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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 19</text>
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            <text>D.A. won't act</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>D.A. won't act&#13;
photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
Child Care Center in conference house&#13;
Kids move again&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
The Child Care Center, with an&#13;
enrollment of ninety children,&#13;
will soon be making a move from&#13;
its current location at the&#13;
Kenosha Campus to the Chancellor's&#13;
Conference Center on&#13;
Kenosha County, Hwy E.&#13;
Sherry Svatek, director of the&#13;
Child Care Center, indicated that&#13;
when the search was begun for a&#13;
new location, the Student Activities&#13;
Building was initially&#13;
considered.&#13;
That location, however, would&#13;
have caused a considerable inconvenience&#13;
to the Child Care&#13;
Center personnel, in that all&#13;
equipment would have to be&#13;
broken down and stored each&#13;
evening to make room for student&#13;
use of the building.&#13;
The suggestion use the&#13;
Chancellor's Conference Center&#13;
was not made until after the&#13;
death of Chancellor Irvin Wyllie,&#13;
since he had used the Conference&#13;
Center extensively as an&#13;
auxiliary working area.&#13;
Brian Murray, assistant&#13;
director of Planning and Construction&#13;
said that some&#13;
renovation of the Conference&#13;
Center will begin in the next few&#13;
weeks .to meet state structural&#13;
requirements for day care&#13;
centers.&#13;
Murray said that these&#13;
renovations include the addition&#13;
of extra toilet facilities in the&#13;
main building, and heating and&#13;
LLC&#13;
renamed&#13;
for&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
Parkside's Library Learning&#13;
Center has been formally named&#13;
the Irvin G. Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, following action&#13;
taken by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Board of Regents&#13;
Friday, Dec. 6, in Milwaukee.&#13;
The memorial resolution,&#13;
recommended by the faculty at&#13;
Parkside and passed by the&#13;
faculty senate, was unanimously&#13;
approved in honor of t he founding&#13;
chancellor of Parkside who died&#13;
in October.&#13;
Regent President Frank J.&#13;
Pelisek introduced the measure&#13;
to the board, citing that the&#13;
naming of the building after&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie would honor&#13;
"his commitment to and&#13;
realization of quality education."&#13;
Parkside's Library-Learning&#13;
Center, designed by Gyo Obata of&#13;
St. Louis, opened in the fall of&#13;
1972, and has since then drawn&#13;
much national attention because&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
new tiled flooring in the adjacent&#13;
garage, which will become the&#13;
art and lunch room.&#13;
Asked when the building will be&#13;
ready for occupancy, Murray&#13;
said, "We're aiming for&#13;
February first." He did say,&#13;
however, that this is a tentative&#13;
date since problems such as late&#13;
supply deliveries are difficult to&#13;
predict.&#13;
Svatek said she has mixed&#13;
feelings over the move to the&#13;
Conference Center. While&#13;
equipment may be left intact&#13;
each evening, the center does not&#13;
offer as much space as the&#13;
Student Activities Building. This&#13;
lack of space will, according to&#13;
Svatek, make it impossible to&#13;
operate #a nursery on the&#13;
premises.&#13;
She explained that state&#13;
regulations require a minimum&#13;
of thirty-five square feet per&#13;
child. "This is open space,"&#13;
Svetek said. "Kitchen, cup,&#13;
board and closet space can't be&#13;
counted."&#13;
Although Child Care Center&#13;
personnel are confident that next&#13;
semester's enrollment could&#13;
easily match this semester's,&#13;
they also feel that they will not&#13;
have enough room.&#13;
According to Svatek, the&#13;
capacity load of the Chancellor's&#13;
Conference Center as the new&#13;
Child Care Center will be decided&#13;
upon by Alberta Whitaker, a state&#13;
inspector for the Division of&#13;
Family Services.&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER staff&#13;
During a meeting on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 4, Bruce Schroeder,&#13;
the Kenosha District Attorney,&#13;
announced that he would not&#13;
prosecute Barb Burke, president&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB), in connection with a&#13;
complaint filed by RANGER&#13;
accusing PAB of violating the new&#13;
Open Meeting Law.&#13;
"I don't think there was ever a&#13;
deliberate attempt on PAB's part&#13;
to violate the Open Meeting&#13;
Law," Schroeder said.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, Associate&#13;
Dean of Students, said that she&#13;
had been in contact with&#13;
Schroeder "so he could understand&#13;
the University's concern&#13;
about the organizations&#13;
(PAB and RANGER)" and "to&#13;
see if the (Associate Dean of&#13;
Students) office could be of&#13;
assistance."&#13;
She said that she "expressed&#13;
the opinion" to the D.A. "that the&#13;
case should be handled out of&#13;
court."&#13;
Asked how she felt about&#13;
RANGER's decision to file a&#13;
complaint against PAB,&#13;
Echelbarger said, "I think it was&#13;
the responsibility of the paper to&#13;
bring the case before the D.A. if&#13;
they felt that strongly about it."&#13;
Barb Burke, citing reasons why&#13;
she believes Schroeder did not&#13;
prosecute the case, said that&#13;
many people had probably&#13;
inadvertently misinterpreted the&#13;
Open Meeting Law (including&#13;
RANGER), and that since it's a&#13;
confusing issue it shouldn't be&#13;
prosecuted.&#13;
A member of RANGER staff,&#13;
who was present at the Dec. 4&#13;
meeting, said Schroeder mentioned&#13;
the possibility that&#13;
RANGER was violating the same&#13;
law, since meetings have not&#13;
been announced to the Secretary&#13;
of the Faculty.&#13;
Dan McDonald, RANGER&#13;
reporter, was also present at the&#13;
meeting, and remarked that&#13;
"Schroeder said that you&#13;
(RANGER) are calling&#13;
somebody else in violation of the&#13;
law when you are yourself."&#13;
During a later interview,&#13;
Schroeder was asked if he&#13;
thought the Open Meeting Law&#13;
had been violated by PAB and&#13;
was reminded of his earlier&#13;
statement that "in my opinion,&#13;
RANGER is in violation with the&#13;
same law.&#13;
"I am not certain that it was&#13;
violated," hp said. "T d on't know&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
1 The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 19&#13;
Violence in Santa's workshop&#13;
Hairy Christmas&#13;
by Dan McDonald&#13;
Along with feelings of joy and exultation and "Peace to all men"&#13;
rhetoric, Christmas is a time of buying. Clever advertisement&#13;
agencies flood the media with thoughts of gift-giving and commercialism.&#13;
Department store shelves are lined with countless&#13;
numbers of games and toys that are all the "perfect Christmas gift for&#13;
your loved one."&#13;
And, as usual, current fads are the subject matter, along with the&#13;
more traditional-type commodities like war games, cologne, and&#13;
Monopoly. Kung Fu, Monday night football, dirty politics, and hot cars&#13;
take the place of the traditional visions of sugar plumbs dancing about&#13;
in our heads.&#13;
Poor Saint Nick. Can you imagine him climbing down the chimney&#13;
with a bag full of games labelled "LIE, CHEAT, and STEAL" that&#13;
offer the everyday person a chance to "wheel and deal in the game of&#13;
politics? Use vote certificates, blackmail, and all the other methods&#13;
used by the experts."&#13;
Then, for the younger, less aggressive tykes, CLASSY CHRASHERS&#13;
might be appropriate. "Smash 'em up! Luxury Limo and Sedan&#13;
Royale take off fast, zoom off ramps and crash together « hoods,&#13;
doors, wheels and trunk lids go flying. Beautifully detailed cars."&#13;
And in case your CLASSY CRASHER had any passengers aboard&#13;
Santa might want to leave an OPERATION game: "the electric game&#13;
where you are the doctor." This game is also handy in the event you&#13;
might have a SHOOT OUT AT O.K. CORRAL.&#13;
'However, there is one game with less severe results. In fact, you&#13;
won't need OPERATION for this one. Only aspirin. It's called&#13;
HEADACHE... merely give your opponent a headache "by taking all&#13;
his pieces."&#13;
And let's not forget those characters who immediately rose to fame&#13;
between Saturday morning cartoons: G.I. Joe, Big Jim, Big Josh, Big&#13;
Jeff and Big Jack. Musclebound, daring, and heroic, they perform&#13;
feats unknown to common men. They kick holes in brick walls and&#13;
chop bamboo poles in half while clad in bermuda shorts and cowbov&#13;
hats. Unreal! .&#13;
Poor Santa. Imagine him riding along in his sleigh when Baby&#13;
Yawnny suddenly crawls out of one of his bags and says, "Santa, Baby&#13;
Yawnny gots to go poddy!"&#13;
And if that isn't enough, Big Jim decides he and Barby are hungry.&#13;
What does poor Santa do when Big Jim decides to have Rudolph for&#13;
supper? Why, he pulls out his "Ghost Gun" so he can shoot Big Jim&#13;
"without any noise or missiles" and presumably without drawing&#13;
blood.&#13;
And to top that off, G.I. Joe has rounded up as many tanks and guns&#13;
he could find in Santa's bag of goodies and is now launching an all-out&#13;
war on little children.&#13;
Well, Santa decides to turn back in the interest of humanity. After&#13;
all, there's enough trouble in the world without unleashing another&#13;
offensive-espeeially by someone as merciless as G.I. Joe.&#13;
But back in department stores, where shelves are lined with&#13;
countless numbers of games and toys, is a G.I. Joe "Trouble Shooter"&#13;
with a "talking communications center." At this very minute, it is&#13;
broadcasting orders to other G.I. Joes. So if you're hit with a ball from&#13;
a SKITTLE SHOOT game, or run over by an "Imposter Volkswagon"&#13;
that is usually "mild mannered" but "turns into a track-eating&#13;
monster," don't say I didn't warn you. Those department stores are to&#13;
be entered at your own risk. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday/ Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
' J m ...-the cJSSYLUM winteR swards&#13;
("called "The, Nutc^ackeRO&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion&#13;
'Right to know'&#13;
usurped&#13;
Once again administrative fog has come rolling in.&#13;
Our administration sees fit to involve themselves in the&#13;
internal affairs of student groups because of some&#13;
warped sense of protecting the community image of&#13;
Parkside. Case in point: The suit RANGER filed with '&#13;
the Kenosha County District Attorney against PAB was&#13;
to be definitive in nature. Little is known about the&#13;
responsibilities of student groups as concerns the antisecrecy&#13;
law. The Parkside Activities Board, as an&#13;
alleged violator of the present law, was to be taken to&#13;
court so that a "confusing situation" could be once and&#13;
for all cleared up by the judicial branch of our government.&#13;
Our district attorney, in all his wisdom, has&#13;
chosen to usurp that power of our court system that&#13;
states when citizens have conflicting views the court&#13;
shall be the final arbitrator.&#13;
Among the overt and covert reasons for the District&#13;
Attorney's decision are: no deliberate attempt to violate&#13;
the law, others are violating the law, "a confusing&#13;
issue." If these are the the criteria for nonenforcement&#13;
of the law, I would suggest that Kenosha is fertile&#13;
ground for any criminal activity.&#13;
Among the covert activities-we find our Assistant&#13;
Dean of Students seeking to assist the student groups&#13;
involved. RANGER feels that a better method of attempting&#13;
to alleviate the situation would have been to&#13;
contact the student groups-not the District Attorney.&#13;
RANGER finds it hard to believe that the meeting of&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger with Bruce Schroeder was only to&#13;
offer "assistance"; perhaps it was a means of seeing&#13;
that the outside world does not become aware that the&#13;
beautiful Parkside Campus could possibly hide discord&#13;
among the students.&#13;
In our conferences with the District Attorney, the&#13;
question of possible violation of the anti-secrecy law by&#13;
the Editorial Board of the RANGER was never mentioned&#13;
until AFTER the offer of assistance by the Dean&#13;
of Students Office.&#13;
We, as members of the press, cannot allow the hidden&#13;
threat of legal action sway us from a course that can&#13;
only benefit the campus by clarifying a confusing issue.&#13;
RANGER calls on the Dean of Students, the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board and other campus groups to assist us in&#13;
the search for clarity of the law. We will continue our&#13;
legal course of action so that all of us will be aware of&#13;
our responsibilities under the law.&#13;
Wrapping it up&#13;
in bright paper&#13;
With this issue Ranger will cease publication for the&#13;
Christmas break. We will begin publishing again on&#13;
January 15, 1975. A s the semester comes to a close, we&#13;
feel a bit of retrospection on the school year is in order.&#13;
RANGER feels that there has been some good done and&#13;
some failures.&#13;
The good includes the passage of a strong student&#13;
government constitution (the failure to implement that&#13;
document does not detract from it). Other successes&#13;
include the action taken in the areas of affirmative&#13;
action and obtaining sufficient counselors. We have to&#13;
balance these positive actions against such failures as&#13;
the administration and certain student groups who&#13;
continue to maintain a fragmented attitude towards the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Ranger feels strongly that once Parkside can function&#13;
in a unified manner we will begin to make this a&#13;
"community" and not the "islands of isolation" that&#13;
now exist.&#13;
We have an opportunity to start a new semester in a&#13;
new year. Perhaps the break from the grind of school&#13;
will allow time for the irritations and angers to subside,&#13;
and perhaps the spirit of goodwill of the holidays will&#13;
continue into the new semester.&#13;
We have all learned much and the holiday break will&#13;
give us all time to analyze our various failures and&#13;
successes and come back in '75 wiser and better able to&#13;
handle our tasks. ^ &lt;&#13;
The staff at Ranger wishes you all a happy holiday&#13;
and a safe vacation.&#13;
NutCRackeR5)&#13;
J PON'T GET TO "COME" OUT" MUCH""&#13;
n ANYMORE,... with all -that-time in the&#13;
closet J had hm&lt;L to think, about"&#13;
worthy people,to vUhorn we owe praise&#13;
X came up with these....&#13;
TOM REINERT Tor cL-fine.&#13;
performance,,...^ product^!&#13;
PQG As old members,-for belnq&#13;
\ -the- part of -fhe body JT mosk&#13;
' aet into..-&#13;
DEAN DEARBORN for bclnq&#13;
L a Sport.... J&#13;
KEN PE5TKA, who gets&#13;
,the Snow Queen.&#13;
Award-for his&#13;
) tacky mouth—&#13;
horny behav/OR?&#13;
Unfair to athletes&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in regards to any&#13;
of the students or faculty who are&#13;
interested in the welfare and&#13;
education of minority students&#13;
here at Parkside. We were&#13;
recruited from out of state and&#13;
were given information regarding&#13;
Parkside and other&#13;
necessary matters which was not&#13;
true. According to the circumstances&#13;
which confronted us&#13;
when we arrived here, we were&#13;
told we would receive food&#13;
stamps, convenient transportation,&#13;
sufficient funds to&#13;
complete our educational needs,&#13;
and some sort of social activity&#13;
on campus.&#13;
There are athletic students who&#13;
were under the impression that&#13;
they would receive a fair chance&#13;
on the basketball squad, but they&#13;
were not allowed to show their&#13;
true potential due to the fact that&#13;
the varsity squad had been&#13;
chosen prior to our arrival. This&#13;
is not fair to the athlete that is&#13;
capable of playing and not given&#13;
a chance.&#13;
We feel that Rudy Collum is not&#13;
qualified to recruit minority&#13;
students. We feel that we have&#13;
been tricked into coming to&#13;
Parkside, and this is not fair to&#13;
us.&#13;
Several students went in to talk&#13;
about the situation with Rudy&#13;
Collum and the situation was&#13;
taken personally. We don't think&#13;
that he is qualified, so we ask the&#13;
administration to look into this&#13;
matter and take action to better&#13;
protect the welfare and education&#13;
of minority sttudents here at&#13;
Parkside, or the Federal&#13;
government will be notified.&#13;
We don't need someone who is&#13;
only interested in his payroll and&#13;
not the students that he&#13;
represents.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Minority students of&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Bauer under fire from Kenosha attorney&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The reluctance of acting&#13;
chancellor Otto Bauer to abide by&#13;
the merger implementation law&#13;
argues strongly against student&#13;
representatives on the Search&#13;
and Screen Committee giving&#13;
him serious cosideration as a&#13;
permanent chancellor for the&#13;
Parkside campus.&#13;
The merger law provides that&#13;
"students shall have the right to&#13;
organize themselves in a manner&#13;
in which they determine, and to&#13;
select their representatives to&#13;
participate in institutional&#13;
governance."&#13;
The student representatives on&#13;
the Search and Screen Committee&#13;
are the most important&#13;
representatives to participate in&#13;
institutional governance that this&#13;
student body may ever have.&#13;
Yet they are not being selected&#13;
in a manner in which students&#13;
have determined. Instead, the&#13;
process of selection is being "coordinated"&#13;
by the office of the&#13;
associate dean of students.&#13;
Students selected in&#13;
this manner are certainly open to&#13;
challenge. They very well may&#13;
have to defend themselves in&#13;
court against a writ of quo&#13;
warranto i.e. a court proceeding&#13;
challenging by what right do they&#13;
hold office.&#13;
But the Search and Screen&#13;
committee is just one area in&#13;
which student rights to self&#13;
organization are being denied.&#13;
The merger implementation law&#13;
provides that "students&#13;
shall have the primary responsibility&#13;
for the disposition of those&#13;
funds which constitute substantial&#13;
support for campus&#13;
student activities."&#13;
In a referendum on September&#13;
24 and 25 of this year, the&#13;
Parkside student body determined&#13;
that such disposition&#13;
should be done through an&#13;
allocations committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc.&#13;
That allocations committee has&#13;
the responsibility to recommend&#13;
a level for the segregated student&#13;
fee for academic year 1975 76. To&#13;
date, however, Bauer has&#13;
refused to instruct the appropriate&#13;
non-instructional&#13;
personnel and staff in auxiliary&#13;
services to co-operate with this&#13;
Committee in arriving at a&#13;
segregated fee level.&#13;
Instead, he seems bent on&#13;
creating his own committee to&#13;
perform this task which the law&#13;
has delegated to students.&#13;
Bauer's refusal to implement&#13;
the student rights section of the&#13;
merger law not only argues&#13;
against his being given serious&#13;
consideration as a permanent&#13;
Parkside chancellor but provokes&#13;
dissention and argument that&#13;
may jeopardize legislative approval&#13;
of the proposed School of&#13;
Modern Industry as well.&#13;
John Siefert&#13;
Kenosha attorney&#13;
Food&#13;
To the Ediotr,&#13;
Human beings at Parkside do&#13;
not get hungry after 2 p.m. on&#13;
Fridays. I guess I will have to&#13;
condition my body to that&#13;
schedule so I will be able to&#13;
survive, and think, and worry&#13;
and become well adjusted.&#13;
Debora Donatt&#13;
Multicultural input&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To the Members of Third World:&#13;
The Concerned Students&#13;
Coalition suffers from many of&#13;
the same problems, such as&#13;
recognition, as your organization&#13;
and many other student&#13;
organizations face.&#13;
I personally feel that the&#13;
University is making a grave&#13;
mistake by not tapping the only&#13;
direct and accessible source for&#13;
multicultural input - through&#13;
your organization.&#13;
As you may already know the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee is&#13;
making an honest effort to make&#13;
to exist °&#13;
r Student organizations&#13;
? exist on campus and have&#13;
mofeen&#13;
re°rganiZati0ns become&#13;
more represented in studentcampus&#13;
affairs. ^"aentThe&#13;
concerns you voice are&#13;
basic concerns of all student&#13;
organizations. In answer to your&#13;
-rsrcisrs&#13;
mittee's sub-committee on&#13;
Student Organizations. Second, to&#13;
participate in Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association s&#13;
selection of candidates to the&#13;
Search and Screen Committee to&#13;
select a new chancellor.&#13;
This, in my opinion, is the sure&#13;
way to total imput from a'J&#13;
factions of student interest an&#13;
student organizations.&#13;
Thank you. , „&#13;
Kai Christian Nail&#13;
President - C.S-L &#13;
UW president&#13;
defends budget&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
System has done all it can to bear&#13;
its share of austerity in preparing&#13;
its 1975-77 b iennial budget, John&#13;
C. Weaver, president of the UW&#13;
System told Regents in&#13;
Milwaukee Friday.&#13;
The proposed $1.33 billion&#13;
budget, excluding faculty&#13;
compensation proposals, was&#13;
passed in October and submitted&#13;
to the state legislature for consideration&#13;
in the upcoming 1975-&#13;
77 state budget. Further&#13;
recommendations for faculty&#13;
compensation, carrying a&#13;
cumulative two-year cost of&#13;
$105.2 million, were passed in&#13;
November.&#13;
Weaver's statement reflected&#13;
his initial response to the first of&#13;
many day-long public hearings&#13;
that Governor Lucey is conducting&#13;
around the state. The&#13;
hearings air a wide range of&#13;
issues and policy questions&#13;
confronting the state legislature&#13;
as it considers the state budget.&#13;
The first hearing was held&#13;
Monday, Dec. 2.&#13;
"The hearing centered itself&#13;
particularly around the massive&#13;
problems of inflation and&#13;
recession," said Weaver, adding&#13;
that "It is abundantly clear that&#13;
the Governor and Legislature are&#13;
confronted with a serious&#13;
discrepency between projected&#13;
income and state expenditure&#13;
needs, as represented by the&#13;
several state agencies."&#13;
In light of this discrepency,&#13;
Weaver noted that the University's&#13;
budget request "received&#13;
more than a little critical attention."&#13;
He went on to say, "we&#13;
of the public university are no&#13;
strangers to austerity and&#13;
retrenchment," and added that&#13;
"no one in the university is insensitive&#13;
to the confounding&#13;
realities of the fiscal problems&#13;
the state faces. None of us seeks&#13;
more than our fair share of what&#13;
modest increases the state will be&#13;
able to grant, and I find myself&#13;
facing the first stages of budget&#13;
negotiations with a sense of real&#13;
Dride in the responsibility and&#13;
restraint which our requests&#13;
clearly represent."&#13;
Weaver defended the UW&#13;
System's requests by citing three&#13;
areas of budget planning in which&#13;
the percentage increases&#13;
reflected in the university's&#13;
requests fall below those of other&#13;
state agencies:&#13;
1. Whereas the total nonsalary&#13;
programmatic increases&#13;
requested by all state agencies&#13;
represent a 36 percent increase&#13;
over current levels, the increases&#13;
aimed for by' the university&#13;
represent only one half that-18&#13;
percent;&#13;
2. The UW System's faculty&#13;
cost of living and merit salary&#13;
increase requests of 30 percent&#13;
over a two-year period~17 percent&#13;
the first year, and 13 percent&#13;
the second-is the lowest percentage&#13;
increase request yet&#13;
advanced by any major state&#13;
employee group, with the next&#13;
Buying term papers&#13;
illegal in Wisconsin&#13;
Academic Material Unfair&#13;
Trade Practices is an administrative&#13;
rule designed to&#13;
prevent the operation of so-called&#13;
"term paper mills" in Wisconsin,&#13;
according to Tom Crist, director&#13;
oi the Bureau of Consumer&#13;
Protection in Madison.&#13;
Violators of this rule can be&#13;
prosecuted in court and if found&#13;
guilty, fined for each offense not&#13;
to exceed $5,000 and-or be imprisoned&#13;
in the county jail for not&#13;
more than one year (section&#13;
100.26 (3), Wis. Stats.).&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
of its unique architecture.&#13;
Following the resolution's&#13;
adoption, Pelisek asked members&#13;
of the board, chancellors&#13;
and administrators from&#13;
throughout the system, and&#13;
representatives of the press and&#13;
public to stand in silence, offering&#13;
a final tribute to the late chancellor.&#13;
&#13;
Other actions taken by the&#13;
Regents include the following:&#13;
-Adoption of a new set of&#13;
faculty personnel rules. The new&#13;
rules culminated a series of&#13;
discussions and debates between&#13;
faculty and administrators, including&#13;
a public hearing on the&#13;
proposed rules in Madison on&#13;
Nov. 22. The rules will govern&#13;
hiring, granting of tenure,&#13;
dismissal, grievance procedures&#13;
and layoffs during times of&#13;
financial emergency.&#13;
-The voting down of a proposal&#13;
denying outside religious groups&#13;
the use of UW buildings "for the&#13;
advancement of their sectarian&#13;
purposes." Regent Arthur&#13;
DeBardeleben, Park Falls,&#13;
argued for the prohibition, citing&#13;
that the pse of UW buildings by&#13;
religious groups is probably&#13;
unconstitutional. DeBardeleben&#13;
also objected to a presentation&#13;
made to a Board of Regents&#13;
committee the day before by four&#13;
clergymen from campus&#13;
ministries. The religious&#13;
representatives distributed&#13;
written descriptions of their work&#13;
on the campuses to the committee&#13;
members. DeBardeleben&#13;
considered this action "fine in&#13;
church, but it has no place, in my&#13;
opinion, in this university."&#13;
-Reversal of a Regent policy&#13;
decision made in November&#13;
stopping a. new undergraduate&#13;
Mechanical Engineering&#13;
program at UW-Platteville. The&#13;
Board voted to enact the program&#13;
by a 9-7 margin. Regent Mrs.&#13;
Robert R. Williams, Stevens&#13;
Point, introduced the proposal to&#13;
rescind the action taken the&#13;
month before. She cited a change&#13;
in thePlatteville faculty's morale&#13;
and a reassessment of the issue&#13;
as the reasons behind her change&#13;
of vote.&#13;
-Approval of a new academic&#13;
calendar for UW-Oshkosh. The&#13;
calendar includes a- 14-week&#13;
spring and fall semester, with&#13;
each segment broken into two&#13;
seven-week terms. In addition,&#13;
an extra three-week term is&#13;
provided in January.&#13;
UW Senior Vice President&#13;
Donald K. Smith called the&#13;
project an "experimental one";&#13;
however, he added that the&#13;
program represents a&#13;
"tremendously important piece&#13;
of systemwide innovation."&#13;
UW-Oshkosh Chancellor&#13;
Robert Birnbaum said the&#13;
calendar would: allow students to&#13;
move through the university at&#13;
their own pace, gearing themselves&#13;
according to their learning&#13;
speed and financial capabilities;&#13;
allow for students who can only&#13;
afford short terms in the&#13;
university to attend; and allow&#13;
professors free terms to do&#13;
research or take part in public&#13;
service projects.&#13;
LW Regent John M. Lavine, chairman of the Regents Education Committee (forefront), and&#13;
Regent Bertram N. McNamara share a few moments of intellectual relaxation before a recent&#13;
Regent meeting in Madison. The Regents gather monthly to consider a variety of administrative&#13;
policies for the University of Wisconsin system. Their most recent discussions centered on the&#13;
proposed UW System budget, calling for some $1.43 billion in funds for upcoming 1975-77 biennium&#13;
(photo by Paul Anderson)&#13;
lowest at 51 percent;&#13;
3. The UW System's request for&#13;
capital building and remodeling&#13;
programs are below the commonly&#13;
accepted professional&#13;
standard~V2 of one percentage&#13;
point, as compared to a 2 percent&#13;
professional standard.&#13;
He further supported his view&#13;
by adding that "the record shows&#13;
that the University System accomplished&#13;
the largest dollar,&#13;
and percentage, reduction in&#13;
base budget through productivity&#13;
savings during the biennium now&#13;
drawing to a close."&#13;
Specifically, the UW System&#13;
generated 49 percent of the&#13;
state's total productivity savings,&#13;
while comprising only one-fifth of&#13;
the total state expenditure&#13;
budget^&#13;
"Not only have we understood&#13;
our state's needs for fiscal&#13;
prudence qnd exonomy, we have&#13;
done something about it," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
Weaver was careful to concede,&#13;
however, that if the fiscal&#13;
situation in Wisconsin for the&#13;
next biennium demands further&#13;
cuts in state agency budgets,&#13;
"the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System is again prepared to&#13;
shoulder its share of the&#13;
responsibility of adjusting to such&#13;
fiscal realities."&#13;
No mention was made as to&#13;
Unfreezing the clocks&#13;
About 1,200 area grade school children will see performances of&#13;
James Thurber's fairy tale "The Thirteen Clocks" as guests of the&#13;
Players of University of Wisconsin-Parkside at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Dec. 13 in the Communication Arts Theater. Additional performances,&#13;
open to the public, are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 13, and 10 a.m. on Saturday, Dec. 14. Public admission is 50 cents&#13;
for both children and adults.&#13;
Don Rintz, who will direct the production, says the tale can be enjoyed&#13;
by all ages. "The Thirteen Clocks" tells the story, in song and&#13;
poetry, of a wicked Duke who lives in a castle where time is frozen&#13;
with his niece, the Princess Saralinda.&#13;
When suitors come to the castle to woo the Princess, the Duke sets&#13;
impossible tasks for them to do to win Saralinda's hand. All the suitors&#13;
fail until a handsome Prince, disguised as a minstrel, carries out the&#13;
tasks of finding a thousand jewels and making the thirteen frozen&#13;
clocks in the palace work once again.&#13;
The book is by Fred Sadoff and the music by Marc Bucci.&#13;
Peter Strutynski of South Milwaukee is cast as the Duke, Annabelle&#13;
Current of Racine plays the Princess and Keith Gayhart of Racine is&#13;
the Prince. Michael Ward, Racine, is cast as Golux, who tells the story&#13;
of the play and helps the Prince win the hand of Saralinda.&#13;
The Duke's henchman, Hark, is portrayed by Tim Seymour,&#13;
Kenosha, and Jody Jones, Racine, plays Hagga, a remarkable woman&#13;
who weeps jewels. Completing the cast are Art Dexter, Union Grove;&#13;
Chris Simpson, Kenosha; and Steve Ltt, Racine.&#13;
Piano accompanist will be Gerald Bailey of Chicago.&#13;
which university programs would&#13;
be cut in the event that such&#13;
further cuts did occur.&#13;
He concluded with the&#13;
following plea:&#13;
"If the retrenchment era we&#13;
have experienced these past four&#13;
years is of necessity to continue,&#13;
then let all of the recipients of&#13;
state tax support be treated fairly&#13;
and equitably on whatever&#13;
common foundation of support&#13;
the state determines it can&#13;
sustain with appropriate&#13;
recognition being provided to&#13;
those who have already&#13;
sacrificed in unusual measure&#13;
during the current biennium."&#13;
D.A.r 57T&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
who you're trying to knife, but it's&#13;
water over the dam. I don't think&#13;
it matters what I think because&#13;
the case was dropped."&#13;
Ken Pestka, editor-in-chief of&#13;
RANGER, was asked whether he&#13;
thought RANGER had been in&#13;
violation of the law. He pointed&#13;
out that RANGER doesn't actually&#13;
hold meetings as defined in&#13;
the Open Meeting Law, so the&#13;
paper couldn't have violated it.&#13;
"What bearing does this have&#13;
on the case, if any," he asked. "If&#13;
anybody thinks we're in violation&#13;
of the law, let them file a complaint&#13;
with the D.A. and let a&#13;
judge decide."&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
Majors review faculty work&#13;
This is a review by four senior art majors on the&#13;
Faculty Art Exhibit, which will close Friday of this&#13;
week. It was taped last Thursday evening and is&#13;
presented as a conversation on art as you might hear in&#13;
walking through a gallery.&#13;
RANGER: The first criticisms will center on the&#13;
two-dimensional work presented in the gallery. Let's&#13;
begin with the work of Erik Forrest.&#13;
Major l: Viewing this first canvas, Two Friends and&#13;
Auld Reeky, the artist's work has an illustrative&#13;
quality. The colors are intense in some sections of the&#13;
painting, almost uncontrolled for this particular&#13;
composition.&#13;
Major 2: There seems to be a confusion of d epth in&#13;
this piece and in the other pieces. Mr. Forrest has&#13;
chosen a rainbow symbol for this canvas and the next&#13;
one, titled Rainbow, but its use is obviously highly&#13;
personal and subjective.&#13;
Major 3: I like Rainbow. It is very psychological.&#13;
One thing his imagery in all these pieces shares, is the&#13;
quality of be ing derived from collective dreams This&#13;
piece has a purposeful handling of color and of the&#13;
application of brushstrokes to the canvas. There are&#13;
finely applied transparencies in the sheets and body&#13;
for instance.&#13;
Major l: His work is difficult to decipher. I agree&#13;
that the images are dreamlike. The perspective in&#13;
these pieces is hard to take, or so it seems to me. For&#13;
instance, in the piece Waterloo Place, we see the right&#13;
side of the canvas is painted with a classical perspective&#13;
that abruptly switches to almost the reverse&#13;
planes on the other side of the painting. In fact, the&#13;
perspective changes at least three times on this side of&#13;
the work.&#13;
Major 3: It is almost as though the foreground was&#13;
seen through a concave mirror; then, we are looking&#13;
out the window at a completely different horizon.&#13;
Major 2: Right. Another thing that obviously contributes&#13;
to his subject matter is his European&#13;
background.&#13;
RANGER: Does anyone find that the female image&#13;
is another unifying characteristic in his work or is this&#13;
just my impression?&#13;
Major 3: No. I think the female element definitely&#13;
can be seen in his work. Look at this next canvasTregonna--the&#13;
female nude in the window and the&#13;
previous pieces all have women in them. The image of&#13;
a woman allows for certain automatic associations,&#13;
both emotional and psychological.&#13;
Major l; The use of symbolism is apparent in images&#13;
and in titles. The unparticipated picnic spread in the&#13;
foreground of T regonna is suggestive and in the next&#13;
painting, Morning of Kin g Arthur, the title, because it&#13;
is accessible from literature and legend, also brings&#13;
certain concepts of time and manner to mind.&#13;
Major 2: The interesting thing to note about this final&#13;
piece of Erik Forrest's is the style in which it is&#13;
painted; it's more primative technique lends force to&#13;
the use of p lanes. The fractured segments of t he piece&#13;
achieve a much better effect than in the other paintings,&#13;
at least for me.&#13;
RANGER: How about the four pieces by Moishe&#13;
Smith....&#13;
Major 2: The first thing to say is they are all prints,&#13;
and all landscaped in one way or another. The one that&#13;
stands out immediately is the color print Afternoon of a&#13;
Cow. The sky in this one has a remarkably painterly&#13;
quality.&#13;
Major 1: The two scenes of Europe have an incredible&#13;
amount of de tail in the architectural parts of&#13;
the prints. Then, the images of p eople on the steps in&#13;
the foreground of S mith's Roman Holiday are almost&#13;
cartooned, when compared to the detailed rendering of&#13;
the buildings.&#13;
Major 3: The second piece-The Glory that was&#13;
Rome-again has that incredible detail.&#13;
RANGER: It pulls you right up to it, so you can&#13;
examine every part.&#13;
Major 2: The last piece's title is undecipherable. This&#13;
print was made this year. Compared to the others, it's&#13;
extremely unfinished. But here again, we find the&#13;
snapshot image. It would be interesting to find out how&#13;
these effects in the color print and in The Glory that&#13;
was Rome were achieved. Especially the watercolor&#13;
effects in Afternoon of a Cow.&#13;
Major l: This next selection of paintings by Robert&#13;
Cadez shows the use of one simple image, developed&#13;
and slightly varied in a number of works.&#13;
Major 3: The use of c olors to accomplish variations&#13;
in dimension is what he's after. Look at the variations&#13;
in blues at the corners of the piece titled Intussusception.&#13;
&#13;
RANGER: Pond at RonDeau employs the same&#13;
algaelike image only with a florescent and highly&#13;
luminous network of lines around the shapes.&#13;
Major 2: This one gives the effect of plant forms&#13;
under a microscope.&#13;
Major l: The next painting has a fine finger-painting&#13;
quality.&#13;
RANGER: You're referring to Clandestine.&#13;
Major l: Yes. This one's much more developed, even&#13;
subtle.&#13;
Major 3: It has somewhat the same effect as looking&#13;
through colored lead glass. You get impressions of a&#13;
sort of c ityscape with movement.&#13;
Major 2: I get the impression of transparence and&#13;
light. Stained effect. Much more involved use of the&#13;
forms.&#13;
RANGER: The next two pieces by Cadez are the&#13;
algae image on plexiglass; one in blue, Construction I&#13;
and one in yellow, Construction II. (The colors blue and&#13;
yellow are the background undercoating.)&#13;
Major 2: The Constructions use color and space quite&#13;
effectively. It is interesting to note that he painted both&#13;
sides of the plexiglass.&#13;
RANGER: The last artist, working in twodimensional&#13;
media, is David Zaig.&#13;
Major 2: Mr. Zaig has only two pieces in the show.'&#13;
The smaller one is a photosilkscreen. This is a recent&#13;
technique. The out-of-focus background and the&#13;
floating Mirolike shapes on the surface remind me of&#13;
images glued to, say, a window that is being rinsed,&#13;
with rain. (This piece was untitled.)&#13;
Major 3: The larger work--Cul de Sac"is a&#13;
surrealistic work. It is the largest painting in the&#13;
gallery. He has created an extraordinarily threedimensional&#13;
space in the piece.&#13;
Major 3: The painting is done with precision; it's&#13;
obvious that the scope and arrangement were decided&#13;
with considerable thought. The effect of the objects&#13;
floating freely and the counter-image of th eir shadows&#13;
also in the air, is incredible....&#13;
Major 2: The light that created those shadows could&#13;
be coming from the gallery lights themselves. I think&#13;
it's handled well.&#13;
RANGER: If that's all on the two-dimensional&#13;
presentations, then, we'll move on to the threedimensional&#13;
work. Let's start with the ceramic work of&#13;
John Murphy.&#13;
Major 3: Without being specific to any one individual&#13;
piece, the one thing all of Mr. Murphy's work has in&#13;
common is that it was all executed with quality.&#13;
Major 2: Exactly. The work is exceptional, when&#13;
compared with some of the seemingly unfinished and&#13;
erratic work previously viewed.&#13;
Major l: He has, for instance, used some of the same&#13;
symbols as the previous artists, yet treated them in a&#13;
personal manner. His work has a style that belongs&#13;
uniquely to Mr. Murphy himself.&#13;
Major 2: One of the things to note is that he is not tied&#13;
down to one mode of expression in this media and he is&#13;
willing to state the particulars of his craft, such as&#13;
firings and glazes.&#13;
Major 3: He seems to be using an ecological theme&#13;
and yet he has peraonalized it. The work is somewhat&#13;
surreal in the handling of the images.&#13;
RANGER: Anything else that needs to be said?&#13;
Alright, let's move on to the sculptures of Roliin&#13;
Jansky.&#13;
Major I: The rather feminine form with the flecked&#13;
finish is Sur la Pointe. The technical aspects of a ll his&#13;
work is exceptional.&#13;
Major 2: I find it interesting to see this piece in the&#13;
middle of the gallery and then find one shaped just like&#13;
it, but not put together, on the wall....&#13;
RANGER: Thump Counter Thump is the one being&#13;
referred to.&#13;
Major 2: Yes. I am curious as to why he did that.&#13;
Couldn't he get them together?&#13;
RANGER: It seems to me that there is substantial&#13;
reasoning behind that arrangement.&#13;
Major 2: Perhaps. Still, I'm suspicious.&#13;
Major 3: Look at the work Terminus ad Quem. The&#13;
piece is appealing for the artistic irony it has.&#13;
Major l: All his pieces have beautiful finishes....&#13;
Major 2: This was the piece which won the National&#13;
Sculpture Association award and toured the country.&#13;
Major 3: This piece is humorous. I don't mean he&#13;
didn't do it seriously, I mean that the ironic element, as&#13;
stated before, is most apparent on seeing the piece.&#13;
Humor in art is a sophisticated development. The&#13;
comical element is what arouses the interest.&#13;
RANGER: The last piece to view is Intransition.&#13;
Major 3: This is an interesting piece.&#13;
Major 2: There are some good things happening on&#13;
the surface. There is quite a bit of tension in the piece,&#13;
and though it lacks the brilliant finishes of his most&#13;
recent works, I find it the most appealing. This work&#13;
was definitely not meant to be exhibited in a gallery of&#13;
this size.&#13;
Major 3: I agree. It should have some sort of landscape&#13;
to be viewed properly.&#13;
Major l: This one has a flowing quality and internal&#13;
dynamism.&#13;
RANGER: If that's it, I'd like to thank you all and&#13;
call it a night.&#13;
- - amy&#13;
New course line-up for 2nd sem.&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
Both the College of Science and Society (CSS) and the School of&#13;
Modern Industry (SMI) are offering new courses in all divisions.&#13;
Science Division&#13;
In the Division of Science, CSS, there are the following new courses:&#13;
Chemistry 11-495 Seminar in Polymer Chemistry. 1 cr&#13;
Earth Science 12-490 (sec. 1), Special Topics: Environmental&#13;
Communications. 3 cr. According to a flyer on the course, "Environmental&#13;
Communications is a workshop (not a lecture) for science&#13;
students and communications students who want to bridge the&#13;
communications gap.' Students will prepare newspaper articles,&#13;
press releases, magazine features, radio features, videotapes etc&#13;
and will receive feedback from fellow students, instructors, and media&#13;
professionals.&#13;
12-490 Special Topics sec. 2: Energy Management. 1 cr. cross-listed&#13;
as Physics 15-490, se c. 2.&#13;
Psychology 16-225. Psychology of Personal Adjustment. 3 cr. Study&#13;
and practice of self-management: modifying habits and phobias and&#13;
increasing effectiveness in interpersonal relationships, life planning&#13;
and problem solving. Prerequ: Psych. 101.&#13;
16-222. Psychology of Drug Use. 3 cr. Social psychological aspects of&#13;
the use and misuse of depressants, stimulants, and psychedelics,&#13;
including marijuana, LSD, speed, alcohol, tobacco and over-thecounter&#13;
drugs. Prerequ: Psych 101, or LS101, or LS119.&#13;
16-230 Psychology of Human Sexuality. 3 cr. Human sexual&#13;
behavior: variations and frequencies, normal sexual behavior and&#13;
development, myths and fallacies, dysfunctions, deviations, learning&#13;
and modification, attitudes and personal codes. Prereq: Psych 101.&#13;
New in Social Science&#13;
The Division of Social Science is offering the following new courses:&#13;
Anthropology. 21-426 Developmental Change. 3 cr. or Cross-listed as&#13;
Sociology 27-475. Bui lding on the basics of culture change, examines&#13;
the dynamics of macro changes at national and international levels&#13;
Economics 22-205. Economics of Urban Problems. 3 cr. Economics&#13;
of s uch urban problems as housing, urban renewal transnnrtatinn&#13;
and 11,6 finandn&#13;
s&#13;
and Labor Relations. 3 cr. Economics of&#13;
c l S f ,ssue s&#13;
'&#13;
i n&#13;
Geography: Jin America. 3 cr.&#13;
mysical, cultural and economic characteristics of Latin America.&#13;
as Humanities 30-290. 108&#13;
raphy and History. 3 cr. Cross-listed&#13;
Imperial perbd and coventrates ontheR^ 3 hr surveys the&#13;
Hepub^ctl^S^ (191M949)&#13;
more traditional approach^thi^cours °&#13;
f ^&#13;
lsconsin&#13;
-&#13;
3 cr Besides the&#13;
portunity of a more personal H Provide students the oppreservation,in7efro™cmistd0h&#13;
ery&#13;
°&#13;
f their own P&#13;
ast and&#13;
Cons. Instr. Cltles and homes&#13;
. as well as the classroom.&#13;
America. 3 cr. S^enHhrecled^n6^ ^ Relations in Latin&#13;
slavery, abolition, and race relations^6 f&#13;
aI,ng ^ ^&#13;
e nature of&#13;
Cons, instru. s ,n contemporary Latin America.&#13;
Issues: W«menTubertuonS&#13;
rcrkIsemS&#13;
,h&#13;
Cont&#13;
,&#13;
emP°rar&gt;' Political&#13;
Hberatiom" ^ ™d CughTe K'To^&#13;
tensive feeding ?&#13;
uraaucratia Politics. 3 cr. Inorganization&#13;
theory, budgetary ^ na&#13;
' and contemporary&#13;
Prerequ: Pol. Sci. 26-350 o r cons iiS?' 3nd bureaucr&#13;
atic politics.&#13;
Sociology 27-490 Soec'-l T •&#13;
social-psychological asp^ts aTd'pro^ms G&#13;
f&#13;
eronto,&#13;
°g-v&#13;
-&#13;
SociaI and&#13;
continued on next h ° &#13;
libtng&#13;
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AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ARTHUR NICKLE&#13;
ANOTHER ONE OF THOSE DAYS&#13;
IN THE LIFE OF....&#13;
the question still remains.&#13;
Forward by Magnellum&#13;
"I've seen you lots of times. You referring to&#13;
good old Marilyn Morsel herself,&#13;
shit, Old M.M. man!! heavy&#13;
let me explain...."&#13;
Arthur Nickle wrote an autobiography, he never&#13;
once mentioned her, (Marilyn Morsel). Old M.M.&#13;
took it upon herselves to talk with the bastard, easy&#13;
going arthur nicle was in for the surprise of his&#13;
boring life.&#13;
The outlook upon these two human beings&#13;
meeting together is just utterly absurd in the&#13;
wondering eyes of humanity.&#13;
If there is anything left of them the world will&#13;
have a hell of a lot to talk or gossip about (as the&#13;
case may be), IN THIS CASE it is clearly noted as&#13;
gossip along with assholeular behaviour. Such&#13;
assininity is expected to occur with two assholes&#13;
meeting together.&#13;
IN Arthur's statement that these names have&#13;
been changed to protect the guilty; for what I have&#13;
absolutly NO idea, but unfortunatly everything still&#13;
stands together as one or two or three or more, (just&#13;
don't fall on the floor.) In case many of you do not&#13;
understand my review, here is an explanation. Here&#13;
is a section of Chapter 18.&#13;
"My stand on this issue is very much nil marilyn.&#13;
now I expect you to understand me and just tell&#13;
yourselves that this is how I am. I am always nil on&#13;
just about any controversy subject on earth. I am&#13;
not sorry for this fault or gain of mine, in fact I am&#13;
proud. I feel good about this being my ways, my&#13;
personality. I never would have thought that&#13;
someone, especially you, my dear, would be so&#13;
spiteful, full of anger, of pressing views. No, no, that&#13;
is not my view, please you have your views I have&#13;
mine. Why I don't find faults with your views even&#13;
though I do not agree with them or more factually I&#13;
don't understand them. If I were you I would have&#13;
never bothered with an old, ugly man such as&#13;
myselves."&#13;
"Arthur you are not old. For God's sake you're&#13;
only thirty-five. Shit man where's you're head at&#13;
anyhow?"&#13;
" ah Marilyn it is so good to hear a defense from&#13;
you in my behalf. Oh how shall I repay that outburst&#13;
of anger?"&#13;
"What Arthur, what? Speak up you old aging man&#13;
speak up!"&#13;
"I cannot lip read too well, what did you say?"&#13;
"Oh damn it man, turn up your hearing aid. You&#13;
just melt into the furniture you sit in or lie in&#13;
whichever is the case. Why only last nite as I was&#13;
spying on you through my bedroom window IN THE&#13;
NUDE you couldn't even see far enough to see my&#13;
beautiful body."&#13;
"Your body sweetheart?"&#13;
"Yes Arthur, my own body a woman's body. You&#13;
do prefer women's bodies don't you?"&#13;
"Why yes I...."&#13;
"Oh shit you bastard. You tell me what you have&#13;
written in your goddam autobiography and I'll tell&#13;
you that there was never one mention of me in it.&#13;
Nothing, just nothing whatsoever. I would even be&#13;
proud of you if you wrote pornography of me just&#13;
anything."&#13;
"Marilyn stop screaming stop, stop. And don't tell&#13;
me I have my aid up too high, it is on the lowest&#13;
level. Now sit down. Remember girl, respect your&#13;
elders. But I don't know, I'm not really that old,&#13;
twenty eight, that ain't too old. Ah, those old days,&#13;
Marilyn if you lived back then you would see clearly&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
QUINCY KILOMETER.&#13;
WHAT A MAN!!&#13;
ALL 95 POUNDS OF HIM ALL 2 INCHES OF&#13;
PRICK ALL THREE HAIRS ON HIS BONEY&#13;
CHEST HIS FADED BLUE EYES MIDDLEAGED&#13;
UGLY MAN EVERY WOMAN&#13;
PASSES HIM BY WITHOUT NOTICING HIS&#13;
HEROIC ACTS SUCH AS HIS RESCUE OF A&#13;
CAT IN A TREE THIS MORNING, IT&#13;
SCRATCHED THE HELL OUT OF HIM.&#13;
Such comments fill minds with wonder of this&#13;
man this great man. So noble so honest, hot as hot&#13;
milk can get.&#13;
Ha many writers have written about the extreme&#13;
opposite but not old Arthur Nickle who met Quincy&#13;
Kilometer in the 50's, of what century Arthur still&#13;
does not know. (That's the only problem of his&#13;
autobiography) in the meantime old Q.K. keeps on&#13;
trucking....&#13;
IT'S THE DOUBLE HEX, the sirens singing in&#13;
the nite, the emergency door blocked off by&#13;
proceeding obsenities. How can one person communicate&#13;
to the next?&#13;
"Each of us is on our own. We go our own personal&#13;
ways, someone interferes and one will get mad or&#13;
accept the new idea. Find your hopes keep them,&#13;
but don't tell anyone about them. I will try to please,&#13;
only my rationality is all wrong. Too many people&#13;
wish an end to bad things, but yet give them away to&#13;
be bad again. In my life I have seen lots of&#13;
characters and none have been happy to say the&#13;
least. No one would believe me if I told them I was&#13;
happy yesterday or am happy today, I simply will&#13;
be happy. Do not deny your own feelings, whatever&#13;
they are, we are false to ourselves and need to&#13;
learn. We all must learn, we all must learn."&#13;
SUCH A SPEECH OF QUINCY KILOMETER TO&#13;
THE&#13;
CRICKETS, BIRDS, MUSHROOMS AND SKY.&#13;
enjoyed thoroughly by all and by all are anxious&#13;
for&#13;
more words from the lips of Quincy Kilometer.&#13;
OUR FINDINGS SHOW 31 PERCENT USE SOAP&#13;
14 PERCENT DON'T 3 PERCENT UNANSWERED&#13;
85 percent of the votes were yes 50 percent no 13&#13;
percent don't know&#13;
16 million were born today 2 million die today&#13;
SOS SOS&#13;
use your heads use your heads&#13;
of what I mean. Now back in the nineteenth century&#13;
would have been a good time for you and I."&#13;
Arthur, honey, no time would have been good to&#13;
us. We should have been born a century apart!"&#13;
"We were born a century apart, you just don't&#13;
believe me. My whole life has been known of what I&#13;
have already done. Three hundred years from now I&#13;
shall be a psychology professor at Harvard and you&#13;
shall be an unknown student of mine, even though I&#13;
know you."&#13;
"My goodness, if you aren't senile at age twenty&#13;
three? I don't believe it. Let me out of here for God's&#13;
sake. Let me out!! You're cracked!! Madnym!"&#13;
"Marilyn, Marilyn sit down you are in hysterics.&#13;
Shut up! You old goat of a Morsel, shut up! Shut up&#13;
Shut up...."&#13;
WITH BOTH SCREAMING AT THE TOP&#13;
OF THEIR LUNGS&#13;
WE WILL SWITCH OVER TO NONE&#13;
OTHER THAN...OLD BASS LINE HIMSELVES&#13;
&#13;
New course offerings continued from preceding pageNew&#13;
SMI Courses&#13;
The School of Modern Industry is offering the following courses in its&#13;
three divisions.&#13;
Under the Division of Engineering Science, the Applied Science and&#13;
Technology there are three new courses.&#13;
51-308. I ntroduction to Materials Science. 3 cr. Individual study of&#13;
the basic structure and resulting properties, phase equilibria,&#13;
metastability, rate and growth processes in solids using videocassettes.&#13;
Prereq: Physics 201, cons, instr.&#13;
51-428. Introduction to Numerical Control. 3 cr. Individual study of&#13;
principles of numerical control systems, design consideration, manual&#13;
programming, computer-aided programming languages, economic&#13;
aspects and related laboratory experiments on numerically controlled&#13;
machine tools using video-cassettes. Prereq: AST 114 or cons, instr.&#13;
Business Management&#13;
The Division of Management Science (Business Management) is&#13;
offering the following courses:&#13;
61-100 Introduction to Business. 3 cr. An introduction to the role of&#13;
business in modern society; the functional areas of the business environment.&#13;
&#13;
61-202 Accounting Principles I. 3 cr. Introduction to accounting&#13;
emphasizing basic concepts and procedures used by service and&#13;
merchandising organizations in the accumulation and processing of&#13;
financial information with emphasis on presentation of financial&#13;
statements. Prereq: Second semester freshman or cons. intr.&#13;
61-203 Accounting Principles II. 3 cr. Continuation of 61-202.&#13;
Financial statement interpretation and uses of accounting data by&#13;
management for planning and control; accounting for debt and equity&#13;
issues of business corporations, compound interest applications and&#13;
introduction to concepts of cost. Prereq: Bus. Mgt. 202 or equivalent.&#13;
61-303 Accounting and Management Action. 3 cr. Managerial&#13;
aspects of accounting including analysis of financial statements and&#13;
investment analysis, cash flow and funds flow, manufacturing cost&#13;
flows and income. Prereq: Bus. Mgt. 61-200.&#13;
Computers in Business&#13;
61-319 Information Systems Analysis. 3 cr. System study techniques;&#13;
methods of improving and optimizing existing information systemsprocedure&#13;
flow analysis; management presentations; preparation of&#13;
functional flows and specifications for computer programs Prereo*&#13;
AST 220 o r 420 a nd cons, instr.&#13;
61-320 Applications Programming-Batch. 3 cr. COBOL and BAL&#13;
computer languages, file and record design; tape handling and&#13;
characteristics. Each student will write and test a series of computer&#13;
routines and programs. Prereq: AST 220 or 420, and cons. intr.&#13;
61-321 Ap plications Programming: On-line. 3 cr. On-line and communications&#13;
programming problems for industry: fallback, recovery,&#13;
audit trails, and fail-safe systems; each student will write a series of&#13;
on-line routines and programs; Basic Assembler Language (BAL)&#13;
Prereq: AST 220.&#13;
61-322 Designing Information Systems, 3 cr. Feasibility studies; MIS&#13;
vs EDP; error handling; exception reporting; estimating costs, effort,&#13;
and benefits. Each student will design a complete system using&#13;
manual and EDP tools. Prereq: AST 220.&#13;
Further information on new classes can be obtained from the&#13;
Division offices. Descriptions of new courses are due in the division&#13;
offices by Friday, Dec. 13. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
A personal experience&#13;
FLIGHT&#13;
It was dark and the air was getting cold as we&#13;
entered the terminal. With one hand I held a suitcase,&#13;
the other, a shoulder. Her coat was brown and&#13;
coarse and warm under my hand. As we walked&#13;
down the corridors it made a soft, scratching sound&#13;
rubbing against the side of my leg. We found her&#13;
harder feelmg a ,ltUe sick&gt; gripped her shoulder&#13;
A small woman in a grey uniform stood across the&#13;
desk from us and asked in an even smaller voice,&#13;
Smoking or non?" We moved past her, past a man&#13;
wearing another grey-colored uniform, walking and&#13;
knowing we had to say good-bye. She looked up at&#13;
me with sad eyes and said, "I don't want to go back&#13;
there. Her sadness reached around me, squeezing&#13;
me, and I couldn't breathe. I realized that every&#13;
parting in every movie I had ever seen was just a&#13;
hopeless, dead imitation. "I'll miss you." As I spoke&#13;
those words I thought again of the movies, of all the&#13;
times I had heard that line and I was afraid that it&#13;
wouldn t mean anything, that all its meaning was&#13;
used up But then I was kissing her and I forgot to be&#13;
atraid. And then she was gone, a part of the line&#13;
moving away from me. I watched her disappear&#13;
into the tunnel leading to the airplane.&#13;
I looked around me. There were several groups of&#13;
small white chairs arranged in rows. Most of them&#13;
were facing the huge observation window that&#13;
looked out towards the plane. As I turned and&#13;
walked towards the window a feeling of loss and of&#13;
emptiness rushed up my body and my eyes began to&#13;
sting^l reached the window and leaned against it I&#13;
felt the cold even through my coat.&#13;
It seemed like she had been here such a long time&#13;
It had only been a few days but it still seemed like&#13;
such a long time. I couldn't remember what it was&#13;
like for her not to be here. It was autumn. She had&#13;
come in the autumn because we both loved that time&#13;
of year better than any other. The sky is so big and&#13;
the trees are beautiful. But the frost came before&#13;
she did. It came early and hard and I was afraid&#13;
that the leaves would all have fallen before she&#13;
arrived. A few had waited, however, and as I leaned&#13;
against the window I held in my mind an image of us&#13;
walking down a path in a woods that was brown and&#13;
yellow and a little red and so, so silent that the&#13;
crunching of the leaves under our feet hurt my ears&#13;
Overhead the sky rolled and threatened and cursed&#13;
under its breath. The air was sharp and thick, full of&#13;
waiting for something to happen. It was so silent&#13;
that we could hear and feel the waiting and the&#13;
energy and as we walked through it we were almost&#13;
a part of it, of the waiting and the silence of the&#13;
forest and the sky full of power.&#13;
I drew back from the window and stared at the&#13;
plane. It was very close and took up almost the&#13;
entire window. The darkness made it difficult to see&#13;
and the only details that I could make out were the&#13;
two large capital A's on its tail. Next to the plane I&#13;
could see the outside of the tunnel down which she&#13;
had walked. It was sort of an enclosed gangway that&#13;
went straight out from the terminal and then, as it&#13;
drew near the plane, bent at a right angle and was&#13;
connected towards the front, near the nose. Just&#13;
after the bend there was a small window through&#13;
which I could see into the gangway. A bright yellow&#13;
light bulb briefly illumined each of the passengers&#13;
as they passed underneath it in single file. I fixed&#13;
my attention on that window. A half dozen people&#13;
went by before I saw her. It was difficult to see and I&#13;
wouldn't have known it was her if I hadn't&#13;
recognized the coat. The line hesitated and she&#13;
stood for a moment underneath the yellow light&#13;
bulb. I wanted her to look but she didn't. She just&#13;
stood there, framed by the window in that deathly,&#13;
unnatural light, like a yellowing, lifeless snapshot.&#13;
The line moved again and someone in a white hat&#13;
took her place under the light.&#13;
There was nothing more to see. I turned and&#13;
walked away from the window. I found a chair&#13;
behind the desk that was a little bit off by itself and I&#13;
sat down. It was one of those little white chairs&#13;
arranged in rows and facing the window. I was&#13;
sitting so that my body was flat except for my head&#13;
which was bent forward to see out the window.&#13;
Behind me I could still hear the small voice asking,&#13;
"Smoking or non?"&#13;
A man in a red coat stepped up to the window,&#13;
blocking my view. He seemed excited, almost&#13;
nervous, and kept shifting his weight from one leg to&#13;
the other. There was something familiar about him.&#13;
The way his coat was bunched in the back, and those&#13;
brown buttons. Of course, his coat and mine were&#13;
identical. He turned to the man next to him and&#13;
asked him something, pointing to his watch. The&#13;
man's reply seemed to reassure him, and he left his&#13;
spot at the window and began to walk across the&#13;
room. I followed him with my eyes. As I looked at&#13;
his coat I thought that it was perhaps a bit less red&#13;
and slightly more worn than mine. And I didn't like&#13;
his pants. They were a weak grayish-brown and&#13;
didn't go at all with the coat. I looked up in time to&#13;
see him scrutinizing me closely. He stopped in front&#13;
of a vacant seat next to a thin, blonde-haired girl in&#13;
a yellow nylon jacket. He bent over her with this big&#13;
smile on his face and said something which I&#13;
couldn't quite make out and she laughed and bit his&#13;
arm. I decided that I didn't like his smile, either.&#13;
Just then the engines started up again and began to&#13;
resonate in my stomach. He began to talk to her in&#13;
earnest and I couldn't hear anything anymore&#13;
because of the engine noise. I saw him gesture&#13;
towards his coat and then towards me and she&#13;
turned around and gave me a big, wide-eyed stare.&#13;
Her face reminded me of a question mark. I decided&#13;
to answer. I sat up a little and called out over the&#13;
engine noise, "Yeah, they're the same." They&#13;
smiled an embarrassed little smile, as if I had&#13;
spoken out of turn, and then they looked at each&#13;
and laughed and smiled again. He turned to me and&#13;
said something, pointing at his coat. But I couldn't&#13;
hear because of the crescendoing engines and I&#13;
turned away just in time to see the plane pull away.&#13;
My eyes began to sting again and I realized that&#13;
they weren't the same. They weren't the same at&#13;
all.&#13;
- Mike Gorman&#13;
A woman to belt&#13;
feeling as a woman&#13;
her body changing&#13;
monthly&#13;
She feels the warm blood&#13;
soothing and flowing from&#13;
between her tender&#13;
thighs&#13;
Thoughts of a woman, maybe&#13;
feeling a loss of&#13;
child, instead of&#13;
blood&#13;
-Magnellum&#13;
Open: 6 a.m. Mon. thru Thurs.&#13;
8a.m. Sun.&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
30th Ave. &amp; Roosevelt Rd.&#13;
Cold hard glass encircles me,&#13;
cuts me off from people&#13;
who walk past- unseeing,&#13;
unhearing,&#13;
uncaring,&#13;
wrapped in their shallowness&#13;
they move about-bumping into&#13;
each other only to&#13;
recoil in fear of touching&#13;
someone.&#13;
I reached out in fear of not touching&#13;
someone.&#13;
And found&#13;
a Hand that closed about&#13;
mine&#13;
and a voice that said&#13;
"dare to trust"&#13;
-Carol Nordstrom&#13;
Today 1974&#13;
Money is equal to respect&#13;
Lies are valid&#13;
Truth is a legal tender&#13;
Break-ins and burglary is praised&#13;
And honored in all states&#13;
Shoplifting a medium of exhange&#13;
Stealing means to take the Fifth&#13;
Sixth, Seventh, Amendments&#13;
A dollar bill is white&#13;
Grass is green&#13;
Inflation is a gift&#13;
Kickbacks are common business transactions&#13;
Checks are worthless to the poor&#13;
Embezzlements are safes&#13;
Fraud is a Racist Option&#13;
Social Security is having the best part&#13;
Of a homemade apple pie "The Crust"&#13;
Real Estates biggest owner "God"&#13;
Crime is a good judge, and a good lawyer&#13;
Credit is a Jim Crow Slavery Device&#13;
The Stock Market can handle the hay&#13;
Jews can save the dollar&#13;
Insurance premiums can take Healthy Examinations&#13;
-Howard Hill&#13;
KM.**».Oi* Cvi* Si* Kim Kim ^-m ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
Politics and a Flag&#13;
Masterpiece I&#13;
Excuse Me,&#13;
For my dumbness and my intelligence:&#13;
But I didn't know God&#13;
Flew in a Red, White, Blue&#13;
Silk Cloth waving high on a pole&#13;
I though he was in the&#13;
Hearts of man&#13;
Seeking Unity with His Fellow&#13;
Brother&#13;
Under the Banner of God&#13;
Which has No Color&#13;
OH! I didn't know a honorable&#13;
Form of Elite Men could make a&#13;
Law&#13;
Like Women baking a home made&#13;
Cake&#13;
To force a man into an Army&#13;
To Kill another Man&#13;
And that Same Form of Honorable&#13;
Elite Men profit Money, from that&#13;
Life which was turn to Death&#13;
Excuse me,&#13;
Is all this under a Flag and&#13;
Honorable Form Elite Men, who call&#13;
This Politics, Sorry I didn't Know&#13;
-Howard Hill&#13;
Real Estates&#13;
Modern Building ten thousand feet high&#13;
Small roaches crawl low&#13;
Elevators lodge up&#13;
VIP Executives sit in coference&#13;
Good product on the market&#13;
Ghetto's still in bloom&#13;
Let's buy a share&#13;
Like Flies over&#13;
Shit&#13;
-Howard Hill&#13;
OtNO'S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, W isconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOST ACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
Just be heaT'alom?Kor"sTeeDine^ m&lt;&#13;
th° beautiful days? sha11 1&#13;
no wine to drink no Comfort n t'J "° °&#13;
ne t0 enjoy my company&#13;
being. What a shame my sober&#13;
today? Am I too mimh? u atraid&#13;
- Do they not wish to see me&#13;
smoke again today, tomorrow ^e^fold H™,many cigarettes shall I&#13;
spirit? tomorrow toniPht t ' ,&#13;
y sterday Wh&#13;
en will I feel free in my&#13;
Today I got up. I started r&#13;
S &gt;&#13;
eep? When do I become free in spirit?&#13;
like it. Then half a n hour ft&#13;
e n&lt;&#13;
j Anais Nin&#13;
's Novel of the Future I&#13;
hamburger, beanssomenoJ°^ 1 got tired of reading I ate a&#13;
called amy and CliCd S r'.mi,k&#13;
' StUdied my music theory,&#13;
guitar and sang. Went for a mt? played my trombone, then played&#13;
think read MS turned on 'me ,.^ G°&#13;
l 3 Candy bar(s) wrote 1&#13;
hamburger because couldn't a ums 8&#13;
0t high on jazz ate another&#13;
listening to Lampoon Radio it l'T Read more MS whi,e half&#13;
writing again. stunk. Turned on Leonard Cohen and&#13;
These are iust fartc m&#13;
Many things. Got my letted radium" w°k me far away from hear&#13;
"&#13;
of things said in my imarinat- ,,&#13;
m to transportation dept. Lots&#13;
T.V. for three minutes YeS 1 danced t0&#13;
° today. Watched&#13;
-by Magnellum &#13;
RANGER wishes everyone&#13;
a happy holiday&#13;
•for Everyone&#13;
ov\ your List....&#13;
Tourquise jewelry and other associated Jewelry.&#13;
pj^ Blouses, Sweaters, Handbags and Wallets, j&#13;
| j Orange Door&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
GC&amp;ta&#13;
345 MAIN ST.&#13;
*Uttitpni 9 1&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
Rock Jazz Pop Folk&#13;
PI oCCIPQ 1&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
Place to buy records&#13;
(Part II)&#13;
A Matter of Gray&#13;
A wodden box,&#13;
over-full,&#13;
begins to break.&#13;
Is it the content&#13;
that strains&#13;
at the seams and&#13;
splits them wide?&#13;
Is it the weakness&#13;
of the structure,&#13;
that it cannot hold&#13;
what is within?&#13;
Is it the design&#13;
of the builder,&#13;
faulty to start and&#13;
insufficient for the need?&#13;
Tout le monde, tout le monde.&#13;
-Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Of a Martian&#13;
(Parti)&#13;
Taling&#13;
with him,&#13;
with me,&#13;
with who?&#13;
Of rocks, and hills, the sun,&#13;
laughter, life, of Love?&#13;
Did I know you?&#13;
Did I want to know you?&#13;
You wanted to learn of me;&#13;
Pulling,&#13;
pushing,&#13;
prying&#13;
until I flowed to you entirelyBut&#13;
entirely too late;&#13;
He had gathered you&#13;
to him—&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
I'm still hanging,&#13;
groping,&#13;
grasping&#13;
to the piecesWill&#13;
you pull the pieces together,&#13;
rebuild the puzzle?&#13;
If you do, please Hurry~&#13;
They're slipping&#13;
away—&#13;
-Michael Nepper&#13;
The Elite Man&#13;
It's twisted or something, the whole&#13;
What I see, you kn&#13;
Torsion&#13;
Maybe it's the dilation that's making the shadows.&#13;
Maybe they aren't really looking&#13;
don't say that&#13;
Maybe they aren't really whispering&#13;
stop thinking that&#13;
It will go away&#13;
It always has&#13;
Nine or ten hours?&#13;
(why did he start again? (I-he thought he quit&#13;
Never We're-it's inside now&#13;
who said that? *&#13;
A Woman is Man&#13;
She's backbone of his vertabre&#13;
Out of Man Came Woman&#13;
Man has no man&#13;
Beckon cause of his fellow man&#13;
The Elite Class of Man (Well Educated)&#13;
Elite Man has given Woman&#13;
That which God gave to Man Period&#13;
Dominion to be Head&#13;
In this phrase Destiny&#13;
Not the Weaker Vessel&#13;
There's no one in my head no one in my&#13;
must believe, must not think bad things.&#13;
Must not say "must not think bad things"&#13;
must not think about not thinking about&#13;
But I&#13;
it's only a trip. I'm having fun.&#13;
-billy s. IRacine &amp; 'KeKO&amp;fa't *?utl Service So-xd4foxe4&#13;
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It (love) came about so soon,&#13;
But does It matter?&#13;
Time is so uncertain of it's path&#13;
Flying,&#13;
Floating,&#13;
flounderingDoes&#13;
it, did it, will it&#13;
matter&#13;
in the end— -Michael Nepper&#13;
photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
-Howard Hill &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
Ode to a Friend&#13;
I'm back again,&#13;
I g uess it's been a long time.&#13;
Do you know who I am?&#13;
I've changed you know.&#13;
Do you remember the last time&#13;
I came?&#13;
Rember how lonely I was,&#13;
how lost I felt?&#13;
Well, I'm not lost or lonely&#13;
anymore,&#13;
But it's good to know old friends&#13;
so I came to say hello&#13;
and probably goodbye&#13;
for a while&#13;
Because I've found something to&#13;
cling to--&#13;
But don't Cry,&#13;
I'll be back somedaySomeday&#13;
&#13;
when I've lost myself again&#13;
and need you to find&#13;
me-&#13;
-Michael Nepper&#13;
the theme has not spent all the images&#13;
the song requires further, future dances&#13;
the feelings of a heart&#13;
to some other, symbol of deceit&#13;
tell me your dreams i'll tell you mine&#13;
fond words&#13;
parting with thoughts of reunion&#13;
if there is love once, real love&#13;
it stays forever&#13;
blood in the body, fevers in the soul&#13;
-amy 1974&#13;
I&#13;
michael say farewell to the fears that hold you \&#13;
the sons and daughters&#13;
of new images gather, stars on your brow&#13;
rings for your fingers&#13;
i am gone in the darkness lost in the soft shades of your eyes&#13;
coming close and not capable to touch at all&#13;
soon the sins will singe the soul&#13;
and render us silent,&#13;
farther, farther than your last dream has fled&#13;
remember the first overture of my heart&#13;
a beat,&#13;
fit into dark&#13;
rythms of the centuries&#13;
describe a kiss, a bird that entered your throat&#13;
and died, perfectly, near your heart&#13;
III&#13;
come far out on the rim of heaven&#13;
and i will tell you, how your name began&#13;
the music of the spheres....the figment of a lover's longing&#13;
-amy nov. 1974&#13;
photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
My dear Icon:&#13;
Here is a song that goes exactly like this:&#13;
I boils my soks in pure grain sugar&#13;
I likes the sweetness on my feet.&#13;
I casts my undies in the water&#13;
To add some flavor to my seat.&#13;
I likes to drive my power rider,&#13;
Impress the chickies in the street.&#13;
I use my gas to light their fire,&#13;
My air condish'ner cools their heat.&#13;
I drinks my beer from painted poptops,&#13;
Big juicy steaks is what I eat.&#13;
I got no use fer slimey algae&#13;
Don't want no soybeens in my meat.&#13;
I sees this world's in lots of trouble,&#13;
Some people just can't make ends meet.&#13;
I think that someone should do something,&#13;
God knows I'd try, but's time to eat.&#13;
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a musical fairy tale for parents and their children based on&#13;
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by JAMES THURBER&#13;
Two P erformances O nly!&#13;
Friday e vening, D ecember 1 3 at 7 :30&#13;
Saturday m orning, D ecember 1 4 a t 1 0:00&#13;
Communication A rts T heater&#13;
The entire entertainment lasts only one hour!&#13;
(Parents can make plans for later in the evening and&#13;
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time for lunch on Saturday.)&#13;
Be Prompt!&#13;
Performances will start on time!&#13;
All s eats 5 0°&#13;
Tickets at the Door&#13;
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A great selection of albums,&#13;
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Leather Goods —&#13;
Quality leather goods from&#13;
belts and purses to visors&#13;
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Jewelry —&#13;
We offer a unique assortment&#13;
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Pyramid Products —&#13;
Developed by Dr. G. Patrick Flanagan to establish&#13;
a new source of biocosmic energy which:&#13;
— he lps milk keep fresh without refrigeration.&#13;
— makes plants grow faster and healthier. '&#13;
— ripens fruit. '&#13;
— mellows tobacco.&#13;
— makes cheap wine taste like aged wine.&#13;
— ta kes the bitterness out of coffee.&#13;
— enhances the flavor of meat.&#13;
— pr eserves cut flowers. .&#13;
— improves a persons sex life. &#13;
10THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
Campus event. N&lt;) jncrease&#13;
in text prices&#13;
Wednesday, December 11: PAB presents a big end-of-theyear show in&#13;
the Whiteskellar from 12-3 p .m. Dave Duffeck will be featured on&#13;
guitar from 12-1 p.m. and 2-3 p.m. and Bob Bohm, a semi-professional&#13;
magician from Racine will perform from 1-2 p.m. Admission is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
People For a Non-Sexist Society will meet at 12:30 in LLC D174&#13;
(lounge next to Info, kiosk).&#13;
Student music recital, beginning at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater, is free and open to the public.&#13;
Film, "Scarecrow," sponsored by PAB, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm. Arts Theater. The film stars A1 Pac ino and Gene Hackman.&#13;
Admission is $1; UW-P I.D. is required.&#13;
Thursday, December 12: Third World meeting, 12:30-1:30 p.m. in LLC&#13;
D174 (lounge next to Info, kiosk). Election of officers for second&#13;
semester, news that concerns all minorities, especially blacks: high&#13;
percentage of minorities on academic probation; Faculty Senate vote&#13;
on academic drop policy on Dec. 17 - do you know how it will affect&#13;
you? Third World office hours are 11 a.m.-l p.m. Monday through&#13;
Friday, third floor library. Stop for a rap.&#13;
Friday, December 13: Parkside Jazz Ensemble II in concert at the&#13;
Student Activities building from 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Play, "The Thirteen Clocks," begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. All tickets are 50 cents and will be sold at the door.&#13;
Saturday, December 14: Play. "The Thirteen Clocks," begins at 10&#13;
a.m. in the Comm. Arts Theater. All tickets 50 cents and sold at the&#13;
door.&#13;
Campus Ministers Announce: all liturgies beginning Dec. 12-15 will&#13;
be held at the Neuman Center (corner of H wy. SE and JR), and will&#13;
begin at 12:15.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Saturday, December 21: Dance! PAB presents the "Christmas&#13;
Dance," 9:30-1 a.m., with Winfield Road (songs by Emerson, Lake &amp;&#13;
Palmer, Yes, Jethro Tull, Beatles). Admission is $1.25 for Parkside&#13;
students and $1.50 for guests. Student and state I.D.'s required.&#13;
Sigma Pi, a social fraternity, is having a semi-formal dance this&#13;
Friday,.Dec. 13. It is being held at Maplecrest Country Club and will&#13;
feature music by McHenry. A cocktail hour will be held from 6:30 p.m.&#13;
to 7:30 p.m. followed by a steak dinner. There will be dancing until 2&#13;
a.m. Tickets are available at the Information kiosk for twenty dollars&#13;
per couple.&#13;
'tis the&#13;
reason&#13;
3&#13;
a&#13;
by J.D. Garoutte&#13;
According to Ted Wood,&#13;
manager of the Parkside&#13;
University Bookstore, there will&#13;
be no general increase in the&#13;
price of textbooks for the upcoming&#13;
semester.&#13;
This does not mean that all&#13;
textbooks will be the same price&#13;
as in the past. Since some of those&#13;
prices did not increase in July,&#13;
they may be raised now.&#13;
"Our large increase in prices&#13;
came last semester, ranging&#13;
from 25 cents to 75 cents per&#13;
book," Wood said.&#13;
The increase did not depend on&#13;
textbooks being soft cover or&#13;
hard cover, but more on the&#13;
various publishers of the textbooks.&#13;
&#13;
Asked if students would receive&#13;
a larger refund when selling&#13;
books back to the store, Wood&#13;
replied, "The price paid students&#13;
for used books depends on what&#13;
the price of the book was when&#13;
bought, not the current price."&#13;
There might be a price increase&#13;
in new-title books and in&#13;
books that were not increased in&#13;
September.&#13;
Discussing increases in other&#13;
items on sale in the Bookstore,&#13;
Wood said, "Increases are made&#13;
when we reorder such items. An&#13;
example is Bic has raised the&#13;
price on their pens but because of&#13;
the stock we had at that time we&#13;
did not raise prices, but will do so&#13;
when we reorder."&#13;
Bic pens will increase from the&#13;
3 to be&#13;
s&#13;
2&#13;
A pre-paid&#13;
Christmas is&#13;
a reason to be&#13;
jolly -&#13;
A First National Christmas Club&#13;
Savings Account is a way&#13;
to get a pre-paid Christmas.&#13;
Open yours soon!&#13;
1 First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
5} Member 0 I Federal Reserve System • Member Federal Deoosit Insurance Corp&#13;
Ted Wood, Manager of the Bookstore&#13;
present price of 19 cents to 25&#13;
cents sometime in the near&#13;
future. Other items that may see&#13;
an increase in price are&#13;
stationery, greeting cards and Tshirts.&#13;
&#13;
Because the Bookstore is a&#13;
profit-making business, there is a&#13;
I&#13;
The&#13;
Great Old Lunch&#13;
Is Back&#13;
11:00-4:00 MONDAY-FRIDAY* NO SUBSTITUTES • POTATO EXTRA&#13;
(*1.19 for a chopped steak, s alad &amp; toast!)&#13;
(*1.19 for a ranch steak, s alad &amp; toast!)&#13;
Tuesday Night&#13;
Is Bonanza&#13;
Special Night.&#13;
(•1.49 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
(•1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!&#13;
• Feed a child in America for 49$.&#13;
We've got just the right amount of food to make a kid smile — a hamburger,&#13;
an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price — 49c — to make you smile.&#13;
markup of about 20 percent on all&#13;
items. After paying shipping&#13;
costs, it equals out to I8V2 percent.&#13;
Unlike other bookstores&#13;
where the cost of shipping is&#13;
passed on to the cosumer, this&#13;
store absorbs that cost, according&#13;
to Wood.&#13;
The family of the late Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie wishes to thank the&#13;
students of Parkside for the&#13;
bouquet of red roses that was sent&#13;
in their name at the time of the&#13;
late Chancellor's death. "There&#13;
is no way," wrote Harriet, Kay,&#13;
Laura and Gordon Wyllie, "as&#13;
much as we wish we could, that&#13;
we can personally thank&#13;
everyone."&#13;
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Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
probation &amp; drop finalized&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
A probation and drop policy&#13;
was approved by the Academic&#13;
policies Committee for Faculty&#13;
Senate consideration in&#13;
December&#13;
The policy is a simplified&#13;
version of the Nov. 5 draft submitted&#13;
by the Academic Policies&#13;
subcommittee. John Zarling,&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
Engineering Science, revised the&#13;
original draft.&#13;
Evaluation of students after&#13;
completion of 15-credit blocks, in&#13;
the original draft, was changed to&#13;
evaluation of students after each&#13;
semester regardless of the&#13;
number of credits attempted.&#13;
Eugene Norwood, Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society,&#13;
said there would be more clerical&#13;
and administrative work created&#13;
by requiring a block GPA (grade&#13;
point average) in addition to&#13;
cumulative and semester GPA's&#13;
(which have to be done regardless).&#13;
Zarling's proposal of&#13;
evaluating students every&#13;
semester eliminates that work&#13;
load and is a real simplification,&#13;
he said.&#13;
Students will initially be&#13;
evaluated after completing 12&#13;
credits instead of 15, as in the&#13;
original draft.&#13;
Academic Warnings will be&#13;
given regardless of students'&#13;
cumulative GPA when any&#13;
semester GPA falls between 1.5&#13;
and 2.0. This will remind them of&#13;
the need for maintaining the 2.0&#13;
or higher GPA necessary for&#13;
eventual graduation.&#13;
The committee also revised the&#13;
probation and drop cut-off points&#13;
in the approved policy.&#13;
A student who has attempted&#13;
up to 29 credits will be placed on&#13;
Academic Probation if his or her&#13;
cumulative GPA is below a 1.8.&#13;
Students who do not attain a 2 0&#13;
between 30-120 credits attempted&#13;
will be placed on Academic&#13;
Probation.&#13;
A student who has completed 12&#13;
credit hours or more and whose&#13;
GPA drops below the values&#13;
indicated in the table under&#13;
Academic Drop will be dropped&#13;
from the University for' one&#13;
semester.&#13;
The cut-off points in the&#13;
Academic Drop table are 0.8&#13;
cumulative GPA for 0-29 credits&#13;
attempted, 1.6 cumulative GPA .&#13;
for 30-59 credits attempted, 1.8&#13;
cumulative GPA for 60-89 credits&#13;
attempted and 1.9 cumulative&#13;
GPA for 90-120 credits attempted.&#13;
However, students on&#13;
probation who maintain a&#13;
semester GPA of 2.0 or better will&#13;
not be dropped. They will be&#13;
removed from probation when&#13;
their cumulative GPA is 2.0 or&#13;
better.&#13;
The policy also states that&#13;
students on probation must&#13;
report to the Office of Counseling&#13;
within six weeks of the subsequent&#13;
semester. Failure to do&#13;
so will endanger academic appeals&#13;
made by a student.&#13;
Students who are dropped for&#13;
one semester may be readmitted&#13;
after that time by requesting a&#13;
permit to register from an&#13;
academic dean.&#13;
The student is then placed on&#13;
Final Academic Probation and&#13;
will be dropped from the&#13;
university for one year if a 2.0&#13;
semester GPA is not maintained&#13;
every subsequent semester.&#13;
The student who is dropped for&#13;
one year may request readmission&#13;
after that time from the&#13;
appropriate committee within&#13;
CSS or SMI by making a written&#13;
application. This must include&#13;
evidence that previous academic&#13;
problems have been recently&#13;
discussed with the Office of&#13;
Counseling or other Academic&#13;
advisor. The same evidence must&#13;
be presented in an appeal case.&#13;
The approved policy also&#13;
maintains the original draft's&#13;
three-level appeal system. First,&#13;
the request is made to the&#13;
Associate Dean of CSS or the&#13;
designated official of SMI. If the&#13;
student is rejected, the appeal&#13;
may be made to the appropriate&#13;
faculty committee established in&#13;
CSS or SMI. The last appeal is&#13;
made to the appropriate Dean,&#13;
whose decision is final. Appeals&#13;
may be made in person.&#13;
The committee voted to send&#13;
the proposal to the Faculty&#13;
Senate with recommendations&#13;
for its acceptance.&#13;
27 days left til&#13;
O«N&#13;
• AM&#13;
T AM&#13;
DAILY&#13;
Only 27 more planning days&#13;
until Registration. Instead of&#13;
sitting home wreathed in&#13;
timetables, catalogues, previous&#13;
grade reports and little colored&#13;
cards with holes all over them,&#13;
why not do your second semester&#13;
class scheduling the easy way?&#13;
Take a few minutes to let an&#13;
advisor explain - in conversational&#13;
English - everything&#13;
you need to know about how to&#13;
graduate. Special this week - all&#13;
the info you need and want is&#13;
available free at the advising&#13;
outpost on the LLC Concourse&#13;
north of the Bookstore, or from&#13;
faculty members by appointment.&#13;
Outpost hours are 9&#13;
a.m.-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. WedClassified&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE: Twin Bed Complete (wicker&#13;
headboard, recently bought); Oak Library&#13;
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FOR SALE: refrigerator, good condition,&#13;
$35. Typewriter with undersized keyboard&#13;
for small hand, $25. Desk, $5. Call Collen or&#13;
John, 637 7002.&#13;
nesday and Thursday, and&#13;
Friday 9-4. Or, call Tallent Hall&#13;
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anytime. Give yourself a&#13;
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now and graduate later.&#13;
OPEN&#13;
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SATURDAY, D ECEMBER 21st.&#13;
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HAPPY HOLIDAYS! &#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
A need for awareness&#13;
'The gift of womanhood'&#13;
by Nathan Jones&#13;
With the growing self-awareness of w omen to the&#13;
gift of their womanhood, the emergence of women's&#13;
caucuses have become familiar, even on the UW-P&#13;
campus.&#13;
On Thursday, Nov. 7, twelve women and three&#13;
male sympathizers met to set the tone of a newlyforming&#13;
student organization known as "People for&#13;
a Non-Sexist Society."&#13;
During this organizational meeting, men and&#13;
women were gathered together who are actively&#13;
contributing to the eradication of sexism in&#13;
American male-dominated society and are eager to&#13;
involve more Parkside women and men in this&#13;
common effort.&#13;
In dialogue, it was discovered that female&#13;
students at Parkside experience "a sense of&#13;
estrangement from everything" and are "fed-up"&#13;
with the struggles they must endure in order to be&#13;
totally themselves: women and free. "We have to&#13;
act as a cohesive unit for what we feel we deserve as&#13;
women, with men backing us up," said one member.&#13;
&#13;
Some of the most frequently voiced goals of the&#13;
People for a Non-Sexist Society were: a strong&#13;
desire to raise the consciousness of wo men to their&#13;
plight as one of America's oppressed and underrated&#13;
groups, to promote career motivation, and&#13;
to strive to change sexist role perceptions that both&#13;
men and women maintain.&#13;
Janet Scott, a co-chairperson of the burgeoning&#13;
organization, pointed out the need to increase the&#13;
awareness of the instructors at Parkside of the false&#13;
and stifling feminine stereotypes they are perpetuating&#13;
by their lack of consciousness. She also&#13;
said that "the counselling efforts directed toward&#13;
the students are so academically oriented, whereas,&#13;
our organization plans to provide counselling to&#13;
women on campus that will be much more personal&#13;
in orientation."&#13;
"We have to act as a cohesive unit for what we&#13;
feel we deserve as women, with men backing us&#13;
up."&#13;
As the group is in contact with local National&#13;
Organization of Women (NOW) chapters, said&#13;
freshman Lisa Iwon, the student body and faculty&#13;
can expect to find these goals realized with the help&#13;
of a systematic exposure of sexism in textbooks,&#13;
dramatic skits, and a variety of forthcoming services&#13;
to the various groups of women on cpmpus&#13;
(the working wife and mother, the older woman, the&#13;
freshman).&#13;
Since the last meeting, a consciousness-raising&#13;
session was held which involved an even number of&#13;
women and men. They discussed sexuality, growing&#13;
up from adolescence, fears. Participants reportedly&#13;
People for a Non Sexist Society&#13;
left with a "penetrating sense of s atisfaction" and&#13;
members hope that this sort of exchange will occur&#13;
again.&#13;
Scott stated that, at this time, there are plans to&#13;
co-sponsor a lecture by the president of Radcliffe&#13;
College, Matina Horner, with the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
"The counselling efforts directed toward the&#13;
students are so academically oriented, whereas,&#13;
our organization plans to provide counselling to&#13;
women on campus that will be much more personal&#13;
in orientation."&#13;
Feminist consciousness is nothing new on the&#13;
Parkside campus, although the Women's Caucus of&#13;
previous years has broadened to include male&#13;
participation. The presence of such feminist&#13;
organizers as Sara Sheehan, visiting professor of&#13;
political science from the University of California at&#13;
Riverside, as well as Teresa Peck, assistant&#13;
professor of ed ucation who is presently teaching a&#13;
successful and exciting course at Parkside on "An&#13;
Analysis of Sexism in Education," are providing&#13;
necessary direction for the group.&#13;
Sheehan was a primary force behind the creation&#13;
of a vital feminist movement on the UC-Riverside&#13;
campus (comparable in size to Parkside) which&#13;
attempted to respond to the women's needs for&#13;
counselling, dialogue with professional and successful&#13;
women in the community, practical skills,&#13;
and educational and career planning. Starting from&#13;
a small group of determined and pioneering women,&#13;
they were able to become a stimulating and effective&#13;
presence on the UC campus.&#13;
Being a force that seeks change now, says&#13;
Sheehan, "feminism will, by its very nature,&#13;
alienate some people because it is most basically a&#13;
power struggle. But this isn't our motive (to&#13;
alienate), but change stands as a definite focus of&#13;
our collective attention."&#13;
Illustrating the group's desire to affect changes&#13;
on campus, People For a Non-Sexist Society&#13;
members confronted the Parkside Bookstore about&#13;
the large number of s exist magazines (Penthouse,&#13;
Playgirl, Qui, to name a few) displayed on the&#13;
"Feminism will by its very nature alienate some&#13;
people because it is most basically a power&#13;
struggle. But this isn't our motive (to alienate)."&#13;
shelves for sale. Said Scott, "We were very&#13;
disappointed with the response we received which,&#13;
in effect, told us that the bulk of the Bookstore's&#13;
profit comes from such magazines. However, we&#13;
hadn't asked that they (the magazines) be immediately&#13;
cleared, but simply reduced in number."&#13;
During registration for the second semester, a&#13;
table will be provided where representatives of&#13;
People for a Non-Sexist Society will be available to&#13;
respond to inquiries from any interested person.&#13;
They hope to make themselves as accessible as&#13;
possible to the entire student body and hope that&#13;
students will make a point of coming to them.&#13;
Free checking...Free checks *&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR COINVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
Monday-Thursday....... 7:00-5:30&#13;
OPEN: Friday 7:00-8:00&#13;
Saturday 8:00-Noon&#13;
At the intersection of Highways 11 and 31&#13;
Mritm "Bank - *Mt "Pleasant&#13;
v*—»• Sinn Stop in or rail lor :ir in or call for details.&#13;
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MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION&#13;
Students commence&#13;
on Dec. 22&#13;
Mid-year commencement&#13;
exercises will be held at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 22, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. About&#13;
140 students are candidates. The&#13;
ceremony is open to the public.&#13;
Degree candidates are asked to&#13;
report to their assigned rooms in&#13;
the Communication Arts Building&#13;
by 1:15 p.m. to begin forming the&#13;
academic procession.&#13;
Parking will be in the new ArtsAthletics&#13;
Lot just west of t&#13;
Theater. No shuttle busses w&#13;
run from the Tallent Lots.&#13;
Caps and gowns ai&#13;
graduation announcements a&#13;
still available in the Book Stan&#13;
The Parkside Alum&#13;
Association will host a receptii&#13;
for the degree candidates ai&#13;
their guests in Main Place ir&#13;
mediately after the ceremony&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
OCD&#13;
3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member FD.I.C, &#13;
New tenure&#13;
rules 'conflict'&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The Tenure and Promotion&#13;
policies Committee has been&#13;
working on a new set of tenure&#13;
and promotion rules for approximately&#13;
ten months. At the&#13;
last meeting, where they&#13;
finalized their version of the&#13;
rules, it was brought out by David&#13;
Beach, assistant professor of&#13;
psychology, and John Zarling,&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
Engineering Science, that the&#13;
rules were in conflict with the&#13;
broad gu idelines for tenure and&#13;
promotion which were being&#13;
developed by the Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Before going to the Faculty&#13;
Senate, where they were to be&#13;
voted on, Parkside's proposed&#13;
rules were being held by the&#13;
University Committee until the&#13;
Regents finalize the broad&#13;
guidelines, said Beach.&#13;
When asked how it happened&#13;
that Parkside's proposed rules&#13;
came in conflict with the broad&#13;
guidelines, Beach said that close&#13;
attention was not being payed to&#13;
progression of the broad&#13;
guidelines.&#13;
According to Beach, there are&#13;
two main points on which&#13;
Parkside's proposed rules and&#13;
the broad guidelines are in&#13;
conflict.&#13;
The broad guidelines state,&#13;
said Beach, that if a person wants&#13;
to appeal a negative decision&#13;
(one in which tenure is denied), a&#13;
body separate from that which&#13;
made the negative decision must&#13;
determine whether or not an&#13;
appeal is in order and send this&#13;
recommendation to the original&#13;
committee. The committee which&#13;
made the negative decision is&#13;
also the body which must hear&#13;
the appeal, if it is in order&#13;
According to Beach, under&#13;
Parkside's proposed rules,&#13;
anyone who wants to appeal their&#13;
case may do so, and the appeal&#13;
would be heard by a committee&#13;
other than the one which made&#13;
the original negative decision.&#13;
The second inconsistency&#13;
occurs at the point in the&#13;
documents where they state&#13;
under what conditions an appeal&#13;
of a negative decision can occur.&#13;
According to Beach, Parkside's&#13;
proposed rules overstep the&#13;
broad guidelines at this point by&#13;
listing additional grounds which&#13;
would permit a rehearing.&#13;
Beach said that if certain&#13;
sections of the broad guidelines&#13;
are made final by the Regents in&#13;
their present form, the Tenure&#13;
and Promotion Policies Committee&#13;
would have to reconvene&#13;
and make changes in Parkside's&#13;
proposed rules.&#13;
The broad guidelines were&#13;
adopted by the Regents on Dec. 6&#13;
without significant changes in&#13;
these sections.&#13;
There are several differences&#13;
between Parkside's proposed&#13;
rules and Parkside's set of&#13;
present rules.&#13;
The proposed rules, said&#13;
Beach, stress teaching abilityabove&#13;
scholarly activity* and&#13;
service to university, community&#13;
and profession, whereas the&#13;
present rules take these three&#13;
areas as equal.&#13;
He also said that the proposed&#13;
rules provide for a broader&#13;
definition of teaching and and a&#13;
broader range of criteria for&#13;
evaluating teaching ability.&#13;
The present rules downgrade&#13;
unpublished material, said&#13;
Beach whereasdie proposed rules&#13;
seem to give it more importance.&#13;
Parkside's proposed rules also&#13;
conform to the new open meeting&#13;
iaw. They give the candidates for&#13;
tenure access to all evidence, the&#13;
right to present their own case,&#13;
and allow them to request that&#13;
the hearings be open to the&#13;
public, said Beach.&#13;
Present rules give candidates&#13;
the right to request a written&#13;
explanation of a negative&#13;
decision, but the explanations&#13;
that they received were very&#13;
vague at times, said Beach. The&#13;
proposed rules call for a more&#13;
detailed and comprehensive&#13;
written explanation of the&#13;
negative decision.&#13;
Another difference between the&#13;
two sets of rules, said Beach, is&#13;
that the proposed rules give&#13;
candidates the right to make oral&#13;
presentations of their cases&#13;
before any decisions are made&#13;
concerning them, while the old&#13;
rules make no mention of the&#13;
candidates' right to make their&#13;
own presentations until after a&#13;
negative decision is reached.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. It, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 13&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
committee&#13;
formed&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Parkside has formed a&#13;
Bicentennial Committee in&#13;
response to suggestions from UW&#13;
President John Weaver, the&#13;
Board of Regents and the&#13;
Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
Bicentennial Commission.&#13;
The objectives of the state&#13;
commission are to achieve&#13;
greater understanding of the&#13;
ideals of the founding fathers,&#13;
better awareness of the&#13;
relevance of those ideals in&#13;
meeting many of the needs of&#13;
society today, and heightened&#13;
concern to be guided by those&#13;
ideals in the future development&#13;
of the state and nation.&#13;
Nicholas Burckel, director of&#13;
the University Archives and&#13;
chairperson of the Parkside&#13;
committee, said that each&#13;
campus in the system is attempting&#13;
to develop and implement&#13;
a program within the&#13;
context of existing resources and&#13;
financial constraints that will&#13;
celebrate the country's 200th&#13;
birthday in a fashion appropriate&#13;
to academic institutions.&#13;
He said that the committee&#13;
wishes to involve as many individuals,&#13;
units ana&#13;
organizations as possible in plans&#13;
for the 1975-76 academic year.&#13;
To do this, the committee is&#13;
soliciting program proposals.&#13;
"We do not intend to dictate&#13;
programs but rather hope to act&#13;
as a clearinghouse for ideas&#13;
which you suggest," Burckel&#13;
.said.&#13;
Completed forms should be&#13;
sent before December 11 to any&#13;
member of the committee. The&#13;
committee will act on the&#13;
proposals during its December 18&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Members of the committee are&#13;
Burckel; Kathleen Ackermann,&#13;
student representative; Leon&#13;
Applebaum, associate dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society;&#13;
Kim Baugrud, coordinator of the&#13;
University Extension; Joseph&#13;
Boisse, director of the Library;&#13;
John Campbell, chairperson of&#13;
the Social Science Division;&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, associate&#13;
dean of students; Ronald Gottesman,&#13;
professor of English and&#13;
Humanities; Donald Rintz,&#13;
assistant professor# of Communications;&#13;
and Walter Schirer,&#13;
director of Public Information.&#13;
ON THE BEST-GIVING LISTS&#13;
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Tues., D ec. 2 4, 9 :00 - 1:00&#13;
Wed., D ec. 2 5, CLOSED&#13;
Thurs., D ec. 2 6, 9 :00 - 4:30&#13;
Mon., D ec. 3 0, 9 :00 - 4:30&#13;
Tues., D ec. 31,9:00 -1:00&#13;
Wed., J an. 1 , CLOSED&#13;
Thurs., J an. 2 ,9:00 - 4:30&#13;
Fri., D ec. 2 7 , 9 :00 - 1:00 Fri., J an. 3,9:00 -1:00&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE &#13;
14 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
UWP hosts track meet&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Parkside hosted its First Annual&#13;
Indoor Track Training Meet&#13;
last Friday night. It was the first&#13;
meet ever held indoors at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
A small number of competitors&#13;
representing Carthage and&#13;
Loyola Colleges took part in the&#13;
events, but the advantage of&#13;
having a larger number of&#13;
participants allowed Parkside to&#13;
accept many honors.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
accepts members&#13;
Sophomores Shaunte Stills and&#13;
Pat Burns set new school records&#13;
for Parkside.&#13;
Stills leaped the high jump at&#13;
6'6" and Burns threw the shot put&#13;
a distance of 49'6V2" (the indoor&#13;
record).&#13;
Jim Heiring took first place in&#13;
the one mile walk with a time of&#13;
7:18.0, while Bob Meekma placed&#13;
first in pole vaulting at ll'O" and&#13;
Don Lewis placed first in the 40&#13;
yd. dash with :04.9.&#13;
Head Track Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
is looking forward to a good&#13;
season. Freshman Jeff Sitz will&#13;
be sprinting and long and triple&#13;
jumping. Lawson said Sitz has&#13;
"good athletic abilities" and&#13;
considers him a promising&#13;
newcomer to the club.&#13;
This Friday, Dec. 13, at 6:30&#13;
p.m., the track club will host"&#13;
another Training Meet at the&#13;
phy. Ed. Building&#13;
NSF grant&#13;
• &lt;; Happy&#13;
Holidays&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon accepted&#13;
eight new members into its&#13;
fraternity on Sunday, Dec. 8. A&#13;
secret ceremony was held&#13;
initiating into the organization&#13;
David Brandt, Daniel Thomsen,&#13;
Mike Pulda, Todd Manning, Joe&#13;
Smolic, Cindy Gray, Judy&#13;
Shemanske, Rodney Foss, Jim&#13;
Sweetman and Pete Fitzgerald.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon is a&#13;
nationally recognized fraternity&#13;
which has recently accepted&#13;
women into their organization.&#13;
The fraternity's goals are to&#13;
prepare men and women for&#13;
careers in marketing, sales and&#13;
sales management through&#13;
active participation in area&#13;
corporations.&#13;
A National Science Foundation&#13;
Grant of $11,758 in continuing&#13;
support of research by a&#13;
Parkside biologist on the effects&#13;
of environmental stress on a&#13;
genetic abnormality was accepted&#13;
last Friday by the Board&#13;
of Regents.&#13;
The UW-P researcher is Joseph&#13;
S. Balsano, associate professor of&#13;
life science, who is conducting&#13;
the study with a Marquette&#13;
University biologist,EllenRasch.&#13;
Population biology aspects of the&#13;
study are carried out at Parkside&#13;
and cell biology aspects at&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
The studv is formally titled&#13;
"Cytogenetics of the Gynogenetic&#13;
Teloest, Poecilia Formosa."&#13;
Poecilia Formosa is a small fish&#13;
native to eastern Mexico which is&#13;
widely used by researchers&#13;
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because all genetic characteristics&#13;
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heredity through the female line.&#13;
The genetic abnormality involved&#13;
in the study is called&#13;
triplody, in which three&#13;
genetically distinct sets of&#13;
chromosomes occur in the cells of&#13;
the same organism.&#13;
The study was initiated in 1971&#13;
and since that time, Balsano has&#13;
received almost $48,000 in&#13;
National Science Foundation&#13;
Grants (NSF) for his work at&#13;
Parkside. The study is slated to&#13;
continue through 1975 and, during&#13;
that period, NSF grants for the&#13;
study to UW-P and Marquette are&#13;
expected to total $120,000.&#13;
The researchers work to date&#13;
has resulted in a number of&#13;
scholarly papers and&#13;
publications.&#13;
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It looks as tho ugh streaking at&#13;
Parkside is not yet dead. Last&#13;
Wednesday night, after the pool&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Building closed, a&#13;
small group of five people&#13;
streaked once or twice around the&#13;
pool and back into the safety of&#13;
the locker rooms.&#13;
Is this any indication of what is&#13;
to happen in the future? Is this&#13;
any indication of anything at all?&#13;
Perhaps it is, since one of the&#13;
streakers was a University&#13;
employee.&#13;
So keep an eye on the Phv. Ed.&#13;
building to see if anything&#13;
develops...rumor has it that a&#13;
large order of goldfish is being&#13;
sent for.&#13;
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Kick Barron of Parkside makes a takedown asainowhi^ . ,&#13;
Ray Jacobsen to end the match with a 5-2 victory. hitewater s&#13;
UWP first in&#13;
WIC meet&#13;
of Parkside placed first and third&#13;
respectively in the 150 lb. class&#13;
with Mike Jarecki of Marquette&#13;
second and Pete Hartziem of&#13;
Whitewater fourth.&#13;
Rick Barron of Parkside took&#13;
the 158 lb. championship followed&#13;
by Ray Jacobsen of Whitewater,&#13;
Wayne Chojnacski of Stevens&#13;
Point, and Dave Goesch of&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
Lonnie Peterson of Parkside&#13;
took first place in the 167 lb. class&#13;
over Ron Haidingep* of&#13;
Whitewater, Dare Klass and Lee&#13;
Jerrett of Platteville.&#13;
Heavyweight Dean Dehnert of&#13;
Parkside finished third with Fred&#13;
Boskowich of Whitewater first, •&#13;
Ben Guido of Marquette second,&#13;
and Joe, Johnson of Stevens Point&#13;
fourth.&#13;
Also placing third for Parkside&#13;
was Rick Shaumberg with Fred&#13;
Townsend and Gary Zizzo of&#13;
Whitewater first and second, and&#13;
Steve St. John of Northland&#13;
fourth.&#13;
Wrestling coach Jirrt Koch&#13;
remarked, "I knew that we had a&#13;
really good team but I didn't&#13;
think we could do so good against&#13;
Whitewater, which was the&#13;
favorite. It took a super effort but&#13;
we did it."&#13;
As for future hopes, Koch said,&#13;
"we've got a strong wrestler in&#13;
every weight class and some&#13;
good tournament strength for the&#13;
nationals."&#13;
Parkside goes to Evanston, 111.,&#13;
December 13-14 for the&#13;
Whitewater Invitational and to&#13;
Waukesha December 27-28 for the&#13;
Midlands Tournament.&#13;
The next home match will be&#13;
the Carroll Invitational January&#13;
11 at 3 p.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 15&#13;
Fri. Dec. 13&#13;
Sat. Dec. 14&#13;
Sun. Dec. 15&#13;
Mon. Dec. 1&#13;
Tues. Dec. 17&#13;
Wed. Dec. 18&#13;
Thurs. Dec. 19&#13;
Fri. Dec. 2&#13;
Sat. Dec. 21&#13;
Sun. Dec. 22&#13;
Mon. Dec. 23&#13;
Tues. Dec. 24&#13;
Wed. Dec. 25&#13;
Thurs. Dec. 26&#13;
Fri. Dec. 27&#13;
Sat. Dec. 28&#13;
Sun. Dec. 29&#13;
Mon. Dec. 30&#13;
Tues. Dec. 31&#13;
Wed. Jan. l&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 2&#13;
Fri. Jan. 3&#13;
Sat. Jan. 4&#13;
Sun. Jan. 5&#13;
Mon. Jan. 6&#13;
Christmas&#13;
schedule&#13;
Recreational&#13;
Building Hours&#13;
30 a m-4:30 pm&#13;
30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
00 p m-9:30 pm&#13;
:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-9:30 pm&#13;
Pool closed Dec. 23-Jan. 3 for cleaning and repairs.&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
opened its season last Saturday in&#13;
the Wisconsin Intercollegiate&#13;
Championships held here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Competing in the event were&#13;
teams from Carroll College,&#13;
Carthage, Gateway, Lakeland&#13;
Marquette, Milwaukee, Northland,&#13;
Parkside, Platteville,&#13;
Stevens Point, and Whitewater.&#13;
Parkside, who finished third in&#13;
the NAIA national tournament&#13;
last season, took first place in the&#13;
Wisconsin Championships with&#13;
141 points. Second place went to&#13;
Whitewater with 135 points while&#13;
Marquette placed third with 85&#13;
points and Platteville fourth with&#13;
46 points.&#13;
Individual championships for&#13;
Parkside numbered six. In the&#13;
126 lb. class, Parkside's Rico&#13;
Savaglio took first place over&#13;
Dave Conner and Robin Bender&#13;
from Whitewater and Paul&#13;
Clementi of Marquette.&#13;
The 134 lb. championship went&#13;
to Joseph Landers of Parkside,&#13;
followed by Greg Smith (Platteville),&#13;
Kevin Morin&#13;
(Marquette), and Mark Heinzelmann&#13;
(Carroll).&#13;
Bill West of Parkside captured&#13;
first place in the 142 lb. class&#13;
followed by John Harrison of&#13;
Whitewater, Jerry Carr of&#13;
Northland, and Mike Fox of&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Randv Skarda and Rick Kubiak&#13;
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64927">
              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 19, December 11, 1974</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64928">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64929">
              <text>1974-12-11</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64932">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="64933">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="64934">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64935">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64936">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64937">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64938">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64939">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="64940">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="313">
      <name>associate dean jewel echelbarger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="858">
      <name>open meeting law</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="776">
      <name>the ranger</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
