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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, issue 28</text>
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            <text>Disagreement on parking site continues</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>rtI!!'ns vs plants .&#13;
'.Disagreement&#13;
by Debr. Friedell&#13;
is mounting over the&#13;
~ lots which are to be&#13;
" ..... the academic complex&#13;
"'1IIIiIdi"lls.Of the two lots, the&#13;
(lUling the most uproar IS&#13;
- __ on which construction is&#13;
., in this summer, the&#13;
.~ location being east of&#13;
~nt faculty-staff lot. The&#13;
.. lot is to be located across&#13;
.... IoOP road and west of the&#13;
.. ArtS building. "::berS of the Concerned&#13;
§lIdeDt Coalition and some&#13;
~ from Parkside Village&#13;
started a watch on the area,&#13;
~1riD attempt to halt Physical&#13;
filii rrom moving or cutting&#13;
.... any trees. Jon Hug,&#13;
...... t director of Physical&#13;
AaDt attests however, that no&#13;
_ are being cut down or&#13;
_ to make way for the&#13;
,....-ed parking lot. Hug said&#13;
IIIlIlbeoolytrees being cut down&#13;
" Ibo5e which are diseased,&#13;
Ii!ad, at those which have to be&#13;
on parking site co&#13;
For various reasons some tr .&#13;
have been destroyed PO) ees 10 the old _arb • ~&#13;
above are used by PhY~i:IO~~hr;dded trees ucla Lb pidancI&#13;
an as mulcb far lnn DtH&#13;
destroYed so that others can be&#13;
pulled up and transplanted. H&#13;
stated that since last Maya':&#13;
prOJomately 200 trees had been&#13;
~ansplanted. from that particular&#13;
site (the former Schwartz nursery:&#13;
and he estimated the&#13;
survival rate at 75 percent. Hug&#13;
also stated that the trees that&#13;
"ere d trO)ed ad&#13;
shredded and usod ..&#13;
transplanted l.-&#13;
James Callra&#13;
Planning and&#13;
stated la Fndo.&#13;
so as&#13;
" ..... beiJl3&#13;
10 PI&#13;
1DO\, ...d~or~~:":~&#13;
structioo. 1u&#13;
TheParkside--- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, April 10, 1974 Vol. II No_ 28&#13;
AHirmative action&#13;
still being reviewed&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
PIrbIde is in the process of reviewing and&#13;
..... its written Affirmative Action program.&#13;
"'-diDI1o Rita Tallent, assistant to the Chan-&#13;
.. 1be completed "working copy" has satisfied&#13;
ItItAffirmative Action components outlined by&#13;
c.ruAdministration. The next step, says Tallent,&#13;
10 analyze problems we have presently in im-&#13;
.......... tion and what we plan on doing to remedy&#13;
~ems." However, there is no set date for&#13;
;.::::.'" the "prepared written copy" on AI-&#13;
.-." :,&lt;,tion, Tallent says.&#13;
IleanwbUe, monitoring procedures are being&#13;
~byJoseph Altwell, special assistant to the&#13;
a.ceuor for Affirmative Action. Attwell plans to&#13;
~~ permanent committee to "hear grievances&#13;
'-uft to employment practices, or what may&#13;
.... '0 be disCJ:'iminatory practices." The make-&#13;
"&#13;
oIl11lacommiltee is not yet decided upon.&#13;
TlJle,t comments that the development of the&#13;
..... tive Action committee will "strengthen"&#13;
~ly existing search-screen committees&#13;
~ .... g at the department level.&#13;
1It4~ Norwood. Dean of the College of Science ",::,ety, calls this method used to locate can-&#13;
__ .for appoIDtment, "complicated and cum-&#13;
-.~ but necessary,"&#13;
Good Faith Effort&#13;
.\lt1loI1feels that as a "good faith effort" to hire&#13;
~ 'IiOmen and minorities, "applicants for&#13;
shall be recruited only after a full&#13;
~.~ or Lhe~r qualifications and the vacant&#13;
'-dV""", IS SUbmItted and approved by his office&#13;
~ Chancellor Otto Bauer. Attwell will also be&#13;
~ all division and department heads to&#13;
"-iao to !he Affirmative Aetion office "brief and&#13;
~ sta~e:nents of their present practices&#13;
~ g hlr~ng. promotions, annual salary in-&#13;
~rmlnations or employment, and other&#13;
.........- presently in use which affect or relate to ~orreco '. ~ grlltlOn of tenure or permanent status&#13;
e.,;Jees of all catagories." .&#13;
S,C:; cur~e~t statistics of sexual and ~aclal&#13;
"men arkslde S total academic area conslsts of&#13;
....... ll (15.9 percent) of which 18 members (10.9&#13;
~t blare faculty. Minorities are listed as "two&#13;
blatt :Ck and.5 percent Latinos." Parkside has&#13;
1llo d:cUlty member.&#13;
~ haSSlfled staff, which includes 196 ern-&#13;
~12';'. s aratio of 44.9 percent female. There&#13;
"tai~orlt1es in civil service: eight are black;&#13;
~ &amp;~o~ an American Indian; and three are&#13;
~ 'llUerlcans.&#13;
on various "important" campus comare&#13;
12 female faculty members. On&#13;
system-wide committees ar.e three&#13;
faculty women and two academic staff "omen&#13;
Tallent says that the membership of mmoriues on&#13;
committees is "too smal and scattered" to&#13;
estimate.&#13;
Hiring Goals&#13;
Institutional hiring goals are set at ~3 for thJs&#13;
biennium, with 28 open positions in facuh) or "'-h.icb&#13;
14 are in the College of Science and Society Tbtre&#13;
are four anticipated minonty hlnngs. To date. ~&#13;
blacks have been hired: the ·1 lant alhletlc&#13;
director; a librarian; and Attwell. ......-0 mlDonty&#13;
faculty members are to be brought on campus thJs&#13;
fall. One will be a black instructor in the Engl&#13;
discipline.&#13;
The recruitment goals Cor women are set at 11&#13;
five in the College; one in the School of lodftn&#13;
Industry; and five in other academiC upport.&#13;
During this operating budget. four facull) "'Om&#13;
and three academic support ",omen ha~e&#13;
hired.&#13;
Tallent believes that Park~lde ha • e"C.ceU&#13;
prospects for hiring ~nd es.timaung the num r (&#13;
vacancies" over thiS eXlstmg biennIUm A&#13;
TalJent wants to clanfy that '"th eo ..-.omen and&#13;
minorities presenUy hired "eren't n ~I,&#13;
hired under institutional goals"&#13;
Tallent says that twice adjustrnen ba\&#13;
made when it was learned women Cacult~ ,,~not&#13;
getting paid on an equal baSI. '" Ith theIr ma~&#13;
counterparts of the same rank Dunn~ t9io-;t and&#13;
1971-72 a total or SI1.ZiJ in adjustments ",ere \&#13;
to 31 women _ In 1973. S1.200 10 mmor tal") ad·&#13;
justments were paid to four '" omen In addlUon&#13;
Tallent comments that one mlfJont) farol)'&#13;
member was granted a salary adJustmffit Coc W&#13;
1971-72 school year.&#13;
Cite Communit)' .\odion PrOjKt&#13;
Another component of Park. Ide' ",nUen Af·&#13;
firmatlve Action program refers to community&#13;
action projects. ha to&#13;
A section oC this compcment stat~ t t a C'e'.m;w&#13;
of the Latin populatIOn In the RaclOe area I bell~&#13;
t&#13;
· cd as an independent tud~ project tJ,&#13;
con lOU • de t . CO&lt; perauon . hteen of UW-Parkside s stu n s If) )&#13;
elg&#13;
th the Spanish Center. the porjecll directed b:-&#13;
~,liI1iam Folan. assistant proCessor of ..\n~ropoJ (&#13;
d Stauros Daoutis. assistant pro e5S-or&#13;
an . ., The report. though. does not commeat&#13;
SocI010~" and Folan's proposed termlnallon~ nor&#13;
~~h~~~~~r not the Latm popuJation cenS1JS 'A-ouId&#13;
continue afterwa;~~ntions further that Soclol~&#13;
ThE" compon: McKeown and tudent Sen·lces&#13;
pro~:~~ ~~~'11e Ramirez are deahn~ ""th ~.&#13;
spe COftfln~d on It"" )&#13;
Teaching awards&#13;
deliberations begin&#13;
The&#13;
~;a.a~I';&#13;
~ of .... """""&#13;
Pa&#13;
A&#13;
porklng vs plants ~.&#13;
prsagreement on park·&#13;
by Debra Friedel! I n g n is mounting over the&#13;
~ing lots which are to be&#13;
par r the academic complex oea 1 t,ui)dings Of the two ots, ~e&#13;
cau ing the most uprt~ar !s on which construe 10n 1s&#13;
begin this sun:imer, the&#13;
~ location bemg east of&#13;
resent faculty-staff lot. The&#13;
P Jot is to be located across&#13;
loOP road and west of the&#13;
rts building.&#13;
embers of the Concerned&#13;
ent coalition and some&#13;
ts from Parkside Village&#13;
estarted a watch on the area,&#13;
irill attempt to halt Physical&#13;
nt from moving or cutting&#13;
For various rea on ome tr&#13;
have been destroyed. Pi! of hr&#13;
above are used by Ph:y ical Pl&#13;
any trees. Jon Hug,&#13;
ant director of Physical&#13;
nt attests however, that no&#13;
'are being cut down or&#13;
ed to make way for the&#13;
parking lot. Hug said&#13;
the only trees being cut down&#13;
those which are diseased,&#13;
, or those which have to be&#13;
destroyed so that others can be&#13;
pulled up and transpJanted. Hug&#13;
stat~ that since last fay approximately&#13;
200 trees had been&#13;
~ansplanted from that particular&#13;
site (the former Schwartz nursery?&#13;
and he estimated the&#13;
survival rate at 75 percent. Hug&#13;
also stated that the tree that&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
Wednesday, April 10, 1974 Vol. 11&#13;
Affirmative action&#13;
still being reviewed&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Parkside is in the process of reviewing and&#13;
mg its written Affirmative Action program.&#13;
ding to Rita Tallent, assistant to the Chanr,&#13;
the completed "working copy" has satisfied&#13;
10 Affirmative Action components outlined by&#13;
tral Administration. The next step, says Tallent,&#13;
to ··analyze problems we have presently in imtation&#13;
and what we plan on doing to remedy&#13;
problems." However, there is no set date for&#13;
mg the "prepared written copy" on Afti\'e&#13;
~ction, Tallent says.&#13;
nwh1le, monitoring procedures are being&#13;
ed by Joseph Attwell, special assistant to the&#13;
ceUor for Affirmative Action. Attwell plans to&#13;
tea permanent committee to "hear grievances&#13;
tne to employment practices, or what may&#13;
rto be discriminatory practices." The makeflhi&#13;
committee is not yet decided upon.&#13;
Tallent comments that the development of the&#13;
rrnative Action committee will "strengthen"&#13;
IJOrtedly existing search-screen committees&#13;
ling at the department level.&#13;
'orwood, Dean of the College of Science&#13;
iety, calls this method used to locate canfor&#13;
appointment, "complicated and cum- m but necessary."&#13;
Good Faith Effort&#13;
"' ll f('(')s that as a "good faith effort" to hire&#13;
\\omen and minorities "applicants for ion h • all be recruited only after a full&#13;
'Pll n of their qualifications and the vacant on".&#13;
\ 1 submitted and approved by his office&#13;
ice Chancellor Otto Bauer. Attwell will also be&#13;
ring all division and department heads to&#13;
rd to the Affirmative Action office "brief and&#13;
rdin sta~ements of their present practi~es&#13;
g h1r1ng, promotions annual salary m-&#13;
, terminations or employment, and other&#13;
ures presently in use which affect or relate to&#13;
prr recognition of tenure or permanent status&#13;
Y of all catagories."&#13;
on current statistics of sexual and racial&#13;
rn · Parkside's total academic area consists of&#13;
fnt~n 115 9 percent l of which 18 members &lt; 10.9&#13;
t bre faculty. Minorities are listed as "two&#13;
ck ~ck and .5 percent Latinos.·• Parkside has&#13;
acuity member.&#13;
~ 1fiect staff, which includes 196 em12&#13;
~ a _a ratio of 44.9 percent female. There&#13;
:orities in civil service: eight are black;&#13;
h 1\ to~ an American Indian ; and three are ... 1 rnericans ••In . g on various "important" campus comII&#13;
?re 12 female faculty members. On&#13;
} system-wide committees are three&#13;
faculty women and two academic&#13;
Tallent says that the member hip f mm&#13;
committees is ''too ma! and ered"&#13;
estimate.&#13;
Hirin Goal&#13;
Tea&#13;
de&#13;
• I ec&#13;
ad &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, April 10, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
'--------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Losstoo great&#13;
to build lot&#13;
Many questions arise over the issue of parking lots,&#13;
related environmental reports, cutting down and&#13;
transplanting of trees, and so on. It is a situation where&#13;
irrelevant things appear important at times and&#13;
relevant questions can be easily overlooked. The felling&#13;
of trees, for example, is apparently a separate matter&#13;
from the construction of a lot on the same site. But the&#13;
question of whether the lot is needed, or needed there, is&#13;
obvlousl y a central concern.&#13;
RANGER does not have any answers to the myriad of&#13;
questions which occur to us. We do not have the expertise&#13;
to begin to talk about drainage or expenditures&#13;
or other complex facets. But we are of the opinion that it&#13;
would be a very poor maneuver to put a parking lot&#13;
where it is proposed now, adjacent to the temporary&#13;
faculty-staff lot. It is our feeling that no land which is&#13;
presently being used for research by life science classes&#13;
and Is also valuable aesthetically should in any way be&#13;
marred, destroyed and covered with asphalt.&#13;
If indeed additional space Is needed for parking, we&#13;
urge the Office of Planning and Construction to closely&#13;
examine alternative sites, especially near Tallent Hall&#13;
and the lower east lot. More remote parking, of course,&#13;
means expanded shuttle bus service, but such service&#13;
would have to remain on a certain level anyway, since&#13;
even with some close-in parking it will still be necessary&#13;
for many to park down the hill.&#13;
RANGER also urges the University to do thorough&#13;
research into mass transit from the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
areas. In the past Parkside has done almost nothing to&#13;
help the Vets Club with its running of the Racine bus. It&#13;
is defeatist and unreasonable to now destroy valuable&#13;
land, trees, and wildlife to add parking spots if they will&#13;
stand empty a few years hence.&#13;
RANGE R encourages those with decision-making&#13;
power not to bow to the whims of a few and to keep in&#13;
mind at all times that our campus is located on 700acres&#13;
of some of the most beautiful land in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin. We must never forfeit environment and&#13;
aesthetics for convenience. The community does not pay&#13;
the tuition nor does the faculty. The students here are&#13;
concerned about where their parking lots are situated.&#13;
Pride in a university and its programs is what makes a&#13;
university grow, not acres of blacktop near its academic&#13;
complex. Convenience is no good if what is convenient&#13;
isn't attractive, and inconvenience can be outweighed&#13;
by considerations of excellence in the institution itself&#13;
and what else it has to offer.&#13;
i,L.The Pn...altl_- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
T'ht- P.rksldr R.n.u ISpubhshN ~eekJy throughout the ac.demic&#13;
ye-ar b&gt; the studmts 01 The- UnIVersity 0( Wisconsm.Parkslde,&#13;
Kenosha ....eceesm 53140 OCfices are localed It 0-194 l.Jbrary.&#13;
wllmu'C Center. Telephone cut» »3.2295&#13;
~ P.rUlde Ranier IS In In~pendent n~p.aper Opinions&#13;
renected In column.. and tclltorl.ls Ire not necessarily the offiCial&#13;
~n\lo 0' The Um ....ersJty 01 WlsconStn.P.rlutde&#13;
teuen 101M Editor an ef1counted "!llette" on Iny subjeCt of&#13;
Intertst to students '.culty or staff must be COOrlnN to 2SO words or&#13;
Itss typed -.nd dc..lbl~spac:ed The ecbtot'l reserve the nlht to edit&#13;
leUeni for lencth and Iood tAste All J~ten must be Siined and Include&#13;
addrm phonf'number and student sta tUt or faculty rank :-Oames will&#13;
be Withheld upon request The editOrs reserve the nih I to refuse 10&#13;
prInt any letlers&#13;
IE:DllO. IN CHIEF JII"4I M Sct'lhHmlln&#13;
MANAGING !EDITOR TMmIil J ~te""f'1&#13;
HEWS EDITOA: Hlln.., HtdcIon&#13;
FIATURE EDITOR o.tw. Fnedotll&#13;
COpy EDllOR R.be&lt;u EclllllftCt&#13;
WRITEIU S.nclIy ."s&lt;~Kllnu'"yf'I .e.,,_ M,e,,"1 01''''111. Mllr,'.,.n Schubert. Oebbt. 5fTllnd.&#13;
W..11Ultlr,ch', Coin''' W.r4. M,ke WInslow&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS AIl... Frlldr'dr.~. Oebo'eFnedell, DebOyScen1en .•• yWIIld ••&#13;
ARTIST limy c"ndllrj. Oft""y Kroll&#13;
'USINESS MANAGeR St...... Joftf'lSOft&#13;
AQVe-'TISIHG MolHAGE. K.n Pftrtla&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I read with utter disbelief your&#13;
article and editorials concerning&#13;
the Safety and Security affair. It&#13;
was without a doubt one of the&#13;
most disgusting displays ?f&#13;
"journalism" I have ever Witnessed.&#13;
When you, Schliesman&#13;
and Olszyk, graduate fro~&#13;
Parkside U., I'm sure you Will&#13;
have no problem finding jobs&#13;
with the Manchester, New&#13;
Hampshire News. It loves your&#13;
kind of journalism.&#13;
Just 4 years ago, an editor of a&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Iam writing to say that faculty&#13;
should not be in the business of&#13;
firing faculty. It is the job of&#13;
faculty to make administration&#13;
Jive up to fair rules and&#13;
procedures. It is administration's&#13;
job to apply the rules for&#13;
dismissals.&#13;
The comic strip character&#13;
Charlie Brown always says,&#13;
"You need all or the friends you&#13;
can gel."&#13;
Example--after summarily&#13;
firing 104 tenured and nontenured&#13;
faculty members on the&#13;
basis of a declared state of fiscal&#13;
emergency, the Administration&#13;
of Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondale&#13;
has filed suit against&#13;
the fired faculty in circuit court,&#13;
seeking a declaratory judgement&#13;
on the legality of the dismissals.&#13;
Example--Mr. Donald K.&#13;
Smith, Senior Vice President of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System wrote: (March 29, 1974&#13;
letter)&#13;
"Weare trying to draw as clear&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Faculty should never do the&#13;
dirty work of the administration.&#13;
To engage in the firing of a&#13;
collegue is canabilism and this is&#13;
especially true if he is a member&#13;
of your faculty union. Your job is&#13;
to protect him, to see that the&#13;
procedures of the administration&#13;
are just. If you take on this task&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Irecently wrote about the poor&#13;
attendance in some classes at&#13;
Parkside, My premise was (and&#13;
still is) that it's the student's&#13;
responsibility to attend classes&#13;
regularly and that it is the&#13;
professor's obligation to interest&#13;
and motivate students who, in&#13;
good faith. signed up for the&#13;
Course. I maintain that good&#13;
teachers will have good attendance.&#13;
As a remedy to what Iconsider&#13;
a deplorable situation, I&#13;
suggested that attendance&#13;
records be kept in all classes and&#13;
that senior faculty members&#13;
check up on their collegues whose&#13;
classes are poorly attended and&#13;
find out what is being done (or not&#13;
being done) which induces absenteeism.&#13;
But now I've learned&#13;
that some of the classes with the&#13;
poorest attendance are presided&#13;
over by the elite ... Le.. those who&#13;
have been anointed with the Oil of&#13;
Tenure and the idea of one&#13;
tenured person trespassing on the&#13;
domain of one of the brethren to&#13;
poss,bly find out Why a class is&#13;
falling apart is, in the opinion of&#13;
some. just about the most&#13;
reYolting idea ever to hit this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Then I thought that maybe&#13;
some of nur Vice Ohancellors,&#13;
Deans. and-or Department&#13;
Madison newspaper went to jail&#13;
protecting his sources, as have&#13;
numerous others. Court cases&#13;
involving the right to protect&#13;
sources have been fought to the&#13;
Supreme Court, and .won.&#13;
You write With calm&#13;
deliberation how you arrived at&#13;
your agonizing decision to stab&#13;
Krogh and Atkins in their backs.&#13;
Then you stress that your pape,~&#13;
"cannot be bought or coerced.&#13;
What Balderdash! The information&#13;
you received was&#13;
public, or should have been. If&#13;
a line as possible between fiscal&#13;
emergency procedures and&#13;
procedures for dismissal for&#13;
cause. This means we are&#13;
sticking with an effort (reinforced&#13;
substantially) to limit the&#13;
grounds for reconsideration, and&#13;
with the idea that reconsideration&#13;
is not an adversariaJ hearing, but&#13;
is a fact-finding review. We have&#13;
also added a level of review&#13;
beyond the ChanceJlor to escape&#13;
from the circularity of making&#13;
the Chancellor the final judge of&#13;
the merit of his initial decision."&#13;
Note: This means, in fact,&#13;
there is no one who has privilege&#13;
to the realization of tenure.&#13;
In accordance with the policy&#13;
adopted by the Board of Regents&#13;
on March 8, 1974 concerning&#13;
fiscal emergency, and pursuant&#13;
to application of the categories of&#13;
authorized personnel&#13;
designations defined, administrative&#13;
guidelines and&#13;
timetable for implementation are&#13;
just once you have established a&#13;
precedent--and the administration&#13;
will ask you to do its&#13;
dirty work again and again.&#13;
Perhaps, this time, your personal&#13;
dislike for your collegue gives&#13;
you an opportunity to get rid of&#13;
someone you hate. The next time,&#13;
however, you are likely to be&#13;
asked to fire someone you like,&#13;
Chairpersons might have the&#13;
interest and time to look in on the&#13;
teachers with only half a class&#13;
present but I struck out there,&#13;
too. They. too, are among the&#13;
Lords anointed with their own&#13;
inhibitions. No trespassing.&#13;
Furthermore, the Vice Chancellors,&#13;
Deans, et aI, are kept&#13;
very busy receiving and filing&#13;
student input. monitoring the&#13;
publication scores of other&#13;
faculty people, attending&#13;
me~tings, evaluating situations,&#13;
s~ttm~ standards and iSSUing&#13;
dIrectives. Incidentally, Some of&#13;
these upper-echelon people got&#13;
where they are because of their&#13;
excellent teaching ability and a&#13;
couple of them continue to teach&#13;
a class or two because they enjoy&#13;
teaching. Ithink that it would be&#13;
a good idea to require every&#13;
administrator to teach at least&#13;
one class a semester, not only for&#13;
the good of the students but also&#13;
to show how teaching should be&#13;
done and to keep in touch with&#13;
what is going on.&#13;
Well anyway, several students&#13;
button-holed me and asked&#13;
questions such as, "What '5 this&#13;
tenure bUSiness all about?" I told&#13;
the&gt;Ol.that tenure is sort of job&#13;
secunty and that it's very important&#13;
to the indiVidual and to&#13;
th&lt;.'institution that person serves&#13;
(1\'&lt;.' want&lt;.'d job security all or&#13;
you were too frightened 1&#13;
b . 0 f,....&#13;
an 0 VIOUS problem . ""&#13;
university, then you 1\thll&#13;
simply have destroy ~ °uId&#13;
material. To turn st~ t~&#13;
deplorable. g, "&#13;
Either you two are lack .&#13;
incredibly incompetent. It:&#13;
to believe you are both. In eilber&#13;
~ase y~u are a disgrace to&#13;
journalism profession. UIt&#13;
Man ZeboiJ&#13;
RaCine'tudoo!&#13;
to be followed by all campu",&#13;
The Job of adminislralioo I&#13;
being done--it needs no helpfaculty&#13;
needs help. Getting Ibt&#13;
faculty to organize i' dilllllJl&#13;
business. Faculty should ....&#13;
that no group can survive wIiIr&#13;
dealing in the business 0/ klIIq&#13;
off its own members.&#13;
In closing, I should like to '"&#13;
that faculty would do well to It!&#13;
at the business of Pl'OYidil&#13;
maximum support for retI'....&#13;
reassignment, or relocatioai&#13;
faculty affected by Jll!I1OIIIIl&#13;
decisions.&#13;
I am sure you would wisII,.1&#13;
do, that a fair determinatiallaf&#13;
the faculty's position be made. b&#13;
is solely in this spirit that J ...&#13;
this reminder to your atteatial&#13;
Kind regards.&#13;
Most sincenIJ&#13;
John Mack.1'Il1l&#13;
Wisconsin Education ~&#13;
Council, ConsullaJllto&#13;
HighEcl..,.lIlII&#13;
and the administration .,&#13;
demand consistency. The ody&#13;
question is whether the raaaItY&#13;
member is competent in blilleM&#13;
No faculty has any reason 10&#13;
expect a "loving" relat'"&#13;
among themselves.&#13;
JamesF&#13;
ChapterP ......&#13;
WEAC--UW-PlatleVlilr&#13;
my lire and finally figured 0'"&#13;
way to get it. Iwent intobu~~&#13;
for rnyself.) Then some orm) to'&#13;
rappers pitched curves b)' ,.&#13;
why some darn good teachersart&#13;
let go while others stay put.;::&#13;
led into a diSCUSSIonor tea.......&#13;
and their abilities. We ~&#13;
that there are some ~&#13;
around here who are subJtd&#13;
smart and teaching-dull I ~&#13;
to know. I have taken 28 C(lI&#13;
Irom 20 different raculty ~&#13;
since the summer of 1970~&#13;
those twenty I graded 3 "\'/0&#13;
"Superior" ... 3 were 'Itf't&#13;
good" ... 4 were "GrJQd" .. 6 'trt&#13;
"Fair to middlin''' .. and4''abt&#13;
"Duds." Just whHt ISrntG'&#13;
Quality Control Depart (Ilfl&#13;
~rolU1d here that watcheS&#13;
teaching st.,;!!,,? L ....&#13;
• .....("!i ...&#13;
Some of my questlO'''' n"&#13;
gripes but I lopped them "of lJll&#13;
one of my own. One ~&#13;
"Superiors" was an In tfaIS&#13;
back in 1970. Since thE'fl&#13;
persoll has completed" PhDtIU6&#13;
a dissertation three IOChe'11 ,n And that persoll is sll ..!JoJI'&#13;
structur. And one of my illS '&#13;
was. back in 1970 {andSl1tenurt "full" professor. "1m&#13;
teaches two afternoons • • dtgrtt&#13;
and still has only a B_A on tilt&#13;
That B.A.cr is also ~il&#13;
EX(,{,lltive commlll,e~&#13;
Con,,"ued on p"&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, April 10, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
'---------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Loss too great&#13;
to build lot&#13;
Many questions arise over the issue of parking lots,&#13;
r I ted environmental reports, cutting down and&#13;
transplanting of trees, and so on. It is a situation where&#13;
irr I vant things appear important at times and&#13;
r I vant questions can be easily overlooked. The felling&#13;
of tr s, for e ample, is apparently a separate matter&#13;
from th construction of a lot on the same site. But the&#13;
qu stion of whether the lot Is needed, or needed there, is&#13;
obviously a central concern.&#13;
RA GER does not have any answers to the myriad of&#13;
qu stlons r.-hich occur to us. We do not have the expertise&#13;
to begin to talk about drainage or expenditures&#13;
or other complex facets. But we are of the opinion that it&#13;
would be a very poor maneuver to put a parking lot&#13;
wh re It is proposed now, adjacent to the temporary&#13;
f culty-staff lot. It Is our feeling that no land which is&#13;
presently being used for research by life science classes&#13;
and Is also valuable aesthetically should in any way be&#13;
marred, destroyed and covered with asphalt.&#13;
If indeed additional space is needed for parking, we&#13;
urg the Office of Planning and Construction to closely&#13;
examine alternative sites, especially near Tallent Hall&#13;
and the lower east lot. More remote parking, of course,&#13;
means expanded shuttle bus service, but such service&#13;
would have to remain on a certain level anyway, since&#13;
even with some close-in parking it will still be necessary&#13;
for many to park down the hill.&#13;
RANGER also urges the University to do thorough&#13;
research in o mass transit from the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
ar as. In he past Parkside has done almost nothing to&#13;
help the Vets Club with its running of the Racine bus. It&#13;
is defeatist and unreasonable to now destroy valuable&#13;
land, trees, and wildlife to add parking spots if they will&#13;
stand empty a few years hence.&#13;
RANGER encourages those with decision-making&#13;
power not to bow to the whims of a few and to keep in&#13;
mind at all times that our campus is located on 700 acres&#13;
of some of the most beautiful land in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin. We must never forfeit environment and&#13;
aesthetics for convenience. The community does not pay&#13;
the tuition nor does the faculty. The students here are&#13;
concerned about where their parking lots are situated.&#13;
Pride In a university and its programs is what makes a&#13;
university grow, not acres of blacktop near its academic&#13;
complex. Convenience is no good if what is convenient&#13;
isn't attractive, and inconvenience can be outweighed&#13;
by considerations of excellence in the institution itself&#13;
nd what else it has to otter.&#13;
!-Jr.. n. Pn•lkl••-----&#13;
RA NG ER&#13;
O.twa Fr~II&#13;
elle&lt;ca Ee ~&#13;
r l, O.nny roll&#13;
Sr ve J '°"&#13;
TISING MANAG I(.., Pfl a&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I read with utter disbelief Y?ur&#13;
article and editorials concerning&#13;
the afety and Security affair. It&#13;
was without a doubt one of the&#13;
most disgusting displays ?f&#13;
"journalism• I have ever w1tne&#13;
·sed When you, Schliesman&#13;
and Olszvk. graduate from&#13;
Parkside U .. I'm sure you will&#13;
ha,·e no problem finding jobs ...&#13;
with the Manchester, New&#13;
llamp!&gt;hire . ·ews. It loves your&#13;
kind of journalism&#13;
Just 4 years ago, an editor of a&#13;
To the editor: I am writing to ay that faculty&#13;
. hould not be in the business of&#13;
firing faculty. It is the job of&#13;
faculty to make administration&#13;
live up to fair rules and&#13;
procedures. It is administration's&#13;
job to apply the rules for&#13;
di mis ·als.&#13;
The comic trip character&#13;
Charlie Brown always says,&#13;
"You need all of the friends you&#13;
can get."&#13;
Example--after summarily&#13;
firing 104 tenured and nontenured&#13;
faculty members on the&#13;
ba i of a declared state of fiscal&#13;
emergency, the Administration&#13;
of ~ uthern Illinois niversityCarbondale&#13;
has filed suit against&#13;
the fired faculty in circuit court,&#13;
·eeking a declaratory judgement&#13;
on the legality of the dismissals.&#13;
Example--1\lr. Donald K.&#13;
mith. enior Vice President of&#13;
the L ni versity of Wisconsin&#13;
~ tern wrote: C larch 29. 1974&#13;
letter I&#13;
.. We are trying to draw as clear&#13;
To the editor·&#13;
Facultv should never do the&#13;
dirt,· work of the administration.&#13;
To ·engage in the firing of a collegue is canabilism and this is&#13;
especially true if he is a member&#13;
of your faculty union. Your job is&#13;
to protect him, to see that the&#13;
procedures of the administration&#13;
are ju t. If you take on this task&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I recently wrote about the poor&#13;
attendance in some classes at&#13;
Park ide . . ly premise was ! and&#13;
·till is) that it's the student's&#13;
responsibility to attend classes&#13;
regularly and that it is the&#13;
professor's obligation to interest&#13;
and moti\'ate tudents who, in&#13;
good faith. igned up for the&#13;
course I maintain that good&#13;
teacher will have good attendanc;e&#13;
&#13;
As a remedy to what I consider&#13;
a deplorable situation , I&#13;
:ugge ted that attendance&#13;
records be kept in all clas es and&#13;
that enior faculty members&#13;
check up on their collegues whose&#13;
cla. es are poorly attended and&#13;
find out what is being done Cor not&#13;
being done) which induces ab-&#13;
·enteei m. But now I've learned&#13;
that . ome of the classes with the&#13;
poorest attendance are presided&#13;
m·er b:,: the elite ... i.e .. those who&#13;
ha \'e been anointed with the Oil of&#13;
Tenure and the idea of one&#13;
tenured per on trespa ing on the&#13;
domain of one of the brethren to&#13;
po ibly find out why a clas is&#13;
falling apart i . m the opinion of&#13;
. ome. just about the most&#13;
rernltmg idea e\'er to hit thi l'ampu •.&#13;
Then l thought that maybe&#13;
ome of our \'ice ancell~r&#13;
Dean.. and-or Department&#13;
Madison newspaper went to jail&#13;
protecting his sources, as have&#13;
numerous others. Court cases&#13;
involving the right to protect&#13;
sources have been fought to the&#13;
Supreme Court, and _won .&#13;
You write with calm&#13;
deliberation how you arrived at&#13;
your agonizing decision_ to stab&#13;
Krogh and Atkins in their backs.&#13;
Then you stress that your pape,~&#13;
"cannot be bought or coerced.&#13;
What Balderdash! The information&#13;
you received was&#13;
public, or should have been. If&#13;
a line as possible between fiscal&#13;
emergency procedures and&#13;
procedures for dismissal for&#13;
cause. This means we are&#13;
sticking with an effort (reinforced&#13;
substantially) to limit the&#13;
grounds for reconsidera~ion, ~nd&#13;
with the idea that recons1derat10n&#13;
is not an adversarial hearing, but&#13;
is a fact-finding review. We have&#13;
also added a level of review&#13;
beyond the Chancellor to escape&#13;
from the circularity of making&#13;
the Chancellor the final judge of&#13;
the merit of his initial decision ."&#13;
ote: This means, in fact,&#13;
there is no one who has privilege&#13;
to the realization of tenure.&#13;
In accordance with the policy&#13;
adopted by the Board of Regents&#13;
on March 8, 1974 concerning&#13;
fiscal emergency, and pursuant&#13;
to application of the categories of&#13;
authorized personnel&#13;
designations defined, administrative&#13;
guidelines and&#13;
timetable for implementation are&#13;
just once you have established a&#13;
precedent--and the administration&#13;
will ask you to do its&#13;
dirty work again and again.&#13;
Perhaps, this time, your personal&#13;
dislike for your collegue gives&#13;
you an opportunity to get rid of&#13;
someone you hate. The next time,&#13;
however, you are likely to be&#13;
asked to fire someoae you like,&#13;
Chairpersons might have the&#13;
interest and time to look in on the&#13;
teachers with only half a class&#13;
present but I struck out there,&#13;
too. They. too, are among the&#13;
Lords anointed with their own&#13;
inhibitions. No trespassing.&#13;
Furthermore, the Vice Chancellors,&#13;
Deans, et al, are kept&#13;
very busy receiving and filing&#13;
student input, monitoring the&#13;
publication scores of other&#13;
faculty people, attending&#13;
m~tings, evaluating situations,&#13;
setting standards and issuing&#13;
directives. Incidentally, some of&#13;
these upper-echelon people got&#13;
where they are because of their&#13;
excellent teaching ability and a&#13;
couple of them continue to teach&#13;
a clas_s or two because they enjoy&#13;
teachmg. I think that it would be&#13;
a good idea to require every&#13;
administrator to teach at least&#13;
one class a semester, not only for&#13;
the good of the students but also&#13;
to show how teaching should be&#13;
done and to keep in touch with what i going on .&#13;
Well anyway. several students&#13;
button -holed me and a-sked&#13;
questions such as. "What ·s this&#13;
tenure busine s all about?" J told&#13;
them _ that tenure is sort of job&#13;
security and that it's very important&#13;
to the individual and to&#13;
the institution that person serves. 1 l'\'e wanted job security all of&#13;
you wer~ too frightened 10 an obvious problem . . . In lb um vers1 ty, then you h&#13;
simply have destroyed 0&#13;
material. To turn too 1&#13;
deplorable. g&#13;
Either you two are lack&#13;
incredibly incompetent. 1 e)&#13;
to believe you are both. In ei&#13;
~ase y~u are a disgrace 10 Journalism profession.&#13;
Matt&#13;
Racine tu&#13;
to be followed by all camp&#13;
The job of administration&#13;
being done--it needs no h&#13;
faculty needs help. Getting&#13;
faculty to organize is di((&#13;
business. Faculty should ~&#13;
that no group can survive&#13;
dealing in the business of kill&#13;
off its own members.&#13;
In closing, I should like lo&#13;
that faculty would do well to&#13;
at the business of prov1&#13;
maximum support for retra~&#13;
reassignment, or relocation&#13;
faculty affected by perSOOJltl&#13;
decisions.&#13;
I am sure you would wi h, I&#13;
do, that a fair determinatioo of&#13;
the faculty's position be made I&#13;
is solely in this spirit that I&#13;
this reminder to your atten&#13;
Kind regards.&#13;
Most sincml&#13;
John Mack, Wisconsin Education Associa&#13;
Council, Consultant&#13;
HighEducati&#13;
and the administration •&#13;
demand consistency. The&#13;
question is whether the !a .&#13;
member is competent in hi fifW&#13;
No faculty has any rea&#13;
expect a "loving" relali&#13;
among themselves.&#13;
JamesF&#13;
Chapter Pres1&#13;
WEAC--UW-Platt&#13;
my life and finally figured out 1&#13;
way to get it. I went into b:J• ~&#13;
for myself.) Then some of m)&#13;
rappers pitched cur\'e b) a&#13;
why some darn good teachers&#13;
let go while other~ stay put cbt'fS&#13;
led into a discussion of tea&#13;
and their abilities. We a&#13;
that there are some&#13;
around here who are ub&#13;
smart and teaching-dull I&#13;
to know. I have taken 28C&lt;Kl&#13;
from 20 different faculty&#13;
since the summer of 19i&#13;
those twenty I graded 3 as,\&#13;
"Superior" ... 3 were&#13;
good" d" 611 ... 4 were "Gr-0 •·&#13;
"Fair to middlin' ·· . ao&lt;l 4 1 "Duds." Just whtre 1&#13;
Quality Control Oepartl!l&#13;
::round here that watclleS&#13;
teaching ,,;_,pc;;?&#13;
Some of my que:;tior.r 1111 gripes but I topped them 8 f&#13;
one of my own Ont' 0&#13;
··superiors" was an In 1&#13;
back in 1970. Since th~ 11&#13;
person has completed 3 P th&#13;
a dissertation three 1ncht'S n&#13;
And that person is 51111 .. ~ structor. And one of nl) 1 II&#13;
was. back in 1970 1 and 1&#13;
1 ··full" professor. \\Ith&#13;
teac;hes two afternoon, ~&#13;
and still has onl:, a fl,\ on&#13;
That B.A er is also h&#13;
1':xf'cut1ve • Ill'&lt;' " ( ornm1 , 1 Continued on pJ9 &#13;
pisagreement_- _&#13;
CDIIlilllled from page 1&#13;
taken what he desired to&#13;
JOI! and attempts are being&#13;
!'1ft, move valuable trees to&#13;
~"'~ growing sites. He also&#13;
,..... that the area IS overrun&#13;
",ttd bbits which are presently&#13;
~Ibratree bark and which have&#13;
"~ .. tors.&#13;
II) "'~t Esser, associate&#13;
R~r of life science and a&#13;
~mg 101 opponent, said that a&#13;
':'''mg lot in that location WIll&#13;
,.... real drainage problems&#13;
alJt dless of the wiping out of&#13;
;::mal life. He stated that&#13;
orcall'if it is to be.co~structed on&#13;
of a hill it WIll Involve bad :w. problems. Esser added&#13;
IIIallfpeople could not walk or&#13;
lid! the shuttle bus from lots&#13;
.,... near Tall~nt Hall he "felt&#13;
".ry (or them.&#13;
!)ser also doubted whether the&#13;
.... couldbe transplanted at all.&#13;
lit. along with Racine. n~rsery&#13;
oaerWiIliam Fancher indicated&#13;
dial it would be an extreme&#13;
cttaDengeto transplant trees over&#13;
IU' inChesin diameter. in that&#13;
lbt root systems of these trees&#13;
ft too spread out. Fancher said&#13;
IbaIlIl1essthe roots of trees of&#13;
tbII sizehad been pruned or the&#13;
rreeshad been moved numerous&#13;
ttmeS before, the survival rate&#13;
wuJd be very low, Galbraith&#13;
",","""ted that the University&#13;
Ud learned this from expmon&lt;e.&#13;
_Is May Move Seedlings&#13;
Eller also complained of the&#13;
JI'f'Yiom care given to tran- "'Ied trees by Physical Plant.&#13;
_Iedging that the depart-&#13;
.... 1 had sulfered budget cuts&#13;
_Iherelore lost employees, he&#13;
IIIid lhal last spring after trees&#13;
IIIlIIJeen transplanted they were&#13;
11\ watered all sum mer.&#13;
Nlaerouscalls to Physical Plant&#13;
II ~ and his colleagues&#13;
II'*ed no satisfactory action.&#13;
F.aaer also accused the&#13;
ersity of destroying one&#13;
~ at a time so that no one&#13;
IIIUId notice to hoJJer. "The&#13;
**'uction here is a cancerous&#13;
JIIwth," said Esser, and he&#13;
IlidIdlhal because of the prairie&#13;
no..r., abundant animal life&#13;
_fohage the proposed parking&#13;
... hasbeen a choice spot for&#13;
AudfntsIn animology classes to&#13;
iI&gt;&lt;oIIe&lt;ting.He also pointed out&#13;
... new seedlings tire sprouting&#13;
" III lhe sile and would be&#13;
Iroyed by bulldozers and&#13;
cnQa while construction crews&#13;
""'the area with crushed rock&#13;
IIId blacktop, He said there are&#13;
WIIerous poplar, red ash,&#13;
dogwOOd and mountain ash&#13;
~ongs now grOWing there.&#13;
a.. approval be granted for ftc.-.101 there, Galbraith inOd&#13;
It WOuld be possible to&#13;
work out a plan for students t&#13;
move the seedlings. 0&#13;
Galbraith and Murray stated&#13;
th?t there IS a strong opinion on&#13;
this campus for close-in parking&#13;
Many claim, however, that this i~&#13;
a faculty-stall sentiment and not&#13;
a student one. Because of bUdget&#13;
problems stemming from a 1971&#13;
regent act which made the&#13;
building of parking lots a user fee&#13;
bU~den. and because the&#13;
Univer-sity enrollment has not&#13;
grown at the originally predicted.&#13;
rate, certain changes in the&#13;
campus master plan have had to&#13;
bemalle.This includes the&#13;
location. of parking areas&#13;
Galbraith said. '&#13;
Students have suggested either&#13;
ramps, lUldeJ;"groundlots or adding&#13;
an additional lot n~r the&#13;
east lot. Murray stated however&#13;
that ramp and underg~ound lo~&#13;
would cost an exhorbitant&#13;
amount. To add a lot near the&#13;
east lot, he said, would cost more&#13;
also in that the University would&#13;
have to provide additional shuttle&#13;
bus service and he doubted that it&#13;
could be afforded.&#13;
Although the environmental&#13;
impact hearing has not as yet&#13;
been slated, the feeling is that it&#13;
will be in late Mayor June.&#13;
Galbraith states that errors and&#13;
oversights had been made by him&#13;
in the preliminary report and&#13;
that the Department of Transportation&#13;
&lt;DOT), Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Planning&#13;
Commission ISEWRPC), and the&#13;
Department of Natural&#13;
Resources (DNR) as well as&#13;
students have urged that the final&#13;
report be made more detailed&#13;
and specific.&#13;
State Agencies Respond&#13;
SEWRPC recommended "that&#13;
some discussion of the need for&#13;
and study effort supporting the&#13;
recommendation for the parking&#13;
lot and campus roadway system&#13;
be provided." Secondly, it&#13;
suggests analysis be conducted to&#13;
"show whether construction and&#13;
operation of these sites will have&#13;
any significant adverse impacts&#13;
upon ambient air quality." Also.&#13;
SEWRPC suggested that menlion&#13;
be made of the fact that transit&#13;
improvement studies .a.re&#13;
currently underway in the ClUes&#13;
of Racine and Kenosha and that&#13;
the report include. ~~ in·&#13;
vestigation of the feaSibility of&#13;
and recommendation for the&#13;
provision of alternatives .to&#13;
continued use of the automobile&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
DNR wrote that "the&#13;
preliminary relX&gt;rtindicates that&#13;
water drainage from t~e&#13;
prolX&gt;sedparking lot will be via&#13;
natural drainage courses to ~e&#13;
Pike River. The impact of thIS&#13;
letters----&#13;
CCllttlII\loH from Piilge 1&#13;
~ on the destiny of people&#13;
I!loy PhD degrees. whether&#13;
",~uJd be fired, promoted,&#13;
art enure,or what. Now if that&#13;
~ment is being judged by&#13;
Peers" then I'm a PhD&#13;
... _ over As long as such&#13;
-Pitshes co I· . m ten n mue, Just so long&#13;
%.k . Ure be held suspect and&#13;
\lit) morale remain low.&#13;
lalkCOJlCIUdedour rap session&#13;
~~,"g more about attendance&#13;
Itn r~d that any student who&#13;
al~sly Interested in learning&#13;
end classes regularly and&#13;
r&#13;
"'hat happens in the Oflm . ~ hi. IS the professor's&#13;
t" a:f! IIty,And believe me ...&#13;
Pt'ople on this campus r{' ton('{'rned on how you&#13;
n~ nll"~·will gladly set&#13;
aside their own inter.es~s in&#13;
readin', writin', rappln and&#13;
research to help you solve y~ur&#13;
problems and to help you. WI~&#13;
d Is Thetflckls your needs an goa .&#13;
to spot those people and then&#13;
manage to stay close t? them.&#13;
One place to find that kmd hof a&#13;
friend is in a classroom were&#13;
students are either all presenl~r&#13;
accounted for. Those are ~&#13;
teachers ,",ouwill remember an&#13;
. f ''au have thank long a ler .&#13;
graduated. ARTHVR GRVHL&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
P S One of the lectures In the&#13;
., . ·111 be&#13;
Capsule College program ~arole&#13;
I,y Assistant Professor d ' . . I "Art an&#13;
\'opat. BeT _ sU.~Jec . I hOpe that&#13;
S&lt;'xual Politics. Bo~. .&#13;
~I~S. Gruhl will up my a!10wanc:e&#13;
so that 1 call go to that&#13;
drainage may create Ignlfian&#13;
water quality problem. BDd&#13;
should be throoughl, .,"a1ua~&#13;
Care should be taken to Old It . av&#13;
a erauon ~rdrainage In lhe area&#13;
of the PetrIfYIng Spring Park •&#13;
DNR also suggested that "contamI!lent&#13;
of runoff "ater be&#13;
conSidered an alternanve,' and&#13;
~at the environmental report&#13;
mcl~e_ "alternati\'e In of&#13;
provldmg parkin~ (aclhtlt •&#13;
DN~'s Air Pollution Control&#13;
sectIOn is now makIng an&#13;
ev~~ation on the Impact r&#13;
exrstmg air quahlJes It a&#13;
recommends that the Cnl\;&#13;
give "consideration to the \'~Iu&#13;
of the land In pro\1dlOg food&#13;
crops, a park area or for other&#13;
campus facilities"&#13;
Finally, DOT suggested that&#13;
the University explore lh~&#13;
"possibilities of the relaum p&#13;
to mass tran it Iacthues 1lo1lh&#13;
SEWRPC."&#13;
Affirm. action-------&#13;
pi sag reemen t------------&#13;
con11nued from page 1&#13;
k n what he desired to ta e be. and attempts are mg&#13;
ie move valuable trees to&#13;
;l(le 1&#13;
10 growing sites. He also tabe . ed that the area 1s overrun 1 bbits which are presently&#13;
th ratree bark and which have&#13;
nng&#13;
predators.&#13;
b rt Esser, associate Roe . d ressor of life science an a&#13;
1&#13;
ng lot opponent, sai~ that_ a&#13;
k&#13;
. g lot in that location will&#13;
r 10 · bl real dramage pro ems&#13;
~rdless of the wiping out of&#13;
eganimal life. He stated that&#13;
use it is to be constructed on&#13;
or a hill it will involve bad&#13;
·ion problems. Esser added&#13;
1 1&#13;
r people could not walk or&#13;
~ the shuttle bus from lots&#13;
" ~ near Tallent Hall he "felt&#13;
· (or them."&#13;
Esser also doubted whether the&#13;
ireescould be transplanted at all.&#13;
He along with Racine nursery&#13;
William Fancher indicated&#13;
1 1t would be an extreme&#13;
lenge to transplant tre~s over&#13;
inches in diameter, m that&#13;
e root systems of these trees&#13;
are too spread out. Fancher said&#13;
t tmless the roots of trees of&#13;
1 1ze had been pruned or the&#13;
had been moved numerous&#13;
mes before, the survival rate&#13;
d be very low. Galbraith&#13;
ented that the University&#13;
d learned this from exudents&#13;
May Move Seedlings&#13;
r also complained of the&#13;
ire,ious care given to transiianted&#13;
trees by Physical Plant.&#13;
knowledging that the departI&#13;
had suffered budget· cuts&#13;
and therefore lost employees, he&#13;
that last spring after trees&#13;
been transplanted they were&#13;
watered all summer.&#13;
IIDerous calls to Physical Plant&#13;
Esser and his colleagues&#13;
rrocliced no satisfactory action.&#13;
er also accused the&#13;
vers1ty of destroying one&#13;
at a time so that no one&#13;
d notice to holler. "The&#13;
ction here is a cancerous&#13;
~th," said Esser, and he&#13;
that because of the prairie&#13;
H'S, abundant animal life,&#13;
fohage the proposed parking&#13;
a ha been a choice spot for&#13;
nt in animology classes to&#13;
COiiecting. He also pointed out&#13;
new seedlings ere sprouting&#13;
on the site and would be&#13;
troyed by bulldozers and&#13;
while construction crews&#13;
er the area with crushed rock&#13;
blacktop. He said there are&#13;
erous poplar, red ash,&#13;
Wood and mountain ash&#13;
mgs now growing there.&#13;
d approval be granted for&#13;
new lot there Galbraith inated&#13;
it would 'be possible to&#13;
work out a plan for students to move the seedlings.&#13;
Ga:lbrait~ and Murray stated&#13;
th~t there 1s a strong opinion on&#13;
this campus for close-in parking&#13;
Many claim, however, that this i~&#13;
a faculty-staff sentiment and not&#13;
a student one. Because of budget&#13;
problems stemming from a 1971&#13;
re?e~t act which made the&#13;
bmldmg of parking lots a user fee&#13;
bu'.den. and because the&#13;
Umvers1ty enrollment has not&#13;
grown at the originally predicted&#13;
rate, certain changes in the&#13;
campus master plan have had to&#13;
be made. This includes the&#13;
location . of parking areas Galbraith said. '&#13;
Students have suggested either&#13;
ramps, underground lots or adding&#13;
an additional lot n~r the&#13;
east lot. Murray stated, however,&#13;
that ramp and underground lots&#13;
would cost an exhorbitant&#13;
amount. To add a lot near the&#13;
east lot, he said, would cost more&#13;
also in that the University would&#13;
have to provide additional shuttle&#13;
bus service and he doubted that it&#13;
could be afforded.&#13;
Although the environmental&#13;
impact hearing has not as ye~&#13;
been slated, the feeling is that it&#13;
will be in late ,May or June.&#13;
Galbraith states that errors and&#13;
oversights had been made by him&#13;
in the preliminary report and&#13;
that the Department of Transportation&#13;
&lt;DOT), Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Planning&#13;
Commission (SEWRPC), and the&#13;
Department of Natural&#13;
Resources (DNR) as well as&#13;
students have urged that the final&#13;
report be made more detailed&#13;
and specific.&#13;
State Agencies Respond&#13;
SEWRPC recommended "that&#13;
some discussion of the need for&#13;
and study effort supporting the&#13;
recommendation for the parking&#13;
lot and campus roadway system&#13;
be provided ." Secondly, it&#13;
suggests analysis be conducted to&#13;
"show whether construction and&#13;
operation of these sites will have&#13;
any significant adverse impacts&#13;
upon ambient air quality." Al_ o.&#13;
SEWRPC suggested that ment10:1&#13;
be made of the fact that tran 1t&#13;
improvement studies _a_re&#13;
currently underway in the c1t1es&#13;
of Racine and Kenosha and ~at&#13;
the report include . ~~ investigation&#13;
of the feas1b1hty of&#13;
and recommendation for the&#13;
provision of alternatives _to&#13;
continued use of the automobile&#13;
at Parkside. DNR wrote that " the&#13;
preliminary report indicates that&#13;
water drainage from the proposed parking lot will be via&#13;
natural drainage courses to ~e&#13;
Pike River. The impact of th1&#13;
letters----&#13;
Coni,nued from page 2&#13;
d on the destiny of people&#13;
PhD degrees . . . whether&#13;
en should be fired, promoted,&#13;
tenure, or what. Now if that&#13;
n~~rnent is being judged by&#13;
Peer " then I'm a PhD&#13;
over As long as such&#13;
1 ,:1&#13;
es continue. just so long&#13;
1 Ure be held suspect and&#13;
I) lllora)e remain low&#13;
e co · la! ncluded our rap session&#13;
tng more about attendance&#13;
fl1.&gt;d that any student who&#13;
;~ ly interested in learning&#13;
, nd clas es regularly and&#13;
hat happens in the&#13;
room is the professor ·s&#13;
~hihty And believe me ...&#13;
e Pt·ople on this campus&#13;
rE&gt; tonenned on how vou&#13;
rig Tht'y will gladly · set&#13;
aside their own inter_es~s in&#13;
readin' writin', rapprn a nd&#13;
' J e vour research to help you so v ~-,th&#13;
problems and to help you.&#13;
d I The tnck 1s your needs an goa s. to spot those people andththen&#13;
manage to stay close t~ em.&#13;
One place to find that kmd hof a . . I room w ere friend 1s m a c ass students are either all present;r&#13;
accounted for. Those are ~&#13;
teachers vou will remember an&#13;
thank l~ng after you have&#13;
graduated. ARTHUR GR ·HL&#13;
Racme emor&#13;
P S One of the lectures ·~ the ·' · am will b Capsule College progr C ol&lt;'&#13;
I)\' Assistant Profes.or ar d . · b. t· --Art au \'o pat. He_r. ~u,,1ec v I hope that&#13;
Sexual Poltt1cs. Bo. · e . . G ·"l •\·ill up my 11110\, anl :\lrs. nu, • ' so that I ean go to that&#13;
offendc &#13;
4 THE PARKSI DE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
11«1•• day. April 10: Third World meeting discussing spring activities&#13;
at 11:30 am in 0..174&#13;
11«I•• sday. \pril 10: PAB and Racine Art Assoc. will sponsor an&#13;
exhibition and sale of original graphic art at 10 a.m. in Main Place.&#13;
\\ f'dn~~). April '0: PSGA elections, poll located in CL Bldg. lower&#13;
concourse (0-1 level) Last day to vote!&#13;
wedee da~. \pril •• ; Whiteskellar features Toni Roland at 1 p.m. in&#13;
the II'lutesk.llar '0 admtsstee charged.&#13;
II«In day. Ipril 10: tudent concert at 3:30 p.m. in CA·D118. No&#13;
admi 00 charged&#13;
II «I .. da). \prll 10: Film "The Lavender Hill lob" sponsored by&#13;
Ftlm soc ••ty a17:3Op.m In GR 103 Admission is~ cents.&#13;
II «In eav. \priIIO: "Playgrounds for Free" . presentation by Paul&#13;
Hogan aboul building playgrounds from junk at8 p.m. in CL 105. No&#13;
edrm Ion charged.&#13;
\\f'dM da)'•. \pMI to: Lecture by 'orman Bigelow on "Reincarnated&#13;
Hood"," . ponsored b)' PAB at 8 p.rn. in the Comm ArIs theater.&#13;
Ticket on Ie at Information kiosk&#13;
Thu day. Iprll II: Cartoons hown in the Whileskellar at I p.m. 0&#13;
adm •. "00 charged.&#13;
Thu da). Iprlll!: Tape dance sponsored by PAB in theSABat9p.m.&#13;
Adml "Ion i 50 cents.&#13;
Frida) .. Ipnl 1%: '0 claes pnng break. through Sunday, April 2!.&#13;
Frida). April I': Tennis again t College of Racine at 3 p.m. at&#13;
Park! ide&#13;
... turda).&#13;
\.ooda) .&#13;
\looda).&#13;
Park ,de.&#13;
Tu da • prl! n: Film "If "at7:3O p.m in CA-Dt05. 0 admission&#13;
charg«l •&#13;
11'«1.. day. AprIlZ.: Ftlm "Hamlet" at 7:30 p.m. in GR-IO!. 0 adm.&#13;
Ion charged&#13;
pril!O: Women's track Invitational at 11 a.m, at Parkside .&#13;
pril U: Oa es resume.&#13;
prll U: Tennis against UW-Green Bay at 3 p.m. at&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
1'1uandal. prU %1: Lecture-Film with animator Frank Mouris at 7:30&#13;
pm 10 GR \03. 0 edmtssrce charged.&#13;
\11 ltem for IT" "HAT H.r\PPESIr"'G must be submitted to&#13;
R "GFR b) noon Thunda)" prior to publication of the issue in Vo hich&#13;
"'I:nU"m' to. tar.&#13;
liThe Boyfriend"&#13;
cast announced&#13;
b) T IT) Kollman&#13;
"Won't You Charleston With perfect as they romp and frolic in&#13;
Me''', the question the cast of "Sur La Plage" with their&#13;
"The BO)'fnend" will be asking boyfriends: Ed Knudson (Tony).&#13;
I , 2. as they brlOg up the NickSturino !Bobby Van Husenl.&#13;
curtalO on the first musical to he Jeff Kiehlhack ( larcel). Mike&#13;
done In the Comm Arts Theater. Ward (Pierre), and David Matals&#13;
The shO\\'. a romantic spoor of (Alphonse).&#13;
the roaring twenties. is being Even Madame Dubonnet gets&#13;
dJrected by Beecham Robinson, caught up in the romantic atdJrector&#13;
of the Learning Center. mosphere when she reminisces&#13;
Other production staff lOelude "Fancy Forgetting" with her old&#13;
Richard Carrington. production heau. Percival Browne, played&#13;
elirector. Tom Reinert. technical by Mark Shimkus. The specialty&#13;
director. Robert Thomason, number, a fiery tango, will be&#13;
mus.cal director. Carla Buell· done by Marie Romano (Lolita)&#13;
cher. choreographer. and Louise and flick Ponzio (Pepil. Finally,&#13;
Woit hek. costumes. 00 spoof would be complete&#13;
ladame DuboMet, played by without the snobs, who in this&#13;
Carol Knudson, runs a school for case are Lord and Lady&#13;
"Perfect Young Laelies" who will Brockhurst. played by Philip&#13;
be portrayed by Melanie Hansen liVIngston and Carrie Ward.&#13;
IPolly), Chris torm (Maisie). Tickets for "The Boyfriend" go&#13;
Connie Adams lOulcie). Rond! 00 sale April 22 at the [n.&#13;
. rom IFay •• and lary Uyvan formation kiosk: $1 for Parkside&#13;
I 'anCl) Ho......e\'er. it seems the students (maximum of four per&#13;
perfect ,young ladJ~es~a,re!,!nlot~qiiwii't~e~",lipDiW"a~n~dl"li$;2 ~general admission.&#13;
7pm 'I:OOam&#13;
F'ri &amp; Sat.&#13;
, .&#13;
PAB elects officers&#13;
The executive council of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has&#13;
chosen the PAB president and ... ,--&#13;
vice president for the 1974-75 rA"'j,~&#13;
school year. They are Barb&#13;
Burke and Sharon Goff,&#13;
respectively.&#13;
The executive council is made&#13;
up of all the committee ~~~ir- '&#13;
persons within the ~ctlVltI~&#13;
Board; each comm it.tee IS&#13;
allowed one vote on the council.&#13;
Chairpersons for next year&#13;
were also chosen by the members&#13;
of each committee. Dance&#13;
Committee: Ellen Kavanaugh;&#13;
Fine Arts: Sharon Wesely;&#13;
Publicity: Rebecca Ecklund;&#13;
House Committee: Rudy Lineau:&#13;
_~_- Correehouse: Gary Petersen;&#13;
Film: Janet vogelman and&#13;
Peggy Olson; Outing: Mike&#13;
Morey and Rege Wagner; Video:&#13;
Glenn Christensen; Concert: Phil&#13;
Burke Livingston.&#13;
Judo club seeks&#13;
"the gentle way"&#13;
Photo by Df!bbie SCf!ntf!rs&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
"j think most people start for self-&lt;lefense but&#13;
when they get into it they realize it's more' of a&#13;
sport.~· said Jerry Konecny, president of the&#13;
Parks,de Judo Club. as he descrihed the reasons&#13;
~any people are interested in his sport. He also&#13;
Cited ~ ~pparent1y Widespread misconception&#13;
regardmg ~udo--that it's the same thing as karate.-&#13;
and explamed that karate is designed for self.&#13;
cX;t~.se.. whereas jUdo is known as "The Gentle&#13;
\\ay wlth one of its main slogans being "Mutual&#13;
Welfare and Benefit."&#13;
The Parkside Judo club was organized about two&#13;
years ago and now has about 30 members, most of&#13;
them persons who have completed PE Courses Judo&#13;
I and II. The club meets concurrently with the class&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 7:00-9:00. [n&#13;
addition to Konecny. officers are Sue Fletcher.&#13;
serving as secretary, and DarreU .......&#13;
treasurer. They are coached by Ron He .....&#13;
holds a third degree black belt and is 1I'OSidIII"&#13;
the Amateur Athletic Union.&#13;
The main projects of the club concern boIlItw&#13;
tournaments at Parkside and raising mo~ 10 ..&#13;
members to tournaments elsewhere. Betweea ..&#13;
150 persons from nine different clubs attendedIII&#13;
tournament held here on Feb. 24. Konecnyindialld&#13;
this was a relatively poor turnout due DlGIIIJ&#13;
weather conditions, anojthat they wouldlikelDlIId&#13;
another tournament before the end ofthe ...&#13;
In addition to this, members have attended..&#13;
tournaments as a club and several otben u•&#13;
dividuals. One member, Jackie Blaha, won If&#13;
division contest and will now advance to IIJt&#13;
national level.&#13;
Separate tournaments are held for mea .-&#13;
women. Both compete in Rondori, which is ICbII&#13;
fighting. while women may compete bydoing .... "&#13;
several Katas. The Katas resemble a free emtII&#13;
routine in that they contain a pre-arrqehel"&#13;
throws, different ones for exercise, self..,.&#13;
and so on. Competition may he either on the_"&#13;
weight or by the belt the competitor has allliool&#13;
Judo belts are conveyed by the instructorall.&#13;
stages preceeding the black belt, with work.....&#13;
promoting the sport entering the picture, 81W1.&#13;
skill in its practice. According to Konecny,Ibrrn'&#13;
helt, the white one, is usually earned af\Ir lit&#13;
competitor enter's his·her first tourlllJDSl&#13;
assuming they do reasonably welL SucceediJC&#13;
include the blue stripe, green, blue, three....&#13;
brown and 10 stages of black. A board 01 6 ...&#13;
venes to decide whether or not a persoa IIIaIId&#13;
receive a black belt. Considerations enterill&amp;"&#13;
their decision include moral standingS.&#13;
COI?plishments for the sport, performance lid&#13;
wrItten exam requiring knowledge 01 J,,-&#13;
names, tournament names and ability to jutJIt&#13;
tournaments.&#13;
Those interested are invited to comeand&#13;
the Judo club at work. "As~'with anything.&#13;
Konecny. "if you want to be good at it youbit'&#13;
keep practicing. I'd like to try to gel mOlf""'"&#13;
interested."&#13;
LIBRARY CONTEST&#13;
•&#13;
CELEBRATE&#13;
NATIONAL LIBRARY WEEK&#13;
•&#13;
ANSWE~ THE QUESTIONS AND&#13;
WIN!&#13;
•&#13;
PRIZES!&#13;
•&#13;
APRIL 22-2&amp;&#13;
ASK AT THE LIBRARY INFORMATIONDESK&#13;
Classified&#13;
Capers notarized on the spOt (CIfIIIC"&#13;
3riggs, f!vening classes, ft/tCilI , ...&#13;
•34 1886 After 5 p,rn e....erydl~&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
'hit ellar at 1 p.m . • ·o&#13;
red by PAB in the AB at 9 p.m.&#13;
pri bre • thro h • wida. , April 21.&#13;
t Coll e o Racine t 3 p.m. at&#13;
Imitational at 11 a.m. at Par ·ide.&#13;
',Green Bay at 3 p.m. at&#13;
t 7: pm. in CA-D105 .• ·o admi ion&#13;
: r ilm "H ml t" at 7:30 p.m. in GR-101 .• !o ad-&#13;
''The Boyfriend''&#13;
cast announced&#13;
perfecta they romp and frolic in&#13;
"·ur L Plage" with their&#13;
yfrienre : Ed Knud~on (Tonv).&#13;
'i ·• turino (Bobby \'an Hu en).&#13;
JefC Kiehlback &lt;. Iarcen .• like&#13;
Ward (Pierre). and David . Iatals&#13;
( lphon e&gt;.&#13;
Even • Iadame Dubonnet gets&#13;
cau ht up in the romantic atmo:&#13;
phere when he reminisces&#13;
" Fane) Forgetting·• with her old&#13;
beau, Perci\'al Browne, played&#13;
by Mar himku . The pecialty&#13;
number. a fiery tango, will be&#13;
done by , larie Romano (Lolita )&#13;
and Ric PQnzio (Pepi&gt;. Finally,&#13;
no poof would be complete&#13;
without the nobs, who in this&#13;
ca e are Lord and Ladv&#13;
Bro ·hurst, played by Philip&#13;
Livi . ton and Carrie Ward.&#13;
Ti • for "The Boyfriend' ' go&#13;
on le April 22 at the Information&#13;
kio : 1 for Park ide&#13;
tu n &lt;ma. imum or four per&#13;
I.D.) and general admi ~ion.&#13;
• 2 F&#13;
Basement&#13;
PAB elects officers&#13;
Burke&#13;
The executive council of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has&#13;
chosen the P AB president and&#13;
vice president for the 1974-75&#13;
school year. They are Barb&#13;
Burke and Sharon Goff,&#13;
respectively. . . The executive council 1s made&#13;
up of all the committee ~~a_irpersons&#13;
within the ~ct1vit1~&#13;
Board· each committee 1s&#13;
allowed one vote on the council.&#13;
Chairpersons for next year&#13;
were also chosen by the members&#13;
of each committee. Dance&#13;
Committee: Ellen Kavanaugh;&#13;
Fine Arts: Sharon Wesely;&#13;
Publicity: Rebecca Ecklund;&#13;
House Committee: Rudy Lineau;&#13;
Coffeehouse: Gary Petersen;&#13;
Film: Janet Vogelman and&#13;
Peggy Olson; Outing: Mike&#13;
Morey and Rege Wagner; Video:&#13;
Glenn Christensen; Concert: Phil&#13;
Livingston. Gorr&#13;
Judo club seeks&#13;
"the gentle way"&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
serving as secretary, and Darrell w&#13;
treasurer. They are coached by Ron Haaien,&#13;
holds a third degree black belt and is presided d&#13;
the Amateur Athletic Union.&#13;
The main projects of the club concern holdq&#13;
tournaments at Parkside and raising mor,?y to&#13;
members to tournaments elsewhere. Between&#13;
150 persons from nine different clubs attended&#13;
tournament held here on Feb. 24. Konecny india&#13;
this was a relatively poor turnout due mostly&#13;
weather conditions, and that they would like to&#13;
another tournament before the end of the semester&#13;
In addition to this, members have attended&#13;
tournaments as a club and several others as&#13;
dividuals. One member, Jackie Blaha, woo&#13;
division contest and will now advance to&#13;
national level.&#13;
Separate tournaments are held for men women . Both compete in Rondori, which is a&#13;
fighting, while women may compete by doingOllt&#13;
several Katas. The Katas resemble a free ex&#13;
routine in that they contain a pre-arranged SIC&#13;
throws, different ones for exercise, self-def&#13;
and so on. Competition may be either on theba11uf&#13;
weight or by the belt the competitor has a&#13;
"I think mo t people start for self-defense but&#13;
when .~hey _get into it they realize it's more' of a&#13;
. port.. aid Jerry Konecny, president of the&#13;
Park 1de Judo Club, as he described the reasons&#13;
~any people are interested in his sport. He also&#13;
cited an apparentl~ . widespread misconception&#13;
regarding Judo- that 1t s the same thing as karate--&#13;
and explained tha_t karate is designed for selfdet~&#13;
. e'. wherea Judo 1~ known as "The Gentle&#13;
\\.a~ "ith one of its main slogans being "Mutual&#13;
\\elfare and Benefit."&#13;
Judo belts are conveyed by the instructor m&#13;
stages preceeding the black belt, with work to&#13;
promoting the sport entering the picture, as&#13;
skill in its practice. According to Konecny, thefi&#13;
belt, the white one, is usually earned after&#13;
competitor enters his-her first tournam&#13;
assuming they do reasonably well. Succeed~&#13;
include the blue stripe, green, blue, three stag&#13;
brown and 10 stages of black. A board of fi\'f&#13;
venes to decide whether or not a person&#13;
receive a black belt. Considerations enterill8&#13;
their decision include moral standing&#13;
complishments for the sport, performance a&#13;
written exam requiring knowledge of J&#13;
names, tournament names and ability to&#13;
tournaments.&#13;
The Park ide Judo club was organized about two&#13;
year. ago and now has about 30 members most of&#13;
them person who have completed PE cou~ses Judo&#13;
I and 11 ._The club meets concurrently with the class&#13;
Tu ~a~ and Thursday evenings from 7:00-9 :00. In&#13;
add1 ion to Konecny. officers are Sue Fletcher,&#13;
Those interested are invited to come and&#13;
the Judo club at work. "As with anything,&#13;
Konecny, "if you want to be good at it you hi'&#13;
keep practicing. I'd like to try to get more&#13;
interested."&#13;
Classified&#13;
LIBRARY CONTEST "apers notarized on he spat er&#13;
3nggs, evening classes, Mon f&#13;
;34 2886 After 5 p.m everydaY&#13;
•&#13;
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CELEBRATE&#13;
NATIONAL LIBRARY WEEK.&#13;
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ANSWE~ THE QUESTIONS AND&#13;
WIN!&#13;
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• APRIL 22-2&amp;&#13;
ASK AT THE LIBRARY INFORMATION DESK&#13;
E&lt;cit,ng Afrodanceclass.7 7 '5~&#13;
Ned , April 10 Instructor Bettr •&#13;
t503 For registration Racint&#13;
College. &#13;
Bus service&#13;
WecI.-sday. Afw. t. '74 THE PAR SID RA 0&#13;
Phy.Ed. u&#13;
-&#13;
• -&#13;
There will be no Campus Bus Service from April 12 through April 21. Bus service will&#13;
,ewmeApril22, and will be available Monday through Friday Oflly. There will be nowt'ektnd&#13;
buS ~vice atler April 7.&#13;
Service hours&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
MIllIIIII' April \3 CLOSED&#13;
...,.I!'InJFridllY April15-19 1:45thru4:30&#13;
~ April W CLOSED&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Friday, April 129 e.m .. 12 noon&#13;
Saturday, April 13 and Sunday, April 14 CLOSED&#13;
Monday, April IS . Thursday April 189a.m. 4 JOp,m&#13;
Friday, April 199 a.m.-J p.m.&#13;
Saturday, April 20 and soocev. April 21 CLOSED&#13;
Monday. April 22 Resume normal hours&#13;
Regular Hours&#13;
Monday Thursday 9 a.m.-J p.m.&#13;
Friday 9 a.m.-S p.m.&#13;
Saturday 10 a.m ..'l p.m.&#13;
Sunday CLOSED&#13;
- - -&#13;
-&#13;
for spring break&#13;
- - --&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M:~mber Parks ide 200&#13;
N~tioQal Varsity Club&#13;
GEORGEWILLIAMS COLLEGE&#13;
HUmANITIES QUARTER AT LAKE GENEVA&#13;
Wiiams Bay, Wisc .• Lakefront campus&#13;
~&#13;
1lIoe1r.&#13;
~re&#13;
i.,.-v&#13;
~tic"hiPto&#13;
IIonner Plave"&#13;
l'rocIuct;ons '&#13;
1st Session-June 17-29&#13;
2nd Session-JulV 8-27&#13;
3rd Session-August 12-31&#13;
8 quarter hours per session.&#13;
Maximum of 16 quarter hours credit.&#13;
Tuition: $30_Undergraduate credit hour&#13;
$35_Student.at.large credit hour&#13;
High School graduates eligible&#13;
Housing available.&#13;
Contact: Dr. Donald Morrison&#13;
GEORGE WI LLiAMS COLLEGE&#13;
555 31st Street&#13;
Downers Grove, III. 60515&#13;
(3121964.3100&#13;
Library&#13;
Tickets:&#13;
sro Advance&#13;
s350 Door&#13;
Available at all J &amp; J Stores&#13;
The Brat &amp; The Edge ater&#13;
~rJv'd°jeph "&#13;
4437 - 22nd A venue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
at the&#13;
Bra&#13;
"&#13;
F 10&#13;
AP L·&#13;
9&#13;
So&#13;
194 &amp; 50&#13;
ed&#13;
p y&#13;
Bus service&#13;
There will be no Campus Bus Service from April 12 throu h A ·&#13;
resume April 22, and will be available Monday through Friday 0&#13;
9&#13;
nl ~~ii 2&#13;
1. _Bus service will buS service after April 7. y. ere w,11 be no W'ffkencl Service&#13;
Learning· Center&#13;
-l!lN Friday -t April 13&#13;
April 15-19&#13;
April 20&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
7:45 thru 4: 30&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Friday, April 12 9 a.m .- 12 noon&#13;
Saturday, April 13 and Sunday, April 14 CLOSED&#13;
Monday, April 15 . Thursday April 18 9a.m .-4.30p.m&#13;
Friday, April 19 9 a.m .-1 p .m .&#13;
Saturday, April 20 and Sunday, April 21 CLOSED&#13;
Monday, April 22 Resume normal hours&#13;
Regular Hours&#13;
Monday-Thursday 9 a.m .-7 p .m .&#13;
Friday 9 a.m .-5 p.m.&#13;
Saturday 10 a .m .-1 p .m .&#13;
Sunday CLOSED&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Mtmber Parkside 200&#13;
N.iti oal Varsity Club&#13;
~ 443 7 - 22nd A venue Keno ha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
GEORGE WILLIAMS COLLEGE&#13;
HUffiANITIES QUARTER AT LAKE GENEVA&#13;
Wiliams Bay, Wisc. • Lakefront campus&#13;
t.\isic&#13;
lheatre&#13;
~ature&#13;
~OSophy&#13;
~ticeship to&#13;
Banner Players&#13;
111-octucti ons ,&#13;
1st Session-June 17-29&#13;
2nd Session-July 8-27&#13;
3rd Session-August 12-31&#13;
8 quarter hours per session.&#13;
Maximum of 16 quarter hours credit.&#13;
Tuition: $30-Undergraduate credit hour&#13;
$35-Student-at-large credit hour&#13;
High School graduates eligible&#13;
Housing available.&#13;
Contact: Dr. Donald Morrison&#13;
GEORGE WILLIAMS COLLEGE&#13;
555 31st Street&#13;
Downers Grove, 111. 6051 5&#13;
(312) 964-3100&#13;
for spr· 9&#13;
''&#13;
at e&#13;
Bra&#13;
Tickets·&#13;
Availab e at all J&#13;
The rat &amp; e&#13;
J Sore&#13;
dge ater&#13;
D &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 10,1974&#13;
WAR declared&#13;
on discrimination&#13;
A group or black. "lute and&#13;
On aoo women sat around a&#13;
table at th Racine parush&#13;
'&lt;'tit r I I Tuesday night and&#13;
pl ed their dedicauon to endin&#13;
job d nmlnaUon again t&#13;
"'omen&#13;
al hng them eh e . the&#13;
\\omm's Affinnau\e Response,&#13;
(\\.\R the women have been&#13;
organ mn tor the past tw'0&#13;
month • according to vteta&#13;
GonzaJ&#13;
\rm d '" Ith ant i·&#13;
nrmnauon pack . a Ii t 01&#13;
tat and led ral annmSCTlmlMUOn&#13;
la". and a letter&#13;
01 pport lrom Gov Patr,ck&#13;
1.lK"f'). the omen h:tened to&#13;
on of eli nmmauon In uch&#13;
pl a ParkSlde and Unified&#13;
School&#13;
"But the ch nmmauon does&#13;
not just occur In on U\StltUUOI'\or&#13;
00 g llCy," rd Chairperson&#13;
I nn "and "It ex, ts In&#13;
ery otrl nd tnstuuuoo In thi&#13;
nd other C1b&#13;
Goozal I 8 member of the&#13;
GO\ernor' comml Ion on the&#13;
:Uttu of Women and was&#13;
r poru;lbI lor Org8ruZlOg WAR&#13;
, l3nd. an employee of Parkside&#13;
Id the group I dedI ated 10&#13;
talung lellon again t those&#13;
employers who have "kept&#13;
"omen from taking their rightful&#13;
plare in society .•.&#13;
"We must no longer fear the&#13;
loss of jobs. nor must we fear our&#13;
.upervisors."&#13;
She said many employers use&#13;
scare tactics to keep women in&#13;
olhces or other places from&#13;
organmng.&#13;
"The only way we can deal with&#13;
them (employers) is to&#13;
organize." he said&#13;
She said the pnmary focus 01&#13;
the group ",II be equal ernployment&#13;
promotional and&#13;
educational opportunities for&#13;
w omen , Increase awareness of&#13;
minority problems and offer&#13;
support to minority group within&#13;
the community&#13;
The meeting brought&#13;
resolutions and committees&#13;
de .igned to invesugate reports of&#13;
discnminalion at Parkside and&#13;
L'mhed schools&#13;
The women plan lO meet at the&#13;
pam h Center on the first&#13;
Tuesday 01 each month, and have&#13;
In\"lted anyone with a&#13;
cbscnmm3tion complaint lO join&#13;
their group.&#13;
"We are looking ror equal&#13;
nghts and "e are gOing to get&#13;
them," Mand said,&#13;
Academy award film&#13;
to be shown by maker&#13;
"Frank Film:" an academ)" independent filmmaker. He also&#13;
a"'ard wlmung autobiography' for sho" hIS "Frank Film," which a&#13;
filmmaker Fank Mouris, .".;Jl be \ iJlage Voice re"iev.' in October&#13;
shown a . part or a presentation 1973 called "the best Americ~&#13;
by tOUTl mlJUed "Animation mm at the • lew York Film&#13;
and Other Ob6e IonS" Festival. a nine-minute&#13;
1be I tur"f'"-film ""Ill be held in evocation of America's&#13;
CR un at 7'30 pm on Thursday, exhilarating everythingness."&#13;
Apnl 25. SPOll""red by the Lee· The film has received&#13;
ture &amp;: FlOC Arts committee. numerous awards and rave&#13;
10 hi talk loun lliustrates re\'iews.&#13;
\l.lth . lid . hiS development from A cbscussion of filmmaking will&#13;
an architecture student at rol1ow his presentation. AdHarvard&#13;
to a graphic tudent at mission is free.&#13;
Yale to his oresent tatus as an&#13;
JAMAICA A. "mtiml - oritnte~ .rO§ralll&#13;
for std.1lh &amp; fac.tty&#13;
$349 IliIIy 18·25 Ju. 1-8 J.... 27 - J.1y 4&#13;
Includmg • 1 night -1l day&#13;
• Round tnp a,rfare lrom&#13;
ell go&#13;
• Hotel aceommodalJon&#13;
• All taxes and ser\'lce&#13;
charg&#13;
in and scuba cbving, tennis&#13;
goll, sailing, canoeing,&#13;
fIShIng. horse ruling, touring.&#13;
relaXlllg and night Iile.&#13;
Details: University Trave!&#13;
P.O. Box 949&#13;
lo",a City, la. 52240&#13;
1)INO:S&#13;
181&amp; 1&amp; Street&#13;
PHOIIE &amp;34-1991&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
S"TE ...tcS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
P'ZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
.AVIOLI&#13;
M05T.~CIOl.1&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANOWICHES&#13;
8OM.ERS&#13;
HAM.URGERS&#13;
aEER&#13;
SOFT DRINkS&#13;
WINES&#13;
• Photo by o.w.,....&#13;
Implementing their strategy for the RUSSian Front, some members of the Parkside Assod ......&#13;
Wargamers are shown here hard at work (or play") o~ one of the largest games on the market "&#13;
board the) are presently playing on is expandable to mclude other parts of As.ia and EurGpt .1'tIt&#13;
need arises. as ...&#13;
Wargamers reenact history&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
inee the invention of the game&#13;
of Chess, people have played&#13;
wargames. Every Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday evening, in their own&#13;
secluded litUe pari 01 the&#13;
Classroom Building, the&#13;
Parkside Association of&#13;
Wargamers meet to reenact the&#13;
history (and sometimes the&#13;
future) of armed conflict.&#13;
\\1tiJe the "'argames they play&#13;
are far more complex than the&#13;
average game of chess, they are&#13;
similar in that their wargames&#13;
use squares or hexes that&#13;
represent a part of a country or&#13;
batUeroeld on a mapboard. Like&#13;
chess, they use small markers&#13;
that represent the combatants,&#13;
But the results of combat are&#13;
determined by a roll of the dice&#13;
and the odds or relative&#13;
strengths 01 the two sides. But the&#13;
rules that govern combat,&#13;
movement and condition of&#13;
victory are far more complex and&#13;
vary somewhat from game to&#13;
game, Mark Mulkins, Vice.&#13;
President of the club said,&#13;
however. "They're basically an&#13;
alike, after you learn one the rest&#13;
of them come easy; what is&#13;
difficult is learning the strategy&#13;
for each game."&#13;
Advisors for the club include&#13;
lecturer in history Oliver&#13;
H!iyward, and Lloyd Darrel,&#13;
former member of the Purdue&#13;
Association of Wargamers, who&#13;
serves as technical adviser and is&#13;
an expert on conflict simulation&#13;
games,&#13;
The primary club project at&#13;
this t.ime in the simulation of ..&#13;
RUSSIan Front during World.&#13;
1I from 1941-1945. The fI8IIIt or&#13;
one 01 the largest on the III8ItIl&#13;
employing a huge maJlbaanlIll&#13;
hundreds 01 counterl _&#13;
manded by two teams 01"""&#13;
many of whom are "-&#13;
Hayward's Russian ma..,.&#13;
class. At the same time tIIert",&#13;
always a number of other_&#13;
of smaller scale, lim .....&#13;
combat from the Amerilas&#13;
Revolution through 11184.&#13;
Parkside AssocialiOi&#13;
Wargamers meets TuesdaJ III&#13;
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. ID a.&#13;
135. Anyone is invited to aIII!IIl&#13;
whether they want to Iean_&#13;
about wargames or discotwlt&#13;
military genius within ...&#13;
selves!&#13;
Builds playgrounds from junk&#13;
Hogan to lecture for IS dass&#13;
~aul Hogan, who designs and&#13;
builds low-&lt;:ost playgrounds Irom&#13;
"junk," will present a Iree public&#13;
how·to lecture titled&#13;
"Pl~l'grounds for Free" at B p.m.&#13;
on \\ed.nesday CAprillO) in Room&#13;
105 of Lhe Classroom Building.&#13;
The lecture topic is aJso the&#13;
bUeof a book by Hogan from MIT&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
Press which details how he has&#13;
built more than 100 "playgrounds&#13;
for free" in Pennsylvania tU1der&#13;
contract with the state department&#13;
of.community affairs using&#13;
s.uch dIscarded materials as&#13;
tires, logs, ca~le re:ls and utility&#13;
p.oles . .'\dd Imagination and&#13;
snnple, sound design principles&#13;
and you have a playground&#13;
Hogan says. '&#13;
.The designer campaigns for&#13;
kids on the platform that "it is far&#13;
better to help the community&#13;
build Its own playground than to&#13;
buy $5,000 simulated rocket ships&#13;
from a catalog and 'give them to&#13;
the children."&#13;
When a national ~&#13;
(Family Circle) ran an artidr&#13;
Hogan's Playground aw.e&#13;
House at Phoenixville, Pa&#13;
1973. thE! organization ........&#13;
over 3,000 requests for&#13;
formation from acroa&#13;
country.&#13;
Hogan's lecture issponscrel&#13;
Parkside's fndustrial SociIIl&#13;
lIS) Program, an .........&#13;
integrated program&#13;
humanities and social ...,&#13;
courses for freshmen. DuriC&#13;
campus visit, Hoganalsowil"&#13;
to students in the IS (.'l)II'It.&#13;
~1!!!:=_iiiiJ!~"'W-'i :e .",."&#13;
Oel~&#13;
Douhle Cheesehar,.'&#13;
I&#13;
I &amp; French Fries&#13;
,&#13;
~&#13;
1&#13;
All For Only&#13;
&amp; Shake&#13;
3400 Sheridan Rd, &amp; 6926 39th Ave.&#13;
~7 7 • e~ :;;o'::!!&#13;
6 H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1974&#13;
WAR declared&#13;
on discrimination&#13;
have ·'kept&#13;
their ri htful&#13;
I \\'ith&#13;
to&#13;
of&#13;
emnd&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
of&#13;
offer&#13;
ithin&#13;
Acade,my award film&#13;
'to be shown by maker&#13;
" Film." n denw&#13;
run utobi raph; f~&#13;
r F I ris, ill be&#13;
rt of ,.,..,c: .. nl&lt;&gt;tion&#13;
uU "Anim tion&#13;
txsessi11&gt;nS "&#13;
349&#13;
16 6 Str t&#13;
PHO E 634-1991&#13;
independent filmma er. He aL&#13;
w hL: ·•Fra · Film." which a&#13;
, ilia " \' i e re\'iew in October&#13;
1973 called • the t meric~&#13;
ftlm at the 'ew York Film&#13;
F . ti val... a nine-minute&#13;
,·o tion of merica'&#13;
.·hilarating everythi~n .&#13;
The film ha received&#13;
award and rave&#13;
c _ ion of filmm ·ing \l.;11&#13;
follow h1. pr ·entation. AdI&#13;
fre .&#13;
fl E FOOD S&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
ra•&#13;
CHICICE&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
OSTAc;CtOLI&#13;
G OCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SAloOWtCHES&#13;
M&gt;MBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT 0111 KS&#13;
Wt ES&#13;
. ~~~h&#13;
Implementing their strategy for the Russian Front, some members or the Parkside A s,.,,• 1• r h l . ,,._13 ion I&#13;
\\'argam r!&gt; are sho\\n herf' hard at work (or play?) o~ one o t e argest games on thf' markf1&#13;
board ~l') are prt ently playing on is expandable to mclude other parts or Asia and Europf' 3• ~&#13;
need ri ~-&#13;
Warga me rs reenact history&#13;
bJ llan·e) \'. Jleddf'n&#13;
ince the in\'ention of the game&#13;
of he , people have played&#13;
wargam ·. Every Tue.day and&#13;
Thursday e\'ening, in their own&#13;
. ecluded little part of the&#13;
la·. room Building, the&#13;
Park. ide A sociation of&#13;
Wargamers meet to reenact the&#13;
hi .tor) (and ometime the&#13;
future) of armed conflict.&#13;
While the wargames they play&#13;
are far more complex than the&#13;
average game of ch , they are&#13;
1m1lar in that their wargames&#13;
u,e quare or hexes that&#13;
represent a part of a country or&#13;
battlefield on a mapboard. Like&#13;
ch , they use mall markers&#13;
that represent the combatants.&#13;
But the r .ults of combat are&#13;
determined by a roll of the dice&#13;
and the odds or relative&#13;
trengths of the two sides. But the&#13;
rules that govern combat,&#13;
movement and condition of&#13;
victory are far more complex and&#13;
vary somewhat from game to&#13;
game . Mark Mulkins, Vice.&#13;
President of the club said,&#13;
however, "They're basically all&#13;
alike, after you learn one the rest&#13;
of them come easy; what is&#13;
difficult is learning the strategy&#13;
for each game."&#13;
Advisors for the club include&#13;
lecturer in history Oliver&#13;
H!1yward, and Lloyd Darrel,&#13;
former member of the Purdue&#13;
Association of Wargamers, who&#13;
serves as technical adviser and is&#13;
an expert on conflict simulation&#13;
games.&#13;
The primary club project at&#13;
Builds playgro unds from iunk&#13;
this t_ime in the simulation of&#13;
Russian Front during World V.&#13;
II from 1941-1945. The gam one of the largest on the m&#13;
employing a huge mapboard&#13;
hundreds of counter&#13;
manded by two team or iia&#13;
many of whom are fr&#13;
Hayward's Russian His&#13;
class. At the same time there&#13;
always a number of other&#13;
of smaller scale, simulat&#13;
combat from the Amen&#13;
Revolution through 1984&#13;
Parkside Association&#13;
Wargamers meets Tuesda,&#13;
Thursday at 7:30 p.m tn CL&#13;
135. Anyone is invited to a&#13;
whether they want to learn&#13;
about wargames or discmer&#13;
military genius within&#13;
selves!&#13;
Hogan to lecture for IS class&#13;
~aul Hogan, who designs and&#13;
build low-cost playgrounds from&#13;
.. junk," will present a free public&#13;
how-to lecture titled&#13;
.. P ~ygrounds for Free · at s p.m. on \\ednesday (April 10) in Room&#13;
105 of the Cla room Building.&#13;
. The lecture topic is also the&#13;
t1tleof a book by Hogan from MIT&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
the children."&#13;
When a national ma&#13;
( Family Circle) ran an artJ&#13;
Hogan's Playground Cl a&#13;
House at Phoenixville. Pa&#13;
1973, the organization r&#13;
over 3,000 request. for&#13;
formation from aero&#13;
country.&#13;
Hogan's lecture is sponsored&#13;
Parkside's Industrial&#13;
CIS) Program, an inno,&#13;
integrated program&#13;
humanities and social&#13;
courses for freshmen. Du&#13;
campus visit, Hogan al. 11ill&#13;
JON BLON&#13;
Double Cheeseburger f &amp; French Fries ]&#13;
9 &amp; Shake J APRIL 10, 12, 13, &amp; 14&#13;
\ All For Onlv&#13;
.! &#13;
ief news&#13;
fir '." bud et~&#13;
erns Committee will be allocating student group suppa t f&#13;
~ CO~410May 1915at its next meeting in early May r unds for the&#13;
~J ....l rrenlly receiving support should receive the bUdget form Ih&#13;
.........;;..plPS c~ lew days. Assistance in completion of the forms, and lorS rOugh the&#13;
fJIit'- "'~ay be obtained through Student Activit.ies (Tony Totero, ~SC~~l~:WIY&#13;
~"~A55't Dean Jewel ecneuseeaer. Tl1.5). ASSistance is also even bl th J or&#13;
~ivities Board Seun Faust, President, LLC-D195). I a e rough&#13;
~-- ",!hE!' relurn of the completed forms is Monday, MilY 6 00' Ih&#13;
..... " • I" , ey ShOUld be 10 Echelbarger S of Ice.&#13;
Clubasks help in planting trees&#13;
-. Clull is encouraging students to get involved With ecology this month&#13;
we Qximatefy 1,500 young trees around Parkside. The erotect . throug~ th~&#13;
""" •......P'"ril1S and 26. rne variety of trees will include: seedling ~h.1 IS .tentatlvely&#13;
___ • I e pine and red&#13;
c tg dj$CU§S addictign and emotional disgcdgrs&#13;
lIIk . .&#13;
~lIssiOnOn addiction and emcnonar dl.sor~ers With members 01 the Mental Health&#13;
.lIIII' of liIacil'lewili be held In an open class session of Phy Ed 265: Personal sen I&#13;
--- He,llll, Tile class invites me~bers of the. Parks ide community to 'its AO:ri~~~&#13;
~,p m· in Comm Arts 14L The fltle of the discussion is "People in Troubl . Th&#13;
..... ' 1I1ll1UfS" an~ speake.rs Include RU!h. Wayland, Di~ector of the Mental ~'ealt~&#13;
:::.; Tom Slanlhs, coordinator lor add,cfton; and Jamilla Connor, drug COnsultant .&#13;
.II.e will host transportation seminar&#13;
...,.....t,," of Ihe, ~.S. D.epartment of Transp~rtatio~ ', leder~1 aviation, highway and&#13;
IIII'trfllSlt admlRlstratlons and AMTRAK Will partiCipate In a seminar on "Trafl"&#13;
:'-TQnfIfI.tion" April 11.and l~.at ~arks!de. IC&#13;
"' ..... will be .held In conluncf'o~ Wlt~ CapSUle .Col~~ge. a !wo.day community_&#13;
.-- ,....m, and IS sponsored by U~lVerslty E~tenslon In COoperation With Midwest&#13;
...... 'elDelta Nu Alpha Transportation Fraterl'llty and the Racine Traffic ClUb .&#13;
... ...... "A. Erbe, Chicago Regional Representative of the U.S. Department of Tran_&#13;
...... WiIllivtlllekeynote address on "T~ansp0r:tation and the Energy Crisis."&#13;
............... 9OYlrnor of Iowa, was the first regional representati ...e of the secretary of&#13;
........... lfeveloping the role and functions of the office in a pilot program in the Nor_&#13;
........ at 5ean'e before coming to Chicago Region V in 1971.&#13;
....... include acting as a coordinator, expediter and ombudsman for pri ...ate citizens&#13;
... ~,"lcjals who use programs and ser ...ices of the department. He has responsibility&#13;
• ...,.'" delivery 01 federal grants and programs In a sill-state area. including&#13;
_1rM ttle De~rtments of HEW. HUD, DOL, OEO, DOT. EPA. LEAA, USDA and&#13;
•........ spukers will be John M. Cyrocki, regional director 01 the Federal A ...iation&#13;
-,",*,; Ger,ld D. Lo ...e, re'gional administrator for the Federal Highwoily Ad-&#13;
...... Thomas N. Harvey, regional representati ...e of the Urban Mass Transit Ad_&#13;
...... ; 'nd Ricl1.ard M. Boyd, regional manager for the National Railroad Passenger ___ IAMTRAk).&#13;
fit_will hive identical programs each day. from 9:15 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. De.dline&#13;
... ....., ...... wtli(l'lun be made at the University Extension Office in Tallent Hall, is April&#13;
I&#13;
!!erg!!: bUdget review slated for special session&#13;
'-tV. MitfJitr bill (AB930), which will determine the guidelines oilnd rUles under which&#13;
.... s"... 'IIfIill operate. was recently passed by the Assembly and moved on to the-&#13;
'--.aet'lM. Ttlere it was referred to the Health, Education and Welfare Committe-e. The-&#13;
........... rned belore further action could be taken but Governor Lucey said lut wet«&#13;
...... CIlI .... tegisliliture into special session on the 29th of this month to act on this oilnd&#13;
- MIL ItI(htdl", tile budget review.&#13;
WlIIIirtINn 01ttle legislative Fiscal Bureau said that in terms of priorities the budget&#13;
lIIigIIllle e\len more important to the UW system, as it would include Ihe decision on&#13;
........... SYStemnow that the legislature has determined that user lees shoilll not be "'.IIMeN"" Tile jobs of se...eral hundred UW faculty, in the Physical Education ilIrea&#13;
...., ... ,tst.ake ,nd will be lost il the budget review bill falls to make it.&#13;
nit ~s .""h'd deadlinp; anllounces prizes&#13;
.......... for subm,ning stUdent essays to the CLIO essay contest is Monday, April 21&#13;
..... wlIIrtH'Mir prhe·wlnning essays on Wednesday. May I at 3 p.m. Prizes wlll be&#13;
...... 1lldlIdI", S15 first prize, $10 second. and a Iree dinner at the Wlndllm~er&#13;
......... Ktl\O\h.a as third prize. Essays should be submitted to CLIO in the Hum.an,tles&#13;
.... CA_ 'hit., m.ay de.1 with any aspect 01 the humanities.&#13;
J!Irry Chapinto give Racine Environmental Concert&#13;
0I.a0 1'1"",,11be teatu~ed in an Environmental Concert. sponsored by Ihe Department&#13;
..... OCIr\'·Johnny Horizon" program. on Mon .. April 22 at Racine's Memonal Hall at I&#13;
...... ttaltl .reu.SO, ..... Hable allhe Information kiosk, or $3.00 admission I! the ~or&#13;
...... wtll .. to boullda park at the corner of Washington A ...e. oilndWest BI ...d. In RHine,&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
FreeChecking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.DIC.&#13;
Featuring&#13;
selection of&#13;
lIlagazines and&#13;
'.stsellers&#13;
-Vsteries&#13;
Gothic Romance&#13;
524 lJain Street, Suite 109 First Floor Mall - Racine&#13;
7&#13;
Ranger pitcher Tom Rath~ .• bo\~.opI'af'd ~"'Hlltal1&#13;
a double header against" ite-Itfr 8de_. Jrlf&#13;
Rangers rirs1 hom~ na.n Lor) _ pa&#13;
rns committee will be allocating student group support f tJll'l"'5 C~~~: to MaY 1975 at its next meeting in early May unds for the ..-J""" urrentlY receiving support should receive the budget forms th groups c I few days. Assistance in completion of the forms, and form ~ough the 1t1t "'~av be obtained through Student Activit_ies (Tony Totero, L~C_c;;1~:wly ~""'"'iAss't&#13;
WV;c'\ oean Jewel Echelbarger, T11S). Assistance is also availabl t &gt; or&#13;
~ res soard 8( uu Faust, President, LLC-D19S) e hrough&#13;
-""' ne&#13;
Ac,••,• o l~e return of the completed forms is Monday ~ay 6 and th . -io EcMlbarqer's office ' • ey should be .&#13;
trees&#13;
Club ,s encouraging students to get involved with ecology this month ": ,ppro&lt;imately 1,soo young trees around Parkside. The project is !~rough the&#13;
_....... - April 2s and 26. The variety of trees will include: seedling wh·t . entattvely ' 1 e pine and red&#13;
...... scussion on addiction and emotional di~orders with members of the Mental Heal!h ...,.ot Raconewoll be hel_d ,~ an open class session of Phy Ed 265: Personal, School and Hulth The class onvotes members of the Parkside community to its A .1 ,% Pm ,n comm Arts 14L The title of the discussion is " People in Troubl:r\~! uineues" and speakers include Ruth Wayland, Director of the Mental H Ith M Tom Stanit1s, coordinator for addiction; and Jamilla Connor, drug consul~:nt.&#13;
~tives ol the_ U.S. D_epartment of Transportatio~, _federal aviation, highway and&#13;
uu tnns,t adm1n1strat1ons and AMTRAK will part1c1pate ma seminar on " Traff&#13;
..,,..-tihon" April 11. and 1~ at ~arks~de. ,c _,111, will be held on conIunct,on with Capsule Coll~ge, a two-day community-&#13;
,,..,,m, and is sponsored by University Extension in cooperation with Midwest 1M 7 ot Delta Nu Alpha Transportation Fraternity and the Racine Traffic Club .&#13;
.., _,1110 A. Erbe, Chicago Regional Representative of the U.S. Department of Tran-&#13;
..,.... w,11 gove the keynote address on "Transportation and the Energy Crisis."&#13;
1,_ , tonner governor of Iowa, was the first regional representative of the secretary of&#13;
......,,._ developing the role and functions of the office in a pilot program in the Nor-&#13;
,.... at Seattle before coming to Chicago Region Vin 1971.&#13;
'-CtllftS 1rtClude acting as a coordinator, expediter and ombudsman for private citi1ens ,...-,.c 1fflc11ls who use programs and services of the department. He has responsibility aiar,.ut.nt delivery of federal grants and programs in a six-state area, including -trom the Departments of HEW, HUD, DOL, OEO, DOT, EPA, LEAA, USDA and&#13;
...,.,_ speakers will be John M. Cyrocki, regional director of the Federal Aviation&#13;
1r1!tlft; Gerald D. Love, regional administrator for the Federal Highway Ad-&#13;
-·&#13;
-· Tllomas N. Harvey, regional representative of the Urban Mass Transit Ad- 1nd Richard M. Boyd, regional manager for the National Railroad Passenger -(AMTRAK).&#13;
_1111, w,11 have identical programs each day, from 9: lS a.m . to 3:30 p.m . Deadline&#13;
,... • .._, wtuchcan be made at the University Extension Office in Tallent Hall, is April&#13;
review slated for s ecial session&#13;
U W Mtr9ff boll (AB930), which will determine the guidelines and rules under wh,ch U W '"i.m woll operate, was recently passed by the Assembly and moved on to the llrKltlll. There ,twas referred to the Health, Education and Welfare Committee. The ldjourned before further action could be taken but Governor Lucey said last wHk can Ille legislature into special session on the 29th of this month to act on th,, and 11111. tflCluding the budget review.&#13;
lllrtlNfll of the Legislative Fiscal Bureau said that in terms of prooritoes the budget f be even more imPOrtant to the UW system, as it would include the decision on -.o1111e system now that the legislature has determined that user fees shall not be llr'-n9. The 1obs of several hundred UW faculty, in the Physical Educatoon area&#13;
11&lt;1 at stake and will be lost if the budget review bill fails to make it.&#13;
CLIO ~ets rnntPd dPadlinP; anr,ounces prizes&#13;
.... .,. lor subm,tting student essays to the CLIO essay contest is Monday, Aprol 22 •HI reH their prl1e-winning essays on Wednesday, May 8 at 3 p. m . Prites w II be iftduchn9 SU first prite, Sl0 second, and a free dinner at the WindI•mmell" Ml lo K11101ha as third pri1e. Essays should be submitted to CLIO ,n the Human,ltts Um TIiey may deal woth any aspect of the humanitoes.&#13;
C P "~,II be tealu .. ed in an Environmental Concert, sponsored by the ~partment !Ors JOhnny Hori1on" program, on Mon , April 22 at Racine's Memor,al Hall at I&#13;
..._.llcht,artS2 50, ava,lableat the Information kiosk, or S3.00 admoss,on at th•- IIPICfMS w,11 IO to bu old a park at the corner of Washington Ave. and West Blvd '" llac,ne&#13;
merican State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
Phone 658-2 5 2&#13;
Member FDIC&#13;
524 Main Street Suite 109 First floor Mall - Racine&#13;
lilHfWIINIIMH!\ttlifl &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 10,1974&#13;
Tracksters set records in Madison&#13;
The Uruted tates Track arxl&#13;
Field Federation Wisconsin&#13;
Ind_ Cbarnpienships were held&#13;
In ddlSOIl last unday, April 7,&#13;
Park Ide came up \\ ith some&#13;
rxllVllllal recceds b&gt; both men&#13;
aod worn&#13;
In the pole vault. Bob leekma&#13;
I k ~th pia"" ""th a JUmp 0113'&#13;
• " arxl like Holton took 5th also&#13;
t t3' S"&#13;
In shot put. Pat Bum made 49'&#13;
• lor 5th plaee&#13;
Keith I mtt too 4th place tn&#13;
long JUmp ,th 20' 7\2" arxl like&#13;
t 6th wlth JUmp 0120' ,"&#13;
Itrntt plat1'd gain tn the&#13;
tnpl Jump th lime ta ng a&#13;
l th ~ 7" Boero took 5th In&#13;
t lthajumpof42 II;"&#13;
1 pia"" "'ent to haunte&#13;
In th hI JUmp lor 6' ~"&#13;
10 the 70 &gt;d h'gh hurd! , Crall&#13;
mahan a hooI record&#13;
with 9.4 seconds.&#13;
Lee Broadway look 4th in the 60&#13;
yd. dash. running it in 6.7&#13;
seconds.&#13;
A personal record was set by&#13;
Chuck Dettman in the mile run&#13;
with a 4176. He took 3rd in the&#13;
event, beat bv the two lront&#13;
runners b\: onl\" one yard&#13;
Dettman then too 6th in the 880&#13;
with a lime or 2:01.5&#13;
Lucien Rosa set a meet and a&#13;
school record in the 3 mile run&#13;
",.th a ume of I~:t3.1. He took&#13;
hra place.&#13;
Broadwav lied the cnool&#13;
record of Hero DeGroat in the 300&#13;
vd dash '" IIh a time of 329&#13;
• ods, he placed 4th In the&#13;
event.&#13;
A school record was set b&gt;'&#13;
lemu In the 400 intermediate&#13;
hurdl with a time 01 566&#13;
seconds; he also look ~th place.&#13;
The mile relay team of&#13;
DeGroot. Broadway, Carnaha~,&#13;
and zeil Gordon look 3rd place in&#13;
their event.&#13;
Gordon took 3rd and DeGroot&#13;
took qth in the 440 yd. dash, both&#13;
with times of 41.4 seconds.&#13;
Parkside women were among&#13;
the place winners at the USTFF&#13;
Wisconsin Indoor meet Sunday,&#13;
too.&#13;
Kim Piper took a first in the B80&#13;
yd. run with a time of 2:22.0.&#13;
Mar-la Breach took 6th in the&#13;
shot put with 24' 11". .&#13;
Sandy Kingslield placed 2nd In&#13;
the long jump with 15' 11',' and&#13;
5th in the 220 with a time 01 27.8&#13;
seconds, a personal record.&#13;
Sue VonBehren took three&#13;
firsts: she set a personal and&#13;
school record with S' 3" in the&#13;
high jump, took the 70 yd. high&#13;
hurdles in 10.9 seconds, and made&#13;
16' 73..,' in the long jump.&#13;
The 880 relay team of Von·&#13;
Behren, Breach, Kingsfield, and&#13;
Joan Fredericksen took 3rd place&#13;
with a time of 2:00.4.&#13;
There wilJ be a men and&#13;
women's home track meet durin~&#13;
Spring Break, on Saturday, April&#13;
20 at 11:45 a.m. on the Parkside&#13;
outdoor track. Women's teams&#13;
from Madison, Carroll College,&#13;
Carthage, Lewis University&#13;
(III.) tjt-Chicago Circle, and&#13;
UW·M will be participating in the&#13;
meet. An incomplete list of&#13;
participating men's teams includes&#13;
UW·M, UW-Whitewater,&#13;
UW-Stevens Point, and DuPage&#13;
(III.) .&#13;
Also over vacation, on Friday&#13;
and Saturday, April 19 and 20,&#13;
there will be a men's decathlon;&#13;
the five events scheduled for&#13;
Friday will begin at 2 p.m. and&#13;
the five for Saturday will begin at&#13;
10 a.m. The meet will be held at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tennis team aims for good season&#13;
The 197" M. r h'M tMm&#13;
d Ib 1 ev·... al&#13;
de, ccordmg.o Coech&#13;
F a Although there&#13;
001&gt; one returning letterman&#13;
from I I 's uad. m t 01&#13;
th r candidate have had&#13;
~ m lthe expel"lence&#13;
Highlighting thi )"ear'&#13;
II am Weyland at&#13;
numb..- one .mgles, and Bob&#13;
Jaooll6en arxl Don FranCIS at&#13;
number one doubles. Other&#13;
carxlldales Include- Cal Jensen,&#13;
Greg Plarr. Don KalbClelsch,&#13;
Dave Jslsney, Tim Demmg,&#13;
John Tank, John Badlke, Terry&#13;
Loendorl, Gary Imliams, Ken&#13;
Pa""'l . and Emil Contfera&#13;
:&gt;ATE _n-,&#13;
-"-"&#13;
Apr 17 M." ,&#13;
Mo, •&#13;
Mo, •&#13;
Mod&#13;
...... v 11. 11&#13;
OPPONENT&#13;
whilewater&#13;
U W Green Bay&#13;
~leway Tech&#13;
Niles CoUeQe&#13;
N1dlon College&#13;
~rquetle&#13;
U W Green Bav&#13;
U W Milwaukee&#13;
Milton College&#13;
Districl No. ,.. NAIA Tournament&#13;
TIME&#13;
J p.m.&#13;
J p.m.&#13;
J p.m.&#13;
J p.m.&#13;
1 p.m.&#13;
2 p.m.&#13;
12 noon&#13;
1 p.m.&#13;
1 p.m.&#13;
PLACE&#13;
Away&#13;
Home&#13;
Home&#13;
Home&#13;
Away&#13;
Home&#13;
Awav&#13;
Home&#13;
Home&#13;
Rangers beat Whitewater 5-2&#13;
lose in other baseball action&#13;
b) 0 bn Fried II&#13;
I phllll18 a double head ...&#13;
lih 1.:\\ Wh't.....·aler at Horh&#13;
I d la I f'nda)', the Rang ...&#13;
......... ""1 team lost tv.o games to&#13;
....lute-water tonda)'. in&#13;
\\1II1 ..... at... In Fnday's games&#13;
ih team 1.. 1 ih first, 6-t, but&#13;
pitcber Tom Rachel "'00 the&#13;
So2 A home.,., hil by Jefl&#13;
too larted the Ran~er driv'e&#13;
that rxl game of ihe tv.;n&#13;
bill&#13;
y In Whit...... ler the&#13;
\Iarb '" grabbed both games.&#13;
10.6 od oH Losing pllchers lor&#13;
the Rangers were Jefl Klemko&#13;
and Kim Lange, Although&#13;
Parks Ide wa ahead IQ Ibat lirst&#13;
game 6-5 in the last of the sixlb,&#13;
WhJt~'ater came from behind to&#13;
score five nms and \loin the game.&#13;
Jefl Sexton W'as pitching at the&#13;
time and Coach Ken Oberbruner&#13;
pulled tum arxl pul in Klemko.&#13;
The Rangers out-hit the&#13;
Warha",ks ~"';th 27 times at bat&#13;
but surl... ed by making six errors&#13;
earl)" m the game. Whitewater&#13;
""as at bat 27 times for six hits, to&#13;
fU1S and three errors.&#13;
Rade Dimitrije\'ic, Ranger&#13;
rll'St baseman. was star batter in&#13;
the flrsl game WIththree hits for&#13;
four times at bat. All were&#13;
singles. Shortstop Les Zirbel hit a&#13;
double in each game.&#13;
Although the Rangers had the&#13;
bases loaded lwice they couldn't&#13;
get the hits at the right times and&#13;
therefore left a lot of men on&#13;
base.&#13;
In the second game of Mon.&#13;
day's double-header the Rangers&#13;
were at bat 'Z7 times for six hits,&#13;
no runs and three errors. Jeff&#13;
Sexton hit two singles and&#13;
starting pitcher Klemko pitched&#13;
a shut-out until trouble struck in&#13;
the last of the fifth inning. Until&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
Quality IO-Speed bikes&#13;
Falcon&#13;
Bottecchia&#13;
Fice lle&#13;
Cazenave&#13;
that time the score was tied at 0-0&#13;
but Whitewater made its move&#13;
and scored four runs, thereby&#13;
forcing Oberbruner to switch&#13;
pitchers, but to no avail.&#13;
The Rangers will meet&#13;
Madison's J.V. team at 2 p.m. in&#13;
Madison on Thursday for their&#13;
next game. The next home game&#13;
will be against Carroll College on&#13;
Friday, April 19, at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Oberbruner expects to see many&#13;
more winning games from his&#13;
young team but says that at the&#13;
moment they are getting adjusted&#13;
to playing college ball.&#13;
Alan Wallace. Prop.&#13;
Dan Werve. Salesman 8&lt;&#13;
Head Mechanic&#13;
REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES&#13;
18th &amp; Grand. Racine. Wis.&#13;
632-0007&#13;
APRIL 13&#13;
FREE BEE&#13;
and&#13;
Noon&#13;
3 p.m.&#13;
and the XE&#13;
Sat. Hi&#13;
a THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1974&#13;
Tracksters set records • 1n Madison&#13;
DeGroot, Broadway, Camaha~,&#13;
and, ·en Gordon took 3rd place m&#13;
their event.&#13;
Gordon took 3rd and OeGroot&#13;
too . th in the 440 yd. dash, both&#13;
\\ith tim of 41.4 econds.&#13;
Park ide women were among&#13;
the place winner at the USTFF ,.. ;in Indoor meet Sunday,&#13;
too.&#13;
Kim Piper took a first in the 880&#13;
yd. nm "ith a time of 2:22.0.&#13;
1 rla Breach took 6th in the&#13;
t put with 24' 11 ''. _&#13;
ndv King field placed 2nd m&#13;
th I g jump with 15' 11 /' and&#13;
5th in the 220 with a time of 27.8&#13;
nd) • a personal record.&#13;
u \'onBehren took three&#13;
firs : ·he t a per ·onal and&#13;
ool record with 5' 3" in the&#13;
hi h jump. took the 70 yd. high&#13;
hurdl in 10.9 _econds, and made&#13;
I ' 7a " in the long jump.&#13;
Th 880 relay team of VonBehren,&#13;
Breach, Kingsfiel1, and&#13;
Joan Fredericksen took 3rd place&#13;
with a time of 2:00.4.&#13;
There will be a men and&#13;
women's home track meet durin~&#13;
Spring Break, on Saturday, A~ril&#13;
20 at ll:45 a.m. on the Parkside&#13;
outdoor track. Women's teams&#13;
from Madison, Carroll College,&#13;
Carthage, Lewis University&#13;
&lt;Ill.) UI-Chicago Circle, and&#13;
UW-1\1 will be participating in the&#13;
meet. An incomplete list of&#13;
participating men's t~ams includes&#13;
UW-M, UW-Wh1tewater,&#13;
W-Stevens Point, and DuPage&#13;
(Ill.).&#13;
Also over vacation, on Friday&#13;
and Saturday, April 19 and 20,&#13;
there will be a men's decathlon;&#13;
the five events scheduled for&#13;
Friday will begin at 2 p.m. and&#13;
the five for Saturday will begin at&#13;
10 a .m. The meet will be held at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
team ai,ns for good season&#13;
:&gt;AT&#13;
"""n AfK """ ,,&#13;
AfK 7S&#13;
AfK 27&#13;
I&#13;
OPPO ENT&#13;
t Na1'1'&#13;
U W Gr..en Bay&#13;
G,,1~av Tech&#13;
,1~ Colleve&#13;
M.llon couev~&#13;
Marque!!&#13;
U w Grttn Bay&#13;
U w ,rwau e.&#13;
,l!on Colle9~&#13;
O,srrlcl No u NAIA Tournament&#13;
TJME&#13;
3 p .m&#13;
3 pm&#13;
3 pm.&#13;
3 p .m,&#13;
1 p.m .&#13;
2 p .m.&#13;
12 noon&#13;
1 p.m&#13;
1 p .m.&#13;
PLACE&#13;
Away&#13;
Home&#13;
Home&#13;
Home&#13;
Away&#13;
Home&#13;
Away&#13;
Home&#13;
Home&#13;
angers beat W hitew ater 5-2&#13;
ose ·n other base ball action&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
. ,,, •&#13;
•&#13;
&amp;M-3578&#13;
0 8&#13;
TRACIC&#13;
APES I&#13;
$299&#13;
ES&#13;
, ...... . ,.,,, . •&#13;
days a ear'' Truck On&#13;
the fir. t game with three hits for&#13;
four · mes at bat. All were&#13;
ingl rtstop Les Zirbel hit a&#13;
doub1 in each game.&#13;
Although the Rangers had the&#13;
ba loaded tV1ice they couldn't&#13;
g t the hit at the right times and&#13;
th efore left a lot of men on&#13;
ba ...&#13;
In the . econd game of , Ionday'&#13;
double-header the Rangers&#13;
v. re at bat 27 times for six hits,&#13;
run and three errors. Jeff&#13;
e ·ton hit two ingles and&#13;
_ tarting pitcher Klemko pitched&#13;
a shut-out until trouble struck in&#13;
the la t of the fifth inning. Until&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
that time the score was tied at 0-0&#13;
but Whitewater made its move&#13;
and scored four runs, thereby&#13;
forcing Oberbruner to switch&#13;
pitchers, but to no avail.&#13;
The Rangers will meet&#13;
Madison's J .V. team at 2 p.m. in&#13;
Madison on Thursday for their&#13;
next game. The next home game&#13;
will be against Carroll College on&#13;
Friday, April 19, at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Oberbruner expects to see many&#13;
more winning games from his&#13;
young team but says that at the&#13;
moment they are getting adjusted&#13;
to playing college ball.&#13;
Quality JO-Speed bikes&#13;
Falcon&#13;
Bottecchia&#13;
Ficelle&#13;
Cazenave&#13;
Alan Wallace, Prop.&#13;
Dan Werve, Salesman &amp;&#13;
Head Mechanic&#13;
REP AI RS ON ALL MAKES&#13;
18th &amp; Grand, Racine, Wis.&#13;
632-0007&#13;
TONIGHT&#13;
The \.:\\'-Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents ,&#13;
"WORLD'S GREATEST"&#13;
ESCAPE ARTIST&#13;
Norman Bigelow&#13;
REINCARNATED&#13;
HOUDINI&#13;
Wednesday, April 10; 8:00 p.m.&#13;
UW -P's Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
Adm: •200 UW-P Students •2so General&#13;
APRIL 13&#13;
FREE BEE&#13;
and&#13;
HOT 00&#13;
Noon&#13;
3 p.m.&#13;
ZIGG&#13;
and zEU the&#13;
Sat. Nite </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 28, April 10, 1974</text>
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          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
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              <text>English</text>
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          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="64590">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <text>Text</text>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64593">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
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      <name>concerned student coalition</name>
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      <name>eugene gasiorkiewicz</name>
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    <tag tagId="447">
      <name>james galbraith</name>
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    <tag tagId="747">
      <name>office of planning and construction</name>
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</item>
