Cla room building. Student I.D.s, swimsuit, cap and towel&#13;
are necessary.&#13;
Free concert today&#13;
Four Parkside music students will be soloists in a free public concert&#13;
at 3: 30 p.m. on Oct 31 in the Communication Arts Building, Room&#13;
D-118.&#13;
They are Peggy Simmer, soprano, of Salem, a student of Lee&#13;
Dougherty, who will sing Marenka's Aria from Smetana's "The&#13;
Bartered Bride" ; Mary Manulik, cellist, of 7830 38th St., Kenosha, a&#13;
student of David Littrell, who will play a movement from Brahms'&#13;
Sonata in E major. Op. 38, No. 1; Jim Mize, trumpeter, of Great Lakes,&#13;
Ill • a student of Robert Thomason, who will play Barat's Fantasie in&#13;
E-nat; and Patrick Noel, guitarist, of 1301 Villa St., Racine, a student&#13;
of James Yoghourtjian, who will play the sarabande and bourre from&#13;
Bach's Fir t Lute Suite in E minor.&#13;
The vocalist will be accompanied by Jean Tashoff, a piano student&#13;
from Racine, and the cellist by pianist Stephlm Swedish of the music&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Parking lot closes&#13;
Because there are no lights, no sidewalks, and because of the&#13;
pedestrian problem, the parking lot across from the heating and&#13;
chilling plant will close to parking. Ronald Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Safety and Security, assured RANGER that there were enough spaces&#13;
available in the Tallent and east lots, and should the need arise, the&#13;
area across from the heating and chilling plant will again open.&#13;
S&amp;S cracks down&#13;
Ronald Brinkman, Director of Safety and Security, said that this&#13;
year they are " following right straight through" in parking ticket&#13;
matters. An individual who receives a ticket must pay the fine within&#13;
five days or the fine will double. If someone has removed the ticket&#13;
from the windshield, the offender will receive a 20-day notice. If not&#13;
paid, notices will again be sent the 40th and 60th day. Brinkman&#13;
warned that after 60 days without a payment, the ticket will be sent to&#13;
the Kenosha District Attorney where a warrant will be issued for&#13;
arrest. At the present time. approximately 35 tickets "may very well&#13;
be going to the D.A.," said Brinkman.&#13;
Pom Pom squad organizes&#13;
There will be an organizational meeting of the Parkside Porn Porn&#13;
squa~ on Tuesday, No~. 6 at 12 p.m. in the upstairs lounge of the P.E.&#13;
building. Anyon~ who 1s unable to make it should leave her name and&#13;
phone number with the P .E. office, extension 2245.&#13;
YWCA sponsors Mexico tour&#13;
Th_e Racine YWCA has announced a tour to Mexico City, Guadalupe&#13;
Teotihuacan, Cholula, Puebla, Cuernavaca, Taxco and Toluca'&#13;
December 13-23. The cost of the trip_ for YWCA members is $395 and&#13;
for n~n-me~~rs, $405. The cost includes round-trip air fare on Amencan Airlines, all hotel accommodations sights · d&#13;
trance fees h d led ' eeing an en- as sc e u , baggage tips, accident insurance and&#13;
several meals. For more information contact the Racine YWCA. '&#13;
North-South&#13;
exchange&#13;
offers&#13;
unique&#13;
exp~rlence&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Students at Parkside and at all&#13;
other UW system campuses&#13;
have, for the past nine years, had&#13;
the opportunity to experience a&#13;
totally different academic&#13;
cultural and social lifestyle tha~&#13;
that of their own experience and&#13;
background.&#13;
This unique experience is&#13;
provided by the North-South&#13;
Student Exchange Program. This&#13;
program sends, at most, two&#13;
students from each campus to 8&#13;
black university in the South&#13;
Parkside students selected thi;&#13;
fall will attend North Carolina&#13;
Central University in Durham&#13;
for the spring semester. '&#13;
NCCU has a student population&#13;
of around 4,000; Durham has 8&#13;
population of nearly 100,000. Also&#13;
located in Durham is Duke&#13;
University and the University or&#13;
North Carolina is located in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill.&#13;
Students who participate in the&#13;
program are technically enrolled&#13;
at Parkside, so they pay regular&#13;
Wisconsin tuition. They will&#13;
receive transfer credits for all&#13;
work taken at the exchange&#13;
campus. Participation in the&#13;
program will be noted on the&#13;
student's UW transcript, but no&#13;
grades will be recorded.&#13;
Students who will be freshmen&#13;
during participation are not&#13;
eligible and seniors are not&#13;
normally eligible. Juniors will be&#13;
given priority. Applicants should&#13;
have a cumulative Grade Point&#13;
Average of 2.5.&#13;
UW loans or grants can be used&#13;
for participation in the program,&#13;
except for work-study. The&#13;
Financial Aids Office generally&#13;
makes adjustments to replace&#13;
work-study with a loan or grant.&#13;
Every effort will be made to find&#13;
campus employment at NCCU&#13;
for exchange students who must&#13;
have this in order to participate.&#13;
A round-trip airline ticket from&#13;
Milwaukee to Raleigh-Durham&#13;
will be provided by the program&#13;
for participating Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Further information about the&#13;
program, the exchange campus,&#13;
applications, and names or&#13;
current and former participants&#13;
can be obtained from Isom&#13;
Fearn, Tutoring Services Office,&#13;
Room 281, Tallent Hall. Applications&#13;
are due Nov. 2.&#13;
Rc;anger&#13;
classifieds&#13;
LOST-Book of poetry, "return Me to lliY&#13;
Mind" by Stanley Eldridge. Blue ...,mpltltl.&#13;
Probably lost in library. Help return, rt••"'&#13;
offered. 694-2933&#13;
FOR SALE : 15 gal. fish t•nk Willl K&#13;
cessories, Sweepmaster electric br_, 1&#13;
instant hairsetters and iron. Call 6&#13;
;alter s, or weekends.&#13;
Wed .• Oct. 31&#13;
FREE Admission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
Costume&#13;
11UNION"&#13;
Wed .. , Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
OCT. 31; NOV. 2, 3, 4 ]&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
( formerly Shokey' s) .&#13;
Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485 &#13;
Wednesdlly, OCt. 31, 1973 THE PARKS IDE RANGER 5&#13;
Regents- _&#13;
c:ontll'IUecl IrOf'l ...... 1&#13;
ParkSide "all'I.' ••&#13;
. Ire tmngs we asked for "'hn~h are&#13;
unportant. 'l He was especianv happy that It gives&#13;
even m t~ framework of the specific mISSion a&#13;
str~ng ratIonale for a powerful liberal arts faun.&#13;
dation. to the Universil), and also thaI the&#13;
prohibition on graduale programs has ~&#13;
rescmded.&#13;
With respect to the bearmg, 5bucard said "people&#13;
might be put 01110 respond 10 sometlnng they are&#13;
satisfied WIth,bUItt is important 10 respond so that&#13;
we don't lose through complacency what has bee&gt;&#13;
gamed Ihrough considerable eflort ."&#13;
Graduate Programs N.......&#13;
William Moy, Dean 01 the School 01 Modem industry,&#13;
said 01 the draft, "I am very pleased te see&#13;
mcluded a specific mention of englJl&lt;!enng&#13;
tedl~~]ogy and business administration, and also&#13;
spectnc mention of graduate programs ..&#13;
He added that it was "a good mov .... on the pan 01&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie to request inclUSIon of Labor&#13;
Relations.&#13;
Regarding graduate programs, oy commented&#13;
that IIwe're going to serve the business comm\D'Uty&#13;
we need graduate programs in busin&lt;!ss and&#13;
technology for area people who work full-time but&#13;
want to pursue graduate degrees.&#13;
There had been considerable controversy last&#13;
August over a Central Adrnirustratioo proposal&#13;
which placed Parkside and SIXother UW SJ tern&#13;
schools in a cluster or "Primary Undergraduate&#13;
Institutions." The wording of the new nussree&#13;
statement would allow development 01 graduate&#13;
programs related 10 "areas of undergraduate&#13;
emphasis," presumably business and technology. if&#13;
approval and Iunding are received lrom Central&#13;
Administration lor each specific proposal.&#13;
~I&#13;
'~&#13;
~&#13;
the (;01' ..... 1)· comnuU coordlllll1nl laculty&#13;
presen!a~ Anyooe "ish to mea Il.I ",,",t&#13;
must ~ r "lth the O&gt;ancellor'. off ... eel·&#13;
vance This rtgl5tra.!Jon _ not rant an&#13;
opportuOlty to heoIl"lI-tbe R on will d&lt;lennme&#13;
",1'0 10&lt;1' be heard and In ,,-III. orela'&#13;
Tesllmonl· m t be bml'''' to the m.issiOD-d&#13;
the m IOn ~ lor the ... 11re&#13;
..~ •• mi.ssJoD for l tutJona an t.he&#13;
c1uslI!r (those sc:-' In,iousIr d ....&#13;
dergradualel. or th lect on lor '\I.p&#13;
Further 1.nt'onnatlon a\·.11ab11! from the&#13;
cellor's olhce. PSGA or R.' 'GER&#13;
Oral In !alJons are noIto exceed 1m nun&#13;
Bnel wnllen tall'mon marwng dI I&#13;
ness' "·le..... are abo reqmrecl .Dd '\IoTitlft1&#13;
slatrm~nts mal also be bmitted b1 ...&#13;
groups not ontendlll&amp;to k pecta'orI" ill be&#13;
.. come, but will ask'" to roeISla' at the door&#13;
and Indicate "'bother an obIf:" r ... a paf1jC pant&#13;
Lawsonresting comfortably&#13;
room 247. Surgery is scheduled&#13;
lor Wednesday, Nov. 7.&#13;
Her classes are meeting as&#13;
scheduled with the exception 01&#13;
the folk dance class, which has&#13;
been cancelled.&#13;
Women's Sports Director&#13;
Barbara Jo Lawson, who sullore&lt;!&#13;
a back injury Iwo weeks&#13;
.go 00 the trampoline, is&#13;
r&lt;p«ted resting comforlably in&#13;
Kenosha 51.Catherine's hospital,&#13;
Registration Sec::essarl&#13;
The public hearing, which will be chaired by&#13;
Regenl Edwal"ll Hales lrom Racine, is technIcally to&#13;
alfol"llthe public a chance 10 be heard, commented&#13;
Wyllie, but students are welcome to testify also. and&#13;
Thingsyou have wanted&#13;
to see in the&#13;
*&#13;
Qmm[D0UlDQI3&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
• Greeting Cards&#13;
• Wrapping Paper&#13;
• Pocket Combs&#13;
• RecordPromotion&#13;
• Kleenex&#13;
• Cough Drops&#13;
• Toothpaste&#13;
• Anaeln&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP ...&#13;
..&#13;
THE • '.. ..&#13;
.. . .&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
.. ..&#13;
RATEDFOR SALE:&#13;
*And haven't been afraid&#13;
to ask for!&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
Suva ...&#13;
OeIi&lt;inu&gt;ly Solilfying&#13;
• BIGSHEF&#13;
PHONE (4141632-1138 _iiiiii_~~ 308 6th STREET - RACINE. WIS.&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
SPECIAL GROUP&#13;
CUFFED PANTS AND JEANS&#13;
SPECIAL GROUP&#13;
LONG SLEEVE KNIT TOPS&#13;
V2 PRICE&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 't iI 9&#13;
z .&#13;
GOlDEN ItOWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
CO"MONtUEm G&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
$130&#13;
All FOR ~,/fl&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
.2.&#13;
LOC4 TIO.\"S 6926 39th Ave. 3400 Sheridan Road&#13;
~I&#13;
·~&#13;
~ Lawson resting comfortably&#13;
Women's Sports Director&#13;
Barbara Jo Lawson, who suffered&#13;
a back injury two weeks&#13;
ago on the trampoline, is&#13;
reported resting comfortably in&#13;
Ken~a St. Catherine's hospital,&#13;
room 247. Surgery is scheduled&#13;
for Wednesday , Nov . 7.&#13;
Her classes are meeting as&#13;
scheduled with the exception of&#13;
the folk dance class, which has&#13;
been cancelled.&#13;
Things you have wanted&#13;
to see in the *&#13;
CBC!JC!Jru0UC!JQC5&#13;
• Greeting Cards • Kleenex&#13;
• Wrapping Paper • Cough Drops&#13;
• Pocket Combs • Toothpaste&#13;
• Record Promotion • Anacin&#13;
RATED FOR SALE:&#13;
*And haven't been afraid&#13;
to ask for!&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
PHONE (414 ) 632-1138&#13;
308 6th STREET - RACINE WIS&#13;
~~&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
SPECIAL GROUP&#13;
CUFFED PANTS AND JEANS&#13;
SPECIAL GROUP&#13;
LONG SLEEVE KNIT TOPS&#13;
½ PRICE&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 't ii 9&#13;
.i&#13;
Wedne day, Oct. 31 , 1973 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 5&#13;
Regents-------&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
Buy a ... D . ·ointySa "ify g&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
• II COLA&#13;
ALL FOR $1 JO&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave. • LO&#13;
2 •&#13;
TIO .. 3400 Sheridan Road &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 31, 1973&#13;
Alternate school is UW-P classroom&#13;
by Saady Busch&#13;
No. it's not the local coffee house where one can stop for a chat, or a&#13;
cozy to-getber of the relatives in granny's livingroom. The scene is an&#13;
economics class al Racine's Walden ill High School.&#13;
BeIl18 an alternative school, Walden In is concerned with students&#13;
,.110 have had various dirficulties in adj ... ting 10 conventional public&#13;
high schooL Its program is extensive and flexible; tbe atmosphere&#13;
much more informal.&#13;
Instructing the class are students from Parkside's methods class,&#13;
TeachlJ1g Social Studies 10 Seeondary SChools. Each week a differenl&#13;
tudenl l1!leS ooe 01 many leaching methods to execute instruction of&#13;
ones own chosen topic.&#13;
Walden m was chosen because of its' availability, the need existing&#13;
at Walden 111for an economics class, and the flexibility 01 \be school's&#13;
accommodations.&#13;
The roam thrust of the class is to teach economics. Instructor of the&#13;
methods class, Marvin Happel assistanl professor of education&#13;
commented onoth"" matn objectives: "The purpose is to give people a&#13;
chance 10 see whal a high school social studies class can be from&#13;
heginnu~ 10 end. It provides as realistic a situation as possible in an&#13;
unrealistie setting ..&#13;
TeachIng methods used by \be students are grounded on theoretical&#13;
foundations Theuies and programs are studied and then reshaped for&#13;
...e ,n lhe economics class. Students will then bave made a start&#13;
toward learning not jusl leaching, bul creative teaching.&#13;
The "reshaped" leaching theories are used in the preparation and&#13;
execution by each studenl of a teaching pacl. The pact is based upon&#13;
ones chooen loplC Pef'\alJ1ing to economics, and a specific leaching&#13;
method&#13;
Class begins with a meeting attended by Happel and method&#13;
students. Miscellaneous business is tsken care of, teaching packets&#13;
are distributed, and leaching plans fer the evening are discussed.&#13;
FoUOWUlg the half-bour preliminary meeting is the actual&#13;
economics class. Walden DI students are allowed to come in and sil&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view * * * * * * ** * * ***************** * * ******&#13;
PSGA elections&#13;
•&#13;
are coming&#13;
*·~*~*~*H*H*~·*t**.*+**************************&#13;
where they choose. T~e result is a kind of potpourri in att~nda&#13;
ranging from blue-leaned adolescents 10 polished ed nee.&#13;
The student teacher for the evening immedialely begins to ueat .....&#13;
the lesson, utilizing his or her method. Some examples of less C~d~l&#13;
are: "Economic Justice &amp; Equality"; "Consumeration &amp; Suon&#13;
.ClpIQ&#13;
and "Savings &amp; Investment". Typical methods used are miXedrvl\"al.";&#13;
case studies, and role playing. tnedia,&#13;
The atmosphere is one of serious learning suspended. in informa .&#13;
There exists a feeling of openness along with a desire to lity&#13;
problems; to arrive at some conclusions. SOlve&#13;
Following a short break, Happel, the methods class, and WaId&#13;
volunteers analyze and evaluate the preVIOUS lesson. Suggesti en ID&#13;
accepted in appreciatio~; critic~sm is given in earnest. The ~ ~&#13;
much student-teacher interaction, and a learning experience t 11&#13;
everyone. for&#13;
The appreciation of diversified teaching methods along .&#13;
tensive student-teacher interaction, was expressed by severat~~I"'~&#13;
ill students: """"&#13;
"I think it's a good class because it's really accomplishing wha .&#13;
set out to do-teach the dull subject of economics." t It&#13;
"It helps one understand a variety of teachers. I like it thaI&#13;
stay after and criticize." you CIlI&#13;
"The class gives us a chance to see what people at a higher 1 eI&#13;
school have 10 do. It helps us relate to them." ev of&#13;
Methods students also had favorable comments:&#13;
"Methods courses traditionally have been a bummer. This has&#13;
one of the best courses I've ever taken. It covers a lot more lhabelm&#13;
expected. It D I&#13;
"The class gives us experience with a variety of teaching m&#13;
The chance for interaction with students, and learning their opllU'~'&#13;
helpful." om.&#13;
Happel feels the class includes what a methods course should Del&#13;
successful in regards to both alternative students and .; a II&#13;
students. As for similar classes in tbe future, he predicts this: ,,~&#13;
see any problem lJ1taking a class from Parkside and putting a I&#13;
simllar to this in any other high school. If alternative school ::-&#13;
class for us to teach next semester, Iplan on doing something 8~&#13;
somewhere else."&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
In Concert .&#13;
~-- ~ ?&#13;
..,.-/1 --'~" or ~~ -~ .. '&#13;
MAYNARD;~&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA 17 /-&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31: Student concert a13:3O p.rn. in the Comm AnI&#13;
Building, room DU8. Itis free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 31: Vets Club Halloween party at Dania Hall iD&#13;
Racine. Donations requested.&#13;
Nov. 1-4: Play, "The Virus" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Thealft.&#13;
Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2: PAB movie, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid"&#13;
at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday. Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at the Phy Ed Building. ConlactJim&#13;
Koch or Bob Lawson.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3: PAB dance featuring "Boogie Man" from 9 p.m.&#13;
in SAB. Admission is $1.50 andParkside I.D. is required..&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4: PAB movie, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid"&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4: ASA "recreation night" for adult students and their&#13;
families from 610 9 p.m. in Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 6: PAR movie, "Dr. Zhivago" at 7:~ p.m. inComm&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7: PAB movie, "Dr. Zhivago" at 7:30 p.m, in tbt&#13;
Corom Arts Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
1IIJR.-IIJY. 8 8:111P.M.&#13;
e.. AITS 11lATRE&#13;
AIIU3.111 PARIlSlJ( snmrs·&#13;
$4.111GEIDAI.&#13;
JtEdh~&#13;
~&#13;
·'M.F.Hom"&#13;
COMINGUP&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson workshop for music studeDtI&#13;
in the Corom Arts Theatre from 14 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson concertat8p.m. in the C(IDII&#13;
Arls Theatre. Tickels are $3 and available allhe Information kit&amp;&#13;
Saturday. Nov. 10: Vets club dance featuring "Hounddog Band".l1&#13;
p.m. ID SAB. Advance tickets available for $1.50 from Vets &lt;11*&#13;
members and $1.75 al the door .&#13;
....January 2 ~ru 7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip It&#13;
~Ieamboal SprlOgs, Colorado. See the Information kiosk for detaill&#13;
All ilems for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submltlft.&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to pUblication of the issue lD....&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
• 1 NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
• 1'2 DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETING&#13;
• GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
• TOUR HOST SERVICES&#13;
• ALL TIE'S &amp; TAXES&#13;
The&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN _ PARKSIDI&#13;
*RWRIJ.RN HEJIJI&amp;RY&#13;
8 Fan-FIW Dlpl&#13;
Jill .. " 2 • 10 $269 Plus $20 Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Based on J to a ROOrfl&#13;
~&#13;
HURRY!&#13;
Over 2/3 Filled&#13;
IIFor application lorrfl&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CEHTE'&#13;
LLC 0191 nl.22f4 by Gary Huck TRUCK ON DOWN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
A ternate school is UW-P classroom&#13;
'th a m ing attended b · Happel and method&#13;
n . ti ll bu i · taken care of, teaching packets 0&#13;
buted, nd t ching plans for thee" ning are discussed.&#13;
th h If our preliminary meeting is the actual&#13;
cla . Wal n III tudents are allowed to come in and sit&#13;
Cartoonl1t'1 eye view••••••••••****************•********&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
PSGA elections&#13;
Par ide cth'ities Board&#13;
pre ents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA&#13;
'&#13;
/-&#13;
THUR.-NOY. 8 8:00 P.M.&#13;
CtllM. ARTS TIIATRE&#13;
.$3.00 PARKSllE STUDENTS*&#13;
$4.00 6EJWL 'Jtt· ~ "M.F.Hom"&#13;
TRUCK ON DOWN&#13;
where they choose. The result is a kind of potpourri in attenda&#13;
ranging from blue-jeaned adolescents to polished ed nee&#13;
The student teacher for the evening immediately begins to UCatorg&#13;
the lesson, utilizing his or her method. Some examples of less cond~t&#13;
are : "Economic Justice &amp; Equality"; "Consumeration &amp; Suon ~opr~&#13;
and "Savings &amp; Investment". Typical methods used are mixedrvrval'',&#13;
case studies, and role playing. media, The atmosphere is one of serious learning suspended in info .&#13;
There exists a feeling of openness along with a desire :mall . problems; to arrive at some conclusions. 0 sohe&#13;
Following a short break, Happel, the methods class and Wald&#13;
volunteers analyze and evaluate the previous lesson. 'suggesti en lU&#13;
accepted in appreciation; criticism is given in earnest. The ons are&#13;
much student-teacher interaction, and a learning experi:e ult&#13;
everyo!')e, nee for&#13;
The appreciation of diversified teaching methods along .&#13;
tensive student-teacher interaction, was expressed by several~th1 •&#13;
III students: a den&#13;
"I think it's a good class because it's really accomplishing ha . set out to d~teach the dull subject of economics. 11 w t 11&#13;
"It helps one understand a variety of teachers. I like it that&#13;
stay after and criticize." You can&#13;
"The class gives us a chance to see what people at a higher 1 1&#13;
school have to do. It helps us relate to them. 11 eve of&#13;
Methods students also had favorable comments:&#13;
"Methods courses traditionally have been a bummer. This has&#13;
one of the best courses I've ever taken. It covers a lot more thabeen&#13;
expected." n I&#13;
"The class gives us experience with a variety of teaching m&#13;
The chance for interaction with students, and learning their op· e_thods&#13;
helpful.,, 1ruons 11&#13;
Happel feels the class includes what a methods course should nd&#13;
successful in regards to both alternative students and ~ a la&#13;
students. As for s~mila~ classes in the future, he predicts this: .. f~&#13;
see any problem m taking a class from Parkside and putting a c t&#13;
similar to this in any other high school. If alternative school :&#13;
class for us to teach next semester, I plan on doing something 5- a~&#13;
somewhere else." 1m...,.&#13;
It's wh~t's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31: Student concert at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm Ar1s&#13;
Building, room DnB. It is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31: Vets Club Halloween party at Dania Hall&#13;
Racine. Donations requested.&#13;
Nov. 1-4: Play, "The Virus" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre&#13;
Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2: PAB movie, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid'&#13;
at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at the Phy Ed Building. Contact J&#13;
Koch or Bob Lawson .&#13;
. Saturday, ~o~. 3: PAB dance featuring "Boogie Man" from 9 pm&#13;
m SAB. Adm1ss1on 1s $1.50 and Parkside I.D. is required.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4 : PAB movie, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid&#13;
at 7:30p.m. in SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4 : ASA " recreation night" for adult students and their&#13;
families from 6 to 9 p.m. in Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 6: PAB movie, "Dr. Zhivago" at 7:30 p.m. in Comm&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7: PAB movie, "Dr. Zhivago" at 7:30 p.m. 1n !ht&#13;
Comm Arts Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
. Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson workshop for music students&#13;
m the Comm Arts Theatre from 1-4 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson concertat8p.m. in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets are $3 and available at the Information kiSat~rday.&#13;
Nov. 10: Vets club dance featuring "Hounddog Band'' alt&#13;
p.m. m SAB. Advance tickets available for $1.50 from Vets c)lj)&#13;
members and $1.75 at the door.&#13;
~ January 2 ~ru 7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski tnp. to&#13;
::,teamboat Spnngs, Colorado. See the Information kiosk for details&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submiUt41 "&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in •ilcl an item is to appear.&#13;
a Fun-Filled ~r&#13;
Jana,y 2 - 10 $269 Plus s20 Tax &amp; Servoco&#13;
Based on 3 to a Room&#13;
e ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
e 7 NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
e 1'2 DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
e FLOWER LEI GREETING&#13;
e GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
e TOUR HOST SERI/ICES&#13;
e ALL Ttl'S &amp; TAXES &#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jens~n&#13;
TIME FADES AWAY&#13;
Neil Young (Reprise MS 2151)&#13;
The firSt realiz~tion ~pon bein~ exposed t~the opening song is that&#13;
, live material. Nell Young IS broadcastmg a warning for junk!&#13;
tluSlS d A "Th' ki d ' res&#13;
t&#13;
"TimeFa es way. e]W1 res on t care, of course they' t&#13;
I!Ia hitihth k that i 'lus ndgr&lt;JOvetot s g , ouncyroc er atlsastoneinitself H .&#13;
SIll t t . t' . e IS ing with a eompe en crew consis mg of John Barbata (dr )&#13;
~ Drummond (bass), Ben Keith (slide guitar and vocal), u:;;'~k&#13;
NilZChe(piano), and himself (harmonica, guitar, and vocals).&#13;
",. firSt of the three soft, slow 'ballads that are included on thi&#13;
,..or&lt;! appears as a "Journey Thru The Past." This is Neil Young:s&#13;
personal nostalgia trip, he claims he's "gain' back to Canada" woo S&#13;
be came from, after the tour, and he "won't be back 'til Februa:;&#13;
~;cepicks up shortly with "Yonder Stands The Sinner," The&#13;
,.uP rocks hard, Neil Young tries to push it even harder, and his&#13;
wHee gets a little hoarse, but not ~lstract~?gly so. "The sinner" is&#13;
opparenlly"the Great Pretender (Nixonv), whom Neil Young while&#13;
penonifyingJesus, says "He calls my name without a sound. tt •&#13;
The band continues to rock on Impressively with "L A" which&#13;
r.. tureS Neil as a dramatic prophet of doom for the big city, "The&#13;
mwntainserupt and the valley IS sucked Into cracks in the earth." His&#13;
ca5iivatingvoi~e ~?rk~ a,~toundingly well in the same manner as it&#13;
does in songs like Ohio,&#13;
Theremainder of side 1is reserved for "Love In Mind." This is one&#13;
Iihistender ballads that at times seems to move unbearably slow.&#13;
However,it is short and if one allows himself to focus into the sensitive&#13;
lIllOlionthat is the basic part of Neil Young's aura, he may find his&#13;
lace being drowned in tears,&#13;
Side 2 is filled with only three songs, of which "Don't Be Denied" and&#13;
"l1le Bridge" consume the first half. The first is a slow, hard plodding&#13;
rocker with an infectious chorus sinking in with Neil's earnestswodingvoice.&#13;
The second is the last of his quiet reflections on the&#13;
album.&#13;
1be "Last Dance" departs as the highest volume number while also&#13;
occupyingthe entire second half of this side. Neil forces his voice loud&#13;
and almostchokes sometimes. Graham Nash and David Crosby have&#13;
)llIned the band for this last number. Most of the time is used with an&#13;
daborate instrumental concentrating on the guitars while Jack Nitzdie&#13;
adds piano frills on the edges. The whole scene is symholic of a&#13;
spinning hangover realization that "It's a Monday morning, Time to&#13;
10 to work." Neil Young freaks out a series of "Oh Nos" for the&#13;
_oIic junkies trapped in the life of 4o-hours-a-week factory jobs,&#13;
TIMEFADES AWAY,in its completion, has unfolded a compelling&#13;
lellSitivitywith a well-balanced set. The cover credits reveal that&#13;
these tunes were recorded at several different locations. If this&#13;
coUectionis representative of a single concert, then Neil Young and&#13;
crew merit silver awards in performance.&#13;
IRecordcourtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
IIDracula" lecturer&#13;
traces legend&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
Radu Florescu, co-author of In&#13;
...... h 01 Dracula and history&#13;
"",,euor at Boston University,&#13;
Ioctured last Friday evening on&#13;
Dracula, his place in history and&#13;
Ia legend.&#13;
Florescu first became interested&#13;
in Dracula when he read&#13;
BramSlaker's Dracula (whicb he&#13;
~Iy recommends), He&#13;
1lleoIni%ed the names QI villages&#13;
lad trails whicb actually exist in&#13;
Rtimania.&#13;
FIoreacu found manuscripts&#13;
"futen in ancient German,&#13;
IeIling about "Dracula the imllOler."It&#13;
laid of how Vlad Tepes,&#13;
nicknamed "Dracula"&#13;
Ilaughtered Turks by t'be&#13;
IhGuaandain the 15th Century.&#13;
Tbe Turks were constantly in·&#13;
~ Dracula's country and,&#13;
llIe of his many battles&#13;
against them, Dracula is considered&#13;
a national hero by&#13;
Romanians, much as George&#13;
Washington is by Americans.&#13;
What Stoker did, says&#13;
Florescu, was to integrate the&#13;
story of Vlad Tepes WIth the&#13;
vampire legend, for Stoker wa.s&#13;
indeed the first to ever credit&#13;
Dracula with vampirism. Most&#13;
Romanians today know of&#13;
Dracula and vampires, but do not&#13;
associate the two.&#13;
A very few copies of In Search&#13;
or Dracula are still available in&#13;
the bookstore. Florescu's new&#13;
book, Dracula: the Biography or&#13;
the Impaler, will be out around&#13;
HaBoween. A more scholarlx&#13;
approach by several authors IS&#13;
the forthcoming, The Dracula&#13;
Debate.&#13;
Radu Florescu will appear on&#13;
"The Tonight Show" on Oct. 31.&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
feature film series presents&#13;
BUTCH CASSIDY&#13;
AND THE&#13;
SUNDANCE KID&#13;
FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 8:00&#13;
SUNDAY, NOV. 4, 7:30&#13;
S1UIIJlT ACTlYlTIES BUlDllG, AlltISSl* 15'&#13;
UW P &amp; WIs. , 0 ReQuir~&#13;
IF YOU HAVE AN&#13;
UNUSUAl TALENt&#13;
YOU HAVE WHAT IT&#13;
TAkES TO BE A&#13;
BUDWEISER. WORLD&#13;
CHAMPION!&#13;
EARN THIS&#13;
nRRIFIC PATCH,&#13;
7"X6", COLORFUL,&#13;
WASHABLE, WITH&#13;
SPACE FOR WRITING&#13;
IN YOUR SPECIALTY.&#13;
T'h;, (Ine YO\I"O ..-0" It&#13;
cIo'''9 .... IUOWElSf.&#13;
CAN TOTE.So ~Id&#13;
yc* J"., tot. 0 rKOrd&#13;
ftlolmM,of Iud&#13;
CO",, bolOftCed otop 01'-&#13;
O~f, Wlfhovt Ilfti~p.&#13;
for a dtstonce of 25 (Nt&#13;
and eo,,, 0 dandy&#13;
hctw.... , Wo,1d&#13;
ChoMpio. paoch.&#13;
.Ko,d to beot&#13;
••• IV ... '-"'I&#13;
Breathe easy, Earthlings. Budweiser is&#13;
doing something about the current ahortage&#13;
of world champions in the world&#13;
Budweiser is sanctioning 6\'e fnoli h&#13;
events in which world-record setters&#13;
can win prestige plus a handsome&#13;
patch.&#13;
In addition to the thrilling BUD,&#13;
CAN TOTE, there are four others&#13;
Get details at your favorite beer&#13;
store where you see the gaudy "Budweiser&#13;
World Championship" display!&#13;
Do one, beat the record, teU u.s about it on&#13;
a postcard and get your marker pen ready&#13;
for inscribing your particular specially beneath&#13;
where it says "World Champion"&#13;
(Maybe you',.. delecled .hcrt&#13;
this " nOf on offtCiot. rigld~ruI.1&#13;
··cont•••. " But It i,0 Jot of "'n.&#13;
e"'en if you con', break th_&#13;
rKords. You con, 'hOUVh,&#13;
can', you?)&#13;
TO on YOUlt BUDWElSEIl&#13;
WOlllD CHAItlPION PATCH&#13;
(EVEN IF YOU DON'T sa A&#13;
IlICOttD), JUST W1tm YOU.&#13;
NAME, ADDIlISS AND WHAT&#13;
YOU DID ON A P05TCAilD.&#13;
SIND&#13;
IT TO&#13;
NO NOOf Of "'lw;HAII IfOUlt(O C1HU'1000 _lU ~. lID '1"&#13;
Al'lItiLUSU.IUSQl ,1IIe • ST. lO\lIS&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
TIME FADES AWAY&#13;
Neil Young C Reprise MS 21S1)&#13;
The firSt realiz~tion ~pon bein~ exposed t~ the opening song is that .. . live material. Neil Young 1s broadcasting a warning for J.unk. !hi 15 A " Th · k. d ' ies t •·Time Fades way. e Jun 1es on t care of course they . t th3 hi ti. ht b k th · ' ' JUS d groove tot s g , ouncy roe er at 1s a stone in itself H · 11an t t . t· . e 1s ,uig with a compe en crew c~ns1s mg of John Barbata (drums) t~ Drummond (bass?, Ben Keith (s_lide g~itar and vocal), Jack&#13;
che (piano) and himself (harmonica, guitar and vocals) :,iitz ' f l b ' · . The firSt of the t~~e so t, s ow · allads that are mcluded on this&#13;
• record appears as a Journey Thru The Past." This is Neil Young's&#13;
rsonal nostalgia trip, he claims he's "goin' back to Canada" where&#13;
: came from, after the tour, and he ''won't be back 'til February&#13;
comes." · h tl ·th "Y The pace picks up s or Y w1 onder Stands The Sinner " The&#13;
i"&gt;up rocks h.ard, Neil Young tries _to pus? it even harder, a·nd his&#13;
;oice gets a little hoarse, but not ~stract!!1gly so. "The sinner" is&#13;
pparently "the Great Pretender (Nixon?), whom Neil Young, while&#13;
rsonifying Jesus, says "He calls my name without a sound."&#13;
pe The band continues to :ock on impressively with "L A" which&#13;
features Neil as a dramatic p~ophet of ?OOm for the big city. "The&#13;
mountains erupt and the valley 1s sucked mto cracks in the earth." His&#13;
captivating voi~e ~?rk~ a,~toundingly well in the same manner as it&#13;
does in songs hke Ohio.&#13;
The remainder of side 1 is reserved for "Love In Mind." This is one&#13;
of his tender ballads that at times seems to move unbearably slow.&#13;
However, it is short and if one allows himself to focus into the sensitive&#13;
emotion that is the basic part of Neil Young's aura, he may find his&#13;
race being drowned in tears.&#13;
ide 2 is filled with only three songs, of which "Don't Be Denied" and&#13;
"The Bridge" consume the first half. The first is a slow, hard plodding&#13;
rocker with an infectious chorus sinking in with Neil's earnestsounding&#13;
voice. The second is the last of his quiet reflections on the&#13;
album.&#13;
The "Last Dance" departs as the highest volume number while also&#13;
occupying the entire second half of this side. Neil forces his voice loud&#13;
and almost chokes sometimes. Graham Nash and David Crosby have&#13;
joined the band for this last number. Most of the time is used with an&#13;
elaborate instrumental concentrating on the guitars while Jack Nitzehe&#13;
adds piano frills on the edges. The whole scene is symbolic of a&#13;
spinning hangover realization that "It's a Monday morning, Time to&#13;
go to work." Neil Young freaks out a series of "Oh Nos" for the&#13;
alcoholic junkies trapped in the life of 40-hours-a-week factory jobs.&#13;
TI !E FADES A WAY, in its completion, has unfolded a compelling&#13;
sitivity with a well-balanced set. The cover credits reveal that&#13;
lhese tunes were recorded at several different locations. If this&#13;
collection is representative of a single concert, then Neil Young and&#13;
crew merit silver awards in performance.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
"Dracula" lecturer&#13;
traces legend&#13;
b:&gt; Rodney Schroeter&#13;
Radu Florescu, co-author of In&#13;
arch or Dracula and history&#13;
professor at Boston University,&#13;
I lured last Friday evening on&#13;
Dracula, his place in history and&#13;
legend.&#13;
Florescu first became in·&#13;
ted in Dracula when he read&#13;
Bram Stoker's Dracula (which he&#13;
I hly recommends). He&#13;
1'COgnized the names of villages&#13;
trail which actually exist in&#13;
Romania .&#13;
":)or cu found manuscripts&#13;
ritten in ancient German,&#13;
lell'ng about "Dracula the im1&#13;
r." It told of how Vlad Tepes,&#13;
ni cknamed "Dracula,"&#13;
laughtered Turks by the&#13;
thousands in the 15th Century.&#13;
Th Turks were constantly in·&#13;
ding Dracula's country and,&#13;
~e or his many battles&#13;
against them, Dracula is con·&#13;
sidered a national hero by&#13;
Romanians, much as George&#13;
Washington is by Americans.&#13;
What Stoker did, says&#13;
Florescu, was to integr~te the&#13;
story of Vlad Tepes with the&#13;
vampire legend, for Stoker wa_s&#13;
indeed the first to ever credit&#13;
Dracula with vampirism. Most&#13;
Romanians today know of&#13;
Dracula and vampires, but do not&#13;
associate the two.&#13;
A very few copies of 1~ · ear~h&#13;
of Dracula are still available in&#13;
the bookstore. Florescu's new&#13;
book, Dracula: the Biography or&#13;
the Impaler, will be out around&#13;
Halloween. A more scholarl_y&#13;
approach by several authors is&#13;
the forthcoming, The Dracula&#13;
Debate. Radu Florescu will appear on&#13;
"The Tonight Show" on Oct. 31.&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
feature film series presents&#13;
BUTCH CASSIDY&#13;
AND THE&#13;
SUNDANCE KID&#13;
FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 8:00&#13;
SUNDAY, NOV. 4, 7:30&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING, ADMISSNJN 75c UW p &amp; W,s I O Requiried&#13;
IF YOU HAVE AN&#13;
UNUSUAL TALENT,&#13;
YOU HAVE WHAT IT&#13;
TAKES TO BEA&#13;
BUDWEISER WORLD&#13;
CHAMP,ION!&#13;
EARN THIS&#13;
TERRIFIC PATCH,&#13;
7"X6", COLORFUL,&#13;
WASHABLE, WITH&#13;
SPACE FOR WRITING&#13;
IN YOUR SPECIAL TY.&#13;
doing somelhin&#13;
age of world champio&#13;
Budweiser is&#13;
events in which&#13;
can win presti&#13;
patch.&#13;
In addition to th thrillin BUD&#13;
CAN TOTE, there nrc four othe .&#13;
Get detail a t your f v i r&#13;
store where you the ud "Budweiser&#13;
\\'orld Championship" d" play!&#13;
Do one, beat the record, tell us about it on&#13;
a po tcard and et ·our ma r r d •&#13;
for inscribing your particula r&#13;
neath where it y " 'orld harnpion."&#13;
TO GET YOUR BUDWEISER&#13;
WORLD CHAMPION PATCH&#13;
(EVEN IF YOU DON'T SET A&#13;
RECORD), JUST WRIT£ YOUR&#13;
NAME, ADDRESS AND WHAT&#13;
YOU DID ON A POSTCARD.&#13;
HO nc&gt;Of 0# ,u.l(k.Uf lt-QiW tlD Offt 't VOID tt P'I~ to • " .t.'11 l OW&#13;
4 (USU-I .sCI&lt; C • S!&#13;
.... -., . .. ..&#13;
Dl &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesclay. Oct. 31. 1973&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
"Omfft' ('ro5 CounU')"&#13;
Park Ide freshman. Kim Piper. came home from a very successful&#13;
w end I t week. Saturday, she competed in a two-mile race at&#13;
La rcsse.which he wen with a time of 11 51&#13;
In the V.ISCOOSUl Stale Champlonslup meet Sunday. Piper won&#13;
again makq hertheAAU Women's tate Champion. She brokelhe&#13;
old 2'. mil CO""" record with a ume ct rs: 19&#13;
or&#13;
Park Ide CO!' Team uffered through a disappoinling weekend&#13;
Jut week. losi", two games&#13;
~ t....1 gam against Marquette. Parkside lost 4-1.&#13;
In the seccee game Saturday, Oct 27. Parkside booters came back&#13;
WIthanother disappointing defeat,this lime at the bands of UW-Green&#13;
Bay The ...., w... 7~&#13;
~ cor leam's neJd game will be tee UW·.! Tournamenl 00&#13;
IUrday, ·ov.3.&#13;
.&#13;
'--RANGER&#13;
sports _-,&#13;
Soccer team to&#13;
face Lewis College&#13;
b. '~.I.utnu&#13;
The Parkslde soccer tearn&#13;
m L...... College Friday al&#13;
11 30 m a series of games at a&#13;
'v.;. hlwaukee Tournament&#13;
Park Ide played LewlSCollege in&#13;
th .. flrsl game of the season and&#13;
w~ d fealed~.&#13;
Henderson dl..,ussed the&#13;
rectlrd of Lewl f&gt;olIege. "ThIs&#13;
year ~"l College is ranked as&#13;
the 7th best learn in the !id'Oesl&#13;
They hav·e the ond and Uurd&#13;
highest scorers 01 the !idweslon&#13;
the .. leam, includlng Gil Armendarez&#13;
With 17goals and John&#13;
Dolinski ... ,th t3 They are also&#13;
the number one learn in District&#13;
20."&#13;
Other leams included in the&#13;
UlA'- hlwaukee TOW11ameol v.ill&#13;
be W-Plalteville and UWMilwaukee.&#13;
The Rangers will&#13;
start the tournament by playing&#13;
Lewis College at 11:30 Friday. Al&#13;
2:00 Fnday. UW-Platteville plays&#13;
lilwaukee. Platteville's record&#13;
is 2·5. as com pared wi th&#13;
Milwaukee's 4-4 record. The&#13;
losers or both games Friday play&#13;
11:30 Salurday, followed by the&#13;
wumers at 2:00.&#13;
When commenting on last&#13;
year's game with Lewis CoUege,&#13;
Coach Henderson said, "They&#13;
were ready and we weren'l." He&#13;
also said "We gave them easy&#13;
goals that we woo't give them&#13;
next time.'"&#13;
b&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
National Cross Country&#13;
to run here on Saturday&#13;
byDanMarry&#13;
•did-America's finest runners&#13;
will compete in the combined 1973&#13;
Women's National Cross Country&#13;
Meet, and tne Men's MidAmerica&#13;
Cross Country Championships,&#13;
here at Parkside this&#13;
Saturday. Starling time for the&#13;
meet will be 10 a.m. for the&#13;
women's competition, and 12:30&#13;
for the men.&#13;
The unique factor of this meet&#13;
is that contestants don't have to&#13;
be on a team to participate. In&#13;
fact, most of the runners aren't&#13;
00 teams .&#13;
II is estimated that between 500&#13;
and 600 runners will participate&#13;
in this year's event, according to&#13;
coordinator of the meet, Vic&#13;
Godfrey. Looking at the women's&#13;
learns, favorites will have to be&#13;
UW.Madison, UW-LaCrosse,&#13;
Iowa State and Texas A&amp;M.&#13;
Looking at the women on the&#13;
teams, Kim Piper, a freshman at&#13;
parkside, who incidentally holds&#13;
the high school record nationally,&#13;
will have a good shot at first&#13;
place, along with other standou~&#13;
including Peg Neppee and Robm&#13;
Evans from Iowa State, Toni S1.&#13;
Pierre from Minnesota, and&#13;
Australian.born Adrienne Beams&#13;
from Texas A&amp;M, who consequently&#13;
held 12 world records&#13;
for her efforts.&#13;
The Men's Mid-America&#13;
Championships also has a&#13;
number of favorites. The&#13;
University of Chicago Track&#13;
Club, which includes Rick&#13;
Whulatter, the 1972 Olympic&#13;
runner who won the half-mile&#13;
event, has an excellent chance,&#13;
along with Notre Dame and&#13;
Parkside music facuJty members August Wegner&#13;
and Robert Thomason, both assistant professors,&#13;
have drawn up a fight song for the University. The&#13;
song is still awaiting the Chancellor's approval to&#13;
make it all official, but Wegner said that everyone&#13;
he's Ullked to about it has said, "Yup, tbat looks like&#13;
a fight song." These are the words:&#13;
Parkside Range ... hats off to thee,&#13;
Brave and strong, united are we,&#13;
Heads held high with spirit and pride,&#13;
Never daunted, ever onward,&#13;
Green and white will show us the way,&#13;
Banners Dying triumph tnday,&#13;
So fight and fight to shew your might,&#13;
And lead us to victory. RAH RAH RAH RY-!&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Steale Dlnnen&#13;
'1" to '3" • Round trip jet&#13;
• 1 nights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in ZW'ich&#13;
• 2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sig~tseeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz.&#13;
• Tour eSCort&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
• LLC D-197 Can: 553-2294&#13;
~~~KH«J~AY&#13;
APIIIL 12·21, 1S'14&#13;
10 days· 8 nights&#13;
$8 pI", "" 'ax&#13;
&amp; service based on .&#13;
'2 to a room&#13;
includes:&#13;
, R'&#13;
\ I t&#13;
BONINza&#13;
smtQIRPIT~&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St.&#13;
Phone 652.8662&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Individually, Park id&#13;
"powe h .. L SI e. rouse, ucian Rosa&#13;
the defending champion ,~&#13;
could come back with an. and&#13;
replay of last year. II1llla..&#13;
Other learns who will co&#13;
include Lewis Univ mPete&#13;
M t&#13;
. erSlty arque te Umversity Uw '&#13;
Kegonsa Track Club of Mad... ,&#13;
and the Milwaukee Track ~&#13;
There also will he two&#13;
brackets in men's cornpeti~&#13;
The Veterans &amp; Maslers lioo&#13;
petition will include J.mile .....&#13;
for 30 and over, and 4Q..andr:-&#13;
runners. Favorites in er&#13;
category include defenJi'"&#13;
champ Chuck Bradley, a I..':&#13;
at Bradford High, in the 3Gover&#13;
bracket, and Hal HigdonlQd.&#13;
the 4O-and-over brackeL III&#13;
The~e is no admission eharwt&#13;
~or this m~t, so if an)'Onra&#13;
mterest,e? In seeing some fiDt&#13;
competition, you're more tbII&#13;
welcome. Anyone who mightbe&#13;
IOterested m running in the&#13;
should contact Vic Godfrey.1lIOeI&#13;
I&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
eekend sports NatiQnal Cross Country&#13;
to run here on Saturday&#13;
m&#13;
RA&#13;
m born from a \ ery uccessful&#13;
com ed in a two-nule race at&#13;
11 :51.&#13;
II be the&#13;
unday, Piper won&#13;
mpi . b e th&#13;
· ppointing ee end&#13;
'-Green&#13;
- I T mament on&#13;
GER&#13;
b) Dan ~larry&#13;
ti&lt;I-America's finest runners&#13;
v.i ll compete in the combined 1973&#13;
Women's , ·ational Cro.ss Country&#13;
feet, and the .fen's MidAmerica&#13;
Cross Country Championship&#13;
. here at Parkside this&#13;
Saturda:y Starting time for the&#13;
meet ill be 10 a.m. for the&#13;
·omen's competition, and 12:30&#13;
for the men.&#13;
The unique factor of this meet&#13;
i that contestants don't have to&#13;
be on a team to participate. In&#13;
fact, most of the runners aren't&#13;
on teams.&#13;
Iowa State and Texas A&amp;M.&#13;
Looking at the women on the&#13;
teams, Kim Piper, a freshman at&#13;
Parkside, who incidentally holds&#13;
the high school record nationally,&#13;
will have a good shot at first&#13;
place, along with other standouts&#13;
including Peg Neppee and Robin&#13;
Evans from Iowa State, Toni St.&#13;
Pierre from Minnesota, and&#13;
Australian-born Adrienne Beams&#13;
from Texas A&amp;M, who consequently&#13;
held 12 world records&#13;
for her efforts.&#13;
The Men's Mid-America&#13;
,__ __________ Sports ___&#13;
It is estimated that between 500&#13;
and 600 runners will participate&#13;
in thi year' event, according to&#13;
coordinator of the meet, Vic&#13;
Godfr y. Looking at the women's&#13;
team ·, favorites will have to be&#13;
UW-, 1adi on, UW-LaCrosse,&#13;
Championships also has a&#13;
number of favorites. The&#13;
University of Chicago Track&#13;
Club, which includes Rick&#13;
Whulatter, the 1972 Olympic&#13;
runner who won the half-mile&#13;
event, has an excellent chance,&#13;
along with Notre Dame and&#13;
Socc r team to&#13;
face ewis College&#13;
n commenting on la t&#13;
year' game v.i th Lev.i College,&#13;
Coach Hend said, "They&#13;
;-ere ready and we ·eren't.'' He&#13;
also _aid " We gave them easy&#13;
oa _ that 11, w 't give them&#13;
next time.''&#13;
Parkside music faculty members August Wegner&#13;
and Robert Thomason, both assistant professors,&#13;
have drawn up a fight song for the University. The&#13;
song is till awaiting the Chancellor's approval to&#13;
make it all official, but Wegner said that everyone&#13;
he' talked to about it has said, "Yup, that looks like&#13;
a fight song. " These are the words:&#13;
Parkside Rangers hats off to thee,&#13;
Brave and strong, united are we,&#13;
Heads held high with spirit and pride,&#13;
, 'ever daunted, ever onward,&#13;
Green and white will show us the way,&#13;
Banners flying triwnph today,&#13;
So fight and fight to shew your might,&#13;
And lead us to victory. RAH RAH RAH RY- !&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M mber Parkside 200&#13;
'atiooal a rsity Chili&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
~~~K ~Ut&gt;AY&#13;
APlllL 12-21, 19'7(&#13;
10 days - 8 nights&#13;
$499 plus S20 tax&#13;
&amp; service based on · 2 to a room includes:&#13;
Steak Dinners&#13;
•1 79 to '3" • Round trip jet&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St&#13;
Phone 652-8662 . ·&#13;
"WHERE 1'HE COWBOYS FAT/'&#13;
• 7 nights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
• 2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sightseeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz. • Tour escort&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVELCENTER&#13;
a LLC D-197 </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64356">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 9, October 31, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64357">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64358">
              <text>1973-10-31</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64361">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64362">
              <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="64363">
              <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="64364">
              <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="64365">
              <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="64366">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="670">
      <name>alan shucard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="421">
      <name>board of regents</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="648">
      <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="672">
      <name>jazz ensemble</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="669">
      <name>mission statement</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="668">
      <name>wisconsin education association council</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
