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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Norman Mailer here Sunday</text>
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              <text>The ParksideWednesday,&#13;
September 27, 1972&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
EDITORIAL&#13;
Participation the key&#13;
to ending the blues&#13;
Good old Parkside . That's the talk all the returning&#13;
students rally around as they drink beer at the Student&#13;
Activities Building. Freshmen air the three-week-old&#13;
disillusionment of broken dreams as they find this&#13;
college lacking a lot o f what they thought a University&#13;
should have. Lots of talk never gets past the empty cups&#13;
covering their tables. Legitimate complaints, many&#13;
good ideas, some positive suggestions: nobody hears&#13;
them except the same people who heard them yesterday.&#13;
&#13;
But there is a way out of the blues: PARTICIPATION.&#13;
Parkside needs a channel of communication to tie it&#13;
together more than ever. Before t he University traps&#13;
itself in a whirlpool of uniformity, new ideas must be&#13;
heard and discussed by ALLthe people here. Parkside is&#13;
a new University and it can have a tremendous future.&#13;
But as it looks now, Parkside will drown in its own&#13;
garbage. Non-existent student participation has allowed&#13;
Parkside to disintegrat e into a tangled web of apathy&#13;
that swallows the student mind and silences it into meek&#13;
acceptance of d isappointment.&#13;
The only way to change the situation is to keep open&#13;
channels of communication among students. This has to&#13;
be done on a larger scale than the table top debating now&#13;
so common. This newspaper can be an alt ernative. But&#13;
only if you help.&#13;
To keep the student body ac curately informed the&#13;
newspaper must keep its nose into everything. As it&#13;
stands now, we don't have enough noses to fill a Kleenex&#13;
with news. We need people. You can help with anything&#13;
from advertising to typing to editorializing. If you don't&#13;
know how to do it, we can help you learn.&#13;
The choice is yours. There will be a staff meeting&#13;
Thursday, September 28, at 8 p.m. in room D-194 of the&#13;
Library Learning Center. If you decide not to help, this&#13;
may be our last issue. If you decide not to help, be&#13;
careful about what you complain about over beer —&#13;
after four weeks of the same garbage, you'll be boring&#13;
people.&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
here Sunday&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
"An Evening With Norman&#13;
Mailer" will open the 1972-73&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts series at&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 1, in the gymnasium of the&#13;
new physical education building.&#13;
Mailer's Parkside appearance&#13;
will be his first in an October tour&#13;
of 20 colleges and universities,&#13;
the only tour he has scheduled&#13;
this year. Other midwestern&#13;
stops on the tour are Western&#13;
Illinois University at Macomb&#13;
and Notre Dame University.&#13;
Petition circulated on parking&#13;
A petition concerning "the&#13;
parking and transportation&#13;
problem" at Parkside was circulated&#13;
to faculty and staff&#13;
recently by Marion Mochon,&#13;
instructor of anthropology.&#13;
The petition reads:&#13;
"Whereas substantial inconvenience&#13;
and loss of working&#13;
time have been experienced by&#13;
us, we, the undersigned members&#13;
of the faculty and staff of The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
petition the University&#13;
Committee to bring to the appropriate&#13;
authorities and&#13;
agencies and to urge the acceptance&#13;
of our request that:&#13;
"1) temporary and permanent&#13;
parking facilities for faculty and&#13;
staff be provided at the earliest&#13;
possible date adjacent to the&#13;
complex of teaching buildings,&#13;
and that&#13;
"2) additional shuttle service&#13;
be provided during rush hours for&#13;
the convenience of students."&#13;
Mrs. Mochon said 300 petitions&#13;
were signed.&#13;
According to Irwin Zuehlke,&#13;
manager of Business Affairs, the&#13;
second proposal has already gone&#13;
into action with an extra shuttle&#13;
in operation during a peak&#13;
morning period.&#13;
St. Louis Jazz Quartet here&#13;
The St. Louis Jazz Quartet will&#13;
appear in concert Saturday, Oct.&#13;
14, in the Bradford Auditorium at&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
Jeanne Trevor, lead singer,&#13;
made her debut on the Ebony&#13;
Showcase Theater in Los&#13;
Angeles. An immediate success&#13;
in Gaslight Square upon moving&#13;
to St. Louis, she became the city's&#13;
first woman disc jockey to have&#13;
her own day-time jazz show. She&#13;
has also appeared in most of the&#13;
prominent supper clubs there.&#13;
Miss Trevor is a graduate of Los&#13;
Angeles City College, Music and&#13;
Drama Department.&#13;
Terrence Kippenberger,&#13;
bassist and leader of t he group, is&#13;
a graduate of St. Louis Institute&#13;
of Music. He has toured with such&#13;
personalities as Louie Nye and&#13;
June Christy. Kippenberger&#13;
served as musical director,&#13;
conductor and arranger for a&#13;
musical review, "Pointblank,"&#13;
which toured major U.S. cities.&#13;
In September, 1969, he formed&#13;
the St. Louis Jazz Quartet for the&#13;
purpose of presenting school&#13;
children with an introduction to&#13;
jazz as part of an integrated&#13;
concert series of the St. Ix)uis&#13;
Chapter of Young Audiences, Inc.&#13;
Acclaimed as one of the finest&#13;
percussionists to develop in St.&#13;
Louis, Charles Payne provides&#13;
the beat for the Quartet. He has&#13;
performed as drummer with the&#13;
Oliver Nelson Studio Jazz Ensemble,&#13;
with the Gateway&#13;
Symphony Orchestra and with&#13;
the George Hudson Big Band.&#13;
Payne is now commander of&#13;
the St. Louis Drum and Bugle&#13;
Corps, the organization from&#13;
which he received his first&#13;
musical training. After going to&#13;
Europe for study, he returned to&#13;
become a student of Richard&#13;
O'Donnell, principal percussionist&#13;
of the St. Louis&#13;
Symphony Orchestra.&#13;
Keyboard instrumentalist&#13;
David Schrage began his musical&#13;
career in elementary school. He&#13;
was the leader of "Sometimes&#13;
3+1" and "Concepts," two pop&#13;
groups in the St. Louis area. For&#13;
several years he was the official&#13;
accompanist for the St. Louis&#13;
University Chorale and appeared&#13;
with the St. Louis Symphony&#13;
while a member of that Chorale.&#13;
Schrage has been active as a&#13;
composer in recent years,&#13;
writing music in the jazz, folk,&#13;
rock and pop styles, including&#13;
several compositions for the&#13;
Quartet.&#13;
The Quartet's concert program&#13;
runs the gamut from jazz, to&#13;
blues, to ballads. A review of&#13;
their performance at the&#13;
Mississippi River Festival in the&#13;
St. Louis Post-Dispatch said,&#13;
"The Quartet thrilled the&#13;
audience with a program ranging&#13;
from gospel soul music to ...&#13;
downright funky jazz ... Miss&#13;
Trevor's singing was versatile,&#13;
controlled, emotionally sincere ...&#13;
She nearly brought the tent down&#13;
with a hand-clapping, footstomping&#13;
spiritual, LET IT BE ...&#13;
the improvisation was fresh,&#13;
exciting and clearly&#13;
imaginative."&#13;
Zuehlke went on to explain that&#13;
the parking lot and bus service&#13;
budget is contingent upon student&#13;
enrollment and sale of faculty&#13;
and staff parking permits. The&#13;
72-73 budget calls for $20,000 to be&#13;
set aside for parking lot construction&#13;
and service reserve.&#13;
The shuttle system is depleting&#13;
that reserve — in other words,&#13;
the university can't afford a&#13;
parking lot.&#13;
The Parking and Transportation&#13;
Committee is&#13;
presently looking into&#13;
possibilities concerning more&#13;
parking areas and ways to pay&#13;
for them.&#13;
Tickets now are on sale at the&#13;
Parkside Information Center in&#13;
Tallent Hall. General admission&#13;
is $1.50 and Parkside studentstaff&#13;
admission is $1. Mail orders&#13;
for general admission will be&#13;
filled by the Information Center&#13;
and must be accompanied by a&#13;
stamped self-addressed envelope.&#13;
Checks should be made&#13;
payable to The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Agents for Mailer said the&#13;
"evening" will consist of a wideranging&#13;
discussion of "politics,&#13;
life and art" by the Pulitzer&#13;
prize-winning novelist, news&#13;
journalist and political activist.&#13;
Mailer is the author of "The&#13;
Naked and the Dead," the classic&#13;
novel of World War II, and "The&#13;
Deer Park," "An American&#13;
Dream," "Why Are We in Viet&#13;
Nam?" and the prize-winning&#13;
"The Armies of the Night."&#13;
His "Miami and the Siege of&#13;
Chicago" was an assessment of&#13;
the Democratic and Republican&#13;
campaigns of 1969 and he&#13;
recently covered the current&#13;
Democratic convention for Life&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Mailer also is interested in&#13;
filmmaking and directed,&#13;
produced and starred in his most&#13;
recent film, "Maidstone," in&#13;
which he plays a candidate for&#13;
the presidency.&#13;
Counselors form trial workshops&#13;
By Je annine Sipsma&#13;
"Man is a rational being and the height of his growth lies in his&#13;
relationships with others."&#13;
The counselors at Parkside are&#13;
forming new groups called&#13;
Workshops for Interpersonal&#13;
Growth. The first meetings will&#13;
be held during the first week in&#13;
October. There will be meetings&#13;
once a week for eight weeks.&#13;
In talking to Parkside counselors,&#13;
it was found that these are&#13;
experimental groups. Last year&#13;
there were two meetings in&#13;
Parkside Village of a group on&#13;
this order.&#13;
The meetings will be without&#13;
format with members discussing&#13;
whatever happens to be on their&#13;
minds.&#13;
Hot food&#13;
Ever been at school for a few&#13;
hours and don't feel like going&#13;
home to eat?&#13;
Parkside's hot food service&#13;
could be the answer. Located in&#13;
the Student Activities Building,&#13;
the Library-Learning Center and&#13;
at the Kenosha campus, hot food&#13;
is offered to during most of the&#13;
day.&#13;
In addition to the scheduled hot&#13;
food service times below, vending&#13;
service is offered continuously&#13;
at these locations,&#13;
Greenquist and Tallent.&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
Kenosha and the LLC serve&#13;
breakfast from 7:30 to 9:30 a.m.&#13;
The Activities Building handles&#13;
only a continental breakfast&#13;
menu.&#13;
All three locations serve hot&#13;
lunches from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.&#13;
while the LLC serves dinner from&#13;
4 to 6:30 p.m.&#13;
- Dr. Gerald Egan&#13;
The workshops won't be true&#13;
sensitivity groups and they don't&#13;
deal with therapy. They will be&#13;
communication on a personal&#13;
level. They will give people a&#13;
chance to communicate their&#13;
feelings and in turn listen to the&#13;
feelings of others.&#13;
The goal of Workshops for&#13;
Interpersonal Growth will be to&#13;
help people relate to others more&#13;
easily. It also hopes to create a&#13;
greater sense of self-worth,&#13;
better self-expression, and&#13;
keener sense of self-identity.&#13;
Whether it meets these goals will&#13;
depend on the people participating.&#13;
&#13;
There will be group leaders to&#13;
initiate discussion if necessary.&#13;
The group leader will not be a&#13;
leader in the traditional sense but&#13;
will be part of the group like&#13;
anyone else.&#13;
There will be four different&#13;
groups. One group will be made&#13;
up of student nurses and&#13;
meetings will be held at St.&#13;
Luke's if enough people are interested.&#13;
This group relate to&#13;
their interests in nursing.&#13;
Another group will be made up of&#13;
adults over 23 years old who have&#13;
come back to school. They will&#13;
discuss special problems they&#13;
have encountered going into a&#13;
college environment. The other&#13;
two groups will be made up of&#13;
other interested students.&#13;
If you are interested in this&#13;
program, contact one of these&#13;
counselors for information: Steve&#13;
Bangert (553-2121-ext. 42), Clay&#13;
Barnard (553-2225), or Wendy&#13;
Musich (553-2121-ext. 43). &#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
Open to suggestion What's in a name?&#13;
The primary function of this newspaper will be to&#13;
communicate to the Parkside community what its&#13;
members do, feel and think. In guarding the freedom of&#13;
the pre ss as a vital right of m ankind, we will d iscuss&#13;
whatever is not explicitly forbidden by law, including&#13;
the wisdom of an y restrictive statute or public official.&#13;
We will especially concern ourselves with decisions and&#13;
policy affecting Parkside students. We will criticize&#13;
when necessary and will ap plaud when deserved. As a&#13;
student publica tion we will be restricted by nothing&#13;
except consideration of student welfare. We will always&#13;
be open to criticism and suggestion and will make use of&#13;
anything contributing to the improvement of the paper.&#13;
We hope students will m ake use of this paper and use it&#13;
as a communications tool through which they can make&#13;
their feelings and ideas known to the rest f o the Parkside&#13;
community.&#13;
Bus fare a disservice&#13;
-True'or false? " ^ r&#13;
A) Automobiles are the major contribution to air&#13;
pollution.&#13;
B) Mass transportation is a viable solution to the&#13;
problems caused by too many cars.&#13;
C) The University of Wisconsin-Parkside is doing all it&#13;
can to keep the air of Southeastern Wisconsin clean.&#13;
Statement A is true. Many American ecologists&#13;
estimate than an average of 60 percent of all air&#13;
pollution is ca used by the automobile. In Los Angeles&#13;
estimates run as high as 80 pe rcent.&#13;
At Parkside we are very lucky. The air here seems&#13;
quite clean — at least for the time being. The parking&#13;
lots are growing and they are fuller than ever before.&#13;
Enrollment this year has gone up, and with it exhaust&#13;
emissions into the air.&#13;
St atement B is also true. Even Pre sident Nixon in his&#13;
1972 Sta te of the Union message urged that top consideration&#13;
be given to the problem of mass transportation.&#13;
Ecologically there can be no doubt that it is&#13;
far bett er to have ten people in one bus rather than ten&#13;
people in t en cars.&#13;
St atement C is false. The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
has traded its free shuttle service from Racine&#13;
to Campus for a 50 cents a trip, $4.50 a week, $18 a month&#13;
injustice. This trade has not only aided the clouding of&#13;
the campus air but has also done many students a&#13;
terrible disservice.&#13;
Last year a poll was taken to determine if a bus service&#13;
from Racine would be necessary this year. Out of&#13;
700 Rac ine County students polled, 38 percent said they&#13;
would use the bus regularly if serv ice were provided. It&#13;
was then decided that shuttle service would be provided&#13;
for a minimal fee. We do not feel 50 cents a trip is a&#13;
minimal fee. Getting students to campus and keeping&#13;
the campus air clean are problems the University&#13;
should attack immediately.&#13;
If the re are rules against subsidizing shuttle service,&#13;
we urge the University to attack them at their source. If&#13;
funds are not available, we hope that the University will&#13;
do whatever possible to obtain t hem. It is time for the&#13;
University to take action and assume its role a s a leader&#13;
in the clean-a ir campaign of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
This paper is not an athletic or sports newspaper.&#13;
Neither is it an entertainment newspaper. It is not&#13;
written with only the "jocks in mind.&#13;
To be sure, we will cover sports because we consider&#13;
them an integral pa rt of this university and its growth.&#13;
We will also cover entertainment, news and myriad&#13;
other things because we consider them equally important&#13;
to t he development of Parkside.&#13;
This is a paper for all the students. At an early staff&#13;
meeting, the staff members agreed on the name "The&#13;
Parkside Ranger. " So it is and so it shall be until a&#13;
vague sort of eternity or until the staff members decide&#13;
to change the name.&#13;
Ranger also happens to be the nickname of the&#13;
athletic teams here at Parkside. The Ranger was the&#13;
name of an athletic department-produced newspaper&#13;
which was distributed on campus last May and again&#13;
last week. But it will no longer be printed.&#13;
Many u niversities and colleges use the name of their&#13;
school's athletic teams as the paper's name, i.e., the&#13;
Daily lllini (for Illinois' Fighting lllini), the AdvanceTitan&#13;
(for UW-Oshkosh's Titans), the Florida Alligator&#13;
(for Florida's Alligators), Warhawk World (for UWWhitewater's&#13;
Warhawks), the Badger Herald (for UWMadison's&#13;
Badgers), the Gamecock (for South&#13;
Carolina's Gamecocks), the Ma roon (for Chicago's&#13;
Maroons), the Falconews (for the Air Force Academy's&#13;
Falcons), to name just a few.&#13;
The list goes on. But the fact is that Ranger as a name&#13;
j- n o trendsetter, the school's athletic teams, like it or&#13;
not, help publicize the school, and thus everything about&#13;
it, su ch as the newspaper. So, too, does a newspaper&#13;
such as The Parkside Ranger help the school and&#13;
nickname whose name it ha s taken.&#13;
It is that way with us. We believe the name is one that&#13;
will be important not for what the name is but for what is&#13;
contained on th ose pages within the paper. If you read&#13;
only the name and don't like the paper because of that,&#13;
we think you'll be missing something. If you read it&#13;
because you like the name and for no other reason, you,&#13;
too, a re missing something.&#13;
Read t his paper. Tell us what you think. We believe&#13;
the name is going to be accepted because it is the name&#13;
of the campus newspaper, not because it represents the&#13;
interests of a ny special department on the campus.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger can only be as good as Parkside&#13;
students want it to be. It is a tool of communication. And&#13;
it's up to y ou, our readers, to show that this paper is&#13;
something more than just another pretty face — or&#13;
name.&#13;
A&#13;
E.&#13;
The ParksideREPRESENTED&#13;
FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017&#13;
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blished weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITERS: Tom Ford, Bruce Wagner, Rudy&#13;
kXvh weu WGe&#13;
°^&#13;
f ?'&#13;
aesing&#13;
' Kris Koch&#13;
. Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
PpfJXn m *?' el u ' Dale Marti&#13;
". Karen Petersen, Tom Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Paul Nelson&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva &#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Edmonds and&#13;
Curley here&#13;
The comedy team of Edmond&#13;
and Curley will appear at the&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
Friday, Sept. 29 at 9 p.m.&#13;
The team has appeared on&#13;
most of the TV talk show circuit&#13;
and in night clubs and universities&#13;
across the nation.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
is sponsoring the performance&#13;
which will include locals Tony,&#13;
Jumbo, and Garry.&#13;
Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Hours set&#13;
After being duluged with&#13;
customers for the first week or&#13;
so, the Parkside bookstore has&#13;
settled down into regular hours,&#13;
according to William Niebuhr,'&#13;
coordinator of student life.&#13;
Standard hours for the books&#13;
store, which handles all books,&#13;
school supplies and also buys&#13;
books for resale and recycling,&#13;
are Monday-Thursday, 9-7;&#13;
Friday, 9-5; and Saturdays 10-1.&#13;
More alumni&#13;
for UW-P&#13;
Alumni rolls of The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside increased&#13;
to almost 750 with the addition of&#13;
graduates who completed degree&#13;
work during the summer session.&#13;
The number includes the 670&#13;
alumni who had received degrees&#13;
through the May, 1972, commencement;&#13;
the 59 graduates&#13;
who earned degrees during&#13;
summer session; and about 15&#13;
more degree candidates who&#13;
attended summer school and will&#13;
receive degrees on completion of&#13;
various requirements.&#13;
No commencement exercises&#13;
are held for summer session&#13;
graduates. Summer- degree&#13;
candidates who wished to participated&#13;
in the formal spring&#13;
commencement.&#13;
Lecture on lake&#13;
set for Tuesday&#13;
A lecture titled "Lake&#13;
Michigan in the 21st Century"&#13;
will be delivered by Lee Botts,&#13;
executive secretary of the Lake&#13;
Michigan Federation, in the&#13;
Washington Park High School&#13;
theater Tuesday, Oct. 3, at 8 p.m.&#13;
Ms. Botts will discuss what has&#13;
to be done to save the lake,&#13;
responsibilities of various&#13;
government agencies toward the&#13;
lake, how they failed in the past&#13;
and what they are doing now.&#13;
She will recommend change in&#13;
governmental structure and&#13;
suggest the establishment of a&#13;
Lake Michigan Authority.&#13;
Welcome to Parkside!&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount P rices!&#13;
5707 - Sixth A ve.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
evWWWWWWWmMW&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
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end for your d escriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
28-page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
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RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
To every new student and every returning student I&#13;
want to extend a personal welcome, bound up with a&#13;
wish for a successful and satisfying year. This is a time&#13;
of growth and change for you and for the University. We&#13;
grow and change together.&#13;
The biggest changes since last year? Everybody has&#13;
his own idea about that, but topping my list are our gains&#13;
in academic maturity. During the summer the North&#13;
Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools&#13;
granted UW-Parkside full and unconditional accreditation&#13;
as an operationally separate University. We&#13;
are, therefore, accredited in our own right, and not&#13;
simply through association with the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system. For this fall we have added more&#13;
than thirty new members of the faculty and academic&#13;
support staff, whom we welcome along with you. They&#13;
strengthen us and enrich our program offerings in&#13;
almost every field. In preparing our biennial budget&#13;
requests we focused more sharply than ever before on&#13;
our unique campus mission, which involves meeting and&#13;
serving the special needs of man in modern industrial&#13;
society. Strengthening the mission is essential to our&#13;
gaining identity and distinction, and winning support&#13;
within the merged University of Wisconsin system.&#13;
These academic changes, though less visible than the&#13;
physical transformations of the summer, will in the end&#13;
greatly influence the quality development of the&#13;
University.&#13;
During June we were required to move out of the&#13;
Racine Center facilities, a move that involved some&#13;
hardships for everybody, since the replacement space&#13;
(the Classroom Building north of Greenquist) will not be&#13;
completed until late next summer. The big question was&#13;
whether our physical removal from Racine would have&#13;
an adverse effect on enrollments and on our ability to&#13;
serve that community educationally. The ever-present&#13;
doomsayers (including the North Central examiners)&#13;
predicted the worst. But they were wrong. Last year&#13;
half of our students were from Racine, and that percentage&#13;
holds for this year, too. And among new freshmen&#13;
the percentage of students from Racine is actually&#13;
up for 1972-73. The greatest gain from the move,&#13;
however, has come through having more of our students&#13;
at our new site, through each day and through the week.&#13;
That enhances the sense of belonging, the sense of&#13;
community. I have talked to a number of you about this.&#13;
What most of you have said is, "I welcome the change.&#13;
This is like being away from home. For the first time I&#13;
feel that I'm at a real university."&#13;
You are obviously enjoying the new Library-Learnina&#13;
Center and the Physical Education Building. Those of&#13;
us who were involved in the struggles to get those&#13;
facilities, which are essential components of any&#13;
campus, are pleased that they are now in use and functioning&#13;
as we hoped they would. We wanted the LibraryLearning&#13;
Center to be a warm, cheery, inviting place —&#13;
a place to study and to learn, a place to meet and mix&#13;
with friends, a place to relax. We deliberately placed a&#13;
mix of functions in the building to make it more than a&#13;
standard library. So we have here a Learning Center&#13;
(which will feature non-book materials), student&#13;
government and other student activity spaces, offices&#13;
for the campus administration, a bookstore and a&#13;
limited food service operation, and a variety of lounges.&#13;
It all comes together in Main Place, which is where I&#13;
have met and talked with many of you. For the first&#13;
time, in the Greenquist concourse-Main Place&#13;
relationship, the campus is functioning as we wanted it&#13;
to function. From the beginning we hoped to make it&#13;
easy, through architectural design, for students and&#13;
faculty and administrators to meet and mix and mingle.&#13;
We are pleased that you are making good use of the&#13;
Physical Education Building. It's yours to enjoy, so&#13;
enjoy it. Outdoors in that area the tennis courts are&#13;
finished and usable. The soccer field, inside the earthen&#13;
bowl, has been sodded, but will not be ready for competitive&#13;
use until next spring. The wet summer has&#13;
delayed the finishing and seeding of the entire area&#13;
around the Phy Ed Building, and is the cause of the&#13;
delay in placing the Chevron 440 surface on the 8-lane&#13;
running track.&#13;
The summer rain also dashed our hopes of confronting&#13;
you with a more "finished look" campus when you&#13;
arrived this fall. From February we pushed hard to&#13;
achieve that goal, but nature would not cooperate. We&#13;
will continue those efforts through the fall, particularly&#13;
in the Tallent Hall area and in the zone between the Loop&#13;
Road and Wood Road. But we have to live with the fact&#13;
that we have missed another growing season, and so in&#13;
some areas still face another season of mud.&#13;
Taking everything into account, though, we are proud&#13;
of the progress we have made since 1969 and hope you&#13;
are, too, because you have contributed quite directly to&#13;
all the gains we have made physically and&#13;
academically. Without you we would have no accreditation,&#13;
no new buildings, .no new faculty, no&#13;
academic program or mission — none of the things&#13;
essential to a new university in the making. We are glad&#13;
you are here, in increasing numbers.&#13;
Have a good year.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor &#13;
T H E PARK SIDE RAN GER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972&#13;
Trips planned to Hawaii,&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Activities Board&#13;
sponsors&#13;
a bus trip to&#13;
UW-MADISON&#13;
VS.&#13;
OHIO STATE&#13;
FOOTBALL G AME&#13;
Saturday, O ctober 28&#13;
*10 -(Including Bus,&#13;
Continental Breakfast,&#13;
Game Ticket)&#13;
TICKETS AV AILABLE&#13;
INFORMATION OF FICE&#13;
202 TA LLENT HA LL&#13;
Alps&#13;
..y. •&gt; i . y* H ^&#13;
Nine day "Ski and Swiss Alps"&#13;
and "Hawaiian Holiday" trips&#13;
between Semesters have been&#13;
announced by The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Both Trips will leave Jan. 5 and&#13;
return Jan. 14, according to&#13;
William Niebuhr, UW-P coordinator&#13;
of student life. Parkside&#13;
students and staff and their&#13;
immediate families are eligible&#13;
for both trips. A student or staff&#13;
member must accompany the&#13;
family members on the Swiss trip&#13;
because it is an international&#13;
flight, but not on the Hawaiian&#13;
trip.&#13;
Niebuhr said," In looking for&#13;
places to travel to we look for low&#13;
cost places we think we can sell.&#13;
A number of people asked if a&#13;
Hawaii trip could be arranged."&#13;
The Hawaiian trip is round trip&#13;
Milwaukee-Honolulu on a charter&#13;
super DC-8 jet. The cost, $294,&#13;
includes flight, tax and service,&#13;
eight nights at the new Holiday&#13;
Inn Waikiki on the beach, transfers&#13;
between airport and hotel,&#13;
orientation sightseeing tour and a&#13;
number of side trips and other&#13;
options at reduced rates. The&#13;
price is based on three or four to a&#13;
room, with doubles and singles&#13;
New building&#13;
Yellow Submarine&#13;
Sandwich S ho|&gt;&#13;
905 Washington Rd., Kenosha&#13;
Daliwries Made&#13;
Phone 658-3353&#13;
11a.m. - 2 a.m. all week&#13;
Cham-Tap-Ba&#13;
251 1 D u r a n d&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
pagne on Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches&#13;
%&#13;
and Pizza cT)&#13;
ALOHA FROM HAWAII —&#13;
That's the message behind the&#13;
warm smile of Rose Marie&#13;
Alvaro, the Hawaii Visitors&#13;
Bureau poster girl. This five-foot,&#13;
four-inch beauty, a beguiling&#13;
blend of Hawaiian, Portuguese,&#13;
Chinese and English ancestries,&#13;
is an accomplished hula dancer&#13;
and Island entertainer.&#13;
available at an additional $15 and&#13;
$65, respectively.&#13;
Options at reduced rates include&#13;
car rental, two-day outer&#13;
island tour of Hawaii and Kauai,&#13;
a traditional Hawaiian luau,&#13;
Pearl Harbor cruise, tours of Se a&#13;
Life Park and the Polynesian&#13;
Cultural Center, and Honolulu&#13;
nightlife.&#13;
The ski trip is to Zermatt, the&#13;
idyllic mountain village situated&#13;
at the base of the Matterhorn,&#13;
with an overnight stay in&#13;
Copenhagen, Denmark, the last&#13;
night. The price of $337 in cludes&#13;
round trip flight from ChicagoCopenhagen&#13;
on a regularly&#13;
scheduled SAS 747 j et, connecting&#13;
flight to Geneva, ground transportation&#13;
to Zermatt, eight&#13;
nights in good category hotels&#13;
with private bath two to a room,&#13;
and a tour of Copenhagen.&#13;
A l ess expensive motor option&#13;
is ^available for ;nori-skiers. The&#13;
option includes the same flight&#13;
with the last night's lodging in&#13;
Copenhagen, but a free car with&#13;
unlimited mileage upon arrival in&#13;
Geneva replaces the lodging in&#13;
Zermatt. The cost ranges from&#13;
$284 based on four to a car to $304&#13;
with two to a car.&#13;
Niebuhr said limited space is&#13;
available for both trips and urged&#13;
prospective travelers to contact&#13;
him at UW-P as soon as possible&#13;
for more information.&#13;
The&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
HAWAIIAN HBLIDAY&#13;
9 Fun-Filled, Sun-Filled Days&#13;
January 5-14&#13;
$274&#13;
Plus $20 Tax 8. Service&#13;
Your One Low Price Includes:&#13;
Round trip jet fare from Milwaukee&#13;
to Honolulu.&#13;
8 nights lodging on Waikiki Beach.&#13;
Round trip transfers between airport&#13;
&amp; h otel.&#13;
Orientation sightseeing tour.&#13;
Traditional Hawaiian flower lei&#13;
greeting.&#13;
DELIVER OR MAIL TO&#13;
Campus Travel Center Student Activities Office&#13;
D 197 Library Learning Center&#13;
OR CALL 553 2294&#13;
by KEN KONKOL&#13;
LEAR NING CENT ER&#13;
All you readers are no doubt&#13;
already acquainted with the&#13;
facilities of the library which&#13;
extends its bulk through four&#13;
floors of the new Library Learning&#13;
Center, but few of you are&#13;
probably acquainted with the&#13;
facilities of the Learning Center.&#13;
The center, which handles all&#13;
non-print instructional materials&#13;
for the university, is located in&#13;
the D175-D179 suite of offices on&#13;
level D1 LLC.&#13;
Beecham Robinson and Art&#13;
Pettigrew are in charge of the&#13;
staff of the Center which in the&#13;
future will handle facilities such&#13;
as language labs, special study&#13;
courses for accelerated students,&#13;
video tape, films and records. At&#13;
present only facilities for records&#13;
and limited movie viewing are&#13;
available.&#13;
D178 is the check out location&#13;
for the 5000 r ecords currently in&#13;
stock. Loan procedures are&#13;
similar to those used in the&#13;
Library. Records may also be&#13;
listened to in one of the other&#13;
rooms of the center. This room&#13;
will also serve as control room&#13;
for the four video tape units&#13;
available.&#13;
Come late October it is hoped&#13;
that D177 will be subdivided into&#13;
a group of individual carrels&#13;
which will contain film loop&#13;
viewers, slide projectors and&#13;
facilities for record listening and&#13;
viewing of the 35-40 films which&#13;
make up the initial film library.&#13;
As the new buildings on&#13;
campus are completed they will&#13;
be linked to the control room and&#13;
integrated into the communications&#13;
arts system. Also to&#13;
be included is a video tape&#13;
recording studio.&#13;
It will be three years before the&#13;
center builds a good collection of&#13;
material from the present inventory&#13;
which is due mainly to&#13;
faculty requests for instructional&#13;
material, but when they do, the&#13;
Learning Center will prove itself&#13;
an invaluable addition to the&#13;
facilities at Parkside.&#13;
SHAKE MS P&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping Nite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
Lathrop &amp; 21st (almost)&#13;
Racine, Wise. 53406&#13;
Phone: 633-6307&#13;
The Fashion Store For Young Mindedmen&#13;
for th e super look |&#13;
308 6th Street 632-1138 $&#13;
Bee cham Robinso n&#13;
T H E LIBRAR Y&#13;
MIG HTY BIG PLACE&#13;
If you're like most people on&#13;
campus, you've probably already&#13;
gotten yourself lost in the four&#13;
floors of the new library which&#13;
occupies a pretty big cube in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center. In&#13;
order to help you find your way&#13;
around I recently had the&#13;
assistance of assistant librarian&#13;
Carla Stoffle in negotiating the&#13;
stacks.&#13;
There is only one entrance to&#13;
the library on the LI level at 100L,&#13;
just across from the bookstore.&#13;
But, to be consistent with the&#13;
layout of the library floor plan,&#13;
we shall start our tour on the&#13;
third floor.&#13;
There is nothing on the third&#13;
floor - as far as the library is&#13;
concerned. There are, however,&#13;
about 140 faculty members&#13;
have their offices up there who&#13;
think otherwise.&#13;
The second floor also contains&#13;
faculty offices. These are scattered&#13;
peripherally around the&#13;
library 205-223 and 281-299. Also&#13;
on this level are found 271 and&#13;
273, w hich are future conference&#13;
rooms.&#13;
L2 also has a lot of books; all&#13;
the books C to Z less P, and even&#13;
special Collections in 268, A and&#13;
B. On this level we also come&#13;
upon the first of those artistically&#13;
laid out lounges with the orange&#13;
carpeting which lend so much to&#13;
the design concept of the&#13;
building. The floor also includes&#13;
library carrels which permit&#13;
maximum utilization of space.&#13;
One level down at LI we have&#13;
the abstract area in 150B and the&#13;
reference collection in area 150'a.&#13;
107 is a brousing area, while the&#13;
card catalogs and indexes are at&#13;
150C. 191 A, B, C, D are for&#13;
teaching services. The Government&#13;
Documents section is in&#13;
close prosimity to the bound&#13;
periodicals. Completing LI is a&#13;
typing room.&#13;
Level Dl is somewhat crowded.&#13;
D150D is the Reserve materials&#13;
checkout. D150E is the music and&#13;
fine arts area. Down here you will&#13;
find quite a selection of current&#13;
BUM STEER&#13;
Some people have been known&#13;
to spend half their lives seeking&#13;
advice, and the other half dodging&#13;
the consequences.&#13;
r =»—&#13;
54 Great B ooks&#13;
of W estern W orld"&#13;
and&#13;
"Great I deas Today"&#13;
BRAND NEW!&#13;
HALF PRICE!&#13;
654-3962 J &#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972 T H E PARK SIDE RAN GER 5&#13;
at UW-P: Touring LLC and PE&#13;
'•MJ1J n~B-i ^ a 20 ON _H?OOF&#13;
n&#13;
1 : li&#13;
•! .* »&lt;*.*!, i t&#13;
200-&#13;
1 iSffik 1&#13;
L&#13;
*&#13;
20(&#13;
fr&#13;
?&#13;
j&gt;Ff&#13;
periodicals. D117 is the smoking&#13;
room and next door in D115 is a&#13;
group of offices. D103A is the&#13;
staff lounge, D150A the&#13;
periodicals office and mailroom,&#13;
and D105C is the microfilm area.&#13;
Typing can be done in D150F.&#13;
Separate from the library on&#13;
level Dl can also be found the&#13;
food services area near D139, the&#13;
Learning Center, some temporary&#13;
classrooms in D185, 187&#13;
and 189, and a few organization&#13;
offices.&#13;
These offices are best reached&#13;
by ground level from the Dl level&#13;
at Greenquist by going outside&#13;
and entering through the door&#13;
just outside the Student Activities&#13;
D197. D195 is for the PAB, D193&#13;
Student Government, and this&#13;
paper is prepared in D194.&#13;
ARCHIV ES&#13;
Unless you are the type of&#13;
person who likes to dig into&#13;
Kenosha Common Council&#13;
meetings for the year 1935, you&#13;
probably have not been down to&#13;
see Nicholas Burckel in the&#13;
University Archives.&#13;
The Archives, which are&#13;
located on level D2 of the LLC,&#13;
are reached by going down the&#13;
stairs D 100 next door to the&#13;
Learning Center. You can't miss&#13;
it, right next door to the Learning&#13;
Center store room and just&#13;
through the wall of the Library&#13;
basement.&#13;
This situation is temporary&#13;
though, until they knock out part&#13;
of the wall to integrate the Archives&#13;
with the Library storage&#13;
area, and seal off the fire door&#13;
which is the present entrance.&#13;
The Archives houses the noncurrent&#13;
records of the university&#13;
which may be of subsequent&#13;
historical, financial and legal&#13;
value. Since this university is&#13;
rather new, it doesn't have many&#13;
old records, but Burckel has his&#13;
hands full trying to sort out the&#13;
load of junk dug out of the closets&#13;
at the Racine campus.&#13;
Also down there are such&#13;
diverse items as budget drafts,&#13;
Regent minutes, correspondence&#13;
files, things reflecting the&#13;
development of the university&#13;
and a faculty publications file.&#13;
Serving the function of area&#13;
research center for the State&#13;
Historical Society in Madison, the&#13;
center will also contain primary&#13;
research material for students&#13;
doing theses on local history -&#13;
such as minutes of the 1935&#13;
Kenosha Common Council.&#13;
P E N T H O U S E&#13;
P L O RED&#13;
EXLocated&#13;
on the third level of the&#13;
Library Learning Center but&#13;
entirely divorced from it is the&#13;
Administrative Penthouse. This&#13;
is where the bigwigs of the&#13;
University have their offices.&#13;
In an effort to bring you the&#13;
very latest in news coverage and&#13;
acquaint you with just who is up&#13;
there, this reporter braved those&#13;
four flights of stairs leading from&#13;
BEST WISHES&#13;
FROM&#13;
ALA RUG&#13;
418 6th St. #&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
Main Place on Dl at D100.&#13;
The following information&#13;
comes through the assistance of&#13;
my guide, Chancellor Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie.&#13;
According to Wyllie we do have&#13;
a few minor problems to get out&#13;
of the way before things can start&#13;
running smoothly. The rains have&#13;
delayed a lot of the grassing and&#13;
cleaning up and the installation of&#13;
the Chevron 440 surface on the&#13;
track. The implementation of a&#13;
lot of projects is in the hands of&#13;
the State Bureau of Capital&#13;
Development.&#13;
Particularly pleasing is the&#13;
move of the total student body&#13;
toward fuller schedules, giving a&#13;
greater sense of unity and&#13;
campus community, the use&#13;
students and faculty are making&#13;
out of new buildings, and the&#13;
functional relationsh ip&#13;
developing between the concourse&#13;
and mainplace. Also, at a&#13;
time when enrollments are&#13;
falling off nationally, ours continues&#13;
to grow.&#13;
Displeasing is the present state&#13;
of sight development, and the&#13;
concern about certain budget&#13;
projects. The governor's 7.5&#13;
percent productivity increase&#13;
amounts to a base budget cut,&#13;
and his order for the University&#13;
to identify 10 percent of its&#13;
programs as low priority will cut&#13;
one leg off the already skeleton&#13;
budget.&#13;
Future building programs may&#13;
also be affected. The Student&#13;
Union had already been&#13;
authorized in the 71-73 biennium&#13;
and is federally fund supported,&#13;
and there is a reserve built up to&#13;
start it. Budget requests for 1973-&#13;
75 will be more modest, having&#13;
two major and about 13 minor&#13;
projects.&#13;
In the planning stages are a&#13;
request for a building for the&#13;
"School of Modern Industry4md anaddition&#13;
to the P.E. facilities,&#13;
which already fall 30,000 square&#13;
feet short of guideline standards.&#13;
Parking and transportation must&#13;
also be reqorked.&#13;
An east access road must be&#13;
established from 22nd avenue,&#13;
and utilities must be established&#13;
for the greenhouse donated by the&#13;
city of Racine. The parking&#13;
situation needs to be restudied&#13;
but it must still meet environmental&#13;
standards. It's not&#13;
ideal, but it is not hopelessly bad&#13;
either.&#13;
There has been a substantial&#13;
gain in program strength with the&#13;
addition of 33 new and&#13;
replacement faculty members&#13;
along with greatly expanded&#13;
facilities.&#13;
In the Penthouse, in addition to&#13;
the Chancellor in 353A, there is&#13;
quite a nice conference room in&#13;
363 which can be further divided&#13;
into three smaller conference&#13;
rooms by motorized divider&#13;
panels.&#13;
Other important office holders&#13;
include, Vice Chancellor Bauer,&#13;
Rm. 339; Assistant Chancellors&#13;
Brockman, Rm. 349 and Dearborn,&#13;
Rm. 333. 337 is a small&#13;
conference room while 341 and&#13;
347 are storage and duplicating&#13;
rooms.&#13;
The third floor staff is&#13;
augmented by Rita Tallent, 348;&#13;
Ed Webster, 346; Walt Shirer,&#13;
344; Gary Goetz, 342 and Virginia&#13;
Scherr, in 340.&#13;
T H E BUILDI NG&#13;
O F ATHL ETICS&#13;
If you have not yet been to the&#13;
Physical Education Building to&#13;
make use of their facilities, you&#13;
have only yourself to blame.&#13;
Included as the building's most&#13;
outstanding feature is the&#13;
swimming pool which contains&#13;
both high and low diving boards&#13;
into the twelve foot deep diving&#13;
well. The deep end slants up to&#13;
8V2 feet in the corner away from&#13;
the boards and the pool slants to&#13;
3V2 feet at the shallow end.&#13;
Convenient access is given to&#13;
both men's and women's shower&#13;
and locker rooms, and directly&#13;
off the pool in D117 is a Sauna.&#13;
Both men (D123 G &amp; H) and&#13;
women (D121D) have ample&#13;
shower space and the locker&#13;
rooms (D123 &amp; D 121 respectively&#13;
can be described as marginally&#13;
adequate.&#13;
Dwarfing the rest of the&#13;
building is the three court&#13;
gymnasium which has movable&#13;
bleachers which will cover the&#13;
two side courts during athletic&#13;
events. Off the gym in D106 is the&#13;
weight training room where both&#13;
men and women may build up&#13;
and slim down on the two&#13;
--Universal Gyms.&#13;
Also on the main floor is the&#13;
checkout in D125; the coed&#13;
training room, D123A; and the&#13;
Physical Edication Performance&#13;
Lab. D104, in which people can&#13;
have their vital signs monitored&#13;
during periods of exertion. D107&#13;
and D109 are hand and paddleball&#13;
courts while D105 is the gymnastics&#13;
apparatus room.&#13;
There is not much to the second&#13;
floor of the P.E. Building except&#13;
for offices which overlook&#13;
facilities below, the fencing and&#13;
dance training room, in 109, and&#13;
the TV Lounge area at the head of&#13;
the stairs.&#13;
Go take a look - it's worth the&#13;
trip.&#13;
Film&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
present the film, "Olympia"&#13;
Friday, Sept. 29, at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
103 Greenquist.&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
Member F.D.I.C. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Sept. 27, 197 2&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
One of the most exciting&#13;
Contemporary Jazz Groups&#13;
Sat. - Oct. 14 - 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford H.S. Auditorium&#13;
Reserved Seat Tickets - $2.50&#13;
Students &amp; Staff with I.D. - $1.50&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
VW-P Information Office&#13;
Rm. 201, TallentHall&#13;
Zermatt&#13;
Switzerland&#13;
552-8404&#13;
BICYCLES ARE OUR ONLY BUSINESS&#13;
Cougle' full-time&#13;
Leroy G. Cougle has been&#13;
named a full-time assistant&#13;
professor of management science&#13;
in the School of Modern Industry&#13;
at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
effective immediately.&#13;
Cougle previously was a visiting&#13;
assistant professor at UW-P.&#13;
Cougle, who received his Ph.D.&#13;
degree from Loyola University,&#13;
previously taught at Roosevelt&#13;
University and UW-Madison. He&#13;
served as training supervisor for&#13;
several major industrial firms in&#13;
Illinois before forming his own&#13;
management consultant firm in&#13;
1969.&#13;
His national professional&#13;
memberships include the&#13;
American Society for Training&#13;
and Development, National&#13;
Society of Programmed Instruction&#13;
and Society of&#13;
Technical Writers and&#13;
Publishers.&#13;
New UW-P faculty members named NOTICE&#13;
FRIDAY, OCT. 6&#13;
9:30 a.m. — Women's Golf Tournament at Petrifying Springs. Indiana&#13;
University, University of Iowa, Western Illinois, North Park&#13;
College.&#13;
1 &amp; 3:30 p.m. — Soccer. UW-Madison, Notre Dame, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
A &amp; W RO OT B EER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridjn Rd. ( Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
HOURS: DAILY 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M&#13;
SUMMER MONT HS . . .&#13;
11 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 7&#13;
11 a.m. — Oktoberfest Invitational Cross Country Meet. Iowa State&#13;
University, Indiana State University, Purdue University-Calumet,&#13;
South Dakota State.&#13;
9 a.m. — Go lf Tournament at Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Recent Shipment Received&#13;
includes&#13;
Schwinn, Nishiki, American Eagle,&#13;
Peugeot, Nord, LeJeune, Cinilli,&#13;
Mondia and Jeunet&#13;
DON GILL B IKE SHOP&#13;
50067th Ave.&#13;
Kenosh?&#13;
Phone 652-6468&#13;
Ready, wrestle&#13;
Coach Jim Koch has issued i&#13;
call for any UW-P student ir&#13;
terested in wrestling to come oi&#13;
for the wrestling team. Practic&#13;
will start Monday, Oct. 16, at&#13;
p.m. Anyone interested shoul&#13;
stop and visit Coach Koch in hi&#13;
office in the P. E. Building.&#13;
An assistant professor of&#13;
education, Teresa Culum Harris,&#13;
and an instructor in communication,&#13;
Sheldon M. Harsel,&#13;
have been appointed to the&#13;
faculty of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Mrs. Harris, 25, a native of&#13;
Scotland, received her undergraduate&#13;
degree in&#13;
psychology at the University of&#13;
Manchester, England, and her&#13;
Ph. D. degree in educational&#13;
psychology at the University of&#13;
Texas.&#13;
Veterans&#13;
9 Club&#13;
The Veterans' Club will have&#13;
its first meeting of the year at 7&#13;
p.m. Oct. 1 at the Student Activities&#13;
Bldg. All veterans are&#13;
invited.&#13;
teaching socially deprived&#13;
children, and as a consultant to&#13;
the Southwest Educational&#13;
Development Laboratory in&#13;
developing methods for bi-lingual&#13;
teachers.&#13;
Harsel, 30, is a specialist in&#13;
international and intercultural&#13;
communication.&#13;
He received his undergraduate&#13;
degree at Sophia University,&#13;
Tokyo, and completed work for&#13;
his Ph.D. in mass communication&#13;
this summer at The University of&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
Harsel also taught and worked&#13;
as a writer, editor and translator&#13;
while living in Japan from 1965-&#13;
69. Fo r three years before that,&#13;
he was an editor for Compton's&#13;
Encyclopedia and Encyclopedia&#13;
Britannica.&#13;
Painting in show&#13;
Moishe Smith, visiting&#13;
professor of art at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, is&#13;
represented in the current&#13;
Humor in Prints Show at the&#13;
Associated American Artists&#13;
gallery in New York by an etching&#13;
titled "Portrait of the&#13;
Artist as a Young Goy — As an&#13;
Old Jew."&#13;
The show includes 121 prints,&#13;
most by contemporary artists.&#13;
A L L STU D E NT&#13;
ORGANIZATIONS ARE&#13;
A D V I S E D T H AT&#13;
REQUESTS FOR FUND&#13;
I N G F R OM&#13;
AVAILABLE STUDENT&#13;
S U P P O R T G R O U P&#13;
MONIES MUST BE&#13;
SUBMITTED TO THE&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS&#13;
COMMITTEE NO LATER&#13;
THAN OCT. 10. THESE&#13;
REQUESTS MUST BE IN&#13;
THE FORM OF A&#13;
DETAILED BUDGET&#13;
FOR THE 1972-73&#13;
ACA DEM IC Y E A R .&#13;
THEY MAY BE SUBMITTED&#13;
TO JEWEL&#13;
ECHELBARGER, ASSISTANT&#13;
DEAN OF&#13;
STUDENTS, ROOM 284&#13;
TAL LEN T HALL .&#13;
FURTHERMORE, ALL&#13;
STUDENT ORG ANI ­&#13;
ZATIONS ARE&#13;
REMINDED THAT THEY&#13;
SHOULD REGISTER&#13;
WITH THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE IN&#13;
THE LIBRARY LEARNING&#13;
CENTER.&#13;
Oktoberfest Schedule&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4&#13;
10 a.m. — Women's Tennis Invitational. Parkside, Carthage,&#13;
Whitewater, Northwestern, Stevens Point, Lawrence.&#13;
3 p.m. — Soccer. University of Illinois-Chicago Circle.&#13;
THURSDAY, OCT. 5&#13;
3 p.m. — Wo men's Tennis. UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
MPA BURGER ±&#13;
TEEN B URGER&#13;
rtAMA BUR6ER&#13;
BABY B URGER&#13;
(fant&amp;ciqe (foUeqe'i&#13;
presents in concert&#13;
7&amp;&#13;
7ctruten&#13;
^eucte&#13;
Student Actiwtie^ "So^vtd&#13;
Saturday, Oct.&#13;
*5. *4. *,3&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOU R OR DER WILL BE READ Y&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fiih&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE GAL LON OF RO OT BE ER WITH $5.00 OR DER&#13;
i, MILE NORT H OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEAT ER&#13;
ON SHER IDAN ROAD&#13;
7-8p.m. - Carthage Fieldhouse&#13;
On sale: Bidinger s Music&#13;
Carthage College Center Office&#13;
Her principal teaching interests&#13;
are child development,&#13;
cultural and ethnic differences,&#13;
and research in teaching and&#13;
teacher education.&#13;
Mrs. Harris' experience includes&#13;
background as a consultant&#13;
to the Teachers Corps&#13;
Program at the University of&#13;
Texas in examining programs for&#13;
Women's Caucus&#13;
An open meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus will&#13;
be held today at 7:30 p.m. in room&#13;
D-174 of the Library Learning&#13;
Center. Organizers of this year's&#13;
group are Lorri Tommerup and&#13;
Joyce Jansen, students, and&#13;
Wendy Musich, advisor.&#13;
The Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
is not affiliated with any national&#13;
group. Its purpose is to help&#13;
Parkside women broaden their&#13;
involvement in society and gain a&#13;
more positive view of themselves&#13;
as women and members of this&#13;
society.&#13;
According to Mrs. Musich.&#13;
their idea is much the same as&#13;
that of Gloria Steinem when she&#13;
said, "This is a human liberation&#13;
- not a women's liberation."&#13;
Oktoberfest queen&#13;
The UW-Parkside Soccer Club&#13;
is sponsoring an Oktoberfest&#13;
queen contest. Voting booths for&#13;
club members' nominees will be&#13;
set around campus next week&#13;
with the winning candidate to be&#13;
crowned at the championship of&#13;
the Oktoberfest soccer tourney,&#13;
Oct. 7.&#13;
• V V V V V V W ¥ » •&#13;
• EAT IN TH E C OMFORT O F YO UR CA R &#13;
I&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972&#13;
Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Time Schedule&#13;
The Athletic Department invites the students of Parkside to take&#13;
advantage of its new facilities. These consist of three basketball&#13;
courts, a swimming pool, a weight room, handball and paddle ball&#13;
courts and areas for several other activities. All students are welcome&#13;
to use these facilities when they're not being used for scheduled activities.&#13;
&#13;
The Physical Education Building will be open during the following&#13;
hours:&#13;
Monday through Thursday 7:45 a.m. to 10 p.m.&#13;
Friday 7:45a.m. to6p.m.&#13;
Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
Sunday 1:30 to 10 p.m.&#13;
These hours are subject to change. Any change will be posted at the&#13;
p.E. Building and elsewhere on campus.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER&#13;
Wayne Dannehl&#13;
Girls sports&#13;
no longer&#13;
a joke&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
We all remember when&#13;
women's sports were thought of&#13;
as a Sunday afternoon joke. Like&#13;
when we all congregated at a&#13;
high school powder-puff football&#13;
game to watch all those girls&#13;
screaming and kicking at each&#13;
other. No more.&#13;
Women's sports are gaining&#13;
much wider acceptance and&#13;
equality through the organization&#13;
of women's athletic associations&#13;
and inter-collegiate conferences.&#13;
Parkside is a member of the&#13;
Wisconsin Women's Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic Conference&#13;
(W.W.I.A.C.). According to&#13;
Coach Barbra Jo Morris, this&#13;
conference has its origin in the&#13;
old Wisconsin State University&#13;
schools which had a conference of&#13;
their own. The conference now&#13;
includes UW-Parkside, UWMadison,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, Carroll&#13;
and Carthage.&#13;
The W.W.I.A.C. determines the&#13;
rules under which the women&#13;
compete. For example, colleges&#13;
and universities are forbidden&#13;
from recruiting girls from high&#13;
school for sports or from giving&#13;
scholarships based on athletics.&#13;
Another conference rule is that at&#13;
least six schools must be interested&#13;
in participating in a&#13;
sport before it can become a&#13;
conference sport.&#13;
Current Parkside conference&#13;
sports are gymnastics and tennis&#13;
in the fall, and track in the&#13;
spring.&#13;
A unique quality of the&#13;
Parkside women's athletics&#13;
organization is that varsity&#13;
letters are given and the women&#13;
may join the Varsity Club.&#13;
In addition to Varsity, there are&#13;
club and intramural sports.&#13;
Basketball and swimming are&#13;
being added this year. If&#13;
basketball catches on, as Coach&#13;
Morris hopes, after the required&#13;
one-year period, the club sport&#13;
may become conference.&#13;
The tennis team is already&#13;
active and has played three&#13;
matches with a fourth today at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
This year's activities get into&#13;
full swing starting with the&#13;
Oktoberfest tennis, golf and cross&#13;
country competitions. The&#13;
festivities will start off for&#13;
women with the Oktoberfest&#13;
Tennis Invitational, followed on&#13;
Oct. 6 by the golf tournament.&#13;
Schools expected to be&#13;
represented at the tournament&#13;
are Indiana, Iowa, Western&#13;
Illinois and North Park College.&#13;
Starting at 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct.&#13;
7, the cross country team will be&#13;
off and running at the cross&#13;
country invitational. Women&#13;
from Indiana State, Iowa State&#13;
and Purdue-Calumet will participate.&#13;
&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Many intramural and club&#13;
sports are being organized so that&#13;
students can compete on a&#13;
regular basis. At present, Coach&#13;
Jim Koch is trying to organize a&#13;
touch football league which will&#13;
play between 12:30 and 1:30 p.m.&#13;
at the Main campus. He is also&#13;
trying to organize a bowling&#13;
league which will bowl weekly.&#13;
Anyone interested in these activities&#13;
should contact him.&#13;
All girls interested in becoming&#13;
Mat-Maids should meet at 2:30&#13;
p.m. Monday, Oct. 2, at the main&#13;
Athletic Office in the Physical&#13;
Education Building. If you can't&#13;
come, contact Kathy Doherty at&#13;
552-8286 or Pat Kekic at 654-3489.&#13;
The Mat-Maids help to promote&#13;
the Varsity Wrestling program at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Dannehl named&#13;
athletic director&#13;
After a nationwide search for a replacement for&#13;
Thomas P. Rosandich, Wayne Dannehl was chosen&#13;
as athletic director by the Athletic Board. He&#13;
assumed his new position on September 1.&#13;
Dannehl was born in the little town of Watseka,&#13;
111., i n 1937. H e comes from a large sports-minded&#13;
family and is the youngest of twelve children.&#13;
He went to high school in Onarga where he earned&#13;
sixteen letters and won a football scholarship to&#13;
Northern Illinois University. Dannehl was cocaptain&#13;
of the football team there in his senior year,&#13;
earning his fourth letter at the university. Named to&#13;
the Scholastic Little All-American team, he also'&#13;
earned all-conference honors and received the&#13;
Interstate Intercollegiate Conference ScholarAthlete&#13;
award.&#13;
Dannehl then moved to Rockford East High&#13;
School as assistant football coach and head coach of&#13;
wrestling. It was in Rockford that he met his wife&#13;
Carole.&#13;
Dannehl holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in education&#13;
from Northern Illinois University. Before coming&#13;
here he received his Ph. D. in educational administration&#13;
from Northern Illinois and was an&#13;
assistant professor of physical education and&#13;
assistant freshman football coach.&#13;
Dannehl would like to see all possible programs&#13;
go into effect here at Parkside that the university&#13;
can afford. One course he would like to see started&#13;
here is Techniques of Angling. While at Illinois he&#13;
taught a very successful angling course.&#13;
Dannehl said he is glad to be here and that the&#13;
campus is beautiful because of the setting. He likes&#13;
to jog on campus and in Petrifying Springs.&#13;
CAN A DRINK THAT HELPED DEFEAT&#13;
THE JAPANESE SECRET SERVICE IN WORLD WAR II,&#13;
HELP TOD GET THROUGH COLLEGE?&#13;
Answer the ten questions&#13;
~&lt;.-of t he Brass Monkey Undercqyer, Scholarship Contest,&#13;
and win a year's tuition to college.&#13;
The Ten Undercover Questions&#13;
1. What was the name of the Japanese Secret&#13;
Service?&#13;
2. How did the Brass Monkey Club get its name?&#13;
3. What was the name of the street where the&#13;
Brass Monkey Club was located?&#13;
4. If the Brass Monkey was a woman, what two&#13;
possible names could she have had besides&#13;
H. E. Rasske?&#13;
5. What is the color of the Brass Monkey&#13;
Cocktail?&#13;
6. How did Admiral Kokura die?&#13;
7 Where is H. E. Rasske reputed to live now?&#13;
8. During World War II, what was reputed to&#13;
be the principal form of commerce in Macao?&#13;
9. What was the name of the quinine dealer?&#13;
10. Loyana sang "My Love is a Man&#13;
of Gold." What do you think the lyrics of&#13;
this song might have been?&#13;
About a year ^&#13;
and a half ago we&#13;
introduced a drink&#13;
called the Brass Monkey.&#13;
It's made from a secret recipe&#13;
we learned from an old friend of&#13;
H. E. Rasske, who was purported to&#13;
be the Brass Monkey himself, an allied secret agent,&#13;
operating out of Macao during World War II.&#13;
The legend of the Brass Monkey was so fascinating,&#13;
we pieced together and reconstructed as&#13;
much of it as we could in our advertising. It reads&#13;
like a B-movie script, complete with spies, counterspies,&#13;
smugglers, soldiers-of-fortune, mercenaries,&#13;
river pirates and mysterious disappearances.&#13;
If you've ever tasted the Brass Monkey and are&#13;
familiar with the three ads that we've been running,&#13;
you've got a pretty good shot at answering the&#13;
following ten questions. To make it a little easier,&#13;
we'll give you the headlines of t he ads and where&#13;
they appear.&#13;
Headlines: "The Brass Monkey Returns&#13;
"The Brass Monkey Is Worth Two&#13;
Aircraft Carriers In The Coral Sea"&#13;
"Was The Brass Monkey A Woman?"&#13;
Where They Appear:&#13;
"Rolling Stone" October 12,&#13;
October 26 and&#13;
November 9&#13;
Remember, the best answers to these ten&#13;
Questions win a year s free tuition at any college&#13;
of'your choice in the country (provided&#13;
you're enrolled, of course). Give it a&#13;
try. You've got nothing to lose, and&#13;
considering the price of education&#13;
nowadays, an awful lot to gain. ^ /&#13;
Please mail all entries to:&#13;
Brass Monkey&#13;
Undercover Scholarship Contest&#13;
Post Office Box 2016&#13;
Hartford, Connecticut 06101&#13;
Good Luck!&#13;
§) HEUBLEIN COCKTAILS&#13;
a •• will be indued by an independent iudging organization. Noentnes will be judged alter 12/31/72. Employeesand their dependents&#13;
A.i entries ^be i^.J ^ ^ subsidjaries. afhUates and their agencies or judging organization are not eligible for this contest. &#13;
T H E PAR KSID E R A N G ER Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1972&#13;
Booters tie, lose two,&#13;
face UW-Madison Saturday&#13;
An unidentified Parkside soccer player and a Lake Forest player&#13;
battle for the ball in the Rangers' opener against the Foresters. The&#13;
teams tied 1-1.&#13;
Last Saturday, Parkside hosted&#13;
the Southern IllinoisEdwardsville&#13;
Cougers. The&#13;
Cougars, who are presently&#13;
ranked fourth in the nation,&#13;
handed the Rangers their second&#13;
defeat of t he year, by a 6-0 score.&#13;
Parkside was matching the&#13;
Cougars step for step during most&#13;
of t he first half, but the bad news&#13;
started with 12:36 left in the first&#13;
half when Steve Cacciatore&#13;
booted a nifty pass to Chris&#13;
Carenza, who slammed it in for&#13;
the score.&#13;
From then on the Cougars took&#13;
over the ballgame. With 11:40 left&#13;
in the first half, Carenza again&#13;
scored, this time with an assist&#13;
from Bill Renauld. That took care&#13;
of the scoring for the first half&#13;
and the Rangers went to the&#13;
bench, obviously hopoing to come&#13;
back in the second half.&#13;
Unfortunately the second half&#13;
proved to be no better with the&#13;
Cougars' third goal coming with&#13;
just under five minutes gone. The&#13;
third goal came when Greg&#13;
Modde centered the ball and John&#13;
Stremlau booted it into the net.&#13;
By this time Parkside Coach&#13;
Hal Henderson had made a few&#13;
substitutions, but they seemed to&#13;
be of no avail because Greg&#13;
Modde scored two quick goals&#13;
that put the game pretty well out&#13;
of reach for the Rangers.&#13;
The Cougars got their final&#13;
point in the closing seconds of the&#13;
game, when John Stremlau&#13;
picked up his second tally of the&#13;
day.&#13;
Henderson said that he was&#13;
pleased with the performance of&#13;
his team up to a certain point. His&#13;
only complaints seemed to be&#13;
that his team lacked bench&#13;
strength and occasionally made&#13;
some stupid mistakes.&#13;
"The score out there today&#13;
could have been two or three to&#13;
nothing if it hadn't been for some&#13;
stupid errors. The main problem&#13;
is that I don't have any bench&#13;
strength to speak of, Henderson&#13;
siad. "I have to play 10 or $$ guys&#13;
all the time, although 3 or 4 of&#13;
these fellows could probably play&#13;
on any varsity squad in the&#13;
country."&#13;
Injuries have also been&#13;
somewhat of a problem for the&#13;
Rangers, they have played their&#13;
last two games with an injured&#13;
Tom Thomsen at the goalie&#13;
position.&#13;
Despite these problems,&#13;
Henderson is confident that his&#13;
team can come up with a .500&#13;
season this year.&#13;
Henderson said that being&#13;
beaten by a team like S.I.U.E.&#13;
isn't anything to be ashamed of.&#13;
"They are a team that keeps&#13;
punching at you and wearing you&#13;
down until they can tear you&#13;
apart. They are very much like&#13;
the St. Louis ball club that has&#13;
beaten the Cougars the last three&#13;
years in post season play."&#13;
The Parkside soccer team&#13;
started its season off on Saturday,&#13;
Sept. 16 with a grueling,&#13;
double-overtime match with&#13;
Lake Forest College that ended in&#13;
a 1-1 tie. Scoring for the Rangers&#13;
in their first game was Rick&#13;
Lechusz. Shots taken at the goal&#13;
were about even with Parkside&#13;
attempting 35 and Lake Forest&#13;
trying 34 times. The Ranger&#13;
goalie, Tom Thomsen, was quite&#13;
a bit more busy than Lake&#13;
Forest's Fixler, blocking 38 shots&#13;
as compared to Fixler's 17.&#13;
The Rangers' next opponent&#13;
was Lewis College from Lockport,&#13;
111. The Rangers dropped&#13;
this match 3-1 in a very hardfought&#13;
battle.&#13;
Ranger harriers split first two,&#13;
face Eastern Illinois Saturday&#13;
The second cross country meet&#13;
of the season went much better&#13;
for the Rangers. Parkside won&#13;
the meet by placing eight runners&#13;
in the top ten. Lucian Rosa had&#13;
the winning time of 26:37 in the&#13;
five mile run. He was followed by&#13;
Wayne Saunders of IllinoisChicago&#13;
Circle, and the following&#13;
Parkside runners: Dennis Biel,&#13;
Jim McFadden, Keith Merritt,&#13;
Ned Kessenich, Everett Hyde&#13;
and Bill Carlson.&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey said that the&#13;
meet was "a good confidence&#13;
builder for the younger runners."&#13;
He also said that there was a good&#13;
team effort. This meet will give&#13;
more confidence to the team&#13;
when it meets Eastern Illinois&#13;
this Saturday.&#13;
For a long distance outlook on&#13;
the team, Godfrey will have to&#13;
depend on the freshmen to pull&#13;
the team through the season. He&#13;
said "the top three runners will&#13;
do well in each race, but it's up to&#13;
the freshmen."&#13;
The Rangers will run Saturday&#13;
at Charleston, 111., against a&#13;
strong Eastern Illinois squad.&#13;
It** ijfrim &lt;|frn&#13;
THE&#13;
ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 Lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
The cross country team started&#13;
out the season Sept. 19 o n a sour&#13;
note. Last year the Rangers won&#13;
the Stevens Point meet over&#13;
Carthage, Whitewater, and&#13;
Stevens Point. Coach Godfrey&#13;
says, "We had outstanding&#13;
performance on top but nothing&#13;
else." Dennis Biel was the only&#13;
one who placed in the top ten in&#13;
the five mile race, finishing&#13;
second. The next Parkside placer&#13;
was 17th. Carthage's Tom&#13;
Schumacher placed first, setting&#13;
a course record.&#13;
Any man interested in joining&#13;
the Ranger track team should&#13;
contact Coach Bob Lawson.&#13;
Practice for the indoor track&#13;
team has already begun. Coach&#13;
Lawson can be found in the&#13;
Physical Education Building or&#13;
by calling 553-2153.&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
September 30 UW-Madison at Madison&#13;
October 4 Illinois-Chicago Circle at PARKSIDE&#13;
October 6-7 V^Oktoberfest Tournament&#13;
(UW-Madison, Notre Dame, UW-Milwaukee)&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
September 30 Eastern Illinois at Charleston, 111.&#13;
October 3 UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee&#13;
October 7 Oktoberfest Invitational&#13;
Golf&#13;
September 29-30 UW-Oshkosh at Oshkosh&#13;
October 7 Oktoberfest Tournament&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
October 6 Oktoberfest Invitational&#13;
Women's Golf&#13;
October 5 Oktoberfest Tournament&#13;
Tennis&#13;
October 4 Oktoberfest Invitational&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
COMICS&#13;
A.V '(9&#13;
«£, si r&gt;, t&gt; \&#13;
'%aXS&gt;&#13;
EDMONDS&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CURLEY&#13;
9 P.M. - Frida y, September 29&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Admission • M50&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. I.D. required&#13;
also appearing&#13;
Tony, Jumbo and Garry&#13;
VVv Vs </text>
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              <text>PGSA [sic] readies for elections</text>
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              <text>The Parkside _&#13;
RANGERwedneday&#13;
,&#13;
K no ha&#13;
ctoh r 4, 1972&#13;
i on III&#13;
PGSA readies for elections&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
author, speaker'&#13;
m~~ of man;&#13;
opnuons, alternately&#13;
roused and&#13;
roasted the crowd&#13;
Sunday as he&#13;
opened the lecture&#13;
season at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Special Collection room is&#13;
open to the public weekdays from&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. or by appomtment.&#13;
Normal library hours&#13;
are until midnight MondayThursday,&#13;
unlil6 p.m. Friday, 9-5&#13;
Saturday and 1:30-10:30 Sunday.&#13;
Mailer's books, including UWP's&#13;
first editions on display, are&#13;
The Naked and the Dead (948),&#13;
Barbary Shore (1951), Deer Park&#13;
(955), White Negro (957),&#13;
Advertisements for Myself&#13;
(959), Death for the Ladies&#13;
(962), The Presidential Papers&#13;
(1963) I An American Dream&#13;
(964), Cannibals and Christians&#13;
(965), Why Are We in Vietnam&#13;
(967), Bull Fight (967), The&#13;
Armies of the Night (968),&#13;
Miami and the Siege of Chicago&#13;
(1969), Of a Fire on the Moon&#13;
(970), King of the Hill (971),&#13;
Maidstone (l97l) , Prisoner of Sex&#13;
(971) and Existential Errands&#13;
(972).&#13;
Norman Mailer had at least 14&#13;
requests for autographs at UWParkside.&#13;
The prize-winning author, who&#13;
spoke at UW-P Sunday night,&#13;
signed the 14 first editions of his&#13;
bookswhich are in the library's&#13;
possession Monday morning&#13;
when he met with Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
The first editions include 14 of&#13;
Mailer's 18 books and are&#13;
currently on display in the&#13;
Special Collections room which&#13;
has recently opened in the new&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
The room, which is climatically&#13;
controlled, includes a collection&#13;
of 1,300 rare and unusual books&#13;
first editions drafts and&#13;
manuscripts, in~luding th~ Irving&#13;
Wallace Collection which the&#13;
best-selling Kenosha author has&#13;
established at UW-P and the&#13;
Teisberg Collection' of early&#13;
American plays. ___--1&#13;
Student Life Q&amp;A&#13;
board installed&#13;
A student life question and&#13;
~nswer bulletin board has been&#13;
mstalled in the Student Activities&#13;
BUilding to serve as a means for&#13;
students to ask all those little&#13;
que~tions they have been wondering&#13;
about in the Student Life&#13;
area.&#13;
This would include the Student&#13;
Activities Building itself, campus&#13;
food services, the University&#13;
Bookstore, campus housing,&#13;
student activities and&#13;
programming, and the Campus&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
According to William Niebuhr&#13;
Coordinator of Student Life'&#13;
questions placed in the bo~&#13;
~ated on this bulletin board will&#13;
. answered as fairly and conSlsely&#13;
a . I s posslbl~. The answers&#13;
a ong with the questions will be&#13;
pOsted on the board for general&#13;
stUdent b . a servatlOn. As new&#13;
questions come in, the board will&#13;
then be periodically changed.&#13;
All questions will be answered&#13;
as long as they are reasonable&#13;
and do not concern specific&#13;
people by name. The latter is to&#13;
protect a person's individual&#13;
rights and not in involve the&#13;
entire campus with questions&#13;
concerning personality conflicts.&#13;
A somewhat similar project is&#13;
already in affect in the library&#13;
with its "Bitch Ticket." Here a&#13;
student's "bitch" with the library&#13;
is responded to with what the&#13;
library feels to be an "Honest&#13;
Response." Niebuhr hopes the&#13;
Student Life question-answer&#13;
board will deal not only with&#13;
bitches but also with any question&#13;
or suggestion involving Student&#13;
Life. Students are encOl;lraged to&#13;
use this means of better campus&#13;
communication as well as the one&#13;
in the library.&#13;
Park.si~ Student Government&#13;
Assa.clatIon will be holding&#13;
elections Oct. 23-25 and is looking&#13;
~or stu~ents eager to get involved&#13;
~lthe Inner workings of UW-P.&#13;
. UW-P students can he candid.ates&#13;
and can run for any of 28&#13;
offices which are to he filled&#13;
First a little background on the&#13;
objective, history and versaWity&#13;
of PSGA.&#13;
The aim of Student Government&#13;
is to aid a student, students,&#13;
st~dent organizations or campus-&#13;
?nented activities in getting what&#13;
IS needed or wanted. The 1971-n&#13;
~tudent Government has been&#13;
instrumental in a number of&#13;
areas: Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center, the Spring Book Exchange,&#13;
the Teacher-Course&#13;
Evaluations and the Parkside&#13;
annexation issue.&#13;
Most appointments for&#13;
~niversity committees originate&#13;
~nStudent Governmenl PSGA&#13;
Its.elf has six standing cornmitteea.Ffnance,&#13;
Public Information,&#13;
Elections, Grievances&#13;
and Clearing House, Academic&#13;
Policies and Student tjntce. As&#13;
you can see, PSGA concerns&#13;
itself with all facets of student&#13;
life.&#13;
The offices of the Senate which&#13;
are available this fall are:&#13;
PRESIDENT: Serves as&#13;
chairman of the Senate, plans&#13;
meetings and appoints committee&#13;
chairmen.&#13;
VICE PRESIDEST: Aids the&#13;
president in his duties and serves&#13;
as a member of all committees.&#13;
RECORD!. 'G SECRETARY:&#13;
Records the attendance and&#13;
minutes of all Senate meetings.&#13;
CORRESPOSDING SECRI::-&#13;
TARY: Shall handle all official&#13;
Senate correspondence and&#13;
chairs the Public Information&#13;
Committee.&#13;
TREAS R ER: Kecelves,&#13;
deposits, disperses and accounts&#13;
for all funds and makes financial&#13;
reports to the Senate.&#13;
In addition to the officers there&#13;
::Ire 17 senators. The senators are&#13;
the base units of representatian&#13;
in PSGA They can sit on or chair&#13;
most of the standing committees&#13;
besides working on special&#13;
projects&#13;
ln this election there are also&#13;
five positions on the P GA&#13;
Student UDlon Committee. nus&#13;
committee can review and make&#13;
recommendations on the use and&#13;
operations of the SAB and the&#13;
broad area of tudent acnvru&#13;
on campus&#13;
The last posilion needed to be&#13;
filed is one of the student seats an&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
This committee IS&#13;
perhaps one of the most JROuential&#13;
bodies on campus. ThiS&#13;
For 1973-74&#13;
eemrmuee handl th&#13;
recognition of tudenl&#13;
organlzabon and th disperment&#13;
of tudent upport funds&#13;
For a candrdate lo get hISnam&#13;
an the ballot he must (I) a&#13;
Parkside tud ntand (2) submu&#13;
a petilion of 25 Ignalu of&#13;
P students The petibons can be&#13;
picked up at the follOWing&#13;
locauc :&#13;
Ken05ha Camp . Room 135-&#13;
ud nt Servi&#13;
.laIn amp ... ' LLC \).193&#13;
PSGA mce Information Desk&#13;
In U-C. taIn Desk In Ubrary.&#13;
Th completed petitions should&#13;
he returned fore 10 p.m an&#13;
,landay, October 16to tho PSGA&#13;
office at LLC D-193 Th el ban&#13;
WIll he October 23. 24 and 25&#13;
Parkside formulates&#13;
admissions policy&#13;
The niversuy of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside recently formulated its&#13;
admissions policy proposal for&#13;
1m-74.&#13;
In a letter to Madisan Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie detailed the pomts&#13;
of the new (X)licy. which were&#13;
chosen "after considerable&#13;
debale and consrderauoe" and&#13;
which "have been approved by&#13;
the Admissions Policy Committee&#13;
and Faculty enate" and&#13;
are also supported by thecampu&#13;
admlnistrauon.'·&#13;
Unlike past admimslration&#13;
poliCies. the no" policy has excluded&#13;
all references Lo cla&#13;
tandIng and Ac:r or all AT&#13;
scores.&#13;
"In effecl:' saId Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie, "we are trylflg to return&#13;
to the hi lonc policy of the&#13;
Uni\'erslty of Wisconsin thal&#13;
prev"ilPltt ::I rlf'Cade or more ago.&#13;
Our proposa IISaJso a re ose 10&#13;
the observation of th 10rlh&#13;
Central exenun ,who w re of&#13;
the Opinion that W could not&#13;
properly serve our regional&#13;
clientele if we continued to be&#13;
bound to the top half of tho cia&#13;
policy of recent years "&#13;
The enate TeJ ted cut orf&#13;
poInts such as th 25 porcentlovol&#13;
or tal l seer reqwremeJ1l,&#13;
boca. . lhey are "tnherently&#13;
artifiCial. bearing IItll&#13;
deman tratabl relationship to&#13;
colleg perform n or ucc "&#13;
Th re W m qu tion of&#13;
"I""enng tandarcls" According&#13;
lo th han 1I0r, the en al&#13;
f ling "a that "tnJ t ndards&#13;
ar l not 1n th adml. iOlU&#13;
but tn tho tnt II t I&#13;
chall ng thal or pIa bclo~&#13;
tuden after lhey he\! n&#13;
admilled, and the Rrado that ate&#13;
Igned In rclabon t.h reto It&#13;
Almost nurses. physicians,&#13;
clergymen, social workers and others&#13;
professionally interested in the problems&#13;
of the terminally ill attended an all-day&#13;
seminar at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wednesday conducted by Dr.&#13;
Elisabeth Kuber- Ross, author of the&#13;
widely-read book "On Death and Dying."&#13;
Dr. Kuber- Ross, a physician and a&#13;
psychiatrist, is a member of the&#13;
psychiatry faculty of the University of&#13;
Chicago and medical director of South&#13;
Cook County (III.) Mental Health and&#13;
Family Services. Shown at the seminar&#13;
are. left to right, Dr. Kim Baugrud,&#13;
co~rdlnator of University Extension&#13;
w~lch sponsored the seminar; Sandra&#13;
Riese, supervising nurse at St&#13;
Catherine's Hospital, 6504 29th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Dr. Kuber-Ross; and Clarice&#13;
Pac.kman, 1268 52nd Ave., Kenosha, a&#13;
registered nurse at St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital.&#13;
r I ,.&#13;
n h.&#13;
PGSA readies for election&#13;
Norman Mailer had at least 14&#13;
requests for autographs at UWParkside.&#13;
&#13;
The prize-winning author, who&#13;
sPoke at UW-P Sunday night,&#13;
signed the 14 first editions of his&#13;
books which are in the library's&#13;
possession Monday morning&#13;
when he met with Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
The first editions include 14 of&#13;
Mailer's 18 books and are&#13;
currently on display in the&#13;
Special Collections room which&#13;
has recently opened in the new&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
The room, which is climatically&#13;
controlled, includes a collection&#13;
of 1,300 rare and unusual books&#13;
first editions drafts and&#13;
manuscripts, in~luding th~ Irving&#13;
Wallace Collection which the&#13;
best-selling Kenosha author has&#13;
established at UW-P and the&#13;
Teisberg Collection' of early&#13;
American plays.&#13;
n&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
author, speaker'&#13;
m~~ of many&#13;
opiruons, alternately&#13;
roused and&#13;
roasted the crowd&#13;
Sunday as he&#13;
opened the lecture&#13;
season at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Special Collection room is&#13;
open to the public weekdays from&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. or by appointment.&#13;
Normal library hours&#13;
are until midnight MondayThursday,&#13;
until 6 p.m. Friday, 9-5&#13;
Saturday and 1 :30-10:30 Sunday.&#13;
Mailer's books, including UWP's&#13;
first editions on display, are&#13;
The Naked and the Dead (1948),&#13;
Barbary Shore (1951), Deer Park&#13;
0955), White Negro 0957),&#13;
Advertisements for Myself&#13;
(1959), Death for the Ladies&#13;
0962), The Presidential Papers&#13;
(1963), An American Dream&#13;
(1964), Cannibals and Christians&#13;
(1965), Why Are We in Vietnam&#13;
(1967), Bull Fight (1967), The&#13;
Armies of the Night 0968),&#13;
Miami and the Siege of Chicago&#13;
(1969), Of a Fire on the Moon&#13;
(1970), King of the Hill 0971),&#13;
Maidstone ( 1971), Prisoner of ex&#13;
(1971) and Existential Errands&#13;
(1972).&#13;
I&#13;
Student Life Q&amp;A&#13;
board installed&#13;
A student life question and&#13;
~nswer bulletin board has been&#13;
mstalled in the Student Activities&#13;
Building to serve as a means for&#13;
students to ask all those little&#13;
que~tions they have been wondermg&#13;
about in the Student Life&#13;
area.&#13;
This would include the Student&#13;
Activities Building itself, campus&#13;
~ood services, the University&#13;
00kstore, campus housing&#13;
student activities and&#13;
programming, and the Campus&#13;
Information Center.&#13;
According to William Niebuhr&#13;
Coordinator of Student Life '&#13;
QUeStions placed in the bo~&#13;
~ated on this bulletin board will&#13;
. answered as fairly and cons1sely&#13;
a .&#13;
1 s poss1bl.:!. The answers a ong with the questions will be&#13;
P0Sled on the board for general&#13;
student observation. As new&#13;
questions come in, the board will&#13;
then be periodically changed.&#13;
All questions will be answered&#13;
as long as they are reasonable&#13;
and do not concern specific&#13;
people by name. The latter is to&#13;
protect a person's individual&#13;
rights and not in involve the&#13;
entire campus with questions&#13;
concerning personality conflicts.&#13;
A somewhat similar project is&#13;
already in affect in the library&#13;
with its "Bitch Ticket." Here a&#13;
student's "bitch" with the library&#13;
is responded to with what the&#13;
library feels to be an "Hone t&#13;
Response. " iebuhr hopes the&#13;
Student Life question-answer&#13;
board will deal not only with&#13;
bitches but also with any question&#13;
or suggestion involving Student&#13;
Life. Students are enco1,1raged to&#13;
use this means of better campus&#13;
communication as well as the one&#13;
in the library.&#13;
Park_sid_ tudent Gov rnment&#13;
Association will be hold'&#13;
elections Oct. 23-25 and i I ::&#13;
for stu~ents eager to get in ·ol ·eel&#13;
m the mner wor ing of •.p&#13;
i1 W-P student can be can:&#13;
d_ates and can run for an~· of 28&#13;
o~f1ces which are to be · filled.&#13;
Fi~t ~ little backjO"ound on the&#13;
obJective, hi torv and versatili&#13;
of PSGA. . ·&#13;
The aim of tudent Go ·ernment&#13;
is to aid a tudent. tuden '&#13;
st1:1ctent organization or campu .&#13;
?riented activities in getting ·hat&#13;
is needed or wanted. The 1971-72&#13;
~tudent Government ha been&#13;
instrumental in a number of&#13;
areas: Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center, the pring Book E .&#13;
change , the Teacher-Cour e&#13;
Evaluation and the Par ,d&#13;
annexation i ue.&#13;
1ost appointment for&#13;
. niversity committe originate&#13;
10 tudent Government p&#13;
itself has ix tandmg committees;&#13;
Finance, Public Information,&#13;
Election . Grievanc&#13;
and Clearing Ho cademic&#13;
Policies and tud nt&#13;
you can ee. PSG con ern&#13;
itself with all facets of tud nt&#13;
life.&#13;
The offices of the enate hich&#13;
are available thi fall are:&#13;
PRE IDE. 'T. a&#13;
chairman of the nate, plan&#13;
meetings and appoints committee&#13;
chairmen&#13;
VICE PRE IDE. 'T: Aids the&#13;
president in hi duti and rv&#13;
as a member of all comm1tt&#13;
RECORDI. 'G R T.-\R\':&#13;
Records the attendance and&#13;
minute of all enate meeting . ORRE P 'DI&#13;
TARY: hall handle all official&#13;
enate corre pond nee and&#13;
chairs the Public Information&#13;
Committee.&#13;
TREA lRER : Kece1 ·e&#13;
depo its, di pers and ccoun&#13;
for all fund and ma · - fin ncJ&#13;
reports to the nate&#13;
In addition to the Ha r ther&#13;
;ire 17 nato ·. The&#13;
For 1973-7&#13;
Parkside forinulat&#13;
adinissions polic&#13;
Almost nurses, physicians,&#13;
clergymen, social or ers and others&#13;
professionally interested in the problems&#13;
of the terminally ill attended an all-day&#13;
seminar at The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wednesday conducted by Dr.&#13;
Elisabeth Kuber-Ross. author of the&#13;
widely-read book' On Death and Dy ng."&#13;
Dr. Kuber-Ross, a physician and a&#13;
psychiatrist, is a member of the&#13;
psychiatry faculty of the University of &#13;
THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
2&#13;
Is there II doctor&#13;
in the house?&#13;
THORN&#13;
it has been some time since I had a .colum~ ~nthe&#13;
student newspaper, not since the first ed!tlOn °i&#13;
~E\\'SCOPE in fact, two years ago. In ft.tlS one&#13;
shall make the attempt once again to pr-int those&#13;
little things which happen in the course of ~he week&#13;
which tend to bother people, as well as items of&#13;
information too small to warrant a story.&#13;
RA:\'GER is the third newspaper we ha~e had ,on&#13;
campus in as many years, Iollowtng In t~e 10k&#13;
tracks of COLLEGIAN and NEWSCOPE. Things do&#13;
look more promising for us now than they did f~r&#13;
:':EII'SCOPE though, where problems developed In&#13;
alienation of staff and advertising revenue&#13;
collection.&#13;
Just as NEWSCOPE inherited a sizeable debt from&#13;
C'OLLEGIA:'\. we inherit a somewhat smaller ~ebt&#13;
from them, and are in a position to pay it off a htt~e&#13;
at a time. We have a new printer now, located 10&#13;
ZIOn instead of Walworth. This makes it more&#13;
convenient to commute and the Wednesday release&#13;
schedule enables us to get in more of that weekend&#13;
news.&#13;
If you become III what happens to you? 00 you have to&#13;
staY away from school because it would cost you too&#13;
much to see a doctor or it would take you too long to get&#13;
on his crowded schedule? Have you found that as you&#13;
break Into adulthood a chief disadvantage is that your&#13;
parents insurance policy no longer covers you? You&#13;
aren't alone. Undoubtedly many other Parks ide&#13;
students have the same problem.&#13;
Parkside has a health office at Rm. 332 Greenquist&#13;
Hall staffed by Edith Isenberg, a registered nurse. She's&#13;
a fine person who does everything she can to help the&#13;
students that come to her. But she Is a registered nurse&#13;
and there are many things a doctor can do that she&#13;
can't.&#13;
A he Ith service expanded to include a doctor would&#13;
provide Parks Ide students with a real alternative to ~he&#13;
prohibitive costs in obtaining medical help and advice&#13;
from local physicians. A doctor associated with the&#13;
health service could write prescriptions for students and&#13;
staff. (Something that now requires a $10 visit to a&#13;
physician's office) A doctor could also provide a more&#13;
. curate di~~iS of certain problems and a more&#13;
qualified referral when necessary.&#13;
This is not meant to take anything away from Mrs.&#13;
Isenberg. She does a good job. But she is not a doctor.&#13;
She agrees that a doctor on campus would be a good&#13;
thing She feels that it is the cost that prevents a&#13;
physician from being added to the health service. We&#13;
hope tha t the price of health is beyond a dollar sign.&#13;
We realize that there are difficulties in obtaining&#13;
fundS for any new program at Parkside. To cut costs we&#13;
suggest that the health service be operated as a free&#13;
lInic with a doctor hera on a r.egular -schedule: everv«&#13;
'fuesday and Thurstfay for eXample. -.&#13;
We urge the university to do everything it can to work&#13;
WIth Mrs. Isenberg in setting up as complete a health&#13;
service as possible as soon as possible.&#13;
We get letters .••&#13;
Letters to the Editors are encouraged. We ask that&#13;
they be confined to 250 words or less and that they be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. All must be signed and include&#13;
address and phone number and student status (senior,&#13;
junior, sophomore, freshman) or faculty rank. Names&#13;
will be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the&#13;
right to refuse to prillt any letters.&#13;
To the editors:&#13;
Your fronl page edltortal of this&#13;
morninga issue of the new&#13;
Ranger mtrigued me. In fact the&#13;
\A.'holei ue was quite interesting,&#13;
and certainly J must thank you&#13;
for warming my heart so&#13;
no talgically!&#13;
One of the cri ticisms of&#13;
Uruverslties in general, is that&#13;
th y do not provide a "real life"&#13;
environment (or students. Surely,&#13;
here at Parks ide, as our&#13;
newspaper Indicates, we are&#13;
quite mvolved in the real world.&#13;
After all, didn't the Ranger&#13;
COlOralmost aU the school news&#13;
th y could po Ibly dig up? It&#13;
didn't bore us 'With any stories&#13;
ahuul th political campaigns,&#13;
huut ny American problems,&#13;
'tat o( Wisconsin problems, or&#13;
\ \ problem excepting those&#13;
IO"'cly httle do-or..die ones we&#13;
faCt' a tudents here Thank you&#13;
I' \RI\IDE RANGER staff.&#13;
what w(" n('E'(jat UlISuniversity is&#13;
• hlllh chool newspaper. It will&#13;
dd S() much to the sta ture of&#13;
Park ,de&#13;
The onl) thing. though, if you&#13;
&lt;If gOing to produce a high&#13;
hoo! no" paper, at least make&#13;
BY KONKOL&#13;
We have a dwersified staff, and while the overwhelming&#13;
majority have no experience with a&#13;
college newspaper, many have worked for&#13;
high school sheets and yearbooks.&#13;
The name of the paper - RANGER, has even attracted&#13;
some people to the staff: some of them a:e&#13;
somewhat strange. There is this one big hairy guy In&#13;
the scoutmasters hat who comes running out of the&#13;
editor's office every time someone lights a&#13;
cigarette, to throw a bucket of water on it. Must be&#13;
against air pollution or something.&#13;
One thing which is going to help us a lot is having a&#13;
full time adviser, Don Kopriva, who used to Q~&#13;
.director of sports information. We have also ap--&#13;
plied. as a student organization, for funding for 000-&#13;
printing costs which should help stretch our dollars.&#13;
We hope to cover printing with advertising revenue.&#13;
We have a brand new university with the addition of&#13;
two new buildings and the loss of the Racine&#13;
campus. With these come new problems, while&#13;
some old ones are still with us.&#13;
An old problem which affects everyone is the&#13;
parking and bus situation. While the shuttle service&#13;
has improved ever since the Chancellor had to wait&#13;
20 minutes for one. the parking problem is still with&#13;
us. Whoever dreamed up the outlying parking plan&#13;
was really dumb.&#13;
Even the North Central Association of Colleges and&#13;
Secondary Schools hesitated in granting us accredation&#13;
because of our parking problem. Already&#13;
there have been occasions when both parking lots&#13;
were full.&#13;
M hanical breakdowns have been a problem with&#13;
bUe:service. Two buses are kept at the far parking&#13;
I t for just such emergenCIes, but have not been&#13;
enough since you have probably ridden one of those&#13;
yellOWones up the hill.&#13;
They have trouble starting those buses mornings&#13;
now. Imagine what happens when the weather gets&#13;
cold. Jelco isn't going to go, out and buy new buses&#13;
either _ not when they can t be guaranteed a continued&#13;
contract.&#13;
Why offer a bus contract anyway'? Why doesn't&#13;
Parkside buy its own buses, spread out the&#13;
payments over a period of years, have them driven&#13;
by students on work study which is ~ubsidized and&#13;
have them maintained and repaired by area&#13;
technical schools?&#13;
Buses cost a lot of money, especially when compared&#13;
to the amount o~ money spent on slu?ent&#13;
organizations. The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
has less than $7,000 to give to student organizations.&#13;
Of this over $7,500 has been requested by PSGA,&#13;
RANGER Child Care Center and a couple of others,&#13;
Imagine, less than $1.50 of your tuitition is coming&#13;
hack to you through fund 128.&#13;
Another old problem:is the vending machines.Hew&#13;
do you like paying 50 cents for sa.ndwiches which&#13;
used to sell for 35 cents. Or paying 15 cents for&#13;
potato chips which Canteen sells for 10 cents in&#13;
other locations across town.&#13;
We have a new bookstore but it has some of the&#13;
same old problems. In the fourth week of classes we&#13;
are still waiting for books to come in which were&#13;
ordered short. Some of this has been the fault of&#13;
professors who underestimate, but there is no excuse&#13;
for ordering an amount less than requested.&#13;
Perhaps you are amused by people laying sod one&#13;
day and tearing it up the next, when planting grass&#13;
seed would be cheaper, looks better and lasts&#13;
. longer:" 61\ laying sidewalKS' that.i leadt nowhere,&#13;
• while people tramp through the mud 10 get to&#13;
Greenquist ; but I am not.&#13;
You Vets who registered early the second week in&#13;
August wasted your time. The Student Records&#13;
Office didn't send notifications to the VA till September&#13;
B. And you missed out on all those special&#13;
things available during regular registration like&#13;
interest cards.&#13;
Student Government elections are coming around&#13;
October 23-25. They're going to need a lot of help&#13;
manning the polls. If you're interested contact the&#13;
Student Senate Office.&#13;
Also the Student Senate is looking for student&#13;
members for various university committees. If YQu&#13;
are interested, contact the Student Senate af 553'-&#13;
2244 or come see at D-193 LLC.&#13;
Speaking of joining things, this paper is really&#13;
hurting for experienced people. If you think you&#13;
might be interested in seeing your name in print,&#13;
dron on bv D-194LLC and have a look.&#13;
it a good one! Even the high&#13;
school press has some involvement&#13;
with the outside&#13;
world. At least papers that have&#13;
only hard news know some kind&#13;
of journalistic style. Your articles&#13;
were verbose, dry and&#13;
generally, Ididn't finish a single&#13;
one of them, except for Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's letter.&#13;
Perhaps the best way to express&#13;
my point is that you cannot&#13;
expect to keep the attention of the&#13;
students if you present nothing to&#13;
challenge their minds and inspire&#13;
their souls. And, -nless I miss my&#13;
guess, insipid articles on the&#13;
hours of the University bookstore&#13;
will not inspire anyone.&#13;
Perhaps I shouldn't be so&#13;
vehemently anti your paper. You&#13;
might 'ask me why I haven't&#13;
made an offer of my help - and&#13;
that is a good question. I have&#13;
offered myself. However, I refuse&#13;
to write trash, and I also refuse to&#13;
limit myself to events that&#13;
happen only here on the campus&#13;
at Parkside. ews is news, and it&#13;
doesn't have to happen right here&#13;
to make the student body interested.&#13;
I shall make every effort to&#13;
attend the meeting this evening. I&#13;
hope that the next issue may be&#13;
better - but I do want to commend&#13;
you for making an effort to&#13;
keep a newspaper alive on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Eric Cushman Moore&#13;
To Ken Konkol:&#13;
I just wanted to drop you a&#13;
quick note about the article on the&#13;
Library Learning Center. Thanks&#13;
for the good coverage. As you are&#13;
well aware, our primary goal is&#13;
service to the students and&#13;
faculty, and your help in&#13;
spreading the word is appreciated.&#13;
Perhaps you might&#13;
consider a short fellow-up when&#13;
we get Into full swing here.&#13;
Would you also pass along to&#13;
the rest of the Ranger staff my&#13;
compliments on a good issue.&#13;
If you see a way that the&#13;
Learning Center can be of aid to&#13;
you personally. or to the Ranger&#13;
don't hesitate to contact us. Keep&#13;
up the good job.&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
Director&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
~ IJY The Parksidlee..------- -'rr..RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin.&#13;
Offices are located at 0-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessarily the official view of the University ot&#13;
Wisconsi n- Parkside.&#13;
EDITORS AND WRITERS: Tom Ford, Bruce Wagner, Rudy&#13;
Lienau, Sue Zietz, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch, Jeannine SipsrnaKathryn&#13;
Wellner, Ken Konkol, Dale Martin, Karen Petersen, Tom&#13;
Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Paul Nelson&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINES.~ MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva&#13;
;Ii' ,REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY T National Edu&lt;:ational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave.) New York, N. Y. 10017&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
EDITORIALS/OPINIONS&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
in&#13;
there a doctor&#13;
the house?&#13;
1 you b come Ill hat happens to you? Do you have to&#13;
t y rom school because it would cost you too&#13;
much to s doctor or it would take you too long to get&#13;
0 hi crowd d schedule? Have you found that as you&#13;
br into dulthood a chief disadvantage is that your&#13;
Insur nee policy no longer covers you? You&#13;
r n't lone. Undoubtedly many other Parkside&#13;
tud nt h ve the s me problem.&#13;
p rk ide h s a health office at Rm. 332 Greenquist&#13;
H 11 st ff d by Edith Isenberg, a registered nurse. She's&#13;
fin p rson who does everything she can to help the&#13;
s udent that come to her. But she is a registered nurse&#13;
nd th re many things a doctor can do that she&#13;
rvice expanded to include a doctor would&#13;
prov d Par ides udents with a real alternative to ~he&#13;
prohiblllv costs in obtaining medical help and advice&#13;
from loc I physicians. A doctor associated with the&#13;
h Ith s rvice could write prescriptions for students and&#13;
ff. ( omething that now requires a $10 visit to a&#13;
ysici n' office) A doctor could also provide a more&#13;
cur t I n&lt;&gt;Sis of certain problems and a more&#13;
u llfi d referral when necessary.&#13;
This is not meant to take anything away from Mrs.&#13;
I nberg. She does a good job. But she is not a doctor.&#13;
h agrees th t a doctor on campus would be a good&#13;
thing. She feels that it is the cost that prevents a&#13;
physic! n from being added to the health service. We&#13;
hope hat the pr ce of health is beyond a dollar sign.&#13;
W re llze that there are difficulties in obtaining&#13;
funds for any new program at Parkside. To cut costs we&#13;
sugg s that the health service be operated as a free&#13;
I nlc ith ad tor.here on a r.egular-schedule; every--&#13;
u d y nd Thurs'day for exartlple. -.&#13;
e urge the university to do everything it can to work&#13;
1 h Mrs. Isenberg in setting up as complete a health&#13;
rvice as possible as soon as possible.&#13;
get letters ...&#13;
Letters to the Editors are encouraged. We ask that&#13;
they be confined to 250 words or less and that they be&#13;
t ped nd double-spaced. All must be signed and include&#13;
address and phone number and student status (senior,&#13;
junior, sophomore, freshman) or faculty rank. Names&#13;
will be ithheld upon request. The editors reserve the&#13;
right to refuse to pririt any letters.&#13;
it a good one! Even the high&#13;
chool pre s has some invol\'ement&#13;
with the outside&#13;
world. At least papers that have&#13;
only hard news know some kind&#13;
o or journalistic style. Your article&#13;
were verbose, dry and&#13;
of generally, I didn't finish a single&#13;
one of them, except for Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's letter.&#13;
Perbap the best way to expre&#13;
my point is that you cannot&#13;
expect to keep the attention of the&#13;
tudents if you pre ent nothing to&#13;
challenge their minds and inspire&#13;
their oul And. ·•nle I miss my&#13;
gu · , i ipid articles on the&#13;
hours of the niversitv book tore&#13;
will not in pire anyo~e.&#13;
Perhap I houldn't be o&#13;
\'ehemently anti your paper. You&#13;
might ·a k me why l haven't&#13;
made an offer of my help - and&#13;
that is a good question. I have&#13;
offered my elf. However, I refuse&#13;
to write tra h. and I also refuse to&#13;
limit my elf lo events that&#13;
happen only h re on the campu&#13;
at Par id . 'ew is news, and it&#13;
d n't have to happen right here&#13;
to make the tudent body interested.&#13;
&#13;
THORN&#13;
BY KONKOL&#13;
It has been some time since I had a _colum~ !n the&#13;
stud nt newspaper, not since the first e~bon of&#13;
'E\\' COPE in fact, two years ago. In ~is one 1&#13;
hall make the attempt once again to prmt those&#13;
little thing which happen in the course of ~he week&#13;
which tend to bother people, as well as items of&#13;
information too small to warrant a story.&#13;
RA 'GER i the third newspaper w~ ha:ve had _on&#13;
campus in a many years. following m t?e mk&#13;
track of OLLEGIA and ~EWSCOPE. Thi~gs do&#13;
look more promi ing for us now than they did f~r&#13;
. E\\' PE though. where problems developed m&#13;
ahenabon of staff and advertising revenue&#13;
collection.&#13;
Ju t a . 'E\-\ COPE inherited a sizeable debt from&#13;
C'OLLEGI.\:'I., we inherit a somewhat smaller ~ebt&#13;
from them, and are ma position to pay it off a htt!e&#13;
at a time. We have a new printer now, located m&#13;
Zion instead of Walworth . This makes it more&#13;
convenient to commute and the Wednesday release&#13;
chedule enables us to get in more of that weekend&#13;
new.&#13;
We have a diver ified staff, and while the overwhelming&#13;
majority have no experience with a&#13;
college newspaper. many have worked for&#13;
high chool heetsand yearbooks.&#13;
The name of the paper - RANGER, has even attracted&#13;
some people to the taff; some of them are&#13;
omewhat strange. There is this one big hairy guy in&#13;
the coutma ter·s bat who comes running out of the&#13;
editor·. office every time someone lights a&#13;
cigarette. to throw a bucket of water on it. Must be&#13;
against air pollution or something.&#13;
One thing which is going to help us a Jot is having a&#13;
full time advi er. Don Kopriva, who 4sed to Q~&#13;
.director of sports information. We have also applied.&#13;
a a student organization, for funding for nonprinting&#13;
costs which should help stretch our dollars&#13;
We hope to cover printing with advertising revenue.&#13;
We have a brand new university with the addition of&#13;
two new buildings and the loss of the Racine&#13;
campus. With these come new problems, while&#13;
some old ones are still with us.&#13;
An old problem which affects everyone is the&#13;
parking and bus situation. While the shuttle service&#13;
ha improved ever since the Chancellor had to wait&#13;
20 minutes forone. the parking problem is still with&#13;
us. Whoe\·er dreamed up the outlying parking plan&#13;
wa really dumb.&#13;
Even the orth Central Association of Colleges and&#13;
econdary Schools hesitated in granting us accredation&#13;
because of our parking problem. Already&#13;
there have been occasions when both parking lots&#13;
were full.&#13;
Mechanical breakdowns have been a problem with&#13;
bus service. Two buses ar e kept at the far parking&#13;
Jot for just such emergencies, b~t have not been&#13;
ugh since you have probably n dden one of those eno .&#13;
11 yellow ones up the hi .&#13;
They have trouble starting those buses mornings&#13;
w Imagine what happens when the weather gets&#13;
~~Id. Jelco isn't going to go out and buy new buses&#13;
eith~r _ not when they can't be guaranteed a continued&#13;
contract.&#13;
Why offer a bus contract anyway? Why doesn't&#13;
Parkside buy its own buses, spread out the&#13;
payments over a period of years, have them driven&#13;
by students on work study which is ~ubsidized and&#13;
have them maintained and repaired by area&#13;
technical schools?&#13;
Buses cost a lot of money, especially when compared&#13;
to the amount of money spent on stu?ent&#13;
organizations. The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
has less than $7,000 to give to student organizations.&#13;
Of this over $7,500 has been requested by PSGA,&#13;
RANGER Child Care Center and a couple of others,&#13;
Imagine, less than $1.50 of your tuitition is coming&#13;
back to you through fund 128.&#13;
Another old problem:is the vending machin~~-_.Haw&#13;
do you like paying 50 cents for sandwiches which&#13;
used to sell for 35 cents. Or paying 15 cents for&#13;
potato chips which Canteen sells for 10 cents in&#13;
other locations across town.&#13;
We have a new bookstore but it has some of the&#13;
same old problems. In the fourth wee~ of cl~sses we&#13;
are still waiting for books to come m which were&#13;
ordered short. Some of this has been the fault of&#13;
professors who underestimate, but there is no excuse&#13;
for ordering an amount less than requested.&#13;
Perhaps you are amused by people laying sod one&#13;
day and tearing it up the next, when planting grass&#13;
se~d would be cheaper, looks better and lasts&#13;
.. longer.;· o--i; laY,ing sidewalks· that.:Iruid: riowhere,&#13;
while people tramp through the mud to get to&#13;
Greenquist; but I am not.&#13;
You Vets who registered early the second week in&#13;
August wasted your time. The Student Records&#13;
Office didn't send notifications to the VA till September&#13;
8. And you missed out on all those special&#13;
things available during regular registration like&#13;
interest cards.&#13;
Student Government elections are coming around&#13;
October 23-25. They're going to need a Jot of help&#13;
manning the polls. If you're interested contact the&#13;
Student Senate Office.&#13;
Also the Student Senate is looking for student&#13;
members for various university committees. If yqu_&#13;
are interested, contact the Student Senate at 553.-&#13;
2244 or come see at D-193 LLC.&#13;
Speaking of joining things, this paper is really&#13;
hurting for experienced people. If you think you&#13;
might be interested in seeing your name in print,&#13;
dro onb D-194LLCandhavealook.&#13;
I shall make every effort to&#13;
attend the meeting this evening. I&#13;
hope that the next issue may be&#13;
better - but I do want to commend&#13;
you for making an effort to&#13;
keep a newspaper alive on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
i&#13;
~,, JU The Parksid&#13;
..&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Eric Cushman Moore&#13;
To Ken Konkol:&#13;
I just wanted to drop you a&#13;
quick note about the article on the&#13;
Library Learning Center. Thanks&#13;
for the good coverage. As you are&#13;
well aware, our primary goal is&#13;
service to the students and&#13;
faculty. and your help in&#13;
spreading the word is appreciated.&#13;
Perhaps you might&#13;
consider a short follow-up when&#13;
we get int'l full swing here.&#13;
Would ou also pass along to&#13;
the rest of the Ranger staff my&#13;
compliments on a good issue.&#13;
If you see a way that the&#13;
Learning Center can be of aid to&#13;
you personally. or to the Ranger&#13;
don't hesitate to contact us. Keep&#13;
up the good job.&#13;
Beecham Robinson&#13;
Director&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout&#13;
the academ ic year by the students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin .&#13;
Offi ces are located at D-194 Library-Learning Center,&#13;
Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper.&#13;
Opinions expressed in columns and editorials are not&#13;
necessaril y the offi cial v iew of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
_EDITORS A~D WRITERS: Tom Ford , Bruce Wagner, Rudy&#13;
Lienau, Sue Zietz, Geoff Blaesing, Kris Koch, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Kathryn Wellner, Ken Konkol, Da le Ma rtin, Karen Petersen, Tom&#13;
Petersen, Marilyn Schubert, Paul Nelson&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : Pat Nowak, Craig Roberts&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER : Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : F red Lawrence&#13;
ADVISOR : Don Kopriva&#13;
;Ii• ,llEPllESENTED FOil NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY T National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10017 &#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Edi tors: . . .&#13;
I rarely VOIce my opimon&#13;
ublicly; but circumstances have&#13;
r ed me to change my ways. I&#13;
nrc present at a bad scene in the&#13;
~~~ivitieSBuilding th~ night the&#13;
ie MASH was being shown. mov , :-:..&#13;
The projectlOnIst had some&#13;
difficulty getting the film&#13;
fused' and a beer-soaked peon&#13;
oCthe c~owd decided that his eyes&#13;
W h' ere better than t e projec-&#13;
~onists'. He began directing the.&#13;
projectionist as to ho",: ~e should&#13;
focus the film. He defInItely WqS&#13;
not much of a help .. He only&#13;
succeeded in making the&#13;
projectionist more tense than he&#13;
already was. The projectionists'&#13;
job is not an easy one. Many&#13;
things can go wrong especially&#13;
under the circumstances in the&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
Common sense should have&#13;
told the loud mouth that:&#13;
1. The projectionist probably&#13;
knOWS more about adjusting the&#13;
projector than the audience.&#13;
2. The projectionist has eyes&#13;
too, and they probably weren't&#13;
clouded by beer as others most&#13;
likely were.&#13;
3. Loud mouth insults are not&#13;
the best way of encouraging&#13;
anyone.&#13;
I may be making more out of&#13;
this disturbance than is&#13;
necessary; but I think more&#13;
consideration should be given to&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
ALL STUDENT&#13;
ORGANIZATIONS ARE&#13;
ADVISED THAT&#13;
REQUESTS FOR FUNDING&#13;
FROM&#13;
AVAILABLE STUDENT&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP&#13;
MONIES MUST BE&#13;
SUBMITTED TO THE&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS&#13;
COMMITTEE NO LATER&#13;
THAN OCT. 10. THESE&#13;
REQUESTS MUST BE IN&#13;
THE FORM OF A&#13;
DETAILED BUDGET&#13;
FOR THE 1972-73&#13;
ACADEMIC YEAR.&#13;
THEY MAY BE SUBMITTED&#13;
TO JEWEL&#13;
ECHELBARGER, ASSISTANT&#13;
DEAN OF&#13;
STUDENTS, ROOM 284&#13;
TALLENT HALL.&#13;
FURTHERMORE, ALL&#13;
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
ARE&#13;
REMINDED THAT THEY&#13;
SHOULD REGISTER&#13;
WITH THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE IN&#13;
THE LIBRARY LEARNING&#13;
CENTER.&#13;
E.lT IN THE COMFORT Of YOUR UR · ~&#13;
i&#13;
t\'~' ;f) 7R1'~~~S ')Il"~ lHE ~ / ~ SURlifR&#13;
• '~\\' •.." fAMilY&#13;
• ~-y&#13;
: • pm BURGER • MAMA SURliU&#13;
• UEII SURliER • BABY BURGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
Tub•• , n.&lt;~.... "h&#13;
"" S'"mp&#13;
.. " G,"O" O' '00' ",. wIT" "0' DO'"&#13;
','&lt;lll NOOT"0'&#13;
"'.{ITy t",.".&#13;
0" \",0"'" '0.0&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT REER ORIVE·IM&#13;
S""d4." fly II N."h&#13;
Keno,ho&#13;
""",, ".ru" .... lO"."&#13;
.""'~" ..ON,.., " • ~ '" M""'GW'&#13;
those who are providing services&#13;
for us.&#13;
Other than this slight smudge&#13;
agall~st common courtesy, the&#13;
evemng was most enjoyable&#13;
Much thanks to the Activitie~&#13;
Board for planning a successful&#13;
event.&#13;
Rich Gemry&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I want to comment on how&#13;
much Ienjoyed your first edition.&#13;
I liked the broad range of&#13;
coverage of its contents the&#13;
visual format and the' wellwritten&#13;
articles. Congratulations&#13;
and good wishes for a successful&#13;
year.&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Well-put together paper -. nice&#13;
balance of ads, features, news&#13;
and opinion. How about an&#13;
amusement column (section)&#13;
outlining upcoming events in the&#13;
area (festivals, plays, personal&#13;
appearances, movies, etc.)?-It&#13;
would be helpful to know what&#13;
movies are playing in the two&#13;
cities ... Keep up the good work.&#13;
Claude Renshaw&#13;
Management Science&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To Marion Mechen:&#13;
I received your petition today&#13;
and hasten to send yoo an answer&#13;
I do believe that I find myself&#13;
p~llosophically in disagreement&#13;
With you. Surely there is much to&#13;
be said for faculty. staff and&#13;
students to share the same&#13;
facilities on the Campus. First. u&#13;
gives a greater sense of&#13;
solidarity. Second. it promotes&#13;
acquaintance, contact and&#13;
visibility. Third, when staff and&#13;
faculty see what the students&#13;
suffer changes are more likely to&#13;
be effected. Thus, I am of course&#13;
in favor of anything that can be&#13;
done to have bus service and all&#13;
other services faster and better.&#13;
But 1 think 1 would not wish to&#13;
have faCUlty and staff given&#13;
preferred parking. The ecooomic&#13;
gain that follows from having&#13;
high-salaried people closer to&#13;
their work may very well be lost&#13;
in diminished morale and sense&#13;
of community.&#13;
For example, Ihave noted with&#13;
pleasure that the ChanceUor&#13;
himself is riding the bus. This 1&#13;
approve of one hundred percent.&#13;
and Iam sure that from this flow&#13;
the three advanlages mentioned&#13;
above.&#13;
Along this same line of thought,&#13;
I view with the utmost appro\'al&#13;
the present Food Shop in Lower&#13;
Main Place. Today I ate there&#13;
with my wire. We were soon&#13;
:....................•................••.....••.......•........&#13;
. Cham- Tap-Bar&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
BODY AND PAINT SHOP&#13;
Complete Auto Builders&#13;
• Body &amp; Fender Repair&#13;
• Painting&#13;
• Custom Work&#13;
Alex Alrikos - Prop.&#13;
6310 20th Ave.&#13;
657-3911&#13;
KENOSHA. WIS&#13;
9 Fun-Filled. Sun-Filled Days&#13;
January 5-14&#13;
$274&#13;
FOR&#13;
Orientation Jlgbtseeing tour.&#13;
Traditional Hawaiian flower lei&#13;
greeting.&#13;
ADDITiONAL INFORMATION, CONTACT&#13;
CampUS Trav~l Ceot~r StudC!'flIAC!,,,,t,n Otl,c~&#13;
o 197 Library L~arn,ng CC!'flIf1'&#13;
DR CALL SSJ:219.4&#13;
Wed .• Oct. 4.1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
CAR WASH&#13;
OPEN WHKOA YS UNTIL 9 P.M.&#13;
SUNDAYS UNTIl 5 P.M.&#13;
lVashington Dar&#13;
nto lVa h&#13;
"The Co, W&lt;Uh Tho' "'e.'&#13;
5120 A HI, GTO AVE,&#13;
joined b) Dave 1I01le, and&#13;
thereafter bl \"0 Iud nts TIl&#13;
Iive of us had a mo t enJOlabl&#13;
meal TIl, Iond or thing I&#13;
terr-ibly Important, but It is&#13;
SImply not po 'ble under the&#13;
segregation arrangements thaI&#13;
too often prevail 10 InsblutJon&#13;
And 1 see uch planned and unplanned&#13;
conversation at lh&#13;
Food Shop everyday - perhaps a&#13;
little more so right now. tOce&#13;
conditions are crowded and "-&#13;
are all forced together&#13;
xooe of this lessens my admiration&#13;
of you for having hO'A n&#13;
so much energy and uuuauve III&#13;
getung out lour peuuon.&#13;
Phil Burnell&#13;
Director of Ubran&#13;
To Ille Ed,lor&#13;
With great amazement 1 read&#13;
in the MilwaukeeJournai that the&#13;
lalest Gallup Poll gl\es RIchard&#13;
Xixon a 61 percent to 36 percent&#13;
lead over George McGovern&#13;
among voters under 3O! 11:tlS&#13;
unusual findmg '" a recorded&#13;
just after the recent Republican&#13;
Convention. The next Poll 1&#13;
suppooe will tell us that 9 out of 10&#13;
Black voters support the&#13;
presIdent&#13;
"Nanl (an (OM'AIl£&#13;
with&#13;
WASHINGTON SQuAIlr'&#13;
ured that&#13;
a&#13;
nd a&#13;
up rt un&#13;
1 overn A&#13;
eetcd 1:1 \hI aru 1 '" a lh&#13;
"'lch of mam nemocrsuc&#13;
vot -rs and hi 'ou·r to l'ixon&#13;
I'd like to I II all "hy Illlonk&#13;
th fIndIng re ver, far 0([&#13;
from r Dilly&#13;
When \ outh II to 21 " re&#13;
r'1ll t red to vote for III It...t&#13;
lim • lh Ir ct~1 of s-rt "".&#13;
roughl) 3 10 1 Democraue over&#13;
Republican Man' are ind&lt;:pend&#13;
nl. Lasl l ar a Poll&#13;
re' al d Ihat 3 out of 4&#13;
Amencans of II a lTOu&#13;
averaged out sClentl'lcally,&#13;
fa\ored total w,thdrawa' from&#13;
lndo-Chtna A va L m8JOrit or&#13;
)·OUlh ar ror an end Lo thlS cmUy&#13;
"ar&#13;
E\· n as high go\' mment of·&#13;
fic,als are eaughl I aUy and&#13;
IIlegall takl a"ay our n htl&#13;
to Prt\ilC)' nd dl t. '" are&#13;
told th, I only a mall and phony&#13;
1 ue by the Democra and n&#13;
media&#13;
Why ha th 'at t poll _&#13;
)oulhs f.,'onng lXOO" Faull&#13;
interpretation" Pohllca) In·&#13;
nuonce' Or has thai Itghl goo&#13;
out'&#13;
Dav 'ler&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
ELMWOOD SHELL SERVICE&#13;
ompl~U R d r\ let&#13;
6:00am tolloopm&#13;
~-aa&#13;
3125 Durand Avenue R1Icllle&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very large&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
lIul ,t ",.ll n l...bIJh.", ...~I W.llII W·.tbull' ...hI", \4/""-' • a.c.,IIl' 'r&#13;
V1U' ""t W" .. UJ' trI", It. ,'.d, It .,.-rtun.tlu t.r '101" .lindflU,." leu ,L1&#13;
•• t. tl't t~nlry Ht U"" l tI. " ...lui b.1 11011101/'"' 1J'i. "",".'" tn"! .. t"'IK'&#13;
" m.'t ,,"'to dKt~ ""Ith ..".1' ""r" '101[1'1'11ttl. "'" '" "01'1' ,t ItI, .,,I ...&#13;
ttu. fotl .... YIo. • til f tliU .....l'Ioc... r ",W.ld. "1lIItill n,IIl,I, "¥llI.~, th, ,,,I."fIw&#13;
Take a tiP from Hot Horse Herbie .• "do not be one&#13;
hundred percent a sucker! Check It oul."&#13;
,''''_",--"- - -- -_..._-..... f-...... ----- -. ....&#13;
___ "'·''''''''-'_'0 _... _ ...... -..0 ......&#13;
....__ ...._---&#13;
-- Damon Runyon once wrote, "The race is not always to the SWift&#13;
or the battle always to the strone - but it's a &amp;00&lt;1 way to bet:&#13;
JOURNAUSM IS A GOOD WAYTO BET&#13;
i,.~n._--&#13;
RANGER&#13;
" t pSS •••&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Plus S20Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Your One Low Price includes:&#13;
Round trip jet fare from Milwaukee&#13;
to Honolulu.&#13;
t 8 nights lodging on Waikiki Bedch. ~.,.," .{t Round trip U..Iosfers between dUport&#13;
-111" (, hotel.&#13;
,Jl ;&#13;
"':.~..&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editors:.&#13;
1 rarely v01ce my opimon&#13;
ublicly; but circumstances have f ced me to change my ways. I&#13;
ors present at a bad scene in the&#13;
:a tivities Building the night the&#13;
mcovie, MASH: w?s being shown.&#13;
The project10mst had some&#13;
difficulty getting the film&#13;
focused· and a beer-soaked peon&#13;
. the c;owd decided that his eyes m th · ere better than e proJec-&#13;
~onists'. He began directing the_&#13;
projectionist as to ho~ ~e should&#13;
focus the film. He defm1tely W&lt;JS&#13;
not much of a help. He only&#13;
succeeded in making the&#13;
projectionist more tense than he&#13;
already was. The projectionists'&#13;
job is not an easy one. Many&#13;
things can go wrong especially&#13;
under the circumstances in the&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
Common sense should have&#13;
told the loud mouth that:&#13;
1. The projectionist probably&#13;
knows more about adjusting the&#13;
projector than the audience.&#13;
2. The projectionist has eyes&#13;
too, and they probably weren't&#13;
clouded by beer as others most&#13;
likely were.&#13;
3. Loud mouth insults are not&#13;
the best way of encouraging&#13;
anyone.&#13;
I may be making more out of&#13;
this disturbance than is&#13;
necessary; but I think more&#13;
consideration should be given to&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
ALL STUDENT&#13;
ORGANIZATIONS ARE&#13;
ADVISED THAT&#13;
REQUESTS FOR FUND&#13;
ING FROM&#13;
AVAILABLE STUDENT&#13;
SUPPORT GROUP&#13;
MONIES MUST BE&#13;
SUBMITTED TO THE&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS&#13;
COMMITTEE NO LATER&#13;
THAN OCT. 10. THESE&#13;
REQUESTS MUST BE IN&#13;
THE FORM OF A&#13;
DETAILED BUDGET&#13;
FOR THE 1972-73&#13;
ACADEMIC YEAR.&#13;
THEY MAY BE SUBMITTED&#13;
TO JEWEL&#13;
ECHELBARGER, ASSISTANT&#13;
DEAN OF&#13;
STUDENTS, ROOM 284&#13;
TALLENT HALL.&#13;
FURTHERMORE, ALL&#13;
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
ARE&#13;
REMINDED THAT THEY&#13;
SHOULD REGISTER&#13;
WITH THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE IN&#13;
THE LIBRARY LEARNING&#13;
CENTER .&#13;
. ~&#13;
: ,: &gt; ~' PERRY'S&#13;
' . .-:,t- THE i&#13;
\ 1 DRIVE-IN&#13;
' / ~ BUR6ER&#13;
~\ \ ,' FAMILY ! ~-1/&#13;
• • PAPA IUR6ER • MAMA BUR6ER&#13;
• TUN BURGER • BABY BURGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AH(A D TOUlt OIIDU 'Nill I( llfAD'&#13;
Tub, ol Clud, 11 f l\h&#13;
~11d Slinmp&#13;
r•u GAllON Of ltOOT llll WITH u oo OAOU&#13;
! MILE NOIITH or MID(ITV TH(4Tlll&#13;
ON ~HU I DAN IOAO&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp;. W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN Sht11d•11 ,;d H, 32 Nor t h&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
H01,,•\ D4 1lY II A !.4 TO 11 P "1&#13;
iu ..... u MO N TH~&#13;
11 A "'- TO M IDN IGH T&#13;
those who are providing services&#13;
for us.&#13;
O~her than this slight smudge&#13;
agat~st common courtesy' the&#13;
evenmg was most enjoyable.&#13;
Much thanks to the Activities&#13;
Board for planning a successful&#13;
event.&#13;
RichGemry&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
I want to comment on how&#13;
much I enjoyed your first edition.&#13;
I liked the broad range of&#13;
coverage of its contents the&#13;
visual format and the ' wellwritten&#13;
articles. Congratulations&#13;
and good wishes for a successful&#13;
year.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
Anthropology&#13;
Well-put together paper -- nice&#13;
balance of ads, features, news&#13;
and opinion. How about an&#13;
amusement column (section)&#13;
outlining upcoming events in the&#13;
area (festivals, plays, personal&#13;
appearances, movies, etc .)?~ It&#13;
would be helpful to know what&#13;
movies are playing in the two&#13;
cities ... Keep up the good work.&#13;
Claude Renshaw&#13;
Management Science&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
To Marion lochon:&#13;
I recei\'ed }OUr pehtJon lod&#13;
and ha ten to nd you an nere&#13;
&#13;
................•.•.•..................•.....•......•.•........&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . .&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Cham-Tap-Bar&#13;
2511 Durand&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
O~gneon Tap&#13;
Ham Sandwiches C) . and Pizza cf) . . .............................................. . -~··············&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
BODY AND PAINT SHOP&#13;
Complete Auto Builders&#13;
• Body &amp; Fender Repair&#13;
• Painting&#13;
• Custom ork&#13;
Alex Alrikas - Prop.&#13;
631 0 20th Ave .&#13;
657-3911&#13;
KENOSHA, IS&#13;
9 Fun-Filled, un-Filled Da)·&#13;
Januar 5-14&#13;
$2i4&#13;
Plus s20 Tax &amp; Ser ice&#13;
Your On Low Pric Includ~:&#13;
Round trip j et fare from . ih,aukee&#13;
to Honolulu .&#13;
,- 8 nights lodg ing on Wa · iki ach.&#13;
,,t,.j! . lf' Round trip U JOSfc~ b t e n ,nr rt&#13;
.11r· &amp; hot el .&#13;
,.).I ' " ... / .~ Orientation sightseeing tour.&#13;
Tr.iditional Haw .. iian flo er l&#13;
greeting.&#13;
FOR ADD ITIONAL I F0RMAT •O&#13;
campus Travel Cf'f' er S•ude'n' A ' .,,&#13;
D 197 L ,bf'ary Learrti.nQ Ct't"ter&#13;
CO TACT&#13;
es 01 c•&#13;
OR CALL SSJ 2294&#13;
ed ., Oct. , 1972 THE PARKSIO RANGER 3&#13;
CAR WASH&#13;
••••••••••• •••••• • ••••••••• ELMWOOD SHELL SERVICE&#13;
•&#13;
'' pss t ...&#13;
•&#13;
hey kid!&#13;
Let me disclose to you a very lar e&#13;
piece of buzz.&#13;
Damon Runyon once rote "Th rac i not alway to th v.,f&#13;
or the battle alwa s to the stron - but ,t s a ood way to b t •&#13;
JOURNALISM IS A GOOD WAY TO BET&#13;
~ANGER &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER ed .• Oct. 4. 1972&#13;
Parkside's Growing Pains&#13;
f&#13;
n tru ti n&#13;
ide's Growing Pains&#13;
iw.~-&#13;
1:&lt;S- --~=&lt; ·=,_;~'t= &#13;
'Kotch' is coming&#13;
. g to the Student AcComIn&#13;
Building on Oct. 6, the&#13;
t~vltl~'Kotch" focuses on the&#13;
film C g relationship between&#13;
interese~nr_old widower and an&#13;
a 72'Y'ed pregnant teenager,&#13;
unmarr'd by Deborah Winters.&#13;
portraye . t&#13;
t&#13;
b" is basically a s ory&#13;
"Ko C d h ut loneliness, old age, an t e&#13;
ab? ht ned need to be needed, a&#13;
hel~·t~n common to the aged.&#13;
CO~~~~ch,,, starring Walter&#13;
albaU, Felicia Fa~r, Charles&#13;
~tman and Miss W.mters, and&#13;
A king the directorIal debut of mar 1 •&#13;
'1 favorite Jack Lemmon, IS a&#13;
h m I" t&#13;
comedy-drama tel 109 a poignan&#13;
of a unique senior citizen,&#13;
story. . ed Vibrant with an unrestram&#13;
zest for living, h.e ref~ses to be&#13;
t a&#13;
side by hIS children. He&#13;
cas t ·th f es his bleak future no WI&#13;
d&#13;
a&#13;
c&#13;
air but with quixotic&#13;
esp I Ii' Ilantry and eterna op mlsm.&#13;
gaFelicia Farr, wife of director&#13;
Lemmon, returns to the screen&#13;
fler a long absence of four years&#13;
fnthe role of ~athau's daughterm·&#13;
. . law Versatile character actor&#13;
Her goal:&#13;
English&#13;
AdsukoHane's goal in life is to&#13;
teachEnglish - real" Americanstyle"idiomatic&#13;
English - in her&#13;
nativeJapan. In pursuit of that&#13;
goal, she changed residen~es&#13;
from Toyama, about 150 mlles&#13;
fromTokyo, to Kenosha, where&#13;
she will live while attending The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Why Parkside?&#13;
Miss Hane (pronounced,&#13;
roughly, "Hayn'-eh" in&#13;
Japanese) credits the international&#13;
reputation for&#13;
academic excellence of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
and the discovery of a Parkside&#13;
catalog outlining the new&#13;
Wliversity'sinnovative programs&#13;
in a Fulbright library in Japan.&#13;
Because she wishes to be·&#13;
totally immersed in American&#13;
speech and culture, Miss Hane&#13;
saidshe chose Parkside since she&#13;
thought that would be easier to&#13;
accomplishon a smaller campus.&#13;
At registration she selected&#13;
COurseswith her goal in mind:&#13;
English Courses and classes in&#13;
the MOdern American Society&#13;
program, one of several interdisciplinary&#13;
majors which im·&#13;
plement Parkside's special industrial&#13;
society mission and one&#13;
of the "innovations" which&#13;
helped convince her that&#13;
ParkSide was the place for her&#13;
American studies.&#13;
Another reason was the Midwest's&#13;
reputation in Japan for&#13;
Speaking "good" (unaccented)&#13;
English.&#13;
Is the campus what she expected'&#13;
"Oh, yes. Very beautiful," says&#13;
MissHane.&#13;
Miss Hane has studied English&#13;
for ten years in J a pan - three&#13;
rears in jUnior high school, three&#13;
In senior high school and four in&#13;
COllege.She is licensed as a&#13;
teacher in Japan and taught for a&#13;
yearthere in a junior high school.&#13;
Alterher studies at Parkside she&#13;
hopes to be able to teach English&#13;
language Courses and American&#13;
Studies at a women's junior&#13;
Collegein Japan.&#13;
Though one of her reasons for&#13;
Comingto Parkside was that she&#13;
thought she would have to&#13;
communicate totally in English,&#13;
she's discovered it is sometimes&#13;
Very convenient when conversation&#13;
gets complicated to&#13;
have a Japanese-speaking landlady,&#13;
Mrs. M. O. Ekern of 5942&#13;
Third Ave.&#13;
And what is a Japanesespeaking&#13;
landlady doing in&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.?&#13;
Charles Altman plays th h· e son&#13;
w 0 wearies of having the old&#13;
man under foot and decides t&#13;
commit his father to a retiremen~&#13;
home. ,But he doesn't reckon with&#13;
Kotc~ s. mdominability and&#13;
ther-ein lies the crux of the star&#13;
"Kotch." y&#13;
Produced by Richard Carter&#13;
and ?ased on the novel by&#13;
Kathrme Topkins, "Kotch" is an&#13;
ABC Pictures Corp. presentation&#13;
for Cinerama releasing.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Student teaching&#13;
Applications for Spring&#13;
Semester 1973 Student Teaching&#13;
are now available in the&#13;
Education Divisipn Office&#13;
Greenquist 31B. DeaJjline is Oct:&#13;
13.&#13;
To teach&#13;
Japan •&#13;
In&#13;
Japanese born, the daughter of&#13;
a Japanese mother and an&#13;
American father, Mrs. Ekern&#13;
carne to the U.S. for her&#13;
education and never returned to&#13;
the Orient permanently. Now a&#13;
Kenosha city nurse, she did,&#13;
however, work for a number of&#13;
years as a public health nurse in&#13;
Honolulu and last visited Japan&#13;
three years ago to attend a&#13;
niece's wedding.&#13;
Mrs. Ekern is somewhat&#13;
surprised herself at how much&#13;
Japanese she remembers since,&#13;
she notes, "I haven't had a&#13;
chance to speak Japanese with&#13;
anyone in Kenosha until Adsuko&#13;
carne."&#13;
Mrs. Ekern has already given&#13;
Miss Hane a tour of Kenosha and&#13;
reassured her that stories she's&#13;
heard in Japan of violence in&#13;
American cities are exaggerated,&#13;
at least in regard to Kenosha.&#13;
On campus she's also received&#13;
a guided tour conducted by Sue&#13;
Graf a UW-P student from&#13;
Ken~sha who has acted as a kind&#13;
of informal "Big Sister" to the&#13;
petite Miss HaDe.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 4,1972 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 5&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPE&#13;
VOlunteers are needed for the&#13;
open house of the Parkside&#13;
Campus to be held Oct. 15 from&#13;
12-5 p.m.&#13;
T~e volunteers will be&#13;
stationed in the LLC, Physical&#13;
Educataon Building and&#13;
GreenqUist Hall to give in.&#13;
formation and tours.&#13;
Students wishing to work for&#13;
the open house should contact&#13;
Public Information at ext. 2233 by&#13;
Oct. 10.&#13;
There will be a joint meeting of&#13;
the Parkside Young Republicans&#13;
and Young Voters for the&#13;
President Friday, Oct. 6, (r-om&#13;
ll:30a.m. to 1 p.m. in room D-174&#13;
LLC. Corne when you can; leave&#13;
when you have to.&#13;
The Parkside Health office will&#13;
sponsor a table for health&#13;
education, in the activity building&#13;
on Oct. 10, 11 and 12. Various&#13;
pamphlets concerning health&#13;
information relevant to students&#13;
will be available. Ms. Edith&#13;
Isenberg, the Parkside nurse,&#13;
stated that the purpose is to get&#13;
the students acquainted with the&#13;
Health Office and the services&#13;
and information available to&#13;
them.&#13;
The Department of Safety and&#13;
Security will offer the ational&#13;
Safety Council's Defensive&#13;
Driving Course Saturday, OcL 14.&#13;
in 103 Greenquist Hall from 8&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m.&#13;
The course has been a prerequisite&#13;
for the operation of all&#13;
state-owned vehicles since Dfc&#13;
31, 1970. All University tmployees&#13;
(faculty. staff, volunteer&#13;
driver or authorized student&#13;
drivers) who intend to use such&#13;
vehicles must complete the&#13;
course before they may do so&#13;
Individuals wishing to attend&#13;
should contact Safety and&#13;
Security before Oct. 14.&#13;
The American Busines&#13;
Women's Association offers&#13;
interest free loans to Female&#13;
Seniors. No maximum amount IS&#13;
specified and while scholastic&#13;
standing is important, the awanJ&#13;
is based primarily on finanCial&#13;
need. Repayment generally&#13;
begins thirty to sixty days after&#13;
graduation in reasonable mono&#13;
thly installments. For ~ore ~n.&#13;
formation contact the Fmanclal&#13;
Aids Office or call 553-2291&#13;
~ui s.a.o.&#13;
UVE·ON&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
Q&#13;
U&#13;
o&#13;
R&#13;
Monday night is&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping l'ile"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
CAII------&#13;
Lathrop &amp; 21st (almosll&#13;
RaCine. Wise. 53406&#13;
Phone 6336307&#13;
The Parkside Acth,ltl Board&#13;
will sponsor a table lenni&#13;
tournament open to all students.&#13;
faculty and taff begmning Oct&#13;
t6 •&#13;
plnng paddle pla~era may&#13;
register in the tudent Acuviu&#13;
Office, LLC-OI97 for a se-eent&#13;
fee.&#13;
According to Ted Paon, .A B&#13;
Games Committee Chairman.&#13;
"In this tournament th re are no&#13;
losers: everybody \10 III wm a&#13;
prize."&#13;
tudent counseling ervtce of&#13;
the Office or Student Affairs IS&#13;
orfenng three 5O-mmute sessions&#13;
designed 10 help you prepare lor&#13;
six·week exam&#13;
Both sessIons are on Thursday,&#13;
Oct 5 Kenosha at 130 pm,&#13;
Room .36, Greenqwst at I:30&#13;
pm., Room D·'37.&#13;
The Parkside Players will&#13;
present "The Hollow ero"...," a&#13;
production by end about the&#13;
Klllgs and Queens of England&#13;
densed by John Barton. 'ov.3·5&#13;
The program of mu IC, poetry,&#13;
speeches. letters and other&#13;
"'TIlmgs from the chromcle and&#13;
plays of an era I'm be performed&#13;
In the F'U1eArts Room In Kenosha&#13;
at 8: 15 p.rn each e\·emng&#13;
Tr)'outs for.he pealung parts&#13;
are no\\ belOg held and. tudents&#13;
should conlact Richard&#13;
Carrington In Room 215 1.n the&#13;
I G&#13;
library uon of LLC or throu&#13;
th Humamu 0.\ Llilon om In&#13;
Creenquist lIall Ik I rl(' I&#13;
th men and on "oman for III&#13;
program, h h Ip ""th&#13;
publicuy. ticket al ond&#13;
pro am arran men&#13;
• '0 experience IJ, 114: ry&#13;
Any tudent w ho" an to aid at&#13;
th Open Ho t IS" an&#13;
lnformauon seoree and I&#13;
should contact the PooH In&#13;
lormatoon me .. t %233) b)I&#13;
Oct 10&#13;
There Will a NIl:k lodian on&#13;
Oct 4 at III WM kell"" With&#13;
WC. F. Ids LO "The Fatal Cia&#13;
or Beer" and !.aural and Hard In&#13;
",' IC Box"&#13;
"The Fatal Cia 0( Beer" a&#13;
film el 10 the Car north In th&#13;
domtln of th Royal nadlan&#13;
, 'ountl It'sabouta young man&#13;
"00 went Into the city and dra&#13;
"th fatal gl.a of&#13;
MUSIC Box. ""tuch won th&#13;
Academy Award for th t&#13;
corned OOrt In I 31-1932, all&#13;
about deh\·enng • plano to Lh&#13;
house on top or the hill&#13;
Both mO\"l 1oloIII be $heN-n&#13;
tWice bel1oloeen 1 and 3 pm.&#13;
On Oct 20 John ndenon and&#13;
Friends, a folk gWlar roup, Will&#13;
be plal'Ing In the LLC open a&#13;
between 11 a m and 1 pm&#13;
There "Ill be audItoon for th&#13;
co(f hou e on Oct t t from noon&#13;
to 4 P m In the Wh, eller. ny&#13;
lund of group wtable as n·&#13;
terl8lOment In a colI house·&#13;
type atmosphere IS being ht&#13;
Jt Round trip let tare to S'Nltl*rtand&#13;
.... LOdging .nd conllnenla' brute,,,,t&#13;
.... 9th night In Cop*ntlagen&#13;
,.. Moto,- option aV'll,ble&#13;
• Mulh.hngu.1 gUIdes&#13;
Ski&#13;
the&#13;
Alps&#13;
UW Parkside invites you to&#13;
Dep.tlrt Chic.aljJOJan S Relurn ChiC~ Jan \4&#13;
Zermart&#13;
............&#13;
" ,l4iftAl lfltwma ..... w-t-et&#13;
CIl Tf"."'e4 s.r..'C.II",,"1I1 Ac1 .... I,ltt OUtU&#13;
l,.11IrU'Y L...~ ... e..-t..-. .MM D 1"&#13;
T.....- USU"&#13;
Parkslde AClI""CS Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Tl'OE'TACT1\ ITiE BLILDI:o.C&#13;
"'----&#13;
• BEER. SODA&#13;
• LIQUORS. WINES&#13;
ICE - BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
PARKING&#13;
AND HOliDAYS&#13;
CONVENIENT&#13;
OPEN DAilY ... SUNDAYS&#13;
1_6_3_2~-_1_5~6;:;-:5~&#13;
2909 DURAND AVE. RACINE, WISC.&#13;
Frida). Oct. 6 - ;00p.m.&#13;
and&#13;
Wlda)',Oct. 7-;;30p.m.&#13;
• -&#13;
Admi Ion 75ctnl&#13;
Parkside &amp; WIS. 10 reqUired&#13;
ed 0c . -4, 1972 THE PARKS! D RA GER S ·Kotch' is coming IT'S WHATS H . to the Student Ac-&#13;
~o~inluilding on Oct. 6, the&#13;
t!vitl~'Kotch" focus~s on the&#13;
f1lrn f g relationship between&#13;
interese:r-old widower and an&#13;
a 72·Y 'ed pregnant teenager, rnarr1 . un d by Deborah Wmters.&#13;
portrtahy'~ is basically a story " KOC d th bOUt loneliness, old age, an e&#13;
a ·ght ned need to be needed, a he1 e th d diti n common to e age .&#13;
co~Ko~ch," starring Walter&#13;
th u Felicia Farr, Charles&#13;
Ma \' and Miss Winters, and&#13;
AJtrnk~ng the directorial debut of rnar 1 . .&#13;
1 favorite Jack Lemmon, 1s a&#13;
fl rn dy-drama telling a poignant corne . ·t· Of a unique semor c1 1zen. tory . . d Vibrant with an unrestrame&#13;
t for living, he refuses to be&#13;
zest aside by his children. He&#13;
~:~es his bleak fu_ture no~ wi~h&#13;
d Pa ir but with qmxotic es l t· . llantry and eterna op 1m1sm.&#13;
gaFelicia Farr, wife of director&#13;
1,emmon, returns to the screen&#13;
after a Jong absence ~f four years&#13;
. the role of Mathau s daughter-&#13;
:~-law. Versatile character actor&#13;
Charles Altman plays th h . e son w o wearies of having the old&#13;
man ~d~r foot and decides to&#13;
commit his father to a retirement&#13;
home. ~ut ?e doesn't reckon with&#13;
Kotc? s. mdominability and&#13;
therem hes the crux of the sto " Kotch." ry&#13;
Produced by Richard Carter&#13;
and ?ased on the novel by&#13;
Kathrme Topkins, " Kotch" is an&#13;
ABC Pictures Corp. presentation&#13;
for Cmerama releasing.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Student teaching&#13;
Applications for Spring&#13;
Semester 1973 Student Teaching&#13;
are now available in the&#13;
Education Divisipn Office&#13;
Greenquist 318. Dea,l:lline is Oct'.&#13;
13,&#13;
Voluntee are needed for the&#13;
open hou e of the Par d&#13;
Campus to be held Oct. 15 from&#13;
12-5 p.m.&#13;
The volunteer ill be&#13;
stationed in the LLC, Phv ical&#13;
Educati on Building, . and&#13;
Gr eenquist Hall to give informa&#13;
tion and tours.&#13;
Students wi hing to wor for&#13;
the open house hould contact&#13;
Public Information ate. t. 2233 b&#13;
Oct. 10.&#13;
There will be a joint meeting of&#13;
the Parkside Young Republican&#13;
and Young Voter for the&#13;
President Frida}, Oct. 6, from&#13;
ll:30 a .m. to 1 pm. in room D-li'4&#13;
LLC. Come when you can: leave&#13;
when you have to.&#13;
Her goal: To teach&#13;
English in Japan&#13;
The Park ide Health office will&#13;
sponsor a table for health&#13;
education, in the activity build'&#13;
on Oct. 10. 11 and 12. \'ariou&#13;
pamphlets concerning health&#13;
information relevant to tuden&#13;
will be available. 1 Edith&#13;
Isenberg, the Park ide nu&#13;
stated that the purpo e i to et&#13;
the students acquainted ·ith the&#13;
Health Office and the senic&#13;
and information available to&#13;
them.&#13;
The Department of afe y and&#13;
Security will offer the • ·a onal&#13;
Safety Council' Defen 1ve&#13;
Driving Cour e aturday, ct. 14.&#13;
in 103 Greenqw t Hall from 8&#13;
a.m. to 2 p.m&#13;
Adsuko Hane's goal in life is to&#13;
teach English- real "Americanstyle"&#13;
idiomatic Englis~ - in her&#13;
native Japan. In pursmt of that&#13;
goal she changed residences&#13;
frorr: Toyama, about 150 miles&#13;
from Tokyo, to Kenosha, where&#13;
she will live while attending The&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
Why Parkside?&#13;
Miss Hane (pronounced,&#13;
roughly, " Hayn '-eh" in&#13;
Japanese) credits the international&#13;
reputation for&#13;
academic excellence of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin system&#13;
and the discovery of a Parkside&#13;
catalog outlining the new&#13;
university's innovative programs&#13;
m a Fulbright library in Japan.&#13;
Because she wishes to be&#13;
totally immersed in American&#13;
speech and culture, Miss Hane&#13;
said she chose Parkside since she&#13;
thought that would be easier to&#13;
accomplish on a smaller campus.&#13;
At registration she selected&#13;
courses with her goal in mind:&#13;
English courses and classes in&#13;
the Modern American Society&#13;
program, one of several interdisciplinary&#13;
majors which implement&#13;
Parkside's special industrial&#13;
society mission and one&#13;
of the " innovations" which&#13;
helped convince her that&#13;
Parkside was the place for her&#13;
American studies.&#13;
Another reason was the Midwest's&#13;
reputation in Japan for&#13;
peaking "good" (unaccented)&#13;
English.&#13;
ls the campus what she ex- pected?&#13;
"Oh, yes. Very beautiful," says&#13;
Miss Hane.&#13;
Miss Hane has studied English&#13;
for ten years in Japa n - three&#13;
years in junior high school, three&#13;
in senior high school and four in&#13;
college. She is licensed as a&#13;
teacher in Japa n a nd taught for a&#13;
Year there in a junior high school.&#13;
After her studies at Parkside she&#13;
hopes to be able to teach English&#13;
language courses and American&#13;
tudies at a women 's junior&#13;
college in Japan .&#13;
Though one of her reasons for&#13;
coming to Parkside was that she&#13;
thought she would have to&#13;
communicate totally in English,&#13;
·he's discovered it is sometimes&#13;
very convenient when conversation&#13;
gets complicated to&#13;
have a J apanese-speaking landlady,&#13;
Mrs. M. o. Ekern of 5942&#13;
Third Ave.&#13;
And what is a Japanesespeaking&#13;
landlady doing in&#13;
Kenosha. Wis.?&#13;
Japanese born, the daughter of&#13;
a Japanese mother and an&#13;
American father, Mrs. Ekern&#13;
came to the U.S. for her&#13;
education and never returned to&#13;
the Orient permanently. Now a&#13;
Kenosha city nurse, she did,&#13;
however, work for a number of&#13;
years as a public health nurse in&#13;
Honolulu and last visited Japan&#13;
three years ago to attend a&#13;
niece's wedding .&#13;
Mrs. Ekern is somewhat&#13;
surprised herself at how much&#13;
J a panese she remembers since,&#13;
she notes, " I haven't had a&#13;
chance to speak Japanese with&#13;
anyone in Kenosha until Adsuko&#13;
came.''&#13;
Mrs. Ekern has already given&#13;
Miss Hane a tour of Kenosha a nd&#13;
reassured her that stories she's&#13;
heard in Japan of violence in&#13;
American cities are exaggerated,&#13;
at least in regard to Kenosha .&#13;
On campus she 's also received&#13;
a guided tour conducted by Sue&#13;
Graf a UW-P student from&#13;
Ken~sha who has acted as a kind&#13;
of informal " Big Sister " to the&#13;
petite Miss Hane&#13;
nn&#13;
The course ha been a prerequisite&#13;
for the o ration o all&#13;
state-owned \'ehlcl ince DfC&#13;
31 , 1970. II ' nive 1ty "Employees&#13;
(faculty, taff. volunt r&#13;
driver or authorized tuden&#13;
driver l who intend to u ·uch&#13;
vehicles mu t complete the&#13;
course before they may do o&#13;
Individual wi hmg to aUend&#13;
hould contact afet and&#13;
Security before ct 14&#13;
The American Bu ine&#13;
Women' A ociation offer&#13;
interest free loans to F male&#13;
Seniors . • ·o ma. imum moun&#13;
specified and while chol lie&#13;
tanding i important, the award&#13;
i ba ed primarily on fmanc, l&#13;
need. Repayment gen rail)&#13;
begin thirty to i ty da) aft r&#13;
graduation in rea onable monthly&#13;
installmen . For mor nformation&#13;
contact th Fm nc1al&#13;
id Office or call 553· 1.&#13;
'1euC s.a.,.. • BEER• SODA&#13;
$AVE-ON • LIQUORS • WINES&#13;
L ICE _ BAR SUPPLIES - GLASSWARE&#13;
'T CONVENIENT PARKING&#13;
Q OPEN DAIL y . . . SUNDAYS A D HOL DAYS&#13;
u CALL&#13;
J 'o I 632-1565 i"&#13;
I- 2909 DURAND AVE.&#13;
Monday night i&#13;
"Ye Old Suds Sipping '.'.ite"&#13;
at Shakey's in Racine.&#13;
$1 a pitcher for Pab&#13;
or Schlitz light.&#13;
Lathrop&#13;
Racine&#13;
Phon&#13;
RAC INE, WISC.&#13;
- - - --,&#13;
21s ( lmos l ISC 53 06&#13;
633 6307&#13;
UW Parkside invites you to&#13;
Frid ) . l . - :&#13;
nd&#13;
unda) , t . ;'-;:&#13;
rd&#13;
p.m.&#13;
p.m .&#13;
Ski&#13;
th&#13;
Alps ...&#13;
317 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
Larry Lujack Disc Jockey of the Year&#13;
Inquiries about fellowship invited&#13;
lnqulri about the Danforth&#13;
F Ilowshlpt, to be awarded in&#13;
tarc:h 1973. If Invited, actordJDI&#13;
to vregima M herr,&#13;
I tant profe or chemistry&#13;
d i tant to the Vice Chane&#13;
tter , th local campus&#13;
p tauve&#13;
Th Fellowships. oll red by the&#13;
o njcrth Foundallon 01 t. Louis,&#13;
Mo ..... open to men and women&#13;
'" ho are mer or recent&#13;
lITaduates 01 accredited colleges&#13;
10 th United tates, who have&#13;
errous interest in college&#13;
I chtng as a career, and who&#13;
plan 10study lor a Ph 0 in a field&#13;
ol. tudy common to the American&#13;
und rgraduate liberal arts&#13;
m ulum. \ppli an may be&#13;
tn$tl or married. must be under&#13;
thirty years of age, and may not&#13;
ha\ begun any graduate or&#13;
proless,onal stud&gt; beyond the&#13;
b8ccalaureate at the time applIcation&#13;
papers are lile&lt;!.&#13;
Approximately 100 Fellowships&#13;
",11 be awarded 10 March 1973.&#13;
Candidates must be nominated&#13;
b) Liaison Officers 01 their undergraduate&#13;
In tltutions by ov.&#13;
t Study Skills&#13;
ork hop&#13;
Th tudent Counsehng Service&#13;
is gOlOg to conduct another Study&#13;
,I Workohop There will be a&#13;
I of LX one hour sessions&#13;
t", ow k They will be held in&#13;
the LLC room D-I89on Oct. 16, 18,&#13;
23. 25, 30 and '0". I at noon, 2&#13;
p m., and 4 pm'&#13;
The ..-.orUhop \\0 HI cover note&#13;
lakIng, p~paratlon 01 themes,&#13;
reawng ,mpo"emenl. Q3R and&#13;
• _ ion on taking examinations.&#13;
II )'ou are ,ntere ted conlact&#13;
Clay Barnard, Studenl Counhng&#13;
,,'Ic . Room 234 Tallent&#13;
Hall, 563-2269&#13;
'_~_l _" ...~.......- _,... .......J._ ,,__ , ......&#13;
un 'I.~_.-..."'............. oc .&#13;
1. 1972 The Foundation does not&#13;
accept direct applications lor the&#13;
Fellowships.&#13;
Danlorth Fellows are eligible&#13;
for four years of financial&#13;
assistance. with a maximum&#13;
annual living stipend or $2,700 lor&#13;
slOgle Fellows and $2,950 lor&#13;
married Fellows, plus tuition and&#13;
lees. Dependency allowances are&#13;
available. Financial need is not a&#13;
condition for cooaidwation.&#13;
Danforth Fellows may hold&#13;
certain other Iellowships such as&#13;
Ford, Fulbrigbt, National&#13;
Science, Rbodes, etc., concurrently&#13;
and will be Danforth&#13;
Fellows without stipend until the&#13;
other awards lapse.&#13;
The Danforth Foundation,&#13;
created by the late Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
William H. Danforth in 1927, is a&#13;
philanthropy concerned&#13;
primarily with people and values.&#13;
Presently the Foundation focuses&#13;
its activities in two major areas,&#13;
education and the city. In these&#13;
areas the Foundation administers&#13;
programs and makes&#13;
grants to schools, colleges,&#13;
universities and other public and&#13;
private agencies.&#13;
REMEMBER WHEN... 1955&#13;
TITLE ARTIST&#13;
1. Cherry Pink-Apple Blossom White .... Perez Prado&#13;
2. Rock Around The Clock .. Bill Haley and the Comets&#13;
3. Autumn Leaves, " Roger Williams&#13;
4. Yellow Rose of Texas , , .. Mitch Miller&#13;
5. Love Is A Many Splendored Thing , Four Aces&#13;
6. Moments to Remember, .. , Four Lads&#13;
7. Ain't That a Shame , , .. Pat Boone&#13;
8. Crazy Otto , Johnny Maddox&#13;
9. Hearts of Stone .. , Fontane Sisters&#13;
10. Let Me Go, Lover " .. , , .. Joan Weber&#13;
11. He , , ,AI Hibler&#13;
12. I Hear You Knockin' ......•........ ". .Gale Storm&#13;
13. Unchained Melody ,AI Hibler&#13;
14. Till , , Roger Williams&#13;
15. March From the River Kwai ., Mitch Miller&#13;
16. Friendly Persuasion , Pat Boone&#13;
SUPPLIED BY THE PARKSIDE STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Hurray for me---&#13;
WCFL's Lujack&#13;
By Craig Roberts&#13;
Do you ever wonder what goes&#13;
on at the radio station wh~le&#13;
you're listening to your ravorite&#13;
D.J,? I&#13;
Well, I did, So I decided that&#13;
was going to talk to a J).J. and&#13;
find out what really goes on. I&#13;
thought about it lor a little while&#13;
and then decided I wanted to talk&#13;
to Larry Lujack. I chose Larry&#13;
because he was named Disc&#13;
Jockey 01 the Year. Getting the&#13;
interview was a simple matter of&#13;
making a couple 01 phone calls.&#13;
While I was sitting in the&#13;
reception room waiting for him, I&#13;
was wondering what kind of&#13;
entrance he was going to make. I&#13;
didn't have to wait too long; he&#13;
was only 25 minutes late. He&#13;
walked ofl the elevator, waved&#13;
his arm and said, "Let's go." We&#13;
walked into his office and began.&#13;
I asked him to describe a little&#13;
bit about his life and how he got&#13;
into being a D.J. Larry, who was&#13;
born and reared in Idaho, didn't&#13;
always want to be a D.J. While he&#13;
was going to tlte University of&#13;
Idaho, as a biology major, his&#13;
plans were to be a wild life&#13;
conservationist with the Idaho&#13;
Game Dept. At this time, he, like&#13;
most college kids, needed money.&#13;
One day he noticed a job opportunity&#13;
for part-time D.J. work&#13;
at the local (and only) radio&#13;
station.&#13;
"They specified experienced&#13;
person," Larry said. "I went and&#13;
applied and told them I had experience.&#13;
1 just didn't tell them&#13;
what I had experience in."&#13;
This started him off on a new&#13;
career. He said that over the next&#13;
few years he moved around quite&#13;
a bit as this list of jobs indicates:&#13;
KCID, Caldwell, Ida., 1959-61;&#13;
KGEM, Boise, Ida., 1961~62;&#13;
KJR, Seattle, 1962-66; WMEX,&#13;
Boston, 1966-67; WCFL, Chicago,&#13;
1967; WLS, Chicago, 1967-72; and&#13;
WCFL, Chicago. 1972. It was&#13;
while he was at WLS that he won&#13;
the Disc Jockey of the Year&#13;
award.&#13;
AT&#13;
I asked him to comment On&#13;
winning this award and he&#13;
replied in his typically modest&#13;
manner, "Hurray for me."&#13;
I then asked him what he&#13;
usually does during the day, He&#13;
said he spends about one hour per&#13;
day deciding what order he&#13;
should play the songs. He does&#13;
not choose what is to be played'&#13;
others do that for him and th~&#13;
other jocks. Lujack spends&#13;
another four hours per day&#13;
reading all 01 Chicago's&#13;
newspapers and taking notes on&#13;
what he reads. He is on the air for&#13;
four hours and he also spends&#13;
lime taping commercials. Add to&#13;
this public appearances and&#13;
interviews, and he puts in a full&#13;
day,&#13;
If you have heard his program&#13;
you probably have noticed that h;&#13;
regularly asks if you are naked or&#13;
tells you he loves you. As to how&#13;
he thinks up such brilliant expressions,&#13;
he says, "I have a&#13;
strange sense of humor."&#13;
To really believe him you have&#13;
to listen to him and once you&#13;
listen to him you probably won't&#13;
want to stop. Cosmic! Just&#13;
cosmic!&#13;
Poet Liddy&#13;
reads here&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy,&#13;
visiting professor of English at&#13;
The University of Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside, will read from his work&#13;
at a Parkside Poetry Forum&#13;
program at 8 p.m. on Wednesday&#13;
(Oct. 4) in the third floor library&#13;
lounge at UW-P. The program is&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Liddy, whose home is in County&#13;
Wexford, Ireland, is the author of&#13;
five books of poetry and is&#13;
represented in a number of anthologies.&#13;
He has held laculty posts at&#13;
University College Dublin and a&#13;
number of major U.S. institutions&#13;
and is currently teaching courses&#13;
in poetry writing and Irish&#13;
culture at Parkside.&#13;
This Fri. \ ~ rII&#13;
~\; ~&#13;
Q...lr--O-KY-OBE-RF-ES-Y I&#13;
~&#13;
~41N&#13;
~&#13;
s\~&#13;
~A.~&#13;
RAFFERNS&#13;
6015 • 75th St. Kenosha&#13;
10' BEERS7 - 8:30&#13;
POLKA BAND 9 - 1&#13;
Cheese - Sausage Mit Sauerkraut&#13;
Original German Cold Duck&#13;
(Lederhosen Optional)&#13;
Oct. 6&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER ed 0c . 4, 1972&#13;
ah out fellowship invited&#13;
ill&#13;
1. 1m T ound lion does not currently and will be Danforth&#13;
Fellow without stipend \Dltil the&#13;
oth r awards lapse.&#13;
pt di t applications for the&#13;
1-· II h1&#13;
nf rth Fellov. are eligible&#13;
for four year of financ ial&#13;
t n • with a maximum&#13;
nn l li\ln tipend of $2,7 for&#13;
1 I F llov. and $2,950 for&#13;
The Danforth Foundation,&#13;
created by the late ir. and Mrs.&#13;
William H. Danforth in 1927, is a&#13;
philanthropy concerned&#13;
primarily with people and values.&#13;
Pre enUy the Foundation focuses&#13;
its activities in two major areas,&#13;
education and the city. In these&#13;
areas the Foundation administers&#13;
programs and makes&#13;
grants to schools, colleges,&#13;
universities and other public and&#13;
private agencies.&#13;
Fellow , plus tuition and&#13;
pendency allowances are&#13;
8\' 1lable. Financial need is not a&#13;
condition for coosideration.&#13;
Danforth Fellows may hold&#13;
certain other fellowships such as&#13;
Ford, Fulbright, National&#13;
cience, Rhodes, etc., conREMEMBER&#13;
WHEN ... 1955&#13;
1.&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
6.&#13;
7.&#13;
8.&#13;
9 .&#13;
10.&#13;
11.&#13;
12.&#13;
13.&#13;
14.&#13;
15.&#13;
16.&#13;
TITLE ARTIST&#13;
Cherry Pink-Apple Blossom White .... Perez Prado&#13;
Rock Around The Clock .. Bill Haley and the Comets&#13;
Autumn Leaves ................ .. . Roger Williams&#13;
Yellow Rose of Texas . ................ Mitch Miller&#13;
Love Is A Many Splendored Thing ....... Four Aces&#13;
Moments to Remember ..... .. .......... Four Lads&#13;
Ain't That a Shame ....... ... .. ...... ... Pat Boone&#13;
Crazy Otto ..................... .. . Johnny Maddox&#13;
Hearts of Stone .................... Fontane Sisters&#13;
Let Me Go, Lover ..................... Joan Weber&#13;
He ..................... ............. . . Al Hibler&#13;
I Hear You Knockin' .............. .. ... Gale Storm&#13;
Unchained Melody ......... .. ..... . ...... Al Hibler&#13;
Till .............................. Roger Williams&#13;
March From the River Kwai .......... Mitch Miller&#13;
Friendly Persuasion .. .... ..... ......... Pat Boone&#13;
SUPPLIED BY THE PARKSIDE STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
SOMERS BRANCH&#13;
at&#13;
1350 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone 552-8989 or 657-6141&#13;
FIRST&#13;
National Bank&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
. tember F.D.I.C.&#13;
Hurray for nie---&#13;
WCFL 's Lujack&#13;
By Craig Roberts&#13;
Do you ever wonder what go_es&#13;
on at the radio station wh!le&#13;
you're listening to your favorite&#13;
D.J.? I&#13;
v ell, I did. So I decided that wa going to talk to a I).J. and&#13;
find out what really goes on._ I&#13;
thought about it for a little while&#13;
and then decided I wanted to talk&#13;
to Larry Lujack. I chose Larry&#13;
because he was named Disc&#13;
Jockey of the Year. Getting the&#13;
interview was a simple matter of&#13;
making a couple of phone calls.&#13;
While I was sitting in the&#13;
reception room waiting fo~ him, I was wondering what kmd of&#13;
entrance he was going to make. I&#13;
didn't have to wait too long ; he was only 25 minutes late. He&#13;
walked off the elevator, waved&#13;
his arm and said, "Let's go." We&#13;
walked into his office and began.&#13;
I asked him to describe a little&#13;
bit about his life and how he got&#13;
into being a D.J. Larry, who was born and reared in Idaho, didn't&#13;
always want to be a D.J. While he&#13;
was going to tlte University of&#13;
Idaho, as a biology major, his&#13;
plans were to be a wild life&#13;
conservationist with the Idaho&#13;
Game Dept. At this time, he, like&#13;
most college kids, needed money.&#13;
One day he noticed a job opportunity&#13;
for part-time D.J . work&#13;
at the local (and only) radio&#13;
station. "They specified experienced&#13;
person," Larry said. "I went and&#13;
applied and told them I had experience.&#13;
I just didn't tell them&#13;
what I had experience in."&#13;
This started him off on a new&#13;
career. He said that over the next&#13;
few years he moved around quite&#13;
a bit as this list of jobs indicates:&#13;
KCID, Caldwell, Ida., 1959-61;&#13;
KGEM, Boise, Ida ., 1961-62;&#13;
KJR, Seattle, 1962-66; WMEX,&#13;
Boston, 1966-67; WCFL, Chicago,&#13;
1967; WLS, Chicago, 1967-72; and&#13;
WCFL, Chicago, 1972. It was&#13;
while he was at WLS that he won&#13;
the Disc Jockey of the Year&#13;
award.&#13;
I asked him to comment on winning this &lt;'ward and he&#13;
replied in his typically mode t&#13;
manner, "Hurray for me."&#13;
I then asked him what he&#13;
usually does during the day. He&#13;
said he spends about one hour per&#13;
day deciding what order he&#13;
should play the songs. He does&#13;
not choose what is to be played· others do that for him and th '&#13;
other jocks. Lujack spend&#13;
another four hours per day&#13;
reading all of Chicago's&#13;
newspapers and taking notes on&#13;
what he reads. He is on the air for&#13;
four hours and he also spend&#13;
time taping commercials. Add to&#13;
this public appearances and&#13;
interviews, and he puts in a full&#13;
day.&#13;
If you have heard his program&#13;
you probably have noticed that h~&#13;
regularly asks if you are naked or&#13;
tells you he loves you. As to how&#13;
he thinks up such brilliant x- pressions, he says, " I have a&#13;
strange sense of humor."&#13;
To really believe him you have&#13;
to listen to him and once you&#13;
listen to him you probably won't&#13;
want to stop. Cosmic! Ju t&#13;
cosmic!&#13;
Poet Liddy&#13;
reads here&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy,&#13;
visiting professor of English at&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
will read from his work&#13;
at a Parkside Poetry Forum&#13;
program at 8 p.m. on Wednesday&#13;
(Oct. 4) in the third floor library&#13;
lounge at UW-P. The program i&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Liddy, whose home is in County&#13;
Wexford, Ireland, is the author or&#13;
five books of poetry and is&#13;
represented in a number or anthologies.&#13;
&#13;
He has held faculty posts at&#13;
University College Dublin and a&#13;
number of major U.S. institution&#13;
and is currently teaching cours&#13;
in poetry writing and Irish&#13;
culture at Parkside.&#13;
This Fri~\.\~ }' Q ~ Oct. 6&#13;
Q., I OKTOBERFEST 1-,,:J&#13;
~ ~~ ,,,4/NS ~~&#13;
AT - ~&#13;
RAFFERTYS&#13;
6015 - 75th St. Kenosha&#13;
1 o~ BEERS 7 - 8:30&#13;
POLKA BAND 9 - 1&#13;
Cheese - Sausage Mit Sauerkraut&#13;
Original German Cold Duck&#13;
(Lederhosen Optional) &#13;
1MFOOTBALL&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
1972PARKSI DE 1M TOUCH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
Mon.,oct. 2 Football Team YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Tues.,oct. 3 BOSS YS. Trout&#13;
Wed.,oct. 4 Schooners vs. BOSS&#13;
Thurs., oct. 5 Football Team vs, Trout&#13;
Fri., Oct. 6 Make·up Date&#13;
Mon., OCT. 9&#13;
Tues.,oct. 10&#13;
Wed.,oct. 11&#13;
Thurs., oct. 12&#13;
Fri., oct. 13&#13;
Trout YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners YS. Football Team&#13;
Football Team YS. BOSS&#13;
Schooners YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
~keJup Date&#13;
Mon.,oct. 16&#13;
Tues.oct. 17&#13;
Wed.,oct. 18&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 19&#13;
Fri., oct. 20&#13;
Schooners YS. Trout&#13;
BOSS YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Football Team YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
BOSS vs. Trout&#13;
Make.up Date&#13;
Mon.,oct. 23&#13;
tues.. Oct. 24&#13;
Wed.,Oct. 25&#13;
Thurs., oct. 26&#13;
Fri.. Oct. 27&#13;
Schooners YS. BOSS&#13;
Football Team V.S Trout&#13;
Trout YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners YS. Football Team&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
Mon', Oct. ':lO&#13;
Tues.,Oct. 31&#13;
Wed.,Nov. 1&#13;
Thurs.. Nay. 2&#13;
Fri., Nov. 3&#13;
Football Team vs. BOSS&#13;
Schooners YS. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners YS. Trout&#13;
BOSS vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
All games are scheduled at 12:30 on the tootball field&#13;
adjacent to the soccer field. A forfeit wi II result if a tea m&#13;
is not ready to play by 12: 40. Two forfeits will result in&#13;
eliminating a team from further intramural competition,&#13;
including volleyball and basketball.&#13;
In case of bad weather, games will be officially postponed,qy&#13;
t,h,\"~.!J:1~r,il'!!L!~a,l)~irector, ~~~,~_;,lJ~,iJ"a~~~'f:'.!! L&#13;
be scheduled on the following Friday, .&#13;
Correction to the official rules - Eight players (students&#13;
or faculty) will comprise a team, A minimum of six&#13;
are necessary to start the game,&#13;
Anyone who isn't on a team but would like to be should&#13;
comeover while the games are in progress and sign up&#13;
with one of the teams because some will probably be&#13;
short-handed.&#13;
Wed" Oct. 4, 1972 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
This year's Oktoberfest queen candidates. nominated b~ m mbers of lbe r club. Intlud&#13;
(back row. L-R' Cindy Kalt, Debbie Roseth, _loruca .lcClenaghan and &lt;front row, IrRI lkbbl&#13;
Wade. Paris Wilhust , Nancy Michaels and Joan Krebs.&#13;
Linksmen under way;&#13;
Stephens optimistic&#13;
With the fall golf season more&#13;
than half way over. Coach teve&#13;
Stephens is optimistic about the&#13;
spring season&#13;
Stephens confides, "U no&#13;
problems develop and with the&#13;
players we tlunk will be playing&#13;
in the spring we certainly hould&#13;
be one of the contenders In&#13;
District 14 to qualify for the&#13;
nationals ...&#13;
Stephens says that now hIS&#13;
object IS to play young players&#13;
especially the freshmen. to give&#13;
them a chance to show what they&#13;
can dv&gt;.0&lt;J.t9!')!P him de!e mme *&#13;
who will be playing In the' rr ~"·'i1iil:.&#13;
On Sept. 15. the Ranger golfers&#13;
had their first match or the&#13;
season, Uw-Stevens Point hosted&#13;
eleven teams at the Stevens Pomt&#13;
Country Club. The scoring \\,ent&#13;
as follows:&#13;
1. UW-E.u Claire 406&#13;
2. t:W-M.dison 408&#13;
3 UW-La Crosse 412&#13;
4. U\\'-PlatteIIIle 4&#13;
5. UW-Whitewater 423&#13;
6 t:\\-PARKSIDE 42~&#13;
.. l"\\·Ri\erFalls ..25&#13;
8. n\ Oshkosh 427&#13;
9 . tarquette 418&#13;
10 n\ -Stevens Pomt 443&#13;
11 1:1\. out 4:&gt;5&#13;
"edahs~ In the toumam nt&#13;
ere like Kru er of IadlSOll&#13;
and RIC .' orman of 1'..JlU Oalre&#13;
at 71 The ..coemg for Par Ide&#13;
was Jim \ ak . 80 Tom Both&#13;
and RIck \\ illems. as Dave Fa&#13;
and Pete, °e\ ms. 87&#13;
IReady, wrestle THE&#13;
ESTABLISHMENT&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Coach Jim Koch has issued a&#13;
call for any UW-P student interested&#13;
in wrestling to come out&#13;
for the wrestling team. Practice&#13;
will start Monday, Oct. 16, at 4&#13;
p.m. Anyone interested should&#13;
stop and visit Coach Koch in his&#13;
office in the P. E. Building.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
12B·page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213)47J.8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Night&#13;
01. - 001. 14 - 8:01 p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford H .. Audltorium&#13;
Reserved Seat TIckets· $2.50&#13;
udents &amp; Staff With 10 -$150&#13;
Tickets A\'ailable:&#13;
UW·p tnformation orfice&#13;
Rm 2Ot. Tallent Hall&#13;
1IIIImlllll 11111111111I ~ III IIImlllllllllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmllll&#13;
ed., Oct. , 1972 THE PARKS I DE RANGER 7&#13;
IM FOOTBALL&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
1972 PARKSIDE IM TOUCH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
Mon., oct. 2 Football Team vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Tues., Oct. 3 BOSS vs. Trout&#13;
Wed., Oct. 4 Schooners vs. BOSS&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 5 Football Team vs. Trout&#13;
Fri., Oct. 6 Make-up Date&#13;
Mon., Ocr. 9&#13;
Tues., Oct. 10&#13;
Wed., Oct. 11&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 12&#13;
Fri., Oct. 13&#13;
Mon., Oct. 16&#13;
Tues. Oct. 17&#13;
Wed., Oct. 18&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 19&#13;
Fri., Oct. 20&#13;
Mon., Oct. 23&#13;
Tues., Oct. 24&#13;
Wed., Oct. 25&#13;
Thurs., Oct. 26&#13;
Fri., Oct. 27&#13;
Mon., Oct. 30&#13;
Tues., Oct. 31&#13;
Wed., Nov. 1&#13;
Thurs., Nov. 2&#13;
Fri., Nov. 3&#13;
Trout vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners vs. Football Team&#13;
Football Team vs. BOSS&#13;
Schooners vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
~ke-up Date&#13;
Schooners vs.Trout&#13;
BOSS vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Football Team vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
BOSS vs. Trout&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
Schooners vs. BOSS&#13;
Football Team V.S Trout&#13;
Trout vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners vs. Football Team&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
Football Team vs. BOSS&#13;
Schooners vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Schooners vs.Trout&#13;
BOSS vs. Pink Fascists&#13;
Make-up Date&#13;
All games are scheduled at 12 : 30 on the footbal l field&#13;
adjacent to the soccer field . A forfeit will result if a team&#13;
is not ready to play by 12 : 40. Two forfeits wil l result in&#13;
eliminating a team from further intramural competition,&#13;
including volleyball and basketbal l.&#13;
In case of bad weather, games will be officially postpone~&#13;
by t.h.e Intramural Director. Make-up games wi l l --1 • • • ~• • I ',t I I) ... ~•I-~ • •i,• I. , i•&#13;
be scheduled on the following Friday.&#13;
Correction to the official rules - Eight players (students&#13;
or faculty) will comprise a team . A minimum of six&#13;
are necessary to start the game.&#13;
Anyone who isn't on a team but would like to be should&#13;
come over while the games are in progress and sign up&#13;
with one of the teams because some will probably be&#13;
short-handed.&#13;
Linksrnen under a&#13;
Stephens optirni t ·&#13;
Ready, wrestle THE&#13;
Coach Jim Koch has issued a&#13;
call for any UW-P student inlere&#13;
ted in wrestling to come out&#13;
for the wre tling team. Practice&#13;
will start Monday, Oct. 16, at 4&#13;
Pm. Anyone interested should&#13;
top and visit Coach Koch in his&#13;
office in the P . E. Building.&#13;
RESEARCH MATERIALS&#13;
All Topics&#13;
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,&#13;
128-page, mail order catalog of 2,300&#13;
quality research papers. Enclose&#13;
$1.00 to cover postage and handling.&#13;
RESEARCH UNLIMITED&#13;
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024&#13;
(213) 477-8474 • 477-5493&#13;
"We need a local salesman"&#13;
College Men&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
EST ABLISHME T&#13;
SHOW LOUNGE&#13;
Racine's Newest Nightery&#13;
Proudly Presents&#13;
An All Girl All Star&#13;
Go-Go-A-Rama&#13;
Continuous Entertainment&#13;
7 P.M. til?&#13;
424 lake Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
637-8467&#13;
Amateur Contest&#13;
Every Thursda;1&#13;
1ight&#13;
• &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
Off and running. Park ide' harriers just before the gun sounds to open the home cross country season.&#13;
---------&#13;
THE WEEKE D&#13;
Harriers, hooters fall&#13;
BY KRIS KOCH&#13;
Th Park id soccer team was&#13;
handed It' third traight loss 01&#13;
the n 200 la I aturday at the&#13;
hands 01 a tough W·Madlson&#13;
boll club.&#13;
Both teams played even up boll&#13;
&lt;kIrm tho nest haU. but rn the&#13;
nd penod the ladlson club&#13;
talhed tv..c . both 01 lholt goals&#13;
c:onun Irom vabed Alavian.&#13;
f\JaVI8D' first goal came 15&#13;
mmut mto the second heU when&#13;
he rated away from the crowd&#13;
nd booted across an unassisted&#13;
oal&#13;
Fllteen mmutes later he picked&#13;
up hIS second score 01 the day&#13;
"hon the Ranger goalie dropped&#13;
th ball alter blocking a shot and&#13;
lavian was fight there to boot it&#13;
rn The 2-0 lead hold and the&#13;
Rangers had 10 chal!&lt; up another&#13;
I&#13;
The Rangers played the game&#13;
'A Ithout the services of first team&#13;
goalie Tom Thompsen, who&#13;
ustamed a leg injury tbree&#13;
weeks ago. The Rangers record&#13;
now stands at 0-3--1 for the season.&#13;
Ilhnois-Chicago Circle invades&#13;
Parkslde al3 p.m. today and the&#13;
lober/est Tournament will he&#13;
hold thI Frtday and aturday at&#13;
Parks.de, pitting the Rangers&#13;
agam t teams from UWladlson,&#13;
'otre Dame and UWhl"aukee.&#13;
Track&#13;
Any man interested in joining&#13;
th Ranger track team should&#13;
conlact Coach Bob Lawson.&#13;
Practice lor the indoor track&#13;
learn h already begun. Coach&#13;
Lawson can be lound in the&#13;
Phy lcal Education Building or&#13;
by ca IIing 553-2153&#13;
Parkside's Olympian, Lucien&#13;
Rosa, and teammate Dennis Biel&#13;
both broke the school record lor&#13;
the 5 mile run last Saturday in&#13;
Charleston. Ill. but their output&#13;
wasn't enough to pull the&#13;
Rangers past Eastern Illinois as&#13;
they were beaten 23-38. This was&#13;
the second loss of the season for&#13;
the harriers against one win.&#13;
Rosa toured the course in a&#13;
winning time of 24 :53.6, bettering&#13;
the old record 01 25: 29 which he&#13;
also set. Biel also broke the old&#13;
record by placing lourth in the&#13;
race.&#13;
The Parkside Harriers will run&#13;
again this Saturday at the Octobe.rfest&#13;
Invitational which will&#13;
take place on the Parkside&#13;
course.&#13;
The Parkside golf team&#13;
traveled to Green Lake Saturday&#13;
and placed 5th in an eleven team&#13;
college tournament. Lacrosse&#13;
won the meet with a total team&#13;
score 01 782, edging the UWMadison&#13;
team by 11 strokes.&#13;
Parks ide's overall team score&#13;
was 852. Two Racine men held&#13;
low cards for Parkside, Jim&#13;
Vakos registered a 167 and John&#13;
Lehman a 169. Other Parkside&#13;
scores were Pete Nevin with a&#13;
171; Don Fox with a 172; and&#13;
Dave Fox close behind with a 173.&#13;
The gollers get back into the&#13;
swing 01 things this Saturday&#13;
hosting the Octoberfest Tournament&#13;
here at Parkside, and&#13;
then closing out their fall season&#13;
Oct. 14 at Madison.&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Anyone interested in the intramural&#13;
bowling league should&#13;
conlact Coach Jim Kocii in the&#13;
Physical Education BUilding or&#13;
phone 2267.&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
Parkslde&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
Registration&#13;
Now thru Oct. 13&#13;
\ ,," - OJ&#13;
Entry Fee 50·&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
sponsored by Park,ide Activitie' Board&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
October 4 Illinois-Chicago Circle at Parkside&#13;
October 6 Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
(UW-Madison, Notre Dame, UW-Milwaukee) .&#13;
October 14. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... UW-Platteville at Parkside&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
October 7 OktoberfesUnvitational at Parkside&#13;
(Iowa Slate University, Indiana State University, Purdue&#13;
University-Calumet, South Dakota State, Parkside)&#13;
October 13 Notre Dame Invitational at South Bend, Ind.&#13;
October 17.............. .MarquetteatParkside&#13;
Golf&#13;
October 7 Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
(Northeastern Illinois, UW-Green Bay, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
UW-Madlson, UW·River Falls, UW-Platteville,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, UW-LaCrosse, UW-Eau Claire, UW-Stevens Point,&#13;
UW-Parkside, Marquette, Carthage College,&#13;
UW-Whitewater, Northern Illinois)&#13;
October 14 .... .. UW-Mamson at Madison&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
October 6. . . . . . . OktoberfesUnvitational at Parkside&#13;
Women's GOlf&#13;
October ...... .Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
Cagers set&#13;
to start&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
October 14 . . .Oshkosh Invitational at Oshkosh&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
October 4. . . . . . .. Oktoberfest Invitational at Parkside&#13;
(Parkside, Carthage, Whitewater, Northwestern,&#13;
Stevens Point, Lawrence)&#13;
.......... UW·Milwaukee at Parkside&#13;
...... Lake Forest, Beloit at Parkside&#13;
October .....&#13;
October 11 .&#13;
Archery tourney&#13;
Cycling club&#13;
here Sunday&#13;
practice&#13;
Before you know it, basketball&#13;
will be returning to Parkside. Big&#13;
improvement should be in store&#13;
for the team this coming season&#13;
as three returning lettermen and&#13;
a pack of hot-shot freshmen vie&#13;
for starting positions on Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens' eighth Ranger&#13;
team.&#13;
"The season looks more&#13;
promising," Stephens says,&#13;
"with our returning people&#13;
having experience. We lost no&#13;
seniors and added key freshman&#13;
recruits who will put pressure On&#13;
the 1971-72 starters. We'll have&#13;
size, speed and jumping ability,&#13;
but we're also facing our toughest&#13;
schedule ever."&#13;
He ligures that Bill Sobanski&#13;
Gary Cole and John YoungqUist:&#13;
all newcomers, will try for the&#13;
center spot. With one regular&#13;
back at guard in Dennis&#13;
Routheaux, Stephens sees more&#13;
depth than any other position and&#13;
expects newcomers Tim Dolan&#13;
Pat Mason and Joe Hulter to bid&#13;
with lettermen Pete Nevins and&#13;
Routheaux for the starting spots.&#13;
Stephens looks for leading scorer&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, freshmen Don&#13;
Snow, Mike McGrath and Mike&#13;
Hanke to battle for forward.&#13;
Practice begins on Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 15.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • VS, •&#13;
• •&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Satulday, October 28 •&#13;
• •&#13;
•&#13;
• $10 (Includes Bus, •&#13;
•&#13;
: Continental Breakfast, :&#13;
• $6Game Ticketl •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • TICKETS AVAILABLE •&#13;
: INFORMATION OFFICE :&#13;
• 202 TALLENT HALL •&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
Thursday, October 5, the annual&#13;
Oktoberlest Archery&#13;
Tournament will be held at 10:30&#13;
a.m., on the soccer field. The&#13;
tournament is open to all. Bows&#13;
and arrows will be provided. All&#13;
you have to do to enter is to come·&#13;
over and join in the fun. Awards&#13;
will be given to the champions.&#13;
The Parkside Cycling Club will&#13;
leave the P.E. Bldg. at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday. All stUdents, stall and&#13;
faculty are invited to ride with&#13;
the club.&#13;
~ ~'d- ~~ ~tJ4'Ui&#13;
presents in concert&#13;
7k&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 7 -8p.rn. - Carthage Fieldhouse&#13;
On sale: Bidinger's Music&#13;
Carthage College Center Office&#13;
l~ &amp; 7Uut&#13;
7~&#13;
~&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Oct. 4, 1972&#13;
Cagers set&#13;
to start&#13;
practice&#13;
Before you know it, basketball&#13;
will be returning to Parkside. Big&#13;
improvement should be in store&#13;
for the team this coming season&#13;
as three returning lettermen and&#13;
a pack of hot-shot freshmen vie&#13;
for starting positions on Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens' eighth Ranger&#13;
team.&#13;
th gun oond to op n th home cros country eason.&#13;
"The season looks more&#13;
promising," Stephens says,&#13;
"with our returning people&#13;
having experience. We lost no&#13;
seniors and added key freshman&#13;
recruits who will put pressure on&#13;
the 1971-72 starters. We'll have&#13;
size, speed and jumping ability,&#13;
but we're also facing our toughest&#13;
schedule ever."&#13;
H&#13;
Harrier&#13;
BY KRIS KOCH&#13;
D&#13;
, hooters fall&#13;
r&#13;
r .&#13;
Th Park ide Harriers will run a ain thi Saturday at the Octoberfest&#13;
Im;tational which will&#13;
take place on the Parkside course.&#13;
The Park ide golf team&#13;
traveled to Green Lake Saturday&#13;
and plac d 5th in an eleven team&#13;
college tournament. LaCrosse&#13;
won the meet with a total team&#13;
score of 782, edging the UWlladison&#13;
team by 11 strokes.&#13;
Park ide' overall team score&#13;
was 852. Two Racine men held&#13;
low cards for Parkside, Jim&#13;
Vakos regi tered a 167 and John&#13;
Lehman a 169. Other Parkside&#13;
core were Pete evin with a&#13;
171 : Don Fox with a 172; and&#13;
Dave Fo close behind with a 173.&#13;
The golfers get back into the&#13;
wing of things this Saturday&#13;
ho ·ting the Octoberfest Tournament&#13;
h re at Parkside, and&#13;
then cJo ing out their fall season&#13;
Oct. 14 at . 1adi on.&#13;
Bowling&#13;
Anyone interested in the intramural&#13;
bowling league should&#13;
contact Coach Jim Kocfi in the&#13;
Phy ical Education Building or&#13;
phone 2267&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••• Parkside&#13;
OPEN TABLE TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
STARTS OCT 16&#13;
Registration&#13;
ow thru Oct. 13&#13;
/ / -o&#13;
lntry Fee soe&#13;
Apply now - Student Activities Office&#13;
Room D-197 LLC&#13;
ponsored by Parkside Activities Boord&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Soccer&#13;
October 4 ................... . .. Illinois-Chicago Circle at Parks_ide&#13;
October 6 .................... Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
(UW-Madison, Notre Drune, UW-Milwaukee)&#13;
October 14 ........... .. ... .. ...... . .. . . UW-Platteville at Parkside&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
October 7 . ................. . Oktoberfest Invitational at Parkside&#13;
(Iowa State University, Indiana State University, ~due&#13;
University-Calumet, South Dakota State, Parkside)&#13;
October 13 . . ...... Notre Drune Invitational at South Bend, Ind.&#13;
October 17 ......................... .. . . .... Marquette at Parkside&#13;
Golf&#13;
October 7 . . .. . ............... Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
( ortheastern Illinois, UW-Green Bay, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
UW-Madison, UW-River Falls, UW-Platteville,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh, UW-LaCrosse, UW-Eau Claire, UW-Stevens Point,&#13;
UW-Parkside, Marquette, Carthage College,&#13;
UW-Whitewater, Northern Illinois)&#13;
October 14 ......... . .. . . . ... . .. . .. ....... UW-Madison at Madison&#13;
Women's Cross Country&#13;
October 6 .. ... .... .. . . . . . . ... . Oktoberfest Invitational at Parkside&#13;
Women's Golf&#13;
October 5 . .. . . ... .. . ... . . .... Oktoberfest Tournament at Parkside&#13;
Women's Swimming&#13;
October 14 .... .. . . . ....... . . . .. . .. Oshkosh Invitational at Oshkosh&#13;
Women's Tennis&#13;
October 4 ...... . ..... . ... . . . .. Oktoberfest Invitational at Parkside&#13;
(Parkside, Carthage, Whitewater, Northwestern,&#13;
Stevens Point, Lawrence)&#13;
October 5 ...... . ..... . .. . ......... . .. . UW-Milwaukee at Parkside&#13;
October 11 ...... . ..... .. . . ... . .... Lake Forest, Beloit at Parkside&#13;
Archery tourney&#13;
Thursday, October 5, the annual&#13;
Oktoberfest Archery&#13;
Tournament will be held at 10:30&#13;
a.m. , on the soccer field. The&#13;
tournament is open to all. Bows&#13;
and arrows will be provided. All&#13;
you have to do to enter is to come- over and join in the fun. Awards&#13;
will be given to the champions.&#13;
Cycling club&#13;
here Sunday&#13;
The Parkside Cycling Club will&#13;
leave the P.E. Bldg. at 2 p.m.&#13;
Sunday. All students, staff and&#13;
faculty are invited to ride with&#13;
the club.&#13;
He figures that Bill Sobanski&#13;
Gary Cole and John Youngquist:&#13;
all newcomers, will try for the&#13;
center spot. With one regular&#13;
back at guard in Dennis&#13;
Routheaux, Stephens sees more&#13;
depth than any other position and&#13;
expects newcomers Tim Dolan&#13;
Pat Mason and Joe Hutter to bid&#13;
with lettermen Pete Nevins and&#13;
Routheaux for the starting spots.&#13;
Stephens looks for leading scorer&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, freshmen Don&#13;
Snow, Mike McGrath and Mike&#13;
Hanke to battle for forward.&#13;
Practice begins on Sunday,&#13;
Oct. 15.&#13;
••••••••••••••••&#13;
: Parkside :&#13;
: Activities Board :&#13;
: sponsors :&#13;
: a bus trip to :&#13;
: UW-MADISON :&#13;
• •&#13;
.&#13;
• ~~.. .&#13;
•&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • • • • • •&#13;
• • • vs. •&#13;
• •&#13;
: OHIO STATE :&#13;
: FOOTBALL GAME :&#13;
• Saturday, October 28 •&#13;
• • • • • $10 (Includes Bus, I&#13;
: Continental Breakfast, :&#13;
• $6 Game Ticket) 1&#13;
• • •&#13;
e TICKETS AVAILABLE •&#13;
I&#13;
: INFORMATION OFFICE :&#13;
e 202 TALLENT HALL I&#13;
•••••••••••••••• ~~,~St«~~ 'COMd&#13;
7k&#13;
presents in concert&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 7-8p.m. - Carthage Fieldhouse&#13;
On sale: Bidinger 's Music&#13;
Carthage College Center Office </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 2, October 4, 1972</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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