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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, issue 22</text>
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            <text>Faculty get termination notices. Student action appears likely</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Cagers to enter playoffs!&#13;
Cole makes all -WICA t eam story on page 7&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1974 V ol. II No. 22&#13;
As announced in last week's&#13;
paper, the RANGER this week is&#13;
being distributed by members of&#13;
the Adult Student Association,&#13;
the Vets Club and the IS (Industrial&#13;
Society program) class,&#13;
in exchange for donations to&#13;
benefit the A1 Lansdowne family.&#13;
Lansdowne and his son&#13;
are Parkside students whose&#13;
home was completely burned to&#13;
the ground on Feb. 13. Members&#13;
of the above-named groups have&#13;
been authorized to accept&#13;
donations to aid the family in&#13;
exchange for the newspapers,&#13;
and are wearing name tags to&#13;
officially identify themselves as&#13;
part of this project.&#13;
On Thursday all remaining&#13;
papers will be placed in the&#13;
RANGER boxes for normal, free&#13;
distribution.&#13;
10 faculty get termination natire&gt;c&#13;
Student action appears likely&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Apathy-passive by definition, frightening in practice. Because of&#13;
apathy wars have been started, corrupt individuals are allowed to&#13;
take office, people starve, innocent victims rot in prisons, the land of&#13;
the free becomes the land of the corporation, Universities fail to strive&#13;
for a wholesome truth, and the word "responsibility" is muddied and&#13;
disintegrates somewhere into the depths of a polluted environment.&#13;
What does this have to do with Parkside, you say? That University&#13;
which is only a finger on the hands of a University of Wisconsin&#13;
System, located somewhere between the farms of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
Counties, buried amongst the wooded hillsides of a friendly park which&#13;
protects naturally its squirrels, racoons, pheasants, and foliage.&#13;
The students of that University sit silent while some corporate body,&#13;
called CA by those who say it so often that it becomes a familiar dinner&#13;
table topic and short form for Central Administration, dictates the&#13;
University's every move. From somewhere in that computer&#13;
conglomerate of CA the word has come down that in the faculty review&#13;
process, first priority emphasis is to be on teaching. If the faculty&#13;
object, no one knows because they sit huddled in the corner of their&#13;
box-like offices, armchair intellectuals, reading and writing some&#13;
distant words that become entombed somewhere in the innermost&#13;
portions of their brains.&#13;
And at review time, a small group of tenured faculty sit away in&#13;
some long lost conference room around a table and decide the fate of&#13;
their colleagues not yet tenured. What they say, what they know, no&#13;
one else hears or knows of, as all is as quiet and confidential as a&#13;
snowflake seeping through heaven and landing secretly unnoticed in&#13;
the back forty.&#13;
Dick Pautzke&#13;
Student&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(SCAFE)&#13;
Executive&#13;
are faculty&#13;
recommend&#13;
Course and&#13;
Evaluation forms&#13;
are invalid." Yet&#13;
Committees, which&#13;
committees who&#13;
termination or&#13;
Editor's note:&#13;
To RANGER'S knowledge, ten&#13;
faculty members received notice&#13;
of termination this month.&#13;
Rumor has it that two of those&#13;
decisions have been reversed&#13;
through appeals. The following&#13;
faculty are waiting for letters&#13;
from Dean Norwood stating the&#13;
reason for termination. Many of&#13;
the requests for reasons were&#13;
sent over two weeks ago.&#13;
HUMANITIES: John Murphy,&#13;
assistant professor of art (will&#13;
appeal); Gerald Musich, instructor&#13;
of English (considering&#13;
appeal); SOCIAL SCIENCE:&#13;
Reginald Carter, assistant&#13;
professor of sociology (considering&#13;
appeal); Stauros&#13;
Daoutis, assistant professor of&#13;
sociology (will appeal); Roland&#13;
Derenne, assistant professor of&#13;
sociology (will not appeal);&#13;
William Folan, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology (will&#13;
appeal); Joseph Neville,&#13;
assistant professor of history&#13;
(will appeal); SCIENCE:&#13;
Michael Williams, assistant&#13;
professor of mathematics (will&#13;
appeal).&#13;
Senior Dick Pautzke,&#13;
spokesman for an informal group&#13;
calling itself the "Majority of the&#13;
Student Body" (MSB), recently&#13;
said in an interview that "the&#13;
faculty and the administration&#13;
rely on student apathy" in so far&#13;
as tenure or termination are&#13;
concerned.&#13;
"Everybody I've talked to,"&#13;
complains Pautzke, "says the&#13;
tenure, continue to say they use&#13;
them in deciding the excellence&#13;
or non-excellence of any faculty&#13;
member's teaching abilities. Say&#13;
MSB, "If you come to this&#13;
University, pay your tuition and&#13;
attend classes, but have no input&#13;
into the review and who comes&#13;
and who is discharged ~ it has got&#13;
to be changed. It's the students&#13;
who are affected by these&#13;
decisions."&#13;
Pautzke explained that the&#13;
MSB hopes the situation can be&#13;
remedied peacefully. They ask&#13;
that students write letters immediately&#13;
to the Divisional&#13;
Chairpersons in regard to the&#13;
decisions that were made this&#13;
semester, stating why they think&#13;
any decision was a just or an&#13;
unjust one; both negative and&#13;
positive comments on any&#13;
professor are encouraged.&#13;
Pautzke, however, is skeptical&#13;
about the benefit of such letters.&#13;
"I have heard from Executive&#13;
Committee members," he said,"&#13;
Students organize to protest&#13;
Folan's terminaton&#13;
by Rebecca Eckiund&#13;
A group of more than 20&#13;
students attended the second&#13;
meeting of the Latino and Concerned&#13;
Students for Dr. Folan&#13;
Committee (LCSFC) last Wednesday,&#13;
February 20.&#13;
The purpose of the group is to&#13;
organize a protest against the&#13;
termination of William J. Folan,&#13;
assistant professor of anthropology.&#13;
Folan has been active&#13;
in the Spanish-speaking&#13;
community, specifically within&#13;
the Racine Spanish Center.&#13;
Some of the courses of action&#13;
decided upon at the first meeting&#13;
of the LCSFC are already in&#13;
progress.&#13;
A letter has been sent to Marion&#13;
Mochon, associate professor of&#13;
anthropology and chairperson of&#13;
the social science division, John&#13;
Van Willigen and Richard Stoffle,&#13;
assistant professors of anthropology,&#13;
and Alan Shucard,&#13;
associate professor of English&#13;
and chairperson of the University&#13;
Committee. A co py of that letter&#13;
appears in the "We get letters"&#13;
section of this issue of RANGER.&#13;
Petitions are presently being&#13;
circulated by members of the&#13;
LCSFC which protest Folan's&#13;
termination.&#13;
Individuals who have been or&#13;
are now students of Folan are&#13;
asked to write letters to members&#13;
of t he executive committee of the&#13;
social science division or to&#13;
Mochon, voicing their opinions of&#13;
Folan.&#13;
Folan is appealing the decision&#13;
of his termination, which was&#13;
originally made by the Social&#13;
Science division executive&#13;
committee, the same committee&#13;
which will hear the appeal. The&#13;
date for the appeal hearing has&#13;
not yet been scheduled.&#13;
Emiliano Contreras, one of the&#13;
originators of the LCSFC, feels&#13;
that Folan's termination was&#13;
bascially a political decision, that&#13;
the executive committee and&#13;
certain individuals disliked&#13;
Folan's pctivities and concerns&#13;
with the Spanish-speaking&#13;
communities on and off campus.&#13;
"I take it personally," said&#13;
Contreras.&#13;
Wayne Ramirez, who is on the&#13;
advising staff and who serves as&#13;
advisor to the Third World&#13;
Organization, praised Folan's&#13;
work with Latinos. "He is one guy&#13;
who has rolled up his sleeves and&#13;
done something. He's concerned,&#13;
positive person."&#13;
"We can document what he's&#13;
done in the community," continued&#13;
Ramirez, "and students&#13;
can document what he's done in&#13;
the classroom. This expands into&#13;
an Affirmative Action issue."&#13;
that they often discount student&#13;
letters by saying, 'Oh, these are&#13;
just letters from friends.' "&#13;
"Use" of Politics&#13;
"The way Executive Committers&#13;
manipulate evidence is&#13;
what bothers us," said Pautzke,&#13;
and this is the main concern of&#13;
the MSB. "They use findings of&#13;
SCAFE or any other material&#13;
they have whichever way they&#13;
want to, depending on whether a&#13;
person is liked or not." Pautzke&#13;
explained that often decisions are&#13;
made on the basis of conflict or&#13;
friendship between Executive&#13;
Committee members and those&#13;
who are being reviewed. "One&#13;
would think," he reminds us,&#13;
"that PhD's could overlook petty&#13;
philosophical, character, and&#13;
personality differences."&#13;
Because of politics, should we&#13;
have to sit in a classroom with&#13;
someone who can't teach?" he&#13;
asks. The decisions, explains&#13;
another MSB member, should be&#13;
based on the three criteria that&#13;
have been set up-teaching,&#13;
scholarly work, and community&#13;
service - but there is no equality,&#13;
conformity or validity in the&#13;
recommendations that come out&#13;
of the Executive Committees.&#13;
Plans of Protest&#13;
Maybe the letters will be&#13;
enough, MSB members hope.&#13;
However, says Pautzke, "A&#13;
mediod^TUKt^e^develo^e^^&#13;
which there is student input that&#13;
is used and used effectively."&#13;
Pautzke explained that the MSB&#13;
hopes for three student&#13;
representatives on each&#13;
executive committee. The&#13;
students, he says, may be senior&#13;
majors in the field that the&#13;
faculty member being reviewed&#13;
is in. This, or a comparable&#13;
method must be established now,&#13;
say MSB, or action will never be&#13;
taken. "I think that this is one&#13;
matter where Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
can side with the students against&#13;
the powerful Executive Committees&#13;
about the review process&#13;
and about their judgements,"&#13;
says Pautzke. "To get a viable&#13;
student input into the review&#13;
process is something you'd think&#13;
the University would want to do,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
If it doesn't, a one-day peaceful&#13;
boycott of classes is being&#13;
organized by MSB. The&#13;
Executive Committees hold the&#13;
power and "if they don't give&#13;
students any voice in the&#13;
educational and review process,&#13;
they don't relinquish any power.&#13;
So, they win," says Pautzke.&#13;
"The question," says another&#13;
MSB member, "is what to do to&#13;
get them to relinquish."&#13;
If all else fails, a publicity&#13;
campaign is in the offing. "It will&#13;
be a campaign," remarks&#13;
Pautzke, "to urge people not to&#13;
attend Parkside. This is what the&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
No news&#13;
is bad news&#13;
The Vets Club's second paper&#13;
drive is coming on Friday, March f&#13;
1, with all proceeds going toward (&#13;
the Racine bus service. Gary £&#13;
Stewart, above left, and Dietmar ;&#13;
Schmeider bundle an advance&#13;
contribution. Anyone with paper '&#13;
to donate may bring it to th«&#13;
truck which will be in the Tallent&#13;
Hall parking lot. &#13;
2 T H E P A RKS IDE R ANGER Wednesday, Feb. 2 7 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
Termination ire&#13;
proves it - there&#13;
must be a better&#13;
review system&#13;
"If you come to this University and attend classes, but have no input&#13;
into the review (of faculty) and who comes and who is discharged - it&#13;
has got to be changed. It's the students who are affected by these&#13;
decisions."&#13;
--Dick Pautzke, Parkside senior and&#13;
spokesman for MSB ("Majority the&#13;
Student Body")&#13;
Last November 28 RANGER published a commentary on "Teaching&#13;
excellence -- who defines it?" The last paragraph of that article read&#13;
"As faculty committees hold most of the power, it is essential that they&#13;
immediately devise a system in which student input will not only be&#13;
reliable but will be used. Until then students are left no alternative but&#13;
to assume that their considerations of what constitutes teaching excellence&#13;
being used in the review procedure is a myth."&#13;
Although that article caught the attention of the faculty and a&#13;
number of irate responses appeared in the following issue, it has&#13;
apparently taken the students three months to realize the sad truth of&#13;
our words.&#13;
Whether or not the faculty accepted what was said, a few of them on&#13;
a committee studying tenure and promotion policies decided to solicit&#13;
student feelings about the criteria used in review. Unfortunately, only&#13;
a handful of people have responded on the form we printed for that&#13;
committee two weeks ago.&#13;
Students are, however, rallying in support of individual faculty&#13;
members who have received letters of termination. RANGER supports&#13;
the activities of The Latino and Concerned Students for Dr.&#13;
Folan Committee (LCSFC), as well as the efforts of other students&#13;
circulating petitions for retention of individuals they feel are too good&#13;
to lose. We wish to remind these students that, in our opinion, the&#13;
reason these faculty members were terminated in the first place was&#13;
because the process of reviewing them is polluted with personality&#13;
politics and is devoid of authentic and meaningful student input.&#13;
Further, even if some of the termination decisions are reversed in the&#13;
appeals process, there is nothing to stop many of these faculty from&#13;
receiving the same letters of good-bye next year.&#13;
A group is now emerging which calls itself the "Majority of the&#13;
Student Body." These students are concerned with the broader picture,&#13;
the review procedure itself and its shameful lack of regard for&#13;
students' feelings. RANGER is in complete accord with the philosophy&#13;
and goals of this group and is prepared to back its efforts to achieve&#13;
reform 100 p ercent.&#13;
We are hopeful that such change can come about quickly and&#13;
without disruption, but we are committed to insuring that the change&#13;
does come and will be lasting. Therefore, if it is necessary to call for a&#13;
boycott of classes (and capture the attention of local media) this will&#13;
be done and we will support it. If it is necessary to go further, as&#13;
outlined in the story on the MSB this week, RANGER must support&#13;
that also, for we feel that this issue strikes at the very basis of our&#13;
education within this institution -- the quality of the teaching, and also&#13;
our right as tuition (and tax) payers to have a say in the hiring and&#13;
firing practices of the University.&#13;
In the news recently have been reports of other schools facing&#13;
demonstrations, strikes and class boycotts because of similar&#13;
frustrations with faculty terminations. They are demanding a voice in&#13;
determining who has earned the right to teach them and who has&#13;
failed. These decisions cannot be made by other faculty alone, for it is&#13;
the students who pay the money to sit in the classroom and be taught,&#13;
and it is they who know at the end of a course whether they have&#13;
learned something and been respected in the process (Hopefully they&#13;
have learned not to passively accept everything which is done to&#13;
them). Besides, it is already wholly evident that the present method&#13;
just doesn't work.&#13;
UOT The Parkside&#13;
"HANGER&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Thomas J. Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Heddon&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Kathryn Kah,&#13;
Michael Olsyzk, Marilyn Schubert, Debbie&#13;
Strand, Walt Ulbricht, Carrie Ward, Mike&#13;
Winslow&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Allen Fredrickson,&#13;
Debra Friedell, Debby Scenters, Ray Waldie&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari, Denny Kroll&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confined&#13;
to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It has come to the attention of&#13;
several Latino students, the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
refusal to renew the&#13;
contract of Dr. William Folan,&#13;
and thus denying him tenure. A&#13;
number of the Lationo students&#13;
as well as the Latino community&#13;
of Racine and Kenosha have been&#13;
so disturbed over this decision&#13;
that we have formed a committee&#13;
to deal with this matter. We feel a&#13;
great deal of indifference by the&#13;
faculty toward the Latino student&#13;
and community with the exception&#13;
of Dr. Folan. You and&#13;
your colleagues must certainly&#13;
be aware of Dr. Folan's excellent&#13;
work with the Spanish speaking&#13;
population of UW-Parkside,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha. It is baffling&#13;
and insulting to us that we&#13;
have not been considered in this&#13;
situation. Therefore, we are&#13;
requesting specific information&#13;
in writing, justifying your actions&#13;
on Dr. Folan's dismissal and&#13;
tenure denial. We would also like&#13;
detailed information regarding&#13;
your Affirmative Action Plan and&#13;
implementation precedures.&#13;
Emiliano Contreras&#13;
Soph. Racine&#13;
and The Latino and&#13;
Concerned Students for&#13;
Dr. Folan Committee&#13;
Editor's Note: RANGER has&#13;
attempted to obtain a copy 0f&#13;
Parkside's Affirmative Action&#13;
Plan which was completed in&#13;
early December. The plan was&#13;
denied us by Eugene Norwood&#13;
Dean of the College of Science&#13;
and Society and Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer. Also, today's&#13;
RANGER carries a story&#13;
concerning William Folan,&#13;
assistant professor of anthropology,&#13;
and his involvement&#13;
with the Latino community.&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
50 cents worth of mary jane&#13;
please.&#13;
Yes students it's true, Happening&#13;
right under our noses, in&#13;
the MAIN concourse!&#13;
Here's my story:&#13;
Monday morning 11 a.m.:&#13;
because of my strange yearning,&#13;
craving for food, I went to the&#13;
sweet shop. I could of settled with&#13;
that crap out of the canteen&#13;
machines in front of and behind&#13;
the counters, but I needed the&#13;
real thing!&#13;
As I approached the candy&#13;
counters, I noticed that the nice&#13;
young woman servicing the&#13;
shoppe had a strange glaze in&#13;
her eyes.&#13;
"What's good today?" I asked.&#13;
"The virgin peanuts are&#13;
fresh", she said as she drooled&#13;
down her blouse.&#13;
I couldn't decide, then I saw it,&#13;
right there in broad daylight, top&#13;
shelf to the left; MARY JANE —&#13;
50 cents - V2 l b. wrapped in yellow&#13;
paper with a picture of a little&#13;
girl. I had finally found what I&#13;
started my quest for.&#13;
"50 cents worth of MARY&#13;
Jane, Please."&#13;
John Nowicki&#13;
Junior, Racine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To: Peggy Hansen, Sue Johnson,&#13;
Cliff Croxford, Amy Cundari, and&#13;
others;&#13;
This letter is in response to the&#13;
letter printed in the RANGER&#13;
Feb. 13, from the above mentioned&#13;
individuals. As a review,&#13;
these individuals felt Security&#13;
was not doing its job on the night&#13;
of Tuesday, Feb. 5 (the big&#13;
snowstorm). They stated that we&#13;
seemed to hurry our patrol of the&#13;
parking lots and that it was&#13;
impossible to flag the squad&#13;
down. They were right! We had&#13;
only one squad on the road, we&#13;
were in a hurry; in a hurry to get&#13;
the vehicles that were stuck on&#13;
the main road, that being Highway&#13;
"G" (Wood Rd.). Between&#13;
the hours of 4:00 p.m. and 11:30&#13;
p.m. that night, we assisted 8&#13;
vehicles that were stuck in ditches&#13;
and since we don't have the&#13;
facilities to tow the vehicles out,&#13;
we had to direct traffic until the&#13;
tow truck came and removed the&#13;
vehicle. These vehicles were a&#13;
hazard to traffic and were in&#13;
greater need of removal than the&#13;
vehicles in the parking lots.&#13;
There were no county snow plows&#13;
out that night and these roads had&#13;
only one lane of traffic open to&#13;
travel and in some cases, you had&#13;
to make your own lane.&#13;
Also, if those who were in need&#13;
of jumper cables, which our&#13;
squad carries, they could have&#13;
used them if they would have&#13;
contacted our office. There's a&#13;
free phone in the East Tallent lot&#13;
or the Student Union. However,&#13;
due to the possibility of our squad&#13;
radio shorting out, we cannot use&#13;
our vehicle to give jump starts.&#13;
Obviously, you need another&#13;
vehicle to start your vehicle, but&#13;
you must provide it by some&#13;
means yourself.&#13;
PS: Since Feb. 15, 1974, we&#13;
have had 48 motorist assists and 4&#13;
rescue runs this year. Case&#13;
Closed!!!&#13;
Off. Dennis L. Chartier&#13;
Dept. of Safety and Security&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
On Valentine's Day some of the&#13;
women of Parkside attended a&#13;
lecture advertised as "To Be or&#13;
Not to Be Raped" by Frederic&#13;
Stroaska. (Someone thought&#13;
themselves pretty cute when they&#13;
picked that date!) RANGER&#13;
didn't report on what was decided&#13;
but it was probably a split&#13;
decision with an undetermined&#13;
number of vicarious responses.&#13;
When a handsome 31-year old ailAmerican&#13;
male like Frederic&#13;
comes along and lectures women&#13;
about rape it reminds me of the&#13;
fox being in the hen-coop ... or&#13;
maybe it's the other way 'round.&#13;
I'm not trying to be funny or&#13;
amusing when I say that a&#13;
representative from any local&#13;
police department or I could have&#13;
given the Ms (plural, please)&#13;
better advice on how to avoid that&#13;
revolting experience for a heck of&#13;
a lot less than the $900 the Activities&#13;
Board paid to serve an&#13;
audience of "from 80 to 100."&#13;
(Boy, I'll bet Mr. S. laughed all&#13;
the way back to his pad.)&#13;
I have no easy solution as to&#13;
how to handle the morons who hit&#13;
and run like barnyard animals.&#13;
Such creeps can only be handled&#13;
by the woman involved, by the&#13;
police and psychiatrists. But the&#13;
fact remains that over half of the&#13;
rapes are committed by friends&#13;
or relatives, and my guess is that&#13;
in most of those cases the guy&#13;
was probably roused into action&#13;
by the behavior of the woman. So,&#13;
when Stroaska says that it's a&#13;
"myth" that women somehow&#13;
entice a man into raping them, he&#13;
is simply talking nonsense and&#13;
telling his audience what he&#13;
figures they'd like to hear&#13;
Believe me . seduction is a twoway&#13;
street. If it isn't, then why do&#13;
girls wear makeup and perfume?&#13;
Stroaska served another thick&#13;
slice of baloney when he said that&#13;
he didn't come to advise women&#13;
to wear long skirts and how not to&#13;
cross their legs and so forth&#13;
Again, he was just telling them&#13;
what he thought they'd like to&#13;
hear. Now listen to me! ... In my&#13;
opinion women would spend a lot&#13;
less time fighting-off would-be&#13;
rapists if they learned the difference&#13;
between decent and&#13;
indecent exposure when in public&#13;
places. Some girls walk around&#13;
here as though they invented legs&#13;
and that the more they can show&#13;
them off, the "sexier" they&#13;
become. A sight that makes even&#13;
me bug-eyed is the voluptuous&#13;
creature who always wears a&#13;
crotch-length tutu, swiveling her&#13;
way down the concourse daintily&#13;
holding her can of coke in one&#13;
hand as though it were a martini&#13;
glass, and in the other hand is a&#13;
cigarette held as though it were a&#13;
lighted firecracker. She's a living&#13;
facsimile of a dame on the prowl&#13;
at a cocktail party. Boy, what&#13;
body language! Where are her&#13;
textbooks? I dunno ... she&#13;
probably forget them in the&#13;
washroom.&#13;
Then there are the show-offs&#13;
whose skirts are so short that&#13;
when they sit down and cross&#13;
their legs they not only expose&#13;
their thighs but areas of the&#13;
buttocks ... and that's not good ...&#13;
especially when they have a run&#13;
in their pantyhose.&#13;
If those over-exposed women&#13;
continued on page 3 &#13;
Terminations&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 19 74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
University fears more than&#13;
anything else since every cent it&#13;
gets depends on enrollment."&#13;
I autzke explained that next year&#13;
students could also choose not to&#13;
sign up for classes taught by&#13;
Executive Committee members.&#13;
Hoping for a Solution&#13;
These protests are a last resort&#13;
for the MSB, however. It is&#13;
hoping that the University administration&#13;
will encourage&#13;
Executive Committees to work"&#13;
on a viable solution to the&#13;
problems of the faculty review&#13;
process. "We're not saying to&#13;
throw out the tenure system, to&#13;
throw-out the Executive Committees,&#13;
or to throw-out the administration,"&#13;
says Pautzke.&#13;
"We only want student input and&#13;
to be assured that the decisions&#13;
being made by Executive&#13;
Committees are indeed correct&#13;
ones. It's only logical that there&#13;
be an effective student input."&#13;
MSB urges all students to get&#13;
involved in writing letters to&#13;
Executive Committees, for if&#13;
they don't participate, "It will&#13;
show that general apathy still&#13;
reigns."&#13;
Letters&#13;
continued from page 2&#13;
realized how much their&#13;
showomanship raised the blood&#13;
pressure of the young bucks&#13;
around here they'd run home to&#13;
mother before they were caught&#13;
in their own trap. Some women&#13;
must want to live in a jungle ... or&#13;
they wouldn't dress the way they&#13;
do. With the historical perspective&#13;
of 72 years of girlwatching&#13;
it seems to me that the&#13;
higher women hoist their skirts&#13;
above the knee, the lower goes&#13;
public morals ... and then you&#13;
hear women cry, "Help! Help!&#13;
Rape!"&#13;
1 remember back when you&#13;
would hear the saying, "Modesty&#13;
is a virtue" ... like honesty and&#13;
fidelity. I also recall a class I took&#13;
in philosophy (Ethics) when the&#13;
word "Virtue" came up in connection&#13;
with a fellow named&#13;
Aristotle. Big deal! But not a&#13;
word was said about making&#13;
virtue relevant to today's&#13;
problems ... such as rape. Maybe&#13;
the words "Modesty" and&#13;
"Virtue" are foreign to today's&#13;
liberated women. Nevertheless, I&#13;
suggest that sensible modesty in&#13;
dress is one way of cutting down&#13;
the probability of being raped, A&#13;
little more clothing covering&#13;
certain places'... looking less like&#13;
a tramp and more like a wellgroomed&#13;
woman ... would go a&#13;
long way in giving a girl a&#13;
fighting chance to be the kind of a&#13;
person she really wants to be.&#13;
Now, I hope, you see the difference.&#13;
Mr. Stroaska told you&#13;
what to do to put out a fire that&#13;
has started. My suggestions have&#13;
to do with fire prevention&#13;
they didn't cost Parkside&#13;
bucks.&#13;
And&#13;
900&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
Editor's note: The fee for&#13;
Frederic Storaska was $675 plus&#13;
$75 fpr travel and lodging expenses.&#13;
&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
The Exorcist&#13;
Don't think that the cinema audience of 1974 is jaded or protected in&#13;
rationalism. I attended a midnight performance and found an impressionable&#13;
and hysterical audience equaling the anxiety of those&#13;
who viewed A Hard Day's Night 9 years ago. Seventeen year olds to&#13;
senior citizens nervously waited outside, rushed like cattle to get&#13;
tickets and scrambled in a frenzy to seats.&#13;
Regardless how many Oscars The Exorcist accumulates it will be&#13;
he greatest horror-fantasy to date. But not the best. The film suffers&#13;
from as many inadequencies as its number of aural and visual shocks.&#13;
Friedkins direction is pot-holed with ambiguities and disunities.&#13;
nHrlntT h ^&#13;
,UenCe&#13;
'„&#13;
41 beautifully Photographed impression&#13;
of Iraq that ends with an excellent expressionistic encounter between&#13;
Max von Sydow and a santanic figure. Structurally, the sequence adds&#13;
nothing to the narrative but confusion. How does the strange&#13;
medallion get in the hands of the younger priest and why does he later&#13;
have the same weird dreams of a clock as von Sydow?&#13;
P nedkin wants the viewer to feel without perception, hence the&#13;
numerous technical and artistic faults. Von Sydow's make-up&#13;
noticably calls attention to itself. Wires can easily be seen supporting&#13;
the girl in m.d-air during the exorcism. The controversial headturning&#13;
shots are achieved by an unconvincing dummy torso&#13;
Yet The Exorcist is immensely powerful. The fine recording of the&#13;
chilling voice and eerie sounds from the possessed girl together with&#13;
the visually shocking face contribute to an effect that is unique in&#13;
cinema-the capacity to blend asynchronous sound with an incongruous&#13;
visual image. Without this powerful synthesis, the tension&#13;
generated from the girl's appearance and speech. The Exorcist would&#13;
only be a bland serving of occultism. With it the film is genuinely headspinning.&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
Day For Night&#13;
(Showing: Southtown in Milwaukee and Coronet in&#13;
Evanston, Illinois, with English subtitles.)&#13;
Francois Truffaut's latest film is an absorbing education and a&#13;
delightful pleasure. Day for Night reveals the technicalities and&#13;
problems of movie-making plus a voyeur-like experience into the&#13;
lives; of the director, actors and technicians. The film's opening scene&#13;
startles the viewer by exposing a sunny Parisian street as a set. The&#13;
director, played by Truffaut, yells "Cut!" and the illusion is shattered&#13;
Our persistence of vision sustains the illusion of viewing a film&#13;
1 ruffaut reminds us that the mystery and magic of film-making is also&#13;
an illusion The camera is a scalpel, not a magic wand. A director&#13;
reality and arranges them for impression and effect-note&#13;
that the film s title refers to the cinemagraphic practice of using&#13;
filters with daylight to simulate night shots.&#13;
Truffaut insists that films do not "go like trains in the night " An&#13;
actor s performance is like getting a cat to drink milk from a saucer&#13;
apparently easy but sometimes impossible.&#13;
Day For Night's disorientating but provocative frame of referencea&#13;
film within a film inside a director's mind-typifies the artistic selfconsciousness&#13;
of the New Wave of French cinema that erupted in the&#13;
late 50 s. Truffaut's earlier films - 400 BLows, Shoot the Piano Player&#13;
and Jules and Jim also present a personal statement of his art&#13;
References to other directors plus the trademarks of improvisation&#13;
and illusion suggest that film is art and not a central reality&#13;
Appli cations for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1974-75 RANGER&#13;
a re now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
lea st eight credits per&#13;
semeste r are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Ea ch candidat e is asked&#13;
to submit details of his-her&#13;
journalistic experi ence&#13;
and a st atement of plans&#13;
for the RANGER to Geoff&#13;
Bla esing, c-o RANGER,&#13;
LLC D194.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates and&#13;
plans to announc e its&#13;
sele ction before sprina&#13;
br eak.&#13;
FREE DELIVER V&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1974&#13;
Folan's students involved&#13;
with Chicano community&#13;
Student Life sponsoring trip&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Seventeen Parkside students&#13;
are presently involved in a three&#13;
credit Independent Study&#13;
program under the direction of&#13;
William Folan, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology, which&#13;
involves census and survey&#13;
projects in the city of Racine.&#13;
Said Folan, the initiative for&#13;
the Independent Study class&#13;
^ came last semester after com-&#13;
^ pletion of a class he taught in&#13;
Mexican and Chicano culture,&#13;
when a number of the students&#13;
approached him wanting to do&#13;
some type of follow up work in the&#13;
Racine community, working with&#13;
area Chicanos. Folan, who is a&#13;
member of the Board of Directors&#13;
of the Racine Spanish&#13;
Center, arranged for the students&#13;
to complete a Spanish Center&#13;
census study which had&#13;
previously been abandoned due&#13;
to lack of funds.&#13;
The census is needed, say&#13;
Folan's students, because in&#13;
order to get funding or assistance&#13;
from agencies for the Spanishspeaking,&#13;
statistics are wanted&#13;
as to the number of people that&#13;
will benefit from any service.&#13;
These statistics are essential&#13;
before discussion can begin on&#13;
such things as health clinics,&#13;
transportation systems, interpreters&#13;
and bilingual&#13;
lawyers.&#13;
To Study Biiingualism&#13;
Jubentino Gonzales, Spanish&#13;
Center Director, explained that&#13;
U.S. census figures show 4,000&#13;
Spanish-speaking people in&#13;
Racine whereas census&#13;
organizers feel the number is&#13;
closer to eight or ten thousand.&#13;
The survey, which has not yet&#13;
been started, will be a study of&#13;
biiingualism and the attitudes&#13;
and opinions of the community&#13;
towards the bilingual. Folan said&#13;
that "millions of dollars are spent&#13;
to teach Anglos Spanish but when •&#13;
Spanish speak Spanish they are&#13;
often put down immediately and&#13;
attacked for it." The survey&#13;
questionaire, which was&#13;
prepared by Steve Daoutis,&#13;
assistant professor of sociology,&#13;
is arranged to decipher what&#13;
things have influenced individuals&#13;
or groups to accept or&#13;
reject biiingualism. No moral&#13;
judgements are to be made with&#13;
the results, said Folan; it is to be&#13;
a survey data study done by the&#13;
Independent study class.&#13;
Students will learn backgrounds&#13;
and community policy which tend&#13;
to influence attitudes for or&#13;
against biiingualism.&#13;
Folan has been on the Board of&#13;
Directors for the Spanish Center&#13;
since last summer and is&#13;
described by Gonzales as being&#13;
"very well-liked by the Chicano&#13;
community, receptive to our&#13;
needs, and understanding of the&#13;
Chicano culture." Gonzales&#13;
added that Folan has given much&#13;
technical advice to the United&#13;
Migrant Opportunity Service and&#13;
remarked that "I know I am&#13;
speaking for hundreds of&#13;
Chicanos in saying that if there&#13;
were more Bill Folan's the world&#13;
would be a much better place to&#13;
live." He has helped set policy in&#13;
financing, social service, youth&#13;
programs, driver education, and&#13;
adult education.&#13;
Folan said he became involved&#13;
with the Spanish Center because&#13;
he wanted to "lend whatever&#13;
expertise I have." He added that&#13;
"the Spanish-speaking people are&#13;
a large population which feel&#13;
alienated. They need a place and&#13;
people to go to who understand&#13;
the language and culture, and&#13;
who can help them cope with this&#13;
society."&#13;
Folan's Background&#13;
Since 1954 Folan, as an anthropologist,&#13;
has been involved in&#13;
25 major and minor excavations&#13;
(dryland and underwater), many&#13;
in Mexico where he lived for nine&#13;
years, and many of which he was&#13;
director. He has published 22&#13;
articles on archeological investigations,&#13;
has two books which&#13;
have been accepted for&#13;
publication, and six manuscripts&#13;
in preparation.&#13;
Dan Ramirez, one of Folan's&#13;
students, spoke of him as being&#13;
"a man who takes the Spanish&#13;
culture to heart." Another&#13;
student pointed out that "in this&#13;
Independent Study we have&#13;
learned to deal with people, to&#13;
talk and learn of backgrounds.&#13;
For myself, I can see that the&#13;
problems of the parents are often&#13;
the problems of the children, and&#13;
the system either does not deal&#13;
with the problems of the Chicano&#13;
or it is blind. Folan helped me&#13;
guide my education so that I&#13;
know how to help." Ramirez&#13;
added that Folan is a "tremendous&#13;
teacher whom the&#13;
University should feel proud to&#13;
have."&#13;
Jamaica trip filling up fast&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Thirty people have already&#13;
made a down-payment on 8 days&#13;
and 7 nights in Jamaica, and at&#13;
least 30 more are on a list of&#13;
"interested" people. According&#13;
to William Niebuhr, director of&#13;
Student Life and coordinator of&#13;
the trip, attempts are being made&#13;
to extend the return date by one&#13;
day to accommodate more than&#13;
THE BIG TREAT&#13;
Af T he&#13;
the seating capacity of 60 o n the&#13;
return flight.&#13;
Seating capacity on the jet&#13;
flights is restricted for this trip&#13;
because participants will travel&#13;
on regularly scheduled Air&#13;
Jamaica flights, not chartered&#13;
flights as in the past.&#13;
Participants will board the jet&#13;
in Chicago, a jet that Air Jamaica&#13;
calls "the love bird." While in the&#13;
air, passengers will enjoy a&#13;
SUPER CHEF 80&#13;
FRIES &amp;&#13;
LARGE DRINK&#13;
$136&#13;
plus tax&#13;
3400 S heridan R d. &amp; 6 926 39th A ve.&#13;
fashion show (featuring colorful,&#13;
native Jamaican costumes),'&#13;
Jamaican music and food, and&#13;
free Rum Bamboozles.&#13;
The love bird will put down at&#13;
Montego Bay, Jamaica, where&#13;
the travelers will be staying in&#13;
the Casa Montego Hotel. These&#13;
first-class accommodations are&#13;
located directly across from&#13;
Montego Bay's major beaches&#13;
and adjacent to the famous&#13;
Montego Arcade, a shopping&#13;
plaza which offers many Swissmade&#13;
items at half the U.S. price&#13;
as Montego Bay is a duty-free&#13;
port.&#13;
Several side trips will be offered&#13;
at extra cost: a rafting&#13;
excursion down the Martha Brae&#13;
River; a jungle garden tour; a&#13;
plantation tour; a night trip down&#13;
the Great River to a torchlight,&#13;
riverside dinner with a Jamaican&#13;
floor show; and scuba diving&#13;
excursions supervised by Jim&#13;
Walters of Water World in&#13;
Kenosha and Parkside scuba&#13;
instructor.&#13;
LaMacchia Travel of Kenosha&#13;
is the tour operator for this trip&#13;
and is offering a special group&#13;
rate for Parkside. Niebuhr&#13;
stressed the fact that the price for&#13;
this trip is not available for individual&#13;
trips, as some of the&#13;
applicants seemed to believe.&#13;
Many travel agencies around the&#13;
country made bids on the tour&#13;
and LaMacchia of Kenosha just&#13;
happened to turn in the lowest&#13;
bid.&#13;
A new feature is being added to&#13;
this trip. There will be a&#13;
Jamaican Orientation evening&#13;
scheduled within 2 or 3 weeks&#13;
prior to departure. A&#13;
representative from the&#13;
Jamaican Tourist Board will be&#13;
present, along with an employee&#13;
of LaMacchia Travel who has&#13;
been to Jamaica 13 times.&#13;
Niebuhr will also attend; all&#13;
participants in the tour will be&#13;
invited to ask questions and a&#13;
film will be shown.&#13;
Tour participants will leave&#13;
April 14 and return April 21, a&#13;
time period which encompasses&#13;
Parkside's spring break. Cost for&#13;
the trip is $249 plus $20 tax and&#13;
service, based on triple occupancy.&#13;
Total cost for double&#13;
occupancy, including tax and&#13;
service, is $279. For further information&#13;
or application, in-&#13;
"Crimson and Clover"&#13;
by Tommy James &amp; The Shondells&#13;
And It's Also Still Available along with 5,000 other Oldies at&#13;
"D&amp;7K Saba&#13;
^ 191!) TAYLOR AVENUE, RACINE 637-2212.&#13;
terested persons may contact&#13;
Campus Travel Center, LLC&#13;
197, or call 553-2294.&#13;
Niebuhr added that there an&#13;
spaces left on the trip to Gree&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-pag'&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.C&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time&#13;
1 t o 2 days).&#13;
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11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #1&#13;
LOS AN GELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213)477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material is sold for&#13;
research assistance only. &#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 17, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Buzz Faust, right, who is President of the Parkside Activities RnarH r ,Lnil..&#13;
STttai *11° P&#13;
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abu',1 big* IfhedulS&#13;
Education and entertainment&#13;
are aims of PAB&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
"What student organization holds dances,&#13;
presents films, week-day entertainment, outings!&#13;
concerts, lectures and video productions?" said the&#13;
sphinx to the Parkside student. "Answer correctly&#13;
or you are doomed to a fate worse than death--an&#13;
uninterrupted week of classes in the Parkside&#13;
desert."&#13;
For others, lest they too are caught by the sphinx,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board (PAB) is a student&#13;
organization open to all. It contains nine committees:&#13;
Dance, Film, Coffeehouse, Outing, Pop&#13;
and Mini Concert, Performing Arts and Lecture,&#13;
Fames, Video, House and Publicity. Each committee&#13;
handles programs in their area, final&#13;
authority resting with an executive committee&#13;
composed of all the committee chairpersons plus&#13;
the president and vice-president.&#13;
The Dance Committee, chaired by Hans Ebert,&#13;
plans and presents a variety of dances in the&#13;
Student Activities Building. According to PAB&#13;
president Buzz Faust, Parkside is one of the few&#13;
places where dances have really been successful.&#13;
Dances usually draw 250 to 350 people and on some&#13;
occasions have had close-out crowds of over 500. As&#13;
with other committees, the Dance Committee tries&#13;
to bring in many different types of groups - not just&#13;
those specializing in "top 40" music, but blues and&#13;
soul as well. Past groups have included Black&#13;
Society, Circus, Daddy Whiskers and the Johnny&#13;
Young Blues Band.&#13;
Barb Burke chairs the Film Committee, which&#13;
brings in recently released films for weekend&#13;
viewing and old favorites during the week. The new&#13;
theater has improved the atmosphere in which&#13;
some films are presented, she said, but increased&#13;
film rental prices have necessitated a 25 cent increase&#13;
in ticket price. The Committee must schedule&#13;
films a year in advance and also has problems&#13;
getting certain films because they are often under&#13;
contract for two years after their release.&#13;
Lectures, theatrical productions, art exhibits and&#13;
other such events are handled by the Performing&#13;
Arts and Lecture Committee, chaired by Greg&#13;
Klema. As opposed to the faculty Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee, which Faust said seems to cater to&#13;
academic needs, this committee "fills in the gap"&#13;
with people such as Bill Sanders, Maynard&#13;
Ferguson, Gill Eagles, and most recently, Frederic&#13;
Storaska - people Faust described as "more entertaining&#13;
but educational too." They will be&#13;
bringing Norman Bigelow, whose stage name is&#13;
Reincarnated Houdini," to Parkside on April 10.&#13;
Aim for a Concert Each Semester&#13;
The Pop and Mini Concert Committee is chaired&#13;
by John Graham. It presents a wide variety of pop&#13;
music, trying to bring in a concert every semester.&#13;
Problems arise, however, with Parkside's&#13;
proximity to both Chicago and Milwaukee which he&#13;
feels reduces the potential audience, and also with&#13;
the high price of performers and the limited&#13;
audience capacity on campus.&#13;
Other committees and their chairpersons are as&#13;
follows: Coffeehouse-Gary Petersen, Outing-Karin&#13;
Haglof and Terry Hagemann, Games - Ted Paone,&#13;
and Video-Glen Christensen. Variously, they&#13;
present week-day entertainment in the&#13;
Whiteskellar, outdoor trips and recreation, chess,&#13;
table tennis and foosball tournaments, and studentdirected&#13;
video productions.&#13;
PAB is also responsible for physical set-up and&#13;
audio-visual operation during all of their events and&#13;
for coordinating publicity annected with them.&#13;
These tasks are handled specifically by the House&#13;
Committee, chaired by Rudy Lineau, and the&#13;
Publicity Committee, chaired by PAB vicepresident&#13;
Keith Kramer.&#13;
Working With Other Students&#13;
Said Faust, "PAB has a lot to offer; you meet a lot&#13;
of different people, you're able to plan an event and&#13;
see it through, and you pick up leadership qualities&#13;
working with other students. If you get involved you&#13;
find out Parkside isn't such a bad place. It's true&#13;
everywhere, if you don't get involved you don't feel&#13;
part of the school."&#13;
"The participation over the last few years has&#13;
improved." added Kramer, citing the fact that the&#13;
number of events has increased from two years ago&#13;
to 90 last year to well over 100 planned for this year.&#13;
"We hope it will continue to improve," continued&#13;
Kramer. "If students show up and we make a profit,&#13;
more events can be programmed."&#13;
Students interested in becoming a member of&#13;
PAB or who would like more information may&#13;
inquire at the Student Activities Office, LLC D-196.&#13;
Both Faust and Kramer agreed, "We're looking for&#13;
people who are genuinely interested in serving the&#13;
students' best interests."&#13;
budget time&#13;
CCC re quests groups to plan ahead&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee,&#13;
which is responsible for&#13;
allocating funds to student&#13;
organizations, has issued a&#13;
request to existing groups to&#13;
attempt to begin formulating&#13;
their plans for next year.&#13;
The committee deliberated&#13;
until last December before&#13;
allotting funds for the '73-'74&#13;
school year. It had requested&#13;
budget requests from the&#13;
organizations after the start of&#13;
the academic year in the fall, and&#13;
hopes that by encouraging spring&#13;
planning on the part of groups it&#13;
will be able to allocate some&#13;
funds to enable organizations to&#13;
operate on a yearly basis rather&#13;
than waiting until spring&#13;
semester to get money and&#13;
sponsor activities.&#13;
The committee won't know for&#13;
awhile yet how much money it&#13;
will have but it expects the&#13;
amount will be relatively the&#13;
same as this year. By receiving&#13;
as many requests as possible this&#13;
spring CCC will also get an idea&#13;
of what it will be dealing with&#13;
next year.&#13;
A copy of the general&#13;
guidelines for budgets is&#13;
available from Walter Feldt who&#13;
chairs the committee, or Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, assistant dean of&#13;
students. Students needing&#13;
financial counseling or advice&#13;
regarding activities m&amp;y contact&#13;
Echelbarger, Tony Totero who&#13;
coordinates student activities&#13;
(LLC D197), student Buzz Faust&#13;
who is president of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board, or their advisor.&#13;
&#13;
The Raven&#13;
by Mike Winslow&#13;
Court and Spark&#13;
Joni Mitchell&#13;
(Asslyum 7E-1001)&#13;
Someday I'm going to review an album of a normal rock and roll&#13;
band and I'll be able to tell you all of the people on the album. You&#13;
know, Joe plays guitar, Bill plays drums and so on. This is the third&#13;
album in a row that has a lot of people on it (20 in fact). Crosby, Nash,&#13;
Joe Sample, Robbie Robertson, Jose Feliciano, the list goes on.&#13;
Before I heard this album, I read several good reviews and had also&#13;
been told that it was good. Expecting a good album, Joni Mitchell has&#13;
released an extremely human album that was even better than I&#13;
thought it would be. The words and music fit together perfectly like the&#13;
pieces of a puzzle.&#13;
The first song is the title tune "Court and Spark," a slow intimate&#13;
tale of how she felt someone she loved saw her. "He saw me&#13;
mistrusting him, and still acting kind," The ending leaves the listener&#13;
with the feeling that things didn't work out. "Help Me" and "Free Man&#13;
in Paris" really set the album on its way, both having great interplay&#13;
between the words and music. "Free Man" seems to be the most interesting&#13;
rhythmically.&#13;
The pace slows a bit with "People's Parties" in which Joni describes&#13;
the people at a party which could be any party. "Some are friendly&#13;
some are cutting, some are watching it from the wings some are&#13;
standing in the center giving to get something."&#13;
A beautiful and haunting song, "The Same Situation" describes the&#13;
feelings of a woman towards a man who is involved with other women&#13;
I've never heard Joni Mitchell in better form because every song on&#13;
this album is a winner. I'm going to pick out only the highlights of side&#13;
two, but it's really impossible because each song is a highlight in itself&#13;
"Raised on Robbery" is Joni Mitchell doing rock and roll and is also&#13;
one of the songs that is getting airplay on the radio. It opens with a few&#13;
vocal lines a sung in harmony. Then the band kicks in and the song&#13;
takes off.&#13;
A slow jazzy number, "Twisted" which even includes Cheech and&#13;
Chong doing a small bit, is a song that's really out of Joni Mitchell's&#13;
"style." It's the only song Joni didn't write and it's about a person who&#13;
thinks they're a genius and feelings about an analyst who tells them&#13;
they're crazy. The melody of the song twists and turns like the mind of&#13;
a person who is crazy and makes a perfect accompanyment for the&#13;
words. Perhaps the analyst was right.&#13;
There are four more songs on the second side and three of them&#13;
"Car on a Hill," "Down to You," and "Just Like This Train," are&#13;
gems in themselves. The other song, "Trouble Child" is good but is&#13;
overshadowed by the depth of these.&#13;
Joni Mitchell has released a dynamite album. It's lyrical and as&#13;
easy to listen to as relaxing in a favorite chair. Song after song unfolds,&#13;
each seeming to be better than the ones before it from the&#13;
beginning to the end. It's great!&#13;
(Record courtesy J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Journalism&#13;
Ranger announces a meeting&#13;
for all interested persons.&#13;
Discussions: -n ews, fe ature, &amp; sports w riting&#13;
-photography&#13;
-layout&#13;
-business a nd advertising&#13;
Times: W ed. M arch B - 3:30 p m Thurs March 7 - 10:00 am&#13;
Place: R anger o ffice, L LC 0194&#13;
Anyone t hinking o f w orking f or P arkside's&#13;
student n ewspaper is certainly i nvited.&#13;
4 SOW 7th Ave.&#13;
K...&#13;
• LEATHER GOODS: •WATER BEDS • PAPERSV&#13;
• JEWELRY. ' «BEAN BAGS , • TAPES/!&#13;
• BATH PRODUCTS "i RECORDS, - • PIPES&#13;
"Open 365 days a year"&#13;
Phone 6 54-3578 Truck On &#13;
6 THE PARKSI DE RANGER Wedne sday , Feb. 2 7 , 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 27: Varsity baseball organizational meeting at 4&#13;
p.m . in the Phy Ed Bldg. Any interested student is invited.&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 27: Whiteskellar presents Clark Anderson at 1 p.m.&#13;
No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 27: PAB sponsors the film "Billy Jack" at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission charge is 75 cents.&#13;
Thursday. Feb. 28: PAB movie in the Whiteskellar "Freaks" at 1 p.m.&#13;
No admission charged.&#13;
Friday, March 1: Vets Club paper drive in the Tallent Hall parking lot&#13;
from 8:15 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. For information call 553-2481.&#13;
Friday, March 1: Lecture and demonstration of Indian music by&#13;
Malini Sampath from 2:30 until 4 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. No&#13;
admission charged.&#13;
Friday, March 1: PAB sponsors film "Dirty Harry'" at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, March 2: Dance in the SAB at 9 p.m. Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday, March 2: PAB sponsors film "Dirty Harry" at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Sunday, March 3: Faculty concert featuring Maria Mutschler, violin,&#13;
Stephen Swedish, piano, and David Littrell, cello, at 7 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater. Admission is free.&#13;
COMIN G U P&#13;
March 14-17: Mary Chase's prize winning play "Harvey" in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater at 8 p.m. each night. Tickets are now on sale at the Information&#13;
kiosk for $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;
Brief news&#13;
All invited to party&#13;
honoring athletes&#13;
An evening of music, dancing, food and drink is being arranged to&#13;
which all members of the campus community are invited, in honor of&#13;
the fall and winter varisty sports participants. To be called "Parkside&#13;
Athletic Appreciation Night," the event will feature the Jazz Band,&#13;
conducted by Robert Thomason of the music faculty.&#13;
To be held on Sunday evening, March 10, from 7:30-11:30 p.m., the&#13;
cost is $1.50 per person. This charge will cover everything including&#13;
beer, poor boy sandwiches, cake and coffee.&#13;
Reservations are necessary and may be made at the Information&#13;
kiosk. Money must be in by March 6 to allow the coordinator of the&#13;
event, Shirley Schmerling, to arrange for proper quantities of food.&#13;
iE . 194 &amp; 50&#13;
Now Appearing,&#13;
BUS STOP&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. MARCH 1 &amp; 2&#13;
Siattoundt S $*tcUuicAe4&gt; Oun Specialty&#13;
TWIN LAKES&#13;
LE PUNKS&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. MARCH 1 &amp; 2&#13;
Returning N ext W eek!&#13;
IDES &amp; SHAMES UNION&#13;
(Ides o f M arch &amp; Cryan S hames)&#13;
EDGEWATER: Fr L, March 8&#13;
BRATSTOP: Sat., M arch 9&#13;
tor information c all 4 14-857-2011&#13;
Deadline extended for review forms&#13;
The deadline for returning responses on faculty review criteria has&#13;
been extended to this Thursday, Feb. 22. A box is available at the&#13;
Information kiosk to deposit the forms in, and copies of the form,&#13;
which was printed in the RANGER of Feb. 13, are available at the&#13;
RANGER office (LLC D194).&#13;
The two-question form was prepared by the Special Commitee on&#13;
Tenure and Promotion Policies, a faculty committee which is studying&#13;
the faculty review process. Signing the form is optional and may be&#13;
done only if the person wishes to be called by the committee to give&#13;
amplified oral testimony.&#13;
Defensive driving set for March 4&#13;
The Department of Safety and Security is again offering the&#13;
National Safety Council's Defensive Driving Course for employees or&#13;
students who have not taken the course.&#13;
The Defensive Driving Course has been a prerequisite for the&#13;
operation of all state-owned vehicles since December, 1970. Parkside&#13;
employees who intend to use state-owned vehicles are required to take&#13;
this course before permission can be granted to drive state-owned&#13;
vehicles (employees are considered to be faculty, staff or volunteer&#13;
drivers).&#13;
The course will be held at the Classroom Building, room D101 on&#13;
Saturday, March 9, 1974, starting at 9 o'clock A.M. The course should&#13;
be completed somewhere around 3 p.m.&#13;
Please submit to this department as soon as possible the names of&#13;
those individuals who will be taking the course.&#13;
Piano Trio offers free recital&#13;
™Th&#13;
,&#13;
e Parkside Piano Trio, a faculty ensemble composed of Violinist&#13;
Maria Mutschler, Cellist David Littrell and Pianist Stephen Swedish,&#13;
will present a free public program at 7:30 p.m. on Mar. 3 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater. They will play Schubert's Trio in B flat&#13;
major, Opus 99, and Brahms' Trio in B major, Opus 8.&#13;
Varsity baseball&#13;
N A meeting of all interested Varisty baseball prospects will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 27, at 4 p.m. in the Physical Education Building.&#13;
Practice and time schedules will be discussed. We will meet in the&#13;
hallway outside the wrestling room.&#13;
UW-P senior named Miss Kenosha&#13;
The new Miss Kenosha is 22 year old Connie O'Mara, a senior at UWP.&#13;
She was picked last Saturday night and will go on to compete for the&#13;
Miss Wisconsin title in Oshkosh.&#13;
Rational Behaviorisms hold seminar&#13;
A seminar, "Working With Acting-Out Adolescents: A Rational&#13;
Approach will be held on Sat., March 2, from 9 a.m. until 4:30 p m at&#13;
McCarthy Hall in Racine. Maxie C. Maultsby, Director-Psychiatric&#13;
Outpatient Clinic of the University of Kentucky Medical Center and a&#13;
leading figure in Rational Behavior Therapy will present the rational&#13;
approach to working with acting-out adolescents. Maultsby will deal&#13;
with the accurate recognition of acting-out adolescents versus antisocial,&#13;
normal, psychotic or mentally defective adolescents To&#13;
register it is necessary to send $15 to the Association of Rational&#13;
Thinkers, c-o Bette Annis, 1436 North Main Street, Racine. Further&#13;
information is available by calling 639-5967 evenings.&#13;
Marine Coras schedules reen.ltmont&#13;
The Marine Corps officer selection team will visit Parkside on&#13;
March 4th, 5th, and 6th to interview students interested in becoming&#13;
commissioned officers. The recruiters will be located in the concourse&#13;
between Greenquist and the LLC from 10 a.m. until 4 p .m. to provide&#13;
information pertaining to programs.&#13;
Racine man wint 1st d»nrPo b l a rlr bp|f&#13;
Rick Lee, Racine Sophmore, was recently promoted to nidan (first&#13;
degree black belt in karate) by Young Id Uh, Burbank, California and&#13;
President of the American Taek-Wan-Do Association.&#13;
Lee has been trained by Larry Yarber of Racine. Yarber will be&#13;
returning to California soon, turning over directorship of the school&#13;
of self defense in Racine to Lee.&#13;
Lucev visits Kenosha today&#13;
Governor Patrick J. Lucey will be in Kenosha all day today (Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 27). He will be available to answer questions in the&#13;
evening at the Italian-American hall on 52nd St. beginning at 7:30 p m&#13;
This will be a "town hall" type of meeting and is open to the public.&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16 S treet&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIP ING H OT FOODS&#13;
D E LIV E R ED TO YOUR H OME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHI CKE N&#13;
STE AKS&#13;
SEA FOO D&#13;
CHO PS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAG ANA&#13;
RAVIOL I&#13;
MOS T ACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCC HI&#13;
SPA GHE TTI&#13;
SAN DWIC HES&#13;
B O M B ERS&#13;
H A M B URG ERS&#13;
B E ER&#13;
S O FT DRIN KS&#13;
WIN ES&#13;
DYC&#13;
announces&#13;
support&#13;
for Folan&#13;
The Parkside Democratic&#13;
Youth Caucus announced last&#13;
Wednesday that they have&#13;
unanimously endorsed the aims&#13;
of The Latino and Concerned&#13;
Students for Dr. Folan Committee.&#13;
Dan Nielsen, chairperson&#13;
of the DYC stated, "we feel that&#13;
Dr. Folan is truly an outstanding&#13;
member of the Parkside faculty&#13;
and the community as a whole.&#13;
His dedication to the community,&#13;
particularly the Chicano community,&#13;
has marked him as an&#13;
invaluable asset to the University.&#13;
His termination is a&#13;
grievous mistake and an insult to&#13;
all of the students at Parkside."&#13;
CO&#13;
CD&#13;
CO&#13;
GO&#13;
3©&#13;
C"D —I CD CD 72 ••i •&#13;
GO mmmmm &#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 17, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Bill Sobanski&#13;
75'&#13;
STU. ACT. BLDG.&#13;
I.D.s REQUIRED&#13;
Cagers open p l a y o ffs&#13;
at home Thurs. night&#13;
NIU ends Rangers' regular season&#13;
P.A.B. MOVIE&#13;
Clint E astwood&#13;
DIRTY&#13;
HARRY&#13;
Fri., M arch 1 - 8 :00&#13;
Sun., M arch 3 - 7 :30&#13;
Gateway Conference champion&#13;
Milton College was selected&#13;
Sunday as the No. 1 team in the&#13;
Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
Association (WICA) playoffs&#13;
beginning Thursday.&#13;
UW-Parkside was rated second&#13;
in the voting by coaches at independent&#13;
colleges in Wisconsin&#13;
NAIA District 14. Lakeland&#13;
College was seeded third and St.&#13;
Norbert College fourth.&#13;
Milton, 18-10 after an 81-77&#13;
overtime win over Lakeland&#13;
Saturday night, will be home&#13;
Thursday night at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
against St. Norbert, 13-10.&#13;
Parkside, 13-14, will face&#13;
Lakeland, 21-5, at the UWParkside&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
Building. That game is also&#13;
slated for a 7:30 p.m. start on&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
The Milton-St. Norbert winner&#13;
will be home to the Wisconsin&#13;
State University Conference&#13;
(WSUC) runner-up UW4&#13;
Thl d i j "&#13;
UUdy» ma&#13;
rcn 4. The Parkside-Lakeland winner&#13;
will play at the site of the WSUC&#13;
champion UW-Eau Claire, that&#13;
same night. The, Monday winners&#13;
will play Wednesday, March 6,&#13;
for the NAIA District 14 championship&#13;
and the trip to the&#13;
national tournament (March 11-&#13;
16) in Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Parkside season passes are not&#13;
valid for admission to the&#13;
Thursday night game here&#13;
Admission is $2 for the general&#13;
public and $1 for all students with&#13;
I.D.'s and children.&#13;
Parkside and Lakeland have&#13;
met five times in the past, with&#13;
the Rangers sandwiching one win&#13;
in the series among four&#13;
Lakeland wins. Parkside won 118-&#13;
99 here in the 1970-71 season,&#13;
while Coach Duane "Moose"&#13;
Woltzen's Huskies won the WICA&#13;
playoff game last year at&#13;
Sheboygan, 62-55. The two teams&#13;
have not met this season. ihe 1973-74 Ranger basketball team, 1. to r.: Coach Steve Stephens, Malcolm Mahone, Bill&#13;
Sobanski, Claude Harris, Gary Cole, Rade Dimitrijevic, Don Snow, assistant coach Rudy Collum;&#13;
front row: manager John Bonaretti, Roscoe Chambers, Joe Hutter, Chuck Chambless, Cal Denson&#13;
and Jeff Gottfried.&#13;
on a sour note&#13;
Gary Cole&#13;
Parkside netman Gary Cole has been chosen as a&#13;
member of the all-WICA (Wisconsin Independent&#13;
College Association) basketball team. Cole has been a&#13;
top scorer for the Rangers all season. Chuck Chambliss&#13;
and Bill Sobanski received honorable mention.&#13;
DE KALB, 111.—UW-Parkside&#13;
fell victim to its own cold&#13;
shooting here Saturday night as&#13;
Northern Illinois of the MidAmerican&#13;
Conference ended the&#13;
Rangers' regular season by&#13;
handing Steve Stephens' crew a&#13;
65-51 setback.&#13;
Parkside shot 30 per cent from&#13;
the floor for the game, hitting on&#13;
21 of 70 shots. The NIU Huskies&#13;
couldn't do much better,&#13;
however, making 27 of 77 shots&#13;
for a 35 per cent shooting mark.&#13;
Parkside ended its regular&#13;
season at 13-14 while Northern,&#13;
with two games left on its slate,&#13;
upped its mark to 7-16. Parkside&#13;
will host Lakeland College&#13;
Thursday night at UW-P in the&#13;
Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
Association playoffs. Game time&#13;
is 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Gary Cole was again the big&#13;
man for Parkside, scoring 22&#13;
points to lead all scorers and&#13;
pulling down 15 rebounds. Bill&#13;
Sobanski, though not starting,&#13;
saw heavy action for the first&#13;
time since recovering from a&#13;
broken foot and scored 16 po ints.&#13;
NIU had four men in double&#13;
figures. Tim Bryant led with 12,&#13;
Dwayne Caldwell 11, and Pete&#13;
Valaika and John Fisher 10 each.&#13;
Valaika had 16 rebounds for the&#13;
Huskies.&#13;
Parkside played catch-up from&#13;
the start of the game and finally&#13;
tied it for the first time at 14-all&#13;
with 9:41 remaining in the first&#13;
half. The Rangers tied it again at&#13;
16 two minutes later but NIU&#13;
went ahead 18-16 with 6:24 left on&#13;
a Tim Bryant tipin and Northern&#13;
never again lost the lead. Northern&#13;
went up by seven at 27-20&#13;
with three minutes left but the&#13;
Rangers closed it to 27-24 with&#13;
1:53 remaining on two Cole free&#13;
throws and a Cole layup. NIU&#13;
pulled away in the closing minute&#13;
to make it 33-26 a t the half.&#13;
Parkside could hit on only nine&#13;
of 40 shots in the first half for a&#13;
22.5 percentage while Northern&#13;
made 13 of 31 for a 41.9 per cent&#13;
mark. NIU outrebounded&#13;
Parkside 28 to 23 in the opening&#13;
stanza.&#13;
Parkside twice closed the NIU&#13;
lead to three points, early in the&#13;
Classified&#13;
FUL L TIME EMP LOY MEN T- day shift&#13;
orderly. Contact Barbara Boren, Director of&#13;
Nursing at the Addiction Center, 2000&#13;
Domanik Drive or call 632 6141.&#13;
TUTORS WAN TED to work with migrant&#13;
Spanish speaking children after school hours&#13;
in the child's home. Si.65 pe r hour...-&#13;
maximum ten hours per week. Tutors must&#13;
be able to communicate in Spanish, Contact:&#13;
Irene Dominguez, Federal Projects,&#13;
second half as Sobanski hit on a&#13;
breakaway layup to make it 39-36&#13;
and then Cole made a 7-footer&#13;
from in the lane at 14:08 to close&#13;
the gap to 41-38.&#13;
NIU pulled away, though, with&#13;
eight straight points and had&#13;
made the score 49-38 before&#13;
Sobanski got a layup after a&#13;
three-minute Parkside scoring&#13;
drought. The Rangers could&#13;
never get closer than seven after&#13;
that and lost Cole and Chuck&#13;
Chambliss on fouls before Northern&#13;
ended the contest with a&#13;
seven point burst in the final&#13;
minute and one-half to give the&#13;
Huskies the final victory margin.&#13;
Parkside outrebounded Northern&#13;
56-52.&#13;
In JV action, NIU defeated&#13;
Parkside 71-53 as Tim Hubbard&#13;
had 15 points for the losers.&#13;
In Monday action (Feb. 18) the&#13;
Rangers defeated Oakland&#13;
University of Michigan 82-62.&#13;
N E E D E D : Girl to share la rge 3 bedroom&#13;
apartment with 2 other girls. Rent is $44 per&#13;
person, including he at (utilities extra).&#13;
Located in West Racine. Leave name and&#13;
Phone at Information desk if interested. If&#13;
this isn't possible call 632 1164 between 3-5 M&#13;
F, and be tween 9 1 Sal Ask for Betsy.&#13;
E L D E R L Y WOM AN seeking live-in&#13;
employment. Babysitting, care of an older&#13;
person, and or light housework. Contact&#13;
Mary Pearson at 5547160.&#13;
CAMER A for sale. Yashica 35mm SLR with&#13;
3 l enses and case. Call Bob a t 658-4048. &#13;
8 T H E PAR KSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, Feb. 2 7 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
The Parkside Judo Club won the team competition Sunday as they&#13;
sponsored a National Invitational Men's Collegiate Invitational Judo&#13;
Tournament. Placing first were Emiliano Contreras, White Belt-light;&#13;
and Jim Pattersen, White Belt-medium. Six judo clubs participated in&#13;
the event, with at least one Parkside competitor placing in each of the&#13;
seven divisions.&#13;
Pucksters split pair&#13;
over weekend&#13;
In hockey action over the&#13;
weekend the Parkside pucksters&#13;
scored a win and a loss. The loss&#13;
was at home on Friday against&#13;
Marquette by a score of 6-1.&#13;
Parkside's only goal came in the&#13;
first period by John Bruneau,&#13;
assisted by Jerry Madala.&#13;
In the second game against&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in Milwaukee,&#13;
Parkside won 7-3. John Culotta&#13;
scored the first goal with an&#13;
assist by Jerry Simonsen. Then&#13;
Madala got the Rangers second&#13;
hat trick of the season when he&#13;
scored three in a row. All were&#13;
assisted by Tad Ballantyne and&#13;
Culotta also helped out on the&#13;
third goal.&#13;
Bill Iserman, assisted by&#13;
Reggie Carter scored the&#13;
Rangers fifth; Ballantyne&#13;
assisted by Culotta got the sixth;&#13;
and Robin Lipske scored the&#13;
Parkside's final goal with an&#13;
assist from John Lulewicz.&#13;
The next game and last home&#13;
game will be March 8 at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena against&#13;
Whitewater. Face off is at 6 p.m.&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
team&#13;
loses&#13;
to Oshkosh&#13;
Parkside's gymnastics team&#13;
bowed to UW-Oshkosh, the NAIA&#13;
champions, in a meet at the Phy&#13;
Ed building Saturday. Oshkosh&#13;
had 143.75 points and won all&#13;
events, with Parkside taking two&#13;
seconds and a third. Kevin O'Neil&#13;
won those in the side horse, the&#13;
still rings and the parallel bars.&#13;
Fencers&#13;
better&#13;
their&#13;
record&#13;
The fencers won two contests&#13;
and lost another in a quadruple&#13;
meet at home last Saturday.&#13;
They beat the University of&#13;
Chicago 24-3 and Milwaukee Area&#13;
Technical College 26-6 and lost to&#13;
Ohio State 16-11. Parkside has a&#13;
14-4 r ecord so far this season.&#13;
In epee competition Bernie&#13;
Vash was 8-1, Mark Mulkins 6-3&#13;
and John Badtke 4-5. In foil, John&#13;
Tank was 8-1, Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
8-1 and Brett&#13;
Mandernack 5-4. In sabre, Rick&#13;
Moffett and David Bauman were&#13;
7-2 while Bill Rouse was 8-1.&#13;
The Ranger fencers will vie in&#13;
the Great Lakes tournament for&#13;
all non-Big Ten schools at Wayne&#13;
State on March 9.&#13;
The p lace t o go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and t hings!&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. schedule&#13;
Wednesday Feb. 27 Gyms open for recreation 12:30-1:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 8. Sauna 12:30-2 p.m. and 3:30-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramural basketball 8 p.m. till closing&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 28 Gyms open 10:30a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 8-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Rugby Club Practice in middle gym 8-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30-10:30 a.m. and 12:30-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 3:30-6 p.m.&#13;
Friday Mar. 1 Gyms open 10:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. volleyball in middle&#13;
court noon&#13;
Soccer Club practice in gym 8 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11 a.m.-l p.m.&#13;
Saturday Mar. 2 Gyms open 9:30-4 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30-4 p.m.&#13;
Sunday Mar. 3 Gyms open 3-6:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramurals in gyms 6:30 - c losing&#13;
Pool open 3 9:30 p.m. swim group also 7 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 3-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Monday Mar. 4 Gyms open 12:30-1:30 p.m. and middle court open 8&#13;
9:30 p.m.&#13;
Golf team practice on north court 8 p.m. till closing&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30-2 p.m. and 3:30 6 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday Mar. 5 Gym open 12:30-1:30 p.m. and middle court 8-9:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Golf team practice on north court 8 - closing&#13;
Handball courts open all day except 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 6-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Reminder: Sauna hours are the same as hours posted for pool.&#13;
Varsity athletics occupy the gyms everyday from 3:30-8 p.m.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Now you can&#13;
protect yourself&#13;
against muggers, rapists&#13;
and worse with this&#13;
amazing new whistle. Wear it&#13;
as a necklace or carry it as a key chain. Its long-range&#13;
penetrating shrill brings help in a hurry. The next dark&#13;
night (that's tonight!) you'll feel a lot safer just knowing&#13;
you have the greatest protection in the world. Gives&#13;
obscene phone callers a shrilling earful, too&#13;
GET IT BEFORE YOU HAD IT!&#13;
COME IIM OR MAIL HANDY COUPON&#13;
Yes! I w ant to be saved! Send me London-Like Whistles&#13;
Key Chain—Necklace (Number) Chrome&#13;
I e nclose $5.00 for each London-Like&#13;
Whistle. I u nderstand that if I a m not&#13;
totally satisfied, I w ill receive a complete&#13;
refund if returned in 10 days.&#13;
NAME.&#13;
Family Jewels Ltd.&#13;
3431 West Villard Avenue&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53209&#13;
STREET NUMBER.&#13;
CITY STATE.&#13;
NOW PAVING 5.4%&#13;
(Compounds Annually to 5.51%)&#13;
ON REGULAR&#13;
CRED PASSBOOK IT&#13;
UNION&#13;
THREE C ONVENIENT L OCATIONS:&#13;
U.W. Parkside - Room 219, Tallent Hall&#13;
ISO W. Chestnut St.. B urlington&#13;
52119 Washington Ave., Racine </text>
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