<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2665" 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/2665?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T20:40:30+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4812">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/549d60d98e1497bac635225f51babe9d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>63197460aa28d0f9f68dfe429af30ccc</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="64395">
            <text>Volume 2, issue 12</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="64396">
            <text>Forty-five people react to mission</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="64403">
            <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="91004">
            <text>Regents' hearing&#13;
Forty-five people react&#13;
to mission&#13;
Student John DeLao spoke for the Vets' Club at&#13;
the Regents' hearing last Friday.&#13;
Folk Festival here&#13;
to be informal&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Forty five people, including students, politicians,&#13;
business, industry and labor leaders, gave their&#13;
reactions to Parkside's proposed mission at the&#13;
Regents' hearing last Friday. Approximately 160&#13;
persons listened on as the Regents heard varying&#13;
reactions to the proposed mission. For the most&#13;
part, speakers agreed with Chancellor Wyllie who&#13;
opened the hearing statements and said, "I strongly&#13;
recommend Regent adoption of the Select Mission&#13;
statement proposed for UW-Parkside. What we&#13;
need beyond that, in order to maintain momentum&#13;
in our mission development, are follow-up approvals&#13;
of new mission-related academic&#13;
programs, and approval of our request for a School&#13;
of Modern Industry building."&#13;
Wyllie also reminded the Regents that it was his&#13;
judgement in 1966 and "is my judgement today, that&#13;
this university cannot meet its service obligations to&#13;
the people of southeastern Wisconsin if it&#13;
(Parkside) lands programmatically at either extreme&#13;
(liberal arts-modern industry). Students will&#13;
continue to need strong educational preparation in&#13;
the arts and sciences," Wyllie said.&#13;
Business, industry and labor leaders agreed with&#13;
the chancellor, and as William Gardner,&#13;
representing the Kenosha Manufacturers'&#13;
Association said, "there are 400 manufacturing&#13;
firms in the area with 48,000 employees and a&#13;
payroll of 600 million dollars. In an era and an area&#13;
where better educated manpower is needed we&#13;
support complete fulfillment of the mission&#13;
statement and encourage expansion. Parkside&#13;
should provide people to fill supervising and&#13;
managerial positions as well as the demand for&#13;
cultural and social knowledge in a complex modern&#13;
industrial society," Gardner said.&#13;
Georgfe Maddox of American Motors Corporation&#13;
told the Regents that AMC had to recruit its&#13;
engineers from other states, specifically Michigan&#13;
and the East, and this notion was reiterated by&#13;
many area leaders in asking the Regent's approval&#13;
for graduate programs within the School of Modern&#13;
Industry as well as a building to house the School.&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
"The performers will be&#13;
scheduled to show up at a certain&#13;
time, but they can play for as&#13;
long as the audience wants."&#13;
Gary Petersen, coffeehouse&#13;
coordinator, emphasized that&#13;
Parkside's second annual Folk&#13;
Festival will be'as informal as&#13;
possible.&#13;
The Folk Festival will begin at&#13;
1 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 25, in the&#13;
Student Activities Building and&#13;
will run until "the performers fall&#13;
off the stage," said Petersen. No&#13;
other event is scheduled for that&#13;
evening.&#13;
Some of the featured performers&#13;
will be Brian Kipp, Tony&#13;
&amp; Jumbo, Dave Rogers, and Lynn&#13;
&amp; Sue. Other students and local&#13;
people will also perform, and&#13;
anyone is welcome to come in and&#13;
sing or play. Performers will not&#13;
be paid in cash but will receive&#13;
"liquid libations," according to&#13;
John Graham, who is assisting in&#13;
coordinating the event.&#13;
Game tables will be closed,&#13;
televisions will be unplugged, and&#13;
the bar will be open. The event is&#13;
being sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
Student reactions&#13;
to planning sought&#13;
Student reactions to academic&#13;
planning goals are being sought&#13;
by the Ten Year Academic&#13;
Planning Committee. The&#13;
committee has drawn up a&#13;
preliminary draft of planning&#13;
principles and a first and second&#13;
"Five Year Plan," ranking&#13;
proposed new majors in order of&#13;
priority.&#13;
The goals outlined include&#13;
establishment of a reward&#13;
system for faculty which gives&#13;
special recognition to teaching&#13;
excellence, institution of a&#13;
Community Advisory Board,&#13;
implementation of three new&#13;
undergraduate and two graduate&#13;
majors in the next five years and&#13;
three additional undergraduate&#13;
majors by 1983, and equality of&#13;
educational and employment&#13;
opportunities for women and&#13;
minority persons through Affirmative&#13;
Action.&#13;
The academic plan for the first&#13;
five years lists the following&#13;
proposed majors in order of&#13;
p r i o r i t y : En g i n e e r i n g&#13;
Technology; Computing and&#13;
Manageme n t I n f o r m a t i o n&#13;
Systems; Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene; Business&#13;
Manageme n t ( G r a d u a t e ) ;&#13;
En e r g y Ma n a g eme n t ;&#13;
Futuristics, Technology and&#13;
Teacher Education; Engineering&#13;
Systems Design (Graduate);&#13;
Anthropology; Human Resource&#13;
Development; Developmental&#13;
Change; Industrial Relations;&#13;
Manufacturing Engineering; and&#13;
Visual Communications.&#13;
For the second five years the&#13;
proposals are: Accounting;&#13;
P e r s o n n e l Ma n a geme n t ;&#13;
Production Systems; Marketing;&#13;
F i n a n c e ; Sma l l - B u s i n e s s&#13;
Management; Organizational&#13;
Behavior; Systems Analysis;&#13;
Qu a n t i t a t i v e Bu s i n e s s&#13;
Te c h n i q u e s ; Ge n e r a l&#13;
Management; Governmental&#13;
Administration; Religious&#13;
Studies; and Nursing.&#13;
Students may pick up copies of&#13;
the document at the Information&#13;
Center in Main Place. They are&#13;
asked to send their written&#13;
reactions to the office of the Vice&#13;
Chancellor in LLC (intercampus&#13;
mail may be left at the Information&#13;
Center). Once&#13;
responses are in, the committee&#13;
will meet to consider them in&#13;
preparation for writing the&#13;
finished draft, which is to be&#13;
presented to the Chancellor Dec.&#13;
3.&#13;
Members of the committee,&#13;
which has been meeting since&#13;
last April, include students&#13;
Diane Becker (from the College&#13;
of Science and Society) and&#13;
Arnold Pascale (from the School&#13;
of Modern Industry), faculty&#13;
members Orpheus Johnson&#13;
(Humanities), Leroy Cougle&#13;
(Management Science), George&#13;
P e r d i k a r i s ( E n g i n e e r i n g&#13;
Science), Paul Kleine&#13;
(Education), William Murin&#13;
(Social Science), and Morris&#13;
Firebaugh (Science). Deans&#13;
William Moy (School of Modern&#13;
Industry) and Eugene Norwood&#13;
(College of Science and Society)&#13;
are also on the committee, which&#13;
is chaired by Vice Chancellor&#13;
Bauer. Non-voting members&#13;
include Jewel Echelbarger of&#13;
Student Services, John Zarling&#13;
(Special Assistant to the Vice&#13;
Chancellor), Gary Goetz who is&#13;
Director of Budget Planning, and&#13;
Dave Vogt of Facilities&#13;
Management.&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 21, 1973 Vol. II No. 12&#13;
UW-P administrators attend&#13;
Spanglish workshop held&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
A workshop dealing with intercommunity&#13;
relations and Spanish&#13;
culture alienation in the Racine&#13;
area was w»i? attended by&#13;
various Parkside administrators&#13;
and decision-makers last Wednesday&#13;
evening at the Racine&#13;
YWCA.&#13;
Present at the meeting were&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Otto Bauer;&#13;
A s s i s t a n t - C h a n c e l l o r A l l e n&#13;
Dearborn; Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students Jewel Echelbarger;&#13;
Beechum Robinson, Director of&#13;
the Learning Center; Richard&#13;
Cummings of the Personnel office;&#13;
Wayne Ramirez of the&#13;
counseling staff; Rita Tallent,&#13;
Affirmative Action Officer; and&#13;
various faculty and students.&#13;
The purpose of the workshop,&#13;
said Gladys Benavides .Corbit of&#13;
the Center for Community&#13;
Leadership Development in&#13;
Madison, was to "gather community&#13;
educators and decisionmakers&#13;
and allow them to decide&#13;
for themselves what the issues&#13;
are, identifying for themselves&#13;
the problems of the Latino&#13;
community and to decide then on&#13;
on-going action." Corbit added&#13;
that the workshop instigators&#13;
were "not here as experts to tell&#13;
you what is right or what is wrong&#13;
with your community."&#13;
Anita Herrera, Director of the&#13;
Career Opportunity Programs&#13;
for the Racine Unified School&#13;
District, said that the only&#13;
program now held in bilingual&#13;
education is the head-start&#13;
program.&#13;
Educational Interest Ceases&#13;
The group's general consensus&#13;
was that by the time the Chicano&#13;
child reached the junior high&#13;
level of schooling, interest in&#13;
education had ceased. Motivation&#13;
for learning was lost and often&#13;
times failing grades followed,&#13;
with students dropping out of&#13;
school before graduating. "The&#13;
Spanish-speaking child needs&#13;
help," explained workshop&#13;
participants. "They have been&#13;
ignored all these years by the&#13;
Unified School District. They&#13;
arrive here and receive no help&#13;
with language and they will never&#13;
make it. Tutoring on a voluntary&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Assistant Chancellor, listens attentively&#13;
at the Spanglish workshop.&#13;
basis is not enough." (There are&#13;
10,000 Spanish-speaking people in&#13;
the city of Racine and 3,000 in&#13;
Kenosha).&#13;
Unified School District Administrator&#13;
Leland Johnson&#13;
explained that the ages of&#13;
Spanish-speaking children and&#13;
the schools they attended in the&#13;
system were so diversified that it&#13;
would be difficult to set up&#13;
bilingual classes. In trying to get&#13;
a handle on some of the&#13;
problems, Johnson said, "the&#13;
problem in regards to learning&#13;
that these children have is not&#13;
with language but with the&#13;
cultural environment." Bill&#13;
Folan, Parkside assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology,&#13;
remarked that one cannot&#13;
seperate language from culture.&#13;
Richard Teschner, instructor of&#13;
Spanish here, said that although&#13;
the Unified School District may&#13;
have a lot of children with&#13;
Spanish surnames the School&#13;
District is not aware of how many&#13;
are bilingual. Often, Teschner&#13;
said, "they want to misuse or&#13;
pretend they don't speak it and&#13;
become passive bilinguals."&#13;
Self-imposed Segregation&#13;
Many participants agreed with&#13;
Teschner's viewpoint, saying&#13;
that the Spanish speaking child&#13;
suffers from a "self-imposed&#13;
segregation." This is a result of&#13;
discrimination both subtle and&#13;
overt.&#13;
Reverand Carlos Puig commented&#13;
that "if you can get the&#13;
Anglo to stop being afraid of&#13;
foreign - you can start to build a&#13;
relationship. But, it has to start in&#13;
the first grade before they start&#13;
to segregate." He added that the&#13;
learning motivation is often not&#13;
there because "they come from&#13;
homes with a lower education&#13;
standard. Motivation is not there&#13;
because they do not know how."&#13;
Ramirez explained that it is not&#13;
difficult for the Spanish-speaking&#13;
to pick up English but often times&#13;
it cannot be read or comprehended.&#13;
After breaking into smaller&#13;
groups participants discussed the&#13;
internal hassles at Racine's&#13;
Spanish Center, pride in heritage,&#13;
need for motivation, action which&#13;
could be taken by the Unified&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday/ Nov. 21, 1973&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
^ Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Administrators&#13;
exhibit&#13;
community&#13;
concern&#13;
RANGER wishes to commend those administrative&#13;
staff members who were concerned enough about the&#13;
community in which Parkside is located to participate&#13;
in the Spanglish workshop in Racine last week.&#13;
More than merely participating in the workshop, it is&#13;
evident that the university is capable of offering community&#13;
service and exhibiting genuine human interest&#13;
in this area.&#13;
Perhaps even more commendable is the administration's&#13;
apparent support of its exceptional&#13;
counselor, Wayne Ramirez, who has an unceasing&#13;
determination to right the wrongs of a racist society.&#13;
As RANGER has stated before, in a modern industrial&#13;
society, a modern industrial university has no greater&#13;
service to render than interaction on a human level -&#13;
where administrations may courageously listen,&#13;
communicate and act -- not for money, recognition or&#13;
self-preservation, but instead in a moving and honest&#13;
desire to help make life a little nicer for us all.&#13;
RANGER calls on the Education Division to work in&#13;
coordination with Ramirez on developing a plan for&#13;
bilingual education certification. If such a plan were to&#13;
be implemented we could not only save terminated&#13;
faculty members in the Spanish discipline but could&#13;
provide the community with desperately needed and&#13;
well-trained bilingual graduates.&#13;
Such a program would truly be living up to the&#13;
university's mission in a liberal arts manner. More than&#13;
this, however, it would demonstrate the university's&#13;
initiative to tackle some of society's most complex&#13;
problems, namely peaceful human interaction, in the&#13;
want for a better world.&#13;
It is a fact that students do not have enough impact on the operation&#13;
of this University. It is also a fact that there are times when students&#13;
are offered a chance to provide input in some matter but they fail to&#13;
respond. Such an opportunity exists right now and it i s very important&#13;
that we take advantage of it.&#13;
The occasion is the report of the Ten Year Academic Planning&#13;
Committee (see page one). The importance lies in the direct impact&#13;
these proposals will have on academic programming, university&#13;
governance and community relations. It is incumbent upon all of us,&#13;
even those about to graduate, to look at this draft and react. Even if we&#13;
favor it (and I personally feel it is an excellent document in many&#13;
respects) we should respond, for it still has to be approved at higher&#13;
levels when the committee makes its final recommendations.&#13;
The plan, once adopted, will guide Parkside through the next ten&#13;
years and some effects could be felt as early as next fall. But even&#13;
seniors should be encouraged to respond, for not only have they the&#13;
insight that accrues from spending a number of years here, but many&#13;
of them may find themselves back here at some future time for&#13;
graduate courses or to complete another major or out of some other&#13;
interest. And certainly freshmen, sophomores and juniors, who will&#13;
potentially be affected before they graduate, should see the necessity&#13;
of speaking out for themselves and their futures.&#13;
Copies of the document^jnay be picked up at the Information Center&#13;
and responses are requeued by Monday (Nov. 26).&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confined&#13;
to 300 w ords or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like very much to thank&#13;
the kind young man in the new&#13;
black Gremlin who helped me&#13;
start my car on a very rainy&#13;
Wednesday, November 14.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
Joseph Neville&#13;
Assistant Professor, History&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have an idea for celebrating&#13;
the Mideast cease-fire. We should&#13;
let the president, our senators&#13;
and congress know how we feel&#13;
about the war. Here is my plan&#13;
for a celebration involving many&#13;
different people from all walks of&#13;
life.&#13;
The day of celebration will&#13;
hereby be dedicated to Shalom&#13;
With Honor. To start off the&#13;
festivities we can hire Glen&#13;
Campbell to sing his famous hit&#13;
"Gentile on My Mind" from the&#13;
back of a U.N. jeep. Bumper&#13;
stickers saying; "P.O.W.-M.I.A.&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Attention! ... All you environmentalists&#13;
and ecologists.&#13;
As you know the Alaskan Pipeline&#13;
Bill has been passed. I have some&#13;
inside information in which you&#13;
might be interested. It comes&#13;
from my niece who has a friend&#13;
who works in the mimeograph&#13;
room in the Department of Interior&#13;
in Washington, D.C.&#13;
This usually reliable source&#13;
calls our attention to some of the&#13;
fine print in the Pipeline Bill. It&#13;
directs the President to "impose&#13;
by Executive Order any fuelsaving&#13;
methods which are&#13;
deemed necessary." (This is a&#13;
usual proceedure of Congress - to&#13;
delegate responsibility to the&#13;
President... and six months later&#13;
complain about the President&#13;
exercising too much authority.)&#13;
Anyhow, according to our informant,&#13;
a directive is being&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Disturbing symptoms that sent&#13;
me to the hospital on October 29&#13;
suddenly worsened about an hour&#13;
before my 11:30 a. m. class. My&#13;
mental and physical energies&#13;
were ebbing rapidly. To the aid I&#13;
immediately sought, these&#13;
persons at Parkside responded in&#13;
ways for which I shall always be&#13;
grateful. The telephone operator&#13;
quickly connected me with the&#13;
nurse, whose number I was too&#13;
confused to locate. Darlene May&#13;
of the Humanities Office instantly&#13;
comprehended and&#13;
followed through on my&#13;
minimally worded instructions to&#13;
cancel classes. From the Information&#13;
Kiosk a student worker&#13;
piloted me to the nurse's new&#13;
quarters (following the hallway&#13;
labyrinth alone would have taxed&#13;
me painfully.) Mrs. Edith&#13;
Isenberg immediately saw my&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In an action I find incomprehensible&#13;
Commencement&#13;
day for graduating seniors has&#13;
been moved up from January 6 to&#13;
December 16. De cember 16th is&#13;
the Sunday before final exam&#13;
week!&#13;
I, for one, will be given an&#13;
English take-home exam on&#13;
Friday the 14th which is due&#13;
Monday the 17th. Anyone who has&#13;
had this type of. exam before&#13;
realizes that it isn't something&#13;
you can whip together on a&#13;
Friday night! And there's other&#13;
exams following.&#13;
The sensible thing to do would&#13;
be to skip all the ceremonies&#13;
attached with graduation and,&#13;
instead, stay home and study.&#13;
How many people will have to do&#13;
just that and give up a very big&#13;
day!?!&#13;
I hope that there is a very good&#13;
reason for choosing the 16th for&#13;
commencement day. I feel that&#13;
an explanation is due.&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
Only Cairo Knows" will be sold to&#13;
raise funds to pay back the&#13;
Pentagon for their 2.2 billion&#13;
dollar military aid which made&#13;
Shalom with Honor a reality.&#13;
Refreshments to be served&#13;
throughout the day include&#13;
Victory bagels and Camel&#13;
cigarettes made from camels.&#13;
We will have the show on a big&#13;
stage. Lumber and empty oil&#13;
drums can be donated by Saudi&#13;
Arabia and microphones and&#13;
taping equipment which don't&#13;
exist will come from the United&#13;
States. Later the Israeli Air&#13;
Force can hold a 21 bomb salute,&#13;
prepared to the effect that&#13;
"Inasmuch as the building of the&#13;
Pipeline has been delayed over&#13;
three years by over-zealous&#13;
contributions of free advice, by&#13;
demands for time-consuming&#13;
environmental impact studies&#13;
and similar delaying actions&#13;
(including the signing of petitions&#13;
and-or writing letters provoking&#13;
the fore-mentioned delays) any&#13;
such contributors to the country's&#13;
present Energy Crisis are NOT to&#13;
receive any gasoline or heating&#13;
oil once the rationing of such&#13;
c ommo d i t i e s b e c o m e s&#13;
necessary." However, "In lieu of&#13;
the gas and oil and as an expression&#13;
of the government's&#13;
appreciation for their concern for&#13;
the environment, each such&#13;
person will receive a slice of&#13;
frozen tundra suitable for&#13;
framing.&#13;
The same general rules are&#13;
need for hospitalization and&#13;
alerted the Cardiac Unit at St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital. Security&#13;
officer, William Carter, quickly&#13;
appeared and with another officer&#13;
carried me on a stretcher&#13;
under oxygen to the Parkside&#13;
ambulance. At the hospital,&#13;
cardiac specialists met the&#13;
ambulance and within moments I&#13;
was under treatment in the intensive&#13;
care section.&#13;
From the very first every&#13;
person at Parkside whose help I&#13;
required performed resourcefully,&#13;
professionally and&#13;
humanely. Undoubtedly my&#13;
successful recovery owes much&#13;
to these individual acts of&#13;
assistance and overall efficiency&#13;
with which the emergency was&#13;
handled.&#13;
Emmett G.Bedford&#13;
Assistant Professor of English&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I was nauseated at the fact that&#13;
$88.00 will be taken out of my&#13;
tuition to support various&#13;
"segregated fee" programs. I&#13;
believe the days of "in loco&#13;
parentis" are past. It is time for&#13;
Parkside to end its economic "in&#13;
loco parentis," which exists in&#13;
the form of mandatory student&#13;
activity fees.&#13;
Students are mature enough to&#13;
spend their own money. Activities&#13;
which cannot support&#13;
themselves through voluntary&#13;
fees or in the open market do not&#13;
deserve to exist at the expense of&#13;
freedom of choice and apparently&#13;
do not contribute enough to the&#13;
university to warrant continued&#13;
subsidy.&#13;
Students who do not want to&#13;
participate in or attend the&#13;
various "segregated fee"&#13;
programs should be able to spend&#13;
their money the way they choose,&#13;
rather than as the administration,&#13;
CCC and SAB&#13;
dictate.&#13;
Kenneth Polzin, Jr.&#13;
Salem&#13;
to be done over the Aswan High&#13;
Dam and Russian Embassy. In&#13;
the evening the audience will be&#13;
treated to a comedy movie: Bob&#13;
Hope and Golda Meir starring in&#13;
Road to Damascus. The film will&#13;
be shown aboard a Lybian&#13;
airliner. And as the Shalom With&#13;
Honor celebration comes to a&#13;
close, our miracle worker Henry&#13;
Kissinger is going to do a spectacular&#13;
water-walk across the&#13;
Sea of Galilee, facing Mecca.&#13;
Now why shouldn't we enjoy&#13;
ourselves? Vietnam was good for&#13;
a few riots wasn't it?&#13;
David Myer&#13;
senior&#13;
being set up for those who have&#13;
been instrumental in causing&#13;
delays in the building of badly&#13;
needed oil refineries and electric&#13;
power plants. And if the time&#13;
comes when electric power must&#13;
be curtailed the plans call for&#13;
shutting off all electric power to&#13;
Paris Township in Kenosha&#13;
County. But instead of getting the&#13;
Frozen Tundra Award the&#13;
Parisians and their collaborators&#13;
will be issued candles made of&#13;
recycled whale blubber.&#13;
I know that if the President&#13;
finds it necessary to implement&#13;
these plans that it will change the&#13;
lifestyle of quite a few of my&#13;
friends at Parkside. And I also&#13;
know that when it happens those&#13;
members of The Committee of&#13;
Lynch the President will come&#13;
charging out with rope in hand.&#13;
Nevertheless, I thought it might&#13;
be helpful if Itip ped you off as to&#13;
what the future has in store for&#13;
you. Good luck!&#13;
ARTHUR M. GRUHL&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
The P*l&lt;side&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
EDITOR -IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: DAvid&#13;
Daniels&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Stephen Giftord,&#13;
Barbara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Jensen, Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert,&#13;
John Sorenson, Steve Stapanian, Carrie&#13;
Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Brian Ross, Jim&#13;
Ruffolo&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Amy Cundari, Gary Huck,&#13;
Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT: Terri Gelenian, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence,&#13;
Jim Magruder, Amy Cundari&#13;
Regents1 hearing&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
a few people, including Manny Brown, a Racine&#13;
attorney and former assemblyman, and Joseph&#13;
Noll, a Kenosha industrialist, complained that the&#13;
statement really made no sense without specifics.&#13;
wnnfniS1?'^1 beljeve this is a l0°p h«le. I do not&#13;
want platitudes and general statements ol purpose.&#13;
We have to have it all spelled out in specifics or we'll&#13;
lose graduate programs." Noll told the Regents that&#13;
unless graduate programs were implemented the&#13;
Regents would be guilty of the immorality of&#13;
abandonment." He cautioned the Regents to "move&#13;
now and quickly before someone with more power&#13;
than the Board of Regents (i.e. the state legislature)&#13;
takes control."&#13;
Alan Shucard, associate professor of English&#13;
representing the faculty, said that the faculty&#13;
generally approve" of the statement; however, he&#13;
questioned clustering of campuses, saying that "a&#13;
maximum of options should be offered to all&#13;
campuses and a "graduate bureaucracy" on the&#13;
Milwaukee and Madison campuses limits the&#13;
others.&#13;
Jane Schliesman, a student representing the&#13;
Parkside RANGER, told the Regents that although&#13;
twenty-eight percent of the declared majors here&#13;
are in the School of Modern Industry one-hundred&#13;
per cent of our students as well as society itself need&#13;
the human knowledge central to liberal arts offerings."&#13;
Schliesman, referring to a clause in the&#13;
core mission which states a "first priority emphasis&#13;
on teaching excellence," questioned the Regents on&#13;
how this is to be accomplished and insured. She&#13;
went on to say that students "can best ascertain&#13;
teaching effectiveness."&#13;
Richard Byrd, representing the Racine and&#13;
Spanglish workshop&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
School District and Parkside,&#13;
integration vs. acceptance, and&#13;
the need to get those Spanish&#13;
speaking individuals who had&#13;
made it back into the communities&#13;
where they are needed.&#13;
Kenosha Teachers Associations, told the Regents&#13;
that there are "many facets to a community and&#13;
they are not all industrial." Byrd emphasized the&#13;
need for graduate programs in the College of&#13;
Science and Society as well as in the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
Dan Ramirez, a Parkside sophomore, asked the&#13;
Regents to approve a curriculum relevent to the&#13;
needs of the numerous minority students in the&#13;
university.&#13;
Nearly all speakers in recommending masters&#13;
programs in both the College and the School argued&#13;
that attending graduate school at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
was not acceptable. Said one nursing student&#13;
"commuting is expensive, time-consuming, and&#13;
dangerous."&#13;
Both Regents and members of Central Administration&#13;
appeared interested and concerned as&#13;
individuals filed forward for three hours airing their&#13;
views on the mission statement. Parkside's hearing&#13;
was not as controversial as the one held at UWGreen&#13;
Bay, where students complained about undergraduate&#13;
programs which many said were not&#13;
specialized but a conglomerate. However, many&#13;
Parkside students including speaker Kay Sweeney&#13;
have this same complaint about Parkside's Communications&#13;
major. Green Bay students complained&#13;
that they were unable to find jobs upon&#13;
graduation, where Parkside students did not seem&#13;
to have such a problem.&#13;
Parkside's turn-out for the hearing was much&#13;
more impressive than the one held at LaCrosse on&#13;
Friday where three people turned up to speak on&#13;
LaCrosse's proposed mission.&#13;
Bilingual Education Proposal&#13;
Ramirez suggested that the&#13;
Parkside Education Department&#13;
develop a program in bilingual&#13;
education in which Parkside&#13;
students receive certification and&#13;
graduates are hired within the&#13;
Racine Unified School District.&#13;
Folan suggested that in this light,&#13;
perhaps the "community has to&#13;
accept bilingual as beautiful.&#13;
Millions of dollars are spent for&#13;
teaching the Anglos to speak&#13;
English but the Spanish are&#13;
punished for speaking Spanish."&#13;
Folan also suggested the Spanish&#13;
community "be conditioned that&#13;
bilingual is good and not bad as&#13;
they have been taught."&#13;
In as far as Parkside is capable&#13;
of problem solving, Dearborn&#13;
was very favorable to the&#13;
Ramirez approach, saying that it&#13;
is something that is realistic and&#13;
could be taken up with the&#13;
Education Division. One problem&#13;
brought up at the workshop was&#13;
the need Spanish speaking&#13;
parents have to understand both&#13;
the American language and&#13;
culture to survive in this system.&#13;
Dearborn suggested possible noncredit&#13;
audit courses for Spanish&#13;
speaking adults.&#13;
Dearborn said that as far as&#13;
present Parkside students who&#13;
are Chicanos are concerned&#13;
"what we have to do is keep them&#13;
from dropping out."&#13;
Members of the Dean of&#13;
Students office have, since late&#13;
last spring, been progressively&#13;
involved in identifying the needs&#13;
of minorities in the community&#13;
and Parkside's role in problem&#13;
solving.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Library has Judiaca exhibit&#13;
An exhibit of Judaica loaned by members of the congregation of&#13;
Beth Israel Sinai Temple, Racine, currently is on display in the&#13;
Library in the circulation area on the concourse level. The exhibit is&#13;
open to the public during regular library hours.&#13;
A c ollection of jewelry with a Jewish motif also is included in the&#13;
display.&#13;
Parkside Players seek new members&#13;
membe^rkSide Pl3yerS have annotinced a campaign to gain new&#13;
.hwPreSidf?u 1th? organization, Ray Waldie, has stated that the&#13;
nrn? re jde Players ls to provide exposure to theatre&#13;
production, video-taped productions, and film production.&#13;
the new organization will provide interested students with the&#13;
opportunity to receive instruction in every facet of theatrical&#13;
production; from set building to lighting to camera and video&#13;
opcrHtion.&#13;
meetingl orf Dee TTf 3re inV"ed t0 attend an organizational&#13;
. ,'p '. p.m. in the SAB. For further information&#13;
contact Ray Waldie at 633-1776 or Don Rintz at 553-2437.&#13;
Ed. field exnerlpnr.. fnrmi rtl| r&#13;
students interested in participating in field experience&#13;
uring the spring semester should pick up application forms in&#13;
December 3 applications are due in the Education office&#13;
Here's one not ggina to the da&#13;
On Tuesday, Nov. 13 the state owned Rambler driven by Chancellor&#13;
SkieTheSraC Chd h* illGgal Parkin8 ^hind the Greenquist loading&#13;
rather *e red and white sta rather than the blue municipal plates was ticketed tbey lai cseencsuer iptvla otef-!&#13;
lcer but later voided by Ron Brinkman, Director of Safety and&#13;
ecurity who printed on the ticket "voided ticket-chancellor's car."&#13;
PAB sponsors chess tourney&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board is sponsoring a five round chess&#13;
tournament beginning on Nov. 30. The top four finishers will represent&#13;
Parkside at the regional tourney. Contact the Activities office (LLC&#13;
D195) for further information.&#13;
S&amp;S now LA F&#13;
For those who have lost a watch, wallet, ring, keys, glasses or&#13;
other item, Safety and Security may be holding it. In order to centralize&#13;
the efforts of offices who may be involved in this procedure, lost&#13;
and found is now located in the S&amp;S Building (second building behind&#13;
the faculty parking lot). To claim an article one must either have&#13;
identification or describe the item. Persons finding things are&#13;
requested to leave them at the Information Center which will hold&#13;
articles for one day and then send them to S&amp;S.&#13;
Student and professor research&#13;
Nixon's image&#13;
As the issue of President&#13;
Nixon's "image" began appearing&#13;
again in the newspaper&#13;
headline, a teacher and a student&#13;
here decided to look at that image&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
E. Scott Baudhuin, Assistant&#13;
Professor of Communications,&#13;
and Barb Luther, a senior&#13;
communications student, chose a&#13;
research tool they used successfully&#13;
during the Presidential&#13;
campaign of 1968. Called a&#13;
"semantic differential," the&#13;
questionaire lists pairs of bipolar&#13;
adjectives, such as good-bad,&#13;
fair-unfair, and then asks the&#13;
respondent to place the President&#13;
on one of the seven points along&#13;
the range from one extreme to&#13;
the other.&#13;
With the recent political&#13;
events, which have apparently&#13;
implicated Nixon, it seemed&#13;
logical to conduct a follow-up&#13;
study of his image in order to&#13;
examine any evaluative changes&#13;
that may have occurred between&#13;
these two time frames in his&#13;
career.&#13;
The first study indicated that&#13;
students and other respondents&#13;
thought of Nixon as moderately&#13;
qualified, informed, successful,&#13;
bold, respectful, relevant, intelligent,&#13;
but somewhat biasfed,&#13;
unattractive and ugly. The&#13;
favorable results seemed born&#13;
out by the landslide re-election&#13;
victory that followed.&#13;
The second poll, taken in&#13;
August and September 1973,&#13;
showed that respondents had&#13;
changed some of their attitudes&#13;
since that time. This study&#13;
revealed that people felt slightly&#13;
more negative toward Nixon now&#13;
and feel he is aggressive, bold,&#13;
intelligent, but is also more&#13;
unqualified, bad, less informed,&#13;
inbiased,&#13;
dishonest, irrelevant&#13;
undependable, untrustworthy&#13;
unattractive, ugly and&#13;
compent.&#13;
Although Baudhuin and Luther&#13;
say the poll can't determine if the&#13;
change in attitudes was brought&#13;
about by the Watergate Affair,&#13;
the words chosen, even the&#13;
favorable ones, seem to indicate&#13;
that the President's ciritcs aren't&#13;
alone in their condemnations.&#13;
RESEARCH AIDS&#13;
Free Catalog&#13;
Thousands of research aids listed&#13;
Each available with footnotes and&#13;
bibliography&#13;
Lowest prices ($2. per page) are&#13;
GUARANTEED&#13;
For a FREE copy of our latest 80 (&#13;
page mail-order catalog, send 50'&#13;
cents (to cover postage and handling)&#13;
to&#13;
Nat 7 Research Bank&#13;
420 N. Palm Dr., Bev. Hills, Cal. 902)0&#13;
You must include your zip code.&#13;
TELEPHONE: (213) 271-5439&#13;
.'*w&#13;
T-t&#13;
4 5010 7*A Are.&#13;
• LEATHER GOODS! •WATER BEDS •PAPERS&#13;
•• JJ EEWEELLRRYY.. " ' •BEAN BAGS •TAPES&#13;
• BATH PRODUCTS RECORDS, -•PIPES&#13;
"Open 3 65 d ays a y ear"&#13;
Phone 654-3578 Truck On&#13;
PRELAW HANDBOOKS&#13;
Available In&#13;
The Bookstore&#13;
$300&#13;
Buy Your&#13;
Copy Now!&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
&lt;/k«K HOLI&gt;AY&#13;
APRIL 12-21,1974&#13;
10 days - 8 nights&#13;
$499 plus $20 fax&#13;
&amp; s ervice based on&#13;
2 to a room&#13;
includes:&#13;
HURRY!&#13;
Over 3/4 Fi lled&#13;
Round trip jet&#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.&#13;
Tour escort&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday , No v . 21, 197 3&#13;
User fees&#13;
appear&#13;
doubtful&#13;
A revision of the estimate of the&#13;
revenue that could be collected&#13;
by the university of Wisconsin&#13;
System in increased user fees&#13;
will be requested of t he governor&#13;
and legislature if the Board of&#13;
Regents accepts a recommendation&#13;
of its central administration.&#13;
The budget act had anticipated&#13;
that $1 million could be generated&#13;
through increased charges to&#13;
students, faculty, and staff for&#13;
"non-instructional" activities.&#13;
However, Governor Patrick&#13;
Lucey told a group at UWOshkosh&#13;
that he doubted that his&#13;
proposed user fee would become&#13;
law.&#13;
The user fee study revealed&#13;
"few viable and untapped&#13;
alternatives are available to the&#13;
chancellors to raise additional&#13;
user fee revenue from students,&#13;
staff, and the public to offset&#13;
general purpose revenue costs.&#13;
The units have already exploited&#13;
all significant revenue opportunities&#13;
to manage budget&#13;
austerity."&#13;
The fee could have forced&#13;
students and faculty as well as&#13;
the general public to pay to attend&#13;
athletic events, to use&#13;
university gymnasiums, to read&#13;
campus newspapers, to use&#13;
placement centers, to attend&#13;
lectures and concerts, to become&#13;
members of s tudent associations&#13;
and to participate in other nonclassroom&#13;
activities.&#13;
: Lucey pointed out that the fee&#13;
was not meant to apply only to&#13;
the universities but to every state&#13;
institution. He added that such a&#13;
fee is used more extensively in&#13;
many other states.&#13;
The user fee which has drawn&#13;
vehement opposition from every&#13;
segment of the university&#13;
community was suggested to&#13;
Lucey to make up for the 1.5&#13;
million reduction (later altered to&#13;
$1 million) that he proposed for&#13;
the 1974-75 UW system budget.&#13;
However, Lucey conceded that it&#13;
appeared that he had "lost that&#13;
battle to the legislature."&#13;
by Jerry Dublel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
Stereo is super, but Quad is mod. 4-&#13;
Channel surround sound is what's&#13;
happening on the Hi-Fi scene as the discs&#13;
and tapes are finally catching up to the&#13;
equipment. The system-confusion is&#13;
lessening as more information is&#13;
becoming available and the manufacturers&#13;
are getting it all together.&#13;
Will quad completely replace stereo in&#13;
the next few years? No, anymore than&#13;
color TV has completely replaced black&#13;
and white TV, but the real Hi-Fi buff will&#13;
not be satisfied with anything less than&#13;
the best 4-channel equipment he can&#13;
afford.&#13;
Can you double your listening pleasure&#13;
without doubling the price? At Sight 'n&#13;
Sound, 4-channel systems are available&#13;
at stereo prices - from under $200&#13;
complete with speakers. Stop in at Sight&#13;
'n Sound, 21st 8. Taylor, and have one of&#13;
the audio consultants demonstrate the&#13;
excitement of 4-channel sound to you&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo - TV&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
Records - Tapes&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 'til 6&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21: Lynn and Sue in the Whiteskellar from 1-3 p.m.&#13;
No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21: PAB dance featuring "Eden Stone" at 9 p.m.&#13;
in SAB. Admission is $1 for Parkside Students and $1.50 for guests.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 22: Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 25: Parkside's second annual mini folk festival from 1-&#13;
6 p.m. in the SAB. No admission charged and the bar will be open.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 26: Bible Study in LLC D185 from 10:30-11:30.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28: Tony Rolands and Rick Schroeder at the&#13;
Whiteskellar from 1-3 p.m. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28: American Language Exemption Exam in&#13;
Comm Arts 222 from 1:30-4 p.m.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 29: Piano trio recital in the Comm Arts Theater at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 30: The beginning of a five round chess tournament.&#13;
Contact the Student Activities Office for information.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 30: PAB sponsoring the film "Omega Man" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
SAB. Admission is 75 c ents.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 1: Meeting of the Parkside Players at 1 p.m. in SAB.&#13;
All i tems for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of th e issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Robinson to read&#13;
from works of Stuart&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Director of th e Learning Center and Assistant&#13;
Professor of Education will be reading from the works of Jesse Stuart&#13;
for the Poetry Forum on November 27 at 7 p.m. in the Library.&#13;
Professor Robinson has been a student of Mr. Stuart's for many years.&#13;
In 1939 when he was attending a one-room school in Eastern Kentucky&#13;
Jesse Stuart taught him, and when he was a freshman at Georgetown&#13;
College, Mr. Stuart was a visiting professor teaching creative writing&#13;
and Prof. Robinson studied with him again. In 1961 Professor&#13;
Robinson directed a three-act adaptation of Mr. Stuart's The Thread&#13;
That Runs So True, and Stuart and his wife, Naomi Deene came to the&#13;
University of Illinois to attend the opening night performance and visit&#13;
with Robinson again. They have kept in touch, mainly through&#13;
correspondence since then.&#13;
Among the many honors and awards to Jesse Stuart are these: Taps&#13;
for Private Tussie, Book-of-the-Month Club selection and winner of the&#13;
Thomas Jefferson Southern Award; The Thread That Runs So True,&#13;
selected by National Education Association as the best book of 1949,&#13;
the $5,000 award from the Academy of American Poets in 1961 (the&#13;
largest granted to American Poets); and awards from Guggenheim in&#13;
1937, an Academy of Arts and Science in 1941, and Thomas Jefferson&#13;
Memorial Award in 1943.&#13;
»ttiiw mam aim r.-;- ftanftanftai wiM •&#13;
• AKAI • DUAL • WATTS • SHURE • JVC • TECHNICS&#13;
S J &amp; J&#13;
ITape &amp; R ecord Center&#13;
* Super Low Prices&#13;
c&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
• SHERWOOD • TEAC • ALTEC • KOSS • SENNHISER&#13;
- • i ' H ^&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page ,&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
1 to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE B LVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material is sold for&#13;
research assistance only.&#13;
GLOBE C YCLE&#13;
* Gitane * Falcon&#13;
•Tsunoda * Atala&#13;
610 C ollege A ve.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
The p lace to go&#13;
for P ants&#13;
and t hings!&#13;
ISERMANN'8&#13;
THE [American]&#13;
Shop&#13;
614 - 56th Street&#13;
The UNION&#13;
NOVEMBER 21, 2 3, 2 4, 2 5&#13;
Wed., FrL, Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot 2nd National (formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
Wednesday , Nov. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Energy crisis means conservation here&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Editor's note: This week RANGER begins the&#13;
first in a three-part series on the "energy crisis"&#13;
and how it affects Parkside.&#13;
The national energy crisis has come to affect&#13;
Parkside, plus many other state institutions&#13;
Enactment of conservation programs are underway&#13;
throughout the Wisconsin University System's&#13;
campuses, with recommendations for future&#13;
savings being studied.&#13;
It was at the request of UW Vice-President Robert&#13;
Winter, issued last June, that Parkside's Physical&#13;
Plant began curtailment of energy consumption and&#13;
utility expenditures, a task which will include&#13;
securing air handling units, pumps, motors&#13;
elevators, lighting levels, thermostat settings, leak&#13;
sources in buildings, automatic combustion' controls,&#13;
etc.&#13;
"For years we were brainwashed into using&#13;
electricity indiscriminately," said Rodger Allen&#13;
physical plant director. "Now we're being asked to&#13;
look into areas where we can cut costs."&#13;
One of these areas pertaining to electricity is&#13;
lighting. All interior lights are secured by&#13;
custodians on the third shift, after completing their&#13;
assigned work. Allen stated though, that it was the&#13;
responsibility of those who occupied classrooms and&#13;
offices, during the day, to turn out lights when not in&#13;
use. According to a survey, conducted by students'&#13;
of Earth Science assistant professor Henry Cole last&#13;
month, 60 percent of all unoccupied rooms were left&#13;
with lights on.&#13;
Walkway lamps have been reduced to every other&#13;
one. Except for minimal security, outside lights are&#13;
secured by timeclock controls at midnight. These&#13;
include walking lights, currently in operation, along&#13;
with every second roadway lamp and those in the&#13;
parking lot area.&#13;
Various air supply and exhaust units, totaling&#13;
approximately 270,000 cubic feet per minute, are&#13;
shut down at 11 p.m. each night, and restarted at 6&#13;
a.m. the following morning. Here, the Physical&#13;
Plant's goal is to double this figure by reducing&#13;
ventilating fans in each building one at a time.&#13;
Tallent Hall is the first to be considered.&#13;
Air compressors located in the seven buildings,&#13;
too, have been halted by tying in the central air&#13;
system. Main air compressors found in the Heating&#13;
and Chilling Plant are equipped with unloading&#13;
valves that reduce greater electrical consumption&#13;
for starting and stopping.&#13;
Controls are said to be, "the latest, most efficient"&#13;
regarding the Heating and Chilling Plant's&#13;
boilers. Automatic controlling of fuel and air ratios&#13;
enables greater conservation of energy.&#13;
Parkside's primary fuel, natural gas, is purchased&#13;
on an "interruptable rate," through which&#13;
the Wisconsin Natural Gas Company may temporarily&#13;
shut off service in severe cold weather.&#13;
Several times last winter the power plant was&#13;
torced to rely on two 40,000 gallon storage tanks&#13;
containing no. 5 fuel oil. This fuel source, considered&#13;
to be m abundance, is readily available from a local&#13;
Mobil Oil dealer. The Wisconsin Natural Gas&#13;
Company also has assured Parkside that 100 percent&#13;
of their fuel supplied last winter will again be&#13;
available this winter.&#13;
Measures for conserving fuel, nonetheless, are in&#13;
full swing. Wherever feasible, temperatures in&#13;
unoccupied areas are lowered to 60 degrees&#13;
farenheit. During the heating season, all thermostats&#13;
are set at 68, and reset in summer, to 78.&#13;
Because most thermostats on campus are adjustable&#13;
the Physical Plant secured lock covers in&#13;
many instances, to prevent tampering. Allen&#13;
recommends that all new buildings (Physical Plant&#13;
and Student Union) be equipped with tamper-proof&#13;
thermostats.&#13;
"Saving energy at the same time helps cut costs,"&#13;
said Allen. "They're both tied in with one affecting&#13;
the other."&#13;
Operating costs last fiscal year at Parkside wereelectricity&#13;
$248,588.76; heating $114,601.70; and&#13;
water and sewerage $13,221.01. The forecast for this&#13;
fiscal year is just under $500,000, which includes&#13;
2300 gross square feet of building expansion. Allen&#13;
was unable to estimate savings from current energy&#13;
cut backs, since further listings of power consumption&#13;
were still being made when this article&#13;
was written. However, the earliest possible conclusion&#13;
of this research is expected no sooner than&#13;
late December or early next year.&#13;
Meanwhile, the Physical Plant is setting an&#13;
example of conserving gasoline by utilizing a&#13;
shuttle-type bus to deliver men and materials to&#13;
various job sites. This eliminates gas consumption&#13;
via the use of individual vehicles. Two cylinder&#13;
Cushman scooters are also being used when individual&#13;
transportation is needed at a savings of&#13;
approximately 25 miles per gallon.&#13;
"Although there are means of energy savings&#13;
without causing any noticeable discomfort to&#13;
people, we should keep in mind that the greatest&#13;
savings of energy comes from curtailing some&#13;
service or convenience, "commented Allen.&#13;
Next Week: How the planning and development of&#13;
UW-P contributed to our current energy problems.&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
The smoke stacks located on the Heating and Chilling Plant are&#13;
responsible for the fuel gas emission of boilers.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
"OPEN YEAR AROUND"&#13;
" x - - \ CARRY-OUTS&#13;
^ CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE R EADY&#13;
f Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
"1^*" and Shrimp&#13;
EE GALLON OF ROOT BEER&#13;
« WITH s5 ORDER&#13;
i j MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
w A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Hours Sun -Thrs. 11-7&#13;
F r i . &amp; S a t . 1 1 t o l l&#13;
MARTHA MERRELL's&#13;
BOOKSTORES&#13;
PRESENT...&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
THE PERFECT GIFT.&#13;
Something for everyone&#13;
on your Christmas list.&#13;
Stop in and pick-up our&#13;
Christmas catalog. It's&#13;
full of ideas and new&#13;
books.&#13;
paperback.&#13;
SHOOTING STARS: The Rolling Stone B ook o f P ortraits&#13;
$095&#13;
,.J1995&#13;
~..$3500&#13;
THE ART OF ANDREW WYETH&#13;
THE ART OF WALT DISNEY^ aner x«&#13;
MOUNTAIN ARTISANS QUILTING BOOK... 112 50&#13;
OUR BODIES OUR SELVES: A Book By &amp; For W omen&#13;
paper- $285&#13;
$495&#13;
..*395&#13;
BEING OF THE SUN by Alicia Bay Laurel, paper .. . . . . . . ..™. .&#13;
KESEY'S GARAGE SALE by Ken Kesey, et al, pa per&#13;
GUINNESS BOOK OF WORLD RECORDS New ™ Edm» &gt;695&#13;
ALISTAIR COOKE'S AMERICA 115°°&#13;
LORD OF THE RINGS by J.R.R. Tolkien, slipcaseO,.„.....™.™.™™.™.J2250&#13;
BURR by Gore Vida .'895&#13;
QUant/m QHmil's Bodskies&#13;
6i4-59ULSH 31 "2-— 6.^ ST,&#13;
6SS-365X. 63rZ-S\&lt;?3&gt;&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance r equired&#13;
• No limit t o the&#13;
number o f c hecks&#13;
yoo write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
mm&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your f ree c hecking&#13;
account s oon a t&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
500 Wisconsin A ve. R acine&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER W e d n e s d a y , N o v . 2 1 , 1 9 7 3&#13;
Society blind to problems of handicapped&#13;
Editor's note: The following story was told by a&#13;
Parkside senior who is paralyzed from the waist&#13;
down, to RANGER feature editor Debra Friedell.&#13;
Now a practice teacher, the student has spent the&#13;
past four years in the wheelchair where she will be&#13;
for the rest of her life.&#13;
In my dreams I can still walk. Except, once I had&#13;
a dream where I was running and I kept thinking I&#13;
shouldn't be doing this—I shouldn't be doing this.&#13;
I've been paralyzed from the waist down since I&#13;
was seventeen.&#13;
Just before I graduated from high school I started&#13;
getting pretty bad pains in my back. The doctor&#13;
thought it was a disc problem. The last three days&#13;
before I stopped walking I kept losing my balance. I&#13;
couldn't move easily and I had to concentrate to&#13;
make every move. Then I stopped walking completely.&#13;
It was on a Sunday morning. Sunday&#13;
evening I went to the hospital. I didn't have any&#13;
feeling. It was a spinal tumor.&#13;
I thought it was a disc problem and I'd need a&#13;
lousy operation or something like that. But on that&#13;
Sunday I knew that wasn't it. I was nervous, puzzled&#13;
maybe, I had no idea what was going on. There were&#13;
enlarged blood vessels in my spinal column which&#13;
There are very limited places where I&#13;
can live. Doorways have to be wide and&#13;
there can't be any stairs.&#13;
were bleeding and had formed a mass. They had to&#13;
be removed but, when they were, the scar tissue&#13;
remained to block the spinal column.&#13;
I was in the Kenosha hospital from June 11 to July&#13;
14, then I went to a Chicago hospital for two or three&#13;
weeks and finally to a Chicago rehabilitation center&#13;
until the end of September. There I was taught to&#13;
get in and out of a car and how to dress myself and&#13;
things like that.&#13;
I don't know how I got used to it. It was all so&#13;
gradual. Especially at first when they were telling&#13;
me that maybe I'd walk again and then saying&#13;
maybe I wouldn't. It got discouraging.&#13;
In the Chicago rehabilitation center I met a&#13;
woman who had been a model until she broke her&#13;
neck in a diving accident. She had no future, her&#13;
career had been her body and now she was&#13;
married and had two children and that was her&#13;
whole life. She'd been in a car accident-all of a&#13;
sudden-zapped. She was, in general, very angry&#13;
and thought that it just wasn't fair.&#13;
Handicapped people can't organize around issues&#13;
like other groups can. There is no way of getting the&#13;
handicapped in the open. They are shut away in&#13;
institutions and put away in little boxes, out of sight,&#13;
like the Viet Nam war veterans.&#13;
I started going to Parkside the fall after I&#13;
graduated from high school, knowing that I wanted&#13;
to major in French. Now I am practice teaching&#13;
French at Tremper High School in Kenosha. Getting&#13;
around at the Kenosha Campus was easy but out&#13;
here (the main campus) the ramp is way in the back&#13;
of the buildings. The ramps they had before were&#13;
terrible. They were so steep.&#13;
My social life is shot. I want to dance or go to bars.&#13;
That's where the social life is but that's where you&#13;
can't go. If I went people would think that I'm some&#13;
kind of nut. "What's that person doing here." I go to&#13;
movies.&#13;
I don't know what I want to do for a career. I'm&#13;
going to try teaching for a while but I can't just go&#13;
anywhere and take a job. Employers often think a&#13;
handicapped person is sick in other ways. They&#13;
think that the handicapped individual is unsafe or&#13;
will be at home sick a lot. I suppose I could do&#13;
secretarial work and type for eight hours a day but&#13;
that's a miserable prospect. There are very limited&#13;
places where I can live. Doorways have to be wide&#13;
and there can't be any stairs.&#13;
The dependence is the worst part. For me it's&#13;
confining and everything has to be scheduled and&#13;
arranged. For some people it's all right, I don't like&#13;
I w as nervous, puzzled, I h ad no idea&#13;
what was going on.&#13;
it. I prefer to do things myself, like getting around in&#13;
my wheelchair. I need the exercise. Sometimes I&#13;
begin to figit and people think I'm bored. Actually,&#13;
I'm just trying to move around a little.&#13;
Physical therapy, that is, special exercises and&#13;
treatments with a trained physical therapist, are&#13;
important to keep muscles in shape. The problem is&#13;
that one physical therapy session costs about $30&#13;
and should be taken at least once a week. Insurance&#13;
does not cover this. And, as far as I have been able&#13;
to find out, no public funding will pay for physical&#13;
therapy for a person over age 20, unless they are&#13;
unable to get a job. I am not currently having&#13;
physical therapy because we cannot afford it.&#13;
When I was a senior in high school I had plans of&#13;
going East after graduation and bumming around&#13;
for a while.&#13;
The government and people in general are not&#13;
aware of the problems of the handicapped. They&#13;
aren't seen because they can't get out and into&#13;
places where they can be noticed. If they get out,&#13;
there is no place to go. It's a vicious circle.&#13;
Handicapped people can't organize&#13;
around issues like other groups can. They&#13;
are shut away in institutions and put&#13;
away in little boxes, out of s ight, like the&#13;
Viet Nam veterans.&#13;
paralyzed from her neck down. Sometimes she'd&#13;
completely withdraw from the rest of us and would&#13;
say nothing. At least I have my brains. Another&#13;
woman, paralyzed from the neck down, was&#13;
An&#13;
nUn"-Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
BurgerChef ©&#13;
Buy a .&#13;
Deliciously Satisfying&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
GOLDEN BROWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
"UN" COMMONIY REFRESHING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALL FOR $ J 30&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
Start Your S^Now!&#13;
J ' BurgerChef&#13;
6926 39th Ave. • 2 • I.OC I TIO.XS' 3400 Sheridan Road&#13;
Bud Drinkers, can&#13;
you figure this out?&#13;
Suppose Bud® came in 24-oz. bottles that cost 50^ apiece. And suppose the&#13;
12-oz. bottles cost 25^ each. A guy comes up to you carrying two boxes the&#13;
same size. He tells you one box is full of 12-oz. bottles, the other is exactly&#13;
half full of the 24-oz. bottles. One is worth more than the other. Which, one?&#13;
r , „ "uni am rieii ssmi&#13;
I,,noA n0 -xoq „nj ay &gt;p,d noA enns aqmu 'naSia«pna Suhubjuod az,s aulas am&#13;
saxoq om, q,i« noA o, dn aaunoa AnS b aun, ,xaN :,Bnow 1S03 £&#13;
pire "ratwoq zo-ys aanq, no 'saouno ZL u,B,uoa P^om xoq qni-jrv-, au t&#13;
•OO'SSl Woo PIn0M pus 'Sam0q zo-ST aA,8«, uWuoa P1no« xoq nm am Oi»uno&#13;
Ml spioq xoq qoua asoddns noA jj) -qoniu SB bdim, surejuoa ,i asnoaaq xoq&#13;
ITO-j,bM aq, uaq, anoun q,no« sj xoq „nj aHi -aauenajj.p a,„q saqBtu samoq&#13;
aq, jo ,soa no azis aq, 'azts aunas aq, A[Pexa ana saxoq q,oq aauig VaaMSNV&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
.Sports&#13;
Marry&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: The name of this weekly column, "Sportsfest " is&#13;
taken from the annual winter sports festival which kicks nff th l •'.&#13;
sports season. This co.umu win cover the&#13;
sports!" gymnaSt,CS' a"d »th"' =&gt;»d ends pertaining It&#13;
While the holiday of ''Tom Turkey" is celebrated across the country&#13;
head Ice Hockey Coach Tom Krimmel will be nrenarina hie P!07&#13;
hopefully a litde celebration of their own, as this year's team Ste sit&#13;
to encounter the Alumni, on Friday November 23&#13;
This year's team will include all the "trimmings", as four members&#13;
of he team are returnees from last year. The four returning playels&#13;
defensive Reggie Carter, a sociology teacher at Parkside Tom&#13;
Oinstenson, who plays at the forward position, Jerry Madala, a'nothTr&#13;
forward, and John Lulewicz, this year's team captain&#13;
This year, the hockey team will play a 23 game schedule. Nine of&#13;
those games will be away. One of the away games includes an&#13;
exhibition game against UW-Milwaukee, at the Milwaukee Arena&#13;
before a Milwaukee Admirals (semi-pro) game.&#13;
This year's schedule will be an easy one for the Rangers, but team&#13;
captain Lulewicz guaranteed us that the squad will put out 110&#13;
percent at every game.&#13;
I might add that all home hockey games are played at the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Arena, and this years squad can use all the support they can eet&#13;
Hope to see you there! s&#13;
To conclude this week's column, I would like to congratulate all fall&#13;
sports participants, and especially the coaches, who make my iob a&#13;
little bit easier with their great cooperation.&#13;
al, students, faculty and staff,during open fwfm hot™ S&#13;
own pace as it is not Olympic training. All swimmers pictured above have swum at least 50 mi^&#13;
since August. One mile equals 7.4 lengths of the pool. at le3St 50 m,les&#13;
Cross Country seventh Need extra m oney? I&#13;
in™! 4^'!! Sa,nger,C!,OSS CTltry Team captured seventh place&#13;
Sace in Cross Country Championships, which took&#13;
place in Salinas, Kansas, last Saturday.&#13;
thC higiJeSt f inish' as a team Champ for the 1973 season is Eastern New Mexico. - National&#13;
Individual honors in the championships went to Tony Brien from&#13;
ftafch hT1 ge in Kansas' while Parkside's own Lucian Rosa&#13;
£ vearrheehm F°T Ludan' this is 1116 second straight year he has been named to the Ail-American team which&#13;
consists of the top 15 finishers of the five mile course.&#13;
sh^wynnrtUulghlW°nder h0W long a P3'1" of cross country&#13;
shoes will last If you happen to ask Parkside's Dennis Biel, his answerwill&#13;
probably be "not long enough." In the race Saturday ben4 X&#13;
was only about 4V2 miles from finishing the race, found he wasn't&#13;
ihli rPGr support3n hls feet&gt; resulting from his shoes ripping (Dr&#13;
Sholz, where were you?) He thus removed his foot wear and proceded&#13;
the co^se bare footed. Dennis finished the race in 35th position&#13;
OOtthhVerr SnPpa rkI sidae p1l ace-g0eft teWrsh atw heer eC:O uWld ahyanvee dRohnoed ew it(h8 0sthho) es Joimn!&#13;
and^Efal^Martbf1 (33(tth)^ Men"m Chuck Dettman (3'12th)'&#13;
See u s—&#13;
RANGER LLC-D194&#13;
^ BONANZA'S Thanksgiving Feast!&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, No v . 21, 197 3&#13;
SPORT.&#13;
CUT EDITOR'S NOTE:&#13;
Students! Are you taking a specific phy ed. course you might want to&#13;
let other students in on? Why not be a guest writer for our SPORTCUT&#13;
column? All feature stories will be printed. To turn in stories, bring&#13;
them to the RANGER office in the Library Learning Center (D194).&#13;
They will be greatly appreciated!&#13;
by Neal Sautner&#13;
Ever since my first day in Fencing Class I've heard it called many&#13;
things-one of them was bar room brawling. Bar room brawling you&#13;
ask? Yes. Fencing used to be a means of se ttling your disputes in the&#13;
back room of bars. They used to strap you and your opponents left foot&#13;
to the floor and then let you stab away.&#13;
Today they lighten, shorten and modify the weapon and call it a foil.&#13;
They also took it out of the bars, civilized it, and now refer to its as&#13;
fencing. But after watching my fencing class sometimes I begin to see&#13;
Sportsfest queen candidates&#13;
Left to right: Pat Kekic (Tennis), Kim Piper (Track), Melanie Hansen (Wrestling) JarkiP&#13;
Levonian (Gymnastics), Joan Krebs (Baseball), Rita Ohm (Basketball), Nancy Michals (Soccet)&#13;
Missing: Debbie LeMay (Golf) and Terri Simo (Fencing).&#13;
photo by Mike Swanningson&#13;
, why ou r instructor, Coach Loran Hein, sometimes refers to us as Die&#13;
stickers and not fencers.&#13;
''Fencing is a thinking man's game," states Hein. "Sometimes its&#13;
referred to as a physical chess." When asked about what qualities a&#13;
fencer should possess he then gave me a list including "alertness&#13;
quickness, extreme mental and physical ability, quickness of the&#13;
mind, and ability to respond instantly." He justifies his last remark by&#13;
adding it just takes one tenth of a second to score a touch, and in&#13;
ofTsecond '' ^ b® SCOml in 38 little time aS one twenty-fifth&#13;
arp°^?f0f rea?on,? Coach Hein people like to take fencing&#13;
^ fuch a challenge to learn, and it holds your interest." He&#13;
thinks that people don't respect an easy sport, and rightly so because&#13;
fencing requires both mental and physical abilities.&#13;
Hem then brought up the fact that fencing is the only sport that takes&#13;
place on the side of you. The reason for this in fencing is that if you're&#13;
target^55 t0 y°Ur °PP°nent you offer him two'thirds less of a body&#13;
I'll say this much about fencing and that's if you're not determined&#13;
enough to win, you won't; and that good fencing comes from practice&#13;
and more practice. K&#13;
?ummed UP fencing by saying that, "You don't need a&#13;
D F D tricks&gt; just a pocket full, but they must be well executed "&#13;
Pete Banaszak summed up the feelings of the fencing class by&#13;
saymg that, Thinking is the name of the game, and if you're not&#13;
thinking all the time you'll lose."&#13;
For all people who would like to take an interesting P E class trv&#13;
fencing. Next semester Coach Loran Hein is starting a beginners&#13;
pe,® and Sabor, where this semester we deal mainly with&#13;
" f°aching an advanced foil class for women.&#13;
Classified&#13;
18 chord organ, walnut wood, reasonable&#13;
Can be seen at 3136 Kearney Ave., Racine'&#13;
after 1:00.&#13;
Wanted: student opinions on how the&#13;
bookstore should be run. Contact Bruce&#13;
Wagner c-o Student Activities office Box 139&#13;
or call 552-9462, after 5.&#13;
FOR SALE: Camaro, 1967, excellent shape,&#13;
new engine, very fast, 327, 4 speed, many&#13;
extras. Call and find out about it. $1,850 not&#13;
firm about it. Mark Havranek, 414-694-0771.&#13;
FOR SALE: Antique Icebox, fair condition,&#13;
best offer. Call Brad, 652-8443.&#13;
TYPING: Done on IBM electric. Call Pat at&#13;
654-0030, after 5 p.m.&#13;
HELP WANTED: Teacher 8, Aids to work&#13;
with preschool children in Parkside Childcare&#13;
Center. Full or half days, experience&#13;
with young children preferred. For info, and&#13;
application, call days 553-2393 or 553-2104&#13;
evenings 652-3996 or 634-4982. Respond by&#13;
Fri. 11-23, work study applications accepted.&#13;
NEED ANY typing done? Call Ginny at 637-&#13;
7796.&#13;
Stafa (fy, cutct cete&amp;wte&#13;
ivitA 04,/&#13;
Join us for Live Entertainment&#13;
and food at...&#13;
Edgewater&#13;
Motor Inn&#13;
410 Lake Ave., Twin Lakes, Wis.&#13;
November 21,22, 23 &amp; 24&#13;
Dance to "Blackwater Gold"&#13;
Open Daily 4 P.M. - 1 A.M. Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 A.M. - 1 A.M&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
Highway 1-94 &amp; 50&#13;
Open 9 A.M. - 1 A.M. Every Day Sandwiches served at all times&#13;
"BRATWURST OUR SPECIALTY" All r egular mixed drinks 50&#13;
t TVatcA fat acet Tteiv tya* Sve Speciai)</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="64392">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 12, November 21, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64393">
              <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="64394">
              <text>1973-11-21</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="64397">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64398">
              <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="64399">
              <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="64400">
              <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="64401">
              <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="64402">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="421">
      <name>board of regents</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="684">
      <name>folk festival</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="677">
      <name>parkside mission statement</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
