<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/items/browse?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=257&amp;sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CCreator" accessDate="2026-05-10T15:41:45+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>257</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>4375</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="2622" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4442">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/164c86a3b7fd72aefed31451d4dba2e4.pdf</src>
        <authentication>baffb114832b53dfa1d9ee9b6855a219</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63783">
              <text>Volume 6, issue 17</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63784">
              <text>Two Administrators &amp; A Disgruntled Grad Look at UWP</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63791">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89900">
              <text>qUaKc ZoNe UnDeR uWp&#13;
Vice Chancellor Otto Bauer, right, greeting Toklat the bear as&#13;
referee Pam Engdahl looks on. Toklat will be coaching Parkside's&#13;
varsity wrestling squad in the fall. Bauer won the match by pinning&#13;
the plucky bear in 22 s econds.&#13;
faculty notes&#13;
47 Fired&#13;
by Sifton Winnow&#13;
of t he Newscope staff&#13;
Forty-seven tenured faculty&#13;
members received notice of&#13;
termination this morning. As&#13;
the terminated teachers milled&#13;
around in the Greenquist&#13;
concourse, NEWSCOPE&#13;
learned the reason given for&#13;
termination was "suspected&#13;
activities with the Communist&#13;
Party, and conspiracy to&#13;
provoke a conspiracy, conspiracy."&#13;
&#13;
One dejected instructor exclaimed&#13;
that among the stated&#13;
reasons for his termination,&#13;
"excessively long hair" stood&#13;
out most prominently.&#13;
During an afternoon meeting&#13;
of the terminated faculty&#13;
members, the possibility for&#13;
organizing was rejected&#13;
because "that would constitute&#13;
a conspiracy, we'd be playing&#13;
right into their hands."&#13;
Shortly after that statement&#13;
was made, three hundred&#13;
helmeted national guardsmen&#13;
stormed into the lecture hall,&#13;
and ejected the nonviolently&#13;
resisting professors from the&#13;
building. A long line of hunched&#13;
over mentors could be seep&#13;
shuffling down the road from&#13;
Greenquist, the slower members&#13;
prodded by the guards'&#13;
bayonets.&#13;
A spokesman for the administration&#13;
told NEWSCOPE&#13;
that the mass firings&#13;
represented "nothing unusual;&#13;
we do it all the time."&#13;
by Hugo Myeye&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
In a recent press conference.&#13;
Dr. Lionel Treign has predicted&#13;
that by the year 2,000 "der vails&#13;
vill com dumbleling down". The&#13;
renowned geologist spoke with a&#13;
slight German accent as he&#13;
explained his theory of a&#13;
hitherto unknown geological&#13;
fault in southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
"Bigger den even de Andreas&#13;
Vault in Kalifornya," the&#13;
bespeckled scientist explained&#13;
to the hastily called members of&#13;
the press that "dis von iz bigger&#13;
dan evfer vault und iz located&#13;
near a zity called Kenosha."&#13;
The bearded professor later&#13;
explained that he had pinpointed&#13;
the exact location of the&#13;
fault to "Zom place nare der&#13;
park.'' Upon checking the&#13;
coordinates it was learned that,&#13;
as had been feared, Parkside&#13;
was dangerously straddling the&#13;
fault.&#13;
Officials at the University&#13;
have been keeping a tight lid&#13;
over the matter, and have&#13;
closed off the campus to&#13;
everyone but students and&#13;
faculty. Some observers say&#13;
that the UW is hesitant in informing&#13;
its students as to&#13;
Parkside's precarious position&#13;
because "they're afraid it will&#13;
hurt Parkside's image."&#13;
Persistent rumors have been&#13;
floating around concerning&#13;
alleged cancellations of all&#13;
geology classes; with instructors&#13;
being called out of bed&#13;
at odd hours of the morning to&#13;
attend meetings behind locked&#13;
conference doors.&#13;
Dr. Treign, discoverer of the&#13;
Fault, has told newsmen that he&#13;
"vill make zit down dere, az&#13;
zoon az I vind der quivkest&#13;
route." Some observers predict&#13;
that Treign's reception will be&#13;
less than cordial.&#13;
GALA Protest Planned&#13;
by Anne X. Sasiun&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
The group called Freedom to&#13;
Lose Un-Necessary Kredits&#13;
(FLUNK) has called upon its&#13;
membership to boycott all&#13;
finals this semester. Claiming&#13;
to represent over a quarter of&#13;
the UW-P student body, FLUNK&#13;
spokesman Girard Turntable&#13;
has declared "finals week is&#13;
flunk week, or fun week, or&#13;
anything else you can think of&#13;
that begins with an F."&#13;
Massive demonstrations are&#13;
expected to continue throughout&#13;
the week as the FLUNK&#13;
organization pickes up&#13;
momentum. A University&#13;
spokesman has informed&#13;
NEWSCOPE that contingency&#13;
plans involving massive&#13;
national guard callups are in&#13;
the offing. He said, "Failing is&#13;
one thing, but organizing to fail&#13;
is quite another. The administration&#13;
thinks it may&#13;
violate federal conspiracy&#13;
laws." Later the spokesman&#13;
explained that "This is not just&#13;
another college prank; it&#13;
smacks of hardcore anarchy.&#13;
and aims to tear down the&#13;
University."&#13;
A spokesman for FLUNK told&#13;
NEWSCOPE that the "theme&#13;
for the mass demonstrations is&#13;
'ignore the beast'." He explained&#13;
that "only by looking&#13;
away, will the beast see us,&#13;
recognize us." So far there have&#13;
been 25 arrests for "malicious&#13;
destruction of corporate&#13;
property" involving the improper&#13;
opening of 25 pop-top&#13;
cans of Coke. "We are&#13;
everywhere," the spokesman&#13;
said.&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
lampi mn&#13;
Volume 6 Number 17 May 8,1972&#13;
Two adMINISTRATORS § a&#13;
disGRUNTIed Grad Look At uwF&#13;
C A R EER LEA RNI NG&#13;
Students interested in learning more about their career interests&#13;
are invited to join the group Friday, May 12th, from two&#13;
until three on the Racine Campus, Room 203 Main Hall. This group&#13;
will continue its meetings during the summer. For more information&#13;
call 553-2121, e xtension K42.&#13;
M I M E&#13;
Dr. E. Reid Gilbert, director of the Wisconsin Mime Company,&#13;
which is devoted to "reviving the lost art of mime," and an&#13;
authority on religious drama and Asian theater, will be a guest&#13;
lecturer for three days this week at Parkside.&#13;
Dr. Gilbert will lecture through Thursday in drama, art and&#13;
philosophy classes and also will hold several informal meetings&#13;
with drama students on campus. His guest lectures are being&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Humanities Division.&#13;
Dr. Gilbert received his master's degree in religious drama&#13;
and his doctoral degree in Asian theater. His studies have included&#13;
the Indian and Japanese theaters, both of which incorporate mime,&#13;
the "play without words" which dates back to 20 B.C. Gilbert also&#13;
has studied with the famous French mime Etienne Decroux.&#13;
F R EE MUSI C&#13;
Three Parkside music faculty members and a Racine Unified&#13;
School music educator will join to present a "Concert of Contemporary&#13;
Music" at eight p.m. on Thursday, May 11th, in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hall.&#13;
The performers are Lee Dougherty, soprano, Frances Bedford,&#13;
harpsichord and piano, and Harry Lantz, cello of the UW-P faculty&#13;
and Frank Suetholz, flute, of the Racine Unified.&#13;
The concert is free and open to the public.&#13;
THINK ABOUT IT&#13;
Transcendental Meditation is an unique and effortless mental&#13;
technique by which any individual can expand his mind and&#13;
simultaneously provide deep rest and relaxation for the body.&#13;
Lectures: Tuesday, May 9th, at Greenquist 101, and Thursday, May&#13;
11th, at Greenquist 101, both nights at eight p.m.&#13;
C A R EER I N T E R EST EXPL ORA TION G RO U P&#13;
Students interested in learning more about their career interests&#13;
are invited to join the group Friday, May 12, from 2-3 on the&#13;
Racine Campus, Room 203 Main Hall. This group will continue its&#13;
meetings during the summer. For more information call 553-2121,&#13;
extension K42.&#13;
MAY IS " P L A NT A H E M P S EED M O NTH "&#13;
The "heads" of the Students for Legalizing Marijuana wish to&#13;
remind everyone that the President has declared May "Plant a&#13;
Hemp Seed Month". So if y ou have a hemp seed, plant it and watch&#13;
it grow green, healthy, sturdy, and, hopefully, potent.&#13;
By Sifton Winnow of the NEWSCOPE staff&#13;
This week, NEWSCOPE was privileged and proud as punch to&#13;
interview two top officials within the University, and a disgruntled&#13;
employee on the janitorial staff. We have changed the names to&#13;
protect those who feel they should be protected.&#13;
The first interviewee is a well known dean, who we shall refer&#13;
to as 2D; the second is a highly successful reliable source in Tallent&#13;
Hall, and the third is Ed Norton of the maintenance staff.&#13;
Of th e three, only the bespeckled Norton did not express initial&#13;
reticence toward the idea of an interview: it was only after informing&#13;
the two others if they refused to cooperate, we would bug&#13;
their office, that they readily acquiesced: The idea of a million&#13;
June bugs crawling on their plush carpets during commencement&#13;
was quite convincing.&#13;
NS: Mr. 2-D . . .&#13;
2D: Let's get one thing straight&#13;
before we start this thing. I am&#13;
to be addressed as 'your honor'.&#13;
NS: Very well then, ah, your&#13;
honor . . .&#13;
2D: I don't know what your&#13;
game is, but when I said you&#13;
should say 'your honor', I didn't&#13;
mean you to include 'very well&#13;
then'. Is that clear?&#13;
NS: A thousand pardons. Your&#13;
honor, I wanted to ask you . . .&#13;
2D: Hold it right there. What do&#13;
you mean YOU want to ask ME&#13;
something? I know damn well&#13;
you've got a taperecorder hid&#13;
away somewhere. I told you&#13;
guys last week that tape&#13;
recorders weren't allowed in&#13;
my office. The thing for you to&#13;
do if you want answers is to&#13;
send me the questions, double&#13;
spaced, typed in elite style on&#13;
one of our IBM selectrics, in 20&#13;
words or less, on a 3x5 unlined&#13;
card. And none of those&#13;
polysyllable words, either.&#13;
NS: But sir . . .&#13;
2D: Don't you listen, can't you&#13;
understand, boy, it's 'your&#13;
honor'. Saavy? One other thing,&#13;
if y ou came her to get me to put&#13;
my foot in my mouth trying to&#13;
answer one of your loaded&#13;
questions, you can forget about&#13;
it. I'm not going to fall for it.&#13;
How do you think I got to be&#13;
where I am now, huh? Come&#13;
on, guess, I'll give you three&#13;
guesses.&#13;
NS: Your honor . . .&#13;
2D: Come on, three guesses.&#13;
You wanna bet on it; I'll give&#13;
you odds.&#13;
NS: Very well. Ah, by marrying&#13;
into the University.&#13;
2D: Wrong, dunderhead. Two&#13;
more tries. Tell you what, to&#13;
make it more interesting, I'll&#13;
bet you a Parkside diploma of&#13;
your choice. I'll even have it&#13;
framed for you.&#13;
NS: What if I lose?&#13;
2D: What are you talking&#13;
about? You've already lost.&#13;
NS: Your honor, just one&#13;
question.&#13;
2D: OK, I'll condescend just this&#13;
one time, but don't let it get&#13;
around or I'll have you&#13;
arrested.&#13;
NS: Come now, arrested for&#13;
what?&#13;
2D: That's up to our police.&#13;
NS: I know my rights.&#13;
2D: Dummy, what rights?&#13;
You're a student.&#13;
NS: Your honor, would you&#13;
explain why you addressed a&#13;
threat to Dean Loumos, that if&#13;
anyone was to drink at the Bon&#13;
Voyage party for the Racine&#13;
campus, you'd have him&#13;
busted?&#13;
2D: Ho, ho. . . I ain't falling for&#13;
that. Is that supposed to be your&#13;
question?&#13;
NS: Of course.&#13;
2D: Of course, what?&#13;
NS: Of course, your honor.&#13;
2D: OK, now you're learning;&#13;
and that's what is truly great&#13;
about our University. Sooner or&#13;
later everybody learns to&#13;
respect his superiors. Yes sir,&#13;
sooner or later. You can drop&#13;
the 'your honor' bit; I think&#13;
you've learned your place.&#13;
NS: Getting back to the&#13;
qeustion . . .&#13;
2D: Yes, I've got it; I'll have&#13;
you arrested for conspiring with&#13;
Loumos.&#13;
NS: That's absurd. Three&#13;
people have to be involved.&#13;
2D: Don't worry about that,&#13;
remember you're only a&#13;
student, you got no rights. By&#13;
the way, what was the question?&#13;
NS: It wasn't important.&#13;
2D: What, you mean to say you&#13;
come up here to have an&#13;
audience with my being, only to&#13;
waste my precious time with&#13;
unimportant questions?!&#13;
NS: I protest.&#13;
2D: That's right, protest,&#13;
picket, bomb, steal, cheat. I&#13;
know you, you're one of them&#13;
radical freakouts who will stop*&#13;
at nothing to undermine our&#13;
system of g overnment. Well, let&#13;
me clue you in bub, your breed&#13;
is dying here at PU and good&#13;
riddance.&#13;
NS: Can I assume then that the&#13;
interview is over?&#13;
2D: What interview: I told you I&#13;
don't give out interviews.&#13;
NS: But sir, what about communications&#13;
with the students?&#13;
2D+ What about it?&#13;
NS: Students have a right to&#13;
know what the University is&#13;
doing.&#13;
2D: Students have no rights.&#13;
Remember if it weren't for the&#13;
University, there wouldn't be&#13;
any students in the first place.&#13;
By the way, would you like to&#13;
see the file we have compiled on&#13;
you?&#13;
NS: File?&#13;
2D: Yes, file.&#13;
NS: No, I'm not here for . . .&#13;
2D: Very well. Oh, one other&#13;
thing. I think your abortion ads&#13;
lower the already low caliber of&#13;
your paper.&#13;
(Continued on Page 6) &#13;
May 8,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 2&#13;
EwtoRiAL&#13;
Welp, this is our last issue of the semester, possibly forever.&#13;
People in Tallent refused to take our plea for assistance seriously,&#13;
couldn't even return a phone call. So, next year is anybody's guess.&#13;
Most of this issue is parting shots lampoon: satirical if you&#13;
know what's happening at the U; crude and fatuous if you're a&#13;
"victim". At least it's fun to write.&#13;
But this is deadend day for NEWSCOPE as we (you) know it.&#13;
Anyone who wants to take it over should check out our advisor,&#13;
Walter Feldt, and I would suppose the only qualification necessary&#13;
will be desire and enthusiasm. It will be a lot like starting from&#13;
scratch, though we kept NEWSCOPE going to keep the base of&#13;
reliable advertisers we've managed to scrounge up. The ads will&#13;
still be there.&#13;
If the U. helps out NEWSCOPE next year to the degree we&#13;
think will be necessary, it's gonna be a changed rag. But a lot of the&#13;
changes will depend on who comes up to take over the paper.&#13;
You'll hear reports that the staff of N-SCOPE was a clique.&#13;
True, too, but a de facto clique. There just weren't other people&#13;
interested in the paper.&#13;
So it's the last issue and we're tired and it's time we did things&#13;
we're into and let someone else worry about deadlines, and unpqid&#13;
accounts receivable, and billings and mailings, and lost&#13;
photographs and lost sleep. It's time to say goodbye, and goodluck&#13;
to anyone with enough enthusiasm to learn how to run a paper.&#13;
Good times, bad times, great writing and press releases, strengths&#13;
and weaknesses, ego problems, it's time for someone else to take&#13;
over.&#13;
Racine's Newest Rock Bar&#13;
Now Open&#13;
Open for Cocktails 4:30&#13;
- - - * — i~n-n~w~inj~i.i ui_- -&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
EJ sfatlisklent"&#13;
424 Lake Avenue, Racine&#13;
(formerly Counselor's II)&#13;
Live Entertainment&#13;
5 nights a week&#13;
now featuring&#13;
Second Coming&#13;
formerly&#13;
Buddy and the Citations&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, lb (".ROUND BRECON&#13;
FRENCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LETTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
GRILLED COUNTRYHAM&#13;
A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURGER CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST gQg&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
J&#13;
0 ,v»„ „/W „,/w yoN m Me4 to hi&#13;
Th r ..&#13;
A TELEV/|SED CREDIT SEMINAR&#13;
G ° e8&#13;
° Ql Contlnumg Education, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
PSYCHOLOGY OF DRUG USE...AND ABUSE&#13;
a six week course - Summer, 1972&#13;
presented on the following stations:&#13;
WLUK-TV (ch ll) Green Bay, Wis. WREX-TV&#13;
WX0W-TV (ch 19) La Crosse, Wis. KDUB-TV&#13;
WK0W-TV (ch 27) Madison, Wis. WDSE-TV&#13;
WMVS-TV (ch 10) Milwaukee, Wis. KTCA-TV&#13;
WA0W-TV (ch 9) Wausau, Wis. WNMR-TV&#13;
(ch 13) Rockford, III.&#13;
(ch 40) Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
(ch 8) Duluth, Minn,&#13;
(ch 2) Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Northern Michigan Univ.&#13;
TOP.CS WILL INCLUDE: Is the Mi-Hue, i„ Drugs „r in People&#13;
Abused 1)(llM a1uim,&#13;
111 •• V &lt;» Dr ug Abuse Drugs Commonly&#13;
Smi.jl ( onsnlnuunns . . S(1(|(,v ' ' ^ " 1&#13;
l^ek.pmen, and Grnu.h . , . Psycho_&#13;
- Ruin in Di ug ^ . N^ions&#13;
YOU CAN ENROLL AS:&#13;
a "Special" undergraduate student&#13;
a "Special" graduate student&#13;
an undergraduate auditor&#13;
Earn 3 graduate or undergraduate credits&#13;
„n,l vi,,,i„R ,lip nnd mM&#13;
host professor&#13;
Robert lone, Ph.D.&#13;
All course4&#13;
requirements&#13;
c an be&#13;
completed&#13;
at home&#13;
without&#13;
campus&#13;
attendance&#13;
N.ime.&#13;
-TH.&#13;
AildressCity&#13;
&#13;
Stole- -zipTelevised&#13;
Instruction&#13;
Return to ^°"&#13;
ege of Continu'ng Education&#13;
°' University ot Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
Oshkosh, Wisconsin 54901&#13;
Interested in (check one) Graduate CrediU Undergiaduate C reclil- . Uruleigraduate AuditSeAvincj&#13;
tUe. Qineit&#13;
Pifyi &amp; Oiaiian Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
9Gunm&amp;.&#13;
B E ER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's &#13;
Sex Panel attracts 30 Page 3 NEWSCOPE May 8,1972&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
of the Newseope staff&#13;
Wednesday, May 3rd, six&#13;
panel members argued around&#13;
the basic question: "Should&#13;
private sex between consenting&#13;
adults be legal?" This includes&#13;
homosexual behavior and&#13;
prostitution. A new bill&#13;
providing for free consenting&#13;
adult sex is currently being&#13;
introduced in the state senate.&#13;
Speaking for this idea were&#13;
Defense Attorney Art Nathan, a&#13;
prostitute known as Mickey,&#13;
and Father Joe Feldhouse&#13;
representing Gay Lib.&#13;
Prosecutor Richard McConnell,&#13;
the Reverend Gregory Spitz,&#13;
and Assemblyman Eugene Dorf&#13;
were opposing the idea.&#13;
The debate seemed to be&#13;
individual rights versus&#13;
societie's rights. Should&#13;
government have the right to&#13;
enforce the norms of the&#13;
majority on the minority?&#13;
Mr. Dorf f said such a law'&#13;
would upset the family basis,&#13;
which he says the U.S.A. is&#13;
structured on. He also added&#13;
that it is the government's job to&#13;
enforce moral standards. Mr.&#13;
Dorf claims that democratic&#13;
governments are based on the&#13;
Ten Commands.&#13;
Father Feldhouse said&#13;
homosexuality is a built-in&#13;
nature and God given right. The&#13;
government has no right to&#13;
punish gays because they don't&#13;
express love in a hetrosexual&#13;
way. He also added that 10 per&#13;
cent of the male population is&#13;
gay.&#13;
Mr. Nathan argued that the&#13;
state should not enforce moral&#13;
codes on individuals. "I want to&#13;
know how the state is harmed&#13;
by oral sex?" he said. Any&#13;
•private sexual act, including&#13;
homosexual acts and&#13;
prostitution does not harm&#13;
society he stated. Mr. Nathan&#13;
pointed out that there is less&#13;
trouble with Illinois gay barssince&#13;
private homosexual expression&#13;
is legal there.&#13;
Reverend Spitz and Attorney&#13;
McConnell claimed that all laws&#13;
are made for the protection of&#13;
the people. Reverend Spitz felt&#13;
the state should enforce&#13;
society's moral norms. Mr.&#13;
McConnell claimed, "There are&#13;
no victimless crimes." But Mr.&#13;
McConnell did feel Wisconsin's&#13;
laws regarding husband and&#13;
wife sex are too strict.&#13;
Mr. Nathan pointed out the&#13;
existing "selective enforcement."&#13;
So many people&#13;
break these laws in some way.&#13;
Mr. McConnell agreed there&#13;
were some law enforcement&#13;
abuses.&#13;
Afterwards a few people had&#13;
a brief chat with Mickey. I&#13;
leanred that 95 per cent of her&#13;
customers are married men."&#13;
Since the men can't be satisfied&#13;
at home she feels she is saving&#13;
marriages. She also added that&#13;
she has a hard time being accepted&#13;
by people even though&#13;
most of her friends are freaks.&#13;
The interesting discussion&#13;
was attended by 30 people.&#13;
Parting words of SGA President&#13;
dean Loumos&#13;
Student Government President&#13;
1971-2&#13;
Alright, let's get some things&#13;
straight, right from the&#13;
beginning. If you are trying to&#13;
enact change within any&#13;
Amerikan institution, it's stupid&#13;
to involve yourself too deeply&#13;
with the institution itself.&#13;
There's just too much to do.&#13;
Now, I'm working on the&#13;
principle that there has to be&#13;
many basic and fundamental&#13;
changes are not going to come&#13;
about within the existing&#13;
structure, for these changes are&#13;
contradictory to the existence of&#13;
the structure itself.&#13;
Now, the question is how do&#13;
you deal with the power&#13;
structure knowing that what&#13;
you want is completely against&#13;
established rules and&#13;
regulations. We've got to find&#13;
out exactly who has the power&#13;
— and here at Parkside it's&#13;
from the top down. Faculty&#13;
governance, historically the&#13;
group that controls the campus,&#13;
has been a complete mockery so&#13;
far. You can compare Parkside&#13;
to a feudal monarchy, with the&#13;
students as peasants.&#13;
Now, that happens is that to&#13;
maintain the myth of some kind&#13;
of democratic process, we're&#13;
told to elect a student government.&#13;
This is the 'official voice'&#13;
of the students. But, where does&#13;
that leave you, as the individual?&#13;
Where and what is&#13;
your role in this whole&#13;
bureaucracy? What exactly can&#13;
the student government do? It's&#13;
simple. It can't do anything,&#13;
except to reinforce the existing&#13;
structure. Even if you have 22 of&#13;
the most brilliant minds in the&#13;
world, it won't go anywhere,&#13;
because it's not allowed to. (One&#13;
of the most frequent comments&#13;
we heard was that we had a lot&#13;
of 'good ideas'.) It's no accident&#13;
that the most success we had in&#13;
any of our projects were the&#13;
things we did off+CAMPUS.&#13;
Almost everything we did oncampus&#13;
was frustrated and&#13;
ineffective because of all the&#13;
bull-shit we had to go through.&#13;
Now, here's the important&#13;
part, what we lacked was a&#13;
strong following. This is the&#13;
average students' role. This&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vi Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line S°ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE I&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
campus needs a united,&#13;
demanding, militant, student&#13;
body. No Student Government&#13;
will ever be taken seriously&#13;
unless they have an aware, hip,&#13;
student body, will to take their&#13;
lives into their own hands and&#13;
willing to take the necessary&#13;
measures to deal with their own&#13;
problems.&#13;
This student government&#13;
went about as far as it could go.&#13;
Where we failed was not in&#13;
having the support we needed,&#13;
or maybe, if we did have it, our&#13;
mistake was not to call it out. I&#13;
don't think I've said anything&#13;
you don't already know, and I&#13;
really believe that something's&#13;
going to break at Parkside soon.&#13;
What's important is to know&#13;
where you stand, and if you&#13;
don't, you "better make up your&#13;
mind soon. I'm not only talking&#13;
about Parkside, I'm talking&#13;
about the whole country. The&#13;
wheel is turning fast and sides&#13;
are already drawn. It's a yes or&#13;
no question dealing in life and&#13;
death. One more important&#13;
thing to understand. Individuals&#13;
within the system's structure&#13;
ndlihe system. Cheat, lie, stea&gt;&#13;
and even kill — What to you&#13;
think Attica was all about?&#13;
Rockefeller was quoted as&#13;
saying the reason he didn't go to&#13;
Attica was because he didn't&#13;
want to draw attention to it.&#13;
It can't go on too much longer.&#13;
Something's going to break and&#13;
if it's not organized it's going to&#13;
be squashed because they've&#13;
got all the power. Fortunately,&#13;
their power is built on falseness&#13;
and money, which isn't lasting.&#13;
Our power is built on something&#13;
which can't be beaten. What we&#13;
have is our love and communication&#13;
and all we have to&#13;
do is get it together and nothing&#13;
can stop us.&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 201h Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
CO&#13;
Beginning the second week of SGA's SYMPOSIUM 72, Theatre&#13;
X from Milwaukee presented a two hour program at the Student&#13;
Activities Building on Wednesday evening.&#13;
Presenting skits which are both serious and humorous. Theatre&#13;
X attracted almost 200 people to the Activities Building. Many of&#13;
the skits were laden with didacticism whose themes included the&#13;
socialization of young children growing up in effete America, and&#13;
the inhumanity of man toward men.&#13;
When not relying on generally witty dialogue, the troupe was&#13;
able to put across a feeling or attitude through facial expressions:&#13;
many of the most memorable expressions epitomizing the absurd.&#13;
Beside original works like "Nightmare Theater", the troupe&#13;
presented engrossing adaptations of fables such as the "King s&#13;
Invisible Clothes" and an interpretation of the Biblical Genesis.&#13;
Parkside's new student housing facilities are now ready for&#13;
occupancy. The airy two and three bedroom apartments rent for&#13;
$463 and $363 per month, respectively. The rustic structures are&#13;
finished in varying shades of charcoal gray to blend with the&#13;
natural beauty our campus has to offer.&#13;
Dke VJL eij S' —&gt;upper CU&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan Id.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Sports Cars Special ists &#13;
May 8, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 4&#13;
Bob Sieger&#13;
JOHNNY CASH;&#13;
Love It Or Shove It&#13;
Johnny Cash, number one&#13;
star of the country-western set,&#13;
has just released his latest&#13;
album. At a closed press conference,&#13;
which this reviewer&#13;
crashed, disguised as one of&#13;
merle Haggard's hit men, Mr.&#13;
Cash was quoted as saying,&#13;
"This here son-of-a-bitch (his&#13;
new album) oughta make some&#13;
real money."&#13;
When asked about the&#13;
production end of the record,&#13;
Mr. Cash became very enthusiastic.&#13;
"This record is&#13;
unlike anything I done yet. Six&#13;
of the sons was writ by the P.R.&#13;
boys for Colsolidated Edison up&#13;
in New York, but I think the&#13;
strongest cut on the album is the&#13;
one writ by the son-in-law of the&#13;
President of American Oil&#13;
Company called People Won't&#13;
You Help Me (Pave the Ocean).&#13;
It's a great song, all about how&#13;
we got to progress and not go&#13;
backwards if we're gonna have&#13;
any progress at all. This here&#13;
song was a regular bitch to&#13;
produce, let me tell you. Why,&#13;
one part called for me to wail in&#13;
harmony with a dying sea cow.&#13;
Now, there are only 71 sea cows&#13;
left in the whole world and they&#13;
all live on an island off the coast&#13;
of Alaska. Well, some of our&#13;
best technicians and engineers&#13;
had to fly to Alaska and then&#13;
charter a boat to take them and&#13;
all their recording equipment&#13;
and generators out to this&#13;
island. Finally, when&#13;
everything was set up, they&#13;
found they had to kill 14 sea&#13;
cows before they found one that&#13;
moaned in B-flat. Took 'em a&#13;
whole week and raised our&#13;
budget sky-high."&#13;
Just then we were interrupted&#13;
for lunch and cocktails, served&#13;
by pretty younq qirls cunninglv&#13;
attired as gas pumps. One girl&#13;
in particular kept coming up to&#13;
this reviewer, popping her gum&#13;
and saying breathily, "Fill 'er&#13;
up, Mister?" It was all I could,&#13;
do to keep my mind off my&#13;
dipstick. When I did mention&#13;
something to her about a lube&#13;
job for later, she frowned, said&#13;
she was Catholic, and besides,&#13;
had forgotten to wear her Final&#13;
Filter.&#13;
After lunch, when everyone&#13;
Ah been a picker a' some kind.&#13;
Ah'se never a very good picker,&#13;
though. When Ah'se a young'"un&#13;
Ah picked my nose till it bled so&#13;
bad Ih near passed on. Later,&#13;
Ah picked cotton till my back&#13;
was 'bout busted in two. In&#13;
Texas, Ah picked up a pill habit&#13;
that 'most took me down.&#13;
Because a' that, Ah picked up a&#13;
year in jail. Ah met my wife,&#13;
June Carter Nash, in Memphis.&#13;
Yup, that's right, she was a&#13;
pick-up. Why, if Ih'd known then&#13;
that Ah was pickin' up the whole&#13;
Carter family Ah mighta ended&#13;
my whole pickin' career right&#13;
there. Somewheres 'round this&#13;
time Ah started pickin' guitar.&#13;
At first, Ah thought it was&#13;
gonna be another dead end. But&#13;
then Ah met a man who told me,&#13;
! 1 m J o k r \ r \ ^ C x e $ f\.&#13;
was filled up and loosened up,&#13;
Mr. Cash began talking about&#13;
his life. He seemed very&#13;
emotional, as his words came&#13;
slowly and were sometines&#13;
slurred beyond understanding.&#13;
His face was flushed and he&#13;
often had to stop talking to clear&#13;
his throat and loosen it up with&#13;
some minty-smelling liquid that&#13;
the cute, little, Catholic gas&#13;
pump kept pouring for him.&#13;
"Why, oert' near all my life&#13;
'Boy, I don't know what it is you&#13;
got, but I get I can sell it.' Now&#13;
Ah'm successful for the first&#13;
time in my life as a picker.&#13;
Ah'm afraid that'll have to be&#13;
it for today, boys. Ah gotta go&#13;
down to the Gulf of Mexico and&#13;
put on a show for some boys on&#13;
an oil rig. Ah hear tell the&#13;
beaches down there are right&#13;
purty this time of year."&#13;
You expect more from&#13;
Johnny Cash, and you get it.&#13;
by "Red" Widely&#13;
of the Newscope Sportstaff&#13;
It didn't take me long to&#13;
realize that, as far as bars were&#13;
concerned, the Activities&#13;
Building was strictly bush&#13;
league. Newly remodeled so as&#13;
to more closely resemble the&#13;
genuine item, the bar features&#13;
Bud, Schlitz, Pabst and a Malt&#13;
Liquor Tap. Glasses are&#13;
competitively priced at a&#13;
quarter. The bartenders are&#13;
friendly and ready to serve. It&#13;
plays in the Class B Beer Bar&#13;
league.&#13;
The juke has improved to the&#13;
point where it's worth a&#13;
quarter, though some of the new&#13;
pinball machines are foul balls&#13;
into the bleacher. I struck out 12&#13;
glasses before they got a hit off&#13;
me and by then the game had&#13;
been decided.&#13;
Perhaps, the most interesting&#13;
aspect of the bar on review&#13;
night, were the different groups&#13;
of drinkers sitting at the tables.&#13;
One shaggy haired and&#13;
glazeyed crew plotted the&#13;
revolution; you could tell&#13;
because they sat in a dark part&#13;
of the building and kept looking&#13;
at the door to see if an administrator&#13;
walked in. I thing&#13;
they wanted a captive.&#13;
Another group sat for hours&#13;
playing gin; another one spent&#13;
an hour building an art object&#13;
out of the empty waxpaper&#13;
cups, and then put a match to it.&#13;
Still another group sat staring&#13;
raptly at Sesame Street on the&#13;
tube, furthering their eduction.&#13;
Though the prices are right,&#13;
the atmosphere isn't. Geared to&#13;
the lowest common&#13;
denominator, the Activities&#13;
Building is just that, and not a&#13;
union. It's in a league with the&#13;
teeny bars, which don't exist&#13;
anymore. That's a clue.&#13;
By Herb Erbofthe NEWSCOPE staff&#13;
Title: Cattle Fatted Like Pigs: The New Student&#13;
Author: Sun Yet-Sun in collaboration with Moon Got-Sun&#13;
Publisher: House of the Rising Innocence Press (Price: Classified)&#13;
Dr. Sun Yet-Sun, famed author of the Munchkin Uprising of '42 and Five Ye To&#13;
Go, has written yet another historical novel; for the first time collaborating w^tfhis&#13;
distinguished mother-in-law, the honorable Moon Got-Sun.&#13;
Dr. Sun, in his latest work tackles the issue of student apathy; of a new gene at ion&#13;
of students who reflect little of the activism seen in the prevalent past decade Relyinq&#13;
heavily on interviews with actual students, Dr. Sun has compiled a five page tome&#13;
whose startling conclusion predicts increasing apathy among future students Amonq&#13;
the pivotal premises from which he derives his stunning conclusion, is the prediction&#13;
that 1973 will have 365 days in it, and that December will again be the month for the&#13;
gala Christday festivals observed round the globe, except "in the barbaric countries&#13;
of the yellow hoardes," the author informs us.&#13;
Among the intensive interviews presented in The New Student, Sifton Winnow of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside represented the Midwest student. Winnow who&#13;
said he is active on the defunct campus newspaper, also explained that "| don't qo to&#13;
classes much, because I never bothered to register."&#13;
Parkside, a newly remodeled college campus on the outskirts of Kenosha ex&#13;
plained Winnow, "is a lot like my green thumb; it ain't really there." He said that&#13;
many of his fellow students shared his goal of becoming "a blue whale."&#13;
Dr. Sun in an explanation of his methodology, stated that he chose the Parkside&#13;
campus as representative of the Midwest college because "it was there, and m r&#13;
importantly, because it reminted me of my previous work concerning pena?&#13;
0^ institutions.'&#13;
&#13;
He pithily concluded that the "West is the best, the East next, and the Midwest&#13;
half west.&#13;
Grandpa manned the coffee tanks.&#13;
Hills Brothers, brewed to a rich brown&#13;
blend, under the watchful eyes of Frank&#13;
Fuhrer. The Saing Mark's men ru n the&#13;
affair like clockwork — they have to.&#13;
The first fry was in February; it attracted&#13;
some nine hundred people as the&#13;
ushers were prepared for half that many.&#13;
They still talk about it. The line went out&#13;
the front door of the Auditorium toward&#13;
Sheridan Road, people cursing, cussing,&#13;
with consternation and contempt. The&#13;
Catholic men whipped together a winning&#13;
system the next time around, more friers&#13;
and faster service.&#13;
It has all mellowed out. The customers&#13;
number about four hundred, everyone is&#13;
fed quickly, or slowly, whichever the&#13;
person prefers. Even Grandpa Fuhrer,&#13;
between preparing tankfuls of coffee, ca n&#13;
enjoy an occasional drink, olive and all,&#13;
along with his fellow workers.&#13;
Maggie and I had gotten to the church&#13;
early, a little before five-thirty, which is&#13;
starting time. We ate slowly, I studied the&#13;
hall, the people, and the perch.&#13;
I concluded that the fish was good, th e&#13;
ushers deserved all those tax-free dollars,&#13;
(what can I say? I wanna stay on the good&#13;
side of Him.)&#13;
I spent a good portion of the time watching&#13;
for celebrities, I couldn't help it.&#13;
There were priests, the new ones who ar e&#13;
hip, and the old ones who aren't. There&#13;
were nuns, old ones, new ones, dressed in&#13;
black, some in blue. ALL INTERESTING&#13;
PEOPLE, BUT NOT ONE OF THEM&#13;
FAMOUS.&#13;
I was looking for Anthony Quinn dressed&#13;
as a fisherman, or Bishop Sheen, maybe&#13;
Pat O'Brien and Bing Crosby humming&#13;
softly, Father Berrigan and the Catonsville&#13;
Nine or the Harrisburg Seven, or I&#13;
would even have setted for Father Groppi&#13;
and a couple of Commandos.&#13;
To no avail. Not one celebrity ate under&#13;
that roof. All that was represented w ere&#13;
the pillars of the community, smiling,&#13;
laughing and eating perch, with one&#13;
common bond: a golden stairway to&#13;
heaven.&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
About a week before, we were standing&#13;
in the Carthage Field House singing with&#13;
the Byrds, "Jesus Is Just Alright". Now&#13;
Maggie and I were helping the Catholics at&#13;
Saint Mark's Church in Kenosha pay for&#13;
their Astrodome of prayer.&#13;
What could be more appropriate than&#13;
ending the column with A Last Supper,&#13;
under the watchful eye of The Man. There&#13;
we were in the Saint Mark's Auditorium&#13;
enjoying perch, peace and brotherhood.&#13;
The Ushers at the church sponsor the&#13;
Fish Fry only on the last Friday of every&#13;
month, (except in July and August). The&#13;
profits help to pay off the debt incurred&#13;
when the church on 14th Avenue became&#13;
too small and was replaced by a bigger,&#13;
newer one.&#13;
It ain't cheap, that stairway to heaven.&#13;
For a dollar and a half, you get five&#13;
pieces of lake perch, French fries, cole&#13;
slaw, Italian bread, tartar sauce and&#13;
coffee or soda. The perch is fried in peanut&#13;
oil, and the cole slaw is the finest of blends.&#13;
These Do-Gooders aren't tea-totalers by&#13;
any means. There are alcoholic beverages&#13;
available for a half-buck each. The drinks&#13;
add a bit of class to the affair.&#13;
The church ushers do all the planning,&#13;
preparing and serving. One of the Pfarr&#13;
brothers, representing the service station&#13;
family, was serving a table lined with&#13;
nuns. The detective who walks criminals&#13;
from the jailhouse to court and back again&#13;
was smiling at three little kids, appeasing&#13;
them with grape soda, and Maggie's&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA;&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
I HI »: DI LIVI KY T O IVXHKSIDi; VILLACJi;&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays Diana&#13;
VMTCHES&#13;
Role* - Accutron&#13;
UttrachrOn - Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Timex&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES REPAIR DEPT. "]&#13;
France'*&#13;
Fineit -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
3017 «Ui Ave. V40UU%CC &amp; S&amp;ND&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
0% Discount to students and faculty with |.D&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace - Lun.&#13;
Reed A Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Titfon - Orrefore&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Royal Worceiter &#13;
MAY 20&amp;21&#13;
Fun • Food • Entertainment&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
COMING IN PERSON&#13;
romffiiisi&#13;
THE WORLD'S WORST BAN JO BAND&#13;
LIVE FROM N EW YORK C ITY&#13;
9:00 P.M. TO 1:00 A.M.&#13;
UNDER THE TENT - TALLENT HALL PARKING LOT&#13;
* ADMISSION: 99£ FOR STUDENTS, FACULTY&#13;
&amp; STAFF WITH PARKS IDE I.D&#13;
f\. SO FOR GUESTS&#13;
* FRE MUSTACHES&#13;
* FRE MUSTACHE GARTERS&#13;
* FRE MUSTACHE MATCHES&#13;
* FRE PEANUTS&#13;
* FRE L AUGHS&#13;
* BEER AfJD SODA (PAY AS YOU CONSUME)&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
1:00 P.M. — Parkside Olympics&#13;
Open for cocktails 4:30&#13;
Tricycle Race, Water Balloon Throw&#13;
Egg Throw-Catch, Tug of War into Mud Hole&#13;
Prizes&#13;
3,:00 P.M. — Free Concert&#13;
Tayles&#13;
"Progressive Rock"&#13;
6:00 P.M. to 12:30 A.M. — Continuous Live Entertainment by:&#13;
Mesa&#13;
"Country Rock"&#13;
Circus&#13;
"Top 40"&#13;
Original&#13;
Golden Catalinas&#13;
"Rock ft. Roll"&#13;
Adm. $1.00 Student, Faculty &amp; Staff&#13;
$1.50 Guests Accompanied by Above&#13;
Starting 4:00 P.M. — Burgers — Brats — Beer &#13;
May 8,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 6&#13;
Three Interviews&#13;
(Continued from Page 1&#13;
NS: I figured you'd say that.&#13;
2D: Why, crud?&#13;
NS: Because we haven't run it&#13;
in four weeks.&#13;
2D: Oh, well, I have a long&#13;
memory for those sort of things.&#13;
Well, is that all?&#13;
NS: Yes, I think so.&#13;
2D: OK, fine. Would you mind&#13;
telling my secretary on the way&#13;
out to send in the first applicant&#13;
for editor of the campus&#13;
newspaper; pretty please with&#13;
sugar .on top.&#13;
Totneibish says all&#13;
On Tuesday, NEWSCOPE&#13;
was granted an audience with a&#13;
reliable source in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Terry Totneibish, minister of&#13;
entertainment, answered many&#13;
piquant questions in an&#13;
unusually straightforward&#13;
manner.&#13;
NS: What is your exact title?&#13;
TT: Well, that's a difficult one,&#13;
now isn't it? You'll have to wait&#13;
until the dean comes back&#13;
tomorrow for that one.&#13;
NS: Well, what is, what are&#13;
your specific duties here?&#13;
TT: Where; here in my office,&#13;
or in the hall, or in another&#13;
office? You know, where is&#13;
here?&#13;
NS: Do you serve in an advisory&#13;
•capacity?&#13;
TT: Advisory capacity? Hmmm,&#13;
yeah, I suppose that's what I&#13;
do most of the time. I advise&#13;
people.&#13;
NS: What kind of a dvice do you&#13;
give?&#13;
TT: Damn, excuse me, darn&#13;
good advice! Yes, sir, there are&#13;
no flunkies here in Tallent Hall,&#13;
you can be sure of that.&#13;
NS: Who is your biggest critic?&#13;
TT: Well, I'd have to say you,&#13;
Newscope, and the SGA. It&#13;
seems like we can never please&#13;
you guys.&#13;
NS: Why not?&#13;
TT: I don't know. The dean tells&#13;
me you're a bunch of misfit&#13;
pinkos, but well,. I think that's a&#13;
bit out of line. I think you have&#13;
the wrong attitude; yeah,&#13;
maybe that's it.&#13;
NS: Why do you think that?&#13;
TT: How do I know, I'm not a&#13;
shrink, I'm an advisor. I'm just&#13;
one of the team.&#13;
NS; Who are your opponents&#13;
then?&#13;
TT: Why .should there be opponents,&#13;
why can't everybody&#13;
be friends?&#13;
NS: But some people don't&#13;
agree with the way things are&#13;
being run at the purient Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
TT: Who doesn't agree? It's not&#13;
the students, because by and&#13;
large, they dig what we do for&#13;
them. Look how successful Jose&#13;
Greco was, and John Denver.&#13;
NS: But you must admit you&#13;
have critics.&#13;
TT:Oh sure, but they're so far&#13;
out of line that, well, we don't&#13;
listen to them. After all, we&#13;
represent the majority here.&#13;
You see we look upon students&#13;
as children; they don't yet know&#13;
what they like. But we do; for&#13;
one thing I'm older and more&#13;
experienced in this, and like I&#13;
wouldn't be here very long if I&#13;
gave out bad advice. Would I?&#13;
NS: Well, let's not discuss that&#13;
yet. What I really want to know&#13;
is, uh, what are your future&#13;
plans?&#13;
TT: Future plans for me as an&#13;
advisor or as Terry Totneibish?&#13;
NS: As advisor.&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
WINDJAMMER&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
''Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN R OOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING . . .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4401 7Hi AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
'WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
~SENATOR PROXMIRF&#13;
TT: Tried to pull a fast one,&#13;
huh? Well, that's alright, it's all&#13;
in the game. We want to bring in&#13;
the "Lettermen", and the&#13;
"Christy Minstrels" and hold a&#13;
symposium on basketweaving.&#13;
NS: Do you think students will&#13;
relate well to the "Minstrels"?&#13;
TT: Well, why not? When I was&#13;
in school I dug 'em. Sure, things&#13;
have changed, but, like how&#13;
could anyone get tired of the&#13;
Minstrels, you know. I just don't&#13;
see how.&#13;
NS: From where are the&#13;
Prurient Activities Board's&#13;
funds coming?&#13;
TT: Student fees mostly.&#13;
NS: Are all your programs&#13;
planned for students in mind, or&#13;
do you think there are other&#13;
factors.&#13;
TT: Of course there are other&#13;
factors. We try to plan for&#13;
everybody, oldsters as well as&#13;
students. I'm sure a lot of o lder&#13;
students would jump at the&#13;
chance to see the Christy&#13;
Minstrels.&#13;
NS: Wouldn't you agree,&#13;
though, that most of the funding&#13;
comes from younger students'&#13;
fees?&#13;
TT: Yeah, sure I'll go along&#13;
with that. But that doesn't mean&#13;
you can just go and ignore the&#13;
people who'd like to see Jose&#13;
Greco or something. It ain't&#13;
easy planning all this stuff, you&#13;
know. We try to please the&#13;
community as well as the&#13;
students. That's why you'll&#13;
never see Frank Zappa or the&#13;
Grateful Dead here. Parkside&#13;
has a definite image to&#13;
cultivate, and all that loud&#13;
music and long hair is not very&#13;
good fertilizer. That's a pretty&#13;
good analogy or whatever you&#13;
call it, don't you think?&#13;
NS: Any final comments?&#13;
TT: Yeah, I'd just wish, and I&#13;
pray for this every night before&#13;
I go to bed; I just wish you guys&#13;
would realize we put on these&#13;
programs for your own good.&#13;
You seem to think you know so&#13;
much, but the fact is if you know&#13;
so much, why are you just a&#13;
student, huh? That's the thing,&#13;
you see, you're just a student&#13;
trying to get an education here&#13;
at our wonderful University,&#13;
and really, I don't see where&#13;
you get the time to ask all these&#13;
questions. You should be-in the&#13;
library studying.&#13;
NS: Thank you, I think I'll&#13;
follow your advice.&#13;
TT: Good then, see you've&#13;
learned something. That's why&#13;
I'm here at Parkside, to advise&#13;
people, to guide them along the&#13;
difficult road toward a degree. I&#13;
get a kick out of doing what I do,&#13;
I guess that's why I love my job&#13;
so much; that and the money. I&#13;
have a sort of moral obligation&#13;
to do what I do.&#13;
NS: That's sort of profound.&#13;
TT: It is? Well, yes, so it is..&#13;
Bless you/son.&#13;
(Continued on Page 7)&#13;
•pftle&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
"Hiqhest bar „&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
• • * • • • » « « ,,&#13;
We'4s. *Wo Sun. l-t&#13;
12 07. BOTTLE BEBR&#13;
+• HTGFRBALLS 35 $&#13;
live A7usic —&#13;
Fri. + 5a~h&#13;
ACROSS FROM M&#13;
ARKE THEATER&#13;
Associate Professor Surinder Datta fingers the newest edition&#13;
to the hot lunch counter'at the Activities Building. Initial response&#13;
to this fresh baked taste treat has been somewhat poor. A minced&#13;
version of the same served with generous helpings of creamed corn&#13;
will be available soon.&#13;
Telephone Wor Tax&#13;
by mike kite&#13;
This is a message to all you&#13;
peace loving, first in the air,&#13;
brothers and sisters who continually&#13;
shout for a change. The&#13;
time has come for you to quit&#13;
talking about doing something&#13;
and get up off your asses and do&#13;
it! This does not necessarily&#13;
mean violent action such as&#13;
bombing and rioting, for though&#13;
they have their place, there are&#13;
other possibly more powerful&#13;
means.&#13;
"If a thousand . . . were not&#13;
to pay their tax bill this year&#13;
that would not be a violent and&#13;
bloddy measure as it would be&#13;
to pay them and enable the state&#13;
to commit violence and shed&#13;
innocent blood.&#13;
Henry David Thoreau&#13;
Very few people realize that a&#13;
10 per cent excise tax, which&#13;
goes directly to support the war&#13;
in Vietnam, is included on&#13;
everyone's phone bill.&#13;
The 10 per cent tax was first&#13;
enacted in 1941 as a temporary&#13;
tax. It has come close to being&#13;
discontinued' but has consistently&#13;
been raised around a&#13;
time of war.&#13;
Because of the widening war&#13;
in Vietnam federal legislation&#13;
was passed which, ohce again in&#13;
April, 1966, restored the 10 per&#13;
cent tax on telephone bills. At&#13;
that time the tax was 3 per cent&#13;
and due to be dropped in 1969.&#13;
"It is clear," said Rep. Wilbur&#13;
Mills, Chairman of the House&#13;
Ways and Means Committee,&#13;
"that the Vietnam and only the&#13;
Vietnam operation makes the&#13;
bill necessary."&#13;
Congressional Record Feb. 23,&#13;
1066&#13;
The 10 per cent tax was&#13;
scheduled to decline to 5 per&#13;
cent in 1971, to 3 per cent in 1972&#13;
and to 1 per cent in 1972, and to&#13;
be repealed in 1974. However,&#13;
once again on Jan. 2, 1971, the&#13;
telephone tax was extended for&#13;
1971 and 1972. It is now&#13;
scheduled to begin dropping 1&#13;
per cent in 1972 and to 1 percentage&#13;
point each year&#13;
thereafter, to fade out by 1984.&#13;
Congressman Mills was&#13;
always careful to refer to&#13;
"operations in Vietnam". But&#13;
those of us who realize its true&#13;
nature know it is not an&#13;
operation but a tragic bloodbath.&#13;
We know that revenue for&#13;
the Vietnam war pays for the&#13;
killing of thousands of our&#13;
young brothers (over 50,000&#13;
American G.I.'s have died in&#13;
Indochina). But just as important&#13;
it finances the indefinite&#13;
continuation of war (which has&#13;
developed into an electronics&#13;
war so that less Americans will&#13;
die but which will kill the same&#13;
or more Asians) against a&#13;
people who desire above all to&#13;
be alive and to determine their&#13;
own destiny free from foreign&#13;
domination.&#13;
"What difference are my few&#13;
cents (The average 10 per cent&#13;
tax on a private bill is between&#13;
10 and 15 cents) going to make&#13;
considering the millions spent&#13;
in Vietnam?" This being the&#13;
first reaction of most people.&#13;
Although the money is important&#13;
it is a secondary reason&#13;
for refusal. A tax boycott&#13;
demonstrates to the government&#13;
that you are opposed to&#13;
the war in Indochina and are&#13;
acting conscientiously on your&#13;
belief. This act of refusing to&#13;
pay the tax concretely affirms&#13;
the position that individuals&#13;
must not comply with immoral&#13;
actions of governments. It&#13;
results in a direct confrontation&#13;
between citizens and government,&#13;
and creates one more&#13;
problem the government has to&#13;
contend with so long as it&#13;
pursues its current policies. In&#13;
addition, the fact that people&#13;
are willing to resist the war to&#13;
the point of breaking the law&#13;
compels others to examine&#13;
more carefully the depth and&#13;
nature of their own opposition to&#13;
the war, and to begin to act&#13;
themselves. Finally, the&#13;
monthly refusal of a small&#13;
amount of money creates a&#13;
thorny collection problem for&#13;
the Internal Revenue Service&#13;
(I.R.S.).&#13;
The next thought of most&#13;
potential war tax resisters is of&#13;
the possible legal ramifications&#13;
involved in refusal to pay the&#13;
tax. Tens of thousands of people&#13;
across America have begun&#13;
refusal of this war tax. The&#13;
telephone companies have&#13;
assured resisters that their&#13;
telephone service will not be&#13;
interrupted.&#13;
The phone company treats&#13;
refusal fo the tax as a matter&#13;
between the individual and the&#13;
government. In some cases they&#13;
even called to remind a&#13;
customer that on the bill they&#13;
had just paid the tax had not&#13;
been deducted.&#13;
The phone company reports&#13;
to the IRS that the tax is not&#13;
being paid. The IRS eventually&#13;
sends the tax refuser several&#13;
written demands for the unpaid&#13;
amount and sometimes pays the&#13;
refuser a visit. When these&#13;
measures fail to convince the&#13;
refuser to pay up, the IRS&#13;
finally attempts to seek out a&#13;
bank account or salary check&#13;
from which to deduct the unpaid&#13;
amount plus up to 6 per cent&#13;
interest.&#13;
Though the threat of financial&#13;
penalties or perhaps even&#13;
harsher steps seem to me small&#13;
inconveniences beside the&#13;
agony of those killed or&#13;
berieved by war, and the numb&#13;
hopelessness of those crippled&#13;
(Continued on Page 7) &#13;
worker gripes&#13;
(Continued from Page 6)&#13;
Ed Norton, a pseudonym for&#13;
our final interviewee, is employed&#13;
by the University as a&#13;
window-washer, spec-4. Norton&#13;
a recent graduate of the&#13;
U n i v e r s i t y , exp res sed&#13;
disillusionment with Parkside&#13;
and the way in which it is&#13;
operated.&#13;
NS: Why did you choose to&#13;
work for Parkside?&#13;
EN: Well, I didn't choose, right.&#13;
I was forced into taking this&#13;
crummy job because, well, like&#13;
the other places I put in my&#13;
application thought Parkside&#13;
was some kind of nursing home.&#13;
You know, some rest home&#13;
overlooking the park. So they&#13;
had this opening here for&#13;
window washer, and I took it up,&#13;
mainly because the bank was&#13;
hounding me on my educational&#13;
loans.&#13;
NS: Are you continuing your&#13;
education here?&#13;
EN: Ha, ha, yeah in a way, I&#13;
suppose. I'm learnin', for instance,&#13;
that you gotta be crazy&#13;
to be a window washer, I mean,&#13;
some of them windows are a&#13;
hundred feet off the ground.&#13;
You know, like where's that at?&#13;
Brushed&#13;
DENIMS&#13;
VERY DEFINITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX®&#13;
Put a kicky new look into&#13;
your jeans wardrobe with&#13;
brushed cotton denim!&#13;
Belt loop tops—flare bottoms—Western&#13;
or cargo&#13;
pockets. Five great colors:&#13;
tan, blue, olive, burgundy&#13;
and brown. Sizes&#13;
28 38 $7and $8&#13;
Richman&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
Elm wood Plaza&#13;
NS: Do you have to conform to&#13;
any departmental regulations?&#13;
EN: Yeah, they tole me I&#13;
couldn't have long hair because&#13;
it was a hazard. They said it&#13;
could get caught in a window.&#13;
Like my specialty is linguistics,&#13;
and I still can't figure that one&#13;
out.&#13;
NS: Do you have to wear a&#13;
uniform?&#13;
EN: Yeah, this off-green bush&#13;
I'm wearin' now for instance. It&#13;
matches the color of the&#13;
chancellor's car. They say it&#13;
helps me blend into the scenery.&#13;
NS: What kind of salary do you&#13;
receive?&#13;
EN: Yeah, that's where the&#13;
mothers really screwed me.&#13;
They told me that if I wanted to&#13;
advance in this place, I'd have&#13;
to take some courses at KTI. So&#13;
I signed up part-time there, and&#13;
you-know what those assholes&#13;
did, they put me on work study!&#13;
A lousy dollar seventy-five an&#13;
hour!&#13;
NS: Why don't you quit?&#13;
EN: Where's to go, man. Like&#13;
no one seems to hire UW-P&#13;
graduates these days, in fact&#13;
the dropouts get better jobs&#13;
than the graduates. I know one&#13;
guy who just had to mention the&#13;
fact that he spent three years&#13;
here and he right away got the&#13;
manager's position at a nursing&#13;
home. That sonofabitch is&#13;
makin' bread.&#13;
NS: What would you do to&#13;
correct this situation?&#13;
fop5&#13;
Bo"t"/onrvS&#13;
Sk.As&#13;
Rkn+S&#13;
P)« 11 C|oHi"g&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sites 9" - 12" - 14" - 16'1&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARHY-OUTS - DELIVERY "YOU R / NG . . . WE BKING"&#13;
• 657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
EN: I'd have dropped out if I'd&#13;
have known about it, but I was,&#13;
well, victimized, I guess. All my&#13;
life I'm brainwashed into&#13;
equating money with a diploma,&#13;
you know. Like I didn't go here&#13;
to get educated, I went here&#13;
because I'd make a quarter&#13;
million more in a life time if I&#13;
had that sheepskin. So I was&#13;
fucked over by a national&#13;
conspiracy, I was brainwashed.&#13;
I'd like to see the pigs prosecute&#13;
that conspiracy, but I know they&#13;
won't.&#13;
NS: How do you make your job,&#13;
uh, acceptable.&#13;
EN: Well, first off ain't nobody&#13;
gonna get me to clean the&#13;
windows a hundred feet off the&#13;
ground. Everytime they tried&#13;
that, the night before I'd throw&#13;
rocks through them. Next&#13;
morning I'd report that there&#13;
ain't no windows to clean.&#13;
Usually, though, I eezrfn the&#13;
Activities Building Windows&#13;
about three times a day,&#13;
especially from the inside; you&#13;
know, smoke a jay, drink a few&#13;
beers and just groove on the&#13;
windex bubbles.&#13;
NS: Have you had any interesting&#13;
experiences connected&#13;
with your job.&#13;
EN: Yeah, couple times when I&#13;
was high enough to crawl out on&#13;
the ledge of Tallent to wash&#13;
windows, I eavesdropped on&#13;
some, uh, private meetings.&#13;
You know, they've got a conspiracy&#13;
going to raise tuition&#13;
and to require any students who&#13;
work at Tallent, like some of the&#13;
members of the Activities&#13;
Board; like they're trying to&#13;
require a loyalty oath, a dress&#13;
code, and all sorts of shit. They&#13;
might even bug the SGA's new&#13;
offices.&#13;
NS: Any final observations?&#13;
EN: Yeah, Tallent has the&#13;
foggiest windows on campus,&#13;
that's one reason they don't&#13;
communicate well with&#13;
students, because they never&#13;
see 'em. Another thing is there's&#13;
been a rumor going around in&#13;
Tallent about pay toilets being&#13;
installed in Greenquist and the&#13;
Activities Building. The&#13;
reasoning, I guess, goes&#13;
something like "taking a piss is&#13;
a necessity and, since students&#13;
will pay a quarter for a glass of&#13;
beer, which they don't consider&#13;
a necessity for a student here,&#13;
then they can pay for the&#13;
necessities. They say it will be&#13;
educational because it will&#13;
teach students the difference&#13;
between a necessity and a&#13;
luxury. But that's their attitude&#13;
toward education, too. I happen&#13;
to believe that being drunk is&#13;
necessary for sane survival on&#13;
this campus.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE —1946 Ford,6cyl. 2 door&#13;
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.&#13;
for this $450 v alue.&#13;
FOR SALE —'62 Comet, 6cyl. $125.&#13;
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.&#13;
FOR SALE — Guitar MARTIN D-18,&#13;
with deluxe hard shell case, $335&#13;
firm, ph. 652.0295.&#13;
FOR SALE: White panne yelvet&#13;
shawl with long white fringe. Never&#13;
worn. Shimmers like .White gold. $25&#13;
new, will sell for $10. Ph. Cleta 654-&#13;
1927 o r 553-2496.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good&#13;
cond. $1,145. Call 632-9669 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
P E Turntable. SHURE high track&#13;
cartridge. Call Ron. 657-6630.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 Triumph 500,&#13;
custom, best offer call 552-9068.&#13;
1970 Nova, 350 V-8, two barrel,&#13;
factory 3 speed on floor, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 32,000 miles,&#13;
new tires. Call 657-7105, 8 t o 5:30 or&#13;
554-6470 after 6:30.&#13;
1951 Cadillac: Good runing condition.&#13;
$90. Call 652-7177 at 3711 - 18th&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha.&#13;
FOR SALE — 1969 V, Corvette&#13;
Coupe. Emaculate, 20,000 miles, 350&#13;
- 300, air, AM-FM, new tires, 4 speed,&#13;
$3,800. 554-8996 after 4:00. Red.&#13;
Page 7 NEWSCOPE May 8,1972&#13;
war&#13;
(Continued from Page 6)&#13;
by poverty.&#13;
To determine the amount of&#13;
the war tax merely take 10 per&#13;
cent of the total U.S. tax, which&#13;
is listed directly to the left of the&#13;
amount due on your bill. You&#13;
must also include a note with&#13;
your bill stating why you are&#13;
deducting that amount.&#13;
Our cities are decaying,&#13;
pollution is reaching intolerable&#13;
levels, serious housing&#13;
problems, and hunger, and&#13;
poverty are widespread in this,&#13;
the richest country in the world.&#13;
It is because of these problems&#13;
and others that Alternative&#13;
Funds have been set up by tax&#13;
refusers. The refused taxes are&#13;
pooled for use in the community,&#13;
the exact use of the&#13;
money is determined by the&#13;
members of the Fund. These&#13;
Alternative Funds have been&#13;
set up across the country. If an&#13;
Alternative Fund does not exist&#13;
in your community join&#13;
together with other tax resisters&#13;
and form one.&#13;
The organization largely&#13;
TAX&#13;
responsible for exposing the&#13;
war tax and organizing the&#13;
resisters is War Tax&#13;
Resistance. They have over 190&#13;
War Tax Resistance Centers&#13;
across the country supporting&#13;
23 Alte rnative Funds.&#13;
But you the people, are the&#13;
ones supporting this immoral&#13;
and illegal war and it's up to you&#13;
to stop it. gno I rance might have&#13;
been your excuse up till now but&#13;
you no longer have an excuse.&#13;
Realizing this tax exists how&#13;
can one continue to use their&#13;
phones with a clear conscience,&#13;
without refusing to pay it.&#13;
And finally to those who know&#13;
of the tax, and yet continue to&#13;
pay it may their dialing fingers&#13;
turn to dust and their ears to&#13;
stone for even though they are&#13;
not the ones who drop the bombs&#13;
or spull the triggers that does&#13;
not make them any less guilty..&#13;
For further information&#13;
write: War Tax Resistance, 339&#13;
Lafayette St., New York, N.Y.&#13;
10012.&#13;
THE SANDS&#13;
Sport Bar&#13;
Hwy. 32 on The Strip&#13;
Play Pool — Foosball&#13;
Welcome New Adults&#13;
This Ad Good for a FREE&#13;
Game of Foosball or Pool&#13;
Spiffy 1963 MG Midget SPORTSCAR,&#13;
needs body work, truly THE&#13;
car of the future and yours for the&#13;
ridiculously low price of $150 cash,&#13;
contact Jim at 553-2496 or at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
'59 Chevy Biscayne, 76,500 miles,&#13;
good condition. $175.00 or best offer.&#13;
Call 658-3833.&#13;
1966 Triumph TR 4. New top, new&#13;
brakes, extra set of snow tires,&#13;
clutch worn. $850 with new clutch&#13;
installed or $700 as is. Call 568-1094.&#13;
WANTED — reliable small car,&#13;
about $400. Call 654-1684 a fter nine&#13;
p.m.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
HOUSEWORK HELPER — early&#13;
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.&#13;
554-8517.&#13;
WANTED — a student volunteer to&#13;
be big brother to 11 year old cerebral&#13;
palsied boy. Call Wendy at 553-2121,&#13;
ext. 42.&#13;
Divers to go on Norman Slater expedition;&#13;
to Mexico June 16-30 a nd&#13;
July 1-20 to the Bermuda Triangle.&#13;
Call Mary Jane Chellis at 657 9200.&#13;
WANTED — Male German Shepard&#13;
Pu;;y. Cheap. Call Cliff, 652 4969.&#13;
RIDERS WANTED — To&#13;
Jacksonville, Fla. Leaving May 19&#13;
(late). Arriving May 21 (noon). Via:&#13;
Indianapolis, Louisville, Nashville&#13;
(rest stop), Chatanooga, Atlanta,&#13;
and Macon., Riders to split cost.&#13;
Returning June 5 via scenic route. If&#13;
interested leave name and phone.&#13;
Call 878-3122.&#13;
Gay Youth Coalition: Anyone interested,&#13;
or having any questions or&#13;
problems they would like to discusplease&#13;
call 634-4470.&#13;
Go Go Girls wanted', top wages,&#13;
Pussy Cat Lounge, 633-3805, Racine.&#13;
Babysitter and light house work,&#13;
afternoons and evenings, full or part&#13;
time. Please call 632-3785.&#13;
WANT TO TRADE Men's 21"&#13;
bicycle frame - Reynolds 531. With to&#13;
trade for larger, comparable frame -&#13;
would consider selling. Ph. 657-3046.&#13;
TYPING done. Experienced. Ph.&#13;
552-877.&#13;
ROMEMATE WANTED — Girl to&#13;
share apt. in June, a mile from the&#13;
Kenosha campus. 3 rooms. Ph. 652-&#13;
1486, between 12 - 2, 652-5904.&#13;
WANTED - Writers, journalists,&#13;
production staff and ad men to take&#13;
over a college newspaper. Must be&#13;
housebroken, learn while you earn&#13;
when you can. Ph. 553-2496 o r 553-&#13;
2498. Ask for anybody or come in&#13;
person to the Newscope office,&#13;
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A. &#13;
Page 8&#13;
A True Story&#13;
Almost made the Byrds&#13;
May 8,1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
by Julie Helterskelter&#13;
Zipped to the gills, we were awake for&#13;
days before the concert, planning for&#13;
every possibility, including an unexpected&#13;
parting along the Somers faultline and the&#13;
protocol for maintaining Tugboat Kenosha&#13;
on the high ripples of Lake Michigan. We&#13;
figured that if it happened while the Byrds&#13;
were on stage we'd be running with Jesus&#13;
anyway and who would really lose? Not&#13;
Us. Not with the number one folk-gospelrock&#13;
band in the world on the quarterdeck.&#13;
Susie and Marie even painted their eyes&#13;
six colors because they read that Roger&#13;
McGuinn likes colorful chicks. We thought&#13;
they were maladjusted but we scored them&#13;
some amyls anyway. All I wanted was&#13;
Gene Parson's drumstick with maybe a&#13;
few beads of sweat.&#13;
Anyway, we got there early (Friday)&#13;
and camped down in the tunnels under the&#13;
Carthage Fieldhouse to lay in wait. We&#13;
were behind some serious smoking right&#13;
away and we rigged up this lean-to in the&#13;
shower room just the way Sunflower&#13;
taught us at the tola rock festival. (I&#13;
wonder why he never sent the money back.&#13;
Oh well, I stil l have his beads.) We tried to&#13;
trap some small animals to cook over a&#13;
roach (this is all part of survival tactics),&#13;
but all we could fine were these huge rats&#13;
in tracksuits. After the soup and the KoolAid&#13;
were gone we sent Kim out to look for&#13;
the food stands and the water truck but she&#13;
never came back. Maybe she got knifed.&#13;
What a beautiful way to die. I mean at a&#13;
rock festival surrounded by brothers and&#13;
sisters. Luckily we had fifteen thousand&#13;
Seconals left.&#13;
The Ripple was almost gone when the&#13;
I:-.&#13;
first of the groupies tried to invade our&#13;
territory. We damn well hadn't carhped for&#13;
two days right under the stage for nothing.&#13;
These ladies greased right in like they'd&#13;
already scored all the Byrds and had&#13;
actually come in their bus or something&#13;
but we had these spray cans of Mace left&#13;
over from Stevens Point and we showed&#13;
them who was gonna get first crack at&#13;
Clarence White's bones. While they were&#13;
out we carved 'Plaster Casters' in their&#13;
foreheads.&#13;
The beautiful sounds of huge amplifiers&#13;
humming and stiff microphones brought&#13;
us up for a look. The biggest drumset I'd&#13;
ever seen knocked my eyes right around&#13;
and this guy with this beard behind it was&#13;
doing everything but humping it. I mean&#13;
he was intense. And the guitar player —&#13;
what a beautiful soul he has — was jumping&#13;
around like he had to piss. But there&#13;
were only three of'them and they weren't&#13;
hillbillies so they couldn't be the Byrds.&#13;
The organ player looked a little like Rod&#13;
Stewart and he was really into his axe.&#13;
hear again but there was only some drippy&#13;
country music with a banjo and I realized&#13;
it was 'Mr. Tambourine Man' they were&#13;
wrecking so I s tarted screaming Rip Off,&#13;
and, you know, flashing the finger. I m ean,&#13;
the whole audience wanted to boogie.&#13;
And when they finally played a boogie&#13;
... I just can't talk about it but it like&#13;
lifted me up on these golden clouds and I&#13;
could see the notes in a million colors&#13;
dancing all around and I ga ve myself up to&#13;
the music and it was . . . beautiful.&#13;
They played all their best spngs like&#13;
'Rock and Roll Star' and 'Chimes of&#13;
Freedom' — they do it so much better than&#13;
Dylan — but we all wanted to hear "Eight&#13;
Miles High'. I dropped two Sunshines&#13;
halfway through the set because the first&#13;
time I e ver did acid I heard "Eight Miles&#13;
High' and I learned a lot of things about&#13;
myself. But they jazzed it up with a cruddy&#13;
bass solo and even though it was cool the&#13;
way everybody but Skip and Gene walked&#13;
off the stage, I s till had to do four reds to&#13;
get into it.&#13;
When they left without doing 'Jesus is&#13;
Just Alright', I k new there'd be an encore&#13;
but I snuck backstage anyway to maybe&#13;
pick up a damp shirt or a guitar, and there&#13;
was a pig there. He had his back to me so it&#13;
was easy to hit him with a two by four and&#13;
getaway. I he aded back into the tunnel but&#13;
I passed out right at the dressing rom&#13;
room door and the next thing I k new I w as&#13;
in the back of this van and Susie and Marie&#13;
were looking at me with strange respect in&#13;
their eyes. Susie said, Gee we found you all&#13;
used up by the dressing room and I heard&#13;
there were two million people there tonight&#13;
and to think that out of all those people&#13;
they chose you ... her voice faded away.&#13;
I turned on my Madonna smile.&#13;
policy of zero population&#13;
growth.&#13;
Parkside scored very well on&#13;
the ZPG survey; unfortunately&#13;
the 500 people interviewed on&#13;
our campus do not represent the&#13;
community as a whole. Factory&#13;
workers, business people and&#13;
many professional people still&#13;
believe in that out dated&#13;
American growth syndrome.&#13;
ZPG would like to update the&#13;
views of these people. However,&#13;
we must act quickly. At our&#13;
present growth rate our&#13;
government, economic, and&#13;
social institutions must accommodate&#13;
over 250,000 additional&#13;
people every month.&#13;
If you would like to help this&#13;
fall or summer stop by the ZPG&#13;
office on the second floor of-the&#13;
Student Organizations Building.&#13;
Leave your name, address and&#13;
phone number. A member will&#13;
contact you about summer and&#13;
fall activities.&#13;
survey&#13;
by Gregg Davis&#13;
Everybody has heard that&#13;
there is a population problem in&#13;
the world, but who "thinks&#13;
there's one in America? I do, for&#13;
one, so does ZPG, President&#13;
Nixon, and the commission to&#13;
investigate population growth&#13;
and the American future.&#13;
Parkside ZPG wanted to&#13;
know if their campus felt that&#13;
there is or will be an overpopulation&#13;
problem in this&#13;
country, so they set up a booth&#13;
in Greenquist Hall during Earth&#13;
Week and took a survey of these&#13;
and other questions.&#13;
Here's what they asked:&#13;
Question 1: In your opinion&#13;
the ideal number of children in&#13;
a family is? The average of the&#13;
answers was 2.23, just a little&#13;
over what ZPG would consider&#13;
correct for a stable population.&#13;
If the average number ot&#13;
children per family is 2, then&#13;
each parent would exactly&#13;
replace its own number.&#13;
Question 2: Do you feel that&#13;
birth control devices should be&#13;
freely available to everyone&#13;
desiring them (with property&#13;
instructions and-or medical&#13;
supervision)? 96 per cent answered&#13;
yes they did feel that&#13;
contraceptive distribution&#13;
should be wide spread. Unfortunately,&#13;
Wisconsin has the&#13;
most archaic state law in the&#13;
country. It refers to contraceptives&#13;
as obscene&#13;
materials. This year, a good&#13;
birth control bill was introduced&#13;
in Wisconsin which would make&#13;
contraceptives available to&#13;
persons 16 and above. However,&#13;
the bill was killed in a final vote.&#13;
Question 3: Do you feel that a&#13;
pregnant woman should be able&#13;
to have a (legal) abortion on&#13;
demand? This is a more controversial&#13;
subject due to the&#13;
questionable rights of the unborn.&#13;
Only 77 per cent felt that&#13;
abortions should be available to&#13;
all women on demand. ZPG&#13;
supports legal abortions.&#13;
Question 4: Do you feel that&#13;
Parkside ZPG should run a&#13;
birth control information center&#13;
on campus. 97 per cent felt that&#13;
we should have an information&#13;
center. Information is already&#13;
being cimpiled by ZPG in order&#13;
to open a referral service for&#13;
abortions, vasectomies and&#13;
contraceptives&#13;
Question 5: Do you feel that&#13;
overpopulation is now a&#13;
problem in the United States?&#13;
Only 77 per cent felt that we are&#13;
experiencing a population&#13;
problem now. On July 18, 1969,&#13;
President Nixon, in his message&#13;
to Congress, said that we are&#13;
now feeling the pressures of a&#13;
society where population has&#13;
outgrown government and&#13;
economy. He also mentioned&#13;
that adding another 100 million&#13;
to our ranks by the year 2000&#13;
would irrepairably destroy&#13;
world environment, seriously&#13;
deplete natural resources and&#13;
even make us a target for world&#13;
revolt. Most important of all, he&#13;
urged Congress to establish a&#13;
commission to define the&#13;
problem and explore solutions&#13;
that are compatible with the&#13;
ethical values and principles of&#13;
this society.&#13;
Question 6: Do you feel that&#13;
overpopulation could be a&#13;
problem in the U.S. in the next&#13;
50 years? 96 per cent felt that it&#13;
would be. In March, the final&#13;
report was released by the&#13;
commission. to investigate&#13;
population growth and the&#13;
American future. They&#13;
examined carefully the effects&#13;
of population growth on every&#13;
facet of American life and&#13;
concluded that we must adopt a&#13;
HAMM'S ,12 PAK&#13;
CANS&#13;
Glenmore Brandy—fifth&#13;
Corby's Blend fifthG&#13;
in f * ftf &gt;&#13;
Vodka .fifth&#13;
Would your club or organization'&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101&#13;
Your complete home&#13;
wine making center.&#13;
Spanada&#13;
Rhinegarten&#13;
W fifth&#13;
' Where the fun starts before the party begins&#13;
•i. .. Prices good through Sunday, May 14&#13;
IN RACINE AT WESTGATE ON HIGHWAY 20, WASHINGTON AVENUE AND OHIO STREET&#13;
DAILY 9 A.IVL TO 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY • SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO t P.M.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
^ic^celo&lt;leon&#13;
S]&#13;
W.c. FIELDS&#13;
in&#13;
The Great Chase&#13;
The Pharmacist&#13;
The Fatal Glass ot Beer&#13;
Thurs. Noon&#13;
Imission -One Nicke&#13;
PAB Note:&#13;
We are sorry that we were not&#13;
able to show the W. C. Fields&#13;
Films last time. But we thank&#13;
the fifty students that did come&#13;
and hope they enjoyed the&#13;
alternate Films. </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63780">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope Lampoon, Volume 6, issue 17, May 8, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63781">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63782">
                <text>1972-05-08</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="63785">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63786">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63787">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63788">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63789">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63790">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="2163">
        <name>satire</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2623" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4810">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/bf44a59b784ef70123549cdd9d3ba2c0.pdf</src>
        <authentication>29b7d9636544d59f87677d8dc11d8e62</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63795">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 1</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63796">
              <text>Parkside Varsity Club Awards</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63806">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89901">
              <text>--May,1972, Vol. I, No. I&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN&#13;
~&#13;
~~&#13;
MikE&#13;
OEWnT&#13;
ALLAMERICAN&#13;
INDOOR&#13;
TRACK PARKSIDE VARSITY CLUB&#13;
AWARDS 1971-72 I&lt;ENOSUA&#13;
RUDY&#13;
AI-VAllEZ&#13;
ALL-AMERICAN&#13;
CROSS COUHTR't'&#13;
RACINE&#13;
..JoMN&#13;
MAfoIzALlK&#13;
N-,,,ON-'L&#13;
F9oIC''''G-~&#13;
-~ATHl£T1C&#13;
t)'REC-" R's&#13;
AWARO"&#13;
KeNOSf04A&#13;
uw.parkSld UbralJ&#13;
May, 1972, Vol. I, No. I&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCO s,&#13;
'' A.,,_.LETE&#13;
OFTHE&#13;
Mll&lt;.E&#13;
OEWRT&#13;
ALLAMERICAN&#13;
tNOOOR&#13;
TRACK&#13;
YeAR"&#13;
1-UCIAN&#13;
R.OSA,&#13;
OISTANCE&#13;
RUNNER&#13;
l=A.OM CEVLO~-l..&#13;
PREPARING- FOK&#13;
aHeOLYMPIC&#13;
MARATI-ION&#13;
AT MUNtCH&#13;
~&#13;
OICt&lt;.&#13;
EI.\..ISON&#13;
'NATIONAL&#13;
VARSl-rY&#13;
CLUB&#13;
AWAR"&#13;
KEM&#13;
MARnN&#13;
ALL AMERICAN&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
COLEMAN&#13;
Al,..OO MAORIGAMO&#13;
&lt;- RANGER AWAA.0&#13;
FO~ SeRVICS TO&#13;
ATHLETlCS" .&#13;
u&#13;
N H&#13;
A Message&#13;
fromthe&#13;
Vice-&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
S1Dc au 01 UA ... the world tIlrOuCb our own eyes, the values&#13;
of lAt rcoUee1&amp;l ath1.ue. to Ilthlet •• , coaches, spectators, spon-&#13;
..". 1IlOt111ltl_, aDd tile world Of sport may vary cooslderably.&#13;
Yrvm my po.tDt 01 Y1,ew, J atrCl)C11 endorse the lifetime sport&#13;
C epl aDd Ita mpbul •• t Plrkslde. I IlsO .. ew athletics as a&#13;
r-.J Wl1.tYLDI fore. t'Jr a campus. I am especla.11y looking forward.&#13;
to tb1a summ r wtwa our DeW physical educattOlll bu.Ud1.Dg' wID provide&#13;
• hOm for Uae Rupra &amp;.Dd • place for students, faculty, and st:a11'&#13;
to ~rUelpac.. !bet 18 wortbWb.1le recreaUooal activities at the&#13;
UGh' r IfJ. Clearl,. rour aecomplUhmeDLs 1D1ntercoUeglatecompe·&#13;
uu,., ut to be c:ommeDdlld ~y, and I wish you &amp;OOd torttme In&#13;
aU fUture com tJtlODa. otto F. Bauer&#13;
Vtee-ebaDceUor&#13;
ay, 1972&#13;
THAM~ge from the ChanceUor"'"&#13;
t of the and an all-American football&#13;
to embody both, ele~en ~an 001- player. Justice White was SUrely&#13;
Greek ideal. To the ethrcentury exceptional in his distinction and&#13;
versity 0f the nineteen scholar- '. eminence, but he was also broadly we owe our emphasis o.ntellectual representative of a great mass Of&#13;
ship and rigoro~s l1~h univer- university gra~ates, men andwQ..&#13;
training. To the ng b Idge we men who make room in their&#13;
Oxford and Cam r , t d siUes, Iatton of ath- lives for spar s an for other&#13;
owe the direct a~soc activity with physical aC~ivities that reflect&#13;
letic and sportmg lean peo- their apprectatton of the inter ..&#13;
0ty life TheAmer th&#13;
universl • f ontinent dependence of ought and action&#13;
h conquest 0 a c . d T I ple , ~ ose to be physically of body and mmu. hose Who&#13;
requlIed them t of their na- really understand the American&#13;
active ~O\1gh m:nd it easy to people, their heritage and their&#13;
tiona! hls~orYJ ftUal achievement history, should not be surprised&#13;
reconcile Intellec . ity in their by the prominent and proper rOle&#13;
and athletic acnv ai uvee of athletics in the modern unt-&#13;
I and in their person •&#13;
schoo s ., f the United versity.&#13;
A leading JUstice 0&#13;
States Supreme Court, Byron&#13;
HWhizzer" White, was an outstanding&#13;
student at the University&#13;
of Colorado, a Rhodes Scholar&#13;
Irvin Go Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
DIALOGUE&#13;
WITH THE&#13;
DIRECTOR&#13;
Critics who are offended by the&#13;
presence of athletics in mere not nl&#13;
American universities fail 0 y&#13;
to appreciate the diversity of ou~&#13;
educational heritage, but alSOW~&#13;
that heritage haS contributed 0&#13;
the achievement 0I .~..1.......... e in the&#13;
life of the nation and in the 11:~: of indivIdual men. Many moralls&#13;
in the. anctent world decried the&#13;
nesb and elevated the 111e01 the&#13;
mind above that of the ~LJ-\J"U,.J' But&#13;
there were others wh0 argued that&#13;
the body was tbe temple of God,&#13;
and lhat worship of God required&#13;
t for the body and its uses.&#13;
respec I'no the&#13;
The Greek ioea! of ed\lca "''0&#13;
whole man, the bodY as well as&#13;
the mind, represented a reconcUtatioo&#13;
of these conflicting points&#13;
01 view.&#13;
The American unIversity came&#13;
::::::::::::I::::',::::::::r:::m::::::::r:::::r:::::::::::::::~~~::~::I::::::::::~:::::~:~:::III:::::~:::::::::::::::::::,::t:I:::IIIIltt:::::l~~:II:~:III::::::::~::::::::::~:::r:!:::~:::::::;:t&#13;
"•.J"~ _....&#13;
THOMAS ROSANDICH&#13;
The Cbinese call this the Year of the Rat; in the&#13;
world of sport it would be the Year of Ping-Pong.&#13;
At the Office of Athletics, we call this a YEAR OF&#13;
CONSOLIDATION.&#13;
A basic troop-leading prLnciple is coined from&#13;
the woro MACE which renects Movement To Contact,&#13;
Attack, Consolidation and Expansion.&#13;
during the 1969-1970 aeademtc year as we developed&#13;
the varsity program and the personnel to execute&#13;
the same. 1971-19'12 put things in high gear as we&#13;
atta.eted across a broad front giving Parkside its&#13;
first All-American, National Rookie Coach of the&#13;
Year Award, our mascot design and an in-depth&#13;
operational program. That brings us to this year,&#13;
our Year of Consolidation.&#13;
We consolidated in typical athletic fashion by&#13;
impleme..ntlng for the ttrst time Oktoberfest in the&#13;
tall; a broad program in women's athletics including&#13;
varsity teams in tennis, volleyball, gymnastics and&#13;
track &amp;: field; an academic program of Coaching&#13;
Certificationj completed plans on our outdoor and.&#13;
indoor 1a.clliUesj hired an aequatlcs director; developed&#13;
the freshman basketball team; sent the&#13;
golf team to Florida, the wrestling team to Louisiana&#13;
and the track team to Arkansas; raised $10,000 by&#13;
Parkside 200 and last but not least, got the National&#13;
Varsity Club off to a roaring start while still&#13;
operating as we have been out of two towns., two&#13;
counties and 23 sites. At last, we will consolidate&#13;
Regardless of the year, however, we want to&#13;
take this opportunity to thank the students, laculty,&#13;
staff and administration of the University, the&#13;
Parkside 200 and National Varsity Club members&#13;
and. Indeed the people in the communities for their&#13;
continued and unqualified support.&#13;
Thus we look towards the'1972-1973 academie&#13;
year with a great deal of anticipation for it should&#13;
be a year of Expansion. Why? Bobby Kennedy probably&#13;
said it better than anyone when he said: "consider tor&#13;
a moment what we achieve from athletics ... the&#13;
sheer fun of playing .•. the building 01 a healthy and&#13;
aiert mind ... stamina., courage. unselfishness and&#13;
most lmportantly, perhaps. . .the will to win."&#13;
HISTORY and LOCATIO&#13;
The Un""""ly 01 Wisconslr&gt;-Parkside had its beginnings in&#13;
leg I 'atlve Kllon In 1965 which provided lor a new, lour-year&#13;
degrae-grantlng campus 01 The University 01 Wisconsin in&#13;
the Kenosha-RKine araa In 1966. Irvin G Wyllie, widely&#13;
rllCognlzed echolar teacher snd suthor, was named chancellor&#13;
of the new university end in the same year the Governot's&#13;
Site SelllCtlon Comm,ttee recommended that the new campus&#13;
be located on a roiling 7()O..acre aite of alternating prairie and&#13;
woodland ad)Kenl 10 Petrifying Spnngs Park in northern&#13;
Kano he County Ground was broken for the lirst major&#13;
campus building ,n October, 1967.&#13;
Tha In,t,.1 S6 5 mlll'on building program, which included&#13;
Gr nqUI t and Tallent Halls, w.s completed in September,&#13;
1969 w n the '''st students began classes on the new&#13;
campu An add,tlonal bUilding budget 01 $'97 million&#13;
PP"oved for tha 1969-71 f, cal biennium provides lor con-&#13;
"ruct on 01 four add,tlonal major buildings - a library.&#13;
I rnlr'V c ter I the key butlding on campus; 8 communicalion&#13;
art bulldong which Will prov,de addlt'onal general&#13;
purpo ewell e p&amp;&lt;:.ahzed classroom space, a multi-use&#13;
P • cal education IKllrly end a cantral campus healing and&#13;
ch II ng plant All will be ready lor the 1972-73 school year&#13;
Th. ~ P.rk.,de c.mpu. i. located 10 m.ioI •• north of the&#13;
IIhfM)laborder, two mil•• _at of lak.e Michigan and ~tween&#13;
(he Cllt •• of KenO.ha and Recine on Wood Road. Milw.ult_&#13;
11_ 20 mll_ to. the north, Chicago 60 mil•• to the eoultt&#13;
tt.ghway ~94,the Inter.t.t.link. between Milwau_ an'll Chieego'&#13;
pa .... hve mile. _t of the campu.. Hig~y E In K~&#13;
County. running .. at from 1-94, lead. directly to the campua.&#13;
The modern urban campu •• a in K.noaha and Recin. ef"e 'uet&#13;
tov•• nd 15 mlnut.a. r•• pecti ....ly. from the main camp ..... 'n..&#13;
K..noaha c.mpua I.IOC.I~ at 8700 WeMington Road (Highway&#13;
48). the RaCine Campu •• t 1001 S. M.in Str_t (Highway 81:).&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
An official publication 01 the&#13;
National Varsity Club, Inc., of&#13;
The Un~versity of Wiscons1n~&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Vol. I , No.1, May. 1972&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
President- - _ Dario Madrigrano&#13;
Vice-President- _ -Bob Hartman&#13;
Secretary _ _ _ _ - -AI Gelsone&#13;
Treasurer- -Guy Trecroc1&#13;
Executive Board - - -Stan BarTY,&#13;
Gene Brookhouse, Joe Cucunate,&#13;
Chet Dlckow, Mark Mana, orby'&#13;
MaSSI; Al Ramovic, Jack Rice,&#13;
Blll Wells, Paul Hutka.&#13;
Publisher- -The National Varsity&#13;
ClUb, Inc.&#13;
Editor- _ _ _ _ __ Pete Turco&#13;
.. Consultant to the Edltor- _Don&#13;
Kopriva&#13;
Parks ide 200 Editor- - _Lloyd&#13;
Northard&#13;
Staif Writers- _ -JIm Bradley, AI&#13;
Gelsone, Vic Godfrey&#13;
Art Director- _ _ -AI Rainov1C&#13;
Business Manager _ -GUYTrecroci&#13;
Photographers- _ _Darrel Borger,&#13;
Steve LUjegren, Marsh Sl~&#13;
monsen ~!IJ~tIi~I!~~t!i)Ji!j~f@ftt!1es age&#13;
rom the&#13;
f!&#13;
Otto F. Bauer&#13;
• c -Cbancellor&#13;
ndLO TIO&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
THE RANGER A Message from the Chancellor&#13;
and an all-American football&#13;
player. Justice White was surely&#13;
exceptional in his distinction and&#13;
eminence, but he was also broadly&#13;
representative of a great mass of&#13;
university gra~ates, men and women&#13;
who make room in their&#13;
lives for sports and for other&#13;
physical activities that renect&#13;
their appreciation of the interdependence&#13;
of thought and action&#13;
of body and mind. Those Wh~&#13;
really understand the American&#13;
people, their heritage and their&#13;
history, should not be surprised&#13;
by the prominent and proper role&#13;
of athletics in the modern uni-&#13;
Critics who are offended by the&#13;
mere presence of athletics in&#13;
American universities fail not only&#13;
to appreciate the diversity of our&#13;
educational heritage, but also what&#13;
that heritage haS contributed to&#13;
the achievement of bala.nCe In the&#13;
ll!e of the nation and In the lives&#13;
of Individual men. Many moraliSt s&#13;
In the ancient world decried the&#13;
flesh and elevated the life of the&#13;
mind above that of the body· But&#13;
there were others who argued that&#13;
the body was the temple of God,&#13;
and that worship of God required&#13;
respect tor the body and its uses,&#13;
The Greek Ideal of educating the&#13;
·hole man, the body as well as&#13;
the mind, represented a reconciliation&#13;
of these conflicting points&#13;
of view.&#13;
The American university came&#13;
body both elements of the&#13;
to em . ·&#13;
Greek ideal. To the German university&#13;
of the nineteenth century'&#13;
we owe our emphasis on scholarship&#13;
and rigorous intellectual&#13;
training, To the English univerities&#13;
Oxford and Cambridge, we&#13;
s th' e direct association of athowe&#13;
·t 'th letic and sporting activ1 Y w1&#13;
university life. TheAmericanpeole&#13;
whose conquest of a continent&#13;
P ' . d them to be physically require&#13;
active through most of their national&#13;
history' found it easy to&#13;
reconcile intellectual achievement&#13;
and athletic activity in their&#13;
schools and in their personal lives.&#13;
A leading justice of the United&#13;
States Supreme Court, Byron&#13;
''Whtzzer'' White, was an outstanding&#13;
student at the University&#13;
of Colorado, a Rhodes Scholar&#13;
DIALOGUE&#13;
WITH THE&#13;
DIRECTOR&#13;
versity.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
THOMAS ROSANDICH&#13;
The Chinese call this the Year of the Rat; in the&#13;
world of sport It would be the Year of Ping-Pong,&#13;
At the Office of Athletics, we call this a YEAR OF&#13;
CONSOLIDATION.&#13;
A basic troop-leading principle is coined from&#13;
the word MACE whichrenectsMovementToContact,&#13;
Attack, Consolidation and Expansion.&#13;
during the 1969-1970 academic year aswedeveloped&#13;
the varsity program and the personnel to execute&#13;
the same. 1971-1972 put things in high gear as we&#13;
attacked across a broad front giving Parkside its&#13;
fir All-American, National Rookie Coach of the&#13;
Year A"--ard, our mascot design and an in-depth&#13;
operatiom.l program. That brings us to this year,&#13;
our Year of Consolidation.&#13;
We consolidated in typical athletic fashion by&#13;
implementing for the tl.rst time Oktoberfest in the&#13;
fall; a broad program in women's athletics including&#13;
varsity teams In tennis, volleyball, gymnastics and&#13;
track &amp;: field; an academic program of Coaching&#13;
Certification; completed plans on our outdoor and&#13;
indoor J'Acllities; hired an acquatics director; developed&#13;
the freshman basketball team; sent the&#13;
golf team to Florida, the wrestling team to Louisiana&#13;
and the track team to Arkansas; raised $10,000 by&#13;
Parkside 200 and last but not least, got the National&#13;
Varsity Club off to a roaring start while still&#13;
operating as we have been out of two towns, two&#13;
counties and 23 sites. At last, we will consolidate&#13;
Regardless of the year, however, we want to&#13;
take this opportunity to thank the students, faculty,&#13;
staff and administration of the University, the&#13;
Parkside 200 and National Varsity Club members&#13;
and Indeed the people in the communities for their&#13;
continued and unqualified support.&#13;
Thus, we look towards the 1972-1973 academic&#13;
year with a great deal of anticipation for it should&#13;
be a year of Expansion. Why? Bobby Kennedy probably&#13;
said it better than anyone when he said: ''consider for&#13;
a moment what we achieve from athletics •. ,the&#13;
sheer tun of playing .•. the building of a healthy and&#13;
alert mind ... stamina, courage, unself1shness and&#13;
most importantly, perhaps. . .the will to win."&#13;
TH E RANGE R&#13;
An official publication of the&#13;
National Varsity Club, Inc., of&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Vol. I, No. 1, MaY, 1972&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
President- - - Dario Madrigrano&#13;
Vice-President- - -Bob Hartman&#13;
Secretary- - - - - -Al Gelsone&#13;
Treasurer- - - - - -Guy Trecroci&#13;
Executive Board - - -Stan Barry,&#13;
Gene Brookhouse, Joe Cucunate,&#13;
Chet Dickow, Mark Mano, OrbY&#13;
Moss, Al Rainovic, Jack Rice,&#13;
Bill Wells, Paul Hutka.&#13;
Publisher- -The National Varsity&#13;
Club, Inc.&#13;
The new Pa,.ka de campua i • located 10 .&#13;
llhno,e bord..-, two milH weet of lake M· ~ea north of the&#13;
t e c t•H of Kenoaha end Racine W ochogen , and i,.,-.,&#13;
" " 20 m l!M to the north , C hic:"o 6~od _Road . MilwaukN&#13;
Highway 1-94, the interstate link be~n ,.. . ,m,le:.:,o the eoutto .&#13;
PllHH f e m ll M WHt of the c empue H~ weu enlt Chicto00,&#13;
C0Ut1ty. runn,ng ... t fr o m 1-94 1 .. d d . tgh-y E In Ken...,.&#13;
• • irectly to the cempve.&#13;
Editor- - - -Pete Turco&#13;
Consultant to the Editor- -Don&#13;
Kopriva&#13;
Parkside 200 Editor- - -Lloyd&#13;
Northard&#13;
Sta.ff Writers- - -Jim Bradley, Al&#13;
Gelsone, Vic Godfrey&#13;
Art Director- - - -Al RalnOVIC&#13;
Busine ss Manager - - Guy Trecroci&#13;
Photographers- - -Darrel Borger,&#13;
Steve Liljegren, Marsh Simonsen&#13;
T he modern urban cempueea in K h&#13;
five e n d t6 m •n utea reapectivelw f•noa • and Racine are juet&#13;
Kenoahe C.mpu• • ioceted et 3700r~m :::.• main campue. The&#13;
43 1. the Rac,ne Campu• 81 1001 5 .: . •ngton Road (Highway&#13;
• ""8 '" Str"Nt (Highwey 81).&#13;
ff ff !f f ttt f tf f !tf tf !Ifitl&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
&gt;&#13;
THE RA,'GER&#13;
GUEST SPEAKER, RAY ELIOT:&#13;
uA BUILDER OF FINE MEN"&#13;
Ray Eliot, Associate Director&#13;
of Athletics at the University of&#13;
Illinois, retired in 1960from active&#13;
football coaching after 28&#13;
years of service, 23 of which&#13;
were at his alma mater, nnnots.&#13;
- As head football coach at illinois&#13;
from 1942 through 1959,&#13;
Mr. Eliot won or shared three Big&#13;
Ten titles, and produced decisive&#13;
victories in the two Rose Bowl&#13;
games in which his teams appeared.&#13;
Earlier. while serving as one&#13;
of Bob zuppke' 5 line coaches he&#13;
also was head hockey coach ~nd&#13;
assistant baseball coach.&#13;
Mr. Eliot graduated from the&#13;
University of Illinois in- 1932and&#13;
began his coaching career at illinois&#13;
College, Jacksonville. He&#13;
.served one year as assistant football&#13;
coach, then was promoted to&#13;
the head coaching job. He also&#13;
served as baseball coach, and in&#13;
both sports, his teams compiled&#13;
impreSSive records.&#13;
Among the many awards this man&#13;
has earned are the Presidency&#13;
or the American Football Coaches&#13;
ASSOCiation in 1955-56. the Los&#13;
Angeles Times' Coach ot the Year&#13;
Award in 1951,HelmsHallofFame&#13;
in 1956. The Alonzo Stagg Award&#13;
in 1961. Chicago Midwest Writers&#13;
C~Ch of the Year Award in 1959.&#13;
and an honorary life membership&#13;
in the American Football Coaches&#13;
Association in 1965.&#13;
Mr. Eliot bas been asked to&#13;
coach several All Star teams:&#13;
among them the Chicago Tribune&#13;
All Star Game; 4 Urnes coach of&#13;
East-West Shrine Game in San&#13;
Francisco; 4 times coach of the&#13;
Blue-Gray Game in Montgomery.&#13;
Alabama; 2 times coach of the&#13;
Ncr th-South Shrine Game in MiamI&#13;
Florida; and several Urnes&#13;
selected as the nattonaj coach of&#13;
the week.&#13;
As an ill ini footb&amp;lJ and baseball&#13;
player, as. a small-&lt;:.OUece&#13;
coach. as a lioe assistant to Bob&#13;
ZUppke. aDd as head coach at his&#13;
alma mater, Mr. Eliot bas stuck&#13;
firmly to his dedicated assignment&#13;
in I1Ie, "A builder of tI.ne&#13;
men."&#13;
His solid background Ul coacb.1Dg&#13;
his dynamic speakmg ability. bls&#13;
great leellng lor and popularity&#13;
with persons tram every wall: Of&#13;
life, all equip him perfectly for&#13;
his assignment.&#13;
He Is a man who wUl t:alc.etime&#13;
from a busy schedule to thank 8.&#13;
high school boy for an article on&#13;
him in the school paper, and a&#13;
man who receives fan mall from&#13;
the Arctic Circle to TOkyo, Japan .&#13;
Mr. Eliot is a man. who will glve&#13;
you "Something To Think About."&#13;
RAY ELIOT&#13;
Educational&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
and&#13;
Academics&#13;
The&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin- Athletic&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside shares the The Universuv of Wlsconstn s ducauonal her.t89 and II&#13;
teaching, research. and public service goal!; Sub en bing 10 an eduC8t10nal&#13;
philosophy that respects freedom of choice and drv rSlly 01 purpo PM rd&#13;
oHers a broad educational program ernbracmq the art sen nco and OCI I&#13;
sciences&#13;
Chancellor WyllIe heads a disunquished faculty of nat onal and Int rnauon I&#13;
reputation drawn from some of this country s most prestigious umv rsure a&#13;
well as from top institutions abroad and from the upper ranks of tndu try and&#13;
government All share a deep commitment to the teachmg of und rgradual&#13;
and many have done post-doctoral work and boest prout c r ord of producnv&#13;
scholarsfup They provide a rich mtcllectua1 and cultural rru boib on campu&#13;
and in the Racine and Kenosha communmes&#13;
They leach onParksrde s two major academic units the College ,f SCI n e and&#13;
Society and the School of Modern Industry each deSIgnedto provrd tud nts&#13;
with a grasp of the human and technologIcal resources of th urban mdust 181&#13;
society of southeastern WisconSIn&#13;
The College of Science and Society offers a broad rang of loberal art and&#13;
elementary and secondary teacher certification programs through It diVISion&#13;
of science. social science humanist ic studies and educauon Th 5 hool of&#13;
Modern Industry focuses on Perkssde S special rrus Ion of urban-tndustrutl&#13;
studies and provides a strong hnk between the tbeorericai and applied renee&#13;
through .ts d.vrstons of engine rlOg SCI nc maongem nt CI nc and labor&#13;
economics&#13;
Parkside seeks to combine the best of the traditional and the new In Its tOlaf&#13;
program of sports It emphasizes summer and winter Olympic-type port With&#13;
competitions for both men and women in mtf"rCollegl8t athletics Intrsmural&#13;
and sport clubs Parkside will pioneer a strong program for wom n In OlympiC&#13;
sports here The total program is committed to the dov lopm or and culttV tlon&#13;
of the Individual's personal excellence men,ally, phYSIcally, p'ychologlcally,&#13;
and socially&#13;
To achieve the alms and objectives of thIS lOt rcolleglste athletlc program at&#13;
Parkside, the immediale need musl be excellent teacher It 's beloved that&#13;
Parkside has assembled the finest coaching teft of any unlv rSlty In America&#13;
No school in the country has the depth In a coaching staH a. th one thai I&#13;
gathered here in southern WisconSin They not only bring to WI conSln flch&#13;
backgrounds of expenencesfrom all over the Unlled States a comp "'or' end&#13;
students of sport, but they're also out tanding I achers of phy Ical education&#13;
and related activities&#13;
UW-Pa.rk lde'l Phy I("al [duea-&#13;
Hon and Athletics uUdlnl will&#13;
bt.! compleu-d b)' Ul aumm r or&#13;
this fear. 11 wl11 hou sla.tf orftce&#13;
• thn fUU- tl ktlbAll&#13;
court, han&lt;lbaU, voIh baLt, badminton&#13;
and 1 Mill court ,an I htlane&#13;
lmmt.ne pool, wt'lght rOOm ,&#13;
classrooms, th human perf rmanee&#13;
la-bon ton' and other&#13;
specialty room~ VarSity and LDtra.&#13;
mural locker areas for bolh mf n&#13;
and. worn 0 ue also included In&#13;
the buU&lt;11nc U 'f;ellua a.auna. The&#13;
buU&lt;11nc sHe Is adjacent to Intramural&#13;
and var.ll~ atbl lie llold ,&#13;
CamOlY Construcuon ot Kenosha&#13;
15 tb~ contractor.&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
THE RA. GER&#13;
GUEST SPEAKER, RAY ELIOT :&#13;
"A BUILDER OF FINE MEN "&#13;
Ray Eliot, Associate Director&#13;
of Athletics at the University of&#13;
Illinois, r etired in 1960 from active&#13;
football coaching after 28&#13;
y ears of service, 23 of which&#13;
were at his alma mater, Illinois.&#13;
· As head football coach at Ill&#13;
inois from 1942 through 1959,&#13;
Mr. Eliot won or shared three Big&#13;
Ten titles, and produced decisive&#13;
victories in the two Rose Bowl&#13;
games in which his teams appeared.&#13;
Earlier, while serving as one&#13;
of Bob Zuppke's line coaches, he&#13;
also was head hockey coach and&#13;
assistant baseball coach.&#13;
Mr. Eliot graduated from the&#13;
University of Illinois in· 1932 and&#13;
began his coaching career at Illinois&#13;
College, Jacksonville. He&#13;
served one year as assistant foot.&#13;
ball coach, then was promoted to&#13;
the head coaching job. He also&#13;
served as baseball coach, and in&#13;
both sports, his teams compiled&#13;
The&#13;
impressive records.&#13;
Among the many a wards this man&#13;
has earned are the Presidency&#13;
of the American Football Coaches&#13;
Association in 1955-56, the Los&#13;
Angeles Times' Coach of the Year&#13;
Award in 1951,HelmsHallofFame&#13;
in 1956, The Alonzo Stagg Award&#13;
in 1961, Chicago Midwest riters&#13;
Coach of the Year Award in 1959,&#13;
and an honorary life membership&#13;
in the American Football Coaches&#13;
Association in 1965.&#13;
Mr. Eliot has been asked to&#13;
coach several All Star teams:&#13;
among them the Chicago Tribune&#13;
All Star Game; 4 times coach of&#13;
East-West Shrine Game in San&#13;
Francisco; 4 times coach of the&#13;
Blue-Gray Game in Montgomery,&#13;
Alabama; 2 times coach of the&#13;
North-South Shrine Game in Hami&#13;
Florida; and several times&#13;
selected as the national coach of&#13;
the week.&#13;
As an Illini f&#13;
ment in life,&#13;
men."&#13;
His solid background inc chin&#13;
his dynamic speaking ability, hi&#13;
great feeling for and popularl ·&#13;
with p.;r ons from e ry of&#13;
life, all equip him perf&#13;
his assignment.&#13;
He I. a man w UI tlm&#13;
from a busy schedule to thank a&#13;
high school boy for an article on&#13;
him m the school paper, and a&#13;
man who receive fan m 11 from&#13;
the Arctic C ircl to To ·yo, Japan.&#13;
fr. Eliot Is a man ·m&#13;
you "Something To Thi&#13;
Educational&#13;
Philosoph}&#13;
and&#13;
Academic&#13;
Par side share the&#13;
teaching research and&#13;
phtlo oph&#13;
offer a broad&#13;
sciences&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Athletic&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&gt;&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
BASKETBALf:RINTERESTING&#13;
HEAD COACH STEVE STEPHENS CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
MOST VALUABLE&#13;
bf h prepped at Park,&#13;
Racine freshman Chuck Cham ISS, W 0 . bi' way this&#13;
burst onto the Parks ide basketball scene&#13;
d In a d 9365 points&#13;
year. The rangy 6'1 ", 170 lb. forward-guar score the s uad's&#13;
for 8 17.4 point-per-game average.and was named q&#13;
most valuable player in vote of his teammates.&#13;
Steve Stephens, basketball&#13;
coach at the University of&#13;
WIsconsin-Parks ide since&#13;
the new campus opened&#13;
wrth the 1968-69 season&#13;
and since 1964 In the UWKenosha&#13;
Center system, has&#13;
fashioned a 108-71 record&#13;
In those eight campaigns.&#13;
AggreSSIve Stephens teams&#13;
have been squads to reckon&#13;
with tn Wisconsin college&#13;
basketball since he joined&#13;
the UW staff after a five-year&#13;
h d ba ketball coach and chairman of the&#13;
I duc non d partment at Beaver Dam (Wis.)&#13;
cho I&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
Denn"I.(DelJ.e~ Routheawc transferred into UW-Parkside and ty took command of the freshman-dominated team.&#13;
~" rurtiveof Michigan started in 8veIYga~e for Coa:~&#13;
Stevenaand contributed 7.5 points a contest. With a year&#13;
experienceunder the Stephenssystem behi~ him, Aoutheaux&#13;
ahoukf be ready for a great t 972·73 campaign.&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Grand Forks&#13;
Fargo&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Luther College&#13;
U. of Missouri-Rolla&#13;
North Dakota&#13;
North Dakota State&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
S. Illinois-Edwardsville&#13;
Dec. I.&#13;
Dec. 2.&#13;
Dec. 6.&#13;
Dec. 7.&#13;
Dec. 12&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
De. 29&#13;
&amp;30 Boyne County Classic with&#13;
Mich. Tech, Lake Superior&#13;
State, Ferris State Big Rapids,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Platteville&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Detroit&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
.Marquette&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
, Lake Forest&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
UW_Platteville&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Aquinas&#13;
Indiana State-EvansvUle&#13;
Wayne State&#13;
St. Xavier&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Ripon&#13;
Purdue-North Central&#13;
Milton&#13;
Carroll&#13;
Lake Forest&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Dominican&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Jan. 6&#13;
Jan. 9&#13;
Jan. 13&#13;
Jan. 16&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan. 23&#13;
Jan. 27&#13;
Jan. 30&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Feb. 6&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 13&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 20&#13;
Feb. 23&#13;
Feb. 27&#13;
cnv In WI con In and Kenosha alumni&#13;
v rlOUS phy Ical education and coaches&#13;
SIgma Della PSI fraternIty and the&#13;
Ctub&#13;
He 81 0 A I A 0, met 14 golf chairman and&#13;
chaired ttl P rksrde UnIted Fund drive In 1970.&#13;
Th 35-y ar old St phens and hIS WIfe, Connie, have&#13;
8 d u ht r Honor 16&#13;
ASSISTANT KEN (RED) OBERBRUNER&#13;
Former professional baseball&#13;
and basketball player Ken&#13;
(Red) Oberbruner is the&#13;
assistant basketball coach&#13;
at UW-Parkslde Additional&#13;
duties Include student counseling&#13;
and coordinating the&#13;
equipment room operation.&#13;
A graduate of Notre Dame,&#13;
Red was athletic director&#13;
and coached football. basketball&#13;
and baseball for 24&#13;
years at nearby Milton (Wis )&#13;
College. He also directed&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
~&#13;
CALEDONlA (RACINE LUTHERAN)&#13;
RAeI NE (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (ST. JOSEPH)&#13;
GREENDALE&#13;
GREENDALE;&lt;&#13;
KENOSHA (ST. JOSEPH)&#13;
JEFFERSON&#13;
CUDAHY&#13;
BANGKOK, THAILAND&#13;
DELAVAN (DELAVAN-DARIEN)&#13;
BURLINGTON&#13;
EWEN, MICH. (G6GEBIC J,C.)&#13;
RACINE (CASE)&#13;
RACINE (ST. CATHERI~E)&#13;
KENOSHA (ST. JOSEPH)&#13;
KENOSHA (RACINE PARK)&#13;
iLLIOTT BRIESKE&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLI SS&#13;
*TOM HELLER&#13;
*MIKE JOYCE&#13;
*TOM JOYCE&#13;
~ILL LOOS&#13;
PETE NEVINS&#13;
*MARK PECK&#13;
PRAKONG (RAY) PHANTURAT&#13;
~ALE PH ILLIPS&#13;
BOB POPP&#13;
*DENNIS (DEKE) ROUTHEAUX&#13;
*PHIL STEWART&#13;
MORLEY TORGERSON&#13;
LARRY WADE&#13;
PETE WOOD&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
SO,&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
SO.&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
FR,&#13;
ASSISTANT JIM HOGAN&#13;
Former Perk id tar Jim Hogan, who averaged 21.1&#13;
poirus a game as 8 top notch guard on last year's team.&#13;
I aldong Stephens and Oberbruner this year in all&#13;
phil os of Ihe game 8S a student coach&#13;
HIS primary responsibility however, will rest with&#13;
the jumor varSIty player&#13;
A WINCHESTER PUBLIC&#13;
SHOOTING CENTER&#13;
NORTH SHORE WINCHESTER&#13;
PUBLIC SHOOTING CENTER&#13;
3109 I;J. S. Highway 41 (1-94)&#13;
Franksville, (Racine County) Wise. 53126&#13;
Telephone (Club) (414) 835-1112&#13;
* Open to the public&#13;
* Ammunition &amp; gun rental&#13;
* Open seven days a week&#13;
* Instruction available&#13;
1971 - 72 UW.pARKSIDE BASKETBALL TEAM&#13;
Front '0* k Chuck C"mbll a, Pete Nevins. Dele Phillips Bill Loa. Tom Jo La W&#13;
lot Aut Coec:h Juon~n Aut Coech Ken Obe br •M ' yce, rry ada. Back row,&#13;
Prdl 51ewet1 Bob Popp, T~ ....Iler. Pet. Wood ~k~n::~ut~ PecH~; Morley Torgerson, Ray Phanturat,&#13;
from pia""l ElliOtl .... k•. Mike Joyce' ux. ad Coach Steve Stephens. Missing SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN'S&#13;
MOST MODERN&#13;
TRAP and SKEET RANGE&#13;
THE RANGEll May, 1972 ~ B-AS- KET- B-AL~L: ~I NT--ER---=-Es-=-===11----=-=--=NG~-&#13;
H AO COACH STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
D1 tnct 1 gol f ch irm an a nd&#13;
Unit d Fund dn in 1 970&#13;
d h1 w 1f , Connie, have&#13;
OBERBRUNER&#13;
HOGAN&#13;
re t w ith&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
MOST VALUABLE&#13;
Racine freshman Chuck Chambliss , who prepped at Park,&#13;
burst onto the Parkside basketball scene in a big way this&#13;
year. The rangy 6'1 ", 170 lb. forward-guard scored 365 points&#13;
for a 17 .4 point-per-game average and was named the squad's&#13;
most valuable player in vote of his teammates.&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
Dennis (De~e). Routheaux tranaferred into UW-Parkslde and&#13;
promptly took command of the freshman-dominated team.&#13;
The 6'1" native of Michigan started in every game for Coach&#13;
Stevens and contributed 7.5 points a contest. With a year of&#13;
experience under the Stephens system behind him, Routheaux&#13;
should be ready for a great 1972· 73 campaign.&#13;
Dec. 1.&#13;
Dec. 2 .&#13;
Dec . 6.&#13;
Dec. 7.&#13;
Dec. 12&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
De. 29&#13;
30&#13;
Luther College&#13;
U. of Missouri-Rolla&#13;
North Dakota&#13;
North Dakota State&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
S. Illinois-Edwardsville&#13;
Boyne County Classic with&#13;
Mich. Tech, Lake Superior&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Grand Forks&#13;
Fargo&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
State, Ferris State Big Rapids,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Jan. 6&#13;
Jan. 9&#13;
Jan. 13&#13;
Jan. 16&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan. 23&#13;
Jan. 27&#13;
Jan. 30&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Feb. 6&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 13&#13;
F eb. 17&#13;
Feb. 20&#13;
Feb. 23&#13;
Feb. 27&#13;
UW-Platteville&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Aquinas&#13;
Indiana State-Evansville&#13;
Way ne State&#13;
St. Xavier&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Ripon&#13;
Purdue-North Central&#13;
Milton&#13;
Carroll&#13;
Lake Forest&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Dominican&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
UW-Mllwaukee&#13;
iLLI OTT BR 1 ESKE&#13;
*CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
*TOM HELLER&#13;
*MIKE JOYCE&#13;
TOM JOYCE&#13;
ijILL LOOS&#13;
*PETE NEVINS&#13;
MARK PECK&#13;
PRAKONG (RAY) PHANTURAT&#13;
~ALE PH I LLI PS&#13;
Platteville&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Detroit&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
.Marquette&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
' Lake Forest&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
THE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
CALEDONIA (R~CINE LUTHERAN)&#13;
RAC I NE lPARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (ST, JOSEPH)&#13;
GREENDALE&#13;
GREEiNDALE;&#13;
KENOSHA (ST, JOSEPH)&#13;
JEFFERSON&#13;
CUDAHY&#13;
•BOB POPP&#13;
*DENNIS (DEKE) ROUTHEAUX&#13;
PHIL STEWART&#13;
MORLEY TORGERSON&#13;
LARRY WADE&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
so.&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
so.&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
BANGKOK, THAILAND&#13;
DELAVAN (DELAVAN-DARIEN)&#13;
BURLINGTON&#13;
EWEN, MICH, (G8GEBIC J C )&#13;
RACINE (CASE) I I&#13;
PETE WOOD&#13;
RACINE (ST, CATHERIN~)&#13;
KENOSHA (ST, JOSEPH)&#13;
KENOSHA (RACINE PARK)&#13;
A WINCHESTER PUBLIC&#13;
SHOOTING CENTER&#13;
NORTH SHORE WINCHESTER&#13;
PUBLIC SHOOTING CENTER&#13;
3109 y. s. Highway 41 (1-94)&#13;
Franksville, (Racine County) Wisc. 53126&#13;
Telephone (Club) (414) 835-1112&#13;
* Open to the pub I i.c&#13;
*Amm ·t· uni ton &amp; gun rental&#13;
* Open seven days a week&#13;
* Instruction available&#13;
SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN'S&#13;
MOST MODERN&#13;
TRAP and SKEET RANGE&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
o&#13;
RUDY ALVEREZ&#13;
1st CROSS-COUNTRY ALL-AMERICAN&#13;
ROBERT l. LAWSON, HEAD COACH&#13;
Now finishing his third&#13;
season as track and cross&#13;
country coach, Bob Lawson&#13;
has built a solid reputation&#13;
as one of America's&#13;
best young coaches&#13;
after 13 years as a college&#13;
mentor.&#13;
Lawson led the UW-Parkside&#13;
cross country team to&#13;
a NAIA District 14 championship&#13;
and a seventh&#13;
place finish in the nationals&#13;
last year; he was named&#13;
District 14 "Coach of the&#13;
Vear."&#13;
He led the Parks ide coaching team to the Philippines&#13;
in 1970 and stayed in the island republic seven months&#13;
as a teacher and coach of track and field. He is currently&#13;
a member of the USTFF executive committee.&#13;
serving a term that runs until 1973, and has coauthored,&#13;
with Tom Rosandich and Paul Ward, lIAmerican&#13;
Training Patterns," a coaching-training manual&#13;
explaining the American method.&#13;
Born in Aberdeen, Washin~ton in 1935, Bob graduated&#13;
from Southern Cal in 1 958 and added his masters at&#13;
Oregon State in 1 960.&#13;
While at Southern Cal, Lawson won two Pac-8 high&#13;
hurdle titles and placed fourth in both the NCAA and&#13;
AAU highs in 1958. But it was in the decathlon that&#13;
Bob made his mark, as he placed second In the AAU&#13;
ten-eventer in 1 955, had the eight best score of all&#13;
time and ranked third in the world.&#13;
The 1971 cross country season&#13;
Was easily the most seccessrui&#13;
in ParkSide's short history.&#13;
And In running thrOUgh a 4-4&#13;
dual season to high naUooal placing,&#13;
the Ranger harriers made&#13;
their mark on the cross country&#13;
record books. To wtt, Utey did&#13;
the fOlloWing:&#13;
·won the NAlADlstrlc1l4cbamptonshtp&#13;
·placed seventh in the NAtA&#13;
nattouaj cbampionship meet.&#13;
-bad an all-Amertca runner--&#13;
Parkside's nrst--ln Racine freshman&#13;
Rudy Alvarez.&#13;
-had another near-aU-America&#13;
in barefoot freshman Lucian Rosa,&#13;
wbo also won the Platteville Invitational&#13;
and District 14 tlUes.&#13;
-had the NAlA District 14 coach&#13;
of the year in Bob La WSOD.&#13;
-had the District 14 Runner-Up&#13;
Team of the year.&#13;
-Had lettermen, giving DeW bead&#13;
coacb Vic Godfte}' a solid bflse for&#13;
Improvement in 1972.&#13;
Success, to be sure; but it's all&#13;
relative aed God1'rey, wbo's blkin&amp;'&#13;
over the cross country cbares so&#13;
Lawson can devote more time to&#13;
the fall track program, knows the&#13;
Rangers wUl bave to keep worlrlog&#13;
bard.&#13;
But hard work was a tra.1t Of&#13;
the 1971 squad, and it may bave&#13;
taken it farther down the championshtp&#13;
trail than some teams&#13;
with more talent but less desire.&#13;
Alvarez, the nrst all-AmeriCA&#13;
runner in Parkside history, sboulcI&#13;
improve in 1972 and will give the&#13;
Ra.ngers a great 1-2 puDCb with&#13;
Rosa, woo wU1 be representingb1s&#13;
native Ceylon in the 1972OlympIcs&#13;
at Municb.&#13;
Rosa bothered by Ulness through&#13;
the last hal1 of the season, wU1&#13;
return in 1972 more accustomed&#13;
to b1lls and the race pace of&#13;
American cross country. He's a&#13;
good bet, as 15 Alvarez, to gain&#13;
nattooaJ recognitton next :year and&#13;
pUsh the Rangers a little turther&#13;
a100g the path towards the .. lIonal&#13;
champiooship.&#13;
Backlng the troot-runninc duo IS&#13;
a corps Of top runners, lDcluc1m&amp;:&#13;
Wausau's Dennis Biel, who'll be a&#13;
sophomore in the fall;Waterford's&#13;
pair offinerunners.Jtm cFadden&#13;
and Gary Lance, who wm be mto&#13;
their junior sea.soo and sopbomores-&#13;
to-be Bm Carlson of&#13;
Rhinelander and Jim Whitmore of&#13;
Moslnee.&#13;
RecrniUng 15 cotne well and&#13;
Godfrey expecfs to have a tIDe&#13;
buncb of barriers work in&amp;: out&#13;
here in the f:IJ.I. Reasooabb', be&#13;
expects to be cooteDd...lnl for lbe&#13;
District title and .. Uotal booors,&#13;
but with the add.1t1OQ of tbe enr ...&#13;
tough 1I0tre Dame lJrr1taUoaaJ to&#13;
the Partslde slate, the Ranrers'&#13;
competJtlon will be that much&#13;
tougher.&#13;
RacineT&#13;
sertling the employees .nd st.H of UW-P.Tkslde&#13;
•&#13;
ach&#13;
Sophomore, Jim McF-'den of W.. .,.,ont, .. e.ptein of the eq ..........&#13;
• key r'OlKe in lhe Rangera' f.UCOH ful ..... on'OO but tot en inJury nNt&#13;
the teil end of ltte cemp8tgn. hi. MCOf"d Maaon could heve bMn thM muetl&#13;
bett.... He'll return nut ye.- _ e two-time "'erman end g..... the ~&#13;
continued upet'tenc. and ~ip.&#13;
THE 1971 RANGER SQUAD&#13;
-Rudy Alvarez, Fre.shmaD, Racine&#13;
(Part); -Dennis Blel, Fretibman,&#13;
Wausau (East); BLU CarJs(Jft,&#13;
Fre.shman, RhLnfol.a.Ddfor; "ChUCk&#13;
Dettman, Sophomore, rtnette:&#13;
···Mlke De Wit. Senior, Keno&#13;
(Tremper); ·-Jtm McFadden,&#13;
Sophomore. Waterfordj -Keith&#13;
Merrltt, Sophomor, Kt'DOSba,&#13;
{Tremptr)j "Gary Lane • Sopbo-.&#13;
more. Wat rford; -Lucian Rosa,&#13;
Freohman, Kandy, CeyIOll; KIm&#13;
Whitmore, Fr hman, Wos&#13;
1972 CROSS COUNTRY SCHEDULE&#13;
sept. 19 Carthage, UW..\\l1ltewat r, UW...&#13;
Ste n.s POint&#13;
ro.-Chiaro Clrel&#13;
Eastena llllDols&#13;
UW-MUwauk Okt_,re t lnyltalloaaJ&#13;
lIotre Dame InvitaUonaI&#13;
Ma.rquell&#13;
USTFF Mld-Amerleao&#13;
Cba.mplOl1SlUp&#13;
State AAU Cba.mplOMhtp&#13;
1IA1A Dlstrlcl 14&#13;
1IA1A lIalloaaJ Meet&#13;
lIaUonaI MU .._&#13;
PARXSDlE&#13;
MU .... uk&#13;
Eau cWr.&#13;
LI rtJ. Mo.&#13;
Cblca&amp;o, U1,&#13;
Sept. 23&#13;
Sept. 30&#13;
Oet. 3&#13;
Oct. ?&#13;
Oct. 13&#13;
Oct. 21&#13;
Oct. 28&#13;
S n Point&#13;
PARKliDlE&#13;
Chari toa, lU.&#13;
M1I uk&#13;
PARXSDlE&#13;
Wotro Dam • IDcI.&#13;
PARXStDE&#13;
Noy, ..&#13;
lIoy. It&#13;
IIOY. 18&#13;
IIOY. 25&#13;
r Cr dO&#13;
convenient location&#13;
only six miles from the&#13;
Parkside campus&#13;
at&#13;
"Washington SquaTe"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
R.ciQe&#13;
SAME DAY SERVICE 0 LOA SAD SAVI GS&#13;
•&#13;
ay, 1972&#13;
RUDY ALVEREZ&#13;
1st CROSS-COUNTRY ALL-AMERICAN&#13;
ROBERT L. LAWSON, HEAD COACH&#13;
Now finishing his third&#13;
season as track and cross&#13;
country coach, Bob Lawson&#13;
has built a solid reputation&#13;
as one of America's&#13;
best young coaches&#13;
after 13 years as a college&#13;
mentor.&#13;
Lawson led the UW-Parkside&#13;
cross country team to&#13;
a NAIA District 14 championship&#13;
and a seventh&#13;
place finish in the nationals&#13;
last year; he was named&#13;
District 14 " Coach of the&#13;
Year ."&#13;
He led the Parkside coaching team to the Phil i ppines&#13;
in 1970 and stayed in the island republic seven months&#13;
as a teacher and coach of track and field . He is currently&#13;
a member of the USTFF executive committee,&#13;
serving a term that runs until 1973, and has coauthored,&#13;
with Tom Rosandich and Paul Ward , " American&#13;
Training Patterns," a coaching-training manual&#13;
explaining the American method .&#13;
Born in Aberdeen, Washin~ton in 1935, Bob graduated&#13;
from Southern Cal in 1 958 and added his masters at&#13;
Oregon State in 1960.&#13;
While at Southern Cal, Lawson won two Pac-8 high&#13;
hurdle titles and placed fourth in both the NCAA and&#13;
AAU highs in 1958. But it was in the de~athlon that&#13;
Bob made his mark, as he plac~d second in the AAU&#13;
ten-eventer in 1955, had the eight best score of all&#13;
time and ranked third in the world .&#13;
record books. To&#13;
the following:&#13;
• on the. 'Al.A Di rict 14champianship&#13;
*placed se .. -enth 1n th AJA&#13;
national championship meet.&#13;
•bad an all-Amer ca runner--&#13;
Parkside's !lrst--ln Rae fre -&#13;
man Rudy Alvarez.&#13;
*had another near-all-America&#13;
in barefoot freshman Lucian Rosa ,&#13;
who also won the Platteville Inv -&#13;
tational and Dlstr ct 14 uu .&#13;
*bad the .·ALA District 14 coac&#13;
of the year in Bo La&#13;
had the Dtstr ct 14 Runner-Up&#13;
Team of !he year.&#13;
*Had lettermen, gtnng oe h d&#13;
coach Vi.c Godfrey a lld bas for&#13;
improvement ln 1972.&#13;
Success , to be sure; bu it' all&#13;
relative and Godfrey, bo' tak&#13;
over the cross coun ry chores o&#13;
La ·son can d vo e more tire to&#13;
the fall track program, th&#13;
Rangers lll have to k p ork&#13;
hard.&#13;
But bard work a trait Of&#13;
the 1971 squad, and t ma bav&#13;
taken it farther down the chamto.&#13;
·lnee.&#13;
Recru ting ls go&#13;
Godfrey expect · to fin&#13;
bunch of barrier out&#13;
bere In the fall. R~.uua,,u.l •&#13;
expects to be cont ndlng f r lb•&#13;
District title and aatlonal honor ,&#13;
but wltb tbe addlUon Of th e rto&#13;
b otre Dame In t:a.Uooal to&#13;
the Parksl late, the Ra r '&#13;
compefitioo ww be that much&#13;
tougher.&#13;
1972 CRO S COUNTRY SCHEDULE&#13;
Racin T&#13;
"&#13;
serving the employees and st•H of UW-Parkside&#13;
convenient location&#13;
only six miles from the&#13;
Parkside campus&#13;
· at&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
SAME DAY SER ICE 0 LOA A D A I&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Pall: 6 THE RANGER --&#13;
The oach --- . UW_Parkside was a wtrmer again&#13;
Fencing at ted an 11..9 woo-lost&#13;
in 19'72 as the Rangfeirfsth pinasthe prestigiouS Great&#13;
mark and gained a season Park-&#13;
Lakes meet to close their regular : and&#13;
side defeated BLg Teo schools Ohio State&#13;
:eu:::ta and added other victories over such Iowa state, ChiCago, Milwaukee Tech, Oberlin&#13;
Missouri-KansaS City and Trl-Slate.&#13;
But competition 1nd1vldua1-wise, 1s far trom&#13;
, ohn Tank who won the&#13;
over Both sophomore J ,&#13;
WlSC"mstn closed reu tournament, and senior John&#13;
HanDllk a strong second at the Great Lakes tourney,&#13;
are e~ted to pursue more tournament wtns in&#13;
the coming weeks. And for both Hein and the team,&#13;
nest year premises to be even better J with Hanwit&#13;
the only senior .&#13;
In his time at the University&#13;
of Wlsconsln·Parkside, Loran&#13;
Hein has been called both&#13;
the Lombardi of fencing"&#13;
and another Clark Kent&#13;
Both are likely true In his&#13;
five years at the Kenosha&#13;
school, Hem has built a team&#13;
from scratch that today challenges&#13;
- and often as not,&#13;
defeats - the giants of Midwest&#13;
fencing&#13;
His youthful teams, built&#13;
maInly of Kenosha area student&#13;
wltn no prror fenCing experience. have proved&#13;
....ncommonly succes ful aq;unsl long-established Midwe&#13;
t fenClnq chooL uch as Michigan State, Wiscon&#13;
In Omo State, Notre Dame, Wayne State and o tr ou&#13;
H",,' d sn t look like a coach instead, hiS appearan&#13;
I more thilt of tne m trucror of mathematics&#13;
which he I tall be pectacted, mild-mannered.&#13;
But tll philo ophy I that hiS sport is to be enjoyed&#13;
(tnd he coach In that manner "I'm not coaching&#13;
n t am, he ay "I'm coaching indrvtduats "&#13;
And '0 h IS One of hrs I g71· 72 fencers, John&#13;
H"nl Ilk we on the UMed Stare team that played&#13;
nth World Student Game In Italy during the summ&#13;
r of 1970 Anoth r, Clark Anderson fenced in&#13;
the Milrt,", and Ro 51 International Tournament in&#13;
ew York," 1969 And a third, Keith Herbrechtsm&#13;
ler I todny the 8 1St ant fencing coach at the Li S Military Acnd my and. credits that opportunity&#13;
ro th I on he learned from Hein. who first started&#13;
him on the road to fenCing success and a No. 11&#13;
nauon 1 tOil rank 109 Ie s than two years ago&#13;
A 1959 qr duat8 of Milton (WIS ) College. Loran earned&#13;
hi master at Northea I Missouri State Teachers&#13;
Coli go 10 19"6 after five years as a mathematics intru&#13;
tor t St John', Military Academy in Delafield, W,.&#13;
He I a m moor of the Sigma Phi Zeta education&#13;
IroterMy and the Sigma Delta PSI physical education&#13;
fraternity&#13;
lOft ... H(IN&#13;
PETE SHEMANSKE&#13;
CAPTAIN &amp; MOST VALUABLE&#13;
THE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
STURTEVANT (BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
RACINE&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
WAUWATOSA (EAST)&#13;
RACINE (HORLICK)&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
CHARLES CHRISTENSEN* FR.&#13;
JOHN HANZALlK**** SR.&#13;
DON KOSER* JR.&#13;
ROY MEDINA FR.&#13;
RICK MOFFETT SO.&#13;
KIM NELSON SO.&#13;
HENRY RICHTER FR.&#13;
PETER SHEMANSKE*** JR.&#13;
JOHN TANK** SO.&#13;
BERNIE VASH* SO.&#13;
STEVE VEPRASKAS* FA.&#13;
CAPTAIN - PETER SHEMANSKE&#13;
* LETTERS EARNED&#13;
,&#13;
American&#13;
Motors&#13;
Sigma Phi Zeta education&#13;
D It P , ph ·sical educat ion&#13;
,&#13;
American&#13;
Motors&#13;
- . . t OW-Parkside was a· wtnner again&#13;
Fencmg a ted an 11-9 won-lost&#13;
in 1972 as ~edru:~ :sthe prestigious Great&#13;
mark and ga ~,1,.r season. ParkLakes&#13;
meet to close their rei;...- d&#13;
side defeated Big Ten schools Ohio State an h&#13;
Unn ta and added other victories over sue&#13;
foes ::o Iowa State, Chicago, Milwaukee Tech, Oberlin&#13;
iissouri-Kansas City and Tri-State. fr&#13;
But competition, individual-wise, is far :n&#13;
over Both sophomore John Tank, who ~on e&#13;
· t and seruor John&#13;
wtscoosin closed foil tournamen,&#13;
Hanzallk a strong secood at the Great Lakes tourney,&#13;
are e~ted to pursue more tournament wtns in&#13;
the coming weeks, And for both Hein and the team,&#13;
next year promises to be even better' with Hanzallk&#13;
the only senior.&#13;
PETE SHEMANSKE&#13;
CAPTAIN &amp; MOST VALUABLE&#13;
THE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
CHARLES CHRISTENSEN* FR.&#13;
JOHN HANZALIK**** SR .&#13;
DON KOSER * JR .&#13;
ROY MEDINA FR .&#13;
RICK MOFFETT SO.&#13;
KIM NELSON SO.&#13;
HENRY RICHTER FR .&#13;
PETER SHEMANSKE*** JR.&#13;
JOHN TANK** SO .&#13;
BERNIE VASH* SO .&#13;
STEVE VEPRASKAS * FR.&#13;
CAPTAIN - PETER SHEMANSKE&#13;
* LETTERS EARNED&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
STURTEVANT(BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
RACINE&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
WAUWATOSA (EAST)&#13;
RACINE (HORLICK)&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
FENCING&#13;
1972·73 SCHEDULE&#13;
-PARTlALDec.&#13;
3&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
illinOis Open&#13;
Notre Dame, Ill-Chteago&#13;
Circle&#13;
Mich. State, UW-Madison&#13;
Detroit, IIliDOfs&#13;
Ohio State, Chicago&#13;
Great Lakes Championship&#13;
Champalgn ,ill.&#13;
Chteago, OJ.&#13;
E. Lansing,Mlch&#13;
Champalgn,ill.&#13;
PARKSlDE&#13;
PARKSlDE&#13;
TOM BOTHE&#13;
Great Lakes Invltalional fencer-s who fln, hed fourth. • I m betund po fOlt W.~ St" end H'e&#13;
Dame included (I-r) Don KO&amp;ef" Pete Sheman • Ben'ue Vash R ff , John Hana"" John Tin" end&#13;
Coach loran Hein. Koser. Tan. Hanzel. aod f hman JeH Dougta will be: com mg in III at c M.dwest&#13;
Fencing CNImpionshlps at 8aute er.... M.eh&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 24&#13;
March 3&#13;
March 10&#13;
GOLF: On the Florida Links 1972 ROSTER&#13;
COACH: STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
Player&#13;
*Bothe, Tom&#13;
Dr iefke, Randy&#13;
Feiner, Tom&#13;
Fox, Dave&#13;
Fox, Don&#13;
***Guttormsen, Leif&#13;
Hjortnes s, Mark&#13;
Nevins, Pete&#13;
Thompson, Dean&#13;
Vakoa, Jim.&#13;
Weyrauch, Dan&#13;
*Willems, Rick&#13;
Class&#13;
So.&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
THE SEASON&#13;
A . spring trip to Florida highlighted&#13;
UW-Parkside golf activity&#13;
in 1972.&#13;
Coached by Steve Stevens, the&#13;
Rangers traveled to Tampa, Fla.,&#13;
for a week over spring break and&#13;
got in a lot of pr;'ctice time on the&#13;
dry links. The team also held an&#13;
intra-squad tournament to determine&#13;
who would start in the opener&#13;
against Lake Forest and Rockford.&#13;
And when the Rangers finally got&#13;
back into the cold North, they found&#13;
the weather just that--coldand wet.&#13;
After a couple days postponement,&#13;
the Lake Forest/Rockford match&#13;
was finally played and the Rangers&#13;
had bagged two wins t~ start ott&#13;
the season on a successtul note.&#13;
Other matches followed with&#13;
Whitewater, Dominican, UW-MUwaukee,&#13;
Milton, Marquette, Northwestern,&#13;
UW_Madlson and other&#13;
NAIA District 14 Schools and the&#13;
Rangers were holding their own,&#13;
with a .500 record at the midway&#13;
point.&#13;
They competed this weekend in&#13;
Hometown (H. 5.)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Racine (Park)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha (TRemper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Racine (Park)&#13;
Jefferson&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
Racine (HorUc.k.)&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
Kenosha (St. Joseph)&#13;
the NAlA District 14 tourney at&#13;
Green Lake.&#13;
Stephens top golfers inCluded&#13;
Tom Feiner J a transfer from the&#13;
University of Houston who led the&#13;
club in the early going; Kenosha&#13;
senior Lei! Guttomrsen, a threeyear&#13;
letterman lor Stephens wbc&#13;
holds the Parks ide record OIlthe&#13;
petrUying Springs course wlth a&#13;
68- and sophomores Jim vskcs&#13;
fr~m Rae tne and Tom Bothe tram&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
JIM VAI(OS&#13;
HOME OF THE BIG MAC&#13;
AND&#13;
DELICIOUS FRENCH FRIES&#13;
52nd St. '" 40th Avenue&#13;
Sheriden Road '" 818t Street&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Dec. 3&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 24&#13;
March 3&#13;
March 10&#13;
FENCING&#13;
1972- 73 SCHEDULE&#13;
-PARTIALIllinois&#13;
Open&#13;
Notre Dame, Ill-Chicago&#13;
Circle&#13;
Mich. State, UW-Madlson&#13;
Detroit, Illinois&#13;
Ohio State, Chicago&#13;
Great Lakes Championship&#13;
Champa!gn,lll,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
E, Lansing, 1ich&#13;
Champaign ,Ill.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
GOLF : On the Florida Links&#13;
1972 ROSTER&#13;
COACH: STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
Player&#13;
*Bothe, Tom&#13;
Driefke, Randy&#13;
Feiner, Tom&#13;
Fox, Dave&#13;
Fox, Don&#13;
***Guttormsen, Leif&#13;
Hjortness, Mark&#13;
Nevins, Pete&#13;
Thompson, Dean&#13;
Vakoa, Jim.&#13;
Weyrauch, Dan&#13;
*Willems, Rick&#13;
Class&#13;
So.&#13;
So,&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr&#13;
Sr,&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Hometown (H. S.)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Racine (Park)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Ken&lt;?sha (TRemper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Racine (Park)&#13;
Jef1er n&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
Racine (Horllck)&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
Kenosha (St. Joseph)&#13;
THE SEASON&#13;
A spring trip to Florida highlighted&#13;
UW-Parkside goll activity&#13;
in 1972.&#13;
Coached by Steve Stevens, the&#13;
Rangers traveled to Tampa, Fla.,&#13;
for a week over spring break and&#13;
got in a lot of prictice time on the&#13;
dry links. The team also held an&#13;
intra-squad tournament to detE,&gt;rmine&#13;
who would start in the opener&#13;
against Lake Forest and Rockford.&#13;
And when the Rangers finally got&#13;
back into the coldNorth, they found&#13;
the weather just that--cold and wet.&#13;
After a couple days postponement,&#13;
the Lake Forest/Rockford match&#13;
was finally played and the Rangers&#13;
had bagged two wins t~ start ott&#13;
the season on a successM note.&#13;
Other matches followed with&#13;
Whitewater, Dominican, UW-Mllwaukee,&#13;
Milton, Marquette, Northwestern,&#13;
UW-Madlson and other&#13;
NAIA District 14 Schools and the&#13;
Rangers were holding their own,&#13;
with a .5oo record at the midway&#13;
point.&#13;
They competed this weekend in&#13;
the NAIA District 14 tourney at&#13;
Green Lake.&#13;
Stephens top golfers includ&#13;
Tom Feiner, a transfer from&#13;
University of Housto ho led th&#13;
club in the early going; K nos&#13;
senior Leif Guttomr en, thr -&#13;
year letterman for Stepb n ho&#13;
holds the Parkside record on th&#13;
Petrifying Springs cours Ith&#13;
68· and sophomores Jim Vako&#13;
fr~m Racine and Tom Both from&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
TOM BOTHE&#13;
HOME OF THE BIG MAC&#13;
AND&#13;
DELICIOUS FRE CH FRIES&#13;
52nd St. 40th Av nu&#13;
Sh rid n Ro d &amp; 81 I Sir&#13;
Page 8&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
BAN&#13;
Program&#13;
Welcome&#13;
Invocation&#13;
h Hanzalik, President,VrJ! Jo n II&#13;
Leonard Bullock, UW-Park~&#13;
Church&#13;
Dinner d Guests _ Thomat&#13;
P&#13;
' of Honore Introduction S ker - Ray Eliot,AJif"&#13;
b Guest pea&#13;
Address y , s most valuablesandSlof captain , , Presentation Alumni Award _ ()flO&#13;
Special Awards - d _ AI De Simonl,Ranger Awar , ~&#13;
A. li-Americ'aAwa.rds - IrvinG&#13;
Outstan dirng Athlete Award _ Ott&#13;
Athletic Di.rec tor 's Award - 11rO~&#13;
CONG&#13;
PARKSI&#13;
E.F.MADRt&#13;
1831~&#13;
KE&#13;
DI~&#13;
BUDWEISEI&#13;
••• !IX: II'" tJt. b MEISl&#13;
p THE RANGER&#13;
Program&#13;
Welcome&#13;
Invocation&#13;
Dinner&#13;
BAN&#13;
- John Hanzalik, President V , a,51&#13;
Leonard Bullock, UW-Park~&#13;
Church&#13;
Introduction of Honored Guests - Thomae P·&#13;
Address by Guest Speaker - Ray Eliot , A&#13;
Presentation of captains, most valuables ands&#13;
Special Awards - Alumni Award - o,1&#13;
Ranger Award - Al De Simone .&#13;
All-America Awards - Irvin o&#13;
Outstanding Athlete Award _&#13;
Athletic Director's Award - Tho&#13;
CONG&#13;
PARKSID&#13;
E.F. -MAD&#13;
1831&#13;
KE&#13;
DI&#13;
BUDWEISE&#13;
MEIS&#13;
ClUET&#13;
rsity Club&#13;
ude trackman and lay minister in the Baptist&#13;
8 P. Rosandich, Athletic Director&#13;
isociate Athletic Director, University of Illinois&#13;
d senior awards. by coaches&#13;
lario Madrigrano, President, Nat!. Varsity Club&#13;
ie, Executive Director, Rarkside 200&#13;
G.Wyllie&#13;
Otto F. Bayer&#13;
ThomasP. Rosandich&#13;
~ULATIONS&#13;
ATHLETES&#13;
~IGRANOI INC.&#13;
55th street&#13;
~NOSHA&#13;
ISTRIBUTORS OF&#13;
BUDWEISER&#13;
MICHELOB&#13;
:R MALTLIQUOR&#13;
~TERBRAU BEERS&#13;
THE RA GER&#13;
\&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
UET&#13;
sity Club&#13;
ide trackman and lay minister in the Baptist&#13;
P. Rosandich, Athletic Director&#13;
sociate Athletic Director, University of Illino i s&#13;
senior awards by coaches&#13;
rio Madrigrano, President, Natl. Varsity Club&#13;
e, Executive Director, Parkside 200&#13;
. Wyllie&#13;
Otto F. Bayer&#13;
homas P. Rosandich&#13;
..&#13;
JULATIONS&#13;
E ATHLETES&#13;
IGRANO, INC.&#13;
55th street&#13;
NOSHA&#13;
STRIBUTORS OF&#13;
BUDWEISER&#13;
MICHELOB&#13;
R MALT LIQUOR&#13;
TER BRAU BEERS&#13;
'&#13;
THE R GER&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Tics: QUALITY 10&#13;
'!be UW_Parkslde gymnastics&#13;
team, 1IDdl!r ttrst-year ccecbDave&#13;
DoaI H..,. lacked depth but not&#13;
mach else as three Rangers dtaqulIfted&#13;
lor tile oaUooaIs.&#13;
8eIllOr Warren McGUUvray t the&#13;
moM n..tuable IJ-moast, placed&#13;
elebt III lbo an-around In the NAtA&#13;
.tiODIl meet .t Eastern. nnoots.&#13;
MeGtlUYr&amp;Y was Parkside's top&#13;
performer throucboot the season&#13;
UllI bad t-.led 45 points In the&#13;
an-aroomd·&#13;
Two lrHhmeD belped the Park-&#13;
_ide cause • lot. Kerln O'Nell,&#13;
.I""ted captain of the squad, posted&#13;
qua.lltyme scores In the rlogS to&#13;
make it to the NAlA and then just&#13;
ml'- C"lt~ Into the finals.&#13;
K rJ") Pfe1ter,ILteO'NeUaTremper&#13;
prewc:t. jOined the team at mJd-_ bot still posted three&#13;
'.0 or _er quahfYlDg marks aDd&#13;
mack&gt; it to Charleston, where he&#13;
flDabed 1'7Ih In the large field.&#13;
• LETTERS EARNED&#13;
BURBANK, CAL,&#13;
KENOSHA (TREt~PER)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
SR. WARREN McGILLIVRAY&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR .&#13;
most valuable&#13;
.... in of "- Po...... Gym Mtrics tum. competes on th. Rill&#13;
1972· 73&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
It's the real thing. CQ~e. SCHEDULE&#13;
Nov. 24, Midwest Open;&#13;
Dec. 1, Chicago, PARKSIDE&#13;
Dec. 8, UW-Stout Menomonie&#13;
Dec. 15, UW-Ea~Claire PARKSIDE&#13;
'&#13;
Jan. 20, UW-Madison, Madison,&#13;
Jan. 27,UW- Whitewater, UWPlatteville,&#13;
PARKSIDE,&#13;
Feb. 3, UW-Oshkosh, St. Cloud&#13;
State, Oshkosh,&#13;
Feb. 9, Western Illinois, Macomb,&#13;
ru.&#13;
Feb. 10, Eastern Ill., Charleston,&#13;
01.&#13;
Feb. 17, Triton Invitational, River&#13;
Grove, m,&#13;
Feb. 23, Mankato State Mankato&#13;
Minn. "&#13;
March 2, Triton, PARKSlDE,&#13;
March 23-24, NAIA Championships.&#13;
i!I·!illl!IIIIIIIIIIIII·III·IIIII!I!IIIIIIIIII!!·!1111IIIIII!IIIII!I!IIIIIIIII!II!IIII.II&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
ICS: QUALITY&#13;
FR,&#13;
LETTERS EAR ED&#13;
BURBA K, CAL,&#13;
E IOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
E OSHA (TRE PER)&#13;
It's the real thing. CQ_tce.&#13;
WARREN McGILLIVRA Y&#13;
most valuable&#13;
1972 - 73&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Nov. 24, Midwest Open·&#13;
Dec. 1, Chicago, PARKSIDE&#13;
Dec. 8, UW-Stout, Menomonie,&#13;
Dec. 15, UW-Eau Claire PARKSIDE&#13;
'&#13;
Jan. 20, UW-Madison, Madison,&#13;
Jan. 27,UW- Whitewater, uwPlatteville,&#13;
PARKSIDE,&#13;
Feb. 3 , UW-Oshkosh, St. Cloud&#13;
State, Oshkosh,&#13;
Feb. 9, Western Illinois, Macomb,&#13;
Ill.&#13;
Feb. 10, Eastern Ill Ch ., arleston,&#13;
Ill.&#13;
Feb. 17 , Triton Invitational River&#13;
Grove, Ill. '&#13;
Feb. 2 3, Mankato State Mankato&#13;
Minn. ' '&#13;
March 2, Triton PARKSIDE&#13;
M ' • arch 23-24, NAIA Championships.&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
..&#13;
bright note in 1971 even though ad started with a 2-1 triumph • over UW .. the Rangers suffered a tough loss And Mad!.son.&#13;
in their last game of the year, I-Ion they tied UW-Green Bay&#13;
But the Rangers also finished the Phoenix field in a&#13;
6-6-1 for the year and counted rough-and_tOUgh game that served&#13;
among their victories decisions :~ a h~relUde to the NAJA play_&#13;
over UW-Platteville, Ohio State InWU:h closed out the season,&#13;
Notre Dame and Wisconsin and ~ lt t one--and in some ways&#13;
tie with OW -Green Bay 'I was anti-cllmatic atter Park-&#13;
They played eventual• NAIAna- U8Wde-'sPladtrtam attc overtime win over&#13;
tional champion Quincy to a 2-2 off dev~e in the first playdeadlock&#13;
through two periods be- Ran:"un 3"0 reen Bay upended the&#13;
fore faltering a Iostn. g .~-. 5 • in. flght.flIIed ga by a re-, to move to the N me&#13;
spectable 4-2 count in the First Joe 0 AlAAreapJayotfs.&#13;
Okt be t T rr again was an all-Mid. a rfes ournament - west pi k d They came back the day after with Mcil&lt;an aJlso was co--captain&#13;
e enretta and most&#13;
that loss to Quincy and white_ ValUable. Freshmen Rick Lechusz&#13;
washed Ohio State of the Big Ten and R,'ck KlI f M&#13;
' ps 0 tlwaukee also 2-0, to preserve the dominance were topcontrtbutors to the Ran r&#13;
over Big Ten schools Which they attack and herald a bright tu~e&#13;
for Parkstde soccer.&#13;
Name&#13;
*Andacht, Chris&#13;
"Bever-Idge, Doug&#13;
"Br ieske, Elliott&#13;
*Hopkins, Matt&#13;
*Jenrette, Mike&#13;
1971 Roster&#13;
Pos, Class Hometown (H. S.)&#13;
LW Sr. Franklin&#13;
B So.&#13;
LFB Fr. Caledonia (Rac. Luth.)&#13;
RW FR. Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
RI Jr. Poo.Uac, Mich.&#13;
(Taipei American)&#13;
Cudahy&#13;
Milwaukee (BoysJTech)&#13;
Milwaukee (Don Bosco)&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
Marshtield&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
(LIverpool. EnglancO&#13;
Bangkok, Thailand&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha. (Bradford)&#13;
*Kiefer, Wolf Dieter&#13;
"Ktlps , Rick&#13;
*Lechusz, Rick&#13;
"Levonowich, Pete&#13;
***MarkovisJ Stan&#13;
***Martinson, Tim&#13;
***Nassauer, Kurt&#13;
**Orr, Joe&#13;
CFB Jr.&#13;
LW Fr.&#13;
CF Fr.&#13;
F Sr.&#13;
LHB -s«.&#13;
RFB Jr.&#13;
RW Jr.&#13;
RHB So.&#13;
*Phanturat, Ray&#13;
*Schneider J Dietmar&#13;
***Thomsen, Tom&#13;
*Van Tine, Ed&#13;
"Weyrauch, Paul&#13;
*denotes letters earned&#13;
LI&#13;
RFB&#13;
o&#13;
RW&#13;
G&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Jr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Jr.&#13;
GOAL FOR PARKSIDE I I I I&#13;
i JOE ORR&#13;
Co-eaptain and most valuable, Joe&#13;
Orr was named to the All-Midwest&#13;
team for the second straight year_&#13;
1'8 II&#13;
LECHUSZ WITH THE BALL&#13;
The Rangers effort againsl 8\fenlual natMK\81c~mp'(ln Quincy In I Ol.tobeirl&#13;
have been one of their flnesl performance", of the year Here lop fr hm8n R Lechuu 'NOt.. I IM~"&#13;
while co-ceptem Mike Jenrette moves up to give. I IInOe QuIncy won the game .2 aflet' II" ng • qu 2.()&#13;
lead, bUl tbe Rang8f"6 lied It up t 2.. 11and ga'lftl their oppotl«lt • bll of • -elr The Reno-' I Otuo St I&#13;
2.() In the consolation game of the toumey&#13;
Geza Mart.lDy. appointed bead soccer coach at&#13;
the Unrverslty of WISCOOSin-Parkstde in the ta.lJ&#13;
ot 19'71, brought with him a wide ra.nee 01 t:eaehLnc&#13;
and coaching experieoce 10 both men's andwomen's&#13;
sports and phys1eal ..,tin".&#13;
Martiny was a prote!ilSOTof blolog1ca.l sc eoce,&#13;
pbysiCal etlJcaUOD and ~th at St. Fl"'aDCtsxavier&#13;
University in Nova Scot1a I..Dd at the Call ge of&#13;
the Holy Name in 0I.kland, Call1., before COD1ln1'&#13;
to Parkslde.&#13;
With extensive, albeU uDOftlcial, coach.1nC of&#13;
gymnastiCS. soccer I teDC1nC. aterpolo and otber&#13;
aquatic sports to his credit, th1s D-m.nastlC5&#13;
aquattc spons to his credit, th1s versatUe man&#13;
bas estabhs.hed women's and rtrl!:' CYmIlUUC$&#13;
classes 1n Racine.&#13;
Im~1&#13;
PARKSIDE Oct 6&#13;
I...ake Forest, W.&#13;
Locl&lt;porl. Ill.&#13;
P mE&#13;
Madl_&#13;
r t&#13;
Toumam t&#13;
W-Pla vIII&#13;
Marqu tfe •&#13;
- Gr !lay&#13;
'AlA District 14&#13;
Sept. 9.&#13;
Sept. 16&#13;
Sept. 20&#13;
Sept. 23&#13;
Sept. 30&#13;
DominlCaD&#13;
LAke Forest&#13;
Lewis CoHere&#13;
S. D1. Edwardsville&#13;
0'\\' -MadisoD&#13;
UW-PARK IDE PEOPLE GET&#13;
RED CARPET TREATl\IE T&#13;
AT&#13;
2704 Lot"rop A ..... Ilocine. Wisconsin&#13;
(Of course, so does everyone else!)&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
SOCCER: SOiiie Big Wins Parkside soccer ended on a&#13;
bright note in 1971, even though&#13;
the Rangers sufft!red a tough loss&#13;
in their last game of the year.&#13;
had started With a 2-1 triumph&#13;
But the Rangers also finished&#13;
6-6-1 for the year and counted&#13;
among their victories decisions&#13;
over OW-Platteville, Ohio State,&#13;
Notre Dame and Wisconsin and a&#13;
tie with UW-Green Bay.&#13;
They played eventual NAIA national&#13;
champion Quincy to a 2-2&#13;
deadlock through two periods before&#13;
faltering a losing by a respec&#13;
table 4-2 count in the First&#13;
Oktoberfest Tournament.&#13;
They came back the day after&#13;
that loss to Quincy and whitewashed&#13;
Ohio State of the Big Ten,&#13;
2-0, to preserve the dominance&#13;
over Big Ten schools which they&#13;
over OW-Madison.&#13;
And they tied UW-Green Bay&#13;
1-1 on the Phoenix field ln a&#13;
rough-and-tough game that s rved&#13;
as a prelude to the NAIA playoff&#13;
which closed out the season.&#13;
In that one--anct in some ways&#13;
it was anti-climatic after Parkside's&#13;
dramatic overtime wtnover&#13;
OW-Platteville in the first playoff&#13;
round--Green Bay upended the&#13;
Rangers 3-0 in a fight-filled game&#13;
to move to the NAIAAreaplayotts.&#13;
Joe Orr again was an all- Udwest&#13;
pick and also was co-captain&#13;
with Mike Jenrette and most&#13;
valuable. Freshmen Rick Lechusz&#13;
and Rick Kilps of Milwaukee also&#13;
were top contributors to the Ranger&#13;
attack and herald a bright future&#13;
for Parkside soccer.&#13;
1971 Roster&#13;
Name Pos. Class Hometown (H. S.) *Andacht, Chris LW Sr. Franklin *Beveridge, Doug B So.&#13;
*Brieske, Elliott LFB Fr. Caledonia (Rae. Luth.) *Hopkins, Matt RW FR. Kenosha (Tremper) *Jenrette, Mike RI Jr. Pontiac, Mich.&#13;
(Taipei American)&#13;
*Kiefer, Wolf Dieter CFB Jr. Cudahy&#13;
*Kilps, Rick LW Fr. Milwaukee (Boys'Tech)&#13;
*Lechusz, Rick CF Fr. Milwaukee (Don Bosco)&#13;
*Levonowich, Pete F Sr. Kenosha ***Markovis, Stan LHB · Jr. Racine ***Martinson, Tim RFB Jr. Marshfield&#13;
***Nassauer, Kurt RW Jr. Kenosha (Tremper}&#13;
**Orr, Joe RHB So. Milwaukee&#13;
{Liverpool. England)&#13;
*Phanturat, Ray LI Fr. BangkOk, Thailand&#13;
*Schneider, Dietmar RFB Fr. Racine&#13;
***Thomsen, Tom G Jr. Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
*Van Tine, Ed RW Sr. Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
*Weyrauch, Paul G Jr. Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
*denotes letters earned&#13;
Gez.a&#13;
the Un&#13;
LECHUSZ&#13;
UVl-PARK IDE PE&#13;
RED RPE TR&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
JOE ORR&#13;
Co-captain and most valuab~e , Jo~&#13;
Orr was named to the AII-Midwes&#13;
team for the second straight year.&#13;
2704 lafltrop AY .• Rocin~, Wisconsin&#13;
(Of cour e. o do&#13;
1M be, federal Oepodl I , ,..nee Corpo,ot-&#13;
11&#13;
Jr&#13;
Jr&#13;
Jr&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
Jr&#13;
RECKA&#13;
A _ and geoera1lY tnexper-&#13;
IOD&lt;ed UW_Parkslde tennis team&#13;
cIId .-tIy _I lbat kind 01team&#13;
..-IIy-'.&#13;
It played """,edIclllb1y and lor&#13;
most coachf's, such play might&#13;
be- f'ooacb to drive them up the&#13;
pI"Oftrbtal nll. but cceen Diek&#13;
F recka ba.s patience and foresight.&#13;
He' Il:DOWs the CTouP or players&#13;
be bas this yeaT could be pretty&#13;
cood nut lime around and anY&#13;
10&amp;_ th15 feu mIgIlt ~sl pro-&#13;
TIde tbt' ruel for next year's nre&#13;
ta tile form ofnluableexperience.&#13;
Keaosba sopbOmore Mike5a.fagO&#13;
p1a ed • o. 1 ~hinCles for Parkatdt&#13;
this yeer and had 8 .500&#13;
_rk bead~ into tbe balrway&#13;
polDt of lbe on. Backing him&#13;
reSkk&#13;
re SkiP Jone • a freshman nom&#13;
"111. Park lU., who bad some&#13;
pr 1 ltIg!l schOOl creoentJala&#13;
and. pped In at the No. 2&#13;
a.taeo and Jones also teamed&#13;
t 1 doublE'S and proved an&#13;
adept e blDatton. KenOsha sophre&#13;
DaD Ileczkow. kl played&#13;
ec of the seasoo at No. 3&#13;
Rae tor Da..-eHerchen,&#13;
Mlea:kO"..ul a relurnUli let-&#13;
• was at No.4 and Kenosha&#13;
r DeMls Halverson was in&#13;
at 0.5.&#13;
Artotber ho saw a lot of acuao&#13;
Radue ).mtor Todd Nel-&#13;
SOD. both at . '0. 6 sLagles andat&#13;
a _I. pol.&#13;
The _rs dumped Dominican&#13;
by a Inpslded 13-1 count In an&#13;
.rl1 aDd lost close eDc&#13;
r to. ArqUette and UWU&#13;
~. Tbey met U\\' -Green&#13;
Bay today In C...., Bay and wUl&#13;
playa. !lUlD T\lesda,y and In the&#13;
"AlA D(5tTlCt at \\'b.itewaler next&#13;
...s.&#13;
DENNIS HALVERSON&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
MIKE SAFAGO&#13;
:!iii!!:t::;~t:~::::;~:::~::~~:;:::~~:l;;~:::~::::;~~m~~~~:~:!::::;::~~;~:~:::~;;!:::::!~:?cation of the National Varsity Club for the Office of Athletics. :}i&#13;
:=::;= Pictured on the cover: AIda Madrlgrano, Kenosha resident :::::::&#13;
:~:~a:~nd Racine businessman, donated two large, scoreboards to :;:;:;:&#13;
':~:~th::e new physical education and athletics building at Parksfde. ;~:~:~&#13;
{~~For this continued service to Parkstde and devotion to athletics ~t~&#13;
;::::: be is honored as °Ranger of the Year" with the Ranger W;:::::&#13;
::;:;:he Is honored as uRanger of the Year" with the Ranger Award.::;:;:;&#13;
::( Dick Eljtson sits on Parkstde'e Athletic Board and the execu- (ij~&#13;
:;:;l:i:ve bOard of Parkside 200. He has worked during Parkside's. ::::::&#13;
=;:;:;shorl history at building up the university in the community. A::;=;= ~:~:li:etterman in baseball at Wisconsin during his undergraduate {;~&#13;
::;:;: days, he will be presented the Alumnus Award. ;;;;;;: J~.Three men gained all-America honors at Parkside this yeaI&lt;t~;&#13;
:::;:C::oleman sophomore Ken Martin repeated his high national :::::;&#13;
;::::f;inish in wrestling as he placed third in the NAIA meet and ;:::;: ~jgtained national recognition, and accompanying all-A merica status, ~tj&#13;
;:;:::for the second straight year. Rudy Alvarez, freshman from ::::;::&#13;
::::::RacLne Horlick high school, placed 15th in the NAAlA cross ::;:::;&#13;
:~:~c:o~untry meet to pace the Rangers' seventh place finish and :~;~:~:&#13;
{~:~become the first Parkside cross cOWltry all-America in history. {:~&#13;
~:~;~:And Kenosha. senior Mike De Witt, a Trempetr product, }~:&#13;
;:::::claimed national honors at the NAJA indoor track championships:;::;:&#13;
-;{ with a third place finish in the two mile walk. Parkslde's first::::::: :r; track all-America, be's dipped under the Olympic trial quali- }~:~ ::? tying standard and will travel to Eugene, Ore., next month'~{:&#13;
::;:::for the U.s. Olympic Trials. :::;:; ~~Jothn Hanzalik, a four-time letterman in fencing after gradua- ~t~&#13;
::::;: tiOD from Tremper, has had a varied and successful career at:::;:;. :~rParkside. He's won the Great Lakes epee crown--one of the::::::: ~:t:most prestigious of collegiate fencing titles--and has competed~:~:~:~&#13;
~:\ in the World stude.nt Games in Italy. A gentleman, a scholar, ~:}&#13;
::::;: an athlete. Hanzalik receives the Athletic Director's Award::::::&#13;
;:::::as the outstanding student-athlete. :::::: ~ISm~all In stature but big of heart, this freshman fr.om Kandy,~~t.&#13;
:::::;Ceylon, captured the hearts of track fans at Parkside this year. :;:::::&#13;
:~\ He was the NAJA District 14 cross country champ and broket~:~&#13;
:{~nearly every P~kside distance record this season in track. ::::::&#13;
::::::He Will compete m Munich in the late summer in the 10 000 meter :;::::&#13;
:::::: R.!ldmarathon races in the greatest athletic spectacle' of all the :::::;&#13;
:;-:':·:0: 1ympl.c, Games. An athlete for all seasons, Lucian Ros'a is::.:.:.::.&#13;
:.:;-::P:.arkside s Athlete of the Year. :%::::::&#13;
HOLIDAY INN OF KENOSHA&#13;
WELCOMES&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
VIKING LOUNGEOON&#13;
-1 A.M.&#13;
VIKING RESTAURANT&#13;
6:30 A.M. - 10:30 P.M.&#13;
·MARINA ROOM - LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
·111 DELUXE SLEEPING ROOMS&#13;
·PooL&#13;
·BANQUET FACILITIES FOR 200-4()()&#13;
kenosha&#13;
5125 6th AVENUE 658-3281&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
MIKE SAFAGO&#13;
._._. _.:.:.:~.--·.·.·.·.·_·_·_·_._._·_._'._·_=_=·:'.:'.·'.-.-'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'.·:·:·:·:·:·=·:·=·=·=·:·:··-:-:-:-·-·-·.·-·-·-·-·:·:-;-;-;-:,:-:-:-:•:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::&#13;
;:;:;: This is the first edition of THE RANGER, the official publi - ·:::::&#13;
(if cation of the National Varsity Club for the Office of Athletics.\:(&#13;
;:;::: Pictured on the cover: Aldo Madrigrano, Kenosha resident:::::::&#13;
\:) and Racine businessman, donated two large, scoreboards to{(:!&#13;
:):):. the n w physical education and athletics building at Parkside. ({:&#13;
:-:-:: For this continued service to Parkside and devotion to athletics::::::&#13;
)(jhe ts honored as "Ranger of the Year" with the Ra nger W }((&#13;
:it be Is honored as "Ranger of the Year" with the Ranger A ward . t:::&#13;
;:;:;: Dick Ellison sits on Parkside's Athletic Board and the execu- ::;:;:;&#13;
~:\:). uve board of Parkside 200. He bas worked during Parkside's '({:&#13;
·f i short history at building up the university in the community. A\:(&#13;
:;:;:;letterman in baseball at Wisconsin during his undergraduate=:::::&#13;
(/: d.:lys, he will be presented the Alumnus Award. !{:: ·:t Three men gained all-America honors at Parkside this year :::=;:;&#13;
:;:;:;: Coleman sophomore Ken Martin repeated his high national:;:;:;&#13;
;::::: f111lsh ln wrestling as he placed third in the NAIA meet and ::=::: i}i gained national recognition, and accompanying all-America status,{}&#13;
:::::: for the second straight year. Rudy Alvarez, freshman from=:::=:&#13;
-:;:;: Racine Horlick high school, placed 15th in the NAAIA cross?::: :-.•.• ....&#13;
:;:::;. country meet to pace the Rangers' seventh place finish and -:::::: t(:i become the first Parkside cross country all-America in history. /) if: And Kenosha senior Mike De Witt, a Trempetr product,}(: ::t claimed national honors at the NAIA indoor track championships:=:=::&#13;
:;:;:; with a third place finish in the two mile walk. Parkside's firsf::::: , :ir track all-America, he's dipped under the Olympic trial quali-(i&#13;
·:::=:- tying standard and will travel to Eugene, Ore., next month:::=::&#13;
:\: for the U.S. Olympic Trials. :=:::: iJi John Hanzalik, a four-time letterman 1n fencing after gradua- f)&#13;
-:;:;: tlon from Tremper , has had a varied and successful career at::::=: t: Parkside. He's won the Great Lakes epee crown--one of the\:::&#13;
f:). most prestigious of collegiate fencing titles--and has competed\(:! ti:( in the World student Games in Italy. A gentleman, a scholar,\(:&#13;
:;:;:; an athlete, Hanzalik receives the Athletic Director's Award:=::;:&#13;
;:;:;: as the outstanding student-athlete. ·:·:-: fij Small in stature but big of heart, this freshman trom Kandy)}&#13;
::=::: Ceylon, captured the hearts of track fans at Parkside this year.=:=:::: ;t_ He was the NAIA District 14 cross country champ and broke){&#13;
:;:::; nearly every Parkside distance record this season in track. :;:;:; ):t He will compete in Munich in the late summer in the 10,000 meter)(:&#13;
:t) ~d m~thon races in the greatest athletic spectacle of all, the{:(&#13;
::::;: Olympic Games. An athlete for all seasons , Lucian Rosa i s :-::::&#13;
;:;::: Parkside's Athlete of the Year . :::::: : . 0&#13;
VIKING LOUNGE •&#13;
'001 - 1 A. t.&#13;
HOLIDAY INN OF KENOSHA&#13;
WELCOMES&#13;
OW-PARKSIDE&#13;
VIKING RESTAURANT&#13;
6:30 A.M. - 10:30 P.M.&#13;
•MARL'VA ROOM - LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
•in DELU XE SLEEPING ROOMS&#13;
•POOL&#13;
•BA.'VQ UET FACILITIES FOR 200-400&#13;
kenosha&#13;
5125 6th A VENUE 658-3281&#13;
TRACK: "Big Five" PaceAttack"&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Mike De Witt, 8 senior from Kenosha, won&#13;
walk titles throughout the Midwest and&#13;
placed third in the NAIA indoor track championships&#13;
to gain All-America honorsthe&#13;
first Ranger trackman ever to do so.&#13;
He'll participate in the Olympic trials at&#13;
Eugene, Ore., in late June.&#13;
Dennis Biel of Wausau was another veraatil.&#13;
runner for Coach Bob Lawson. The&#13;
lanky freshman, who clocked a 4: 16 mile&#13;
as 8 senior at Wausau East, won events&#13;
ranging from the 440 yard dash t~rough&#13;
the mile and ran on every middle-dlstance&#13;
or distance relay through the course of&#13;
the 8888on.&#13;
Five men dominated the track walk.&#13;
scene at UW-Parkstde this year. Dermts Btel, a treshmau whO&#13;
Lucian Rosa, the tresbmantrom hadn't n1D compettuvely lD two&#13;
Ceylon who also was named years, followed up 011. tlDe crou&#13;
Athlete of the Year, ran every- country season and became a man&#13;
thing trom 880 yards to the mara- for aU relays.&#13;
than and set records at nearly And Steve £rspamer, wbo woo&#13;
all of them. a state 100 yard d:Lsh HUe _hUe&#13;
Keith Merritt, the team's iron at Hurley, proved tba.t be stm&#13;
Man, holds school marks in the Utes the century in collep u&#13;
440 hurdles, the triple jump and be scored blc 00 the Ra.o.rers'&#13;
the pole vault and rates as one southern trip and CODtlDued his&#13;
of the most versatile trackmen nne sprlnt.J.oc OIl the rela;p c:1raround,&#13;
cult in the north.&#13;
Mike De Witt became the Ran- In a nutshell. tboae tlve m D&#13;
gers' first all-America during the were the basis CJ1 UW-Parll:slde&#13;
indoor season with a third In the Track in Unto But there ere&#13;
NAJA championships. He coattn- certalnly others wbose cootribu·&#13;
ued his tOUgh walking outdoors tlons were no less and .. bose de41-&#13;
as he qualified for next month's calion was J,1st as creat &amp;Dd.wb.o&#13;
Olympic trials in the 20-1c.Uometer Victories came stead1ly too.&#13;
The 1972 TraCk Squad&#13;
Class&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Name&#13;
ALVAREZ,Rudy&#13;
BtEL, Dennis&#13;
BRlESKE, zniou&#13;
*BULLOCK, Leonard&#13;
CARLSON, Bill&#13;
***08 WITT, Mike&#13;
ERSPAMER, Steve&#13;
*LANCE, Gary&#13;
**MARTlNSON, Tim&#13;
*Mc FADDEN, Jim&#13;
*MERRlTT, Keith&#13;
NEWTON, Randy&#13;
*PATTEN, John&#13;
ROSA, Lucian&#13;
WHITMORE, Kim&#13;
-Denotes letters earned&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Jr.&#13;
So.&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr,&#13;
Hometown(H. 5,)&#13;
Radne (Horlick)&#13;
Wausau (Eul)&#13;
Caledonla(RacIDeL.)&#13;
El Paso, Teas&#13;
(AustlD)&#13;
Rh10elander&#13;
Kenosba(Tremper)&#13;
Hurll!J&#13;
WllIenord&#13;
arshfleld&#13;
Waterford&#13;
Kenosha(Tremper)&#13;
South M Uft.Ukee&#13;
Feltelo, CaUtornta&#13;
(SOn LorenzoValll!J)&#13;
Kandy, CeylOc&#13;
Yostnee&#13;
Sopt .....iiiOl. KMth Merrit1 of K~ ......&#13;
tphe""',".on MaIn of the "-"D* '-'" _ M di.- hi. ~1Ii1y nu".....oue ,,"'".&#13;
competing in _ men,. _ .~ ....... In&#13;
• m4let. He Nt ac:hooI reoorcte ,n the t ..~ p" jump and po" veu" ndoore, and on&#13;
the ~. tr;p to Aril. ..... O¥ef ~lng&#13;
brNk. .... anottter ~" the 4AO-ywd intermeetiel&#13;
h,ur-d ...-. -----...,&#13;
EOMU 0 /!a 1naedtia&#13;
TRAVEL AOENCY VICTOR E. GODFREY, ASST. COACH .q •&#13;
Fr,&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Vic Godfrey is ending hiS&#13;
third season With the Parkside&#13;
track team He took&#13;
over the reins as head cross&#13;
counlry coach in 1970 ,n the&#13;
absence of Bob Lawson and&#13;
guided lhe Rangers to a 4-1&#13;
dual mark a second in the&#13;
USTFF Mid-Amencan Meet&#13;
and a first in the AlA&#13;
District 14 1nvitationsl&#13;
He'll take over as cross country coach next fall as Lawson devotes time&#13;
to the fall track program&#13;
He first came to Parks ide in the fall of 1969 after successful lrack coaching&#13;
tours at Watertown, S.D, and Madison. Minn., hIgh schools He IS also&#13;
assi.stant eros s country coach and coordinator of Intramurals and club&#13;
sports at Parkside. .&#13;
Vic coached two years in Indonesia while in the Peace Corps. He 1$ 8 mem·&#13;
ber of the Wisconsin Track Coaches and Cross Counlry Coaches 8SSOClat&#13;
ions and Blue KeY'i' ~t~h~e:..:n~a~~t~hi~o0:.::::.;nn::.a:o~;1;;;,;ra:.ry:.:..;f,;.r;;;a,;.te:.r.;n';",;.tY;" 1&#13;
I ve the Rangers some much-.ndeeodoersd Steve Erspame,. of Hur ey ga h 60 in almost every meet In .'&#13;
sprint strength. He scored in tell seemed to blossom as he ZIPbut&#13;
once out from under cover r~ yh Relays for runner-up honors.&#13;
ped a windy 9.6 in the Arkansas ec&#13;
BEST WISHES&#13;
FROM&#13;
~&#13;
PEPSI&#13;
~&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
RACINE&#13;
COME IN AND LET&#13;
US CHANGE YOUR&#13;
TIME ZONE'&#13;
WE FEATURE NEW&#13;
LOW EUROPEAN&#13;
&amp;&#13;
DOMESTIC YOUTH&#13;
FARES&#13;
EUROPEAN YOUTH&#13;
FARES&#13;
INCLUDING TAX&#13;
CHICAGO TO H. to&#13;
A'" T ADAM IIaoo .18 00&#13;
COPI HAC N 10'00 ."00&#13;
FR" ... !'.. VAT 10.00 •.,00&#13;
LONOQ III 00 UaOO&#13;
~A~ll 11800 • .00&#13;
•• 00 .. 00&#13;
ZURICH til 00 •• 00&#13;
HIGH 0"" [" T80UNO&#13;
JYfW to .lvl., fa&#13;
HIGH (" 0 W TBOU""'O&#13;
Jy'y 20 Auvu.l at&#13;
If SEA 0"" INVOL.V 0&#13;
PL." fAAt&#13;
CITI MAY BE PlIT BUT MV 'T&#13;
8 "'''R CARMltR&#13;
chlc_gOIO&#13;
MI,AMI FT l.AUO£AOAU: It?&#13;
TAM~"JO"LANOO 151&#13;
LOS AHOUES/SAN FRANCISCO ... 2:&#13;
211152. SlnII·K....&#13;
867-5171&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
. THE RA 'GER I TRACK: ''Big Five'' Pace Attack&#13;
Mike De Witt, a senior from Kenosha, won&#13;
walk titles throughout the Midwest and&#13;
placed third in the NAIA indoor track championships&#13;
to gain All-America honorsthe&#13;
first Ranger trackman ever to do so.&#13;
He'll participate in the Olympic trials at&#13;
Eugene, Ore., in late June.&#13;
Dennis Biel of Wausau was another versatile&#13;
runner for Coach Bob Lawson. The&#13;
lanky freshman, who clocked a 4:16 mile&#13;
as a senior at Wausau East, won events&#13;
ranging from th~ 440 yard ~ash t~rough&#13;
the mile and ran on every m1ddle-d1stance&#13;
or distance relay through the course of&#13;
the season.&#13;
Five men dominated the track&#13;
scene at UW-Pa.rkslde this year.&#13;
Lucian Rosa, the tresbmantrom&#13;
Ceylon who also was named&#13;
Athlete of the Year, n.n everything&#13;
from 880 yards to the rnan.thon&#13;
and set records at nearly&#13;
all of them.&#13;
Keith Merritt, the team's lTOn&#13;
Man, holds school marks in th&#13;
440 hurdles, the triple jump and&#13;
the pole vault and rates a one&#13;
of the most versatile traclcmen&#13;
around.&#13;
Mike De Witt became the Rangers•&#13;
first all-America during th er&#13;
indoor season with a third in the Trac&#13;
NAIA championships. He continued&#13;
his tough walking outdoor&#13;
as he qualilied for next month'&#13;
Olympic trials in the 20-kllometer&#13;
cat&#13;
The 1972 Track Squad&#13;
Name&#13;
ALVAREZ, Rudy&#13;
BIEL, Dennis&#13;
BRIF.SKE, Elliott&#13;
*BULLOCK, Leonard&#13;
CARLSON, Bill&#13;
***De WITT, Mike&#13;
ERSPAMER, Steve&#13;
*LANCE, Gary&#13;
**MARTTh'SON, Tim&#13;
*Mc FADDEN, Jim&#13;
*MERRITT, Keith&#13;
NEWTON I Randy&#13;
*PATTEN, John&#13;
ROSA , Lucian&#13;
WlilTMORE, Kim&#13;
*Denotes letters earned&#13;
Class&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Jr.&#13;
So.&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr,&#13;
VICTOR E. GODFREY, ASST . COACH&#13;
He'll take over as cross country coach&#13;
to the fall track program.&#13;
' au&#13;
8&#13;
He first came to Parkside in the fall of 1969 aft r ucc&#13;
tours at Watertown, S.D., and Madi on , . inn., high_&#13;
assistant cross country coach and coordinator of mtramur I&#13;
sports at Parkside .&#13;
Vic coached two years in Indonesia whit in th p&#13;
ber of the Wisconsin Track Coache and Cro&#13;
tions and Blue Key, the national honorary fr t&#13;
ot t,m&#13;
c hing&#13;
I lo&#13;
nd club&#13;
oci ·&#13;
WISHES BEST&#13;
FROM&#13;
ome much-needed&#13;
I ve the Rangers s · doors&#13;
Steve Erspamer of Hur ey . ga 60 in almost every meet in . '&#13;
sprint strength . He scored m th e II seemed to blossom as he zipbut&#13;
once out from under cover reaT yh Relays for runner-up honors.&#13;
· h Arkansas ec ped a windy 9 .6 m t e&#13;
PEP.SI&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
,RACINE&#13;
CO A D LET&#13;
US CHA GE YOUR&#13;
Tl E ZO Et&#13;
WE F TURE W&#13;
LOW EUROPEA&#13;
DO STIC YOU T H&#13;
FARES&#13;
UROP AN YOUTH&#13;
F R S&#13;
I CLUDING TAX&#13;
2111 52nd Street - Kenosha&#13;
657-5171&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
MAT MAIDS AND 'FRIENDS&#13;
The UW..p...kside ~ Maida.,who ekl the Rangers al all home and many away meets, pose here with the&#13;
they chMf for _ Front row (k): Mary Fonk, Pat Kekic, Cathy Frederking, Kathy Doherty~, Mal'"YFreder1l.&#13;
lng C.oI e~"ki, Barb Lundskow, Julie Constablie. Back row (I-r): Frank Velsaquez, ~1I1West, Jeff&#13;
..Jenkine. RICk Sc:hortff .. r, Coech Jim Koch, Steve Sulk, Mark Barnhill, Kyle Barnes, Ken Martin.&#13;
Parkstde-s first women's gymnastics&#13;
team completed successfully&#13;
on bOth the regional and&#13;
state levels as all the gymnasts&#13;
qualified for state competition and&#13;
represented Parkside at the State&#13;
with some fine performances.&#13;
Co-captains Kathy Kramer and&#13;
Mary Jo Giannotti proved to be&#13;
the top Rangers. Miss Kramer&#13;
placed first in the all-around,&#13;
free exercise and vault at the&#13;
regional meet and went on to take&#13;
fifth in free ex., eighth in the&#13;
uneven bar 5 and ninth in the vault&#13;
statewide. Miss Giannotti was second&#13;
in the free ex. and third in&#13;
the vault at the regional and seventh&#13;
in free ex. and vault and ninth&#13;
in balance beam at the state.&#13;
GRIN AND BEAR IT&#13;
"The R8nger Bear meet VllCe'-Chancellor Otto F Bauer as cheerleader&#13;
Pam Engdahl Joe 00&#13;
TIlE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
ary Jo GlaDDOtti&#13;
. ren Styl@y&#13;
S&amp;DllY Hantns&#13;
-Katb&gt; Kramer&#13;
L1Dd): Reid&#13;
Liz Stellbere&#13;
1TI_..u". ud • cl&gt;oer.&#13;
leaD Coli •&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr,&#13;
Cherry Hill, N. J.&#13;
Kenosba(Tremper)&#13;
Racine&#13;
Racine (Horlick)&#13;
Waukesha&#13;
Racine (Hcr lfck)&#13;
sr;:-:;~:::: at tbit IU ralty of r ...... ~ lIlat 1utJ_.&#13;
,.. .'s ac:tlYlU .. ,&#13;
rs-dn'a ... ..u .. au&#13;
Sportsfest came the first weekend&#13;
in December and once again&#13;
U was a success. The balloting&#13;
for the queen of Sportsfest was&#13;
somewhat different this year, however,&#13;
in that only coins were&#13;
acceptable as ballots, with the candidate&#13;
collecting the most coins&#13;
as votes, elected the queen. The&#13;
money went to the Harlow Mills&#13;
Scholarship Fund, honoring the&#13;
late professor who had such a&#13;
deep committment .to the University&#13;
.&#13;
Cathy MomperofKenosha, sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Equestrian&#13;
C'lub, was the Queen and her court&#13;
included other candidates Carol&#13;
Busche, Kenosha; Debbie Goudreau,&#13;
Racine; Bonnie Eppesrs,&#13;
Kansasville; Debbie LaJeunesse&#13;
Kenosha; Mary Fonk KenoSha~&#13;
Robin Strangberg, Ke'nOSha; Li~&#13;
Stellberg, Racine; Bar'b Lundskow,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Co-{;_lns - Katl&gt;y Kramer" Mary Jo Giannotti -&#13;
-lAtt rs earned&#13;
W,"'ll!_d La 51e berg 'Y&#13;
RBIDElmAl • COMMERCIAL&#13;
ONE Of 5Of/THEASrUH WISCONSIN'S&#13;
LUGEST AGENCIES TRECROCI&#13;
REALTY REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL SERVICE&#13;
IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS 658-1319&#13;
A TORS GUY D. TRECROCI• Broker, 6927 39th Ave.&#13;
RES. PH. 694-6743&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
MAT MAIDS AND .FRIENDS&#13;
, who aid th Rangers at all home and many away meets, pose here with the&#13;
(1-r): Mary Fonk, Pat Kekic, Cathy Frederking, Kathy Dohertyu, Mary Fredi&#13;
Barb Lu kow, Juli Con tablie. Back row (l·r): Frank Velsaquez, Bill West, Jeff&#13;
, Coach Jim Koch, St ve Sulk, Mark Barnhill, Kyle Barnes, Ken Martin.&#13;
GRIN AND BEAR IT&#13;
Vtee-Chancellor Otto F Bauer as cheerleader&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Cherry Hill, N. J.&#13;
Kenosha(Tremper)&#13;
Racine&#13;
Racine (Horlick)&#13;
Waukesha&#13;
Racine (Horlick)&#13;
Mary Jo Giannotti ---&#13;
Parkside's first women's gymnastics&#13;
team completed success!&#13;
Ully on both the regional and&#13;
state levels as all the gymnasts&#13;
qualified for state competition and&#13;
represented Parkside at the State&#13;
with some fine performances.&#13;
Co-captains Kathy Kramer and&#13;
Mary Jo Gtannottl proved to be&#13;
the top Rangers. Miss Kramer&#13;
placed first in the all-around,&#13;
free exercise and vault at the&#13;
regional meet and went on to take&#13;
fifth in free ex., eighth in the&#13;
uneven bars and ninth in the vault&#13;
statewide. Miss Giannotti was second&#13;
in the free ex. and third in&#13;
the vault at the regional and seventh&#13;
in free ex. and vault and ninth&#13;
in balance beam at the state.&#13;
Sportsfest came the first weekend&#13;
in December and once again&#13;
it was a success. The balloting&#13;
for the queen of Sportsfest was&#13;
somewhat different this year, however,&#13;
in that only coins were&#13;
acceptable as ballots, with the candidate&#13;
collecting the most coins&#13;
as votes, elected the queen. The&#13;
money went to the Harlow Mills&#13;
Scholarship Fund, honoring the&#13;
late professor who had such a&#13;
deep committment to the University.&#13;
Cathy Momper of Kenosha, sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Equestrian&#13;
Club, was the Queen and her court&#13;
included other candidates Carol&#13;
Busche, Kenosha; Debbie Goudreau,&#13;
Racine; Bonnie Eppesrs&#13;
Kansasville; Debbie LaJeunesse'&#13;
Kenosha; Mary Fonk Kenosha'.&#13;
Robin Strangberg, Ke'nosha; Li~&#13;
1-----:-------------==------:-------------------!!!! Stellberg, Racine; BarbLundskow -----111. ·-----...;:.;::.,...:,:K,:en::,:o;:s:,::ha:_;. ________ ,&#13;
EC OC&#13;
EA&#13;
ERCIAL&#13;
E&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
IS OUR O LY BUSI ESS&#13;
APPRAISAL SERVICE&#13;
[ 658-1319&#13;
GUY D. TRECROCI - Broker, 6927 39th Ave.&#13;
RES. PH. 694-6743&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
CO-CAPTAINS --- JEFF JENKINS &amp; KEN MARTIN&#13;
JIM KOCH, HEAD COACH WhenJim Koch came to Park. Another AlI-America wrestler t side in the fall of 1970 th aDd a h.1gber t1n1sh in the NAIA&#13;
were no facilities so he i ~::NaUooals than 19'11 marked Coach&#13;
J a workout and m'eet ar:~ a Jim Koch's second year at wrest-&#13;
, -- - local Junior high schoot Th ling mentor at Parkside. The Ranwere&#13;
only 12 wrestlers a:nd v:re gers were lacking in depth and&#13;
little interest in the sport SOJiry lost numerous dual meets by cee,&#13;
organized the First Parkstde two or three POints because of&#13;
Wrestling Clinic which d losses by forfeit, but it's worth&#13;
over 600 coaches' and athl:t:: noting that the Grapplers won the&#13;
for the day-long discussions and majority of matches they wrestled&#13;
demonstrations. He or". t zed a and that with no seniors WI the&#13;
grOUP of lIMat Maids" t h squad, an even brigbler year Is&#13;
o elp at ahead In 197273&#13;
meets and provide support for the - .&#13;
team; it's an idea whi h has Ken Martin, 134-lb. sophomore&#13;
been copied since by other colleges and high schools C wAho b•e_c_amHe Parkside's first all- . memea ODors in the sport last&#13;
Jim earned his B.s. in physical education from South year, again cla1med oaUooaJ status&#13;
Dakota State in 1969, where he lettered three Urnes in with his third place finlsh in this&#13;
wrestling and captained the strong SOOU team as a senior. year's meet .• - a place that only&#13;
He'll finish work on his M.s. at State in August of 19'12. a scoring error kept from be1DC&#13;
ll1gher. He placed the Rangersto&#13;
an 18th place NaUaoal 1lnisb _.&#13;
three higher than In 1971-. with&#13;
strong support from 150-lber Jeti'&#13;
Jenkins and. heavywelib-t Steve&#13;
Sulk.&#13;
GEORGE WOLFE, ASST. COACH&#13;
George Wolfe, assistant&#13;
wrestling coach at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide, brings a wealth&#13;
of experience and knowledge&#13;
to his new position&#13;
at the University.&#13;
He's also coordinator of&#13;
the school's physical education&#13;
program and advisor&#13;
to the Judo Club.&#13;
A 1965 graduate of Central&#13;
Michigan University, where&#13;
he lettered four times in&#13;
football and once captained the Chips, George received&#13;
his mesters at the University of Akron in 1969 and his&#13;
Ph. D. at the University of Utah this past summer.&#13;
From 1965-69, Wolfe was head wrestling coach and&#13;
a teacher 'of physical education at McKinley High&#13;
School in Canton, Ohio. He also assisted with football&#13;
and baseball during his tenure there. At Utah,&#13;
George was a graduate teaching assistant.&#13;
I!IL.RANfiEILSi&#13;
~AYNE BASLEY&#13;
KYLE BARNES&#13;
-MARK BARNHILL&#13;
TOM BERGO&#13;
ROR CLARKE&#13;
linJEFF JENKI NS&#13;
CHRIS LUEDKE&#13;
--KEN MARTIN&#13;
RICK MAULDIN&#13;
~OB SANDERS&#13;
RICK SCHOEFFLER&#13;
·STEVE SULK&#13;
-FRANK VELASQUEZ&#13;
-BILL WEST&#13;
KEN MARTIN&#13;
~TlME ALL-AMERICAN. C().CAPTAIN AND MOST VALUAIILE&#13;
JR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
SO.&#13;
JR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
FR,&#13;
SO.&#13;
FR,&#13;
SO.&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
SO.&#13;
UNION GROVE&#13;
PESHTIGO&#13;
KENOSHA ~ST' JOSEPH)&#13;
KENOSHA BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA CHAMPAIG~, ILL.)&#13;
KENOSHA B~ADFORD)&#13;
r.ILWAUKEE (MADISON)&#13;
COLEMAN&#13;
RACINE (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (TRE~PER)&#13;
RACINE (CASE)&#13;
PESHTIGQ&#13;
RACINE (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER) - LETTERS EARNED&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN RESIDENTIAL CENTERS, INC.&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp;&#13;
17" N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSiN&#13;
PARKSIDE VILLAGE APARTM.NTS&#13;
2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
Aak about rentals.&#13;
Apartments available now.&#13;
Contact: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kornman&#13;
Apt. t 06 - Phone: 414 - 552-8955&#13;
DE~UXE3 ROOM SUITE&#13;
-e- ..-&#13;
DELUXE 2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
J ROOMSUITE&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
- THE RA. 'GER J&gt; 15 ~~!!~li·ng: Martin All-American When Jim Koch came to Park- Another All-America wr r&#13;
w side in the fall of 1970 there and a higher finish in th Al.A&#13;
were no facilities so he ioc t d Nationals than 1971 marked Coach&#13;
a workout and m'eet area ~ \ Jim Koch's sec d year at tlocal&#13;
Junior high school Th ling mentor at Park 1d • Th Ranwere&#13;
only 12 wrestlers ~d v:re gers were lacklng ln pth nd&#13;
little interest in the sport so Ji~ lost numerous dual me ts by on ,&#13;
Organized the First P~rkside two or three points becau of&#13;
Wrestllng Clinic, Which drew los~es by forfe t, but it's worth&#13;
over 600 coaches and athletes notmg_ that the Grappler con the&#13;
for the day-long discussions and majority of _matches they wrestled&#13;
demonstrations. He organized a and that '1th no seniors the&#13;
group of "Mat Maids" to help at squad, an even brighter year ls&#13;
meets and provide supportfor the ahead in 1972-73.&#13;
team; it's an idea whi h has Ken Martin, 134-lb. opbomore&#13;
been copied since by other colleges and high schools c Awho became Par side's first all-&#13;
. merica Hocors in the sport last&#13;
Jim earned his B.S. in physical education from South year, again clalmednatlooalstatus&#13;
Dakota State in 1969, where he lettered three times in with his third place finish in this&#13;
wrestling and captained the strong SDSU team as a senior. year's meet. -- a place that OQly&#13;
He'll finish work on his M.S. at State in August of 1972. a scoring error kept trom being&#13;
GEORGE WOLFE, ASST. COACH&#13;
George Wolfe, assistant&#13;
wrestling coach at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
brings a wealth&#13;
of experience and knowledge&#13;
to his new position&#13;
at the University.&#13;
He's also coordinator of&#13;
the school's physical education&#13;
program and advisor&#13;
to the Judo Club.&#13;
A 1 965 graduate of Central&#13;
Michigan University, where&#13;
he lettered four times in&#13;
football and once captained the Chips, George received&#13;
his masters at the University of Akron in 1969 and his&#13;
Ph . D. at the University of Utah this past summer.&#13;
higher. He placed the Ranier to&#13;
an 18th place Nati&lt;mal finish -three&#13;
higher than ln 1971 -- !th&#13;
strong support from 150-lber Jett&#13;
Jenkins and heavyweight Slev&#13;
Sulk.&#13;
THE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
~AYNE BASLEY&#13;
KYLE BARNES&#13;
*MARK BARNHILL&#13;
TOM BERGO&#13;
RnR CLARKE&#13;
••*JEFF JENKINS&#13;
CHRIS LUEDKE&#13;
**KEN MARTIN&#13;
RICK MAULDIN"&#13;
ijOB SANDERS&#13;
RICK SCHOEFFLER&#13;
*STEVE SULK&#13;
*FRANK VELASQUEZ&#13;
*BILL WEST&#13;
TWO-Tl E ALL-AMERICAN• CG-CAPTAIN D STVALUA&#13;
JR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
SO,&#13;
JR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
so.&#13;
FR,&#13;
SO,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
SO,&#13;
U JO GROVE&#13;
PESHTIGO&#13;
KE OSHA !ST, JOSEPH)&#13;
KE OSHA BRADFORD)&#13;
KE OSHA CHAMPAIG~, lLL,)&#13;
KENOSHA B~ADFORD))&#13;
i ll AUKEE { DISO&#13;
COLEMAN&#13;
RAC I E (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (TRE~PER)&#13;
RACINE (CASE)&#13;
PESHTIGO&#13;
RACINE (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
From 1965,-69, Wolfe was head wrestling coach and&#13;
a teacher of physical education at McKinley High&#13;
School in Canton, Ohio. He also assisted with football&#13;
and baseball during his tenure there. At Utah,&#13;
George was a graduate teaching assistant. CO-CAPTAINS --- JEFF JENKINS &amp; KEN MARTIN • CETTERS EARNED&#13;
Ask about rentals.&#13;
Apartments available now.&#13;
Contact: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kornman&#13;
Apt. 106 - Phone: 414 - 552-8955&#13;
PARKSIDE VILLAO A ARTM NT&#13;
OE LUXE 2 ROOM SUITE&#13;
2 ROOM SUITE&#13;
m&#13;
OELUXE3 ROOM SUITE&#13;
~U I I JI s-&#13;
OWNER : PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN ESIOENTIAL CENTERS, INC.&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; R&#13;
17'4 N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN&#13;
3 OOMSUITE&#13;
THE RANGER LING&#13;
- .......'--0&#13;
1972 - 73 SCHEDULE&#13;
Northern Open&#13;
Sportsfest opponent to be&#13;
named&#13;
UW-Whitewater/UW Oshkosh&#13;
war-hawk Invitational&#13;
Grand Valley State&#13;
Midlands Tournament&#13;
So. trip to La. State&#13;
Tournament to be named&#13;
Eight State Invitational .&#13;
UW-Oshkosh or trw-wmee- Oshkosh or White water&#13;
Nwoarttheerr.n Mtctugan Marq. uPeAt.tReK,MSJJcDIlE.&#13;
E. 111., Mich. Tech pARKSIbl&#13;
lll.-Chicago Circle&#13;
Augustana or Whitewater&#13;
NAIA National Meet&#13;
Nov. 24&#13;
Dec. 1&#13;
PA1lKBlDB&#13;
PA1lKBIDB&#13;
IVhitewaler&#13;
P,....... "'~&#13;
LaGrange,&#13;
Baton Route,lf.&#13;
Dec. 6&#13;
Dec. 9&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
Dec. 27-28&#13;
Jan •. 6-13&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan. 27&#13;
Jan. 3\&#13;
Macomb,lIL&#13;
..._.-...-a.._ eopI'woo.lOIe Bill W... 1.01'ned thJe' teKamoch't.it&#13;
-- bec8me one of Coach 1m&#13;
tmoipck~eeIMenn . but.wtnnln. g 9 end k»sing 2 a•t 134 lba.&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 22&#13;
Mar. 8-10 Sioux Clty,"1oIl&#13;
appa&#13;
appa&#13;
_l.Jto&#13;
that greot beer drinking fraternity&#13;
gle Wholesale&#13;
211981 t. treet&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
THE "iANGER&#13;
STLING&#13;
that&#13;
ee&#13;
omore em West joined the team at&#13;
but became one of Coach Jim Koch's&#13;
· nntng 9 and losing 2 at 134 lbs.&#13;
Nov. 24&#13;
Dec. 1&#13;
Dec. 6&#13;
Dec. 9&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
Dec. 27-28&#13;
Jan • . 6-13&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan. 27&#13;
Jan. 31&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 22&#13;
Mar. 8-10&#13;
at beer drinking fraternity&#13;
JEFF JENKINS&#13;
co-captain&#13;
1972 - 73 SCHEDULE&#13;
Northern Open&#13;
Sportsfest opponent to be&#13;
named&#13;
UW-Whitewater/UW Oshkosh&#13;
Warhawk Invitational&#13;
Grand Valley State&#13;
Midlands Tournament&#13;
So. trip to La. State&#13;
Tournament to be named&#13;
Eight State Invitational&#13;
UW-Oshkosh or UW-WhiteMadison&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
LaGrange, ru,&#13;
Baton Rouge, La.&#13;
Macomb, lll.&#13;
water Oshkosh or White water&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
E. Ill., Mich. Tech&#13;
UL-Chicago Circle&#13;
Augustana or Whitewater&#13;
NAIA National Meet&#13;
Marquette, Mich.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
e vVholesale&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
_P",ARKSIDE AILWAVS&#13;
THE RA GER Page 17 PANORA A&#13;
LET'S GO, RAY I I I I&#13;
Prakong(Ray) Phanturat, the Rangers' able soccer star from Thailand b ht I t f&#13;
perienceto ~he young. Park id ' roug a 0 0 ex- 51.8 team. Here he shows some of that savvy as he rna v&#13;
the ball against a QUincy defender. neu ers&#13;
Parkside's cross country trails, winding through the brush and wooded land of the campus make for an ideal&#13;
route for the harriers. The United States Track and Field Federation will again hold its Mid-America championships&#13;
herein the fall and is seriously considering the Parkside site for its national meet&#13;
·PROS IN ACTION&#13;
Thefootball Pros went into action March 19 against the Parkside AII-S!8fS ~ey ma~h~ndl~&#13;
the Stars, who outnumbered them but had just about the same total we,ghhta~ paedSthe~r;~&#13;
tory. But it was a fun day for all including the swarms of youngsters woe 099&#13;
per gym and got coveted autographs from their heroes after the contest,&#13;
- ad C ch Steve Stephens' cagers&#13;
Freshman Phil S,t8wart 81d b~h starting and coming off&#13;
many times durtnq the V,ear, 0 bi lay Here "Stew," No.&#13;
the bench to come up with the 19 P . f he ball&#13;
40, goes up eqet.nst 8 Lak e F0rest man or t .&#13;
"JUNE&#13;
BALL"&#13;
Pat Ke c was among lhe lOp coed on lhe Parkstde tennl. aquad and&#13;
finished the veal' With only one JON&#13;
The Ranger Bear made his first appearance on campus Illat before Sport t .. t and entertained&#13;
fans at Sporting events. throughout the wmter Here he IS Introduced by WLIP RadiO Sports&#13;
Director Al Gelsone prior to the start of the Pal'ktude-Peckers game In March&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
THE R TGER&#13;
Prakong (Ray) Phanturat, the Rangers' able soccer star from Thailand b ht 1 1 f&#13;
h P k ·d , roug a o o experience&#13;
to t e young ar s1 e team. Here he shows some of that s h&#13;
the ball against a Quincy defender. avvy as e maneuvers&#13;
Parkside's cross country trails, winding through the brush and wooded land of the campus, ma e for an ideal&#13;
route for the harriers. The United States Track and Field Federation will again hold its Mid-America championships&#13;
here in the fall and is seriously considering the Parkside site for its national meet&#13;
I , L-........----&#13;
PRos IN ACTION&#13;
The football Pros went into action March 19 against the Parkside AII-S\ars. T~ey ma~h~ndled&#13;
the Stars, who outnumbered them but had just about the same total we,g:t a~ P8Js:h ~r~&#13;
tory. But it was a fun day for all including the swarms of youngSters w O c ogge e&#13;
per gym and got coveted autographs from their heroes after the contest.&#13;
. Coach Steve Stephens' cagers&#13;
Freshman Phil S_tewart aided both starting and coming off&#13;
many times during the y_e~r th big play. Here "Stew," No.&#13;
the bench to come up wit Fe t man for the ball.&#13;
40, goes up against a Lake ores&#13;
"JUNE&#13;
BALL"&#13;
The Range&lt; Bear made his first appear&#13;
fans at sporting events throug out t wmt H&#13;
Director Al Gelso e prior to the start o th Par&#13;
17&#13;
 Pqe~~I~ ~T~H~E~R~A~N~G~E~R:----:-::---------- M:::;::a.y:.:,:..:~&#13;
PARKSIDE 200 PURPOSE&#13;
n. Putsl~ zoo (lQIP was orpniZed prlDCIpo.\&#13;
l)' \0 ra -. to proride scllOlar ships lor&#13;
_ ... U. plQ'slc:a1 odlIealloo proeram· n. _IT.c_opt. of course, ""IJIC lIlat&#13;
•• tratc eocapet1UV8 pbysllCal ec:tucatlon program&#13;
r.,tre. top athlete. and top athletes toda)· come&#13;
via .Kbo1&amp;r btpl. vI course, the natural result&#13;
01 atr1JIlC pIQ' leal e&lt;lIc2t1oo procram I. •&#13;
lr .tudent u•• prit de corps" that naturally&#13;
bWl_ •• tadeDt body. Thil, 1 tHol, will do more&#13;
10_ op tbo rrowth 01 Part.l~ l1wl any otner&#13;
MCIIl Dt of tbe Unlyttr tty.&#13;
o doubt lbe 1111 reallecute prorram will dey&#13;
lop til tat .... 1tJ aDd eom~Ut1ftDltSS u we cooltllU&#13;
to nlN larpr amountl 01 money aDd brtJIC&#13;
more out..-ndlDl .~te. to our campus.&#13;
r Park.1de 100 croup IS p1..aDDJ.nC to be. close&#13;
Irl~ club Of tile PbyslCal EducaUoo DepartmODI&#13;
..... ._ rdll!' 10 tHll III any otber way we&#13;
caD 10 brlJlC _boot a lUll ~y.topol"'" of tile p1aDS&#13;
sat ... t lor PansUlo by DI_lor. Tom RosaDdlcb.&#13;
Allred S. De 81m_&#13;
Pre.IdeDl, Partsldo 200&#13;
PARKS/DE 200&#13;
KEEPS THE&#13;
RANGERS&#13;
RUNNING&#13;
Alfred DeSimone, Preeident P.r1taide&#13;
ZOO.&#13;
• • • AND ROSATOO!&#13;
EXECUTIVE BOARD MEMBERS&#13;
OR.PAUL CAPELLI&#13;
llOYD NORTHARD&#13;
DICK ELLISON&#13;
ALOO MAORIGRANO&#13;
Other Executive Board&#13;
Members, JERRY FEENEY&#13;
EOKOZAK and OOM TIRA·&#13;
BASSI JR.&#13;
Lucian Rosa has not earned&#13;
all-America honors at UW-Park ..&#13;
side yet though he almost certajnly&#13;
will before his career is&#13;
over but after nearly a complete&#13;
school year of living with the Ken&#13;
Joanis family, Rosa is becoming&#13;
very much Americanized.&#13;
Better yet, and certainly not&#13;
unexpectedly, Joanis, a Parkside&#13;
200 member, and his wife have&#13;
accepted the freshman from Ceylon&#13;
as one of their family.&#13;
"He's a part of the family,"&#13;
Mrs. Joanis said, "and we knew&#13;
that the dog knew when it went&#13;
into bed with him."&#13;
But there never was any doubt&#13;
in the Joanis's minds that Lucian&#13;
would become part of the family.&#13;
They had long been interested in&#13;
the American Field Service pro--&#13;
gram and through it had learned&#13;
of Lucian's wish to stay with an·&#13;
American family during his first&#13;
year at Parkside.&#13;
lilt's the American way" became&#13;
a family joke, with Lucian&#13;
sharing in it as he loaded or&#13;
unloaded the dishwasher, carried&#13;
out garbage or ran the snowplow&#13;
in winter.&#13;
Buf: at the same time, Rosa&#13;
has made his American :ftlmily&#13;
much more aware of Asia and&#13;
Ceylon. They are nOwlooking forward&#13;
eagerly to watChtDg on TV&#13;
this summer as the Slim Rosa&#13;
trods barefoot through the streets&#13;
of Munich this summer as he&#13;
competes in the 10,000 meters&#13;
and marathon for his native land.&#13;
And they admittedly Would like&#13;
to travel to Asia and especially&#13;
Ceylon, because of Lucian'S influence,&#13;
PARKSIDE 200&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
MEMBERSHIP PLEDGE&#13;
me ~_~ ~~_&#13;
Add,,,,,, "_&#13;
ell&#13;
$1 I __________ ZIP _&#13;
Bu I&#13;
Phona ConI&#13;
My pledge is $ _ Dale _&#13;
Make checks payable to Parks ide 200.&#13;
Lucian Rosa, like any freshman in&#13;
college, uses the phone B lot. Here&#13;
he calls a teammate to plan a long&#13;
distance run through the Parksilk&#13;
area. Rosa, a native of Ceylon, is.&#13;
living with Mr. and Mrs. Ken JOBnis,&#13;
771 7 49th Avenue, Kenosha.&#13;
"He'S a very comfortable person&#13;
to have around;" Mrs. Joan-&#13;
,is noted, although she admitted&#13;
that at first she felt quite prO-.&#13;
tective toward him.&#13;
"But he's absolutly charming,"&#13;
she noted, "and pointed to his&#13;
attitude with children as evidence.&#13;
"He's like the Pied Piper to the&#13;
children in the area and when&#13;
he's out runnin'g some will otten&#13;
try to keep up with him and make&#13;
maybe one short lap to his-iQ..ot&#13;
so.'" --= The Joanises, and their=5:0B,-E&#13;
senior at TremJ?E!r, tried variOUS-:&#13;
Ceylonese-type foods but soonconverted&#13;
Rosa to conventional American&#13;
"chow".&#13;
''We tried rice and curry on&#13;
Lucian's birthday _bUt I had to&#13;
give up and said that Lucian would&#13;
have to change." :-&#13;
But Ro~ apparently doesn'tdis"-&#13;
like American food. He'S added&#13;
some six pounds on his small&#13;
frame since starting at Parkside&#13;
in the fall, a credit to the ham"&#13;
burgers, hotdogs and other American&#13;
"delicacies" which he snaps&#13;
up.&#13;
Lonesome? Not Rosa. He'S pa.Ft&#13;
of a family and there's enough&#13;
to keep him busy, either at hOme&#13;
or when running for Parks1de,&#13;
but an always 'welcome- sight 15&#13;
the letter - stuck in the mirror.&#13;
frame in the JOanises' _enfrance~.&#13;
way.&#13;
Then he knows it's one of those·'·&#13;
special ones from Ceylon and 116&#13;
can thank his lucky stars, for twO&#13;
families that care about him.&#13;
And a group known as the PaJ'k"&#13;
side 200 which wants to help PaIk"&#13;
side athletics and athletes enjoy&#13;
much success.&#13;
Mail 10:&#13;
Parks ide 200&#13;
Office of Athletics&#13;
University o~Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
ANNUALDUESS~l00~------------------------~--------J&#13;
~~.!!.--------------------~T~H~E:_R~A~N~G~E~R~ ____________________ M_a--=...~&#13;
R&#13;
Ctt&#13;
IDE 200 PU 1RPOSE&#13;
AlfTed DeSimone, President Parkside&#13;
200.&#13;
PARKSIDE 200&#13;
KEEPS THE&#13;
RANGERS&#13;
RUNNING&#13;
• • • AND ROSA TOO !&#13;
IRV SILVER&#13;
•&#13;
DICK ELLISON&#13;
ALDO MADRIGRANO&#13;
Other Executive Board&#13;
Members, JERRY FEENEY&#13;
ED KOZAK and DOM TIRABASSI&#13;
JR.&#13;
PARKSIDE 200&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. PARKSIDE&#13;
MEMBERSHIP PLEDGE&#13;
Lucian Rosa has not earned&#13;
all-America honors at UW-Parkside&#13;
yet though he almost certainly&#13;
will before his career is&#13;
over but after nearly a complete&#13;
school year of living with the Ken&#13;
Joanis family, Rosa is becoming&#13;
very much Americanized.&#13;
Better yet, and certainly not&#13;
unexpectedly, Joanis, a Parkside&#13;
200 member, and his wife have&#13;
accepted the freshman from Ceylon&#13;
as one of their family.&#13;
"He's a part of the family,"&#13;
Mrs. Joanis said, "and we knew&#13;
that the dog knew when it went&#13;
into bed with him."&#13;
But there never was any doubt&#13;
in the Joanis's minds that Lucian&#13;
would become part of the family.&#13;
They had long been interested in&#13;
the American Field Service program&#13;
and through it had learned&#13;
of Lucian's wish to stay with an&#13;
American family during his first&#13;
year at Parkside.&#13;
"It's the American way" became&#13;
a family joke, with Lucian&#13;
sharing in it as he loaded or&#13;
unloaded the dishwasher, carried&#13;
out garbage or ran the snowplow&#13;
in winter.&#13;
But at the same time, Rosa&#13;
has made his American family&#13;
much more aware of Asia and&#13;
Ceylon. They are now looking forward&#13;
eagerly to watching on TV&#13;
this summer as the Slim Rosa&#13;
trods barefoot through the streets&#13;
of Munich this summer as he&#13;
competes in the 10,000 meters&#13;
and marathon for his native land.&#13;
And they admittedly would like&#13;
to travel to Asia and especially&#13;
Ceylon, because of Lucian's influence&#13;
.&#13;
My pledge is s ------- Date _____ _&#13;
Make checks payable to Parkside 200.&#13;
Lucian Rosa, like any freshman in&#13;
college, uses the phone a lot. Here&#13;
he calls a teammate to plan a long&#13;
distance run through the Parkside&#13;
area. Rosa, a native of Ceylon, is&#13;
living with Mr. and Mrs. Ken Joanis,&#13;
7717 49th Avenue, Kenosha,&#13;
"He's a very comfortable person&#13;
to have around," Mrs. Joanis&#13;
noted, although she admitted&#13;
that at first she felt quite- protective&#13;
toward him.&#13;
"But he's absolutly charming,"&#13;
she noted, "and pointed to his&#13;
attitude with children as evidence.&#13;
"He's like the Pied Piper to the&#13;
children in the area and when&#13;
he's out runntng some will often&#13;
try to keep up with him and make&#13;
maybe one short lap to his 10 or&#13;
so."&#13;
The Joanises, and their son, a-senior&#13;
at Tremper tried various&#13;
CeY,lonese-type foods but soon converted&#13;
Rosa to conventional Am·&#13;
erican "chow".&#13;
"We tried rice and curry on&#13;
Lucian's birthday but I had to&#13;
give up and said that Lucian would&#13;
have to change."&#13;
But Ros!!- apparently doesn't dis·&#13;
like American food. He's added&#13;
some six pounds on his small&#13;
frame since starting at Parkside&#13;
in the fall, a credit to the ham·&#13;
burgers, hotdogs and other American&#13;
"delicacies" which he snaps&#13;
up.&#13;
S.un, __________ ZIP ------- Mail to :&#13;
Parkside 200&#13;
Office of Athletics&#13;
Lonesome? Not Rosa. He's part&#13;
of a family and there's enough&#13;
to keep him busy, either at home&#13;
or when running for Parkside,&#13;
but an always · welcome sight is&#13;
the letter stuck in the mirror&#13;
frame in the Joantses' entran&lt;;e'."&#13;
way. .&#13;
p Com&#13;
ANNUAL DUES $100&#13;
University o~ Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Then he knows it's one of those&#13;
Special ones from Ceylon and he&#13;
can thank his lucky stars, for two&#13;
families that care about him,&#13;
And a group known as the park·&#13;
side 200 which wants to help Park·&#13;
side athletics and athletes enjoy&#13;
much success.&#13;
~::...~19:,:7.:2_-lii•• ~." •• ~--'~;--;;';~::-_-=~~~~~~ ~~:.:~ NATIONAL VARSITY CLUB '-" president's Perspective In less than 30 da&#13;
M drl ys over 200&#13;
BY Darlo a grana people have join d th&#13;
, beeD connected with many tton, In less th e30 e orgamza.,&#13;
I...v.ne..izationS in my J·1fe buI never put together thl an days we haye&#13;
oonn;e"""- thusi b 5 paper which will with as much en usiasm y serve as a monthly I bli&#13;
all concerned as with the National for the Office of Athi:tcs&#13;
ca&#13;
::&#13;
varsity Club. ~e National Varsity Club as publtshar&#13;
and sponsor.&#13;
In. that time, we have also establfshed&#13;
the tirst Alumnus&#13;
Award. That is going to Dick Ellison&#13;
and we COuldn't find a better&#13;
man. Through his many acnvities&#13;
on behalf 01 Parkside, Dick&#13;
has set a fine example for future&#13;
recipients.&#13;
The scope of the National Varsity&#13;
Club 1.s wide indeedj basically&#13;
the objecttva is total involvement&#13;
with the University of Wisconstn-&#13;
Parkatde through the support and&#13;
encouragement of its Intereclje.,&#13;
giate athletics program.&#13;
Among the many things we want&#13;
to do, and one of the most important,&#13;
is to welcome graduating&#13;
members of the UW-Parkstde Varsity&#13;
Club into the organization.&#13;
o.rio M.drlgreno&#13;
p,nld..,t, N.tionlll varsity Club Each graduating senior who is a&#13;
a monogram winner will receive free membership for one year.&#13;
He will receive the membership card, decal and lapel pin at&#13;
tonight's banquet.&#13;
The National Varsity Club is open to anyone -- college graduate&#13;
or not -- for the next year. Our goal is a membership of 500 but&#13;
our eornmittment will not stop at any figure and knows no bounds.&#13;
BEAR COACHES AT SMOKER&#13;
The NMionai V.. ity Club got off 10 • f"OlIring -.1 in mid-April WId joining it ~ Irwt ..-nok.,&#13;
__ 0."'-90 __ .0· I • ..-.- Zab_i('"") Bill o-vo (righI). -lng - ....&#13;
were P.-keida 200 ExtlCUlive 0inct0f" AI De Simona (center. -.eI), Athletic Board ~ Gene Qeeioro&#13;
kiewicz (left, r... ) ...t NIltionaI V.. ity Club ........... Guy Tr..crod. ()the,r top po cA .1 a ..... and w" u' $ ,.,...&#13;
........_ .. II Oltond ........ to be hold ..-.,. durlng Iho 1'12-13 ,... ~&#13;
ATHLETIC BOARD&#13;
Advisor's&#13;
Outlook&#13;
The Varsity Club and myself&#13;
as adVisor are proud to sponsor&#13;
support the Office of Athletics by&#13;
spoosoring this annual awards banque!.&#13;
W. leel thai It Is Important to&#13;
focus the attention of the universit)'&#13;
community on those who are&#13;
the doers and accomplishers, the&#13;
people we honor here tonight.&#13;
We recognize that it has taken&#13;
Obtstanding effort and sacrifice on&#13;
their Jl8l't to achieve the successes&#13;
that tbey have and ·we wish to&#13;
coacrotuIate them for It.&#13;
r,&#13;
I&#13;
~•&#13;
(L-R) Dick Keehn (faculty). Cori&#13;
Unclner (faculty), Tom Rosandich&#13;
(8thletic director), Gene Gasior·&#13;
kiewicz: (chairman, faculty). Ken&#13;
"'-tin (student), Dick Elli.on (Park·&#13;
_ide 200), Monis Firebaugh (f~&#13;
ully). Alion Schneklor (faculty);&#13;
IftiQing from picture: John za,..&#13;
il"ll (foculty). Bob Wh;'o (P.,koido&#13;
200). Poto Hobotl., (otudont). ••,•&#13;
"va IC~of K~Na~H~&#13;
RUSS COLEY&#13;
National V.... ity Club Executiv. Board&#13;
F.- _, AI ~. Tom _. Dorlo Modrigrono. Bob _.&#13;
Guy T.-crocI. , Jim 1I&lt;odIoy. Lou DlCootri. Dri&gt;y _. P... l&#13;
Yulka. Geno _. An ~. Bill W..... AI .... _Ie. _ l»&#13;
CUNlIo, e-t Gf'eco.&#13;
D. Tirabassi&#13;
and Sons,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
WLIP/AM/IOSO • WLiP/Ft0V9S.1 • ",,"u 657-4162&#13;
excavating and grading&#13;
sewer work sand gravel&#13;
8539 39th Avenue, Phone: 694-655'&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
MaY, 19_72 __ jjlji~ ... ~~~-;:-;;-:~-==--~~~~~~--------------------~~!.!_ -- NATIONAL VARs11Y CLUB President's Perspective In less than 30 da&#13;
M drl ys over 200 BY Dario a grano people have joined th&#13;
I've been connected with many tion. In less than 30 ct:'. organizaizations&#13;
in my life but never put together this r ys "."e have&#13;
orgaDwith as much enthusiasm by serve as a mopathlpe 'wh1~h Will&#13;
one th th N t· 1 n Y pubhcatton&#13;
all concerned as wi e a iona for the Office of Athletics With&#13;
varsity Club. ~e National Varsity Club as publisher&#13;
and sponsor.&#13;
In that time, we have also established&#13;
the first Al umnus&#13;
Award. That is going to Dick Ellison&#13;
and we couldn't find a better&#13;
man. Through his many activities&#13;
on behalf of Parkside, Dick&#13;
has set a fine example for future&#13;
recipients.&#13;
The scope of the National Varsity&#13;
Club is wide indeed; basically&#13;
the objective is total involvement&#13;
with the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
through the support and&#13;
encouragement of its intercollegiate&#13;
athletics program,&#13;
Among the many things we want&#13;
to do, and one of the most important,&#13;
is to welcome graduating&#13;
members oftheUW-ParksideVarsity&#13;
Club into the organization. Dario Madrigrano&#13;
Preaident, National Varsity Club Each graduating senior who is a&#13;
a monogram winner will receive free membership for one year.&#13;
He will receive the membership card, decal and lapel pin at&#13;
tonight's banquet.&#13;
The National Varsity Club is open to anyone -- college graduate&#13;
or not -- for the next year. Our goal is a membership of 500 but&#13;
our committment will not stop at any figure and knows no bounds.&#13;
Advisor's&#13;
Outlook&#13;
The Varsity Club and myself&#13;
as advisor are proud to sponsor&#13;
support the Office of Athletics by ~&#13;
sponsoring this annual awards banquet.&#13;
We feel that it is important to&#13;
focus the attention of the university&#13;
community on those who are&#13;
the doers and accomplishers, the&#13;
people we honor here tonight.&#13;
We recognize that it has taken&#13;
outstanding effort and sacrifice on&#13;
their part to achieve the successes&#13;
that they have and we wish to&#13;
congratulate them for it.&#13;
ATHLETIC BOARD&#13;
(L·R) Dick Keehn (faculty), Carl&#13;
Lindner (faculty), Tom Rosandich&#13;
(athletic director), Gene Gasior·&#13;
ki-icz (chairman, faculty), Ken&#13;
P.1artin (student), Dick Ellison (Park·&#13;
•ide 200), Morris Firebaugh (facUhy),&#13;
Allan Schneider (faculty);&#13;
miuing from picture: Jphn Zar·&#13;
Ii~ (faculty), Bob White (Park·&#13;
•ide 200), Pete H11betler (student).&#13;
''VOIC~ of K~NO~HA:'&#13;
WLIP/AM/1050 • WLIP/FM/95. 1 • Pt.011~ 657-'162&#13;
BEAR COACHES AT SMOKER&#13;
D. Tirabassi&#13;
and Sons,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
excavating and grading&#13;
sewer work - sand - gravel&#13;
8539 39th Avenue, Phone: 694-655 I&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
P 20&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
May , 1972&#13;
i • I o ~,&#13;
----~&#13;
ean: w&#13;
m~&#13;
Ye,, 1now you can lhave the only Interstate&#13;
room on your block .Ju1t by ordering one of&#13;
theH posters In our expreaaway size (Size A).&#13;
Or, If you're not ready for that, some of them&#13;
are also available In county size (B), unimproved&#13;
(C), or blcycle path (D).&#13;
GE.@~ili:3@~~1 ~ ~&#13;
SIZE .A 22Y, ft. JC 10Y, IL, $8.50&#13;
(come• In 12 panela, 4 ft. x 5 ft. each)&#13;
SIZE B s tt. x s ft., s1 .so&#13;
SIZE C 33 In. x 20 In., $,75&#13;
SIZE D 221n. x 111n., s.so&#13;
ALL :POSTERS&#13;
AREIN&#13;
FULL COLOR&#13;
SEVEN-UP BOTTLING, INC.&#13;
of Kenosha-Racine-Walworth Counties&#13;
3131 PflllllPS AV&#13;
c~e:,~&#13;
.. """' ~'""'"' - -------- ----.. -· ·· - -·--- .. - ------ - _ . .,... --~ ~.... - - ~&#13;
I - _ __, - ._. ~ ~- • - t:)__ ~ r,i - f ~ •&#13;
-- -&#13;
~&#13;
::i::&#13;
trj&#13;
~ z a&#13;
trj&#13;
~&#13;
~--· r------------------------------------1&#13;
Ooooo~&#13;
Design #12 S\ze A.&#13;
A.&#13;
D•algn #"'14 Biz• A&#13;
~Unco\a:&#13;
I cut out everything just right (I think) and now I'm eligible to be a superhighway. I'll&#13;
even ~ry to get the coupon in the right envelope and send a check or money order&#13;
instead of cash. And another thing .. . after I've put up my poster, can I give speeding&#13;
tickets to my roommate?&#13;
I enclose $ _ ____ check or money order payable to " Uncola Poster Offer." Send&#13;
me the Uncola posters in sizes and quantities marked below. (For each design you&#13;
want, mark quantity in size box.)&#13;
A B C D A B C D&#13;
Design #1 DODD Design #6 D&#13;
Design#2 O Design #7 D&#13;
Design#3 O O Design #8 D&#13;
Design#4 O O Design #9 D O O 0&#13;
Design#5 O O Design #10 0&#13;
A B C D&#13;
Design # 11 D&#13;
Design #12 D&#13;
Design #13 D&#13;
Design # 14 0&#13;
Offer expires Sept. 1, 1972.&#13;
Please allow 3 weeks for delivery.&#13;
NAME ___ _ _ _______ _ __:_ ______ ~-------~&#13;
ADDRESS _ _ .....,..;1:_ _ _ _ _____ _____ ___ ..c...-...'---------'--......!&#13;
CITY ____ ~~~--------STATE _____ ~ __ ZIP ___ _&#13;
Pf•••• mafl to: Uncol• Poeter Otter&#13;
P.O. Box 11477, St. Loul•• Mo. 83105 OR Enclo•• In&#13;
C•mpu• R••ch-ln return •nv•lope&#13;
•.•• ., . .. "'"'•"' ,...,,.., .. ··n•I' ""'' ,.,.,.., .. .. ..,,. ., .... . ,..,.~ ....... ,.. .. ,.,._,. ,, .• ,..n,.,,,,. .. , ... ,..,.,.,.,,,,r ,;,, r~• .,.,,, .. ..,_..,,. o,;,,..,..,.,...,,_&#13;
~ -&lt;&amp;&gt; _,&#13;
,-,:,</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63792">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 1, May 10, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63793">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63794">
                <text>1972-05-10</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63797">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63798">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63799">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63800">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63801">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63802">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63803">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63804">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63805">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="285">
        <name>ken martin</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="282">
        <name>lucian rosa</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2525">
        <name>mike dewitt</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="283">
        <name>rudy alvarez</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2624" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4444">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/009ea3578d7ab31058efda294471089c.pdf</src>
        <authentication>e213b88ae44e7fcfacde859eb1c757b1</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63810">
              <text>Volume 2, issue 1</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63811">
              <text>Dannehl Named A.D. As Rosandich Goes to UWM</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63821">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89902">
              <text>Sept., 1972, Vo. II, No. 1&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE — —- i^a Nttiuioiicnau lVv arsity Club&#13;
DANNEHL NAMED A.D. AS&#13;
ROSANDICH GOES TO UWM&#13;
The appointment of Dr. Wayne&#13;
E. Dannehl, 35, as Director of&#13;
Athletics and Associate Professor&#13;
of Physical Education at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parksidehas&#13;
been announced today by UW-P&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie.&#13;
Dannehl, who assumed his new&#13;
position Sept. 1, comes to Parkside&#13;
from the University of 111.&#13;
in Champaign where he has taught&#13;
physical education and coached&#13;
football since 1967. Before that&#13;
he taught science and coached&#13;
football, baseball, wrestling and&#13;
track for seven years at Sycamore&#13;
(111.) high school (1960-62) and&#13;
Rockford East high school (1962-&#13;
67).&#13;
Dannehl succeeded Thomas P.&#13;
Rosandich who left Parkside last&#13;
month to become athletic director&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee. The Parkside&#13;
Athletic Board conducted a national&#13;
search for a replacement.&#13;
In announcing the appointment,&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie said Dannehl&#13;
"inherits a strong staff, an excellent&#13;
new facility, and community&#13;
support on which he can build.&#13;
We want him to put his own distinctive&#13;
mark on our program, just&#13;
as Tom Rosandich did in his time&#13;
with us."&#13;
Wyllie praised the Athletic&#13;
Board for "an outstanding job in&#13;
screening a large list of candidates&#13;
in a very short time" and&#13;
said "in Dr. Wayne Dannehl we&#13;
have a man who was everybody's&#13;
first choice. We all agreed that&#13;
he represented exactly the right&#13;
balance of athletic and academic&#13;
experience."&#13;
At Illinois, Dannehl was an assistant&#13;
professor of p hysical education&#13;
and assistant freshman football&#13;
coach. In addition to teaching,&#13;
he was an advisor to undergraduate&#13;
physical education students and&#13;
supervisor of student teachers.&#13;
This spring he rec eived an award&#13;
for teaching excellence at Illinois&#13;
and was selected as a member of&#13;
a North Central Association of&#13;
secondary schools evaluation&#13;
team. He is listed in "Outstanding&#13;
Young Men of America-1972."&#13;
Dannehl earned his Ph.D„ at&#13;
Illinois (1970) in educational administration&#13;
and his B.S. (with&#13;
honors) and MJS. degrees in education&#13;
from Northern Illinois University&#13;
(1960,1964).&#13;
Co-captain of N orthern Illinois'&#13;
football team his senior year,&#13;
Dannehl was named to the Scholastic&#13;
Little All-American team,&#13;
earned all-conference honors, and&#13;
received the Interstate Intercollegiate&#13;
Conference ScholarAthlete&#13;
award.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie said Dannehl's&#13;
"broad-gauged philosophy&#13;
fits our program, which combines&#13;
physical education, athletics, club&#13;
sports, intramurals and recreation&#13;
in a unique way in that no element&#13;
of the program stands alone and&#13;
each activity reinforces the othDannehl&#13;
has researched and published&#13;
widely in such areas as the&#13;
value of athletics, evaluation of&#13;
athletic programs, organization of&#13;
physical education units in Midwestern&#13;
universities, crowd control&#13;
and coaches' behavior, and&#13;
wrestling and football techniques.&#13;
His latest article, "Bias in Baseball,"&#13;
appeared recently in The&#13;
Black Athlete.&#13;
He has made presentations each&#13;
of the last three years at the&#13;
Midwest convention of t he American&#13;
Association of Health, Physical&#13;
Education and Recreation.&#13;
He is considered to be one of&#13;
the top wrestling officials in 111.&#13;
and was manager of the Illinois&#13;
state high school wrestling tournaments&#13;
in 1969 and 1971.&#13;
Born in Watseka, 111., the youngest&#13;
of 12 children, Dannehl graduated&#13;
from Onarga,Ill., high school&#13;
where he was named to the Little&#13;
All-State football team in 1954.&#13;
He is married (Carole Rae) and&#13;
the father of two girls (Denise&#13;
and Diane).&#13;
PaEe 4 Cross Country&#13;
Preview&#13;
Page 5 Soccer Preview&#13;
Pages 6-7. . .Sports Schedules&#13;
Pages 10-11. . .Physical Education&#13;
Building Fees,&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
&#13;
Page 12. . .Physical Education&#13;
Courses&#13;
WAYNE DANNEHL TOM ROSANDICH&#13;
0KT06ERFEST&#13;
OCT. 6-7 &#13;
THE RANGER SEPT., 1972&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
State Bank&#13;
3928 60th STREET •&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
658-2582&#13;
Regular Banking Hours:&#13;
LOBBY: 9:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.&#13;
DRIVE-IN: 9:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m.&#13;
FRIDAY: 9:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m.&#13;
SATURDAY: 9 a.m. to Noon&#13;
Banking hours tailored for your convenience.&#13;
Free checking accounts for college students.&#13;
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.&#13;
Nearing completion southeast of&#13;
the new Physical Education facility&#13;
is a bowled area enclosing a&#13;
440-yard all-weather track and&#13;
soccer field. Spectators will be&#13;
able to watch soccer or track&#13;
action European-style, that is,&#13;
sitting cm th e grass slopes rising&#13;
from the outer edge of t he track.&#13;
Tennis courts will be located directly&#13;
north of the track-soccer&#13;
complex.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PEOPLE GET&#13;
RED CARPET TREATMENT&#13;
AT&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave., Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
(Of course, so does everyone else!)&#13;
M»mb«r Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
An official publication of the&#13;
National Varsity Club, Inc., of&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Vol. 2, No. 1, Sept., 1972&#13;
President Bob Hartman&#13;
Vice-President To be named&#13;
Secretary- A1 Gelsone&#13;
Treasurer- - - - -Guy Trecroci&#13;
Executive Board Stan Barry,&#13;
Gene Brookhouse, Joe Cucunato,&#13;
Lou Di Castri, Chet Dickow, Mark&#13;
Mano, Orby Moss, A1 Rainovic,&#13;
Jack Rice, Bill Wells, Paul Yutka.&#13;
Publisher—The National Varsity&#13;
Club, Inc.&#13;
Editor- Pete Turco&#13;
Consultant to the Editor- - Don&#13;
Kopriva&#13;
Parkside 200 Editor Lloyd&#13;
Northard&#13;
Staff Writers Jim Bradley, A1&#13;
Gelsone, Lou DiCastri,Vic Godfrey&#13;
Art Director A1 Rainovic&#13;
Business Manager- -Guy Trecroci&#13;
Photographers Darrel Borger,&#13;
Neil Hagloff, Marsh Simonsen &#13;
ROBERT E&#13;
SEPT., 1972&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
One of the finest areas In the&#13;
new building is the swimming pool&#13;
and accompanying facilities. The&#13;
pool, an eight-lane, 25-yard short&#13;
course, also has a 12' 6" deep&#13;
diving area with one and three&#13;
meter boards. See Rules and Regulations&#13;
of the building on pages&#13;
10 and 11 for information regarding&#13;
recreation.&#13;
3700 Roosevelt Road&#13;
658-2021&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
658-1665 Richard E. Ell&#13;
President&#13;
"Our experienced sales staff would&#13;
welcome your call for real estate assistance&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM • 2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131 &#13;
Page 4 THE RANGER&#13;
SEPT., 1972&#13;
HARRIERS ON TITLE&#13;
Cross country at Parkside in&#13;
1972 figures to be a mixture of&#13;
the old and the new.&#13;
The old is really not that old&#13;
either, unless one wants to call&#13;
a team with no seniors "old".&#13;
But the experience is there,&#13;
and for Vic Godfrey, the "new"&#13;
who's taking over the team so&#13;
track mentor Bob Lawson can&#13;
devote more time to the cinder&#13;
sport, that might just be enough&#13;
to help the Rangers to a repeat&#13;
of their District 14 title and NAIA&#13;
national seventh.&#13;
Top man, of course, is sophomore&#13;
Lucian Rosa. The Ceylon&#13;
native won just about everything&#13;
in sight last fall and may be&#13;
expected to do about the same in&#13;
his second campaign with the hilland-dale&#13;
sport.&#13;
But there's a good supporting&#13;
cast, headed by Waterford junior&#13;
Jim McFadden who started strong&#13;
last fall but was slowed by an&#13;
injury late in the year. Also expected&#13;
to be top contenders for&#13;
spots on the squad are Menomonie&#13;
junior Rick Lund, a 1970 letterman&#13;
who returns after missing&#13;
last season; Dennis Biel, sophomore&#13;
from Wausau; Keith Merritt,&#13;
Kenosha junior; and Mosinee&#13;
sophomore Kim Whitmore.&#13;
Some good freshmen should give&#13;
Godfrey added talent to work with&#13;
and keep the Rangers in the thick&#13;
of the District title picture and&#13;
on the path toward national recognition.&#13;
&#13;
TRAIL&#13;
Vic Godfrey, Head Coach&#13;
For Vic Godfrey, this season&#13;
marks the second time he has&#13;
assumed control of Ranger cross&#13;
country fortunes. He guided Parkside&#13;
to a 4-1 dual mark and a&#13;
District title in 1970 while thenhead&#13;
mentor Bob Lawson was&#13;
coaching in the Philippines.&#13;
Now he's got the Rangers on&#13;
his own and the season promises&#13;
to be just about as good as the&#13;
one Lawson and Godfrey pushed the&#13;
young Parkside squad to last&#13;
season.&#13;
Godfrey first came to Parkside&#13;
in the fall of 1969 after successful&#13;
track coaching tours at Watertown,&#13;
S.D., and Madison, Minn.,&#13;
high schools. He's also the assistant&#13;
track coach at Parkside and&#13;
coordinator of c lub sports.&#13;
Vic coached two years in Indonesia&#13;
while in the Peace Corps.&#13;
He's a member of the Wisconsin&#13;
Track Coaches and Cross Country&#13;
Coaches associations and Blue&#13;
Key, the national honorary fraternity.&#13;
Godfrey and his wife Ruth&#13;
have one child.&#13;
USTFF MID AMERICA AND&#13;
NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS&#13;
OCTOBER 28, 1972 —KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
r&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE ANNOUNCES&#13;
the Third Annual MID-AMERICA FEDERATION CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
CHAMPIONSHIPS under the auspices of the United States&#13;
Track &amp; Field Federation&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1972&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE, KENOSHA WISCONSIN&#13;
(Located midway between Chicago &amp; Milwaukee)&#13;
THE LIST OF RACES INCLUDES THE NATIONAL FEDERATION CHAMPIONSHIPS FOR GIRLS&#13;
&amp; WOMEN AS WELL AS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS FOR VETERANS (Men 30-39) and MASTERS&#13;
(Men 40 &amp; over).&#13;
PROGRAM:&#13;
10:00 A.M.&#13;
11:15 A.M.&#13;
12:00 A.M.&#13;
WOMEN &amp; GIRLS NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS&#13;
Nine &amp; under: 10-11; 12-13;&#13;
14-17; and Open Division.&#13;
NATIONAL VETERANS and MASTERS (Men)&#13;
Veteran 30-39.&#13;
Master 40 and over.&#13;
TWO MILES&#13;
THREE MILES&#13;
MID-AMERICAN CHAMPIONSHIPS SIX MILES&#13;
MEN'S OPEN ANY AGE&#13;
FEE:&#13;
TWO DOLLAR ENTRY FEE FOR ALL ENTRANTS. FIVE DOLLAR LATE ENTRY&#13;
FEE FOR ALL ENTRIES AFTER THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26th&#13;
AWARDS:&#13;
MEDALS TO TOP 15 RUNNERS IN EACH CLASS.&#13;
TROPHIES TO TOP THREE TEAMS IN MID-AMERICAN OPEN AND TO&#13;
TOP THREE TEAMS IN THE WOMEN'S OPEN ONLY.&#13;
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
VIC GODFREY, OFFICE OF ATHLETICS, UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
or call 414 553-2310 Res. 414 554-9210&#13;
THE&#13;
For Lucian Rosa, 1971-72 was&#13;
a very good year and this one&#13;
promises to be even better. The&#13;
freshman from Ceylon cracked&#13;
UW-Parkside records in nearly&#13;
every distance race over the&#13;
course of the track season. In his&#13;
first try ever at crosscountry last&#13;
fall, he won the NAIA District 14&#13;
individual title as Parkside waltzed&#13;
to the team crown and then placed&#13;
16th in the nationals as he t Rangers&#13;
grabbed a strong seventh.&#13;
Things didn't end with cross&#13;
country however as Rosa-running&#13;
barefoot in every race—shocked&#13;
the opposition with his determination&#13;
and endurance. The climax of&#13;
his fine season came late in April&#13;
at Des Moines, Iowa, as he won&#13;
the U.S. Track and Field Federation's&#13;
national marathon championship&#13;
at the Drake Relays in 2&#13;
hours, 22 minutes, 13 seconds, a&#13;
new record.&#13;
He later placed third in the&#13;
10,000 meter run in the NAIA&#13;
outdoor championships and went&#13;
to Munich in June to prepare for&#13;
the 10,000 and marathon in the&#13;
Olympic Games. But he's back&#13;
here now for cross country and&#13;
should be ready for an even better&#13;
year this second time around.&#13;
TRECR0CI&#13;
REALTY&#13;
REALTORS&#13;
RHIDENTIAL - C OMMERCIAL&#13;
ONE OF SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN'S&#13;
LARGEST AGENCIES&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS&#13;
APPRAISAL S ERVICE&#13;
658-1319&#13;
MLS GUY D. T REGROCI - B roker, 6927 39th Ave.&#13;
RES. PH. 694-6743 &#13;
SEPT., 1972&#13;
^ _ THE RANGER d&#13;
SOCCER OUTLOOK OPTIMISTIC&#13;
U D f 1^. f_J I f """ I ~C Tod returnppR PROSPECTS&#13;
Promising newcomers could&#13;
blend with 12 returning lettermen&#13;
to stamp a winning brand on Parkside&#13;
soccer in 1972.&#13;
New head coach Hal Henderson&#13;
expects to have 25-30 players&#13;
available for duty and is optimistic&#13;
about his squad's chances of&#13;
improving its 6-6-1 ledger of last&#13;
season.&#13;
COACHES&#13;
Heading the Parkside soccer&#13;
program in 1972 is Hal Henderson,&#13;
formerly head coach at Rockford&#13;
(111.) College.&#13;
Henderson, 30, has coached on&#13;
the college scene for seven years,&#13;
with one term at the University&#13;
of Colorado, three years at Park&#13;
College in Kansas City and the&#13;
same period at Rockford.&#13;
He's a graduate of Park, where&#13;
Top returnees are sophomore&#13;
Rick Lechusz, the Rangers' leading&#13;
scorer last year, and another&#13;
soph, Ray Phanturat of Thailand,&#13;
and Mike Jenrette, Wolf Kiefer&#13;
and Tom Thomsen.&#13;
The team's "rookies" include&#13;
two major division soccer players&#13;
from Milwaukee living in Racine,&#13;
Mike Nedeljkovic and Tashe&#13;
Bozinouski, and Pietro Tarantino&#13;
of Milwaukee Bay View high and&#13;
Anothai Nganthavee of Thailand.&#13;
Henderson is optimistic because&#13;
he lettered four times in the sport&#13;
and captained the squad twice, and&#13;
has his masters from Colorado.&#13;
At Parkside, he'll also be the&#13;
head trainer and as such will have&#13;
responsibilities with all Parkside&#13;
teams.&#13;
Henderson currently serves as&#13;
first vice president of the NAIA&#13;
National Soccer Coaches Association&#13;
and as a member of th e NAIA&#13;
National Tournament Games Comof&#13;
the large number of r eturnees,&#13;
including eight starters, and because&#13;
of the expected depth that&#13;
other Parkside teams have lacked.&#13;
Competition should be strong in&#13;
several positions and barring injuries&#13;
the Rangers could find themselves&#13;
in the thick of th e District&#13;
14 playoffs battling for a postseason&#13;
bid. Key to a successful&#13;
season may lie in the ability of&#13;
the team to work together and&#13;
establish consistency under a new&#13;
coach.&#13;
mittee.&#13;
Assisting Hal is U.S. Olympic&#13;
team member John Bocwinski of&#13;
Kenosha, who started playing the&#13;
game in his native Argentina and&#13;
has seldom stopped since. For the&#13;
last 18 years, he has played for&#13;
the Schlitz Polonia team of Milwaukee&#13;
and has been named to the&#13;
all-star team of the Wisconsin&#13;
State League every year since&#13;
1961.&#13;
LECHUSZ WITH THE BALL&#13;
The Rangers' effort against eventual national champion Ouincv in thP OktnhorW t&#13;
have been one of their finest performances of the vear fW t™ °&#13;
ktobe ,&#13;
lest Tournament at Parkside may&#13;
while co-captain Mike Jenrette moves up to le aslisLoe ol 1 T' W°&#13;
rks with the ba&#13;
"&#13;
lead, but the Rangers tied it up at 2-all and gave their opponents a h* nf a game *"2 afte r t ak,n9 a quick 2-0&#13;
2-0 in the consolation game of the tourney. scare. The Rangers beat Ohio State&#13;
Ill ..&#13;
Parkside's New Head Coach&#13;
Hal Henderson&#13;
GOAL FOR PARKSIDE ! ! ! !&#13;
MAIN ENTRANCE TO UW-PARKSIDE'S NEW PHYSICAL EDUCATION &amp; A THLETICS BLDG.&#13;
BEST WISHES&#13;
from&#13;
&lt;JAe&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NRTIONRL BRNK&#13;
OF KENOSHA&#13;
conveniently located in the&#13;
center of town&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C. &#13;
Page 6 THE RANGER&#13;
SEPT., 1972&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
COACH VIC GODFREY&#13;
September&#13;
19 Carthage, Whitewater, Stevens&#13;
Point&#13;
23 Illinois-Chicago Circle&#13;
JO Eastern Illinois&#13;
October&#13;
3 Wisconsin-Milwaukee&#13;
7 Oktoberfest Invitational&#13;
13 Notre Dame&#13;
Invitational&#13;
17 Marquette&#13;
28 USTFF Mid-American&#13;
Championship&#13;
November&#13;
3 Loras&#13;
11 NAIA District 14&#13;
18 NAIA Nationals&#13;
25 National AAU&#13;
Stevens Point&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Charleston, III.&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
South Bend, Ind.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Eau Cloire&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Chicago, III.&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
COACH HAL HENDERSON&#13;
ASST. JOHN BOCWINSKI&#13;
September&#13;
16 Lake Forest Lake Forest, III.&#13;
20 Lewis Lockport, III.&#13;
23 Southern lllinoisEdwardsville&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
27 Dominican PARKSIDE&#13;
30 UW-Madison Modison&#13;
October&#13;
4 IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle PARKSIDE&#13;
6-7 Oktoberfest Tournament PARKSIDE&#13;
(UW-Madison, Notre Dame,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee) PARKSIDE&#13;
14 UW-Platteville PARKSIDE&#13;
21 Marquette PARKSIDE&#13;
November&#13;
1 Eastern Illinois Charleston, III.&#13;
4 UW-Green Bay PARKSIDE&#13;
11 NAIA District 14 Playoffs&#13;
VIC GODFREY&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY&#13;
HAL HENDERSON&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
JOHN BOCWINSKI&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
GOLF, BASKETBALL&#13;
RUDY COLLUM&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
LORAN HEIN&#13;
FENCING, ADMIN. ASST.&#13;
FALL GOLF&#13;
COACH STEVf STEPHENS&#13;
September&#13;
15 UW-Stevens Point Stevens Point&#13;
22-23 UW-LoCrosse LaCrosse&#13;
29-30 UW-Oshkosh oshkosh&#13;
October&#13;
7 Oktoberfest Tournament PARKSIDE'&#13;
14 UW-Madison Madison &#13;
SEPT., 1972&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
Page 7&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
COACH STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
ASST. RUDY COLLUM&#13;
December&#13;
Luther College PARKSIDE&#13;
Univ. of Missouri- Rollo PARKSIDF&#13;
North Dakota Grand Forks N D&#13;
North Dakota State Fargo. N.D.&#13;
Northern Michigan PARKSIDE&#13;
Southern Illinois-Edwardsville PARKSIDE&#13;
29-30 Boyne County&#13;
Classic (2) Big Rapids, Mich.&#13;
(Michigan Tech, Lake Superior&#13;
State, Ferris State)&#13;
January&#13;
6 UW-Platteviile Platteville&#13;
UW-Green Bay Green Bay&#13;
Aquinas PARKSIDE&#13;
Indiana State-Evansville PARKSIDE&#13;
Wayne State Detroit, Mich,&#13;
St. Xavier PARKSIDE&#13;
Northern Michigan Marquette, Mich.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
9&#13;
13&#13;
16&#13;
20&#13;
23&#13;
27&#13;
30 Ripon&#13;
FebrUbry&#13;
3 Purdue-North Centra&#13;
6 Milton&#13;
10 Carroll&#13;
13 Lake Forest&#13;
17 UW-Green Bay&#13;
20 Dominican&#13;
23 Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
27 UW-Milwaukee&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Lake Forest, III.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
Mi waukee&#13;
INDOOR TRACK&#13;
COACH BOB LAWSON&#13;
ASST. VIC GODFREY&#13;
December&#13;
23 Chicago Holidoy Ope n Chicago, III.&#13;
January&#13;
4 Chicago Track&#13;
Club Open Chicago, III.&#13;
13 Invitational Relays Chicago, III.&#13;
19-20 NAIA Indoor&#13;
Championships Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
27 19th Chicagolond Ope n Chicago, III.&#13;
February&#13;
U Illinois Champaign, III.&#13;
17 Titan Open Meet Oshkosh&#13;
1 24 UW-LaCrosse, UW-Whitewater,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, UW-Stevens Point.&#13;
Loras College LaCrosse&#13;
March&#13;
3 Illinois Open Champaign, III.&#13;
10 North Central&#13;
Champaign, III.&#13;
Invitationol Naperville, III.&#13;
17 UW-Milwaukee Milwaukee&#13;
FENCING&#13;
COACH LORAN HEIN&#13;
November&#13;
29 Wisconsin Intercollegiate Madison&#13;
December&#13;
2 Illinois Open Champaign, III.&#13;
January&#13;
3 Iowa State Ames, Iowa&#13;
4 Nebraska Lincoln, Nebr.&#13;
6 Air Force Academy Colorado&#13;
8 Kansas, MissouriKansas&#13;
City Lawrence, Kans.&#13;
10 Washington Univ., Florissant JC,&#13;
Southern III.-Edwardsville St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
13 Indiana, Purdue,&#13;
Illinois Champaign, III.&#13;
19 Lake Superior State PARKSIDE&#13;
20 Air Force, Minnesota,&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison Madison&#13;
February&#13;
3 Notre Dame, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Milwaukee Tech, IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle Chicago, III.&#13;
9 Tri-State Angola, l.nd..&#13;
10 Wisconsin-Madison.&#13;
Michigan State East Lansing, Mich.&#13;
17 Beloit, Wayne State,&#13;
Illinois Champaign, III.&#13;
24 Chicago, Oberlin PARKSIDE&#13;
March&#13;
3 UW-Milwaukee, Chicago,&#13;
Milwaukee Tech Milwaukee (Tech)&#13;
10 Great Lakes Championships PARKSIDE&#13;
Champaign, III.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Madison&#13;
December&#13;
2&#13;
9&#13;
15&#13;
28-29&#13;
January&#13;
12-13&#13;
24&#13;
27&#13;
February&#13;
3&#13;
8&#13;
10&#13;
14&#13;
20&#13;
March&#13;
8-10&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Championships&#13;
Whitewater Invitational&#13;
Grand Valley State&#13;
Midlands Tournament&#13;
Louisiana State Tournament&#13;
Marquette&#13;
Eight State Invitational&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
UW - LaCrosse&#13;
Eastern Illinois, Michigan Tech,&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle&#13;
UW - Oshkosh&#13;
UW - Milwaukee&#13;
NAIA National Tournament&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Evanston, III.&#13;
Baton Rouge, La.&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Macomb, III.&#13;
Marquette, Mich.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
GEZA MARTINY&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
BOB GRUENINGER&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
COACH GEZA MARTI NY&#13;
November&#13;
24 Midwest Open&#13;
December&#13;
1 Chicago&#13;
2 UW-Eau Claire&#13;
8 UW-Stout&#13;
15 UW-Madison&#13;
January&#13;
27 UW-Platteville,&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
February&#13;
3 UW-Oshkosh,&#13;
St. Cloud State&#13;
10 UW-Stevens Point&#13;
17 Triton Invitational&#13;
23 Mankato State&#13;
March&#13;
2 Triton&#13;
10 Western Illinois&#13;
23-24 NAIA&#13;
Palatine, III.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Menomonie&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Oshkosh&#13;
Stevens Point&#13;
River Grove, III.&#13;
Mankato, Minn.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Macomb, III.&#13;
BOB LAWSON&#13;
TRACK&#13;
JIM KOCH&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
BARB MORRIS&#13;
WOMEN'S SPORTS DICK FRECKA&#13;
TENNIS&#13;
WOMEN'S SCHEDULE&#13;
1 COACHES DICK FRECKA,&#13;
GEZA MARTINY, BARBARA JO MORRIS&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Oct 6 Oktoberlest Invitational PARKSIDE&#13;
Oct. 28 USTFF Nationol Women's&#13;
Championships PARKSIDE&#13;
Golf&#13;
Oct. 5 Oktoberlest Tournament PARKSIDE&#13;
Swimming&#13;
Oct. 14 Oshkosh Invitational Oshkosh&#13;
Nov. 4 Parkside Invitational PARKSIDE&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
Oct. 28 Whitewater&#13;
Invitational Whitewater 1&#13;
Nov. 11 Region B&#13;
Dec. 9&#13;
Championships PARKSIDE&#13;
Dec. 9 State meet Oshkosh&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Sept, 21 Carthage Kenosha&#13;
Sept. 23 Whitewater&#13;
Sept. 25&#13;
Invitational Whitewater 1&#13;
Sept. 25 Carthage, Northwestern PARKSIDE&#13;
Sept, 27 UW-Whitewater Whitewater 1&#13;
Oct. 4 Oktoberfest Invitational PARKSIDE&#13;
Oct. 11 Lake Forest, Beloit PARKSIDE&#13;
Oct. 18 UW-Oshkosh PARKSIDF&#13;
Nov. 10-11 State Meet Oshkosh &#13;
Racine Teachers Credit Union&#13;
serving the employees and staff of UW-Parkside&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
SAME DAY SERVICE ON LOANS AND SAVINGS&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
SEPT., 1972&#13;
KEN MARTIN&#13;
TWO-TIME ALL-AMERICAN • CO-CAPTAIN AND MOST VALUABLE&#13;
Sophomore Keith Merritt of Kenosha was&#13;
the Iron Man of the Ranger team as he displayed&#13;
his versatility numerous times,&#13;
competing in as many as five events in&#13;
a meet. He set school records in the triple&#13;
jump and pole vault indoors, and on&#13;
the Rangers' trip to Arkansas over spring&#13;
break, set another in the 440-yard intermediate&#13;
hurdles.&#13;
TOM BOTHE&#13;
RANGERS&#13;
Pat Kekic was among the top coeds on the Parkside tennis squad and&#13;
finished the year with only one loss.&#13;
JOHN TANK &#13;
SEPT., 1972&#13;
BASKETBALL SET Page 9&#13;
THE PROSPECTS&#13;
Big improvements should be in&#13;
store for Wisconsin-Parkside basketball&#13;
in 1972-73 as eight&#13;
returning lettermen and a bundle&#13;
of hot-shot freshmen vie for starting&#13;
roles in Coach Steve Stephens'&#13;
eighth Ranger squad.&#13;
But the man who could help the&#13;
most sat out last season's 4-18&#13;
campaign with a back injury and&#13;
while Stephens won't predict a&#13;
complete turnabout, he figures&#13;
that big Mike Madsen (6-8, 235)&#13;
will give the Rangers added board&#13;
strength.&#13;
'The season looks more promising,'&#13;
Stephens says, 'with all our&#13;
returning people having experience.&#13;
We lost no seniors and&#13;
added key freshmen recruits who&#13;
will put pressure on the 1971-&#13;
72 starters. We'll have size, speed&#13;
and Jumping ability but we're also&#13;
facing our toughest schedule&#13;
ever.'&#13;
By position, Stephens looks for&#13;
regular Bob Popp and leading&#13;
scorer Chuck Chambliss (17.4)&#13;
letter man Tom Heller (moved from&#13;
center) and freshmen Don Snow,&#13;
Mike McGrath and Mike Hanke to&#13;
battle at forward.&#13;
He figures that Madsen, semiregular&#13;
Mark Peck (6-6) and newcomer&#13;
Bill Sobanski will vie with&#13;
'70-71 letter-winner Mike Jackson&#13;
for the Center spot. And with&#13;
regulars back at guard in Tom&#13;
Joyce and Dennis (Deke) Routheaux,&#13;
Stephens sees more depth&#13;
than any other position and expects&#13;
newcomers Tim Dolan, Pat Mason&#13;
and Joe Hutter to bid with Mike&#13;
Joyce and Pete Nevins, both lettermen,&#13;
for Tom Joyce's and Routheaux's&#13;
spots, which they too will&#13;
be fighting to keep.&#13;
THE PLAYERS&#13;
Lettermen lost from 1971-72—1&#13;
THE PLAYERS&#13;
Lettermen lost from 1971-72 -- 1&#13;
Forward - Phil Stewart (6-3)&#13;
Lettermen returning from 1971-&#13;
1972—8&#13;
Forwards - Chuck Chambliss&#13;
(6-1, Bob Popp (6-2)&#13;
Centers - Tom Heller (6-6),&#13;
Mark Peck (6-6)&#13;
Guards - Mike Joyce (6-1), Tom&#13;
Joyce (5-11), Pete Nevins (6-0),&#13;
Dennis Routheaux (6-1)&#13;
Starters returning — 5&#13;
F. Chuck Chambliss, F Bob&#13;
Popp, C. Tom Heller, G. Tom&#13;
Joyce, G. Dennis Routheaux.&#13;
Lettermen returning from 1970-&#13;
71 — 2&#13;
Centers -- Mike Madsen (6-8)&#13;
Mike Jackson (6-6)&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
The 1971-72 Record&#13;
(Won 4, Lost 18; 1-7 home, 3-11&#13;
road)&#13;
UW-P&#13;
45&#13;
60&#13;
93&#13;
66&#13;
70&#13;
86&#13;
65&#13;
63&#13;
56&#13;
70&#13;
76&#13;
76&#13;
67&#13;
83&#13;
81&#13;
69&#13;
59&#13;
78&#13;
60&#13;
67&#13;
84&#13;
81&#13;
68&#13;
82&#13;
63&#13;
103&#13;
73&#13;
OT92&#13;
81&#13;
81&#13;
100&#13;
75&#13;
92&#13;
77&#13;
91&#13;
80&#13;
76&#13;
91&#13;
85&#13;
82&#13;
94&#13;
78&#13;
OT87&#13;
71&#13;
OPPONENT&#13;
@W. Michigan&#13;
Wayne State&#13;
Lake Forest&#13;
Wis.Green Bay&#13;
N. Michigan&#13;
@Purdue N. Central&#13;
#St. Norbert&#13;
#COE&#13;
Wis .-Milwaukee&#13;
@ Carroll&#13;
Wis.-Plattevile&#13;
@St. Xavier&#13;
Mo.-St. Louis&#13;
@S. Ill-Edwardsvl.&#13;
@Ind jSt.-E vansvill e&#13;
@Milton&#13;
@Aquinas&#13;
St .Xavier&#13;
@Wis.-Milw.&#13;
@Wis.-Green Bay&#13;
@Lakeland&#13;
@Dominican&#13;
FOR COMEBACK&#13;
McDonald's is open for&#13;
breakfast!&#13;
Featuring Egg McMuff in.&#13;
An egg, grilled in butter, covered with&#13;
cheese and Canadian bacon, on a&#13;
toasted, buttered English muffin.&#13;
You can have the great new Egg McMuffin&#13;
by itself. Or with Florida orange juice and a&#13;
cup of coffee.&#13;
Either way, ifs at a price that won't jolt&#13;
""•u awake.&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
Free Florida orange juice!&#13;
(as an introductory offer)&#13;
Serving Breakfast Daily from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m.&#13;
Sunday from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m.&#13;
Sheridan Road at 81st St. • 52nd S t. and 39 th A ve.&#13;
Our Other Locations:&#13;
Downtown&#13;
Corner of 6th Avenue&#13;
and 56th Street&#13;
Pleasant Prairie&#13;
9900 39th Avenue&#13;
Bristol&#13;
Corner Highways 50 and 45&#13;
Deposits Insured&#13;
to $20,000 by&#13;
the F.D.I.C.&#13;
Our Somers Branch&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue Main Phone: 657-6141&#13;
Near the Parkside Campus&#13;
Somers Phone: 5528989&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
of Kenosha &#13;
Page 10 THE RANGER SEPT., 1972&#13;
LEARN A NEW&#13;
Physical Education, Recreation,&#13;
Intramurals, Club Sports And Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside A / A % ' •&#13;
1 1 \ 1 a V&#13;
Guidelines For The Use Of The&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
The purpose of t his presentation&#13;
is to acquaint students, faculty&#13;
and staff with the scope and policies&#13;
and procedures of basic instructional&#13;
activity of physical education,&#13;
Intramurals, recreation and&#13;
athletics. The material included&#13;
on these pages attempts to answer&#13;
the many questions that have been&#13;
asked by university students and&#13;
staff. For further information,&#13;
please contact the Physical Education&#13;
Office, 553-2245 or 2246.&#13;
What Are The Objectives Of Physical&#13;
Education and Related Programs?&#13;
&#13;
The basic philosophy of t he physical&#13;
education, Intramural, club&#13;
sports, recreation and athletic&#13;
program at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside is LIFETIME&#13;
SPORTS. The cornerstone of th is&#13;
philosophy is physical education&#13;
where the various skills for the&#13;
many lifetime sports activities are&#13;
taught. All activity courses carry&#13;
a one credit evaluation towards&#13;
graduation, and a total of 30 hours&#13;
in. physical education is acceptable&#13;
on your graduation transcript.&#13;
Reflecting a modern trend,&#13;
most of the courses offered at&#13;
Parkside are co-educational.&#13;
Thus, Physical Education is in&#13;
essence the base of a pyramid,&#13;
where skills are learned, then a&#13;
wide offering in intramurals gives&#13;
the individual the opportunity to&#13;
develop those skills. For those&#13;
who seek more than intramural&#13;
competition a new concept of club&#13;
sports is offered so that various&#13;
individuals in sports that are not&#13;
normally a part of i ntercollegiate&#13;
competition can find extra-mural&#13;
competition against other universities&#13;
and colleges. Examples such&#13;
as this would be sailing, bowling,&#13;
judo and hockey. Parkside has been&#13;
a leader in the development of&#13;
club sports and the offerings in&#13;
this area are only limited by t he&#13;
imagination of those seeking activity.&#13;
At the top of this pyramid&#13;
is intercollegiate athletics, the&#13;
highest level of skill, and again&#13;
this program is offered to both&#13;
men and women with a variety of&#13;
fall, winter and spring sports.&#13;
While the above is the concept&#13;
and philosophy, as follows there&#13;
are seven points that are the objectives&#13;
of all activity in physical&#13;
education.&#13;
1. To develop physical capabilities&#13;
that comprise the biological&#13;
basis of p hysical fitness.&#13;
2. To improve skills in basic&#13;
body mechanics, team and individual&#13;
sports in addition to rhythmic&#13;
and creative activities.&#13;
3. To develop an understanding&#13;
of the self through movement experiences.&#13;
&#13;
4. To encourage the students to&#13;
develop and appreciate and understand&#13;
the role of human movement&#13;
in various sports forms involved&#13;
in man's culture.&#13;
5. To acquire a knowledge and&#13;
understanding of the history, rules&#13;
courtesies, customs, strategies&#13;
and techniques of many sports.&#13;
6. To Improve social competence&#13;
and emotional stability&#13;
through participation in sports activities.&#13;
&#13;
7. To establish a climate of&#13;
instruction and participation in&#13;
which students gain an Insight&#13;
into acceptable, ethical and moral&#13;
values.&#13;
Summation: To provide every&#13;
member of t he university community&#13;
with the opportunity to learn&#13;
physical skills that he or she can&#13;
use all his or her life through&#13;
the physical education program,&#13;
and to provide additional opportunity&#13;
to develop those skills&#13;
through the intramural, club sports&#13;
and intercollegiate athletic program.&#13;
&#13;
Who Administers The Physical&#13;
Education Program&#13;
1. Dr. Wayne Dannehl, Director&#13;
of Physical Education, Recreation&#13;
and Athletics, is responsible for&#13;
all the programs.&#13;
2. Loran He in, Assistant to the&#13;
Director, is responsible for scheduling&#13;
and space utilization according&#13;
to the guidelines established&#13;
by the University and the&#13;
Athletic Board.&#13;
3. Steve Stephens, Coordinator&#13;
for Physical Education, is responsible&#13;
for all men and women's&#13;
physical education. Essentially, all&#13;
physical education courses at&#13;
Parkside are co-educational, with&#13;
the exception of football, ice&#13;
hockey., wrestling, and soccer.&#13;
Physical Education Courses&#13;
101 American Training Patterns&#13;
103 Football&#13;
105 Soccer&#13;
106 Weight Training&#13;
111 Baseball&#13;
114 Figure Improvement&#13;
115 Track&#13;
130 Softball&#13;
141 Swimming&#13;
142 Water Stunts and Diving&#13;
162 Beginning Gymnastics&#13;
164 Judo&#13;
172 Ice Hockey&#13;
173 Golf&#13;
174 Bowling&#13;
176 Fundamentals of Rhythm&#13;
179 Folk Dance&#13;
181 Paddleball^quash, Handball&#13;
188 Water Polo&#13;
189 Badminton&#13;
200 Basketball&#13;
215 Fencing&#13;
219 Wrestling&#13;
221 Tennis&#13;
233 Volleyball&#13;
243 Adv. Recreational Aquatics&#13;
245 Archery&#13;
262 Intermediate Gymnastics&#13;
263 Advanced Gymnastics&#13;
268 Outdoor Leadership&#13;
270 Karate&#13;
272 Field Hockey&#13;
274 Tumbling, Free Exercise and&#13;
Trampoline&#13;
276 Scuba Diving&#13;
284 Recreational Games&#13;
345 Boating and Sailing&#13;
366 Square Dance&#13;
375 Modern Dance&#13;
385 Beginning Skiing&#13;
391 Orienteering&#13;
393 Nordic Skiing&#13;
395 Marksmanship&#13;
Service Courses&#13;
152 First Aid and Medical SelfHelp&#13;
&#13;
205 Rhythms, Folk and Square&#13;
Dancing&#13;
252 Games of Low Organization&#13;
253 Officiating Team and Dual&#13;
Sports&#13;
254 Officiating Individual Sports&#13;
301 Senior Lifesaving&#13;
302 Water Safety Instructor&#13;
351 Physical Ed. for Elementary&#13;
School Teachers&#13;
352 Physical Ed Techniques&#13;
401 Hunter Safety Instructor Cert.&#13;
403 Ski Patrol Certification&#13;
409 Ski Instructor's Certification&#13;
433 Adapted Physical Education&#13;
4. Jim Koch, Coordinator for&#13;
Intramurals, is responsible for&#13;
all men's and women's intramurals&#13;
programming.&#13;
FALL INTRAMURAL SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept. 11 #Touch Football - Noons&#13;
and 4 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 11 - #Recreation - Noons&#13;
and evenings.&#13;
Sept. 12 - #Women's Softball -&#13;
Noons and/or 4 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 18 - #Powderpuff Football&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 19 - #Pass Tag - Recreation&#13;
League&#13;
Sept. 20 - #Tennls - Oktoberfest&#13;
Tournament Starts&#13;
Sept. 20 - #Bowling - 4 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 28-&#13;
Sept. 28 - #Golf - Oktoberfest&#13;
Tournament Starts.&#13;
Oct. 2 - Handball-Ladder Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 5 - Golf-Oktoberfest Tournament&#13;
ends.&#13;
Oct. 6 - Archery - Oktoberfest&#13;
Tournament&#13;
Oct. 7 - Tennis - Oktoberfest&#13;
Tournament ends&#13;
Oct. 7 - Sailing-Oktoberfest&#13;
Oct. 15 - Punt-Pass-Kick&#13;
Oct. 15 - Powerlifting Contest&#13;
(Odd Lift)&#13;
Oct. 29 - Orienteering (on Campus)&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 5 - All-University Football&#13;
Championship&#13;
Nov. 6 - Judo Tournament&#13;
Nov. 13 - Basketball Signup -&#13;
(8:00-10:00 p.m.)(challenge games&#13;
only first semester)&#13;
Dec. 10 - Basketball Tournament&#13;
(one day only)&#13;
# 1st day of a ctivity&#13;
5. Vic Godfrey, Coordinator for&#13;
Club Sports, is responsible for&#13;
all club sport programming.&#13;
This program is one of the most&#13;
dynamic, sweeping college campuses&#13;
throughout America in&#13;
the 1970's. This is an opportunity&#13;
for someone who has learned&#13;
the physical skill through the&#13;
intramural program and then seek&#13;
outside extramural competition&#13;
(outside competition against other&#13;
colleges and universities or clubs).&#13;
The Parkside program is one of&#13;
the most dynamic in the United&#13;
States. It offers everything from&#13;
Judo to ice hockey. Besides, ice&#13;
hockey had over twenty games&#13;
scheduled last year against outstanding&#13;
colleges of America. The&#13;
KENOSHA BRANCH&#13;
WEST FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
58th St. and 6th Ave. Phone 658-2573&#13;
Home Office: Capitol Court, Milwaukee&#13;
YES—We Can Furnish You&#13;
With Money Orders and&#13;
Travelers Checks&#13;
HOURS: 9 to 4:30 MONDAY&#13;
through THURSDAY&#13;
9 to 8 P.M. on FRIDAY&#13;
program itself is only limited in&#13;
scope by the imagination and desires&#13;
of the students. Here, then,&#13;
are some of t he offerings:&#13;
CLUB SPORTS ADVISORS&#13;
Coordinator of Club Sports - Vic&#13;
Godfrey 553-2310&#13;
Baseball - Ken Oberbruner - 553-&#13;
2481&#13;
•Bowling - Jim Koch 553-2267&#13;
•Equestrian Club - Vic Godfrey&#13;
553-2310&#13;
•Fencing - Loran Heln 553-2309&#13;
Handball - Dick Frecka 553-2272&#13;
Hockey - Brien Murray 553-2348&#13;
•Judo-Karate - Ron Hanson 553-&#13;
2245&#13;
Orienteering - Vic Godfrey 553-&#13;
2310&#13;
Rugby - Wayne Dannehl 553-2245&#13;
•Sailing - Dexter Domahoski 553-&#13;
2451&#13;
•Ski Club - John Zarling 553-2288&#13;
Soccer - Hal Henderson 553-2311&#13;
•Volleyball - Vic Godfrey 553-2310&#13;
Weightlifting - Bob Lawson 553-&#13;
2153&#13;
* Coed Clubs&#13;
Guidelines For Scheduling The&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
I. General. The guidelines established&#13;
here are temporary in&#13;
nature until the physical education&#13;
building is formally shaken down&#13;
and our program is put into operation.&#13;
These guidelines are necessary&#13;
to aid various members of&#13;
the staff in scheduling physical&#13;
education, intramurals and recreation,&#13;
and intercollegiate programs&#13;
at the present time.&#13;
In accordance with the adopted&#13;
philosophy for the Office of Athletics,&#13;
priority on scheduling the&#13;
building will be as follows:&#13;
l.i Physical Education&#13;
2. Intercolleg. Athletics, men&#13;
and women&#13;
3. Intramurals&#13;
4. Club Sports&#13;
5. Recreation&#13;
While this dictates prime times&#13;
for scheduling, it does not reflect&#13;
overall allocation of h ours where,&#13;
in fact, the intramurals/club&#13;
sports/recreation area, which is&#13;
open to all students, faculty, and&#13;
staff is three times the time&#13;
allocation of say, intercollegiate&#13;
athletics. The established principle&#13;
gives the priority on&#13;
scheduling.&#13;
II. General Blocking of Time in&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
8:00 to 12:00 Physical Education&#13;
12:00 to 1:30 Intramurals &amp; Rec.&#13;
1:30 to 3:30 Physical Education&#13;
3:30 to 6:30 Intercollegiate Athl.&#13;
6:30 to 10:00 Physical Ed. Intramurals,&#13;
Recreation&#13;
6:00 to 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m.&#13;
to 12:30 a.m. are additional times&#13;
being considered for intramurals&#13;
and recreation pending funding for&#13;
additional staff and bussing.&#13;
HI. General Block Scheduling for&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletics&#13;
Tuesdays: Basketball - JVs 5:30&#13;
p.m., Varsity 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wednesdays: Wrestling -7:30p.m.&#13;
Fridays: Gymnastics, men and women&#13;
- 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Saturdays: Morning - Fencing&#13;
10:00 a.m.; Swimming 10:00 a.m.&#13;
(men and women); Badmington&#13;
10:00 a.m.&#13;
Afternoon - Wrestling 1:00 p.m.;&#13;
Volleyball 1:00 p.m. (women); Basketball&#13;
1:00 p.m. (women);&#13;
Evening - Basketball JVs 5:30,&#13;
Varsity 7:30.&#13;
IV. General Block Scheduling for&#13;
Intramurals, Club Sports, and&#13;
Recreation &#13;
SEPT., 19 72&#13;
^ THE RANGER&#13;
SPORTS ACTIVITY Page 11&#13;
8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m - Intramurals,&#13;
Recreation, Handball&#13;
daily, 2 courts&#13;
12:00 to 1:30 p.m. - Intramurals,&#13;
Basketball, Mon/Wed/Fri,&#13;
three main gyms. - Intramurals'&#13;
Volleyball, Tues/Thurs, thretl&#13;
main gyms. - Recreation, Swimming,&#13;
daily, pool. - Recreation,&#13;
Weight Training, daily, weight&#13;
room.&#13;
6:30 to 10:00p.m. - Intramurals,&#13;
Basketball, (men), Mon/Wed/Fri'&#13;
8-10 p.m. - Intramurals, Basketball,&#13;
(women), Tues/Thurs, 8-10&#13;
p.m. - Intramurals, Recreation,&#13;
Swimming, Mon/Wed/Fri, 6:30-&#13;
10 p.m. - Sports Club, Orchesis&#13;
Tues/Thurs, 6:30-10p.m. -Sports&#13;
Club, weight lifting, Mon/Wed/Fri,&#13;
6:30-10 p.m., weight room. -&#13;
Sports Club, Judo, Tues/Thurs,&#13;
6:30-10 p.m., combatives area.&#13;
Volleyball, Tues/Thurs, 6:30-&#13;
8 p.m., main gym. Recreation,&#13;
Family Judo, Fri, 6:30-10 p.m.,&#13;
combatives area.&#13;
Family Recreation. Sundays&#13;
from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. are reserved&#13;
for recreation of faculty,&#13;
staff. Noon hour swims are reserved&#13;
for wives of faculty and&#13;
staff. Special programs and sport&#13;
clubs activities will also be offered&#13;
to the children of faculty and&#13;
staff, such as judo on Friday night.&#13;
This program will be developed&#13;
according to interest and again,&#13;
funding.&#13;
V. General Block Scheduling for&#13;
Extended Hours Program - Physical&#13;
Education&#13;
P.E. Weight Training - Tues/&#13;
Thurs 6:30 to 10 p.m., Weight&#13;
Training Area.&#13;
P.E. Judo - Tues/Thurs 6:30&#13;
to 10 p.m. Combatives Area.&#13;
P.E. Lifesaving - Tues/Thurs,&#13;
Swimming Pool.&#13;
P.E. Dance - Mond/Wed -Combatives&#13;
Area.&#13;
P.E. RacquetSports - Mond/Wed&#13;
6:30 to 10 p.m., Handball Courts.&#13;
EQUIPMENT: Only basketballs&#13;
and volleyballs can be checked out&#13;
at the Equipment Room. Participants&#13;
must provide any other&#13;
necessary athletic equipment.&#13;
Golfers must provide their own&#13;
personal clubs.&#13;
The building must be cleared&#13;
of all participants by one half&#13;
hour following the end of t he daily&#13;
activity period.&#13;
Any changes in building hours&#13;
for any valid reason or due to&#13;
special events, recess or vacation&#13;
will be posted on the main&#13;
bulletin boards.&#13;
RESERVATION PROCEDURE FOR&#13;
HANDBALL AND TENNIS COURTS&#13;
1. Reservations can be made&#13;
one day in advance of the desired&#13;
playing period by personally phoning.&#13;
&#13;
2. Reservations will be accepted&#13;
beginning at 8 a.m. on Monday of&#13;
each week from students or academic-administrative&#13;
staff for one&#13;
hour of play per playing group&#13;
according to the time schedule for&#13;
the courts indicated.&#13;
3. A court permit will be issued&#13;
for each reserved playing period&#13;
and must be picked up by registrants&#13;
BY THE BEGINNING BUT&#13;
NOT EARLIER THAN 30 MINUTES&#13;
PRIOR TO THAT PLAYING&#13;
PERIOD at the Equipment Room.&#13;
Court permits for evening playing&#13;
periods beginning at 4:30 p.m.&#13;
or for Saturday and Sunday are to&#13;
be picked up at the e&#13;
be picked up at the Equipment&#13;
Room.&#13;
4. Permit holders must occupy&#13;
the court reserved no later than 15&#13;
minutes after the beginning of t he&#13;
period scheduled; otherwise the&#13;
court will be available to any one&#13;
on a first-come, first-served&#13;
basis.&#13;
VI. Conclusion. The above are&#13;
guidelines in the operation of the&#13;
building to give us direction and&#13;
will allow for participation in the&#13;
various programs that are offered.&#13;
There is already great community&#13;
interest in the facility. That will&#13;
have to be the sixth priority for&#13;
scheduling purposes. It should be&#13;
noted that faculty and staff are&#13;
encouraged to participate in intramurals,&#13;
club sports, and the recreation&#13;
program along with the&#13;
students.&#13;
Procedure&#13;
All participants will draw gear&#13;
and equipment at the equipment&#13;
window by asking for their swishy&#13;
bag number. They must show their&#13;
I.D. card with the special physical&#13;
education stamp to draw equipment.&#13;
This number will be checked&#13;
against the roster in the facility&#13;
before issue. A swishy bag number&#13;
will correspond to the locker number&#13;
in the facility, where equipment&#13;
can be stored on a permanent&#13;
basis. You dress in front of your&#13;
small locker removing the lock&#13;
from there to the dressing locker&#13;
prior to each activity. At the end&#13;
of each activity period, white stuff&#13;
is gathered up (shorts, towels,&#13;
socks, tee shirts) and placed in the&#13;
swishy bag and turned in to the&#13;
equipment room for laundry. The&#13;
whole laundry concept is predicated&#13;
on the fact that the locker room&#13;
does not have proper circulation&#13;
or ventilation to house equipment&#13;
that is not laundered on a use&#13;
basis. It should be noted that any&#13;
lock foreign to the school lock will&#13;
be cut off of lockers at the close&#13;
of each activity day.&#13;
Upon drawing any special equipment&#13;
such as volleyballs, basketballs,&#13;
the I.D. card must be&#13;
surrendered to the equipment man&#13;
and a note will be tagged to it&#13;
on the type of equipment drawn.&#13;
Who May Enroll in Physical Education&#13;
Classes?&#13;
Any member of the university,&#13;
the community or the community&#13;
at large can register for physical&#13;
education classes and receive&#13;
academic credit.&#13;
Is Physical Education Required?&#13;
No. Physical Education offers&#13;
a wide variety of activities from&#13;
which students may select classes&#13;
on an elective basis. Non-required&#13;
physical education at Parkside reflects&#13;
modern trends once again,&#13;
putting students into the classes&#13;
who really want to be there.&#13;
Is Academic Credit Earned&#13;
Through Physical Education&#13;
Courses?&#13;
Yes, all physical education classes&#13;
are one credit classes except&#13;
American Training Patterns,&#13;
which is a two hour course, and&#13;
they apply in the total hours for&#13;
graduation up to 30 hours.&#13;
May Classes Be Repeated For&#13;
Academic Credit?&#13;
Yes, all physical education classes&#13;
are designed to give each&#13;
student an opportunity to advance&#13;
at his own ability, therefore, students&#13;
may repeat the same activity&#13;
for academic credit. For example,&#13;
ski classes provide&#13;
students with four ability classifications&#13;
for instruction. The same&#13;
would be true with judo and many&#13;
of the other courses.&#13;
How Are Grades Assigned?&#13;
All physical education classes&#13;
are graded on a letter basis. The&#13;
evaluation process is determined&#13;
by each instructor. However, the&#13;
student missing more than 10% of&#13;
the class meetings may receive&#13;
an N/C, no grade. This is the&#13;
criteria used for grading. The&#13;
option for the grading system has&#13;
shifted on the emphasis from Education&#13;
from a working grade to&#13;
learning skills and knowledge&#13;
established in the course, which&#13;
are the objectives of each specific&#13;
class. All activity classes also&#13;
have a written examination. Those&#13;
courses that are offered in the&#13;
coaching certificate have a paper&#13;
with them.&#13;
How Can Excused Classes Be&#13;
Made Up?&#13;
Arrangements to make up&#13;
missed classes are the responsibility&#13;
of the student. These arrangements&#13;
must be made with&#13;
the instructor.&#13;
Are Textbooks Required?&#13;
Some outstanding handbooks are&#13;
available from the bookstore for&#13;
many of the activities. The purchase&#13;
of these handbooks is highly&#13;
recommended but the decision to&#13;
require students to purchase them&#13;
are left to the instructor. Textbooks&#13;
are required for all coaching&#13;
certificate courses, in an effort&#13;
for the student to develop a professional&#13;
library.&#13;
Are Special Uniforms Required?&#13;
Equipment outlined in *hi,g&#13;
article is required for all activity&#13;
classes in the Physical Education&#13;
building. The key to this requirement&#13;
is health purposes and the&#13;
control on the use of th e building&#13;
by those people who may not be&#13;
authorized.&#13;
Who Furnished the Sports Equipment?&#13;
&#13;
All equipment for physical education&#13;
is provided by the university&#13;
with the exception of those listed&#13;
under special fees.&#13;
Where May Equipment Be Rented?&#13;
&#13;
Each instructor will provide the&#13;
student with information on where&#13;
equipment can be rented if the&#13;
school does not furnish it. Some&#13;
may be obtained in the equipment&#13;
room in the Physical Education&#13;
Building, some in the bookstore&#13;
and some in downtown commercial&#13;
sporting goods companies. In the&#13;
case of ski equipment, this can&#13;
be obtained at the hill used for&#13;
the classes, as can skates for&#13;
ice hockey and skating classes.&#13;
Who Is Responsible For Medical&#13;
Expenses In The Event Of Injury?&#13;
The student must assume the&#13;
cost of medical expenses which&#13;
result from an accident while participating&#13;
in the physical education&#13;
activity. The school is equipped&#13;
to handle emergency first aid but&#13;
no accident insurance is carried&#13;
by the university that covers the&#13;
student. It is therefore recommended&#13;
that each student who is&#13;
not covered by an accident insurance&#13;
policy, purchase such&#13;
insurance prior to participation in&#13;
physical education. In 90% of the&#13;
cases, the insurance used is that&#13;
of the family policy. If t his is not&#13;
operational, the university provides&#13;
a student group policy at a&#13;
very reasonable rate. All students&#13;
enrolling in physical education&#13;
must have insurance or will have&#13;
to sign a waiver for participation&#13;
in the program. The Instructor will&#13;
cover this at the beginning of e ach&#13;
semester.&#13;
Where Do Classes Meet On The&#13;
First Scheduled Day of Classes?&#13;
The instructor will meet the students&#13;
at the assigned teaching&#13;
station according to the class&#13;
schedule. It is necessary to have&#13;
paid your physical education fee,&#13;
draw your equipment and be prepared&#13;
for activity on the first day&#13;
prior to the first meeting, if it&#13;
is an activity course.&#13;
How May Classes Be Added Or&#13;
Dropped?&#13;
Students may add a physical&#13;
Jia \Tflacckia&#13;
TRAVEL AGENCY&#13;
Since 1931&#13;
Free Parking In Rear&#13;
Invites you to use their complete travel service.&#13;
youth ,ares&#13;
' domest&#13;
ic and European.&#13;
PACKAGE TOURS, HONEYMOON TRIPS AND GROUP TRAVEL&#13;
arrangements are all available at Kenosha's oldest travel&#13;
agency.&#13;
INCLUDING TAX&#13;
HI LO&#13;
293.00 273.00&#13;
301.00 283.00&#13;
301.00 283.00&#13;
278.00 258.00&#13;
288.00 268.00&#13;
262.00 262.00&#13;
251.00 233.00&#13;
EUROPEAN YOUTH FARES&#13;
CHICAGO TO:&#13;
AMSTERDAM&#13;
COPENHAGEN&#13;
FRANKFURT&#13;
LONDON&#13;
PARIS&#13;
ROME&#13;
ZURICH&#13;
'Kenosha's Progressive-Professional Travel Service'&#13;
LA MACCHIA TRAVEL AGENCY&#13;
2111 52ND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS. 53140&#13;
PHONE 657-5171&#13;
GENE LA MACCHIA&#13;
LOU Dl CASTRI JUDY BRKOVIC&#13;
education class to their schedule&#13;
by 1) acquiring a change of r egistration&#13;
card from the Registrar's&#13;
office, 2) by picking up an add&#13;
card from the Physical Education&#13;
Office and 3) by returning the&#13;
cards to the Registrar's Office.&#13;
Students may drop a class by&#13;
1) getting a change of registration&#13;
card from the Registrar's Office&#13;
2) checking in the assigned lock,&#13;
towel and equipment, 3) receiving&#13;
a drop card from the Physical&#13;
Education Office for return of th e&#13;
card to the Registrar's Office.&#13;
Students who do not attend&#13;
classes and do not drop out will&#13;
automatically receive a failing&#13;
grade.&#13;
What is the cost of physical&#13;
education classes and activities to&#13;
students and staff? In addition to&#13;
university tuition fees, each student&#13;
and staff member is required&#13;
to validate their I.D. card at the&#13;
Bursar's office, and pay a fee to&#13;
receive the following equipment:&#13;
A. Shorts, B. Tee shirts, C.&#13;
Towel, D. Swishy Bag, E. Locker,&#13;
F. Locker*&#13;
*The fee includes laundry throughout&#13;
the year for the above named&#13;
equipment. What is the fee?&#13;
Student - $7.50 per semester,&#13;
$7.50 for summer school.&#13;
Staff - $25.00 per year September&#13;
to September.&#13;
Staff w/family - $35.00 per year.&#13;
Special guest - $1.00 fee per'&#13;
use - guests are limited to staff&#13;
and students to three times per&#13;
year.&#13;
•All equipment and material*&#13;
issued in conjunction with this fee&#13;
are the property of th e university&#13;
with the exception of the lock which&#13;
can be turned in for a refund.&#13;
FEE SCHEDULE&#13;
Activity - Cost or Equipme:&#13;
furnished by student.&#13;
. Archery - arrows, arm guar,&#13;
and finger tabs.&#13;
Bowling -&#13;
Handball - balls and glove&#13;
Hockey - $15.&#13;
Judo - judo uniform&#13;
Karate - karate uniform&#13;
Marksmanship - ammunitionai&#13;
birds.&#13;
Paddleball - balls and racket&#13;
Sailing - $10.&#13;
Scuba Diving - $15 equipme&#13;
rental.&#13;
Skiing - skis, boots, pole&#13;
goggles.&#13;
Tennis - balls and rackets,&#13;
FEES FOR EQUIPMENT RENTA&#13;
Swimming suits $.50 (gues&#13;
Rackets $.50&#13;
Cross Country Skis $.50&#13;
•Note: For any abuse or damage&#13;
the equipment, the full charge&#13;
same will be levied against tl&#13;
participant. Students and facul&#13;
may wear their own swimsuit&#13;
i.e., no cutoffs or jeans.&#13;
EQUIPMENT SALE&#13;
The following equipment will 1&#13;
on sale in the Physical Educatii&#13;
Building at the equipment windo1&#13;
tennis balls, handballs, paddli&#13;
balls, badminton birds, band a&#13;
boxes, supporters, fencing blade&#13;
handball gloves, golf balls, s&#13;
waxes, ammunition, judo gee&#13;
sweat suits, socks, supporter&#13;
(cont. on page 12) &#13;
Page 12 THE RANGER SEPT., 1972&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION COURSES&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION&#13;
Bight Week Courses&#13;
note:&#13;
Concurrent registration in both courses is required at the time of registration.&#13;
43-103 Football Men O nly 1 1 TTH 8:30-10:20 GR 112 Frecka&#13;
and&#13;
43-453 Coaching Theory: Football Men O nly 1 1 TTH 8:30-10:20 GR 112 Frecka&#13;
43-105 Sqccer Men Only 1 1 TTH 1:30- 3:20 PE-D102 H. Henderson&#13;
and&#13;
43-457 Coaching Theory: Soccer Men O nly 1 1 TTH 1:30- 3:20 GR 220 H. Henderson&#13;
43-111 Baseball Men O nly 1 1 TTH 8:30-10:20 PE-D102 Staff&#13;
and&#13;
43-460 Coaching Theory: Baseball Men O nly 1 1 TTH 8:30-10:20 GR 220 Staff&#13;
43-114 Figure Improvement 8 Fitness Co-Ed 1 1 MM 10:30-12:20 PE-D106 Lawson&#13;
and&#13;
Weight Training Co-Ed 1 1 MM 10:30-12:20 PE-D209 Lawson&#13;
43-106 Weight Training Co-Ed A&#13;
43-138 Beginning Swimming Co-Ed 1 1 TTH 8:30-10:20 PE-D117 Martiny&#13;
and&#13;
•3-1&#13;
and&#13;
39 Intermediate Swimming Co-ed 8 1 1 TTH 8:30-10:20 PE-D117 Martiny&#13;
•3-139&#13;
cons instr&#13;
43-162 Gymnastics Co-Ed 1 I TTH 1:30- 3:20 PE-D10S Martiny&#13;
and&#13;
43-274 Tumbling, Free-X, Trampoline Co-Ed 1 1 TTH 1:30- 3:20 PE-D105 Martiny&#13;
43-164 Judo I Co-Ed 1 1 MM 8:30-10:20 PE-D106 Godfrey&#13;
and&#13;
43-165 Judo II Co-Ed 8 PE 43-164 1 1 8:30-10:20 PE-D106 Godfrey&#13;
• 43-164 Judo I Co-Ed 1 2 TTH 7:00- 8:50pm PE-D106 Hansen&#13;
and&#13;
43-165 Judo II Co-Ed 8 PE 43-164 1 2 TTH 7:00- 8:50pm PE-D106 Hansen&#13;
43-173 Golf Co-Ed 1 1 MM 10:30-12:20 GR 112 Stephens&#13;
and&#13;
43-174 Bowling Co-Ed 1 1 MW 10:30-12:20 Surf Bowl Koch&#13;
43-176 Fundamentals of Rhythm Co-Ed 1 1 TTH 1:30- 3:20 PE 109 Morris&#13;
and&#13;
43-375 Modem Dance Co-Ed 1 1 TTH 1:30- 3:20 PE 109 Morris&#13;
43-181 Paddleball Men O nly 1 1 MW 10:30-12:20 PE-D107 Staff&#13;
and&#13;
43-182 Handball Men O nly 1 1 MW 10:30-12:20 PE-D107 Frecka&#13;
43-215 Fencing I Co-Ed 1 1 MW 1:30- 3:20 PE 109 Hein&#13;
and&#13;
43-216' Fencing II Co-Ed 1 1 MW 1:30- 3:20 PE 109 Hein&#13;
43-221 Tennis Co-Ed 1 1 W 1:30- 3:20 PE-D102 Frecka&#13;
and&#13;
43-189 Badminton Co-Ed 1 1 MW 1:30- 3:20 PE-D102 Koch&#13;
43- 245 Archery Co-Ed 1 1 TTH 10:30-12:20 PE-D102 Koch&#13;
and&#13;
43-233 Volleyball Co-Ed 1 1 TTH 10:30-12:20 PE-D102 Koch&#13;
43-268 Outdoor Leadership Co-Ed 1 1 F 1:30- 4:S0 GR 112 Grueninger&#13;
and&#13;
Staff 43-395 Marksmanship Co-Ed 1 1 F 1:30- 4:50 GR 112 Staff&#13;
43-345&#13;
and&#13;
43-243&#13;
Boating 6 Sailing Co-Ed 1 1 MW 1:30- 3:20 PE-D117 Martiny 43-345&#13;
and&#13;
43-243 Recreational Aquatics Co-Ed 1 i m 1:30- 3:20 PE-D117 Martiny&#13;
Semester Courses&#13;
43-101&#13;
• 43-152&#13;
• 43-166&#13;
43-188&#13;
• 43-206&#13;
43-252&#13;
43-253&#13;
43-255&#13;
43-276&#13;
43-301&#13;
43-351&#13;
43-352&#13;
43-353&#13;
• 43-401&#13;
• 43-403&#13;
American Training Patterns&#13;
First Aid &amp; M edical&#13;
Self Help&#13;
Judo III&#13;
Water Polo&#13;
Beginning Skiing&#13;
Games of Low Organization&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed 8 PE 43-165&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Officiating Team 6 Dual Sports Co-Ed&#13;
Prevention 6 Care of&#13;
Athletic Injuries&#13;
Scuba Diving&#13;
Senior Life Saving&#13;
Phy Ed for Elem School&#13;
Teachers&#13;
Phy Ed Techniques&#13;
Body Mechanics&#13;
Hunter Safety&#13;
Ski Patrol Certification&#13;
43-480 Sport Psychology&#13;
Phy Ed 43-152&#13;
or cons Instr&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
Co-Ed 6 Phy Ed&#13;
43-152&#13;
Co-Ed&#13;
1 MW&#13;
1 TTH&#13;
1 TTH&#13;
1 F&#13;
1 M&#13;
1 TTH&#13;
1 MW&#13;
1 MW&#13;
1 F&#13;
1 W&#13;
1 MWF&#13;
8:30- 9:20 PE-D209&#13;
7:45- 9:00pm GR 229&#13;
9:00- 9:50pm PE-D106&#13;
8:30-10:20 PE-D117&#13;
7:00- 8:S0pn PE-D106&#13;
8:30- 9:20 PE-D102&#13;
9:30-10:20 GR 112&#13;
2:30- 3:20 GR 227&#13;
10:30-12:20&#13;
8:30-10:20&#13;
9:30-10:20&#13;
1 MW 10:30-11:20&#13;
1 TTH 10:30-11:20&#13;
1 T&#13;
1 M&#13;
PE-D117&#13;
PE-D117&#13;
,GR 229&#13;
GR 222&#13;
GR 222&#13;
7:00- 8:50pm GR-D137&#13;
7:00- 8:50pm PE-D106&#13;
1 TTH 7:45- 9:00pm GR 221 Lawson&#13;
Requirements for Coaching Certi-&#13;
(cont. from page 11) {lcate&#13;
Parkside has initiated a professional&#13;
program to certify&#13;
coaches for lnterscholastic and&#13;
institutional athletic programs.&#13;
This certification program is&#13;
designed to meet a state and nationwide&#13;
need for trained coaches.&#13;
A student seeking certification&#13;
must satisfy the general requirements&#13;
for graduation at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside or&#13;
must be a graduate from another&#13;
institution of higher learning. Candidates&#13;
for this certificate, must,&#13;
in addition to their course work,&#13;
pass a board of review made up&#13;
of the teachers/coaches involved&#13;
in their program. Students may&#13;
enroll in this program with the&#13;
consent of instructor.&#13;
The Coaching Certificate has&#13;
two programs: (1) a general certificate&#13;
for any student completing&#13;
the 18-credit program outlined&#13;
below, and (2) a master's coaching&#13;
certificate. The master's certificate&#13;
requires the same 18-credit&#13;
program plus participation in&#13;
intercollegiate athletics.&#13;
101 AMERICAN TRAINING PATTERNS&#13;
- 2 credits. Fundamental&#13;
principles of conditioning, including&#13;
marathon, Fartlek, interval,&#13;
repetition, speed, and weight training.&#13;
Two hour lab.&#13;
253 OFFICIATING TEAM AND&#13;
DUAL SPORTS - 2 credits. Rule&#13;
interpretations and techniques of&#13;
officiating. Practice in actual officiating&#13;
required. Graduates are&#13;
eligible for certification by the&#13;
WIAA as an official and by the&#13;
intramural board for university&#13;
officiating. Special sections for&#13;
women. One hour lecture; two hour&#13;
lab.&#13;
255 PREVENTION AND CARE OF&#13;
ATHLETIC INJURIES - 2 credits.&#13;
Designed to train students in the&#13;
prevention and treatment of&#13;
athletic injuries. Two hour lecture.&#13;
Prerequisite: 152 First Aid/Medical&#13;
Self-Help.&#13;
353 BODY MECHANICS - 2credits.&#13;
Analysis of human motor performance&#13;
in the teaching of physical&#13;
activities. Two hour lecture. Prerequisites:&#13;
LS101 Bioscience and&#13;
LS214 Human Physiology and Anatomy.*&#13;
&#13;
354 SCIENTIFIC BASES OF CONDITIONING&#13;
- 3 credits. A study&#13;
of the physiological changes of th e&#13;
human body, during and after exercises&#13;
and the implications to&#13;
human performance. Two hour&#13;
lecture; two hour lab. Prerequisites:&#13;
LS101 Bioscience andLS214&#13;
Human Physiology and Anatomy.*&#13;
451 ORGANIZATION AND ADMINISTRATION&#13;
OF ATHLETICS&#13;
2 credits. Foundation course in&#13;
the various phanes of operating&#13;
and administering a physical education&#13;
and athletic department.&#13;
Two hour lecture.&#13;
453-460 COACHING THEORY/&#13;
FOOTBALL, WRESTLING, BASKETBALL,&#13;
TRACK Si FIELD,&#13;
SOCCER, SWIMMING, GYMNASTICS&#13;
AND BASEBALL - 1 credit&#13;
each. A study of the techniques&#13;
necessary to organize, administer&#13;
and teach football, wrestling, basketball,&#13;
track, soccer, swimming,&#13;
gymnastics and baseball for interscholastic&#13;
competition. Course offerings&#13;
designed for women are&#13;
swimming, gymnastics, basketball&#13;
and track &amp; field. Prerequisites:&#13;
P.E. 103, 219, 200, 115, 105, 142,&#13;
162, and 111 respectively.* T*°&#13;
hours lecture. Any two of the above&#13;
required. .&#13;
480 SPORTS PSYCHOLOGY -&#13;
credits. Designed to familiar^®&#13;
the student with the appllcati&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
of the scientific method to pr°&#13;
lems of behavior as related&#13;
athletics. Three hours lecturePrerequisite:&#13;
Psychology 10L&#13;
•Recommended prerequisites&#13;
those students desiring tocontin&#13;
with a physical education ma^°e&#13;
or a master's degree someth®&#13;
In the future.&#13;
Lawson&#13;
Frecka&#13;
Hansen&#13;
Martiny&#13;
Godfrey&#13;
Morris&#13;
Frecka&#13;
H. Henderson&#13;
Staff&#13;
Morris&#13;
Stephens&#13;
Frecka&#13;
Grueninger&#13;
Staff&#13;
H. Henderson&#13;
&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63807">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 1, September 1, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63808">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63809">
                <text>1972-09-01</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63812">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63813">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63814">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63815">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63816">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63817">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63818">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63819">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63820">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="289">
        <name>athletic director</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="648">
        <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="181">
        <name>tom rosandich</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="288">
        <name>wayne dannehl</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2625" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4367">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/85e3880dc766f09e177bd17bac9baf58.pdf</src>
        <authentication>4f2151f389a02c2b3f9450d00223b121</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63825">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 1</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63826">
              <text>Norman Mailer here Sunday</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63836">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89903">
              <text>The ParksideWednesday,&#13;
September 27, 1972&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
EDITORIAL&#13;
Participation the key&#13;
to ending the blues&#13;
Good old Parkside . That's the talk all the returning&#13;
students rally around as they drink beer at the Student&#13;
Activities Building. Freshmen air the three-week-old&#13;
disillusionment of broken dreams as they find this&#13;
college lacking a lot o f what they thought a University&#13;
should have. Lots of talk never gets past the empty cups&#13;
covering their tables. Legitimate complaints, many&#13;
good ideas, some positive suggestions: nobody hears&#13;
them except the same people who heard them yesterday.&#13;
&#13;
But there is a way out of the blues: PARTICIPATION.&#13;
Parkside needs a channel of communication to tie it&#13;
together more than ever. Before t he University traps&#13;
itself in a whirlpool of uniformity, new ideas must be&#13;
heard and discussed by ALLthe people here. Parkside is&#13;
a new University and it can have a tremendous future.&#13;
But as it looks now, Parkside will drown in its own&#13;
garbage. Non-existent student participation has allowed&#13;
Parkside to disintegrat e into a tangled web of apathy&#13;
that swallows the student mind and silences it into meek&#13;
acceptance of d isappointment.&#13;
The only way to change the situation is to keep open&#13;
channels of communication among students. This has to&#13;
be done on a larger scale than the table top debating now&#13;
so common. This newspaper can be an alt ernative. But&#13;
only if you help.&#13;
To keep the student body ac curately informed the&#13;
newspaper must keep its nose into everything. As it&#13;
stands now, we don't have enough noses to fill a Kleenex&#13;
with news. We need people. You can help with anything&#13;
from advertising to typing to editorializing. If you don't&#13;
know how to do it, we can help you learn.&#13;
The choice is yours. There will be a staff meeting&#13;
Thursday, September 28, at 8 p.m. in room D-194 of the&#13;
Library Learning Center. If you decide not to help, this&#13;
may be our last issue. If you decide not to help, be&#13;
careful about what you complain about over beer —&#13;
after four weeks of the same garbage, you'll be boring&#13;
people.&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
here Sunday&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
"An Evening With Norman&#13;
Mailer" will open the 1972-73&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts series at&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 1, in the gymnasium of the&#13;
new physical education building.&#13;
Mailer's Parkside appearance&#13;
will be his first in an October tour&#13;
of 20 colleges and universities,&#13;
the only tour he has scheduled&#13;
this year. Other midwestern&#13;
stops on the tour are Western&#13;
Illinois University at Macomb&#13;
and Notre Dame University.&#13;
Petition circulated on parking&#13;
A petition concerning "the&#13;
parking and transportation&#13;
problem" at Parkside was circulated&#13;
to faculty and staff&#13;
recently by Marion Mochon,&#13;
instructor of anthropology.&#13;
The petition reads:&#13;
"Whereas substantial inconvenience&#13;
and loss of working&#13;
time have been experienced by&#13;
us, we, the undersigned members&#13;
of the faculty and staff of The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
petition the University&#13;
Committee to bring to the appropriate&#13;
authorities and&#13;
agencies and to urge the acceptance&#13;
of our request that:&#13;
"1) temporary and permanent&#13;
parking facilities for faculty and&#13;
staff be provided at the earliest&#13;
possible date adjacent to the&#13;
complex of teaching buildings,&#13;
and that&#13;
"2) additional shuttle service&#13;
be provided during rush hours for&#13;
the convenience of students."&#13;
Mrs. Mochon said 300 petitions&#13;
were signed.&#13;
According to Irwin Zuehlke,&#13;
manager of Business Affairs, the&#13;
second proposal has already gone&#13;
into action with an extra shuttle&#13;
in operation during a peak&#13;
morning period.&#13;
St. Louis Jazz Quartet here&#13;
The St. Louis Jazz Quartet will&#13;
appear in concert Saturday, Oct.&#13;
14, in the Bradford Auditorium at&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
Jeanne Trevor, lead singer,&#13;
made her debut on the Ebony&#13;
Showcase Theater in Los&#13;
Angeles. An immediate success&#13;
in Gaslight Square upon moving&#13;
to St. Louis, she became the city's&#13;
first woman disc jockey to have&#13;
her own day-time jazz show. She&#13;
has also appeared in most of the&#13;
prominent supper clubs there.&#13;
Miss Trevor is a graduate of Los&#13;
Angeles City College, Music and&#13;
Drama Department.&#13;
Terrence Kippenberger,&#13;
bassist and leader of t he group, is&#13;
a graduate of St. Louis Institute&#13;
of Music. He has toured with such&#13;
personalities as Louie Nye and&#13;
June Christy. Kippenberger&#13;
served as musical director,&#13;
conductor and arranger for a&#13;
musical review, "Pointblank,"&#13;
which toured major U.S. cities.&#13;
In September, 1969, he formed&#13;
the St. Louis Jazz Quartet for the&#13;
purpose of presenting school&#13;
children with an introduction to&#13;
jazz as part of an integrated&#13;
concert series of the St. Ix)uis&#13;
Chapter of Young Audiences, Inc.&#13;
Acclaimed as one of the finest&#13;
percussionists to develop in St.&#13;
Louis, Charles Payne provides&#13;
the beat for the Quartet. He has&#13;
performed as drummer with the&#13;
Oliver Nelson Studio Jazz Ensemble,&#13;
with the Gateway&#13;
Symphony Orchestra and with&#13;
the George Hudson Big Band.&#13;
Payne is now commander of&#13;
the St. Louis Drum and Bugle&#13;
Corps, the organization from&#13;
which he received his first&#13;
musical training. After going to&#13;
Europe for study, he returned to&#13;
become a student of Richard&#13;
O'Donnell, principal percussionist&#13;
of the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony Orchestra.&#13;
Keyboard instrumentalist&#13;
David Schrage began his musical&#13;
career in elementary school. He&#13;
was the leader of "Sometimes&#13;
3+1" and "Concepts," two pop&#13;
groups in the St. Louis area. For&#13;
several years he was the official&#13;
accompanist for the St. Louis&#13;
University Chorale and appeared&#13;
with the St. Louis Symphony&#13;
while a member of that Chorale.&#13;
Schrage has been active as a&#13;
composer in recent years,&#13;
writing music in the jazz, folk,&#13;
rock and pop styles, including&#13;
several compositions for the&#13;
Quartet.&#13;
The Quartet's concert program&#13;
runs the gamut from jazz, to&#13;
blues, to ballads. A review of&#13;
their performance at the&#13;
Mississippi River Festival in the&#13;
St. Louis Post-Dispatch said,&#13;
"The Quartet thrilled the&#13;
audience with a program ranging&#13;
from gospel soul music to ...&#13;
downright funky jazz ... Miss&#13;
Trevor's singing was versatile,&#13;
controlled, emotionally sincere ...&#13;
She nearly brought the tent down&#13;
with a hand-clapping, footstomping&#13;
spiritual, LET IT BE ...&#13;
the improvisation was fresh,&#13;
exciting and clearly&#13;
imaginative."&#13;
Zuehlke went on to explain that&#13;
the parking lot and bus service&#13;
budget is contingent upon student&#13;
enrollment and sale of faculty&#13;
and staff parking permits. The&#13;
72-73 budget calls for $20,000 to be&#13;
set aside for parking lot construction&#13;
and service reserve.&#13;
The shuttle system is depleting&#13;
that reserve — in other words,&#13;
the university can't afford a&#13;
parking lot.&#13;
The Parking and Transportation&#13;
Committee is&#13;
presently looking into&#13;
possibilities concerning more&#13;
parking areas and ways to pay&#13;
for them.&#13;
Tickets now are on sale at the&#13;
Parkside Information Center in&#13;
Tallent Hall. General admission&#13;
is $1.50 and Parkside studentstaff&#13;
admission is $1. Mail orders&#13;
for general admission will be&#13;
filled by the Information Center&#13;
and must be accompanied by a&#13;
stamped self-addressed envelope.&#13;
Checks should be made&#13;
payable to The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Agents for Mailer said the&#13;
"evening" will consist of a wideranging&#13;
discussion of "politics,&#13;
life and art" by the Pulitzer&#13;
prize-winning novelist, news&#13;
journalist and political activist.&#13;
Mailer is the author of "The&#13;
Naked and the Dead," the classic&#13;
novel of World War II, and "The&#13;
Deer Park," "An American&#13;
Dream," "Why Are We in Viet&#13;
Nam?" and the prize-winning&#13;
"The Armies of the Night."&#13;
His "Miami and the Siege of&#13;
Chicago" was an assessment of&#13;
the Democratic and Republican&#13;
campaigns of 1969 and he&#13;
recently covered the current&#13;
Democratic convention for Life&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Mailer also is interested in&#13;
filmmaking and directed,&#13;
produced and starred in his most&#13;
recent film, "Maidstone," in&#13;
which he plays a candidate for&#13;
the presidency.&#13;
Counselors form trial workshops&#13;
By Je annine Sipsma&#13;
"Man is a rational being and the height of his growth lies in his&#13;
relationships with others."&#13;
The counselors at Parkside are&#13;
forming new groups called&#13;
Workshops for Interpersonal&#13;
Growth. The first meetings will&#13;
be held during the first week in&#13;
October. There will be meetings&#13;
once a week for eight weeks.&#13;
In talking to Parkside counselors,&#13;
it was found that these are&#13;
experimental groups. Last year&#13;
there were two meetings in&#13;
Parkside Village of a group on&#13;
this order.&#13;
The meetings will be without&#13;
format with members discussing&#13;
whatever happens to be on their&#13;
minds.&#13;
Hot food&#13;
Ever been at school for a few&#13;
hours and don't feel like going&#13;
home to eat?&#13;
Parkside's hot food service&#13;
could be the answer. Located in&#13;
the Student Activities Building,&#13;
the Library-Learning Center and&#13;
at the Kenosha campus, hot food&#13;
is offered to during most of the&#13;
day.&#13;
In addition to the scheduled hot&#13;
food service times below, vending&#13;
service is offered continuously&#13;
at these locations,&#13;
Greenquist and Tallent.&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
Kenosha and the LLC serve&#13;
breakfast from 7:30 to 9:30 a.m.&#13;
The Activities Building handles&#13;
only a continental breakfast&#13;
menu.&#13;
All three locations serve hot&#13;
lunches from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.&#13;
while the LLC serves dinner from&#13;
4 to 6:30 p.m.&#13;
- Dr. Gerald Egan&#13;
The workshops won't be true&#13;
sensitivity groups and they don't&#13;
deal with therapy. They will be&#13;
communication on a personal&#13;
level. They will give people a&#13;
chance to communicate their&#13;
feelings and in turn listen to the&#13;
feelings of others.&#13;
The goal of Workshops for&#13;
Interpersonal Growth will be to&#13;
help people relate to others more&#13;
easily. It also hopes to create a&#13;
greater sense of self-worth,&#13;
better self-expression, and&#13;
keener sense of self-identity.&#13;
Whether it meets these goals will&#13;
depend on the people participating.&#13;
&#13;
There will be group leaders to&#13;
initiate discussion if necessary.&#13;
The group leader will not be a&#13;
leader in the traditional sense but&#13;
will be part of the group like&#13;
anyone else.&#13;
There will be four different&#13;
groups. One group will be made&#13;
up of student nurses and&#13;
meetings will be held at St.&#13;
Luke's if enough people are interested.&#13;
This group relate to&#13;
their interests in nursing.&#13;
Another group will be made up of&#13;
adults over 23 years old who have&#13;
come back to school. They will&#13;
discuss special problems they&#13;
have encountered going into a&#13;
college environment. The other&#13;
two groups will be made up of&#13;
other interested students.&#13;
If you are interested in this&#13;
program, contact one of these&#13;
counselors for information: Steve&#13;
Bangert (553-2121-ext. 42), Clay&#13;
Barnard (553-2225), or Wendy&#13;
Musich (553-2121-ext. 43). &#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
Open to suggestion What's in a name?&#13;
The primary function of this newspaper will be to&#13;
communicate to the Parkside community what its&#13;
members do, feel and think. In guarding the freedom of&#13;
the pre ss as a vital right of m ankind, we will d iscuss&#13;
whatever is not explicitly forbidden by law, including&#13;
the wisdom of an y restrictive statute or public official.&#13;
We will especially concern ourselves with decisions and&#13;
policy affecting Parkside students. We will criticize&#13;
when necessary and will ap plaud when deserved. As a&#13;
student publica tion we will be restricted by nothing&#13;
except consideration of student welfare. We will always&#13;
be open to criticism and suggestion and will make use of&#13;
anything contributing to the improvement of the paper.&#13;
We hope students will m ake use of this paper and use it&#13;
as a communications tool through which they can make&#13;
their feelings and ideas known to the rest f o the Parkside&#13;
community.&#13;
Bus fare a disservice&#13;
-True'or false? " ^ r&#13;
A) Automobiles are the major contribution to air&#13;
pollution.&#13;
B) Mass transportation is a viable solution to the&#13;
problems caused by too many cars.&#13;
C) The University of Wisconsin-Parkside is doing all it&#13;
can to keep the air of Southeastern Wisconsin clean.&#13;
Statement A is true. Many American ecologists&#13;
estimate than an average of 60 percent of all air&#13;
pollution is ca used by the automobile. In Los Angeles&#13;
estimates run as high as 80 pe rcent.&#13;
At Parkside we are very lucky. The air here seems&#13;
quite clean — at least for the time being. The parking&#13;
lots are growing and they are fuller than ever before.&#13;
Enrollment this year has gone up, and with it exhaust&#13;
emissions into the air.&#13;
St atement B is also true. Even Pre sident Nixon in his&#13;
1972 Sta te of the Union message urged that top consideration&#13;
be given to the problem of mass transportation.&#13;
Ecologically there can be no doubt that it is&#13;
far bett er to have ten people in one bus rather than ten&#13;
people in t en cars.&#13;
St atement C is false. The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
has traded its free shuttle service from Racine&#13;
to Campus for a 50 cents a trip, $4.50 a week, $18 a month&#13;
injustice. This trade has not only aided the clouding of&#13;
the campus air but has also done many students a&#13;
terrible disservice.&#13;
Last year a poll was taken to determine if a bus service&#13;
from Racine would be necessary this year. Out of&#13;
700 Rac ine County students polled, 38 percent said they&#13;
would use the bus regularly if serv ice were provided. It&#13;
was then decided that shuttle service would be provided&#13;
for a minimal fee. We do not feel 50 cents a trip is a&#13;
minimal fee. Getting students to campus and keeping&#13;
the campus air clean are problems the University&#13;
should attack immediately.&#13;
If the re are rules against subsidizing shuttle service,&#13;
we urge the University to attack them at their source. If&#13;
funds are not available, we hope that the University will&#13;
do whatever possible to obtain t hem. It is time for the&#13;
University to take action and assume its role a s a leader&#13;
in the clean-a ir campaign of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
This paper is not an athletic or sports newspaper.&#13;
Neither is it an entertainment newspaper. It is not&#13;
written with only the "jocks in mind.&#13;
To be sure, we will cover sports because we consider&#13;
them an integral pa rt of this university and its growth.&#13;
We will also cover entertainment, news and myriad&#13;
other things because we consider them equally important&#13;
to t he development of Parkside.&#13;
This is a paper for all the students. At an early staff&#13;
meeting, the staff members agreed on the name "The&#13;
Parkside Ranger. " So it is and so it shall be until a&#13;
vague sort of eternity or until the staff members decide&#13;
to change the name.&#13;
Ranger also happens to be the nickname of the&#13;
athletic teams here at Parkside. The Ranger was the&#13;
name of an athletic department-produced newspaper&#13;
which was distributed on campus last May and again&#13;
last week. But it will no longer be printed.&#13;
Many u niversities and colleges use the name of their&#13;
school's athletic teams as the paper's name, i.e., the&#13;
Daily lllini (for Illinois' Fighting lllini), the AdvanceTitan&#13;
(for UW-Oshkosh's Titans), the Florida Alligator&#13;
(for Florida's Alligators), Warhawk World (for UWWhitewater's&#13;
Warhawks), the Badger Herald (for UWMadison's&#13;
Badgers), the Gamecock (for South&#13;
Carolina's Gamecocks), the Ma roon (for Chicago's&#13;
Maroons), the Falconews (for the Air Force Academy's&#13;
Falcons), to name just a few.&#13;
The list goes on. But the fact is that Ranger as a name&#13;
j- n o trendsetter, the school's athletic teams, like it or&#13;
not, help publicize the school, and thus everything about&#13;
it, su ch as the newspaper. So, too, does a newspaper&#13;
such as The Parkside Ranger help the school and&#13;
nickname whose name it ha s taken.&#13;
It is that way with us. We believe the name is one that&#13;
will be important not for what the name is but for what is&#13;
contained on th ose pages within the paper. If you read&#13;
only the name and don't like the paper because of that,&#13;
we think you'll be missing something. If you read it&#13;
because you like the name and for no other reason, you,&#13;
too, a re missing something.&#13;
Read t his paper. Tell us what you think. We believe&#13;
the name is going to be accepted because it is the name&#13;
of the campus newspaper, not because it represents the&#13;
interests of a ny special department on the campus.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger can only be as good as Parkside&#13;
students want it to be. It is a tool of communication. And&#13;
it's up to y ou, our readers, to show that this paper is&#13;
something more than just another pretty face — or&#13;
name.&#13;
A&#13;
E.&#13;
The ParksideREPRESENTED&#13;
FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017&#13;
f&#13;
v^&#13;
eKPar&#13;
t&#13;
kHSlde&#13;
^&#13;
ng&#13;
f&#13;
riS&#13;
r&#13;
blished weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITERS: Tom Ford, Bruce Wagner, Rudy&#13;
kXvh weu WGe&#13;
°^&#13;
f ?'&#13;
aesing&#13;
' Kris Koch&#13;
. Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
PpfJXn m *?' el u ' Dale Marti&#13;
". Karen Petersen, Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Paul Nelson&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva &#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Edmonds and&#13;
Curley here&#13;
The comedy team of Edmond&#13;
and Curley will appear at the&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
Friday, Sept. 29 at 9 p.m.&#13;
The team has appeared on&#13;
most of the TV talk show circuit&#13;
and in night clubs and universities&#13;
across the nation.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
is sponsoring the performance&#13;
which will include locals Tony,&#13;
Jumbo, and Garry.&#13;
Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Hours set&#13;
After being duluged with&#13;
customers for the first week or&#13;
so, the Parkside bookstore has&#13;
settled down into regular hours,&#13;
according to William Niebuhr,'&#13;
coordinator of student life.&#13;
Standard hours for the books&#13;
store, which handles all books,&#13;
school supplies and also buys&#13;
books for resale and recycling,&#13;
are Monday-Thursday, 9-7;&#13;
Friday, 9-5; and Saturdays 10-1.&#13;
More alumni&#13;
for UW-P&#13;
Alumni rolls of The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside increased&#13;
to almost 750 with the addition of&#13;
graduates who completed degree&#13;
work during the summer session.&#13;
The number includes the 670&#13;
alumni who had received degrees&#13;
through the May, 1972, commencement;&#13;
the 59 graduates&#13;
who earned degrees during&#13;
summer session; and about 15&#13;
more degree candidates who&#13;
attended summer school and will&#13;
receive degrees on completion of&#13;
various requirements.&#13;
No commencement exercises&#13;
are held for summer session&#13;
graduates. Summer- degree&#13;
candidates who wished to participated&#13;
in the formal spring&#13;
commencement.&#13;
Lecture on lake&#13;
set for Tuesday&#13;
A lecture titled "Lake&#13;
Michigan in the 21st Century"&#13;
will be delivered by Lee Botts,&#13;
executive secretary of the Lake&#13;
Michigan Federation, in the&#13;
Washington Park High School&#13;
theater Tuesday, Oct. 3, at 8 p.m.&#13;
Ms. Botts will discuss what has&#13;
to be done to save the lake,&#13;
responsibilities of various&#13;
government agencies toward the&#13;
lake, how they failed in the past&#13;
and what they are doing now.&#13;
She will recommend change in&#13;
governmental structure and&#13;
suggest the establishment of a&#13;
Lake Michigan Authority.&#13;
Welcome to Parkside!&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount P rices!&#13;
5707 - Sixth A ve.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
evWWWWWWWmMW&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
end for your d escriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
28-page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
uality research papers. Enclose&#13;
1.00 to cover pos tage an d handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
To every new student and every returning student I&#13;
want to extend a personal welcome, bound up with a&#13;
wish for a successful and satisfying year. This is a time&#13;
of growth and change for you and for the University. We&#13;
grow and change together.&#13;
The biggest changes since last year? Everybody has&#13;
his own idea about that, but topping my list are our gains&#13;
in academic maturity. During the summer the North&#13;
Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools&#13;
granted UW-Parkside full and unconditional accreditation&#13;
as an operationally separate University. We&#13;
are, therefore, accredited in our own right, and not&#13;
simply through association with the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system. For this fall we have added more&#13;
than thirty new members of the faculty and academic&#13;
support staff, whom we welcome along with you. They&#13;
strengthen us and enrich our program offerings in&#13;
almost every field. In preparing our biennial budget&#13;
requests we focused more sharply than ever before on&#13;
our unique campus mission, which involves meeting and&#13;
serving the special needs of man in modern industrial&#13;
society. Strengthening the mission is essential to our&#13;
gaining identity and distinction, and winning support&#13;
within the merged University of Wisconsin system.&#13;
These academic changes, though less visible than the&#13;
physical transformations of the summer, will in the end&#13;
greatly influence the quality development of the&#13;
University.&#13;
During June we were required to move out of the&#13;
Racine Center facilities, a move that involved some&#13;
hardships for everybody, since the replacement space&#13;
(the Classroom Building north of Greenquist) will not be&#13;
completed until late next summer. The big question was&#13;
whether our physical removal from Racine would have&#13;
an adverse effect on enrollments and on our ability to&#13;
serve that community educationally. The ever-present&#13;
doomsayers (including the North Central examiners)&#13;
predicted the worst. But they were wrong. Last year&#13;
half of our students were from Racine, and that percentage&#13;
holds for this year, too. And among new freshmen&#13;
the percentage of students from Racine is actually&#13;
up for 1972-73. The greatest gain from the move,&#13;
however, has come through having more of our students&#13;
at our new site, through each day and through the week.&#13;
That enhances the sense of belonging, the sense of&#13;
community. I have talked to a number of you about this.&#13;
What most of you have said is, "I welcome the change.&#13;
This is like being away from home. For the first time I&#13;
feel that I'm at a real university."&#13;
You are obviously enjoying the new Library-Learnina&#13;
Center and the Physical Education Building. Those of&#13;
us who were involved in the struggles to get those&#13;
facilities, which are essential components of any&#13;
campus, are pleased that they are now in use and functioning&#13;
as we hoped they would. We wanted the LibraryLearning&#13;
Center to be a warm, cheery, inviting place —&#13;
a place to study and to learn, a place to meet and mix&#13;
with friends, a place to relax. We deliberately placed a&#13;
mix of functions in the building to make it more than a&#13;
standard library. So we have here a Learning Center&#13;
(which will feature non-book materials), student&#13;
government and other student activity spaces, offices&#13;
for the campus administration, a bookstore and a&#13;
limited food service operation, and a variety of lounges.&#13;
It all comes together in Main Place, which is where I&#13;
have met and talked with many of you. For the first&#13;
time, in the Greenquist concourse-Main Place&#13;
relationship, the campus is functioning as we wanted it&#13;
to function. From the beginning we hoped to make it&#13;
easy, through architectural design, for students and&#13;
faculty and administrators to meet and mix and mingle.&#13;
We are pleased that you are making good use of the&#13;
Physical Education Building. It's yours to enjoy, so&#13;
enjoy it. Outdoors in that area the tennis courts are&#13;
finished and usable. The soccer field, inside the earthen&#13;
bowl, has been sodded, but will not be ready for competitive&#13;
use until next spring. The wet summer has&#13;
delayed the finishing and seeding of the entire area&#13;
around the Phy Ed Building, and is the cause of the&#13;
delay in placing the Chevron 440 surface on the 8-lane&#13;
running track.&#13;
The summer rain also dashed our hopes of confronting&#13;
you with a more "finished look" campus when you&#13;
arrived this fall. From February we pushed hard to&#13;
achieve that goal, but nature would not cooperate. We&#13;
will continue those efforts through the fall, particularly&#13;
in the Tallent Hall area and in the zone between the Loop&#13;
Road and Wood Road. But we have to live with the fact&#13;
that we have missed another growing season, and so in&#13;
some areas still face another season of mud.&#13;
Taking everything into account, though, we are proud&#13;
of the progress we have made since 1969 and hope you&#13;
are, too, because you have contributed quite directly to&#13;
all the gains we have made physically and&#13;
academically. Without you we would have no accreditation,&#13;
no new buildings, .no new faculty, no&#13;
academic program or mission — none of the things&#13;
essential to a new university in the making. We are glad&#13;
you are here, in increasing numbers.&#13;
Have a good year.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor &#13;
T H E PARK SIDE RAN GER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972&#13;
Trips planned to Hawaii,&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Activities Board&#13;
sponsors&#13;
a bus trip to&#13;
UW-MADISON&#13;
VS.&#13;
OHIO STATE&#13;
FOOTBALL G AME&#13;
Saturday, O ctober 28&#13;
*10 -(Including Bus,&#13;
Continental Breakfast,&#13;
Game Ticket)&#13;
TICKETS AV AILABLE&#13;
INFORMATION OF FICE&#13;
202 TA LLENT HA LL&#13;
Alps&#13;
..y. •&gt; i . y* H ^&#13;
Nine day "Ski and Swiss Alps"&#13;
and "Hawaiian Holiday" trips&#13;
between Semesters have been&#13;
announced by The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Both Trips will leave Jan. 5 and&#13;
return Jan. 14, according to&#13;
William Niebuhr, UW-P coordinator&#13;
of student life. Parkside&#13;
students and staff and their&#13;
immediate families are eligible&#13;
for both trips. A student or staff&#13;
member must accompany the&#13;
family members on the Swiss trip&#13;
because it is an international&#13;
flight, but not on the Hawaiian&#13;
trip.&#13;
Niebuhr said," In looking for&#13;
places to travel to we look for low&#13;
cost places we think we can sell.&#13;
A number of people asked if a&#13;
Hawaii trip could be arranged."&#13;
The Hawaiian trip is round trip&#13;
Milwaukee-Honolulu on a charter&#13;
super DC-8 jet. The cost, $294,&#13;
includes flight, tax and service,&#13;
eight nights at the new Holiday&#13;
Inn Waikiki on the beach, transfers&#13;
between airport and hotel,&#13;
orientation sightseeing tour and a&#13;
number of side trips and other&#13;
options at reduced rates. The&#13;
price is based on three or four to a&#13;
room, with doubles and singles&#13;
New building&#13;
Yellow Submarine&#13;
Sandwich S ho|&gt;&#13;
905 Washington Rd., Kenosha&#13;
Daliwries Made&#13;
Phone 658-3353&#13;
11a.m. - 2 a.m. all week&#13;
Cham-Tap-Ba&#13;
251 1 D u r a n d&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
pagne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches&#13;
%&#13;
and Pizza cT)&#13;
ALOHA FROM HAWAII —&#13;
That's the message behind the&#13;
warm smile of Rose Marie&#13;
Alvaro, the Hawaii Visitors&#13;
Bureau poster girl. This five-foot,&#13;
four-inch beauty, a beguiling&#13;
blend of Hawaiian, Portuguese,&#13;
Chinese and English ancestries,&#13;
is an accomplished hula dancer&#13;
and Island entertainer.&#13;
available at an additional $15 and&#13;
$65, respectively.&#13;
Options at reduced rates include&#13;
car rental, two-day outer&#13;
island tour of Hawaii and Kauai,&#13;
a traditional Hawaiian luau,&#13;
Pearl Harbor cruise, tours of Se a&#13;
Life Park and the Polynesian&#13;
Cultural Center, and Honolulu&#13;
nightlife.&#13;
The ski trip is to Zermatt, the&#13;
idyllic mountain village situated&#13;
at the base of the Matterhorn,&#13;
with an overnight stay in&#13;
Copenhagen, Denmark, the last&#13;
night. The price of $337 in cludes&#13;
round trip flight from ChicagoCopenhagen&#13;
on a regularly&#13;
scheduled SAS 747 j et, connecting&#13;
flight to Geneva, ground transportation&#13;
to Zermatt, eight&#13;
nights in good category hotels&#13;
with private bath two to a room,&#13;
and a tour of Copenhagen.&#13;
A l ess expensive motor option&#13;
is ^available for ;nori-skiers. The&#13;
option includes the same flight&#13;
with the last night's lodging in&#13;
Copenhagen, but a free car with&#13;
unlimited mileage upon arrival in&#13;
Geneva replaces the lodging in&#13;
Zermatt. The cost ranges from&#13;
$284 based on four to a car to $304&#13;
with two to a car.&#13;
Niebuhr said limited space is&#13;
available for both trips and urged&#13;
prospective travelers to contact&#13;
him at UW-P as soon as possible&#13;
for more information.&#13;
The&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
HAWAIIAN HBLIDAY&#13;
9 Fun-Filled, Sun-Filled Days&#13;
January 5-14&#13;
$274&#13;
Plus $20 Tax 8. Service&#13;
Your One Low Price Includes:&#13;
Round trip jet fare from Milwaukee&#13;
to Honolulu.&#13;
8 nights lodging on Waikiki Beach.&#13;
Round trip transfers between airport&#13;
&amp; h otel.&#13;
Orientation sightseeing tour.&#13;
Traditional Hawaiian flower lei&#13;
greeting.&#13;
DELIVER OR MAIL TO&#13;
Campus Travel Center Student Activities Office&#13;
D 197 Library Learning Center&#13;
OR CALL 553 2294&#13;
by KEN KONKOL&#13;
LEAR NING CENT ER&#13;
All you readers are no doubt&#13;
already acquainted with the&#13;
facilities of the library which&#13;
extends its bulk through four&#13;
floors of the new Library Learning&#13;
Center, but few of you are&#13;
probably acquainted with the&#13;
facilities of the Learning Center.&#13;
The center, which handles all&#13;
non-print instructional materials&#13;
for the university, is located in&#13;
the D175-D179 suite of offices on&#13;
level D1 LLC.&#13;
Beecham Robinson and Art&#13;
Pettigrew are in charge of the&#13;
staff of the Center which in the&#13;
future will handle facilities such&#13;
as language labs, special study&#13;
courses for accelerated students,&#13;
video tape, films and records. At&#13;
present only facilities for records&#13;
and limited movie viewing are&#13;
available.&#13;
D178 is the check out location&#13;
for the 5000 r ecords currently in&#13;
stock. Loan procedures are&#13;
similar to those used in the&#13;
Library. Records may also be&#13;
listened to in one of the other&#13;
rooms of the center. This room&#13;
will also serve as control room&#13;
for the four video tape units&#13;
available.&#13;
Come late October it is hoped&#13;
that D177 will be subdivided into&#13;
a group of individual carrels&#13;
which will contain film loop&#13;
viewers, slide projectors and&#13;
facilities for record listening and&#13;
viewing of the 35-40 films which&#13;
make up the initial film library.&#13;
As the new buildings on&#13;
campus are completed they will&#13;
be linked to the control room and&#13;
integrated into the communications&#13;
arts system. Also to&#13;
be included is a video tape&#13;
recording studio.&#13;
It will be three years before the&#13;
center builds a good collection of&#13;
material from the present inventory&#13;
which is due mainly to&#13;
faculty requests for instructional&#13;
material, but when they do, the&#13;
Learning Center will prove itself&#13;
an invaluable addition to the&#13;
facilities at Parkside.&#13;
SHAKE MS P&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
Lathrop &amp; 21st (almost)&#13;
Racine, Wise. 53406&#13;
Phone: 633-6307&#13;
The Fashion Store For Young Mindedmen&#13;
for th e super look |&#13;
308 6th Street 632-1138 $&#13;
Bee cham Robinso n&#13;
T H E LIBRAR Y&#13;
MIG HTY BIG PLACE&#13;
If you're like most people on&#13;
campus, you've probably already&#13;
gotten yourself lost in the four&#13;
floors of the new library which&#13;
occupies a pretty big cube in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center. In&#13;
order to help you find your way&#13;
around I recently had the&#13;
assistance of assistant librarian&#13;
Carla Stoffle in negotiating the&#13;
stacks.&#13;
There is only one entrance to&#13;
the library on the LI level at 100L,&#13;
just across from the bookstore.&#13;
But, to be consistent with the&#13;
layout of the library floor plan,&#13;
we shall start our tour on the&#13;
third floor.&#13;
There is nothing on the third&#13;
floor - as far as the library is&#13;
concerned. There are, however,&#13;
about 140 faculty members&#13;
have their offices up there who&#13;
think otherwise.&#13;
The second floor also contains&#13;
faculty offices. These are scattered&#13;
peripherally around the&#13;
library 205-223 and 281-299. Also&#13;
on this level are found 271 and&#13;
273, w hich are future conference&#13;
rooms.&#13;
L2 also has a lot of books; all&#13;
the books C to Z less P, and even&#13;
special Collections in 268, A and&#13;
B. On this level we also come&#13;
upon the first of those artistically&#13;
laid out lounges with the orange&#13;
carpeting which lend so much to&#13;
the design concept of the&#13;
building. The floor also includes&#13;
library carrels which permit&#13;
maximum utilization of space.&#13;
One level down at LI we have&#13;
the abstract area in 150B and the&#13;
reference collection in area 150'a.&#13;
107 is a brousing area, while the&#13;
card catalogs and indexes are at&#13;
150C. 191 A, B, C, D are for&#13;
teaching services. The Government&#13;
Documents section is in&#13;
close prosimity to the bound&#13;
periodicals. Completing LI is a&#13;
typing room.&#13;
Level Dl is somewhat crowded.&#13;
D150D is the Reserve materials&#13;
checkout. D150E is the music and&#13;
fine arts area. Down here you will&#13;
find quite a selection of current&#13;
BUM STEER&#13;
Some people have been known&#13;
to spend half their lives seeking&#13;
advice, and the other half dodging&#13;
the consequences.&#13;
r =»—&#13;
54 Great B ooks&#13;
of W estern W orld"&#13;
and&#13;
"Great I deas Today"&#13;
BRAND NEW!&#13;
HALF PRICE!&#13;
654-3962 J &#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972 T H E PARK SIDE RAN GER 5&#13;
at UW-P: Touring LLC and PE&#13;
'•MJ1J n~B-i ^ a 20 ON _H?OOF&#13;
n&#13;
1 : li&#13;
•! .* »&lt;*.*!, i t&#13;
200-&#13;
1 iSffik 1&#13;
L&#13;
*&#13;
20(&#13;
fr&#13;
?&#13;
j&gt;Ff&#13;
periodicals. D117 is the smoking&#13;
room and next door in D115 is a&#13;
group of offices. D103A is the&#13;
staff lounge, D150A the&#13;
periodicals office and mailroom,&#13;
and D105C is the microfilm area.&#13;
Typing can be done in D150F.&#13;
Separate from the library on&#13;
level Dl can also be found the&#13;
food services area near D139, the&#13;
Learning Center, some temporary&#13;
classrooms in D185, 187&#13;
and 189, and a few organization&#13;
offices.&#13;
These offices are best reached&#13;
by ground level from the Dl level&#13;
at Greenquist by going outside&#13;
and entering through the door&#13;
just outside the Student Activities&#13;
D197. D195 is for the PAB, D193&#13;
Student Government, and this&#13;
paper is prepared in D194.&#13;
ARCHIV ES&#13;
Unless you are the type of&#13;
person who likes to dig into&#13;
Kenosha Common Council&#13;
meetings for the year 1935, you&#13;
probably have not been down to&#13;
see Nicholas Burckel in the&#13;
University Archives.&#13;
The Archives, which are&#13;
located on level D2 of the LLC,&#13;
are reached by going down the&#13;
stairs D 100 next door to the&#13;
Learning Center. You can't miss&#13;
it, right next door to the Learning&#13;
Center store room and just&#13;
through the wall of the Library&#13;
basement.&#13;
This situation is temporary&#13;
though, until they knock out part&#13;
of the wall to integrate the Archives&#13;
with the Library storage&#13;
area, and seal off the fire door&#13;
which is the present entrance.&#13;
The Archives houses the noncurrent&#13;
records of the university&#13;
which may be of subsequent&#13;
historical, financial and legal&#13;
value. Since this university is&#13;
rather new, it doesn't have many&#13;
old records, but Burckel has his&#13;
hands full trying to sort out the&#13;
load of junk dug out of the closets&#13;
at the Racine campus.&#13;
Also down there are such&#13;
diverse items as budget drafts,&#13;
Regent minutes, correspondence&#13;
files, things reflecting the&#13;
development of the university&#13;
and a faculty publications file.&#13;
Serving the function of area&#13;
research center for the State&#13;
Historical Society in Madison, the&#13;
center will also contain primary&#13;
research material for students&#13;
doing theses on local history -&#13;
such as minutes of the 1935&#13;
Kenosha Common Council.&#13;
P E N T H O U S E&#13;
P L O RED&#13;
EXLocated&#13;
on the third level of the&#13;
Library Learning Center but&#13;
entirely divorced from it is the&#13;
Administrative Penthouse. This&#13;
is where the bigwigs of the&#13;
University have their offices.&#13;
In an effort to bring you the&#13;
very latest in news coverage and&#13;
acquaint you with just who is up&#13;
there, this reporter braved those&#13;
four flights of stairs leading from&#13;
BEST WISHES&#13;
FROM&#13;
ALA RUG&#13;
418 6th St. #&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
Main Place on Dl at D100.&#13;
The following information&#13;
comes through the assistance of&#13;
my guide, Chancellor Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie.&#13;
According to Wyllie we do have&#13;
a few minor problems to get out&#13;
of the way before things can start&#13;
running smoothly. The rains have&#13;
delayed a lot of the grassing and&#13;
cleaning up and the installation of&#13;
the Chevron 440 surface on the&#13;
track. The implementation of a&#13;
lot of projects is in the hands of&#13;
the State Bureau of Capital&#13;
Development.&#13;
Particularly pleasing is the&#13;
move of the total student body&#13;
toward fuller schedules, giving a&#13;
greater sense of unity and&#13;
campus community, the use&#13;
students and faculty are making&#13;
out of new buildings, and the&#13;
functional relationsh ip&#13;
developing between the concourse&#13;
and mainplace. Also, at a&#13;
time when enrollments are&#13;
falling off nationally, ours continues&#13;
to grow.&#13;
Displeasing is the present state&#13;
of sight development, and the&#13;
concern about certain budget&#13;
projects. The governor's 7.5&#13;
percent productivity increase&#13;
amounts to a base budget cut,&#13;
and his order for the University&#13;
to identify 10 percent of its&#13;
programs as low priority will cut&#13;
one leg off the already skeleton&#13;
budget.&#13;
Future building programs may&#13;
also be affected. The Student&#13;
Union had already been&#13;
authorized in the 71-73 biennium&#13;
and is federally fund supported,&#13;
and there is a reserve built up to&#13;
start it. Budget requests for 1973-&#13;
75 will be more modest, having&#13;
two major and about 13 minor&#13;
projects.&#13;
In the planning stages are a&#13;
request for a building for the&#13;
"School of Modern Industry4md anaddition&#13;
to the P.E. facilities,&#13;
which already fall 30,000 square&#13;
feet short of guideline standards.&#13;
Parking and transportation must&#13;
also be reqorked.&#13;
An east access road must be&#13;
established from 22nd avenue,&#13;
and utilities must be established&#13;
for the greenhouse donated by the&#13;
city of Racine. The parking&#13;
situation needs to be restudied&#13;
but it must still meet environmental&#13;
standards. It's not&#13;
ideal, but it is not hopelessly bad&#13;
either.&#13;
There has been a substantial&#13;
gain in program strength with the&#13;
addition of 33 new and&#13;
replacement faculty members&#13;
along with greatly expanded&#13;
facilities.&#13;
In the Penthouse, in addition to&#13;
the Chancellor in 353A, there is&#13;
quite a nice conference room in&#13;
363 which can be further divided&#13;
into three smaller conference&#13;
rooms by motorized divider&#13;
panels.&#13;
Other important office holders&#13;
include, Vice Chancellor Bauer,&#13;
Rm. 339; Assistant Chancellors&#13;
Brockman, Rm. 349 and Dearborn,&#13;
Rm. 333. 337 is a small&#13;
conference room while 341 and&#13;
347 are storage and duplicating&#13;
rooms.&#13;
The third floor staff is&#13;
augmented by Rita Tallent, 348;&#13;
Ed Webster, 346; Walt Shirer,&#13;
344; Gary Goetz, 342 and Virginia&#13;
Scherr, in 340.&#13;
T H E BUILDI NG&#13;
O F ATHL ETICS&#13;
If you have not yet been to the&#13;
Physical Education Building to&#13;
make use of their facilities, you&#13;
have only yourself to blame.&#13;
Included as the building's most&#13;
outstanding feature is the&#13;
swimming pool which contains&#13;
both high and low diving boards&#13;
into the twelve foot deep diving&#13;
well. The deep end slants up to&#13;
8V2 feet in the corner away from&#13;
the boards and the pool slants to&#13;
3V2 feet at the shallow end.&#13;
Convenient access is given to&#13;
both men's and women's shower&#13;
and locker rooms, and directly&#13;
off the pool in D117 is a Sauna.&#13;
Both men (D123 G &amp; H) and&#13;
women (D121D) have ample&#13;
shower space and the locker&#13;
rooms (D123 &amp; D 121 respectively&#13;
can be described as marginally&#13;
adequate.&#13;
Dwarfing the rest of the&#13;
building is the three court&#13;
gymnasium which has movable&#13;
bleachers which will cover the&#13;
two side courts during athletic&#13;
events. Off the gym in D106 is the&#13;
weight training room where both&#13;
men and women may build up&#13;
and slim down on the two&#13;
--Universal Gyms.&#13;
Also on the main floor is the&#13;
checkout in D125; the coed&#13;
training room, D123A; and the&#13;
Physical Edication Performance&#13;
Lab. D104, in which people can&#13;
have their vital signs monitored&#13;
during periods of exertion. D107&#13;
and D109 are hand and paddleball&#13;
courts while D105 is the gymnastics&#13;
apparatus room.&#13;
There is not much to the second&#13;
floor of the P.E. Building except&#13;
for offices which overlook&#13;
facilities below, the fencing and&#13;
dance training room, in 109, and&#13;
the TV Lounge area at the head of&#13;
the stairs.&#13;
Go take a look - it's worth the&#13;
trip.&#13;
Film&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
present the film, "Olympia"&#13;
Friday, Sept. 29, at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
103 Greenquist.&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
Member F.D.I.C. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Sept. 27, 197 2&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
One of the most exciting&#13;
Contemporary Jazz Groups&#13;
Sat. - Oct. 14 - 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford H.S. Auditorium&#13;
Reserved Seat Tickets - $2.50&#13;
Students &amp; Staff with I.D. - $1.50&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
VW-P Information Office&#13;
Rm. 201, TallentHall&#13;
Zermatt&#13;
Switzerland&#13;
552-8404&#13;
BICYCLES ARE OUR ONLY BUSINESS&#13;
Cougle' full-time&#13;
Leroy G. Cougle has been&#13;
named a full-time assistant&#13;
professor of management science&#13;
in the School of Modern Industry&#13;
at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
effective immediately.&#13;
Cougle previously was a visiting&#13;
assistant professor at UW-P.&#13;
Cougle, who received his Ph.D.&#13;
degree from Loyola University,&#13;
previously taught at Roosevelt&#13;
University and UW-Madison. He&#13;
served as training supervisor for&#13;
several major industrial firms in&#13;
Illinois before forming his own&#13;
management consultant firm in&#13;
1969.&#13;
His national professional&#13;
memberships include the&#13;
American Society for Training&#13;
and Development, National&#13;
Society of Programmed Instruction&#13;
and Society of&#13;
Technical Writers and&#13;
Publishers.&#13;
New UW-P faculty members named NOTICE&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 6&#13;
9:30 a.m. — Women's Golf Tournament at Petrifying Springs. Indiana&#13;
University, University of Iowa, Western Illinois, North Park&#13;
College.&#13;
1 &amp; 3:30 p.m. — Soccer. UW-Madison, Notre Dame, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
A &amp; W RO OT B EER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridjn Rd. ( Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
HOURS: DAILY 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M&#13;
SUMMER MONT HS . . .&#13;
11 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 7&#13;
11 a.m. — Oktoberfest Invitational Cross Country Meet. Iowa State&#13;
University, Indiana State University, Purdue University-Calumet,&#13;
South Dakota State.&#13;
9 a.m. — Go lf Tournament at Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Recent Shipment Received&#13;
includes&#13;
Schwinn, Nishiki, American Eagle,&#13;
Peugeot, Nord, LeJeune, Cinilli,&#13;
Mondia and Jeunet&#13;
DON GILL B IKE SHOP&#13;
50067th Ave.&#13;
Kenosh?&#13;
Phone 652-6468&#13;
Ready, wrestle&#13;
Coach Jim Koch has issued i&#13;
call for any UW-P student ir&#13;
terested in wrestling to come oi&#13;
for the wrestling team. Practic&#13;
will start Monday, Oct. 16, at&#13;
p.m. Anyone interested shoul&#13;
stop and visit Coach Koch in hi&#13;
office in the P. E. Building.&#13;
An assistant professor of&#13;
education, Teresa Culum Harris,&#13;
and an instructor in communication,&#13;
Sheldon M. Harsel,&#13;
have been appointed to the&#13;
faculty of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Mrs. Harris, 25, a native of&#13;
Scotland, received her undergraduate&#13;
degree in&#13;
psychology at the University of&#13;
Manchester, England, and her&#13;
Ph. D. degree in educational&#13;
psychology at the University of&#13;
Texas.&#13;
Veterans&#13;
9 Club&#13;
The Veterans' Club will have&#13;
its first meeting of the year at 7&#13;
p.m. Oct. 1 at the Student Activities&#13;
Bldg. All veterans are&#13;
invited.&#13;
teaching socially deprived&#13;
children, and as a consultant to&#13;
the Southwest Educational&#13;
Development Laboratory in&#13;
developing methods for bi-lingual&#13;
teachers.&#13;
Harsel, 30, is a specialist in&#13;
international and intercultural&#13;
communication.&#13;
He received his undergraduate&#13;
degree at Sophia University,&#13;
Tokyo, and completed work for&#13;
his Ph.D. in mass communication&#13;
this summer at The University of&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
Harsel also taught and worked&#13;
as a writer, editor and translator&#13;
while living in Japan from 1965-&#13;
69. Fo r three years before that,&#13;
he was an editor for Compton's&#13;
Encyclopedia and Encyclopedia&#13;
Britannica.&#13;
Painting in show&#13;
Moishe Smith, visiting&#13;
professor of art at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, is&#13;
represented in the current&#13;
Humor in Prints Show at the&#13;
Associated American Artists&#13;
gallery in New York by an etching&#13;
titled "Portrait of the&#13;
Artist as a Young Goy — As an&#13;
Old Jew."&#13;
The show includes 121 prints,&#13;
most by contemporary artists.&#13;
A L L STU D E NT&#13;
ORGANIZATIONS ARE&#13;
A D V I S E D T H AT&#13;
REQUESTS FOR FUND&#13;
I N G F R OM&#13;
AVAILABLE STUDENT&#13;
S U P P O R T G R O U P&#13;
MONIES MUST BE&#13;
SUBMITTED TO THE&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS&#13;
COMMITTEE NO LATER&#13;
THAN OCT. 10. THESE&#13;
REQUESTS MUST BE IN&#13;
THE FORM OF A&#13;
DETAILED BUDGET&#13;
FOR THE 1972-73&#13;
ACA DEM IC Y E A R .&#13;
THEY MAY BE SUBMITTED&#13;
TO JEWEL&#13;
ECHELBARGER, ASSISTANT&#13;
DEAN OF&#13;
STUDENTS, ROOM 284&#13;
TAL LEN T HALL .&#13;
FURTHERMORE, ALL&#13;
STUDENT ORG ANI ­&#13;
ZATIONS ARE&#13;
REMINDED THAT THEY&#13;
SHOULD REGISTER&#13;
WITH THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE IN&#13;
THE LIBRARY LEARNING&#13;
CENTER.&#13;
Oktoberfest Schedule&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4&#13;
10 a.m. — Women's Tennis Invitational. Parkside, Carthage,&#13;
Whitewater, Northwestern, Stevens Point, Lawrence.&#13;
3 p.m. — Soccer. University of Illinois-Chicago Circle.&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 5&#13;
3 p.m. — Wo men's Tennis. UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
MPA BURGER ±&#13;
TEEN B URGER&#13;
rtAMA BUR6ER&#13;
BABY B URGER&#13;
(fant&amp;ciqe (foUeqe'i&#13;
presents in concert&#13;
7&amp;&#13;
7ctruten&#13;
^eucte&#13;
Student Actiwtie^ "So^vtd&#13;
Saturday, Oct.&#13;
*5. *4. *,3&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOU R OR DER WILL BE READ Y&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fiih&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE GAL LON OF RO OT BE ER WITH $5.00 OR DER&#13;
i, MILE NORT H OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEAT ER&#13;
ON SHER IDAN ROAD&#13;
7-8p.m. - Carthage Fieldhouse&#13;
On sale: Bidinger s Music&#13;
Carthage College Center Office&#13;
Her principal teaching interests&#13;
are child development,&#13;
cultural and ethnic differences,&#13;
and research in teaching and&#13;
teacher education.&#13;
Mrs. Harris' experience includes&#13;
background as a consultant&#13;
to the Teachers Corps&#13;
Program at the University of&#13;
Texas in examining programs for&#13;
Women's Caucus&#13;
An open meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus will&#13;
be held today at 7:30 p.m. in room&#13;
D-174 of the Library Learning&#13;
Center. Organizers of this year's&#13;
group are Lorri Tommerup and&#13;
Joyce Jansen, students, and&#13;
Wendy Musich, advisor.&#13;
The Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
is not affiliated with any national&#13;
group. Its purpose is to help&#13;
Parkside women broaden their&#13;
involvement in society and gain a&#13;
more positive view of themselves&#13;
as women and members of this&#13;
society.&#13;
According to Mrs. Musich.&#13;
their idea is much the same as&#13;
that of Gloria Steinem when she&#13;
said, "This is a human liberation&#13;
- not a women's liberation."&#13;
Oktoberfest queen&#13;
The UW-Parkside Soccer Club&#13;
is sponsoring an Oktoberfest&#13;
queen contest. Voting booths for&#13;
club members' nominees will be&#13;
set around campus next week&#13;
with the winning candidate to be&#13;
crowned at the championship of&#13;
the Oktoberfest soccer tourney,&#13;
Oct. 7.&#13;
• V V V V V V W ¥ » •&#13;
• EAT IN TH E C OMFORT O F YO UR CA R &#13;
I&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972&#13;
Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Time Schedule&#13;
The Athletic Department invites the students of Parkside to take&#13;
advantage of its new facilities. These consist of three basketball&#13;
courts, a swimming pool, a weight room, handball and paddle ball&#13;
courts and areas for several other activities. All students are welcome&#13;
to use these facilities when they're not being used for scheduled activities.&#13;
&#13;
The Physical Education Building will be open during the following&#13;
hours:&#13;
Monday through Thursday 7:45 a.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
Friday 7:45a.m. to6p.m.&#13;
Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
Sunday 1:30 to 10 p.m.&#13;
These hours are subject to change. Any change will be posted at the&#13;
p.E. Building and elsewhere on campus.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER&#13;
Wayne Dannehl&#13;
Girls sports&#13;
no longer&#13;
a joke&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
We all remember when&#13;
women's sports were thought of&#13;
as a Sunday afternoon joke. Like&#13;
when we all congregated at a&#13;
high school powder-puff football&#13;
game to watch all those girls&#13;
screaming and kicking at each&#13;
other. No more.&#13;
Women's sports are gaining&#13;
much wider acceptance and&#13;
equality through the organization&#13;
of women's athletic associations&#13;
and inter-collegiate conferences.&#13;
Parkside is a member of the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference&#13;
(W.W.I.A.C.). According to&#13;
Coach Barbra Jo Morris, this&#13;
conference has its origin in the&#13;
old Wisconsin State University&#13;
schools which had a conference of&#13;
their own. The conference now&#13;
includes UW-Parkside, UWMadison,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, Carroll&#13;
and Carthage.&#13;
The W.W.I.A.C. determines the&#13;
rules under which the women&#13;
compete. For example, colleges&#13;
and universities are forbidden&#13;
from recruiting girls from high&#13;
school for sports or from giving&#13;
scholarships based on athletics.&#13;
Another conference rule is that at&#13;
least six schools must be interested&#13;
in participating in a&#13;
sport before it can become a&#13;
conference sport.&#13;
Current Parkside conference&#13;
sports are gymnastics and tennis&#13;
in the fall, and track in the&#13;
spring.&#13;
A unique quality of the&#13;
Parkside women's athletics&#13;
organization is that varsity&#13;
letters are given and the women&#13;
may join the Varsity Club.&#13;
In addition to Varsity, there are&#13;
club and intramural sports.&#13;
Basketball and swimming are&#13;
being added this year. If&#13;
basketball catches on, as Coach&#13;
Morris hopes, after the required&#13;
one-year period, the club sport&#13;
may become conference.&#13;
The tennis team is already&#13;
active and has played three&#13;
matches with a fourth today at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
This year's activities get into&#13;
full swing starting with the&#13;
Oktoberfest tennis, golf and cross&#13;
country competitions. The&#13;
festivities will start off for&#13;
women with the Oktoberfest&#13;
Tennis Invitational, followed on&#13;
Oct. 6 by the golf tournament.&#13;
Schools expected to be&#13;
represented at the tournament&#13;
are Indiana, Iowa, Western&#13;
Illinois and North Park College.&#13;
Starting at 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct.&#13;
7, the cross country team will be&#13;
off and running at the cross&#13;
country invitational. Women&#13;
from Indiana State, Iowa State&#13;
and Purdue-Calumet will participate.&#13;
&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Many intramural and club&#13;
sports are being organized so that&#13;
students can compete on a&#13;
regular basis. At present, Coach&#13;
Jim Koch is trying to organize a&#13;
touch football league which will&#13;
play between 12:30 and 1:30 p.m.&#13;
at the Main campus. He is also&#13;
trying to organize a bowling&#13;
league which will bowl weekly.&#13;
Anyone interested in these activities&#13;
should contact him.&#13;
All girls interested in becoming&#13;
Mat-Maids should meet at 2:30&#13;
p.m. Monday, Oct. 2, at the main&#13;
Athletic Office in the Physical&#13;
Education Building. If you can't&#13;
come, contact Kathy Doherty at&#13;
552-8286 or Pat Kekic at 654-3489.&#13;
The Mat-Maids help to promote&#13;
the Varsity Wrestling program at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Dannehl named&#13;
athletic director&#13;
After a nationwide search for a replacement for&#13;
Thomas P. Rosandich, Wayne Dannehl was chosen&#13;
as athletic director by the Athletic Board. He&#13;
assumed his new position on September 1.&#13;
Dannehl was born in the little town of Watseka,&#13;
111., i n 1937. H e comes from a large sports-minded&#13;
family and is the youngest of twelve children.&#13;
He went to high school in Onarga where he earned&#13;
sixteen letters and won a football scholarship to&#13;
Northern Illinois University. Dannehl was cocaptain&#13;
of the football team there in his senior year,&#13;
earning his fourth letter at the university. Named to&#13;
the Scholastic Little All-American team, he also'&#13;
earned all-conference honors and received the&#13;
Interstate Intercollegiate Conference ScholarAthlete&#13;
award.&#13;
Dannehl then moved to Rockford East High&#13;
School as assistant football coach and head coach of&#13;
wrestling. It was in Rockford that he met his wife&#13;
Carole.&#13;
Dannehl holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in education&#13;
from Northern Illinois University. Before coming&#13;
here he received his Ph. D. in educational administration&#13;
from Northern Illinois and was an&#13;
assistant professor of physical education and&#13;
assistant freshman football coach.&#13;
Dannehl would like to see all possible programs&#13;
go into effect here at Parkside that the university&#13;
can afford. One course he would like to see started&#13;
here is Techniques of Angling. While at Illinois he&#13;
taught a very successful angling course.&#13;
Dannehl said he is glad to be here and that the&#13;
campus is beautiful because of the setting. He likes&#13;
to jog on campus and in Petrifying Springs.&#13;
CAN A DRINK THAT HELPED DEFEAT&#13;
THE JAPANESE SECRET SERVICE IN WORLD WAR II,&#13;
HELP TOD GET THROUGH COLLEGE?&#13;
Answer the ten questions&#13;
~&lt;.-of t he Brass Monkey Undercqyer, Scholarship Contest,&#13;
and win a year's tuition to college.&#13;
The Ten Undercover Questions&#13;
1. What was the name of the Japanese Secret&#13;
Service?&#13;
2. How did the Brass Monkey Club get its name?&#13;
3. What was the name of the street where the&#13;
Brass Monkey Club was located?&#13;
4. If the Brass Monkey was a woman, what two&#13;
possible names could she have had besides&#13;
H. E. Rasske?&#13;
5. What is the color of the Brass Monkey&#13;
Cocktail?&#13;
6. How did Admiral Kokura die?&#13;
7 Where is H. E. Rasske reputed to live now?&#13;
8. During World War II, what was reputed to&#13;
be the principal form of commerce in Macao?&#13;
9. What was the name of the quinine dealer?&#13;
10. Loyana sang "My Love is a Man&#13;
of Gold." What do you think the lyrics of&#13;
this song might have been?&#13;
About a year ^&#13;
and a half ago we&#13;
introduced a drink&#13;
called the Brass Monkey.&#13;
It's made from a secret recipe&#13;
we learned from an old friend of&#13;
H. E. Rasske, who was purported to&#13;
be the Brass Monkey himself, an allied secret agent,&#13;
operating out of Macao during World War II.&#13;
The legend of the Brass Monkey was so fascinating,&#13;
we pieced together and reconstructed as&#13;
much of it as we could in our advertising. It reads&#13;
like a B-movie script, complete with spies, counterspies,&#13;
smugglers, soldiers-of-fortune, mercenaries,&#13;
river pirates and mysterious disappearances.&#13;
If you've ever tasted the Brass Monkey and are&#13;
familiar with the three ads that we've been running,&#13;
you've got a pretty good shot at answering the&#13;
following ten questions. To make it a little easier,&#13;
we'll give you the headlines of t he ads and where&#13;
they appear.&#13;
Headlines: "The Brass Monkey Returns&#13;
"The Brass Monkey Is Worth Two&#13;
Aircraft Carriers In The Coral Sea"&#13;
"Was The Brass Monkey A Woman?"&#13;
Where They Appear:&#13;
"Rolling Stone" October 12,&#13;
October 26 and&#13;
November 9&#13;
Remember, the best answers to these ten&#13;
Questions win a year s free tuition at any college&#13;
of'your choice in the country (provided&#13;
you're enrolled, of course). Give it a&#13;
try. You've got nothing to lose, and&#13;
considering the price of education&#13;
nowadays, an awful lot to gain. ^ /&#13;
Please mail all entries to:&#13;
Brass Monkey&#13;
Undercover Scholarship Contest&#13;
Post Office Box 2016&#13;
Hartford, Connecticut 06101&#13;
Good Luck!&#13;
§) HEUBLEIN COCKTAILS&#13;
a •• will be indued by an independent iudging organization. Noentnes will be judged alter 12/31/72. Employeesand their dependents&#13;
A.i entries ^be i^.J ^ ^ subsidjaries. afhUates and their agencies or judging organization are not eligible for this contest. &#13;
T H E PAR KSID E R A N G ER Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972&#13;
Booters tie, lose two,&#13;
face UW-Madison Saturday&#13;
An unidentified Parkside soccer player and a Lake Forest player&#13;
battle for the ball in the Rangers' opener against the Foresters. The&#13;
teams tied 1-1.&#13;
Last Saturday, Parkside hosted&#13;
the Southern IllinoisEdwardsville&#13;
Cougers. The&#13;
Cougars, who are presently&#13;
ranked fourth in the nation,&#13;
handed the Rangers their second&#13;
defeat of t he year, by a 6-0 score.&#13;
Parkside was matching the&#13;
Cougars step for step during most&#13;
of t he first half, but the bad news&#13;
started with 12:36 left in the first&#13;
half when Steve Cacciatore&#13;
booted a nifty pass to Chris&#13;
Carenza, who slammed it in for&#13;
the score.&#13;
From then on the Cougars took&#13;
over the ballgame. With 11:40 left&#13;
in the first half, Carenza again&#13;
scored, this time with an assist&#13;
from Bill Renauld. That took care&#13;
of the scoring for the first half&#13;
and the Rangers went to the&#13;
bench, obviously hopoing to come&#13;
back in the second half.&#13;
Unfortunately the second half&#13;
proved to be no better with the&#13;
Cougars' third goal coming with&#13;
just under five minutes gone. The&#13;
third goal came when Greg&#13;
Modde centered the ball and John&#13;
Stremlau booted it into the net.&#13;
By this time Parkside Coach&#13;
Hal Henderson had made a few&#13;
substitutions, but they seemed to&#13;
be of no avail because Greg&#13;
Modde scored two quick goals&#13;
that put the game pretty well out&#13;
of reach for the Rangers.&#13;
The Cougars got their final&#13;
point in the closing seconds of the&#13;
game, when John Stremlau&#13;
picked up his second tally of the&#13;
day.&#13;
Henderson said that he was&#13;
pleased with the performance of&#13;
his team up to a certain point. His&#13;
only complaints seemed to be&#13;
that his team lacked bench&#13;
strength and occasionally made&#13;
some stupid mistakes.&#13;
"The score out there today&#13;
could have been two or three to&#13;
nothing if it hadn't been for some&#13;
stupid errors. The main problem&#13;
is that I don't have any bench&#13;
strength to speak of, Henderson&#13;
siad. "I have to play 10 or $$ guys&#13;
all the time, although 3 or 4 of&#13;
these fellows could probably play&#13;
on any varsity squad in the&#13;
country."&#13;
Injuries have also been&#13;
somewhat of a problem for the&#13;
Rangers, they have played their&#13;
last two games with an injured&#13;
Tom Thomsen at the goalie&#13;
position.&#13;
Despite these problems,&#13;
Henderson is confident that his&#13;
team can come up with a .500&#13;
season this year.&#13;
Henderson said that being&#13;
beaten by a team like S.I.U.E.&#13;
isn't anything to be ashamed of.&#13;
"They are a team that keeps&#13;
punching at you and wearing you&#13;
down until they can tear you&#13;
apart. They are very much like&#13;
the St. Louis ball club that has&#13;
beaten the Cougars the last three&#13;
years in post season play."&#13;
The Parkside soccer team&#13;
started its season off on Saturday,&#13;
Sept. 16 with a grueling,&#13;
double-overtime match with&#13;
Lake Forest College that ended in&#13;
a 1-1 tie. Scoring for the Rangers&#13;
in their first game was Rick&#13;
Lechusz. Shots taken at the goal&#13;
were about even with Parkside&#13;
attempting 35 and Lake Forest&#13;
trying 34 times. The Ranger&#13;
goalie, Tom Thomsen, was quite&#13;
a bit more busy than Lake&#13;
Forest's Fixler, blocking 38 shots&#13;
as compared to Fixler's 17.&#13;
The Rangers' next opponent&#13;
was Lewis College from Lockport,&#13;
111. The Rangers dropped&#13;
this match 3-1 in a very hardfought&#13;
battle.&#13;
Ranger harriers split first two,&#13;
face Eastern Illinois Saturday&#13;
The second cross country meet&#13;
of the season went much better&#13;
for the Rangers. Parkside won&#13;
the meet by placing eight runners&#13;
in the top ten. Lucian Rosa had&#13;
the winning time of 26:37 in the&#13;
five mile run. He was followed by&#13;
Wayne Saunders of IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle, and the following&#13;
Parkside runners: Dennis Biel,&#13;
Jim McFadden, Keith Merritt,&#13;
Ned Kessenich, Everett Hyde&#13;
and Bill Carlson.&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey said that the&#13;
meet was "a good confidence&#13;
builder for the younger runners."&#13;
He also said that there was a good&#13;
team effort. This meet will give&#13;
more confidence to the team&#13;
when it meets Eastern Illinois&#13;
this Saturday.&#13;
For a long distance outlook on&#13;
the team, Godfrey will have to&#13;
depend on the freshmen to pull&#13;
the team through the season. He&#13;
said "the top three runners will&#13;
do well in each race, but it's up to&#13;
the freshmen."&#13;
The Rangers will run Saturday&#13;
at Charleston, 111., against a&#13;
strong Eastern Illinois squad.&#13;
It** ijfrim &lt;|frn&#13;
THE&#13;
ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
The cross country team started&#13;
out the season Sept. 19 o n a sour&#13;
note. Last year the Rangers won&#13;
the Stevens Point meet over&#13;
Carthage, Whitewater, and&#13;
Stevens Point. Coach Godfrey&#13;
says, "We had outstanding&#13;
performance on top but nothing&#13;
else." Dennis Biel was the only&#13;
one who placed in the top ten in&#13;
the five mile race, finishing&#13;
second. The next Parkside placer&#13;
was 17th. Carthage's Tom&#13;
Schumacher placed first, setting&#13;
a course record.&#13;
Any man interested in joining&#13;
the Ranger track team should&#13;
contact Coach Bob Lawson.&#13;
Practice for the indoor track&#13;
team has already begun. Coach&#13;
Lawson can be found in the&#13;
Physical Education Building or&#13;
by calling 553-2153.&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
September 30 UW-Madison at Madison&#13;
October 4 Illinois-Chicago Circle at PARKSIDE&#13;
October 6-7 V^Oktoberfest Tournament&#13;
(UW-Madison, Notre Dame, UW-Milwaukee)&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
September 30 Eastern Illinois at Charleston, 111.&#13;
October 3 UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee&#13;
October 7 Oktoberfest Invitational&#13;
Golf&#13;
September 29-30 UW-Oshkosh at Oshkosh&#13;
October 7 Oktoberfest Tournament&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
October 6 Oktoberfest Invitational&#13;
Women's Golf&#13;
October 5 Oktoberfest Tournament&#13;
Tennis&#13;
October 4 Oktoberfest Invitational&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
COMICS&#13;
A.V '(9&#13;
«£, si r&gt;, t&gt; \&#13;
'%aXS&gt;&#13;
EDMONDS&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CURLEY&#13;
9 P.M. - Frida y, September 29&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Admission • M50&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. I.D. required&#13;
also appearing&#13;
Tony, Jumbo and Garry&#13;
VVv Vs </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63822">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 1, September 27, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63823">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63824">
                <text>1972-09-27</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63827">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63828">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63829">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63830">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63831">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63832">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63833">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63834">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63835">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="218">
        <name>erwin zuehlke</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="255">
        <name>marion mochon</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="291">
        <name>norman mailer</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="293">
        <name>parking</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="295">
        <name>st louis jazz quartet</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2626" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3252">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/f43d74bc0819f0a753df391f30d7b5c5.pdf</src>
        <authentication>b4da057b68f33660e8a3a2437094d9c2</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63840">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 2</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63841">
              <text>PGSA [sic] readies for elections</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63851">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89904">
              <text>The Parkside _&#13;
RANGERwedneday&#13;
,&#13;
K no ha&#13;
ctoh r 4, 1972&#13;
i on III&#13;
PGSA readies for elections&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
author, speaker'&#13;
m~~ of man;&#13;
opnuons, alternately&#13;
roused and&#13;
roasted the crowd&#13;
Sunday as he&#13;
opened the lecture&#13;
season at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Special Collection room is&#13;
open to the public weekdays from&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. or by appomtment.&#13;
Normal library hours&#13;
are until midnight MondayThursday,&#13;
unlil6 p.m. Friday, 9-5&#13;
Saturday and 1:30-10:30 Sunday.&#13;
Mailer's books, including UWP's&#13;
first editions on display, are&#13;
The Naked and the Dead (948),&#13;
Barbary Shore (1951), Deer Park&#13;
(955), White Negro (957),&#13;
Advertisements for Myself&#13;
(959), Death for the Ladies&#13;
(962), The Presidential Papers&#13;
(1963) I An American Dream&#13;
(964), Cannibals and Christians&#13;
(965), Why Are We in Vietnam&#13;
(967), Bull Fight (967), The&#13;
Armies of the Night (968),&#13;
Miami and the Siege of Chicago&#13;
(1969), Of a Fire on the Moon&#13;
(970), King of the Hill (971),&#13;
Maidstone (l97l) , Prisoner of Sex&#13;
(971) and Existential Errands&#13;
(972).&#13;
Norman Mailer had at least 14&#13;
requests for autographs at UWParkside.&#13;
The prize-winning author, who&#13;
spoke at UW-P Sunday night,&#13;
signed the 14 first editions of his&#13;
bookswhich are in the library's&#13;
possession Monday morning&#13;
when he met with Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
The first editions include 14 of&#13;
Mailer's 18 books and are&#13;
currently on display in the&#13;
Special Collections room which&#13;
has recently opened in the new&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
The room, which is climatically&#13;
controlled, includes a collection&#13;
of 1,300 rare and unusual books&#13;
first editions drafts and&#13;
manuscripts, in~luding th~ Irving&#13;
Wallace Collection which the&#13;
best-selling Kenosha author has&#13;
established at UW-P and the&#13;
Teisberg Collection' of early&#13;
American plays. ___--1&#13;
Student Life Q&amp;A&#13;
board installed&#13;
A student life question and&#13;
~nswer bulletin board has been&#13;
mstalled in the Student Activities&#13;
BUilding to serve as a means for&#13;
students to ask all those little&#13;
que~tions they have been wondering&#13;
about in the Student Life&#13;
area.&#13;
This would include the Student&#13;
Activities Building itself, campus&#13;
food services, the University&#13;
Bookstore, campus housing,&#13;
student activities and&#13;
programming, and the Campus&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
According to William Niebuhr&#13;
Coordinator of Student Life'&#13;
questions placed in the bo~&#13;
~ated on this bulletin board will&#13;
. answered as fairly and conSlsely&#13;
a . I s posslbl~. The answers&#13;
a ong with the questions will be&#13;
pOsted on the board for general&#13;
stUdent b . a servatlOn. As new&#13;
questions come in, the board will&#13;
then be periodically changed.&#13;
All questions will be answered&#13;
as long as they are reasonable&#13;
and do not concern specific&#13;
people by name. The latter is to&#13;
protect a person's individual&#13;
rights and not in involve the&#13;
entire campus with questions&#13;
concerning personality conflicts.&#13;
A somewhat similar project is&#13;
already in affect in the library&#13;
with its "Bitch Ticket." Here a&#13;
student's "bitch" with the library&#13;
is responded to with what the&#13;
library feels to be an "Honest&#13;
Response." Niebuhr hopes the&#13;
Student Life question-answer&#13;
board will deal not only with&#13;
bitches but also with any question&#13;
or suggestion involving Student&#13;
Life. Students are encOl;lraged to&#13;
use this means of better campus&#13;
communication as well as the one&#13;
in the library.&#13;
Park.si~ Student Government&#13;
Assa.clatIon will be holding&#13;
elections Oct. 23-25 and is looking&#13;
~or stu~ents eager to get involved&#13;
~lthe Inner workings of UW-P.&#13;
. UW-P students can he candid.ates&#13;
and can run for any of 28&#13;
offices which are to he filled&#13;
First a little background on the&#13;
objective, history and versaWity&#13;
of PSGA.&#13;
The aim of Student Government&#13;
is to aid a student, students,&#13;
st~dent organizations or campus-&#13;
?nented activities in getting what&#13;
IS needed or wanted. The 1971-n&#13;
~tudent Government has been&#13;
instrumental in a number of&#13;
areas: Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center, the Spring Book Exchange,&#13;
the Teacher-Course&#13;
Evaluations and the Parkside&#13;
annexation issue.&#13;
Most appointments for&#13;
~niversity committees originate&#13;
~nStudent Governmenl PSGA&#13;
Its.elf has six standing cornmitteea.Ffnance,&#13;
Public Information,&#13;
Elections, Grievances&#13;
and Clearing House, Academic&#13;
Policies and Student tjntce. As&#13;
you can see, PSGA concerns&#13;
itself with all facets of student&#13;
life.&#13;
The offices of the Senate which&#13;
are available this fall are:&#13;
PRESIDENT: Serves as&#13;
chairman of the Senate, plans&#13;
meetings and appoints committee&#13;
chairmen.&#13;
VICE PRESIDEST: Aids the&#13;
president in his duties and serves&#13;
as a member of all committees.&#13;
RECORD!. 'G SECRETARY:&#13;
Records the attendance and&#13;
minutes of all Senate meetings.&#13;
CORRESPOSDING SECRI::-&#13;
TARY: Shall handle all official&#13;
Senate correspondence and&#13;
chairs the Public Information&#13;
Committee.&#13;
TREAS R ER: Kecelves,&#13;
deposits, disperses and accounts&#13;
for all funds and makes financial&#13;
reports to the Senate.&#13;
In addition to the officers there&#13;
::Ire 17 senators. The senators are&#13;
the base units of representatian&#13;
in PSGA They can sit on or chair&#13;
most of the standing committees&#13;
besides working on special&#13;
projects&#13;
ln this election there are also&#13;
five positions on the P GA&#13;
Student UDlon Committee. nus&#13;
committee can review and make&#13;
recommendations on the use and&#13;
operations of the SAB and the&#13;
broad area of tudent acnvru&#13;
on campus&#13;
The last posilion needed to be&#13;
filed is one of the student seats an&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
This committee IS&#13;
perhaps one of the most JROuential&#13;
bodies on campus. ThiS&#13;
For 1973-74&#13;
eemrmuee handl th&#13;
recognition of tudenl&#13;
organlzabon and th disperment&#13;
of tudent upport funds&#13;
For a candrdate lo get hISnam&#13;
an the ballot he must (I) a&#13;
Parkside tud ntand (2) submu&#13;
a petilion of 25 Ignalu of&#13;
P students The petibons can be&#13;
picked up at the follOWing&#13;
locauc :&#13;
Ken05ha Camp . Room 135-&#13;
ud nt Servi&#13;
.laIn amp ... ' LLC \).193&#13;
PSGA mce Information Desk&#13;
In U-C. taIn Desk In Ubrary.&#13;
Th completed petitions should&#13;
he returned fore 10 p.m an&#13;
,landay, October 16to tho PSGA&#13;
office at LLC D-193 Th el ban&#13;
WIll he October 23. 24 and 25&#13;
Parkside formulates&#13;
admissions policy&#13;
The niversuy of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside recently formulated its&#13;
admissions policy proposal for&#13;
1m-74.&#13;
In a letter to Madisan Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie detailed the pomts&#13;
of the new (X)licy. which were&#13;
chosen "after considerable&#13;
debale and consrderauoe" and&#13;
which "have been approved by&#13;
the Admissions Policy Committee&#13;
and Faculty enate" and&#13;
are also supported by thecampu&#13;
admlnistrauon.'·&#13;
Unlike past admimslration&#13;
poliCies. the no" policy has excluded&#13;
all references Lo cla&#13;
tandIng and Ac:r or all AT&#13;
scores.&#13;
"In effecl:' saId Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie, "we are trylflg to return&#13;
to the hi lonc policy of the&#13;
Uni\'erslty of Wisconsin thal&#13;
prev"ilPltt ::I rlf'Cade or more ago.&#13;
Our proposa IISaJso a re ose 10&#13;
the observation of th 10rlh&#13;
Central exenun ,who w re of&#13;
the Opinion that W could not&#13;
properly serve our regional&#13;
clientele if we continued to be&#13;
bound to the top half of tho cia&#13;
policy of recent years "&#13;
The enate TeJ ted cut orf&#13;
poInts such as th 25 porcentlovol&#13;
or tal l seer reqwremeJ1l,&#13;
boca. . lhey are "tnherently&#13;
artifiCial. bearing IItll&#13;
deman tratabl relationship to&#13;
colleg perform n or ucc "&#13;
Th re W m qu tion of&#13;
"I""enng tandarcls" According&#13;
lo th han 1I0r, the en al&#13;
f ling "a that "tnJ t ndards&#13;
ar l not 1n th adml. iOlU&#13;
but tn tho tnt II t I&#13;
chall ng thal or pIa bclo~&#13;
tuden after lhey he\! n&#13;
admilled, and the Rrado that ate&#13;
Igned In rclabon t.h reto It&#13;
Almost nurses. physicians,&#13;
clergymen, social workers and others&#13;
professionally interested in the problems&#13;
of the terminally ill attended an all-day&#13;
seminar at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wednesday conducted by Dr.&#13;
Elisabeth Kuber- Ross, author of the&#13;
widely-read book "On Death and Dying."&#13;
Dr. Kuber- Ross, a physician and a&#13;
psychiatrist, is a member of the&#13;
psychiatry faculty of the University of&#13;
Chicago and medical director of South&#13;
Cook County (III.) Mental Health and&#13;
Family Services. Shown at the seminar&#13;
are. left to right, Dr. Kim Baugrud,&#13;
co~rdlnator of University Extension&#13;
w~lch sponsored the seminar; Sandra&#13;
Riese, supervising nurse at St&#13;
Catherine's Hospital, 6504 29th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Dr. Kuber-Ross; and Clarice&#13;
Pac.kman, 1268 52nd Ave., Kenosha, a&#13;
registered nurse at St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital.&#13;
r I ,.&#13;
n h.&#13;
PGSA readies for election&#13;
Norman Mailer had at least 14&#13;
requests for autographs at UWParkside.&#13;
&#13;
The prize-winning author, who&#13;
sPoke at UW-P Sunday night,&#13;
signed the 14 first editions of his&#13;
books which are in the library's&#13;
possession Monday morning&#13;
when he met with Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
The first editions include 14 of&#13;
Mailer's 18 books and are&#13;
currently on display in the&#13;
Special Collections room which&#13;
has recently opened in the new&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
The room, which is climatically&#13;
controlled, includes a collection&#13;
of 1,300 rare and unusual books&#13;
first editions drafts and&#13;
manuscripts, in~luding th~ Irving&#13;
Wallace Collection which the&#13;
best-selling Kenosha author has&#13;
established at UW-P and the&#13;
Teisberg Collection' of early&#13;
American plays.&#13;
n&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
author, speaker'&#13;
m~~ of many&#13;
opiruons, alternately&#13;
roused and&#13;
roasted the crowd&#13;
Sunday as he&#13;
opened the lecture&#13;
season at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Special Collection room is&#13;
open to the public weekdays from&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. or by appointment.&#13;
Normal library hours&#13;
are until midnight MondayThursday,&#13;
until 6 p.m. Friday, 9-5&#13;
Saturday and 1 :30-10:30 Sunday.&#13;
Mailer's books, including UWP's&#13;
first editions on display, are&#13;
The Naked and the Dead (1948),&#13;
Barbary Shore (1951), Deer Park&#13;
0955), White Negro 0957),&#13;
Advertisements for Myself&#13;
(1959), Death for the Ladies&#13;
0962), The Presidential Papers&#13;
(1963), An American Dream&#13;
(1964), Cannibals and Christians&#13;
(1965), Why Are We in Vietnam&#13;
(1967), Bull Fight (1967), The&#13;
Armies of the Night 0968),&#13;
Miami and the Siege of Chicago&#13;
(1969), Of a Fire on the Moon&#13;
(1970), King of the Hill 0971),&#13;
Maidstone ( 1971), Prisoner of ex&#13;
(1971) and Existential Errands&#13;
(1972).&#13;
I&#13;
Student Life Q&amp;A&#13;
board installed&#13;
A student life question and&#13;
~nswer bulletin board has been&#13;
mstalled in the Student Activities&#13;
Building to serve as a means for&#13;
students to ask all those little&#13;
que~tions they have been wondermg&#13;
about in the Student Life&#13;
area.&#13;
This would include the Student&#13;
Activities Building itself, campus&#13;
~ood services, the University&#13;
00kstore, campus housing&#13;
student activities and&#13;
programming, and the Campus&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
According to William Niebuhr&#13;
Coordinator of Student Life '&#13;
QUeStions placed in the bo~&#13;
~ated on this bulletin board will&#13;
. answered as fairly and cons1sely&#13;
a .&#13;
1 s poss1bl.:!. The answers a ong with the questions will be&#13;
P0Sled on the board for general&#13;
student observation. As new&#13;
questions come in, the board will&#13;
then be periodically changed.&#13;
All questions will be answered&#13;
as long as they are reasonable&#13;
and do not concern specific&#13;
people by name. The latter is to&#13;
protect a person's individual&#13;
rights and not in involve the&#13;
entire campus with questions&#13;
concerning personality conflicts.&#13;
A somewhat similar project is&#13;
already in affect in the library&#13;
with its "Bitch Ticket." Here a&#13;
student's "bitch" with the library&#13;
is responded to with what the&#13;
library feels to be an "Hone t&#13;
Response. " iebuhr hopes the&#13;
Student Life question-answer&#13;
board will deal not only with&#13;
bitches but also with any question&#13;
or suggestion involving Student&#13;
Life. Students are enco1,1raged to&#13;
use this means of better campus&#13;
communication as well as the one&#13;
in the library.&#13;
Park_sid_ tudent Gov rnment&#13;
Association will be hold'&#13;
elections Oct. 23-25 and i I ::&#13;
for stu~ents eager to get in ·ol ·eel&#13;
m the mner wor ing of •.p&#13;
i1 W-P student can be can:&#13;
d_ates and can run for an~· of 28&#13;
o~f1ces which are to be · filled.&#13;
Fi~t ~ little backjO"ound on the&#13;
obJective, hi torv and versatili&#13;
of PSGA. . ·&#13;
The aim of tudent Go ·ernment&#13;
is to aid a tudent. tuden '&#13;
st1:1ctent organization or campu .&#13;
?riented activities in getting ·hat&#13;
is needed or wanted. The 1971-72&#13;
~tudent Government ha been&#13;
instrumental in a number of&#13;
areas: Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center, the pring Book E .&#13;
change , the Teacher-Cour e&#13;
Evaluation and the Par ,d&#13;
annexation i ue.&#13;
1ost appointment for&#13;
. niversity committe originate&#13;
10 tudent Government p&#13;
itself has ix tandmg committees;&#13;
Finance, Public Information,&#13;
Election . Grievanc&#13;
and Clearing Ho cademic&#13;
Policies and tud nt&#13;
you can ee. PSG con ern&#13;
itself with all facets of tud nt&#13;
life.&#13;
The offices of the enate hich&#13;
are available thi fall are:&#13;
PRE IDE. 'T. a&#13;
chairman of the nate, plan&#13;
meetings and appoints committee&#13;
chairmen&#13;
VICE PRE IDE. 'T: Aids the&#13;
president in hi duti and rv&#13;
as a member of all comm1tt&#13;
RECORDI. 'G R T.-\R\':&#13;
Records the attendance and&#13;
minute of all enate meeting . ORRE P 'DI&#13;
TARY: hall handle all official&#13;
enate corre pond nee and&#13;
chairs the Public Information&#13;
Committee.&#13;
TREA lRER : Kece1 ·e&#13;
depo its, di pers and ccoun&#13;
for all fund and ma · - fin ncJ&#13;
reports to the nate&#13;
In addition to the Ha r ther&#13;
;ire 17 nato ·. The&#13;
For 1973-7&#13;
Parkside forinulat&#13;
adinissions polic&#13;
Almost nurses, physicians,&#13;
clergymen, social or ers and others&#13;
professionally interested in the problems&#13;
of the terminally ill attended an all-day&#13;
seminar at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wednesday conducted by Dr.&#13;
Elisabeth Kuber-Ross. author of the&#13;
widely-read book' On Death and Dy ng."&#13;
Dr. Kuber-Ross, a physician and a&#13;
psychiatrist, is a member of the&#13;
psychiatry faculty of the University of &#13;
THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
2&#13;
Is there II doctor&#13;
in the house?&#13;
THORN&#13;
it has been some time since I had a .colum~ ~nthe&#13;
student newspaper, not since the first ed!tlOn °i&#13;
~E\\'SCOPE in fact, two years ago. In ft.tlS one&#13;
shall make the attempt once again to pr-int those&#13;
little things which happen in the course of ~he week&#13;
which tend to bother people, as well as items of&#13;
information too small to warrant a story.&#13;
RA:\'GER is the third newspaper we ha~e had ,on&#13;
campus in as many years, Iollowtng In t~e 10k&#13;
tracks of COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE. Things do&#13;
look more promising for us now than they did f~r&#13;
:':EII'SCOPE though, where problems developed In&#13;
alienation of staff and advertising revenue&#13;
collection.&#13;
Just as NEWSCOPE inherited a sizeable debt from&#13;
C'OLLEGIA:'\. we inherit a somewhat smaller ~ebt&#13;
from them, and are in a position to pay it off a htt~e&#13;
at a time. We have a new printer now, located 10&#13;
ZIOn instead of Walworth. This makes it more&#13;
convenient to commute and the Wednesday release&#13;
schedule enables us to get in more of that weekend&#13;
news.&#13;
If you become III what happens to you? 00 you have to&#13;
staY away from school because it would cost you too&#13;
much to see a doctor or it would take you too long to get&#13;
on his crowded schedule? Have you found that as you&#13;
break Into adulthood a chief disadvantage is that your&#13;
parents insurance policy no longer covers you? You&#13;
aren't alone. Undoubtedly many other Parks ide&#13;
students have the same problem.&#13;
Parkside has a health office at Rm. 332 Greenquist&#13;
Hall staffed by Edith Isenberg, a registered nurse. She's&#13;
a fine person who does everything she can to help the&#13;
students that come to her. But she Is a registered nurse&#13;
and there are many things a doctor can do that she&#13;
can't.&#13;
A he Ith service expanded to include a doctor would&#13;
provide Parks Ide students with a real alternative to ~he&#13;
prohibitive costs in obtaining medical help and advice&#13;
from local physicians. A doctor associated with the&#13;
health service could write prescriptions for students and&#13;
staff. (Something that now requires a $10 visit to a&#13;
physician's office) A doctor could also provide a more&#13;
. curate di~~iS of certain problems and a more&#13;
qualified referral when necessary.&#13;
This is not meant to take anything away from Mrs.&#13;
Isenberg. She does a good job. But she is not a doctor.&#13;
She agrees that a doctor on campus would be a good&#13;
thing She feels that it is the cost that prevents a&#13;
physician from being added to the health service. We&#13;
hope tha t the price of health is beyond a dollar sign.&#13;
We realize that there are difficulties in obtaining&#13;
fundS for any new program at Parkside. To cut costs we&#13;
suggest that the health service be operated as a free&#13;
lInic with a doctor hera on a r.egular -schedule: everv«&#13;
'fuesday and Thurstfay for eXample. -.&#13;
We urge the university to do everything it can to work&#13;
WIth Mrs. Isenberg in setting up as complete a health&#13;
service as possible as soon as possible.&#13;
We get letters .••&#13;
Letters to the Editors are encouraged. We ask that&#13;
they be confined to 250 words or less and that they be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. All must be signed and include&#13;
address and phone number and student status (senior,&#13;
junior, sophomore, freshman) or faculty rank. Names&#13;
will be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the&#13;
right to refuse to prillt any letters.&#13;
To the editors:&#13;
Your fronl page edltortal of this&#13;
morninga issue of the new&#13;
Ranger mtrigued me. In fact the&#13;
\A.'holei ue was quite interesting,&#13;
and certainly J must thank you&#13;
for warming my heart so&#13;
no talgically!&#13;
One of the cri ticisms of&#13;
Uruverslties in general, is that&#13;
th y do not provide a "real life"&#13;
environment (or students. Surely,&#13;
here at Parks ide, as our&#13;
newspaper Indicates, we are&#13;
quite mvolved in the real world.&#13;
After all, didn't the Ranger&#13;
COlOralmost aU the school news&#13;
th y could po Ibly dig up? It&#13;
didn't bore us 'With any stories&#13;
ahuul th political campaigns,&#13;
huut ny American problems,&#13;
'tat o( Wisconsin problems, or&#13;
\ \ problem excepting those&#13;
IO"'cly httle do-or..die ones we&#13;
faCt' a tudents here Thank you&#13;
I' \RI\IDE RANGER staff.&#13;
what w(" n('E'(jat UlISuniversity is&#13;
• hlllh chool newspaper. It will&#13;
dd S() much to the sta ture of&#13;
Park ,de&#13;
The onl) thing. though, if you&#13;
&lt;If gOing to produce a high&#13;
hoo! no" paper, at least make&#13;
BY KONKOL&#13;
We have a dwersified staff, and while the overwhelming&#13;
majority have no experience with a&#13;
college newspaper, many have worked for&#13;
high school sheets and yearbooks.&#13;
The name of the paper - RANGER, has even attracted&#13;
some people to the staff: some of them a:e&#13;
somewhat strange. There is this one big hairy guy In&#13;
the scoutmasters hat who comes running out of the&#13;
editor's office every time someone lights a&#13;
cigarette, to throw a bucket of water on it. Must be&#13;
against air pollution or something.&#13;
One thing which is going to help us a lot is having a&#13;
full time adviser, Don Kopriva, who used to Q~&#13;
.director of sports information. We have also ap--&#13;
plied. as a student organization, for funding for 000-&#13;
printing costs which should help stretch our dollars.&#13;
We hope to cover printing with advertising revenue.&#13;
We have a brand new university with the addition of&#13;
two new buildings and the loss of the Racine&#13;
campus. With these come new problems, while&#13;
some old ones are still with us.&#13;
An old problem which affects everyone is the&#13;
parking and bus situation. While the shuttle service&#13;
has improved ever since the Chancellor had to wait&#13;
20 minutes for one. the parking problem is still with&#13;
us. Whoever dreamed up the outlying parking plan&#13;
was really dumb.&#13;
Even the North Central Association of Colleges and&#13;
Secondary Schools hesitated in granting us accredation&#13;
because of our parking problem. Already&#13;
there have been occasions when both parking lots&#13;
were full.&#13;
M hanical breakdowns have been a problem with&#13;
bUe:service. Two buses are kept at the far parking&#13;
I t for just such emergenCIes, but have not been&#13;
enough since you have probably ridden one of those&#13;
yellOWones up the hill.&#13;
They have trouble starting those buses mornings&#13;
now. Imagine what happens when the weather gets&#13;
cold. Jelco isn't going to go, out and buy new buses&#13;
either _ not when they can t be guaranteed a continued&#13;
contract.&#13;
Why offer a bus contract anyway'? Why doesn't&#13;
Parkside buy its own buses, spread out the&#13;
payments over a period of years, have them driven&#13;
by students on work study which is ~ubsidized and&#13;
have them maintained and repaired by area&#13;
technical schools?&#13;
Buses cost a lot of money, especially when compared&#13;
to the amount o~ money spent on slu?ent&#13;
organizations. The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
has less than $7,000 to give to student organizations.&#13;
Of this over $7,500 has been requested by PSGA,&#13;
RANGER Child Care Center and a couple of others,&#13;
Imagine, less than $1.50 of your tuitition is coming&#13;
hack to you through fund 128.&#13;
Another old problem:is the vending machines.Hew&#13;
do you like paying 50 cents for sa.ndwiches which&#13;
used to sell for 35 cents. Or paying 15 cents for&#13;
potato chips which Canteen sells for 10 cents in&#13;
other locations across town.&#13;
We have a new bookstore but it has some of the&#13;
same old problems. In the fourth week of classes we&#13;
are still waiting for books to come in which were&#13;
ordered short. Some of this has been the fault of&#13;
professors who underestimate, but there is no excuse&#13;
for ordering an amount less than requested.&#13;
Perhaps you are amused by people laying sod one&#13;
day and tearing it up the next, when planting grass&#13;
seed would be cheaper, looks better and lasts&#13;
. longer:" 61\ laying sidewalKS' that.i leadt nowhere,&#13;
• while people tramp through the mud 10 get to&#13;
Greenquist ; but I am not.&#13;
You Vets who registered early the second week in&#13;
August wasted your time. The Student Records&#13;
Office didn't send notifications to the VA till September&#13;
B. And you missed out on all those special&#13;
things available during regular registration like&#13;
interest cards.&#13;
Student Government elections are coming around&#13;
October 23-25. They're going to need a lot of help&#13;
manning the polls. If you're interested contact the&#13;
Student Senate Office.&#13;
Also the Student Senate is looking for student&#13;
members for various university committees. If YQu&#13;
are interested, contact the Student Senate af 553'-&#13;
2244 or come see at D-193 LLC.&#13;
Speaking of joining things, this paper is really&#13;
hurting for experienced people. If you think you&#13;
might be interested in seeing your name in print,&#13;
dron on bv D-194LLC and have a look.&#13;
it a good one! Even the high&#13;
school press has some involvement&#13;
with the outside&#13;
world. At least papers that have&#13;
only hard news know some kind&#13;
of journalistic style. Your articles&#13;
were verbose, dry and&#13;
generally, Ididn't finish a single&#13;
one of them, except for Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's letter.&#13;
Perhaps the best way to express&#13;
my point is that you cannot&#13;
expect to keep the attention of the&#13;
students if you present nothing to&#13;
challenge their minds and inspire&#13;
their souls. And, -nless I miss my&#13;
guess, insipid articles on the&#13;
hours of the University bookstore&#13;
will not inspire anyone.&#13;
Perhaps I shouldn't be so&#13;
vehemently anti your paper. You&#13;
might 'ask me why I haven't&#13;
made an offer of my help - and&#13;
that is a good question. I have&#13;
offered myself. However, I refuse&#13;
to write trash, and I also refuse to&#13;
limit myself to events that&#13;
happen only here on the campus&#13;
at Parkside. ews is news, and it&#13;
doesn't have to happen right here&#13;
to make the student body interested.&#13;
I shall make every effort to&#13;
attend the meeting this evening. I&#13;
hope that the next issue may be&#13;
better - but I do want to commend&#13;
you for making an effort to&#13;
keep a newspaper alive on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Eric Cushman Moore&#13;
To Ken Konkol:&#13;
I just wanted to drop you a&#13;
quick note about the article on the&#13;
Library Learning Center. Thanks&#13;
for the good coverage. As you are&#13;
well aware, our primary goal is&#13;
service to the students and&#13;
faculty, and your help in&#13;
spreading the word is appreciated.&#13;
Perhaps you might&#13;
consider a short fellow-up when&#13;
we get Into full swing here.&#13;
Would you also pass along to&#13;
the rest of the Ranger staff my&#13;
compliments on a good issue.&#13;
If you see a way that the&#13;
Learning Center can be of aid to&#13;
you personally. or to the Ranger&#13;
don't hesitate to contact us. Keep&#13;
up the good job.&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
Director&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
~ IJY The Parksidlee..------- -'rr..RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at 0-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University ot&#13;
Wisconsi n- Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITERS: Tom Ford, Bruce Wagner, Rudy&#13;
Lienau, Sue Zietz, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch, Jeannine SipsrnaKathryn&#13;
Wellner, Ken Konkol, Dale Martin, Karen Petersen, Tom&#13;
Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Paul Nelson&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINES.~ MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
;Ii' ,REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY T National Edu&lt;:ational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave.) New York, N. Y. 10017&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
in&#13;
there a doctor&#13;
the house?&#13;
1 you b come Ill hat happens to you? Do you have to&#13;
t y rom school because it would cost you too&#13;
much to s doctor or it would take you too long to get&#13;
0 hi crowd d schedule? Have you found that as you&#13;
br into dulthood a chief disadvantage is that your&#13;
Insur nee policy no longer covers you? You&#13;
r n't lone. Undoubtedly many other Parkside&#13;
tud nt h ve the s me problem.&#13;
p rk ide h s a health office at Rm. 332 Greenquist&#13;
H 11 st ff d by Edith Isenberg, a registered nurse. She's&#13;
fin p rson who does everything she can to help the&#13;
s udent that come to her. But she is a registered nurse&#13;
nd th re many things a doctor can do that she&#13;
rvice expanded to include a doctor would&#13;
prov d Par ides udents with a real alternative to ~he&#13;
prohiblllv costs in obtaining medical help and advice&#13;
from loc I physicians. A doctor associated with the&#13;
h Ith s rvice could write prescriptions for students and&#13;
ff. ( omething that now requires a $10 visit to a&#13;
ysici n' office) A doctor could also provide a more&#13;
cur t I n&lt;&gt;Sis of certain problems and a more&#13;
u llfi d referral when necessary.&#13;
This is not meant to take anything away from Mrs.&#13;
I nberg. She does a good job. But she is not a doctor.&#13;
h agrees th t a doctor on campus would be a good&#13;
thing. She feels that it is the cost that prevents a&#13;
physic! n from being added to the health service. We&#13;
hope hat the pr ce of health is beyond a dollar sign.&#13;
W re llze that there are difficulties in obtaining&#13;
funds for any new program at Parkside. To cut costs we&#13;
sugg s that the health service be operated as a free&#13;
I nlc ith ad tor.here on a r.egular-schedule; every--&#13;
u d y nd Thurs'day for exartlple. -.&#13;
e urge the university to do everything it can to work&#13;
1 h Mrs. Isenberg in setting up as complete a health&#13;
rvice as possible as soon as possible.&#13;
get letters ...&#13;
Letters to the Editors are encouraged. We ask that&#13;
they be confined to 250 words or less and that they be&#13;
t ped nd double-spaced. All must be signed and include&#13;
address and phone number and student status (senior,&#13;
junior, sophomore, freshman) or faculty rank. Names&#13;
will be ithheld upon request. The editors reserve the&#13;
right to refuse to pririt any letters.&#13;
it a good one! Even the high&#13;
chool pre s has some invol\'ement&#13;
with the outside&#13;
world. At least papers that have&#13;
only hard news know some kind&#13;
o or journalistic style. Your article&#13;
were verbose, dry and&#13;
of generally, I didn't finish a single&#13;
one of them, except for Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's letter.&#13;
Perbap the best way to expre&#13;
my point is that you cannot&#13;
expect to keep the attention of the&#13;
tudents if you pre ent nothing to&#13;
challenge their minds and inspire&#13;
their oul And. ·•nle I miss my&#13;
gu · , i ipid articles on the&#13;
hours of the niversitv book tore&#13;
will not in pire anyo~e.&#13;
Perhap I houldn't be o&#13;
\'ehemently anti your paper. You&#13;
might ·a k me why l haven't&#13;
made an offer of my help - and&#13;
that is a good question. I have&#13;
offered my elf. However, I refuse&#13;
to write tra h. and I also refuse to&#13;
limit my elf lo events that&#13;
happen only h re on the campu&#13;
at Par id . 'ew is news, and it&#13;
d n't have to happen right here&#13;
to make the tudent body interested.&#13;
&#13;
THORN&#13;
BY KONKOL&#13;
It has been some time since I had a _colum~ !n the&#13;
stud nt newspaper, not since the first e~bon of&#13;
'E\\' COPE in fact, two years ago. In ~is one 1&#13;
hall make the attempt once again to prmt those&#13;
little thing which happen in the course of ~he week&#13;
which tend to bother people, as well as items of&#13;
information too small to warrant a story.&#13;
RA 'GER i the third newspaper w~ ha:ve had _on&#13;
campus in a many years. following m t?e mk&#13;
track of OLLEGIA and ~EWSCOPE. Thi~gs do&#13;
look more promi ing for us now than they did f~r&#13;
. E\\' PE though. where problems developed m&#13;
ahenabon of staff and advertising revenue&#13;
collection.&#13;
Ju t a . 'E\-\ COPE inherited a sizeable debt from&#13;
C'OLLEGI.\:'I., we inherit a somewhat smaller ~ebt&#13;
from them, and are ma position to pay it off a htt!e&#13;
at a time. We have a new printer now, located m&#13;
Zion instead of Walworth . This makes it more&#13;
convenient to commute and the Wednesday release&#13;
chedule enables us to get in more of that weekend&#13;
new.&#13;
We have a diver ified staff, and while the overwhelming&#13;
majority have no experience with a&#13;
college newspaper. many have worked for&#13;
high chool heetsand yearbooks.&#13;
The name of the paper - RANGER, has even attracted&#13;
some people to the taff; some of them are&#13;
omewhat strange. There is this one big hairy guy in&#13;
the coutma ter·s bat who comes running out of the&#13;
editor·. office every time someone lights a&#13;
cigarette. to throw a bucket of water on it. Must be&#13;
against air pollution or something.&#13;
One thing which is going to help us a Jot is having a&#13;
full time advi er. Don Kopriva, who 4sed to Q~&#13;
.director of sports information. We have also applied.&#13;
a a student organization, for funding for nonprinting&#13;
costs which should help stretch our dollars&#13;
We hope to cover printing with advertising revenue.&#13;
We have a brand new university with the addition of&#13;
two new buildings and the loss of the Racine&#13;
campus. With these come new problems, while&#13;
some old ones are still with us.&#13;
An old problem which affects everyone is the&#13;
parking and bus situation. While the shuttle service&#13;
ha improved ever since the Chancellor had to wait&#13;
20 minutes forone. the parking problem is still with&#13;
us. Whoe\·er dreamed up the outlying parking plan&#13;
wa really dumb.&#13;
Even the orth Central Association of Colleges and&#13;
econdary Schools hesitated in granting us accredation&#13;
because of our parking problem. Already&#13;
there have been occasions when both parking lots&#13;
were full.&#13;
Mechanical breakdowns have been a problem with&#13;
bus service. Two buses ar e kept at the far parking&#13;
Jot for just such emergencies, b~t have not been&#13;
ugh since you have probably n dden one of those eno .&#13;
11 yellow ones up the hi .&#13;
They have trouble starting those buses mornings&#13;
w Imagine what happens when the weather gets&#13;
~~Id. Jelco isn't going to go out and buy new buses&#13;
eith~r _ not when they can't be guaranteed a continued&#13;
contract.&#13;
Why offer a bus contract anyway? Why doesn't&#13;
Parkside buy its own buses, spread out the&#13;
payments over a period of years, have them driven&#13;
by students on work study which is ~ubsidized and&#13;
have them maintained and repaired by area&#13;
technical schools?&#13;
Buses cost a lot of money, especially when compared&#13;
to the amount of money spent on stu?ent&#13;
organizations. The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
has less than $7,000 to give to student organizations.&#13;
Of this over $7,500 has been requested by PSGA,&#13;
RANGER Child Care Center and a couple of others,&#13;
Imagine, less than $1.50 of your tuitition is coming&#13;
back to you through fund 128.&#13;
Another old problem:is the vending machin~~-_.Haw&#13;
do you like paying 50 cents for sandwiches which&#13;
used to sell for 35 cents. Or paying 15 cents for&#13;
potato chips which Canteen sells for 10 cents in&#13;
other locations across town.&#13;
We have a new bookstore but it has some of the&#13;
same old problems. In the fourth wee~ of cl~sses we&#13;
are still waiting for books to come m which were&#13;
ordered short. Some of this has been the fault of&#13;
professors who underestimate, but there is no excuse&#13;
for ordering an amount less than requested.&#13;
Perhaps you are amused by people laying sod one&#13;
day and tearing it up the next, when planting grass&#13;
se~d would be cheaper, looks better and lasts&#13;
.. longer.;· o--i; laY,ing sidewalks· that.:Iruid: riowhere,&#13;
while people tramp through the mud to get to&#13;
Greenquist; but I am not.&#13;
You Vets who registered early the second week in&#13;
August wasted your time. The Student Records&#13;
Office didn't send notifications to the VA till September&#13;
8. And you missed out on all those special&#13;
things available during regular registration like&#13;
interest cards.&#13;
Student Government elections are coming around&#13;
October 23-25. They're going to need a Jot of help&#13;
manning the polls. If you're interested contact the&#13;
Student Senate Office.&#13;
Also the Student Senate is looking for student&#13;
members for various university committees. If yqu_&#13;
are interested, contact the Student Senate at 553.-&#13;
2244 or come see at D-193 LLC.&#13;
Speaking of joining things, this paper is really&#13;
hurting for experienced people. If you think you&#13;
might be interested in seeing your name in print,&#13;
dro onb D-194LLCandhavealook.&#13;
I shall make every effort to&#13;
attend the meeting this evening. I&#13;
hope that the next issue may be&#13;
better - but I do want to commend&#13;
you for making an effort to&#13;
keep a newspaper alive on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
i&#13;
~,, JU The Parksid&#13;
..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Eric Cushman Moore&#13;
To Ken Konkol:&#13;
I just wanted to drop you a&#13;
quick note about the article on the&#13;
Library Learning Center. Thanks&#13;
for the good coverage. As you are&#13;
well aware, our primary goal is&#13;
service to the students and&#13;
faculty. and your help in&#13;
spreading the word is appreciated.&#13;
Perhaps you might&#13;
consider a short follow-up when&#13;
we get int'l full swing here.&#13;
Would ou also pass along to&#13;
the rest of the Ranger staff my&#13;
compliments on a good issue.&#13;
If you see a way that the&#13;
Learning Center can be of aid to&#13;
you personally. or to the Ranger&#13;
don't hesitate to contact us. Keep&#13;
up the good job.&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
Director&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academ ic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin .&#13;
Offi ces are located at D-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessaril y the offi cial v iew of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
_EDITORS A~D WRITERS: Tom Ford , Bruce Wagner, Rudy&#13;
Lienau, Sue Zietz, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Kathryn Wellner, Ken Konkol, Da le Ma rtin, Karen Petersen, Tom&#13;
Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Paul Nelson&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER : Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : F red Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR : Don Kopriva&#13;
;Ii• ,llEPllESENTED FOil NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY T National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 &#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Edi tors: . . .&#13;
I rarely VOIce my opimon&#13;
ublicly; but circumstances have&#13;
r ed me to change my ways. I&#13;
nrc present at a bad scene in the&#13;
~~~ivitieSBuilding th~ night the&#13;
ie MASH was being shown. mov , :-:..&#13;
The projectlOnIst had some&#13;
difficulty getting the film&#13;
fused' and a beer-soaked peon&#13;
oCthe c~owd decided that his eyes&#13;
W h' ere better than t e projec-&#13;
~onists'. He began directing the.&#13;
projectionist as to ho",: ~e should&#13;
focus the film. He defInItely WqS&#13;
not much of a help .. He only&#13;
succeeded in making the&#13;
projectionist more tense than he&#13;
already was. The projectionists'&#13;
job is not an easy one. Many&#13;
things can go wrong especially&#13;
under the circumstances in the&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
Common sense should have&#13;
told the loud mouth that:&#13;
1. The projectionist probably&#13;
knOWS more about adjusting the&#13;
projector than the audience.&#13;
2. The projectionist has eyes&#13;
too, and they probably weren't&#13;
clouded by beer as others most&#13;
likely were.&#13;
3. Loud mouth insults are not&#13;
the best way of encouraging&#13;
anyone.&#13;
I may be making more out of&#13;
this disturbance than is&#13;
necessary; but I think more&#13;
consideration should be given to&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
ALL STUDENT&#13;
ORGANIZATIONS ARE&#13;
ADVISED THAT&#13;
REQUESTS FOR FUNDING&#13;
FROM&#13;
AVAILABLE STUDENT&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP&#13;
MONIES MUST BE&#13;
SUBMITTED TO THE&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS&#13;
COMMITTEE NO LATER&#13;
THAN OCT. 10. THESE&#13;
REQUESTS MUST BE IN&#13;
THE FORM OF A&#13;
DETAILED BUDGET&#13;
FOR THE 1972-73&#13;
ACADEMIC YEAR.&#13;
THEY MAY BE SUBMITTED&#13;
TO JEWEL&#13;
ECHELBARGER, ASSISTANT&#13;
DEAN OF&#13;
STUDENTS, ROOM 284&#13;
TALLENT HALL.&#13;
FURTHERMORE, ALL&#13;
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
ARE&#13;
REMINDED THAT THEY&#13;
SHOULD REGISTER&#13;
WITH THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE IN&#13;
THE LIBRARY LEARNING&#13;
CENTER.&#13;
E.lT IN THE COMFORT Of YOUR UR · ~&#13;
i&#13;
t\'~' ;f) 7R1'~~~S ')Il"~ lHE ~ / ~ SURlifR&#13;
• '~\\' •.." fAMilY&#13;
• ~-y&#13;
: • pm BURGER • MAMA SURliU&#13;
• UEII SURliER • BABY BURGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
Tub•• , n.&lt;~.... "h&#13;
"" S'"mp&#13;
.. " G,"O" O' '00' ",. wIT" "0' DO'"&#13;
','&lt;lll NOOT"0'&#13;
"'.{ITy t",.".&#13;
0" \",0"'" '0.0&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT REER ORIVE·IM&#13;
S""d4." fly II N."h&#13;
Keno,ho&#13;
""",, ".ru" .... lO"."&#13;
.""'~" ..ON,.., " • ~ '" M""'GW'&#13;
those who are providing services&#13;
for us.&#13;
Other than this slight smudge&#13;
agall~st common courtesy, the&#13;
evemng was most enjoyable&#13;
Much thanks to the Activitie~&#13;
Board for planning a successful&#13;
event.&#13;
Rich Gemry&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I want to comment on how&#13;
much Ienjoyed your first edition.&#13;
I liked the broad range of&#13;
coverage of its contents the&#13;
visual format and the' wellwritten&#13;
articles. Congratulations&#13;
and good wishes for a successful&#13;
year.&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Well-put together paper -. nice&#13;
balance of ads, features, news&#13;
and opinion. How about an&#13;
amusement column (section)&#13;
outlining upcoming events in the&#13;
area (festivals, plays, personal&#13;
appearances, movies, etc.)?-It&#13;
would be helpful to know what&#13;
movies are playing in the two&#13;
cities ... Keep up the good work.&#13;
Claude Renshaw&#13;
Management Science&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To Marion Mechen:&#13;
I received your petition today&#13;
and hasten to send yoo an answer&#13;
I do believe that I find myself&#13;
p~llosophically in disagreement&#13;
With you. Surely there is much to&#13;
be said for faculty. staff and&#13;
students to share the same&#13;
facilities on the Campus. First. u&#13;
gives a greater sense of&#13;
solidarity. Second. it promotes&#13;
acquaintance, contact and&#13;
visibility. Third, when staff and&#13;
faculty see what the students&#13;
suffer changes are more likely to&#13;
be effected. Thus, I am of course&#13;
in favor of anything that can be&#13;
done to have bus service and all&#13;
other services faster and better.&#13;
But 1 think 1 would not wish to&#13;
have faCUlty and staff given&#13;
preferred parking. The ecooomic&#13;
gain that follows from having&#13;
high-salaried people closer to&#13;
their work may very well be lost&#13;
in diminished morale and sense&#13;
of community.&#13;
For example, Ihave noted with&#13;
pleasure that the ChanceUor&#13;
himself is riding the bus. This 1&#13;
approve of one hundred percent.&#13;
and Iam sure that from this flow&#13;
the three advanlages mentioned&#13;
above.&#13;
Along this same line of thought,&#13;
I view with the utmost appro\'al&#13;
the present Food Shop in Lower&#13;
Main Place. Today I ate there&#13;
with my wire. We were soon&#13;
:....................•................••.....••.......•........&#13;
. Cham- Tap-Bar&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
BODY AND PAINT SHOP&#13;
Complete Auto Builders&#13;
• Body &amp; Fender Repair&#13;
• Painting&#13;
• Custom Work&#13;
Alex Alrikos - Prop.&#13;
6310 20th Ave.&#13;
657-3911&#13;
KENOSHA. WIS&#13;
9 Fun-Filled. Sun-Filled Days&#13;
January 5-14&#13;
$274&#13;
FOR&#13;
Orientation Jlgbtseeing tour.&#13;
Traditional Hawaiian flower lei&#13;
greeting.&#13;
ADDITiONAL INFORMATION, CONTACT&#13;
CampUS Trav~l Ceot~r StudC!'flIAC!,,,,t,n Otl,c~&#13;
o 197 Library L~arn,ng CC!'flIf1'&#13;
DR CALL SSJ:219.4&#13;
Wed .• Oct. 4.1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
CAR WASH&#13;
OPEN WHKOA YS UNTIL 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAYS UNTIl 5 P.M.&#13;
lVashington Dar&#13;
nto lVa h&#13;
"The Co, W&lt;Uh Tho' "'e.'&#13;
5120 A HI, GTO AVE,&#13;
joined b) Dave 1I01le, and&#13;
thereafter bl \"0 Iud nts TIl&#13;
Iive of us had a mo t enJOlabl&#13;
meal TIl, Iond or thing I&#13;
terr-ibly Important, but It is&#13;
SImply not po 'ble under the&#13;
segregation arrangements thaI&#13;
too often prevail 10 InsblutJon&#13;
And 1 see uch planned and unplanned&#13;
conversation at lh&#13;
Food Shop everyday - perhaps a&#13;
little more so right now. tOce&#13;
conditions are crowded and "-&#13;
are all forced together&#13;
xooe of this lessens my admiration&#13;
of you for having hO'A n&#13;
so much energy and uuuauve III&#13;
getung out lour peuuon.&#13;
Phil Burnell&#13;
Director of Ubran&#13;
To Ille Ed,lor&#13;
With great amazement 1 read&#13;
in the MilwaukeeJournai that the&#13;
lalest Gallup Poll gl\es RIchard&#13;
Xixon a 61 percent to 36 percent&#13;
lead over George McGovern&#13;
among voters under 3O! 11:tlS&#13;
unusual findmg '" a recorded&#13;
just after the recent Republican&#13;
Convention. The next Poll 1&#13;
suppooe will tell us that 9 out of 10&#13;
Black voters support the&#13;
presIdent&#13;
"Nanl (an (OM'AIl£&#13;
with&#13;
WASHINGTON SQuAIlr'&#13;
ured that&#13;
a&#13;
nd a&#13;
up rt un&#13;
1 overn A&#13;
eetcd 1:1 \hI aru 1 '" a lh&#13;
"'lch of mam nemocrsuc&#13;
vot -rs and hi 'ou·r to l'ixon&#13;
I'd like to I II all "hy Illlonk&#13;
th fIndIng re ver, far 0([&#13;
from r Dilly&#13;
When \ outh II to 21 " re&#13;
r'1ll t red to vote for III It...t&#13;
lim • lh Ir ct~1 of s-rt "".&#13;
roughl) 3 10 1 Democraue over&#13;
Republican Man' are ind&lt;:pend&#13;
nl. Lasl l ar a Poll&#13;
re' al d Ihat 3 out of 4&#13;
Amencans of II a lTOu&#13;
averaged out sClentl'lcally,&#13;
fa\ored total w,thdrawa' from&#13;
lndo-Chtna A va L m8JOrit or&#13;
)·OUlh ar ror an end Lo thlS cmUy&#13;
"ar&#13;
E\· n as high go\' mment of·&#13;
fic,als are eaughl I aUy and&#13;
IIlegall takl a"ay our n htl&#13;
to Prt\ilC)' nd dl t. '" are&#13;
told th, I only a mall and phony&#13;
1 ue by the Democra and n&#13;
media&#13;
Why ha th 'at t poll _&#13;
)oulhs f.,'onng lXOO" Faull&#13;
interpretation" Pohllca) In·&#13;
nuonce' Or has thai Itghl goo&#13;
out'&#13;
Dav 'ler&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
ELMWOOD SHELL SERVICE&#13;
ompl~U R d r\ let&#13;
6:00am tolloopm&#13;
~-aa&#13;
3125 Durand Avenue R1Icllle&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
lIul ,t ",.ll n l...bIJh.", ...~I W.llII W·.tbull' ...hI", \4/""-' • a.c.,IIl' 'r&#13;
V1U' ""t W" .. UJ' trI", It. ,'.d, It .,.-rtun.tlu t.r '101" .lindflU,." leu ,L1&#13;
•• t. tl't t~nlry Ht U"" l tI. " ...lui b.1 11011101/'"' 1J'i. "",".'" tn"! .. t"'IK'&#13;
" m.'t ,,"'to dKt~ ""Ith ..".1' ""r" '101[1'1'11ttl. "'" '" "01'1' ,t ItI, .,,I ...&#13;
ttu. fotl .... YIo. • til f tliU .....l'Ioc... r ",W.ld. "1lIItill n,IIl,I, "¥llI.~, th, ,,,I."fIw&#13;
Take a tiP from Hot Horse Herbie .• "do not be one&#13;
hundred percent a sucker! Check It oul."&#13;
,''''_",--"- - -- -_..._-..... f-...... ----- -. ....&#13;
___ "'·''''''''-'_'0 _... _ ...... -..0 ......&#13;
....__ ...._---&#13;
-- Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to the SWift&#13;
or the battle always to the strone - but it's a &amp;00&lt;1 way to bet:&#13;
JOURNAUSM IS A GOOD WAYTO BET&#13;
i,.~n._--&#13;
RANGER&#13;
" t pSS •••&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Plus S20Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Your One Low Price includes:&#13;
Round trip jet fare from Milwaukee&#13;
to Honolulu.&#13;
t 8 nights lodging on Waikiki Bedch. ~.,.," .{t Round trip U..Iosfers between dUport&#13;
-111" (, hotel.&#13;
,Jl ;&#13;
"':.~..&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editors:.&#13;
1 rarely v01ce my opimon&#13;
ublicly; but circumstances have f ced me to change my ways. I&#13;
ors present at a bad scene in the&#13;
:a tivities Building the night the&#13;
mcovie, MASH: w?s being shown.&#13;
The project10mst had some&#13;
difficulty getting the film&#13;
focused· and a beer-soaked peon&#13;
. the c;owd decided that his eyes m th · ere better than e proJec-&#13;
~onists'. He began directing the_&#13;
projectionist as to ho~ ~e should&#13;
focus the film. He defm1tely W&lt;JS&#13;
not much of a help. He only&#13;
succeeded in making the&#13;
projectionist more tense than he&#13;
already was. The projectionists'&#13;
job is not an easy one. Many&#13;
things can go wrong especially&#13;
under the circumstances in the&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
Common sense should have&#13;
told the loud mouth that:&#13;
1. The projectionist probably&#13;
knows more about adjusting the&#13;
projector than the audience.&#13;
2. The projectionist has eyes&#13;
too, and they probably weren't&#13;
clouded by beer as others most&#13;
likely were.&#13;
3. Loud mouth insults are not&#13;
the best way of encouraging&#13;
anyone.&#13;
I may be making more out of&#13;
this disturbance than is&#13;
necessary; but I think more&#13;
consideration should be given to&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
ALL STUDENT&#13;
ORGANIZATIONS ARE&#13;
ADVISED THAT&#13;
REQUESTS FOR FUND&#13;
ING FROM&#13;
AVAILABLE STUDENT&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP&#13;
MONIES MUST BE&#13;
SUBMITTED TO THE&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS&#13;
COMMITTEE NO LATER&#13;
THAN OCT. 10. THESE&#13;
REQUESTS MUST BE IN&#13;
THE FORM OF A&#13;
DETAILED BUDGET&#13;
FOR THE 1972-73&#13;
ACADEMIC YEAR.&#13;
THEY MAY BE SUBMITTED&#13;
TO JEWEL&#13;
ECHELBARGER, ASSISTANT&#13;
DEAN OF&#13;
STUDENTS, ROOM 284&#13;
TALLENT HALL.&#13;
FURTHERMORE, ALL&#13;
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
ARE&#13;
REMINDED THAT THEY&#13;
SHOULD REGISTER&#13;
WITH THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE IN&#13;
THE LIBRARY LEARNING&#13;
CENTER .&#13;
. ~&#13;
: ,: &gt; ~' PERRY'S&#13;
' . .-:,t- THE i&#13;
\ 1 DRIVE-IN&#13;
' / ~ BUR6ER&#13;
~\ \ ,' FAMILY ! ~-1/&#13;
• • PAPA IUR6ER • MAMA BUR6ER&#13;
• TUN BURGER • BABY BURGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AH(A D TOUlt OIIDU 'Nill I( llfAD'&#13;
Tub, ol Clud, 11 f l\h&#13;
~11d Slinmp&#13;
r•u GAllON Of ltOOT llll WITH u oo OAOU&#13;
! MILE NOIITH or MID(ITV TH(4Tlll&#13;
ON ~HU I DAN IOAO&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp;. W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN Sht11d•11 ,;d H, 32 Nor t h&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
H01,,•\ D4 1lY II A !.4 TO 11 P "1&#13;
iu ..... u MO N TH~&#13;
11 A "'- TO M IDN IGH T&#13;
those who are providing services&#13;
for us.&#13;
O~her than this slight smudge&#13;
agat~st common courtesy' the&#13;
evenmg was most enjoyable.&#13;
Much thanks to the Activities&#13;
Board for planning a successful&#13;
event.&#13;
RichGemry&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I want to comment on how&#13;
much I enjoyed your first edition.&#13;
I liked the broad range of&#13;
coverage of its contents the&#13;
visual format and the ' wellwritten&#13;
articles. Congratulations&#13;
and good wishes for a successful&#13;
year.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
Well-put together paper -- nice&#13;
balance of ads, features, news&#13;
and opinion. How about an&#13;
amusement column (section)&#13;
outlining upcoming events in the&#13;
area (festivals, plays, personal&#13;
appearances, movies, etc .)?~ It&#13;
would be helpful to know what&#13;
movies are playing in the two&#13;
cities ... Keep up the good work.&#13;
Claude Renshaw&#13;
Management Science&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
To Marion lochon:&#13;
I recei\'ed }OUr pehtJon lod&#13;
and ha ten to nd you an nere&#13;
&#13;
................•.•.•..................•.....•......•.•........&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . .&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
O~gneon Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches C) . and Pizza cf) . . .............................................. . -~··············&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
BODY AND PAINT SHOP&#13;
Complete Auto Builders&#13;
• Body &amp; Fender Repair&#13;
• Painting&#13;
• Custom ork&#13;
Alex Alrikas - Prop.&#13;
631 0 20th Ave .&#13;
657-3911&#13;
KENOSHA, IS&#13;
9 Fun-Filled, un-Filled Da)·&#13;
Januar 5-14&#13;
$2i4&#13;
Plus s20 Tax &amp; Ser ice&#13;
Your On Low Pric Includ~:&#13;
Round trip j et fare from . ih,aukee&#13;
to Honolulu .&#13;
,- 8 nights lodg ing on Wa · iki ach.&#13;
,,t,.j! . lf' Round trip U JOSfc~ b t e n ,nr rt&#13;
.11r· &amp; hot el .&#13;
,.).I ' " ... / .~ Orientation sightseeing tour.&#13;
Tr.iditional Haw .. iian flo er l&#13;
greeting.&#13;
FOR ADD ITIONAL I F0RMAT •O&#13;
campus Travel Cf'f' er S•ude'n' A ' .,,&#13;
D 197 L ,bf'ary Learrti.nQ Ct't"ter&#13;
CO TACT&#13;
es 01 c•&#13;
OR CALL SSJ 2294&#13;
ed ., Oct. , 1972 THE PARKSIO RANGER 3&#13;
CAR WASH&#13;
••••••••••• •••••• • ••••••••• ELMWOOD SHELL SERVICE&#13;
•&#13;
'' pss t ...&#13;
•&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very lar e&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
Damon Runyon once rote "Th rac i not alway to th v.,f&#13;
or the battle alwa s to the stron - but ,t s a ood way to b t •&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
~ANGER &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER ed .• Oct. 4. 1972&#13;
Parkside's Growing Pains&#13;
f&#13;
n tru ti n&#13;
ide's Growing Pains&#13;
iw.~-&#13;
1:&lt;S- --~=&lt; ·=,_;~'t= &#13;
'Kotch' is coming&#13;
. g to the Student AcComIn&#13;
Building on Oct. 6, the&#13;
t~vltl~'Kotch" focuses on the&#13;
film C g relationship between&#13;
interese~nr_old widower and an&#13;
a 72'Y'ed pregnant teenager,&#13;
unmarr'd by Deborah Winters.&#13;
portraye . t&#13;
t&#13;
b" is basically a s ory&#13;
"Ko C d h ut loneliness, old age, an t e&#13;
ab? ht ned need to be needed, a&#13;
hel~·t~n common to the aged.&#13;
CO~~~~ch,,, starring Walter&#13;
albaU, Felicia Fa~r, Charles&#13;
~tman and Miss W.mters, and&#13;
A king the directorIal debut of mar 1 •&#13;
'1 favorite Jack Lemmon, IS a&#13;
h m I" t&#13;
comedy-drama tel 109 a poignan&#13;
of a unique senior citizen,&#13;
story. . ed Vibrant with an unrestram&#13;
zest for living, h.e ref~ses to be&#13;
t a&#13;
side by hIS children. He&#13;
cas t ·th f es his bleak future no WI&#13;
d&#13;
a&#13;
c&#13;
air but with quixotic&#13;
esp I Ii' Ilantry and eterna op mlsm.&#13;
gaFelicia Farr, wife of director&#13;
Lemmon, returns to the screen&#13;
fler a long absence of four years&#13;
fnthe role of ~athau's daughterm·&#13;
. . law Versatile character actor&#13;
Her goal:&#13;
English&#13;
AdsukoHane's goal in life is to&#13;
teachEnglish - real" Americanstyle"idiomatic&#13;
English - in her&#13;
nativeJapan. In pursuit of that&#13;
goal, she changed residen~es&#13;
from Toyama, about 150 mlles&#13;
fromTokyo, to Kenosha, where&#13;
she will live while attending The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Why Parkside?&#13;
Miss Hane (pronounced,&#13;
roughly, "Hayn'-eh" in&#13;
Japanese) credits the international&#13;
reputation for&#13;
academic excellence of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
and the discovery of a Parkside&#13;
catalog outlining the new&#13;
Wliversity'sinnovative programs&#13;
in a Fulbright library in Japan.&#13;
Because she wishes to be·&#13;
totally immersed in American&#13;
speech and culture, Miss Hane&#13;
saidshe chose Parkside since she&#13;
thought that would be easier to&#13;
accomplishon a smaller campus.&#13;
At registration she selected&#13;
COurseswith her goal in mind:&#13;
English Courses and classes in&#13;
the MOdern American Society&#13;
program, one of several interdisciplinary&#13;
majors which im·&#13;
plement Parkside's special industrial&#13;
society mission and one&#13;
of the "innovations" which&#13;
helped convince her that&#13;
ParkSide was the place for her&#13;
American studies.&#13;
Another reason was the Midwest's&#13;
reputation in Japan for&#13;
Speaking "good" (unaccented)&#13;
English.&#13;
Is the campus what she expected'&#13;
"Oh, yes. Very beautiful," says&#13;
MissHane.&#13;
Miss Hane has studied English&#13;
for ten years in J a pan - three&#13;
rears in jUnior high school, three&#13;
In senior high school and four in&#13;
COllege.She is licensed as a&#13;
teacher in Japan and taught for a&#13;
yearthere in a junior high school.&#13;
Alterher studies at Parkside she&#13;
hopes to be able to teach English&#13;
language Courses and American&#13;
Studies at a women's junior&#13;
Collegein Japan.&#13;
Though one of her reasons for&#13;
Comingto Parkside was that she&#13;
thought she would have to&#13;
communicate totally in English,&#13;
she's discovered it is sometimes&#13;
Very convenient when conversation&#13;
gets complicated to&#13;
have a Japanese-speaking landlady,&#13;
Mrs. M. O. Ekern of 5942&#13;
Third Ave.&#13;
And what is a Japanesespeaking&#13;
landlady doing in&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.?&#13;
Charles Altman plays th h· e son&#13;
w 0 wearies of having the old&#13;
man under foot and decides t&#13;
commit his father to a retiremen~&#13;
home. ,But he doesn't reckon with&#13;
Kotc~ s. mdominability and&#13;
ther-ein lies the crux of the star&#13;
"Kotch." y&#13;
Produced by Richard Carter&#13;
and ?ased on the novel by&#13;
Kathrme Topkins, "Kotch" is an&#13;
ABC Pictures Corp. presentation&#13;
for Cinerama releasing.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Student teaching&#13;
Applications for Spring&#13;
Semester 1973 Student Teaching&#13;
are now available in the&#13;
Education Divisipn Office&#13;
Greenquist 31B. DeaJjline is Oct:&#13;
13.&#13;
To teach&#13;
Japan •&#13;
In&#13;
Japanese born, the daughter of&#13;
a Japanese mother and an&#13;
American father, Mrs. Ekern&#13;
carne to the U.S. for her&#13;
education and never returned to&#13;
the Orient permanently. Now a&#13;
Kenosha city nurse, she did,&#13;
however, work for a number of&#13;
years as a public health nurse in&#13;
Honolulu and last visited Japan&#13;
three years ago to attend a&#13;
niece's wedding.&#13;
Mrs. Ekern is somewhat&#13;
surprised herself at how much&#13;
Japanese she remembers since,&#13;
she notes, "I haven't had a&#13;
chance to speak Japanese with&#13;
anyone in Kenosha until Adsuko&#13;
carne."&#13;
Mrs. Ekern has already given&#13;
Miss Hane a tour of Kenosha and&#13;
reassured her that stories she's&#13;
heard in Japan of violence in&#13;
American cities are exaggerated,&#13;
at least in regard to Kenosha.&#13;
On campus she's also received&#13;
a guided tour conducted by Sue&#13;
Graf a UW-P student from&#13;
Ken~sha who has acted as a kind&#13;
of informal "Big Sister" to the&#13;
petite Miss HaDe.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 4,1972 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 5&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPE&#13;
VOlunteers are needed for the&#13;
open house of the Parkside&#13;
Campus to be held Oct. 15 from&#13;
12-5 p.m.&#13;
T~e volunteers will be&#13;
stationed in the LLC, Physical&#13;
Educataon Building and&#13;
GreenqUist Hall to give in.&#13;
formation and tours.&#13;
Students wishing to work for&#13;
the open house should contact&#13;
Public Information at ext. 2233 by&#13;
Oct. 10.&#13;
There will be a joint meeting of&#13;
the Parkside Young Republicans&#13;
and Young Voters for the&#13;
President Friday, Oct. 6, (r-om&#13;
ll:30a.m. to 1 p.m. in room D-174&#13;
LLC. Corne when you can; leave&#13;
when you have to.&#13;
The Parkside Health office will&#13;
sponsor a table for health&#13;
education, in the activity building&#13;
on Oct. 10, 11 and 12. Various&#13;
pamphlets concerning health&#13;
information relevant to students&#13;
will be available. Ms. Edith&#13;
Isenberg, the Parkside nurse,&#13;
stated that the purpose is to get&#13;
the students acquainted with the&#13;
Health Office and the services&#13;
and information available to&#13;
them.&#13;
The Department of Safety and&#13;
Security will offer the ational&#13;
Safety Council's Defensive&#13;
Driving Course Saturday, OcL 14.&#13;
in 103 Greenquist Hall from 8&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m.&#13;
The course has been a prerequisite&#13;
for the operation of all&#13;
state-owned vehicles since Dfc&#13;
31, 1970. All University tmployees&#13;
(faculty. staff, volunteer&#13;
driver or authorized student&#13;
drivers) who intend to use such&#13;
vehicles must complete the&#13;
course before they may do so&#13;
Individuals wishing to attend&#13;
should contact Safety and&#13;
Security before Oct. 14.&#13;
The American Busines&#13;
Women's Association offers&#13;
interest free loans to Female&#13;
Seniors. No maximum amount IS&#13;
specified and while scholastic&#13;
standing is important, the awanJ&#13;
is based primarily on finanCial&#13;
need. Repayment generally&#13;
begins thirty to sixty days after&#13;
graduation in reasonable mono&#13;
thly installments. For ~ore ~n.&#13;
formation contact the Fmanclal&#13;
Aids Office or call 553-2291&#13;
~ui s.a.o.&#13;
UVE·ON&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
Q&#13;
U&#13;
o&#13;
R&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping l'ile"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
CAII------&#13;
Lathrop &amp; 21st (almosll&#13;
RaCine. Wise. 53406&#13;
Phone 6336307&#13;
The Parkside Acth,ltl Board&#13;
will sponsor a table lenni&#13;
tournament open to all students.&#13;
faculty and taff begmning Oct&#13;
t6 •&#13;
plnng paddle pla~era may&#13;
register in the tudent Acuviu&#13;
Office, LLC-OI97 for a se-eent&#13;
fee.&#13;
According to Ted Paon, .A B&#13;
Games Committee Chairman.&#13;
"In this tournament th re are no&#13;
losers: everybody \10 III wm a&#13;
prize."&#13;
tudent counseling ervtce of&#13;
the Office or Student Affairs IS&#13;
orfenng three 5O-mmute sessions&#13;
designed 10 help you prepare lor&#13;
six·week exam&#13;
Both sessIons are on Thursday,&#13;
Oct 5 Kenosha at 130 pm,&#13;
Room .36, Greenqwst at I:30&#13;
pm., Room D·'37.&#13;
The Parkside Players will&#13;
present "The Hollow ero"...," a&#13;
production by end about the&#13;
Klllgs and Queens of England&#13;
densed by John Barton. 'ov.3·5&#13;
The program of mu IC, poetry,&#13;
speeches. letters and other&#13;
"'TIlmgs from the chromcle and&#13;
plays of an era I'm be performed&#13;
In the F'U1eArts Room In Kenosha&#13;
at 8: 15 p.rn each e\·emng&#13;
Tr)'outs for.he pealung parts&#13;
are no\\ belOg held and. tudents&#13;
should conlact Richard&#13;
Carrington In Room 215 1.n the&#13;
I G&#13;
library uon of LLC or throu&#13;
th Humamu 0.\ Llilon om In&#13;
Creenquist lIall Ik I rl(' I&#13;
th men and on "oman for III&#13;
program, h h Ip ""th&#13;
publicuy. ticket al ond&#13;
pro am arran men&#13;
• '0 experience IJ, 114: ry&#13;
Any tudent w ho" an to aid at&#13;
th Open Ho t IS" an&#13;
lnformauon seoree and I&#13;
should contact the PooH In&#13;
lormatoon me .. t %233) b)I&#13;
Oct 10&#13;
There Will a NIl:k lodian on&#13;
Oct 4 at III WM kell"" With&#13;
WC. F. Ids LO "The Fatal Cia&#13;
or Beer" and !.aural and Hard In&#13;
",' IC Box"&#13;
"The Fatal Cia 0( Beer" a&#13;
film el 10 the Car north In th&#13;
domtln of th Royal nadlan&#13;
, 'ountl It'sabouta young man&#13;
"00 went Into the city and dra&#13;
"th fatal gl.a of&#13;
MUSIC Box. ""tuch won th&#13;
Academy Award for th t&#13;
corned OOrt In I 31-1932, all&#13;
about deh\·enng • plano to Lh&#13;
house on top or the hill&#13;
Both mO\"l 1oloIII be $heN-n&#13;
tWice bel1oloeen 1 and 3 pm.&#13;
On Oct 20 John ndenon and&#13;
Friends, a folk gWlar roup, Will&#13;
be plal'Ing In the LLC open a&#13;
between 11 a m and 1 pm&#13;
There "Ill be audItoon for th&#13;
co(f hou e on Oct t t from noon&#13;
to 4 P m In the Wh, eller. ny&#13;
lund of group wtable as n·&#13;
terl8lOment In a colI house·&#13;
type atmosphere IS being ht&#13;
Jt Round trip let tare to S'Nltl*rtand&#13;
.... LOdging .nd conllnenla' brute,,,,t&#13;
.... 9th night In Cop*ntlagen&#13;
,.. Moto,- option aV'll,ble&#13;
• Mulh.hngu.1 gUIdes&#13;
Ski&#13;
the&#13;
Alps&#13;
UW Parkside invites you to&#13;
Dep.tlrt Chic.aljJOJan S Relurn ChiC~ Jan \4&#13;
Zermart&#13;
............&#13;
" ,l4iftAl lfltwma ..... w-t-et&#13;
CIl Tf"."'e4 s.r..'C.II",,"1I1 Ac1 .... I,ltt OUtU&#13;
l,.11IrU'Y L...~ ... e..-t..-. .MM D 1"&#13;
T.....- USU"&#13;
Parkslde AClI""CS Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Tl'OE'TACT1\ ITiE BLILDI:o.C&#13;
"'----&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
PARKING&#13;
AND HOliDAYS&#13;
CONVENIENT&#13;
OPEN DAilY ... SUNDAYS&#13;
1_6_3_2~-_1_5~6;:;-:5~&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.&#13;
Frida). Oct. 6 - ;00p.m.&#13;
and&#13;
Wlda)',Oct. 7-;;30p.m.&#13;
• -&#13;
Admi Ion 75ctnl&#13;
Parkside &amp; WIS. 10 reqUired&#13;
ed 0c . -4, 1972 THE PARKS! D RA GER S ·Kotch' is coming IT'S WHATS H . to the Student Ac-&#13;
~o~inluilding on Oct. 6, the&#13;
t!vitl~'Kotch" focus~s on the&#13;
f1lrn f g relationship between&#13;
interese:r-old widower and an&#13;
a 72·Y 'ed pregnant teenager, rnarr1 . un d by Deborah Wmters.&#13;
portrtahy'~ is basically a story " KOC d th bOUt loneliness, old age, an e&#13;
a ·ght ned need to be needed, a he1 e th d diti n common to e age .&#13;
co~Ko~ch," starring Walter&#13;
th u Felicia Farr, Charles&#13;
Ma \' and Miss Winters, and&#13;
AJtrnk~ng the directorial debut of rnar 1 . .&#13;
1 favorite Jack Lemmon, 1s a&#13;
fl rn dy-drama telling a poignant corne . ·t· Of a unique semor c1 1zen. tory . . d Vibrant with an unrestrame&#13;
t for living, he refuses to be&#13;
zest aside by his children. He&#13;
~:~es his bleak fu_ture no~ wi~h&#13;
d Pa ir but with qmxotic es l t· . llantry and eterna op 1m1sm.&#13;
gaFelicia Farr, wife of director&#13;
1,emmon, returns to the screen&#13;
after a Jong absence ~f four years&#13;
. the role of Mathau s daughter-&#13;
:~-law. Versatile character actor&#13;
Charles Altman plays th h . e son w o wearies of having the old&#13;
man ~d~r foot and decides to&#13;
commit his father to a retirement&#13;
home. ~ut ?e doesn't reckon with&#13;
Kotc? s. mdominability and&#13;
therem hes the crux of the sto " Kotch." ry&#13;
Produced by Richard Carter&#13;
and ?ased on the novel by&#13;
Kathrme Topkins, " Kotch" is an&#13;
ABC Pictures Corp. presentation&#13;
for Cmerama releasing.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Student teaching&#13;
Applications for Spring&#13;
Semester 1973 Student Teaching&#13;
are now available in the&#13;
Education Divisipn Office&#13;
Greenquist 318. Dea,l:lline is Oct'.&#13;
13,&#13;
Voluntee are needed for the&#13;
open hou e of the Par d&#13;
Campus to be held Oct. 15 from&#13;
12-5 p.m.&#13;
The volunteer ill be&#13;
stationed in the LLC, Phv ical&#13;
Educati on Building, . and&#13;
Gr eenquist Hall to give informa&#13;
tion and tours.&#13;
Students wi hing to wor for&#13;
the open house hould contact&#13;
Public Information ate. t. 2233 b&#13;
Oct. 10.&#13;
There will be a joint meeting of&#13;
the Parkside Young Republican&#13;
and Young Voter for the&#13;
President Frida}, Oct. 6, from&#13;
ll:30 a .m. to 1 pm. in room D-li'4&#13;
LLC. Come when you can: leave&#13;
when you have to.&#13;
Her goal: To teach&#13;
English in Japan&#13;
The Park ide Health office will&#13;
sponsor a table for health&#13;
education, in the activity build'&#13;
on Oct. 10. 11 and 12. \'ariou&#13;
pamphlets concerning health&#13;
information relevant to tuden&#13;
will be available. 1 Edith&#13;
Isenberg, the Park ide nu&#13;
stated that the purpo e i to et&#13;
the students acquainted ·ith the&#13;
Health Office and the senic&#13;
and information available to&#13;
them.&#13;
The Department of afe y and&#13;
Security will offer the • ·a onal&#13;
Safety Council' Defen 1ve&#13;
Driving Cour e aturday, ct. 14.&#13;
in 103 Greenqw t Hall from 8&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m&#13;
Adsuko Hane's goal in life is to&#13;
teach English- real "Americanstyle"&#13;
idiomatic Englis~ - in her&#13;
native Japan. In pursmt of that&#13;
goal she changed residences&#13;
frorr: Toyama, about 150 miles&#13;
from Tokyo, to Kenosha, where&#13;
she will live while attending The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
Why Parkside?&#13;
Miss Hane (pronounced,&#13;
roughly, " Hayn '-eh" in&#13;
Japanese) credits the international&#13;
reputation for&#13;
academic excellence of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
and the discovery of a Parkside&#13;
catalog outlining the new&#13;
university's innovative programs&#13;
m a Fulbright library in Japan.&#13;
Because she wishes to be&#13;
totally immersed in American&#13;
speech and culture, Miss Hane&#13;
said she chose Parkside since she&#13;
thought that would be easier to&#13;
accomplish on a smaller campus.&#13;
At registration she selected&#13;
courses with her goal in mind:&#13;
English courses and classes in&#13;
the Modern American Society&#13;
program, one of several interdisciplinary&#13;
majors which implement&#13;
Parkside's special industrial&#13;
society mission and one&#13;
of the " innovations" which&#13;
helped convince her that&#13;
Parkside was the place for her&#13;
American studies.&#13;
Another reason was the Midwest's&#13;
reputation in Japan for&#13;
peaking "good" (unaccented)&#13;
English.&#13;
ls the campus what she ex- pected?&#13;
"Oh, yes. Very beautiful," says&#13;
Miss Hane.&#13;
Miss Hane has studied English&#13;
for ten years in Japa n - three&#13;
years in junior high school, three&#13;
in senior high school and four in&#13;
college. She is licensed as a&#13;
teacher in Japa n a nd taught for a&#13;
Year there in a junior high school.&#13;
After her studies at Parkside she&#13;
hopes to be able to teach English&#13;
language courses and American&#13;
tudies at a women 's junior&#13;
college in Japan .&#13;
Though one of her reasons for&#13;
coming to Parkside was that she&#13;
thought she would have to&#13;
communicate totally in English,&#13;
·he's discovered it is sometimes&#13;
very convenient when conversation&#13;
gets complicated to&#13;
have a J apanese-speaking landlady,&#13;
Mrs. M. o. Ekern of 5942&#13;
Third Ave.&#13;
And what is a Japanesespeaking&#13;
landlady doing in&#13;
Kenosha. Wis.?&#13;
Japanese born, the daughter of&#13;
a Japanese mother and an&#13;
American father, Mrs. Ekern&#13;
came to the U.S. for her&#13;
education and never returned to&#13;
the Orient permanently. Now a&#13;
Kenosha city nurse, she did,&#13;
however, work for a number of&#13;
years as a public health nurse in&#13;
Honolulu and last visited Japan&#13;
three years ago to attend a&#13;
niece's wedding .&#13;
Mrs. Ekern is somewhat&#13;
surprised herself at how much&#13;
J a panese she remembers since,&#13;
she notes, " I haven't had a&#13;
chance to speak Japanese with&#13;
anyone in Kenosha until Adsuko&#13;
came.''&#13;
Mrs. Ekern has already given&#13;
Miss Hane a tour of Kenosha a nd&#13;
reassured her that stories she's&#13;
heard in Japan of violence in&#13;
American cities are exaggerated,&#13;
at least in regard to Kenosha .&#13;
On campus she 's also received&#13;
a guided tour conducted by Sue&#13;
Graf a UW-P student from&#13;
Ken~sha who has acted as a kind&#13;
of informal " Big Sister " to the&#13;
petite Miss Hane&#13;
nn&#13;
The course ha been a prerequisite&#13;
for the o ration o all&#13;
state-owned \'ehlcl ince DfC&#13;
31 , 1970. II ' nive 1ty "Employees&#13;
(faculty, taff. volunt r&#13;
driver or authorized tuden&#13;
driver l who intend to u ·uch&#13;
vehicles mu t complete the&#13;
course before they may do o&#13;
Individual wi hmg to aUend&#13;
hould contact afet and&#13;
Security before ct 14&#13;
The American Bu ine&#13;
Women' A ociation offer&#13;
interest free loans to F male&#13;
Seniors . • ·o ma. imum moun&#13;
specified and while chol lie&#13;
tanding i important, the award&#13;
i ba ed primarily on fmanc, l&#13;
need. Repayment gen rail)&#13;
begin thirty to i ty da) aft r&#13;
graduation in rea onable monthly&#13;
installmen . For mor nformation&#13;
contact th Fm nc1al&#13;
id Office or call 553· 1.&#13;
'1euC s.a.,.. • BEER• SODA&#13;
$AVE-ON • LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
L ICE _ BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
'T CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
Q OPEN DAIL y . . . SUNDAYS A D HOL DAYS&#13;
u CALL&#13;
J 'o I 632-1565 i"&#13;
I- 2909 DURAND AVE.&#13;
Monday night i&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping '.'.ite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
Lathrop&#13;
Racine&#13;
Phon&#13;
RAC INE, WISC.&#13;
- - - --,&#13;
21s ( lmos l ISC 53 06&#13;
633 6307&#13;
UW Parkside invites you to&#13;
Frid ) . l . - :&#13;
nd&#13;
unda) , t . ;'-;:&#13;
rd&#13;
p.m.&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Ski&#13;
th&#13;
Alps ...&#13;
317 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
Larry Lujack Disc Jockey of the Year&#13;
Inquiries about fellowship invited&#13;
lnqulri about the Danforth&#13;
F Ilowshlpt, to be awarded in&#13;
tarc:h 1973. If Invited, actordJDI&#13;
to vregima M herr,&#13;
I tant profe or chemistry&#13;
d i tant to the Vice Chane&#13;
tter , th local campus&#13;
p tauve&#13;
Th Fellowships. oll red by the&#13;
o njcrth Foundallon 01 t. Louis,&#13;
Mo ..... open to men and women&#13;
'" ho are mer or recent&#13;
lITaduates 01 accredited colleges&#13;
10 th United tates, who have&#13;
errous interest in college&#13;
I chtng as a career, and who&#13;
plan 10study lor a Ph 0 in a field&#13;
ol. tudy common to the American&#13;
und rgraduate liberal arts&#13;
m ulum. \ppli an may be&#13;
tn$tl or married. must be under&#13;
thirty years of age, and may not&#13;
ha\ begun any graduate or&#13;
proless,onal stud&gt; beyond the&#13;
b8ccalaureate at the time applIcation&#13;
papers are lile&lt;!.&#13;
Approximately 100 Fellowships&#13;
",11 be awarded 10 March 1973.&#13;
Candidates must be nominated&#13;
b) Liaison Officers 01 their undergraduate&#13;
In tltutions by ov.&#13;
t Study Skills&#13;
ork hop&#13;
Th tudent Counsehng Service&#13;
is gOlOg to conduct another Study&#13;
,I Workohop There will be a&#13;
I of LX one hour sessions&#13;
t", ow k They will be held in&#13;
the LLC room D-I89on Oct. 16, 18,&#13;
23. 25, 30 and '0". I at noon, 2&#13;
p m., and 4 pm'&#13;
The ..-.orUhop \\0 HI cover note&#13;
lakIng, p~paratlon 01 themes,&#13;
reawng ,mpo"emenl. Q3R and&#13;
• _ ion on taking examinations.&#13;
II )'ou are ,ntere ted conlact&#13;
Clay Barnard, Studenl Counhng&#13;
,,'Ic . Room 234 Tallent&#13;
Hall, 563-2269&#13;
'_~_l _" ...~.......- _,... .......J._ ,,__ , ......&#13;
un 'I.~_.-..."'............. oc .&#13;
1. 1972 The Foundation does not&#13;
accept direct applications lor the&#13;
Fellowships.&#13;
Danlorth Fellows are eligible&#13;
for four years of financial&#13;
assistance. with a maximum&#13;
annual living stipend or $2,700 lor&#13;
slOgle Fellows and $2,950 lor&#13;
married Fellows, plus tuition and&#13;
lees. Dependency allowances are&#13;
available. Financial need is not a&#13;
condition for cooaidwation.&#13;
Danforth Fellows may hold&#13;
certain other Iellowships such as&#13;
Ford, Fulbrigbt, National&#13;
Science, Rbodes, etc., concurrently&#13;
and will be Danforth&#13;
Fellows without stipend until the&#13;
other awards lapse.&#13;
The Danforth Foundation,&#13;
created by the late Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
William H. Danforth in 1927, is a&#13;
philanthropy concerned&#13;
primarily with people and values.&#13;
Presently the Foundation focuses&#13;
its activities in two major areas,&#13;
education and the city. In these&#13;
areas the Foundation administers&#13;
programs and makes&#13;
grants to schools, colleges,&#13;
universities and other public and&#13;
private agencies.&#13;
REMEMBER WHEN... 1955&#13;
TITLE ARTIST&#13;
1. Cherry Pink-Apple Blossom White .... Perez Prado&#13;
2. Rock Around The Clock .. Bill Haley and the Comets&#13;
3. Autumn Leaves, " Roger Williams&#13;
4. Yellow Rose of Texas , , .. Mitch Miller&#13;
5. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing , Four Aces&#13;
6. Moments to Remember, .. , Four Lads&#13;
7. Ain't That a Shame , , .. Pat Boone&#13;
8. Crazy Otto , Johnny Maddox&#13;
9. Hearts of Stone .. , Fontane Sisters&#13;
10. Let Me Go, Lover " .. , , .. Joan Weber&#13;
11. He , , ,AI Hibler&#13;
12. I Hear You Knockin' ......•........ ". .Gale Storm&#13;
13. Unchained Melody ,AI Hibler&#13;
14. Till , , Roger Williams&#13;
15. March From the River Kwai ., Mitch Miller&#13;
16. Friendly Persuasion , Pat Boone&#13;
SUPPLIED BY THE PARKSIDE STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Hurray for me---&#13;
WCFL's Lujack&#13;
By Craig Roberts&#13;
Do you ever wonder what goes&#13;
on at the radio station wh~le&#13;
you're listening to your ravorite&#13;
D.J,? I&#13;
Well, I did, So I decided that&#13;
was going to talk to a J).J. and&#13;
find out what really goes on. I&#13;
thought about it lor a little while&#13;
and then decided I wanted to talk&#13;
to Larry Lujack. I chose Larry&#13;
because he was named Disc&#13;
Jockey 01 the Year. Getting the&#13;
interview was a simple matter of&#13;
making a couple 01 phone calls.&#13;
While I was sitting in the&#13;
reception room waiting for him, I&#13;
was wondering what kind of&#13;
entrance he was going to make. I&#13;
didn't have to wait too long; he&#13;
was only 25 minutes late. He&#13;
walked ofl the elevator, waved&#13;
his arm and said, "Let's go." We&#13;
walked into his office and began.&#13;
I asked him to describe a little&#13;
bit about his life and how he got&#13;
into being a D.J. Larry, who was&#13;
born and reared in Idaho, didn't&#13;
always want to be a D.J. While he&#13;
was going to tlte University of&#13;
Idaho, as a biology major, his&#13;
plans were to be a wild life&#13;
conservationist with the Idaho&#13;
Game Dept. At this time, he, like&#13;
most college kids, needed money.&#13;
One day he noticed a job opportunity&#13;
for part-time D.J. work&#13;
at the local (and only) radio&#13;
station.&#13;
"They specified experienced&#13;
person," Larry said. "I went and&#13;
applied and told them I had experience.&#13;
1 just didn't tell them&#13;
what I had experience in."&#13;
This started him off on a new&#13;
career. He said that over the next&#13;
few years he moved around quite&#13;
a bit as this list of jobs indicates:&#13;
KCID, Caldwell, Ida., 1959-61;&#13;
KGEM, Boise, Ida., 1961~62;&#13;
KJR, Seattle, 1962-66; WMEX,&#13;
Boston, 1966-67; WCFL, Chicago,&#13;
1967; WLS, Chicago, 1967-72; and&#13;
WCFL, Chicago. 1972. It was&#13;
while he was at WLS that he won&#13;
the Disc Jockey of the Year&#13;
award.&#13;
AT&#13;
I asked him to comment On&#13;
winning this award and he&#13;
replied in his typically modest&#13;
manner, "Hurray for me."&#13;
I then asked him what he&#13;
usually does during the day, He&#13;
said he spends about one hour per&#13;
day deciding what order he&#13;
should play the songs. He does&#13;
not choose what is to be played'&#13;
others do that for him and th~&#13;
other jocks. Lujack spends&#13;
another four hours per day&#13;
reading all 01 Chicago's&#13;
newspapers and taking notes on&#13;
what he reads. He is on the air for&#13;
four hours and he also spends&#13;
lime taping commercials. Add to&#13;
this public appearances and&#13;
interviews, and he puts in a full&#13;
day,&#13;
If you have heard his program&#13;
you probably have noticed that h;&#13;
regularly asks if you are naked or&#13;
tells you he loves you. As to how&#13;
he thinks up such brilliant expressions,&#13;
he says, "I have a&#13;
strange sense of humor."&#13;
To really believe him you have&#13;
to listen to him and once you&#13;
listen to him you probably won't&#13;
want to stop. Cosmic! Just&#13;
cosmic!&#13;
Poet Liddy&#13;
reads here&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy,&#13;
visiting professor of English at&#13;
The University of Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside, will read from his work&#13;
at a Parkside Poetry Forum&#13;
program at 8 p.m. on Wednesday&#13;
(Oct. 4) in the third floor library&#13;
lounge at UW-P. The program is&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Liddy, whose home is in County&#13;
Wexford, Ireland, is the author of&#13;
five books of poetry and is&#13;
represented in a number of anthologies.&#13;
He has held laculty posts at&#13;
University College Dublin and a&#13;
number of major U.S. institutions&#13;
and is currently teaching courses&#13;
in poetry writing and Irish&#13;
culture at Parkside.&#13;
This Fri. \ ~ rII&#13;
~\; ~&#13;
Q...lr--O-KY-OBE-RF-ES-Y I&#13;
~&#13;
~41N&#13;
~&#13;
s\~&#13;
~A.~&#13;
RAFFERNS&#13;
6015 • 75th St. Kenosha&#13;
10' BEERS7 - 8:30&#13;
POLKA BAND 9 - 1&#13;
Cheese - Sausage Mit Sauerkraut&#13;
Original German Cold Duck&#13;
(Lederhosen Optional)&#13;
Oct. 6&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER ed 0c . 4, 1972&#13;
ah out fellowship invited&#13;
ill&#13;
1. 1m T ound lion does not currently and will be Danforth&#13;
Fellow without stipend \Dltil the&#13;
oth r awards lapse.&#13;
pt di t applications for the&#13;
1-· II h1&#13;
nf rth Fellov. are eligible&#13;
for four year of financ ial&#13;
t n • with a maximum&#13;
nn l li\ln tipend of $2,7 for&#13;
1 I F llov. and $2,950 for&#13;
The Danforth Foundation,&#13;
created by the late ir. and Mrs.&#13;
William H. Danforth in 1927, is a&#13;
philanthropy concerned&#13;
primarily with people and values.&#13;
Pre enUy the Foundation focuses&#13;
its activities in two major areas,&#13;
education and the city. In these&#13;
areas the Foundation administers&#13;
programs and makes&#13;
grants to schools, colleges,&#13;
universities and other public and&#13;
private agencies.&#13;
Fellow , plus tuition and&#13;
pendency allowances are&#13;
8\' 1lable. Financial need is not a&#13;
condition for coosideration.&#13;
Danforth Fellows may hold&#13;
certain other fellowships such as&#13;
Ford, Fulbright, National&#13;
cience, Rhodes, etc., conREMEMBER&#13;
WHEN ... 1955&#13;
1.&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
6.&#13;
7.&#13;
8.&#13;
9 .&#13;
10.&#13;
11.&#13;
12.&#13;
13.&#13;
14.&#13;
15.&#13;
16.&#13;
TITLE ARTIST&#13;
Cherry Pink-Apple Blossom White .... Perez Prado&#13;
Rock Around The Clock .. Bill Haley and the Comets&#13;
Autumn Leaves ................ .. . Roger Williams&#13;
Yellow Rose of Texas . ................ Mitch Miller&#13;
Love Is A Many Splendored Thing ....... Four Aces&#13;
Moments to Remember ..... .. .......... Four Lads&#13;
Ain't That a Shame ....... ... .. ...... ... Pat Boone&#13;
Crazy Otto ..................... .. . Johnny Maddox&#13;
Hearts of Stone .................... Fontane Sisters&#13;
Let Me Go, Lover ..................... Joan Weber&#13;
He ..................... ............. . . Al Hibler&#13;
I Hear You Knockin' .............. .. ... Gale Storm&#13;
Unchained Melody ......... .. ..... . ...... Al Hibler&#13;
Till .............................. Roger Williams&#13;
March From the River Kwai .......... Mitch Miller&#13;
Friendly Persuasion .. .... ..... ......... Pat Boone&#13;
SUPPLIED BY THE PARKSIDE STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
. tember F.D.I.C.&#13;
Hurray for nie---&#13;
WCFL 's Lujack&#13;
By Craig Roberts&#13;
Do you ever wonder what go_es&#13;
on at the radio station wh!le&#13;
you're listening to your favorite&#13;
D.J.? I&#13;
v ell, I did. So I decided that wa going to talk to a I).J. and&#13;
find out what really goes on._ I&#13;
thought about it for a little while&#13;
and then decided I wanted to talk&#13;
to Larry Lujack. I chose Larry&#13;
because he was named Disc&#13;
Jockey of the Year. Getting the&#13;
interview was a simple matter of&#13;
making a couple of phone calls.&#13;
While I was sitting in the&#13;
reception room waiting fo~ him, I was wondering what kmd of&#13;
entrance he was going to make. I&#13;
didn't have to wait too long ; he was only 25 minutes late. He&#13;
walked off the elevator, waved&#13;
his arm and said, "Let's go." We&#13;
walked into his office and began.&#13;
I asked him to describe a little&#13;
bit about his life and how he got&#13;
into being a D.J. Larry, who was born and reared in Idaho, didn't&#13;
always want to be a D.J. While he&#13;
was going to tlte University of&#13;
Idaho, as a biology major, his&#13;
plans were to be a wild life&#13;
conservationist with the Idaho&#13;
Game Dept. At this time, he, like&#13;
most college kids, needed money.&#13;
One day he noticed a job opportunity&#13;
for part-time D.J . work&#13;
at the local (and only) radio&#13;
station. "They specified experienced&#13;
person," Larry said. "I went and&#13;
applied and told them I had experience.&#13;
I just didn't tell them&#13;
what I had experience in."&#13;
This started him off on a new&#13;
career. He said that over the next&#13;
few years he moved around quite&#13;
a bit as this list of jobs indicates:&#13;
KCID, Caldwell, Ida., 1959-61;&#13;
KGEM, Boise, Ida ., 1961-62;&#13;
KJR, Seattle, 1962-66; WMEX,&#13;
Boston, 1966-67; WCFL, Chicago,&#13;
1967; WLS, Chicago, 1967-72; and&#13;
WCFL, Chicago, 1972. It was&#13;
while he was at WLS that he won&#13;
the Disc Jockey of the Year&#13;
award.&#13;
I asked him to comment on winning this &lt;'ward and he&#13;
replied in his typically mode t&#13;
manner, "Hurray for me."&#13;
I then asked him what he&#13;
usually does during the day. He&#13;
said he spends about one hour per&#13;
day deciding what order he&#13;
should play the songs. He does&#13;
not choose what is to be played· others do that for him and th '&#13;
other jocks. Lujack spend&#13;
another four hours per day&#13;
reading all of Chicago's&#13;
newspapers and taking notes on&#13;
what he reads. He is on the air for&#13;
four hours and he also spend&#13;
time taping commercials. Add to&#13;
this public appearances and&#13;
interviews, and he puts in a full&#13;
day.&#13;
If you have heard his program&#13;
you probably have noticed that h~&#13;
regularly asks if you are naked or&#13;
tells you he loves you. As to how&#13;
he thinks up such brilliant x- pressions, he says, " I have a&#13;
strange sense of humor."&#13;
To really believe him you have&#13;
to listen to him and once you&#13;
listen to him you probably won't&#13;
want to stop. Cosmic! Ju t&#13;
cosmic!&#13;
Poet Liddy&#13;
reads here&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy,&#13;
visiting professor of English at&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
will read from his work&#13;
at a Parkside Poetry Forum&#13;
program at 8 p.m. on Wednesday&#13;
(Oct. 4) in the third floor library&#13;
lounge at UW-P. The program i&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Liddy, whose home is in County&#13;
Wexford, Ireland, is the author or&#13;
five books of poetry and is&#13;
represented in a number or anthologies.&#13;
&#13;
He has held faculty posts at&#13;
University College Dublin and a&#13;
number of major U.S. institution&#13;
and is currently teaching cours&#13;
in poetry writing and Irish&#13;
culture at Parkside.&#13;
This Fri~\.\~ }' Q ~ Oct. 6&#13;
Q., I OKTOBERFEST 1-,,:J&#13;
~ ~~ ,,,4/NS ~~&#13;
AT - ~&#13;
RAFFERTYS&#13;
6015 - 75th St. Kenosha&#13;
1 o~ BEERS 7 - 8:30&#13;
POLKA BAND 9 - 1&#13;
Cheese - Sausage Mit Sauerkraut&#13;
Original German Cold Duck&#13;
(Lederhosen Optional) &#13;
1MFOOTBALL&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
1972PARKSI DE 1M TOUCH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
Mon.,oct. 2 Football Team YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Tues.,oct. 3 BOSS YS. Trout&#13;
Wed.,oct. 4 Schooners vs. BOSS&#13;
Thurs., oct. 5 Football Team vs, Trout&#13;
Fri., Oct. 6 Make·up Date&#13;
Mon., OCT. 9&#13;
Tues.,oct. 10&#13;
Wed.,oct. 11&#13;
Thurs., oct. 12&#13;
Fri., oct. 13&#13;
Trout YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners YS. Football Team&#13;
Football Team YS. BOSS&#13;
Schooners YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
~keJup Date&#13;
Mon.,oct. 16&#13;
Tues.oct. 17&#13;
Wed.,oct. 18&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 19&#13;
Fri., oct. 20&#13;
Schooners YS. Trout&#13;
BOSS YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Football Team YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
BOSS vs. Trout&#13;
Make.up Date&#13;
Mon.,oct. 23&#13;
tues.. Oct. 24&#13;
Wed.,Oct. 25&#13;
Thurs., oct. 26&#13;
Fri.. Oct. 27&#13;
Schooners YS. BOSS&#13;
Football Team V.S Trout&#13;
Trout YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners YS. Football Team&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
Mon', Oct. ':lO&#13;
Tues.,Oct. 31&#13;
Wed.,Nov. 1&#13;
Thurs.. Nay. 2&#13;
Fri., Nov. 3&#13;
Football Team vs. BOSS&#13;
Schooners YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners YS. Trout&#13;
BOSS vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
All games are scheduled at 12:30 on the tootball field&#13;
adjacent to the soccer field. A forfeit wi II result if a tea m&#13;
is not ready to play by 12: 40. Two forfeits will result in&#13;
eliminating a team from further intramural competition,&#13;
including volleyball and basketball.&#13;
In case of bad weather, games will be officially postponed,qy&#13;
t,h,\"~.!J:1~r,il'!!L!~a,l)~irector, ~~~,~_;,lJ~,iJ"a~~~'f:'.!! L&#13;
be scheduled on the following Friday, .&#13;
Correction to the official rules - Eight players (students&#13;
or faculty) will comprise a team, A minimum of six&#13;
are necessary to start the game,&#13;
Anyone who isn't on a team but would like to be should&#13;
comeover while the games are in progress and sign up&#13;
with one of the teams because some will probably be&#13;
short-handed.&#13;
Wed" Oct. 4, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
This year's Oktoberfest queen candidates. nominated b~ m mbers of lbe r club. Intlud&#13;
(back row. L-R' Cindy Kalt, Debbie Roseth, _loruca .lcClenaghan and &lt;front row, IrRI lkbbl&#13;
Wade. Paris Wilhust , Nancy Michaels and Joan Krebs.&#13;
Linksmen under way;&#13;
Stephens optimistic&#13;
With the fall golf season more&#13;
than half way over. Coach teve&#13;
Stephens is optimistic about the&#13;
spring season&#13;
Stephens confides, "U no&#13;
problems develop and with the&#13;
players we tlunk will be playing&#13;
in the spring we certainly hould&#13;
be one of the contenders In&#13;
District 14 to qualify for the&#13;
nationals ...&#13;
Stephens says that now hIS&#13;
object IS to play young players&#13;
especially the freshmen. to give&#13;
them a chance to show what they&#13;
can dv&gt;.0&lt;J.t9!')!P him de!e mme *&#13;
who will be playing In the' rr ~"·'i1iil:.&#13;
On Sept. 15. the Ranger golfers&#13;
had their first match or the&#13;
season, Uw-Stevens Point hosted&#13;
eleven teams at the Stevens Pomt&#13;
Country Club. The scoring \\,ent&#13;
as follows:&#13;
1. UW-E.u Claire 406&#13;
2. t:W-M.dison 408&#13;
3 UW-La Crosse 412&#13;
4. U\\'-PlatteIIIle 4&#13;
5. UW-Whitewater 423&#13;
6 t:\\-PARKSIDE 42~&#13;
.. l"\\·Ri\erFalls ..25&#13;
8. n\ Oshkosh 427&#13;
9 . tarquette 418&#13;
10 n\ -Stevens Pomt 443&#13;
11 1:1\. out 4:&gt;5&#13;
"edahs~ In the toumam nt&#13;
ere like Kru er of IadlSOll&#13;
and RIC .' orman of 1'..JlU Oalre&#13;
at 71 The ..coemg for Par Ide&#13;
was Jim \ ak . 80 Tom Both&#13;
and RIck \\ illems. as Dave Fa&#13;
and Pete, °e\ ms. 87&#13;
IReady, wrestle THE&#13;
ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Coach Jim Koch has issued a&#13;
call for any UW-P student interested&#13;
in wrestling to come out&#13;
for the wrestling team. Practice&#13;
will start Monday, Oct. 16, at 4&#13;
p.m. Anyone interested should&#13;
stop and visit Coach Koch in his&#13;
office in the P. E. Building.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
12B·page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213)47J.8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
01. - 001. 14 - 8:01 p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford H .. Audltorium&#13;
Reserved Seat TIckets· $2.50&#13;
udents &amp; Staff With 10 -$150&#13;
Tickets A\'ailable:&#13;
UW·p tnformation orfice&#13;
Rm 2Ot. Tallent Hall&#13;
1IIIImlllll 11111111111I ~ III IIImlllllllllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmllll&#13;
ed., Oct. , 1972 THE PARKS I DE RANGER 7&#13;
IM FOOTBALL&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
1972 PARKSIDE IM TOUCH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
Mon., oct. 2 Football Team vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Tues., Oct. 3 BOSS vs. Trout&#13;
Wed., Oct. 4 Schooners vs. BOSS&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 5 Football Team vs. Trout&#13;
Fri., Oct. 6 Make-up Date&#13;
Mon., Ocr. 9&#13;
Tues., Oct. 10&#13;
Wed., Oct. 11&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 12&#13;
Fri., Oct. 13&#13;
Mon., Oct. 16&#13;
Tues. Oct. 17&#13;
Wed., Oct. 18&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 19&#13;
Fri., Oct. 20&#13;
Mon., Oct. 23&#13;
Tues., Oct. 24&#13;
Wed., Oct. 25&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 26&#13;
Fri., Oct. 27&#13;
Mon., Oct. 30&#13;
Tues., Oct. 31&#13;
Wed., Nov. 1&#13;
Thurs., Nov. 2&#13;
Fri., Nov. 3&#13;
Trout vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners vs. Football Team&#13;
Football Team vs. BOSS&#13;
Schooners vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
~ke-up Date&#13;
Schooners vs.Trout&#13;
BOSS vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Football Team vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
BOSS vs. Trout&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
Schooners vs. BOSS&#13;
Football Team V.S Trout&#13;
Trout vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners vs. Football Team&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
Football Team vs. BOSS&#13;
Schooners vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners vs.Trout&#13;
BOSS vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
All games are scheduled at 12 : 30 on the footbal l field&#13;
adjacent to the soccer field . A forfeit will result if a team&#13;
is not ready to play by 12 : 40. Two forfeits wil l result in&#13;
eliminating a team from further intramural competition,&#13;
including volleyball and basketbal l.&#13;
In case of bad weather, games will be officially postpone~&#13;
by t.h.e Intramural Director. Make-up games wi l l --1 • • • ~• • I ',t I I) ... ~•I-~ • •i,• I. , i•&#13;
be scheduled on the following Friday.&#13;
Correction to the official rules - Eight players (students&#13;
or faculty) will comprise a team . A minimum of six&#13;
are necessary to start the game.&#13;
Anyone who isn't on a team but would like to be should&#13;
come over while the games are in progress and sign up&#13;
with one of the teams because some will probably be&#13;
short-handed.&#13;
Linksrnen under a&#13;
Stephens optirni t ·&#13;
Ready, wrestle THE&#13;
Coach Jim Koch has issued a&#13;
call for any UW-P student inlere&#13;
ted in wrestling to come out&#13;
for the wre tling team. Practice&#13;
will start Monday, Oct. 16, at 4&#13;
Pm. Anyone interested should&#13;
top and visit Coach Koch in his&#13;
office in the P . E. Building.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
128-page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213) 477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
EST ABLISHME T&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursda;1&#13;
1ight&#13;
• &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
Off and running. Park ide' harriers just before the gun sounds to open the home cross country season.&#13;
---------&#13;
THE WEEKE D&#13;
Harriers, hooters fall&#13;
BY KRIS KOCH&#13;
Th Park id soccer team was&#13;
handed It' third traight loss 01&#13;
the n 200 la I aturday at the&#13;
hands 01 a tough W·Madlson&#13;
boll club.&#13;
Both teams played even up boll&#13;
&lt;kIrm tho nest haU. but rn the&#13;
nd penod the ladlson club&#13;
talhed tv..c . both 01 lholt goals&#13;
c:onun Irom vabed Alavian.&#13;
f\JaVI8D' first goal came 15&#13;
mmut mto the second heU when&#13;
he rated away from the crowd&#13;
nd booted across an unassisted&#13;
oal&#13;
Fllteen mmutes later he picked&#13;
up hIS second score 01 the day&#13;
"hon the Ranger goalie dropped&#13;
th ball alter blocking a shot and&#13;
lavian was fight there to boot it&#13;
rn The 2-0 lead hold and the&#13;
Rangers had 10 chal!&lt; up another&#13;
I&#13;
The Rangers played the game&#13;
'A Ithout the services of first team&#13;
goalie Tom Thompsen, who&#13;
ustamed a leg injury tbree&#13;
weeks ago. The Rangers record&#13;
now stands at 0-3--1 for the season.&#13;
Ilhnois-Chicago Circle invades&#13;
Parkslde al3 p.m. today and the&#13;
lober/est Tournament will he&#13;
hold thI Frtday and aturday at&#13;
Parks.de, pitting the Rangers&#13;
agam t teams from UWladlson,&#13;
'otre Dame and UWhl"aukee.&#13;
Track&#13;
Any man interested in joining&#13;
th Ranger track team should&#13;
conlact Coach Bob Lawson.&#13;
Practice lor the indoor track&#13;
learn h already begun. Coach&#13;
Lawson can be lound in the&#13;
Phy lcal Education Building or&#13;
by ca IIing 553-2153&#13;
Parkside's Olympian, Lucien&#13;
Rosa, and teammate Dennis Biel&#13;
both broke the school record lor&#13;
the 5 mile run last Saturday in&#13;
Charleston. Ill. but their output&#13;
wasn't enough to pull the&#13;
Rangers past Eastern Illinois as&#13;
they were beaten 23-38. This was&#13;
the second loss of the season for&#13;
the harriers against one win.&#13;
Rosa toured the course in a&#13;
winning time of 24 :53.6, bettering&#13;
the old record 01 25: 29 which he&#13;
also set. Biel also broke the old&#13;
record by placing lourth in the&#13;
race.&#13;
The Parkside Harriers will run&#13;
again this Saturday at the Octobe.rfest&#13;
Invitational which will&#13;
take place on the Parkside&#13;
course.&#13;
The Parkside golf team&#13;
traveled to Green Lake Saturday&#13;
and placed 5th in an eleven team&#13;
college tournament. Lacrosse&#13;
won the meet with a total team&#13;
score 01 782, edging the UWMadison&#13;
team by 11 strokes.&#13;
Parks ide's overall team score&#13;
was 852. Two Racine men held&#13;
low cards for Parkside, Jim&#13;
Vakos registered a 167 and John&#13;
Lehman a 169. Other Parkside&#13;
scores were Pete Nevin with a&#13;
171; Don Fox with a 172; and&#13;
Dave Fox close behind with a 173.&#13;
The gollers get back into the&#13;
swing 01 things this Saturday&#13;
hosting the Octoberfest Tournament&#13;
here at Parkside, and&#13;
then closing out their fall season&#13;
Oct. 14 at Madison.&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Anyone interested in the intramural&#13;
bowling league should&#13;
conlact Coach Jim Kocii in the&#13;
Physical Education BUilding or&#13;
phone 2267.&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 13&#13;
\ ,," - OJ&#13;
Entry Fee 50·&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
sponsored by Park,ide Activitie' Board&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
October 4 Illinois-Chicago Circle at Parkside&#13;
October 6 Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
(UW-Madison, Notre Dame, UW-Milwaukee) .&#13;
October 14. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... UW-Platteville at Parkside&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
October 7 OktoberfesUnvitational at Parkside&#13;
(Iowa Slate University, Indiana State University, Purdue&#13;
University-Calumet, South Dakota State, Parkside)&#13;
October 13 Notre Dame Invitational at South Bend, Ind.&#13;
October 17.............. .MarquetteatParkside&#13;
Golf&#13;
October 7 Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
(Northeastern Illinois, UW-Green Bay, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
UW-Madlson, UW·River Falls, UW-Platteville,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, UW-LaCrosse, UW-Eau Claire, UW-Stevens Point,&#13;
UW-Parkside, Marquette, Carthage College,&#13;
UW-Whitewater, Northern Illinois)&#13;
October 14 .... .. UW-Mamson at Madison&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
October 6. . . . . . . OktoberfesUnvitational at Parkside&#13;
Women's GOlf&#13;
October ...... .Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
Cagers set&#13;
to start&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
October 14 . . .Oshkosh Invitational at Oshkosh&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
October 4. . . . . . .. Oktoberfest Invitational at Parkside&#13;
(Parkside, Carthage, Whitewater, Northwestern,&#13;
Stevens Point, Lawrence)&#13;
.......... UW·Milwaukee at Parkside&#13;
...... Lake Forest, Beloit at Parkside&#13;
October .....&#13;
October 11 .&#13;
Archery tourney&#13;
Cycling club&#13;
here Sunday&#13;
practice&#13;
Before you know it, basketball&#13;
will be returning to Parkside. Big&#13;
improvement should be in store&#13;
for the team this coming season&#13;
as three returning lettermen and&#13;
a pack of hot-shot freshmen vie&#13;
for starting positions on Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens' eighth Ranger&#13;
team.&#13;
"The season looks more&#13;
promising," Stephens says,&#13;
"with our returning people&#13;
having experience. We lost no&#13;
seniors and added key freshman&#13;
recruits who will put pressure On&#13;
the 1971-72 starters. We'll have&#13;
size, speed and jumping ability,&#13;
but we're also facing our toughest&#13;
schedule ever."&#13;
He ligures that Bill Sobanski&#13;
Gary Cole and John YoungqUist:&#13;
all newcomers, will try for the&#13;
center spot. With one regular&#13;
back at guard in Dennis&#13;
Routheaux, Stephens sees more&#13;
depth than any other position and&#13;
expects newcomers Tim Dolan&#13;
Pat Mason and Joe Hulter to bid&#13;
with lettermen Pete Nevins and&#13;
Routheaux for the starting spots.&#13;
Stephens looks for leading scorer&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, freshmen Don&#13;
Snow, Mike McGrath and Mike&#13;
Hanke to battle for forward.&#13;
Practice begins on Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 15.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • VS, •&#13;
• •&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Satulday, October 28 •&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
• $10 (Includes Bus, •&#13;
•&#13;
: Continental Breakfast, :&#13;
• $6Game Ticketl •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • TICKETS AVAILABLE •&#13;
: INFORMATION OFFICE :&#13;
• 202 TALLENT HALL •&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
Thursday, October 5, the annual&#13;
Oktoberlest Archery&#13;
Tournament will be held at 10:30&#13;
a.m., on the soccer field. The&#13;
tournament is open to all. Bows&#13;
and arrows will be provided. All&#13;
you have to do to enter is to come·&#13;
over and join in the fun. Awards&#13;
will be given to the champions.&#13;
The Parkside Cycling Club will&#13;
leave the P.E. Bldg. at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday. All stUdents, stall and&#13;
faculty are invited to ride with&#13;
the club.&#13;
~ ~'d- ~~ ~tJ4'Ui&#13;
presents in concert&#13;
7k&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 7 -8p.rn. - Carthage Fieldhouse&#13;
On sale: Bidinger's Music&#13;
Carthage College Center Office&#13;
l~ &amp; 7Uut&#13;
7~&#13;
~&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
Cagers set&#13;
to start&#13;
practice&#13;
Before you know it, basketball&#13;
will be returning to Parkside. Big&#13;
improvement should be in store&#13;
for the team this coming season&#13;
as three returning lettermen and&#13;
a pack of hot-shot freshmen vie&#13;
for starting positions on Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens' eighth Ranger&#13;
team.&#13;
th gun oond to op n th home cros country eason.&#13;
"The season looks more&#13;
promising," Stephens says,&#13;
"with our returning people&#13;
having experience. We lost no&#13;
seniors and added key freshman&#13;
recruits who will put pressure on&#13;
the 1971-72 starters. We'll have&#13;
size, speed and jumping ability,&#13;
but we're also facing our toughest&#13;
schedule ever."&#13;
H&#13;
Harrier&#13;
BY KRIS KOCH&#13;
D&#13;
, hooters fall&#13;
r&#13;
r .&#13;
Th Park ide Harriers will run a ain thi Saturday at the Octoberfest&#13;
Im;tational which will&#13;
take place on the Parkside course.&#13;
The Park ide golf team&#13;
traveled to Green Lake Saturday&#13;
and plac d 5th in an eleven team&#13;
college tournament. LaCrosse&#13;
won the meet with a total team&#13;
score of 782, edging the UWlladison&#13;
team by 11 strokes.&#13;
Park ide' overall team score&#13;
was 852. Two Racine men held&#13;
low cards for Parkside, Jim&#13;
Vakos regi tered a 167 and John&#13;
Lehman a 169. Other Parkside&#13;
core were Pete evin with a&#13;
171 : Don Fox with a 172; and&#13;
Dave Fo close behind with a 173.&#13;
The golfers get back into the&#13;
wing of things this Saturday&#13;
ho ·ting the Octoberfest Tournament&#13;
h re at Parkside, and&#13;
then cJo ing out their fall season&#13;
Oct. 14 at . 1adi on.&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Anyone interested in the intramural&#13;
bowling league should&#13;
contact Coach Jim Kocfi in the&#13;
Phy ical Education Building or&#13;
phone 2267&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
Registration&#13;
ow thru Oct. 13&#13;
/ / -o&#13;
lntry Fee soe&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
ponsored by Parkside Activities Boord&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
October 4 ................... . .. Illinois-Chicago Circle at Parks_ide&#13;
October 6 .................... Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
(UW-Madison, Notre Drune, UW-Milwaukee)&#13;
October 14 ........... .. ... .. ...... . .. . . UW-Platteville at Parkside&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
October 7 . ................. . Oktoberfest Invitational at Parkside&#13;
(Iowa State University, Indiana State University, ~due&#13;
University-Calumet, South Dakota State, Parkside)&#13;
October 13 . . ...... Notre Drune Invitational at South Bend, Ind.&#13;
October 17 ......................... .. . . .... Marquette at Parkside&#13;
Golf&#13;
October 7 . . .. . ............... Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
( ortheastern Illinois, UW-Green Bay, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
UW-Madison, UW-River Falls, UW-Platteville,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, UW-LaCrosse, UW-Eau Claire, UW-Stevens Point,&#13;
UW-Parkside, Marquette, Carthage College,&#13;
UW-Whitewater, Northern Illinois)&#13;
October 14 ......... . .. . . . ... . .. . .. ....... UW-Madison at Madison&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
October 6 .. ... .... .. . . . . . . ... . Oktoberfest Invitational at Parkside&#13;
Women's Golf&#13;
October 5 . .. . . ... .. . ... . . .... Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
October 14 .... .. . . . ....... . . . .. . .. Oshkosh Invitational at Oshkosh&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
October 4 ...... . ..... . ... . . . .. Oktoberfest Invitational at Parkside&#13;
(Parkside, Carthage, Whitewater, Northwestern,&#13;
Stevens Point, Lawrence)&#13;
October 5 ...... . ..... . .. . ......... . .. . UW-Milwaukee at Parkside&#13;
October 11 ...... . ..... .. . . ... . .... Lake Forest, Beloit at Parkside&#13;
Archery tourney&#13;
Thursday, October 5, the annual&#13;
Oktoberfest Archery&#13;
Tournament will be held at 10:30&#13;
a.m. , on the soccer field. The&#13;
tournament is open to all. Bows&#13;
and arrows will be provided. All&#13;
you have to do to enter is to come- over and join in the fun. Awards&#13;
will be given to the champions.&#13;
Cycling club&#13;
here Sunday&#13;
The Parkside Cycling Club will&#13;
leave the P.E. Bldg. at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday. All students, staff and&#13;
faculty are invited to ride with&#13;
the club.&#13;
He figures that Bill Sobanski&#13;
Gary Cole and John Youngquist:&#13;
all newcomers, will try for the&#13;
center spot. With one regular&#13;
back at guard in Dennis&#13;
Routheaux, Stephens sees more&#13;
depth than any other position and&#13;
expects newcomers Tim Dolan&#13;
Pat Mason and Joe Hutter to bid&#13;
with lettermen Pete Nevins and&#13;
Routheaux for the starting spots.&#13;
Stephens looks for leading scorer&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, freshmen Don&#13;
Snow, Mike McGrath and Mike&#13;
Hanke to battle for forward.&#13;
Practice begins on Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 15.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
.&#13;
• ~~.. .&#13;
•&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • • • • • •&#13;
• • • vs. •&#13;
• •&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Saturday, October 28 •&#13;
• • • • • $10 (Includes Bus, I&#13;
: Continental Breakfast, :&#13;
• $6 Game Ticket) 1&#13;
• • •&#13;
e TICKETS AVAILABLE •&#13;
I&#13;
: INFORMATION OFFICE :&#13;
e 202 TALLENT HALL I&#13;
•••••••••••••••• ~~,~St«~~ 'COMd&#13;
7k&#13;
presents in concert&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 7-8p.m. - Carthage Fieldhouse&#13;
On sale: Bidinger 's Music&#13;
Carthage College Center Office </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63837">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 2, October 4, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63838">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63839">
                <text>1972-10-04</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63842">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63843">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63844">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63845">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63846">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63847">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63848">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63849">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63850">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="217">
        <name>campus concerns committee</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="648">
        <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="303">
        <name>elisabeth kuber-ross</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="291">
        <name>norman mailer</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="298">
        <name>special collections</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="184">
        <name>Student Activities</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="300">
        <name>student life</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2627" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3251">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/fa5c19336c3af92188c13b6928a1d8ab.pdf</src>
        <authentication>715dfacfca8eeea2fbed120d7f62fdf1</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63855">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 3</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63856">
              <text>How many $ needed to run Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63866">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89905">
              <text>The. University of \\'iscol'61n.&#13;
Parkslde Activities Board has&#13;
annou~ed the appearance of the&#13;
St. Louis Jazz Quartet in concert&#13;
at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 14,10 the&#13;
Bradford High chool&#13;
auditorium.&#13;
The Quartet has been billed a&#13;
one of the most exciting contemp?rary&#13;
jazz. groups In&#13;
America Their program runs the&#13;
gamut from jazz to blues to&#13;
ballads A review of their perfo.rmance&#13;
at the Missi ippt&#13;
RIVer Festival in the t. LotH&#13;
Post-Dispatch read, 'The&#13;
Quartet thrilled the audience&#13;
with their fine program rang10g&#13;
from gospel soul music to fun .&#13;
jazz. Their singing was versatile,&#13;
controlled, and emotionall)&#13;
sincere. They brought dov. n the&#13;
house with their hand-elapp1Og,&#13;
foot-stomping spiritual. Let It Be&#13;
Their show is fresh. exciting, and&#13;
clearly imaginallve.··&#13;
The group has extended an&#13;
invitation to an)' intere ted&#13;
member of the audience to la\&#13;
and talk after the concert. The\&#13;
will be glad to answer an;·&#13;
questions you might have.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at&#13;
the UW-Parkside Information&#13;
Office. Room 201 Tallent Hall&#13;
Reserved seat tickets are $2.50.&#13;
students and staff with Parksrde&#13;
ill are $l.5O.&#13;
St. Lo ui&#13;
Jazz Q&#13;
here Satur&#13;
For Once In. I til&#13;
FlOe and t eUo,,"&#13;
On Green DOllllln Street&#13;
methm mpl&#13;
Free-Again&#13;
I'nul us Ttme&#13;
Somebody'. Knockong&#13;
Walk HIm l:p&#13;
TheParkside--------&#13;
GE do da&#13;
a&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
lob r 11 1 72&#13;
How many $ needed to run Parkside&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown 1972-73&#13;
Union Reserve. . . '38.50&#13;
Lecture &amp; Fine Arts .. 2.00&#13;
Student Health . .. 2.00&#13;
Transpcrtation &amp; Parking ..............•..... 18.00&#13;
Athletics... . ... . ..... . . .9.00&#13;
Ill~aln"rals. ....•..... . 8.00&#13;
Student Activities 8.50&#13;
Student Group Support.. . 2.00&#13;
$88.00&#13;
Summer Sesston (Union Reserve) .. "$22.00&#13;
Apathy will help Nixon:&#13;
McGovern aide&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
. 'Skip" Roberts, Deputy&#13;
DIrector of Congressional Liaison&#13;
~orthe McGovern campaign, was&#13;
In Wisconsin last week addressing&#13;
various groups for the&#13;
Senator.&#13;
Roberts. former Director of the&#13;
Viet Nam Veterans Against the&#13;
War. and now on leave as&#13;
Director of the Labor-University&#13;
Alliance. addressed groups at&#13;
~O~i~ican College and the&#13;
l ",lanan Universalist Church in&#13;
HaCine, as well as a press conference&#13;
at the Racine McGovern&#13;
office. (A meeting was scheduled&#13;
at Parkside, but never&#13;
materialized due to the apathy of&#13;
the So-called "organizers" a&#13;
Spokesman for the R~cine&#13;
MCGovern office said.)&#13;
R Referring to this apathy,&#13;
oberts attacked the general&#13;
apathy of the tB-24-year-old&#13;
vot ers, long considered a&#13;
stronghold of the McGovern&#13;
camp.&#13;
. ')'10st 18'24~year-old \ oters are&#13;
~e~thetic." said Roberts.&#13;
{'Y"'E' '0 longer {'C'ncerced&#13;
about the war, and the economic,S&#13;
of the country usually doesn. t&#13;
affect them. They are once again&#13;
becoming the isolationist 10-&#13;
telligentia clique that th_ey&#13;
seemed to be in the early 19;,05&#13;
and 60s."&#13;
Roberts cited a recent New&#13;
York Times poll which showed&#13;
that 55 percent of those 10-&#13;
terviewed had not decided t~at&#13;
they would actually vote: despite&#13;
their preference In the&#13;
Presidential race. .&#13;
·'It is this apathy which ma~&#13;
d f at George 1\lcGovern ..&#13;
R~beerts said, "and it .is thiS&#13;
apathy that Richard Nixon IS&#13;
counting on."&#13;
Open House&#13;
Th University of Wisconsi~-&#13;
e ht"twIIi Parkside announced t a I Oct&#13;
hold an open house Sunday. . .&#13;
15 from noon till 5 p.m. ViSItors&#13;
. t 'ty to tour ··n have an oppor unt&#13;
\\I . II s well as the&#13;
GreenqUist Ha . a . g Center&#13;
L·b y_Learmn new I rar . 1 Education&#13;
and the new Physlca&#13;
-uidmg.&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
How much does it cost to run 8&#13;
university? This IS a question&#13;
many of you have probably asked&#13;
yourselves but never bothered to&#13;
find out In order to answer thiS&#13;
question. RA:XGER interviewed&#13;
Erwin F Zuehlke. DIrector 01 the&#13;
Business Office&#13;
The thmg \\,hich concerns mo (&#13;
students on a day-to-dey ba IS I&#13;
the transportation and parking&#13;
This segment of finance takes up&#13;
a good part of the egregated ree&#13;
It was Originally anticipated that&#13;
Parks Ide " ould have sn-lOO rrom&#13;
student receipts and facult)&#13;
permits and an ackhtlonal $13.&#13;
subsid) through tate funds lor a&#13;
total T&amp;P budget or over .000&#13;
Park ide IS not geumg S77,000&#13;
from tudent and raC'ult~&#13;
receipts. the real figure IS closer&#13;
to $10.000, And the university I&#13;
paying out more than the crigmal&#13;
$70.000 \\ hrch "a allocated for&#13;
buses, This cuts IOta the&#13;
Intended to be set aside for nev.&#13;
parking Iactliue .&#13;
Of the $70.000 oflglnall~ IO~&#13;
tended for buSing. 543.600 \I, as for&#13;
the two huttles. $18.600 for the&#13;
Kenosha mterclty bu and $7.800&#13;
for the summer se 1011, ..\ddluoo&#13;
of the additional shuttle IS costing&#13;
us another $9.000. Coupled ",th&#13;
the $7.000 loss m re\'enue. It&#13;
means the parking reserve I cut&#13;
to $1.000.&#13;
There is a question on ho\\, to&#13;
gain rC\'enue, perhaps "e lA'ould&#13;
have to charge additional&#13;
parking fees. Instead or the&#13;
present $90.000 a year. we could&#13;
use 5120,000 a year in order to&#13;
maintain the reserve and bwld&#13;
new lots.&#13;
Even then Parks ide "ou!d have&#13;
no facilities to mamtam them&#13;
There would even be a problem&#13;
with &gt;corage ~ilIl~'I'.·'lf )'&#13;
need three :;:huM~l\m ~nt&#13;
()"T ~ 2 1972 voJ -&#13;
ERWI ZUEHl E&#13;
Dunn th r gular chool&#13;
. Ion bu t amOUR to&#13;
a " The. hull I run on&#13;
I.,bror boo"" and the Ph) 'cal&#13;
Educo;,on Bwld,ng must k p&#13;
th "e sa me boo lor the purpo&#13;
0/ ""Pong addlllonal e,,,,"&#13;
do"n&#13;
Because 0/ the lac of rund&gt; It&#13;
d&lt;Je,. nOlloo Iokel) that Ice to&#13;
Racn~ \I, III rei tated In (act&#13;
\\ l~ln Coach Litle rna)tv n&#13;
curtail !'Orne QlWr8uon If Lh )'&#13;
don"t get more """In On the&#13;
other hand. e mIght be abl lo&#13;
extend en Ice to Kenosha&#13;
Zuehlke ,,"ould like to see more&#13;
~tuden rei) on car is and&#13;
lnterclt,,· buses to allevlale the&#13;
parklllg Ituatloo&#13;
Par Side need additional&#13;
capital to bu) our own buses.&#13;
bu " and '''0 for candb) AI a&#13;
cost or $25. for a Twin Coach&#13;
L P gas model ",th capacIty of&#13;
31 and 3.000 for some OJ·&#13;
pa sen~er model&gt; the oroglOal&#13;
• L&#13;
J zz&#13;
h&#13;
The Parkside,--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
How many$ needed tor __ __&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown 1972-73&#13;
l 'nion Reserve .... . .. . ..... . . . .. .. .. .. . ..... $38.50&#13;
I .ecture &amp; Fine Arts ... . . . . .. .......... . ....... 2.00&#13;
Student Health .. ... ... .. .. ..... .. . .......... .. 2.00&#13;
Transportation &amp; Parking . . . .. . . ..... . ....... 18.00&#13;
\thletics ................ ... . . .. . ............ . . 9.00&#13;
Intra murals . ........ ... .. .. ............. .. ... 8.00&#13;
Stud!'nt Activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 8.50&#13;
~tudrnt Group Support .. . . .... . ..... . ........ 2.00&#13;
$88.00&#13;
Sumnwr Spssion (Union Reserve) . ... .. ...... $22.00&#13;
Apathy will help Nixon:&#13;
McGovern aide&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
Skip" Roberts, Deputy&#13;
Director of Congressional Liaison&#13;
for the McGovern campaign, was&#13;
in Wisconsin last week adc)re&#13;
ing various groups for the&#13;
enator.&#13;
Hoberts. former Director of the&#13;
Viet Nam Veterans Against the&#13;
War. and now on leave as&#13;
Director of the Labor-University&#13;
Alhance, addressed groups at&#13;
Dominican College and the&#13;
l rutarian Universalist Church in&#13;
Hacme , as well as a press conference&#13;
at the Racine McGovern&#13;
office IA meeting was scheduled&#13;
at Parkside, but never&#13;
materialized due to the apathy of the so-called "organizers," a&#13;
· Pokes man for the Racine&#13;
!\JcGovern office said.)&#13;
Referring to this apathy ,&#13;
Roberts attacked the general&#13;
apathy of the 18-24-year-old \Ol ers, long considered a ·tr&#13;
· onghold of the McGovern t'amp&#13;
. ':\lost 18-24-year-otd , oters are&#13;
~~? thetic ," aid Ro be r s&#13;
" 'r p .,o lor.ger re- cen-Ec!&#13;
about the war. and the economics&#13;
of the country usually doesn't&#13;
affect them. They are one~ ag~m&#13;
becoming the isolat1on1 t 111 -&#13;
te II igen ti a clique that th_ey&#13;
seemed to be in the early 19;,0&#13;
and 60s." • ·ew Roberts cited a recent&#13;
York Times poll which hO\\ed&#13;
that 55 percent of those interviewed&#13;
had not decided that&#13;
they would actually vote, de p1te&#13;
their preference in the&#13;
Presidential race. . . "It is this apathy which ma~.&#13;
defeat George l\IcGo~e rn ._&#13;
Roberts said . "and it I th1&#13;
apathy that Richard 'ixon I&#13;
counting on ."&#13;
Open House&#13;
Th University of Wisc_ons1~- e ed that 1t will Parkside announc . Oct&#13;
hold an open house Sunday_. . .&#13;
15 from noon till 5 P·1!1· V1s1tors&#13;
will have an opportunit)l.l to t~~~ . t Hall as we a Greenqu1s · . g Center L' brary-Learnm new 1 . 1 Education and the new Phys1ca&#13;
1(1 Illa"&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
0 972&#13;
n&#13;
•&#13;
ar &#13;
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed .• Oct. 11. 1971&#13;
ED TORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
new attitude&#13;
A new attlluOe seems to preval among many students&#13;
10 Ih e~lenl that they are willingtoparlicipate.&#13;
en Ihls paper first came out. it was weak. Now it&#13;
h S il larg staff of people with many interests. Some&#13;
c m 10 write, some are photographers. some wanted to&#13;
slid nd ome came down and just said they wanted&#13;
to h Ip&#13;
Th e people are forming something new and good. A&#13;
rvice 10 school and peers. the paper was created by&#13;
Ih m.&#13;
ow thai we are a going concern. we welcome all to&#13;
come 10 the ollice and loin us. There is greater strength&#13;
In grea ter numbers.&#13;
Id s 'or stor ies are always appreciated. The Ranger&#13;
will Iways seek to service this campus to the fullest of&#13;
Its journallsllc capabllllles.&#13;
It can be done....&#13;
The question of whether it would be possible to move&#13;
large amounts of people from the Phisical Education&#13;
Building has been answered. II can be done.&#13;
The Norman Mailer lecture was the test case. Appro~imalely&#13;
BOO people atfended. Seven buses were used&#13;
to bring people to the Athlelic Building from the parking&#13;
lot and a caravan of fourleen buses were stationed to&#13;
bring them back.&#13;
The reasoning behind the fourteen buses on the return&#13;
trip Is that at the end of a presentation. it is expected&#13;
Ihat everyone will run for a bus at the same lime. The&#13;
Mailer presentation was an exception with many of the&#13;
people filing out before Mailer was finished.&#13;
Even though people did not stream out of the building.&#13;
IIwas apparent that this method of transportation would&#13;
be adequate.&#13;
Access to Ihe parking lot was found to be the real&#13;
problem. Perhaps, in the future. more security ollicers&#13;
iII be provided so that some may assist in traffic&#13;
direcllon.&#13;
But ...&#13;
It must be realized that expanded use of the Physical&#13;
Educallon Building and the usage of the theatre portion&#13;
of the new Communication Arts Building in the spring&#13;
wi II require a new parking system.&#13;
The administration has recognized the parking&#13;
problem and has demonostrated its concern by asking&#13;
for a study to recommend placement of a new parking&#13;
facility. But fhls study will be considering the overall&#13;
parking problem and will not deal specifically with the&#13;
problems which will develop in the event of massive&#13;
crowds&#13;
On st.rn te shows the cost of moving 3.000 people to&#13;
nd trom the PhYSical Education Building would be&#13;
ppro Imil el 5500 Assuming ten buses were used. it IS&#13;
C cv ted ha the last audience member would leave&#13;
build ng pproxlma ely two and one na If hours afteconclus&#13;
on a the event&#13;
I h es lma s Me correct. and no one has thus far&#13;
prov n a her lse, he Ranger strongly urges that any&#13;
tu ure par ong area to be placed to facilitate the ex&#13;
pand d use of the PhYSical Education Bu'lding and the&#13;
v lual u of lhe new theatre.&#13;
The Ranger also recognizes that any future parking or&#13;
Ir nsportation must be funded by means other than&#13;
those presently available. We suggest that funds be&#13;
cotlected by some Iype of user fee which will be fair and&#13;
equitable to the total campus community: students.&#13;
'acuity and sfaff alike.&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
It seems we paid Norman Mailer $3175 for his appearance&#13;
here. That is a hell of a lot of money to&#13;
spend to hear him read his book. ItfIgures he should&#13;
have paid us to let him promote It Instead. ~or ~at&#13;
amount we could have bought 400 COpies of It. Eight&#13;
hundred people attended the lecture and 5900 was&#13;
collected at the door. It wasn't worth $2200 to have&#13;
lum autograph those library books. While th.e&#13;
following discussions were interestmg, they weren t&#13;
that interesting&#13;
Last Thursday and Friday someone dragged t~ee&#13;
sets of those steel filing shelves out int~ the re3:1nat&#13;
the library loading dock. After an overnight so~ourn&#13;
they were nice and rusty. Even af.ter higher&#13;
authority was consulted, they remained there&#13;
another four bours. Seems whoever orders the&#13;
furnishings has money to throwaway.&#13;
Two years ago one of the under-directors in the&#13;
finanCe office promised to install pencil sharpeners&#13;
In Greenquist Hall. Student Government finally had&#13;
to install a couple on its own. We could use some&#13;
more - and in the library. How about the clock for&#13;
Greenquist concourse - and another for Main&#13;
Place')&#13;
Certain campus police have been making rounds&#13;
through. the buildings during prime class ti:nes in&#13;
full uniforms with their guns hanging out. This does&#13;
tend to antagonize certain types of people, but it is&#13;
onJy temporary until the new blazers arrive. It&#13;
seems the old ones "wore ouL"&#13;
A lot. of students are still waiting on their grants&#13;
from the state. For those who needed the money&#13;
more than for just tuition, for which payment has&#13;
been delayed; until the money arrives they can&#13;
always go on welfare and blame the governor who is&#13;
trying to save the state money. Il's ridiculous when&#13;
you realize that these are just loans and the money&#13;
will be paid back.&#13;
You should be happy to learn that they are finally&#13;
putting labels on the lavatory doors. It is frustrating&#13;
to not know which is which, and trial and error could&#13;
be embarrassing. The writing on the walls at the&#13;
entrances to the locker rooms is so large that many&#13;
people don't notice it. A few have had interesting&#13;
experiences on entering the wrong one.&#13;
Student Government elections are in just three&#13;
weeks. They can't afford to pay the cost of handbill&#13;
printing for candidates. But anyone interested can&#13;
get their own for a cost of $1.35 for the first 50 and&#13;
$.35 for each additional 50 at Printing and&#13;
Duplicating in the Modulux Building.&#13;
Speaking of elections, it doesn't look like many will&#13;
run for the Student Union Committee. There isn't&#13;
much point in trying to get this area under student&#13;
advisement until the Parkside Activities Board is&#13;
abolished.&#13;
We get&#13;
letters ...&#13;
Dear Editor,&#13;
\\ e demand to be heard' sex&#13;
discrrrmnauon has gone far&#13;
enough at good ole Parkside ' We&#13;
are making reference to a&#13;
definite ne-cessity in the men s&#13;
locker room. \\ e realize that as a&#13;
rule. women do have more hair&#13;
however. some of us hav~&#13;
progressed from the Age of&#13;
Cre\l,cut to the Age at Aquaflus&#13;
and ~es. after many years, we.&#13;
too. have split ends. Halr does not&#13;
·eem to dryas quickly as It did 10&#13;
the Age of Crewcut. The point is&#13;
that women have hair dryers in&#13;
their locker room and as the&#13;
temperature drops and wet hair&#13;
freezes. and we would pretty&#13;
please like a hair dryer or two.&#13;
Two Wet Heads&#13;
A few of the present Student Senate have made&#13;
some remarks on the supposed mishandling of the&#13;
monetary Teacher of the Year awards. Seems that&#13;
even though there are an equal number of students&#13;
on the committee, these are hand picked and have&#13;
nothing to say about the method used In selection.&#13;
Just looking at the poor turnout last year shows thrs&#13;
has to change.&#13;
$10 a month is an awful lot of money to pay for a&#13;
telephone on campus.&#13;
Be careful if you answer that ad for research&#13;
materials. If you're caught submitting a paper not&#13;
your own, it could mean expulsion. A few people&#13;
here have already learned the hard way that&#13;
plagiarism doesn't pay. Use this service only for&#13;
research!&#13;
If you have a file cabinet in your office, there are&#13;
probably a lot of people with a key to it S-IOOseems&#13;
to be a prevalent lock on these.&#13;
A couple of staff members are considering an article&#13;
in the Nov, 1 issue on the national political&#13;
candidates. If you have anything you'd like to&#13;
mention -- pro or con .. drops us a line by OCt.21.&#13;
That library of ours is not only big, it's impressive.&#13;
In talking to Ken Herrick, Ilearned that the library&#13;
has 180,000 volumes including bound periodicals.&#13;
There are half a million cards in the card catalog,&#13;
and it is staffed by 90 people, including GO part-lime&#13;
students, and 30 Civil Service and academic personnel&#13;
including 13 professional librarians.&#13;
If you're waiting for the Student-Staff directory to&#13;
come out, you'll have to wait a little longer - till the&#13;
beginning of November.&#13;
The Archives is looking for copies from the back&#13;
issues of the previous student newspapers, The old&#13;
copy files from COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE&#13;
were deleted to nothing. If you have some eariy&#13;
issues that you forgot to throw out, take them to the&#13;
Archives or bring them to the newspaper office,&#13;
Touring below floors in the library can be an ex·&#13;
perience. There are a couple of rooms down there&#13;
which are nearly empty and together are about as&#13;
big as the Tallent Hall parking lot.&#13;
If you have something bothering you or a newsitem&#13;
too small to stretch into a full story, write and iet us&#13;
know about them. A black border around an article&#13;
sure attracts readers.&#13;
If you find yourself short of money, a good wayto&#13;
get hold of some is to solicit ads for the RANGER.&#13;
We pay 10 percent commission and a telephone can&#13;
do most of your work for you. Stop on by D-I94and&#13;
find out about it.&#13;
If you're one of those glory hounds who might like&#13;
the idea of seeing your name in print, why not let us&#13;
know about it. The pay isn't too great, but you getto&#13;
meet a lot of interesting people.&#13;
!"Jf:.The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parks ide Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Kenosha. Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at 0-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the officiai view of the University 0'&#13;
W,sconsin- Perkside.&#13;
EDITORS '-\:&gt;:0 WRITERS, Rudv Lienau Geoff Blaesmg. Kns Ko('h.&#13;
~Iath~ \\'ellner, Ken Konkol. Jea~nine Sip'sma Shawn Clements. Dalr&#13;
1\ artm T p ,&#13;
, om etersen, Marilyn Schubert. Dave Reyher&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pe;tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
-"~·---:.R-E-PR-E-S-EN":"TE-D"':"fO-R-N-A-T-'O-N-AL-A-O-V-ER-T-1-SI-N-G-.-Y---1 T National Educational Advertising Services,lnc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y, 10017 -&#13;
'2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
But ...&#13;
R LS/ OPI&#13;
itu&#13;
t ing ne and good. A&#13;
as crea ed by&#13;
done ....&#13;
parking lo as found to be the real&#13;
ps, In the future, more security officers&#13;
d so ha some may assist in traffic&#13;
I mu b r allzed that expanded use of the Physical&#13;
on Building and the usage of the theatre portion&#13;
Communic tlon Ar s Building in the spring&#13;
uir n par Ing system.&#13;
dmini r on has recognized the parking&#13;
nd d monostrated its concern by asking&#13;
commend placement of a ne parking&#13;
udy Ill be considering he overall&#13;
nd ill no deal specifically with the&#13;
1ll d v lop in e e en of massive&#13;
IO s&#13;
THORN&#13;
Sy Konkol&#13;
Tu o , ars ago one of the under-directors m the&#13;
finance offic promi ed to in tall pencil harpeners&#13;
in G nqw t Hall tudent Go ernment finally had&#13;
to in tall a couple on it own. \! e could use some&#13;
more - and in the librarv. How about the clock for&#13;
G qw t concourse :.. and another for Main&#13;
Place"&#13;
ertam camp police ha e been making rounds&#13;
through the building during prime class times in&#13;
full uniform "'1th their gun hanging out. This does&#13;
tend to antagoruze certain types of people, but it is&#13;
only temporary until the new blazers arrive. It&#13;
eems the old ones "wore out •·&#13;
lot of tud nt are till waiting on their grants&#13;
from the tale. For th e who needed the money&#13;
more than for just tuition, for which payment has&#13;
been d layed: until the money arrives they can&#13;
alway go on welfare and blame the governor who is&#13;
trying to save the tale money. It's ridiculous when&#13;
you realize that these are ju t loan and the money&#13;
will be paid back.&#13;
You hould be happy to learn that they are finally&#13;
putting labels on the lavator doors. It is frustrating&#13;
to not know"' h1ch is which, and trial and error could&#13;
be embarra ing. The writing on the walls at the&#13;
entrances to the locker rooms is so large that many&#13;
people don't notice it. A few have had interesting&#13;
experiences on entering the wrong one.&#13;
udent Government elections are in just three&#13;
. They can't afford to pay the cost of handbill&#13;
pnnting for candidates. But anyone interested can&#13;
et their own for a cost of $1.35 for the first 50 and&#13;
. 35 for each additional 50 at Printing and&#13;
Duplicating in the :l.odulux Building.&#13;
peaking of elections, it doesn't look like many will&#13;
run for the tudent nion Committee. There isn't&#13;
much point m trying to get this area under student&#13;
advisement until the Parkside Activities Board is&#13;
aboh hed.&#13;
A re ..... of the present Student enate have made&#13;
·ome remarks on the supposed m1shandlmg of lhe&#13;
monetary Teacher of the Year awards. eems that&#13;
even though there are an equal number of Ludent.,&#13;
on the committee. these are hand picked and hav&#13;
nothing to say about the method used m select10&#13;
Just looking at the poor turnout la t year how lh1.&#13;
has to change.&#13;
10 a month is an awful lot of money to pay for&#13;
telephone on campus.&#13;
Be careful if you answer that ad for re earch&#13;
materials. If you're caught submitting a pap r not&#13;
your own, it could mean expulsion. A few people&#13;
here have already learned the hard way that&#13;
plagiarism doesn't pay . Use this service only for&#13;
research!&#13;
If you have a file cabinet in your office, there are&#13;
probably a lot of people with a key to it. S-100 eem&#13;
to be a prevalent lock on these.&#13;
A couple of staff members are considering an article&#13;
in the Nov. 1 issue on the national political&#13;
candidates. If you have anything you'd like Lo&#13;
mention -- pro or con -- drops us a line by Oct. 21.&#13;
That library of ours is not only big, it's impressive.&#13;
In talking to Ken Herrick, I learned that the library&#13;
has 180,000 volumes including bound periodicals&#13;
There are half a million cards in the card catalog,&#13;
and it is staffed by 90 people, including 60 part-time&#13;
students, and 30 Civil Service and academic personnel&#13;
including 13 professional librarians.&#13;
If you're waiting for the Student-Staff directory to&#13;
come out, you'll have to wait a little longer -- till the&#13;
beginning of November.&#13;
The Archives is looking for copies from the back&#13;
issues of the previous student newspapers. The old&#13;
copy files from COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE&#13;
were deleted to nothing. If you have some early&#13;
issues that you forgot to throw out, take them to the&#13;
Archives or bring them to the newspaper office.&#13;
Touring below floors in the library can be an experience.&#13;
There are a couple of rooms down there&#13;
which are nearly empty and together are about as&#13;
big as the Tallent Hall parking lot.&#13;
If you have something bothering you or a news item&#13;
too small to stretch into a full story, write and !el us&#13;
know about them. A black border around an article&#13;
sure attracts readers .&#13;
If you find yourself short of money, a good way to&#13;
get hold of some is to solicit ads for the RANGER .&#13;
We pay 10 percent commission and a telephone can&#13;
do most of your work for you. Stop on by D-194 and&#13;
find out about it.&#13;
If you're one of those glory hounds who might like&#13;
the idea of seeing your name in print, why not let us&#13;
know about it. The pay isn't too great, but you get Lo&#13;
meet a lot of interesting people.&#13;
We get&#13;
letters ...&#13;
\,fr.. The ParkskJe -&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin .&#13;
Offices are located at D-194 Libr ary-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553_2295_&#13;
~he Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are no&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University or&#13;
W sco'1sin- Parkside&#13;
f.:DITORS \ D \\HITERS: Hudv L1enau Geoff Blaesmg Km Koch&#13;
Kath \\ 11 • , · · • I&gt; le ·. c mr Ken Konkol, Jeannme Sip ·ma Shawn Clement:,. a '.\lartm To p · · · m etersen. Marilyn Schubert Dave Reyhe1&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pe;tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: F red Lawrence ADVISOR : Don Kopriva&#13;
w· ,llEPR.ESENTED FOR. NATIONAL ADVER.TISING BY I National Educational Advertising Services, Inc,&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 &#13;
Wed .• Oct. 11, 1972 THE PARKS IDE RANGER 3&#13;
poet James Liddy&#13;
return's to Parkside&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy has returned to Th&#13;
University of "':isconsin-Parkside campus for the&#13;
1972-73 academic year as a visiting professor ef&#13;
EnglIs'h .&#13;
0&#13;
Liddy, who has held facu~ty posts at San Francisco&#13;
State College, St~te Umversity of New York at&#13;
Bingham~on, l!mverslty C?llege DUblin, Lewis and&#13;
Clark University and Denison University, spent a&#13;
week as a guest lecturer at Parkside in March 1971&#13;
Liddy is the author of five books of poetry. Hi~&#13;
poems have appeared in "The Dolmen Review of&#13;
Irish Writing," The New York Times' "Today"&#13;
"The Kil~enn.y Magazine," The Irish Press a~d&#13;
other publications, and have been reprinted in "The&#13;
Penguin Book of Irish Verse," "New Poets of&#13;
Ireland" and "Drumbook."&#13;
He has presented poetry readings at The San&#13;
Francisco ~oetry Corner, t~e International Poetry&#13;
Forum of Pittsburgh, The Irish Embassy in London&#13;
and at a number of colleges and universities in&#13;
Ireland and the U.S.&#13;
Liddy received his bachelor's and master's&#13;
degrees at University College Dublin and barrister&#13;
at law at Kings Inns Dublin.&#13;
BLUE HOUSE&#13;
PREFERABLY CHINESE&#13;
Wearing the masks of dead poets&#13;
They crave the butterfly immortality of circulation:&#13;
The dinginess of their methods hurts me.&#13;
I would not like to waste my tiny legacy of energy&#13;
Seeing the letters of my name headlined&#13;
And my nervous photograph printed&#13;
(I have not the temperament for politics&gt;.&#13;
It fatigues me a lot to contemplate the industry&#13;
Of those who do not hear life's message&#13;
Of eternal unimportance.&#13;
The poet should be a gentleman&#13;
Preferably Chinese:&#13;
I would prefer to retire to riverbanks and walks&#13;
Asking with a prayer through the senses&#13;
To be released from Effort&#13;
Finding gay and courageous friends&#13;
And being generous with time which we call love.&#13;
- James Liddy&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
By Tom Petersen&#13;
Not knowing exactly what tYJ&gt;E:of artic,le I was&#13;
going to do, I set out in pursuit of mformah?n about&#13;
our poet in residence, James Liddy, My fIrst stop&#13;
was Stella Grey's office, and she suggested that I&#13;
speak to Dr. Liddy himself. Next Iwas at the LLC&#13;
where his office is located and, fmdmg myself on ~e&#13;
second floor, realized 1 had forg~tten his off~ce&#13;
number Back to the main desk. WhIle I was askmg&#13;
for the I~ation of his office, the librarian informed&#13;
me that Dr, Liddy was standing beside me: What&#13;
follows is sort of an impromptu interview, WIth Dr.&#13;
Liddy and me making up the questions as we went&#13;
.. l' t" I wasn't sure along. Being a "rookIe Journa IS , , w he&#13;
where to begin, so I started off by asking ho&#13;
came to Parkside. . .&#13;
LIDDY: I always go to a good school that inVites&#13;
me to be their poet in residence. . e&#13;
RANGER: What do you think of Parkslde. th&#13;
school and the students'? . 'te&#13;
LIDDY: As to the buildings, the LLC. IS ~~re&#13;
beautiful enough space to dream or, If Y&#13;
• . A to the students, recreational to speculate m. s b t th y&#13;
American kids are the nicest in the world, U he&#13;
f t· of the teac er, aren't always awake. The unc Ion k&#13;
specifically of the writer, is to keep them a;a .~&#13;
The life at Parkside seems to start slowly bu WI d&#13;
winter coming it will probably become :ar~al~n a&#13;
lively, I notice about the students that t ~y from&#13;
lot which is probably explained by commg&#13;
, . . Wch Norman such a nice place as Wlsconsm, Wit&#13;
"the p easan Mailer referred to last Sunday as&#13;
country north of Chicago." lawyer'&#13;
RANGER: You said you were once a ,&#13;
were you also writing then'? . ba k with my&#13;
LIDDY' Yes and now lookmg c, " . t the expense awful Irish guilt, perhaps sometImes a&#13;
of my clients. h did you&#13;
RANGER: From lawyer to teacher -- w y&#13;
make lhe change? " d own in a&#13;
LIDDY: Well, one morning In wig ~n ,g the' high&#13;
Probate molion before Justice Dawltt 10 ore than&#13;
court, I thought: I ar:n io:portant, I.h~~ek~ut, I will&#13;
the people in this affidaVIt. If I don.t the Dublin&#13;
be only a lawyer. Then I looked ou; ;Omight.l The&#13;
sky. II won't say I heard VOIces, bu d So I&#13;
d&#13;
k the real wor s. message was, go away an see told to get at&#13;
was chosen, and by that I mean I w~s, adequate&#13;
the hard work necessary for wTltmg&#13;
Poet Janes Liddy (left) ond Parkside's Herb ubly.&#13;
poems in book sequence. I behev the boo IS th&#13;
basisofpoelr)·. not the mdivtdual poem SolO earn a&#13;
living, while mvolved In the truggle (or boo ,I&#13;
turned to teaching.&#13;
RA."GER· Asa poet. h"" do)ou r IIOU benetlt&#13;
(rom your teaching'!&#13;
LIDDY' There is a contro\"eTS) a 10 ""bether&#13;
poets benefit from teaching Jolin Berryman IQ h&#13;
Paris Re-\ iew interview said thai poets get noth~&#13;
from creative wrtung I don't necessarily agree&#13;
with this. One doesn't ....mte poems JUSt (or oneself&#13;
one \\ rites for the commwlIc} of dead poets and&#13;
those to come, I notice In my wnung cia thai&#13;
there are alway one or two poets I can reall) help.&#13;
the others get caught up ",th the excitement. and&#13;
their writing gets better. tn my v.TlU~ da I&#13;
usually end up forgetling ml II&#13;
RANGER· I noticed tha, lOU have a COPI 0( th&#13;
Playboy interview ..nth Bernadette Devlin What&#13;
are yoer feeling or the Iwauon LO'reland"&#13;
LIDDY, Ac'uall)' I'm ha\"lng a groop In my cia&#13;
study this interview They haven't reponed ~et.but&#13;
my vie .....is clear, Bernadette 15 a herome-. a Joan of&#13;
Arc for the mrocntv In •·orth~ Ireland I upport&#13;
the official I RA more than the PI'O\' lonall R 1\ •&#13;
but I go along Withmost O("hat both "In do The&#13;
cause is for the unity of ireland, the- sameAbraham&#13;
Lincoln's cause In the O\·iJ war here&#13;
Americans seem to forget thai they ov.e- their&#13;
country to fighting KIng George In In6 I also&#13;
believe in the SOClaJ In.tggle (or a beuer e. i.tenee&#13;
in all Ireland&#13;
RANGER· Have you e'er had an)&#13;
periences "Ith the \'1olence that has&#13;
Ireland?&#13;
LIDDY' . 'one dIr"'~1 There ISn·' much actl\ .t)&#13;
where I live. I do bu) the matenal lht I R A&#13;
distributes, and I otherv.'ise contnbule But II' an&#13;
emotIOnal thing basically: )ou·d be surpnsed h""&#13;
many people in Ireland don't e\'en M\'e that&#13;
RANGER, Gelling back 1O lour wnling. do)ou&#13;
ever do work for magaun .,&#13;
LIDDY Yes.laJ"a) ha"e had the urge 1Oedit I&#13;
did \re-na 10 Ireland and 1"10\11 I ha\f" • n&#13;
magazme there. The Plei d ,&#13;
RA. ·GER Ho" do IOU f",,1 about lour poetr).&#13;
what are you tr)'lng toexpre In .)our TltJ"8"&#13;
LIDDY IbelI",e ml poelT)'I "hal poetr)&#13;
00- a relIgiOUSart , ot lhal poets are qwt pn&#13;
but the\ are sen'an Thf!" UN\ 1 Cull of&#13;
messages The poet' bu. In I. to walt fer them&#13;
and decode them Tlu. is ne, r fully Ie. "&#13;
do not qulLekno" "hal IShappenln In m) poelT) I&#13;
locate places and ex nen "'Nch contain t&#13;
inviSible- re\'elatIOfb. but hk am nina n Job In a&#13;
\Ioarehouse.1 am not urewhere t\er)thl or&#13;
even came (rom Ido nO\lo m~ poem art' not JU t&#13;
m~ busm nor the audience'.&#13;
rsonal e&#13;
ep throo&#13;
BENEFIT ROCK CONCERT ................. FOR .&#13;
GEORGE McGOVERN .......................&#13;
October 13, 1972&#13;
Racine Labor Center 7 P.M,&#13;
2300 Layard Ave. 'til Midnight&#13;
5 solid hours of&#13;
Country Jf.. Old Rock .. Now Rock&#13;
Donation: sl at door&#13;
J 08 OPPORTU ITY&#13;
String r needed for&#13;
W ZN- Z8 to r port&#13;
by 6 a.m. Mon.-Sat.&#13;
on enesha poll ee , Iir&#13;
&amp;. sheri ff. Poy on hourly&#13;
bosis. Must be rellabl&#13;
Call Fronk Falduta at&#13;
658-2055 before II a.m.&#13;
CHECKIM;&#13;
IS&#13;
AT fllST ullom&#13;
Of IACIIE&#13;
• II .ili.l.&#13;
~ilmerI~llrd&#13;
• Mo Ii.it 10 th&#13;
1I.~tr.f eheks&#13;
'01 writl&#13;
AT FIIST Ullom&#13;
OF UCIME&#13;
AT FIIST UTIOUL&#13;
OF UCIME&#13;
Opu ,au free checkilr&#13;
iCCOIAt SOOI it&#13;
First ational Bank&#13;
a.nd. Trust Company of Racl.n&#13;
---- -'- --&#13;
500WISCOISil hi. belli&#13;
ed., Oct. I , 72 TH PARK ID RA G&#13;
Poet James Liddy&#13;
return·s to Parkside&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy has ret&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside urned to The&#13;
1972-73 academic year as a visit' campus for the&#13;
English. mg professor of&#13;
Liddy, who has held faculty st&#13;
cisco State College, State Univer~t st~ San FranBinghamton,&#13;
University College Dy ir ew Y?rk at&#13;
Clark University and Denison Uru_u 10., Lewis and vers1ty sp t week as a guest lecturer at Parksid . M ' en a Liddy is the author of five boo/ 10f arch, 1971.&#13;
poems have appeared in "The D ~ o poetrt His&#13;
Irish Writing," The New York ~-men, ~.ev1ew of&#13;
"The Kilkenny Magazine " The ;n_ies Today,"&#13;
other publications, and ha~e been r ns~ Press and . eprmted in "Th&#13;
Pengum Book of Irish Verse" "N e Ireland" and "Drum book." ' ew Poets of&#13;
He has presented poetry readi&#13;
Francisco Poetry Corner the lnte ngs/t The San&#13;
Forum of Pittsburgh, Th~ Irish E;~:s~on_al Poetry&#13;
and at a number of colleges and .YID ~nd~n&#13;
Ireland and the U.S. uruvers1bes ID&#13;
Liddy received his bachelor's d&#13;
degrees at University College Dublina;nd ;:ias~er's at law at Kings Inns Dublin. arnster&#13;
BLUE HOUSE&#13;
PREFERABL y CHINESE&#13;
Wearing the masks of dead poets&#13;
They ~ra~e the butterfly immortality of circulation.&#13;
The d1Dg1Dess of their methods hurts ·&#13;
I w~uld not like to waste my tiny Jega;e~f ener Seemg the letters of my name headlined gy&#13;
And my nervous photograph printed&#13;
(I ha_ve not the temperament for politics).&#13;
It fatigues me a lot to contemplate the industry&#13;
Of those who do not hear life's message&#13;
Of eternal unimportance.&#13;
The poet should be a gentleman&#13;
Preferably Chinese:&#13;
I wo_uld pr:efer to retire to riverbanks and walks&#13;
Askmg with a prayer through the senses&#13;
To be released from Effort&#13;
Finding gay and courageous friends&#13;
And being generous with time which we call love.&#13;
-- James Liddy&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
By Tom Petersen&#13;
ot knowing exactly what type of article I was&#13;
going to do, I set out in pursuit of information about&#13;
our poet in residence, James Liddy. My first stop&#13;
was Stella Grey's office, and she suggested that I&#13;
speak to Dr. Liddy himself. Next I was at the LLC&#13;
where his office is located and, finding myself on the&#13;
second floor, realized I had forgotten his office&#13;
number. Back to the main desk. While I was asking&#13;
for the location of his office, the librarian informed&#13;
me that Dr. Liddy was standing beside me. What&#13;
follows is sort of an impromptu interview, with Dr.&#13;
Liddy and me making up the questions as we went&#13;
along. Being a "rookie journalist," I wasn't sure&#13;
where to begin, so I started off by asking how he&#13;
came to Parkside. LIDDY: I always go to a good school that invites&#13;
me to be their poet in residence. RANGER: What do you think of Parkside, the&#13;
school and the students?&#13;
LIDDY: As to the buildings, the LLC is quite&#13;
beautiful, enough space to dream or, if you're&#13;
recreational, to speculate in. As to the students,&#13;
American kids are the nicest in the world, but they&#13;
aren't always awake. The function of the teacher,&#13;
specifically of the writer, is to keep them awake.&#13;
The life at Parkside seems to start slowly but with&#13;
winter coming it will probably become warm and&#13;
lively. I notice about the students that they talk a&#13;
lot, which is probably explained by coming from&#13;
such a nice place as Wisconsin, which orman Mailer referred to last Sunday as "the pleasant&#13;
country north of Chicago."&#13;
RANGER: You said you were once a lawyer:&#13;
were you also writing then?&#13;
LIDDY : Yes, and now looking back, with my&#13;
awful Irish guilt, perhaps sometimes at the expen e&#13;
of my clients. RANGER: From lawyer to teacher -- why did you&#13;
make the change? . LIDDY: Well, one morning in wig and gown, 1~ a&#13;
Probate motion before Justice Dawitt in the high&#13;
court, I thought: I am important, I have more th~n&#13;
the people in this affidavit. If I don'.t look out. I will&#13;
be only a lawyer. Then I looked out to 1!1e Dublin&#13;
sky. (l won't say I heard voices, but I m1ghU The&#13;
message was, go away and seek the real words. So I&#13;
was chosen, and by that I mean I was told to get at&#13;
the hard work necessary for writing adequate&#13;
Poet JCJTies Liddy (left) and Par&#13;
BENEFIT ROCK CONCERT ...................... FOR • •&#13;
GEORGE McGOVERN .................&#13;
October 13, 1972&#13;
Racine Labor Center 7 P.&#13;
2300 Layard Ave. til idnight&#13;
5 solid hours of&#13;
Country ~ Old Rock • o&#13;
Donation: s1 at door&#13;
Au P&lt;I !or&#13;
Rock&#13;
AL&#13;
•&#13;
1rd&#13;
• I II tt t t I&#13;
• er 1f c tc s&#13;
J I rift&#13;
CHECKI G&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST TIO AL&#13;
OF ACI E&#13;
0 e yo r free c ec i&#13;
acco t so at &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
New buildings on display at Open House&#13;
The new buildings on The&#13;
Umv nit)" of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
campu will be on public display&#13;
for tbe lirst lime durmg a public&#13;
Open House unday. Oct IS,&#13;
from noon to 5 p m&#13;
Thou nd of vi uors are expected&#13;
to tour the 700·acre&#13;
mpu. with major attention&#13;
tocu mg on the three new&#13;
hulldll'lt. the rna rve LibraryLe&#13;
mlng enter. with Its muchd1SCU..&#13;
d lain Place. the&#13;
Ph)' ical Education Buildmg.&#13;
nd the H bng hilhng Plant,&#13;
lh eentr tiled campu utilities&#13;
lit triblltion center&#13;
Other campus bUlldongs also&#13;
will b open. including&#13;
r nqUl t and Tall nt Halls,&#13;
which opened on fall of 1969, and&#13;
the envmes BUlldmR which 1&#13;
the 1 mporary campus union .&#13;
Th hrst Wop pen Hou e, on&#13;
. prtn of 1970 horUy arter the&#13;
new mpus opened. attracted&#13;
ohout 5. persons d pue an allday&#13;
ra rn Another 2.500 a tte~ed&#13;
th econd the follow lng pnng&#13;
I pla)' and exhrbiuons will be&#13;
f.. tured In all bUlldlOgs, meluding&#13;
computer demontrau&#13;
,lab lit pia" and art&#13;
exhibIts In reenqui tHall,&#13;
p erat mtm-tour s. demonlraUon&#13;
of the latest m learnong&#13;
m tenal and equIpment. and&#13;
_ lit pia 10 the Library'&#13;
Learning Center. and demon·&#13;
tratlons of various sports,&#13;
recreational activities, special&#13;
equipment and even a Pep Band&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
BulldlOg&#13;
In addition. the Parkside&#13;
Baroque Players will present&#13;
concerts at 1'30 p.m and 3 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist Hall auditorium&#13;
103&#13;
A special service for parents&#13;
will be a "Kiddie Korral" child&#13;
care center in Tallent Hall for&#13;
live year olds and up, featuring&#13;
cartoon rtIms and ref"'5hments&#13;
to entertain the children who do&#13;
not care to accompany their&#13;
parents through the huildings.&#13;
Vi itors also will be able to see&#13;
two other major buildings well&#13;
along in construction: the&#13;
Communication Arts Building,&#13;
!cheduled for occupancy In early&#13;
pring 1973~ and a Classroom&#13;
Building, scheduled for completion&#13;
next September.&#13;
If-guiding tour Oyers wtll&#13;
uggest routes and activities and&#13;
provide special information on&#13;
the campus and its facilities.&#13;
They will be available at the&#13;
starting POints in the parking lots&#13;
and at information stops.&#13;
Parking will be in TaUent&#13;
Hall'. two parking lots. with&#13;
continuou shuttle bus service&#13;
from there around the loop road&#13;
~ hich encircles the central&#13;
academic rea ufficient buses&#13;
w,lI be on dul)' SO that one wtll&#13;
always be In sight and waits&#13;
should not exceed two or three&#13;
minutes Walking distances from&#13;
the lots to the main building area&#13;
range from one-third of a mile to&#13;
a mile. Mulllple buses will begin&#13;
nmnllll at 11'45 a m&#13;
S. says th VA...&#13;
'SHC)R£. Not ...:7rIFY n-( VA&#13;
OF "'ClAE E'N ADORESS&#13;
WIo\&amp;J "lO' LANOS.-:;"'&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
I I/JrI'_to&#13;
,&#13;
,.----. .. _"'A .....&#13;
,-IJDI "-_-,._"'-~ /'I'll -.__,._1; ...&#13;
Building projects and site&#13;
developrnent work totaling&#13;
nearly $30 million has been&#13;
completed or is nearing cornplelion&#13;
on the W·P campus&#13;
mce It opened to its first&#13;
students in eptember 1969. An&#13;
additional $6 million In projects,&#13;
IOcluding a permanent Campus&#13;
Umon and a Ph) ical Plant&#13;
facility, have been funded and&#13;
are in design and planning&#13;
tages. The UW ystem Board of&#13;
Regents recently recommended&#13;
a $3.1 million School of Modem&#13;
Industry Building for Parks ide&#13;
during the 1973-75 biennium.&#13;
Uw-Parkside is located in&#13;
northern Keno ha County adjacent&#13;
to Petrifying Springs Park&#13;
between Kenosha and Racme.&#13;
bordered on the west by Hwy. 31.&#13;
on the north and south by county&#13;
roads A and E and On the east by&#13;
Wood Rd. (30th Ave.). County E&#13;
exits from Interstate 94. TaUent&#13;
Hall parking lots are entered&#13;
(rom Wood Rd. and County A.&#13;
Workshop&#13;
planned&#13;
A study skills workshop will be&#13;
conducted (or students at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Oct. 16, 18,23.25 and Nov. 1 by the&#13;
tudent Counseling Services&#13;
staff. Workshop sessions will be&#13;
In Room D-I89 of the LibraryLearning&#13;
Center.&#13;
The sessions open to all&#13;
Parkside students. will cover&#13;
topics including note-taking.&#13;
preparation of themes and&#13;
research papers, reading and&#13;
taking exammations.&#13;
The workshop sessions are&#13;
patterned after a successful&#13;
study skills "pilot" program held&#13;
last summer&#13;
CIa)' Barnard of the Student&#13;
Counseling staff sa ',~ October&#13;
was chosen for tiie ~'5ions&#13;
because most students wiH have&#13;
completed six-week&#13;
examinations and wiH be able to&#13;
determine whether they need.&#13;
help with study sl&lt;iJls.&#13;
Marines interview here&#13;
MILWA KEE- The Mari~e&#13;
Corps Officer sel~tion T~am ~i1l&#13;
visit The University of wlscons~nParkside&#13;
Oct. 11 and 12 to l~-&#13;
terview students interested m&#13;
becoming commissioned officer.s.&#13;
The Officer Selection Team WIll&#13;
be located m the Student Activities&#13;
Building to provide .information&#13;
pertaining to ~ar1ne&#13;
Officer Programs, according to&#13;
Capt. D. M. BU~koveetz, the&#13;
Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Officer.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
programs leading to. a commission&#13;
as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • VS. •&#13;
•&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
•&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Saturday, October 28 •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• $10 (Includes Bus. •&#13;
• Continental Breakfast, •&#13;
: $6 Game Ticket) :&#13;
• •&#13;
••&#13;
TICKETS IYAILABlE&#13;
••&#13;
: INFORMATION OffiCE :&#13;
• '202 TALLENT HALL • ••••••••••••••••&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average. pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualified and have the&#13;
leadership potential required of a&#13;
Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs are&#13;
open to highly qualified students,&#13;
Woman Officer Programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
Regents&#13;
accept grant&#13;
MADISON .. Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
Friday accepted a federal grant&#13;
of $5,493 in support of the Law&#13;
Enforcement EducatIon&#13;
Program (LEEP) at UW·&#13;
Parkside. The funds are part of&#13;
the $7,800 approved by the U.S&#13;
Department of Justice for the&#13;
first semester LEEP program at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
LEEP grants pay tuition for&#13;
local law enforcement officers&#13;
who wish to further their&#13;
education in job-related courses&#13;
while pursuing their careers.&#13;
VISIT&#13;
THE DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
CAMPUS CLOTHES.••... .FOR MEN&#13;
Try Us..•..••••..••• .You'lI Like Us!!!&#13;
STUDENT 10% DISCOUNT&#13;
This special discount is offered to Park-side students on all Bell's, regular&#13;
priced merchandise. Coupon must be presented al time of sale with I.D&#13;
BELL'S DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
offer expires Nov. 3D, 1972&#13;
~&#13;
come in and browse ...&#13;
CLOTHING BELL HOUSE&#13;
Downtown I Kenosha&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET !'If:. The P"'k&amp;ide_~ __&#13;
RANGER&#13;
" t pSS ...&#13;
hey kid! I&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who is a scrite lor a local d~j~1&#13;
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportunities for guys and dolls on~agcllance&#13;
over tile country. He says tllere is a real hot future In the newspaper racket a Id&#13;
to make some decent scratch, wllile maybe puttmg Ihe arm on some of the Ills of 0 k a\\'&#13;
terra tirma. With a high-class monicker like Waldo you can not help but have tile real n&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker' Check it out."&#13;
T~@obo.'e R'H'lvone"" 100.. ly ".",I",od, mean,&#13;
'he "me ~a, no.e, he." he"o, '~an now '0 get&#13;
,"to an .. «ling c.,ce, H'llou,nol"m&#13;
Fo, I, •• ",Io,ma"on abou, lou,nal"n' &lt;a,.e,', 3n&lt;l&#13;
",hola,'h,p" w", •• o T~e New,c.po, F,,,,&lt;l. P 0&#13;
Bo. 300, Pnnce,on. New Je, .. y 08540 Also&#13;
Contac, yom locol new,pop." and yo", ,ehool&#13;
new,pope, odVl'•• ,&#13;
the swift Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to t"&#13;
or the battle always to the strong _ but it's a good way to be .&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
ew buildings on display at Open House&#13;
Marines interview here&#13;
Regents&#13;
accept grant&#13;
MADISON -- Regents of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
Friday accepted a federal grant&#13;
of $5,493 in support of the Law&#13;
Enforcement Education&#13;
Program (LEEP &gt; at WParkside.&#13;
The funds are part of&#13;
the $7,800 approved by the U.&#13;
Department of Justice for the&#13;
first semester LEEP program at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
ork hop&#13;
planned&#13;
A ·tudy kills wor k hop will be&#13;
conducted for tudents at The&#13;
niver ity of Wi consin-Parkside&#13;
t 16. 18, 23. 25 and ov. 1 by the&#13;
tudent Coun ehng ervices&#13;
tare Workshop es ions will be&#13;
in Room D-189 of the LibraryLearning&#13;
Cen er.&#13;
The e io open to all&#13;
Park ide tudents. will cover&#13;
topic includ ing note-taking,&#13;
prepara tion of theme and&#13;
r earch papers, reading and&#13;
taking examination&#13;
Th workshop se ion are&#13;
patte rned a fter a uccessful&#13;
tud) kill • pilot" program held&#13;
I t 1mm r&#13;
ay Barnard of the tudent&#13;
oun ling taff · ctober&#13;
\ a cho en for ,.. ior&#13;
because most tudents ha\'e&#13;
co mpleted ix eek&#13;
examina tion and will be able to&#13;
determine whether they need&#13;
help with tud) kills&#13;
11 w \ 'KEE- The 'Iarine&#13;
Corp fficer Selection T~am v.:m&#13;
vi it The ·niver ity of Wt cons~nPark&#13;
ide Oct. 11 and 12 to L~-&#13;
ter\'iey, tudent intere led ID&#13;
becoming commis ioned officer_s&#13;
The Officer Selection Team will&#13;
be located ID the Student Activities&#13;
Building to provide _informa&#13;
tion pertaining to Manne&#13;
Officer Programs, according to&#13;
Capt. D. i. Buckoveetz, ~ e&#13;
1arine Corps Officer election&#13;
om er.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
program leading to . a commi&#13;
ion as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • vs. • •&#13;
• •&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Saturday, October 28 •&#13;
• • • • • $10 (Includes Bus •&#13;
• Continental Breakfast, •&#13;
: $6 Game Ticket) :&#13;
• • •&#13;
e TICKETS AVAILABLE •&#13;
e&#13;
: INFOR ATION OFFICE :&#13;
e 202 TALLENT HALL e&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
:\Iember F.D.I.C.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average, pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualifi~d and ~ave the&#13;
leadership potential reqwred of a&#13;
Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer Programs are&#13;
open to highly qualified students.&#13;
Woman Officer Programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
LEEP grants pay tuition for&#13;
local Jaw enforcement officer&#13;
who wish to further their&#13;
education in job-related courses&#13;
while pursuing their careers&#13;
v~~l DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
CAMPUS CLOTHES ....... FOR MEN&#13;
Try Us ............... You'll Like Us!!!&#13;
STUDENT 10 % DISCOUNT This spec ia l d iscount i s offered to Par kside students on all Bell 's, regular&#13;
priced merchandise. Coupon must be presented at lime of sa le w ith 1. 0&#13;
BELL 'S DOWNUNDER SHOP&#13;
offer expires Nov. 30, 1972&#13;
come in and browse ...&#13;
CLOTHING BELL HOUSE&#13;
Downtown / Kenosha&#13;
'' pss t ...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
I hear it most reliably from a pal, Waldo Winchester, who is a scribe for a loc al dail~I&#13;
sheet. Well, Waldo says there are yards of opportunities for guys and dol ls on rags a ce&#13;
over the country. He says there is a real hot future in the newspaper racket - a th~~&#13;
to make some decent scratch, while maybe putting the arm on some of the ills of : kn•~&#13;
terra firma. With a high-class monicker like Waldo you can not help but have th e rea&#13;
Take a tip from Hot Horse Herbie ... "do not be one·&#13;
hundred percent a sucker! Check it out."&#13;
The above Runyonese, loo sely transla ted . means&#13;
the t,me has never been betlet than n ow to get&#13;
mto an exc,1In9 career in Iournal1sm&#13;
For free m1 o rmat,on about J0urnahsm ca, eers and&#13;
scholarships, write to The Newspaper Fund. P 0&#13;
Bo1t 300, Princeton. New Jersey 08540 Also&#13;
contact your local newspaper and your school&#13;
newspaper advise,&#13;
the swift Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to t ,,&#13;
or the battle always to the strong- but it's a good way to be ·&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
t~Ak,..,N __ G_ E_ R_ &#13;
. '. ,&#13;
, ,&#13;
North -South Exchange I&#13;
panned&#13;
BYJeannjne Sip sma&#13;
J Croxford is a student from&#13;
pa;;side who participated in the&#13;
North.South Exchange Program.&#13;
This program ~llow~d him to&#13;
tt nd a prirnari ly black&#13;
a u~hern University, North&#13;
~~rolina Central University, for&#13;
the second semester of the 1968·69&#13;
school year.&#13;
As to how he felt on the first&#13;
day, he said it was kind of strange&#13;
and that the ten students from&#13;
Wisconsin sort of stuck together.&#13;
"To begin with, there is a&#13;
definite color distinction and you&#13;
reel kind of lost and out of place,&#13;
but once you get to know people,&#13;
youfeel more at home," Croxford&#13;
said&#13;
He said some people are very&#13;
friendly, others don't care if&#13;
vou're there or not and the black&#13;
militants usually just left him&#13;
alone&#13;
Most of his friends were not&#13;
other exchange students; he said&#13;
he hardly saw them at all. He had&#13;
met a lot of his friends in a play&#13;
he was in.&#13;
"It was a good experience. You&#13;
learn what life is like in a&#13;
minority. Most white people don't&#13;
get the chance. You run into&#13;
situations you read about blacks&#13;
getting into."&#13;
Part of the purpose of this&#13;
program is to experience difrerent&#13;
cultural and social&#13;
situations. Croxford said that&#13;
there were differences in the&#13;
kinds of music, ways of dancing,&#13;
verbal expressions, and some of&#13;
the foods in the cafeteria; there&#13;
were also a lot of courses in black&#13;
culture&#13;
"1 noticed that the people&#13;
seemed to be better dressed."&#13;
Croxford said. "It wax not uncommon&#13;
to see a guy Tn" a sports&#13;
jacket&#13;
He said he'd go back if given&#13;
the chance, but the program only&#13;
allows one to go down for a&#13;
semester without paying Qut-ofstate&#13;
tuition.&#13;
"You have to go there with an&#13;
open mind, knowing it isn't going&#13;
to be all good or all bad. It's the&#13;
same as anywhere else; you meet&#13;
some people you don't get along&#13;
with and some who have the&#13;
same interests," Croscord said.&#13;
"~fter Iwas there for a while, I&#13;
didn't think of people as being&#13;
?lack or white anymore; they're&#13;
Just your friends and there's no&#13;
color distinction."&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
The academic year 1972-73 i&#13;
the erghth year of the U. . s&#13;
f W&#13;
· mversIty&#13;
o ISconsin's one-semester&#13;
student exchange program with a&#13;
black university Thi&#13;
offers th '. IS program&#13;
. . e Umversity of&#13;
WIsconSin students&#13;
t&#13;
. an oppor&#13;
unity to grow in th .&#13;
d&#13;
err unerstanding&#13;
of Amerl'ca .&#13;
tit ti n inS&#13;
I U IOns and society b&#13;
tici . Y par- icipating for a semester in a&#13;
totally different ac aderm&#13;
cultural and social life style th&#13;
lC&#13;
,&#13;
that of their own experience a~~&#13;
background The&#13;
. program&#13;
stresses the differences which the&#13;
exchange student WI' II .Incur&#13;
becau~e we live in a complex and&#13;
changing society in which differences&#13;
among people -- racial&#13;
geographic, religious and&#13;
economic -- are real and&#13;
unavoidable. By realizing this&#13;
through experience, the student&#13;
can become more aware of the&#13;
why as well as what the problems&#13;
and is.sues are in America today.&#13;
Sprmg semester, Wisconsin&#13;
students will attend North&#13;
Carolina Central University It is&#13;
located in the circle of ac~demic&#13;
institutions which include Duke&#13;
University in Durham and the&#13;
University of North Carolina in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill. Textiles&#13;
and tobacco industries are also&#13;
predominant in the Durham&#13;
area, and the weather is mild.&#13;
The population of Durham was&#13;
95,438 in the 1970 census&#13;
Exchange students follow a&#13;
course program similar to one&#13;
they would follow at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Tl1j.s does not e.xclude&#13;
taking courses for which there&#13;
are no direct equivalents at&#13;
Wisconsin, but which would be of&#13;
special value to take at the exchange&#13;
school. It is the student's&#13;
responsibility to consult the&#13;
Office of Admissions on the&#13;
transferability of any courses&#13;
they may take. They should also&#13;
consult academic advisors in&#13;
their college or major. To date&#13;
there has bee&#13;
ficult n no major die-&#13;
. Y regardlOg transfer of&#13;
credits. StUdents .'11 w recewe&#13;
~ansfer credits for work taken at&#13;
e exchange University. not&#13;
grades. Participation In the&#13;
program will be noted 00 the&#13;
student's uw transcript.&#13;
Applicants who will be fresh.&#13;
m:~ during participation are not&#13;
elIgible. Students who will be&#13;
Jumo.rs during participation Will&#13;
tM: given priority. tuoents ho&#13;
w~ll.be seniors are oot normauv&#13;
ehglble. In order to a ist \!lith&#13;
program activities participanls&#13;
should be at Wi eonsin for at&#13;
l~a.st a year follo""ing par&#13;
t1clpation in the program&#13;
Moreover. the Uni\'er It)· of&#13;
Wisconsin requires that a tude:nt&#13;
must earn his la l 30 crechts jn&#13;
residence to receive a Wisconsin&#13;
degree. An applicant shoold ha\'e&#13;
a cumulative CPA of 2.5 through&#13;
last semester. Progress in tho&#13;
semester's classes will also be&#13;
evaluated. There are some ex·&#13;
ceptions.&#13;
There is a n agreement by&#13;
North Carolina Central and&#13;
University of Wisconsin Sj tern&#13;
campuses (except Madison~ that&#13;
exchange students are permitted&#13;
to pay Wisconsin tuition on thesr&#13;
Wisconsin campus before the\&#13;
leave for "CCl: Thu tbey \\ould&#13;
avoid paymg Xorth Carolina outof·state&#13;
tuition at ,'CCC&#13;
Students will pay room and&#13;
board and other expenses at&#13;
NCCU. The offiCial room and&#13;
board costs per semesler are&#13;
s-I2Q&#13;
AccordlOg to 150m Fern, 10&#13;
terested students must pick up an&#13;
application at his office and ha\'e&#13;
it and related form turned 10 b\&#13;
Nov. 3. They ",Ill then be uiterviewed&#13;
between ,,·o\: 6 and&#13;
10V. 10 and nolificatlon of&#13;
selection will be made by ..'0\ 20&#13;
There will be an orientalJOO held&#13;
in Madison 10 early December&#13;
and the students wiU leave for&#13;
North Carolina Central&#13;
University around Jan. 5. 1973&#13;
: .&#13;
Cham- Tap-Bar&#13;
Wed., Oct. 11, 1971 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
Sorry. hoa&#13;
"Leave your empty&#13;
cigarette pack&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
A large. orange. IIll lh bUcIt&#13;
lenermg Implores toom and&#13;
facult) to "le3\ yoor em"t&#13;
Cleareue paclt " rn ord .... thai •&#13;
"httle rI" In a • hi .. au f;&#13;
ho pitaI" m.y ha\ free&#13;
hour m an Iron lu&#13;
In tront 0( the gn 011. table&#13;
are some •. empt) pIIc of&#13;
crgareue. ~ haun o( lIt lor.&#13;
chtld"&#13;
rT) 0&#13;
Tbe si n In the caJ"etrna on&#13;
the K ha campllS Jud I&#13;
lrom the .... mb&lt;r 0( ern ) pa&#13;
0/ are Ie th m&#13;
riTectl\ nfortunatlth t I&#13;
a cruel ,thou ~po no&#13;
tenuonalh so hoa&#13;
Achee' '" Ith Lh mat.n ofh at&#13;
Kenosha ~ .. Ied no OM&#13;
knev. the anglO 0( the I nit"""&#13;
been compl"'necI about I.....&#13;
•~eone.·· a td&#13;
lIer efforts to lind the niaker 01&#13;
th ., n prG\ed frultl Th&#13;
reporter' ellorb did .....&#13;
Call to t,I""au ·.r~a&#13;
ho--pltal prG\'ed Jll.! a lut I&#13;
There.po ra edlrom "\Ie&#13;
ha\ e no one ~ an an Iron lu&#13;
to'"Tha' the old .1., j e.n&#13;
the .. arid ••&#13;
"&#13;
10 % commission&#13;
BUSI G PROBLEMS?&#13;
Rider. n eded to Rocin&#13;
or service ",ill be discontinued.&#13;
T II your&#13;
fri end. to ride the bu.,&#13;
Schedule. ovo; loble 01&#13;
lJW -p InfonTlol ion Office&#13;
or coli JeNel Ech 1-&#13;
borger ot 553-2342.&#13;
Special&#13;
Sx7 COLOR E LAR E.IE. iT&#13;
OC70BER I ' 0 'OVE. IBER I I&#13;
~~~~------------&#13;
Pukside AcliYities Board prm Is&#13;
P to and t\f'\&#13;
Elm\\ood PtW&#13;
381 Durand PI .....&#13;
SsHSII&#13;
•&#13;
D&#13;
G offr&#13;
fUllfil! lbe&#13;
on r Band&#13;
Fri., Oct. 13 9:00 p.m,&#13;
Student Activities Bldg,&#13;
dm. P&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE&#13;
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295&#13;
251 I Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
d"gne onTap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches 0&#13;
:&#13;
. and Pizza :J:)0.&#13;
/~.-..~.-.. ---------~-_.;"&#13;
) § We need people who are money-hungry!&#13;
)&#13;
)&#13;
' (&#13;
ed., Oct. 11, 972 THE PARKSIDE RA G R&#13;
North-South Exchange Panned 1&#13;
BY Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
J Croxford is a student from&#13;
Pa~:side who participated in the&#13;
North-South Exchange Program.&#13;
Th's program allowed him to&#13;
tiend a primarily black&#13;
\uthern Univers~ty, . North&#13;
Carolina Central Uruvers1ty, for&#13;
the second semester of the 1968-69&#13;
chool year. A to how he fel~ on the first&#13;
day, he said it was kind of strange&#13;
and that the ten students from&#13;
Wisconsin sort of stuck together.&#13;
·'To begin with, there is a&#13;
definite color distinction and you&#13;
reel kind of lost and out of place,&#13;
but once you get to know people,&#13;
vou feel more at home," Croxford&#13;
said&#13;
He said some people are very&#13;
friendl), others don't care if&#13;
l'ou're there or not and the black&#13;
militants usually just left him&#13;
alone&#13;
Most of his friends were not&#13;
other exchange students; he said&#13;
he hardly saw them at all. He had&#13;
met a lot of his friends in a play&#13;
he was in.&#13;
"It was a good experience. You&#13;
learn what life is like in a&#13;
minority. Most white people don't&#13;
get the chance. You run into&#13;
ituations you read about blacks&#13;
getting mto."&#13;
Th~ academic yelir 1972-73 . the eighth year of th U . . is&#13;
f . e mvers1ty 0 Wisconsin's one-semester&#13;
student e~change program with a&#13;
black umversity Th'&#13;
offers th . . is program . . e Umversity of&#13;
W1sconsm students&#13;
portunity to grow in tha~ op- d . e1r un- :;s:_andmg of American inst·&#13;
I. u i~ns and society by par1c1patmg&#13;
for a semest . er m a totally different academ.&#13;
cultural and social life style th;~&#13;
that of their own experience and&#13;
background The p · rogram&#13;
stresses the differences which the&#13;
exchange student w1·11 mcur .&#13;
becau~e we live in a complex and&#13;
changmg society in which differences&#13;
among people -- racial&#13;
geographic, religious and&#13;
economic -- are real and&#13;
unavoidable. By realizing this&#13;
through experience, the student&#13;
can become more aware of the&#13;
why as well as what the problem&#13;
and is_sues are in America today em ter·&#13;
evaluated&#13;
ceptions&#13;
There 1&#13;
rr •&#13;
'Lea ur&#13;
• Cl ar&#13;
Part of the purpose of this&#13;
program is to experience different&#13;
cultural and social&#13;
1tuations. Croxford said that&#13;
there were differences in the&#13;
kinds of music, ways of dancing,&#13;
verbal expressions, and some of&#13;
the foods in the cafeteria; there&#13;
were also a lot of courses in black&#13;
culture&#13;
Spring semester, Wiscon m&#13;
students will attend :-.orth&#13;
Carolina Central Universitv It i&#13;
located in the circle ot ac~dem1c&#13;
institutions which include Duke&#13;
University in Durham and the&#13;
University of North Carolina in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill Textile&#13;
and tobacco industries are also&#13;
predominant in the Durham&#13;
area, and the weather i mild&#13;
The population of Durham wa&#13;
95,438 in the 1970 census&#13;
Exchange students follow a&#13;
course program similar to one&#13;
they would follow at the&#13;
University of Wi con inParkside.&#13;
This does not e: elude&#13;
taking courses for which there&#13;
are no direct equivalent at&#13;
Wisconsin, but which would be of&#13;
special value to take at the exchange&#13;
school. It is the tudent&#13;
responsibility to con ult the&#13;
Office of Admi ions on the&#13;
transferability of any course&#13;
they may take. They hould al o&#13;
consult academic advi or in&#13;
their college or major To date&#13;
Specia&#13;
'·I noticed that the people&#13;
seemed to be better dressed "&#13;
Croxford aid "It wax not uncommon&#13;
to see a guy in a sports&#13;
jacke&#13;
He said he'd go back if given&#13;
the chance, but the program only&#13;
allows one to go down for a&#13;
emester without paying out-oftate&#13;
tuition.&#13;
"You have to go there with an&#13;
open mind, knowing it isn't going&#13;
to be all good or all bad. It's the&#13;
same as anywhere else; you meet&#13;
ome people you don't get along&#13;
with and some who have the&#13;
·ame interests," Croscord said.&#13;
"After I was there for a while, I&#13;
didn't think of people as being&#13;
black or white anymore; they're&#13;
JU t your friends and there's no&#13;
color distinction ."&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
:······························································&#13;
.&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar =&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
:&#13;
Ham Sandwiches O&#13;
. and Pizza O ; : •.•.••••••••...••••••.••.•.•.•....................•...........•&#13;
Our&#13;
Fri. Oct. 13&#13;
Studen&#13;
I~.,.-....,..-...~~,,,,,,--..._,...-.... ,,..-......,_,,...---....&#13;
) ll We need people who are money-hungry!&#13;
)&#13;
) RE 0 ER 0&#13;
'&#13;
7&#13;
•&#13;
10 % commission STOP BY THE PAR SIDE RANGE OFFICE&#13;
D-194 LLC or telephone 553-2295 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING P.E. Bldg. underused Mother Nature's organ&#13;
gardening food supply _ Will~&#13;
foods -- will. be discussed and&#13;
collected during a University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension COUfS&#13;
"Edible Wild Plants," e,&#13;
Three lectures will be held 0&#13;
Thursdays, beginning Oct. 1;&#13;
7:30 p.m., on the UW-Parksid~&#13;
Wood Road Campus; and thre&#13;
field trips on Saturdays, 8 a.rn te&#13;
noon. . 0&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewi&#13;
professor of life science at ~~.&#13;
~ark~idfe, will&#13;
t&#13;
,instruct the class'&#13;
or&#13;
t&#13;
l~ 0lrma IOn on field trip&#13;
rna er-ta 5 and registrar&#13;
ta t Universit IOn can c mv~rsl y Extension 553:&#13;
2312. There IS a special reduced&#13;
student fee of $5.00.&#13;
An organizational meeting for&#13;
all students and faculty interested&#13;
in studying Christian&#13;
Science is being planned. The&#13;
group is looking for a faculty or&#13;
staff member as an advisor to the&#13;
group. For more information,&#13;
contact Rich Meyers at 634-1202.&#13;
"It's Wbat's Happening" will&#13;
be a regular feature or The&#13;
Parkside Ranger. All clubs and&#13;
organizations are urged to&#13;
submit notices about meetings.&#13;
rallies. etc. in person at the&#13;
Parkside Ranger office, D-IM&#13;
LLC. We ask that these be in our&#13;
oUice one week before the issue&#13;
(Wednesday for the next Wednesday's&#13;
issue). None will be&#13;
accepted over the phone.&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
•&#13;
will be holding elections from&#13;
Oct. 23-25. The deadline lor the&#13;
completion of petitions is 10 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 16. The deadline for platforms&#13;
is Oct. 11 and otficer&#13;
candidates are asked to appear&#13;
for pictures on Oct. 10 from 10 -12&#13;
noon at l..LC0-194. Petitions may&#13;
be picked up at the PSGA office&#13;
LLC 0.193, the main desk in the&#13;
library, the information desk in&#13;
the LLC, or at the student services&#13;
office on the Kenosha&#13;
campus, K-l35. Volunteers are&#13;
needed to work at the polls. You&#13;
can sign up at the SG office, LLC&#13;
D-193.&#13;
By Shawn R_ Clements&#13;
II' a beauhlul, n,'" Olympic size pool Adjoining the pool are very&#13;
Ole . modem. male and female locker rooms. At one end of the&#13;
T) tal-clear pool are diving hoards of obvious quality. Idyllic, isn't it?&#13;
The onl) probl m With the scene i a lack of the most important&#13;
commodlt) - people Aecordmg to sst. to the Athletic Director Loren&#13;
lIem "The enure buildmg. e pecially the pool. is gro Iy uoderused."&#13;
Th r "' lor thl. underuse are quite unclear. Lack of knowledge?&#13;
If lOU re readmg thl ,that no longer applies. (Fees and schedules at&#13;
end 01 rncle r&#13;
Th lO'mn tum 1 adding two electrically operated curtains which.&#13;
htn 10" red ~ III divide the gym mto three sections, thus making&#13;
m re roodm for el a well as general u e. The sauna, too, will soon&#13;
r ,&#13;
Th ee I me m ntion about the lact that the Physical Education&#13;
b'Jlldlng "III have to be elf ustaming in the near future. Hein's&#13;
r pun to qu . hon about tin was that lillie, if anything, is known&#13;
bout that Idea Thu ,any peculation about the possible eflect of&#13;
uch • mev on fe IS pure conjecture.&#13;
IIIth II the laClhtl available in this million-dollar building. nonus&#13;
b) tUdent, faculty and staff IS incomprehensible, especially&#13;
conSldermR th t I for equivalent facilities would run $150 on the&#13;
PJ he morkl't "Eve-f)'one kept crying for a swimming pool .. Hein&#13;
ld "No\lt It's here U Il!" '&#13;
f e. h dul Includes&#13;
$1.50 mo. U Shirt, shorts, towel, swimsuit, aU laundering&#13;
The WhiteskeJlar Coffee House&#13;
•&#13;
will be holding auditions on&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18, for upcoming&#13;
acts this fall. They will&#13;
begin at 1 p.m. and continue until&#13;
they are all heard, Some twenty&#13;
acts are expected to audition.&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
A Republican "Meet the&#13;
Candidates" Dessert will be held&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct, 12, at&#13;
the Kenosha VFW. GOP candidates&#13;
for state and local offices,&#13;
as well as tst District&#13;
Congressional candidate Merrill&#13;
Stalbaurn, will be present at the&#13;
affair, spmsored by the Kenosha&#13;
County Young Republicans, with&#13;
which the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans are affiliated. For&#13;
more information, phone Marilyn&#13;
Schubert at 658-8954.&#13;
Audit.ions for the 1972&#13;
production of cardiac capers has&#13;
been .set for Oct. 10 in the 51.&#13;
Mary s Hospital cafeteria at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
. The show is open to anyone&#13;
IOterested and includes a varlet&#13;
f&#13;
.. da Y o SlOglOg, ncing, and some&#13;
drama. Anyone who auditions'&#13;
~heshow is used in some aspect ~~&#13;
It.&#13;
($2 01 thl Lock, locker, towel&#13;
I. r fundabl&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
•&#13;
present the feature film,&#13;
"Loneliness of the Long Distance&#13;
Runner," and a short, "The&#13;
Wall," at 7:30 p.m. today (Oct.&#13;
11) in Greenquist Hall. Donation&#13;
is 60 cents .&#13;
Towel&#13;
wimsUit. per usage&#13;
Paddle ball or handball (player keeps ball)&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
liED LE&#13;
The Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
•&#13;
will meet today at 7:30 p.m. in D174LLC&#13;
to discuss the remainder&#13;
of ~e Gloria Steinem tape and&#13;
attitudes and opinions about it.&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
Pool National Varsity Club&#13;
Mon - Fn, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m&#13;
Mon - Thurs, 5:30 p.m. to to p.m.&#13;
Sal., 10 a m to 5 p.m.&#13;
Sun, 1-30 p.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P M&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M. • •&#13;
CALL&#13;
632-1565&#13;
.". s.M.i.&#13;
UVE·OM&#13;
Cymna lum&#13;
Mon • Thurs, 7,45 a m.&#13;
to to p m.&#13;
f'rl .. 7:45 am to 6 p.m.&#13;
t , 9 am (0 5 p.m.&#13;
Sun, 1,30 pm. to 10 p.m.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
RACINE 553·2150&#13;
rEACH~R&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
~&#13;
The House of&#13;
fIne Diamond.s 2909 DURAND AVE_ RACINE, wise.&#13;
1----------------------- I -------1&#13;
!GINO'S TAILORS!&#13;
I I&#13;
I I&#13;
I Clothes for the Young Man I&#13;
I Large Selection of Doubleknit Slacks and Sportcoats :&#13;
I Alterations and Styling I&#13;
I 10 pet. off with Parkside I.D. I&#13;
! 2212 60th Street 654-0774 I&#13;
,_____________ I __________ 1&#13;
ramou Brand Watches&#13;
Ring - Jewelry- GUts&#13;
Repairs THE&#13;
EST ABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
UT (Itfttl • ,. w:&#13;
. ,"!.-a . N.I4A. ..,.&#13;
_ ,UIt-.a&#13;
CAIRY-OU1S&#13;
....-_...~.......&#13;
,.... a....- ,... _ .._--,.." ...- -'_ .. ...... _.ra&#13;
,....-&#13;
... ... I'" -'-&#13;
...l'O_&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
RESEARCH MATlRIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
SInd IOf y r dtsctiphve, UIl-to-dale&#13;
121pIIp, lUll Oldertltliol of 2 300&#13;
QUlllty ft3urch papers helln&#13;
$1 oaI. co'" ,utal. 1M ~H1101.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLlMIT£D&#13;
519 Gl£HROCK m., SUIT£ 203&#13;
lOS AHGEUS, CALIF. !10024&#13;
(213) 411-S414 • m·S4!l3&#13;
''We Mid • loul salesmln"&#13;
A mateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night Jim FlIlpK. 116-.4152, Racine&#13;
1S..c&#13;
...... Steve Httgeno .............d $1.. KlMOSha W', 531 w. 654-7297, KenoSha&#13;
• I. «I, 654.5139&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANG ER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
P. ld . underused IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
•&#13;
By Shawn R. Clements&#13;
"It' \ llal' Happening" will&#13;
~ a re ular feature of The&#13;
P rk ide Ranger. II club and&#13;
rganization are urged to&#13;
ubmit notic about meeting ,&#13;
rallie , etc . in pe on at the&#13;
the pool are ve~&#13;
Park id Ranger orri e, D-l!M&#13;
LL . We a k that the e be in our&#13;
ffi e one week b fore the i ue&#13;
!\\edn day for the ne t Wed·&#13;
n da) • i u ) .• 'one will be&#13;
ace pt d ov r the phone.&#13;
Par ide tudent • Government&#13;
ill be holding elections from&#13;
Oct. 23-25. The deadline for the&#13;
completion of petition i 10 a.m.&#13;
r, to&#13;
t. 16. The deadline for plat·&#13;
form i Oct. 11 and officer&#13;
candidat are a ked to appear&#13;
for pictures on Oct. 10 from 10 -12&#13;
noon at LLC D-194. Petitions may&#13;
be picked up at the PSGA office&#13;
LLC D-193, the main desk in the&#13;
library. the information desk in&#13;
the LLC, or at the tudent ser-&#13;
\ic office on the Kenosha&#13;
campu , K-135. Volunteers are&#13;
needed to work at the polls. You&#13;
can ign up at the SG office, LLC&#13;
D-193.&#13;
•&#13;
T The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
\\ 1m u,t. per e&#13;
present the feature film ,&#13;
"Loneliness or the Long Distance&#13;
Runner, ' and a short, "The&#13;
Wall," at 7:30 p.m. today (Oct.&#13;
11) in Greenquist Hall. Donation&#13;
is 60 cents .&#13;
11 or h nd I &lt; play r keeps ball)&#13;
· Ht.I Lf.&#13;
m. to 1: p.m&#13;
• S: p.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
m to s p.m.&#13;
pm. to 10 p.m.&#13;
, 7: 5 .m.&#13;
f 'ne Diamonds&#13;
m BrandW tch&#13;
in - J 'Atll') -GU&#13;
R lr -&#13;
-z.s.....&#13;
IIE-11&#13;
L&#13;
The Parkside W• omen's Caucus&#13;
will meet today at 7: 30 p.m. in D·&#13;
174 LLC to discuss the remainder&#13;
or the Gloria Steinem tape and&#13;
attitudes and opinions about it.&#13;
•BEER• SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
I CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
Q OPE N DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
u&#13;
I&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
0&#13;
CALL&#13;
I 632-1565 R&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.&#13;
------------------------------&#13;
GINO'S TAILORS&#13;
Clothes for the Young Man&#13;
Large Selection of Doubleknit Slacks and Sportcoats&#13;
Alterations and Styl ing&#13;
10 pct. off with Parkside I.D.&#13;
2212 60th Street 654-0774&#13;
' I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I ______________________________ !&#13;
RESEARCH MAffRIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
... .&#13;
NML&#13;
lit( OISIC'\iS&#13;
IOR "01VIOU4l ~&#13;
• 116 '152. Rac,ne&#13;
2S1.5 6Jr Steve Hagenow 654 d St., Kenosha, Wis. 531&lt;10, 654-5739 ' -7297, Kenosha&#13;
An organizational meeting for&#13;
all students and faculty interested&#13;
in studying Christian&#13;
Science is being planned. The&#13;
group is looking for a faculty or&#13;
taff member as an advisor to the&#13;
group. For more information,&#13;
contact Rich Meyers at 634-1202.&#13;
The Whiteskellar • Coffee House&#13;
will be holding auditions on&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 18, for upcoming&#13;
acts this fall. They will&#13;
begin at l p.m. and continue until&#13;
they are all heard. Some twenty&#13;
acts are expected to audition.&#13;
•&#13;
A Republican "Meet the&#13;
Candidates" Dessert will be held&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 12, at&#13;
the Kenosha VFW. GOP candidates&#13;
for state and local offices,&#13;
as well as 1st District&#13;
Congressional candidate Merrill&#13;
Stalbaurn, will be present at the&#13;
affair, sponsored by the Kenosha&#13;
County Young Republicans, with&#13;
which the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans are affiliated. For&#13;
more information, phone Marilyn&#13;
Schubert at 658-8954.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
Mother Nature's organi&#13;
gardening food supply _ wil~&#13;
foods - will_ be discussed and&#13;
co~ected_ durmg a University of&#13;
W1sconsm-Extension course "Edible Wild Plants." '&#13;
Three lectures will be held 0&#13;
Thursdays, beginning Oct. 1:&#13;
7:30 p.m., on the UW-Parksid '&#13;
Wood Road Campus; and thr&#13;
field trips on Saturdays, s a.m. t&#13;
noon. 0&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewi&#13;
professor of life science at c;,&#13;
Parkside, will instruct the cl ·&#13;
For information on field ~ -&#13;
materials and registrat· lp ta tu . . ion con c mv~rs1ty Extension 553:&#13;
2312. There 1s a special reduced&#13;
student fee of $5.00.&#13;
•&#13;
Audit_ions for the 1972&#13;
production of cardiac capers ha&#13;
been ,set for_ Oct. 10 in the l.&#13;
Mary s Hospital cafeteria at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The show is open to anyon&#13;
interested and includes a varlet&#13;
f . . d y o smgmg, ancing, and some&#13;
drama. Anyone who auditions . th h . ed' lO . e s ow 1s us m some aspect of&#13;
It.&#13;
•&#13;
443 7 - 22nd A venue Kenosha ,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
THE&#13;
ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur C1Jntest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night &#13;
-&#13;
0",&#13;
"&#13;
Membersof the UW-Parkside women's tennis team t k&#13;
e&#13;
for a photo. with Coach Dick Frecka Pictur da(le)a mement from practice to&#13;
pos • e -r are Sue ./II de' Squire, Kay Becker, Sue Gra f and Frecka. Pat K k' h anggaar, ind&#13;
I h R e rc , t e squad's N I layer .vho ed t e anger women to a first place f' , h' I o . P , InIS rn ast .veek's O&lt;t be&#13;
f&#13;
st Tennis Tournament, IS not pictured. 0 re&#13;
, Photo by Crarg Robert&#13;
"Yon ve got to he optimistic"&#13;
I'I;EI:: L.\:\CE WRlTI:"G&#13;
SERVtCES Report writing,&#13;
speech writing, commercial&#13;
cOPY-editing. editing and ~rlOg done in my home.&#13;
ease call 639-7378&#13;
eVenings.&#13;
WithOll,t hurting your feelings,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Pat enjoys playing on the team,&#13;
and says she loves competition.&#13;
She doesn't mind strange courts&#13;
and likes to play away from home&#13;
because "we have a lot of fun on&#13;
the trips."&#13;
Sue Wanggard doesn't dislike&#13;
playing away meets because the&#13;
courts are strange, but because&#13;
the people are strange, so she&#13;
likes to play at home better.&#13;
"It really helps to have&#13;
somebody there to watch you,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Sue enjoys playing on hot,&#13;
sunny days, but her favorite&#13;
conditions are cloudy and cool.&#13;
"With the sun coming out when&#13;
it's to my advantage," she added.&#13;
Sue says the wind doesn't&#13;
bother her, but after a couple of&#13;
wild shots cries 01 "BI"" , Wind "&#13;
echoed arouod the courts&#13;
Practice is held every weekdav&#13;
from about 3 to 5 p.m. and ~&#13;
Fridays it can last all afternoon&#13;
Along with practice&#13;
developing a good attitude IS oi&#13;
great imporlance&#13;
"Yoo've got to be opium tic,&#13;
concentrate and try to do "hat&#13;
the coach tells yeo." said ue&#13;
Wanggard.&#13;
During a practice doubles&#13;
match, Frecka continuously&#13;
encouraged and cnucued hJ&#13;
players.&#13;
At one point, when there&#13;
seemed to be more critieism&#13;
flying around than tennis balls,&#13;
he turned and said \l, ith a mile,&#13;
"I can't let these girls thi&#13;
they're too good, because then&#13;
they can beat anybody:"&#13;
Soccer&#13;
oct. 14.&#13;
Oct. 21 ..&#13;
Cross&#13;
Oct. 13&#13;
Oct. t7 .&#13;
Country&#13;
. Notre Dame Invitational at Bend, Inc&#13;
Ma rquene at Parts'de&#13;
Golf&#13;
Oct. 14 .&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
Oct. 14&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Oct. 18&#13;
UW-Plalle..,Ue at Pari&lt; Id&#13;
Marquette at Parks,de&#13;
U\\'-Mad,son at ~Iadlson&#13;
Oshkosh tnvltational at Oshkosh&#13;
W-oshkosh at Par ,de&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine,&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
American State Bankt&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
Phone 658-2582&#13;
3928 60th St.&#13;
Wed" OCt. 11, 1972 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 7&#13;
ByKathrynWellner&#13;
Good exercise and fun aren't&#13;
the only things Pat Keltic, Sue&#13;
Wanggardand Sue Graf get out of&#13;
tennis.&#13;
The girls, respectively the top&#13;
three members of the women's&#13;
tennisteam, each have their own&#13;
unique reasons for playing.&#13;
After being injured as a&#13;
gymnast, Sue Wannggard took up&#13;
playing tennis and running cross&#13;
«entry. She says she does it&#13;
mostly for her own personal&#13;
enjoyment.&#13;
"Il changed my personality,&#13;
100. I keep more to myself now; I&#13;
don't let my emotions show as&#13;
much anymore," said Sue. "One&#13;
thinga sport like this teaches you&#13;
is patience," she added.&#13;
Sue Graf, a senior, gets a&#13;
feeling of accomplishment,&#13;
especially when she wins.&#13;
"When -I win-E really-feel-Iike-c--v-.&#13;
work&#13;
I've done something, like all the&#13;
and practice have paid off,"&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
she said. "But when Ilose I feel&#13;
very upset with myself, and&#13;
depressed. "&#13;
Sueseemed very positive about&#13;
the effect tennis has had on her&#13;
personality.&#13;
"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed,&#13;
"especially the ups and downs."&#13;
Nobodylikes to lose. Pat Kekic&#13;
describes the way she feels&#13;
before a match as "the worst&#13;
possiblebutterflies" and she says&#13;
that she doesn't settle down until&#13;
aller she starts playing.&#13;
"Coach (Dick) Frecka always&#13;
makes us relax with his snide&#13;
httle jokes," she said, smiling.&#13;
Winning, on the other hand, is&#13;
always exciting, • 'especially&#13;
when your coach is there or if it's&#13;
the match you need to win the&#13;
meet."&#13;
According to Pat, playing&#13;
lenms taught her to be both a&#13;
g~ Winner and a good loser. She&#13;
beheves that it's good for people&#13;
to learn good sportsmanship and&#13;
courtesy.&#13;
"It has helped me to learn how&#13;
to get along with people" she&#13;
~aid. '&#13;
Pat has had the advantage of&#13;
living across the street from&#13;
some tennis courts and she&#13;
slarted playing when she was&#13;
thirteen.&#13;
"The best time for kids to start&#13;
Isv,;hen they're nine or len," said&#13;
Pat.&#13;
She never had lessons until she&#13;
played for the team. so all of&#13;
oach Frecka's advi&lt;.:e has been&#13;
e1tome.&#13;
·Ht·s good at giving criticism&#13;
MemMr" F' 0 I C&#13;
Harrier' b&#13;
La t TIl sda)" the Ranger&#13;
hamers .. ent (0 t ..hi a&#13;
and came bo "'10 qwte&#13;
ha~ Coach \',c GodIf'O) ,d&#13;
"n. IS the that.. ha.&#13;
be.,on them 10 the lour }..&#13;
thal e ',"eo been • am them&#13;
n,., top five .",..,.,... ran a&#13;
team for th rlrst ume th ) r&#13;
If this eeps '" d a&#13;
coote~ lor the . AlA DlSlnct&#13;
O1amplOnSh,p .,&#13;
TIC&#13;
l;&#13;
Rm&#13;
DE IS 81El&#13;
t&#13;
•&#13;
In t&#13;
\aUa e&#13;
Information It&#13;
I, TaUonl Hall&#13;
,&#13;
M mbers o f the UW-Parkside women's tennis team tak • •&#13;
e . h C h D· k F e a memen ro practice o for a photo. wit oac 1c recka. Pictured (I-) S&#13;
pose S r are ue anggaard Cind S U·,re Kay Becke r, ue Graf and Frecka Pat Kek· th 1 '&#13;
q ' • 1 c, e squad s O I layer who led the Ranger women to a first place finish in I t k' Ok. be&#13;
p • • as ee s to r- fe st Tennis Tournament, 1s not pictured. Pho&#13;
O&#13;
b\ Cr&#13;
1&#13;
R&#13;
"You've got to he optimi~tic&#13;
BY Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Good exercise and fun. aren't&#13;
the only things Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
wanggard and Sue Graf get out of&#13;
tennis. . The girls, respectively the top&#13;
three members of the women's&#13;
tennis team, each have their own&#13;
unique reasons for playing.&#13;
After being injured as a&#13;
gymnast, Sue Wannggar? took up&#13;
playing tennis and runnmg cross&#13;
country. She says she does it&#13;
mostly for her own personal&#13;
enjoyment.&#13;
"It changed my personality,&#13;
too. I keep more to myself now; I&#13;
don't let my emotions show as&#13;
much anymore," said Sue. "One&#13;
thing a sport like this teaches you&#13;
i patience," she added.&#13;
Sue Graf, a senior, gets a&#13;
feeling of accomplishment,&#13;
especially when she wins.&#13;
"When I win I really reel Hke&#13;
I've done something, like all the&#13;
work and practice have paid off,"&#13;
he said. "But when I lose I feel&#13;
very upset with myself, and&#13;
depressed."&#13;
Sue seemed very positive about&#13;
the effect tennis has had on her&#13;
personality.&#13;
"Oh, yes!" she exclaimed,&#13;
"especially the ups and downs."&#13;
obody likes to lose. Pat Kekic&#13;
describes the way she feels&#13;
before a match as "the worst&#13;
po ible butterflies" and she says&#13;
that she doesn't settle down until&#13;
after she starts playing.&#13;
"Coach (Dick) Frecka always&#13;
makes us relax with his snide&#13;
little jokes, " she said, smiling.&#13;
Winning, on the other hand, is&#13;
always exciting, "especially&#13;
when your coach is there or if it's&#13;
the match you need to win the&#13;
meet."&#13;
According to Pat, playing&#13;
tenni taught her to be both a&#13;
00d winner and a good loser. She&#13;
believes that it's good for people&#13;
lo learn good sportsmanship and courte y.&#13;
"It ha helped me to learn how&#13;
to ,:et along with people," she&#13;
Pat has had the advantage of&#13;
hvmg across the street from&#13;
ome tennis courts and she&#13;
tarted planng when she was th1rte •n. ·&#13;
"Th' best tune for kids to start&#13;
'p h n the, 're nine or ten, .. said&#13;
at&#13;
1 h n '\ r had lesson· until he&#13;
P ed for the team. so all of&#13;
th fr• ka ad, ice ha. be&#13;
lcom •&#13;
H&#13;
• Hl:i-; L \, (T WRITl'.I.G&#13;
•~H\'t( Es Report writing.&#13;
Jleech \\Tiling. commercial&#13;
copy-edtt1ng. editmg and&#13;
~Ping done in my home .&#13;
lea e call 639-7378 evening&#13;
without hurting your feelings,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Pat enjoys playing on the team,&#13;
and says she loves competition.&#13;
She doesn't mind strange courts&#13;
and likes to play away from home&#13;
because "we have a lot of fun on the trips."&#13;
Sue Wanggard doesn't dislike&#13;
playing away meets because the&#13;
courts are strange, but because&#13;
the people are strange, so she&#13;
likes to play at home better.&#13;
"It really helps to have&#13;
somebody there to watch you,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Sue enjoys playing on hot,&#13;
sunny days, but her favorite&#13;
conditions are cloudy and cool.&#13;
"With the sun coming out when&#13;
it's to my advantage," she added.&#13;
Sue says the wind doesn't&#13;
bother her, but after a couple of&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
oct. 14 . ... ... ........................ .&#13;
Oct. 21 ..... . ......... . ....... .&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Oct. 13 ......... ... ...... .&#13;
Oct. 17 ................... .&#13;
Golf&#13;
Oct. 14 ...... ......... ..&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
Oct. 14 ......... ·&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Oct. 18 .. . .... · · · · ·&#13;
Monday night i&#13;
"Ye Old ud ipping , 'ite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$I a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light&#13;
American&#13;
Free Checking Ac o its&#13;
for College tud nts&#13;
Phone 65 --5&#13;
3928 60th St. D C&#13;
., Oct. 11, 1 72 TH PA ID G 7&#13;
OE IS l&#13;
Harr· r I&#13;
• Tl &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed .• Oct. 11,1972&#13;
Intramural&#13;
Th I 1 Touch Football season&#13;
I. und r ....8) with three undeleat&#13;
d learns teadmg the way.&#13;
La l year's university chamPiOns.the&#13;
hoon rs, got off 10 a&#13;
good tart WIIb a 21-t~ vic tory&#13;
over B A new learn is out in&#13;
ront In the wm column, however,&#13;
lhe Trout porI a 2-1)record.&#13;
er e led 1»' their flashy&#13;
runner Dean MatlOson. The other&#13;
undefeated team is the Pink&#13;
FascI Is They combined the pinpolOlpasslOg&#13;
or Jack Swaru with&#13;
the hawk·l1ke delense 01 Fred&#13;
Z1 vers ror a 1!HlVlCtory over the&#13;
FOOIballTeam&#13;
andlng&#13;
Trout&#13;
hnon rs&#13;
Pink F ,IS&#13;
FOOIballTeam&#13;
BO&#13;
TwO Park Ide I Bowling&#13;
Leagues are forming that&#13;
tudent can Ign up for now.&#13;
Th Itrat league i being held at&#13;
endan Lan 10 Kenosha It&#13;
will be held every Monday at 9: 15&#13;
pm The OIld league WIll be&#13;
beld at uri Lanes, also in&#13;
Kenosha It "ill be held every&#13;
f'nday at 4 30 p.m.&#13;
Anyone Interested in joimng&#13;
elth r 01 th. leagues should&#13;
'Ill' up,.," at the P E Buildlng.&#13;
crt am lose&#13;
The Park Idt soccer team&#13;
wed liS rourlh game 01 the&#13;
son la I .....ednesday !Ught to&#13;
th !uka. or C'lucago Circle&#13;
Coli e,:l-2 It as a game 01&#13;
rgument and controversial&#13;
all • "hlch showed in the&#13;
lahst!c Par Ide commiUed 30&#13;
louis 10 Ollcago Circle's 37.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Jobs re Available ... !&#13;
For FREE inIonnation&#13;
on ludenc istance and&#13;
pia _nt program send&#13;
If-addressed STAMPED&#13;
envelope 10 the ational&#13;
Placemen I Regi Iry. 1001&#13;
I ldal10 St.. Kalispell.&#13;
MT S9901&#13;
o ,1\1\11&#13;
Porkside soccer coach Hal Henderson gives his team&#13;
some advice before recent game. The Porkside booters, fresh from&#13;
their first win of the season against UW-Milwaukee, "ill face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday afternoon&#13;
o THE WEEKE D&#13;
Rooters win lst game&#13;
2·0&#13;
I ·0&#13;
1-0&#13;
0·2&#13;
0-2&#13;
The Uw-Parkslde soccer team&#13;
got its first win saturday in the&#13;
consolation game of the&#13;
Oktoberfest Soccer Tournament&#13;
as lhe Rangers dumped UW1i1waukee&#13;
&amp;2.&#13;
Parkside had losl Friday to&#13;
otre Dame, 3-1,but the Rangers&#13;
rallied saturday and posted their&#13;
highest goal total of the year.&#13;
Rick Lechusz, Mike Jenrette,&#13;
Mike Nedeljkovic and Wayne&#13;
Shisler each scored one goal for&#13;
Parkside while Ray Phanturat&#13;
had two. Parkside held a 2-1)&#13;
halftime lead and a 4-2 lead with&#13;
13minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
exploded lor two goals in the final&#13;
13minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
exploded lor two goals in tbe final&#13;
13 minutes to put the game on ice.&#13;
Parkside is now 1·5--1on the&#13;
sea on and will face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday aftemoon.&#13;
•&#13;
The Parkside cross country&#13;
team came up with one of its&#13;
better performances here&#13;
Saturday as it claimed a strong&#13;
third In the first annual&#13;
Oktoberfest Invitational.&#13;
Lucian Rosam, the sophomore&#13;
from Ceylon. tasted defeat lor the&#13;
first time this year but the loss&#13;
came against South Dakota&#13;
tate's Garry Bentley. a&#13;
delending NCAACoilege Division&#13;
1500-meter champ.&#13;
Bentley clocked 25:30 for the&#13;
rugged five mile route while Rosa&#13;
"as close behind al 25:37. Dan&#13;
Sols\ig or leam champ SDSU&#13;
grabbed third while all·American&#13;
Jim Drews of LaCrosse was&#13;
PIZZA KnCHEN&#13;
fourth and Parkstde s Dennis&#13;
Biel a strong fifth.&#13;
Other Ranger placers included&#13;
junior Jim McFadden in tenth,&#13;
freshman Sid Hyde in 24th. and&#13;
junior Keith Merritt in 25th.&#13;
Parkside will travel to the&#13;
otre Dame Invitational at South&#13;
Bend Friday. The meet attracts&#13;
most Midwestern teams and&#13;
should be a good test lor the&#13;
young Ranger team.&#13;
•&#13;
First place honors in the&#13;
Second Annual Oktoberlesl Gall&#13;
Tournament Saturday went to&#13;
orthern Illinois while UW·&#13;
Madison grabbed second and&#13;
Parkside was a strong third in the&#13;
is-note tourney at Petrifying&#13;
Springs.&#13;
Medalist honors went to Rick&#13;
Willems, of Parkside; Rick&#13;
Garcia of Northern Illinois&#13;
placed second; Steve Larsen,&#13;
also Irom Northern, placed third;&#13;
Phil Lohr from UW-Madison&#13;
finished fourth and Tom Bothe of&#13;
Parkside copped fifth.&#13;
Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
•&#13;
team placed first in the&#13;
Oktoberfest Tournament here&#13;
last Wednesday. The Rangers&#13;
had a score of 12. Whitewater&#13;
placed second with 10, Carthage&#13;
was third with 8 and Lawrence&#13;
finished last with no points.&#13;
Rangers Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
Wanggard and Nicolet DeRose&#13;
all won their matches.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bombers&#13;
Free Delifery to Parkside Village&#13;
son ItH11.... , ''',n, 6S1-S'"&#13;
Photo by Pal Nowak&#13;
---------- Jonathan Livingston&#13;
Seagull&#13;
Last Whole Earth Catalog&#13;
Politics of Heroin in S.E, Asia&#13;
The Prophet&#13;
Woodstock Craftsman's&#13;
Manual&#13;
Massage Book&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
Having trouble locating these books? Well, search no&#13;
further than Martha Merrill's Bookstore. See us for&#13;
what's new in books - bestsellers, art, chess, novels,&#13;
reference works, crafts specialties, ad infinitum.&#13;
Look over our large selection of hard covers and&#13;
paperbacks - and take advantage of our fast special&#13;
order service.&#13;
M~N\~~ rs~t(Yta.J&#13;
~.Jw. f{(lJ;iA'&amp; •&#13;
GI4-59t.hsr. 312-(;"""'$'1',.&#13;
6S8-3bf;?- 632-5195' ••&#13;
---_---•.&#13;
-------&#13;
...&#13;
--&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 13&#13;
//-01&#13;
'Entry Fee 501&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
,&#13;
..&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 11, 1972&#13;
ntramural&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
2-0&#13;
1 • O&#13;
1 -0&#13;
O·&#13;
0-2&#13;
Parkside soccer coach Hal Henderson gives his team&#13;
some advice before recent gane. The Parkside booters, fresh from&#13;
their first win of the season against UW-Milwaukee, will face UWPlatteville&#13;
here Saturday afternoon Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
D&#13;
Booter win lst game&#13;
Th \\'-Par 1de socc r team&#13;
first wm turdav in the&#13;
on olation game or the&#13;
to rfest Soccer Tournament&#13;
the Rangers dumped UWt1lwaukee&#13;
6-2.&#13;
Park ide had lo.st Friday to&#13;
, ·otr Dame, 3·1. but the Rangers&#13;
rall1t-d . turday and posted their&#13;
highest oal total of the ) ear.&#13;
Rick Lechusz, fike Jenrette,&#13;
hke . 'edeljkovic and Wayne&#13;
i ler each cored one goal for&#13;
Park 1de while Ray Phanturat&#13;
had two. Park ide held a 2--0&#13;
lftime lead and a 4-2 lead with&#13;
13 minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
ploded for two goals in the final&#13;
13 minutes to go, but the Rangers&#13;
ploded for two goal in the final&#13;
13 minutes to put the game on ice.&#13;
P rk ide i now 1·5-1 on the&#13;
on and will face \ ·&#13;
11 t ev11le here Saturday af-&#13;
• country&#13;
fourth and Parkside s Dennis&#13;
Biel a trong fifth.&#13;
Other Ranger placers included&#13;
Junior Jim tcFadden in tenth,&#13;
freshman Sid Hyde in 24th, and&#13;
junior Keith Merritt in 25th.&#13;
Parkside will travel to the&#13;
. ·otre Dame Invitational at South&#13;
Bend Friday. The meet attracts&#13;
mo.st fidwestern teams and&#13;
should be a good test for the&#13;
oung Ranger team.&#13;
•&#13;
First place honors in the&#13;
Second Annual Oktoberfest Golf&#13;
Tournament Saturday went to&#13;
, orthern Illinois while UWIadison&#13;
grabbed second and&#13;
Parkside was a trong third in the&#13;
HI-hole tourney at Petrifying&#13;
prings.&#13;
tedalist honors went to Rick&#13;
Willems, of Parkside; Rick&#13;
Garcia of Northern Illinois&#13;
placed second; Steve Larsen,&#13;
also from Northern, placed third;&#13;
Phil Lohr from UW-Madison&#13;
finished fourth and Tom Bothe of&#13;
Parkside copped fifth.&#13;
• Parkside's women's tennis&#13;
team placed first in the&#13;
Oktoberfest Tournament here&#13;
last Wednesday. The Rangers&#13;
had a score of 12. Whitewater&#13;
placed second with 10, Carthage&#13;
was third with 8 and Lawrence&#13;
finished last with no points.&#13;
Rangers Pat Kekic, Sue&#13;
Wanggard and Nicolet DeRose&#13;
all won their matches.&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Clllebn &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Frtt Delivery to Parkside Village&#13;
son 1°" ., •• , ,,,,n, 6S1-St9t&#13;
----------&#13;
Jonathan Livingston&#13;
Seagull&#13;
Last Whole Earth Catalog&#13;
Politics of Heroin in S.E. Asia&#13;
The Prophet&#13;
Woodstock Cr aftsm an 's&#13;
Manual&#13;
Massage Book&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
Having trouble locating these books? Well, search no&#13;
further than Martha Merrill's Bookstore. See us for&#13;
what's new in books - bestsellers, art, chess, novels,&#13;
reference works, crafts specialties, ad infinitum.&#13;
Look over our large selection of hard covers and&#13;
paperbacks - and take advantage of our fast special&#13;
order service.&#13;
G14-59~St;&#13;
658-3b !;"2-&#13;
f{_ru;U'ZIJ., •&#13;
312.- 6-¼ 5-t, -&#13;
632-5195' -·&#13;
---&#13;
-------~-- -----·&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 13 / / -o, ·t ·ntry Fee so~&#13;
Appl Y no w - Student Ac tivities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63852">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 3, October 11, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63853">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63854">
                <text>1972-10-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63857">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63858">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63859">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63860">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63861">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63862">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63863">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63864">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63865">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="218">
        <name>erwin zuehlke</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="176">
        <name>george mcgovern</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="163">
        <name>ken konkol</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="234">
        <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="307">
        <name>richard nixon</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="219">
        <name>segregated fees</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="295">
        <name>st louis jazz quartet</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2628" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3250">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/7321e50dd9119962d773242ce147d364.pdf</src>
        <authentication>02ed962d835780c94a5c1b054d16c60c</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63870">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 4</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63871">
              <text>Who's he?  It's the gov!</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63881">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89907">
              <text>The Parkside _&#13;
RANGE dn day,O lob r 18, 1972&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey&#13;
Bus service from- Racine&#13;
may end Friday&#13;
By Shawn Clements&#13;
As or Oct. 20, there may be no&#13;
more bus service between Racine&#13;
and the Parkside campus. This&#13;
will leave some 100 students&#13;
without transportation and&#13;
conceivably add to the already&#13;
overcrowded parking lots.&#13;
According to Stan Altenbern,&#13;
president of Wisconsin Coach&#13;
L.ines, the service is being&#13;
discontinued because of lack of&#13;
Use. Altenbern said that a&#13;
minimum of 180 one-way trips&#13;
must be made per day for the&#13;
companyto break even, and 230&#13;
to 250 for the line to make a&#13;
decent profit.&#13;
The announcement came&#13;
following a Public Service&#13;
C~mmission hearing on Oct. 10.&#13;
Wisconsin Coach had originally&#13;
requested a permanent permit to&#13;
operate the line, though this was&#13;
changed to a temporary permit&#13;
request (which was approved)&#13;
after the company discovered the&#13;
loss of revenue. A schedule&#13;
change, which went into effect on&#13;
Oct. 9, has had little effect as yet,&#13;
according to Altenbern, on&#13;
revenues,&#13;
d Jewel Echelbarger, assistant&#13;
ean for student affairs said that&#13;
"f '&#13;
eelers" have gone out to Flash&#13;
of R ' FI acme and Kenosha Transit.&#13;
d' ash,. however, is already&#13;
f ISCUssmg discontinuing service&#13;
t~r Racine. A public hearing on&#13;
1, at request has been set for NoV,&#13;
d&#13;
' Ms, Echelbarger also said that&#13;
ISC ' G USSlons are underway with&#13;
trateway Tech" which already&#13;
t&#13;
ansports students from Racine&#13;
o Ke h ' and nos a, to possibly expand&#13;
transport Parkside students&#13;
as well,&#13;
"The main thing we need is&#13;
more interest in using the buses,"&#13;
Ms. Echelbarger commented.&#13;
"Without increased revenue, who&#13;
can blame Wisconsin Coach for&#13;
wanting to discontinue. Where&#13;
are all the students concerned&#13;
with ecology?"&#13;
A caB to Racine Mayor Kenneth&#13;
Huck's office produced a&#13;
"no comment" and a "The&#13;
Mayor is busy and cannot speak&#13;
with you."&#13;
Car pool, anyone?&#13;
Who's he?&#13;
BY SHAWN CLEMENTS&#13;
"Who's that guy? wbere's he&#13;
from?" Th .- ose were typical&#13;
questions asked by Parkside&#13;
students last Tuesday as&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey loured&#13;
the campus with Doug&#13;
LaFo~ette, assistant professor of&#13;
chemistry and Democratic&#13;
candidate for the State Senate&#13;
from Kenosha&#13;
Lucey arrived on the Keoosha&#13;
Campus at 2 p.m. and was&#13;
greeted by LaFollette and Henry&#13;
Cole, professor of science, After a&#13;
few brief formalities, they were&#13;
off to see what the city of&#13;
Kenosha is doing 'With its sewage&#13;
these days,&#13;
LaFollette, a well-known&#13;
ecologist, led the governor on a&#13;
tour of two "holding ponds"&#13;
where the sewage is dwnped. The&#13;
unfortunate part of dumping the&#13;
sewage in this manner is that the&#13;
holding ponds lie in a flood plain -&#13;
when the rains come, the raw,&#13;
untreated sewage goes&#13;
everywhere. Lucey promised to&#13;
look into the matter.&#13;
The entourage (the governor&#13;
and LaFollette in the governor's&#13;
limousine, with two carloads of&#13;
news paople Iollowingj arrived at&#13;
Tallent Hall at 2:45 p.m., only to&#13;
find that parking was nonexistent.&#13;
It's somewhat strange&#13;
to see the governor's chauffeur&#13;
looking in vain for a parking spot&#13;
Parking was finally located,&#13;
though, and the group boarded a&#13;
shuttle bus (which almost lett&#13;
without the governor) (or&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The governor&#13;
said that he was pleased with the&#13;
idea of a shuttle bus, but also&#13;
agreed with LaFollette that $1 for&#13;
a round·trip from Racine was&#13;
entirely too steep, and indeed&#13;
contributed to the OVeI"CON"'SlDg&#13;
of the existing lots - not 10&#13;
mention the added pollution.&#13;
Lucey and Doug LaFollette&#13;
were met by Bruce Schroeder.&#13;
who was recently appointed&#13;
District Attorney for Kenosha by&#13;
It's the gov!&#13;
lAIcey and "ho IS roll/llog for&#13;
elec-tion In rovember A lMrt':&#13;
to meet Luc~' "as O1&amp;rl Huck.&#13;
Democratic cendrdare for the&#13;
late mbly&#13;
As the governor entered&#13;
Greenqcasr. sUlTOUnded by nov.&#13;
people, the reacuon w.&#13;
C1mos,ty, mostly. and. glimmer&#13;
here and there 0( recogruhon -&#13;
mostly recogruhon 0( LaFoll tt ,&#13;
oot Lucey,&#13;
Locey greeted the luden&#13;
warmly, and the reaclJon of me t&#13;
was plea arable, If a bit nervous&#13;
ophomore teve Brinkman&#13;
summed up much 0( the tudents'&#13;
sentiment "hen he commented,&#13;
"1I's good that he came here to&#13;
meet the luden , instead of&#13;
haVl~ the tudents ha'1ng to go&#13;
to him"&#13;
Chanc&lt;!lIor \ly'lhe greeted th&#13;
governor and LaFolieUe ID&#13;
Greenqwsl The two Lalked hk&#13;
old fnends for • fev. moments,&#13;
and \lyllte pomted out the construction&#13;
under "ay .nd offered&#13;
several comments regard,~ It&#13;
The governor '8 qwle tnteeested&#13;
m the type 0( bu,ld,og&#13;
bere, especially ".th the emphasis&#13;
on "hvrng bulldlog:'&#13;
rather lhan tradtucaal, tod&#13;
architecture Ever-ywher the&#13;
governor ....enl here, he saw&#13;
evidence 01 this concept. a&#13;
studen louoged on n-. .nd&#13;
the "hot do "e-eryv.here&#13;
A tour 0( lhe hbr.ry prov.ded •&#13;
chance for the gov morlO the&#13;
"krofiche readers Ttl book&#13;
provided for lhe demonstr.uon&#13;
....as a volume by Robert 1&#13;
"Ftghung Bob" La Folielle, Iale&#13;
governor of Wi con In Phil&#13;
Burnell, dlrector 0( lhe hbrary,&#13;
po,nted out to budget-mInded&#13;
lAIcey that the hooI obta.tned&#13;
20, volum ,n the 'licrofl e&#13;
collection for S20, The sam&#13;
collechon 10 th orlllnll,&#13;
assummg lhe boo .. rf' 'en&#13;
available .....ould run len to fift&#13;
umes \hal pnce, and tak 1&#13;
um&#13;
p&#13;
Th 8O\emor&#13;
01 11I'O" th pi&#13;
th&#13;
m&#13;
Austerity slows building program here&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
Things have been happening&#13;
around campus in the ~on·&#13;
strucHon department. Besides&#13;
the major projects of Communication&#13;
Arts and Classr&#13;
.&#13;
oom&#13;
buildings various other projects&#13;
are being' undertaken in the area&#13;
of sight development. Among&#13;
these are bus shelters and&#13;
sidewalks,&#13;
The shelters. which will .have&#13;
the appearance of interlmk~&#13;
hexagons roughly 13 x 30 feet, Will&#13;
have seating capacities for about&#13;
30 persons. Unfortunately: only&#13;
'II be constructed In the&#13;
one WI h f r&#13;
, diate future -- at tea&#13;
1mme d also unk'ng&#13;
lot an par I ,; will be unheated,&#13;
fortunately, I b ' g laid&#13;
The walks presently em ba k&#13;
between the segments 0,£ t!t.e&#13;
c&#13;
the responslblhty of&#13;
lot are . the planning&#13;
someone 10&#13;
department in, Mad,son The&#13;
long-range plan I to have sealing&#13;
areas and landscapmg In the&#13;
areas around the parking lolS to&#13;
improve the aesthetic situation&#13;
A decorative circular .....alk 15&#13;
being constructed In front of&#13;
Tallent Hall The center of the&#13;
entry circle is an area which may&#13;
some day contain a fountam. but&#13;
no money exists for such a&#13;
project at this time. The&#13;
decorative brick walkway Will&#13;
match the brick pavers to be used&#13;
elsewhere on campus&#13;
Upon completion of the&#13;
Communication Arts, _and&#13;
Classroom building . additional&#13;
walks and terraced areas will be&#13;
provided south and west of the&#13;
Library, west of the Classroom&#13;
building and south of lhe CommArts&#13;
building, ,&#13;
In talking to James GalbraIth,&#13;
head of Planning and Con·&#13;
s!ruction, RA 'GER learned thaI&#13;
of the two major bUilding&#13;
pro ts req led for th 197HS&#13;
bteMlum, only th ... " bulldl&#13;
for the h lof 100 rn In tr)'&#13;
hod appro,ed by th Board&#13;
0( Regt'll The addluon to th&#13;
Ph) Ed bulld,ng " drIlled ",'en&#13;
thou$ the pr t faclhty f.1&#13;
short 0( Rt'I(enl gwdchn&#13;
Becau'e of the go\'ern r'&#13;
aust nty pr&lt;JiRram. only ual&#13;
buIldIng' ",II be appro,ed for&#13;
con troctlon In lh n 'lCt bien·&#13;
mum It I hoped thaI th • \I&#13;
buildIng "II' be one of thoI.e&#13;
con~ld",ed nual&#13;
In nf'\\ lng th present tate or&#13;
the campu', GalbraIth I proud&#13;
and pleased ".th the results of&#13;
Lhe ....ock but '" Ishe' th faeihtl&#13;
could be compleled sooner&#13;
The CommuOicallon Art&#13;
bulldmg" a or.g",ally' scheduled&#13;
for compleUon m January, 1973,&#13;
but ra",s have detayed the early&#13;
constnJcllon Korndorfer eonstruchon&#13;
is trying hard to have at&#13;
least the cia room portion of the GOVT. rJ ~s.&#13;
OCT 1 1972&#13;
UW-Parksida LlbralJ&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
-----------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
"' ..&#13;
ii&#13;
0&#13;
z&#13;
.;&#13;
"-&#13;
,.&#13;
D&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey&#13;
Bus service from-Racine&#13;
may end Friday&#13;
By Shawn Clements&#13;
As of Oct. 20, there may be no&#13;
more bus service between Racine&#13;
and the Parkside campus. This&#13;
will leave some 100 students&#13;
without transportation and&#13;
conceivably add to the already&#13;
overcrowded parking lots.&#13;
"The main thing we need is&#13;
more interest in using the buses,"&#13;
Ms. Echelbarger commented.&#13;
"Without increased revenue, who&#13;
can blame Wisconsin Coach for&#13;
wanting to discontinue. Where&#13;
are all the students concerned&#13;
with ecology?"&#13;
A call to Racine Mayor Kenneth&#13;
Huck's office produced a&#13;
"no comment" and a "The&#13;
Mayor is busy and cannot speak&#13;
with you."&#13;
Car pool, anyone?&#13;
Who's he?&#13;
According to Stan Altenbern,&#13;
president of Wisconsin Coach&#13;
Unes, the service is being&#13;
discontinued because of lack of&#13;
u e. Altenbern said that a&#13;
minimum of 180 one-way trips&#13;
must be made per day for the&#13;
company to break even and 230&#13;
lo 250 for the line to 'make a decent profit. Austerity slows buildin&#13;
The announcement came&#13;
following a Public Service&#13;
C~mmission hearing on Oct. 10.&#13;
Wisconsin Coach had originally&#13;
requested a permanent permit to&#13;
Operate the line, though this was&#13;
changed to a temporary permit&#13;
request (which was approved)&#13;
after the company discovered the&#13;
loss of revenue. A schedule&#13;
change, which went into effect on&#13;
Oct. 9, has had little effect as yet,&#13;
according to Altenbern, on&#13;
revenues.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger assistant&#13;
~?n for student affair's, said that&#13;
eelers" have gone out to Flash&#13;
of Ra · Fl cme and Kenosha Transit.&#13;
dash ,. however, is already&#13;
f&#13;
I cussing discontinuing service&#13;
t~r Racine. A public hearing on&#13;
l. at request has been set for Nov.&#13;
d&#13;
. Ms. Echelbarger also said that I CU . G ss1ons are underway with&#13;
1&#13;
/leway Tech., which already&#13;
1 ansports students from Racine&#13;
a~lenosha, to possibly expand&#13;
a transport Parkside students&#13;
S We]].&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
Things have been happening improv&#13;
around campus in the ~onstruction&#13;
department. Besides&#13;
the major projects of Communication&#13;
Arts and Clas r_oom&#13;
buildings various other proJects&#13;
are being' undertaken in the area&#13;
of sight development. Among&#13;
these are bus shelters and&#13;
sidewalks. . . , The shelters, which will _ha~e&#13;
the appearance of interlink~&#13;
hexagons roughly 13 x 30 feet, wll&#13;
have seating capacities for about&#13;
30 persons. Unfortunately_, only&#13;
one will be constructed m re&#13;
immediate future -- at the ar&#13;
k. g lot and also unpar&#13;
m . . b heated&#13;
fortunately , it will e un_ I ·ci&#13;
The walks presently bemg a1k&#13;
th egments of the bac&#13;
between es "bTty of&#13;
lot are the respons1 I I .&#13;
in the planning someone&#13;
d11&#13;
It' th&#13;
h r&#13;
0 &#13;
2THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
We need those buses&#13;
Wisconsin Coach is considering discontinuing bus&#13;
service from Racine to our campus. This must not&#13;
happen.&#13;
Many of our students from Racine rely on this service&#13;
and would be greatly inconvenienced.&#13;
p rt of the problem lies In the amount of students who&#13;
use the service. Wisconsin Coach feels if cannot operate&#13;
profitably with the present passenger usage. This&#13;
editorial makes an appeal to students, faculty, and staff&#13;
from R cin who could lust as soon use the service as&#13;
not. Ev n though it is the view of this paper that the cost&#13;
of the service is too high, at this point it is better than no&#13;
rvlce lit all.&#13;
re Important, we are making an appeal to&#13;
Wisconsin Coach to continue service in the hope fhat&#13;
mar stud nts, faculty, and staff will begin to use Coach&#13;
buses regularly. We feel this service will be mutually&#13;
profit ble for both Wisconsin Coach and passengers.&#13;
Editorial research&#13;
We re Iit is our responsibility fo alert our audience to&#13;
th possible trouble which may arise from the use of the&#13;
product of one of our advertisers, Research Unlimited.&#13;
The company sells research papers by mail order&#13;
:i:at logue.&#13;
First, plagiarism is illegal. Second, the state's attorney&#13;
has been clamping down on suspected users of&#13;
the service.&#13;
If it Is found that the paper was indeed used as&#13;
background material, no adion can be taken. If there is&#13;
a case of plagiarism, the student user will very likely&#13;
find himself expelled from school.&#13;
The function of Research Unlimited is very legal, but&#13;
the service's misuse can be Illegal.&#13;
Chess, anyone?&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
1 ~ poant In Parkside's&#13;
hislory II IS necessary to a one&#13;
v I)' Importanl qu bon - shall&#13;
th l.LC food Ice rea at·&#13;
tempt to chi Its OIiglOaI goal&#13;
_ to a· a cafetena for&#13;
tu n • fa ulty, and taU - or&#13;
11\' In lO one (W' another of the&#13;
CUrT'tflt trends wtuch ppear 10&#13;
rapIdly be monopollZlng II~&#13;
1/ .• opl 10 keep II a cereteete.&#13;
th all d us who wander around&#13;
I nc.~ tray m one hand and&#13;
boob or attache case in lhe other&#13;
ould uddenly flOd thai there is&#13;
Ind a place to II. You may&#13;
ha. 10 ~ rrang someone else's&#13;
rb&lt;o&amp; ,but tI a I you ' .. got a&#13;
I How ·er, ther&lt;! a~ other&#13;
llern8It'· to eabng lunch. and&#13;
to lin Ith lis polley of ",porting&#13;
II .d . RAl'iGER wishes to&#13;
make you aware or these&#13;
l\&gt;lhlt&#13;
flt"t. th rea could be con·&#13;
, rted to a ludy hall In the&#13;
Ir d.lton I n thiS o\lld&#13;
reqwre pla.,n aU the tables end&#13;
to end to row • With chain only&#13;
alo~ one Id to pre.enl \10'&#13;
n f) con\'ersation. But&#13;
lnno'" tlHO Park ide students&#13;
, decIded that ludYI~ is&#13;
much mQre eUeclively done&#13;
m. I loud no and confUSIon.&#13;
Theref_ the fUl'1\llure could&#13;
rema.n .t IS, and perhaps a&#13;
rock band could be hired to play&#13;
In 'alO Place to provide ad·&#13;
ebltonal "OUnd bmulllS.&#13;
nd allemalt,.., IS to make&#13;
It InlO • C 100 ard sharks&#13;
bound- 'n lhe lacsurule red&#13;
I alh r . eals. They could&#13;
probably conVInce the ludenl&#13;
b .. b 0I1t to layout money&#13;
for red , Iv I openes from&#13;
lin 10floor 10 enclose the a rea&#13;
m k .t mor .nbmate hag&#13;
lin ould be mce, too,&#13;
Itho h not necessary nghl&#13;
"Y .a r and other k.nds of&#13;
"ould hso c:ontrl1l11le to&#13;
the atmosphere. The food service&#13;
counter could be converted to a&#13;
bar. and the pictures in the&#13;
veeding machines changed from&#13;
soda cans to apples, oranges and&#13;
lemons. Jackpot! You could play&#13;
pok.er fo.- "as" with your profs,&#13;
roU dice lor pass or fail, and spin&#13;
the roulette wheel 01 term paper&#13;
topics. You might even win the&#13;
compleled paper.&#13;
A tbird major trend in&#13;
utilization of this area is as a&#13;
game room, specifically for&#13;
chess. One can visualize it now:&#13;
Daleline - Kenosha - World&#13;
Cbess Cbampion Bobby Fischer&#13;
am.ed today al the campus of&#13;
UW·Parkside for his match with&#13;
challe~er Queenie Bishop. Is.&#13;
Bishop. a Parkside student, had&#13;
requested thai the match be held&#13;
in the university's Chess Place&#13;
because d the proximity of soda&#13;
mactunes and rest rooms.&#13;
"I drink a lot when I'm Ilnder&#13;
pre 1lCO." Ms. Bishop is quoled&#13;
as saying. H()\\'ever. Mr. Fischer,&#13;
upon his am.a!, glanced al the&#13;
buildl~ ,,;th scorn and ",fused&#13;
to play until a cafeteria was&#13;
constructed ",;thin easy walking&#13;
distance.&#13;
So there you have it, Parkside.&#13;
The l.LC Cafeteria stands jt the&#13;
er roads. Which direcbon il&#13;
wtll take depends on You. U you&#13;
~ishto gh'e in to your stomachs,&#13;
please have a little consideration&#13;
for the other stomachs on&#13;
campus, too. Between the hours&#13;
0111 and 2 you a", mosl likely 10&#13;
see hunger-crazed students&#13;
desperately seeking a place 10&#13;
rest thew lra)'S During this lime&#13;
try ludying lO the Iibr&amp;!)' (we&#13;
realize It'S quiet, but one has to&#13;
adapt locertaln inconveniences).&#13;
There are also lounge areas&#13;
throughoul the building for&#13;
lud)'ing. or playing chess, poker,&#13;
old maid. or whatever. Let's give&#13;
the original plan for a cafelena a&#13;
(alf trial.&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
Pencil sharpeners mentioned last week have&#13;
arrived. ow all we need is someone to install them.&#13;
I hope they'll lind the time.&#13;
Tentative schedules have been made out for classes&#13;
next semester. U the division heads would release&#13;
these to the students. they could receive immed~ate&#13;
leedhack on how to resol ve any coollicts that might&#13;
have occurred in having required courses occurrl~&#13;
stmultanecusly: something which has happened m&#13;
the past&#13;
We could sure use some enclosed and heated bus&#13;
shelters before the snow flies. The way things stand&#13;
oow, we're not going to get them.&#13;
With the money squeeze on, it's interesting to note&#13;
that we do have funds to install that unnecessary&#13;
piece of walk in front of Tallent H 11.Also, laying&#13;
those walks to lear up that beautiful piece of lawn in&#13;
the center of the back parking lot is stupid. People&#13;
gomg to and from the buses are going to travel in a&#13;
straight line across the grass.&#13;
It is amazing to me that certain students at this&#13;
university have not progressed beyond the maturity&#13;
oC the average kindergarten student. Irefer to those&#13;
morons who carved their initials in the concrete in&#13;
front of Tallent Hall. This is pure vandalism and I&#13;
hope those responsible are caught and expelled.&#13;
There are still not enough buses in service to handle&#13;
the crowds during the morning rush periods.&#13;
Drivers are taking on passengers at the near lot&#13;
before going to the far lot with the result that the&#13;
buses are Cull before they reach there. This practice&#13;
should cease.&#13;
I'm reasonably certain that if enough people&#13;
requested it, the lower level entrance to the Library&#13;
could be opened. There is t?O mU~h time wasted in&#13;
getting to the one entrance 10 service at the present&#13;
time.&#13;
I think it is about time that the Distinguished&#13;
Teacher Award nominations be put back into th&#13;
hands of the only people qualified to jUdg:&#13;
distingUIshed teaching - the students themselves&#13;
The method us~~ the past tw~ years does not work:&#13;
There is InSUffiCient student input for results to be&#13;
analyzed.&#13;
Last time the .4,~+ students at this school submitted&#13;
some~llng lIke ~O?recoI?mendations. Hence&#13;
this method Judges writing ability of students, not&#13;
quality of instruction. The Student Senate Teacher&#13;
Evaluation Forms could easily be made mandatory&#13;
in all divisions and used in such an evaluation.&#13;
Time is running out for those of you who would like&#13;
to get in on the great Nixon-McGovern cutdown in&#13;
the Nov. 1 issue. Anything you would like to see&#13;
mentioned for or against either side should be in OUr&#13;
office by Oct, 21. I shall be taking the anti-Nixon&#13;
point of view; another staff member is pro-Nixon&#13;
We need some anti and prO-McGovern input t~&#13;
round out the discussion.&#13;
How about setting the clocks on campus to&#13;
correspond to time in the rest of the world? Seems&#13;
things around here happen three minutes later than&#13;
other places.&#13;
1 wasn't kidding when I mentioned before that we&#13;
need people to solicit ads for the paper. The more&#13;
we get, the better we can run in not having the&#13;
financial burden hanging over.&#13;
There is going to be a staff meeting this Thursday at&#13;
8 p.m. in the office, D·194 LLC. Monday nights we&#13;
have a newspaper layout session. Everyone is invited&#13;
to attend,&#13;
We get letfers.i,&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I would like to summarize the&#13;
status of the parking petition&#13;
which I circulated, and to&#13;
respond to Phil Burnett's letter.&#13;
Phil sent me the original copy of&#13;
the letter and I, in turn, submitted&#13;
it to the University&#13;
Committee when I appeared.&#13;
before them. The petition which&#13;
you published was a part of a&#13;
letter which presented an&#13;
argument which did not appear in&#13;
the Ranger.&#13;
My argument was that poor bus&#13;
service caused faculty and slalf&#13;
to spend between 6 and 8 bours&#13;
per week riding the bus, thus&#13;
reducing the work output of many&#13;
persons. I suggested that a&#13;
remedy Jay in a temporary andor&#13;
'permanent starr·faculty&#13;
parking lot on the west side of&#13;
Wood Road. Ialso suggested that&#13;
the shuttle service needed some&#13;
attention. I think mosl of us&#13;
would agree that the bus service&#13;
has improved substantially.&#13;
Many comments and&#13;
suggestions were returned with&#13;
the parking petition. I sum·&#13;
marized these for the members of&#13;
the University Committee&#13;
suggesled thai they be gi.. ~&#13;
further sludy by the appropriate&#13;
committee, and requested that&#13;
the committee take a position&#13;
sUP.p?rting the sense of the&#13;
pe,tition. The University Comffi1lt.E:e&#13;
took such a position&#13;
unarumously; they forwarded the&#13;
matter. to the Campus Planning&#13;
Com~llltu:e. I believe that the&#13;
park10g Situation is under review&#13;
at this time.&#13;
Personally, I am all for non.&#13;
segregaled parking lots as long&#13;
as lhey fllOCt.on efficiently I&#13;
ho~. we're on the road tow~rd&#13;
erCIClency.&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
esteem. Which garbage can was&#13;
all that work thrown into?&#13;
Hats off to Jewel Echelbarger.&#13;
She agreed that the busing&#13;
situation wasn't right, yet she&#13;
signed the letter which told&#13;
students that school would now&#13;
cost them 18 dollars a month&#13;
more just to get there (daily ride&#13;
to and from campus). She has&#13;
now placed her name on an ad&#13;
which says "service will be&#13;
discontinued" if more riders&#13;
don;t ride the daily robber. To&#13;
Jewel I say, may you ride a&#13;
bicycle to campus in the middle&#13;
of January. Some of us will have&#13;
to.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In its first issue in its short&#13;
existence, the Parkside Ranger&#13;
editorialized on the busing&#13;
situation for students commuting&#13;
from Racine to Campus. Three&#13;
weeks later the situation has&#13;
changed. It's GOTTEN WORSE!&#13;
Now for ithe same ridiculously&#13;
high fee there are considerably&#13;
less trips per day. And to top thai,&#13;
there is a threa t of discontinued&#13;
service.&#13;
I would like 10 thank the administration&#13;
at Parkside and the&#13;
Wisconsin Coach Lines for taking&#13;
such a dramatic action. It's good&#13;
to know that student surveys and&#13;
editorials are held in such high ~If:.The Parksidlee------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
-&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is publ ished weekly throughout&#13;
the academ ic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Oftices are located at D-194 Library.Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are nof&#13;
nwecessarily the official view of the University of&#13;
Isconsin· Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRIT . Koch, Kathy W II ERS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kns ~&#13;
Martin; ner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma, Shawn Clements, Da&#13;
, am Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave R~yher,&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken P";tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
,&#13;
N ,J..EP1lESENTED ~J.. NATIONAL ADVER.TISIN~ BY&#13;
49&#13;
anonal EducatIOnal Advertising ServIces, InC. i&#13;
360 Lexington Ave.• New York. N, Y. 10017 ~&#13;
'THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 EDITORIALS/ 0 PINION s&#13;
n.&#13;
need those buses&#13;
considering discontinuing bus&#13;
o our campus. This must not&#13;
ny of ours uden s from Racine rely on this service&#13;
ould greatly inconvenienced.&#13;
problem lies · n the amount of students who&#13;
le . i consln Coach feels it cannot operate&#13;
t h present passenger usage. This&#13;
n ppe I o students, faculty, and staff&#13;
ho could f ust as soon use he service as&#13;
h It I l of this paper that the cost&#13;
too high, t this point It ls better than no&#13;
Import nt, e re ma ng an appeal to&#13;
o Co ch to continue service In the hope that&#13;
n , f culty, nd staff ill begin to use Coach&#13;
ul rly. feet this service ill be mutually&#13;
or both n Coach and passengers.&#13;
earch&#13;
pons bllity to alert our audience to&#13;
roubl hlch may arise from the use of the&#13;
our d rt1sers, Research Unlimited.&#13;
II rch papers by mail order&#13;
Is llleg I. Second, the state's atdo&#13;
n on suspected users of&#13;
'&#13;
anyone?&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
THORN I'm reasonably certain that if enough people&#13;
requested it, the lower level entrance to the Library&#13;
could be opened. There is t?O mu~h time wasted in&#13;
getting to the one entrance m service at the present&#13;
time.&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
p ncil harpeners mentioned last week have&#13;
rrived .• ow all we need is omeone to install them.&#13;
I think it is about time that the Distinguished&#13;
Teacher Award nominations be put back into the&#13;
hands of the onl! people qualified to judge&#13;
distinguished teaching - the students themselves&#13;
Toe method used the past two years does not work·&#13;
There is insufficient student input for results to ~&#13;
analyzed.&#13;
I hope th y'II find the time.&#13;
Tentative chedule have been made out for classes&#13;
ne. t eme ter. If the division heads would rel~se&#13;
th · to th tud nts, they could receive immed!ate&#13;
r dback on how tor olve any conflicts that might&#13;
have occurred in ha,ing required courses occurri~g&#13;
imultan ·ly; something which has happened m&#13;
Last time the 4,000+ students at this school submitted&#13;
some~ing like ~o? recoi:n_mendations. Hence&#13;
this method Judges wntmg ab1hty of students not&#13;
quality of instruction. The Student Senate Tea~her&#13;
Evalu~ti~~ Forms coul~ easily be made mandatory&#13;
in all div1s1ons and used m such an evaluation.&#13;
th pa ·t.&#13;
\ e could ur u e ome enclosed and heated bus&#13;
.-hell befor th now flies. The way things stand&#13;
no\\. w re not going to get them. Time is running out for those of you who would like&#13;
to get in on the great Nixon-McGovern cutdown in&#13;
the Nov. 1 issue. Anything you would like to see&#13;
mentioned for or against either side should be in our&#13;
office by Oct. 21. I shall be taking the anti- ixon&#13;
point of view; another staff member is pro-Nixon&#13;
We need some anti and pro-McGovern input to&#13;
round out the discussion.&#13;
With th mone. squ eze on, it's interesting to note&#13;
that w do hav funds to in tall that unnecessary&#13;
piec o( \ alk in front of Tallent H ll. Also, laying&#13;
t \\alk to tear up that beautiful piece of lawn m&#13;
th c nt r or the back parking lot i stupid. People&#13;
oing to and from the buse are going to travel in a&#13;
trai ht line acr the gra .&#13;
It i amazing to me that certain students at this&#13;
umv ·1ty hav not progre ed beyond the maturity&#13;
o th a,·erage kindergarten student. I refer to those&#13;
moron, \hO carved their initials in the concrete in&#13;
front of Tallent Hall. Thi i pure vandalism and I&#13;
hope tho e r pon ible are caught and expelled.&#13;
How about setting the clocks on campus to&#13;
correspond to time in the rest of the world? Seem&#13;
things around here happen three minutes later than&#13;
other places.&#13;
I wasn't kidding when I mentioned before that we&#13;
need people to solicit ads for the paper. The more&#13;
we get, the better we can run in not having the&#13;
financial burden hanging over. There are till not enough buses in service to handle&#13;
the crowds during the morning rush periods.&#13;
Drl\'ers are taking on pas engers at the near lot&#13;
before going to the far lot with the result that the&#13;
bu ·es are full before they reach there. This practice&#13;
There is going to be a staff meeting this Thursday al&#13;
8 p.m. in the office, D-194 LLC. Monday nights we&#13;
have a newspape.- layout session. Everyone is invited&#13;
to attend. hould cea e.&#13;
We get lefters~.-~·-··--"&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I would like to summarize the&#13;
tatus of the parking petition&#13;
which I circulated, and to&#13;
respond to Phil Burnett's letter.&#13;
Phil ent me the original copy of&#13;
the letter and I, in turn, submitted&#13;
it to the University&#13;
C-Ommittee when I appeared&#13;
before them. The petition which&#13;
you published was a part of a letter which presented an&#13;
argument which did not appear in&#13;
the Ranger.&#13;
• 1 · argument was that poor bus&#13;
sen;ce caused faculty and staff&#13;
to pend between 6 and 8 hours&#13;
per week riding the bus, thus&#13;
reducing the work output of many&#13;
persons. I suggested that a&#13;
remed lay in a temporary andor&#13;
_Permanent staff-faculty&#13;
parking lot on the west side of&#13;
Wood Road. I also suggested that&#13;
the shuttle ervice needed some&#13;
attention. I think most of us&#13;
would agree that the bus service&#13;
ha improved substantially.&#13;
• lany comments and&#13;
suggestions were returned with&#13;
the parking petition. I summarized&#13;
these for the members of&#13;
the ni versity Committee&#13;
uggested that they be give~&#13;
further study by the appropriate&#13;
committee, and requested that&#13;
the committee take a position&#13;
up_P?rting the sense of the&#13;
pe_tition. The University Comm1tt.E:e&#13;
took such a position&#13;
unarumously; they forwarded the&#13;
matte~ to the Campus Planning&#13;
Com~mt~. I_ believe that the&#13;
parkmg situation is under review&#13;
at this time.&#13;
Personally, I am all for nonegregated&#13;
pa~king lots as long&#13;
as they• function efficiently. I&#13;
hoi_ie_ we re on the road toward&#13;
efficiency.&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In its first issue in its short&#13;
existence, the Parkside Ranger&#13;
editorialized on the busing&#13;
situation for students commuting&#13;
from Racine to Campus. Three&#13;
weeks later the situation has&#13;
changed. It's GOTIEN WORSE!&#13;
Now for ·the same ridiculously&#13;
high fee there are considerably&#13;
less trips per day. And to top that,&#13;
there is a threat of discontinued&#13;
service.&#13;
I would like to thank the administration&#13;
at Parkside and the&#13;
Wisconsin Coach Lines for taking&#13;
such a dramatic action. It's good&#13;
to know that student surveys and&#13;
editorials are held in such high&#13;
esteem. Which garbage can wa&#13;
all that work thrown into?&#13;
Hats off to Jewel Echelbarger.&#13;
She agreed that the busing&#13;
situation wasn't right, yet she&#13;
signed the letter which told&#13;
students that school would now&#13;
cost them 18 dollars a month&#13;
more just to get there (daily ride&#13;
to and from campus). She has&#13;
now placed her name on an ad&#13;
which says "service will be&#13;
discontinued" if more riders&#13;
don't ride the daily robber. To&#13;
Jewel I say, may you ride a&#13;
bicycle to campus in the middle&#13;
of January. Some of us will have&#13;
to.&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
~Jr.. The PmkskJe -&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located ~t D-1 94 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553.2295.&#13;
~h~ Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
ne_cessa~ily the official view of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITE · Kach, Kathy Well RS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kns ale&#13;
M t· T ner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma Shawn Clements, D&#13;
ar m, om Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, D~ve Reyher.&#13;
=~OTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak Craig Roberts . SI NESS MANAGER· Ken Pe~tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: i-'red Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
7;--:------------___-.:&#13;
• . N ,llEPRESENTED FOil NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY t T ational Educational Advertising Services, Inc. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 ___...., &#13;
Officer Candidates&#13;
ld promise you the world,&#13;
I cau&#13;
ee&#13;
eleeted give you nothing&#13;
andon n The reason for such a&#13;
in retur. . due to the&#13;
ment IS&#13;
stateurance of the. attitudes and&#13;
un~:s of the elected senators;&#13;
bell president of the student&#13;
for a~ent I am responsible to&#13;
govet&#13;
te and call meetings of the&#13;
IIlStl ttl The voting which will&#13;
sena eiace on specific issues is&#13;
~~d~ by all senators and not hy&#13;
the president alone. .&#13;
If any candidate for the office&#13;
f resident IS making such&#13;
o Pises he cannot be conpr:~eddompetent&#13;
for the ollice&#13;
~:ause of his lack of knowledge&#13;
of the. student government&#13;
proceedings.&#13;
Your next President,&#13;
Thomas E. Haack&#13;
Shawn Clements&#13;
for Vice-President&#13;
The reasons I am seeking officership&#13;
as vice-president of&#13;
student government are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
1. Student government should&#13;
represent student ideals and&#13;
wishes. This has not been so in&#13;
the past.&#13;
2. Students have no voice in the&#13;
administration of policies at&#13;
Parkside. This should be changed&#13;
now.&#13;
3. The so-called student union,&#13;
lhougha temporary one, should&#13;
be made more realistic now.&#13;
4. Asa senior at this institution,&#13;
Ihave seen student governments&#13;
corne and go, and I think it is&#13;
about time the student government&#13;
did something to earn the&#13;
respect of the students and administration&#13;
as welL&#13;
The most important task to be&#13;
endeavored by student government&#13;
is to establish a "student&#13;
voice" in the function of&#13;
Parkside. We tried advocation in&#13;
the past, let's give application a&#13;
chance. Let's take a look at some&#13;
stUdent government action. It's&#13;
about time Parkside matured.&#13;
JOE HARRIS&#13;
Candidate for Vice-President&#13;
Student Government&#13;
u.T III THf {OHfORT Of YOUI CAR&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
:1 (~&gt;:1',\, f\ ~RltrJ THE&#13;
~ • ~ BURliER&#13;
'11.\'\-''-' IAHIL'&#13;
~-&gt;-'&#13;
• PiPA BUR6ER • HAMA BURGER&#13;
• TUM BUlin • BABY BURiER&#13;
CARR'( -OUTS&#13;
tA" 'Hloo 'OUO 000[0 """ .. "00'&#13;
T"h' 01 Cb,&lt;~••• rllh&#13;
,.dSb" .. " .'&#13;
"11 G'lLOH 0' OOOT 1110"'ITH ,~(J.Q 000'0&#13;
.. "'"' _OOIH 0'&#13;
""OC'" THUlil&#13;
0_ IH'O'Do_ OOAO&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
She,,~.n Rd H, 12 No''"&#13;
Keno,ho&#13;
HOCOI D'"'''''''' TO"'" 'U""," "O",'HI&#13;
" ." '0 ""O""GH'&#13;
The reasons I am r .&#13;
again for a position in ps~nmg&#13;
as follows: are&#13;
1. I believe there is a need&#13;
student counselling servt for a f rvrca made&#13;
up 0 stUdents who are willin to&#13;
help counsel stUdents above ~nd&#13;
beyon~ academIC counselling&#13;
Parks.Ide. is a growing and&#13;
changmg mstitution.&#13;
2. Last semester PSGA p t&#13;
. togeth~r a student-teach~r&#13;
.evaluation, I would like to see this&#13;
be ~evised to a more permanent&#13;
project, The basic form and ideas&#13;
are ther~, but with a little more&#13;
work . ~IS form could be very&#13;
benef~clal in student program&#13;
planmng. It might also have&#13;
son:: influence on faculty&#13;
posittons.&#13;
3. eee is one of the most imp~rtant&#13;
and influential committees&#13;
on campus. I believe the&#13;
~tudents can benefit much more&#13;
If the eee were more active in&#13;
the campus concern situation.&#13;
4. Revision of the PSGA constitution.&#13;
I know there is need for&#13;
revision of the constitution. Bylaws&#13;
are needed. The constitution&#13;
is too generaL&#13;
Parkside needs student in·&#13;
volvement. As Parkside gets&#13;
larger, the students should have a&#13;
larger coice in University&#13;
governance. We have a good start&#13;
- let's keep going. If you can't&#13;
run for election in the g\lvern·&#13;
ment, please vote in the PSGA&#13;
elections.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
Acting President&#13;
PLATFORM&#13;
1. Assure student government&#13;
to be a viable and powerful force&#13;
to guarantee students "that what&#13;
they see is what they get."&#13;
2. fnstitute a sense of loyalty&#13;
among the Administration,&#13;
faculty, and student body.&#13;
3. Stamp out apathy of students&#13;
towards their government.&#13;
4. Promote the general welfare&#13;
of all students regardless of race,&#13;
color, creed, national origin, or&#13;
social status.&#13;
5. Reassert belief in a supreme&#13;
being and the dignity of all&#13;
peoples under one God.&#13;
6. Pledge to support the student&#13;
body and uphold the rights of all&#13;
students in all matters under the&#13;
law. d '11&#13;
7 Condemn drug abuse an WI&#13;
vig~rously oppose the ille~al&#13;
distribution and use of narcotics&#13;
and dangerous drugs on the&#13;
campus. .&#13;
8. Deplore the pollutIOn of our&#13;
environment and oppose any&#13;
attempt to install any system thaI&#13;
will add to our present air, water,&#13;
or other pollution on the campus.&#13;
Frederick Lawrence&#13;
Candidate for Vice--Pres.&#13;
..~**~*****&#13;
TOM WEISS&#13;
What is Parks ide Student&#13;
Government missing?&#13;
The students oE Parkside need&#13;
a viable government structure&#13;
which has the power to affect&#13;
change and create full implementation&#13;
of student ideas and&#13;
resources.&#13;
Advocation and applicatioo are&#13;
two different things. What&#13;
students say tbey wanl and need&#13;
is one lbing, being able 10 bring&#13;
~ese wants and needs to reality&#13;
IS another.&#13;
In order to have needed&#13;
changes at Parkside, we must&#13;
initiate vehicles which can bring&#13;
such change about. These&#13;
vehicles must be created in the&#13;
form of:&#13;
1. A student court and jury.&#13;
Here students and faculty work&#13;
together to decide; for example,&#13;
the validity of tickets received by&#13;
students, the validity of&#13;
disciplinary action initiated by&#13;
the University against a student~&#13;
the validity of all types oE fines&#13;
levied upon students, and the&#13;
resolution of other student -&#13;
University conflicts.&#13;
2. More powerful student&#13;
committees and boards. Here .....e&#13;
make decisions needed in the&#13;
proper operation of the Union and&#13;
related student activities&#13;
3. The creation or proper lines&#13;
of communication bet~een the&#13;
student government and the&#13;
university. Here wvre "'ill enable&#13;
the realization of equitable&#13;
decisions and solutions to all&#13;
student related problems as&#13;
OPIX&gt;sedto decisions favoring the&#13;
interests of the administration&#13;
and of the parties sympathetic 10&#13;
the University power structure&#13;
-Bruce Volpmtesta, Joe ltams,&#13;
and 1 will make such vehicles a&#13;
Pa rkside reality.&#13;
CHAMPIOS TER\tPAPERS&#13;
636 ~acon t. C'o. 505)&#13;
Boston. Mas. 0'2'215&#13;
61 j .536-9700&#13;
Research m..'tt"ll. teor T~&#13;
R~rs. The'Soft.~lC l.owEST PRICES&#13;
QUICK SERViCE For "'~'-'&#13;
pl~ll~ wt,t~ or cell.&#13;
Wed .• Oct. 18. 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Senate ..*......*****&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz,&#13;
Ta e a tiP from Hot Horse Herbie "do no on&#13;
hundred percent a sucker' Ch ,lout ..&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
Student Go~ermnenl ha !&gt;em&#13;
havmgalotoftroUbieth t twe&#13;
years at Par Ide "Mus&#13;
pnmanJy been due to th quahty&#13;
of person that has been elected 10&#13;
ofIice. Then bas been a great&#13;
deal or problem in e-en reach!&#13;
a quorum m order 10 hold a&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Student Gccernment cannot&#13;
begin to operate efle&lt;:tJ,e1y unul&#13;
the present con utuucn IS&#13;
replaced by a oriulble one. Abo&#13;
\"Oters must carefully consider&#13;
the type of persoe they \'01 for.&#13;
In the po I, bl of peopl ha'e&#13;
been ~oled In that caMOt "orIt&#13;
ellect"..,lj· ,,·,th others&#13;
I "00'1 go uuc greal deta.,1 00&#13;
my quahficallons for office •I&#13;
people "bo 1m me at all kn...&#13;
how Ithmk I ha' e been "" the&#13;
udent Senate lnee Ib for·&#13;
mal100 and ha~e 'lA.T1Uenfor the&#13;
campus new paper for the pasl&#13;
three ·... rs \\'h&lt;n sam thmg&#13;
bothers me. 1 lend 10exp mj&#13;
oplt'Uon on It, "'hether ~t lO •&#13;
campus. adrmnL ..trator. • I I&#13;
leglalor or th go-ernor&#13;
As a TIler for the paper. I I&#13;
mlo a lot of Lhn~5 1 know .. hat&#13;
makes thIS campus Uelt, and I&#13;
shall keep I&lt;)"ng to bnn th&#13;
sludenl 1010his nglllful pia 00&#13;
campus. not let h,m be shO\'ed&#13;
Ide and ne ected.&#13;
Weare hound 10lose sam good&#13;
quahlY people 10th nale.n th&#13;
presidential race lnc~ only on&#13;
pe.-, can be elected to th&#13;
olh"" _lore can be accomplished&#13;
'IA.,l.hm the Senate than Without It&#13;
ThaI I "h} 1 run for the pool 01&#13;
senator HO'IA.ever. anyone that&#13;
feels the urg rna) ....Tlle me In for&#13;
president&#13;
Oct. 23-25&#13;
*****************&#13;
,..Student Governm nt ,..&#13;
~Elections&#13;
,.. ~&#13;
~GET OUT &amp; VOTE ~ I 7rJii~.&#13;
~***** ..*...***..***~Li::&#13;
ERIC CUSHMAN MOORE&#13;
" t pSS ...&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
..&#13;
..._---- -- --_.....-&#13;
_1.-__ -- _ .....,- --- -_......._._ ..&#13;
...-..._-- -&#13;
Damon Runyon once wrote. "The race&#13;
-------- -- IS not alway. 10 the SWltt&#13;
Of the banle 411w,ysto the it,.on&amp;- but It'S' &amp;ood way to be ..&#13;
JOURNAUSM IS A GOOD WAYTO BET&#13;
%ANGER&#13;
Officer Candidates ed ., Oct. 11, 972 TH PARKSIO RA G R&#13;
1 could promise _you the wo~ld, .... ******** Senate&#13;
d once elected give you nothmg&#13;
an turn The reason for such a ·n re · 1 tement is due to the&#13;
st~ssurance of the. attitudes and&#13;
unrefs of the elected senators;&#13;
ror I as president Of the S~Udent&#13;
vernrnent I am responsible to&#13;
~o titute and call meetings of the&#13;
insnate. The voting which will&#13;
:ke place on specific issues is&#13;
decided by all senators and not by&#13;
the president alone.&#13;
If any candi~ate for ~he office&#13;
of president 1s makmg such&#13;
mises, he cannot be con-&#13;
~ered competent for the office&#13;
t,ecause of his lack of knowledge&#13;
of the student government&#13;
proceedings. Your next President,&#13;
Thomas E. Haack&#13;
Shawn Clements&#13;
for Vice-President&#13;
The reasons I am seeking officership&#13;
as vice-president of&#13;
student government are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
1. Student government should&#13;
represent student ideals and&#13;
wishes. This has not been so in&#13;
the past.&#13;
2. Students have no voice in the&#13;
administration of policies at&#13;
Parkside. This should be changed&#13;
now.&#13;
3. The so-called student union&#13;
though a temporary one, should&#13;
be made more realistic now.&#13;
4. As a senior at this institution&#13;
I have seen student governmen~&#13;
come and go, and I think it is&#13;
about time the student government&#13;
did something to earn the&#13;
respect of the students and administration&#13;
as well.&#13;
The most important task to be&#13;
endea~ored by student government&#13;
1s to establish a "student&#13;
voice" in the function of&#13;
Parkside. We tried advocation in&#13;
the past, let's give application a&#13;
chance. Let's take a look at some&#13;
student government action. It's&#13;
about time Parkside matured.&#13;
JOE HARRIS&#13;
Candidate for Vice-President&#13;
Student Government&#13;
• lll ll IHI COMFORT Of YOUI CAR&#13;
i&#13;
: (1: ~\\ ~vfi"&#13;
' /,. ~ BURGER&#13;
~ -- FAMILY&#13;
• PAPA BURGER • MAMA BURGER&#13;
• TUN 8UR61R • BUY IUR6lR&#13;
CARRY-OUTS CALL AHU D 'l'OUfl ~I.OU Will I( l(AD,&#13;
-'"d Shr,mp •·&#13;
HJt CALLON Of 1.00l 1((1 WITH 5,- 00 01.0U&#13;
: .._,u NOUH or MIOCITY TH(Al(I&#13;
ON \HUIOA N flOAO&#13;
[ 552-8404 j&#13;
A &amp;. W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN Sh..,,d~" ltd Hv ]2 Norrh&#13;
Kenosha HOll\ 0.\tll II .\ ._. TO 11 r r.1&#13;
\IJ.., ... U. "40HTH\&#13;
I I A Y TO MIOMIGHT&#13;
The reasons I · am r · agam for a position . unnmg&#13;
as follows: m PSGA are&#13;
1. I believe there is a&#13;
student counsellin n_eed for a&#13;
up of students wh! !~rv1~e ~ade&#13;
help counsel students e :lbng to&#13;
beyond academi a ve and&#13;
TOM WEISS Ken Konkol ERIC CUSH N MOOR&#13;
Parkside is c co~nselling. h . . a growmg a d&#13;
c angmg mstituti n 2 La on. · st semest . together a st e~ PSGA put&#13;
evaluation. I woul~li:;t-teach~r&#13;
be revised to to see this&#13;
project The b a ~ore permanent . as1c form and idea&#13;
:-o:t:~· bfut with a little mor! . . is orm could be ve&#13;
benef1c1al in student ry&#13;
planning. It might 1Program . a so have&#13;
son:i~ mfluence on facult&#13;
positions. Y&#13;
3. CCC is one of the most imp~rtant&#13;
and influential committees&#13;
on campus. I believe the&#13;
students can benefit much&#13;
·r th more I e CCC were more active in&#13;
the campus concern situation&#13;
4. Revision of the PSGA · ftu. cons&#13;
J . t~on. I know there is need for&#13;
rev1s1on of the constitution. By-&#13;
!aws are needed. The constitution&#13;
1s too general.&#13;
Parkside needs student involvement.&#13;
As Parkside gets&#13;
larger, the students should have a&#13;
larger coice in University&#13;
governance. We have a good start&#13;
-- let's keep going. If you can't&#13;
run for election in the g.:ivernment,&#13;
please vote in the PSGA&#13;
elections.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
Acting President&#13;
PLATFORM&#13;
1. Assure student government&#13;
to be a viable and powerful force&#13;
to guarantee students "that what&#13;
they see is what they get."&#13;
2. Institute a sense of loyalty&#13;
among the Administration,&#13;
faculty, and student body.&#13;
3. Stamp out apathy of students&#13;
towards their government.&#13;
4. Promote the general welfare&#13;
of all students regardless of race,&#13;
color, creed, national origin, or&#13;
social status. 5. Reassert belief in a supreme&#13;
being and the dignity of all&#13;
peoples under one God. 6. Pledge to support the student&#13;
body and uphold the rights of all&#13;
students in all matters under the&#13;
law.&#13;
7. Condemn drug abuse and will&#13;
vigorously oppose the iIJe~al&#13;
distribution and use of narcotics&#13;
and dangerous drugs on the&#13;
campus.&#13;
8. Deplore the pollution of our&#13;
environment and oppose any&#13;
attempt to install any system that&#13;
will add to our present air, water.&#13;
or other pollution on the campu Frederick Lawren e&#13;
Candidate for ice-Pre .&#13;
Sun., Oct. 22&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Admission 75c&#13;
Parkside and Wis. 1.0. req1ired&#13;
tud nt&#13;
1de need&#13;
tructure&#13;
to affect&#13;
Let me disclo e to you&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
Da&#13;
Of"&#13;
•••&#13;
kid!&#13;
if TO BET &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
Parkside Potpourri&#13;
A&#13;
The Hawaiian trip is over half-filled. Interested&#13;
students are urged to act now and reserve a spot on this&#13;
great tour.&#13;
B&#13;
Nancy Michals. Oktoberfest Queen&#13;
c&#13;
Phy Ed meets modern design&#13;
D&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie in his "Penthouse"&#13;
E&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey and candidate Doug La Follette tour&#13;
campus.&#13;
B&#13;
Photos by Pat owak &amp; Craig Roberts&#13;
D&#13;
E&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
Parkside Potpourri&#13;
The Hawaiian trip is over half-filled. Interested&#13;
students are urged to act now and reserve a spot on this&#13;
great tour.&#13;
B&#13;
N ncy Michals, Oktoberfest Queen&#13;
Phy Ed meets modern design&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie in his "Penthouse"&#13;
Gov. P trick Lucey and candidate Doug La Follette tour&#13;
c mpus.&#13;
B&#13;
Ph to by Pat owak &amp; Craig Robert&#13;
C&#13;
E&#13;
D &#13;
VIEWPOINT&#13;
;,..;---&#13;
By Shawn Clements&#13;
,,L Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
et me finish my beer"&#13;
. Professor Douglas La Follette led Gov Pat&#13;
smce id lTd .&#13;
roundParksl east ues ay, and since he's&#13;
LuceYl~professor I've heard of running for office&#13;
th~onear (excepting Dr. McGovern), I decided to&#13;
thl~~nto what make~ a political campaign.&#13;
100 Follette is runnmg for the State Senate from&#13;
La ha His Republican opponent is George W&#13;
~~~:so~.In the interest of fairness, I attempted t~&#13;
tact Anderson so I could get a look at his camCO"gnoperation.&#13;
This attempt was met by a brick&#13;
~;Ilof silence and "Don't call us, we'll call you's."&#13;
SO this is, admittedly, somewhat one-sided.&#13;
La Follette is assistant professor of chemistry at&#13;
Parkside. He's better known, though, as an&#13;
ecologist.&#13;
When one first. meet:' . La Follette, it can be&#13;
d"concerting. while waiting for the governor, we I:ot to La Follette's office at Kenosha. One&#13;
Weporterasked if he could turn on a light. "Do you&#13;
~ave something you want to read?" La Follette&#13;
asked. "If so, go ahead. If not, it's a waste of&#13;
etectricity. The sunlight's adequate." A quick check&#13;
revealed that La Follette has always done this __&#13;
reserving artificial lighting for times when it's&#13;
necessary.&#13;
La Follette's "campaign headquarters" are in his&#13;
home.One of the first things that struck me was the&#13;
business-like atmosphere of the place. Everywhere&#13;
it's an office ·th·&#13;
literature piled :~ thies, press statements and&#13;
though. u . All very neat and orderly.&#13;
"I believe in the 'Poi t ' . .&#13;
explains. "Every thin n~, pnnclple~" La Follette&#13;
to Point A, where it1:lon~~ ~one being used goes&#13;
The La Follette cam: .&#13;
examples of this d . patgn IS replete with&#13;
terized b th or. erliness. I heard it characscientificYc~mpaerig~ltll,clans&#13;
as "one of the rna t&#13;
J asked ve ever seen."&#13;
. La Follette what the main pomt 01 hi&#13;
campaign was. "I'm fed . - - .&#13;
elitist politics" he repl"ed AsuPWith politicians. and&#13;
. ' . an example of thi he&#13;
~mt.ed to a "free beer" event held last Tuesday&#13;
dvem~g, whe~e people were asked to chip in a $1&#13;
onation. ~unous, I attended the get-together&#13;
Affter dutIfully paying my one doUar. and geul~&#13;
~y ;ee beer, I talked to the people there. One girl&#13;
ad~ t any money. Her donation of 16 cents was&#13;
~onsl?ered good enough, however. (Can )'( J&#13;
,mag me that happening ata thousand-&lt;lollar-a-plate&#13;
dinner? )&#13;
~fter the gathering got underv.'ay, the political&#13;
speeches started. Surprisingly, they did not drag on&#13;
and on. Gov. Lucey said a few won:ls, as did La&#13;
Follette -- and then it was back to the beer drinking.&#13;
tan~ union pt'&lt;JpI " ~ In IU(!ndal'k't At thf'&#13;
~Uwnn • ,.hlch II lIy ga\ m _ to&#13;
about oom,tlung I'd In ""pi 01.- I&#13;
an ad dire tl'd 10 pl~ of m n n I&#13;
attacklllll La Foll \I&#13;
IlA. GEIl "II hal lour ",,"uon 01 tad'"&#13;
l \II .1 m r: "11' typoc I RepubllClln m r&#13;
tacuc ••&#13;
R..\. 'Gl-:R .. ml't ~ou both&#13;
Follelt '. tl'd. '00'111 lour JOb&#13;
!'hut dO\' n \menc n toto ....&#13;
l II ., mber •. '0 H "auIdn't do lhal nd&#13;
he' lor th "orI&lt;t'J' That hy I'm An&#13;
derson' nO! 110' lor th corporatJ n.• nd h •&#13;
b 109 lhe ,",ark rs"&#13;
RA.· ER "An) ""'or camm&#13;
l."AII '.""ber'··Y.ah Let m&#13;
Good poinl. I thou I I&#13;
dnn Ing. and my lOur&#13;
OnOthlng. that La Folleti. Oln lorh,m .. h&#13;
corps 0( \lIork .,,, n man mort:' h&#13;
though "That's the pn I pul t poilU&#13;
Th La Follette c.mpalgn.' I th c&#13;
man)' thJ.s:) r. II unde.r·n n&#13;
agam "Ilhmanyolh campal .It' lh A.&#13;
the VOIWlleOf W,thout th."", th lutW'O&#13;
nalOr from Kcnooh. "auld ,n IOn')'&#13;
,ndeed&#13;
MediaFair slated&#13;
OSHKOSH -- Radio-TV-film&#13;
students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Oshkosh are bringing&#13;
several outstanding radio, TV&#13;
and movie personalities to the&#13;
campus for their first "Media&#13;
Fair 72" Nov. 13 to 17.&#13;
Among those scheduled to give&#13;
talks are Paul Duke of the NBC&#13;
News Washington bureau, CBS&#13;
sportscaster Haywood Hale&#13;
Broun and "Oscar" winning&#13;
screenplay writer Dalton&#13;
Trumbo.&#13;
Programs will be held during&#13;
the day and evening on each of&#13;
the five days for the Media Fair&#13;
which is being funded by the&#13;
Oshkosh Student Association&#13;
Speakers Series and coordinated&#13;
by the radio-TV-film section of&#13;
the speech department, Alpha&#13;
Epsilon Rho chapter at the&#13;
university and the Reeve Union&#13;
fine arts committee.&#13;
All sessions will be open to the&#13;
public without charge.&#13;
Paul Duke will speak on the&#13;
1972 Presidential campaign.&#13;
Dalton Trumbo will have an&#13;
opendiscussion on the Hollywood&#13;
scene and writing for the movies&#13;
on Tuesday evening, Nov. 14.&#13;
Trumbo won the 1971 Cannes&#13;
International Film Festival&#13;
Award for "Johnny Got His&#13;
r..AB·O·RT·ioNS····&#13;
~FREERelerral to N.Y. Clinic.&#13;
12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
CONTROLLED&#13;
:PARENTHOOD&#13;
(a non. profit organiL.ation)&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
. (313) 964-0530 .............................&#13;
Jobs Are Available ... !&#13;
For FREE information&#13;
on stUdent assistance and&#13;
placem~n t program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED&#13;
envelope to the National&#13;
Placement Registry, 100 I&#13;
~TstIdaho St., Kalispell.&#13;
"1 59901&#13;
- NO GIMMICKS _&#13;
Gun," of which he was the writer,&#13;
director and producer. He also&#13;
received an "Oscar" for one of&#13;
his movie screenplays.&#13;
"Communications by Lasers,"&#13;
subject of a talk and threedimensional&#13;
photography&#13;
demonstration, will show how&#13;
laser beams can be used to&#13;
transmit telephone conversations,&#13;
TV programs and&#13;
communications data.&#13;
Cable television, the effects of&#13;
cable television on today's&#13;
commercial broadcasting and&#13;
regulation of cable television will&#13;
be discussed.&#13;
International television is the&#13;
subject of the talk to be given by&#13;
Colin Campbell, vice president of&#13;
ABC Films and director for its&#13;
international sales. There will&#13;
also be a 12-hour "Film Grab&#13;
Bag," consisting of a mixtur~ of&#13;
silent films, early sound mOVies,&#13;
comedies, dramas and European&#13;
movies.&#13;
t II La&#13;
.... h,·11&#13;
lJ""&#13;
Illu h my&#13;
umed my&#13;
Lady, are you terrorized?&#13;
Does a woman have to go&#13;
through life terrorized and&#13;
befuddled by a machine - namel)'&#13;
her own car? The Parkside&#13;
Women's caucus doesn'ttlunk so&#13;
and is taking steps to reverse this&#13;
cultural stereotype. Parkside&#13;
Women's Caucus is offering a Car&#13;
Clinic for all Parkside ~omen&#13;
students, faculty and staff who&#13;
would like to be able to tell a Ian&#13;
belt from a fuel pump.&#13;
The Car Clinic will be held&#13;
Sunday. Oct. 22. al 1 p.m. on the&#13;
north Side of the bus shelter III th&#13;
far east parking lot of the main&#13;
(Wood Road) campus (Bad&#13;
weather date will be announced&#13;
by posted nyers.)&#13;
Women are encouraged to&#13;
come dressed in grubbies and&#13;
should be prepared to "ark either&#13;
on their own car or on someone&#13;
else's. Procedures such as&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
PIZZA tnCHEN&#13;
Chiclced &amp; ltaliln Sluug. Bolllhers&#13;
free Deliveryto Perksl., Villi"&#13;
,,,,,,, 6S1-S''''&#13;
checking oil and changmg a tire&#13;
"III be demonstratl'd&#13;
Regular Parkslde Women's&#13;
.... h d on&#13;
.t 7':10 p m&#13;
Ca ...&#13;
II l'd&#13;
lOLL&#13;
m&#13;
y ,&#13;
0·174&#13;
n&#13;
run&#13;
HITESKELLAR&#13;
\. (north lounle&#13;
\'\ Greenquist Halll&#13;
\.;V~TA'''' E"'~ '1M'&#13;
1 '.11. Thrsday. Oct. 19&#13;
1 mberrOI&#13;
i it Our&#13;
IER BR&#13;
at&#13;
135022nd A enue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
H&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
.." " " ". " " ",&#13;
Cham- Tap-Bar&#13;
25' r Durand&#13;
Racine. Wls,&#13;
edh~gne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches 0&#13;
............................. and Pizza ,.".,, cXJ, 0:.&#13;
J!JEWPOINT&#13;
~&#13;
'' L Wed., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSID&#13;
et Ille finish my be&#13;
R G RS&#13;
By Shawn Clements r' . e professor Douglas La Follette led Gov Pat&#13;
sine ·d l t T · around Parks1 e as uesday, and since he's&#13;
Lucey I' h d f · Jy professor ve ear o runnmg for office&#13;
thf/;ear (excepting Dr. M:&lt;?overn), I decided to&#13;
~k into what make~ a political campaign.&#13;
La Follette is runm~g for the State Senate from&#13;
OSha. His Republican opponent is George w&#13;
!{en · t t ff · · Anderson. In them eres o a1rness, I attempted to&#13;
contact Ande.rson s~ I could get a look at his cam-&#13;
·gn operation. This attempt was met by a brick ~;ll of silence and "Don't call us, we'll call you's.,,&#13;
So this is, adi:iiitte~ly, somewhat one-sided.&#13;
La Follette 1s assistant professor of chemistry at&#13;
Parkside. He's better known, though, as an&#13;
ecologist.&#13;
When one first. mee~ . La Follette, it can be&#13;
disconcerting. While wa1tmg for the governor we&#13;
went to La Follette's office at Kenosha. 'one&#13;
reporter asked if he could turn on a light. "Do you&#13;
have something you want to read?" La Follette&#13;
asked. "If so, go ahead. If not, it's a waste of&#13;
electricity. The sunlight's adequate." A quick check&#13;
revealed that La Follette has always done this __&#13;
reserving artificial lighting for times when it's&#13;
necessary.&#13;
La Follette's "campaign headquarters" are in his&#13;
home. One of the first things that struck me was the&#13;
business-like atmosphere of the place. Everywhere&#13;
Media Fair slated •&#13;
OSHKOSH -- Radio-TV-film&#13;
students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Oshkosh are bringing&#13;
several outstanding radio, TV&#13;
and movie personalities to the&#13;
campus for their first "Media&#13;
Fair 72" Nov. 13 to 17.&#13;
Gun," of which he was the writer,&#13;
director and producer. He also&#13;
received an "Oscar" for one of&#13;
his movie screenplays.&#13;
Lady, are you terrori ?&#13;
•&#13;
Among those scheduled to give&#13;
talks are Paul Duke of the NBC&#13;
News Washington bureau, CBS&#13;
sportscaster Haywood Hale&#13;
Broun and "Oscar" winning&#13;
screenplay writer Dalton&#13;
Trumbo.&#13;
Programs will be held during&#13;
the day and evening on each of&#13;
the five days for the Media Fair&#13;
which is being funded by the&#13;
Oshkosh Student Association&#13;
Speakers Series and coordinated&#13;
by the radio-TV-film section of&#13;
the speech department, Alpha&#13;
Epsilon Rho chapter at the&#13;
university and the Reeve Union&#13;
fine arts committee.&#13;
All sessions will be open to the&#13;
public without charge.&#13;
Paul Duke will speak on the&#13;
1972 Presidential campaign.&#13;
Dalton Trumbo will have an&#13;
open discussion on the Hollywood&#13;
scene and writing for the movies&#13;
on Tuesday evening, Nov. 14.&#13;
Trumbo won the 1971 Cannes&#13;
International Film Festival&#13;
Award for "Johnny Got His&#13;
:··· .......................... . l ABORTIONS&#13;
l FREE Referral to N.Y. Clinic.&#13;
1 12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
CONTROLLED&#13;
PARENTHOOD&#13;
(a non.profit organilation)&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
. (313) 964-0530 :&#13;
·····························•&#13;
Jobs Are Available ... !&#13;
For FREE information&#13;
on student assistance and&#13;
placeJ:Trent program send&#13;
self-addressed ST AMPED&#13;
envelope to the National&#13;
Placement Registry, 1001&#13;
~ st Idaho St., Kalispell, " 1T 59901&#13;
- NO GIMMICKS -&#13;
" Communications by Lasers,"&#13;
subject of a talk and threedi&#13;
men siona l photogra phy&#13;
demonstration, will show how&#13;
laser beams can be used to&#13;
transmit telephone conversations,&#13;
TV programs and&#13;
communications data.&#13;
Cable television, the effects of&#13;
cable television on today's&#13;
commercial broadcasting and&#13;
regula tion of cable television will&#13;
be discussed.&#13;
International television is the&#13;
subject of the talk to be given by&#13;
Colin Campbell, vice president of&#13;
ABC Films and director for its&#13;
international sales. There will&#13;
also be a 12-hour "Film Grab&#13;
Bag," consisting of a mixtur~ of&#13;
silent films, early sound movies,&#13;
comedies, dramas and European&#13;
movies.&#13;
Does a woman ha\·e to o&#13;
through life terrorized and&#13;
befuddled by a machine - name \&#13;
her own car" The Par · 1d°&#13;
Women' Caucus doesn' thin· o&#13;
and is taking tep- tor \er th&#13;
cultural tereotype. Par td&#13;
\\.'omen· Caucu i offenn a r&#13;
Clinic for all Par ide ,omen&#13;
student . faculty and taff ho&#13;
would like to be able to tell a fan&#13;
belt from a fuel pump&#13;
The Car Clinic "111 be h ld&#13;
unday. Oct. 22. at 1 pm on th&#13;
north 1de of the b h r far ea t parkin lot of the m m&#13;
(\\'ood Road) campu B d&#13;
weather date will be nnoun&#13;
by po ted Oyer.,.)&#13;
Women are encour&#13;
come dr ed m grubb1&#13;
hould be prepared to&#13;
on their O\\ n car or on&#13;
el e' Procedure&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bo111lters&#13;
Free Del~ery to Parksi•• Yill•t•&#13;
1011 JOI/, At1n•1 ,,,., 6l1-lf'1&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
1&#13;
hon&#13;
F T&#13;
a ional Bank&#13;
of eno h&#13;
......................................................... -..... . . ~-- . Cham-Tap-Bar&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis. .&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
ap&#13;
Ham Sandw ·ches 0&#13;
and Pizza O . ................................................................ &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
~ K nosba School 808M! is&#13;
I 109for ..·olunteen to work in&#13;
!he 'allOnal Rlght to Read&#13;
Program Th1S would entail&#13;
work,ng w,lh lourth and liIlh&#13;
grade el mentary tudents appro&#13;
trn lely two hours per week.&#13;
For more ,nformation contact&#13;
Dr Vlrglnla HawkUlS, reading&#13;
con ul tant , Keno ha Public&#13;
hool •01653- 2371. extension 61,&#13;
01' Education OWl Ion Gree:nquist&#13;
318. $53-2lt10&#13;
•&#13;
Pltk ,d Iud nt Actlvitie&#13;
Board 10,11 P nt "B,g Jake"&#13;
3 part 01 Its conlInulng&#13;
I ture Iilm ser,&#13;
1'hf; rnO"1 lars John Wayne&#13;
nd R.chard Boon In lh Iilm&#13;
J hn wayne play·· BIg Jake&#13;
" andel. who ha h.. grandson&#13;
ludn pped by a band 01 outlaw&#13;
I by R. hard B ne Haring 01 '1. 8. Jak ts cut to lind hi&#13;
ran n nd ,n the p there&#13;
pretty Iypocal John&#13;
\'")"n cllon&#13;
Th mo" ,,111 be hewn at 8&#13;
pm nd the adml ·.00 pnce IS 7S&#13;
c nt YOUf WI conSln and&#13;
P rk ,de lOS are required&#13;
•&#13;
I) rk.ldt tudents (or&#13;
I ,o,·em and lhe ne,,·ly lormed&#13;
r"Jark. Ide Educators for&#13;
"teO I.ern are sponsonng a&#13;
Te h·lnlorMcCovemlobeheld&#13;
ot the Library-Learning Center&#13;
from 11'30 a m to 1'30 p.m.&#13;
wednesday, OCt 2S During lhis&#13;
two-hour period various memrs&#13;
of lhe laculty and starr. as&#13;
" II as m mbers 01 lhe tudent&#13;
body, ".11 peak on behalf of lhe&#13;
\1 ~f'rn~ nver ticKet.&#13;
Present plans also call lor the&#13;
appearance of a Democrat of&#13;
!'.Om national stature.&#13;
•&#13;
,x instrumental music&#13;
tudents at The University 01&#13;
WI5COI"lIn-Parkside will pl'esent&#13;
a lree pubhc concert atS p.m. on&#13;
Thursday lOcI. 19) in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room&#13;
A Parkside poetry Forum will&#13;
be held on OCI. 30 in the Ubrary'&#13;
Learning Center at 8 p.m.&#13;
Featured will be James Chapsom,&#13;
who has written with&#13;
Parkside resident poet James&#13;
Uddy. Also leatured will be a&#13;
student who writes in English as&#13;
well as in Spanish, Daniel&#13;
Ramerez.&#13;
The readings will take place in&#13;
the second Ooor lounge, which is&#13;
located behind the rare book&#13;
room.&#13;
•&#13;
The Whiteskellar Colfee House&#13;
will present live on stage local&#13;
talent, Dave Rogers. Rogers will&#13;
appear Thursday. OCt. 19, at I&#13;
p.m. He is a Parkside student and&#13;
his act will cover a variety of&#13;
music ranging from blues to folk&#13;
rock Wluteskellar is open (rom 1&#13;
1I1I 3 pm&#13;
•&#13;
Parkside Young Republicans&#13;
.and Young Voters for the&#13;
President will be holding a joint&#13;
meeting Friday, Oct. 20, from&#13;
l1:30a.m. to 1 p.m. in room 0~174&#13;
LLC. ew campaign strategy&#13;
will be discussed.&#13;
The Hawaii Trip is over hall&#13;
•&#13;
lilled. according 10Bill iebohr,&#13;
coordinator of Student Life.&#13;
The nine-day trip will last from&#13;
Jan 5 to 14and costs $Z74 plus $20&#13;
lax and service.&#13;
Interested travelers are ad·&#13;
vised to register in the Student&#13;
Activities Ollice. LLC Hm. 0-197,&#13;
as soon as possible.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
•&#13;
Vilas Master String Quartet will&#13;
open the 1972-73 University Artists&#13;
Concert series at UWParkside&#13;
with a program at 3&#13;
p.m. on Sunday, OCt. 22, in Room&#13;
103Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Tiekets will be available at lhe&#13;
door. General admission is $2;&#13;
admission for Parkside students&#13;
and staff and lheir immediate&#13;
lamilies is $1 (children 12 and&#13;
under are admitted Cree).&#13;
President John C. Weaver has&#13;
scheduled business trips to all 13&#13;
Wliversities in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system before the end&#13;
of the year.&#13;
He will be accompanied by a&#13;
lew members 01bis stafl on each&#13;
tri&#13;
~'eaver and his staff will visit&#13;
the Parkside campus on Monday,&#13;
Nov. 20.&#13;
Students for McGovern&#13;
•&#13;
will&#13;
hold a meeting in LLC 0-174 on&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 19, Irom 2 to 4&#13;
p.m. All students and faculty are&#13;
invited. This will be an important&#13;
strategy meeting, as well as a&#13;
coordinating effort with other&#13;
area McGovern offices.&#13;
"Recipe for Making&#13;
•&#13;
a Moon"&#13;
will be the topic of a free public&#13;
lecture by Dr. Larry A. Haskin,&#13;
professor of chemistry at !he&#13;
University of Wisconsin·Madlson&#13;
and 1970 ASA award winner for&#13;
his work with lunar rock samples,&#13;
at a: 15 p.rn. on Friday (OCI.&#13;
20) in Tallent Hall at The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
The Philanthropist Club, a&#13;
•&#13;
social organization that has been&#13;
operating lor the last three&#13;
semesters, will hold a Casino&#13;
Night this saturday. It will be&#13;
held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building Irom 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.&#13;
"The Existential World of&#13;
•&#13;
Norman Mailer" is a course&#13;
being offered by the university&#13;
extension. The class will run for&#13;
five consecutive Tuesdays&#13;
beginning Oct. 17. Taught by&#13;
Walter Graffin. asst. professor 01&#13;
English, the class will be concerned&#13;
with the concepts that&#13;
unite Mailer's writings and his&#13;
life which emphasize his feelings&#13;
on action, power and sex. The&#13;
cost will be $11 or $16 for a&#13;
married couple, and registration&#13;
forms are available in Room 206&#13;
Talent Hall, the UW-P extension&#13;
office. Registration must be&#13;
completed before Oct. 10. For&#13;
further information, call 553-2312.&#13;
Poetry Corner&#13;
SPIRIT&#13;
Espirit de Corp .,. Soul ... Heart ... Ad Infinitum&#13;
Who cares Nation ... Church ... Society ... Ad Absurdum&#13;
Why Give .. ' a .'. damn .,. Ad Nauseatum&#13;
._ Barry E. Jones&#13;
War and Peace&#13;
'Great White&#13;
Hope' here&#13;
"CASINO NICHT"&#13;
ORIIIIUlIO&#13;
OAMIUIIO&#13;
BAR MAIDS&#13;
ROULmES&#13;
DiCE OAMES&#13;
CIIUCK-A-LUO&#13;
POKER TABLES&#13;
Good .. , bad ... infinite; indifferent&#13;
SO&#13;
ugly ... beautiful ... WHICH&#13;
WAR is Peace?&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents the movie, "The Great&#13;
White Hope," in the Student&#13;
Activities Building on Friday,&#13;
Oct. 20, and on Sunday, oct. 23.&#13;
The movie is based on the true&#13;
story of Jack Johnson, the first&#13;
black heavy·weight boxing&#13;
champ in the United States, and&#13;
his struggle to keep his crown.&#13;
The story stars James Earl&#13;
Johnson and Jane Alexander. For&#13;
her performance in the movie&#13;
Miss Alexander received the&#13;
academy award nomination.&#13;
As the long running hit on the&#13;
New York stage, the play&#13;
received the pulitzer Prize, the&#13;
New York Critics Award, and the&#13;
Tony Award.&#13;
Showings wilL_be at. S p.m.&#13;
Friday - and 7~30 ·p.m.' Sunday.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents on both&#13;
nights and Parkside and state&#13;
IDs are required.&#13;
F. Lee Bailey&#13;
to lecture&#13;
at UW-p&#13;
The Student Activities office&#13;
has announced that the famous&#13;
criminal lawyer, F. Lee Bailey,&#13;
will lecture here Nov. 10 at 8 p.m.&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
building.&#13;
Mr. Tony Totero, coordinator&#13;
of Student Services, said, "He&#13;
rose to fame with the Sam&#13;
Shephard murder trial. ... He&#13;
defended the Boston Strangler,&#13;
William Calley and is presently&#13;
representing former Governorof&#13;
Illinois and Judge Otto Kerner.&#13;
Tickets will go on sale on OCt&#13;
23 at the information office,Rm&#13;
201 Tallent Hall, and al&#13;
Bidingers, Kook-Geer Records&#13;
and J.J Records and Tapel off&#13;
campus.&#13;
Admission prices are $1 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
$1.50 for general admission.&#13;
BUCK JACK&#13;
CRAP TABLES&#13;
FORTUNE WHEEl&#13;
GAMES&#13;
lET'S MAKE A DEAL&#13;
TO TELL THE TRUTH&#13;
P-RIZES &amp; SURPRISES&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
{appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
631-8461&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
itA BIG AUCTION IN THE END"&#13;
SATURD ~, OCTOBER 21 9 P.M. 1 AaM.&#13;
All inion ~1ts (illcl.des ~SOQDO Oalllhiint Money)&#13;
StN«"e AdUidie. 'C,.tUtC9 p~ &amp; 1Q~, 1.7:&gt;, ~e4&#13;
Dancers Wanted&#13;
U lJJ[ijJ CDCiJ CiJ(g ill&#13;
PSGAPresident&#13;
§CDCiJ(l!JGJ (B[bl3 OOC3GJU0&#13;
Vice President&#13;
iJiJ (jJGJ GJlLrn[3§U UC(Bm13Vfr&#13;
Au. &amp; Pd. for by Haack &amp; Clements Comm., J. petwe ChrJP'&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
T&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
HATS HAPPE ING&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Hawa11 Trip i over half&#13;
filled, rdm to Bill , 'iebuhr,&#13;
rdmator of tudent Llfe. Th nine-&lt;la) trip will la t from&#13;
Jan 5 to 14 and cost $Z14 plu $20&#13;
ta and rvic .&#13;
lnt •r ted travelers are ad-&#13;
,i. d to regi ter in the tudent&#13;
ct1v ill ffice, LLC Rm. D-197,&#13;
a . oon a possible.&#13;
The niversity • or Wisconsin&#13;
Vilas faster String Quartet will&#13;
open the 1972-73 niversity Arti&#13;
Concert eries at UWPark&#13;
1de with a program at 3&#13;
p.m. on unday, Oct. 22 , in Room&#13;
103 Greenqui t Hall.&#13;
Ticket Y.ill be available at the&#13;
door. General admission is $2 ;&#13;
admi ion for Parkside students&#13;
and taff and their immediate&#13;
rt famili i $1 (children 12 and&#13;
\D'lder are admitted Cree).&#13;
President John C. Weaver has&#13;
eduled bu ine trips to all 13&#13;
wuversities in the niversit of&#13;
Wisconsin } tern before the end&#13;
of the ·ear. He will be accompanied by a&#13;
f , members or his staff on each&#13;
tri ~;eaver and his tarr will visit&#13;
th Parkside campu on Monday,&#13;
'o • 20.&#13;
•&#13;
.. R ipe for faking a foon "&#13;
will be the topic of a free public&#13;
I tur by Dr. Larry A. Haskin,&#13;
prof · r of chemistry at The&#13;
'niv ity of Wi consin-Madison&#13;
and 1970 ASA award winner for&#13;
hi work with lunar rock sampl&#13;
, at 8: 15 p.m. on Friday (Oct.&#13;
20) in Tallent Hall at The&#13;
niver it of WisconsinPark&#13;
ide.&#13;
The Philanthropist • Club, a&#13;
ocial organization that has been&#13;
operating for the last three&#13;
emesters, will hold a Casino&#13;
ight this Saturday. It will be&#13;
held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building from 9 p.m. to 1 a .m.&#13;
" The Existential • World of&#13;
orman Mailer" is a course&#13;
being offered by the university&#13;
extension. The class will run for&#13;
five consecutive Tuesdays&#13;
beginning Oct. 17. Taught by&#13;
Walter Graffin, asst. professor of&#13;
English, the class will be concerned&#13;
with the concepts that&#13;
unite Mailer's writings and his&#13;
life which emphasize his feelings&#13;
on action, power and sex. The&#13;
cost will be $11 or $16 for a&#13;
married couple, and registration&#13;
forms are available in Room 206&#13;
Talent Hall, the UW-P extension&#13;
office. Registration must be&#13;
completed before Oct. 10. For&#13;
further information, call 553-2312.&#13;
"CASINO NIGHT''&#13;
DRI KINI&#13;
A IUNO&#13;
BAR AIDS&#13;
ROUlfflES&#13;
DICE IA ES&#13;
BLACK JACK&#13;
CRAP TABLES&#13;
FORTUNE WHEEL&#13;
GAMES&#13;
C CK-A-LUO&#13;
LET'S MAKE A DEAL&#13;
TO TELL THE TRUTH&#13;
POKER TABLES PRIZES &amp; SURPRISES&#13;
11A BIC AUCTION IN THE END"&#13;
ATURD i, OCTOBER 21 9 P.M. 1 A.M.&#13;
Poetry Corner&#13;
__ Barry E. Jones&#13;
SPIRIT&#13;
Espirit de Corp ... Soul ... Heart ... Ad Infinitum&#13;
Who cares d&#13;
ation ... Church ... Society ... Ad Absur um&#13;
Why&#13;
Give ... a ... damn ... Ad Nauseatum&#13;
War and Peace&#13;
Good ... bad ... infinite; indifferent&#13;
0&#13;
ugly ... beautiful ... WHICH&#13;
WAR is Peace?&#13;
'Great White&#13;
Hope' here&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents the movie, "The Great&#13;
White Hope," in the Student&#13;
Activities Building on Friday,&#13;
Oct. 20, and on Sunday, Oct. 23.&#13;
The movie is based on the true&#13;
story of Jack Johnson, the first&#13;
black heavy-weight boxing&#13;
champ in the United States, and&#13;
his struggle to keep his crown.&#13;
The story stars James Earl&#13;
Johnson and Jane Alexander. For&#13;
her performance in the movie&#13;
Miss Alexander received the&#13;
academy award nomination.&#13;
As the long running hit on the&#13;
New York stage, the play&#13;
received the Pulitzer Prize, the&#13;
New York Critics Award, and the&#13;
Tony Award. Showings will be at 8 p.m.&#13;
Friday and 7:30 p.m. Sunday.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents on both&#13;
nights and Parkside and state&#13;
IDs are required.&#13;
F. Lee Bailey&#13;
to lecture&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
The Student Activities office&#13;
has announced that the famou&#13;
criminal lawyer, F. Lee Bail y,&#13;
will lecture here Nov. JO at 8 p.m&#13;
in the Physical Education&#13;
building.&#13;
Mr. Tony Totero, coordinator&#13;
of Student Services, said, "H&#13;
rose to fame with the m&#13;
Shephard murder trial. .. H&#13;
defended the Boston Strangler,&#13;
William Calley and is presenUy&#13;
representing former Governor or&#13;
Illinois and Judge Otto Kerner&#13;
Tickets will go on sale on Oct&#13;
23 at the information office, Rm&#13;
201 Tallent Hall, and at&#13;
Bidingers, Kook-Geer Records&#13;
and J-J Records and Tape&amp; cif&#13;
campus.&#13;
Admission prices are $1 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
$1.50 for general admission.&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
U IJJ 00 [IJ(D (D(B (]&#13;
PSGA President&#13;
§aJaJWGJ CBCb~OOll'D'Ue&#13;
Vice President&#13;
/HJ GJru mCILr~§U uuCBm£3'i1cc&#13;
Au. &amp; Pd, for by Haack &amp; Clements Comm,, J. Petzke ChrJll• &#13;
ON THE WEEKEND&#13;
Penalty kick&#13;
The 17th Annual Notre Dame&#13;
Cross Country Invitational saw&#13;
t~o new records set Friday. The&#13;
first came Irom Mike Slack 01&#13;
North Dakota State who won the&#13;
l~dlvldual title in 23:44.2 over the&#13;
fIve mile course, besting Olympic&#13;
gold medalist Dave Wottle's old&#13;
':l~rk. Parkside's Lucian Rosa&#13;
fImshed 15th in 24:16 for a&#13;
Parkside record and beat Dave&#13;
Antagnoli 01 Edinboro State, the&#13;
defending NAJA champ, in the&#13;
process.&#13;
Bowling Green won the team&#13;
title with 81 points in the ~leam&#13;
field followed in the lop five by&#13;
Eastern Michigan, Ball Slate.&#13;
Southern Illinois and Michigan.&#13;
The Rangers grabbed 24th.&#13;
Dennis Biel was Parkside's&#13;
second man at 59th while 'ed&#13;
Kessenich linished in t7Oth,Keith&#13;
Merritt in 183rd and Sid Hyde in&#13;
217lh.&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey called it the&#13;
Rangers' toughest meet of the&#13;
year.&#13;
Next home meet for Parkside is&#13;
. at noon, Oct. 28, when the&#13;
Rangers host tbe Third Annual&#13;
USTFF Mid American Championships.&#13;
The Rangers did well in their&#13;
last goll match 01 the season&#13;
placing filth 01 IS. The lirst place&#13;
team, UW-Madison. won with a&#13;
score of 320, followed by Northern&#13;
Illinois University learn one at&#13;
323, Northern illinois University&#13;
team two at 324, Uw-Le Crosse at&#13;
326, Parkside at 328, UW·&#13;
Whitewater and University of&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis at 329.&#13;
Medalists in the match Chuck&#13;
Voy, UW·Oshkosh, at 76. Pete&#13;
Nevins, UW-Parkside and Marl)'&#13;
Joyce, orthern Illinois tied fOl'&#13;
second with 77; Mike Soli Northern&#13;
Illinois, had a 78. Nevins&#13;
lost the second place trophy in a&#13;
. play off against ~\artyJoyce.&#13;
The Parkside team scores were&#13;
as follows; Pete Nevins, 77~ Tom&#13;
Bothe, 83; Dave Fox and Jim&#13;
Vakos 840 Rick Willemas, 89.&#13;
The 'next time the golfers will&#13;
see action is in the spring. 1&#13;
Carthage College Activities Board Presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
: .&#13;
• Parkside :&#13;
• A • CI' " rvitres B d • oar .•&#13;
•&#13;
• Sponsors •&#13;
•&#13;
: a bus Irip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: VS, : Tickets s5 &amp; S4&#13;
: OHIO STATE : College Center Office&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME : ON SALE Carthage K noshal Cook-Gene (Racine)&#13;
: Saturday. October 28 .1~B~id:in:ge:r~s~M~US~iC~(D:o:w:nt~ow~n~e... ... ....•.....••••. ~&#13;
Carthage&#13;
Fieldhouse B L0 0 D Also Don Cooper&#13;
sWEATAND&#13;
TEARS&#13;
J&#13;
Before a recent meet, Coach Godfrey gives some&#13;
advice to his harriers. In the Notre Dame Invitational&#13;
this weekend, the harriers placed ..&#13;
14th. Lucian Rosa finished in 15th place. The&#13;
harriers next meet at home for the USTFF MidAmerica&#13;
Championship on the 28th.&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
I&#13;
At a recent match an&#13;
unidentified Ranger&#13;
boots the ball. Last&#13;
weekend they booted&#13;
the ball enough for a&#13;
2-1 win in overtime&#13;
OVer LW-Platteville.&#13;
Saturday&#13;
October 28&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
,&#13;
j&#13;
!&#13;
BUSING PROBLEMS?&#13;
Riders needed to Racine&#13;
or service will be disconti&#13;
nued , Tell your&#13;
fri ends to ri de the bus.&#13;
Schedules ovai loble at&#13;
UW-p Information Office&#13;
or call Jewel Echelborger&#13;
ot 553-2342.&#13;
Wed" Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
•&#13;
unn for boot r&#13;
.1Ike ,'edel OVIC put In both 01&#13;
Parkside's goals ler the soec ... ,&#13;
teams second '41n of the ear.&#13;
beallng -Plauevill t-I The&#13;
wmmng goal ler tbe Rang&#13;
came on a penalty kick earl In&#13;
the first overtime penod&#13;
The Rangers &lt;Iommated lb&#13;
first half but JUSt couldn't find th&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
October 2\&#13;
ovember 1&#13;
tarqu&#13;
IU. Il&#13;
at P'anL"""&#13;
Ea rl lAln, 1\1&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
October 17&#13;
October:!ll&#13;
I.rqu&#13;
mpoo&#13;
at P&#13;
'p, Pol&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
October:!ll lSTn· .aue Illomen' C1uImpoo Ip,P.&#13;
Women~5 Gymnastics&#13;
October :!ll t Whit .t....&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
October 18 t Par de&#13;
:'olonday night is&#13;
"Ye Old uds ipping : II ..&#13;
at hakey' In R in,&#13;
sr a pi tcher for Pobst&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
l th,op 21&gt;t I Imo,tl&#13;
R "'" W. 5 40&#13;
Phone 633 307&#13;
-'1-&lt;1'-'" __01 ·· _ ...&#13;
..,..- -_.&#13;
OC . 18-24, 1972&#13;
Adulta-$l.50&#13;
_RICH LITTLE-HERB VOLAND&#13;
Rd,&#13;
Wed ., Oct. 18, 1972 THE PARKS ID&#13;
Q,N THE WEEKE D&#13;
Penalty ki&#13;
The 17th Annual 'otre Dame&#13;
Cross Country Invitational w&#13;
t~o new records set Frida v Th&#13;
first came from like la or&#13;
~o~~ Dakota State who ·on th&#13;
1~d1v1dual title in 23: 44 _2 ov r th&#13;
five mile course, besting lympic&#13;
gold medalist Dave Wottte· old&#13;
~~k. Parkside's Lucian Rosa&#13;
finished 15th in 24:16 for a&#13;
Parkside record and beat Dave&#13;
Antagnoli of Edinboro ate the&#13;
defending NAIA champ m' th&#13;
process.&#13;
Bowling Green won the team&#13;
title with 81 points in the 30-team&#13;
field followed in the top five b_·&#13;
Eastern iichigan, Ball ate,&#13;
Southern Illinois and . lichi an.&#13;
The Ranger grabbed 24th .&#13;
Dennis Biel was Par ide".&#13;
second man at 5 th ·hile . 'ed&#13;
Kessenich finished in liOth. Keith&#13;
Merritt in 183rd and id Hvde n 217th. .&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrev called it the&#13;
Rangers' toughest· meet o the&#13;
year.&#13;
ext home meet for Par· id i&#13;
· at noon, Oct. 28. when the&#13;
Rangers host the Third Annual&#13;
USTFF 1id American Championships.&#13;
&#13;
Before a recent meet, Coach Godfrey gives some&#13;
advice to his harriers. In the Notre Dame Invitational&#13;
this weekend, the harriers placed ..&#13;
24th. Lucian Rosa finished in 15th place . The&#13;
harriers next meet at home for the USTFF MidAmerica&#13;
Championship on the 28th.&#13;
The Rangers did Y.ell m their&#13;
last golf match of the sea on&#13;
placing fifth of 15. Th fi t pl e&#13;
team, UW- tadison, Y.OO 1th a&#13;
score of 320, follow d b. , 'orthern&#13;
Illinois University team one a·&#13;
323, 'orthern Illinoi 'mv 1·:&#13;
team two at 324. \'-LaCro. _&#13;
326. Parkside at 328&#13;
Whitewater and Univers1t_&#13;
At a recent match an&#13;
unidentified Ranger&#13;
boots the bal 1. Last&#13;
Weekend they booted&#13;
the ball enough for a&#13;
2-1 win in overt ime&#13;
over LW-Platteville.&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
!&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
1issouri t. LoUJ at 329.&#13;
1edalists in the match Ch&#13;
Voy, ~-Oshkosh. at i6 P te&#13;
evins, ,\\'-Par ide and . art)&#13;
Joyce, 'orthern Illino1 lied f&#13;
second -....;th n: . like Ii , 'orthern&#13;
Illinois, had a 78 ·e,ins&#13;
lost the second place troph) m a&#13;
play off qgain t • larty Jo)&#13;
The Parkside team score re&#13;
as follow : Pete. 'evms ;-;· Tom&#13;
Bothe, 83: Dave Fo. and Jim&#13;
Vakos, 840 Rick Will ma ,&#13;
The next time the olf 111&#13;
see action i in the pr1 .&#13;
BUSING PROBLEMS?&#13;
Riders needed to Racine&#13;
or service will be discontinued.&#13;
Tel I your&#13;
friends to ride the bus.&#13;
Schedules avai I able at&#13;
LJW-P Information Of -&#13;
ice or call Je el Echelberger&#13;
at 553-2342.&#13;
Carthage College Activities Board Presents&#13;
Saturday&#13;
October 28&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Carthage&#13;
Fieldhouse&#13;
In Concert&#13;
BLOOD Also Don Cooper&#13;
SWEATAND&#13;
Tickets $5 &amp; $4 TEARS&#13;
arthage College Center Office . ON SALE C K nosha) cook-Gene (Racine) Bidingers Music (Downtown e&#13;
• fi r 0&#13;
C ED&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
Women's Gymnastics&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
I&#13;
RANG R 7&#13;
r &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., oct. 18.1972&#13;
SwIm Club.&#13;
coach Barb&#13;
Third Row:&#13;
front rOW (1 to r): Barb Kupper. Torn Bergo. Nancy Michals,&#13;
MorrIs. Second Row: Richard Harnrn.John Heigl, Rich Glover.&#13;
Dale MartIn, Pat HIll, Torn Hughes, Shirley Moore.&#13;
wim Club&#13;
According to club president Tom&#13;
Berge, the difficulty 01 a workout&#13;
can easily be told (rom the&#13;
redness of the swimmers' eyes.&#13;
"The main thing now is for&#13;
individuaJs to work on their&#13;
strokes and cut down their&#13;
times," said Coach Barbra Jo&#13;
Morris.&#13;
HWe need specialists, divers,&#13;
and just people who are willing to&#13;
compete. Even if they've never&#13;
competed before, they shouldn't&#13;
be discouraged Irom coming&#13;
because they're inexperienced.&#13;
There are quite a few members of&#13;
the club who never competed&#13;
before," she added.&#13;
Even though the workouts get&#13;
toegh, there is still that club&#13;
atmosphere. It isn't quite like&#13;
being on a varsity team where&#13;
one must show up for practice&#13;
every day. This way even the&#13;
people who don't have a lot 01&#13;
time to practice can still participate.&#13;
The club is currently in the oneyear&#13;
probation period required of&#13;
all sports before they become&#13;
varsity. For both the men and the&#13;
women, going varsity next year&#13;
is primarily a matter of money,&#13;
Photo by Craig Roberts&#13;
Working on strokes&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
Curses! Foiled by an axle&#13;
An oversize tricycle&#13;
"built for eight" was&#13;
the entry by the ad&#13;
hoc Red Baron relay&#13;
team for the fourth&#13;
annua I I IT "Spr Ing&#13;
Thing~' The team finished&#13;
on the bottom&#13;
due to a broken axle.&#13;
pictured are Dave Reyher&#13;
and Marty Gregory.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
12S-page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
Quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 80024&#13;
(213)477·8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
YOUNG DRIVERS WEl(OMf&#13;
INSURANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS· CYCLES - SCOOTERS&#13;
All forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Ser¥ice&#13;
With The Better Co's&#13;
Fire - Life - Hospital - Bolt~&#13;
Package Policies&#13;
DIAL %&#13;
~-36Ofl ,.,/ .". ~ ~/·"""·{I.J"'.! ..-..(;:j .....&#13;
J. R. MULICH&#13;
CARL H. JEHSEI'l&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
.. troke it!" 0, thi i not an&#13;
obscene proposition, but it could&#13;
well be the motto 01 the Parks ide&#13;
wrm Club.&#13;
On paper the club numbers 45,&#13;
but due to class schedule and&#13;
work conflicts. not everyone&#13;
shows up for practice at the same&#13;
time. I lucked out. The day I&#13;
chose for my interview turned out&#13;
to be the lowest turnout yet.&#13;
Practice is held every day lrom&#13;
3,30 to 5,30 p.m. during which&#13;
time the swimmers indulge in the&#13;
numerous delights of learning&#13;
nip turns, practicing flip turns.&#13;
and teaching other people flip&#13;
turns. Arter watching an hour's&#13;
worth 01 flip turns Irom the&#13;
relative salety of a starting&#13;
block, I am now able to&#13;
di tinguish a good Ilip turn Irom&#13;
• had flip turn. This is not&#13;
because I know what a good or a&#13;
had flip turn looks like, but&#13;
because I soon distovered that I&#13;
didn't get splashed if the turn was&#13;
properly executed.&#13;
In addition to nip turns, they&#13;
have been known to do a little&#13;
swimming, something on the&#13;
order 01 two to three miles a day.&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART nME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
according to Coach Morris.&#13;
There are advantages to being&#13;
a club rather than a varsity sport,&#13;
one of them being that there is a&#13;
wider range of appeal in a club&#13;
than in going out for a team.&#13;
Even if swimming becomes&#13;
varsity next year, Coach Morris&#13;
expressed her hope of there being&#13;
a Swim for Fun Club. This would&#13;
provide a place for those people&#13;
who aren't necessarily interested&#13;
in going out for the team.&#13;
The men's season doesn't&#13;
actually start until November,&#13;
and it runs until March. During&#13;
that time they will have swim&#13;
meets against Whitewater,&#13;
Carroll, Ripon and many nonconference&#13;
schools from the&#13;
Chicago area. The women's&#13;
season should be over by&#13;
Thanksgiving, but will be extended&#13;
into March so that the&#13;
girls can swim against Illinois&#13;
schools.&#13;
Pat Hill, the club's best hack&#13;
stroker, took 2nd in the W-yd.&#13;
back stroke in a recent meet,&#13;
while Julie Surendonk took znd in&#13;
the l00--yd. breast stroke. Their&#13;
next meet win be this Saturday at&#13;
Oshkosh.&#13;
5520 6th AVE.&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkside&#13;
\&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT. 23&#13;
,&#13;
-,&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC. sponsored by Parkside ActivitiesBoard&#13;
/'..----...-~-,----....-..... .........•............&#13;
We ~oareiDoii~huilg~1&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES- GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
()PEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
CALL ---'----&#13;
632-1565&#13;
10% commission&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 20&#13;
-&gt; OJ " )&#13;
Entry Fee 50~&#13;
Appl y now - Student ActivitiesOffice&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFIC[_)&#13;
0-194 LLC or telephone 553-229~&#13;
.--......--.....--.....--....-..-..-..-.- - - .. - "...--..&#13;
~ ~ ----- -...._--~~&#13;
8 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 18, 1972&#13;
Swim Club,&#13;
Coach 8 rb&#13;
Third Row:&#13;
front row (l tor): Barb Kupper, Tom Bergo, Nancy Michals,&#13;
Morris. Second Row: Richard HalTITl, John Heigl, Rich Glover·&#13;
Dale Martin, Pat Hill, Tom Hughes, Shirley Moore.&#13;
Pt,oto by Cra ig Roberts&#13;
lub&#13;
Working on strokes&#13;
it!'' 'o, thi.- i · not an&#13;
vu.::, .. .,.,._ pro 1tion, but it could&#13;
the m lto of th Park id&#13;
tub.&#13;
r th club numbers 45,&#13;
but du to cla: chedule and&#13;
work conflict . not everyone ·how · up for practice at the same&#13;
tim . I lucked out. The day I&#13;
h for my intervie'ilo' turned out&#13;
to th low t turnout yet.&#13;
Pr ctic i h Id every day from&#13;
3: lo 5:30 p.m. during which&#13;
tim th ·imm indulge in the&#13;
num ro a d lights of learning&#13;
nip turn . practicing flip turns, nd leaching other people flip&#13;
turns. Aft r watching an hour's&#13;
""orth or mp turns from the r I tive safety of a tarting&#13;
lock, 1 am now able to&#13;
· t1nguish a good flip turn from&#13;
bad flip turn. This is not a I know what a good or a&#13;
d flip turn looks like, but&#13;
ause I n distovered that I&#13;
didn'tg t pl hediftheturnwas&#13;
properly e uted. In ddition to flip turns, they&#13;
have been known to do a little&#13;
wimming, mething on the&#13;
ord r ol two to three miles a day.&#13;
Coll191 Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
Accordin to club president Torn&#13;
Bergo, th difficulty of a workout&#13;
can ily be told from the&#13;
redne of the wimrners' eyes.&#13;
"Th main thing now is for&#13;
individual to work on their&#13;
troke and cut down their&#13;
times," said Coach Barbra Jo&#13;
lorris. "We need specialists, divers,&#13;
and ju t people who are willing to&#13;
compete. Even if they've never&#13;
competed before, they shouldn't&#13;
be discouraged from coming&#13;
because they're inexperienced. There are quite a few members of&#13;
the club who never competed&#13;
before, ' he added. Even though the workouts get&#13;
tough, there is still that club&#13;
atmosphere. It isn't quite like&#13;
being on a varsity team where&#13;
one must show up for practice&#13;
every day. This way even the&#13;
people who don't have a lot of&#13;
time to practice can still participate.&#13;
&#13;
The club is currently in the oneyear&#13;
probation period required of&#13;
all sports before they become&#13;
varsity. For both the men and the&#13;
women, going varsity next year&#13;
is primarily a matter of money,&#13;
according to Coach Jorris. There are advantages to being a club rather than a varsity sport,&#13;
one of them being that there is a&#13;
wider range of appeal in a club&#13;
than in going out for a team.&#13;
Even if swimming becomes&#13;
varsity next year, Coach Morris&#13;
expressed her hope of there being&#13;
a Swim for Fun Club. This would&#13;
provide a place for those people&#13;
who aren't necessarily interested&#13;
in going out for the team. The men's season doesn't&#13;
actually start until November,&#13;
and it runs until March. During&#13;
that time they will have swim&#13;
meets against Whitewater,&#13;
Carroll, Ripon and many nonconference&#13;
schools from the&#13;
Chicago area . The women's&#13;
season should be over by&#13;
Thanksgiving, but will be extended&#13;
into March so that the&#13;
girls can swim against Illinois&#13;
schools.&#13;
Pat Hill, the club's best back&#13;
stroker, took 2nd in the 50-yd.&#13;
back stroke in a recent meet,&#13;
while Julie Surendonk took 2nd in&#13;
the 100-yd. breast stroke. Their&#13;
next meet will be this Saturday at&#13;
Oshkosh.&#13;
•BEER• SODA&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
Q&#13;
u&#13;
0&#13;
R&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
~PE N DAILY 9A. M. - 9 P. M.&#13;
SUN DAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
CALL --------,&#13;
632-1565&#13;
Photo by Pat Nowak&#13;
Curses! Foiled by an axle&#13;
An ove rs ize tricycle 11built for ei ght " was&#13;
the entry by the ad&#13;
hoc Red Baron relay&#13;
t eam for the fourth&#13;
annua 1 I IT 11S pr i ng&#13;
Thing!' The team finished&#13;
on the bottom&#13;
due t o a broken axle .&#13;
Pictured are Dave Reyhe&#13;
r and Marty Gregory.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date, 128-page, mail orde r catalog of 2,300&#13;
quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANBELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213) 477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
YOUNG DRIVERS WELCOMf&#13;
INSUR ANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS - CYCLES - SCOOTERS&#13;
All Forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Service&#13;
With The Better Co's&#13;
Fire - Life - Hospital - Boats&#13;
Package Policies&#13;
~DIAL ~&#13;
052-3600] =:/;)E: J. R. MULICH&#13;
CARL H. JENSEN&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT. 23&#13;
' ' \&#13;
\&#13;
·,&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 20&#13;
/ -Q;,&#13;
/ ./&#13;
·Entry Fee 50'&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC. sponsored by Parkside Acti vities Board&#13;
I ••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
We need people whoare'mmiij=buiigry!~1&#13;
) ARE YOU A SALESPERSON?&#13;
10 % commission STOP BY THE PARKSIDE RANGER OFFICE_</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63867">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 4, October 18, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63868">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63869">
                <text>1972-10-18</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63872">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63873">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63874">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63875">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63876">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63877">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63878">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63879">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63880">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="313">
        <name>associate dean jewel echelbarger</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="310">
        <name>doug lafollette</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="331">
        <name>f. lee bailey</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="163">
        <name>ken konkol</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="309">
        <name>patrick lucey</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="312">
        <name>racine bus service</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2629" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4445">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/3fac2296a9dc2fe39369b680ae61665e.pdf</src>
        <authentication>fe0e302b8679d5d73d541126bf4bfd09</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63885">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 5</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63886">
              <text>HHH Campaigns for McGovern</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63896">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89906">
              <text>These three University of Wisconsin-Parkside students are now in&#13;
Europe on student teaching assignments: left to right, Kathy&#13;
Williamson of Kenosha; Bill Zapencki, Kenosha; and Jacquie Braun&#13;
of Racine. Seniors in Parkside's Division of Education, they are the&#13;
first UW-P students to participate in the overseas teacher training&#13;
program.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Parking Committee dissolves;&#13;
Racine buses run til Friday&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Las week's meeting of the&#13;
Parking and Transportation&#13;
Committee revealed that&#13;
Wisconsin Coach service from&#13;
Racine will continue until next&#13;
Friday and that the committee's&#13;
lack of power has resulted in its&#13;
move to dissolve.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
Assistant Dean of Students said,&#13;
"In a meeting with Wisconsin&#13;
Coach on October 10, they said&#13;
they had looked at their books&#13;
and wanted to discontinue service&#13;
because they were showing a&#13;
loss. At that time they said they'd&#13;
continue service until Oct. 20; in&#13;
subsequent talks they indicated&#13;
they would extend service to Oct.&#13;
27."&#13;
Immediately after the Oct. 10&#13;
meeting, talks began between the&#13;
Business Department and&#13;
several transportation concerns.&#13;
Among them were the Kenosha&#13;
Transit Authority, Flash of&#13;
Racine and the Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute bus service.&#13;
The progress of these talks&#13;
were not fully discussed but there&#13;
were indications that each&#13;
concern would have some&#13;
problem providing the service at&#13;
this time.&#13;
Subsidy of Wisconsin Coach by&#13;
the university was discussed but&#13;
Erwin Zuelke, Director of&#13;
Business Affacs said there is no&#13;
legal way Parkside can subsidize&#13;
Wisconsin Coach. He said&#13;
however, student support funds,&#13;
such as Student Government&#13;
money alloted by the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee, could be&#13;
used if the student organization&#13;
did it of their own volition.&#13;
When the committee exhausted&#13;
the Racine busing issue,&#13;
Professor Leon Applebaum,&#13;
economics, made a motion to&#13;
dissolve the committee and&#13;
suggested that the Campus&#13;
Planning committee be allowed&#13;
to assume activities thereof. The&#13;
motion was seconded by&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Brockman&#13;
and was passed unanimously.&#13;
Committee Chairman,&#13;
Professor Harry Lantz, music,&#13;
said, "We've been whipping boy&#13;
for many problems."&#13;
Members were concerned that&#13;
they met to discuss problems but&#13;
were pwoerless to affect change.&#13;
It was suggested that Campus&#13;
Planning will have a greater&#13;
chance at action.&#13;
VOTE!&#13;
Wednesday, October 25, 1972&#13;
| RANGER Straw Poll&#13;
| Nov. 2-3&#13;
illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIH&#13;
HHH campaigns for McGovern&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
Originally Sen. Hubert H.&#13;
Humphrey (D Minn.) had been&#13;
scheduled to land at the airport at&#13;
7:30 p.m. but was delayed in take&#13;
off from his fourth meeting of the&#13;
day. Hence he didn't land at Gate&#13;
7 of Mitchell field till 8:07.&#13;
Some of the comments before&#13;
the press conference were better&#13;
than the conference itself. Joe&#13;
Spehart, driver of the McGovern&#13;
campaign bus (which had&#13;
previously been the Humphrey&#13;
campaign bus) mentioned the&#13;
research done by a 1948&#13;
California Congressional candidate.&#13;
&#13;
"This man spent 24 years in&#13;
researching the speeches of&#13;
Richard Nixon and determined a&#13;
foolproof method to tell when&#13;
Nixon was lying.&#13;
"If he pulls his ear, he's telling&#13;
the truth. If h e straightens his tie,&#13;
he's telling the truth. If he rubs&#13;
his hands, he's telling the truth.&#13;
But watch out. If he opens his&#13;
mouth and starts talking ~ that's&#13;
a lie."&#13;
The senator entered the press&#13;
conference and was told he would&#13;
have to hurry to get to the union&#13;
rally at the Red Carpet Expo&#13;
Center at 8:30 p.m. But the&#13;
senator said he "would eat first."&#13;
He hadn't eaten since 7 a.m.&#13;
The press conference got under&#13;
way with Humphrey fielding a&#13;
question in regard to the&#13;
Democrats for Nixon ad on TV&#13;
which refers to his criticizing&#13;
George McGovern's defense&#13;
program. He explained that the&#13;
things said in the Democrats for&#13;
Nixon ads were no longer true,&#13;
that positions had changed on&#13;
these issues and that McGovern&#13;
had changed his stand.&#13;
In referring to President&#13;
Nixon, Humphrey referred to his&#13;
(Nixon's) recent veto of a natural&#13;
resources act, his stand against&#13;
education bills, against veterans'&#13;
bills, public service money, his&#13;
cutback in programs for the poor,&#13;
and the fact that Nixon was&#13;
against the labor movement.&#13;
In closing he said, "This&#13;
country can't take four more&#13;
years of Richard Nixon, a Nixon&#13;
who has wage controls on&#13;
workers and no salary controls on&#13;
corporate executives."&#13;
Humphrey then mentioned the&#13;
present electoral system in which&#13;
a win in twelve key statesqould&#13;
win the election. He seemed&#13;
confident that McGovern would&#13;
win California, Nixon's home&#13;
state.&#13;
When questioned by this&#13;
reporter about the Democrats for&#13;
Nixon Committee, the Senator&#13;
said that he wasn't in favor of&#13;
them, that he didn't think it would&#13;
help to drum Connally out of the&#13;
Democratic Party and that he&#13;
had received no specific information&#13;
as to Republican&#13;
campaign contributions paying&#13;
for the Democrats for Nixon&#13;
commercials. He concluded that&#13;
Nixon would not be president now&#13;
if some good Democrats had used&#13;
their heads in voting in 1968.&#13;
Upon completion of the press&#13;
conference, Humphrey adjourned&#13;
to room 411 in the Red&#13;
Carpet Inn where he had dinner.&#13;
Here, or at the airport, security&#13;
arrangements were not&#13;
especially evident. In fact, the&#13;
only security officer seen all&#13;
night was the officer posted inside&#13;
the bathroom in the Expo&#13;
Center.&#13;
While waiting for the senator to&#13;
arrive at the Expo Center, those&#13;
in attendance were treated to&#13;
such rousing songs as the&#13;
McGovern Labor Rally Song,&#13;
Solidarity Forever and You Are&#13;
My Sunshine.&#13;
One of the main speakers was&#13;
union leader Emil Mazey, who&#13;
mentioned that Nixon had&#13;
created a bigger deficit in the&#13;
budget than had been created by&#13;
presidents in the previous 18&#13;
years.&#13;
He added, "Nixon is the best&#13;
president money can buy ... This&#13;
is not 1952 where Nixon has an&#13;
$18,000 slush fund given him by&#13;
California big business... but 1972&#13;
where he now has a twenty&#13;
million dollar slush fund donated&#13;
to his campaign by large corporations."&#13;
&#13;
Mazey then lauded Humphrey&#13;
as a friend of the working man,,&#13;
referring to his 1948 election to&#13;
senate and his work for the repeal&#13;
of the Taft-Hartley Act.&#13;
The big moment of the night&#13;
arrived as Humphrey entered the&#13;
hall. It took five minutes to get&#13;
the paraders to finally sit down.&#13;
This reporter observed the&#13;
senator's speech from a distance&#13;
of about nine feet in the press&#13;
box.&#13;
After the crowd quieted&#13;
Humphrey remarked on the&#13;
introduction: "That was an introduction&#13;
my father would have&#13;
liked and which my mother&#13;
wouldn't believe."&#13;
He remarked about the trouble&#13;
the chief executive has to go&#13;
through: "If McGovern wins he'll&#13;
have ty trouble, but if N ixon wins&#13;
you'll have the trouble - and&#13;
don't you forget it!"&#13;
In speaking on the economic&#13;
situation -- "If you expect to work&#13;
for the money you have to live on,&#13;
you can't afford Richard Nixon."&#13;
He then made remarks about&#13;
the Nixon-Congress battle on who&#13;
was going to control the purse&#13;
strings of the country, the&#13;
President or the elected&#13;
representatives of the people. He&#13;
remarked about the things Nixon&#13;
was taking credit for which were&#13;
being done by Congress.&#13;
"Five-and-one-half billion has&#13;
been taken out of d efense to help&#13;
old folks and kids. Congress&#13;
approved a 20 percent increase in&#13;
social security. Nixon wanted&#13;
five percent. But he took credit&#13;
for it. Then he blames Congress&#13;
for inflation -- this fellow's hard&#13;
to hit."&#13;
"Nixon says the economy is&#13;
improving. When my wife says&#13;
prices are going up I ask her who&#13;
am I to believe, you or the&#13;
president? I've spent 36 years&#13;
with Muriel and loved it, but four&#13;
years of Nixon is too much for&#13;
me. If you don't like my man&#13;
McGovern, vote for him, just to&#13;
get even with Nixon."&#13;
Humphrey then pointed to&#13;
Nixon's record-setting pace:&#13;
"Let's just look at Nixon's&#13;
record. We have the highest&#13;
unemployment in ten years. The&#13;
highest inflation in two decades.&#13;
The highest budget deficit in&#13;
eight decades and the highest&#13;
intejst rates in 100 years ... If we&#13;
had pulled ourselves together&#13;
four years ago he wouldn't be in&#13;
the White House.&#13;
The senatorhen remarked on&#13;
his association with George&#13;
McGovern, stating that it was he&#13;
who persuaded him to run for&#13;
Senate.&#13;
"When George McGovern&#13;
came to Washington, I helped&#13;
him find his house. We lived right&#13;
next eoor to each other, just&#13;
acorss the district line."&#13;
"When the McGovern family&#13;
entertained they used to borrow&#13;
our dishes. I want him to get&#13;
elected president so I can get my&#13;
dishes back."&#13;
"When our children outgrew&#13;
their bunk beds, we gave them to&#13;
the McGoverns. We also let them&#13;
have our old dining room set and&#13;
gave our old nickelodeon to the&#13;
McGovern kids. When he gets&#13;
elected I'm sure I'll get the thing&#13;
back."&#13;
In conclusion Humphrey said,&#13;
"Richard Nixon says you've&#13;
never had it so good. Remember&#13;
that when you get your tax bill.&#13;
Remember that when you have to&#13;
eat beans and franks instead of&#13;
steak. Remember that when you&#13;
find the dollar is worth 20 cents&#13;
less than it was four years ago.&#13;
Remember when wages are&#13;
frozen while profits increase,&#13;
you've never had it so good." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 25, 1972&#13;
Crossings hazardous&#13;
As Parkside has grown, and as it will continue to&#13;
grow, the advent of added roads and thicker vehicular&#13;
traffic has complicated the always present problem of&#13;
campus safety. Although the major responsibility&#13;
inherently lies with the pedestrians and vehicle&#13;
operators themselves, there are some feasible safety&#13;
measures which deserve checking into.&#13;
A sore traffic area on the north side of the campus is&#13;
the intersection of Hwy. A and Wood Road. Eastbound&#13;
traffic on A is poorly visible to northbound traffic on&#13;
Wood Road. The speed limit of 65 on Hwy. A could be&#13;
reduced to 45 and a four-way stop instituted at the intersection&#13;
to provide a far safer area.&#13;
An area where traffic is a hazard to pedestrian travel&#13;
is the crossing of Wood Road. Although it is a posted&#13;
school crossing zone and caution lights are continually&#13;
flashing, much traffic is still speeding through the area&#13;
as if on the way to a fire. Perhaps "rumble strips"&#13;
(ridges in the road as those on highway 50 as you approach&#13;
1-94) may be a helpful suggestion.&#13;
As was stated above, primary responsibility for safety&#13;
lies with the pedestrian himself. Care in crossing any&#13;
road goes without saying; but too many people have&#13;
little reaard for the fact that fast-moving traffic very&#13;
often is not paying attention as it should be.&#13;
The Tallent and Greenquist bus stops also present&#13;
problems. Passengers should proceed to cross streets&#13;
from the rear of the bus. It is much easier to watch for&#13;
traffic and much safer. Let's all work together to&#13;
provide for a safer campus. A death or serious injury is&#13;
a poor price to pay for correctable mistakes.&#13;
Each vote counts&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
In approximately two weeks millions of&#13;
Americans will go to the polls and vote for a&#13;
President, many other officers and some&#13;
referendums. This column is dedicated to those who&#13;
may not.&#13;
"To vote or not to vote" is not a question ; it is a&#13;
cop-out. Now that eighteen-year-olds have the vote,&#13;
most all people on campus have the right. An&#13;
estimated 25 million became eligible with the new&#13;
law and considering elections of the past couple of&#13;
decades, it^jvould take only a fraction of the new&#13;
voters to swing an election.&#13;
In 1968, Humphrey lost by approximately 150,000&#13;
votes. Kennedy won by much less than that.&#13;
The point is that each individual vote counts for&#13;
something, now more than ever.&#13;
Should it be said, "The kids were given the vote to&#13;
keep them quiet"? I think not.&#13;
The youth vote in America had a lot to say about&#13;
the present candidates for President. Youth effort&#13;
in campaigning had, and has now, more than ever,&#13;
made presence and usefulness obvious.&#13;
The next several weeks and, eventually, Nov. 7&#13;
will reveal whether active, politicking youth has&#13;
followed through on its new opportunity.&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINION S&#13;
¥ The ParksideThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at D-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITERS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch,&#13;
Kathy Wellner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma, Shawn Clements, Dale&#13;
Martin, Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
By this time or shortly in the future, the doors to the&#13;
lower level of the library are open. In a letter&#13;
received from Philip Burnett, Library Director, it&#13;
was explained that the inconvenience of having only&#13;
one door affects everyone, including Library staff.&#13;
The lower door will now be open from about 9 a.m.&#13;
to 3 p.m. on a trial basis.&#13;
If the door stays open, it s i up to those who make use&#13;
of it. If traffic does not warrant it, it will close. If&#13;
people try to bring food in from the nearby food&#13;
service area, it will be closed. To facilitate use, the&#13;
reserve book section will be moved to the circulation&#13;
desk.&#13;
The front page story last week about the governor's&#13;
visit had the Chancellor explain that students&#13;
decided to have Mailer come here. The Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee was responsible for Mailer's&#13;
visit. This committee is made up of eight faculty&#13;
chosen by the Assistant Chancellor and only four(!)&#13;
students.&#13;
If the Chancellor can say that one-tenth of 1 percent&#13;
of the students were responsible for wasting $2,200&#13;
of student money, I wonder what bit of misinformation&#13;
is coming out next.&#13;
For those of you who have friends who can't read,&#13;
please mention it to them that those signs posted&#13;
around the food service area mean that no one is to&#13;
be occupying space in that area from 11 to 1 unless&#13;
they are eating!&#13;
For those of you who attend class in Kenosha, notice&#13;
those cars parked on the left side of the drive facing&#13;
the school. This practice is illegal, stupid and&#13;
dangerous as evidenced by the head-on I nearly had&#13;
with one of these clowns pulling in across my front&#13;
bumper as I was leaving the lot last week. How&#13;
about it, security? Bust these fools and cease this&#13;
practice.&#13;
Canteen has a man on full time filling its machines&#13;
on campus. He has to hustle to keep the machines&#13;
full. This is where a good part of the excess profit&#13;
Canteen makes goes. Is there a cheaper way?&#13;
For people who must spend any time at all in the&#13;
Library, the static electricity phenomena is a real&#13;
problem. It is disconcerting to be electrified every&#13;
time you touch something. Who is the person&#13;
responsible for not correcting this before it became&#13;
a difficulty? Also, non-static carpeting should have&#13;
been installed in the first place.&#13;
THORN&#13;
I've been wondering what that third flagpole is for -&#13;
any ideas?&#13;
Anyone who desires to assist in distinguished&#13;
teacher award procedures, please contact me. If we&#13;
can get enough people together, maybe we can get it&#13;
done right this year.&#13;
What happened to all those politically minded&#13;
students who are continually holding those rallies&#13;
on campus? For two weeks now I have been mentioning&#13;
our big political issue coming out Nov. l and&#13;
not a single person has brought anything to this&#13;
office. If anybody supports any candidate or is&#13;
against any candidate and thinks his opinion is&#13;
worth as much as mine, get your copy to us by Oct&#13;
26 (t hat's Thursday, gang).&#13;
I suggest the university investigate the trimester&#13;
program, in which the summer session will be&#13;
lengthened to four months and in which the spring&#13;
semester will end in April. By looking at a calendar&#13;
you can see it can be done with no rout ble at al.&#13;
Bus petitions are circulating fast and furious. What&#13;
good are they if there is no money to enact them?&#13;
Last day to drop a class is this Friday!&#13;
Why can't offices on campus stay open during the&#13;
noon hour? People staffing these could eat&#13;
separately and thus promote efficiency, and it&#13;
would be a convenience to students who are only&#13;
free at that time.&#13;
Who was the person who scheduled the pool to be&#13;
closed from 1:30 to 5:30 every day? This is the&#13;
prime time when it should be open, when people are&#13;
finished with their morning classes and would like&#13;
something to refresh them after a hard day. Any&#13;
activities scheduled during this time could easily&#13;
have been re-scheduled.&#13;
Some people have taken us up on the 10 percent&#13;
commission for selling ads, as evidenced by the&#13;
increased amount in this issue. We could use a lot&#13;
more. If we can get three pages every week, we can&#13;
go to twelve pages. It isn't that hard, but we need&#13;
the bodies.&#13;
?&#13;
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 ?&#13;
To Chancellor Wyllie:&#13;
During enrollment time the&#13;
school advertised that there&#13;
would be bus service from Racine&#13;
to Greenquist and back.&#13;
Believing this, like others, I&#13;
enrolled, paid my tuition, bought&#13;
books, attended classes and&#13;
studied, fully thinking I would be&#13;
able to complete the semester.&#13;
Now the school, under your administration,&#13;
has stated that this&#13;
bus service may be discontinued&#13;
at any time.&#13;
You encouraged people to&#13;
enroll believing that this bus&#13;
service would be provided; now&#13;
you feel you can walk out on this&#13;
promise and leave people&#13;
stranded. This kind of deception&#13;
indicates irresponsibility, at the&#13;
least, and possibly fraud.&#13;
Furthermore, your administration&#13;
recently stated that&#13;
theUW system had liberalized its&#13;
admission policy which would&#13;
allow minority people to enroll.&#13;
However, if you allow the bus&#13;
service to be discontinued, you&#13;
have, in effect, prevented many&#13;
of the minority people from&#13;
enrolling because they won't&#13;
have any way of getting to school&#13;
since they cannot afford to buy a&#13;
car. Thus, while the university&#13;
opens one door, it closes another.&#13;
From an economic standpoint,&#13;
you will be penalizing the people&#13;
who can afford it least. Many&#13;
students who were taking the bus&#13;
back at the end of the day were on&#13;
their way to work and without&#13;
this service they will be forced to&#13;
give up their jobs because they&#13;
can't get to work on time without&#13;
a decent bus service.&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
for&#13;
enI&#13;
believe, as many others do,&#13;
that you should be held responsible&#13;
for the situation you have&#13;
created. When this school was in&#13;
the planning stage, surely it must&#13;
have occurred to you that some&#13;
type of transportation would be&#13;
needed because of its location. It&#13;
is unreasonable to expect every&#13;
student to own a car&#13;
economic, as well as&#13;
vironmental, reasons.&#13;
As I understand it, the position&#13;
of the school is that (l) the&#13;
University cannot afford to&#13;
provide this service and (2) it is&#13;
prohibited from providing it since&#13;
all transportation is supposed to&#13;
be financed without UW money.&#13;
However, the University could&#13;
afford expensive lounges and&#13;
aesthetic considerations.&#13;
Granted, these are very nice and&#13;
desirable, but surely the ability to&#13;
get to school must be just as&#13;
important. Now as far as the UW&#13;
refusal to subsidize bus service I&#13;
believe, because of the unusual&#13;
location and the fact that you&#13;
encouraged people to enroll&#13;
depending on this service, the&#13;
ruling can be brought to court if&#13;
necessary and reversed because&#13;
of the unusual circumstances.&#13;
If you cannot correct this&#13;
problem, I think you'd better be&#13;
prepared to face a civil suit.&#13;
Kathy Schulz&#13;
Racine junior&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, Oct. 13, I lost the&#13;
little respect I had for the&#13;
security guards here on the&#13;
Parkside campus. About noon, I&#13;
noticed a security guard parked&#13;
in a car by the new flag poles on&#13;
campus. I know he was parked&#13;
there for over an hour. I believe&#13;
that this is a big waste if we are&#13;
going to pay a person to sit there&#13;
and watch people walking for no&#13;
real reason.&#13;
Later in the day, I tried to get&#13;
into the Library-Learning&#13;
Center. I came from the Physical&#13;
Education building about 5:25&#13;
only to find that the building was&#13;
locked. In it was a security guard&#13;
looking at me shaking his head. I&#13;
motioned that I wanted to get in,&#13;
but he held up five fingers and&#13;
shook his head again.&#13;
I know the building is supposed&#13;
to be open to 6 p .m. on Friday.&#13;
The buses run to 6:15 only&#13;
because the buildings are open to&#13;
6 p.m.&#13;
I know that Friday was the first&#13;
day a security guard was&#13;
stationed in the building but&#13;
that's no excuse for locking&#13;
people out an hour early.&#13;
I think this shows some&#13;
ignorance on the part of these so&#13;
called "security guards."&#13;
David Zuehlke&#13;
Racine Sophomore &#13;
Wed., Oct. 25/ 197 2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Vets irate over lack of benefits 658 HELP&#13;
Switchboard&#13;
"We're getting screwed!"&#13;
That was the opening&#13;
statement when RANGER asked&#13;
Chuck St. Pierre, leader of the&#13;
Parkside Vets' Club, why their&#13;
group existed.&#13;
The "screw" St. Pierre&#13;
referred to is the lack of&#13;
veteran's benefits. "We now get&#13;
$175 per month. At the end of&#13;
World War two vets got free&#13;
tuition and books and $170 per&#13;
month. And that's a difference of&#13;
almost 30 years," St. Pierre said.&#13;
His comments were heartily&#13;
approved by the 20 or so members&#13;
in attendance at the&#13;
meeting. There were no war&#13;
stories told RANGER during or&#13;
after the meeting. There was&#13;
plenty of discussion about&#13;
veteran's benefits, however.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
It has recently come to my&#13;
attention that it is not possible for&#13;
students or faculty members to&#13;
cash a check on this campus. This&#13;
is a ridiculous and very inconvenient&#13;
policy that I feel&#13;
should be amended.&#13;
Most colleges and universities&#13;
have check cashing privileges for&#13;
students and faculty during&#13;
regular business hours. By&#13;
presenting a current ID card and&#13;
the check (generally for under&#13;
$25), a student can cash his&#13;
check. Since many students are&#13;
now attending Parkside whose&#13;
homes are not in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, I feel that someplace at&#13;
the University should cash our&#13;
checks. This is not a terribly&#13;
time-consuming practice. Actually,&#13;
I see no reason why the&#13;
Bursar's office could not handle&#13;
this without much difficulty.&#13;
Even at other campuses on our&#13;
own system such services are&#13;
available. At UW-Madison,&#13;
checks can be cashed at the&#13;
Bursar's office and at the student&#13;
union. At UW-Milwaukee, this&#13;
service is available for faculty&#13;
members at the Bursar's office&#13;
and for students at the bookstore&#13;
and student union. Many of the&#13;
other campuses on our system&#13;
offer the same service, but the&#13;
examples are too numerous to&#13;
repeat here. Perhaps students&#13;
who need check cashing&#13;
privileges should make their&#13;
need known to administration&#13;
representatives and something&#13;
can be done to change the state of&#13;
things!&#13;
Eric Cushman Moore&#13;
There was also discussion&#13;
about the Day Care center, which&#13;
the Vets' Club is helping out by&#13;
building shelves. POW bracelets&#13;
were discussed, and the general&#13;
membership was in favor of&#13;
ordering a supply, to be sold at&#13;
cost around the campus.&#13;
The veterans are planning a&#13;
trip to Madison, coordinated with&#13;
other veterans groups, to demand&#13;
that Gov. Lucey take a firm stand&#13;
on benefits. What type of&#13;
demonstration or confrontation&#13;
this will be is still up in the air;&#13;
according to one member.&#13;
"Our biggest problem," St.&#13;
Pierre said, "is getting members.&#13;
At least a guy could show up&#13;
for a few free beers. Then maybe&#13;
he'd get the idea that we are&#13;
worth joining."&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Sunday, Oct. 15, was our&#13;
open house. Hundreds of people&#13;
came - many looking resplendent&#13;
in their white shirts, ties,&#13;
jewelry and elegant knit suits.&#13;
Shiny shoes scuffled across&#13;
spotless floors. They admired our&#13;
growth, stood awestruck at the&#13;
huge factory-like buildings, and&#13;
they just adored the plush furniture&#13;
and all the modern, expensive&#13;
conveniences and&#13;
sophisticated equipment which&#13;
make an office run.&#13;
Clean and spotless shuttle&#13;
buses guided the tourists to a&#13;
fantasy world of bright, affluent&#13;
men's dreams. And yet to come is&#13;
the big water fountain to be in&#13;
front of Tallent Hall to add a&#13;
touch of Disneyland. But why&#13;
should wealthy white socialites,&#13;
parents of students and townspeople&#13;
be the only ones to visit&#13;
us and our image?&#13;
I feel that a great treat for so&#13;
many poor inner city children&#13;
and youths would be a guided&#13;
tour of the campus. We could&#13;
drive buses into Racine's and&#13;
Kenosha's ghettos and pick up&#13;
the folks for a look at the liberal&#13;
intellectual community. Our&#13;
Chancellor would be proud to tell&#13;
the starving welfare recipients&#13;
and black brothers and sisters&#13;
that this truly is a great country&#13;
with abundant opportunities for&#13;
all. And won't they be impressed?&#13;
We really are involved&#13;
in the community and the betterment&#13;
of society.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie - a man&#13;
among men and champion of&#13;
decency and the American Way.&#13;
He's also a champion at keeping&#13;
The next meeting is set for Oct.&#13;
29, at 7 p.m., in the Student Activities&#13;
Building. A gathering at 1&#13;
p.m. in the S.A.b. is also planned,&#13;
to get ready for a touch football&#13;
game the club is planning on&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
"The main thing we need&#13;
emphasized," a member said, "is&#13;
that we aren't a bunch of jocks&#13;
sitting around swapping war&#13;
stories and getting drunk. We're&#13;
together because we're concerned&#13;
about the raw deal that&#13;
vets are getting, especially in&#13;
Wisconsin. We're concerned that&#13;
Gov. Lucey has yet to take a firm,&#13;
public stand on the issue of&#13;
veterans' benefits. And we're&#13;
concerned because most of us are&#13;
older than the average student,&#13;
are paying taxes and have&#13;
families to support as well as&#13;
school to attned."&#13;
the black student population&#13;
down and, from what I heard,&#13;
limiting funds for them, too. But&#13;
why now? Now that the buildings,&#13;
all that's in them, and water&#13;
fountain with paved and repaved&#13;
roads are paid for, or will be, we&#13;
just don't have money for&#13;
frivolous use, do we?&#13;
David Myer&#13;
sophomore&#13;
P.S. Hey, Champ, how about&#13;
being sure that all female employees&#13;
here get the same pay as&#13;
males doing the same work?&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Your editorial concerning&#13;
health care is well advised. Ms.&#13;
Isenberg does an excellent job&#13;
and is to be commended for&#13;
same. However, as you point out,&#13;
"She is not a doctor." It seems&#13;
that some arrangement might be&#13;
made for a free clinic for&#13;
students. I heartily endorse such&#13;
an idea and recommend we make&#13;
it more than just an idea soon.&#13;
Mrs. Reuben Gorsky&#13;
Racine&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
128-page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover posta ge and ha ndling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 6LENR0CK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
on&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
The RANGER went to Switchboard,&#13;
Kenosha's call-in&#13;
service, and talked to two&#13;
operators who were working that&#13;
night.&#13;
On entering, there is a flight of&#13;
stairs. At the top is a sign that&#13;
says, "People helping people - a&#13;
life-time opportunity."&#13;
Switchboard has several different&#13;
rooms. There's one for&#13;
personal counseling. Another&#13;
room has a parachute fastened to&#13;
the ceiling, a TV for when things&#13;
get slow, and writings on the wall&#13;
like "Who do Switchboard people&#13;
call?" and "If they've got the&#13;
dime, we've got the time." This is&#13;
also where the three telephone&#13;
lines are located.&#13;
Switchboard has been in&#13;
existence since 1970 and handles&#13;
any type of problem calls. There&#13;
are 16 people who work there.&#13;
There are at least two people&#13;
working each night from 6 p.m. to&#13;
midnight on weekdays, and 6&#13;
p.m. to 3 a.m. on weekends.&#13;
It is supported mainly by&#13;
Kenosha Drug Abuse. There have&#13;
also been fund-raising campaigns&#13;
such as a basketball game with&#13;
Playboy Bunnies and Hares as&#13;
cheerleaders which was held on&#13;
Oct. 17.&#13;
Switchboard also performs&#13;
other services besides counseling&#13;
on the phone. A person can call&#13;
and make an appointment to&#13;
come down and get professional&#13;
counseling. There are booklets&#13;
near the counseling room which&#13;
contain information on drugs,&#13;
birth control, alcoholism apd VD.&#13;
If there is a caller whom ISwitchboard&#13;
cannot help, they have a&#13;
file of other agencies to which&#13;
they can refer him. There are&#13;
duty&#13;
also speakers who will go out and&#13;
talk with groups.&#13;
The people who work on the&#13;
lines have to go through a&#13;
training program. This is taught&#13;
mostly by old members of&#13;
Switchboard. The program lasts&#13;
for two weeks with meetings&#13;
twice a week.&#13;
S w itc h b o a rd r e c e i v es&#13;
anywhere from 200 to 600 calls a&#13;
month. Some things people call&#13;
about are answers to math&#13;
problems, how to tell your&#13;
boyfriend he has bad breath, how&#13;
many squares there are on a&#13;
checker board, and what time&#13;
Creature Features is on.&#13;
"There are times when you&#13;
wonder how serious some of the&#13;
callers are," one of the operators&#13;
said, "when you hear people&#13;
laughing in the background."&#13;
There are also a number of very&#13;
serious calls. One time someone&#13;
called who was going to commit&#13;
suicide and the operator talked to&#13;
the person for six hours.&#13;
One operator said that they are&#13;
"sort of a last resort for people&#13;
who can't talk to their friends&#13;
about their problems." Switchboard&#13;
does what it can. If&#13;
Switchboard gets something they&#13;
don't know about, they admit it&#13;
and refer the caller to someone&#13;
else. They try to get the person to&#13;
think logically and then give&#13;
them alternatives, instead of&#13;
advice.&#13;
Switchboard would like to have&#13;
a regular drop-in center and a&#13;
foster home where run-aways&#13;
can temporarily be housed. Right&#13;
now its policy restricts people&#13;
from coming to their office except&#13;
by appointment. If a runaway,&#13;
comes in,, they don't have&#13;
anywhere for him to stay.&#13;
If you need someone to talk to,&#13;
call 658-HELP.&#13;
giefert/Assembly&#13;
One of the most qualified young&#13;
men running for office anywhere&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
PAID ADVERTISEMENT: A utk. Pi. f*r ky CitiiMS Ur Scfwt CMimittM. R. WitSami"&#13;
3943 Ro4n«y Liin, R«&lt;int, Ttmi.&#13;
Carthage C ollege Activities B eard Presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
Saturday&#13;
October 2 8&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Carthage&#13;
Fieldhouse&#13;
Q gjW| |jWij| p Also Don C ooper&#13;
SWEAT-.&#13;
Tickets s5 &amp; $4 TEARS&#13;
ON SALE Carthage C ollege C enter O ffice&#13;
Bidingers M usic (Downtown K enosha) C ook-Gene (Racine)&#13;
Free beer controversy&#13;
Bartenders claim "meddling V&#13;
Bartenders in the Student&#13;
Activities Building complained&#13;
last week that they are victims of&#13;
"unfair beaurocratic meddling,"&#13;
as at least two of them were&#13;
threatened with firing.&#13;
The changes were made by two&#13;
bartenders (who asked that they&#13;
not be identified) in a chance&#13;
meeting with this reporter.&#13;
The bartenders alledged that&#13;
they were being "spied upon" by&#13;
the administration, who accused&#13;
them of giving away free beer to&#13;
friends. They also charged that&#13;
William R. Niebuhr, coordinator&#13;
of Student life, refused to talk to&#13;
them as a group, is never in the&#13;
S.A.B., and refused to disclose his&#13;
sources of information. They also&#13;
stated that faculty and staff&#13;
receive more free beer than&#13;
anyone.&#13;
Niebuhr confirmed that two of&#13;
the men had been spoken to&#13;
regarding the dispersal of free&#13;
beer. He also admitted that some&#13;
faculty members were asked to&#13;
"keep on eye on the bar" during a&#13;
recent event.&#13;
He denied, however, that&#13;
faculty and staff received more&#13;
free beer than anyone.&#13;
"This was the practice before&#13;
this school year, but since then&#13;
we've decided that no one, not&#13;
even the Chancellor, gets free&#13;
beer," Niebuhr said.&#13;
Niebuhr also said that "the&#13;
attitude of the bartenders is also&#13;
a consideration."&#13;
Talks with students in the&#13;
S.A.B. revealed that friends of&#13;
the bartenders do get free beer.&#13;
However, it seems' that some&#13;
staff members are also sipping&#13;
free suds.&#13;
In a related incident, several of&#13;
the bartenders complained about&#13;
the pizza being offered. (The&#13;
supplier was changed this year).&#13;
In commenting on this,&#13;
Niebuhr said that the first consideration&#13;
had to be expense. He&#13;
said, any complaints about the&#13;
pizza can be handled through use&#13;
of the suggestion box.&#13;
"DeRango's will make that pizza&#13;
to our specifications. They'll&#13;
change it anyway we want it&#13;
changed. If people have complaints,&#13;
let them suggest the&#13;
changes needed."&#13;
Niebuhr added that the&#13;
decision as to where the pizza will&#13;
be purchased is a business one,&#13;
not one "about which the bartenders&#13;
should be concerned."&#13;
• •• and more letters &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., O ct. 25, 1 9 72&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Open House&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount P rices!&#13;
5707 - Sixth Axe.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
"WI f t ashington Square&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Radge&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Photo by Craig Roberts &#13;
Young Republicans active&#13;
Two previously unheard of&#13;
groups have been formed on the&#13;
Parkside campus, namely the&#13;
Parkside Young Republicans and&#13;
Young Voters for the President.&#13;
Joint meetings have been held,&#13;
but each group is a separete&#13;
entity with separate goals.&#13;
Young Voters for the&#13;
President, as a nation-wide&#13;
organization, is nonpartisan and&#13;
includes Democrats and Independents&#13;
as well as&#13;
Republicans. According to Ross&#13;
Workman, who organized the&#13;
Parkside chapter, the main goal&#13;
of Yo ung Voters is the re-election&#13;
of President Nixon and therefore,&#13;
it does not become involved in&#13;
any other races.&#13;
Here at Parkside, as at other&#13;
campuses across the nation, a&#13;
major emphasis has been to&#13;
dispel the notion that college&#13;
students overwhelmingly support&#13;
Sen. George McGovern. Some of&#13;
the activities sponsored by this&#13;
Information&#13;
available&#13;
on fellowship&#13;
Each year the National&#13;
Research Council advises the&#13;
National Science Foundation in&#13;
the selection of candidates for the&#13;
Foundation's program of&#13;
Graduate Fellowships. Panels of&#13;
prominent scientists are appointed&#13;
by the National Research&#13;
Council to recommend candidates&#13;
to the Foundation after a&#13;
careful review of each applicant's&#13;
qualifications. In 1972,&#13;
of.a total of 5,647 a pplicants to the&#13;
program, 998 candidates were&#13;
selected for awards.&#13;
Applicants to the NSF&#13;
Graduate Fellowship Program&#13;
must be beginning graduate&#13;
students by the Fall of 1973, or&#13;
must have completed not more&#13;
than one calendar year of fulltime&#13;
or part-time graduate study&#13;
by the Fall of 1973. Subject to the&#13;
availability of funds, new&#13;
fellowships awarded in the&#13;
Spring of 1973 will be for periods&#13;
of three years, the second and&#13;
third years contingent on certification&#13;
to the Foundation by&#13;
the fellowship institution of the&#13;
sstudent's satisfactory progress&#13;
toward an advanced degree in the&#13;
sciences.&#13;
Further information and&#13;
preliminary application forms&#13;
may be secured from the College&#13;
Office, Greenquist 345.&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 5 52-8355&#13;
• PAPA B URGER • MAMA BU RGER&#13;
• TEEN B URGER . BABY BU RGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD YOUR OR DER W ill BE RE ADY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken • Fish&#13;
jnd Shrimp&#13;
fREt GALLON OE ROO T BEE R WITH SS 00 ORDER&#13;
MILE NORTH Of&#13;
MIDCITY THEAT ER&#13;
ON SHERI DAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT B EER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Shcndjn Rd Hy 11 North&#13;
Ken osha&#13;
HOURS DAILY H AM TO II TM&#13;
SUMMER MONTHS&#13;
II A M TO MIDNIGHT&#13;
•AA A A *&#13;
group have been a bumpershekermg&#13;
drive in both Racine&#13;
and Kenosha, attendance at a&#13;
Young Voter rock concert in&#13;
Milwaukee and a survey of&#13;
Parkside students, which is&#13;
currently being undertaken.&#13;
Activity is expected to increase&#13;
dramatically as the election&#13;
approaches, and several&#13;
speakers will be brought in&#13;
Young Republicans also&#13;
supports the president but, in&#13;
addition, is actively involved in&#13;
the congressional, state and local&#13;
races. Each member is encouraged&#13;
to work with one or&#13;
more candidates they are&#13;
especially interested in. In this&#13;
way the activities of the YRs&#13;
have been many and varied.&#13;
Some members have worked&#13;
for Tom Mortenson in Racine,&#13;
others working with the Kenosha&#13;
Young Republicans have worked&#13;
on the Robert Baker and Arnold&#13;
Esser campaigns. A major upcoming&#13;
activity for this group is&#13;
the "Meet the Candidates"&#13;
dessert, in which they will be able&#13;
to meet the congressional, state&#13;
and local Republican candidates&#13;
as well as officers of the&#13;
Wisconsin Federation of Young&#13;
Republicans.&#13;
In the near future, they will be&#13;
boarding the WFYR campaign&#13;
bus to stump for their candidates.&#13;
The regular meeting time for&#13;
both clubs is on Fridays from&#13;
11:30a.m. until 1 p.m. in Room D174&#13;
L LC.&#13;
Career Counseling Center&#13;
The Career Counseling and&#13;
Information Center is a place&#13;
where students can drop in and&#13;
browse through materials on&#13;
careers or talk to Barb Larson&#13;
career counselor.&#13;
The center contains material&#13;
on career trends, what different&#13;
jobs you can get into with a&#13;
certain major, many job titles&#13;
and definitions, and different&#13;
degrees you can get in your&#13;
major at certain colleges. According&#13;
to Mrs. Larson, if there is&#13;
information you would like that&#13;
the center doesn't have, they will&#13;
try to find it for you.&#13;
She went on to say that tests&#13;
are available to help focus on a&#13;
person's particular interests. The&#13;
test helps the student to learn&#13;
more about himself and isolate&#13;
his interests, in order to concentrate&#13;
on going into a certain&#13;
line of work. This will aid him in&#13;
choosing his classes.&#13;
Mrs. Larson also remarked&#13;
that picking a career is not a onetime&#13;
process, but continues on&#13;
through your entire life.&#13;
The Career Counseling and&#13;
Information Center is located in&#13;
Tallent Hall, Room 284. If you&#13;
wish to make an appointment,&#13;
call Barb Larson, 553-2122.&#13;
UW P Winter Break&#13;
rams&#13;
Jan 5-14&#13;
1497&#13;
ttP TODAY OVERHAlf FILLED!&#13;
Sielert/Assembly&#13;
He realizes Vietname era&#13;
veterans need State educational aids.&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
PAID A DVERTISEMENT: Auth. a nd Pd. for by Citiz ens for Siofer t Committee R Willoms,&#13;
3043 Rodney L ena, Rocine , Trees.&#13;
Wed./ Oct. 25/ 197 2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
! llll'jlllllllllllllllllllllltlttmilHHIIMMIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMtlltMIIMIIIIIIMIIIIinillllllllimillin^&#13;
~ s&#13;
1 Walking down the steps&#13;
swirling curving and winding down&#13;
My mind is wandering all around.&#13;
It grows dizzy from massive shapes&#13;
I am gazing at the soul of amerikan education&#13;
Those massive shapes stab&#13;
the hearts of artists bleed&#13;
jagged points blind me&#13;
My fate; to drown in this sureal sea&#13;
The glass shows the real art&#13;
rocks and trees&#13;
Man's mind is marred he looks for freedom&#13;
he looks out onto charred stumps&#13;
I know it will not be found this way&#13;
this wild child will never be free&#13;
look at its poverty what is it really worth?&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
i =&#13;
E&#13;
1 3 =&#13;
power prestige&#13;
education please&#13;
3llllHHIIIllHIIHHIIHHIHHHmiHlllllHHIIIHII|||Hlllimillllllllllllllllllnilllllllliiiiiiiiiiimiii&#13;
THE PARK SIDE&#13;
RANGER will no w accept&#13;
classifi ed adve rtising.&#13;
Cost per insertion for each&#13;
ad of 20 words or less is 50&#13;
cents, payable at the time&#13;
you turn in your ad copy at&#13;
the RANGER office, D-194&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
Deadline for all such ads is&#13;
THURSDAY NOON before&#13;
the followingwednesday&#13;
publication. No ads can be&#13;
accept ed pay this time.&#13;
The adver tising manage r&#13;
reserves the right to refuse&#13;
any ad which may be&#13;
libelous or is in violation of&#13;
any and all civil rights&#13;
acts.&#13;
UW Parkside&#13;
Winter Break&#13;
Travel Program&#13;
to&#13;
Non Skiers:&#13;
nd&#13;
Motor option&#13;
For Information Contact&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC-D-197&#13;
lit&#13;
SHAKE y S PA?*A»&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey'sin Racine.&#13;
$1 a pit cher for Pabst&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
Lath rop &amp; 21st (almost)&#13;
Racine, Wise. 5 3 4 0 6&#13;
Pho ne: 633-63 07&#13;
^IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||l|||||||||mm|||||,||||,||||||,|||||||m||||||||||||m||mii|m|||m|||||m|||m|||||m|||||m|||||||||||||||||||||||||&#13;
MONDAY "College Night"&#13;
BEER — BEER&#13;
Large Glass 15c Large Pitcher 99c&#13;
TUESDAY thru THURSDAY&#13;
Com Charge ( NOT one dollar)&#13;
Only $0*&#13;
I REMEMBER!!&#13;
| When the bell rings bar drinks are only 35*&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
6 N ights a Week&#13;
1Where Hie action is"&#13;
6 Packs To Go&#13;
Miller 99c Bud $1&#13;
30 Schlitz $1&#13;
30&#13;
nS&#13;
1&#13;
Station&#13;
WE CATER TO YOU&#13;
2707 63 St. |&#13;
1 P°0&#13;
' Tables &amp; Dart Games I&#13;
rtY&amp;£\ i i i ti i^&gt; ui rr« i?|B&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimmmmiiiiimiiiiiiiiii miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiimmimil &#13;
6 THE PARKSI DE RANGER W e d., Oct. 25, 1 9 7 2&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
A class to help writers polish&#13;
their professionalism and&#13;
heighten their insights into new&#13;
article ideas, more vivid writing&#13;
and ever-changing markets is&#13;
offered by University Extension&#13;
beginning Oct. 25.&#13;
Both practicing writers and&#13;
beginners will find help in the&#13;
class, "Got Writer's Cramp?"&#13;
The experienced writer who has&#13;
hit a snag will gain inspiration;&#13;
neophytes can quickly pick up&#13;
important basics by association&#13;
with more advanced writers.&#13;
The instructor will be Bill&#13;
Nelson, newspaperman,&#13;
magazine freelancer and writing&#13;
instructor.&#13;
The class will meet on 8&#13;
Wednesdays, at 7:30 p.m., at&#13;
Starbuck Jr. High School,&#13;
Racine. Contact University&#13;
Extension at UW-Parkside for&#13;
registration information, phone&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
The Hawaii Trip is over half&#13;
filled, according to William R.&#13;
Niebuhr, coordinator of Student&#13;
Life. The nine-day trip will be&#13;
from Jan. 5-14 and costs $274 plus&#13;
$20 tax and service. Interested&#13;
travelers are advised to register&#13;
in the Student Activities Office,&#13;
LLC Rm. D-197, as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
John Mack, consultant to&#13;
higher education of the Wisconsin&#13;
Education Association, will&#13;
speak to James E. McKeouwn's&#13;
classes in urbanism and urbanization&#13;
Nov. 8, 6-7:15 p.m., in&#13;
Room D-lll, Gr.&#13;
There will be a draft seminar&#13;
on Wednesday, Oct. 25, at 2:30 in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 231.&#13;
According to Steve Bangert,&#13;
counselor, this will be an informal&#13;
question-and-answer&#13;
session. Some of the topics&#13;
covered will be basic laws on the&#13;
draft, how the lottery works,&#13;
what deferments still stand,&#13;
medical standards, legal&#13;
statements of a conscientious&#13;
objector, and the different&#13;
branches of the service.&#13;
If you want help on an individual&#13;
basis, contact Steve&#13;
Bangert at the Kenosha campus,&#13;
Room 135, e xt. 42.&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate&#13;
professor of music at The&#13;
University of WiscorisinParkside,&#13;
has been invited to&#13;
serve as clinician and conductor&#13;
of the Ohio Regional All-State&#13;
Orchestra Oct. 28 and 29 in&#13;
Cincinnati. Lantz will conduct the&#13;
orchestra, sponsored by the Ohio&#13;
Music Education Association in&#13;
concert before the state music&#13;
group, at its annual meeting.&#13;
RAG TIME RANGERS announce&#13;
their second official club&#13;
meeting. It will be held in the&#13;
S.A.B. Oct. 29 (Sun.), promptly at&#13;
1 p.m. Fashion show, bike hike,&#13;
ski trips to Whitecap and Aspen,&#13;
Colo., will be discussed and&#13;
planned. Bring your friends.&#13;
Interested students are urged to&#13;
come and find out what we have&#13;
to offer. See you there!&#13;
mm&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken ft Italian Sausage B ombers&#13;
Fru Delivery it Parkslde Vi llage&#13;
5021 30th Annua Phone 6 57-5191&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar&#13;
2511 Dur and&#13;
^ Racine, Wis.&#13;
(Shampagne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches G&#13;
and Pizza C© O&#13;
SSefert/ Assembly&#13;
We need a student&#13;
in the State Legislature&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
PAID ADVERTISEMENT: A uth. end Pd. ler by Citizens far Siafart Cemmitlaa. R. WiL&#13;
fiems* 3043 Rednay lint, Racine, Treat.&#13;
The Parkside swim club is in&#13;
need of members. Members have&#13;
the opportunity of participating&#13;
in competitive swimming in a&#13;
club atmosphere. No experience&#13;
is necessary. Training will be&#13;
provided if desired. Applications&#13;
are taken at the pool daily, from&#13;
3:30 to 5:30.&#13;
Mohamed S. El-Hennawi, 31,&#13;
has been appointed an assistant&#13;
professor of management science&#13;
in the School of Modern Industry&#13;
at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
effective in January.&#13;
His fields of specialization include&#13;
corporation finance, money&#13;
and banking and monetary&#13;
theory and policy.&#13;
El-Hennawi presently is on the&#13;
faculty of the University of&#13;
Illinois where he is completing&#13;
work for his Ph.D. degree. He&#13;
previously has taught at&#13;
Alexandria University in his&#13;
native Egypt and at Washington&#13;
University in St. Louis and at St.&#13;
Louis University. El-Hennawi&#13;
also has experience with private&#13;
business both in Egypt and the&#13;
U.S.&#13;
Attention: Christian Scientists,&#13;
or student and faculty members&#13;
interested in studying Christian&#13;
Science.&#13;
Special organizational&#13;
meeting. Please contact Rich&#13;
Myers at 634-1202.&#13;
We are looking for a facultystaff&#13;
member interested in&#13;
Christian Science to act as advisor.&#13;
Phone 634-1202.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present Big Jake on Nov. 3,&#13;
as part of their continuing feature&#13;
film series.&#13;
The movie stars John Wayne&#13;
and Richard Boone. John Wayne&#13;
portrays Big Jake McCaudels&#13;
who has his grandson kidnapped&#13;
by outlaws led by Richard Boone.&#13;
Hearing of it, Big Jake sets out to&#13;
find his grandson, and in the&#13;
process there is some pretty&#13;
typical John Wayne action.&#13;
The movie will be shown at the&#13;
activities building at 8 p.m., and&#13;
the admission price is 75 cents.&#13;
Your Wisconsin and Parkside IDs&#13;
are required.&#13;
The Whiteskellar will present&#13;
Grant Anderson and John&#13;
Graham Thursday at 1 p.m. Both&#13;
are guitarists and folk singers,&#13;
with Graham playing a twelvestring&#13;
guitar.&#13;
A print titled "A Gothic Tale&#13;
(Death in Milano)" by Moishe&#13;
Smith, visiting professor of art at&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
has been purchased by&#13;
the United States Information&#13;
Agency and is currently being&#13;
exhibited with a group of&#13;
American prints in various&#13;
Australian museums.&#13;
The print also is included in a&#13;
traveling show at various U.S.&#13;
museums sponsored by the&#13;
American Federation of Arts.&#13;
Smith, a Chicago native,&#13;
worked in Rapallo, Italy, immediately&#13;
before coming to&#13;
Parkside this fall. He previously&#13;
taught at several Midwestern&#13;
universities including UWMadison.&#13;
His work has been&#13;
featured in one-man shows in&#13;
Europe and the U.S. and is in a&#13;
number of permanent collections.&#13;
&#13;
The RAG TIME RANGERS&#13;
present the second annual&#13;
THINK SNOW dance this&#13;
Saturday evening, Oct. 28. It will&#13;
be held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.&#13;
The performing band comes to&#13;
us direct from Iowa. Their name&#13;
is White Cross and they're one of&#13;
Iowa's top dance bands. The band&#13;
consists of seven excellent&#13;
musicians who play rhythm,&#13;
blues, rock 'n' roll and jazz.&#13;
Admission is $1.50, club&#13;
members 75 cents. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin IDs are required.&#13;
:&#13;
Parkside Educators&#13;
for&#13;
McGovern&#13;
The coming election offers a crucial decision. The next President must shape policy which will take&#13;
us through some of the critical years of this half of th e twentieth century. Because we are convinced&#13;
that he can best provide the leadership and policies so deeply needed, we endorse Senator George&#13;
McGovern as our choice for President.&#13;
David R. Beach Myra Sadker&#13;
Frederick A. Becker Ann E. Harbeson Michael T. Marron Marilyn Scamman&#13;
Emmett Bedford John Harbeson Andrew M. McLean Frank G. Schliesmann&#13;
i&#13;
Gabriella S. Bonn Teresa Harris M. Brian McMahon Robert W. Schrader&#13;
John D. Buenker John R. Henderson James S. Mehoke James Shea&#13;
Nicholas Burckel Kenneth Herrick Marion J. Mochon Alan R. Shucard&#13;
Philip M. Burnett Harold W. Heser Robert J. Moore Aaron Snyder&#13;
John Campbell Peter S. Hoff Robert w. Moore Harold Stern&#13;
Robert A. Canary Michael Holmes Frank Mueller Bruce Stiehm&#13;
Henry S. Cole Kenneth Holsten Thomas E. Mueller Carla J. Stoffle&#13;
James Dean Rollin Jansky William J. Murin Richard Stoffle 3&#13;
Frank N. Egerton Mary Helgren Johnson Morton Nachlas David Streeter&#13;
John Elmore Thomas D. Knight Michael O'Rourke Richard Teschner&#13;
Walter W. Feldt Charles Kugel Virginia Parsons Douglas Thompson&#13;
3&#13;
Eric Forrest David Kuhn Don T. Piele John Van Willigen&#13;
Shirley Fraser Donald D. Kummings Michael D. Reid Carole Gottlieb Vopat %&#13;
4&#13;
Ronald W. Gatterdam Douglas LaFollette Don Rintz Alan Wallace&#13;
Ronald Gottesman James Liddy Richard Rosenberg Robert D. Wrinkle&#13;
Ben Greenebaum Carl Lindner David Sadker Heh-Hsiang Yuan&#13;
ll=*=&#13;
• " ' - - - •&#13;
This list of names represents the results of a rather informal poll. The absence of a name does not&#13;
necessarily imply either lack of support for McGovern or enthusiasm for the opposing ticket.&#13;
(Authorized and paid for by Parkside Educators for McGovern: H. Cole, F. Egerton, W. Johnson, and A. Snyder, Coordinators.)&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
Friday, Nov. 10-8:00 p.m. - Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
• America's Most Famous Defense Attorney&#13;
• Best-Selling Author • Lecturer&#13;
speaking on "The Defense Never Rests"&#13;
F. LEE BAILEY&#13;
General Admission - *1.50&#13;
Parkside Students &amp; Staff - *1.00&#13;
Tickets Available: UW-P Information Office - Room 201 - Talent Hal &#13;
Wed., Oct. 25, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Gymnasts' goal is participation USTFF cross country&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Parkside's got a gymnastics&#13;
team! A good one, too.&#13;
Last year Parkside's women's&#13;
gymnastics team, in its first year&#13;
of competition, won every dual&#13;
meet, and all six girls qualified&#13;
for state. This year the team is&#13;
bigger with members of last&#13;
year's team plus a number of&#13;
experienced gymnasts and&#13;
beginners.&#13;
At the beginner level are&#13;
Debbie Lienau, Cindy Squire,&#13;
Sharon Lindstrom, Toni Marini,&#13;
and Bonnie Sparks. The intermediate&#13;
girls are July&#13;
Weidner, Debbie Roseth, Liz&#13;
Stellberg, Paris Wohlust, and&#13;
Karen Sivley. Jacki Levonian,&#13;
Kim Simonsen and team captain&#13;
Kathy Kramer compete at the&#13;
advanced level. All members of&#13;
the team compete in all around,&#13;
which consists of floor exercise,&#13;
balance beam, uneven bars, and&#13;
vaulting.&#13;
The team is improving on all&#13;
levels according to Coach Geza&#13;
Martiny, who started Women's&#13;
gymnastics at Parkside when he&#13;
arrived last fall.&#13;
Two of the girls, Jacki&#13;
Levonian, and Kim Simonsen,&#13;
are working on the national level&#13;
for the United States Gymnastics&#13;
Federation.&#13;
If one speaks to the members of&#13;
a gymnastics team, it soon&#13;
becomes apparent that it is very&#13;
much an individual sport. There&#13;
is rarely unilateral agreement on&#13;
anything, be it the advantages of&#13;
long legs or which event is most&#13;
difficult. One of the few things&#13;
which was generally agreed upon&#13;
was that gymnastics can be&#13;
frustrating at times, especially&#13;
when a judge seems to be against&#13;
one. Most of the girls felt that the&#13;
absolute power of the judges&#13;
wasn't quite fair, because different&#13;
judges have different&#13;
preferences in style. If one's style&#13;
doesn't suit the judge, too bad.&#13;
Also agreed on was that work for&#13;
self improvement results in team&#13;
improvement.&#13;
Butterflies and shakes are only&#13;
a couple of the many individual&#13;
reactions to meets. One girl felt&#13;
that the worst possible feeling is&#13;
the one she gets as she stands&#13;
waiting for the judge's nod to&#13;
A«&#13;
g,n&#13;
' The §&#13;
reatest feeling?&#13;
Afterward, in the shower when&#13;
it's all over, and one feels one has&#13;
done their best.&#13;
A firm belief in her ability to fly&#13;
is one girl's formula for success&#13;
in vaulting.&#13;
"You've got to have the right&#13;
mental attitude. Think that&#13;
you're weightless. I think to&#13;
myself just before I start that I'm&#13;
gonna fly," she said.&#13;
kor a while there was a great&#13;
debate on the advantages of size&#13;
It seemed that the taller girls&#13;
viewed being short as an advantage,&#13;
and the short girls&#13;
considered long legs to be the&#13;
most valuable asset. Finally, one&#13;
of them decided that what one&#13;
does with one's size is most&#13;
important. Good carriage and&#13;
grace come across well no matter&#13;
what a person's size. The&#13;
women's gymnastics season runs&#13;
from September to the first week&#13;
of December, and is followed&#13;
immediately by the men's season&#13;
which runs until April.&#13;
This is the first year that&#13;
Parkside has had a full men's&#13;
gymnastics team. The members&#13;
of the team and their events are&#13;
as follows: Steve Sladky, Brian&#13;
Petschow, Tim Petro, Mike&#13;
Miller, Brad Grunewald, and Jim&#13;
Magruder, competing in all&#13;
around. The rest of the team&#13;
•consists of Kevin O'Neil; rings,&#13;
parallel bars, side horse, and&#13;
high bar, Jerry Konecny; side&#13;
horse, rings, and high bar, Greg&#13;
Dewitz; vaulting and floor&#13;
exercise, Jesus Torres; high bar,&#13;
and Mark Jossart; floor exercise.&#13;
According to Martiny, the&#13;
philosophy of gymnastics at an&#13;
educational institution is to teach&#13;
students to achieve a goal&#13;
through participation. The goal of&#13;
the Parkside gymnastics team is&#13;
participation. Whether or not&#13;
they win is not as important as&#13;
whether or not they work hard&#13;
and do their best.&#13;
Grunewald says tnat he gets&#13;
nervous the night before a meet,&#13;
but not when he is out doing his&#13;
routine.&#13;
The men agreed that gymnastics&#13;
is one of the hardest&#13;
sports. Some of their comments&#13;
on the nature of g ymnastics were&#13;
interesting, if not amusing.&#13;
"You have to approach it with&#13;
reckless abandon."&#13;
"It's really a mind over matter&#13;
sports."&#13;
"You've got to feel self concious."&#13;
&#13;
"Workouts go in cycles. You&#13;
start out looking forward to it,&#13;
after a while you can't stand it,&#13;
and then it gets better again.&#13;
The team is looking forward to&#13;
the big meets when it gets to&#13;
travel and maybe pick up a few&#13;
trophies.&#13;
One hazard of gymnastics, like&#13;
all sports, is injuries. There have&#13;
been several of these because of&#13;
to the lack of spotting equipment.&#13;
Hopefully this situation will not&#13;
continue.&#13;
The whole team thinks it's&#13;
great when people come to watch&#13;
the meets, especially girls.&#13;
Powder Puffs&#13;
still undefeated&#13;
Parkside's Powder Puff&#13;
Football Team remained undefeated&#13;
with a resounding 19-0&#13;
Columbus Day victory over GTI.&#13;
This was the second victory of the&#13;
season for the girls. Parkside had&#13;
a very balanced attack with four&#13;
girls getting into the scoring&#13;
column. The first score came&#13;
when Nancy Thomson connected&#13;
on a 38-yard bomb pass to Barb&#13;
Piasecki. In the second half the&#13;
girls kept the pressure on GTI as&#13;
Dita Hunter intercepted a GIT&#13;
pass and pranced 65 yards for the&#13;
score. The final score of the game&#13;
came as Paula Vanchem&#13;
returned to punt for 40 yards and&#13;
a touchdown.&#13;
The next game of the season&#13;
has the girls matched up with&#13;
Dominican College Oct. 29.&#13;
Harriers dump Marquette&#13;
Jim McKadden&#13;
The Ranger Cross country&#13;
team had its best team meet&#13;
against Marquette Oct. 17 winning&#13;
17-44. Coach Vic Godfrey&#13;
said that "if the fourth to seventh&#13;
place runners keep running the&#13;
way they are we should be in the&#13;
top three in the NAIA District 14&#13;
and have a chance for the&#13;
Nationals." The District 14 meet&#13;
is at Eau Claire on Nov. 11 and&#13;
the nationals are Nov. 18 at&#13;
Kansas City. Mo.&#13;
Lucian Rosa finished in the top&#13;
spot again for the Rangers with a&#13;
time of 2 6:25. He was followed by&#13;
Dennis Biel in 26:38 and Jim&#13;
McFadden in 26:50. The course&#13;
record in the five mile race is&#13;
25:30 by Garry Bentley of South&#13;
Dakota State. Keith Merritt&#13;
finished sixth, Ned Kessenich&#13;
seventh. Sid Hyde eighth, Everett&#13;
Hyde ninth, and John Ammeran&#13;
fourteenth.&#13;
Parkside's dual record is now&#13;
3-1.&#13;
WHITESKEUAR&#13;
(north lounge&#13;
**. Greenquist H all)&#13;
v»Vf.&#13;
THURS., OCT. 26&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Major employers throughout the&#13;
U.S. (private &amp; government) are&#13;
seeking qualified college men and&#13;
women for career positions with&#13;
top pay and outstanding benefits.&#13;
Excellent opportunities exist in&#13;
many areas. For FREE information&#13;
on student assistance and&#13;
placement program send selfaddressed&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
National Placement Registry,&#13;
Data-Tech Services, 1001 East&#13;
Idaho St., Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
ihi^im i Qfru&#13;
v&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
25 Gorgeous D ancing Girls&#13;
(appearing o n our s tage w eekly)&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
424 Lake A ve.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night Dancers W anted&#13;
This season the Ranger cross&#13;
country team will be hosting the&#13;
United States Track and Field&#13;
F e d e r a t i on Mk- Am e r i c a&#13;
Championship. The meet will be&#13;
held on Oct. 28 beginning at 10&#13;
a.m. The Western Championships&#13;
were held last Saturday&#13;
at Fresno State University. The&#13;
Eastern Championships are also&#13;
going to be held Oct. 28 at Pennsylvania&#13;
State University. The&#13;
National Championships are to&#13;
be held at Northern Texas State,&#13;
Nov. 22.&#13;
The favorites are University of&#13;
Chicago Track Club, Northwestern&#13;
University, and the&#13;
Western Michigan team. There&#13;
will also be a competition for&#13;
veterans, runners over 30, and&#13;
masters, for runners over 40. The&#13;
course for the veterans and&#13;
masters will be three miles, while&#13;
the course for the college teams&#13;
will be five miles.&#13;
The Women's USTFF MidAmerican&#13;
C h ampionsh ips are&#13;
also to be held Oct. 28 here at&#13;
Parkside. The competition begins&#13;
at 10 a.m. The men will follow as&#13;
soon as the women are finished.&#13;
The favorite for the women is the&#13;
Ozark Track Club. They will race&#13;
on a two-mile course. The open&#13;
competition will be run on a&#13;
10,000 meter course&#13;
Booters lose 3-1&#13;
The UW-P booters lost 3-1 to&#13;
Marquette in a sloppy quagmire&#13;
nere last Saturday, dropping&#13;
their record to 2-6-1.&#13;
The first half went well with&#13;
Parkside leading 1-0, but the&#13;
second half turned into a different&#13;
ball game when Marquette&#13;
scored three goals.&#13;
According to Coach Hal&#13;
Henderson, Marquette's second&#13;
goal was literally given to them&#13;
due to a mistake by Parkside.&#13;
During the last few minutes&#13;
Women&#13;
gymnasts&#13;
sweep&#13;
The women's gymnastics team&#13;
did well in its second meet of the&#13;
year, beating Carroll College of&#13;
Waukesha Saturday afternoon in&#13;
all three classes. The scoring&#13;
went as follows:&#13;
Beginner Parkside - 41.00&#13;
Carroll-27.55&#13;
Intermediate Parkside-47.10&#13;
Carroll-00.00&#13;
Advan ced Parkside-54.10&#13;
Carroll-00.00&#13;
The next meet for the gymnasts&#13;
will be Oct. 28 at Whitewater.&#13;
Marquette made its third and&#13;
final goal on a penalty kick.&#13;
"The game was very disappointing,&#13;
as I believe we were the&#13;
better team," Hendersen said.&#13;
"On paper the shots and goal&#13;
saves were even, but after that&#13;
second goal, we just died," he&#13;
added.&#13;
The Rangers will have this&#13;
weekend off before traveling to&#13;
Charleston, 111., n ext Wednesday&#13;
for a contest against rugged&#13;
Eastern Illinois. Parkside will&#13;
close regular season play the&#13;
following Saturday when it meets&#13;
UW-Green Bay here.&#13;
Swimming meet here&#13;
The Parkside swim team is&#13;
having its first home meet this&#13;
coming Tuesday, Oct. 31 at 6 p.m.&#13;
CHAMPION TERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
617-536-9700&#13;
Research material for Termpapers,&#13;
Reports, Theses, etc. LOWEST PRICES.&#13;
QUICK SERVICE. For information,&#13;
please write or call.&#13;
HALE HITCH So says V ie VA ~ * Honk Kifdiaa&#13;
DID VOL KNOW ^1&#13;
YOU CAN ATTEND A FOREIGN&#13;
UNIVERSITY UNDER THE G.L BILL?"&#13;
For information, contact the Veterans Administration&#13;
y&#13;
m&#13;
Q&#13;
0&#13;
to&#13;
IR&#13;
• BEER • SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENI ENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8 P.M.&#13;
CALL&#13;
632-1565&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.&#13;
OKNiir&#13;
jfraim&#13;
ROOKS&#13;
W&#13;
If yo u&#13;
prefer&#13;
use our&#13;
Rear&#13;
Entrance&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
On Our Screen&#13;
"Vice-Hustlers"&#13;
plus&#13;
"Sweet Lips"&#13;
New Selections of Adult Books Arriving&#13;
Daily! Theatre Open Noon 'til&#13;
Midnite. Book Storo Open 11 a.m.&#13;
'til Midnite.&#13;
18 Years and Over Only!&#13;
OPEN TODAY&#13;
6:00 - 12:00 Mid.&#13;
410 MAIN STREET • DOWNTOWN &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 25, 1972&#13;
Club sports HOW in action Womens tennis squad wins again&#13;
SWIMMING&#13;
Swim coach Barb Morris has&#13;
just released the 1972-73 Ranger&#13;
swim schedule for both the men&#13;
and women. The women open up&#13;
Oct. 31 at 6 p.m. with UWOshkosh.&#13;
This will be the first&#13;
swim meet in the new Physical&#13;
Education building.&#13;
Five days later, on Nov. 4, the&#13;
women will be hosting an invitational&#13;
in the home pool. The&#13;
men open their season at the&#13;
Ripon Relays on Dec. 2 to be&#13;
followed by meets on Dec. 9 with&#13;
Carroll College and Dec. 15 with&#13;
UW-Whitewater. Both meet? are&#13;
at home.&#13;
The men will start the new&#13;
semester by journeying to&#13;
Chicago to meet Loyola on Jan.&#13;
13. Both teams will be meeting&#13;
Lake Forest in the local pool on&#13;
Jan. 20 before going to Chicago&#13;
State on Jan. 29. The final home&#13;
meet for the men will feature the&#13;
University of Chicago on Feb. 7.&#13;
The women will bow out, Feb.&#13;
10 at DeKalb, 111., w ith Northern&#13;
Illinois and the men will finish up&#13;
Feb. 21 at Carroll College.&#13;
JUDOCLUB&#13;
The Parkside Judo Club&#13;
practices every Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday evenings at 9 p.m. with&#13;
3rd degree Black Belt Ron&#13;
Hansen. The club has already&#13;
participated in two tournaments&#13;
with club president Helmut Kah&#13;
bringing home the first place&#13;
trophy in the White-Brown Belt&#13;
light weight class in Chicago&#13;
recently.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
The R Time Rangers under&#13;
president Bill Jaecks have been&#13;
very busy preparing for the&#13;
coming Ski season. The club is&#13;
sponsoring a dance Oct. 28 to&#13;
follow a Road Rally they recently&#13;
sponsored.&#13;
Several members of the racing&#13;
team are planning on attending a&#13;
pre-season racing camp to be&#13;
held in early December at Mt.&#13;
Telemark. A plane load of the&#13;
club is planning on visiting&#13;
Colorado over the semester&#13;
break for a ski trip sponsored by&#13;
the Midwest Collegiate Ski&#13;
Association.&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
Dr. Omar Amin is looking for&#13;
table tennis enthusiasts who&#13;
I ABORTIONS&#13;
: FREE Referral to N .Y.Clin&#13;
i 12 weeks o r le ss&#13;
: Total c ost&#13;
i $ 150&#13;
CALL&#13;
i CONTROLLED&#13;
: PARENTHOO&#13;
J (a non-profit organization&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
I DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
j (313) 9 64-0530&#13;
would like to practice as a team&#13;
on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons&#13;
at the Physical&#13;
Education building. The club&#13;
would like to play other colleges&#13;
on a dual meet basis.&#13;
HOCKEY&#13;
Parkside's very successful&#13;
hockey club will be in action&#13;
early this fall. The Rangers have&#13;
been invited by the Milwaukee&#13;
Admirals to play a exhibition&#13;
game with the Marquette&#13;
Warrors on Nov. 7 at the&#13;
Milwaukee Arena at 6:45 p.m.&#13;
prior to the Admirals-Green Bay&#13;
Bobcats game. Tickets are $1.50.&#13;
More information will appear&#13;
later.&#13;
RUGBY&#13;
The Ranger Ruggers recently&#13;
dropped a 30-12 match to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Rugby&#13;
Club. The Rangers have made&#13;
constant progress this season and&#13;
are finally shaping up as a team&#13;
to reckon with.&#13;
The last home match of the&#13;
season will be held Sunday, Nov.&#13;
5 at Lakefront Stadium in&#13;
Kenosha. The game is being&#13;
sponsored by the Kenosha Lions.&#13;
Tickets will be on sale shortly.&#13;
The Lions are making this an all&#13;
out push to fill the stadium and&#13;
make this an annual event. The&#13;
Rangers' opponents will be the&#13;
Warriors of Marquette.&#13;
The women's tennis team&#13;
played at Oshkosh Oct. 19,&#13;
winning the meet 3-2, conference&#13;
scoring.&#13;
The number one player, Pat&#13;
Kekic, took first in singles with a&#13;
pro set score of 8-3. Pat and Sue&#13;
Graf took first in doubles with an&#13;
8-2, while Kay Becker and Eileen&#13;
Reilly took second with 8-6.&#13;
Normally a set is six games,&#13;
but one may play a pro set with&#13;
eight, ten or twelve games. The&#13;
first player to reach eight games&#13;
in an eight game pro set wins&#13;
provided they have a margin to&#13;
two games.&#13;
Coming up this weekend is the&#13;
W.W.I.A.C. State meet at&#13;
Oshkosh. The meet will begin at&#13;
5:30 p.m. Friday and 9 a.m.&#13;
Saturday. Schools participating&#13;
in the meet are Carthage,&#13;
Whitewater, La Crosse, Stevens&#13;
Point, Oshkosh and Parkside.&#13;
Representing Parkside in&#13;
doubles will be Pat Kekic and Sue&#13;
Graf; number one position, and&#13;
Kay Becker and Nicolet De Rose;&#13;
number two Doubles will be&#13;
played Friday evening.&#13;
IM Football&#13;
In the IM Touch Football&#13;
League, the cream is rising to the&#13;
top as last year's University&#13;
Champions, the Schooners, have&#13;
sole possession of first place with&#13;
a perfect 4-0 record.&#13;
STANDINGS&#13;
Schooners 4-0&#13;
Pink Fascists 4-1&#13;
Trout 2-3&#13;
Football Team 1-4&#13;
BOSS 14&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
?|&#13;
ov&#13;
-&#13;
1 Eastern Illinois at Charleston&#13;
ov&#13;
-&#13;
4 UW-Green Bay at Parkside&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
28 USTFF Mid-American Championship at Parkside&#13;
Nov&#13;
-&#13;
3 Loras at Parkside&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
0ct&#13;
-&#13;
28 USTFF National Women's Championships at Parkside&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
Nov&#13;
-&#13;
4 Parkside Invitational at Parkside&#13;
Women's Gymnastics&#13;
0ct&#13;
-&#13;
28 Whitewater Invitational at Whitewater&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
Nov&#13;
-&#13;
10-11 State Meet at Oshkosh&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Jobs Are Available. . . !&#13;
For FREE information&#13;
on student assistance and&#13;
placement program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED&#13;
envelope to the National&#13;
Placement Registry, 1001&#13;
East Idaho St., Kalispell,&#13;
MT 59901&#13;
- NO GIMMICKS -&#13;
The dearest choice for a generation&#13;
A/T„n ». , r, So McGovern can't win, eh?&#13;
Where have you heard that before?&#13;
In the primaries last Spring,&#13;
that's where.&#13;
But you fooled the political&#13;
experts and rewrote the history&#13;
books. You provided the manpower&#13;
and womanpower for the largest,&#13;
smoothest, toughest vote-canvassing&#13;
operation this country had&#13;
ever seen.&#13;
Now it's time to do it again.&#13;
And the job this Fall is even more&#13;
important. For the choice between&#13;
Nixon and McGovern is the clearest&#13;
choice voters have had for a&#13;
generation.&#13;
McGovern has opposed the&#13;
bombing of Indochina, while&#13;
Nixon has been inflicting the explosive&#13;
equivalent of 7 Hiroshima&#13;
atom bombs a month on that already&#13;
devastated area.&#13;
Nixon believes in putting people&#13;
out of work in order to hold&#13;
down prices. His policies have put&#13;
2 million more people out of work.&#13;
McGovern believes that there&#13;
should be a job for everyone who&#13;
wants to work, with the U.S. Government&#13;
itself as the employer of&#13;
last resort.&#13;
Nixon started his campaign&#13;
with $10 million in secret money.&#13;
McGovern's campaign is financed&#13;
almost entirely by contributions&#13;
of $5 to $25 from the people.&#13;
Nixon has nominated conservatives&#13;
and mediocrities to the&#13;
United States Supreme Court.&#13;
One or two more Nixon appointments&#13;
if he is re-elected, and you'll&#13;
live with a heavy-handed Nixon&#13;
court for the rest of your life.&#13;
McGovern has pledged to appoint&#13;
a woman and members of racial&#13;
and ethnic minorities, and will appoint&#13;
highly qualified liberals.&#13;
Ralph Nader says the Nixon&#13;
Administration is "the most corrupt&#13;
in our history." The late&#13;
Robert Kennedy called George&#13;
McGovern "the most decent man&#13;
in the Senate."&#13;
McGovern wants the millionaires&#13;
and the large corporations to&#13;
start paying their fair share of&#13;
taxes. Nixon wants to maintain&#13;
the status quo.&#13;
Get an absentee ballot if you&#13;
need one. Get some money together&#13;
to help us make get-outthe-vote&#13;
phone calls. And get together&#13;
with your local McGovern&#13;
Committee to find out how you&#13;
can help.&#13;
You started this campaign. It's&#13;
up to you to finish it.&#13;
r&#13;
Send money while there's still time!&#13;
Help us buy get-out-the-vote phone calls.&#13;
Age of McGovern Box 100, A-M, Washington, D.C. 20005&#13;
contribution™"' '° he&#13;
'&#13;
P 8et&#13;
°&#13;
Ut the VOte f&#13;
°&#13;
r Gwrge McG°wrn. Enclosed is my&#13;
• $5 to pay for 50 phone calls to voters • $25 to pay for 250 phone calls to voters&#13;
• $10 to pay for 100 phone calls to voters • (whatever you can give)&#13;
The Age of McGovern&#13;
Dedicated to raising $1 million&#13;
for a nationwide get-out-the-vote drive&#13;
Name.&#13;
Address..&#13;
City_ —State. -Zip_&#13;
thtfnew fxtfitica"c^nthbubons'a'cC f&#13;
°"&#13;
OWing informati&#13;
°" is *'*&gt; "«ded for rec ord purp oses only un der&#13;
Occupation Name of Company City &amp; Still&#13;
Authorized and paid f or by Age of M cGovern Campaign Committee • 201 East 42nd Street </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63882">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 5, October 25, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63883">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63884">
                <text>1972-10-25</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63887">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63888">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63889">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63890">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63891">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63892">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63893">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63894">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63895">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="313">
        <name>associate dean jewel echelbarger</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="176">
        <name>george mcgovern</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="322">
        <name>harry lantz</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="163">
        <name>ken konkol</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="307">
        <name>richard nixon</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2630" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3248">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/916b55217cf5ba74c4ebe9585b47d176.pdf</src>
        <authentication>41f55cf483a82268162788ba11d9cf47</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63900">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 6</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63901">
              <text>Bus service to continue</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63911">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89908">
              <text>r, ,. ""&#13;
The Parkside _&#13;
RANGER Wedne day, o emb r 1 1972&#13;
Bus service to continue&#13;
For the ume beUl$!:, blb tar&#13;
\I III he collected a pa ers&#13;
arru e In the parkin lot&#13;
Allen Dearborn A 51 tanl&#13;
Chancellor, sard, "The qurc e t&#13;
CUre for the dilemma IS to ride&#13;
the bu and leave the "'orr~ Ing to&#13;
us."&#13;
"Ridership \I'll dictate the&#13;
future of tbe kmd of quality In&#13;
service and equipment We&#13;
wan I the schedule 10 reflect th&#13;
needs of the tudent and \Ie are&#13;
not arbrtrarrly selling them up at&#13;
thrs Orne. We don', want I&#13;
student to drop a course oor drop&#13;
from school because ol the lack of&#13;
lransportatloo ..&#13;
Dearborn went 00 to say, "1&#13;
would like to thank al1 the mterested&#13;
tudents, faculty and&#13;
parents ~ho contacted me With&#13;
Bus service will continue&#13;
between Racine and the campus&#13;
for the remainder of the&#13;
semester. A blue and white Jelco&#13;
b~s with a Parkside sign in the&#13;
Window will be used.&#13;
According to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students "Wisconsin Coach&#13;
tickets are still valid on the new&#13;
set-up." She went on to say. "If&#13;
early morning and late evening&#13;
routes aren't ridden enough we'll&#13;
ha ve to drop them."&#13;
Routes will remain the same as&#13;
present for the first week (nine&#13;
south-bound and six northbound&#13;
runs) and the number of routes&#13;
will be adjusted contingent upon&#13;
the number of passengers and&#13;
U:eir needs.&#13;
ugg' uen and&#13;
Itwl~on like lhl •&#13;
I a gr t pan.&#13;
• \I If. • 011&#13;
ed by th&#13;
reed bloc&#13;
th m h&#13;
'4 re abl te"&#13;
everceme l 0 tad Without&#13;
I '"fit lher our tern or&#13;
of humor Thar&#13;
De rborn said, "1 \lould 10k to&#13;
than lI"sconoon Coach Lin (or&#13;
their pauenee, for Ih *r&#13;
"t1l1ll1!n to und land our&#13;
problem v n though Ih&#13;
tfered ftnanelal I dally&#13;
"II must y thaI th are&#13;
!'OOd peep! 10 do bu on WIth "&#13;
•&#13;
Voting In Main Place&#13;
- Haack, Harris head PSGA&#13;
PSGA ELECTION - ~ - - -&#13;
RETURNS&#13;
Thomas E. Haack and Joseph&#13;
Harriss are the new President&#13;
and Vice-President. respe&#13;
ctively. of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Associateion.&#13;
Haack beat out incumbent&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta for the office of&#13;
Presdident and Harriss triumphed&#13;
in a three way race for the&#13;
Vice Presidency.&#13;
In a discussion following their&#13;
victory. Haack and Harris said&#13;
that they "can forsesee no&#13;
problems in working together"&#13;
on SGA. Both said thaI one of the&#13;
first goals to be tackled will be&#13;
rewriting the present constitution.&#13;
which both feel 1S&#13;
inadequate and irrelevan.t&#13;
Neither (ores£'es any difficulty 10&#13;
accomplishing this.&#13;
The only item on which the (yoo&#13;
disagre&lt;' is on remo\'al of&#13;
senators for non-attendanCE' at&#13;
meeunas Wherea Haac (3\OMi&#13;
rernoval of a senator aher two&#13;
cons ecuuve meeung mt d&#13;
Harrts (~l thai ~ a natOf'"&#13;
i elecled. he shuould be per&#13;
mlued to f1nJ h hi t rm&#13;
regardl .. of non·attendanc&#13;
Haack also ,""ould h e lo&#13;
leadfr hip ~rant ~J\ en for&#13;
partlclpat,on In GA Th. v.ould.&#13;
he 5a\. , "Increase the!' mtf're I&#13;
and the quallt)" of th I ted&#13;
lIaark. _I, "a prt&gt; mf'd _tudent&#13;
Y.OO y.ould 'Ike- to go into (01&#13;
~\necol~~ III. main OO)l"'Ctl\·&#13;
In", 3 I. "lO get more par·&#13;
tlClp.-lllon In go\~rnenl from&#13;
the . tu&lt;!&lt;·nl&#13;
"\\ hen \ ote-rtaurnoul only '4&#13;
percenl. 't~d""l 0\ emm""l&#13;
hard pr ,ed to. ~ thai It lrull&#13;
repr"~h ttw 'uck-nt ....&#13;
hesa,d ·llh,I.1 \lould Ilk more&#13;
sludt"nt \ OU;f,' 10 tht" aclI\ It I of&#13;
I'HESID~:NT&#13;
ThomasE, Haack&#13;
BruceVolpintesta&#13;
WI'i1r Ins&#13;
KenKonkol 57&#13;
~Iark Harris 16&#13;
339&#13;
207&#13;
89&#13;
STUDENT UNION COMMITTEE&#13;
Modemsto Lopez&#13;
Tom Bergo&#13;
Sue Murphy&#13;
(will not serve)&#13;
Jim Grecco&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
11&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
VICE·PRESIDENT&#13;
JoeHarris&#13;
ShawnClements&#13;
Frederick Lawrence&#13;
WrileIns&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
250&#13;
203&#13;
90&#13;
18 SENATORS&#13;
Kenneth R. Konk"oJ&#13;
Thomas Weiss&#13;
Peggy Hansen&#13;
Laurie Ann Thompsen&#13;
Tom Jennett&#13;
Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Janice Petzke&#13;
Mark R Harris&#13;
Rick Ponzio&#13;
Debra Roberts&#13;
Neil Lawton&#13;
Michael Wickware&#13;
Ernest Llanas&#13;
Eric Cushman Moore&#13;
Gerard Wielgat&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
Rich Kienitz&#13;
){osanne Darrey&#13;
Rochelle N. Upright&#13;
266&#13;
249&#13;
234&#13;
231&#13;
226&#13;
210&#13;
172&#13;
161&#13;
153&#13;
145&#13;
141&#13;
137&#13;
132&#13;
132&#13;
130&#13;
127&#13;
117&#13;
94&#13;
84&#13;
TIlE,ISUIlER&#13;
James Rea&#13;
WriteIns&#13;
455&#13;
28&#13;
fllllHESPONDlNG&#13;
SECIIETAIIY&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
Write Ins&#13;
471&#13;
25&#13;
KEfOl\J)ING SECRETARY&#13;
James II. Bielefeldt&#13;
WriteIns&#13;
481&#13;
18&#13;
(',111PlIS CONCERNS COMIIlTTEE&#13;
Elaine1\1. Birch&#13;
James TWist&#13;
Write Ins&#13;
~ry Murphy 32&#13;
256&#13;
240&#13;
49&#13;
'Hollow Crown'&#13;
to be staged here&#13;
·'The H II J ph Gouchel. f 0 ow Crown" a singers are ose .. aCUity t d' B diet ban tone , Ptes '.s u ent and alumni tenor; Ron ene, The&#13;
J " entatIOn, will be staged Nov and Chris Roland, bass.&#13;
', ...and 5 Th . L • "11 be Frances by Joh· e play, put together il(COmpaOlst \\ I&#13;
kin s n Barton, is about the Bpdford. , . be staged&#13;
is a~t~nl~queens of England and The presentatl.on WI~~room 111&#13;
Poetr a Ya collection of music. in the Klnosha flOe ar I ticket&#13;
chrO~Cland "."ritings from the at l{: 15 ~.m. The ~eg~n~r $1 for&#13;
Period es and plays of the price will ,be $1.5 available at&#13;
l'he'rne students. Tlc.kets a~~er at Tallent&#13;
l{ichard mbers. of the cast are the informatlO~ ~es office, the&#13;
Dean R· Carrington, James Hall. huma.Ollle·ce and at the&#13;
Linda' M,lC.k Karabetsos and Kenosha MaIO offl&#13;
[nlkel - readers. The door.&#13;
-&#13;
N&#13;
w PSGA Officers: Vice-president Joe Harris and Presidenf Tom Haack.&#13;
e S.&#13;
GllVl. PUB Photo by Cral&amp; Rob ....&#13;
a ?&#13;
NOV 2. --&#13;
~side Ubrary UW-pafl\&#13;
' \. '. t' ' ' ' ''&#13;
The Parkside---------&#13;
R ANGER d n d '&#13;
~~-;;:;;.•&#13;
Main Place 1&#13;
PSGA ELECTION&#13;
RETURNS&#13;
PHESIDENT&#13;
Thomas E. Haack&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
\\rite Ins&#13;
Ken Konkol 57&#13;
~lark Harris 16&#13;
\'IC'E-PRESIDENT&#13;
Joe Harris&#13;
awn Clements&#13;
Frederick Lawrence&#13;
Write Ins&#13;
TRE.\ SURER&#13;
James Rea&#13;
Write Ins&#13;
('0HHESPONDING&#13;
:EC'HETARY&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
Write Ins&#13;
IIEC'0HDING SECRETARY&#13;
James R. Bielefeldt&#13;
\\rite Ins&#13;
339&#13;
207&#13;
89&#13;
250&#13;
203&#13;
90&#13;
18&#13;
455&#13;
28&#13;
471&#13;
25&#13;
481&#13;
18&#13;
( \\JPUS CON CERNS COM-&#13;
\IITTEE&#13;
Elaine 1\1 . Birch&#13;
James Twist&#13;
II rite Ins&#13;
•&#13;
1Prry Murphy 32&#13;
256&#13;
240&#13;
49&#13;
STU DENT UN IO N&#13;
MITTEE&#13;
Modemsto Lopez&#13;
Tom Bergo&#13;
Sue Murphy&#13;
( will not serve l&#13;
Jim Grecco&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
SENATORS&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkvol&#13;
Thomas Weiss&#13;
Peggy Ha nsen&#13;
Laurie Ann Thompsen&#13;
Tom Jennett&#13;
J eannine Sipsma&#13;
Janice Petzke&#13;
Mark R Harris&#13;
Rick Ponzio&#13;
Debra Roberts&#13;
Neil Lawton&#13;
Michael Wickware&#13;
Ernest Llanas&#13;
Eric Cushman Moore&#13;
Gera rd Wielgat&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
Rich Kienitz&#13;
Rosanne Darre~&#13;
Rochelle N. Upright&#13;
co 1-&#13;
11&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
266&#13;
249&#13;
234&#13;
231&#13;
226&#13;
210&#13;
172&#13;
161&#13;
153&#13;
145&#13;
141&#13;
137&#13;
132&#13;
132&#13;
130&#13;
127&#13;
117&#13;
94&#13;
84&#13;
'Hollow Crown '&#13;
to be staged here&#13;
"The Hollow Crown ," a&#13;
!acuity, student and alumni re entation, will be staged Nov.&#13;
b~4 and 5. The play, put together&#13;
k; John Barton, is about the&#13;
1 ngs and queens of England and&#13;
Po atually a collection of music,&#13;
che ry and writings from the ron1cles · PeriOd . and plays of the&#13;
R!e members of the cast -are&#13;
Deana rd . Carrington , James&#13;
I.1ncta' t.&#13;
1c_k Karabetsos and&#13;
11 n1kel · readers. The&#13;
J0seph Gouche l, singe rs a r e diet baritone:&#13;
tenor: Hon Bet d 'bass. The&#13;
and Chn~ R:~I~ 'be Frances .i,-compamst&#13;
B&lt;'dl'ord. f n will be staged&#13;
The presenta '.° e arts room 111&#13;
in the Krnosha fm regular ticket&#13;
at 8: 15 p.m. T~~-50 and $1 for&#13;
price will be available at&#13;
students. Tic_ket~=~~er at Tallent&#13;
the informallo~ . office, the&#13;
Hall. huma_ni~~~ce and at the&#13;
Kenosha Mam&#13;
door.&#13;
Bus • service to c&#13;
Bus ervice \\ ill continue&#13;
between Racin and the campu ·&#13;
for the remainder of the&#13;
semester. A blue and \\ h1te Jelco&#13;
bu with a Park id ign in the&#13;
window will be u ed .&#13;
According to Je\\ el&#13;
Echelbarger. A I tant Dean of&#13;
Students. "\\'iscon in Coach&#13;
tickets are till valid on the new&#13;
set-up." he went on lo say. • If&#13;
ea rly morning and late e\'emng&#13;
routes aren't ridden enough e·11&#13;
ha ve to drop them."&#13;
Routes will remain the same a&#13;
present for the fir t week (mne&#13;
south-bound and ix northbound&#13;
runs) and the number of rout&#13;
will be adju led contingent upon&#13;
the number of pa engers and&#13;
U:eir need .&#13;
Haack, Harris&#13;
Thoma E. Haack and J()S{'ph&#13;
Harns are he ne Pr id&#13;
and \'ice-Pre ident.&#13;
ctively, of thl' Par~ id&#13;
Go\'ernment A. soc1ate1on&#13;
Haack beat out incun:ibent&#13;
Bruce \'olpintesta fort~ om. or&#13;
Presdident and Harn triumphed&#13;
in a three way race for th&#13;
Vice Pre id ncy. .&#13;
In a di cu ion followm~ th _1r&#13;
victorv, Haack and Harn id&#13;
that .they "can . for e. e n~&#13;
Problem in working to eth r&#13;
GA Both !-aid that on of th on ' ·n be first goal to be tackled • . . the pre ent con- rewri t1 ng . 1 stitution. \\ hich both f ~- . dequate and irrel \'an&#13;
i?!ther r~rl'SC' an) difficult) an&#13;
accomph hing thi , . o The onh item on which th t&#13;
disagret• · 1 . emo\·al of on r enator. for non-attendan t&#13;
•&#13;
head P, GA&#13;
PSGA Officer s: v,ce-pr . es·, dent Joe Harris and President Tom Haack.&#13;
New S.&#13;
GO l,jt,, p Oby Cr&#13;
0 z&#13;
""'\de Ubra£Y UV4-Par2&#13;
&#13;
R ru &#13;
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. 1, 1971&#13;
THORN&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
The student government elections are over ro:td .the&#13;
fmal voting tabulations are very. disaPJX)l~tlIlg.&#13;
Only 671 persons cast ballots. This gives us a flgure&#13;
of 15.4 percent for the percentage of people who had&#13;
enough interest in their school to both~r to try to&#13;
improve the student position by supporting student&#13;
government.&#13;
To the 3.695 students who did not vote we can only&#13;
say a vote which is not cast is not co~nted, and a&#13;
vote which is not counted does not CXlSt. As far as .&#13;
labulations go, the person who does not vote does&#13;
not exist and if you don't exist, you're not of any&#13;
worth.&#13;
Some old business to be cleared up involves those&#13;
non-existent pencil sharpeners which the Business&#13;
Office say are in stock. They are not doing us a bit of&#13;
good still in the boxes.&#13;
It's hard to believe, but one time last week I&#13;
checked the clocks and they actually read the&#13;
correct time. I hopethis canbe kept up. Nowall we&#13;
need is a few more put in locations such as the&#13;
Concourse and Main Place.&#13;
got together and petitioned the state legislalors&#13;
We have beautiful bus s~elters on the draWing&#13;
boards. The only problem IS they will not be COm.&#13;
pleted in time to be used this winter. The present&#13;
shelters are worse than useless. They do not keep&#13;
out the cold, wind or rain and yet detract from lhe&#13;
aesthetics of the surroundings.&#13;
The present inadequate shelters could be healed&#13;
with no trouble at all, Three students on work study&#13;
could enclosethe shelters completely and install&#13;
used fuel oil space heaters. There is no conceivable&#13;
reason why the shelters could not be finished this&#13;
weekend.&#13;
We have received a note from Roger Allen, director&#13;
of the physical Plant, that the humidification has&#13;
not yet been turned on. The state agency in charge&#13;
has been contacted and is tracking down correct&#13;
peopleto make adjustments.&#13;
Wedo not have any money to increase bus service to&#13;
and on campus. The fund for future parking lots has&#13;
been deeply cut into. This problem could be&#13;
alleviated by spending a sum of money initially to&#13;
construct a tunnel from the parking lots La the main&#13;
section of campus. This solution would require a&#13;
great initial. capitaloutlay, bu.t.when you consider&#13;
the fact that this may enable us to save the money&#13;
spent on shuttle buses, and could be used in the&#13;
future for construction of the transit system the&#13;
idea has some merit. '&#13;
--AMG&#13;
I do take exception, however,to&#13;
a fictional account that Clements&#13;
alleges to have been a eonversation&#13;
with me. Clements&#13;
-wrote:&#13;
"Inthe 'interest of fairness, 1&#13;
attempted to contact Andersonso&#13;
1could get a look at his campaign&#13;
operation. This attempt was met&#13;
by a brick wall of silence and&#13;
'Don't call us, we'll call yon's'.'&#13;
To the best of my knowledge,I&#13;
have never been contacted by&#13;
Shawn Clements, now has anyone&#13;
at our campaign headquarters.&#13;
Our headquarters,by theway,&#13;
is locatedal5025-6thAve.,across&#13;
the street from the Chinese&#13;
restaurant. Surely any enterprising&#13;
reporter - "in the&#13;
interest of fairness" - would&#13;
have easily found a way to breach&#13;
the "brick wall of silence" -&#13;
especially since our doors are&#13;
seldom closed.&#13;
GeorgeW.Ander""&#13;
CandidaleforStateSenator&#13;
22nd State Senate Dislnct&#13;
Ride those buses!&#13;
Our sincerest praise is extended to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of Students, John Rogers,&#13;
admissions specialist, and Alien Dearborn, Assistant&#13;
Chancelior, for their long and diligent work which has&#13;
resulted in continued Racine bus service.&#13;
There were stumbling blocks too numerous to mentlon.&#13;
From time schedules to low ridership to the&#13;
question of subsidy these three kept working.&#13;
Talks were held with at least four transportation&#13;
concerns and final agreement didn't come until the&#13;
Friday before bus service was to be discontinued. The&#13;
hec1lc pace of these talks combined with the pressure of&#13;
students and their peers for adion was succumbed and&#13;
it showed that there was concern by administration over&#13;
this issue.&#13;
None of this could have been done without the full&#13;
approval and assistance of Chancellor 'rwin G .. Wyliie.&#13;
Administration concern over this issue overode ali&#13;
obstacles, including heavy pressure from students and&#13;
staff armed with a myriad of solutions.&#13;
Now it's time for everyone to get together to help&#13;
make this effort ali the more meaningful. Ride the buses&#13;
.• "keep them wheels roliing."&#13;
It amazes me that we do nol have money toprovtde&#13;
proper bus service or build adequate parking lots,&#13;
yet we do have the money to construct a boat Ianding&#13;
and a swamp in Ute front yard.&#13;
I tried to contact the state department, which is&#13;
responsible for such incompetence, but all I got was&#13;
a runaround. Something might be done if everyone&#13;
We get letters •••&#13;
worth reading (at least understandable)in&#13;
il this week or the&#13;
column will be deleted. In either&#13;
case. this letter has served a&#13;
useful purpose.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I feel that a few words are in&#13;
order concerning the&#13;
"Viewpoint" article which was&#13;
published in The Ranger on Oct.&#13;
18.&#13;
Since "Viewpoint" is properly&#13;
labeled as a personal viewpoint&#13;
by its author Shawn Clements, I&#13;
cannot rightly criticize its contents&#13;
as being subjective&#13;
reporting.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I read that we now have at&#13;
Parkside a "Poet in Waiting" ...&#13;
lin "Residence"1) Well,&#13;
anyway. Lord Byron, stop&#13;
"waiting"! Come out wherever&#13;
you are and try to teach the&#13;
would-be "poets" around here&#13;
the difference between poetic&#13;
writing and rhetorical tripe.&#13;
In my opinion, 90 percent of the&#13;
alleged poetry which has been&#13;
printed in Ranger's "Poetry&#13;
Corner" has been absolutely&#13;
inane. Reread the stuff printed in&#13;
the Oct. 18issue and try to make&#13;
sense out of it.&#13;
And a couple of weeks ago&#13;
there was a lament printed in&#13;
which the writer said that it&#13;
fatigued him a lot "to contemplate&#13;
the industry of those&#13;
who do not hear life's message of&#13;
eternal importance." (What&#13;
maudlin treatment of the human&#13;
spirit! How self-demeaning and&#13;
bored can a person get? ... Such&#13;
nonsense makes me ill and, alas,&#13;
it will probably be published"&#13;
someplace. )&#13;
And then, I recall, the writer.&#13;
continued by suggesting&#13;
somethingto the effecl that "The&#13;
poet should be a gentleman,&#13;
preferably Chinese." Well, I&#13;
shouldhopeso! ... andI'll beglad&#13;
to pay for his visa ... to China of&#13;
co~rs~! Some profs are aWf~lly&#13;
naive If they think we college kids&#13;
are so dumb Utat we will swallow&#13;
sluff like that cart blank.&#13;
That's poetry? Phoney&#13;
baloney! That kind of neurotic&#13;
drivel belongs with the graffiti&#13;
you find on the walls of our&#13;
reverberating "Whiteskellar.'&#13;
Parkside has more than its&#13;
share of academic mediocrity at&#13;
all levels. Isn't there some kind of&#13;
quality control program&#13;
operating at this institution?&#13;
.. Arthur M. Grubl&#13;
Racine senior&#13;
Now an "aside" to readers&#13;
Take ?, 100k. Either "Poet~~&#13;
Corner Will have something&#13;
~If:.The ParkskJe . -&#13;
RANGER-&#13;
. The Parkside Ranger is published weekly thrOughOut&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at D-194 Library-Learning center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are no&#13;
l&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University 01&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
EDITORSAND WRITERS: Rudy Lienau Geoff Blaesing,KrisK~&#13;
~ath~ Wellner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma, Shawn Clements,D'&#13;
arfin, Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS:Pat Nowak Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESSMANAGER: Ken P"';tka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
~:---:::_-=-- ADVISOR: Don Kopriva ----i&#13;
W ,IlEPI.ESENTED fOIl NATIONAL ADVERnSING BY Q T National Educational Advertising Services,lnc.&#13;
l60 uKineron Ave., New York. N. Y. 10017 ~&#13;
."" -&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. 1, 1972&#13;
Ride those bu es !&#13;
Our sincerest praise is extended to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of Students, John Rogers,&#13;
dmlssions specialist, and Allen Dearborn, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor, for their long and diligent work which has&#13;
r suited tn continued Racine bus service.&#13;
There were stumbling blocks too numerous to mention&#13;
. From time schedules to low ridership to the&#13;
qu tlon of subsidy these three kept working.&#13;
T lk were held with at least four transportation&#13;
concern nd final agreement didn't come until the&#13;
Frid y before bus service was to be discontinued. The&#13;
h ct c p c of these talks combined with the pressure of&#13;
tud nts nd their peers for action was succumbed and&#13;
it showed that there was concern by administration over&#13;
this Issue.&#13;
None of this could have been done without the full&#13;
approval and assistance of Chancellor 'rwin G .. Wyllie.&#13;
Administr tion concern over this issue overode all&#13;
obstacles, including heavy pressure from students and&#13;
· t f rmed with a myriad of solutions.&#13;
Now it' s time for everyone to get together to help&#13;
m this effort all the more meaningful. Ride the buses&#13;
•• "ke p them wheels rolling."&#13;
EDITORIALS/ OPINIONS&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
THORN&#13;
The tudent government elections are ?ver ~d _the&#13;
fmal voting tabulation ar ver disappomtrng.&#13;
ly 671 person ca t ballots. This gi\·e us a figure&#13;
got together and petitioned the state legi lator&#13;
we have beautiful bus shelters on the drawin&#13;
boards. The only problem is they will not be com.&#13;
pleted in time to be used this winter. The pres nt&#13;
shelters are worse than useless. They do not k •p&#13;
out the cold, wind or rain and yet detract from th&#13;
aesthetics of the surroundings.&#13;
o 15.4 percent for the percentage of people who had&#13;
nough mter t in their chool to bother to try to&#13;
improve the tudent position by upporting student&#13;
overnm nt.&#13;
To the 3,695 tud nt who did not vote we can only&#13;
sav a \'Ole which i · not cast is not counted, and a&#13;
vo·te which i not counted does not exi t. As far a&#13;
tabulation go, the per on who doe not vote does&#13;
not exi t and if . ou don't exist, you're not of any&#13;
The present inadequate shelters could be heated&#13;
with no trouble at all. Three students on work tudv&#13;
could enclose the shelters completely and in tail&#13;
used fuel oil space heaters. There is no conceivabl&#13;
reason why the shelters could not be finished thi&#13;
weekend.&#13;
orth&#13;
me old bu ines to be cleared up involves those&#13;
non--exi tent p ncil sharpener which the Business&#13;
mce ay are in tock. They are not doing u a bit of&#13;
good till in the boxe .&#13;
We have received a note from Roger Allen, director&#13;
of the P hysical Plant, that the humidification ha&#13;
not yet been turned on. The state agency in charg&#13;
has been contacted and is tracking down corr .1&#13;
people to make adjusbnents.&#13;
It' hard to b heve, but on time last week I&#13;
checked the clocks and they actually read the&#13;
corr ct time. I hope thi can be kept up. Now all we&#13;
need i a fe\\ more put in locations such as the&#13;
Concourse and Main Place.&#13;
We do not have any money to increase bu ervice lo&#13;
and on campus. The fund for future parking lots ha&#13;
been deeply cut into. This problem could be&#13;
alleviated by spending a sum of money initially to&#13;
construct a tunnel from the parking lots to the main&#13;
section of campus. This solution would require a&#13;
great. initial capital outlay, ~ut when you con ider&#13;
the fact that this may enable us to save the money&#13;
spent on shuttle buses, and could be u ed in th&#13;
future for construction of the transit sy tern lhe&#13;
It amazes me that we do not have money tc,provide&#13;
proper bus ervice or build adequate parking lots,&#13;
vet we do ha e the mone to construct a boat landing&#13;
and a wamp in the front yard.&#13;
I tried to contact the state deparbnent, which is&#13;
responsible for uch incompetence, but all I got was&#13;
a runaround Something might be done if everyone idea has some merit. '&#13;
We get letters ...&#13;
I do take exception, however, to a fictional account that Clemen&#13;
alleges to have been a conversation&#13;
with me. Clemen&#13;
wrote: .# .1 t • •&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I read that we now have at&#13;
Park id a " Poet in Waiting" ...&#13;
l in "Re idence"?) ... Well,&#13;
anyway, Lord Byron. stop&#13;
"waiting"! Come out wherever&#13;
you are and try to teach the&#13;
would-be "poets" around here&#13;
the difference between poetic&#13;
writing and rhetorical tripe.&#13;
In my opinion, 90 percent of the&#13;
alleged poetry which has been&#13;
printed in Ranger's " Poetry&#13;
Corner" ha been absolutely&#13;
inane. Reread the stuff printed in&#13;
the Oct. 18 is ue and try to make&#13;
en e out of it.&#13;
And a couple of weeks ago&#13;
there ,, a a lament printed in&#13;
which the writer aid that it&#13;
fatigued him a lot "to contemplate&#13;
the industry of those&#13;
who do not hear life's message of&#13;
eternal importance." (What&#13;
maudlm treatment of the human&#13;
pirit '. How self-demeaning and&#13;
bored can a person get? ... Such&#13;
non ense makes me ill and alas&#13;
it will probably be pubiished •&#13;
omeplace.l&#13;
And then. I recall, the writer.&#13;
continued by suggesting&#13;
something to the effect that "The&#13;
poet hould be a gentleman,&#13;
preferably Chinese." Well, I&#13;
hould hope o! ... and I'll be glad&#13;
to pay for his visa ... to China, of&#13;
course! ome profs are awfully&#13;
naive if they think we college kids&#13;
are o dumb that we will swallow&#13;
luff like that _cart blank.&#13;
That' poetry? Phoney&#13;
baloney ! That kind of neurotic&#13;
dm·el belongs with the graffiti&#13;
you find on the wall of our&#13;
reverberating "Whiteskellar."&#13;
Parkside has more than its&#13;
hare of academic mediocrity at&#13;
all level . I n 't there some kind of&#13;
qua lit?' control program&#13;
operating at this in titution?&#13;
-· Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
Racine senior&#13;
:-..ow an " aside" to readers&#13;
Take a look . Either " Poet~;&#13;
Corner" will have something&#13;
worth reading (at least understandable)&#13;
in it this week or the&#13;
column will be deleted. In either&#13;
case. this letter has served a&#13;
useful purpose.&#13;
--AMG&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I feel that a few words are in&#13;
order concerning the&#13;
"Viewpoint" article which was&#13;
published in The Ranger on Oct.&#13;
18.&#13;
Since "Viewpoint" is properly&#13;
labeled as a personal viewpoint&#13;
by its author Shawn Clements, I&#13;
cannot rightly criticize its contents&#13;
as being subjective&#13;
~eporting.&#13;
"ln the interest of fairn . 1&#13;
attempted to contact Ander on&#13;
I could get a look at his campa,~&#13;
operation. This attempt wa m t&#13;
by a brick wall of silence and&#13;
'Don't call us, we'll call you' '•·&#13;
To the best of my knowledge I&#13;
have never been contacted by&#13;
Shawn Clements, now has anyone&#13;
at our campaign headquarter&#13;
Our headquarters, by the way,&#13;
is located at 5025-Gth Ave., acr&#13;
the street from the Chine&#13;
restaur ant. Surely any en·&#13;
terprising reporter - "in the&#13;
interest of fairness " - would&#13;
have easily found a way to breach&#13;
the "brick wall of silence" -&#13;
especially since our doors are&#13;
seldom closed.&#13;
George W. Anderson&#13;
Candidate for State enalor&#13;
22nd State Senate Di lnct&#13;
i .W The Parkside -&#13;
.-yrr ..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
ThE: Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the a~ademic year by the students of The University 01&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin .&#13;
Offices are located at D-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
1_·h~ Parkside Ranger is an independent newspapel'·&#13;
Opin ions expressed in columns and editorials are no&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITERS: Rudy Lienau Geoff Blaesing Kris Kocb.&#13;
Kath~ Wellner, Ken Konkol, Jeannine Sipsma, Shawn Cle'merits, o,Jt&#13;
Martin, Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
~r--------------___.:: • ,llEPI.ESENTEO fOI. NATIONAL ADVEllTISING BY&#13;
T National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexinpon Ave., New York. N. Y. 10017 ~ &#13;
VIEWPOINT&#13;
--&#13;
Wed., Nov. I, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Equal time allotted Anderson&#13;
George Anderson&#13;
needs of the """PI&#13;
On the I sue of fundln for buUdtn Ind edu... Uon&#13;
program 1\ Plrb,d . And n h tllIl "If&#13;
thm~ are not mevt a ( t. lh pro U&#13;
,nd,cated, It "ould be bl 10cut do n It&#13;
unfair to creele a ·ractor)· \It, moul v ord&#13;
Hebehev thllprogrlm hi_ to be Ippro-ed I&#13;
tedUlolOlD'""minds. Ind tllIl stu""n &amp;houId be&#13;
given every availabl opportunlly&#13;
Anderson Sly . "Property II reI, r&#13;
the num r onf' I ." To curb tI&#13;
return the mone) to th I&#13;
redl lnbulong II money&#13;
"We should gel II lSCQnStn back tnto compelllJon&#13;
bet" een the ta tes."&#13;
Anderson say lIIal WlSConstn n rly the&#13;
hlghesl lax rat In the country The ,lit ,houId&#13;
attract emplo)' • CM!Itong more job op r1UOIU ,&#13;
th"""'-ore mcrea In the II ba If thI! I dtd&#13;
thl •taxes "ould be I If pendt doesn't 0&#13;
up&#13;
W'sconstn 11m III I In fe&lt;k!rll fund'na Ih&#13;
"a). aerospace &lt;UllrO • lob opportun,u from&#13;
federal ~O\emmenl contracts I. H ). ·'W~ t&#13;
onl\ 01 cen of our IIx dolllr back" n w Ihould&#13;
be gelling 91cen back" H Sly tllIt the IOUlbml&#13;
tates are gelting 51 SO for each of their IIx dolllrs&#13;
Anderson behe, . "Pohticlans lUl\ pend other&#13;
people' money"&#13;
The future or George Andenlon de-penck on the&#13;
\'oler •'0" )'0\1 know th other ,d of th lJIt&#13;
senate campal n (or Kenosha&#13;
By Geoff Blaesing&#13;
Last week th,e Ranger printed a story on the&#13;
political campal.gn of Do~g La Follette. The article&#13;
made only a brief mention of the most important&#13;
part of a political campaign, his opponent.&#13;
The opponent i~this case is George Anderson.&#13;
The article mentioned that Anderson's office was&#13;
called, but the reporter was told, "Don't call us&#13;
we'llcall you." So this article, as the last one stated'&#13;
"is admittedly somewhat one-sided." '&#13;
Anderson has political experience. He served four&#13;
consecutive terms on the Kenosha County Board of&#13;
supervisors. He also served on the mayors' committee&#13;
to bring UW -Parkside to Kenosha.&#13;
Anderson's views oj the ecology problem are&#13;
similar to LaFollette's. The difference lies in the&#13;
tact that Anderson believes that LaFollette's approach&#13;
is "too drastic and emotional."&#13;
"A sensible program is one that everyone could&#13;
live with," he said.&#13;
Anderson cites a case in New Hampshire. A small&#13;
town called Lincoln is dying. The town's main industry&#13;
l a paper mill, could not meet the pollution&#13;
control requirements by the required time, even&#13;
after they had already spent over a million dollars.&#13;
Nowthe mill is locked up. The town's young people&#13;
are leaving.&#13;
Anderson believes that it is the responsibility of&#13;
both the citizen and the government to correct the&#13;
problem. He also believes that it is the responsibility&#13;
of the government to be responsive to the&#13;
Parking dilemma solved&#13;
for h.llndicapped&#13;
By Marilyn Schubert&#13;
On Sept. 8, senior Julie Lahr&#13;
wrotea letter to the Chancellor&#13;
outliningthe difficulties she had&#13;
encounteredin finding a place to&#13;
park, This may sound like a&#13;
commonailment, but fOf.J),lJ~~it&#13;
holds special problems because&#13;
afterdisembarking from her car,&#13;
shemust find her way to class in&#13;
a wheelchair. Although Julie's&#13;
parking problems were ever&#13;
present, they worsened when&#13;
constructionwork forced her to&#13;
abandonher usual parking spot&#13;
westof Greenquist.&#13;
As she stated in the letter, she&#13;
now was f.aced .witb three&#13;
alternatives: (1) finding a&#13;
parkingspot on a strip of cement,&#13;
rromwhichshe could get to class&#13;
independently, (2) asking the&#13;
assistance of campus police in&#13;
gettingto and from class or (3)&#13;
taking her chances on ~ Good&#13;
Samaritan. All three proved&#13;
unworkable.&#13;
The first failed when the only&#13;
placeshecould be sure of finding&#13;
a parking spot was next to the&#13;
waste container; she was&#13;
hcketedfor this because it was&#13;
Inconvenientfor waste removal.&#13;
The.campus police could not&#13;
provIdea solution either because&#13;
~ey had to be reminded every&#13;
Y Julie had a class and&#13;
SOmetimesforgot leaving her&#13;
~andCd. They fi~ally informed&#13;
r they could no longer be&#13;
r'Spo 'bl ' nSI e lor getting her to rlass b t&#13;
I u offered no other&#13;
•&#13;
SenIOr&#13;
solution.&#13;
The third possibility also was a&#13;
failure. Said Julie, "I would be&#13;
sitting at the bottom of a hill and&#13;
there could be twenty people&#13;
standing around, but no one&#13;
would offer to help. I realize it&#13;
isn't that they don't want to help,&#13;
but they are afraid they will hurt&#13;
our feelings; but we aren't that&#13;
proud."&#13;
For three years Julie tried all&#13;
possible solutions and often had&#13;
to return home, never having&#13;
managed to get to class at all. She&#13;
called time after time, receiving&#13;
no solution to her problem and&#13;
arriving at the conclusion that,&#13;
"Nobody cared, nobody gave a&#13;
damn. "&#13;
At this point, she decided to&#13;
write the Chancellor, sending a&#13;
carbon copy to Assemblyman&#13;
George Molinaro.&#13;
The leller ended up on the desk&#13;
of Assistant Chancellor Allen&#13;
Dearborn with the Chancellor's&#13;
instructions. "Do anything. but&#13;
do something!" Something v:as&#13;
done and Julie now has a parkmg&#13;
SJXlt~ear the small building east&#13;
of Greenquist.&#13;
"It's not that we don't ca..re or&#13;
don't want to help." Oearbor,n&#13;
added, "but just that we aren t&#13;
always made aware that a&#13;
probl~m exists. Onc~ we know&#13;
that there is somethmg \\'ron~.&#13;
we can take steps to get It&#13;
corrected. ,. .&#13;
lle noted that the buildmgs,&#13;
under the state building code, are&#13;
designed to accommodate the&#13;
handicapped. He also mentioned&#13;
the existence of a "Help the&#13;
Handicapped" group at L'\\"-&#13;
Milwaukee. and orrered to ad\'ise&#13;
or get a starr member to advise&#13;
such a group if it were formed&#13;
here.&#13;
Julie has said even now that&#13;
she would not recommend&#13;
Parkside to other handicapped&#13;
students until a few things, such&#13;
as over-all attitudes, are&#13;
changed. She - as well as other&#13;
handicapped students - \\ill be&#13;
facing additional hardshIps as&#13;
winter snow and ice make It&#13;
impossible to navigate a&#13;
wheelchair.&#13;
Meditation&#13;
Society lecture&#13;
set&#13;
''Transcendental ~ledltatlon"&#13;
will be introduced by the&#13;
Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society in a lecture to&#13;
be held O\'. 2 al 8 pm_&#13;
Greenquist 0-101 and :'\0\' I~ at,&#13;
pm LLC·D-J89. .Th~introductory lecture \\ 111&#13;
sune\ the pnnclp e 'I and&#13;
benefits of this effortless. mental&#13;
tcchniqul.' \\ hich expands the&#13;
conscious capa('ity of thE.&gt;mmd&#13;
while gi\'ing the body a profound&#13;
stat(' of rest&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
A&#13;
., Most Famous Defense Attorney&#13;
• menca s&#13;
• Best-Selling Author • Lecturer&#13;
F. LEE BAILEy&#13;
. "Tbe Defense Never Rests speakmg on '&#13;
. . n - 'I 50&#13;
General AdmlsslO 'ff _ '1.00&#13;
'd Students &amp; Sta&#13;
Parksl e 201 _ Talent Hall&#13;
l' k . Office - Room Ie ets Available: UW _p InformatiOn&#13;
Poe's of T&#13;
to be shown her&#13;
OOPS! WE GOOFED!&#13;
The ParkSlde Aetl\111 Board ",II begm Its n~ senes of f,lm&#13;
claSSICS \uth the s:hov..tn of&#13;
Edga~ Allan Poe's "Comedy of&#13;
Terrors .,&#13;
The mO\1e tars some of ~&#13;
Kreal races of the horror lilm&#13;
era' Vincent Pr,~, Peter Lorre,&#13;
Rom KarlMf 83, II Rathbon&#13;
and Joe E Bro.-n&#13;
Vincent Price and Pl"ler Lorre&#13;
play 1"0 rap&lt;calhon nd bum·&#13;
bhnJi!:Wldtrta e - "ho run "dId ~..;J&amp;if.'s;tfi1&#13;
- - 1: _ Mr~~.w" =GlifJil;.1iiiiliol~&#13;
"CU. tomer" and commH&#13;
murder and may ht"m to" are&#13;
In the "Educators for&#13;
McGovern" ad ,n last&#13;
Wednesday's issue, we&#13;
inadvertently om,tted the&#13;
name of one of the group's&#13;
coordinators, Wayne G.&#13;
Johnson, on the list of&#13;
those UW·P faculty and&#13;
staff supporting George&#13;
McGovern,&#13;
L I I&#13;
Siefer'/ Assembly&#13;
We need a Itudent&#13;
In the State Legillature&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
1- •&#13;
...................................... , , , °&#13;
0&#13;
/ Cham- Tap-Bar&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
(3 (J~gne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches 0 '&#13;
~ and Pizza cf) 0j&#13;
................................................................................... ,...&#13;
-&#13;
W d., ov. 1, 1972 THE P RKSIO RANGER 3&#13;
~&#13;
VIEWPOINT&#13;
Equal time allotted And r on&#13;
By Geoff Blaesing&#13;
Last week th_e Ranger printed a story on the&#13;
political campa1_gn of Do~g La Follette. The article&#13;
made only a bnef mention of the most important&#13;
part of a political campaign, his opponent.&#13;
The opponent in this case is George Anderson&#13;
The article mentioned that Anderson's office wa~&#13;
called, but the reporter was told, "Don't call us&#13;
we'll call you." So this article, as the last one stated'&#13;
"is admittedly somewhat one-sided." '&#13;
Anderson has political experience. He served four&#13;
consecutive terms on tpe Kenosha County Board of&#13;
Supervisors. He also served on the mayors' committee&#13;
to bring UW-Parkside to Kenosha.&#13;
Anderson's views oj the ecology problem are&#13;
similar to LaFollette's. The difference lies in the&#13;
fact that Anderson ~elieves tha~ LaFollette's approach&#13;
is "too drastic and emotional."&#13;
"A sensible program is one that everyone could&#13;
Jive with," he said.&#13;
Anderson cites a case in New Hampshire. A small&#13;
town called Lincoln is dying. The town's main industry,&#13;
a paper mill, could not meet the pollution&#13;
control requirements by the required time, even&#13;
after they had already spent over a million dollars.&#13;
Now the mill is locked up. The town's young people&#13;
are leaving.&#13;
Anderson believes that it is the responsibility of&#13;
both the citizen and the government to correct the&#13;
problem. He also believes that it is the responsibility&#13;
of the government to be responsive to the&#13;
George Ander on&#13;
Parking dilentnta solved&#13;
for ~~ndicapped • senior&#13;
By Marilyn Schubert&#13;
On Sept. 8, senior Julie Lahr&#13;
wrote a letter to the Chancellor&#13;
outlining the difficulties she had&#13;
encountered in finding a place to&#13;
park. This may sound like a&#13;
common ailment, but for Jµli~ it&#13;
holds special problems because&#13;
after disembarking from her car,&#13;
:he must find her way to class in&#13;
a wheel chair. Although Julie's&#13;
parking problems were ever&#13;
present, they worsened when&#13;
construction work forced her to&#13;
abandon her usual parking spot&#13;
west of Greenquist.&#13;
As she stated in the letter, she&#13;
now was faced with three&#13;
alternatives: ( 1) · finding a&#13;
parking spot on a strip of cement,&#13;
from which she could get to class&#13;
independently, (2) asking the&#13;
a sistance of campus police in&#13;
getting to and from class or (3)&#13;
laking her chances on ~ Good&#13;
amaritan. All three proved unworkable.&#13;
The first failed when the only&#13;
place she could be sure of finding&#13;
a parking spot was next to the&#13;
waste container; she was&#13;
licketed for this because it was&#13;
inconvenient for waste removal.&#13;
The . campus police could not&#13;
provide a solution either because&#13;
they had to be reminded every&#13;
!lay Julie had a class and&#13;
ornetirnes forgot, leaving her&#13;
tanded . They finally informed&#13;
er they could no longer be&#13;
respo ·b ns, le for getting her to&#13;
class, but off erect no other&#13;
solution.&#13;
The third possibility also was a&#13;
failure. Said Julie, " I would be&#13;
sitting at the bottom of a hill and&#13;
there could be twenty people&#13;
standing around, but no one&#13;
would offer to help. I realize it&#13;
isn't that they don't want to help,&#13;
but they are afraid they will hurt&#13;
our feelings; but we aren't that&#13;
proud."&#13;
For three years Julie tried all&#13;
possible solutions and often had&#13;
to return home, never having&#13;
managed to get to class at all. She&#13;
called time after time , receiving&#13;
no solution to her problem and&#13;
arriving at the conclusion that,&#13;
"Nobody cared, nobody gave a&#13;
damn ."&#13;
At this point, she decided to&#13;
write the Chancellor, sending a&#13;
carbon copy to Assemblyman&#13;
George Molinaro.&#13;
The letter ended up on the desk&#13;
of Assistant Chancellor Allen&#13;
Dearborn wit~ the Chancellor's&#13;
instructions, "Do anythmg, but&#13;
do something!" Something was&#13;
done and Julie now has a parkmg&#13;
spot ~ear the small building east&#13;
of Greenquist.&#13;
"Ifs not that we don't ca.re or&#13;
don't want to help." Dearbor~&#13;
added. "but just that we aren t&#13;
always made aware that a&#13;
probl~m exists. Once we know&#13;
that there is somethmg wron~.&#13;
we can take steps to get ,t&#13;
corrected.'· . He noted that the buildmgs,&#13;
under the late buildmg cod . ar&#13;
designed to accommodate th&#13;
handicapped. He also mentioned&#13;
the exi tence of a "Help h&#13;
Handicapped" group at l \ -&#13;
Milwaukee. and offered to ad ·&#13;
or get a staff member to d, 1&#13;
such a group if it ~er formed&#13;
here.&#13;
Julie ha said even no&#13;
she would not recomm nd&#13;
Parkside to other handicapped&#13;
student until a fe,\ thin . • u h&#13;
as over-all attitude . a r&#13;
changed. he - a \\ell a oth r&#13;
handicapped tud nt - ill&#13;
facing additional hard h1!)!,&#13;
winter no\\ and ice m ·&#13;
impo ,ble to t&#13;
wheelchair&#13;
Meditation&#13;
Society I ctur&#13;
set&#13;
OW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
Presents&#13;
[ Attorney A . ' Most Famous De1en e . • menca s&#13;
• Best-Selling Author • Lecturer&#13;
F. LEE BAILEY&#13;
• 'The Defense Stl er Rests speaking on&#13;
· · n 51 50 General Adm iss10 - .ff - s 1 00 . S d nts &amp; Sta . Parkside tu e 201 _ Talent Hall 1' k . Office - Room tc ets Available: UW-P Information&#13;
to h&#13;
OOPS! E GOOF EO!&#13;
In the "Educator&#13;
coordinator ,&#13;
John&#13;
thos U&#13;
staff&#13;
cGovern.&#13;
Si fert/A mbly&#13;
W n d a stud nt&#13;
in th Stat L glslatur&#13;
DEMOC AT 63rd&#13;
'" I&#13;
...............................................................&#13;
. ·~-~ . ap-Bar&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Rae ne, W&#13;
neon Tap&#13;
Ham andwiches O&#13;
. and Pizza ct) 0 . ························································ ······· &#13;
� ud PIli4 by ~ CW10J for \be Electt_ of GeorIe ADde:tWL&#13;
PAID ADV. Cu CIIDdfta. Cbbm.... 7114 2:Dd Ave.&#13;
often preached by "Wise doctrines are&#13;
knaves and fools, and yet what is truth withlifeless,&#13;
aborted thing:' out integrity but a&#13;
wiscon in has been noted for its relatively&#13;
clean politics, but now and then a candidate&#13;
comes along who exhibits a political expedIency&#13;
so ruthless that one doubts his&#13;
Sincerity in all things.&#13;
The hiSlor) of the Democratic&#13;
congres ional primary in the fall of t970 when&#13;
Doug LaFolleUe ran against Les Aspin ;lnd&#13;
C("rald FIJinn is a clear record that Doug is&#13;
indeed bad news for bt\th Republican and&#13;
Democral alike.&#13;
Prior to the Democratic congressional&#13;
primary In Ute fall of 1970, Doug LaFollette&#13;
publicly advertised himself as Ute "grandnephew&#13;
of 'Fighting Bob' LaFollette." His&#13;
seJr-styled claim to fame was made&#13;
repeatedly in speeches, biographical&#13;
material and press releases.&#13;
Doug's claim to be a grand·nephew of&#13;
"FIghting Bob" was utterly false! He has&#13;
been publicly disowned by Ute wisconsin&#13;
LaFollette family.&#13;
Bronson LaFollette minced no words:&#13;
"I am deeply concerned that although&#13;
Douglas LaFollette claims that he does not&#13;
wish to use the LaFollette name to his advantage,&#13;
he has publicly and privately stated&#13;
a relationship which issiinply not true. I&#13;
"Douglas LaFollette has only recently&#13;
moved to Wisconsin and perhaps he does not&#13;
realize Ute importance of the LaFollette&#13;
tradition. But it is a strong tradition coupled&#13;
with a belief iII honesty in government.&#13;
Douglas LaFollette has acted in a way which&#13;
can only discredit the LaFollette name,"&#13;
Bronson sa id.&#13;
HAs far as Iknow, be is no relative of mine.&#13;
l never heard of bim before he came to&#13;
Wisconsin a year and a half ago," Bronson&#13;
t,aFollette said.&#13;
James Wimmer, former state chairman of&#13;
the Democra tic party, had more strong&#13;
words: "If Doug is guilty of restructuring the&#13;
genealogical records," he said. "I don't think&#13;
irs fair to mislead the public whether it's&#13;
selling soap or anything else."&#13;
ot fair to mislead Ute public whether it's&#13;
soap or anything else! Ironic words when you&#13;
consider that today Doug is peddling "Truth&#13;
In Advertising" as part of his political&#13;
package!&#13;
When newsmen confronted Doug with the&#13;
LaFollette family's absolute denial of Doug's&#13;
self-proclaimed "grand-nephew" relationship,&#13;
Doug came up with a "family&#13;
genealogist" who "discovered" that Ute&#13;
relationship was actually as a "second cousin&#13;
three times removed." This utterly insignificant&#13;
relationship apparently satisfied&#13;
Doug LaFollette.&#13;
Ince Doug is over 30 years old and a PhD.&#13;
he cannol plead youthful ignorance in evading&#13;
personal respons ihitity for his baseless claim&#13;
to be a grand-nephew of "Fighting Bob."&#13;
But this was not the era, of "sharp practice"&#13;
and "chicanery," as the Beloit Daily News&#13;
called it, in Doug LaFollettc's campaign&#13;
against Les Aspin.&#13;
It was during the same 1970 primary that&#13;
anotner shoddy episode occurred. that casts&#13;
further doubt as to Doug's political sincerity.&#13;
This was the so-called "poll" which was&#13;
released to all n~ws media, indicating that&#13;
Doug was the strong favorite.&#13;
This supposedly independent poll was in&#13;
la~t created by a close associate of Doug's,&#13;
~smg Doug's own campaign workers, but&#13;
Issued \"ithout explanation on stationery from&#13;
DOUG&#13;
laID/kite&#13;
for STATE SENATE&#13;
6510 5lhAvenue, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
the&#13;
wise shopper act&#13;
""'~~OI'(.S.hO?PH"- '~!-~'-:'~&#13;
1t~n.COH H.w ?eo9k )t ff wko "'Y'{~+ fe J LAp&#13;
W;.}t Yo.~w.. Q~~ l&gt;'\nV\;"'jl~\s fYOpol.Js \Jolif,oYls&#13;
m~K-e.. 11;"~/r wL) :C/M d t.-1-,,; ),"'i" 1'1'1 s-l-~"J&#13;
c;;&gt;\'\ Wlq ~ov ASS lA. e s . H e.r e is Co, S4"'\O\" V"J of&#13;
~'/ Pyt)~oled )e.jislvL;, 0'" 11e Covd'''''''tV'&#13;
Issu£. . \\ L -L.-lI r&#13;
~()uJ ~ 1Q ~&#13;
I&#13;
• Dating of perishable foods&#13;
• Price per pound&#13;
~. Truth in advertising&#13;
.Consumer education&#13;
• Misleading sales&#13;
tribution if he could produce evidence that he&#13;
was a probable winner, hence the "poll."&#13;
l,nterestingly enough, most of Doug'S&#13;
financial backing in this year's Democratic&#13;
state senate primary came from out of state,&#13;
We fear very much that, according to&#13;
Doug's track record, Doug's main purpose in&#13;
seeking the state senate seat is a driving&#13;
desire to get state-wide and perhaps national&#13;
publicity for himself. We believe Doug'S&#13;
record indicates an opportunist streak that&#13;
will do great harm to good people on both&#13;
SIdes of the political fence.&#13;
the University of Chicago political science&#13;
department and signed. by a faculty member&#13;
who was ~drnittedly a supporter of Doug's.&#13;
All o~ this came out in the newspapers after&#13;
the ~dltor of the Racine Journal-Times inY("s.lIgal~d&#13;
the "poll" and discovered that the&#13;
~hllvel'slty of Chicago had nothing to do with&#13;
It. Th~ editorial.writers were very critical of&#13;
~o.lIg s behaVIOr. calling it "Political&#13;
(IHcallery ...&#13;
It also turned out that one Larry Do gl&#13;
id.enti.fiedas "active in New York POI~iC=,~:&#13;
pi omlsed Doug a sizable campaign conPAID&#13;
ADV. ~ ud Paid 117 CaacerDed cttluAI for u.. Ele&lt;:tloll or Geac'I• ADdenno&#13;
Gu QDdna. Clblnnu. m, 2nd A ~-&#13;
''Wise doctrines are often preached by&#13;
knaves and fools, and yet what is truth without&#13;
integrity but&#13;
ron.son LaFoJJette minced no words:&#13;
"l m de ply cone med that although&#13;
ugla LaFollette claim that he does not&#13;
·i h to u the LaFollette name to his adv&#13;
ntag h ha publicly and privately tated&#13;
r lationsh1p wti1ch i imply not true.&#13;
"Dougla LaFollette has only recently&#13;
moved to Wi on in and perhaps he does not&#13;
realiz the importance of the LaFollette&#13;
tradition. But it is a strong tradition coupled&#13;
w 1th a belief m honesty in government.&#13;
ougla LaFollette has acted in a way which&#13;
can only discredit the LaFollette name,"&#13;
Bro on id.&#13;
J mes Wimmer, former state chairman of&#13;
th D mocratic party, had more strong&#13;
word : " Ir Doug is guilty of restructuring the&#13;
g n alogical record ," he said, "I don't think&#13;
1t' fair to mi lead the public whether it's&#13;
lling oap or anything el e."&#13;
' t fair to m1 lead the public whether it's&#13;
p or any th mg el e ! Ironic words when you&#13;
con id r that today Doug i peddling "Truth&#13;
In dv rti ing" as part of his political&#13;
~ckage!&#13;
Wh n n w men confronted Doug with the&#13;
LaFoll tte family' ab olute denial of Doug's&#13;
If-proclaimed "grand-nephew" relationhip,&#13;
Doug came up with a "family&#13;
n alogi t" who "discovered" that the&#13;
r I lion hip wa actually a a "second cousin&#13;
thr time removed." This utterly inignificant&#13;
relation hip apparently satisfied&#13;
Doug LaFollette.&#13;
a lifeless, aborted thing:'&#13;
DOUG&#13;
laHl!ette&#13;
for STATE SENATE&#13;
6510 SthAvenue, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
the&#13;
wise shopper act&#13;
. ~~~'( Stovper - 1h~n. co't flw peo\)k )&lt; ff wko O\ '(&lt;jf fed t-t p&#13;
IJ; H. v'~ '3"-'- "," I Mm, ;~;i }· 1r r ••pol..) J poh + iO\'\ J&#13;
)t\ i k~ . n ovt J Wk-..) r: M d ,.:t 0. ;/ ii-ti" 'f,,11./ Sf .. ~ J&#13;
C,\,\ W\ qi OYA s s I.A. u . Ht. H , s Co\ J'&lt; l••\11•1. _t:\ Y':) 0 f&#13;
)e.jislo.Jf;o~ o"' 1'he&#13;
I SSL.(.{ •&#13;
5)oJI L" ~ui,1t{_&#13;
I&#13;
• Dating of perishable foods&#13;
• Price per pound&#13;
~•Truth in advertising&#13;
•Consumer education&#13;
• Misleading sales&#13;
the niversity of Chicago political science&#13;
department and signed by a faculty member&#13;
who was ?dmittedly a supporter of Doug's.&#13;
,\II o~ this came out in the newspapers after&#13;
lhe ~d,tor of the Racine Journal-Times inve&#13;
_tigat~d the "poll" and discovered that the&#13;
~ mvers1t~ of_Chicago had nothing to do with&#13;
it. The ed,tonal writers were very critical of&#13;
l~o_ug's behavior, calling it "Political&#13;
( h1canery."&#13;
. It ~l~o turned out that one Larry Doug!&#13;
ident1_f1ed as " active in New York politic:~:&#13;
promised Doug a sizable campaign co~-&#13;
tribution if he could produce evidence that he&#13;
was a probable winner, hence the "poll."&#13;
Interestingly enough most of Doug's&#13;
financial backing in thi~ year's Democratic&#13;
state senate primary came from out of state.&#13;
We fear very much that according to&#13;
Doug's track ree:ord, Doug's ~ain purpose in&#13;
seeking the state senate seat is a driving&#13;
desire to get state-wide and perhaps national&#13;
publicity for himself. We believe Doug's&#13;
record indicates an opportunist streak that&#13;
~ill do great harm to good people on both&#13;
sides of the political fence. &#13;
STUPH!, an independant&#13;
theater group, will perform at the'&#13;
Whiteskeller today, Nov. 1, from&#13;
1 to 3 p.m.&#13;
The group performs short&#13;
comedyand serious sketches.&#13;
Some of the group's previous&#13;
activities have included. four&#13;
public shows, a prison tour, a&#13;
college tour with "Six Pack and&#13;
Other Heathen Rites," and. a&#13;
children's .play.&#13;
Three permanent bus&#13;
-.&#13;
shelters planned, but&#13;
only one will be ready&#13;
..this-year&#13;
By Marilyn Schubert&#13;
With winter winds fast approaching,&#13;
students and faculty&#13;
are beginning to wonder what it&#13;
will be like waiting for buses&#13;
wQen cold weather sets in.&#13;
According to Jim Galhraith,&#13;
director of Planning loud Construction,&#13;
three permanent&#13;
shelters are planned in the near&#13;
future, but only one of these is&#13;
expected to he completed this&#13;
fall.This shelter will he located in&#13;
thecenter of the east parking lot&#13;
and is expected to be finished by&#13;
mid or late November.&#13;
It will ha~e transparent glazed&#13;
surfaces, but as things stand r-ow,&#13;
it will not be heated. This is&#13;
becausepower lines extending to&#13;
theparking lot are not capable of&#13;
supporting the conventional&#13;
electric radiant heaters. Other&#13;
methods of heating are being&#13;
investigated in the event that it&#13;
doesprove to he too cold.&#13;
The other shelters now planned&#13;
art' one replacing the temporary&#13;
shelter at Tallent Hall and&#13;
another on the loop road west of&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
building. These are expected to&#13;
he completed next spring and will&#13;
he heated. No permanent shelter&#13;
is being planned for the stop&#13;
north of the Classroom building,&#13;
since it would interfere with&#13;
construction of the Student&#13;
Union. However, Galbraith said&#13;
he is trying to get the temporary&#13;
shelter improved to offset winter&#13;
conditions.&#13;
The major reason that there&#13;
will not be more permanent&#13;
shelters this winter is because&#13;
each shelter is expected to cost&#13;
hetween $4,000 and $5,000 and no&#13;
further funds have been allocated&#13;
for this purpose. The Department&#13;
of Administration, a loca'\d~Xtension&#13;
of the S~ate BUl ~~;&#13;
Commission chaired by h&#13;
governor, is responsible for suc&#13;
allocations.&#13;
CHAMPIONTERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon 51. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston,~ass.02215&#13;
617-536-9700&#13;
:esearch material for 'rermceoers.&#13;
QePlmS.Theses, etc. LOWEST PRICES.&#13;
IUlCK SERVICE. For tnrcrmenon. Pease write or call.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS.&#13;
All Topics&#13;
~28dfor your. descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
quai~age, mall order"atalog of 2,300&#13;
$1 I Y research papers. Enclose&#13;
.00to tover postage anI! handling.&#13;
RESEARtlt UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK A~E., SUITE 203&#13;
~~IS3ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
) 477-8474 • 4;-7-5493&#13;
..... "We need a local salesman"&#13;
Wed., Nov, 1, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Got a question?&#13;
Information Center canfield it&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
Where can you get bread Cor&#13;
your body?&#13;
Looking for a trained dog act'&#13;
How high is a bus Crom the&#13;
ground?&#13;
Where does Parkside keep its&#13;
airplane?&#13;
There is a charming woman on&#13;
campus who is responsible for&#13;
finding answers to these and&#13;
other more orthodix quesuoos.&#13;
She is Mrs. Verna Zimmerman&#13;
coordinator of the Parkside In:&#13;
formation Center. To the ord.inary&#13;
observer these may seem&#13;
like prank requests, but Mrs.&#13;
Zimmerman and her staff do not&#13;
make hasty assumptions.&#13;
A few probing questions&#13;
disclosed that the first caller was&#13;
"young, healthy and poor," and&#13;
wished to offer his body to&#13;
science. He'd take the cash DOW&#13;
and they'd get him later. He was&#13;
referred to University Hcspital m&#13;
Madison. The next request, for&#13;
the dog act, came from a lady&#13;
seeking entertainment (or a&#13;
child's birthday party. Parkside&#13;
has a number of Caculty and staff&#13;
members who accept speaking&#13;
engagements, as well as student&#13;
and staff musical groups, but no&#13;
trained dog act.&#13;
The question about the height&#13;
of a bus was a bit baffling until it&#13;
was learned that the caller was a&#13;
75-year-old lady who wished to&#13;
attend a concert here, but bas&#13;
trouble navigating steps. The last&#13;
call turned out to he a pilot&#13;
looking for a job. Parkside has no&#13;
airplane, though, so the InfOtthafi01CCenteJ-&#13;
lis unable"to&#13;
help him.&#13;
Most of what the Information&#13;
Center handles is not as unusual&#13;
as all that. Its services include&#13;
current data on facult and starr·&#13;
ecause -wee gra es&#13;
for freshmen are now&#13;
being mailed, the drop&#13;
period has been extended&#13;
through Fri., Nov. 3,&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART nME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
Sieferl/ Assembly&#13;
He realizes Vietnam era&#13;
veterans need State educational aida.&#13;
Verna Zimm rman&#13;
. their offices. ext.e:ru.1 and&#13;
ofhce beers - descnpuo , bek t&#13;
sales. campus lours. da&#13;
cancellations and a tree sbJd I&#13;
pltone. II also sen a a Lo. t&#13;
and Fomd. SO II }OO can't hnd&#13;
our calculus textbook or car&#13;
ke~ or whatever. )00 mtght&#13;
cbe&lt;:l&lt; there. In Tallent 201 The&#13;
ex tension 1$ 234S&#13;
sa ,cally. the Center IS a&#13;
referral servi It ha general&#13;
Informabart and CAD tell )lOU&#13;
"here to go for the pe&lt;:.h&lt;s.&#13;
"It serves as a Cocal potnt to&#13;
dISpense ,"Cormabon. to bnd&#13;
th ,"formatIon g P bet" een th&#13;
\1nl\ers.t· and the puhhe,&#13;
studen • Caculty and t.IIff An&#13;
extensive In(ormauon dilla bank&#13;
ha been created (or' pur,&#13;
pose:' . Irs Zimmerman&#13;
plams_ "We Ire nol In Ad·&#13;
Th reall&#13;
Ibm ou don"&#13;
or ...hom to&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
.. ~ t--'I .. W&#13;
WIt&#13;
RATHBONE ~ "i7II~~&#13;
.... ~w&#13;
...--'-&#13;
00 KTtI&#13;
PI IC£. LOR:IIE' KARl.lIT&#13;
.rn:WllSO!l&#13;
FUTURE CLASSICS&#13;
1:36 P.M,&#13;
Rm 103&#13;
Greenqu, IHall&#13;
A~•. 56'&#13;
STUPH!, an independant&#13;
theater group, will perform at the·&#13;
Whiteskeller today, Nov. 1, from&#13;
I to 3 p.m. The group performs short&#13;
comedy and serious sketches.&#13;
Some of the group's previous&#13;
activities have included four&#13;
public shows, a prison tour, a&#13;
college tour with "Six Pack and&#13;
Other Heathen Rites," and a&#13;
children's .play.&#13;
Three permanent bus&#13;
shelters planned, hut&#13;
only one will he ready&#13;
this year&#13;
By Marilyn Schubert&#13;
With winter winds fast approaching,&#13;
students and faculty&#13;
are beginning to wonder what it&#13;
will be like waiting for buses&#13;
when cold w..;ather sets in.&#13;
According t0 Jim Galbraith,&#13;
director of Planning :md Construction,&#13;
three permanent&#13;
shelters are planned in the near&#13;
future, but only one of these is&#13;
expected to be completed this&#13;
fall. This shelter will be located in&#13;
the center of the east parking lot&#13;
and is expected to be finished by&#13;
mid or late November.&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
building. These are expected to&#13;
be completed next spring and will&#13;
be heated. No permanent shelter&#13;
is being planned for the stop&#13;
north of the Classroom building,&#13;
since it would interfere with&#13;
construction of the Student&#13;
Union. However, Galbraith said&#13;
he is trying to get the tempo_rary&#13;
shelter improved to offset winter&#13;
conditions.&#13;
The major reason that there&#13;
will not be more permanent&#13;
sheiters this winter is because&#13;
each shelter is expected to cost&#13;
between $4,000 and $5,000 and no&#13;
further funds have been allocated&#13;
for this purpose. The Department&#13;
of Administration, a loca_l ~x- . of the State Bu1ldmg tens10n . the&#13;
Commission chaired by&#13;
governor, is responsible for such&#13;
allocations.&#13;
Wed ., Nov. 1, 1'72 THE PARKSIDE RANG R S&#13;
Got a question?&#13;
Information Cent r nfi l • l&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
rna Zimm&#13;
Si fert/A mbly&#13;
H r alfz s VI tnam ra&#13;
v terans n d Stat ducatlonal aldL&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
It will ha~e transparent glazed&#13;
surfaces, but as things stand l'"W,&#13;
it will not be heated. This i!'&#13;
because power lines extending to&#13;
U1e parking lot are not capable of&#13;
supporting the conventional&#13;
electric radiant heaters. Other&#13;
?1ethods of heating are being&#13;
investigated in the event that it&#13;
does prove to be too cold.&#13;
The other shelters now planned&#13;
are one replacing the temporary&#13;
shelter at Tallent Hall and&#13;
another on the loop road west of ,J&lt;&gt;JJS CHAMPION TERMP APERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston,Mass.02215&#13;
R 617-536-9700 Research material for Termpapers,&#13;
Qrrts, Theses, etc. LOWEST PR ICES.&#13;
1 ICK SERVICE. For information, Pease write or call.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Iiad 1or your descriptive up-ta-date,&#13;
quairiage, mail order ,atalog of 2,300 $l Y research papers. Enclose .oo to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEAP..tlt UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK ~~E., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(2l3) 477-8474 • 4,7-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
.. ...&#13;
fj&#13;
Solos&#13;
Apµly at:&#13;
Part-time Jobs&#13;
now available&#13;
in t~~ Rac ine &amp;&#13;
Kenosha areas&#13;
TH E STUDENT EMPLOYMENT OFFICE&#13;
FE TU E CLASSICS&#13;
7:30 P. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed.• Nov. 1. 1972&#13;
REVIEW&#13;
'Big Jake'&#13;
By Bill Brahilugh&#13;
'e:&lt;t In the hne of feature films&#13;
pre nted by the tudent Actt\'ltl&#13;
Board I Big Jake. one of&#13;
"hall literally a parade 01 John&#13;
Wayne movie In _orne ways it is&#13;
n typrcal Wa) ne \\,'\\0 tern. In&#13;
sorne way It i. not&#13;
The rilm I pi ced m a 1909&#13;
nng and eeeters around the&#13;
k.dnappm~ 01 liule Jake Meandl&#13;
IJohn Elhan Wayne) by&#13;
bad guy John fam (Richard&#13;
Boone) nnd hi sub equent&#13;
reseu by Big Jake (Big Wayne).&#13;
81g Jak. received mixed&#13;
nuc 1 opinion upon us release.&#13;
Th enu that liked the IiIm&#13;
11k d II ause II was Wayne.&#13;
Thoo&lt; thaI d.dn't-probably the&#13;
me reason.&#13;
81g Jake I something 01 a&#13;
1I01lywood home movie. The&#13;
Ouk 's son. Patrick, plays Big&#13;
J k 's son. James. Another&#13;
Wayn n, John Elhan, already&#13;
m ntlened above. plays Jake's&#13;
grand on nd a third son,&#13;
Iich I, produced the mm.&#13;
In th rse 01 a chllerenl type&#13;
01 lamlly, Wayne galhered&#13;
Iogelher several old lriends 10&#13;
mak Ibis mOVIe with him. Big&#13;
Jak. marks the fillh lime&#13;
lau"",n O'Hara bas been the&#13;
Ouk's leachng I dy. Olreclor&#13;
Ceorge h rman worked with&#13;
Wayne m the early '30's. And the&#13;
r I or th crew was largely&#13;
comprised of people Wayne bas&#13;
worked With belo", in his long&#13;
career&#13;
Iso In the cast Is Chris Milchum.&#13;
son of screen familiar&#13;
Robert l.tchum or Chris'&#13;
performance. Judith Crist said,&#13;
"Bob l.tchum's real·lile son&#13;
ChriS morc than ~ his daddy&#13;
proud" Olhers, however,&#13;
r marked on the stilIness, nol&#13;
only 01 hi achng. but 01 Patrick&#13;
Wayne's as well.&#13;
John L. Wa erma" of the San&#13;
Francisco Chronicle calls the&#13;
film, "0 \'er)' eUective Western ...&#13;
If )'00 are willing to overlook its&#13;
Inherent defiCienCies." About one&#13;
particular scene Wasserman&#13;
r marks land this will probably&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Winter Break&#13;
Travel Program&#13;
to ~ ~l"" ~..--&#13;
Ze Jan.&#13;
S&#13;
rm 5-14&#13;
w· at It t&#13;
Zerla&#13;
on kiers: Dd&#13;
NIotor Option Avoilable&#13;
For lnformation Contact&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVD. CrNTER&#13;
LLC·D·197&#13;
IIJOI employen th.r'Olllhout the&#13;
l.S. (pm.te &amp; ,ovemment) arc&#13;
tlOnc qUAlified eoll~e men and&#13;
.....omen for ureer pOlUtions with&#13;
t...p pay and oubtandinc bene-fiu.&#13;
Excellent opportunitiet txillt in&#13;
many an.. For FREE infor.&#13;
m don on tudent .. iltan&lt;:e and&#13;
pltummt ltOftrUn .end telf·&#13;
db~ ptAMPEO envdope to&#13;
• onaI acernent fleP.rtry&#13;
o.t..Tte!I Scm"". 1001 E.i&#13;
Idaho I.. K.liopdl. MT S9901.&#13;
"&#13;
draw the most people to the&#13;
movie): "Wayne guns down a&#13;
baddre from a shower ... supposedly&#13;
whilst nude. This is not&#13;
only a rare nudie murder, but-if&#13;
you watch like a hawk-you will&#13;
see that Wayne is actually&#13;
wearing panty bose. And&#13;
more ..he looks kind of cute."&#13;
The tudent Activities Board&#13;
will present Big Jake Friday,&#13;
'0\'.3. at 8:00p.m .• in (Wherever&#13;
they show them l Admission is&#13;
75C. IStudent Activities Building,&#13;
Pa rksjde and State I.D.&#13;
required.)&#13;
LLC hours&#13;
extended&#13;
The Library-Learning Center is&#13;
now open more hours to enable&#13;
students. laculty and the community&#13;
more use of its Iacilities.&#13;
Twenty to thirty cassettes are&#13;
available now. In the future there&#13;
will be 30 audio cbannels and 13&#13;
visual channels on command&#13;
wnrch will be connected to the&#13;
library study carrels lrom the&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
The center is located in 0·175&#13;
torr Main Place on 0-1&gt; and its&#13;
adviser is Beecham Robinson.&#13;
The schedule: Mon. thru&#13;
Thurs .• 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. i Fri., 8&#13;
a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m. to&#13;
2 p.m.&#13;
UW Parksi~e Willer&#13;
Break Travel Programs&#13;
Jan.&#13;
5 - 14&#13;
HONOLULU&#13;
HAWAII&#13;
for more info contact&#13;
Campus Travel Center&#13;
Sign up Today&#13;
OYER HALF FILLED!&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
Sigma Pi fraternity has Iormed&#13;
a nationally affiliated colony&#13;
at Parkside campus. Being both&#13;
social and service oriented,&#13;
Sigma Pi aims to provide social&#13;
activities for members and also&#13;
participate in worthwhile&#13;
campus and community improvement&#13;
projects. Membership&#13;
rushing is now in progress.&#13;
So far, members have assisted&#13;
at Parkside's open house as&#13;
guides and are also forming&#13;
basketball and loothall learns in&#13;
the hopes of promoting intramural&#13;
sports at Parkside.&#13;
Future plans include .. loy drive&#13;
for Parkside's day care center. a&#13;
blood donation drive, a donut sale&#13;
and a charity dance.&#13;
Election 01 ollicers took place&#13;
at a special meeting Oct. 19. A&#13;
publicity committee has been&#13;
formed containing members Dan&#13;
Duchesneau, Dave Krogh, Pat&#13;
McDevit and Gary Meyer.&#13;
information about Sigma Pi&#13;
will be given by any member or&#13;
by Advisor Ken Oberbruner in&#13;
Room zn, Tallent Hall.&#13;
W.PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES&#13;
BOARD&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
John Wayne&#13;
as&#13;
"Big Jake"&#13;
Fri.. Nov. 3. 8 p.m.&#13;
and&#13;
Sun .• Nov.S.7:30p.m.&#13;
Student Act. Bldg.&#13;
Adm. 75c&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin IDs required.&#13;
t.athrop &amp; 21st (almost)&#13;
Racine, Wise. 53406&#13;
Phone: 633·6307&#13;
._IIIN __ III .. IHllftIIlNI .. III IIIIIII1UIlll .. H1I11Il11I1I11I1I11IH1I1I1I11II11I1t ---- ------..j&#13;
LIV&#13;
IIIIIIIIIIIEIIIIIIIIIIEIIIIIIINIIIIIIITIIIIIIIEIIIIIIIIRIIIIIII,III11AIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIEIIIIINIIIIIII,IIIIIIIHl&#13;
1I0lDI1 _JI"II." ":&gt;" " ,&#13;
t~:.;.&#13;
REMEMBER MONDAf , TUESDAf!!&#13;
.", "" W ringl bit tlrinltl are fJnly IS~&#13;
~ ...~&#13;
James Chapson, a puhlished&#13;
poet from Hawaii now living in&#13;
the Kenosha area, and Daniel&#13;
Ramirez, a student who writes in&#13;
both English and Spanish, will be&#13;
featured when the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum meets at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday ( OV. 2) in the second&#13;
floor library lounge at The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Forum meetings are open to&#13;
interested members of the&#13;
community.&#13;
November forum sessions will&#13;
include a student reading on Nov.&#13;
6, a reading and workshop by&#13;
Bink Noll 01 Beloit College on&#13;
QV. 13, a reading by Richard&#13;
Deutch &lt;who has been bailed by&#13;
R. P. Dickey in "Sou'wester" as&#13;
"one of the two best American&#13;
poets under thirty") on Nov. 20,&#13;
and a reading by Racine-born&#13;
poet David Kherdian on Nov. 2:1.&#13;
Warner Bros., Inc., in&#13;
association with the National&#13;
Entertainment Conference&#13;
(NEC), has produced a series or&#13;
traveling art exhibits that cover&#13;
all areas of film making, one of&#13;
which is presently located adjacent&#13;
to the circulation desk on&#13;
level 0-1 01 LLC.&#13;
The structure consists of&#13;
several panels, each concentrating&#13;
on one aspect of film&#13;
making .. Cinematography, post&#13;
pro~.ucbon, set. design, costume&#13;
design and animation are the&#13;
topics of the design.&#13;
The "Broken Horn" is the title&#13;
01 the book of poetry and art&#13;
being sponsored this year by the&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum. The&#13;
advisory staff includes Alan&#13;
gehucard, Carl ~indner and Don&#13;
Cummmbs. Entries of either art&#13;
or poetry may be submitted to&#13;
them by Nov. 30.&#13;
....Hungry?&#13;
Haven't Got Time to Wait?&#13;
Come to The .....&#13;
JAVELIN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
Excellent Food!&#13;
Open 7 Days a Week 7 a.m .. 11 p.m.&#13;
2200 60th Street Kenosha&#13;
Fast Service!&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$1 0 pi tcher for Pobst&#13;
or Sch Iitz Ii9ht •&#13;
6 Packs To Go&#13;
Miller 99&lt; Bud $130 Schlitz $130&#13;
The Train Station ~&#13;
WE CATER TO FRATERNfTY PARriS&#13;
2703 63 St.&#13;
Pool Tables &amp; Dart Games&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. 1, 1972&#13;
R&#13;
'Big Jake'&#13;
By Bill Brohaugh&#13;
Tra&#13;
t&#13;
n&#13;
ark id&#13;
t r Break&#13;
I Program&#13;
Motor Option Avoiloble&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
LLC hour&#13;
extended&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
5&#13;
!&#13;
I&#13;
UW Parksi~e Wiater&#13;
Break Trani Progra s&#13;
HONOLULU&#13;
HAWAII&#13;
for more info contact&#13;
Campus Travel Center&#13;
Sign 1p Today&#13;
OVER HALF FILLED!&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
igma Pi Fraternit has formed&#13;
a nationally affiliated colon&#13;
at Par ide campus. Being both&#13;
oc1al and ervice oriented&#13;
1gma P1 aim to provide ociai&#13;
bvities for members and also&#13;
participate in orthwhile&#13;
campu and community improvement&#13;
projects. 1embership&#13;
rushing i now in progre .&#13;
far, members have a isled&#13;
at Par ide' open house a&#13;
gu1d and are also forming&#13;
ba etball and football team in&#13;
th hope of promoting intramural&#13;
ports at Park ide.&#13;
Future plan include• to drive&#13;
for Park ide' day care center, a&#13;
blood donation dri\'e, a donut sale&#13;
and a charity dance.&#13;
Election of officers took place&#13;
at a pec1al m ting Oct. 19. A&#13;
publicity committee has been&#13;
formed containing members Dan&#13;
uche neau, Dave Krogh, Pat&#13;
1cDe it and Gary Meyer.&#13;
Information about igma Pi&#13;
will be given by any member or&#13;
by Advisor Ken Oberbruner in&#13;
Room 'm, Tallent Hall.&#13;
ITIES&#13;
PRE ENTS&#13;
John Wayne&#13;
as&#13;
11819 Jake"&#13;
Fri., Nov. 3, 8 p.m.&#13;
and&#13;
Sun., Nov. 5, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Student Act. Bldg.&#13;
Adm. 75c Parkside and Wisconsin I Os required.&#13;
James hapson, a published&#13;
poet from Hawaii now living in&#13;
the Keno ha area, and Daniel&#13;
Ramirez, a student who writes in&#13;
both English and panish, will be&#13;
featured when the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum meets at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thur day &lt; ov. 2 ) in the second&#13;
floor library lounge at The&#13;
' niv r ity of WisconsinPark&#13;
ide&#13;
Forum meetings are open to&#13;
intere ted memb rs of the&#13;
community. • o\'ember forum sessions will&#13;
include a student reading on Nov.&#13;
6, a reading and workshop by&#13;
Bink oil of Beloit College on&#13;
ov. 13, a reading by Richard&#13;
Deutch &lt;who has been hailed by&#13;
R. P . Dickey in " ou'wester" as&#13;
"one of the two best American&#13;
poets under thirty") on Nov. 20,&#13;
and a reading by Racine-born&#13;
poet David Kherdian on Nov. '1:1 .&#13;
Warner Bros., Inc., in&#13;
association with the ational&#13;
Entertainment Conference&#13;
c NEC&gt;, has produced a serie of&#13;
traveling art exhibits that cover&#13;
all areas of film making, one of&#13;
which is presently localed adjacent&#13;
to the circulation desk on&#13;
level D-1 of LLC.&#13;
The structure consist of&#13;
everal panels, each concentrating&#13;
on one aspect of film&#13;
making. Cinematography, po t&#13;
production, set design, costum&#13;
design and animation are th&#13;
topics of the design.&#13;
The "Broken Horn" is the title&#13;
of the book of poetry and art&#13;
being sponsored this year by th&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum. Th&#13;
advisory staff includes Alan&#13;
chuca_rd, Carl ~indner and Don&#13;
Curnrnmbs. Entries of either art&#13;
or poetry may be submitted lo&#13;
them by Nov. 30.&#13;
.... Hungry?&#13;
Haven't Got Time to Wait?&#13;
Come to The .....&#13;
JAVELIN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
Fast Service! Excellent Food!&#13;
Open 7 Days a Week 7 a.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
2200 60th Street Kenosha&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$1 a pitche r for Pabst&#13;
or Schlitz light. Lathrop &amp; 21st (almost)&#13;
Racine, Wisc. 53406&#13;
P_hone : 633-6307&#13;
6 Packs To Go&#13;
Miller 99c Bud $130 Schlitz $130&#13;
The Train Station&#13;
WE CATER TO FRATERNITY PARTY$&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I &#13;
We&lt;J .• Nov. I. 1972 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 7&#13;
Par sld's Tom&#13;
Krimmel elud a t c I&#13;
on his way to a Parksld&#13;
try In the recent g m&#13;
which Parkside won&#13;
If you missed this g me,&#13;
be sure to be on hand for&#13;
the upcoming m ch whc·&#13;
which will pit the P rksld&#13;
team aga'nst th&#13;
Marque"e Warriors, Th&#13;
game will be held at th&#13;
Kenosha Lake Iront&#13;
Stadium at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 5, II Is&#13;
sponsored by the Lions'&#13;
Oub and the proceeds will&#13;
go to charity Refresh·&#13;
ments will be available.&#13;
Ragtime Rangers active and thinking S ow&#13;
l'mled Slat ki&#13;
the)- are dOln e'\ et) thm&#13;
can tn help" Ith the trip 10 pen.&#13;
Colo. so that e "on't pulllllll&#13;
peecle up In t.rns or n~lI~&#13;
student . land-b),t The pn e 011&#13;
the trtp ha no catch· he ceetlnued&#13;
"But I don', I' lOU l&#13;
lI'ell, JO,n ,he f\agume Ran~&#13;
aR\1I\'"3\ For one thm all m&lt;&#13;
other ;,cu,' oller ,II&#13;
keep 'OU '0&lt;) bus) •• nd ho&#13;
kno... rna. be m In ~t&#13;
"ho ' I ",11 prompt. OU 10 lI" It&#13;
Of. on)~ that I ,r ~au jotn. ou&#13;
J.!,eI a d1 ount on all the 'CU\1t1&#13;
!hel ""'" to th pubhe.nd&#13;
charge admi: Ion for&#13;
You pay onll three doIla lor&#13;
the enure year, buly'OlJ t. 10'&#13;
for ~our mOM "01 onl~ doe&#13;
\OUT Ra tim R.a patch&#13;
eonwauof the th doll.... \I'"&#13;
get I.... loCI He el on, In&#13;
th, ,pan_ dd W, 10 the&#13;
dl. oun on th GULli" nd&#13;
\Oll'n- doin all nght&#13;
, If l OJ don 1 ,or II on I&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are on&#13;
the move!&#13;
Who are the Ragtime Rangers"&#13;
They're Parkside's ski club.&#13;
That's not entirely true. though&#13;
Why? Because the Ragtime&#13;
Rangers are more than jus' a ski&#13;
club.&#13;
.. Nf; askEtg ourselves ~h' lh&#13;
club should die when the gra I&#13;
green." said club president. Bill&#13;
Jaeck. "And we couldn't think 01&#13;
a reason, so we started doing&#13;
other things during the monlhs&#13;
when there is no snow"&#13;
Road ralleys. dances. perues&#13;
and trips are just a few of the&#13;
things the Ragtime Rangers do on&#13;
the off season.&#13;
"We're actually pertorrnmg a&#13;
service to the campus and&#13;
community. because .....e do thing&#13;
like sponsor trips at low costs&#13;
that we make no money on," said&#13;
Jaeck.&#13;
"Since we are members of the&#13;
Rooters close&#13;
regular season&#13;
here Saturday&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
UW-Parkside's soccer team&#13;
PIZZA KnCHEN&#13;
Willclose its regular season this&#13;
week, facing Eastern Illinois&#13;
today at Charleston 111 and&#13;
UW-Green Bay here S~turday at&#13;
2 p,m,&#13;
The Rangers are currently 2-5-1&#13;
a~d will be looking for strong&#13;
WinS . h agamst both teams as they&#13;
_ad into the NAJA District 14&#13;
~aYOffS next week, If UW-P&#13;
,ats Green Bay, the Rangers&#13;
Will be seeded No. 1 in the&#13;
PlaYOffswith UWGB and PlatteVille&#13;
t ' h . a earn which the Rangers&#13;
ave already defeated.&#13;
Chicken &amp; ltllian Sausag. Bollllte,.&#13;
Free D.I~.ryto P.rktl~. VIII•••&#13;
",., 6$1·$'"&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
AR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
ICE - B&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
DAILY 9A M - 9 P.M. OPEN . •&#13;
SUN D AY TI L 8~P::..M.:.:,.:--_--,&#13;
CAll&#13;
632-1565&#13;
Parksi.e Rigby Club&#13;
Fealuilg DANCE&#13;
STONE COHN'S BLUES BAND&#13;
Sal., Mn. 4, 9-1 .... 'I"&#13;
Speciol: 50' OFF odm. price by&#13;
disploylng ticket for Nov. 5 Dome.&#13;
P d Yo PI 1010 , ... , ..&#13;
WHITESKELLAR&#13;
,,\\ (north lounge&#13;
\&#13;
Greenquisl Halll&#13;
~Vl&#13;
EN1'tlTA'~ r&#13;
w I p.m, n&#13;
ed., Nov. I&#13;
RACINE, WISC.&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE.&#13;
A G R&#13;
r th n II&#13;
Ragtime Rangers active and thinking 0&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
IM&#13;
.6 . . . ···· ...&#13;
Rooters close&#13;
regular season&#13;
here Saturday&#13;
UW-Parkside's soccer team&#13;
will close its regular season this&#13;
week, facing Eastern Illinois&#13;
t~ay at Charleston, Ill., a nd&#13;
lJW-Green Bay here Saturday at&#13;
2 p.m.&#13;
The Rangers are currently 2-5-1&#13;
and will be looking for strong Wins · h against both teams as they&#13;
ead into the NAIA District 14&#13;
:ayoffs next week. If UW-P&#13;
_ats Green Bay, the Rangers&#13;
w,n be seeded No. 1 in the&#13;
ila~offs with UWGB a nd P latt1lle.&#13;
a team which the Rangers&#13;
ave already defeated.&#13;
WHITES KELLAR&#13;
,i\\ (north lounge&#13;
\\ VEnquist Hall)&#13;
ENT\RTAl"4t r&#13;
W lp .. mll g ed., Nov. I&#13;
··, ince we :ir mcm lh&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bo1111Nn&#13;
Free Dell~ery to Parkside Ylll•t•&#13;
$011 IOI/, At111•1 p1,,,,, 611·Sl9f&#13;
•BEER• SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
'"12• s-,1,,i•&#13;
$AVE-ON BAR SUPPLIES _ GLASSWARE&#13;
ICE -&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A. M. - 9 p.&#13;
________ SUNDAY TI CALL L 8_:P_:.. _M~. ----,&#13;
632-1565&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE.&#13;
RACINE, WISC.&#13;
feat r' g DA CE&#13;
STD E COHN S BLUES BAD&#13;
Sat., o . 4, 9-1 . '1&#13;
Special: 50' OFF adm. prlc by&#13;
displaying ticket for Nov. 5 gam . p &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. I, 1972&#13;
CLUBS&#13;
WEIGHT LIFTING&#13;
Persons interested in either&#13;
weight or power lifting are invited&#13;
to workout on Tuesday.&#13;
Thursday and Sunday. Workouts&#13;
begin at 11;30 a.m. on the weekand&#13;
1:30 on Sunday.&#13;
Lifters of all levels, novice&#13;
through expert. are invited and&#13;
encouraged to meet at this time.&#13;
Additional Information may be&#13;
obtained from th Club port&#13;
OUice in the Physical Education&#13;
building or by phoning 2310.&#13;
JUDO CLUB&#13;
The Parksode Judo Club is&#13;
ponsorrng their first judo&#13;
tournament of the year Thursday.&#13;
overnber 9 at 6:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Physical Education building.&#13;
Awards will be given in four&#13;
cia es to the top three individuals.&#13;
Competition will be held in the&#13;
following classes: Brown Belt&#13;
IOpen): Men's White Belt&#13;
(Lightweight and Heavyweight&gt;:&#13;
and Women's White Belt which is&#13;
open, Applications may be obtained&#13;
from Vic Godfrey or any&#13;
member or the Judo Club, The&#13;
entry ree is SI.OO. Spectators are&#13;
encouraged with a free adrm&#13;
ion.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL CLUB&#13;
The Parkside Volleyball Club&#13;
will be organized Thursday t Nov.&#13;
9 at 7:00 p.m. In the meantime all&#13;
persons interested in playing&#13;
volleyball should report to the&#13;
Physical Education Building on&#13;
Tuesday, November 7 and&#13;
Friday, November 10 for&#13;
recreation a) volleyball. Men and&#13;
women, staff and students are&#13;
invited.&#13;
Oeza Martiny will be coaching&#13;
the Volleyball Club while Dick&#13;
Frecka will be working with the&#13;
noon recreational program. They&#13;
may be contacted in Athletics for&#13;
additional information.&#13;
Jogging at noon&#13;
Anyone interested in jogging&#13;
each noon should meet at the&#13;
main gym of the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
from noon to 12: 15 p.m. each&#13;
weekday. Contact Wayne Dannehl.&#13;
Bob Lawson or Vic Godfrey&#13;
for information.&#13;
r"~:B'O'RT'j()NS""1&#13;
: FREEReferral to N.Y. Clinic. :&#13;
~ 12 weeks or less 1&#13;
~ Tolal cosf 1&#13;
\ $150 1&#13;
CALL ~&#13;
· CONTROLLED ~&#13;
1 PARENTHOOD~&#13;
· (a Don-profit organization) :&#13;
: SUITE 1006 :&#13;
• DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
: (313) 964-0530 1&#13;
......•.............•••...... ~&#13;
P.E. Bldg. schedule&#13;
POOL: Monday through Friday 11:3(}-3:30, 5:3(}-tO:00 except&#13;
Friday closed at 3:30.&#13;
Saturday 9:00-5:00 P.M.&#13;
Sunday 1:3IHO:00 P.M.&#13;
GYMNASIUM: Monday through Friday 8:00-10:00 P.M .• except&#13;
Friday closed at 5:00.&#13;
Saturday 9:00-5:00 P.M.&#13;
Sunday 1:3(}-10:00 P.M.&#13;
SA NA: Same as Pool Hours&#13;
November 4 Soccer-UW-Green Bay at UW-P - 2:00&#13;
Women's Gymnastics - UW-Oshkosh at UW-P - 2:00&#13;
Swimming - Invitational· 10:00 A.M.&#13;
November 7 Hockey at Milwaukee&#13;
Parkside vs. Marquette - 6:45&#13;
Milwaukee Arena&#13;
Women&#13;
gymnasts 3rd&#13;
at Whitewater&#13;
Parkside's women's gymnastics&#13;
team placed third&#13;
Saturday in the 5th Women's&#13;
Invitational Gymnastics&#13;
Championships at UWWhitewater.&#13;
LaCrosse won the meet with&#13;
139.80 points. Eau Claire took&#13;
second with 105.59 and Parkside&#13;
finished third with 912.10.&#13;
Girls placeing from Parkside&#13;
included Jackei Levonian and&#13;
Kim Simonsen in advanced&#13;
competition and Paris Wolhust in&#13;
intermediate competition.&#13;
Lucian Rosa&#13;
•&#13;
Pat Kekic&#13;
-&#13;
Netters tie for third&#13;
'At the W-.W.I.A,C. State meet at Oshkosh held Oct. 27-&#13;
28 Parkside's women's tennis team tied Oshkosh and&#13;
Stevens Point for third place. First and second place&#13;
went to La Crosse and Whitewater, respectively.&#13;
Individual results were as follows: number one&#13;
singles Pat Kekic was the runner up, as she lost in the&#13;
finals, Number three singles Kay Becker won the&#13;
consolation as did the number one doubles team of Pat&#13;
Kekic and Sue Graf. Grat. also the number two singles&#13;
player made team points although she didn't reach the&#13;
finals.&#13;
Rosa Lst, harriers 3rd in USTFF&#13;
UW-Parkside placed third&#13;
Saturday in the U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Mid-America&#13;
Cross Country Championships&#13;
here.&#13;
Western Michigan, long a&#13;
dominant power in cross country,&#13;
swept to the title with 36 points&#13;
but the Rangers had the individual&#13;
winner in Lucian Rosa,&#13;
who covered the six mile course&#13;
in 28:11.&#13;
In the team race, the Chicago&#13;
Track Club placed second with 61&#13;
points and Parkside totaled 70 in&#13;
third. Rounding out the scoring&#13;
were the Kegonsa Track Club&#13;
with 90, DePaul with 129 and&#13;
Marquette with 134.&#13;
Rosa and runner-up Steve&#13;
Stintzi of Western ran together&#13;
KENOSHA LIONS&#13;
Present the 1st Annual&#13;
RUGBY FOOTBALL GAME&#13;
PARKSIDE V,S. MARQUETTE&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 5, 1972, 1:30 P.M.&#13;
LAKE FRONT STADIUM - KENOSHA, WIS,&#13;
Donation: Students 50' Adults'l&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin IDs required.&#13;
STARTSFRIDAY&#13;
On Our Screen&#13;
"Vice-Hust Iers"&#13;
plus&#13;
"Sweet Lips"&#13;
New Selections of Adult Books Arriving&#13;
Daily! Theatre Open Noon 'til&#13;
Midnite. Book Store Open 11 a.m.&#13;
'til Midnite.&#13;
18 Yeorsond Over Only!&#13;
OPEN TODAY&#13;
6:00 • 12:00 Mid.&#13;
STREET • DOWNTOWN&#13;
If you&#13;
pr.f.,&#13;
use our&#13;
R_,&#13;
Entrance&#13;
410 MAIN&#13;
virtually the whole race before&#13;
Rosa pulled away in the last&#13;
three-quarters mile. Stintzi was&#13;
docked in 28:32.&#13;
Other Parkside scorers included&#13;
junior Jim McFadden in&#13;
eighth at 29:34, Everett Hyde in&#13;
25th, Keith Merritt in stst and&#13;
Ned Kessenich in 33rd ..&#13;
Other races were for national&#13;
championships. Hal Higdon of the&#13;
Indiana Striders took the Masters&#13;
(over 40) title while Kenosha&#13;
Tremper cross country coach&#13;
Chuck Bradley copped the&#13;
Veterans (over 30) race.&#13;
In the veterans race, three&#13;
Parkside coaches, Vic Godfrey,&#13;
Bob Lawson and Bob Grueninger,&#13;
took sixth. loth and 12th,&#13;
respectively.&#13;
There were also five women's&#13;
championship, races for various&#13;
age groups.&#13;
Parkslde's next meet, and last&#13;
dual action before championship&#13;
competition begins, is here&#13;
Friday at 4 p.m. against Loras.&#13;
Siefert/ Assembly&#13;
One of the most qualified young&#13;
men running for oHice anywhere&#13;
DEMOCRAT-63rd&#13;
,AID ADVERtiSEMENT:Aulh. 1M P•• f.r tly (it in'" l.r Si.ful C.",,,,itt,,. ~.Wil.&#13;
5am,; 3043.""IY La"" Rati"', Tr"'.&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
7P.M. TIL?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
[very Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
~.&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
424 Lake Ave., Racine 637-8467 Doncers wonted&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. 1, 1972&#13;
CLUBS&#13;
WEIGHT LIFTING&#13;
p&#13;
JUDO CLUB&#13;
VOLLEYBALL CLUB&#13;
Pa rk ide oil yball Club&#13;
organiz d Thursday, ov.&#13;
p.m. In th meantime au&#13;
pe ·on int r ted in playing&#13;
voll y 11 hould report to the&#13;
Phy i al Education Building on&#13;
P.E. Bldg. schedule&#13;
P( L: .Monda_ through Friday 11 :30-3:30, 5:30-10:00 except&#13;
Friday clo ed at 3:30.&#13;
turday 9:00-5:00 P . I.&#13;
unday 1:30-10:00 P . 1.&#13;
Yt\1:-.: I 1: Monday through Friday 8:00-10:00 P .M., except&#13;
Fnday clo ed at 5:00.&#13;
turday 9:00-5:00 P .1\1.&#13;
unday 1 :30-10:00 P . 1.&#13;
A N : ame a Pool Hours&#13;
'ovember 4 occer- \ -Green Bay at m -P - 2:00&#13;
Worn n' Gymna tics - ·w-Oshkosh at W-P - 2:00&#13;
w1mming - Invitational - 10:00 . 1:.&#13;
'o\'ember 7 Hockey at 1ilwaukee&#13;
Park id vs. farquette - 6:45&#13;
1ilwaukee Arena&#13;
Women&#13;
gymnasts 3rd&#13;
at Whitewater&#13;
Park ide's women's gymna&#13;
tics team placed th ir d&#13;
turday m the 5th Women's&#13;
Invitation al Gym n astics&#13;
hamp1on hips at UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
La rosse won the meet with&#13;
139.80 points. Eau Claire took&#13;
econd with 105.59 and Parkside&#13;
Cini hed third with 912.10.&#13;
Girls placeing from Park ide&#13;
included Jackei Levonian a nd&#13;
Kim 1monsen in advanced&#13;
competition and Paris Wolhust in&#13;
intermediate competition. Lucian Rosa&#13;
Pat Kekic&#13;
Netters tie for third ·At thew·. W. I.A.C. State meet at Oshkosh held Oct. 27-&#13;
28 Parkside's women' s tennis team tied Oshkosh and&#13;
Stevens Point for third place. First and second place&#13;
went to La Crosse and Whitewater, respectively.&#13;
Individual results were as follows: number one&#13;
singles Pat Kekic was the r unner up, as she lost in the&#13;
finals. Number three singles Kay Becker won the&#13;
consolation as did the number one doubles team of Pat&#13;
Kekic and Sue Graf. Graf, also the number two singles&#13;
player made team points a lthough she didn't reach the&#13;
finals.&#13;
Tu day, ov mber 7 and&#13;
f riday , 'ovember 10 for&#13;
r r at1onal volleyball. Men and&#13;
"om n, tare and tudents are&#13;
mvit d&#13;
Rosa 1st, harriers 3rd in USTFF&#13;
eza fartiny will be coaching&#13;
th Voll yball lub while Dick&#13;
Fr cka 111 b working with the&#13;
noon r er a hon, I program. They&#13;
may be contacted in Athletics for&#13;
additional information.&#13;
Jogging at noon&#13;
nyone interested in jogging&#13;
ach noon hould meet at the&#13;
m. in gym of the Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
from noon to 12 15 p.m. each&#13;
" kday. ontact Wayne Dann&#13;
hi. Bob Law on or ic Godfrey&#13;
r r information&#13;
f SI says 1111 YA ... .., ~=&#13;
~·························· ··&#13;
~ ABORTIONS ~ : FREE Referral to N.Y. Clinic.:&#13;
12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
•150&#13;
CALL&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
CONTROLLED&#13;
PARENTHOOD~&#13;
( a non-profit organization)&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DAVID STOTT BLDG.&#13;
(313) 964-0530&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
. . ·····························~&#13;
W-Parkside placed thir d&#13;
Satwday in the U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Mid-America&#13;
Cross Country Championships&#13;
here.&#13;
Western 1ichigan, long a&#13;
dominant power in cross country,&#13;
swept to the title with 36 points&#13;
but the Rangers had the individual&#13;
winner in Lucian Ros·a ,&#13;
who covered the six mile course&#13;
in 28:11.&#13;
In the team race, the Chicago&#13;
Track Club placed second with 61&#13;
points and Parkside totaled 70 in&#13;
third. Rounding out the scoring&#13;
were the Kegonsa Track Club&#13;
with 90, DePaul with 129 and&#13;
Marquette with 134.&#13;
Rosa and runne r-up Steve&#13;
tintzi of Western ran together&#13;
KENOSHA LIONS&#13;
Present the 1st Annual&#13;
RUGBY FOOTBALL GAME&#13;
PARKSIDE V .s. MARQUETTE&#13;
Sunday , Nov. 5, 1972, 1:30 P.M.&#13;
LAKE FRONT STADIUM - KENOSHA, WIS.&#13;
Donation: Students soe Adults • 1&#13;
If you&#13;
prefer&#13;
UM our&#13;
Roar&#13;
fntranco&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin I Os required.&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
On Our Screen&#13;
"Vice-Hustlers"&#13;
plus&#13;
"Sweet Lips"&#13;
New Selections of Adult Books Arriving&#13;
Daily! Theatre Open Noon 'til&#13;
Midnite. Book Store Open 11 a .m. 'til Midnite.&#13;
18 Years and Over Only!&#13;
OPEN TODAY&#13;
6:00 . 12:00 Mid.&#13;
410 MAIN STREET • DOWNTOWN&#13;
virtually the whole race before&#13;
Rosa pulled away in the last&#13;
three-quarters mile. Stintzi was&#13;
docked in 28:32.&#13;
Other Parkside scorers included&#13;
junior Jim McFadden in&#13;
eighth a t 29 :34, Everett Hyde in&#13;
25th, Keith Merritt in 31st and&#13;
ed Kessenich in 33rd ..&#13;
Other races were for national&#13;
championships. Hal Higdon of the&#13;
Indiana Striders took the Masters&#13;
(over 40) title while Kenosha&#13;
Tremper cross country coach&#13;
Chuck Bradley copped the&#13;
Veterans (over 30) race.&#13;
ln the veterans race, three&#13;
Parkside coaches, Vic Godfrey,&#13;
Bob Lawson and Bob Grueninger,&#13;
took sixth , 10th a nd 12th,&#13;
respectively.&#13;
There were also five women's&#13;
championship, races for various&#13;
age groups.&#13;
Parkside's next meet, and last&#13;
dual a ction before championship&#13;
com petition begins, is here&#13;
Friday at 4 p.m. against Loras.&#13;
Siefert/ Assembly&#13;
One of the most qualified young&#13;
men running for office anywhere&#13;
DEMOCRA T-63 rd&#13;
r AID ADVlRTISlMENT: Auth. 1114 r~. for by Cititon• fer Siefert Ct111111itt11. R. Wili&#13;
anu: 1043 Reolnty lane, Ratint, lrH, .&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
7P.M. TIL?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
424 Lake Ave., Racine 637-8467 Dancers v'vanted </text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63897">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 6, November 1, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63898">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63899">
                <text>1972-11-01</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63902">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63903">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63904">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63905">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63906">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63907">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63908">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63909">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63910">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="112">
        <name>alumni</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="156">
        <name>assistant chancellor allen dearborn</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="313">
        <name>associate dean jewel echelbarger</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="324">
        <name>bus service</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="329">
        <name>constitution</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="2631" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="3247">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/b367cee58e1331c1173aef0d28c69986.pdf</src>
        <authentication>e061776c05fd76d0762bf78736beb7c4</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63915">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 7</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63916">
              <text>F. Lee Bailey to speak here Friday</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63926">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89909">
              <text>/&#13;
,",.: ..- ,,' ':': ..", ',"" ','" ',' ::"' "&#13;
'...... ," ..', ',' " , .. , '.\ , .. ,, .. ,\ .- '.-'.. '.&#13;
"\ '.'. '.' \ ,\ ,\ ,, .&#13;
------- ""'" ,,'"&#13;
F. Lee Bailey to spe~k&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
"The Defense Never Rests" is&#13;
the title of a book by one of the&#13;
ounlry'S most famous trial&#13;
~awyers, F. Lee Baile~.&#13;
Bailey will be at Parkside on&#13;
Friday, Nov. 10, at 8 p:m. His will&#13;
be the first lecture this semester&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Anthony Totero, coordinator of&#13;
student programming, explains&#13;
that the Board decided on F. Lee&#13;
Bailey partly because it wanted&#13;
to get off on the right foot by&#13;
choosing a speaker of some&#13;
stature.&#13;
Bailey's reputation as a rebel&#13;
has evolved because of the nature&#13;
ofthe defense attorney's job -- to&#13;
fight the Establishment. This he&#13;
does admirably well, which is&#13;
why he was Capt. Ernest&#13;
Medina'schoice as the lawyer to&#13;
defend him against the My Lai&#13;
massacre charges.&#13;
His stop here at Parkside will&#13;
be the first on his current lecture&#13;
tour, but he has already&#13;
established himself as an in·&#13;
teresting, controlled speaker. His&#13;
appearances usually find him&#13;
speaking for 45 minutes followed&#13;
by half an hour for questions.&#13;
" .&#13;
here Friday&#13;
Topics to be covered include his&#13;
ex~riences in some of his cases&#13;
(which include the Boston&#13;
Strangler, the Great Plymouth&#13;
Mall Robbery and the retrial of&#13;
Dr, Sam Sheppard). penal&#13;
reform and the plight of the&#13;
defendant, who is stigmatized&#13;
whether guilty or innocent as&#13;
soon as he is arrested. He will&#13;
also comment on the role of the&#13;
defense attorney.&#13;
In connection with this last&#13;
topic, a sec lion in his book attempts&#13;
to answer a question&#13;
frequently put to him by laymen'&#13;
"How can you defend a man y~&#13;
know is guilty?"&#13;
Replies Bailey. "Guilt, like&#13;
most things, is scarcely ever&#13;
black or white," He says the&#13;
questioner is rarely satisfied v.ILh&#13;
lus answer though&#13;
"He sees no fusunceuce for&#13;
defending someone who reall)&#13;
drd It. He can afford to play the&#13;
moralist, it' not his neck on the&#13;
gUIllotine. If lawyers were to&#13;
hun every case In which they&#13;
knew the defendant was guilty,&#13;
there woeld be no courts, Every&#13;
person v. ho was arre ted and&#13;
indicted would go right to jail&#13;
unless hIS defense counsel Judged&#13;
tum mnocent."&#13;
Baile)' IS e pecially worried&#13;
about what happens to someone&#13;
when the) are arrested ev n&#13;
though they may subsequently be&#13;
acquitted&#13;
"The pre umptien of innocence&#13;
ha.s never existed In the public&#13;
mind:' he explams Even worse,&#13;
Juries often ConVict Innocent&#13;
people.&#13;
, "The system's o\-erridmg fault&#13;
lS., ..the fact thal as the wheels of&#13;
justice grind on, Innocence&#13;
becomes progressively less&#13;
relevant_"&#13;
He feels thai if polygraphs llie&#13;
delector tests) were to gain&#13;
general acceptance they would&#13;
preclude many trials and prevent&#13;
many innocent people from ever&#13;
even having to come to court.&#13;
edne day RANGER Vol. I, No.7&#13;
TheParkside---- _&#13;
Barney Stanitis does his thing&#13;
Barney Stanitis has done his&#13;
thing again.&#13;
Barney is a job superintendent&#13;
for Camosy Construction Co. of&#13;
Kenosha, and his thing is getting&#13;
buildings up fast. His skill at&#13;
doing that has made him&#13;
something of a legend at UWParkside.&#13;
His latest coup occurred this&#13;
week when the $4,1 million&#13;
classroom building being constructed&#13;
at UW-P by Camosy was&#13;
"topped out" two months early.&#13;
That moved the building's&#13;
completion schedule from Aug. 20&#13;
to May 4,&#13;
Topping out, with the placing of&#13;
the traditional tree atop the&#13;
bUilding, signifies that all the&#13;
major concrete pouring has been&#13;
completed and the frame of the&#13;
bUilding is done.&#13;
With Stanitis on the job, the&#13;
early topping out surprised no&#13;
One. He had earned his UW-P&#13;
reputation as a fast man with a&#13;
bUilding some three years ago&#13;
When, under his supervision,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, the school's first&#13;
la?oratory classroom building,&#13;
miraculously opened in time for&#13;
the 1969 fall semester.&#13;
To accomplish that feat the&#13;
S!anitis-led Camosy crew w~rked&#13;
nme hours a day and Saturdays to&#13;
make up time lost to a concrete&#13;
stirke. From ground level construction&#13;
to topping out was&#13;
accomplished in 15 months,&#13;
compared to a national average&#13;
of three years for such a building.&#13;
d Barn~y, n~w 57, recalls those&#13;
ayS WIth mixed emotions&#13;
"If I had to go through that&#13;
agaIn, I'd resign" he said. "But w ' •&#13;
e Just had to get it done&#13;
'.'1 remember 1 asked the&#13;
~?IVersity people if they had&#13;
Ired professors to start teaching&#13;
in it in September. When they&#13;
said they had I told them, 'then&#13;
we'll get you a building&#13;
somehow'."&#13;
Stanitis, a Racine resident who&#13;
has worn a Camosy hard hat for&#13;
eight years after Z7 years with&#13;
Johnson-Henricksen Construction&#13;
of Racine, also gUided&#13;
the other of UW-P's first two&#13;
buildings, Tallent Hall. to an&#13;
onschedule opening that fall ..&#13;
More recently. he led the&#13;
Camosy team on the physical&#13;
education building which opened&#13;
comfortably within schedule this&#13;
fall after running several weeks&#13;
ahead most of the way.&#13;
Barney probably kIlO" as&#13;
much practical p ychology as the&#13;
psychology professors who teach&#13;
in his buildings. And this is one of&#13;
the secrets of his success.&#13;
"The big thing is gelling people&#13;
to work," he said. "To do that you&#13;
have to be able to judge them.&#13;
Some need a pat on the back,&#13;
others need you to climb on their&#13;
back. And sometimes you ha\'e to&#13;
get on your knees, The trick is to&#13;
choose the right method for each&#13;
man&#13;
His other secret IS a computer·&#13;
like capacity to antiCipate&#13;
theproper scheduling of men and&#13;
materials for future work&#13;
BARNEY'S BUILDING - Barney Stanitis lright), job superind&#13;
f C mosy Construction Co. the generaJ contractor on the&#13;
ten ent or a ' . h' UW-Parkside classroom building, talks o~er the projeCt w Ich&#13;
newb&#13;
t ped out with the traditional tree WIth Gerry Knop &lt;lem,&#13;
has een op ,.' nd Job C I , 'd t of Camosy Wlsconsm operabons, a n or ey, Vice presl en&#13;
Camosy project manager.&#13;
nus would save the la.pa) er&#13;
money and ease th burd non th&#13;
courts, a " II a IvaKlng th&#13;
. uspect reputatIon&#13;
Regardm the prISon I' lem&#13;
BaIley' book tat ,&#13;
"In 'ifoct "hal th la" l'&#13;
lhal "c'r gomg to put ttlt felon&#13;
mto a place h:f lht'n" .n:&#13;
plenty of othen Ju I 10k him 10&#13;
timulat hlS crlmm.lIt • and&#13;
others "ho aren't qUit 11k him&#13;
and can teach him cnmInal acts&#13;
he h ~n't )et cone hed \\&#13;
th"'" murd or . ptm , dOfl&lt;'&#13;
pu, hen. and bank rob, all&#13;
lOf!e.her 10 cro" &lt;1&lt;'&lt;1 cell block !IO&#13;
they can eombme their re peelive.&#13;
pecialu In"hat amount to&#13;
coli g of cnm And" put&#13;
innocent men In among lh m ..&#13;
He lh n OUtJlO hi ug,g lJon&#13;
for a . yst ern of •• arned&#13;
freedom," "herein the C'OfWlct&#13;
has the opportufUty for ~or·&#13;
th"lule employment. TItI gl"&#13;
the person a chance to be&lt;:om a&#13;
productIVe CIUzen and" as h&#13;
demon trated hiS Improv ment..&#13;
he .. ould be able to .arn Iu way&#13;
mto partial confinement and then&#13;
IOlo freedom."&#13;
Bailey's lecture hould prov&#13;
IOteresting nOl onJ)' for those&#13;
making law their career, but for&#13;
anyone concerned about )U tJc&#13;
10 America&#13;
ov mb r 8, 1972&#13;
•••••••••• **********************&#13;
R GER&#13;
STRAW POLL&#13;
RETUR S&#13;
P'R!SID!:Ir'!'1AL !U:C'!'1011'&#13;
(Xl"'" 10.... rucrlO&#13;
ItII'lJm,I CAl 130 lit DIS'MtlCT CO&#13;
RICUJID M. IUOI ltIilOO U&#13;
SPIPIO 'f. AGRW&#13;
260 IlDClCIW' 334 JlU&#13;
us ASPIJI&#13;
GIlOIlCE HCGOV!llI&#13;
R. SiJIID'I' SClDUVIft&#13;
IlZI'IIBLI CAJ 48&#13;
AllI:lUCAJ MEIll\ILL I. STAl.IAl.OIJOIlI&#13;
SClO&lt;tn&#13;
ftIC1L\S J, AJlDD901 NQ:IUCAI 3&#13;
0&#13;
ClWlLlI:S J, roR'l'QIl--&#13;
SOCIALIST I.UlII&#13;
LDfIS "CHat&#13;
GDJ:Y'IBn ClUmIJt901 S!'Aft stun&#13;
2 22M Dumucr&#13;
COO&lt;lJIIST USA&#13;
GUS IW.L Dl&gt;tOCIV.T 275 JARVIS 1'IDR&#13;
DOUC .... lAPOLUlTn--&#13;
SOCULIsr .........&#13;
RI:PUBLI CAlI 77&#13;
EVlLn RDD&#13;
CLIrrol DE8ER.Jtt GIORGI v. AllDDl&#13;
PEOPLZS 7&#13;
7&#13;
AKElUCAI&#13;
BElIJ AMI. J. S'POCK CIIES!'Dl 1lEJISLE't JULIus W. HOBSOI&#13;
******************************&#13;
\ ' ,·&#13;
\' \'''.' . \.\&#13;
F. Lee Bailey to speak here Friday&#13;
BY Jane Schliesman&#13;
"The Defense Never Rests" is&#13;
e title of a book by one of ~he th try's most famous trial coun B -1 rs F Lee a1 ey. lawye , · k ·ct Bailey . wi ·11 be at Par s1 e on . .&#13;
Fri 'd y ov 10 at 8 p.m. His will a , · ' . be the first lecture this semester&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. . Anthony Totero, c_oordmator_ of&#13;
t dent programming, explains&#13;
~ u t the Board decided on F. Lee&#13;
B \ey partly because it wanted&#13;
ttget off on the right foot by&#13;
ch()()l,ing a speaker of some&#13;
stature.&#13;
Bailey's reputation as a rebel&#13;
has evolved because of the nature&#13;
of the defense attorney's job -- to&#13;
fight the Establishment. T?is ~e&#13;
does admirably well, which 1s&#13;
why he was Capt. Ernest&#13;
Medina's choice as the lawyer to&#13;
defend him against the My Lai&#13;
massacre charges.&#13;
His stop here at Parkside will&#13;
be the first on his current lecture&#13;
tour but he has already&#13;
established himself as an interesting,&#13;
controlled speaker. His&#13;
appearances usually find him&#13;
speaking for 45 minutes f~llowed&#13;
by half an hour for questions.&#13;
Topics to be covered include his&#13;
experiences in some of his cases&#13;
(which include the Boston&#13;
Strangler, the Great Plymouth&#13;
Mail Robbery and the retrial of&#13;
Dr. Sam Sheppard), penal&#13;
reform and the plight of the&#13;
defendant, who is stigmatized&#13;
whether guilty or innocent as&#13;
soon as he is arrested. He will&#13;
also comment on the role of the&#13;
defense attorn y.&#13;
In connection with tht la t&#13;
topic, a section in hi boo attempts&#13;
to answer a que lion&#13;
frequently put to him by laymen:&#13;
"How can you defend a man ·ou&#13;
know is guilty?"&#13;
Replies Bailey, "Guilt, Ii e&#13;
most things, i scarce!} ever&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Barney Stanitis does his thing&#13;
Barney Slanitis has done his&#13;
thing again.&#13;
Barney is a job superintendent&#13;
for Camosy Construction Co. of&#13;
Kenosha, and his thing is getting&#13;
buildings up fast. His skill at&#13;
doing that has made him&#13;
something of a legend at UWParkside.&#13;
&#13;
His latest coup occurred this&#13;
week when the $4 .1 million&#13;
classroom building being constructed&#13;
at UW-P by Camosy was&#13;
"topped out" two months early.&#13;
That moved the building's&#13;
completion schedule from Aug. 20&#13;
to May 4.&#13;
Topping out, with the placing of&#13;
the traditional tree atop the&#13;
building, signifies that all the&#13;
major concrete pouring has been&#13;
completed and the frame of the&#13;
building is done.&#13;
With Slanitis on the job, the&#13;
early topping out surprised no&#13;
one. He had earned his UW-P&#13;
reputation as a fast man with a&#13;
building some three years ago&#13;
when, under his supervision,&#13;
Greenquist Hall, the school's first&#13;
laboratory classroom building,&#13;
miraculously opened in time for&#13;
the 1969 fall semester.&#13;
To accomplish that feat, the&#13;
tanitis-led Camosy crew worked&#13;
nine hours a day and Saturdays to&#13;
make up time lost to a concrete stirke. From ground level construction&#13;
to topping out was&#13;
accomplished in 15 months,&#13;
compared to a national average&#13;
or three years for such a building.&#13;
Barney, now 57, recalls those&#13;
day with mixed emotions.&#13;
" If I had to go through that&#13;
again, I'd resign," he said. "But&#13;
We just had to get it done.&#13;
" I remember I asked the&#13;
~iversity people if they had&#13;
hired professors to start teaching&#13;
in it in September. When they&#13;
said they had I told them, 'then&#13;
we'll get you a building&#13;
somehow'."&#13;
Stanitis, a Racine resident who&#13;
bas worn a Camosy hard hat for&#13;
eight years after 'l:l years with&#13;
Johnson-Henricksen Construction&#13;
of Racine, also guided&#13;
the other of UW-P's first two&#13;
buildings, Tallent Hall, to an&#13;
onschedule opening that fall..&#13;
More recently, he led the&#13;
Camosy team on the physical&#13;
education building which opened&#13;
comfortably within schedule this&#13;
fall after running several week&#13;
ahead most of the way.&#13;
, Barney taruti (rightl, job uperin- BARNEY'S B ILDI Gtr - t' n Co the general conlractor on the C sy Cons uc JO ., tendent for amo • h"ch b ·irung talk O\'er the project w 1&#13;
new UW-Parkside cla~r~t t u~tion~ tree with Gerry Knop (left),&#13;
bas been topped out with ~ ::onsin operations. and John Corle;. vice president of Camosy Camosy project manager.&#13;
dn a&#13;
R&#13;
TR&#13;
ol . I,&#13;
m&#13;
. 1&#13;
RET R&#13;
130&#13;
260&#13;
0&#13;
2 22D4&#13;
GUS BALL T&#13;
JARVIS 'l'fDI\&#13;
DOOC&#13;
SOCIALIST&#13;
RIPU'BLIC&#13;
rn:tn RUD&#13;
curro IDQRt&#13;
PEOPLES 7&#13;
AKI J. SPOCl(&#13;
JULIUS • HOBSO&#13;
r 2&#13;
• *&#13;
3&#13;
275&#13;
LA10&#13;
77&#13;
7&#13;
lZf&#13;
********************************&#13;
)&#13;
-&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER V:::l .• Nov. 8. 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
Photo by Cra4 Roberts THORN&#13;
Many people have voiced their displeasure with the&#13;
possibility of a mars" In our front yard. This editorial is&#13;
an attempt to sympathize with those who do not want the&#13;
marsh.&#13;
A pond. perhaps, or even a lake would be readily&#13;
accepted - but a marsh. with a very low level of&#13;
usefulness or beauty, seems rather dreary.&#13;
To use the pond as an ice rink in winter sounds excillng&#13;
That will be looked into by this editor. At the&#13;
same time Ranger will look, in depth, at what the marsh&#13;
wi 1l'&lt;l'lIlsn, how It witl look and how changes can be made&#13;
if they are desirable.&#13;
We hope someone can prove that a marsh would really&#13;
be virtuous. If that were to happen, another editorial&#13;
would be written syaing how wrong we were. We don't&#13;
believe this will be the case.&#13;
A campus of beautiful grass and the trees which were&#13;
so carefully worked around will be a drawing card for&#13;
students in the future and something for everyone at&#13;
Parkside and outlying communities to be proud of.&#13;
t.ets use our natura I lowland practically - as a pond&#13;
or small take. but not a marsh.&#13;
Now that this position has been stated, everyone has&#13;
his equal chance to defend or attack it. Tell everyone&#13;
what you think with a leiter to the editor.&#13;
Remember. no marsh is a good marsh.&#13;
_ IU The PartWde&#13;
~rr..RANGER&#13;
Tht Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
he a_ademic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisco'1sln.Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at 0·194 Library·Learning Center.&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
1he Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
O!:&gt;tnlonsexpressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin.Parkslde.&#13;
OITOR D WRITERS: Rudy Lienau, Geoff Blaesing. Kris Koch,&#13;
Kilhy Wellner, Ken Konltol. JealUline Sipsma, Shawn Clemer&gt;Is, Dale&#13;
Mlrun. Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.&#13;
PltOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
au INEIlS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERnlllNG MANAGER: Fred Lawrel&gt;Ce&#13;
ADVI90R: 0.0 Kopriva&#13;
,&#13;
.....-..aIHTID flCW. NATlONAl ADVonSJNG IY&#13;
NaDoaal EdlKltioaal Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
J'O Losi_ A... N ... yon, N. Y. 10011&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
We have it from a reliable source that the makeup&#13;
of the Lecture and Fine Arts Committ~ is being reevaluated.&#13;
It is about time. This commIttee spend~&#13;
more money (rom the - segregated fee than. a&#13;
tudent organizations combined, yet this commIttee&#13;
has only four students on it.&#13;
I; the four students on the committee vote i~ ~Iock,&#13;
they can still be overruled by a simple majority of&#13;
the eight appointed faculty.&#13;
tudents should control student money: It is abo~~&#13;
time students were consulted when It. co~es&#13;
allocating the segregated fee. Too much IS gomg for&#13;
"0 little.&#13;
The Bureau of Facilities Management In Madison is&#13;
responsible for the Inept landscaping program on&#13;
campus. if you think there may be a mmdless&#13;
beaurocral in charge of some of the developments,&#13;
remember they may not be as incompetent as they&#13;
seem Then again they could very well be.&#13;
We are paying F. Lee Bailey $2,000 for his appearance&#13;
here However. this is $500 less than his&#13;
normal asking fee. thanks to the efforts of someone&#13;
on campus who knows his agent, a former Kenosha&#13;
man.&#13;
Some of those plants which we paid so much money&#13;
for across from the bookstore are dying.&#13;
The basement of Greenquist is empty. It could be&#13;
lined with student lockers.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
The following members were&#13;
present: Tom Haack, President;&#13;
Joe Harris. Vice-President ;&#13;
James Rea, Treasurer Terri&#13;
Appleget, Corresponding&#13;
ecretary; Jim Bielefeldt,&#13;
Recording Secretary; and Peggy&#13;
Hansen, Mark Harris, Tom&#13;
Jennett. Rich Kienitz, Ken&#13;
Konkol. Neil Lawton. Ernest&#13;
Llanas. Eric Moore, Jan Petzke,&#13;
Rick Ponzio. Thomas Weiss,&#13;
Michael Wickware and Gerard&#13;
Wielgat. Senators.&#13;
The following members were&#13;
absent: Rosanne Darrey (excused).&#13;
Debra Roberts, Jeannine&#13;
ipsma. Laurie Thompsen&#13;
(excused I. Motion: It is proposed&#13;
that Student Government co-&#13;
"1 ......&#13;
If a TV lounge was installed in D-I73, we could keep&#13;
the card players out of the food service area during&#13;
the lunch hour, and most of the rest of the time,~.&#13;
People have been industriously laying sod the past&#13;
couple of weeks, at one hell.of an expense. It may be&#13;
too late in the seaso": for t~s to take hold. Last time&#13;
sod was laid so late It all died. Grass seed is much&#13;
cheaper.&#13;
Why can't a path of grav~l be laid across that&#13;
muddy patch of ground leading to Greenquistl Th.&#13;
money saved on cleaning up the mud alone would be&#13;
worth it.&#13;
You all remember the great McGovern. Nixon&#13;
cutdown scheduled for last issue? It didn't haPPen&#13;
Not one single s?litary stu~ent. Democrat ~&#13;
Republican, submitted anythmg for pubhcation&#13;
Even after being reminded to do so in three COn~&#13;
secutive issues of this paper.&#13;
That Kenneth R. Konkvol who was listed On thl'&#13;
front page of the last Issue as receiving the 100 I&#13;
votes in the Senate election is realty this very sam"&#13;
writer. No, Idid not use an assumed name this s&#13;
merely a typographical error.&#13;
Quite a lot of typographical errors have been cc&#13;
curring in recent issues due to the fact that we&#13;
not have sufficient people on the staff to lhoroughh'&#13;
proofread all articles before our prmting deadhn~&#13;
We could use your help&#13;
The staff gets together every Monday night In ill.&#13;
office to layout the paper. If you are interested In&#13;
helping, stop on by.&#13;
We also need ad solicitors. Stop in and see how It I&#13;
done. Remember, only three pages of ads and we go&#13;
to twelve pages.&#13;
Minutes of&#13;
Novem ber 1, 1972&#13;
sponsor the Alcoholism and Drug&#13;
Abuse Council at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Vote: Unanimous.&#13;
The following students were&#13;
appointed chairmen of committees:&#13;
Mark Harris, Constitution&#13;
Amendment Committee;&#13;
Tom Weiss, Student&#13;
Union Committee; Eric Cushman&#13;
Moore, Interview Committee;&#13;
Tom Jennett, Grievances and&#13;
Clearing House; and Ken Konkol,&#13;
Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
These appointments were&#13;
unanimously approved by the&#13;
Senate.&#13;
The following student was&#13;
appointed Acting Chairman:&#13;
Tom Weiss, Student Court&#13;
Committee. Approved&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
We get letters •.•&#13;
Letters to the Editors are encouraged. We ask that&#13;
tney be confined to 250 words or less and that they be.&#13;
typed and double-spaced. All must be signed and include&#13;
address and phone number and student status (senior,&#13;
[uruor, sophomore, treshrna»: or faculty rank. Names&#13;
~ill be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the&#13;
right to refuse to ori'lt any letters.&#13;
~&#13;
I&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In your column THORN of Oct.&#13;
25, Ken Konkol calls allention to&#13;
the static electricity in the&#13;
Library carpeting. The LLC&#13;
building is a complicated&#13;
m~h.anis~. Like other large&#13;
bUIldIngs, It will require several&#13;
mont~s for shakedown, and&#13;
continued watchfulness&#13;
thereafter. With the coming of&#13;
cold weather and extra heat in&#13;
the system, humidity controls are&#13;
now being put into winter&#13;
'operation for the first time. When&#13;
these are adjusted, the static&#13;
electricity should be much&#13;
dim_inished.&#13;
I~ the problem continues.&#13;
serIOus. we may be able to reduce&#13;
it ~Y periodic spraying. NonstatIc&#13;
carpeting is more expensive;&#13;
and in the LLC budget&#13;
we were lucky in the end to get&#13;
carpeting at all. Although nonstatic&#13;
carpeting is sometimes&#13;
alm~st essential (for example, in&#13;
hospital operating rooms and&#13;
~ome computer and industrial&#13;
Ins~allations), it may well be&#13;
omitted where the snapping is no&#13;
more than a mild nuisance. Until&#13;
Ihe humidity reduces the&#13;
problem to the non-nuisance&#13;
level, Library users may wish to&#13;
a~proach the metal book shelving&#13;
.With caution - sleeve first.&#13;
Philip M. Burnett·&#13;
Library&#13;
A Student Government Rap&#13;
Sheet was discussed. Further&#13;
action is responsibility of Public&#13;
Information Committee.&#13;
Treasurer-s Heport&#13;
Student Govt. Acct $18-1&#13;
Fund 128 Temp. Allow. 31586&#13;
Total Funds A vail. 1300.•&#13;
Motion: It was moved that&#13;
Student Government attempt 10&#13;
reclaim control of budgeting fer&#13;
Fund 128. Vote: In Favor· II&#13;
Opposed - I. Abstained - 2.&#13;
The resignation of Sue Murph~&#13;
from the Student union COO'·&#13;
mittee was accepted by&#13;
Senate. Meeting adjourned&#13;
To the Editor.&#13;
Saturday night, Oct. 28, pro\~&#13;
to be either the best or sece&#13;
best dance of the year. I wasat&#13;
the first dance of the year. a~&#13;
"Black Society" was fantastIC&#13;
"White Cross" played Saturda~&#13;
night and though their style rJ&#13;
music was different to that&#13;
Black Society. I thoughl iJl'l&#13;
were equally as well&#13;
One thing I have noticed&#13;
clubs put on dances to ~ak~~ap&#13;
of money. and in turn hlr~e tht"!f&#13;
or just o.k. bands to rnak ~&#13;
profits rise. Not so oct: 28.IY&#13;
club that put on the Th,n~~,dt&lt;l&#13;
Dance went all out and p -de: I&#13;
a great service to Parksl&#13;
bOlJl&#13;
saw signs all over the place atJ'I3l&#13;
a band coming from I:;, '(b.&#13;
was supposedly very gd ill' I·&#13;
signs were correct an nrtJ1&#13;
ten dance that night wasthuBI~&#13;
The place was paCked&#13;
C&#13;
"~hageytl&#13;
Sweat and Tears at ar ·ouS sur&#13;
n ob\'1 The dance was a ha\~ng I&#13;
cess with everyone ...&#13;
fantastic time., writing tbP&#13;
The reason I m h pe otb"&#13;
letter is because I dances C .&#13;
clubs that sponsor I: stud&lt;"&#13;
produce a servlC~ ing grt,l&#13;
weekends by brinJ notal"!&#13;
bands to Parkside an ney_JJlskl&#13;
thinking of the rno&#13;
part. TornJ""&#13;
. . ,. . . ... . . 2 THE PARKSIDE RA GE R V.'::j., ov. 8, 1972&#13;
DITOR ALS/OPI&#13;
Photo by Cra Rob rt.s&#13;
Par de R nger is published weekly throughout&#13;
m c year by the students of The University of&#13;
n-Par s de, enosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
c s r located at 0.19, Library-Learning Center,&#13;
phone (, c) 553 2295.&#13;
Par side Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opin oos expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
n c rlly the official view of the University of&#13;
1 consin-Parkside.&#13;
\\ RI : Rudy Llenau, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch,&#13;
Ko ol, JeaMme Jpsma, hawn Clemer,ts, Dale&#13;
arilyn Schubert, Dave Reyher.&#13;
: Pat owak, Craig Roberts&#13;
AGER: Ken P Uta&#13;
n I G A GER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
R: Ooo Kopriva&#13;
,Uft. POI. NATIONAL ADVEaTISJNG BY -~&#13;
auoa.al Eduatioaal Advertising Services, Inc. Q&#13;
1'° Lui A" .. Ncw Yon. N. Y. 10017&#13;
'I I ".&#13;
IONS&#13;
THORN If a TV lounge was installed in D-173, we could k&#13;
the card players out of the food service area duri~&#13;
the lunch hour, and most of the rest of the time, loo.&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
We ha,·e it from a reliable source tt_iat ~e m~keu!&#13;
or the Lecture and Fine Art Committ~ is being r&#13;
evaluated. It i about time This committee spend~&#13;
more monev from the segregated fee than_ a&#13;
tudent or a·nizations combined, yet this committee&#13;
ha only four tudents on it.&#13;
People have been industriously laying sod the pa l&#13;
couple of weeks, at one hell _of an expense. lt may be&#13;
too late in ~he season_ for thi:s to take hold. Last time&#13;
sod was laid so late 1t all died. Grass seed is much&#13;
cheaper.&#13;
Why can't a path of gravel be laid acros that&#13;
muddy patch of ground leading to Greenqu1 t? Th&#13;
money saved on cleaning up the mud alone would&#13;
worth it.&#13;
tr the four tudents on the committee vote i~ ~Jockf&#13;
th , can till be overruled b a imple ma1onty 0 You all remember the great McGovern . , ixon&#13;
cutdown scheduled for last issue? It didn't hat&gt;Pt th 1ght appointed faculty.&#13;
nt ·hould c ntrol tudent money. It is about&#13;
. ire tud nts were consulted when it_ co~es to&#13;
11 atin the· gregated fee. Too much 1s going for&#13;
ot one single s?litary stu?ent, Democrat ;&#13;
Republican, submitted anything for pubhcat,on&#13;
Even after being re'!1inded to do so in thr COIi·&#13;
secutive issues of this paper.&#13;
htU • That Kenneth R. Konkvol who wa · It ted on th&#13;
front page of the last issue as rec 1vmg the in&#13;
votes m the enate election is really thi \ •r&#13;
writer. o, I did not use an assumed name thr&#13;
merely a typographical error.&#13;
Quite a lot of typographical error have h n&#13;
curring in recent is ues due to th tact that w&#13;
not have sufficient people on the staff to th rou ,&#13;
proofread all articles before our printing d d&#13;
We could use your help&#13;
some o th plant which we paid o much money&#13;
fo acr · from th bookstore are d ing&#13;
The staff gets together every Monday night in&#13;
office to Jay out the paper. If you are int re t Ill&#13;
helping, stop on by.&#13;
The b m n of Greenqui t is empty. It could be&#13;
lined with tudent lockers.&#13;
We also need ad solicitors. Stop m and e hO\\ rt&#13;
done . Remember, only three pages of ad and we&#13;
to twelve pages.&#13;
PSGA Minutes of&#13;
November 1, 1972&#13;
The follo,~ing members were&#13;
pre nt: Tom Haack, President;&#13;
Jo Harri • \'ice-Pre ident;&#13;
Jam · Rea. Trea urer Terri&#13;
\ pl et, Corre ponding&#13;
ecretary. Jim Bielefeldt,&#13;
R orciing cretar ; and Peggy&#13;
Han en • Yark Harri·. Tom&#13;
Jennett. Rich Kienitz, Ken&#13;
Konkol. . ·en Lawton, Ernest&#13;
Liana. , Eric loore, Jan Petzke,&#13;
Hick Ponzio, Thoma Weis ,&#13;
lichael \ 1ck\\ar and Gerard&#13;
Wielgat. nat r.&#13;
Th follov. in member were&#13;
ab nt: Rosanne Darre · t excu&#13;
ed), Debra Roberts. Jeannine&#13;
. 1p ma, Laurie Thompsen&#13;
&lt;e. cu edl. ~loLJon : It is proposed&#13;
that tudent Government coponsor&#13;
the Alcoholism and Drug&#13;
Abuse Council at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Vote: nanimous.&#13;
The following students were&#13;
appointed chairmen of committees:&#13;
Mark Harris, Conti&#13;
tu ti on Amendment Committee;&#13;
Tom Weiss, Student&#13;
nion Committee; Eric Cushman&#13;
Moore, Interview Committee;&#13;
Tom Jennett, Grievances and&#13;
Clearing House ; and Ken Konkol,&#13;
Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
The e appointments were&#13;
unanimously approved by the&#13;
nate&#13;
The following student was&#13;
appointed Acting Chairman:&#13;
Tom Weiss. Student Court&#13;
Committee . Approved&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
We get letters ...&#13;
Letters to the Editors are encouraged. We ask that&#13;
tney be confined to 250 words or less and that they be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. All must be signed and include&#13;
~dd_ress and phone number and student status (senior,&#13;
1u_n,or, so_phomore, freshma,,) or faculty rank. Names&#13;
"".ill be withheld upon r£:quest. The editors reserve the&#13;
right to refuse to pri11t any letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
ln your column THOR of Oct.&#13;
25, Ken Konkol call attention to&#13;
the tatic electricity in the&#13;
Library carpeting. The LLC&#13;
building i a complicated&#13;
m~h_ani ~- ~ike other large&#13;
building , 1t will require several&#13;
month for shakedown and&#13;
continued watchfulness&#13;
thereafter. With the coming of&#13;
cold weather and extra heat in&#13;
the Y tern, humidity controls are&#13;
now being put into winter&#13;
operation for the first time. When&#13;
these are adjusted, the static&#13;
electricity hould be much&#13;
diminished.&#13;
I{ the problem continue&amp;&#13;
eriou . we may be able to reduce&#13;
it ~y periodic spraying. Nonstatic&#13;
carpeting is more expensive;&#13;
and in the LLC budget&#13;
we were lucky in the end to get&#13;
carpeting at all. Although nonstatic&#13;
carpeting is sometimes&#13;
alm~st essential &lt;for example, in&#13;
hospital operating rooms and&#13;
~ome computer and industrial&#13;
ms~allationsl, it may well be&#13;
omitted where the snapping is no&#13;
more than a mild nuisance. Until&#13;
the humidity reduces t he&#13;
problem to the non-nuisance&#13;
level, Library users may wish to&#13;
a~proach the metal book shelving&#13;
. with caution - sleeve first.&#13;
Philip M. Burnett·&#13;
Libr ary&#13;
A Student Government R&#13;
Sheet was discussed. Furth&#13;
action is responsibility of Pub!&#13;
Information Committee.&#13;
Treasurt&gt;r's Rt&gt;port&#13;
Student Govt. Acct $184 8.1&#13;
Fund 128 Temp. AIIO\\ 315&#13;
Total Funds Avail. S~ .&#13;
MoJ.ion: It wa moved t al&#13;
Student Government attempt&#13;
reclaim control of budgetin f&#13;
Fund 128. Vote · In Favor · 11&#13;
Opposed . 1. Ab tain '2.&#13;
The resignation of ue Mu&#13;
from the Student L mon&#13;
mittee was accepted by&#13;
Senate. Meeting ad1ourned&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
Saturday night, Oct 28, proi&#13;
to be either the best or ·&#13;
best dance of the year I wa 1&#13;
the first dance of the year. a&#13;
" Black Society" was fantill it&#13;
"White Cross" played · tu&#13;
night and th~ugh therr ti' ~ music was different to lha&#13;
Black Society , I thought&#13;
were equally as well . One thing I have noticed&#13;
clubs put on dances to make a lot&#13;
of money, and in turn hrre r&#13;
or just o.k . bands to mak; 'fbt&#13;
profits rise. ot so Oct&#13;
club that put on the Thrnk • d&#13;
Dance went all out and pro~, 1 a great service to Parks•&#13;
saw signs all over the pla~ ·'&#13;
a band coming from 1:;&#13;
was supposedly very gd th at&#13;
signs were correct an&#13;
tendance that nrght 1&#13;
~~,t:~I&#13;
The place was packed thJ~ 1&#13;
Sweat and Tears at Car . · b\10\l· The dance was an o ha11n ' cess with everyone&#13;
fantastic time. ·ung&#13;
The reason I'm wrr ·&#13;
letter is because I ho:es c&#13;
clubs that sponsor da t··1 · to II''&#13;
produce a service ing gr'&#13;
weekends by bring not al&#13;
bands to Parkside andnefl11·&#13;
thinking of the mo&#13;
part. &#13;
The Raven&#13;
Around 1967 a fad was introduced for rock music Thi f&#13;
' "St ' d . IS ad Was psychedelic mUSIC. range, ~elr ,experimental and creative"&#13;
the comments generally made In reference to these ne dl . we~e&#13;
w tmensions In&#13;
sounds.&#13;
The fads for rock in 1971 were in themselves quits Il'm'ted a&#13;
lk . . I . De was tobe a solo fa singer. accompanymg one's self on an ac ti ,&#13;
t I ic Jncl di ous ICguitar- The other was me a mUSIC me u mg one electric g itar-i ' , d d . 1lI arrst one&#13;
bassist one rummer, an one vocalist. The first af :&#13;
, h I li ht ib orementioned&#13;
style thought t ~t on y Ig II VIh~S}.ad asthetic qualities, The latter&#13;
assumedeveryt mg w~s ~l -r~ t ~hIt ~e~e hard and loud. Certainly&#13;
both types are 3&#13;
l&#13;
Ppr&#13;
d&#13;
ecla e, th~ e limits these styles impose on&#13;
themselves may ea one to mk that as for experimenting' k&#13;
this is The End! In roc&#13;
Ofcourse no,t. Some bands still experiment. At this time I will brio&#13;
to your attention a few lesser known records. g&#13;
The "elecftric&#13;
t&#13;
Lidght arches dirt"''' b]Ythe same name has a Beatleish&#13;
sound. The Irs Sl e 1S a. goo . rrp, eavmg you with a sense of 16th or&#13;
17th century tmaTdnhetss'dhke w&#13;
t&#13;
ItCh],-bhurning or something, The second&#13;
side bums ou. a SI e IS 00 ig t, too consistent, and contains no&#13;
vocals.&#13;
"In Se~rch ~f S~ace" by ~awkwind deserves a blue ribbon. Traces&#13;
of Satanic Majesties, N~torIOus Byrds, and many other albums from&#13;
that era can be felt. ThIS band makes splendid use of electronics in&#13;
their synthesiser. In sho.rt, "In Search of Space" is a must for space&#13;
children or anyone who likes to move his mind with music.&#13;
Bo.th sides are really far out and .side two comes ahead creatively,&#13;
and IS,~ore perfectly balance~. SIde two starts out with a moving&#13;
theme Iam the center of the universe, and everything moves relative&#13;
to.me." The beginning of "Adjust Me" builds up to a spine tingling&#13;
climax.&#13;
Jefferson Airplane is back with what is probably their best product&#13;
to date. J.A. took ideas from their previous LP's such as Baxters&#13;
Volunteers, and Bark. T~e end re.sult however is something entirely&#13;
new. Indeed Jefferson AIrplane still possesses the kind of magic that&#13;
makes me grow fonder of them upon repeated listening.&#13;
The song writing on "Long John Silver" is magnificent. Vocal&#13;
harmonies and exchanges are included frequently, And I'd surely put&#13;
Jorma up against the most competitive of axe-men.&#13;
J.A. may be perfect in the musical sense, but you can't always take&#13;
their lyrics too seriously. If you do you should be put "up against the&#13;
wall yourself mother ---." "Eat Starch Mom" demonstrates absurd&#13;
lyrics plainly. The Plane must have received a payoff from a&#13;
processed convenience food company.&#13;
Title song "Long John Silver" takes swift and drives hard. &lt;lAirie"&#13;
is prett) "Twilight Double Leader" has shades of Pooniel in the&#13;
middle. The beginning of .•Alexandra" may strike one as being corny,&#13;
but It developes into dynamite with a guitar solo that feels like water.&#13;
The ending leaves you absolutely breathless with Grace's wailings.&#13;
"Eat Starch Mom" is'a bouncy hard rocker.&#13;
The previously discussed discs should provide other wings for your&#13;
mind to fly by&#13;
Free music program&#13;
tonight at Kenosha&#13;
Kenosha; and Susan Lasco,&#13;
saxophone, Salem.&#13;
Ensemble numbers will include&#13;
a flute trio by Miss Truax, Lenee&#13;
Stevens, Elkhorn, and Paula&#13;
Novack, Kenosha; a guitar trio&#13;
by Kurt Harfr, Kenosha, Floyd&#13;
Hanson, Kenosha, and Gary&#13;
Walk, Racine; and a percussion&#13;
ensemble including Robert&#13;
Hansen, Kenosha, David Walley,&#13;
Racine, Brian Ford, Kenosha,&#13;
and Curtis Petri, Kenosha.&#13;
Accompanists will include&#13;
Kathy Devine, Union Grove,&#13;
Susan Kloet, Kenosha, Sluart&#13;
Melius, Racine, Jean Tashoff,&#13;
Racine, and Fred Wenger,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Vocal and instrumental music&#13;
students at The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will present&#13;
a free public program at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Wednesday, Nov. 8, in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room.&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Karla&#13;
Bielewicz, mezzo-soprano,&#13;
Kenosha; David Johnston, tenor,&#13;
Kenosha; Lynn Cross, contralto,&#13;
Kenosha; and Judith Lanning,&#13;
Soprano, Racine.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will be&#13;
Jill Reich piano Racine'&#13;
Deborah 'Perron~, piano:&#13;
Kenosha; Phillip Ince, violoncello.&#13;
Racine; Linda Truax, flute,&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
CONTINUOUSENTERTAINMENT&#13;
7P.M. TIL?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
lake Ave., Racine 637-8467 Dancers vYanted&#13;
Wed.• Nov. 8. 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
.. , '"&#13;
'The Case of the Disappearing Plants'&#13;
This week Ranger brings its&#13;
readers a real bcnest-to-goodness&#13;
whod~nit to solve - "The Case of&#13;
the DIsappearing Plants." Here&#13;
are the facts for you Sherlock&#13;
Holmes types:&#13;
E.ugene Gasiorkiewicl.&#13;
chaIrman of the Science Division.&#13;
Robert Esser. associate&#13;
professor of life science, and two&#13;
students spent hours pnor to&#13;
C?pen House arranging the horticultural&#13;
display along the&#13;
library's glass west wall. Some of&#13;
Esser's blood was shed in this&#13;
endeavor, as he cut himself on a&#13;
cactus.&#13;
The planter contains more than&#13;
fifty kinds of plants, some of&#13;
them donated by students and&#13;
faculty members. It IS designed&#13;
to serve an educational as well as&#13;
an aesthetic Function. The plants&#13;
range from desert natives on the&#13;
north end (where the light mtensity&#13;
is greatest) to specimens&#13;
from the northern temperate&#13;
zone to tropical ram forest plants&#13;
on the south end, Tbev will&#13;
eventually all be labeled f~r easy&#13;
identification. .&#13;
Sometime between 7 a.m and&#13;
midnight (this time span was&#13;
deduced by Secunty and can be&#13;
regarded as accurate) on a day in&#13;
mid-October, a number of these&#13;
plants disappeared. Among the&#13;
missing specimens is a valuable&#13;
cactus. 38 years of age. donated&#13;
to the University by Esser. It wa&#13;
the only cactus flowering there at&#13;
the lime. which is 10 Itself a&#13;
unique characteristic of the&#13;
missing plant. It was also one of&#13;
the oldest plants 10 the di play,&#13;
The girl in the picture I Terry&#13;
Richards of Kenosha 1 holding&#13;
the missing cactus. This photo&#13;
was taken before the plants&#13;
disappeared. and .\Is. Richards I&#13;
beyond suspicion. The picture is&#13;
provided only to aid you In&#13;
identifying the cactus.&#13;
Your mission. then, should you&#13;
decide to accept it. is to find the&#13;
missing plants. They are believed&#13;
stolen. but the perpetrators of&#13;
uus evil deed will not be&#13;
prosecuted In fact. should this&#13;
fall into their hands. Ranger has&#13;
a message for them - If your&#13;
thumbs aren't as green a you&#13;
though! and vou'd like to unload&#13;
the 'tun bn'ug It to the Rang er&#13;
office LLC 0-19-1) and 1t will get&#13;
(0 Gasrorjoewrca .'0 questions&#13;
a ked&#13;
As a result of this dISaPpearance&#13;
and the loss of other&#13;
\"3nou and undry th1l1gs from&#13;
LLC's stock of rurmshlngs.&#13;
Security has deCided to have a&#13;
man palrolling the halls at all&#13;
tImes 11l1s eem a. ad state of&#13;
affaIrs. but apparently a&#13;
necessary tep to help clear up&#13;
thl. roysters&#13;
LPt u~ not berome too paranoid&#13;
at lhe Il'tht of man In umform,&#13;
unlE'SS we really havp ~methmg&#13;
to feel l(Ullty about&#13;
ONE SWEET DREAM&#13;
5010 7JAVE.&#13;
KE OSHA&#13;
U FIRST NATIOIIAL&#13;
Of RACIIIE&#13;
.110 mini •••&#13;
balance reqlired&#13;
• 110 limit to the&#13;
nu.ber of checks&#13;
yOl write&#13;
AT FIRST IIATlOIIAL&#13;
OF RACIIIE&#13;
AT fiRST NAT101lAl&#13;
Of RACIIIE&#13;
Open ym free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
-.--._- -_._-&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
The Raven&#13;
Around 1967 a fad was introduced for rock music Th. f · "St · d · is ad was psychedelic music. !!ranged, ~eir r' experimental and creative" were&#13;
the comments genera Y ma em re erence to these new ct· . . 1mens1onsm sounds.&#13;
The fads for rock in 1971 were in themselves quite lim·ted Jk · · 1 0 · ne was to be a solo fo smgetr '1 acco1!1p~nylmdg. one's self on an acoustic guitar&#13;
The other was me a music me u mg one electric g ·t . t · dr d . u1 ans ' one bassist, one ummer, ~n o~e vocahst. The first aforementioned&#13;
style thought ththat only hghllt ~1bhets.fh_ad asthetic qualities. The latter&#13;
assumed e\ery mg was a -ng I it were hard and loud C ta·n1&#13;
both types are appreciable, but the limits these styles ·. er&#13;
1 Y&#13;
I d th. impose on themselves may e~ one to mk that as for experimenting in rock&#13;
this is --- The End.&#13;
Of course no.t. Some bands still experiment. At this time I will brin&#13;
to your attent10n a few lesser known records. g&#13;
The "electric Light Orchestra" by the same name has a Be ti · h&#13;
f&#13;
. t . d . d t . l . a e1s sound. The Jrs s1 e 1s a. goo . rip, ea~mg you with a sense of lGth or&#13;
17th century madness. hk~ w1tc~-burmng or something. The second&#13;
side bums out. That side 1s too hght, too consistent, and contains no&#13;
vocals.&#13;
"In Search ~f S~ace" by ~awkwind deserves a blue ribbon. Traces&#13;
of Satanic MaJesties, N~tonous Byrds, and many other albums from&#13;
that era can be felt. This band makes splendid use of electronics in&#13;
their synthesiser. In sho.rt, "In Search of Space" is a must for space&#13;
children or anyone who likes to move his mind with music.&#13;
Both sides are really far out and side two comes ahead creatively&#13;
and is .~ore perfectly balance~. Side two starts out with a moving&#13;
theme I am the center of the um verse, and everything moves relative&#13;
to me." The beginning of "Adjust Me" builds up to a spine tingling&#13;
climax.&#13;
Jefferson Airplane is back with what is probably their best product&#13;
to date. J.A. took ideas from their previous LP's such as Baxters&#13;
Volunteers, and Bark. The end result however is something entirely&#13;
new. Indeed Jefferson Airplane still possesses the kind of magic that&#13;
makes me grow fonder of them upon repeated listening.&#13;
The song writing on "Long John Silver" is magnificent. Vocal&#13;
harmonies and exchanges are included frequently. And I'd surely put&#13;
Jorma up against the most competitive of axe-men.&#13;
J.A. may be perfect in the musical sense, but you can't always take&#13;
their lyncs too seriously. If you do you should be put "up against the&#13;
wall yourself mother----." "Eat Starch Mom" demonstrates absurd&#13;
lyrics plainly. The Plane must have received a payoff from a&#13;
processed convenience food company.&#13;
Title song "Long John Silver" takes swift and drives hard. "Airie"&#13;
is prett) .. Twilight Double Leader" has shades of Pooniel in the&#13;
middle. The beginning of ·'Alexandra'' may strike one as being corny,&#13;
but 1t developes into dynamite with a guitar solo that feels like water.&#13;
The endmg leaves you absolutely breathless with Grace's wailings.&#13;
"Eat Starch Mom" is a bouncy hard rocker.&#13;
The previously discussed discs should provide other wings for your&#13;
mind to fl:&gt; b)&#13;
Free music program&#13;
tonight at Kenosha , Kenosha; and Susan Lasco, \local and instrume~tal ~usic saxophone, Salem.&#13;
, t~dents at The Umvers1ty of Ensemble numbers will include&#13;
W1sconsin-~arkside will present a flute trio by Miss Truax, Lenee&#13;
a free pubhc program at ~ p.m. Stevens, Elkhorn, and Paula&#13;
on Wednesday, Nov. 8, m the Novack Kenosha· a guitar trio&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts by Kurt Harff, Kenosha , Floyd&#13;
Room. . . Hanson, Kenosha, and Gary _Yocal . soloists will be Karla Wolk, Racine; and a percussion&#13;
B1elew1cz, mezzo-soprano, ensemble including Robert&#13;
Kenosha; David Johnston, tenor, Hansen, Kenosha , David Walle ,&#13;
Kenosha; Lynn Cross, contralto, Racine Brian Ford, Kenosha,&#13;
Kenosha; and Judith Lanning, and c~tis Petri, Kenosha .&#13;
soprano, Racine. . . Accompanists will include .Instrumental soloists will be Kathy Devine, Union Grove, Jill Reich, piano, Racine ; Susan Kloet, Kenosha, Stuart&#13;
Deborah Perrone, piano, Melius Racine, Jean Tashoff, Kenosha; Phillip Ince, violon- Racin~ and Fred Wenger,&#13;
cello, Racine; Linda Truax, flute, Kenosh~.&#13;
25 Gorgeous Dancing Girls&#13;
(appearing on our stage weekly)&#13;
CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
7P.M. TIL?&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Ni2ht&#13;
THE ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Lake Ave., Racine 637-8467 Dancers YVanted&#13;
'The Case of th&#13;
KE&#13;
Wed. , Nov. 8, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Di app • ar1n I t&#13;
• min, 1&#13;
•&#13;
ala ce req1ir d&#13;
rite&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
ee&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
AT FIRST NATIO AL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open yo r free checki g&#13;
account soo at &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Noy. 8, 1972&#13;
Community the lab in new class&#13;
The community is the&#13;
laboratory for students in a new&#13;
class called "The City" being&#13;
offered for the [irst time this&#13;
semester at The University of&#13;
W rsccnstn-Perkstoe.&#13;
The course is interdisciplinary&#13;
.. students may enroll for credit&#13;
In either English or political&#13;
science .. and claims as its&#13;
subject matter the whole range of&#13;
urban experience, from the&#13;
.•ghts and sounds 01 the city to its&#13;
delivery system for social serVICes&#13;
Classroom work is combined&#13;
"Ilh individual and group student&#13;
research projects in community&#13;
"laboratories" which range Crom&#13;
inner city streets to hospital&#13;
room to police squad cars.&#13;
Laboratory equipment includes&#13;
camera and tape recorders, but&#13;
most importantly, lhe students'&#13;
eyes and ears.&#13;
The Idea for the course&#13;
or igmated with the two&#13;
professors who are teaching it&#13;
JOJnUy: art Lindner of the&#13;
Englt h faculty and Wiltiam&#13;
Murin of the political science&#13;
laculty. Both are big city&#13;
products. Lindner has lived most&#13;
01 hiS liIe In New York City and&#13;
Murin also is from the east.&#13;
They have designed lhe course&#13;
to Interpret. through their own&#13;
academic tlelds , Parkside's&#13;
special educational mission of&#13;
relating to the urban industrial&#13;
society which it serves in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The&#13;
course is one of nine which focus&#13;
on urba n problems this semester&#13;
10 w-P's liberal arts-oriented&#13;
hool of cience and Society.&#13;
"Most of OUf students come&#13;
from urban backgrounds"&#13;
Lindner said. "But they may n'ot&#13;
have really become aware or the&#13;
~Ity ar&lt;4irlP them; 01 "'filit&#13;
happens outside their own neighborhoods.&#13;
The interdisciplinary&#13;
nature 01 lhe class helps point out&#13;
urban lnter-relat icnshtps. Bill&#13;
(Mur-in) and I are learning, too.&#13;
He's becoming more of a&#13;
humanist and I'm becoming&#13;
more of a soclologlst."&#13;
The classroom portion of the&#13;
course employs a variety of&#13;
readings Irom urban poetry to&#13;
sociological studies, fiJms and&#13;
te tapes to explore such&#13;
topics as the city as a sense of&#13;
place. growing up in the city,&#13;
people in the city, art and envtronment.&#13;
life in the streets, and&#13;
urban cri es and problems.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
MocIefn w .. lnul baby (rIb oIndmol"r.",.&#13;
II'. e..lIllJ-ll.d ..ys. 4341215 .~.nings.&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
To dD odd tobs ,"vol~ing minor&#13;
l'MI4IHhokl ,.,.lr-s ~, two·'oImily 1I00t.&#13;
e.1I »l-11. dolYS. 634-4115 n.nlngs.&#13;
TO IGHT!&#13;
Wed., ov.8&#13;
Screen Classics&#13;
leaturi"'O&#13;
incent Price&#13;
Peter Lorre&#13;
Boris Karloff&#13;
Adm. 50'&#13;
1:30 Cr. II. room 103 dm.&#13;
Students have chosen an&#13;
equally broad range 01 subjects&#13;
for their individual and group&#13;
projects.&#13;
A sampling 01 group projects&#13;
includes a study of Racine's new&#13;
alternative high school which&#13;
aims at turning on students&#13;
turned off by traditional studies;&#13;
analysis of effectiveness of&#13;
street-level community action&#13;
groups in Racine and Kenosha;&#13;
exploration of the effects of urbanization&#13;
on organized religion;&#13;
and a survey of several specific&#13;
kinds of crime including child&#13;
abuse in Kenosha.&#13;
Individual projects include a&#13;
study of juvenile delinquency in&#13;
Racine; collages meant to express&#13;
how various persons view&#13;
urban life; a slide series shot on&#13;
Racine streets to illustrate urban&#13;
poetry; a study 01 the decline 01&#13;
downtown areas and related&#13;
attempts to preserve urban&#13;
landmarks; analysis of the effect&#13;
01 drugs in a black neighborhood&#13;
in Milwaukee; studies of mental&#13;
health facilities in Kenosha and&#13;
of the history of the Racine Police&#13;
Department's Community&#13;
Relations unit; a photo essay set&#13;
in Kenosha on signs and their&#13;
functions in urban life; and a&#13;
slide series of Chicago cityscapes&#13;
sel to original musical interpretations.&#13;
The city also is the subject of&#13;
three sections of the American&#13;
Language course which Parkside&#13;
offers in place of the traditional&#13;
Freshman English. One section is&#13;
also titled "The City" and two&#13;
others are on "Language and the&#13;
Industrial Society." Related&#13;
sections of the course deal with&#13;
"Past and Future Shock,"&#13;
"Environmental Pollution,"&#13;
"Women's Liberation and&#13;
Literature" and "Poetry, F'iction,&#13;
Drama: Antidote to the&#13;
Boredom of an Industrial&#13;
Society."&#13;
The innovative language&#13;
program has been a part of&#13;
Parks ide's curriculum since the&#13;
new university opened in 1969 and&#13;
is designed to teach written and&#13;
spoken communications skills in&#13;
the framework of contemporary&#13;
issues. Students can choose this&#13;
semester from 15 different topics.&#13;
Urban-related courses being&#13;
offered this semester in other&#13;
disciplines in the College 01&#13;
Science and Society include a&#13;
history course, "Emergence of&#13;
Metropolitan America," and a&#13;
sociology course, "Urbanism and&#13;
Urbanization."&#13;
Romerez, Chapson explore&#13;
life in poetry&#13;
The Poetry Forum last&#13;
Thursday presented two poets,&#13;
Daniel Romerez and James&#13;
Chapson, and their readings.&#13;
Romerez recited his poetry&#13;
with deep emotional conviction.&#13;
His heavy voice created romantic&#13;
illusion but was not overly sentimental.;&#13;
Time elapsed between&#13;
lines ana each idea was contemplated.&#13;
Romerez's bilingual&#13;
attempts 01 Spanish and English&#13;
proved that his "transcendental&#13;
barrier of language through&#13;
sound" succeeded.&#13;
By contrasting nature and&#13;
human life, he writes to have&#13;
questions raised as to his ideas.&#13;
Romerez's subject matter&#13;
consisted of love, war, spiritual&#13;
and physical imprisonment.&#13;
There was an excess of concrete&#13;
objects overloaded and ran his&#13;
sentences rampant with intense&#13;
thought.&#13;
Chapson's poetry consisted of&#13;
the void, insensitive man,&#13;
walking streets and exploring the&#13;
life of emptiness. His poetry,&#13;
stories of the vain and the selfish,&#13;
living in the existence of&#13;
monotony and depression.&#13;
Chapson's sinewy voice echoing&#13;
the rage and irony of modern&#13;
man and life's absurdity.&#13;
Chapson's verbal expressions&#13;
are callous and unsympathetic&#13;
toward the man who dreams of&#13;
the unreal. He reflects little on a&#13;
phrase or word, to emphasize the&#13;
neglect of man's being. Chapson&#13;
scolds and scoffs at those who are&#13;
vulnerable to lower nature. His&#13;
hard and indifferent tone cornmunicates&#13;
the voice of man in his&#13;
lame and distraught state, which&#13;
brought verbal reality and life&#13;
into his words.&#13;
CHAMPION TERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
6t1-536-91oo&#13;
Research material for 'rermoecere.&#13;
Reports, Theses, etc. LOWEST PR ICES.&#13;
QUICK SERVICE. For information,&#13;
please write or call.&#13;
The poster&#13;
Tnthe last few weeks, there has&#13;
been a crisis, as far as poste~s&#13;
and the posting of these posters IS&#13;
concerned. Posters have not been&#13;
posted in their designated areas,&#13;
but have been posted on bricks&#13;
and cement walls, doors and&#13;
windows. The correct placement&#13;
of posters is on bulletin boards&#13;
only.&#13;
Many of the students at&#13;
Parks ide do not know the rules&#13;
pertaining to bulletin boards. The&#13;
following rules, as outlined and&#13;
enforced by Student Activities,&#13;
should be observed:&#13;
1) Only bulletin boards marked&#13;
"Campus Events." "For Sale"&#13;
and "Rides and Riders Wanted"&#13;
may be used by student&#13;
organizations, faculty, staff,&#13;
students and other University&#13;
personnel.&#13;
2) Divisional bulletin boards&#13;
are controlled by the divisions&#13;
and are solely for their use.&#13;
3) Divisions may not use&#13;
"Campus Events" bulletin&#13;
boards for divisional purposes.&#13;
4) Bulletin boards marked&#13;
"For Sale" or &lt;IRides or Riders&#13;
Wanted" are for use by&#13;
University personnel. These&#13;
bulletin boards are the only ones&#13;
that can be used for this purpose.&#13;
Notes must be approximately&#13;
3x5.&#13;
5) Posters advertising nonUniversity&#13;
sponsored events&#13;
must receive approval from the&#13;
Office of Student Activities&#13;
before being posled.&#13;
, " ..&#13;
... ,,,&#13;
• •&#13;
CrISIS&#13;
6) Posters on the "Campus&#13;
Events" bulletin boards must be&#13;
no longer than 14x22. Exceptions&#13;
are made for pre-printed posters.&#13;
7) Posters must indicate&#13;
organizational sponsorship or&#13;
author.&#13;
8) The following rules must be&#13;
observed when posting On&#13;
bulletin boards:&#13;
a) Posters may only be attached&#13;
by lacks or pins.&#13;
bl A group may only post One&#13;
poster concerning one topic On&#13;
anyone bulletin board.&#13;
c~ Removal?f obsc~rity of any&#13;
active poster IS prohibited.&#13;
d) Posters must be remoVed&#13;
from the bulletin boards one day&#13;
after the event takes place.&#13;
e) Posting is restricted only to&#13;
designated bulletin boards.&#13;
Il Posters may nol be altached&#13;
to windows, doors, walls, trees Or&#13;
any other part of the UniverSity&#13;
grounds without prior approval of&#13;
the Office of Student Activities&#13;
9) Direct questions concerni.,g&#13;
bulletin boards to the Student&#13;
Activities Office.&#13;
In addition to the rules listed&#13;
above, special permission to use&#13;
banner posters for advertising&#13;
school functions can be obtained&#13;
at the Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 in the Library&#13;
Learning Center. The bulletin&#13;
boards are made to keep our&#13;
campus clean, and for students to&#13;
communicate in a more orderly&#13;
fashion.&#13;
Plus $20 Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Price Includes:&#13;
Round Trip Jet Fare to Honolulu&#13;
Luxury Hotel on Waikiki Beach&#13;
All ground transfers&#13;
Traditional flower lei greeting&#13;
Tour Host services&#13;
The&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
#RWRII-RN HEJbI&amp;RY&#13;
9 Fun-Filled, Sun-Filled Days&#13;
January 5-14&#13;
$274&#13;
HURRY!&#13;
Over 2/3 Filled&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
Campus Travel Center - Student Activities&#13;
Office&#13;
Library Learning Center 0-197&#13;
Phone: 553·2219&#13;
r111H11I1I1I1I1I1I1II1I "1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111&#13;
i LIVE ENTE~TAINMENT I&#13;
~l 5 Nights a Week i&#13;
~ ~'il~,i~~~\ DANCE • DANCE • DANCE I&#13;
i .ere IIIe alJlilJniI' I&#13;
! I&#13;
i ~~ Mille, 99~P::~S,~~, G;ChlilZ'1" I&#13;
I MIN:E •"~I•• jl;IIII IREMEMBER MIJNDAY I, TUESDAY!!&#13;
~ 1tI",,,,, HI ringl IJIf irinla tiff IJnly lSI I ~&#13;
;;&#13;
;;&#13;
I&#13;
l..HllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnHBnlllnlllllnllnml1llmnmllmlllllllll~::mlllnll P&#13;
00 I Tab Ie s &amp; Dart Game5&#13;
18111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111110110111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111&#13;
The Train Station ~&#13;
WE CATER TO FRATERNITY PARTIES&#13;
2703 63 St.&#13;
. ' . .&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. 8, 1972&#13;
• •&#13;
Community the lab in new class The poster cr1s1s&#13;
11 w•l11u1 .,.by crob and m1ttrHs,&#13;
US C• Ul·lllO d•ys, 634.41U even,ngs.&#13;
HELPW 'TED&#13;
To do odd 1obs tnvolv1ng minor -•-•d r .,..,, for two-f•m,ly flat.&#13;
Ctll SSl 11IO d•y•, 634-41U evfl&gt;ongs.&#13;
n Cla ic&#13;
,~aruru,9&#13;
'in nt Pri&#13;
Pet r Lorre&#13;
B ri Karloff&#13;
tudent have chosen an&#13;
equally broad range of ubjects&#13;
for their individual and group&#13;
projec . sampling of group projects&#13;
includ a tudy of Racine' ne&#13;
alternative high chool which&#13;
aim at turning on students&#13;
turn doff by traditional tudies;&#13;
analy I of effectivene s of&#13;
treet-level communit action&#13;
group in Racine and Keno ha;&#13;
e. ·ploration or the effects of urbanization&#13;
on organized religion;&#13;
and a urvey of e era! specific&#13;
kin or crime including child&#13;
abu in Kenosha.&#13;
Indi\idual projects include a&#13;
tudy of juvenile delinquen y in&#13;
R cin : collages meant to expr&#13;
how ,ariou person iew&#13;
urban life, a lide erie hot on&#13;
Ra in treet to illu trate urban&#13;
po try: a tudy of the decline of&#13;
downtown area and related&#13;
attempt to pre erve urban&#13;
landmark ; anal} i of the effect&#13;
or dru in a black neighborhood&#13;
in tilwaukee; tudies of mental&#13;
h alth facilities in Kenosha and&#13;
of the hi tory of the Racine Police&#13;
partment' Community&#13;
Relation unit; a photo essay set&#13;
in Keno ha on igns and their&#13;
funchon in urban life; and a&#13;
lide series of Chicago cityscapes&#13;
et to original musical interpretations.&#13;
The city al o is the subject of&#13;
three ections of the American&#13;
Language course which Parkside&#13;
offer in place of the traditional&#13;
Freshman English. One section is&#13;
also titled "The City" and two&#13;
others are on "Language and the&#13;
Industrial Society." Related&#13;
ection of the course deal with&#13;
"Past and Future hock ,"&#13;
"En iron mental Pollution,"&#13;
"Women's Liberation and&#13;
Literature" and "Poetry, Fiction,&#13;
Drama: Antidote to the&#13;
Boredom of an Industrial&#13;
ciety."&#13;
The innovative language&#13;
program has been a part of&#13;
Park ide' curriculum since the&#13;
new university opened in 1969 and&#13;
i designed to teach written and&#13;
poken communications skills in&#13;
the framework of contemporary&#13;
i ues. tudents can choose this&#13;
em ester from 15 different topics.&#13;
rban-related courses being&#13;
offered this emester in other&#13;
di ciplines in the College of&#13;
ience and Society include a&#13;
history course, "Emergence of&#13;
Ietropolitan America," and a&#13;
ociology course, "Urbanism and&#13;
rbanization."&#13;
Romerez, Chapson explore&#13;
life in poetry&#13;
The Poetry Forum last&#13;
Thursday presented two poets,&#13;
Daniel Romerez and James&#13;
hap on, and their readings.&#13;
Romerez recited his poetry&#13;
with deep emotional conviction.&#13;
His heavy voice created romantic&#13;
illusion but wa not overly sentimentaL&#13;
Time elapsed between&#13;
lines ana each idea was contemplated.&#13;
Romerez's bilingual&#13;
attempts of Spanish and English&#13;
proved that his "transcendental&#13;
barrier of language through&#13;
sound" succeeded.&#13;
By contrasting nature and&#13;
human life, he writes to have&#13;
questions raised as to his ideas.&#13;
Romerez's subject matter&#13;
con i ted of love, war, spiritual&#13;
and phy ical imprisonment.&#13;
There wa an excess of concrete&#13;
objects overloaded and ran his&#13;
sentences rampant with intense&#13;
thought.&#13;
hap on' poetry consisted of&#13;
the void, insensitive man .&#13;
walking streets and exploring the&#13;
life of emptiness. His poetry,&#13;
stories of the vain and the selfish,&#13;
living in the existence of&#13;
monotony and depression.&#13;
Chapson's sinewy voice echoing&#13;
the rage and irony of modern&#13;
man and life's absurdity.&#13;
Chapson's verbal expressions&#13;
are callous and unsympathetic&#13;
toward the man who dreams of&#13;
the unreal. He reflects little on a&#13;
phrase or word, to emphasize the&#13;
neglect of man's being. Chapson&#13;
scolds and scoffs at those who are&#13;
vulnerable to lower nature. His&#13;
hard and indifferent tone communicates&#13;
the voice of man in his&#13;
lame and distraught state, which&#13;
brought verbal reality and life&#13;
into his words.&#13;
CHAMPION TERMPAPERS&#13;
636 Beacon St. (No. 605)&#13;
Boston, Mass. 02215&#13;
617-536-9700 Research material for Termpapers,&#13;
Reports, Theses, etc. LOWEST PRICES.&#13;
QUICK SERVICE. For information,&#13;
please write or call.&#13;
In the last few weeks, there has&#13;
been a crisis, as far as posters&#13;
and the posting of these posters is&#13;
concerned. Posters have not been&#13;
posted in their designated areas,&#13;
but have been posted on bricks&#13;
and cement walls, doors and&#13;
windows. The correct placement&#13;
of posters is on bulletin boards&#13;
only.&#13;
fany of the students at&#13;
Parkside do not know the rules&#13;
pertaining to bulletin boards. The&#13;
following rules, as outlined and&#13;
enforced by Student Activities,&#13;
should be observed: 1) Only bulletin boards marked&#13;
"Campus Events." "For Sale"&#13;
and "Rides and Riders Wanted"&#13;
may be used by student&#13;
organizations, faculty, staff,&#13;
students and other University&#13;
personnel.&#13;
2) Divisional bulletin boards&#13;
are controlled by the divisions&#13;
and are solely for their use.&#13;
3) Divisions may not use&#13;
"Campus Events" bulletin&#13;
boards for divisional purposes.&#13;
4) Bulletin boards marked&#13;
"For Sale" or "Rides or Riders&#13;
Wanted" are for use by&#13;
University personnel. These&#13;
bulletin boards are the only ones&#13;
that can be used for this purpose.&#13;
otes must be approximately&#13;
3x5.&#13;
5) Posters advertising nonUniversity&#13;
sponsored events&#13;
must receive approval from the&#13;
Office of Student Activities&#13;
before being posted.&#13;
6) Posters on the "Campus&#13;
Events" bulletin boards must be&#13;
no longer than 14x22. Exceptions&#13;
are made for pre-printed posters.&#13;
7) Posters must indicate&#13;
organizational sponsorship or&#13;
author.&#13;
8) The following rules must be&#13;
observed when posting on&#13;
bulletin boards:&#13;
al Posters may only be attached&#13;
by tacks or pins.&#13;
b &gt; A group may only post one&#13;
poster concerning one topic on&#13;
any one bulletin board.&#13;
c) Removal or obscurity of any&#13;
active poster is prohibited.&#13;
dl Posters must be removed&#13;
from the bulletin boards one day&#13;
after the event takes place.&#13;
e) Posting is restricted only to&#13;
designated bulletin boards.&#13;
f) Posters may not be attached&#13;
to windows, doors, walls, trees or&#13;
any other part of the University&#13;
grounds without prior approval of&#13;
the Office of Student Activities.&#13;
9) Direct questions concerning&#13;
bulletin boards to the Student&#13;
Activities Office.&#13;
In addition to the rules listed&#13;
above, special permission to u&#13;
banner posters for advertising&#13;
school functions can be obtained&#13;
at the Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 in the Library&#13;
Learning Center. The bulletin&#13;
boards are made to keep our&#13;
campus clean, and for students to&#13;
communicate in a more orderly&#13;
fashion.&#13;
9 Fun-Filled, Sun-Filled Days&#13;
January 5-14&#13;
$274&#13;
Plus $20 Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Price Includes:&#13;
• Round Trip Jet Fare to Honolulu&#13;
• Luxury Hotel on Waikiki Beach&#13;
• All ground transfers&#13;
Traditional flower lei greeting&#13;
Tour Host services&#13;
.. -Aa;-&#13;
lll 11111 IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllll 1111 11111 I 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 -&#13;
MONDAY &amp; TflR • LIVE ENTERTAINMENT I&#13;
BEER --college Nfth,\ 1tlat i,•\!!~t we: .N:Sc; ~;;NCE I&#13;
Lorge Glass 1 sc Large Pit=~H~~:ll!lll: 1tbere t/,e action ;,• ~ I&#13;
==~~-&#13;
REMEMBER MONDAr, TIIE$DAr II&#13;
,tl,n II,, W ring, 1,,, drinlt, ,,, only 1$1&#13;
~~~&#13;
6 Packs To Go&#13;
Miller 99c Bud $1 30 Schlitz $1 30&#13;
::&#13;
!&#13;
i&#13;
The Train Sfafio11 i&#13;
WE CATER TO FRATERNITY PARTIES&#13;
2703 63 St.&#13;
Pool Tables &amp; Dart Games &#13;
" '-&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
•&#13;
Wed.. Nov. 8, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
•&#13;
What's Happening" will&#13;
·,It'S&#13;
regular feature of The&#13;
be a 'de Ranger. All clubs and&#13;
Parksl. ations are urge to d&#13;
organtZ mit notices about mee tlmgs,&#13;
sub I' etC. in person at the&#13;
ral1es, ff' D&#13;
k&#13;
'de Ranger 0 Ice, -194 Par SI •&#13;
1£ We ask that these be 10 our&#13;
L Ii . one week before the issue of Ice&#13;
(wednesday for the next. Wedd&#13;
y's issue). None will be&#13;
nes a&#13;
accepted over the phone.&#13;
•&#13;
beAnyone interested in dogs 'II&#13;
able to . k WI th . PIC up pointers on&#13;
of el~l?roper. care in a University&#13;
be . I~consm-Extension coo&#13;
gmmng Nov. 8. rse&#13;
Selecting the dog f&#13;
needs housi . or your&#13;
he lth ousm~, maintaining dog&#13;
a ,groommg, nutrition and&#13;
r~sponsibilities of dog owoersnl&#13;
Will be Covered in the class p&#13;
A veterinarian a spec'lal: t . feeds .' IS m&#13;
, a tral,ner, a dog judge and&#13;
a small. ammal specialist from&#13;
the .UOlv~rsity of Wisconsin.&#13;
Madison Will be instructors of th&#13;
class. e&#13;
Meetings will be held . W on SIX&#13;
ednesdays at 7:30 p.m. at uw.&#13;
Parkside Kenosha campus A&#13;
Special reduced rate for fa~ilY&#13;
m.embers and for students of S5&#13;
WIll apply.&#13;
Regis~ation information may&#13;
be obtained from Diversity&#13;
Extension, 553-2312.&#13;
Sparush ",amst Carmen Vd.,&#13;
presently In her fIfth sea..... a&#13;
art! t-m-re rdence at W.&#13;
Park ide. will pre. ent a&#13;
Crn\"ersuy Ar1J ts Concert n&#13;
~gram at 3 pm on unday,&#13;
xov 12. In Room 103. Creenqu,. t&#13;
HaU&#13;
General adm 'on, $2. d&#13;
rni ton for Par Ide tud&#13;
and taU and their Imme(ha1&#13;
families I $1&#13;
An internationally nov. n&#13;
concert am t. ., Vila hi&#13;
appeared In con rts and recitals&#13;
throughout Europe and South&#13;
Amenca and, In late 1970. v.a&#13;
featured in the Jeune e&#13;
~Iuslcal lnteenaucoal Ani&#13;
roes at Camegl HaU rn a&#13;
recital v.hJch "on pra (rom th&#13;
:-;"" York Ttm&#13;
~11 \"da .....111also appear In&#13;
the 110031 concert In the current&#13;
Umversu y Arti t erie as&#13;
sololSl \I,-jlh the •tll\ll aukee&#13;
ymphony on • la 10 Tbe final.&#13;
concert IS lenLaU_ely scheduled&#13;
"or the Communication ArLs&#13;
Bulld'ng Theater&#13;
Looking for someth'&#13;
Sun.d~y afternoon? T~~g to do. on&#13;
ActivIties Board' ParksIde&#13;
"Outer L' it IS sponsoring the&#13;
1 inn s I" r d&#13;
Sunday afternoo oaN&#13;
rallye this&#13;
. n, ov. 12. It's&#13;
Just the thing to get&#13;
house or away from ~~~ ~ut of the&#13;
an afternoon f ooks for&#13;
challenge R .0 fun and&#13;
begi t' eglstration will&#13;
n a noon on the Tall&#13;
parking lot, the f tent Hall&#13;
leaving at '1 p m Ir~h car will be&#13;
fee is $5 '. e entrance&#13;
per car, allowing two&#13;
persons per car. Trophies will be&#13;
awarded to the top three places&#13;
and a party will be held af:&#13;
terwards where you can recount&#13;
to your friends the thrills and&#13;
hazards encountered during the&#13;
Course of the rallye over hot do s&#13;
and beer, g&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are&#13;
sponsoring a "Ski Show" Sunday,&#13;
Nov.12, at 7:30 p.m. Admission is&#13;
75 cents. There will be ski&#13;
movies, a fashion show, cross&#13;
country skis display, plus the&#13;
latest designs. Door prize: 2 sets&#13;
of fiberglass skis. (Student Activities&#13;
Building).&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
4 named as Danforth nominees&#13;
•&#13;
Parkside has named four&#13;
students as its first Danforth&#13;
Fellowship Nominees. Parkside&#13;
became eligible to nominate&#13;
Dan,forth canQ.idates upon&#13;
achieving independent accredalion&#13;
from the North Central&#13;
Association of Colleges and&#13;
Secondary Schools this year,&#13;
The nominees are Jay W.&#13;
Ruud, 1651Chatham St., Racine,&#13;
a May, 1972, Parkside graduate&#13;
in English; Alan Joseph Ramias,&#13;
4410 19th Ave., Kenosha, who will&#13;
graduate in January in&#13;
philosophy and English; Susan&#13;
Jayne Olson, 31410th St., Racine,&#13;
who will graduate next May in&#13;
English; and Stanley R. Craig,&#13;
1715 19th Ave., Kenosh'l., wh.Q,will&#13;
graduate next May in chemistry&#13;
and management science.&#13;
The fellowships, offered annually&#13;
since 1952 by the Danforth&#13;
Foundation of St. Louis, Mo., are&#13;
open to men and women who are&#13;
seniors or recent graduates of&#13;
accredited colleges in the United&#13;
States, who have serious interest&#13;
in college teaching as a career,&#13;
and who plan to study for a Ph. D.&#13;
degree in a field of study common&#13;
t? the American undergraduate&#13;
lIberal arts curriculum. Can-&#13;
~id.ates must be nominated by the&#13;
lIaison officer of their undergraduate&#13;
institution. The&#13;
number of nominees per institution&#13;
is based on enrollment.&#13;
Approximately 100 fellowships&#13;
will be awarded in March, 1973.&#13;
Danforth Fellows are eligible for&#13;
four years of financial&#13;
assistance, with a maximum&#13;
annual stipend of $2,700 for single&#13;
fellows and $2,950 for married&#13;
fellows plus tuition and fees.&#13;
Financial need is not a condition&#13;
for consideration.&#13;
In selecting Danforth Fellows,&#13;
special attention is given to&#13;
evidence of intellectual ability&#13;
which is felxible and of wide&#13;
range, academic achievement&#13;
which is a thorough foundation&#13;
for graduate study, evidence of&#13;
personal characteristics which&#13;
are likely to contribute to effective&#13;
teaching and to constructive&#13;
relationships with&#13;
students, and evidence of a&#13;
concern for the relation of ethical&#13;
or religious values to academic&#13;
disciplines, the educational&#13;
process and to academic and&#13;
social responsibility.&#13;
Parkside's nominees were&#13;
selected on recommendation of&#13;
the faculty to the W·P Danforth&#13;
liaison officer, Virginia Scherr.&#13;
who is special assistant to Vice&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer and a&#13;
member of the chemistry faculty&#13;
An tntemallonal fol dance&#13;
group bas been fanned ,n Racme.&#13;
All Interested tudents, faculty&#13;
and staff are encouraged to come&#13;
to learn dane from Greece,&#13;
Israel. Bulgana. Yu 0 laYla and&#13;
other countrl ThIS group&#13;
sponsored bl the RaCIne Par&#13;
and Recreauon Department and&#13;
meel at tbe Lak'" ''''' CommUOIt)·&#13;
Center. 201 Gould. e\er)'&#13;
Friday e\erung from 1 to 10 p m&#13;
Beginning dane are Laught&#13;
from 7 lD 8 pm&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Beloit poet&#13;
will read here&#13;
Beloit College poet'In'&#13;
residence Bink '011 will gh'e an&#13;
afternoon reading and conduct an&#13;
evening workshop at VW·&#13;
Parkside under the sponsorshJp&#13;
of the Poetry Forum on •'0\' 13&#13;
Noll, who was named "Teacher&#13;
of the Year" at Bel0l1 in 1965. aLa&#13;
has been a faculty member at&#13;
Dartmouth College and JuDiaLa&#13;
College and spent a year a gue t&#13;
lecturer on American literature&#13;
in Zaragonza. pain. Wlder a&#13;
Fulbright grant. DUring 196Hll,&#13;
he was resident fello,," In creatl\ e&#13;
writing at Princeton&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College tudents&#13;
392 60th t, Phon 65 25 2&#13;
o c&#13;
r-"t,:B·O"RT·ioNS····~&#13;
~ FREEReferral 10 N.Y, Clinic. ~&#13;
· 12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
· CONTROLLED&#13;
~PARENTHOODj&#13;
WHITESKELLAR&#13;
~\ (north lounge&#13;
,~ \ Greenquist Halll&#13;
~VE&#13;
ENT~ITA'''1Nr&#13;
12:30p.ffi.&#13;
Wed., Nov.8&#13;
Major employers throughout the&#13;
U.S. (private &amp; government) are&#13;
seeking '1ualified coU~e. men ~d&#13;
women or career paubons WIth&#13;
top pay and out8tan~.ng bt:r;tefi~.&#13;
Excellent opporturubt8 eX18t In&#13;
many areas. For F~EE infor·&#13;
mation on student a!l818tance and&#13;
placement program send self.&#13;
addressed STAMPED envelope to&#13;
National Placement Reglstry.&#13;
Data-Tech Services. 1001 Eallt&#13;
Idaho St .. K']i,pe11, MT 59901.&#13;
\Ionda) nil:ht i&#13;
"Ye Id, uds, ippingit "&#13;
at hak y' In Ra in&#13;
SI a pi tcher for Pobst&#13;
(a Don_profit organiatiOQ) or Schlitz light.&#13;
SUITE 1006&#13;
DA JD STOTT BLDG.&#13;
· (313) 964-0530 e••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
2hI ( Im"'ll&#13;
,\( !&gt;340&#13;
633 307&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Va~ity Club&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ACTMTIES BOARD&#13;
pr nts&#13;
• merica' 10 t Famou&#13;
• Best· elling Author&#13;
tD443~ - 22~d Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
~ Wlsconslll Phone 654-0774 cl nse tt rn&#13;
• Lecturer&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
RACINO: 553-2150&#13;
r,cACHE:R&#13;
8 P. . Fri. 0 10 Phy. Ed. BId&#13;
F. LEE BAILEY&#13;
"Washington quare S "&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Racil1e&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
peaking on "The Deft/lse I er:erRests"&#13;
General Admission - '1.50&#13;
Parks ide rudents taff - s1.00&#13;
Tickets Available: U\ -P Information Office - Room 201 - Talent Hall&#13;
t I • r ' 1 •&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
What's Happening" will&#13;
"lt'S regular feature of The&#13;
be a 'de Ranger. All clubs and&#13;
parks• d . ations are urge to rgan1z . 0 ·t notices about meetmgs, subntl . . etc m person at the&#13;
ralbeS, · ff' D&#13;
k 'de Ranger o ice, -194&#13;
par s1 . C We ask that these be m our LL· f th' ff. one week be ore e issue 0 ice&#13;
(Wednesday for the next. Wedd&#13;
Y's issue). None will be 0es a&#13;
Pted over the phone. acce&#13;
•&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are&#13;
sponsoring a "Ski Show" Sunday,&#13;
ov.12, at 7:30 p.m. Admission is&#13;
75 cents. There will be ski&#13;
movies, a fashion show, cross&#13;
country skis display, plus the&#13;
latest designs. Door prize: 2 sets&#13;
of fiberglass skis. (Student Activities&#13;
Building).&#13;
•&#13;
Looking for someth.&#13;
Sun.day afternoon? T mg to do.on&#13;
Activities Board . he Parkside&#13;
"Outer Limits /s s~nsoring the&#13;
Sunday afternoo:oaN rallye this ·. , ov. 12. It's&#13;
Just the thing to get&#13;
house or away from~~~ ~ut of the&#13;
an afternoon f ooks for&#13;
challenge R .&#13;
0 f~n and&#13;
begin at . eg1stration will noon on the Tall t&#13;
parking lot· the f t en Hall&#13;
leaving at '&#13;
1 irs car will be&#13;
fee is $5 p.m. The entrance&#13;
per car, allowing two&#13;
persons per car. Trophies will be&#13;
awarded to the top three places&#13;
and a party will be held af~&#13;
terwards where you can recount&#13;
to your friends the thrills and&#13;
hazards encountered during the&#13;
course of the rallye over hot do&#13;
and beer. gs&#13;
•&#13;
beAnyone interested in do ·u&#13;
able to pick up . \\ • the· pointers on of ·~~roper. care in a 'ni,·e it, . t~consin-Extension cou . beginning ov. 8.&#13;
Selecting the dog f . needs h . or }our health ousing,. maintainin d&#13;
' .grooming, nutrition and&#13;
responsibilities of d own ·hi&#13;
will be covered in the cla p&#13;
A veterinarian a peciar· t . feeds a t . · 1 m , rainer. a d Jud and&#13;
fh small. anin:ial peciali t from e n1ver 1t of \\'i co . Mad· · · n tn · ison will be instructo f th&#13;
clas . 0&#13;
1eeting will be held on Wed da 1. n~s Y at 7:30 p.m. at&#13;
Park ide Kenosha carnpu&#13;
special reduced rate for fa~il ,&#13;
m.embers and for tud n of . will apply.&#13;
Registration information ma&#13;
be obtained from niver it.&#13;
Exten ion, 553.2312. •&#13;
4 nanted as Dan£ orth • noin1nees&#13;
Parkside has named four&#13;
students as its first Danforth&#13;
Fellowship Nominees. Parkside&#13;
became eligible to nominate&#13;
Danforth candidates upon&#13;
achieving independent accredation&#13;
from the North Central&#13;
Association of Colleges and&#13;
Secondary Schools this year.&#13;
The nominees are Jay W.&#13;
Ruud, 1651 Chatham St., Racine,&#13;
a May, 1972, Parkside graduate&#13;
in English; Alan Joseph Ramias,&#13;
441019th Ave., Kenosha , who will&#13;
graduate in January in&#13;
philosophy and English; Susan&#13;
Jayne Olson, 314 10th St. , Racine,&#13;
who will graduate next May in&#13;
Eng1ish; and Stanley R. Craig,&#13;
171519th Ave. , Kenoshc}. who will&#13;
graduate next May in chemistry&#13;
and management science.&#13;
The fellowships, offered annually&#13;
since 1952 by the Danforth&#13;
Foundation of St. Louis, Mo., are&#13;
open to men and women who are&#13;
eniors or recent graduates of&#13;
accredited colleges in the United&#13;
tates, who have serious interest&#13;
in college teaching as a career,&#13;
and who plan to study for a Ph. D.&#13;
degree in a field of study common&#13;
:WHITES KELLAR&#13;
t? the American undergraduate&#13;
hberal arts curriculum. Can-&#13;
~id_a tes must be nominated by the&#13;
ha1son officer of their undergraduate&#13;
institution. The&#13;
number of nominees per institution&#13;
is based on enrollment.&#13;
Approximately 100 fellowships&#13;
will be awarded in March, 1973.&#13;
Danforth Fellows are eligible for&#13;
four years of financial&#13;
assistance, with a maximum&#13;
annual stipend of $2,700 for single&#13;
fellows and $2,950 for married&#13;
fellows plus tuition and fees.&#13;
Financial need is not a condition&#13;
for consideration.&#13;
In selecting Danforth Fellows,&#13;
special attention is given to&#13;
evidence of intellectual ability&#13;
which is felxible and of wide&#13;
range, academic achievement&#13;
which is a thorough foundation&#13;
for graduate study, evidence of&#13;
personal characteristics which&#13;
are likely to contribute to effective&#13;
teaching and to constructive&#13;
relationships with&#13;
students, and evidence of a&#13;
concern for the relation of ethical&#13;
or religious values to academic&#13;
disciplines, the educational&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
\\ (north lounge&#13;
,~ \ Greenquist Hall)&#13;
~VE&#13;
ENJ-tAl"1,,r.&#13;
12:30p.m.&#13;
Major employers throughout the&#13;
U.S. (private &amp; government) are seeking qualified college men and women for career poeitionll with&#13;
top pay and outstan~_ng bc~efi~.&#13;
Excellent opporturubes ex1St m many areas. For FREE information&#13;
on student assistance and&#13;
placement program send acJf.&#13;
addressed ST AMPED envelope to&#13;
National Placement Registry,&#13;
Data-Tech Services, 1001 East&#13;
Wed., Nov. 8 Idaho St., Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
• 4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
' W1scons1n Phone 654-0774&#13;
~"°"'· ~~~~~~&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
proces and to academic and&#13;
ocial respon ibihh .&#13;
Parkside' nominee ere&#13;
elected on recommendat.Jon of&#13;
~~ faculty to the W-P Danforth&#13;
hat on officer, \'1rgioia ch rr&#13;
who is pecial i tant to \'ic '&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer and&#13;
member or the ch mi t~ facult_ .&#13;
Beloit poet&#13;
will read her&#13;
r··A· s·o·RT 'j ON s ... ·.&#13;
: FREE Referral to . Y. Cli ic. :&#13;
12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
CALL&#13;
. CONTROLLED&#13;
~ PARENTHOOD~ . . (a non- profit&#13;
SUIT 6&#13;
OA\10 STOTT BLDG.&#13;
. (313) 964-0530 · ............................. .&#13;
Ticke&#13;
Wed ., Nov. 8, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGERS&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
American&#13;
for&#13;
h h n&#13;
DIC&#13;
OW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIE&#13;
•&#13;
n&#13;
P. fl. . 1 h .&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
F. LEE BAILEY&#13;
D&#13;
11 &#13;
,'THE PARKSIDE'RANGE'R Wed., NOlI, 8,1972&#13;
Exploring transcendental meditation Meet the'&#13;
which relieves the deep anxieties&#13;
which accumulate in all human&#13;
beings due to the stresses of&#13;
living.&#13;
Physiologists . currently&#13;
recognize three major states ~f&#13;
consciousness and . t~elr&#13;
corresponding phYSlOlog~cal&#13;
slates. They are waking,&#13;
dreaming and deep sleep. The&#13;
fourth proposed state is that of&#13;
transcendental consciousness.&#13;
This IS a state of restful alertness&#13;
during which the mind is very&#13;
alert, and the body is in an e,:en&#13;
deeper state of rest than during&#13;
deep sleep. .&#13;
The most important part IS that&#13;
meditators don't meditate for&#13;
meditation's sake, but for the&#13;
cummulative results.&#13;
Short term studies have shown&#13;
that in addition to a multitude of&#13;
physical benefits, lhe,re are ma~y&#13;
mental and sociologICal benefits&#13;
experienced by meditators.&#13;
These benefits are discussed m&#13;
more detail in a bulletin&#13;
published by W. H. Free~an ~~d&#13;
Company, entitled SCientifIc&#13;
American Offprints: The&#13;
Physiology of Meditation.&#13;
For further information on how&#13;
TM can benefit you, you can&#13;
attend the introductory lecture&#13;
Tuesday, Nov, 14, at 7 p.m. in&#13;
LLC D-189_.&#13;
There are basically two stages&#13;
to TM. During the first there is a&#13;
refinement of the thinking&#13;
process. as one experiences&#13;
progressively Iiner levels of the&#13;
thinking process. This is accompanied&#13;
by an expansion of&#13;
awareness at the same time that&#13;
the mind settles down to its&#13;
essential nature.&#13;
The second stage is reached&#13;
when the finest level of the&#13;
thinking process is transcended&#13;
and the mind experiences pure&#13;
consciousness. At this point, the&#13;
mind is not fogged or cramped by&#13;
disorganized, random thoughts.&#13;
. '0 concentration. contemplation,&#13;
hypnosis or&#13;
suggestion is necessary. TM is a&#13;
simple. natural method which is&#13;
based on the ract that the&#13;
thmking process is natural and&#13;
effortless, and has intelligence&#13;
and attention. This attention is&#13;
turned inward rather than outward&#13;
and made to follow the most&#13;
pleasing and satisfying direction&#13;
possible. This tendency to follow&#13;
the most charming thought&#13;
causes the mind to experience the&#13;
finer levels necessary to reach&#13;
pure consciousness.&#13;
The best part of TM is that it&#13;
results not only in extremely&#13;
refined mental perception, but&#13;
that there is a corresponding&#13;
physiological state of deep' rest&#13;
(}) You must attend an introductory&#13;
lecture which explains&#13;
the benefits of TM. (2)&#13;
Attend a preparatory lecture&#13;
which discusse the actual&#13;
mechanic of TM (3) A personal&#13;
Interview with the teacher so that&#13;
he rna} get to know the&#13;
pr-ospective student. (4) There is&#13;
a day of personal instruction for&#13;
1\'0 hours at the student's convemence&#13;
to learn the techruque.&#13;
teps 5. 6 and 7 are three days of&#13;
verineauon of experience during&#13;
'0\ hich students meet in a&#13;
ria. room nuauon to check the&#13;
tuoeru' progre. in acqumng&#13;
the technique.&#13;
Th second requirement asks&#13;
that )'ou abstain from the use of&#13;
drug- uch as marijuana. LSD&#13;
and other hallucinogens, amphetamines&#13;
and barbi tuat es.&#13;
There i no moral reason for this.&#13;
It IS merely a ph~ iclogrcal one.&#13;
Thirdly. th re 15 a fee for the&#13;
course. This fee IS charged by&#13;
tudents International&#13;
\te&lt;htallon oclety merely to&#13;
keep the organizauon running on&#13;
local. national and international&#13;
levels. as it IS a non-profit&#13;
educatIonal organization.&#13;
Married couples are asked for a&#13;
pa)'ment of $125: adult m·&#13;
dmduals. $75: college students.&#13;
Sol5: and high school students,&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner Music Dept.&#13;
Hav vou ever wondered just&#13;
"hat belOit transcended is during&#13;
tra~fndt-ntal meditation"&#13;
ccordln~ to And) Goodman. a&#13;
tuderu t Par ide and a teacher&#13;
or Tran. cendental Meditation,&#13;
ITM). one experiences&#13;
prcgre .1\ f'1) finer level of&#13;
thmklnR until th finest level I&#13;
r aeheo and thtn transcended as&#13;
on re..icn pur consclousn&#13;
What do. all thIS mean. )'ou&#13;
k QUIte Imp), it means that&#13;
eee meditates. ere' mmd&#13;
10110" It m t ple In and&#13;
tur I !rom or thought The&#13;
r uu I • Cf) tal darlt) or&#13;
con (;10U nesa, and 3&#13;
.orre ndlng ph) I al tate of&#13;
-p r t "00 Ir nqwhl)&#13;
Surpr, m~l) nough, th ..&#13;
Id)1I1 I. I i. errortle ly&#13;
chI \ 01 10110'" rs of TM For&#13;
I bru~fpt'nod of 1~20 minutes per&#13;
da)'. mornln~ and evenIng,&#13;
meditator uUhled thl Simple.&#13;
Ifortl . mtntal t hmqll&lt;!as it&#13;
I tau~ht b) the laharishl&#13;
\Iah h "Ol!' and the leachers&#13;
hom hl' h., cprt",ed to lea h 11&#13;
lI)OU h.,\p 10 do to become a&#13;
meditator I meet three . Imple&#13;
noqwr men~ Th first 01 tbese&#13;
reqUJr m nt. I. one or time, and&#13;
th r ute' tV n steps Involved&#13;
By Tom Peterson&#13;
The music department here at&#13;
Parkside is one of the least.&#13;
known segments of the schooL&#13;
The department offers a full&#13;
degree in music which students&#13;
can certify for teaching. There&#13;
are presently some 90 students&#13;
committed to a major, being&#13;
taught by eight full-time and six&#13;
part-time faculty members. The&#13;
department now holds classes on&#13;
both the Kenosha and WoodRoad&#13;
campuses, but will be housed in&#13;
the new Communication Arts&#13;
Building upon its completion&#13;
Facilities will be greatly ex.&#13;
panded with Ihe new building&#13;
which win include music studios&#13;
a large rehearsal room for band'&#13;
orchestra and chorus, plus in:&#13;
dividual and ensemble practice&#13;
rooms.&#13;
The bands and choirs un.&#13;
derstandably make up a large&#13;
part of the department. There are&#13;
three chorale groups which arc&#13;
not related to one another at a,1.&#13;
The Chorus does a certain Iypeof&#13;
music for general appeal; it is not&#13;
selective and is open to anyone.&#13;
The Chrale is a group of aboutJO&#13;
persons that performs more&#13;
challenging music. For example,&#13;
it wiJI do a program of Italian&#13;
music from the 17th and tSU!&#13;
century. The Chorale is open to&#13;
anyone with an audition,&#13;
Probably one of the more&#13;
familiar musical groups is the&#13;
Baroque Players, which is a&#13;
faculty ensemble that does get&#13;
around for numerous performances.&#13;
REVIEW: 'Where Does It Hurt?'&#13;
8y 8i II 8rohough&#13;
r . II "" I ea 01)' oneol the&#13;
mo t \'pr atlle comedian of&#13;
rteent lim He I able to pia)&#13;
"lth "'lual d ftness a master&#13;
thl f ITh fo,), a bumbhng&#13;
pollee detecti,·e Onspecter&#13;
nUl, and a variety of&#13;
Insane penoonages in one film&#13;
Dr trangelo\'e), uddenl)·. ",e&#13;
find him In th center of a private&#13;
ho ptt I pgr mg a 1ecl1erOUs,&#13;
ronnannJl hObPlla)admirustrator,&#13;
a chant ·ter that 15 as sly and&#13;
('tJrulln~ a: he IS improbable.&#13;
. lie,.. " \Ibert Horrnagle. a&#13;
man that makes love with nurses&#13;
In the linen closet, allows&#13;
~fatl()n to be performed in&#13;
change for green stamps, qas a&#13;
ceret entrance to his office&#13;
through the Pepsi machine, and&#13;
general I)' 'tu,,05 every patient&#13;
for p, ry mclde that BIll&lt;!Cross&#13;
'"ill cough up&#13;
eller is surrounded by&#13;
character equally as improbably-an&#13;
incompetent doctor,&#13;
a Japanese lab technician that&#13;
does Groucho Marx impressions,&#13;
an o\'ersexed nurse that&#13;
renade tiers through the&#13;
soda machine. And into this falls&#13;
an uny,aT)' "'orker that ends up&#13;
g Ihng hIS appenchx (healthy)&#13;
removed when all he wanted was&#13;
a ch . t X-ra)'&#13;
held hiS own, adding his own&#13;
depth to Hoffnagle.&#13;
Whel'e Does It Hurt? It hurts&#13;
basically because the movie was&#13;
not all that it could have been.&#13;
Good laugh lines were sparce. It&#13;
seemed that a movie with Peter&#13;
Sellers could have been much&#13;
more. I'll admit, it was entertaining,&#13;
but unfortunately, it&#13;
was also a bit of a disappointment.&#13;
\\ her~ Do~ It Hurt? is a Not to say that the movie isn't&#13;
farce--almost. It is the un- funny. It is. But it is populated&#13;
fortunate mating of two genres, mosUy with a humor you might&#13;
satire and farce. a mating that expect to hear on the streets, not&#13;
doesn't qUite make it. The film IS on the screen, It is certainly&#13;
"dedicated" to the diligent. humor that would offend your&#13;
public minded MO's dedicated to parents. but that our generation.&#13;
upholding the Hyppocratic Oath, more liberal and vulgar. would&#13;
Those three doctors are then enjoy.&#13;
asked to stand up. Thus we are Structurally, the film is&#13;
prepar~(or=:satire. basically continuous. but sudThe&#13;
story of ahospital that is denly falls apart at the very end.&#13;
more commercial than it is Alot of loose ends are not tied up,&#13;
altruistic would seem to be and we leave in a bit of a fog,&#13;
satire, but with (arcical saying to ourselves, "Whatever&#13;
characters and a farcical plot, happened to .....&#13;
the movie is transxormed into a Character portrayals by the&#13;
muddle. The two genres don't actors and actresses are good,&#13;
mesh-they collide. One one hand but they were written poorly in&#13;
you have sharp social comment, the first place. I cannot lavish&#13;
on the other you have an idiocy praise on Sellers, but I can't say&#13;
that. destroys any relation with anything derogatory, either. He&#13;
reahty. ............................................................... . .&#13;
: .&#13;
1 Cham- Tap-Bar 1&#13;
··&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
..............................&#13;
Parkside ActiVities Board presents&#13;
~&#13;
\\". Road Rallye /~~.&#13;
Sun. , Noy. 12, 1912&#13;
Registration 12:00&#13;
Tallent Hall lot entrance&#13;
Fee 15&#13;
The Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Team from Milwaukee will visit The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parks ide on Nov.&#13;
9 to intorm interested students of&#13;
programs leading to a commission as a&#13;
Marine Officer. The minimum starting&#13;
salary for a Marine Officer is S9,000 per&#13;
year, increasing to sn,ooo within 2 years.&#13;
All training is done in the summer and&#13;
there are no on·campus commitments.&#13;
Those students who apply and are accepted&#13;
as undergraduates accrue&#13;
longevity While in the program. resulting&#13;
in a freshman, for example. starting at&#13;
SlO.5oo after he graduates and accepts a&#13;
commission. There is no obligation to&#13;
accept a commission or go on active duty.&#13;
If a young man accepts a commission&#13;
following graduation. he must serve at&#13;
least 2', years on active duty. Financial&#13;
assistance of 5100 per school month is&#13;
available in addition to aviation options&#13;
leading to designation as a Marine Pilot or&#13;
Marine Flight Officer.&#13;
Captain Dennis M. BUCKOVETZ heads&#13;
the Officer Selection efforts in Wisconsin&#13;
and Upper Michigan and will be available&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse to fur·&#13;
ther explain the Marine Corps com·&#13;
missioning programs and how to apply.&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
'A) Racine, Wis.&#13;
eS dhMfiPagne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches&#13;
L. ._{l:.ndPizza cD 01 . ~~ .- .&#13;
RESEARCH MAnRIALS o&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send 10t'Jour desCriptive. up-to-date.&#13;
121 PI .... ,1"'der tal'loe 01 2,300&#13;
qUII ty luurch papelS. EltilSt&#13;
$1.00 '1tint ,nutl 1M undlilll.&#13;
RmARCH UNlIMIT£O&#13;
519 GUNROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
OS ANGElES, CALtf. 90024&#13;
213)471-1474 • 477-5493&#13;
r'fe MeG I local salesman"&#13;
Parkside Activitie5 Board Presents&#13;
(]Q~(D0~Q0 [DI]UU(5£££&#13;
~~[;J(D[Brn~ ~[;J(D1111 00 lD13[;J13 VII! 0'l!(DClff&#13;
aJ lIJeDGJ(B(3&#13;
featuring mfil&#13;
UUlL:.JL:i&#13;
(Rock-n.Roll Revival)&#13;
[,?[;JOG(iJ~ v lDl.Dl:D ill.D Eism IJ.[.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
PIZZA KnCHEN liege Men (immediately following F. Lee Bailey Lecture)&#13;
Admissions 11'0 Student Activities Building&#13;
ART TIME Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers 75' for Greaser get-ups&#13;
ORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
F,.. O.lh.ry to Pa,ksld. Villag.&#13;
5Dn 10M At'lI" ''',"' 651-51"&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. a, 1972&#13;
E loring transcendental ineditation Meet the·&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
tc&gt;-dale , ol 2,300&#13;
£11elese&#13;
11&#13;
11191 Men&#13;
all 552-8355&#13;
Th r are ba icallv two tag&#13;
to T. t. During the first there i a&#13;
r frnement of the thinking&#13;
pure consciou n . The be t part of T 1 1 that it&#13;
re ults not onlv in extremely&#13;
refined mental • perception, but&#13;
that there i a corre ponding&#13;
phy iological tate of d ep· rest&#13;
which relieves the deep anxieties&#13;
which accumulate in all human&#13;
bein due to the stres es of&#13;
living. Phv iologists currently&#13;
recognize three major state ?f&#13;
con ciousness and their&#13;
corre ponding physiological&#13;
tale . They are waking,&#13;
dreaming and deep sleep. The&#13;
fourth proposed state is that of&#13;
transcendental con ciousnes&#13;
Thi 1. a . late ol restful alertne s&#13;
during which the mind is very&#13;
alert. and the body 1s in an even&#13;
deeper tale of rest than during&#13;
deep sl ep. . The most important part 1s that&#13;
meditators don't meditate for&#13;
meditation's sake, but for the&#13;
cummulative r ults. horl term studies have shown&#13;
that in addition to a multitude of&#13;
physical benefits, the_re are ma~y&#13;
mental and ociolog1cal benefits&#13;
experienced by ~editator~.&#13;
Th e benefits are d1scu sed m&#13;
more detail in a bulletin&#13;
publi hed by W. H. Freen:1an ~~d&#13;
ompany, entitled Sc1entJfic&#13;
American Offprints: The&#13;
Physiology of Meditation.&#13;
For further information on how&#13;
T 1 can benefit you, you can&#13;
attend the introductory lecture&#13;
Tuesday, ov. 14, at 7 p.m. in&#13;
LLC D-189 ..&#13;
Music Dept.&#13;
By Tom Peterson&#13;
The music department her at&#13;
Parkside is one of th lea. lknown&#13;
segments of the chool&#13;
The departm nl offer. a full&#13;
degree in music which luden&#13;
can certify for teaching. Th r&#13;
are presently som 90 tuden&#13;
committed to a major, being&#13;
taught by eight full-time and ix&#13;
part-time faculty member . The&#13;
department now holds cla e on&#13;
both the Kenosha and Wood Ro d&#13;
campuses, but will be hou d in&#13;
the new Communication Ar&#13;
Building upon its completion&#13;
Facilities will be greatly xpanded&#13;
with the new buildin&#13;
which will include music tudi0s&#13;
a large rehearsal room for band&#13;
orchestra and chorus, plu in&#13;
dividual and ensemble prachc&#13;
rooms.&#13;
'Where Does It Hurt?'&#13;
The bands and choir un- derstandably make up a larg&#13;
part of the department. Ther ar&#13;
three chorale groups which ar&#13;
not related to one another at a,l&#13;
The Chorus does a certain type o(&#13;
music for general app al ; it i. not&#13;
selective and is open to anyon&#13;
The Chrale is a group of about 30&#13;
persons that performs more&#13;
challenging music. For exampl&#13;
it will do a program of ltaha~&#13;
music from the 17th and 18th&#13;
century. The Chorale is open to&#13;
anyone with an audition. .'.'\ot to av that the movie isn't&#13;
funny. It i ·. But it is populated&#13;
mostly with a humor you might&#13;
expect to hear on the streets, not&#13;
on the creen. It is certainly&#13;
humor that would offend your&#13;
parents. but that our generation.&#13;
more liberal and \'ulgar, would&#13;
enJoy.&#13;
Structurally, the film is&#13;
basically continuous, but suddenly&#13;
falls apart at the very end.&#13;
A lot of loose ends are not tied up,&#13;
and we leave m a bit of a fog,&#13;
saying to ourselves, "Whatever&#13;
happened to ... "&#13;
Character portrayals by the&#13;
actors and actresses are good,&#13;
but they were written poorly in&#13;
the first place. I cannot lavish&#13;
praise on Sellers, but I can't say&#13;
anything derogatory, either. He&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar =&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
0&#13;
L.. ..... __ g_n:d Pizza cO 0 . ··········----~,--~.-.. ..............•&#13;
Ham Sandwiches&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
PIZZA KffCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage Bomhers&#13;
Free Delkery to Puksi•• Village&#13;
SOl11M At1••1 Pl,on, 6S1-St9t&#13;
held ht own. adding his own&#13;
depth to Hoffnagle.&#13;
\\'here Does It Hurt? It hurts&#13;
ha ically because the movie was&#13;
not all that it could have been.&#13;
Good laugh lines were sparce . It&#13;
. eemed that a movie with Peter&#13;
Seller could have been much&#13;
more. I'll admit, it was entertaining,&#13;
but unfortunately, it&#13;
was also a bit of a disappointment.&#13;
&#13;
The Marine Corps Officer Selection&#13;
Team from Milwaukee will visit The&#13;
University of Wisconsin . Parkside on Nov.&#13;
9 to inform interested students of&#13;
programs leading to a commission as a&#13;
Marine Officer . The minimum starting&#13;
salary for a Marine Officer is $9,000 per&#13;
year, increasing to $11,000 within 2 years.&#13;
All training is done in the summer and&#13;
there are no on -campus commitments.&#13;
Those students who apply and are ac -&#13;
cepted as undergraduates accrue&#13;
longevity while in the program, resulting&#13;
in a freshman, for example, starting at&#13;
S10,500 after he graduates and accepts a&#13;
commission. There is no obligation to&#13;
accept a commission or go on active duty.&#13;
If a young man accepts a commission&#13;
following graduation, he must ser ve at&#13;
least 21 2 years on active duty. Financial&#13;
assistance of S100 per school mont h is&#13;
available in addition to aviation options&#13;
leading to designation as a Marine Pilot or&#13;
Marine Flight Officer.&#13;
Captain Dennis M . BUCKOVETZ heads&#13;
the Offi cer Selection efforts in Wisconsin&#13;
and Upper Michigan and wi ll be available&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse to further&#13;
explain the Marine Corps commissioning&#13;
programs and how to apply.&#13;
Probably one of the mor •&#13;
familiar musical groups is th&#13;
Baroque Player , which i a&#13;
faculty ensemble that doe g t&#13;
around for numerou p rformances&#13;
.&#13;
............................. Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
~&#13;
--~~: Road Ral lye /~:&#13;
Sun. , Nov. 12, 1972&#13;
Registration 12:00&#13;
Tallent Hall lot entmce&#13;
Fee $5&#13;
TROPHIES&#13;
WILL BE AWARDED!&#13;
~ PARTY AFTERWARD! . . : ........................ ······&#13;
(Bl]~(D§~I]§ l!JGJUV~~~~&#13;
'-'illl:Dl1l1 C§ (](31](3 Ul!l §'(r(D(H&#13;
(D (D(D(Dl]~&#13;
featuring m~ uru L.:,)&#13;
(Rock-n-Roll Revival)&#13;
llffiOCDGJ~ v l]f:!:(D tJ(D £ s~l!: Lr~lL.&#13;
(i m mediatel y follow ing F. Lee Bailey Lecture)&#13;
Admissions $l5° Student Activities Building&#13;
75c for Greaser get-ups&#13;
IJffiCfsl3§&#13;
\.W,\\\\t&#13;
DANCE CONTEST &#13;
....., .... ,-.&#13;
, .... ~.. ' .&#13;
'Weaklings, here's your chance&#13;
Kathryn Wellner BY&#13;
a 90-pound weakling?&#13;
AreYOUrybodYpick on you?&#13;
DoeS eve. t th ab your gi, run over 0 e&#13;
Well,gdr&#13;
dojo and learn the&#13;
ParksJe " '&#13;
"gentleway, , ' h if you don t weig 90 Even I&#13;
d judocan be fun as well as&#13;
pount'During the Tukogawa era&#13;
usefu 1'876)the only weapons of (1576-, ,&#13;
d I&#13;
Japanese warriors were&#13;
feu a "'tslk'e ' hands (JlUJU U, mv s, theIr Th&#13;
d&#13;
clubs and spears. e&#13;
swor s, . d ' th&#13;
t day sport of JU 0 IS e&#13;
Presen. .. . d dant of JIUJutsu, an was descen .&#13;
1 ped bv .jigoro Kano. deve 0 • .&#13;
Professor Kana estabhsh~d the&#13;
Kodokan(a school of studying the&#13;
waY)In Tokyo III.June of 1882.&#13;
TheParkside Judo Club mee~s&#13;
rv Tuesday and Thursday 10&#13;
eve r ti the dojo (place of prac Ice -&#13;
actually the large green gymnastIcsmat&#13;
in the gym) The club&#13;
advisor and sensei Ron H ' hi , ansen&#13;
IS a t ird degree black belt&#13;
(Sandan). Helmut K h&#13;
presIdent, is a third degree bro~~&#13;
belt ISankyuj • Bonnie E&#13;
seer t· ppers,&#13;
e ary, IS also a Sankyu and&#13;
treasurer Mike Wood' Was&#13;
recently awarded his Yonk&#13;
Igreen belt J. yu&#13;
Other members of the club are&#13;
Rudy Alvarez, Gokyu 16th degree&#13;
student); Deana Bigley, Rokkyu&#13;
15th degree student); Jim Gallo,&#13;
Rokkyu; Micah Grasser&#13;
Sankyn John Jones Gokyu:'&#13;
Mike Kocol, Rokky~; Jerry&#13;
Konecy, Sankyu ; Bill Matelski.&#13;
Gokyu; Hayes Norman, YonkyuMark&#13;
Olson, Gokyu; Kerris&#13;
Palmer, Rokkyu ; Tom Parnella,&#13;
Rokkyu. John Petersen GokyuMike&#13;
Popinski, ROkky~; Kathy&#13;
Wellner, Gokyu; and Darrell&#13;
Wright, Rokkyu.&#13;
"Judo IS an outlet for the&#13;
release of hostilities built up&#13;
Women defend honor&#13;
By Pat Nowak&#13;
It was a cold, cloudy afternoon&#13;
butsomehowtypical of what one&#13;
'wouldexpect for a football game.&#13;
But-wasit just a football game?&#13;
Toa passerby maybe, but to the&#13;
players it was a ti~e of co~-&#13;
frontationand defendmg of one s&#13;
honor. Sound a little heavy for&#13;
you' Well, maybe so, but that's&#13;
;'hat happened last Sunday afternoon.&#13;
The vets vs. the women's&#13;
caucus in what was to be the&#13;
game of the season took place,&#13;
and it proved to be quite interesting.&#13;
In the pre-game&#13;
preparations the women were&#13;
found to be outnumbered so a&#13;
quickdraft was formed and a few&#13;
of the vets found themselves&#13;
playing for the caucus.&#13;
The game, thought by few to be&#13;
an easy victory for the vets, soon&#13;
proved otherwise. A stiff&#13;
defensive battle soon became&#13;
apparent as the women refused to&#13;
give ground to the vets. It was&#13;
late in the second quarter when&#13;
the first score came for the&#13;
womenon an intercepted pass by&#13;
Jeff Vandernanen who returned&#13;
il 60 yeards for the score.&#13;
The game again ground down&#13;
to a standstill with neither the&#13;
womennor the vets able to mount&#13;
a Substantial drive. The women's&#13;
hopes for victory were smashed&#13;
In the final seconds of play when&#13;
TERMPAPERS&#13;
Resnrthed and professionally typed.&#13;
All Writers have a minimum BS, BA&#13;
Degree.&#13;
CALL COLLECT: 202.333.0201&#13;
ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
OUR TERMPAPER CATALOG&#13;
lOVER 3,000 ON FILE)&#13;
We will not send the same paper to the&#13;
s~me Sthoot tWice. ORDER NOW! Send&#13;
51 to tover postage and handling tor your&#13;
tiiltiillog.&#13;
TERMPAPER LIBRARY, INC.&#13;
3160"0" Street, N.W.&#13;
Wnhington, D.C. 20007&#13;
r"~:B'O'RT'ioNS"'1&#13;
~FREERelerralto N,Y, Clinic, l&#13;
~ 12 weeks or less&#13;
~ Total cost&#13;
~ $150&#13;
(not including&#13;
transportation to N.Y.)&#13;
an interference call gave the vets&#13;
the ball on the one-yard line, On&#13;
the following play Chet Andersen&#13;
made a diving reception for the&#13;
score.&#13;
The clock ran out and overtime&#13;
was declared. Neither side&#13;
scored and the game ended in&#13;
almost total darkness. Coach&#13;
Wendy Musich described the&#13;
caucus' play with, "Brilliant&#13;
defensive work and team play&#13;
came through for us. We came&#13;
through as I expected."&#13;
The game is now only sJXlrts&#13;
history and there are only&#13;
memories of the sore muscles&#13;
and cold hands,&#13;
There are rumors that a new&#13;
challenge may arise on the&#13;
volleyball court for a rematch&#13;
against the vets.&#13;
UW-p hosts&#13;
gym meet&#13;
Parkside will host the Women's&#13;
Region B Gymnastics Championships&#13;
Saturday at Bullen&#13;
Junior H. S. in Kenosha.&#13;
thrOUghstudying," Grasser said&#13;
'..It teaches you gent1enes.,;&#13;
said Kah as several other&#13;
members snickered.&#13;
In spite of the fact that judo&#13;
provides a person with lots of&#13;
strenuous exercise, and a few&#13;
occasional bruises, it can't be too&#13;
bad, since the club has been in&#13;
existence at Parkside since&#13;
September, 1969, The club&#13;
sponsored the rirst Annual&#13;
Wisconsin Collegiate Judo&#13;
Tournament last April.&#13;
The next tournament will be a&#13;
Parks ide intramural held or;&#13;
Thursday. Nov. 9. Registration&#13;
fee is 81 and entry forms are&#13;
available from Vic Godfrey or&#13;
members of the Judo Club. Tbere&#13;
will be three divisions: Men's&#13;
brown belt, open; men's while&#13;
belt, lightweight and&#13;
heavyweight: and women's white&#13;
belt. open. If you don't plan on&#13;
competing. there's no cha~e:or&#13;
watching&#13;
Harriers end&#13;
in a tie&#13;
Parkside's harflers firushed&#13;
out their regular season with a 28·&#13;
28 tie with Loras Friday. Lucian&#13;
Rosa finished first again with a&#13;
time of 25:32.3. only two second&#13;
off the course record. followed by&#13;
Dennis Biel. 26:01 Jim ~1cFadden&#13;
finished fifth. ~ed&#13;
Kessenich ninth and Everett&#13;
Hyde eleventh. Loras' highest&#13;
placer was Ed Wagner. who&#13;
finished third in 26:03&#13;
The Rangers wilJ be at Eau&#13;
Claire Saturday in the :\AIA&#13;
District 14meet where Coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey figures the harriers will&#13;
havea good chance to place in the&#13;
top three and earn a trip to lhe&#13;
nationals&#13;
Rooters close&#13;
with 3-0 los:;&#13;
The l'W-Parkside soccer team&#13;
closed its season Saturday \I,Ilh a&#13;
;H) loss at the hands of t-II ·Gr",n&#13;
Bay The Rangers ended \\ lth a '2-&#13;
1\-1record&#13;
Wed., Nov, 8, 1972 THE PARKSIDE ~ANGER 7&#13;
P.E. Bldg. schedule&#13;
POOL&#13;
Saturday _&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Monday. Wednesday ..••&#13;
Tuesday. Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
101 m IOSp.m&#13;
1"0 to 10p.m&#13;
1l·30-t'30.S·30-10p m&#13;
..•...•• 1l:30-S·30.S30-IOp m&#13;
11'301 m 1O'30p.m&#13;
GVlIU M&#13;
Monday through Friday&#13;
turday&#13;
day&#13;
.. 10 1010pm&#13;
~ Frida d Itspm&#13;
91 m IOSp.m&#13;
l'30loI0p.m&#13;
Al:&#13;
Same as Pool Houn&#13;
H DB.\LL R&#13;
Same IS GymnASIum&#13;
'ovember 10 F L IlIlle)&#13;
'o"ember II Wresthn Olnlc - G}mnl urn a&#13;
Enllre BuJldUlg Closed&#13;
ours are ubject to chan e b«'JUIM" of peclaJ «!\ ent&#13;
SCHED LED&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
• 0\ 11&#13;
CRO&#13;
• 'o\"&#13;
· '0\&#13;
COL:-.TRV&#13;
11&#13;
18&#13;
• AlA 0 InellO PI&#13;
110\IE'" Gnl, n&#13;
• 'o\" II RegIon B O\'lmplonshl&#13;
11'0\1E'" TE"" I&#13;
:\ov 1().1l ~,l It&#13;
410 MAIN&#13;
STARTS FRIDAY&#13;
On Our Screen&#13;
, 'Vi(e-Hustlers"&#13;
plus&#13;
"Sweet lips"&#13;
N.w S.lections of Aduh 800 • lu·&#13;
nVlng Dollyl Th aile OfMn Noon ',.1&#13;
Mldnl' •• look Store O~n '1 0 m.&#13;
III Mldnil •.&#13;
8 Yea" ond Over Only&#13;
OPEN TODAY&#13;
6:DD • 12:00 Mid.&#13;
STREET • DOWNTOWN&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE _ BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8,...,:P..:.._M...:.. _&#13;
CAlL&#13;
632-1565&#13;
'1eMC ~'.&#13;
SAVE·ON&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
Q&#13;
U&#13;
o&#13;
R&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE, RACINE. WiSe,&#13;
PIUS '10 Ta.. .aNI ~,("t'&#13;
COl"i',Kl&#13;
Camp.l'S Tr .... ei Ce&lt;"leI"&#13;
SluderV",(1,,,,1" Oft,ce&#13;
L,tJ(arv L~" ng Ceoro'lt'!'"0 tl'&#13;
PI'\l:IM W n~&#13;
Hy_&#13;
~f.,&#13;
... WI ~,&#13;
too,&#13;
It\,rolW.&#13;
T1W DUll NOME COOK/Nt;!&#13;
n. But 1_ I~. C u'"&#13;
"COUNTRY&#13;
KffCHEN"&#13;
Dn Mile North&#13;
01 Cal PiS 01 Hwy. 31&#13;
Dpe. 1 Days a Week 8 u. to 8 p.m.&#13;
SUNDAY'S SPECIAL: Roast Bttf &amp; T rkay&#13;
Hwy. 31 - 1/. Mile North of Petrifying Spnn,s&#13;
... ·, ·, ... ·. .. . . .. .. .. •. ~ .... ~&#13;
Weaklings, here's your chance&#13;
BY Kathryn Wellner&#13;
u a 90-pound weakling'? Are yo . k ? everybody pie on you .&#13;
o~s rab your gi, run over to the&#13;
well, ~de dojo, and learn the parks ,,&#13;
··gentle way. ' . h l&#13;
·r you don t we1g 90 E~O 11&#13;
pounds, judo can be fukn as we as&#13;
f 1 During the Tu ogawa era u e 6&#13;
u 1&#13;
'&#13;
876) the only weapons of&#13;
(157 - ' • d I Japanese warriors were feu a .. · ts ) knives their hands (JIUJU u ' Th '&#13;
swords, clubs and fs~rs: the&#13;
present-day sp~_rt. ot JU o dis e&#13;
d endant of JIUJU su, an was eK J' K d loped by 1goro ano.&#13;
/v~essor Kano established the&#13;
K:iokan ( a school of studying the&#13;
. ,., 10 Tokyo m June of 1882 wa, · - The Parkside Judo Club meets&#13;
every Tuesday and Thurs~ay in&#13;
the dojo (place of practice -&#13;
actuall)- the large green gymn~stic&#13;
mat in the gym) The club&#13;
advisor and sensei Ron H · . , ansen is a third degree black belt&#13;
&lt;Sa~danl. Helmut Kah&#13;
president, is a third degree brow~&#13;
belt ( Sankyu l . Bonnie E . ta . ' ppers secre ry, is also a Sankyu and&#13;
treasurer Mike Wood 'was&#13;
recently awarded his Yonk&#13;
( green belt) . yu&#13;
Other members of the club are&#13;
Rudy Alvarez, Gokyu (6th degree&#13;
student); Deana Bigley, Rokkyu&#13;
(5th degree student); Jim Gallo&#13;
Rokkyu; Micah Grasser'&#13;
Sa_nkyu; John Jones, Gokyu! .&#13;
M 1ke Kocol, Rokkyu: Jerry&#13;
Konecy' Sankyu; Bill Matelski&#13;
Gokyu; Hayes Norman, Yonkyu:&#13;
Mark Olson, Gokyu; Kerns&#13;
Palmer, Rokkyu; Tom Pamelia.&#13;
R~kkyu; John Petersen. Gokvu&#13;
Mike Popinski, Rokkyu; Kath;.&#13;
Wellner, Gokyu; and Darreit&#13;
Wnght, Rokkyu.&#13;
"Judo 1s an outlet for the&#13;
release of hostilities built up&#13;
through tudying," Grasser said&#13;
'_'It teaches you gentlen ..•&#13;
said Kah a several other&#13;
member nickered.&#13;
In . pite of the fact that judo&#13;
provides a person with lots of&#13;
strenuou exercise, and a re&#13;
occa ional bruises, it can't be too&#13;
bad. since the club ha been in&#13;
existence at Parkside ince&#13;
eptember. 1969 The club&#13;
spon ored the fir t Annual&#13;
\\'i con 10 Collegiate Judo&#13;
Tournament la t April.&#13;
The next tournament will a&#13;
Park ide intramural ~Id or.&#13;
Thur da), 'o\'. 9. Regi tration&#13;
fee is I and entry form are&#13;
available from Vic Godfre, or&#13;
member of the Judo Club. T .&#13;
will be three dhi io : I n·&#13;
brown belt. open, men' hite&#13;
belt. lightweight and&#13;
heavyweight: and worn n' \\hite&#13;
belt, open. If )OU d n't plan o&#13;
compe mg, her ·&#13;
,,atchmg&#13;
Women defend honor Harrier&#13;
in a tie&#13;
nd&#13;
By Pat Nowak&#13;
It was a cold, cloudy afternoon&#13;
but somehow typical of what one&#13;
would expect for a football game.&#13;
But was it just a football game'?&#13;
To a passerby maybe, but to the&#13;
players it was a time of confrontation&#13;
and defending of one's&#13;
honor. Sound a little heavy for&#13;
vou? Well, maybe so, but that's&#13;
~hat happened last Sunday afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
The vets vs. the women's&#13;
caucus in what was to be the&#13;
game of the season took place,&#13;
and it proved to be quite interesting.&#13;
In the pre-game&#13;
preparations the women were&#13;
found to be outnumbered so a&#13;
quick draft was formed and a few&#13;
of the vets found themselves&#13;
playing for the caucus.&#13;
The game, thought by few to be&#13;
an easy victory for the vets, soon&#13;
proved otherwise. A stiff&#13;
defensive battle soon became&#13;
apparent as the women refused to&#13;
give ground to the vets. It was&#13;
late in the second quarter when&#13;
the first score came for the&#13;
women on an intercepted pass by&#13;
,Jeff Vandernanen who returned&#13;
tt 60 yeards for the score.&#13;
The game again ground down&#13;
to a standstill with neither the&#13;
women nor the vets able to mount&#13;
a ubstantial drive. The women's&#13;
hope for victory were smashed&#13;
10 the final seconds of play when&#13;
TERMPAPERS&#13;
Researched and professionally typed.&#13;
All writers have a minimum BS, BA Degree.&#13;
CALL COLLECT: 202-333-0201&#13;
ALSO AVAILABLE&#13;
OURTERMPAPERCATALOG&#13;
(OVER 3,000ON FILE)&#13;
We Will not send the same paper to the&#13;
um, school twice. ORDER NOW! Send&#13;
SI lo cover postage and handling for your cot•log.&#13;
TERMPAPER LIBRARY, INC.&#13;
3160 "0" Street, N.W.&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20007&#13;
f .. A. s·o·R f. i o N s ... -~&#13;
] FREE Referral to N.Y. Clinic.~&#13;
• 12 weeks or less&#13;
Total cost&#13;
$150&#13;
{not including&#13;
~ CA LL transportation to N.Y.)&#13;
; CONTROLLED&#13;
; PARENTHOOD&#13;
: (A Non Profit Organization)&#13;
• 238West Wisconsin Avenue&#13;
Suite 605&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin .&#13;
.&#13;
·....... (414) 278-8262&#13;
·······················&#13;
an interference call gave the vets&#13;
the ball on the one-yard line. On&#13;
the following play Chet Andersen&#13;
made a diving reception for the&#13;
score.&#13;
The clock ran out and overtime&#13;
was declared. Neither side&#13;
scored and the game ended in&#13;
almost total darkness. Coach&#13;
Wendy Musich described the&#13;
caucus' play with, "Brilliant&#13;
defensive work and team play&#13;
came through for us. We came&#13;
through as I expected."&#13;
The game is now only sports&#13;
history and there are only&#13;
memories of the sore muscles&#13;
and cold hands.&#13;
There are rumors that a new&#13;
challenge may arise on the&#13;
volleyball court for a rematch&#13;
against the vets.&#13;
UW-P hosts&#13;
gym meet&#13;
Parkside will host the Women's&#13;
Region B Gymnastics Championships&#13;
Saturday at Bullen&#13;
Junior H. S. in Kenosha .&#13;
Park 1de' harrier fm1 hed&#13;
out their regular ea on v1th a -&#13;
28 tie with Lora Frida · .uc,an&#13;
Rosa fim hed fi t a a·m , h a&#13;
time of 25·32.3. onl) t&gt;Ao econd&#13;
off the course record. folio ed b&#13;
Dennis Biel. 26:01 Jim . leFadden&#13;
fini hed t1fth, ' ed&#13;
Kessenich ninth and E\'er t&#13;
Hyde eleventh. Lora ' h1e:he ,&#13;
placer wa Ed Wagner. ho&#13;
finished third m 26:03.&#13;
The Rangers 111 be at Eau&#13;
Claire ' aturda) in the · I&#13;
District 1-t meet \\here Coach \'i&#13;
Godfrey f1gur he ham II&#13;
have a good chance to pla m th&#13;
top three and earn a tnp to th&#13;
national.&#13;
Booter lo e&#13;
with 3-0 lo -&#13;
• BEER• SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS • WI ES&#13;
ICE _ BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9A.M. - 9 P.&#13;
SUNDAY TIL 8_P......:..._M_. __ __,&#13;
CALL&#13;
632-1565&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE.&#13;
. . et tare to switterlaind * ..._ Round trip I . tail breakfast&#13;
Lodging and cont,nen&#13;
Jt 9th night in Copenhagen&#13;
Jt Motor option avai1laible * Multi-lingual guides&#13;
ONL y THREE WEEK&#13;
LEFT TO SIG p&#13;
RACINE, WISC.&#13;
Wed., Nov. 8, 1972 THE PARKSfDE RANGER 7&#13;
P.E. Bldg. hedul&#13;
\\&#13;
rs"&#13;
On&#13;
410 Al ST EET TO&#13;
TFW OUR HO :E COOK/NCI&#13;
T lttC ff&#13;
"COUNTRY&#13;
KffCHEN"&#13;
SU DA&#13;
0 e ile orl&#13;
f Ca p s o&#13;
Ope 7 Days a ee&#13;
SPEC • R st &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Nov. S, 1912&#13;
a r r adying&#13;
. tl practicing for its season&#13;
Parkside's baske~ball team ISC~I~~r:nh~re. Exceptional fr~shmen&#13;
opener Dec. 1 against Luther g omises a bright season for&#13;
talent coupled with returning :ei~;:;sS~;phens and Assistant Rudy&#13;
the Rangers and Head Coac [or op ner Collum.&#13;
Women third&#13;
in swim meet&#13;
Parkside's women Swimmers&#13;
look third in their first home&#13;
meet last Tuesday. Oshkosh lOOk&#13;
first with 91 points, Whitewater&#13;
was second with 69 and Parkside&#13;
had 33.&#13;
Individually, Pal Hill look n"t&#13;
place in the 50-yard and tOO-yard&#13;
backstroke. Julie Surendonk&#13;
placed second in the 100 In&#13;
dividual medley, and in the 50&#13;
breast stroke; she also took third&#13;
In the butterfly.&#13;
Also competing for Parkside at&#13;
the meet were Charlene 'tarl1n&#13;
Amy werve. Nancy Michal&#13;
Ba rb Kupper and Shirley 'MOOrt"&#13;
R u~~ers lose&#13;
to Marquette&#13;
The Ruggers of ParkSld.&#13;
battled with lhe MarqUfU&#13;
Warriors Sunday in the First&#13;
Annual Rugby Foolball gam.&#13;
sponsored by lhe Lions Club&#13;
After a disappointing first half&#13;
during which Marquette scorEd&#13;
14 points, Parkside had yet to&#13;
score. But the game was rarrrona&#13;
over as the second hall proved&#13;
Coming from behind, Parks,dt&#13;
made two tries and two COO.&#13;
versions to leave the score •&#13;
respectable 14-12.&#13;
/'111 H,,/ing ftJ M, ',ng",!f!ItJHfJn&#13;
ftJ e" M' Lalell in 'lIP!!'&#13;
P"bil, T-Shim&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
Libra" Learning Center&#13;
ov . •• 1972&#13;
for n r&#13;
ti acticing for its season&#13;
Parkside's baske!ball tea; i~ cl~;~:n h!r~.r Exceptional fr~shmen&#13;
opener Dec. 1 against Lu_t er o romises a bright season for&#13;
alent coupled with returning hve;;ran\fephens and Assistant Rudy&#13;
the Rangers and Head Coac eve&#13;
Collum.&#13;
Women third&#13;
in swim meet&#13;
Hugger lo e&#13;
to Marquett&#13;
The Ruggers of Park id&#13;
battled with the l\tarquett&#13;
Warriors unclay in the f&#13;
Annual Rugby F'ootball&#13;
sponsored by the Lion lub&#13;
After a disappointing fir:;t h If&#13;
during which Marqu tte&#13;
14 points, Parkside had yet lo&#13;
score. But the game was far frOl?I&#13;
over as the second half Pl"O\ ed&#13;
Coming from behind, Parkside&#13;
made two tries and two ~ - versions to leave the sc~ 1&#13;
respectable 14-12.&#13;
/'Ill H11ding lo 1/,1 R1ng11 .. ~ftllion&#13;
lo IJel 1/,1 lale1I in ;f;Jlff!feii,-&#13;
11bil1 T-S/,il'II&#13;
a. ; net&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63912">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 7, November 8, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63913">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63914">
                <text>1972-11-08</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63917">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63918">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63919">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63920">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63921">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63922">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63923">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63924">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63925">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="331">
        <name>f. lee bailey</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="4460">
        <name>molinaro hall</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="234">
        <name>parkside activities board (PAB)</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
