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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>$112. of your tuition…&#13;
</text>
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            <text>Volume 5, issue 14</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>er&#13;
Vol. 5 No. 14&#13;
/l /l Lord Ronald sa,d nothing, he flung hum 11 ()()&#13;
\.)I.) from the room, flung h,m I upon h,1 hO&lt; V V&#13;
and rOde madly off ,n au d•rectlona.&#13;
Stephen Butler LMCOCk 116 1'44&#13;
Wednesday, January 19, 1977&#13;
• •&#13;
St"~re~11ted Fees Committee quorum IL to R) l\.ai ,all. Da\t~ Holle . Rutol) Tutl"" .. ld. Oou,rlairt Edf'nhou .. f'r Kirl t,·0 1'ium. l'f'I«' ~1ru,,n"'ki.&#13;
by Robert Hoffman&#13;
$112 of your tuition goes to the segregated fees allocation committee. It&#13;
allocates over $500,000 to various student organizations.&#13;
Appointed by PSGA, the same organization that is requesting over&#13;
$8,000 of student monies? You got it.&#13;
The allocation committee is currently preparing the 19 7-78 budget.&#13;
Parkside is unique in that it is one of the few campuses that has students&#13;
controlling the segregated fees budget. The segregated fees is that Sl 12 of&#13;
your tuition.&#13;
Such a committee which is totally run by students must attract some&#13;
interest, right? Well if interest is gauged by turnout of committee&#13;
members, then the answer is no. Only three members showed up at the&#13;
first meeting, two short of a quorum. The next two meetings, while&#13;
achieving quorum, still failed to get all nine committee members to attend.&#13;
Now, wait, these are all elected representatives, right? Wrong, only two&#13;
members of the committee were elected, the rest were appointed by PSGA.&#13;
Now if you go to a movie here at Parkside, drink a beer down at the&#13;
union, go see the nurse, read the newspaper, participate in PSGA, or ha·,e&#13;
a child in the Child Care Center, then you are deeply affected by what wiJI&#13;
and will not happen at this year's allocation committee.&#13;
This article will briefly summarize: (1) the areas that are covered in the&#13;
Bookstore bungles?&#13;
Bob Blat'l and Clairf' Brobt&gt;n -.e-arrh in ,ain for rf'quirf'd lt'1l in 1he- book .. tort" annt,.&#13;
by Christopher Clausen&#13;
1 n the past the Parkside&#13;
Bookstore. has been the subject of&#13;
criticism from both students and&#13;
faculty. Charges of unjustified high&#13;
prices and sloppy management&#13;
have been leveled consistantly with&#13;
little done to probe these charges.&#13;
This semester less than 25% of&#13;
the books ordered have arrived as&#13;
of Thur~day. January 13th. In an&#13;
interview with Ranger. bookstore&#13;
manager Paul Hoffman commented&#13;
on some of these questions as&#13;
well as others:&#13;
RANGER: How do you determine&#13;
your prices?&#13;
HOFFMAN: For new books we&#13;
use the publishers suggested retail&#13;
price. For the used books we raise&#13;
the price by 25% from the p-rice we&#13;
paid for them to cover expenses and&#13;
make a profit.&#13;
RANGER: Who controls the&#13;
bookstore?&#13;
HOFFMAN: Follett Company. a&#13;
private leasing firm out of Chicago.&#13;
leases it from UW-Parkside.&#13;
RANGER: Who pays the salaries&#13;
of the booksrore employees?&#13;
HOFFMAN: All expenses are&#13;
paid out ,.r the money we take in.&#13;
The papc1 ,.-ork is done down in&#13;
Chicagv.&#13;
RANGER: How much does&#13;
Parkside collect for leasing the&#13;
bookstore out to Follett Company?&#13;
HOFFMAN: In the contract&#13;
Parkside is paid 5.1 % of all the&#13;
money taken in at the bookstore&#13;
before Follett Compan received&#13;
an) money.&#13;
RANGER: Ha the Book Co-op&#13;
cut into your busine s?&#13;
HOFFMAN: ot yet. At the&#13;
college I worked at before coming&#13;
to Park ide, the Co-op bookstore&#13;
was doing quite well. That college&#13;
11 a~ a commuter college al o and I&#13;
11a\ a little ~urpri~ed not to ee one&#13;
here.&#13;
RANGER: What is the reason (s)&#13;
behind the current lack of books&#13;
for this semester?&#13;
HOFFMAN: Well. we had several&#13;
late requests turned in by the&#13;
faculty and the weather has not&#13;
helped for deliveries either. There&#13;
are other reasons but they \\ill come&#13;
out later. &#13;
editorial.&#13;
Stuants silent&#13;
Committee appropriates monies&#13;
Our Segregated Fees Committee' is spending&#13;
about one hundred and twelve dollars of your&#13;
annual tuition money. If you don't know who they&#13;
are or what they are supposed to do with the&#13;
money, you are not alone.&#13;
Students at Parkside have never really cared&#13;
about this committee. We are one of the few&#13;
campuses that lets students do what they want with&#13;
the part of tuition that supports student organizations.&#13;
Last time there was an election to fill the&#13;
committee with elected students no one ran. This&#13;
left only two elected members on the committee.&#13;
Since this is a student government codified&#13;
committee, Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
filled the committee with appointees. But&#13;
very few people voted in the last P.S.G.A. election!&#13;
Thats okay too, because no one cares what student&#13;
government does anyway. So, when there isn't&#13;
enough interest among students to decide which&#13;
student organizations get how much money you&#13;
don't have to worry. Our student government will be&#13;
glad to do it. That is where they get their money.&#13;
After all the tuition is collected this year; there&#13;
will be about $500,000.00 of segregated fees. In the&#13;
old days administrators and faculty would decide&#13;
how much went to athletics, student life and&#13;
programming, newspaper, student government,&#13;
and all the student organizations on campus. In&#13;
modern times the students decide. Who .is more&#13;
biased? Theoretically, fhe students should have a&#13;
better idea of what they want. Who is on that&#13;
committee representing you? .&#13;
We do know Kai Nail is on the committee. He&#13;
represents the council of student organizations. He&#13;
is also President of the Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition which operates the food co-op, the book&#13;
'co-op, and the rumored to be alternative newspaper.&#13;
He does most of the talking and the committee has&#13;
almost unanimously passed all his motions.&#13;
All the members on the committee belong or&#13;
belonged to a student group that receives funds&#13;
from the committee. There are students on the&#13;
committee that will be voting on their own budgets&#13;
and cutting others. Will your favorite activity get&#13;
cut? Does it have a member on the committee?&#13;
Perhaps it just does not matter! Maybe you are&#13;
just supposed to go to classes and not care about&#13;
where the hundred dollars or so goes from your&#13;
tuition money. Maybe that is why there is student&#13;
government. They do the work and we give them the&#13;
money. Everything must be going alright, because&#13;
it sure is quiet.&#13;
Viall come on down!&#13;
Editorial transitions at the' RANGER occur every&#13;
year. It just happened again!&#13;
RANGER is six years old. During this time its size.&#13;
shape, and design have remained the same. It is time&#13;
for a change. Our mission is to report student life at&#13;
Parkside. We need twice as many writers as we&#13;
currently have to become a graphically modern weekly.&#13;
Complaints and hatred are cheap tools of change in&#13;
the same respect that talk is cheap. Change at the&#13;
RANGER means people with good ideas giving their&#13;
time to the organization and its mission.&#13;
Our core staff this semester represents most of the&#13;
hardest workers that produced last semester's paper.&#13;
Tom Cooper is the General Manager. He is in charge&#13;
of the business side of the paper as well as making sure&#13;
the office meets deadlines. He is in charge of everything&#13;
we can stick him with.&#13;
Bruce Wagner, our Copy Editor, is also the old man&#13;
of the Sea around Parkside. He knows everybody's&#13;
phone number and what their job was before Guskin&#13;
(B.G.).&#13;
John McKloskey, our young News Editor, is young&#13;
enough to require a work permit to make sure&#13;
. RANGER isn't in violation of child labor laws.&#13;
Jean Tenuta. Sports Editor, has brothers and&#13;
boyfriends throughout the sports spectrum. She is a&#13;
Med Tech student who takes all the "hard" courses in&#13;
the timetable.&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swencki. our poet in residence, is doubling&#13;
as our Feature Editor. He is the one who holds our&#13;
pages together.&#13;
Sue Marquardt is our Circulation chief. She will be&#13;
working very hard getting out the mail to the&#13;
subscribers who pay $5.00 for postage.&#13;
Controversial Phil Hermann will be our very own&#13;
Investigative Reporter. He and Chris Clausen are&#13;
working on the "hot" ones you'll see in future issues.&#13;
Bob Hoffman. writer of our cover story on the&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee. He worked very hard at&#13;
the Carter Headquarters in Racine 10 make sure&#13;
Carter Won. ..&#13;
Mona Maillet is in charge of our events page. She&#13;
also does everything she can at production lime.&#13;
Myself. I am a recruiter right now. I wanr'wnters.&#13;
and others who want 10 help LIS put out a beautiful well&#13;
written paper. We will tram everybody for everything.&#13;
Come on down or give us a vall. We need you!&#13;
Philip L. Livingston, Editor&#13;
Wednesday, January '9, '977&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen.&#13;
~!~@ll'Phllip L. Livingston ~&#13;
,l,\\,ll'~)QI!ll'@©~@ll'&#13;
l!il@l!~@ll'©if ~@~lN\~&#13;
@@_li'~ wri!llID.i!l~@ll'ThomaS R. Cooper ~&#13;
©&lt;oJwr l!3ti~@ll'Bruce wagner&#13;
li'!@Wi"@l!il@l!~@ll'John R. McXlOllkey&#13;
ll'@i!l~1Illll'@l!3@l!il@li'Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
~JW@ll'~@l!ilti~@ll'Jean Tenuta&#13;
ltllilw@@~!~i!l~b}1!j)ID,@JW@ll'i&gt;@ll'PhilHermann&#13;
©!ll'©1Illni!l~!@lID.SueMarquardt&#13;
)2Jll'@@l1lll©~!@lID.wri!llID.i!l~@ll'&#13;
~').@l_ll'~!@!~ wri!l~&lt;l/ll' ~.~'\i'&#13;
,I,\\,@lw&lt;l/ll'~!@!lID.~~~@@&#13;
Ranger is published by students ot the University of Wisconsin-Porkside. Views herein ere not necessarily those of anyone else.&#13;
editorial&#13;
Students silent&#13;
Committee appropriates monies&#13;
Our Segregated Fees Committee, is spending&#13;
about one hundred and twelve dollars of you,r&#13;
annual tuition money. If you don't' know who they&#13;
are or what they are supposed to do with the&#13;
money, you are not alone.&#13;
Students at Parkside have never really cared&#13;
about this committee. We are one of the few&#13;
campuses that lets students do what they want with&#13;
the part of tuition that supports student organizations.&#13;
Last time there was an election to fill the&#13;
committee with elected students no one ran. This&#13;
left only two elected members on the committee.&#13;
Since this is a student government codified&#13;
committee, Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
filled the committee with appointees. But&#13;
very few people voted in the last P.S.G.A. election!&#13;
Thats okay too, because no one cares what student&#13;
government does anyway. So, when there isn't&#13;
enough interest among students to decide which&#13;
student organizations get how much money you&#13;
don't have to worry. Our student government will be&#13;
glad to do it. That is where they get their money.&#13;
After all the tuiti0n is collected this year., there&#13;
will be about $500,000.00 of segregated fees. In the&#13;
old days administrators and faculty would decipe&#13;
how much went to athletics, student life and&#13;
programming, newspaper, student government,&#13;
. and al I the student -organizations on campus. In&#13;
modern times the students decide. Who -is more&#13;
biased? Theoretically, the students should have a&#13;
better idea of what they want. Who is on that&#13;
committee representing you? ·&#13;
We do know Kai Nall is on the committee. He&#13;
represents the council of student organizations. He&#13;
is also President of the Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition which operates the food co-op, the book&#13;
·co-op, and the rumored to be alternative newspaper.&#13;
He does most of the talking and the committee has&#13;
almost unanimously passed all his motions.&#13;
All the members on the committee belong or&#13;
belonged to a student group that receives funds&#13;
from the committee. There are students on the&#13;
committee that will be voting on their own budgets&#13;
and cutting others. Will your favorite activity get&#13;
cut? Does it have a member on the committee?&#13;
Perhaps it just does not matter! Maybe you are&#13;
just supposed to go to classes and not care about&#13;
where the hundred dollars or so goes from your&#13;
tuition money. Maybe that is why there is student&#13;
government. They do the work and we give them the&#13;
money. Everything must be going alright, because&#13;
it sure is quiet.&#13;
Y'all co111e on do1Nnl&#13;
Editorial transitions at the RANGER occur every&#13;
year. It just happened again!&#13;
RANGER is six years old. During this time its size,&#13;
shape, and design have remained the same. It is time&#13;
for a change. Our mission is to report student life at&#13;
Parkside. We need twice as many writers as we&#13;
currently have to become a graphically modern weekly.&#13;
Complaints and hatred are cheap tools of change in&#13;
the same respect that talk is cheap. Change at the&#13;
RANGER means people with good ideas giving their&#13;
time to the organization and its mission.&#13;
Our core staff this semester represents most of the&#13;
hardest workers that produced last semester's paper.&#13;
Tom Cooper is the General Manager. He is in charge&#13;
of the business side of the paper as well as making sure&#13;
the office meets deadlines. He is in charge of everything&#13;
we can stick him with.&#13;
Bruce Wagner, our Copy Editor, is also the old man&#13;
of the Sea around Parkside. He knows everybody's&#13;
phone number and what their job was before Guskin&#13;
(B.G.).&#13;
John McKloskey, our young News Editor, is young&#13;
enough to require a work permit to make sure&#13;
· RANGER isn't in violation of child labor laws.&#13;
Jean Tenuta, Sports Editor, has brothers and&#13;
boyfriends throughout the sports spectrum. She is a&#13;
Med Tech student who takes all the "hard" courses in&#13;
the timetable.&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swencki, our poet in residence,is doubling&#13;
as our Feature Editor. He is the one who holds our&#13;
pages together.&#13;
Sue Marquardt is our Circulation chief. She will be&#13;
Wednesday, January 19, 1977&#13;
Bob Hoffman, Chris Clausen, Mona Maillet,&#13;
Fred Tenuta, Thomas Nolen.&#13;
working very hard getting out the mail to the&#13;
subscribers who pay $5.00 for postage.&#13;
Controversial Phil Hermann will be our very own&#13;
Investigative Reporter. He and Chris Clausen are&#13;
working on the "hot" ones you'll see in future issues.&#13;
Bob Hoffman, writer of our cover story on the&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee. He worked very hard at&#13;
the Carter Headquarters in l{acine to make sure&#13;
Carter Won. '&#13;
Mona Maillet is in charge of our events page. She&#13;
also docs everything sht: can at production time.&#13;
Myself. 1 am a recruiter right now . I want ' writers.&#13;
and others who want to help us put out a beautiful well&#13;
written paper. We will tra111 cvcryh&lt;idy for everything.&#13;
Come on down or give us a &lt;·all. We need you!&#13;
Philip L. Livingston, Editor&#13;
1£.F'(; JIDl'!.F@@i@;r&#13;
~l'l.i@FPhilip L. Livingston ~&#13;
~~l'!.'(;@)f' @if ~@'(r;~g&gt;lfil.~&#13;
®@llil.@g,~&#13;
~&#13;
Eir&amp;lli\lID.i@R'&#13;
~~~@FBruce&#13;
Thom.as&#13;
Wagner&#13;
R. Cooper ~&#13;
1ID'@w~ ~@l.l'!.i@g,John R. McKlOSk:ey&#13;
lr'@&amp;ir;w.E'® ~~l'l.~lf'Jeffrey J. Swencki&#13;
~~@Fir;~ ~~i@i:t&gt;Jean Tenuta&#13;
ltruw@~ir;l'l.~&amp;il'!.W® IB@~@g&gt;ir;@;r Phil Hermann&#13;
©l'iF@WJ.lllID.il'!.@lli\Sue Marquardt&#13;
~~WJ.©'(;l'l.@lli\ Eir&amp;lli\lID.~@;r&#13;
Mw@;ril'!.~l'!.~ Eir&amp;~@F ~~'W&#13;
1£.~w@;ril'l.~l'!.lli\~ ~IID.11@~&#13;
Ranger is published by students at the University of Wisconsin -Parkside . Views herein ore not necessarily those of anyone else . &#13;
On Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
Groups backed&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I think it's horrible that. with all&#13;
the students attending Parkside,&#13;
only a small percentage" are&#13;
involved with student organizations&#13;
and extra-curricular activities. The&#13;
people who complain that Parkside&#13;
has nothing to offer are the same&#13;
people who run home as soon as&#13;
their classes are over. They&#13;
complain that nothing happens&#13;
dur-ing the weekends, but refuse to&#13;
come to the dances. movies,&#13;
concerts, and any other such&#13;
activities. They say that Parkside&#13;
has no places to go between classes,&#13;
but ignore the Union, the library,&#13;
and Main Place.&#13;
Student organizations are just&#13;
begging for members. Many are&#13;
forced to fold due to lack of&#13;
students. Some of the groups,&#13;
such as PSGA and Ranger, cannot&#13;
serve the students as well as they&#13;
are equipped to because of lack of&#13;
participation.&#13;
If the 'students of -this campus&#13;
would take a little time to become&#13;
involved. in student organizations,&#13;
they would find that Parkside has&#13;
more to offer than classes and&#13;
basketball games.&#13;
Ramona Maillet&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
In December I wrote a letter in&#13;
which Iregistered my disgust with&#13;
that of others about what we&#13;
considered an obscene article on&#13;
sex which appeared in a&#13;
supplc mc n t called the DEHANGER.&#13;
Curt Collins wrote a&#13;
letter in rebuttal ending his letter&#13;
with the words. "Don't stop,&#13;
RANGER!. just because some&#13;
traditionalist says one shouldn't&#13;
laugh at sex."&#13;
That's not what I said. Curt. My&#13;
objections were aimed at cheapening&#13;
and demeaning sex and they&#13;
still hold. I've listened to many&#13;
stories immersed in sex which I&#13;
found funny. Like the one where&#13;
some young friends of mine were&#13;
parked one dark night. They were&#13;
in the back seat of the car and&#13;
suddenly realized that the car was&#13;
rolling down hill. They had rocked&#13;
it loose from its moorings.&#13;
Ivie~s&#13;
This Semester ....&#13;
UNION&#13;
Gruhl rebuts rebuttal&#13;
by&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swenckl&#13;
. Jeanne Rudd is a junior majoring in Psychology and Political Science&#13;
intending to go into secondary education in those fields. She is from&#13;
Kenosha, married and has four children-lb. IS, J2. and 11 years of age.&#13;
Jeanne worked for two years as a student-to-student counselor in Tallent&#13;
H.all but quit due to the elimination of the student-to-student program&#13;
with the budget cut. She was requested to stay on as secretarial help but&#13;
found she hated being a secretary.&#13;
When questioned about her leaving her job she said, "I feel the&#13;
University has placed its priorities in bureaucratic paperwork and not in&#13;
the students, where it belongs."&#13;
How does Jeanne feel about the student body? "I think the students are&#13;
a fine bunch of people. They are extremely friendly. Ialso feel that it's a&#13;
shame so few students participate in the many. many extracurricular&#13;
activities offered. The many clubs and organizations a student can gel&#13;
involved in would provide experience beneficial after graduation.'&#13;
When asked what she likes and dislikes the most about Parks ide Jeanne&#13;
replied, "I like the opportunity it has given me to pursue higher education.&#13;
"Because of my family circumstances I would not be able to go to school out&#13;
of town.&#13;
"What I dislike the most is the apathy of the students, the politics of the&#13;
university establishment, and the food."&#13;
I finally asked Jeanne if being in school as a wife and mother has&#13;
influenced her outlook on her role as a woman. She commented, "I have&#13;
the educational institution. The only place where females predominate in&#13;
recognized the inequality between the treatment of males and females inll ..--------------------------'1 P.A.B. Film Series&#13;
this University is in the role of bureaucratic secretarial support. There are&#13;
so few women in other areas that it appears to be tokenism. It seems funny Presents&#13;
that with so many highly qualified females in this area, they are so poorly&#13;
represented at Parkside."&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
''''''.'''11 PITCHER BEER&#13;
PABST-BUD-OLD ST1LE -UTE-OL1&#13;
$1so (Plus *100 Pitch.r D.positl&#13;
STARTING HAPP1 HOUR THIS FRI&#13;
3:00 to 5:30 - CLOSINC THIS FRI. ONLY 6:00&#13;
Curt called me "a traditionalist:'&#13;
that suits me fine. On a fewoccasions&#13;
I've been called much&#13;
worse. where would we be without&#13;
traditions? .. Come to think of&#13;
it ... What are PARKSlDE's&#13;
traditions? I've asked about a score&#13;
of Parks ide people that question&#13;
and the way they stumble around&#13;
for an answer is really something.&#13;
I'lltry to find time to write a report&#13;
on that subject.&#13;
In the meantime. have a good&#13;
year. May each of you be lucky&#13;
enough to find at least one teacher&#13;
who will really turn you on and who&#13;
will miss you when you're absent&#13;
from class. Good luck!&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Class of '74&#13;
R~NGER, he said that thc .&#13;
paper was about the only way the&#13;
student body had to find out about&#13;
what was going on upstairs. In this&#13;
I heartily agree. Sometimes&#13;
Parkside reminds me of being&#13;
something like a frigate with a&#13;
compliment of gold-braided administrators&#13;
sufficient to run an&#13;
aircraft carrier. These people, I've&#13;
been told, spend most of their time&#13;
at meetings where they don't really&#13;
change anything. Instead they&#13;
rearrange people and things and&#13;
review an-d rewrite goals and&#13;
policies. Nice work, if you can get&#13;
it! With a crew that size there is&#13;
bound to be some gold bricks the&#13;
most notorious which comes to&#13;
mind a "fuTI" professor with a B.A.&#13;
degree and tenure who teaches two&#13;
afternoons a week between his&#13;
moonlighting and who gets paid&#13;
around $25.000 a year for his time&#13;
and trouble. So keep on watching&#13;
'em and write on RANGER!&#13;
Wed., Jan. 26&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 27&#13;
2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATER&#13;
Admission $1.00&#13;
1977 Local ACUI Intercollegiate Tournament Program&#13;
~. \fit}&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
.1 EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
- Thurs. 9:30 - 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks 60'&#13;
~erbu'8&#13;
~ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Wed.&#13;
Bowling - Jan 22 &amp; 23, 1977&#13;
Billiards Jan 28, 29 s 3D, 1977&#13;
Table. Tennis - Jan. 28, 29 &amp; 3D, 1977&#13;
Foosball - Feb. 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Chess - Feb 4, 5 &amp; 6, 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
Regionals in Madison Wisc. Feb. 17-19, 1977.&#13;
Union Rec-Center for information or to enter.&#13;
Contact the&#13;
'100 fee/entry.&#13;
Toumament director: Randy Moog Phone: 553-2695&#13;
Groups backed&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I think it's horrible that, with all&#13;
the students attending Parkside,&#13;
only a small percentage· are&#13;
involved with student organizations&#13;
and extra-curricular activities. The&#13;
people who complain that Parkside&#13;
has nothing to offer are the same&#13;
people who run home as soon as&#13;
their classes are over. They&#13;
complain that nothing happens&#13;
during the weekends, but refuse to&#13;
come to the dances, movies,&#13;
concerts, and any other such&#13;
activities. They say that Parkside&#13;
has no places to go between classes,&#13;
but ignore the Union, the library,&#13;
and Main Place.&#13;
Student organizations are just&#13;
begging for members. Many are&#13;
forced to fold due to lack of&#13;
students. Some of the groups,&#13;
such as PSGA and Ranger, cannot&#13;
serve the students as well as they&#13;
are equipped to because of lack of&#13;
participation.&#13;
If the students of. this campus&#13;
would take a little time to become&#13;
involved in student organizations,&#13;
they would find that Parkside has&#13;
more to offer than classes ai:td&#13;
basketball games.&#13;
Ramona Maillet&#13;
by&#13;
Jeffrey J. Swencld&#13;
Jeanne Rudd is a junior majoring in Psychology and Political Science&#13;
intending to go into secondary education in those fields. She is from&#13;
Kenosha, married and has four children-16, 15, 12, and 11 years of age.&#13;
Jeanne worked for two years as a student-to-student counselor in Tallent&#13;
Hall but quit due to the elimination of the student-to-student program&#13;
with the budget cut. She was requested to stay on as secretarial help but&#13;
found she hated being a secretary.&#13;
When questioned about her leaving her job she said, "l feel the&#13;
University has placed its priorities in bureaucratic paperwork and not in&#13;
the students, where it belongs."&#13;
How does Jeanne feel about the student body? "l think the students are&#13;
a fine bunch of people. They are extremely friendly. I also feel that it's a&#13;
shame so few students participate in the many, many extracurricular&#13;
activities offered. The many club~ and organizations a student can get&#13;
involved in would provide experience beneficial after graduation."&#13;
When asked what she likes and dislikes the most about Parkside Jeanne&#13;
replied, "I like the opportunity it has given me to pursue higher educatioR.&#13;
·Because of my fl!,mily circumstances l would not be able to go to school out&#13;
of town.&#13;
"What I dislike the most is the apathy of the students, the politics of the&#13;
university establishment, and the food."&#13;
l finally asked Jeanne if being in school as a wife and mother has&#13;
influenced her outlook on her role as a woman. She commented, "I have&#13;
recognized the inequality between the treatment of males and females in&#13;
the educational institution. The only place where females predominate in&#13;
this University is in the role of bureaucratic secretarial support. There are&#13;
so few women in other areas that it appears to be tokenism. It seems funny&#13;
that with so many highly qualified females in this area, they are so poorly&#13;
represented at Parkside."&#13;
Gruhl rebuts rebuttal&#13;
Curt called me "a traditionalist,"&#13;
that suits me fine. On a few -&#13;
occasions I've been called much&#13;
worse. Where would we be without&#13;
traditions? ... Come to think of&#13;
it . . . What are PARKSIDE's&#13;
traditions? I've asked about a score&#13;
of Parkside people that question&#13;
and the way they stumble around&#13;
for an answer is really something.&#13;
I'll try to find time to write a report&#13;
on that subject.&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
·1n December I wrote a letter in&#13;
which l registered my disgust with&#13;
that of others about what we&#13;
considered an obscene article on&#13;
sex which appeared in a&#13;
wpplem1:nt called the DERANGER.&#13;
Curt Collins wrote a&#13;
letter in rebuttal ending his letter&#13;
with the words, "Don't stop,&#13;
RANGER!, just because some&#13;
traditionalist says one shouldn't&#13;
laugh at sex."&#13;
That's not what I said, Curt. My&#13;
objections were aimed at cheape"ning&#13;
and demeaning sex and they&#13;
still hold. I've listened to many&#13;
stories immersed in sex which I&#13;
found funny. Like the one where&#13;
some young friends of mine were&#13;
parked one dark night. They were&#13;
in the back seat of the car and&#13;
suddenly realized that the car was&#13;
rolling down hill. They had rocked&#13;
it loose from its moorings.&#13;
R~NGER, he said that the .&#13;
paper was about the only way the&#13;
student body had to find out about&#13;
what was going on upstairs. In this&#13;
I heartily agree. Sometimes&#13;
Parkside reminds me of being&#13;
something like a frigate with a&#13;
compliment of gold-braided administrators&#13;
sufficient to run an&#13;
aircraft carrier. These people, I've&#13;
been told, spend most of their time&#13;
at meetings where they don't really&#13;
change anything. Instead they&#13;
rearrange people and things and&#13;
review arid rewrite goals and&#13;
policies. Nice work, if you can get&#13;
it! With a crew that size there is&#13;
bound to be some gold bricks the&#13;
most notorious which comes to&#13;
mind a "full" professor with a B.A.&#13;
degree and tenure who teaches two&#13;
afternoons a week between his&#13;
moonlighting and who gets paid&#13;
around $25.000 a year for his time&#13;
and trouble. So keep on watching&#13;
'em and write on RANGER!&#13;
Introducing: French Pizza $1.50&#13;
In the meantime, have a good&#13;
year. May each of you be lucky&#13;
enough to find at least one teacher&#13;
who will really turn you on and who&#13;
will miss you when you're absent&#13;
from class. Good luck!&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Class of '74&#13;
This Semester ••• ,,&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
1111101/lllll&#13;
PITCHER BEER&#13;
PABST-BUD-OLD STYLE -UTE-OLY&#13;
$1 SO (Plus •1•0 Piteher Deposit)&#13;
STARTING HAPN HOUR THIS FRI&#13;
3:00 to S:30 - CLOSING THIS FRI. 0Nl1 6:00&#13;
P .A.B. Film Series&#13;
Presents&#13;
Wed., Jan. 26 - 2:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thurs., Jan. 27 - 2:30 p.m. 7 :30 p .m.&#13;
UNION CINEMA THEATE&#13;
Admission $1.00&#13;
I .I EVERY MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY&#13;
SPAGHETTI FEAST&#13;
$1.95&#13;
Bowling - Jan. 22 &amp; 23, 1977 Foosball - r-eb. 4. 5 &amp; 6 . 1977&#13;
Chess - F-eb. 4. 5 &amp; 6. ,sn&#13;
Includes: Salad, Italian Bread and a Free Glass of Wine.&#13;
On&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9 :30 - 11 :00 p.m.&#13;
Bubble Up&#13;
Mixed Drinks so•&#13;
Spring, West of 31 in&#13;
Green Ridge Plaza&#13;
632-6151&#13;
~_Jerbu~&#13;
,ourt&#13;
PUB &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
Billiards Jan. 20. 29 &amp; 3o. 1977&#13;
Table . Tennis - Jan. 20. 29 &amp; 3o. 1977&#13;
Local tournament winners to represent Parkside at the ACUI&#13;
Regionals in Madison Wisc. Feb. 17-19, 1977. Contact the&#13;
Union Rec -Center for information or to enter. 51°0 fee/entry.&#13;
Tournament director: Randy Moog Phone: 553-2695 &#13;
Shuttle busses and athletics face cut?&#13;
budget and (2) what the committee has done with these budgets so far and&#13;
what members of the committee plan to do with these budgets.&#13;
UNION: the best place to start in this budget is with the union. After&#13;
all, they are asking for $322,450.&#13;
The basic question with the union is what members of the committee&#13;
feel should be done. Kai Nall, member of the committee, a former'&#13;
Vice-President of PSGA, and an unsuccessful candidate for President of&#13;
PSGA outlined to Ranger how he views the union budget.&#13;
Kai Nan's intent is two-fold. One is to get the union to become selfsufficient&#13;
so eventually they will not need any segregated fee dollars and so&#13;
student tuition can be reduced. Kai Nall feels that would be good for&#13;
everyone concerned. He says that the union wouldn't have to come to the&#13;
allocations committee to get money approved for concerts and movies and&#13;
other programs, they would be free to do anything they wanted to do.&#13;
Kai Nail's second intent is to change who the programing at the union is&#13;
geared to. Kai Nail says that about 600/0 of the students at this campus are&#13;
over 25 and that the programing should be directed at them rather than at&#13;
the 18 to 21 year olds. Kai Nall thinks that there must be much more&#13;
family programming since these 25 year olds usually are married and have&#13;
children. Nail said that one of his major blockades in changing&#13;
programming at the union is Bill Niebuhr, director of the union who is&#13;
paid $10,424 (600/. of his salary) out of segregated fees. Nail said. that he&#13;
has tried to talk to Niebuhr about changing the programming but that&#13;
Niebuhr has resisted any change. But how does Kai Nall think he can get&#13;
rid of Niebuhr? Kai Nall's resolution to request job descriptions from most&#13;
staff positions funded by the allocations committee, was passed&#13;
unanimously by the committee.&#13;
Kai Nall plans to just rewrite Bill Niebuhr's job description and if the&#13;
Chancellor goes along with the committee's new job description, then a&#13;
talent hunt for a new director of the union would begin.&#13;
. (Niebuhr was unavailable for a reply since he is currently vacationing&#13;
In Acapulco.)&#13;
As was mentioned before, this attempt by the committee to fire Niebuhr&#13;
relates to the question of what union programming should be.&#13;
Should the union try to get big name bands (such as America, one of the&#13;
groups being mentioned that Parkside may get this semester) and lose over&#13;
$2,{X)() of student monies? Or should the programming be geared to events&#13;
that make money (Ranger has been unable to find any events or&#13;
programming at the union that make money) or at least events that break&#13;
even. (Events that break even are usually movies.)&#13;
Kai Nall feels that the idea of trying to get big name entertainment is&#13;
just absurd, that it isn't worth the cost to the students.&#13;
Relating to the union programming is the Performing Arts and Lectur-es&#13;
con't from page 1&#13;
budget which is requesting $8,954. Looking at this budget, the choice of&#13;
what should or should not be done becomes clear. The performing arts and&#13;
lectures committee put on two jazz concerts last year with expenses of&#13;
$5,000 and received $4,500 of revenue. To Kai Nail something like that is&#13;
acceptable. What is not acceptable to Nail is examples like the fact that&#13;
the performing arts and lecture committee put on two dance performances&#13;
!'It a cost of $1.500 and only received $600 of revenue. NaIl thinks that a&#13;
Seltreltuted Fee~ (:huirman. I'ue Slrllll'llliki&#13;
program like that is not justifiable. Nail feels that ther~ were very few&#13;
students attending these dance performances and that students shouldn't&#13;
be asked to subsidize by $900 events that are attended by a majority of&#13;
non-students.&#13;
Pete Strutynski, chairman of the allocations committee and vicepresident&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board, feels that for the sake of&#13;
"diversity" we should subsidize these events and others.Iike them.&#13;
Another question that the allocations committee will decide shortly is&#13;
whether they should allocate $7,400' this next year and for a succeding five&#13;
years in order to allow the union to borrow $40,CXXl to make further&#13;
improvements on the union? It is impossible at this point to determine&#13;
whether they will or will not approve this loan.&#13;
In summary about the union, whether you will see high class bands, or&#13;
see fine arts and lectures or dance repertories or just what kind of movies&#13;
Multi-cultural center&#13;
offers ethnic courses&#13;
The newly-organized Center for Multicultural Studies at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parks ide will offer three courses during the second semester,&#13;
and announced plans for six ethnic workshops during the 1977-78&#13;
academic year. .&#13;
The center is an interdisciplinary institute designed to foster knowledge,&#13;
understanding and appreciation of the various peoples and cultures that&#13;
have contributed to the development of the U.S. and of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
It will use the skills of historians, demographers, political scientists,&#13;
sociologists, anthropologists, linguists, artists, musicians and community&#13;
representatives to study the ethnic life and culture of various national&#13;
groups in this area.&#13;
Initial course offerings will be "From Italy to Wisconsin: Origin of an&#13;
Ethnic Community" from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
beginning Jan. 18 "Roots: The Afro-American Experience" from 6:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. Wednesdays beginning Jan. 19; and a weekend ethnic workshop,&#13;
"The Polish Community in Southeastern Wisconsin," Friday evening,&#13;
March 4 and all day Saturday, March 5.&#13;
The two courses carry three academic credits and the workshop one&#13;
credit. "Roots" and the Polish workshop may be taken for graduate credit&#13;
under a consortia agreement with UW-Whitewater. Undergraduates may&#13;
register during regular Parkside registration, beginning Jan. 11 and&#13;
continuing during the first week of classes, and graduate students may&#13;
register through the University Extension Office at Parkside. -&#13;
"From Italy to Wisconsin" will include the history and culture of italy&#13;
during the 19th century, the motivation for the Italian immigration to&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parksfde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Mention this ad!&#13;
"The culture&#13;
America and the immigrants' adjustment to life in the United States and&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The instructor will be Ginevra Sfassciotti, a&#13;
Kenosha native and a Ph. D. candidate at the University of Rochester,&#13;
N.Y., where she has specialized in 19th century Italian history.&#13;
"Roots" is an interdisciplinary course in Black history and culture using&#13;
Alex Haley's widely acclaimed new book tracing his family's heritage from&#13;
West Africa to the slave culture of the American south to the present day.&#13;
The course also will incorporate the forthcoming television film based on&#13;
Haley's book and will include study of the land, people, history and culture&#13;
of Sub-Saharan Africa; the slave trade and slavery in the New World&#13;
colonies; Southern slavery in the 19th century: the anti-slavery movement&#13;
and the Civil War; Reconstruction and Black life after the Civil War; the&#13;
legal assault on discrimination; Black protest movements; and the Black&#13;
experience today.&#13;
The Polish workshop, which will be held at St. Bonaventure High&#13;
School, Sturtevant, will explore the history, traditions, culture, social&#13;
structure. art. music and present circumstances of the Polish community&#13;
in southe~stern Wisconsin. Ethnic sweet's will be served at the evening&#13;
session and an ethnic luncheon at the all-dey session.&#13;
During the 1977-78 year, the center plans to offer six similar workshops&#13;
focusing on Blacks, Latinos, Italians, Danes, Armenians and Germans.&#13;
With the support of more than a dozen ethnic organizations in the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
Unified School Districts, the center has applied to the U.S. Office of&#13;
.Education for a grant in support of the workshops as well as development&#13;
of curricular materials on various ethnic groups which would be available&#13;
to the schools.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at Union Square&#13;
you will see, all of this will&#13;
of the committee meetings:&#13;
be Thursday at 3:30, ;"&#13;
WLLC D173.&#13;
ATHLETICS AND&#13;
decisi~!1 as yet. However&#13;
comm~ttee (to this reporter&#13;
these suggestions). Nail f&#13;
priority over the Interm&#13;
should be divided equally&#13;
Title IX is to get parity&#13;
this parity can be accomp&#13;
sports and women's spo&#13;
difference. Kai Nall men&#13;
TRANSPORTATION:&#13;
but there were interesti&#13;
general consenus that&#13;
Racine bus is asking for&#13;
works out tu over SI20&#13;
- Also under considera .&#13;
parking lot to be built&#13;
eliminating the shuttle&#13;
bus service. This would&#13;
In conclusion, the A&#13;
future weeks that affect&#13;
next meeting is Thursday&#13;
Uross-connt&#13;
crosses con t~&#13;
by'Chrls Clausen&#13;
Victor Godfrey. Parkside'&#13;
cross-country coach, is leaving t&#13;
coach in Bahrain.&#13;
Bahrain (pronounced Bir-rain) i&#13;
off the east coast of Saudi Arabia i&#13;
the western Persian Gulf. lnde&#13;
pendent from Britain since Janua&#13;
l , 1970, with a population on one&#13;
quarter million, its economy is&#13;
_ based on oil refining and aluminum&#13;
production.&#13;
Victor Godfrey is going to this&#13;
country along with seven othe&#13;
individuals to establish a national&#13;
athletic program.&#13;
Godfrey's job wiJl become&#13;
national nack coach coordinating&#13;
the Bahrainese school track&#13;
program.&#13;
To most people. moving to a tin&#13;
Arabian island to help establish&#13;
sport's program is something of&#13;
fairy tale. But to Victor Godfrey it'&#13;
just a new challenging job amon&#13;
others.&#13;
Godfrey spent 4 years with th&#13;
Peace Corps in the Far East. H&#13;
came to accept and understand a&#13;
culture and the&#13;
Shuttle husses and athletics {ace cut?&#13;
budget and (2) what the committee has done with these budgets so far and&#13;
what members of the committee plan to do with these budgets.&#13;
UNION: the best place to start in this budget is with the union. After&#13;
all, they are asking for $322,450.&#13;
The basic question with the union is what members of the committee&#13;
feel should be done. Kai Nall, member of the committee, a former ·&#13;
Vice-President of PSGA, and an unsuccessful candidate for President of&#13;
PSGA outlined to Ranger how he views the union budget.&#13;
Kai Nail's intent is two-fold. One is to get the union to become selfsufficient&#13;
so eventually they will not need any segregated fee dollars and so&#13;
student tuition can be reduced. Kai Nall feels that would be good for&#13;
everyone concerned. He says that the union wouldn't have to come to the&#13;
allocations committee to get money approved for concerts and movies and&#13;
other programs, they would be free to do anything they wanted to do.&#13;
Kai Nail's second intent is to change who the programing at the union is&#13;
geared to. Kai Nall says that about 60o/o of the students at this campus are&#13;
over 25 and that the programing should be directed at them rather than at&#13;
the 18 to 21 year olds. Kai Nall thinks that there must be much more&#13;
family programming since these 25 year olds usually are married and have&#13;
children. Nall said that one of his major blockades in changing&#13;
programming at the union is Bill Niebuhr, director of the union who is&#13;
paid $10,424 (60% of his salary) out of segregated fees. Nall said that he&#13;
has tried to talk to Niebuhr about changing the programming but that&#13;
Niebuhr has resisted any change. But how does Kai Nall think he can get&#13;
rid of Niebuhr? Kai Nail's resolution to request job descriptions from most&#13;
staff positions funded by the allocations committee, was passed&#13;
unanimously by the committee.&#13;
Kai Nall plans to just rewrite Bill Niebuhr's job description and if the&#13;
Chancellor goes along with the committee's new job description, then a&#13;
talen~ hunt f?r a new director of the union would begin.&#13;
(Niebuhr was unavailable for a reply since he is currently vacationing&#13;
in Acapulco.)&#13;
As was mentioned before, this attempt by the committee to fire Niebuhr&#13;
relates to the question of what union programming should be.&#13;
Should the union try to get big name bands (such as America, one of the&#13;
groups being mentioned that Parkside may get this semester) and lose over&#13;
$2,000 of student monies? Or should the programming be geared to events&#13;
that make money (Ranger has been unable to find any events or&#13;
programming at the union that make money) or at least events that break&#13;
even. (Events that break even are usually movies.)&#13;
Kai Nall feels that the idea of trying to get big name entertainment is&#13;
just absurd, that it isn't worth the cost to the students.&#13;
Relating to the union programming is the Performing Arts and Lectur-es&#13;
con 't from page 1&#13;
budget which is requesting $8,954. Looking at this budget, the choice of&#13;
what should or should not be done becomes clear. The performing arts and&#13;
lectures committee put on two jazz concerts last year with expenses of&#13;
$5,000 and received $4,500 of revenue. To Kai Nall something like that is&#13;
acceptable. What is not acceptable to Nall is examples like the fact that&#13;
the performing arts and lecture committee put on two dance performances&#13;
~t a cost of $1,500 and only received $600 of revenue. Nall think~ that a&#13;
Segregated Fee¥ Chairman , a,ere Strutyn" ki&#13;
program like that is not justifiable. Nall feels that there were very few&#13;
students attending these dance performances and that students shouldn't&#13;
be asked to subsidize by $900 events that are attended by a majority of&#13;
non-students.&#13;
Pete Strutynski, chairman of the allocations committee and vicepresident&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board, feels that for the sake of&#13;
"diversity" we should subsidize these events and others like them.&#13;
Another question that the allocations committee will decide shortly is&#13;
whether they should allocate $7,400 this next year and for a succeding five&#13;
years in order to allow the union to borrow $40,000 to make further&#13;
improvements on the union? It is impossible at this point to determine&#13;
whether they will or will not approve this loan.&#13;
In summary abou~ the union, whether you will see high class bands, or&#13;
see fine arts and lectures or dance repertories or just what kind of movies&#13;
Multi-cultural center&#13;
offers ethnic · courses&#13;
The newly-organized Center for Multicultural Studies at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside will offer three courses during the second semester,&#13;
and announced plans for six ethnic workshops during the 1977-78&#13;
academic year.&#13;
The center is an interdisciplinary institute designed _to foster knowledge,&#13;
understanding and appreciation of the various peoples and cultures that&#13;
have contributed to the development of the U.S. and of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
It will use the skills of historians, demographers, political scientists,&#13;
sociologists, anthropologists, linguists, artists, musicians and community&#13;
representatives to study the ethnic life and culture of various national&#13;
groups in this area.&#13;
Initial course offerings will be "From Italy to Wisconsin: Origin of an&#13;
Ethnic Community" from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
beginning Jan. 18 "I.foots: The Afro-American Experience" from 6:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. Wednesdays beginning Jan.19; and a weekend ethnic workshop,&#13;
"The Polish Community in Southeastern Wisconsin," Friday evening,&#13;
March 4 and all day Saturday, March 5.&#13;
The two courses carry three aca~emic credits and the workshop one&#13;
credit. "Roots" and the Polish workshop may be taken for graduate credit&#13;
under a consortia agreement with UW-Whitewater. Undergraduates may&#13;
register during regular Parkside registration, beginning Jan. 11 and&#13;
continuing during the first week of classes, and graduate students may&#13;
register through the University Extension Office at Parkside. ·&#13;
" From Italy to Wisconsin" will include the history and culture of Italy&#13;
during the 19th century, the mo•ivation for the Italian immigration to&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M ember Parkside 200&#13;
National Va rsity Club&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
'&#13;
America and the immigrants' adj•.ist ment to life in the United States and&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The instructor will be Ginevra Sfassciotti, a&#13;
Kenosha native and a Ph. D. candidate at the University of Rochester,&#13;
N.Y., where she has specialized in 19th century Italian history.&#13;
"Roots" is an interdisciplinary course in Black history and culture using&#13;
Alex Haley's widely acclaimed new book tracing his family's heritage from&#13;
West Africa to the slave culture of the American south to the present day.&#13;
The course also will incorporate the forthcoming television film based on&#13;
Haley's book and will include study of the land, people, history and culture&#13;
of Sub-Saharan Africa; the slave trade and slavery in the New World&#13;
colonies; Southern slavery in the 19th century; the anti-slavery movement&#13;
and the Civil War; Reconstruction and Black life after the Civil War; the&#13;
legal assaµlt on discrimination; Black protest movements; and the Black&#13;
experience today.&#13;
The Polish workshop, which will be held at St. Bonaventure High&#13;
School, Sturtevant, will explore the history, traditions, culture, social&#13;
structure, art. music and present circumstances of the Polish community&#13;
in southeastern Wisconsin . Ethnic sweets will be served at the evening&#13;
~ession and an ethnic luncheon at the all-day session.&#13;
During the 1977-78 year, the center plans to offer six similar workshops&#13;
focusing on Blacks, Latinos, Italians, Danes, Armenians and Germ.ans.&#13;
With the support of more than a dozen ethnic organizations in the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities as well as the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
Unified School Districts, the center has applied to the U.S. Office of&#13;
· Education for a grant in support of the workshops as well as development&#13;
of curricular materials on various ethnic groups which would be available&#13;
to the schools.&#13;
On tap at Union Square - - --- -- .&#13;
you will set:, all of this Will&#13;
of the committee meetings&#13;
be Thursday at 3·30 . . ' Ill&#13;
WLLC D173.&#13;
ATHLETICS AND I&#13;
decisiop as yet. However&#13;
comm~ttee (to this reporter&#13;
. ~~,·' Kai Nall , acthr q •·&#13;
,.i.ti:lb&#13;
these suggestions). Nall feit'J;&gt;··&#13;
priority over the Intermuiif lids&#13;
should be divided equally ,,~/IO&#13;
Title IX is to get parity -~-- this parity can be accompiil _illt&#13;
sports · and women's spo dfl!. !he&#13;
difference. Kai Nall men · mll!I!&#13;
TRANSPORTATION: . ~&amp;d&#13;
but there were interes · ~&#13;
general consenus that the&#13;
Racine bus is asking for&#13;
works out to over $120&#13;
Also under considerati&#13;
parking lot to be built n&#13;
eliminating the shuttle b&#13;
bus service. This would&#13;
In conclusion, the All&#13;
future weeks that affect&#13;
next meeting is Thursday&#13;
by-Chris Clausen&#13;
Victor Godfrey, Parkside'&#13;
cross-country coach , is leaving t&#13;
coach in Bahrain.&#13;
Bahrain (pronounced Bir-rain) is&#13;
off the east coast of Saudi Arabia in&#13;
the western Persian Gulf. lnde&#13;
pendent from Britain since January&#13;
1, 1970, with a population on one&gt;&#13;
quarter million, its economy is&#13;
~ based on oil refining and aluminum&#13;
production.&#13;
Victor Godfrey is going to this&#13;
country along with seven othe&#13;
individuals to establish a national&#13;
athletic program.&#13;
Godfrey's job will becorn&#13;
national u;ack coach coordinating&#13;
the Bahrainese school track&#13;
program.&#13;
To most peoplt:, moving to a tin&#13;
Arabian island to help establish a&#13;
sport's program is something of a:&#13;
fairy tale. But to Victor Godfrey it'&#13;
just a new challenging job amon&#13;
others.&#13;
Godfrey spent 4 years with the&#13;
Peace Corps in the Far East. He&#13;
came to accept and understand a&#13;
well as appreciate the Moslem&#13;
culture and the people he said.&#13;
"The culture of Bahrain t, &#13;
_C_o_ur_se_s_o..:;..::ffi~e_re_d__ ,'Ine~s&#13;
;.\Vi]1 ided shortly by the committee. (Note, all&#13;
:tn~ bpen to the public.) The next meeting will&#13;
, ll) .room kitty corner from the info kiosk,&#13;
~RA15: the committee had made no 'e .&#13;
vtr; NaIl made several suggestions to the&#13;
l°tter ~med the committee would go alo~g with&#13;
)&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
i,,~ ~r (If the Se,:rejl;aled Fees Commhtee,&#13;
111fetbat the Athletics budget should not have&#13;
mllrludget. Nall feels that the Athletics budget&#13;
tallyrcen men and women. Since the intent of&#13;
ty bElen men and. women's sports, Kat feels that&#13;
mptidbylooking at the difference between men's&#13;
5pOJ'\Dd just reduce the men's budget by the&#13;
nentieda figure of over $10,000 .&#13;
•H: ::ommittee again did not make any decision&#13;
. roposals. Foremost among these was the&#13;
the~. bus may have to be cut. Currently the&#13;
'or bsidy of SII ,000. With only 90 riders that&#13;
dent.&#13;
. ' the shuttle bus. With the planning of a new&#13;
,0 the Phy. Ed. building, there was talk of&#13;
b tirely or just drastically reducing the shuttle&#13;
~d 'e a proposed $50,000 in segregated fees.&#13;
'DSCommittee will be deciding things in the&#13;
et ts and attendance is encouraged. The&#13;
lay aJoil room D173 actoss from the info kiosk.&#13;
ruoauh&#13;
I&#13;
Iry to coach&#13;
similar so there'll be no culture&#13;
shock for myself. For my family it&#13;
v;ill be a little ditlerent. The&#13;
children, who will attend Bahrain&#13;
) is public school rather than private&#13;
lin school. are young enough not to&#13;
notice too much of a change. My&#13;
wifeis lOOking forward to this with&#13;
much enthusiasm as I am."&#13;
Victor Godfrey was originally&#13;
Jm enthusiastic about the potential of&#13;
the UW-P area.&#13;
his "Of course the basic handicaps&#13;
towards recruiting, such as lack of&#13;
alumni and the fact that UW -P is a&#13;
ctlmmuter college. has hurt us&#13;
Oluch. I feel satisfied that we have&#13;
achieved the goal above and beyond&#13;
establishing. a cross-country program."&#13;
said Godfrey.&#13;
There is no need to worry about&#13;
the program falling apart,&#13;
according to Godfrey. because he is&#13;
conlident in Coach Bob Lawson-,&#13;
and When news of Godfrey's&#13;
Ilsignation became public. numerhe&#13;
~us informal telephone c~lIs&#13;
He .lllquired about the job opening.&#13;
as GOdfrey is sad at leaving&#13;
~JT1 Parkside and the potential of the&#13;
id, area. yet he is excited by the&#13;
bssibility' of working in Bahrain.&#13;
....&#13;
,'j&#13;
to&#13;
de&#13;
,ry&#13;
neis'&#13;
,e'&#13;
nal&#13;
m&#13;
,fig&#13;
ck&#13;
iny&#13;
,a&#13;
fa&#13;
It'S&#13;
,ng&#13;
Criminal justice&#13;
"Criminal Justice and the Constitution" will be the second course&#13;
offering in the developing criminal justice program here at Parkside. The&#13;
three-credit class will meet Wednesdays beginning tonight. January J9.&#13;
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
The course is specifically designed to meet the professional needs of&#13;
criminal justice personnel and to provide interested students with a greater&#13;
understanding of tile origin. workings and problems of the criminal justice&#13;
system. It will include study of due process standards, search and seizure&#13;
guidelines. pica bargaining standards. interrogation and right to counsel&#13;
staudurdv. trial by jury. police regulations and prisoner rights.&#13;
The instructor will be John Kozlowicz, whose recent research has&#13;
focused on current trends of U.S. Supreme Court decisions in criminal law&#13;
and civil liberties cases. He also has been a National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities fellow researching defendants' rights and the jury system.&#13;
Additional information on the course, the Parkside criminal justice&#13;
program and availability of leep funding for criminal justice professionals&#13;
is available from Cliff Johnson, academic counseling specialist in criminal&#13;
justice, who can be reached at 553-2575.&#13;
The current course offering continues a program begun last fall with a&#13;
course on "The Development of Stress Management Skills in Relation to&#13;
the Police Punctlon'tartended by 25 law enforcement personnel.&#13;
The courses are designed as the basis for a developing interdisciplinary&#13;
program in which students could complete a concentration in criminal&#13;
justice at Parkside within the sociology major.&#13;
.Regents approve&#13;
teaching projects&#13;
Two proposals submitted by University of Wisconsin-Parkside faculty&#13;
and staff members have been funded under the UW System&#13;
Undergraduate Teaching Improvement Grant program for 1977-78 .&#13;
Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs Donald K, Smith announced&#13;
at a Board of Regents meeting Dec. 16.&#13;
Donald Piele, mathematics, and Larry Wood, psychology, were awarded&#13;
a grant of $9,154 for a project aimed at improving and e.xpanding ~n&#13;
existing pilot course designed to teach general problem solving strategies&#13;
including organizing information, inference, trial and error, subgcals,&#13;
contradiction and working backward. Interactive computing will be used&#13;
to reinforce problem solving skills taught in class and instructional&#13;
materials will be developed to teach students use of problem solving&#13;
strategies in conjunction with computer programming to solve complex&#13;
problems. .&#13;
Carla Stoffie. assistant director of the Library-Learntng Center. and&#13;
Simon Karter, archivist, received funding of $8.485 for a project involving&#13;
preparation of concise workbook-guides to ~i?rary ~esearch skill~ and&#13;
basic bibliographic resources in English, polItical sCience and SOCiology&#13;
similar to a previously-developed workbook-guide in history. Faculty&#13;
consultants for the project will be Samuel Pernacciaro. assistant professor&#13;
of political science, James Gruber, assistant professor of sociology, and&#13;
Alan Shucard. associate professor of English, .,&#13;
The grants are designed to encourage dev~.topment of tnnovatlve&#13;
teaching in the U.W System.&#13;
Aspin crosses tracks&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin has&#13;
asked the Chicago &lt;J~ldNorthwestern&#13;
Railroad to improve the&#13;
condition of the grade crossing near&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The tracks intersect Highway A&#13;
just west of Highway .32.&#13;
In a letter to railroad president&#13;
James Wolfe. Aspin stated,&#13;
"Highway A is one of the major&#13;
traffic links connecting Kenosha&#13;
and Racine County students with&#13;
UW-Parksfde.'·&#13;
"In recent months the crossing&#13;
has deteriorated to a point where&#13;
vehicular traffic has to virtually&#13;
crawl across the tracks." continued&#13;
Aspin.&#13;
Aspin has received numerous&#13;
complaints about the condition of&#13;
the crossing. According to Aspin,&#13;
Wisconsin statutes make it the&#13;
responsihility of the railroad to&#13;
maintain ;!s track crossings.&#13;
Free Pizza Delivery&#13;
Club Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Phone: 652·8737&#13;
AI•• 4.11•.,11" Chi•••• , Sp.,hefti, R•• 'oll, B.. I&#13;
OPEN 4 p.•. ft 1 '.Ill.&#13;
Learning disabilities&#13;
Two courses of interest to teachers are among second seme ter&#13;
education offerings at Parkside.&#13;
They are "Teaching About the Third World" and "Inservice 10&#13;
Learning Disabilities for Classroom Teachers," both on Tuesdays&#13;
beginning Jan. 18 from 6:30 to 9:J5 p.m. Both are three-credit courses.&#13;
Designed for both prospective and practicing teachers, "Teaching&#13;
About the Third World" can be taken either for Parkside undergraduate&#13;
credit or Uw-whltewater graduate credit. Undergraduate registraunn 1\&#13;
during rhc week of January 11 and graduate registration is at the Ii,..,t&#13;
clu ......vcvvton:&#13;
Instructors for the course. which deals with Africa. Asia and La ••&#13;
. America. are Marvin Happel, assistant professor of edu aucn and a&#13;
specialist in multicultural education and social studies methods. and&#13;
Gerald Greenfield, assistant professor of history and a specialist in Latin&#13;
American and African area studies.&#13;
"Jn ..cn icc in Learning Disabilities" i..designed to provide the classroom&#13;
reacher wuh practical vkill .. in identifying children with learning&#13;
disabilities. remedial techniques for use in the classroom and techniques&#13;
for helping LD children develop compensatory measures for their deficit"&#13;
so they can continue to learn in the classroom situation.&#13;
The course. arranged with area special education depart ments which&#13;
will be working with students in the class to explain local diagnostic&#13;
procedures. will be taught by Diane 1. German. assistant professor of&#13;
education and director at the Learning Disabilities Program at Park ide.&#13;
Detailed rcgt ..truuon information IS available by calling the Intcrmauon&#13;
Center ill 55J-2345 .&#13;
'Flags of convenience'&#13;
Tankers keep sinking&#13;
by Carla Rapaport&#13;
(PNS)- Behind the recent rash&#13;
of oil tanker accidents in U.S.&#13;
waters lies a system of shipping&#13;
registration that has given the tiny&#13;
African nation of Liberia the&#13;
largest merchant fleet in the world&#13;
- and that may be a significant&#13;
cause of accidents at sea.&#13;
Liberia, along with Panama and&#13;
a few other small nations. flies a&#13;
"flag of convenience." Ship owners&#13;
from around the world register&#13;
fleets there to escape the taxes,&#13;
union wage scales and often- strict&#13;
regulations and inspections in their&#13;
home countries.&#13;
Three-quarters of the Liberian&#13;
ships are Greek or Americanowned.&#13;
And some of the best ships&#13;
in the world, including those of&#13;
almost every major U.S. oil&#13;
company ~are among them.&#13;
But according to recent statistics&#13;
from the Organization for&#13;
Economic Cooperation and Devel,&#13;
opment (OECD) - made up of&#13;
Japan. the U.S. and Western&#13;
Europe - ships flying flags of&#13;
convenience were lost at nearly four&#13;
times the rate of those from DECD&#13;
nations during the ten years prior&#13;
to 1973.&#13;
Investigators discovered that&#13;
while only 2S percent of the&#13;
ocean-going traffic in the Hong&#13;
Kong area in 1975 flew flags of&#13;
convenience. they accounted for 75&#13;
percent of all ships that sank or&#13;
seriously faltered,&#13;
Last February and March the&#13;
Hong Kong Marine Depanmcnt&#13;
unc""ered 106 cases of ilIe.. 1&#13;
recruitment and decided to begin&#13;
spot checks on seamen's ceniflcates&#13;
on ships berthing there.&#13;
One convicted ship-broker in&#13;
Hong Kong testified that he had&#13;
simply written in higher grades -&#13;
elevating one sailor from pumpman&#13;
to chief engineer. for example&#13;
- on Panamanian certificates. He&#13;
then photocopied them and sent&#13;
the copies to the Liberian&#13;
Maritime Administration in New&#13;
York for the equivalent liberian&#13;
certificates, which were in turn&#13;
used by sailors to get "genuine"&#13;
Panamanian licenses,&#13;
The Liberian government flatly&#13;
denied that it accepted Panaman·&#13;
ian seamen's licenses as a basis for&#13;
issuing Liberian licenses. But Hong&#13;
Kong government officials say such&#13;
exchanges have been routine for&#13;
years. an assessment that is&#13;
confirmed by international shipping&#13;
registration officials.&#13;
While Britain requires a rigorous&#13;
series of oral and written exams&#13;
taken after several years in traioing&#13;
school. Liberia gives a multiple&#13;
choice test. And in Taiwan. the&#13;
exam is heavily weighted with&#13;
political Questions.&#13;
Standards for promotion from&#13;
rank to rank and for officer&#13;
certification likewise vary widely.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN8 A.M. TIL 10:30 P.M.&#13;
2615 Washington lWe. 634-2313&#13;
-&#13;
_IY UJ\eeided shortly by the committee. (Note, all 1&#13;
n_gs bpen to the public.) The next meeting will&#13;
' 1n room kitty comer from the info kiosk,&#13;
~RALS: the committee had made no V •&#13;
ever i Nall made several suggestions to the 0 tter eemed the committee would go along with&#13;
I&#13;
efE:re~aled Feew Committee.&#13;
fethat the Athletics budget should not have&#13;
uriudget. Nall feels that the Athletics budget&#13;
ally-ween men and women. Since the intent of&#13;
~ been men and .. women's sports, Kai feels that&#13;
mplitf by looking at the difference between men's&#13;
sponnd just reduce the men's budget by the&#13;
entied a figure of over $10,000.&#13;
N: ticommittee again did not make any decision&#13;
· roposals. Foremost among these was the&#13;
e ·ine bus may have to be cut. Currently the&#13;
or bsidy of $11,000. With only 90 riders that&#13;
pe dent.&#13;
tio the shuttle bus. With the planning of a new&#13;
ne lo the Phy·. Ed. building, there was talk of&#13;
us tirely or just drastically reducing the shuttle&#13;
Id •e a proposed $50,000 in segregated fees.&#13;
ms Committee will be deciding things in the&#13;
t dents and attendance is encouraged. The&#13;
· ay a30 in room D 173 across from the info kiosk.&#13;
r coach&#13;
e's&#13;
to&#13;
is&#13;
in&#13;
be-&#13;
~ ~JS&#13;
~er&#13;
hal&#13;
ry to coach&#13;
similar so there'll be no culture&#13;
shock for myself. For my family it&#13;
will be a little different. The&#13;
ch ildren, who will attend Bahrain&#13;
public school rather than private&#13;
school, are young enough not to&#13;
notice too much of a change. My&#13;
wife is looking forward to this with&#13;
much enthusiasm as I am."&#13;
· Victor Godfrey was originally&#13;
enthusiastic about the potential of&#13;
the UW -P area .&#13;
"Of course the basic handicaps&#13;
towards recruiting, such as lack of&#13;
alumni and the fact that UW-P is a&#13;
commuter college, has hurt us&#13;
me rnuch. I feel satisfied that we have&#13;
[ng achieved the goal above and beyond&#13;
ck establishing_ a cross-country program,"&#13;
said Godfrey.&#13;
ny There .is no need to worry about&#13;
the program falling apart,&#13;
according to Godfrey, because he is&#13;
confident in Coach Bob Lawson ,,&#13;
a&#13;
fa&#13;
ifs&#13;
ng and when news of Godfrey's&#13;
resignation became public, numer-&#13;
,he ?Us informal telephone ciills&#13;
1-{e .inquired about the job opening.&#13;
Godfrey is sad at leaving&#13;
Parkside and the potential of the&#13;
d. area, yet he is excited by the&#13;
b--t ssibility· of working in Bahrain. ~&#13;
_C_o_ur_se_s_o_ffi_e_re_d_ , s&amp; I = news ,&#13;
Criminal justice&#13;
"Criminal Justice and the Constitution" will be the second course&#13;
offering in the developing criminal justice program here at Parkside. The&#13;
three-credit class will meet Wednesdays beginning tonight, January 19,&#13;
from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
The course is specifically designed to meet the professional needs of&#13;
criminal justice personnel and to provide interested students with a greater&#13;
understanding of t•1e origin, workings and problems of the criminal justice&#13;
system. It will include study of due process standards, search and seizure&#13;
guicli:linc,. pica bargaining standard~. interrogation and right to counsel&#13;
~tanclard,. trial by jury. police regulation~ and prisoner rights.&#13;
The instructor will be John Kozlowicz, whose recent research has&#13;
focused on current frends ofU .S. Supreme Court decisions in criminal law&#13;
and civil liberties cases. He also has been a National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities fellow researching defendants' rights and the jury system.&#13;
Additional information on the course, the Parkside criminal justice&#13;
program and availability of Jeep funding for criminal justice professionals&#13;
is available from Cliff Johnson, academic counseling specialist in criminal&#13;
justice, who can be reached at 553-2575.&#13;
The current course offering continues a program begun last fall with a&#13;
course on "The Development of Stress Management Skills in Relation to&#13;
the Police i::unction'' 'attended by 25 law enforcement personnel.&#13;
The courses are designed as the basis for a developing interdisciplinary&#13;
program in which students could complete a concentration in criminal&#13;
justice at Parkside within the sociology major .&#13;
. Regents approve&#13;
teaching projects&#13;
Two proposals submitted by University of Wisconsin-Parkside faculty&#13;
and staff members have been funded under the UW System&#13;
Undergraduate Teaching Improvement Grant program for 1977-78,&#13;
Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs Donald K. Smith announced&#13;
at a Board of Regents meeting Dec. 16.&#13;
Donald Piele, mathematics, and Larry Wood, psychology, were awarded&#13;
a grant of $9,154 for a project aimed at improving and e_xpanding ~n&#13;
existing pilot course designed to teach general problem solvmg strategies&#13;
including organizing information, inference, trial and error, subgoals,&#13;
contradiction and working backward. Interactive computing will be used&#13;
to reinforce problem solving skills taught in class and instructio~al&#13;
materials will be developed to teach students use of problem solving&#13;
strategies in conjunction with computer programming to solve complex&#13;
problems. .&#13;
Carla Stoffle, assistant director of the Library-Learning Center, and&#13;
Simon Karter, archivist, received funding of $8,485 for a project involving&#13;
preparation of concise workbook-guides to library ~esearch skill~ and&#13;
basic bibliographic resources in English, political science and sociology&#13;
similar to a previously-developed workbook-guide in history. Faculty&#13;
consultants for the project will be Samuel Pernacciaro, assista~t professor&#13;
of political science, James Gruber, assistant professor of soc1ology, and&#13;
Alan Shucard, associate professor of English.&#13;
The grants are designed to encourage deveJopment of innovative&#13;
teaching in the UW System.&#13;
Aspin crosses tracks&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin has&#13;
asked the Chicago a!1d Northwestern&#13;
Railroad to improve the&#13;
condition of the grade crossing near&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The tracks intersect Highway A&#13;
just west of Highway .32.&#13;
In a letter to railroad president&#13;
James Wolfe, Aspin stated,&#13;
"Highway A is one of the major&#13;
traffic links connecting Kenosha&#13;
and Racine County students with&#13;
UW -Parkside."&#13;
"In recent months the crossing&#13;
has deteriorated to a point where&#13;
vehicular traffic has to virtually&#13;
crawl across the tracks," continued&#13;
Aspin.&#13;
Aspin has received numerous&#13;
complaints about the condition of&#13;
the crossing. According to Aspin,&#13;
Wisconsin statutes make it the&#13;
responsibility of the railroad to&#13;
maintain ,is track crossings.&#13;
~&#13;
Free Pizza Delifery&#13;
Club ·Highview&#13;
5035 60th Street&#13;
Pho'ne: 652-87;17&#13;
Alto ••Dttrl19 Chlck11, s,11h1tt1, Railoll, 8111&#13;
OPEN 4 t.•: to 1 •·•·&#13;
-&#13;
Learnin di abiliti&#13;
'Flags of conve ience'&#13;
ec nd m ter&#13;
a&#13;
and&#13;
tin&#13;
Tankers keep sinking&#13;
by Carla Rapaport&#13;
(PNS)-Behind the recent ra h&#13;
of oil tanker accident in U. .&#13;
waters lies a system of hipping&#13;
regi tration that has given the tin&#13;
African nation of Liberia the&#13;
largest merchant fleet in the world&#13;
- and that may be a ignificant&#13;
cause of accidents at ea.&#13;
Liberia, along with Panama and&#13;
a few other small nations, flies a&#13;
" flag of convenience." Ship owners&#13;
from around the world register&#13;
fleets there to escape the taxes,&#13;
union wage scales and often strict&#13;
regulations and inspections in their&#13;
home countries.&#13;
Three-quarters of the Liberian&#13;
ships are Greek or Americanowned.&#13;
And some of the be t ships&#13;
in the world, including tho e of&#13;
almost every major U.S. oil&#13;
company, are among them.&#13;
But according to recent statistics&#13;
from the Organization for&#13;
Economic Cooperation and Development&#13;
(OECD) - made up of&#13;
Japan, the U.S. and Western&#13;
Europe - ships flying flags of&#13;
convenience were lost at nearly four&#13;
times the rate of those from OECD&#13;
nations during the ten years prior&#13;
to 1973.&#13;
Investigators discovered that&#13;
while only 25 percent of the&#13;
ocean-going traffic in the Hong&#13;
Kong area in 1975 flew flags of&#13;
convenience, they accounted for 75&#13;
percent of all ships that sank or&#13;
sen u ly faltered .&#13;
Last cbru ry nd March the&#13;
Hong Kong Marine&#13;
un overed l&#13;
recruitment and d 1d&#13;
pot h k n earn n&#13;
on hip berthin there.&#13;
One c nvi t d hip-br&#13;
Hong Kong te tified that&#13;
simply written in higher gr de -&#13;
elevating one ailor fT m pumpman&#13;
to chief engineer, for example&#13;
- on Panamanian certificate . He&#13;
then photocopied them and sent&#13;
the copie to the Liberian&#13;
Maritime Admini !ration in New&#13;
York for the equivalent Liberian&#13;
certificate , which were in turn&#13;
u ed by ailors to get "genuine"&#13;
Panamanian license .&#13;
The Liberian g vernment flat!&#13;
denied that it accepted Panamanian&#13;
eamen' Ii en e a a b i for&#13;
i uin Liberian licen e . But H ng&#13;
Kong g vernment offici I y uch&#13;
exchange have been routine for&#13;
year , an a ment that i&#13;
c nfirmed by internation I hipping&#13;
regi trati n official .&#13;
While Britain require a ri orou&#13;
erie of oral and written exam&#13;
taken after everal years in training&#13;
school. Liberia give a multiple&#13;
choice te t. And in Taiwan, the&#13;
exam is heavily weighted with&#13;
political que tions.&#13;
Standards for promotion from&#13;
rank to rank and for officer&#13;
certification likewi e vary widely.&#13;
LEE SAUSAGE SHOP&#13;
Home of the Suhmarine&#13;
Sandwich&#13;
OPEN 8 A.M. Ill 10:30 P .M.&#13;
2615 Washington /We. 634-2373 &#13;
Visage&#13;
editor's note&#13;
jeff .... ,- j. Mwencki&#13;
The following haiku were written by the eighth grade&#13;
accelerated English class at Gilmore Junior High&#13;
School in Racine where I was student teaching this&#13;
past fall.&#13;
Reflections,&#13;
Reflections dazzle&#13;
Copying the countryside&#13;
In beautiful pools.&#13;
Susan Svaboda&#13;
Waterfalls falling&#13;
creating brilliant colors&#13;
when the sun shines through&#13;
Katie Lorence&#13;
1HHHHHHHHHHHHH-HHHHHHHMHHHHHHHHHH&#13;
a drop of dew, clinging to petals,&#13;
quietly drops,&#13;
heaven's tears.&#13;
Sheryl Ollvarsen&#13;
a crystal, white, fragil snowflake&#13;
drifts to the ground&#13;
silently weeping ....&#13;
Sheryl Olivarsen&#13;
thin silver moon&#13;
shines sleepily down to the&#13;
awakening earth ....&#13;
Sheryi Ollvarsen&#13;
Great grey elephants&#13;
Tremendous in strength and weight&#13;
Roam in huge herds&#13;
Sue Guentzel&#13;
Geese swiftly fly&#13;
over the snow covered farm&#13;
southbound for their home&#13;
Connie Lamberton&#13;
The ugly duckling&#13;
Waddling away from home&#13;
To become a swan&#13;
Monica Steinbach&#13;
Butterflies are grand&#13;
Silent, flying, beautiful&#13;
They flutter on air .:&#13;
Sue Guentzel&#13;
When wint'ry ways confound the time&#13;
and I, an l-stck-cota&#13;
compounded drawn-and-quarteredly,&#13;
my mind on you ...&#13;
I find no little comfort there&#13;
where warm before your fiery eyes our fears&#13;
would melt away ...&#13;
Fire and wine, apples, cheeses - Jesus! I'm:&#13;
alone tonight&#13;
good wood to burn&#13;
a book&#13;
but&#13;
me ...&#13;
no match/es.&#13;
Happilessly rememb'ring when -&#13;
before I saw your&#13;
Smg. u anty ... · , I .&#13;
aware of nothing&#13;
to be lost&#13;
you&#13;
were just&#13;
another snowflake falling on my soul&#13;
(Ohitscold! - I'm growing old ... )&#13;
but weren't we innocently clean?&#13;
like new-fallen&#13;
'fore the footprints&#13;
of our time&#13;
lost in love?&#13;
And now you remind me,&#13;
finally,&#13;
of teardrops in the snow.&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the mind before my birth&#13;
where the dreams i dreamed&#13;
before the night and i&#13;
were fed by my mother's womb&#13;
and time but slept in fluid of growing pang&#13;
!&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the mind before my birth&#13;
before there was a tomorrow to come&#13;
and yesterday was never more&#13;
and i was never more&#13;
tnen two dreams becoming one .'&#13;
and dreams made more reality&#13;
than a world of abstract fleshly wakenings&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
why day happened'somehow&#13;
without even a whispering good-bye&#13;
i watch as memory mist swallows years&#13;
into deja vu .&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
why born children smile&#13;
why only born children smile&#13;
Do only born children smile?&#13;
i run without a time to go&#13;
and though&#13;
i am in the where i was born&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the when before my birth&#13;
c&#13;
"&#13;
41&#13;
.j&#13;
(,&#13;
jeffrey [. swencki&#13;
Visage&#13;
Reflections ,&#13;
Reflections dazzle&#13;
Copying the countryside&#13;
In beautiful pools.&#13;
Susan Svaboda&#13;
thin silver moon&#13;
shines sleepily down to the&#13;
awakening earth . ...&#13;
Sheryi 01 Iversen&#13;
The ugly duckling&#13;
Waddling away from home&#13;
To become a swan&#13;
editor's note&#13;
jeUrt-y j . Mwe n c k i&#13;
The following haiku were written by the eighth grade&#13;
al·celcrated English dass at Gilmore Junior High&#13;
St·hool in Racine where I was student teaching this&#13;
past ran.&#13;
a drop of dew, clinging to petals,&#13;
quietly drops,&#13;
heaven's tears.&#13;
Sheryl 01 Iversen&#13;
Great grey elephants&#13;
Tremendous in strength and weight&#13;
Roam in huge herds&#13;
Sue Guentzel&#13;
Monica Steinbach&#13;
When wint'ry ways confound the time&#13;
Butterflies are grand&#13;
Silent, flying, beautiful&#13;
They flutter on air.&#13;
Sue Guentzel&#13;
Waterfalls fa( ling&#13;
creating brilliant colors&#13;
when the sun shines thr(?ugh&#13;
Katie Lorence&#13;
a crystal, white, fragil snowflake&#13;
drifts to the ground&#13;
silently weeping . ...&#13;
Sheryl 01 Iversen&#13;
Geese swiftly fly&#13;
over the snow covered farm&#13;
southbound for their home&#13;
Connie Lamberton&#13;
and I, an i-sick-cold&#13;
compounded drawn-and-quarteredly,&#13;
my mind on you . . .&#13;
:n:=~~~~~n:::n~!l:::n:~l::!l:~~tl::fl::1l3.1"1 i look to discover&#13;
I find no little comfort there&#13;
where warm before your fiery eyes our fears&#13;
would melt away . ..&#13;
Fire and wine, apples, cheeses - Jesus! I'm:&#13;
alone tonight&#13;
good wood to burn&#13;
a book&#13;
but&#13;
me .. .&#13;
no match/ es.&#13;
Happilessly rememb'ring when -&#13;
before I saw your&#13;
Smg. . I I . u ar,ty ...&#13;
aware of nothing&#13;
to be lost&#13;
you&#13;
were just&#13;
another snowflake falling on my soul&#13;
(Ohitscold! - I'm growing old ... )&#13;
but weren't we innocently clean?&#13;
like new-fallen&#13;
'fore the footprints&#13;
of our time&#13;
lost in love?&#13;
And now you remind me,&#13;
finally,&#13;
of teardrops in the snow.&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
the mind before my birth&#13;
where the dreams i dreamed&#13;
before the night and i&#13;
were fed by my mother's womb&#13;
and time but slept in fluid of growing pang&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the mind before my birth&#13;
before there was a tomorrow to come&#13;
and yesterday was never more&#13;
and i was never more&#13;
than two dreams becoming one .&#13;
and dreams made more reality&#13;
than a world of abstract fleshly wakenings&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
why day happened.somehow ..&#13;
without even a whispering good-bye&#13;
i watch _as memory mist swallows years&#13;
into deja vu .&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
why born children smile&#13;
why only born children smile&#13;
Do only born children smile?&#13;
i run without a time to go&#13;
and though&#13;
i am in the where i was born&#13;
i look to discover&#13;
the when before my birth&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki &#13;
iRa~gers&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
•&#13;
WIn six during break&#13;
weeks.&#13;
MONTANA STATE, December 11 :,sports The Rangers, blew an II point&#13;
lead in the second half. having&#13;
difficulty connecting at the free&#13;
throw line, and lost 75-65 to their&#13;
NCAA division 1 opponent.&#13;
Parks ide outrebounded Montana&#13;
State 48-46 and outshot them 41-39&#13;
but only made 9 of 19 from the free&#13;
throw line as Montana' State hit 21&#13;
of 3S for the victory.&#13;
Marshall Hill hauled down '3&#13;
Ranger season and career high of&#13;
20 rebounds and added 14 points.&#13;
Scott had IS points to lead the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
UW-PLATEVILLE, December 14&#13;
....Scott hit 18 of 24 shots from the&#13;
floor as he scored his second&#13;
highest offensive output of his&#13;
career. 37 points. and Parkside won&#13;
76-66.&#13;
Scotty's hot shooting gave the&#13;
Rangers a 35·25 half time lead and&#13;
a 56 percent mark from the field to&#13;
Plateville's 41 percent in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Ma~in Chones had 10 rebounds,&#13;
but the Rangers were outrebounded&#13;
41-36.&#13;
CARROLL COLLEGE, January 4&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Carroll showed an inability to&#13;
contain a tall man, in our case Hill,&#13;
as Parks ide won 92-81, after a three&#13;
week break.&#13;
Hill was the difference in the&#13;
game. with 23 points and 20&#13;
rebounds and caused four of the&#13;
five Carroll starters to collect four&#13;
fouls.&#13;
Scott scored a usual total of 18&#13;
points and Stevie King hit 17. The&#13;
Rangers got an additional surprise&#13;
from Brown who came off the&#13;
bench and made several steals. to&#13;
wind up with 12 points.&#13;
Mike Hanke. senior forward.&#13;
who had been out since the&#13;
beginning of the season, returned&#13;
to action.&#13;
ST. XAVIER COLLEGE, January&#13;
8 at Parkside&#13;
Parkside broke their 28 .game&#13;
winning streak at home, losing&#13;
87-76. although Scott scored 3S&#13;
points.&#13;
Xavier, a shorter team than&#13;
Parkside with a 14-5 record. hit&#13;
repeatedly from outside even&#13;
though they were outrebounded&#13;
48-28.&#13;
Parks ide was behind 43·34 at&#13;
halftime and cut Xavier's lead to&#13;
60-58. but two jump shots and a&#13;
fast break layup later, and the&#13;
Rangers were behind 72-64 with six&#13;
minutes remaining; The Rangers&#13;
never got closer than four the rest&#13;
of the way.&#13;
Coach Stephens thought the&#13;
defense played very well, talking it&#13;
up to try and help out. He was&#13;
pleased with the way we "owned the&#13;
inside." and the play of freshmen&#13;
Lonnie Lewis and Lester&#13;
Thompson.&#13;
Scott scored 24 to lead the&#13;
Rangers. Marshall Hill added 12,&#13;
Joe Foots had 11 and Stevie King&#13;
had 10. Hill also had 10 rebounds.&#13;
Western was led by David Morgan,&#13;
who had 12 points and nine&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
UW-WHITEWATER, January 11&#13;
Parkside scored its second&#13;
victory over Whitewatef' this&#13;
season. 76-74 but it was not&#13;
impressive as the first was.&#13;
Scott scored two free throws with&#13;
two seconds left in the game for the&#13;
win and totaled 20 points in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Parkside was behind 44-38 at the&#13;
half as Whitewater led in rebounding&#13;
30-19 and increased their lead&#13;
to 56-47 before Parks ide began&#13;
moving to tie the game at 60-60.&#13;
A Scott basket gave the Rangers&#13;
a 66-64 lead. which they maintained&#13;
until Steve Laird tied the&#13;
score at 74 with I :37 left.&#13;
INDIANA-PURDUE UNIVERSITY,&#13;
January 13&#13;
Although Indiana-Purdue has&#13;
had a good reputation this season.&#13;
they were blasted by the Rangers&#13;
77-61.&#13;
Scott turned in another exciting&#13;
performance. scoring every basket&#13;
in the first J 5 minutes of the second&#13;
half and finished the game with 20&#13;
points. Hill added 17 points to the&#13;
Parkside cause, keeping the&#13;
Rangers ahead most of the game.&#13;
Parkside's basketball squad.&#13;
although taking a three week rest&#13;
with no games and Rot participating&#13;
in a holiday tournament for the&#13;
first time in years. were busy during&#13;
the semester break.&#13;
The Rangers had a 8-4 record&#13;
going into action this past weekend.&#13;
with several unexpected events&#13;
occuring.&#13;
This is a summary of the action&#13;
the team saw since the end of last&#13;
semester:&#13;
ST. NORBERT COLLEGE, December&#13;
8 at Parkslde&#13;
The Rangers. returning home&#13;
from a three game road trip, were&#13;
glad to be home to bomb St.&#13;
Norbert, 106·65.&#13;
The team from De Pere was&#13;
dominated on the boards and&#13;
couldn't keep up with the Rangers'&#13;
shooting and were behind 47-27 at&#13;
the half.&#13;
Parkside increased their lead to&#13;
66-36 in the first six minutes of the&#13;
second half with sparkling steals&#13;
and dunks by Marvin Chones and&#13;
Leartha Scott, the top scorer with&#13;
25 points. Lawrence Brown an.;&#13;
Lester Thompson came off the&#13;
bench to aid the Ranger cause.&#13;
Even though it was a healthy&#13;
victory for the Rangers, the team&#13;
lost the services of their top reserve.&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic in the last two&#13;
seconds of the game. Dimitrijevic&#13;
has been out since then after knee&#13;
'Surgery and will find out from his&#13;
doctor whether he will play in two&#13;
Speed, guards&#13;
beat Lawrence&#13;
by Jean Tenuta their biggest problem is a lack of&#13;
heigh t. The three tallest team&#13;
members are 5'9"; Rose Dorzweller,&#13;
Pat Munger and Sue&#13;
Kortendick. Munger was expected&#13;
to start, but is unable to play, due&#13;
to mononucleosis.&#13;
Center Kolovos, at 5'8", had&#13;
been playing against opponents&#13;
who have been two to six inches&#13;
taller than she.&#13;
"Our losses have come when we&#13;
have been dominated on the&#13;
boards," said Henderson. "Both&#13;
Carthage and Whitewater have&#13;
each had three girls who are six feet&#13;
or taller."&#13;
But Henderson thinks that the&#13;
squad's speed will keep the team&#13;
competitive with their opponents.&#13;
"We're an exciting team to&#13;
watch. We're quick and show&#13;
hustle; we caused Whitewater to&#13;
switch from their man to man&#13;
defense to a zone as we were scoring&#13;
layups repeatedly:' said Henderson.&#13;
The team's only senior is Nina&#13;
Hunter. Oster, LoU and Dorzweiler&#13;
are all sophomores. Freshmen 'also&#13;
include Sue Veselik, Carol Shinske,&#13;
Penny Siperly and Debbie Catlett,&#13;
aU of whom have seen action so far.&#13;
Aher the home opener against&#13;
Condordia Junior College prior to&#13;
the men's basketball game against&#13;
UW -Green Bay last night, the club&#13;
will take a break until January 27,&#13;
~hen they will face Waukesha Tech,&#13;
in another home game at 7 p.m.&#13;
Parkside's newly formed women's&#13;
basketball club played three&#13;
games over the semester break and&#13;
played their fourth last evening.&#13;
In the one win over Lawrence&#13;
College, and two losses to Carthage&#13;
and Whitewater. all on the road,&#13;
junior center Diana Kolvos has&#13;
been the team's most consistent&#13;
player, with help from sophomore&#13;
guard Frozene Lott on offense.&#13;
The squad defeated Lawrence&#13;
41·38 in their opening game in&#13;
which Lott scored 20 points and&#13;
Kclovos had 11.&#13;
A very -highly regarded Carthage&#13;
team completely dismantled the&#13;
Rangers 70-27, jumping out to a&#13;
J5-2 lead early in the game. Lott&#13;
was again leading scorer with 11&#13;
points followed by Kolovos' nine&#13;
points.&#13;
Last Friday, Parkside lost to&#13;
UW-Whitewater 61-45. Karen&#13;
Oster led in the offensive attack&#13;
with 10 points, trailed by Kolovos,&#13;
with eight and Lott with seven.&#13;
The team's strength so far lies in&#13;
their three guards; LoU, Oster and&#13;
Dita Hunter. according to Coach&#13;
Hall Henderson. "Of the teams&#13;
we've played so far and other teams&#13;
that I've seen, our guards could&#13;
hold a starting position on any of&#13;
them," he said.&#13;
Henderson's team is young, with&#13;
only one senior and one junior.&#13;
Besides being a first year squad,&#13;
~('.. 11 ~prinll~ r.... t.. " mort' point_.&#13;
Rangers&#13;
to meet Phoenix&#13;
by Fred Tenuta&#13;
• SEI'ESTl:R RATES&#13;
• S I NGl£ Fro1S FOR&#13;
/'EN &amp; IQ'£N&#13;
• ECXlNQ'1ICAL RATES&#13;
• rui, PHYSICAL&#13;
I-'EI1IERSH 1P&#13;
• COFFEE SHtY&#13;
• ON CITY BUS ROlITE&#13;
• OVER LOOKl NG&#13;
LAKE MIOlIGAN&#13;
Pnrk side' s basketball learn&#13;
played Uw-Green Bay last evening&#13;
to open the spring semester of play&#13;
10 a game that Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens expected to be a tough&#13;
one lor the Rangers.&#13;
"Green Bay has a tough zone&#13;
defense and are a complete team&#13;
with good depth." said Stephens.&#13;
Green Bay is led by NCAA/Division&#13;
2 top player. 6' J" Ron Ripley, who&#13;
has led them to a 14.1 record.&#13;
Saturday night. the Rangers&#13;
overwhelmed Western Illinois&#13;
University 88·54. increasing their&#13;
record to Q-4.&#13;
Parkside jumped out to a 6·0&#13;
lead. but the Leathernecks brought&#13;
it back to 6-4. It ",'as as clove as they&#13;
were to get all night.&#13;
I he Ru ngcr s continued to&#13;
maintain control in the second half.&#13;
he,ll;ng western's press ~'ith lo.ng&#13;
pavses , and their zone defense with&#13;
patience. They also worked hard on&#13;
their defense&#13;
For more&#13;
infonnatfon&#13;
col1-634-1994&#13;
~&#13;
I,&#13;
.'&#13;
,&#13;
,.,S:.: •&#13;
'.~'~~·,I•&#13;
" II' I&#13;
• .11&#13;
.,&#13;
Sendelhach,&#13;
Fanstino honored&#13;
725 Lake Avenue&#13;
Racine. Wisconsin&#13;
Steve Sendelbach, a defensive&#13;
player on the soccer squad has been&#13;
named :.l the National Soccer&#13;
Coaches .vvsociation All-Midwest&#13;
team.&#13;
It was the second year that&#13;
Sendelbach has been named to the&#13;
team. Steve is a junior from&#13;
Milwaukee Pius. and was all-NAIA&#13;
in 1975 and has been the most&#13;
valuable player and captain at&#13;
Parks ide for the past two seasons,&#13;
Tracy Faustino, from Racine St.&#13;
Catherine was named to the&#13;
WWIAC first team for small state&#13;
schools in volleyball. She is a freshman&#13;
and was Most Valuable on the&#13;
young Ranger team.&#13;
................FREE---..&#13;
SKATE RENTAL&#13;
WITH THIS AD AT ANY REGULAR SESSION&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67th St., leno.h.&#13;
i••t off .;, ••• , 31&#13;
Trackmen named all district&#13;
were leRoy Jefferson in the 120-yd.&#13;
high hurdles. national champion&#13;
Jim Heiring in the six mile walk&#13;
and three field event performers.&#13;
Jeff Sitz (long jump), Pat Burns&#13;
(shot put) and Rick Hessefort&#13;
(hammer throw).&#13;
Five UW -Parkside trackmen&#13;
have been named to the NAJA alldistrict&#13;
track and field team&#13;
announced by the District 14&#13;
executive committee.&#13;
Chosen from Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson's team that place fifth in&#13;
last spring's NAJA national meet&#13;
iRa~gers • Will six during break&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's basketball squad,&#13;
although taking a three week rest&#13;
with no games and Rot participating&#13;
in a holiday tournament for the&#13;
first time in years, were busy during&#13;
the semester break.&#13;
The Rangers had a 8-4 record&#13;
going into action this past weekend,&#13;
with several unexpected events&#13;
occuring.&#13;
This is a summary of the action&#13;
the team saw since the end of last&#13;
semester:&#13;
ST. NORBERT COLLEGE, December&#13;
8 at Parkside&#13;
The Rangers. returning home&#13;
from a three game r~ad trip, were&#13;
glad to be home to bomb St.&#13;
Norbert, 106-65.&#13;
The team from De Pere was&#13;
dominated on the boards and&#13;
couldn't keep up with the Rangers'&#13;
shooting and were behind 47-27 at&#13;
the half.&#13;
Parkside increased their lead to&#13;
66-36 in the first six minutes of the&#13;
second half with sparkling steals&#13;
and dunks by Marvin Chones and&#13;
Leartha Scott, the top scorer with&#13;
25 points. Lawrence Brown an\;&#13;
Lester Thompson came off the&#13;
bench to aid the Ranger cause.&#13;
Even though it was a healthy&#13;
victory for the Rangers, the team&#13;
lost the services of their top reserve,&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic in the last two&#13;
seconds of the game. Dimitrijevic&#13;
has been out since then after knee&#13;
surgery and will find out from his&#13;
doctor whether he will play in two&#13;
weeks.&#13;
MONTANA STATE, December 11&#13;
The Rangers blew an 11 point&#13;
lead in the second half, having&#13;
difficulty connecting at the free&#13;
throw line , and lost 75-65 to their&#13;
NCAA division I opponent.&#13;
Parkside outrebounded Montana&#13;
State 48-46 and outshot them 41-39&#13;
but only made 9 of 19 from the free&#13;
throw line as Montana· State hit 21&#13;
of 35 for the victory.&#13;
Marshall Hill hauled down a&#13;
Ranger season and career high of&#13;
20 rebounds and added 14 points.&#13;
Scott had 15 points to lead the&#13;
Rangers.-&#13;
UW-PLATEVILLE, December 14&#13;
, Scott hit 18 of 24 shots from the&#13;
floor as he scored his second&#13;
highest offensive output of his&#13;
career, 37 points, and Parkside won&#13;
76-66.&#13;
Scotty's hot shooting gave the&#13;
Rangers a 35-25 half time lead and&#13;
a 56 percent mark from the field to&#13;
Plateville's 41 percent in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Ma~in Chones had 10 rebounds,&#13;
but the Rangers were outrebounded&#13;
41-36.&#13;
CARROLL COLLEGE, January 4&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Carroll showed an inability to&#13;
contain a tall man, in our case Hill,&#13;
as Parkside won 92-81, after a three&#13;
week break.&#13;
Hill was the difference in the&#13;
game, with 23 points and 20&#13;
rebounds and caused four of the&#13;
five Carroll starters to collect four&#13;
fouls.&#13;
Speed, guards&#13;
beat Lawrence&#13;
by Jean Tenuta&#13;
Parkside's newly formed women's&#13;
basketball club played three&#13;
games over the semester break and&#13;
played their fourth last evening.&#13;
In the one win over Lawrence&#13;
College, and two losses to Carthage&#13;
and Whitewater, all on the road,&#13;
junior center Diana Kotvcis has&#13;
been the team's most consistent&#13;
player, with help from sophomore&#13;
guard Frozene Lott on offense.&#13;
The squad defeated Lawrence&#13;
41-38 in their opening game in&#13;
which Lott scored 20 points and&#13;
Kolovos had 11.&#13;
A very highly regarded Carthage&#13;
team completely dismantled the&#13;
Rangers 70-27, jumping out to a&#13;
15-2 lead early in the game. Lott&#13;
was again leading scorer with 11&#13;
points followed by Kolovos' nine&#13;
points.&#13;
Last Friday, . Parkside lost to&#13;
UW -Whitewater 61-45. Karen&#13;
Oster led in the offensive attack&#13;
with 10 points, trailed by Kolovos,&#13;
with eight and Lott with seven.&#13;
The team's strength so far lies in&#13;
their three guards; Lott, Oster and&#13;
Dita Hunter, according to Coach&#13;
Hall Henderson. "Of the teams&#13;
we've played so far and other teams&#13;
that I've seen, our guards could&#13;
hold a starting position on any of&#13;
them," he said.&#13;
Henderson's team is young, with&#13;
only one senior and one junior.&#13;
Besides being a first year squad,&#13;
their biggest problem is a lack of&#13;
height. The three tallest team&#13;
members are 5'9"; Rose Dorzweiler,&#13;
Pat Munger and Sue&#13;
Kortendick. Munger was expected&#13;
to start, but is unable to play, due&#13;
to mononucleosis.&#13;
Center Kolovos, at 5'8", had&#13;
been playing against opponents&#13;
who have been two to six inches&#13;
taller than she.&#13;
"Our losses have come when we&#13;
have been dominated on the&#13;
boards," said Henderson. "Both&#13;
Carthage a_nd Whitewater have&#13;
each had three girls who are six feet&#13;
or taller."&#13;
But Henderson thinks that the&#13;
squad's speed will keep the team&#13;
competitive with their opponents.&#13;
"We're an exciting team to&#13;
watch. We're quick and show&#13;
hustle; we caused Whitewater to&#13;
switch from their man to man&#13;
defense to a zone as we were scoring&#13;
layups repeatedly;• said Henderson.&#13;
The team's only senior is Nina&#13;
Hunter. Oster, Lott and Dorzweiler&#13;
are all sophomores. Freshmen also&#13;
include Sue Veselik, Carol Shinske,&#13;
Penny Siperly and Debbie Catlett,&#13;
all of whom have seen action so far.&#13;
After the home opener against&#13;
Condordia Junior College prior to&#13;
the men's basketball game against&#13;
UW -Green Bay last night, the club&#13;
wiil take a break until January 27,&#13;
when they will face Waukesha Tech.&#13;
in another home game at 7 p.m.&#13;
Traukmen named all district&#13;
Five UW-Parkside trackmen&#13;
have been named to the NAIA alldistrict&#13;
track and field team&#13;
announced by the District 14&#13;
executive committee.&#13;
Chosen from Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson's team that place fifth in&#13;
last spring's NAIA national meet&#13;
were LeRoy Jefferson in the 120-yd.&#13;
high hurdles, national champion&#13;
Jim Heiring in the six mile walk&#13;
and three field event performers,&#13;
Jeff Sitz (long jump}, Pat Bums&#13;
(shot put) and Rick Hessefort&#13;
(hammer throw).&#13;
Scott scored a usual total of 18&#13;
points and Stevie King hit 17. The&#13;
Rangers got an additional surprise&#13;
from Brown who came off the&#13;
bench and made several steals, to&#13;
wind up with 12 points.&#13;
Mike Hanke, senior forward ,&#13;
who had been out since the&#13;
beginning of the season , returned&#13;
to action .&#13;
ST. XAVIER COLLEGE, January&#13;
8 at Parkside&#13;
Parkside broke their 28 _game&#13;
winning streak at home, losing&#13;
87-76, although Scott scored 35&#13;
points.&#13;
Xavier, a shorter team than&#13;
Parkside with a 14-5 record, hit&#13;
repeatedly from outside even&#13;
though they were outrebounded&#13;
48-28.&#13;
Parkside was behind 43-34 at&#13;
halftime and cut Xavier's lead to&#13;
60-58, but two jump shots and a&#13;
fast break layup later, and the&#13;
Rangers were behind 72-64 with six&#13;
minutes remaining, The Rangers&#13;
never got closer than four the rest&#13;
of the way.&#13;
Coach Stephens thought the&#13;
defense played very well, talking it&#13;
up to try and help out. He was&#13;
pleased with the way we "owned the&#13;
inside," and the play of freshmen&#13;
Lonnie Lewis and Lester&#13;
Thompson.&#13;
Scott scored 24 to lead the&#13;
Rangers. Marshall Hill added 12,&#13;
Joe Foots had 11 and Stevie King&#13;
had 10. Hill also had 10 rebounds.&#13;
Western was led by David Morgan,&#13;
who had 12 points and nine&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
UW-WHITEWATER, January 11&#13;
Pa rkside scored its second&#13;
victory over Whitewatef' this&#13;
season , 76-74 but it was not&#13;
impressive as the first was.&#13;
Scott scored two free throws with&#13;
two seconds left in the game for the&#13;
win and totaled 20 points in the&#13;
contest.&#13;
Parkside was behind 44-38 at the&#13;
half as Whitewater led in rebounding&#13;
30-19 and increased their lead&#13;
to 56-47 before Parkside began&#13;
moving to tie the game at 60-60.&#13;
A Scott basket gave the Rangers&#13;
a 66-64 lead, which they maintained&#13;
until Steve Laird tied the&#13;
score at 74 with 1 :37 left.&#13;
INDIANA-PURDUE UNIVERSITY,&#13;
January 13&#13;
Although Indiana-Purdue has&#13;
had a good reputation this season,&#13;
they were blasted by the Rangers&#13;
77-61.&#13;
Scott turned in another exciting&#13;
performance, scoring every basket&#13;
in the first 15 minutes of the second&#13;
half and finished the game with 20&#13;
points. Hill added 17 points to the&#13;
Parkside cause, keeping the&#13;
Rangers ahead most o( the game.&#13;
Seodelbach,&#13;
Faustino honored&#13;
Steve Sendelbach, a defensive&#13;
player on the soccer squad has been&#13;
named :,, the National Soccer&#13;
Coaches \ ,sociation All-Midwest&#13;
team.&#13;
It was the second year that&#13;
Sendelbach has been named to the&#13;
team. Steve is a junior from&#13;
Milwaukee Pius, and was all-NAIA&#13;
in 1975 and has been the most&#13;
valuable player and captain at&#13;
Parkside for the past two seasons.&#13;
Tracy Faustino, from Racine St.&#13;
Catherine was named to the&#13;
WWIAC first team for small state&#13;
schools in volleyball. She is a freshman&#13;
and was Most Valuable on the&#13;
young Ranger team.&#13;
Rangers&#13;
to meet Phoenix&#13;
by Fred Tenuta&#13;
Park ide's ba ketball team&#13;
played UW-Green Bay la t evening&#13;
to open the spring eme ter of play&#13;
in a game that oach te\:e&#13;
Stephens expected to b a tough&#13;
one for the Rangers.&#13;
"Green Bay ha a tough zone&#13;
defense and are a complete team&#13;
"·ith good depth," said Stephen .&#13;
Green Bay is led by CAA / Di ision&#13;
2 top player. 6' J" Ron Ripley. who&#13;
has led them to a 14-1 rec&lt;&gt;rd.&#13;
Saturday night. the Rangers&#13;
oven,hclmcd We tern lllinoi&#13;
University -54. increa ing their&#13;
record to 9-4.&#13;
Parkside jun1ped out to a 6-0&#13;
lead . but the Leatherne k brought&#13;
it back to 6-4. II" a a clo\e a the&#13;
were to get all night.&#13;
1 he Ranger~ continued to&#13;
maintain control in the ~econd half.&#13;
heating We,tcrn·, pre ~ith Io_ng&#13;
pa,,L~. and their rnnc delen~e \I Ith&#13;
patience. They al O \IOrked hard on&#13;
their deli:n~e&#13;
* Sc/1:STER RATES&#13;
* SINGLE RC01S F~&#13;
l"EN&amp;\&gt;01:N&#13;
* Ea:x-a-1ICAL RATES&#13;
* FLU. PHYS I CAL&#13;
t·1:1"BERSH IP * COFFEE 51-o&gt;&#13;
* ON CllY BUS ROUTE&#13;
* OVER LOO I NG&#13;
LAKE MIOilGAN&#13;
For more&#13;
information&#13;
cal 1-634-1994&#13;
FREE&#13;
SKATE RENTAL&#13;
WITH THIS AD AT ANY REGULAR SESSION&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220 67th St., Kenosha&#13;
just off highway 31&#13;
. &#13;
SERVICES INCi!ODING&#13;
Check Coshing.&#13;
Ticket Soles,&#13;
Lost &amp; Found,&#13;
Generol Informotion,&#13;
Etc., Etc.. Etc.&#13;
ore now locoted in the&#13;
moin Boz oor of the&#13;
Union&#13;
Informotion only is still&#13;
ovolloble ot the Info.&#13;
KIOSK in fflotn Ploce of&#13;
the WLLC.&#13;
Stop by or&#13;
coli: 553-2345&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HAND DIP YOUR OWN&#13;
ICE CREAM &amp; SHERBERT .35&#13;
CHOC., STRAW., PINEAPPLE&#13;
SUNDAES .55&#13;
DOUBLE DIP .25 EXTRA&#13;
NOWI •••UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Jan 29&#13;
at 9 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
IEEiMINIi np&#13;
Breast-exam taught&#13;
A breast self-examination teachin&#13;
day will be held in Union 104 on&#13;
Wednesday, January 26.&#13;
These sessions will be held on&#13;
hourly basis, starting at 10 a.m.&#13;
and ending at 8 p.m., with the&#13;
exception of 1 or 5 p.m.&#13;
Breast cancer is the leading&#13;
cause of cancer-related deaths in&#13;
women. If detected in time, it can&#13;
be almost totally cured, with a&#13;
five-year survival rate of up to 84&#13;
per cent. The most effective way of&#13;
detecting it is by self-examination.&#13;
95 per cent of all cases are detected&#13;
in this manrier.&#13;
For. further information regarding&#13;
the clinic, contact Edith&#13;
Isenberg. campus nurse. in the&#13;
Health Office extension (553-)2366.&#13;
Master&#13;
class held&#13;
Prof. Stephen Swedish will&#13;
present a piano master class from 2&#13;
to 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 22&#13;
CA o.ns.&#13;
This is the first in a series of&#13;
master classes to be presented&#13;
during the semester by members of&#13;
the music faculty.&#13;
Music students from the&#13;
community as well as Parkside&#13;
students are invited to sit in on theclasses,&#13;
which are free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY,JANUARY 19&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 PM. Union Cafeteria&#13;
/ THURSDAY, JANUARY 20&#13;
Free Throw Contest from II AM to 1 PM, PhyEd. Bldg.&#13;
FRIDAY,.JANUARY 21 .&#13;
Last Day for payment of tuition and fees without penalty.&#13;
Math Colloquium: "Catastrophy Theory" with Prof. J, Robbin. 3:30 PM,&#13;
(L·J[)7.&#13;
Festival scheduled&#13;
Parkside and its Center for&#13;
Multicultural studies will sponsor a&#13;
Scandinavian-Italian Festival on&#13;
campus on Feb. 20.&#13;
All students, faculty and staff&#13;
interested in becoming involved in&#13;
planning for the event are invited to&#13;
attend an organizational meeting at&#13;
1:30 p.m, on Tuesday. Jan. 2S in&#13;
the Union. Room 207.&#13;
Aditional information is available&#13;
from Rita Tallent Picken or&#13;
Cynthia Gray.&#13;
***&#13;
ADMISSIO~&#13;
Advance&#13;
5200 Student&#13;
5250 General&#13;
5250 AT DOOR&#13;
Tickets&#13;
available in&#13;
UNION INFO&#13;
CENTER&#13;
SUNDAY,JANUARY 23&#13;
Vets Club Meeting 4 PM ..WLLC D-174.&#13;
MONDAY,JANUARY 24&#13;
Print and Sculpture Show CA Gallery. Noon to 5 PM. Mon-Thurs ..&#13;
Tues. &amp; Wed. 7 to II PM. Through February II.&#13;
TUESDAY, JANUARY 25&#13;
Free Throw Contest from II AM to I PM. PhyEd. Bldg.&#13;
Wrestling Carroll College at PhyEd. Bldg, 7 PM.&#13;
Keith Berger (mirner S PM. Comm. Arts Theater&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26&#13;
Randy Rice PAS Cotleeh~)use from 2 to 4 PM. Un\on Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" at 2:30 and 7:30 PM, Union&#13;
Theatre. $1. (also January 27)&#13;
Breast Self-Examination Teach-In by Wis. Div. American Cancer Society&#13;
and Campus Health Office. HOURLY SESSIONS 10. II AM, 2. 3. 4.&#13;
0.7. and 8 PM'. Union Room 104.&#13;
Events should be turned in to the Ranger by Noon on Wednesday before&#13;
next week's issue. A Form will soon be available.&#13;
Monday, January 24.1977&#13;
RANGER Stuffmeeting for all students interested in working on paper as&#13;
photographers. writers. production workers. ad sales. and lay-out. D-173.&#13;
kiddy corner from info Kiosk in Main Place. 3:00 P.M.&#13;
It was 14 years ago this month that the fabled North Shore Inter-urban&#13;
Line gave up in its rivalry with the superhighway ... gasoline and cars were&#13;
both cheap and plentiful then ... and the dark green trolleys rolled forever&#13;
to a halt. Most were later scrapped, but a few found their way to the East&#13;
Troy area, where a small electric railway still operates. On January 22 and&#13;
23 railfans will converge on the East Troy Railroad to observe North Shore&#13;
Days with special trains, movies and slides, locomotive 'rides ... and to&#13;
snap thousands of pictures. Trolley. Ho!&#13;
Library extends hours&#13;
The Parkside library-learning&#13;
center will be extending its hours&#13;
during this semester.&#13;
The LLC will be open until&#13;
midnight as a result of requests&#13;
from students. Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence director Alan Shucard.&#13;
and the Library-Learning Center&#13;
Advisory Committee,&#13;
There was some problem with&#13;
funding costs of the extended&#13;
hours. Library-Learning Center&#13;
director Joseph Boisse stated that&#13;
he wrote to Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services and Academic&#13;
Outreach. Clayton Johnson.&#13;
with the problem.&#13;
Johnson responded that he would&#13;
fund . the experiment for one&#13;
semester. If the project is&#13;
successful. the hours will be&#13;
extended for an additional year.&#13;
Dupliuating needs envelopes&#13;
Richard Flahive. Duplicating&#13;
Centes Supervisor. urges all student&#13;
organizations and faculty/&#13;
staff to return empty inter-campus&#13;
mail envelopes to their area mail&#13;
pick-up points. It everyone would&#13;
clean out their desks and return&#13;
unused envelopes it would not be&#13;
necessary to order more,&#13;
Wrestlers duel Carroll&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers will face&#13;
UW -Oshkosh tonight at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
at Oshkosh after winning the&#13;
Carthage Invitational Saturday.&#13;
The team will travel to Anderson&#13;
Invitational at Anderson, Indiana&#13;
for day long competition on Friday&#13;
and Saturday, Next Tuesday, the&#13;
Rangers will take on Carroll&#13;
College at 6:30 p.m, in their home&#13;
dual meet opener.&#13;
If you have read Ihill rar you are ~'''lIrl enough 10 wrile for U8!&#13;
PENI&#13;
SERVICES&#13;
Check Cashing.&#13;
Ticket So.les.&#13;
Lost &amp; Found,&#13;
General Information,&#13;
Etc.. Etc.. Etc.&#13;
o.re now located in the&#13;
mo.in Bo.zo.o., of the&#13;
Union&#13;
lnfo,mo.tion only is still&#13;
o.vo.ilo.ble o.t the Info.&#13;
KIOSK in mo.in Plo.ce of&#13;
the WLLC.&#13;
Stop by o,&#13;
co.II: 553-2345&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
~&#13;
FOOD SERVICE&#13;
HAND DIP YOUR OWN&#13;
ICE CREAM &amp; SHERBERT .35&#13;
CHOC., STRAW., PINEAPPLE&#13;
SUNDAES .55&#13;
DOUBLE DIP .25 EXTRA&#13;
NOWI ..• UNION DINING ROOM&#13;
Breast exam taught&#13;
A breast self-examinatiop teachin&#13;
day will be held in Union 104 on&#13;
Wednesday, January 26.&#13;
These sessions will be held on&#13;
hourly basis, starting at 10 a.m.&#13;
and ending at 8 p.m., with the&#13;
exception of 1 or 5 p.m.&#13;
Breast cancer is the leading&#13;
cause of cancer-related deaths in&#13;
women. If detected in time, it can&#13;
be almost totally cured, with a&#13;
five-year survival rate of up to 84&#13;
per cent. The most effective way of&#13;
detecting it is by self-examination.&#13;
95 per cent of all cases are detected&#13;
in this manner.&#13;
For further information regarding&#13;
the clinic, contact Edith&#13;
Isenberg, campus nurse, in the&#13;
Health Office extension (553-)2366.&#13;
Master&#13;
ulass held&#13;
Prof. Stephen Swedish will&#13;
present a piano master class from 2&#13;
to 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 22i&#13;
CA D-118.&#13;
This is the first in a series of&#13;
master classes to be presented&#13;
during the semester by members of&#13;
the music faculty.&#13;
Music students from the&#13;
community as well as Parkside&#13;
students are invited to sit in on the&#13;
classes, which are free.&#13;
Festival sthednled&#13;
Parkside and its Cent.er for&#13;
Multicultural studies will sponsor a&#13;
Scandinavian-Italian Festival on&#13;
campus on Feb. 20.&#13;
All students, faculty and staff&#13;
interested in becoming involved in&#13;
planning for the event are invited to&#13;
attend an organizational meeting at&#13;
1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 25 in&#13;
the Union, Room 207.&#13;
Aditional information is available&#13;
from Rita Tallent Picken or&#13;
Cynthia Gray.&#13;
Events cale*** ndars covering the&#13;
spring semester are now available&#13;
at the Main Desk/Information&#13;
Center in the Union.&#13;
t.••z•.:a:.••;a;,••.,t;••;t..••;e;•~.t:•~ "'§ .. ,JA,•,:••~ .. ~··~"':IA'',f;:,••,J;, ':!: =ic :1: ~n11.,• ... ,;a.. ~··~··~··~··~o:,;,••:,;.••:,;, .. l'!.,~ .. :r. •• !7..,~ •• ~ •• ~ .. ~ •• :;: •• ~ .............. , .•. ,,:.:.," .............. , .•. ff ••• ,, ............................ ~. ..,:..,, .................... , ............. , .............. ..&#13;
Sat.&#13;
Jan 29&#13;
at 9 p.m.&#13;
in&#13;
UNION&#13;
SQUARE&#13;
PAB PRESENTS&#13;
MEGAN McDONOUGH&#13;
' and MADA RUE&#13;
ADMISSIO~&#13;
Advance&#13;
5 2° 0 Student&#13;
52 50 General&#13;
52 50 AT DOOR&#13;
Tickets&#13;
available in&#13;
UNION INFO&#13;
CENTER&#13;
·••:s;••;s:••:,;•-:.;••:a;••:,;,.:a;••:a:••:a:••li''it:'':.t.:''iti'':.,;11:.,;n:,;••;s:••:.,.:n:.,.:n:.,.;n:s;••;s:••:,;n:s;••:.t.:••;t;••:,;••:s;,.;s;••;r;n~11;,;nifi••ifi••; .,,?.,,?.,,~,,!r.,•!P.t,!P.u?.•!?.••?.••·•· .. ·•·••!v.••·•· .. ~•t!v.H:;!•,~••~••~tt~•t?.11!'r.••~u21•!i:••~tt?.u!'r.w?.1,-:r.•,:V.••~••·•·••·•·tt~&#13;
WEDNESDAY,JANUARY 19&#13;
PAB Coffeehouse from 2 to 4 PM. Union Cafeteria&#13;
.,,, THURSDAY,JANUARY 20&#13;
Free Throw Contest from 11 AM to I PM. PhyEd. Bldg.&#13;
FRIDAY,JANUARY 21&#13;
Last Day for payment of tuition a~d fees without penalty.&#13;
Math Colloquium: "Catastrophy Theory .. with Prof. J. RobQin. 3:30 PM.&#13;
CL-107.&#13;
SUNDAY,JANUARY 23&#13;
Vets Club Meeting 4 PM. WLLC D-174.&#13;
MONDAY, JANUARY 24&#13;
Print and Sculpture Show CA Gallery. Noon to 5 PM. Mon-Thurs ..&#13;
Tues. &amp; Wed. 7 to 11 PM . Through February 11.&#13;
TUESDAY, JANUARY 25&#13;
Free Throw Contest from 11 AM to I PM. PhyEd. Bldg.&#13;
Wrestling Carroll College at PhyEd. Bldg. 7 PM.&#13;
Keith Berger (mime) 8 PM. Comm. Arts Theater&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26&#13;
Randy Rice PAB Coffeeh;&gt;use from 2 to 4 PM . Un\on Cafeteria.&#13;
Movie "The Rocky Horror Picture Show .. at 2:30 and 7:30 PM, Union&#13;
Theatre. $1. (also January 27)&#13;
Breast Self-Examination Teach-In by Wis. Div. American Cancer Society&#13;
and Campus Health Office. HOURLY SESSIONS 10. 11 AM. 2. 3. 4.&#13;
o. 7. and 8 PM. Union Room 104.&#13;
Events should be turned in to the Ranger by Noon on Wednesday before&#13;
next week's issue. A Form will soon be available.&#13;
Monday. January 24. 1977&#13;
!-&lt;ANGER Staff meeting for all students interested in working on paper as&#13;
photographers. writer~. production workers. ad sales, and lay-out. D-173.&#13;
kictdy corner from info Kiosk in Main Place. 3:00 P.M.&#13;
It was 14 years ago this month that the fabled North Shore Inter-urban&#13;
Line gave up in Its rivalry with the superhighway . .. gasoline and cars were&#13;
both cheap and plentiful then . . . and the dark green trolleys rolled forever&#13;
to a halt. Most were later scrapped, but a few found their way to the East&#13;
Troy area, where a small electric railway still operates. On January 22 and&#13;
23 rallfans will converge on the East Troy Railroad to observe North Shore&#13;
Days with special trains, movies and slides, locomotive rides . . . and to&#13;
snap thousands of pictures. Trolley_ Ho!&#13;
Library extends hours&#13;
The Parkside library-learning&#13;
center will be extending its hours&#13;
during this semester.&#13;
The LLC will be open until&#13;
midnight as a result of requests&#13;
from students, Center for Teaching&#13;
Excellence director Alan Shucard,&#13;
and the Library-Learning Center&#13;
Advisory Committee.&#13;
There was some problem with&#13;
funding costs of the extended&#13;
hours. Library-Learning Center&#13;
director Joseph Boisse stated that&#13;
he wrote to Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services and Academic&#13;
Outreach, Clayton Johnson,&#13;
with the problem.&#13;
Johnson responded that he would&#13;
fund . the experiment for one&#13;
semester. If the project is&#13;
successful, the hours will be&#13;
extended for an additional year.&#13;
Duplicating needs envelopes&#13;
Richard Flahive, Duplicating&#13;
Cente~ Supervisor, urges all student&#13;
organizations and faculty/&#13;
staff to return empty inter-campus&#13;
mail envelopes to their area mail&#13;
pick-up points. It everyone would&#13;
clean out their desks and return&#13;
unused envelopes it would not be&#13;
nece sary to order more.&#13;
Wrestlers duel Carroll&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers will face&#13;
UW-Oshkosh tonight at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
at Oshkosh after winning the&#13;
Carthage Invitational Saturday.&#13;
The team will travel to Anderson&#13;
Invitational at Anderson, Indiana&#13;
for day long competition on Friday&#13;
and Saturday. Next Tuesday, the&#13;
Rangers will take on Carroll&#13;
College at 6:30 p.m. in their home&#13;
dual meet opener.&#13;
If you have read thi8 rar you arf' 1m1ttrt f'nou@:h 10 writt" for u8!&#13;
,I </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 5, issue 14, January 19, 1977</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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            </elementText>
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          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66212">
              <text>Text</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="66213">
              <text>Newspaper</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="66214">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66215">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66216">
              <text>UW-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="66217">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="568">
      <name>bookstore</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="775">
      <name>child care center</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4531">
      <name>multicultural center</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2482">
      <name>segregated university fee allocation committee (SUFAC)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1334">
      <name>shuttle buses</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
