<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2693" 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/2693?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T21:00:44+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3321">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/dccb928de03f9d7ab35599440d337cc4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4527d7040d4b5b7276e757c43e48ac97</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="64753">
            <text>Volume 3, 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="64754">
            <text>Icon - fine arts insert</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="64764">
            <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="90123">
            <text>TheParkside- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1974 Vol. III No.9&#13;
eee hears complaints&#13;
by BETSY NEU&#13;
The Campus Concerns Commillee&#13;
(CCC) met Tuesday&#13;
October t, to discuss the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.lPSGA), its constitution and&#13;
alleged election irregularities.&#13;
Walter Feldt, Chairperson of&#13;
the CCC, said that Tuesday's&#13;
meeting would not constitute a&#13;
formal hearing on the alleged&#13;
irregularities, but would involve&#13;
"an airing of the charges." -&#13;
Oneof the charges came from&#13;
Barbara Burke, President of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board. Her&#13;
grievance, expressed in a formal&#13;
letter to Feldt, centered on two&#13;
complaints.&#13;
The first complaint involved a&#13;
~-constitution flyer which she&#13;
said was found in one of the&#13;
votingbooths. Burke termed this&#13;
"illegal."&#13;
Secondly, Burke described&#13;
herself as "outraged" that the&#13;
members of the Election Committee&#13;
were "ideologically and&#13;
emotionally involved in the&#13;
PSGA." Burke suggested that&#13;
"onlyunbiased and non-partisan&#13;
people, preferably outside this&#13;
University" be allowed to&#13;
tabulate votes.&#13;
Debra Friedell, Chairperson of&#13;
Ihe Election Committee&#13;
responded with an invitation to&#13;
Burke to send a representative or&#13;
comeherself to check ballots as&#13;
they were being tabulated last&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Friedell, in a letter to Feldt and&#13;
the eee, stated that "neither she&#13;
(Burke) nor a representative&#13;
showed up at any time while the&#13;
ballots were being counted."&#13;
Jewel -Echelbarger. associate&#13;
Dean of Students told RANGER&#13;
that her office had received&#13;
"quite a. few calls about election&#13;
irregularities. "&#13;
Although Echelbarger felt it&#13;
unfair- to name anyone at this&#13;
time, she specified that the&#13;
alleged irregularities involved&#13;
pro-eonstitution canvassing by&#13;
persons responsible for handing&#13;
ballots to student voters.&#13;
Other complaints to&#13;
Echelbarger's office claimed&#13;
that students located near the&#13;
polls attempted to read completed&#13;
ballots as voters deposited&#13;
them in the ballot box.&#13;
Marian Kropp, a transfer&#13;
student from U.W. Madison said&#13;
that shewas "disgusted" with the&#13;
canvassing tactics of PSGA&#13;
President Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
near the voting booths.&#13;
When asked to elaborate,&#13;
Kropp said that Milutinovich&#13;
directed comments towards&#13;
special interest groups opposed.&#13;
to the constitution. She described&#13;
these comments as "consisting of&#13;
name calling and slander,"&#13;
Phil Livingston of the Students&#13;
for Better Government (SBG)&#13;
which had recently proposed an&#13;
alternate constitution, stated that&#13;
the SBG had no plans as of now to&#13;
put their constitution up for&#13;
referendum.&#13;
"The students obviously want&#13;
the PSGA to represent them."&#13;
Livingston said.&#13;
Livingston said further that,&#13;
"the vigorous belief of the SBG&#13;
re~ajns as strong as ever opposing&#13;
the PSGA as a government,&#13;
but there is nothing to be&#13;
done now after the students have&#13;
voted."&#13;
PSG A&#13;
to replace&#13;
advisor&#13;
In a September 26 meeting,&#13;
PSGA Inc. agreed to seek a new&#13;
advisor to student government.&#13;
The senate unanimously agreed&#13;
that Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
associate Dean of Students and&#13;
present advisor to PSGA, has not&#13;
been doing a satisfactory job.&#13;
Other discussion included a&#13;
move to hire a new lawyer for&#13;
PSGA. Senator Michael Hahner&#13;
stated that he is in contact with&#13;
Jay Schwartz of Racine and will&#13;
set up an interview with Schwartz&#13;
to discuss costs.&#13;
President Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
vetoed a motion by president pro&#13;
tempore John Kontz that Instructed&#13;
the president to have all&#13;
minutes of past meetings transcribed&#13;
in the minute book by the&#13;
next PSGA meeting.&#13;
Milutinovich said it was impossible&#13;
to meet that deadline but&#13;
said the minutes are presently&#13;
being transcribed and will be&#13;
available as soon as possible,&#13;
Five of the remaining seven&#13;
members of the Senate were&#13;
present at the meeting. Karen&#13;
Willems was absent, Keith&#13;
Chambers is on leave of absence.&#13;
As votes were tabulated by Kai NalHat board) and Debra Friede" or&#13;
the Elections Committee, Secur-ity Officer dert upervisN. 1,171&#13;
students "oted in the ~onl'tit.utlonal rer~ndam Oft Sept. 24 1"'15.&#13;
Referendum&#13;
turnout&#13;
heavy&#13;
With over 22 percent of the&#13;
student body voting, the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. IPSGA) constitution was&#13;
ratified Wednesday, September&#13;
25, 1974.&#13;
The final tally, counted under&#13;
the supervision of Debra Friedel!&#13;
and Kai Nail of the Elections&#13;
Committee, reflected a nearly&#13;
two-to-one margin in favor of the&#13;
referendum, with 733 for and 446&#13;
against.&#13;
Nell. co-author of the recently&#13;
ratified constitution, and&#13;
chairperson of the Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition. was enthusiastic&#13;
over the large voter&#13;
turnout.&#13;
Speaking moments after the&#13;
last vote was tabulated, i all&#13;
said. "I'm glad to see that the,...&#13;
were alot of people who voted on&#13;
both sides ...that people with both&#13;
opions took the time to vole."&#13;
P GA President Dennis&#13;
. filutinovich' was also encouraged&#13;
by the 1,179 students&#13;
who voted.&#13;
.lilutinovich • said, "the&#13;
sweetest things about the victory&#13;
was that we tPSGA) overcame so&#13;
many lies and innuendoes",&#13;
Friedell, • all and Walter&#13;
Feldt, Chairperson of the&#13;
Campus Concerns Commiuee,&#13;
set noon Thursday October 3, as&#13;
the deadline for contesting the&#13;
election results.&#13;
Anyone Wishing to contest the&#13;
ejection results may contact&#13;
either Friedell or Nall at their&#13;
homes before the deadline&#13;
Boycott cuts Canteen sales&#13;
Jeannine Sipsma sales during the boycott showed Parkside. At GTI cigarettes sell&#13;
or RANGER Staff can soda sales down by 40-50 for 50&lt;' compared to 60c at&#13;
The Concerned Student" percent and cup soda up by 50-60 Parkside. fruit pies at GTI sell&#13;
Coalition ICSC) held a full percent. for 25c compared to JOe at&#13;
boycott on Canteen food products Also, the food line lost an Parkside and candy there sells&#13;
durmg Sept. 18, 19 and 20. estimated $200 a day during the for ISc while some Hems here&#13;
According to Kai NaIl, boycott. have been raised to 20c&#13;
llresident of the CSC, the boycott Nail explained that Canteen . .Iebuhr responded that&#13;
was to continue on Monday, Sept. was not selling enough coffee or . Parksides Canteen prices are&#13;
30 against all Canteen machines cup soda, which are considered consistent with those of other t'w&#13;
except the cup soda and coffee high profit items. so the pnces on campuses&#13;
machines. other items were increased. Niebuhr though, is in the&#13;
William Niebuhr. director of However. Canteen prices at process of finding out why GTI's&#13;
tUdent Life, said that the Gateway Technical Institute prices are not consistent wHn&#13;
unoffiCial estimate of Canteen (GTf), are lower than those at UW·s.&#13;
~AI~~il~*ii~~~lM~~~~&amp;1tf&amp;l~\qi~i~~~_tl~&#13;
Kaleidoscope on WLIP&#13;
will meet again this Thursday. at 2:30 p.m., m CA&#13;
D157.&#13;
Werwie said more people are needed. "Twenty·&#13;
five people expressed their interest at registration.&#13;
but only five have come. At least ten are needed for&#13;
a successful weekly program."&#13;
Dave Campbell, the program's advisor. attributed&#13;
the small turnout at the worshop to a "lack&#13;
of time on the part of students, or Just apathy. "&#13;
"It is an excellent opportlttllty and good experience&#13;
for those going in~o electr,~nic media ... a.nd&#13;
Parkside has all of the eqUIpment. Campbell said.&#13;
If "Kaleidoscope Radio" is successful. the future&#13;
holds many possibilities. ,.&#13;
··We e\'entually will turn to F:\I stereo. Campbell&#13;
said .&#13;
W('nne added, "In three years Parkstde hopes to&#13;
han' it's own radio station."&#13;
Saturday. Oct. 5, at 2:00 p.m., is the time to tune&#13;
yourAMdial to WLIP for "Kaleidoscope Radio". a&#13;
half hour program of music, drama and other&#13;
features.&#13;
The program is written. prnduced and taped&#13;
Weekly here at Parkside. Its announcer is Diane&#13;
Werwie.&#13;
Werwie is a former winner of the "Golden Mike&#13;
Award" for her dedication and experience in&#13;
presenting the '''New Voice" radio program from&#13;
Tremper High Schoof.&#13;
Now a Parkside student. she has set out to open up&#13;
these opportunities to other students. like herself.&#13;
that would like experience in radio broadcasting:&#13;
To do this. a workshop has been organized to tram&#13;
stu.dents as engineers and announcers. and to teach&#13;
~ntcrs the basics of writing scripts. The&#13;
Kall'idosl'op{' Hadio Workshop" met last week&#13;
*T$E11f@tl~~~J~1~~mt!IImI~!~~~!~~Ii~~II~fI:!It~~tf~~~~~~ff~i:~~~~~t:i:iftttm~m:mm:~tMf~l~IMMll:&#13;
He commented that Park ide's&#13;
contract with Canteen allow that&#13;
when a machine vields over a&#13;
certain amount 01 profit&#13;
Parkside gels a commi. sron,&#13;
..ltbouah this doesn't happen very&#13;
( Iten.&#13;
.Iarcy tark. operation controlter&#13;
of Canteen. said that price&#13;
differences between Park ide&#13;
and GTI may be for many&#13;
reasons including differences m&#13;
commiSSIOn rates. types and&#13;
number of machmes. and how&#13;
much of what items are sold.&#13;
Stark mentioned that prices&#13;
probably w1llalso be going up at&#13;
GTI.&#13;
·'1 think it Hhe boycott) was a&#13;
complete success for what we&#13;
had intended." all said. "I thmk&#13;
we'll very soon get a cup pop&#13;
machine to replace one of the can&#13;
machines in the cafeteria,"&#13;
"It looks as ,Ithe attempt to get&#13;
people to drink cup soda was&#13;
successful:' said ~iebuhr, '·The&#13;
effecl on soda was good for&#13;
everyone im'ol\·ed."&#13;
HE'went on tosay. ··No way can&#13;
a boycott bring prices back&#13;
down .. ,boycotts don't change&#13;
costs&#13;
"Canteen prices will remain&#13;
the same until January.·'&#13;
:\'iebuhr continued. "But -the ract&#13;
Ihat bad .....eather has destroved a&#13;
!l 1 01 CfOPS will probably 'raise&#13;
:c)d priC'l's and thus Canteen&#13;
pru.'('S 3J!,ain .,&#13;
'I.!t'(lm\ hllt&gt;. all {"an soda&#13;
lllal"hint"S \\ ill h(&gt; fC'pJaC€"dby cup&#13;
1l1.lt"hllll~ l'xc('pl in thE&gt; cafelpria&#13;
.. here. for the ume bemg, onl&#13;
one (If the two machm "111 be&#13;
rertaced&#13;
David 81 hop coordinat r for&#13;
uxiliary Servi • said that no&#13;
can da machine- \\ III be&#13;
removed Irom the careteria&#13;
He said that there are not man)&#13;
can soda machine left at&#13;
Parkside as mo t of them have&#13;
en replaced by up machm .&#13;
"The omy "ay one would be&#13;
removed IS if there is no demand&#13;
for II after the fountam soda I&#13;
Inslalled 10 the commg Burger&#13;
hop."&#13;
Bishop explamed that the&#13;
machines were "absolutely not"&#13;
taken oul because of the boycott&#13;
but were replaced 10 response to&#13;
the increase in cost of can soda&#13;
A mass traasit V\'ty is being&#13;
("ondu("ted b~' Planning Ind&#13;
Construction in ~OII)unction with&#13;
Southf'a tern Wi consin Regloul&#13;
Planning Comml ion ror •&#13;
ruturf' mass tran it system&#13;
bfot"'t"f'n Parkside and the cities&#13;
or Radnf' and Kenosha.&#13;
Thf' second phase 01 &amp;hi ar-&#13;
'f'.'., ~ bich \to ill begin next .e8.,&#13;
"ill study the four kinds or bu&#13;
ridf'rship at Parksicle: the Vet'&#13;
bus. Keno ha t"il.y bus. lhf'&#13;
rampu~ "huulf' and the ctntf'r&#13;
..huttlf',&#13;
nurin~ rf'~islration stu.dents&#13;
\\rrf' askrd to provldf' In·&#13;
Formation on lhf'ir df'parturf' and&#13;
ani' al Ijmes&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1974 Vol. 111 No. 9&#13;
CCC hears complaints&#13;
by BETSY NEU&#13;
nie Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC) met Tuesday&#13;
October 1, to discuss the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. (PSGA), its constitution and&#13;
alleged election irregularities.&#13;
Walter Feldt, Chairperson of&#13;
the CCC, said that Tuesday's&#13;
meeting would not constitute a&#13;
formal hearing on the alleged&#13;
irregularities, but would involve&#13;
"an airing of the charges."&#13;
One of the charges came from&#13;
Barbara Burke, President of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board. Her&#13;
grievance, expressed in a formal&#13;
letter to Feldt, centered on two&#13;
complaints.&#13;
The first complaint involved a&#13;
pro-eonstitution flyer which she&#13;
said was found in one of the&#13;
voting booths. Burke termed this&#13;
"illegal."&#13;
econdly, Burke described&#13;
herself as "outraged" that the&#13;
members of the Election Committee&#13;
were "ideologically and&#13;
emotionally involved in the&#13;
PSGA." Burke suggested that&#13;
"only unbiased and non-partisan&#13;
people, preferably outside this&#13;
University" be allowed to&#13;
tabulate votes.&#13;
Debra Friedell, Chairperson of&#13;
the Election Committee&#13;
responded with an invitation to&#13;
Burke to send a representative or&#13;
come herself to check ballots as&#13;
they were being tabulated last&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Friedell, in a letter to Feldt and&#13;
the CCC, stated that "neither she&#13;
IBurke) nor a representative&#13;
showed up at any time while the&#13;
ballots were being counted. "&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, associate&#13;
Dean of Students told RANGER&#13;
that her office had received&#13;
"quite a few calls about election&#13;
irregularities."&#13;
Although Echelbarger felt it&#13;
unfair to name anyone at this&#13;
time, she specified that the&#13;
alleged irregularities involved&#13;
pro-constitution canvassing by&#13;
persons responsible for handing&#13;
ballots to student voters.&#13;
Other complaints to&#13;
Echelbarger's office claimed&#13;
that students located near the&#13;
polls attempted to read completed&#13;
ballots as voters deposited&#13;
them in the ballot box.&#13;
Marian Kropp, a transfer&#13;
student from U.W. Madison said&#13;
that she was "disgusted" with the&#13;
canvassing tactics of PSGA&#13;
President Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
near the voting booths.&#13;
When asked to elaborate,&#13;
Kropp said that Milutinovich&#13;
directed comments towards&#13;
special interest groups opposed&#13;
to the constitution. She described&#13;
these comments as "consisting of&#13;
name calling and slander."&#13;
Phil Livingston of the Students&#13;
for Better Government ( SBG)&#13;
which had recently proposed an&#13;
alternate constitution, stated that&#13;
the SBG had no plans as of now to&#13;
put their constitution up for&#13;
referendum&#13;
"The students obviously want&#13;
the PSGA to represent them."&#13;
Livingston said. Livingston said further that,&#13;
"the vigorous belief of the SBG&#13;
re~ains as strong as ever opposing&#13;
the PSGA as a government,&#13;
but there i nothing to be&#13;
done now after the tudents have&#13;
voted.'&#13;
PSGA&#13;
to replace&#13;
advisor&#13;
In a September 26 meeting,&#13;
PSGA Inc . agreed to seek a new&#13;
advisor to student government.&#13;
The senate unanimously agreed&#13;
that Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
associate Dean of tudents and&#13;
present advisor to PSGA, ha not&#13;
been doing a sati factory job.&#13;
Other discussion included a&#13;
move to hire a new lawyer for&#13;
PSGA. Senator Michael Hahner&#13;
stated that he is in contact with&#13;
Jay Schwartz of Racine and \\-ill&#13;
set up an interview with Schwartz&#13;
to discuss costs.&#13;
President Dennis • lilutinovich&#13;
vetoed a motion by president pro&#13;
tempore John Kontz that instructed&#13;
the president to have all&#13;
minutes of past meetings transcribed&#13;
in the minute book by the&#13;
next PSGA meeting.&#13;
1ilutinovich said it was impossible&#13;
to meet that deadlin but&#13;
said the minutes are presently&#13;
being transcribed and will be&#13;
available as soon a possible. Five of the remaining even&#13;
members of the enate were&#13;
present at the meeting. Karen&#13;
Willems was ab ent. Keith&#13;
Chambers i on leave of absence.&#13;
Referendum&#13;
turnout&#13;
heavy&#13;
:nth over 22 percent of the&#13;
tudent body voting the Par _ide&#13;
tudent Government Association&#13;
Inc. PSGA) coo tJtution ·a&#13;
ratified Wednesday, September&#13;
25, 1974.&#13;
The final tally, counted under&#13;
the upervision of Debra Fried II&#13;
and Kai • 'all of the Election&#13;
Committee. reflected a near] •&#13;
l'-\o-to--one margin in favor of the&#13;
referendum, .,.,;th 733 for and 446&#13;
against.&#13;
• ·a11, co-author of the r entlv&#13;
ratified con titution, and&#13;
chairperson of the med&#13;
tudent Coalition. wa enthus1a&#13;
tic O\'er the large ·oter&#13;
turnout.&#13;
()('akin~ moments aft r the&#13;
Ia t vote a tabulated, • 'all&#13;
id, "I'm 1.1lad to . ee th t N'&#13;
Boycott cuts Canteen sa es&#13;
Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
or RANGER Staff&#13;
The Concerned Student&#13;
oalition &lt;CSCl held a full&#13;
boyt·ott on Canteen food products&#13;
during Sept. 18, 19 and 20.&#13;
sales during the boycott howed&#13;
can soda sales down by 40-50&#13;
percent and cup soda up by 50-60&#13;
percent.&#13;
ell&#13;
ccording to Kai all,&#13;
Also, the food line lo. t an&#13;
estimated $200 a dav during the&#13;
bovcott.&#13;
l-'fe. 1dent of the CSC, the boycott&#13;
wa. to t·ontinue on Monday, Sept.&#13;
30 ugamst all Canteen machines&#13;
·xcept the cup soda and coffee&#13;
machines.&#13;
Nall explained that Canteen&#13;
was not selling enough coffee or&#13;
cup soda, which are con idered&#13;
high profit items. so the price_ on&#13;
other items were increa ed.&#13;
l'ampu •. . '1ebuhr though. 1 in th&#13;
proces of finding out \hy GTr.&#13;
prices are not on i t nt \ 1th&#13;
'\\''_ .&#13;
William Niebuhr. director of&#13;
tudent Life, said that the&#13;
unofficial estimate of Canteen&#13;
However. Canteen price at&#13;
Gateway Technical In titute&#13;
&lt;GTI &gt; are lower than tho e at&#13;
Kaleidoscope on WLIP&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 5, at 2:00 p.m., is the time to tune&#13;
Your AM dial to WLIP for "Kaleidoscope Radio" , a&#13;
half hour program of music, drama and other&#13;
features.&#13;
The program is written, produced a~d t~ped Weekly here at Parkside. Its announcer 1s Diane&#13;
Werwie.&#13;
Werwie is a former winner of the "Golden Mike&#13;
Award" for her dedication and experience in&#13;
pre enting the "New Voice" radio program from&#13;
Tremper High School.&#13;
Now a Parkside student. she has set out to open up these opportunities to other students. like herself. that would like experience in radio broadcastin~.&#13;
will meet again this Thursday. at 2:30 p.m., m CA&#13;
DI57. Werwie said more people are needed. "Twentyfive&#13;
people expre sed their interest at regi tration.&#13;
but only five have come. At lea t ten are needed for&#13;
a succe sful weekly program .. Dave Campbell. the program·s advisor, attributed&#13;
the small turnout at the worshop to a ··Jack&#13;
of time on the part of students. or JU t apathy." " It is an excellent opportunity and good experience&#13;
for those going into electronic media .and&#13;
Parkside ha all of the equipment:· Campbell .aid&#13;
If ··Kaleidoscope Radio·· i ucces ful, the future&#13;
holds many pos ibilities. ··we e,·entually will turn :o F. l tereo.·· Camptx,11&#13;
said . Wl'rwie added. ··Jn three ~ear. Park! 1de ho()(': to&#13;
ha,·e ifs 0\\ n radio station ··&#13;
To do this. a workshop has been organized to tram&#13;
tu.dents as engineers and annourieers. and to teach&#13;
~ritcrs the basics of writing scripts. The&#13;
l&lt;a1t•1doscope Radio Workshop·· met last week&#13;
, .•~. · ·.i~um~1(Jtmr1m11mrrrr11lr1w .: .... : ,.:t1~tt1~1~1~jiij~t~ij · ·.· ·~· ·=· ···=·························:.···· ····················.·=···············= ... =.=.:.=.=.=.~=.=.=.=.:~.:.:.:~&#13;
ill remain&#13;
onl.&#13;
ill &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER Weck .. lday, OCt. 2, 1'74&#13;
GER&#13;
'- __ ----EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
e."s··-&#13;
2-way&#13;
street&#13;
Journa hst,c Intl1lrily 15 not an elusive concept with no&#13;
pr tical m ns 01 application. that newspapers use to&#13;
h de behind when the ,ssues get rough. It is the policy,&#13;
boy all oltMr pohel s,thal mak" any paper worth Its&#13;
It, capabllt of functioning ;as a forum of reSNrched&#13;
ncI ,nvest,~ted facts. In other words. truth. Anything&#13;
nd v... yltll"9 sa,d to a repor er is subject to be prin·&#13;
,", unIe.. oth rwise designated by confidential ceo&#13;
I rr nce or reques . The request that a cerlain remark&#13;
or a body of InformatIon not be used in print, must come&#13;
BE FOR E th remark is made 01 course, all in·&#13;
orm loon gl en 10 reporters 15 eighed lor Importance&#13;
nd truth The lournalist has a responsibility to use good&#13;
iudgm nt nd ood taste in h.s ma erial. What is an&#13;
Import nt e pose to the reporter, may seem an in11md&#13;
long exposition to the Interviewee linding his&#13;
rem r 5 In prlnl.&#13;
In th n wspaper business. e have learned that the&#13;
trultl may set you "H, but it also binds you. The last&#13;
ItIlng th t a secrce wlll reveal is the truth. We on the&#13;
RANGER usure you that what we publish as news. is&#13;
ttl truth as we now It. In editorials. you may have&#13;
r son to ta e Issue with the individual's slant on the&#13;
truth, but n a news article the circumstances and&#13;
remar s are represented in context and objectively. II&#13;
our Intormation 15 Incorrect e Invite you to supply the&#13;
"r I" lacts 01 the case. MDre olten than not. it is not a&#13;
I lse stat ment hat 15 printed. but a half·truth. These&#13;
hall truths are the product 01 the source in most cases or&#13;
01 problems In the availability 01 materials needed to&#13;
research and probe given Inlormation.&#13;
Ouring the Conslltutional Referendum, members 01&#13;
the RANG ER were accused of dishonesty and poor&#13;
journallsloc coverage of all sides. Yet, the RANGER&#13;
nlerv,ewed other organiza ions besides the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. and gave them front page coverage (reler to Sept&#13;
mber 25, 197 Issue). We have been interested in ALL&#13;
SteWs.RANGE R is no1 for the P.S.G.A. Inc. or any other&#13;
organization. except where they serve the interests 01&#13;
the students 01 this university. We are FOR&#13;
STUDENTS! ot lust a!rtain select individuals, but lor&#13;
every member 01 the university who is trying to provide&#13;
lor or wor for a more e"ectua' environment 01 learn'ng.&#13;
It's about time&#13;
The passing 01 he constitution on September 25 ends&#13;
on stage n the complex prOa!ss 01 attaining student&#13;
rights RANGE R ex ends congratulations to those&#13;
students ho exercIsed their rights in voting on the&#13;
conslltut on. The turn·out. approXimately 20 percent 01&#13;
e sludent body-was excellent. Cons dering Par side's&#13;
I atus as a commuter campus with a large enrollment 01&#13;
part hme students, the lact that this high percentage 01&#13;
students oak Ime to e aluate the Issues and make their&#13;
dec Slon bodes well lor student Involvement.&#13;
RANGER hopes that this expression 01 student sen·&#13;
hmentls the beginning 01 a sludent governmenl that has&#13;
the power to mplement fhe opinions 01 students. And&#13;
th these added powers comes a multilude of altendant&#13;
respons.bllllies and opportunities.&#13;
For the student body there exists the opportunity to&#13;
t e part In a functioning democratic government.&#13;
P r side Student Government Associahon will be&#13;
hokl "" elections in October. To those students who have&#13;
a desire to participate In and gain experience Irom an&#13;
effect ve student government RANGER extends an&#13;
Invitation to those serious and knowledgeable can·&#13;
dldates _offer ttle opportunity to utilize the services of&#13;
RA GER to give wide dissemination of their views.&#13;
RANGER does this In the beliel that a wide ranging&#13;
di Iogue on the future of Parkside will give the student&#13;
body a true choice 01 candidates.&#13;
The.re IS&#13;
some HISTORY&#13;
8EIN&lt;:r MADE&#13;
BEHIND THAT&#13;
SHELF, THEN~&#13;
\&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Kontz miHed&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I would like to take this opportunityto&#13;
clarify the meeting&#13;
limes of J'SGA Inc. In the&#13;
September25, 1974 editionof the&#13;
ParksideRANGER newspaper,&#13;
James D. Smith implied thai&#13;
P.S.G.A.Inc. holdsmeetsat odd&#13;
and awkward times for the&#13;
deliberatepurposeof preventing&#13;
a majority of students from attending.The&#13;
P.S.G.A.Inc. is not&#13;
in the habit of holdingmeetings&#13;
at inconvenient hours. The&#13;
meetingon Sunday, September8&#13;
at 10:00 a.m. was the ONLY&#13;
meeting held at such a time as&#13;
this. \l "as held because a&#13;
typographical error in the&#13;
RA.~GER stated the meeting&#13;
time as such. We as the student&#13;
governingbody of this campus,&#13;
felt obhgaLedto holdthemeeting&#13;
anyway because students thought&#13;
this was the correct time. We can&#13;
only ask that Mr. Smith display&#13;
more of a penchant for accuracy&#13;
in the future.&#13;
Sincerelyyours,&#13;
John D. Kontz,&#13;
President Pro Tempore&#13;
ofP.S.G.A.inc.Senate&#13;
Thanks&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Congratulationsto all whoput&#13;
together ICON...a very interesting&#13;
and commendable&#13;
project.&#13;
Arthur Grubl&#13;
Class of '74&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER'&#13;
publication of the students IS a wholly inde~endenl&#13;
pressing the interests .?f the U.W. Parkslde, ex·&#13;
;tudents. and responsi·b~pon.ons. and cOncerns of the&#13;
located in 0194 LLC e lor .ts contents. Offices are&#13;
Wisconsin 53140 Ph ,U.W. Parkside. Kenosha.&#13;
. . ones 553·2295. 553-2287.&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
BUSiness.Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
AdvertISing Manager J h S Pd' 0 n acket&#13;
ro uchon Manager Tom K C E' ennedy&#13;
oPV d.tor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News EdItor Michael 015 k&#13;
~umanities Editor amy clJndari&#13;
M&#13;
e&#13;
:&#13;
s Department Paul Anderson&#13;
C&#13;
I, e Nepper, Jeannine Sipsma •&#13;
o I~en Wilson •&#13;
Humanities DepartmentW .&#13;
Photoqraphy Editor 0 I alter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Ph t a e Allen&#13;
o ographers Dave Kell Ohm er. Rita&#13;
HEP R SIDE RA GER ed ~y. Oct. 2. 1974&#13;
[ Editori!i!on~&#13;
-&#13;
2 y&#13;
et&#13;
about time&#13;
There's&#13;
some H\STORY&#13;
BEING- MADE&#13;
BEHi ND THAT&#13;
SHELF, THEN~&#13;
,:&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Kontz miffed&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I ould like to take this oprtunity&#13;
to clarify the meeting&#13;
tim of .PSGA Inc. In the&#13;
ptember 25. 1974 edition of the&#13;
Park id R 'GER newspaper,&#13;
Jam D Smith implied that&#13;
P G A. Inc. holds meets at odd&#13;
and awkward times for the&#13;
deliberate purpose of preventing&#13;
a majority of students from attending.&#13;
The P S.G.A. Inc. is not&#13;
in the habit of holding meetings&#13;
at inconvenient hours. The&#13;
m ing on Sunday. September 8&#13;
at 10:00 a.m. was the ONLY&#13;
meeting held at uch a time as&#13;
thi . It w a held because a&#13;
typographical error in the&#13;
~ · ER tated the meeting&#13;
time as such. We as the student&#13;
governing body of this campus&#13;
felt obligated to hold the meeting&#13;
anyway because students thought&#13;
this was the correct time. We can&#13;
only ask that Mr. Smith display&#13;
more of a penchant for accuracy&#13;
in the future.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
John D. Kontz,&#13;
President Pro Tempore&#13;
of P .S.G.A.Inc. Senate&#13;
Thanks&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Congratulations to all who put&#13;
together ICON ... a very interesting&#13;
and commendable&#13;
project.&#13;
~ lY/ . "&gt;yrr .. The Parksidiee--------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Class of '74&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER . publication of the st d t is a wholly independeni&#13;
::&gt;ressing the interes~ en~ ?f the U.W. Parkside, ex-&#13;
:;tudents, and responstbiC:t 0 ~ s' and concerns of the&#13;
ocated in 0 194 LLC or ,ts contents. Offices are&#13;
Wisconsin 531 40 Ph ' U.W. Parkside, Kenosha, . . ones 553-2295, 553-2287&#13;
Ed,~or Kenneth Pestka ·&#13;
Busine~s. Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Advertising Manager J h S&#13;
Production M O n acket&#13;
anager Tom Kenned&#13;
Copy Edi_tor Rebecca Ecklund y&#13;
~ews ~~1tor Michael Olszyk&#13;
N uman1t1es Editor amy cundari&#13;
ews Department Paul And&#13;
Mike N erson,&#13;
C II ep~er, Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
0 ~en Wilson '&#13;
Humanities Department&#13;
Photoqraphy Editor DatWaAlltler Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Phot e en&#13;
ographers Dave Kell&#13;
Ohm er, Rita&#13;
I &#13;
[)ear Mr. Wood. .&#13;
I mean how lucky can you get? George Harrison writes a song f&#13;
you. Jagger and Richard ,,:rite TWO songs for you. Rod Stewart sin~~&#13;
bSCk-up vocals for sou. Kieth RIchard sings and plays lead guitar.&#13;
while Ian McLagan (of Small Faces and Faces fame) plays organ f r&#13;
you. Sounds like a dynamite album, right? Dead wrong! You blew ~t&#13;
Ronnie. baby! .&#13;
you'd think with all that help and talent. I've Got My Own Album To&#13;
Do. would be one oflhe outstanding albums of the year.&#13;
Shame on you. Ron Wood.&#13;
After serving your apprenticeship with Messrs. Beck and Stewart&#13;
and after d?ing great thin~s wi,th the Faces; how could you play&#13;
somethinglike Crotch MUSIC which sounds like someone scratching&#13;
the same' How on earth did you manage to hall up, Am I Groovin You.&#13;
a Chuck Berry tune, so bad? And I hope George Harrison never speaks&#13;
to you again for what you did to his, Far East Man. Mr. Jagger and&#13;
Mr.Richard are sure going to be unpleasantly surprised. when they&#13;
hearAct Together and Sure the One You Need. And the next time you&#13;
do, If You Golla Make a Fool of Somebody. do us all a favor and let&#13;
Rod Stewart sing lead and not just back-up. Please?&#13;
Although. I must admit I Can Feel the Fire and Mystifies Me. are&#13;
real nice rockers and you and Richards did manage to keep your&#13;
guitar strings untangled. And. Take a Look at the Guy has a neat duet&#13;
lof sorts). so how do you explain mudpies like. Shirley and Cancel&#13;
Everything?&#13;
I'm afraid I'lljust have to give you a Dcfor this album. Now listen, if&#13;
youcouldget Rod and Jeffery ~they're not doing much now, and Mick&#13;
Wallerto play drums otherwise I'll just have to keep listening to&#13;
Beck-ola.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Fred Bultman&#13;
-Fred Bultman of RANGER&#13;
All albums in this column are donated by One Sweet Dream. and can&#13;
be checked out in the library.&#13;
Grants&#13;
deadline&#13;
approaches&#13;
In May. t974. the t975-76&#13;
competition for grants for&#13;
graduate study abroad offered&#13;
under the Mutual Educational&#13;
Exchange Program &lt;FulbrightHays)&#13;
and by foreign govern.&#13;
ments, universities and private&#13;
donors was officially opened by&#13;
the Institute of International&#13;
Education. Only a few more&#13;
weeks remain in which qualified&#13;
graduate students may apply for&#13;
one of the 550 awards which are&#13;
available to 52 countries.&#13;
Most of the grants offered&#13;
provide round-trip tranSportation,&#13;
tuition and main.&#13;
tenance for one academic year; a&#13;
few provide international travel&#13;
only or a stipend intended as a&#13;
Partial ,grant-in-aid.&#13;
S&#13;
PORTS&#13;
C;~TER&#13;
,....152-... 1&#13;
2728· 52nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS. 5314.&#13;
Parts and Service lor&#13;
All Imported Cars&#13;
also&#13;
QUAliTY ROAD SERVICE&#13;
Visit Keuoshats Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
*Rock*]aa*Pop*F olk*&#13;
*Classical*&#13;
DISCOUNT PRlCES ALWA YS&#13;
~~&#13;
""" The Place to hu}' record~&#13;
Candidates must be U.S.&#13;
citizens at the time of application.&#13;
hold a bachelor's&#13;
degree or its equivalent by the&#13;
beginning date of the grant, have&#13;
language ability commensurate&#13;
with the demands of the proposed&#13;
study projects. and good health.&#13;
Preference is given to those&#13;
between 20 and 35 years of age.&#13;
Application forms and further&#13;
information for students&#13;
currently enrolled at Parkside&#13;
may be obtained from the&#13;
campus Fulbright Program&#13;
Adviser John Zarling, associate&#13;
professor of Engineering&#13;
Science, who is located in LLC&#13;
340. The deadline for filing applications&#13;
on this campus is&#13;
OCtober t7. 1974.&#13;
Third&#13;
world&#13;
elects&#13;
officers&#13;
by Nathan Jones&#13;
The Black and Brown members&#13;
of the Parkside student community&#13;
have come t~ether in a&#13;
coalition of peoples of coJor and&#13;
those sympathetic to the cause of&#13;
Third World liberation. The&#13;
meeting was held Thursday,&#13;
September 26.&#13;
Under the leadership of Hayes&#13;
Norman, 15 students came&#13;
together to formuJate an identity.&#13;
purpose, and direction for the&#13;
two-year-old organization.&#13;
Perceiving themselves fUDdamentalJy&#13;
as a support-group&#13;
for "minority students;" the&#13;
emerging organization seeks to&#13;
bring about a unity among these&#13;
students and those sympathetic&#13;
to their cause. Not every&#13;
potential member has yet chosen&#13;
to share in the diIIerence this&#13;
organization will make, but they&#13;
are welcome, according to&#13;
Norman.&#13;
At the last meeting officers&#13;
were elected in order to get the&#13;
coalition off the ground this&#13;
school-year. They are: Hayes&#13;
Norman, president; Arlene&#13;
Martin, vice-president; Nathan&#13;
Jones, secretary; and Cornelius&#13;
Gordon, chairperson of the&#13;
communications committee.&#13;
It was the belief of the members&#13;
that no longer can they&#13;
afford the luxury of doing their&#13;
own little thing in their own little&#13;
pasture. Rather. they must pool&#13;
their strengths, energies and&#13;
mind-power, and with long and&#13;
careful coJiaboration, come&#13;
closer to the truth of tbe world.&#13;
The next meeting of The Third&#13;
World coalition will be held&#13;
October 3, Thursday. in room&#13;
0174 at 12'30 p.m.&#13;
Open:'; a.m. :\Ion. thru Thurs.&#13;
xa.m.xun.&#13;
~~&#13;
~~~&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
(A&amp;'!v&gt;&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
30th Ave. &amp; Roosevelt Rd.&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-25R2&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY&#13;
NO COYER CHARGE&#13;
15c TAPS&#13;
4619 Eighth Ave. 657-9791 )&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
_.,o~·STATE BANK&#13;
~&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Jomes DotReII Smltll Jr.&#13;
TIlINK BACK READERS. to your idyllic pre-Parkslde period, to&#13;
HIe which virtually revolved around your anticipation of umversny&#13;
life and all its joys. As you strolled through our lillie garden of Eden&#13;
for the first time, soothed by the reassuring drone of a guide'S voice.&#13;
you thrilled in the realizalioo that this was It. college. You had&#13;
arrived!&#13;
But something was wrong. You couldn't put your finger 00 It, but&#13;
something was missing. You put it from your mind though, not&#13;
allowing your reverie 10 be disturbed. And so it went through ummer&#13;
vacation and registration until perhaps the first day or classes or&#13;
maybe for you the second or third Then you knew. Or maybe It took&#13;
the first cold day when you bad to bring a coal or haul a lunch Perhaps&#13;
it was a Wednesday when you found yourselfat school for twelve hours&#13;
with twenty pounds of calculus. sociology, chemistry, history and&#13;
!¥Iysics books with no place to drop them. It could have been then thai&#13;
it dawned on you that when you wanted to run over to the Phy Ed&#13;
building at noon (or a swim and shower, what you couJdn't leave your&#13;
books, coat,lunch, umbrella and lab books in was a wall locker. 'cuz Jt&#13;
ain't dere volks! And hasn't been for the last SIX years&#13;
Those wbo have the desire to see and the responsibility to insure the&#13;
establishment of an environment conducive to minimal msLracbon&#13;
from the learning process would do well to reorder pricnues such that&#13;
less emphasis is given to carrying books and more to reading them&#13;
WHY DO THINGS HALF WAY! If you have a good thing, push it.&#13;
right? Sucb a far-reaching progressive measure of socio-econcnue&#13;
leveling as charging faculty-staff Iif'ty dollars for a twenty-eight dollar&#13;
parking permit should be reflected in a twenty-seven cent price for a&#13;
cup of coffee. They should pay five dollars for a two-dollar and elghly&#13;
cent book too. I mean really now. after all we only want to be Iair.&#13;
don't we?&#13;
I DO NOT BEGRUDGE THE PRESESCE OF TIlOSE PEOPLE AT&#13;
THIS NIVERSITY wbo are not here 10 study and learn all that they&#13;
can; I will not question their right to be here. But I will question their&#13;
right to interfere with those of a different bent.&#13;
IF AN EXAM MUST BE P T ON A FRIDAY because some people&#13;
in a class "don't wanna bana study over the weekend," then what of&#13;
those who do? To whom should a universtry cater" To which group&#13;
should a professor defer at the expense of the other' To the firsl group&#13;
a Monday exam is a cause for COncern to their consciences. They&#13;
wouldn't study over the weekend that a Mooday exam would give&#13;
them anyway. and find it easier to excuse themselves for a poor&#13;
Friday performance because it comes at the end of a loog week The&#13;
second group will study over that weekend regardless and haVIng had&#13;
an exam on the preceeding Friday robs them of the opporturuty of&#13;
reaping additional benefit from their diligence. The weeeend I the&#13;
time for a real student to sirt, digest. organize, catalogue and Jearn&#13;
all that has been put out to him and for him dunng a week that ha&#13;
been hectic, if he is working up to his abilities. It is also a Orne for&#13;
relaxation. But if it must be a lime to forgel that one IS a student, then&#13;
why be a student at all?&#13;
make&#13;
·a·&#13;
date&#13;
_._-_._-_ .......,&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN' TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELelllE&#13;
Iler skate&#13;
.312..,' 6-$0.1'&#13;
_3Z·S=~5-&#13;
-----&#13;
--&#13;
-&#13;
---------&#13;
SHOW COLLEGE I D. &amp;&#13;
KATE FOR SI2;;A:-;Y LATE&#13;
WJo:Jo:KI:::-;DSESSIOX.&#13;
THl·RS. 9: 15·11' t5&#13;
FRI &amp;SAT 9:30-11'30&#13;
~.eete'"&#13;
I825SYCA~IORE .~\·EXt:E&#13;
R.~ClXE. WISCOXSIX 53-lOO&#13;
CALL 633-4493&#13;
M"'\tka. M!R.ttiti. ~fb.lRJ&#13;
~ ~&#13;
"'....- 590..9:&#13;
6.5P-3b~~&#13;
•&#13;
Dear Mr. Wood, .&#13;
1 mean how luc~y can yo~ get? George Harrison writes a song for&#13;
you. Jagger and Richard w_rite T~O songs for you. Rod Stewart sings&#13;
back-up vocals for you. Kieth Richard sings and plays lead guitar,&#13;
while Ian McLagan (of Small Faces and Faces fame) plays organ for&#13;
you. Sounds like a dynamite album, right? Dead wrong! You blew it&#13;
Ronnie, baby! ·&#13;
You'd think with all that help and talent, I've Got My Own Album To&#13;
Do, would be one of the outstanding albums of the year. Shame on you, Ron Wood.&#13;
After serving your apprenticeship with Messrs. Beck and Stewart&#13;
and aft~r d?ing great thin~s wi~ the Faces; how could you play&#13;
something like Crotch Music which sounds like someone scratching&#13;
the same? How on earth did you manage to ball up Am I Groovin You&#13;
a C'huck Berry tune, so bad? And I hope George H;rrison never speak~&#13;
to you_again for what yo~ did to his, Far East Man. Mr. Jagger and&#13;
tr. Richard are sure gomg to be unpleasantly surprised when they&#13;
hear Act Together and Sure the One You Need. And the next time you&#13;
do, U You Gotta Make a Fool of Somebody, do us all a favor and let Rod Stewart sing lead and not just back-up. Please?&#13;
Although, I must admit I Can Feel the Fire and Mystifies Me, are&#13;
real nice rockers and you and Richards did manage to keep your&#13;
guitar strings untangled. And, Take a Look at the Guy has a neat duet&#13;
(of sorts), so how do you explain mudpies like, Shirley and Cancel&#13;
Everything?&#13;
I'm afraid I'll just have to give you a D-for this album. Now listen if&#13;
you could get Rod and Jeffery. they're not doing much now, and Mi.ck Waller to play drums ... otherwise I'll just have to keep listening to&#13;
Beck-0la.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Fred Bultman&#13;
-Fred Bultman of RANGER&#13;
All albums in this column are donated by One Sweet Dream, and can&#13;
be checked out in the library.&#13;
Grants&#13;
deadline&#13;
approaches&#13;
In May, 1974, the 1975-76&#13;
competition for grants for&#13;
graduate study abroad offered&#13;
under the Mutual Educational&#13;
Exchange Program (FulbrightHaysl&#13;
and by foreign governments,&#13;
universities and private&#13;
donors was officially opened by&#13;
the Institute of International&#13;
Education. Only a few more&#13;
weeks remain in which qualified&#13;
graduate students may apply for&#13;
one of the 550 awards which are&#13;
available to 52 countries.&#13;
Most of the grants offered&#13;
provide round-trip tranportation,&#13;
tuition and maintenance&#13;
for one academic year; a&#13;
few provide international travel&#13;
only or a stipend intended as a&#13;
partial grant-in-aid.&#13;
Candidates must be U.S.&#13;
citizens at the time of application,&#13;
hold a bachelor's&#13;
degree or its equivalent by the&#13;
beginning date of the grant, have&#13;
language ability commensurate&#13;
with the demands of the proposed&#13;
study projects, and good health.&#13;
Preference is given to those&#13;
between 20 and 35 years of age.&#13;
Application forms and further&#13;
information for student&#13;
currently enrolled at Parkside&#13;
may be obtained from the&#13;
campus Fulbright Program&#13;
Adviser John Zarling. associate&#13;
professor of Engineering&#13;
Science, who is located in LLC&#13;
340. The deadline for filing applications&#13;
on this campu&#13;
October it. 1974.&#13;
Third&#13;
world&#13;
elects&#13;
officers&#13;
by :'liathan Jones&#13;
The Black and Brown members of the Parkside tudent community&#13;
have come t~ether in a&#13;
coalition of peoples of color and&#13;
those sympathetic to the cau e of&#13;
Third World liberation. The&#13;
meeting was held Thursdav September 26. • '&#13;
Under the leadership of Hayes&#13;
orman. 15 students came&#13;
together to formulate an identity&#13;
purpose, and direction for th~&#13;
two-year-old organization.&#13;
Perceiving themselves fundamentally&#13;
as a support-group for "minority students," the&#13;
emerging organization eeks to&#13;
bring about a unity among the e&#13;
students and those sympathetic&#13;
to their cause. Not everv&#13;
potential member ha yet choseii&#13;
to share in the difference thi&#13;
organization will make, but thev&#13;
are welcome, according to&#13;
Norman.&#13;
At the last meeting officers&#13;
were elected in order to get the&#13;
coalition off the ground this&#13;
school-year. They are: Hayes&#13;
Norman, president: Arlene&#13;
Martin. vice-president; athan&#13;
Jones, secretary; and Cornelius&#13;
Gordon. chairperson of the&#13;
communication committee&#13;
It was the belief of the members&#13;
that no longer can they&#13;
afford the luxury of doing their&#13;
own little thing in their own little&#13;
pasture. Rather, they must pool&#13;
their strengths, energies and&#13;
mind-power. and with long and&#13;
careful collaboration. come&#13;
closer to the truth of the world.&#13;
The next meeting of The Third&#13;
World coalition will be held&#13;
October 3, Thur day. in room&#13;
D174 at 12:30 p.m&#13;
Open: 6 a.m. ;\Ion. thru Thur ..&#13;
a.m. un.&#13;
~~&#13;
~~~ SERVICE&#13;
~ RESTAURANT&#13;
2728 - 52nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS. 53140&#13;
Parts and Service for&#13;
All Imported Cars&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
also&#13;
QUALITY ROAD SERVICE&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
RPcord Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
•Rock*Ja£z*PoP*Folk*&#13;
*Classical*&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
,._&#13;
:J~&#13;
The Place to huy re('ord,&#13;
4619 Eighth Ave.&#13;
15c TAPS&#13;
657-9791&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Membff F.D I C&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
make&#13;
·-· date&#13;
lier skate&#13;
-------&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
Of BOOKS IN· TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wednesdn. OCt. 2. 1'74&#13;
•&#13;
osts seminar&#13;
L ....&#13;
I&#13;
.. "&#13;
ocII""""'.IJ'S lut) ar and came&#13;
W&lt;) _ ... WlIlIIinlt evee&#13;
lbough cempet ng against&#13;
~ lrom Jdlools ,.,lb large&#13;
bro d 8sunl and journahsm&#13;
cIopar1meIlU&#13;
'!be r be held lrom&#13;
• 1~8JD ~ pm 011 turda}.&#13;
ber t A rocatralionlee 01&#13;
cIoIJa """on both lbe&#13;
_ ..... or and a beon&#13;
A .nn lbe&#13;
day lrom • 4S ... 9,30 a m AI·&#13;
....,....-d JOUl one 01&#13;
lour panel gro~&#13;
~ 01 prol lrom&#13;
major W n.-. I8UOC1S&#13;
8d Dl I . 01 \\,'IIo&gt;nSln.&#13;
paneb held .............. t1)&#13;
om'ng and aft.rnoon, ,II&#13;
4iK •.•. Radio and&#13;
T If'\ ion Progr.mmang~&#13;
Broad&lt;:ast Sales and ProDl°tions,&#13;
and Community Relations and&#13;
Pubhc Allairs. '11 be&#13;
Th. scholarship awards WI&#13;
made at the noon luncheon. A&#13;
general session at 3 p.m. on lbe&#13;
IUlure oleable and pay lelevlSlon&#13;
,,;U conclude the seminar. .&#13;
Interested sludents may oblaUl&#13;
reg_alion lorms. scholarship&#13;
applications and more 10·&#13;
formation from either Lynn&#13;
Gartley. aSS1SWlI professor of&#13;
CommunlC3tions, al (553') 242910&#13;
Gr 3Z2 or Sheldon Harsel. m·&#13;
suud.o~ or Commlmications at&#13;
553-2518 10 Gr 302.&#13;
cholarship applications.&#13;
reg'slration forms and lbe live&#13;
dollar registration lee should be&#13;
returned 00 laler than Friday,&#13;
OclOber 25.&#13;
Business exam&#13;
deadline&#13;
IwaU- •• ltt'U ,... Utt'&#13;
t for Grad.al~&#13;
.. t$ (TG 81 are&#13;
IH~r Wf'l.hf' d of&#13;
\\ .~,. Pla«IDN&amp;&#13;
'M f 0«' 1be tell be ad·&#13;
end OD • . J. 197., and 011&#13;
Jan 25. arch 22 and July 12,&#13;
I, and ~oIapplicaDls&#13;
to m.... thaD no graduale&#13;
CANTEEN&#13;
BUY A MEAL PASS&#13;
'II WORTH OF FOOD FOR 'ID&#13;
PLUS WE PAY THE TAX&#13;
AVAILABLE STARTING MON., OCT. 7&#13;
CANTEEN FOOD SERVICE&#13;
bustness schools.&#13;
There IS a test lee(\2), which&#13;
CO"ers a score report sent to lbe&#13;
applicant. to Ius undergraduate&#13;
placement officer and as many as&#13;
three graduate .. 1looIs 01 his&#13;
cbolce Registration to take the&#13;
teSt sIlouId be made in advance to&#13;
aVOid an addtional service (ee&#13;
and guaranlee a place.&#13;
Fine arts preview o 0t (recent paintings by Robert Cadez, assistant prot:&#13;
An e'hl~e 'iJniversity 01 Wisconsin·Parkside, will he on displa'tlor&#13;
of arl.at ~ Co munication Arts Gallery Sept. 23through Oct. 19 YIf&#13;
Parkslde s .rn ludes paintings silkscreen prints and a ...:&#13;
The show IDC . ' ed ed f I' ~·os ~ lexigla" constructions r uc rom ,~e pholograJlhs~&#13;
unusual I' ti and printed in 011based 10kon plexiglass panels l(&#13;
larger. ~~a~fLittrell will present a faculty recital on Friday. ~t1.&#13;
Cellis 4' the communication Arts Theater at the Univers' .,&#13;
p.rn. Oct. P'aIDrksideHe will be assisted by pianist Mary Annli~~&#13;
Wiscoostn- . -q,&#13;
hi~le.:.,gram is free and open to the public.&#13;
The pLittrells will play Hindemith's Sonata,. Opus 11, no.&#13;
e rt' "Arpeggione" Sonata; and Rachmaninoff's Sona'•. I.&#13;
Schube s ~ Ill'&#13;
minor Opus 19. '. .&#13;
The 'IlS-member Lake Shore ~ymp~ony Orchestra 01 Cltlcago...&#13;
• 0 t Stephen swedish as SolOist will present a guest concertIt .....&#13;
pla~ls 0t or Wisconsin-Parkside Communication Arts Theater lilt&#13;
UDlverSlocYt 6 (sunday) under sponsorship 01 lbe Parkside 1_'t. t&#13;
p.m. on . "..--wrtFine&#13;
Arts Committee. ..'&#13;
Swedish, a member .of the Parkslde musIC faculty, will liay lilt&#13;
Greig Piano Concerto ID A Mmor, lbe work he perlormed With lilt&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony last Sunday (Sept. 22) at lbe PerformingAna&#13;
Center. At that perlormance, the capacIty audi~nce brOUghtSwediI,&#13;
bad&lt; on stag~ several tlme~ wIth enthuSlasllc applause III&#13;
Milwaukee critiCS praised the mterpretatIOn of the expansIVe-.&#13;
certo. . I' W '0 t . The orchestra also WIll P ay agner s ver ure to "Rienzi" ...&#13;
Tchaikovsky's Symphony NO.5.&#13;
The concert will be conducted by Ralph Lane of 6427 C!larles lit.&#13;
Racine a former professor of music and dean of the conservalG)"&#13;
music ~t Lawrence University, who has appeared as conduduo.&#13;
numerous symphonY concerts both in Europe and the U.S. Herecoi ..&#13;
a master 01music degree from the Eastman School 01Music,whlft •&#13;
also was a laculty member, and also holds a degree from !IartlIll&#13;
Law School. Concert tickets are available at the Parkside Inlormation Ceotori&#13;
Library.Learning Center Main Place, at Cook·Gere in Racine...&#13;
Bidinger'S House of Music in Kenosha. General admission is a ..&#13;
adults and $1 for all students.&#13;
"The Oaks," a print by University of Wisconsin.ParklWe.&#13;
proressor Moishe Smith, is the recipient of a purchase awant II&#13;
Los Angeles Printmaking Society's second National Print EIhllIllot,I&#13;
on display at the Otis i\rt Institute Gallery through Nov. II.&#13;
national juried. show opened Octo 3.&#13;
Unified to ease Keno&#13;
TIte Doihed School Board&#13;
.Ionday. sept. 23. voted &amp;-1 to&#13;
accept a $170.000 city-eounty&#13;
renl8l lee lor the University 01&#13;
WlSCOIlSmCenter building and&#13;
enter' negotiations for a lease.&#13;
The action was recommended&#13;
1». the board's UWK committee.&#13;
lark Undas, chairman, ex·&#13;
pressed the hope lbat midway in&#13;
lbe Ih'e-year lease the board and&#13;
the owners of the building can sit&#13;
dowTland discuss the possibility&#13;
01 gIving lIle building to the&#13;
dlSlnct lor a permanent high&#13;
sdlooI&#13;
According to Waller Johnson, a&#13;
board member. nifted will not&#13;
use lbe building as a regular&#13;
EAT ON&#13;
CAMPUS?&#13;
OW SAVE&#13;
public high school but rather as&#13;
an alternative schooL&#13;
"Our offer was made&#13;
primarily to relieve the school&#13;
district o( overcrowding,"&#13;
Johnson said.&#13;
"Other institutions, such as&#13;
KTI, have expressed an interest&#13;
in future use of the building,"&#13;
Johnson said. "Unified's use of it&#13;
is going to be temporary."&#13;
Rent for the five-year period&#13;
will amount to $850,000. With an&#13;
additional $200,000 lor&#13;
remndeling, the tQtal cost will&#13;
amount to $1.6 million.&#13;
Eugene Ryshkus commented,&#13;
"If we get into the building and&#13;
offer a program we can be proud&#13;
0(, maybe there will be a&#13;
of attitude."&#13;
Frank Falduto,&#13;
president, said, "'They'd hlw&#13;
evict us."&#13;
Jackie Ball, the only&#13;
member to vote against&#13;
motion to accept the&#13;
complained, "We'll be p"tiIIC&#13;
our money in it and still.,&#13;
own it when the five yean&#13;
up." 0&#13;
She suggested lookingfor&#13;
property and said site knew ..&#13;
least live other buildings 1IIiIl&#13;
are available.&#13;
Falduto said the board bad&#13;
alternatives: "We can e&#13;
Tremper, expand Bradford,&#13;
a double shill at bolh ~&#13;
schools, purchase property,&#13;
the UWK building or doooIhiIJ&#13;
Falduto's suggestion to .&#13;
the molion to include an ...&#13;
buy the school at the endal&#13;
years lost 4·3.&#13;
~ lJIY l'W·PARK!I1&#13;
~nrWINTF.RRRF.AK~'&#13;
acopu&#13;
$244&#13;
• Round Trip I.t&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodgill&#13;
• Marcarila Party&#13;
• Yacht Cruis. a! ..&#13;
• Ground Transf&#13;
'&#13;
rs&#13;
• Tips &amp; Tax'S&#13;
For application or lO(or'&#13;
Contacle .,1i'&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL(E .&#13;
• "I.e [).197 call:&#13;
• • PLUS S20.oo :s-&#13;
&amp; SERVICE otJJ'&#13;
ON3TOAIt&#13;
IDE RA GER ednuct.y, Od. 2, 1974&#13;
• osts seminar&#13;
Fine arts preview . . of recent paintings by ~obert ~adez, _assistant Pror&#13;
An exhibit U iversity of Wisconsm-Parks1de, will be on disp:--&#13;
of art _at ~h~;munication Arts Gallery Sept. 23 through Oct. 19 Y a&#13;
Parkside s . ludes paintings, silkscreen prints and a 8eri&#13;
The show !n~ss constructions reduced from line photogra~ of&#13;
unusual I?1e~igl and printed in oil based ink on plexiglass panels of&#13;
larger_ pam~rLittrell will present a faculty recital on Friday, ~t ?·&#13;
CelhSt Da . the Communication Arts The~te~ at the Universi . II&#13;
p.m. Oc~. 4p• mkside He will be assisted by p1amst Mary Ann Litt~~&#13;
Wisconsin- ar · -..,:q&#13;
his wife. is free and open to the public.&#13;
~?~i~!ft1s will play Hindemith's Sonata,_ O~s 11, no. 1&#13;
Schubert's "Arpeggione'~ Sonata; and Rachma~moff s Sonata in p&#13;
minor• Opus 1be&#13;
9· r Lake Shore Symphony Orchestra of Chicago ..... 11te ss-mem . .11 t ~ ... iani t Stephen Swedish as sol~1st w1 pres!n ! guest concert •t 1t&#13;
P, . rsit or Wisconsin-Parkside Comm~rucabon Arts Theater at&#13;
Unive Ocy t 6 (Sunday) under sponsorship of the Parkside Leci.-'&#13;
p.m. on . - Fine Arts Committee. . . Swedish, a member of the ~arks1de music faculty, will play flit&#13;
G ·g Piano Concerto in A Minor, the work he performed With flit&#13;
r.~f~aukee Symphony last Sunday (Sep~. 22) a_t the Performing Ana&#13;
Center. At that performanc~, the cai;&gt;ac1ty audi~nc~ brought ~&#13;
back on stage several time~ with en_thustastic applause 111d&#13;
Milwaukee critics praised the mterpretatton of the expansive cqi.&#13;
c~~ orchestra also will play' Wagner's Overture to "Rienzi'' 111d&#13;
Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5.&#13;
The concert will be conducted by Ralph Lane of 6427 Charles&#13;
Racine a former professor of music and dean of the conservai«yer&#13;
music ~t Lawrence University, who has appeared as conduct« 1&#13;
numerous symphony concerts both in Europe and the U.S. ~e recev.i&#13;
a master of music degree from the Eastman School of Music, where_&#13;
also was a faculty member, and also holds a degree from Han,•&#13;
Law School.&#13;
Concert tickets are available at the Parkside Information Centlli&#13;
Library-Learning Center Main Place, at Cook-Gere in Racine ._&#13;
Bidinger's House of Music in Kenosha. General admission is a r.&#13;
adults and $1 for all students. "11te Oaks," a print by University of Wisconsin-Park Wt 111&#13;
prores or Moishe Smith, is the recipient of a purchase award la It&#13;
Los Angeles Printmaking Society's Second National Print Elhlbilla,&#13;
00 di play at the Otis l\rt Institute Gallery through Nov. H. 'lit&#13;
national juried show opened Oct. 3.&#13;
Unified to lease Keno&#13;
EAT 0&#13;
CA PU ?&#13;
SAVE!&#13;
g to Walter Johnson, a&#13;
ber, nified will not&#13;
!din a a regular&#13;
public high school but rather as&#13;
an alternative school.&#13;
" Our offer was made&#13;
primarily to relieve the school&#13;
district of overcrowding,"&#13;
Johnson said.&#13;
"Other institutions, such as&#13;
KTI, have expressed an interest&#13;
in future use of the building,"&#13;
Johnson said. "Unified's use of it&#13;
is going to be temporary."&#13;
Rent for the five-year period&#13;
will amount to $850,000. With an&#13;
additional $200,000 for&#13;
remodeling, the tQtal cost will&#13;
amount to $1.6 million.&#13;
Eugene Ryshkus commented,&#13;
" If we get into the building and&#13;
offer a program we can be proud&#13;
of, maybe there will be a&#13;
of attitude."&#13;
Frank Falduto,&#13;
president, said, "They'd ha,e&#13;
evict us."&#13;
Jackie Ball, the only&#13;
member to vote against&#13;
motion to accept the offer&#13;
complained, "We'll be putlil\1&#13;
our money in it and still wm&#13;
own it when the five years&#13;
up." . She suggested looking for&#13;
property and said she knew«&#13;
least five other buildings&#13;
are available.&#13;
Falduto said the board had&#13;
alternatives: "We can e&#13;
Tremper, expand Bradford,&#13;
a double shift at both&#13;
schools, purchase property.&#13;
the UWK building or do nothiIC&#13;
Falduto's suggestion to&#13;
the motion to include an opliGI&#13;
buy the school at the end of&#13;
years lost 4-3.&#13;
~ lJY l 'W-P \RK. pt:&#13;
~" WINTERRRE\K TRIP&#13;
HOTEL&#13;
et~ &amp; RACQUET CL&#13;
a,apulCO&#13;
$244 PLUS S20 00 ~!~D &amp; SERVICE OOJ' ON J TO AR&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodgill&#13;
• Marcarita Party&#13;
• Yacht Cruise of llf&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tips &amp; Taxes&#13;
For application or inforlll'&#13;
Contact .&#13;
C AMPl'S TRAVEL Ct,&#13;
II I.LC D-197 call: . &#13;
ampus calendar I&#13;
laYl&#13;
i!,l DNESDAY, October 2 -&#13;
lis ~ESKELLAR: Featuring&#13;
Kudlata from Milwaukee,&#13;
y;ng guitar and smgmg from&#13;
m. in GreenqUlst Hall, room&#13;
~'.Admission is free and open&#13;
the public.&#13;
FILM: "superma~t,. ~ponsored&#13;
the parkside Activities Board&#13;
sp.m. in the.Student Activities&#13;
dg AdmiSSIon IS $1.00 and&#13;
. 'de I.D. and proof of age&#13;
required&#13;
SATURDAY, October 5 -&#13;
ANeE: Featuring "Mandrake"&#13;
nsored by the Parkside Acvities&#13;
Board from 9 p.m.-l a.m.&#13;
the Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Issionis $1.50.Parkside J.D.&#13;
d proof of age are required.&#13;
III SUNDAY, October 6&#13;
. AGTIME RANGERS MEMRSHIPMEETING:&#13;
12noon in .&#13;
e Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
will be an orienteering&#13;
y after, films, beer, etc.&#13;
FILM: "SUperman" at 7:30&#13;
.m. in the Student Activities&#13;
dg. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
SATURDAY,October 19 - UWAPISON&#13;
vs. MICHIGAN&#13;
TBALL GAME: $10.00 inudesbus&#13;
trip there and ticket to&#13;
e game. Sign up at the Ination&#13;
center, I..LC Main&#13;
ceo&#13;
EMEST/o;R BREAK - TWO&#13;
IPS: ACAPULCO AND&#13;
AMAICA• BOTH BETWEEN&#13;
ANUARY3-10. 1975&#13;
ACAPULCO:$244 plus $20 tax&#13;
service based on 3 to a room.&#13;
eludes round trip tranrtation.&#13;
7 nignts at the deluxe&#13;
Matador Hotel &amp; Racquet&#13;
ub. Yacht cruise of Aca puleo&#13;
y with a welcoming Margarita&#13;
. Includes tips and taxes.&#13;
or further information contact&#13;
Student Life Office LLC D197&#13;
phooe 553-2294.&#13;
AMAleA&#13;
MONTEGOBAY: $279plus $20&#13;
x and service based on 3 to a&#13;
om. Includes round trip&#13;
nsportation. 7 nights at Toby&#13;
Jusl Stop In!&#13;
I '~'P~&#13;
9"'" Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County /0; &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
Inn. only a short walk from&#13;
famous Doctor's Cave Beach.&#13;
Tips and taxes included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS: $309 plus $20 tax&#13;
and service based on 3 to a room.&#13;
Includes round trip transportation.&#13;
7 nights at Shaw Park&#13;
located on the beach on Cutlass&#13;
Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle&#13;
party and unlimited free tennis&#13;
are included as well as reduced&#13;
golf rates at Upton Country Club.&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
the Student Life Office, LLC DI97&#13;
at 553-2294.&#13;
CAMPUS MINISTERS ANNOUNCE:&#13;
Sister Colette and Father Wayne are on the Parkside Campus on&#13;
Monday and Thursday of each week. They can be reached at the&#13;
Newman Center (Hwy. E &amp; JR) or by phone: 552-8626 or 651.3408 For&#13;
c~nfidential services, especially regarding pregnancy, phone LifeRight&#13;
at 658-3661.&#13;
Mass will be celebrated at 12:15 p.m. each Sunday. beginning October&#13;
6, 1974. On the first, third and fifth Sundays at the Newman&#13;
Cent~r .and on the second and fourth Sunday at the Carthage&#13;
Meditation Chapel on that campus. You are invited to join.&#13;
DISCUSSIOnsare planned for both the Kenosha and Racine areas. At&#13;
SI. George School in Kenosha at 8:00 p.m. on Monday, October 14, a&#13;
session dealing with VALUES will be presented by Sister Colelle.&#13;
On October 28, Sister Carla Mae Streeter will provide a PRAYER&#13;
experience for anyone interested.&#13;
On November 11, Fr. Jim Heimerl from UW-M will wonder with his&#13;
audience about whether SCRIPTURE is really Jesus' story.&#13;
Similar discussions will be held at S1.Patrick's School in Racine. At&#13;
8:00 p.m. on Monday, October 21 and November 18, Father Dan&#13;
Murphy will use SCRIPTURE as his theme for discussion and&#13;
celebration. On Nov. 4 the VALUES program will be held at St. Pat's.&#13;
Interested in a "Better Understanding of the Old Testament'?".&#13;
Tuesday mornings, beginning October 1 and thru November 5, Fr.&#13;
Charlie Walter will be doing that in the Gold Room at St. George&#13;
Parish, from 9:30-11:30a.m.&#13;
A series of classes entitled "The Sacraments" are also available at&#13;
SI. George Parish. These will be offered by Dave Reith each Tuesday&#13;
evening from 8-10p.m. A good diet for growing Christians.&#13;
Also coming ... a retreat experience, at time to get away, to think, to&#13;
feel, to wonder. It will be held at Benet Lake from Friday evening.&#13;
Nov. 15 to Sunday afternoon, November 17. Cost is a minimal $20.00&#13;
per person and the experience is priceless. Reservations must be&#13;
made before November 1, 1974.Phone 552-8626.&#13;
~ NOW PAYIN&#13;
(jllJ , 5.4%&#13;
BUFFET-DINING&#13;
AREA&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
AT LLC D-185&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
WE BUY USED BOOKS AND OFFER&#13;
A 5 % COLLEGE REBATE&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
lfilll - "-:i~hth Avenue&#13;
Kt'llosha fi5H-2709&#13;
"ACROSS FROM UNION PARK"&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
--IidiLI&amp;iiii ...._&#13;
PRE-NURSING&#13;
Students planning to transfer. to U.W.M. - Odober 15. 117. is the&#13;
deadline for the fall 1975term.&#13;
PRE-LAW&#13;
Call 553-2452 Placement Office to learn what code number to put on&#13;
your LSAT form (depends on how long you have ~ at Parksidel.&#13;
PRE-PHARMACY&#13;
Admissions to U.W. - Madison for. fall 1975 application deadline is&#13;
February 1, 1975.&#13;
For more information call Placement Office 553-2452.&#13;
On Monday, October 14, the Information&#13;
****&#13;
Kiosk will sell $10 Food&#13;
passes. Bill Niebuhr, director of student life, explained that the Food&#13;
Passes will be worth $11 in purchases from either of the two food&#13;
operations on campus.&#13;
The Food pass system has been introduced in the hopes that increased&#13;
sales will compensate for losses incurred by the discount and&#13;
as a benefit for. those that eat regularly on campus. Niebuhr stated&#13;
that the actual discount will be greater than one dollar because no&#13;
sales tax will be charged. Thus the actual discount will be fourteen&#13;
percent.&#13;
****&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie in southeastern Kenosha County has been&#13;
designated a Registered National Landmark by the U.S. Department&#13;
of the Interior.&#13;
The announcement was made to the Board of Regents in Green&#13;
Bay by Chancellor Wyllie. The regents are the legal owners of&#13;
the property, the gift of the Wisconsin Nature Conservancy. and&#13;
Parkside is custodian of the tract, which is considered the beat&#13;
remaining example of a Lake Michigan shoreline prairie and conlaina&#13;
more than 300 plant species, many of them rare.&#13;
"The selection of the Chiwaukee Prairie as a Registered National&#13;
Landmark is an honor and a recognition of the unique character and&#13;
importance of this preserve," Wyllie said. "Being aware ot the h.igb&#13;
responsibility to the nation that goes with the ownership and use of a&#13;
property which has outstanding value in illustrating the natlD'a1&#13;
history of tbe United States, we agree to protect and use thia site fer&#13;
purposes consistent with preservation of its natural integrity."&#13;
Wyllie told the regents thattbe site will be marked with a bronze&#13;
plaque which currently is being prepared by the Department of interior's&#13;
National Park service.&#13;
~~ itchbc. ar'd&#13;
24 hours&#13;
-----~&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELlN'&#13;
AND 'ENEIAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
(&#13;
~~S) OI IBGlL,IR&#13;
.1:.1 P.ISSlOOK&#13;
e:t~on-.\J""" SIIIIGS&#13;
TIIU rt\U.\Ii:\J LWU"\$.&#13;
I.M.r.tsi.. - I.. :!l;. hll'" IItll&#13;
III M.(W" SI.. a.t~,..&#13;
,!II IIIlMII. It... llriIr&#13;
12 s r v . DT&#13;
\J&#13;
'1' nll'l , t'.&#13;
cOCKTrl\L .HlX.IIt&#13;
-4-7 P.M.&#13;
ALL ])R1Nl"S&#13;
'L I 50~&#13;
~ £#.$'" pU~&#13;
'165'1 -75th sr, (Hi.5O)&#13;
KE OSHA&#13;
O),oJER. Lf-'vfL eU.l· OF· F"RE "RI$TAYI'~&#13;
~campus calendar&#13;
l's I WEl)NESDA Y, October 2 -&#13;
• 'fflTESKELLAR: Featuring J Kudlata from Milwaukee,&#13;
1:tfot mg guitar and singing from&#13;
,~ay m in Greenquist Hall, room 1·3P- · . . f d P20l. Admission 1s ree an open&#13;
~ the public.&#13;
f(LM: "Superma~"- ~ponsored&#13;
: l . the Parkside Act1v1bes Board&#13;
in 1: 8 p.m. in the_ Stu~ent Activities&#13;
pidg Admission 1s $1.00 and&#13;
"Park~ide I.D. and proof of age&#13;
t~are required.&#13;
at, SATURDAY, October 5 -&#13;
DANCE: Featuring "Mandrake"&#13;
iJ&gt;O!lSOred by the Parkside Ac-&#13;
\tivities Board from 9 p.m.-1 a.m.&#13;
~In the Student Activitie~ Bldg.&#13;
All dmission is $1.50. Parkside 1.D.&#13;
and proof of age are required.&#13;
ire SUNDAY, October 6&#13;
~RAGTIME RANGERS ME~-&#13;
BERSlllP MEETING: 12 noon m .&#13;
illthe Student Activili_es Bl?g·&#13;
t,iere will be an orienteermg&#13;
~rally after, films, beer, etc.&#13;
i FILM: "Superman" at 7:30&#13;
tp.m. in the Student Activities&#13;
·v,a1dg. Admission is $1.00.&#13;
1 SATURDAY, October 19 - UWADISON&#13;
vs. MICHIGAN&#13;
FOOTBALL GAME: $10.00 in-&#13;
~udes bus trip there and ticket to&#13;
at&amp;he game. Sign up at the InliJormation&#13;
Center, LLC Main&#13;
Place. EMESTER BREAK - TWO&#13;
ikfRIPS: ACAPULCO AND&#13;
AMAICA - BOTH BETWEEN&#13;
TIIJANUARY 3-10, 1975&#13;
ACAPULCO: $244 plus $20 tax&#13;
lrtd service based on 3 to a room.&#13;
,ncludes round trip tranW&lt;Jrtation.&#13;
7 nights-at the deluxe&#13;
El Matador Hotel &amp; Racquet&#13;
ub. Yacht cruise of Acapulco&#13;
nay with a welcoming Margarita&#13;
rty. Includes tips and taxes.&#13;
or further infor~ation contact&#13;
e Student Life Office LLC D197&#13;
iiione 553-2294.&#13;
?AMAICA&#13;
MONTEGO BAY: $279 plus $20&#13;
x and service based on 3 to a&#13;
oom. Includes round trip&#13;
ansportation. 7 nights at Toby&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
. ·~~ 9""' Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
C'ounty E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
Inn, only a short walk from&#13;
famous Doctor's Cave Beach&#13;
Tips and taxes included. ·&#13;
OCHO RIOS: $309 plus $20 tax&#13;
and service based on 3 to a room.&#13;
Includes round trip transportation.&#13;
7 nights at Shaw Park&#13;
l&lt;X!ated on the beach on Cutlass&#13;
Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle&#13;
party and unlimited free tennis&#13;
are included as well as reduced&#13;
golf rates at Upton Country Club.&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
the Student Life Office, LLC D197&#13;
at 553-2294.&#13;
CAMPUS MINISTERS ANNOUNCE:&#13;
Sister Colette and Father Wayne are on the Parkside Campus on&#13;
Monday and Thursday of each week. They can be reached at the&#13;
Newman Center (Hwy. E &amp; JR) or by phone: 552-8626 or 657-3408 For&#13;
c~nfidential services, especially regarding pregnancy, phone Life- Right at 658-3681.&#13;
Mass will be celebrated at 12:15 p.m. each Sunday, beginning October&#13;
6, 1974. On the first, third and fifth Sundays at the Newman&#13;
Cent~r _and on the second and fourth Sunday at the Carthage&#13;
M~1tatio~ Chapel on that campus. You are invited to join.&#13;
D1scuss1ons are planned for both the Kenosha and Racine areas. At&#13;
St. George School in Kenosha at 8:00 p.m. on Monday, October 14, a&#13;
session dealing with VALUES will be presented by Sister Colette.&#13;
On October 28, Sister Carla Mae Streeter will provide a PRAYER&#13;
experience for anyone interested.&#13;
On November 11, Fr. Jim Heimerl from UW-M will wonder with his&#13;
audience about whether SCRIPTURE is really Jesus' story.&#13;
Similar discussions will be held at St. Patrick's School in Racine. At&#13;
8:00 p.m. on Monday, October 21 and November 18, Father Dan&#13;
Murphy will use SCRIPTURE as his theme for discussion and&#13;
celebration. On Nov. 4 the VALUES program will be held at St. Pat's.&#13;
Interested in a "Better Understanding of the Old Testament? ".&#13;
Tuesday mornings, beginning October 1 and thru November 5, Fr.&#13;
Charlie Walter will be doing that in the Gold Room at St. Crllorge&#13;
Parish, from 9:30-11 :30 a .m.&#13;
A series of classes entitled "The Sacraments" are also available at&#13;
St. George Parish. These will be offered by Dave Reith each Tuesday&#13;
evening from 8-10 p.m. A good diet for growing Christians.&#13;
Also coming ... a retreat experience, at time to get away, to think, to&#13;
feel, to wpnder. It will be held at Benet Lake from Friday evening,&#13;
Nov. 15 to Sunday afternoon, November 17. Cost is a minim.:.! $20.00&#13;
per person and the experience is priceless. Reservations must be&#13;
made before November 1, 1974. Phone 552-8626.&#13;
BUFFET-DINING&#13;
AREA&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
AT LLC D-185&#13;
RYANS ROAD&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED, FRI., SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 2, 4, 5, 6&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
1 formerly St-iokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
WE BUY USED BOOKS AND OFFER&#13;
A 5 % COLLEGE REBA TE&#13;
EIGHTH A VENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
lf&gt;OI - Eighth ,\H'llllt'&#13;
Kt&gt;nosha ll:\!l-2iO!l&#13;
"ACROSS FROM UNION PARK"&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Brief News&#13;
PRE-, I. 'G&#13;
Students planning to tran fer to U.W. I. - Octo~r 15, ltH i th&#13;
deadline for the fall 1975 term.&#13;
PRE-LA\&#13;
Call 553-2452 Placement Office to learn what code number to put on&#13;
your I.SAT form (depends on ho long you have been at Par 1&lt;ie ).&#13;
PRE-PHAR. tACY&#13;
Admissions to .W. - Madison for fall 1975 application deadline 1&#13;
February 1, 1975.&#13;
For more information call Placement Office 553-2452.&#13;
On Monday, October 14, **** the Information Kiosk will sell $10 Food&#13;
passes. Bill Niebuhr, director of student life, explained that the Food&#13;
Passes will be worth $11 in purcha es from either of the two food&#13;
operations on campus.&#13;
The Food pass system has been introduced in the hopes that increased&#13;
sales will compensate for losses incurred by the discount and&#13;
as a benefit for those that eat regular) on campus. 'iebuhr tated&#13;
that the actual di count ·will be greater than one dollar becau no&#13;
sales tax will be charged. Thu the actual discount will be fourteen&#13;
percent.&#13;
**** Chiwaukee Prairie in southeastern Kenosha County has been&#13;
designated a Registered National Landmark by the U.S. Department&#13;
of the Interior.&#13;
The announcement was made to the Board of Regents in Green&#13;
Bay by Chancellor Wyllie. The regents are the legal owners of&#13;
the property, the gift of the Wisconsin ature Con ervancy, and&#13;
Parkside is custodian of the tract, which is considered the best&#13;
remaining example of a Lake Michigan shoreline prairie and contain&#13;
more than 300 plant species, many of them rare.&#13;
"The selection of the Chiwaukee Prairie as a Registered National&#13;
Landmark is an honor and a recognition of the unique character and&#13;
importance of this preserve," Wyllie said. "Being aware of the high&#13;
responsibility to the nation that goes with the ownership and use of a&#13;
property which has outstanding value in illustrating the natt.D"al&#13;
history of the United States, we agree to protect and use this ite for&#13;
purposes consistent \\;th preservation of its natural integrity."&#13;
Wyllie told the regents that the site will be marked with a bronze&#13;
plaque which currently is being prepared by the Department of Interior's&#13;
National Park Service.&#13;
all} ta S.51 ) FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
4659 -15th ~T. ( .so)&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
,0 EA. f\fL 81L · OF - FARE "RE~T-'i/11..\IIT &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER W~Y. OCt. 2. 1974&#13;
CLASSifIED ADVnnSING ORDER FORM&#13;
J&#13;
Ads will run lor ODe week&#13;
ooIy. ReDeWais can be made&#13;
by calling lbe Friday&#13;
precedIng lbe next&#13;
publicatiOD.&#13;
fore pub) lea-dOD&#13;
Kickers&#13;
boot two&#13;
The Parkside Rangers s?Cc,er&#13;
team traveled to Quincy, I~h.nOls,&#13;
the W&#13;
eekend to participate -&#13;
over .&#13;
. the Fourth Annual Qumcy&#13;
~ollege Invitational Soccer&#13;
Tournament. On Saturday, ~he&#13;
Rangers balOed the Delendmg&#13;
NAIA National cnampion.&#13;
Quincy College. After holding the&#13;
host Hawks scoreless for 21&#13;
minutes, the Rangers began to&#13;
fee) the pressure of t~e Ha~ks&#13;
and trailed 3·) at halWme. RIck&#13;
Lechusz, senior from MIlwaukee,&#13;
scored the lone Ranger goal on a&#13;
25.yard shot alter taking a short&#13;
pass from sophomore Stan&#13;
Stadler. In the second hall the&#13;
roof fell in on the young Rangers&#13;
as Quincy scored an additional&#13;
three goals to defeat the Rangers&#13;
&amp;-1. According to Coach Henderson,&#13;
however, the Rang~rs&#13;
made a much better showmg&#13;
than the score indicated, for&#13;
three 01 the Quincy goals were&#13;
deflections olf 01 Ranger&#13;
defenders. ON the other hand,&#13;
Henderson said that the young&#13;
Rangers were so nervous that by&#13;
the time they began to settle&#13;
down, they were three goals&#13;
behind.&#13;
On Sunday, the Rangers drew&#13;
again a Defending National&#13;
Champion in NCAA Division I&#13;
Champ Sl. Louis University, and&#13;
currently lhe:NO:1 rankec:fspccer&#13;
team in the country.&#13;
AOOllESS DATE.------&#13;
C IN PHONENO.,_----&#13;
AT FI ST ATlII Al&#13;
IF lAC [&#13;
• .if I&#13;
blain r. irt~&#13;
• liIIil It •&#13;
I .f c IC S&#13;
'" ril.&#13;
AT FI ST AT At&#13;
File&#13;
If&#13;
*&#13;
ill&#13;
XCII" SIll al&#13;
511 Ate. Ixin&#13;
. pacing&#13;
. Itmagers are needed for men's&#13;
and women's swim teams.&#13;
An) on Ulteresled can contact&#13;
the AlhIebe ornce.&#13;
--Jock shorts--&#13;
on th tile \\ resuers suengto cowa not&#13;
hn! malch the efforts 01the Bombers,&#13;
on ~l )';. "'00 wen 8--7. .&#13;
tI and ~mp.n. 1lte first two games ~r mcId&#13;
t alth baodo tramuralloolball are now hIStory&#13;
a Cootz had and IlIooks like il is here to stay.&#13;
for b m Ilyou are interested in getting on&#13;
R n r t, , t , a learn. contact Loren Hein,&#13;
and lar • all Intramural Coordinator, and he&#13;
I I "ill place you on one.&#13;
o«ond OD~ 19,&#13;
~ a~now on sale al !he Information. kiosk in&#13;
~ and at !be P E BlllIdmg Offiee.&#13;
_IS are ooId on a reset"'ed basis so it would be to your ad-&#13;
'-aD 10pordlaJe) ......tickeu as soon as possible.&#13;
~ remIlJD!be same as last y'ear: StudenlS·Faeuity-stafl, $5.00;&#13;
adnllissl.... 5tO. •&#13;
et dnul !be bolder to all alhletic events sponsored by&#13;
......, .. wLy lor !be CWTftJIschool year&#13;
.. •&#13;
27~'B'tat&#13;
194&#13;
Sft!P&#13;
&amp; 50&#13;
*&#13;
Presents&#13;
*&#13;
WED.&#13;
II]&#13;
OCT. 2nd.&#13;
The&#13;
--------------- APPEARING&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
Oct. 4th. &amp; 5tb&#13;
JLL.aalada --------------- E ESOAY &amp; FRIDAY FREE ADMISSION&#13;
WITH UW-P STUDENT 1.0.&#13;
A PITCHER OF BEER ONLY 50~&#13;
WEDNESDA Y AFTER 7:00 P.M •&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••• ..........,.&#13;
~~~ :&#13;
BRRT~5T[IN~&#13;
e :•&#13;
t , CDG DCI. 1" THIU 11t~ •&#13;
BETWEEN 9 &amp; 5 P •&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••. M. :&#13;
••••••••••••&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
1974 UW-PARKSIDE SOCCER SCHEDULE&#13;
"lNO:S&#13;
1816 16 Streel&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
OCt. 2 _ UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS·CHICAGO CIRCLE&#13;
OCt. 5 . UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN·MILWAUKEE&#13;
Oct. 12. UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN·PLATTEVILLE&#13;
Oct. 18·19 Eastern 11I1nois Tournament&#13;
Friday: vs. Eastern III. University&#13;
Saturday: \IS. Blackburn College&#13;
OCt. 23 . MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY&#13;
Oct. 30 . Lake Forest College&#13;
Nov. 2 . Lewis University&#13;
Nov. 6 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-GREEN BAY&#13;
Nov. 9 University of Wisconsin·Madlson&#13;
PARDSIDE lD. REQUIRED&#13;
•&#13;
51.31 I&#13;
'"&#13;
51"&#13;
$159&#13;
'"&#13;
'&#13;
Cl&#13;
GORDER FORM&#13;
callin&#13;
preceding&#13;
pu cation.&#13;
run foe ooe week&#13;
can be made&#13;
the Friday&#13;
the next&#13;
_____________&#13;
DATE ______ _&#13;
s&#13;
o. _____ _&#13;
in&#13;
it ~d be to your adble.&#13;
&#13;
tudents-Faculty- taff, $5.00;&#13;
*Presents*&#13;
e&#13;
WED. OCT. 2nd.&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
Oct. th. &amp; 5th&#13;
iMBacla&#13;
ED ESDAY &amp; FRIDAY FREE ADMISSION&#13;
1TH U -P STUDENT 1.0.&#13;
Kickers&#13;
boot two&#13;
The Parkside Rangers s?Cc_er&#13;
team traveled to Quincy, I!h_no1s,&#13;
the W eekend to participate · over Q · . the Fourth Annual umcy&#13;
~ollege Invitational Soccer&#13;
Tournament. On Saturday, ~he&#13;
Rangers battled the Defen~mg&#13;
AIA National Champion,&#13;
Quincy College. After holding the&#13;
ho t Hawks scoreless for 21&#13;
minutes, the Rangers began to&#13;
feel the pressure of °!e Ha~ks&#13;
d trailed 3-1 at halftime. Rick&#13;
~husz, senior from Milwaukee,&#13;
ored the Jone Ranger goal on a&#13;
2S-yard shot after taking a short&#13;
pa s from sophomore Stan&#13;
tadler. In the second half the&#13;
roof fell in on the young R~~gers a Quincy cored an add1t1onal&#13;
three goals to defeat the Rangers&#13;
6-1. According to Coach Henderson,&#13;
however, the Rang~rs&#13;
made a much better showmg&#13;
than the score indicated, for&#13;
three of the Quincy goals were&#13;
deflections off of Ranger&#13;
defenders. ON the other hand,&#13;
Hender on said that the young&#13;
Rangers were so nervous that by&#13;
the time they began to settle&#13;
down, they were three goals&#13;
behind.&#13;
On Sunday, the Rangers drew&#13;
again a Defending National&#13;
Champion in NCAA Division I&#13;
Champ St. Louis University, and&#13;
currently the o. 1 ranked soccer&#13;
team in the country.&#13;
The Rangers&#13;
great improvement&#13;
~day, and possibly .&#13;
picture of the futul'!&#13;
young Rangers, as they&#13;
Louis to a scoreless&#13;
score. It didn't take long&#13;
Billi~ens ~s they found !ht&#13;
at six mmutes into the&#13;
half. However, the Rang"'&#13;
back 17 minutes later to&#13;
score ?n a breaka~ay&#13;
left wmg by senior Ri&#13;
(Milwaukee). With&#13;
minutes remaining it I Oil&#13;
the Rangers could etUe 1"&#13;
and perhaps score aga&#13;
wasn't to be as St. Louis&#13;
twice more to seal the&#13;
of the tournament&#13;
Rangers, 3-1 .&#13;
The Rangers return&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 2, a&#13;
the University or llli&#13;
Circle Campus on !ht&#13;
Parkside field bebt&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
beginning at 2:30 p 11&#13;
Rangers are hopeful&#13;
proving on their 1·3&#13;
against the Chikas. The&#13;
play at home on Saturda&#13;
as they host the Cniv&#13;
Wisconsin-Milwaukee&#13;
at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
1974 UW-PARKSIDE SOCCER SCHEDULE&#13;
Oct. 2 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS-CHICAGO CIRCLE&#13;
Oct. 5 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MILWAUKEE&#13;
Oct. 12 . UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PLATTEVILLE&#13;
Oct. 18-19 Eastern Illinois Tournament&#13;
Friday: vs. Eastern Ill. University&#13;
Saturday: vs. Blackburn College&#13;
Oct. 23 MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY&#13;
Oct. 30 . Lake Forest College&#13;
Nov. 2 - Lewis University&#13;
Nov. 6 UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-GREEN BAY&#13;
Nov 9 University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
PARKSIDE.I&#13;
Lake FOAII,&#13;
Lockport, IR I&#13;
PARKSIDE, Ip&#13;
Madison, 2 p&#13;
1&gt;1NO:S FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
$139&#13;
SI 39&#13;
SI 79&#13;
SI 59 &#13;
RANGER&#13;
L.-_-------sports __&#13;
Schussl&#13;
There will be a meeting of the Rag Time Rangers on Sunday, OcIober&#13;
6, at 1:30 an the Student Activities Building. All students inIemled&#13;
In skiing should attend.&#13;
SHQRECREST&#13;
6395305&#13;
GEORGETOWN&#13;
SS4 1334&#13;
PIZZA CmCKEN&#13;
,\"10 FISH CARRYOUTS&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
HOURS Sun Wed &amp;Thurs.l'~JOAM&#13;
11 10 PM&#13;
fOri .\ 5,1' 11 30 A M 12~30AM&#13;
UW-PARKSIOF.&#13;
WINTERRREAK TRIP&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 2. 1974THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Frigid frolics&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Ski racing at .Pa~kside is a club sport. It reflects&#13;
emphasis on a lifetime sport that is not a part of the&#13;
tntercollegtata program at Parkside.&#13;
Four year:s ago st.~dents interested in ski racing&#13;
and recreational skiing organized a club with the&#13;
cooperation and advice of the physical education&#13;
and athletic staff. They called themselves The Rag&#13;
Time Rangers. Practices and meets were set up for&#13;
the racers while trips to the north were arranged (or&#13;
.the recreati,onal f~n-seekers. The club enjoyed&#13;
many organized trtps and events during its first&#13;
three years. Due to lack of interest there was no&#13;
club or racing team last semester&#13;
On Wectnesday, September 18, a reorganizational&#13;
Golf's&#13;
last&#13;
fling&#13;
meeting of The Rag TIme Rangers was held by&#13;
interested students. Advisor Vic Godfrey was&#13;
present with ideas and advice OIl further promotiOll&#13;
of skiing and ski racing at ParUide. Godfrey&#13;
suggested offering a l-ttedit course in ski -inI&#13;
next semester for all persons mterested in raciDg. U&#13;
enough interest is shown, this will take place.&#13;
The team will hopefully consist of sIxteen&#13;
members. Two men and women learns, class A and&#13;
class B, with four persons in each class to complete&#13;
the team. Racers are needed. To race you must be a&#13;
full time student, have your own ski equipment and&#13;
a desire to learn the sport of racing&#13;
On SUnday, October 6, at 1:30 p.m. the Rag Time&#13;
Rangers will meet in the Student Activities&#13;
Building. Ski rucks will be shown.&#13;
Tennis tourney&#13;
There will be a tennis tournament&#13;
at the Parkside tennis&#13;
courts on Saturday, Oct. 12. The&#13;
drawing of names will take place&#13;
at 12:30. Participants are asked&#13;
to sign up an hour before drawing&#13;
time so there will be as little&#13;
confusion as possible.&#13;
The tournament wiU include&#13;
singles and doubles competition.&#13;
There will be no mixed doubles.&#13;
Singles competition will start at t&#13;
p.m. and doubles at 3:30 p.m. AU&#13;
Parkside students are welcome&#13;
to sign up.&#13;
Parkside golfers, coming into&#13;
the final days of their fall season&#13;
competed Friday and&#13;
Saturday in two different fall&#13;
tournaments in southern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside has only one more&#13;
tourney after this weekend, its&#13;
own invitational Oct. 5 at&#13;
Brighton Dale.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens will&#13;
enter six golfers in each tourney.&#13;
with five scoring. Probable entries&#13;
include seniors Don and&#13;
Dave Fox (Kenosha-Tremper)&#13;
and freshmen Jim Webers&#13;
(Racine-Case), Casey Griff in&#13;
(Racine-Case), Dave Jones&#13;
(Racine-Case) and Tom Rogan&#13;
(Racine-St. Catherine's).&#13;
2121 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA.'11.7f71&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From Goers CoUntry.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
- ~-------~~~~----- ---- ---- -&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
: DOUBLE - BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR :&#13;
: Monday thru Saturday :&#13;
• •&#13;
: 4:00-9:00 P.M. :&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
"Best Stereo Sound" *&#13;
OPEl liS SOOI&#13;
*&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
GfuI1&#13;
~ in tile&#13;
~un&#13;
From '279&#13;
1'1 '" "'(\()(l f1lX,'\, "ERVICl:&#13;
''-'',rr&gt; &lt;'N 1 H') 1'1 POOM&#13;
• 1:II11ndTrip Jet&#13;
• 7 \;ghts Lodging&#13;
• !l1I1I1 Punch welcome&#13;
• I-round 'rrnnstcrs&#13;
• Tip ... alltl Taxes&#13;
For appl, , , Icatlon or mformation&#13;
('" Contact:&#13;
•&#13;
'~\IPlIS TRAVEl. ('ENTER&#13;
1.1£ 1)..1.7 ('all: 553-229&lt;&#13;
3 FOOSBALL TABLES&#13;
2 POOL TABLES&#13;
(CITY CHAIIPS) lie. r. W•• e•&#13;
5601-24 AVE. KENOSHA&#13;
TbeSuke'OISI&#13;
Wednesday , Oct. 2, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
L------~---Sports&#13;
RANGER _ __, Frigid frolics&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Ski ra_cing at _Pa~kside is a club sport. It reflects&#13;
~mphas1s o_n a hfetirne sport that is not a part of the&#13;
mtercolleg1ate program at Parkside.&#13;
Four ye~s ago students intere ted in ski racing&#13;
and recr~tional skiing organized a club \\;th the&#13;
cooperation and advice of the physical education&#13;
ai:id athletic staff. They called themselves The Rag&#13;
Time Rangers. Practices and meets were set up for&#13;
the racers while trips to the north were arranged for&#13;
the recreational fun-seekers. The club enjoyed&#13;
many organized trips and events during its first&#13;
three years. Due to lack of interest there was no&#13;
club or_ racing team last semester.&#13;
On Wednesday, September 18, a reorganizational&#13;
meeting of The Rag Time Rang&#13;
interested students. d · r ic Godf'r ~a&#13;
pre t "th idea and advic oo further pr motion&#13;
of "ing and i racin at Par ide. Godfrey&#13;
ugg ted offering a 1-creclit oou in i ra ing&#13;
next seme ter for all person inter ted m racmg. If&#13;
enough inter i hown th will lake pla .&#13;
The team will hopefully con isl f lxt&#13;
members. Two men and women team , cl A and&#13;
cla B, ·ith four persons in each cla to comp! e&#13;
the team Racers are needed. To race -ou mu · t be a&#13;
full time student, have your own ki quipmenl and&#13;
a desire to learn the port of racin .&#13;
On Sunday. October 6, at 1 : 30 p.m. the Rag Tim&#13;
Rangers will meet in the ud t ctiv:iti&#13;
Building. ki flicks \\ill be .hown.&#13;
Golf's&#13;
last&#13;
fling&#13;
Tennis tourney&#13;
Parkside golfers, coming into&#13;
the fmal davs of their fall season competed Friday and&#13;
Saturday in two different fall&#13;
tournaments in southern&#13;
Wisconsin. Parkside has only one more&#13;
tourney after this weekend, its&#13;
own invitational Oct. 5 at&#13;
Brighton Dale.&#13;
There will be a tenni tour- The tournam nl ill includ&#13;
nament at the Park id teMi ingles and doubl compe on.&#13;
courts on Satlll'day, Oct. 12. The There "'ill be no mixed doubl .&#13;
drawing of names ill take place ingl competition 111 tart l I&#13;
at 12:30. Participants are asked p.m. and double at 3: p.m. All&#13;
to sign up an hour before drawing Par ide tuden are welcom&#13;
time so there will be as little to i n up&#13;
confusion as possible. •&#13;
Schuss!&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens will&#13;
enter six golfers in each tourney,&#13;
with five scoring. Probable entries&#13;
include seniors Don and&#13;
Dave Fox (Kenosha-Tremper)&#13;
and freshmen Jim Webers&#13;
&lt;Racine-Case ), Casey Griffin&#13;
(Racine-Case ), Dave Jones&#13;
(Racine-Case) and Tom Rogan&#13;
(Racine-st. Catherine's).&#13;
There will be a meeting of the Rag Time Rangers on Sunday, Oc6,&#13;
at 1: 30 in the Student Activities Building. All students in2121&#13;
BIRCH RD. KENOSHA- 551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
led in skiing should attend.&#13;
r'rnm '279&#13;
,, 00 T I\ X I'. ~E"RVICE"&#13;
I A •f fl \N l l() /\ ROOM&#13;
• l:1111nrl Trip Jct&#13;
• ~ \ights I .o&lt;lging&#13;
• l:11111 Punch Wdcom&lt;'&#13;
• ':ro1111rl TransfE'rs • Tip, :ind Ta:&lt;('S&#13;
Forap 1- . P ,cation or information&#13;
. Contact: I&#13;
( ,\~tPt•s TRA VEI. CENTER&#13;
I.LC D-197 Ca II : 553-2294&#13;
SHORECREST GEORGETOWN&#13;
639 5305 554 733~&#13;
PIZZA CHICKEN&#13;
\~O FISH CARRYOUTS&#13;
ANYTIME! HOU RS Sun Wed &amp; Thurs 11 30 A M&#13;
II 10 P M&#13;
F r i I!, ~At 11 30 A M 12 30 A M "On Tap at the Union"&#13;
5601-24 AYE. KENOSHA .&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ! DOUBLE-BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR !&#13;
: Monday thru Saturday ___ :&#13;
. -- .&#13;
: 4:00-9:00 P .M. :&#13;
. ,__........_ -- .&#13;
.&#13;
• .....,__, ,__ .&#13;
•&#13;
• •&#13;
.&#13;
• • ~~ ~- -- --- . • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
3 FOOSBALL TABLES&#13;
2 POOL TABLES&#13;
(CITY CHAMPS) Mea &amp; Wa•ea&#13;
"Best Stereo Sound"&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
* OPENING SOON *&#13;
The Smoke 'ouse &#13;
$1Nf(lES L'l8' -.&lt;. 'f'l&#13;
BOXED SETS 't.q~-IO.q~ .&#13;
e niversity Booksto&#13;
S GcLES L'l8'--~.'f'l&#13;
OXCD SETS Lf.Cf~-10,qg- .&#13;
iversity Book·stot </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="64750">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 9, October 2, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64751">
              <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="64752">
              <text>1974-10-02</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64755">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="64756">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="64757">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64758">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64759">
              <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="64760">
              <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="64761">
              <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="64762">
              <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="64763">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="217">
      <name>campus concerns committee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="800">
      <name>photography</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="799">
      <name>poetry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="801">
      <name>theatre reviews</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
