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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>SMI building cut in state budget slash</text>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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              <text>The Parkside, _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, January 31, 1973&#13;
sMI buildng cut&#13;
budget slash&#13;
By Ken KonkoI&#13;
Theax fell last Tuesday on 25&#13;
percent of the UW building&#13;
program for the 1973-75 biennium.&#13;
The pain was especially&#13;
sharp here at Parkside wbere the&#13;
p.l million whicb bad previously&#13;
been approved for the School of&#13;
Modern Industry building was&#13;
amputated from the revised&#13;
budget.&#13;
Parkside appeared tn be&#13;
singledout as especially hard hit,&#13;
even thougb it bad no request in&#13;
f&lt;r additional building in the 73-75&#13;
period, but was nevertheless&#13;
reduced $3.1 million.&#13;
All other campuses in the&#13;
systemretained at least a portion&#13;
of their requests. The most&#13;
",table exception to the chopping&#13;
blockwas the Madison Center for&#13;
HealthSciences which would cost&#13;
132million, half of which would&#13;
eme from state funds. Seven&#13;
_uonai buildiug projects rot&#13;
the Madison campus also&#13;
remained uncut. These would&#13;
C&lt;lIll an additional $7,725,000.&#13;
The Milwaukee campus also&#13;
escaped almost unscathed in the&#13;
cut, from $97 million to $75&#13;
million for the system. Five&#13;
lIUjeCts,including construction&#13;
of a multipurpose physical&#13;
education building to replace&#13;
Baker Field House would alone&#13;
C&lt;lIll six million. '&#13;
In an interview with Chancellor&#13;
Irwin Wyllie, we found tbat be&#13;
Wasextremely disturbed that the&#13;
SMIbuilding was reconsidered to&#13;
deathafter the Board of Regents&#13;
hado!'gInally approved it for the&#13;
~enmum 73-75. The chancellor&#13;
dd hopes that at least some&#13;
~ vanced planning money would&#13;
allocated for preparation so&#13;
that If the building would be&#13;
~':troved in the future, no delays&#13;
d be encountered prior to&#13;
lICtua) construction.&#13;
.Thechancellor mentioned that&#13;
ve Wouldhe in difficulty because&#13;
Vol. I, No. 15&#13;
•In state&#13;
William May, Dean of the School of Modern Industry&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
life goes on and the program has&#13;
to continue to function.&#13;
To function during the next two&#13;
years, 8MI IS goin~ w .iave to&#13;
prolong their stay in the new&#13;
laboratory facility in the&#13;
Classroom building. The&#13;
laboratory equipment is going to&#13;
be moved from the very overcrowded&#13;
room in Greenquist&#13;
(237) to the larger facility in the&#13;
new building. Now though, tnstead&#13;
of later moving into the&#13;
SMI building, the stay will be a&#13;
bit protracted.&#13;
In addition to laboratories, . II&#13;
also requires specialized&#13;
classroom facilities with furnishings&#13;
which fit the needs of the&#13;
instruction. Now. instead oC&#13;
having these classrooms&#13;
available in the foreseeable&#13;
future, SMI will have to make do&#13;
with what would be available to&#13;
suit the greater variety of need&#13;
Dean Moy also expressed the&#13;
bope that planning money would&#13;
be advanced during this biennium&#13;
and that student interest in&#13;
the school would continue to&#13;
increase even without the: new&#13;
facility.&#13;
of the projected enrollment increases&#13;
which are the highest in&#13;
the system percentagewise and&#13;
""'-"secondirr'actual increase. In an&#13;
earlier interview, he mentioned&#13;
that 28 percent of the students&#13;
here are now in the applied fields&#13;
this building would serve, and&#13;
that the building was central to&#13;
the industrial mission of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
As for the mext, -two years,&#13;
Wyllie stated that Parkside&#13;
should be able to make due with&#13;
buildings coming on line by&#13;
mixing of functions in the various&#13;
buildings and implementing the&#13;
Greenquist conversion plans to&#13;
obtain additional laboratory&#13;
space.&#13;
To find out the immediate&#13;
effect of the loss on the School of&#13;
Modern Industry, Ranger interviewed&#13;
Dean William Moy.&#13;
The dean stated be had no&#13;
additional information to offer on&#13;
the reasons for the cuts, that all&#13;
he knew was what had appeared&#13;
in the papers. He stated that his&#13;
first reaction on learning of the&#13;
news was a feeling of extreme&#13;
sadness, but is now resigned that&#13;
lsam Fearn&#13;
The tutors are payed Parkside&#13;
students. There are two types of&#13;
tutors, core tutors and on call&#13;
tutors. Core tutors have definite&#13;
hours and will deal with the core&#13;
subjeds which are math.&#13;
English, statistics. and t~e&#13;
sciences. These are the areas lD&#13;
which students seem to run into&#13;
the most problems.on call tutors&#13;
deal with a specific class which is&#13;
not necessariJy in the core subjects.&#13;
They are available if&#13;
requested.&#13;
According to Fearn, applications&#13;
to become a tu1?r .are&#13;
now heing accepted. A limited&#13;
number of core tutors will be&#13;
hired but there is no limit to the&#13;
number of on call tutors needed .&#13;
The 25·piece Chicago Chamber Orchestra under&#13;
the baton of Dieter Kober will present a University&#13;
Artists Concert Series program at J p.m. on Sunday&#13;
in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Pianist Annie Petit of the Parkside music faculty&#13;
will appear as soloist with the orchestra for Bach's&#13;
Clavier Concerto o. 1 in 0 Minor and David Moll&#13;
and Fred Spector of the ensemble will be soloists&#13;
for Kalliwoda's Concert Variations for Two Violins,&#13;
Op. 14.&#13;
The orchestra also will play Incidental music&#13;
from "The Fairy Queen" by Purcell, "For&#13;
Children" from the ten-piece plano series by&#13;
Bartok, Air for Strings by Jolo and Serenade In G&#13;
Major, "Eine kleine Nachtmusik" by Mozarf.&#13;
The much-prelsed chamber group, organized In&#13;
1961, has performed more than 400 concer for&#13;
Chicago audiences in addition to a touring chedule&#13;
which has taken the group throughout th south,&#13;
north and midwest.&#13;
Tickets, available at the door, are $3.50 tor&#13;
general admission and $1.50 for Parkslde students&#13;
and start and their immediate families Children 12&#13;
and under are admitted free.&#13;
What is a chamber orchestra? " Is a small&#13;
symphony orchestra, ranging in size from 12 to 35&#13;
players, compared with 50to 100In a full symphony&#13;
orchestra.&#13;
Until about 150years ago, all symphonic music&#13;
was composed tor chamber orchestras which&#13;
originated in the elegant salons and elaborately&#13;
landscaped parks of Europe's castles and palaces.&#13;
Today, much orchestral music Is being wrlH n&#13;
again for the smaller, artistically more demanding&#13;
chamber symphony orchestra.&#13;
Brrrrrrrrr!&#13;
'r n w Tutoring service begins at Parks ide&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Ias~free tutoring service began&#13;
ProgrMonday at Parkside. The&#13;
thE' am occupies the offices in&#13;
0"" SOutheast end of the second&#13;
Will'~ Talent Hall. The offices&#13;
I,cCOrd' open from 1 to 5 p.m.&#13;
"""lolDg to Isom Fearn, adto&#13;
even:tudent affairs, they hope&#13;
Programuraully .have tbe tutoring dayS nnmg 8 hours a day 5&#13;
de"'';d ~k. The grea ter the&#13;
Fear longer the hours.&#13;
tUtorin remarked that the&#13;
1",,- g program offers two&#13;
~'1'&lt;&gt; of SerV.Ices, long term&#13;
te.,g ~d short term tutoring.&#13;
.~ a... htuto. ring is for students 'I... on aVlOg trouble with a&#13;
tutoru, .the whole. Short term&#13;
• 'l&gt;e&lt;i~'Sfor students that have&#13;
ICproblem.&#13;
at 68°&#13;
Application forms can be picked&#13;
up at the Fmanclal A,HIs Office or&#13;
from Isorn Fearn, room 280,&#13;
Tallent Hall Two faculty&#13;
signatures rrom the area In which&#13;
the student plans to tutor ,,,IIalso&#13;
be reqwred&#13;
Fearn mentioned that the&#13;
tutorial service ha other ser-&#13;
\'ices ...h..ich support it These&#13;
loclude counselor.&gt;, the Learmng&#13;
Center. and faculty as resource&#13;
people for the tutors.&#13;
J. Yosttutorial services reqwre a&#13;
person who nee&lt;ls help to fill out a&#13;
bunch of forms and take tests but&#13;
this program has done away With&#13;
all that Fearn remarked A&#13;
student who nee&lt;ls help m one of&#13;
his subjects should top by the&#13;
tutoring offices.&#13;
eovernor P tncll J Luc&#13;
directed all tal a oci&#13;
Immediate re to co&#13;
In re pon e to th&#13;
nauonal fuel en I&#13;
Eff clive Immedlat Iy th&#13;
lemperatur In all Park Id&#13;
building will be reduced to&#13;
dege Evemug and" k nd&#13;
lemperalur drops WIU ~ accompli&#13;
hed by reduclna th&#13;
movement of atr ID Lh btlllm,..&#13;
\\'tuch lO turn '4111c .~ fuel.&#13;
Financial aid&#13;
Finaocial aids applicatIons Cor&#13;
the 1973-74school year ~ du m&#13;
the Financial Aids Office Feb. 15&#13;
First con deration can not he&#13;
given to appllcantio receive&lt;!&#13;
after that date.&#13;
The Parkside-_____ _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, January 31, 1973&#13;
SMI buildng cut&#13;
budget slash&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
The ax fell last Tuesday on 25&#13;
percent of the UW building&#13;
program for the 1973-75 biennium&#13;
. The pain was especially&#13;
sharp here at Parkside where the&#13;
$3.1 million which had previously&#13;
been approved for the School of&#13;
!odem Industry building was&#13;
am putated from the revised&#13;
budget.&#13;
Parkside appeared to be&#13;
singled out as especially hard hit,&#13;
even though it had no request in&#13;
for additional building in the 73-75&#13;
period, but was nevertheless&#13;
reduced $3.1 million.&#13;
Vol. I, 15 o.&#13;
• 1n state&#13;
All other campuses in the&#13;
syste m retained at least a portion&#13;
of their requests. The most&#13;
notable exception to the chopping&#13;
block was the Madison Center for&#13;
Health Sciences which would cost&#13;
$.12 million, half of which would&#13;
come from state funds. Seven&#13;
dOOIUOna1 building projects for&#13;
the Madison campus also&#13;
remained uncut. These would&#13;
~tan additional $7,725,000.&#13;
William W\oy, Dean of the School of Modern Industry&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
The l\filwaukee campus also&#13;
escaped almost unscathed in the&#13;
cut, from $97 million to $75&#13;
mi~ion for the system. Five&#13;
!l'OJeCts, including construction&#13;
of a _multipurpose physical&#13;
education building to replace&#13;
Baker Field House would alone&#13;
cost six million. '&#13;
In an interview with Chancellor&#13;
Irwin Wyllie , we found that he&#13;
was extremely disturbed that the&#13;
· U building was reconsidered to&#13;
death ~f!er the Board of Regents&#13;
had ongmally approved it for the&#13;
hie · nnium 73-75 . The chancellor&#13;
had hopes that at least some&#13;
~vanced planning money would&#13;
al!ocated for preparation so&#13;
!hat If the building would be&#13;
!:oved in the future, no delays&#13;
d be encountered prior to&#13;
actual construction.&#13;
The chancellor mentioned that&#13;
e would be in difficulty because&#13;
of the projected enrollment increases&#13;
which are the highest in&#13;
the system percentagewise and&#13;
· second irractual increase. In an&#13;
earlier interview, he mentioned&#13;
that 28 percent of the students&#13;
here are now in the applied fields&#13;
this building would serve, and&#13;
that the building was central to&#13;
the industrial mission of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
As for the next two years,&#13;
Wyllie stated that Parkside&#13;
should be able to make due with&#13;
buildings coming on line by&#13;
mixing of functions in the various&#13;
buildings and implementing the&#13;
Greenquist conversion plans to&#13;
obtain additional laboratory&#13;
space.&#13;
To find out the immediate&#13;
effect of the loss on the School of&#13;
Modern Industry, Ranger interviewed&#13;
Dean William Moy.&#13;
The dean stated he had no&#13;
additional information to offer on&#13;
the reasons for the cuts, that all&#13;
he knew was what had appeared&#13;
in the papers. He stated that his&#13;
first reaction on learning of the&#13;
news was a feeling of extreme&#13;
sadness, but is now resigned that&#13;
life goes on and the program ha&#13;
to continue to function .&#13;
To function during then t t o&#13;
years, S1'1I 1s gom 1 , to&#13;
prolong their stay in the ne'o'&#13;
laboratory facility in the&#13;
Classroom buildin . The&#13;
laboratory equipment is going to&#13;
be moved from the very oYercrowded&#13;
room in Greenqui t&#13;
(237) to the larger facility in the&#13;
new building . . 'ow though, instead&#13;
of later moving into the&#13;
SMI building, the stay v.ill be a&#13;
bit protracted.&#13;
In addition to laboratories, . 11&#13;
also require pec1alized&#13;
classroom facilities with furnishings&#13;
which fit the needs or th&#13;
instruction. , ·ow. m tead or&#13;
having these cla room&#13;
available in the fore eabl&#13;
future , S 11 will have to ma e do&#13;
with what would be a,·ailabl lo&#13;
suit the greater variety of n&#13;
Dean toy al o e pr the&#13;
hope that planning money d&#13;
be advanced during · bi&#13;
nium and that tudent int re i n&#13;
the school v. ould continue to&#13;
increase even without the n&#13;
facility.&#13;
Tutoring service begins at Park&#13;
By Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
~ f~ee tutoring service began&#13;
Jlto fonday a_t Parkside. The&#13;
the gram occupies the offices in&#13;
n south east end of the second&#13;
oor of Tai t H ·u b en all. The offices&#13;
Aceor~· open from 1 to 5 p.m .&#13;
,r;._ ing to Isom Fearn ad-&#13;
·...,.,rto st d ' to u ent affairs they hope&#13;
event II ' Ptogr ua Y have the tutoring&#13;
days am running 8 hours a day 5&#13;
dema~ ;eek. The greater the&#13;
Fear e longer the hours .&#13;
t torin n remarked that the&#13;
~ g Program offers two&#13;
of ser · torin vices, long term&#13;
l.ingte~ and short term tutoring.&#13;
b) a Ill tutoring is for students&#13;
re having trouble with a&#13;
;n. th e Whole. Short term&#13;
a 'Pee~ is for students that have&#13;
ic Problem. Isom Fearn&#13;
The tutors are payed Park.·ide&#13;
students. There are two ype· of&#13;
tutors, core tutors and on call&#13;
tutors. Core tutors have definite&#13;
hours and will deal with th core&#13;
subjects which are math,&#13;
English. statistics. and t~e&#13;
sciences. These are th area m&#13;
which students seem to run into&#13;
the most problems.on call tutors&#13;
deal with a pecific cla which i&#13;
not necessarily m the core ubjects.&#13;
They are available if&#13;
requested&#13;
According to Fearn , applications&#13;
to become a tut?r .are&#13;
now being accepted. A hm1ted&#13;
number of core tutors v.iU be&#13;
hired but there is no limit to the&#13;
number of on call tutors needed.&#13;
rrrrrrrrr.&#13;
1l0&#13;
id&#13;
T PAR SIDE RA GER Wed~ J~n.31. 1973&#13;
A GER £ditorial/Opi n ion&#13;
• rnz 81 and power&#13;
congratulate the Par side&#13;
nment Ass«ialoon (PSGA) tor&#13;
hlnll constructive. The&#13;
to s p&lt;'oposedwinter&#13;
fIrst thing PSGA&#13;
r that students&#13;
except through&#13;
nat&#13;
have&#13;
,n&#13;
Of&#13;
rt nI t .letn------&#13;
Dt ....&#13;
Lea!&#13;
II&#13;
--- by Gary Huck&#13;
THORN By Konkol&#13;
. has been put down in the past and will probably continue to&#13;
SecOndly . the future as minor thefts and security problems&#13;
be \lut 0HwnID er the men at security cannot be blamed for these&#13;
coottnue. owev • .&#13;
. th are stretched a little thin.&#13;
s~e ~!ur men may be sufficient to patrol the campus at night when&#13;
. round to present a problem, there IS no way the same&#13;
thereheISr nof omneena can handle the S.ituatIO. n duurrimg peak buildin g use&#13;
nUIIl n~ they have two more buildings to contend with next fall the&#13;
bours.",~n&#13;
jobTowsialltisbfeacitmorpiloyssibplaet.rol the campus two ears would have to be kept&#13;
all times so one could back up the other. There would have to be&#13;
out at the Cushman to handle the traffic situation. There would&#13;
ohnaveemtaon boen two men patrolling the buildimgs, one for Greenquist-&#13;
Oassroom and one for LLG-CommArts. . ..&#13;
There would be a need for an office 10 the mam building ,complex to&#13;
handle any public relations problems and to have an easily reached&#13;
pi ced for someone to bring any problems: A man would have to be in th:t office whenever the buildings were 10 use.&#13;
To round out the staff, a dispatcher would be needed to hold do~ the&#13;
fort in the main security offIce, as well as the director. According to&#13;
my math, this would require a total of at least eight men, or lust about&#13;
double the present daytime force. . ..&#13;
Most of us do not come in contact With t~e security office very often.&#13;
Occasionally we might become acquamted through the parking&#13;
sitTuhatiisonis. the week the patrol has started to I.ssue ti.ckets again. The&#13;
most frequent violation is going to be illegal parking. l myself got a&#13;
warning ticket for this last week. It seems that when I tned to find a&#13;
location in which to install my car, all the stalls were full, so I parked it&#13;
alongside the edge of the far lot with everyone else that couldn't find a&#13;
spAacpep. arently the patrol does not take any such reason into account&#13;
when they patrol the lots. They just do the job they are supposed to do&#13;
and issue the tickets. You can't blame anyone for doing his job.&#13;
But the people who receive a summons under such circumstances do&#13;
blame the patrol. They shouldn't. Instead they should blame the&#13;
person whose bright idea it was to redesign the Tallent Hall lot with&#13;
the result that we now have 200 less spaces there than before. Once&#13;
again there is not enough thinking ahead going into the facilities'&#13;
design around here.&#13;
There are 442 spaces in the Tallent Hall lot and' 867spots in the back.&#13;
However, there have been 5,037 parking stickers distributed at&#13;
Parkside this year and class schedules dictate that there are ofteo&#13;
over 1400cars on campus. Faculty-Staff car pools .have not reduced&#13;
the Dumber of cars extensively. The cost of other transportation is so&#13;
prohibitive that most people would rather drive.&#13;
Right now there is need of an additional4OO-car lot. By the time this&#13;
will be completed we shall probably need spaces for at least 2000 cars&#13;
to have enough room next time one of those community functions is&#13;
held here during the day.&#13;
A problem exists in that there is not enough money to construct a&#13;
new parking lot behind Tallent Hall. The parking reserve has been&#13;
depleted to provide additional shuttle bus service.&#13;
I believe I have come to a sort of stop-gap solution to the problem.&#13;
The construction plans for the new lot call for a lot similar to those&#13;
presently in use, complete with blacktop and lighting. Why not instead&#13;
grade that land that is planned for the future lot and lay the large stone&#13;
base? People would be then allowed to park there when the other lots&#13;
are full.&#13;
There is no need for elaborate parking facilities when all we need is&#13;
space; space we need now! Instead of first getting enough money&#13;
together to build the entire lot, lay the foundation first and put the lot&#13;
10 use. As additional money becomes available, the lighting and&#13;
blac~p can be completed a section at a time.&#13;
WIth the lot in use on the gravel foundation, the lot would be packed&#13;
down before the surface would be laid. Done this way, the blacktop&#13;
would not crack into smaller pieces later&#13;
Instead of waiting two years to pay for the lot by user fees, the lot&#13;
could be In use In two weeks! ~If:. 1MPark:slsicOldet------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
y:"he ~ark~ide Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
Ke:oSh~ t';i stud~nts of The University of Wisconsin·Parkside,&#13;
Lea .' sconsm 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library'&#13;
rnmg Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295&#13;
refTlehcetedP.arksideI Rang·er IS an i..ndependent newspaper. OPi.n.ions&#13;
view of ~n ~ ~ns. and ed~torials are not necessarily the official&#13;
Letters t: th m~e~slty of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
interest to stu; ~'7r are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
less typed de~, aculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
lett~rs for le~~th :u~le-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address ph n good taste. All letters must be signed and mclude&#13;
be Withheldonenumber and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any let~~n request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
rs.&#13;
Classified and dis 1 .&#13;
ED1TOR.IN.C . pay ad rates Willbe furnished upon request.&#13;
MANAGING ~~.;. RUdv Lienau&#13;
NEWS EDITOR' GOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EO' eatf Blaesing .&#13;
SPORTS EDIT~~~R: ~ane Schllesman&#13;
BUSINESS MANAG~n~ Koch, Kathryn Wellner '&#13;
ADVERTISING MA R. Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MA~AGER: Jerrv Murphy&#13;
WRITERS' Ken K k AGER: KllIthrvn Wellner&#13;
Blaha . on 01, Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine stceme. Helmut Kah, eUl&#13;
CARTOONIST: Gary Huck&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ken ..&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF' Konkol, At Craig, Bill Noll, Dennis Doonan, Greg Svston&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriv~ Fred Lawrence, Ken KonkoL Rudy Lienau&#13;
lTit Natton..a.l.E.SEEdNuTcEaDtI'O:0n"'aNl AATIOdNvAerLtisAinDgVERTSISeIrNvGiceBsY, Inc. -,&#13;
______ 360-=I.:e.:.::.:.D:&amp;t:::O:D~A~.:.e.:.:.::y.,~oN~:re:~k,~N~~l~.·.~l~OO~l~'~ _&#13;
GE •• J n. 31 , 3&#13;
ER&#13;
di or I/Opinion&#13;
po er&#13;
,., .&#13;
I t&#13;
_______ b·&#13;
ary Huck&#13;
THORN By Konkol&#13;
.____ t down in the past and will probably continue to&#13;
.,...,.,,,.;ty bas ~· pu d · b ~ ... • . the future as minor thefts an secunty pro lems&#13;
be ~ut down ~ the men at security cannot be blamed for these&#13;
coonnue. However, littl thin&#13;
- th are stretched a e · . mce _ e may be sufficient to patrol the campus at mght when&#13;
\\"hi!e four men d to present a problem, there is no way the same&#13;
there 00 one aro~ handle the situation during peak building use&#13;
number of mthen cahave two more buildings to contencl with next fall the&#13;
hours . When ey&#13;
job will be im~ible. uld . il patrol the campus two cars wo have to be kept&#13;
To satis~actor Y ne could back up the other. There would have to be&#13;
out at all bro~ ~hman to handle the traffic situation. There would&#13;
one manbeon tw men patrolling the buildings, one for Greenquisthave&#13;
to o&#13;
Cl room and one for LLC-CommArts. . . .&#13;
ere would be a need for an office in the mam building _complex to&#13;
'lb bli"c relations problems and to have an easily reached&#13;
handle any pu A uld h · pl ced f someone to bring any problems: man wo ave to be m&#13;
a m°:e whenever the buildings were m use.&#13;
th~~~ out the staff, a dispatcher would be n~ed to hold do~ the&#13;
fort in the main security office, as well as the _director. Ac~ording to&#13;
th thl·s would require a total of at least eight men, or Just about&#13;
myma , .&#13;
double the present daytime force. . . .&#13;
fosl of us do not come in contact with t~e security office very of~.&#13;
ca ionally we might become acquamted through the parking&#13;
ituation . ed to · t· k t · 'Ibl is the week the patrol has star~ issue. 1c e s agam. The&#13;
m t frequent violation is going to be illegal parking. I '?-yself ~ot a&#13;
·arning ticket for this last week. It seems that when I tried to fmd a&#13;
location in which to install my car, all the stalls were full, so I parked it&#13;
along ide the edge of the far lot with everyone else that couldn't find a&#13;
~~ h . Apparently the patrol does not take any sue reason mto account&#13;
·h n they patrol the lots . They just do the job they are supposed to do&#13;
and · ue the tickets. You can't blame anyone for do~ his job.&#13;
But the people who receive a summons under such circumstances do&#13;
blame the patrol. They shouldn't. Inst~ad they should blame the&#13;
person whose bright idea it was to redesign the Tallent Hall lot with&#13;
th e re ult that we now have 200 less spaces there than before. Once&#13;
aga L, there is not enough thinking ahead going into the facilities'&#13;
design around here.&#13;
There are 442 spaces in the Tallent Hall lot and' 867 spots in the back.&#13;
However , there have been 5,037 parking stickers distributed at&#13;
Par · de this year and class schedules dictate that there are often&#13;
over 1400 cars on campus. Faculty-Staff car pools .have not reduced&#13;
the number of cars extensively. The cost of other transportation is so&#13;
prohibitive that most people would rather drive.&#13;
Right now there is need of an additional 400-car lot. By the time this&#13;
will be completed we shall probably need spaces for at least 2000 cars&#13;
to have enough room next time one of those community functions is&#13;
held here during the day.&#13;
A problem exists in that there is not enough money to construct a&#13;
new parking lot behind Tallent Hall. The parking reserve has been&#13;
depleted to provide additional shuttle bus service.&#13;
I believe I have come to a sort of stop-gap solution to the problem.&#13;
The construction plans for the new lot call for a lot similar to those&#13;
presently in use , complete with blacktop and lighting. Why not instead&#13;
grade that land that is planned for the future lot and lay the large stone&#13;
base? People would be then allowed to park there when the other lots&#13;
are full.&#13;
There is no need for elaborate parking facilities when all we need is&#13;
space ; space we need now! Instead of first getting enough money&#13;
~ether to build the entire lot, lay the foundation first and put the lot&#13;
m use. As additional money becomes available, the lighting and&#13;
blacktop can be completed a section at a time.&#13;
With the lot in use on the gravel foundation, the lot would be packed&#13;
down before the surface would be laid. Done this way, the blacktop&#13;
would not crack into smaller pieces later.&#13;
Instead of waiting two years to pay for the lot by user fees the lot&#13;
could be in use in two weeks! '&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic i&lt;:~ by th~ stud~nts of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
os?a, Wisconsm 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library·&#13;
Learnmg Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295&#13;
The Parkside Ra g · . · · · n t d . n er 1s an mdependent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
re ec e m column d ed' · ff' · I . s an 1torials are not necessarily the o 1c1a&#13;
VI~ of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
inter~~to /~e Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subJect of&#13;
less t eds u ents , faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words ":&#13;
lett~ YP and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
addrrs for ~eng th and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be w:h Pldone number and student status·or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
Print a e I tutpon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
ny e ers.&#13;
Classified and di I d .&#13;
EDITO sp ay a rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
R-IN -CHIEF · Rudy L"&#13;
MANAGING E 1enau&#13;
NEWS EDITO~-ITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE ED . Geoff Blaesing .&#13;
SPORTS EDIT~~OR · fane Schliesman&#13;
BUSINESS MANAG~~s Koch, Kathryn Wellner&#13;
ADVERTISING MA · Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION M NAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
WRITERS· Ken K A~AGER: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Blaha · on °1• Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah, 8111&#13;
CARTOONIST : Gary Huck&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS·&#13;
ADVERTISING STAte.n Konkol, Al Craig, Bill Noll, Dennis Doonan . Greg Syston&#13;
ADVISER · Don K _F · Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
· opriva 7r-~----------------• N ,I.EPB.ESENTED f'.O'- NATIONAL ADVEllTISING BY i T ataonal Educational Advertising Services, Inc. T&#13;
36o Lexin,ton Ave., New York, N. 1'. 10017 __.-&#13;
point of View&#13;
Remembering the lessons&#13;
of war and peace&#13;
by Jane Schl iesman&#13;
F or Years and one week after he initially took office Richa d N'&#13;
. Ia be congratu Iatdfe'llh"o"n IDa yac ievmg the peace",rlxoonn A " IS a f II th t th . . menca s ownterms ..Ho' pe u Yb etl ex ra men'" s of wai.t'ing the furth er d ea th&#13;
anddestructIOn, can e a e~stparbally JusbfJed by those :erms. This&#13;
isnotthe place to quote statistics on the war for they are a matter of&#13;
rec&lt;Jrd.But before they begin to slowly fade from our minds a few&#13;
flections are 10 order.&#13;
reFirst there is a tendency for humankind to forget the lessons of&#13;
' I Carl sandburg s poem. "Gr"ass . 1 war. IS an : oquent description of this,&#13;
wherein he speaks of mfamous battlefJelds--Waterloo, Gettysburg,&#13;
ypres, Verdun--now c?vered Wlt~ grass, ~e ruin forgotten. Viet Narn&#13;
hastaught us many ~h~ngs: Pa~bclp~hon In an immoral war alienates&#13;
a large number of ~lh~ens. It IS f~hle to engage in a conflict neither&#13;
sidecan win. Constitutional ~uthorIty to declare and wage war belongs&#13;
toCongress, the represen~~hves of the I?eople. War diverts more and&#13;
more massive fu.n~ to m.II.Itary expen?Itures at the expense of other&#13;
priorities. All thIS .10 addItIon t~ the bItterest lesson of all, and what&#13;
VietNam has had In common WIth all wars--the toll in human life and&#13;
suffering.&#13;
Next, there is the attitude of the war's opposition to be considered.&#13;
For many who came to denounce it, their reasons were more&#13;
pragmatic than humanitarian. It was the military cost of the war that&#13;
prompted their dissent, and the idea that Viet Nam was a lost cause.&#13;
Three times in as many decades our technology has laid waste an&#13;
Asian country--Japan then Korea then Viet Nam. It is only the endurance&#13;
of the Vietnamese people which has forced us to analyze what&#13;
we are doing.&#13;
Nowit appears to be over and the time for rebuilding has come. We&#13;
cannot call it a victory but we can hope that it serves the future as a&#13;
potent example of the futility of war. Le Duc Tho, chief North Vietnamese&#13;
negotiator, is quoted to have said that as long as there are&#13;
imperialists there will be war. But as long as we remember, we shall&#13;
exercise restraint. Peace.&#13;
Union establishes&#13;
scholarship program&#13;
President Al Chesser of the&#13;
United Transportation Union&#13;
announced the establishment of&#13;
an ambitious scholarship&#13;
program that will enable a large&#13;
number 01UTU members aged 25&#13;
or under and the children and&#13;
grandchildren of older UTU&#13;
members to obtain a college&#13;
education.&#13;
The program, to begin in&#13;
September 1973, is being spon-&#13;
SOred by !he UTU Insurance&#13;
Association at an initial cost of&#13;
$100,000 in scholarships plus&#13;
thousands of dollars more in&#13;
related services and expenses.&#13;
Chesser hailed the UTU Inrsoulrea'nce&#13;
ASSOciation for its key . In making the program a&#13;
reahty. "Our Association" the&#13;
p~raedsiid.ent said , "has built 'a fine&#13;
han of service to thousands&#13;
land thousands of ·railroadmen.&#13;
ts life insurance and health&#13;
llSurance programs as well as&#13;
manJ' other excelle'nt group&#13;
:ograms, have added a great&#13;
easure of security to the lives of&#13;
~r members and their families.&#13;
~tOWthe association has gone one&#13;
Iltepfurther by seeking to provide&#13;
~e greatest benefit of all' a fine&#13;
"uUc t" .&#13;
ch . a Ion at the college of one's&#13;
for%ce.1 re~ard this as the finest&#13;
A.cof SOCial service."&#13;
CbeOIl.hcnor.ding to Chesser , 50 Ulng $500 scholarships will&#13;
an a~ar~~ the first year - and&#13;
SChOI~dltlonal 50 continuing&#13;
ucc rshlps awarded each&#13;
Itl'.~ding year until an annual&#13;
of 200 scholarshios is&#13;
reached after four years. The&#13;
scholarships will be pro-rated&#13;
according to the number of UTU&#13;
members in each of ten districts.&#13;
Noting that "all our ambitious&#13;
yOWlg members and our older&#13;
members' children and grandchildren&#13;
deserve an equal chance&#13;
to go to college," Chesser e~-&#13;
plained that the scholarships WIll&#13;
be initially awarded on a purely&#13;
chance basis. He added,&#13;
however, that continuation. of&#13;
each scholarship in succeedl~g&#13;
years will depend on the 1?-&#13;
dividual recipient's academiC&#13;
performance.&#13;
Chesser emphasiz~d that&#13;
program administr~tI~n. and&#13;
decisions affecting mdIvldual&#13;
scholarships will. be . the&#13;
responsibility of a .dlstmgUlshed&#13;
Scholarship AdVisory Com&#13;
mittee. Its members are Senator&#13;
Edward M. Kf?"1n&#13;
(Massachusetts); Sena tor&#13;
Richard S. SChweiker Pepn&#13;
svlvania); Rep. .H~rley p&#13;
Staggers (West Virglma) . W&#13;
Kelly Ass!. Deputy Mlmster&#13;
Canadian Dept. of Labour' Fred&#13;
K Hoehler, Jr., ExecutI.\e&#13;
D: tor AFL-CIO Labor StudIes&#13;
Celrnetcer' a•nd Robert B. 11.1 K ~e lV C er ,&#13;
D New York State School of&#13;
In~u~'trial and Labor Relations at&#13;
Cornell University. th&#13;
D '-to-dav management of f&gt;&#13;
pro;am, chesser noted. will ~&#13;
handled bv R. R. Bryant, an I&#13;
W . collins. Ass!. Genera&#13;
Se~retary &amp; Treasurers of the&#13;
UTU.&#13;
LOST &amp;&#13;
FOUND&#13;
Many Of these iterM have been&#13;
and FOUnd for al least a S4!me.~n :e LCdI&#13;
are urged to come itndclaim~1 i~~&#13;
~:lILN~~R~i~ON CENTER, TALLEN~T&#13;
de~dlinefor re~~ogor.,::~ :::;;.:~. The&#13;
Friday, Feb. 9, after Which they wi":'~ Oonaled 10 Charity.&#13;
Invenlory oIlhe LO$Iand FOI,Ind&#13;
Afropick ..&#13;
alarm clock .&#13;
articles Of clothing ..&#13;
beaded choker&#13;
cuff link. . ..&#13;
earrings.&#13;
exern ene books (used)&#13;
glasses .&#13;
hUbcap&#13;
keys ..&#13;
kito! biology inslrumenn,&#13;
luggage lag&#13;
medieval art&#13;
Milw. Bucks bracelet&#13;
notebooks. etc. r"e'c"ords&#13;
rings&#13;
slide rules&#13;
lerm paper&#13;
wallet&#13;
walch&#13;
and things lhovgnt lost for~l!f"&#13;
1 1&#13;
......,&#13;
1&#13;
1 '''',&#13;
0,..&#13;
1&#13;
21M't'I&#13;
I1&#13;
,1&#13;
mo.y&#13;
1,•&#13;
,&#13;
Stolen book&#13;
found but&#13;
unrecovered&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
Then there's the case of Tom&#13;
Geb, a student bere at Parkside,&#13;
who two days before the final in&#13;
AST 260 had his book stolen from&#13;
the library while he had gone to&#13;
the food service area.&#13;
Fortunately for Tom, or&#13;
perhaps unfortunately, he found&#13;
his book a half hour later in !he&#13;
bookstore where the thief had&#13;
apparently just sold it back. Tom&#13;
then explained to the bookstore&#13;
manager !hat the book had been&#13;
stolen and was told to contact the&#13;
security oUice.&#13;
Apparently !he response Tom&#13;
received Crom that office did not&#13;
satisfy bim as he later filed a&#13;
complaint with the Kenosha&#13;
County Sheriff's Office. The&#13;
response there was equa!l~&#13;
dissatisfying since he was m"&#13;
formed that security police here&#13;
at Parkside have lull JUnsWction&#13;
on campus&#13;
E,'en though Tom Geb's name&#13;
had been erased lrom the book,&#13;
he was able to prove to his&#13;
satisfaction that the book as htS&#13;
bv tile hand'Aritmg inside' but&#13;
this e\'idence "as JosufJ"loent for&#13;
absolute proof according to at&#13;
least one member of the eeunty&#13;
force&#13;
The result&#13;
book Tom&#13;
"hich the&#13;
lrom thc bo&lt;)ks".ono.&#13;
bough' ba k&#13;
$ I n&#13;
or h&#13;
romGt.&#13;
etter he y,&#13;
earher h&#13;
'tated "a&#13;
thief was kn&#13;
bookstore equ&#13;
when selh~g aclt book As of&#13;
this v. r' mg I:1as recCJved no&#13;
repl)&#13;
Tom n&#13;
whole ~xpe&#13;
learned&#13;
menlbc&#13;
s •&#13;
s ra h (' e&#13;
equitab e&#13;
with anoth&#13;
get It done&#13;
to take the&#13;
a esson&#13;
ed bv on&#13;
ead, he&#13;
e matter&#13;
Itb an&#13;
d workll1g&#13;
to 01 sectD'lly to&#13;
Wed., Jan. 31, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Movemen&#13;
the&#13;
Editor' Note: "The ~10H~mftt'"~IU be ...... u1ar 'eatu~ 1,0&#13;
Ranger, to deal with lhe femln I. pea r nfe In lOda' ldy •&#13;
Guest wr-iters art in\ited.. The foil "in article 'AI u mJtt.H b&#13;
Wend) Musich, ~n elor and ad" ee lO the Par leW \\om n'&#13;
Caueu . wee \4-1 in 'tad on rKenO) for. m linl f l \'d&#13;
oordinating eeeeu of \\omtn in Hlgbtr dueallOG.&#13;
Parkside women ....ere represented at the J.nuary m ollh&#13;
wisconsin Coor'd1l11ting Counctl 0( Wornen In H r EdUClluan&#13;
(WCCHEI held In ,ladison on January 19, 20, and 21 RIta Tan t.&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor, Wendy .luslch, Coo lor, and J an&#13;
Koehler. student and member 01 Parll.."de Women' ucu., auonded&#13;
the three-&lt;lay sessIOn&#13;
Begmmng the conference ~ a a pa~1 dilcllI;olon on coil&#13;
bargaInlOg held Fnda. "'emng feattD'lng rep tau,&#13;
\"ariou facult) orgaruz.atJo 10 ludm, John tack t: w e&#13;
Barbash. AAI'P. and fumnond .Iun , tMe&lt;! F..,u1t&#13;
represenlative from TAl'f""&#13;
The weCHE bw 1nE'S$ mec n ,.,&#13;
discu:s..~lon Calrly exploded O\! er .hat ha&#13;
~oboda AflaIr ' The Rcgent Ad H&#13;
Dlsad .. ntaRed -Iud&lt;: .. hId&gt; mdu&#13;
Par "Ide am has recommtnc:kod&#13;
ASSistant to P'reslCitnt John \ \ r&#13;
Women. n-port to JOS('ph \\ .'&#13;
EqualOpponu ties for t,,*,u&#13;
sa~ _Is "obo,r ~tlon as parall and _ out-dlnal 10\\'11&#13;
and disagreed thaI WIle\' could effect" eh&#13;
minorities. Further. grea-t dl plea. ure"l -ex:ON!ss&lt;.cl&#13;
JnequaJ salanes. despite their ~Imllar dull&#13;
AUention then turned to the raUltcalIon 0( the II" CHE propooal to&#13;
the UW AdmlOlSlraUon for the Alllnnatll' AcUon Program for&#13;
Women al all campuses TIl doewnent th II" H IUon&#13;
paper on problems of "omen in higher educauon, and ,""Iud man&#13;
I lieS rangmg lrom grl .... nce procedures to Worn n', llIdl&#13;
Prouams to eounseIll1g programs to phy ICllI edueauon and&#13;
reereallon faciliUes (RIta Tallenl and Wendy. 1 I h ba' copi of&#13;
this document is anyone 15 Interested In re\'l In 1l.) no. rev&#13;
version will act as a basis {or the group' .000" and Will nt to&#13;
regents, chancellors, Affirmat.\'. AcUon O(ll ,a.nd emtra.l ad,&#13;
mirnstrauon.&#13;
cholar hip a ail- bl&#13;
to Ra ine Co. 1 om n&#13;
point of View&#13;
. Remembering the lessons&#13;
of war and peace&#13;
by Jane Sehl iesman&#13;
F r Years and one week after he initially took office Richard N'&#13;
ou 1 t d f' 11 h' · ' ucon . t be congratu a e on ma y ac ievmg "the peace" on A . ,&#13;
is o 11 th t h . . menca s&#13;
ter ms Hopefu y e ex ra mont s of waitmg the furthe d th own · . b tl t . . . . , r ea&#13;
and destruction, can ea e~s partially Justified by those ~rms. This&#13;
is not the place to quote stah~hcs on the war for they are a matter of&#13;
record. But bef?re they begm to slowly fade from our minds a few&#13;
flections are m order.&#13;
reFi·rst there is a tendency for humankind to forget the lessons of w&#13;
' ' "G " . 1 ar. Carl Sandburg s poem rass is an e oquent description of this&#13;
where in he speaks of infamo~s battlefields--Waterloo, Gettysburg'.&#13;
Ypres, Verdun--now c?vered wit? ~ra~s, ~e ruin forgotten. Viet Nam&#13;
has taught us many ~h~ngs: Pa~ticip~tion man immoral war alienates&#13;
a large number of ~ih~ens. It is f~hle to engage in a conflict neither&#13;
side can win. Constitutional a_uthonty to declare and wage war belongs&#13;
to Congress, the represen~~bves of the ~eople. War diverts more and&#13;
more massive fu_n~s to m_il!tary expen~itures at the expense of other&#13;
priorities. All this _m addition t~ the bitterest lesson of all, and what&#13;
Viet Nam has had m common with all wars--the toll in human life and&#13;
suffering.&#13;
Next, there is the attitude of the war's opposition to be considered.&#13;
For many who came to denounce it, their reasons were more&#13;
pragmatic than humanitarian. It was the military cost of the war that&#13;
prompted their dissent, and the idea that Viet Nam was a lost cause.&#13;
Three times in as many decades our technology has laid waste an&#13;
Asian country--Japan then Korea then Viet Nam. It is only the endurance&#13;
of the Vietnamese people which has forced us to analyze what&#13;
we are doing.&#13;
Now it appears to be over and the time for rebuilding has come. We&#13;
cannot call it a victory but we can hope that it serves the future as a&#13;
pote nt example of the futility of war. Le Due Tho, chief North Vietnamese&#13;
negotiator, is quoted to have said that as long as there are&#13;
imperialists there will be war. But as long as we remember, we shall&#13;
exercise restraint. Peace .&#13;
Union establishes&#13;
scholarship prograin&#13;
President Al Chesser of the&#13;
United Transportation Union&#13;
announced the establishment of&#13;
an ambitious scholarship&#13;
program that will enable a large&#13;
number of UTU members aged 25&#13;
or wider and the children and&#13;
gran dchildren of older UTU&#13;
members to obtain a college&#13;
education.&#13;
The program, to begin in&#13;
ptember 1973, is being sponSOred&#13;
by the UTU Insurance&#13;
sociation at an initial cost of&#13;
sioo,ooo in scholarships plus&#13;
lhousands of dollars more in&#13;
related services and expenses.&#13;
Chesser hailed the UTU Insurance&#13;
Association for its key&#13;
role_ in making the program a&#13;
reality. "Our Association " the&#13;
Pl'esident said "has built 'a fine&#13;
lrndit' ' ion of service to thousands&#13;
It d ~ousands of railroadmen&#13;
hfe insurance and health&#13;
urance programs, as well as&#13;
any other excellent group&#13;
: 0 ams, have added a great&#13;
r:ra ure of security to the lives of&#13;
, members and their families. ·;:·the association has gone one&#13;
th P (Urther by seeking to provide&#13;
,.,.e greatest benefit of all· a fine&#13;
'-UUC t" . ch a ion at the college of one's&#13;
for% · 1 re~ard this as the finest&#13;
of social service "&#13;
ccording to Ch~sser 50&#13;
COnbnuing $500 cholarship; will&#13;
a, arded the first year - and&#13;
~h ~dditional 50 continuing&#13;
UC c rsh1ps awarded each&#13;
v~~ding year until an annual&#13;
of 200 scholarships is&#13;
reached after four years. The&#13;
scholarships will be pro-rated&#13;
according to the number of UTU&#13;
members in each of ten districts.&#13;
Noting that "all our ambitious&#13;
young members and our older&#13;
members' children and grandchildren&#13;
deserve an equal chance&#13;
to go to college ," Chesser e~plained&#13;
that the scholarships will&#13;
be initially awarded on a purely&#13;
chance basis. He added ,&#13;
however, that continuation . of&#13;
each scholarship in succeed1~g&#13;
years will depend on the i?dividual&#13;
recipient's academic&#13;
performance.&#13;
Chesser emphasiz~d that&#13;
program administr~ti~n. and&#13;
decisions affecting mdiv1dual&#13;
scholarships will. be . the&#13;
responsibility of a d1stmgmshed&#13;
Scholarship Advisory Com&#13;
mittee. Its members are Sen&#13;
Edward M. Ken&#13;
Ma sachusetts); Senat r&#13;
Richard S Schweiker Pe°t1&#13;
sylvama) · Rep. Harley . . . .. ) w p&#13;
Staggers (West Virg1rua ..&#13;
K lly Asst. Deputy l\11m ter&#13;
c:nadian Dept. of Labour· Fred&#13;
K Boehler. Jr . Execut1 . ...e&#13;
Director. AFL-CIO Labor tu:~e:&#13;
Center; and Robert B .• 1cKe f&#13;
Dean, ' ew York State Sc~ool o&#13;
Industrial and Labor Relallons at&#13;
Cornell Umversity&#13;
Dav-to-da, management of the&#13;
m Chesser noted, will be&#13;
progra ' • t and n&#13;
handled b, R. R. Bryan ' 1&#13;
W Collins. Asst Genera&#13;
Secretary &amp; Treasurers of the&#13;
UTU.&#13;
LOST&amp;&#13;
FOUND&#13;
Many of these items have been n&#13;
and Found for at least a semes ff ';:- Lost&#13;
are urged to come and claim wn.t i; ff'SOn~&#13;
the INFORMATION CENTER , T~:;s a&#13;
HAL~ 201 (at the top of e sta,nl Tht&#13;
de~dline for repc,ss=ing your belOng&#13;
Friday, Feb. 9, atter Which !hey 1' t&gt;!&#13;
donated to charity.&#13;
Inventory of the Lost and Found·&#13;
Afro pick .&#13;
alarm clock • • • •&#13;
articles Of clothi~9&#13;
beaded choker • •&#13;
cuff link&#13;
earrings ••&#13;
exam blue books (used)&#13;
glasses .&#13;
hubcap • •&#13;
keys .......&#13;
kit of biology instruments&#13;
luggage tag&#13;
medieval art .•&#13;
M ilw. Bucks bracelet&#13;
notebooks, etc&#13;
pen .&#13;
records&#13;
rings&#13;
slide rules&#13;
term paper&#13;
wallet&#13;
watch&#13;
and th ngs hOU!I t 0$ tor er&#13;
Stolen hook&#13;
found hut&#13;
unrecovered&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
ma Y&#13;
1&#13;
1 ,,,..&#13;
lpr&#13;
l&#13;
2l se&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
Then there's the ca of Tom&#13;
Geb , a student here at Par ide,&#13;
who two days before the final in&#13;
AST 260 had his boo tolen from&#13;
the library while he had gone to&#13;
the food service area .&#13;
Fortunately for Tom , or&#13;
perhaps llllfortunately, he found&#13;
his book a half hour later in th&#13;
bookstore where the thief had&#13;
apparently just sold it bac . Tom&#13;
then explained to the - tore&#13;
manager that the boo had been&#13;
stolen and was told to tact the&#13;
securih· office.&#13;
Apparently the re ns Tom&#13;
received from that offi did no&#13;
satisfy him a h lat filed a&#13;
complaint \ ith the Keno ha&#13;
County henff' OHic . Th&#13;
response her equ 11;&#13;
dissatisf)in in&#13;
formed that -ecurity pohc&#13;
at Parksid hav full )\Jn&#13;
Wed., Jan. 31, 1973 THE PA RKSI OE RA G R 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movem&#13;
•&#13;
HE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., J&lt;ln. 31, 1973&#13;
Th Ra en&#13;
By GUY Jensen&#13;
Th Cartoon trip&#13;
oga course&#13;
offered&#13;
A 10week yoga course is&#13;
to be given at Carthage&#13;
College on Saturdays&#13;
beginning February 3.&#13;
Two classes are scheduled&#13;
to be held in the&#13;
U Backroom" in the&#13;
Commons area tram 9:00&#13;
A.M .. 10:30A.M. and from&#13;
10:30 A.M.·12:00 A.M.&#13;
Students are requested to&#13;
make reservations with&#13;
the instructor Mrs. Carol&#13;
Merrick at 654.4851 and&#13;
are asked to bring a mat or&#13;
blanket.&#13;
Mrs. Merrick is known&#13;
professionally as "Yogini&#13;
Sri Gargi" an Indian name&#13;
given her by her i nstructor,&#13;
Swami&#13;
Vishnudevananda. She&#13;
received her certitication&#13;
tram the Sivananda yoga&#13;
Ashram in Val Morin,&#13;
Canada after five years&#13;
study and undergoing the&#13;
teachers training course at&#13;
his Canadian Ashram.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS QFFICE&#13;
•&#13;
~~~~"~"~'O~INE: 219 T5A5L3L-E2N15T0HALL&#13;
rAOHc."&#13;
1ZA KffCHEN&#13;
~. So Iter.&#13;
Fr .&#13;
un 1M ..&#13;
,.,h '.rbI4. V1Ht,.&#13;
",., (,$7·$191&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Bspana&#13;
Special ).,. I,.. .....&#13;
Easter Break&#13;
APRIL 21-29&#13;
Only $249 . I plus 1010lax&#13;
me udes: &lt;1M service&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
• Luxury Apartment&#13;
• Doily Car Rental&#13;
• Sangria Party&#13;
• All Tips &amp; Transfer&#13;
For ."format,on and . S 'IT apPlicatIons Conlact&#13;
avel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
Audio- Visual Review&#13;
'Bronx' &amp; 'Management'&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
The video taP,e, uptown: Portrait or The South Bronx shows wba&#13;
life life is like 10 the South Bronx.. . t&#13;
The tape brings you mrougn a typical week In the Bronx.&#13;
unemployment rate is verr high so dun~g the weekdays there·..1'bt&#13;
men out in the street pl.aying basebalhl WIth an old stick ' There \l.i"e&#13;
also children playing With some tr~s som~ne had thrown out in&#13;
tr-eet There is a free theater which sometimes plays there Peop&#13;
~i1ls~nd for an hour waiting for t~e show to begin and no matter ..~&#13;
kind of play it is, they always love It.&#13;
On Sunday afternoons everybody goes down to the park and Vi&#13;
the baseball game. The players are from the neighborhood a~ld&gt;os&#13;
people there are all friends and neighbors.&#13;
The tape does a good job of portraying the Bronx. It seems to&#13;
wall-ta-wall people and people-ta-people walls. The people ..110:&#13;
there ten the listener about t~elr ~eIghborhood and the feeling t&#13;
prevails there. It gives you mSlght into the ~ronx. It's not just a ~&#13;
you're not supposed to walk through at night. The people that&#13;
there are out on the streets at night and all that they meet are tbeor&#13;
neighbors. The tape brings you to the Bronx and to the peopleI&#13;
in which a personal visit coul?n't. . ' n a I)&#13;
You. Yourself Incorporated IS a him 10 the Learning Center about&#13;
self_management.&#13;
It is somewhat like a filmed l.ect~re bU~it's ~one in a rather cltT&#13;
way. The speaker uses many aids including ammated clips ~fi&#13;
at no time gets boring.&#13;
In a commanding voice the orator tells you, "Either think. or a bette&#13;
way to do your job or someone else will think of a way to eUmiDatr&#13;
Work smarter not harder. There is always a payoff for the perso". il&#13;
does a little bit more. Success IS like smokmg, It's definitely&#13;
forHmeinagls.o" talks about overcoming the fear of failure. He sayslhal&#13;
success is preceeded. by failure ..No one ever learned to walk WiItIlIIl&#13;
failing and falling. What he says ISvery true. It seems thateY..,.,.&#13;
sometime or ~not~e: has been afr,aid t? try so~ething newfer"&#13;
failing and being ridiculed. After listening to this man talk abaltk&#13;
realize that this fear is totally unwarranted.&#13;
Not only does this film inspire you to be successful, it gt ... idooI.&#13;
how to do it. The thing it really stresses \Show to get in therigbtlnat&#13;
of mind. The speaker says that the main ingredients of - ..&#13;
courage and confidence. Through the film, he manages to IIIIUIItt&#13;
listener with a little bit of each,&#13;
by Bob Rohan&#13;
Iii '&#13;
3315 • 52nd 51.&#13;
Kenosha, WIt-&#13;
P'no- c. \&#13;
!J1dit:.,.. lIJooJ.d.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 551-71~&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR. DINING ROO&#13;
~~~~&#13;
IOE ft. ll. 1'73&#13;
Jensen&#13;
P R SIDE CA PUS OFFICE&#13;
21 T AllE HALL&#13;
5S3-21 SO&#13;
'W. hington Square"&#13;
5200 Wa hington Avenue&#13;
Racine&#13;
,.&#13;
,., . ,.&#13;
"-• ,,,_,,,,&#13;
a cour e&#13;
ff rd&#13;
A 10 ee Yoga course is&#13;
o be given at Carthage&#13;
College on Saturdays&#13;
beginn i ng February 3.&#13;
T o classes are scheduled&#13;
o be held in the&#13;
" Bae room" in the&#13;
Commons area from 9: 00&#13;
A . . . 10 : 30 A.M. and from&#13;
10: 30 A . M.- 12:00 A.M.&#13;
S udents are requested to&#13;
ma e reservations with&#13;
i nstructor Mrs. Carol&#13;
rr c at 654-4851 and&#13;
re as ed to bring a mat or&#13;
bl n e .&#13;
s. Merrick Is known&#13;
professionally as "Yogini&#13;
Sri Gargi" an Indian name&#13;
gl en her by her ins&#13;
ructor, Swami&#13;
Vishnudevananda. She&#13;
received her certification&#13;
from the Sivananda Yoga&#13;
Ashram in Val Morin,&#13;
Canada after five years&#13;
study and undergoing the&#13;
eachers training course at&#13;
his Canadian Ashram.&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
E§Paiia&#13;
Special&#13;
Easter Break&#13;
APRIL 21-29&#13;
Only $pf 1o?a.&#13;
Includes M d Serv ,ce&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
• luxury Apartment&#13;
• Daily Car Rental&#13;
• Sangria Party&#13;
• All Tips &amp; Transfer&#13;
For •nfor mat10n and - S&#13;
Tr appl1cat,ons contact&#13;
avel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
Audio-Visual Review&#13;
'Bronx' &amp; 'Management'&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
The video tape, Uptown: Portrait or The South Bronx shows&#13;
life life is like in the South Bronx. . .&#13;
The tape brings you throu_gh a typ1~al week m the 8 l'Olbt&#13;
unemployment rate is ve91 high so dun~g the weekdays there· '111t&#13;
men out in the street playing baseball with an old stick. There&#13;
al O children playing with some tr~sh som~ne had thrown out In&#13;
treet. There is a free theater which sometimes plays there p,._, ·&#13;
will stand for an hour waiting for ~e show to begin and no matie;, ""'lllt&#13;
kind of play it is, they always love it.&#13;
On unday afternoons everybody goes down to the park and~&#13;
the baseball game. The players ar~ from the neighborl)ooct 111d&#13;
people there are all friends and neighbors.&#13;
The tape does a good job of portraying the Bronx. It &amp;eans&#13;
wall-to-wall people and people-t_o-p~ple walls. The people Wbe to&#13;
there tell the listener abou! t~eir ~e1ghborhood and the feelinc&#13;
prevails there. It gives you ms1ght mto the Bronx. It's notjuat• llllet&#13;
you're not supposed to walk through at night. The people that&#13;
there are out on the streets at night and all that they meet Ire&#13;
n ighbor . The tape br~n~ you to ,the Bronx and to the peop1e 1111&#13;
in which a personal v1s1t couldn t.&#13;
You, Yoursel£ Incorporated is a film in the Learning CeQQr&#13;
self-management.&#13;
It is somewhat like a filmed lecture but it's done in a rather-.&#13;
way . The speaker u~es many aids including animated cli ... 'l'lle&#13;
at no time gets bormg.&#13;
ln a commanding voice the orator tells you, "Either think ol a&#13;
way to do your job or someone else will think of a way to eliadaaae&#13;
Work smarter not harder. There is always a payoff for the per-.&#13;
does a little bit more. Success is like smoking, it's definitely&#13;
forming ."&#13;
He also talks about overcoming the fear of failure. He IIJI&#13;
success is preceeded by failure. No one ever learned to wal&#13;
failing and falling. What he says is very true. It seems thatft'li.,.&#13;
sometime or another has been afraid to try something new,-._.,&#13;
failing and being ridiculed. After listening to this man talk ._1&#13;
realize that this fear is totally unwarranted.&#13;
Not only does this film inspire you to be successful, it IMI&#13;
how to do it. The thing it really stresses is how to get in the rfll!I&#13;
of mind. The speaker says that the main ingredients of&#13;
courage and confidence. Through the film, he manalfil to&#13;
listener with a little bit of each.&#13;
by Bob Rohan&#13;
3315.52-&#13;
From Russia,&#13;
with Gruhl&#13;
by Ken Pestka&#13;
Freedom is the right to do as&#13;
ld To the Russian people this is&#13;
'~e 'sole definition of freedom.&#13;
Recently Arthur Gruhl, a&#13;
parkside student,. had th~ oprtunity&#13;
of visiting Russia as&#13;
POrtof his studies as a history&#13;
POajor. This definition of freedom&#13;
~ oneof the insights into Russian&#13;
~~aracter that,. for Gruhl, is the&#13;
underlyingmotivation of Russian&#13;
action and life.&#13;
Recently this reporter had the&#13;
pleasure of attending the Racine&#13;
Optimists club luncheon where&#13;
Grublwas the guest speaker. He&#13;
hadpraise for the cleanliness and&#13;
evident patriotism of the Russian&#13;
people.The fervor of the Russian&#13;
people in singing their national&#13;
anthem at athletic events, contrasted&#13;
with recent actions at&#13;
athletic meetings in our own&#13;
country is, for Gruhl, an indieation&#13;
that the Russians are&#13;
building and maintaining their&#13;
.traditions while in our -own&#13;
country we are seeing our&#13;
traditions and ties with the past&#13;
eroded.&#13;
Grubl highlighted the basic&#13;
differences between the V.S.S.R.&#13;
and the V.S. by relating an incident&#13;
that happened to a fellow&#13;
ttour is.t The tourist wa s at -&#13;
emptmg to take a photograph of&#13;
a cat that resembled a pet he had&#13;
at home. Mter a short chase the&#13;
cat took refuge behind a garbage&#13;
can I,n an alley. At this point a&#13;
Russian proceeded to make a&#13;
cltlz~ns arrest. It seems the&#13;
tourist was about to take a picture&#13;
of an unflattering aspect of&#13;
Russian life. After several hours&#13;
in the police station the tourist&#13;
w~s allowed to continue his trip&#13;
minus the photograph of the&#13;
garbage can.&#13;
Gruhl was impressed with the&#13;
low cost of the trip. "It was the&#13;
best travel bargain we ever had&#13;
and we've traveled in 46 countries,"&#13;
he said. The total cost of&#13;
the trip was approximately $600&#13;
dollars. This figure included&#13;
round trip flight from New York,&#13;
all hotel accommodations meals&#13;
transportation in Russi'a, and&#13;
guide services. Grubl stated that&#13;
the V.W. Parkside Activities&#13;
Board is looking into the&#13;
possihilities of offering a trip to&#13;
Russia as part of their travel&#13;
program.&#13;
Summer jobs in Europe offer&#13;
experience to interested. students&#13;
roo ·itt·i~Uii·""&#13;
• 1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15~&#13;
Work this summer ,fn the&#13;
forests of Germany, on construction&#13;
in Austria, on farms in&#13;
Germany, Sweden and Denmark,&#13;
in indystries in France and;.&#13;
Germady, in hotels .·in Switzerland.&#13;
There are these jobs available&#13;
as well as jobs in Ireland,&#13;
England, France, Italy and&#13;
Holland are open by the consent&#13;
of the govermnents of these&#13;
countries to American university&#13;
students coming to Europe the&#13;
next summer.&#13;
For several years students&#13;
made their way across the&#13;
Atlantic through A.E.S.-8ervice&#13;
to take part in the actual life of&#13;
the people of these countries. The&#13;
success of this project has caused&#13;
a great deal of enthusiastic interest&#13;
and support both in&#13;
America and Europe. Every&#13;
year, the program has been&#13;
expanded to include many more&#13;
students and jobs. Already, many&#13;
students have made application&#13;
for next swnmer jobs. American-&#13;
European Student Service (on a&#13;
non~profitable basis) is offering&#13;
these jobs to students for Germany,&#13;
Scandinavia, England,&#13;
Austria, Switzerland, France,&#13;
Italy and Spain. The jobs consist&#13;
of forestry work, child care work&#13;
([emales only), farm work, hotel&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11- 8&#13;
work- (limited number&#13;
available) I construction work"&#13;
and some other more qualified&#13;
jobs requiring more specialized&#13;
training. ~... I&#13;
"'The purpose of this program-Is&#13;
to afford the student an op-&#13;
.portunity to get into real living&#13;
contact with the people and&#13;
customs of Europe. fu this way, a&#13;
concrete effort can be made to&#13;
learn something of the culture of&#13;
Europe. In return for his or her&#13;
work, the student will receive his&#13;
or her room and board, plus a&#13;
wage. However, student should&#13;
keep in mind tha t they will be&#13;
working on the European&#13;
economy and wages wiH&#13;
naturally be scaled accordingly.&#13;
The working conditions (hours,&#13;
safety, regulations, legal&#13;
protection, work permits) will be&#13;
strictly controlled by the labor&#13;
ministries of the countrIes m·&#13;
volved.&#13;
]n most cases, the employers&#13;
have requested especially Cor&#13;
American students. Hence they&#13;
are particularly interested in the&#13;
student and want to make, the&#13;
work as interesting as poSSible.&#13;
For further information and&#13;
application forms to: American-&#13;
European Student-Service, Box&#13;
34733, FL 9490 Vaduz,&#13;
Liechtenstein (Europe).&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef sandWiChes!&#13;
F b II 2 Pool Tables&#13;
005 a .&#13;
Air Conditioning. p'nball Machine • I •&#13;
.........C.o.ld.S.ix.P.ac.ks..To..G.o •••••••••&#13;
Science seminar&#13;
here Saturday&#13;
A daY-long symposium for&#13;
secondary school science&#13;
~eachers and students doing&#13;
IDde~endent projects in the&#13;
ch.emlcal, biological and physical&#13;
sciences will be held Saturday,&#13;
Feb. 3, at Parkside under&#13;
Spo~sorship of the Kenosha-&#13;
Rac,me District of the Wisconsin&#13;
JUnior Academy of Sciences.&#13;
The morning session will be&#13;
devoted to discussion of possible&#13;
tndependem science projects and&#13;
gUidance on student projects&#13;
underway and the afternoon&#13;
sessions will deal with writing&#13;
and presentation of scientific&#13;
papers.&#13;
Donald Carlson, co-chairman&#13;
of the district, said one purpose of&#13;
the symposium is to stimulate&#13;
interest in individual science&#13;
project investigations for&#13;
presentation at the Junior&#13;
Academy District meeting 00&#13;
April 7 at Racine Park High&#13;
School and tbe state meeting 00&#13;
April 24 at Ripon College.&#13;
Morning discussion sessions&#13;
will be led by Prof. Eng ... e&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz of Parkside,&#13;
biological sciences; Prof. Kenneth&#13;
Hamm, Carthage College,&#13;
chemical sciences; and Prof.&#13;
Gerald Buck, Dominican, the&#13;
College of Racine, physical&#13;
sciences. In addition. Irene&#13;
O'Neill of tbe Wisconsin&#13;
Telephone Co. will present a&#13;
program on lasers titled&#13;
"Potential Unlimited. It&#13;
During the afternoon, Prof.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz and Richard Bliss,&#13;
science consultant for the Racine&#13;
Unified School District, will talk&#13;
on writing of scientific papers&#13;
and a Parkside audio-visual&#13;
specialist will demonstrate use of&#13;
audio-visual equipment as an aid&#13;
to presentation of scientific data.&#13;
Science tea~ ape! their&#13;
students" can moe reservatJOnS&#13;
for the symposium by cootacting&#13;
Carlson or eo-chairman Jane&#13;
Gordon at Park High School,&#13;
~cine. by Jan. 26.&#13;
$I SlfS lilt WA... • _&#13;
lifUE...lAlSE.·."..".-&#13;
AilE £NTI1l£t&gt; TO COfflINlllNt';&#13;
T~EA1M(NT O/IIAI/ t'JJl/1N.",-NT&#13;
&amp;"I ttS' Fot.L~A I'E/tIOI'OF&#13;
HDS',.,rAL,rA11ON IN A WI'J5t'Aofra&#13;
~J7ONNOU'ItM.)-&#13;
.' . ...~~~~\.':&#13;
.." ~ .f Village- inn.&#13;
p .. ~ c ......E H 0 L :! E. I" (&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
A(I'OU OT&#13;
COUPON 5 Sirloin&#13;
oz. Steak&#13;
Two AA Eggs&#13;
Hash Browns&#13;
Toast or Pancakes&#13;
all for . . .&#13;
Wed., Jan. 31, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGeR 5&#13;
Pat Ireland who hails from San Francisco will&#13;
give a concert at Ihe SIudent Acllvilles Building on&#13;
Feb. 3. The concert, which begins al 8:00 p.m., Is&#13;
free 10 students wilh Ihe ad of Ihe concert ap&#13;
pearing In Ihis Issue of the RMger. SIud nts&#13;
withoul Ihe ad will be charged 50 cenls llnd guests&#13;
SI.OO.&#13;
Pal is Ihe kind of performer whos style 15 so&#13;
effortless Ihal even his gullllr luning Is a pleasure&#13;
10walch. His material ranges Irom Tom PaKlon 10&#13;
Rev. Gary Davis, with heavy ernphests on his own&#13;
original malerlal like "Go To Hell Rellders&#13;
Digesl."' He has the singular dlsllncllon of playing&#13;
lor Sonny Bardger and Ihe San Francisco H It's&#13;
Angels.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADS&#13;
F'ORALE Coil". M...&#13;
,"". u.A.I ft. o..M ~ ... ' .....&#13;
IIld.Ula ....... ' .... PART nME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658·2573 58th 5t. ot 6th Ave.&#13;
AI OFFICE CAPITOL COURT IlWAU EE&#13;
Ao.d.uU ,;It((,plf/u 11-.", ~uU&lt;f4&#13;
In Concert&#13;
A I E A&#13;
~'1 - '1t.s-Utl ~ ~a'"&#13;
Saturday Feb. 3 8:00 P.&#13;
Student Activities 81ildlAl&#13;
Admission: 50' Parkslde Stud nts&#13;
"00 Guests&#13;
OR&#13;
Rip - Off the P,A.B. by presenting&#13;
this AD at the door and be alhitted&#13;
FREE (()c4 'P~ S(.f"U.e.&#13;
,u",aw '1-uU&#13;
-..-~ ..-. ..- .&#13;
From Russia,&#13;
with Gruhl&#13;
by Ken Pestka&#13;
Freedom is the right to do as&#13;
Id To the Russian people this is&#13;
·:e ·sole definition of freedom.&#13;
Recently Arthur Gruhl, a&#13;
p rkside student, had the op;&#13;
rtunity of visiting Russia as&#13;
rt of his studies as a history&#13;
paajor. This definition of freedom&#13;
~ one of the insights into Russian&#13;
~1aracter that,_ for_ Gruhl, is ~he&#13;
underlying motivation of Russian&#13;
action and life.&#13;
Recently this reporter had the&#13;
pleasure of attending the Racine&#13;
Optimists club luncheon where&#13;
Gruhl was the guest speaker. He&#13;
had praise for the cleanliness and&#13;
evident patriotism of the Russian&#13;
people. The _fer:vor of ~e Ru~sian&#13;
people in smgmg their national&#13;
anthem at athletic events, contrasted&#13;
with recent actions at&#13;
athletic meetings in our own&#13;
country is, for Gruhl, an indication&#13;
that the Russians are&#13;
building and maintaining their&#13;
.traditions while in our own&#13;
country we are seeing our&#13;
traditions and ties with the past&#13;
eroded.&#13;
Gruhl highlighted the basic&#13;
differences between the U.S.S.R.&#13;
a~d the U.S. by relating an inc1de~&#13;
t that happened to a fellow&#13;
toun~t. The tourist was attemptmg&#13;
to take a photograph of&#13;
a cat that resembled a pet he had&#13;
at home. After a short chase the&#13;
cat t?Ok refuge behind a garbage&#13;
can i_n an alley. At this point a&#13;
~~ss1an proceeded to make a&#13;
c1tiz~ns arrest. It seems the&#13;
tourist was about to take a picture&#13;
?f a~ unflattering aspect of&#13;
~uss1an hfe. After several hours&#13;
m the police station the tourist&#13;
w~s allowed to continue his trip&#13;
mmus the photograph of the&#13;
garbage can.&#13;
Gruhl was impressed with the&#13;
low cost of the trip. "It was the&#13;
best travel bargain we ever had&#13;
and we' ve traveled in 46 countries,"&#13;
he said. The total cost of&#13;
the trip was approximately $600&#13;
dollars. This figure included&#13;
round trip flight from New York,&#13;
all hotel accommodations meals&#13;
transportation in Russ{a, and&#13;
guide services. Gruhl stated that&#13;
the U .W. Parkside Activities&#13;
Board is looking into the&#13;
possibilities of offering a trip to&#13;
Russia as part of their travel&#13;
program.&#13;
Summer jobs in Europe offer&#13;
experience to interested students&#13;
Work this summer in the&#13;
forests of Germany, on construction&#13;
in Austria, on farms in&#13;
Germany, Sweden and Denmark,&#13;
in industries in France and/&#13;
Germady, in hotels in Switzerland.&#13;
There are these jobs available&#13;
as well as jobs in Ireland,&#13;
England, France, Italy and&#13;
Holland are open by the consent&#13;
of the governments of these&#13;
countries to American university&#13;
students coming to Europe the&#13;
next summer.&#13;
For several years students&#13;
made their way across the&#13;
Atlantic through A.E.S . ..service&#13;
to take part in the actual life of&#13;
the people of these countries. The&#13;
success of this project has caused&#13;
a great deal of enthusiastic interest&#13;
and support both in&#13;
America and Europe. Every&#13;
year, the program has been&#13;
expanded to include many more&#13;
students and jobs. Already, many&#13;
students have made application&#13;
for next summer jobs. AmericanEuropean&#13;
Student Service (on a&#13;
non -profitable basis) is offering&#13;
these jobs to students for Germany,&#13;
Scandinavia, England,&#13;
Austria, Switzerland, France,&#13;
Italy and Spain. The jobs consist&#13;
of forestry work, child care work&#13;
(females only), farm work, hotel&#13;
work (limited number&#13;
available) , construction work,&#13;
and some other more qualified&#13;
jobs requiring more specialized&#13;
training. ,&#13;
The purpose of this program&#13;
to afford the student an op-&#13;
. portunity to get into real living&#13;
contact with the people and&#13;
customs of Europe. In this way, a&#13;
concrete effort can be made to&#13;
learn something of the culture of&#13;
Europe . In return for his or her&#13;
work, the student will receive his&#13;
or her room and board, plus a&#13;
wage. However, student should&#13;
keep in mind that they will be&#13;
working on the European&#13;
economy and wages will&#13;
naturally be scaled accordingly .&#13;
The working conditions ( hours,&#13;
safety, regulation~, l_egal&#13;
protection, work permits) will be&#13;
strictly controlled by the_ la~r&#13;
ministries of the countries involved.&#13;
In most cases, the employer&#13;
have requested especially for&#13;
American students. Hence they&#13;
are particularly interested in the&#13;
stude nt and want to make. the&#13;
work as interesting as pos ible.&#13;
For further informati on. and&#13;
application forms to: AmericanEuropean&#13;
Student-Service, Box&#13;
34733, FL 9490 \'aduz,&#13;
Liechtenstein (Europe&gt;r··ice,i;··,ub·· · ..&#13;
• 1701 N. Main Racine 633 -9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11 - 8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15c&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sa n &lt;lwiches&#13;
F b II 2 Pool Tables&#13;
OOS a .&#13;
A . C d .. n ·ng Pinball Machine t 1r o n 1t1 0 1 +&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go•••••••••• ....................&#13;
Science minar&#13;
here Saturda&#13;
A day-long ymposium r&#13;
secondary chool cience&#13;
~eachers and tudent doing&#13;
Independent project in the&#13;
ch_emical , biological and phy 1cal&#13;
sciences will be held Saturda) ,&#13;
Feb . 3 , at Park ide under&#13;
sponsorship of the Keno haRac_&#13;
ine District of the i nsm&#13;
Junior Academ , of ien e .&#13;
The morning ion ,II be&#13;
?Cvoted to discu ion of pos ibl&#13;
m~ependent cience projec nd&#13;
guidance on tudent projec&#13;
underway and the afternoon&#13;
sessions \\-ill deal with writi&#13;
and pre entation of ientif1c&#13;
papers.&#13;
Donald Carlson, co-chairman&#13;
of the district, said on purpo of&#13;
the sympo 1wn i to imul t&#13;
interest in individual&#13;
project inve ligation for&#13;
presentation at the Junior&#13;
Academy Di trict meeting&#13;
April 7 at Racine Par H1&#13;
School and the state meeting on&#13;
April 24 at Ripon Coll e .&#13;
forning discussion -i&#13;
will be led by Prof. Eu&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz of Par 1de,&#13;
biological ciences; Prof. Kenneth&#13;
Hamm. Carthage Coll e ,&#13;
chemical cience ; and Prof.&#13;
Gerald Buck, Dom1mcan , th&#13;
College of Racine , ph_' 1cal&#13;
sciences. In addition , Irene&#13;
O'Neill of the \ ·i con in&#13;
Telephone Co. v.ill pr nt a&#13;
program on la er titled&#13;
''Potential Unlimited."&#13;
During the afternoon Prof.&#13;
Gasiorltiewicz and Richard Bl' ,&#13;
science consultant for the Racine&#13;
Unified School District, ;ill ta!&#13;
on writing of scientific papers&#13;
and a Par side audio-vi ual&#13;
specialist will demonstrate of&#13;
audio-visual equipment as an "d&#13;
to presentation of ientific ta.&#13;
Science teach and th&#13;
students can m e ·-,..,..,....,.,in'"&#13;
for the symposium by contacti&#13;
Carlson or co-cll8.1.rman J n&#13;
Gordon at Park High hool&#13;
~cine. by Jan . 26.&#13;
T o&#13;
Hash Bro ns&#13;
Toast r Pa cakes&#13;
all for ...&#13;
$19~ .~~:~~p:~&#13;
Wed., Jan. 31, 973 THE PARKSIDE RA GcR 5&#13;
for Sonny&#13;
Angels .&#13;
Cl&#13;
Coll&#13;
PART TI E&#13;
ORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
0 CE&#13;
PAT&#13;
dmi s1on: oc&#13;
• 1&#13;
58t St at 6th Ave.&#13;
0 cou&#13;
D&#13;
tud&#13;
OR&#13;
Rip - Off the P.A. . by pres nting&#13;
this D at the door nd a itted&#13;
FREE&#13;
THE PARI&lt;SIDE RA GER Wed., J.n. 31, 1973&#13;
•&#13;
PIZ&#13;
TS HAPPE ING&#13;
U lOU like to argue, watch for&#13;
gns anrounciJlg the formation&#13;
01 the ?arkside [lebate Club. A&#13;
m~ will be held Wed., Feh. 7.&#13;
The ume and room to be announced.&#13;
Block, Tom Hughes, Jack Mann&#13;
Dan Rysewyk and P •&#13;
Weyrauch. Sigma Pi is Proud&#13;
aUI&#13;
see this Involved indiVidual fI to&#13;
and extends its congratuiati e Ort&#13;
its new members, onsto&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity would like&#13;
to announce that on Jan. 21 and&#13;
22 six new members were&#13;
l~dged into this Fraternal&#13;
~rotherhood- These' pledges are&#13;
as follows: Rick Barnhart, Larry&#13;
German major happy&#13;
• with new lifestyle&#13;
• The Par ide Child Care&#13;
R ..-ill ha,-e a tralJUII&amp;&#13;
!rom Jan. 22 to Jan. 25_&#13;
T Coach Old&lt; I're&lt;ia and&#13;
E&lt;ilh 1_ 'I. R: • will gh-e the a;::::t' ~TIlereis DO charge for&#13;
~ 10 Red Cross rust aid&#13;
proced TIle w-ill be&#13;
• :30 a m and 4:30 p.m 1be&#13;
0&gt;iId Care CeDI.. IS in the&#13;
ellI of !he Parts&gt;de Baptist&#13;
un:h DO Htgh".. y E between&#13;
tIDd '&#13;
"I am eempletely happy here." writes Pam&#13;
E~dahl one of the German majors at parkaide.&#13;
\lon' from wotrenbuttel, Kenosha's sister city&#13;
lJ1 \\ • t Germany&#13;
.. tv German i so fluid now that t amy have to&#13;
ta i refresher eoorse in English when 1 come&#13;
bo '&#13;
\I - Engdahl, is one of many cases in which&#13;
nt' have decided to apply their German&#13;
tudi done at parkside to some day-t&lt;&gt;-day&#13;
practice tuch enhance their overall academic&#13;
SUC:&lt;e!"'- She accepted a job as a bank clerk in&#13;
olr ttel (or a year ince the job market in&#13;
1\ Germany has been wide open during the past&#13;
fe'lo\' ars others have taken Similar jobs before her&#13;
as te cbers. . cretarres of interpreters.&#13;
Glona Alfredson and James Smith decided to&#13;
...pend their Juruor year in Germany. Alfredson is in&#13;
f'reloorg and milh IS in Bonn. They have also sent&#13;
had&lt; letters to lellow students, recommending this&#13;
e perience.&#13;
Chances for studying or working in Germany are&#13;
,'er) good for Parkside students. All German&#13;
majors wbo have had their basic training at&#13;
Parkside passed their selective exams in Madison.&#13;
The)' ha ve returned to cornplete&#13;
their degree. been accepted&#13;
to a graduate school or have&#13;
found good jobs on their return .&#13;
Full information on various&#13;
opportunities to study or work in&#13;
Germany can be received (rom&#13;
Dr Walbru&lt;::k'O corrdinator of&#13;
Germany.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200Lathrop Ave.• Racine&#13;
SII-56th St.. Kenosha&#13;
"pSSt•••&#13;
h ykid!&#13;
Let me&#13;
piece 0&#13;
lose to you a cry large&#13;
'ZZ.&#13;
e 101a Otal dail~&#13;
• ddoliOnra&amp;Sall&#13;
er acket- a chance&#13;
sa e of Ihe '"i of old&#13;
• p It I haye Ille leal know&#13;
not be onee&#13;
wrote The race&#13;
to the stronc -b t&#13;
always to the swift&#13;
good way to bet."&#13;
IS AG ~YTOBET i-If:....-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
parkstde student, Pam Engdahl, romps willt&#13;
some of her host-family in Wolfenbuttel West&#13;
Germany. She is a bank clerk in that city. ' "'~:!I~"····.... ,";,::: .... rtes i KLUTE· ,,~roNG :&#13;
•&#13;
Academy T V da· • Award Winner Jane L' on •&#13;
: Donald Sutherland i • Fri., Feb. 2; 8:00 p.m. •&#13;
• Sun., Feb. 4; 7:30 p.m. •&#13;
•+ Adm. 75c ::~:,~:;: •• lOS re&lt;jUirlMl ~....~=;i:~..;.:..J&#13;
....,~..........~...,.. '.&#13;
S1.75&#13;
\~~~~~~n ~}l#~ikio/JJ ~~d matter how much of our pizza,chicken, potatoes&#13;
_salad you eat, the price is only $1.7 5)&#13;
Children under 3 Free _ C\lildren 3-9, 10Cenls a Yea' SII"ln 'IlIA 'ABLDll .. Ye PUBLIC hOUse&#13;
lathrop and 21st (Almost)&#13;
IDE ., Jan. 31 , 1 73&#13;
PPE I G&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity would like&#13;
to announce that on Jan. 21 and&#13;
22 six new members were&#13;
l~dged into this Fraternal&#13;
trotherhood. These . pledges are&#13;
as follows : Rick Barnha~. Larry_&#13;
Block, Tom Hughes, Jack Ma&#13;
Dan Rysewyk and Phil,&#13;
W ch S. auJ eyrau . 1gma Pi is Proud&#13;
see this involved individual en to&#13;
and extends its congratuiationaort&#13;
!ts new member . to&#13;
G rman major happy&#13;
·th n lifestyle&#13;
PP. h re," writes Pam&#13;
rm n major at Park ide.&#13;
utt I Keno. ha' i ter city&#13;
st. ..&#13;
kid!&#13;
ry large&#13;
a ays to the swift&#13;
ood way to bet."&#13;
TO ET&#13;
P arkside student, Pam Engdahl, romps Witb&#13;
some of her _host-family in Wolfenbuttel, West&#13;
Germa ny. She 1s a bank clerk in that city .&#13;
................ !!\ t ·::::::E=·::-"KL UTE•&#13;
: STARRING !&#13;
• Academy J. V da • Award Winner ane .L' on&#13;
: Donald Sutherland :&#13;
: Fri., Feb. 2; 8:00 p.m. :&#13;
t Sun., Feb. 4; 7 :30 p.m. f&#13;
+ Adm. 75c :~:CS:.: ff • I Os required&#13;
~ .... ~;:;:~:: ... ..J&#13;
Lathrop and 21st ( Almost)&#13;
Grapplers 4th in tourney&#13;
. . &lt;&#13;
but Martin loses ?~ ~)&#13;
~4&#13;
~~- -0&amp;..&#13;
&amp;~5~ EVERYTHING YOUWANTEDTOKNOWABOUTA SALES PIZZA CAREER ... and afraid to ask. Get the facts about ~ P4 ITALIAN FOOD A SPECIALTY tial'sjo~pre~~wa~~~:l~-m~~a~:=~~: ~:~~~egwhile&#13;
car~. In sa . r ll-time upon graduation. 1m- ","- \ SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
~::~~~p~~:gs~~g~ine u.wd Ke~sha. PhoneMr.Cohen, .~ DRINKS AVAILABLE FROM THE BAR&#13;
IF-ItO ,. 633-2427in Racine. Equal opportumty - M-F. '.r)&#13;
CLASSIFIED.ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Cia sifi~ Ad\ uti In~R.lf&#13;
presents 5 cents per word up to 25 words fOCe"ach .n tlOn CllECK I&lt; o FOR $&#13;
Payable in advance by check or ca h lo.&#13;
DA ) TO RUlI W The Puk id~Ranger&#13;
8usin~ Office Tofmd 'our , multiply th&#13;
" [).I~ LLC L'\I-Park Ide num of v.'Ordi llm 5 = Iult.p1y th t lOIAl b §(]U UQUll Keno ha. Wi . $.314'&#13;
th number of • u )'OU want&#13;
NAME It to run&#13;
to ADDRESS DATE&#13;
WHITECAP PHONE NO.&#13;
MOUNTAIN CITY&#13;
One word per space Do not skiP space bet"..., words to show p3Cq ::5050 -_UW-P students Ragtime Rangers&#13;
$44 50-Guests&#13;
$20.00 Down Payment&#13;
(Sign up at Into Center' Talll!r'lt Hall)&#13;
Feb. 16, 17, &amp; 18&#13;
"': . Transportation. Lodging,&#13;
Includes. Meals.and un Tickets&#13;
for 1st time&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
Two time All-American Ken&#13;
Martin lost for the first time this&#13;
ear but Parkside still managed&#13;
~ n'nish 4th in a very strong&#13;
wrestling tournament over the&#13;
weekend.&#13;
Western Illinois took team&#13;
honors at the Eight State invitational&#13;
at Macomb, Ill. by a&#13;
.sizable margin. They finished&#13;
with81points, Moorhead State 57,&#13;
WayneState 53, UW-Parkside 47~&#13;
Eastern Michigan 28, MISSOUrI&#13;
Valley 18. Langsing Community&#13;
College 13 and Chicago State O.&#13;
Martin lost. which makes his&#13;
season record 12-1. but only after&#13;
facing two former two time All-&#13;
American's in a roll. First after&#13;
handling Maxs Branum 9-7,&#13;
Martin found himself going up&#13;
against former opponent Doug&#13;
Willer of Eastern Michigan.&#13;
Willer finally won the match 8-6.&#13;
the second time out of three trys&#13;
against Martin.&#13;
Parkside had two first place&#13;
winners though in Junior Bill&#13;
West, now 10-1, and freshman&#13;
Rico Savaglio, now 8-1. Savaglio&#13;
according to Coach Jim Koch,&#13;
performed in the outstanding&#13;
individual match for Parkside&#13;
defeating Harley Haug of&#13;
Moorhead State 9-5 in the finals ..&#13;
Other finishers for the Parkside&#13;
grapplers were two third place&#13;
.finishes by Joe Landers and&#13;
Randy Skarda and two fifth&#13;
places by Arlyn Fredrich and&#13;
Gary Peterson.&#13;
Koch stated that, overall, he&#13;
was very pleased with the results&#13;
considering that several of the&#13;
other teams are NCAAand NAJA&#13;
power houses. Koch also exclaimed&#13;
that he was especially&#13;
happy with the lighter weights&#13;
and that if Parkside could have&#13;
got more points from the upper&#13;
weight classes that we could have&#13;
won.&#13;
Intramural&#13;
basketball&#13;
Parkside's intramural&#13;
basketball league began its&#13;
season Jan. 17. League play is on&#13;
Sunday and Wednesday nights at&#13;
the P.E. building. Play will run&#13;
through the end of March&#13;
follOWedby a tournament involving&#13;
the top teams from each&#13;
division to determine a champion.&#13;
ow·, STAGE BAND&#13;
JAZZ ENSEMBLE&#13;
PRESENTS A&#13;
JAZZ&#13;
WORKSHOP&#13;
Friday. Feh. 2&#13;
noon - 1 P.M.&#13;
FREE! StUdent Activities Building&#13;
Speaking of&#13;
Sports&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
After attending the last basketball game, Iwas rather pleased at the&#13;
number of people I saw that turned out to cheer our Rangers 00. The&#13;
cagers are a young team this year, but they have proven themselves&#13;
worthy of competing in college basketball and at the time of this&#13;
writing were over the .500 mark on the season. I am sure that Coach&#13;
Stephens is pleased with the performance of IiiSteam eed l'U het that&#13;
if a few more Parkside students turned out to watch the games, they&#13;
also would he pleased. .&#13;
This semester we (on the Ranger staff) have something rather&#13;
unusual in store for all you sports fans ... two sports editors. N~' I'm&#13;
sure you're wondering what is so unusual about tw? sports ~tors.&#13;
right? Well. one of us is a girl. Kathy Wellner and I will be putting our&#13;
heads together to become THE Parkside Ranger Sports Editor. Kathy&#13;
and I will try to keep you up to date on all the sports around the&#13;
Parkside campus and, to the delight of all of your hearts, we ",U also&#13;
try to write a sports colum~ every. week or so to let you know that we&#13;
are working for your reading enjoyment. . .&#13;
I also have an unusual request for any student;s that like to ~t their&#13;
minds to work writing stories. We, the sports ecf:itor,are badly m.n~&#13;
of a couple of sports writers and would appreciate anyooe that 15 interested&#13;
in writing sports stories to contact one of us at the Ranger&#13;
office in Library-Leaming Center D-194.&#13;
Wed., Jan. 31. 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Feb.3,7:3Op.m.&#13;
Feb. 6, 7:30pm.&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
Jan.31&#13;
Feb. 3,1 pm.&#13;
Purdu ,'OC"!h Iral&#13;
• ItllAln&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
Feb. 3,1 p.m. W-Qshk.-b" l Cloud to It OsIhkoolJ&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
.......... T'"",&#13;
S_mChA&#13;
T A.M ~.ACTIC:.&#13;
)... .00100&#13;
1 •• 00&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
.... MoncIeY" ~~y&#13;
TWIdII,.&amp;~'t F,_&#13;
.-Y«'lda'/.. T~,. ~,. nII_.') • '.I'I't'....'..'. ... I&#13;
I .. ...............,&#13;
".s ... , .-"(.lC.*"U.l.1--.1I&#13;
• 10 001.... 'C" .... ,1&#13;
.'" to ... "" n "'c . , '" ..&#13;
-P Judo Club to p n or&#13;
collegiate tournam nt&#13;
This year' Wi ansin&#13;
Collegiate Judo Tcurnam ent ,&#13;
ponsored by tho UW·Par ,d clal&#13;
Judo ClUb, ",11 be held m the&#13;
Physical Educa"on Build,".&#13;
field bouse SUndly. Feb. 4, It 12&#13;
p.m&#13;
Then! will be five cluses of&#13;
compet.tlon: Men's Willie Belt.&#13;
len's 8n:"0..,,Belt, • len' Black&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha o OFF ON ANY&#13;
i"ANGE&#13;
Sports&#13;
Grapplers 4th in tourney&#13;
but Martin loses&#13;
for 1st time&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
Two time All-American Ken&#13;
Martin lost for the first time this&#13;
ear but Parkside still managed i n'nish 4th in a very strong&#13;
wrestling tournament over the&#13;
weekend.&#13;
western Illinois took team&#13;
honors at the Eight State In.&#13;
vitational at Macomb, Ill. by a&#13;
·. sizable margin. They finished&#13;
with 81 points, Moorhead State 57,&#13;
Wayne State 5~, UW-Parks_ide 47!&#13;
Eastern Michigan 28, M1ssour1&#13;
Valley 18, Langsing Community&#13;
College 13 and Chicago State 0.&#13;
Martin lost, which makes his&#13;
season record 12-1, but only after&#13;
facing two former two time AllAmerican's&#13;
in a roll. First after&#13;
handling Maxs Branum 9-7,&#13;
Martin found himself going up&#13;
against former opponent Doug&#13;
Willer of Eastern Michigan.&#13;
Willer finally won the match 8-6,&#13;
the second time out of three trys&#13;
against Martin.&#13;
Parkside had two first place&#13;
winners though in Junior Bill&#13;
West, now 10-1, and freshman&#13;
Rico Savaglio, now 8-1. Savaglio&#13;
according to Coach Jim Koch,&#13;
performed in the outstanding&#13;
individual match for Parkside&#13;
defeating Harley Haug of&#13;
Moorhead State 9-5 in the finals.&#13;
Other finishers for the Parkside&#13;
· grapplers were two third place&#13;
finishes by Joe Landers and&#13;
Randy Skarda and two fifth&#13;
places by Arlyn Fiedrich and&#13;
Gary Peterson.&#13;
Koch stated that, overall, he&#13;
was very pleased with the results&#13;
considering that several of the&#13;
other teams are NCAA and NAIA&#13;
power houses. Koch also exclaimed&#13;
that he was especially&#13;
happy with the lighter weights&#13;
and that if Parkside could have&#13;
got more points from the upper&#13;
weight classes that we could have&#13;
won.&#13;
Intramural&#13;
basketball&#13;
Parkside's intramural&#13;
Speaking of&#13;
Sports&#13;
By Kris Koch&#13;
After attending the last basketball game, I was rather pleased at the&#13;
number of people I saw that turned out to cheer our Rangers on . The&#13;
cagers are a young team this year, but they have proven them v&#13;
worthy of competing in college basketball and at the time oC th1&#13;
writing were over the .500 mark on the season. I am ure that Coa&#13;
Stephens is pleased with the performance of lits team and l 11 be t&#13;
if a few more Parkside students turned out to watch the gam the)&#13;
also would be pleased . .&#13;
This semester we (on the Ranger staff) have som thin rather&#13;
unusual in store for all you sports fans ... two sports edito .• • I m&#13;
. sure you're wondering what is so unusual about tw? port ~t&#13;
right? Well, one of us is a girl. Kathy Wellner and I ·ill be putti our&#13;
heads together to become THE Parkside Ranger por Editor-. K th.&#13;
and I will try to keep you 11p to date on all the por aro d th&#13;
Parkside campus and, to the delight of all of your hear , "'e ·1U al&#13;
try to write a sports colum~ every_ week or o to let you no th I e&#13;
are working for your readmg enJoyment. .&#13;
I also have an unusual request for any tud n . that like to~ th r&#13;
minds to work writing stories. We, the port editor, are badJ} in _n .&#13;
of a couple of sports writers and would appreciate anyon th t . n -&#13;
terested in writing sports stories to contact one of at th&#13;
office in Library-Learning Center D-194 .&#13;
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT&#13;
CAREER ... and afraid to ask. Ge~ the fact a ut Pr t'O\\ ~&#13;
tial's job preview program - the first t~p ~a~~; hi&#13;
car~r. in sales adnegdr:!!esfu~-~::er::;:· graduation tmobtammg&#13;
your ' Pho 1 Coo&#13;
mediate openings in Racine and Ke~ ha . ne. r .&#13;
633-2427 in Racine. Equal opportumty - • 1-F .&#13;
Wed., Jan. 31, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
SCHED D&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Feb.3 i : pm .&#13;
Feb. 6 7: pm.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb .3&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
F b. 3, lp .m .&#13;
P.E. Bld • ul&#13;
J t&#13;
t&#13;
Alfredo's Restaura t&#13;
2827 63rd St , soe OFF&#13;
enosha&#13;
ON ANY&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
ITALIA FOOD A SP CIALTY&#13;
SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAG&#13;
ORI S AVAILABL FRO TH BA basketball league began its&#13;
season Jan. 17. League play is on&#13;
Sunday and Wednesday nights at&#13;
the P .E . building. Play will run&#13;
through the end of March&#13;
followed by a tournament involving&#13;
the top teams from each&#13;
division to determine a champion.&#13;
CLASSIFIED.ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
UW-P STACE BAND&#13;
JAZZ ENSEMBLE&#13;
PRESENTS A&#13;
JAZZ&#13;
WORKSHOP&#13;
Friday, Feh. 2&#13;
noon - 1 P.M.&#13;
FREEi&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
to&#13;
WHITECAP&#13;
MOUNTAIN&#13;
UW-P students&#13;
:::: : Ragtime Rangers&#13;
$44 50 _ Guests&#13;
$20.00 Down Payment&#13;
Pal Info Center . Tallent Hall) (Signu&#13;
Feb. 16, 17, &amp; 18&#13;
ii: . Transportation, Lodllinl!,&#13;
includes. Meals and Lift Tickets&#13;
NA&#13;
DATE ADDRESS------------- -------&#13;
CITY--~-:-:-:'.':-:::-:::-~::::-;-;:-;:::::~~w:-:_inen=&#13;
I&#13;
.. Photo by AI Craig&#13;
kp mn•er t t.&#13;
Cougars was Sophomore Gary&#13;
Hickerson with 33 points.&#13;
1001o"ed by teammate Antonio&#13;
Jobns&lt;Jo "ith 19.&#13;
Parkside shot well lrom the&#13;
field. connecting on 52 percent 01&#13;
the shots they took. The Rangers&#13;
shot only 33 percent from the&#13;
chanty line, though, hitting 6 of&#13;
18. SI. Xavier gunned through 43&#13;
percent of their field goal attempts,&#13;
but they also were cold&#13;
from the gift stripe, connecting&#13;
on only 12 of 24 tosses.&#13;
Rangers fall in rematch&#13;
against No. Michigan&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
The uW_Parkside cagers&#13;
I ed tough basketball last&#13;
~t~day night against Norther,"&#13;
Michigan, but they couldn t&#13;
contain N.M.'s Bob Lehan who&#13;
scored 25 points and helped down&#13;
the R1lngers B(}-72. The host&#13;
Michigan team climbed to a 43-~&#13;
advantage at halftime and their&#13;
lead was never relinquished. .&#13;
Gary Cole lead the R1lngers m&#13;
the point column with 16 pomts,&#13;
while Mike Hanke and Chuck&#13;
Chambliss each meshed 14. Bill&#13;
Sobanski grabbed reboundmg&#13;
honors with 13 boards be&#13;
helped along in that dePan..::&#13;
by Hanke who hauled in 11&#13;
The leading SCorer for'&#13;
thern Michigan was Lehan !lIr&#13;
25, while teammates I~&#13;
Robertson and Gary ~&#13;
both concentrated on wor~ ...&#13;
hoards, grabbing 12 apiece&#13;
The Rangers faced Iii&#13;
College last night and 111II':&#13;
home [or their next three .....&#13;
against Purdue-North CeIunI&#13;
Feb. 3, Milton Collegeon .... '&#13;
and Carroll College on Fob ..&#13;
•&#13;
St. Xavier&#13;
Jot"..~&#13;
H.l.c.kenofl .",&#13;
Ryan&#13;
Wills .00'" Totals&#13;
FG. FT. PF&#13;
I ,.' ,~&#13;
16 t-a 3&#13;
3 '·8 ,&#13;
c c-o 3&#13;
1 o.t , ,., ,1----··&#13;
" 12-24 15---&#13;
F,G. FoT.a. PF. - 3&#13;
6 " , e o-c s&#13;
e c-o , , 3·' , , c-a , Women's track&#13;
3 ,., ,&#13;
1 c-o e All women interested II ..&#13;
I o.c 3&#13;
8 '·3 a should contact Barb ManiI,&#13;
33 6-18 " 2257. Practice for lite&#13;
50 ac 70 season has begun, and~&#13;
" 38 n are needed.&#13;
p"rkside&#13;
Routheaux&#13;
Dolan&#13;
ChambliSS&#13;
eever&#13;
CO'e&#13;
Y,ou~ngquist Gottfried&#13;
SObanski&#13;
Hanke&#13;
'rcters&#13;
51. Xavier&#13;
PiIlrkside&#13;
ATiON ULLETIN&#13;
FREE T-SHIRTS&#13;
To 8e Gwen Away&#13;
(110 Plreh}se M.e.ssary)&#13;
~&#13;
SPECIAL CHAMPIONSHIP RING DISPLA1:&#13;
Dallas Cowhoys Milwaukee Bdcles&#13;
Foothall Hall of Fame&#13;
Baltimore Oriols and many others&#13;
LAROEST RINO EVER MADE ( SiZE 19)&#13;
For Bronko Nagurski&#13;
ER&#13;
p.,&#13;
GER'"7 ATiON&#13;
., J•. 30 &amp; 31&#13;
IftMnlh ....... r.&#13;
Rangers fall in remat&#13;
against No. Michigan&#13;
Photo b Al Cr ig&#13;
Sophomore Gary&#13;
Hae er on with 33 points,&#13;
Collo•"td by teammate Antonio&#13;
.,WP,IJIJ with 19.&#13;
Pa de shot well from the&#13;
fieJd, COMecting on 52 percent of&#13;
the they took. The Rangers&#13;
shot only 33 percent from the&#13;
charity lane, though, hitting 6 of&#13;
18 t . xavier gunned through 43&#13;
percent of their field goal attempts,&#13;
but they also were cold&#13;
from the gift stripe, connecting&#13;
on only 12 of 24 tosses.&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
The UW-Parkside cagers&#13;
,;ed tough basketball last&#13;
~tin-day night against Norther,n&#13;
fichigan, but they couldn t&#13;
ta. M 's Bob Lehan who con m . ·&#13;
scored 25 points and helped down&#13;
the Rangers ~72. The host&#13;
fichigan team climbed to a 43-~&#13;
advantage at halftime and their&#13;
lead was never relinquished. .&#13;
Gary Cole lead th~ Range~s m&#13;
the point column Wlth 16 pomts,&#13;
while Mike Hanke and Chu~k&#13;
Chambliss each meshed 14. ~111&#13;
obanski grabbed reboundmg&#13;
SI. Xavier&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Hickerson&#13;
KHon&#13;
Ryan&#13;
Wills&#13;
Rogers&#13;
Totals&#13;
Parkside&#13;
RoulhNUX&#13;
Ooten&#13;
Chambliss&#13;
Peyer&#13;
Cote&#13;
Youngquist&#13;
Snow&#13;
Gottfried&#13;
SObanski&#13;
Hanke&#13;
Totals&#13;
St. Xavier&#13;
Parkside&#13;
-&#13;
FG.&#13;
7&#13;
16&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
29&#13;
FG.&#13;
1&#13;
6&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
4&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
33&#13;
30&#13;
34&#13;
FT. PF&#13;
5.9 4 .....&#13;
1-2 3&#13;
4 -8 2&#13;
0-0 3&#13;
0-1 2&#13;
2-4 1&#13;
12-24&#13;
FT. P F.&#13;
0-2 3&#13;
1-2 0&#13;
0-0 5&#13;
0-0 0&#13;
3-5 4&#13;
0-2 2&#13;
2-4 2&#13;
0-0 0&#13;
0-0 3&#13;
0 -3 2&#13;
6-18 21&#13;
40 70&#13;
38 72&#13;
ATION .. ULLETIN&#13;
FREE T-SHIRTS&#13;
To Be Gifen Away&#13;
(N, P11e~111 N1ee111ry)&#13;
honors with 13 boards be&#13;
helped along in that uqi' 11111._.&#13;
by Hanke who hauled in IL&#13;
The leading scorer for&#13;
them Michigan was Leh-.&#13;
25, while teammate,&#13;
Robertson and Gary&#13;
both concentrated on wor&#13;
boards, grabbing 12 •.--&#13;
The Rangers faced&#13;
College last night and&#13;
home for their next three&#13;
against Purdue-North "--·&#13;
Feb. 3, Milton College OIi&#13;
and Carroll College on&#13;
All women intereate4&#13;
should contact Barb&#13;
2257. Practice for&#13;
season has begun,&#13;
are needed.&#13;
SPECIAL CHAMPIONSHIP RING DISP~:&#13;
Dallas Cowl,oys Milwaukee Bueb&#13;
Footl,all Hall of Fame&#13;
Baltimore Oriols and many others&#13;
LARGEST RING EVER MADE ( SIZE 191&#13;
For Bronko Nagurski</text>
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