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            <text>PARKSIDE i UV&#13;
COLLEGIAN "n&#13;
Parkside Gets&#13;
Medical Attention&#13;
Regents&#13;
Warn&#13;
Kellett&#13;
The board of regents today warned it&#13;
would not sit by and see the Parkside and&#13;
Green Bay campuses stripped from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
The board, reacting to a reported&#13;
proposal of the Kellett commission on&#13;
sducation, supported a board of visitors&#13;
recommendation that the new campuses&#13;
remain in the University of Wisconsin.&#13;
Regent Charles Gelatt, LaCrosse, said&#13;
le was the "minority of one" in supportingtransfer&#13;
of the new campuses to the board&#13;
af regents of the Wisconsin State&#13;
Universities.&#13;
Gelatt contended that the new campuses&#13;
would dilute the quality and effort of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
UW President Fred H. Harrington interjected&#13;
that Gelatt was a minority of&#13;
'exactly one." There are 10 members of&#13;
the UW board of regents.&#13;
Discussion of the proposal came after&#13;
the board of visitors assailed the proposed&#13;
Kellett recommendation to take the new&#13;
campuses and the center system from the&#13;
University.&#13;
No formal regent action was taken, but&#13;
the board indicated its firm stand for the&#13;
status quo.&#13;
Regent Gordon Walker, Racine, told the&#13;
ooard of visitors: "We want to assure you&#13;
that this majority won't be a silent&#13;
majority."&#13;
The regents indicated they would further&#13;
iiscuss the Kellett proposals which are&#13;
now tentatively scheduled to go to Gov.&#13;
Knowles on March 2. Regent Jack Pilisek,&#13;
Whitefish Bay, noted the Kellett recommendations&#13;
in March will only be "tentative."&#13;
He noted the commission expects&#13;
a full summer of discussion on the&#13;
proposals before drafting a final report&#13;
and recommendations for the 1971&#13;
legislature.&#13;
Richard Cates, Madison, a member of&#13;
the board of visitors, warned that the&#13;
Kellett recommendations would have an&#13;
affect "on the attitudes and spirit of&#13;
people" at the new campusses.&#13;
Cates said board of visitors had found "a&#13;
lot of people who are trying to accomplish&#13;
something that is quite unusual."&#13;
Douglas LaFollette Tuesday&#13;
declared his candidacy for the&#13;
Democratic nomination for congress&#13;
in the first district.&#13;
Strong Donation&#13;
Regents of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Friday accepted a gift of scientific&#13;
periodicals valued at $1,700 for the&#13;
University of, Wisconsin-Parkside Library&#13;
Donor of the 110 volumes, principally in&#13;
the fields of bacteriology, nutrition and&#13;
public health, is Professor Dorothy H.&#13;
Strong of the UW-Madison department of&#13;
foods and nutrition.&#13;
Professor Strong, who will retire in&#13;
June, previously donated another group of&#13;
publications in related fields to the&#13;
Parkside Library. The initial gift was&#13;
valued at $700.&#13;
Study A brood&#13;
Michigan State University is offering&#13;
credit courses in England, Spain, France,&#13;
Austria, Norway and Japan during the&#13;
summer of 1970, the MSU Office of&#13;
Overseas Study announced today.&#13;
It is also offering noncredit language&#13;
courses in France, Germany, Switzerland,&#13;
Spain and Italy.&#13;
The credit courses are open to&#13;
sophomores, juniors, seniors and graduate&#13;
students. They offer American students an&#13;
opportunity to continue their university&#13;
education, while investigating the culture&#13;
and getting to know the people of one or&#13;
more countries.&#13;
Sophomores may study social science or&#13;
the history of western man in London;&#13;
juniors, political science in London, and&#13;
seniors may continue German in Vienna,&#13;
French in Paris or Spanish in Barcelona.&#13;
Graduate students may pursue comparative&#13;
education in Tokyo or comparative&#13;
social work in Oslo.&#13;
All are taught by MSU faculty, experienced&#13;
in the country involved. The&#13;
students are housed on a university&#13;
campus with an American resident adviser.&#13;
&#13;
The noncredit language courses include&#13;
German in Cologne; French in Paris or&#13;
Lausanne, Switzerland; Spanish in Barcelona&#13;
or Madrid, and Italian in Florence.&#13;
Because an effort is made to immerse the&#13;
student in the culture, as well as to increase&#13;
his fluency in the language, he is&#13;
taught by a native instructor, and, except&#13;
in Paris, housed with a native family.&#13;
Cost of the summer program varies&#13;
from $800 to $1,000 for transportation,&#13;
room, board and tuition during the school&#13;
term. Each student has three-day&#13;
weekends and a ten-day period at the&#13;
conclusion of the term for independent&#13;
travel.&#13;
Additional information may be obtained&#13;
by contacting the MSU Office of Overseas&#13;
Study, 108 Center for International&#13;
Programs, MSU, East Lansing, telephone&#13;
517-353-8921.&#13;
Area Schools&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
division of education sent its first group of&#13;
students as practice teachers to the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Unified School Districts&#13;
during this semester.&#13;
A total of about 30 students took part in&#13;
the program with approximately half&#13;
teaching in each district, according to&#13;
John F. Elmore, Director of Admissions.&#13;
About 15 students will be practice teaching&#13;
in elementary schools with the remainder&#13;
in secondary schools in the areas of social&#13;
studies, mathematics, chemistry, biology,&#13;
art and music.&#13;
Students will be assigned to a licensed&#13;
teacher in a district school as well as a&#13;
university supervisor who will work with&#13;
them in developing teaching skills and&#13;
provide written evaluations of their performance.&#13;
&#13;
Candidates for educational certification&#13;
at Parkside have an option of practice&#13;
teaching full days for eight weeks or half&#13;
days for 16 weeks, Elmore said. They&#13;
receive eight college credits under either&#13;
program, he added.&#13;
Elmore said that most of the student&#13;
teachers will either receive their degrees&#13;
W. Medical School.&#13;
Bus Schedule&#13;
Revised&#13;
. . . Again&#13;
7:30 a.m.&#13;
Leaves Kenosha-Arrives Racine 7:55&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Leaves Racine-Arrives Kenosha 7:55&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Tallent to Greenquist Continuous&#13;
Daytime Shuttle.&#13;
8:00 a.m.&#13;
Kenosha bus arrives Tallent Hall-8:15&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Shuttles continuously until-8:30 a.m.&#13;
Racine bus arrives Tallent hall-8:18&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Shuttles continuously until-8:30 a.m.&#13;
Invaded&#13;
at the end of the second semester or will&#13;
complete requirements for educational&#13;
certification by the end of summer session.&#13;
Elmore also announced that UWParkside&#13;
has been accepted into membership&#13;
in the Wisconsin Improvement&#13;
Program (WIP) which works to promote&#13;
educational cooperation and to develop&#13;
placement programs for interns in&#13;
Wisconsin public schools. Other members&#13;
of WIP are UW-Madison, UW-Green Bay,&#13;
eight of the Wisconsin State Universities&#13;
and two private institutions.&#13;
Elmore said Parkside expects to place&#13;
its first intern teachers in area schools&#13;
next fall.^&#13;
Under the internship program, student&#13;
teachers work full time in the schools for a&#13;
full semester carrying about three-fifths of&#13;
a normal teaching load and receiving&#13;
compensation equal to about 25 per cent of&#13;
the average starting salary for a teacher&#13;
with a B. A. degree and no experience.&#13;
(Student tqachers not in the internship&#13;
program receive no pay.) Intern teachers&#13;
also are assigned to licensed teachers in&#13;
the schools as well as to university&#13;
supervisors.&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Meds began the&#13;
second semester with a trip on January 30&#13;
to the U. W. Medical School in Madison.&#13;
Fifteen students left the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot at 7:30 A.M. for a day of tours&#13;
and informal meetings with some of the&#13;
Medical School faculty members.&#13;
Dr. Anna M. Williams, pre-med advisor&#13;
at Parkside, gave a morning tour covering&#13;
the Medical Library, the McArdle&#13;
Laboratory for Cancer Research, cancer&#13;
wards in the hospital, and the Radiology&#13;
Department.&#13;
The use of chemotherapy and radiation&#13;
in the treatment of cancer was explained&#13;
to the students. They then had lunch and&#13;
discussions with three Medical School&#13;
professors and a recent medical graduate&#13;
now interning at University Hospitals.&#13;
After lunch, a medical student showed&#13;
the Parkside students the classrooms,&#13;
laboratories and recreational rooms for&#13;
medical students. He also discussed the&#13;
type of work that a medical student would&#13;
do during the four years of medical school.&#13;
Dr. Robert Coye, Director of Admissions,&#13;
and Dr. Donald Korst, who is in&#13;
charge of the training the U. W. medical&#13;
students receive at other Madison&#13;
hospitals, then talked to the students and&#13;
answered their questions.&#13;
The tours were of special interest to&#13;
senior Douglas Devan, who has been accepted&#13;
into the fall, 1970 class of the U. W.&#13;
Medical School. Other students on the trip&#13;
were Charles Folabit, Judy Geist, Gary&#13;
Hartnell, Tim Higgins, Bill Jeranek, Paul&#13;
Ketarkus, Marty Mathieson, Ulf Munlzing,&#13;
Olivia Moreno, Curtis Sahakian, Edward&#13;
Scruggs, Margaret Schumacher, Betty&#13;
Vogt and John Werwie.&#13;
9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Leaves Kenosha on the Hour&#13;
Leaves Racine on the Hour&#13;
Leaves Tallent Hall to Greenquist16&#13;
minutes after the hour&#13;
21 minutes after the hour&#13;
26 minutes after the hour&#13;
Leaves Greenquist Hall to Tallent20&#13;
minutes after the hour&#13;
25 minutes after the hour&#13;
29 minutes after the hour&#13;
Leaves Tallent Hall to Racine and&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
On the half hour.&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
Extra bus for continuous shuttle&#13;
Last bus for Racine and Kenosha from&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
9:50 p.m.&#13;
Last bus for Racine and Kenosha from&#13;
Tallent Hall (Fridays only)&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
Chancellor I. G. Wyllie observed the&#13;
2,646 students at registration. A&#13;
smooth operation. &#13;
E D I T O R I A L S&#13;
WSU-Parlcside - NEVER!&#13;
A man by the name of William Kellett has a plan — a plan which, if&#13;
placed in operation, would turn the Parkside and Green Bay campuses over to&#13;
the State University system. Kellett is the Chairman of the Governor's Commission&#13;
on Education which will recommend stripping Parkside and Green&#13;
Bay from the University of Wisconsin.&#13;
We suppose a possible analogy could be drawn Irom this with its being&#13;
like moving from a penthouse on top of the John Hancock Building in Chicago&#13;
to a one room apartment in the Milwaukee inner city. Not only would UWP and&#13;
GB suffer economically from such a move, but remember tor a second the&#13;
difference in stature between a degree from the University ot Wisconsin and&#13;
one from Stout State — not much of a comparison.&#13;
UW President Fred H. Harrington has predicted that the UW board of&#13;
regents will respond publicly to the statement before the Kellett commission&#13;
makes its final report to the Governor. Let's hope someone makes a statement&#13;
and puts an end to the silly thoughts floating from the capital. Speaking of&#13;
floating, Kellett may have been "floating trial balloons" on the transfer of the&#13;
campuses, but it seems unfair not to let the University involved a chance to&#13;
respond to these bags of hot air before or during the time when our governor&#13;
receives the report.&#13;
In the words of Eugene McPhee, director of the Wisconsin State&#13;
University system, we "hope it's a harmonious discussion," even though the&#13;
plan itself is as ridiculous as a transfer of control of the United States back to&#13;
that of the people of the United States.&#13;
Representation without Representation&#13;
The Collegian staff is dissatisfied with the choices of student&#13;
representation on the campus concerns committee (CCC) for a number of&#13;
reasons.&#13;
First, the Chancellor was given a list, drawn up by student government&#13;
last year, to make the choices from. That list included six names and two&#13;
alternatives for those positions. Talking with a number of student senators&#13;
from last year, they can remember very well the hours making up that list.&#13;
What happened to it — no one knows.&#13;
. Second, if, perchance, this list was lost, damaged, spindled or mutilated,&#13;
why not chose from the list of student leaders that went on the StudentFaculty&#13;
Workshop". These students are the nucleus of leaders of the school.&#13;
Those people who are still at Parkside are: Ed Borchardt, Peter Habetler,&#13;
Greg Emery, Doug Johnson, Neil Haglov, John Koloen, Barb Krai, Kris&#13;
Lukauskas, Jim Runge, Jim Madura, John Romano, Constance Rytei ske, Rick&#13;
Sereno, Pat Spring, Kathy Stellato and Mary Terselic. Every one of these&#13;
people, with the exception of one or two, was outspoken last year (68-69), and&#13;
any one of them would be a better choice than most of the student members we&#13;
now have on CCC. Just to show how interested one student was, Bob Manley&#13;
has only attended one in six meetings. Is this the voice you want? The Collegian&#13;
staff doesn't.&#13;
Third, it would be apparent to anyone observing CCC that the faculty&#13;
does most of the talking while three out of the five representatives just sit and&#13;
nod their "silent majority" heads yes. While it may be true that Parkside is a&#13;
charter member of the Apathy Club, this should not deny those of us who want&#13;
a strong voice in the "most powerful committee" on campus, that much&#13;
needed voice. Barb Krai, Bob Manley and Sue Siewert arethe students denying&#13;
us that voice. In a typical situation one faculty member will say something and&#13;
they nod their "silent majority" heads yes .. . thirty seconds later they will be&#13;
nodding their heads in agreement to another faculty member who directly&#13;
contradicts the first.&#13;
We are not saying we should be vocal on every matter arising, but&#13;
they've got to stand up and take an active part since all human beings do have&#13;
opinions on all subjects. At least say something so people can see where you&#13;
stand on the given topic, right or wrong, you have the duty to say it.&#13;
Please, use OUR voice before WE lose it.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
i r&#13;
Volume I - No. 7&#13;
9 February 1970&#13;
Marc Colby&#13;
Editor-in-Chief '!!!.'.! GreS Emery&#13;
News Editor Ed Borchardt&#13;
Feature Editor ' Helen Schumacher&#13;
Sports Editor John Jolicoeur&#13;
Business Manager Neil Ha&#13;
e&#13;
lov&#13;
Chief Photographer ! ! Margie Noer&#13;
Production Manager Mr* John Pesta&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published every twc.wee*i by the&#13;
Parkside; Kenosha,&#13;
Wlscons™' pp„„arilv those of THE COLLEGIAN staff,&#13;
the *University o^Wis cons in- Parkside, its faculty, administrators, or students.&#13;
WE Are the Free People&#13;
Science has been advancing the idea of artificial insemination human&#13;
embryo and raising the embryo outside the womb. The process would be much&#13;
like that described in "Brave New World ; pre-packaged life.&#13;
Critics of this method base their objections on the inhumanity of the&#13;
system, it is too precise, too scientific, too cold. Something about this strictly&#13;
regimented method of procreation seems inhuman and forbodes an era of&#13;
stricUy regimented human society. This is not the first step towards a brave&#13;
"&#13;
eW Trdancyls'reaOy'the o nly time we are perfectly free. Babies eat when&#13;
they want, express any emotion or desire they feel and have basically total&#13;
freedom of mobility. Only later does pre-packaged life appear.&#13;
Starting with kindergarten, the child is taught when to play, eat, sing,&#13;
think etc. He is being trained to live by opening packages. For instance, the&#13;
alphabet is the largest package a child can open. Memorized by any rate the&#13;
alphabet contains so much prepared thought it is capable of eliminating&#13;
thought entirely, and it often does. Learning to read is the first step humans&#13;
take to following the basic tenant of Fuckercandlism: "All sensation must be&#13;
vicarious". As a child grows he opens other packages; television, radio,&#13;
movies, newspapers, fashions, all of these pre-packaged elements are&#13;
essentially forms of pre-packaged life. Turn a knob, exchange a coin and with&#13;
no creative effort on your part you are entertained or instructed. Your ideas&#13;
are supplied by the nation's top thinkers, you can listen or dance to any of&#13;
thirty-seven million musical groups, your God is supplied gratis by the Gideon&#13;
Bible Society in conjunction with Pope Paul and the World Council ol Churches,&#13;
gown by Bill Bias.&#13;
By the time of high school graduation nine out of ten people are able to&#13;
continue their existence by opening packages; they have forgotten that they&#13;
have the potential not only to open packages but to make their own packages.&#13;
College is the last chance most people have of learning to make packages but&#13;
few take advantage of this fact. Campuses like Madison have so many&#13;
packages available that they give the impression that kids on that campus&#13;
really have freedom when it is actually a cardboard concentration camp.&#13;
Parkside, on the other hand, has next to no packages; we are the free people.&#13;
For you see, Parkside is in infancy, the state of greatest general freedom. Now&#13;
is the time to start making packages, even though some ham-headed administrators&#13;
can present some problems.&#13;
LETTERS to t he e ditor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Time was when I thought being an adult&#13;
was a bowl of cherries. I looked up at;&#13;
everyone and thought what a marvelous&#13;
thing it would be to be able to look&#13;
everyone in the eye. Every teacher I ever&#13;
had in public schools expected me to act in&#13;
an "adult manner." They sometimes even&#13;
regarded me as angelic because the "big&#13;
bad hammer of discipline," always&#13;
hanging over my head was too much for&#13;
me to bear. Well, here I am at the&#13;
University of Wis.-Parkside in the good old&#13;
(quotecommacough) "adult" world. My&#13;
wishes, of course, would be that every&#13;
aspect of my relations with people be that&#13;
bowl of cherries it was supposed to be and&#13;
that there was a magic age at which&#13;
everything immediately turned out right.&#13;
Setting my aims this high, the other day I&#13;
sat down to class. A few minutes prior to&#13;
that class I overheard another conversation&#13;
taking place between a man and&#13;
a woman who were maliciously insulting a&#13;
third party who was also not supposed to&#13;
hear but did. After getting all upset, which&#13;
I shouldn't have done, I quietly reaffirmed&#13;
my position that this was adult behavior&#13;
and that all the maliciousness in the world&#13;
could only be traced to previous&#13;
generations. In other words, I was taught&#13;
to be brutal.&#13;
Is it unfair to ask of mankind, why he&#13;
wishes to destroy his neighbor? Or are the&#13;
pressures of living so demanding as to&#13;
need someone to kick and to maime for a&#13;
lifetime?&#13;
. There is still hope, there is a youth, and a&#13;
youth following that and a youth following&#13;
that and on and on into eternity will man&#13;
live. Some day he will discover a pot of&#13;
gold at the end of a rainbow, and he will&#13;
gather the fruits of wisdom. I know I'm&#13;
being unjust to the millions of people who&#13;
think the times are good but better times&#13;
are always coming and man's desires may&#13;
never be fulfilled.&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
Blast . . .&#13;
Counterblast&#13;
"The time has come, the Walrus said,&#13;
"To talk of many things,&#13;
"Of shoes and ships and sealing wax,&#13;
"Of cabbages and kings."&#13;
B—CB is a new feature in the Collegian&#13;
designed to serve serve as a tabloid lectern&#13;
from which any student may voice an idea,&#13;
opinion, call to the barricades, or polemic&#13;
on any subject he or she wishes. If you take&#13;
the time to write it down in readable&#13;
English, we'll print it.&#13;
I had asked (challenged is more the&#13;
word, really) Messer's Smith and Koloen&#13;
to write the first article for this column,&#13;
but their usual plethoric sense of literary&#13;
indignation seems to have failed them.&#13;
If you are interested in submitting&#13;
something, please bring it to the Collegian&#13;
office, Room 109 in Kenosha. As always, no&#13;
names will be printed if you would rather&#13;
we didn't.&#13;
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thru the&#13;
Kitchen Window&#13;
By ED BORCHARDT&#13;
During this first half of this century&#13;
films and theater followed Oscar Wilde's&#13;
dictum that "Life Mirrors Art". Show biz&#13;
was to give a means of escape for Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. North America. The movies of people&#13;
like Fred Astaire became dreams that&#13;
money could buy.&#13;
Beginning in the late '50's, a new style&#13;
became popular. Life was not to mirror&#13;
art, life became art. This is the style in&#13;
which Arnold Weshner wrote "The Kitchen",&#13;
playing at the Performing Arts&#13;
Center. The play presents a day in the life&#13;
of a popular London restaurant, the&#13;
Trivoli. Weshner is highly qualified to&#13;
write on this subject, since he had worked&#13;
in kitchens in London and Paris&#13;
previously. As do many plays, the story of&#13;
"The Kitchen" unfolds rather than&#13;
following a plot.&#13;
While watching this play, one senses that&#13;
this is a world haunted by fear, confusion,&#13;
and falsities. Working under the strain of&#13;
the kitchen the characters are robbed&#13;
slowly of all humanity and never notice it.&#13;
Friendships-hatreds are founded and&#13;
forgotten. The young Peter is the only one&#13;
to notice this change but it's too late, even&#13;
for him. Peter decries the inability of his&#13;
co-workers to dream but wheh they and&#13;
him tell them his dream, what he would do&#13;
if the Trivoli were to disappear, he finds he&#13;
has lost the one thing that makes man&#13;
great.&#13;
Thus this play is not just a study of interface&#13;
within a small group, it is a&#13;
microcosm devised to show us what is&#13;
happening to modern man. For us&#13;
McLuhan would say, it is the job of the&#13;
artist to exist ahead of his time in order to&#13;
show us what will happen.&#13;
Chemical Invasion&#13;
of Oceans by Man&#13;
Dr. Goldberg is Professor of Chemistry&#13;
at the Scripps Institution of&#13;
Oceanography, LaJolla, California. He has&#13;
his B. S. degree from California and Ph. D.&#13;
degree from the University of Chicago. Dr.&#13;
Goldberg has been associated with Scripps&#13;
for twenty years. His research has been in&#13;
geochemistry of marine waters, marine&#13;
sedimentation, meteoritics and radio&#13;
T H&#13;
A N K&#13;
S&#13;
BRASS&#13;
CANNON&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
BOOK&#13;
MART&#13;
5811 » 8th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
chemistry.&#13;
The lecture, one of a series in the&#13;
Distinguished Lecture Series, is sponsored&#13;
by University Extension and the AllUniversity&#13;
of Wisconsin Sea Grant&#13;
Program. Faculty, students and the public&#13;
are invited without charge.&#13;
It will be given Wednesday afternoon,&#13;
February 18, 1970, at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
auditorium of Wisconsin Center, 702&#13;
Langdon Street. The lecture also will be&#13;
broadcast on ETN at a small number of&#13;
locations. Arrangements have been made&#13;
for concurrent slide presentations and for&#13;
audience questions at Green Bay,&#13;
Milwaukee and Parkside. At other campus&#13;
locations, contact your local Extension&#13;
office.&#13;
For further information, contact: Dr. E.&#13;
C. Gasiorkiewicz, University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin. Telephone&#13;
414-658-4861.&#13;
Library Mags, Etc.&#13;
New magazines are beginning to come in&#13;
with the new year. Some are old standbys:&#13;
"College English", "Harper's", "Fortune",&#13;
"Ramparts", and "Scientific&#13;
American". Some are more esoteric: "Le&#13;
Figaro Litteraire", "Pravda", "Vnesh&#13;
Torgovlia". A very useful item is&#13;
"Editorial Reserach reports". Small&#13;
newspapers subscribe to it to get&#13;
backgrounds for their editorials.&#13;
A new record player will shortly be&#13;
available in the main Parkside Library.&#13;
From the Right&#13;
By JEFF&#13;
The query is again being raised, "Where&#13;
is Parkside's student government?"&#13;
The truth be known, no such thing has&#13;
ever existed in this University. What&#13;
functioned under the title mostly concerned&#13;
itself with social activities, and had&#13;
a dismal record of resignations and&#13;
depleted membership.&#13;
As a growing young institution, Parkside&#13;
requires a strong, elected body to&#13;
represent the students. We pay for this&#13;
place, indeed, we are the University. To&#13;
have no say in its operation is idiocy.&#13;
STUDENT GOVERNMENT.&#13;
.ANYONE?&#13;
PARRY&#13;
The administration should expect us to&#13;
take an active interest in the running of&#13;
our school, and we should take up this&#13;
responsibility. The administration is there&#13;
for just that purpose; to administer our&#13;
school. It should be done not in spite of the&#13;
student body, but in accordance with it.&#13;
Curiously, one may hear at every turn&#13;
complaints of one kind or another about&#13;
the school. With an effective body voicing&#13;
these complaints we can lay the foundation&#13;
for a University responsive to the students'&#13;
wishes.&#13;
It's Brandt's for the Finest in Sound Equipment&#13;
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GIVE 'EM H ELEN&#13;
Before I dig into my discussion on jogging, I'd like to say a thing or two&#13;
about the recent incident concerning a number of basketball players&#13;
suspended for training violations. It really annoys me when something like this&#13;
happens. Coach Stephens is a very understanding man, so the offense must&#13;
have been serious to warrant such drastic action. The whole purpose of&#13;
training rules are to keep the athlete in top condition so he can play his best.&#13;
Once an athlete becomes a member of a team, he voluntarily accepts these&#13;
regulations and is on his honor to obey them. In my mind, there is no rhyme or&#13;
reason to break training. It is a definite sign of immaturity and can only result&#13;
in the lessening of teamwork.&#13;
I've learned of the story and most of the details and I don't see any&#13;
reason for publicizing them. Speaking as a fan, I'm sorry to see it happen. My&#13;
sympathy to the players involved because I know how much they enjoyed the&#13;
sport, but when someone goes back on his word, he deserves any and all&#13;
punishment dished out. My compliments to Coach for having the courage of his&#13;
convictions in suspending the players even at the risk of a drastic decline in&#13;
victories. And finally, my best wishes to the rest of the team for pulling through&#13;
and showing this university the kind of stuff our athletes are made of.&#13;
Now, to the jogging. WOW! It really makes a difference in physical as&#13;
well as mental fitness. I began on January 1 with a program of 15 minutes each&#13;
day. Seeing as how I wasn't in tip-top shape, I ran two blocks and walked one.&#13;
After a while, I went to three for one. There's a trick to breathing, too. I read&#13;
somewhere that you should breathe in for four steps, hold it for four and&#13;
breathe out for four. I found that this type of breathing exercise prevents or at&#13;
least lessens fatigue at the end of the run. I've tried to keep a regular program&#13;
but there were a few days when the weather got down below zero and it was&#13;
highly recommended that one did not place one's well-being in danger by entering&#13;
the cold unnecessarily. In other words, don't go out or you'll get frostbit!&#13;
It's been a wild experience. I've discovered muscles I didn't know I had&#13;
(my apologies to Dr. Esser). And I woke up my lazy ones. For you girls who are&#13;
regular readers of this column, jogging isn't an exclusively masculine sport. In&#13;
fact, it helps to trim off those extra pounds and shape those sagging muscles. It&#13;
is a very small sacrifice to make when you consider the outcome. Get your&#13;
boyfriends to get out and run with you. Chances are that if you're out of shape&#13;
he is, too.&#13;
JOGGERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE!&#13;
Parkside Hosts M eet&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will host the first Midwest Intercollegiate&#13;
Women's Fencing Championship next&#13;
Spring, it was announced today.&#13;
The meet, which has been sanctioned by&#13;
the American Fencing League of America&#13;
and the NCAA, will be held Apr. 25 at Case&#13;
high school fieldhouse in Racine.&#13;
More than 200 women fecners, including&#13;
a team from Parkside, are expected to&#13;
represent collegiate institutions from an&#13;
18-state area.&#13;
Parkside fencing coach Loran Hein and&#13;
Michigan State coach Charles Schmitter&#13;
are co-chairmen of the event, with Hein&#13;
serving as meet director.&#13;
The meet in Racine reflects Parkside's&#13;
growing stature in collegiate fencing.&#13;
Hein's freshman and sophomore men's&#13;
team received national attention with a&#13;
third place finish and an individual title in&#13;
the Great Lakes Invitational at Notre&#13;
Dame last season. This year, with its first&#13;
junior class, the Parkside varsity will&#13;
fence such opponents as Nebraska,&#13;
Minnesota, Missouri, Kansas, Air Force,&#13;
Colorado, Iowa, Indiana, Notre Dame,&#13;
Illinois, Michigan State and Wisconsin.&#13;
Senators Elected&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
faculty has elected five colleagues to fill&#13;
vacancies on the 14-member Faculty&#13;
Senate, the legislative body of the UWP&#13;
faculty.&#13;
DeLuca's&#13;
HEAVENLY FRENCH&#13;
SALON&#13;
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2ND FLOOR&#13;
RACINE&#13;
633-5955&#13;
S P E C I A L T Y:&#13;
L O NG HAIR ST Y L I N G - CUTTING&#13;
Crown your beauty&#13;
with a lovely&#13;
new hair style.&#13;
Open Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
Vic Godfrey&#13;
Coach's Corner&#13;
Several days ago, Parkside was&#13;
privileged to have as its guest the world&#13;
famous track coach, Arthur Lydiard of&#13;
New Zealand. Much has been written&#13;
about this man and he has written so those&#13;
people familiar with him had certain&#13;
expectation^.&#13;
None had reason to be disappointed. He&#13;
came on even stronger than many expected.&#13;
Lydiard is a dynamic man with&#13;
unbounded energy.&#13;
Lydiard became known throughout the&#13;
irack and fitness world in 1960 when two of&#13;
his athletes won gold medals in the Rome&#13;
Olympics. From there several of his&#13;
'black-shirted Kiwis' went on to set&#13;
numerous world records.&#13;
JUDO&#13;
Mr. Suh has joined the athletic staff full&#13;
time this semester. A variety of judo&#13;
classes are offered as well as karate. All&#13;
interested in forming a judo club should&#13;
nnritart him or the Office of Athletics.&#13;
WEIGHT TRAINING&#13;
Two universal gyms have just arrived&#13;
and have been installed in the Kenosha&#13;
weight room in the basement of the&#13;
Kenosha campus. These machines coupled&#13;
with the Olympic weight lifting sets&#13;
already there gives Parkside one of the&#13;
best weight training set upis in University&#13;
circles.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Coach Loren Hein's chargers ran up 12&#13;
straight victories against the best competition&#13;
available before bowing to the Air&#13;
Force Academy 15-12. It should be noted&#13;
that the Academy has a victory string of 41&#13;
consecutive bouts. If one has to be beat it is&#13;
nice to be beat by the best.&#13;
WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
Parkside had a fledgling team last fall&#13;
with just one meet scheduled. Several&#13;
indoor meets have been run and a schedule&#13;
is being planned for this spring.&#13;
Next fall a full scale XC schedule will be&#13;
run as well as an indoor and outdoor track&#13;
program. Several girls from track clubs in&#13;
Mid-America have expressed an interest&#13;
in the program being developed at this&#13;
school.&#13;
There are only a few colleges in the&#13;
country offering a full fledged women's&#13;
program. Parkside is getting in on the&#13;
ground floor and should be able to develop&#13;
one of the better programs in the land.&#13;
If there are girls on campus at the&#13;
present time who are interested they&#13;
should contact the Athletic Office immediately.&#13;
Track is not just a spring sport&#13;
as so many people believe.&#13;
It should be noted that Mary Libal,&#13;
Parkside's one woman track team, is&#13;
incapacitated at the present.&#13;
the&#13;
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MARCH 6, 7 &amp; 8 - WHITECAP MT.&#13;
MONTREAL, WISCONSIN&#13;
Trip includes:&#13;
Round trip transportation, lodging (Montreal lodge), two breakfasts, one&#13;
dinner, two days lift tickets (including night skiing Sat.), two free lessons for&#13;
beginners, apres ski party with ski films, soda, beer, popcorn, etc., and use&#13;
of lodge facilities including fireplace lounge, pool tables, juke box, etc. Ski&#13;
rentals available at special rate for entire weekend: $5.00 for woods; $7.00&#13;
for metals.&#13;
Cost of trip: $40.00 — registered guest&#13;
$29.50 — Parkside student&#13;
$19.50 — activity card holder.&#13;
Reservations now being taken at the office of student affairs (all campuses).&#13;
Deadline Feb. 27. $10.00 non-refundable deposit required. Bus limit 40. </text>
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