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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 11</text>
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            <text>PSGA files with regents</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>PSGA files with regents&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
",. Parkside Student Government Association.&#13;
.... (PSGAl. Tuesday. Oct. 8 filed a peution asking&#13;
fer a declaratory ruling on the newly ratified&#13;
student constitution with the Board of Regents.&#13;
John Kontz. President Pro T~mpore. said that the&#13;
petition for a declaratory ruling "would carry it&#13;
(!be constitution) to the end through the adQliJlislrlltivechannels."&#13;
"If the Regents reject this petition." Kontz&#13;
.... tinued. "~e (PSGA) would appeal it to the Dane&#13;
CoW!ty CircuIt Court and. If necessary. to the State&#13;
&amp;apreI1lc Court."&#13;
1bepetition for a declaratory ruling "requires the&#13;
Regents to make a final statement either denying or&#13;
granting specific sections of this statement," said&#13;
Kootz. .&#13;
Thepetition for a declaratory ruling asks that the&#13;
Regentsdetermine the ,?anner in w?i~h stu~en~.&#13;
select their representatives to participate In Institutional&#13;
governance, and formulate and&#13;
recommend to the Chancellor a budget involving&#13;
the disposition of student fees which constitute&#13;
substantial support for campus student activities.&#13;
"At no point in the University of Wisconsin&#13;
requisition process is there a requirement for the&#13;
signature or certification by students, selected by&#13;
the Student Body at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
to participate in institutional governance,"&#13;
the petition states.&#13;
The petition asks that the "Regents declare that&#13;
all requisitions from the allocable portion of the&#13;
segregated university fee made subsequent to July&#13;
8. 1974, be made only after students selected by the&#13;
Student Body at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
to participate in institutional governance,&#13;
or their designees, sign or certify that the&#13;
requisition is being made in accordance with the&#13;
policies concerning student life, services, and interests."&#13;
According to the petition, "the Parks ide Student&#13;
Government Association. Inc. had been designated&#13;
by the Student Body at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
to exercise the powers and responsibilities&#13;
granted 'students', Jl in the merger statute.&#13;
Through the constitutional referendum, which&#13;
was held Sept. 24 and 25, "the Student Body at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside organized&#13;
themselves as the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Incorporated," the petition states.&#13;
In light of this. the petition asks that the "Regents&#13;
declare vacant all students seats on committees&#13;
involved in the process of institutional governance&#13;
which have not been filled according to the&#13;
procedures set forth in the Constitution of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association, Inc., or&#13;
in the By-Laws and resolutIons adopted pursuant to&#13;
that constitution. but instead have been fiUed by&#13;
appointment hy the ChanceUor or the Dean of&#13;
Students ...&#13;
The petition asks further that the "Regenta&#13;
declare that aU committees involved in the for,&#13;
mulation, and review, or policies concernu'l&#13;
student life, services and interests. have a majority&#13;
of student members."&#13;
Also. the petitioo alleges that the "board and its&#13;
several faculties are now in tbe process of adopting&#13;
rules for tenure and probationary appouuments,&#13;
and for the review of faculty performance and for&#13;
the non-retention ani dismissal of faculty members."&#13;
The petition claims that "neither the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association, Inc.. nor i&#13;
appropriate committees have been consulted on&#13;
these rules."&#13;
Therefore, the petition asks that the "Regents&#13;
direct that the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. Icn .• through its appropriate committees.&#13;
be consulted on the rules before tbey are&#13;
submitted for a public hearing or&#13;
The petition asking for a declaratory ruling on the&#13;
PSGA constitution will be before the Regents at&#13;
their I 'ovember meeting.&#13;
TheParkside,-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
~------------ ....~.:==::~--- Wednesday,Oct, 16,1974Vol.III No,11---&#13;
GET&#13;
" A&#13;
___~PIN.-&#13;
GET&#13;
1"&#13;
o PIN!&#13;
Tax forum&#13;
Nobel winning economist&#13;
Kenneth Arrow of Harvard and&#13;
former interior Secretary&#13;
Stewart Udall are among six&#13;
national experts who will&#13;
headline a free. public forum on&#13;
"Value JUdgments and&#13;
Taxation" to be held at the&#13;
University of wisconsin-Perkside&#13;
Saturday. Oct. 19.&#13;
The forum will beheld in the&#13;
COmmunication Arts theater&#13;
Saturday morning beginning at 9&#13;
a.m. and is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside through a grant from&#13;
the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities.&#13;
ThepUblicforum at Parkside is&#13;
PBrt of a two-day conference on&#13;
~t topic which will convene&#13;
·day. Oct. 18. at an all-day&#13;
Session at Wingspread, the&#13;
~ference center of the Johnson&#13;
OundatlOn in Racine. The&#13;
Wingspreadsession, which is not&#13;
~ to the general public. wili&#13;
rtng together about 60&#13;
J10licYmakersfrom local state ad· ~. national government.&#13;
Iness. industry. labor. the&#13;
mass media and citizen groups.&#13;
Conference co*chairmen&#13;
Ronald Gottesman. English and&#13;
humanities, and RIchard&#13;
Rosenberg, economics, t:M:&gt;thof&#13;
the Parkside faculty; said the&#13;
public forum at Parkside wili&#13;
feature the same panel of experts&#13;
and topics as the Wingspread&#13;
session. Each panelist will&#13;
discuss his topic for about 20&#13;
minutes, then, after a refreshment&#13;
break, the floor wH.Ibe open&#13;
to questions and discuSSIO~S.The&#13;
panel wili consider from different&#13;
perspectives the way. ~oclal&#13;
values relate to tax policies at&#13;
national, state and local levels.&#13;
Arrow, a Harvard professor of&#13;
economics, received the. Nobel&#13;
prize in economic science m ~972.&#13;
Past president of .th~ Amenc~n&#13;
Economics AssocIation .. he 1S&#13;
perhaps best known for hl~ book.&#13;
Social Choice and IndiVidual&#13;
Values (1951). His most recent&#13;
work is The Limits of Qr·&#13;
tanization (974).&#13;
Udall. who was Secretary of the&#13;
Interior from 1961-69 and earher&#13;
served as a Congressman from&#13;
. continl:ed on page 3&#13;
Time of...the sun&#13;
Solar conference slated&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
On Friday. October 25,&#13;
Parkside, the University Extension&#13;
and the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environment will&#13;
jointly sponsor an all-day conference&#13;
on the •'Time of the Sun ...&#13;
Solar Power."&#13;
It will be the first conference of&#13;
this type ever held in the Midwest&#13;
and will deal with the practical&#13;
application of solar energy.&#13;
Edith Sobel. chairperson of the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment said, "This conference&#13;
is geared for the&#13;
businessman and lay person just&#13;
developing an interest in alternative&#13;
sources of energy. Most&#13;
previous conferences, in other&#13;
parts of the country. have been&#13;
structured for scientists and&#13;
highly knowledgeable environmentalists."&#13;
She said it is&#13;
hoped that this conference ",..ill&#13;
get others concerned in the use of&#13;
solar power.&#13;
The conference will feature a&#13;
number of internationally&#13;
recognized authorities in the field&#13;
of solar and wind power.&#13;
Dr. George Lof, Director of the&#13;
Solar Applications Laboratory&#13;
and president of the International&#13;
Solar Energy Society. Dr. J.A.&#13;
Duffie. Director of the Solar&#13;
Energy Laboratory in dadison,&#13;
and John Kopecky. Project&#13;
Engineer of Solar Energy at&#13;
Honeywell. Inc. of Minneapolis,&#13;
Minnesota will speak on the&#13;
subject of solar energy. William&#13;
Heronemus, wind engineering&#13;
systems expert and professor of&#13;
Engineering at the Umversity of&#13;
~Iassachusetts in Boston will&#13;
speak on wind power.&#13;
lorris Firebaugh, associate&#13;
professor of PhYSICS.said of the&#13;
conference. "They've got the&#13;
very top names in solar energy in&#13;
the world. Lor and Duffie. and the&#13;
number one advocate and&#13;
principal spokesman on wind&#13;
power. Heronernus."&#13;
"Lof is principally an expert in&#13;
the field of space heating hy solar&#13;
energy." Firebaugh explained.&#13;
"He has lived in a solar house&#13;
himself for fifteen years and also&#13;
has a solar-beated laboratory."&#13;
Firebaugh has been&#13;
corresponding with Lof for some&#13;
time. In Firebaugh's rorthcoming&#13;
book, Per ptctJVH on Energy&#13;
(eo-authored with Lon Reudisilil.&#13;
there will be a picture of Lof's&#13;
solar-heated bouse. An article on&#13;
the "Power from the off-shore&#13;
winds" by Heronemus will also&#13;
be featured in their book.&#13;
Sobel said Lof was internationally&#13;
known and had just&#13;
returned from 8 meeting in the&#13;
U.s.S.R on heating and cooling&#13;
with solar energy.&#13;
Kopecky IS project engineer of&#13;
solar energy at Honeywell. Inc . of&#13;
Minneapolis. Minnesota&#13;
Honeywell has done trial projee&#13;
on heating and cooling s_ I ms&#13;
for school 10 the Ea r. and ha&#13;
also worked on trailer whIch are&#13;
heated and cooled by .olar&#13;
power.&#13;
Parkside tudents may attend&#13;
the conference free but should&#13;
register by October 18 m Gr. 344&#13;
con"nl:" 01\ IN,1t S&#13;
Amer. lang. to go&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
The American Language&#13;
requirement will be abolished in&#13;
the Fall of 1975 if a proposal now&#13;
being studied is adopted.&#13;
As Donald Kummings. English&#13;
Department Coordinator, said.&#13;
"it's not doing its job; faculty&#13;
members have complained that&#13;
many st,~dents do not write weB&#13;
enough. I..&#13;
The Academic Po 1C1es&#13;
Committee has been working on&#13;
the proposal ror the past year.&#13;
If' approval is given, com~lete&#13;
elimination of the American&#13;
Language requirement would&#13;
become effective in the Fall or&#13;
1975. .&#13;
A new requirement in wntlen&#13;
composition would be&#13;
established, one that for most&#13;
students would be a two-course&#13;
requirement, depending on&#13;
placement and performance,&#13;
with most students being placed&#13;
in either English 100 (Elements&#13;
of English). or English 101&#13;
(Freshman Composition l.&#13;
Freshman Composition is a&#13;
new course that is designed to&#13;
meet the present requirement in&#13;
American Language for students&#13;
entering under previous and&#13;
current catalogues.&#13;
A higher level course would&#13;
also be requirod. Students who&#13;
complete English 100 or 101. or&#13;
score highly on placement tests.&#13;
will take English 102 (presently&#13;
Advanced Composition 201&gt;.&#13;
Placement tests can exempt&#13;
some from the composition&#13;
requirement completely.&#13;
The proposal is part of a review&#13;
of all general degree&#13;
reqwrements being conducted by&#13;
Ihe Academic Policies Committee.&#13;
Although neither the American&#13;
Language Committee nor the&#13;
English discipline has taken a&#13;
formal stand on the issue,&#13;
members from both have been&#13;
involved in its preparation.&#13;
English 100 and 101. both selfpacing,&#13;
pass*fail, three-credit&#13;
courses would increase the&#13;
number of required courses for&#13;
the majority of students.&#13;
The composition requirement&#13;
is, however. a skill requirement&#13;
assuming "that a given level of&#13;
literacy should be achieved by&#13;
com,1'MACf Oft ..... S&#13;
PSGA files with regents by Michael Olszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
'l1!e Parkside Student Gove:nment ~sociation,&#13;
Inc. (PSGA), Tuesday, _Oct. 8 filed a petition asking&#13;
for a declaratory rulmg on the newly ratified&#13;
tudent constitution with the Board of Regents. 5 John Kontz, President Pro Tempore, said that the&#13;
petition for a declaratory ruling "would carry it&#13;
(the co~titution) to ,,the end through the administrative&#13;
channels.&#13;
••If the Regents reject this petition," Kontz&#13;
continued, "~e (PSGA) w~uld appeal it to the Dane&#13;
eounty Circuit Court and, 1f necessary, to the State&#13;
Supreme Court." . The petition for a declaratory rulmg "requires the&#13;
Regents to ma_k~ a fin~l stateme~t either denying or&#13;
granting spec1f1c sections of this statement,'' said&#13;
Kontz. '11ie petition for a declaratory ruling asks that the&#13;
Regents determine the ~anner in w~~h stu~en~,&#13;
select their representatives to participate m mstitutional&#13;
governance, and formulate and&#13;
recommend to the Chancellor a budget involving&#13;
the disposition of student fees which constitute&#13;
ubstantial support for campus student activities.&#13;
"At no point in the University of Wisconsin&#13;
requisition process is there a requirement for the&#13;
ignature or certification by students. selected by&#13;
the St~dent Body at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
to participate in institutional gover- nance," the petition states.&#13;
The petition asks that the "Regents declare that&#13;
all requisitions from the allocable portion of the&#13;
segregated university fee made subsequent to July&#13;
8, 1974, be made only after students selected b the&#13;
Student Body at the University of Wisco.nsinParkside&#13;
to participate in institutional governance,&#13;
or their designees, sign or certify that the&#13;
requisition is being made in accordance with the&#13;
policies concerning student life, services, and interests."&#13;
•&#13;
According to the petition, "the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association. Inc. had been de ignated&#13;
by the Student Body at the University of Wi consinParkside&#13;
to exercise the powers and responsibilities&#13;
granted 'students'," in the merger statute.&#13;
Through the constitutional referendum, which&#13;
was held Sept. 24 and 25, "the Student Body at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside organized&#13;
themselves as the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Incorporated," the petition states.&#13;
In light of this. the petition asks that the "Regents&#13;
declare vacant all students seats on committees&#13;
involved in the process of institutional governance&#13;
which have not been filled according to the&#13;
procedures set forth in the Constitution of the&#13;
The Parkside,-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
--------Wednesday,Oct. 16, 1974 Vol. Ill No.11----&#13;
Time of the sun&#13;
Solar conference slated&#13;
.I&#13;
Tax forum&#13;
Nobel winning economist&#13;
Kenneth Arrow of Harvard and&#13;
former interior Secretary&#13;
Stewart Udall are among six&#13;
national experts who will&#13;
headline a free public forum ori&#13;
"Value Judgments and&#13;
Taxation" to be held at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 19.&#13;
The forum will be. held in the&#13;
Communication Arts theater&#13;
Saturday morning beginning at 9&#13;
a.m. and is sponsored by&#13;
Parkside through a grant from&#13;
the National Endowment for the&#13;
Humanities.&#13;
The public forum at Parkside is&#13;
P3rt of a two-day conference on&#13;
that topic which will convene&#13;
Friday, Oct. 18, at an all-day&#13;
session at Wingspread, the&#13;
~feren~e ce~ter of the Johnson&#13;
Woundation m Racine. The&#13;
ingspread session, which is not&#13;
~pen to the general public, will&#13;
ri~g together about 60&#13;
i&gt;Ohcymakers from local state and · ' ~- national government,&#13;
rn iness, _industry, labor, the ass media and citizen groups.&#13;
Conference co-chairmen&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, English and&#13;
humanities, and Richard&#13;
Rosenberg, economics, bc?th of&#13;
the Parkside faculty; said the&#13;
public forum at Parkside will&#13;
feature the same panel of experts&#13;
and topics as the Wingspread&#13;
session . Each panelist will&#13;
discuss :us topic for about 20&#13;
minutes, then, after a refreshment&#13;
break, the floor wil_l be open&#13;
to questions and discuss10?s. The&#13;
panel will consider from d1ffer~nt&#13;
perspectives the way. ~oc1al&#13;
values relate to tax pohc1es at&#13;
national, state and local levels.&#13;
Arrow' a Harvard professor of&#13;
economics, received the_ Nobel&#13;
prize in economic science m ~972.&#13;
Past president of ~h~ Amenc3:n&#13;
Economics Assoc1at10n, . he is&#13;
perhaps best known for h1~ ~ook,&#13;
Social Choice and Individual&#13;
Values (1951). His most recent&#13;
work is The Limits of ()rtanization&#13;
0974) · Udall, who was Secretary of ~e&#13;
Interior from 1961-69 and earlier&#13;
served as a Congressman from&#13;
continced on page 3&#13;
by Colleen Dor ey&#13;
On Friday, October 25,&#13;
Parkside, the University Extension&#13;
and the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environment will&#13;
jointly sponsor an all-day conference&#13;
on the "Time of the Sun ...&#13;
Solar Power."&#13;
It will be the first conference of&#13;
this type ever held in the Midwest&#13;
and will deal with the practical&#13;
application of solar energy.&#13;
Edith Sobel, chairperson of the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment said, "This conference&#13;
is geared for the&#13;
businessman and lay person ju t&#13;
developing an intere t in alternative&#13;
sources of energy. to. t&#13;
previous conference , in other&#13;
parts of the country, have been&#13;
s.tructur d for cientist and&#13;
highly knowledgeable environmentali&#13;
·ts." She said it i&#13;
hoped that this conference \\ill&#13;
get others concerned in the e of&#13;
solar power. The conference will feature a&#13;
number of internationallv&#13;
recognized authorities in the field&#13;
of solar and rind power.&#13;
Dr. George Lo!, Director of the&#13;
Solar Application Laboratory&#13;
and president of the International&#13;
Solar Energ Society, Dr. J.A.&#13;
Duffie, Director of the Solar&#13;
Energy Laboratory in • ladison,&#13;
and John Kopecky, Project&#13;
Engineer of Solar Energ_ at&#13;
Honeywell, Inc. of , 1inneapoli ,&#13;
linnesota will peak on the&#13;
ubject of solar energy. William&#13;
Heronemus, "ind en ·neermg&#13;
) 'tern ~-pert and prof r of&#13;
Engineering at the 'niv it of&#13;
ta_ chu.ctL in Bo on will&#13;
.peak on ind po .... er. , 1orris Firebau ,&#13;
prof sor of Phy ic , .&#13;
conference. "They'v&#13;
very top nam in. lar energ • in&#13;
the world, Lof and Duffi , and th&#13;
number one advocate and&#13;
principal pok man on \\ind&#13;
powe!". Heronemu ."&#13;
" Lof i principally an pert in&#13;
the field of pace heating by lar&#13;
energy;• Fireba h explained.&#13;
" He ha lived in a solar hou&#13;
Amer. lang. to go&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
The American Language&#13;
requirement \\ill be abolished in&#13;
the Fall of 1975 if a proposal now&#13;
being studied is adopted.&#13;
As Donald Kummings, English&#13;
Department C~rdiJ?ator. said;&#13;
"it's not doing its ]Ob: facult)&#13;
members have complained that&#13;
many st.~dents do not \\Tite well&#13;
enough. . The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee has been working on&#13;
the proposal for the past year.&#13;
If· approval is given. com~lete&#13;
elimination of the American&#13;
Language requirement would&#13;
become effective in the Fall or&#13;
1975. . . A new requirement m written&#13;
composition would be&#13;
established, one that for mo t&#13;
students would be a two-cour e&#13;
requirement, depending on&#13;
placement and performance,&#13;
"ith most tudents being placed&#13;
in either EnglLh 100 (Elem n&#13;
of English &gt;, or Engli h 101&#13;
(Fre hman Composition).&#13;
Freshman Compo ition i a&#13;
new course that is d igned to&#13;
meet the present requirement in&#13;
American Language for tudents&#13;
entering under previou and&#13;
current catalogue .&#13;
A higher level cour e would&#13;
also be required Students who&#13;
complete Engli h 100 or 101, or&#13;
score highly on placement te ts,&#13;
will take English 102 &lt;presently&#13;
Advanced Compo ition 201l.&#13;
Placement tests can exempt&#13;
some from the compo ition&#13;
requir m nt comp! el .&#13;
The pr I' rt of&#13;
or all en rat de r&#13;
reqwremen i conducted by&#13;
the cademic Policl ommitt&#13;
•&#13;
Altho&#13;
Language Committee nor th&#13;
EnglLh dLciplin ha tak n&#13;
formal and on th i u •&#13;
member from both ha\'e&#13;
involved in its pr paration.&#13;
English 100 and 101, both . lf.&#13;
pacing, pa -fail, three-credit&#13;
cour e would increa e the&#13;
number of required cou for&#13;
the majority of tudenL.&#13;
The composition requirement&#13;
i , however, a kill requir ment&#13;
assuming "that a gi en le el of&#13;
literacy should be achie\'ed by&#13;
cont n\:NI °" pa9t s &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER WwcInes.s.y, oct. 16. 1974&#13;
'--&#13;
A GER&#13;
EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
co : something&#13;
or everyone&#13;
To all of au al enjoyed the seplember Issue of ICON&#13;
(RANGER humanlhes magazine) we reilerale our&#13;
In Iallon. conlrlbute&#13;
In n nsliluf on such as Par side. with lhe&#13;
dom nIIl ng Influence of the business and lechnology&#13;
I. IC offen 0IIe of the lew lorms 01 humanlsllc&#13;
pr on to reach many 01 lhose sludents Involved In&#13;
se ences. The conlroversy and commenls over the&#13;
I rsl ICOM shows lhal sludents Ihrooghouf the school&#13;
e I ed al 'and hopefully read) the ICO .&#13;
To hose s uden not dlrec ty Involved In humanlsllc&#13;
tud thaI tool&lt; lime 10 read and com me'll on ICON we&#13;
n you," Too 0 en lhose deeply Involved In Ihe&#13;
s 0 e vas ma iorlly 01 people with IIlfle&#13;
rt sl e ra nlng lhal ma e up lhe major portion 01 Ihe&#13;
r saud nee. The arti •• w lie nol losing hi. lnrlty&#13;
or sunning hIs ba ground. musl bridge Ihe&#13;
pIe sts be een h s perceptions and concep ions&#13;
nd pr I e ces and Ideals 01 his audience.&#13;
raug a lorum soc as leo ear isl exposes Ihe&#13;
r ul 01 hi'll lIect 0 lhe scrut ny 01 menlalitles 01&#13;
I s tur II 01 dl lerng onenlahon. A dialogue&#13;
d,spara e groups ca only increase the&#13;
rt·s 10 his audience and broaden Ihe&#13;
w r neu 0 lhe non.. rt,,!.&#13;
In S conlex RANG ERin es those Involved In Ihe&#13;
humanls c stud'es and others 10 con ribute Iheir orks&#13;
and 0 all 0 hers 0 conlr"bute he" comments.&#13;
OOPSi&#13;
!be IJ"'llI"DI&#13;
I • belief 01. m} DeW&#13;
job nat mellhll..ed 10 lb.&#13;
_ It blhat e-_ though I'U&#13;
_ ....,...... 1 be ..bl. to&#13;
..... "ta.1D &lt;be COCllaCl tb all&#13;
!be a.1 Parblde wha mean&#13;
.. much '" 1M&#13;
ebril)' tbe r..&#13;
the bead 01. c..l........ W&lt;__ ' Bureau ...&#13;
r t&#13;
~n.P.'.'&#13;
RA GER&#13;
e PARI&lt;SIDE RANGER .s a wholly Independent&#13;
publ ca on 01 e s udents 01 the U.W. Parkside. ex&#13;
or s ng n rests. opinions. and concerns 01 Ih£&#13;
tuden s. r porlS ble lor ts conlenls. OIlices are&#13;
loea ed In 019. LLC. U.W. Par s de. Kenosha,&#13;
scons n 53140 Phones ill229S. ill 2281.&#13;
Ed.tw enne Pesl a&#13;
lItIs ..... s M....ver SIeve Johnson&#13;
Adver1.s".. M."..-r John sac el&#13;
ProdlK"'" M.". r TomKennedy&#13;
Copy Edotw Rebecca Ec lund&#13;
Editw ch I OIszy&#13;
Hum." s Ed.1cw amy cundari&#13;
o..artm ... t Paul Anderson.&#13;
pp«, Je nntne S,psma.&#13;
lson&#13;
Huma". o..artm ... t Waller Ulbricht. Fred Bultman&#13;
Pllot.. raplly Edilcw 0.'- Allen&#13;
Pllo,.. •• pfMn 0 ve Keller. Ril.&#13;
rn&#13;
A&#13;
SCHOOL ODYSSEY 2001:&#13;
WHERE/5TH£:&#13;
ART DEPARTMENT?&#13;
"&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
THEY'RE NOT REAL! Drs. Quass and Knight are not what yw&#13;
Utink! The two of them, I mean the real ones, were beaten to deathtwo&#13;
years ago wilb a rubber policeman by a crazed quant student fll'&#13;
simply having had the bad fortune to walk into the lab at the very&#13;
moment that .the student discovered after 79 titrations, that some&#13;
practical joker bad exchanged his soluble cWorlde· for a bottleof&#13;
Squirt. The important thing to note is that the student was im·&#13;
mediately torn to bloody pieces by a mob of irate chern. students(«&#13;
having dispatched the two much loved lamas of labs to that biglabin&#13;
the sky. The mourning students worked &lt;lilyand night to replace th&lt;ir&#13;
lamented losses with androids fully programmed to provide the same&#13;
light in lbe black worlds Qf analytical chemistry and inorganic that&#13;
Homer did. This level of programming excellence was only possible&#13;
because the good doctors had given so much of themselves. Thenew&#13;
Homer Knight turns out exams just as hair curling and Quass's&#13;
mystical Imagery Improves with each passing day, like a goodviolin.&#13;
&lt;Had these characteristics not been programmed in, someone mi~t&#13;
have suspected the switch.) Which all simply goes to show that gettiIC&#13;
rtd of good people like the aforementioned is not the kind of thingdone&#13;
easftyor excusably under the noses of those who have benefited inthe&#13;
past and anticipate benefiting in the future from their dedicated&#13;
tutelage.&#13;
MANYWEEKS OF POLITICAL INFIGHTING in the boardrOOmof&#13;
Anaconda Aircar Corp. were brought to a close last week whenthe&#13;
deCISIonwas finally reached to adopt a proposal by the president"&#13;
brother-m·law that the company convert to the world famous Parks,de&#13;
Pe~S?nne) Policy Performance Parameters. In depth analysis of the&#13;
po .C1es as they would apply to the famous producers of anti-gravitY&#13;
l:,XlSrevealed that whereas before the swltchover a good man could&#13;
de fire? for mere ~n~ompetance, now it will be possible to save,the&#13;
,:;,rvmg fellow hIS Job if only he looks good in committee and "gns&#13;
we m the company chorus. While admitting that this might cause an&#13;
o~erall deterioration in the company's ability to fulfill their stated&#13;
O&#13;
°thjeCti~esof performance production by req-liiring the release or&#13;
erwlse well q I·f·ed fl1 those who' .ua 1 I people who are lousy tenors to make room&#13;
milk had smg m tune, a company spokesman said that the priceof&#13;
An d&#13;
goneup to 4.15and that motorcycles had nothing to dowit!llt&#13;
- aCOn a down fift d . . eeDan a third In heavy trading:.--&#13;
CITIZENS OF"E ent&#13;
erypto ra ARTH ARM YOURSELVES! Defense departm&#13;
in theg&#13;
chp~ershave broken the code by which extraterrestial agents ar Itectur I f' . om- municatin wit a. lr~ that designed Parkside have been C&#13;
vieWed frogmor~~elr mm~torr martian mentors. Itseems that w~&#13;
responsible for t~~(authoritative sources claim sky-lab photOS~e&#13;
twists t IS breakthrough) or another planet (I) the sIr ... , urns and see . I' I 'dewP' system takes mmg Y meamngless curves that our 51 'ell&#13;
hold deep an~ctually appears as calligraphic.like characters wh';'~&#13;
revelation puts rsSlbly sm~ster meaning for earth dwellers, . it&#13;
was claimed tha~ ~est preVIOUScontroversial allegations Wh~:ts&#13;
(found stumbl" SCovery had been made by disoriented stu &lt;WI&#13;
a walk from m~ around i~circles and S-cuTves two hours overdUean&#13;
idiogram for ~ t A t~ POlCtB) that the pavement was actual.l~(f1S&#13;
have been conf~e Chmese graffiti. This reporter's own SUSPICIappreciated&#13;
from ~med, that our sidewalk Sebring can only be tht&#13;
ground.) e air, (It certainly isn't appreciated here ort&#13;
T&#13;
A GER&#13;
'--------Edi oriol/Opinion&#13;
I 0&#13;
0 e&#13;
• •&#13;
00 S&#13;
• 0 ,et 1ng&#13;
eryone&#13;
r ch • Fr&#13;
Ria&#13;
A SCHOOL ODYSSEY 2001:&#13;
WHERE'S TH£&#13;
ART t,EPARTMEt-.!T?&#13;
'&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
THEY'RE NOT REAL! Drs. Quass and Knight are not what yoo&#13;
think! The two of them, I mean the real ones, were beaten to death two&#13;
years ago with a rubber policeman by a crazed quant student for&#13;
simply having had the bad fortune to walk into the lab at the very&#13;
moment that lhe student discovered after 79 titrations, that some&#13;
practical joker had exchanged his soluble chloride-for a bottle of&#13;
Squirt. The important thing to note is that the student was im·&#13;
mediately torn to bloody pieces by a mob of irate chem. students for&#13;
having dispatched the two much loved lamas of labs to that big lab in&#13;
the sky. The mourning students worked day and night to replace their&#13;
lamented losses with androids fully programmed to provide the same&#13;
light in the black worlds Qf analytical chemistry and inorganic that&#13;
Homer did. This level of programming excellence was only possible&#13;
because the good doctors had given so much of themselves. The new&#13;
Hom~ ~ght turns out exams just as hair curling and Q~~·s&#13;
mystical imagery improves with each passing day, like a good v10bn.&#13;
&lt;Had these characteristics not been programmed in, someone m1~I&#13;
~ve suspected the switch.) Which all simply goes to show that getl~&#13;
nd of good people like the aforementioned is not the kind of thing done&#13;
easfty or excusably under the noses of those who have benefited in the&#13;
past and anticipate benefiting in the future from their dedicated&#13;
tutelage.&#13;
MANY WEEKS OF POLITICAL INFIGHTING in the boardroom of&#13;
An~~nda Air~ar Corp. were brought to a close last week when the&#13;
decision. was fmally reached to adopt a proposal by the presid~t&#13;
brother-m-law_ that the company convert to the world famous Parkside&#13;
Per5?nnel Policy Performance Parameters. In depth analysis of the&#13;
po ~cies as they would apply to the famous producers of anti-gravity&#13;
~&gt;OS revealed that whereas before the switchover a good man could&#13;
d fire? for mere incompetance, now it will be possible to save (he&#13;
,tser:,mg fellow his job if only he looks good in committee and sigr.&#13;
ell 10 the co~pany chorus. While admitting that this might cause an 0~~ral~ deterioration in the company's ability to fulfill their stat4&#13;
0 ~ecll~es of performance production by requiring the release 0&#13;
~o e~~e w~l qualified people who are lousy tenors to make rOO!" f~&#13;
milk h O Slng 10 tune, a company spokesman said that the price 0&#13;
An addgone up to 4.15 and that motorcycles had nothing to do wi!h it. - aeon a do fif . . wn teen and a third m heavy trading. --&#13;
~~;!Z!NS OF EARTH ARM YOURSELVES! Defense departrnen~&#13;
in th g ~~ers have broken the code by which extraterrestial agen&#13;
muni~~n 1~ctura~ firi_n that designed Parkside have been c_o:;&#13;
viewed fro~ with !heir minatory martian mentors. It seems that ~h bt&#13;
responsible for~~~ &lt;authoritative sources claim sky-Jab photos toge&#13;
tv/1sts tur or is breakthrough} or another planet ( ! ) , the stranal , ns and s · 'dew ystem takes eemmgly meaningless curves that our si ch&#13;
hold deep an:ctual~y app~rs as calligraphic-like characters w;ii&#13;
revelation P ts r5sibly s1mster meaning for earth dwellers. . it&#13;
was cJaimeduth ~ ~est previous controversial allegations wher~:ts&#13;
&lt;found stumbr a scovery had been made by disoriented SlU&#13;
a Walk from in~ around i~ circles and S-curves two hours overdr an&#13;
idiogram for 1:mt A t~ pomt B) that the pavement was actu~ Y()ll$&#13;
have been conte ~mese graffiti. This reporter's own sus:1 ap·&#13;
Pfeciated from 1t';t . that our si~ewalk Sebring can only t)lt&#13;
ground.I e air. &lt;It certainly isn't appreciated here 00 &#13;
Dilemn~ of the handicapped:&#13;
.the struggle to get through one day&#13;
by J.D. Garoutte&#13;
Editor's note: The following article is the first in a&#13;
tWOpart series on the problems that physically&#13;
handicapped s!udents face attending a university,&#13;
such as parkside.&#13;
As these people walk down the hall many heads&#13;
will turn, some in concern, some in sympathy and&#13;
SOIT!~ in amazement. Most people though will be&#13;
,;king for the same reason: they are looking at a&#13;
~ysically handicapped person struggle through the&#13;
day·&#13;
Being physically handicapped can and often does&#13;
p-esentproblems for these individuals. However, in&#13;
the future, these prohlems may he alleviated due to&#13;
revisions in building codes and new a pproaches to&#13;
education.&#13;
The new approach to educating the physically&#13;
handicapped is in the fact that these individuals are&#13;
now attending "normal" public schools. In the past,&#13;
the physically handicapped person was sent to&#13;
schools specifically created for his-her needs.&#13;
Also, revised building codes have made public&#13;
facilities more accessible to the physically handicapped.&#13;
Under the Wisconsin Administrative Code,&#13;
safeguards for physically handicapped persons&#13;
(Septemher 1973): "Any place of employment or&#13;
public building, the initial construction of which is&#13;
commenced after July I, 1970, shall he so designed&#13;
and constructed as to provide reasonable means of&#13;
ingress and egress by the physically handicapped.&#13;
"The requirements may be accomplished by at&#13;
least one ground or street level entrance and exit&#13;
without steps.&#13;
"Doors having a clear opening of at least 40 inches&#13;
in width.&#13;
"There shall be reasonable means of access from&#13;
a parking lot if any ... to at least one floor on which&#13;
the primary business of such building is located."&#13;
At Parkside, the Department of Safety and&#13;
Security plays a key role in assuring that parking is&#13;
available to the physically handicapped.&#13;
According to William Carter, Jr., police officer, a&#13;
total of six spaces are available to the physically&#13;
handicapped for parking;' three spaces adjacent to&#13;
Tallent Hall and three spaces directly hehind the&#13;
Classroom Building.&#13;
leAstudent who owns a disabled license plate and&#13;
dispiays this on his auto, does not have to pay to&#13;
park. on the university's grounds or any munieapal&#13;
~rkmg lot or meter," said Ronald Brinkmann&#13;
director of Safety and Security. '&#13;
Ot?erwise, Brinkmann said that parking permits&#13;
are ~ssued to disabled students after a letter is&#13;
received from their family doctor stating that it is&#13;
necessary for the individual to have close parking&#13;
or accessable transportation.&#13;
The permits are given for as long as the doctor&#13;
deems necessary, Brinkmann said.&#13;
He said ~urther that a person receiving this kind&#13;
of a permit, only pays the regular parking permit&#13;
cost of $7. At some other universities there is an&#13;
~tra charge, such as at UW-Milwaukee, where the&#13;
disabled student is charged $35 to park.&#13;
H~wever, at. Parkside, there is a shortage in&#13;
available parking for the physically handicapped.&#13;
::"1IS semester there are approximately ten permits&#13;
In use for the six available spaces.&#13;
. Another person at Parkside, who .has a vested&#13;
interest in the. welfare of the physically handicapped,&#13;
IS Edith Isenberg, registered nurse.&#13;
Isenberg said that there are no known provisions&#13;
for transporting a physically- handicapped persoo&#13;
who may need help in getting from one building or&#13;
class, to another.&#13;
Currently, she is assisting physically handicapped&#13;
students on her own with the help of&#13;
students who work in her office.&#13;
Isenherg cited a problem in doing this, in that, if&#13;
she IS out of her office helping a student, she may&#13;
not be readily available when an emergency arises.&#13;
"The handicapped have access to the elevators&#13;
besides, it would he impossible to keep track of all&#13;
the handicapped for some are very mobile and&#13;
could be anywhere on campus," commented Sophie&#13;
Graf, administrative secretary.&#13;
Unfortunately, at this time there is a lack of an&#13;
emergency procedure for the evacuation of&#13;
physically handicapped students from a building in&#13;
the case of a fire.&#13;
These responsibilities will fall under the&#13;
jurisdiction of the new safety coordinator, Atdo&#13;
Adoefo Rodriguez, who's duties include the implementation&#13;
and enforcement of all fIre, health and&#13;
safety codes.&#13;
Next week: The physically handicapped student&#13;
talks.&#13;
Tax-------------&#13;
tontina;ed from page 1&#13;
Arizona for six years, currently is&#13;
chairman of the hoard of Overview&#13;
Corp. and is a leading environmentalist&#13;
who writes a&#13;
syndicated column, "Udall on the&#13;
Environment." His most recent&#13;
book is The Energy BallQOn&#13;
(11174) .&#13;
Other speakers are:&#13;
James Buchanan, general&#13;
director of the Center for Public&#13;
Choice and professor of&#13;
economics at Virginia&#13;
Polytechnic Institute, whose&#13;
most recent book (with G.F.&#13;
Thirlby) is Theory of Public&#13;
Choice 0972l.&#13;
Joseph Pechman. director of&#13;
Economic Studies at Brookings&#13;
Institution, one of the nation's&#13;
leading experts on taxation and&#13;
the author of Federal Tax Policy&#13;
(1971) .&#13;
Lester Thurow, economics and&#13;
management professor at MIT,&#13;
former staffer for the Council of&#13;
Economic Advisers during the&#13;
Johnson administration and, as&#13;
an adivser to George McGovern&#13;
in 1972,. proposed a potent&#13;
inheritance tax and other controversial&#13;
tax programs. His&#13;
most recent rook is The Impact&#13;
of Taxes on the American&#13;
Economy 0970.&#13;
Discussant for the forum will&#13;
he Sidney Ratner, professor of&#13;
history at Rutgers and author&#13;
whose career has combined&#13;
studies of economics, political&#13;
science and philosophy.&#13;
Forum topics will be "National&#13;
Values and Tax Politics: An&#13;
International Comparison"&#13;
(Thurow); "Democratic Values&#13;
and Taxation" (Arrow and&#13;
Buchana); "Value Judgments,&#13;
Tax . Policy and the Environment"&#13;
(Udall); and&#13;
"Changing Values and Future&#13;
Tax Policy: Towards the Year&#13;
2000" (Pechman).&#13;
Prof Gottesman, the project&#13;
director, said he was grateful to&#13;
the Wisconsin Humanities&#13;
Committee, a regranting agency&#13;
for the National Endowment for&#13;
the Humanities, for supporting&#13;
the Parkside forum under the&#13;
committee's state theme Cor 1974,&#13;
which is "Human Values at Stake&#13;
in Public Tax.ing and Spending."&#13;
and to the Johnson Foundation&#13;
for its cooperation in the project.&#13;
The conference will he the&#13;
subject of the Johnson Foundation's&#13;
"Conversations Crom&#13;
Wingspread" heard in Wisconsin&#13;
and nationally, and will be&#13;
videotaped Cor distribution on the&#13;
state educational television&#13;
network and possibly national&#13;
educational television.&#13;
"We're hopeful that large&#13;
numbers oC citizens wiU take&#13;
advantage of this opportunity to&#13;
participate in a public dialogue&#13;
on an issue that direcUy affects&#13;
all of us and that is particularly&#13;
timely now." Gottesman said.&#13;
(fompOIIds Auually 10 5.61%)&#13;
P.A.B. Presents&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
fANCY ,,,,.,16' ~&#13;
DERRINGER&#13;
Sat., Oct.19th 9:00· 1:00 a.m.&#13;
Stu. Act. Bldg. 6 Adm. *1.50.&#13;
ID's R••• ir ••&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
5.5%&#13;
('~s 0\ REGILIR&#13;
('~....) PISS8Qllk&#13;
~OIT.u1'l ~ S.\\I\I;S&#13;
THin: 1'8\'t:\lE\r UlfITllI\S:&#13;
I.I\. Parl._~idl' -- Room !;r.i. Tall~11 Hall&#13;
Iii ". IlPll•• ,~.. Burli'~II"&#13;
~!II"i.~il~D. \11'" Raril"&#13;
.Dr- ancy O. Lurie. an an·&#13;
thropologlSt with the liIwaukee&#13;
Public Museum, ",11 d,scu the&#13;
history of Indian-Wlute relations&#13;
from 1-2 p.m. Saturday, Roger&#13;
Tallmadge of Wisconsm Dells&#13;
will then lead an all·lnwan panel&#13;
discussion on the heritage and&#13;
horizons of the American Indian&#13;
in Wisconsin.&#13;
Inwan panel parucipants, lO&#13;
addition to Tallmadge, Include'&#13;
Josephine White Eagle, PI ITO,&#13;
S.D., Director of Indian&#13;
Education: Ed LaPlante.&#13;
Mtlwaukee, Great Lakes Tribal&#13;
Council, Diane Philbrick,&#13;
MadIson, We Indians Program,&#13;
Bernadine Tallmadge, 11'1. consln&#13;
Dells, Wmnebago Pubhc Ind,an&#13;
Museum. John Winn. heik I&#13;
WisconslO Rapids. traditional&#13;
Olief of the Winnebago Ttlhep&#13;
and Lornune Winne helk&#13;
Wlsco,,,in RapIds.&#13;
An Am r,can indIan cultural&#13;
presentation "ill he featured&#13;
aturda~ even 109 Th con.&#13;
f... ence will conclude unda~&#13;
followlOg a boat tour of the t.:pper&#13;
Dells .&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Petitions for the ParksideStudent Government Associat.on, Inc. fall&#13;
election may he obtained hegimung Wednesday, Oct is, In the PSGA&#13;
office, LLC 0.193. Elections will he held III the second" k of&#13;
ovember Cor divisional senators, members to serve on a Segregated&#13;
Fee Allocations Committee and a seat on the Campld Comcems&#13;
Committee. All candidates have until Oct. 25 to me petItions. Also,&#13;
petitions must he filed by Oct 25 for ref er endums to he placed on the&#13;
• 'ovember ballot.&#13;
Parkside Boxing aub. ~here will he an organizational meet'ng for&#13;
all persons interesting m joimng the Parkside Boxing aub au Thursday,&#13;
October 17 at 2:30 in Comm. Arts 128. Expeneneed and&#13;
mexpenenced person are both welcome. For more mformation call&#13;
Dr. PomazaJ at 503-2343.&#13;
There will he an important meeting of Tbe Parblde Play.... on&#13;
Tuesday. October Z2 at 4:38 iD the Green Room of the Tbn\e'r (CA0173&gt;'&#13;
Scri~s for SpooII River Anl.bology, the Theatre's second production,&#13;
are a,.ailable for over-n ightcheck out. C.. tac:l Tom RelDen illCA.ztt.&#13;
Usbers are needed r... l.be pia,.. T1Ie Bald SopraDO aDd l.be Amerle ..&#13;
Dream. You will be able to watch the show free If you vollllDl,eer for&#13;
this service. Register at the Idorm.lion IOosIr. in M..lDpl.~eLLC. or&#13;
see Tom Reinert iD the Theater.&#13;
Auditions Ier Parulde'l secoDd Cbellb"kaJ produdlon. poon RI\lft"&#13;
Anthology, will be beld Monday aud Tuesday, Oclober 21 and Z2 rrom&#13;
2:0&amp;-3:" aDd 7:00.10:00 p.m. ill Ihe Comm.·Arto Theatre, The play, an&#13;
adaptation by Charles Aidman of Edgar Lee Master's pooa River&#13;
Anthology, will he directed by Tom Reinert. Approximately 13 actors&#13;
will portray ov er 80 characters. Also needed are two sqers. one male&#13;
and one female, who play guitar. All those interested are encouraged&#13;
to audition. For further details contact Tom Reinert in CA-240&#13;
Wisconsin Indians&#13;
topic of conference&#13;
"The American Indian of&#13;
Wisconsin: Heritage and&#13;
Horizons" is the theme of the 1974&#13;
fall gathering of the Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences, Arts aod&#13;
Letters, Oct. 19-20 a\ Camp&#13;
Up/lam Woods, Wisconsin Dells,&#13;
Meeting with the Academy will&#13;
be members of the Wisconsin&#13;
Archeological Survey.&#13;
Persons interested in attending&#13;
the program may receive&#13;
registration materials by writing&#13;
the Wisconsin Academy a\ 1922&#13;
University Ave., Madison, or by&#13;
calling 608-263-1692.&#13;
Early morning environmental&#13;
tours are scheduled for Saturday,&#13;
Oct 19, to he followed at 10:30&#13;
a.m. by a program on the prehistoric&#13;
American Indians of&#13;
Wisconsin. The program will be&#13;
led by Dr David A Baerreis,&#13;
UW-~Iadison professor of anthropology&#13;
and archeology.&#13;
Reports of the latest archeological&#13;
findings in Wisconsm&#13;
will he gIven by anthropolO!!lsts&#13;
Robert Alex, UW·, Iilwaukee.&#13;
James B. Stoltman. t.:\\'.&#13;
• tadison; Clarence Geier. l;W·&#13;
PlaUeville, Alaric Faulkner,&#13;
UW.Qshkosh; and John .100re,&#13;
UW ..."'pvPnc;;, Point&#13;
Ju, t Stop In~&#13;
. ,~~&#13;
9bfC' Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Dally 6:00 A.M.-S:OO P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
2711- S1nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS 53140&#13;
Paris aid Service lor&#13;
All I.porled Cars&#13;
dlso&#13;
• QUALITY ROAD SERVICE&#13;
,&#13;
CLASWtm ADVRnIINO OlD" '0'.&#13;
l'Ioowoo •• " ........ ~ .. """",.._--......&#13;
•• Ml.oLoll __ ~-- ----- --.&#13;
c,IV&#13;
-_ ....._- -.._-- .. .-&#13;
- .-. ..-&#13;
- ••&#13;
..... ___ -.. __ do __ ,..... ... _&#13;
Classified&#13;
EARN UP TO $17'00. r.chool 'fur hltng,ng&#13;
Ol)$'~ on cempv$ n 1M)erf'I mf' Sf'fld&#13;
NIIm". .odreu. ~ .1\(1 ,thoot '0&#13;
Coord noa'or Of Cemou' Rf1Jr"'""."Y""&#13;
PO Dox 131-4,AM ArbOr MI 410t&#13;
Oilemn~ of the handicapped:&#13;
the struggle to get through one day&#13;
by J .D. Garoutte&#13;
Editor's note: The following article is the first in a&#13;
two part series on the problems that physically&#13;
handicapped s!udents face attending a university,&#13;
uch as Parkside.&#13;
· As these people walk down the hall many heads&#13;
will turn, some in concern, some in sympathy and ome in amazement. Most people though will be&#13;
j~king for the ~ame reason: they are looking at a&#13;
physically handicapped person struggle through the&#13;
dating physically handicapped can and often does&#13;
present problems for these individuals. However, in&#13;
the future, these problems may be alleviated due to&#13;
revisions in building codes and new approaches to&#13;
education.&#13;
The new approach to educating the physically&#13;
handicapped is in the fact that these individuals are&#13;
now attending "norm'.31" public schools. In the past,&#13;
the physically handicapped person was sent to&#13;
schools specifically created for his-her needs.&#13;
Also, revised building codes have made public&#13;
facilities more accessible to the physically handicapped.&#13;
&#13;
Under the Wisconsin Administrative Code,&#13;
Safeguards for physically handicapped persons&#13;
(September 1973): "Any place of employment or&#13;
public building, the initial construction of which is&#13;
commenced after July 1, 1970, shall be so designed&#13;
and constructed as to provide reasonable means of&#13;
ingress and egress by the physically handicapped.&#13;
"The requirements may be accomplished by at&#13;
least one ground or street level entrance and exit&#13;
without steps.&#13;
"Doors having a clear opening of at least 40 inches&#13;
in width.&#13;
"There shall be reasonable means of access from&#13;
a parking lot if any ... to at least one floor on which&#13;
the primary business of such building is located."&#13;
At Parkside, the Department of Safety and&#13;
Security plays a key role in assuring that parking is&#13;
available to the physically handicapped.&#13;
According to William Carter, Jr., police officer, a&#13;
total of six spaces are available to the physically&#13;
handicapped for parking;· three spaces adjacent to&#13;
Tallent Hall and three spaces directly behind the&#13;
Classroom Building.&#13;
"A student who owns a disabled license plate and&#13;
displays this on his auto, does not have to pay to&#13;
park_on the university's grounds or anv municapal&#13;
~rkmg lot or meter," said Ronald -Brinkmann&#13;
director of Safety and Security. '&#13;
Ot~erwise, Brinkmann said that parking permits&#13;
are ~ssued to disabled students after a letter i&#13;
received from their family doctor stating that it is&#13;
necessary for the individual to have clo e parking or accessable transportation.&#13;
The permits are given for as long as the doctor&#13;
deems necessary, Brinkmann said.&#13;
He said further that a person receiving thi kind&#13;
of a permit, only pays the regular parking permit&#13;
cost of $7. At some other universities there i an&#13;
e~tra charge, such as at mv- Iilwaukee, where the&#13;
disabled student is charged $35 to park.&#13;
H?wever, at Parkside, there is a shorta e in&#13;
av~ilable parking for the physically handicapped .&#13;
'.fh1s semester there are approximately ten permits&#13;
m use for the six available spaces.&#13;
. Another person at Parkside, who .has a ve led&#13;
~terest ~ the. welfare of the phy ically liandicapped,&#13;
1s Edith Isenberg, registered nurse.&#13;
Isenberg said that there are no known provisions&#13;
for transporting a physically- handicapped person&#13;
who may need help in getting from one building or class, to another.&#13;
. Currently, she is assisting physically handicapped&#13;
students on her own with the help of&#13;
students who work in her office.&#13;
Is~nberg cited a problem in doing this, in that, if&#13;
she JS out of her office helping a student, she may&#13;
not be readily available when an emergency arises.&#13;
"The handicapped have access to the elevators&#13;
besides, it would be impossible to keep track of all&#13;
the handicapped for some are very mobile and&#13;
could be anywhere on campus,'' commented Sophie&#13;
Graf, administrative secretary.&#13;
Unfortunately, at this time there is a lack of an emergency procedure for the evacuation of&#13;
physically handicapped students from a building in&#13;
the case of a fire.&#13;
These responsibilities will fall under the&#13;
jurisdiction of the new safety coordinator. Atdo&#13;
Adoefo Rodriguez, who's duties include the implementation&#13;
and enforcement of all fire. health and&#13;
safety codes.&#13;
Next week: The phy ically handicapped tudent&#13;
talks.&#13;
Tax------------&#13;
contin~ed from page 1&#13;
Arizona for six years, currently is&#13;
chairman of the board of Overview&#13;
Corp. and is a leading environmentalist&#13;
who writes a&#13;
yndicated column, "Udall on the&#13;
Environment." His most recent&#13;
book is The Energy BallQOn&#13;
(1974).&#13;
Other speakers are:&#13;
James Buchanan, general&#13;
director of the Center for Public&#13;
Choice and professor of&#13;
economics at Virginia&#13;
Polytechnic Institute, whose&#13;
most recent book (with G.F .&#13;
Thirlbyl is Theory of Public&#13;
Choice &lt;1972).&#13;
Joseph Pechman, director of&#13;
Economic Studies at Brookings&#13;
Institution, one of the nation's&#13;
leading experts on taxation and&#13;
the author of Federal Tax Policy &lt;mu.&#13;
Lester Thurow, economics and&#13;
management professor at MIT,&#13;
former staffer for the Council of&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
5.5%&#13;
(fompoands Annually to 5.61 %) (~«r•) 0\ REGI.I.\R&#13;
P\SSBOOI\&#13;
('~~ 0~&#13;
OfT. \]~~ s \\ I\GS&#13;
TIIIU. IU\11.111.\T 111111111\\:&#13;
1.11. Pirl.11dr -- Room ~:r.i. Tillnl Hill&#13;
l~t II. llP\1101 St .. Burlinl!lon&#13;
~:!tie lh,~i1,2to1 hP .. Ra;i,r&#13;
Economic Advisers during the&#13;
Johnson administration and, as&#13;
an adivser to George McGovern&#13;
in 1972, proposed a potent&#13;
inheritance tax and other controversial&#13;
tax programs. His&#13;
most recent book is The Impact&#13;
of Taxes on the American&#13;
Economy (1971).&#13;
Discussant for the forum will&#13;
be Sidney Ratner. professor of&#13;
history at Rutgers and author&#13;
whose career has combined&#13;
studies of economics, political&#13;
science and philosophy.&#13;
Forum topics will be "National&#13;
Values and Tax Politics: An&#13;
International Comparison"&#13;
(Thurow); "Democratic Values&#13;
and Taxation'' (Arrow and&#13;
Buchana); "Value Judgments.&#13;
Tax Policy and the Environment"&#13;
(Udall); and&#13;
"Changing Values and Future&#13;
Tax Policy: Towards the Year&#13;
2000" ( Pechman l.&#13;
Prof. Gottesman, the project&#13;
director. said he ·as grateful to&#13;
the Wi con in Humanitie&#13;
Committee. a regranting agency&#13;
for the National Endowment for&#13;
the Humanitie , for upporting&#13;
the Parkside forum under the&#13;
committee's tale theme for 1974,&#13;
which is ''Human Values at take&#13;
in Public Taxing and pending,"&#13;
and to the John on Foundation&#13;
for it cooperation in th proj t.&#13;
The conference will be th&#13;
subject of the Johnson Foundation'&#13;
"Conver ation from&#13;
Wing pread" h ard in \ ,. consin&#13;
and- nationally , and ·ill b&#13;
• videotaped for di tnbution on th&#13;
state educational televi-ion&#13;
network and ~· -ibly national&#13;
educational televi ion .&#13;
"We're hopeful that larg&#13;
numbers of citize - 111 tak&#13;
advantage of thi opportunity t&#13;
participate in a public dialogue&#13;
on an is ue that directly aff&#13;
all of us and that i particularly&#13;
timely now.'' Gotte man aid.&#13;
,.. P.A.B. Presents&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
'/ANCY.',.,.,,., ~&#13;
DERRINIJER&#13;
Sat., Oct. 19th 9:00 - 1:00 a.&#13;
Stu. Act. Bldg. 6 Adm. $1.SO&#13;
ID's Required&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Brief New,s&#13;
There ill be an important me&#13;
Tu da_ • tob r 2! at : In t Gr&#13;
D173).&#13;
• ript for Rhu Ui I&#13;
are auilabl for over-n ght chec&#13;
uditi&#13;
th lo&#13;
Wisconsin Indians&#13;
topic of conference&#13;
top In:&#13;
. ·~'P~ ')ii* Restaurant&#13;
P. I.&#13;
County E&#13;
2121. S2nd Strut&#13;
KENOSHA , WIS 5314&#13;
Parts and Service for&#13;
All I ported Cars&#13;
I.so&#13;
• UAUT ' R AD SER IC[&#13;
-&#13;
CIN __________ _&#13;
............... _ .......&#13;
lassified &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 16, 1974&#13;
~ru.Ld.c.ptJon"&#13;
• o-drop' policy may be dropped&#13;
=&#13;
lCoallDilIft&#13;
ac&gt;&lt;Inlp poIlcy&#13;
fall cI "72 aDd&#13;
1 II&#13;
EuigeM • • • Dean cI the&#13;
01 eace aDd Soc:iety&#13;
lbol II "I cruel deceplJOll&#13;
Slucl&lt;lllS ore not warned&#13;
Illd IlIIllcreed 10 a decwoD poinl&#13;
m.,. m.... cleans and&#13;
..tviMn Aa II II. !be) .. DOone&#13;
Illd JUIl go 10 1 terminal aDd&#13;
'"'IiIIer B stucl&lt;IIlS ore more&#13;
I 10ba f!If acl\'IIOn I... belp&#13;
tbaD D an"'""" really need&#13;
the btIp"&#13;
0110 81 ...... Vioo Cl&gt;aD«1Ior.&#13;
CIted the cue cI a f\UdenI wbo&#13;
had completed lOS credli bourS&#13;
th 1 I la' and was UDdf!If&#13;
the decOPbOll be -ud .....&#13;
IJ'IcIao&#13;
All studoaU ..... plJ'blde 00&#13;
pel IlalICbIIC Parksi&lt;le&#13;
n'l h.a\'1! entraeee&#13;
m thai&#13;
... eDt u&#13;
re iD the boUom&#13;
and&#13;
transff!lf studfnts entering with&#13;
less than a two1'Oini GPA.&#13;
"We've got a group of 8 to 10&#13;
P""""'t of incoming freshman at&#13;
the bottom of their high schoOl&#13;
duo ,.1&gt;0 hive 13 dlances in 100&#13;
01 getting a I~I." Norwood&#13;
said. "We have an obligation to&#13;
them besides just letting thern&#13;
enter and sink at swim."&#13;
"It is basically immoral to&#13;
allow people tc go for two or three&#13;
years and invest 1l1oosands of&#13;
dollars witbout evf!lfbeing able 10&#13;
grlduate and never earn a&#13;
degree:' .&#13;
1be committee also menboned&#13;
IllUdents ,.1&gt;0 consistenUy attain&#13;
I than a lW&lt;&gt;-jlOinlGPA and&#13;
never go (or eounseling,&#13;
academic Idvising or tutoring&#13;
bul still gel their education paid&#13;
for by the university or by 1l1e&#13;
1JO\"ft1'U]'1ent,&#13;
• 'Qnli"OOd explamed that Hone&#13;
(unction of a probation·drop&#13;
syslem would be nOIjust to throw&#13;
dummies or cheaters out. but to&#13;
get the educationally disadvantaged&#13;
student to an academIc&#13;
skills program which is now set&#13;
up." .&#13;
"The educationally disadantaged&#13;
student is least likely to&#13;
;.,., advisors, Built·in mandatory&#13;
requirements for advising would&#13;
at least expose 1l1estudents to the&#13;
system. "&#13;
Johnson emphasized that there&#13;
"should be a better notification&#13;
process" to inform students of&#13;
their progress towards&#13;
graduation. ,&#13;
The committee also discussed&#13;
the difficulty of raising GPA's&#13;
since they are cumulative. .&#13;
Bauer offered one possible&#13;
model to discuss. "Unless a&#13;
student attained a 1.4 GPA by 1l1e&#13;
end of 30 credits attempted, a 1.6&#13;
Johnson appointod&#13;
Feldt, assistant Prof&#13;
Engineering Scienee&#13;
Gray, professor of '&#13;
James Smith, a ~&#13;
Norwood as 1l1e&#13;
members.&#13;
The sulrcommitteo ill.&#13;
back in a month,&#13;
ASP: opportunity to succeed&#13;
...&#13;
AT FI ST UTIO AL&#13;
Of lAC E&#13;
• ,.i, ,&#13;
JIJ CI fe ire&#13;
•&#13;
bert Grace II assigned to&#13;
the Jl"OWII1l • a counselor&#13;
Grace re&lt;:ei"ed hIS I.S. degree in&#13;
udenl personnol services lasl&#13;
spnngfrom t,oW·La Crosse "here&#13;
hi the is topic was "The&#13;
Emf!lfience of Black Students on&#13;
the IIlSCOOSin Slate University&#13;
Campu&gt;e&gt; and an Evaluation of&#13;
the In&gt;titutional Responses." He&#13;
has been a minority student&#13;
adnse:r.t Y·Le and also&#13;
worked Ul its placement office.&#13;
l:W-P Education Division&#13;
QWrman Paul Kleine pointed&#13;
out that students entering&#13;
Parllside.like those at most other&#13;
u. LOStitutions. have a wirle&#13;
range of academic skills.&#13;
"Smce we admit students&#13;
,,1&gt;oseskillsmay not yet be at the&#13;
le~eI needed to perform&#13;
satisfactorily in college classes,&#13;
Yoehave an obligation to those&#13;
students to try to build their skills&#13;
to the point where they will have&#13;
an opportunity to succeed, If Prof.&#13;
Kleine said. The lack of skills&#13;
does not imply a lack of intelligence,&#13;
he added, but merely&#13;
a lack of basic tools for using&#13;
intelligence.&#13;
Prof. Enderle said that&#13;
placement tests in English and&#13;
mathematics, now administered&#13;
routinely to entering freshmen&#13;
give clues to a student's ability to&#13;
handle college level work.&#13;
The Academic Skills Program&#13;
will use various diagnostic&#13;
techniques to identify students&#13;
with serious deficiencies in&#13;
reading, mathematics, writing&#13;
and study skills and devise individualized&#13;
methods of&#13;
upgrading 1l10seskills .&#13;
The program also will coordinate&#13;
a number of existing efBig&#13;
Foot&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., fRI. SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 16, 18, 19 &amp; 20&#13;
Kellosllo's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
The Parkside Players Present an evenin&#13;
'Theater of the Absurd' g&#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;
CO. MUNICATION ARTS THEATER&#13;
2 pub1tc. 1 UW·p students. stoff All&#13;
Tie ets at information Kiosk and seats reserved.&#13;
at the dOor&#13;
AD&#13;
,&#13;
G&#13;
AT f ST AT At&#13;
Df IACI E&#13;
c&#13;
AT FIIST At At&#13;
Of lAC E&#13;
o,e,&#13;
T&#13;
•&#13;
T&#13;
o-drop' policy may be dropped&#13;
L&#13;
s&#13;
0&#13;
also mentioned&#13;
·ho is ently attain&#13;
a t -o-point GPA and&#13;
0 for coun, eling,&#13;
d\i i or tutoring&#13;
cation paid&#13;
·ty or by the&#13;
function of a probation-drop&#13;
system would be not just to throw&#13;
dummies or cheaters out, ~ut to&#13;
get the educationally d1sa~-&#13;
taged student to an academic&#13;
::lis program which is now set&#13;
up." . "The educationally . d1sadantaged&#13;
student is least likely to&#13;
~ advisors. Built-in mandatory&#13;
requirements for advising would&#13;
at least expose the students to the&#13;
system."&#13;
Johnson emphasized t~a~ th~re&#13;
"should be a better notif1cat1on&#13;
process" to inform students of&#13;
their progress towards&#13;
graduation. . The committee also discussed&#13;
the difficulty of raising GPA's&#13;
since they are cumulative. . Bauer offered one possible&#13;
model to discuss. "Unless a&#13;
tudent attained a 1.4 GP A by the&#13;
end of 30 credits attempted, a 1.6&#13;
by the end of 60 credits&#13;
tempte~, a 1.8 GPA by tilt&#13;
90 credits attempted and&#13;
GPA by the end of 120'credita&#13;
student would be dropped ~&#13;
An a~peal system and&#13;
alternatives were also ·&#13;
Norwood then pro&#13;
motion to set up a sub-co~&#13;
on probation and drop&#13;
which would make&#13;
mendations back ~ Academic_ Policies ComrnJttet was unanunously aoopted&#13;
Johnson appointed 11&#13;
Feldt, assistant profe&#13;
Engineering Science&#13;
Gray, professor of E&#13;
James Smith, a student&#13;
Norwood as the sub-co&#13;
members.&#13;
The sub-committee is lo&#13;
back in a month.&#13;
opportunity to succeed&#13;
to the point where they will have&#13;
an opportunity to succeed," Prof.&#13;
Kleine said. The lack of skills&#13;
does not imply a lack of intelligence,&#13;
he added, but merely&#13;
a lack of basic tools for using&#13;
intelligence.&#13;
Prof. Enderle said that&#13;
placement tests in English and&#13;
mathematics, now administered&#13;
routinely to entering freshmen&#13;
give clues to a student's ability to&#13;
handle college level work.&#13;
The Academic Skills Program&#13;
will use various diagnostic&#13;
techniques to identify students&#13;
with serious deficiencies in&#13;
reading, mathematics, writing&#13;
and study skills and devise individualized&#13;
methods of&#13;
upgrading those skills.&#13;
The program also will coordinate&#13;
a number of existing efBig&#13;
Foot&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., FRI. SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 16, 18, 19 &amp; 20&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 554_0485&#13;
Bald Soprano by Eugene Ionesco&#13;
and&#13;
erica by Edward Albee&#13;
directed by Don Rintz&#13;
P. • CT. 17-18-19-20 . U · TION ARTS THEATER&#13;
2 ~ubhc, 1 U -P students/staff All&#13;
Tic e s o information Kiosk d .seats reserved.&#13;
an at tne door&#13;
forts in that direction Incl&#13;
basic library skills co&#13;
reading improvement&#13;
"ASP takes a pm·&#13;
proach to successful I&#13;
Enderle said. "We take&#13;
at the level where the)· art&#13;
try ot improve their skills&#13;
they are locked into&#13;
and failure."&#13;
Incorporation of ASP&#13;
education division has a&#13;
off" value for pro&#13;
teachers, she added,&#13;
students involved in te&#13;
training can gain e~&#13;
educational method&#13;
remedial reading workiJI&#13;
other students enroll~&#13;
academic skills programs&#13;
Participation in ASP p&#13;
is voluntary, she said&#13;
program is being de1&#13;
consultation with an&#13;
terdisciplinary advi Ol}&#13;
mittee and is complem&#13;
existing personal cou&#13;
academic advising, be &#13;
Campus calendar&#13;
Wf:DNf:SDAY.OCtober 16&#13;
W!llTf:SKf:LLAR:.Featuring Chuck Brauer. ~OC~1and guitar. from&#13;
-3p.m. in GreenqUlst Hall. room D2Q1.Admlsslqn IS free. He will also&#13;
~ perrorrning Thursday. October 17. .&#13;
FILM: "The Thief Who Came to Dinner:' sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
ACtivitiesBoard at 7:.30p.m: In Greenquist Hall, room 103.Admission&#13;
11$1.parkside I.D. IS required.&#13;
'ft/lIRSDAY. October 17&#13;
''11If: BAW SOPRANO" and "THE AMERICAN DREAM":&#13;
fWSl'l'ted by the Players of UW-Parkside and directed by Professor =Kintz. A theatre of the absurd. at 8 p.m. In the Communication&#13;
Theater. Tickets are $2 for general public and $1 for Parkside&#13;
II\ldeJ1tsfaculty and staff. Tickets are on sale at the Information&#13;
KiGIk. The plays continue through October 18. 19and 20.&#13;
fIllDAY. October 18&#13;
JA'Cl CONCERT: Featuring Jazz pianist Siggy Millonzi. sponsored by&#13;
lbe Parllside Activities Board from 9 p.m.-12 midnite in tbe Student&#13;
ACtivitiesBldg. Tickets are $1.50advance for Parkside students and $2&#13;
lor general and at Ihe door. Parkside LD. and proof of age are&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY.OCtober 19&#13;
LECl'URE: uValue Judgements and Ta:,a~ion:' from 9 a.m-s p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theatre. Admission IS free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
SUNDAY.OCtober 20&#13;
Nf:WMANCENTER: 12:15 p.m. Mass at the Newman Center located&#13;
00 the corner of JR and E. 3825 12th Street, Kenosha. Everyone&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Sf:MESTERBREAK - TWO TRIPS: ACAPULCO AND JAMAICO&#13;
ACAPULCO:&#13;
$244 Ius$20tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
tra':portation. 7 nights at the deluxe EI Matador Hot~l and Racquet&#13;
CI b Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay WIth a welcoming Margarita&#13;
pa~.y.Includes tips and taxes. For further information contact the&#13;
StudentLife Office LLC DI97 or phone 553-2294.&#13;
JAMAICA.Montego Bay:&#13;
S279plus$20tax andservice based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
transportation. 7 nights at Toby Inn, only a short walk from famous&#13;
Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and taxes included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS:&#13;
$309 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
·transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located o~ the beach on ~t1ass&#13;
Bay.A welcoming Rum Swizzle party and unlimited free tennis are&#13;
includedas well as reduced golf rates at Upton Country Club. For&#13;
furtherinformation contact the Student Life Office. LLC DI97 or phone&#13;
553-2294.&#13;
1)INO:S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
Don't letthe •&#13;
ma~&#13;
education. stop&#13;
you.&#13;
Tbe price of a college educanon&#13;
IS skyrocketing. The Air&#13;
Force has done something&#13;
aboul it. For the first time.&#13;
the Air Force ROTC Scholar- .&#13;
~hip~ include the 2-year&#13;
program. for men and women.&#13;
If YOUqualify, the Air Force&#13;
~lll pay for Ihe remainder of&#13;
your college education. Not&#13;
only do AFROTC 2-year&#13;
~cholar-6hips cover futl tuition.&#13;
tellllbur'iement fot textbooks.&#13;
lab and incidental fees, and&#13;
sroo a monlh, tax-free.&#13;
To cash in on all this apply&#13;
qualify, and enroll in the Air&#13;
Fntce ROTC aL&#13;
.:t:1s./,lacu_ ... ''''~~I.... W~it.,AFROTe_&#13;
i;a",' n~ VIII"."I', A..... M.odilon,Wi,.&#13;
It\ a great way to finish your&#13;
college education in the money.&#13;
;met build a future as an Air&#13;
Furce officer.&#13;
~KE 11lE MOSTOF IT&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PllZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAilS'&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Faculty art show&#13;
set for Nov-Dec&#13;
by Jeff Kieblbauch&#13;
A meeting of the Art faculty&#13;
was beld on October 9. Those&#13;
faculty members in attendance&#13;
were Robert Cadez, Erik Forrest.&#13;
Rollin Jansky, Jobn Murphy and&#13;
Moishe Smith. Among the&#13;
matters discussed at this meeting&#13;
was the art exhibit scbedule for&#13;
the Parkside Theater Gallery. Of&#13;
particular concern was the&#13;
scheduling 01 the Faculty Art&#13;
Show. The possibility of planning&#13;
the art exhibits to. coincide with&#13;
events in the Theater was&#13;
discussed.&#13;
By scheduling the art exhibits&#13;
to coincide- with events in the&#13;
Theater there would be a greater&#13;
likelihood that more people would&#13;
view the exhibits. However it was&#13;
argued that the scheduling should&#13;
not be totally controlled by&#13;
what's going on in the Theater.&#13;
_ It was decided to schedule the&#13;
Facul ty Art Show -from&#13;
November 21 through December&#13;
15. The opening of the Art show&#13;
will coincide with the opening 01&#13;
the Theater's second production.&#13;
"Spoon River Anthology, OJ&#13;
Forrest proposed a videotape&#13;
series on each of the exhibits&#13;
shown in the Parkside Theatre&#13;
Gallery. The videotape program&#13;
would include a discussion with&#13;
the artist, possible guest comments&#13;
and a camera scan of the&#13;
gallery showing various works&#13;
from the exhibit. Ail agreed it&#13;
sounded like an lDteresting and&#13;
worthwhile proposal.&#13;
Time placement for spring&#13;
semester course offerings was&#13;
discussed, as were possible&#13;
course offerings for the summ ...&#13;
sessioo and 7$-76 school year. A&#13;
faculty member urged that a&#13;
rhythm or pattern be established&#13;
in course offerings so that&#13;
students could project a year in&#13;
advance what courses would be&#13;
offered. thus enabling students to&#13;
plan schedules ahead of time.&#13;
A reference was made to the&#13;
September 2S Ranger editorial&#13;
concerning the practicality of&#13;
Parkside's Art degree. The&#13;
possibility of getting a&#13;
professional artist from industry&#13;
to teach a course was mentioned,&#13;
however nothing defmite was&#13;
decided.&#13;
A request from Parkside&#13;
student Stephen Stapanian that&#13;
two art courses taken at another&#13;
school be recognized for accreditation&#13;
by Parkside was&#13;
discussed and it was agreed that&#13;
"the request was reasonable.&#13;
It was decided that the next Art&#13;
Faculty meeting would be held on&#13;
October 23. A major topic of&#13;
discussion at this meeting will be&#13;
a Sophomore review. This would&#13;
be an advising type of session&#13;
where Art faculty members&#13;
would meet with upcoming&#13;
juniors to see if they're on the&#13;
right course towards getting their&#13;
Art degrees.&#13;
NIGHTCLUB&#13;
P .A.B. PRESENTS A&#13;
riday, Oct. 18, 9:00 p.m.&#13;
, S.A.B.&#13;
Adrnission-! 1.50 Advance&#13;
D \VISCO SlJ !D'S REQUIRED&#13;
featuring&#13;
$olar'-----&#13;
or 10 room 180 In Tall~nt Hall&#13;
Th~ roof ......... becinI at ':80&#13;
a.m. and lasts till 3:00 p.m. From&#13;
8:30 to 9: IS th.... will be ....... al&#13;
reglstratioo and infonnalioo.&#13;
Duffie. Kopecky and&#13;
Heronernus will speak fl'Olllt:15-&#13;
11:50. Lunell is from 12:00-12:45.&#13;
During this time. the solar&#13;
display area can be vlalted. Lof&#13;
will speak from 12 :5().1 : 40 on&#13;
solar energy.&#13;
The ronference will th... break&#13;
into four workIhopo: e&lt;lOnomlc:a&#13;
of solar power. wind \lOwe'. solar&#13;
equipment and prO'!" !It and&#13;
architect ural consideratiooa of&#13;
desilo. aestbetlCII and polillcal&#13;
factors.&#13;
Participants in the conference&#13;
are to eIl000e two worbbopo they&#13;
wish to attend when they preregister.&#13;
LanguagI8.~--&#13;
any college graduate."&#13;
English 100 will be concerned&#13;
with the hasic writing skills including&#13;
nouns and verbs.&#13;
capitalization, punctuation, and&#13;
paragraphs&#13;
English 101is also a course on&#13;
basic writing skills. but expo&#13;
the tudent to more compl x&#13;
problems or tyhstic control&#13;
English 102 will look deeper&#13;
into the art of writing as it covers&#13;
argumentative kills and the&#13;
organization of looRer papers&#13;
incorporating research.&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
HQRECRE T E IIf.I· ""If&#13;
6lt Ul» noll 7)).1&#13;
PIZZ \ C'1IlC'KE'&#13;
\ '0 Fl. II('\RRYOl"1'S&#13;
WIDEST SRECTIDN&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
Ma.~MwUiL~ tR"&#13;
tf.-Jl&amp; ~&#13;
G4 SQu..9 -5101'&#13;
6SF ::it.bc;2-&#13;
-------&#13;
----&#13;
-&#13;
campus cal_endar Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
WEDNESDAY, October 16&#13;
winTESKELLAR:_ Featuring Chuck Braue:, ~oc~l and guitar, from&#13;
!-3 p.m. in Greenqmst Hall, room D201. Adm1ss10n 1s free. He will also&#13;
be performing Thursday, October 17.&#13;
Faculty art show&#13;
fJLM: "The Thief ~o Cam~ to Dinner'.' sponsored by the Parkside f ·&#13;
Activities Board at 7 ._30 p.m: m Greenqmst Hall, room 103. Admission set Or NO v-D e C&#13;
is $l. Parkside I.D. 1s reqwred.&#13;
11fl)RSDAY, October 17&#13;
.,THE BALD SOPRANO" and "THE AMERICAN DREAM":&#13;
Presented by the Players of UW-Parkside and directed by Professor&#13;
[)On runtz. A theatre of the absurd, at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
ArtS Theater. Tickets are $2 for general public and $1 for Parkside&#13;
students faculty and staff. Tickets are on sale at the Information&#13;
Kiosk- '!be plays continue through October 18, 19 and 20.&#13;
FRIDA y, Octobe~ 18&#13;
J 73, CONCERT: Featuring Jazz pianist Siggy Millonzi, sponsored by&#13;
Parkside Activities Board from 9 p.m.-12 midnite in the Student&#13;
::ti vi ties Bldg. Tickets are $1.50 advance for Parkside students and $2&#13;
for general and at the door. Parkside I.D. and proof of age are&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY, October 19&#13;
LECTURE: "Value Judgements and Ta~a!ion'.' from 9 a .m.-3 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theatre. Adm1ss1on 1s free and open to the&#13;
~blic.&#13;
UNDA y, October 20&#13;
NEWMAN CENTER: 12:15 p.m. Mass at the Newman Center located&#13;
on the corner of JR and E, 3825 12th Street, Kenosha. Everyone&#13;
welcome.&#13;
. El\1ESTER BREAK -TWO TRIPS: ACAPULCO AND JAMAi CO&#13;
CAPULCO:&#13;
$244 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
transportation. 7 nights at the deluxe El _Matador Hot~l and Racq~et&#13;
Cl b Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay with a welcoming Margarita&#13;
pa~t;. Includes tips and taxes. For further information contact the&#13;
Student Life Office LLC D197 or phone 553-2294.&#13;
JAMAICA, Montego Bay:&#13;
$279 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
transportation. 7 nights at Toby Inn, only a short walk from famous&#13;
Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and taxes included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS:&#13;
$309 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room. Includes round trip&#13;
transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located o~ ~e beach on 01tlass&#13;
Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle party and unlimited free tenrus are&#13;
included as well as reduced golf rates at Upton Country Club. For&#13;
further information contact the Student Life Office, LLC D197 or phone&#13;
553-2294.&#13;
1&gt;1NO:S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991 PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
Dontlet the .&#13;
ma~&#13;
education stop&#13;
}OU.&#13;
~ price of a college education&#13;
1s skyrocketing. The Air&#13;
Force has done something&#13;
about ii. For the first time,&#13;
lhe Air Force ROTC Scholar- ·&#13;
\h1p, include the 2-year&#13;
Program. for men and women.&#13;
If. you qualify. the Air Force&#13;
Will pay for the remainder of&#13;
Your college education. Not&#13;
onl~ do AFROTC :!-year&#13;
chotari.hips cover full tuition,&#13;
reimbur,ement for te)(tbooks.&#13;
lab and incidental fees. and&#13;
100 a month. ta)(-free.&#13;
r O ca,h in on all this apply&#13;
qualify. and enroll in the Air&#13;
tnrce ROTC aL&#13;
~~:~1 MN110ft or Superior. Write: AF ROTC.&#13;
u," IIU Uninnlty Ave., M•dlson, Wl1.&#13;
It\ a great way to finish your&#13;
college education in the money.&#13;
and build a future as an Air&#13;
force officer.&#13;
MAKE lllE MOST OF IT&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS·&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
by Jeff Kiehlbauch&#13;
A meeting of the Art faculty&#13;
was held on October 9. Those&#13;
faculty members in attendance&#13;
were Robert Cadez, Erik Forrest,&#13;
Rollin Jansky, John Murphy and&#13;
Moishe Smith. Among the&#13;
matters discussed at this meeting&#13;
was the art exhibit schedule for&#13;
the Parkside Theater Gallery. Of&#13;
particular concern was the&#13;
scheduling of the Faculty Art&#13;
Show. The possibility of planPing&#13;
the art exhibits to. coincide with&#13;
events in the Theater was discussed.&#13;
By scheduling the art exhibits&#13;
to coincide- with events in the&#13;
Theater there would be a greater&#13;
likelihood that more people would&#13;
view the exhibits. However it wa&#13;
argued that the scheduling should&#13;
not be totally controlled b~:&#13;
what's going on in the Theater.&#13;
It was decided to schedule the&#13;
Faculty Art Show · from&#13;
rovember 21 through December&#13;
15. The opening of the Art show&#13;
will coincide with the opening of&#13;
the Theater's econd production,&#13;
"Spoon River Anthology ...&#13;
Forrest proposed a videotape&#13;
series on each of the exhibits&#13;
shown in the Parkside Theatre&#13;
Gallery. The videotape program&#13;
would include a discussion with&#13;
the artist, possible guest comments&#13;
and a camera scan of the&#13;
gallery showing various works&#13;
from the exhibit. All agreed it&#13;
SOWl&lt;ied like an interesting and&#13;
worthwhile proposal.&#13;
Time placemen for _pring&#13;
semester course offenng&#13;
discu sed, as were po ibl&#13;
course offerings for the mmer&#13;
session and 7S-76 school _ ar. A&#13;
faculty member urged that a&#13;
rhythm or pattern be tabl.ished&#13;
in cour e offerings so that&#13;
tudents could project a year in&#13;
advance what courses "'ould be&#13;
offered, th~ enabling tuders to&#13;
plan schedules ahead of time.&#13;
A reference as made to the&#13;
September 25 Ranger editorial&#13;
concerning the practicality of&#13;
Parkside's Art degree. The&#13;
possibilit of getting a&#13;
professional arti t from indu try&#13;
to teach a course a mentioned,&#13;
ho ·ever nothing definite ·a&#13;
decided .&#13;
A request from Park ide&#13;
student tephen tapanian that&#13;
tv.o art cours taken at noth&#13;
school be rec nized f&#13;
creditation by Park 1de a&#13;
disc and it ·a agr ed that&#13;
lhe reque t ·as rea&#13;
n wa decided that then t Art&#13;
Faculty meeting ould be ld on&#13;
October 23. A major topic of&#13;
di ·ion at thi meeti ill&#13;
a phomore re ri.ew. Thi!. ould&#13;
be an advi ing type of&#13;
where Art faculty memb r&#13;
would meet with upcomin&#13;
juniors to see if they're on th&#13;
right course toward getting th ·r&#13;
Art degree .&#13;
P .A.B. PRESENTS A&#13;
NIGHTCLUB&#13;
featurin&#13;
0 p.m&#13;
Solar-----&#13;
Languagee~--&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE &#13;
6 THE PARI&lt;SIDE RA GER Wedll •• Y. 0C1. 16. In'&#13;
committee adds&#13;
courses to timetable&#13;
·81 tin g ad hoc instructors,&#13;
t\ us I' 'ted The committee, after Im1&#13;
~bate decided to "evaluate all&#13;
..".. ad hoes before making any&#13;
commitments for new" appoiDUTlenlS&#13;
next semester -.&#13;
,d hoc cvaJu:&gt;.tions will be&#13;
based on written student&#13;
&lt;&gt;pillions and through a teacher&#13;
aluation questionnaire to be&#13;
compleled by the instructor and&#13;
res1 ed by lEe. ,&#13;
TIl cornmlltee concluded their&#13;
m Ing by appointing ~l.ingKuo&#13;
a dale professor of&#13;
Engmeering Science, and Al&#13;
Groosberl, prolessor 01 PhYSICS&#13;
and Engineering Science,. to&#13;
erve as Interim Executive&#13;
CuJ'l,mitt.ee representatives to the&#13;
campus Planning Committee,&#13;
Kuo will serve one year,&#13;
G.-berg will serve lor two,&#13;
.10).&#13;
opm&lt;d&#13;
011&#13;
US, week RANGER ran&#13;
a story 'itlecl "Musich to&#13;
head GTI Women's&#13;
Bureau." As much as we&#13;
would like to give Ms,&#13;
Musich a promotion, the&#13;
job of director belongs to&#13;
Anne TImm. Musich will&#13;
be in charge of the&#13;
counseling section of the&#13;
ea .&#13;
t&#13;
Bonanza s&#13;
r e-pornt program&#13;
to at i nation.&#13;
ric Bonanza.&#13;
ak dinner!)&#13;
lI' . Ioiin dinn r :II&#13;
u&#13;
II. 9 {&#13;
Ill. 9 {&#13;
• Feed • cIIBd ba Am ,lea fur 4k&#13;
-a&#13;
The IeCO .. ·... are 011 as. __ ."' ..."......."'0... ee&#13;
\&#13;
MTER AHEAD!&#13;
se bare already placed Ibeir&#13;
-fille~, s -filled weel ia&#13;
p ea _.J'&#13;
SJ3U r a&#13;
'13 ~ II 0 TEGO BAY&#13;
3-10. 1915 FR $264 COMPlm&#13;
I,.......... S:&#13;
~l( let lir'-,&#13;
• First Class 11 111m h~lill&#13;
• ,Itt.' CeekUils&#13;
• Grilid I rusfers&#13;
• lOir Escort&#13;
• Gratuities&#13;
lC&#13;
80TH TRIPS:&#13;
•&#13;
Dance group coming •&#13;
The Fine Arts Dance Theatre, a&#13;
group 01 faculty and students&#13;
lrom uW-Milwaukee's School of&#13;
Fine Arts will perform before a&#13;
Parkside 'audience on Friday,&#13;
OCtober 25. ,&#13;
The dance troupe was formed&#13;
in 1967 and has since won high&#13;
critical acclaim from area&#13;
journalists for its performances.&#13;
Milwaukee Journal's Walter&#13;
Monlried described the program&#13;
as "swiftly moving, diversified&#13;
and enjoyable" while Sentinel&#13;
critic Jay Joslyn called it&#13;
"imaginative and beautiful."&#13;
The Fine Arts Dall~e Theatre&#13;
HUNGRY H&#13;
Submarine S.&#13;
Carry011&#13;
"Where the Ham ,.&#13;
Phone 65z.cl4&#13;
506 - 56th St., K....&#13;
*Presents..*&#13;
STYX&#13;
FRI., OCT. 18th&#13;
------------ -'&#13;
*&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
*&#13;
SAT., OCT. 19th&#13;
, Oc1. l , 1 74&#13;
ee adds&#13;
imetable&#13;
st eek RANGER ran&#13;
s ory titled "Musich to&#13;
d GTI Women's&#13;
ur au." As much as we&#13;
ould like to give Ms.&#13;
usich a promotion, the&#13;
job of director belongs to&#13;
'Timm. Musich will&#13;
of the&#13;
of the&#13;
• Dance group coming&#13;
The Fine Arts Dance Theatre, a&#13;
group of faculty and students&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee's School of&#13;
Fine Arts, will perform before a&#13;
Parkside audience on Friday,&#13;
October 25.&#13;
The dance troupe was formed&#13;
in 1967 and has since won high&#13;
critical acclaim from area&#13;
journalists for its performances.&#13;
Milwaukee Journal's Walter&#13;
Monfried described the program&#13;
as "swiftly moving, diversified&#13;
and enjoyable" while Sentinel&#13;
critic Jay Joslyn called it&#13;
"imaginative and beautiful."&#13;
The Fine Arts Dance Theatre&#13;
combines traditional &amp;Bl&#13;
garde cho.reography wt&#13;
and classical music,&#13;
music is original ~or\&#13;
composers.&#13;
Pianist Richard&#13;
(music director for t&#13;
Department or Dance)&#13;
musical interludes to&#13;
and taped-music poru&#13;
program.&#13;
The Parkside ap&#13;
the Fine Arts Dance&#13;
being sponsored by the ~&#13;
Activities Board. The&#13;
scheduled for 8 p.m io&#13;
Arts Theater on Oct. 25&#13;
are available at the Inf&#13;
kiosk at $1 for studen&#13;
for the general public,&#13;
HUNGRY HU&#13;
Submarine Saa•••&#13;
Carry 011&#13;
"Where the Happy Pet&#13;
Phone 652--0234&#13;
506- 56th St., Ke&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
*Rock*Jazz*Pop*F&#13;
*Classical•&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES Al&#13;
* Presents..*&#13;
STYX&#13;
FRI., OCT. 18th&#13;
*APPEARING*&#13;
SAT., OCT. 19th &#13;
and the labs would be uoed for&#13;
production .&#13;
Due to the rebirth of "'terest In&#13;
audio and radio, Gartley believes&#13;
it would be a good idea 10 occasionally&#13;
offer an advanced&#13;
audio course. Other possibilities&#13;
include courses in Law and&#13;
Ethics of the Media, Media&#13;
HIStory and perhaps oometlung&#13;
in children's programming&#13;
Gartley feels that P.arUide has&#13;
excellent facilities for quality&#13;
pro&lt;klction work and that a&#13;
program 10 mas.. communications&#13;
has real potential,&#13;
as does Parkside.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
has been drawn up. Several&#13;
course proposals have already&#13;
been written and these will be&#13;
discussed in discipline meetings&#13;
within the next couple of weeks.&#13;
Gartley would like to see a core&#13;
of produ&lt;;tion courses in audio&#13;
and television offered at&#13;
Parkside, primarily a beginning&#13;
course and a television directing&#13;
course.&#13;
She hopes to offer an introduction&#13;
10Broadcast Prodcast&#13;
Production. This would include&#13;
radio and television exercises.&#13;
The lectures would prepare the&#13;
students for the lab assignments&#13;
includes Neta D. Owen as&#13;
Mommy; Art Dexter as Daddy;&#13;
Bruce Wagner as Grandma&#13;
(Yes, Grandma-Rintz believes&#13;
the role was written 10 be played&#13;
by a male); Susan Modder as&#13;
Mrs. Barker; and David&#13;
3928 60th St.&#13;
Gartley exploring intern program&#13;
by Jeff Kiehlbauch&#13;
"I .. lly like Parkside. I'm&#13;
~ted with where it is )md 1&#13;
Igood about being here. The&#13;
ree dents here are, very&#13;
:::.mbited they're willing to try&#13;
1bin8S. Th~Y're willing to ask&#13;
_.-lions in class rather than&#13;
or;;,. to themselves that they&#13;
:"'1 Wlderstand. Students ~ere&#13;
ore very interested m learning.&#13;
11teY'veused school as a real&#13;
opportunity and that's&#13;
rOfreshing· ..&#13;
'l1le above comments on&#13;
ParkSide come from its new&#13;
assistant professor of Communication,&#13;
Linda. Gartley.&#13;
Gartley, . who received her&#13;
graduate degree m RadIO,&#13;
Television and ~ from the&#13;
Universityof Michigan, taught at&#13;
EasternMichigan University and&#13;
Seton Hall University in South&#13;
Orange, New Jersey before&#13;
comingto Parkside.&#13;
She has collaborated with her&#13;
husbandon the revision of a book&#13;
entitledThe Television Program:&#13;
It', Direction and Production.&#13;
1bey are currently working on&#13;
another book which should be&#13;
completedaround the end of the&#13;
year.&#13;
This semester Gartley is&#13;
teaching Introduction to Human&#13;
Communicatioll, Mass Media in&#13;
American Society and a special&#13;
topic class-Broadcast .Writing&#13;
and Production, which IS bemg&#13;
offered for the first time this&#13;
semester. Broadcast Writing and&#13;
Production is primarily a writing&#13;
course but is also an exposure to&#13;
the production facilities in Media&#13;
Productions on campus.&#13;
Students will be exposed to a&#13;
variety of writing styles such as&#13;
news writing, writing in teams,&#13;
and comedy writing. They will be&#13;
given the opportunity to write&#13;
and produce a radio commercial&#13;
complete with dialogue and&#13;
sound effects and to produce a&#13;
feature talk show for television.&#13;
The students have already done&#13;
.a lab where they took printed&#13;
material such as pamphlets and&#13;
newspaper ads and rewrote them&#13;
for radio presentation. WGN&#13;
studio in Chicago has offered to&#13;
give the students a tour of their&#13;
facilities.&#13;
Gartley. will be going to some of&#13;
the Milwaukee stations within the&#13;
next month and some guest&#13;
speakers may derive from that.&#13;
She is also exploring the&#13;
possibility of holding some&#13;
writing and producing workshops&#13;
at Parkside utilizing the talent of&#13;
some of the free-lance writers in&#13;
the area.&#13;
Gartley highly approves of a&#13;
mixture of community work with&#13;
academic work. She is actively&#13;
involved in attempting to&#13;
organize an internship program&#13;
in cooperation with professional&#13;
groups and industries in the&#13;
surrounding communities. One&#13;
radio station in the area has&#13;
already approached Parkside&#13;
about an internship and she feels&#13;
there are a lot of opportunities&#13;
and a great deal of potential for&#13;
such a program in this cornmunity.&#13;
Gartley, in explaining the&#13;
advantages of a program of this&#13;
nature, said that "a program&#13;
done in a laboratory situation is a&#13;
marvelous way to learn, but&#13;
there comes a time when a&#13;
student becomes frustrated. about&#13;
the lack of feedback that he gets&#13;
from anyone but the instructor.&#13;
Internship would put students in&#13;
\1 real production situation and_&#13;
give them an opportunity to get a&#13;
lot of feedback from their&#13;
superiors on their work and to :&#13;
actually feel like they're accomplishing&#13;
something. It's a&#13;
different kind of pride than&#13;
getting an A in a, course."&#13;
She also feels an internship&#13;
program could be belpful in&#13;
terms of placing students in jobs&#13;
or at least getting them an interview.&#13;
As for further developments in&#13;
the area of mass communication&#13;
at Parkside, Gartley said thai a&#13;
list of tentative courses to be&#13;
offered. sometime in the future&#13;
An evening of absurdity&#13;
"The Bald Soprano" by Eugene&#13;
Ionesco and "The American&#13;
Dream" by Edward Albee&#13;
comprise "an evening of theatre&#13;
of the absurd" to be presented by&#13;
the Parkside Players Thursday'&#13;
through Sunday (OCt. 17, 18, t9,&#13;
20) in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Curtain time is 8 p.m.&#13;
Don Hintz, assistant professor&#13;
of Communication, will direct the&#13;
two comedies. Thomas Reinert is&#13;
technical director and scenic&#13;
designer.&#13;
For "The Bald Soprano," Rintz&#13;
has cast Ric Birch as Mr. Smith;&#13;
Terry Kollman as Mrs. Smith;&#13;
Glen A. Christensen as Mr.&#13;
Martin; Jody Jones as Mrs.&#13;
Martin; Kris Simpson as the&#13;
maid; and Tim seymour as the&#13;
fire chief.&#13;
"The American Dream" cast&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
15t TAPS&#13;
4619 Eighth Ave.&#13;
Schroeder as Young Man.&#13;
Tickets are available in advance&#13;
at the lnlormation kiosk m&#13;
Main Place or at the door. All&#13;
seats are reserved. Public ad·&#13;
mission is $2. Parkside studentstaff&#13;
admission is SI&#13;
Phone 658-2582&#13;
651-9191&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
~FOIC&#13;
~ MCDOnald-S. ~&#13;
'Ie ape&#13;
We, the crew people of McDonald's ®&#13;
are guaranteed to ...&#13;
• Serve you food that's hot, or we'll&#13;
replace it.&#13;
• Clean your table, or the meal's&#13;
on us.&#13;
• Give you a courteous "thank you,"&#13;
or there's no charge.&#13;
® .-------- ......&#13;
MeDOnalft e&#13;
MOSt II~&#13;
3116 22IId AVE.&#13;
3926 52Dd ST.&#13;
N,IY' comm. prof. Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Gartley exploring intern program&#13;
by Jeff Kiehlbauch 3!1d comedy writing. They will be&#13;
given the opportunity to write&#13;
and produce a radio commercial&#13;
complete with dialogue and&#13;
sound effects and to produce a&#13;
feature talk show for television.&#13;
"I really like Park_si?e· I'm&#13;
chanted with where 1t 1s ;md I :i good about being here. The&#13;
dents here are very stw»bited, they're ~illing to try&#13;
:ings. They're willmg to ask&#13;
estions in class rather than&#13;
!utter to themselves that_ they&#13;
ck&gt;n't W1derstand. St?dents ~ere&#13;
are very interested m learnmg.&#13;
niey've used school as a real&#13;
portunity and that's op II&#13;
refreshing·&#13;
The above comme_nts on&#13;
Parkside come from its new&#13;
ssistant professor of Com-&#13;
~unication, Linda _ Gartley.&#13;
Gartley, . who rec~1ved h_er&#13;
graduate degre~ m Radio,&#13;
Television and . Film from the&#13;
University of !'fichig3:n, ta?ght at&#13;
Eastern Michigan Uruvers1ty and&#13;
Seton Hall University in South&#13;
Orange, New ~ersey before&#13;
coming to Parkside.&#13;
She has collaborated with her&#13;
husband on the revision of a book&#13;
entitled The Television Program:&#13;
It's Direction and Production.&#13;
They are currently working on&#13;
another book which should be&#13;
completed around the end of the&#13;
year.&#13;
This semester Gartley is&#13;
teaching Introduction to Human&#13;
Communication, Mass Media in&#13;
American Society and a special&#13;
topic class--Broadcast Writing&#13;
and Production, which is being&#13;
offered for the first time this&#13;
semester. Broadcast Writing and&#13;
Production is primarily a writing&#13;
course but is also an exposure to&#13;
the production facilities in Media&#13;
Productions on campus.&#13;
Students will be exposed to a&#13;
variety of writing styles such as&#13;
news writing, writing in teams,&#13;
The students have already done&#13;
.a lab where they took printed&#13;
material such as pamphlets and&#13;
newspaper ads and rewrote them&#13;
for radio presentation. WGN&#13;
studio in Chicago has offered to&#13;
give the students a tour of their&#13;
facilities.&#13;
give them an opportunity to get a&#13;
lot of feedback from their&#13;
superiors on their work and to ·&#13;
actually feel like they're accomplishing&#13;
something. It's a&#13;
different kind of pride than&#13;
getting an A in a,. course."&#13;
She also feels an internship&#13;
program could be helpful in&#13;
terms of placing students in jobs&#13;
or at least getting them an interview.&#13;
&#13;
As for further developments in&#13;
the area of mass communication&#13;
at Parkside, Gartley said that a&#13;
list of tentative courses to be&#13;
offered sometime in the future&#13;
ha been drawn up several&#13;
course proposal have already&#13;
been written and these will be&#13;
discussed in discipline meeting&#13;
\\ithin the next couple of v.edc .&#13;
Gartley would like to see a core&#13;
of produc;tion courses in audio&#13;
and tele i ion offered at&#13;
Parkside, primarily a beginm.ng&#13;
course and a television directing&#13;
course. She hopes to offer an Introduction&#13;
to Broadca t Prodca t&#13;
Production. This would include&#13;
radio and television exerc ·&#13;
The lectures would prepare the&#13;
students for the lab assignments&#13;
Gartley. will be going to some of&#13;
the Milwaukee stations within the&#13;
next month and some guest&#13;
speakers may derive from that.&#13;
She is also exploring the&#13;
possibility of holding some&#13;
writing and producing workshops&#13;
at Parkside utilizing the talent of&#13;
some of the free-lance writers in&#13;
the area.&#13;
Parkside players present&#13;
Gartley highly approves of a&#13;
mixture of community work with&#13;
academic work. She is actively&#13;
involved in attempting to&#13;
organize an internship program&#13;
in cooperation with professional&#13;
groups and industries in the&#13;
surrounding communities. One&#13;
radio station in the area has&#13;
already approached Parkside&#13;
about an internship and she feels&#13;
there are a lot of opportunities&#13;
and a great deal of potential for&#13;
such a program in this community.&#13;
&#13;
An· evening of absurdity&#13;
Gartley, in explaining the&#13;
advantages of a program of this&#13;
nature, said that " a program&#13;
done in a laboratory situation is a&#13;
marvelous way to learn, but&#13;
there comes a time when a&#13;
student becomes frustrated about&#13;
the lack of feedback that he gets&#13;
from anyone but the instructor.&#13;
Internship would put students in&#13;
~ real production situation and&#13;
"The Bald Soprano" by Eugene&#13;
Ionesco and ' 'The American&#13;
Dream" by Edward Albee&#13;
comprise " an evening of theatre&#13;
of the absurd" to be presented by&#13;
the Parkside Players Thursday·&#13;
through Sunday (Oct. 17, 18, 19,&#13;
20) in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theatre. Curtain time is 8 p.m.&#13;
Don Rintz, assistant professor&#13;
of Communication, will direct the&#13;
two comedies. Thomas Reinert is&#13;
technical director and scenic&#13;
designer.&#13;
For "The Bald Soprano," Rintz&#13;
has cast Ric Birch as Ir. Smith ;&#13;
Terry Kollman as l.\1rs. Smith :&#13;
Glen A. Christensen as Mr.&#13;
Martin ; Jody Jones as :',!rs.&#13;
Martin ; Kris Simpson as the&#13;
maid ; and Tim Seymour as the&#13;
fire chief.&#13;
"The American Dream" cast&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
mcludes , 'eta D. Owen a&#13;
• tommy ; Art Dexter as Daddy;&#13;
Bruce Wagner a Grandma&#13;
(Yes, Grandma-Rintz believes&#13;
the role was written to be played&#13;
by a male . , Susan fodder a&#13;
• lrs. Barker; and Da id&#13;
Schroeder as Young 1 n.&#13;
Tick t are available in d·&#13;
vance at the Informal on lei in&#13;
, lain Place or at lh door. All&#13;
ed. Publtc d·&#13;
d tud lMOCKUS&#13;
TAP&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, S TU DAY&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
15c TAPS&#13;
4619 Eighth Ave.&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
'~On Tap at the Union" ~t&gt;«FO I C&#13;
r-A: McDona1d·s /4&#13;
lie••• Guaraitteed&#13;
We, the crew people of McDonald's®&#13;
are guaranteed to ...&#13;
a Serve you food that's hot, or we'll&#13;
replace it.&#13;
a Clean your table, or the meal's&#13;
on us.&#13;
• Give you a courteous "thank you,"&#13;
or there's no charge.&#13;
jj u1v A4 Do~®&#13;
~flop&amp;.&#13;
---------------&#13;
McDOna1crs ®&#13;
1earest to, JOI&#13;
3116 22nd AVE.&#13;
392&amp; 52nd ST. &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER WedMsUy. Oct. 16. 1974&#13;
'- GERSports--&#13;
ers enter&#13;
playoffs&#13;
allowed P te-ill to capl~l1ze&#13;
Ilea to score their&#13;
~l of the aHernoon&#13;
Patbl&lt;lobacll«!.t baIf-time~'&#13;
....... 1iDC to Cold! HenPiau&#13;
.11 ,.. •• very&#13;
I nal be tnilUlI ~;&#13;
':;.2::_~~~ man) ~ sboUId have&#13;
00&#13;
ar&#13;
218 allllCH RI). I&lt;EHOSHA.Sl1·7'f7'1&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR, DINING AOOII&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
THE THIEF&#13;
HO&#13;
C E TO DI ER&#13;
&lt;&#13;
women's siJorts discusse&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
The Parkside Athletic Board&#13;
held its first committee meetUll&#13;
of the semester on October 10.&#13;
TopICS (or disCUSSionwere the&#13;
budget. the Women's Atbletlc&#13;
Program aod in(ormatlon. on&#13;
,,-bat w...s approved last spring·&#13;
Appointed chairp~rson was&#13;
Peter Ellis; Ron Smger was&#13;
appointed secretary. Members o(&#13;
the committee are Wayne&#13;
Dannebl. direCtor o( Albletics,&#13;
Kathr)-n lauer, Laverne Quass,&#13;
Omar Amin, Bob Thomason,&#13;
Teresa Peck and John HaU,&#13;
Thi.s ummer ~"O new wom~'s&#13;
rts were added to the varsity&#13;
athleuc teams. They are&#13;
s....imming and fencing. The&#13;
pre\iOUS ones are track, cr~s&#13;
countrY. gymnastics and tenms.&#13;
Par Ide currently has ten&#13;
men' and six women's sports.&#13;
"€N&lt;' that "omen have started&#13;
programs. the) are seeking&#13;
mone-' This ba become a real&#13;
probiem around the state,&#13;
Tnditlooally, men have been&#13;
granted money (or athletic&#13;
~, not women.&#13;
I tale schools, except (or&#13;
Pan. Ide aod Green Bay, have&#13;
eparate physical education&#13;
department for men and&#13;
_en.&#13;
IIManng just one athletic&#13;
J:I'OI1"&amp;IT' •to sa id Darmehl, "in·&#13;
teed or t\li'O. \lie are in a unique&#13;
bOO AU our segregated (ee&#13;
dollars go to meo and women&#13;
programs."&#13;
·'Parks,de has the potential 10&#13;
expand." said Dannehl, "but not&#13;
tbe staff. I'm trying to explore&#13;
e-'ery possibility tbat we can to&#13;
add a ","'Oman or women to the&#13;
atbletic staff in order to make a&#13;
(u11 complemenl o( sports."&#13;
A question was raised regarding&#13;
the limited number of (re~&#13;
swim hours in the pool. The mam&#13;
roblem is that there are not&#13;
~Ough life guards, ,&#13;
A motion was made by Arnin&#13;
that a letter he drafted to James&#13;
Galbraith, director of Planmng&#13;
and Construction, P.........&#13;
a summer-swirn '-L~&#13;
program be set IIp 'Ibia&#13;
limited to Parksid~&#13;
faculty children, A ~&#13;
be charged per I It&#13;
motion was carried, eooa..&#13;
Cagers open&#13;
practice season&#13;
Parkside basketball coach&#13;
Steve Stephens welcomed back a&#13;
veteran group and several&#13;
promising newcomers as&#13;
basketball practice (or the 1974-75&#13;
season officially began Tuesday&#13;
(Oct. 15),&#13;
The Rangers will have six&#13;
weeks to prepare for their season&#13;
opener here Nov, 30 against UWWhitewater.&#13;
Parkside, 14-15 a&#13;
year ago, should be much improved&#13;
this season with a solid&#13;
blend of veterans and promising&#13;
rookies.&#13;
Tops among the 35 candidates&#13;
for the varsity squad should be&#13;
the four returning starters, Gary&#13;
Cole, Bill Sobanski, Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and Chuck Chambliss,&#13;
Cole, the team's most valuable&#13;
player last year with his 22,0&#13;
point and 12 rebound per game&#13;
averages, is a legitimate allAmerica&#13;
candidate. Cole, a 6-9&#13;
junior from Racine (Park),&#13;
missed seven games last year&#13;
aCt"" breaking his lbumb in preseason&#13;
drills.&#13;
Also back are 1973-74 starters&#13;
Sobanski, a 6-7 junior (rom Oak&#13;
Lawn, Ill, (Chicago Mt. Carmel),&#13;
wbo averaged 15 points and 7,8&#13;
rebounds a conl.est; Mahone, a 6-&#13;
4 guard (rom KenoshaI&#13;
Gordon Tech) who hit"&#13;
per game clip; and I&#13;
6-2 senior from Racine&#13;
who has started nearIJ&#13;
UW-P game since hi!.&#13;
year and last year av......&#13;
ppg,&#13;
Another returnee it&#13;
Hanke, who started II I&#13;
man in 1972-73 and Sli&#13;
school last season. 11It&#13;
sophomore forward&#13;
Milwaukee &lt;Hamill..&#13;
Stephens a strong&#13;
shooter.&#13;
Tops among the&#13;
are two transfers fromSt.&#13;
University who will be&#13;
Jan.'6, Marshall Hilland&#13;
Scott.: Hill, a 6-10&#13;
center, and ScoU, I&#13;
sophomore guard who I&#13;
ouistanding one-on.....&#13;
player, bolb preppedII&#13;
Gordon Tech, ExpectedII&#13;
depth at guard is 5-11&#13;
Stevie King, anOlbtr&#13;
Tech product. Also&#13;
aid in reserve rolea duriI&#13;
season are lettenneD&#13;
Chambers (6-3), CalYit1&#13;
(6-2) and Rade Dimilrijelll:&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
WE BUY USED BOOKS AND OFFER&#13;
A 5% COLLEGE REBATE&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 - Eighth Avenue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
"ACROSS .FROM UNION PARK"&#13;
,&#13;
5601-24 AVE. KENOSHA :...............................•.........&#13;
: DOUBLE - BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR :&#13;
: Monday thru Saturday :&#13;
• •&#13;
: 4:00-9:00 P.M. :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: 50·:&#13;
••••••••••••••••••• •&#13;
3 F SlAIl TABlES " •••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
2 TAIlES Best StereQ Sound" *&#13;
OPENING SOON·&#13;
(em e ,s) &amp; ••••• in Kenosha The Smoke 'ouse&#13;
--=:::::::::::::-&#13;
- -&#13;
I&#13;
ER&#13;
'------------Spor s _ _&#13;
er&#13;
offs&#13;
Athlatlcs board meets&#13;
women's sports discusse&#13;
b Bonn~Ha&#13;
A question was raised r egarding&#13;
the limited number of fre~&#13;
swim hours in the pool. The mam&#13;
roblem is that there are not&#13;
~ough life guards. .&#13;
A motion was made by Amm&#13;
that a letter be drafted to J a~es&#13;
Galbraith, director of P lannmg&#13;
and Construction, Pl'ODI.;._&#13;
a summer-swim ·i;, ~ro~am be set up. This&#13;
hm1ted to Parkside sb111... ".&#13;
faculty children. A $"ir"'&#13;
be char ged per I ee motion wa s carried. ~&#13;
Cagers open&#13;
practice season&#13;
Parkside basketball coach&#13;
Steve Stephens welcomed back a&#13;
veteran group and several&#13;
promising newcomers as&#13;
basketball practice for the 1974-75&#13;
season officially began Tuesday&#13;
(Oct. 15).&#13;
The Rangers will have six&#13;
weeks to prepare for their season&#13;
opener here Nov. 30 against UWWhitewater.&#13;
Parkside, 14-15 a&#13;
year ago, should be _much i~-&#13;
proved this season with a sohd&#13;
blend of veterans and promising&#13;
rookies. Tops among the 35 candidates&#13;
for the varsity squad should be&#13;
the four returning starters, Gary&#13;
Cole, Bill Sobanski, Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and Chuck Chambliss.&#13;
Cole, the team's most valuable&#13;
player last year with his 22.0&#13;
point and 12 rebound per game&#13;
averages, is a legitimate allAmerica&#13;
candidate. Cole, a 6-9&#13;
junior from Racine (Park),&#13;
missed seven games last year&#13;
afte breaking his thumb in preseason&#13;
drills.&#13;
Also back are 1973-74 starters&#13;
Sobanski, a 6-7 junior from Oak&#13;
Lawn, Ill. (Chicago Mt. Carmel),&#13;
who averaged 15 points and 7.8&#13;
rebounds a coni.est; Mahone, a 6-&#13;
4 guard from Kenosha (&#13;
Gordon Tech) who hit at&#13;
per game clip; and Cham 1&#13;
6-2 senior from Racine&#13;
who has started neariy&#13;
UW-P game since his 1&#13;
year and last year averace4&#13;
ppg.&#13;
Another returnee I&#13;
Hanke, who started a 1&#13;
man in 1972-73 and sat&#13;
school last season Tht&#13;
sophomore forward&#13;
Milwaukee &lt;Hamilton&#13;
Stephens a strong&#13;
shooter.&#13;
Tops among the n&#13;
are two transfers from&#13;
University who wlll be&#13;
Jan . '6, Marshall Hilland&#13;
Scott. Hill, a 6-10 so&#13;
center, and Scott a&#13;
sophomore guard who 1&#13;
outstanding one-on--Olle&#13;
player, both prepped at&#13;
Gordon Tech. Expected to&#13;
depth at guard is HI&#13;
Stevie King, another&#13;
Tech product. Also&#13;
aid in reserve roles duril season are lettermen&#13;
Chambers (6-3), Calvin&#13;
(6-2) and Rade DimitrijM&#13;
NOW OPEN&#13;
W E BUY USED BOOKS AND 0FFEI&#13;
A 5 % CO LLEGE REBA TE&#13;
EIGHTH A VENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 - Eighth Avenue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
"ACROSS FROM UNION PARK"&#13;
, </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 11, October 16, 1974</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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