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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 1, issue 22</text>
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            <text>"73-74" Financial aids behind schedule</text>
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            <text>"73-74" Financial aids behind schedule&#13;
Madison — Students who need&#13;
financial aid to go to college next&#13;
fall have grounds for anxiety this&#13;
spring.&#13;
Chances are they won't know&#13;
how much aid, if any, they'll be&#13;
getting, until late this summer,&#13;
because the rules which govern&#13;
aid programs are up in the air,&#13;
suspended in budget debates at&#13;
the state and federal level.&#13;
Aids packages&#13;
Financial aids administrators&#13;
on the University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
campus are looking at&#13;
the legislative process a little&#13;
glumly these days. "At this time,&#13;
we should be putting together&#13;
student financial aid packages,&#13;
but we're unable to do so at all,"&#13;
said Wallace H. Douma, director&#13;
of student financial aids.&#13;
Douma's office is usually&#13;
scrambling this time ofyear,&#13;
piecing grants, loans and workstudy&#13;
employment together so&#13;
that aid recipeints will know how&#13;
they'll finance the coming year of&#13;
school.&#13;
This year, "instead of giving&#13;
them a package that says 'you're&#13;
going to get $500 in a grant, $500&#13;
in a loan, and $500 in a job,' we're&#13;
only going to be able to say,&#13;
'you're eligible for $1,500, but we&#13;
don't know what form it will be in&#13;
-or if you'll get it.""&#13;
Revamp of aids&#13;
Nationally, President Nixon&#13;
has proposed revamping of aid&#13;
programs established during the&#13;
1960's. He would replace the&#13;
Educational Opportunity Grant&#13;
Program (EOG, funding $210&#13;
million in 1972-73) with a Basic&#13;
Opportunity Grant (BOG,&#13;
proposed funding $622 million for&#13;
1973-74). BOG's "entitlement&#13;
concept" would give $1,400 to&#13;
every student who goes on for&#13;
post-high school educationminus&#13;
whatever the family&#13;
contribution should be, as&#13;
calculated by a formula.&#13;
Smaller grants&#13;
"It appears to me that BOG&#13;
will give smaller grants to more&#13;
students," Douma said. "While&#13;
there's going to be more money&#13;
available, it's going to be&#13;
distributed in a different way.&#13;
Generally, in terms of aid, I think&#13;
students will be as well off as this&#13;
year."&#13;
Douma likes the BOG idea, but&#13;
adds, "at this point, there are no&#13;
rules, no appropriations, no&#13;
nothing for this program, and&#13;
registration is going to start&#13;
August 20."&#13;
Under the Administration's&#13;
plan, National Defense Student&#13;
Loans (totalling $286 million this&#13;
year) would be eliminated, and&#13;
private credit unions, banks, and&#13;
savings and loans would take up&#13;
the lenders' role under the&#13;
guaranteed loan program.&#13;
Work-Study&#13;
Finally, the College WorkStudy&#13;
Program would be pared&#13;
for $270 million to $250 million.&#13;
Under the program, federal&#13;
money pays 80 percent and te&#13;
local employer (the University or&#13;
a non-profit concern in the&#13;
community) 20 percent of a&#13;
student's wages. Richard E.&#13;
Corbett, who handles the&#13;
program here, estimates that the&#13;
dollars-and-cents loss here would&#13;
reduce the number of UWMadison&#13;
students getting workstudy&#13;
aid from this year's 1,100 to&#13;
900.&#13;
Consequently, Douma, Corbett,&#13;
and other state financial aid&#13;
administrators are pushing for a&#13;
state companion to the federal&#13;
work-study program. They feel it&#13;
would help offset the effect of the&#13;
federal cut (aggravated this year&#13;
by newly eligible schools lining&#13;
up for a share of the pie), and also&#13;
help students who've established&#13;
need, but follow other, porrer&#13;
students on the work-study&#13;
priority list.&#13;
The alternative to work-study&#13;
for these students may be a loanand&#13;
loan indebtedness. A student&#13;
adviser to the Wisconsin Higher&#13;
Education Aids Board (HEAB)&#13;
testified before the Joint Finance&#13;
Committee of the state&#13;
legislature recently that one in 10&#13;
1972 seniors left UW System&#13;
schools over $3,000 in debt.&#13;
(continued on page 4)&#13;
The ParksideWednesday,&#13;
March 21 ,1973&#13;
Vol. 1 No. 22&#13;
Interdisciplinary course offered&#13;
The Burlington Brass Works&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci must be&#13;
smiling. Not just one of those&#13;
enigmatic Mona Lisa smiles, but&#13;
a broad approving grin.&#13;
"The most scientific artist"&#13;
would doubtless endorse an&#13;
unusual course being offered this&#13;
sen}ester should he hear of it on&#13;
some heavenly hotline.&#13;
Predicated on the idea that&#13;
there's art in chemistry and&#13;
chemistry in art, the two-credit&#13;
interdisciplinary course is titled&#13;
"Aesthetics and Properties of&#13;
Materials." Students can enroll&#13;
for credit in either art or&#13;
chemistry.&#13;
The course is the joint creation&#13;
of two Parkside faculty members,&#13;
John Murphy, an assistant&#13;
professor of art wjiose work as a&#13;
ceramist has attracted national&#13;
attention, and Michael Marron,&#13;
an assistant. professor of&#13;
chemistry, whose particular field&#13;
is molecular structure and&#13;
kinetics of chemical reactions.&#13;
They believe the course is unique.&#13;
It is designed to give students&#13;
"hands on" experience in&#13;
working with glass, ceramics,&#13;
metals and plastics as well as&#13;
theoretical and historical perspectives.&#13;
&#13;
The purpose of the course,&#13;
according to Murphy and&#13;
Marron, is to increase students'&#13;
awareness of creative&#13;
possibilities of the materials,&#13;
provide a unified basis for understanding&#13;
material properties,&#13;
establish a connection between&#13;
science and art and point out&#13;
areas of overlap between&#13;
creative and technical applications&#13;
of the materials,&#13;
(continued on page 5)&#13;
Capsule college&#13;
offered in April&#13;
The 1973 Capsule College at&#13;
Parkside will be a two-day event,&#13;
April 25 and 26, with registrants&#13;
given an option of attending for&#13;
one or both days.&#13;
The initial Capsule College in&#13;
1971 attracted about 400 women&#13;
from throughout southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and the 1972 event&#13;
drew more than 600. Both&#13;
previous "colleges" were oneday&#13;
events.&#13;
The 1973 program will offer&#13;
four two-and-one-half hour&#13;
workshops and 27 75-minute&#13;
seminars each day. Participants&#13;
may elect to attend either a&#13;
workshop and two seminars or&#13;
four seminars each day.&#13;
Brochures outlining the&#13;
program and registration blanks&#13;
will be available in about two&#13;
weeks.&#13;
Capsule College is sponsored&#13;
by Parkside, University Extension&#13;
and the Kenosha, Racine&#13;
and Walworth Extension Offices.&#13;
Liddy concludes festivities Niebuhr named to 1974 convention&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
The cheerful personality of&#13;
James Liddy climaxed the St.&#13;
Patricks day festivities that&#13;
happened in the LLC with Irish&#13;
Poetry reading. The Poet-inResident&#13;
gave the reading at&#13;
Main Place at 3 p.m. Sat., Feb.&#13;
17. Liddy felt that it was fitting to&#13;
conclude all of this "foolishness"&#13;
with poems written by his friends&#13;
from Ireland where "poetry is as&#13;
common as being drunk." "On&#13;
this day," he explained, "only St.&#13;
Patrick exists and God doesn't,&#13;
and St. Patrick never existed&#13;
anyway."&#13;
He began with material from&#13;
the Dublin World War II scene&#13;
when "booze was rationed" and&#13;
where "love always was&#13;
rationed." Liddy read various&#13;
works from Patrick Kavangh,&#13;
Michail Collins, Brian Linch, and&#13;
Michael King some of which were&#13;
friends that he "quarreled so&#13;
often" with. Some of these&#13;
disputes ended up with two&#13;
parties "not speaking to each&#13;
other for a year."&#13;
He concluded his reading with&#13;
a couple of his own poems.&#13;
Immediately following the&#13;
Irish Poetry reading, Jim&#13;
Runnels a Professor at Carthage&#13;
College presented his Irish folksinging.&#13;
The songs he performed&#13;
were written about those involved&#13;
with the Irish civil war.&#13;
Prior to these activities was a&#13;
poetry workshop, a prose&#13;
workshop, and a production of an&#13;
Irish play, "The Big House." The&#13;
poetry workshop was run by&#13;
Liddy and Poet Knute Skinner in&#13;
LLC D-174 at 10 a.m. At the same&#13;
time as the Poetry wordshop,&#13;
Herbert Kuble held a prose&#13;
workshop in LLC 3314. The Big&#13;
House was put on by Parkside&#13;
students and directed by Pat&#13;
Engdahl.&#13;
planning committee&#13;
William R. Niebuhr, Coordinator&#13;
of Student Life has been&#13;
named to the 1974 Convention&#13;
Planning Committee of the&#13;
National Entertainment Conference&#13;
(NEC) and nominated&#13;
for ele election to the NEC board&#13;
of directors.&#13;
Niebuhr's prime responsibility&#13;
for the 1974 convention, to be held&#13;
in February at Houston, Texas,&#13;
will be the development of all&#13;
sessions dealing with university&#13;
travel programs.&#13;
Over the past three years&#13;
Niebuhr has developed group and&#13;
charter travel programs to&#13;
London, Rome, Acapulco, Amsterdam,&#13;
Hawaii, the French&#13;
Alps and the Spanish Riviera and&#13;
has established an on-campus&#13;
travel information center at UWP.&#13;
&#13;
Niebuhr, also a member of the&#13;
NEC's Travel Committee, is&#13;
currently ending a two year term&#13;
as NEC Unit Coordinator for&#13;
Wisconsin and Upper Michigan.&#13;
The NEC is composed of over 650&#13;
colleges and universities and&#13;
serves the individual campus by&#13;
providing programs and services&#13;
in the areas of film, theatre,&#13;
lectures, contemporary and&#13;
classical music, art and exhibits,&#13;
video programming and travel.&#13;
Also appointed to the Planning&#13;
Committee were P. Gus Geil,&#13;
Wittenberg University; Philip&#13;
Bowman, Grand Valley State&#13;
College; Karen Nixon, University&#13;
of Missouri-Columbia; Carol&#13;
Barta, Duquesne University;&#13;
Austin Cooper, University of&#13;
Houston, Frank Baird,&#13;
University of Georgia; and Jim&#13;
E. Duffy, Essex Community&#13;
College! Willi am R. Ni ebuhr, &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 21, 1973&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Aids mixup causes&#13;
delay&#13;
Once again financial aids, loans, grants and&#13;
workstudy notifications will be late. The problem isn't at&#13;
the local level but is spread across the nation in a mass&#13;
of undefined rules.&#13;
President Nixon set forth new budget proposals which&#13;
are seemingly larger, but include more institutions,&#13;
therefore each university may receive less overall.&#13;
The state of Wisconsin, along with states across the&#13;
nation, is trying to decide how available funds are going&#13;
to be dispersed. It is still trying to find out how much&#13;
morvey w ill be available.&#13;
Parkside officials seem to feel that there will at least&#13;
be as much financial aid available as last year and the&#13;
Financial Aids Office thinks it is not a month behind in&#13;
its job a s UW-Madison says it is.&#13;
We hope that the students poncerned are not inconvenienced&#13;
too much. Indeed, we hope financial aid&#13;
statements are on time for next year and that students&#13;
who hope to work or go to school thib summer, with state&#13;
or federal funds, receive those funds.&#13;
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EDITORS&#13;
NOTEBOOK&#13;
The Activities Board presentation&#13;
of Jose Greco was indeed a&#13;
success even though there was a&#13;
loss in money.&#13;
The concert holds Parkside's&#13;
all-time attendance record for a&#13;
fine art event and may conceivably&#13;
hold the record for attendance&#13;
of students and faculty.&#13;
At this stage of Parkside's&#13;
development of activities and&#13;
fine arts, programs like this are&#13;
major breakthroughs. Over&#13;
1,5000 students, faculty and&#13;
community members took part in&#13;
the two performances last week.&#13;
There was definitely interest.&#13;
More importantly, there was&#13;
interest in the university's activity&#13;
and not just the act.&#13;
The local media gave the Greco&#13;
concert widespread postconcert&#13;
coverage. That is unusual for this&#13;
area, but the public relations&#13;
contained in those media are&#13;
certainly welcomed by the&#13;
school.&#13;
It is hard to assign dollar&#13;
amounts to the cultural value of a&#13;
fine arts program, but it seems&#13;
that a well-developed program of&#13;
fine arts events will be very&#13;
valuable. The extent to which fine&#13;
arts programming is developed&#13;
at Parkside will be tempered by&#13;
available dollars. The simple loss&#13;
of money on one concert, or even&#13;
a number of programs, should&#13;
not bring ridicule of the whole&#13;
program or series.&#13;
One must be very short-sighted&#13;
or be wearing blinders not to be&#13;
able to see the great value of even&#13;
a money-losing venture when it&#13;
has great cultural value.&#13;
Programming of fine arts&#13;
events will continue and must be&#13;
maintained by funds available if&#13;
this university is to live up to its&#13;
responsibility as an institution of&#13;
learning. Once the fine arts&#13;
programming at Parkside is&#13;
established the money losers will&#13;
be few and far between. Until&#13;
then the university is responsible&#13;
for the cultivation of the students,&#13;
faculty, staff and members of the&#13;
community who will, in the long&#13;
run, more than support fine arts&#13;
programming here. They will&#13;
help develop and mold that&#13;
programming for the future.&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
The Activities Office reports that it did not lose as much money on&#13;
the Jose Greco performance as they had expected. Attendance was a&#13;
surprisingly high 1,036,383 of them students. Total receipts were about&#13;
$1,700, which means after expenses, the students of Parkside only lost&#13;
$1,200 or so on the deal.&#13;
There are approximately 4,150 students at this university, which&#13;
means only 9.2 percent attended the performance. The whole student&#13;
body paid the dollars so that each student present could receive a little&#13;
culture. The final cost breakdown shows that each student attending&#13;
was subsidized to the tune of $3.24.&#13;
Not every presentation that is presented by the Activities Board&#13;
loses money. It just seems that way sometimes. Some programs are&#13;
actually of such general interest that they make money. What we need&#13;
is more of the latter and less of the former.&#13;
If the programs put on by the Board were substantially money&#13;
making presentations, the profits received could be plowed back into a&#13;
worthwhile enterprise, such as redicing the debt on the Union&#13;
Reserve.&#13;
Since the budget modification to the segregated fee, there will not be&#13;
as much money going into the reserve because of the redistribution of&#13;
funds from the summer session. This money would go in portion to the&#13;
Activities Office, which seems to have to put on a number of losing&#13;
ventures each year just to balance the books.&#13;
If discretion was utilized in programming, not all the money&#13;
allocated to the Activities Office need be spent. Monies left over as&#13;
surplus at the end of the year would be used in the Union Reserve.&#13;
Debt reduction in the reserve account should be a priority, since the&#13;
sooner the debt is paid off, the less money will have to be spent by the&#13;
students of Parkside in additional interest payments.&#13;
More information on the Stanton Freidman performance, April 17-&#13;
Friedman will be arriving at Parkside Tuesday morning and will be&#13;
available during the day for participation in classes where interest is&#13;
expressed in Ufology. Interested faculty should contact the Activities&#13;
Office now and avoid the rush.&#13;
The evening performance, which will take place at 8 p.m. in the P.E.&#13;
Building, will include a slide presentation of actual UFOs. Discussed&#13;
will be the Air Force's report on project bluebook, which Friedman&#13;
accuses of deliberately deceiving the public regarding UFOs.&#13;
It should be good.&#13;
A couple of weeks ago I received a form for use in my nomination of&#13;
a faculty member for the annual Distinguished Teaching Award. It&#13;
was the first I had heard that the Awards Committee was even in&#13;
operation. But this committee always has been pretty secretive.&#13;
Ever since awards selection was taken out of the handsof the&#13;
students, there has been dissent on how appropriate the awards&#13;
procedure was. Last year less than three percent of the student body&#13;
participated.&#13;
Now we fine that the method used last year remains.essentially •thei&lt;-&#13;
same. The committee is very sensitive about the procedures used&#13;
Two years ago when the present format was first utilized the committee&#13;
went so far as to destroy all records so that their methods might&#13;
not be questioned.&#13;
I am pleased to say that one suggestion I made earlier in the year is&#13;
being followed, that faculty teaching evaluation forms be utilized in&#13;
making the evaluations. I am also pleased to see the main emphasis is&#13;
being placed on teaching.&#13;
There is a higher proportion of students on the committee this year,&#13;
but they are still the minority. The hand-picking aspect of choosing&#13;
students to be on the committee also leaves much to be desired. If&#13;
more publicity was given the results of committee actions, I'm sure&#13;
that any slightly ambiguous aspects of committee operation could be&#13;
cleared up.&#13;
r&#13;
_ By Gary Huck&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibrarvLearnmg&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
rJw S&#13;
arksid&#13;
f Ran8&#13;
er is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
view of The IJniversity^f Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
606853&#13;
"&#13;
1^ ^ °&#13;
ffidal&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
co^JVc&#13;
RE ED,T0R: -"ane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry MurDhv&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmus^e^TertrGogo^Gwff 5 ^36^' Jeannine SiP&#13;
sma&#13;
- Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck Boh Rnh.„ a Basing&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ken Konkol am Noll ^&gt;&#13;
mv Cu n d a ri&#13;
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ADVISER: Don Kopriva w r e&#13;
"ce, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
rj ' , K*P*MRNTI&#13;
D FOR NATIONAL A DVERTISING BY&#13;
I ^ f Advert»*ng Services, Inc. 9&#13;
360 Lexington Avt., New York, N. x\ 10017 I &#13;
Wed., Mar. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Several people have auestioned&#13;
my veracity about there really&#13;
being a "Chastity Belt" such as I&#13;
mentioned in my recent letter&#13;
There certainly is such a device,&#13;
and it's been in use for a lone&#13;
time. &amp;&#13;
I remember back in 1189 when&#13;
my liege, Richard the LionHearted,&#13;
was organizing what&#13;
would go down in history at being&#13;
The Third Crusade. (That was&#13;
during one of my "other lives."&#13;
I've lost count of the number of&#13;
reincarnations I have lived&#13;
through. I vaguely recall having&#13;
lived once as a Viking and in&#13;
another life I was a college&#13;
professor.)&#13;
Well anyway, my buddy, Sir&#13;
Henry the Hammer had talked&#13;
me into joining the Crusade&#13;
Movement. My name at that time&#13;
was Arthur the Brave. ("Sir&#13;
Arthur" for short.) Henry and I&#13;
had a mutual friend named Cecil&#13;
the Chicken-Hearted. We gave&#13;
him that name because he said he&#13;
was a conscientious objector and&#13;
didn't want to be a Crusader.&#13;
On the morning we were to&#13;
leave Cecil came to see us off. It&#13;
was a touching moment when Sir&#13;
Henry said to Cecil, "Old friend&#13;
you know that Lady Jane and I&#13;
have been going steady and last&#13;
night, as a pledge of her fidelity,&#13;
she allowed me to fasten and lock&#13;
a certain kind of belt around her&#13;
beautiful slender waist." (That&#13;
was the first time I'd ever heard&#13;
of that kind of a belt.)&#13;
"Only this morning" continued&#13;
Sir'Henry, talking to Cecil, "did I&#13;
learn that The Holy Land is a&#13;
helluva long ways from here and&#13;
I shall not be back in a fortnight&#13;
as I had planned. Now I don't&#13;
want to lose the key while I am off&#13;
fighting the infidels and I am&#13;
asking you to take care of my&#13;
Lady's honor while I am away so&#13;
I am placing in your hands this&#13;
key which is for the belt Lady&#13;
Jane is wearing. Guard it with&#13;
your life. And if I don't return,&#13;
well...."&#13;
Sir Cecil accepted the&#13;
responsibility with great humility&#13;
and I was deeply moved as the&#13;
two Knights shook hands.&#13;
The next day, while Richard's&#13;
entourage was halted for an aleOtto&#13;
&#13;
THERE'5 N OT f GET A ^&#13;
ENOUGH / CHAIR F ROM&#13;
CHAIRS&#13;
HERE.&#13;
break, a horseman was observed&#13;
coming our way at a fasfclip To&#13;
our surprise and relief we soon&#13;
recognized the dust-covered rider&#13;
as being Cecil the ChickenHearted.&#13;
&#13;
He pulled his horse up short&#13;
where Sir Henry and I were&#13;
standing and he was out of the&#13;
saddle and on the ground before a&#13;
page had a chance to grab his&#13;
horse's bridle. Obviously he was&#13;
over-flowing with indignation&#13;
w u ?&#13;
e s&#13;
' Han k &gt;" he s a i d ... " -&#13;
Whats the big idea?...You gave&#13;
me the wrong key!"&#13;
I'll make believers of you yet!&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I read the Marilyn Schubert&#13;
article on the ecology-mindness&#13;
about Parkside (3-7-73). This&#13;
article gave the impression that&#13;
the trend of this school was to&#13;
soon become an area of wooded&#13;
land, like no other in the state.&#13;
The image is false for it has been&#13;
scarred before it has begun.&#13;
The present plants within the&#13;
building are not healthy and not&#13;
pruned. Perhaps the personnel&#13;
who are planning their massive&#13;
array of forestry could take a&#13;
look in their own hallways at the&#13;
shriveling, dusty plants.&#13;
After investigating, I found&#13;
that the present floor is not&#13;
sealed, making the air and&#13;
surrounding areas dusty and&#13;
difficult to clean. These conditions&#13;
are presently causing the&#13;
plants to die. Many plants are&#13;
located where unconcerned individuals&#13;
brush against them.&#13;
I am not an over-avid botanist,&#13;
nor do I feel this is a topic of&#13;
world-binding importance.&#13;
Rather, plants are extremely&#13;
expensive, and create a relaxed&#13;
atmosphere, so some action&#13;
should be taken.&#13;
The natural look of brick must&#13;
be sacrificed, and though it is an&#13;
expensive process, the floor must&#13;
be sealed. In the long run, it&#13;
would be more practical for&#13;
cleaning purposes, as well as&#13;
maintaining the true natural&#13;
image of Parkside.&#13;
R S.K&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
To Ken Konkol&#13;
Regarding the portion of your&#13;
"Editorial-Opinion" which appeared&#13;
in the Parkside RANGER&#13;
on Wednesday, March 7, 1973,&#13;
blaming the Activities Board for&#13;
conducting a "money-wasting"&#13;
operation by sponsoring the&#13;
"internationally acclaimed&#13;
Flamenco dancers, Jose Greco&#13;
and Nana Lorca", is an unfair&#13;
charge. Culture and art should&#13;
not be considered "frivolous",&#13;
but rather an important part of&#13;
life and education. I am sorry&#13;
that you failed to mention the&#13;
informal and free public lecture&#13;
demonstration on Monday,&#13;
March 12 at 2 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall, conducted by Jose Greco.&#13;
You may be correct in stating&#13;
that "There isn't that much interest&#13;
in either dancing or&#13;
Spanish culture in the whole of&#13;
Racine and Kenosha," and the&#13;
Latin community (which is&#13;
sizeable) is keenly aware of this&#13;
indifference. Therefore, I am&#13;
happy that the University is&#13;
trying to do something which is&#13;
positive and constructive by&#13;
providing opportunities of artistic&#13;
and cultural value for all&#13;
people to share.&#13;
It is unfortunate that you&#13;
profess student, faculty, administration&#13;
and community&#13;
isolation. This is a state&#13;
university which is largely&#13;
supported by the community.&#13;
Many of the students attending&#13;
UW-Parkside are also active&#13;
members of the communities of&#13;
Racine and Kenosha, Instead of&#13;
attacking constructive activities&#13;
on the basis of "profit", please&#13;
deal with what can be done by&#13;
the University and the community&#13;
to enhance mutual trust,&#13;
understanding and development.&#13;
Wayne Ramirez&#13;
by Jeff Vukos&#13;
by amy cundari&#13;
"sr©"&#13;
© the&#13;
Movemeni&#13;
Parkside, Women's studie s, and Dr. Vopat&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
What is Women's Liberation? The media have presented it to us as&#13;
a frenzied, strident conglomeration of crazies, Lesbians and bra&#13;
burners, but we know life is far more complex than that." So begins&#13;
Carole Vopat, Instructor in English, in the course description for&#13;
American Language-Women's Liberation in Literature She goes on&#13;
to say that class discussions will deal with "women's role her image&#13;
our society, ourselves, love, sex, life, death, birth and abortion "&#13;
When one investigates Women's Studies at Parkside, she or he finds&#13;
out a very curious thing-Vopat is Women's Studies at Parkside' In&#13;
addition to her American Language course, she conducted a senior&#13;
seminar and an upper division English course last semester dealing&#13;
with women writers. She's doing it because she wants to, not because&#13;
she was hired or asked to do it.&#13;
This writer has sat in on a number of sessions of Vopat's American&#13;
Language course this semester-some have seen animated discussion&#13;
explode like many sticks of dynamite scattered through the roomothers&#13;
have been more subdued. All have been enlightening and&#13;
productive. Raising consciousness is the thing, and this class has&#13;
attracted all kinds of people: The avid feminist, the curious "I just&#13;
want to know more about it" type, the "it's ok for others but I don't&#13;
need.it set, the sympathetic men, and the male hero-saviours who&#13;
enrolled to have a little fun upsetting the libbers and defending the&#13;
honor of masculinity. Committed, uncommitted, or skeptical, they are&#13;
learning more about themselves and their own feelings toward the&#13;
sexist society we live in.&#13;
One session opened with a discussion of an essay by Kate MilletSexual&#13;
Politics (In Literature)". Besides being concerned with&#13;
drawing out the basic message of the article, Vopat was aiming for&#13;
practical applications-"What can we do about sexual politics&#13;
7&#13;
" At&#13;
one point, two class members attempted to role-play a situation where&#13;
boy meets girl and comes on macho-strong. But later, participation&#13;
lagged and many seemed hesitant to discuss this potent essay and its&#13;
implications. The consensus of opinion was, though, that one can't&#13;
change things alone.&#13;
This led to a discussion of the women's movement, and speculation&#13;
as to why a lot of women aren't involved. Fear seems to be a prevalent&#13;
reaction.&#13;
"This is one struggle where people distrust the movement," Vopat&#13;
remarked. A lot of women are comfortable with the way things are&#13;
and feel they would have a lot to lose. Many married women who get&#13;
involved eventually face divorce, because they can't stand it any more&#13;
and their partners can't change. Consciousness-raising hurts-a&#13;
woman gets lonely, confused and angry. Everywhere she looks she&#13;
sees evidence of oppression, and many women are content just not to&#13;
know." J&#13;
The class then offered reasons why women should join a women's&#13;
movement. This led to a discussion of the "bra-burning" stigma the&#13;
movement in general has. The symbol is a result of a protest at the&#13;
"Miss America" pageant, where women burned their "harnesses" to&#13;
point up women's oppression as sex objects, their being paraded like&#13;
sides of beef inside the convention hall.&#13;
The image of lesbians which has become attached to feminists was&#13;
also analyzed. It connotes "crazyness" or "abnormality." Many think&#13;
that because some women don't accept a man as the center of their&#13;
existence, because they are aggressive and not submissive, because&#13;
they don t fit into the "norm" of women, they are lesbians.&#13;
As a result of this discussion of the women's movement&#13;
representatives of five groups were invited to address the class last&#13;
week. Counselor Wendy Musich talked about the Parkside Women's&#13;
Caucus and counseling services available for women on campus.&#13;
Student Jean Koehler spoke of the recently formed United Women&#13;
Students of Wis. (UWSW), a statewide group investigating segregated&#13;
fees allocations, health programs, athletic funding and women's&#13;
studies. Plans are to use the group as a statewide force for change on&#13;
the campuses.&#13;
The Kenosha chapter of N.O.W. was discussed by member Marcia&#13;
Schwartz, who invited interested people to attend their next meeting&#13;
on March 28, 7:30 p.m. at the West Kenosha State Bank, on Hwy. 50.&#13;
Sandra Peterson of the Racine Women's Center at the YWCA talked&#13;
of the great progress made in Racine in the last three years in&#13;
women's movements. The center acts as an information service and&#13;
referral agency, among other things, and "encompasses all groups&#13;
and gives them a facility to work out of."&#13;
The Racine Women's Political Caucus was represented by Molly&#13;
Canary, who talked of the problems the Caucus is facing now, as-well&#13;
as its past activities. She finds it encouraging that women are&#13;
beginning to do things on their own, not just under the auspices of the&#13;
group. "They're attending county board meetings and school board&#13;
meetings, and joining the Democratic or Republican parties and&#13;
listening to what's being said," she remarked.&#13;
Vopat, in her constant attempt to get people thinking about the&#13;
myriad of issues involved in women's concerns, had at one point asked&#13;
her class what they would like to see at Parkside in this regard. "More&#13;
women s studies courses," came the reply from a number of students&#13;
Right on, sisters! &#13;
4 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 21, 1 9 73&#13;
Traffic violations&#13;
carry heavy fines&#13;
Contrary to what may be&#13;
believed by some, Parkside is not&#13;
a juvenile institution. I have just&#13;
been informed that the Parkside&#13;
campus is subject to the same&#13;
traffic regulations as the big-time&#13;
highway systems.&#13;
Sgt. Krogh of the Safety and&#13;
Security system said the traffic&#13;
rules and penalties for Parkside&#13;
are the same as those of the state&#13;
highway system. Running a stop&#13;
sign carries a penalty of $30, plus&#13;
$7 court costs for the first offense.&#13;
Anyone who has a second offense&#13;
within a year is fined between $50&#13;
and $100.&#13;
Sgt. Krogh remarked that the&#13;
way students ignore stop signs&#13;
and speed is "just ridiculous." He&#13;
is surprised that there haven't&#13;
been more accidents. "You can&#13;
see it when you're parked by&#13;
Wood Road for just a short time,"&#13;
said Sgt. Krogh, reflecting on the&#13;
gross number of traffic&#13;
violations.&#13;
Krogh issued a warning to all&#13;
Parkside students that the&#13;
Security force will begin&#13;
cracking down on traffic&#13;
violators very soon, in order to&#13;
prevent the situation from&#13;
becoming even more hazardous.&#13;
This rigid enforcement will start&#13;
approximately the same time&#13;
that these words you are now&#13;
reading appear in print.&#13;
What this means, for all those&#13;
who drive in the Parkside&#13;
domain, is that you must begin&#13;
obeying stop signs, speed limits,&#13;
and all other traffic regulations.&#13;
Otherwise, you will be arrested&#13;
and have to go through the court&#13;
procedures which will waste&#13;
much of your precious time and&#13;
money.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
receives national recognition&#13;
The colony of Alpha Kappa&#13;
Lambda fraternity at Parkside&#13;
became a full-fledged chapter of&#13;
Aopha Kappa Lambda fraternity,&#13;
a national fraternity numbering&#13;
over 10,000 men. This colony&#13;
officially became the Beta&#13;
Lambda chapter on March 10,&#13;
1973.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda came&#13;
into existence at Parkside on&#13;
February 26, 1971. It was the&#13;
second fraternity colony&#13;
established at Parkside, the first&#13;
was Zeta Beta Tau, which folded&#13;
about the same time Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda began. Since then&#13;
only Sigma Pi has established a&#13;
colony on campus.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda held an&#13;
installation banquet and&#13;
ceremony on March 10 at which a&#13;
charter incorporating, the newly&#13;
installed fraternity was&#13;
presented. Robert Stewart, the&#13;
fraternity's national president,&#13;
presented the charter.&#13;
This new chapter is only a&#13;
beginning, a foundation, for other&#13;
fraternities and sororities to be&#13;
born on campus. Alpha Kappa&#13;
Lambda is the start of the&#13;
established "Greek System" at&#13;
Parkside, which will grow as&#13;
Parkside grows.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-258-2&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHUITZ BtllCK-OPEl&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
1900&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BIRDS OF FIRE&#13;
Mahavishnu Orchestra&#13;
(KC 319%)&#13;
Welcome to an encounter with the Mahavishnu Orchestra. The name&#13;
just turns me off. And the cover, with birds flying gracefully&#13;
surrounded by soft tones of red and yellow, is a sure indication of a&#13;
loser. Now if the band was named the Slicing Daggers and there was a&#13;
photo of five super-ripped dudes on the front, my ears would anxiously&#13;
await their feast.&#13;
But behold the structure of this sound. This is a rock and roll band&#13;
that has recently begun to attract live audiences. The instruments:&#13;
double-barrel guitar, keyboard and moog, violin, bass and drums are&#13;
manipulated by very skillful beings. McLaughlin can play his guitar&#13;
hard and fast. The bass and drums, always supporting superbly, get&#13;
their chance to appear naked in "One Word." The violin if compared&#13;
to Papa John Creach, sounds more eastern than western.&#13;
The music is intricately composed, while it can drive and tear. Instruments&#13;
blend together, each one having its turn to surface as they&#13;
swirl around each other. It is often impossible to determine the point&#13;
that one changes into another. There are enough details in these&#13;
musical creations so that even after countless playings new aspects&#13;
can be realized.&#13;
Visions and images are called forth by the multitudes. "Birds of&#13;
Fire" begins as a misty setting that is followed by the action being&#13;
raised up into the clouds where the gods have their battles. "Celestial&#13;
Terrestial Commuters" has some fire feedback interwoven in a moog&#13;
and the rest of the orchestra. "Sapphire Bullets of Pure Love" is 21&#13;
seconds of outer space computer blurbing. "Thousand Island Park"&#13;
portrays a melancholy Spanish setting for the "Hope" that is to follow.&#13;
The "Hope" carries anyone miles above the earth. Side 2 contains&#13;
more similar visions, along with some mellower passages with&#13;
clearer, sparkling guitar tones. "Sanctuary" is quite mournful. "Open&#13;
Country Joy," after a few seconds of softer vibes, is sharply contrasted&#13;
by more fire music.&#13;
BIRDS OF FIRE then, is a title that accurately describes the sound.&#13;
The music burns and also raises one with the smoke, to newer&#13;
dimensions. It supplies the physical force along with mental&#13;
enlightenment. Its structure is complex enough to prevent it from&#13;
becoming boring. The one and only weak point--no vocals.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
"OpRrrnotf*! "'"'&#13;
f i°. ^WelhRvf* «* *•- .«»i k j ,.v&gt;.n.o&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Monday&#13;
March 26&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Tallent H all&#13;
Adni: 50° student/staff&#13;
'1.00 general&#13;
Financial aids&#13;
(continued from page 1)&#13;
Then too, there's the current&#13;
controversy over who --HEAB, or&#13;
individual UW-System campuses-should&#13;
have power over&#13;
distribution of state aid to&#13;
students.&#13;
Madison campus administrators&#13;
favor local control,&#13;
arguing that centralization would&#13;
mean inflexibility. Gov. Lucey&#13;
and HEAB have hailed state&#13;
control as the answer to&#13;
discrepancies among campuses,&#13;
and a means of increasing the&#13;
student voice in the final say on&#13;
how aid is distributed.&#13;
Meanwhile, the 1973-74 school&#13;
year approaches, and students&#13;
must Weigh plans for it. If aid&#13;
enters the picture, things blur.&#13;
"We are now one month behind&#13;
schedule and every day pushes us&#13;
back further," Douma said. He&#13;
noted that last fall the University&#13;
was willing to waive late&#13;
payment penalties for students&#13;
who couldn't pay tuition due to&#13;
last-minute rule changes in the&#13;
guaranteed loan program, and it&#13;
would probably be willing to do so&#13;
again.&#13;
"That's fine for tuition, but for&#13;
the landlord who wants his&#13;
money Aug. 1, or for buying&#13;
groceries, waiving tuition&#13;
temporarily doesn't help,"&#13;
Douma points out.&#13;
Next week - how the financial&#13;
aids at Parkside are being effected.&#13;
&#13;
ANDREA'S SINCE 1911&#13;
I'M A JOLLY&#13;
JELLY BEAN&#13;
... not just a sad sugar bean&#13;
that's sweet and tasteless.&#13;
My smooth candy coating&#13;
comes in eight sparkling&#13;
colors and each one&#13;
identifies a satisfying fruit&#13;
flavor such as yellow for&#13;
lemon, orange for orange,&#13;
green for lime, pink for&#13;
strawberry and white for&#13;
pineapple... as well as the&#13;
e v e r -op ula r lico ric e&#13;
flavored black Jelly Bean.&#13;
And under my satiny&#13;
smooth candy coat is the&#13;
secret of my success... the&#13;
reason I'm a genuine Jolly&#13;
Jelly Bean. You've guessed&#13;
it... soft, tender, pectin-jell&#13;
... yummy good... and good&#13;
for you. I hear all kinds of&#13;
wonderful compliments&#13;
where people eat me... how&#13;
much they like flavors ...&#13;
and how soft and tender I&#13;
am. Want to be convinced!&#13;
Try me soon!&#13;
69*&#13;
OPEN DAILY&#13;
9a.m. to6p.m.&#13;
Friday 'til 9 p.m.&#13;
Sunday 10 a.m. to2 p.m.&#13;
pipe shop&#13;
FREE PARKING LOT&#13;
24th Ave. - 60th St.&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY &#13;
Wed., Mar. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Interdisciplinary course offered&#13;
(continued from page!)&#13;
Parkside is a natural place for&#13;
the germination of such a course&#13;
both because of its encouragement&#13;
of interdisciplinary&#13;
studies and because of its&#13;
"special mission" of training&#13;
students to live and work in an&#13;
urban, industrial society.&#13;
The eleven student!^ in the&#13;
present class include eight&#13;
enrolled for art credit and three&#13;
enrolled for chemistry credit.&#13;
For art students, Murphy feels&#13;
the course will help to discourage&#13;
an overspecialization which has&#13;
infiltrated thinking in the art&#13;
community much as the family&#13;
doctor has given way to the&#13;
specialist in medical practice.&#13;
Through the centuries, from&#13;
the time of the great classical&#13;
masters to about the 1920s, artists&#13;
customarily worked in a number&#13;
of media and consequently&#13;
gained familiarity with a wide&#13;
variety of materials and their&#13;
properties, Murphy points out.&#13;
Da Vinci, for example, was a&#13;
painter, sculptor and architect&#13;
(and a scientist, musician and&#13;
philosopher as well).&#13;
Murphy feels that superspecialization&#13;
is self-limiting and&#13;
sees the course as a way to encourage&#13;
art students to experiment&#13;
with a variety of media&#13;
by pointing out the creative&#13;
possibilities of various materials.&#13;
"Chemistry students similarly&#13;
discover something of the range&#13;
of both industrial-technical and&#13;
aesthetic possibilities in working&#13;
with varied materials by&#13;
examining their properties.&#13;
Many of the abstract concepts&#13;
learned in the classroom come to&#13;
life in a way quite different from&#13;
the standard chemistry&#13;
laboratory experience," Marron&#13;
said.&#13;
"What we're trying to do is give&#13;
art students an appreciation of&#13;
the chemical make-up of commonly&#13;
used art materials and to&#13;
introduce chemistry students to&#13;
the creative possibilities inherent&#13;
in the same materials," Murphy&#13;
added.&#13;
The process takes students&#13;
from campus lecture halls and&#13;
laboratories to artists' studios,&#13;
museums, a brass foundry and a&#13;
plastics plant.&#13;
Along the way, art students&#13;
meet tools traditionally reserved&#13;
to the scientist such as the&#13;
scanning electron microscope&#13;
and spectrophotometric equipment&#13;
and the chemistry students&#13;
get a nodding acquaintance with&#13;
the ceramists' kiln and the art of&#13;
glass blowing.&#13;
Students first observe an&#13;
operation, such as metal casting&#13;
or vacuum forming, then try&#13;
their own hands at it.&#13;
With any luck at all, one of&#13;
them may one day produce a 20th&#13;
century LaGioconda. And maybe&#13;
even tell us why she's smiling.&#13;
North Carolina choir to appear&#13;
The concert choir of North&#13;
Carolina Central University will&#13;
perform at Parkside Monday,&#13;
March 26, at 8 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Described by some as among&#13;
the very best choral ensemble in&#13;
the country, the 50 v oice group&#13;
will perform a variety of music&#13;
including folk songs of Creole,&#13;
Russian, and black origins, as&#13;
well as traditional compositions&#13;
by Black composers. There will&#13;
'also bb three fffdVemdnte from&#13;
Contata 150 by J.S. Bach, "Nach&#13;
dir Herr zerlanget mich" ("Lord&#13;
My Soul Doth Long for Thee").&#13;
Songs from the black church will&#13;
complete the selections.&#13;
The choir is also appearing at&#13;
other University of Wisconsin&#13;
campuses under the auspices of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Committee on Cooperation with&#13;
Developing Universities (CCDU),&#13;
a program of interinstitutional&#13;
cooperation with&#13;
three black universities-North&#13;
Carolina A &amp; T at Greensboro,&#13;
North Carolina Central&#13;
University at Durham and Texas&#13;
Southern University at Houston.&#13;
Parkside has an exchange&#13;
student program with North&#13;
Carolina Central. It is a statesupported&#13;
co-educational institution,&#13;
one of the 16 campuses&#13;
of the University of North&#13;
Carolina System. The student&#13;
population is 4,000 and the school&#13;
grants bachelor's degrees in&#13;
selected areas. It is located in the&#13;
circle of academic institutions&#13;
which includes Duke University&#13;
in Durham and the University of&#13;
North Carolina in neighboring&#13;
Chapel Hill.&#13;
Choir conductor Charles H.&#13;
Gilchrist has been director of the&#13;
NCCU choir for the past five&#13;
years. He has received degrees&#13;
from North Carolina Central&#13;
University and Indiana&#13;
University. He is presently&#13;
enrolled in the Doctoral program&#13;
at U.N.C., Greensboro.&#13;
This year's spring tour takes&#13;
the choir to the East coast before&#13;
heading to the Midwest. The&#13;
choir will be performing at&#13;
Washington, D.C., Baltimore and&#13;
New York. It will then travel to&#13;
Cleveland before completing its&#13;
tour in Wisconsin.&#13;
Their appearance here is&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. Tickets are $1 for&#13;
general admission, 50 ce nts for&#13;
Parkside students and staff, and&#13;
are available at the Information&#13;
Center, Tallent Hall 201.&#13;
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT A SALES&#13;
CAREER ... and afraid to ask. Get the facts about Prudential's&#13;
job preview program — the first step toward a growth&#13;
career in sales and sales management. Part-time while&#13;
obtaining your degree; full-time upon graduation. Immediate&#13;
openings in Racine and Kenosha. Phone Mr. Cohen,&#13;
633-2427 in Racine. Equal opportunity - M-F.&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
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Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
'Review&#13;
s4ucUo.-?l/i&amp;ctcit IRevieca&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
"Can a presidential candidate really be sold like deodorant?" This is&#13;
the question that the tape The Selling of a President tries to answer&#13;
The tape is an interview with Joe McGinnis who wrote the book The&#13;
Selling of a President. This deals with image building of the candidates&#13;
in the 1968 election. Mr. McGinnis was inspired to write the&#13;
book after hearing a member of the Democratic Party state "We're&#13;
going to turn Humphrey into Abraham Lincoln by November." He&#13;
contends that the people vote for an image and not the man&#13;
During most of the tape Mr. McGinnis talks about the Nixon campaign.&#13;
He said that members of the party were afraid to expose Nixon&#13;
directly to the press because they didn't want him to ruin his image&#13;
So, they hired the producer of the Mike Douglas Show to stage supposedly&#13;
impromptu press conferences. He went around the country&#13;
picking people to be on panels being very careful not to choose anyone&#13;
who could ask a penetrating question. He also picked reporters having&#13;
little or no experience as political critics.&#13;
The Republican Party also had trouble finding people to be in their&#13;
advertisements. Even some actors and actresses who were out of&#13;
work and really needed the money refused to be in an ad for Nixon&#13;
One time they sent photographers to Harlem to get some pictures of&#13;
happy black store owners posing in front of their stores. After the&#13;
crowd that had gathered found out who the photographers were hired&#13;
by, the happy black store owners were no longer very happy and&#13;
neither was the crowd.&#13;
Mr. McGinnis also said that the party had enough money so t hat&#13;
Nixon never had to meet any hostile forces, they bought all the time&#13;
they needed to communicate the image. All of Nixon's appearances up&#13;
until two weeks before the election were completely controlled by the&#13;
party. Even the cameramen were hired by the Nixon staff.&#13;
Did Nixon really win the '68 ele ction or was it the image that his&#13;
supporters developed for him?&#13;
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657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 6th AVE&#13;
jfcdmission&#13;
%Wisc. &amp; Parkside I. D. 's Required&#13;
2 Student Activities Bldg. 9 p.m.&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
&gt;\°i&#13;
SHRKEas&#13;
A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP AND 21st (ALMOST)&#13;
A A &#13;
6 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 21, 1 9 73&#13;
The Ranger asks—&#13;
Should amnesty he given to draft evaders ?&#13;
Connie Adams, Sophomore,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"No, in a general way, no,&#13;
because the guys that have&#13;
worked, that have been sent&#13;
overseas and have worked in Viet&#13;
Nam, most of them went because&#13;
they felt that's what they had to&#13;
do. And those that didn't go, alot&#13;
of them had the money to go to&#13;
Canada, they wanted to get away&#13;
so they didn't want to do their&#13;
job; they had the money they&#13;
went somewhere where they&#13;
didn't have to work. And if&#13;
they're poor, like if I had been a&#13;
guy and if I would have had to go&#13;
to Viet Nam, I would have gone, I&#13;
wouldn't have gone to Canada.&#13;
Even if I had had the money to&#13;
skip out I wouldn't had done it. I&#13;
think it's unfair to the people who&#13;
have served to give the draft&#13;
evaders amnesty."&#13;
Linda Servais, Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"Yes, and no; there's two sides&#13;
to it really. There's pros and cons&#13;
for it and you could talk about&#13;
both of them, andyou can say I&#13;
think it should because why&#13;
should they fight in a war that&#13;
really has no meaning, then&#13;
again it is breaking the law."&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch C reated&#13;
Sandwiches &amp;&#13;
Charcoal Steaks&#13;
North &amp; South S heridan R d.&#13;
It's the real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Judy Burris, Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"Yes, I do, well I think they&#13;
thought they were doing what&#13;
was right; they considered what&#13;
they were doing was right. And to&#13;
not let them come back to their&#13;
country, I don't know why they'd&#13;
want to though, but if they want&#13;
to, they should be able to. But I&#13;
don't unow why they'd want to."&#13;
Rick Ponzio, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"I think the people that have&#13;
left the country altogether should&#13;
be let back, with some sort of&#13;
service waiting for them; in some&#13;
way they have to function to&#13;
serve the time they would have&#13;
spent if they would have gone in.&#13;
And the people who spent time in&#13;
jail should be let free."&#13;
Mike Jenrette, Senior, Racine&#13;
"Yeah, I think it could be, but I&#13;
think there should be some&#13;
penalty if they come back, like&#13;
maybe having them all in&#13;
volunteer service or something&#13;
like that. They should be made to&#13;
serve the two years, because&#13;
Ibelieve, you know, you shouldn't&#13;
fight for something you don't&#13;
believe in, because if I was in Viet&#13;
Nam I wouldn't want someone&#13;
next to me that didn't really want&#13;
to be there, taking a chance of the&#13;
both of us getting shot up. But I&#13;
think they should be able to come&#13;
back, and if they do they should&#13;
have some penalty to pay."&#13;
Women's Caucus&#13;
gets reserve shelf&#13;
A reserve shelf has been set up&#13;
in the library for the Parkside&#13;
Women's Caucus. It contains a lot&#13;
of data on the Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment as well as various&#13;
clippings and pamphlets on other&#13;
women's concerns. A complete&#13;
bibliography of the library's&#13;
holdings on the subject of women&#13;
in many realms is also available,&#13;
as is a referral list of speakers&#13;
and sources of i nformation. Back&#13;
copies of Ms. magazine are there&#13;
too.&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11-8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15f&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Table s&#13;
Air Conditioning .Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
VAieos&#13;
PIZZA mem&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery te Parkside Village&#13;
5021 30th Annus Phone 657-5191&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
There will be a foosball tournament&#13;
held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building April 9-15. There&#13;
will be prizes awarded to the best&#13;
teams playing. There is a $1&#13;
registration fee per two-person&#13;
team and the deadline for&#13;
registering is April 6. You can&#13;
register at the SAB or at the&#13;
Activities office in LLC D-197.&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity would like&#13;
to announce that there are now&#13;
openings for interested students&#13;
that are concerned in becoming&#13;
involved in a dedicated, active&#13;
fraternity. For further available&#13;
information see any Sigma Pi&#13;
member, Ken Oberbruner&#13;
(Tallent Hall Rm. 237, Ext. 2481)&#13;
or Wayne Dannehl (P.E.&#13;
Building, Ext. 2245).&#13;
The Learning Center will&#13;
sponsor a free showing of the film&#13;
"To Die in Madrid," a&#13;
documentary covering the&#13;
Spanish Civil War. The showing&#13;
will be in Tallent Hall, first floor&#13;
south, Thursday at 7 p.m.&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity would like&#13;
to extend congratulations to&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda Fraternity&#13;
on their achievement of National&#13;
Recognition. Anything can be&#13;
accomplished if given enough&#13;
time!&#13;
There will be a Vet's Club&#13;
meeting Sunday, March 25 at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Student Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Anyone interested in forming&#13;
Spanish group should attend th&#13;
organizational meeting Thursda&#13;
at 11:30 in D-110 of the librarj&#13;
Questions? Call Jan Feifer at 69'&#13;
3419.&#13;
"Circus" will provide the&#13;
music for the dance sponsored b&gt;&#13;
the Student Activities Board this&#13;
Saturday. The dance will be in&#13;
the Student Activities Building&#13;
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Admission&#13;
$1.50, Wisconsin and Parkside&#13;
I.D.'s required.&#13;
TeUotfaj,&#13;
3203-52nd St.&#13;
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Wed./ M ar. 21, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
L The Parkside £ RANGER Hockey, growing sport in UW system&#13;
Spring Rugby Schedule&#13;
March 24 - Chicago Lions - Parkside&#13;
March 31 - Purdue North Central - Indiana&#13;
April 7 - Northwestern - Evanston&#13;
April 14 - Illinois Valley - Parkside&#13;
April 15 - Milwaukee School of Engineering - Parkside&#13;
May 5 - Marquette - Milwaukee&#13;
May 12 - Dodge County - Parkside&#13;
All home matches begin at 1:30.&#13;
INTRAMURAL STANDINGS, STATS&#13;
(asof Wednesday, March 7)&#13;
American Basketball League&#13;
Capitol Division Central Division&#13;
Bold Ones 5-1 Mercury Comets 5-1&#13;
Starry Eyed Gang 3-3 Deke's Boys 3-3&#13;
Soccer Team 1-5 Faculty Fossils 1.5&#13;
Sports&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Individual&#13;
D. Staffon&#13;
Mitch Arents&#13;
Hal Henderson&#13;
jack Geisler&#13;
Ed Hopkins&#13;
John Pena&#13;
Everett Hyde&#13;
Scott Nelson&#13;
Bob Lawson&#13;
p. pevonka&#13;
Team&#13;
Starry Eyed Gang&#13;
Bold Ones&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Soccer Team&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
National Basketball League&#13;
Eastern Division&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Herblius Superblius&#13;
Privateers&#13;
Rebels&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Individual&#13;
Tom Hart&#13;
Larry Wade&#13;
Ron Schmitz&#13;
Dezek&#13;
SonnTag&#13;
Dean Christenson&#13;
Kevin Sorenson&#13;
Marino&#13;
Pete Wood&#13;
Casebolt&#13;
Western Division&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Flash&#13;
Rat Patrol&#13;
Big K&#13;
Sigma Pi&#13;
6-1&#13;
5-1&#13;
4-3&#13;
3-3&#13;
3-4&#13;
Team&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Rebels&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Total&#13;
Points&#13;
110&#13;
95&#13;
94&#13;
86&#13;
86&#13;
85&#13;
84&#13;
78&#13;
6 6&#13;
56&#13;
Total Points&#13;
178&#13;
144&#13;
124&#13;
113&#13;
124&#13;
107&#13;
84&#13;
81&#13;
75&#13;
72&#13;
Average&#13;
18.3&#13;
15.9&#13;
15.7&#13;
14.3&#13;
14.3&#13;
14.1&#13;
14.0&#13;
13.0&#13;
11.0&#13;
9.3&#13;
Average&#13;
25.3&#13;
20.6&#13;
17.8&#13;
16.1&#13;
17.8&#13;
15.3&#13;
12.0&#13;
11.6&#13;
10.8&#13;
10.3&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
Once upon a time a couple of&#13;
years back Parkside started up a&#13;
hockey team, or a group of young&#13;
men did. Once upon a time about&#13;
10 years back the University of&#13;
Wisconsin returned to hockey.&#13;
Today Parkside plays in a&#13;
small ice ring in Milwaukee&#13;
called the Wilson Park Arena.&#13;
Marquette and others also play&#13;
there. Today the Wisconsin&#13;
Badgers devour opponents in the&#13;
beautiful, spacious Dane County&#13;
Coliseum in Madison.&#13;
Parkside's record the last two&#13;
years was 18-2-1 in 1971-72 and 9-3-&#13;
1 in 1972-73 with one game&#13;
remaining. Fewer games were&#13;
played this year because of&#13;
several cancellations.&#13;
Parkside is coached by a&#13;
considerate man who doesn't&#13;
teach at the university. His name&#13;
is Ludvick Podlogar, who took&#13;
the job of being hockey coach&#13;
because a friend told him about&#13;
the Rangers problems of getting&#13;
better organized. Lud just said,&#13;
"I'll take a look at em and try to&#13;
help develope them as hockey&#13;
players. I'm a hockey fanatic&#13;
anyway."&#13;
Does Lud resent driving in his&#13;
spare time to Milwaukee, to&#13;
coach a group of college students&#13;
who want to play the game? "I&#13;
don't when it's for such a great&#13;
group of g uys. This has got to be&#13;
the finest group of young men&#13;
I've ever been associated with,&#13;
they really care and pull for each&#13;
other," Lud exclaimed.&#13;
NCAA champs&#13;
Coach Bob Johnson at Madison&#13;
doesn't have to worry about his&#13;
opinion on hockey there, his&#13;
program isn't in jeopardy.&#13;
Johnson has the hockey facility&#13;
compared to almost none for&#13;
college, 24 hockey players on&#13;
scholarship, the school athletic&#13;
department 100 percent behind&#13;
him, students behind him some&#13;
8,430 for each game, national&#13;
recognition from Sports&#13;
Illustrated, and now the NCAA&#13;
championship hockey trophy for&#13;
his collection. This the Badgers&#13;
received last Saturday be&#13;
defeating the University of&#13;
Denver 4-2 in Boston.&#13;
Lud has between 200-300 loyal&#13;
fans in the 3,000 seat areana. Lud&#13;
has a good balanced offense and&#13;
defense. Lud has a group of 15&#13;
guys from different areas of the&#13;
country; who play because they&#13;
were bit by the hockey bug.&#13;
Blood and teeth&#13;
Lud said, "It's not personal&#13;
pride, I really can't explain why&#13;
these guys want to play hockey,&#13;
totally." How do you explain a&#13;
player like Tom Krummel who&#13;
lost two teeth in a heated hockey&#13;
contest. He comes skating over to&#13;
me, asks me to hold on to the&#13;
bloody teeth and returns to action.&#13;
How do you explain that?&#13;
What's the Ranger's problems&#13;
concerning hockey? Lud said&#13;
calmly, "the support from the?&#13;
school and the athletic department."&#13;
A meeting between that&#13;
•department and Lud was&#13;
scheduled for this week to&#13;
possibly talk of future hockey aid.&#13;
The comparison made between&#13;
the Bdgers and the Rangers isn't&#13;
to say that Parkside should go in&#13;
that direction, but that with •&#13;
Wisconsin's showing of hockey&#13;
interest and success, possibly it&#13;
could happen here.&#13;
Financial problems&#13;
Last year the team members&#13;
had to go out and raise between&#13;
$1,500 and $,800 to cover the&#13;
hockey costs. They did it by&#13;
selling advertisements for the&#13;
hockey programs. In years past&#13;
hockey members had to pay for&#13;
almost the total hockey costs.&#13;
Lud said, "luckily this year they&#13;
didn't have to pay anything out of&#13;
their own pockets."&#13;
Here at Parkside basketball is,&#13;
supposed to reign big? But the&#13;
hockey club keeps on hoping that&#13;
their wishes of University support&#13;
will someday join them with&#13;
the other better funded varsity&#13;
sports.&#13;
While they wait, Lud and&#13;
company will keep on enjoying&#13;
the game of hockey.&#13;
j j (f y y -f C3 li&#13;
J UW-Parkside&#13;
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8 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 21, 19 73&#13;
Co-ed tracksters victorious&#13;
The Parkside coed tracksters&#13;
had four standouts in a victorious&#13;
trip to Whitefish Bay last Friday&#13;
night. The Rangerettes were first&#13;
in team scoring behind the individual&#13;
performances of Sue&#13;
Von Behren, who caputred firsts&#13;
in the high jump and long jump&#13;
for Parkside while Eileen Reilly&#13;
placed first in b«th the 880 y ard&#13;
run and the mile walk along with&#13;
picking up a second in the mile&#13;
run.&#13;
The 400 yard run was&#13;
dominated by Sandy Kingsfield&#13;
who also placed second in the&#13;
long jump, and Trudy Buehrens&#13;
was the victor in the shot put,&#13;
while also gaining a fourth place&#13;
in the 50 y ard hurdles.&#13;
Team scores were; Parkside&#13;
44, Milwaukee Track Club 26 and&#13;
Fox Valley 13.&#13;
On March 10, the girls track&#13;
team participated in the&#13;
University of Chicago Track Club&#13;
Relays and received some good&#13;
individual performances from&#13;
three coeds.&#13;
Sandy Kingsfield leaped to a&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
The Parkside trackster s&#13;
placed well at the Wisconsin&#13;
State AAU Championships at&#13;
Whitefish Bay last weekend.&#13;
Lucien Rosa took first in both&#13;
the mile and two mile runs with&#13;
4:20.5 and 9:19, respectively.&#13;
In the quarter mile, Herb&#13;
DeGroot took first with 53.8 while&#13;
Cornelius Gordon came in&#13;
second.&#13;
The mile relay team of&#13;
DeGroot, Gordon, Keith Merritt,&#13;
and Chuck Dettman won. Merritt&#13;
also took second in the triple&#13;
jump with a distance of 45 fee t 8&#13;
inches. Dettman was second in&#13;
the 880 with a time of 2:02.2.&#13;
Three gymnasts from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will compete this weekend in the&#13;
National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic national championships&#13;
at UW-LaCrosse.&#13;
Coach Geza Martiny will take&#13;
Kevin O'Neil, Bryon Petschow&#13;
and Tom Brannon to LaCrosse&#13;
for the preliminary action&#13;
Friday. Finals follow on Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
O'Neil, a sophomore from&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) will be&#13;
making his second appearance in&#13;
as many years for the Rangers in&#13;
the NAIA. Again, as last year,&#13;
he'll be competing on the rings&#13;
only.&#13;
For Petschow and Brannon,&#13;
both freshmen out of Racine Park&#13;
High School, Martiny sees the&#13;
meet as a great opportunity for&#13;
them to gain experience and&#13;
confidence. Petschow, who cocaptained&#13;
the young Parkside&#13;
squad with O'Neil, was recently&#13;
selected most valuable in a vote&#13;
of his teammates and will go in&#13;
the long horse vault at LaCrosse.&#13;
Brannon, who enrolled at&#13;
Parkside only in January and did&#13;
not work out with the team until&#13;
then, came on strong at the&#13;
season's close and qualified with&#13;
Petschow on the long horse vault.&#13;
"We're very proud that three of&#13;
our young gymnasts can make it&#13;
to the national meet," Martiny&#13;
said. "We're hoping that they'll&#13;
gain a lot of experience in this&#13;
meet that will help them in the&#13;
future."&#13;
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ONE COUPON PER WEEK PER CUSTOMER&#13;
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NAME &amp; ADDRESS&#13;
Sophomore guard Chuck&#13;
Chambliss of Racine has been&#13;
selected by his basketball&#13;
teammates as the squad's most&#13;
valuable player for 1972-73.&#13;
It was the second straight year&#13;
that Chambliss was so honored&#13;
by his teammates.&#13;
Chambliss, 6-2 Racine Park&#13;
product, averaged 15.3 points per&#13;
game this past season in leading&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens's Parkside&#13;
squad to a 13-12 season mark and&#13;
a berth in the Wisconsin Independent&#13;
College Assn. playoffs.&#13;
He earlier has been named to&#13;
the all W.I.C.A. team.&#13;
Tim Hubbard, 6-3 freshman&#13;
forward out of Kenosha Bradford,&#13;
was selected the team's&#13;
most improved player.&#13;
Sophomores Chuck Chambliss&#13;
of Racine, and Joe Hutter of&#13;
Chicago have been elected 1973-74&#13;
basketball co-captains by their&#13;
teammates.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
1969, CAMARO, economical, 3-speed,&#13;
Drange, Black vinyl top. $1295.00 634-6277.&#13;
REWARD: If you saw someone kick a yellow&#13;
1970 V.W. Karmen Ghla on Tuesday 3-13-73,&#13;
collect a substantial reward. Call Tom at 632-&#13;
7803 a fter 6 o'clock.&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
2667.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 c ents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Rangef&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK FNOT-OfiFD FOR .f&#13;
DATESfS1&#13;
) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
riTY PHONE NO.&#13;
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Two Ranger Fencers to&#13;
compete in World meet&#13;
third place in the long jump and&#13;
also picked up a sixth place in the&#13;
60 yard dash. Sue Von Behren&#13;
vaulted to a third in the high&#13;
jump while teammate Eileen&#13;
Reilly was sixth in the 880.&#13;
The 880 re lay team consisting&#13;
of Kingsfield, Reilly, Maria&#13;
Breach and Trudy Buehrens also&#13;
took a fifth.&#13;
The Rangerette tracksters next&#13;
meet will be against Carthage&#13;
College on March 24.&#13;
Two UW-Parkside fencers,&#13;
John Tank and Joe Bieblel, have&#13;
been invited to compete in the&#13;
Martini-Rossi International&#13;
Invitational for the second&#13;
straight year.&#13;
The Invitational will be held&#13;
March 23-25 in New York and is&#13;
considered one of the top international&#13;
tournaments in the&#13;
world. The meet will bring&#13;
together about 60 fencers from&#13;
around the world in each of the&#13;
three weapon classifications, foil,&#13;
epee and sabre.&#13;
Uw-Parkside Coach Loran&#13;
Hein commented that only about&#13;
15 college and university fencers&#13;
from the United States will be&#13;
invited in each weapon.&#13;
Tank and Biebel are both&#13;
natives of Wauwatosa and both&#13;
compete in the foil classification&#13;
of the sport. John, a junior and&#13;
Joe, a sophomore, are considered&#13;
among the brightest young&#13;
prospect in the country. Biebel&#13;
made it to the quarter finals last&#13;
year before being elininated and&#13;
Tank made it to the quarter finals&#13;
in the U.S. National Championships.&#13;
&#13;
Both athletes started fencing&#13;
under the direction of Ed Sampon&#13;
at the Wauwatosa Rection&#13;
Department and have taken&#13;
turns beating each other in major&#13;
competition. Tank has won the&#13;
state foil championships the last&#13;
two years, while Biebel captured&#13;
the Midwest title in 1971 when&#13;
Tank came in third in the 19 and&#13;
under division, and also won&#13;
against him in the 1972 Great&#13;
Lakes championships. Each has&#13;
been named to the All-Midwest&#13;
Intercollegiate honor team.&#13;
Beibel was inelligible for intercollegiate&#13;
competition this year&#13;
after transferring from&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College, but Tank finished the&#13;
regular season with a 53-7 record&#13;
John Tank&#13;
Hein who has turned Parkside&#13;
into a Midwestern fencing power&#13;
in the schools four year history,&#13;
feels that both have excellent&#13;
chances to make the list of the 15&#13;
who will be invited to the final&#13;
tryouts in Tucson, Arizona, in&#13;
June.&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
AUTO &amp;&#13;
TRUCK&#13;
PARTS GORDON&#13;
AUTO PARTS, INC.&#13;
Complete Machine Shop Service&#13;
Paint &amp; Body Shop Supplies&#13;
High Performance Work.&#13;
1400 Milwaukee Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 7.30 9:00&#13;
Saturday 7 30 5. 30&#13;
Sunday 9:00 1:00&#13;
Discount to Parkside Students&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication. </text>
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