<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2663" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.uwp.edu/exhibits/show/rangernews/item/2663?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T21:00:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="3354">
      <src>https://archives.uwp.edu/files/original/68d0537cdbd4095e46c7cfe2143752d1.pdf</src>
      <authentication>38b11f65b6c07c9a00d2234be35b65a7</authentication>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="8">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45717">
                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="45718">
                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="97">
        <name>Issue</name>
        <description/>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="64371">
            <text>Volume 2, issue 10</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="96">
        <name>Headline</name>
        <description>Used for newspapers, the Headline element describes the main article of the issue.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="64372">
            <text>State gifts go with job of chancellor</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="95">
        <name>Series Number</name>
        <description>The series number of the original collection.</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="64379">
            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
      <element elementId="1">
        <name>Text</name>
        <description>Any textual data included in the document</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="89927">
            <text>p'" car. aIr condltloners. ••&#13;
State gifts go with [eb of chancellor&#13;
by Mike Olszyk&#13;
"11Ieless I know about the chancellor, the better&#13;
cif 1am," was the statement made by one physical&#13;
plantworker when asked to describe Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie'splace of residence. Although this was his&#13;
..... rePly,it seems fair to ~aythat of the university&#13;
rsonne1contacted, a majority expressed similar&#13;
\':.JinIls of paranoia. There was a tendency to shy&#13;
BYfrom what constitutes Wyllie's personal&#13;
~ions, and where state dollars go, in terms of&#13;
"mces provided the chancellor. Wha t follows&#13;
IbeO is as Wyllie himself puts it, "part of standard&#13;
~ure and general maintenance in integrity of&#13;
cJlIlpus ll1ildings.'.' '"&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. IrVIO G. Wylhe live 10 a multi-level&#13;
bolDe&#13;
in a thicld~ wooded section of the University&#13;
IiWisconsin-parkside property. Market valued at&#13;
S42800,the white frame house is on Hy. E., on the&#13;
.... tbe8st boundaries of the university's 690 acres.&#13;
lI'bi1emaking the house adaptable to the family,&#13;
twO rooms were recarpeted and the electrical&#13;
~eII1 upgraded. Installation of an. electric range,&#13;
and three small industrial-sIzed aIr conditioners&#13;
plUSone portable unit, made this necessary. Ex:&#13;
dudingthese major appliances, the Wyllies own the&#13;
refrigerator, dishwasher, and 75-80 percent of the&#13;
boUSe'. furniture.&#13;
Cost to the WliveI'sity :n operating the residence&#13;
011. monthly basis is: electricity, $68.09; and oil&#13;
124.47.11Ie chancellor is also free from property&#13;
taXes aDd maintenance costs.&#13;
Intended to be only temporary, Wyllie describes&#13;
tbe homeas, "the least substantial in camparision&#13;
ONE HOUSE This is th hi&#13;
cellar and Mr~·.·Wyllie re:j~"tte frame home on Hy. E .. ben Cbaewi~h&#13;
cbanceltors' residences throughout the&#13;
university system." Lack of a separate dining&#13;
roo~, limited storage space, and no study. forces&#13;
Wyllie to use the next door "conference bome"&#13;
along with other administrative offici.ls. This&#13;
center hosts conferences, staff meetings, and large&#13;
scale dinner engagements.&#13;
When Parkside purchased land in 1966,to build Its&#13;
architecturally designed odyssey on, it was dooe&#13;
With the understanding that, within three to four&#13;
years, 60 to 80 feet along Hy. E's northern bank&#13;
would be relinquished to the Kenosha County Hlgbway&#13;
Department for road improvements. Presently&#13;
postponed for an indefinite period, chancellor's&#13;
residence and conference center none the less voW&#13;
Segregated fees&#13;
explained&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown&#13;
Union Reserve&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts .&#13;
StudentHealth&#13;
Busing and Parking .&#13;
Athletics .&#13;
InlramuraIs .&#13;
StudentActivities&#13;
StudentGroup Support&#13;
......... .. $38.50&#13;
. 1.50&#13;
.. 2.00&#13;
......... ..18.00&#13;
. .. 9.00&#13;
. '........ . .. 8.00&#13;
............... . 9.00&#13;
............ 2.00&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
A latal of $88 will be taken out&#13;
Iithe tuition this year of students&#13;
enrolled in twelve or more&#13;
tndits. Students carrying less&#13;
than twelve credits will have the&#13;
lIIIlOlDltpro-rated. The money is&#13;
used for financing various&#13;
•• greg.ted fee-supported&#13;
programs.&#13;
The only change that has been&#13;
madethis year is that 50 cents&#13;
.as deleted from the Lecture and&#13;
FineArts Committee and put into&#13;
1he Student Activities fund. That&#13;
dlang. was made because the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Com·&#13;
nuttee is composed. primarily of&#13;
fatuity members, whereas&#13;
tegregated fee money comes&#13;
frOIll the students and it was felt&#13;
lhat IbeStudent Activities Board&#13;
tI more student orientated.&#13;
~ Union Reserve is money&#13;
bemg set aside for Parks ide's&#13;
now Union which will be under&#13;
-netion beginning in the&#13;
Constitutional&#13;
referendum&#13;
Passed&#13;
The results of the Constitutional&#13;
Referendum were&#13;
:,",nced last Friday by PSGA.&#13;
motions passed, with 7 per·&#13;
: of the student body voting.&#13;
t1 QuorumChange, passed 295- c4mDeletIOnof the Student Union&#13;
Co IIlUtee, passed .253-71,&#13;
liernblnmg the positions ot&#13;
cording Secretary and&#13;
~ing Secretary into one&#13;
• ~Uve position passed 274-&#13;
.-:::: the Election time change,&#13;
277-44.&#13;
Total $88.00&#13;
summer of 1974. The health&#13;
allotment is used to pay half of&#13;
the salary of the nurse and&#13;
provides money for health&#13;
supplies and expenses, The intramural&#13;
sports program.&#13;
salaries for coaches involved&#13;
with intramural athletics,&#13;
referees, and other finances&#13;
needed to carry out the in·&#13;
tram ural suports program&#13;
Varsity athletics receives&#13;
segregated fee money for a&#13;
portion of coaches' salaries,&#13;
travel expenses, awards and&#13;
uniforms; other money for&#13;
varsity athletics is received from&#13;
the state. (The state money will&#13;
be discontinued next year,)&#13;
Student Group Support money is&#13;
used to finance various student&#13;
organizations, The division of&#13;
money among student&#13;
organizations is decided by the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
-Inslde-&#13;
"The Virus" reviewed--&#13;
"neither ordinary nor&#13;
extraordinaryJI page 4&#13;
Impeachment and other&#13;
Presidential problems--an&#13;
interview with three&#13;
Parkside political&#13;
scientists page 5&#13;
Film Society reels to roll&#13;
page 7&#13;
"Th~ Raven" and "The&#13;
Mo\'ement" are not included in&#13;
this week's issue due to sll:ortage&#13;
or SDace.&#13;
be torn dolO" 1O'hen th highway ",.d&#13;
Yet 10 1!Jr1, Wylli and the u,wv I&#13;
good Idea to bulId • ..".....te garage&#13;
evenlually-1&lt;&gt;-be-condemned I'Sldence To add 10&#13;
eleetne expenses, they ~Jpped It ,.,th an&#13;
automatic openmg door and ~1ec:1nC!lntmg (not In&#13;
operal1OO • The conf.... rce &lt;:enter has an .ttached&#13;
garage, but it ..... apparently lOC'Ortveru~ 10&#13;
Wylli. to park hIS an the""&#13;
"Gdt Home" to be' Pro\iclf'd&#13;
A "gift home" to be prov"led the ~lIor Is&#13;
Sb!I m the hands of 11S0"'".r, "8. Whllakrr, a&#13;
member of the eomrmuee ~ foe&#13;
eslablisbing Partslde'sloc:auon Willed ptember&#13;
30, 1972,the manston becomes the offlCal ~&#13;
of tbe dIancelkr ",nen the WbltUen pass ...&#13;
Considered by ardutectural Uthontl to be one of&#13;
the finest eumpl of tr.dJOOllal TIdor ...&#13;
chuecruee lD the mid . the hom. f.. _.&#13;
authentic Enghsh mas&lt;lQJ')', "O()(\ pandlJlll and&#13;
garden landscaping. It fae LaIt~ MI(:h an •• t 115&#13;
68th PI m Kenosha&#13;
U the SllustiOll would anse that the chanc:ellor&#13;
forced to move fore the \\:ll1taker t. becomes&#13;
a&lt;:cesstble, be could dra • prwlte !&gt;oualqI&#13;
allowance, monthly, ol appr011.1malelyS7G0.from&#13;
\\-lSCOIlSlOUnlvenIl) President, John Weaver.&#13;
The cost lD mamLe.....nee of the \\bltaker estate&#13;
would probably be substantiaUy tugber com·&#13;
pared 10 W}ih.'s ~nt resIdence Ellllen'btu .....&#13;
&amp;rOtmdWyllie's house a~ S8jd to be ( \It; and mu'KJl"&#13;
mee July, upkeepol h resIdence has .mounted to&#13;
$19921.&#13;
Grounds crev., po lbl. foethe ,.-elJ.kfllllawn&#13;
CODtUruedOD pq. 3&#13;
The Parksidlee-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973Vol. II No. 10&#13;
HearingNov.'6&#13;
Mission statement amended&#13;
The draft of the nev. mission&#13;
statement for Parkside, upon&#13;
which the Regents' 'ov 16&#13;
hearing will be based, has been&#13;
altered somewhat from the one&#13;
printed in last week's RASGER.&#13;
The new language is as follows.&#13;
(aJ The Universlly should offer&#13;
a distinctive academic program&#13;
which includes liberal afts&#13;
degrees and provides specific&#13;
educational support for the&#13;
economiC, technological&#13;
scientific. and cultural needs of&#13;
an industrial society.&#13;
cb) The University should&#13;
develop a distinct programmahc&#13;
focus on the economic.&#13;
lechnolo~cal, and managerial&#13;
need&gt; and mIcros of mduobJ·&#13;
based societies&#13;
4c) The em "ersily should oller&#13;
undergraduate programs In&#13;
engineering technolog~ Bnd&#13;
bUSiness admimstratlon. In·&#13;
cluding I.bor ""Iallon&#13;
•d I The Cni, ersltl hou1d ba'.&#13;
a commitment to program.&#13;
dIrected to",ard meet.ng th~&#13;
manp"" er need&gt; 01 Induotn.1&#13;
.oelet) and a. ~1511ng It&#13;
eL"Ooomlc grov. th&#13;
(eJ The lOnl\ r ity hou1d&#13;
support apphcalloo of scholar!}&#13;
actiVities In . tt"Ct 31rt'3 of&#13;
kno" ledge, e pc lalll oClal,&#13;
cultural. technological, and&#13;
envlronmtnlal probltm. of&#13;
WEAC plan revealed&#13;
The WEAC IWlsconslO&#13;
Education Association). a&#13;
faculty union. will present a plan&#13;
to make all of the campuses '" the&#13;
UW system as equal as possible,&#13;
at campus mission hearmgs In&#13;
November and December&#13;
Parkside's hearing will be on&#13;
Friday mommg, '0\", 16 The&#13;
plan's major recommendauons&#13;
include:&#13;
"\0 program or campus should&#13;
be given preferential treatment if&#13;
the UW system is in fact to be one&#13;
system.&#13;
Students should be able to&#13;
transfer credits among all&#13;
universities within the system&#13;
All diplomas should be- coo·&#13;
ferred by the UW system and not&#13;
by the individual campuses.&#13;
Internal procedures should be&#13;
established to eliminate the&#13;
current climate of mistrust and&#13;
disrespect between the doctoriaJ&#13;
cluler campuses - . 1.dlSOn and&#13;
~lIlwaukee - and the WllH~nlly&#13;
du ter camp s&#13;
Prof ors 'aid oU at oae&#13;
campu.&gt; of the t;W should be&#13;
lured by other campu. ~1th&#13;
vacanCies before the other&#13;
campuses go out Ide for per'&#13;
soonel&#13;
..\tlea t once e\tr) (our )ears.&#13;
me central awmmstratlon and&#13;
mdlvidual campus ad·&#13;
ministrations hould un'ey&#13;
WisconSIn conSumer in&#13;
business. labor. educauon and&#13;
go\·emment as ",ell as alwnnt&#13;
parents and tlJdenlS to see bov;&#13;
well t:\\ p~rams are meetlf1i,&#13;
the needs of society&#13;
The LW should place more&#13;
emphaSIS on contlOuing&#13;
education so that each campus&#13;
could offer undergr.duate and&#13;
graduate courses full tim ... lid&#13;
part time, at rught and dUrIng th~&#13;
SlIffim r&#13;
Th~ t" bould C'O.tlIlUf&#13;
oper.uon 01 etbOlC I&#13;
campu. , IOcludlng th r tI .&#13;
closed nt.... for hi ck luden&#13;
on the lad""" campus.&#13;
Gr du Ie and und rHa.lf&#13;
progr.m hould ",,0 1 th lob&#13;
market more than thel do !IO'o'&#13;
All ludfftt go\"emmeat can&#13;
didat.t art' rrqvnttd to ubmi'&#13;
th, ... pl.tform to R '\GJ::R by&#13;
Thunda,. \ .• in order to&#13;
hale them pubU hed ill. pedal&#13;
campaign I D. the follo .. 1na&#13;
l\tdM:sday. Pictur IN' al.&#13;
rt'q.~ ltd • R. SGER&#13;
plIologr.ph..... ill be ".U.b1.ti1&#13;
lLC 01". Oil 'nlon4ay. '0\.&#13;
rrom 11:.3:31 and Fri4lay •• '.\0.&#13;
f f",AI 1.:.11 :31. e-plet~&#13;
'-taU ar.,.-.. PSG '&#13;
office ..... LL ma.&#13;
JJJ!l.!e« car, air conditioners ...&#13;
5tate gifts go with iob of chance lor&#13;
by Mike Olszyk&#13;
••'J'he Jess I know about the chancellor, the better&#13;
orr 1 am "was the statement made by one physical&#13;
ant w~rker when ~sked to describe Chancellor&#13;
~ Jlie's place of res1~ence. Although this was his&#13;
Y reply it seems fair to say that of the university ov.n ' ed · · rsonnel contact , a maJor1ty expressed similar&#13;
leelings of paranoia. The~e was a te~dency to shy&#13;
away from what constitutes Wyllie'~ personal&#13;
ssessions, and where state dollars go, m terms of&#13;
iX' rvices provided the chancellor. What follows&#13;
:en. is as Wyllie himself p_uts it, "pa~t of standard&#13;
~ure and general mamtenance m integrity of&#13;
campus buildings.'.' . . . Dr. and Mrs. Irvm G. Wylhe live m a multi-level&#13;
11ome in a thickly wooded section of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside property. Market valued at&#13;
$42 800, the white frame house is on Hy. E., on the&#13;
southeast boundaries of the university's 690 acres.&#13;
While making the house adaptable to the family,&#13;
two rooms were recarpeted and the electrical&#13;
,stem upgraded. Installation of an electric range,&#13;
and three small industrial-sized air conditioners&#13;
plus one portable unit, made this necessary. Ex:&#13;
eluding these major appliances, the Wyllies own the&#13;
refrigerator, dishwasher, and 75-80 percent of the&#13;
house's furniture.&#13;
Cost to the university :.n operating the residence&#13;
on a monthly basis is: _electricity, $68.09; and oil,&#13;
$24.47. The chancellor 1s also free from property&#13;
taxes and maintenance costs.&#13;
Intended to be only temporary, Wyllie describes&#13;
the home as, "the least substantial in comparision&#13;
ONE HOUSE Th" · •·• 1 1 the \\bite frame home on H&#13;
cellor and Mrs. Wyllie re ide. .&#13;
with chancellors' re idence throu hout th&#13;
university system." Lack of a separate dining&#13;
room, limited storage pace and no tudy fore&#13;
Wyllie to use the next doo; ''conference' horn "&#13;
along with other ad.mini trative officials. Th'&#13;
center hosts conferences, taff meetin , nd larg&#13;
scale dinner engagements.&#13;
When Parkside purchased land in 1 to build i&#13;
ru:chitecturally designed ody_ : on, it a&#13;
with the understanding that, ¼-ithin three to four&#13;
years, 60 to 80 feet along Hy. E' n rthem ba&#13;
would be relinquished to the Ken ha Count\' H -&#13;
way Department for road improvements. Present!)&#13;
postponed for an indefinite period, chancell •&#13;
residence and conference center none the I ill&#13;
Segregated fees The Parksid e------- ...&#13;
explained RANGE&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown&#13;
Union Reserve ...................................... ..... ..... $38.50&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts ........................................... 1.50&#13;
udent Health .............. . ............... ....... ... .......... 2.00&#13;
Bu ing and Parking ............................................ 18.00&#13;
thletics ................ ... .................................... 9.00&#13;
Intramurals ........................... . ... ... .... ............... 8.00&#13;
Student Activities ..................... .......................... 9.00&#13;
Student Group Support .................... . ..... . .............. 2.00&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
A total of $88 will be taken out&#13;
of the tuition this year of students&#13;
enrolled in twelve or more&#13;
credits. Students carrying less&#13;
than twelve credits will have the&#13;
amoW1t pro-rated. The money is&#13;
u ed for financing various&#13;
gregated fee-supported&#13;
)l'ograms.&#13;
The only change that has been&#13;
made this year is that 50 cents&#13;
w deleted from the Lecture and&#13;
F e Arts Committee and put into&#13;
th ludent Activities fund. That&#13;
change was made because the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committ&#13;
e I composed primarily of&#13;
!acuity members, whereas&#13;
ated fee money comes&#13;
from the students and it was felt&#13;
that the Student Activities Board&#13;
more student orientated.&#13;
Th Union Reserve is money&#13;
lng .et aside for Parkside's&#13;
new Union which will be under&#13;
COO truction beginning in the&#13;
Constitutiona I&#13;
referendum&#13;
Passed&#13;
The results of the Conhtutional&#13;
Referendum were&#13;
I OUIK'.ed last Friday by PSGA. 1 motions passed, with 7 perlbet&#13;
of the student body voting.&#13;
27 Quo~um Change, passed 295-&#13;
Co Deletion of the Student Union&#13;
0 nt~iUee, passed . 2S.3-71,&#13;
R mbining the positions ot&#13;
~cording. Secretary and&#13;
no re ponding Secretary into one&#13;
n-elective position passed 274-&#13;
, and the Election time change,&#13;
pa 277-44.&#13;
Total $88.00&#13;
summer of 1974. The health&#13;
allotment is used to pay half of&#13;
the salary of the nurse and&#13;
provides money for health&#13;
supplies and expenses. The intramural&#13;
sports program.&#13;
salaries for coaches involved&#13;
with intramural athletics,&#13;
referees, and other finances&#13;
needed to carry out the intra&#13;
mural suports program.&#13;
Varsity athletics receives&#13;
segregated fee money for a&#13;
portion of coaches' salaries,&#13;
travel expenses, awards and&#13;
uniforms; other money for&#13;
varsity athletics is received from&#13;
the state. &lt;The state money will&#13;
be discontinued next year.&gt;&#13;
Student Group Support money is&#13;
used to finance various student&#13;
organizations. The division of&#13;
money among student&#13;
organizations is decided by the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
- Inside--&#13;
"The Virus" reviewed--&#13;
"nei the r ordinary nor&#13;
extraordinary" page 4&#13;
Impeachment and other&#13;
Presidential problems--an&#13;
interview with th ree&#13;
Parkside political&#13;
scientists pages&#13;
Film Society reels to roll&#13;
page 7&#13;
"The Ra,·en" and "The&#13;
MO\·ement" are not included in&#13;
this week's issue due to skortage&#13;
of space.&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
Hearing Nov. I 6&#13;
Mission statement amended&#13;
WEAC plan revealed&#13;
The&#13;
system&#13;
WEAC&#13;
A&#13;
· tudent hould ~ abl, t&#13;
transfer credit among all&#13;
univers1tie \\ithm the y t m, All diploma bould b conferred&#13;
by the W S). tern and not&#13;
bY the individual campu&#13;
·1nt,mal proc,dur hould be&#13;
established to eliminate th&#13;
current climate of mi trust and&#13;
clisre peel between the doctorial &#13;
'-'&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973&#13;
RA GER&#13;
'- ---EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
o ential for&#13;
theatre is great&#13;
"The Virus" has come and gone, and appears not to&#13;
h ve been catching. But. words of praise are due for the&#13;
cast. the stage crew and other supportive personnel for&#13;
th or extraordinary efforts in this inaugural production&#13;
at the Cornm Arts Theater. While all did not come off as&#13;
well as was hoped, the potential for theatre at Parkside&#13;
was demonstrated. and that potenllal is great.&#13;
Although two more ma lor productions have been&#13;
planned tor next spring, "Harvey" and "The&#13;
Boyfriend," students have expressed interest In staging&#13;
more original plays such as "The Virus," which was&#13;
written by Parkslde professor Herbert Kubly. One&#13;
suggestion might be that students submit scripts that&#13;
they themselves have written, to a student committee&#13;
which would select a play for production. The student&#13;
committee might also name a student director and stage&#13;
crew. The director would then name his or her own cast&#13;
after lTy.outs. Perhaps credits could be given in English&#13;
or drama to the playwright and director. This then.&#13;
would be a total student effort with only minimal advice&#13;
from faculty.&#13;
RANGE R supports any efiort Parks Ide students make&#13;
to learn, create. work and do on their own. Only when&#13;
they make the attempt to use. on their own, that which&#13;
they've been taught in classes, can real learning take&#13;
place.&#13;
In others' worcl.&#13;
Does merger mean&#13;
hIgher costs?&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
We get&#13;
To 'The Editor:&#13;
The show goes on. The&#13;
American people thrill to each&#13;
new installment of the IORich~d&#13;
Nixon Magic Hour." Tricky DIck,&#13;
as the renowned sleight of hand&#13;
artist is known. mystifies his&#13;
audiences with his ability to&#13;
make congressional appropriations&#13;
vanish into thin air.&#13;
A wave of his hand and poo!!, B·&#13;
52S are rendered invisible (they&#13;
too vanish, into cambodian air).&#13;
Dick is also noted for his memory&#13;
tricks.&#13;
In recent weeks he has stunned&#13;
all observers with some samples&#13;
from his new bag of tricks. In a&#13;
rare Saturday night performance,&#13;
Dick, using a can of&#13;
whitewash as his only prop.&#13;
caused three justice department&#13;
officials to disappear from offices&#13;
that were padlocked and guarded&#13;
by F.B.I. agents (that happened&#13;
later, but it was still a pretty good&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to Debra Friedell's&#13;
pomt of view regarding the&#13;
communication major at&#13;
Parkside I share her concern for&#13;
the type of communication major&#13;
we presently have. However I'm&#13;
disaPPOinted in several of the&#13;
Implications from Debra's "point&#13;
of view." As I understand it, the&#13;
cornmunlcatioo major is the only&#13;
"interdisciplinary" major in our&#13;
division and this fact seems to&#13;
make it a desireable alternative&#13;
to very narrow and-or&#13;
specifically structured majors.&#13;
The reason why I think this is now&#13;
a "destreable" alternative is&#13;
simply that many job markets in.&#13;
our economy now call for people&#13;
with a more general or broad&#13;
background in a particular field.&#13;
Were it financially possible for&#13;
us to do so, we would certainly&#13;
like to oller more courses in the&#13;
areas mentioned in Ms. Friedell's&#13;
article. At the present time this is&#13;
nnt possible. As is probably true&#13;
letters&#13;
Ifckl Thinking that this might&#13;
n~ta~aze the people sufficiently,&#13;
he then took nine ordinary tape&#13;
recordings, muttered th.~magic&#13;
wordS HBe-Be Re-Bo-ZO and, 10&#13;
and behold, only seven tapes&#13;
remained. The only ones not&#13;
joining in the applause were the&#13;
rather humorless type~ on the&#13;
House Judiciary CommIttee.&#13;
When people ask Dick where he&#13;
got his mystical JX&gt;wers, he IS&#13;
likely to shrug his shoulders •.and&#13;
reply with ~ impish grm, ,?h,&#13;
executive privilege, I guess.&#13;
Unfortunately for lovers of&#13;
dirty tricks, Richard's recent&#13;
performances h~ve go.tten lousy&#13;
reviews, and his ratmgs have&#13;
dropped alarmingly. We are&#13;
forced to reluctantly conclude&#13;
that the time has come to. bring&#13;
the curtain down on Richard&#13;
Nixon's act. Daniel Nielsen,&#13;
Franksville&#13;
in practically every discipline on&#13;
campus, continuous efforts are&#13;
being made in the communication&#13;
discipline to revise,&#13;
update, and-or add new cours~&#13;
to our curriculum. However, this&#13;
revision of major must, of&#13;
necessity, face the constraints of&#13;
legislative good will since the&#13;
state lawmakers ultimately&#13;
make decisions about financial&#13;
support for higher education. As&#13;
is the case with most discipline in&#13;
our division, we in communication&#13;
are again revising&#13;
our major but changes on paper&#13;
will be meaningless unless we&#13;
have the power (faculty memo&#13;
bers to teach specialized courses)&#13;
to implement the changes or&#13;
revisions in the communication&#13;
major.&#13;
Finally, in reference to the idea&#13;
of "distinctiveness" in a major, I&#13;
must disagree with Ms. Friedell's&#13;
implication that the communication&#13;
major is not distinctive.&#13;
In comparing other comTo&#13;
Tbe Editor:&#13;
Is there sucK' a tb1Dg&#13;
student contract? Iwould: •&#13;
know the limits for teache to&#13;
making assignments. n lQ&#13;
To get specific, I am enroll&#13;
one of Herbert Kubly's I ed 111&#13;
Hehas assigned everyone&lt;: a~&#13;
hi.s cl~~ses to see his pla~~~ or&#13;
Virus, and review it. Thisi Th~&#13;
but it costs $1.50. ,r...&#13;
$1.50 may not seem like&#13;
to most, but if you are a s~Ucb&#13;
working 5 or 10 hours per w ent&#13;
can upset your budget. Even~ II&#13;
doesn't, as a matter of prin "pl n&#13;
don't think any teacher sbo~d01&#13;
allowed to make assign he&#13;
that costs the students m:,eall&#13;
unless this requirement is t)&#13;
clear in the student cataJo;:'de&#13;
at least in the first weJite or&#13;
classes. of&#13;
In this particular case 1 thirt&#13;
Mr. Kubly is trying to helpil1SUl!&#13;
that his play will be a box of!&#13;
success by assigning aU 0( ::&#13;
students to buy tickets for his&#13;
play. Also consider that "ell&#13;
student will probahly bring .1&#13;
least one guest.&#13;
Name withheld upon request.&#13;
(Roprlale4lrom lIle UW·!\I Post&gt;&#13;
Po er Is the name 01. the game and its future allocation to students&#13;
and faculty under the merger implementation bill will be &gt;"rY int~g&#13;
to watch.&#13;
For the faculty here. there will be many de\"lopments, Ulc1udingthe&#13;
formabon 01. tbe UllIverslty'S JIUSSlonstatement. and decisions&#13;
reprdm the adcbbon 01. graduate programs.&#13;
WIUle it .. ill last, the tenure system may undergo some&#13;
modlflcauons The probable future advent 01. collective bargaining&#13;
Into the ystem for faculty members ..ill undoubtedly influence&#13;
higher educat,on m some yet unforseen way'S.&#13;
On conl.ro&gt;..-sial proposal .. ill concern the student rights section&#13;
which th laculty senato has already endorsed. UDlted Council, which&#13;
pusltmg the bU!, a hopeful portent of the pressure of student&#13;
opUUOD Oft tate go,·emments and institutions.&#13;
Workmg out the details IS yet another matter. Already a difference&#13;
In rpr&lt;tabon is d....·e1oplngo\"r the admiJustralJon ol segregated&#13;
f funds G '-'es Ion 36. I~I .. hich gives students, "in&#13;
&lt;anlUltation .. ,th the chancellor," the rigbt to spend those "student&#13;
f .. h,ch consbtute 'lJbstanbal upport for student campus ac·&#13;
1I\It! .. to 1n&lt;'ludesegregated acth'lty rees ....hile the administration&#13;
he _'t&#13;
'I'M ..ordlng 01. the biD clearly gIves students the right to spend&#13;
regated aet1\'lly lees 'The phrase, "in consultatioo With the&#13;
~lIor, .."",,.dea a suffiCIent safeguard to prevent abuse of the "Just onc.e ICJ like to be on t.he&#13;
....luI th bill', unplementabon ",ill take a long time. the .. hole 1~:;~~~~.s~id~e;;;;t;h;;o;t;';S=;W~i;n;n;;ih~9;:!:-:=;;;;;;;=~..&#13;
proctSS ould begm as soon as possible.&#13;
o of the bill houId sene the further I&gt;UfllOS" 01. mobilizing&#13;
tudent op Uan to unnecessary twtlon hikes. In October, the DO YOU h&#13;
CommIt for EconomiC Development ICED) recommended that ave quest-Ion&#13;
tUIUOO and fees be in&lt;:reased ",ithin the next five )-ear5 to pay for 50&#13;
rc-ent&#13;
\er&#13;
of 1t\Str'Udlmal costs&#13;
twtlan for undergraduates, at a rate 01 $413 a semester a ou b t stu ent relghts d&#13;
ould mcru to _ under this proposal. While clea rly mflabonary'&#13;
h an in ......ud also make.t set!m that students 111 a quest f~ and powe r?&#13;
.. t Is rightfully theirs. ar-e the perpetuators of higher costs. This&#13;
impress&gt;on would be Inaccurate Cbance1lor Sauro bas already&#13;
led th propDIBl "morally abilomlnL" C de&#13;
..... Itln h her coots for tudents, whether&#13;
It would be IroniC for a merger" ruch was&#13;
111&#13;
effected to save money to&#13;
tuition ... m fees Or does&#13;
a n Idat es Fo'rum&#13;
po,..r C06t more' Wed., Nov. 14 2:30-4:00 LLCD185&#13;
munication majors througb(u&#13;
the count~y I have found Ihol&#13;
P.ar.ksl?e s major is, indeed.&#13;
d.ish~ctlve and-or innovativeIII&#13;
relation to course offeringsIDd&#13;
our university mission. In short.&#13;
we are trying to keep up withlilt&#13;
'~real world" even though there.&#13;
bound to be a time lag bet_&#13;
the revision of a major and the&#13;
implementation of the ne.&#13;
major.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
E. Scott Baudhuin&#13;
Assistant Professor of Com·&#13;
munication&#13;
P.S. We welcome student.&#13;
about our major.&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Let's clean up Americafor""&#13;
200th Anniversary! 'ThePeoPs&#13;
Bicentennial Commission ..&#13;
planning a birlhday part7&#13;
America will never forget - •&#13;
second American Revolutioallr&#13;
1976.&#13;
'The political fervor oftbo ....&#13;
Woodstock the Watkin" Gloa.&#13;
were just a dress rettearUIf.&#13;
what's coming up. 'Il1e bi&lt;8-&#13;
teonial of the AmenCli&#13;
Revolution comes on the beeb Ii&#13;
Watergate dislocations in to&#13;
economy,' and .increased&#13;
cynicism and alienation 10-&#13;
corporate and political II'&#13;
stitutions in America.&#13;
So put July 4th, 1976 on lcalendar.&#13;
We have three l.... =&#13;
return this country to .' .nd I' revolutionary origins&#13;
make our place in histor)'- 0101&#13;
It's going to take car&#13;
preparation. Firsl, all of~m~&#13;
must be reminded that ~eart •&#13;
nation of people born II!'&#13;
Revolution ..second, wem~&#13;
the groundwork for a new dill&#13;
movement that will turD&#13;
country around. ri&lt;JlS \IlIf&#13;
Join with the newpat . . 101&#13;
build the birthday thai will ~&#13;
around the world. 'Thoma:,.ut&lt;'&#13;
Abigail Adams and&#13;
Henry had their mQl1lOlll&#13;
it's our tur~. B' eat....&#13;
The NIXon ~c a.-I!&#13;
Commission ISspen'::a"&#13;
of dollars to rn&#13;
space for their TarY .....&#13;
With your help wecao--&#13;
Let America" ..&#13;
revolutionaries apeIk&#13;
Peoples Bicentennial ue&#13;
1346 Connecticut A~ ,&#13;
Washington, D.C.&#13;
Room 1025&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973&#13;
a o&#13;
• ea re ea t&#13;
rom facul&#13;
RANGER upports any effort Par side students make&#13;
o I rn, er ork and do on their own. Only when&#13;
h a empt o use, on their own, that which&#13;
n taught in classes, can real learning take&#13;
In others' w o rds&#13;
Does merger mean&#13;
higher costs?&#13;
ud r the t . t P o&#13;
future allocation to tudents&#13;
on bill will be \-ery ininclud·&#13;
the&#13;
and decisions&#13;
We get&#13;
To The Editor: The how goes on. The&#13;
American people thrill to each&#13;
new in tallment of the "Richard&#13;
1. ·on 1agic Hour." Tricky Dick, the renowned sleight of hand&#13;
arti is known. mystifies his&#13;
audiences with his ability to&#13;
ma e congressional ap·&#13;
propriations vanish into thin air.&#13;
-ave of hi hand and poof!, B·&#13;
52.s are rendered invisible (they&#13;
too vanish, into Cambodian air).&#13;
D1 • i al. noted for his memory&#13;
tri . In recent weeks he has stunned&#13;
all o rvers with some samples&#13;
from hi!= new bag of tricks. In a&#13;
rare aturday night per·&#13;
form nee, Dick, using a can of&#13;
whit a a his only prop,&#13;
ca ed three justice department&#13;
officials to disappear from offices&#13;
that ere padlocked and guarded&#13;
by F.B.I. agents (that happened&#13;
lat , but it wa till a pretty good&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
ln r ·pon. to Debra Friedell's&#13;
poin of view regarding the&#13;
communication major at&#13;
Park ide I hare her concern for&#13;
the t:pe of communication major&#13;
pr ntly have. However I'm&#13;
di!!appointed in everal of the&#13;
implication from Debra's "point&#13;
,iew." As I understand it, the&#13;
communication major is the only&#13;
" in erd" ciplinary'' major in our&#13;
dh·· ion and this fact seems to&#13;
m e it a d ireable alternative&#13;
to very narro and-or&#13;
cifically tructured majors.&#13;
The reason why I think this is now&#13;
a "d ireable" alternative is&#13;
• im~. that many job markets in. our econom. now call for people&#13;
ith a more general or broad&#13;
background in a particular field.&#13;
Were 1t financially possible for&#13;
us to do so, we would certainly&#13;
like to offer more courses in the&#13;
areas mentioned in Is. Friedell's&#13;
article. At the present time this is&#13;
not possible. As i probably true&#13;
letters&#13;
trick). Thinking that this might&#13;
not amaze the people sufficiently,&#13;
he then took nine ordinary ta}?e&#13;
recordings, muttered ~~ magic&#13;
words "Be-Be Re-Bo-Zo and, lo&#13;
and behold, only seven tapes&#13;
remained. The only ones not&#13;
joining in the applause were the&#13;
rather humorless types on the&#13;
House Judiciary Committee.&#13;
When people ask Dick where ~e&#13;
got his mystical powers, he 1s&#13;
likely to shrug his _shoul~ers..3nd&#13;
reply with an impish grm, Oh,&#13;
executive privilege, I guess."&#13;
Unfortunately for lovers of&#13;
dirty tricks, Richard's recent&#13;
performances h~ve go_tten lousy&#13;
reviews, and his ratmgs have&#13;
dropped alarmingly. We are&#13;
forced to reluctantly conclude&#13;
that the time has come to bring&#13;
the curtain down on Richard&#13;
Nixon's act. Daniel Nielsen,&#13;
Franksville&#13;
in practically every discipline on&#13;
campus, continuous efforts are&#13;
being made in the communication&#13;
discipline to revise,&#13;
update, and-or add new courses&#13;
to our curriculum. However, this&#13;
revision of major must, of&#13;
necessity, face the constraints of&#13;
legislative good will since the&#13;
state lawmakers ultimately&#13;
make decisions about financial&#13;
support for higher education. As&#13;
is the case with most discipline in&#13;
our division, we in communication&#13;
are again revising&#13;
our major but changes on paper&#13;
will be meaningless unless we&#13;
have the power (faculty members&#13;
to teach specialized courses)&#13;
to implement the changes or&#13;
revisions in the communication&#13;
major.&#13;
Finally, in reference to the idea&#13;
of "distinctiveness" in a major, I&#13;
must disagree with Ms. Friedell's&#13;
implication that the communication&#13;
major is not distinctive.&#13;
In comparing other comIMPEACH&#13;
&#13;
NIXON!&#13;
"Just onc.e Ic:t Ii ke to be 011 t he&#13;
side thcit:S winning!·&#13;
DO YOU have question&#13;
about student rights&#13;
a nd power?&#13;
Candidates FOrun,&#13;
Wed., Nov. 14 2:30-4:00 LLC D185&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Is there such a thin&#13;
student contract? I woul! rlll a&#13;
know the hmits for teach ike to&#13;
making assignments. ers Ill&#13;
To get specific, I am enroll&#13;
one of Herbert Kubly' l ed&#13;
H h . ca&#13;
e as assigned everyone .&#13;
hi_s classes to see his pla '.n ~ f&#13;
Virus," and review it. Th&amp;;'· 1lie&#13;
but it costs $1.50. 18 fi&#13;
$1.50 may not seem lik&#13;
to most, but if you are a e mu&#13;
working 5 or 10 hours per "~~d&#13;
can upset your budget E&#13;
d , · ven if&#13;
oesn t, as a matter of pr· .&#13;
don't think any teachers~~~: 1&#13;
allowed to make assignm&#13;
that costs the students&#13;
unless this requirement i moo&#13;
clear in t~e student catalo:d&#13;
at least m the first Week or&#13;
classes. of&#13;
In this particular ca e I think&#13;
Mr. Kubly is trying to help 1&#13;
that his play will be a box nrr&#13;
success by assigning all ~ 1&#13;
students to buy tickets f&#13;
play. Also consider that&#13;
student will probably bring&#13;
least one guest.&#13;
Name withheld upon req&#13;
munication majors through&#13;
the co~try I have found tha&#13;
P_ar_ks1?e's major is, ind d&#13;
distinctive and-or innovatne&#13;
relatio? to _course offering 800&#13;
our umvers1ty mission. In&#13;
we are trying to keep up th&#13;
"real world" even though there&#13;
bound to be a time lag bet\\&#13;
the revision of a major and&#13;
im~lementation of the 0&#13;
maJor.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
E. Scott Baudhuin&#13;
Assistant Professor of Co •&#13;
munication&#13;
P.S. We welcome student input&#13;
about our major .&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Let's clean up America £or&#13;
200th Anniversary! The Peopl&#13;
Bicentennial Commis ion&#13;
planning a birthday part&#13;
America will never forget - a&#13;
second American Revolution (er&#13;
1976.&#13;
The political fervor of the s.&#13;
Woodstock the Watltin's Glen&#13;
were just a dress rehearsa! (er&#13;
what's coming up. The btcmtennial&#13;
of the America&#13;
Revolution comes on the heels ol&#13;
Watergate, dislocations tn ':&#13;
economy, and increa&#13;
cynicism and alienation to&#13;
corporate and political 1&#13;
stitutions in America&#13;
So put July 4th, !976 on&#13;
calendar. We have three Y ars&#13;
return this country to&#13;
revolutionary origin 8" d&#13;
make our place in histoi: ef&#13;
It's going to take car&#13;
preparation. First, all of Am 1&#13;
must be reminded that \le art&#13;
nation of people born&#13;
Revolution. Second, we m&#13;
the groundwork for a ne-.r&#13;
movement that will turn&#13;
country around. . Join with the new patnotS&#13;
build the birthday that \\ill~&#13;
around the world. Thoma p tn&#13;
Abigail Adams and • Henry had their moment&#13;
it's our turn. . The Nixon BacenteCommission&#13;
is spen~ ,&#13;
of dollars to mo ~&#13;
space for their Tory&#13;
With your help we can ft&amp;b'&#13;
Let America's . ·es-..1rouL revoluttonari 11...-,&#13;
PeoJ?les Bicentennial C&#13;
1346 Connecticut AVertue,&#13;
Washington. D.C. 2()036&#13;
Room 1025 &#13;
# 9YlP, B .t~it»r$&#13;
i~ol~"o~\&lt;.&#13;
&gt;!1L, _----J&#13;
by Jan .. &amp;hli ..sman&#13;
freebies' Reporter Michael Olszyk, who did the story on all the&#13;
oodies a person gets for bemg chancellor, earns this week's Su r&#13;
~IeuthAward for perseverance above and beyond the call of duty, pe&#13;
H&#13;
is investigation brought him into contact with a slew of I&#13;
th i 'de nd tsid f thi , poop e at&#13;
IIlevels bo msi a ou leo IS institution There&#13;
a ied h b h . were even&#13;
ore&#13;
who he trr to reae I ut e was unsuccessful at rnaki m ' S 1 ing conpections&#13;
Wl~ them. orne peop e ~ere about as talkative as the&#13;
Egyptian sphinx; others opened up like the water gates of th A&#13;
d&#13;
Iasci ti tori e swan Darn- He hear many ascma ng s ones and details and th ~" instaki en comen&#13;
ced the pamsta mg process of verification. That&#13;
f!I Imina ", 'thCh -~ ted In an mterVIew WI ancellor Wyllie himself&#13;
cuThe package deal each UW system chan~enor gets var'ies from&#13;
school to school, but has been under scrutiny (chiefly by student&#13;
newspapers). on a number o~ campuses In the state. The Daily CardiD.lin&#13;
Madison has looked mto the style to which Chancellor Young&#13;
haS become accustomed, and the UWM Post did an article early thi&#13;
semester on the inheritance former Chancellor Joseph Klotsche left ~~&#13;
his successor, Werner Baum.&#13;
11lePost article mentioned such comforts as a 14 room stateowned&#13;
residence donated by Milwaukee industrialist Walter Harnischfeger,&#13;
llSmal1 as far as lakeside rnansions go, 'It does offer the Baums a&#13;
rnagniijcent view of Lake Michigan, along with zero property taxes&#13;
utility and maintenance costs," the article stated, '&#13;
Wyllie'S contract originally called for the state to build him a new&#13;
borne. Then they tried to get someone to donate a house for him. When&#13;
that proved unsuccessful he was given his current home on Wliversity&#13;
property as well as the conference house next door. He says be has&#13;
sinCearranged for the donation of a house to be included in a will so his&#13;
successors will have a roof over their heads.&#13;
In Milwaukee, "The university provides two full time housemaidcooks&#13;
to work at the residence, Some of their duties include preparing&#13;
IJ'eakfast and lunch for the chancellor and his family, general&#13;
tx&gt;useclening, floral arranging and serving when the chancellor entertains,"&#13;
the Post article said. "Baum may draw on an annual $2500&#13;
entertainment budget for use in entertaining official visitors and&#13;
guests of the university, According to Central Administration&#13;
guidelines, use of the fund for gatherings of state employees is not&#13;
penniUed, nor is the purchase of alcoholic beverages."&#13;
UWM's chancellor also gets a car-- "a jet black, late model&#13;
American Motors Ambassador" as well as the gas and mechanics to&#13;
service it.&#13;
UW President Weaver, of course, also gets beaucoup fringe benefits&#13;
such as house and chauffeur-driven car and ahout $45 thousand a year,&#13;
He recenUy turned down a pay raise, which sounds very&#13;
magnanimous until you think of the tax bracket it would have put him&#13;
in.&#13;
lt appears true that money isn't everything. That's why the state is&#13;
so kind as to take it away from the tax-and~tuition payers and convert&#13;
it into usable forms like houses, cars, stoves, refrigerators, and more,&#13;
and donate them to ponr people earning over $30,000 a year working&#13;
ler tbe state, They pay no taxes nn their homes, and by giving them&#13;
these benefits instead of a higher salary they are able to stay in a&#13;
lower tax bracket. Welfare state for the state employees' welfare?&#13;
~If:.The Pltt&lt;i8Illid.I-----&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academiC&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin·Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin $3140. Offices are located at 0-194 Uhrary·&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranier is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials art not necesurity the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin·Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraled. Aliletten on any sub)eCt of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff musl be confined to 250.....ords O!&#13;
leu, typed Jlnd double-spaced. The editon reserve the right to teht&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be sianed and include&#13;
address. phone number and student statUI or faculty rink. Names will.&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the riaht to refuse to&#13;
pnnt any letters.&#13;
EDITORIN·CHIEF: Jane M. Schllesm;,n&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Frl~1I&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: RebecCll Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy BUsh, Stephen Gilford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Hedden, Gary Jensen, Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schu~t. John&#13;
SoI"enHn, Steve Stapanian, Carrie Ward, Tom e&gt;eFouw, Neal Sautnfl"&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brran Ross,&#13;
Jim Rufloro&#13;
CARTOONISTS: amy cundari, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
L.AYOUT: Terri Gelenlan, Terry Knop, slaff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken pestka&#13;
"'OVERTISING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCUL.ATION MANAGER: Gary Worlhfngton&#13;
"DVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
• \h \1 • Dl':\L • W:\TTS • SIICRE • J\T • 1'ECII'I{'S •&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
~Tape&amp; Record Centeri&#13;
Super Low Prices ~&#13;
'"&#13;
•&#13;
• "IlFH\\OOU.&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
SIB-56th 51., Kenosha&#13;
1'E:\C • .-\LTEC • KOSS. SE"...-ItISEH •&#13;
Wednesday. NOY.7. "73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
State gifts&#13;
TIM&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PAIKSIDE&#13;
f+RWRIJ.RN HEJbl&amp;RY&#13;
~n6Jl8i8~&#13;
..... 2-10&#13;
continued from pag e 1&#13;
in sum".ler and snow removal operations in winter,&#13;
~o~ With trades-men-in-residence - who did some&#13;
limited exterior painting this fall - handle most&#13;
~a!nte.nance work. Physical plant also provides a&#13;
janitot-ial .maid. two days a week. Coming from&#13;
Mrs, Wylhe. her orders usually consist of laundrv&#13;
and cleaning. •&#13;
State - ow---ned Car&#13;
T? service the university's 12, state owned&#13;
vehicles.' physical plant maintains a small&#13;
mechanics crew, capable of minor repairs This&#13;
fleel crew is responsible for gassing up and w~sIung&#13;
the chancellor's 1971 American ~otors Ambassador.&#13;
once a week.&#13;
Ea.ch state car comes upholstered with a senes of&#13;
credit cards honored by most gas stations and&#13;
garages, The O1ancellor's is no exceptioo,&#13;
Howev,:", these cards are to be used solely 00&#13;
university autos.&#13;
A report that Wyllie on occasioo once had a&#13;
privately owned Ford serviced by university personnel,&#13;
was disclaimed along with the rumor of a&#13;
three week family vacation in Arizooa, dunng the&#13;
summer of 1972, with a state vehicle. "Untrue"&#13;
expounded Wyllie on both accounts!&#13;
Wyllie does not deny though, having a police radio&#13;
put m hIS state car, for four to five months in late&#13;
1972, which was a physical plant expense 'of S725_&#13;
Used only a total of six times, its purpose was to&#13;
keep Wyllie in touch with a disorganized university,&#13;
due to construction.&#13;
According to a St, P.ul PIoneer Press article&#13;
dated August 5. 1973, Wyllie refused to hand over&#13;
this state vehicle despite orders from UW Central&#13;
Administration and the Governor's office, issued&#13;
September of 1972, Cars leased to the univel'Slty&#13;
system are declared surplus by the Department of&#13;
Administration lDOM after four years of use or&#13;
60,000 miles, whichever comes first. 1bis is a&#13;
standard practice carried out by DOA and the&#13;
vehicles are auctioned off through sealed bIds&#13;
Replacement for WyUie was not receIved, since&#13;
he could not justify t3,5OOmiles anually, nor ..'by be&#13;
should have another Ambassador (a DOA I'\Iliql&#13;
passed down last April 11, states that only for&#13;
medical problems can the state JrOvide an air&#13;
conditioned sedan model. such as an Ambassador),&#13;
Meanwhile, the car was auctioned and sold&#13;
through sealed bids, to a man in Food du Lac,&#13;
Despite this, Wyllie continued to keep lhe vehicle&#13;
and use it for another six months&#13;
Talking to Erwin Zuehlke, Director of Business&#13;
Affairs at Parkside, one gets a s1ighU)' dtUerent&#13;
story. He claims that sealed bids were sent out by&#13;
the Governor's office before Department 01 Purchases&#13;
had delivered to Par-kside a replacement&#13;
Zuehlke makes no reference lO the inability to&#13;
justify 13,500 annual bu iness miles. and neither&#13;
does he say that Parkside requested another air&#13;
conditioned Ambassador It was understood that the&#13;
replacement would be a second line AM model, such&#13;
as the Matador,&#13;
A court inqUisition proved Parkside to be In the&#13;
right. But instead of r-ecewing a ntN.' car. the state&#13;
loaned Wyllie an Identical, used, 7t Ambassador&#13;
Now it appears as though Wyllie ...ilI use one 01 four&#13;
ordered compacl AM Hornets, scheduled to amve&#13;
early next year.&#13;
HWe sympathize with the man who waited for the&#13;
car, but this wasa case where wehad to prove bemg&#13;
right," said Zuehlke. ID regard to the Fond du Lac&#13;
man who waited longer than expected for Wyllie's&#13;
previous vehicle, Wylhe though. "'as not sym'&#13;
pathetic to the polDl of driving hlS own family car&#13;
during the mix up. and coHectlng mileage felm·&#13;
--------.,&#13;
, Earn $$$ seiling'&#13;
, ,&#13;
, ad. for RANGER , a.-------~&#13;
The plaee to go&#13;
lot PInts&#13;
Ind thingsl&#13;
614 • 56th Street&#13;
'" SOTHER H L E - rile C&lt;lGferftl&lt;e _ ,",.t&#13;
door to &lt;be 1I)IUe re IoI.. ee, used I.- ............&#13;
""d Lall meeting _&#13;
bursemenrs at 11 cen lor the fint. nul .. INert&#13;
month and ..,.'en cenlS lor every mile tberelIfter&#13;
c........ 1".,e&#13;
All tJungs COOSIdered, Wyllie contends that there&#13;
really aren't that many extras available to tum ..&#13;
chancellor and m- wt do exist, he feels are&#13;
nee spry in order for. chaDcelJor to Jft:I8It •&#13;
respe&lt;Uble unage to the commUDIty&#13;
As was stated earher ID tIus article, there .. a&#13;
tendency to sby a.... y from .. -hat ~t_&#13;
Wyllle's personal pe&gt;UMs..... , and wber'e state&#13;
dollars go. In rerms of services provided !be&#13;
chancellor Accordtng to zuehlke, Wyllie hM no&#13;
pnvate expense funds, and that anythin&amp; purcburd&#13;
for him is done through the nlvel'Slty'. normal&#13;
stalH'eqU1red, ""lUl5ltiOOl&#13;
ThlS does not explain though. phyoicaJ plaDt&#13;
purchasong special fend ..... aod redwood but&lt;&#13;
chIps, used as mulch around WyU.. •• lJ'HJI&#13;
Although gardelllJl8. a hobby of Wythe'., baa Ium&#13;
domg most 01 the labor and buying gardorI -.&#13;
physical plant still tills the large plol 011J'OWld and&#13;
lays do ..... black v.-o pIaotlC _IIPI&#13;
.. eeds&#13;
Phy lcal plant chrector Rodger Allen has "work&#13;
orders" dra ..... up belore .ny labor IS actually done&#13;
ID and around the campus, lor k~ong !rack of&#13;
lauverslt)' dollars Work done on Wyllie's 1'aI~&#13;
...as not recorded separ.tely until Allen m&#13;
dtrector In February of 1972&#13;
Remodeling and the bUlldlDg of Wyllie's g.rag&#13;
po Ihly .. as paId for through the uruvel'Slty'.&#13;
"fimshlDg funds" 1'hI fund IS 'gned to repair&#13;
na.. ID unIversIty bwldll18 &lt;*.Ie to m .... lculaUOCll&#13;
ID construetJon Earlier thIS year Wylll and the&#13;
plamung dtrector made. contract bid to ,' ......&#13;
Construction to build a 40 loot red..-ood fen&lt;e. WIth&#13;
money from thl lund, to hide the cooll tOWffl of&#13;
the heating and chilhng plan, Estllnated to&#13;
near thousand. the (;(n;ernor's offi In MadiJon&#13;
refused to appropriate the money,&#13;
An enlertlllnment budget 01 annually ..&#13;
granled the chancellor lor rntertalnlllg ofllcal&#13;
VISIror.; or guesta of the unlVerllty Cenrral Ad,&#13;
mIDI.. ratlon guulellnes say thaI uN of theIIe funds&#13;
for gathenngs of state employ I not permuted,&#13;
nor IS the purchase of .lcohollc be ra&amp; '&#13;
Fin.lly. It IS Ulterestong to note that the IloarcI 01&#13;
Regents. ID the last flSC8l year. granted a "50"&#13;
of hYIng adJUSIm nt" to Wyll .. , thus lJnnI the&#13;
chancellor's salary to $36,550,&#13;
IhiN."1 $269 .... To ..&#13;
~.)IOIlIA: ......&#13;
• .OVNO T.IP .II.T&#13;
• 1 "'_GNU OUTIllGOC.&#13;
wE-IT&#13;
• '1 DAYCtTy TOU.&#13;
• FLOWIE.II:ll.' OIl:(I[TI"O&#13;
• GlitOUNO TII: ..... IFI.II:S&#13;
• lOU. Hon 10ElItVICIU&#13;
• ",U. TIPS &amp; ".&amp;X'"&#13;
b) Jane S(hliHman&#13;
freebies! Reporter Micha~! Olszyk, who did the story on all the&#13;
oodies a person gets for bemg chancellor, earns this week's Su r&#13;
gleuth A war? fo~ perseveranc~ a?ove and beyo~d the call of duty_ pe&#13;
His investth1ga_tio~dbroudght thi~d mtfothc?n~ct_ with a slew of people at&#13;
all levels bo ,~1 e an ou s1 e o is msbtution. There were even&#13;
re who he tried to reach, but he was unsuccessful at mak· mo th S 1 mg connections&#13;
wi~ emth. ome pedeop e l~kerehabout as talkative as the&#13;
Egyptian sphinx; o ers op~n . up 1 ~ t e water gates of the Aswan&#13;
Dam- He heard ~a~\~ascmatmg stones and details and then commenced&#13;
the pa1~s ta i~g pr?CthesCsh of verification. That proces&#13;
ulminated in an m erVIew w1 ancellor Wyllie himself&#13;
c The package deal each UW system chan~ellor gets varies from&#13;
school to school, but has been under s_crutmy (chiefly by student&#13;
newspapers)_ on a number o~ campuses m the ~tate. The Daily Cardinal&#13;
in Madison has looked mto the style to which Chancellor Young&#13;
has beeome accustomed, and the UWM Post did an article early this&#13;
semester on the inheritance former Chancellor Joseph Klotsche left to&#13;
his successor, Werner Baum.&#13;
The Post article mentioned such comforts as a 14 room stateowned&#13;
residence donated by M_ilwaukee _industrialist Walter Harnischfeger.&#13;
"Small as far as lakeside mansions go, it does offer the Baums a&#13;
magnificent view of Lake Michigan, along with zero property taxes&#13;
utility and maintenan_c~ costs," the article stated. '&#13;
Wyllie's contract ongmally called for the state to build him a new&#13;
home. Then they tried to get someone to donate a house for him. When&#13;
that proved unsuccessful he was given his current home on university&#13;
property as well as the con~erence house next_ door. He says he has&#13;
since arranged for the donation of a house to be mcluded in a will so his&#13;
successors will have a roof over their heads.&#13;
In Milwaukee, "The university provides two full time housemaidcooks&#13;
to work at the residence. Some of their duties include preparing&#13;
breakfast and lunch for the chancellor and his family, general&#13;
houseclening, floral arranging and serving when the chancellor entertains,"&#13;
the Post article said. "Baum may draw on an annual $2500&#13;
entertainment budget for use in entertaining official visitors and&#13;
guests of the university. According to Central Administration&#13;
guidelines, use of the fund for gatherings of state employees is not&#13;
permitted, nor is the purchase of alcoholic beverages."&#13;
UWM's chancellor also gets a car- 11 a jet black, late model&#13;
American Motors Ambassador" as well as the gas and mechanics to&#13;
service it.&#13;
UW President Weaver, of course, also gets beaucoup fringe benefits&#13;
such as house and chauffeur-driven car and about $45 thousand a year.&#13;
He recently turned down a pay raise, which sounds very&#13;
magnanimous until you think of the tax bracket it would have put him&#13;
in.&#13;
It appears true that money isn't everything. That's why the state is&#13;
so kind as to take it away from the tax-and-tuition payers and convert&#13;
it into usable forms like houses, cars, stoves, refrigerators, and more,&#13;
and donate them to poor people earning over $30,000 a year working&#13;
for the state. They pay no taxes on their homes, and by giving them&#13;
these benefits instead of a higher salary they are able to stay in a&#13;
lower tax bracket. Welfare state for the state employees' welfare?&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-229$. . The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
renected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any sub,ect of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed jlnd double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address. phone number and student status or faculty rank Names wil~&#13;
~ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
pnnt any letters&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF . Jane M. Schllesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR · Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR · Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR , David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS Sandy Bush, Stephen Gilford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Hedden, Gary Jensen, Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert, JOhn&#13;
Sorensen, Sieve Stepanian, Carrie Ward, Tom OeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian ROSS,&#13;
Jim Ruffolo&#13;
CARTOONISTS amy cundarl, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT Terri Gelenlan, Terry Knop, stall&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
.O.DVERTISING MANAGER : Amy Cundarl&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER . Gary Wor!hlnglon&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
• \K.\1 • DUAL • WATTS e SHURE e JVf' • TECH:"ilCS •&#13;
,. J&amp;J -&#13;
~&#13;
~ Tape &amp; Record Center;&#13;
""l&#13;
::!&#13;
-- •&#13;
- Super Low Prices -.... 2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
518-56th St.. Kenosha • SIIERWOOD • L"R TE.-\C • :\L TE(" • KOSS • SE:"i:"illlS.-, •&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
State gifts&#13;
continued from el&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
614 - 56th Street&#13;
Jeappineu is JCQ6XJii&#13;
lh AW I&#13;
$269 p , &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER WednesdaY. Nov. 7. 1973&#13;
Review&#13;
Play is IInightmare&#13;
of game-playing"&#13;
f:dkor' nMf': ,-Ttl.,., ira .. bf Herber1 Kubly"'.&#13;
lIIe pr ml.. production in Pork \cit' ne .. Com'&#13;
mUllk lion \rt Theater \l played lor lour alghlS&#13;
, w "andi r~"i edhenby am) c-undarl.Ms.&#13;
(.nd.r~ member of the Putt ide PJa)ers and&#13;
loa .. orktd In Io&lt;al "en ba lbealn lor tblrteen&#13;
an, In ""lin 1,1&lt;Tbntre, Raken Voulh&#13;
~ctlon , and Sl Jowpb' Hlgb booI. She loa&#13;
.. orktd ... '''0 Park kle production a a Ilgbling&#13;
oed pe"'al err tecbnlcl .... She Is a _lor&#13;
ma}orln&amp;1n pb~by aad art. and I R SGER'&#13;
..artl .. ·ln· klen,,:'&#13;
by am &lt;""dart&#13;
'.",.. Virus." by Herbert Kubly, IS a play about&#13;
lh bl... C1 I lamily of a martinet patriarch who&#13;
nooal all.,,,e and luilt punut hIS children and&#13;
black wlI aller b. dealh The play is a nigblDUl!&lt;!&#13;
of m plaY'1\&amp; It remlnda one 01 a Ollistmas&#13;
where no one 101 whal lhey really wanled.&#13;
Th tl menlll of tragedy and susptllSt which&#13;
alletnpllO hold lh pIOlIOBelh... , &lt;hsUllegrate in lhe&#13;
lh.rd acl. The lhlrd act' SUJ'1'UI Ian:e. The&#13;
dw' ct break down dunng lhe crackdown on&#13;
InIlh whIch R""ben bas pressed 10arnve in the t"''O&#13;
preVlO'" aclll Reuben ISlhe proeagooist ollhe play,&#13;
WIth blS pnvate ,.,....,al identity &lt;=loving him&#13;
lrom the black servant role hIS dead lather WIshed&#13;
played out and lhe remo"ed secunties of lhe white&#13;
world be was depcived 01.&#13;
The d1alocue ISmlerestmg in its humor, but awk·&#13;
ward In appbcaUon One can not imagine the&#13;
provlnetal Drew, a compa$SlJlate, but unpresuming&#13;
lawyer. to enter with a continental "Ciao!" at the&#13;
beglnning 01 lhe third acl. Verbal images like&#13;
"b1ack .. a telepbooe," or "Butterfly·boy," when&#13;
uttered by lheir perspective characters did oot&#13;
tie well Wllh the audience.&#13;
ill, lhe aud1ence "'... trealed 10 some good&#13;
moments 01 humor, 10 verbal sexual inference and&#13;
m turn-of-e.. nt action. 1l was amusi.ng to see the&#13;
b1ac:l&lt;, militant Ajax make the high society liancee&#13;
of lh o,·...·beanng Larry come ..,th little per.&#13;
I\Ill .on 10 hIm lor a moment 01 purely physical&#13;
aflection&#13;
The actinglS '-ery good collSldering the sections 01&#13;
tared dialogue, and even If lhe dialogue did render&#13;
Itself at times cumbersome, Kubly's characters are&#13;
well-devtloped and almoal Greek in lheir classism.&#13;
The labulous matrian:h 01 Gertrude Jeannette&#13;
permeates the play ""th nch leeling and honest&#13;
urnent. Don Hintz's portrayal 01 Larry at once&#13;
.ckens us and yet calls lor our understanding. He&#13;
remands us of a .. oak despot ..-hose throne was&#13;
pushed up under hl/Tl. and once rwding bimself 00&#13;
lhls uncomfortable plateau is completely crushed&#13;
by mlemal loneliness The splendid sensual.&#13;
coolnesa 01 AjaX comes aero with nne hwnor in&#13;
e,e LOll's character. Drew, played by Dennis&#13;
Doo Rinl1 as Lury and Judi Smith as Rhoda confront&#13;
one anothel" in a scene from "The Virus." A&#13;
total oll308 people altended the lour perlormances.&#13;
Geragltty, is a warm and subtle sort lor all his&#13;
education, and his love; Rhoda, played by JudIe&#13;
Smith, needs \hiS simple aflection and sincertty to -&#13;
counter her lalling delences and bitter nature&#13;
trought on by emollonal isolatioo. AMabelle&#13;
Current does a line job being the societal Pamela&#13;
Drake, nung into this horrible weekend 01&#13;
revelation. Rick: Ponzio's Reuben is, intense and&#13;
lragile, a rme portrayal 01 a half·breeds attempts to&#13;
grasp identity and secure reality in the midst of&#13;
seething confusioo.&#13;
A very special commendation goes to Mr -Thomas&#13;
Reinert and his crew for a remarkable stage setting.&#13;
The special quality 01 the set and its&#13;
sophisticated construction show that lhere is need&#13;
(oc a more interested renewal of the dramatics in&#13;
\hiS university. Ted Paone and the resl 01 the&#13;
student crew did a line job executing the Reinert&#13;
design. The illusions of unending corridors and lhe&#13;
numerous performing levels which could be utilized&#13;
by the actors speak very well for the technical&#13;
quality we may expect lrom future productions on&#13;
this campus.&#13;
"I don't know how ordinary people live, hut lhey&#13;
don'llive like us!" So says Rhoda in the course of&#13;
the play, to air both her frustration and ours. No,&#13;
\hiS is not the life of ordinary persons or of extraordinary&#13;
ones; it is rather the life chronicles 01&#13;
sham personages. What could not come acrOSS in&#13;
plot and action, had to be delivered by the actors. II&#13;
the play works, it is because 01 the insight of the&#13;
individuals portraying the characters and the&#13;
realities they strove to achieve in a meager plot.&#13;
HOFF ANIS American State Bank&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5107· S...... ,&#13;
.......&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
Phone 658-2582 3928 60th St.&#13;
MHnbet'" F D.I.C&#13;
armed with questions or just&#13;
listen. 10&#13;
RANGER editor J&#13;
~h1iesman commented that .i.:&#13;
Importance of this election&#13;
cannot he stated too strongly.'II.&#13;
have. to elect serious, hardworking&#13;
and responsible Pl!OpIe&#13;
to PSGA this year, who are inleoi&#13;
on making student government&#13;
viable Iorce. II PSGA does a&#13;
work this year it's aU over:f(l'::&#13;
future. We owe it to ourselves to&#13;
take this last opportUnity 10&#13;
salva~e student power at&#13;
Park~lde, or those coming after&#13;
us will be even more victimized&#13;
than we are and will have \II to&#13;
blame."&#13;
She added that she e"PtCtl&#13;
most 01 the RANGER s!llfllo 110&#13;
at the forums with "some serioua&#13;
questions that should concern UI&#13;
all. "&#13;
. "Since we will not have a pal*'&#13;
coming out between \be time of&#13;
the lorums and lbe electi......&#13;
she concluded, "I bope tbe&#13;
student body will come and ."&#13;
tually hear the candidates lor&#13;
themselves, to enable them to&#13;
vote like their sludant rigbla&#13;
depend on it. Tbey do'"&#13;
Two pre-election forums - one&#13;
for officer candidates and one for&#13;
senatorial candidates -- have&#13;
been scheduled lor next Wed·&#13;
nesday, NoV. 14.The presid.ential&#13;
and Vice-Presidential candidates&#13;
will be available in LLC Dlll5 to&#13;
.nswer questions [rom 2:30-3:15;&#13;
Senate hopeluls from 3:15-4 p.rn.&#13;
Brief (ormal statements by&#13;
candidates are planned at this&#13;
time and platforms will also be&#13;
, k' printed in next wee s paper .&#13;
However, candidates will be&#13;
available prL1'Jlarily to ans~er&#13;
student questions on a Wide&#13;
variety of topiCS. Subjects expected&#13;
to be covered include the&#13;
importance ol PSGA, student&#13;
rights, tbe extent 01 student&#13;
power on this campus, Constltutional&#13;
questIOns, the&#13;
potential (OCUS of ~tudent&#13;
government (academiC, activity.related,&#13;
grievances and so&#13;
on), ways of increasing PSG~'s&#13;
responsibility and contact With&#13;
its constituency, lack of student&#13;
involvement, and feelings about&#13;
participation in a state·wide&#13;
network of student governments&#13;
such as the Uoited Council of&#13;
Student Governments based in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
All students are invited to come&#13;
Candidate forums&#13;
scheduled'&#13;
ACADEMIC&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
MATERIALS&#13;
THOUSANDS OF RESEARCH STUDIES&#13;
AL.L SUBJECTS&#13;
CATALOGUE CONTAINING 10,000 LISTINGS&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
. Send for FREE Details or&#13;
Telephone (312) 427·2840&#13;
---------------- Academic Resealch, Inc. I&#13;
I 431 South Dearborn Street I&#13;
I Chicago, Illinois 60605 I&#13;
I I&#13;
I Your Name -- I&#13;
I Add.... I&#13;
I I&#13;
I&#13;
CilyloStat. I&#13;
----------------&#13;
SKILOM aOOTS, BINDINGS,&#13;
POLES AND SKIS&#13;
PWS: FREE WAXING AND&#13;
ON SNOW LESSON IN X-C SKIING&#13;
AT&#13;
$72.95 tAN PUT 10U 1M&#13;
THE X-tOUMTIW&#13;
SKI OF TIiINGS.&#13;
"HC&#13;
SlIO&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973&#13;
evlew&#13;
lay •&#13;
IS 'nightmare&#13;
game- laying"&#13;
t,· i a ;arm and ubtle sort for all his&#13;
ti · ·, and Jove; Rhoda, played by Judie&#13;
ith, this 1mple affection and sincerity to&#13;
counter her falling defences and bitter nature&#13;
brought on by em onal isolation. Annabelle&#13;
Curr t · a fine job being the societal Pamela&#13;
Dr e, nu into this horrible weekend of&#13;
re ·elation. Ri Ponz.io' Reuben is, intense and&#13;
fragile, a fine portrayal of a half-breeds attempts to&#13;
asp identity and secure reality in the midst of&#13;
hing c fusion . ry pecial commendation goes to, 1r. Thomas&#13;
Reinert and hi er v. for a remarkable stage settin&#13;
. The pecial quality of the set and its&#13;
· ticated c truction show that there is need&#13;
m r int tee! renewal of the dramatics in&#13;
thi uni •ersity. Ted Paone and the rest of the&#13;
udent ere did a fine job executing the Reinert ·gn. The 1llu ·oo of unending corridors and the&#13;
numerous performing levels which could be utilized&#13;
by the ac peak very ·ell for the technical&#13;
qu lit ·e may peel from future productions on&#13;
th 0 campus.&#13;
" I don t know ho ordinary people live, but they&#13;
don't foe like u '. .. So say Rhoda in the course of&#13;
th pla) , to air both her frustration and ours. No,&#13;
thi not the life of ordinary persons or of extraordinar)&#13;
on ; it i rather the life chronicles of&#13;
sham pe es. What could not come across in&#13;
plo and actio had to be delh·ered by the actors. If&#13;
the pla) wor it 1 because of the insight of the&#13;
individual portraying the characters and the r liti they trove to achieve in a meager plot.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
392&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
-.-FD.I C&#13;
AURUS RISING&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
I NOV. 7, 9, 10, 11 l&#13;
Ke,,.sh's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(for erlyS 0 ey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road&#13;
Candidate forums&#13;
scheduled·&#13;
Two pre-election forums -- one&#13;
for officer candidates and one for&#13;
senatorial candidates - have&#13;
been scheduled for next Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 14. Th~ Presid_ential&#13;
and Vice-Presidential candidates&#13;
will be available in LLC D185 to&#13;
•nswer questions from 2: 30-3: 15;&#13;
Senate hopefuls from 3: 15-4 p.m.&#13;
Brief formal statements ~y&#13;
candidates are planned at thts&#13;
time. and platforms wi,ll also be&#13;
printed in next week s ~per.&#13;
However, candidates w1ll be&#13;
available primarily to ans~er&#13;
student questions on a w1de&#13;
variety of topics. Subjects expected&#13;
to be covered include the&#13;
importance of PSGA, student&#13;
rights, the extent of student&#13;
power on this ca~pus, Constitutional&#13;
questions, the&#13;
potential focus of student&#13;
government ( academic, activity-related,&#13;
grievances and so&#13;
on), ways of increasing PSG~'s&#13;
responsibility and contact with&#13;
its constituency, lack of student&#13;
involvement, and feelings about&#13;
participation in a state-wide&#13;
network of student governments&#13;
such as the United Council of&#13;
Student Governments based in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
All students are invited to come&#13;
armed with questions or J'u t&#13;
listen. lo&#13;
RANGER editor J&#13;
Sew. ane . 1esman commented that "tht&#13;
importance of this election&#13;
cannot be stated too strongly 1&#13;
have. to elect serious, harde&#13;
working and responsible peop&#13;
to PSGA this year, who are int&#13;
on making student government&#13;
viable force. If PSGA does a&#13;
k th" ·t· llOl&#13;
wor 1s year 1 s all over for th&#13;
future. We owe it to ourselv to&#13;
take this last opportunity to&#13;
salvage student power&#13;
Park~ide, or those coming af~&#13;
us will be even more victimized&#13;
than we are and will have us to&#13;
blame."&#13;
She added that she exi&gt;ecta&#13;
most of the RANGER staff to be&#13;
at the forums with "some etiOUS&#13;
questions that should concern&#13;
all."&#13;
"Since we will not have a paper&#13;
coming out between the lime of&#13;
the forums and the elections"&#13;
she concluded, "I hope th&#13;
student body will come and&#13;
tually hear the candidates for&#13;
themselves, to enable them lo&#13;
vote like their student rigb&#13;
depend on it. They do."&#13;
ACADEMIC&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
MATERIALS&#13;
THOUSANDS OF RESEARCH STUDIES&#13;
ALL SUBJECTS&#13;
CATALOGUE CONTAINING 10,000 LISTINGS&#13;
NOW AVAILABLE&#13;
Send for FREE Details or&#13;
Telephone (312) 427-2840&#13;
----------------&#13;
Academic Research, Inc. I&#13;
I 431 South Dearborn Street I&#13;
I Chicago, Illinois 60605 I&#13;
I I&#13;
I Your Name ------------1&#13;
I Address _____________&#13;
I&#13;
I I&#13;
I City&amp;State ____________&#13;
I&#13;
----------------&#13;
$72.9S CAN PUT 10U IN&#13;
THE X-COUMTR1&#13;
SKI OF TIIIMGS.&#13;
SKILOM BOOTS, BINDINGS,&#13;
POLES AND SKIS&#13;
PLUS: FREE WAXING AND&#13;
ON SNOW LESSON IN X-C SKIING&#13;
AT &#13;
Wednesday, Noy. 7, 1'73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
pM.. by o..aw~ FrMrdri&#13;
Kay Wahnef William Murin&#13;
Impeachment and Presidential ,. •••••*********t ~VOTE:&#13;
• •&#13;
i PSGA i&#13;
: is i&#13;
j!",RS!*t~.!.'.'.&#13;
power discussed&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
When President Nixon fired&#13;
ArthibaldCox, there were many&#13;
wi¥&gt; called for his impeachment.&#13;
11le firing, compounded by the&#13;
PreSident's refusal to turn over&#13;
the controversial "Waterg~te&#13;
tapes" and the ever-growing&#13;
po_ of the office of the&#13;
Presidency have contributed to&#13;
the ftrSl serious moves toward&#13;
impeachment since the&#13;
Presidency of Andrew Johnson.&#13;
Wrinkle said one of the main&#13;
arguments for impeachment is&#13;
"malfeasance in office." "If the&#13;
President knew about the&#13;
Watergate break-in and cover-up&#13;
culmination of the personalized&#13;
Presidency."&#13;
Wrinkle coniended that "its oot&#13;
so much the power of the office,&#13;
its the power the President&#13;
chooses to exert."&#13;
Wabner cited examples of the&#13;
President's growing power. such&#13;
as irnpoundment and the&#13;
President's ability to have his&#13;
vetoes sustained by Congress.&#13;
Wahner and Murin both&#13;
suggested that the Congress&#13;
might use the issue of Gerald&#13;
Ford for the Vice-Presidency to&#13;
reassert itself.&#13;
Wabner felt that. "he (the&#13;
President) should have h...lded&#13;
over the tapes" and that "the&#13;
flI1ng or Cox was a severe&#13;
miscalculation." turin,&#13;
however, stated that he has little&#13;
faith in the tapes as evidence&#13;
because they could he "fixed"&#13;
He also said that in Ius ol"-nion&#13;
the talk of impeachment "'OUlddo&#13;
lillie to "change Mr •"lxon's&#13;
style" and that he "''OUldnot let&#13;
the threat of impeaclunent affect&#13;
his deosroes.&#13;
--------- --------- " the majority of&#13;
politicians are honest;&#13;
however, ltle corruption&#13;
ltlat does exist extends into&#13;
boltl parties."&#13;
"It's not so much the&#13;
power of the office, it's the&#13;
power the President&#13;
chooses to exert."&#13;
--------- --------- --------- Of politics, Wahner said, "1&#13;
beheve strcngly that the m8jonty&#13;
of politicians are honest:&#13;
however. the corruption tha' does&#13;
exist extends into bolb parties"&#13;
Sle Cited the high cost burden of&#13;
campaign fmancing the reason&#13;
for this.&#13;
then that was misprison of a&#13;
felony," he said. All three&#13;
professors concurred, however.&#13;
that there was little chance for&#13;
impeachment because, as&#13;
Wrinkle put tt.vit's such a drastic&#13;
step, its like killing a fly with a&#13;
sledgehammer." For that reason&#13;
it is an ineffective mechanism to&#13;
maintain the system of checks&#13;
and balances.&#13;
Wrinkle explained though, that,&#13;
"Unfortunately, impeachment is&#13;
the only way the Constitution&#13;
really provides for any form of&#13;
sanction against a president."&#13;
As [or the power of the office of&#13;
the presidency I Ml:lrinstate.d that&#13;
it is an "evolutionary kind of&#13;
phenomena that started with&#13;
FDR. Nixon is a natural&#13;
"Unfortunately, i mpeachmentis&#13;
the only way&#13;
the Constitution rea lIy&#13;
provides for any form of&#13;
sanction against a&#13;
president,..&#13;
AT FIRST UlIOIAL&#13;
OF IACI.E&#13;
•••• i.i•••&#13;
hlme re~.ir.~&#13;
••• Ii il 18 Ih&#13;
••• ~.r Df chets&#13;
, •• wril.&#13;
---------&#13;
Our Annual Pre-Holiday&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Three Parkside political science&#13;
II"Dfessors • Robert Wrinkle,&#13;
William Murin and Kay Wabner -&#13;
recently expressed their views on&#13;
unpoachment and presidential&#13;
power in an interview for&#13;
RANGER. Why impeachment?&#13;
begins Nov. 9&#13;
at 5:00 p.rn, in Kenosha&#13;
Nov. 12 at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
• PAPA BURGER&#13;
• TEEN BURGER&#13;
• MAMA BURGER&#13;
• BABY BURGER&#13;
Exciting Bargains for Everyone! AT FIIST unom&#13;
OF IACIIlE SAVINGS UP T083 PERCENT&#13;
Hundreds of titles to choose from.&#13;
Books are in mint condition and make&#13;
perfect gifts.&#13;
CARRY.OUTS&#13;
CAll AHEAD _ YOUR ORDER WILL 8E READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
Don't miss this opportunity to pick up&#13;
valuable books at a fraction of their&#13;
regular price.&#13;
N\orUL.MwaitL ~~&#13;
,,14-59U,St:&#13;
~&#13;
31"2..-&#13;
~&#13;
~-St. _&#13;
.&#13;
659-5&amp;S1- ~3'2-.s=.r.:&#13;
------&#13;
----------&#13;
'EE GALLON OF ROOT BEER&#13;
;., WITH 15 DRIlR AT FlIST unom&#13;
OF IACI E&#13;
0,•• , ••r Iree chcki'l&#13;
Kc••• 1 SH' al&#13;
11 MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
Ot-l SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404 J&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and TruJR Compa.D7 of Racine&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN -_._----&#13;
HoUrs Sun - Thrs. 511liscnsit An. laci•• 11-7&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. IIto 11 Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Keno5ha&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
William Murin&#13;
Impeachment and Presidential&#13;
power d isC:ussed&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
When President Nixon fired&#13;
:\rehibald Cox, there were many&#13;
'.wro called for his impeachment.&#13;
The firing, compounded by the&#13;
President's refusal to turn over&#13;
the controversial "Waterg~te&#13;
tapes" and the ever-growmg&#13;
IX)W&amp; of the office of the&#13;
Presidency have contributed to&#13;
the first serious moves toward&#13;
impeachment since the&#13;
Pre idency of Andrew Johnson.&#13;
"Unfortunately, i mpeachment&#13;
is the only way&#13;
the Constitution really&#13;
provides for any form of&#13;
sanction against a&#13;
president."&#13;
Three Parkside political science&#13;
irofessors - Robert Wrinkle,&#13;
William Murin and Kay Wahner -&#13;
r ntly expressed their views on&#13;
impeachment and presidential&#13;
power in an interview for&#13;
R . 'GER. Why impeachment?&#13;
Wrinkle said one of the main&#13;
arguments for impeachment is&#13;
"malfeasance in office." "If the&#13;
President knew about the&#13;
Watergate break-in and cover-up&#13;
"It's not so much the&#13;
power of the office, it's the&#13;
power the President&#13;
chooses to exert."&#13;
then that was misprison of a&#13;
felony," he said. All three&#13;
professors concurred, however,&#13;
that there was little chance for&#13;
impeachment because, as&#13;
Wrinkle put it,"it's such a drastic&#13;
step, its like killing a fly with a sledgehammer." For that reason&#13;
it is an ineffective mechanism to&#13;
maintain the system of checks&#13;
and balances.&#13;
Wrinkle explained though, that,&#13;
"Unfortunately, impeachment is&#13;
the only way the Constitution&#13;
really provides for any form of&#13;
sanction against a president."&#13;
As for the power of the office of&#13;
the presidency, Murin stated that&#13;
it is an "evolutionary kind of&#13;
phenomena that started with&#13;
FDR. Nixon is a natural&#13;
• PAPA BURGER&#13;
• TEEN BURGER&#13;
• MAMA BURGER&#13;
• BABY BURGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL B£ READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
ind Shrimp&#13;
GALLON OF ROOT BEER&#13;
WITH s 5 ORDER&#13;
1 2 MILE NORTH Of&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404 J&#13;
Hours Sun -Thrs. 11-7&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 to 11&#13;
culmination of the personalized&#13;
Presidency."&#13;
Wrinkle contended that "1 not&#13;
so much the power of the office,&#13;
its the power the President&#13;
chooses to exert.·•&#13;
Wahner cited examples of the&#13;
President's growing power, uch&#13;
as impoundment and the&#13;
President's ability to have hvetoes&#13;
sustained by Coog&#13;
Wahner and • 1urm tx&gt;th&#13;
suggested that the Congre&#13;
might use the issue of Gerald&#13;
Ford for the Vice-Pre idency to&#13;
reassert itself.&#13;
Wahner felt that, "he (the&#13;
President) should ha ·e h , ed&#13;
over the tapes" and that " the&#13;
flr1ng of Cox wa a&#13;
miscalculation .'' !uri n ,&#13;
however, stated that he ha littl&#13;
faith in the tapes as ide&#13;
because they could&#13;
" the majority of&#13;
politicians are honest;&#13;
however, the corruption&#13;
that does exist extends into&#13;
both parties."&#13;
---------&#13;
()Jr Annual Pre or oy&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
beg' s ov. 9&#13;
a 5:00 p.m. ·n enosho&#13;
Nov. 12 ot 9:30 a.m.&#13;
in Roc·ne.&#13;
Exciting Bargains for Everyo&#13;
SAVINGS UP T083 PERCE T&#13;
Hundreds of titles to choose from.&#13;
Books are in mint condition and make&#13;
perfect gifts.&#13;
Don't miss this opportunity to pick up&#13;
valuable books at a fraction of their&#13;
regular price.&#13;
fl\OJiJJ&lt;A. MwJ.t). ~lo-U&gt;&#13;
~ f{cuima, •&#13;
614-59th.st: 3l'2..-~-V\St, -&#13;
6S9-3&amp;S-Z- ~32-.S=-=--=&#13;
------&#13;
----------&#13;
I&#13;
PSGA&#13;
•&#13;
AT Fl SJ NU D Al&#13;
OF AC E&#13;
D oar free c ec I 1&#13;
cco t s at&#13;
isc11si1 An. bci11 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. Nov. 7. 1973&#13;
Emmett Bedford. a IStant prol_ of English, was taken ill ",;Ib a&#13;
art alia&lt; on ooday, Oct 29 and talten to L Catherine's hospital&#13;
m K ltbough h condition ",-as reported to be serious last&#13;
he tmp ......red ou/rlCi nlly' ever the ",eelt.nd and was expected to&#13;
ta n out of "'t.... V. care on Monday His classeS are being &lt;onIb:ted&#13;
b) Jam Dean Peler Martm and Don RlnU&#13;
lI:,ief neWS&#13;
Bedford III. condition Improve.&#13;
US warm purse carrlen&#13;
CCCbegins budget&#13;
deliberations&#13;
1b~ Campus CoDcerns Com~&#13;
miUef' bas extended the dead~e&#13;
for student organit.ation fundmg&#13;
requests. AU budgets must be&#13;
submiUed to Jewel Echelbarge~.&#13;
istant Dean of Students. tn&#13;
TZSl by noon wednesday, NoV.&#13;
.4.&#13;
taken up by eee was the&#13;
clloosing of a student (or the (ifth&#13;
student position on the cornmittee.&#13;
111at position is to be held&#13;
by the president ot the Student&#13;
Union Committee, but Parkslde&#13;
has no such committee until next&#13;
year. Last year the seat was&#13;
declared vacant by interpretation&#13;
of the regulations by&#13;
the University Committee.&#13;
However. this year students&#13;
expressed their_interest in filling&#13;
that position.&#13;
Echelbarger suggested that&#13;
someone [rom the Union Planning&#13;
Committee or the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board-PAB-be seated.&#13;
She said it was her (eeling that&#13;
the person "best able to serve at&#13;
this time is the president o( the&#13;
Activities Board," adding that&#13;
those students on the Union&#13;
Committee were selected by the&#13;
Chancellor whereas the&#13;
President o( the Activities Board&#13;
had been selected by approximately&#13;
50 students on the&#13;
Activities Board. It was agreed&#13;
by the eee that the P AB&#13;
president. BuZZFaust, would be&#13;
asked to serve on eee.&#13;
The chairperson o( eee was&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(eee) met officially (or&#13;
the first time this semester I last&#13;
Tuesday evening. The ccc has&#13;
the task o( dividing up $7200&#13;
among student organizations at&#13;
Parkside. Those organizations&#13;
have sent budget requests to cee&#13;
lDtal\ing $23,754,so tar.&#13;
Present at the meeting were&#13;
students Phylis Lidberg, Tom&#13;
Jennett, and Sue Fletcher;&#13;
(ae:uJty members Walter Feldt,&#13;
Micllael O'Rourke, Teresa Peck,&#13;
carole Vopat, Bob Cadez. and&#13;
H... bert Kubly; and representing&#13;
the Administration was Jewel&#13;
EcheIbarger, Assistant Dean o(&#13;
Students. Absent were (acuIty&#13;
member Robert Grueninger and&#13;
student Elaine Birch.&#13;
The (nt order o( business&#13;
• 1 lYand lY ishes to . a warning to aU individuals who&#13;
rry puroe ",10 the hbnry. They ask lhat lndt';Wals Iteep traClt of&#13;
tbeIr pune at aU urn pones are belng olen at an average or one&#13;
a cia,&#13;
Tllunday. ov. a. the Parblde Poetry Forum will (.. tore an&#13;
...... "" of twdent poetry. Any student Interested in reading several&#13;
rnay do 10. He or sbe abou1d sunply lW"tt up at the reading,&#13;
w!IIchwill bo8m at 7'30 p.m. In tile oecond l\oor library lounge. This&#13;
tbennI 01poeu will mclude students lrom sumlUfll!ing colleges as&#13;
well II rrom Par1tIIde·&#13;
One-way fare. available on bu.&#13;
Student. to read their poetry&#13;
!.ltma PI take. new pledge.&#13;
SlIm&amp; Pllralemity bas _ed lbat on Thursday. OcL 25. six new&#13;
members weft pledged into their fraternity brolherlJond. The pledges&#13;
are O&gt;arles PeITOnJ, Micbael Kopc:%Y1ISIri,Daryl Vincent, Ricl&gt;ard&#13;
Duby, J_ph Hutten, and William SobanSIti. Sigma Pi extends&#13;
«JIlII"&amp;lulationSto .ts new members.&#13;
third World .ponlOn lecture&#13;
Th.TIurd World OrgaOWluon willspoosor a lecture on Islam today,&#13;
• v. 7 at 12:30 '" Gree&gt;qUlStroom 103.The lecturer will be Ali Razaa&#13;
and (ree and OpeD to the publiC.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
classlfleels&#13;
,~ &amp;ALI .. Soli M'f OI! "'* GtN'&#13;
........ ~._JDr \'1M ."*" ....Iid IJDO call&#13;
"LL. 'fy ....D ....'" ~ cad ~&#13;
.... HO no" .. ~.~ .....&#13;
~ ~ C."t.et SoKand JtW100N • 650'-&#13;
--&#13;
APRIL .2·%•• 1....&#13;
to day •a rughts&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
For PI'IIC lion or informauon&#13;
lacl&#13;
(""Pl TlU\'EL E'TER&#13;
• \'u'I)-'''' all, m-~&#13;
Bud Drinkers, can&#13;
you figure this out?&#13;
Ralph bought a 6-pak of Budweiser. and invited four friends over to share it.&#13;
Since he bought, he expected to have two cans to himself, but unfortunately&#13;
when he returned to the refrigerator for his second, he found it missing. So he&#13;
asked who took it. Al said," Joe drank it." Joe said, "Dan drank it." Dan said,&#13;
.. Joe, that's a lie!" And Bill said, "I didn't drink it." If only one of these&#13;
statements is true, who really drank it?&#13;
I&#13;
then selected by the (&#13;
members present, as atult)'&#13;
are not allowed to VOlestueIoozi&#13;
decision. Feldt as':' dtat&#13;
professor of engin~ing ~lllDt&#13;
was selected and it was ......&#13;
that the position o( ~&#13;
would revolve alPha~&#13;
among eee members. '&lt;lU,&#13;
A sub-cornmitttee was then&#13;
up to decide guidelines, Cri~&#13;
and some procedures to be&#13;
when limiting and cutting -&#13;
from organizational req~&#13;
"Within the state r.gulau:,:'&#13;
said Feldt, "we will ha&#13;
. ve: ..&#13;
restrict even further."&#13;
The eee has the powerIlOl&#13;
to limit money (rom req.... ':&#13;
may also strike items&#13;
within the budget. "Some.::&#13;
get money (rom other .......&#13;
also," said Echelbarg.r ''wlidl&#13;
we wil~ want to keep U; _&#13;
Athletic organiz.ation. fw&#13;
example, may get segregated lot&#13;
allotments (rom lhe A1bIotIr&#13;
Board.&#13;
Echelbarger .slt.d ...&#13;
perhaps some moneybe set ....&#13;
(or orgamzatlons whichmal ..&#13;
created next semester and ....&#13;
some funding.&#13;
' EP SIDE GE 'f, .1, m&#13;
CCC begins budget&#13;
deliberations&#13;
mg to all individua who&#13;
that indi • o.aa eep track of&#13;
olen at an a erage of one&#13;
I&#13;
rm.ation will sponsor a lecture oo Islam today,&#13;
Gnienquist room UX!. The lecturer will be Ali Ra:r.aa&#13;
to the public.&#13;
b O.bra Friedell&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC) met officially for&#13;
the first time this semester. last&#13;
Tuesday evening. The CCC has&#13;
the task of dividing up $7200&#13;
among student organizations at&#13;
Parkside. Those organizations&#13;
have sent budget requests to CCC&#13;
totalling $23,754, so far .. Present at the meeting were&#13;
tudents Phylis Lidberg, Tom&#13;
Jennett, and Sue Fletcher;&#13;
faculty members Walter Feldt,&#13;
Michael O'Rourke, Teresa Peck,&#13;
Carole Vopat, Bob Cadez, and&#13;
Herbert Kubly; and representing&#13;
the Administration was Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger. Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students. Absent were faculty&#13;
member Robert Grueninger and&#13;
student Elaine Birch.&#13;
The first order of business&#13;
taken up by CCC was the&#13;
choosing of a student for the fifth&#13;
student position on the committee.&#13;
That position is to be held&#13;
by the president of the Stud~nt&#13;
Union Committee, but Parkside&#13;
has no such committee until next&#13;
year. Last year the seat was&#13;
declared vacant by interpretation&#13;
of the regulati~ns by&#13;
the University Committee.&#13;
However, this year stude~ts&#13;
expressed their -interest in filling&#13;
that position. Echelbarger suggested that&#13;
someone from the Union Planning&#13;
Committee or the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board--PAB-be seated.&#13;
She said it was her feeling that&#13;
the person "best able to serve at&#13;
this time is the president of the&#13;
Activities Board," adding that&#13;
those students on the Union&#13;
Committee were selected by the&#13;
Chancellor whereas the&#13;
President of the Activities Board&#13;
had been selected by a pproximately&#13;
50 students on the&#13;
Activities Board. It was agreed&#13;
by the CCC that the P AB&#13;
president, Buzz Faust, would be&#13;
asked to serve on CCC.&#13;
The chairperson of CCC was&#13;
r&#13;
'&lt;&#13;
Q&#13;
a&#13;
..&#13;
'&lt;&#13;
:c&#13;
C&#13;
"&#13;
~&#13;
Bud Drinkers, can&#13;
you figure this out?&#13;
Ralph bought a 6-pak of Budweiser _ and invited four friends over to share it.&#13;
ince he bought, he expected to have two cans to himself, but unfortunately&#13;
when he returned to the refrigerator for his second, he found it missing. So he&#13;
asked who took it. Al said," Joe drank it." Joe said, "Dan drank it." Dan said&#13;
"Joe. that's a lie!" And Bill said, "I didn't drink it." If only one of the~&#13;
tatements is true, who really drank it?&#13;
then selected by the fa&#13;
members present, as ~ are not allowed to vote&#13;
decision. Feldt a OIi&#13;
• I professor of engineering&#13;
was selected and it wa&#13;
that the position of 'lreed&#13;
would revolve alpha~&#13;
among CCC members. can,&#13;
A sub-committtee was thea&#13;
up to decide guidelines M'lt-..&#13;
and some procedures t:i be ..... ._&#13;
when limiting and cutti~&#13;
from organizational req&#13;
"Within the state regu1a..__&#13;
said Feldt, "we will ha - restrict even further." ve 11&#13;
The CCC has the power not&#13;
to limit money from l'eQ\leMa&#13;
may also sbike items&#13;
within the budget. "Some ~ get money from other .. ..,.&#13;
also," said Echelbarger ,&#13;
we will want to keep ~&#13;
Athletic organizations&#13;
example, may get llelreaated&#13;
allotments from the&#13;
Board.&#13;
Echelbarger asked&#13;
perhaps some money be let&#13;
for organizations which ma,&#13;
created next semester and&#13;
some funding.&#13;
..&#13;
I&#13;
~~K H¢Llt&gt;AY &#13;
",,,. CIS Clrt&#13;
;.;--&#13;
Wed ... _" Nov. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Film society shows cl • asslcs "'bil. mellar&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Their financial difficult~es&#13;
Ned by an emergency meeting&#13;
SO he Campus Concerns Como!&#13;
I e Parkside Film Society is&#13;
""lie.. l th rolling, on 1t5 way 0 ano er&#13;
SUCcessful year. .&#13;
filmS scheduled for this year&#13;
are' \,aJnpr and Carnival of Souls&#13;
M' nday, November 12. Gospel&#13;
. ~ing to Saint Matthew -&#13;
AI'.ndaY.November 26. Big Sleep&#13;
. Wednesday, December 12.&#13;
'Mlese will all be shown in GR103&#13;
with 75 cents admission&#13;
~ed.&#13;
The films scheduled for&#13;
November 12 were previ~wed by&#13;
Film Society, and co:-chalrperson&#13;
Bob Mainland descnbes them as&#13;
livery eerie and very good."&#13;
Gospel Accordi~g to Sa~nt&#13;
Matthew is described as bemg&#13;
wellmade and a good handling of&#13;
the topic. Big Sleep is a must for&#13;
Humphrey Bogart fans. It is&#13;
desCribed as a good film with&#13;
reaUy good performances by&#13;
Bogart and others.&#13;
Films for second semester&#13;
mclude: Rebel Without a Cause&#13;
and Wild One - Wednesday,&#13;
January 23. Forbidden Games -&#13;
Monday, February 11. Sherlock,&#13;
Jr .• Cops and The Navigators·&#13;
Monday, March 11. Day at the&#13;
1\1&lt;" . Wednesday, March 27.&#13;
Lavender Hill Mob - Spril 10.&#13;
Film Society was organized'&#13;
several years ago and now has&#13;
eight student members with&#13;
RMaid Gottesman, professor of&#13;
English, acting as advisor. They&#13;
had a very successful year last&#13;
year with from 1200-1600 in total&#13;
attendance and shut-out performances&#13;
on two occasions.&#13;
Mainland attributes their success&#13;
to good publicity and good films&#13;
and said he sees no reason why&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send tor yourup·lodate, 160·page,&#13;
Nil orde, catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
la cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
I t.2 daysl.&#13;
RESEARCHASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941WilSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGfLES. CALIF. 90025&#13;
12131477-8474or 477·5493&#13;
OUr rnurch material is sold for&#13;
fnufell assistance only.&#13;
\\ ","e'ida). 0\ r , Ken R.og&#13;
from 1·3 pm. Free.&#13;
II edee ~. 0\.; nurd World rgantzllbOll U present a&#13;
lecturer 011Islam aI12'30 p.m lDGreenq room 1113F&#13;
wedne da~. 0\. ';:P. B movie "Dr ZhJ\ • at 1&#13;
Comm Am Theatre AdmlSSlOn Is $1&#13;
Thn~a~. 0\. :Poe . Forum poosortnIa poe rn&#13;
s.udent poe at;:30 p m on lbe second floor library I • F&#13;
Thur&lt;d.. .'. : .t.ynard Ferguaan pIer m 5t1tdenu&#13;
from 1-4 pm. m the Comm Arts Tbo.lre&#13;
Thu.rsd.a~.' v, : 18~nardFergusonl:XJOCert.l8p m lntbe&#13;
Arts Theatre. 1'1 as are sold OlIt&#13;
Frid.~, 0\. t: ThIrd World CGnsU.ulIon m at 11&#13;
Greenqw t 1113.&#13;
lunla~. 0'. I': \'e\s Club dancel"l11nn&amp; "Hound Doc Band" at&#13;
9 p.m lD AB Advance lJ are a\·.i1abl from \' Club rnernbl!n&#13;
lor $1.50. Tickets at the door ere $I.~ .&#13;
nda~. 0\.11: epbe.n edisha mem rei Parbide's m C'&#13;
faculty will present a free concert a' .:30 pm lR th Comm rtI&#13;
Theatre&#13;
"on~" ~O\. 1%:Film Soclet} presents ··\'.mp~T··and ··Canu\..l&#13;
or Soul at ,'30 p.rn m Greenqu.1Sl 103. Adm' iOD1.5 'Th centa.&#13;
n" ....d.~. 0\. l5: Jan Eosembl land II under the du...,t1on or&#13;
Robert T'bomason. tant pro(es&gt;or .. m c, v.ill p lit a free&#13;
concert m IbeComm Arts Thealreat 7:30p.m&#13;
Frida). '0\. IS=PAR mo\,e t". "tghl of t.be Ll\'t Dead·' at I p m&#13;
SAB. Admi 100 is 15 cents&#13;
larda) ..'0\.17: Dance featonna "'Circuo" oponaored b)"AB n&#13;
SAB a' 9 pm.&#13;
Sancia), :-'0\ •• , PAB mo". ". ',ght .. the J..,j Dead.t 7':10&#13;
pm m SAB AdmissIon IS 75 c",,1S&#13;
So\t:mber It aDd !t: PSGA electioos&#13;
Film Society President Bob Mainland&#13;
they shouldn't be as successful&#13;
again this year.&#13;
The films shown by Film&#13;
Society are different than those&#13;
usually seen at a moviehouse or&#13;
those brought in by Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. They are films&#13;
that have been around for several&#13;
~ears and are classics. Many&#13;
times they are films students&#13;
have seen and have asked to see&#13;
again. Others have usually been&#13;
written about or films clips are&#13;
available, so Film Society&#13;
generally has a fairly accurate&#13;
idea of what kind of film they are&#13;
bringing in.&#13;
Membership in the club is open&#13;
to anyone who wants to belong.&#13;
There is a lot of work to be done,&#13;
but it is split up among the&#13;
members so no one is overloaded.&#13;
Co-chairperson Mike&#13;
McDonald designs posters for the&#13;
various films, which are printed&#13;
on the silk screen apparatus Film&#13;
Society purchased last year. GI""&#13;
Christensen serves as projectionist&#13;
and everyone helps in&#13;
getting the posters distributed&#13;
Asked. why he is involved in&#13;
Film Sociely, Mainland replied,&#13;
"rm interested in seeing a film&#13;
society at Parkside. ost&#13;
colleges and Wliversities do have&#13;
them, and J think by lbe response&#13;
shown, there is a need for one&#13;
here. It is film as Art. &gt;I&#13;
:~"i- l '01\... • ... 1.t&gt;··· .-:!, r· .J\ .-..:. ..:t&#13;
r&#13;
V-1:"1lTERE,J'~E~'vI-n.J':.~: ...~i\~ . "~. &lt; •• ~ ~.F"&#13;
V&#13;
1I"r'"&#13;
~.&#13;
. . '~ . '". ~ .&#13;
L . ""/(50/0 'j'" A",) :'r-'" ~-/KenoJha&#13;
l..&#13;
,. ;&#13;
'a.&#13;
.LEATHER GOODS! .WATER BEDS.. ePAPERS&#13;
eJEWELRY.'~ .' eBEAN BAGS •• TAPES&#13;
eBATH p~.?.l?~CTS~,~ECORD§:",";.!PIPES _&#13;
, ".,~ ''Opel 15 days a year'&#13;
Phone654-3518 Ira OIlIklWl&#13;
Steak dinners&#13;
3315 52nd ST' Kenosha&#13;
Phone 652-8662&#13;
ttmkw4 to&#13;
.. 1Il .. 1dl&#13;
11IB&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
·31&#13;
. .. " . II!&#13;
SalftJidts ~ II IIIiHs&#13;
BRATWL'RSI'O~l 8P IALTY&#13;
FRIDAY,IIV. 9, o.e to "TAG"&#13;
SAl, V. 10, AI. IS"&#13;
Edge ater otor Inn&#13;
. LWs," .&#13;
"" Ili~~P-'I. - I' .&#13;
.l s.. IItl.-It.&#13;
eu'tpt&#13;
WED., FRI. &amp; SAl, IIV. 1, 9, 10&#13;
D3lce to "LIFE"&#13;
Filn, society shows 1 •&#13;
c ass1cs&#13;
b) Marilyn Schubert&#13;
h ·r financial difficulties&#13;
T e1 t· ved bv an emergency mee mg&#13;
1 the campus C~ncerns . Con:i- ol I e Parkside Film Society 1s&#13;
te . to th rolling. on its way ano er&#13;
cessful year. . flms scheduled for this year&#13;
are'. \'ampr and Carnival of Souls&#13;
M nday, November 12. Gospel&#13;
· ~ding to Saint Matthew -&#13;
'~day, November 26. Big Sleep&#13;
. Wednesday, December 1~.&#13;
These will all be shown m GR103&#13;
with 75 cents admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
The films scheduled for&#13;
. ·ovember 12 were previ~wed by&#13;
Film Society, and c~chairperson&#13;
Bob Mainland describes them as&#13;
"very eerie and very good."&#13;
Go pet According to Saint&#13;
"atthew is described as being&#13;
well made and a good handling of&#13;
the topic . Big Sleep is a must for&#13;
Humphrey Bogart fans. It is&#13;
de cribed as a good film with&#13;
really good performances by&#13;
Bogart and others.&#13;
Film Society Pre ident Bob . 1ainland&#13;
Films for second semester&#13;
mclude: Rebel Without a Cause&#13;
and Wild One - Wednesday,&#13;
January 23. Forbidden Games -&#13;
Ionday, February 11. Sherlock,&#13;
Jr .. Cops and The Navigators -&#13;
Monday, March 11. Day at the&#13;
Races · Wednesday, March 27.&#13;
Lavender Hill Mob - Spril 10.&#13;
Film Society was organized&#13;
several years ago and now has&#13;
eight student members with&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, professor of&#13;
English, acting as advisor. They&#13;
had a very successful year last&#13;
year with from 1200-1600 in total&#13;
attendance and shut-out performances&#13;
on two occasions.&#13;
Mainland attributes their success&#13;
to good publicity and good films&#13;
and said he sees no reason why&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page,&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
I to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
0..r research material is sold for&#13;
research uslstance only.&#13;
they shouldn't be as successful&#13;
again this year.&#13;
The films shown by Film&#13;
Society are different than those&#13;
usually seen at a moviehouse or&#13;
those brought in by Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. They are films&#13;
that have been around for several&#13;
)'.ears and are classics. Many&#13;
times they are films students&#13;
have seen and have asked to see&#13;
again. Others have usually been&#13;
written about or films clips are&#13;
available, so Film Society&#13;
generally has a fairly accurate&#13;
idea of what kind of film they are&#13;
bringing in.&#13;
Membership in the club is open&#13;
to anyone who wants tQ belong.&#13;
There is a lot of work to be done,&#13;
Steak dinners&#13;
~179 &amp; UP&#13;
3315 52nd ST· Kenosha&#13;
Phone 652-8662&#13;
but it i&#13;
members so no o&#13;
loaded. Co-chairper on Ii e&#13;
kDonald designs poste for th&#13;
various mm , which are printed&#13;
on the silk creen apparatu FIim&#13;
Society purcha ed la t :ear. Glen&#13;
Chri ten en sen· as projec- tioni t and evervone hel in&#13;
getting the posters d tnbuted.&#13;
Asked why he i tnrnh-ed in&#13;
Film ociety •. lainland replied,&#13;
" I'm interested in seeing a film&#13;
society at Par ide. • lo t&#13;
colleges and universitie do have&#13;
them, and I think by the respon&#13;
shov.rn, there is a need for one&#13;
here. It is film a Art."&#13;
Wednesct.y, ov. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGE&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
Hi&#13;
BR 01&#13;
FRIDAY V. 9, ce to 'TAG&#13;
SAT. 0V. 10 Al. IS&#13;
d at lot Inn&#13;
41&#13;
d&#13;
WED., FRI. &amp; SAT. Y. 7 9, 10&#13;
O.mce to 'LIFE' &#13;
• THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973&#13;
Harriers&#13;
__________ RANGERSports _-,&#13;
Sports shorts&#13;
T1Irkf') 1'T'ot With Th nk Illviog still Ihree w eeks away a group of Parkside&#13;
poopl d i&lt;lod10 get into the holiday spirit ea;ly when they competed&#13;
In th annual cr- Country Turkey Trol, beld last Sunday, 'ovember&#13;
thThe rules 01 th race were: I. couples run logether u male, 1&#13;
femal l,2 coupl have to pred&gt;ct the ume II will take them to finish&#13;
the race ~ lhe couple lbal comes etesest to thell' lftdicled time are the&#13;
wlnnft"S Th WInningcouple was EoIIeenReilly and Bob Lawson, who were 10&#13;
nds oR their pred&gt;cted time. second place wenlto Tom Beyer and&#13;
Lura, who were 12secondo off their predicted time. A toIJlI of 8&#13;
coupl competed In the meet&#13;
An lntereshng fact of thi meet was that the prizes were as unique as&#13;
~ra I II FI~lpn1e .... a lurkeytwhalelse?l,secondplacegol&#13;
cluck ,third pn.e wa eggs, fourth was eggnog, the rulb place&#13;
f"ushers got ppl cider&#13;
'atram.' I8a In:lbell&#13;
JIm Koch has announced thai men should start forming learns in&#13;
pre ration for lho Pr~rislmas Holiday Intramural Basketball&#13;
Tournam nl. "lUch wlUlake place the fusllwo weeks of December.&#13;
Thl Y r lwo I g will be formed. a unday note, and a Wed·&#13;
y Nt I gue The d adhnes for lbese SlgnUp sheets is&#13;
Th nkO\llVIng&#13;
Raquet 8011 Th "III a raquet ball tournament soon. For information&#13;
conlact JIm Koch In the Phy Ed. bwldlng.&#13;
W,nUlD IIDk:&#13;
The 1m Parlwde Wr tling Chnic will be held lbis saturday,&#13;
ovemher 10th. and I""..-dmg 10 head wrestling coach Jim Koch, it&#13;
should qUlle a shoW.&#13;
Thll Y ~ clonIC will feature three outstandlng iDdivi~ols in lbe&#13;
port of wrealllng Bill Harlow, wbo WIS runner-up on the world&#13;
w.... lllng charnplonslups, ....iIl be a guesl speaker, along wilb&#13;
Park Ide' Ken Marton, lbe ~ time national cbampion. Bill West, also&#13;
from Park ide and mcidenlaUy a ruMer'Up in the 1973nationals, will&#13;
ak along 10 Ith Koch.&#13;
The ret! Irltion fee for lbe cIlIuc will be SI, and you may regisler&#13;
any hme belween 1:30 and 10 a.m. on saturday. Lasl year, approXlmalely&#13;
600 Ittended lbe cUnic, and Coach Kocb expects another&#13;
fine turnout this year&#13;
SKcu Re u1 The Pa,kside Ranger Soccer Team look third place in the UW&#13;
Milwaukee tournarnenllast saturday, by defeating UW·Plalteville :H.&#13;
Lewl Unlve",ity won the tourney, blanking UW·Milwaukee 2-0.&#13;
PI er Kiefer scored lwo goals for Parkside, and Ray Pbanturat the&#13;
olht'r ThIS101ft leaves Parkslde with a 3-9season record.&#13;
to compete&#13;
In district&#13;
playoffs&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
Eou Claire's the place, and&#13;
with Lucian Rosa setting the&#13;
pace, the results could be interesttng&#13;
in tbe 1973 NAIA&#13;
District 14. CrosS Country&#13;
Playoffs, to be beld this Saturday.&#13;
For the Rangers, the two teams&#13;
that will give them the most&#13;
trouble are Cartbage and&#13;
LaCrosse; however, three of the&#13;
twelve competing teams in the&#13;
dlstricl will go to the national&#13;
toumament. "We reel we have&#13;
made steady progress this&#13;
season, and as a result of the MidAmerica&#13;
tournament last weekend,&#13;
we feel pretty confident that&#13;
we'll make il," head coach Vic&#13;
G&lt;tdfrey remarked.&#13;
Coach G&lt;tdfrey went on to&#13;
explain how the harriers have&#13;
accumulated such an impressive&#13;
7-1dual meet record this year:&#13;
utbe major reason is that these&#13;
guys have worked harder than&#13;
any other group we've had at&#13;
Parkside." Hopefully this hard&#13;
work \\ill pay oCf, because in&#13;
Phy-Ed Bldg. hours&#13;
until further notice there will be varsity athletic pracli ee l&#13;
gy&#13;
mS from 3:30 p.m, ·6:30 p.m. daily and on Sat. 9:00 a . .-\1 III Ill"&#13;
noon. MONDAY, Nov. 5_Gymopen 12:30-1:20, 7:00-10:00 p.m. Pool&#13;
6:00-10:00 p.m. Handball courts open 12:00-10:00 p.m.&#13;
TUESDAY, Nov. 6 - Same as above.&#13;
WEDNESDAY' Nov. 7 . Same as above.&#13;
THURSDAY, NoV. 8 - Same as above, except pool oot IVallable&#13;
during evenings. FRIDAY, NoV. 9 - Women's Gymnastics Meet YS. UW Milwu .&#13;
p.rn. Gymnasiums closed from 12:00 on. WresUing Clinic set-up'r6:00&#13;
p.m. on. pool open 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m, Handball .,.:&#13;
available 8:30 a.m. ·4:00 p.m.&#13;
SATURDAY, NoV. 10 - Parkside WresUing Clinic· The .&#13;
building will be closed (or this event, no recreational periods ertire:&#13;
SUNDAY, NoV. 11- Building open as usual for recreatio~2'OO&#13;
till 10:00 p.m. All areas available. . p....&#13;
order to advance to the nationals,&#13;
they have to be one of the lop&#13;
three teams in their district, or&#13;
individually, one has to be one of&#13;
the lop three runners.&#13;
With that thougbt in mind,&#13;
Godfrey will head into this&#13;
playoffs full force, the team&#13;
consisting of Rosa, Dettman,&#13;
Biel, Rhode, Merritt, DeVasquez,&#13;
and Ammerman. Last week-end&#13;
in the Mid-America Championships&#13;
Parkside took second&#13;
place in the team competition,&#13;
losing only to the tough&#13;
"Chicago 7." Individually, Rosa&#13;
did it again, this' time with a 30:46&#13;
clocking in the 10,000 meier&#13;
event. Other places for Parkside&#13;
were: Chuck Dettman-5th,&#13;
Dennis Biel . 9th, Wayne Rhode -&#13;
26th, Keith Merritt - 31st, Jim&#13;
DeVasquez - 49th.&#13;
There were a tolal of 'iii&#13;
dividuals who competed in ...&#13;
10,000meter race. tho&#13;
In the National Vele&#13;
Competition for 30-39year&#13;
three men from Parkside not"":&#13;
=&#13;
gave away the fact that they~&#13;
over 30, oo.t that they aren't bid&#13;
runners either. Coaches 0rtIt'&#13;
Moss, Bob Grueninger and 8Gb&#13;
Lawson, finished 16th' 18th UlI&#13;
21st respectively. ' ,&#13;
Getting back to tbe IIa"IIf&#13;
Cross Country team, if all _&#13;
go as planned, Coach GodIn,&#13;
and crew wIll be singinglIKaMM&#13;
City here we come" at ...&#13;
National Cross Country CIJaa.&#13;
plOoshlPSto take pIa.. at Sou.,&#13;
Kansas on November 10.&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
Q1.DIES YOU •.&#13;
10 years ago "Fun Fun Fun," by The Beach&#13;
6oys. was on the char1s, and it is available along KEEP •&#13;
'. . .&#13;
with 4500 others in stock.&#13;
·.&#13;
THE ·,&#13;
" .&#13;
•&#13;
Z' &amp; ?It ~ Sala&#13;
·&#13;
' .&#13;
,. . .&#13;
..&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
.,&#13;
,'&#13;
191!TAYLOR \\~ESCE. RACL"E 63i-!%J:!.&#13;
-&#13;
2 FoOsBALL TABLES&#13;
25'1&#13;
C&#13;
Drink at the P&#13;
0&#13;
tubar&#13;
0&#13;
L&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
L&#13;
R&#13;
25~ T&#13;
T Home of the SHORTY A&#13;
v&#13;
B&#13;
Bar Drinks 45~&#13;
L&#13;
Big Beer&#13;
E&#13;
s&#13;
Pobst Bud Schlitz&#13;
0&#13;
L ON TAP&#13;
0 tt&#13;
I&#13;
t-_&#13;
E&#13;
Open 7 days a week ~1:~ ~ ~&#13;
-5&#13;
8:00 a.m. - 1,00 a.m. ~O' , 'E&#13;
'" -&#13;
0&#13;
C&#13;
R c Z '" '-u&#13;
-0 ~&#13;
'"&#13;
"'0-&#13;
E&#13;
(1) .5 '- "'0 '"&#13;
..0 0- + Po&lt;&#13;
3=~-6 '"&#13;
C .. . Jit ..0 a&gt; u.J&#13;
5&#13;
0&#13;
.*1l ~U '- C&gt;~U.J H&#13;
R&#13;
~ :::» .8 .- uO::: 0&#13;
•&#13;
..0 .~ u0&#13;
%&#13;
••• I~ ~&#13;
u.JmM M 0- R&#13;
1~.&#13;
5&#13;
\:.&#13;
T&#13;
AiR HOCKt"Y&#13;
Y&#13;
TOP 40 4&#13;
Buy a ...&#13;
Deliciously Sotisfying&#13;
• BIGSHEF&#13;
GOLDEN 8ROWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
"UN" COMMONLY REFRESHll'lli&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
All FOR $130&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave.&#13;
StQrtYourS.t Now!&#13;
.2.&#13;
LOC.4TIOSS 3400 Sheridan Rood&#13;
nesclay, Nov. 7, 1ffl&#13;
GER&#13;
~---------Sports _ _,&#13;
ort shorts&#13;
raquet ball tournament soon. For information&#13;
D the Phy Ed. building.&#13;
'de Wrestling uuc will be held th Saturday&#13;
.Noven1ber lCMb, nd ccord1111 to head wrt'Stl~ coach Jim Koch, it&#13;
qute• .&#13;
n cluuc r ture three outstanding indiviG&amp;als in the&#13;
Bill Harlo , bo runner-up in the world&#13;
championships will be • guest speaker, al~ with&#13;
' Ken artin, the 3 time national champion. Bill West also&#13;
from P ide and ancidentally • rumer-up in the 1973 oationab, will&#13;
alcq 1th Koch.&#13;
The registration f for the clinic will be Sl and you may register&#13;
any tune n 1:30 and 10 a m. on turday. Last year approximately&#13;
attended the clinic, and Coach Koch expects a~ther&#13;
ftne turnout this y r. rR&#13;
Tbe Pa&#13;
ll uk&#13;
10 years ago " Fun Fun Fun," by The Beach&#13;
Boys, was on the charts, and it is available along&#13;
with ~ others in stock.&#13;
T&#13;
V&#13;
u ar&#13;
Home of the 2 5 C SHORTY&#13;
Bar Dr'nks 4S"" Big Beer ..,.&#13;
Pabst Bud Schlitz&#13;
0 TAP&#13;
Open 7 days o week&#13;
8:00 o.m. · 1 :00 a.m.&#13;
E&#13;
TOP 40&#13;
Harriers&#13;
to compete&#13;
In district&#13;
playoffs&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
Eau Claire's the place, and&#13;
with Lucian Rosa setting the&#13;
pace, the results could be interesting&#13;
in the 1973 NAIA&#13;
District 14 Cross Country&#13;
Playoffs, to be held this Satu~&#13;
day.&#13;
For the Rangers, the two teams&#13;
that will give them the most&#13;
trouble are Carthage and&#13;
LaCrosse; however, three of the&#13;
t'&lt;Nel e competing teams in the&#13;
district will go to the national&#13;
tournament. "We feel we have&#13;
made teady progress this&#13;
season, and as a result of the MidAmerica&#13;
tournament last weekend&#13;
we feel pretty confident that&#13;
we'll make 1t," head coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey remarked.&#13;
Coach Godfrey went on to&#13;
e plain how the harriers have&#13;
accumulated such an impressive&#13;
7·1 dual meet record this year:&#13;
" the major reason is that these&#13;
guys have worked harder than&#13;
any other group we've had at&#13;
Parkside.'' Hopefully this hard&#13;
work will pay olf, because in&#13;
An&#13;
Phy-Ed Bldg. hours&#13;
Until further notice there will be_ varsity athletic pracuce&#13;
gyms from 3:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. daily and on Sat. 9:00 a.111.&#13;
noon. MONDAY, Nov. 5-Gymopen 12:30-1:20, 7:00-10:00p.m.&#13;
6:00-10:00 p.m. Handball courts open 12:00-10:00 p.m.&#13;
TUESDAY, Nov. 6 - Same as above.&#13;
WEDNESDAY - Nov. 7 - Same as above.&#13;
THURSDAY, Nov. 8 - Same as above, except pool not a&#13;
during evenings. FRIDAY, Nov. 9 - Women's Gymnastics Meet vs. UW Milwu. 1, p.m. Gymnasiums closed from 12:00 on. Wrestling Clinic set-up tbae&#13;
6:00 p.m. on. Pool open 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Handball&#13;
available 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. COIU1a&#13;
SATURDAY, Nov. 10 - Parkside Wrestling Clinic _ The&#13;
building will be closed for this event, no recreational periods. estlrt&#13;
SUNDA y, Nov. 11 - Building open as usual for recreation 2.00&#13;
till 10:00 p.m. All areas available. · PJI.&#13;
order to advance to the nationals,&#13;
they have to be one of the top&#13;
three teams in their district, or&#13;
individually, one has to be one of&#13;
the top three runners.&#13;
With that thought in mind,&#13;
Godfrey will head into this&#13;
playoffs full force, the team&#13;
consisting of Rosa, Dettman,&#13;
Biel, Rhode, Merritt, DeVasquez,&#13;
and Ammerman. Last week-end&#13;
in the Mid-America Championships&#13;
Parkside took second&#13;
place in the team competition,&#13;
losing only to the tough&#13;
"Olicago 7." Individually, Rosa&#13;
did it again, this time with a 30:46&#13;
clocking in the 10,000 meter&#13;
event. Other places for Parkside&#13;
were: Chuck Dettman-5th,&#13;
Dennis Biel - 9th, Wayne Rhode -&#13;
26th, Keith Merritt - 31st, Jim&#13;
DeVasquez - 49th.&#13;
There were a total of • dividuals who competed In ii,&#13;
10,000 meter race.&#13;
In the National Veteraa.&#13;
Competition for 30-39 year~&#13;
three men from Parkside not-.&#13;
gave away the fact that u., _, over 30, ~t that they area't llat&#13;
runners either. Coacbea&#13;
Moss, Bob Grueninger and°=&#13;
Lawson, finished 16th 'lath&#13;
21st respectively. ' '&#13;
Getting back to the&#13;
Cross Country team, if an&#13;
go as planned, Coach ~&#13;
and crew will be singing "&#13;
City here we come" 11&#13;
National Cross Country&#13;
pionships to take place at&#13;
Kansas on November 10.&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE .&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
Buy a ... Delkiously Sot"&#13;
• BIGS&#13;
•&#13;
"UN" COMMONl Y REFRESHING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALLFOR $1 lO&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave.&#13;
StQrt Your Set Now!&#13;
• 2 •&#13;
LOC.4TIOSS 3400 Sheridan R </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64368">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 10, November 7, 1973</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64369">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64370">
              <text>1973-11-07</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64373">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64374">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64375">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64376">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64377">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64378">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="674">
      <name>chancellor</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="648">
      <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="219">
      <name>segregated fees</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="668">
      <name>wisconsin education association council</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
