<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/items/browse?tags=rudy+alvarez&amp;output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-03-08T01:21:16+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>1</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>1</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="2623" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4810">
        <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/bf44a59b784ef70123549cdd9d3ba2c0.pdf</src>
        <authentication>29b7d9636544d59f87677d8dc11d8e62</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="8">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                  <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63795">
              <text>Volume 1, issue 1</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
          <name>Headline</name>
          <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63796">
              <text>Parkside Varsity Club Awards</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="95">
          <name>Series Number</name>
          <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63806">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="1">
          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="89901">
              <text>--May,1972, Vol. I, No. I&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN&#13;
~&#13;
~~&#13;
MikE&#13;
OEWnT&#13;
ALLAMERICAN&#13;
INDOOR&#13;
TRACK PARKSIDE VARSITY CLUB&#13;
AWARDS 1971-72 I&lt;ENOSUA&#13;
RUDY&#13;
AI-VAllEZ&#13;
ALL-AMERICAN&#13;
CROSS COUHTR't'&#13;
RACINE&#13;
..JoMN&#13;
MAfoIzALlK&#13;
N-,,,ON-'L&#13;
F9oIC''''G-~&#13;
-~ATHl£T1C&#13;
t)'REC-" R's&#13;
AWARO"&#13;
KeNOSf04A&#13;
uw.parkSld UbralJ&#13;
May, 1972, Vol. I, No. I&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCO s,&#13;
'' A.,,_.LETE&#13;
OFTHE&#13;
Mll&lt;.E&#13;
OEWRT&#13;
ALLAMERICAN&#13;
tNOOOR&#13;
TRACK&#13;
YeAR"&#13;
1-UCIAN&#13;
R.OSA,&#13;
OISTANCE&#13;
RUNNER&#13;
l=A.OM CEVLO~-l..&#13;
PREPARING- FOK&#13;
aHeOLYMPIC&#13;
MARATI-ION&#13;
AT MUNtCH&#13;
~&#13;
OICt&lt;.&#13;
EI.\..ISON&#13;
'NATIONAL&#13;
VARSl-rY&#13;
CLUB&#13;
AWAR"&#13;
KEM&#13;
MARnN&#13;
ALL AMERICAN&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
COLEMAN&#13;
Al,..OO MAORIGAMO&#13;
&lt;- RANGER AWAA.0&#13;
FO~ SeRVICS TO&#13;
ATHLETlCS" .&#13;
u&#13;
N H&#13;
A Message&#13;
fromthe&#13;
Vice-&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
S1Dc au 01 UA ... the world tIlrOuCb our own eyes, the values&#13;
of lAt rcoUee1&amp;l ath1.ue. to Ilthlet •• , coaches, spectators, spon-&#13;
..". 1IlOt111ltl_, aDd tile world Of sport may vary cooslderably.&#13;
Yrvm my po.tDt 01 Y1,ew, J atrCl)C11 endorse the lifetime sport&#13;
C epl aDd Ita mpbul •• t Plrkslde. I IlsO .. ew athletics as a&#13;
r-.J Wl1.tYLDI fore. t'Jr a campus. I am especla.11y looking forward.&#13;
to tb1a summ r wtwa our DeW physical educattOlll bu.Ud1.Dg' wID provide&#13;
• hOm for Uae Rupra &amp;.Dd • place for students, faculty, and st:a11'&#13;
to ~rUelpac.. !bet 18 wortbWb.1le recreaUooal activities at the&#13;
UGh' r IfJ. Clearl,. rour aecomplUhmeDLs 1D1ntercoUeglatecompe·&#13;
uu,., ut to be c:ommeDdlld ~y, and I wish you &amp;OOd torttme In&#13;
aU fUture com tJtlODa. otto F. Bauer&#13;
Vtee-ebaDceUor&#13;
ay, 1972&#13;
THAM~ge from the ChanceUor"'"&#13;
t of the and an all-American football&#13;
to embody both, ele~en ~an 001- player. Justice White was SUrely&#13;
Greek ideal. To the ethrcentury exceptional in his distinction and&#13;
versity 0f the nineteen scholar- '. eminence, but he was also broadly we owe our emphasis o.ntellectual representative of a great mass Of&#13;
ship and rigoro~s l1~h univer- university gra~ates, men andwQ..&#13;
training. To the ng b Idge we men who make room in their&#13;
Oxford and Cam r , t d siUes, Iatton of ath- lives for spar s an for other&#13;
owe the direct a~soc activity with physical aC~ivities that reflect&#13;
letic and sportmg lean peo- their apprectatton of the inter ..&#13;
0ty life TheAmer th&#13;
universl • f ontinent dependence of ought and action&#13;
h conquest 0 a c . d T I ple , ~ ose to be physically of body and mmu. hose Who&#13;
requlIed them t of their na- really understand the American&#13;
active ~O\1gh m:nd it easy to people, their heritage and their&#13;
tiona! hls~orYJ ftUal achievement history, should not be surprised&#13;
reconcile Intellec . ity in their by the prominent and proper rOle&#13;
and athletic acnv ai uvee of athletics in the modern unt-&#13;
I and in their person •&#13;
schoo s ., f the United versity.&#13;
A leading JUstice 0&#13;
States Supreme Court, Byron&#13;
HWhizzer" White, was an outstanding&#13;
student at the University&#13;
of Colorado, a Rhodes Scholar&#13;
Irvin Go Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
DIALOGUE&#13;
WITH THE&#13;
DIRECTOR&#13;
Critics who are offended by the&#13;
presence of athletics in mere not nl&#13;
American universities fail 0 y&#13;
to appreciate the diversity of ou~&#13;
educational heritage, but alSOW~&#13;
that heritage haS contributed 0&#13;
the achievement 0I .~..1.......... e in the&#13;
life of the nation and in the 11:~: of indivIdual men. Many moralls&#13;
in the. anctent world decried the&#13;
nesb and elevated the 111e01 the&#13;
mind above that of the ~LJ-\J"U,.J' But&#13;
there were others wh0 argued that&#13;
the body was tbe temple of God,&#13;
and lhat worship of God required&#13;
t for the body and its uses.&#13;
respec I'no the&#13;
The Greek ioea! of ed\lca "''0&#13;
whole man, the bodY as well as&#13;
the mind, represented a reconcUtatioo&#13;
of these conflicting points&#13;
01 view.&#13;
The American unIversity came&#13;
::::::::::::I::::',::::::::r:::m::::::::r:::::r:::::::::::::::~~~::~::I::::::::::~:::::~:~:::III:::::~:::::::::::::::::::,::t:I:::IIIIltt:::::l~~:II:~:III::::::::~::::::::::~:::r:!:::~:::::::;:t&#13;
"•.J"~ _....&#13;
THOMAS ROSANDICH&#13;
The Cbinese call this the Year of the Rat; in the&#13;
world of sport it would be the Year of Ping-Pong.&#13;
At the Office of Athletics, we call this a YEAR OF&#13;
CONSOLIDATION.&#13;
A basic troop-leading prLnciple is coined from&#13;
the woro MACE which renects Movement To Contact,&#13;
Attack, Consolidation and Expansion.&#13;
during the 1969-1970 aeademtc year as we developed&#13;
the varsity program and the personnel to execute&#13;
the same. 1971-19'12 put things in high gear as we&#13;
atta.eted across a broad front giving Parkside its&#13;
first All-American, National Rookie Coach of the&#13;
Year Award, our mascot design and an in-depth&#13;
operational program. That brings us to this year,&#13;
our Year of Consolidation.&#13;
We consolidated in typical athletic fashion by&#13;
impleme..ntlng for the ttrst time Oktoberfest in the&#13;
tall; a broad program in women's athletics including&#13;
varsity teams in tennis, volleyball, gymnastics and&#13;
track &amp;: field; an academic program of Coaching&#13;
Certificationj completed plans on our outdoor and.&#13;
indoor 1a.clliUesj hired an aequatlcs director; developed&#13;
the freshman basketball team; sent the&#13;
golf team to Florida, the wrestling team to Louisiana&#13;
and the track team to Arkansas; raised $10,000 by&#13;
Parkside 200 and last but not least, got the National&#13;
Varsity Club off to a roaring start while still&#13;
operating as we have been out of two towns., two&#13;
counties and 23 sites. At last, we will consolidate&#13;
Regardless of the year, however, we want to&#13;
take this opportunity to thank the students, laculty,&#13;
staff and administration of the University, the&#13;
Parkside 200 and National Varsity Club members&#13;
and. Indeed the people in the communities for their&#13;
continued and unqualified support.&#13;
Thus we look towards the'1972-1973 academie&#13;
year with a great deal of anticipation for it should&#13;
be a year of Expansion. Why? Bobby Kennedy probably&#13;
said it better than anyone when he said: "consider tor&#13;
a moment what we achieve from athletics ... the&#13;
sheer fun of playing .•. the building 01 a healthy and&#13;
aiert mind ... stamina., courage. unselfishness and&#13;
most lmportantly, perhaps. . .the will to win."&#13;
HISTORY and LOCATIO&#13;
The Un""""ly 01 Wisconslr&gt;-Parkside had its beginnings in&#13;
leg I 'atlve Kllon In 1965 which provided lor a new, lour-year&#13;
degrae-grantlng campus 01 The University 01 Wisconsin in&#13;
the Kenosha-RKine araa In 1966. Irvin G Wyllie, widely&#13;
rllCognlzed echolar teacher snd suthor, was named chancellor&#13;
of the new university end in the same year the Governot's&#13;
Site SelllCtlon Comm,ttee recommended that the new campus&#13;
be located on a roiling 7()O..acre aite of alternating prairie and&#13;
woodland ad)Kenl 10 Petrifying Spnngs Park in northern&#13;
Kano he County Ground was broken for the lirst major&#13;
campus building ,n October, 1967.&#13;
Tha In,t,.1 S6 5 mlll'on building program, which included&#13;
Gr nqUI t and Tallent Halls, w.s completed in September,&#13;
1969 w n the '''st students began classes on the new&#13;
campu An add,tlonal bUilding budget 01 $'97 million&#13;
PP"oved for tha 1969-71 f, cal biennium provides lor con-&#13;
"ruct on 01 four add,tlonal major buildings - a library.&#13;
I rnlr'V c ter I the key butlding on campus; 8 communicalion&#13;
art bulldong which Will prov,de addlt'onal general&#13;
purpo ewell e p&amp;&lt;:.ahzed classroom space, a multi-use&#13;
P • cal education IKllrly end a cantral campus healing and&#13;
ch II ng plant All will be ready lor the 1972-73 school year&#13;
Th. ~ P.rk.,de c.mpu. i. located 10 m.ioI •• north of the&#13;
IIhfM)laborder, two mil•• _at of lak.e Michigan and ~tween&#13;
(he Cllt •• of KenO.ha and Recine on Wood Road. Milw.ult_&#13;
11_ 20 mll_ to. the north, Chicago 60 mil•• to the eoultt&#13;
tt.ghway ~94,the Inter.t.t.link. between Milwau_ an'll Chieego'&#13;
pa .... hve mile. _t of the campu.. Hig~y E In K~&#13;
County. running .. at from 1-94, lead. directly to the campua.&#13;
The modern urban campu •• a in K.noaha and Recin. ef"e 'uet&#13;
tov•• nd 15 mlnut.a. r•• pecti ....ly. from the main camp ..... 'n..&#13;
K..noaha c.mpua I.IOC.I~ at 8700 WeMington Road (Highway&#13;
48). the RaCine Campu •• t 1001 S. M.in Str_t (Highway 81:).&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
An official publication 01 the&#13;
National Varsity Club, Inc., of&#13;
The Un~versity of Wiscons1n~&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Vol. I , No.1, May. 1972&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
President- - _ Dario Madrigrano&#13;
Vice-President- _ -Bob Hartman&#13;
Secretary _ _ _ _ - -AI Gelsone&#13;
Treasurer- -Guy Trecroc1&#13;
Executive Board - - -Stan BarTY,&#13;
Gene Brookhouse, Joe Cucunate,&#13;
Chet Dlckow, Mark Mana, orby'&#13;
MaSSI; Al Ramovic, Jack Rice,&#13;
Blll Wells, Paul Hutka.&#13;
Publisher- -The National Varsity&#13;
ClUb, Inc.&#13;
Editor- _ _ _ _ __ Pete Turco&#13;
.. Consultant to the Edltor- _Don&#13;
Kopriva&#13;
Parks ide 200 Editor- - _Lloyd&#13;
Northard&#13;
Staif Writers- _ -JIm Bradley, AI&#13;
Gelsone, Vic Godfrey&#13;
Art Director- _ _ -AI Rainov1C&#13;
Business Manager _ -GUYTrecroci&#13;
Photographers- _ _Darrel Borger,&#13;
Steve LUjegren, Marsh Sl~&#13;
monsen ~!IJ~tIi~I!~~t!i)Ji!j~f@ftt!1es age&#13;
rom the&#13;
f!&#13;
Otto F. Bauer&#13;
• c -Cbancellor&#13;
ndLO TIO&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
THE RANGER A Message from the Chancellor&#13;
and an all-American football&#13;
player. Justice White was surely&#13;
exceptional in his distinction and&#13;
eminence, but he was also broadly&#13;
representative of a great mass of&#13;
university gra~ates, men and women&#13;
who make room in their&#13;
lives for sports and for other&#13;
physical activities that renect&#13;
their appreciation of the interdependence&#13;
of thought and action&#13;
of body and mind. Those Wh~&#13;
really understand the American&#13;
people, their heritage and their&#13;
history, should not be surprised&#13;
by the prominent and proper role&#13;
of athletics in the modern uni-&#13;
Critics who are offended by the&#13;
mere presence of athletics in&#13;
American universities fail not only&#13;
to appreciate the diversity of our&#13;
educational heritage, but also what&#13;
that heritage haS contributed to&#13;
the achievement of bala.nCe In the&#13;
ll!e of the nation and In the lives&#13;
of Individual men. Many moraliSt s&#13;
In the ancient world decried the&#13;
flesh and elevated the life of the&#13;
mind above that of the body· But&#13;
there were others who argued that&#13;
the body was the temple of God,&#13;
and that worship of God required&#13;
respect tor the body and its uses,&#13;
The Greek Ideal of educating the&#13;
·hole man, the body as well as&#13;
the mind, represented a reconciliation&#13;
of these conflicting points&#13;
of view.&#13;
The American university came&#13;
body both elements of the&#13;
to em . ·&#13;
Greek ideal. To the German university&#13;
of the nineteenth century'&#13;
we owe our emphasis on scholarship&#13;
and rigorous intellectual&#13;
training, To the English univerities&#13;
Oxford and Cambridge, we&#13;
s th' e direct association of athowe&#13;
·t 'th letic and sporting activ1 Y w1&#13;
university life. TheAmericanpeole&#13;
whose conquest of a continent&#13;
P ' . d them to be physically require&#13;
active through most of their national&#13;
history' found it easy to&#13;
reconcile intellectual achievement&#13;
and athletic activity in their&#13;
schools and in their personal lives.&#13;
A leading justice of the United&#13;
States Supreme Court, Byron&#13;
''Whtzzer'' White, was an outstanding&#13;
student at the University&#13;
of Colorado, a Rhodes Scholar&#13;
DIALOGUE&#13;
WITH THE&#13;
DIRECTOR&#13;
versity.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
THOMAS ROSANDICH&#13;
The Chinese call this the Year of the Rat; in the&#13;
world of sport It would be the Year of Ping-Pong,&#13;
At the Office of Athletics, we call this a YEAR OF&#13;
CONSOLIDATION.&#13;
A basic troop-leading principle is coined from&#13;
the word MACE whichrenectsMovementToContact,&#13;
Attack, Consolidation and Expansion.&#13;
during the 1969-1970 academic year aswedeveloped&#13;
the varsity program and the personnel to execute&#13;
the same. 1971-1972 put things in high gear as we&#13;
attacked across a broad front giving Parkside its&#13;
fir All-American, National Rookie Coach of the&#13;
Year A"--ard, our mascot design and an in-depth&#13;
operatiom.l program. That brings us to this year,&#13;
our Year of Consolidation.&#13;
We consolidated in typical athletic fashion by&#13;
implementing for the tl.rst time Oktoberfest in the&#13;
fall; a broad program in women's athletics including&#13;
varsity teams In tennis, volleyball, gymnastics and&#13;
track &amp;: field; an academic program of Coaching&#13;
Certification; completed plans on our outdoor and&#13;
indoor J'Acllities; hired an acquatics director; developed&#13;
the freshman basketball team; sent the&#13;
golf team to Florida, the wrestling team to Louisiana&#13;
and the track team to Arkansas; raised $10,000 by&#13;
Parkside 200 and last but not least, got the National&#13;
Varsity Club off to a roaring start while still&#13;
operating as we have been out of two towns, two&#13;
counties and 23 sites. At last, we will consolidate&#13;
Regardless of the year, however, we want to&#13;
take this opportunity to thank the students, faculty,&#13;
staff and administration of the University, the&#13;
Parkside 200 and National Varsity Club members&#13;
and Indeed the people in the communities for their&#13;
continued and unqualified support.&#13;
Thus, we look towards the 1972-1973 academic&#13;
year with a great deal of anticipation for it should&#13;
be a year of Expansion. Why? Bobby Kennedy probably&#13;
said it better than anyone when he said: ''consider for&#13;
a moment what we achieve from athletics •. ,the&#13;
sheer tun of playing .•. the building of a healthy and&#13;
alert mind ... stamina, courage, unself1shness and&#13;
most importantly, perhaps. . .the will to win."&#13;
TH E RANGE R&#13;
An official publication of the&#13;
National Varsity Club, Inc., of&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Vol. I, No. 1, MaY, 1972&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
President- - - Dario Madrigrano&#13;
Vice-President- - -Bob Hartman&#13;
Secretary- - - - - -Al Gelsone&#13;
Treasurer- - - - - -Guy Trecroci&#13;
Executive Board - - -Stan Barry,&#13;
Gene Brookhouse, Joe Cucunate,&#13;
Chet Dickow, Mark Mano, OrbY&#13;
Moss, Al Rainovic, Jack Rice,&#13;
Bill Wells, Paul Hutka.&#13;
Publisher- -The National Varsity&#13;
Club, Inc.&#13;
The new Pa,.ka de campua i • located 10 .&#13;
llhno,e bord..-, two milH weet of lake M· ~ea north of the&#13;
t e c t•H of Kenoaha end Racine W ochogen , and i,.,-.,&#13;
" " 20 m l!M to the north , C hic:"o 6~od _Road . MilwaukN&#13;
Highway 1-94, the interstate link be~n ,.. . ,m,le:.:,o the eoutto .&#13;
PllHH f e m ll M WHt of the c empue H~ weu enlt Chicto00,&#13;
C0Ut1ty. runn,ng ... t fr o m 1-94 1 .. d d . tgh-y E In Ken...,.&#13;
• • irectly to the cempve.&#13;
Editor- - - -Pete Turco&#13;
Consultant to the Editor- -Don&#13;
Kopriva&#13;
Parkside 200 Editor- - -Lloyd&#13;
Northard&#13;
Sta.ff Writers- - -Jim Bradley, Al&#13;
Gelsone, Vic Godfrey&#13;
Art Director- - - -Al RalnOVIC&#13;
Busine ss Manager - - Guy Trecroci&#13;
Photographers- - -Darrel Borger,&#13;
Steve Liljegren, Marsh Simonsen&#13;
T he modern urban cempueea in K h&#13;
five e n d t6 m •n utea reapectivelw f•noa • and Racine are juet&#13;
Kenoahe C.mpu• • ioceted et 3700r~m :::.• main campue. The&#13;
43 1. the Rac,ne Campu• 81 1001 5 .: . •ngton Road (Highway&#13;
• ""8 '" Str"Nt (Highwey 81).&#13;
ff ff !f f ttt f tf f !tf tf !Ifitl&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
&gt;&#13;
THE RA,'GER&#13;
GUEST SPEAKER, RAY ELIOT:&#13;
uA BUILDER OF FINE MEN"&#13;
Ray Eliot, Associate Director&#13;
of Athletics at the University of&#13;
Illinois, retired in 1960from active&#13;
football coaching after 28&#13;
years of service, 23 of which&#13;
were at his alma mater, nnnots.&#13;
- As head football coach at illinois&#13;
from 1942 through 1959,&#13;
Mr. Eliot won or shared three Big&#13;
Ten titles, and produced decisive&#13;
victories in the two Rose Bowl&#13;
games in which his teams appeared.&#13;
Earlier. while serving as one&#13;
of Bob zuppke' 5 line coaches he&#13;
also was head hockey coach ~nd&#13;
assistant baseball coach.&#13;
Mr. Eliot graduated from the&#13;
University of Illinois in- 1932and&#13;
began his coaching career at illinois&#13;
College, Jacksonville. He&#13;
.served one year as assistant football&#13;
coach, then was promoted to&#13;
the head coaching job. He also&#13;
served as baseball coach, and in&#13;
both sports, his teams compiled&#13;
impreSSive records.&#13;
Among the many awards this man&#13;
has earned are the Presidency&#13;
or the American Football Coaches&#13;
ASSOCiation in 1955-56. the Los&#13;
Angeles Times' Coach ot the Year&#13;
Award in 1951,HelmsHallofFame&#13;
in 1956. The Alonzo Stagg Award&#13;
in 1961. Chicago Midwest Writers&#13;
C~Ch of the Year Award in 1959.&#13;
and an honorary life membership&#13;
in the American Football Coaches&#13;
Association in 1965.&#13;
Mr. Eliot bas been asked to&#13;
coach several All Star teams:&#13;
among them the Chicago Tribune&#13;
All Star Game; 4 Urnes coach of&#13;
East-West Shrine Game in San&#13;
Francisco; 4 times coach of the&#13;
Blue-Gray Game in Montgomery.&#13;
Alabama; 2 times coach of the&#13;
Ncr th-South Shrine Game in MiamI&#13;
Florida; and several Urnes&#13;
selected as the nattonaj coach of&#13;
the week.&#13;
As an ill ini footb&amp;lJ and baseball&#13;
player, as. a small-&lt;:.OUece&#13;
coach. as a lioe assistant to Bob&#13;
ZUppke. aDd as head coach at his&#13;
alma mater, Mr. Eliot bas stuck&#13;
firmly to his dedicated assignment&#13;
in I1Ie, "A builder of tI.ne&#13;
men."&#13;
His solid background Ul coacb.1Dg&#13;
his dynamic speakmg ability. bls&#13;
great leellng lor and popularity&#13;
with persons tram every wall: Of&#13;
life, all equip him perfectly for&#13;
his assignment.&#13;
He Is a man who wUl t:alc.etime&#13;
from a busy schedule to thank 8.&#13;
high school boy for an article on&#13;
him in the school paper, and a&#13;
man who receives fan mall from&#13;
the Arctic Circle to TOkyo, Japan .&#13;
Mr. Eliot is a man. who will glve&#13;
you "Something To Think About."&#13;
RAY ELIOT&#13;
Educational&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
and&#13;
Academics&#13;
The&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin- Athletic&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Parkside shares the The Universuv of Wlsconstn s ducauonal her.t89 and II&#13;
teaching, research. and public service goal!; Sub en bing 10 an eduC8t10nal&#13;
philosophy that respects freedom of choice and drv rSlly 01 purpo PM rd&#13;
oHers a broad educational program ernbracmq the art sen nco and OCI I&#13;
sciences&#13;
Chancellor WyllIe heads a disunquished faculty of nat onal and Int rnauon I&#13;
reputation drawn from some of this country s most prestigious umv rsure a&#13;
well as from top institutions abroad and from the upper ranks of tndu try and&#13;
government All share a deep commitment to the teachmg of und rgradual&#13;
and many have done post-doctoral work and boest prout c r ord of producnv&#13;
scholarsfup They provide a rich mtcllectua1 and cultural rru boib on campu&#13;
and in the Racine and Kenosha communmes&#13;
They leach onParksrde s two major academic units the College ,f SCI n e and&#13;
Society and the School of Modern Industry each deSIgnedto provrd tud nts&#13;
with a grasp of the human and technologIcal resources of th urban mdust 181&#13;
society of southeastern WisconSIn&#13;
The College of Science and Society offers a broad rang of loberal art and&#13;
elementary and secondary teacher certification programs through It diVISion&#13;
of science. social science humanist ic studies and educauon Th 5 hool of&#13;
Modern Industry focuses on Perkssde S special rrus Ion of urban-tndustrutl&#13;
studies and provides a strong hnk between the tbeorericai and applied renee&#13;
through .ts d.vrstons of engine rlOg SCI nc maongem nt CI nc and labor&#13;
economics&#13;
Parkside seeks to combine the best of the traditional and the new In Its tOlaf&#13;
program of sports It emphasizes summer and winter Olympic-type port With&#13;
competitions for both men and women in mtf"rCollegl8t athletics Intrsmural&#13;
and sport clubs Parkside will pioneer a strong program for wom n In OlympiC&#13;
sports here The total program is committed to the dov lopm or and culttV tlon&#13;
of the Individual's personal excellence men,ally, phYSIcally, p'ychologlcally,&#13;
and socially&#13;
To achieve the alms and objectives of thIS lOt rcolleglste athletlc program at&#13;
Parkside, the immediale need musl be excellent teacher It 's beloved that&#13;
Parkside has assembled the finest coaching teft of any unlv rSlty In America&#13;
No school in the country has the depth In a coaching staH a. th one thai I&#13;
gathered here in southern WisconSin They not only bring to WI conSln flch&#13;
backgrounds of expenencesfrom all over the Unlled States a comp "'or' end&#13;
students of sport, but they're also out tanding I achers of phy Ical education&#13;
and related activities&#13;
UW-Pa.rk lde'l Phy I("al [duea-&#13;
Hon and Athletics uUdlnl will&#13;
bt.! compleu-d b)' Ul aumm r or&#13;
this fear. 11 wl11 hou sla.tf orftce&#13;
• thn fUU- tl ktlbAll&#13;
court, han&lt;lbaU, voIh baLt, badminton&#13;
and 1 Mill court ,an I htlane&#13;
lmmt.ne pool, wt'lght rOOm ,&#13;
classrooms, th human perf rmanee&#13;
la-bon ton' and other&#13;
specialty room~ VarSity and LDtra.&#13;
mural locker areas for bolh mf n&#13;
and. worn 0 ue also included In&#13;
the buU&lt;11nc U 'f;ellua a.auna. The&#13;
buU&lt;11nc sHe Is adjacent to Intramural&#13;
and var.ll~ atbl lie llold ,&#13;
CamOlY Construcuon ot Kenosha&#13;
15 tb~ contractor.&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
THE RA. GER&#13;
GUEST SPEAKER, RAY ELIOT :&#13;
"A BUILDER OF FINE MEN "&#13;
Ray Eliot, Associate Director&#13;
of Athletics at the University of&#13;
Illinois, r etired in 1960 from active&#13;
football coaching after 28&#13;
y ears of service, 23 of which&#13;
were at his alma mater, Illinois.&#13;
· As head football coach at Ill&#13;
inois from 1942 through 1959,&#13;
Mr. Eliot won or shared three Big&#13;
Ten titles, and produced decisive&#13;
victories in the two Rose Bowl&#13;
games in which his teams appeared.&#13;
Earlier, while serving as one&#13;
of Bob Zuppke's line coaches, he&#13;
also was head hockey coach and&#13;
assistant baseball coach.&#13;
Mr. Eliot graduated from the&#13;
University of Illinois in· 1932 and&#13;
began his coaching career at Illinois&#13;
College, Jacksonville. He&#13;
served one year as assistant foot.&#13;
ball coach, then was promoted to&#13;
the head coaching job. He also&#13;
served as baseball coach, and in&#13;
both sports, his teams compiled&#13;
The&#13;
impressive records.&#13;
Among the many a wards this man&#13;
has earned are the Presidency&#13;
of the American Football Coaches&#13;
Association in 1955-56, the Los&#13;
Angeles Times' Coach of the Year&#13;
Award in 1951,HelmsHallofFame&#13;
in 1956, The Alonzo Stagg Award&#13;
in 1961, Chicago Midwest riters&#13;
Coach of the Year Award in 1959,&#13;
and an honorary life membership&#13;
in the American Football Coaches&#13;
Association in 1965.&#13;
Mr. Eliot has been asked to&#13;
coach several All Star teams:&#13;
among them the Chicago Tribune&#13;
All Star Game; 4 times coach of&#13;
East-West Shrine Game in San&#13;
Francisco; 4 times coach of the&#13;
Blue-Gray Game in Montgomery,&#13;
Alabama; 2 times coach of the&#13;
North-South Shrine Game in Hami&#13;
Florida; and several times&#13;
selected as the national coach of&#13;
the week.&#13;
As an Illini f&#13;
ment in life,&#13;
men."&#13;
His solid background inc chin&#13;
his dynamic speaking ability, hi&#13;
great feeling for and popularl ·&#13;
with p.;r ons from e ry of&#13;
life, all equip him perf&#13;
his assignment.&#13;
He I. a man w UI tlm&#13;
from a busy schedule to thank a&#13;
high school boy for an article on&#13;
him m the school paper, and a&#13;
man who receive fan m 11 from&#13;
the Arctic C ircl to To ·yo, Japan.&#13;
fr. Eliot Is a man ·m&#13;
you "Something To Thi&#13;
Educational&#13;
Philosoph}&#13;
and&#13;
Academic&#13;
Par side share the&#13;
teaching research and&#13;
phtlo oph&#13;
offer a broad&#13;
sciences&#13;
University of&#13;
Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Athletic&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&gt;&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
BASKETBALf:RINTERESTING&#13;
HEAD COACH STEVE STEPHENS CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
MOST VALUABLE&#13;
bf h prepped at Park,&#13;
Racine freshman Chuck Cham ISS, W 0 . bi' way this&#13;
burst onto the Parks ide basketball scene&#13;
d In a d 9365 points&#13;
year. The rangy 6'1 ", 170 lb. forward-guar score the s uad's&#13;
for 8 17.4 point-per-game average.and was named q&#13;
most valuable player in vote of his teammates.&#13;
Steve Stephens, basketball&#13;
coach at the University of&#13;
WIsconsin-Parks ide since&#13;
the new campus opened&#13;
wrth the 1968-69 season&#13;
and since 1964 In the UWKenosha&#13;
Center system, has&#13;
fashioned a 108-71 record&#13;
In those eight campaigns.&#13;
AggreSSIve Stephens teams&#13;
have been squads to reckon&#13;
with tn Wisconsin college&#13;
basketball since he joined&#13;
the UW staff after a five-year&#13;
h d ba ketball coach and chairman of the&#13;
I duc non d partment at Beaver Dam (Wis.)&#13;
cho I&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
Denn"I.(DelJ.e~ Routheawc transferred into UW-Parkside and ty took command of the freshman-dominated team.&#13;
~" rurtiveof Michigan started in 8veIYga~e for Coa:~&#13;
Stevenaand contributed 7.5 points a contest. With a year&#13;
experienceunder the Stephenssystem behi~ him, Aoutheaux&#13;
ahoukf be ready for a great t 972·73 campaign.&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Grand Forks&#13;
Fargo&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Luther College&#13;
U. of Missouri-Rolla&#13;
North Dakota&#13;
North Dakota State&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
S. Illinois-Edwardsville&#13;
Dec. I.&#13;
Dec. 2.&#13;
Dec. 6.&#13;
Dec. 7.&#13;
Dec. 12&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
De. 29&#13;
&amp;30 Boyne County Classic with&#13;
Mich. Tech, Lake Superior&#13;
State, Ferris State Big Rapids,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Platteville&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Detroit&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
.Marquette&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
, Lake Forest&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
UW_Platteville&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Aquinas&#13;
Indiana State-EvansvUle&#13;
Wayne State&#13;
St. Xavier&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Ripon&#13;
Purdue-North Central&#13;
Milton&#13;
Carroll&#13;
Lake Forest&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Dominican&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Jan. 6&#13;
Jan. 9&#13;
Jan. 13&#13;
Jan. 16&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan. 23&#13;
Jan. 27&#13;
Jan. 30&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Feb. 6&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 13&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 20&#13;
Feb. 23&#13;
Feb. 27&#13;
cnv In WI con In and Kenosha alumni&#13;
v rlOUS phy Ical education and coaches&#13;
SIgma Della PSI fraternIty and the&#13;
Ctub&#13;
He 81 0 A I A 0, met 14 golf chairman and&#13;
chaired ttl P rksrde UnIted Fund drive In 1970.&#13;
Th 35-y ar old St phens and hIS WIfe, Connie, have&#13;
8 d u ht r Honor 16&#13;
ASSISTANT KEN (RED) OBERBRUNER&#13;
Former professional baseball&#13;
and basketball player Ken&#13;
(Red) Oberbruner is the&#13;
assistant basketball coach&#13;
at UW-Parkslde Additional&#13;
duties Include student counseling&#13;
and coordinating the&#13;
equipment room operation.&#13;
A graduate of Notre Dame,&#13;
Red was athletic director&#13;
and coached football. basketball&#13;
and baseball for 24&#13;
years at nearby Milton (Wis )&#13;
College. He also directed&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
~&#13;
CALEDONlA (RACINE LUTHERAN)&#13;
RAeI NE (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (ST. JOSEPH)&#13;
GREENDALE&#13;
GREENDALE;&lt;&#13;
KENOSHA (ST. JOSEPH)&#13;
JEFFERSON&#13;
CUDAHY&#13;
BANGKOK, THAILAND&#13;
DELAVAN (DELAVAN-DARIEN)&#13;
BURLINGTON&#13;
EWEN, MICH. (G6GEBIC J,C.)&#13;
RACINE (CASE)&#13;
RACINE (ST. CATHERI~E)&#13;
KENOSHA (ST. JOSEPH)&#13;
KENOSHA (RACINE PARK)&#13;
iLLIOTT BRIESKE&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLI SS&#13;
*TOM HELLER&#13;
*MIKE JOYCE&#13;
*TOM JOYCE&#13;
~ILL LOOS&#13;
PETE NEVINS&#13;
*MARK PECK&#13;
PRAKONG (RAY) PHANTURAT&#13;
~ALE PH ILLIPS&#13;
BOB POPP&#13;
*DENNIS (DEKE) ROUTHEAUX&#13;
*PHIL STEWART&#13;
MORLEY TORGERSON&#13;
LARRY WADE&#13;
PETE WOOD&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
SO,&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
SO.&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
FR,&#13;
ASSISTANT JIM HOGAN&#13;
Former Perk id tar Jim Hogan, who averaged 21.1&#13;
poirus a game as 8 top notch guard on last year's team.&#13;
I aldong Stephens and Oberbruner this year in all&#13;
phil os of Ihe game 8S a student coach&#13;
HIS primary responsibility however, will rest with&#13;
the jumor varSIty player&#13;
A WINCHESTER PUBLIC&#13;
SHOOTING CENTER&#13;
NORTH SHORE WINCHESTER&#13;
PUBLIC SHOOTING CENTER&#13;
3109 I;J. S. Highway 41 (1-94)&#13;
Franksville, (Racine County) Wise. 53126&#13;
Telephone (Club) (414) 835-1112&#13;
* Open to the public&#13;
* Ammunition &amp; gun rental&#13;
* Open seven days a week&#13;
* Instruction available&#13;
1971 - 72 UW.pARKSIDE BASKETBALL TEAM&#13;
Front '0* k Chuck C"mbll a, Pete Nevins. Dele Phillips Bill Loa. Tom Jo La W&#13;
lot Aut Coec:h Juon~n Aut Coech Ken Obe br •M ' yce, rry ada. Back row,&#13;
Prdl 51ewet1 Bob Popp, T~ ....Iler. Pet. Wood ~k~n::~ut~ PecH~; Morley Torgerson, Ray Phanturat,&#13;
from pia""l ElliOtl .... k•. Mike Joyce' ux. ad Coach Steve Stephens. Missing SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN'S&#13;
MOST MODERN&#13;
TRAP and SKEET RANGE&#13;
THE RANGEll May, 1972 ~ B-AS- KET- B-AL~L: ~I NT--ER---=-Es-=-===11----=-=--=NG~-&#13;
H AO COACH STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
D1 tnct 1 gol f ch irm an a nd&#13;
Unit d Fund dn in 1 970&#13;
d h1 w 1f , Connie, have&#13;
OBERBRUNER&#13;
HOGAN&#13;
re t w ith&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
MOST VALUABLE&#13;
Racine freshman Chuck Chambliss , who prepped at Park,&#13;
burst onto the Parkside basketball scene in a big way this&#13;
year. The rangy 6'1 ", 170 lb. forward-guard scored 365 points&#13;
for a 17 .4 point-per-game average and was named the squad's&#13;
most valuable player in vote of his teammates.&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
Dennis (De~e). Routheaux tranaferred into UW-Parkslde and&#13;
promptly took command of the freshman-dominated team.&#13;
The 6'1" native of Michigan started in every game for Coach&#13;
Stevens and contributed 7.5 points a contest. With a year of&#13;
experience under the Stephens system behind him, Routheaux&#13;
should be ready for a great 1972· 73 campaign.&#13;
Dec. 1.&#13;
Dec. 2 .&#13;
Dec . 6.&#13;
Dec. 7.&#13;
Dec. 12&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
De. 29&#13;
30&#13;
Luther College&#13;
U. of Missouri-Rolla&#13;
North Dakota&#13;
North Dakota State&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
S. Illinois-Edwardsville&#13;
Boyne County Classic with&#13;
Mich. Tech, Lake Superior&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Grand Forks&#13;
Fargo&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
State, Ferris State Big Rapids,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Jan. 6&#13;
Jan. 9&#13;
Jan. 13&#13;
Jan. 16&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan. 23&#13;
Jan. 27&#13;
Jan. 30&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Feb. 6&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 13&#13;
F eb. 17&#13;
Feb. 20&#13;
Feb. 23&#13;
Feb. 27&#13;
UW-Platteville&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Aquinas&#13;
Indiana State-Evansville&#13;
Way ne State&#13;
St. Xavier&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
Ripon&#13;
Purdue-North Central&#13;
Milton&#13;
Carroll&#13;
Lake Forest&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
Dominican&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
UW-Mllwaukee&#13;
iLLI OTT BR 1 ESKE&#13;
*CHUCK CHAMBLISS&#13;
*TOM HELLER&#13;
*MIKE JOYCE&#13;
TOM JOYCE&#13;
ijILL LOOS&#13;
*PETE NEVINS&#13;
MARK PECK&#13;
PRAKONG (RAY) PHANTURAT&#13;
~ALE PH I LLI PS&#13;
Platteville&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Detroit&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
.Marquette&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
' Lake Forest&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
DEKE ROUTHEAUX&#13;
THE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
CALEDONIA (R~CINE LUTHERAN)&#13;
RAC I NE lPARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (ST, JOSEPH)&#13;
GREENDALE&#13;
GREEiNDALE;&#13;
KENOSHA (ST, JOSEPH)&#13;
JEFFERSON&#13;
CUDAHY&#13;
•BOB POPP&#13;
*DENNIS (DEKE) ROUTHEAUX&#13;
PHIL STEWART&#13;
MORLEY TORGERSON&#13;
LARRY WADE&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
so.&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
so.&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
BANGKOK, THAILAND&#13;
DELAVAN (DELAVAN-DARIEN)&#13;
BURLINGTON&#13;
EWEN, MICH, (G8GEBIC J C )&#13;
RACINE (CASE) I I&#13;
PETE WOOD&#13;
RACINE (ST, CATHERIN~)&#13;
KENOSHA (ST, JOSEPH)&#13;
KENOSHA (RACINE PARK)&#13;
A WINCHESTER PUBLIC&#13;
SHOOTING CENTER&#13;
NORTH SHORE WINCHESTER&#13;
PUBLIC SHOOTING CENTER&#13;
3109 y. s. Highway 41 (1-94)&#13;
Franksville, (Racine County) Wisc. 53126&#13;
Telephone (Club) (414) 835-1112&#13;
* Open to the pub I i.c&#13;
*Amm ·t· uni ton &amp; gun rental&#13;
* Open seven days a week&#13;
* Instruction available&#13;
SOUTHEASTERN WISCONSIN'S&#13;
MOST MODERN&#13;
TRAP and SKEET RANGE&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
o&#13;
RUDY ALVEREZ&#13;
1st CROSS-COUNTRY ALL-AMERICAN&#13;
ROBERT l. LAWSON, HEAD COACH&#13;
Now finishing his third&#13;
season as track and cross&#13;
country coach, Bob Lawson&#13;
has built a solid reputation&#13;
as one of America's&#13;
best young coaches&#13;
after 13 years as a college&#13;
mentor.&#13;
Lawson led the UW-Parkside&#13;
cross country team to&#13;
a NAIA District 14 championship&#13;
and a seventh&#13;
place finish in the nationals&#13;
last year; he was named&#13;
District 14 "Coach of the&#13;
Vear."&#13;
He led the Parks ide coaching team to the Philippines&#13;
in 1970 and stayed in the island republic seven months&#13;
as a teacher and coach of track and field. He is currently&#13;
a member of the USTFF executive committee.&#13;
serving a term that runs until 1973, and has coauthored,&#13;
with Tom Rosandich and Paul Ward, lIAmerican&#13;
Training Patterns," a coaching-training manual&#13;
explaining the American method.&#13;
Born in Aberdeen, Washin~ton in 1935, Bob graduated&#13;
from Southern Cal in 1 958 and added his masters at&#13;
Oregon State in 1 960.&#13;
While at Southern Cal, Lawson won two Pac-8 high&#13;
hurdle titles and placed fourth in both the NCAA and&#13;
AAU highs in 1958. But it was in the decathlon that&#13;
Bob made his mark, as he placed second In the AAU&#13;
ten-eventer in 1 955, had the eight best score of all&#13;
time and ranked third in the world.&#13;
The 1971 cross country season&#13;
Was easily the most seccessrui&#13;
in ParkSide's short history.&#13;
And In running thrOUgh a 4-4&#13;
dual season to high naUooal placing,&#13;
the Ranger harriers made&#13;
their mark on the cross country&#13;
record books. To wtt, Utey did&#13;
the fOlloWing:&#13;
·won the NAlADlstrlc1l4cbamptonshtp&#13;
·placed seventh in the NAtA&#13;
nattouaj cbampionship meet.&#13;
-bad an all-Amertca runner--&#13;
Parkside's nrst--ln Racine freshman&#13;
Rudy Alvarez.&#13;
-had another near-aU-America&#13;
in barefoot freshman Lucian Rosa,&#13;
wbo also won the Platteville Invitational&#13;
and District 14 tlUes.&#13;
-had the NAlA District 14 coach&#13;
of the year in Bob La WSOD.&#13;
-had the District 14 Runner-Up&#13;
Team of the year.&#13;
-Had lettermen, giving DeW bead&#13;
coacb Vic Godfte}' a solid bflse for&#13;
Improvement in 1972.&#13;
Success, to be sure; but it's all&#13;
relative aed God1'rey, wbo's blkin&amp;'&#13;
over the cross country cbares so&#13;
Lawson can devote more time to&#13;
the fall track program, knows the&#13;
Rangers wUl bave to keep worlrlog&#13;
bard.&#13;
But hard work was a tra.1t Of&#13;
the 1971 squad, and it may bave&#13;
taken it farther down the championshtp&#13;
trail than some teams&#13;
with more talent but less desire.&#13;
Alvarez, the nrst all-AmeriCA&#13;
runner in Parkside history, sboulcI&#13;
improve in 1972 and will give the&#13;
Ra.ngers a great 1-2 puDCb with&#13;
Rosa, woo wU1 be representingb1s&#13;
native Ceylon in the 1972OlympIcs&#13;
at Municb.&#13;
Rosa bothered by Ulness through&#13;
the last hal1 of the season, wU1&#13;
return in 1972 more accustomed&#13;
to b1lls and the race pace of&#13;
American cross country. He's a&#13;
good bet, as 15 Alvarez, to gain&#13;
nattooaJ recognitton next :year and&#13;
pUsh the Rangers a little turther&#13;
a100g the path towards the .. lIonal&#13;
champiooship.&#13;
Backlng the troot-runninc duo IS&#13;
a corps Of top runners, lDcluc1m&amp;:&#13;
Wausau's Dennis Biel, who'll be a&#13;
sophomore in the fall;Waterford's&#13;
pair offinerunners.Jtm cFadden&#13;
and Gary Lance, who wm be mto&#13;
their junior sea.soo and sopbomores-&#13;
to-be Bm Carlson of&#13;
Rhinelander and Jim Whitmore of&#13;
Moslnee.&#13;
RecrniUng 15 cotne well and&#13;
Godfrey expecfs to have a tIDe&#13;
buncb of barriers work in&amp;: out&#13;
here in the f:IJ.I. Reasooabb', be&#13;
expects to be cooteDd...lnl for lbe&#13;
District title and .. Uotal booors,&#13;
but with the add.1t1OQ of tbe enr ...&#13;
tough 1I0tre Dame lJrr1taUoaaJ to&#13;
the Partslde slate, the Ranrers'&#13;
competJtlon will be that much&#13;
tougher.&#13;
RacineT&#13;
sertling the employees .nd st.H of UW-P.Tkslde&#13;
•&#13;
ach&#13;
Sophomore, Jim McF-'den of W.. .,.,ont, .. e.ptein of the eq ..........&#13;
• key r'OlKe in lhe Rangera' f.UCOH ful ..... on'OO but tot en inJury nNt&#13;
the teil end of ltte cemp8tgn. hi. MCOf"d Maaon could heve bMn thM muetl&#13;
bett.... He'll return nut ye.- _ e two-time "'erman end g..... the ~&#13;
continued upet'tenc. and ~ip.&#13;
THE 1971 RANGER SQUAD&#13;
-Rudy Alvarez, Fre.shmaD, Racine&#13;
(Part); -Dennis Blel, Fretibman,&#13;
Wausau (East); BLU CarJs(Jft,&#13;
Fre.shman, RhLnfol.a.Ddfor; "ChUCk&#13;
Dettman, Sophomore, rtnette:&#13;
···Mlke De Wit. Senior, Keno&#13;
(Tremper); ·-Jtm McFadden,&#13;
Sophomore. Waterfordj -Keith&#13;
Merrltt, Sophomor, Kt'DOSba,&#13;
{Tremptr)j "Gary Lane • Sopbo-.&#13;
more. Wat rford; -Lucian Rosa,&#13;
Freohman, Kandy, CeyIOll; KIm&#13;
Whitmore, Fr hman, Wos&#13;
1972 CROSS COUNTRY SCHEDULE&#13;
sept. 19 Carthage, UW..\\l1ltewat r, UW...&#13;
Ste n.s POint&#13;
ro.-Chiaro Clrel&#13;
Eastena llllDols&#13;
UW-MUwauk Okt_,re t lnyltalloaaJ&#13;
lIotre Dame InvitaUonaI&#13;
Ma.rquell&#13;
USTFF Mld-Amerleao&#13;
Cba.mplOl1SlUp&#13;
State AAU Cba.mplOMhtp&#13;
1IA1A Dlstrlcl 14&#13;
1IA1A lIalloaaJ Meet&#13;
lIaUonaI MU .._&#13;
PARXSDlE&#13;
MU .... uk&#13;
Eau cWr.&#13;
LI rtJ. Mo.&#13;
Cblca&amp;o, U1,&#13;
Sept. 23&#13;
Sept. 30&#13;
Oet. 3&#13;
Oct. ?&#13;
Oct. 13&#13;
Oct. 21&#13;
Oct. 28&#13;
S n Point&#13;
PARKliDlE&#13;
Chari toa, lU.&#13;
M1I uk&#13;
PARXSDlE&#13;
Wotro Dam • IDcI.&#13;
PARXStDE&#13;
Noy, ..&#13;
lIoy. It&#13;
IIOY. 18&#13;
IIOY. 25&#13;
r Cr dO&#13;
convenient location&#13;
only six miles from the&#13;
Parkside campus&#13;
at&#13;
"Washington SquaTe"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
R.ciQe&#13;
SAME DAY SERVICE 0 LOA SAD SAVI GS&#13;
•&#13;
ay, 1972&#13;
RUDY ALVEREZ&#13;
1st CROSS-COUNTRY ALL-AMERICAN&#13;
ROBERT L. LAWSON, HEAD COACH&#13;
Now finishing his third&#13;
season as track and cross&#13;
country coach, Bob Lawson&#13;
has built a solid reputation&#13;
as one of America's&#13;
best young coaches&#13;
after 13 years as a college&#13;
mentor.&#13;
Lawson led the UW-Parkside&#13;
cross country team to&#13;
a NAIA District 14 championship&#13;
and a seventh&#13;
place finish in the nationals&#13;
last year; he was named&#13;
District 14 " Coach of the&#13;
Year ."&#13;
He led the Parkside coaching team to the Phil i ppines&#13;
in 1970 and stayed in the island republic seven months&#13;
as a teacher and coach of track and field . He is currently&#13;
a member of the USTFF executive committee,&#13;
serving a term that runs until 1973, and has coauthored,&#13;
with Tom Rosandich and Paul Ward , " American&#13;
Training Patterns," a coaching-training manual&#13;
explaining the American method .&#13;
Born in Aberdeen, Washin~ton in 1935, Bob graduated&#13;
from Southern Cal in 1 958 and added his masters at&#13;
Oregon State in 1960.&#13;
While at Southern Cal, Lawson won two Pac-8 high&#13;
hurdle titles and placed fourth in both the NCAA and&#13;
AAU highs in 1958. But it was in the de~athlon that&#13;
Bob made his mark, as he plac~d second in the AAU&#13;
ten-eventer in 1955, had the eight best score of all&#13;
time and ranked third in the world .&#13;
record books. To&#13;
the following:&#13;
• on the. 'Al.A Di rict 14champianship&#13;
*placed se .. -enth 1n th AJA&#13;
national championship meet.&#13;
•bad an all-Amer ca runner--&#13;
Parkside's !lrst--ln Rae fre -&#13;
man Rudy Alvarez.&#13;
*had another near-all-America&#13;
in barefoot freshman Lucian Rosa ,&#13;
who also won the Platteville Inv -&#13;
tational and Dlstr ct 14 uu .&#13;
*bad the .·ALA District 14 coac&#13;
of the year in Bo La&#13;
had the Dtstr ct 14 Runner-Up&#13;
Team of !he year.&#13;
*Had lettermen, gtnng oe h d&#13;
coach Vi.c Godfrey a lld bas for&#13;
improvement ln 1972.&#13;
Success , to be sure; bu it' all&#13;
relative and Godfrey, bo' tak&#13;
over the cross coun ry chores o&#13;
La ·son can d vo e more tire to&#13;
the fall track program, th&#13;
Rangers lll have to k p ork&#13;
hard.&#13;
But bard work a trait Of&#13;
the 1971 squad, and t ma bav&#13;
taken it farther down the chamto.&#13;
·lnee.&#13;
Recru ting ls go&#13;
Godfrey expect · to fin&#13;
bunch of barrier out&#13;
bere In the fall. R~.uua,,u.l •&#13;
expects to be cont ndlng f r lb•&#13;
District title and aatlonal honor ,&#13;
but wltb tbe addlUon Of th e rto&#13;
b otre Dame In t:a.Uooal to&#13;
the Parksl late, the Ra r '&#13;
compefitioo ww be that much&#13;
tougher.&#13;
1972 CRO S COUNTRY SCHEDULE&#13;
Racin T&#13;
"&#13;
serving the employees and st•H of UW-Parkside&#13;
convenient location&#13;
only six miles from the&#13;
Parkside campus&#13;
· at&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
SAME DAY SER ICE 0 LOA A D A I&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Pall: 6 THE RANGER --&#13;
The oach --- . UW_Parkside was a wtrmer again&#13;
Fencing at ted an 11..9 woo-lost&#13;
in 19'72 as the Rangfeirfsth pinasthe prestigiouS Great&#13;
mark and gained a season Park-&#13;
Lakes meet to close their regular : and&#13;
side defeated BLg Teo schools Ohio State&#13;
:eu:::ta and added other victories over such Iowa state, ChiCago, Milwaukee Tech, Oberlin&#13;
Missouri-KansaS City and Trl-Slate.&#13;
But competition 1nd1vldua1-wise, 1s far trom&#13;
, ohn Tank who won the&#13;
over Both sophomore J ,&#13;
WlSC"mstn closed reu tournament, and senior John&#13;
HanDllk a strong second at the Great Lakes tourney,&#13;
are e~ted to pursue more tournament wtns in&#13;
the coming weeks. And for both Hein and the team,&#13;
nest year premises to be even better J with Hanwit&#13;
the only senior .&#13;
In his time at the University&#13;
of Wlsconsln·Parkside, Loran&#13;
Hein has been called both&#13;
the Lombardi of fencing"&#13;
and another Clark Kent&#13;
Both are likely true In his&#13;
five years at the Kenosha&#13;
school, Hem has built a team&#13;
from scratch that today challenges&#13;
- and often as not,&#13;
defeats - the giants of Midwest&#13;
fencing&#13;
His youthful teams, built&#13;
maInly of Kenosha area student&#13;
wltn no prror fenCing experience. have proved&#13;
....ncommonly succes ful aq;unsl long-established Midwe&#13;
t fenClnq chooL uch as Michigan State, Wiscon&#13;
In Omo State, Notre Dame, Wayne State and o tr ou&#13;
H",,' d sn t look like a coach instead, hiS appearan&#13;
I more thilt of tne m trucror of mathematics&#13;
which he I tall be pectacted, mild-mannered.&#13;
But tll philo ophy I that hiS sport is to be enjoyed&#13;
(tnd he coach In that manner "I'm not coaching&#13;
n t am, he ay "I'm coaching indrvtduats "&#13;
And '0 h IS One of hrs I g71· 72 fencers, John&#13;
H"nl Ilk we on the UMed Stare team that played&#13;
nth World Student Game In Italy during the summ&#13;
r of 1970 Anoth r, Clark Anderson fenced in&#13;
the Milrt,", and Ro 51 International Tournament in&#13;
ew York," 1969 And a third, Keith Herbrechtsm&#13;
ler I todny the 8 1St ant fencing coach at the Li S Military Acnd my and. credits that opportunity&#13;
ro th I on he learned from Hein. who first started&#13;
him on the road to fenCing success and a No. 11&#13;
nauon 1 tOil rank 109 Ie s than two years ago&#13;
A 1959 qr duat8 of Milton (WIS ) College. Loran earned&#13;
hi master at Northea I Missouri State Teachers&#13;
Coli go 10 19"6 after five years as a mathematics intru&#13;
tor t St John', Military Academy in Delafield, W,.&#13;
He I a m moor of the Sigma Phi Zeta education&#13;
IroterMy and the Sigma Delta PSI physical education&#13;
fraternity&#13;
lOft ... H(IN&#13;
PETE SHEMANSKE&#13;
CAPTAIN &amp; MOST VALUABLE&#13;
THE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
STURTEVANT (BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
RACINE&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
WAUWATOSA (EAST)&#13;
RACINE (HORLICK)&#13;
KENOSHA (BRADFORD)&#13;
CHARLES CHRISTENSEN* FR.&#13;
JOHN HANZALlK**** SR.&#13;
DON KOSER* JR.&#13;
ROY MEDINA FR.&#13;
RICK MOFFETT SO.&#13;
KIM NELSON SO.&#13;
HENRY RICHTER FR.&#13;
PETER SHEMANSKE*** JR.&#13;
JOHN TANK** SO.&#13;
BERNIE VASH* SO.&#13;
STEVE VEPRASKAS* FA.&#13;
CAPTAIN - PETER SHEMANSKE&#13;
* LETTERS EARNED&#13;
,&#13;
American&#13;
Motors&#13;
Sigma Phi Zeta education&#13;
D It P , ph ·sical educat ion&#13;
,&#13;
American&#13;
Motors&#13;
- . . t OW-Parkside was a· wtnner again&#13;
Fencmg a ted an 11-9 won-lost&#13;
in 1972 as ~edru:~ :sthe prestigious Great&#13;
mark and ga ~,1,.r season. ParkLakes&#13;
meet to close their rei;...- d&#13;
side defeated Big Ten schools Ohio State an h&#13;
Unn ta and added other victories over sue&#13;
foes ::o Iowa State, Chicago, Milwaukee Tech, Oberlin&#13;
iissouri-Kansas City and Tri-State. fr&#13;
But competition, individual-wise, is far :n&#13;
over Both sophomore John Tank, who ~on e&#13;
· t and seruor John&#13;
wtscoosin closed foil tournamen,&#13;
Hanzallk a strong secood at the Great Lakes tourney,&#13;
are e~ted to pursue more tournament wtns in&#13;
the coming weeks, And for both Hein and the team,&#13;
next year promises to be even better' with Hanzallk&#13;
the only senior.&#13;
PETE SHEMANSKE&#13;
CAPTAIN &amp; MOST VALUABLE&#13;
THE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
CHARLES CHRISTENSEN* FR.&#13;
JOHN HANZALIK**** SR .&#13;
DON KOSER * JR .&#13;
ROY MEDINA FR .&#13;
RICK MOFFETT SO.&#13;
KIM NELSON SO.&#13;
HENRY RICHTER FR .&#13;
PETER SHEMANSKE*** JR.&#13;
JOHN TANK** SO .&#13;
BERNIE VASH* SO .&#13;
STEVE VEPRASKAS * FR.&#13;
CAPTAIN - PETER SHEMANSKE&#13;
* LETTERS EARNED&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
STURTEVANT(BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
RACINE&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
WAUWATOSA (EAST)&#13;
RACINE (HORLICK)&#13;
KENOSHA(BRADFORD)&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
FENCING&#13;
1972·73 SCHEDULE&#13;
-PARTlALDec.&#13;
3&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
illinOis Open&#13;
Notre Dame, Ill-Chteago&#13;
Circle&#13;
Mich. State, UW-Madison&#13;
Detroit, IIliDOfs&#13;
Ohio State, Chicago&#13;
Great Lakes Championship&#13;
Champalgn ,ill.&#13;
Chteago, OJ.&#13;
E. Lansing,Mlch&#13;
Champalgn,ill.&#13;
PARKSlDE&#13;
PARKSlDE&#13;
TOM BOTHE&#13;
Great Lakes Invltalional fencer-s who fln, hed fourth. • I m betund po fOlt W.~ St" end H'e&#13;
Dame included (I-r) Don KO&amp;ef" Pete Sheman • Ben'ue Vash R ff , John Hana"" John Tin" end&#13;
Coach loran Hein. Koser. Tan. Hanzel. aod f hman JeH Dougta will be: com mg in III at c M.dwest&#13;
Fencing CNImpionshlps at 8aute er.... M.eh&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 24&#13;
March 3&#13;
March 10&#13;
GOLF: On the Florida Links 1972 ROSTER&#13;
COACH: STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
Player&#13;
*Bothe, Tom&#13;
Dr iefke, Randy&#13;
Feiner, Tom&#13;
Fox, Dave&#13;
Fox, Don&#13;
***Guttormsen, Leif&#13;
Hjortnes s, Mark&#13;
Nevins, Pete&#13;
Thompson, Dean&#13;
Vakoa, Jim.&#13;
Weyrauch, Dan&#13;
*Willems, Rick&#13;
Class&#13;
So.&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
THE SEASON&#13;
A . spring trip to Florida highlighted&#13;
UW-Parkside golf activity&#13;
in 1972.&#13;
Coached by Steve Stevens, the&#13;
Rangers traveled to Tampa, Fla.,&#13;
for a week over spring break and&#13;
got in a lot of pr;'ctice time on the&#13;
dry links. The team also held an&#13;
intra-squad tournament to determine&#13;
who would start in the opener&#13;
against Lake Forest and Rockford.&#13;
And when the Rangers finally got&#13;
back into the cold North, they found&#13;
the weather just that--coldand wet.&#13;
After a couple days postponement,&#13;
the Lake Forest/Rockford match&#13;
was finally played and the Rangers&#13;
had bagged two wins t~ start ott&#13;
the season on a successtul note.&#13;
Other matches followed with&#13;
Whitewater, Dominican, UW-MUwaukee,&#13;
Milton, Marquette, Northwestern,&#13;
UW_Madlson and other&#13;
NAIA District 14 Schools and the&#13;
Rangers were holding their own,&#13;
with a .500 record at the midway&#13;
point.&#13;
They competed this weekend in&#13;
Hometown (H. 5.)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Racine (Park)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha (TRemper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Racine (Park)&#13;
Jefferson&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
Racine (HorUc.k.)&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
Kenosha (St. Joseph)&#13;
the NAlA District 14 tourney at&#13;
Green Lake.&#13;
Stephens top golfers inCluded&#13;
Tom Feiner J a transfer from the&#13;
University of Houston who led the&#13;
club in the early going; Kenosha&#13;
senior Lei! Guttomrsen, a threeyear&#13;
letterman lor Stephens wbc&#13;
holds the Parks ide record OIlthe&#13;
petrUying Springs course wlth a&#13;
68- and sophomores Jim vskcs&#13;
fr~m Rae tne and Tom Bothe tram&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
JIM VAI(OS&#13;
HOME OF THE BIG MAC&#13;
AND&#13;
DELICIOUS FRENCH FRIES&#13;
52nd St. '" 40th Avenue&#13;
Sheriden Road '" 818t Street&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Dec. 3&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 24&#13;
March 3&#13;
March 10&#13;
FENCING&#13;
1972- 73 SCHEDULE&#13;
-PARTIALIllinois&#13;
Open&#13;
Notre Dame, Ill-Chicago&#13;
Circle&#13;
Mich. State, UW-Madlson&#13;
Detroit, Illinois&#13;
Ohio State, Chicago&#13;
Great Lakes Championship&#13;
Champa!gn,lll,&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
E, Lansing, 1ich&#13;
Champaign ,Ill.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
GOLF : On the Florida Links&#13;
1972 ROSTER&#13;
COACH: STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
Player&#13;
*Bothe, Tom&#13;
Driefke, Randy&#13;
Feiner, Tom&#13;
Fox, Dave&#13;
Fox, Don&#13;
***Guttormsen, Leif&#13;
Hjortness, Mark&#13;
Nevins, Pete&#13;
Thompson, Dean&#13;
Vakoa, Jim.&#13;
Weyrauch, Dan&#13;
*Willems, Rick&#13;
Class&#13;
So.&#13;
So,&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr&#13;
Sr,&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Hometown (H. S.)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Racine (Park)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Ken&lt;?sha (TRemper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Racine (Park)&#13;
Jef1er n&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
Racine (Horllck)&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
Kenosha (St. Joseph)&#13;
THE SEASON&#13;
A spring trip to Florida highlighted&#13;
UW-Parkside goll activity&#13;
in 1972.&#13;
Coached by Steve Stevens, the&#13;
Rangers traveled to Tampa, Fla.,&#13;
for a week over spring break and&#13;
got in a lot of prictice time on the&#13;
dry links. The team also held an&#13;
intra-squad tournament to detE,&gt;rmine&#13;
who would start in the opener&#13;
against Lake Forest and Rockford.&#13;
And when the Rangers finally got&#13;
back into the coldNorth, they found&#13;
the weather just that--cold and wet.&#13;
After a couple days postponement,&#13;
the Lake Forest/Rockford match&#13;
was finally played and the Rangers&#13;
had bagged two wins t~ start ott&#13;
the season on a successM note.&#13;
Other matches followed with&#13;
Whitewater, Dominican, UW-Mllwaukee,&#13;
Milton, Marquette, Northwestern,&#13;
UW-Madlson and other&#13;
NAIA District 14 Schools and the&#13;
Rangers were holding their own,&#13;
with a .5oo record at the midway&#13;
point.&#13;
They competed this weekend in&#13;
the NAIA District 14 tourney at&#13;
Green Lake.&#13;
Stephens top golfers includ&#13;
Tom Feiner, a transfer from&#13;
University of Housto ho led th&#13;
club in the early going; K nos&#13;
senior Leif Guttomr en, thr -&#13;
year letterman for Stepb n ho&#13;
holds the Parkside record on th&#13;
Petrifying Springs cours Ith&#13;
68· and sophomores Jim Vako&#13;
fr~m Racine and Tom Both from&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
TOM BOTHE&#13;
HOME OF THE BIG MAC&#13;
AND&#13;
DELICIOUS FRE CH FRIES&#13;
52nd St. 40th Av nu&#13;
Sh rid n Ro d &amp; 81 I Sir&#13;
Page 8&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
BAN&#13;
Program&#13;
Welcome&#13;
Invocation&#13;
h Hanzalik, President,VrJ! Jo n II&#13;
Leonard Bullock, UW-Park~&#13;
Church&#13;
Dinner d Guests _ Thomat&#13;
P&#13;
' of Honore Introduction S ker - Ray Eliot,AJif"&#13;
b Guest pea&#13;
Address y , s most valuablesandSlof captain , , Presentation Alumni Award _ ()flO&#13;
Special Awards - d _ AI De Simonl,Ranger Awar , ~&#13;
A. li-Americ'aAwa.rds - IrvinG&#13;
Outstan dirng Athlete Award _ Ott&#13;
Athletic Di.rec tor 's Award - 11rO~&#13;
CONG&#13;
PARKSI&#13;
E.F.MADRt&#13;
1831~&#13;
KE&#13;
DI~&#13;
BUDWEISEI&#13;
••• !IX: II'" tJt. b MEISl&#13;
p THE RANGER&#13;
Program&#13;
Welcome&#13;
Invocation&#13;
Dinner&#13;
BAN&#13;
- John Hanzalik, President V , a,51&#13;
Leonard Bullock, UW-Park~&#13;
Church&#13;
Introduction of Honored Guests - Thomae P·&#13;
Address by Guest Speaker - Ray Eliot , A&#13;
Presentation of captains, most valuables ands&#13;
Special Awards - Alumni Award - o,1&#13;
Ranger Award - Al De Simone .&#13;
All-America Awards - Irvin o&#13;
Outstanding Athlete Award _&#13;
Athletic Director's Award - Tho&#13;
CONG&#13;
PARKSID&#13;
E.F. -MAD&#13;
1831&#13;
KE&#13;
DI&#13;
BUDWEISE&#13;
MEIS&#13;
ClUET&#13;
rsity Club&#13;
ude trackman and lay minister in the Baptist&#13;
8 P. Rosandich, Athletic Director&#13;
isociate Athletic Director, University of Illinois&#13;
d senior awards. by coaches&#13;
lario Madrigrano, President, Nat!. Varsity Club&#13;
ie, Executive Director, Rarkside 200&#13;
G.Wyllie&#13;
Otto F. Bayer&#13;
ThomasP. Rosandich&#13;
~ULATIONS&#13;
ATHLETES&#13;
~IGRANOI INC.&#13;
55th street&#13;
~NOSHA&#13;
ISTRIBUTORS OF&#13;
BUDWEISER&#13;
MICHELOB&#13;
:R MALTLIQUOR&#13;
~TERBRAU BEERS&#13;
THE RA GER&#13;
\&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
UET&#13;
sity Club&#13;
ide trackman and lay minister in the Baptist&#13;
P. Rosandich, Athletic Director&#13;
sociate Athletic Director, University of Illino i s&#13;
senior awards by coaches&#13;
rio Madrigrano, President, Natl. Varsity Club&#13;
e, Executive Director, Parkside 200&#13;
. Wyllie&#13;
Otto F. Bayer&#13;
homas P. Rosandich&#13;
..&#13;
JULATIONS&#13;
E ATHLETES&#13;
IGRANO, INC.&#13;
55th street&#13;
NOSHA&#13;
STRIBUTORS OF&#13;
BUDWEISER&#13;
MICHELOB&#13;
R MALT LIQUOR&#13;
TER BRAU BEERS&#13;
'&#13;
THE R GER&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Tics: QUALITY 10&#13;
'!be UW_Parkslde gymnastics&#13;
team, 1IDdl!r ttrst-year ccecbDave&#13;
DoaI H..,. lacked depth but not&#13;
mach else as three Rangers dtaqulIfted&#13;
lor tile oaUooaIs.&#13;
8eIllOr Warren McGUUvray t the&#13;
moM n..tuable IJ-moast, placed&#13;
elebt III lbo an-around In the NAtA&#13;
.tiODIl meet .t Eastern. nnoots.&#13;
MeGtlUYr&amp;Y was Parkside's top&#13;
performer throucboot the season&#13;
UllI bad t-.led 45 points In the&#13;
an-aroomd·&#13;
Two lrHhmeD belped the Park-&#13;
_ide cause • lot. Kerln O'Nell,&#13;
.I""ted captain of the squad, posted&#13;
qua.lltyme scores In the rlogS to&#13;
make it to the NAlA and then just&#13;
ml'- C"lt~ Into the finals.&#13;
K rJ") Pfe1ter,ILteO'NeUaTremper&#13;
prewc:t. jOined the team at mJd-_ bot still posted three&#13;
'.0 or _er quahfYlDg marks aDd&#13;
mack&gt; it to Charleston, where he&#13;
flDabed 1'7Ih In the large field.&#13;
• LETTERS EARNED&#13;
BURBANK, CAL,&#13;
KENOSHA (TREt~PER)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
SR. WARREN McGILLIVRAY&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR .&#13;
most valuable&#13;
.... in of "- Po...... Gym Mtrics tum. competes on th. Rill&#13;
1972· 73&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
It's the real thing. CQ~e. SCHEDULE&#13;
Nov. 24, Midwest Open;&#13;
Dec. 1, Chicago, PARKSIDE&#13;
Dec. 8, UW-Stout Menomonie&#13;
Dec. 15, UW-Ea~Claire PARKSIDE&#13;
'&#13;
Jan. 20, UW-Madison, Madison,&#13;
Jan. 27,UW- Whitewater, UWPlatteville,&#13;
PARKSIDE,&#13;
Feb. 3, UW-Oshkosh, St. Cloud&#13;
State, Oshkosh,&#13;
Feb. 9, Western Illinois, Macomb,&#13;
ru.&#13;
Feb. 10, Eastern Ill., Charleston,&#13;
01.&#13;
Feb. 17, Triton Invitational, River&#13;
Grove, m,&#13;
Feb. 23, Mankato State Mankato&#13;
Minn. "&#13;
March 2, Triton, PARKSlDE,&#13;
March 23-24, NAIA Championships.&#13;
i!I·!illl!IIIIIIIIIIIII·III·IIIII!I!IIIIIIIIII!!·!1111IIIIII!IIIII!I!IIIIIIIII!II!IIII.II&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
ICS: QUALITY&#13;
FR,&#13;
LETTERS EAR ED&#13;
BURBA K, CAL,&#13;
E IOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
E OSHA (TRE PER)&#13;
It's the real thing. CQ_tce.&#13;
WARREN McGILLIVRA Y&#13;
most valuable&#13;
1972 - 73&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Nov. 24, Midwest Open·&#13;
Dec. 1, Chicago, PARKSIDE&#13;
Dec. 8, UW-Stout, Menomonie,&#13;
Dec. 15, UW-Eau Claire PARKSIDE&#13;
'&#13;
Jan. 20, UW-Madison, Madison,&#13;
Jan. 27,UW- Whitewater, uwPlatteville,&#13;
PARKSIDE,&#13;
Feb. 3 , UW-Oshkosh, St. Cloud&#13;
State, Oshkosh,&#13;
Feb. 9, Western Illinois, Macomb,&#13;
Ill.&#13;
Feb. 10, Eastern Ill Ch ., arleston,&#13;
Ill.&#13;
Feb. 17 , Triton Invitational River&#13;
Grove, Ill. '&#13;
Feb. 2 3, Mankato State Mankato&#13;
Minn. ' '&#13;
March 2, Triton PARKSIDE&#13;
M ' • arch 23-24, NAIA Championships.&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
..&#13;
bright note in 1971 even though ad started with a 2-1 triumph • over UW .. the Rangers suffered a tough loss And Mad!.son.&#13;
in their last game of the year, I-Ion they tied UW-Green Bay&#13;
But the Rangers also finished the Phoenix field in a&#13;
6-6-1 for the year and counted rough-and_tOUgh game that served&#13;
among their victories decisions :~ a h~relUde to the NAJA play_&#13;
over UW-Platteville, Ohio State InWU:h closed out the season,&#13;
Notre Dame and Wisconsin and ~ lt t one--and in some ways&#13;
tie with OW -Green Bay 'I was anti-cllmatic atter Park-&#13;
They played eventual• NAIAna- U8Wde-'sPladtrtam attc overtime win over&#13;
tional champion Quincy to a 2-2 off dev~e in the first playdeadlock&#13;
through two periods be- Ran:"un 3"0 reen Bay upended the&#13;
fore faltering a Iostn. g .~-. 5 • in. flght.flIIed ga by a re-, to move to the N me&#13;
spectable 4-2 count in the First Joe 0 AlAAreapJayotfs.&#13;
Okt be t T rr again was an all-Mid. a rfes ournament - west pi k d They came back the day after with Mcil&lt;an aJlso was co--captain&#13;
e enretta and most&#13;
that loss to Quincy and white_ ValUable. Freshmen Rick Lechusz&#13;
washed Ohio State of the Big Ten and R,'ck KlI f M&#13;
' ps 0 tlwaukee also 2-0, to preserve the dominance were topcontrtbutors to the Ran r&#13;
over Big Ten schools Which they attack and herald a bright tu~e&#13;
for Parkstde soccer.&#13;
Name&#13;
*Andacht, Chris&#13;
"Bever-Idge, Doug&#13;
"Br ieske, Elliott&#13;
*Hopkins, Matt&#13;
*Jenrette, Mike&#13;
1971 Roster&#13;
Pos, Class Hometown (H. S.)&#13;
LW Sr. Franklin&#13;
B So.&#13;
LFB Fr. Caledonia (Rac. Luth.)&#13;
RW FR. Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
RI Jr. Poo.Uac, Mich.&#13;
(Taipei American)&#13;
Cudahy&#13;
Milwaukee (BoysJTech)&#13;
Milwaukee (Don Bosco)&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Racine&#13;
Marshtield&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
(LIverpool. EnglancO&#13;
Bangkok, Thailand&#13;
Racine&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
Kenosha. (Bradford)&#13;
*Kiefer, Wolf Dieter&#13;
"Ktlps , Rick&#13;
*Lechusz, Rick&#13;
"Levonowich, Pete&#13;
***MarkovisJ Stan&#13;
***Martinson, Tim&#13;
***Nassauer, Kurt&#13;
**Orr, Joe&#13;
CFB Jr.&#13;
LW Fr.&#13;
CF Fr.&#13;
F Sr.&#13;
LHB -s«.&#13;
RFB Jr.&#13;
RW Jr.&#13;
RHB So.&#13;
*Phanturat, Ray&#13;
*Schneider J Dietmar&#13;
***Thomsen, Tom&#13;
*Van Tine, Ed&#13;
"Weyrauch, Paul&#13;
*denotes letters earned&#13;
LI&#13;
RFB&#13;
o&#13;
RW&#13;
G&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Jr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Jr.&#13;
GOAL FOR PARKSIDE I I I I&#13;
i JOE ORR&#13;
Co-eaptain and most valuable, Joe&#13;
Orr was named to the All-Midwest&#13;
team for the second straight year_&#13;
1'8 II&#13;
LECHUSZ WITH THE BALL&#13;
The Rangers effort againsl 8\fenlual natMK\81c~mp'(ln Quincy In I Ol.tobeirl&#13;
have been one of their flnesl performance", of the year Here lop fr hm8n R Lechuu 'NOt.. I IM~"&#13;
while co-ceptem Mike Jenrette moves up to give. I IInOe QuIncy won the game .2 aflet' II" ng • qu 2.()&#13;
lead, bUl tbe Rang8f"6 lied It up t 2.. 11and ga'lftl their oppotl«lt • bll of • -elr The Reno-' I Otuo St I&#13;
2.() In the consolation game of the toumey&#13;
Geza Mart.lDy. appointed bead soccer coach at&#13;
the Unrverslty of WISCOOSin-Parkstde in the ta.lJ&#13;
ot 19'71, brought with him a wide ra.nee 01 t:eaehLnc&#13;
and coaching experieoce 10 both men's andwomen's&#13;
sports and phys1eal ..,tin".&#13;
Martiny was a prote!ilSOTof blolog1ca.l sc eoce,&#13;
pbysiCal etlJcaUOD and ~th at St. Fl"'aDCtsxavier&#13;
University in Nova Scot1a I..Dd at the Call ge of&#13;
the Holy Name in 0I.kland, Call1., before COD1ln1'&#13;
to Parkslde.&#13;
With extensive, albeU uDOftlcial, coach.1nC of&#13;
gymnastiCS. soccer I teDC1nC. aterpolo and otber&#13;
aquatic sports to his credit, th1s D-m.nastlC5&#13;
aquattc spons to his credit, th1s versatUe man&#13;
bas estabhs.hed women's and rtrl!:' CYmIlUUC$&#13;
classes 1n Racine.&#13;
Im~1&#13;
PARKSIDE Oct 6&#13;
I...ake Forest, W.&#13;
Locl&lt;porl. Ill.&#13;
P mE&#13;
Madl_&#13;
r t&#13;
Toumam t&#13;
W-Pla vIII&#13;
Marqu tfe •&#13;
- Gr !lay&#13;
'AlA District 14&#13;
Sept. 9.&#13;
Sept. 16&#13;
Sept. 20&#13;
Sept. 23&#13;
Sept. 30&#13;
DominlCaD&#13;
LAke Forest&#13;
Lewis CoHere&#13;
S. D1. Edwardsville&#13;
0'\\' -MadisoD&#13;
UW-PARK IDE PEOPLE GET&#13;
RED CARPET TREATl\IE T&#13;
AT&#13;
2704 Lot"rop A ..... Ilocine. Wisconsin&#13;
(Of course, so does everyone else!)&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
SOCCER: SOiiie Big Wins Parkside soccer ended on a&#13;
bright note in 1971, even though&#13;
the Rangers sufft!red a tough loss&#13;
in their last game of the year.&#13;
had started With a 2-1 triumph&#13;
But the Rangers also finished&#13;
6-6-1 for the year and counted&#13;
among their victories decisions&#13;
over OW-Platteville, Ohio State,&#13;
Notre Dame and Wisconsin and a&#13;
tie with UW-Green Bay.&#13;
They played eventual NAIA national&#13;
champion Quincy to a 2-2&#13;
deadlock through two periods before&#13;
faltering a losing by a respec&#13;
table 4-2 count in the First&#13;
Oktoberfest Tournament.&#13;
They came back the day after&#13;
that loss to Quincy and whitewashed&#13;
Ohio State of the Big Ten,&#13;
2-0, to preserve the dominance&#13;
over Big Ten schools which they&#13;
over OW-Madison.&#13;
And they tied UW-Green Bay&#13;
1-1 on the Phoenix field ln a&#13;
rough-and-tough game that s rved&#13;
as a prelude to the NAIA playoff&#13;
which closed out the season.&#13;
In that one--anct in some ways&#13;
it was anti-climatic after Parkside's&#13;
dramatic overtime wtnover&#13;
OW-Platteville in the first playoff&#13;
round--Green Bay upended the&#13;
Rangers 3-0 in a fight-filled game&#13;
to move to the NAIAAreaplayotts.&#13;
Joe Orr again was an all- Udwest&#13;
pick and also was co-captain&#13;
with Mike Jenrette and most&#13;
valuable. Freshmen Rick Lechusz&#13;
and Rick Kilps of Milwaukee also&#13;
were top contributors to the Ranger&#13;
attack and herald a bright future&#13;
for Parkside soccer.&#13;
1971 Roster&#13;
Name Pos. Class Hometown (H. S.) *Andacht, Chris LW Sr. Franklin *Beveridge, Doug B So.&#13;
*Brieske, Elliott LFB Fr. Caledonia (Rae. Luth.) *Hopkins, Matt RW FR. Kenosha (Tremper) *Jenrette, Mike RI Jr. Pontiac, Mich.&#13;
(Taipei American)&#13;
*Kiefer, Wolf Dieter CFB Jr. Cudahy&#13;
*Kilps, Rick LW Fr. Milwaukee (Boys'Tech)&#13;
*Lechusz, Rick CF Fr. Milwaukee (Don Bosco)&#13;
*Levonowich, Pete F Sr. Kenosha ***Markovis, Stan LHB · Jr. Racine ***Martinson, Tim RFB Jr. Marshfield&#13;
***Nassauer, Kurt RW Jr. Kenosha (Tremper}&#13;
**Orr, Joe RHB So. Milwaukee&#13;
{Liverpool. England)&#13;
*Phanturat, Ray LI Fr. BangkOk, Thailand&#13;
*Schneider, Dietmar RFB Fr. Racine&#13;
***Thomsen, Tom G Jr. Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
*Van Tine, Ed RW Sr. Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
*Weyrauch, Paul G Jr. Kenosha (Bradford)&#13;
*denotes letters earned&#13;
Gez.a&#13;
the Un&#13;
LECHUSZ&#13;
UVl-PARK IDE PE&#13;
RED RPE TR&#13;
Bank of Elmwood&#13;
JOE ORR&#13;
Co-captain and most valuab~e , Jo~&#13;
Orr was named to the AII-Midwes&#13;
team for the second straight year.&#13;
2704 lafltrop AY .• Rocin~, Wisconsin&#13;
(Of cour e. o do&#13;
1M be, federal Oepodl I , ,..nee Corpo,ot-&#13;
11&#13;
Jr&#13;
Jr&#13;
Jr&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
Jr&#13;
RECKA&#13;
A _ and geoera1lY tnexper-&#13;
IOD&lt;ed UW_Parkslde tennis team&#13;
cIId .-tIy _I lbat kind 01team&#13;
..-IIy-'.&#13;
It played """,edIclllb1y and lor&#13;
most coachf's, such play might&#13;
be- f'ooacb to drive them up the&#13;
pI"Oftrbtal nll. but cceen Diek&#13;
F recka ba.s patience and foresight.&#13;
He' Il:DOWs the CTouP or players&#13;
be bas this yeaT could be pretty&#13;
cood nut lime around and anY&#13;
10&amp;_ th15 feu mIgIlt ~sl pro-&#13;
TIde tbt' ruel for next year's nre&#13;
ta tile form ofnluableexperience.&#13;
Keaosba sopbOmore Mike5a.fagO&#13;
p1a ed • o. 1 ~hinCles for Parkatdt&#13;
this yeer and had 8 .500&#13;
_rk bead~ into tbe balrway&#13;
polDt of lbe on. Backing him&#13;
reSkk&#13;
re SkiP Jone • a freshman nom&#13;
"111. Park lU., who bad some&#13;
pr 1 ltIg!l schOOl creoentJala&#13;
and. pped In at the No. 2&#13;
a.taeo and Jones also teamed&#13;
t 1 doublE'S and proved an&#13;
adept e blDatton. KenOsha sophre&#13;
DaD Ileczkow. kl played&#13;
ec of the seasoo at No. 3&#13;
Rae tor Da..-eHerchen,&#13;
Mlea:kO"..ul a relurnUli let-&#13;
• was at No.4 and Kenosha&#13;
r DeMls Halverson was in&#13;
at 0.5.&#13;
Artotber ho saw a lot of acuao&#13;
Radue ).mtor Todd Nel-&#13;
SOD. both at . '0. 6 sLagles andat&#13;
a _I. pol.&#13;
The _rs dumped Dominican&#13;
by a Inpslded 13-1 count In an&#13;
.rl1 aDd lost close eDc&#13;
r to. ArqUette and UWU&#13;
~. Tbey met U\\' -Green&#13;
Bay today In C...., Bay and wUl&#13;
playa. !lUlD T\lesda,y and In the&#13;
"AlA D(5tTlCt at \\'b.itewaler next&#13;
...s.&#13;
DENNIS HALVERSON&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
MIKE SAFAGO&#13;
:!iii!!:t::;~t:~::::;~:::~::~~:;:::~~:l;;~:::~::::;~~m~~~~:~:!::::;::~~;~:~:::~;;!:::::!~:?cation of the National Varsity Club for the Office of Athletics. :}i&#13;
:=::;= Pictured on the cover: AIda Madrlgrano, Kenosha resident :::::::&#13;
:~:~a:~nd Racine businessman, donated two large, scoreboards to :;:;:;:&#13;
':~:~th::e new physical education and athletics building at Parksfde. ;~:~:~&#13;
{~~For this continued service to Parkstde and devotion to athletics ~t~&#13;
;::::: be is honored as °Ranger of the Year" with the Ranger W;:::::&#13;
::;:;:he Is honored as uRanger of the Year" with the Ranger Award.::;:;:;&#13;
::( Dick Eljtson sits on Parkstde'e Athletic Board and the execu- (ij~&#13;
:;:;l:i:ve bOard of Parkside 200. He has worked during Parkside's. ::::::&#13;
=;:;:;shorl history at building up the university in the community. A::;=;= ~:~:li:etterman in baseball at Wisconsin during his undergraduate {;~&#13;
::;:;: days, he will be presented the Alumnus Award. ;;;;;;: J~.Three men gained all-America honors at Parkside this yeaI&lt;t~;&#13;
:::;:C::oleman sophomore Ken Martin repeated his high national :::::;&#13;
;::::f;inish in wrestling as he placed third in the NAIA meet and ;:::;: ~jgtained national recognition, and accompanying all-A merica status, ~tj&#13;
;:;:::for the second straight year. Rudy Alvarez, freshman from ::::;::&#13;
::::::RacLne Horlick high school, placed 15th in the NAAlA cross ::;:::;&#13;
:~:~c:o~untry meet to pace the Rangers' seventh place finish and :~;~:~:&#13;
{~:~become the first Parkside cross cOWltry all-America in history. {:~&#13;
~:~;~:And Kenosha. senior Mike De Witt, a Trempetr product, }~:&#13;
;:::::claimed national honors at the NAJA indoor track championships:;::;:&#13;
-;{ with a third place finish in the two mile walk. Parkslde's first::::::: :r; track all-America, be's dipped under the Olympic trial quali- }~:~ ::? tying standard and will travel to Eugene, Ore., next month'~{:&#13;
::;:::for the U.s. Olympic Trials. :::;:; ~~Jothn Hanzalik, a four-time letterman in fencing after gradua- ~t~&#13;
::::;: tiOD from Tremper, has had a varied and successful career at:::;:;. :~rParkside. He's won the Great Lakes epee crown--one of the::::::: ~:t:most prestigious of collegiate fencing titles--and has competed~:~:~:~&#13;
~:\ in the World stude.nt Games in Italy. A gentleman, a scholar, ~:}&#13;
::::;: an athlete. Hanzalik receives the Athletic Director's Award::::::&#13;
;:::::as the outstanding student-athlete. :::::: ~ISm~all In stature but big of heart, this freshman fr.om Kandy,~~t.&#13;
:::::;Ceylon, captured the hearts of track fans at Parkside this year. :;:::::&#13;
:~\ He was the NAJA District 14 cross country champ and broket~:~&#13;
:{~nearly every P~kside distance record this season in track. ::::::&#13;
::::::He Will compete m Munich in the late summer in the 10 000 meter :;::::&#13;
:::::: R.!ldmarathon races in the greatest athletic spectacle' of all the :::::;&#13;
:;-:':·:0: 1ympl.c, Games. An athlete for all seasons, Lucian Ros'a is::.:.:.::.&#13;
:.:;-::P:.arkside s Athlete of the Year. :%::::::&#13;
HOLIDAY INN OF KENOSHA&#13;
WELCOMES&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
VIKING LOUNGEOON&#13;
-1 A.M.&#13;
VIKING RESTAURANT&#13;
6:30 A.M. - 10:30 P.M.&#13;
·MARINA ROOM - LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
·111 DELUXE SLEEPING ROOMS&#13;
·PooL&#13;
·BANQUET FACILITIES FOR 200-4()()&#13;
kenosha&#13;
5125 6th AVENUE 658-3281&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
MIKE SAFAGO&#13;
._._. _.:.:.:~.--·.·.·.·.·_·_·_·_._._·_._'._·_=_=·:'.:'.·'.-.-'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'."'.·:·:·:·:·:·=·:·=·=·=·:·:··-:-:-:-·-·-·.·-·-·-·-·:·:-;-;-;-:,:-:-:-:•:·:·:·:·:·:·::::::&#13;
;:;:;: This is the first edition of THE RANGER, the official publi - ·:::::&#13;
(if cation of the National Varsity Club for the Office of Athletics.\:(&#13;
;:;::: Pictured on the cover: Aldo Madrigrano, Kenosha resident:::::::&#13;
\:) and Racine businessman, donated two large, scoreboards to{(:!&#13;
:):):. the n w physical education and athletics building at Parkside. ({:&#13;
:-:-:: For this continued service to Parkside and devotion to athletics::::::&#13;
)(jhe ts honored as "Ranger of the Year" with the Ra nger W }((&#13;
:it be Is honored as "Ranger of the Year" with the Ranger A ward . t:::&#13;
;:;:;: Dick Ellison sits on Parkside's Athletic Board and the execu- ::;:;:;&#13;
~:\:). uve board of Parkside 200. He bas worked during Parkside's '({:&#13;
·f i short history at building up the university in the community. A\:(&#13;
:;:;:;letterman in baseball at Wisconsin during his undergraduate=:::::&#13;
(/: d.:lys, he will be presented the Alumnus Award. !{:: ·:t Three men gained all-America honors at Parkside this year :::=;:;&#13;
:;:;:;: Coleman sophomore Ken Martin repeated his high national:;:;:;&#13;
;::::: f111lsh ln wrestling as he placed third in the NAIA meet and ::=::: i}i gained national recognition, and accompanying all-America status,{}&#13;
:::::: for the second straight year. Rudy Alvarez, freshman from=:::=:&#13;
-:;:;: Racine Horlick high school, placed 15th in the NAAIA cross?::: :-.•.• ....&#13;
:;:::;. country meet to pace the Rangers' seventh place finish and -:::::: t(:i become the first Parkside cross country all-America in history. /) if: And Kenosha senior Mike De Witt, a Trempetr product,}(: ::t claimed national honors at the NAIA indoor track championships:=:=::&#13;
:;:;:; with a third place finish in the two mile walk. Parkside's firsf::::: , :ir track all-America, he's dipped under the Olympic trial quali-(i&#13;
·:::=:- tying standard and will travel to Eugene, Ore., next month:::=::&#13;
:\: for the U.S. Olympic Trials. :=:::: iJi John Hanzalik, a four-time letterman 1n fencing after gradua- f)&#13;
-:;:;: tlon from Tremper , has had a varied and successful career at::::=: t: Parkside. He's won the Great Lakes epee crown--one of the\:::&#13;
f:). most prestigious of collegiate fencing titles--and has competed\(:! ti:( in the World student Games in Italy. A gentleman, a scholar,\(:&#13;
:;:;:; an athlete, Hanzalik receives the Athletic Director's Award:=::;:&#13;
;:;:;: as the outstanding student-athlete. ·:·:-: fij Small in stature but big of heart, this freshman trom Kandy)}&#13;
::=::: Ceylon, captured the hearts of track fans at Parkside this year.=:=:::: ;t_ He was the NAIA District 14 cross country champ and broke){&#13;
:;:::; nearly every Parkside distance record this season in track. :;:;:; ):t He will compete in Munich in the late summer in the 10,000 meter)(:&#13;
:t) ~d m~thon races in the greatest athletic spectacle of all, the{:(&#13;
::::;: Olympic Games. An athlete for all seasons , Lucian Rosa i s :-::::&#13;
;:;::: Parkside's Athlete of the Year . :::::: : . 0&#13;
VIKING LOUNGE •&#13;
'001 - 1 A. t.&#13;
HOLIDAY INN OF KENOSHA&#13;
WELCOMES&#13;
OW-PARKSIDE&#13;
VIKING RESTAURANT&#13;
6:30 A.M. - 10:30 P.M.&#13;
•MARL'VA ROOM - LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
•in DELU XE SLEEPING ROOMS&#13;
•POOL&#13;
•BA.'VQ UET FACILITIES FOR 200-400&#13;
kenosha&#13;
5125 6th A VENUE 658-3281&#13;
TRACK: "Big Five" PaceAttack"&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
Mike De Witt, 8 senior from Kenosha, won&#13;
walk titles throughout the Midwest and&#13;
placed third in the NAIA indoor track championships&#13;
to gain All-America honorsthe&#13;
first Ranger trackman ever to do so.&#13;
He'll participate in the Olympic trials at&#13;
Eugene, Ore., in late June.&#13;
Dennis Biel of Wausau was another veraatil.&#13;
runner for Coach Bob Lawson. The&#13;
lanky freshman, who clocked a 4: 16 mile&#13;
as 8 senior at Wausau East, won events&#13;
ranging from the 440 yard dash t~rough&#13;
the mile and ran on every middle-dlstance&#13;
or distance relay through the course of&#13;
the 8888on.&#13;
Five men dominated the track walk.&#13;
scene at UW-Parkstde this year. Dermts Btel, a treshmau whO&#13;
Lucian Rosa, the tresbmantrom hadn't n1D compettuvely lD two&#13;
Ceylon who also was named years, followed up 011. tlDe crou&#13;
Athlete of the Year, ran every- country season and became a man&#13;
thing trom 880 yards to the mara- for aU relays.&#13;
than and set records at nearly And Steve £rspamer, wbo woo&#13;
all of them. a state 100 yard d:Lsh HUe _hUe&#13;
Keith Merritt, the team's iron at Hurley, proved tba.t be stm&#13;
Man, holds school marks in the Utes the century in collep u&#13;
440 hurdles, the triple jump and be scored blc 00 the Ra.o.rers'&#13;
the pole vault and rates as one southern trip and CODtlDued his&#13;
of the most versatile trackmen nne sprlnt.J.oc OIl the rela;p c:1raround,&#13;
cult in the north.&#13;
Mike De Witt became the Ran- In a nutshell. tboae tlve m D&#13;
gers' first all-America during the were the basis CJ1 UW-Parll:slde&#13;
indoor season with a third In the Track in Unto But there ere&#13;
NAJA championships. He coattn- certalnly others wbose cootribu·&#13;
ued his tOUgh walking outdoors tlons were no less and .. bose de41-&#13;
as he qualified for next month's calion was J,1st as creat &amp;Dd.wb.o&#13;
Olympic trials in the 20-1c.Uometer Victories came stead1ly too.&#13;
The 1972 TraCk Squad&#13;
Class&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Name&#13;
ALVAREZ,Rudy&#13;
BtEL, Dennis&#13;
BRlESKE, zniou&#13;
*BULLOCK, Leonard&#13;
CARLSON, Bill&#13;
***08 WITT, Mike&#13;
ERSPAMER, Steve&#13;
*LANCE, Gary&#13;
**MARTlNSON, Tim&#13;
*Mc FADDEN, Jim&#13;
*MERRlTT, Keith&#13;
NEWTON, Randy&#13;
*PATTEN, John&#13;
ROSA, Lucian&#13;
WHITMORE, Kim&#13;
-Denotes letters earned&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Jr.&#13;
So.&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr,&#13;
Hometown(H. 5,)&#13;
Radne (Horlick)&#13;
Wausau (Eul)&#13;
Caledonla(RacIDeL.)&#13;
El Paso, Teas&#13;
(AustlD)&#13;
Rh10elander&#13;
Kenosba(Tremper)&#13;
Hurll!J&#13;
WllIenord&#13;
arshfleld&#13;
Waterford&#13;
Kenosha(Tremper)&#13;
South M Uft.Ukee&#13;
Feltelo, CaUtornta&#13;
(SOn LorenzoValll!J)&#13;
Kandy, CeylOc&#13;
Yostnee&#13;
Sopt .....iiiOl. KMth Merrit1 of K~ ......&#13;
tphe""',".on MaIn of the "-"D* '-'" _ M di.- hi. ~1Ii1y nu".....oue ,,"'".&#13;
competing in _ men,. _ .~ ....... In&#13;
• m4let. He Nt ac:hooI reoorcte ,n the t ..~ p" jump and po" veu" ndoore, and on&#13;
the ~. tr;p to Aril. ..... O¥ef ~lng&#13;
brNk. .... anottter ~" the 4AO-ywd intermeetiel&#13;
h,ur-d ...-. -----...,&#13;
EOMU 0 /!a 1naedtia&#13;
TRAVEL AOENCY VICTOR E. GODFREY, ASST. COACH .q •&#13;
Fr,&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Vic Godfrey is ending hiS&#13;
third season With the Parkside&#13;
track team He took&#13;
over the reins as head cross&#13;
counlry coach in 1970 ,n the&#13;
absence of Bob Lawson and&#13;
guided lhe Rangers to a 4-1&#13;
dual mark a second in the&#13;
USTFF Mid-Amencan Meet&#13;
and a first in the AlA&#13;
District 14 1nvitationsl&#13;
He'll take over as cross country coach next fall as Lawson devotes time&#13;
to the fall track program&#13;
He first came to Parks ide in the fall of 1969 after successful lrack coaching&#13;
tours at Watertown, S.D, and Madison. Minn., hIgh schools He IS also&#13;
assi.stant eros s country coach and coordinator of Intramurals and club&#13;
sports at Parkside. .&#13;
Vic coached two years in Indonesia while in the Peace Corps. He 1$ 8 mem·&#13;
ber of the Wisconsin Track Coaches and Cross Counlry Coaches 8SSOClat&#13;
ions and Blue KeY'i' ~t~h~e:..:n~a~~t~hi~o0:.::::.;nn::.a:o~;1;;;,;ra:.ry:.:..;f,;.r;;;a,;.te:.r.;n';",;.tY;" 1&#13;
I ve the Rangers some much-.ndeeodoersd Steve Erspame,. of Hur ey ga h 60 in almost every meet In .'&#13;
sprint strength. He scored in tell seemed to blossom as he ZIPbut&#13;
once out from under cover r~ yh Relays for runner-up honors.&#13;
ped a windy 9.6 in the Arkansas ec&#13;
BEST WISHES&#13;
FROM&#13;
~&#13;
PEPSI&#13;
~&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
RACINE&#13;
COME IN AND LET&#13;
US CHANGE YOUR&#13;
TIME ZONE'&#13;
WE FEATURE NEW&#13;
LOW EUROPEAN&#13;
&amp;&#13;
DOMESTIC YOUTH&#13;
FARES&#13;
EUROPEAN YOUTH&#13;
FARES&#13;
INCLUDING TAX&#13;
CHICAGO TO H. to&#13;
A'" T ADAM IIaoo .18 00&#13;
COPI HAC N 10'00 ."00&#13;
FR" ... !'.. VAT 10.00 •.,00&#13;
LONOQ III 00 UaOO&#13;
~A~ll 11800 • .00&#13;
•• 00 .. 00&#13;
ZURICH til 00 •• 00&#13;
HIGH 0"" [" T80UNO&#13;
JYfW to .lvl., fa&#13;
HIGH (" 0 W TBOU""'O&#13;
Jy'y 20 Auvu.l at&#13;
If SEA 0"" INVOL.V 0&#13;
PL." fAAt&#13;
CITI MAY BE PlIT BUT MV 'T&#13;
8 "'''R CARMltR&#13;
chlc_gOIO&#13;
MI,AMI FT l.AUO£AOAU: It?&#13;
TAM~"JO"LANOO 151&#13;
LOS AHOUES/SAN FRANCISCO ... 2:&#13;
211152. SlnII·K....&#13;
867-5171&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
. THE RA 'GER I TRACK: ''Big Five'' Pace Attack&#13;
Mike De Witt, a senior from Kenosha, won&#13;
walk titles throughout the Midwest and&#13;
placed third in the NAIA indoor track championships&#13;
to gain All-America honorsthe&#13;
first Ranger trackman ever to do so.&#13;
He'll participate in the Olympic trials at&#13;
Eugene, Ore., in late June.&#13;
Dennis Biel of Wausau was another versatile&#13;
runner for Coach Bob Lawson. The&#13;
lanky freshman, who clocked a 4:16 mile&#13;
as a senior at Wausau East, won events&#13;
ranging from th~ 440 yard ~ash t~rough&#13;
the mile and ran on every m1ddle-d1stance&#13;
or distance relay through the course of&#13;
the season.&#13;
Five men dominated the track&#13;
scene at UW-Pa.rkslde this year.&#13;
Lucian Rosa, the tresbmantrom&#13;
Ceylon who also was named&#13;
Athlete of the Year, n.n everything&#13;
from 880 yards to the rnan.thon&#13;
and set records at nearly&#13;
all of them.&#13;
Keith Merritt, the team's lTOn&#13;
Man, holds school marks in th&#13;
440 hurdles, the triple jump and&#13;
the pole vault and rates a one&#13;
of the most versatile traclcmen&#13;
around.&#13;
Mike De Witt became the Rangers•&#13;
first all-America during th er&#13;
indoor season with a third in the Trac&#13;
NAIA championships. He continued&#13;
his tough walking outdoor&#13;
as he qualilied for next month'&#13;
Olympic trials in the 20-kllometer&#13;
cat&#13;
The 1972 Track Squad&#13;
Name&#13;
ALVAREZ, Rudy&#13;
BIEL, Dennis&#13;
BRIF.SKE, Elliott&#13;
*BULLOCK, Leonard&#13;
CARLSON, Bill&#13;
***De WITT, Mike&#13;
ERSPAMER, Steve&#13;
*LANCE, Gary&#13;
**MARTTh'SON, Tim&#13;
*Mc FADDEN, Jim&#13;
*MERRITT, Keith&#13;
NEWTON I Randy&#13;
*PATTEN, John&#13;
ROSA , Lucian&#13;
WlilTMORE, Kim&#13;
*Denotes letters earned&#13;
Class&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
So.&#13;
Jr.&#13;
So.&#13;
So.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr,&#13;
VICTOR E. GODFREY, ASST . COACH&#13;
He'll take over as cross country coach&#13;
to the fall track program.&#13;
' au&#13;
8&#13;
He first came to Parkside in the fall of 1969 aft r ucc&#13;
tours at Watertown, S.D., and Madi on , . inn., high_&#13;
assistant cross country coach and coordinator of mtramur I&#13;
sports at Parkside .&#13;
Vic coached two years in Indonesia whit in th p&#13;
ber of the Wisconsin Track Coache and Cro&#13;
tions and Blue Key, the national honorary fr t&#13;
ot t,m&#13;
c hing&#13;
I lo&#13;
nd club&#13;
oci ·&#13;
WISHES BEST&#13;
FROM&#13;
ome much-needed&#13;
I ve the Rangers s · doors&#13;
Steve Erspamer of Hur ey . ga 60 in almost every meet in . '&#13;
sprint strength . He scored m th e II seemed to blossom as he zipbut&#13;
once out from under cover reaT yh Relays for runner-up honors.&#13;
· h Arkansas ec ped a windy 9 .6 m t e&#13;
PEP.SI&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
,RACINE&#13;
CO A D LET&#13;
US CHA GE YOUR&#13;
Tl E ZO Et&#13;
WE F TURE W&#13;
LOW EUROPEA&#13;
DO STIC YOU T H&#13;
FARES&#13;
UROP AN YOUTH&#13;
F R S&#13;
I CLUDING TAX&#13;
2111 52nd Street - Kenosha&#13;
657-5171&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
MAT MAIDS AND 'FRIENDS&#13;
The UW..p...kside ~ Maida.,who ekl the Rangers al all home and many away meets, pose here with the&#13;
they chMf for _ Front row (k): Mary Fonk, Pat Kekic, Cathy Frederking, Kathy Doherty~, Mal'"YFreder1l.&#13;
lng C.oI e~"ki, Barb Lundskow, Julie Constablie. Back row (I-r): Frank Velsaquez, ~1I1West, Jeff&#13;
..Jenkine. RICk Sc:hortff .. r, Coech Jim Koch, Steve Sulk, Mark Barnhill, Kyle Barnes, Ken Martin.&#13;
Parkstde-s first women's gymnastics&#13;
team completed successfully&#13;
on bOth the regional and&#13;
state levels as all the gymnasts&#13;
qualified for state competition and&#13;
represented Parkside at the State&#13;
with some fine performances.&#13;
Co-captains Kathy Kramer and&#13;
Mary Jo Giannotti proved to be&#13;
the top Rangers. Miss Kramer&#13;
placed first in the all-around,&#13;
free exercise and vault at the&#13;
regional meet and went on to take&#13;
fifth in free ex., eighth in the&#13;
uneven bar 5 and ninth in the vault&#13;
statewide. Miss Giannotti was second&#13;
in the free ex. and third in&#13;
the vault at the regional and seventh&#13;
in free ex. and vault and ninth&#13;
in balance beam at the state.&#13;
GRIN AND BEAR IT&#13;
"The R8nger Bear meet VllCe'-Chancellor Otto F Bauer as cheerleader&#13;
Pam Engdahl Joe 00&#13;
TIlE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
ary Jo GlaDDOtti&#13;
. ren Styl@y&#13;
S&amp;DllY Hantns&#13;
-Katb&gt; Kramer&#13;
L1Dd): Reid&#13;
Liz Stellbere&#13;
1TI_..u". ud • cl&gt;oer.&#13;
leaD Coli •&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr,&#13;
Cherry Hill, N. J.&#13;
Kenosba(Tremper)&#13;
Racine&#13;
Racine (Horlick)&#13;
Waukesha&#13;
Racine (Hcr lfck)&#13;
sr;:-:;~:::: at tbit IU ralty of r ...... ~ lIlat 1utJ_.&#13;
,.. .'s ac:tlYlU .. ,&#13;
rs-dn'a ... ..u .. au&#13;
Sportsfest came the first weekend&#13;
in December and once again&#13;
U was a success. The balloting&#13;
for the queen of Sportsfest was&#13;
somewhat different this year, however,&#13;
in that only coins were&#13;
acceptable as ballots, with the candidate&#13;
collecting the most coins&#13;
as votes, elected the queen. The&#13;
money went to the Harlow Mills&#13;
Scholarship Fund, honoring the&#13;
late professor who had such a&#13;
deep committment .to the University&#13;
.&#13;
Cathy MomperofKenosha, sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Equestrian&#13;
C'lub, was the Queen and her court&#13;
included other candidates Carol&#13;
Busche, Kenosha; Debbie Goudreau,&#13;
Racine; Bonnie Eppesrs,&#13;
Kansasville; Debbie LaJeunesse&#13;
Kenosha; Mary Fonk KenoSha~&#13;
Robin Strangberg, Ke'nOSha; Li~&#13;
Stellberg, Racine; Bar'b Lundskow,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Co-{;_lns - Katl&gt;y Kramer" Mary Jo Giannotti -&#13;
-lAtt rs earned&#13;
W,"'ll!_d La 51e berg 'Y&#13;
RBIDElmAl • COMMERCIAL&#13;
ONE Of 5Of/THEASrUH WISCONSIN'S&#13;
LUGEST AGENCIES TRECROCI&#13;
REALTY REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL SERVICE&#13;
IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS 658-1319&#13;
A TORS GUY D. TRECROCI• Broker, 6927 39th Ave.&#13;
RES. PH. 694-6743&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
MAT MAIDS AND .FRIENDS&#13;
, who aid th Rangers at all home and many away meets, pose here with the&#13;
(1-r): Mary Fonk, Pat Kekic, Cathy Frederking, Kathy Dohertyu, Mary Fredi&#13;
Barb Lu kow, Juli Con tablie. Back row (l·r): Frank Velsaquez, Bill West, Jeff&#13;
, Coach Jim Koch, St ve Sulk, Mark Barnhill, Kyle Barnes, Ken Martin.&#13;
GRIN AND BEAR IT&#13;
Vtee-Chancellor Otto F Bauer as cheerleader&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Fr.&#13;
Cherry Hill, N. J.&#13;
Kenosha(Tremper)&#13;
Racine&#13;
Racine (Horlick)&#13;
Waukesha&#13;
Racine (Horlick)&#13;
Mary Jo Giannotti ---&#13;
Parkside's first women's gymnastics&#13;
team completed success!&#13;
Ully on both the regional and&#13;
state levels as all the gymnasts&#13;
qualified for state competition and&#13;
represented Parkside at the State&#13;
with some fine performances.&#13;
Co-captains Kathy Kramer and&#13;
Mary Jo Gtannottl proved to be&#13;
the top Rangers. Miss Kramer&#13;
placed first in the all-around,&#13;
free exercise and vault at the&#13;
regional meet and went on to take&#13;
fifth in free ex., eighth in the&#13;
uneven bars and ninth in the vault&#13;
statewide. Miss Giannotti was second&#13;
in the free ex. and third in&#13;
the vault at the regional and seventh&#13;
in free ex. and vault and ninth&#13;
in balance beam at the state.&#13;
Sportsfest came the first weekend&#13;
in December and once again&#13;
it was a success. The balloting&#13;
for the queen of Sportsfest was&#13;
somewhat different this year, however,&#13;
in that only coins were&#13;
acceptable as ballots, with the candidate&#13;
collecting the most coins&#13;
as votes, elected the queen. The&#13;
money went to the Harlow Mills&#13;
Scholarship Fund, honoring the&#13;
late professor who had such a&#13;
deep committment to the University.&#13;
Cathy Momper of Kenosha, sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Equestrian&#13;
Club, was the Queen and her court&#13;
included other candidates Carol&#13;
Busche, Kenosha; Debbie Goudreau,&#13;
Racine; Bonnie Eppesrs&#13;
Kansasville; Debbie LaJeunesse'&#13;
Kenosha; Mary Fonk Kenosha'.&#13;
Robin Strangberg, Ke'nosha; Li~&#13;
1-----:-------------==------:-------------------!!!! Stellberg, Racine; BarbLundskow -----111. ·-----...;:.;::.,...:,:K,:en::,:o;:s:,::ha:_;. ________ ,&#13;
EC OC&#13;
EA&#13;
ERCIAL&#13;
E&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
IS OUR O LY BUSI ESS&#13;
APPRAISAL SERVICE&#13;
[ 658-1319&#13;
GUY D. TRECROCI - Broker, 6927 39th Ave.&#13;
RES. PH. 694-6743&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
CO-CAPTAINS --- JEFF JENKINS &amp; KEN MARTIN&#13;
JIM KOCH, HEAD COACH WhenJim Koch came to Park. Another AlI-America wrestler t side in the fall of 1970 th aDd a h.1gber t1n1sh in the NAIA&#13;
were no facilities so he i ~::NaUooals than 19'11 marked Coach&#13;
J a workout and m'eet ar:~ a Jim Koch's second year at wrest-&#13;
, -- - local Junior high schoot Th ling mentor at Parkside. The Ranwere&#13;
only 12 wrestlers a:nd v:re gers were lacking in depth and&#13;
little interest in the sport SOJiry lost numerous dual meets by cee,&#13;
organized the First Parkstde two or three POints because of&#13;
Wrestling Clinic which d losses by forfeit, but it's worth&#13;
over 600 coaches' and athl:t:: noting that the Grapplers won the&#13;
for the day-long discussions and majority of matches they wrestled&#13;
demonstrations. He or". t zed a and that with no seniors WI the&#13;
grOUP of lIMat Maids" t h squad, an even brigbler year Is&#13;
o elp at ahead In 197273&#13;
meets and provide support for the - .&#13;
team; it's an idea whi h has Ken Martin, 134-lb. sophomore&#13;
been copied since by other colleges and high schools C wAho b•e_c_amHe Parkside's first all- . memea ODors in the sport last&#13;
Jim earned his B.s. in physical education from South year, again cla1med oaUooaJ status&#13;
Dakota State in 1969, where he lettered three Urnes in with his third place finlsh in this&#13;
wrestling and captained the strong SOOU team as a senior. year's meet .• - a place that only&#13;
He'll finish work on his M.s. at State in August of 19'12. a scoring error kept from be1DC&#13;
ll1gher. He placed the Rangersto&#13;
an 18th place NaUaoal 1lnisb _.&#13;
three higher than In 1971-. with&#13;
strong support from 150-lber Jeti'&#13;
Jenkins and. heavywelib-t Steve&#13;
Sulk.&#13;
GEORGE WOLFE, ASST. COACH&#13;
George Wolfe, assistant&#13;
wrestling coach at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parks ide, brings a wealth&#13;
of experience and knowledge&#13;
to his new position&#13;
at the University.&#13;
He's also coordinator of&#13;
the school's physical education&#13;
program and advisor&#13;
to the Judo Club.&#13;
A 1965 graduate of Central&#13;
Michigan University, where&#13;
he lettered four times in&#13;
football and once captained the Chips, George received&#13;
his mesters at the University of Akron in 1969 and his&#13;
Ph. D. at the University of Utah this past summer.&#13;
From 1965-69, Wolfe was head wrestling coach and&#13;
a teacher 'of physical education at McKinley High&#13;
School in Canton, Ohio. He also assisted with football&#13;
and baseball during his tenure there. At Utah,&#13;
George was a graduate teaching assistant.&#13;
I!IL.RANfiEILSi&#13;
~AYNE BASLEY&#13;
KYLE BARNES&#13;
-MARK BARNHILL&#13;
TOM BERGO&#13;
ROR CLARKE&#13;
linJEFF JENKI NS&#13;
CHRIS LUEDKE&#13;
--KEN MARTIN&#13;
RICK MAULDIN&#13;
~OB SANDERS&#13;
RICK SCHOEFFLER&#13;
·STEVE SULK&#13;
-FRANK VELASQUEZ&#13;
-BILL WEST&#13;
KEN MARTIN&#13;
~TlME ALL-AMERICAN. C().CAPTAIN AND MOST VALUAIILE&#13;
JR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
SO.&#13;
JR.&#13;
JR.&#13;
FR,&#13;
SO.&#13;
FR,&#13;
SO.&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR.&#13;
FR.&#13;
SO.&#13;
UNION GROVE&#13;
PESHTIGO&#13;
KENOSHA ~ST' JOSEPH)&#13;
KENOSHA BRADFORD)&#13;
KENOSHA CHAMPAIG~, ILL.)&#13;
KENOSHA B~ADFORD)&#13;
r.ILWAUKEE (MADISON)&#13;
COLEMAN&#13;
RACINE (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (TRE~PER)&#13;
RACINE (CASE)&#13;
PESHTIGQ&#13;
RACINE (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER) - LETTERS EARNED&#13;
OWNER: PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN RESIDENTIAL CENTERS, INC.&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp;&#13;
17" N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSiN&#13;
PARKSIDE VILLAGE APARTM.NTS&#13;
2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
Aak about rentals.&#13;
Apartments available now.&#13;
Contact: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kornman&#13;
Apt. t 06 - Phone: 414 - 552-8955&#13;
DE~UXE3 ROOM SUITE&#13;
-e- ..-&#13;
DELUXE 2 ROOMSUITE&#13;
J ROOMSUITE&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
- THE RA. 'GER J&gt; 15 ~~!!~li·ng: Martin All-American When Jim Koch came to Park- Another All-America wr r&#13;
w side in the fall of 1970 there and a higher finish in th Al.A&#13;
were no facilities so he ioc t d Nationals than 1971 marked Coach&#13;
a workout and m'eet area ~ \ Jim Koch's sec d year at tlocal&#13;
Junior high school Th ling mentor at Park 1d • Th Ranwere&#13;
only 12 wrestlers ~d v:re gers were lacklng ln pth nd&#13;
little interest in the sport so Ji~ lost numerous dual me ts by on ,&#13;
Organized the First P~rkside two or three points becau of&#13;
Wrestllng Clinic, Which drew los~es by forfe t, but it's worth&#13;
over 600 coaches and athletes notmg_ that the Grappler con the&#13;
for the day-long discussions and majority of _matches they wrestled&#13;
demonstrations. He organized a and that '1th no seniors the&#13;
group of "Mat Maids" to help at squad, an even brighter year ls&#13;
meets and provide supportfor the ahead in 1972-73.&#13;
team; it's an idea whi h has Ken Martin, 134-lb. opbomore&#13;
been copied since by other colleges and high schools c Awho became Par side's first all-&#13;
. merica Hocors in the sport last&#13;
Jim earned his B.S. in physical education from South year, again clalmednatlooalstatus&#13;
Dakota State in 1969, where he lettered three times in with his third place finish in this&#13;
wrestling and captained the strong SDSU team as a senior. year's meet. -- a place that OQly&#13;
He'll finish work on his M.S. at State in August of 1972. a scoring error kept trom being&#13;
GEORGE WOLFE, ASST. COACH&#13;
George Wolfe, assistant&#13;
wrestling coach at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
brings a wealth&#13;
of experience and knowledge&#13;
to his new position&#13;
at the University.&#13;
He's also coordinator of&#13;
the school's physical education&#13;
program and advisor&#13;
to the Judo Club.&#13;
A 1 965 graduate of Central&#13;
Michigan University, where&#13;
he lettered four times in&#13;
football and once captained the Chips, George received&#13;
his masters at the University of Akron in 1969 and his&#13;
Ph . D. at the University of Utah this past summer.&#13;
higher. He placed the Ranier to&#13;
an 18th place Nati&lt;mal finish -three&#13;
higher than ln 1971 -- !th&#13;
strong support from 150-lber Jett&#13;
Jenkins and heavyweight Slev&#13;
Sulk.&#13;
THE RANGER SQUAD&#13;
~AYNE BASLEY&#13;
KYLE BARNES&#13;
*MARK BARNHILL&#13;
TOM BERGO&#13;
RnR CLARKE&#13;
••*JEFF JENKINS&#13;
CHRIS LUEDKE&#13;
**KEN MARTIN&#13;
RICK MAULDIN"&#13;
ijOB SANDERS&#13;
RICK SCHOEFFLER&#13;
*STEVE SULK&#13;
*FRANK VELASQUEZ&#13;
*BILL WEST&#13;
TWO-Tl E ALL-AMERICAN• CG-CAPTAIN D STVALUA&#13;
JR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
SO,&#13;
JR,&#13;
JR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
so.&#13;
FR,&#13;
SO,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
FR,&#13;
SO,&#13;
U JO GROVE&#13;
PESHTIGO&#13;
KE OSHA !ST, JOSEPH)&#13;
KE OSHA BRADFORD)&#13;
KE OSHA CHAMPAIG~, lLL,)&#13;
KENOSHA B~ADFORD))&#13;
i ll AUKEE { DISO&#13;
COLEMAN&#13;
RAC I E (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (TRE~PER)&#13;
RACINE (CASE)&#13;
PESHTIGO&#13;
RACINE (PARK)&#13;
KENOSHA (TREMPER)&#13;
From 1965,-69, Wolfe was head wrestling coach and&#13;
a teacher of physical education at McKinley High&#13;
School in Canton, Ohio. He also assisted with football&#13;
and baseball during his tenure there. At Utah,&#13;
George was a graduate teaching assistant. CO-CAPTAINS --- JEFF JENKINS &amp; KEN MARTIN • CETTERS EARNED&#13;
Ask about rentals.&#13;
Apartments available now.&#13;
Contact: Mr. and Mrs. Larry Kornman&#13;
Apt. 106 - Phone: 414 - 552-8955&#13;
PARKSIDE VILLAO A ARTM NT&#13;
OE LUXE 2 ROOM SUITE&#13;
2 ROOM SUITE&#13;
m&#13;
OELUXE3 ROOM SUITE&#13;
~U I I JI s-&#13;
OWNER : PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN ESIOENTIAL CENTERS, INC.&#13;
DEVELOPER: GLOBAL BUSINESS &amp; R&#13;
17'4 N. FARWELL AVE.&#13;
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN&#13;
3 OOMSUITE&#13;
THE RANGER LING&#13;
- .......'--0&#13;
1972 - 73 SCHEDULE&#13;
Northern Open&#13;
Sportsfest opponent to be&#13;
named&#13;
UW-Whitewater/UW Oshkosh&#13;
war-hawk Invitational&#13;
Grand Valley State&#13;
Midlands Tournament&#13;
So. trip to La. State&#13;
Tournament to be named&#13;
Eight State Invitational .&#13;
UW-Oshkosh or trw-wmee- Oshkosh or White water&#13;
Nwoarttheerr.n Mtctugan Marq. uPeAt.tReK,MSJJcDIlE.&#13;
E. 111., Mich. Tech pARKSIbl&#13;
lll.-Chicago Circle&#13;
Augustana or Whitewater&#13;
NAIA National Meet&#13;
Nov. 24&#13;
Dec. 1&#13;
PA1lKBlDB&#13;
PA1lKBIDB&#13;
IVhitewaler&#13;
P,....... "'~&#13;
LaGrange,&#13;
Baton Route,lf.&#13;
Dec. 6&#13;
Dec. 9&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
Dec. 27-28&#13;
Jan •. 6-13&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan. 27&#13;
Jan. 3\&#13;
Macomb,lIL&#13;
..._.-...-a.._ eopI'woo.lOIe Bill W... 1.01'ned thJe' teKamoch't.it&#13;
-- bec8me one of Coach 1m&#13;
tmoipck~eeIMenn . but.wtnnln. g 9 end k»sing 2 a•t 134 lba.&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 22&#13;
Mar. 8-10 Sioux Clty,"1oIl&#13;
appa&#13;
appa&#13;
_l.Jto&#13;
that greot beer drinking fraternity&#13;
gle Wholesale&#13;
211981 t. treet&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
THE "iANGER&#13;
STLING&#13;
that&#13;
ee&#13;
omore em West joined the team at&#13;
but became one of Coach Jim Koch's&#13;
· nntng 9 and losing 2 at 134 lbs.&#13;
Nov. 24&#13;
Dec. 1&#13;
Dec. 6&#13;
Dec. 9&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
Dec. 27-28&#13;
Jan • . 6-13&#13;
Jan. 20&#13;
Jan. 27&#13;
Jan. 31&#13;
Feb. 3&#13;
Feb. 10&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feb. 22&#13;
Mar. 8-10&#13;
at beer drinking fraternity&#13;
JEFF JENKINS&#13;
co-captain&#13;
1972 - 73 SCHEDULE&#13;
Northern Open&#13;
Sportsfest opponent to be&#13;
named&#13;
UW-Whitewater/UW Oshkosh&#13;
Warhawk Invitational&#13;
Grand Valley State&#13;
Midlands Tournament&#13;
So. trip to La. State&#13;
Tournament to be named&#13;
Eight State Invitational&#13;
UW-Oshkosh or UW-WhiteMadison&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
LaGrange, ru,&#13;
Baton Rouge, La.&#13;
Macomb, lll.&#13;
water Oshkosh or White water&#13;
Northern Michigan&#13;
E. Ill., Mich. Tech&#13;
UL-Chicago Circle&#13;
Augustana or Whitewater&#13;
NAIA National Meet&#13;
Marquette, Mich.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
e vVholesale&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
_P",ARKSIDE AILWAVS&#13;
THE RA GER Page 17 PANORA A&#13;
LET'S GO, RAY I I I I&#13;
Prakong(Ray) Phanturat, the Rangers' able soccer star from Thailand b ht I t f&#13;
perienceto ~he young. Park id ' roug a 0 0 ex- 51.8 team. Here he shows some of that savvy as he rna v&#13;
the ball against a QUincy defender. neu ers&#13;
Parkside's cross country trails, winding through the brush and wooded land of the campus make for an ideal&#13;
route for the harriers. The United States Track and Field Federation will again hold its Mid-America championships&#13;
herein the fall and is seriously considering the Parkside site for its national meet&#13;
·PROS IN ACTION&#13;
Thefootball Pros went into action March 19 against the Parkside AII-S!8fS ~ey ma~h~ndl~&#13;
the Stars, who outnumbered them but had just about the same total we,ghhta~ paedSthe~r;~&#13;
tory. But it was a fun day for all including the swarms of youngsters woe 099&#13;
per gym and got coveted autographs from their heroes after the contest,&#13;
- ad C ch Steve Stephens' cagers&#13;
Freshman Phil S,t8wart 81d b~h starting and coming off&#13;
many times durtnq the V,ear, 0 bi lay Here "Stew," No.&#13;
the bench to come up with the 19 P . f he ball&#13;
40, goes up eqet.nst 8 Lak e F0rest man or t .&#13;
"JUNE&#13;
BALL"&#13;
Pat Ke c was among lhe lOp coed on lhe Parkstde tennl. aquad and&#13;
finished the veal' With only one JON&#13;
The Ranger Bear made his first appearance on campus Illat before Sport t .. t and entertained&#13;
fans at Sporting events. throughout the wmter Here he IS Introduced by WLIP RadiO Sports&#13;
Director Al Gelsone prior to the start of the Pal'ktude-Peckers game In March&#13;
May, 1972&#13;
THE R TGER&#13;
Prakong (Ray) Phanturat, the Rangers' able soccer star from Thailand b ht 1 1 f&#13;
h P k ·d , roug a o o experience&#13;
to t e young ar s1 e team. Here he shows some of that s h&#13;
the ball against a Quincy defender. avvy as e maneuvers&#13;
Parkside's cross country trails, winding through the brush and wooded land of the campus, ma e for an ideal&#13;
route for the harriers. The United States Track and Field Federation will again hold its Mid-America championships&#13;
here in the fall and is seriously considering the Parkside site for its national meet&#13;
I , L-........----&#13;
PRos IN ACTION&#13;
The football Pros went into action March 19 against the Parkside AII-S\ars. T~ey ma~h~ndled&#13;
the Stars, who outnumbered them but had just about the same total we,g:t a~ P8Js:h ~r~&#13;
tory. But it was a fun day for all including the swarms of youngSters w O c ogge e&#13;
per gym and got coveted autographs from their heroes after the contest.&#13;
. Coach Steve Stephens' cagers&#13;
Freshman Phil S_tewart aided both starting and coming off&#13;
many times during the y_e~r th big play. Here "Stew," No.&#13;
the bench to come up wit Fe t man for the ball.&#13;
40, goes up against a Lake ores&#13;
"JUNE&#13;
BALL"&#13;
The Range&lt; Bear made his first appear&#13;
fans at sporting events throug out t wmt H&#13;
Director Al Gelso e prior to the start o th Par&#13;
17&#13;
 Pqe~~I~ ~T~H~E~R~A~N~G~E~R:----:-::---------- M:::;::a.y:.:,:..:~&#13;
PARKSIDE 200 PURPOSE&#13;
n. Putsl~ zoo (lQIP was orpniZed prlDCIpo.\&#13;
l)' \0 ra -. to proride scllOlar ships lor&#13;
_ ... U. plQ'slc:a1 odlIealloo proeram· n. _IT.c_opt. of course, ""IJIC lIlat&#13;
•• tratc eocapet1UV8 pbysllCal ec:tucatlon program&#13;
r.,tre. top athlete. and top athletes toda)· come&#13;
via .Kbo1&amp;r btpl. vI course, the natural result&#13;
01 atr1JIlC pIQ' leal e&lt;lIc2t1oo procram I. •&#13;
lr .tudent u•• prit de corps" that naturally&#13;
bWl_ •• tadeDt body. Thil, 1 tHol, will do more&#13;
10_ op tbo rrowth 01 Part.l~ l1wl any otner&#13;
MCIIl Dt of tbe Unlyttr tty.&#13;
o doubt lbe 1111 reallecute prorram will dey&#13;
lop til tat .... 1tJ aDd eom~Ut1ftDltSS u we cooltllU&#13;
to nlN larpr amountl 01 money aDd brtJIC&#13;
more out..-ndlDl .~te. to our campus.&#13;
r Park.1de 100 croup IS p1..aDDJ.nC to be. close&#13;
Irl~ club Of tile PbyslCal EducaUoo DepartmODI&#13;
..... ._ rdll!' 10 tHll III any otber way we&#13;
caD 10 brlJlC _boot a lUll ~y.topol"'" of tile p1aDS&#13;
sat ... t lor PansUlo by DI_lor. Tom RosaDdlcb.&#13;
Allred S. De 81m_&#13;
Pre.IdeDl, Partsldo 200&#13;
PARKS/DE 200&#13;
KEEPS THE&#13;
RANGERS&#13;
RUNNING&#13;
Alfred DeSimone, Preeident P.r1taide&#13;
ZOO.&#13;
• • • AND ROSATOO!&#13;
EXECUTIVE BOARD MEMBERS&#13;
OR.PAUL CAPELLI&#13;
llOYD NORTHARD&#13;
DICK ELLISON&#13;
ALOO MAORIGRANO&#13;
Other Executive Board&#13;
Members, JERRY FEENEY&#13;
EOKOZAK and OOM TIRA·&#13;
BASSI JR.&#13;
Lucian Rosa has not earned&#13;
all-America honors at UW-Park ..&#13;
side yet though he almost certajnly&#13;
will before his career is&#13;
over but after nearly a complete&#13;
school year of living with the Ken&#13;
Joanis family, Rosa is becoming&#13;
very much Americanized.&#13;
Better yet, and certainly not&#13;
unexpectedly, Joanis, a Parkside&#13;
200 member, and his wife have&#13;
accepted the freshman from Ceylon&#13;
as one of their family.&#13;
"He's a part of the family,"&#13;
Mrs. Joanis said, "and we knew&#13;
that the dog knew when it went&#13;
into bed with him."&#13;
But there never was any doubt&#13;
in the Joanis's minds that Lucian&#13;
would become part of the family.&#13;
They had long been interested in&#13;
the American Field Service pro--&#13;
gram and through it had learned&#13;
of Lucian's wish to stay with an·&#13;
American family during his first&#13;
year at Parkside.&#13;
lilt's the American way" became&#13;
a family joke, with Lucian&#13;
sharing in it as he loaded or&#13;
unloaded the dishwasher, carried&#13;
out garbage or ran the snowplow&#13;
in winter.&#13;
Buf: at the same time, Rosa&#13;
has made his American :ftlmily&#13;
much more aware of Asia and&#13;
Ceylon. They are nOwlooking forward&#13;
eagerly to watChtDg on TV&#13;
this summer as the Slim Rosa&#13;
trods barefoot through the streets&#13;
of Munich this summer as he&#13;
competes in the 10,000 meters&#13;
and marathon for his native land.&#13;
And they admittedly Would like&#13;
to travel to Asia and especially&#13;
Ceylon, because of Lucian'S influence,&#13;
PARKSIDE 200&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
MEMBERSHIP PLEDGE&#13;
me ~_~ ~~_&#13;
Add,,,,,, "_&#13;
ell&#13;
$1 I __________ ZIP _&#13;
Bu I&#13;
Phona ConI&#13;
My pledge is $ _ Dale _&#13;
Make checks payable to Parks ide 200.&#13;
Lucian Rosa, like any freshman in&#13;
college, uses the phone B lot. Here&#13;
he calls a teammate to plan a long&#13;
distance run through the Parksilk&#13;
area. Rosa, a native of Ceylon, is.&#13;
living with Mr. and Mrs. Ken JOBnis,&#13;
771 7 49th Avenue, Kenosha.&#13;
"He'S a very comfortable person&#13;
to have around;" Mrs. Joan-&#13;
,is noted, although she admitted&#13;
that at first she felt quite prO-.&#13;
tective toward him.&#13;
"But he's absolutly charming,"&#13;
she noted, "and pointed to his&#13;
attitude with children as evidence.&#13;
"He's like the Pied Piper to the&#13;
children in the area and when&#13;
he's out runnin'g some will otten&#13;
try to keep up with him and make&#13;
maybe one short lap to his-iQ..ot&#13;
so.'" --= The Joanises, and their=5:0B,-E&#13;
senior at TremJ?E!r, tried variOUS-:&#13;
Ceylonese-type foods but soonconverted&#13;
Rosa to conventional American&#13;
"chow".&#13;
''We tried rice and curry on&#13;
Lucian's birthday _bUt I had to&#13;
give up and said that Lucian would&#13;
have to change." :-&#13;
But Ro~ apparently doesn'tdis"-&#13;
like American food. He'S added&#13;
some six pounds on his small&#13;
frame since starting at Parkside&#13;
in the fall, a credit to the ham"&#13;
burgers, hotdogs and other American&#13;
"delicacies" which he snaps&#13;
up.&#13;
Lonesome? Not Rosa. He'S pa.Ft&#13;
of a family and there's enough&#13;
to keep him busy, either at hOme&#13;
or when running for Parks1de,&#13;
but an always 'welcome- sight 15&#13;
the letter - stuck in the mirror.&#13;
frame in the JOanises' _enfrance~.&#13;
way.&#13;
Then he knows it's one of those·'·&#13;
special ones from Ceylon and 116&#13;
can thank his lucky stars, for twO&#13;
families that care about him.&#13;
And a group known as the PaJ'k"&#13;
side 200 which wants to help PaIk"&#13;
side athletics and athletes enjoy&#13;
much success.&#13;
Mail 10:&#13;
Parks ide 200&#13;
Office of Athletics&#13;
University o~Wisconsin-Parks ide&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
ANNUALDUESS~l00~------------------------~--------J&#13;
~~.!!.--------------------~T~H~E:_R~A~N~G~E~R~ ____________________ M_a--=...~&#13;
R&#13;
Ctt&#13;
IDE 200 PU 1RPOSE&#13;
AlfTed DeSimone, President Parkside&#13;
200.&#13;
PARKSIDE 200&#13;
KEEPS THE&#13;
RANGERS&#13;
RUNNING&#13;
• • • AND ROSA TOO !&#13;
IRV SILVER&#13;
•&#13;
DICK ELLISON&#13;
ALDO MADRIGRANO&#13;
Other Executive Board&#13;
Members, JERRY FEENEY&#13;
ED KOZAK and DOM TIRABASSI&#13;
JR.&#13;
PARKSIDE 200&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. PARKSIDE&#13;
MEMBERSHIP PLEDGE&#13;
Lucian Rosa has not earned&#13;
all-America honors at UW-Parkside&#13;
yet though he almost certainly&#13;
will before his career is&#13;
over but after nearly a complete&#13;
school year of living with the Ken&#13;
Joanis family, Rosa is becoming&#13;
very much Americanized.&#13;
Better yet, and certainly not&#13;
unexpectedly, Joanis, a Parkside&#13;
200 member, and his wife have&#13;
accepted the freshman from Ceylon&#13;
as one of their family.&#13;
"He's a part of the family,"&#13;
Mrs. Joanis said, "and we knew&#13;
that the dog knew when it went&#13;
into bed with him."&#13;
But there never was any doubt&#13;
in the Joanis's minds that Lucian&#13;
would become part of the family.&#13;
They had long been interested in&#13;
the American Field Service program&#13;
and through it had learned&#13;
of Lucian's wish to stay with an&#13;
American family during his first&#13;
year at Parkside.&#13;
"It's the American way" became&#13;
a family joke, with Lucian&#13;
sharing in it as he loaded or&#13;
unloaded the dishwasher, carried&#13;
out garbage or ran the snowplow&#13;
in winter.&#13;
But at the same time, Rosa&#13;
has made his American family&#13;
much more aware of Asia and&#13;
Ceylon. They are now looking forward&#13;
eagerly to watching on TV&#13;
this summer as the Slim Rosa&#13;
trods barefoot through the streets&#13;
of Munich this summer as he&#13;
competes in the 10,000 meters&#13;
and marathon for his native land.&#13;
And they admittedly would like&#13;
to travel to Asia and especially&#13;
Ceylon, because of Lucian's influence&#13;
.&#13;
My pledge is s ------- Date _____ _&#13;
Make checks payable to Parkside 200.&#13;
Lucian Rosa, like any freshman in&#13;
college, uses the phone a lot. Here&#13;
he calls a teammate to plan a long&#13;
distance run through the Parkside&#13;
area. Rosa, a native of Ceylon, is&#13;
living with Mr. and Mrs. Ken Joanis,&#13;
7717 49th Avenue, Kenosha,&#13;
"He's a very comfortable person&#13;
to have around," Mrs. Joanis&#13;
noted, although she admitted&#13;
that at first she felt quite- protective&#13;
toward him.&#13;
"But he's absolutly charming,"&#13;
she noted, "and pointed to his&#13;
attitude with children as evidence.&#13;
"He's like the Pied Piper to the&#13;
children in the area and when&#13;
he's out runntng some will often&#13;
try to keep up with him and make&#13;
maybe one short lap to his 10 or&#13;
so."&#13;
The Joanises, and their son, a-senior&#13;
at Tremper tried various&#13;
CeY,lonese-type foods but soon converted&#13;
Rosa to conventional Am·&#13;
erican "chow".&#13;
"We tried rice and curry on&#13;
Lucian's birthday but I had to&#13;
give up and said that Lucian would&#13;
have to change."&#13;
But Ros!!- apparently doesn't dis·&#13;
like American food. He's added&#13;
some six pounds on his small&#13;
frame since starting at Parkside&#13;
in the fall, a credit to the ham·&#13;
burgers, hotdogs and other American&#13;
"delicacies" which he snaps&#13;
up.&#13;
S.un, __________ ZIP ------- Mail to :&#13;
Parkside 200&#13;
Office of Athletics&#13;
Lonesome? Not Rosa. He's part&#13;
of a family and there's enough&#13;
to keep him busy, either at home&#13;
or when running for Parkside,&#13;
but an always · welcome sight is&#13;
the letter stuck in the mirror&#13;
frame in the Joantses' entran&lt;;e'."&#13;
way. .&#13;
p Com&#13;
ANNUAL DUES $100&#13;
University o~ Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Then he knows it's one of those&#13;
Special ones from Ceylon and he&#13;
can thank his lucky stars, for two&#13;
families that care about him,&#13;
And a group known as the park·&#13;
side 200 which wants to help Park·&#13;
side athletics and athletes enjoy&#13;
much success.&#13;
~::...~19:,:7.:2_-lii•• ~." •• ~--'~;--;;';~::-_-=~~~~~~ ~~:.:~ NATIONAL VARSITY CLUB '-" president's Perspective In less than 30 da&#13;
M drl ys over 200&#13;
BY Darlo a grana people have join d th&#13;
, beeD connected with many tton, In less th e30 e orgamza.,&#13;
I...v.ne..izationS in my J·1fe buI never put together thl an days we haye&#13;
oonn;e"""- thusi b 5 paper which will with as much en usiasm y serve as a monthly I bli&#13;
all concerned as with the National for the Office of Athi:tcs&#13;
ca&#13;
::&#13;
varsity Club. ~e National Varsity Club as publtshar&#13;
and sponsor.&#13;
In. that time, we have also establfshed&#13;
the tirst Alumnus&#13;
Award. That is going to Dick Ellison&#13;
and we COuldn't find a better&#13;
man. Through his many acnvities&#13;
on behalf 01 Parkside, Dick&#13;
has set a fine example for future&#13;
recipients.&#13;
The scope of the National Varsity&#13;
Club 1.s wide indeedj basically&#13;
the objecttva is total involvement&#13;
with the University of Wisconstn-&#13;
Parkatde through the support and&#13;
encouragement of its Intereclje.,&#13;
giate athletics program.&#13;
Among the many things we want&#13;
to do, and one of the most important,&#13;
is to welcome graduating&#13;
members of the UW-Parkstde Varsity&#13;
Club into the organization.&#13;
o.rio M.drlgreno&#13;
p,nld..,t, N.tionlll varsity Club Each graduating senior who is a&#13;
a monogram winner will receive free membership for one year.&#13;
He will receive the membership card, decal and lapel pin at&#13;
tonight's banquet.&#13;
The National Varsity Club is open to anyone -- college graduate&#13;
or not -- for the next year. Our goal is a membership of 500 but&#13;
our eornmittment will not stop at any figure and knows no bounds.&#13;
BEAR COACHES AT SMOKER&#13;
The NMionai V.. ity Club got off 10 • f"OlIring -.1 in mid-April WId joining it ~ Irwt ..-nok.,&#13;
__ 0."'-90 __ .0· I • ..-.- Zab_i('"") Bill o-vo (righI). -lng - ....&#13;
were P.-keida 200 ExtlCUlive 0inct0f" AI De Simona (center. -.eI), Athletic Board ~ Gene Qeeioro&#13;
kiewicz (left, r... ) ...t NIltionaI V.. ity Club ........... Guy Tr..crod. ()the,r top po cA .1 a ..... and w" u' $ ,.,...&#13;
........_ .. II Oltond ........ to be hold ..-.,. durlng Iho 1'12-13 ,... ~&#13;
ATHLETIC BOARD&#13;
Advisor's&#13;
Outlook&#13;
The Varsity Club and myself&#13;
as adVisor are proud to sponsor&#13;
support the Office of Athletics by&#13;
spoosoring this annual awards banque!.&#13;
W. leel thai It Is Important to&#13;
focus the attention of the universit)'&#13;
community on those who are&#13;
the doers and accomplishers, the&#13;
people we honor here tonight.&#13;
We recognize that it has taken&#13;
Obtstanding effort and sacrifice on&#13;
their Jl8l't to achieve the successes&#13;
that tbey have and ·we wish to&#13;
coacrotuIate them for It.&#13;
r,&#13;
I&#13;
~•&#13;
(L-R) Dick Keehn (faculty). Cori&#13;
Unclner (faculty), Tom Rosandich&#13;
(8thletic director), Gene Gasior·&#13;
kiewicz: (chairman, faculty). Ken&#13;
"'-tin (student), Dick Elli.on (Park·&#13;
_ide 200), Monis Firebaugh (f~&#13;
ully). Alion Schneklor (faculty);&#13;
IftiQing from picture: John za,..&#13;
il"ll (foculty). Bob Wh;'o (P.,koido&#13;
200). Poto Hobotl., (otudont). ••,•&#13;
"va IC~of K~Na~H~&#13;
RUSS COLEY&#13;
National V.... ity Club Executiv. Board&#13;
F.- _, AI ~. Tom _. Dorlo Modrigrono. Bob _.&#13;
Guy T.-crocI. , Jim 1I&lt;odIoy. Lou DlCootri. Dri&gt;y _. P... l&#13;
Yulka. Geno _. An ~. Bill W..... AI .... _Ie. _ l»&#13;
CUNlIo, e-t Gf'eco.&#13;
D. Tirabassi&#13;
and Sons,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
WLIP/AM/IOSO • WLiP/Ft0V9S.1 • ",,"u 657-4162&#13;
excavating and grading&#13;
sewer work sand gravel&#13;
8539 39th Avenue, Phone: 694-655'&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
MaY, 19_72 __ jjlji~ ... ~~~-;:-;;-:~-==--~~~~~~--------------------~~!.!_ -- NATIONAL VARs11Y CLUB President's Perspective In less than 30 da&#13;
M drl ys over 200 BY Dario a grano people have joined th&#13;
I've been connected with many tion. In less than 30 ct:'. organizaizations&#13;
in my life but never put together this r ys "."e have&#13;
orgaDwith as much enthusiasm by serve as a mopathlpe 'wh1~h Will&#13;
one th th N t· 1 n Y pubhcatton&#13;
all concerned as wi e a iona for the Office of Athletics With&#13;
varsity Club. ~e National Varsity Club as publisher&#13;
and sponsor.&#13;
In that time, we have also established&#13;
the first Al umnus&#13;
Award. That is going to Dick Ellison&#13;
and we couldn't find a better&#13;
man. Through his many activities&#13;
on behalf of Parkside, Dick&#13;
has set a fine example for future&#13;
recipients.&#13;
The scope of the National Varsity&#13;
Club is wide indeed; basically&#13;
the objective is total involvement&#13;
with the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
through the support and&#13;
encouragement of its intercollegiate&#13;
athletics program,&#13;
Among the many things we want&#13;
to do, and one of the most important,&#13;
is to welcome graduating&#13;
members oftheUW-ParksideVarsity&#13;
Club into the organization. Dario Madrigrano&#13;
Preaident, National Varsity Club Each graduating senior who is a&#13;
a monogram winner will receive free membership for one year.&#13;
He will receive the membership card, decal and lapel pin at&#13;
tonight's banquet.&#13;
The National Varsity Club is open to anyone -- college graduate&#13;
or not -- for the next year. Our goal is a membership of 500 but&#13;
our committment will not stop at any figure and knows no bounds.&#13;
Advisor's&#13;
Outlook&#13;
The Varsity Club and myself&#13;
as advisor are proud to sponsor&#13;
support the Office of Athletics by ~&#13;
sponsoring this annual awards banquet.&#13;
We feel that it is important to&#13;
focus the attention of the university&#13;
community on those who are&#13;
the doers and accomplishers, the&#13;
people we honor here tonight.&#13;
We recognize that it has taken&#13;
outstanding effort and sacrifice on&#13;
their part to achieve the successes&#13;
that they have and we wish to&#13;
congratulate them for it.&#13;
ATHLETIC BOARD&#13;
(L·R) Dick Keehn (faculty), Carl&#13;
Lindner (faculty), Tom Rosandich&#13;
(athletic director), Gene Gasior·&#13;
ki-icz (chairman, faculty), Ken&#13;
P.1artin (student), Dick Ellison (Park·&#13;
•ide 200), Morris Firebaugh (facUhy),&#13;
Allan Schneider (faculty);&#13;
miuing from picture: Jphn Zar·&#13;
Ii~ (faculty), Bob White (Park·&#13;
•ide 200), Pete H11betler (student).&#13;
''VOIC~ of K~NO~HA:'&#13;
WLIP/AM/1050 • WLIP/FM/95. 1 • Pt.011~ 657-'162&#13;
BEAR COACHES AT SMOKER&#13;
D. Tirabassi&#13;
and Sons,&#13;
Inc.&#13;
excavating and grading&#13;
sewer work - sand - gravel&#13;
8539 39th Avenue, Phone: 694-655 I&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
P 20&#13;
THE RANGER&#13;
May , 1972&#13;
i • I o ~,&#13;
----~&#13;
ean: w&#13;
m~&#13;
Ye,, 1now you can lhave the only Interstate&#13;
room on your block .Ju1t by ordering one of&#13;
theH posters In our expreaaway size (Size A).&#13;
Or, If you're not ready for that, some of them&#13;
are also available In county size (B), unimproved&#13;
(C), or blcycle path (D).&#13;
GE.@~ili:3@~~1 ~ ~&#13;
SIZE .A 22Y, ft. JC 10Y, IL, $8.50&#13;
(come• In 12 panela, 4 ft. x 5 ft. each)&#13;
SIZE B s tt. x s ft., s1 .so&#13;
SIZE C 33 In. x 20 In., $,75&#13;
SIZE D 221n. x 111n., s.so&#13;
ALL :POSTERS&#13;
AREIN&#13;
FULL COLOR&#13;
SEVEN-UP BOTTLING, INC.&#13;
of Kenosha-Racine-Walworth Counties&#13;
3131 PflllllPS AV&#13;
c~e:,~&#13;
.. """' ~'""'"' - -------- ----.. -· ·· - -·--- .. - ------ - _ . .,... --~ ~.... - - ~&#13;
I - _ __, - ._. ~ ~- • - t:)__ ~ r,i - f ~ •&#13;
-- -&#13;
~&#13;
::i::&#13;
trj&#13;
~ z a&#13;
trj&#13;
~&#13;
~--· r------------------------------------1&#13;
Ooooo~&#13;
Design #12 S\ze A.&#13;
A.&#13;
D•algn #"'14 Biz• A&#13;
~Unco\a:&#13;
I cut out everything just right (I think) and now I'm eligible to be a superhighway. I'll&#13;
even ~ry to get the coupon in the right envelope and send a check or money order&#13;
instead of cash. And another thing .. . after I've put up my poster, can I give speeding&#13;
tickets to my roommate?&#13;
I enclose $ _ ____ check or money order payable to " Uncola Poster Offer." Send&#13;
me the Uncola posters in sizes and quantities marked below. (For each design you&#13;
want, mark quantity in size box.)&#13;
A B C D A B C D&#13;
Design #1 DODD Design #6 D&#13;
Design#2 O Design #7 D&#13;
Design#3 O O Design #8 D&#13;
Design#4 O O Design #9 D O O 0&#13;
Design#5 O O Design #10 0&#13;
A B C D&#13;
Design # 11 D&#13;
Design #12 D&#13;
Design #13 D&#13;
Design # 14 0&#13;
Offer expires Sept. 1, 1972.&#13;
Please allow 3 weeks for delivery.&#13;
NAME ___ _ _ _______ _ __:_ ______ ~-------~&#13;
ADDRESS _ _ .....,..;1:_ _ _ _ _____ _____ ___ ..c...-...'---------'--......!&#13;
CITY ____ ~~~--------STATE _____ ~ __ ZIP ___ _&#13;
Pf•••• mafl to: Uncol• Poeter Otter&#13;
P.O. Box 11477, St. Loul•• Mo. 83105 OR Enclo•• In&#13;
C•mpu• R••ch-ln return •nv•lope&#13;
•.•• ., . .. "'"'•"' ,...,,.., .. ··n•I' ""'' ,.,.,.., .. .. ..,,. ., .... . ,..,.~ ....... ,.. .. ,.,._,. ,, .• ,..n,.,,,,. .. , ... ,..,.,.,.,,,,r ,;,, r~• .,.,,, .. ..,_..,,. o,;,,..,..,.,...,,_&#13;
~ -&lt;&amp;&gt; _,&#13;
,-,:,</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63792">
                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 1, May 10, 1972</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63793">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63794">
                <text>1972-05-10</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63797">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63798">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="63799">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63800">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63801">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63802">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63803">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63804">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="63805">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="285">
        <name>ken martin</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="282">
        <name>lucian rosa</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2525">
        <name>mike dewitt</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="283">
        <name>rudy alvarez</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
