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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, issue 17</text>
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            <text>Advising battle continues</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Will build new road, parking lots&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Parkside students may find it&#13;
easier to park next fall because of&#13;
two new parking lots scheduled to&#13;
be built. The lots will be located&#13;
near the Communication Arts&#13;
Building and the proposed site for&#13;
the new student union and will&#13;
have a combined capacity of 1,045&#13;
vehicles. The lots are needed&#13;
because of increased student&#13;
enrollment, and the eventual&#13;
closure of the Kenosha Campus.&#13;
Work will also begin this summer&#13;
on the new Student Union across&#13;
the loop road from the Classroom&#13;
Building and, as a result, the&#13;
faculty parking lot will be lost.&#13;
The net gain in parking spaces&#13;
will be 225. If this fall it is evident&#13;
that more parking spaces are&#13;
needed, another 450-vehicle lot&#13;
could be constructed behind the&#13;
P.E. Building by the fall of 1975,&#13;
according to James Galbraith of&#13;
Planning and Construction. On&#13;
the basis of estimates that only 46&#13;
percent of the student body is on&#13;
campus at any one time, and with&#13;
increasing reliance on car pools&#13;
and mass transit due primarily to&#13;
the energy crisis, Galbraith&#13;
believes that the 225 space net&#13;
increase should be sufficient for&#13;
next year. Galbraith also stated&#13;
that the "back-up" parking lot&#13;
across the street from the heating&#13;
plant could be put into service if&#13;
the need arose.&#13;
Gil Eagles, "the entertaining psychic," will demonstrate his extrasensory&#13;
perception tonight in the Comm Arts Theater, sponsored&#13;
by the Activities Board. Story on page 3.&#13;
In addition to the new parking&#13;
lots, work may also be started on&#13;
a new outer loop road that would&#13;
be constructed outside the&#13;
present one and would be the only&#13;
access to the two new parking&#13;
lots. Shuttle buses and service&#13;
vehicles would still use the old&#13;
loop road. Plans for the new road&#13;
have not yet been approved by&#13;
the Building Committee, but even&#13;
if they are, Galbraith said he&#13;
doubts that the road could be&#13;
completely surfaced by this fall.&#13;
All of this and more is part of&#13;
the so-called "Master Plan" that&#13;
one day envisions Parkside&#13;
becoming a campus of 25,000&#13;
students. Total costs for this&#13;
phase of the plan, which includes&#13;
the two new parking lots and the&#13;
new outer loop road amounts to&#13;
$776,900. The total costs for these,&#13;
the third lot behind the P.E.&#13;
Building, the completed outer&#13;
loop road, lights and sidewalks&#13;
would be $1,030,000.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 Vol. II No. 17&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Elections committee named&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Last semester began like any&#13;
other for the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association.&#13;
Petitions were circulated, candidates&#13;
campaigned and&#13;
caucused and finally, on Nov.&#13;
20th and 21st, approximately 11&#13;
percent of the student body voted&#13;
for the candidates of their choice.&#13;
When the votes were tallied, Tom&#13;
Jennett had been elected&#13;
President, Chuck Perroni to&#13;
C.C.C. and Vice President, Mary&#13;
Clare Werve was elected&#13;
Treasurer, and 17 other students&#13;
were elected Senators.&#13;
The primary issue that faced&#13;
P.S.G.A. was that of Senatorelect&#13;
Normal Neophyte. Controversy&#13;
arose when Neophyte's&#13;
election was challenged on the&#13;
grounds that he violated&#13;
Wisconsin Election Laws by not&#13;
running under his legal name. At&#13;
the first meeting of the newly&#13;
elected Senate, Neophyte was&#13;
refused a seat for that reason.&#13;
After much deliberation&#13;
P-S G.A. unanimously decided to&#13;
abide by P.S.G.A. election laws&#13;
and Wisconsin election laws&#13;
where they apply, and to hold&#13;
new elections in, the Spring&#13;
Semester. Toward that end, the&#13;
Assistant Dean of Students appointed&#13;
a new Elections Committee&#13;
as requested by P.S.G.A.&#13;
Appointed to the committee&#13;
were: Buzz Faust, president of&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board;&#13;
P.S.G.A. President Tom Jennett&#13;
and Senator Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
(neither is running for reelection);&#13;
and Jane Schliesman&#13;
editor of the RANGER.&#13;
At the most recent P.S G A&#13;
meeting, last Friday, Jennett&#13;
announced that future meetings&#13;
would be videotaped by Student&#13;
Life. Jem&amp;tt also asked that&#13;
Senate Committees formed&#13;
earlier in the year meet, organize&#13;
and start working on their&#13;
assigned tasks. The Grievance&#13;
and Clearinghouse Committee&#13;
will meet at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday,&#13;
Jan. 23 in LLCD174;&#13;
students are welcome to attend.&#13;
The only known candidate for&#13;
P.S.G.A. President thus far is&#13;
Lan Nielsen. When asked for his&#13;
candid opinion of P.S G A&#13;
Nielsen said, "It's a mess, I'd like&#13;
to clear it up."&#13;
Advising battle continues&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to debate the issue of academic advising,&#13;
more specifically the' proposal by Alan Shucard!&#13;
associate professor of E nglish, which calls for "the&#13;
offices of academic advising to be staffed by faculty&#13;
members who will be appropriately rewarded for&#13;
advising."&#13;
Last December a recommendation came from the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee in which those&#13;
students who have declared a major or an area of&#13;
interest would be advised by faculty. Those students&#13;
who are undecided would continue to receive&#13;
academic advising through the Student Services&#13;
Office administered by Allen Dearborn, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor and Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant Dean&#13;
of Students.&#13;
Shucard's proposal would place all academic&#13;
advising in the hands of the faculty to be administered&#13;
through the academic Deans' offices&#13;
(Dean Moy of the School of Modern Industry and&#13;
Dean Norwood of the College of Science and&#13;
Society) with "non-academic staff (supposedly the&#13;
Student Services Office} assisting."&#13;
No recommendation came out of Thursday's&#13;
meeting; however, sessions will be held between the&#13;
Deans of the College and the School with Dearborn's&#13;
staff in which it is hoped some agreements can be&#13;
made.&#13;
Most discord appeared to be between the College&#13;
of Science and Society and the Student Services&#13;
Office. Echelbarger said, "Our people are&#13;
professionals who do not see themselves as faculty&#13;
assistants."&#13;
Norwood felt that although Shucard's proposal&#13;
involves the advising of 1200 students, he was&#13;
"baffled that a proposal that says substantially the&#13;
same thing as the proposal the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee originally sent out can cause so much&#13;
controversy...The proposal Shucard has advanced&#13;
eliminates some of the options."&#13;
Shucard claimed that "contrary to opinions that&#13;
have been bandied about, I am not acting as the&#13;
Dean's (Norwood) or Otto Bauer's (Vice-&#13;
Chancellor) messenger boy." (A RANGER&#13;
editorial called the proposal politically motivated in&#13;
order to give more power to the academic deans'&#13;
and create and save faculty positions.)&#13;
No Money Available&#13;
Insofar as financing the operation and hiring&#13;
faculty while present faculty handle advising&#13;
Norwood said, "Money to fund such a proposal is&#13;
not available in the College's budget. That is not to&#13;
say the campus administration, in its infinite&#13;
wisdom, can't find or take money from other&#13;
areas."&#13;
James Dean, chairperson of the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee, questioned those present to&#13;
consider which system gives a higher degree of&#13;
effectiveness.&#13;
Barb Larson of the Student Services staff explained&#13;
that career counseling and academic advising&#13;
overlap. "If you separate the two," she said&#13;
students will suffer." Dearborn added that&#13;
academic advising is often just an excuse for a&#13;
student to enter an advisor's door with personal&#13;
problems. "Academic advising is a blur which&#13;
encompasses many things," he said.&#13;
Moy asked Shucard to elaborate on why the&#13;
faculty is more capable of advising than the Student&#13;
Sei vices staff. Shucard said the career counseling&#13;
could still be handled by the Student Services Office&#13;
while academic advising could be carried out&#13;
through the academic deans' offices bv the facultv&#13;
Moy again asked Shucard, "But what are the advantages&#13;
of faculty advising?" Said Shucard,&#13;
There is a short circuit in communications between&#13;
the Dean's office and the Student Services •&#13;
office. I don't know whose fault it is and I'm not&#13;
interested. I would like to short circuit that communication&#13;
need." Moy questioned whether or not&#13;
the breakdown would not exist between the Dean's&#13;
office-and the faculty as well.&#13;
Vay n e J o h n s o n , a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r o f&#13;
?il?S?.?uy' thcT suS§ested changing the proposal to&#13;
ead, The offices of academic advising are to be&#13;
staffed by faculty as well as the Student Services&#13;
Office....&#13;
Said Dearborn, "If you do that I'll pull out completely.&#13;
I cannot just assign my staff over to the&#13;
Deans administration." Echelbarger added that,&#13;
Our staff are already under an administrative&#13;
structure. It would be very difficult to have them&#13;
report to the academic Deans as well."&#13;
Strictly a Faculty Operation&#13;
Dearborn added, "The proposal makes no&#13;
reference to us, it is strictly a faculty operation I&#13;
am not prepared to tell my staff to be assistants out&#13;
of either of the academic Deans' offices." Dearborn&#13;
said that the original proposal in which Student&#13;
Services advised those students who were undeclared,&#13;
"is working with the School and it can&#13;
work with the College." But under this proposal&#13;
Dearborn said the College would have the Student&#13;
Services staff working whenever the faculty didn't&#13;
want to, such as between semesters, nights and&#13;
during the peak times.&#13;
He continued, "Here we are arguing about&#13;
budgets, Student Services and faculty. We're not&#13;
talking about the students."&#13;
Norwood agreed to a meeting with Dearborn and&#13;
his staff, as Moy and Dearborn had set up earlier to&#13;
work out some agreements and report back to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee this week.&#13;
In ending, Dearborn said, "I am proud of my&#13;
staff. They are young, and growing. All I ask is give&#13;
us some stature."&#13;
Shucard told Dearborn to "Stick to the issues and&#13;
refrain from imputing other motives as you have&#13;
been doing this past week." Dearborn interrupted,&#13;
tolling Shucard, "If you want to give me a lecture&#13;
come to my office. But I'm not the only one who's&#13;
been thinking those thoughts."&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee will meet&#13;
again on Friday, Jan. 25 at 1 p.m. in Comm Arts&#13;
room 233.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974&#13;
RANGER 1— Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Dangerous&#13;
intersections&#13;
need 4-way stop&#13;
Definite iraffic safety probiems exist at two intersections&#13;
adjacent to the campus. Since Parkside&#13;
came into existence, and with its increasing population,&#13;
the corners of County Trunk A and Wood Road and A&#13;
and County Trunk Y (near the northeast end of the&#13;
campus) have become hazardous.&#13;
At A and Wood Road there is a visibility problem due&#13;
to the hill just west of Wood Road on A. There is also a&#13;
congestion problem when classes let out and a large&#13;
volume of people are leaving at the same time.&#13;
Congestion is even worse at the other intersection, for&#13;
Y is a main route between Racine and Kenosha and not&#13;
only University people use it but many other residents of&#13;
both cities. Cars on A tend to dart out when there is the&#13;
slightest opening.&#13;
A four-way stop at both intersections would reduce the&#13;
.hazards and hasten the flow of traffic, especially for&#13;
cars at A and Y. We suggest that people at Parkside&#13;
request Kenosha County to investigate this situation&#13;
before anyone is injured or even killed. Since we have a&#13;
commuter campus, and since statistics show that most&#13;
accidents happen within 10 miles of home, this is a&#13;
matter of concern to all of us.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Bad deal&#13;
for terminated&#13;
employe&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Kent Mayes was a police officer with the Parkside Safety and&#13;
Security force from November 1, 1971 until May 23, 19 73. T hen as a&#13;
result of Governor Lucey's announced productivity gain savings and&#13;
low priority requirements for the 1973-75 biennial budget, Mayes' job&#13;
was terminated. His salary of $8376 comprised part of the $16,736&#13;
savings from a 13 percent low priority requirement for Safety and&#13;
Security. (Another $8508 was cut also from this department for the&#13;
productivity allotment.)&#13;
As a civil service employe, Mayes decided to appeal his case to the&#13;
State Personnel Board in early summer. The Board agreed to hear&#13;
Mayes' appeal later that summer on the grounds that the performance&#13;
evaluation he had received as part of his lay-off procedure was considered&#13;
to be invalid.&#13;
A period of four months followed from the August 17 hearing until&#13;
the Board finally issued its opinion on December 20, 19 73. It was a&#13;
rugged time for Mayes who forfeited his unemployment checks; he&#13;
attended Gateway Technical Institute during the day, thus completing&#13;
a degree in police science. But in light of the Board's ruling of "full&#13;
reinstatement immediately," the long wait seems so mehow recon&#13;
ciled, that is until one considers that the Board has no legal recourse to&#13;
enforce its ruling.&#13;
Today Mayes remains unemployed while Parkside appeals the&#13;
Board's ruling. James Greenwald, legal advisor for the Board, said&#13;
that by delaying the remedy the Board had given the employe, the&#13;
chances of that employe returning to his original job grew dimmer.&#13;
This seems especially true and unfortunate now, considering that,&#13;
after an-eight-month layoff, Mayes must go out and hire his own&#13;
counsel to sue Parkside within 60 days of the Board's ruling so that he&#13;
may return to Work.&#13;
|&#13;
f)oti&gt;book&#13;
bv Jane Schliesman&#13;
"When major campus groups are at odds with each other the future&#13;
of a quality University is dimmed."&#13;
-RANGER editorial, Jan. 16,1974&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee meeting last Thursday was at&#13;
best an exercise in frustration, but to this student observer it was a&#13;
disillusioning and disheartening display of academicians thinking in&#13;
circles, chasing themselves round and round the track and revving&#13;
their engines in attempts to lure Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn&#13;
out of the pit to show his stuff. When he finally accepted the challenge&#13;
he apparently surprised at least a few persons present with his direct&#13;
driving style and guts. The race was for real and the conflict no longer&#13;
subtle.&#13;
To be fair, it must be stated that a number of committee members&#13;
watched this contest from the sidelines or waved the yellow caution&#13;
flag. While there is solidarity among the Student Services staff, the&#13;
faculty apparently are in a bit of a quandary as to what the whole thing&#13;
is all about.&#13;
I still defend RANGER'S analysis of it last week as a "power play,"&#13;
for it calls for the academic deans to administer the advising, taking it&#13;
away from Student Services. Involved, therefore, is money and&#13;
positions (the overt and covert foci of discussion) and therefore power&#13;
for the deans. Shucard may not have intended this-he seems&#13;
genuinely interested in a good advising system, even if he did say he&#13;
didn't care whose fault the present communication problems in advising&#13;
are-but Norwood is gunning for the checkered flag on this one.&#13;
Confusion is understandable, for I'm still not sure whether Shucard&#13;
or Norwood is the mechanic, and which of them is the driver, but their&#13;
car was frequently seen going off the track into the sidelines of general&#13;
degree requirements, budget, revision approvement process, and&#13;
other potholes. The central issue here-what is best for the studentswas&#13;
referred to as "obvious" and thus summarily dismissed for most&#13;
of the meeting.&#13;
It is my feeling that if they had dwelled on the obvious for a few&#13;
minutes they could have avoided hassles that are likely to leave longlasting&#13;
scars on relations between faculty and counselors. For&#13;
example, Shucard said that faculty doing academic advising would be&#13;
"volunteers who are good at it." If one-third of the full-time faculty&#13;
here volunteered and were good at it (which seems a high estimate),&#13;
there would be 57 faculty advisors. It is obvious that if you turn over&#13;
3400 und eclared or undecided students to 57 faculty, each faculty&#13;
member would be advising 60 stu dents over and above his or her&#13;
declared majors. This would make it difficult for many students to&#13;
even get an appointment, let alone try and walk in without one (not to&#13;
mention the strain on these teachers).&#13;
It is further obvious that these faculty members would be giving up&#13;
vacation time between semesters, since that is when students seek&#13;
advising, in exchange for a "reward" such as a reduced class load&#13;
during the semester. It seems to me that the faculty members who&#13;
would be good at academic advising are those who can establish good&#13;
rapport with students, those who are sought after for classes. To&#13;
"reward" them by letting them work less in their chosen career seems&#13;
rather paradoxical anyway, but also obviously hurts the students who&#13;
could otherwise be exposed to the classroom experience with these&#13;
people.&#13;
Finally, since money does seem to be one of the considerations in&#13;
this proposal, and since most of the cogs in the University wheel are&#13;
facing budget cutbacks or at best holding, it just makes good economic&#13;
sense to upgrade the present system if it is a viable one (which it&#13;
certainly is) rather than start over with a whole new system.&#13;
So this is my personal plea—one voice, but I think I speak for many&#13;
students for I've discussed this with many of them-to both faculty and&#13;
Student Services staff. The present system needs improvement in&#13;
communication, but it is a good system and I would like to see i t&#13;
retained. It keeps the faculty teaching and it provides the students&#13;
with readily available, unbiased, understanding help from trained&#13;
professionals in the field of advising and counseling. What the present&#13;
system needs most is a higher measure of respect for each other on the&#13;
part of the opposing entities in this conflict, and more generally on the&#13;
part of everyone at Parkside-students, staff, faculty and administration&#13;
alike.&#13;
Tell ihe "truth,&#13;
AriDTHE TRUTH&#13;
» , ,Y'L,L 5ET YOU FREE.'&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 TH E PARKSI D E RANGER 3&#13;
UW-P appeals officers reinstatement&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Parkside has decided to appeal&#13;
the State Personnel Board's&#13;
ruling on Dec. 20, concerning the&#13;
layoff of police officer Kent&#13;
Mayes. According to Charles&#13;
Stathas, a University System&#13;
attorney, Gov. Patrick Lucey&#13;
was to appoint a special council&#13;
to represent Parkside last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
A petition of review to the&#13;
circuit court was also to have&#13;
been issued Jan. 18, 1974 by the&#13;
University Legal System-within&#13;
30 days of the original Personnel&#13;
Board ruling.&#13;
The Board ordered that, "the&#13;
Respondent (John C. Weaver,&#13;
President, University of&#13;
Wisconsin) immediately reinstate&#13;
the Appellant (Mayes) to&#13;
his former position, without any&#13;
loss of seniority or other benefits&#13;
and with full back pay, from the&#13;
date of his layoff (May 23,1973) to&#13;
the date of his receipt of the&#13;
Respondent's written unconditional&#13;
offer of recall to&#13;
active employment."&#13;
Personal Basis for Layoff&#13;
Mayes, who was laid off due to&#13;
cuts in appropriations, appealed&#13;
to the Board June 5, 1973 objecting&#13;
to the performance&#13;
evaluation he had received as&#13;
part of the layoff procedure by&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, director of&#13;
Safety and Security. He contended&#13;
that his layoff was based&#13;
on "a very personal basis and&#13;
was not fairly done," citing&#13;
written proof that he was better&#13;
qualified than one other officer,&#13;
Laurence Augustine.&#13;
Based upon the evidence given&#13;
at the hearing Aug. 17, 1973 at&#13;
Parkside, the Board ruled that&#13;
"the Appellant was not the least&#13;
efficient and effective employe&#13;
amongst those employes in the&#13;
layoff group in the police officer&#13;
class."&#13;
"The departure from previous&#13;
Board cases concerning whether&#13;
or not the burden of proof that&#13;
rests upon the appointing&#13;
authority is the same as showing&#13;
discharge for just cause, is the&#13;
procedural question that the&#13;
University plans to appeal the&#13;
case on," said Stathas.&#13;
Procedure is Provided&#13;
At the outset of the Mayes v.&#13;
Weaver hearing, the burden of&#13;
proof rested on the counsel for&#13;
Weaver to prove to a reasonable&#13;
certainty that the facts as relied&#13;
on and stated in the layoff notice&#13;
were in fact true and constituted&#13;
just cause for the action taken.&#13;
The State Bureau of Personnel&#13;
provides for the procedure to be&#13;
used in determining which employe&#13;
shall be laid off when a&#13;
reduction in force is necessary. It&#13;
specifies that the three lowest&#13;
ranking in seniority shall be&#13;
evaluated by their superior based&#13;
upon each employe's services&#13;
and demonstrated competence&#13;
and fitness.&#13;
According to the Board's&#13;
opinion, "the Respondent's only&#13;
proferred evidence on this issue&#13;
was the executed 'Layoff Performance&#13;
Rating Scale' forms for&#13;
the Appellant and Officer&#13;
Augustine, which were prepared&#13;
by Brinkmann on May 16, 1973."&#13;
These forms gave numerical&#13;
values to such "rating factors"&#13;
as quality and quantity of work,&#13;
work habits, work interest, and&#13;
personal relations with the&#13;
director.&#13;
"The Respondent did not try to&#13;
establish by witnesses or records&#13;
why higher ratings were given&#13;
Officer Augustine than the Appellant&#13;
for any of the rating&#13;
factors listed in the form," the&#13;
Board's opinion stated.&#13;
With regard to Mayes' principal&#13;
witness, another police&#13;
officer on the Security force, the&#13;
Board's opinion believed his&#13;
testimony to be "credible and&#13;
plausible," saying that, "it&#13;
constitutes almost the sole&#13;
testimony to the job performance&#13;
of the Appellant and Officer&#13;
Augustine."&#13;
James Greenwald, legal advisor&#13;
for the State Personnel&#13;
Board, said that the Mayes v.&#13;
Weaver case was one of the first&#13;
layoffs in which the "preponderence&#13;
of evidence" rested on&#13;
the employer, rather than the&#13;
employe. This new "standard of&#13;
proof" was based on what he&#13;
called the "landmark" civil&#13;
service law, Dec. 1971, involving&#13;
Reinke v. Personnel Board. This&#13;
law states that "in discharge&#13;
proceedings before the ~ State&#13;
Personnel Board, appointing&#13;
authority has burden of proving&#13;
that discharge was for just&#13;
cause."&#13;
"Prior to this, discharge for&#13;
just cause had to be proven false&#13;
by the employe," said Greenwald.&#13;
Parkside's Personnel director,&#13;
Richard Sarto, has yet to&#13;
acknowledge, according to&#13;
Mayes, the Board order for his&#13;
reinstatement. Mayes was informed&#13;
by Sarto on Jan. 5 of this&#13;
year that the University planned&#13;
to appeal the Board ruling.&#13;
No Way to Enforce&#13;
Greenwald commented that the&#13;
"remedy" the Board gives the&#13;
employe is poor in the sense that&#13;
the statutes do not provide for an&#13;
enforcement provision, in which&#13;
the Board may go to court to&#13;
enforce its ruling, such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Employment Peace&#13;
Act enables the Employment&#13;
Relations Commission to do so.&#13;
Instead, statutes 16.05 (l)(e)&#13;
reads, "any action brought&#13;
against an appointing authority&#13;
by an employe for failure to&#13;
comply with the order of the&#13;
board shall be brought and&#13;
served within 60 days after the&#13;
date of the board's finding."&#13;
"Right now I'm exploring the&#13;
possibility of an act to put into&#13;
force, to affect, implementation&#13;
pending appeal," Greenwald&#13;
said. "When the attorney general&#13;
represents our ruling in court, I&#13;
plan to- ask, 'how can the&#13;
University appeal it without&#13;
applying to it?' "&#13;
Gil Eagles to demonstrate ESP&#13;
Gil Eagles, credited by news&#13;
accounts with driving a car&#13;
blindfolded around a race track&#13;
and through an infield obstacle&#13;
course using the minds of&#13;
passengers as eyes, will&#13;
demonstrate his extrasensory&#13;
perception (ESP) to the public&#13;
Jan. 23 (Wednesday) at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Admission for students is $1.50,&#13;
everyone else $2. Tickets can be&#13;
purchased at the Information&#13;
Center or at the door the night of&#13;
the performance.&#13;
Eagles, who has appeared on&#13;
national television but emphasizes&#13;
the college entertainment&#13;
circuit, performed&#13;
his driving feat last April in&#13;
Kingston, Ontario. He was accompanied&#13;
by the city police&#13;
constable and members of the&#13;
press. His eyes were covered by&#13;
silver dollars, adhesive tape, a&#13;
leather blindfold, then more tape.&#13;
He was handcuffed to the wheel.&#13;
"Their minds were my eyes,"&#13;
he was quoted as saying after the&#13;
incident-free trip. "I've never&#13;
done that before," he said. "Kind&#13;
of fun, wasn't it?"&#13;
During his performance, which&#13;
ranges in length from one to three&#13;
hours, "depending on the endurance&#13;
of the audience," Eagles&#13;
demonstrates ESP with members&#13;
of the audience. He identifies&#13;
serial numbers without&#13;
seeing the object, reads minds,&#13;
and sometimes gives psychic&#13;
counselling to audience members&#13;
who pre-submit questions.&#13;
Eagles has been the subject of&#13;
experiments by serious scholars&#13;
who are studying psychic&#13;
phenomena throughout the&#13;
world. He also. conducts communication&#13;
clinics and has had&#13;
considerable success writing and&#13;
adapting his abilities to the industrial&#13;
and trade show markets.&#13;
Reviewers have praised his&#13;
stage presence and entertainment&#13;
ability as well as&#13;
expressing amazement at his&#13;
demonstrations.&#13;
Although Eagles is billed as&#13;
"the entertaining psychic," the&#13;
entire process of physic&#13;
phenomena has been receiving&#13;
considerable attention in recent&#13;
years, much of it serious.&#13;
Commander Edgar Mitchell&#13;
experimented with earth communication&#13;
from the moon, it is&#13;
being studied at university institutes,&#13;
and the Russians claim&#13;
to have advanced the study of&#13;
thought transference through&#13;
ESP. There are even machines&#13;
on the market today to assist&#13;
persons in their every day&#13;
practice of ESP.&#13;
STAFF MEETING&#13;
Wed. Jan. 23 2:30 p.m.&#13;
RANGER LLC D194&#13;
All interes ted persons welcome&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: Beginning this week film student Walt Ulbricht&#13;
will be writing a column of re views in RANGER. His column will focus&#13;
on local offerings in the community as well as at Parkside.&#13;
Ingmar, Orson and Will&#13;
This semester offers an outstanding opportunity for film enthusiasts.&#13;
Ronald Gottesman's Film Directors course, Humanities&#13;
310, a nd Andrew McLean's Shakespeare and Film, Humanities 240,&#13;
will screen cinema masterpieces. Critically acclaimed films of&#13;
Ingmar Bergman, Orson Welles, Laurence Olivier and Akira&#13;
Kurosawa will be shown for both registered students and interested&#13;
friends of film.&#13;
Gottesman specifically examines Bergman's search for Soul and&#13;
Meaning and the enigmatic world of Welles. Seven Bergman films&#13;
profile themes of God, Death and the Individual. Wild Strawberries,&#13;
Virgin Spring, Winter Light and the powerful religious allegory, The&#13;
Seventh Seal trace Bergman's beauty and mystery. Eight films of&#13;
Welles (probably Kenosha's only genius) include the classic Citizen&#13;
Kane, his experimental Macbeth and The Trial, Kafka's nightmare of&#13;
deadly justice.&#13;
McLean explores the problem of cinematic adaptation. Can&#13;
Shakespeare's suggestive imagery be translated into a visual&#13;
language? Nine discriminating and diverse Shakespearean films&#13;
contrast the interpretation and technique of Olivier, Kurosawa, Welles&#13;
and Castellani. The lavish 1935 Max Rheinhardt production of A&#13;
Midsummer Night's Dream with interesting performances by James&#13;
Cagney, Dick Powell and Mickey Rooney can not be adequately&#13;
compared to Kurosawa's Throne of Bl ood, an excellent interpretation&#13;
of Macbeth as a 15th Century Samurai.&#13;
Never before has Parkside assembled a greater collection of&#13;
superlative films. Combined with thfe comfort of th e handsome Comm-&#13;
Arts Theater where most of these films will be shown, this semester&#13;
will indeed be a "Magnum Force." Go to these shows and grow a little.&#13;
Film Directors:&#13;
Welles and Bergman&#13;
Mondays 7:00 - 10:00&#13;
28 Jan. The Stranger&#13;
4 Feb. Lady from Shanghai&#13;
11 Feb. Macbeth&#13;
18 Feb. Mr. Arkadin&#13;
25 Feb. Touch of Evil&#13;
4 Mar. The Trial&#13;
Bergman:&#13;
11 Mar. Smiles of a Summer Night&#13;
18 Mar. The Seventh Seal&#13;
25 Mar. Wild Strawberries&#13;
8 Apr. Virgin Spring&#13;
22 Apr. Winter Light&#13;
29 Apr. The Silence&#13;
6 May Persona&#13;
Shakespeare and Film:&#13;
Wednesdays 7:30-10:00&#13;
6 Feb. Kurosawa's Throne of&#13;
Blood&#13;
13 Feb. Welles' Macbeth&#13;
20 Feb. Burge's Othello&#13;
6 Mar. Youtkevich's Othello&#13;
20 Mar. Castellani's Romeo&#13;
and Juliet&#13;
3 Apr. Reinhardt's Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream&#13;
24 A pr. Olivier's Hamlet&#13;
8 May Kozinstev's Hamlet&#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 Librarv-&#13;
Learnmg Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
ietters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters. °&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Michael Olsiyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
1 tUTA. *" w-&#13;
'Easter in Athens&#13;
trip organizing&#13;
Ninety people have already&#13;
signed up to spend Easter in&#13;
Athens. The Campus Travel&#13;
Center is coordinating a package&#13;
trip to Greece for not only&#13;
Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
alumni, but for other schools as&#13;
well. The increased scope of&#13;
participatiQn is made possible by&#13;
the fact that the vacationers will&#13;
travel on a commercial airline&#13;
(Swissair) rather than a charter.&#13;
The package includes seven&#13;
nights in Athens, where the group&#13;
will be staying in the Greek&#13;
section of the city at the Omonia&#13;
Hotel. Side trips will include a&#13;
cruise to the islands of Hydra,&#13;
Poros and Aegina, and a sightseeing&#13;
tour of Athens.&#13;
The eighth night will be spent in&#13;
Zurich, Switzerland at the Nova&#13;
Park Hotel on the return leg of&#13;
the trip. The group will attend a&#13;
fondue party at one of the famous&#13;
Swiss fondue restaurants.&#13;
Also included in the package is&#13;
the round-trip flight, two meals&#13;
daily, tour escort, and taxes and&#13;
service. The cost of the trip os&#13;
$499 plus $20 tax and service&#13;
based on two persons per room.&#13;
The group will leave for Athens&#13;
on April 12 and return April 21, a&#13;
time period which encompasses&#13;
Parkside's Spring Recess.&#13;
For additional information or&#13;
SAVE 50%&#13;
7,h*" \ Kenojha&#13;
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DYLAN " n0„ *3&#13;
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Phone 6 54-3578&#13;
"Open 36 5 da ys a y ear"&#13;
Truck On&#13;
Kenosha's Finest Condominiums&#13;
Why rent when you can own a condommihome&#13;
for about the same monthly payment&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
ONE BEDROOM RANCH STYLE&#13;
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Prices include; • Ai, conditioning • Luxurious carpeting . Electnc range and self .clZ^T^T&#13;
• rounfrv rhthhn *Dlshwash"' • Food waste disposal .Cen„al FM/TV antenna&#13;
• Country clubhouse, with sauna .And many other design and convenience features.&#13;
SEE OUR DECORATOR FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
Models also open weekdays 1 t o 8&#13;
Or by personal showing at your convenience&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE 1— 552-9339&#13;
PARK5IDE REALTY INC.&#13;
Developed and Built by U S General. Inc&#13;
applications, contact the Campus&#13;
Travel Center at (553-)2294 or&#13;
stop in at the Center, LLC D-197.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: Film Society sponsors the film "Rebel Without&#13;
A Cause" and "Wild One" at 7:30 p.m. in Gr. 103. Admission is 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: Whiteskellar presenting Bob Rohan from 1-3&#13;
p.m. in Gr. D103. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: E.S.P. lecture featuring Gil Eagles and&#13;
sponsored by the PAB. 8-10 p.m. in C.A.T. Tickets on sale at Information&#13;
kiosk for $1.50 students and $2 general public.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 25: Third World Organization sponsoring David Sanchez&#13;
at 1:30 in Gr. 103.&#13;
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 25-27: Ragtime Rangers Mt&#13;
Telemark Ski weekend. Contact Information kiosk for further details&#13;
Saturday, Jan, 26: Hockey, UW-P vs. UW-LaCrosse at 10:30 a m at&#13;
the Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 26: Dance from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in SAB, Admission is&#13;
$1.50 and Parkside I.D. as well as proof of age, is required.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: Vets Club meeting at4 p.m. in SAB.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: Student recital from 3 to 4:30 p.m in C A T&#13;
and open to the public. ' ' "&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: UW-P vs. Illinois State in hockey. 6pm at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29: Basketball UW-P vs. UW-Milwaukee at 7 30 n m&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Bldg. p,m-&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Jan. 29: Film on physical fitness from 7-8 p.m. in Gr. 103 No char^P&#13;
wE? . 6n Au?t,ons of new acts Whiteskellar at 1 p.m. ^ the Whiteskeilar in thee&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted in&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear. n&#13;
Behavior modification&#13;
is vehicle for change&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
William R. Morrow, professor&#13;
of psychology, will again involve&#13;
his Advanced Behavior&#13;
Modification class in the practical&#13;
aspects of clinical experimentation.&#13;
Student volunteers will participate&#13;
in a program that is&#13;
designed to change their&#13;
behavior in one of four ways:&#13;
overcome test anxiety, control&#13;
eating, quit smoking, and&#13;
overcome shyness with the opposite&#13;
sex.&#13;
Morrow's seven students will&#13;
be following the basic procedures&#13;
of behavior modification, adjusting&#13;
those procedures to fit the&#13;
needs of the two or three individuals&#13;
that each student will&#13;
be working with.&#13;
Morrow stressed the point that&#13;
each participant must help him&#13;
or herself, must do the work that&#13;
is involved in overcoming the&#13;
individual problem. The behavior&#13;
modification procedures can be&#13;
used to structure and aid the&#13;
process of changing behavior.&#13;
Basically the same experiment&#13;
was conducted in the spring&#13;
semester of 1973 by Morrow's&#13;
class with a fairly high percentage&#13;
of success. That&#13;
program was the subject of a&#13;
paper submitted by Morrow at&#13;
William Morrow&#13;
the annual meeting last month of&#13;
the Association for the Advancement&#13;
of Behavior Therapy.&#13;
In that paper, Morrow reported&#13;
58 percent of the clients&#13;
m a r k e d l y i m p r o v e d "&#13;
(meaning, for example, in the&#13;
area of smoking, that 58 percent&#13;
quit smoking for at least the&#13;
period of follow-up); 25 percent of&#13;
the clients showed moderate&#13;
improvement (meaning, again in&#13;
the smoking area, at least a 50&#13;
percent reduction in the consumption&#13;
of cigarettes); t:&#13;
remaining 17 percent show&#13;
negligible improvement.&#13;
The program will begin in tl&#13;
fourth week of classes, but a&#13;
pointments and interviews wi&#13;
applicants will be held befo&#13;
that time. Each student volunte'&#13;
will attend a total of eig&#13;
sessions, each session consistir&#13;
of 45 minutes apiece. The timi&#13;
for these sessions will 1&#13;
arranged by the volunteer and h&#13;
or her trainer.&#13;
Students wishing to participal&#13;
in the program can pick up flyei&#13;
at the Information Center or th&#13;
Library Circulation Desk. Boxt&#13;
for dropping off the registratio&#13;
forms will also be available £&#13;
these two locations. Th&#13;
registration forms can also b&#13;
sent to Morrow, Greenquist 35'&#13;
by either inter-campus or U.S&#13;
mail.&#13;
7inn nf "JPersons wi»h car to drive&#13;
oav J ™ °n b.USin6SS for ,he RANGER. Wi&#13;
miU alPfVr'P Which is approximately :&#13;
trii from ia !S ab0Ut °ne h0Ur ,0r ,he r0un&#13;
n or neTr 7 S'de- "deal for persons livin&#13;
RANrt o .I"' Contact Tom Petersen in th&#13;
"ANGER office, LLC D194.&#13;
JAN. 2 3, 2 5, 2 6, &amp; 27&#13;
Kenosha s Newest Nitespot 2nd National OHO 1% (formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbav R oad Rhone 6 54-0485&#13;
Audio visual products Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Creative new media taking hold&#13;
f, - -by °ebra Friedell&#13;
00™'r rent&#13;
that of showing video tapes-they makeThem 'b™&#13;
"It may be the biggest project vet at thiJ T' , ,&#13;
claim Christensen and Rudy Lienau who works''on&#13;
t h e t e c h n i c a l c r e w . " B u t w e n e e d n P n n! » f&#13;
volved. This is not just fo7eSaXL g6t in"&#13;
but for education and involvement ™ PUrf&gt;°Se&#13;
In starting out, the video committee has selected&#13;
a few films from the library, such as Niirht it It Opera with the Marx Brothers, Buster Keaton molt&#13;
Again and Pardon Us, a Laurel and HarriJ1&#13;
which they will take a film and^mateTp^am&#13;
around it A host will introduce and g,ve S&#13;
background of the film and there will be sufh things&#13;
as advertising and commercials concerning h ngs&#13;
going on at Parkside. Says Christensen, "This wll&#13;
give us a chance to experiment and be creative We&#13;
have writers, performers, directors, producers&#13;
who want to work. Video is a new media and an&#13;
expanding one. We need experience and we want to&#13;
get students ,n on all levels of video production "&#13;
There will also be a spot in the show for talent&#13;
Before the semester is over the committee has&#13;
plans for moving into broadcasting news satires&#13;
Although the ideas have not been fully developed&#13;
Christensen explained hopes for such things as the&#13;
campus news parody, soap opera type of shows on&#13;
campus life, feature shorts on future shock and&#13;
straight reporting of news events. "We are open to&#13;
many ideas in many areas," said Christensen&#13;
These are just things in planning."&#13;
The committee hopes to put monitors in high&#13;
traffic areas on campus to show the tapes and then&#13;
keep them in the Library Learning Center on file for&#13;
later viewing. Said Christensen, "There is a good&#13;
chance of getting closed circuit television within six&#13;
months, and we'd like to get a channel on it."&#13;
The technical crew was trained by Dave Campbell,&#13;
coordinator of the media production facility,&#13;
and Beecham Robinson, director of the Learning&#13;
Center. "Our crew is trained at a much quicker&#13;
pace than anyone imagined," Lienau exclaimed. "A&#13;
lot of doors were open with little red tape, which is&#13;
unusual with a bureaucracy."&#13;
In regard to funding, Lienau explained that the&#13;
Activities Board has given the video committee $100&#13;
and that there is no charge for the use of the&#13;
Homecoming tickets&#13;
now on sale&#13;
Parkside's two fraternities and&#13;
sorority are planning the&#13;
University's first homecoming to&#13;
be held the weekend of Feb. 8, 9&#13;
and 10. The "informal"&#13;
homecoming will center around&#13;
the Grand Valley State vs.&#13;
Parkside basketball game on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9. A dinner and&#13;
dance will follow the 7:30 p.m.&#13;
basketball game. The Parkside&#13;
Stage Band will perform and&#13;
liquor and beer will be served.&#13;
On Friday night there will be a&#13;
dance at the Student Activities&#13;
Building in which a blue-grass&#13;
band, Mission Mt. Wood Band,&#13;
will be featured.&#13;
Tickets are on sale for $2.50 at&#13;
the Information kiosk in Main&#13;
Place. This ticket allows students&#13;
to receive a reduced price entrance&#13;
to both Friday night's&#13;
dance and Saturday's basketball&#13;
game, besides admission to&#13;
Saturday night's dinner and&#13;
dance.&#13;
All students are invited to&#13;
attend and become involved.&#13;
Promoters emphasize the&#13;
casualness of Parkside's first&#13;
homecoming and encourage all&#13;
students to participate.&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Glenn Christensen, shown here in the control room of the audio&#13;
visual production studio, explained that he has tried to select films&#13;
that offer continuous entertainment--a student may walk in at any&#13;
point and enjoy the program.&#13;
equipment. Money from outside advertising is being&#13;
investigated; however, there may be some legal&#13;
problems involved.&#13;
In a tour of the video production center,&#13;
Christensen demonstrated some of the art&#13;
techniques one is capable of accomplishing when&#13;
working with video. The facility accommodates two&#13;
cameras plus two portapack mobile units. One can&#13;
create all sorts of special effects such as those&#13;
which can be created by CBS, said Lienau. They&#13;
included such things as superimposition, using&#13;
slides and live performance simultaneously,&#13;
dissolves, cuts and wipes.&#13;
The timing is extremely important in audio-visual&#13;
production. Christensen explained that not only are&#13;
the production deadlines so close together but so&#13;
Literary magazine&#13;
published&#13;
many things happen at once during production.&#13;
"The 'we' is very important. Because of the fast&#13;
pace there is a tendency to lose your sensitivity to&#13;
one another," said Christensen. "Everyone has to&#13;
work together as one entity. You can't be anything&#13;
in this media without knowing something about&#13;
people. You learn from others."&#13;
The first show, to be broadcast this February, will&#13;
feature Christensen as producer and Maria Breach,&#13;
a secretary in the audio production center, as&#13;
director.&#13;
Christensen stressed the want and need for more&#13;
students to get involved with all the levels of&#13;
production-from talent to technical. He asked that&#13;
anyone interested stop at the Student Activities&#13;
Office in LLC D195.&#13;
Dwarves, a new locally-based&#13;
literary magazine published by&#13;
many of the same people involved&#13;
in such past literary and&#13;
journalistic endeavors as&#13;
Newscope, Indications and the&#13;
Nickel Bag is now on sale at bars,&#13;
bookstores and in the very wide&#13;
halls of Parkside itself.&#13;
Dwarves includes selected&#13;
poetry by Diane Lawler, Clark&#13;
Anderson and Ryan Higgins,&#13;
short fiction by Jim Koloen, Marc&#13;
Eisen and Paul Lomartire,&#13;
drawings by John Sieger and&#13;
Casey Higgins and photographs&#13;
by Brian Ross.&#13;
Not a "student" literary&#13;
magazine, Dwarves is an offcampus&#13;
publication which will&#13;
continue to afford an outlet for&#13;
serious creative efforts by&#13;
students as well as non-students.&#13;
The price is one dollar per copy.&#13;
Student Activities calendars&#13;
for second semester are now&#13;
available at the Information&#13;
kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for P ants&#13;
and things!&#13;
ISEftMIANN'S&#13;
THE&#13;
[American]&#13;
614 - 5 6th S treet&#13;
V/ednesd&#13;
Qr. ±o3 Cky, vJcxn. 7:30pm.&#13;
. 1 F 1 c ? / v ^&#13;
- SI GNS OP T H E I R T \VHE S =&#13;
S&#13;
ESIBSk,&#13;
S\&#13;
Brando&#13;
•3 BOB&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday , J a n . 23, 1974&#13;
_Ashortf short&#13;
The End&#13;
by Kurt Alexander Muller&#13;
And God Looked Down Over All&#13;
The Earth And He Was Sick Unto&#13;
His Stomach....&#13;
"O.K." He said, "All right! I&#13;
am fed up...I am disgusted...I&#13;
have had it! Enough is&#13;
enough...Gabriel, blow your&#13;
damned horn! I am putting an&#13;
end to all that crap down there!!"&#13;
"Well, it's about time," Gabriel&#13;
replied, taking his horn out of its&#13;
case. "Do you want a nice&#13;
modern riff or something&#13;
military, like taps, or maybe one&#13;
good long, strong-"&#13;
"I don't care what you blow,"&#13;
said God, "Just blow! Make it&#13;
loud; make it solid and final and&#13;
of a ll eternity-make it ring from&#13;
heaven to hell and back...make it&#13;
reach into all men's souls and fill&#13;
them with the realization that&#13;
this is IT. Make it bang!!"&#13;
"All right," Gabriel said, "All&#13;
right, but don't yell at me. After&#13;
all, I am a musician, not a&#13;
plumber. I've waited a long time&#13;
for this gig and I'm not going to&#13;
goof it. You just tell me how&#13;
you're going to end it and I'll&#13;
come up with something that&#13;
cooks.'' And he fit the mouthpiece&#13;
into his horn. "You going to have&#13;
it rain for forty days and forty&#13;
nights again?"&#13;
"Well," God said, "I haven't&#13;
really given it much thought."&#13;
"Well, if you're thinking of&#13;
having it rain, you'd better forget&#13;
it-they got new drainage systems&#13;
down there!!"&#13;
"Maybe I'll have an earthquake,"&#13;
God said, "that would siewh&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
It's simply amazing how electronic&#13;
calculators have become a "must" Item&#13;
for every student (as well as&#13;
housewives, salesmen, businessmen, or&#13;
any guy or gal who has trouble balancing&#13;
the old checkbook).&#13;
What has greatly contributed to their&#13;
popularity of course besides their&#13;
usefulness, Is the low price.&#13;
At $29.95 for a four function model&#13;
capable of doing chain and mixed&#13;
calculations, you simply can't afford to&#13;
be without one. We just received a new&#13;
supply and believe me, they're going&#13;
fast.&#13;
The new Artarantz SQ full logic IC chip&#13;
will be available within the next 30 days,&#13;
we are told and if you don't know what it&#13;
is, let me lay it on you straight... it will&#13;
allow you to listen to stereo records,&#13;
tapes and broadcasts (as well as SQ&#13;
disks) with 4-channel separation so close&#13;
to discrete that I defy you to tell the&#13;
difference.&#13;
I predict that this introduction will&#13;
revolutionize Quad in a number of ways:&#13;
Obviously, any 4 channel receiver not&#13;
equipped with or capable of receiving&#13;
this chip will be obsolete. Just as important,&#13;
this could be the beginning of&#13;
the end for CD 4 --- the four channel disk&#13;
system developed and promoted by RCA&#13;
and JVC. I simply can't conceive that&#13;
anyone will spend the extra $200 or more&#13;
for the extra equipment needed for CD 4&#13;
to gain those extra 4 db's of separation.&#13;
By the way, we've got some terrific&#13;
buys on records and tapes. From cutouts&#13;
at 3 for $1.00 to the latest releases at&#13;
$3.79. 8-track tapes from $1.99 and up.&#13;
Come in and browse -- you're sure to find&#13;
something you'll.like.&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo-TV&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
Records - Tapes&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 'til 6&#13;
said Gabriel. "I&#13;
I&#13;
get&#13;
really-"&#13;
"No good&#13;
could give you some great&#13;
quakey music-but lots of those&#13;
houses are quakeproof, and&#13;
imagine that you want to&#13;
them all at the same time."&#13;
"Of course, of course," said&#13;
God. "I know that. I wasn't&#13;
seriously thinking of earthquakes...&#13;
a plague is more my&#13;
style-maybe a plague that would&#13;
knock down every living--"&#13;
"They're all vaccinated!"&#13;
"Vaccinated? Hmmm...of&#13;
course...that is a shame,&#13;
though...in the old days you could&#13;
make a plague that would strike&#13;
down everything, Man, woman-"&#13;
"I suppose everything is&#13;
fireproof?" Gabriel interrupted.&#13;
"Everything except the&#13;
slums," said God, "and if you&#13;
burn those out they'll just rebuild&#13;
with modern developments."&#13;
Gabriel fingered his valves&#13;
while God sat back and thought&#13;
for a while. "Listen," God finally&#13;
said, smiling weakly, "what the&#13;
hell. Maybe I'll give them some&#13;
more time-after all, they are my&#13;
own children aren't they?"&#13;
"O.K. by me," said Gabriel.&#13;
"You wanna hear a little&#13;
something any way... I mean as&#13;
long as I already got the horn&#13;
out?"&#13;
More silence.&#13;
"All right," God finally said&#13;
softly, leaning back, "Play me&#13;
some blues!!"&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR THE DISCRIMINATING READER&#13;
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&amp;3TZ-SI9SThe&#13;
Raven&#13;
by Mike Winslow&#13;
Wanted Dead or Alive&#13;
David Bromberg&#13;
(Columbia KC 32717)&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: Gary Jensen, who wrote "The Raven" for two&#13;
semesters, is not attending Parkside this semester. His column will be&#13;
written by Mike Winslow and will appear bi-weekly.&#13;
I've never heard David Bromberg before except for his version of&#13;
Mr. Bojangles" which I but dimly remember. What prompted me to&#13;
review his album was the cover, which is a black and white&#13;
photograph of Bromberg clinging to the radio tower of the Empire&#13;
tate Building, clutching an airplane in one hand like King Kong. The&#13;
rear cover shows him as a giant face gazing through a bedroom&#13;
window at a startled girl, with a "King Kong" look on his face.&#13;
first side of the album was recorded in San Francisco using&#13;
some of the local musicians. Side two was cut in New York and three of&#13;
mnsfr. CUtSf T , Since Brombei'g uses so many different&#13;
musicians to back him it wouldn't be practical to name them, but rest&#13;
• f 1 F e g ° ° d ' ° n e 1 ) 0 1 1 1 1 t o n o t e i s h o w t h e y c o m b i n e d a f i d d l e&#13;
rlh°rnnSrajSeVeral °f the songs with g00d results- Another is how&#13;
Bromberg s dry voice fits in with the music&#13;
andhCnrTuTnS Wir5 "T,he H°ldup" Written j°intly ^ Bromberg&#13;
feitimM ? t f fl0"' S 3 fast"paced sonS witb a catchy melody and&#13;
tastv tnimnpf h" S°me °f th° gUltar parts and in a short but&#13;
he'shniT « a' S°ng 1S directed from a bandit to the persons&#13;
holding up and although the words are serious they sometimes&#13;
seem comical when combined with the music. A good song.&#13;
nhc Pmeo"e Else s Blues" is about a guy who has everything "two&#13;
hecks in the mail and a refund on my union dues,...all the dope I can&#13;
smoke, all the chicks I can use." This is followed by "Danger Man " a&#13;
blues shuffle with guitar, sax and trumpet solos plus the Sweet' Inspirations&#13;
singing background vocals. There's a hot jam, but it would&#13;
have been nice if it had lasted longer.&#13;
The last song on the first side, "The Main Street Moan" is done&#13;
fshnrtr3 lhW KtW° gVltars' mandolin and bass. It's a nice tune with&#13;
die street &amp; y°U migHt "ke t0 Sing WhiIe walking down&#13;
Send Me to the 'lectric Chair" (copyright 1927) nnens the COnnnj&#13;
side m a Dixieland style featuring clarinet and cornet solos It tells the&#13;
story of a man who's committed a murder and rather than srLnd his&#13;
hfe in jail pleads with the judge to send him to the 'lectric chaTr 'This&#13;
' Vc®nfination of two more old blues tunes, "Statesboro&#13;
ues - Church Bells Blues." It's Bromberg playing the blues alone&#13;
and improvising some of the lyrics.&#13;
• Wallflawer," a Bob Dylan tune in a country vein is a good song but&#13;
is eclipsed by the next tune, a live version of "Kansas City" which is&#13;
ynamite. The saxes scream and the trumpets wail while the pianist&#13;
improvises the blues and Bromberg plays guitar P&#13;
A fitting conclusion to the album is "The New Lee Highway Blues "&#13;
LitTr fiL?1UeS,deSCribing Hfe on the road eompYet? wlth banjo&#13;
pnH nf'in m J™ minutes of good pickin' and fiddlin' at the&#13;
end of the song. This is one of the best songs on the album.&#13;
This album is David Bromberg "fiddlin' " around with the blues&#13;
Sfl! i t (?3re blUGS but with a different flavor There's a&#13;
blues The °u Dlxl0land&gt; country blues and even "regular" type&#13;
aaflnfkndittyv ffoorr fthheT hb lyu e1sS,n yo3u m11 pdr So°bnagb l0yn ltihkee ailtb. um and if you have an&#13;
(Record Courtesy J&amp;J Tape &amp; Record Center)&#13;
Any hassles, p roblems, c omplaints?&#13;
The PSGA Grievance and Clearinghouse&#13;
Committee will deal w ith them.&#13;
Meeting: Wed., Jan. 2 3, L LC D174&#13;
ESP &amp; PSYCHIC&#13;
DEMONSTRATIONS&#13;
Tonight, Jan. 23rd 8 p.m.&#13;
Comm. Ar t s Theat r e Adm. »2&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
InFo Center - LLC Main Place, At Door&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Peace Corps . Vi s t a ^mn„. t^„y&#13;
ACTION'S Peace Corps and VISTA will be on camnm ,,&#13;
programs° "** P°tenUal aPP"CantS t0 the ""&#13;
rtSne?.rraswe,iastK—1&#13;
Moyle explains, "Many people believe that filling out an anniwj&#13;
obligates the applicant to join Peace Corps or VISTA This fi nitt ?&#13;
I t mer e l y g i v e s P e a c e C o r p s a n d V ISTA t h e &lt;tace t o ma£ht J&#13;
plicanfs abilities and talents with the requests from host comm^Ues&#13;
here and overseas. An applicant makes his or her decision al&#13;
tesed on the matching ~&#13;
thlS="e haS t0 P,an ahead «"» " h-He is Just&#13;
Applicants from practically every field of study are needed for the&#13;
training cycles that start m spring, summer and fall This includes&#13;
liberal arts and social science as well as specific studies&#13;
Peace Corps service is overseas for two years and that of VISTA is&#13;
here in the U.S. for one year. All travel, health and living expenses arc&#13;
paid while the volunteer serves the community that requested him.&#13;
Broomball teams organic&#13;
Co-ed broomball teams are being set up now to play at the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Arena on Monday and Friday noons. Skates are not needed&#13;
",'mgXm ?a7rt,Clpatin® sh°uld «»««* Vic Godfrey intte&#13;
S&amp;S becomes L&amp;F&#13;
The Department of Safety and Security has become the central&#13;
collection agency on campus for lost and found items to be claimed or&#13;
turned in. Individuals wishing to claim lost articles may either drop in&#13;
at the security budding or call extension 2455 between Sam and&#13;
midnight on weekdays. Found articles may be turned in at either the&#13;
security building or the Information Center. Articles which are unclaimed&#13;
after 60 days will be sold or turned over to the finder according&#13;
to state law.&#13;
East lot wil l be i n touch&#13;
Due to the isolation of the east parking lot, an inter-campus&#13;
heew f3S installed fere so assistance can be summoned in&#13;
the event of an emergency. The phone is located at the east end of the&#13;
walkway from Tallent Hall. For assistance between the hours of 8 a m&#13;
and midnight, dial 2455 or the operator.&#13;
Racine AAUW to award scholarship&#13;
The Racine Branch of the American Association of University&#13;
Women has announced that applications are now being accepted for&#13;
the $400 scholarship which AAUW awards annually to a Racine County&#13;
woman.&#13;
The scholarship award, which is based on academic achievement&#13;
and financial need, is awarded each year to a Racine County woman&#13;
beginning the first or second semester of her junior year at any accredited,&#13;
degree-granting college or university the fall after the grant&#13;
is awarded.&#13;
Deadline for filing applications is April 1. The scholarship will be&#13;
awarded at AAUW's annual banquet in May.&#13;
Application blanks may be obtained from Mrs. W. Robert Jennings,&#13;
1219 South Main St., Racine, Wis. 53403, the scholarship committee&#13;
chairman, or from deans or student affairs directors at a student's&#13;
college or university.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned to Mrs. Jennings along with a&#13;
transcript of the student's credits for her college work to date.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
OINO'S&#13;
1816 1 6 Street&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
FOR PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOST ACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
Ml l W !•&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
Service&#13;
SOME LIKE IT HOT&#13;
in January&#13;
Mexican Special&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29&#13;
Respi ratory exhibi t now i n l ibrary&#13;
Associati^TW1? °ffiCe' irlconjunction with The Wisconsin Lung&#13;
= r?,can Cancer Society and the Pathology Se showPn«f rha Mernal Hospital- opened its first exhibitin&#13;
Sf® ,floor of the library last Monday-Jan- 21.&#13;
three^IrtV i ™ ASm°king and Your Health" and is displayed in&#13;
Svstem ? fo°my, and Physiology of ^ Respiratory&#13;
Have Ri'JhJt r * Smoking on the Body; 3. The Non-Smokers&#13;
^ s, Too. Free educational literature will be available.&#13;
Teaching appl icat ions avai labl e&#13;
durfng1htm4U5^w,UdentS Wh° P,3n t0 intern or student teach&#13;
soon L noss/ht J?","® Urged t0 COmplete aPPdcations as&#13;
Hall ThfrELn ' Apphcat,on forms are available in 210 Greenquist&#13;
WinJSf deadhne for intern applications for Fall Semester 1974 and ^aSmrefoJ^n 19?4" Students who plan t0&#13;
March 1, 1974 SemeStGr 1974 must complete aPPhcations by&#13;
For further information about any of these programs contact&#13;
phonM553)O230S5SOr °f Education Dwayne Olsen, 210 Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Films about rebel lion open^mester&#13;
^,?Uth in rebe,lion- "Rebel Without a Cause" and&#13;
Society at n m 0PS ^ semester of the Parkside Film&#13;
730 Pm- °n Wednesday, Jan. 23 in Greenquist Hall 103&#13;
«^n k\ 2rei?pen t0 publ,c'and admission is 75 cents.&#13;
mirSf iWltbout a Cause." starring the late James Dean, deals with&#13;
"The Wiinn "ag,!rS.revolt PrinciPa"y against their parents.&#13;
JthI \ ? StarS Mar,on Brand0 and Lee Marvin. deals&#13;
niral towiv m° yClegang and the results of its invasion of a small&#13;
Both films are marked by a number of violent episodes (or at least&#13;
what passed for violence when "Wild One" was made in 1953 and&#13;
Rebel in 1955), and both have happy endings, of sorts; cop-outs say&#13;
some reviewers. J&#13;
Remaining films in the series are "Forbidden Games" (Feb 1 1 ) -&#13;
three Buster Keaton films: "Sherlock Jr.," "Cops" and "The&#13;
Navigator" (March 11); "Day at the Races (March 27); and&#13;
Lavender Hill Mob" (April 10).&#13;
Chancello r vi s i t ing Kent Stat e&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie is heading North Central Association&#13;
examining teams which are undertaking complete institutional accrediting&#13;
reviews of Notre Dame and Kent State. Wyllie is in Kent,&#13;
Ohio this week leading a 10-member North Central team at Kent State'&#13;
He will head another 10-member North Central examining team&#13;
March 18-20 at Notre Dame. Both periodic reviews cover the entire&#13;
University operation including academic review of undergraduate&#13;
through doctoral.&#13;
****************-*******************&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our&#13;
Advertisers •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••i t*&#13;
JOHN W. MERRICK, D .V.M.&#13;
announces the association ot&#13;
JOHN WENTLAND, D.V.M.&#13;
and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
Villa Capri Shopping Center&#13;
North 22nd Ave. Kenosha; (Ohio St. Racine)&#13;
552-9122 Day and Evening Hours by Appointment&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
HBUILDING^H&#13;
V&amp; v&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED: Senior Chemistry major to&#13;
conduct experiment(s). Includes qualitative&#13;
analysis. Contact Ted, c-o Ranger, LLC&#13;
D194.&#13;
WANTED: Journalism major or someone&#13;
with the ability to write clear legible news&#13;
stories on a very part-time basis. Small&#13;
weekly in Zion, III. needs occasional help in&#13;
covering various municipal functions&#13;
usually in the evening. Pay isn't good and the&#13;
assignments are sometimes dry but the&#13;
experience Is great. Call 312-872-4572 for&#13;
details. Ask for Shirley.&#13;
Proof reader-TY PI ST needed! Call 552-8859&#13;
on Thursday after 7 p .m. and ask for Roger.&#13;
Girl wanted to share 3 bedroom apt. Near&#13;
Parkside via Racine. Rent $100 per mo. 637-&#13;
2080 after 6 p.m. - Price.&#13;
PAPERS NOTARIZED on the spot. See&#13;
Betty Briggs, Business Management major,&#13;
evening classes 6:15-9:15. 634-2886.&#13;
INCOME TAX PREPARATION. Ex&#13;
perienced and reasonable. Discount to&#13;
Parksiders. Call 633-0416 for appointment&#13;
FOR SALE: Stereo FM-AM car radio. Works&#13;
great. 654-0030 evenings.&#13;
AQUARIUM WITH FISH and accessories&#13;
Cheap. Call 552-8584. Ask for Jeff.&#13;
Personals&#13;
HAS ANYONE FOUND my seaweed? I lost&#13;
it at registration. Contact Karen Paal,&#13;
Admissions Office.&#13;
KAY W. IN P.S. We're looking for a circulation&#13;
manager and heard you've got&#13;
experience. 5000 copies per week. Interested?&#13;
Not lucrative but safe. R.S.&#13;
CT3&#13;
mmmm&#13;
03&#13;
&amp;) 5&#13;
3&#13;
go P™&#13;
m&#13;
GO&#13;
•9*&#13;
&lt;73&#13;
-3=&#13;
i mmsmm &amp;) r—&#13;
CO CSSP&#13;
3&#13;
-H&#13;
CO&#13;
CO&#13;
IT*&#13;
P"&#13;
m&#13;
CO&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. ja„. 23, 1974&#13;
Phy. Ed. SIdg. Schedule&#13;
Wed. Jan. 16 - Gym open for recreation&#13;
intramural basketball&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 17 - Gym open for recreation&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Fri. Jan. 18 -&#13;
Sat. Jan. 19&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Basketball games&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Sun. Jan. 20 - B|dg open af 2 pm 1Q pm&#13;
Mon. Jan. 21 •&#13;
Tues. Jan. 22 -&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
12:30 pm-l:30 pm&#13;
8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-2 pm &amp; 6 pm-10 pm&#13;
10:30 am 1:30 pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10:30 am &amp; 12:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
11:30 am-l:30 pm&#13;
10:30 am-5 pm&#13;
8:30 am 5 pm Entire bldg. closes 5:00&#13;
11 am 1:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-4 pm&#13;
JV-5:30 Varsity-7:30&#13;
8:30 am-5 pm&#13;
3:30 pm-5 pm&#13;
All facilities available except for&#13;
intramurals in gyms at 6:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-l :30 pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-2 pm&#13;
12:30pm • 1: 30pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
all day except between 10:30 am &amp; 12:30 prr&#13;
11:30 am-1:30 pm 8. 6 pm-10 pm&#13;
Mat men extend&#13;
winning record&#13;
Parkside's wrestling team ran&#13;
its record to 3-0 Saturday, beating&#13;
Western Dlinois at Macomb 29-20.&#13;
Randy Skarda, 150 pounder,&#13;
won his 11th without a loss,&#13;
pinning his opponent in 3:33. Bill&#13;
West at 134 pounds is now 10-0&#13;
after pinning Scott Pickford in&#13;
7:41, and Ken Martin at 142&#13;
pounds is 9-0 for the season on a&#13;
pin over Tom Arlis in 2:55.&#13;
Other Ranger winners were&#13;
Rick Schovan (118) on a pin in&#13;
7:14, and 126-pound Ricco&#13;
Savaglia on a 6-2 decis ion. Tom&#13;
Beyer at 177 pounds drew his&#13;
match 9-9.&#13;
The Ranger mat team is&#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;
1 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;
Our research material is sold for&#13;
research assistance only.&#13;
ranked fifth in the NAIA midwest&#13;
region.&#13;
Cagers defeat Wayne State&#13;
Parkside's cagers unleashed&#13;
their biggest scoring explosion of&#13;
the year Saturday night at the&#13;
Physical Education Building as&#13;
the Rangers overpowered Wayne&#13;
State 89-65.&#13;
The Rangers, with Gary Cole&#13;
scoring 27 points and pulling&#13;
down 17 rebounds, hit on 37 of 78&#13;
shots from the field for a 47&#13;
percent mark while Wayne could&#13;
only make 23 of 69 for 33 percent.&#13;
Four other Parkside players&#13;
were in double figures. Malcolm&#13;
Mahone had 12, Calvin Demson 11&#13;
and Rade Dimitrijevic and Chuck&#13;
Chambliss 10 each.&#13;
The Rangers never trailed in&#13;
the game. They jumped out to a&#13;
quick 13-6 le ad in the first five&#13;
and one-half minutes of play and&#13;
had pushed the lead to 46-39 at&#13;
half-time. Wayne State had&#13;
threatened late in the half and&#13;
had closed the gap to 33-32 wi th&#13;
5:19 remaining but the Rangers&#13;
hit on seven straight points, three&#13;
by Denson and four by Don Snow&#13;
(seeing his first action since Dec.&#13;
14 after his recovery from a&#13;
broken cheekbone) and were out&#13;
Trackmen&#13;
looking for&#13;
honors&#13;
Three Parkside trackmen will&#13;
compete Friday and Saturday in&#13;
the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
indoor championship meet at&#13;
Kansas City.&#13;
Juniors Lucian Rosa and&#13;
Dennis Biel and freshman Jim&#13;
Heiring will be Parkside's entries.&#13;
For Rosa, a junior from Kandy,&#13;
Ceylon, and Biel, a junior from&#13;
Wausau (East), the meet will&#13;
mean another chance for the all-&#13;
America honors each grabbed&#13;
last season. For Heiring, a&#13;
walker from Kenosha (Bradford),&#13;
it's his fi rst trip to the meet&#13;
where Mike DeWitt established&#13;
the Parkside walking tradition by&#13;
taking all-America honors two&#13;
seasons ago.&#13;
Rosa placed fourth in the mile&#13;
and second in the two-mile last&#13;
year and will be aiming at a win&#13;
in the longer distance this time,&#13;
although he'll again be entered in&#13;
both. Biel posted one of the&#13;
NAIA's top 1,000-yard times last&#13;
weekend at Madison in winning&#13;
the USTFF Open at the UW&#13;
fieldhouse and could be the&#13;
favorite in that event at Kansas&#13;
City."&#13;
of danger.&#13;
Parkside stormed out in the&#13;
half and by midway through the&#13;
final stanza had upped its lead to&#13;
18 at 70-52. The Rangers' biggest&#13;
lead of the night came at 3:38&#13;
when Dean Christensen drove in&#13;
for a layup and gave Parkside a&#13;
27-point bulge at 83-56.&#13;
The Rangers outrebounded&#13;
Wayne 58-35 as Mahone had nine&#13;
rebounds, Dimitrijevic seven and&#13;
Snow six in addition to Cole's 17.&#13;
In action Tuesday, Jan. 15,&#13;
Parkside defeated St. Xavier&#13;
College 63-61 at Chicago as Cole&#13;
led all scorers with 19 points.&#13;
Chambliss had 16, Mahone 10 and&#13;
Denson 10 as th e Rangers held a&#13;
35-31 half-time lead, lost it near&#13;
the end and came back on a shot&#13;
by Cole with 1:08 left in the&#13;
contest to grab the win.&#13;
Parkside met Indiana State-&#13;
Evansville Monday and Southern&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville on the road&#13;
as the Rangers attempted to&#13;
better their 6-10 season mark.&#13;
Parkside will play at Aquinas&#13;
College in Grand Rapids, Mich.,&#13;
Saturday night before returning&#13;
home next Tuesday to take on a&#13;
rugged UW-Milwaukee squad at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Physical&#13;
Education Building.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building policy&#13;
Family Identification Card&#13;
1 1. The Parkside family identification card is a convenience for the immediate family&#13;
(spouse and children only; of faculty, staff and students who use the athletic facilities.&#13;
2. When using the athletic facilities, the family of faculty, staff and students may present&#13;
either the family identification card or the identification card of the faculty member, staff&#13;
member or student. Further proof of identification may be required by those managing the&#13;
facility.&#13;
3. Family identification cards may be secured from the physical education office Monday&#13;
through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. beginning January 14,1974.&#13;
4. The charge for the card will be $1.00 (The charge for the second semester, 1973-74 will be&#13;
$.50) Beginning with the academic year 1974-75, cards will be sold on a yearly basis only from&#13;
September 1 to August 31. The charge will beSl.OO regardless of time of purchase.&#13;
5. Only one family identification card per family will be issued.&#13;
6. Family identification cards will list the name (s) of the spouse and children on the card.&#13;
7. Those allowing unauthorized persons to use the family identification card will lose the&#13;
identification card and surrender the privilege of using the physical education building.&#13;
8. Family members may bring one guest to the facility for a $1.00 charge.&#13;
9. ALL PERSONS USING THE ATHLETIC FACILITIES MUST OBEY THE FOLLOWING&#13;
RULES AND REGULATIONS:&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
1. Anyone using the athletic facilities must have an ID card.&#13;
2. The ID card must be shown upon request at the athletic facility.&#13;
3. Those using the pool and sauna must exercise special care. The following rules govern&#13;
their use:&#13;
a. No running, pushing or shoving on the pool deck or in the pool area.&#13;
b. Only one person at a time may use the diving board.&#13;
c. Persons in street clothes will not be allowed on the pool deck.&#13;
d. Food is prohibited in the pool area.&#13;
e. Artificial swim devices are not allowed in the pool. The use of fins, masks and goggles is&#13;
prohibited.&#13;
f. No one is permitted in the guard tower except the lifeguard.&#13;
g. Leaders of organized groups visiting the pool shall assume full responsibility for the conduct&#13;
of their groups.&#13;
h. Patrons should acquaint themselves with the various depths of the pool.&#13;
8. No glass containers are allowed in the bathhouse or pool area.&#13;
i. The lifeguard may expel from the pool anyone violating these rules,-or anyone whose conduct&#13;
is jeopardizing the safety or pleasure of others.&#13;
4. Family members must provide all clothing, towels and locks. Empty lockers are&#13;
available in locker areas. No locks may be left on the lockers at the end of the day.&#13;
5. PARENTSMUSTSTAY WITH CHILDREN AGETWELVE OR UNDER.&#13;
6. ANYONE VIOLATING THE RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE ATHLETIC&#13;
FACILITY WILL BE ASKED TO LEAVE!&#13;
7. Those using the Sauna must strictly adhere to the following instructions:&#13;
a. Minimum of two people in the Sauna.&#13;
b. Maximum of twelve people in Sauna.&#13;
c. Swim suits only.&#13;
d. Keep hands off controls.&#13;
e. Limit use to fifteen minutes.&#13;
f. Caution extended stay may cause dizziness.&#13;
g. Absolutely no one allowed in the Sauna alone.&#13;
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 17, January 23, 1974</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1974-01-23</text>
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        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64457">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="38">
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          <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="64458">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64461">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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      <name>elections</name>
    </tag>
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      <name>james galbraith</name>
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    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
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