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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 10</text>
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            <text>Regents act on guidelines</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Regents act on Guidelines&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of Ranger staff .&#13;
Student leaders expressed&#13;
concern Friday Oct. 4 as the UW&#13;
Board of Regents adopted a set ofInterim&#13;
Guidelines on merger&#13;
implementation drafted by&#13;
Central Administration instead of&#13;
a similar proposal submitted by&#13;
student leaders through the&#13;
United Council of Student&#13;
Governments.&#13;
The UW Merger Statute&#13;
provides as follows: "The&#13;
students of each institution or&#13;
campus subject to the responsibilities&#13;
and powers of the board,&#13;
the president, the chancellor, and&#13;
the faculty shall be active parr&#13;
ticipants in the immediate&#13;
governance of the policy&#13;
development for such institutions.&#13;
As such, students shall&#13;
have primary responsibility for&#13;
the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services, and interests. Students&#13;
inconsultation with the chancellor&#13;
and subject to the final&#13;
confirmation of the board shall&#13;
have the responsibility for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees&#13;
which constitute substantial&#13;
support for campus student&#13;
activities. The students of each&#13;
institution or campus shall have&#13;
the right to organize themselves&#13;
in a manner they determine and&#13;
to select their respresentatives to&#13;
participate in institutional&#13;
governance."&#13;
The most common concern and&#13;
subject of debate on the part of&#13;
students stemmed from a phrase&#13;
in the merger law which gives&#13;
students "primary responsibility&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
met Tuesday, Oct. 8, to&#13;
hear the Election Committee give&#13;
a report on the alleged election&#13;
irregularities.&#13;
Three student complaints&#13;
received by the CCC in formal&#13;
letters had been referred last&#13;
week to the Election Committee,&#13;
chaired by Debra Friedell.&#13;
Barb Burke, president of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board,&#13;
charged that a pro-constitution&#13;
flyer she had found resting faceup&#13;
on the counter in one of the&#13;
voting booths constituted illegal&#13;
canvassing.&#13;
Friedell said that the Election&#13;
Committee is not convinced that&#13;
the flyer was placed in the booth&#13;
in an attempt to influence voters,&#13;
since there, is a strong possibility&#13;
that the flyer was unintentionally&#13;
left in the booth.&#13;
Friedell stated that "Burke&#13;
neither removed the flyer nor did&#13;
she inform the poll workers."&#13;
When confronted with this, Burke&#13;
said she had left the flyer as it&#13;
was, hoping it would prompt&#13;
other voters to write similar&#13;
complaints.&#13;
Although the Election Committee&#13;
feels that Burke's charge&#13;
was an important one, they do not&#13;
consider that it warrants rerunning&#13;
the referendum as Burke&#13;
suggested.&#13;
Instead, Friedell said that a&#13;
recommendation will be made&#13;
that in future elections, each&#13;
voter be requested to leave all&#13;
printed material pertaining to the&#13;
election outside the booths.&#13;
The second written complaint&#13;
investigated by the Election&#13;
Committee, came from Barb&#13;
Lienau.&#13;
She charged that a poll worker&#13;
had commented negatively on&#13;
her husband's stand against the&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests."&#13;
Specifically, student leaders&#13;
and chancellors disagreed on the&#13;
issue of determining the&#13;
allocation of student fees and on&#13;
who would designate&#13;
representatives to various&#13;
university committees.&#13;
UW Senior Vice President&#13;
Donald K. Smith, in an introductory&#13;
statement explaining&#13;
the Interim Guidelines as&#13;
proposed by Central Administration,&#13;
stated that the&#13;
Board felt an immediate need to&#13;
implement a set of guidelines&#13;
explaining section 36.09 (5), to&#13;
end the "somewhat chaotic state&#13;
which now exists on some&#13;
campuses" due to the lack of&#13;
proper statute guidelines and&#13;
limitations.&#13;
He stressed that the guidelines&#13;
proposed by United Council had&#13;
been taken as a reflection of&#13;
University policy on some&#13;
campuses but should not have&#13;
been taken as such.&#13;
Smith also pointed toward&#13;
responses to the UC guidelines by&#13;
both student groups and chancellors&#13;
at various universities in&#13;
the system as the reason for&#13;
Central Administration's&#13;
proposed guidelines.&#13;
Prior to the Regents' vote on&#13;
the Interim proposal, several&#13;
spokesmen were given an opportunity&#13;
to air their views on the&#13;
interim issue before the Board.&#13;
Included among those who&#13;
represented various student&#13;
groups, faculty committees and&#13;
chancellors, was James&#13;
Hamilton, United Council&#13;
PSGA constitution.&#13;
Friedell termed this "a serious&#13;
complaint" and spoke with&#13;
Lienau and the poll worker involved.&#13;
&#13;
Although both Lienau and&#13;
Friedell agree that the complaint&#13;
is not serious enough to call for a&#13;
re-running of the referendum,&#13;
Friedell said that a recommendation&#13;
would be made for&#13;
future poll workers to be instructed&#13;
not to make any election-oriented&#13;
comments when&#13;
working at the voting booths.&#13;
The third charge was submitted&#13;
to the CCC by Steve&#13;
Gouris, who claimed that he had&#13;
been allowed to vote twice.&#13;
Friedell said that this was the&#13;
most serious charge of all; and&#13;
stated in advance of Tuesday's&#13;
meeting that it was still being&#13;
investigated.&#13;
The Electiqn Committee is not&#13;
thoroughly convinced of the&#13;
validity of Gouris' charge, and&#13;
has no plans at this time to re-run&#13;
the referendum.&#13;
Other matters acted upon by&#13;
the CCC in its previous Oct. 1&#13;
meeting included the appointment&#13;
of four members as a&#13;
committee to consider budget&#13;
requests of student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
Serving on the committee are&#13;
Barb Burke, of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board; Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich, of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc.; Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
associate dean of students; and&#13;
Robert Grueninger. assistant&#13;
professor of physical education.&#13;
The student organizations&#13;
which have submitted budget&#13;
requests to the CCC are: PSGA.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon, thq^Students&#13;
for Better Government, and&#13;
AWOL (Action Within Our&#13;
Lifetimes).&#13;
president.&#13;
In a half-hour testimony before&#13;
the Board, Hamilton expressed&#13;
several concerns with Central&#13;
Administration's handling of the&#13;
United Council's proposals.&#13;
Following a brief historic sketch&#13;
leading up to the United Council's&#13;
proposed guidelines, Hamilton&#13;
said:&#13;
"I have brought this process to&#13;
your attention for several important&#13;
reasons. First, so that&#13;
you understand that our&#13;
document, which you've, had for&#13;
two months, was the result of a&#13;
laborious and compromising&#13;
drafting procedure, which saw&#13;
the involvement of not only&#13;
student leaders but members of&#13;
the ad hoc drafting committee,&#13;
the MISC, students, and Central&#13;
(College Press Service) - As the&#13;
long awaited criminal trial of&#13;
several Ohio National Guardsmen&#13;
indicted for the 1970&#13;
shootings at Kent State&#13;
University approaches, their&#13;
commanding officer has confirmed&#13;
earlier reports that one of&#13;
the indicted men actually gave an&#13;
order to fire. Until now, National&#13;
Guard officials have consistently&#13;
maintained that no order to fire&#13;
had been given.&#13;
Lt. Col. Charles Fassinger&#13;
made the disclosure in a sworn&#13;
deposition filed recently in a civil&#13;
case in which he and more than 50&#13;
other persons are being sued for&#13;
their roles in the Kent incident&#13;
which left four students dead and&#13;
nine wounded. Fassinger, who&#13;
was the highest uniformed officer&#13;
on the scene of the shootings,&#13;
testified that an order to fire had&#13;
been given by Matthew J. McManus.&#13;
&#13;
It was not clear from&#13;
Fassinger's deposition whether&#13;
McManus gave the order before&#13;
or after the shooting began or&#13;
whether McManus told the troops&#13;
to fire at or over the students.&#13;
A Justice Department summary&#13;
of an 8000-page FBI report&#13;
on the shootings corroborated&#13;
Fassinger's story, but said, "Sgt.&#13;
McManus stated that after the&#13;
firing began, he gave an order to&#13;
'fire over their heads.' " The&#13;
Justice Department summary&#13;
states, "There was no initial&#13;
order to fire."&#13;
A source close to the case,&#13;
however, emphasized that the&#13;
summary was only of information&#13;
uncovered in the&#13;
months immediately following&#13;
the shooting and is by no means&#13;
the final word on the matter. It is&#13;
expected that the question of an&#13;
order to fire will be more closely&#13;
pursued as additional witnesses&#13;
are interviewed and during&#13;
subsequent court proceedings.&#13;
McManus is one of eight former&#13;
guardsmen indicted by the&#13;
federal grand jury which investigated&#13;
the shootings last&#13;
Administration as well.&#13;
"Second, I hope you will agree&#13;
that we have made a scrupulous&#13;
effort to ensure that the content&#13;
of our paper conformed with the&#13;
intentions of the framers of the&#13;
law.&#13;
"And third, so that we can&#13;
come to some understanding as&#13;
to why the concerns Dr. Smith&#13;
raised in the interim guidelines&#13;
were not brought up while our&#13;
document was being drafted,&#13;
especially since this process&#13;
involved Central Administration&#13;
input."&#13;
A series of objections were&#13;
raised after Hamilton's&#13;
testimony echoing objections&#13;
aired by chancellors and administrators&#13;
in relation to the&#13;
United Council proposed&#13;
winter (after then-Attorney&#13;
General Elliot Richardson&#13;
overruled the decisions of his&#13;
predecessors John Mitchell and&#13;
Richard Kleindienst forbidding&#13;
such a grand jury investigation).&#13;
McManus himself has taken the&#13;
Fifth Amendment in response to&#13;
questions about the shooting.&#13;
The criminal trial of McManus&#13;
and the seven other indicted&#13;
guardsmen is scheduled to open&#13;
in Cleveland in mid-October. The&#13;
grand jury that indicted them has&#13;
not been discharged, and it is&#13;
possible, although unlikely, that&#13;
there could be more indictments&#13;
as more information about the&#13;
shootings emerges.&#13;
Meanwhile, independently of&#13;
the criminal cases, the civil cases&#13;
are also proceeding. The civil&#13;
cases are brought under the&#13;
federal civil rights laws, which&#13;
provide money damages for&#13;
persons deprived fo their constitutional&#13;
rights under color of&#13;
law. All nine of the injured&#13;
students, plus the parents of all&#13;
four of the students killed at&#13;
Kent, have such cases pending.&#13;
The cases have been consolidated&#13;
and will be tried in federal court&#13;
in Cleveland in April 1975.&#13;
The lengthy process of pre-trial&#13;
discovery is now going on, and it&#13;
was in the course of. this&#13;
discovery process that Fassinger&#13;
disclosed his knowledge about&#13;
McManus' order.&#13;
The discovery process had&#13;
been interrupted in 1970 when a&#13;
federal judge dismissed the civil&#13;
cases. In April of this year,&#13;
however, that dismissal was&#13;
overturned by the US Supreme&#13;
Court.&#13;
The most significant feature of&#13;
the civil cases is that they name&#13;
as defendants not only the&#13;
enlisted personnel who fired their&#13;
weapons into the students on May&#13;
4, but also the National Guard&#13;
commanders and officials, who&#13;
were responsible for placing the&#13;
troops in the situation with loaded&#13;
weapons and under orders to&#13;
disperse peaceful assemblies.&#13;
guidelines.&#13;
Nearly all the chancellors&#13;
referred directly or indirectly to&#13;
the phrase in 36.09 ( 5) "...-subject&#13;
to the responsibilities and powers&#13;
of the board, the president, the&#13;
chancellor and the faculty, shall&#13;
be active participants..." Most&#13;
expressed the view that UC's&#13;
guidelines would expand the&#13;
students' role far beyond the&#13;
legislative intent.&#13;
. Related to the "cosmic" scope&#13;
of students' role in institutional&#13;
governance was the concern that&#13;
UC's guidelines provide student&#13;
participation in nearly every&#13;
aspect of academic and nonacademic&#13;
decision-making. The&#13;
sentence that includes the&#13;
reference to primary responcontinued&#13;
on page 2&#13;
re&#13;
One of the civil defendants is&#13;
Sylvester Del Corso, a war hero&#13;
and former prison warden who&#13;
became Ohio's Adjutant General&#13;
in 1968. It was Del Corso who&#13;
implemented the extraordinary&#13;
policy of sending Ohio guardsmen&#13;
into routine civil disturbance&#13;
duty with live ammunition&#13;
loaded in their weapons - contrary&#13;
to regular Army practice -&#13;
and under permissive rules&#13;
regarding the use of fire-power.&#13;
Prior to the 1970 shootings, Del&#13;
Corso had urged Ohio guardsmen&#13;
to write letters in support of the&#13;
war, and had publicly stated his&#13;
belief that Communist conspirators&#13;
were behind the&#13;
campus protest movement.&#13;
Another of the civil defendants&#13;
is James A. Rhodes, who was&#13;
Governor of Ohio in 1970, and who&#13;
had appointed Del Corso. Late in&#13;
1969 and in 1970, Rhodes had&#13;
made public vows to end&#13;
disruptions on Ohio Campuses.&#13;
During Rhodes' administration&#13;
the Ohio National Guard saw&#13;
more duty in civil disorders than&#13;
the National Guard of any other&#13;
state in the union.&#13;
On the day before the Kent&#13;
shootings, Rhodes had held a&#13;
press conference in the city,&#13;
denouncing the groups whom he&#13;
presumed responsible for the&#13;
disorder and vowing to "drive&#13;
them out of Kent."&#13;
A former guardsman who was&#13;
in charge of the Guard's press&#13;
relations at Kent State has&#13;
testified in his deposition in the&#13;
civil cases that at a closed&#13;
meeting preceeding his press&#13;
conference Rhodes had given&#13;
orders that the Guard should&#13;
disperse even peaceful assemblies&#13;
on the campus.&#13;
Rhodes is currently out of office,&#13;
but he is running as the&#13;
Republican candidate for&#13;
Governor of Ohio again this fall.&#13;
More light on the 1970 shootings&#13;
is expected to be shed as the&#13;
months of depositions and other&#13;
discovery in the civil cases&#13;
proceed and are made public.&#13;
Election probe&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 10&#13;
Kent State trial&#13;
O ^ • rt rder given to fi &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
GuidelinesMass&#13;
transit&#13;
Now that four weeks of the semester have passede&#13;
passed, schedules have settled down, the usual number&#13;
of people have dropped class, there are parking places&#13;
to be found. What became of the dire warnings of&#13;
"parking in the streets"? Could it be that a bit of&#13;
"exageration" of the problem occurred in order to carry&#13;
accross the supposed need for additional parking&#13;
spaces.&#13;
A visitor recently commented "you have a beautiful&#13;
campus here". He was right-but give it a couple of&#13;
years-we'll rectify that oversight. We are progressing&#13;
toward a solution rapidly-watch the grader remodel the&#13;
earth west of LLC. It's a magnificent display of man's&#13;
ultimate goal—if something grows there, black top it.&#13;
The myopic vision demonstrated by planners of this&#13;
campus is displayed in their absolute inability to&#13;
progress beyond the 1950's ideal of shopping center&#13;
suburbia.&#13;
The rest of the world screams Mass Transit, President&#13;
Ford considers higher taxes on gasoline to restrict auto&#13;
travel, the nation, states and cities subsidize rail and&#13;
bus travel, on and on, Mass Transit.&#13;
Parkside? Well, we are going to have a beautiful&#13;
student Union-Let's build parking lots. Empty space&#13;
west of LLC-let's build parking lots. Busses-let's get&#13;
Vets club.&#13;
the Editor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is in reply to your editorial "Do we need starving artists." I&#13;
think that RANGER readers should know that the art discipline has&#13;
made numberous efforts over the last three or four years to establish a&#13;
Graphic Design major at Parkside. An early proposal reached Central&#13;
Administration just before Merger and was frozen along with all other&#13;
proposals for new majors. More recently a Visual Communication&#13;
major, incorporating work in photography, film and television as well&#13;
as graphic design, was proposed and sent forward to Central Administration&#13;
with a low priority. It was not turned down but rat neither&#13;
did it ecr eive much practical support or encouragement.&#13;
Such a major would be quite expensive to initiate but it seems to me&#13;
that, considering the unique industrial and commercial character of&#13;
this part of Wisconsin, it would not be difficult to justify. No other State&#13;
University in Wisconsin has such a major.&#13;
Personally I see a degree course in Art as having, in itself, great&#13;
educational value quite apart from its vocational uses and I do not, as&#13;
your writer appears to do, despise the teaching of art at the elementary,&#13;
junior high or senior high level. The present major, too, seeks to&#13;
establish a firm foundation in drawing and design, as essential a base&#13;
for a future designer as for a future painter, sculptor or teacher of art.&#13;
Nevertheless, I think that all members of the art discipline would&#13;
welcome support from students for a Graphic Design major of some&#13;
kind.&#13;
Erik Forrest&#13;
Associate Professor of Art&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a letter to the Sept. 25 Ranger, Keith C. Chambers complained&#13;
he received a parking ticket which was upheld by the appeals committee&#13;
(Subcommittee on Parking &amp; Transportation). He further&#13;
stated that a "student member" of the subcommittee informed him of&#13;
various activities of the parking &amp; transportation subcommittee. This&#13;
seems somewhat mysterious in that we the undersigned are the only&#13;
two student members of the parking &amp; transportation subcommittee&#13;
(which hears parking ticket appeals) and neither of us have had any&#13;
conversation whatsoever with Mr. Chambers concerning this matter!&#13;
Dick Fields&#13;
Chet Anderson&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Third World, AWOL, and PSGA, Inc. are co-sponsoring a film on the&#13;
Attica state prison incident on Wednesday Oct. 9 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist lecture hall 103. There will be a donation of $1 asked to go&#13;
towards a defense fund for the prisoners. It took alot of work to get this&#13;
film, so please attend this informative documentary.&#13;
Hayes D. Norman&#13;
Pres. of Third World&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
I have got something to say to two of the individuals who submitted&#13;
letters which appeared in your Sept. 25th issue.&#13;
First, to Keith C. Chambers, Kenosha senior: You have told the rest&#13;
of us that the whole world is picking on you, have told your mom yet?&#13;
Just a friendly piece of advice I would like to give you, is that you had&#13;
better watch out for the most fearsome of the fine farm animals you&#13;
reffered to. I am talking about the bull. If he gets rift of the fact that&#13;
first you were exploiting some of his neighbors, and then you were&#13;
patronizing them, he might see to it that you are the recipient of one of&#13;
the two things he is most well known for.&#13;
And to Arthur Gruhl: Your letters are always enjoyable, but after&#13;
Keith C. Chambers, Kenosha senior, they are an absolute necessity!!&#13;
Virginia B. Peters&#13;
-t-arkside Employee&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
sibility begins with the phrase&#13;
"as such." This phrase refers&#13;
back to "active participants,"&#13;
who are limited by the responsibilities&#13;
and powers of the board&#13;
and the president as well as the&#13;
chancellor and faculty of the&#13;
local campuses.&#13;
The extent and nature of the&#13;
students' consultation with the&#13;
chancellor is not described with&#13;
reference to the "disposition of&#13;
student fees."&#13;
Several expressed the concern&#13;
that the statute 36.09 (3) charges&#13;
the chancellor with the responsibility&#13;
and accountability for&#13;
administering all the funds on the&#13;
campus, whatever the source.&#13;
Unless the chancellor also has the&#13;
final recommending authority,&#13;
he does not have authority to&#13;
carry out his responsibility (no&#13;
chancellor disagreed with the&#13;
view that' students should have&#13;
primary input to chancellors in&#13;
policy recommendations affecting&#13;
student life, services and&#13;
interests).&#13;
Virtually all chancellors&#13;
responding felt that it would be&#13;
unwise to confer monopoly rights&#13;
on student governments as the&#13;
sole representative for students&#13;
on the campus. The examples of&#13;
union boards, intramural&#13;
programs, residence halls&#13;
councils and others were cited as&#13;
areas where other student constituencies&#13;
should be consulted&#13;
for their input as well as the&#13;
student government. The&#13;
problems of nominal turnout for&#13;
elections were cited; in at least&#13;
one case, there is not a student&#13;
government elected to student&#13;
body offices.&#13;
A majority also objected to&#13;
United Council as the exclusive&#13;
representative of students at the&#13;
System level (several campuses&#13;
do not belong to United Council).&#13;
The role of students in being&#13;
consulted about "rules for tenure&#13;
and probationary appointments,&#13;
for the review of faculty performance&#13;
and for the nonretention&#13;
and dismissal of faculty&#13;
members" was seriously&#13;
questioned, since this is the&#13;
responsibility of the faculty and&#13;
the chancellor to develop such&#13;
rules.&#13;
Regent Solberg offered an&#13;
appropriate conclusion during&#13;
the course of the Interim&#13;
discussions (after which the&#13;
board approved Central Administration's&#13;
proposals) saying,&#13;
"I think the guidelines are just&#13;
something less than guidelines,&#13;
maybe. But it's a starting point. I&#13;
think that we better start with&#13;
this, and I don't think that we&#13;
should get into heavy debates as&#13;
to a lot of specifics of those&#13;
guidelines; those will be debated&#13;
on the individual campuses."-&#13;
R^PEN—!&#13;
•SPORTS&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
[photographers&#13;
JAD ACCOUNT&#13;
EXECUTIVES&#13;
j contact KEN&#13;
I at&#13;
RANGER I I&#13;
] LLC D-194&#13;
WWfflTEESKELLASf Auditions for the Whiteskellar from 1:00 - 3:00&#13;
pm in Greenquist Hall, room D201.&#13;
umnAY October ll FILM: "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid"&#13;
fibred bv the Parkside Activities Board at 8:00 pm in the Student&#13;
EtEX Admission is $1.00. Parkside I D. and proof of age are&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY October 12 RUGBY: Parkside vs. Northwestern at&#13;
1:30 pm on the Wood Road field. Admission is free and open to the&#13;
DANCE: Sponsored by the Soccer tearrv 9:00 pm - 1:00 am in the&#13;
Student Activities Bldg. Admission is $1.50. Parks.de I.D. and proof of&#13;
age are required.&#13;
SUNDAY October 13 NEWMAN CENTER: 12:15 pm.Mass celebrated&#13;
at the Center located on the corner of E &amp; JR, 3825 - 12th Street,&#13;
MUSIC CONCERT: Includes Frances Bedford and David Littrell at&#13;
4:00 pm in Greenquist Hall, room 103, Admission is free and open to&#13;
FILM: "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid at 7:30 pm.&#13;
SATURDAY October 19 UW-MADISON vs. MICHIGAN FOOTBALL&#13;
GAME: $10.00 includes bus trip and tickets to the game. Seats&#13;
are near the 20 yard line. Sign up at the Information Center, LLC Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK TWO TRIPS: ACAPULCO AND MAMICO&#13;
BOTH BETWEEN JANUARY 3 - 10, 1975&#13;
ACAPULCO: $244 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room.&#13;
Includes round trip transportation. 7 nights at the deluxe El Matador&#13;
Hotel &amp; Racquet Club. Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay with a welcoming&#13;
Margarita party. Includes tips and taxes. For further information&#13;
contact the Student Life Office LLC D197 or phone 553-2294.&#13;
JAMAICA - MONTEGO BAY: $279 plus $20 tax and service based on 3&#13;
to a room. Includes round trip transportation. 7 nights at Toby Inn,&#13;
only a short walk from famous Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and taxes&#13;
included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS: $309 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes&#13;
round trip transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located on the&#13;
beach on Cutlass Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle party and unlimited&#13;
free tennis are included as well as reduced golf rates at Upton Country&#13;
Club. For further information contact the Student Life Office, LLC&#13;
D197 at 553-2294.&#13;
There will be an organizational meeting for Men's Gymnastics.&#13;
Friday Oct. 11 at 3:00p.m. in the Phy. Ed. Bldg. '&#13;
The Pre-Law Club will meet Wednesday, October 9, at 4 p.m. in LLC&#13;
D174. All interested students are welcome.&#13;
Frank J. Maez of the Lambda Chi Alpha international fraternity,&#13;
will visit the Parkside October 7-12, to discuss with interested&#13;
students, the establishment of a chapter on campus. Meetings will be&#13;
held in the Library Learning Center from 9 - 5 throughout the week.&#13;
A public meeting on the conditions of Beebe school, a school for the&#13;
mentally retarded in Racine, will be held on Wed. Oct. 9, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
at the Racine County Courthouse.&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association Inc. has a vacancy in&#13;
the Vice presidency. The term runs till April. Anyone interested in the&#13;
position should submit their name to the president and president protempore&#13;
of PSGA at LLC-D193, as soon as possible.&#13;
PSGA would like to announce that the following positions are open&#13;
for consideration:&#13;
ACADEMIC POLICIES COMMITTEE two names to be selected by&#13;
Chancellor from list of six.&#13;
CAMPUS CONCERNS COMMITTEE, two names to be selected by&#13;
Chancellor from list of six.&#13;
, ADMISSIONS POLICIES COMMITTEE, two names to be selected&#13;
by Chancellor from list of six.&#13;
ATHLETIC BOARD, two names to be selected by Chancellor from&#13;
list of four.&#13;
J&#13;
p™E &amp; fLNE ARTS COMMITTEE, four names submitted by&#13;
LIBRARY COMMITTEE, four names submitted by PSGA.&#13;
l he terms run for a one year period. Students are asked to submit&#13;
their names for consideration as soon as possible.&#13;
pfrtcS q^ '&#13;
i S&#13;
°&#13;
n e v a c a n c y in the at large division of the&#13;
with CQ r U&#13;
.&#13;
Goverhment Association Inc. Senate. In accordance&#13;
Tpmnnr I&#13;
1 k ,&#13;
new PSGA constitution, the President Pro&#13;
O^ m Thf ?&#13;
tZ&#13;
' WlU make an aPPointment to fill that seat on&#13;
Anv ctnHo aPP01ntmcnt is subject to the confirmation of the senate.&#13;
Kontf^t thi^r? « m being aPPointed to this seat should contact&#13;
Kontz at the PSGA office, LLC D-193, prior to Oct. 16.&#13;
OrlanizatTonl Th 3&#13;
°&#13;
f the United CouncU of Student&#13;
°&#13;
Ct 10&#13;
' at 2 P m- LLC D-174. This&#13;
Government aLo t commit&#13;
tee of the Parkside Student&#13;
10 of the new e J;&#13;
iatl0n Inc. as provided for under Article I, Section&#13;
are asked to atterid"&#13;
110&#13;
" Representatives of all student organizations&#13;
Ine^Pmf/ r?&#13;
eet&#13;
.i?^ of the Parkside Student Government Association"&#13;
Oct in at I n&#13;
UX1 \ RnterPrises Committee will be held Thursday.&#13;
attend Anv it.'a '?• D_174&#13;
- All interested parties are invited to&#13;
deals with t&#13;
Ua '"terested in membership in the committee which&#13;
rersoni!L K T services&#13;
- should contact the committee chairperson,&#13;
John Kontz, at the PSGA office, LLC D-193.&#13;
C The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
ssr r™-&#13;
Wisconsin 53,40. Pho£ ^ &#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
There is a tl.oo charge lor classified ads.&#13;
Jual fill In (his form and srnd it to:&#13;
NAME&#13;
The i'arlulde Hanger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
O-IM LU: UWParkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wis. 53140&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
Ads will run for one week&#13;
only. Renewals can be made&#13;
by calling the Friday&#13;
preceding the next&#13;
publication.&#13;
Ads nust be submitted one week before publication&#13;
Walter i .&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
Classified&#13;
Minolta SLR 35mm $230 Retail Will sell for&#13;
$100. Excellent cond. Call 553 2295.&#13;
KAY WAHNER •• former students and&#13;
current friends may write KAY RAN&#13;
DLE, Apt. 302, 1855 Poplar Woods Circle&#13;
West, Germantown, Tennessee 38138&#13;
ENTIRE HOUSEHOLD FOR SALE&#13;
FINEQUA LITV&#13;
UNLIM ITED QUA NTIT Y&#13;
REAS ONA BLE PRICES&#13;
LOCA TED AT&#13;
7 9 36 4 8 TH AVE . KEN OSH A, WL.&#13;
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THE GROOVE TUBE&#13;
A few years ago, I let my television set get it right between the eyes.&#13;
Or, really between Monty Hall's.&#13;
He bounced down the aisle, teasing the audience with $3200 worth of&#13;
nirvana. The usual gang of idiots slobbered to prostitute themselves&#13;
before the golden calf, hiding somewhere behind Door Number One,&#13;
Two or Three.&#13;
My hammer struck without mercy, smashing Monty's skull and&#13;
narrowly missing his stooge, Jay Steward. Unfortunately, I only&#13;
cracked the screen and broke a damn good hammer.&#13;
Ken Shapiro's act of v iolence against the waste-land of television is*&#13;
more successful. Writer, director, star, and producer of "The Groove&#13;
Tube", Shapiro slays the hallow idol with first degree satire.&#13;
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OCTOBER 9th THRU 16th&#13;
me upening sequence, a Driuiant parody oi Stanley&#13;
confrontation between the ape-man and the mysterious monolith in&#13;
"2001", summarizes the form and extent of TV's influence on our&#13;
consciousness. Like the apes which caress the TV set during a sunrise,&#13;
we mindlessly cling to the Tube as it takes us to a daily no-where-iand&#13;
of aimlessness and banality.&#13;
Shapiro stylizes his film after the mess of normal TV programming.&#13;
For example, the latent sensuality of t he classic Clairol commercialboy&#13;
meets girl in a romantic slow-motion romp through fields and&#13;
woods-incongruously introduces a morning kids' show, Koko the&#13;
Clown. But Shapiro goes one step farther and relates the commercial&#13;
and show-Koko reads pornography during "make-believe time".&#13;
Even the low-budget limitations of "The Groove Tube" emphasize&#13;
that sickening sameness of television. One actor may sell deodorant in&#13;
the morning, receive a divorce on a soap opera at noon, or become a&#13;
fugitive from police during a prime time drama. In the film, Shapiro&#13;
the chameleon changes into a commercial narrator, a newscaster, a&#13;
doper in a situational comedy, and a talk show host..&#13;
Many of the commercials and vignettes are wickedly devastating.&#13;
Shapiro juxtaposes a subject like sex against a conventional format&#13;
like ABC's Wide World of Sports and the result is the highly erotic&#13;
Sex Olympics". But the film suffers from inconsistent imagination&#13;
and perception. Too frequently, Shapiro retreats to hack topics like the&#13;
story of two dope dealers and buries himself in underground cliches.&#13;
After Shapiro's attack, television resembles a disemboweled corpse.&#13;
That reminds me. I like to think that the person who bought my old TV&#13;
set turned it into something useful. Like a liquor cabinet.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
HBUIIDING^H&#13;
nu Stofi&#13;
" 194 &amp; 50&#13;
• Presents •&#13;
ELCCBUJ&#13;
WED., FRI. &amp; S AT.&#13;
OCT. 9th, 11th &amp; 12th&#13;
The&#13;
WEDNESDAY &amp; FRIDAY&#13;
I7GGG&#13;
ADMISSION WITH U W-P&#13;
STUDENT I.D.&#13;
A PITCHER OF BEER ONLY 50*&#13;
WEDNESDAY AFTER 7:00 P.M.&#13;
* APPEARING*&#13;
SUN., OCT. 13th&#13;
at the EDGEWATER&#13;
(TWIN LAKES)&#13;
&amp;&#13;
FRI., OCT. 18th&#13;
at the BRAT SHOP&#13;
STYX &#13;
4 T H E PARKSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974&#13;
lo©&#13;
To investigate PAB&#13;
PSGA hears complaints&#13;
aDlfesaoo^MtannL&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
DON'T WORRY ABOUT IT THEY SAY! -when I get a test back that&#13;
doesn't come up to my expectations. I am reminded of a line from my&#13;
younger sister's repetoir. "There's no joy in being in dire straits if vou&#13;
can't wallow in self pity!" So there smart guys!&#13;
OUR OTHER QUOTE FOR THE DAY: What's the difference between&#13;
Capitalism and Communism? "Whereas Capitalism involves the&#13;
exploitation of man by his fellow man, Communism is vice versa "&#13;
Don't think too long about that one.&#13;
FEAST OR FAMINE? Rushing to meet the need bf stop signs at bus&#13;
stops and cross walks in the record time of two or three years&#13;
(depending on how long ago one considers the need to have&#13;
developed), whoever got the signs must have bought them at a "buy&#13;
three-get one free" sale. How many years will it be until we get a "oneway&#13;
only between the hours of..." sign for the mini Sebring circuit we&#13;
have to run to get out of here by car?&#13;
BELIEVE IT OR NOT: For those of you who doubt your potential to&#13;
pursue the prof erred fruits of post graduate education; to those who&#13;
picture the publication of their possibly pedantic productions of p aper&#13;
improbable, may I assuage your fears and open to you the opportunities&#13;
of the higher learning process by quoting only the title of an&#13;
actually printed, published and seen-by-yours-truly paper: "The&#13;
Hitch-hiking Effect of a Favourable Gene" by John Smith. Grad&#13;
school here I come. I can see it now "Probability Parameters on the&#13;
Puerile Practice of Public Proscis Picking" by J. Smith.&#13;
Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Among the topics discussed at&#13;
an Oct. 3 meeting of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
Inc. (PSGA) were voting&#13;
irregularities on the constitution&#13;
and an investigation of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB).&#13;
Also, a review was conducted&#13;
for a new PSGA advisor and a&#13;
report was given by the&#13;
Grievance Committee.&#13;
Letters were read from various&#13;
students claiming voting&#13;
irregularities on the constitutional&#13;
referendum.&#13;
One of the complaints was a&#13;
letter from Barbara Burke,&#13;
president of the PAB, claiming&#13;
that she had found a "vote yes&#13;
leaflet" in one of the voting&#13;
booths.&#13;
Carrie Ward, a senator, said&#13;
that the PSGA had not put the&#13;
leaflet in the booth and that "it&#13;
must have been placed there by a&#13;
student voter."&#13;
Another letter written by Steve&#13;
Gouris, a student, complained&#13;
that he was able to vote twice in&#13;
the referendum.&#13;
Mike Hahner, a senator, said&#13;
that this person should be asked&#13;
to sign a sworn statement&#13;
declaring that he voted twice&#13;
under his own name.&#13;
Hahner said that if Gouris had&#13;
voted under a different name, he&#13;
was "defrauding the Election&#13;
Committee."&#13;
"All complaints are minor as&#13;
far as I'm concerned," said&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, PSGA&#13;
president.&#13;
John Kontz, president protempore,&#13;
then read a proposal&#13;
made by Milutinovich to conduct&#13;
a "full investigation of the PAB,&#13;
including a check on their books&#13;
for the last three vears."&#13;
In the insuing discussion the&#13;
question was brought up about&#13;
whether the PAB would agree to&#13;
an investigation and it was&#13;
suggested that they may try to&#13;
prevent it.&#13;
The motion to investigate PAB&#13;
was passed unanimously.&#13;
A review followed for a new&#13;
PSGA advisor. It was conducted&#13;
by Hahner, chairperson of the&#13;
Advisor Committee. Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, associate dean of&#13;
students, is the present PSGA&#13;
advisor.&#13;
Sara Sheehan, a visiting&#13;
assistant professor of political&#13;
science, is the candidate for the&#13;
position of advisor.&#13;
Milutinovich asked Sheehan a&#13;
question regarding the status of&#13;
students in comparison with&#13;
administrators and faculty.&#13;
She responded, "I think&#13;
students should govern themselves.&#13;
You (PSGA) should make&#13;
all decisions pertaining to student&#13;
life."&#13;
When questioned on her opinion&#13;
of the role of an advisor, Sheehan&#13;
said, "I don't think the student&#13;
advisory role should exist,"&#13;
The review, which lasted an&#13;
approximate 15 minutes, was&#13;
concluded with a motion by Ward&#13;
to accept Sheehan as PSGA&#13;
advisor designate.&#13;
This motion passed the senate&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
Final study out on Union&#13;
The Parkside Office of Planning&#13;
and Construction today&#13;
announced that a final environmental&#13;
impact study on&#13;
proposed construction of a $3.5&#13;
million Student Union Building,&#13;
to be financed by user fees, is&#13;
available to the public for review&#13;
and comment.&#13;
In compliance with the Environmental&#13;
Policy Act, a public&#13;
hearing on the project will be&#13;
held at 7 p.m. on Oct. 28 in UW-P&#13;
Classroom Building Room 105.&#13;
Written comments on the environmental&#13;
impact statement&#13;
will be accepted by the Office of&#13;
Planning and Construction in&#13;
advance of the hearing. Both&#13;
written and oral testimony will be&#13;
accepted at the hearing.&#13;
Copies of the statement are&#13;
available to the public at the UWP&#13;
Library and at the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha city libraries. Additional&#13;
copies have been circulated&#13;
to the clerks of Racine&#13;
and Kenosha city and county and&#13;
the Town of Somers, appropriate&#13;
state agencies and the&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Regional&#13;
Planning Commission.&#13;
The 73,000 squre-foot union&#13;
building is to be located just north&#13;
of the loop service road which&#13;
encircles and academic area of&#13;
Big Foot&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., F RI. S AT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 9 , 1 1, 1 2, 1 3&#13;
OCT. 1 6, 1 8, 1 9 &amp; 20&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenhay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
the campus and would be attached&#13;
to the Classroom Building&#13;
immediately to the south by an&#13;
enclosed walkway over the road.&#13;
The structure is to house food&#13;
service areas, theater, bowling&#13;
alleys, lounges, meeting and&#13;
game rooms, student&#13;
organization headquarters,&#13;
lockers, concessions and union&#13;
staff offices.&#13;
The environmental impact&#13;
statement says the structure will&#13;
significantly improve the campus&#13;
environment&#13;
The report adds that physical&#13;
impact of the structure on the&#13;
environment is minimal since the&#13;
one-acre plot selected for&#13;
development presently is used as&#13;
a temporary parking lot. The&#13;
building is designed to conform&#13;
with state energy conservation&#13;
guidelines and will have a policy&#13;
of recycling paper, glass and&#13;
waste products generated by the&#13;
food service operations. The&#13;
building will use existing central&#13;
heating and chilling equipment.&#13;
Substantial assistance in debt&#13;
service on the self-amortizing&#13;
project is available through a&#13;
grant from the Department of&#13;
Housing and Urban Development&#13;
in the form of an interest subsidy&#13;
amounting to $2.9 million over 30&#13;
years. No state tax funds will be&#13;
committed to the building.&#13;
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Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5 y/endv moves on&#13;
Musich to head&#13;
GTI Women's Bureau&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Wendy Musich has been a&#13;
counselor on the Student Services&#13;
staff at Parkside since October of&#13;
1968. Within those six years, she&#13;
has served t he campus in many&#13;
capacities; her service has been&#13;
both p rofessional and personal,&#13;
institutional and individual.&#13;
On Friday, Oct. 18, Musich will&#13;
leave the Parkside staff and step&#13;
into a new phase of her career as&#13;
head of the Women's Bureau at&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute&#13;
(GTI).&#13;
The Women's Bureau is a new&#13;
program that was proposed by&#13;
the Community Services Division&#13;
staff of GTI and was granted&#13;
funding from federal and voch.-&#13;
tech. district sources.&#13;
The program is designed to&#13;
counsel women who are entering&#13;
or re-entering the working world.&#13;
Services will include personal&#13;
counseling, vocational testing,&#13;
assistance in job placement, andor&#13;
assistance in setting up an&#13;
educational or training course.&#13;
For education and training,&#13;
women will be referred to&#13;
whichever area school best meets&#13;
their needs; the program was not&#13;
set up simply to recruit students&#13;
for GTI.&#13;
"It allows me to focus in&#13;
counseling, which is really what I&#13;
like to do," said Musich of the&#13;
Women's Bureau job.&#13;
Musich finds herself uniquely&#13;
qualified for the position. She&#13;
earned a master's degree in&#13;
psychiatric social work from the&#13;
University of Chicago, then&#13;
worked at a mental health clinic&#13;
in Madison before joining the&#13;
Parkside staff.&#13;
"I'm very appreciative of the&#13;
experiences I've had here," said&#13;
Musich. "They've led me right&#13;
into the next thing. I've enjoyed&#13;
working in an academic setting."&#13;
As a member of the dean of&#13;
students staff, Musich served as&#13;
coordinator of the Adult Student&#13;
Program for a year and a half. In&#13;
academic advising, she served as&#13;
the liaison counselor to the&#13;
science division for beginning&#13;
science students. She has done a&#13;
lot of personal counseling, served&#13;
as advisor to the Women's&#13;
Caucus for approximately two&#13;
years, and has assisted in&#13;
counseling high school students,&#13;
among various other duties.&#13;
Of the Adult Student Program&#13;
experience Musich said, "It's&#13;
been very exciting and rewarding&#13;
to see older students get to&#13;
believe in themselves. As a&#13;
population, they are some of our&#13;
most exciting students. It's been&#13;
good to have been a part of that&#13;
program."&#13;
Musich's departure will make a&#13;
total of three vacancies on the&#13;
Student Services counseling&#13;
staff. (Wayne Ramirez left in&#13;
July of '74 an d Isom Fearn left&#13;
last month.)&#13;
"There are definite problems&#13;
in the Student Services office in&#13;
retaining people," said Musich.&#13;
"There are not enough opportunities&#13;
for professional&#13;
advancement, either by salary or&#13;
title.&#13;
"I am leaving because at this&#13;
stage in my career I need solid&#13;
evidence of professional advancement,"&#13;
she continued, "and&#13;
it doesn't seem to be forthcoming&#13;
at Parkside, either in. terms of&#13;
measurable salary increase or&#13;
title change, or both. This job&#13;
offered me a handsome salary&#13;
increase and a chance to develop&#13;
a new program."&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, associate&#13;
dean of students and head of the&#13;
Student Services staff, agrees&#13;
with Musich. "I do think we are&#13;
Wendy Musich&#13;
slow in rewarding professional&#13;
staff who have served this&#13;
campus in a counseling capacity.&#13;
Past history records that those&#13;
dedicated to counseling as a&#13;
profession haven't been able to&#13;
enjoy the recognition they&#13;
deserve."&#13;
Echelbarger said that she,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen&#13;
Dearborn, and Chancellor Irvin&#13;
Wyllie are "concerned about it&#13;
and are making every effort to&#13;
rectify the situation as soon as&#13;
possible."&#13;
"The Student Services staff is a&#13;
superb group of people," said&#13;
Musich. "The rest of this campus&#13;
doesn't realize the contribution&#13;
we make here. We wear many&#13;
hats at all times, which is very&#13;
tiring but necessary. We take&#13;
care of the student's life outside&#13;
the classroom. And unless the&#13;
staff begins to receive some&#13;
rewards, other people may&#13;
leave."&#13;
It may be December 1 before&#13;
any of the vacancies are filled on&#13;
the counseling staff. For each&#13;
open position, a job description is&#13;
written by Echelbarger and sent&#13;
to Dearborn for approval, then on&#13;
to Vice Chancellor Otto Bauer or&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie. If the'&#13;
description is not approved at qne&#13;
of those offices, it is sent back to&#13;
Echelbarger for revision.&#13;
The two positions vacated by&#13;
Ramirez and Fearn have now&#13;
been authorized and are being&#13;
advertised on a nation-wide&#13;
scale.&#13;
After about a month of advertising&#13;
the positions in different&#13;
publications and at different&#13;
universities whose&#13;
graduates would qualify,&#13;
Echelbarger anticipates having&#13;
gathered about 100 ap plications.&#13;
An advisory committee made&#13;
up of three students, three or four&#13;
staff members, one civil service&#13;
employee, and Echelbarger, will&#13;
narrow those 100 to five or six.&#13;
Out of those finalists, Dearborn&#13;
and Bauer will make the final&#13;
decision.&#13;
Echelbarger hopes to fill the&#13;
positions left vacant by Fearn&#13;
and Musich by January 1.&#13;
Remaining on the counseling&#13;
staff are John Rogers, Ken&#13;
Oberbruner and Echelbarger.&#13;
There are plans to hire Rudy&#13;
Collum of athletics to assist on a&#13;
part-time basis. The Student-toStudent&#13;
advisors will be called&#13;
upon more frequently and tentative&#13;
plans are being made to&#13;
hire a Limited Term Employee&#13;
(LTE) for the interim.&#13;
Said Echelbarger, "I have no&#13;
doubt there will be an over-load&#13;
on the present staff."&#13;
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SOUR CREAM POTATOES WITH&#13;
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6 THE PARKS IDE RANGER W e dne sday , Oct. 9, 1 9 7 4&#13;
Regents move on tuition&#13;
A HUW 1U VIUUVU 111 die&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Board of Regents approved&#13;
Friday, Oct. 4, a proposed $1.3&#13;
billion 1975-77 biennial budget&#13;
which moves to de-escalate instruction&#13;
fee charges to&#13;
Wisconsin resident undergraduate&#13;
students. In total,&#13;
the biennial budget, excluding&#13;
faculty compensation proposals&#13;
to be considered in November,&#13;
marks an increase in state and&#13;
non-state funds of $96,874,700 over&#13;
the past 1974-76 b udget.&#13;
The major proportion of budget&#13;
increases drawn from state funds&#13;
($78,417,200 or 66 percent) fall&#13;
into the following two categories:&#13;
A fee de-escalation schedule&#13;
which will halve fee charges to&#13;
Wisconsin resident undergraduate&#13;
students starting in&#13;
the '76-'77 school year. The fee deescalation&#13;
proposal is designed to&#13;
reduce economic barriers to&#13;
resident students who desire a&#13;
university education and to&#13;
combat the inflationary spiral of&#13;
costs to students. Under the deescalation&#13;
program, the percentage&#13;
of average instructional&#13;
cost charged as fees to resident&#13;
undergraduates would be&#13;
reduced from 25 percent to 12.5&#13;
percent ($21.4 million).&#13;
Workload and fixed cost inWARNING:&#13;
&#13;
The Ivory Tower&#13;
is about to&#13;
collapse.&#13;
It's your last year of college. Why think&#13;
about life insurance now? Because, the&#13;
older you get the more it costs. And next&#13;
year, it's all up to you. Find out&#13;
about CollegeMaster.&#13;
Call the Fidelity Union CollegeMaster®&#13;
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creases for teaching additional&#13;
students, meeting inflationary&#13;
cost increases, operating new&#13;
buildings, increasing student&#13;
wages to meet future minimum&#13;
wage requirements, service and&#13;
utility increases and other increases&#13;
($30.2 million).&#13;
The workload considerations&#13;
are designed to meet an increase&#13;
of 6,881 additional students&#13;
enrolled in degree credit&#13;
programs and 24,252 enrollees in&#13;
continuing education programs.&#13;
The remaining 34 percent ($27&#13;
million) increase, to be drawn&#13;
from state funds, would meet the&#13;
following demands:&#13;
An allocation of $3.9 million for&#13;
improvements in existing&#13;
programs for minoritydisadvantaged&#13;
students, additional&#13;
ethnic studies, women's&#13;
studies, and an external degree&#13;
program for Wisconsin citizens.&#13;
Funds to meet demands for&#13;
more primary care physicians,&#13;
allied health professionals and&#13;
specialized nursing and&#13;
cooperative health training&#13;
courses.&#13;
An allocation of $2.5 million to&#13;
facilitate economic, agricultural,&#13;
state and urban community&#13;
development assistance&#13;
programs.&#13;
Funds of $2.4 million to increase&#13;
teacher effectiveness&#13;
through improved course offerings,&#13;
utilizing educational&#13;
technology, replacing obsolete&#13;
equipment and meeting basic&#13;
accreditation standards.&#13;
Additional capital outflows to&#13;
meet new state and federal laws&#13;
which require investments in&#13;
health and safety protection, in&#13;
addition to other building improvements,&#13;
expansion of state&#13;
hospitals and empty dorm to&#13;
classroom conversions.&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, S ATURDAY&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
15&#13;
e TAPS&#13;
657-9791 4619 E ighth A ve.&#13;
MCW U UUget&#13;
is a $2.5 million boost in funds for&#13;
Parkside. During the 1975-77&#13;
biennium, Parkside would&#13;
receive $27,227,700 in state funds&#13;
and student fees, representing a&#13;
9.5 percent increase over current&#13;
levels.&#13;
A proposed amendment to the&#13;
biennial budget, presented to&#13;
Regent Ody Fish, Hartland, and&#13;
voted down by the board,&#13;
revealed that members of the&#13;
board ranked faculty pay raises&#13;
over resident reduced fees as the&#13;
top priority item. The Fish&#13;
amendment called for a slowmotion&#13;
de-escalation of resident&#13;
undergraduate fees, proposing&#13;
that the proportionate costs to&#13;
resident students be reduced&#13;
from 25 percent to 20 percent,&#13;
instead of 12.5 percent.&#13;
"I have some reservation about&#13;
de-escalation of instruction&#13;
fees," said Fish, citing three&#13;
areas of concern:&#13;
"First, I think the effect of&#13;
widening the tuition spread&#13;
between public and private institutions&#13;
of higher education is&#13;
certainly not going to be helpful.&#13;
"Secondly this would increase&#13;
the burden on all tax payers.&#13;
"Thirdly, I think we are excluding&#13;
a segment of the&#13;
population from the current&#13;
inflationary pressures and&#13;
problems. We add to that the&#13;
practicality of getting it done.&#13;
Also, the obviously difficult&#13;
program of getting necessary&#13;
faculty compensation increasesincreases&#13;
that I intend to support."&#13;
&#13;
Fish suggested that an expanded&#13;
scholarship program be&#13;
instituted to assist those in need,&#13;
rather than a flat reduction in&#13;
continued on next page&#13;
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R©CJ©ntS continued from preceeding page&#13;
tuition tor everyone. amount of dollar* fnr tv,^ t&#13;
Regent Neshek responded to of pe0ple , T&#13;
Fish's suggestion by claiming actuall d somethbin t„ , '&#13;
that the purpose oi the de- inflation for The "peoo-e o&#13;
Pf&#13;
escalation program ,s to "help Wisconsin who Seed °&#13;
the largest majority of students education, and who, if?hey get aS&#13;
Who are in the middle income education, will be able tf LSd&#13;
group. vx~ * "&#13;
He stated, "most of our&#13;
students-or a good 80 percent of&#13;
our students-are students of&#13;
middle income parents.&#13;
The typical middle income&#13;
parent who makes between&#13;
$10,000, $11,000 a nd $14,000, has&#13;
three children in school, not in&#13;
college, and is trying to support a&#13;
family, cannot afford to send one&#13;
or two children to college.&#13;
"I think the effect of what we&#13;
have attempted to do here will in&#13;
itself be a grant program across&#13;
the board, and give relief to the&#13;
majority of students that you&#13;
really want to help, without&#13;
setting up expensive machinery&#13;
such as we have now, to affect&#13;
grants and aids."&#13;
Neshek concluded by adding,&#13;
"I think the 12-and-a-half percent&#13;
is a minimum goal that we should&#13;
attempt to obtain as a first step."&#13;
Regent John Lavine also took&#13;
issue with Fish:&#13;
"Tuition represents 25-30&#13;
percent of a student's cost of&#13;
going to school; the other twothirds&#13;
to three-quarters-room&#13;
and board-basically, the student&#13;
and-or his family will have&#13;
anywhere. Yes, it may be that&#13;
students may not be able to go to&#13;
the campus they want, but they&#13;
will always have the costs of&#13;
eating and a roof over their&#13;
heads-we can't do much about&#13;
that. Here is a way where we can&#13;
meaningfully, with a small&#13;
[ PARKSibrSOCcTRTLUB"&#13;
more to the tax structure. Vice&#13;
President Smith yesterday made&#13;
the point-and I thought it was&#13;
very well taken-that the last&#13;
area that any economicallyminded&#13;
person ought to attack in&#13;
an inflationary time, is&#13;
education, because that's the one&#13;
thing that can upgrade the&#13;
society and its productivity."&#13;
Lavine concluded by saying&#13;
"I'm not unmindful of the faculty&#13;
compensation issue. But I will&#13;
state very candidly, as much as I&#13;
support this 101 percent, if it&#13;
came to an either-or situation,&#13;
universities are not made of&#13;
bricks and mortar-they are&#13;
made by people and a great&#13;
faculty. I will certainly support&#13;
the faculty compensation above&#13;
everything."&#13;
Regent DeBardeleben, Park&#13;
Falls, supported the Fish&#13;
amendment, citing that he was in&#13;
favor of eventual free public&#13;
higher education, but he too,&#13;
believed that the key issue in the&#13;
biennium should be faculty pay&#13;
raises.&#13;
"Clearly, the priority item is to&#13;
get adequate faculty compensation&#13;
in this biennium. The&#13;
UW-system is going to be sorely&#13;
hurt unless this is done," he said.&#13;
UW Senior Vice President&#13;
Donald Percy reminded the&#13;
board that the governor and the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
had asked the university to'&#13;
submit a salary increase package&#13;
separately from the rest of the&#13;
budget.&#13;
Fish refuted by saying that the&#13;
university should look at the&#13;
overall picture in preparing its&#13;
budget request.&#13;
"We're only looking at the&#13;
grocery bill today. The rent&#13;
doesn't come due until next week,&#13;
so we're saying we won't look at&#13;
it until then," he said.&#13;
The motion was not carried, as&#13;
members of the board voted&#13;
down the amendment by a 11-3&#13;
margin.&#13;
£&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
r Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
? MONTHS&#13;
AFTER&#13;
PARKSIPE&#13;
BLACKOUT]&#13;
?THERE&#13;
M0&#13;
{&#13;
PCMER&#13;
FAILURE&#13;
\?"UC£&#13;
Wednesday night Oct. 2 and Thursday during the day, Parkside&#13;
experienced a power failure resulting from the failure of a section of&#13;
the primary transformer circuit.&#13;
.After about two hours of darkness on Wednesday and about&#13;
seventeen hours of the same on Thursday service was restored at 4:12&#13;
a.m. Friday morning.&#13;
The failure was in the section of the circuit that maintains steady&#13;
voltage under different load conditions. Physical Plant is presently&#13;
operating "as near normal as possible" according to Roger Allen&#13;
director of Physical Plant.&#13;
No further power failures are anticipated, however, Parkside will&#13;
not be able to use the main chiller until these circuits are replaced. Its&#13;
is expected to take two days to replace the burned out circuits, and this&#13;
work should begin in a week or two when the parts are available.&#13;
Safety and Security reported no potentially dangerous situations&#13;
arising during the power outage and there were no reported injuries.&#13;
H E ILE M A N'S&#13;
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From God's Country.&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
A 'DANCE&#13;
s.&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
s, 'A£FY&#13;
SATURDAY, OCT. 12th&#13;
9:00 to 1:00&#13;
STUDENT ACT. B!DG.&#13;
ADVANCE TICKETS $1.00&#13;
(AVAILABLE FROM SOCCER CLUB MEMBER)&#13;
AT D OOR $1.50&#13;
WIS. — IJW-P I D REQUIRED&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
The Parkside Players Present an evening of&#13;
'Theater of the Absurd'&#13;
The Bald Soprano by Eugene lonesco&#13;
and&#13;
The American Dream by Edward Albee&#13;
directed by Don Rintz&#13;
8 P.M. OCT. 17-18-19-20&#13;
COMMUNICATION A RTS T HEATER&#13;
ADM. $2 public, $1 UW-P students/staff All seats reserved.&#13;
Tickets at information Kiosk a nd at the door&#13;
• Round Trip, Jet&#13;
• 7 \fghts Lodging&#13;
• Rum Punch Welcome&#13;
• (u'oimd Transfers&#13;
• T ips and Taxes&#13;
For application or informationContact:&#13;
&#13;
CAMPUSTRAVEL(ENTER&#13;
LLC 1)197 Call: 553-2294 &#13;
8 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wed nesd ay, Oct. 9, 1 9 7 4&#13;
needs a friend ?&#13;
Paris Wohlust demonstrates her abilities on the&#13;
balance beam.&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
"Super concentration and total" unawareness of&#13;
everything except for what I am doing," said Paris&#13;
Wohlust as she explained what goes through her&#13;
mind during a performance.&#13;
Teammate Julie Scherer added, "performing&#13;
requires a lot of p syching, I tell myself I know what&#13;
I'm doing and that I'm not going to fall. I fool&#13;
myself."&#13;
Wohlust and Scherer are both members of&#13;
Parkside's Womens Gymnastics Team.&#13;
Outside of carrying over 12 credits and working&#13;
part-time jobs, they practice regularly for iy2 hours&#13;
every day. Much of the team does not work-out&#13;
together because of job and class conflicts. Wohlust&#13;
and Scherer would preferably work out with the rest&#13;
of the team than alone.&#13;
"Talking and encouragement goes on when the&#13;
team works together. We could have much more&#13;
team spirit this way," said Wohlust.&#13;
The women feel the only way to change this would&#13;
be to recruit more members for the team. There&#13;
would naturally be more people practicing at the&#13;
same time then.&#13;
Parkside's Womens Gymnastics team is undefeated.&#13;
"As a small team," said Wohlust, "we&#13;
display our strength by putting quality in place of&#13;
quantity. The girls are very ambitious."&#13;
Though the women do not compete at the same&#13;
level, much mutual respect for one another and&#13;
effective communication is considered to exist in&#13;
the team.&#13;
Wohlust and Scherer describe their coach, Doug&#13;
Davis,as relaxed. They said Davis creates an atmosphere&#13;
in which the team feels they have the&#13;
right and freedom to express their ideas.&#13;
Scherer has participated in gymnastics for three&#13;
years, while Wohlust has participated for six years.&#13;
Wohlust enjoys gymnastics because there is a&#13;
feeling of achievement, yet challenge involved. She&#13;
said, "It feels good to do good."&#13;
Wohlust and Scherer explain gymnastics as the&#13;
ability to develop complete control over the mind&#13;
and body. In this way they display manners of s elfconfidence,&#13;
style and poise.&#13;
THE FACT IS - WE ALL DO.&#13;
I am not talking about acquaintances.&#13;
We all have plenty of those.&#13;
I am talking about real friends—&#13;
the do or die kind. We both know&#13;
those aren't easy to come by.&#13;
In order to establish real friendships,&#13;
we have to make ourselves&#13;
available to meet other people, we&#13;
have to be willing to work with&#13;
other people, and if we expect&#13;
other people to appreciate our&#13;
ideas, we must be willing to listen&#13;
to theirs.&#13;
If you hear an acquaintance or&#13;
an unknown individual making a&#13;
statement you don't agree with, it&#13;
makes little difference. If that person&#13;
were a true friend, you'd make&#13;
the time to discuss it with him&#13;
thoroughly.&#13;
When you have a personal problem&#13;
to discuss or something to be&#13;
happy about, you don't take it to an&#13;
acquaintance—you take it to a true&#13;
friend.&#13;
I could go on and on relating&#13;
the differences between acquaintances&#13;
and friends, but you already&#13;
know the differences. The thing I&#13;
want to tell you about is an organization&#13;
which was founded to&#13;
promote honest friendships.&#13;
When a group of Boston University&#13;
law students first gathered together&#13;
in 1909, they did so because&#13;
they were already friends. But&#13;
when they decided to expand their&#13;
fraternity to take in new members&#13;
on their own campus and on other&#13;
campuses, they did so because&#13;
they wanted to share their friendship.&#13;
Because of their belief in the&#13;
concept that honest friendships&#13;
promote the best in men, over 120,-&#13;
000 individuals have shared their&#13;
idea.&#13;
A group of acquaintances without&#13;
purpose is called a clique, but&#13;
that is where a fraternity is different.&#13;
We have proven that the more&#13;
a man learns about being a good&#13;
fraternity brother, the more he&#13;
knows about being a good friend&#13;
to his associates outside the&#13;
fraternity.&#13;
Even though you will make lifelong&#13;
friendships within the fraternity,&#13;
you will find that the real&#13;
value of the fraternity is learning&#13;
how to be a good friend and a productive&#13;
member of society.&#13;
A fraternity is then a growth institution.&#13;
It is designed to help&#13;
your acquaintances grow, your&#13;
friendships grow, and most importantly&#13;
to help you grow as an&#13;
individual.&#13;
You make many decisions every&#13;
day. Choosing to join a fraternity,&#13;
and, if so which one, is. an important&#13;
decision. The only individual&#13;
capable of telling you about the&#13;
fraternal experience is someone&#13;
who has experienced it. Talk to a&#13;
member of Lambda Chi Alpha&#13;
about his experience.&#13;
I did and I found the fraternity&#13;
experience to be extremely&#13;
worthwhile.&#13;
Frank Maez of Lambda Chi Alpha&#13;
is meeting with interested students&#13;
in the Library Learning Center&#13;
October 7-11, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA the Fraternity ofHonest Friendship&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
SvuMstf the. Qineti&#13;
Piffci &amp; Otaluut Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
i U/&#13;
"U w&#13;
l'W-P ARKSI.DE&#13;
/INTERBREAKTRIP&#13;
H O T E L &amp; R A C Q U E T CLL)B&#13;
acapulco&#13;
PLUS $20.00 TA X&#13;
&amp; S ERVICE BASED&#13;
ON 3 TO A ROOM&#13;
$244&#13;
• Round Trip Jet&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Marcarita P arty&#13;
Yacht C ruise of B ay&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tips &amp; Taxes&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUSTRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call : 553-2294&#13;
Bonanza's&#13;
three-point program&#13;
to beat inflation.&#13;
The Tuesday Night Price Bonanza.&#13;
(&#13;
#1.49 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
(&#13;
#1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)&#13;
. uesday night will r\ever he the same again.&#13;
•Peed a child in America for 49&lt;,&#13;
\ VCi-r'&#13;
t ,US&#13;
l t&#13;
, ° r|ght amount of food to make a kid smile - a hamburger,&#13;
an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price - 49c - to make you smile.&#13;
® Brink up. The seconds are on us.&#13;
At Bonanza, you get free refills on all soft drinks, coffee, and ice tea.&#13;
IbuTl love love ft.&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY </text>
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