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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, issue 19</text>
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            <text>Second Semester Enrollment Sets Record</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Second semester&#13;
enrollment sets record&#13;
Second semester enrollment at&#13;
Parkside is 4,425, a record high&#13;
for the Spring semester.&#13;
Current enrollment is seven&#13;
percent, or 282 students, more&#13;
than second semester last year&#13;
when 4,143 registered. The attrition&#13;
from first semester's alltime&#13;
high of 4,856 is considered a&#13;
normal drop from the Fall to&#13;
Spring semesters by Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn.&#13;
"Although second semester&#13;
data is preliminary, the final&#13;
figures won't vary much and&#13;
there are some very encouraging&#13;
signs," Dearborn said. He cited a&#13;
29 percent increase in the number&#13;
of freshmen over a year ago, a&#13;
doubling of minority students,&#13;
and what appears to be a good&#13;
retention rate in both categories&#13;
from first semester.&#13;
Freshman are up from 1,198&#13;
last year at this time to 1,554, and&#13;
down only six percent from Fall.&#13;
There are 222 minorities at&#13;
Parkside, more than twice the 110&#13;
last year, including 148 blacks, up&#13;
from 68 last year. There was&#13;
virtually no change from the 224&#13;
minorities who began the Fall&#13;
semester at UW-P.&#13;
"Another encouraging sign is&#13;
the expanded geographical base&#13;
from which our students are&#13;
coming," Dearborn said.&#13;
Students from outside Kenosha&#13;
and Racine counties are up 21&#13;
percent from last year, from 329&#13;
to 399. Local students also are up,&#13;
from 1,729 to 1,803 (four percent)&#13;
in Kenosha county and from 2,085&#13;
to 2,223 (seven percent) in Racine&#13;
county.&#13;
"I'm also pleased with the&#13;
number of transfer students who&#13;
are coming to us from other&#13;
schools as upperclassmen," he&#13;
said. "It showed up dramatically&#13;
last Fall and seems to be continuing.&#13;
A lot of area students are&#13;
rehiring to Parkside after&#13;
starting somewhere else."&#13;
This is borne out by the fact&#13;
that not only are Parkside's 839&#13;
seniors up 10 percent from last&#13;
year's 765, they also are up from&#13;
the 799 of last Fall despite 150 who&#13;
graduated in January.&#13;
Female students have increased&#13;
12 percent, from 1,560 to&#13;
1,755, while males are up three&#13;
percent, from 2,583 to 2,670.&#13;
The number of sophomores and&#13;
juniors are virtually unchanged&#13;
from last year and the number of&#13;
"specials" (those not in degree&#13;
programs or otherwise unclassified)&#13;
is down from last&#13;
year.&#13;
Financial aid proposal&#13;
Loan program would abolish state grants&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
A new student financial aids program for the state&#13;
of Wisconsin has been proposed by James Jung&#13;
executive secretary of the Higher Educational Aids&#13;
Board.&#13;
The main feature of the plan is that all state grant&#13;
and loan programs that exist now would be&#13;
eliminated and replaced by one large program of&#13;
loans that would be available to all resident&#13;
students. 1 e hstudent need not use the money in the&#13;
state of Wisconsin, but could attend any university&#13;
in the country.&#13;
The proposal, called the Wisconsin Guaranteed&#13;
Higher Education Plan (WGHEP), says that all&#13;
students may borrow up to $2500 per year for four&#13;
years of college, with repayment contingent upon&#13;
income level after graduation. This means that&#13;
repayment of the loan would be made based on the&#13;
individual's ability to pay. If a person's income is&#13;
low, payments will be less than those of someone&#13;
whose income is high. If after 25 years the loan is&#13;
not repaid in full, the remaining amount will be&#13;
forgiven. However, a person who has a high income&#13;
may end up paying more than was originally&#13;
borrowed, even beyond the interest on that amount.&#13;
Such a consequence might be necessary to make up&#13;
for those who cannot pay, according to Jan Ocker&#13;
director of Financial Aids at Parkside.&#13;
Aid Now Based on Need&#13;
Financial aid is presently based on need, which&#13;
considers the parents' ability to pay. Many minority&#13;
and disadvantaged students now qualify for grant&#13;
money but under WGHEP, state grants would no&#13;
longer be available. It is a known fact in the&#13;
financial aids community, said Ocker, that there is&#13;
a reluctance on the part of low-income, minority&#13;
students to accept loans, especially in the large&#13;
amounts that WGHEP would require&#13;
Ocker fears that graduates who have a large debt&#13;
to repay will be reluctant to accept high paying&#13;
jobs, fearing that their payments will be high and&#13;
that the total amount will be in excess of what they&#13;
borrowed. This could be a potential loss to the entire&#13;
work force, said Ocker.&#13;
He also fears that there will be a large increase in&#13;
tuition under WGHEP. Where tuition now makes up&#13;
P6r&#13;
^&#13;
nt 0f 1116 total costs of education,&#13;
WGHEP would make it justifiable for tuition to be&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
by Kathryn L. Kah&#13;
It works! After being on the&#13;
blink since last March, the sauna&#13;
has been fixed.&#13;
Apparently this was not a&#13;
simple matter. According to John&#13;
Galbraith of Planning and&#13;
Construction, the Metos sauna,&#13;
manufactured in Helsinki,&#13;
Finland, was the victim of&#13;
unusual circumstances.&#13;
When the State has a building&#13;
constructed, there are usually&#13;
several prime contractors involved&#13;
in the construction of the&#13;
building. A prime contractor is&#13;
the company which signs the&#13;
contract with the State; it is&#13;
usually the lowest bidder. One&#13;
company does the building,&#13;
another company does the&#13;
plumbing, another heating, and&#13;
still another does the electrical&#13;
work.&#13;
In the case of the Physical&#13;
Education Building, the original&#13;
prime electrical contractor from&#13;
Bellview, Washington went into&#13;
receivership-that is, broke. This&#13;
company obtained the sauna&#13;
from the manufacturer in&#13;
Finland and installed it. The&#13;
original cost was $850.&#13;
The State has a bonding&#13;
company, an insurance company,&#13;
which takes over in the&#13;
event that one of the prime&#13;
contractors goes broke. There is&#13;
also a one-year period during&#13;
which the original prime contractor&#13;
must fix anything that&#13;
goes wrong with its work.&#13;
The sauna failed within the oneyear&#13;
guarantee period, the&#13;
company had gone broke, and the&#13;
bonding company had to take&#13;
over.&#13;
Since the bonding company is&#13;
only an insurance company, it&#13;
had to hire a new electrical&#13;
contractor to fix the sauna. This&#13;
took until July.&#13;
According to Galbraith, It took&#13;
until sometime last September to&#13;
determine what was actually&#13;
wrong with the unit.&#13;
It seems that the failure may&#13;
have been due to improper installation.&#13;
The unit shorted out&#13;
and some of the wires burned.&#13;
The improper hook-up was&#13;
probably aggravated by people&#13;
pouring large quantities of pool&#13;
water on it.&#13;
The sauna is primarily dry&#13;
heat. It is permissible to pour a&#13;
dipperful at a time of pure water&#13;
on the stones, but NOT pool&#13;
water. Saunas of this type are&#13;
usually trouble-free if not abused.&#13;
When the trouble was finally&#13;
discovered, the whole unit was&#13;
shipped to California to the new&#13;
contractor hired by the bonding&#13;
company. Once the sauna finally&#13;
reached someone who knew what&#13;
they were doing, and the new&#13;
contractor was paid by the&#13;
bonding company, it was fixed in&#13;
short order. The cost was $150.&#13;
So people may certainly go use&#13;
the sauna once again, but please&#13;
don't pour a bucket of pool water&#13;
on it!&#13;
w The Parkside&#13;
"RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 Vol. II No. 19&#13;
The sad saga of the sauna,&#13;
or , where were you&#13;
when the pipes went out?&#13;
The lock is off, the door is open! After being inoperative for almost a&#13;
year, the sauna is once again functioning and available for use.&#13;
nf «hrr°&#13;
U&#13;
^&#13;
P,a*",&#13;
tS (S0P) was an effort that hadn,t really gotten out&#13;
the nrnhi T ! °&#13;
f e&#13;
'&#13;
ght or nine students started cleaning up NLK^s&#13;
Fcy&#13;
-»tr5.&#13;
here a re D"&#13;
b Donatt a nd &#13;
2 THE PARKSFDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
•Editorial/OpinionAid&#13;
proposal&#13;
not good&#13;
enough&#13;
"The College Money Crunch" is the title of a recent&#13;
television documentary dealing with the rising costs of&#13;
higher education. The central point was that the wealthy&#13;
people can afford to go to college, the poor get financial&#13;
aid, and the middle-class gets squeezed out.&#13;
The plight of middle-income families whose tax&#13;
dollars support financial aid but whose children are not&#13;
eligible for it, has come to the attention of the Wisconsin&#13;
Higher Educational Aids Board (HEAB) and it has&#13;
produced a controversial proposal to try and rectify the&#13;
situation. While we applaud the effort, we cannot support&#13;
the plan as it now stands, for it would create more&#13;
problems than it would solve.&#13;
The proposal would replace the present stat^ grants&#13;
and scholarships with a program of loans. A student&#13;
could borrow the dollars to meet all his-her educational&#13;
costs and would be obliged to pay back the debt within 25&#13;
years of leaving school, predicated on income.&#13;
Many well-founded objections have arisen regarding&#13;
the proposal, some of them being that the loan program&#13;
would discourage students in financially poor circumstances&#13;
from attending college and incurring heavy&#13;
debts, that tuition rates would skyrocket and everyone&#13;
would be forced to borrow money, and that graduates&#13;
might be reluctant to take a higher paying job because&#13;
they would then be required to repay higher amounts.&#13;
Current loan and grant programs are based considerably&#13;
on the parents' financial status and questions&#13;
are being raised as to whether or not the parents of&#13;
students over 18 are responsible for debts and tuition&#13;
payments of their children. The HEAB proposal does&#13;
anticipate judicial sanction of students' emancipation&#13;
and attempts to alleviate other inequities and&#13;
inadequacies in the present financial aid system. For&#13;
example, the student from a middle-income background&#13;
is ignored by financial aid officers and by university&#13;
offices hiring students for part-time work. It is much&#13;
cheaper to give a job to a student on work study, for the&#13;
federal government pays 80 percent of the wages, but it&#13;
leaves out in the cold those students who aren't eligible&#13;
for aid but need a job to keep going.&#13;
While the proposal aims at a fairer system of aid for&#13;
all, we feel it just is not comprehensive enough to meet&#13;
the needs of middle and lower income students. Further,&#13;
the cost of administering it would be staggering. The&#13;
best system would be one which combines present&#13;
programs (relaxing requirements and treating each&#13;
case as individually as possible) with such guaranteed&#13;
loans as HEAB has proposed. "Need" must be&#13;
realistically redefined, and as a recent Racine Journal&#13;
Times editorial stated, "the best form of student&#13;
assistance is low tuition."&#13;
Hence, while we do not support the proposed loan plan&#13;
as the sole state financial aid program, we feel HEAB is&#13;
on the right track. We hope the plan is not completely&#13;
rejected for we would like to see its good points incorporated&#13;
into a new proposal which will give everyone&#13;
an equal chance at higher education and encourage&#13;
people to take advantage of such opportunities.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M.&#13;
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&#13;
Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels,&#13;
Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken&#13;
Pestka&#13;
We gletters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I applaud the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board selection of a&#13;
nationally known expert, Mr.&#13;
Frederic Storaska, to speak&#13;
here on Feb. 14 about "Rapes and&#13;
Other Assaults on Women."&#13;
However, I feel that advertising&#13;
this program as a "Valentine's&#13;
Day Special" is in poor taste.&#13;
After discussing this with the&#13;
individual responsible for&#13;
selecting the date, I realized the&#13;
choice of Feb. 14 was i ntentional&#13;
and that it was meant to be&#13;
ironic.&#13;
Unfortunately, this advertising&#13;
has caused concern and some&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Before everyone has finished&#13;
congratulating each other on the&#13;
fine job in building Parkside, I&#13;
would like to present a point of&#13;
view which receives much lip&#13;
service but not much elseecology.&#13;
I remember when&#13;
Greenquist was built and how it&#13;
was designed so that no parking&#13;
lot with its polluting cars would&#13;
be nearby. I remember how a&#13;
fancy expensive bus service was&#13;
instituted to preserve the natural&#13;
beauty of the Parkside-Petrified&#13;
Springs area. I was proud to be a&#13;
student here. Now I am ashamed.&#13;
Why is Everyone so happy about&#13;
the new parking lots and road to&#13;
be built around Parkside? No one&#13;
said anything when the facultystaff&#13;
parking lot was set up&#13;
during the summer (when no&#13;
student government or&#13;
organizations were present to&#13;
protest). I didn't hear a sound&#13;
from any one of our ecological&#13;
life science professors-they&#13;
bring up their cars to the lot with&#13;
the rest of the professors and&#13;
administrators who are too good&#13;
to ride the buses and use the&#13;
sidewalks with the rest of us&#13;
commoners.&#13;
How many acres of fertile land&#13;
will Parkside cover with asphalt&#13;
and concrete? How many more&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Parkside has been infiltrated&#13;
by a tribe of scofflaws...people&#13;
who know what the rules are and,&#13;
unfortunately, think that they can&#13;
break them at will and get away&#13;
with it. My guess (and hope) is&#13;
that this cadre of litter-bugs is the&#13;
tail-end of a generation which&#13;
should have been spanked instead&#13;
of "Spocked" by permissive&#13;
mothers who always (?)&#13;
picked up after their kids.&#13;
The rules here are that there is&#13;
to be no smoking in classrooms&#13;
and auditoriums. That's a State&#13;
Law. Another rule is that no food&#13;
or drinks are to be taken into&#13;
classrooms. Yet these rules are&#13;
being broken all of the time. The&#13;
proprietors of the library are the&#13;
only people around here with guts&#13;
enough to see that these rules are&#13;
observed.&#13;
Scofflaws come in all colors,&#13;
sexes, shapes and size. A weird&#13;
example of scofflawism in action&#13;
would be the young woman who&#13;
would be beautiful were it not for&#13;
the fact that she sits in class&#13;
chewing gum, sucking a cigarette&#13;
and draining a can of coke, while&#13;
taking notes...while a seemingly&#13;
oblivious professor lectures a few&#13;
feet away. Her coordination is&#13;
fantastic in an unbecoming sort&#13;
of way. And wheji class is over,&#13;
she walks out, leaving all of her&#13;
sick humor. Some people&#13;
evidently believe that an individual&#13;
who freely chooses&#13;
sexual intimacy with another&#13;
subconsciously welcomes sexual&#13;
assault. In certain instances, law&#13;
enforcement agencies and&#13;
defense attorneys have used this&#13;
premise to unjustly attack a rape&#13;
victim's credibility. For these&#13;
reasons, I consider the choice of&#13;
date and the manner of publicity&#13;
unfortunate. It highlights the&#13;
dilemma many victims face and&#13;
pinpoints the reason so many&#13;
refuse to bring charges.&#13;
Rape is not purely a feminine&#13;
problem. Recently a male inmate&#13;
cars will we accommodate to&#13;
choke our trees and plants and&#13;
run over our animals and waste&#13;
our fuel resources? What happened&#13;
to encouraging car pools&#13;
and bicycles and walking?&#13;
Speaking of dirty deals last&#13;
summer, why do we have an&#13;
instant lawn which makes&#13;
everyone so proud of the way&#13;
Parkside looks? How many&#13;
families of rabbits, squirrels and&#13;
other field creatures now live in&#13;
our freshly mowed lawn-not&#13;
many I'll bet. Why weren't the&#13;
natural plants and animals&#13;
allowed to live at our doorstep?&#13;
Now we look like a city school and&#13;
have to pay to have the lawn cut&#13;
and watered. I suppose that we&#13;
will need herbicides, pesticides&#13;
and fertilizer to keep the lawn&#13;
looking "nice." Also, do we have&#13;
to use rock salt on the sidewalks?&#13;
What's the matter with sand and&#13;
cheap student labour (to shovel)&#13;
instead of salt and tractors that&#13;
chew up the lawn?&#13;
I am a chemist, a scientist and&#13;
an ecologist. Why in the interest&#13;
of science and the name of&#13;
knowledge must we destroy in&#13;
order to learn? What causes a&#13;
teacher to ask his mushroom&#13;
class to collect 25 species of&#13;
muchrooms each, when he knows&#13;
Pets is right next to us and you&#13;
garbage behind her. Incidentally,&#13;
I've been told that it is the&#13;
professor's responsibility to&#13;
control what goes on in the&#13;
classroom.&#13;
Some of our classrooms and&#13;
lecture halls look like bars where&#13;
the help went on strike...tin cans&#13;
and ash trays on desks, tin cans&#13;
along the walls and even on top of&#13;
hat racks. (I wonder who it is who&#13;
encourages smoking by putting&#13;
those ash trays in "No Smoking"&#13;
areas...and who removes the "No&#13;
Smoking" signs when they're put&#13;
up?)&#13;
Notice sometime, the number&#13;
of cigarette butts littering the&#13;
floor outside the library entrances.&#13;
And that double-decked&#13;
seating arrangement in Main&#13;
Place! ...It is usually littered with&#13;
lunch left-overs and tin cans&#13;
Sometimes it looks like a&#13;
pyramid of people trying to hatch&#13;
the cans. You'd think that their&#13;
bottoms would hurt.&#13;
When on campus we are&#13;
seldom more than fifty feet away&#13;
from a waste basket of some sort&#13;
Why not use 'em? Then, when a&#13;
waste container gets filled to&#13;
over-flowing so that it makes a&#13;
messy-looking area, the&#13;
janitorial crew will then be at&#13;
fault for not emptying it more&#13;
often. Our litterbugs should attend&#13;
Moscow U in the USSR Do&#13;
charged in court that he had been&#13;
sexually assaulted by another&#13;
prisoner. The court held that this&#13;
type of rape was impossible&#13;
Evidently the judge has seen&#13;
penal institutions only from a&#13;
distance.&#13;
I encourage all people concerned&#13;
about the serious problem&#13;
of rape to attend Mr. Storaska's&#13;
lecture and see his demonstration&#13;
of simple self-defense techniques&#13;
The evening may be one of the&#13;
most informative you will ever&#13;
spend.&#13;
Kathleen Sweeney&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
couldn't find a mushroom in the&#13;
park all fall? Other life science&#13;
professors do the same. Why? To&#13;
add to their personal collections?&#13;
I know knowledge doesn't come&#13;
free but why are so many living&#13;
things killed in order to study&#13;
them? Why does Parkside claim&#13;
to be ecological when it is not?&#13;
Why does an institution-when it&#13;
has a chance to lead its community&#13;
and preserve the natural&#13;
beauty of the area-act like a&#13;
fancy factory and be concerned&#13;
with looks instead of life?&#13;
Ecology at Parkside-bullshit.&#13;
I don't have all the answers,&#13;
but sometime, somewhere,&#13;
someone has to raise a voice of&#13;
protest against unnecessary&#13;
development. The answer to full&#13;
parking lots is not to build new&#13;
ones b ut to provide alternatives&#13;
to one-person, one-car parking.&#13;
Parkside has done seme&#13;
ecological things and I appreciate&#13;
those. I just care enough&#13;
to say something before it happens&#13;
not afterwards like&#13;
everyone else. Don't build the&#13;
new road and parking lots-we&#13;
don't need them. What we need is&#13;
concern for the world we live and&#13;
learn in.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
any littering there and within&#13;
minutes you'd be hauled before a&#13;
panel of your peers and assigned&#13;
to twenty hours of work...usually&#13;
policing the grounds of the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Here's a suggestion to the&#13;
addicts who can't do without a&#13;
smoke or drink for an hour or so.&#13;
If the existing rules impose a&#13;
hardship on you, get organized&#13;
and work through the Grievance&#13;
Committee of PSGA and see i f&#13;
you can have the rules&#13;
changed...like having "Smoking"&#13;
and "No Smoking" areas in&#13;
classrooms like they now do on&#13;
airplanes. You'd better talk to the&#13;
Regents, too.&#13;
We are all privileged to use a&#13;
25-million dollar facility, thanks&#13;
to the foresight and generosity of&#13;
the people of Wisconsin. The way&#13;
things stand now a visitor could&#13;
walk around our ipdoor campus&#13;
and conclude that we're a bunch&#13;
of ungrateful slobs.&#13;
I'm sorry if it appears that I'm&#13;
scolding because I don't like to be&#13;
scolded. But it's high time that&#13;
someone talked about the smoke&#13;
pollution, cans and garbage&#13;
around here. If you want to do&#13;
something about your environment,&#13;
here is a good place to&#13;
begin.&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
Racine Senior &#13;
More letters&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reply to David Myer's letter&#13;
of Jan. 30, in which he derided the&#13;
university and faculty for&#13;
teaching so-called "unproven&#13;
theories, Freudian dogma, explanatory&#13;
fiction, subjective&#13;
observation, and information&#13;
useful to professors in their&#13;
research and to students meeting&#13;
requirements," I would ask him&#13;
how else he would propose to&#13;
teach courses in psychology and&#13;
sociology.&#13;
The study of these two&#13;
disciplines must in fact be taught&#13;
on a theoretical basis because&#13;
that is the only basis for explanations&#13;
of phenomenon which&#13;
occur within their scopes. There&#13;
is no such thing as an objective&#13;
fact or a law within these fields&#13;
because almost all proposed laws&#13;
are able to be disproved in a&#13;
given situation. These fields do&#13;
not seek absolutes but rather try&#13;
to explore all possibilities in the&#13;
hope that the future will be able&#13;
to apply the hypotheses with a&#13;
reasonable degree of predictability.&#13;
&#13;
These disciplines, in short, are&#13;
not taught to students so as to be&#13;
applied strictly, as the laws of&#13;
science, but to awaken the minds&#13;
of students to the large range of&#13;
possible explanations, so that a&#13;
student will be free to choose the&#13;
explanation which best suits a&#13;
given situation, or if there is no&#13;
explanation, he will be able to&#13;
arrive at his own independent&#13;
situation to a problem.&#13;
For this reason, I think the&#13;
teaching of theories is important&#13;
because we must attempt to&#13;
teach our students to think and to&#13;
reason or else we shall become&#13;
subservient to any authoritarian&#13;
society which has the might to&#13;
enforce its demands.&#13;
Peter L. Strutynski&#13;
South Milwaukee Junior&#13;
flotfboojt&#13;
Loans&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
raised to cover 100 percent of total educational&#13;
costs, Ocker explained. Thus, while more money&#13;
will be available to all students, those who are&#13;
presently able to bear the cost of their own&#13;
education would, under WGHEP, be forced to&#13;
borrow money.&#13;
Ocker believes that WGHEP would cost the state&#13;
two to three times as much money as the present&#13;
program and that paperwork involved in following&#13;
up loan repayments for 25 years would be excessive.&#13;
More Accessible to Middle Income Students&#13;
The program was designed to make financial aid&#13;
more accessible to middle income students who,&#13;
under existing programs^are ineligible for financial&#13;
assistance because of their parents' income.&#13;
WGHEP is also designed to deal with the 18-yearold&#13;
Age of Majority Law. One portion of that law&#13;
stipulates that parents may not be held financially&#13;
responsible for the debts of their children who are&#13;
over 18 years of age. That portion of the law is now&#13;
being tested in court and, should the law be upheld,&#13;
existing loan programs in Wisconsin could become&#13;
illegal, according to Ocker. WGHEP would be a&#13;
solution to that problem, since need would not be&#13;
determined by parental income.&#13;
Ocker explained that under WGHEP, some grants&#13;
and work-study money would still be available.&#13;
Wisconsin would still receive federal money for&#13;
grants and work-study and the Tuition Grant&#13;
Program, which sets aside money for students&#13;
attending private colleges in Wisconsin, would be&#13;
retained under WGHEP.&#13;
Ocker outlined the type of financial aid program&#13;
that he would support. He would like to retain most&#13;
of the features of the present system, but also include&#13;
a type of loan not based on need, specifically&#13;
to aid the middle income student. Ocker would also&#13;
like to see a diversity of grant programs based on&#13;
need, relaxing that need requirement should tuition&#13;
rise.&#13;
Senator Dorman Opposes Plan&#13;
State Senator Henry Dorman (D-Racine) sits on a&#13;
subcommittee of the Joint Committee of Finance of&#13;
the state legislature. That group studies any&#13;
proposals for new student financial aid systems.&#13;
The Higher Educational Aids Board (HEAB)&#13;
passed WGHEP on principle, which means that&#13;
while HEAB does not necessarily support the plan,&#13;
it will be allowed to go to the legislature for further&#13;
study.&#13;
Dorman has taken a stand against WGHEP; his&#13;
complaints about the plan closely parallel those of&#13;
Ocker.&#13;
Like Ocker, Dorman is in favor of improving the&#13;
present system rather than replacing it entirely&#13;
with a new plan. He would like to see a "balanced&#13;
aid program of scholarships, grants, work-study,&#13;
and loans."&#13;
Increased Tuition?&#13;
Dorman pointed out that aid programs like&#13;
WGHEP have been instituted at other universities&#13;
and that under these programs tuition has gone up&#13;
very quickly.&#13;
Dorman says that WGHEP will not be passed by&#13;
the legislature "because not only do I not like it, but&#13;
the UW Administration does not like it, VocationalTechnical&#13;
people do not like it, and HEAB does not&#13;
like it."&#13;
James Jung, executive secretary of HEAB and&#13;
proponent of WGHEP, explained that this plan is&#13;
not a final one and should be developed with full&#13;
public discussion, including student participation.&#13;
"You'll notice," said Jung, "that the only support&#13;
for the plan is from students." He says that the&#13;
United Council of Student Governments in&#13;
Wisconsin has come out in favor of WGHEP.&#13;
Limited Funds Available&#13;
Jung outlined some of the basic concepts of the&#13;
plan, saying that WGHEP was designed to deal with&#13;
the Age of Majority Law, to recognize that 18-yearolds&#13;
are adults and responsible for their debts.&#13;
He explained that with the limited resources&#13;
available in the state, the plan was designed to get&#13;
the most out of what Wisconsin has in the way of&#13;
funds for financial aid. "It will not be cheap for the&#13;
state," Jung said, "but it (WGHEP) targets the&#13;
money to where it's needed most."&#13;
Jung also expressed concern for the middle class&#13;
students. "They are finding it increasingly difficult&#13;
to finance their education." Jung believes that the&#13;
state has an obligation to underwrite every student&#13;
and that post-secondary education should be&#13;
available to everyone.&#13;
He pointed out that at present, 63 percent of all&#13;
state financial aid is loans (Dorman puts the figure&#13;
at 50 percent), and that repayment on these loans is&#13;
not contingent on income after graduation.&#13;
WGHEP, he said, is not a loan in the true sense of&#13;
the word: it becomes an obligation only if the&#13;
graduate's income can support it.&#13;
Ocker made this final statement on WGHEP: "All&#13;
indications I have say that the disadvantages&#13;
outweigh the advantages of this proposal. The&#13;
likelihood of it becoming a reality is very slim at&#13;
this time."&#13;
by Jane Schllesman&#13;
^&#13;
rst RANGER of this semester, reference was made to the&#13;
staff s plans for expanded coverage of campus news and events and&#13;
our hopes for 16 page papers every other week. Shortly after this&#13;
announcement we were told by our printer, Zion Benton Publishing&#13;
Company, that there is still a grave paper shortage and we will have to&#13;
hold to eight p&amp;ges every week. At the present time the printer has&#13;
enough newsprint to get us through March.&#13;
What this means is that the space problems we experienced last&#13;
semester will become even more acute, since we can no longer put out&#13;
an occassional 12 page issue to alleviate some of the strain. It means&#13;
we may from time to time be printing on poor quality paper. It means&#13;
that, effective last week, we print only 4,000 c opies instead of 5 000&#13;
since that not only saves paper but helps the budget (with the increase&#13;
in the price of newsprint it will cost as much to print 1,000 fewer&#13;
copies).&#13;
The premium on space in each issue will make it difficult to justify&#13;
many and large pictures, as we had hoped to be able to have. It will&#13;
necessitate putting many important pieces of information in Brief&#13;
News when we would otherwise have done a larger article. Much post&#13;
event coverage of lectures and concerts will have to be foregone as in&#13;
last semester.&#13;
We want to continue to provide in-depth reporting of c ertain issues,&#13;
and special features perhaps not directly related to life at Parkside in&#13;
particular. It is my feeling that such articles are not only informative&#13;
but also thought-provoking.&#13;
Some would argue that it is our charge as a campus newspaper to&#13;
put Parkside events first and I agree up to a point. We owe people here&#13;
first class reporting of PSGA decisions, faculty and administrative&#13;
moves, and coverage of what students are up to. But we also must be&#13;
concerned with broader matters that affect us as well as with life&#13;
beyond the acreage of UW-P. I put coverage of the new financial aid&#13;
proposal, for example, ahead of a P.A.B. lecture, or the academic&#13;
advising issue before homecoming. Likewise, a feature on alcoholism&#13;
or mass transit takes precedence over what's new in the Whiteskellar&#13;
or in some cases what a student organization may be doing. Each issue&#13;
will have to be judged on what I feel will be its appeal to the students&#13;
and in many cases an article will be held for several weeks until there&#13;
is space available for it.&#13;
I want people to continue to contact us when they feel they have a&#13;
story or information of i nterest to the campus community. But I also&#13;
hope our sources and readers will understand if we have to put many&#13;
items in Brief News and-or It's What's Happening, or if we cannot&#13;
cover an event at all.&#13;
Finally, I want to thank several people on campus who, when they&#13;
heard about our paper problem, immediately began calling around the&#13;
state in efforts to help us out-and they're still trying! They are&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn, Dale Irish in Purchasing, and&#13;
Don Kopriva in Public Information. Their concern and assistance is&#13;
greatly appreciated by the whole staff, and I trust also by our readers.&#13;
Storaska to lecture on rape and defense&#13;
Frederic Storaska has been&#13;
lecturing for six years about the&#13;
prevention of assault on women,&#13;
men and children. He has spoken&#13;
to about two million students at&#13;
over 300 colleges and universities&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
Documented reports say that&#13;
Storaska's lectures have&#13;
"prevented serious assault andor&#13;
saved lives" in some 273 cases.&#13;
Storaska's concern for the&#13;
prevention of a ssault stems from&#13;
an incident he witnessed in 1964.&#13;
A young girl was brutally attacked&#13;
by several boys, and&#13;
though Storaska was able to fight&#13;
off her assailants, the girl was&#13;
seriously injured.&#13;
This incident led Storaska to&#13;
seek information on assaults at a&#13;
number of universities. When he&#13;
found that little or none existed,&#13;
Storaska set out on an intensive&#13;
research project that eventually&#13;
led to requests for lecture appearances.&#13;
&#13;
Storaska now speaks on four&#13;
major topics: Child Abuse,&#13;
Assaults on Men, and Sex and&#13;
Surviving the Dating Game are&#13;
three of those topics. The fourth&#13;
topic, and the one he will speak on&#13;
at Parkside, is To Be or Not To Be&#13;
Raped-Prevention of Assaults on&#13;
Women. The topic deals&#13;
specifically with the myths that&#13;
surround rape, the popular&#13;
methods of defense that are&#13;
supposed to work, the make-up of&#13;
the assailant (who he is, what he&#13;
wants, what he needs), and the&#13;
victim (realistic attitudes and&#13;
techniques within which a woman&#13;
can safely react in any given&#13;
assault).&#13;
Storaska's lecture is scheduled&#13;
for Thursday, Feb. 14, at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theater. Admission&#13;
price for students is $1,&#13;
for the general public it is $1.50.&#13;
The lecture is being sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
2 TEXAS-SIZE SAVINGS&#13;
TWO BONANZA&#13;
Cheese-Burgers&#13;
1/4 Lb. B eef &amp; French Fries&#13;
$1 80&#13;
• with coupon&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St. &#13;
4 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
Terminations again dominate&#13;
grievance committee meeting&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
The Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) met last&#13;
Wednesday, January 30, in Upper&#13;
Main Place to hear student&#13;
complaints and to discuss issues&#13;
that had been brought up at the&#13;
first meeting on Jan. 23.&#13;
The major issue under&#13;
discussion was the protest of&#13;
faculty terminations. Anna&#13;
Hendricks, a student,&#13;
represented Alan Wallace, an&#13;
instructor of English who has&#13;
been terminated, and read a&#13;
statement that had been&#13;
prepared by Wallace. In that&#13;
statement, Wallace explained&#13;
that there are three criteria for&#13;
review of a faculty member:&#13;
ratings on SCAFE forms&#13;
(Student Course and Faculty&#13;
Evaluation), campus and&#13;
community service, and&#13;
academic research and&#13;
publication (which includes the&#13;
completion of the Ph.D dissertation).&#13;
Faculty are expected to&#13;
excell in two out of the three&#13;
areas.&#13;
Wallace explained in his&#13;
statement that he has rated&#13;
highly on SCAFE forms,&#13;
especially in upper division&#13;
courses, and that he is very active&#13;
in community service. He is&#13;
a member of the Southside&#13;
Revitalization Corporation Board&#13;
in Racine, and is a member of the&#13;
Citizen's Advisory Panel to the&#13;
State Revolutionary War&#13;
Bicentennial Commission. He has&#13;
not completed his Ph.D dissertation.&#13;
Since Wallace's termination&#13;
becomes effective at&#13;
the end of this semester, he no&#13;
longer has any recourse for&#13;
appeal, although the opportunity&#13;
was there when he was notified&#13;
last year of his termination.&#13;
Most of the students at the&#13;
meeting seemed to be concerned&#13;
about what course of action they&#13;
can take now on behalf of&#13;
professors who are presently up&#13;
for review or have already been&#13;
terminated. Thomas Callanan,&#13;
assistant professor of Sociology,&#13;
was present at the meeting "to&#13;
answer questions," he said. His&#13;
suggestions included finding out&#13;
who has been terminated and&#13;
why, looking up Tenure and&#13;
Termination guidelines in the&#13;
University Rules and&#13;
Regulations, and obtaining a&#13;
copy of the "COPP" committee&#13;
report.&#13;
PSGA senators Tom Petersen&#13;
and Mike Hahner have attempted&#13;
to obtain a listing of the status of&#13;
all faculty members, but were&#13;
refused that information. They&#13;
are presently trying to obtain a&#13;
document, the Humanities&#13;
Review Criteria for Faculty,&#13;
which was released just prior to&#13;
Thanksgiving, 1973.&#13;
Three other grievances were&#13;
aired at the meeting. One student&#13;
questioned the increase in the&#13;
price of a can of soda from 20&#13;
cents to 25 cents. He said he had&#13;
observed no increased prices in&#13;
Canteen-operated machines off&#13;
campus.&#13;
Another student complained of&#13;
the shortage of tables in the&#13;
cafeteria during rush hours and&#13;
requested that something be done&#13;
to obtain more places to sit.&#13;
A third student, Keith&#13;
Chambers, protested the construction&#13;
of new parking lots and&#13;
roads in the Comm Arts and&#13;
Classroom Building area.&#13;
PSGA meets, discusses&#13;
elections, grievances&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association met on&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29, a nd discussed&#13;
elections and heard a report from&#13;
the Grievance and Clearinghouse&#13;
Committee.&#13;
New elections were requested&#13;
for sometime late this month or&#13;
early March, to be run according&#13;
to PSGA election laws. (The&#13;
Elections Committee met the&#13;
following Thursday and agreed to&#13;
come before the Senate and&#13;
explain some of the problems&#13;
with this and recommend that&#13;
elections be held in April, according&#13;
to the referendum passed&#13;
last semester.)&#13;
The Senate, which was not at&#13;
quorum strength, then heard a&#13;
report from Senator Mike Hahner&#13;
of the Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee.&#13;
Hahner said the committee was&#13;
investigating problems concerning&#13;
slow school clocks, the&#13;
lack of pencil sharpeners, canteen&#13;
services, termination of&#13;
faculty and also complaints that&#13;
Parkside students under 18 are&#13;
denied entrance to Student Activity&#13;
Board functions.&#13;
Ken Konkol, former PSGA&#13;
presidential candidate, took the&#13;
opportunity to criticize the&#13;
Elections Committee for their&#13;
"bias" and failure to hold elections&#13;
within the prescribed 20-day&#13;
period. Konkol also stated he&#13;
would work to defeat an earlier&#13;
proposed referendum to postpone&#13;
the regular April elections until&#13;
the Fall.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovic announced&#13;
he will be a candidate for PSGA&#13;
president in the upcoming&#13;
election. Thus far only&#13;
Milutinovic and Dan Nielsen&#13;
have announced candidacy for&#13;
this office.&#13;
The p lace t o g o&#13;
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research assistance only.&#13;
When the clock struck&#13;
nine it wasn't on time&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
The clocks at Parkside perform&#13;
a very necessary and vital function&#13;
for the students, but unfortunately&#13;
they are not always&#13;
accurate. To find out why this is,&#13;
RANGER asked Norman Madsen&#13;
of Physical Plant how the clocks&#13;
operate and how they are&#13;
maintained.&#13;
The clocks in the Library&#13;
Learning Center, Classroom&#13;
Building and Greenquist receive&#13;
hourly signals from the master&#13;
clock in the hallway in&#13;
Greenquist. The Communication&#13;
Arts Building has not actually&#13;
been completed. When it is done&#13;
and paid for, these clocks will be&#13;
connected to the rest of the&#13;
system.&#13;
The clocks themselves are&#13;
made by Simplex, and can be&#13;
found in many public schools and&#13;
state universities. Madsen said&#13;
the reason the clocks are not&#13;
fixed immediately when they fail&#13;
is that he has no means of&#13;
monitoring them. In our first&#13;
interview, on Thursday, Jan. 28&#13;
this reporter asked Madsen if he&#13;
was aware that the clock in the&#13;
cafeteria was not in order.&#13;
Madsen said he was not and the&#13;
next day the same clock had been&#13;
taken away for repairs.&#13;
For the benefit of our readers,&#13;
RANGER attempted to construct&#13;
a chart listing each main clock in&#13;
the academic complex and&#13;
showing how fast or slow each&#13;
was in relation to the master&#13;
clock. It was found, however, that&#13;
each clock varies so much from&#13;
hour to hour thai the information&#13;
would not have been timely by&#13;
the time it was printed.&#13;
.SS^Gj)&#13;
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TEAC • ALTEC • KOSS o SENNHISER • &#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
The Raven&#13;
by Mike Winslow&#13;
Students will care for&#13;
concourse plants&#13;
E. H. in the U. K.&#13;
(The Eddie Harris London Sessions)&#13;
(Atlantic SD1647)&#13;
Most of today's music defies definitions. If you call it this it's that&#13;
and vice versa. As I must venture to describe this music it's simnlv&#13;
Eddie Harris an accomplished jazz saxophonist jamming with some&#13;
of England's best rock musicians, including Jeff Beck Albert Lee&#13;
Stevie Winwood, Rick Grech, Chris Squire and Alan White the latter&#13;
two, members of YES.&#13;
Having heard some of Eddie Harris' adventures with other iazzmen&#13;
and Beck and Winwood's albums with their respective bands I was&#13;
interested to see how this fusion of rock and jazz would sound' I was&#13;
hoping for big things, few of which got off the ground. It's not the songs&#13;
themselves that are disappointing but that the musicians don't seem to&#13;
be at their best.&#13;
"Baby" opens side one with Eddie Harris playing electric sax and&#13;
trumpet and doing the vocal (singing through his horn). The theme of&#13;
the song is stated by Eddie's "singing" but he fails to elaborate upon it&#13;
very much except when the guitar, sax and piano take short solos The&#13;
band could have done more with this song.&#13;
The next song, "Wait a Little Longer," is a funky jam with the&#13;
saxophone taking the lead and wailing. This builds to a peak but finally&#13;
returns to the opening statement featuring sax and guitar which&#13;
closes the song in a fitting way. This is followed by "He's Island Man"&#13;
which contains a mediocre sax solo which doesn't get off. Neither does&#13;
the song.&#13;
"I've Tried Everything" is the best song on the album. Jeff Beck&#13;
plays the first guitar solo, but gone is his powerhouse guitar style.&#13;
Instead he substitutes clean, mellow licks which compliment the&#13;
music. Following Beck's lead, Stevie Winwood does a fine solo on&#13;
electric piano and is followed by Eddie Harris and Albert Lee completing&#13;
the song in good style, adding their own personal touches to the&#13;
jam.&#13;
A moog synthesizer opens "I Waited for You," the only song not&#13;
written by Harris. The song opens slowly and the moog is well played&#13;
by Tony Kaye. The mood of this song is laid back and relaxed as&#13;
Harris on saxophone joins along with the moog to complete the&#13;
number.&#13;
"Conversations of Everything and Nothing," over 15 minutes long,&#13;
ends the album. The first half of the song is wasted time in which the&#13;
musicians seem to be making a vague stab in the dark in an attempt to&#13;
make music. Even when the song begins to pick up, there isn't very&#13;
much "oomph" in the playing. Harris gets a few good licks in on sax&#13;
but the listener is sidetracked by a bass and-or drums that tend to get&#13;
in the way by playing too loudly and not very well.&#13;
The album is OK. Not bad but not great. Most of the songs are good&#13;
but the musicians seem to be holding back. There isn't any song where&#13;
everybody plays like they're really getting off. In other words, the&#13;
musicians seem to be suffering from a lack of feeling.&#13;
(Record courtesy J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester&#13;
underway&#13;
"The Throne of Blood,"&#13;
Japanese director Kurosawa's&#13;
1957 adaptation of Macbeth as a&#13;
15th Century Samurai warrior,&#13;
will be shown today (Feb. 6), the&#13;
second in a series of&#13;
Shakespearean films being&#13;
screened during Parkside's&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester."&#13;
All of the films are at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist Hall, Room 101,&#13;
and are free and open to the&#13;
public. Others in the series are&#13;
Welles' "Macbeth," Feb. 13;&#13;
Burge's "Othello," Feb. 20;&#13;
Youtkevich's "Othello,";&#13;
Castellani's "Romeo and Juliet,"&#13;
March 20; Reinhart's "Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream," April&#13;
3; Olivier's "Hamlet," April 24;&#13;
and Kosinstev's "Hamlet," May&#13;
8.&#13;
Dates for two other&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester" events&#13;
have been changed. The New&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at National Parks,&#13;
Private Camps, Dude Ranches and&#13;
Resorts throughout the nation.&#13;
Over 50,000 students aided each&#13;
year. For FREE information on&#13;
student assistance program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED envelope&#13;
to Opportunity Research,&#13;
Dept. SJO, 55 Flathead Drive,&#13;
Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
.. .YOU MUST APPLY EARLY....&#13;
#0$ STiiDbN' A SS'ST ANt.F PROGRAM MAS B16N AfVlEWtOBv T Mf t F OF RA i iR AQf C OMMISSION&#13;
Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco, originally scheduled&#13;
to present "Romeo and Juliet" at&#13;
Parkside on March 1, now will&#13;
offer "Midsummer Night's&#13;
Dream" on April 9 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. A daylong&#13;
symposium on&#13;
"Shakespeare, the Media and the&#13;
Secondary School," first slated&#13;
for March 30, has been changed&#13;
to April 6.&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
In October of 1972, prior to the&#13;
open house held for the Library&#13;
Learning Center, the University&#13;
obtained plants for the plant bay&#13;
along the concourse of LLC next&#13;
to the library. Getting the plants&#13;
was not easy and one reason was&#13;
that both Central Administration&#13;
and the architect preferred that&#13;
Parkside have green plastic&#13;
plants instead of real ones. As the&#13;
University is desirous of&#13;
aesthetic beauty, however, the&#13;
plants were finally purchased&#13;
through a broker and came from&#13;
California, Florida, and Arizona.&#13;
At the present time many of the&#13;
plants have died, some have&#13;
drowned, some have been stolen,&#13;
and some of those which are left&#13;
are infested with tropical insects.&#13;
One of those which was stolen&#13;
was a cactus nursed and owned&#13;
for 32 years by Robert Esser,&#13;
associate professor of life&#13;
science.&#13;
Eugene Gas iokiewicz,&#13;
professor of life science, explained&#13;
that when purchased, the&#13;
plants appeared to be nsi ect free.&#13;
However, put in the environment&#13;
of the LLC with air conditioning&#13;
and heating, the insects have&#13;
emerged. Gasiorkiewicz also said&#13;
that since some of the plants were&#13;
taken from a tropical rain forest&#13;
with limited light and a high&#13;
temperature and humidity they&#13;
cannot be expected to grow the&#13;
same way. The plants, he said,&#13;
were started on a trial and error&#13;
basis and were chosen for diverse&#13;
characteristics, and one could not&#13;
predict the success or failure of&#13;
any plant.&#13;
The plant bay, designed by LLC&#13;
architects, should not be located&#13;
where it is, said Gasiorkiewicz. A&#13;
better locale would have been on&#13;
the other side of the concourse&#13;
where the lighting is more ample.&#13;
When the plants arrived the&#13;
responsibility for their care was&#13;
placed on one individual from the&#13;
Physical Plant who worked with&#13;
the plants during the day. Since&#13;
then the Physical Plant, as well&#13;
as the rest of the University, has&#13;
suffered from budget cuts and&#13;
since June the night crew janitors&#13;
have watered the plants once per&#13;
week.&#13;
Recently Gasiorkiewicz has&#13;
received the revenue to hire two&#13;
students to care for the plants&#13;
and the city of Racine has&#13;
donated two greenhouses to&#13;
Parkside. Gasiorkiewicz expressed&#13;
hope that one greenhouse&#13;
Budweiser&#13;
K I N G o r B E E R S S&#13;
So - you still h aven't t hought o t a gift f or y our&#13;
"Kissing B uddy" o n Valentines D ay.&#13;
Stop and talk t o the Bud girl a t 1 831 55th Street&#13;
for a Budweiser l abel g ift i tem.&#13;
She has s uch things a s. . .&#13;
K H ^&#13;
E JQ&#13;
&gt; tt&#13;
S S L E&#13;
T&#13;
S&#13;
H&#13;
I&#13;
R&#13;
T&#13;
F&#13;
R&#13;
I&#13;
S&#13;
B&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
steins&#13;
PR&#13;
O&#13;
S&#13;
T&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
S&#13;
'&gt;&#13;
r&#13;
/&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Numerous plants such as these in the LLC concourse by the library&#13;
windows have died due to lack of care. Approximately $2000 was spent&#13;
to purchase the plants but when Physical Plant suffered budget cuts&#13;
last spring, it could no longer afford to look after them.&#13;
would be up this summer and&#13;
would be used as a recovery&#13;
clinic for dying plants.&#13;
The students will water, dust,&#13;
and clean up the plants as well as&#13;
label them. Gasiorkiewicz said&#13;
that many students had sought&#13;
him out concerned about the&#13;
welfare of the plants and that any&#13;
SISHT'n&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
"Music for Lovers" •• th at's the name&#13;
ot a popular album — b ut also a great&#13;
gift idea for Valentine's Day. So if your&#13;
favorite guy or chick digs music come&#13;
around to Sight 'n Sound for the latest&#13;
albums and tapes at special discount&#13;
prices.&#13;
If you're a math freak; we've got&#13;
electronic calculators for as low as&#13;
$29.95. Great for doing homework and if&#13;
you haven't got enough bread for one,&#13;
tell the old man you'll let him use it to&#13;
work on his taxes if he'll help you out.&#13;
Now that we got the commercials out&#13;
of the way, let's talk seriously about&#13;
selecting audio gear.&#13;
Let's clear up one misconception,&#13;
right away - all stereo is not hi-fi and all&#13;
hi-fi is not stereo.&#13;
Stereophonic sound is simply sound&#13;
that derives from two separate sound&#13;
sources and is reproduced through two&#13;
or more speakers. This can be done by a&#13;
$19.95 phonograph or a stereo system&#13;
costing hundreds or even thousands of&#13;
dollars. The difference is fidelity - the&#13;
ability of the equipment to reproduce the&#13;
sounds as closely as possible to the way&#13;
they were originally recorded.&#13;
Although we have not reached perfection,&#13;
and probably never will, (sorry,&#13;
Memorex) good equipment is available&#13;
at modest cost.&#13;
Companies like Marantz, Superscope,&#13;
Pioneer Sherwood in receivers; Jensen,&#13;
Cerwin Vega, Rectifinear and AR in&#13;
speakers; Dual, BSR and Garrard in&#13;
turntables haveexcellent units available&#13;
in all price ranges. Also, by buying&#13;
components, you can build your system&#13;
gradually.&#13;
if you are seriously considering the&#13;
purchase of hi-fi gear in the near future,&#13;
the first step is to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the products available.&#13;
Talk with knowledgeable people, read&#13;
the manufacturers' literature and listen&#13;
to the equipment.&#13;
The Society of Audio Consultants has&#13;
published an Audio Primer which is&#13;
most helpful. It regularly sells for $1.25,&#13;
but we'll give a copy free to the first 50&#13;
who come in and mention this ad.&#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;
student who likes to work with&#13;
plants is welcome to help.&#13;
S OO&#13;
e 5&#13;
2&#13;
a» §&#13;
n ni&#13;
&lt;/&gt; &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 6: Whiteskellar auditions new acts in the&#13;
Whiteskellar at 1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 6: Shakespeare film festival presents Kurosawa's&#13;
"The Throne of Blood" a Japanese adaptation of Macbeth at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6: PAB movie, "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter" at&#13;
7:30p.m. in GR103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. ?: Third World organizational meeting at 11 a.m. in&#13;
LLC D174.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 7: Ronald Gottesman, professor of English, will&#13;
present a lecture, "King Kong: Myth, Monster, Movie" CL D105 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. No admission charged.&#13;
Friday, Feb. 8: "Mission Mountain Wood Band" at 9 p.m. in the&#13;
SAB. Tickets are now on sale at the Information kiosk for $1.50.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9: Fencing: UW-Parkside vs UW-Madison, Michigan&#13;
State and Purdue at 10 a.m. in the Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9: Basketball: Parkside vs Grand Valley at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Phy Ed Building. Admission is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Midwest open bike roller race at noon in the Phy&#13;
Ed Building. Admission is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Hockey: Parkside vs Harper at 6 p.m. at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena. Admission charged.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Faculty recital featuring David Littrell and Mary&#13;
Ann Littrell at 4 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
February 14: Fredric Storaska lecture on "Rapes and&#13;
Other Assaults" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission is $1.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
• No m inimum&#13;
balance re quired&#13;
• No li mit to t he&#13;
number o f checks&#13;
you w rite&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
Open y our free ch ecking&#13;
account soon a t&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
MemDer 9&lt; Federal Reserve System Mernoer Federal Deposit In surance Corp&#13;
500 W isconsin A ve. Racine&#13;
Classified&#13;
AFRO DANCE CLASS, also Physical Fitness&#13;
Exercise class. 7:00-7:45 p.m. and 7:45-&#13;
8:15 p.m. respectively. Wed. nights, call&#13;
Mrs. Dowman, 633-3503.&#13;
If anyone knows of any Look Nevada&#13;
bindings and some good 180 CM skis for sale&#13;
please contact Greg 639-1342.&#13;
FOR SALE: Small cabinet stereo, 2&#13;
speakers, good mechanical condition, $50.&#13;
Call 694-1873.&#13;
Personals&#13;
WENDY -- See you last nite. The trio.&#13;
K.W. IN P.S. Can you ioin us for dinner&#13;
tonite? Off campus, we promise. Jane 8.&#13;
Deb.&#13;
CLIO lecture Brief news&#13;
Gottesman Harvard accepts UW-P senior&#13;
to speak&#13;
on&#13;
"King Kong n&#13;
A talk titled "King Kong:&#13;
Myth, Monster and Movie" will&#13;
begin the second semester CLIO&#13;
Association lecture series.&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, Parkside&#13;
professor of English and&#13;
humanities and an internationally&#13;
recognized&#13;
authority on film, will present the&#13;
slide-illustrated lecture at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Feb. 7 in the Classroom&#13;
Building Room 105.&#13;
CLIO lectures, on the&#13;
theme "The Humanities in an&#13;
Industrial Society," are free and&#13;
open to the public. The CLIO&#13;
Association is an international&#13;
organization connected with&#13;
"CLIO: An Interdisciplinary&#13;
Journal of Literature, History&#13;
and the Philosophy of History"&#13;
which is published at Parkside.&#13;
Gottesman, who came to&#13;
Parkside in June, 1972, from&#13;
Rutgers University is author andor&#13;
editor of a number of books on&#13;
film and film-makers and is&#13;
secretary of the Society for&#13;
Cinema Studies.&#13;
He is the recipient of a number&#13;
of awards including an International&#13;
Affairs Center Grant&#13;
to work in Moscow's Central&#13;
State Archives for Art and&#13;
Literature in 1966 and a&#13;
Guggenheim Fellowship in 1970-&#13;
71. He received his Ph.D. degree&#13;
from Indiana University.&#13;
Other CLIO lectures for second&#13;
semester, all at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room D-lll,&#13;
are: "The Great House in 19th&#13;
Century English Literature" by&#13;
Henry Kozicki, assistant&#13;
professor of English and an&#13;
editor of "CLIO," on Feb. 20;&#13;
"The Rip-Off: A Defense in the&#13;
Context of a World View" by&#13;
Wayne Johnson, associate&#13;
professor of philosophy, on&#13;
March 13; "The Cultural Values&#13;
and Commitments of American&#13;
Businessmen" by Irvin G. Wyllie,&#13;
chancellor and professor of&#13;
history, on April 3; and prizewinning&#13;
essays by Parkside&#13;
students on May 8.&#13;
Mark Leuck, a Parkside senior from Kenosha, has been accepted for&#13;
admission by the Harvard University Law School and plans to begin&#13;
professional studies there next fall. Harvard accepts about 500 law&#13;
students each year out of more than 5,000 applicants. Leuck scored 756&#13;
out of a possible 800 on the standardized Law School Admissions Test&#13;
to place in the top one percent of students tested. He also was accepted&#13;
by the law schools at UW-Madison and Stanford&#13;
University, the only other schools where he applied.&#13;
Sigma Pi collects for March of Dimes&#13;
Sigma Pi fraternity kicked off their drive for the March of Dimes at&#13;
the Parkside-UW-Milwaukee basketball game, collecting $29. Accompanied&#13;
by their "Little Sisters," members of the fraternity caught&#13;
coins in the Sigma Pi banner while the basketball team impressively&#13;
beat UW-M. The fraternity would like to thank all who contributed and&#13;
intends to hold a basketball marathon to collect more money for the&#13;
March of Dimes.&#13;
Stage crew forming for "Harvey"&#13;
The crew sign-up sheet for the next production in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater will be posted on Tom Reinert's office door, CA 240, on&#13;
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of this week. People signing up can&#13;
indicate a preference for lights, props, make-up, costumes, sound,&#13;
stage crew and so on. Assignments will be posted next week and the&#13;
first crew meeting held.&#13;
Third World to meet&#13;
The Third World organization will hold its first meeting of the&#13;
second semester on Thursday, Feb. 7 at 11 a.m. in D174 of the LLC.&#13;
This will be an organizational meeting and all minority students are&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
Business irat invites new members&#13;
Students interested in establishing contacts with business, sales and&#13;
marketing executives are invited to join the National Business&#13;
fraternity, Pi Sigma Epsilon, every Sunday in the Classroom Building&#13;
D105 at 7 p.m.&#13;
Littrell to give cello recital&#13;
Cellist David Littrell will make his second public appearance as a&#13;
member of the music faculty in a 4 p.m. recital on Feb. 10 (Sunday) in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Littrell and his wife, pianist Mary Ann Littrell, will perform&#13;
Beethoven's 18th Century work, Twelve Variations in G Major on a&#13;
theme from Handel's oratorio, "Judas Maccabaeus," and three 20th&#13;
Century compositions: Prokofiev's Sonata in C Major Op. 119&#13;
Webern's Three Little Pieces Op. 11 and Martinu's Sonata No. 2.&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
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Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
THE STING&#13;
Director George Roy Hill reunites Paul Newman K&#13;
Redford in another cops and robbers nostalgic spoof Butch r A&#13;
and the Sundance Kid are now affable con men oSn^n ™aS5&#13;
't&#13;
S o u t h S i d e i n 1 9 3 6 . H e n r y G o n d o r f ( N e w m a T a&#13;
5&#13;
with his apprentice Johnny Hooker (Redford) a half-million rinii'a^ ?&#13;
UP against an Irish Mafia boss. Gondorf s professional£e sS the&#13;
S murder "" Ho0ker hun&#13;
^ ™lcat&#13;
Hill opens a bag of gimmicks to capture the Chicago of the soc Ufl&#13;
interjects a half dozen illustrations from an early Norman Rockwell&#13;
s c h o o l to i n t r o d u c e t h e f i l m 's s c e n e s . A h e a v y h u e o f g r a n f S t o&#13;
evoke a nostalgic tone. Hill previously used a delicate sepia finish in&#13;
Butch Cassidy, but this result in The Sting is a te^ SacUon as&#13;
unimaginative as the ubiquitous green of Soylent Green. FinaT an&#13;
overkill of wipes and ,ns outs destroys narrative continuity Like an&#13;
amateur freaking out with a zoom lens Hill could not film a transition&#13;
without this peeling or zeroing effect Bon&#13;
Worst of all. Hill's Chicago insults me. 1 have an affectionate and&#13;
persona^feelmg for it. During the Depression crafty Uncle Bruno ran&#13;
bootleg booze and smalltime operations. G-men followed him thrnunh&#13;
World War II. Dad endured the stockyards' stench tX yZ^Antl&#13;
dug the largest collection of rusty nails and bottle caps in the block&#13;
from the alley s asphalt.&#13;
I can suspend my disbelief to accept the historical inaccuracy of the&#13;
numerous NRA posters in the film (in 1935 the Supreme Court ru rf&#13;
the NRA as unconstitutional), but I refuse to allow Hollywood's false&#13;
preconceptions to erase Chicago's greatness-its squalor and scum&#13;
Whfdy City ^ "&#13;
L&#13;
" Stations without graffiti do not exist in the&#13;
Despite Hill's inadequacies The Sting is enjoyable entertainment&#13;
Newman displays a mature self-assuredness in his underplaying. He&#13;
fades into the woodwork, but it is Newman who captures the film's&#13;
warmth and delightfulness, a subtlety which Redford has not yet&#13;
mastered.&#13;
Tonight, Wednesday, Feb. 6 Parkside has two excellent films. At&#13;
7:30 in the Comm-Arts Theater Akira Kurasawa's Throne of B lood, a&#13;
magnificent adapatation of Macbeth, will be shown. Kurasawa's&#13;
conception of Macbeth as a 15th Century Samurai is the best cinematic&#13;
interpretation of Shakespeare's tragedy of conscience and power.&#13;
In Greenquist 103, also at 7:30 tonight, Alan Arkin's outstanding&#13;
performance in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter completes the fine&#13;
double feature. Arkin is a deaf mute whose sense of t ouch influences a&#13;
small Alabama town. His performance as the silent and lonely Mr.&#13;
Singer is truly tender and poignant. Compare Arkin's role with Cliff&#13;
Robertson's Academy Award winning performance in Charley. Both&#13;
Arkin and Robertson were nominated that year as Best Actor, yet I&#13;
still consider Arkin's performance to be distinctly superior.&#13;
SAB to be closed for conce rt se tup&#13;
The Student Activities Building will be closed from 6-8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday to allow for set-up for the Mission Mountain Wood Band concert&#13;
that evening.&#13;
Table tennis playe rs plan pr ac ti ce&#13;
Students interested in playing table tennis are invited to contact&#13;
eitner Omar Amin in GR 341 or Vic Godfrey in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
ractices are at 4:30 p.m. on Sundays, and the first match will be held&#13;
on Feb. 17.&#13;
, «&#13;
II ii PACK SHOP&#13;
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With down clothing, sleeping bags, cross country&#13;
skis, t ents, c ompasses, b ackpacks, b ooks,&#13;
compact s toves, a nd more...&#13;
Featuring equipment by:&#13;
M ALPINE DESIGN l#FIW#&#13;
Vets club outlines&#13;
future plans&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Since Parkside Vets Club was the only club to&#13;
receive all the C.C.C. funds it asked for-$1410-&#13;
RANGER talked with its president, Chet Anderson,&#13;
to find out what they are doing as a club and how&#13;
they plan to use the money.&#13;
Vets Club was organized in August of 1972 by Red&#13;
Oberbruner, director of Veterans Affairs, and&#13;
Chuck St. Pierre, who served as its first president.&#13;
The purposes of the club are to provide help for the&#13;
vets and to unite them so they can help each other,&#13;
said Anderson. "You've been out for four years, you&#13;
don't know what to do or where to get your&#13;
benefits...It's mainly to help each other out."&#13;
In answer to the $1410 question many students are&#13;
probably asking, a large share of the money will be&#13;
used to generate funds to pay the $2000 de bt owed&#13;
Jelco Bus Company since last school year when the&#13;
Racine bus operated at a deficit. The remaining&#13;
portion of the budget request will go to support the&#13;
recycling campaign.&#13;
The Racine bus is now self-supporting, but the&#13;
club is undertaking many avenues of fund raising to&#13;
reduce last year's debt. In addition to holding&#13;
dances, they are selling candy, and decided at their&#13;
Jan. 27 meeting to sell "totally recycled"&#13;
stationery. The stationery is totally recycled&#13;
because in addition to being made of recycled&#13;
paper, it comes in a poster instead of a throw-away&#13;
box and does not require an envelope.&#13;
In line with their environment-conscious attitude,&#13;
the Vets Recycling committee, chaired by Dietmar&#13;
Schneider, is investigating the possibility of&#13;
recycling soda cans and considering the purchase of&#13;
a can crusher. They will also sponsor another paper&#13;
drive March 1 and are hoping for better student&#13;
support than they received last semester.&#13;
"We're hoping it will pay for itself, but we don't&#13;
know if it will," said Anderson, "please urge&#13;
everyone to save their papers for us."&#13;
Vets Club meetings are held twice a month at the&#13;
Student Activities Building; officers in&#13;
addition to Anderson are John DeLaO, vice&#13;
president, and Dick Pautzke, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
In order that their 75 members be kept informed&#13;
about such things as new grants and early&#13;
registration, Vets Club publishes a monthly&#13;
newsletter. Other activities include sponsoring the&#13;
car pool program, a toy drive for underprivileged&#13;
children and the Parkside Day Care Center, and an&#13;
August beer party to get the Vets out and inform&#13;
them what benefits are available. They also would&#13;
like to get a book co-op started, but this is still being&#13;
investigated.&#13;
Chet Anderson, left, president of the Vet's Club, and secretary-treasurer Dick Pautzke, prepare to&#13;
conduct a recent Sunday afternoon meeting in the Student Activities Building. Any veteran is&#13;
welcome to become an active member of the group, which is oriented toward campus and membership&#13;
service.&#13;
Str a ight from Las Vegas&#13;
Nationa l Recording Artists&#13;
*******&#13;
Top Ten H it!&#13;
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6208 Greenbay Road FEB. 8 &amp; 9 Phone 654-0485 &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. schedule&#13;
IDENTIFICATION REQUIRED FOR USE OF FACILITIES: Effective immediately, inly&#13;
I D. cards that have been validated tor second semester use will be honored.&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-l:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30 pm-2 pm &amp; 3:30-10 pm&#13;
Gym open 10:30 am-1:30 pm &amp; 7:30 pm-lOpm&#13;
Handball courtsopen8:30am-10:30am&amp; 12:30pm-lOpm&#13;
Pool open 11:30 am-l:30 pm 8&lt; 3:30- 6 pm&#13;
Gym open 10:30 am-5 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-5 pm&#13;
Pool open 11 a m-1 pm&#13;
Entire building closes at 5 pm every Friday and Sat. except for special events.&#13;
Fencing meet today - Madison, Mich. State, Purdue 10 am-Gym. Gyms will be closed all day&#13;
today.&#13;
Basketball game tonight - Grand Valley 7:30 pm-JV's at 5:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-4 pm only&#13;
Swimming pool open 12:30-4 pm only&#13;
Bike Race in Gym I -12 noon. Other gyms open 2-6:30 pm. Pool 8. Handball courts open 2 pm-10&#13;
pm&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-1';30 pm &amp; 7:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30 pm-2 pm 8. 3:30-6 pm&#13;
Wrestling meet tonight - Marquette Univ. 8 pm in gym.&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-l:30 pm only&#13;
Track practice in gym 3:30-5:30&#13;
Handball courts open all day except 10:30 am-12:30 pm&#13;
Pool open 11:30 am-1:30 pm 8.6 pm-10 pm&#13;
UW-P 13th in NAIA contest&#13;
Parkside has finished 13th in&#13;
the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
All-Sports Championship for 1972-&#13;
73.&#13;
Ranger teams compiled 84V2&#13;
points in national competition to&#13;
rank 13th nationally. U.S. International&#13;
University of San&#13;
Diego compiled 157V2 points to&#13;
take first place honors, just&#13;
ahead of Eastern New Mexico,&#13;
with 157. UW-Oshkosh had 128 in&#13;
third. Nebraska-Omaha (123)&#13;
and Central Washington State&#13;
(12iy2) rounded out the top five.&#13;
Area 4, composed of NAIA&#13;
schools in District 13 (Minnesota),&#13;
District 14 (Wisconsin),&#13;
District 15 (Iowa), and District 16&#13;
(Missouri), rates as the top NAIA&#13;
area nationally. And Wisconsin,&#13;
with Oshkosh, LaCrosse and&#13;
Parkside all in the top 13, rates as&#13;
the top national district.&#13;
Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, who saw Ranger&#13;
squads reach the lofty national&#13;
plateau during his first year on&#13;
the job, praised Parkside athletes&#13;
and coaches for their efforts.&#13;
"I think it shows that the&#13;
student-athletes we have here at&#13;
Parkside rank right up there with&#13;
the nation's best," Dannehl said.&#13;
"It's also a fine reflection of the&#13;
job which our coaching staff has&#13;
done in helping these athletes&#13;
reach their full potential. It's my&#13;
hope that we'll do as well or&#13;
better during the 1973-74 year and&#13;
in succeeding years."&#13;
The Rangers' national ranking&#13;
was based on national finishes by&#13;
teams and individuals in the top&#13;
ten in cross country, wrestling,&#13;
gymnastics, and indoor and&#13;
outdoor track.&#13;
The Winners&#13;
rarKsme cagers shocked UW-M in a 73-59 upset last week in what&#13;
both schools consider a final meeting. Gary Cole (43) led the Ranger&#13;
attack, pumping in 27 points. Chuck Chambliss (25) pushed his career&#13;
total over the 1,000 point mark, scoring 18 p oints.&#13;
Cagers dump UWM&#13;
and Northern Mich.&#13;
Gary Cole poured in 47 p oints&#13;
Saturday afternoon and broke the&#13;
UW-Parkside single game&#13;
scoring record as the Rangers&#13;
edged Northern Michigan 88-86 at&#13;
Marquette, Mich.&#13;
For Parkside, it was the ninth&#13;
win in 13 g ames and raised the&#13;
Rangers' season record to 10-11&#13;
with a game Tuesday night at&#13;
Milton College. A win at Milton&#13;
would give Parkside the chance&#13;
to go over the break-even mark&#13;
for the first time this season with&#13;
a win Saturday night at the&#13;
Physical Education Building,&#13;
over Grand Valley State. Game&#13;
time is 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Cole's 47-point production&#13;
broke the old varsity mark set by&#13;
Eli Slaughter against Grand&#13;
Valley State in the 1969-70 season.&#13;
Cole's previous high was the 31&#13;
points he had against Aquinas&#13;
College nearly two weeks ago.&#13;
Parkside's win over Northern&#13;
Michigan gave the Rangers a&#13;
measure of revenge for the 76-66&#13;
loss suffered at Parkside earlier&#13;
in January. And it followed up a&#13;
tremendous week for Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens and his team&#13;
which saw them upset a major&#13;
college, UW-Milwaukee Tuesday&#13;
at Parkside, 73-59.&#13;
Against NMU, Cole pumped in&#13;
21 field goals on 31 attempts and&#13;
made five of seven from the free&#13;
throw line. He had 22 points in the&#13;
first half and 25 i n the second.&#13;
The big sophomore from Racine&#13;
also pulled down 17 rebounds.&#13;
Parkside and the Wildcats&#13;
were tied at 42 at the half and&#13;
Northern jumped out to a five&#13;
point lead early in the second half&#13;
but the Rangers never let the lead&#13;
get any bigger than that and&#13;
moved into the lead at 65-64 with&#13;
10:30 left in the game when Chuck&#13;
Chambliss hit on a driving layup.&#13;
The lead seesawed until Parkside&#13;
hit eight straight points to open a&#13;
75-70 lead with 6:27 left. Northern&#13;
tied the game at 77 and again at&#13;
79 before taking an 82-80 lead with&#13;
3:16 remaining.&#13;
Cole hit on a free throw with&#13;
1:59 left to reduce NMU's margin&#13;
to one at 82-81 a nd then Chambliss&#13;
made a breakaway layup&#13;
with 1:33 to go as the Rangers&#13;
moved in front, 83-82. A three&#13;
point play by Cole made it 86-82&#13;
before NMU's Kurt Ekberg put&#13;
the Cats back within two at 86-84&#13;
with 43 seconds left.&#13;
A Malcolm Mahone baseline&#13;
shot from 14 feet with 27 seconds&#13;
left moved the Rangers up by&#13;
four again. A Gene Conley layup&#13;
for Northern ended the scoring&#13;
with 13 s econds left.&#13;
Mahone had 17 p oints for the&#13;
Rangers, Chambliss 12, Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic and Joe Hutter five&#13;
and Calvin Denson two.&#13;
Parkside shot 47.5 percent to&#13;
Northern's 54.4 percent but the&#13;
Rangers converted on 10 of 15&#13;
free throws while NMU was able&#13;
to can only 12 of 26 from the&#13;
stripe. NMU outrebounded&#13;
Parkside 46 to 39.&#13;
Against Milwaukee, Cole&#13;
scored 27 p oints as the Rangers&#13;
took a 41-34 half-time lead and&#13;
parlayed it into their first win&#13;
ever over UW-M. Mahone and&#13;
Chambliss were also in double&#13;
figures with 18 points each.&#13;
Chambliss also set Parkside&#13;
history in that game as he scored&#13;
the 1,000th point of his three-year&#13;
career to become the first man in&#13;
UW-P basketball history to reach&#13;
that milestone.&#13;
w MED 1&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
• N mm&#13;
PRODI EMS?&#13;
may oiler RX via&#13;
overseas training&#13;
For the session starting Fall, 1974&#13;
Euromed will assist qualified Amer&#13;
ican students in gaining admissioi&#13;
to recognized overseas medica&#13;
schools.&#13;
And that's just the beginning.&#13;
Since t he language barrier constitute:&#13;
the preponderate difficulty in succeed&#13;
ing at a f oreign school, the Euromei&#13;
program also includes an intensivi&#13;
12 week medical and conversationa&#13;
language course, mandatory for al&#13;
students. Five hours daily, 5 days pe&#13;
week (12-16 weeks) the course i:&#13;
given in the country where the studen&#13;
will attend medical school.&#13;
In addition, Euromed provides stu&#13;
dents with a 12 week intensive cul&#13;
tural orientation program, witl&#13;
American students no w stu dying medi&#13;
cine in that particular country servini&#13;
as counselors.&#13;
Senior or graduate students currentl&#13;
enrolled in an American university ar&#13;
eligible to participate in the Euronlei&#13;
program.&#13;
For application and further&#13;
info rma tion , phone toll free&#13;
(800) 645-1234&#13;
or write,&#13;
Euromed, Ltd.&#13;
170 Old Country Road&#13;
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| Open 9:00 A M to 1 A.M. Daily&#13;
| Sandwiches served at all times&#13;
BRATWURST OU R SPECIALITY!&#13;
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live Entertainment Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
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nites - Apply in person at the BRAT.</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 19, February 6, 1974</text>
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              <text>1974-02-06</text>
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          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <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>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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