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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 1, issue 25</text>
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            <text>The Big Band Sound comes to Parkside</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>The Big Band Sound conies to Parkside&#13;
North Texas State Band&#13;
Tr . North Texas State&#13;
University's world-famous Lab&#13;
Band, winner of 38 awards for&#13;
bands and individual performers&#13;
aLnaVonal Jazz festivals and&#13;
official "Big Band" at the 1970&#13;
Montreux, Switzerland, International&#13;
Jazz Festival, will&#13;
appear in concert at Parkside&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
gymnasium at 2 p.m. on Sunday&#13;
April 15.&#13;
General admission is $2; admission&#13;
for persons with student&#13;
ID is $l. High school groups interested&#13;
in arranging block&#13;
seating should contact Ed&#13;
Knestmg, Office of School and&#13;
Campus Relations, at Parkside.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Parkside Information Center and&#13;
at the door.&#13;
The Parkside Stage Band&#13;
directed by Robert Thomason,'&#13;
who received his masters degree&#13;
from North Texas and is a former&#13;
Lab Band member, will present a&#13;
"pre-concert concert" prior to&#13;
ihe Lab Band performance.&#13;
The Texas Lab Band, directed&#13;
by Leon Breeden, has a number&#13;
of "firsts" to its credit including&#13;
first big band from a university to&#13;
perform by presidential invitation&#13;
at the White House (with&#13;
Duke Ellington and Stan Getz as&#13;
guest soloists), first jazz group of&#13;
any kind to perform for the&#13;
National Assn. of Secondary&#13;
School Principals national&#13;
convention and first big band&#13;
from a university to perform at&#13;
the Music Educators National&#13;
Conference national convention.&#13;
Jazz saxophonist Gerry&#13;
Mulligan called it "the best big&#13;
band I have ever heard" and&#13;
orchestra leader Duke Ellington&#13;
paid the supreme compliment: "I&#13;
wish it were mine."&#13;
The band has toured Mexico&#13;
and Germany and has appeared&#13;
at the Venezuelan Embassy and&#13;
the State Department&#13;
Auditorium in Washington, D.C.,&#13;
at the new Music Center of the&#13;
Los Angeles Center for the&#13;
Performing Arts and at jazz&#13;
festivals throughout the country.&#13;
The group is presently on a&#13;
Midwestern tour and will appear&#13;
at UW-Madison on April 12 and at&#13;
Northwestern University on April&#13;
14 be fore ending the tour with its&#13;
Parkside appearance.&#13;
The Lab Band is an outgrowth&#13;
of the pioneering jazz education&#13;
program began 25 years ago at&#13;
North Texas State University, the&#13;
first school in the nation to offer&#13;
the bachelor of music degree with&#13;
a major in dance band.&#13;
Says jazz trumpeter Clark&#13;
Terry, a featured member of the&#13;
NBC Tonight Show Orchestra, "It&#13;
is impossible to think of the&#13;
progress of jazz in the last 20 to 25&#13;
years without thinking of North&#13;
Texas State University. NTSU is&#13;
the one school that really stuck&#13;
its neck out and made a&#13;
respectable lady out of jazz...And&#13;
look at all the others that have&#13;
followed suit."&#13;
Parkside's "day of music" will&#13;
conclude Sunday evening with a&#13;
free public concert by the&#13;
Parkside Concert Band, directed&#13;
by Bernard Stiner, at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
UW-P concert band&#13;
The 60-member Parkside&#13;
concert band will present its&#13;
annual spring concert at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, April 15, in the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
BernaVd H. Stiner, assistant&#13;
professor of music, will conduct.&#13;
The band will play Russell&#13;
Alexander's "The Southerner"&#13;
march, Hector Berlioz' "Beatrice&#13;
and Benedict" overture, Modest&#13;
Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an&#13;
Exhibition," Gabriel Pares' "Le&#13;
Voltigeur," Caesar Giovannini's&#13;
"Chorale and Capriccio," Robert&#13;
E. Jager's "Second Suite" and W.&#13;
Francis McBeth's "Masque."&#13;
Parkside's highly regarded&#13;
percussion section will be&#13;
showcased on "Masque," which&#13;
was commissioned in 1967, is&#13;
characterized by intricate rhythm&#13;
arrangements, and was&#13;
featured recently in "Percussion&#13;
Arts Society" magazine.&#13;
He has served as guest conductor,&#13;
clinician and adjudicator&#13;
for many music education groups&#13;
around the country and last&#13;
summer was guest conductor and&#13;
clinician at the noted Interlochen&#13;
(Mich.) Arts Academy. #He has&#13;
been an invited lecturer and&#13;
director at the Universities of&#13;
Illinois, Wisconsin-Madison, and&#13;
Indiana and at Louisiana State&#13;
University.&#13;
Stiner, who took his undergraduate&#13;
work at Southwestern&#13;
(Kans.) College and his&#13;
graduate degree at the&#13;
University of Oklahoma, has&#13;
served on the board of directors&#13;
of the National Band Association&#13;
and is a member of numerous&#13;
p r o f e s s i o n a l m u s i c&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Moy named Dean of SMI&#13;
Wednesday, April 11, 1973 Vol. I, No. 25&#13;
The appointment of William A. Moy as Dean of&#13;
The School of Modern Industry and professor of&#13;
industrial engineering, effective July 1, was approved&#13;
in Madison Friday by the UW System Board&#13;
of Regents.&#13;
Moy has been acting Dean of The School of&#13;
Modern Industry since January, 1972. He came to&#13;
Parkside from the UW-Madison campus where he&#13;
was professor and chairman of the Industrial&#13;
Engineering Department. As a member of the&#13;
Madison faculty since 1958, Moy received four&#13;
"outstanding teaching" awards by engineering&#13;
students.&#13;
The School of Modern Industry (SMI) contains&#13;
interdisciplinary programs in Divisions of&#13;
Engineering Science, Management Science and&#13;
Labor Economics, and is the heart of UWParksideJs&#13;
"industrial society mission," providing&#13;
an educational home for programs which relate&#13;
directly to the dominant economic activity of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
(continued on page 9)&#13;
Friedman to lecture&#13;
here on 'Ufology'&#13;
Dean Wi l l iam Moy&#13;
"Flying Saucers Are Real," an&#13;
illustrated lecture, will be given&#13;
Tuesday, April 17 at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
P.E. Building by Stanton T.&#13;
Friedman, a nuclear physicist,&#13;
lecturer and the only space&#13;
scientist devoting full time to the&#13;
science of "Ufology."&#13;
More than 13 years of study and&#13;
investigation have convinced&#13;
Friedman that Earth is being&#13;
visited by intelligently controlled&#13;
vehicles. His talk covers data&#13;
from several UFO studies,&#13;
misconceptions about UFO's,&#13;
travel to the stars, "humanoids,"&#13;
the arguments of the "educated"&#13;
non-believers, and the "Condon&#13;
Report."&#13;
Friedman took both his&#13;
bachelor and master of science&#13;
degrees in physics from the&#13;
University of Chicago in 1955-56.&#13;
His professional background&#13;
includes 14 years of experience&#13;
concerning nuclear aircraft,&#13;
nuclear rockets, fusion rockets&#13;
and nuclear power plants for&#13;
space and earthbound applications.&#13;
Friedman's professional affiliations&#13;
include the American&#13;
Physical Society, the American&#13;
Nuclear Society, the American&#13;
Institute of Aeronautics and&#13;
Astronautics, and the Air Force&#13;
Assn. He is also director of the&#13;
California UFO Research Institute.&#13;
He has published and presented&#13;
many technical papers and has&#13;
also published articles on Flying&#13;
Saucers in both the popular press&#13;
and professional journals.&#13;
Tickets for the lecture are $1.50&#13;
and are on sale at Bidinger's in&#13;
Kenosha, Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and the Information Center in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
3rd annual Capsule College here a two-day event&#13;
The third annual Capsule Comnlete The third annual Capsule rePiKtratinn in. t„.: , .. . . .._ **&#13;
College at Parkside has been&#13;
expanded into a two-day event-&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, April&#13;
25 and 26. This is during spring&#13;
break, and students as well as&#13;
people in the community are&#13;
encouraged to attend one or both&#13;
days.&#13;
Capsule College is sponsored&#13;
by Parkside and the University&#13;
Extension. It offers intellectual&#13;
stimulation in the areas of personal&#13;
development, family&#13;
concerns, community and selfunderstanding.&#13;
Deadline for registration is&#13;
Friday, April 13. The registration&#13;
fee of $4.50 for one day or $9 f or&#13;
both includes coffee breaks and&#13;
luncheons. Each day's programs&#13;
will begin at 8:45 a.m. and at 3:30&#13;
p.m. Sessions will be in&#13;
Greenquist Hall and LLC.&#13;
Complete registration information&#13;
is available from the&#13;
University Extension Office in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Program offerings include six&#13;
workshops (2% hours each) and&#13;
40 seminars (75 minutes each) on&#13;
a wide range of subjects. Last&#13;
year's program, which drew&#13;
more than 600 women to the&#13;
campus, offered 19 topics.&#13;
Workshops offered both April&#13;
25 and 26 are: "Is Your Estate&#13;
Tailor-Made?" conducted by&#13;
Louise Young, UW Extension&#13;
specialist in home management&#13;
and family economics; "Exercise&#13;
and Fitness" (including an&#13;
optional dip in the pool) conducted&#13;
by Robert W. Grueninger,&#13;
assistant professor of physical&#13;
education and director of&#13;
P a r k s i d e ' s P e r f o rma n c e&#13;
Laboratory; and "The Language&#13;
of Intimacy," conducted by Jane&#13;
B. Tybring, Extension specialist&#13;
in family relations.&#13;
"The Modern Novel: What&#13;
Next" is a workshop to be offered&#13;
April 25 only, by Robert E.&#13;
Najem, director of the National&#13;
Humanities Series, Midwestern&#13;
(enter, and UW Extension&#13;
professor of French.&#13;
"Why Still Woman's Lib? A&#13;
Woman Philosopher's View" by&#13;
Mary Helgren Johnson, assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"Modern Japanese Culture" by&#13;
Donald Mokelke, Curator of&#13;
Education, Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum, and a teacher of art.in&#13;
Japan for nine years;&#13;
"Handwriting Analysis" by&#13;
Stan Sherman, certified graphoanalyst;&#13;
And, "Removing Roadblocks to&#13;
Education and Careers, or, How I&#13;
Found a New Me Buried Under a&#13;
Pile of Dirty Dishes" by a panel&#13;
including Dorothy Rath, Career&#13;
Planning Director, Carthage&#13;
College; Betty Fearn, Extension&#13;
Adult Education Counselor;&#13;
Joanne Rattan, homemaker&#13;
doing post-baccalaureate work at&#13;
Parkside; Ramona Koch,&#13;
homemaker and Parkside&#13;
student; and Wendy Musich,&#13;
panel moderator and counselor at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Seminars offered April 26 o nly&#13;
are:&#13;
"What's New in the Field of&#13;
OB-BYN?" by Elizabeth Allen&#13;
Steffen, MD, Racine obstetrician&#13;
and gynecologist;&#13;
"Slaying Dragons: Some Insights&#13;
Into Becoming an Effective&#13;
Political Participant" by&#13;
Ann Harbeson, a UW political&#13;
scientist and author of a course in&#13;
American National Government;&#13;
"Ancient and Modern Egypt'''&#13;
by Omar M. Amin, assistant&#13;
professor of life science at&#13;
Parkside, and his wife, Magda El&#13;
Sayed Amin;&#13;
"How to Lead a Group and Like&#13;
It" by Virginia Harnett, an experienced&#13;
speech teacher with a&#13;
background in theater work;&#13;
"Montessori Education" by&#13;
Sister Ruthanne Reed, Rosehart&#13;
Montessori School, Racine;&#13;
"The Single Parent Family" by&#13;
Samuel Stellman, Director,&#13;
Extension Center for Social&#13;
Service;&#13;
"Adding Life to Years" by the&#13;
Rev. Carl A. Becker, Executive&#13;
Director, Lincoln Lutheran of&#13;
Racine;&#13;
(continued on page 8)&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 11, 1973&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Congress must take&#13;
lead on food prices&#13;
Meat is good. Being able to buy it is even better.&#13;
The recent meat boycott dropped meat sales in some&#13;
areas by 70 percent. Though its effectiveness is&#13;
questionable, the fact that so many people joined in the&#13;
effort to lower meat prices indicates the fantastic&#13;
widespread support of this nation's populace.&#13;
Everyone In th is area knows how much the price of&#13;
meat affects his weekly grocery bill. When the prices&#13;
become so high that millions of people are willing to&#13;
sacrifice meat from their week's diet, it is time for&#13;
everyone who can do something about lowering prices to&#13;
do so.&#13;
President Nixon has seen fit to try to stop the rise in&#13;
meat prices. It is time for Congress to take the initiative&#13;
the President didn't have the backbone to take.&#13;
Congress must pass measures to have the price of all&#13;
meat and other food items lowered.&#13;
Congress has proponents of such legislation and it&#13;
may pass. But, the White House has indicated that this&#13;
type of legislation would be vetoed.&#13;
Congress must fight back.&#13;
This is one of the most elemental gripes of almost&#13;
every politician's constituency. This is the one issue that&#13;
all representatives can get together on to over-ride a&#13;
presidential veto.&#13;
We need good food to eat at reasonable prices. We&#13;
hope legislators realize that they now have the support&#13;
to carry out what they want to do-lower food prices.&#13;
4-bi-A-hl-l-SBY&#13;
[Rudy LiENati&#13;
This week's Editor's Notebook has a new look thanks to Amy Cundari,&#13;
a staff artist and very good friend.&#13;
But this week the look won't be the only difference. I'd like to&#13;
mention a few ideas which concern both the paper and the reader.&#13;
Our advertisers have been experimenting with many types of ads. A&#13;
popularly used gimmick is the coupon. In many cases coupons have&#13;
been very effective, but in all cases coupon ads have been a savings to&#13;
those readers who have used them.&#13;
In these days of high prices it behooves every reader to use any&#13;
money-saving ad to its optimum. It makes sense to use all the media&#13;
and advertisements contained in those media when buying products or&#13;
services.&#13;
Every week the RANGER offers many bargains. Some are&#13;
available because the advertiser has decided to give the Parkside&#13;
student a break. In other cases advertisers have decided to use the&#13;
RANGER as a supplemental outlet for their advertising.&#13;
In both cases the advertiser is spending money on a service to the&#13;
RANGER reader. Without them we would not exist.&#13;
It will benefit all concerned to use coupons and patronize RANGER&#13;
advertisers.&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1973-74 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight hours per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
to submit details of his&#13;
journalistic experience&#13;
and a statement of his&#13;
plans for the RANGER to&#13;
Don Kopriva, Adviser to&#13;
Student Publications, by&#13;
Friday, April 13, at D-194&#13;
LLC.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates&#13;
Tuesday, April 17, and&#13;
announce its selection&#13;
before spring break.&#13;
Bingo!?&#13;
Women are free-to play bingo! (Men, too.) Wisconsin&#13;
citizens decided two issues last week, voting to legalize&#13;
bingo and voting against the proposed constitutional&#13;
amendment reading, "Equality of rights or equal&#13;
protection under the law shall not be denied or abridged&#13;
on the basis of sex."&#13;
We find it deplorable that this latter proposal was&#13;
rejected. Carole Vopat, assistant professor of English,&#13;
in her keynote address for Parkside's Women's Day,&#13;
spoke of " freedoms which must be voted into existence&#13;
because up to now they have not existed." Today, April&#13;
11, 1973, t hey still do not exist.&#13;
The failure of this amendment to pass has a number of&#13;
roots. Opponents said it would undermine the traditional&#13;
roles of the family unit and nullify statutes designed to&#13;
protect women from sexual and job abuse. This simply&#13;
would not have been true. The state would not interfere&#13;
in a viable marriage or family situation; protection&#13;
statutes would not be nullified but expanded to include&#13;
men.&#13;
What many people failed to realize was that this Jaw&#13;
would have provided a constitutional guarantee that&#13;
men and women would be treated as individuals, with&#13;
unique capacities, preferences and abilities, and not as&#13;
members of separate classes, divided by gender. The&#13;
principle of equal justice under the law which has&#13;
guided this country for almost two centuries has not, in&#13;
fact, ever been fully realized.&#13;
Are people afraid of admitting that all members of the&#13;
human race are equal in worth and therefore deserve&#13;
equality of opportunity? Do people honestly believe that&#13;
one person should have greater rights under the law&#13;
than another? A country that allows its ideology to be&#13;
undermined by such practices is creating an&#13;
aristocracy, an elite, and perpetuating a class division&#13;
that is polarizing our society in terms of sex.&#13;
Where do we go from here? The federal Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment (which Wisconsin voters have already&#13;
ratified) will take a number of years yet to be enacted&#13;
and indeed appears to be in trouble due to a misguided,&#13;
uninformed backlash. While women are not the sole&#13;
benefactors of such human rights as this would provide,&#13;
they are the ones who most feel that the forces of oppression&#13;
are proceeding with amazing diligency. The&#13;
women's movement, in an attempt to create a counterbacklash,&#13;
may become more militant and impatient. We&#13;
feel they would be justified, for until this nation extends&#13;
to everyone in practice what it claims for them in&#13;
theory, we are living a lie.&#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 Library-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#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;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
s,psm"Hel™'Kan'0,11&#13;
A D ? S ? ! V l N S E S T A F K F e n £ G r w X i t o n&#13;
ADV^E^tf Don Kopriv. ^ K*" ««"»' • ""dvTl.Su&#13;
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. x\ 10017 !&#13;
Wed., April 11, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol We get letters...&#13;
'°thC Segreg3ted WhiCh&#13;
2i3F cultural nature 1^?™mittee sP°nsors performances on campus of a&#13;
stadem orienteH P u a™,!' y duPlicates student-oriented Parkside Activities Board the efforts of the more&#13;
~7n*£^S PU' °" by 'he L&amp;FA c°«""i"ee have not&#13;
th,is column' due t0 la&lt;* °f ®Pa«&#13;
,, y' so ^ue a bit of reluctance on my part to discuss the&#13;
Whin V pe°? wh,°feel stron§1y in fav°r of the L&amp;FA Committee.&#13;
of the llnir S3 C!! " °f this type' you tend t0 bruise the feelings&#13;
"took* nn «? • er. ousslon and some people tend to take my attacks&#13;
on their previously aloof citadels personally&#13;
wnVnh flly tK,P°J)U,1f,r °pinion' 1 d0 not stick thorns in people just to&#13;
riahfc * S JUSt that as self-aPPointed crusader for student&#13;
21 sojJ}etimes my pen leaves spatters of blood. I hold the opinion&#13;
that anything which is bad for the students must be disposed of and&#13;
any bastion which trys to withhold or take something away from the&#13;
students must be stormed.&#13;
To return from digression, I was discussing the L&amp;FA Committee.&#13;
Afterholdmg off to steel myself for the confrontation, I finally contacted&#13;
Frances Bedford, Chairperson of the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Brakhage6 relati°n t0 150111 1116 Irish P°ets program and Stan&#13;
She thought I might be disappointed because both these recent&#13;
performances were "not costing the students one red cent." From&#13;
what I gather, they were funded by university money but not through&#13;
the segregated fee. Just where the money came from, if indeed any&#13;
was spent, is uncertain since the business office has no record of anv&#13;
such expenditure.&#13;
Contrary to the thought that I might be disappointed by the news, I&#13;
was happy to hear it. I am all for bringing programs to Parkside that&#13;
do not cost money. "&#13;
So, instead of sticking it to the L&amp;FA Committee this week, I must&#13;
give them a well-deserved well done for this method of operation. This&#13;
method of operation is to be commended and should be pursued.&#13;
I was talking to Marty Gregory, who coordinates the programs in&#13;
the Whiteskellar, and he would like to point out that to date this school&#13;
year, there have been about 44 hours of entertainment put on at the&#13;
cost of about $479 with about 1,200 students attending, at a cost to&#13;
students of about 40 cents each. These programs are put on as a service&#13;
to students primarily during the school day. All programs should&#13;
be as cheap.&#13;
The distinguished teacher award nominations have achieved twice&#13;
as much response as last year. This is a participation level of about 1V2&#13;
percent. So far, not so good.&#13;
Keep Tuesday-evening open on your calendar. That is for the lecture&#13;
by Stanton Friedman. Tickets cost a reasonable $1 for students and&#13;
are available at the Information Center in Tallent Hall or through the&#13;
Activities Office. General Admission is $1.50 and these tickets are&#13;
available through Cook-Gere in Racine or Bidinger's in Kenosha.&#13;
Those people who would like to hear Friedman talk during the day&#13;
may get his schedule through the Activities Office.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
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To IT AS XA^AS S { If&#13;
By Gary Huck&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
While visiting the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Pa rkside Library on&#13;
Friday, March 30,1 inadvertently&#13;
left my wallet and prescription&#13;
glasses in a public area of the&#13;
library. By the time I discovered&#13;
my loss and returned to search&#13;
for them, they were gone.&#13;
The following morning,&#13;
Margaret Williamson, a Parkside&#13;
student from Kenosha, called at&#13;
my home in Madison to tell me&#13;
she had found them. My relief&#13;
and appreciation of her integrity&#13;
in this must not, I feel, be left&#13;
unheralded.&#13;
Thank you, Margaret, for&#13;
reaffirming my feeling of pride&#13;
and appreciation of humanity in&#13;
general, and students in particular.&#13;
Nancy H. Marshall&#13;
Director, Wisconsin Interlibrary&#13;
Loan Service&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
WHEREAS our banner was&#13;
demolished and;&#13;
WHEREAS our attempt to&#13;
confiscate the bell was thwarted;&#13;
BE IT RESOLVED that the&#13;
brothers of Sigma Pi Fraternity&#13;
of the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside do formally declare&#13;
war on the Brothers of Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda Fraternity.&#13;
ARTICLES OF WAR:&#13;
I. All Alpha Kappa Lambdas&#13;
are "RATS" and shall be called&#13;
Same by all Sigma Pi's.&#13;
II. All Alpha Kappa Lambda's&#13;
shall be soundly beaten about the&#13;
head on all competition between&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda and Sigma&#13;
Pi.&#13;
III. Since all Alpha Kappa&#13;
Lambdas are "RATS" humane&#13;
treatment is not called for.&#13;
IV. Prisoners of War shall&#13;
receive cheese and water only.&#13;
V. Termination of this war&#13;
shall be contingent upon PEACE&#13;
WITH HONOR.&#13;
Signed,&#13;
The Brothers of Sigma Pi&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
If you will most graciously&#13;
grant me your undying attention&#13;
for but a few moments, I will&#13;
report to you a subject that will&#13;
take but, only a few brief&#13;
moments to describe. The main&#13;
reason being for the statement&#13;
made above, is undoubtedly&#13;
because of the lack of substantial&#13;
material and adequate accomplishments&#13;
by the subject in&#13;
question. The subject of course, is&#13;
the so-called, semi, part-time,&#13;
active Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
Fraternity. Now, as I have beard&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda is the more&#13;
established, or should I say, more&#13;
ancient fraternity on campus,&#13;
simply because they have been&#13;
on campus longer and also&#13;
because, of their outdated,&#13;
roaring 20's ideas concerning&#13;
fraternal accomplishments ancf&#13;
student activities. Now truthfully,&#13;
I have no right to hassle this&#13;
so-called, highly established&#13;
organization, consisting of an&#13;
awesome amount of 23, or is it 22&#13;
members? I mean, if their idea of&#13;
a heavy student activity is an&#13;
income tax helping session, in&#13;
relation to a blast in the Union&#13;
with the Convention on a&#13;
Saturday night, well, then that's&#13;
their bag, Kiddo, you know, 23&#13;
skidoo and all that hep, neato&#13;
stuff. But, seriously now and with&#13;
kidding aside, if you want to join&#13;
a fraternity with ideas and&#13;
reforms that resemble those of&#13;
medieval Europe, then join Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda. It's the cat's&#13;
meow.&#13;
John Sacket Jr.&#13;
Publicity Chairman&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity&#13;
To the Ranger:&#13;
November 7th was a day of&#13;
infamy. Now once again a large&#13;
number of fools and macho bigots&#13;
went to the polls and voted for&#13;
inequality, pseudo-morality and&#13;
just plain stupidity. The defeat of&#13;
the Wisconsin Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment is a victory for the&#13;
mentally backward or culturally&#13;
handicapped. But to a lot of&#13;
progressive people we all are&#13;
brothers and sisters with brains,&#13;
feelings, human needs and a soul.&#13;
Don't think for a minute that&#13;
this setback will slide either, for&#13;
you who said "no" to this&#13;
amendment have only&#13;
strengthened the will of those&#13;
oppressed and held back by&#13;
sexism and greed. The women&#13;
and men believing in basic&#13;
human dignity and personal selfdetermination&#13;
will fight all the&#13;
harder against the continuing&#13;
forces which hold everyone back&#13;
from fulfillment and happiness.&#13;
We apparently need a reeducation&#13;
and a turning away&#13;
from selfishness. .&#13;
The voters feef gambling with&#13;
Bingo cards comes before fair&#13;
treatment under law. April 3rd is&#13;
now another day of infamy. But,&#13;
we have lost a battle but we will&#13;
win the war.&#13;
Dave Myer&#13;
© the&#13;
Movement&#13;
Editor's Note: "The Movement" is a regular feature in RANGER to&#13;
deal with women's concerns. Guest writers are invited. This week's&#13;
article is from UW-Madison's News and Publications Service.&#13;
MOST WOMEN STILL 'SKIRT' ENGINEERING ATUW-MADISON&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Engineering, like&#13;
others across the country, has a problem women's liberation may help&#13;
solve. The problem is shrinking enrollment.&#13;
In September,'1965, there were 736 freshmen in a College of&#13;
Engineering undergraduate student body totalling 2,456.&#13;
Last fall, of 1,913 engineering undergraduates, 348 were freshmenand&#13;
only 23 were women.&#13;
Nonchalance within engineering faculties over the scarcity of&#13;
women in their classes and among their peers is changing to concern,&#13;
for women represent an almost untapped pool of potential engineering&#13;
students: last spring, United States schools of engineering averaged&#13;
out to being only .82 percent female.&#13;
But steering women to the engineering,campus isn't easy, says&#13;
engineering education Prof. Lois Greenfield, lone woman on the UWMadison&#13;
College of Engineering faculty, because the steering-away&#13;
process begins early.&#13;
"In our society, little girls are given dolls to play with, not erector&#13;
sets," she notes. Young women who excel in math or science in high&#13;
school meet with " 'Aha! You should be a nurse!' or 'Aha! You should&#13;
be a science teacher,' always the traditional roles. Often, counselors&#13;
never consider the prospect of a girl going into engineering."&#13;
The UW engineering faculty seeks to attract freshmen by means of&#13;
an informal outreach program in state schools. But tbe professors who&#13;
speak before bleachers full of high school students are usually men.&#13;
"I don't think we know how to present our work properly for girls,"&#13;
muses Associate Dean John L. Asmuth.&#13;
"Role models," (women other women copy), for would-be women&#13;
engineers are hard to come by. Hiring women to fill faculty positions&#13;
in the College of Engineering would be desirable, Asmuth says, but&#13;
points out that parsimonious budget-makers aren't likely to be impressed&#13;
by pleas for more professors to teach declining numbers of&#13;
engineering students.&#13;
Then, too, there's no glut of women engineering professors to hire.&#13;
If a woman were determined to find reasons not to go into&#13;
engineering, she could. "Current myth has it that the 'half-life' of an&#13;
engineer-the time it takes for half of what he learned in school to&#13;
become obsolete--is from five to 10 years," says Prof. Greenfield.&#13;
"That means a woman who's serious about her profession can't take&#13;
a complete time-out for five to 10 years while she gets her family&#13;
started. She has to look at the possibility of continuing in a professional&#13;
role at least part-time while her children are young;"&#13;
But refreshing stale knowledge, will be imperative for male&#13;
engineers, too, in the future. "Technical renewal is becoming painfully&#13;
necessary," says Dean Asmuth. "I think engineering is going to&#13;
have to face the re-training problem for engineers of both sexes, at&#13;
about the same time"&#13;
Jaclyn Horsfall, 21, of Madison, originally planned to be an English&#13;
teacher. "But one day my father (a state civil engineer) said to me,&#13;
'Look, kid. One-half the drivers in the world are women, but all the&#13;
road designers are men.' He wanted me to design roads with a&#13;
'woman's touch,' " she recalls.&#13;
"For a long time, I said 'No way,' but the more I thought about it, the&#13;
better it looked," she says. She's now a junior in civil and environmental&#13;
engineering.&#13;
This year the governing organization of student professional&#13;
engineering societies, Polygon Board, elected its first woman&#13;
president, Cheryl Brandt of West Allis, a chemical engineering senior.&#13;
Several members of the engineering faculty sent the National&#13;
Science Foundation a proposal early this year. They wanted money to&#13;
conduct a special summer engineering clinic for high school girls&#13;
whose propensities in math and science might lead them to consider&#13;
engineering as a career-if they found out about it in time.&#13;
The NSF, with budget troubles of i ts own, turned down the grant last&#13;
week, says Prof. Greenfield.&#13;
4 t h e PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 11, 1973&#13;
Water Pollution Control covered in Lake Alert conference&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
The first topic covered at the&#13;
Lake Michigan Alert Conference&#13;
was the Federal Water Pollution&#13;
Control Act Amendments of 1 972.&#13;
According to the Water&#13;
Pollution Control Handbook by&#13;
Barbara Reid and Gus Speth, The&#13;
Project on Clean Water of the&#13;
Natural Resources Defense&#13;
Council was established to&#13;
monitor the implementation of&#13;
this act and to watchdog the U.S.&#13;
Environmental Protection&#13;
Agency which is charged with the&#13;
bulk of the federal responsibility.&#13;
The Project also intends to&#13;
offer advice and assistance to&#13;
citizens around the country who&#13;
desire to monitor the per-&#13;
Wisconsin poet Edna Meudt of&#13;
Dodgeville, the author of four&#13;
volumes of poetry and winner of&#13;
numerous awards and honors for&#13;
her work, has scheduled&#13;
programs at two area institutions.&#13;
She will read from her work at&#13;
8 p.m. on Thursday in the second&#13;
floor library lounge in a program&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum and will conduct a&#13;
workshop at 10:30 a.m. on Friday&#13;
in the International Room at&#13;
Dominican, The College of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mrs. Meudt's books include&#13;
"Round River Canticle," "In No&#13;
Strange Land," "No One Sings&#13;
Face Down" and the justpublished&#13;
"The Inelectable Sea."&#13;
She also is represented in a&#13;
Parkside pianist&#13;
in recital&#13;
here Thursday&#13;
Pianist August Wegner of&#13;
Parkside music faculty will be&#13;
joined by guest artists&#13;
Christopher M. Bonds, violinist,&#13;
and Phyllis Bonds, soprano, in a&#13;
free public recital at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday in Room 103,&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Wegner, who joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty last fall, has&#13;
performed a number of solo piano&#13;
recitals and has made several&#13;
appearances at composers'&#13;
symposia. He received his MBE&#13;
and MA degrees in choral music&#13;
and piano at Central Michigan&#13;
University and an MFA in&#13;
composition and piano and a Ph.-&#13;
D. in composition at the&#13;
University of Iowa where he&#13;
taught prior to coming to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Mr. Bonds, who also is a&#13;
composer as well as a performing&#13;
artist, is acting chairman of the&#13;
music department at Carroll&#13;
College. He has been violinist&#13;
with the Phoenix Symphony and&#13;
concertmaster of the Elmira&#13;
(N.Y.) Symphony. He received&#13;
bachelors and masters degrees in&#13;
music from Arizona State&#13;
University and a Ph.D. from the&#13;
University of Iowa.&#13;
Ms. Bonds, who has performed&#13;
at Arizona State, Elmira and&#13;
Carroll, received bachelors and&#13;
masters degrees at Arizona and&#13;
studied with former Metropolitan&#13;
Opera performer Josephine&#13;
Antoine and with Louise Baker&#13;
and Lois Fisher.&#13;
formance of their state water&#13;
pollution control boards and&#13;
agencies which are also given&#13;
powers under the Act.&#13;
Reid, head of Clean Water&#13;
Project of the National&#13;
Resources Defense Council, read&#13;
the basic goals of the act, which&#13;
are "to restore and maintain the&#13;
chemical, physical and biological&#13;
integrity of the Nation's waters."&#13;
After reading the goals, Reid's&#13;
speech concentrated mostly upon&#13;
the explanation of the standards&#13;
for waste emissions and the&#13;
permits which will be issued of&#13;
dischargers of waste under the&#13;
Act. She also frequently urged&#13;
that people take it upon themselves&#13;
to assist the imnumber&#13;
of anthologies and&#13;
journals.&#13;
She is a member of the faculty&#13;
of The Rhinelander School of&#13;
Arts, one of the country's major&#13;
summer writers' workshops, and&#13;
has been featured poet at the&#13;
Deep South Writers Conference&#13;
and judge of many national&#13;
poetry writing competitions.&#13;
She is a charter member of the&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Writers&#13;
Stanley Russell Craig Jr., a&#13;
Parkside student from Kenosha,&#13;
has been awarded an honorable&#13;
mention in competition for the&#13;
1973 Danforth Foundation&#13;
Fellowships. The fellowships are&#13;
awarded annually to outstanding&#13;
students who plan to complete&#13;
doctoral degrees with the career&#13;
goal of teaching in higher&#13;
education institutions.&#13;
Craig, one of Parkside's first&#13;
four Danforth nominees, was&#13;
among six students from&#13;
Wisconsin universities who&#13;
received honorable mention. The&#13;
others are from UW-Oshkosh&#13;
(one), UW-Madison (two) and&#13;
Marquette University (two).&#13;
Wisconsin's only 1973 Danforth&#13;
fellow, David Krause of Hartford,&#13;
also is from Marquette.&#13;
MAY 4-6&#13;
&gt; Tickets&#13;
$5.00 for Derby Ticket&#13;
^$2.50 pre-Derby Concert&#13;
advance sale ticket&#13;
($4.00 at the door)&#13;
piementation of the Act.&#13;
"Public participation in the&#13;
development, revision, and enforcement&#13;
of any regulation,&#13;
standard, effluent limitation,&#13;
plan or program established by&#13;
the Administrator or any state&#13;
under this Act shall be provided&#13;
for, encouraged, and assisted by&#13;
the Administrator and the States.&#13;
The Administrator, in&#13;
cooperation with the States, shall&#13;
develop and publish regulations&#13;
specifying minimum guidelines&#13;
for public participation in such&#13;
processes." (FWPCA Section&#13;
101(e))&#13;
Reid explained the effluent&#13;
requirements, the 1977 and 1983&#13;
deadlines and the technologically&#13;
based standards set up by the&#13;
Act.&#13;
Assn. and of the Wisconsin&#13;
Fellowship of Poets. She also has&#13;
been an officer of the National&#13;
Federation of State Poetry&#13;
Societies, Inc., the National&#13;
League of American Pen Women&#13;
and the American Poetry&#13;
League.&#13;
In 1970, she was the recipient of&#13;
the Governor's Award in the&#13;
Arts.&#13;
uraig will graduate from&#13;
Parkside in May with a double&#13;
major in chemistry and&#13;
management science. He plans&#13;
graduate studies in chemistry&#13;
and has been offered teaching&#13;
assistantships at both Princeton&#13;
and Harvard Universities.&#13;
Craig, his wife Susan and their&#13;
young son live at 1715 - 19th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha. Mrs. Craig is a member&#13;
of the Parkside English faculty.&#13;
His parents, the senior Craigs,&#13;
live at 311 Wilnette Spring Drive,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The Danforth Foundation this&#13;
year awarded about 100&#13;
fellowships and 265 honorable&#13;
mentions from among more than&#13;
2,000 candidates nominated by&#13;
undergraduate institutions from&#13;
throughout the United States.&#13;
Lodging t hru the&#13;
co-opergtion of the&#13;
University of Louisville: (&#13;
$1 per day includes&#13;
• coffee, donuts &lt;&#13;
• shower&#13;
• bring own sleeping bag1&#13;
Section 301 of the Act&#13;
establishes national deadlines for&#13;
the achievement of certain levels&#13;
of pollution control from all&#13;
major sources of pollution. The&#13;
first deadline requires that industrial&#13;
sources of p ollution must&#13;
achieve the "best practicable&#13;
control technology economically&#13;
available" and municipal&#13;
facilities must attain "best&#13;
practicable waste treatment&#13;
technology." This deadline is set&#13;
for July 1, 1983.&#13;
According to Reid, the Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency&#13;
(EPA) has the authority to define&#13;
effluent standards for each industrial&#13;
category, such as steel,&#13;
or papermills. There are 27&#13;
major categories.&#13;
The EPA's final guidelines will&#13;
be available in October '73.&#13;
The technologically based&#13;
standards will insure that if&#13;
pollution is capable of being&#13;
cleaned up, industries and&#13;
municipal systems must do it.&#13;
Reid also stated that the&#13;
highest water quality standards&#13;
set for a river or stream must be&#13;
required under the Act, the more&#13;
stringent limitations required by&#13;
water quality standards must be&#13;
achieved by the mid-1977&#13;
deadline.&#13;
All states have water quality&#13;
standards that are federally&#13;
approved for interstate waters&#13;
Many states have water quality&#13;
standards set for intrastate&#13;
waters as well. States are&#13;
allowed to set more stringent&#13;
limitations than the federal&#13;
minimums required for&#13;
technological controls.&#13;
Therefore, if a state water&#13;
quality standard for a particular&#13;
stream requires greater than the&#13;
best practicable technology, in&#13;
order to achieve that standard,&#13;
the stricter state standards&#13;
apply-&#13;
In addition, a new national&#13;
water quality standard goal has&#13;
been set for 1983. This goal is the&#13;
achievement of a water quality&#13;
which provides for the protection&#13;
and propagation of fish, shellfish&#13;
and wildlife and provides for&#13;
recreation in and on the water&#13;
(swimming). (FWPCA section&#13;
101(a)(2))&#13;
Present water quality standards&#13;
are required to be&#13;
reviewed and upgraded at least&#13;
once every three years with a&#13;
requirement for public hearings&#13;
before a state revision of standards.&#13;
Next week-Shoreline Erosion&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
THE&#13;
KENTUCKY DERBY&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
MUST SUPPLY OWN TRANSPORTATION - TRAVEL&#13;
INFORMATION AND SIGN-UP AT STU. ACT. OFFICE -&#13;
LLC-D-197.&#13;
Anything on the Menu&#13;
ViPrice&#13;
3315 -52nd SL Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
To Parkside Students&#13;
with I.D. C ards&#13;
" 'Expires' April l«,f 1973&#13;
He*******************************&#13;
S Parkside Activities Board jt&#13;
« presents j*,&#13;
A una&#13;
featuring&#13;
*&#13;
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*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
MM+&#13;
$***&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
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*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
****************************&#13;
Sat., Apr. 14 9:00 p.m. -1:00 a.m.&#13;
Stu. Act. BIdg&#13;
Adm.: * 1 Pa rkside St udents *150 Guests&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wise. I.D.'s&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
•FREE MUSIC*&#13;
Wed. - Fri • * Sf l t i&#13;
No Cover&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'LUNCH •&#13;
P I Z Z A , C H ICKEN , SALA D , M O - J O 'S ^&#13;
1 1 : 3 0 - 1 : 3 0 A&#13;
Mon. -Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun. Z&#13;
$ " | 8 9 J&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'FISH F I S H , P I Z Z A . SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed. &amp; Fri. $199&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
•&#13;
PIZZA I&#13;
2 0 K INDS SERVEDALLTHETIME # •&#13;
P IUS N ( l l i r Fa v n r i l o&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
WMO J O'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
i rv _' «_ _ . . . .&#13;
Poet Meudt here Thursday&#13;
Stanley Craig awarded&#13;
honorable mention&#13;
Wed. , Ap r i l 11, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Vopat talks of destiny, liberation&#13;
Pnrtlif S™°te: Women's Day. sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus, was held last Wednesday-&#13;
Many people from the communities as well&#13;
as from Parkside attended the dozen sessions on the&#13;
p r o g r am. The k e y no t e a d dr e s s , "An at omy I sn o t&#13;
Destiny was delivered by Carole Vopat, assistant «—-«&#13;
53-fS? ''Anatomy isLstiliy^^m^^gotog&#13;
^ ^ fema^af^of my life'but&#13;
don t know what a woman really is. I know all too&#13;
well what I have been told I am; but I Tm still fin°&#13;
ding out, beneath all the role playing and con&#13;
.sk,;?.""" *&lt;"•'«• I- •Fssgs&amp;xsssgss, pemses are worth more than people with vaginas&#13;
There are a few more flourishes to it -like, people&#13;
ave,penises are therefore suited by nature to&#13;
thrust and conquer and dominate, to be aggressive&#13;
rrJll ogt and hard and firm and erect and&#13;
emnfvVe' Pfi?Ple With vaSinas are filled with&#13;
empty space; they have receptacles instead of&#13;
s words, and as the vagina was created to accept the&#13;
penis, so the female is by nature receptive, passive&#13;
Because she has !ute"fs&#13;
destined to be a mother; because she has a vagina&#13;
she is destined to accept and serve men.&#13;
Man is dominant; woman to be dominated; man&#13;
to rule and woman to serve. People with penises are&#13;
superior to people with vaginas; people with penises&#13;
were meant to rule people with vaginas; people with&#13;
penises are the norm and the standard; people with&#13;
vaginas are wounded, castrated, imperfect, inferior-&#13;
female.&#13;
We are born into a male world, raised in a male&#13;
culture, shown male images of ourselves, taught&#13;
male standards. We live in a world in which&#13;
MALENESS is the norm, and what is UNMALE,&#13;
that is, female, is inferior, different and therefore&#13;
less. We live in a world in which we are the second&#13;
sex.&#13;
Whether the- theory comes from biology,&#13;
psychology, sociology, anthropology, or religion,&#13;
toe ideal is the same; that there is in woman in&#13;
irreducible natural component which can be&#13;
characterized as passive, receiving, unassertive&#13;
and submissive-by implication, non-intellectual,&#13;
illogical and emotional. Women are by nature unfit&#13;
to direct either the way of the world or their own&#13;
lives. Women who are assertive and intellectual,&#13;
who are not like this stereotype, are not "natural"&#13;
women; they are sick, or homosexual, or rejecting&#13;
their sexuality, or suffering "penis envy." In some&#13;
way they're unnatural and disturbed, for woman,&#13;
given her natural characteristics, given what all&#13;
men know is her very nature, finds her only real&#13;
fulfillment in the home and motherhood.&#13;
Most men want to be husbands and fathers but no&#13;
man is raised to be a husband and father and no&#13;
man would ever conceive of those relationships as&#13;
his prime function in life, his destiny, his identity,&#13;
his total fulfillment. Yet every woman is raised,&#13;
still, to believe that being a wife and mother is her&#13;
prime function in life, and her instinctive choice.&#13;
For what else are a vagina and a uterus for?&#13;
Anatomy is destiny.&#13;
Women who are told that what they fundamentally&#13;
WANT and NEED is to be wives and&#13;
mothers as distinguished from being anything else,&#13;
women who are told that their childbearing and&#13;
housewifely obligations supercede all other needs,&#13;
ARE BEING LIED TO. For all human beings, male&#13;
or female, have within them a great driving force of&#13;
energy which is the basis of all human life, and that&#13;
energy expresses itself as a driving human need for&#13;
self-assertion and for self-fulfillment. Yet women&#13;
are raised as martyrs in a world which offers&#13;
martyrs no rewards save martyrdom; women are&#13;
trained to deny their personal selves, their egos,&#13;
their personal needs, to serve those of their&#13;
husbands and their children. They are trained to be&#13;
masochists, and then told masochism is their&#13;
nature, their inherent essence, as well as their&#13;
destiny.&#13;
For a person with a vagina needs the same things&#13;
a person with a penis does: needs self-fulfillment,&#13;
identity, self-respect, needs in short, a self, to be&#13;
taken seriously, to speak and to be heard.&#13;
There is nothing inherent in woman which makes&#13;
her less of a human being, with less of a human's&#13;
needs, than a man. We are the victims not of&#13;
biology, not of our anatomy, but of our culture,&#13;
which trains us that anatomy is destiny, that&#13;
woman inside is only empty space: without intellect,&#13;
without creativity, without potential,&#13;
without energy and life and force save that which is&#13;
planted in her uterus by man.&#13;
The basis of the theories of woman's natural&#13;
submissiveness, her inherent inferiority, is not fact&#13;
but myth-and the myth is that of MALE&#13;
SUPREMACY. Male supremacy has taken varied&#13;
Carole Vopat&#13;
iorms throughout history; its single purpose,&#13;
however, has always been to maintain control over&#13;
the other half of humanity.&#13;
I cannot argue about hormones or biology. But the&#13;
moral argument is simple and clear cut-&#13;
DOMINATION OF ONE GROUP BY ANOTHER IS&#13;
IMMORAL. OPPRESSION OF ONE GROUP BY&#13;
ANOTHER IS WRONG. DISCRIMINATION&#13;
OPPRESSION, REPRESSION AND SUPPRESSION&#13;
OF ONE HALF OF HUMANITY IS&#13;
MORALLY WRONG. IT IS WRONG!&#13;
••• What does it mean to be liberated? It means quite&#13;
simply to be FREE. To be without compulsion for&#13;
the very first time: toe compulsion to be dainty, to&#13;
be sweet, to be sexy, to be shy, to compete&#13;
aggressively with other women, to flirt and be&#13;
helpless with men so they'll like you; the compulsion&#13;
to please-like a dancing doll or rouged up&#13;
puppet-to be daddy's darling and hubby's baby,&#13;
their sweet, their precious, their baby girl. And it&#13;
means not having to disguise your strengths as&#13;
weaknesses: to be smart and play dumb; to be wise&#13;
and play silly; to be intellectual and play sexy; to be&#13;
proud yet play humble; to be independent and in&#13;
control and disciplined, yet to act helpless; to be an&#13;
adult yet play the child. And worse, not to know you&#13;
are playing a role: to be smart and think you are&#13;
stupid; to be strong yet convinced you are weak; to&#13;
be wise but deem yourself silly; to be valuable and&#13;
perceptive and capable yet paralyzed by an insecurity&#13;
so deep and vicious that life for you is a&#13;
constant state of feeling threatened and anxious and&#13;
small; to be beautiful yet to hate your reflection in&#13;
the mirror; to be stately and rich, yet to set yourself&#13;
up as a little girl, or a whore, or a gypsy, or&#13;
whatever you're supposed to look like that year. The&#13;
waste, the tremendous cost in human lives and&#13;
human potential! I have been there and I know that&#13;
pain of feeling so totally inadequate, worthless,&#13;
unimportant, so completely NOT ENOUGH.&#13;
I see women here, women who are my friends,&#13;
beautiful and capable women, who look at themselves,&#13;
and despise themselves-because they are&#13;
female and to be female is just not enough.&#13;
Liberation means ACCEPTING YOURSELF and&#13;
saying IT IS ENOUGH. IT IS GOOD. I AM&#13;
ENOUGH.&#13;
You, just you, are fine and lovely and you don't&#13;
need pretense-not fake manners or fake makeup or&#13;
fake clothes or fake images. You don't have to&#13;
pretend to be anything, because you, just you, all by&#13;
yourself, you're enough.&#13;
You don't need a home and a dishwasher and a&#13;
husband and a child and a sewing circle or a degree&#13;
or a title to complete you, to give you worth or value&#13;
or dignity or importance, because you, just you,&#13;
you, by nature, are not inferior. You are by nature&#13;
ENOUGH.&#13;
Does liberation mean hating men, blaming men?&#13;
In no way, at no time, can hate or blame ever be&#13;
liberating. Anger can free us, because what anger&#13;
means is self-respect; it means we don't deserve to&#13;
be treated this way and get your foot off my neck.&#13;
Anger is good because first one cannot be angry&#13;
unless she feels she is valuable. But blame and hate&#13;
are only destructive and self-destructive. Surely we&#13;
know that each person conceives of him or herself&#13;
as a hero; that no one deliberately and maliciously&#13;
in full cruel spirit sets out to destroy another.&#13;
However, toe situation began-whether back in&#13;
those prehistoric caves or on the Mayflower or&#13;
whenever-the situation of oppo.oppression is here&#13;
now and must be changed. I have faith in education;&#13;
I have made education my life. I have faith that&#13;
when people are shown that they are pursuing a&#13;
destructive and self-destructive course of action,&#13;
they will themselves want to change it, because&#13;
people want to be good and to be fair. I have faith&#13;
that if men and women are educated to the issues&#13;
involved in our struggle, that society will change, as&#13;
society has changed to give blacks more-not&#13;
enough by any means and not as much as whites&#13;
have, but more. And in our personal struggles, I&#13;
believe that men and women mean well; that if t hey&#13;
had the choice, they would rather not exist towards&#13;
each other in a relationship of oppression, resentment,&#13;
suspicion and hatred; not in a power struggle&#13;
but in a marriage of true minds and true hearts and&#13;
souls and bodies.&#13;
I believe if people are shown toe right and just&#13;
path, they will choose to walk on it; that people,&#13;
men and women, act as they do out of ignorance and&#13;
not maliciousness. Situations are complex, but I&#13;
believe, as Anne Frank once said, facing a struggle&#13;
and an oppression greater perhaps than any of us&#13;
here have witnessed, that "people are basically&#13;
good at heart." I do not believe the women's&#13;
movement wants to blame and hate men; but that it&#13;
wants to raise our consciousnesses, uplift us, both&#13;
men and women, so that we can exist together in a&#13;
blessed state of peace, and work together for the&#13;
common good. It disturbs me that men are afraid or&#13;
threatened by the women's movement; for their&#13;
fear and suspicion will close off their minds and&#13;
education will not take place. It disturbs me that my&#13;
sisters believe that the movement wants to destroy&#13;
them, to reach into their homes and blight their&#13;
children and their marriage beds, for their&#13;
suspicion and fear will close their minds also and&#13;
education will not take place.&#13;
I cannot allay all of t hese fears, for some of them&#13;
are certainly well-founded fears, for once education&#13;
takes place, there's no going back and nothing is&#13;
ever toe same again, and the security of that old&#13;
warm world is lost forever, in which men were men&#13;
and women were women and everyone knew his or&#13;
her place. I have already spoken to you of toe&#13;
tremendous personal cost of liberation, and of&#13;
having to make your own place in a world where&#13;
places are hard to come by. But I d o firmly believe&#13;
that what we will get is far greater than what we&#13;
will give up; that the world of equality and opportunity,&#13;
of liberty, towards which we aspire is far&#13;
greater than the world of oppression and&#13;
stereotyping that we leave behind; that education&#13;
and consciousness raising are their own rewards,&#13;
and that it is better to live in a confusing and insecure&#13;
universe as a free woman and a free man,&#13;
than to exist chained in a safe yet smothering world!&#13;
I believe in working towards a world and an&#13;
America where each will be all he or she is capable&#13;
of becoming; and where all of us-male, female&#13;
black, white-will fulfill the fullest potential of our&#13;
humanity.&#13;
Well, I have so many more stories to share with&#13;
you, as you have to share with me. So much we have&#13;
realized, and pieced together alone and with each&#13;
other. But that will have to wait for another time.&#13;
We have all of t he rest of our lives to come to know&#13;
and love each other and ourselves.&#13;
The total speech is available on tape in the&#13;
Learning Center along with tapes of many Women's&#13;
Day sessions.&#13;
HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 1 1 , 1 9 7 3&#13;
Tapes, films, cassettes form&#13;
16 mm films&#13;
ANGKOR-THE LO ST CITY&#13;
ALBRECHT DURER&#13;
APPEALS TO S ANTIAGO&#13;
ART NOUVEAU&#13;
BABOON EC OLOGY&#13;
BABOON SOCIAL ORGANIZATION&#13;
BALLET MECHANIQUE&#13;
blueEanAGELPRESSURE FLAKING&#13;
BOSCH, GARDEN OF DE LIGHTS&#13;
BUILDING OF TH E BOM B&#13;
TOM LIN E BEHAVI0RISM AND THE BOTTHE&#13;
CABINET OF DR. CA LIGARI&#13;
CHEMICAL BONDING&#13;
CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMALITIES - THE&#13;
SEX CHROMOSOMES&#13;
CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMALITIES - THE&#13;
AUTOSOMES&#13;
SIDERA"8^8 " °ENERAL C°N"&#13;
CIVILISATION SERIES&#13;
COLONIAL SIX&#13;
CORNER OF W HEAT&#13;
THE CURE&#13;
DEAD BIR DS&#13;
THE DEHUMANIZING CITY AND HYMIE&#13;
SCHULTZ&#13;
THE DESERT PEOPLE&#13;
EDISON ALBUM&#13;
ENZYME DEFECTS AND DNA MEDICAL&#13;
GENETICS&#13;
FACE T O FAC E&#13;
FOUR FAM ILIES&#13;
FUTURE SHOCK&#13;
GENES AND P ROTEIN SYNTHESIS&#13;
GERMAN LA NGUAGE FILM&#13;
GIACOMETTI&#13;
THE GOLD R USH&#13;
GUTEN TAG&#13;
THE HADZA: THE FOOOD QUEST OF AN&#13;
EAST AFRICAN HUNTING AND GATHERING&#13;
TRIBE&#13;
THE HERITAGE OF TH E UN COMMON MA N&#13;
HIROSHIMA NAG ASAKI: AUGUST, 1945&#13;
THE HO LY GHOST PEOPLE&#13;
HUMAN RE PRODUCTION&#13;
THE HUNT ERS&#13;
HYDROGEN ATOM: LONG V ERSION&#13;
I DO , AND I UND ERSTAND&#13;
THE IMMIGRANT&#13;
INFANTS SCHOOL&#13;
INTOLERANCE&#13;
ISHI IN TWO WORLDS&#13;
IT'S A GIFT&#13;
LAST LAUGH&#13;
11:59 - LAS T MINUTE TO C HOOSE&#13;
LIFE AND DEATH OF A HO LLYWOOD EXTRA&#13;
LONELINESS AN D LO VING&#13;
LOVE T O KIL L&#13;
M&#13;
MARVELS OF ME LIES&#13;
THE MED IA CEN TER IN ACTION&#13;
THE MEDICINAL GENETICS SERIES&#13;
MISS GOODALL AND THE WILD CHIMPANZEES&#13;
MONKEYS, APES AND M AN&#13;
MY COUNTRY, RIG HT OR WRONG&#13;
NANOOK OF TH E NORTH&#13;
NOSFERATU&#13;
THE NUER&#13;
ODESSA STEPS&#13;
ONE A.M .&#13;
THE PHANTOM OF TH E OPERA&#13;
PIAGET'S DEVELOPMENTAL THEORYCLASSIFICATION&#13;
PIAGET'S DEVELOPMENTAL THEORYCONSERVATION&#13;
POET I &amp; II&#13;
POTEMKIN&#13;
POTTERS WORLD&#13;
THE PRE-NATAL DIAGNOSIS BY AMNIOSYNTHESIS&#13;
PRIDE AND PRINCIPLE&#13;
PSYCHO&#13;
THE REAL SECURITY&#13;
THE RIGHT TO LIVE: WHO DECIDES&#13;
THE RINK&#13;
SEARCHING FOR VALUES SERIES&#13;
A SENSE OF PURPOSE&#13;
SHAPES AND POLARITIES OF MOLECULES&#13;
THE SIXTIES&#13;
A SMALL THINGS CLASSROOM&#13;
SO THAT MEN ARE FREE&#13;
SPANISH SERIES&#13;
SUBMERGED GLORY-STUDY IN STONE&#13;
TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD&#13;
TEACHING SKILLS&#13;
THIRTY NINE STEPS&#13;
TITANS, U.S.A.&#13;
A TRIP TO THE MOON&#13;
TROUBLE WITH THE LAW&#13;
UPTOWN: PORTRAIT OF THE SOUTH&#13;
BRONX&#13;
VD&#13;
VIOLENCE: JUST FOR FUN&#13;
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF...&#13;
WHEN PARENTS GROW OLD&#13;
WHETHER TO TELL THE TRUTH&#13;
WHY LEGER?&#13;
WILLIAM HARVEY AND THE CIRCULATION&#13;
OF THE BLOOD&#13;
WISCONSIN - TRAIL OF NATIONS&#13;
WONDERING ABOUT THINGS&#13;
YOU, YOURSELF, INCORPORATED&#13;
Video tapes&#13;
THE ADVOCATES JOURNAL&#13;
THE AFRICAN QUEEN&#13;
ALL THE KING'S MEN&#13;
THE AMERICA SERIES&#13;
APOLLO 17 SPACE FLIGHT&#13;
ART IS&#13;
ATTACK&#13;
BILL MOYER'S JOURNAL&#13;
THE BILL OF RIGHTS - INTERROGATION&#13;
THE BILL OF RIGHTS - SEARCH PRIVACY&#13;
BIRTH OF A NATION&#13;
THE BOAT&#13;
BONNIE AND CLYDE&#13;
THE CAVE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES&#13;
CITIES OF THE FUTURE&#13;
CITIZEN KANE&#13;
DAMES&#13;
DEBATE ON WOMEN'S LIBERATION&#13;
DER GOLEM&#13;
THE FALL OF BABYLON&#13;
FAUSTUS&#13;
THE FORBIDDEN CITY&#13;
FIRST TUESDAY IN FEBRUARY, 1973- THE&#13;
WIFE OF A POW.&#13;
FOOTLIGHT PARADE&#13;
THE GENERAL&#13;
THE GRAPES OF WRATH&#13;
THE HIRED HAND&#13;
HORSE FEATHERS&#13;
THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME&#13;
IF YOU GIVE A DANCE, YOU GOTTA PAY&#13;
THE BAND&#13;
IN COLD BLOOD&#13;
IN SEARCH OF THE ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS&#13;
THE INHERITANCE&#13;
THE JAZZ AGE&#13;
ROBERT KENNEDY REMEMBERED&#13;
KING HENRY V&#13;
KING KONG&#13;
KNIFE IN THE WATER&#13;
KRAKATOA&#13;
LAST MOON LANDING&#13;
VAIECS&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery to P arkside Village&#13;
SOU 30th Annul Phone 657-S191&#13;
LIFE AND HEALTH OF THE AMERICAN&#13;
WOMAN&#13;
LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT&#13;
LULLABY OF BROADWAY&#13;
THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS&#13;
THE MALTESE FALCON&#13;
THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER&#13;
MOTIVATION AND PRODUCTIVITY&#13;
ODD MAN OUT&#13;
OF THEE I SING&#13;
ONCE UPON A MATTRESS&#13;
THE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC&#13;
POST ELECTION PROGRAM&#13;
PSYCHO&#13;
RASHOMON&#13;
REACTION TO THE VIETNAM CEASE FIRE&#13;
THE RESTLESS EARTH&#13;
ROMEO AND JULIET&#13;
RULES OF THE GAME&#13;
SESAME STREET&#13;
SET INDUCTION&#13;
A SHOT IN THE DARK&#13;
STREET OF THE FLOWER BOXES&#13;
STAGECOACH&#13;
TEN DAYS&#13;
THEORY X, THEORY Y&#13;
TOM JONES&#13;
A TRIBUTE TO BEETHOVEN&#13;
UBERFALL&#13;
UPTOWN: PORTRAIT OF THE SOUTH&#13;
BRONX&#13;
VERTIGO&#13;
THE VIOLENT EARTH&#13;
WHAT ABOUT TOMORROW?&#13;
WILD STRAWBERRIES&#13;
WINESBURG, OHIO&#13;
THE WITCH DOCTOR&#13;
YOGI BEAR&#13;
Editor's Note: Instead of the regular A&#13;
contains information about the operation&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Director of the Le&#13;
its objectives and purposes as follows- (&#13;
the learning process (2) To be used as&#13;
learning (3) To be concerned with the ne&lt;&#13;
individuals (4) To be used as a commui&#13;
cooperative arrangements with other ir&#13;
and region.&#13;
Phillip Quetschke, Assistant to the Dire&#13;
the Learning Center work as a team&#13;
responsibilities it's hard to make j&#13;
described the Learning Center as bein&#13;
students, faculty, and residents of Racir&#13;
come in and use the Learning Center o&#13;
enrolled at Parkside. As far what kinds &lt;&#13;
out of the Learning Center Quetschke s&#13;
restrictions on the use of any of the matt&#13;
just about anything." Mr. Quetschke al;&#13;
Center can handle almost any format of&#13;
equipment is made to be easily operable U&#13;
Sandra Thomason, Specialist of the A.&#13;
and faculty with audio-visual projects. T&#13;
located in the basement next to the Ai&#13;
become part of the Comm. Arts building&#13;
workshop is now being used mostly by f;&#13;
but that anyone is welcome. She is ther&#13;
equipment involved in making such things&#13;
strips, and transparencies. All the thini&#13;
workshop eventually become part of the&#13;
person pays for the materials, in which ca&#13;
According to Thomason, the room in wl&#13;
will eventually become a sort of master &lt;&#13;
Library and Learning Center will be hooke&#13;
be able to push a button and the material&#13;
from the control room up to the carrel.&#13;
Johanna Herrick, Media Librarian, car&#13;
ago to fill a newly created job. Her dutie;&#13;
dering new materials, organizing materi&#13;
use, and making materials accessabie&#13;
Herrick, all requests for new materials m&#13;
are considered and usually ordered.&#13;
Sound filmstrips&#13;
ALCOHOL: THE SOCIAL DRUG-THE SOCIAL&#13;
PROBLEM&#13;
AMERICA! THE POETRY OF A NATION&#13;
AMERICAN GOTHIC: HAWTHORNEMELVILLE&#13;
THE AMERICAN HUMORISTS&#13;
THE AMERICAN POOR: A SELF+PORTRAIT&#13;
THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY&#13;
ANATOMY OF U.S. POLITICAL PARTIES&#13;
THE BLACK ODYSSEY: MIGRATION TO THE&#13;
CITIES&#13;
CITIES: USA&#13;
THE CITY AND THE MODERN WRITER&#13;
CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE&#13;
CONCORD: A NATION'S CONSCIENCE&#13;
A CONTROVERSIAL FILM&#13;
DARE TO BE DIFFERENT&#13;
EDGAR ALLAN POE&#13;
ENVIRONMENT1 CHANGING MAN'S&#13;
VALUES&#13;
RAGINEI&#13;
7~£ACHCR1&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
^JHION// "Washington Square&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
Wed., A p r i l 11, 1973 THE PARKS I D E RANGE R 7&#13;
n coroe f Learning Center&#13;
ir AV review, this week's column&#13;
tion of the Learning Center,&#13;
i Learning Center, listed some of&#13;
's: (l) To facilitate and improve&#13;
I as a resource for teaching and&#13;
3 needs of students and faculty as&#13;
munity resource (5) To develop&#13;
ir institutions in the community&#13;
Director, stated that the people in&#13;
am. Because of the overlap in&#13;
;e job distinctions. Quetschke&#13;
being a service organization to&#13;
lacine and Kenosha. Anyone can&#13;
er or the Library without being&#13;
nds of materials can be checked&#13;
ke said, "We don't want to put&#13;
materials. We can be talked into&#13;
e also stated that the Learning&#13;
at of non-print material and the&#13;
We to encourage student use.&#13;
e A.V. Workshop helps students&#13;
ts. The workshop is temporarily&#13;
le Archives but will eventually&#13;
Iding. Thomason stated that the&#13;
by faculty and student teachers&#13;
there to train people to use the&#13;
hings as slide presentations, film&#13;
things which are made in the&#13;
' t he Learning Center unless the&#13;
ch case he may keep the project,&#13;
in which the workshop is located&#13;
iter control room. Carrels in the&#13;
looked up so that the student will&#13;
erial he wishes will be projected&#13;
Tel.&#13;
i, cam e to Parkside three weeks&#13;
iuties involve such things as oraterials,&#13;
scheduling of machine&#13;
able to students. According to&#13;
ils made by students and faculty&#13;
THE MIGRANT WORKER&#13;
NATIONALISM&#13;
OPEN HOUSING&#13;
OUR CREDIT ECONOMY&#13;
THE PEOPLE PROBLEM&#13;
STAND?AL C0MMITMENT: WHERE DO YOU&#13;
THE WORLD OF MARK TWAIN&#13;
YOUR PERSONALITY: THE YOU OTHERS&#13;
KNOW&#13;
FRESHMAN&#13;
OF EMILY&#13;
PORTRAIT OF A&#13;
CONGRESSMAN&#13;
PREJUDICE!&#13;
THE PRIVATE WORLD&#13;
DICKINSON&#13;
THE RECKLESS YEARS: 1919-1929&#13;
REVOLUTION&#13;
THE SEARCH FOR BLACK IDENTITYMALCOM&#13;
X&#13;
THE SEARCH FOR BLACK IDENTITYPROUD&#13;
HERITAGE FROM WEST AFRICA&#13;
SEX DETERMINATION AND SEX LINKAGE&#13;
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS: TO CHANGE A&#13;
NATION&#13;
SPEAKING OF LANGUAGE&#13;
MAN'S NATURAL ENVIRONMENT: CRISIS&#13;
THROUGH ABUSE&#13;
STATE GOVERNMENT IN ACTION&#13;
STIMULANTS&#13;
STREETS, PRAIRIES AND VALLEYS- THE&#13;
LIFE OF CARL SANDBURG&#13;
THE THIRD HOUSE: WASHINGTON LOBBYISTS&#13;
AT WORK&#13;
TRANSPORTATION: WHERE DO WE GO&#13;
FROM HERE?&#13;
URBAN AMERICA AS WE SEE IT&#13;
VENEREAL DISEASE: A PRESENT DANGER&#13;
THE VISION OF STEPHEN CRANE&#13;
ERNEST HEMINGWAY, THE MAN&#13;
ERNEST HEMINGWAY, THE WRITER&#13;
THE EXPATRIATE WRITERS&#13;
THE EXPLOITED GENERATION&#13;
THE FARM QUESTION&#13;
FOREIGN AID&#13;
FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT: THE&#13;
YEARS THAT CHANGED THE NATION&#13;
THE GREAT DEPRESSION: 1929-1939&#13;
HARD TO FEEL YOU'RE SOMEBODY: DOPE&#13;
IN THE CITY&#13;
THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE AND BEYOND&#13;
THE HONORABLE COURT; THE SUPREME&#13;
COURT OF THE UNITED STATES&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO BIOLOGICAL&#13;
MEASUREMENTS&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO DNA&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO ECOLOGY&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO GAMETOGENESIS&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO MEIOSIS&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO MENDELIAN&#13;
INHERITANCE&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO MITOSIS&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO PROBABILITY&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO THE WATER CYCLE&#13;
JACK LONDON: A LIFE OF ADVENTURE&#13;
JOB ATTITUDES: WHY WORK AT ALL?&#13;
THE LITERATURE OF PROTEST&#13;
MASS MEDIA: IMPACT ON A NATION&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents:&#13;
Video cassettes&#13;
ARTIST IN RESIDENCE&#13;
B.F. SKINNER&#13;
BOSCH: GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS&#13;
DEMAGOGUES AND DO-GOODERS&#13;
ELIOT PORTER&#13;
EXITS AND ENTRANCES&#13;
HELLO DARWIN&#13;
HOMAGE TO THE SQUARE&#13;
IDEA OF THE CITY&#13;
IDEAS ON THE THEATER&#13;
INFORMATION PROCESSING&#13;
LEARNING&#13;
PICNIC IN SCIENCE&#13;
PRIMER OF THE UNIVERSE&#13;
ROOTS OF A COLD WAR&#13;
THE SENSORY WORLD&#13;
SENTINEL: WEST FACE&#13;
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY&#13;
A T IME FOR LEARNING&#13;
UNDER THE COULDS OF WAR&#13;
UNDERSTANDING COMPUTERS&#13;
WHAT MAKES MAN HUMAN&#13;
WHY MAN CREATES&#13;
THE WRITER AND THE CITY&#13;
Super 8 mm sound film loops&#13;
APOLLO 11&#13;
THE CASABLANCA SUMMIT MEETING&#13;
CHARLES LINDBERGH&#13;
THE CRIMEAN CONFERENCE&#13;
D DAY&#13;
DEMOCRATIC RESURGENCE&#13;
EAST WEST SUMMIT&#13;
ECONOMIC REVOLUTION&#13;
EISENHOWER INAUGURATION&#13;
FDR: BIOGRAPHY&#13;
FDR: MASS MEDIA&#13;
FATEFUL TRIP TO TEXAS&#13;
FOUNDING OF THE U.N.&#13;
HARDING AND COOLIDGE&#13;
HERBERT HOOVER: BIOGRAPHY&#13;
I HAVE A DREAM&#13;
ISOLATION OR INTERVENTION, PTS. 1 &amp; 2&#13;
JFK: BIOGRAPHY&#13;
JFK: JOSEPH R. MCCARTHY&#13;
KOREAN WAR, PTS 1&amp;2&#13;
LATIN AMERICAN DILEMMA&#13;
MAKERS OF THE "A" BOMB&#13;
THE POLITICAL PUZZLE&#13;
POLITICS OF WAR&#13;
REACTION AGAINST LABOR&#13;
RICHARD M. NIXON: INAUGURATION&#13;
SIBERIA&#13;
STRUGGLE FOR RACIAL EQUALITY&#13;
SUMMIT DIPLOMACY&#13;
Super 8 mm silent film loops&#13;
DECIDUOUS FOREST: PLANT AND ANIMAL&#13;
ADAPTATIONS&#13;
ECOLOGY AND ECOSYSTEMS&#13;
ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES&#13;
THE EVERGLADES&#13;
MACROMOLECULAR BIOSYNTHESIS: DNA&#13;
REPLICATION&#13;
MACROMOLECULAR BIOSYNTHESIS: RNA&#13;
TRANSCRIPTION&#13;
PROTIEN TRANSLATION&#13;
POND: FOOD WEB&#13;
POND COMMUNITY&#13;
8 mm silent film loops&#13;
FORMATION OF SHOCK WAVES&#13;
RADIOACTIVE DECAY&#13;
SCINTILLATION SPECTROMETRY&#13;
Mark IV autotutor programs&#13;
BASIC COMMUNICATION SKILLS: COMMUNICATION&#13;
THEORY&#13;
BASIC COMMUNICATION SKILLS: ORAL&#13;
COMMUNICATION&#13;
BASIC COMMUNICATION SKILLS: WRITTEN&#13;
COMMUNICATION&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: DECIMAL&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: FRACTIONS&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: PERCENTAGES&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: RATIO AND&#13;
PROPORTION&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: WHOLE NUMBERS:&#13;
ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: WHOLE NUMBERS:&#13;
COMPLEX OPERATIONS&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: WHOLE NUMBERS:&#13;
DIVISION&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: WHOLE NUMBERS:&#13;
NULTIPLICATION&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: CLAUSES,&#13;
FRAGMENTS, RUN-ONS&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: IMPROVING YOUR&#13;
PUNCTUATION&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: IMPROVING YOUR&#13;
WRITING&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: MODIFIERS&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: SENTENCES AND&#13;
PHRASES&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: SENTENCES, NOUNS&#13;
AND PRONOUNS&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: VERB USAGE&#13;
HOW TO WRITE EFFECTIVE REPORTS&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: FOLLOWING&#13;
DIRECTIONS&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: READING&#13;
INTERPRETATION I&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: READING&#13;
INTERPRETATION II&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: REFERENCE&#13;
SKILLS&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: REFERENCE&#13;
SKILLS (LIBRARY)&#13;
Slides&#13;
FEDERICO FELLINI, 1950-1969&#13;
JEAN-LUC GODARD, 1951-1969&#13;
JEAN RENOIR, 1924-1939&#13;
ORSON WELLES, 1941-1969&#13;
S.M. EISENSTEIN,&#13;
33DL&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
• OUR •&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
Starr ing&#13;
ROBERT MITCHUM&#13;
Fr i . Apr . 13,8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun. Apr . 15, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Stu. Act. Bldg.&#13;
75 cents adm.&#13;
Wise. &amp; Parkside I.D. req.&#13;
3Cees $ub&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER iy&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Th u r s d a y 1 1 - 8 i&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six. Packs To Go&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Ap r i l 1 1 , 19 7 3&#13;
Capsule College...&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENNING&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee has planned&#13;
an outing at Deal's Lake State&#13;
Park Sunday, April 15 from 7&#13;
a.m. until dark. Spend the day&#13;
hiking, climbing and picnicking,&#13;
i he cost is $1.50, which includes&#13;
transportation and one meal. The&#13;
outing will leave from and return&#13;
to the Tallent fall parking lot.&#13;
Sign up in L-LC-D197.&#13;
Parkside Philanthropist Club is&#13;
sponsoring a lecture entitled&#13;
"The Phoenix and the Cross:&#13;
Military Dictatorship in Greece,"&#13;
a presentation by Andreas&#13;
Kazamias, professor of&#13;
educational policy studies at UWMadison.&#13;
Kazamias, who has been to&#13;
Greece several times in the past&#13;
few years since the military took&#13;
over, has visited prisons, talked&#13;
to prisoners and seen student&#13;
demonstrations asking for&#13;
freedom and better education.&#13;
The lecture is on Wednesday,&#13;
April 18, at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 101. Admission is&#13;
free. Refreshments, will follow,&#13;
and discussion with kazamias&#13;
and Herbert Kubly, professor of&#13;
English, who has also been to&#13;
Greece and has written about the&#13;
country and its government.&#13;
The Financial Aids Office has&#13;
moved to Tallent Hall. They are&#13;
now located in rooms 286 and 288.&#13;
The entire Physical Education&#13;
Building will be closed all day&#13;
April 15, due to two concerts that&#13;
day.&#13;
The tutorial service will be&#13;
available during the week of the&#13;
Spring Break, Monday through&#13;
Friday from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.&#13;
(through the lunch hour.)&#13;
Core tutors in the areas of&#13;
mathematics and English will be&#13;
available at all times. Students&#13;
needing help in other areas must&#13;
call first ext. 2289, or stop by for&#13;
an appointment. Help will be&#13;
found for them in their specific&#13;
area.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present Ryan's Daughter in&#13;
the Student Activities Building,&#13;
Friday and Sunday, April 13 and&#13;
15 at 8 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Admission&#13;
is 75 cents and Wisconsin&#13;
and Parkside I.D.'s are required.&#13;
There will be a dance, sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, in the Student Activities&#13;
Building Saturday, April 14.&#13;
Music will be provided by&#13;
Homesweet. Admission is $1 for&#13;
Parkside students and $1.50 for&#13;
their guests. Wisconsin and&#13;
Parkside I.D.'s required.&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECOUPS&#13;
TAPIS&#13;
Discount P rices!&#13;
5707 - Sixth Ave.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
All faculty and staff are asked&#13;
to return any large inter-campus&#13;
envelopes which they no longer&#13;
need to the Mailroom at D-218&#13;
LLC or call ext. 2385 for pickup.&#13;
i§-&#13;
Members of the Guitar Society&#13;
at Parkside will present^a free&#13;
public concert at 8 p.n&amp;stdday, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room" 103.&#13;
The program will (consist of&#13;
works from the 17th through the&#13;
20th century:&#13;
Students taking part Will be&#13;
Kurt Harff, 8917 22nd Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Floyd Hanson, 6929&#13;
14th Ave., Kenosha; Gary Wolk,&#13;
1906 Lydian Drive, Racine;&#13;
Rochelle Host, 6620 19th Ave.,&#13;
Kehosha; and Ken Rogers,&#13;
Marshfield.&#13;
All are music majors at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Monday's snow storm&#13;
necessitated the cancellation of&#13;
the Activities Board showing of&#13;
What's New Pussycat. It has&#13;
been rescheduled to be shown&#13;
today in Greenquist Hall room&#13;
103, at 2 p.m., and room 101 at 8&#13;
p.m. Admission is 50 cents.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda week at&#13;
Parkside will begin April 11 and&#13;
end April 18. The purpose will be&#13;
to answer any and all questions&#13;
about fraternities and promotion&#13;
of fraternities at Parkside. A&#13;
booth will be set up in Main&#13;
Place. Feel free to mingle.&#13;
So you plead ignorance to the&#13;
question of what has the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
done or doing? Educate yourself&#13;
April 12 and 13 during PSGA&#13;
information days. A booth will be&#13;
set up in LLC for students to stop&#13;
and ask questions. Give them any&#13;
grievances you have and provide&#13;
us with some suggestions.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee has a bike hike&#13;
planned for Sunday, April 28 from&#13;
7 a.m. until dark. The cost is $1,&#13;
which includes a picnic lunch and&#13;
a beverage. The 25-mile hike is to&#13;
Fox River Park by Silver Lake,&#13;
and leaves from and returns to&#13;
the Tallent Hall parking lot. The&#13;
PAB will supply the lunch and&#13;
beverage. Sign up in L-LC-D197.&#13;
In the March 28 issue the&#13;
Ranger asked, "What is your&#13;
opinion of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association?" The&#13;
answers that were received&#13;
ranged from, "I haven't any" to&#13;
"I don't even know nothing about&#13;
it."&#13;
Because of the lack of&#13;
knowledge, students have about&#13;
their Student Government, the&#13;
P.S.G.A. will have a table set up&#13;
in Main Place this Thursday and&#13;
Friday to inform students about&#13;
what is being accomplished in&#13;
student government and to accept&#13;
any grievances students&#13;
may have about Parkside.&#13;
Grievance boxes or "Bitch&#13;
Boxes" as they have been named,&#13;
will be put up around Parkside&#13;
foi students to air their complaints.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D. I .C.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
ITALIAN F OOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
^SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
IExpire DRINKS AVAILABLE F ROM THE B AR&#13;
A p r l Us 5 0 ' OFF ANY&#13;
- - c 5 0 ?&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
"Home Wine-making for Fun"&#13;
by John J. Zwiebel, wine hobbyist;&#13;
"Consumerism" by Rep. R.&#13;
Michael Ferrall (D-Rac.);&#13;
And, "The Science-Religion&#13;
Conflict" by Wayne Johnson,&#13;
assistant professor of philosophy&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
"Biological Recycling of&#13;
Resources" by Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, professor of life&#13;
science, and chairperson of the&#13;
Parkside Science Division;&#13;
"Reproductive Engineering"&#13;
by Surinder P. Datta, associate&#13;
professor of life science at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"Body Language: The Other&#13;
Dimension" by E. Scott&#13;
Baudhuin, assistant professor of&#13;
communications at Parkside;&#13;
"Birds and Wild Flowers of&#13;
Wisconsin" by members of the&#13;
Hoy Nature Club;&#13;
"Power and Politics: A View&#13;
From the Outside" by Eunice&#13;
Moss, Program Associate for&#13;
Urban Affairs, Human&#13;
Development and Minority&#13;
Citizen Needs, the Johnson&#13;
Foundation;&#13;
"Parkside Poetry Circus,"&#13;
readings by Parkside faculty and&#13;
students;&#13;
• " The Environment: Where Do&#13;
We Stand?" by Louise Erickson,&#13;
citizen environmentalist from&#13;
Racine;&#13;
"Academic Counseling and&#13;
Conversation" by the Parkside&#13;
counseling staff ;&#13;
"How to Be Happy'' by Jane B.&#13;
Tybring, Extension specialist in&#13;
family relations;&#13;
And, "Be Ready for Tax Time&#13;
Next Year" by Louise Young,&#13;
Extension specialist in home&#13;
management and family&#13;
economics.&#13;
Seminars being offered April 25&#13;
only are:&#13;
"Ask a Gynecologist Anything"&#13;
by William J. Madden, MD,&#13;
Racine obstetrician and&#13;
gynecologist;&#13;
"Transactional Analysis and&#13;
Interpersonal Relations" by&#13;
Roger T. Williams, Extension&#13;
specialist in adult education and&#13;
mental health;&#13;
"Gardening in Containers" by&#13;
Leland C. Smith, Kenosha County&#13;
horticultural agent;&#13;
"The Impact of Female Employment&#13;
on the Family" by&#13;
Richard W. Stoffle, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"So You'd Like to Sell What&#13;
You Write" by Bill Nelson, freelance&#13;
writer and copy editor, The&#13;
Milwaukee Journal;&#13;
"Issues in Food Quality" by&#13;
Mary E. Mennes, Extension&#13;
associate professor of food&#13;
science;&#13;
Two workshops are scheduled&#13;
April 26 only. One is "Master-&#13;
Slave: The Meaning of Power,"&#13;
which deals with the meaning of&#13;
destructive behavior and will be&#13;
conducted by Richard B. Arnesen,&#13;
MD, Service Chief,&#13;
i Mendota State Hospital Child-&#13;
Adolescent Service, and clinical&#13;
instructor in psychiatry, UW&#13;
School of Medicine. The other is&#13;
"Parental Roles: Coping With&#13;
Teen-Agers" by Samuel D.&#13;
Stellman, ACSW, professor and&#13;
director of the Extension Center&#13;
for Social Service.&#13;
Seminars being offered April 25&#13;
and 26 are:&#13;
"An Introduction to Yoga" by&#13;
Carol Merrick (Yogini Sri&#13;
Gargi), who is certified by&#13;
Swananda Yoga Ashram;&#13;
"Arts and Crafts: Use Them in&#13;
Your Home" by Kathryn A.&#13;
Harle, Extension furnishings and&#13;
design specialist;&#13;
"Woman As Writer, Woman As&#13;
Poet, Or, Where Have All the&#13;
Flowers Gone" by Carole Vopat,&#13;
assistant professor of English at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"How to Cope With&#13;
Catastrophic Illness" by Ann L.&#13;
St. Louis, RN, Director of&#13;
General Education, St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital, Kenosha;&#13;
"Mysticism and Mythology"&#13;
by Robert W. Schrader, instructor&#13;
of philosophy at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"Witchcraft: An Anthropologic&#13;
View of the Old Religion" by&#13;
Parkside students, Dan Paulson&#13;
and Bill Zupek, who have just&#13;
conducted a study of witchcraft&#13;
in the Milwaukee area;&#13;
"Good Music is Forever," a&#13;
lecture-demonstration by Pianist&#13;
Carmen Vila, Artist-in-Residence&#13;
at Parkside;&#13;
"Parents' Guide to Children's&#13;
Literature" by Judith Hamilton,&#13;
instructional materials librarian&#13;
at Parkside;&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
A°&lt; A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
SHftKE*JS ** " PAR LO»&#13;
IN RACINE&#13;
U. LATHROP AND 21st ( ALMOST)&#13;
The Ranger asks-- Are you&#13;
participating in the meat boycott?&#13;
Diane Resch, Freshman, Racine&#13;
"Yes; well I know it's not&#13;
possible for the economic&#13;
situation but at least you're&#13;
voicing your opinion."&#13;
Chris Roland, Freshman, Racine&#13;
"No; I've been still eating&#13;
leftover corned beef for my&#13;
sandwiches at lunch, and then&#13;
having lunch from Sandy's being&#13;
brought over to where 1 work, so I&#13;
haven't been participating in it. I&#13;
keep getting reminded in the&#13;
evening news but during the day I&#13;
just forget."&#13;
Paul Kleine,&#13;
Education Division&#13;
Chairman,&#13;
"Yes; we have not purchased&#13;
at all since Monday. I think it's&#13;
one of the few kinds of populist&#13;
movements that have arisen&#13;
where people feel strongly&#13;
enough about something that&#13;
they can get it organized without&#13;
a formal group. Simply, as I saw&#13;
it, a group of housewives getting&#13;
together with a television camera&#13;
and solicited enough response&#13;
that it's having a nationwide&#13;
effect. I think that's good; it&#13;
allows the nation to respond&#13;
quickly without a big structure.&#13;
And secondly, I don't know how&#13;
else our economic system is&#13;
supposed to work in any other&#13;
way than supply and demand. If&#13;
prices get too high, I think it&#13;
behooves the consumer to&#13;
scream and to cut back."&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewicz, Chairman,&#13;
Science Division&#13;
"Sure, my wife doesn't buy so I&#13;
don t eat."&#13;
Sue Goetz, Junior, Racine&#13;
"Yes; I am, I don't think it will&#13;
do any good but it can't do any&#13;
harm. Because after it's over the&#13;
people who can afford eating&#13;
steaks will go back to eating&#13;
them. And the people who can't&#13;
afford to eat steaks, if the prices&#13;
don't go down when it's over,&#13;
won't eat them anymore anyway.&#13;
It's sort of an enforced boycott&#13;
with the prices enforcing the&#13;
boycott."&#13;
Norman Pietras,&#13;
dock Lake&#13;
Senior, Pad-&#13;
"No; I'm not. The way I figure&#13;
it I really don't think it will do&#13;
that much good. What the&#13;
President is doing about the meat&#13;
prices, putting a freeze on them,&#13;
will do more good."&#13;
hW&#13;
Cindy Barnes, Staff, Learning&#13;
Center&#13;
"Yes; I haven't bought any&#13;
meat here since the beginning of&#13;
the week. I just want to see what&#13;
happens, if it has any effect."&#13;
Myra Sadker, assistant professor&#13;
of education.&#13;
"Yes; I think that meat prices&#13;
are too high and traditionally one&#13;
way to get prices down is to&#13;
boycott them. I like it also&#13;
because it's the first movement&#13;
I've seen people into since Nixon&#13;
got in; it's just the feeling of&#13;
people doing something that I like&#13;
also."&#13;
Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
aand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Card&#13;
yjJ with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning&#13;
:NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
Wed., April 11, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
Moy named Dean&#13;
of SMI&#13;
(continued from page 1)&#13;
Moy's background includes experience in private&#13;
industry with Proctor and Gamble, St. Louis; Toro&#13;
Manufacturing Co., Minneapolis; Oscar Mayer &amp;&#13;
Co., Madison; and 3M Co., St. Paul. He earned his&#13;
Ph.D. degree' in industrial engineering and&#13;
management science at Northwestern University&#13;
and his bachelor's and master's degrees in industrial&#13;
engineering from the University of Minnesota.&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie said that Dean Moy's&#13;
appointment will greatly strengthen the mission&#13;
thrust of Parkside.&#13;
"Because of Professor Moy's effective leadership&#13;
we have been able, during the last 15 months, to&#13;
improve the variety and quality of our course offerings,&#13;
sharpen the focus of our specialized&#13;
programs, and substantially strengthen our faculty&#13;
in The School of Modern Industry," Wyllie said.&#13;
"Dean Moy's personal interest in students and his&#13;
dedication to teaching excellence will surely attract&#13;
students to his school in increasing numbers in the&#13;
years ahead.&#13;
"His experience in private industry has already&#13;
been helpful in developing contacts and working&#13;
relationships with area industry. The full&#13;
development of those relationships holds the key not&#13;
only to the success of the school but also to the&#13;
success and well being of UW-Parkside itself."&#13;
Accepting his new assignment, Moy said, "I am&#13;
extremely pleased to be a part of the development&#13;
of The School of Modern Industry. Our goal is to&#13;
make available to our students a variety of&#13;
programs in technology, business and labor&#13;
relations that will assist them in preparing for&#13;
careers in a modern industrial society. I am fortunate&#13;
to begin with an excellent faculty and a large&#13;
and growing student population. I especially look&#13;
forward to working with the business and industrial&#13;
community on the development of programs that&#13;
jointly meet their needs and those of our students."&#13;
Moy is a member of numerous professional&#13;
associations, including the American Institute of&#13;
Industrial Engineers, American Society for&#13;
Engineering Education, Institute of Management&#13;
Sciences, Operations Research Society of America,&#13;
American Statistical Association and the&#13;
Association for Computing Machinery. He is a&#13;
registered professional engineer in Wisconsin and&#13;
has published in a number of professional journals.&#13;
MEDITATION WORKSHOP&#13;
Wed., April II at 7 :00 p.m.&#13;
Speaker: Mr. Loren Ritacca&#13;
..^.^LLC-D-174 onsore^b^Baha^sClub&#13;
RA&#13;
^WESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine&#13;
RAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 Rapids Dr., Racine]&#13;
TeUu&amp;td&#13;
3203-52(1(1 SI.&#13;
Finest i n&#13;
Imported&#13;
and Domestic&#13;
START A NEW HOBBY WINE MAKING&#13;
SEE OUR NEW DEPT&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
WISCONSIN CHEESE WUVh&#13;
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer&#13;
Expires Sept. 5,1973&#13;
NAME 8. ADDRESS&#13;
^50c COUPON '&#13;
Old Milwaukee $253&#13;
•WSnMWftMVAWVWWVVWA STROH'S .&#13;
12 c™ $2°9&#13;
Cans&#13;
Meister Brau&#13;
Bock Beer 7Qc&#13;
6 Throwaway Bottles f V&#13;
10 THE PA«KSIDE RANGER Wed., April 11, ,973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen ILS improves with TWX use&#13;
HOUSES OF THE HOLY&#13;
Led Zeppelin&#13;
(SD7255)&#13;
We are now deeply into the&#13;
strange year of 1973. The original&#13;
Byrds have surprisingly made a&#13;
successful reunion and Donavan&#13;
attempts to regain a role as a&#13;
hero of the pop youth culture.&#13;
Rumors about the Beatles are&#13;
almost running amuck. Did you&#13;
know that if "Strawberry Fields"&#13;
is played backwards it says,&#13;
"Beatles in '73"? In the midst of&#13;
all this delicious insanity, Led&#13;
Zeppelin's new grooved&#13;
plasticware has finally arrived&#13;
after many moons of heated&#13;
anticipation. The long wait&#13;
maybe could be accounted for as&#13;
Led Zeppelin using one of the&#13;
Stones' formulas, which consists&#13;
of announcing an arrival date for&#13;
a new product and then postponing&#13;
it several times. If my&#13;
theory is correct, this is done to&#13;
get the customers wanting.&#13;
A fairly decent collection of&#13;
vibrations these are, but they&#13;
may not be what is expected by&#13;
some. There is nothing as tearing&#13;
and chaotic as "Black Dog."&#13;
There are no cuts as novel as&#13;
"Whole Lot of Love," "Stairway&#13;
to Heaven," and "When the&#13;
Levee Breaks" were. Robert&#13;
Plant, conceived by many as a&#13;
sexy vocalist," is getting weaker.&#13;
Much of what is meant to be&#13;
singing appears as lazy, inat;&#13;
tentive mumblings. Maybe this is&#13;
supposed to convey an exhausted,&#13;
wasted feeling, but a lot of&#13;
Plant's blurpings are detracting&#13;
and almost irritating on HOUSES&#13;
OF THE HOLY. However, even&#13;
having to bear with that, competent&#13;
musical composing makes&#13;
the album enjoyable.&#13;
Jimmy Page demonstrates his&#13;
skill on guitar right off the bat in&#13;
"The Song Remains the Same."&#13;
He gives some chords a patented&#13;
Keith Richard treatment and&#13;
then proceeds to churn up a lead&#13;
solo in which the notes have&#13;
transcendental Byrd-like ring.&#13;
Another guitar is overdubbed,&#13;
creating a slightly thunderous&#13;
effect.&#13;
"The Rain Song" features a&#13;
Mellotron along with a violin.&#13;
Together with the guitar they&#13;
depict a gloomy, cold day in&#13;
Hawaii, despite the fact that no&#13;
such situation ever exists. "Over&#13;
the Hills and Far Away" has an&#13;
impressive, mellow climax.&#13;
YOUNG DRIVERS W ELCOME&#13;
INSURANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS - CYCLES - SCOOTERS&#13;
All Forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Service&#13;
Wifh The Better Co's&#13;
Fire - Life - Hospital - Boats&#13;
Package Policie*&#13;
"If ' '* Jptu'&lt;»&#13;
-DIAL-&#13;
652-3600&#13;
MOVT•/ VOU /MTT M&#13;
J. R. MULICH&#13;
CARL H. JENSEN&#13;
J. It. MULICH&#13;
*&#13;
5520 6th AVE. KENOSHA&#13;
Heavy thumping drumming&#13;
begins "The Crunge" and all&#13;
superheavy freaks will expect a&#13;
blasting rocker. Not so. The&#13;
music promptly settles into a&#13;
funky-soul, Archie Bell and the&#13;
Drell's "Tighten Up" sort of&#13;
thing. - • '&#13;
"Dancing Days"-"are here&#13;
again" and Plant tells of&#13;
"flower...power." It rocks fairly&#13;
heavy but the tune is as dull as,&#13;
uh.. .Racine? Kenosha?&#13;
The thudding drum starts up&#13;
again and grinding metal is&#13;
anticipated. Disappointment&#13;
once again? "D'yer Mak'er" is a&#13;
bopper straight out of the 50's. It&#13;
is a higher quality number&#13;
though; Robert is sounding&#13;
sensuous.&#13;
"No Quarter" is my fave rave.&#13;
Quiet e6rie spots build up to&#13;
climaxes with electric fuzz in one&#13;
channel and a Synthesiser in the&#13;
other. Plant's moaning is most&#13;
fitting and touching as he portrays&#13;
the feeling of being on the&#13;
last hinge of desperation. Additional&#13;
voices join in the final&#13;
departure.&#13;
"The Ocean" is metal-funk, a&#13;
millimeter above mediocre, that&#13;
keeps seeming as if i t is going to&#13;
turn into "Good Times, Bad&#13;
Times!"&#13;
Led Zeppelin didn't bomb out&#13;
but they had trouble shaking the&#13;
clinging mud of inactivity. This&#13;
kept them from being sensational&#13;
enough to top LED ZEPPELIN 4&#13;
and so they made a lukewarm&#13;
cake.&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape&#13;
and Record Center)&#13;
by Helmut Kah&#13;
The Parkside library has&#13;
improved its Interlibrary Loan&#13;
Service (ILS) system with the&#13;
installation of a Teletypewriter&#13;
Exchange Service (TWX) terminal.&#13;
Parkside now has a line to&#13;
any library in the USA, Canada,&#13;
or Mexico which also has a TWX&#13;
terminal.&#13;
Under the ILS system the&#13;
librarian can obtain books or&#13;
photocopies which the Parkside&#13;
library does not have in its&#13;
holdings. The Wisconsin ILS&#13;
permits students to get books and&#13;
photocopies from the UWMadison&#13;
library and faculty&#13;
members to obtain them from&#13;
any library participating in ILS.&#13;
ILS is thereby an aid to persons&#13;
doing research because it enables&#13;
them to have access to almost&#13;
any book or photocopy they may&#13;
need.&#13;
Before Parkside installed the&#13;
teletype terminal the librarian&#13;
would have to type up a book&#13;
request form and mail it, with a&#13;
time lag of two or more days&#13;
between sending and delivery.&#13;
TWX has eliminated this time&#13;
lag.&#13;
The TWX method of obtaining a&#13;
book at first seems more complicated,&#13;
than the mail method. It&#13;
may be, but the benefits make it&#13;
much superior.&#13;
In ordering a book or photocopy&#13;
with the teletype the librarian&#13;
first types all necessary information&#13;
on the terminal which&#13;
simultaneously produces a printout&#13;
and a coded paper tape with&#13;
the same information. *&#13;
If t he librarian is satisfied with&#13;
the order as it is printed, she then&#13;
dials the number of the ap-&#13;
Kathryn Wellner demonstrates the TWX&#13;
propriate library and transmits&#13;
the message by running the tape&#13;
through the terminal. As the&#13;
paper tape is run through the&#13;
teletype a print-out is&#13;
automatically produced on both&#13;
the transmitting and receiving&#13;
terminals. This allows transmission&#13;
errors to be detected by&#13;
the person sending the message.&#13;
It also allows the person&#13;
receiving the message to reply&#13;
the same day, thereby speeding&#13;
up communication.&#13;
The message transmission is&#13;
carried over phone company&#13;
wires and line use is charged on a&#13;
per minute basis. Tne encoded&#13;
paper tape runs through the&#13;
terminal at one hundred words&#13;
per minute, thus saving considerable&#13;
expense over direct&#13;
transmission. The advantage of&#13;
using TWX over calling on the&#13;
telephone is that TWX eliminates&#13;
second-guessing about what a&#13;
person has said.&#13;
• The Parkside librarians who&#13;
are presently learning to use the&#13;
teletype are Judy Hamilton and&#13;
Dave Knowles. If you want a book&#13;
which the Parkside library does&#13;
not own they can help you get it.&#13;
Snyder awarded Young&#13;
Humanist Fellowship&#13;
A. Aaron Snyder, an associate&#13;
professor of philosophy, has been&#13;
awarded a "Young Humanist&#13;
Fellowship" by the National&#13;
Endowment for the Humanities&#13;
for studies on "Criminal&#13;
Responsibility" at Yale&#13;
University Law School where he&#13;
will be a visiting scholar, on leave&#13;
from UW-Parkside for the 1973-74&#13;
academic year.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside last&#13;
fall, Snyder taught philosophy at&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
His recent research includes&#13;
studies on the standard insanity&#13;
tests in law and an attempt to&#13;
formulate a general nonresponsibility&#13;
defense which is&#13;
justifiable on both philosophic&#13;
and policy grounds. He plans to&#13;
pursue these studies at Yale.&#13;
Snyder, 34, received his undergraduate&#13;
degree magna cum&#13;
laude from Princeton University,&#13;
which he attended on a National&#13;
Merit Scholarship, and was&#13;
his Ph.D. at Cornell University.&#13;
He was a Woodrow Wilson&#13;
National Fellow at Harvard&#13;
University and a visiting scholar&#13;
at the invitation of Yale Law&#13;
School.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents.&#13;
An Illustrated Lecture&#13;
'umu o""—«. ARE REAL!"&#13;
nuclear physicist&#13;
- lecturer&#13;
Tues. - April 17&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Adm: $1.00&#13;
STANTON T&#13;
FRIEDMAN Tickets Available: Info Center&#13;
Dry $&#13;
8. . Cleaned&#13;
LDS. only&#13;
Free Pre-Spotting&#13;
Drop Off Service&#13;
WE&#13;
Wash - Dry - Fold&#13;
20*&#13;
o$&gt;v&#13;
* *$&lt;•&#13;
vV&#13;
Lb.&#13;
$^50&#13;
MINIMUM&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open 8 a tn to8p.m&#13;
6814 Fourteenth Avenue Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
LOUCHE&#13;
"2 8 * 0&#13;
A" # .&#13;
FRIDAY.&#13;
SATURDAY,XT&#13;
SUNDAY W&#13;
Wed . , April 11, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
TheParkside RAIMGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
Soccer club a winner this spring&#13;
"Hey, Ray!"&#13;
"Yeah, Sugar?"&#13;
"Did you know that Parkside&#13;
took third place in a 16 team&#13;
soccer tournament last month?"&#13;
"Groovy, far out and all that&#13;
.other right on revolutionary&#13;
radical rhetorical rap! How come&#13;
I don't hear about it until now?&#13;
Hey, Sugar. Wait a minute. What&#13;
you trying to pull? I may not&#13;
know much about soccer, but last&#13;
month was March, and soccer is&#13;
a fall sport."&#13;
Not at Parkside is soccer&#13;
limited to being a fall sport. It is&#13;
played here in the spring in club&#13;
form, according to Rick Kilps,&#13;
soccer club vice president. The&#13;
club has a full schedule of&#13;
tournaments and games enough&#13;
to keep Pele happy right through&#13;
to the end of May. The games are&#13;
regulation length and are&#13;
governed by collegiate rules.&#13;
The club members are just&#13;
about the same as the players&#13;
who comprised the UW-Parksidd&#13;
varsity team last fall, but now&#13;
they only play to keep (heir skills&#13;
sharp and for fun, since&#13;
recognition for soccer is practically&#13;
nil to begin with, and&#13;
drops below that when it is played&#13;
on the club level.&#13;
Kilps also said that part of the&#13;
reason soccer receives the little&#13;
publicity is that the game still&#13;
seems as foreign as its origins to&#13;
many people, so they don't bother&#13;
to watch the game, because they&#13;
have made no effort to understand&#13;
it.&#13;
Soccer club members think&#13;
that's dumb.&#13;
"It's now very much an&#13;
American game," said Kilps.&#13;
"It's becoming very big on the&#13;
collegiate level of competition,&#13;
and there are more clubs being&#13;
formed all the time."&#13;
To remedy this lack of understanding&#13;
about the world's&#13;
most popular spectator sport (the&#13;
Parkside version; through' no&#13;
fault of its own, usually draws&#13;
massive crowds composed of&#13;
parents, wives and-or girl friends&#13;
and an occasional drunk wandering&#13;
over from the student&#13;
union, the club is now making&#13;
available to all you Archie&#13;
Bunkers out there a free booklet.&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
Uf*.&#13;
— BOTH UNDIR SAMt OWNIRSHIP —&#13;
In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" • 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
• GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
••YOU RING .&#13;
DELIVERY&#13;
WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
In this handy little blue booklet&#13;
is everything you always wanted&#13;
to know about soccer but were&#13;
afraid to ask. The novice to the&#13;
game will find an explanation for&#13;
the game's basic terminology,&#13;
skills, the rules of the game, and&#13;
the team's roster. How many of&#13;
you know that it takes 11 players&#13;
to field a team? This booklet is&#13;
available through club members.&#13;
Other club officers are Rick&#13;
Lechusz, president; Mike&#13;
Jenrette, secretary; and Coach&#13;
Hal Henderson, the club adviseras&#13;
well as Parkside's regular&#13;
soccer coach.&#13;
Last weekend the club won five&#13;
big games. The club defeated&#13;
UW-Whitewater Saturday at&#13;
Whitewater, as Mitch&#13;
Nedeljkovic notched four goals in&#13;
the 6-5 decision.&#13;
The club won the Oshkosh&#13;
Indoor Tournament Sunday as it&#13;
defeated UW-Green Bay for the&#13;
first time in Parkside soccer&#13;
history, 1-0, as Nedeljkovic&#13;
scored the winning goal.&#13;
Following the game, UW-Green&#13;
Bay coach Tom Griffith warned&#13;
of the battle that's imminent&#13;
when the squads meet in regular&#13;
competition in the fall: "Wait&#13;
until the outdoor season. It won't&#13;
be a game; it will be a war."&#13;
The Rangers, with Nedeljkovic&#13;
again leading the way with six&#13;
goals, won their first three games&#13;
of the tournament, whipping&#13;
Marinette 5-1, Fox Valley Center&#13;
5-1 and Fox Valley Bombers 1-0.&#13;
The club makes its home debut,&#13;
weather permitting, at 3 p.m.&#13;
today against Carthage. Other&#13;
home games are scheduled for&#13;
April 21 and April 28. The club&#13;
will host an eight team tournament&#13;
May 5.&#13;
In the rest of t he world, soccer&#13;
is so popular that it isn't uncommon&#13;
for eager spectators to&#13;
get trampled to death in a rush&#13;
for tickets. The soccer club isn't&#13;
for that but asks that you, please,&#13;
bring a friend.&#13;
Fencing coach Loran Hein (right) started his drive to&#13;
raise money for the World University Games to be held&#13;
this summer in Moscow by selling a World Games patch&#13;
to Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie. The World Games include&#13;
competition in ten sports but Hein is, naturally enough,&#13;
most concerned with fencing and his own foilist, junior&#13;
John Tank of Wauwatosa, whom the Parkside coach is&#13;
confident can make the U.S. team.&#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;
IVEEAT&#13;
IN THE COMFORT&#13;
OF Y OUR CAR&#13;
. r&#13;
• PAPA B URGER . MAMA BURGER&#13;
• TEEN BURGER . BABY BURGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
. and Shrimp&#13;
FREE GALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH $5.00 ORDER&#13;
1/2 M ILE &amp;ORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVESheridan&#13;
Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
HOURS: DAILY T1 A.M. TO 11 P.M.&#13;
~0/6&#13;
Go "to . . . ,&#13;
ONE oLQEgf&#13;
unt Rrr ARrfo&#13;
il //&#13;
foA 7^//7iTs/ J/7 P/f£$ . . .&#13;
Ao/tch CZ/Ps - 7Z/=£s//&gt;y- mmps - Pbs+CRS--&#13;
:\1&#13;
5140 6th AVE L Amjizxzi&#13;
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'hhVZkfeA Co/T]iCS&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 1 1 , 1 97 3&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
" ~ Sports&#13;
Netters fall to Carthage&#13;
in opener&#13;
by B. D. RASMUSSEN&#13;
Ruggers lose twice&#13;
The Parkside Ruggers suffered&#13;
two defeats last weekend. The&#13;
first came at the hands of Northwestern&#13;
University by a score&#13;
of 24-8. P arkside's two tries were&#13;
scored by Eric Olsen and John&#13;
Wilcox. Outstanding Parkside&#13;
player of the game was John van&#13;
Vleet. Parkside's second defeat&#13;
came at the hands of Codrics&#13;
Rugby Club of Milwaukee 24-0.&#13;
The next game will be this&#13;
Saturday at 2 p.m. against&#13;
Illinois Valley.&#13;
The weather last Saturday was&#13;
poor and so was Parkside tennis&#13;
as the Ranger netters dropped&#13;
their season opening dual meet&#13;
by a 9-0 score to Carthage on the&#13;
Parkside courts.&#13;
Carthage started the assault&#13;
with Scott Engholt defeating Rick&#13;
Bedore in No. one singles by a&#13;
score of 10-4. In the twos pairing&#13;
Rick Johnson defeated Gary&#13;
Christensen 10-3, Bob Simpson&#13;
took Dave Herchen 10-5, and&#13;
Mark Henderson, Chris Teezan,&#13;
and Mark Hale beat Mark Haase,&#13;
Todd Nelson, and Calvin Jensen&#13;
respectively, all by 10-3 scores to&#13;
complete the singles sweep.&#13;
Carthage continued the trend in&#13;
doubles. The team of Simpson-&#13;
Henderson beat the Ranger duo&#13;
of Christensen-Herchen by a 10-3&#13;
score; so did Teezen-Engholt&#13;
similarly beat Bedore-Andy&#13;
Peterson. Johnson-Hale asserted&#13;
Carthage's tennis supremacy of&#13;
the Pike River region by downing&#13;
Nelson-Jensen 10-5.&#13;
Parkside will try to change&#13;
things Friday when it travels to&#13;
Carthage to participate in a&#13;
double dual with Wheaton and&#13;
Elmhurst. The meet will start at&#13;
10:30 a.m. On Monday Carroll&#13;
College will be in town for a-1&#13;
p.m. meet.&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
Pool&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Ice facility planned for Kenosha&#13;
The dream of many Kenoshans&#13;
to have an indoor ice skating&#13;
facility in this area will become a&#13;
reality this November. Bob&#13;
Riley, president of the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Hockey Assn., announced&#13;
plans to build the Kenosha Ice&#13;
Arena.&#13;
Rosa takes 1st&#13;
Lucien Rosa took first in the&#13;
two mile run at the Wisconsin&#13;
Indoor Track and Field&#13;
Federation Championship at&#13;
Madison last Saturday with a&#13;
time of 9:13.1.&#13;
Taking second in the 440 was&#13;
Cornelieus Gordon in 51.7. Also in&#13;
the 440 was Herb DeGroot, taking&#13;
fourth.&#13;
Tim Martinson took second in&#13;
pole vaulting, Mike Kopczynski&#13;
was third in the long jump, and&#13;
Raul Medina placed fifth in the&#13;
half mile.&#13;
The relay team of Dennis Biel,&#13;
DeGroot, Kopczynski and Gordon&#13;
placed second in the 880, and with&#13;
Medina running in place of&#13;
Kopczynski for the mile, they&#13;
took third.&#13;
Keith Merritt won the&#13;
Whitewater Decathlon with 5736&#13;
points.&#13;
The year-round skating facility&#13;
will measure 120 feet wide by 245&#13;
feet long, and will have a seating&#13;
capacity of 920. The arena will&#13;
also contain a concession stand,&#13;
pro-shop, four team lockers, and&#13;
ample lobby space. The location&#13;
for the arena will be in the&#13;
vicinity of Highway 50 and 60th&#13;
Ave.&#13;
It is expected that the Parkside&#13;
hockey team will be playing its&#13;
home games in the arena this&#13;
fall. The team had previously&#13;
been going up to Milwaukee to&#13;
play and practice. Bill&#13;
Westerlund, manager of the&#13;
Parkside Hockey Club, has been&#13;
selected as rink manager for the&#13;
new arena.&#13;
Construction is slated for&#13;
completion by Nov. 1.&#13;
Gemignani second&#13;
in lift&#13;
Joe Gemignani lifted a total of&#13;
1,320 pounds to place second in&#13;
the Wisconsin State Power Lifting&#13;
Championship last weekend.&#13;
Gemignani lifted in the 181 pound&#13;
weight class. He benched 350&#13;
squatted 430, deadlifted 540, and&#13;
he was outlifted by only five&#13;
pounds.&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHULTZ BUICK-0PEL&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
1900&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
Monday &amp; Wednesday 11 '30.-1 '30&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday . 11:30-2:30&#13;
Friday ^ -30-3"30&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 5 30-10 00&#13;
Thursday 5-30-7-00&#13;
9:00-10:00&#13;
1°:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:30-10:00&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday 10:30-1:30 (2 courts open)&#13;
3:30-6:00 (1 court open)&#13;
6:00-10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday 8:00a.m.-10:00p.m.&#13;
. except Tuesday &amp; Thursday closed from 10:30-12:00 for classes&#13;
Saturday a 00-5-00&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished&#13;
apartment near Parkside. Utilities and heat&#13;
included, $130. 654-7341&#13;
1972 Kustom 500 Amp. Excellent condition.&#13;
List $1700. $950 or best offer. Call 633-6191&#13;
after 5.&#13;
TERM PAPERS papers neatly typed. 50&#13;
cents per page. Call for and deliver. J.&#13;
Konke, 694-2776 after 5:30.&#13;
WANNA BUY a nice looking Swede? My 1969&#13;
SAAB 96 might be her! Call Jerry, 654-7181&#13;
for info.&#13;
1969 OPEL Station Wagon. Excellent condition,&#13;
25-30 miles per gallon. 654-8888.&#13;
RIDE WANTED to Boston or New York over&#13;
spring break, April 20-29. Will share expenses.&#13;
Call Kathy at 637-3738.&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632&#13;
:667. J&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADV ERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHF.DK FNCT.CRFD FDR $&#13;
DATESfSl 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;
annnpcc datf&#13;
CITY PHONF NO&#13;
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Two Shows 7:00 p.m.&#13;
in Racine Memorial Hall&#13;
Richie Havens&#13;
BEN SIDRAN&#13;
former accompainist with R olling Stones&#13;
STEVE MILLER BAND&#13;
ERIC CLAPTON&#13;
Gen.&#13;
Adm.&#13;
Tickets A vailable At:&#13;
All J &amp; J RECORD STORES&#13;
BEAUTIFUL DAY RECORDS&#13;
THE EARTH WORKS&#13;
DUBEES BAR&#13;
Presented b y&#13;
America Theatre&#13;
Productions</text>
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          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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