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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of UW-Parkside</text>
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            <text>Volume 2, issue 29</text>
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            <text>CSC captures PSGA</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>PSGA normnli,^&#13;
CSC captures PSGA&#13;
Seven hundred and seventy-one&#13;
students turned out to vote in the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Assoc (PSGA) elections held&#13;
on April 9 and 10. It was the&#13;
largest voter turnout ever at&#13;
Parkside, with 17.4 percent of the&#13;
student body participating. By&#13;
state and national standards this&#13;
is considered a fairly good turnout&#13;
for college elections.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, member&#13;
and presidential candidate of the&#13;
Concerned Student Coalition,&#13;
received 72 percent of the vote to&#13;
defeat Dan Nielsen who was&#13;
making his second bid for the&#13;
presidency. Milutinovich ran for&#13;
President Dennis Milutinovich,&#13;
president.&#13;
left, and Malcolm Mahone, vice&#13;
senator last fall under the name&#13;
"Normal Neophyte" but was not&#13;
seated in an ensuing hassle.&#13;
Milutinovich said he hopes to&#13;
see PSGA become the "most&#13;
important student organization&#13;
on campus," especially in the&#13;
areas of budgeting and some&#13;
student services. When asked if&#13;
PSGA could be effective&#13;
Milutinovich replied, "I think&#13;
everyone here is dedicated... if&#13;
we believe in what we are doing&#13;
we will succeed."&#13;
Mahone Wins In Write-in&#13;
Malcolm Mahone, who won his&#13;
unchallenged write-in campaign&#13;
for vice president, was&#13;
unavailable for comment. He&#13;
polled 493 write-in votes. Mahone&#13;
is also chairperson of the Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition and will&#13;
serve in that post until new&#13;
elections are held in that group&#13;
this Thursday.&#13;
Mary Clare Werve also ran&#13;
unopposed in a write-in campaign&#13;
for treasurer and was elected&#13;
with 277 votes.&#13;
In the senate race the Elections&#13;
Committee has requested the&#13;
senate to make a determination&#13;
on whether or not to seat the two&#13;
write-in candidates, Beth&#13;
Speaker and Tom Kennedy, since&#13;
they polled so few votes. There&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, April 24, 1974 Vol. II No. 29&#13;
B A priority project for the Parkside pick-up patro, is the c„„str„cti„„ debris beh Jlte cJT&#13;
Free conce r t f or par t icipants&#13;
Campus clean-up&#13;
begins Saturday&#13;
by Kenneth Pestka&#13;
On April 27 spring cleaning begins at Parkside.&#13;
According to Jan Ocker and Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
coordinators of CamRus Beautification Day,&#13;
Parkside students will have an opportunity to&#13;
contribute their time and muscle to beautify&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Students are invited to be at Tallent Hall at 9 a.m.&#13;
Saturday with shovels (if they have them) arid bag&#13;
lunches. Coffee will be free.&#13;
All participants that work two or more hours will&#13;
be admitted free to the Pat Ireland concert to be&#13;
held Saturday night at the Student Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Work will begin with clean-up and tree planting&#13;
around "Wyllie's Pond."&#13;
Dogwood and willow trees for the project will&#13;
come from the restoration project now going on at&#13;
Ranger Mac's Fen in Burlington. Trees from the&#13;
perimeter of the present wooded areas will also be&#13;
thinned and transplanted to open areas. According&#13;
to Sue Johnson, another staff member involved in&#13;
organizing the clean-up, this is a great chance to&#13;
"Give a Frog a Home" and show concern for our&#13;
campus.&#13;
Election&#13;
results&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
Dan Nielsen&#13;
VICE PRESIDENT&#13;
Malcolm Mahone&#13;
(write-in)&#13;
TREASURER&#13;
Mary Clare Werve&#13;
(write-in)&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS COMMITTEE&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
(write-in)&#13;
564&#13;
150&#13;
493&#13;
SENATORS&#13;
(17 seats)&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Debra Jo Donatt&#13;
Edna Mae (Carrie) Ward&#13;
Susan L. Burns&#13;
Gregory J. Hawkins&#13;
Michael G. Hahner&#13;
Thomas J. Petersen&#13;
Karen Willems&#13;
Mark Nielsen&#13;
Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
James D. Smith, Jr.&#13;
John D. Kontz&#13;
John D. Nowicki&#13;
James R. Taraska&#13;
Beth Speaker&#13;
(write-in)&#13;
Tom Kennedy&#13;
(write-in)&#13;
441&#13;
407&#13;
405&#13;
395&#13;
371&#13;
303&#13;
298&#13;
214&#13;
207&#13;
179&#13;
164&#13;
149&#13;
149&#13;
149&#13;
33&#13;
23&#13;
are vacancies in the new senate&#13;
whether or not they are seated&#13;
and special fall elections will be&#13;
held to fill them.&#13;
Senators Comment&#13;
All t he other senate candidates&#13;
are certified winners. Keith Cliff&#13;
Chambers received the most&#13;
votes in the contest and attributed&#13;
his success to the fact&#13;
that he had "more of a specific&#13;
issue than the other candidates."&#13;
He further stated he felt his large&#13;
support was an indication of&#13;
support by the students on his&#13;
stand against the building of&#13;
close-in parking lots and&#13;
destruction of trees and wildlife&#13;
near the school for that purpose.&#13;
Chambers also hopes to see the&#13;
students have more of a voice in&#13;
how their segregated and user&#13;
fees are spent.&#13;
Debora Jo Donatt, also elected&#13;
to the senate, commented that&#13;
"Dennis (Milutinovich) and the&#13;
CSC have tapped a new source of&#13;
people to be in student government.&#13;
People are involved who&#13;
have never been involved before,&#13;
like myself." She commented&#13;
that the new student government&#13;
is a diverse group of people and&#13;
"we don't know all the&#13;
established procedures but aren't&#13;
inclined to follow those runarounds&#13;
anyway and get that&#13;
bullshit."&#13;
The parking lot issue, the&#13;
cafeteria and faculty review are&#13;
what she termed important&#13;
problems. Greg Hawkins,&#13;
another newly-elected senator,&#13;
added student rights and power.&#13;
Donatt concluded that with&#13;
regard to apathy, "It's changing-&#13;
-people are concerned and getting&#13;
involved."&#13;
Michael G. Hahner won reelection&#13;
to serve a second term as&#13;
senator. Hahner said that&#13;
although it is late in the semester,&#13;
he feels work can be done in the&#13;
senate committees and&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Pestka named&#13;
RANGER editor&#13;
Kenneth Pestka, a junior&#13;
majoring in art and math, has&#13;
been chosen as editor-in-chief of&#13;
the RANGER for 1974-75. He was&#13;
one of two applicants for the&#13;
position, the other beingsophomore&#13;
William Blahg. A&#13;
third student, Geoff Blaesing,&#13;
who chaired the RANGER Advisory&#13;
Board this year, withdrew&#13;
his application.&#13;
Pestka, who has done some&#13;
writing and photography for&#13;
RANGER, served as business&#13;
manager of the paper from Sept.&#13;
of 1972 un til Jan. of this year and&#13;
is currently advertising&#13;
manager. In his application for&#13;
the position of editor he indicated&#13;
that he sees the achievement of&#13;
financial stability as one of the&#13;
greatest needs, so the paper can&#13;
remain an independent, studentoriented&#13;
publication.&#13;
Regarding his plans for the&#13;
paper Pestka said he is interested&#13;
in finding what type of regular&#13;
publication is most effective on&#13;
this campus-either a straight&#13;
newspaper which would be&#13;
strictly concerned with immediate&#13;
happenings on campus,&#13;
or perhaps more of a magazine&#13;
format, with in-depth features&#13;
and pictorial expressions of&#13;
student interest.&#13;
He is thinking of b eginning with&#13;
every fourth issue being a&#13;
feature-oriented journal, to test&#13;
reactions to such a format.&#13;
"As editor I would like to encourage&#13;
the student population to&#13;
utilize the services a newspaper&#13;
supplies to the college community.&#13;
In seeking to achieve this&#13;
I will attempt to broaden the staff&#13;
of the newspaper to include a&#13;
representative cross-section of&#13;
students. In this way the interests&#13;
of all segments of the student&#13;
body would have an influence on&#13;
the content of the newspaper,"&#13;
Pestka stated.&#13;
"I believe that the responsibility&#13;
of the editor is to set down&#13;
the broad goals and moral attitudes&#13;
of the newspaper," he&#13;
continued. "Once these limits&#13;
have been established those&#13;
people directly involved m&#13;
production should be allowed the&#13;
fullest freedom in determining&#13;
how these restrictions should be&#13;
implemented in their own areas.&#13;
The editor should act only as a&#13;
guide and director and in this&#13;
Kenneth Pestka&#13;
way allow the full expressions of&#13;
the talents and abilities of his&#13;
staff."&#13;
"One aspect of the University&#13;
I intend to" highlight," Pestka&#13;
remarked, "is the activities in&#13;
Humanities. We have an excellent&#13;
professor in the field of&#13;
printmaking and several of his&#13;
students are worthy of exposure,&#13;
as well as the areas of music,&#13;
theatre, English ahd so on. There&#13;
are many things in these areas of&#13;
general interest to students."&#13;
Science, he added, is another&#13;
area he would like to explore&#13;
more fully.&#13;
Pestka described himself as&#13;
"open-minded" when asked what&#13;
editorial views readers could&#13;
expect next year. He said that "in&#13;
dealing with administrators who&#13;
are not too open-minded, it is not&#13;
bias but personal fear of reprisal&#13;
that reporters will encounter. We&#13;
must alleviate this, or keep going&#13;
higher up."&#13;
Pestka has named all but one of&#13;
his sub-editors, but emphasizes&#13;
that there are a number of other&#13;
vacancies as well as a general&#13;
need for staff, and he would like&#13;
to talk with anyone interested in&#13;
working on the paper. "I'm not&#13;
too hung up on 'experience' " he&#13;
added.&#13;
Appointed news editor is Debra&#13;
Friedell, currently feature&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 24, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Administration&#13;
wants&#13;
apathy&#13;
When this year's RANGER staff began printing, 29&#13;
issues ago, we felt that our responsibility to our readers&#13;
was to report the news and activities on this campus as&#13;
objectively as possible. We still do. The individuals who&#13;
are dedicated to producing this paper each week have no&#13;
greater wish than to see Parkside be the best university&#13;
in the UW system, and its student newspaper one of the&#13;
most credible.&#13;
A newspaper has an obligation to let its readers know&#13;
what's happening, especially when most of its&#13;
readership is comprised of tuition paying-tax paying&#13;
citizens of the state. Freedom of the press ensues from&#13;
the right of the people to know.&#13;
However, since the beginning we have had minimal&#13;
cooperation from most administrators, have been thwarted,&#13;
lied to, and denied the right to items of public&#13;
information by many University employees.&#13;
Evidence shows that many administrators and&#13;
decision-makers at Parkside find a most fulfilling pasttime&#13;
in militantly perpetuating student apathy.&#13;
When students publicly support William Folan in the&#13;
hope that his Executive Committee will reverse its&#13;
termination recommendation, the head of the Social&#13;
Science" Division and the Dean of the College schedule&#13;
his appeal hearing last-May 18, the day after final&#13;
exams end.&#13;
Numerous students have voiced opposition to the&#13;
proposed parking lot site because of the ecological&#13;
impact. The environmental hearing is set for May 20-&#13;
again, after the semester is over and students have left&#13;
campus for awhile. If all goes well for the planners, the&#13;
lot will be finished by the time school starts in Fall.&#13;
Despite federal and state funding to the University,&#13;
citizens are denied access to budget information even&#13;
though state regulations require openness and federal&#13;
laws support full disclosure.&#13;
The University claims to want an active student&#13;
government but before election results were completely&#13;
tabulated last fall the Dean of Students office was&#13;
raising complaints about seating "Normal Neophyte,"&#13;
an action which eventually made PSGA a farce and&#13;
certainly never gave it a chance to work things out for&#13;
itself.&#13;
When students are taught or forced to be silent, small&#13;
and close-minded, their University will be the same. It&#13;
has long been time to genuinely encourage and aid involvement,&#13;
interest and participation. It is long past&#13;
time for honest action, for moral motives, and for information&#13;
affecting the public to be made public information.&#13;
One can only predict that the continuing conservatism,&#13;
fear and secrecy by which Parkside operates&#13;
shall only discourage any free-minded and concerned&#13;
persons from attending.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF - Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR - Thomas J. Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR - Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR - Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR - Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS - Jerry Delcore, Michael Olszyk,&#13;
Marilyn Schubert. Walt Ulbricht, Ken Pestka&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS • Dave Keller, John&#13;
Gesquirre, Ken Pestka&#13;
ARTIST - Amy Cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER - Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER - Ken Pestka&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Being a member of a student&#13;
organization, Sigma Pi&#13;
Fraternity, I would like to t hank&#13;
the administration for those&#13;
wonderful offices on the third&#13;
floor of the library. Not only are&#13;
these offices inadequate, they are&#13;
easily burglarized, for they have&#13;
no doors. In the past few months&#13;
trophies, notebooks, a circular&#13;
saw, and supplies valued at 75&#13;
dollars have been taken from our&#13;
files. A ritual, which has a&#13;
monetary value that can't be&#13;
placed, also has been stolen.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Vision in Action is the title for&#13;
an independent study sponsored&#13;
by professor J. Bishop through&#13;
the social science division.&#13;
Eight boys will participate&#13;
from St. Bonaventure's High&#13;
School. They will attend a two&#13;
week camping trip to Rocky&#13;
Mountain National Park,&#13;
Colorado, for 5 days. Then 5 days&#13;
will be spent at Yellowstone&#13;
National Park, Wyoming.&#13;
There will be 4 adult counselors&#13;
in charge of base rating specific&#13;
emotions daily. They are Father&#13;
Mel Barron, Stan R. Breiwick,&#13;
and Parkside students Sandy&#13;
Taylor and Yvonne Breiwick.&#13;
Research will cover 3 areas of&#13;
motivation: low motivation, low&#13;
achiever and introverted&#13;
behavior.&#13;
The main approach is to encourage&#13;
group competition for&#13;
the low motivators and introvprted&#13;
students. Cooperation'&#13;
Will be stressed for the low&#13;
achiever. We want to encourage&#13;
Since one key fits almost all file&#13;
cabinets, anybody can come in&#13;
and open our files, which has&#13;
happened. Student organizations&#13;
deserve better. They are formed&#13;
for the students and the community.&#13;
Our fraternity the past&#13;
year has participated in the Big&#13;
Brother Program, donated toys&#13;
and clothes to the Day Care&#13;
Center and Project Head Start,&#13;
collected money for the March of&#13;
Dimes, donated and decorated&#13;
the Christmas tree in Main Place,&#13;
helped sponsor the Gene Fox&#13;
Memorial Dance, helped cooreach&#13;
student to build self-esteem&#13;
and help them to prepare at least&#13;
two long range goals.&#13;
These students have been&#13;
working very hard raising funds&#13;
by going door-to-door selling&#13;
ecology stationary, baking health&#13;
food bread and cookies, car&#13;
washes, and collecting&#13;
newspapers. They know they&#13;
need direction and they want to&#13;
discover more about themselves.&#13;
By being out of contact with&#13;
their usual environment and&#13;
having to reorganize their daily&#13;
routine for 14 day s they will be&#13;
more open to change and through&#13;
a special design of interpersonal&#13;
dynamics we will be able to&#13;
establish a lot of self-disclosure&#13;
and personal autonomy. Perhaps&#13;
without any of the social&#13;
distractions he is accustomed to,&#13;
our efforts for motivational influence&#13;
should affect the student&#13;
strongly and, hopefully carry&#13;
thrdugh fbr the rest of his life. We&#13;
plan to do a folloW-up.study'on the&#13;
effectiveness, educationally and&#13;
dinate last year's "Spring&#13;
Thing," and put together Las&#13;
Vegas Night. We as a student&#13;
organization are willing to help&#13;
the University, but the University&#13;
isn't willing to help us. They say&#13;
student organizations can have&#13;
an office when the new student&#13;
union is completed. Who k nows,&#13;
by then there might not be any&#13;
student organizations left.&#13;
Rick Barnhart&#13;
Waterford Senior&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity&#13;
Academic Chairman&#13;
socially, from this experience in&#13;
the mountains one year later and&#13;
a spot check during their first&#13;
semester.&#13;
We hope to encourage more&#13;
visions in action. If we are very&#13;
successful we hope to introduce a&#13;
new area for internship in the&#13;
field of sociology, psychology and&#13;
communications.&#13;
We need your support-so&#13;
please buy our delicious health&#13;
bread and cookies at our bake&#13;
sales. We will be at Penny's and&#13;
Goldblatts in Racine April 27,&#13;
9:30-5:30, and in May we have&#13;
four scheduled car washes for&#13;
every Saturday till our departure&#13;
date August 10. The car washes&#13;
will be on Durand Ave., Racine at&#13;
the Mobil gas station across from&#13;
Big Boy's. Also, until Aug. 10 we&#13;
are taking orders by phone for&#13;
the whole wheat-banana-nut&#13;
bread-the phone number is&#13;
"Racine 632-8440.&#13;
Yvonne Breiwick&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
Wednesday, Apr. 24, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Faculty recommended&#13;
for tenure; others&#13;
await appeal&#13;
Pestka&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
editor. Her present spot will be&#13;
filled by Jane M. Schliesman, this&#13;
year's editor-in-chief. Richard P.&#13;
Ahlgrimm has been named&#13;
sports editor and Amy Cundari&#13;
will head up the new humanities&#13;
department. Becky Ecklund will&#13;
continue as copy editor. Still to be&#13;
named is a managing editor, the&#13;
position now held by Thomas&#13;
Petersen who is leaving to spend&#13;
more time on his duties as a&#13;
PSGA senator.&#13;
Steve Johnson will remain&#13;
business manager for one more&#13;
semester; another vacancy&#13;
exists in advertising.&#13;
Finally, Pestka remarked that&#13;
"it has been suggested that the&#13;
name of the paper doesn't appropriately&#13;
reflect its place on&#13;
campus, so I am considering&#13;
changing the name and welcome&#13;
suggestions."&#13;
by Jane .Schliesman&#13;
'C\~{ ^ 4&#13;
C only f ssue* /eRt ( \&#13;
ext. iMa fco/wj&#13;
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-cloCO f=X&gt;.&#13;
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and one in earth science,&#13;
requested that their names not be&#13;
released until the recommendation&#13;
is official.&#13;
Individuals whose Executive&#13;
Committee recommended termination&#13;
are at the present time&#13;
being heard through the appeals&#13;
process. Those people are Gerald&#13;
Musich, instructor of English;&#13;
Reginald Carter assistant&#13;
professor of sociology; Stauros&#13;
Daoutis, assistant professor of&#13;
anthropology; Roland Derenne,&#13;
assistant professor of sociology;&#13;
William Folan, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology;&#13;
Joseph Neville, assistant&#13;
professor of history; and Michael&#13;
Williams, assistant professor of&#13;
mathematics.&#13;
All recommendations will be&#13;
made final sometime during the&#13;
summer when the Board of&#13;
Regents gives its approval.&#13;
The following faculty members&#13;
have unofficially been recommended&#13;
to receive tenure and a&#13;
promotion by their respective&#13;
Executive Committee. In Social&#13;
Science they are: Richard&#13;
Keehn, assistant professor of&#13;
economics; John Campbell,&#13;
assistant professor of geography;&#13;
John Van Willigen, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology; and&#13;
Robert Wrinkle, assistant&#13;
professor of political science,&#13;
now on leave of absence. In&#13;
Humanities they are Carl Lindner,&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
English; Carole Vopat, assistant&#13;
professor of English; and John&#13;
Murphy, assistant professor of&#13;
art. In Science is Lon Ruedisili,&#13;
assistant professor of earth&#13;
science. In the School of Modern&#13;
Industry is John Zarling,&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
engineering science.&#13;
Two individuals, one in music&#13;
Lots -cmy ir ou&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
specifically in stopping the&#13;
building of a Union parking lot&#13;
across the loop road from the&#13;
Classroom building.&#13;
CCC Seat Remains Vacant&#13;
For the seat on the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee Bruce&#13;
Wagner polled 8 votes on a writein&#13;
basis but the Elections Committee&#13;
has decided not to certify&#13;
him since it does not consider so&#13;
few votes to be representative&#13;
and because the Committee&#13;
received a written complaint&#13;
charging that it had failed to&#13;
announce that the seat was included&#13;
in the election.&#13;
The seat will remain vacant until&#13;
the special fall elections. When&#13;
told of this decision Wagner said&#13;
he violated no election laws and&#13;
would fight the Elections Committee&#13;
to keep his seat.&#13;
nett, Election Chairperson,&#13;
sealed the box and locked it in the&#13;
PSGA office. Several CSC&#13;
m e m b e r s , i n c l u d i n g&#13;
Milutinovich, Donatt and&#13;
Hawkins, then positioned&#13;
themselves in an adjoining room&#13;
and Donatt spent the entire night&#13;
there.&#13;
Jennett said he was satisfied&#13;
that no one had gotten into the&#13;
office or tampered with the&#13;
ballots. Jewel Echlebarger,&#13;
assistant dean of students, said&#13;
she had received a complaint&#13;
from Safety and Security but was&#13;
satisfied with the Committee's&#13;
decision.&#13;
Election Irregularity&#13;
The Elections Committee noted&#13;
an irregularity in procedures but&#13;
determined it had not affected&#13;
results and no action would be&#13;
taken. The problem arose at the&#13;
end of the first day's voting when&#13;
the ballots cast were to be locked&#13;
in a safe. Finding the ballot box&#13;
did not fit in the safe Tom Jen- T&gt; &amp; 79C 'WtcuCc Sale&amp;&#13;
Has Latest Records &amp; Tapes&#13;
at Special Prices&#13;
You Can Afford /&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE, RACINE 637-2212.&#13;
10 So. Riverside Plaza&#13;
Chicago, Illinois 60606&#13;
Photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
One sign of s pring in southeastern Wisconsin is that as the weather&#13;
warms, the smelt run is on! This scene is the Racine Yacht Club pier.&#13;
Smelt are tiny fish, about four to six inches long and excellent for pan&#13;
frying. More spring photos on pages 6 and 7.&#13;
"There are so many theaters&#13;
and so little theatre.&#13;
People are willing to spend so&#13;
much money on buildings and so&#13;
little on people."&#13;
-MargritRoma, Director,&#13;
The New Shakespeare Co.&#13;
of San Francisco, when&#13;
asked recently how she&#13;
liked Parkside's theater. • LEATHER GOODS' •WATER BEDS •PAPERS&#13;
• JEWELRY •BEAN BAGS •TYPES/!&#13;
• BATl 1 PROPUCTS RECORDS, ••••,,# PIPES *&#13;
! "Open 36S cfays a year .; .!.&#13;
''THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 24, 1974&#13;
Regents approve SMI build •ng;&#13;
location and architect sought&#13;
Approval of the proposed&#13;
School of Modern Industry (SMI)&#13;
building and authority to seek&#13;
advance planning funds for the&#13;
project from the State Building&#13;
Commission was received from&#13;
the Board of Regents at their&#13;
April meeting.&#13;
The request for the advance&#13;
planning money will go before the&#13;
State Building Commission next&#13;
month. The state Bureau of&#13;
f a c i l i t i e s M a n a g e m e n t&#13;
estimates the planning money&#13;
request at approximately $35,000-&#13;
$40,000.&#13;
Parkside officials are hopeful&#13;
the building will be approved in&#13;
the 1975-77 biennial building&#13;
budget. If it is, granting of the&#13;
advance planning money now&#13;
will have hastened completion of&#13;
the building by enabling construction&#13;
to begin shortly after&#13;
approval of the 1975-77 state&#13;
building budget. The building&#13;
could then possibly be finished by&#13;
late 1977 or early 1978.&#13;
James Galbraith, Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction,&#13;
estimated the building will cost&#13;
roughly $4 million. Asked about&#13;
the location Galbraith replied&#13;
*B - u&#13;
QQ S3 1 U ^ .&#13;
"tr T=* =3&#13;
O cs f i&#13;
i« vr»&#13;
Q—&#13;
CO LAJI&#13;
it— - _ Qg •ex&#13;
CO "2 =C&#13;
O u. •&#13;
| ' T3' U ri&#13;
UJ w OX&#13;
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that it will be in the academic&#13;
complex, and four possibilities&#13;
need to be studied. They are:&#13;
south of Comm Arts and west of&#13;
the woods and sidewalk, connecting&#13;
to Comm Arts at the&#13;
concourse level; southeast of&#13;
LLC behind the Information&#13;
kiosk, running in an east-west&#13;
direction similar to Comm Arts;&#13;
the west end of the Classroom&#13;
building, although there is&#13;
limited space available there;&#13;
and east of the new campus&#13;
Union, north of the inner loop&#13;
road in an east-west direction.&#13;
Containing 66,250 assignable&#13;
square feet, the building will&#13;
accommodate the proposed new&#13;
engineering technology program,&#13;
the expansion and broadening of&#13;
the management sciences undergraduate&#13;
program, and the&#13;
proposed new masters programs&#13;
in those two areas. It will also&#13;
house the Modern Industry&#13;
Outreach Program.&#13;
The SMI building was initially&#13;
endorsed by the regents in October&#13;
of 1972, having been&#13;
proposed since 1969. The project&#13;
was withdrawn in January 1973&#13;
pending further study and&#13;
mission definition as well as&#13;
because of revised, lower&#13;
enrollment projections.&#13;
The recently adopted mission&#13;
statement for Parkside reinforced&#13;
the school's emphasis on&#13;
developing programs directly&#13;
related to the industrial&#13;
character of the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area, including graduate work in&#13;
the SMI which could begin as&#13;
early as fall, 1975. Expanded&#13;
undergraduate programs have&#13;
also received preliminary approval.&#13;
The School currently&#13;
generates about. 14 percent of the&#13;
total campus credit hour&#13;
production and it is expected to&#13;
increase to 25 percent by 1980.&#13;
Besides strengthening the&#13;
modern industry mission&#13;
program, officials say the&#13;
building is also needed to provide&#13;
additional space to meet expected&#13;
growth in the face of loss&#13;
of the Kenosha campus facilities&#13;
next January.&#13;
The Pat Ireland concert, originally set for February but cancelled&#13;
by a s nowstorm, has been rescheduled for Saturday, April 27, in the&#13;
Student Activities Building. A "happy hour" will precede the concert&#13;
from 8-9 p.m., when beer will be 20 cents. Tony, Jumbo and Company&#13;
will open the show at 9 p.m. Tickets are $1.50 for students in advance&#13;
and $2 for guests and at the door.&#13;
BurgerChef&#13;
Big Shef&#13;
SPECIAL?, NOW!&#13;
55* Regularly&#13;
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) • &gt; » « t * v v y v c&#13;
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3400 S heridan Rl &amp; 6926 39tli Ave.&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
THE GREAT GATSBY&#13;
It's an old Hollywood story. The production of the film foreshadowed&#13;
its failure. An incredible amount of confusion, animosity and scandal&#13;
existed: producers, shooting schedules and actors changed places like&#13;
a 7 million dollar game of musical chairs. Despite its enormous&#13;
budget, the superstars or the promotion of the Gatsby Look in fashion&#13;
(including Teflon cookware!), The Great Gatsby is another slap to&#13;
Hollywood's philosophy and prescription of greatness - Expensive&#13;
packaging cannot improve crap. The film is an empty shell which, at&#13;
best, resembles Fitzgerald's conception in its opulent parentheses. The&#13;
depth of the charcters' self-delusion and their futile search for order&#13;
and meaning can not be captured by merely reconstructing Gatsby's&#13;
wild parties or palatial mansion in decadent aetail.&#13;
Director Jack Clayton has turned F. Scott Fitzgerald's pathos into&#13;
maudlin bathos. The opening credits, a montage of faded photos of Jay&#13;
Gatsby's lost love, Daisy Buchanan (Mia Farrow), previews the&#13;
following 2V2 hours of trite shape minus substance. Gatsby is actually&#13;
a moving photograph, not a motion picture. Clayton handles actors&#13;
like mannikins or models. Mia Farrow's Daisy is a brittle child of stuff&#13;
dreams are not made on. To impress us of her bland beauty, Clayton&#13;
punctuates the film with dozens of soft focus close-ups. I can never&#13;
generate sympathy for a covergirl, especially one who is not&#13;
photogenic.&#13;
Gatsby (Robert Redford) is a limp and soggy man of mystery.&#13;
Clayton has de-emphasized Gatsby's humble and sordid origin to&#13;
create a myth not a man. And the narrator, Nick Carraway (Sam&#13;
Waterston) is an awkward ambiguity in the film. He seems to be more&#13;
like an objective reporter than a participant in the chaos as Fitzgerald&#13;
intends. By limiting the role of Nick, Clayton denies us a closer&#13;
identification with the tragedy; we merely shrug our shoulders at&#13;
Gatsby s death.&#13;
The screenplay by Francis Ford Coppola (The Godfather's director)&#13;
is one of many loose threads in a weak and sloppy fabric Nick's&#13;
narration is lengthy and redundant. "It had been a golden afternoon "&#13;
explains Nick when he first sighted Gatsby. Simultaneously, a stock&#13;
shot of a golden-crimson sunset over a sea tells our eyes the same&#13;
message more economically and descriptively.&#13;
In an attempt to bring culture to the masses Clayton seizes literary&#13;
symbolism and swings it like a heavy club. He tastelessly pounds us&#13;
with the significance of the smouldering ashpiles which climaxes as&#13;
Gatsby s hearse passes a hellish scene of flaming destruction and&#13;
waste. But much worse, Clayton imposes bird imagery to emphatically&#13;
state Gatsby's fate. Clayton cuts to an insipid close-up of a&#13;
blue-jay (get it?) during Gatsby's murder. Cheap thinking even for an&#13;
amateur filmmaker.&#13;
Gatsby is literally supported by its supporting actors. Karen Black's&#13;
performance as the frustrated wife, Myrtle Wilson, is a good portrayal&#13;
^a"^leSCenthunger for sex' escaPe and society. Her husband&#13;
(Scott Wilson) intimately develops the agony and later the insanity of&#13;
diseased love Myrtle's lover, Tom Buchanan is excellently played by&#13;
Bruce Dern who captures a lonely man's angst, racism and relief in&#13;
absurd theories of cosmic destruction.&#13;
Gatsby's tragedy focuses on human perception. Gatsby lives for an&#13;
ilusion while Daisy lives a lie. To the film's director Jack Clayton and&#13;
its producer David Merrick I add a final epitaph from the novel:&#13;
there is no confusion like the confusion of a simple mind."&#13;
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Models also open weekdays&#13;
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Or by a personal showing •'&#13;
at your convenience.&#13;
For more information PHONE 5 52-9339&#13;
PARKSIDE REALTY INC.&#13;
id Built by U S General&#13;
Have LaFollette': Wednesday, Ap r . 24, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition (CSC) has sought unsuccessfully&#13;
thus far to get an&#13;
injunction to keep Physical Plant&#13;
Irom transplanting or destroying&#13;
any more trees on the proposed&#13;
parking lot site just east of the&#13;
present faculty-staff lot.&#13;
In his report to CSC on the legalsituation&#13;
regarding the proposed&#13;
site, CSC member Kai Nail stated&#13;
that the University is complying&#13;
with the environmental impact&#13;
law which requires it to publicize&#13;
a preliminary report, a final&#13;
report, and hold a hearing. Nail&#13;
said that the law is an ambiguous&#13;
one and does not require the&#13;
University to state the truth in&#13;
any of its reports. The CSC has, in&#13;
the past, accused University&#13;
administrators of lying and&#13;
misinforming the public in its&#13;
preliminary environmental&#13;
impact report.&#13;
The CSC has been passing a&#13;
petition opposing the parking lot&#13;
site and has gained nearly 600&#13;
signatures in that effort. Their&#13;
attorney, Terry Rose of Kenosha,&#13;
is doing further checking and will&#13;
be in contact with state senator&#13;
Douglas LaFollette, said Nail, to&#13;
see what support can be&#13;
generated from public officials.&#13;
LaFollette Supports CSC&#13;
LaFollette has given verbal&#13;
support to CSC, saying that&#13;
"whenever I hear that they'll&#13;
save money by doing it one way&#13;
rather than another my initial&#13;
reaction is suspicion. Since they&#13;
support or like one plan, they'll&#13;
always say it saves money.&#13;
That's always a good excuse,&#13;
whether it's true or not. My&#13;
thought is that if they get more&#13;
lots the name of the school should&#13;
be changed from Parkside to&#13;
CSC fails in injunction attempt&#13;
Parrkiingllottssiide.. Whhaatt PPaarrikrcsiiHde^ .... ....&#13;
doesn't need is another lot "&#13;
Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction, James Galbraith,&#13;
said he had no idea as to whether&#13;
or not LaFollette's opposition to&#13;
the proposed site would affect the&#13;
situation. Galbraith stated that&#13;
the only alternative site the&#13;
University has is that which was&#13;
announced in the original campus&#13;
master plan, a site directly west&#13;
of the existing far east lot.&#13;
Construction of a lot with 1,000&#13;
spaces in that area would cost&#13;
about the same as building one on&#13;
the proposed site, said Galbraith&#13;
however, the total system would&#13;
cost more in that additional&#13;
shuttle bus service would have to&#13;
be provided. Galbraith also felt&#13;
that the shuttle bus service would&#13;
have to be maintained in that&#13;
area over summer school&#13;
sessions and on week-ends and&#13;
holidays.&#13;
Monies used to finance parking&#13;
lots and shuttle bus service are&#13;
generated through user fees.&#13;
Currently these areas receive $18&#13;
out of tuition for each student&#13;
carrying 15 credits. Also, $7&#13;
student parking stickers help&#13;
finance lots, and these amounts&#13;
are pro-rated for part time&#13;
students. Faculty and staff also&#13;
pay a parking fee of $40.&#13;
Lot Won't Be Needed In 5 Years&#13;
Keith Graham of the&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Regional&#13;
P l a n n i n g C o m m i s s i o n&#13;
(SEWRPC) said that because the&#13;
campus enrollment has grown at&#13;
a slower rate than was originally&#13;
anticipated, SEWRPC has&#13;
worked with the University in&#13;
deciding that short term changes&#13;
in the original campus master&#13;
plan should be made at this time.&#13;
Graham hoped that the lot would&#13;
Photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
narking7nfsL^,lttraCtt°rrSin J)ack®round created the ruts in the foreground of the proposed&#13;
UUnniivveerrssiittyv ffrronmT rr emoving trees from this, 0lta'nCdS.C fai,ed in its efforts to get an injunction to stop the&#13;
Drainage problems ignored&#13;
not be needed anymore within 3-5&#13;
years and indicated it could be&#13;
ripped up. The University could,&#13;
at that time, resume following&#13;
the original master plan.&#13;
Graham said that SEWRPC is&#13;
counting heavily on the cities of&#13;
Racine and Kenosha to&#13;
develop some type of viable mass&#13;
transit system involving&#13;
Parkside. For this reason, he&#13;
continued, the University is going&#13;
to hold back construction of a lot&#13;
on the other proposed site, west of&#13;
the Comm Arts Building.&#13;
Graham said that the only&#13;
assurance he could give students&#13;
that the University would not fall&#13;
into a habit of providing close-in&#13;
parking was because "in our&#13;
conversations and the previous&#13;
actions of the University I am&#13;
convinced it is anxious to follow&#13;
the outline of the original campus&#13;
master plan."&#13;
Kent Regal of the Department&#13;
of Natural Resources Air&#13;
Pollution Control, said that the&#13;
proposed lot is small and that&#13;
there is adequate traffic control&#13;
to reduce running time, which is&#13;
the major factor in air quality.&#13;
Reduction of running time, said&#13;
Regal, reduces air emmissions.&#13;
He added that the proposed site is&#13;
in a large open area and vehicle&#13;
traffic is low, therefore,&#13;
quality should not suffer.&#13;
air&#13;
No More Lots Before 1980&#13;
No other parking lots are expected&#13;
to be needed before 1980,&#13;
said Galbraith. At that time&#13;
consultants feel that a 450 car lot&#13;
will be required, located south of&#13;
the Phy Ed Building. Galbraith&#13;
said that because of the&#13;
University's hope of getting a&#13;
mass transit system by that&#13;
time, the need for additional&#13;
parking space will have&#13;
diminished and no new lot will be&#13;
required.&#13;
A p ublic hearing regarding the&#13;
proposed parking lot site directly&#13;
east of the faculty-staff lot will be&#13;
held on May 20 at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Classroom Building, room 105.&#13;
Anyone wishing to speak may&#13;
sign up in the concourse before&#13;
the hearing. Individuals who&#13;
cannot or do not wish to speak&#13;
publicly may write a letter&#13;
stating their views to the Office of&#13;
Planning and Construction. All&#13;
letters must be signed and dated.&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Final impac t study out on l o ts &amp; road&#13;
Pike Rivpr Thp W i c n Anein ThPTP Q1 m nl m net&#13;
The Final Environmental&#13;
Impact Statement on the construction&#13;
of two parking lots and&#13;
an outer access road on campus&#13;
has been released by James&#13;
Galbraith, director of Planning&#13;
and Construction.&#13;
The report includes information&#13;
on environmental&#13;
impact, alternatives to and advantages&#13;
of the project, and&#13;
economic impact. Also included&#13;
are "reasons why proposed&#13;
action is believed to be the best&#13;
course of action," and various&#13;
reactions to the preliminary&#13;
environmental impact report.&#13;
The project calls for the construction&#13;
of two close-in parking&#13;
lots: one located on the north side&#13;
of the loop road, east of the&#13;
temporary faculty-staff lot (the&#13;
future site of the Campus Center);&#13;
the other located across the&#13;
loop road from the Comm Arts&#13;
building, to the west, and within&#13;
walking distance of the Phy Ed&#13;
building. The proposed roadway&#13;
would connect with the new&#13;
parking lots, and encircle the&#13;
academic area on the outer&#13;
perimeters of the campus.&#13;
The report stresses the need for&#13;
additional parking spaces on&#13;
campus due to the closing of the&#13;
Kenosha Center and the loss of&#13;
the faculty-staff lot when construction&#13;
of the Campus^ Center&#13;
begins.&#13;
Alternative sites were rejected&#13;
for various reasons, the major&#13;
objection being the increased&#13;
cost of expanded shuttle bus&#13;
service should new parking lots&#13;
be constructed adjacent to&#13;
present permanent lots.&#13;
Multi-level parking ramps&#13;
were rejected as an alternative&#13;
"because of their excessive&#13;
cost;" mass transit link-ups with&#13;
Racine and Kenosha and additional&#13;
campus housing are&#13;
unsatisfactory alternatives, says&#13;
the report, because their effect is&#13;
too long-range and the need is&#13;
immediate.&#13;
In considering the environmental&#13;
effects of the&#13;
project, the report acknowledges&#13;
the existence of wildlife in the&#13;
parking lot areas, but claims "it&#13;
will be easy for the animals to&#13;
relocate in areas which will be&#13;
entirely sympathetic and supportive&#13;
to their existence."&#13;
The report says that "plant&#13;
material" in the north lot site will&#13;
be either transplanted or used to&#13;
landscape and screen the area;&#13;
destruction of plant life will be&#13;
kept to a minimum.&#13;
Another major environmental&#13;
problem brought on by construction&#13;
in these areas would be&#13;
water drainage. The designed&#13;
drainage system calls for surface&#13;
runoff water to be carried via&#13;
natural drainage courses into the&#13;
Pike River. The Wisconsin&#13;
Department of Natural&#13;
Resources (DNR), in its response&#13;
to the preliminary report, states&#13;
that this drainage method "may&#13;
create significant water quality&#13;
problems... and may affect the&#13;
vegetation of the Petrifying&#13;
Springs Area." The DNR letter&#13;
suggests that "alternative&#13;
methods of providing parking&#13;
facilities" be investigated.&#13;
The original plan for natural&#13;
water drainage is restated in this&#13;
final report, but no alterations in&#13;
the plan have been" made to&#13;
forestall water quality problems&#13;
or adverse effects on Park&#13;
vegetation.&#13;
The report justifies the need for&#13;
close-in parking by virtue of the&#13;
fact that Parkside is a commuter&#13;
campus, thus parking must be&#13;
"readily available and&#13;
reasonably convenient."&#13;
"There simply must be&#13;
adequate facilities to accomodate&#13;
this (parking) need. Any failure&#13;
to provide these improvements&#13;
will result in such drastic transportation&#13;
problems to the&#13;
students and staff that it will&#13;
cause serious interference with&#13;
the education process. It is a&#13;
basic, essential, physical need&#13;
that will become a source of&#13;
annoyance, discouragement, and&#13;
discontent to the community if it&#13;
is not readily available and&#13;
reasonably convenient. Conversly,&#13;
if parking is adequate and&#13;
convenient, it will recede to the&#13;
background of one's consciousness,&#13;
freeing one's&#13;
awareness to the more important&#13;
aspects of gaining a good&#13;
education and the extending of&#13;
effort in that endeavor."&#13;
Concern extends beyond the&#13;
campus community, however.&#13;
The report goes on to say, "It is&#13;
unfair to forget the general public&#13;
and their need for parking&#13;
facilities and reasonable access&#13;
to this campus. Their interest and&#13;
participation in on-campus ...&#13;
events must be accommodated."&#13;
In conclusion, the report states&#13;
that the overall needs of Parkside&#13;
"indicate that the proposed plans&#13;
clearly provide the most advantages&#13;
with few long-term bad&#13;
effects."&#13;
Copies of the report are&#13;
available at the Parkside library&#13;
and at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
public libraries. Written comments&#13;
will be accepted by the&#13;
Office of Planning and Construction&#13;
and at the environmental&#13;
hearing to be held on&#13;
May 20 in Room 105 of the&#13;
Classroom Building at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The hearing will be open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
STEVE'S FIVE &amp; DIME TERMPAPER'S&#13;
1123 Broadway Suite 203&#13;
N.Y., N.Y. 10010&#13;
(212) 675-4849&#13;
Term papers &amp; Thesis from 90c - pg.&#13;
Mon. -Sat. 10:30-4:00&#13;
CAMPUS JOBS AVAILABLE&#13;
"UNION"&#13;
April 24, 26, 27, 28&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd Notional .(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 G reenbay R oad Phone 6 54-0485&#13;
Ge n t l y comes s&#13;
Shyly and cautiously spring&#13;
moves in, as if it might be too&#13;
early yet. Gently, almost unnoticed&#13;
the world gives in and the&#13;
seasons change.&#13;
For most who are anxious&#13;
everything becomes a sign of&#13;
spring. Even a snowstorm in&#13;
April. But, low heavy clouds&#13;
move to make way for a glorious&#13;
sun, the land thaws and water&#13;
gathers in the form of countless&#13;
puddles. Buds peak out of their&#13;
branches to watch trilliums and&#13;
daffodils unfold and bloom from&#13;
an earth which too has a&#13;
fragrance about it that smells&#13;
like spring.&#13;
Sparrows which spent the&#13;
winter sleeping under a snow&#13;
laden spruce branch wake the&#13;
world one day this time of year,&#13;
and tiny as they are, they rejoice&#13;
like a church choir.&#13;
• * •**. ' *&#13;
Jfe* " w&#13;
Wednesday, Apr. 24, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
spring&#13;
One day called spring, rather&#13;
than reaching for an armful of&#13;
hay from the loft, someone leads&#13;
a horse down the lane to a pasture&#13;
soaked in green.&#13;
The change in the earth's&#13;
personality is not obvious. Spring&#13;
is a teaser and must be watched&#13;
in every detail for surely, early&#13;
one morning as the sun stretches&#13;
to touch the sky, spring will have&#13;
given bi rth to summer.&#13;
-text and photos by&#13;
RANGER Feature Editor&#13;
Debra Friedell&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
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Photo by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Falcon&#13;
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Ficelle Dan Werve, Salesman &amp;&#13;
Cazenave Head Mechanic&#13;
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Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country&#13;
8 THE PARKSI D E RANG E R Wed n e s d a y , A p r . 2 4 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
.Schools in financial straits&#13;
Lay -of f of faculty l ikel y&#13;
rhe Board of Regents recently&#13;
approved a request to place four&#13;
campuses in a state of financial&#13;
emergency for 1975-76. The&#13;
campuses are Whitewater,&#13;
Stevens Point, Platteville and&#13;
Oshkosh. The designation for&#13;
Oshkosh is provisional, subject to&#13;
review by the board at its May&#13;
meeting. By declaring an&#13;
emergency, chancellors have the&#13;
authority to lay off tenured&#13;
faculty members. Dropping&#13;
enrollments are cited as the&#13;
reason for the lay-offs.&#13;
Current enrollment projections&#13;
show that Oshkosh could dismiss&#13;
20-40 tenured faculty members,&#13;
Platteville 16, Stevens Point 20&#13;
and Whitewater 20, even if the $4&#13;
million relief package in the&#13;
budget review bill passes. If the&#13;
bill is lost, more professors could&#13;
lose their jobs including some at&#13;
Parkside. It also would mean that&#13;
some tenured faculty could be&#13;
dismissed without the required&#13;
one year notice.&#13;
The budget review bill is one of&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit t o the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
fjl&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
several items expected to be&#13;
taken up in a special session of&#13;
the Legislature opening April 29.&#13;
Faculty at Oshkosh, Platteville&#13;
and Whitewater refused to go&#13;
along with the declaration of&#13;
fiscal emergency. At Stevens&#13;
Point the faculty supported the&#13;
Chancellor's request for such a&#13;
statement.&#13;
Carol Marion a history&#13;
professor at Stevens Point and&#13;
secretary of The Association of&#13;
UW Faculty (TAUWF) said&#13;
faculty members are&#13;
"frustrated, angry, and&#13;
bewildered at what has happened&#13;
very quickly to campuses which&#13;
four or five years ago were&#13;
growing and exciting places to&#13;
be."&#13;
Two years ago, she noted, her&#13;
classes were so crowded that&#13;
students had to find seats on the&#13;
floor. Today, her classes are half&#13;
the size they used to be. But she&#13;
said it is untrue that with dropping&#13;
enrollments professors have&#13;
nothing to do. "There is plenty for&#13;
them to do," she said, pointing&#13;
out that the state could decide as&#13;
a matter of policy that smaller&#13;
classes are desirable.&#13;
TAUWF has announced its&#13;
intentions to sue the UW on behalf&#13;
of laid off faculty, charging that&#13;
their terminations were illegal.&#13;
The Royal Purple, student&#13;
newspaper at Whitewater,&#13;
reported that the Faculty Senate&#13;
there, in refusing to participate in&#13;
the financial emergency&#13;
declaration at UW-W, discussed&#13;
the policies of Central Administration.&#13;
One faculty&#13;
member said, "Most of us believe&#13;
we are in a fiscal emergency and&#13;
part of it is caused by the&#13;
budgetary policies of Central&#13;
Administration. We are not being&#13;
asked to deal with the fiscal&#13;
emergency but to construct a new&#13;
edifice for the dismissal of&#13;
faculty."&#13;
The Faculty Senate at&#13;
Whitewater also voted to delete&#13;
the last line of its resolution&#13;
which read, "Be it further&#13;
resolved that an acute intellecutal&#13;
emergency be declared&#13;
at the Central Office." The&#13;
reason stated for deletion was&#13;
that the resolution clearly stated&#13;
the Senate's position on a facutal&#13;
basis, but the last line was vague&#13;
and emotional.&#13;
BurgerChef J i&#13;
Big Shef S pecial J&#13;
oVv&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Art Student? awpt f l l in ? rea shows&#13;
Several Parkside art students have had their work accepted in area shows. Marjorie&#13;
Laycock received a blue ribbon for her intaglio print "Maples" which is included in the&#13;
current Racine Art Association Exhibition at Wustum Museum, Racine.&#13;
Lois Mogensen and Jeanne Rayburne both are represented by intaglio prints in the 10th&#13;
Waterloo (Iowa) Municipal Galleries Show "Paper Works," which runs through April 28.&#13;
Norman Johnson has an intaglio and a painting and Gary Petersen a painting in Racine's&#13;
Prairie School Exhibition through April 20.&#13;
The Prairie show also includes two silkscreens by David Zaig of the art faculty. They are&#13;
titled "Parkside" and "Room 217."&#13;
Regents to conduct hearing on campus liquor ri^ioc&#13;
The Board of Regents took a step toward liberalizing liquor rules on the state's campuses at&#13;
the April regent's meeting. But the full board did not go as far as its Education Committee had&#13;
recommended by allowing liquor to be served in residence halls and student gatherina soots&#13;
under rules to be set by each chancellor. '&#13;
The full board voted tentatively to repeal the section of the Wisconsin Administrative Code&#13;
which forbids serving liquor in student areas. The board will conduct a public hearinq on that&#13;
question. After the hearing the board will decide whether to put the repeal into effect.&#13;
If the rule is repealed, the board will then discuss new regulations and how thev will ho&#13;
administered. » ' " De&#13;
ROTC survey resul t s negative&#13;
As * r«u." °' ,bf *urveV conducted here by the Army ROTC it does not appear at this time&#13;
that Parks.de will have an ROTC program. Of the three percent of the studentbodlfi!&#13;
responded, a majority were against such a program being instituted here. Lieutenant Colone&#13;
Raymond Larson said as a result of the survey, "he would not recommend the instituti^n o&#13;
the program to Chancellor Wyllie." msinution of&#13;
"Frank Film" to be shown Thursday&#13;
"Frank Film," the Frank Mouris short film which has just added the 197-1 Oscar for&#13;
animation to a host of other awards, will be shown by its creator as part of a program titled&#13;
"Animation and Other Obsessions" at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 25, in Room nw&#13;
Greenquist Hall. UJ&#13;
The free public program, which also includes rushes from Mouris' current film projects is&#13;
sponsored by the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. Mouris will hold workshoos for fi'lm&#13;
classes during the day preceeding his public program.&#13;
Le c hus z—selected for olvmpic sorrpr t rial*&#13;
Rick Lechusz, a junior, has been selected to compete in the Midwest reaionai &lt;nr«,&#13;
for the 1975 United States Pan American Games team and 1976 Olympic squad&#13;
Lechusz advanced to the Midwest regional trials at Southern Illinois University&#13;
Edwardsville May 4-5 along with 24 other collegians from this region. These 25 will vKK&#13;
non-colleg.ate amateurs at Edwardsville for 25 places in the final trials to •2&#13;
June. Three other regional tryouts are being held in the East South an!l Wes? '&#13;
Lechusz, has lettered for Parkside three times, captained the UW-P team twice and ha*&#13;
been named to the NA.A all-District 14 team the last two years. He was alsT seTcted to X1 ss sAoSu;s;r,ar ,eam ,h is vea r'piaying ,or ,h e&#13;
•Med Te chs to tour lahnratnri^&#13;
SS=SS5S~i,a:&#13;
' " i ' i ' " i . i l l .&#13;
SMI appoint s bus. manaaempnt profpssnr&#13;
Schlwl^f1 Modern Xdustry" ^'r^-^men, »" fhe&#13;
accounting systems and d'ata processing anS auditing SPeC,a"Ia,,°n are a«°""«ng,&#13;
years"antf chaired the'dep^rtme nt°or\wo ye^rV^H^aIso'has'l»T "n,v?r#,?y f°r ,h# PaS* "&#13;
training programs of several major industries including IBM ' teaChi"9 a"d&#13;
Accou,ntaanTsember 0&lt; ^ Accou",in9 Association and the National Association of&#13;
comhig'to the' He'rewiv^hls^BA deweo 7" aCCOuntant before&#13;
and did his doctoral work at the University of North Carolina at ChTpel HiM ^ U"iVerSi,V&#13;
Annual s oring athletic banquet set for M*u i&#13;
R arinp^Mntnr fn'nV'l bC ho,di!n9 i,s awarPs banquet and dance on Friday, May 3 at the&#13;
Racine Motor inn. Last year this event drew approximately 400 people and this year acbette7affaiarwh!&#13;
rh,„a,,hld,iC direC,°r °rbV M°SS' m°re P,annin9 has 9°"a into "a bigger and&#13;
Musicw illhe nr«JThV im™diately following the presentation of awards."&#13;
"seems tn he ne,t ^ « 9r°UP kn0W" 35 "Ll9ht As A Faat*er," which, Moss says,&#13;
banchtfrector Boh'tLZ* at,?n,'°" ,or beit19 able ,0 P,aV i«»st about anything." Parkside&#13;
Dana director Bob Thomason rates them as "among the best going."&#13;
Special'HonorsbLPrt?!,n.,ed«,a,,er 3 smor9asbord dinner- *° Most Valuable Player, Captains,&#13;
others oavss ner , u t h W'nners- The VarsitV Club inv'*®s all athletes free to this affair;&#13;
?he Information Jincif * . thC C°St °f ,he dinner and dance" Ticke,s are sal* a'&#13;
avaiabTeTorsa" k'°Sk and at'he PbY Ed Office. Only a limited number of tickets will be&#13;
available for sale because of the capacity of the facility, and all sales will end on April 25.&#13;
this way: Students pick up question sh • ''brarv staff to enter the contest, which works&#13;
knowledge of the card catalog and referenc^books to »nsuTo'S in,ormation desk' ,ben u,ilize&#13;
fast as possible. The three students with thf hff« »• a"swer as many questions as possible as&#13;
and third prizes respectively. 'meS ,be most answers win first, second&#13;
library.related mateha^s^onAprM 29 Each stud C°tn,eSt and award Pr''es-books and other&#13;
compete individually. Student employes of thD ifif, maV e",er ,ha contest on,V once and must&#13;
have an edge in expertise. ary are not eligible since they, presumably,&#13;
Child Care Center will Bp f fpen ig ^ymmor&#13;
of^a\s?sr FSS?he? infnrmatCen,er hasannounced ,baf ^ will be open for the summer session&#13;
classes. Further information is available by calling the Center at 552-8322.&#13;
VINO'S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
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BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DfelNKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
o social stimulant "Deviance in the Dark" is the&#13;
title of an environmental communication&#13;
experiment recently&#13;
completed by senior Yvonne&#13;
Breiwick as an Independent&#13;
Study project for Scott Baudhuin,&#13;
assistant professor of Communications.&#13;
Breiwick, who is&#13;
majoring in sociology and&#13;
psychology as well as minoring in&#13;
communications, based her&#13;
project on a study by&#13;
psychologists Kenneth and Mary&#13;
Gergen and William H. Barton.&#13;
"The purpose was to find out&#13;
what a person will do in a totally&#13;
dark setting when there are other&#13;
people in the room," Breiwick&#13;
said. "Visual contact was impossible&#13;
so each person was&#13;
stripped of physical identity, but&#13;
free to project onto others in the&#13;
room the image of him-herself&#13;
that each chose."&#13;
The questions Breiwick sought&#13;
to answer were, "What sort of&#13;
relationships will evolve in this&#13;
environment? What do people do&#13;
with this anonymity? How do&#13;
they cope with this kind of&#13;
freedom?"&#13;
Twenty-two Parkside students&#13;
volunteered as subjects for this&#13;
experiment, although they knew&#13;
nothing about Breiwick's purpose&#13;
or what they were letting&#13;
themselves in for. They were&#13;
divided into three groups: group&#13;
A, the control group, who were in&#13;
a lighted room; group B, a group&#13;
of students who knew each other;&#13;
and group C, composed of total&#13;
strangers. The groups were&#13;
sexually mixed and the students&#13;
ranged in age from 18-26.&#13;
Subjects first filled out a&#13;
questionnaire which asked interpersonal&#13;
kinds of questions&#13;
that sought internal selfhelped&#13;
them understand the&#13;
power of nonverbal communication&#13;
in impression formations."&#13;
Breiwick said that discussion in&#13;
group B was very animated and&#13;
those subjects moved about&#13;
freely. In groups B and C almost&#13;
80 percent of the subjects indicated&#13;
on the post-evaluation&#13;
form that they had felt sexual&#13;
excitement.&#13;
Group C's experiences opened&#13;
with tension and nervousness, but&#13;
gradually people moved into&#13;
smaller groups and started&#13;
conversing. This group of&#13;
strangers ultimately recorded&#13;
the highest level of interaction.&#13;
Breiwick said that this group was&#13;
faced with a number of alternatives&#13;
for action and yet almost&#13;
all members chose some form of&#13;
closeness with others. "Were&#13;
these intimacies based on fear of&#13;
the unknown-an attempt to band&#13;
together to ward off danger?&#13;
Group B had an established&#13;
security going for them already&#13;
in knowing each other. Perhaps&#13;
this also affected the amount of&#13;
participation and group&#13;
cohesion," speculated Breiwick.&#13;
One of the subjects summarized&#13;
his experiences on the&#13;
evaluation form, saying, "I found&#13;
myself accepting people, without&#13;
any nonverbal cues to distract&#13;
me. I felt more involved with&#13;
each person and I learned more&#13;
about them in one hour than I&#13;
would have learned all&#13;
semester."&#13;
9. Talked about "important" things&#13;
10. Laughed or giggled&#13;
11. Felt excited in a sexual way&#13;
12. Felt suspended- beyond normal time and&#13;
space&#13;
13. Felt close to another person (s)&#13;
14. Felt afraid of another person (s)&#13;
15. Thought about asking to leave&#13;
16. Hummed or sang&#13;
17. Prayed&#13;
18. Had very interesting ideas&#13;
19. Felt bored&#13;
20. Felt panicky&#13;
21. Felt lonely or isolated&#13;
22. Sat on the floor&#13;
23. Danced&#13;
24. Hugged a person&#13;
25. Prevented someone from touching me&#13;
26. Closed my eyes (other than blinking)&#13;
27. Left the chamber&#13;
28. Lay on the floor&#13;
increased aggression. Faceless&#13;
people are more likely to harm&#13;
each other, a finding with important&#13;
implications for the high&#13;
incidence of crime in the&#13;
anonymous settings of the inner&#13;
city," she continued. "Yet few of&#13;
our subjects found anything&#13;
displeasing about the experience&#13;
of anonymity. Most gained deep&#13;
enjoyment and found out&#13;
something about themselves that&#13;
disclosure. "This was to help&#13;
psyche up the subject for later&#13;
conversation in the dark&#13;
chamber, in an effort to overcome&#13;
a tension problem evident&#13;
in the Gergen study--30 minutes&#13;
of deafening silence," explained&#13;
Breiwick.&#13;
Subjects were then left in the&#13;
chamber for an hour, the only&#13;
instruction being not to smoke.&#13;
They were informed that at the&#13;
end of the hour they would be&#13;
escorted out alone to complete a&#13;
post-evaluation form, and each&#13;
would not have any opportunity&#13;
to meet with other members of&#13;
their group. "Thus people in&#13;
group C would not meet or know&#13;
anyone else who was in their&#13;
chamber with them," Breiwick&#13;
said.&#13;
Baudhuin and Breiwick taperecorded&#13;
all voice communication&#13;
during each session,&#13;
and some of the results of the&#13;
post-eviuation form are summarized&#13;
on the graphs.&#13;
"The results suggested to us&#13;
that when freed from normative&#13;
constraints, people-at least&#13;
between the ages of 18 and 26 ~&#13;
develop very intimate and close&#13;
relations," commented Breiwick.&#13;
"Some psychologists have&#13;
demonstrated that when a person&#13;
is without markers of personal&#13;
identity, when he or she becomes&#13;
'deindividuated' in the researchers'&#13;
terms, the stage is set for&#13;
Reminder: Distinguished T eaching Nomination f orms&#13;
are d ue to day, Wed. A pril 24 .&#13;
(They m ay b e tu rned in at Info, kiosk).&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED: Drafting board or table. Phone&#13;
632-4183. Ask for Ben.&#13;
X HAVE WHAT- YOU'D CALL\&#13;
&gt;^-^A*moFESS'0NAL&#13;
/Aw: N!*- CASE O F&#13;
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RE&amp;RESSION'&#13;
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9 AM&#13;
1 AM&#13;
DAILY&#13;
For sale: 1970 Jaguar XKE Roadster. $3550,&#13;
AM-FM shortwave radio, air conditioning,&#13;
maroon, convertible, black top. Par ex&#13;
cellence condition. 639-6993 Jeff Hansen.&#13;
194 &amp; 50&#13;
DR. BOP &amp;&#13;
THE HEADLINERS&#13;
Featuring the "WHITE RAVEN"&#13;
FRIDAY, APRIL 26&#13;
SAIURDAY, A PRIL 27&#13;
"GENEVA C ONVENTION"&#13;
Tickets $3.00 Advance Available at J &amp; J Tape Center;&#13;
$3.50 at the Door The Brat Stop&#13;
For sale 1967 Thunderbird 4-dr. sedan. Green&#13;
with black vinyl top, air conditioning. Best&#13;
offer, 633-3379 after 5 p.m.&#13;
Wanted: Ride to downtown Kenosha from&#13;
summer night class (Tu-Th). Will share&#13;
expenses. X(553) 2442 between 9:30-12:30&#13;
M Th or X2290.&#13;
1947 ' 2 ton chev. truck-like new tires. Runs&#13;
well. On campus (2387) or 180 Tallent.&#13;
PART TIME AND SUMMER WORK. Big&#13;
Buck Building Centers interviewing applicants&#13;
for sales work; includes some yard&#13;
and warehouse work. Interviews by ap&#13;
pointment only. Phone Brent Harrison, 694-&#13;
3800.&#13;
MfcLP WANTED! Bartenders and&#13;
waitresses. Apply at the Brat Stop, I 94 and&#13;
Personals&#13;
Bob D., Randy B., Joe T„ Dave P., Fred B&#13;
D-day only 10 days away!&#13;
DON'T MISS THIS! BLITZ! Announcing yet another meeting of&#13;
the Women's Wednesday night storm&#13;
troopers-conversation club. Time. 9 p.m.&#13;
Wed. May 1. Place: TBA. All participants&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD presents&#13;
IN CONCERT TWIN LAKES&#13;
also featuring:&#13;
TONY, JUMBO &amp; COMPANY&#13;
Saturday, April 27&#13;
Showtime 9:00 p,l)&gt; •&#13;
&gt; TICKETS: Sl.SO'PARKSlDESTHDENTk^VANCE&#13;
$2. OO'G U E SW AWA-tfrGOR A' w\V ,"&#13;
TICKETS&#13;
HAPPY-HOUR 8:00-9:01) BEER 20c&#13;
IDS REQUIRED&#13;
iTiTiTiTiTi'Ti'' »vrrrm' i v i v rvr vipm i v t nj&#13;
Student does research r f ) | |t Wednesday, Apr. 24, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Apr. 2 4 , 1 97 4&#13;
Trackster earning national honors&#13;
Drake Relays next&#13;
for Lucian Rosa&#13;
Only 19 men in the long and&#13;
proud history of the Drake&#13;
Relays have won an event three&#13;
consecutive times.&#13;
Next Saturday, Lucian Rosa of&#13;
Parkside could join this elite&#13;
group.&#13;
And although Van Nelson of St.&#13;
Cloud State won Drake titles&#13;
three years running in the two&#13;
longest regular track events, the&#13;
three and six mile runs, none&#13;
have run so far-and won --as has&#13;
Rosa.&#13;
Rosa is one of those rare men&#13;
who can run 26 miles, 385 yards&#13;
and hardly look winded. If he&#13;
wins again at Drake, he will be&#13;
one of those even rarer types who&#13;
can come back rapidly and&#13;
successfully after a previous&#13;
marathon. Rosa placed fourth in&#13;
the famed Boston Marathon on&#13;
April 15 in a personal best of&#13;
2:15:53 and will be facing his&#13;
second marathon only 12 days&#13;
later, a short time indeed for an&#13;
event where the recovery time&#13;
between such races is usually&#13;
much longer.&#13;
"I really don't know how it's&#13;
going to affect me," Rosa explained.&#13;
"But that's really why I&#13;
wanted to try, to see if I can do it.&#13;
"I think Drake has a hilly&#13;
marathon course and I really like&#13;
that better. I think I've got the&#13;
advantage when I'm running&#13;
uphill because I'm small (5-6 and&#13;
115 lbs.). I train for uphill racing&#13;
and don't really have the long&#13;
stride that helps marathoners&#13;
of entrants at Drake (some 168&#13;
running downhill."&#13;
Rosa said the smaller number&#13;
last year) compared to nearly&#13;
2,000 at Boston, won't have any&#13;
effect on him.&#13;
"The crowds always cheer you&#13;
no matter where you're at," Rosa&#13;
said. "At Boston they had&#13;
newspapers that gave the name&#13;
and number of every runner so&#13;
people would know me and call&#13;
me by name. But the people at&#13;
Drake have always been friendly&#13;
and I think they were getting to&#13;
know who I was last year."&#13;
They should have known last&#13;
year because in 1972, in Rosa's&#13;
first run for a Drake Relays&#13;
, watch, he clocked 2:22:13 for a&#13;
Drake marathon record. He fell&#13;
somewhat short of that last year,&#13;
clocking 2:25:18.4 for his second&#13;
win.&#13;
Last year was a busy one for&#13;
Rosa marathon-wise. He came&#13;
back a month after Drake to take&#13;
the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
crown in 2:26:01 and then won&#13;
again in August at the Paavo&#13;
Nurmi Marathon at Hurley, Wis.,&#13;
in a record time of 2:22:59.&#13;
He credits his great improvement&#13;
in time at Bostonalmost&#13;
6V2 minutes-to his&#13;
starting position in the huge field.&#13;
"I only saw about six other&#13;
runners the whole rr Decause I&#13;
was seeded No. 5 and got a&#13;
starting position in the front&#13;
line," he said. "I'd say that&#13;
Drake is a harder course than&#13;
Boston, too."&#13;
But perhaps nothing could have&#13;
Lucian Rosa&#13;
been much harder for the 1972&#13;
Olympian from Ceylon than&#13;
learning to run with shoes. Rosa&#13;
never wore shoes while running&#13;
in his native land but was persuaded&#13;
by Parkside track coach&#13;
Bob Lawson, formerly the head&#13;
coach up the road from Drake at&#13;
Iowa State, to wear shoes for that&#13;
first marathon at Drake in 1972.&#13;
He's beenwearingthem ever since&#13;
and now admits that it would be&#13;
tougher to run without them,&#13;
since his feet have gotten "soft"&#13;
from wearing shoes daily.&#13;
Rest assured, however, that&#13;
Rosa won't be getting "soft."&#13;
Modest and unassuming, he&#13;
knows that another win&#13;
guarantees him a niche in Drake&#13;
Relays annals and vows to "try&#13;
my best" to win again.&#13;
He always has, ever since&#13;
coming to Parkside in 1971. Asian&#13;
Games 5,000 and 10,000 meter&#13;
champion in 1970, a year later he&#13;
was an NAIA track all-America.&#13;
He's now won NAIA all-America&#13;
honors indoors, outdoors (twice)&#13;
and in cross country twice.&#13;
Rosa fourth in&#13;
Boston Marathon&#13;
Parkside's Lucien Rosa, suffering&#13;
from leg cramps, turned in&#13;
a time of two hours, 15 minutes&#13;
and 53 seconds in the Boston&#13;
Marathon, good for fourth place&#13;
in the 26 mile, 385 yard grind.&#13;
Rosa, 30 years old, a junior and&#13;
native of Ceylon, cut 6V2 minutes&#13;
off his previous best time of&#13;
2:22.22, set when he won the&#13;
National Track and Field&#13;
Federation meet at the Drake&#13;
Relays in 1972.&#13;
Neil Cusack, a 22 year old East&#13;
Tennesee State College student&#13;
from Limerick, Ireland, won the&#13;
Marathon in 2:13.39, the second&#13;
fastest winning time in the annual&#13;
event.&#13;
"I thought I really had a&#13;
chance at winning when I came to&#13;
the 12 mile mark and was only a&#13;
minute back of the winner," Rosa&#13;
said. "My coach (Vic Godfrey)&#13;
had told me before the race that if&#13;
I could be in that position, I would&#13;
have a good shot at finishing&#13;
first." But the other guys just ran&#13;
a little too fast for me," he&#13;
continued. "I'm very happy with&#13;
my time, which is the 11th best in&#13;
the history of the Marthon."&#13;
Rosa said cramps in his calf&#13;
muscles bothered him the last six&#13;
miles, but that he was "determined&#13;
to go all the way." "My&#13;
goal before the race was to finish&#13;
in the top 10 and run the distance&#13;
in under two hours, 20 minutes,"&#13;
he said. "I accomplished both,&#13;
and that gave me a lot of&#13;
satisfaction."&#13;
Parkside's John Ammerman&#13;
placed 239 out of the 2000 entries&#13;
with a time of two hours, 45&#13;
minutes and 37 seconds.&#13;
UW-P sponsors&#13;
running camp&#13;
Parkside will sponsor a&#13;
summer cross country and&#13;
distance running training camp&#13;
here Aug. 4-9.&#13;
Offered to "serious runners&#13;
only," the five-day camp will&#13;
have sessions from 8 a.m. to 4&#13;
p.m. daily and will feature lectures&#13;
on running techniques and&#13;
training patterns as well as actual&#13;
running on Parkside's cross&#13;
country trails.&#13;
The staff includes Parkside&#13;
cross country and distance coach&#13;
Vic Godfrey, Chuck Bradley of&#13;
Kenosha Tremper High School&#13;
and Bill Greiten of Racine Case&#13;
High School.&#13;
Godfrey's 1973 Parkside squg&#13;
finished seventh national!&#13;
among NAIA schools. He he&#13;
coached Lucian Rosa to al&#13;
America honors in the spor&#13;
Bradley's 1971 Tremper teai&#13;
won the WIAA state title whi!&#13;
Greiten has won two state pre&#13;
cross country crowns, the WISA.&#13;
championship in 1969 at S&#13;
Catherine's and the WIAA title i&#13;
1973 at Case.&#13;
The fee is $30 for the week-Ion&#13;
camp. For more informatior&#13;
contact Orby Moss at th&#13;
Parkside Physical Educatio&#13;
Bldg. or telephone 414-553-224!&#13;
and&#13;
set&#13;
open&#13;
and&#13;
A&#13;
an&#13;
Seven women's records&#13;
three men's records were&#13;
during a decathlon and&#13;
track meet held Friday&#13;
Saturday at the outdoor track at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
All but three of the records&#13;
were set by Parkside students&#13;
UW-M woman set two and&#13;
Oshkosh woman the other record.&#13;
Kim Piper of Parkside set two&#13;
new school records of 5:13 for the&#13;
women's mile and 2:23.7 for the&#13;
880 while Sue Von Behren also set&#13;
two new school records of five&#13;
feet five inches for the high jump&#13;
and 18 feet for the long jump&#13;
also took third place in&#13;
women's 100 with :11.9.&#13;
In the men's steeple&#13;
Chuck Dettman set a&#13;
record of 9:33.4 while Wayne&#13;
Rhody, with 9:41.0, set the second&#13;
best school mark ever for the&#13;
event.&#13;
Jim Heiring set a school record&#13;
She&#13;
the&#13;
chase,&#13;
school&#13;
Keith Merritt of Parkside&#13;
crossed the finish line first in the&#13;
' inch's ,1501^, meter, run, thq jast&#13;
event of the d^cattiloA/^Wfcime&#13;
rvwjis-4:26.6 and he came in second&#13;
in the decathlonHvlth VWtaf point&#13;
score of 6,010.&#13;
Photo by Ophn Frietif :;&#13;
of a&#13;
school&#13;
of 48:12.0 in the six mile walk and&#13;
Keith Merritt set a school record&#13;
of 6,210 points for the decathlon.&#13;
Herb DeGroot with a :49.9 in&#13;
the 440 was just a tenth&#13;
second away from the _&#13;
record. He took third place.&#13;
Bob Meekma took first place in&#13;
the pole vault with 14 feet while&#13;
Lucian Rosa took first place in&#13;
the six mile with 29:32.&#13;
Sue Von Behren took second&#13;
place in the women's 100 meter&#13;
high hurdles with : 17.0&#13;
Sandy Kingsfield took&#13;
place in the women's 440 with&#13;
: 61.7 and also second place in the&#13;
women's long jump with 16 feet&#13;
nine inches. She also took&#13;
second place in the women's 220&#13;
with :27.4.&#13;
In the women's 440&#13;
Parkside took third place&#13;
:53.7.&#13;
In the men's prediction&#13;
Jim Koch took second place with&#13;
7:06.8. Pat Burns took third&#13;
place in the men's shot put'with&#13;
49 feet eight inches. Mike Boero&#13;
•, .too k third in the Men's long jump&#13;
With 21 feet nine inches while.&#13;
vVpennis Ruhle took third place in&#13;
,V4he&#13;
,V&gt;flso,took third place in the triple&#13;
jump with 43 feet, nine inches.&#13;
while&#13;
second&#13;
relay,&#13;
with&#13;
mile,&#13;
V Sue Von ,'Bjjhi^i ;&lt;*'Pdrfk'side Reaches across the&#13;
100 meter event. Oshkosh was, first in the event and&#13;
in a close second in 17 seconds flat.&#13;
Seven records set&#13;
in Parkside decath.&#13;
Photo by Oebra Friedell&#13;
Piper gains ber th&#13;
at Drake Relays&#13;
First year student Kim Piper&#13;
will compete in the Women's&#13;
Invitational Mile at Saturday's&#13;
Drake Relays, Women's Track&#13;
Coach Barbara Lawson has&#13;
announced.&#13;
Piper, who has a best time of&#13;
5:03.4 for the distance, will be&#13;
competing against some of the&#13;
nation's finest women milers in&#13;
the race, scheduled for 2:55 p.m.&#13;
Piper, A'ho won the girls' state&#13;
mile title twice while a student at&#13;
Case High School in Racine, holds&#13;
Parkside and WWIAC records for&#13;
the 880 yard run, the mile run, the&#13;
lVi-mile run and the two mile.&#13;
She has won Wisconsin Amateur&#13;
Athletic Union (AAU) and U.S.&#13;
Track and Field Federation&#13;
(USTFF) titles this year.&#13;
She has run once before on the&#13;
famed Drake oval, taking third in&#13;
a special girls' mile in last year's&#13;
All-American High School Track&#13;
Championships, held in Des&#13;
Moines.&#13;
Wednesday, Apr . 24, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
Batters beat Carroll,&#13;
lose other games&#13;
Coach Red Oberbruner's&#13;
baseball team initiated their new&#13;
home baseball diamond with a 7-5&#13;
win over Carroll College last&#13;
Friday afternoon. The Rangers'&#13;
winning pitcher in that first game&#13;
of a double-header was Jeff&#13;
Sexton, who also hit a double and&#13;
a single in that game.&#13;
Shortstop Les Zirbel was 2 for 3&#13;
hitting doubles and first baseman&#13;
Rade Dimitrijevic helped out&#13;
with a pair of singles. Jim&#13;
McKenna hit a double and a&#13;
single.&#13;
The Rangers lost the second&#13;
game to Carroll 5-4. Jeff Klemko&#13;
pitched the first six innings and in&#13;
the top of the seventh the score&#13;
was tied at 4-4. Klemko walked&#13;
Carroll's first batter and Oberbruner&#13;
put in Tim Lange to&#13;
relieve Klemko.&#13;
Lange and Dimitrijevic picked&#13;
off the runner on first base as he&#13;
led off. With one out, Carroll's&#13;
next batter got a single, Lange&#13;
walked the next batter, and the&#13;
second out came on a fly ball.&#13;
With two outs, Carroll hit a single&#13;
and the runner on second base&#13;
scored to win the game.&#13;
In other action the Rangers lost&#13;
both games of a double-header to&#13;
St. Norbert College on Saturday.&#13;
Pitcher Tom Rachel suffered his&#13;
first defeat of the season 8-7.&#13;
The score was tied at 7-all until&#13;
the last of the seventh inning&#13;
when St. Norbert's got a home&#13;
run.&#13;
Pitcher Tim Lange lost the&#13;
second game 5-1. St. Norbert&#13;
scored two runs in the first inning&#13;
and Lange held them there until&#13;
the last of the sixth. With two&#13;
outs, the first man got on base by&#13;
a Ranger error. A walk and&#13;
another error loaded the bases. A&#13;
single brought in two runs and&#13;
before the final out another run&#13;
was scored.&#13;
The Rangers will play their&#13;
next game here Wednesday,&#13;
April 24, against Lake Forest at 1&#13;
p.m. On April 27 they will meet&#13;
Chicago Circle Campus there and&#13;
on the 29th will be back home for&#13;
a game with Milwaukee Area&#13;
T«:h at 1 p.m.&#13;
Parkside's Kim Piper is pictured here after winning the women's&#13;
mile in 5:13 in Saturday's meet. Piper will be traveling to the Drake&#13;
relays this Saturday.&#13;
Tennis line-up set&#13;
by Whi tewater loss W^t Lvbn|d&#13;
^e&lt;*s nW fs a_&#13;
In tennis the Rangers are in the&#13;
midst of a busy week, meeting&#13;
Niles College here Thursday at 3&#13;
p.m. and travelling to Milton for&#13;
a 1 p.m. match Friday.&#13;
The netters were 0-2 going into&#13;
this week, after a 5-4 loss to UWWhitewater&#13;
earlier this month&#13;
that wasn't decided until the third&#13;
set of No. 3 doubles.&#13;
Coach Dick Frecka figures the&#13;
close loss to Whitewater showed&#13;
that his young squad is improving.&#13;
Playoffs during the&#13;
week may change the Ranger&#13;
lineup somewhat, but the top&#13;
three singles players are set, with&#13;
Chris Weyland at No. 1, Don&#13;
Francis at No. 2 and Bob&#13;
Jacobsen at No. 3.&#13;
Calvin Jensen, Gregg" Pfarr,&#13;
Don Kalbfleisch, John Tank and&#13;
Dave Malaney are vying for the&#13;
No: 4, 5 and 6 singles spots.&#13;
Doubles tearps ip,elude Francis&#13;
and Jacobsen at ,Nb: 1, Weyland&#13;
If you want to have a good time and you don't want to waste a&#13;
lot of gas doing it... come out to the Kenosha Ice Arena and&#13;
take a ride around the ice. It's good exercise, it's fun. And all&#13;
the movement is by "people power."&#13;
Every Friday night there's a special session from 8:15 to&#13;
10:15 p.m. College students with I.D.'s are admitted for V2&#13;
price. For an additional listing of public skating hours, see&#13;
the Saturday T.V. Section of the Kenosha News or call.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
7727 60th Avenue&#13;
Ice Arena&#13;
Phone 694-1801&#13;
Ranger first baseman Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic stretches to make&#13;
the out as the first base umpire&#13;
watches the action. Carroll&#13;
College lost this game to the&#13;
_____&#13;
and Tank paired to No. 2&#13;
Pfarr and Jensen at No. 3.&#13;
and&#13;
o A&#13;
&gt;jo&lt;E&gt;/ p\!c/ \&#13;
LIBRARY CONTEST&#13;
CELEBRATE&#13;
NATIONAL LIBRARY WEEK !&#13;
•&#13;
ANSWER THE QUESTIONS AND&#13;
WIN!&#13;
•&#13;
PRIZES!&#13;
#ARRSiri&#13;
HMIVeRiiTV&#13;
BAAK1TARE&#13;
APRIAr&#13;
«*•</text>
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        <element elementId="50">
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 29, April 24, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64596">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Date</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="64597">
              <text>1974-04-24</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64601">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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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>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64602">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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      <name>concerned student coalition</name>
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      <name>elections committee</name>
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