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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 2, issue 4</text>
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            <text>"Affirmative Action" delayed</text>
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            <text>"Affirmative Action" delayed&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The University of Wisconsin·Parkside advertises&#13;
as an equal opportunity employer. Parkside has no&#13;
black faculty member and 8 percent of the faculty&#13;
are women.&#13;
Determining the number of minority civil service&#13;
employees hired by the University was impossible.&#13;
Richard Cummings of the Personnel Office informed&#13;
RANGER that three months ago those&#13;
statistics, as well as racial and sexual breakdowns&#13;
of faculty members, were turned Over to Dean&#13;
Norwood, dean of the College of Science and Society&#13;
and Equal Employment Opportunities Officer at&#13;
Parkside. In a call to Norwood it was learned that&#13;
the statistics were in the hands of Rita Tallent,&#13;
special assistant to the Cbancellor. Tallent informed&#13;
RANGER that the reports were in Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's possession.&#13;
In a meeting scheduled with Wyllie at which&#13;
TaUent and Norwood turned up, it was learned that&#13;
indeed Wyllie had the reports but they are incomplete,&#13;
so he did not reveal their .£.ontents to&#13;
RANGER. To RANGER's knowledge, of the 189&#13;
civil service workers, two are black, three or the&#13;
other Support staff are black-one counselor, the&#13;
assistant athletic director. and the assistant&#13;
basketbaU coach wbo was also recently named&#13;
Coordinator of Educatiooal Opportunity. Cummings,&#13;
whose office recruits civil service workers.&#13;
said tbat "recruitment depends on supply and&#13;
demand" and that 00 special effort has been made&#13;
to recruit minorities when there is a job opening.&#13;
By law every state university is required to set up&#13;
an Mfirmative Action program Which. according to&#13;
Health, Educalion and Welfare (HEW) guidelines,&#13;
requires the employer to "make additional efforts&#13;
to recruit, employ and promote qualified members&#13;
of groups rormerly excluded."&#13;
February Z3 of this year, Tallent told RAI\GER&#13;
that "Parkside administrators are in the process or&#13;
drawing up an Affirmative Action plan for the&#13;
University." That plan is to set goals which see 10 it&#13;
that "no vacant position can be fiUed until the&#13;
campus Equal Employmenl Opportunity Office&#13;
TheParkside!--- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept_ 26, 1973 Vol. II No, 4&#13;
UNIVEIlSITY OF WlSC(lfSIlt&#13;
CHANCES IN KlMOR.ITY tN!lOLLHDtr&#13;
1971-72 to 1972-13&#13;
("hich IS made up of Parkside admmlstraton&#13;
- icrwood, Tallent and RIchard Sarto, penClIlllIlI&#13;
admtnistrator] is sati. Iied that a good faith errort&#13;
bas been made to fina qualified "omen and&#13;
mmonties, It TaJJent said&#13;
The Afflrtnali\e Action plan w.. &lt;kIeat Ce1tra1&#13;
AdminIStration In Madison on July 15, howev ....&#13;
Parkside's is ootyet completed and the University&#13;
bas been given an mdefinlte e tension.&#13;
When asked If Parkside is dolllg anyl/ung In the&#13;
meantime to draw eueortnes, Tallent laid that&#13;
Parkside is complYlllg ...ith HEW rul .. in nding a&#13;
policy statement to area organization which ex.&#13;
plains that Parkslde IS an equal _rtunlty .....&#13;
p1oyer. She added that hiring mlnOlity civil service&#13;
employees in this area is difficult because "the total&#13;
population or minorities III this area is not very&#13;
large." There are "minority contacts m Radnea.&#13;
Kenosha that DIck Sarto penodlcally contacts __&#13;
jobs are open," she said&#13;
In so far as f~ulty members were ClJDOt!j ned.&#13;
Tallent said that Parkslde ..... a "new Instilutlaa&#13;
mterested in getting taffed" and that "the&#13;
techniques used in recruiting minorities and wcmea&#13;
were not as effective as we hoped them to be."&#13;
She said that twice adjustments have been made&#13;
when Itwas learned women faculty ....ere not gl!'ttiIW&#13;
paid on an equal basis with therr male counterpar1ll&#13;
of the same rank.&#13;
There is no way. however. (or RA. GER to&#13;
ascertain the official stausucs on these or any other&#13;
minorities ror the Equal Employment Opportulllty&#13;
officers gave their reports to Wyllie incompleted&#13;
Wyllie has assured RAe'GER that when they a",&#13;
complete, they will be made public.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
• • H·Cl'e••• t total 't total Kin. Enroll. !&#13;
S-s N-' g T enro111J1t. •&#13;
S-S N-' g !&#13;
enl"Ollt1t. ! !!.2.:. ;;~.e 158 "&#13;
T7 104 952 2.~~ )3,94;~ 100 ill "&#13;
113 10a6 ." lSI 61 40 1137 5.1 22 271 1110 247 no ~:~5:;.~~ ~:.~~~:&#13;
" oe ISBI 1643 214 .S 144 2089 3.1 56 220 1870 '"&#13;
113 '" 2661 •• S8 159 ~;ll&#13;
... Clalre 10 7&#13;
"&#13;
16 122 l.4( 8,619) .. • ~ .., ))&#13;
30 12 100 1.1{ B.101) 2L) ( :K • 23 0 60 L7( 3,531) "&#13;
•&#13;
61 3 1ll 3.1( 3,625} 15.0 ( 51 42 12 4 6 64 ,9' 1,009) "&#13;
12 •&#13;
~ ... 6 .0 l.2( 6,115} 25.1&gt; ( 16&#13;
115 &lt;tB 11.312) ~(29&#13;
••&#13;
109 11 26 0 146 l.2( 11,811) lJ7 "&#13;
23 0&#13;
.. l1Il1de 82 34 13 •&#13;
131&#13;
~&#13;
4.343) "&#13;
28 9 10 136 .1 4,366) - .1 ( -I ~ttavUla 90 9 3 S 101 . , 4,708) 121 12 S S 109 .'-{ ',345} . (42 1it"1' rdll&#13;
"&#13;
4 24 2 '9 1.6( 4,255) 17 4 15 1 101 2.7( 3,9)3) .H.I ( ).I UYoI .. Point 20 4 32 1 51 .'( 9,154) 44 S&#13;
"&#13;
1&#13;
"&#13;
.... l.0( ',101) 49.1 ( II IS 1 9 10 91 1.7( 5,231) "&#13;
1 15 10 107 2.0( S,2~5} 11.6 ( 16&#13;
~~l'iOI' )) , 13 3 "&#13;
l.~~ 3.0o;~ 49 •&#13;
15 , .. 3.~~ l.I~~ ~!.~~J~~ h_ter 1" 11 9 7 183 2.1 8 861 150 16 10 •&#13;
,.. 3.4 8 410&#13;
58 1091 1.5 70 592 1029 123 '" 0 1'" l.l 68259 "&#13;
S Totll '" 109 '"&#13;
202 3180 2.5(126812) 2899 &lt;'0 419 'OS 41)) 3.3'176 UI .n n ""&#13;
totAL SYSTEH 2382 '" '"&#13;
NOTE:&#13;
(e)&#13;
(b)&#13;
All figure. al'e head cO\Int and includa U.S. clthan. only.&#13;
LeSl!Ild:&#13;
II Black&#13;
S-S Spanhh-Spaakln.&#13;
N-A Native Ame.rican&#13;
o Orlental ~el'ican&#13;
T Total "- i thit tabla&#13;
UWCenter S,st_ ia not Incl4.ad ln t:~~~~;&amp;f.~ic~t" to~ UW-Uvu 'all. u 72'73. chUa an m&#13;
In addition to the Native AMI' c~~e: tn PZI ('aRlIt 'Education '1"CIf,n.). Native Amel'icanadult. errro&#13;
(0)&#13;
(d)&#13;
Minority enrollment&#13;
up this semester&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Minority enrollment is up this&#13;
year. According to the above&#13;
chart, minority enrollment was&#13;
3.2percent of the total enrnllment&#13;
in '71-'72and3.1 percent in '72-'73.&#13;
The figure is 4.4 percent for this&#13;
fall. The breakdown in each&#13;
5pecific minority group shows&#13;
that Spanish-speaking students&#13;
have increased from 25 in 1972to&#13;
45 this semester, blacks from 87&#13;
to 148,native Americans from 10&#13;
to 13,and Orientals from 9 to 11. :"'e total is 217 minority students&#13;
ID a total enrollment of 4,839.&#13;
According to Rudy Collum,&#13;
Coordinator of Educational&#13;
Opportunity, no minority&#13;
~bnentteam or effort exists.&#13;
'lie hfllSed to make any further&#13;
~lIlents.&#13;
Isom Fearn, advisor in the&#13;
student affairs office, stated thaI&#13;
he and counselor Wayne ~mU'ez&#13;
were asked by Parkslde Administration&#13;
to recrwt ~monty&#13;
students. Apparently thIS was&#13;
du to the decrease In mlnonty&#13;
stu~nts from '71-'72 to. '72·'!3,&#13;
d the fact that the Umverslty&#13;
:Uld not receiv~ Central. Ad·&#13;
ministration minOrIty funds If the&#13;
University co~ld. not st;,oll~~&#13;
increase in minorIty e~&#13;
that It was and-or prove '-t&#13;
'd' g services for mmon Y proVl m&#13;
students. dded that the&#13;
However, Fearn a. . efforts&#13;
request for recrwtmg h'gh&#13;
the area I&#13;
came late, as d dl·.missed&#13;
I had alrea y . schoo s He did not think&#13;
for the summer. 'rez's efforts&#13;
that his and RamI .&#13;
made any signilicant difference&#13;
in the total minority enroUmen~.&#13;
Fearn suggested that there&#13;
were other factors to be con·&#13;
sidered in the increase. of&#13;
minorily students at Parkside.&#13;
Among these factors are low&#13;
tuition (p.. kside and Green Bay&#13;
have the lowest tuition of the&#13;
state universities), the open&#13;
admission policy, and the. fact&#13;
that the Division of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation sends a number of&#13;
adult minority students to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fearn also commented on the&#13;
lack of black faculty al Parkside.&#13;
He said that a numbe&lt; of black&#13;
stildents are dissatisfied with&#13;
Parkside because It offers&#13;
nothing relevant to their lifestyle.&#13;
uw-p fails to m t&#13;
minority needs&#13;
Try.ng to get information from the Admlluslration on minority&#13;
group faculty. minority students, or mInority recrwtment flforta ..&#13;
like trying to have a baby when you'", not pregnant One ha to&#13;
assume thaI the UrnverSIty IS ashamed or afraid of the Ill!ormatioo&#13;
RA 'GER mighl uncover,&#13;
The statistics on sexual and racial backgrounds 0( raculty and IIlaff&#13;
"'ere refused to us by Parkside's Equal Employment OpportunlU ..&#13;
Officers, Dean Eugene Norwood, and Special AS&amp;1stantto the 0Iancellor&#13;
RJta Tallent According to the Secretary 0( the Facully's Office,&#13;
thaI data ISindeed available and in the hands 0( Norwood.&#13;
Rudy Collum, Coordmator of Educational Opportulllty, n!fuaed to&#13;
give out aD)' lII!ormation regarding minonty enrollment exceplto say&#13;
thaI Parkside has made 00 effort to recnnt mmOlity studenta In the&#13;
past and has 00 plans to do 00 III the future_&#13;
It is truly something to be ashamed of wh!," Parbide IS 10000ted in ..,&#13;
area "'i!h ooe 0( the highest mlllOnty population percentagea In the&#13;
state yet no effort bas been made to roe""t or employ studenta,&#13;
faculty and staff v.iUl minonty backgrounds. Just .s disgtaceful Is&#13;
the fact that the Urnvers.ty this ....... t... ntfers ooly three coursea&#13;
which deal exclusively with nunonti .. : a lIteralure cLass on women,&#13;
blacks and Jews, and two anthropology courses-Mexican and Chicano&#13;
Cultures and 'ew World egro Cultilres..&#13;
Parkside's minority student populaUon bas Inc.... Sed to 4.4 percent&#13;
of the lotal enrollment, an increase 0( almost 1.5 percenl smce last f.U.&#13;
Nolhlllg is belng done, however, to keep minonty students at Parblde&#13;
to complete their undergraduate education Any .nterest the AdmlOlStration&#13;
has III enrolhng minority students seems to be generated&#13;
by the stale money they can receive when they do so&#13;
Hopefully, when nunority students do graduate, they will be&#13;
seJectiveofwhere they submit their job applications. Institutions such&#13;
as Parkside apparently do )lol look favorably upon women or&#13;
mioorities when they hire. (Although, of one is a faculty wife, the&#13;
chances are good for riDding employment at Parkside.)&#13;
At any rate. Parkside is oot maklllg a genume, encouraging effort to&#13;
satisfy the educational and employment needs 0( a"", minority&#13;
groups. As best as we can detenriine (rom our own statistics, some of&#13;
which are admittedly unofficial since we wete told no olficial ftgUl'eS&#13;
exISt, this Univ'erslty is doing oolhtng to help counterbaIance the racist&#13;
and sexist practices that have so long oppressed Ion many talented&#13;
and inlelligent people of this country.&#13;
We call on the Administration oot only to complete and implement&#13;
Its Afrrrmative Action plan posthaste, nol only to complete and make&#13;
pubhc its records, but also to demonstrate III concrete ways sensitivity&#13;
and genuine concern for ev... y studenl who applies to and attends the&#13;
l:niverslty. In the case of students with minority backgrounclo, this&#13;
will necessarily involve the teaching of courses relevant to their ex.&#13;
perience, !&gt;ypersons who have shared that experience.&#13;
11 Affi_rmative Action" delayed&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside advertises&#13;
as an equal opportunity employer. Parkside has no&#13;
black faculty member and 8 percent of the faculty&#13;
are women.&#13;
RA "GER. To R . "GER' kno I e, of th l&#13;
civil ervice ·or ers, t\liO ar black, thre of the&#13;
other upport taff are bl c -o cou lor, th&#13;
assistant athl ic director, nd the a • tant&#13;
basketball coach ·ho wa. a recen J named&#13;
Coordinator of Educational Opportunit. . CUmming&#13;
, ·hose office re ruits civil sen i wo ,&#13;
said that "recruitment depen on upply and&#13;
Determining the number of minority civil service&#13;
employees hired by the University was impossible.&#13;
Richard Cummings of the Personnel Office informed&#13;
RANGER that three months ago those&#13;
statistics, as well as racial and sexual breakdowns&#13;
of faculty members, were turned over to Dean&#13;
Norwood, dean of the College of Science and Society&#13;
and Equal Employment Opportunities Officer at&#13;
Parkside. In a call to Norwood it was learned that&#13;
the statistics were in the hands of Rita Tallent,&#13;
special assistant to the Chancellor. Tallent informed&#13;
RANGER that the reports were in Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's possession.&#13;
demand" and that no pecial effort ha. m d&#13;
to recruit minoriti w n there · a job o&#13;
By law every tale Uni\·e ity · required to t up&#13;
an Affirmative Action program ·hich, according to&#13;
Health, Education and Welfare (HEW&gt; guidelin ,&#13;
requires the employer to "ma e addili al !forts&#13;
to recruit, employ and promote qualified m mbcrs&#13;
of groups formerly e eluded."&#13;
February Z3 of this year, Tallent told RA. 'GER&#13;
In a meeting scheduled with Wyllie at which&#13;
Tallent and Norwood turned up, it was learned that&#13;
indeed Wyllie had the reports but they are incomplete,&#13;
so he did not re_veal their contents to&#13;
that "Parkside admini trators are in the proc of&#13;
drav.ing up an Affirmative Action plan f the&#13;
University." That plan i to et goals which see to it&#13;
that "no vacant position can be filled until the&#13;
campus Equal Employment Opportunity Office&#13;
The Parkside,-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1973 Vol. II No. 4&#13;
Nldhon v ulr.ee&#13;
u ota&#13;
B&#13;
758&#13;
885&#13;
1643&#13;
tau Clalre 70&#13;
Green Bey 33&#13;
1..1 Croue 42&#13;
01hkosh 109&#13;
Parkside 82&#13;
Plattevllle 90&#13;
liver Falls 39&#13;
Sttvens Point 20&#13;
Stout 65&#13;
Superior 33&#13;
ltewater 156&#13;
Sub Total 739&#13;
TOTAL SYSTEM 2382&#13;
NOTE:&#13;
(a}&#13;
{b)&#13;
IJIIIVERS ITY OF WlSCOIIS Ill CHANCES IN MINOIUTY PmOLUIDl'r&#13;
1971-72 to 1972-73&#13;
7. total&#13;
s-s N-A .Q T enrollmt. B s-s N-A 63 27 104 9°52 2.8( 33,943} ioo no 63 151 61 40 1137 5.1 22 277 1170 247 l 0 214 88 144 2089 3.7 56 220 1870 391 173&#13;
7 29 16 122 1.4( 8,679} 98 a 30&#13;
4 23 0 60 l. 7( 3,531} 39 a 61&#13;
12 4 6 64 .9( 7,009} 54 12&#13;
11 26 0 146 1.2( 11,811) 137 15 • 23&#13;
34 13 8 137 ~ 4,343) 89 28 9&#13;
9 3 5 107 • ( 4,708) 127 12 5&#13;
4 24 2 69 1.6( 4,255} 77 4 25&#13;
4 32 l 57 .6( 9,154) 44 5 35&#13;
7 9 10 91 1.7( 5,231) 65 7 25&#13;
6 13 3 55 1.8{ 3,004} 49 • 25&#13;
11 9 7 183 2.1 8 867 250 16 10&#13;
109 185 58 1091 1.5 70 592 1029 123 256&#13;
323 273 202 3180 2.5 126 812 2199 520 429&#13;
All f1gureo are head count and lnclude U.S. c1tlzen1 only.&#13;
Legend:&#13;
B Black&#13;
S-S Spanish-Speaking&#13;
N•A Native American O Oriental American&#13;
0 T&#13;
171 IOU S4 lS 1&#13;
227 266&#13;
12&#13;
3&#13;
6&#13;
0&#13;
10&#13;
5&#13;
l&#13;
l&#13;
10&#13;
2&#13;
a&#13;
5a&#13;
215 4111&#13;
(c}&#13;
(d)&#13;
T Total&#13;
UII Center '-" in thil t.oble&#13;
In addition&#13;
System h not included in ~e ~1~':ii.c~ted for UW-Uvcr Falla 111 71/73, di re an 1?6&#13;
to the Native .Americ•1°&#13;
1 Native American _~tui enn; (Parent !dl&gt;catl°" Pn,sru}. adult• en't'o cu n&#13;
Minority enrollment&#13;
up this semester&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Minority enrollment is up this&#13;
year. According to the above&#13;
chart, minority enrollment was&#13;
3.2 percent of the total enrollment&#13;
in '71·'72and 3.1 percentin '72-'73.&#13;
The figure is 4.4 percent for this&#13;
fall. The breakdown in each&#13;
Specific minority group shows&#13;
that Spanish-speaking students&#13;
have increased from 25 in 1972 to&#13;
45 this semester, blacks from 87&#13;
to 148, native Americans from 10&#13;
to 13, and Orientals from 9 to 11.&#13;
'.fhe total is 217 minority students 1n a total enrollment of 4,839.&#13;
According to Rudy Collum,&#13;
Coordinator of Educational&#13;
Opportunity, no minority&#13;
l'ectuibnent team or effort exists.&#13;
He refused to make any further&#13;
COlntnents.&#13;
Isom Fearn. advisor in the&#13;
student affairs office, stated ~at&#13;
he and counselor Wayne ~mir:&#13;
were asked by Par:ks1d_e ~ .&#13;
ministration to recrwt ~monty&#13;
d ts Apparently this was stu en . . · ·t due to the decrease ID rn!noi;i y&#13;
d t from '7l-'72 to 72- 73, stu ens · ·t d the fact that the Univers1 Y&#13;
:uld not receive Central_ Administration&#13;
minority funds if the&#13;
Uru·versity could not shollw ant · ·t enro men increase in mmon Y . that it was and-or prove · rit providing services for mmo Y&#13;
students. dded that the&#13;
However' Fearn ~ting efforts&#13;
request for recr h"gh s the area I came late, a d dismissed Schools had alrea y think He did not for the_ surnmde~mirez's efforts that his an&#13;
made any significant difference&#13;
in the total minority enrollmen~.&#13;
Fearn suggested that ther&#13;
were other factors to be con·&#13;
sidered in the increase . of&#13;
minority students at Parkside. Among these factors are lo&#13;
tuition CP,.rkside and Green Bay&#13;
have the )owe t tuition of the&#13;
state universities). the open&#13;
admission policy, and the . fact&#13;
that the Division of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation sends a nwnber of&#13;
adult minority tudents to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fearn also commented on the&#13;
lack of black faculty at Parkside.&#13;
He said that a number of black&#13;
students are dissati~ied \\1th&#13;
Parkside because 1t offers&#13;
nothing relevant to their lifestyle.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
UW-P fails to ,n&#13;
minority needs&#13;
f &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed.• sept. 26. 1973&#13;
_______A GE&#13;
EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
Investigation&#13;
must continue&#13;
Until lately. Spiro Agnew as Vice President has actually&#13;
been an asset to President Nixon. His presence&#13;
softened the cry of Impeachment directed toward Nixon,&#13;
tor the prospect of Agnew in the White House did not&#13;
thrill too many people in Washington or across the&#13;
country.&#13;
The recent allegations, growing out of a federal grand&#13;
jury probe. that Agnew took political kickbacks have&#13;
made him a liability that Nixon can hardly aHord. There&#13;
have been reports that Agnew is contemplating&#13;
reslgnatlon ..the latest of these indicate that he would&#13;
resign as part of a deal to permit him to plead guilty to a&#13;
lesser charge.&#13;
Agnew. of course, denies he is thinking of any such&#13;
thing. His attorneys say he plans to pursue his full&#13;
defense, beginning with legal maneuvers to halt the&#13;
Investigation. The basis for such a motion has not been&#13;
disclosed. but the investigation must be continued.&#13;
Twice before the Senate committee probing campaign&#13;
activities was convened. attempts to authorize a&#13;
complete Investigation of the Watergate break-in were&#13;
thwarted. To stop the Investigation of Agnew's past&#13;
activities before the truth is ascertained would leave&#13;
doubt In many minds. not only with respect to the VicePresident's&#13;
character but also concerning an already&#13;
frequently denounced system of justice.&#13;
The Constitution seems to support the idea that the&#13;
Vice· President has Immunity against prosecution until&#13;
he Is Impeached. As long as he claims the immunity of&#13;
his office he cannot actively fight the charges against&#13;
him. If he resigns to clear himself, that resignation&#13;
should not be part of a "deal" to reduce the charges. Not&#13;
only would that be a contradiction. but It would be a&#13;
further violation of the trust of public office to use his&#13;
position to barter for leniency.&#13;
Whether Agnew is to resign. be impeached, or be&#13;
cleared of any or all charges, the investigation must run&#13;
Its full course. Like in the Watergate probe, results must&#13;
be made public. The people must continue to exhibit&#13;
Interest and concern in sustaining these and other&#13;
Inquiries. and when the truth is found, we must demand&#13;
appropriate penalties for the guilty. This is our only&#13;
hope for restoring responsibility and helping to alleviate&#13;
corruption in public office.&#13;
--I&#13;
5&#13;
~ TN PiPa.tlta.Ii:':'IIII--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thor ParkslM Rineer IS publlshed ,,~kJy throughout the academic&#13;
ye r b) the $ludents 01 The Unl\lemty of Wisconsin-Parkslde&#13;
Ktnaah •. V,lSCons,n ~140 orrseee are located .t 0-194 Library:&#13;
~.rnlnc Center. Telephone: (414l w·zas&#13;
The ParulCSe Rancer is an Independent newspaper OPinions&#13;
te'flKttd In colwnns Ind edltorialJ Ire: not ~rily the official&#13;
v...... of Tbe l:rnverllty of W1lConsua·Plrulde&#13;
I".tttrn to lht EdllOl' an encoura.ed AlIletten on .ny subjeCt of&#13;
interest to ,t~ts 'acuity or eurr must be conhned to 2$0 words or&#13;
leu typed ~ double-spaced The editors reserve the nlht to edit&#13;
letten for lencth and aood taste Allletten must be slaned and include&#13;
add,..... phon!! number and student slatus or faculty rank Names will&#13;
be ""lthMld upon f'eQuut The edlton reserve the rilht to refuse to&#13;
pnnl any letten&#13;
IOtTOIIIN CHI.' ..I SdM~&#13;
.... AGING IDITOR , '"~&#13;
.IATU •• IDITO- Dttwa ",..11&#13;
NIWS ID'TOII ... _,. .. w.....&#13;
sf'Oltn 101T0R O" ....rry&#13;
CO,"Y 10iTO. R.-.cO Ee.l ....&#13;
"H01'OORA"HIC COO.OINATOIt 0.'tt4I o.ttieb&#13;
.RITIR' o.v ..I..... Vedll ~. Mk ..... Otuyk. ~rUyft&#13;
~. caff"W,,,, T..., Detww.III.Us.vt-.KeftK ... 04&#13;
"M01oolt."H •• ' Jay Saw.. JIM .vtt.... "'ian ROU... I.... .~.MA C... TOONISTS ..,..y ClMlNfi. ~ry Huck. ......&#13;
LAYOUT T""'~, lefTY K...,. an.c. W ......&#13;
aUSIN!U MAN.. OI •• K.. ~ ...&#13;
ADVaRTI'INO STA". K... "ft Frd l.wrHCe. Jim ~&#13;
AOVISOIt. ~ K.. ''Ia&#13;
Last February I initiated research lor RANGER on Affirmative&#13;
Action, a policy required of all universities and colleges by the&#13;
Department 01Health, Education and Welfare. Its purpose IS not only&#13;
to see that employment neutrality be practiced but "requires the&#13;
employer to make additional efforts to recruit, employ and promote&#13;
qualified members of groups formerly excluded."&#13;
At that time Debbie Friedell, who wrote this week's front page story&#13;
on the lack oi significant minority group representation among the&#13;
faculty and stall 01 Parkside, interviewed Rita Tallent who .coordinates&#13;
Affirmative Action for women here. We both read the existing&#13;
guidelines and were told by Tallent that Parkside's own document on&#13;
an Aflirmative Action plan lor all "groups lormerly excluded" would&#13;
be completed by July 15.&#13;
The first week of school we again started asking questions about&#13;
Affirmative Action, We were told Parkside had been given "an indefinite&#13;
extension" on drawing up a plan.&#13;
Prompted by a question from a student regarding women and&#13;
minorities on the Security force, we found out that the Security office&#13;
employs two women-one a stenographer, the other a dispatcher. The&#13;
Director hastened to point out that there is also an Indian on the force.&#13;
Further investigation revealed that officer Robert Lewis, who normally&#13;
patrols the buildings during the day, is said Indian.&#13;
We started looking at other ollices and at laculty and asked ourselves&#13;
il the University was at least lollowing general HEW guidelines&#13;
even without our own written policy. When we carried this question to&#13;
the Administration, we found the only action, if you can call it that,&#13;
was to send out letters to area agencies such as NAACP, UMOS, WIN&#13;
and the Wis. State Employment Office, stating that Parkside is an&#13;
equal opportunity employer. Perind.&#13;
The student side of the minority issue was brought to our attention&#13;
during registration when we came across the chart reprinted on page&#13;
one. Since that time we had been trying to obtain even preliminary&#13;
enrollment figures. Those figures became available last week. Our&#13;
research on this story involved a number. of phone calls, including&#13;
contact with Rudy Collum, who was appointed Coordinator of&#13;
Educational Opportunity last August. He served last year as Special&#13;
Assistant to Dean Eugene Norwood, as well as being a specialist in&#13;
athletics.&#13;
In a press release announcing Collum's appointment, Vice Chancellor&#13;
Otto Bauer said Collum's principal assignment will be "to observe&#13;
and recommend ways in which UW-Parkside can offer greater&#13;
educational opportunity to its students and area residents. Because&#13;
Parks ide oilers integrated programming and services lor all students,&#13;
including minority students, adults, and others, it is crucial that each&#13;
campus office and activity develop and maintain a sensitivity and&#13;
genuine concern for every student who applies to and attends the&#13;
university."&#13;
As noted in Kathy Wellner's story, no minority recruitment effort&#13;
exists according to Collum. Special, intensive recruitment of adults&#13;
and veterans does exist.&#13;
An interesting thing about Collum-when asked specific questions&#13;
about his new job, he declihed to answer, suggesting we contact Bauer&#13;
or come and see him at some other lime (presumably alter he's had a&#13;
chance to contact Bauer). Along with the few comments he did give us,&#13;
he repeatedly stated that il we quoted him on anything, he would deny&#13;
It.&#13;
Collum several times queried what point we were trying to prove&#13;
and w,hywe wanted to know these things. We are not trying to prove&#13;
anything, one way or another. We started out in quest of some answers&#13;
~o questions w.e and. others. were asking on two separate but related&#13;
Issues-the Aff)rmative Action practices at Parkside and the minority&#13;
enrollme?t. '!ie were given ~n unbelie.vab~e run-around. We gradually&#13;
started piecing together a picture which IS not complimentary bul to&#13;
the best of our knowledge is accurate. We welcome response. from&#13;
s~udents and Administration, but we request that this response be&#13;
direct-no more circularity and non-answers, please.&#13;
*******************************************.&#13;
: Ode to Billie Jean :&#13;
,.&#13;
*&#13;
,.,. : ,. *&#13;
The challenge made, they came to play, ~&#13;
... The woman's name was Court. ~&#13;
.. The fellow's name was Bobby Riggs and tennis was the sport ,.. *&#13;
Bobby played his best 01games or Margaret her worst,' ,.&#13;
: For tn a match of two se.ts straight the name of Riggs was first. !&#13;
Jt The game thus played It proved to him and was for him a symbol-- 1:&#13;
,. She.should not hold a racquet but a needle and a lhimhle ;:&#13;
Jt A pig, a seU·proclaimed one, of the chauvinistic kind . ..&#13;
,.. He soon became a spokesman for the men of such a ~ind ...&#13;
~ And so at last it came to pass he challenged Billie Jean . ~&#13;
,. To a Battle 01tbe Sexes to be played upon the green ;:&#13;
,. Wlthm the Houston Astrodome the best three sets oi five ,.&#13;
~ ~lth one-hundred tbousand dollars to the one who stayed alive ~&#13;
It Iggs was favored 5to 2 by those who seemed t k . .....-&#13;
,. But Billje had a lot 01strength statistics did nO~Shnow, ,.&#13;
: She beat the man In three straight sets 6-4 6-3 6_3&#13;
0w&#13;
. :&#13;
~ The match was won lor women's spor~, a ;"on'Ian;s victory. ~&#13;
,. Kay Zebell ,.&#13;
,. civil service stall ,.&#13;
~ Payroll Office :&#13;
,. ,.&#13;
.******************************************~&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
E&#13;
Investigation&#13;
111ust continue&#13;
Unt I I tely, Spiro Agnew as Vice President has actu&#13;
lly been n ass t to President Nixon. His presence&#13;
softened th cry of Impeachment directed toward Nixon,&#13;
for th prosp t of Agnew In the White House did not&#13;
thrill too many people in Washington or across the&#13;
country.&#13;
The r c nt allegations, growing out of a federal grand&#13;
jury prob , that Agnew took political kickbacks have&#13;
made him II blllty that Nixon can hardly afford. There&#13;
h ve be n reports that Agnew is contemplating&#13;
resign tlon--the latest of th se Indicate that he would&#13;
r lgn s part of a deal to permit him to plead guilty to a&#13;
lesser charg .&#13;
Agn w, of course, denies he is thinking of any such&#13;
thing. His ttorneys say he plans to pursue his full&#13;
defens , beginning with legal maneuvers to halt the&#13;
Investigation. The basis for such a motion has not been&#13;
dlsclos d, but the investigation must be continued.&#13;
Twice b fore the Senate committee probing campaign&#13;
ctlv ties was convened, attempts to authorize a&#13;
comp! te nvestlgation of the Watergate break-In were&#13;
thwar ed. To stop the Investigation of Agnew's past&#13;
actlv ties before the truth is ascertained would leave&#13;
doubt In many minds, not only with respect to the VicePresident's&#13;
character but also concerning an already&#13;
fr quently denounced system of justice.&#13;
The Constitution seems to support the idea that the&#13;
Vice-President has immunity against prosecution until&#13;
he s lmpe ched. As long as he claims the immunity of&#13;
his office he cannot actively f'ght the charges against&#13;
him. If he resigns to clear himself, that resignation&#13;
should not be part of a "deal" to reduce the charges. Not&#13;
only would that be a contradiction, but it would be a&#13;
further violation of the trust of public office to use his&#13;
position to barter for leniency.&#13;
Whether Agnew is to resign, be Impeached, or be&#13;
cleared of any or all charges, the investigation must run&#13;
Its full course. Like in the Watergate probe, results must&#13;
be made public. The people must continue to exhibit&#13;
interest and concern in sustaining these and other&#13;
Inquiries, and when the truth is found, we must demand&#13;
appropriate penalties for the guilty. This is our only&#13;
hope for restoring responsibility and helping to alleviate&#13;
corruption In public office.&#13;
In Ju" hh.- m•11&#13;
Last February I initiated research for RANGER on Affirmative&#13;
Action, a policy required of all universities and colleg~ by the&#13;
Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Its purpose 1s not only&#13;
to see that employment neutrality be practiced but "requires the&#13;
employer to make additional efforts to recruit, employ and promote&#13;
qualified members of groups formerly excluded."&#13;
At that time, Debbie Frieden, who wrote this week's front page story&#13;
on the lack of significant minority group representation among the&#13;
faculty and staff of Parkside, interviewed Rita Tallent who _co_ordinates&#13;
Affirmative Action for women here. We both read the existing&#13;
guidelines and were told by Tallent that Parkside's own document on&#13;
an Affirmative Action plan for all "groups formerly excluded" would&#13;
be completed by July 15.&#13;
The first week of school we again started asking questions about&#13;
Affirmative Action. We were told Parkside had been given "an indefinite&#13;
extension" on drawing up a plan.&#13;
Prompted by a question from a student regarding women and&#13;
minorities on the Security force, we found out that the Security office&#13;
employs two women-one a stenographer, the other a dispatcher. The&#13;
Director hastened to point out that there is also an Indian on the force.&#13;
Further investigation revealed that officer Robert Lewis, who normally&#13;
patrols the buildings during the day, is said Indian.&#13;
We started looking at other offices and at faculty and asked ourselves&#13;
if the University was at least foIIowing general HEW guidelines&#13;
even without our own written policy. When we carried this question to&#13;
the Administration, we found the only action, if you can call it that,&#13;
was to send out letters to area agencies such as NAACP, UMOS, WIN&#13;
and the Wis. State Employment Office, stating that Parkside is an&#13;
equal opportunity employer. Period.&#13;
The student side of the minority issue was brought to our attention&#13;
during registration when we came across the chart reprinted on page&#13;
one. Since that time we had been trying to obtain even preliminary&#13;
enrollment figures. Those figures became available last week. Our&#13;
research on this story involved a number of phone calls, including&#13;
contact with Rudy Collum, who was appointed Coordinator of&#13;
Educational Opportunity last August. He served last year as Special&#13;
Assistant to Dean Eugene Norwood, as well as being a specialist in&#13;
athletics.&#13;
In a press release announcing Collum's appointment, Vice ChanceIIor&#13;
Otto Bauer said Collum's principal assignment will be "to oberve&#13;
and recommend ways in which UW-Parkside can offer greater&#13;
educational opportunity to its students and area residents. Because&#13;
Parkside offers integrated programming and services for all students,&#13;
including minority students, adults, and others, it is crucial that each&#13;
campus office and activity develop and maintain a sensitivity and&#13;
genuine concern for every student who applies to and attends the&#13;
university."&#13;
As noted in Kathy Wellner's story, no minority recruitment effort&#13;
exists according to Collum. Special, intensive recruitment of adults&#13;
and veterans does exist.&#13;
An interesting thing about Collum-when asked specific questions&#13;
about his new job, he declined to answer, suggesting we contact Bauer&#13;
or come and see him at some other time (presumably after he's had a&#13;
chance to contact Bauer) .. Along with the few comments he did give us,&#13;
~ repeatedly stated that 1f we quoted him on anything, he would deny&#13;
1t.&#13;
Collum several times queried what point we were trying to prove&#13;
and w.hy we wanted to know these things. We are not trying to prove&#13;
anythm~, one way or another. We started out in quest of some answers&#13;
~o questions w_e and_ others were asking on two separate but related&#13;
issues-the Affirmative Action practices at Parkside and the minority&#13;
enrollme~t. ":Ne were given an unbelievable run-around. We gradually&#13;
started p1ecmg together a picture which is not complimentary but to&#13;
the best of our knowledge is accurate. We welcome response. from&#13;
s~udents and Administration, but we request that this response be&#13;
direct-no more circularity and non-answers, please.&#13;
*******************************************'&#13;
! Ode to Billie Jean :&#13;
* ,..&#13;
* ,..&#13;
; i ~ The challenge made, they came to play,&#13;
* The woman's name was Court. ,t&#13;
* The fellow's name was Bobby Riggs and tennis was the sport *&#13;
lf- Bobby played his best of games or Margaret her worst, · lf-&#13;
: Form a match oftwos~tsstraight the name of Riggs was first. !&#13;
* The game thus played it proved to him and was for him a symbol-- l:&#13;
* She_ hould not hold a racquet but a needle and a thimble *&#13;
lf- A pig, a self-proclaimed one, of the chauvinistic kind · ,ti&#13;
He soon becaf!le a SPokesman for the men of such a ~ind *&#13;
* And so at last 1t came to pass he challenged Billie Jean · !&#13;
,t- T~ a ~attle of the Sexes to be played upon the green *&#13;
* W!thm the Houston Astrodome the best three sets of five *&#13;
; :.1th one-hundred thousand dollars to the one who stayed alive ~ ~ iggs was favored 5 to 2 by those who seemed t k . ~&#13;
,t- But Bill_ie had a lo_t of strength statistics did no:sh~:w' ,t&#13;
: She beat the man m three straight sets 6-4 6-3 6-3 . :&#13;
* The match was won for women's spor~. a ~o~an;svictory. * : Kay Zebell l&#13;
* civil service staff ,t&#13;
* Payroll Office Jt&#13;
: :&#13;
*******************************************; &#13;
photo by Allen Fredericks.on&#13;
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL cartoonist Bill Sanders, below, was at&#13;
Parkside last Wednesday evening. Before he left he drew the above&#13;
cartoon in the Whiteskeller.&#13;
phOl0 by Allen Freoericks.on&#13;
"·"4&#13;
{/&#13;
We getletters&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
The United Farm Workers are&#13;
engaged in a critical struggle on&#13;
the West Coast. The Teamsters&#13;
are attempting by a variety of&#13;
devices to muscle cesar Chavez&#13;
out of the migrant labor picture.&#13;
Responsible union leaders across&#13;
the country have been appalled at&#13;
the way in which the growers and&#13;
the Teamsters have worked in&#13;
collusion against the field&#13;
laborers' best interests.&#13;
It would help the United Farm&#13;
Workers cause if pressure could&#13;
be applied to Gallo Wine&#13;
products. This corporation has&#13;
repeatedly rejected the idea of&#13;
free union elections. It is siding&#13;
with the Teamsters against the&#13;
workers Chavez represents.&#13;
I appeal to you and your&#13;
readers to boycott Gallo Wines as&#13;
well as non-union lettuce and&#13;
grapes. We must make the Gallo&#13;
Corporation aware of consumer&#13;
resistance to their labor policies.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
on request. Thank you for giving&#13;
this matter your support.&#13;
ErnestT. campbeU, ChaUinan&#13;
New York Interfaith Committee&#13;
To Aid Migrant Farmworkers&#13;
490 Riverside Drive&#13;
New York, New York l00Z7&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a world where issues have&#13;
faded, apathy a way of life, and&#13;
the "love" of the sixties a&#13;
memory, there still remain&#13;
important trials in the human&#13;
battle for equality. The family of&#13;
man is stiU divided by its most&#13;
fatal disease, racism. Strong&#13;
voices survive in man's centers&#13;
of learning where their sole&#13;
purpose is to unite us. And now&#13;
one of these voices is being&#13;
destroyed at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in Madison.&#13;
The University is going to close&#13;
down the Afro-American and&#13;
Native-American centers on the&#13;
Madison campus. It is a decision&#13;
fatal to the cultural growth of the&#13;
campus' minority students. A&#13;
decision that also damages the&#13;
white students' chances of ever&#13;
really learning about his black&#13;
and brown brothers and sisters.&#13;
The centers have offered all&#13;
students a learning opportunity&#13;
new in this country. Black, brown&#13;
and Native-American studies are&#13;
an important part of America&#13;
and should be taught on campus&#13;
and off. The void in America's&#13;
background concerning its understanding&#13;
of its minorities is&#13;
shamefully large. With aids like&#13;
the two Madison centers that void&#13;
is only now beginning to close.&#13;
I want to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the peoples whose&#13;
cultures have been so neglected&#13;
by history. I want to learn from&#13;
the people who took pride in&#13;
studying and researching their&#13;
ethnic backgrounds, from people&#13;
who will be proud to teach it,&#13;
reaching from the past, the&#13;
present and most important,&#13;
looking proudly towards the&#13;
future, There is much to be&#13;
learned from the excited&#13;
minority leaders in their effort to&#13;
build their proper spot in a&#13;
resistant society. I say close not&#13;
the existing center, create new&#13;
ones.&#13;
I hope Parkside students&#13;
sharing this opinion will register&#13;
their disapproval with the&#13;
Regents' decision by writing to&#13;
Regent Edward Hales at 440&#13;
Main Street in Racine. Show your&#13;
support now before there is&#13;
nothing left to support.&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
Parkside graduate, Racine&#13;
~ " J .. :I&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement" is a regular rea-hIre in RANGER. It&#13;
deals with women and the status of women at Parkskle, la society aDd&#13;
in history. Guest writers are invited.&#13;
. by Barb Hanson&#13;
Why Bobby Riggs Doesn't Matter&#13;
Due to the Thursday noon deadline for "The Movement" column,&#13;
this article was written prior to the match on Thursday night.&#13;
The tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs has&#13;
attracted an amazing amount of attention from the American public.&#13;
Families have divided allegiances, lovers break up rather than switch&#13;
loyalties, and best friends are friendly no more because of the spectacular&#13;
$100,000 winner-take-all match. What is behind all this commotion?&#13;
What convinced ABC to pay $750,000for the TV rights, and&#13;
why did CBS get so mad that they dragged ABC and the match&#13;
promoters to court in an effort to get the rights for themselves'? Why is&#13;
the country so excited'?&#13;
Much of the interest can probably be attributed to Riggs' reputation&#13;
as the foremost hustler in the U.S. today. Riggs is a consummate&#13;
sbowman and has been exploiting the "Lib vs. Lob: The Battle or the&#13;
Sexes" angle for all that he can. To drum up interest in the match,&#13;
Riggs has been making statements that no sane human being would&#13;
ever make, like "A woman belongs in two places, the bedroom and the&#13;
kitchen, in that order," and "The best way to handle women is to keep&#13;
them barefoot and pregnant," and HI plan to bomb Billie Jean King in&#13;
the match and set back the Women's Lib Movement about another 20&#13;
years." As if this match could slow down the Lib movement in tennis&#13;
or in general!&#13;
Two camps have developed out of Riggs' vulgar noise-making:&#13;
those who see Riggs as an obnoxious ass who needs his ears pinned&#13;
back by the greatest woman player on the circuit, and those poor&#13;
misguided fools who see Riggs as the man of the hour, their hope to set&#13;
all the "uppity women" on their collective cans.&#13;
The primary objection I have about this match is this misguided&#13;
emphasis on it being THE "Battle of the Sexes." King has done more&#13;
for the women's tennis circuit Ulan any other person but she does not&#13;
typify the movement in its entirety. nor does every woman identify&#13;
with her. Riggs has made a lot of noise about his fan clubs but he Is&#13;
hardly every man's hero. The real "BatUe of the Sexes" is being&#13;
fought every day by average people who believe in equality versus&#13;
average people who believe in U1eoppression of women. But neither&#13;
side is being offered $100,000to hassle it out in the real world.&#13;
Even accepting the assumption that a tennis match could prove&#13;
something about the relative status of men and women, this match&#13;
never could. King is a superb athlete who happens to be 26 years&#13;
younger than her duck-tooted opponent. If King wins, Riggs up.&#13;
porters will try to diminish her victory by pointing out Riggs' obvious&#13;
physical disabilities and challenge King to playa top male player near&#13;
her own age. King will do no such thing, of course. as neither she nor&#13;
any of the other top women players claim to have the physical pow r&#13;
to play the top men. If King should lose, no one is going to point to&#13;
Riggs' terrible record in the enior Men's circuit or expect him to play&#13;
Pancho Gonzales, who recently turned enior. King says she is playing&#13;
for the honor of the women's circuit (somebody has to. after Riggs&#13;
creamed Margaret Court in the Mother's Day Iassacre) and that the&#13;
money was secondary. Riggs makes no secret of his primary interest,&#13;
his ego and his wallet. to matter who wins. the women's circuit will&#13;
continue growing, King will keep winning, Riggs will keep hustling,&#13;
and women everywhere will continue fighting for their equal place.&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
ceeattve writers. phologrlph.n. InCS&#13;
olMr ,ntenos.led people &lt;Ireinyilltd 10 loIn the&#13;
P ..rll:s.I!H-yr..r!aook 511ft.&#13;
The "ex1 meeting of 1M s.liU will be&#13;
Fnd".,. mom,n,. 10 I.m •• in Dl1~ LlC.&#13;
ReWlrd of 105.00 tor Imall bla&lt;k p",r... losl&#13;
Sept. 17 on lhe third llOCH" of tbe IIbruy.&#13;
Contlin, keys Ind .Ill.t. call lynn I' U2.&#13;
9771, No questions lihd.&#13;
Men Ind women students, P,lrt-lime in.&#13;
venlory work. Ile.x,ble ~rs. $1.01 per hour&#13;
10s.llrt. C.IlI-1OO-2 .. 2..... 1. Genera. B"sil\fl.S&#13;
Service,_ Milwlukee.&#13;
Wantl'd: SI",den' with CIIr to pick me up .f&#13;
Soldier eu. SI.lion In MII.II"k" .....ry&#13;
TlJudlY lind Thu"~y .t , lI.m. Ind "'1",rn&#13;
1'4 p.m. Conilet Mrs. GrOSKIoI., coiled ... I&#13;
MMlison 401-2.))·7009. Will PlY .ell.&#13;
For .-Ie: Stffeo. Moronll., ImlU bu1&#13;
Idequlte lor Smlll .plrtment. Two&#13;
Splulllrrs 115.0. BSR McOonllld UOO&#13;
IIvtomllic hlrnillblll. SlOO com~er.. P'tKIM&#13;
U4--4159. if 1'0 lInlWer een lI,.in I.t.r.&#13;
Typing of ~II kinds ckIne in my nome.&#13;
Experienced. can NlIncy. '-1,.,,,,.&#13;
FOR SALE: PICKET FENCE ]JI'J fHI long&#13;
In) ~ments. incluchng II gllle; Sl s.ll1ndllrd&#13;
pICkets.. ellch 41" x ,~ .. x).··. pllin1ed&#13;
blllCk. Sli. 4).4':1424.&#13;
P."" notllrind on lhe spol. SMM". _etty&#13;
BroilS. Bliliness ""lInll,emenl mllior.&#13;
eyenlng cl~uu. Uo&amp;.1IN.&#13;
I") Chevr.1 Beillir In very 900d medl.&#13;
EAR.NTOP MONEY! Pll"lime promollnl cond.• phone ..n·t740.&#13;
s.tuoent tr.Yel. C.1l or write (include your&#13;
telepl'tone numberl. VAGABOND TOUR.S,&#13;
Box S-49.EVllns."1on.Ill. ~ (311131-.0110.&#13;
HaVing protHems W,ltI .ccovntln,? e.lI SSl.&#13;
,.., ~lt..,. S. lnvtpenslye tulorin, lIIvlIi'.ble&#13;
photo by Allen Frederickson&#13;
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL cartoonist Bill Sanders, below, was at&#13;
Parkside last Wednesday evening. Before he left he drew the above&#13;
cartoon in the Whiteskeller.&#13;
photo by Allen Frederickson&#13;
We get·&#13;
letters&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
The United Farm Workers are&#13;
engaged in a critical struggle on&#13;
the West Coast. The Team&#13;
are attempting by a variety of&#13;
devices to muscle Cesar Chavez&#13;
out of the migrant labor picture.&#13;
Responsible union leaders across&#13;
the country have been appalled at&#13;
the way in which the growers and&#13;
the Teamsters have worked in&#13;
collusion against the- field&#13;
laborers' best interests.&#13;
It would help the United Farm&#13;
Workers cause if pressure could&#13;
be applied to Gallo Wine&#13;
products. This corporation has&#13;
repeatedly rejected the idea of&#13;
free union elections. It is siding&#13;
with the Teamsters against the&#13;
workers Chavez represents.&#13;
I appeal to you and your&#13;
readers to boycott Gallo Wines as&#13;
well as non-union lettuce and&#13;
grapes. We must make the Gallo&#13;
Corporation aware of consumer&#13;
resistance to their labor policies.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
on request. Thank you for giving&#13;
this matter your support.&#13;
Ernest T. Campbell, Chairman&#13;
ew York Interfaith Committee&#13;
To Aid Migrant Farmworkers&#13;
490 Riverside Drive&#13;
New York, New York 10027&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a world where issues have&#13;
faded, apathy a way of life, and&#13;
the "love" of the sixties a&#13;
memory, there still remain&#13;
important trials in the human&#13;
battle for equality. The family of&#13;
man is still divided by its most&#13;
fatal disease, racism. Strong&#13;
voices survive in man's centers&#13;
of learning where their sole&#13;
purpose is to unite us. And now&#13;
one of these voices is being&#13;
destroyed at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in Madison.&#13;
The University is going to close&#13;
down the Afro-American and&#13;
Native-American centers on the&#13;
Madison campus. It is a decision&#13;
fatal to the cultural growth of the&#13;
campus' minority students. A&#13;
decision that also damages the&#13;
white students' chances of ever&#13;
really learning about his black&#13;
and brown brothers and sisters.&#13;
The centers have offered all&#13;
students a learning opportunity&#13;
new in this country. Black, brown&#13;
and ative-American tudies are&#13;
an important part of America&#13;
and should be taught on campus&#13;
and off. The void in America 's&#13;
background concerning its understanding&#13;
of its minorities is&#13;
shamefully large. With aids like&#13;
the two 1adison centers that void&#13;
is only now beginning to close.&#13;
I want to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the peoples whose&#13;
cultures have been so neglected .I&#13;
by history. I want to learn from&#13;
the people who took pride in&#13;
studying and researching their&#13;
ethnic backgrounds, from people&#13;
who will be proud to teach it,&#13;
reaching from the past, the&#13;
present and most important,&#13;
looking proudly towards the&#13;
future . There is much to be&#13;
learned from the excited&#13;
minority leaders in their effort to&#13;
build their proper spot in a&#13;
resistant society. I say close not&#13;
the existing center, create new&#13;
ones. I hope Parkside students&#13;
sharing this opinion \\ill register&#13;
their disapproval with the&#13;
Regents' decision by writing to&#13;
Regent Edward Hales at 440&#13;
Main Street in Racine. Show your&#13;
support now before there is&#13;
nothing left to support.&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
Parkside graduate. Racine&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The, lovement" i a regular feat&#13;
deal ith women and the tatu or women at Par&#13;
in hi tory. Gue t writers are in ited.&#13;
• _ by Barb Han on&#13;
Why Bobby Riggs Doesn't Matter&#13;
Du to th Thur dn noon deadline for "The , lovem nt·· column,&#13;
thi article wa wTitt~ prior to the match on Thur da night.&#13;
The tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Rigg. ha&#13;
attracted an amazing amount of attention from the American pu lie.&#13;
Families have divided allegiances, lovers break up rath r than wit h&#13;
loyalties, and best friends are friendly no more beca of the . pectacular&#13;
$100,000 winner-take-all match. What i behind all thi c mmotion?&#13;
What convinced ABC to pay $750 000 for th TV righ , and&#13;
why did CBS get so mad that they dragged ABC and the match&#13;
promoters to court in an effort to get the rights for them elve ? Why i&#13;
the country so excited?&#13;
Much of the interest can probably be attributed to Rig ·' r putallon&#13;
as the foremost hustler in the U S today. Rigg is a c n ummate&#13;
showman and has been exploiting the "Lib v . Lob: T Battle of the&#13;
Sexes" angle for all that he can. To drum up interest in the match,&#13;
Riggs has been making statements that no sane human being would&#13;
ever make, like "A woman belongs in two plac , the bedroom and the&#13;
kitchen, in that order," and "The best way to handle women i to k p&#13;
them barefoot and pregnant," and " I plan to bomb Billie Jean King in&#13;
the match and set back the Women's Lib Movement about another 20&#13;
years." As if this match could slow down the Lib mo ement in tenni&#13;
or in general! -&#13;
Two camps have developed out of Rigg ' vulgar noi making:&#13;
those who see Riggs as an obnoxious ass who needs hi ears pinned&#13;
back by the greatest woman player on the circuit, and those poor&#13;
misguided fools who see Riggs as the man of the hour. their hope to t&#13;
all the "uppity women" on their collective cans.&#13;
The primary objection I have about thi match i thi mi gwded&#13;
emphasis on it being THE "Battle of the Sexes." King has don more&#13;
for the women's tennis circuit than any other pers-0n but he doe nol&#13;
typify the movement in its entirety, nor d ever woman id ntify&#13;
with her. Rigg has made a lot of noi e about his fan clu but he i&#13;
hardly every man's hero. The real "Battle of the Sex " i in&#13;
fought every day by average people who believe in equality ve , u&#13;
average people who believe in the oppre ion of women. But neith r&#13;
ide i being offered $100,000 to ha sle it out in the real world.&#13;
Even accepting the a sumption that a tenni match could pr ·&#13;
omething about the relative tatu of m n and women, thi match&#13;
never could . King i a uperb athlete who happens to be 26 y ars&#13;
younger than her duck-footed opponent. If King in , igg · . up&#13;
porters will try to dimini h her victory by pointing out Ri ' ob iou.&#13;
phy ical di abilitie and challenge King to play a top male play r n r&#13;
her own age King will do no uch thing, of cou e, a n ilh r ·h n r&#13;
any of the oth r top women play r · claim to have th phy ical w r&#13;
to play the top men. If King hould lose, no one i going to point to&#13;
Rigg · terrible record in the mor . Ien' ~ircuit or xpect him to play&#13;
Pancho Gonzales, who recently turned nior. Kin a h i pl )in&#13;
for the honor of the women's circuit &lt; omebody h to, aft r Ri!U(&#13;
creamed :'llargaret Court in the 1 lother' Day !\ta acr &gt; and th t th&#13;
money wa ec ndary. Rigg makes no ecr t of hi primary int r t,&#13;
hi ego and hi wallet. , o matter who wins, the worn n' circuit will&#13;
continue growing, Kmg will k p winning, Rigg will k p h tling,&#13;
and women everywhere will continue fighting fo th 1r equal pla .&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
Creative wr iters, photographer,, and&#13;
other ,ntere-stt'd p,e,ople- u• 1nvititd to 101n the&#13;
Pnks,de yearbook slalf.&#13;
Tht next meetong of !he staff will be&#13;
Friday mom,n • 10 a .m., ,n 0174 LLC.&#13;
Men ,ind -,omen students : P-11rt-time mventory&#13;
work, fle:x,ble hours, S.2.00 per hour&#13;
to start. Call 1--241-4401. General Busineu&#13;
Services. Milwau.ktt.&#13;
Typing of all k,nds done ,n my home.&#13;
E•penenced. Call Nancy, '32-2667.&#13;
FOR SALE : PICKET FENCE 211&gt; fttl long&#13;
,n 3 ~ments including a gale ; 52 slandanl&#13;
p,ckeh, each 42 ' x 2s,•.t x i ,.". pa,nted&#13;
black. Sll. 6~-3'14.&#13;
EARN TOP M0l'iEY! Part lime promol,ng&#13;
sludent travel. Call or wnle ( ,nclude your&#13;
telephone number): VAGAB0N0 TOURS,&#13;
Box 5-49, Evanston, HI. ~CM ( 312):llMllO.&#13;
Reward of ss.oo for small black pur" 10.1&#13;
Sep!. 17 on the third floor of the library.&#13;
Conta,ns keys and wallet Call Lynn at 452·&#13;
9771. No questions asked&#13;
Wanted : Student with car to pick me up al&#13;
llad9tr Bus S!atlon in MilwaukH evuy&#13;
TueS&lt;lay and Thunday at 9 a m. and relum&#13;
ilt 4 p.m . Contact Mrs. Gros•cJos.e, -collttt, at&#13;
-clison 60t-133-7oot. Will pay well.&#13;
For ult: s-. Motorola, small b"1&#13;
adequate for small apartment. Two&#13;
spukus also. BSR Mc0onald HOO&#13;
automatic tumt;able, s1oa complete. Phone&#13;
654...as,. ,f no answer call again later.&#13;
Pa~ not1ri1ed on !he spol. SN Mn. lltlty&#13;
Briggs. llus,ness Management maior,&#13;
even1n51 clauu. 6l4-1'U.&#13;
190 Chevrolet Belair ,n very good mech&#13;
com1 . phone 6ll-t740.&#13;
Havin51 problems w,th accounhng? Call u2. 9462 after s, lnexpensin lutoring ava1l1blt. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Film Society •&#13;
IS&#13;
back •&#13;
In business&#13;
b" Re c:a Ecklund&#13;
The Parks"ie Film Society ;ill&#13;
r ive runcbng for Its first&#13;
tor flIm sen • the result&#13;
01 mpus Conc,,", Committ&#13;
.. m tng on Tuesd.y Sept&#13;
18&#13;
Library plans&#13;
given final approval until •&#13;
telephone ballot was taken of&#13;
missing members.&#13;
nanimous approval was given '0 the proposal by the members&#13;
who "ere present.t the meeting.&#13;
and the telephone voting of&#13;
mi ing f.cuIty proved positive&#13;
also. tece the student members&#13;
could not be located to vote, CCC&#13;
chatrperson Marion Iochon&#13;
con ulted with student government&#13;
members on campus in&#13;
order to get some student input.&#13;
Student government .pproved&#13;
the idea; the S600will be made&#13;
,mmed,.tely available for Film&#13;
ety use.&#13;
second semester films are to be&#13;
funded exclusively from first&#13;
semester revenues, since the&#13;
Committee stated that no further&#13;
money would be allotted to the&#13;
Film Scciery this year.&#13;
research instruction&#13;
b~ K8lhry n \\ enner&#13;
Th I~br.ry is getting mvolved&#13;
,ccordlng to Carl. toffle,&#13;
eerer nee librarian, the library&#13;
tall has pl.nned • 501of goals&#13;
nd ob1&lt;"ti'es, .nd. strategy to&#13;
Impl ment them&#13;
1bC l: 0 major goets are to&#13;
m.ke r.culty. students, staU •• nd&#13;
communIty .... are of .. hat the&#13;
LIbrary ha , and .. hat It can do&#13;
lor them, and to increase skill&#13;
and If·&lt;u!liciency in the use of&#13;
the LIbrary&#13;
Some general obJOCti'es are to&#13;
Increa'te a~ arene s of the&#13;
Ubran" 8 an education {intruCl1~na)).&#13;
~ahonal (nonIn&#13;
trudlonan, and cultural&#13;
facIlity, prepare Llbr.ry patrons&#13;
to find .nd use library materials&#13;
and faclhtH:; reinforce or&#13;
prev Ide upplementary intrueuon&#13;
In research methods;&#13;
nd to brmg .ttent,on to specific&#13;
matenal • n~ items, and new&#13;
seJ"\ I .,,·allabJe In the Library.&#13;
peeinc objeCO"'es are broken&#13;
do .. n f1"'t, 1»' patron category&#13;
and econd. by library&#13;
sop/Ii hcat,on 100'el ithin each&#13;
cat or;&#13;
ObJ clive number one in&#13;
hbrary ""phlSticat,on Level One&#13;
IS to acquaint Inter-ested students&#13;
'" the phy lcal layoot .nd&#13;
r.editi of the LIbrary. so they&#13;
can I te such thtn as the book&#13;
lack. magazines, microfilm&#13;
matenal • gO"'ernment&#13;
pubhcation • card catalog, and&#13;
r t rooms&#13;
The. nd objOctJve IS to&#13;
"quaint students with some of&#13;
lh H1"V1 .,. .. ilable for their&#13;
.... Interhbrary Loan, displ.ys,&#13;
pholoduphcation. Bitch Tickets,&#13;
nd pee,.1 cultural programs&#13;
re a fe"4 x8mpl ,&#13;
AI ~ I Two, students tn&#13;
m.ng I ..el courses learn&#13;
how to develop search trategles&#13;
on thesr Information needs,&#13;
use the card catalog, use the LC&#13;
Sob) I n .. ding LI t. use the&#13;
lonthl at.log to locate&#13;
10\, mm n1 pubbcations, use the&#13;
Rf&gt;ldtr· Guide and similar&#13;
pubhcation, .nd to cIte and&#13;
evaluate sources of inform.tion&#13;
used for. """earch paper.&#13;
U'vel Three is desIgned ror&#13;
tudents enrolled In research or&#13;
bibliography oriented courses on&#13;
an upper drviston level. At this&#13;
level. students learn the types of&#13;
soon:.. : guides to the literature.&#13;
reviews of the literature, abstracts&#13;
and digests,&#13;
bibliographies and indexes.&#13;
dictionaries, encyclopedias,&#13;
directories, government&#13;
publications. atlases, handbooks,&#13;
yearbooks, manuals, and&#13;
penodsca Is.&#13;
Also included on Level Three&#13;
are the principles of a good&#13;
bibliography, specialized&#13;
..&#13;
photo by Jim Ruflalo&#13;
Cyclists celebrate the end or the road. This was the scene at the finish of the Ragtime Rangers-PAB&#13;
Bike Ra1lye last Sunday.&#13;
techniques for locating major&#13;
research materials, search&#13;
techniques for preparing&#13;
bibliographies, speeches, and&#13;
research papers. and the skills&#13;
necessary to use bibliographic&#13;
sources.&#13;
Teaching students in upper&#13;
division courses with library&#13;
related assignments and searcn&#13;
strategy necessary to complete&#13;
the course and the skills&#13;
necessary to use the specific tools&#13;
which apply to the assignment is&#13;
covered in Level Four.&#13;
Half·Price&#13;
Milled Drinks&#13;
6 P,M. - MIDNICHT&#13;
THURSDA~ NICHTS WITH P.U. I.D.&#13;
1~ Beers&#13;
~&#13;
RANGER needs&#13;
SPORTS writers&#13;
+ WATER BEDS&#13;
+RECORDS&#13;
+TAPES&#13;
This Semester&#13;
NtV4 olL-- lle elbt&#13;
~luttt ~boppt&#13;
10 A.M. - 4 P.M. LLC LOWER MAIN&#13;
DAILY PLACE (east)&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Film Society is&#13;
c in business&#13;
gwen final app-o\'al until a&#13;
tel phone ballot was taken of&#13;
missmg members.&#13;
nanimous appro\·al wa given&#13;
to th proposal b) the members&#13;
·who \\ re Jr sent at the meeting.&#13;
and the telephon voting of&#13;
mi ing faculty proved po itive&#13;
. ince the student members&#13;
could not be located to vote, CCC&#13;
chairper on Marion !ochon&#13;
con lted \\;th tudent government&#13;
members on campus in&#13;
ord to g t some tudent input.&#13;
udent go, ernment approved&#13;
th id ; the ·u be made&#13;
immediately a,·adable for Film • Y use. d sem ter film are to be&#13;
funded u ivelv from first&#13;
ter revenu · . ince the&#13;
mmitt tated that no further&#13;
money would be allotted to the&#13;
Film ·ety thi year.&#13;
photo by Jim -Ruffalo&#13;
brary p'lans&#13;
esearch instruction&#13;
~·cli t celebrate the end of the road. This was the scene at the finish of the Ragtime Rangers-PAB&#13;
Bike Rallye last Sunday.&#13;
&amp;h n \\elln r bibliography oriented course on&#13;
n upper divi ·ion level. At thi&#13;
level, . tudents learn the types of&#13;
sou : guide· to the literature,&#13;
r ,·i " of the literature. abtract&#13;
and dige ts,&#13;
b1blio raphie and indexes.&#13;
dictionarie , encyclopedia ,&#13;
d ire c tories government&#13;
publication • aUa es, handbook ,&#13;
vearbook , manuals, and&#13;
penodicals.&#13;
Also induded on Level Three&#13;
are the principles of a good&#13;
bibliography, specialized&#13;
techniques for locating major&#13;
re earch materials, search&#13;
techniques for preparing&#13;
bibliographies, speeches, and&#13;
research papers, and the skills&#13;
necessary to use bibliographic&#13;
sources.&#13;
Teaching tudents in upper&#13;
division courses with library&#13;
related assignments and searcn&#13;
strategy necessary to complete&#13;
the course and the skills&#13;
necessary to use the specific tools&#13;
which apply to the assignment is&#13;
covered in Level Four.&#13;
306 Doclge Street&#13;
OLD TOWN RACINE&#13;
1~ Beers Half-Price&#13;
Mixed Drinks&#13;
6 P.M. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
THURSDAY NIGHTS WITH P.U. 1.D.&#13;
.&#13;
RANGER needs&#13;
SPORTS. writers&#13;
t WATER BEDS&#13;
t PIPES, PAPERS&#13;
tRECORDS&#13;
tTAPES &#13;
Review&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Par~side'~ Learni~g Center, located in LLC D175,is an audio-visual&#13;
paradise of information and entertainment. The material found there&#13;
can serve as an invaluable supplement to research projects or can be a&#13;
primary sO,uTce of ,information in itself. There are also study and&#13;
practice aids available. But besides providing some excellent&#13;
reso~rce ~aterial, the Learnin,g Center offers a great variety of&#13;
movles~ videotapes, cassettes, film strips, records, and so on which&#13;
entertain.&#13;
The Mime of Marcel Marceau is a film both entertaining and in.&#13;
formative. The scenes alternate between Marceau's school of mime&#13;
and one of his live stage. performances. The classroom scenes reveal&#13;
how rigorously and exactly each movement of face, body and hands is&#13;
analysed, practiced, and perfected. Every muscle in the body&#13;
becomes a tool for creating illusion in pantomime.&#13;
Marceau on stage, his face a mask of white accented in black at&#13;
brows, eyes, and mouth, leads his audience into another world where&#13;
illusion becomes reality and reality illusion. Marceau is a white figure&#13;
alone on the stage, surrounded by total darkness: a lonely every-man&#13;
trapped in a hostile world. His mimed characterizations portray the&#13;
technocracized man, battling indifferent machines in a seemingly&#13;
indifferent world. Striving to conquer his environment, every-man&#13;
becomes funny, ridiculous, and sad. Then he discovers beauty in his&#13;
little world: a bird in flight or a flower opening. These moments of&#13;
beauty seem to expand his small piece of darkness into the universe,&#13;
reducing the frustrations of man's machine world to nothing.&#13;
The classroom exercises being practiced by Marceau's students are&#13;
brought to life by the mime master in his portrayal of man the&#13;
machine battler, man the clown, and man the vision of God. Although&#13;
the exercises are highly structured, stylized, and repetitious, they also&#13;
lake on other-world quality, simply because of their style and&#13;
repetition.&#13;
The film is fun, interesting, and very poetic in quality. It's worth&#13;
dropping by the Learning Center to see it sometime.&#13;
L.&amp;FA sponsor mimisf&#13;
Wed,. Sept. 26. 1973THE PARKS/DE RANGER 5&#13;
Harry Chapin&#13;
Chapin in concert here&#13;
Harry Chapin, Grammy&#13;
finalist as best new artist of 1972-&#13;
73, will perform in concert at&#13;
Parkside Sunday, Sept. 30 at 8&#13;
p.m., in the Physical Education&#13;
BUilding.&#13;
Chapin, whose storytelling&#13;
style and poetic lyrics are most&#13;
frequently compared by critics to&#13;
early Bob Dylan, has seen his&#13;
popular appeal begin to catch up&#13;
with his critical acclaim since the&#13;
release of his second album,&#13;
"Sniper and Other Love Songs,"&#13;
about a year ago.&#13;
T. Daniel&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Mimist-rnagician, T. Daniel, is&#13;
presenting two free public performances&#13;
here Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 26, under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts Comrmttee.&#13;
Daniel, who studied und~r&#13;
Marcel Marceau at the master s&#13;
Ecole Internationale de Mime in&#13;
Paris, will conduct a workshop at&#13;
2 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Studio Theater just east oC the&#13;
main theater and also will perform&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Theater.&#13;
Before turning his attentions to&#13;
Mime, Daniel was a student of all&#13;
phases of theatre, directing and&#13;
acting in numerous plays as well&#13;
as designing for the theatre.&#13;
While attending Illinois State&#13;
University, he broadened his&#13;
knowledge of performing by&#13;
working with the University's&#13;
Gamma Phi Circus as a Juggler,&#13;
Tightwire Artist and solo&#13;
Unicyclist.&#13;
Also skilled in ventriloquy and&#13;
"escapology," Daniel offers a&#13;
unique style, incorporating the&#13;
mystery oC magic and the Cun of a&#13;
Circus Clown with the beauty of&#13;
~is poenc art. Beginning with a&#13;
collage of Mime techniques,&#13;
Daniel and his audience experience&#13;
laughter, sadness, fun,&#13;
excitement, and the use of the&#13;
imagination until the program is&#13;
brought to a very clever and&#13;
unusual end.&#13;
He has appeared at coUeges&#13;
and clubs throughout the country&#13;
and on television, and was a&#13;
member of the Ctucago Masquers&#13;
renaissance theatre group.&#13;
Since then, he has appeared&#13;
several times on the Tonight&#13;
Show, hosted Midnight Special.&#13;
and has been drawing large&#13;
audiences at club and college&#13;
concert dates.&#13;
Earlier this year he was one of&#13;
the five finalists for a Grammy&#13;
Award as Best New Artist and&#13;
received a Billboard 1973&#13;
Trendsetter Award for "devising&#13;
a storyteUing style of songwriting&#13;
with a narrative impact rare to&#13;
popular music."&#13;
Music critics have given&#13;
Chapin generous praise: Variety&#13;
said "Chapin's story songs are&#13;
among the most original of&#13;
contemporary compositions ...his&#13;
performance of them is electrifying"&#13;
RoUing Stone said "He&#13;
takes the audience up, down and&#13;
then suddenly up again, often&#13;
leaving wet. eyes and aching&#13;
hearts throughout the room"&#13;
Cash Box caUed Chapin "a&#13;
completely original, clearsighted&#13;
talent of major proportion."&#13;
a.apin's first album, "Heads&#13;
and Tales," contained the hit&#13;
single "Taxi" and established&#13;
him as an emerging talent. His&#13;
second, "Sniper and Other Love&#13;
Songs," established his validity&#13;
as a potential pop music&#13;
superstar and initiated the&#13;
honors which have come his way&#13;
this year, His third album is&#13;
scheduled for OCtober release.&#13;
Although Chapin uses drums&#13;
and piano on his records, his inperson&#13;
backing consists of three&#13;
musicians who ha ve been with&#13;
him since the group fonned in&#13;
t970: Tim SCott on cello, John&#13;
Wallace on bass, and Ron Palm""&#13;
on lead guitar.&#13;
Chapm has been a music&#13;
performer, on and off, for abc&#13;
15 years, including stints with '&#13;
brothers and father. He has I&#13;
worked in the film-makin,&#13;
dustry, producillll a docum,&#13;
tary, "Legendary Ouunplona&#13;
which won an Academy AW8I&#13;
nomination in addition to fib&#13;
festival awards ID New York an&#13;
Atlanta.&#13;
General admission prices COl&#13;
the concert are $3 in advance and&#13;
$3.50 at the door. Student prices&#13;
are $2.50 in advance and $3 at the&#13;
door. Advance tickets 8rtavailable&#13;
at One Sweet Dreaf!'"&#13;
and J&amp;J Tape in Kenosha, JI&#13;
Tape, Brandt's, and Beauti&#13;
Day in Racine, 1812 Overture&#13;
Milwaukee, and J&amp;J&#13;
WaUkegan. Students can oblE&#13;
tickets at the lnformation ,..~&#13;
ID 'laID Place, LLC&#13;
~~iiIIIo!:~~ 3 ~~&#13;
Chef~'&#13;
10% OFF ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
J $100&#13;
,&#13;
lOR MORE WITH PARKS IDE ID.&#13;
~ ENDS&#13;
Jj OCTOBER 31&#13;
, AT 'j 3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
f&#13;
AND&#13;
,! 6926 39th AVENUE&#13;
,.....·s~~toO&#13;
•&#13;
Review&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Par~side'~ Learni~g Center, located in LLC D175, is an audiirvisual&#13;
paradise of mformation and entertainment. The material found there&#13;
can serve as an invaluable supplement to research projects or can be a&#13;
pnm~ry so.urce of .information in itself. There are also study and&#13;
practice aids available. But besides providing some excellent&#13;
reso1;1rce ~aterial, the Learnin.g Center offers a great variety of&#13;
movies, videotapes, cassettes, film strips, records, and so on which entertain. -&#13;
The Mime of Marcel Marceau is a film both entertaining and informative.&#13;
The scenes alternate between Marceau's school of mime&#13;
and one of his live stage performances. The classroom scenes reveal&#13;
how rigorously and exactly each movement of face, body and hands is&#13;
analysed, practiced, and perfected. Every muscle in the body&#13;
becomes a tool for creating illusion in pantomime.&#13;
Marceau on stage, his face a mask of white accented in black at&#13;
brows, eyes, and mouth, leads his audience into another world where&#13;
illusion becomes reality and reality illusion. Marceau is a white figure alone on the stage, surrounded by total darkness: a lonely every-man&#13;
trapped in a hostile world. His mimed characterizations portray the&#13;
technocracized man, battling indifferent machines in a seemingly&#13;
indifferent world. Striving to conquer his environment, every-man&#13;
becomes funny, ridiculous, and sad. Then he discovers beauty in his&#13;
little world: a bird in flight or a flower opening. These moments of&#13;
beauty seem to expand his small piece of darkness into the universe,&#13;
reducing the frustrations of man's machine world to nothing. The classroom exercises being practiced by Marceau's students are&#13;
brought to life by the mime master in his portrayal of man the&#13;
machine battler, man the clown, and man the vision of God. Although&#13;
the exercises are highly structured, stylized, and repetitious, they also&#13;
take on other-world quality, simply because of their style and&#13;
repetition.&#13;
The film is fun, interesting, and very poetic in quality. It's worth&#13;
dropping by the Learning Center to see it som!ltime.&#13;
Chapin&#13;
Harry Chapin. Grammy&#13;
finalist as best new artist of 1972-&#13;
73. will perform in concert at&#13;
Parkside Sunday, Sept. 30 at 8&#13;
p.m., in the Physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
Chapin. whose storytelling&#13;
style and poetic lyrics are most&#13;
frequently compared by critics to&#13;
early Bob Dylan, has seen his&#13;
popular appeal begin to catch up&#13;
with his critical acclaim since the&#13;
release of his second album,&#13;
"Sniper and Other Love Songs," about a year ago.&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
H rr.) Chapin&#13;
in concert here&#13;
Since then. he has appeared&#13;
several times on the Tonight&#13;
Show. ho ted 1idnight Special.&#13;
and ha been drawing large&#13;
audiences at club and colleg&#13;
concert dates. Earlier this year he wa one of&#13;
the five finalists for a Grammy Award as Best • 'ew Artist and&#13;
received a Billboard 1973&#13;
Trendsetter Award for "devising&#13;
a storytelling style of song,wTiting&#13;
with a narrative impact rare to&#13;
popular music.''&#13;
l&amp;FA sponsor ~irnist&#13;
.fosic critics have given&#13;
Chapin generous praise: Variety said "Chapin 's story songs are&#13;
among the most original of&#13;
contemporary compositions ... his&#13;
performance of them is electrifying."&#13;
Rolling Stone said ''He&#13;
takes the audience up. do\\o-n and&#13;
then suddenly up again, often&#13;
lea\ing wet eye and aching&#13;
heart throughout the room"&#13;
Ca h Bo called Chapin "a&#13;
completely original , clearby&#13;
Michael Olszyk&#13;
Mimist-magician, T. Daniel, is&#13;
presenting two free public performances&#13;
here Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 26, under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Daniel, who studied und~r&#13;
Marcel Marceau at the master s&#13;
Ecole Internationale de Mime in&#13;
Paris, will conduct a workshop at&#13;
2 p.m. in the CommlD'lication Arts&#13;
Studio Theater just east of the&#13;
main theater and also will per- form at B p.m. in the Theater.&#13;
Before turning his attentions to&#13;
T. Daniel&#13;
Mime, Daniel was a student of all&#13;
phases of theatre, directing and&#13;
acting in nwnerous plays as well&#13;
as designing for the theatre.&#13;
While attending Illinois State&#13;
University, he broadened his&#13;
knowledge of performing by working with the University's Gamma Phi Circus as a Juggler,&#13;
Tightwire Artist and solo&#13;
Unicyclist.&#13;
Also skilled in ventriloquy and&#13;
"escapology," Daniel offers a&#13;
lD'lique style, incorporating the&#13;
mystery of magic and the fun of a&#13;
Circus Clo\\rn with the beauty of&#13;
t,is poetic art. Beginning with a&#13;
collage of • time techniques, Daniel and his audience experience&#13;
laughter, sadness, flD'l,&#13;
excitement, and the use of the&#13;
imagination until the program is&#13;
brought to a very clever and&#13;
unusual end.&#13;
He has appeared at colleges&#13;
and clubs throughout the country and on television, and was a&#13;
member of the Chicago Masquers&#13;
renaissance theatre group.&#13;
ighted talent of major propor·&#13;
tion."&#13;
Cliapin's first album, " H ad&#13;
and Tale ," contained the hit&#13;
ingle ' Taxi' ' and e tablished&#13;
him a an emer m talent. Hi&#13;
nd, " niper and Other Love&#13;
ng ," est bli hed his validity&#13;
a potential pop mu ic&#13;
l % OF&#13;
AT&#13;
3400 SHERIDA ROAD&#13;
AND&#13;
6926 39th AVE1 UE&#13;
?~ &#13;
10 THE PARKS1DE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
PAS presents&#13;
movie IIJoe"&#13;
"Joe" IS ~ me Ii,.,,,&#13;
m_ plctur to deal with the&#13;
unrut and Itlestyle 01 conI&#13;
mporary middle merica,&#13;
Pro&lt;Med by David Gil and&#13;
dlr ed by Jolin Avildsen, the&#13;
mm tello th ollen touching,&#13;
Ir~t1y amusing lOrY 01 two&#13;
Wldel, CClIlIra ung hgur • Joe&#13;
urran (Peter Boyle),&#13;
ho_. bowler, and World&#13;
War D \'deran who eams 1\fIO a&#13;
" nd BIU Compton (DennIS&#13;
PatrICk), a , a·year ad·&#13;
v rl nil ullve. De pole thelT&#13;
ontr lin d grees of&#13;
phlsllcation, they are drawn&#13;
her b)' a common dl lr\lS1&#13;
d vy 01 youth ..... ben Bill's&#13;
d u nter, !elt a rsu an&#13;
randon). becom enmeshed in&#13;
an East Village environment of&#13;
drugs. Bill and Joe lash back with&#13;
a vengeance that is a timely and&#13;
stunning commentary on the&#13;
ceasequences 01 radical violence&#13;
in America.&#13;
PeoPle well may credit the&#13;
makers of "Joe" for having made&#13;
a prophetic liIm. Actually,&#13;
orman Wexler wrote his&#13;
original screenplay nearly two&#13;
years ago. lOtending only to&#13;
e-eate a lanlasy whicb dealt with&#13;
the ramifications of the&#13;
genera'ion and polilical gaps that&#13;
trouble our country·&#13;
Parltside Activi'ies Board is&#13;
ponsoringa showing 01 "Joe" on&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
10 GreenqUl , 103. The admission&#13;
charge is 75 cents.&#13;
Regents&#13;
PUBLIC SERVICE MESSAGE&#13;
The Ci,y 01 Racine needs parttime&#13;
crossing guards 10 relieve&#13;
lull-time guards. Tbis is a paid&#13;
position. Interested persons&#13;
should contact Capt. James&#13;
Jerdee a' the safety Bldg.,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
OK new&#13;
physical&#13;
plant&#13;
Illda lor construction 01 a&#13;
physic a' planl building a'&#13;
ParUtda are expeeled to be&#13;
takftJ m ·O\'e.I1lbe.r and contracts&#13;
ign«I in January, it was&#13;
announced la t Tuesday.&#13;
James GalbraIth, director 01&#13;
P\anrung and Construction, said&#13;
that budget and concept lor the&#13;
1521,000 laciltl)'. which wtll&#13;
pro"de lor centralization 01 all&#13;
phy lcal planl operations under&#13;
one rool. has been approved by&#13;
th UW ystern Board 01 Regents&#13;
and IS expected to clear the Stale&#13;
BUIldIng Comml sion soon&#13;
Construellon should begin early&#13;
nelll year, with occupancy in&#13;
early t975.&#13;
The one-storY strUCture, whIch&#13;
,,1lI be located east 01the central&#13;
H ung and Chilling Plant, ...-ilI&#13;
pro"de 19.975gross square leet&#13;
of space for neet maintenance&#13;
and garage laeiliUes, campus&#13;
torege. mainlenance shop areas&#13;
lor groundsk88PlOg. carpentry,&#13;
IOCDIlllth painting. plumblllll.&#13;
electrical and mechanical&#13;
operauon , and staff o/hoes.&#13;
GalbraIth wd the centralized&#13;
latillty ill result in substantial&#13;
vinIJ In electrical energy and&#13;
fu I and increase work ef·&#13;
fiClenc)', sm~ variOUS physical&#13;
plant operations are now scat-&#13;
'ered 10 lormer residences on&#13;
campus "hich are ill-designed&#13;
and lOac!eqUate lor SllCh luneUOOS&#13;
The 1:I2t. project COOlincludes&#13;
buUdlng. Ite developmenl&#13;
and uuhti costs, as well as&#13;
m abl equipment and variOUS&#13;
contingency and architeclural&#13;
f GalbraIth said the "el·&#13;
haeney" 01 the buildlng, a&#13;
panson 01 gro area 10&#13;
... ble area, is lugh, about 90&#13;
percent, and the conslruction&#13;
coat 01 slIghtly less than 117 per&#13;
quare (001. was "very&#13;
eeonomtcal In splle of innationary&#13;
trends" Economical&#13;
pre-engineered modular struclure&#13;
components ;U be used in&#13;
con trUCtlon ArchitectW'al slyle&#13;
oIth bUlhllng ",II be consistenl&#13;
'&lt;lth oth on tbe campus.&#13;
photo by Allen FrederlcklOn&#13;
A RANGER reader! A student takes time to relax and keep informed.&#13;
SAB under student&#13;
management&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
lanagement 01 the Student&#13;
Activities Building is under an&#13;
experimental setup this year with&#13;
students holding posts previously&#13;
occupied by stafl members. The&#13;
change was necessitated due to&#13;
financial cutbacks, but also with&#13;
the realization that students&#13;
should and can handle some 01&#13;
the responsibilities 01 nmning the&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Four students replace the two&#13;
starr supervisors, that formerly&#13;
ran the building, and are&#13;
responsible lor e"erything that&#13;
goes on to the Activities building,&#13;
Some 01 their duties include:&#13;
security 01 the building,&#13;
managing cash now, scheduling&#13;
in the building. and super.vising&#13;
other student employees. The&#13;
student supervisors also make&#13;
recommendations on purchasing,&#13;
and the hiring of other student&#13;
employees. Itimately they are&#13;
responsible to Dave Bishop,&#13;
Coordinator of Auxillary Services,&#13;
though he would like to see&#13;
everyone working together as a "&#13;
team to run the building.&#13;
Having students in supervisory&#13;
positions is new at Parkside and&#13;
if it succeeds could lead to a&#13;
largely student nUl campus union&#13;
when it's finally completed.&#13;
Through this experiment it is&#13;
hoped that more students would&#13;
be encouraged to get involved in&#13;
some decision making processes&#13;
on campus.&#13;
TAPES&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
RECORDS STEREOS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
t9t9TAYLORAVE DE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DE rYNELSON&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
No" Appearing&#13;
9P l.totA.M.&#13;
URSDAY -FRIDAY - SATIJRDAY&#13;
MARINA ROOM&#13;
'Kerw;lISha"S kfiNi H~rbot N,t. Club"&#13;
"Taurus Rising"&#13;
s.pt 21. 29 &amp; lO&#13;
SIGHTLY E 'TERTAINMENT&#13;
In Our Cockt., LouOOf'&#13;
FNlunng&#13;
COLLEGENITE&#13;
evel'Y Thursday&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
5l2S6IhAve.&#13;
Overlooking the Harbor!&#13;
\\\\ ,etHng III,&#13;
,S\\\RTS 'Ie ,,\ ~"A~&#13;
PARKSIDE 'E,&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
- Coming Next:&#13;
RECORD SALE III&#13;
Bigger &amp; Better Than &amp;erl&#13;
. "&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
movie 11Joe''&#13;
nts&#13;
ne&#13;
lcal&#13;
an East Village en ironment of&#13;
&lt;rugs Bill and Joe lash back with&#13;
a vengeance that is a timely and&#13;
stunning commentary on the&#13;
consequences ol radical violence&#13;
m America.&#13;
People well may credit the&#13;
makers of •• Joe" for having made&#13;
a prophetic film . Actually,&#13;
orman We ler wrote his&#13;
original screenplay nearly two&#13;
years ago, intending only to&#13;
create a fantasy which dealt with&#13;
the ramification of the&#13;
generation and political gaps that&#13;
trouble our country.&#13;
Par ide Acti\ities Board is&#13;
ponsonng a shoOAing of " Joe" on&#13;
Wednesday. p( . 26 at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist 103. The admission&#13;
charge i 75 cents.&#13;
P BU VI E~E GE&#13;
The City of Racine needs parttime&#13;
crossmg guards to relieve&#13;
full-time guards, This is a paid&#13;
position. Interested persons&#13;
photo by Allen FreclerlcklOII&#13;
hould contact Capt . James&#13;
Jerdee at the Safety Bldg.,&#13;
Racine. A RANGER reader! A student takes time to relax and keep Informed.&#13;
&#13;
nt&#13;
campu .&#13;
SAB under student&#13;
management&#13;
b Tom Peursen&#13;
fanagement of the Student&#13;
Activities Building is under an&#13;
experimental setup this year with&#13;
tudent holding posts pre\i ously&#13;
occupied by taff members. The&#13;
change wa nece itated due to&#13;
financial cutbacks, but also 'Aith&#13;
the realization that students&#13;
·hould and can handle ome of&#13;
the re ponsibilitie of running the&#13;
tud nt Activitie Building.&#13;
Four tudents replace the two&#13;
taff supervisors, that formerly&#13;
ran the building, and are&#13;
respon ible for everything that&#13;
g on in the Activities building.&#13;
me of their duties include :&#13;
ecunty of the building,&#13;
managing ca h now, scheduling&#13;
10 the building. and uperyi ing&#13;
other student employees. The&#13;
student supervisors also make&#13;
recommendations on purchasing,&#13;
and the hiring of other student&#13;
employees. ltimately they are&#13;
re ponsible to Dave Bishop,&#13;
Coordinator of Auxiliary Ser-&#13;
\ices, though he would like to see&#13;
everyone working together as a .&#13;
team to run the building.&#13;
Having students in supervisory&#13;
positions is new at Parkside and&#13;
if it ucceeds could lead to a&#13;
largely student nm campus union&#13;
when it's finally completed.&#13;
Through this experiment it is&#13;
hoped that more students would&#13;
be encouraged to get involved in&#13;
some decision making processes&#13;
on campus.&#13;
RECORDS STEREOS TAPES&#13;
PIANOS ORGANS&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
IIKEURBA.·&#13;
DE. iY • ,ELS(),&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
. ·ow Appearing&#13;
IP .. lolA.M.&#13;
URSD \' - FRIDAY. 11JRDA y&#13;
In ""&#13;
MARL'AROOM&#13;
··Tauru Ri ing"&#13;
Seo v. 29 &amp; 10&#13;
In O..r Coe I I Lounge&#13;
Ffflur ng&#13;
COLLEGE NITE&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
1\oe,&amp;a,\ ~~&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
5125 6th Ave.&#13;
Overlook ing the Harbor!&#13;
\\6 getHng 1111&#13;
1.s\\\RTS D,-e&#13;
,.\ r,4JfJJ&#13;
PARKSIDE ll&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
, Coming Next:&#13;
RECORD $ALE Ill&#13;
Bigger &amp; Better Than Eier!&#13;
' .. &#13;
Ex-DJ&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
heads media production&#13;
Dave Campbell doing his thing.&#13;
by Micbael Olszyk&#13;
The amplified banging of an electrician, along&#13;
with the repeated ringing of a phone, interrupted&#13;
Dave Campbell from reading an article entitled,&#13;
"Audio Report by the Editors of Rolling Stone."&#13;
Campbell is the coordinator of Parkside's new&#13;
Media Production Facility, located on the main&#13;
floor of the unfinished Communications Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Here, students and faculty will be able to have&#13;
media produced in a form that will hopefully convey&#13;
information to their respective audiences. This&#13;
kaleidoscopic center is designed .to encompass&#13;
almost all areas of media, ranging from general&#13;
audio-visual productions to separate film, television&#13;
and sound creations.&#13;
A staff member, for example, wanting to arrange&#13;
a film strip from separate slides, would find a&#13;
drymount press helpful. Other useful items in the&#13;
AV section of the center include a copystand, 28&#13;
video-tape editors, various recording machines,&#13;
overhead projections. transparencies, and more.&#13;
Sandwiched in between the AV production room&#13;
and television studio is a small TV repair shop, for&#13;
closed-cireuit sets at Parkside. The studio itself will&#13;
house full-color video taping in the near future.&#13;
These facilities presenUy are occupied by cartons&#13;
of TVs and tape-marked floors, designating wbere&#13;
equipment will go once it arrives.&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Iponlorl&#13;
Troubador night&#13;
Troubador Night, the first of a&#13;
series of Parks ide Poetry&#13;
Forums, IS scheduled for&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 'EI at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The new theatre in the Comm.&#13;
Arts building will be open to all&#13;
students, guitarists and song&#13;
writers. The essence of poetry is&#13;
song and music; this is the theme&#13;
of Troubador Night. It is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Among students tuning up for&#13;
the festivities are classical&#13;
guitarist and bluesman Dave&#13;
Rogers,.and Clark Anderson who&#13;
will play along with Keith Herbrechtsmeier.&#13;
John Sieger, Bob&#13;
Fitzgerald, James Frere and&#13;
Charley will also be there. Bob&#13;
Canary of the Humanities&#13;
Division is preparing his melodic&#13;
tunes and stringing his guitar.&#13;
too.&#13;
Poetry Forum advisor, Andy&#13;
McLean, said that any student&#13;
who wants to play and-or sing will&#13;
be able to do so. Just truck right&#13;
in and join the fun. This is a&#13;
students' night in the theatre with&#13;
music. Come, stay, play or listen.&#13;
The next Poetry Forum will be&#13;
Oct. 4, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., in&#13;
the back of the third floor of the&#13;
Library. Students wishing to read&#13;
their poems should contact Carl&#13;
Lindner, assistant professor of&#13;
English, in CA218, ext. 2392.Here&#13;
ts a chance to share your poems&#13;
with others.&#13;
"The entire center should be in operation within&#13;
six months to a year," explained Campbell. "Right&#13;
now, however, only the AV portion is open."&#13;
Film production, with editing facilities, will be the&#13;
third area to open, following television. It plans to&#13;
specialize in 16 mm and 8 mm film.&#13;
Last, but not least, to become operational is the&#13;
audio section. Its control room, located between two&#13;
recording studios, hopes to have a 16 microphone&#13;
mixing system, resulting in Brack, quadraphonic&#13;
recording.&#13;
Setting up these facilities is one 01 two major&#13;
concerns of Campbell, who came to Parkside early&#13;
last May, following five years of experience in radio&#13;
and commercial television at Indiana State&#13;
University. When he arrived here, the Media&#13;
Facility had been three-fourths of the way built.&#13;
Unfortunately, several architectural errors had&#13;
been made.&#13;
Perhaps the most serious error is that the installation&#13;
of a lighting console for the (ilm room is in&#13;
one nf the recording studios. Also, the acoustics (or&#13;
audio production were designed to broadcast rather&#13;
than record.&#13;
Campbell mentioned otber flaws, too, such as the&#13;
AV room being without AC current and a badly&#13;
located testing screen in the dark room.&#13;
"Despite various errors in design," commented&#13;
Campbell, "The center is in a good location, acroos&#13;
Earn $$$ selling&#13;
ads for RANGER&#13;
PARKSfDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTS IN CONCERT&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
INFO. CENTER&#13;
Main etece-t.t,c&#13;
UWP STUDENTS&#13;
52.SO advance&#13;
$3.00 al doOr'&#13;
Sun., Sept. 30,&#13;
8:00&#13;
Phy. Ed. 8ldg. GEN. ADM.&#13;
$l.oo advance&#13;
Sl.SG at dOOr&#13;
(rom the art rooms and music department down the&#13;
hall ....&#13;
"Any well-working production (acUity mlat have&#13;
competentstalf members, whidll leel we have," be&#13;
added.&#13;
One of those five stalf members is Dale ~,&#13;
engineer. Before coming to Parkside, King worIted&#13;
on commercial television in Madison for 17 yean.&#13;
Sandy Thomason, who 15 in charge of AV&#13;
production, comes from Texas ,,'here she received&#13;
her master's in radio and lelevision at SOuthern&#13;
lethodist University. Thomason worked lor a While&#13;
on radio station WFAA io Dallas. She plans to train&#13;
students as assistants in running the AV center,&#13;
In charge of film production will be Mille Reid,&#13;
woo is also experienced in media.&#13;
Phil Quetsehke, assistant director of the Learning&#13;
Center, will help Campbell coordinate the&#13;
Production Center.&#13;
Campbell himself would like to instruct mterested&#13;
students in television work, such as cable nmners,&#13;
lighting, and so forth. .&#13;
Referring to his past, and as to why Campbell&#13;
chose to come to Parkside. he stated, "I have a way&#13;
of droppong into things. While m radio at IndIana I&#13;
was a hoss jock. Jay Anthony was my personaltty&#13;
name. During thal time (at five tauons) 1 found oul&#13;
how the hierarchy in broadcasting constantly mess&#13;
up._.They're really a bunch of neurotic money&#13;
mongers. That's all they're concerned with ."&#13;
"In commercial television it's even worse. One&#13;
weekend Iworked for ABC Wide World of Sports&#13;
They were the most incompetent people l.ver met&#13;
The show we did ran something like three mmut ..&#13;
over schedule, which costs around a quarter of a&#13;
million dollars in television.&#13;
"Fed up with commercialism, I decided 10 try&#13;
something different, more creative. 11m bavl.lNlfun&#13;
bere, which is basically what I strive fer in my life."&#13;
Cable television is one thing that Campbe\l hopes&#13;
to experiment with at Parbide. He would like to&#13;
produce half-hour to an hour programa weekly,&#13;
using a wide spectrum of Ideas from studenta, to IeI1&#13;
to cable stations.&#13;
"The implications of cable television ~ infinite,"&#13;
said Campbell.&#13;
Also, since Parkside was designed to worIr,cIoaeIy&#13;
with southeastern Wisconsin's business and inutry,&#13;
Campbell encourag .. outside organizati ....&#13;
to use the (Un.-making facilities for their ~.&#13;
Looking ahead to the fut ..... of mediae produellcJna,&#13;
especially in education, campbe\l predicted It&#13;
would be possible in our time for studenta to ."""0;""&#13;
lectures by TV through dialing any dea1red program&#13;
and respooding to the lecturer at home.&#13;
"In communicatioDS, lhe leJephone is AI&#13;
primitive as the _," campbell remarked.&#13;
·1&#13;
l'S&#13;
.1&#13;
,&#13;
il&#13;
i&#13;
I CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd 5t.&#13;
PhOIM652-'662&#13;
OPEM 11 D.,"-. ,.. 2 Q tW.-.... thrv Set&#13;
0&gt;-- --'.- --- -&#13;
c --- -&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Ex-DJ heads media production&#13;
photo by DA ~ DA&#13;
Dave Campbell doing hi thing.&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
The amplified banging of an electrician, along&#13;
with the repeated ringing of a phone, interrupted&#13;
Dave Campbell from reading an article entitled,&#13;
"Audio Report by the Editors of Rolling Stone."&#13;
Campbell is the coordinator of Parkside's new&#13;
Media Production Facility, located on the main&#13;
floor of the unfinished Communications Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Here, students and faculty will be able to have&#13;
media produced in a form that will hopefully convey&#13;
information to their respective audiences. This&#13;
kaleidoscopic center is designed to encompass&#13;
almost all areas of media, ranging from general&#13;
audio-visual productions to separate film, television&#13;
and sound creations.&#13;
A staff member, for example, wanting to arrange&#13;
a film strip from separate slides, would find a&#13;
drymount press helpful. Other useful items in the&#13;
AV section of the center include a copystand, 28&#13;
video-tape editors, various recording machines,&#13;
overhead projections, transparencies, and more.&#13;
Sandwiched in between the AV production room&#13;
and television studio is a small TV repair shop, for&#13;
closed-circuit sets at Parkside. The studio itself will&#13;
house full-color video taping in the near future.&#13;
These facilities presently are occupied by cartons&#13;
of TVs and tape-marked floors, designating where&#13;
equipment will go once it arrives.&#13;
"The entire center hould be in operation within&#13;
six months to a year,"' explained Campbell. ' 'Right&#13;
now, however, only the A\' portion i open."&#13;
Film production, with editing facilities, will be the&#13;
third area to open, following television. It plaru to&#13;
specialize in 16 mm and 8 mm film.&#13;
Last, but not least, to become operational is the&#13;
audio section. Its control room, located between tv.'O&#13;
recording studios, hopes to have a 16 microphone&#13;
mixing system, resulting in 4-tra k, quadraphonic&#13;
recording. Setting up these facilities is one of two major&#13;
concerns of Campbell, who came to Parkside early&#13;
last May. following five years or experience in radio&#13;
and commercial television at Indiana State&#13;
University. When he arrived here, the edia&#13;
Facility had been three-fourths of the way built.&#13;
Unfortunately, several architectural errors had&#13;
been made. Perhaps the most serious error i~ that the_ installation&#13;
of a lighting console for the film room IS m&#13;
one of the recording tudios. Also, the acoustics foe&#13;
audio production were designed to troadca t rather&#13;
than record.&#13;
Campbell mentioned other flaws, too such a the&#13;
AV room being without AC current and a badly&#13;
located testing screen in the dark room.&#13;
"Despite various errors in de ign," commented&#13;
Campbell, "The center is in a good location, across&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
sponsors&#13;
Troubador night&#13;
Earn $$$ selling&#13;
ads for RANGER&#13;
:&#13;
Troubador Night, the first of a&#13;
series of Parkside Poetry&#13;
Forums, is scheduled for&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 'n at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The new theatre in the Comm.&#13;
Arts building will be open to all&#13;
students, guitarists and song&#13;
writers. The essence of poetry is&#13;
song and music; this is the theme&#13;
of Troubador Night. It is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Among students tuning up for&#13;
the festivities are classical&#13;
guitarist and bluesman Dave&#13;
Rogers,-and Clark Anderson who&#13;
will play along with Keith Herbrechtsmeier.&#13;
John Sieger, Bob&#13;
Fitzgerald, James Frere and&#13;
Cbarley will also be there. Bob&#13;
Canary of the Humanities&#13;
Division is preparing his melodic&#13;
tunes and stringing his guitar,&#13;
too.&#13;
Poetry Forum advisor, Andy&#13;
McLean, said that any student&#13;
who wants to play and-or sing will&#13;
be able to do so. Just truck right&#13;
m and join the fun . This is a&#13;
students' night in the theatre with&#13;
music. Come, stay, play or listen.&#13;
The next Poetry Forum will ~e&#13;
Oct. 4, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., m&#13;
the back of the third floor of the&#13;
Library. Students wishing to read&#13;
their poems should contact Carl&#13;
Lindner, assistant professor of&#13;
English, in CA 218, ext. 2392. Here&#13;
is a chance to share your poems&#13;
with others.&#13;
PARKS IDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTI3 IN CONCERT&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
INFO. CENTER Main Ptace.LLC&#13;
GEN. ADM.&#13;
s3.00 advance&#13;
s3.S0 at door&#13;
UWP STUDENTS&#13;
n .so advanc"&#13;
S3.00 at doOr&#13;
Sun .• Sept. 30,&#13;
8:00&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
from the rt room nd m hall ....&#13;
-&#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Brief news&#13;
WbIteoltellar presents the return of Parkside's awn Tony and Jumbo&#13;
wI1ba new piano player, Jimi Holsinger. The show will begin at 1 p.m.&#13;
Inthe Whiteoltrllar, Greenqwst 0201. This will be the grand reopening&#13;
GIllie WbIteoltellar Everyone is invited to bring their lunch and enjoy&#13;
dl8DaeIves on wednesday, Sept. 26.&#13;
P::rk ide's student poetry magaame. The _eD Hara, is preparing&#13;
*&#13;
the flnt of Its three iasues for the 1973-74school year Contributions&#13;
uch a poems and hne drawings are welcome and should be sent to&#13;
Carl LIndner, istant professor of English, 218 Comm Arts. Each&#13;
poem hould be legible and accompanied by a sell·addressed stamped&#13;
envelope lIthe writer wlshe the poem returned. Contributions for this&#13;
lit will be received until October IS, with publication expected by&#13;
ovember 7&#13;
Ire Hockey Oub meetings will&#13;
*&#13;
be beld on Thursdays at the P.E.&#13;
bulIdlna, main gym Workout at 7:00 p.m., business meeting at 8:00&#13;
pm Anyone Interested in playIng, managing. or assistant coaching,&#13;
welcome If unable to attend the meeung. contact Vic Godfrey at ext.&#13;
2310&#13;
*&#13;
Anyone w'ho paid lor a parking ticket at Parkside Village that was&#13;
not I ued oy the Kenosha Sheriff's Department can get the money&#13;
bad by lIOing to supenntendent Art Oaultbelr.&#13;
The Veta invite all men and women vets to bring spouse or friend to&#13;
*&#13;
their meeting of September 30 in the SAB at 6:30 p.m. Beer will be&#13;
served.&#13;
*&#13;
Ally string p1ayen interested in participating in Parkside's or-&#13;
• _a an ,..eIcome to come to practice on Mondays at 3:30 and&#13;
n-day night at 7 :30, in COmm Arts DI1B. For more infcrmatioo&#13;
p1_ call David Littrell at 637·1019or at his office in comm Arts 293.&#13;
On Sept. 30 a man from Dependable Pest Control was working over&#13;
*&#13;
IIone of the Parbide Village buildings. He set a can of deadly poison&#13;
dDwn and left. When be returned, it was gone. Whoever tooIt it is asked&#13;
lDpIeaae dispoee of It quickly and carelulJy, before someone gets burl.&#13;
W\acalain's Kettle Moraine, a prime scenic&#13;
*&#13;
and recreational area of&#13;
Ibe Slate, will be the subject 01 aD Extensioo course. Parts 01 lbe&#13;
....-aiDe are now preserved as the Kettle Moraine State Forest. and&#13;
parts Irt" included in the newly created Ice Age Natiooal Scientific&#13;
Reoerve of the national park system.&#13;
The lormatioo 01 the Moraine. component laDdfonns, bedrock&#13;
(leoIogy, and gJacla1 biatory will be covered, and an all-&lt;1ayfield trip&#13;
can be arranged If desired&#13;
The mstruetor is AIIao SChneider, of Parkside's Earth Science&#13;
viSlOll.Five weekly meetings will begin Wednesday, Sept. 26, 7:30&#13;
,.m. at the wood Road Campus.&#13;
- '" about the Danforth Fellowships, to be awarded by lbe&#13;
*&#13;
..n Foundation of St, LouIS, ltssourl in Marcb 1974,are invited,&#13;
""ding to the local campus representative, Prof. John zarling,&#13;
.;istant to the Vice Chancelor, room 340 Library Learning Center.&#13;
The Fellowships are open to all qualified persons of any race, creed&#13;
_ CItizenship, single or married, who bave serious interest in careers&#13;
If teachiog and-or administration 1D colleges and universities, and&#13;
_"",I,a::o to study lor a PhD in any field 01 study common to the un-&#13;
',#a uate liberal arts curriculum in the Uruted States Applicants&#13;
.. be unde_ lISyears 01 age at the lime application papers are filed,&#13;
and may not have undertaken any graduate or professional study&#13;
beyond the baccalaureate. Persons must be nominated by Liaison&#13;
Ofllcers of their undergraduate IOstitutions by Nov 20, 1974. The&#13;
Danforth Foundation does not accept drrect applications lor the&#13;
P'eIIowships ApproXimately 100Fellowships ,,,ll be awarded.&#13;
~ award is (or one year, and is normally renewable until com·&#13;
plebon of the degree nr for a maximum total of four years of graduate&#13;
!IlUdy Fellollo-ship bpends are based on individual need, but may not&#13;
_ exceed S202Sfor slnRle Fellows and $2200 lor married Fellows lor the&#13;
academic year. plus dependency allowances for children and required&#13;
tioo and lees&#13;
The Danlorth Foundation was created in 19Z1by the late Mr. and&#13;
n Wilham H Danforth of St. Louis as a philanthropy devoted to&#13;
ving aid and encouragement to persons, to emphasize the humane&#13;
ues that com from a religious and democratic heritage, and to&#13;
",gthen the essential quality of education.&#13;
Free music&#13;
performances&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Eleven recitals and concerts by&#13;
faculty and student solo and&#13;
ensemble performers make up&#13;
lbe musical agenda for the lall&#13;
semester at Parkside.&#13;
All 01 the performances are&#13;
free and open to the public and all&#13;
are scheduled for the new&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
They are set for 7:30 p.m. except&#13;
the Orristrnas Carol Concert,&#13;
which is at 3 p.m.&#13;
The series will begin OCt. 14&#13;
with a laculty recital by Frances&#13;
Bedlord, harpsichordist, and&#13;
James Yoghourtjian playing the&#13;
classical guitar and viola da&#13;
gamba.&#13;
The next two recitals will introduce&#13;
two new faculty members,&#13;
David Littrell, violoncello,&#13;
who will perform with his wife,&#13;
Mary Ann Littrell as pianist, on&#13;
OCt. 21, and Stephen Swedisb,&#13;
pianist, who will play Nov. 11.&#13;
"An Evening of Jazz" will be&#13;
presented on Nov. 15 by UW-P's&#13;
Jazz Ensembles I and II under&#13;
the direction of Robert Thomason&#13;
and the Parkside Symphonic&#13;
Band directed by Bernard Sliner&#13;
will appear in concert on Nov. 18.&#13;
The Parkside Piano TrIo, a&#13;
newly formed faculty ensemble&#13;
including Marla Mutschler,&#13;
violinist, Littrell and Swedish will&#13;
debut 00 Nov. 29. The Parkside&#13;
Symphony Orchestra conducted&#13;
by Littrell will perform on Dec. 2&#13;
and the Parkside OIorale and&#13;
Chorus directed by Frank&#13;
Mueller will present" Christmas&#13;
Carol Concert on Dec. 9.&#13;
Three student recitals also are&#13;
sdleduled.&#13;
The Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
and other chamber groups are&#13;
scheduled lor Dec. 6; Lenee&#13;
Stevens, flute, witb Sue Anderegg,&#13;
piano, for Dec. 12; and&#13;
Gertrude Sheridan, voice, with&#13;
Everett Kuiper. piano, and Kurt&#13;
Harlf, guitar, for Dec. 13.&#13;
A series of afternoon student&#13;
concerts at 3:30 p.m. ·in Room&#13;
DIl8 01 the COmmunication Arts&#13;
Building are Scheduled lor OCt. 10&#13;
and 31, Nov. 14 and 18 and Dec. 5.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
PAT GARRET &amp; BILLY THE KID&#13;
Bob Dylan-50undtrack (Columbia K C 32460)&#13;
The dominating mood is established with the "Main Title Theme,"&#13;
which introduces the audience to an old tale about the sad fate of a&#13;
wayward boy. This is the first of the "Billys" on this record, and its&#13;
essence is six minutes of melancholy instrumentation. It is formed by&#13;
a typical western outdoor assembly of acoustic guitars and tarnbourine.&#13;
Awalking bass joins in the middle, defining the second&#13;
half ...not extremely gripping ...not terribly dull ...not bad.&#13;
"Cantina Theme (Working for the Law)" brings a fairly intriguing&#13;
arrangement of another instrumental. The pulse is strong-weak,&#13;
strong-weak...interest builds slightly.&#13;
Now the stylus arrives at "Billy I" with feelings of uncertainty. This&#13;
is the first in a large series of vocal Billys. Bob and his familiar harmonica&#13;
companion are featured in this one. The harmonica is the&#13;
sharpest edge here, the song and the singing have little positive or&#13;
negative influence. Lyrically, the line "Billy, they don't like you to be&#13;
so free" supports the whole song in high status ...attention drifts.&#13;
As the light, uninspiring waves of "Bunkhouse Theme" roU in, one&#13;
may decide to head for there ...boredom sets in.&#13;
At the last few threads of side I, a brief but definite improvement&#13;
arrives. The instrumental, "River Theme," releases some affection&#13;
...curiosity is again aroused.&#13;
"Turkey Chase" kicks 011 side 2 with bigh spirits in the style 01&#13;
yahoo hillbilly festivities. Byron Berline demonstrates his lively&#13;
fiddling that temporarily cuts up the melancholy iloilo'01 the album&#13;
with moonshine enthusiasm ...great. ..former opinions are discarded!&#13;
"Knocking on Heaven's Door" rolls in as the highest point, and&#13;
shines out as the true gem of the set. This is the story of a weary&#13;
lawman turning in his credentials as his struggle against crime meets&#13;
a desperate end, and be seeks peace. Tbe mood of this excellent tune is&#13;
portrayed by Dylan most convincingly along with pertinent&#13;
background support in tbe cborus ...fantastic!&#13;
Three aces in a row are set up with the laying down of the "Final&#13;
Theme." A flute is featured hovering above the main weight of this&#13;
instrumental theme ...all-right!&#13;
"Billy 4(Recorded in Mexico City)" is anticipated with disappointment&#13;
as one most likely expects useless repetition. However, Mr.&#13;
Dylan's voice is more touching here than in any of the other&#13;
Billys ...OK +•&#13;
The central message is re-emphasized for the last lime by someone&#13;
with a low-pitcbed voice trying to lay it on solemnly. This moderatinn&#13;
of the main theme is not given more than its true worth as "Billy 7" is&#13;
2:01 minutes long, so the inclusion of this version is justifiable and&#13;
effective ...yes, really.&#13;
This soundtrack may have its dull moments, and needless to say I&#13;
unwarranted repetition. The different Billy versions aren't that wittingly&#13;
distinct. Ifthere are 7 versions of Billy besides the instrumental&#13;
version, one should be thankful that Billys 2, 3, 5 and 6 aren't included.&#13;
After close examination one may suspect another exploitation. One&#13;
basic tune seems to be used in "Cantina Theme(Working for the&#13;
Law)," "River Theme," and "Knocking on Heaven's Door." and&#13;
"Final Theme," make this soundtrack worth every penny 01its price.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; JTape and Record Center) .&#13;
American Can&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
I SEPT. 26, 28, 29, 30 I&#13;
Kenosha's Newes' Ni'espo'&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
f news&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
* t at Park id \'illag that wa&#13;
mon y&#13;
ultheir.&#13;
*&#13;
Th Vets im te au men and women ve to bring pouse or friend to&#13;
their m 'n of ep ember 30 in the SAB at 6:30 p.m. Beer will be&#13;
ted * in participating in Parkside's or- ,....., ... ~~tloDme...t.o, com to practice on Mondays at 3:30 and&#13;
Comm Arts 0118. For more information&#13;
l at 637-1019 or at his office in Comm Arts 293.&#13;
On m n from Dependable * Pest Control was working over&#13;
at o of tb Park ide Village buildings. He set a can of deadly poison&#13;
down and efl. Wh h returned, it was gone. Whoever took it is asked&#13;
to pl d of it quickly and carefully, before someone gets hurt.&#13;
ips, to be awarded by the&#13;
· in larch 1974, are invited,&#13;
tative. Prof. John Zarling,&#13;
Free music&#13;
performances&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Ele •en recitals and concerts by&#13;
faculty and tudent solo and&#13;
en emble performers make up&#13;
the musical agenda for the fall&#13;
sem ter at Parkside. All of the performances are&#13;
free and open to the public and all&#13;
are scheduled for the new&#13;
Communication Art Theater.&#13;
The are et for 7:30 p.m. except&#13;
the Chri tma Carol Concert,&#13;
hich is at 3 p.m.&#13;
The eries will begin Oct. 14&#13;
v.ith a faculty recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford, harpsichordist, and&#13;
Jam Yoghourtjian playing the&#13;
cla ical guitar and viola da&#13;
mba.&#13;
The next two recitals will introduce&#13;
rn o nev. faculty member&#13;
, David Littrell. violoncello,&#13;
'ho will perform with his wife,&#13;
. iary Ann Littrell as pianist, on&#13;
t. 21, and Stephen Swedish,&#13;
piani t, who will play Nov. 11.&#13;
"An Evening of Jazz" will be&#13;
pre"ented on • 'ov. 15 by UW-P's&#13;
Jazz En embles I and II under&#13;
the direction of Robert Thomason&#13;
and the Parkside ymphonic&#13;
Band directed by Bernard Stiner&#13;
will appear in concert on Nov. 18.&#13;
The Parkside Piano Trio, a&#13;
newly formed faculty ensemble&#13;
including Marla Mutschler,&#13;
violinist, Littrell and Swedish will&#13;
debut on Nov: 29. The Parkside&#13;
Symphony Orchestra conducted&#13;
by Littrell will perform on Dec. 2&#13;
and the Parkside Chorale and&#13;
Chorus directed by Frank&#13;
Mueller will present ·a Christmas&#13;
Carol Concert on Dec. 9.&#13;
Three student recitals also are&#13;
scheduled&#13;
The Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
and other chamber groups are&#13;
scheduled for Dec. 6; Lenee&#13;
Stevens, flute, with Sue Anderegg,&#13;
piano, for Dec. 12; and&#13;
Gertrude Sheridan, voice, with&#13;
Everett Kuiper, piano, and Kurt&#13;
Harff, guitar, for Dec. 13.&#13;
A series of afternoon student&#13;
concerts at 3:30 p.m. in Room&#13;
DUB of the Commwiication Arts&#13;
Building are scheduled for Oct. 10&#13;
and 31, Nov. 14 and 18 and Dec. 5.&#13;
nd&#13;
The Rauen&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
PAT GARRET &amp; BILLY THE KID&#13;
Bob Dylan-Soundtrack (Columbia KC 32460)&#13;
The dominating mood is established with the "Main Title Theme,"&#13;
which introduces the audience to an old tale about the sad fate of a&#13;
~·ayward boy. This is the first of the "Billys" on this record, and its&#13;
essence is six minutes of melancholy instrumentation. It is formed by&#13;
a typical western outdoor assembly of acoustic guitars and tambourine.&#13;
A walking bass joins in the middle, defining the second&#13;
half ... not extremely gripping ... not terribly dull ... not bad.&#13;
''Cantina Theme (Working for the Law)" brings a fairly intriguing&#13;
arrangement of another instrumental. The pulse is strong-weak,&#13;
strong-weak .. .interest builds slightly.&#13;
Now the stylus arrives at "Billy 1" with feelings of uncertainty. This&#13;
is the first in a large series of vocal Billys. Bob and his familiar harmonica&#13;
companion are featured in this one. The harmonica is the&#13;
sharpest edge here, the song and the singing have little positive or&#13;
negative influence. Lyrically, the line "Billy, they don't like you to be&#13;
so free" supports the whole song in high status ... attention drifts.&#13;
As the light, uninspiring waves of "Bunkhouse Theme" roll in, one&#13;
may decide to head for there ... boredom sets in.&#13;
At the last few threads of side 1, a brief but definite improvement&#13;
arrives. The instrumental, "River Theme," releases some affection&#13;
... curios1ty is again aroused.&#13;
"Turkey Chase" kicks off side 2 with high spirits in the style of&#13;
yahoo hillbilly festivities. Byron Berline demonstrates his lively&#13;
fiddling that temporarily cuts up the melancholy flow of the album&#13;
with moonshine enthusiasm ... great ... former opinions are discarded!&#13;
"Knocking on Heaven's Door" rolls in as the highest point, and&#13;
shines out as the true gem of the set. This is the story of a weary&#13;
lawman turning in his credentials as his struggle against crime meets&#13;
a desperate end, and he seeks peace. The mood of this excellent tune is&#13;
portrayed by Dylan most convincingly along with pertinent&#13;
background support in the chorus .. .fantastic !&#13;
Three aces in a row are set up with the laying down of the "Final&#13;
Theme." A flute is featured hovering above the main weight of this&#13;
instrumental theme ... all-right!&#13;
"Billy 4(Recorded in Mexico City)" is anticipated with disappointment&#13;
as one most likely expects useless repetition. However, Mr.&#13;
Dylan's voice is more touching here than in any of the other&#13;
Billys ... OK+•&#13;
The central message is re-emphasized for the last time by someone&#13;
with a low-pitched voice trying to lay it on solemnly. This moderation&#13;
of the main theme is not given more than its true worth as "Billy 7" is&#13;
2:01 minutes long, so the inclusion of this version is justifiable and&#13;
effective ... yes, really.&#13;
This soundtrack may have its dull moments, and needless to say,&#13;
unwarranted repetition. The different Billy versions aren't that wittingly&#13;
distinct. If there are 7 versions of Billy besides the instrumental&#13;
version, one should be thankful that Billys 2, 3, 5 and 6 aren't included.&#13;
After close examination one may suspect another exploitation. One&#13;
basic tune seems to be used in "Cantina: Theme(Working for the&#13;
Law)," "River Theme," and "Knocking on Heaven's Door." and&#13;
"Final Theme," make this soundtrack worth -every penny of its price.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
American Can&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29, 30 I&#13;
Kenoslsa's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road &#13;
? ~&#13;
SYCHIC&#13;
stopped the timer . itioi by Rodney Schroeter mechanism." m IOn&#13;
Jones felt his scalp tingle.&#13;
"Where'd it come from? Big X?"&#13;
He carefully put the box in his&#13;
back pants pocket.&#13;
"Hehaditinhis shoe ,t said the&#13;
Psychic, looking out' a large&#13;
Window at the East River. He&#13;
tur,ned to Jones. "The way I&#13;
estImate, the place where I first&#13;
awakened is under that river.&#13;
Quite a way out."&#13;
"And I thought it was Canada ..&#13;
said Jones disgustedly. "Tho~e&#13;
dirty liars."&#13;
"Let's go. IT we meet any&#13;
guards, I'll mentally tell them&#13;
that we don't exist, the same&#13;
thing I did to the guide."&#13;
"Big X never even looked at&#13;
us," said Jones as the two entered&#13;
an empty elevator.&#13;
"I tried to probe his mind&#13;
several times. But I could find&#13;
nothing. As if he had no mind. It's&#13;
possible he is only a pawn, and&#13;
not the true leader of this&#13;
organization as you suspected.&#13;
His attempt to blow up that room&#13;
in the United Nations shows some&#13;
kind of plan. What it is, we can't&#13;
tell right now."&#13;
.The elevator door opened. The&#13;
two men walked out through the&#13;
main entrance into the sunlight.&#13;
The wind flapped through the&#13;
flags of nations from around the&#13;
world.&#13;
"We shall now return to the&#13;
base, the place where I&#13;
awakened.. Doubtless we shall&#13;
learn much more there."&#13;
Jones and the Psychic came to&#13;
the sewer grating where they had&#13;
emerged several hours before.&#13;
The Psychic pulled it aside. Jones&#13;
sat down at the edge and jumped.&#13;
The Psychic did the same. He&#13;
looked up at the grating and&#13;
concentrated. It slid into place.&#13;
The pair made its way through&#13;
the long tunnel without difficulty,&#13;
despite the total darkness. At the&#13;
other end was the office of Big X,&#13;
vacant and with its iron door&#13;
partly melted away, justas it was&#13;
when they had left it.&#13;
"Give me the bomb," said the&#13;
Psychic. "See if anyone else is&#13;
around. Find out if they're in this&#13;
knowingly or if they've been&#13;
deceived, like you have been."&#13;
Jones handed the box to the&#13;
Psychic. "Yeah. All right." He&#13;
climbed through the hole in the&#13;
door.&#13;
The Psychic turned his attention&#13;
to the vast assortment of&#13;
books, folders and typed&#13;
manuscripts. Each folder he&#13;
looked at had a single name on it.&#13;
He looked at several names&#13;
without investigating the insides&#13;
until he found one name that&#13;
interested him.&#13;
On one folder was lettered&#13;
"JONES. "&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
Synopsis: A man has just&#13;
awakened to find he cannot&#13;
remember anything of his past&#13;
life. He finds that he has extraordinary&#13;
mental abilities, and&#13;
names himseif the Psychic. A&#13;
man named Jones tells the&#13;
Psychic that someone named Big&#13;
X is responsible for his amnesia.&#13;
Together the two follow a trail to&#13;
the United Nations building,&#13;
where they find Big X. The story&#13;
continues.&#13;
Cha pter three&#13;
"Those persons holding tickets&#13;
with number forty-two on the&#13;
backs, piease line up at the glass&#13;
doors." -&#13;
"Big X is going on this tour,"&#13;
said Jones in a low voice. "But we&#13;
can't follow him now. We have no&#13;
tickets! II&#13;
Big X had stood up when the&#13;
announcement came. He had a&#13;
large overcoat draped over one&#13;
arm and a newspaper in his hand.&#13;
"Get in line," said the Psychic.&#13;
"Stay close to me and when the&#13;
tour guide approaches, you hold&#13;
out your hand as if you have a&#13;
ticket."&#13;
The guide was a short Chinese&#13;
woman. As she collected tickets&#13;
she said "Thank you" to each&#13;
person. When she came to the&#13;
Psychic, he held out his hand.&#13;
The guide smiled, reached and&#13;
took hold of nothing, and said&#13;
"Thank you." She did the same&#13;
with Jones.&#13;
"what'd you do?" asked Jones&#13;
in a whisper when she had&#13;
passed. "Make her think we had&#13;
tickets?"&#13;
The Psychic nodded slightly.&#13;
The tour had started. The group&#13;
passed through several halls. At&#13;
points the guide would stop to&#13;
explain the origin and&#13;
significance of a painting or&#13;
tapestry.&#13;
"This rug is a donation from&#13;
Iran. Itis largest of its kind in the&#13;
world. The figures on it symbolize...."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Big X.&#13;
This was the man, supposedly,&#13;
who had robbed him of his&#13;
memory. Big X was extremely&#13;
fat, almost round. He faced the&#13;
guide, giving no evidence of&#13;
noticing Jones or the Psychic.&#13;
Jones swallowed nervously. He&#13;
had been watching Big X from&#13;
the start of the tour. He glanced&#13;
at the Psychic frequently, but the&#13;
Psychic's expression told him to&#13;
be patient.&#13;
The guide led the group into a&#13;
large room and told everyone to&#13;
sit down. She began talking about&#13;
the use of the room, and the&#13;
nationality of the architects.&#13;
When the guide finished, the&#13;
group stood up. The Psychic held&#13;
Jones' arm. "Remain&#13;
motionless," he whispered.&#13;
When everyone had left, the&#13;
Psychic walked to the seat where&#13;
Big X had been sitting. He&#13;
reached under the seat and&#13;
brought out a small square box.&#13;
"Huh?" asked Jones. lIWhat's&#13;
that?"&#13;
"A bomb."&#13;
"Uh-yeah? When's it going to&#13;
go off?"&#13;
"Never. I've already deactivated&#13;
it with my mind. It was&#13;
set for forty-eight hours from&#13;
now, at which time an important&#13;
m~ting will be in process, as the&#13;
gUide said."&#13;
"Oh. I wasn't listening."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Jones.&#13;
"Here." He tossed the little box&#13;
to him. "Carry it. It has an antimatter&#13;
nucleus which I want to&#13;
studylater." The Psychic walked&#13;
doWn the steps.&#13;
Jones shook the box. It rattled.&#13;
:'Anti-matter? How strong was&#13;
It?"&#13;
:'Powerful enough to destroy&#13;
thiSroom. And it still is. I only&#13;
Wa1'·'d'" Oa4 21 P'U _u_ O •• -.;.••• c o •• 'e._s&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 9&#13;
•&#13;
Seated behind a display table at the last Pre-Meds club meeting are Vice-President Rich Eckert&#13;
and Secretary Mike Rizzo. Not pictured is newly elected President O. Brian Smith.&#13;
Pre-Meds plan their year&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Ever think you might like to go into medicine? Do Jim Wishau, who was a delegate to the ational&#13;
you know what it takes to get into medical school? If Pre-Med Convention September 7-9, told of some of&#13;
you have or if you don't, a visit with the Parkside the topics discussed and relayed back intormatJon&#13;
Pre-Meds might prove enlightening. he had gained. He cited the fact that 45,000 uaThe&#13;
Pre-Med Club was organized three years ago, dergraduates apply to medical schools while only&#13;
largely replacing the now defunct Biology Club. 15,000are accepted. Using this one out or three&#13;
Enthusiastically advised by Anna Marie Williams, ratio, he stated that one of these three probably had&#13;
associate professor of Life Science, the club aids no chance of being admitted, and had no business&#13;
students who plan to apply for admission to medical applying, bot that still left one person Who could&#13;
school by bringing in guest lecturers who are have made it through medical school and have&#13;
usually area physicians in varying fields, arranging become a good physician, but had lost the chance.&#13;
tours of Wisconsin's two medical schools, and Also brought to light was the fact that the average&#13;
providing information as to how to apply and be grade point of those being accepted has been and&#13;
accepted by one of them. Their success in this en- still is rising, from 23 percent with 3.6and up in 1971,&#13;
deavor can be measured by the fact that all who to 24percentin 1972.He also outlined the percentage&#13;
applied to medical school last year were accepted. of different majors who were accepted: 26 percent&#13;
Nine alumni of the club are now in medical school. English majors, 26 percent foreign language. 26&#13;
Five attend the Medical School of Wisconsin in percent religion, 22 percent biology, 28 percent&#13;
Milwaukee as freshmen, while four, one senior, two chemistry, 28 percent physical education, and 17&#13;
sophomores and one freshman, attend UW- percent microbiology, to name a few.&#13;
Madison. Coach Stevens' talk on Sports Anatomy was of&#13;
WiJIiams got the year off in the second week of interest to women, men and non-pre-meds He&#13;
school with her "Facts of Life for Pre-Meds" lee- discussed the differences In anatomy, physiology,&#13;
ture and counseling session for new pre-meds. At kinesiology and environment, explai.rung why men&#13;
this time she explained the medical school excel at sr'"T1esports and women at others.&#13;
requirements, outlined a typical program to be Bone an tnt construction were shown to be the&#13;
followed, and told them in no nonsense terms what reasons wh men could generally throw straighter&#13;
they will have to accomplish if they expect to be and run faster than women, and tissue compo ilion&#13;
admitted to medical school. was offered as a hypctbesrs for the fact that young&#13;
Exactly what pre-meds must do in order to be women are USUallythe best swimmers.&#13;
accepted is probably best revealed by attending one Other activities planned for this semester include&#13;
of their meetings. Their first meeting, held Sep- maintaining their reference box at the library and&#13;
tember 19, featured election of new officers, a bringing in additional guest lecturers. Two&#13;
report on the National Pre-Med Convention and a osteophatic physicians will be appearing October&#13;
talk by Steve Stephens, associate professor of 17,and a discussion between a young M.D. and one&#13;
physical education, on Sports Anatlioiim.y•.•••••• w.ho.islire.ti.red.iiis.Piiila.niinediiiiifior.'iiaiiteriiiiiin.liiheiil.ear •.•&#13;
The nerag. Navy Pilot isn't.&#13;
E_,Iyou' ... __&#13;
t&gt;elono, " J'QU ... g&lt;M lhe dearf •• you •• Pullfw.,_,•.&#13;
r--------------------l '--- 1, .. _. :,&#13;
1- ·......·_- I&#13;
, ,&#13;
,- -_.- -- , , ,&#13;
,--- , lc.. l1li_:&#13;
, ,&#13;
le--~- I&#13;
, ,&#13;
1L Ie • SUC:~ In The ..... Nny. :j&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
WEEKDAY MOVIES&#13;
VVednesday, Sept. 26&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
103 GR -7Sc&#13;
? ~ Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
s·YCNIC&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter ~i:~:~~~~eram:H ·g_nition&#13;
Synopsis: A man has just&#13;
awakened to find he cannot&#13;
remember anything of his past&#13;
life. He finds that he has extraordinary&#13;
mental abilities, and&#13;
names himself the Psychic. A&#13;
man named Jones tells the&#13;
Psychic that someone named Big&#13;
Xis responsible for his amnesia.&#13;
Together the two follow a trail to&#13;
the United Nations building,&#13;
where they find Big X. The story&#13;
continues.&#13;
Chapter three&#13;
"Those persons holding tickets&#13;
with number forty-two on the&#13;
backs, please line up at the glass&#13;
doors."&#13;
"Big X is going on this tour,"&#13;
said Jones in a low voice. ''But we&#13;
can't follow him now. We have no&#13;
tickets!"&#13;
Jones felt his scalp tingle. "Where'd it come from? Big X?"&#13;
He carefully put the box in his&#13;
back pants pocket.&#13;
"He had it in his shoe " said the&#13;
P~ychic, looking out' a large&#13;
window at the East River. He&#13;
tur~ed to Jones. "The way I&#13;
estimate, the place where I first&#13;
aw~kened is under that river. Qmte a way out."&#13;
"And I thought it was Canada "&#13;
said Jones disgustedly. "Tho;e dirty liars."&#13;
"Let's go. If we meet any&#13;
guards, I'll mentally tell them&#13;
that we don't exist, the same&#13;
thing I did to the guide."&#13;
"Big X never even looked at&#13;
us," said Jones as the two entered&#13;
an empty elevator.&#13;
Big X had stood up when the&#13;
announcement came. He had a&#13;
large overcoat draped over one&#13;
arm and a newspaper in his hand.&#13;
"I tried to probe his mind&#13;
several times. But I could find&#13;
nothing. As if he had no mind. It's&#13;
possible he is only a pawn, and&#13;
not the true leader of this&#13;
organization as you suspected.&#13;
His attempt to blow up that room&#13;
in the United Nations shows some&#13;
kind of plan. What it is, we can't&#13;
tell right now."&#13;
pl,o •..,. J,m&#13;
"Get in line," said the Psychic.&#13;
"Stay close to me and when the&#13;
tour guide approaches, you hold&#13;
out your hand as if you have a&#13;
ticket."&#13;
The guide was a short Chinese&#13;
woman. As she collected tickets&#13;
she said "Thank you" to each&#13;
person. When she came to the&#13;
Psychic, he held out his hand.&#13;
The guide smiled, reached and&#13;
took hold of nothing, and said&#13;
"Thank you." She did the same&#13;
with Jones.&#13;
"What'd you do?" asked Jones&#13;
in a whisper when she had&#13;
passed. "Make her think we had&#13;
tickets?"&#13;
The Psychic nodded slightly.&#13;
The tour had started. The group&#13;
passed through several halls. At&#13;
points the guide would stop to&#13;
explain the origin and&#13;
significance of a painting or&#13;
tapestry.&#13;
"This rug is a donation from&#13;
Iran. It is largest of its kind in the&#13;
world. The figures on it symbolize&#13;
.... "&#13;
The Psychic looked at Big X.&#13;
This was the man, supposedly,&#13;
who had robbed him of his&#13;
memory. Big X was extremely&#13;
fat, almost round. He faced the&#13;
guide, giving no evidence of&#13;
noticing Jones or the Psychic.&#13;
Jones swallowed nervously. He&#13;
had been watching Big X from&#13;
the start of the tour. He glanced&#13;
at the Psychic frequently, but the&#13;
Psychic's expression told him to&#13;
be patient.&#13;
The guide led the group into a&#13;
large room and told everyone to&#13;
it down. She began talking about&#13;
the use of the room, and the&#13;
nationality of the architects.&#13;
When the guide finished, the&#13;
group stood up. The Psychic held&#13;
Jones' arm. "Remain&#13;
motionless," he whispered.&#13;
When everyone had left, the&#13;
Psychic walked to the seat where&#13;
Big X had been sitting. He&#13;
reached under the seat and&#13;
brought out a small square box.&#13;
"Huh?" asked Jones. "What's&#13;
that?"&#13;
"A bomb."&#13;
"Uh--yeah? When's it going to&#13;
go off?"&#13;
"Never. I've already deactivated&#13;
it with my mind. It was&#13;
set for forty-eight hours from&#13;
now, at which time an important&#13;
meeting will be in process, as the&#13;
guide said."&#13;
"Oh. I wasn't listening."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Jones.&#13;
"Here." He tossed the little box&#13;
to him. "Carry it. It has an antimatter&#13;
nucleus which I want to&#13;
study later.'' The Psychic walked&#13;
down the steps.&#13;
Jones shook the box. It rattled.&#13;
"Anti-matter? How strong was It~"&#13;
'.'Powerful enough to destroy this room. And it still is. I only&#13;
· The elevator door opened. The&#13;
two men walked out through the&#13;
main entrance into the sunlight.&#13;
The wind flapped through the&#13;
flags of nations from around the&#13;
world.&#13;
"We shall now return to the&#13;
base, the place where I&#13;
awakened. Doubtless we shall&#13;
learn much more there."&#13;
Jones and the Psychic came to&#13;
the sewer grating where they had&#13;
emerged several hours before.&#13;
The Psychic pulled it aside. Jones&#13;
sat down at the edge and jumped.&#13;
The Psychic did the same. He&#13;
looked up at the grating and&#13;
concentrated. It slid into place.&#13;
The pair made its way through&#13;
the long tunnel without difficulty, despite the total darkness. At the&#13;
other end was the office of Big X,&#13;
vacant and with its iron door&#13;
partly melted away, just as it was&#13;
when they had left it.&#13;
"Give me the bomb," said the&#13;
Psychic. "See if anyone else is&#13;
around. Find out if they're in this&#13;
knowingly or if they've been&#13;
deceived, like you have been."&#13;
Jones handed the box to the&#13;
Psychic. "Yeah. All right. " He&#13;
climbed through the hole in the&#13;
door.&#13;
The Psychic turned his attention&#13;
to the vast assortment of&#13;
books, folders and typed&#13;
manuscripts. Each folder he&#13;
looked at had a single name on it.&#13;
He looked at several names&#13;
without investigating the insides&#13;
until he found one name that&#13;
interested him.&#13;
On one folder was lettered&#13;
"JONES."&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
Seated behind a di play table at the last Pre-:\teds club meeting are Vice-Pr id nl Ri h&#13;
and ecretary :\1ike Rizzo . . 'ot pictured is ne~ly elected Pre ident O. Brian mith.&#13;
Pre-Meds pla&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Ever think you might like to go into medicine? Do&#13;
you know what it takes to get into medical chool? If&#13;
you have or if you don't, a visit with the Parkside Pre-. /!eds might prove enlightening.&#13;
The Pre- ted Club was organized three years ago,&#13;
largely replacing the now defunct Biology Club.&#13;
Enthusiastically advised by Anna /Iarie Williams,&#13;
associate professor of Life Science, the club aids&#13;
students who plan to apply for admission to medical school by bringing in guest lecturers who are&#13;
usually area physicians in varying fields, arranging tours of Wisconsin's two medical schools, and&#13;
providing information as to how to apply and be&#13;
accepted by one of them. Their success in this endeavor&#13;
can be measured by the fact that all who&#13;
applied to medical school last year were accepted .&#13;
'ine alumni of the club are now in medical school.&#13;
Five attend the 1edical School of Wi con in in rnwaukee as freshmen, while four, one enior, two&#13;
ophomores and one freshman, attend •&#13;
tadison. William got the year off in the _econd we k of&#13;
chool with her "Facts of Life for Pre-, feds" lecture&#13;
and counseling ession for new pre-med . At&#13;
this time she explained the medical chool&#13;
requirements. outlined a typical program to be&#13;
followed , and told them in no non en e term what&#13;
they will have to accompli h if they expect to be&#13;
admitted to medical school.&#13;
Exactly what pre-meds mu t do in order to be&#13;
accepted is probably best revealed by attending one&#13;
of their meetings. Their first meeting, held September&#13;
19. featured election of new officers, a&#13;
report on the ational Pre-Med Convention and a&#13;
talk by Steve Stephens, associate professor of&#13;
physical education, on Sports Anatomy.&#13;
their year&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
WEEKDAY MOVIES&#13;
-~&#13;
The average Navy Pilot isn't. No man who ha.s mut•red tt\e fly,ng&#13;
,lulls II takes to fly and land on• th,p at sea can be called an averaQe pt.lot At\d&#13;
th• sense ot accompl,1timent and sa, sfacl•on&#13;
that he en1oys are aiso above&#13;
average Wtuch ,s Of\ly fight For the rnan&#13;
who would go p1aces as a Naval Aviator&#13;
musl past thrOVQh the most challenO•no&#13;
and demanding uairung program 10 be&#13;
found anywhere&#13;
From AVtal,on Office, Canchdlt•&#13;
Schoot through Fhght Tra,n.ng totneday&#13;
his golden Navy W1~ are awarded, M&#13;
11 tested, dnven. pushed and tested&#13;
again. And tor good ,...'°" TM Navy&#13;
nu learMd that wtthou1 the wtd 10&#13;
suc:cNd, no men c.en be successful Wt11ch tmngs us to you Co you hew&#13;
what ,t tallis1o Uy Navy" Send '" th11&#13;
coupon and find out o, tatk w,th you, local Navy ,ec.ru•ter&#13;
E....,. 1tycM.1.,.,..,.,flowfl&#13;
t,etote . 11 you .e got tM des""•· you re&#13;
h•thw"•ytnet•&#13;
UHDTO: HAYV 0.,,.ffl(.•• l .. il"Oft ....... TfOfo Tl(AW&#13;
11 1 -Ott~ a-a ... ~•Y&#13;
.., 1'-w•..,-• w,.co.,.•• .. ua•&#13;
r--------------------1&#13;
- I I ,.,,._.,...._....,___..,.. I ~ • .,.-. ,...,..oa.c- I&#13;
- I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I c., ______ I .,._ : ~~- _____ ,&#13;
lie a_.. In The New Nny. '&#13;
I L--------------------~&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
103 GR - 75~&#13;
k. rt&#13;
lalo &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed •• Sept. 26. 1973&#13;
A Passion play&#13;
Jethro lull at Chi. Town&#13;
photo by Cr.,g Roberts&#13;
b,·Patrick 'owak&#13;
Thnt ' eems to be an inherent lateness to a concert review when the&#13;
wrrter and the publication only move once a week. Not that there is&#13;
anythIng wrong with that except that a person might like to hear about&#13;
n concert before it is ancient history. when reading a review you must&#13;
keep one Important thing in mind. and that is that what you are&#13;
reading IS an opinion and not the gospel truth. Unfortunately, many&#13;
enuc take their litles too seriously and often more times than not,&#13;
literally They feel that because they are critics, it is their duty to&#13;
criucrze Ihope to place myseJf above this category by commenting&#13;
where I think necessary and giving credit where it is due. Your&#13;
comments on the review will be gladly accepted and any suggestions&#13;
as to whal you would hke to see written in an article of this type will&#13;
also be gladly accepted.&#13;
As with any concert, the problem in parking looms as the biggest&#13;
obstacle. This is particularly true in the city of Chicago. Although the&#13;
concert SItes are large and can accommodate large volumes of people,&#13;
they have a critical parking shortage within a sbort distance of the&#13;
site. So the Stadium in Chicago was not to escape this malady. After&#13;
walking some six blocks from our ear, we arrived at OUT seats.&#13;
All of this seems to be tolerable when the group is one of the caliber&#13;
of Jethro Tull. TuU has been one of the most popular groups on the&#13;
scene loday and have contributed such works as Aqualung, Thick as a&#13;
Brick, LIving in the Past. and their latest album, "A Passion Play" to&#13;
the world of music. The group consists of five very talented musicians.&#13;
The group's leader and singer is Ian Aoderson who plays acoustic&#13;
guitar and Ilute. He is accompanied by Clive Bunker on electric&#13;
guuar, John Evan on piano and organ, Jeffery Hammond on base, and&#13;
Martin Barre on drums.&#13;
After suffering through the first act of local talent, the crowd of&#13;
some 12,000 settled down while the stage was prepared. The ticket stub&#13;
was entitled" A Passion Play" after the group's latest album. A large&#13;
screen was lowered behiod the stage and it became apparent that the&#13;
show to Iollow was to be a visual as well as audio performance. As the&#13;
lights were dimmed. a large ball appeared on the screen. It pulsated&#13;
for about 10 minutes, accompanied by a human heart beat. As it grew&#13;
louder and larger, a figure of a ballerina appeared to grow out of it. As&#13;
she reoched up and out there was a nash of powder on the stage and&#13;
the concert was on.&#13;
lt W8. several seconds later that Anderson made his appearance. He&#13;
Jumped wildly about. acknowledging the crowd and twirling his flute&#13;
ver his head and under his legs better than most baton twirlers. His&#13;
mastery was not JUst limited to throwing it about, as the crowd Soon&#13;
earned AlthoUl!h we could see the group well. we could not see the&#13;
een, mce we were about 90 degrees from stage center. This took&#13;
away from the first 45 minutes of the concert. Twice during this&#13;
riod, the group left the stage and the attention was on the screen.&#13;
This was unfortunate because, not having heard the "Passion Play"&#13;
before. I was m the dark as to its contents and the idea put forth.&#13;
\Ithough I could not see the screen. I could see the group and hear&#13;
them equally as "ell&#13;
-&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
• •&#13;
: UL PUlsi~r MAT MAIDS :&#13;
: Presents a Dance featuring :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
i)1I:\ ("'I~It' :\ t~ i&#13;
• •&#13;
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: SAlHDAY, SEPT. 29 • 9:00 p .•• - 1:00 a... :&#13;
• •&#13;
: Student Activities Building :&#13;
• •&#13;
: hrtsi.e Stde-Is . ~Ielta ... : 'I" :&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
te;&#13;
On stage Tull provides all the visual action your eyes can handle. If&#13;
Ian Anderson was not jumping about, the base player was. The group&#13;
moved well on stage, with none of the members confining themselves&#13;
to anyone section of the stage as some groups do. A large part of a&#13;
group's concert success lies in its theatrical ability o~ the stage.&#13;
Although TuU is not as elaborate as some (example, Alice Cooper),&#13;
they are every bit as exciting to watch. Also, the fact that the group did&#13;
not stop for a break between every song helped to keep the whole thing&#13;
moving in a fast, driving mode. .&#13;
The "Passion Play" over, the second half of the concert could begin.&#13;
After introducing the rest of the group, Anderson commented on the&#13;
little child who felt it necessary to throw a lit sparkler down onto the&#13;
crowd, burning a guy on the back of the neck. He called for the person&#13;
to come down and apologize if he felt he was man enough. The second&#13;
half of the concert began with the second side of "Thick as a Brick"&#13;
which brought thunderous applause from the crowd. A drum solo and&#13;
guitar jam later. the group went into a few cuts from the Aqualung&#13;
album playing the title cut and the entire second SIde which consisted&#13;
of "My God," "Slip Steam," and "Wind Up," which appropriately&#13;
ended the concert.&#13;
The crowd chanted for more and just about anyone who possessed a&#13;
match lit it and held it as long as possible. It was really an impressive&#13;
sight to look out over the stadium and see all the little fires. It took&#13;
about five minutes but the crowd won out. The group came out and did&#13;
a thir-ty-minute encore which co~isted of HLocomo~iv~.~reath .. and&#13;
"Hymn 43," also from the Aqualung album. The group left the stage&#13;
for the final time. With the crowd cheering in total darkness, a small&#13;
phone that had been on stage all through the concert began ringing.&#13;
Out of darkness Ian Anderson appeared and answered it. He put the&#13;
phone down, telling the crowd it was for them, and walked off stage.&#13;
I do not believe any writer can convey a concert as it really happens;&#13;
the large crowd, the music, the good times, or in the case of a&#13;
poor group, the bad times, Those of you who have seen concerts or this&#13;
one by Tull in Milwaukee, know what it is like, and many of us can only&#13;
say, "you should have been there." With concerts like this one, a&#13;
person cannot help but feel that this group is going to he around for a&#13;
long period of time, much to our good fortunes. It seems that really&#13;
good groups are few and far between, and Jethro Tull rates as one of&#13;
the hest.&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
~ne~5 75C&#13;
~,&lt;~G~Admission wilh&#13;
Parkside 1.0.&#13;
RA.R LNE MUSICI&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Larry Lynne Group&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29 • 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 a.m.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
A Passion play&#13;
• •&#13;
Jethro Tull at Chi. Town&#13;
pl,oto by Cral9 Roberts&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
AIDS&#13;
Pr featuring&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · • w11. . • • • : SATURDAY, SEPT. 29 • 9:00 p.m. - 1 :00 a.m. :&#13;
• •&#13;
: tud nt Activities Building :&#13;
• •&#13;
: art i• lde11 Gae Um: '1 51 ;&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
On stage Tull provides all the visual action your eyes can handle. U&#13;
Ian Anderson was not jumping about, the base player was. The group&#13;
moved we11 on stage, with none of the members confining themselves&#13;
to anv one section of the stage as some groups do. A large part of a&#13;
group's concert success lies in its theatrical ability o~ the stage. Although Tull is not as elaborate as some (example, Alice Cooper_),&#13;
they are every bit as exciting to watch. Also, the fact that the group did&#13;
not stop for a break between every song helped to keep the whole thing&#13;
moving in a fast, driving mode. . The "Passion Play" over, the second half of the concert could begm.&#13;
After introducing the rest of the group, Anderson commented on the&#13;
little child who felt it necessary to throw a lit sparkler down onto the&#13;
crowd, burning a guy on the back of the neck. He called for the person&#13;
to come down and apologize if he felt he was man enough. The second&#13;
half of the concert began with the second side of "Thick as a Brick"&#13;
which brought thunderous applause from the crowd. A drum solo and&#13;
guitar jam later, the group went into a few cuts ~rom t~e Aqua_lung&#13;
album, playing the title cut and the entire second s1d_e which con~1sted&#13;
of "My God," "Slip Steam," and "Wind Up," which appropriately&#13;
ended the concert. The crowd chanted for more and just about anyone who possessed a&#13;
match lit it and held it as long as possible. It was really an impressive&#13;
sight to look out over the stadium and see all the little fires. It t~k&#13;
about five minutes but the crowd won out. The group came out and did&#13;
a thirty-minute encore which consisted of "Locomotive_ ~reath" and&#13;
"Hymn 43," also from the Aqualung album. The group left the stage&#13;
for the final time. With the crowd cheering in total darkness, a small&#13;
phone that had been on stage all through the concert began ringing.&#13;
Out of darkness Ian Anderson appeared and answered it. He put the&#13;
phone down, telling the crowd it was for them, and walked off stage.&#13;
I do not believe any writer can convey a concert as it really happens;&#13;
the large crowd, the music, the good times, or in the case of a&#13;
poor group, the bad times. Those of you who have seen concerts or this&#13;
one by Tull in Milwaukee, know what it is like, and many of us can only&#13;
say, "you should have been there." With concerts like this one, a&#13;
person cannot help but feel that this group is going to be around for a&#13;
long period of time, much to our good fortunes. It seems that really&#13;
good groups are few and far between, and Jethro Tull rates as one of&#13;
the best.&#13;
,,&#13;
::r&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
r:r&#13;
-&lt;&#13;
Q&#13;
..&#13;
,;;·&#13;
;,o&#13;
0&#13;
if&#13;
l&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
LIVE MUSIC!&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Larry Lynne Orou•&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29 • 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 a.m. &#13;
uw- student&#13;
• • racing pigeons&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
When he was five years old,&#13;
TonY Rossi's father brought a&#13;
coupleof pigeons home to him as&#13;
a gift. Today, Rossi, a Parkside&#13;
sophomore owns about 90 racmg&#13;
pigoons a~d has sold his birds&#13;
throughout the United States and&#13;
the world.&#13;
Rossi won his first pigeon&#13;
ra&lt;:ing contest when he was&#13;
seven. That pigeon made the 300-&#13;
mile race back to the Rossi loft In&#13;
Racine in one day.&#13;
It wasn't until 1967, when he&#13;
was older and could be more&#13;
helpful to his father, that pigeon&#13;
racing became serious to Rossi.&#13;
Breeders were purchased which,&#13;
if "top notch racers," cost&#13;
anywhere from $100to $.500,Rossi&#13;
explained. He has Imported&#13;
pigoons directly from England&#13;
and has some which have come&#13;
from Belgium and France.&#13;
February through April the&#13;
pigoons are bred, each female&#13;
laying two eggs which take 18&#13;
days to hatch. A pigeon is considered&#13;
mature in 'l:l days and IS&#13;
then taken from its parents and&#13;
Wed .• sept. 26. 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
•&#13;
raises&#13;
put in a separate loft with other&#13;
young birds. At this time the&#13;
young birds get used to their&#13;
surroundings and start in on their&#13;
training.&#13;
They are fed a high protein diet&#13;
of dried grains and taken out to&#13;
fly as often as possible. Rossi&#13;
starts the young birds one to two&#13;
miles from home, eventually&#13;
building up to 50 miles. The&#13;
pigeons should be taken out to fly&#13;
at least five times per week,&#13;
Rossi said. "No one knows how&#13;
they navigate home," he added,&#13;
"but it is common to lose birds in&#13;
training." They sometimes hit&#13;
wires or are attacked by hawks&#13;
or cats if they ground to drink.&#13;
Races vary from 100 to 600&#13;
miles. An individual is allowed to&#13;
enter 15 birds in each race.&#13;
Competing pigeons are placed&#13;
together in a trailer and driven to&#13;
the liberating point, to be&#13;
released early the following&#13;
morning. Races are held every&#13;
week from May through October.&#13;
A pigeon can race for approxima&#13;
tely eight years and has&#13;
a life span of about 13.&#13;
Rossi has collected 30 first&#13;
Tony Rossi standing in the doorway of his pigeon loft.&#13;
....... ci.1kind of N8vY Flyer.&#13;
.... N.".I FlightOfficer.&#13;
...hl' ,Ita,k", 10be a NI~II HOII!on~:,.&#13;
sene ,n the cOl,lpon.It ...,11 b"ng you&#13;
the lactS 0, lalk ,I O\til, ...,th ro", Navy&#13;
ree,I,I,'e'&#13;
Whl_' I NI~r pia", " linde'&#13;
_!ecuorllc corlllo!. ,1111 pll ... II In Ihe&#13;
llanasotl NI~al Flillhl OthcI'. NIII,lIIlIr.&#13;
.. acandldat.to, N'~II FIIgl'1torneer&#13;
IraonlngYOI,I'IIneed lome _r spectll&#13;
Cl~lIhcatlon, F'fll. yol,lmust leilly ~&#13;
lOlly.... 11I l/ you'~e ne~er 1I0 ... n tJelotl&#13;
VOO'IIalso neec a college o;I'II'H and tile&#13;
k,,,,, 01mInd that wo'ks well ""itll m.III&#13;
and pI'I....,CS.&#13;
WI'"ng alt"" end olrou, I,"n,nll&#13;
"'09l1m ISI Na~y Commlss,on Ind Itle&#13;
GoIG1nWltlgs01a NI~.I Fltgllt OUoce,&#13;
By IlIenyolI'll be an •• pert If' ..... Ilk.&#13;
Ja''4v,oatlon and JI,"bO'n.eConuol ..&#13;
Iqu'~d 10do rou, lOb"".,.~e' you 110&#13;
BUIwhall!'Yefyou' ,pec,allr. "avel&#13;
wJllbepartol}'(l'llll,f. Jl,nd'o ...oI'&#13;
ellaill •. laspon5lb'!ily, achIevement ano"".. ,,,&#13;
1111111 a It.., ~,nd 01ca"er you"re&#13;
Ioo',n; '0'. ano ,tyol,l monkyol,l_e 1I0t&#13;
SEND TO:&#13;
~:=~Eu~;~~~:§~;~~~;~:-l,&#13;
,-&#13;
i :':~~,"'::_ ' , :&#13;
: "' .... ,.... ,. .. ",. .. ,Ott«.. :&#13;
IN.... - 1&#13;
] .....,... t&#13;
1 s'_ l~ 1&#13;
I""' :&#13;
I C."."'C.' .... ··.. I&#13;
ill•• succ." inTIM~~_N!~J&#13;
,-------------&#13;
It's what's&#13;
happening&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26: Mimist T. Daniel will appear 10 the Comm&#13;
Arts Studio Room at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday. Sept_ 26: PAB will present the film "Joe" in Greenqui.St&#13;
l03at 7:30 p.rn Admission charge is 75cents.&#13;
wednesdav. Sept. 26: Tony, Jumbo and Jlmi will appear 10 the&#13;
Whiteskeller &lt;GR D20ll at I p.m. No admission charge&#13;
. Saturday, Sept. 29: Cross Country meet between Parkside and&#13;
Eastern Illinois at 11 a.m&#13;
Saturday. Sept. n: Soccer meet between Parkside and Mmnesota at&#13;
1:30 p.m. .&#13;
Saturday. Sept. 29: Mat Maid's will sponsor a dance WIth the band,&#13;
Blackwater Gold, in the SAB. Dance will be from 9 p.m, until I a.m.,&#13;
admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday. Sept. 30: Harry Chapin concert will be presented in the Phy&#13;
Ed building at 8 p.m.&#13;
Sunday. Sept. 30: Vet's Club will meet in theSAB at6:30 p.rn,&#13;
Monday, Oct. I: From 7-tOp.m. Adult Student Association will have&#13;
a get-acquainted night in LLC 0173.&#13;
Monday. Oct. I: Women's Caucus will meet at 7:30 p.m. in LLC&#13;
Dt74.&#13;
Tuesday. Oct. Z: Cross country meet between Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee at 4 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 2: Women's swimming meet between Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Morula)· and Tuesday. Oct. 1 and 2: Orchestra practice in Comm&#13;
Arts 0118. Monday practice at 3:30and Tuesdav at 7:30 D.m.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be suhm_ to&#13;
RAlliGER by nnon Wednesday prior to publication of lbe I ue In whicll&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
place trophies and many top&#13;
place positions. Sunday. Sept. 9,&#13;
one of Rossi's pigeons won a $220&#13;
200-miJe race from Independence.&#13;
Iowa to Racine. On&#13;
June 29, a pigeon Rossi owns won&#13;
the 1973 Wisconsin State&#13;
Championship (the Midwest&#13;
prestige race) in a 500-mile flight&#13;
from Topeka, Kansas. "This&#13;
pigeon is one of the biggest&#13;
money winners this year in the&#13;
state," said Rossi, "winning&#13;
$1200." It is also nominated for&#13;
the United States Hall of Fame&#13;
(the highest honor in pigeon&#13;
racing), in which the winner will&#13;
be named .on Oct. 15.&#13;
Rossi's pigeons have brought&#13;
borne over $2000 this year with 8&#13;
firsts and 8 seconds which is an&#13;
extremely successful record,&#13;
Rossi explained.&#13;
With a month left in this year's&#13;
racing season, Rossi's pigeons&#13;
are up. up and away.&#13;
THREE CmE\lE~T LOUTIO\S:&#13;
U.W. Parkside -- Room ~19, Tallelt Hall&#13;
•&#13;
180 W. OIestllt s, BlI'lilgtOI&#13;
~200 Washilgtol Ave., Raeile&#13;
tilE&#13;
PACK&#13;
SHOP&#13;
For litht-"e'ghf ~Ielc pleldet ~"P""&#13;
... lelhlre • DOIf .. Jlelcets&#13;
• Sleep'ng Big. • M" .... '. Tellis&#13;
• 'Ieb • CoIllPUIII • CaMp Stwll&#13;
AIID .. WE ARE STIU ADDIIIO TO OUR STOCKI&#13;
Come in end gel ncquointed, We speak fluenl&#13;
rock climbing. bock pocking. mounlaineering.&#13;
canoeing and cross counlry skiing .&#13;
son - 6th ,.,.., lCe... hI (414)6~Jn1&#13;
Slert I..n: ..... to •.•.. , •.•.&#13;
,_.·TIl.,.. 10 •.•. - S •.•.&#13;
FtWay to •.•.. ' •.•.&#13;
......, ...... ·6 •.•.&#13;
---&#13;
CD&#13;
CD&#13;
=-&#13;
CI&#13;
a&#13;
-&#13;
--&#13;
-&#13;
CD&#13;
CD&#13;
=-&#13;
CI&#13;
a&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
uw- studen • raises It's vv at'&#13;
• • racing pigeons&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
When he was five years old,&#13;
Tonv Rossi's father bro~~ht a&#13;
couple of pigeons ho_me tpo 1km "d as a gift. Today, Rossi, a ar s~ e homore owns about 90 racmg&#13;
5?:e&lt;ms an'd has sold his birds&#13;
~roughout the United States and&#13;
the world. . . Rossi won his flfst pigeon&#13;
racing contest when he was&#13;
seven. That pigeon made the 300-&#13;
milerace back to the Rossi loft in&#13;
Racine in one day·&#13;
It wasn't until 1967, when he&#13;
was older and could be more&#13;
helpful to his fa the~, that pigeo~&#13;
racing became serious to Ro_ss1.&#13;
Breeders were purchased which,&#13;
if "top notch racers," cost&#13;
anywhere from $100 to $_500, Rossi&#13;
explained. He has imported&#13;
pigeons directly from England&#13;
and has some which have come&#13;
from Belgium and France.&#13;
February through April the&#13;
pigeons are bred, ~ch female&#13;
laying two eggs w~1ch ~ke 18&#13;
days to hatch. A pigeon 1s coi:i·&#13;
sidered mature in '1:7 days and 1s&#13;
then taken from its parents and&#13;
put in a separate loft with other&#13;
young birds. At this time the&#13;
young birds get used to their&#13;
surroundings and start in on their&#13;
training.&#13;
They are fed a high protein diet&#13;
of dried grains and taken out to&#13;
fly as often as possible. Rossi&#13;
starts the young birds one to two&#13;
miles from home, eventually&#13;
building up to 50 miles. The&#13;
pigeons should be taken out to fly&#13;
at least five times per week,&#13;
Rossi said. "No one knows how&#13;
they navigate home," he added,&#13;
"but it is common to lose birds in&#13;
training." They sometimes hit&#13;
wires or are attacked by hawks&#13;
or cats if they ground to drink.&#13;
Races vary from 100 to 600&#13;
miles. An individual is allowed to&#13;
enter 15 birds in each race.&#13;
Competing pigeons are placed&#13;
together in a trailer and driven to&#13;
the liberating point, to be&#13;
released early the following&#13;
morning. Races are held every&#13;
week from May through October.&#13;
A pigeon can race for approximately&#13;
eight years and has&#13;
a life span of about 13.&#13;
Rossi has collected 30 first&#13;
Tony Rossi standing in the doorway of his pigeon loft.&#13;
Whenever a Navy plane 1s under&#13;
e1ec1ron•c c001rot. lhal plane ,s 1n the&#13;
hands ol a Naval Flight Officer Naturally,&#13;
Ha cand1da1e lor Naval Fhgh1 Officer&#13;
1r11n1ng you·u need some •ery special&#13;
quaht,cahons Fusi. you must really 't!!!2! to Hy. even 11 you·ve never flown be lore&#13;
You·11 also need a college degree and the&#13;
kind ol mind that works well ,,,,1h math&#13;
and physics&#13;
Wa,ting at the end of your training&#13;
program ,s a Navy Commission and the&#13;
Golden Wings ol a Naval Fhghl Officer&#13;
By then you·u be an expert ,n areas hke&#13;
Jet Nav1g111on and Airborne Control&#13;
equ,pped to do your 10b wherever you go&#13;
But whatever your specialty, travel&#13;
""''II be par1 of you, l1le. And $0 will&#13;
th111enge. respons,b,l,ty. achievement&#13;
l'1d re'lll'ard&#13;
tf thats the k•nd ol career you·re&#13;
look,ng lor a"d 1fyou thin!.; you·ve got&#13;
SEND TO :&#13;
MAYY O,.-P'I C &amp;.,_ 1,.~~MATIO ... TICAW&#13;
r-~~~E«E~°:·?~:~:~~~---1&#13;
: ~:;:":,: ..... ,.., _, .... - ... ..... : l a.•et lv M•H--•• f t,O" 'Ott,1:-1 :&#13;
I ... I I"'''"'' l I I I AOO•tn I&#13;
l Colr S••ie ht ;&#13;
i Cs•·•••C••·•,. "~ : I I&#13;
: Be• success in _T~~~~-N--~ J l----------&#13;
place trophies and many top&#13;
place positions. Sunday, ept. 9&#13;
one of Rossi's pigeons won a 220&#13;
200-mile race from Independence.&#13;
Iowa to Racine. On&#13;
June 29, a pigeon Rossi own won&#13;
the 1973 Wisconsin State&#13;
Championship (the • lidwest&#13;
prestige race) in a 500-mile flight&#13;
from Topeka, Kansas. "This&#13;
pigeon is one of the biggest&#13;
money winners this year in the&#13;
state ," said Rossi , "winning&#13;
$1200." It is also nominated for&#13;
the United States Hall of Fame&#13;
(the highest honor in pigeon&#13;
racing), in which the .... ;nner \\;ll&#13;
be named ·on Oct. 15.&#13;
Rossi's pigeons have brought&#13;
home over $2000 this year v,.;th 8&#13;
firsts and 8 seconds which is an&#13;
extremely successful record,&#13;
Rossi explained&#13;
With a month left in this year's&#13;
racing season, Rossi's pigeons&#13;
are up, up and away.&#13;
happening&#13;
\\edne day, rpt. ? : iimi t T. Dani will ap r in th C mm&#13;
Art tudio Room at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
\\edn day, ~ept. _ : PAB will pr t the film " Joe" in Gr&#13;
103at7:30p.m. Adm· ioncharge i 75cent .&#13;
Wedne da,;, p . - : Tony, Jwnbo and J1m1&#13;
Whiteskeller (GR D201) at 1 p.m. 'o admL ion&#13;
. ~aturda), pt. _ : Cro Countr m t t&#13;
Erutern Illinoi at 11 a .m.&#13;
turd a) .. ept. _ : occer mee bet\\ een Par'. id and !inn&#13;
1:30 p.m. •&#13;
Saturda . Sept. _ : . lat iaid' "'ill ponsor a danc 1th th nd,&#13;
Blackwater Gold, in the AB. Dance will be from 9 p.m. until 1 .m., admission is $1.50.&#13;
unda). ept. 3 : Harry Chapin concert will be pr ented nth&#13;
Ed building at 8 p.m.&#13;
unda). ept.3: \'et'sClubwillmeetinthe ABat6:30p.m,&#13;
.\tonda). Oct. 1: From 7-10 p.m. Adult tud nt n.,;,..,._".,.tion will ha\' a get-acquainted night in LLC D173.&#13;
. tonday. Oct. 1: Women· Caucu \\ill mee at 7:30 p.m. in LLC&#13;
D174 .&#13;
Tu day. Oct. ?: Cross country meet between Park id nd&#13;
.rnwaukee at 4 p.m.&#13;
Tue day, Oct. 2: Women's s imming meet between Par id and&#13;
tilwaukee. •&#13;
I nda, and Tu dn. Oct. 1 and 2: Or hestra practic in omm&#13;
Arts D118. fanday practice at 3 30 and Tuesdav at, :30 o.m.&#13;
All item for IT' WH T HAPPE. ·1. .G hould be ubm tt .d to&#13;
RA. "GER b) noon Wedne. da pri r to publication of thr I u in "hich an item i to appear.&#13;
NOW PAYING 5.4%&#13;
(Compounds Annually to 5.51 ,~)&#13;
0. REG ·L. R&#13;
P SSBOO y&#13;
SAVI GS&#13;
THREE ro~,E~IE~T L C \Tl ~ :&#13;
U.U. Park ide -- Room 219. Tallent Hall&#13;
180 W. Chestnut t.. Burlington&#13;
5200 Wasbin~on .t,e .. Racin&#13;
TIIE&#13;
PACI&lt;&#13;
SHOP&#13;
For light-•eight hack packi119 1q1ipmellf&#13;
• feature • D•n Jackets&#13;
• Sleeping Bags • Mountain Tents&#13;
• Packs • Compasses • Camp Stwes&#13;
AND,· WE ARE STILL ADDING TO OUR STOCKI&#13;
Come in and get acquainted. We spec fluent&#13;
rock climbing. bock pocking, mountaineering,&#13;
canoeing and cross country skiing.&#13;
5033 _ 6th /we., Kenosha (414) 654-33S1&#13;
Sttte INrt: .. "." 10 •.•. • 9 p .•.&#13;
TIH.-Um. 10 •·•· · S P·•·&#13;
ffWay 10 •·•· · 9 p.•.&#13;
sm,•" 10 •.•. - , P·•·&#13;
..... c::&#13;
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8 THE PARKSIDE RANG~R III&lt;wt&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1"3&#13;
__________ sports-~ RANGER&#13;
~"YSlCAL aOUCATION .LOG ANO ATHLETIC O.~T SCHEDULE FOR OCTOBER&#13;
T ... :a C7gu.COUf\tt"y V$- \JoN M tw."kIM P.rkSode - ... OOp-.m&#13;
'NoIftiIt" .. Sw 1ft ChIO 'n UW M ..... ukM P.rU« -6 00 p_rn&#13;
.., ..&#13;
Harriers compile&#13;
2-0.record&#13;
by Daa Marry&#13;
This Saturday, Sept. 29,&#13;
Park Ide'S doss cowlry team&#13;
wUI compete against Eastern m.&#13;
in a meet wbicb head coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey describes as "our&#13;
toughe.t dual meet o[ the&#13;
see.... •·&#13;
The Parmde Harriers, who&#13;
have compUed a 2-0 dual meet&#13;
record thuslar, c:roued the finisb&#13;
line Iaot ...e.:OJ1d with ao overwhelmiDg&#13;
victory against lbe&#13;
University 0( m.-Circle campus,&#13;
21 10 40.&#13;
Indivldual wiDners for&#13;
ParUide ....ere fin! place, Lucian&#13;
........ JU" .....&#13;
!l&lt;l5a, who broke lbe tape at&#13;
26:20, which is 1:57 better lban&#13;
lbe old record. !l&lt;l5a beat second&#13;
place Wayne Saunders from&#13;
lliinois, who, incidentally, was&#13;
last year's NCAA Steeple Chase&#13;
Champion.&#13;
In another weekend meet, the&#13;
Spring Bank International 12-&#13;
mUe raco held in London, Ontario,&#13;
Rosa took sixth place,&#13;
averaging 4:47 a mile. Winner o[&#13;
lbe meet was Neal Cusak o[&#13;
Ireland. An interesting [act o[ lbe&#13;
meet is that eight o[ !be 10 men&#13;
who competed in it were in lbe&#13;
1972Olympic Games.&#13;
photo by Brian Rou&#13;
Despite Ute effort put forth by Park-side's Women's Tennis Team. the neUers lost to Ripon 4-3 lISt&#13;
Saturday .&#13;
Women netters dump Carthage&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
The Parkside Women's Tennis&#13;
Team will venture into its third&#13;
meet of the 1973 season this&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 29, at&#13;
Whitewater .&#13;
The Whitewater Tournament&#13;
will give Parks ide's women&#13;
netters their first real&#13;
test of competition, as&#13;
the meet will include&#13;
UW.LaCrosse ... the 1972 State&#13;
Champs.&#13;
Parkside will, however, enter&#13;
the tourney "well anned" with a&#13;
team that consists of four&#13;
returning letter ladies including&#13;
Pat Kekic, captain of this year's&#13;
squad.&#13;
Last week, on Sept. 19,&#13;
Parkside opened its 1973 campaign&#13;
with an impressive victory&#13;
over Carthage College, 6-1.&#13;
Captain Pat Kekic started&#13;
things oU on the right [oot [or&#13;
Parkside, sweeping two sets from&#13;
Nancy Gillelle o[ Carthage, lHl&#13;
and 6-2. Other singles winners&#13;
were Sue Wanggaard (6-1, lHl),&#13;
Joanne Rallen (lHl, lHl), and&#13;
Marilyn Stellberg (7-5, 6-2).&#13;
Bolb of Parkside's douhles&#13;
teams were victorious. Joan&#13;
Fredricksen and' Sandy&#13;
Kings[ield comhined powers to&#13;
overwhelm their opponents, 6-2&#13;
and lHl. Nicolet DeRose and&#13;
Ue9 SlUe-tat&#13;
"ne Ulmal Plait Shop"&#13;
TERRARIUMS&#13;
EXOTIC ,PLANTS&#13;
MEXICAN POTTERY&#13;
UKUSUALGIFT ITEMS&#13;
S&#13;
all kil~S,&#13;
yape sizes&#13;
H IJIG PLANTS&#13;
lat. WOf'!'ItI'l'sCraucoun'f)o()pen·Paro.de 10:OD.. In&#13;
~'toC""CIlI.I"l''"YOc*'l ".r-.sic» H·OD•. m&#13;
GoW Tourn., PerlU.cW 9 3a am&#13;
s.occ- uw ~ P....... '00p.rn&#13;
P... ~ ~I F.at F_' ".rkSiOI"&#13;
MM.' WOfN"'sT~Svt...UW¥&lt;~" Nt.twaUk .. ·:!·OOp.m&#13;
wOlMf't"'$w~mf'l9rtUl¥""'twau4l.ft Mlw ......" ]cOOpm&#13;
.'1 U &gt;Nort*'toTefW'l 'lIS- U'NSteYfMPOtnl "arlUidIt , OOp.m&#13;
er-sCoun''Y No.,..o._ln",ta"ONlI NOtreo.me , OOp.m&#13;
sat IJ 2NI Anra.&gt;at F.lI Gotf TCIU"\"tor women p.r..,. 9 lOa.",&#13;
o.... a., T«tlI4l"ttoeeer tlel4 P.r~ 1O00. rn&#13;
$oCur "'" UW PI.t~llle PI.~,II. II 00 a m&#13;
WO"'I't"'SC;)'lT\I\MtIUYS. UW Mad son P.rb .. l:00p m.&#13;
,&#13;
... It ~'sTeN\ YS c:.~&amp;.UWWt'l,tew.I'" P.rkstoe :J ClOp,m&#13;
... 17 *(.,\'$ UiuFornl P8;rlU. J OOpm&#13;
Pri It $OCC:'" '" Eastern III.fIOIt Un.~'ty Parbi&lt;MI· 3:ooP ffI&#13;
WOfT*'l'sG'I'tnnntIc:SY'S V'N La CI'OQ4I Parbide ,00p.ffI&#13;
~.s Tennb'YS C.rroll~I.P.rkSoeM 12ClOpm&#13;
llWOl'tI4'ft'S ... mrn no rt UW ~ son Parllside 12,00 P m.&#13;
... 14 $«Cft' ~ ~,,. JlMr~ J ClOP rt'l-&#13;
.tl"M WQrnrIfI', S·.'. Tt'f'lftl, Mftt La Cr1:ltY&#13;
lr.cio.C)eoUfhlon&amp;.OpetlMMI Parks ide n OOp",&#13;
S40t 11 0. .,TKfI ~'"9P'''''t ce.occ.',eId ".rlU~10 JO •. "'&#13;
SOCc ".. (,j", Gr..,.. e.'I' (Or..,.. 841., 2,OOp m&#13;
wo.nen S TennIS S'." MMt La &lt;:roue&#13;
wamen ... Gymnal C1YS W """"0'" Pa,UIOe 1 ClOpm&#13;
Ptr IcMDe(atl\tOtl&amp;.TtaOMHt P.rkSOCM 200pm&#13;
MiIIlI 1t wotM""sSwmlTttl'tgYS UW Mr'wOUk" Nt. .....Vl\.M 6.00p.m&#13;
CACTUS&#13;
large &amp;&#13;
small&#13;
SCTD CANDLES&#13;
DRIED FLOWER&#13;
ARIGEMENTS&#13;
1710 Washington Ave&#13;
(Highway 20 In Racine)&#13;
Phone: 632·4778&#13;
Parkitl t, th East ef tile Blildilg&#13;
EUeen Reilly also won their&#13;
match, 6-3 and 6-2.&#13;
Parkside's Women's Tennis&#13;
Team has 5 meets-3 tournies and&#13;
the stale meet on their schedule.&#13;
With an ample squad and one&#13;
victory behind them so far, head&#13;
coach Dick Frecka can look&#13;
forward to a successful year&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS RESULTS&#13;
SOCCER: Parkside lost to Northern minois s-o&#13;
Parkside lost to Lewis College 5-0&#13;
CROSS,COUNTRY: Parkside 21, U. of ill. Circle Campus 40&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS: Ripon College 4, Parkside 3&#13;
'II&#13;
When you own • condominium, mOfe time for ntll)l.ation and&#13;
entertaining were incllJded in the sales price. Someone elsa&#13;
takes care of the lawn. does the ext.lor maintenance and&#13;
this wlntef. will do the 5!lOW shoveling. Ask the folk. who&#13;
liYtlthere. nothing', e.asilll' than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $27,000&#13;
The .first B"irchwDodTownhouses sold quickly and more are under conuroction,&#13;
Now,.B,rch~~od. Ranch Style homes are ready and they Ire great v,lues, too. Sales pritet incl\lllt:&#13;
• Air cO.ndltooRing • luxurious c;arpe1:ing • Color coordiMud tile&#13;
: ~nc range.net Mlf ...... n;ng ovom • FrlKt·fr.. rflrie-ntor&#13;
• Cen........ • Food Waite d;'posa! • Dr_ing room • Molchd tub and ~&#13;
.... ted tral FMlTy antenna • R_ved 51or. arM • Surtae:. p'rItil'lll t lftdoor&#13;
• .... =.,..... an,~ablal • ~a1 balconV Ol' patio • Priute .ntrY&#13;
.... mmlnli pool • Country clubhouw. with&#13;
. .&#13;
"UM .&#13;
MORE BIRCHWOOO HOMES REAOY SHTEMBER 15 "&#13;
2 Bedroom Townhouses $31.000 3 Bedroom Townhouses $32.000 to $34,000 t&#13;
1 Bedroom R.nch Stym $19.500 to $23,000&#13;
i'tfty IlIIlt wMotl YOU elln own 8 110m//!&#13;
for.oovt t!lft _ month/., payment.&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
301h Avenue at Birch·Road&#13;
OE~ORA TO::DAND FURNISHED M'ODELS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANt;J:Q WA.ff&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
,-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
___________ Sports __ ~&#13;
P VSICAL t!OUCATION llOG A OATHlETIC OEPT. SCHEOUlE FOR OCTOBER&#13;
,rt s&#13;
ht.&#13;
-·&#13;
Ft 12&#13;
Pl P rk,,._ l&gt; OOp&#13;
., .. 17&#13;
,,, It&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
D~pite the effort put forth by Parkside's Women's Tennis Team, the netters lost to Ripon 4-3 last&#13;
Salurda .&#13;
ilk 300pm&#13;
Women netters dump Carthage&#13;
au" 6 00p m&#13;
CJ Country LOr Col eg Iowa Lor.a, 3 00 p m&#13;
Ha~riers compile&#13;
2-0~record&#13;
Rosa, who broke the tape at&#13;
26 :20, which is 1:57 better than&#13;
the old record. Rosa beat second&#13;
place Wayne Saunders from&#13;
Illinois, who, incidentally, was&#13;
last year's NCAA Steeple Chase&#13;
Champion.&#13;
In another weekend meet, the&#13;
Spring Bank International 12-&#13;
mile race held in London, Ontario,&#13;
Rosa took sixth place,&#13;
averaging 4:47 a mile. Winner of&#13;
the meet was Neal Cusak of&#13;
Ireland. An interesting fact of the&#13;
meet is that eight of the IO men&#13;
who competed in it were in the&#13;
1972 Olympic Games.&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
The Parkside Women's Tennis&#13;
Team will venture into its third&#13;
mee of the 1973 season this&#13;
Saturday , Sept. 29 , at&#13;
Whitewater. The Whitewater Tournament&#13;
will give Parkside's women&#13;
netters their first real&#13;
test of competition, as&#13;
the meet will include&#13;
UW-LaCrosse ... the 1972 State&#13;
Champs.&#13;
Parkside will, however, enter&#13;
the tourney "well armed" with a&#13;
team that consists of four&#13;
returning letter ladies including&#13;
Pat Kelcie, captain of this year's&#13;
squad. Last week, on Sept. 19,&#13;
Parkside opened its 1973 campaign&#13;
with an impressive victory&#13;
over Carthage College, &amp;-1.&#13;
Captain Pat Kekic started&#13;
things off on the right foot for&#13;
Parkside, sweeping two sets from&#13;
Nancy Gillette of Carthage, 6-0&#13;
and &amp;-2. Other singles winners&#13;
were .Sue Wanggaard (6-1, 6-0),&#13;
Joanne Hatten (6-0, 6-0), and&#13;
Marilyn Stellberg (7-5, &amp;-2).&#13;
Both of Parkside's doubles&#13;
teams were victorious. Joan&#13;
Fredricksen and · Sandy&#13;
Kingsfield combined powers to&#13;
overwhelm their opponents, &amp;-2&#13;
and 6-0. Nicolet DeRose and&#13;
PLA S&#13;
TERRARIUMS&#13;
EXOTIC _PLANTS&#13;
MEXICAN POTTERY&#13;
CACTUS&#13;
large &amp;&#13;
small&#13;
all kiads,&#13;
sbpe)' sizes&#13;
HtlllG PLANTS&#13;
SCENTED CANDLES&#13;
II&#13;
DRIED FLOWER&#13;
AR,GEMENTS&#13;
1710 Washington Ave&#13;
(Highway 20 In Racine)&#13;
Phone: 632-4778&#13;
Parki11 ta the East of tire Building&#13;
Eileen Reilly also won their&#13;
match, 6-3 and &amp;-2.&#13;
Parkside's Women's Tennis&#13;
Team has 5 meets-3 tournies and&#13;
the state meet on their schedule.&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS RESULTS&#13;
With an ample squad and on&#13;
victory behind them so far, Ilea&#13;
coach Dick Freclca can I&#13;
forward to a successful year.&#13;
SOCCER: Parkside lost to Northern Illinois 5-0&#13;
Parkside lost to Lewis College 5-0&#13;
CROSS-COUNTRY: Parkside 21, U. of Ill. Circle Campus 40&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS: Ripon College 4, Parkside 3&#13;
When you own a condominium, ,nore time for relaxation and&#13;
entertaining were included in the sales price. Someone else&#13;
takes care of the l~n. does the exterior maintenance and&#13;
this winter. will do the snow shoveling. Ask the folks who&#13;
live there, nothing's easier than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
· _Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $27,00&#13;
The first S-irchwood Townhouses sold quickly and mora are under construction.&#13;
Now._ Btrch~ood_ Ranch Style homes ar~ raady _antl thay ara great values, too. Sales prices include:&#13;
• Air co.nditeon,ng • Luxurious carpeting • Colo, coordinated tile&#13;
: =ge and Mlf-cleaning o~e~ • Frost-free refrigerator .&#13;
• • food waste dJSPOS;al · • Dressing room • Molded tub and ahowtr&#13;
._:=.:;,"•1 FM/TV antenna • R....-vld storage area • Surface part&lt;i119 ( Indoor&#13;
911..._ .avau~ble J • Persona~ balcony·or patio • Private entry&#13;
• Heated swimming Pool • Country clubhouse with sauna&#13;
MORE s1RcHwooD HOMES READY sEn~MBER 1s ·f:&#13;
2 Bedroom Townhouses $31,000 3 Bedroom Townhouses $32,000 to $34,000 ; · 1 Bedroom Ranch Style $19,500 to $23,000&#13;
'1f&gt;y renr when you can own 8 home&#13;
for •bour lhtt sa~ monthly payment.&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
30th Avenue al Birch -Road&#13;
DE~DRAT~O ANO FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to$&#13;
Fo~ more information 2 933&#13;
PHONE 1-55 •&#13;
PARK!ilDE REALf ~;_,~ ()tveloped and Built bV U </text>
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