<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2726" 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/2726?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-23T06:19:41+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="4524">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/87308230b56a5f16795c5abd6e3f643e.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4e30a054a15eba7272df969d1840a0ca</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="65245">
            <text>Volume 4, issue 5</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="65246">
            <text>Minority students seek input, programs</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="65256">
            <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="89976">
            <text>PAB denies discrimination&#13;
Minority students seek input, programs&#13;
by Ann Verstegen&#13;
Charges of discrimination have&#13;
been denied by representatives of&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
and Tony Totero, director of&#13;
Student Activities and&#13;
Programming.&#13;
Pete Strutynski, chairman of&#13;
the Concert Committee of the&#13;
PAB, said in reference to those&#13;
charging discrimination, "I think&#13;
they're full of it. The PAB is wide&#13;
open to membership, and free."&#13;
"I'm against segregation in&#13;
any way, shape or form," said&#13;
Totero.&#13;
Erwin Wright, a student PAB&#13;
member last year and newlyapproved&#13;
member this year,&#13;
voiced the complaints of many&#13;
Parkside's Kim Merritt won&#13;
the Amateur Athletic Union's&#13;
(AAU) National Marathon&#13;
Championship for women last&#13;
Sunday. The 26-mile, 385-yard&#13;
event was run in Central Park,&#13;
New York. Merritt, a junior, ran&#13;
the course in record time, while&#13;
establishing herself as an AAU&#13;
national champion.&#13;
Merritt, a product of Racine&#13;
Case High School, was the only&#13;
Parkside runner there. Lucian&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Has this year's student&#13;
government changed from the&#13;
back biting power playing wasy&#13;
of last year's organization?&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA)&#13;
spent a good part of their meeting&#13;
last week discussing a motion to&#13;
censure vice presiident, Kai Nail.&#13;
Censure is an official reprimand&#13;
issued by the Senate and is&#13;
usually taken quite seriously.&#13;
Senate wanted to speak&#13;
The Senate had privately&#13;
decided to vote against the&#13;
motion before it was even in-.&#13;
troduced. Leslie Burns,&#13;
President Protempore, said the&#13;
motion was made because it was&#13;
the only way the body knew to get&#13;
the floor and air their grievances.&#13;
She assured that everyone had&#13;
decided before-hand to vote&#13;
against the motion, to censure.&#13;
However, their intent was not&#13;
made obvious during the&#13;
discussion.&#13;
A 5 minute recess had been&#13;
called after hearing committee&#13;
reports and Senators clustered&#13;
outside the conference room,&#13;
apparently involved in a&#13;
discussion. They filed in, took&#13;
their seats, and the motion was&#13;
made to censure Nail for using&#13;
Parliamentaly procedure to&#13;
express personal opinions. It was&#13;
seconded almost before it had&#13;
been fully stated.&#13;
Nail, who had the legal right to&#13;
a closed meeting in consideration&#13;
of the topic, waived that right and&#13;
campus minority members, "In&#13;
the past, there has been certain&#13;
forms of - ra cial discrimination&#13;
which have been portrayed by the&#13;
Parkside Activity Board."&#13;
Specific biases mentioned,&#13;
were lack of programming for&#13;
minorities, unfair handling of&#13;
minorities at PAB-sponsored&#13;
events, smaller amounts of&#13;
money going toward minority&#13;
programming, lack of minorities&#13;
on the PAB and unwillingness to&#13;
attract area minorities to PAB&#13;
programs.&#13;
A dance by "Harvey Scales and&#13;
the Seven Sounds" last year,&#13;
caused, according to Wright, "a&#13;
lot of hassles for blacks who lived&#13;
out of state because they had no&#13;
Rosa, former Parkside track&#13;
star, was going to run in the sixth&#13;
annual New York Marathon for&#13;
men, in conjunction with which&#13;
the women's race was held, but&#13;
he was bothered by an injury and&#13;
did not compete.&#13;
Running her first marathon as&#13;
a freshman, Merritt finished in&#13;
seventh place last year in both&#13;
the mile and the two-mile AIAW&#13;
meet.&#13;
allowed the meeting to proceed.&#13;
Beer buying important&#13;
In reaction to the motion, Nail&#13;
said,"I think it's funny that&#13;
you're accusing me of overstepping&#13;
Robert's Rules of Order,&#13;
when I don't think you know what&#13;
they are."&#13;
Discussion of the censure&#13;
motion ranged from rationally&#13;
made complaints on procedure to&#13;
more emotionally charged&#13;
claims of undying friendship.&#13;
Another issue which seemed to be&#13;
involved, revolved around the&#13;
question of w ho had bought beer&#13;
for whom in the past, and who&#13;
was to treat in the future.&#13;
Use of profanity at meetings&#13;
was also brought up when Nail,&#13;
apparently surprised at the&#13;
criticism about him, said, "it's&#13;
too bad no one had the balls to tell&#13;
me this before the meeting. I&#13;
really think that's shitty." one&#13;
Senator contended that words&#13;
such as balls and shit are not&#13;
appropriate for formal meetings.&#13;
Nail threatens resignation&#13;
Boro Bosovich, Senator,&#13;
assured Nail that the censure&#13;
action was nothing personal&#13;
saying, "I still like you as a&#13;
friend. In fact, after the meeting&#13;
I'll buy you a beer."&#13;
Some discussion was directly&#13;
pertinent to the issue.&#13;
Nail was accused by Ed&#13;
Bielarezyk, Senator, of d irecting&#13;
rather than presiding over the&#13;
Senate, and was reminded that&#13;
Robert's Rules of Order calls for&#13;
the presiding officer to give the&#13;
state ID to confirm their age. Yet&#13;
PAB members who were not&#13;
working were let in without their&#13;
ID's being checked."&#13;
The "Scales" dance, the only&#13;
minority-directed activity last&#13;
year, cost $500. Wright questions&#13;
why PAB can pay Doc Severinsen&#13;
$13,000 an d so small an amount&#13;
for a group of black interest.&#13;
Only two blacks, Hayes Norman&#13;
and Wright, are now on the&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
"Suggestions that I'm against&#13;
black groups coming to campus&#13;
because they might attract a&#13;
rowdy element that would&#13;
damage facilities are completely&#13;
false," said Totero. "I don't think&#13;
that and have never said&#13;
anything to that effect."&#13;
Totero feels that it is easy to sit&#13;
back and blame a group. "Last&#13;
year there were no major concerts&#13;
because of o ur budget. But&#13;
minorities have never shown an&#13;
interest in sitting on the Activities&#13;
Board. Honest efforts are&#13;
being made to contact groups&#13;
that would appeal to blacks,"&#13;
Totero said. Negotiations are in&#13;
process to book Minnie Riperton.&#13;
Totero does not like to make&#13;
generalizations about any group.&#13;
"All blacks don't like soul music&#13;
just as all white students didn't&#13;
like Doc Severinsen. If we talk&#13;
types of m usic and their appealjazz,&#13;
soul, folk, rock, etc.-then&#13;
chair to another party when he&#13;
feels he can't be neutral on a&#13;
certain subject.&#13;
William Ferko, Senator, admitting&#13;
that censure was a bit&#13;
harsh, said that Nail had&#13;
probably put more work into the&#13;
Senate than all of them combined,&#13;
but that he had probably&#13;
over-stepped his bounds a little.&#13;
After some discussion Nail&#13;
threatened his resignation&#13;
saying, "I hate to be used as an&#13;
excuse for not getting anything&#13;
done. The hassle isn't worth it to&#13;
me. If I'm censured I'll resign,&#13;
it's as simple as that."&#13;
He found solace in the fact that&#13;
the Senate was acting as a body&#13;
against him, since it indicated&#13;
that they weren't breaking up in&#13;
opposing camps as happened last&#13;
year.&#13;
Nail did, however, regret the&#13;
fact that no one had previously&#13;
spoken to him on the subject&#13;
saying, "you could all let me buy&#13;
you a beer in the Union the other&#13;
night but you couldn't level with&#13;
me."&#13;
Student quieted&#13;
Karen Ficcadenti, a student&#13;
spectator, had been quietly&#13;
listening to the meeting, occasionally&#13;
showing signs of&#13;
disqust and amusement. But,&#13;
finally out of pure disqust she&#13;
spoke, condemming the Senate&#13;
for their actions.&#13;
Among other things, she said,&#13;
"this is the first time I've seen a&#13;
PSGA meeting and I'm sick. This&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
we are more accurate," he said.&#13;
He feels it would be perpetuating&#13;
the old system of&#13;
prejudice to divide the students&#13;
into groups. "We should&#13;
recognize differences and&#13;
program for them but certainly&#13;
not on a percentage basis,"&#13;
Totero added.&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks and Julian&#13;
Bond can be considered black&#13;
speakers, Totero feels, "but that&#13;
would be misleading. They have&#13;
appeal for everyone. If we went&#13;
on a percentage basis, the black&#13;
part of the budget would be&#13;
overdrawn by just those two&#13;
speakers." Gwendolyn Brooks&#13;
will receive $850; Julian Bond,&#13;
$1500.&#13;
According to Sue Wesley,&#13;
programming director of PAB,&#13;
"Most students just have no idea&#13;
of the problems in booking&#13;
groups. Many large groups&#13;
prefer a larger facility and&#13;
market than Parkside. Then&#13;
there is their availability, price,&#13;
and technical requirements. One&#13;
group we talked to had 24 p ages&#13;
of tech specifications."&#13;
The Parkside Activity Board is&#13;
considered successful if they&#13;
break even financially at the end&#13;
of the year. Doc Severinsen&#13;
replaced a scheduled Cannonball&#13;
Adderly concert. (Adderly died&#13;
late in the summer.) Severinsen&#13;
was to be playing in Iowa, had an&#13;
open date on his way back to New&#13;
York and approached the&#13;
University with a discount rate.&#13;
Peggy Hanson, PAB member&#13;
termed the Severinsen event&#13;
financially good. "We made back&#13;
most of the price we put into it. It&#13;
is necessary to appeal to as large&#13;
a cross-section as possible."&#13;
Agreeing, Strutynski added,&#13;
"Educated guesses as to a&#13;
group's fee, the physical cost of&#13;
putting the show together, and&#13;
the anticipated revenue are&#13;
brought together. If they don't&#13;
equal one another, if it's not a&#13;
break-even situation, then we&#13;
won't even consider a group."&#13;
Strutynski stressed, "Any&#13;
student at Parkside is open for&#13;
membership on PAB. The&#13;
Concert Committee works by the&#13;
democratic process. The&#13;
majority rules, although we try to&#13;
have a consensus of opinion."&#13;
When asked, Strutynski confirmed&#13;
that increased minority&#13;
participation could make them&#13;
the majority on PAB.&#13;
Totero encourages minorities,&#13;
adult students, Chicands, Indians,&#13;
any interested student, to&#13;
join PAB. He said, "Hopefully,&#13;
the coming together of different&#13;
minorities on campus, with a&#13;
willingness to work together with&#13;
other members of the student&#13;
body, will bring some type of&#13;
unity that will serve the goals of&#13;
all students."&#13;
Student silenced&#13;
PSGA fails in attempt to&#13;
censure Vice President&#13;
Softly walking through autumn browned fields, I tread&#13;
on rustic skinned pine needles,&#13;
their frozen little shapes strewn everywhere&#13;
and the newborn needles cooing with the wind.&#13;
Traveling through the cornfield, the chugging&#13;
faintly reaches me. A puff of s moke&#13;
escorts the morning air, below it an old&#13;
John Deere crawling along munching its usual autumn breakfast.&#13;
I finally reach home, taking note&#13;
of wood that has gone uncut. After the last&#13;
dried life is split I remember your early morning words,&#13;
speaking of the love we shared now dying.&#13;
My eyes began to glisten and a salty tear&#13;
fell to your warm cheek. Touch it.&#13;
Gary Rost&#13;
Alsop concert will be free&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board will present a free concert by Pet&lt;&#13;
Alsop on Thursday, Oct. 2 at 8 p.m. in the Activities Building.&#13;
Sometimes billed as a "good time guitar player," Alsop is als&#13;
known for his wit and satire. Although Alsop performs serious song,&#13;
he is best known for satirical numbers and guitar playing.&#13;
Parkside's Merritt&#13;
wins 26 mile event &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975&#13;
LL-VVL-LcB&#13;
VLL V LUli&#13;
LLUVLJL3&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On October 22nd and 23rd, 1975,&#13;
the P.S.G.S., Inc., will hold&#13;
general elections for Divisional&#13;
Seats in the Senate and&#13;
Allocations Committee. Students&#13;
running for a Divisional Seat&#13;
must have declared a major or&#13;
major area of interest in that&#13;
division prior to or in the Spring&#13;
Semester, 1975. Those students&#13;
who have not declared a major or&#13;
major area of interest prior to or&#13;
in the Spring Semester 1975 may&#13;
run for a Undeclared Seat (two&#13;
positions to be available in the&#13;
P.S.G.S., Inc., Office (WLLC DTo&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
Would you please include this&#13;
appeal to the students in your&#13;
next issue?&#13;
The Tutorial Service needs&#13;
your help and hopes to help you in&#13;
return. Many students on campus&#13;
need tutors, especially in&#13;
Chemistry, Math, and Life&#13;
Science. If you are academically&#13;
qualified, we invite you to join us&#13;
in a student-to-student tutoring&#13;
program. Your hours would be&#13;
flexible to fit your schedule.&#13;
This year, with the new&#13;
Probation and Drop policy, the&#13;
173) from October 6th through&#13;
October 16th. Petitions must be&#13;
filled and turned into the Senate&#13;
Elections Sub-Committee by 5&#13;
p.m. October 16th.&#13;
Any students interested in&#13;
participating in the running of the&#13;
elections please contact Ed&#13;
Bielarczyk, Chairperson,&#13;
Elections Sub-Committee,&#13;
P.S.G.S., Inc., or any other&#13;
member of the Committee.&#13;
Messages can be left at the&#13;
P.S.G.A., Inc., Office.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Ed Bielarczyk&#13;
service is in increased demand,&#13;
but we cannot afford to pay tutors&#13;
unless they have financial aid&#13;
(Work-Study). However, through&#13;
cooperation with the Education&#13;
Division, volunteers can earn&#13;
academic fcredit for participating&#13;
in the program as a tutor. Inservice&#13;
training is provided. If&#13;
you are interested in helping,&#13;
please contact me as soon as&#13;
possible in Tallent Hall 115, phone&#13;
553-2289 for further information&#13;
and application.&#13;
Abisola Gallaher&#13;
Coosdinator of Tutorial Services&#13;
Commentary&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
The politicians in Madison are at it again. Their latest inept act is in&#13;
the vein of typical political jive. Two Kenosha Republicans, George&#13;
Molinaro and Eugene Dorff, are currently sponsoring a bill to have the&#13;
Wisconsin University board of Regents changed from the traditional&#13;
Governor appointee system, to a new politically elected fiasco. The&#13;
bill, if p assed, would give the people of the state the right to elect the&#13;
college board. Each congressional district would elect and then send&#13;
their representative.&#13;
Even though Molinaro and Doff have extremely good intentions, it is&#13;
stil),, a valuable waste of time. Their sincere efforts in other areas&#13;
would be greatly appreciated.&#13;
The bill is currently stuck in the Wisconsin Education Committee&#13;
pending a public hearing. The Committee is headed by Racine&#13;
Democrat Michael Farrell. Farrell is a good friend of the Governor,&#13;
Patrick Lucey, and can be expected to keep this bill as a minor annoyance&#13;
rather then a serious threat. The Governor surely will not'like&#13;
a bill that decreases some of his appointee powers, since he probably&#13;
has a lot of old debts to pay to faithful democratic educators.&#13;
In time, however, the bill might have a slight chance, especially if&#13;
there is a change in Governorship from Democratic to Republican,&#13;
and if the Assembly changes similarity. But, don't hold your breath.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE&#13;
IxUjIilrQLi&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by&#13;
the students of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
and they are solely responsible for its editorial policy&#13;
and content. Offices are locat ed in D194 WLLC, U.W.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295,&#13;
553-2287.&#13;
Acting Editor: Debra Friedell&#13;
Business Manager: Ann Verstegen&#13;
Feature Editor: Michael Palecek&#13;
Writers: Jeff Sweneki, Jeanine Sipsma, Betsy Neu, Ann&#13;
Verstegen, Bruce Wagne r, Walt Ulbricht, Bill Robbins,&#13;
Carol Arentz, amy cundari.&#13;
Photographers: Mike Nepper, Al Fredrickson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Regarding the proposed&#13;
Student Disciplinary Guidelines,&#13;
I would be interested to know why&#13;
the United Council of Student&#13;
Governments would ever prefer&#13;
to see students handled by "law&#13;
enforcement personnel" rather&#13;
than the University. The thought&#13;
of arrest, possible fine or sentence,&#13;
and a permanent record&#13;
downtown, seems far less&#13;
desirable than a confidential file&#13;
in the Dean of Students Office,&#13;
destroyed after one year, and&#13;
whatever other disciplinary&#13;
action the University may take&#13;
(which, at Parkside at least,&#13;
rarely includes suspension or&#13;
expulsion).&#13;
The court system is not the only&#13;
guarantee of fair treatment, and&#13;
the ability of the University to&#13;
accord each student internal due&#13;
process rather than subjecting&#13;
him or her to arrest and criminal&#13;
proceedings, would be beneficial&#13;
to all, including the crowded&#13;
courts and especially the&#13;
students. The UW could insure&#13;
fairness by establishing and&#13;
following hearing procedures&#13;
that allow an accused student a&#13;
choice of equitable options,&#13;
similar to that outlined in the&#13;
proposed guidelines, plus ample&#13;
provisions for appeal.&#13;
I understand our student&#13;
government is a member of the&#13;
United Council, but I do not feel&#13;
UC is representing the best interests&#13;
of students in its insistence&#13;
that non-academic&#13;
misconduct require police involvement.&#13;
Kent State is an&#13;
extreme example, but an&#13;
example nonetheless, of what can&#13;
happen when "law enforcement&#13;
personnel" are asked to handle&#13;
matters meriting University&#13;
attention and possible action. UC&#13;
should realize that if it gets its&#13;
way, local police could use such a&#13;
procedure to justify any and all&#13;
forays onto the campuses "to&#13;
investigate" misconduct, make&#13;
arrests, or just see what the&#13;
college "radicals" are up to that&#13;
particular day. Uptight administrators&#13;
or campus cops&#13;
could interpret it as giving them&#13;
license to call in the boys in blue&#13;
whenever tempers rise above 32&#13;
degrees Fahrenheit. Students a&#13;
little drunk and disorderly in the&#13;
Union could find themselves&#13;
cooling off in the county jail. Such&#13;
a regulation would be granting&#13;
excessive discretionary power to&#13;
campus security personnel as&#13;
well as local police and sheriff.&#13;
I strongly urge our student&#13;
government to forcefully dissent&#13;
from United Council's position,&#13;
and I hope students will look at&#13;
the proposed guidelines (copies&#13;
are available from the Info&#13;
kiosk). There are some problems&#13;
with them, and student input to&#13;
strengthen them in our favor&#13;
before they receive Regent approval,&#13;
is vital if we are to protect&#13;
ourselves from the possibility of&#13;
arbitrary disciplinary action.&#13;
Jane Schliesman&#13;
The following table lists registration deadlines and test dates for the&#13;
major professional and post graduate tests. The Placement Office, 107&#13;
Tallent Hall, has the applications for all of these tests.&#13;
GRADUATE SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST DATES&#13;
1975-76&#13;
Allied Health Professions Admission Test&#13;
Test Date&#13;
Nov. 15&#13;
Jan 24&#13;
March 13&#13;
May 15&#13;
Closing Date&#13;
Oct. 25&#13;
Jan 3&#13;
Feb. 21&#13;
April 24&#13;
Dental Admission Testing Proqram Oct 4&#13;
Jan. 10&#13;
April 24&#13;
Oct. 9&#13;
Sept. 8&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
March 29&#13;
Sept 13&#13;
Federal Service Entrance Examination Nov. 8&#13;
Jan. 10&#13;
Feb. 14&#13;
March 13&#13;
April 10&#13;
May 8&#13;
Oct. 20&#13;
Dec. 20&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Feb. 20&#13;
March 20&#13;
April 20&#13;
Graduate Management Admission Test&#13;
(formerly Admission Test for Graduate&#13;
Study in Business)&#13;
Nov. 1&#13;
Jan. 31&#13;
March 27&#13;
July 10[&#13;
Oct. 10&#13;
Jan. 9&#13;
March 5&#13;
June 18&#13;
Graduate Record Examination Oc t. 18&#13;
Dec. 13&#13;
Jan. 10&#13;
Feb. 28&#13;
April 24&#13;
June 12&#13;
Sept. 3&#13;
Oct 29&#13;
Nov. 26&#13;
Feb. 4&#13;
March 6&#13;
May 19&#13;
Law School Admission Bulletin&#13;
Oct. 11&#13;
Dec. 6&#13;
Feb. 7&#13;
April 10&#13;
July 24&#13;
Sept. u&#13;
Nov. 10&#13;
Jan. 8&#13;
March 11&#13;
June 24&#13;
National Teacher Examinations Nov 8&#13;
Feb. 21&#13;
July 17&#13;
Oc t. 16&#13;
Jan. 29&#13;
June 24&#13;
Optometry College Admission Test Nov. l&#13;
Jan. 17&#13;
March 20&#13;
Oct. 11&#13;
Dec. 27&#13;
Feb. 28&#13;
Pharmacy College Admission Test Nov. 8&#13;
Feb. 14&#13;
May 22&#13;
Oct. 18&#13;
Jan. 24&#13;
May 1&#13;
Colleges of Podiatry Admission Test&#13;
Sept. 27&#13;
Dec. 6&#13;
Feb. 7&#13;
July 17&#13;
Sept. 1&#13;
Nov. 10&#13;
Jan 12&#13;
"r„rsy&#13;
E&#13;
"&#13;
m ,or Dec. 6&#13;
Feb. 7&#13;
April 3&#13;
Aug. 7&#13;
Nov. 15&#13;
Jan. 17&#13;
March 13&#13;
July 17&#13;
meo.cai college Admission Test ~~~~~——————&#13;
For information regarding this test contact:&#13;
John Elmore ?,r&#13;
553-2452 Anna M. Williams&#13;
553-2441 &#13;
Mini college to deal with&#13;
series of women's concerns&#13;
.Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
PSGA meeting&#13;
A Mini-Capsule College&#13;
focusing on the concerns of&#13;
today's woman will be held&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 18, at Parkside.&#13;
The program will deal exclusively&#13;
with women's issues.&#13;
The event is one in a series of&#13;
programs in recognition of the&#13;
International Women's Year&#13;
sponsored by Parkside,&#13;
University Extension, Carthage&#13;
College and Gateway Technical&#13;
Institue.&#13;
Deadline for registration is&#13;
Oct. 6 and registration forms are&#13;
available from the Extension&#13;
Office and Information Kiosk,&#13;
Carthage, Gateway and public&#13;
libraries in Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
luncheon.&#13;
Keynote speaker will be&#13;
Ruberta Weaver of Madison,&#13;
whoe topic is "Women and&#13;
Communicating: How to Say&#13;
What You Mean."&#13;
Following her talk there will be&#13;
two one-hour-fifteen-minute&#13;
sessions during which participants&#13;
may choose one of three&#13;
seminar topics offered during&#13;
each time period.&#13;
Topics during the first time&#13;
period will be "Women's Rights&#13;
and the I,aw," a discussion of&#13;
women's rights today and&#13;
changes taking place in various&#13;
areas of the law with particular&#13;
emphasis on Wisconsin and the&#13;
There is a $4 fee which includes state lefislature, by a panel of&#13;
Hickory Wind&#13;
foot stompin'&#13;
hv .Tim Vnrffan&#13;
women attorneys chaired by&#13;
Barbara Burman, a Milwaukee&#13;
lawyer; "Women Alone," a&#13;
consideration of the concerns of&#13;
the single, divorced or widowed&#13;
woman including social pattersn&#13;
and personal life styles, by&#13;
Velma Ginsberg, a pyschologist&#13;
for theLakeland Counseling&#13;
Center and Walworth County;&#13;
and "The Competent Woman -&#13;
How to Get Organized," which&#13;
includes clutter-clearing secrets&#13;
and management techniques, by&#13;
Alma Baron of the department of&#13;
business and management at&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
Topics for the second time&#13;
period are "Career Change," a&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
by Jim Yorgan&#13;
What is this phenomena that&#13;
causes swollen, red hands, feet&#13;
that refuse to sit still, and vocal&#13;
outbursts of whoops and yahoos.&#13;
The experienced observer&#13;
recognizes these symptoms as&#13;
the external signs of the binary&#13;
implosion of beer and bluegrass.&#13;
At 8 p.m. the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board presented both, in&#13;
abundance, at the Student Activities&#13;
Building. "Hickory&#13;
Wind" brought us their brand of&#13;
American and European&#13;
bluegrass in the finest tradition.&#13;
For those unacquainted with&#13;
bluegrass, the standard instrumentation&#13;
is guitar, fiddle,&#13;
bass, banjo, and mandolin. This&#13;
arrangement was augmented by&#13;
the hammer dulcimer and an&#13;
occasional kazoo. The players:&#13;
Sam Morgan, Mark Walbridge,&#13;
Glenn Macarthy, Bob Shank, and&#13;
Pete Tenney picked, bowed,&#13;
hummed, strummed, and&#13;
hammered for three hours&#13;
straight, pausing only to read&#13;
their mail from the request box.&#13;
Songs titled Insect Love Affairs&#13;
and The Baltimore Fire were&#13;
received with the same ecstatic&#13;
enthusiasm as the old standards,&#13;
Black Mountain Rag and Cuckoo.&#13;
The dorian modal interpretations&#13;
of G ive the Fiddler A Dram and&#13;
Babylon's Fallen lent a haunting,&#13;
Irish taste and exhibited&#13;
continued from page I&#13;
is probably the most childish&#13;
thing I've ever seen in my life."&#13;
In retaliation, Robert Turner,&#13;
Senator, questioned her&#13;
knowledge of politics. As she&#13;
began to answer, Burns, who was&#13;
currently chairing the meeting,&#13;
cut her off sa ying that she had to&#13;
be recognized.&#13;
Ficcadenti apologized, and did&#13;
not attempt to speak for the&#13;
remainder of the meeting. One&#13;
student voice was effectively&#13;
silenced.&#13;
Senator suggests seminar&#13;
At one point in the discussion,&#13;
Avis Weber, Senator, announced&#13;
that she had a few things to say&#13;
and was going to take her time&#13;
saying them. She contended that&#13;
there was a lack of co nsideration&#13;
displayed by all members of the&#13;
Senate, including President and&#13;
Vice-president.&#13;
"This is not a tightly bound&#13;
council. In order for us to work&#13;
together, we must know each&#13;
other, be familiar with faces,&#13;
ideals, and personalities. I think&#13;
if we can conquer that, the&#13;
problem will be somehwat&#13;
limited."&#13;
"There is no interpersonal&#13;
interaction between all of us and&#13;
this is what we need."&#13;
Weber then made a friendly&#13;
amendment that the Senate meet&#13;
once a month in a seminar&#13;
(omit ting P a rli a m e n tar y&#13;
procedure) in order to discuss&#13;
problems at Parkside and to get&#13;
to know each other better.&#13;
Somehow it seemed an appropriate&#13;
place for applause, but&#13;
instead Burns quickly declared&#13;
the amendment unacceptable&#13;
because of i ts lack of pertinence&#13;
to the motion on the floor.&#13;
Burns attempted to ask several&#13;
times about the meaning of a&#13;
"friendly amendment," but was&#13;
effectively ignored by the chair.&#13;
Censure is defeated&#13;
Finally, the vote on the censure&#13;
motion was ready to be taken.&#13;
Nail questioned, "does anyone&#13;
see how similar this is to what&#13;
happened in last year's Senate?"&#13;
The Senate answered by giving a&#13;
unanimous negative decision on&#13;
censure.&#13;
For those unfamiliar with last&#13;
year's Senate, threats of c ensure&#13;
were usually used to sway&#13;
opinions during power struggles.&#13;
No one was ever officially censured&#13;
that year.&#13;
So, the Senate went on to other&#13;
business with Leslie Burns&#13;
serving as chairperson.&#13;
Avis Weber's words about&#13;
interpersonal communication&#13;
come to mind while watching the&#13;
rest of the meeting.&#13;
Someone comments on the&#13;
amount of w ork to be done, "out&#13;
of order," Burns snaps without&#13;
looking up from her paper. And&#13;
so it goes.&#13;
"Hickory Wind's" fine&#13;
musicianship, as each member of&#13;
the band took a break (solo)&#13;
while the others backed him up.&#13;
The final number, Orange&#13;
Blossom Special, had the crowd&#13;
hootin' and stompin' everytime&#13;
the violin signaled yet another&#13;
increase in tempo. Calls for&#13;
"more" were met with a version&#13;
of But It's All Over Now by the&#13;
"Stones."&#13;
For this glowing moment,&#13;
Parkside's typical rigidity was&#13;
swept aside and replaced by&#13;
dance, music, and wiggles. A&#13;
trend this writer welcomes with a&#13;
sigh of relief.&#13;
Grandpa is dying tdo.&#13;
Like last summer,&#13;
Only a little more.&#13;
But you still give him a napkin&#13;
When he easts his evening tomato;&#13;
After all, who isn't always dying a little?&#13;
And you write poems.&#13;
Hoping not to sound sentimental;&#13;
But you do.&#13;
And instead of becoming frustrated&#13;
By your lack of ability to overcome the ordinary,&#13;
Or want of creativity;&#13;
You just stretch out on the front lawn&#13;
like a languid, reclining moon goddess,&#13;
Fan yourself with your notebook,&#13;
And let the dripping Dairy Queens&#13;
From passing car windows&#13;
Be your silvery tears.&#13;
CyndiJensen&#13;
Those long, still summer nights.&#13;
The ones where:&#13;
The screen door creaks on its way to a slamming close;&#13;
A dog gets chased for lifting his leg on Ma's&#13;
Favorite bush;&#13;
The kids all along the block cry through&#13;
The breathless night air with green-apple stomach aches;&#13;
And watermelon seeds stick to your chin&#13;
Like the bluebottles on the sugar-coated fly paper&#13;
Hanging from the kitchen light.&#13;
• WITH THIS G 0UPE3N&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I ANY NEW RELEASE,&#13;
8 6 . 9 8 b . P S 8 7 . 9 8 T A PE S&#13;
$ 4 . 2 9&#13;
J Q N L T&#13;
O N E S W E E T D RI A .M&#13;
5 Q 10 7 T H A V E N U E&#13;
O N LY&#13;
$ 5 . 4 0&#13;
KENBStifl&#13;
photo by Mike Palacek &#13;
4 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975&#13;
"Etc." King is first&#13;
of skellar lectures&#13;
by nV AAnn ntl Verstnrrnn • • tegen&#13;
^ E . Scott Baudhuin, campus&#13;
"Etc." king, dirty word expert&#13;
and assistant professor of&#13;
communications, will speak&#13;
today in the Skellar at the first in&#13;
a series of Professor lectures.&#13;
Baudhuin will speak at 11:30 on&#13;
two topics, "Body LanguageNon-Verbal&#13;
Communication,"&#13;
and "Graffiti." "it's ironic,"&#13;
Baudhuin said. "We had some&#13;
really good graffiti in the Skellar.&#13;
Bill Sanders, Milwaukee Journal&#13;
cartoonist, did his famous Nixon&#13;
right on the wall. Unfortunately,&#13;
they painted right over it!"&#13;
The "Etc." king title comes&#13;
with the territory. Baudhuin&#13;
teaches General Semantics, a&#13;
new way of thinking which helps&#13;
in coping with a complex world.&#13;
Korzybski, the Polish tank&#13;
driver, as Baudhuin calls him,&#13;
who founded General Semantics,&#13;
preferred being conscious of a&#13;
permanent et cetera instead of&#13;
having a dogmatic, period-andstop&#13;
attitude. The national&#13;
magazine for general semanticists&#13;
is titled "Etc." Baudhuin&#13;
has had many articles in "Etc."&#13;
The most recent, in June 1975,&#13;
was titled "Rational Emotive&#13;
Therapy and General Semantitherapy:&#13;
A Review and Comparison."&#13;
&#13;
The article came out of an&#13;
invitation by Dr. Albert Ellis of&#13;
the Institute for Advanced Study&#13;
in Rational Psychotherapy, to&#13;
attend a Rational Therapy&#13;
workshop at the American&#13;
Psychological Association&#13;
Convention in New Orleans. "I&#13;
corresponded with Dr. Ellis and&#13;
got really interested. His therapy&#13;
is very close to general semantics.&#13;
He is a very persuasive&#13;
man," Baudhuin said.&#13;
Of his general semantics&#13;
course, Baudhuin said, "Students&#13;
find it hard to switch their way of&#13;
thinking. General Semantics is&#13;
almost a philosophy tether than&#13;
Music faculty will&#13;
present free concert&#13;
Flutist Joyce Bottje will be guest artist for a concert with harpsichordist&#13;
Frances Bedford of the Parkside music faculty at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Sept. 28, in Room 103 Greenquist Hall.&#13;
They will be assisted by three new members of the Parkside music&#13;
faculty, Carol Irwin, mezzo soprano; Timothy Bell, clarinet; and&#13;
Richard Piippo, cello.&#13;
The free public program will include Episodes for Flute and Harpsichord&#13;
(1969), written for the guest artist by her husband, Will Gay&#13;
Bottje of the University of Illinois-Carbondale music faculty and&#13;
Mario Davidovsky's Synchronisms (1963) for flute and electronic&#13;
sounds.&#13;
In addition, the group will present Rameau's Pieces de Clavecin en&#13;
Concert and J.S. Bach's Sonata VI in E Major for flute, harpsichord&#13;
and cello, and Four Fragments from Chaucer's "The Canterbury&#13;
Tales," a 16th Century text in a modern setting by Lester Trimble for&#13;
mezzo soprano, clarinet and harpsichord.&#13;
Novels, psychology are course&#13;
How recent novelists have used modern psychological theories to&#13;
explore the inner recesses of human thought and feeling will be considered&#13;
in a University of Wisconsin-Extension noncredit course&#13;
beginning September 29. James Alan Runnels, who earned his Ph. D.&#13;
at Rutgers University, will instruct the course. Novels by Henry&#13;
James, Joseph Conrad, Franz Kafka, and Vladimir Novokov will be&#13;
read and discussed.&#13;
REG0RD5 AND TAPES&#13;
WATERBEDS&#13;
PIPES AND PARAPHENALIA&#13;
BEAN BAGS&#13;
LEATHER GOODS&#13;
ONE SWEET&#13;
DREAM&#13;
SD1D 7TN AVENUE&#13;
REN05NA&#13;
654-3578&#13;
in series&#13;
the English course that many&#13;
expected. It can cause a lot of&#13;
fights and arguments. But I've&#13;
gotten used to it."&#13;
Baudhuin received his PhD&#13;
from Bowling Green University.&#13;
His dissertation studied the effects&#13;
of dirty or obscene language&#13;
on attitudinal changes. From his&#13;
various experiments, Baudhuin&#13;
surmises that God is a neutral&#13;
word; religious expletives are the&#13;
least offensive, excretory words&#13;
next, and sexual references the&#13;
most offensive. Dirty words&#13;
blocked out the message to&#13;
varying degrees. "It was very&#13;
interesting," Baudhuin said, "the&#13;
higher the level of obscenity, the&#13;
less attitude change in people.&#13;
They got turned off...with one&#13;
exception. When a female&#13;
speaker gave the -message to a&#13;
male, it produced more attitude&#13;
changes."&#13;
Credit available for ads&#13;
Students interested in writing video advertisements for the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (P.A.B.) video committee are asked to contact the&#13;
ads producer, Bruce Wagner, in the PAB office, WLLC D195, as soon&#13;
as pos sible for instruction and assignment.&#13;
College credit is still available for those wishing to take part in any&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board video productions, including and&#13;
writing.&#13;
For further information, call 552-7113 or 553-2290 or 553-2278.&#13;
'No THE P.A.B.&#13;
PROUDLY&#13;
FILM SERIES&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
GENE KELLY&#13;
"ANCHORS AWIIGH"&#13;
and&#13;
"AN AMERICAN&#13;
IN PARIS"&#13;
October 3 .- 8:00 p.m. S.A.B.*&#13;
October 5. - 7:30 p.m. S.A.B.*&#13;
Admission *1.00&#13;
* Wise. &amp; Parkside l.d.'s required&#13;
When you say Budweiser,you've said it all!&#13;
Distributed by E. F. Madrigrano 183155th Kenosha. Wl &#13;
The pinball crazies&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Those amazing pinball&#13;
wizards, what is it that makes&#13;
them punch 25 cents into a&#13;
machine over and over again to&#13;
watch that silver ball roll and&#13;
bounce through a maze of&#13;
sounding gadgets?&#13;
While it seems that most&#13;
pinball aces are content to get&#13;
their monies worth in lights and&#13;
bells, nonetheless, the sport&#13;
appears to be a very verbal one&#13;
for most, and requiring intense&#13;
concentration from all who play&#13;
it.&#13;
Grunting is top prerequisite.&#13;
After all, anyone who knows&#13;
anything at all about pinball&#13;
certainly knows that the&#13;
machines understand only harsh&#13;
language and good grunting is&#13;
most conducive to higher scores.&#13;
And, some folks say that&#13;
"scores" are their reason for&#13;
pumping so much money into&#13;
what many consider a purposeless&#13;
game. "To try and beat&#13;
the machine," is the idea. What&#13;
satisfaction can be found in ailAmerican&#13;
competition.&#13;
To be sure, the machine, some&#13;
say, is like the system and we are&#13;
the pinballs. Even in this&#13;
bicentennial year, though, the&#13;
machine still holds the quarter&#13;
when the game is over.&#13;
"Well then, I play for the fun of&#13;
it," the players say. Although&#13;
most of us still don't know quite&#13;
what's so fun about it, pinball&#13;
exists and that is basically why&#13;
it's played.&#13;
Don't be misled, pinball is not a&#13;
game of luck, but instead takes&#13;
talent and skill. How one flips is&#13;
the key and that ability is in wrist&#13;
action and timing. Often a player&#13;
will thrust the hips towards the&#13;
machine while flipping, but, this&#13;
really does nothing except throw&#13;
off the observers awareness of&#13;
wrist movement thereby&#13;
protecting strategy secrets. Blind&#13;
flipping is no way to play pinball,&#13;
the notion is to hit targets, get&#13;
extra balls, and to ring up points.&#13;
Some will suggest that pinball&#13;
is sexually symbolic and anyone&#13;
who does well at it is "hung-up."&#13;
"Freud said,"1 (or would have&#13;
said) "that the game is phallic&#13;
and encourages masculine&#13;
aggression," said one player.&#13;
"C'mon, let's go play the "Jungle&#13;
King."&#13;
The "Jungle King" sits next to&#13;
"Captain Card" and "Pro Pool"&#13;
and "Darling" are at the other&#13;
end of the Skellar in Greenquist&#13;
Hall. "If I can just get that multibonus,&#13;
I'll be worth thousands,"&#13;
he tells the machine. The next&#13;
remark was something directed&#13;
towards the pinball machine&#13;
about getting all the rollovers and&#13;
lights and then being eligible for&#13;
the "wows."&#13;
The machines have a personality,&#13;
their players say. To&#13;
tilt, the machines must have a&#13;
sixth sense. Some find enjoyment&#13;
in making the machine breakdown&#13;
emotionally, when the ball&#13;
gets caught speeding between&#13;
two bells and just keeps ringing&#13;
up points.&#13;
Why do people play pinball?&#13;
"Cause they're fuckin' crazy."&#13;
"Are you crazy?"&#13;
"Wouldn't be anything else."&#13;
X H E I L E M A N 'S&#13;
Old&#13;
/&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On tap at the Union"&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22 nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
IC&#13;
I&#13;
Homestead&#13;
fine food &amp; cocktails&#13;
1845 Racine St.&#13;
Open 11 a.m. 637-9685&#13;
gc&#13;
H&gt;tueet&#13;
©liic&#13;
^&gt;f)oppr&#13;
featuring-,&#13;
a variety of your candy&#13;
and nut favorties sold&#13;
the old-fashioned way&#13;
SPECIAL OF THE&#13;
MONTH:&#13;
CANDY CORN&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
located on the concourse between the Library-Learning&#13;
Center &amp; Greenquist Hall&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
issued to students and faculty members only.&#13;
Permanent discount with coupon and ID card ON&#13;
ALL merchandise in our store.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
'—---—CUP AND SAVE———&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE STUDENT COURTESY CARD&#13;
The bearer of this card is entitled to a 10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount on all purchases made at&#13;
Ventura and Sons&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
The courtesy is extended to all UW-Parkside&#13;
Students and Faculty Only.&#13;
Bearer :&#13;
Not valid if not signed. Bearer must show Parkside ID. with&#13;
this card. Fair Trade Items Excepted.&#13;
YvrtfuJM &amp; S&amp;rij,&#13;
Downtown Kenosha &#13;
6 T H E PARKSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1 9 75&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1 and Monday, Oct. 6: Meditation sessions with&#13;
Yogini Chandra Merrick in WLLC D174 from 11:30-1:15&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1: Skeller with Prof. Scott Baudhuin speaking from&#13;
11:30-1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1: Psychology Club meeting at 1:30 p.m. in CL111.&#13;
Films, Until I Die" and "Emotional Development: Aggression" will&#13;
be shown, followed by refreshments.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2: Disciplinary guidelines seminar in CL 217.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2: Women's Assertiveness Training Workshop at 6:30&#13;
p.m. at Kenosha Gateway Technical Institute. Free.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2: Baha'i organization meeting at 7:30 p.m. in WLLC&#13;
D175.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 2: Concert with Peter Alsop at 8 p.m. in SAB. Free&#13;
Friday, Oct. 3: Debate and Forensics Assn. meeting at 2:30 p.m. in CA&#13;
233.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 3: Guest piano recital by Mark Edwards at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the CAT.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 3: Movies, doublefeature of "Anchors Away" and "An&#13;
American in Paris" at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission is $1.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 4: Parkside Invitational golf tournament at 9:30 a.m. at&#13;
Brighton Dale in Kenosha.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 4: Soccer game against UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 4: Women's volleyball, Parkside vs. Marquette&#13;
University at 1 p.m. in P.E. Bldg.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 5: Movies, doublefeature of "Anchors Away" and "An&#13;
American in Paris" at 7:30p.m. in SAB. Admission is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 5: Mass at the Chi-Rho Center at 11:15 a.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 7: Women's volleyball, Parkside vs. Carthage and&#13;
Carroll Colleges at 7 p.m. at Carthage.&#13;
A Sc ent Of Near&#13;
i look to You&#13;
as a sea tide building within me,&#13;
Your dawn smile reflecting&#13;
autumn day freshness,&#13;
a new memory&#13;
for cloud times the elation of knowing You.&#13;
i form You in mind &amp;&#13;
like a poem on paper You&#13;
become me.&#13;
touch it;&#13;
feel the scent of near,&#13;
as green leaves turn scarlet &amp; gold&#13;
dew comes melted frost.&#13;
i could be but a whisper&#13;
of summer left behind&#13;
were it not for eyes holding me to&#13;
day,&#13;
as rocks hold water to fall&#13;
in rapids whirling&#13;
past time, the past time touched,&#13;
touch it.&#13;
feel the scent of near.&#13;
Jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Mini-College&#13;
Sell ads&#13;
Earn&#13;
M&#13;
O&#13;
N&#13;
E&#13;
Y&#13;
CALL&#13;
553 2295&#13;
continued from page 3&#13;
program designed for women&#13;
considering a job change with&#13;
emphasis on setting and attaining&#13;
realistic goals in order to plan a&#13;
new career, by Marge Rossman,&#13;
executive director, Women's&#13;
Inc., Hinsdale, 111.; "Not 'Just a&#13;
Housewife'," focusing on women&#13;
and wives and-or mothers incontemporary&#13;
society and&#13;
conflicts arising from the&#13;
emergence of the "liberated"&#13;
woman, by Dortohy Miniace,&#13;
director and counselor of continuing&#13;
education at UWMilwaukee;&#13;
and "The&#13;
Professional Woman - Choice or&#13;
Chance," a view of what it means&#13;
in terms of commitment,&#13;
preparation, determination and&#13;
satisfaction to choose and pursue&#13;
a career, by Sara Sheehan,&#13;
assistant professor, political&#13;
science, UW-Parkside, and&#13;
former director of the Women's&#13;
Center at the University of&#13;
California-Riverside.&#13;
A general session titled "International&#13;
Women's Year -&#13;
Mexico City -Where Do We Go&#13;
from Here?" will follow luncheon.&#13;
The scheduled speaker is&#13;
Ruth Clusen, president of the&#13;
League of Women Voters of the&#13;
United States, who attended the United Nations in Mexico City&#13;
International Women's Year and will provide an eye-witness&#13;
Conference sponsored by the account of the proceedings.&#13;
PAPA B URGER&#13;
TEEN BURGER&#13;
MAMA B URGER&#13;
BABY B URGER&#13;
OPEN YEAR A ROUND1&#13;
ill&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD -&#13;
YOUR ORDER&#13;
WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken -&#13;
Fish and Shrimp&#13;
&gt;2 MI LE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
The Adult Student A ssn. s ays&#13;
THANKS&#13;
for a Wonderful P icnic!!&#13;
CONTRIBUTORS&#13;
Scott Theres &amp; John Jones -&#13;
magicians&#13;
Massey Ferguson&#13;
Martha Merrill's Book Store&#13;
Ben Franklin&#13;
London Colour Photographers Lts&#13;
Tres Chic Beauty Salon&#13;
Gino's Barber Shop&#13;
Villa Capri Pharmacy&#13;
I st National Bank Racine&#13;
Kenosha National Bank&#13;
Marshall Studio Inc.&#13;
Brown National Bank&#13;
Piggly Wiggly&#13;
S.C. Johnson &amp; Son, Inc.&#13;
Bonanza Sirloin Pit&#13;
Plaza Sewing Center&#13;
Laurent's 66 Service Station&#13;
Pepsi Cola Bottling Co. Inc.&#13;
Frito Lay Potato Chips&#13;
Sentry Food Store&#13;
Paielli's Bakery&#13;
Jaeger's Bakery&#13;
Ponderosa Steak House&#13;
Boy Blue Dairy Treat&#13;
McDonald's Restaurants&#13;
Kentucky Fried Chicken&#13;
Arbee's Discount Liquors&#13;
Lehmann's Bakery&#13;
All Sport Ltd&#13;
Snap-On Tool&#13;
Capri Liquors&#13;
Mid West Construction Co.&#13;
PDQ- Racine&#13;
PDQ Kenosha&#13;
Chocolate Shop&#13;
Jeans Ltd.&#13;
Triangle Wholesale Beer Co. Inc.&#13;
Lincoln Bakery&#13;
UWP Athletic Dept.&#13;
UWP Auxilliary Services&#13;
Educator's Credit Union&#13;
SffiiS&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Hours Sun-Thrs. 11-7&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 t o 11&#13;
THE TRACK SHACK&#13;
ITS MM ITS JUST FOK&#13;
Game room-pool table-foos ba ll-pin ba ll&#13;
and etc.&#13;
First 25* M ichelob Fr eo w ith Parkside I.P.&#13;
Miehelob on ta p SO* an d 25* a glass.&#13;
Hot sa ndwiehes&#13;
Color T V for foo tball games&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
Monday-Saturday 4 P.M.-Closing&#13;
Sunday 11-6 P.M.&#13;
5614 22nd A ve. 657-9714&#13;
Recipe #456.78cR&#13;
7HE&#13;
TaXCO Fl ZZ:&#13;
• 2 oz. Jose Cuervo Tequila&#13;
• Juice from one lime (or 2 tbsp.)&#13;
• 1 tsp. sugar&#13;
• 2 dashes orange bitters&#13;
• White of one egg&#13;
• A glass is quite helpful, too.&#13;
JOSE CUERVO* TEQUILA. 80 PROOF.&#13;
IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY © 1975&#13;
HEUBLEIN. INC.. HARTFORD. CONN. &#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Interest, programs in women's sports increases&#13;
by THOM AIELLO&#13;
The women are beginning to&#13;
enter the fall sports picture at&#13;
parkside. Recently the women's&#13;
tennis, swimming, and volleyball&#13;
teams have started their seasons,&#13;
after many hours of practice.&#13;
JudyGotta, tennis&#13;
So f ar, the tennis team is 0-3,&#13;
losing to UW-Milwaukee 4-1, UWCrosse&#13;
5-0, and Carthage&#13;
College, 3-2. Gotta said La&#13;
Crosse, in particular, "was really&#13;
a tough one to play off the bat,"&#13;
since they have physical&#13;
education majors, which gives&#13;
them more players than most&#13;
schools. Gotta also felt her team&#13;
could have beaten Carthage, with&#13;
more experience. Of her team&#13;
she said, "they all need experience...they&#13;
haven't had&#13;
match experience."&#13;
The ten nis team consists of 12&#13;
members, with seven on the&#13;
travelling squad. Which members&#13;
play, depends on&#13;
"challenge" matches. Any&#13;
player can challenge another to&#13;
gain a higher position, though&#13;
Gotta admitted, "the first five&#13;
were exactly as I thought they&#13;
would be." The leading players&#13;
are: Peggy Gordon, a freshman&#13;
that Gotta called, "a really&#13;
strong hitter, a hard hitter," and&#13;
an "experienced player;" Iris&#13;
Gericke, a sophomore, is "a real&#13;
good athlete with real good&#13;
ground strokes and good serves.&#13;
She's got to work on tactics,"&#13;
according to Gotta; Sandy&#13;
Kingsfield, a senior, was&#13;
described by Gotta as "a super&#13;
athlete. She plays about three&#13;
sports and she's real quick, really&#13;
moves well, can run, and her&#13;
game is steady." Kathy Feitchner,&#13;
a freshman, is lefthanded,&#13;
as is her doubles partner,&#13;
Kingsfield. Gotta said, "she&#13;
has a fierce forehand crosscourt;"&#13;
and Jennifer Zuehlke, a&#13;
sophomore, who's "really in the&#13;
working stages of her game,"&#13;
said Gotta, though "she has nice&#13;
ground strokes."&#13;
Gotta said, "tennis is really a&#13;
growing sport, it's catching fire,"&#13;
and there is much more interest&#13;
in it now than in past years.&#13;
Swim team small&#13;
Barb Ijawson is in her fifth year&#13;
as swimming coach for women at&#13;
Parkside. Although seven women&#13;
"expressed an interest," according&#13;
to lawson, only five are&#13;
now on the team. Lawson, 26,&#13;
thought there were several&#13;
reasons for the low turn-out.&#13;
Among these reasons were: the&#13;
problem of the old notion; "girls&#13;
can't be good after fourteen,"&#13;
which just isn't true, said&#13;
I^awson. Also, there are many&#13;
girls on this campus, Lawson&#13;
feels, that are good swimmers&#13;
but only part-time students.&#13;
Team members this year are:&#13;
freshman, Mary Beth Leitch, an&#13;
"experienced swimmer," an&#13;
"AAU type," who is probably the&#13;
best on the team; freshman Gail&#13;
Olson, a diver, who Lawson calls,&#13;
"pretty good, good basic form;"&#13;
freshman, Lynn Peterson, who&#13;
can swim and dive; and two&#13;
sisters that swam here two years&#13;
ago, when it was a clyb sport,&#13;
Sandy and Sheila Craig, a senior&#13;
and a sophomore, respectively.&#13;
Both transferred from Marquette&#13;
and are "swimmers".&#13;
Volleyball and Softball new&#13;
One of the two new women's&#13;
sports this year is volleyball, the&#13;
other being softball, in the spring.&#13;
Coaching volleyball is Orby&#13;
Moss who is a,so tho Assistant&#13;
Athletic Director.&#13;
Moss feels his 12 member team&#13;
will face "probably as tough a&#13;
schedule as any other school in&#13;
the state. "This includes&#13;
Marquette and Carthage, who&#13;
are considered to be tougher&#13;
ones, according to Moss. He&#13;
added that it is hard to tell just&#13;
how well his team "stack-up"&#13;
until they play a few games, since&#13;
the sport is so n ew here. Moss&#13;
said Diane Koloves, a&#13;
sophomore, and Karen Oster, a&#13;
freshman, were little&#13;
ahead of the rest. " Though,&#13;
as a team, he said the change has&#13;
been "180 degrees from where&#13;
they started to where they are&#13;
now." - •&#13;
Describing how the sport came&#13;
to Parside's program, and what it&#13;
is like, Moss said, "we wanted to&#13;
add more women's sports," and&#13;
the interest in volleyball on&#13;
campus was high.He called the&#13;
type of play they will use as,&#13;
"power volleyball," which applies&#13;
two primary setters to get&#13;
the ball in the sir for spikes, the&#13;
idea controlling the ball on your&#13;
side of the net to be able to get it&#13;
over the net with force.&#13;
v.&#13;
LABELS&#13;
o&#13;
Sine Qua Non&#13;
tinster&#13;
RCA&#13;
Nonesui&#13;
Vanguard&#13;
Elektra&#13;
Atlantic&#13;
J^c/many oVd©&lt;*&#13;
HUGE RECOf&#13;
SA&#13;
Monday thru Thursday 9 to 7&#13;
Friday 9 to, 5&#13;
Saturday 10 to 1&#13;
ROCK&#13;
The Who&#13;
Nilsson&#13;
Buddy Miles&#13;
John Sebastian&#13;
Three Dog Night&#13;
Jefferson Airplane&#13;
BLUES-FOLK&#13;
JAZZ Buffy Sainte Marie&#13;
David Brubeck Joan Baez&#13;
Ramsey Lewis Woody Guthrie&#13;
Cannonball Adderly Muddy Waters&#13;
Ella Fitzgerald&#13;
Stan Kenton&#13;
Ella F Lightnin' Hopkins itzgerald&#13;
Stan Kenton John Lee Hooker&#13;
Dizzy Gillespie Leadbelly&#13;
Gerry Mulligan Billie Holliday&#13;
Alice Coltrane&#13;
LABELS&#13;
CLASSICAL RCA&#13;
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra Atlantic&#13;
London Symphony Orchestra Elektra&#13;
Colin Davis ABC&#13;
Andres Segovia Philips&#13;
Carlos Montoya Sine Qua Non&#13;
Julian Bream Nonesuch&#13;
Josef Krips Vangua '&#13;
Pablo Casals ,&#13;
and many more&#13;
TCHAIKOVSKY:&#13;
LAST THREE SYMPHONIES&#13;
more&#13;
Abravanel,&#13;
Utah Symphony&#13;
Value to $23.98&#13;
$8.98&#13;
4 record set&#13;
BEETHOVEN:&#13;
COMPLETE NINE SYMPHONIES&#13;
Josef Krips&#13;
London&#13;
Symphony&#13;
Value to $41.50&#13;
$12.98&#13;
7 record set&#13;
BEETHOVEN:&#13;
SYMPHONY NO 9&#13;
AND NO. 8&#13;
Soloists&#13;
New Performance&#13;
conducted by .&#13;
Jean Fournet and Rotterdam&#13;
Philharmonic Orchestra&#13;
Value to $11.98 2 record set&#13;
$4.98&#13;
THE ESSENTIAL MAHLER&#13;
Symphony No. 1&#13;
and No. 5, mote&#13;
Value to $23 98 4 re cord set&#13;
$8.98&#13;
THE BAROQUE&#13;
TRUMPET AND HORN&#13;
AT THEIR FINEST&#13;
Maurice Andre, An&#13;
Adolf Scherbaum v9awO&#13;
Value to $29.98 5 record set&#13;
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR&#13;
Andres Segovia&#13;
Laurindo Almeida.&#13;
John Williams,&#13;
Carlos Montoya,&#13;
and many others&#13;
Value to $29.98&#13;
$9.98&#13;
5 record set&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Bookstore &#13;
8 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1975&#13;
Boyjian breaks leg&#13;
Rangers win two and tie&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Ranger soccer team spent&#13;
the weekend in Minnesota and&#13;
overcame 1-0 deficits to beat&#13;
Bethel College, 2-1 on Saturday,&#13;
and the University of Minnesota&#13;
on Sunday, 5-1.&#13;
The Bethel team showed&#13;
hustle, according to coach Hal&#13;
Henderson. He also noted that&#13;
once Parkside worked out their&#13;
kinks from the travelling, they&#13;
outshot their opposition, 17-6.&#13;
Diech Ismaili, assisted by&#13;
captain, Frank Liu, and Bob&#13;
Petkovich, came through for the&#13;
Rangers' victory.&#13;
In the Sunday victory against&#13;
Minnesota, Parkside's Stan&#13;
Stadler, Ismaili, Rico Savaglio,&#13;
and Chris Carter scored goals.&#13;
Playing in a roaring wind at the&#13;
soccer field last Wednesday, the&#13;
Rangers managed to play Trinity&#13;
College to a 1-1 tie.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson called&#13;
the wind a big factor in the game.&#13;
According to Henderson,&#13;
Parkside had many opportunities&#13;
to score but couldn't put it in the&#13;
net'.&#13;
Henderson said the defense&#13;
played well, holding the 1974&#13;
Chrisitan College Tournament&#13;
champs to only one goal in the&#13;
two overtime game. It was by&#13;
Trinity's Patrick Akerele at the&#13;
30 minute mark of the second&#13;
half.&#13;
The Parkside goal came 16&#13;
minutes later on a penalty goal&#13;
scored by Tasche Bozinovski,&#13;
thus ending the scoring for both&#13;
teams.&#13;
However, Parkside managed to&#13;
lose Mike Boyjian for the year&#13;
with a broken leg. According to&#13;
Henderson, Boyajian "will be&#13;
missed a great deal. His experience&#13;
and leadership meant a&#13;
lot to this year's team."&#13;
Golfers place second in&#13;
Carthage Invitational&#13;
* by Thom Aiello&#13;
"Our best weekend of golf."&#13;
That's how Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
described the play of his golfers&#13;
this last weekend. On Friday the&#13;
Rangers placed second in the&#13;
seven-team Carthage Invitational&#13;
at Bristol Oaks. North&#13;
Central won the meet with a 389&#13;
team score. Parkside shot a 395,&#13;
led by the tourney's medalist,&#13;
Larry Rothering, who shot&#13;
rounds of 36 and 38, totalling 74.&#13;
Parkside's next leading golfers&#13;
were Mark Kuyawa with 75, Ray&#13;
Zuzenic, 76, Steve Christensen,&#13;
84, and Tim Seymour, 86.&#13;
On Saturday, the Rangers&#13;
traveled to Janesville for the UWWhitewater&#13;
Invitational that&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION&#13;
BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
FOR OCTOBER&#13;
The Milwaukee Bucks&#13;
Basketball Team will be&#13;
holding their training camp&#13;
at Parkside through Oct. 9.&#13;
These sessions are closed to&#13;
the public at the request of&#13;
the Bucks administration,&#13;
they will however hold an&#13;
open session for all staff,&#13;
students and faculty of&#13;
Parkside sometime near the&#13;
end of this period.&#13;
Your cooperation is&#13;
requested and will be appreciated&#13;
on the above!&#13;
Thank you&#13;
Building Hours Monday-Thursday 8:30a.m.-&#13;
9:30 p.m.; Friday &amp;&#13;
Saturday 8:30 a.m.-4:30&#13;
p.m.; Sunday 6 p.m.-9:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Gymnasiums Same as above schedule&#13;
with the following exceptions:&#13;
Athletic teams&#13;
practice in the gyms from&#13;
3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday&#13;
through Friday. Special&#13;
note should be given to the&#13;
athletic events listed below&#13;
that may take place in the&#13;
gym on some dates.&#13;
Pool Hours Monday-Thursday 11:30&#13;
a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Monday,&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Wednesday&#13;
evenings 6:30 p.m.-9 p.m.;&#13;
Friday &amp; Saturday 11:30&#13;
a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Sundays&#13;
6:30 p.m.-9 p.m.&#13;
Handball Courts Same as building schedule,&#13;
please call in advance to&#13;
reserve a court.&#13;
Weight-training' Same as building schedule&#13;
above.&#13;
Human Hours arranged by apPerformance&#13;
pointment only, call 553-2245&#13;
Lab for Dr. Grueninger.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
needs help.&#13;
Contribute&#13;
your talent&#13;
WLLC&#13;
D * 1 9 4&#13;
involved 10 teams. Parkside&#13;
placed sixth there, with a 407&#13;
team total. Madison's golfers&#13;
took first place with a 384 t otal,&#13;
led by co-medalist Tom&#13;
Steinauer, who shot a 74, along&#13;
with Whitewater's Tom Rajek.&#13;
Rothering once again led&#13;
Parkside with a 77. K uyawa shot&#13;
a 78, Zuzenic finished at 80, as did&#13;
Jim Webers who had missed&#13;
Friday's meet because of conflicts&#13;
with his school schedule.&#13;
Seymour rounded out the&#13;
Parkside leaders with a 92.&#13;
The Ranger golfers close their&#13;
fall season this Saturday, Oct. 4,&#13;
with the fifth annual Parkside&#13;
Invitational, to be held at&#13;
Petrifying Springs at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Tennis team fourth&#13;
Gordon leads way&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The Parkside women's tennis&#13;
team finished fourth out of 10&#13;
teams in last Saturday's UWWhitewater&#13;
Tournament in&#13;
Whitewater. Finishing ahead of&#13;
Parkside were UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
UW-Eau Claire, and Carthage.&#13;
Coach Judy Gotta was pleased&#13;
with the performance by her&#13;
team, as every member won at&#13;
least once.&#13;
Leading the way for the&#13;
VINOS&#13;
Northside 3728 D ouglas&#13;
639-7115&#13;
Southside 18 16-16th S t.&#13;
634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR H OME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
3928 - 60 th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
,n.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home o f the S ubmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
2615 Washington Ave. 634-2373&#13;
photo by A1 Fredrickson&#13;
Curt Spieker and Jim DeVasquez approach the finish line in a cross&#13;
country meet last week-end.&#13;
Runners beat UWM&#13;
Rangers was Peggy Gordon, a&#13;
freshman at number one singles,&#13;
who beat the tourney's top seed in&#13;
the quarterfinals before bowing&#13;
to the eventual winner in the&#13;
semi-finals, marking only her&#13;
second loss of the year. The&#13;
number one doubles team for&#13;
Parkside, Sandy Kingsfield and&#13;
Kathy Feichtner, reached the&#13;
finals in the consolation bracket,&#13;
which they lost 6-7, 5-7.&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
The Parkside cross-country&#13;
squad hosted a triple-dual last&#13;
Saturday. There was some good&#13;
news and some bad news. The&#13;
good news was that Parkside,&#13;
previously ranked number 12 in&#13;
NAIA standings, stretched their&#13;
lifetime record to 8-0 against UWMilwaukee,&#13;
beating them 23-36.&#13;
They also beat the UWMilwaukee&#13;
Track Club, 1940.&#13;
However, the Ranger runners&#13;
lost to Loyola 34-22.&#13;
Dennis McBride of Milwaukee&#13;
was the meet's top runner,&#13;
covering the five miles in 25:45.&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredericksen, a&#13;
sophomore, finished second with&#13;
a time of 26:08. The next&#13;
Parkside runners were Jeff&#13;
DeMatthew in 8th, Jim&#13;
DeVasquez in 10th, Curt Spieker,&#13;
12th, and Greg Julich, who took&#13;
14th place. Also running were&#13;
Jim Heiring, 20th, and Mike&#13;
Rivers, 21st.&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey said,&#13;
"We're very pleased," with the&#13;
number 12 ranking for such a&#13;
young team, but he expects to see&#13;
a drop in next week's rankings&#13;
because of the Loyola loss. The&#13;
team doesn't take kindly to that&#13;
loss, and they will be shooting for&#13;
Loyola again when Loyola hosts&#13;
the 10-team Lakefront Invitational&#13;
on Oct. 11.&#13;
The Italian cook respects food. The spice&#13;
of a sauce, the fine texture of warm, fresh&#13;
bread, the consistancy of a melted cheese&#13;
sauce. For him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
</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="65242">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 4, issue 5, October 1, 1975</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65243">
              <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="65244">
              <text>1975-10-01</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65247">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="65248">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="65249">
              <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="65250">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="65251">
              <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="65252">
              <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="65253">
              <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="65254">
              <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="65255">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="123">
      <name>cross country</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4504">
      <name>kim merritt</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="655">
      <name>minority students</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="234">
      <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
