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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 22</text>
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            <text>"Students" discussed by Task Force</text>
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            <text>Opinions on Merger Bill?&#13;
II Students" discussed by Task Force&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The open hearing of the Task&#13;
Force o'n Implementation of&#13;
36.09(5), Wis. Stats, was called to&#13;
order with an assemblage of 15&#13;
people.&#13;
The purpose of the open&#13;
hearing was to give students an&#13;
opportunity to voice their&#13;
opinions on how that section of&#13;
the Merger Bill should be implemented&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Allen Dearborn, assistant&#13;
chancellor for Student Services,&#13;
said, "I can't understand why the&#13;
student government isn't here or&#13;
the student organizations. We&#13;
have two members of student&#13;
government but we're missing&#13;
the president (Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich, president of&#13;
Parkside Student Gov.'t&#13;
Association) who's a member of&#13;
this committee."&#13;
Dearborn said that the topics&#13;
which the hearing would be&#13;
concerned with were: the&#13;
definition of "students" in the&#13;
Merger Implementation Act, the&#13;
allocation of student fees and the&#13;
role of students in faculty&#13;
governance.&#13;
He announced that each&#13;
student would have 5 m inutes in&#13;
which to speak.&#13;
Only one student, Edward&#13;
Arndt, senator of PSGA, spoke at&#13;
the hearing.&#13;
Arndt stressed the need for&#13;
student representation on&#13;
committees dealing with faculty&#13;
tenure.&#13;
He recommended that 3&#13;
student representatives sit on the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division and that&#13;
5 representatives sit on each of&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
•Wednesday, January 29, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 22&#13;
Students battle student*&#13;
Conflicts in PSGA&#13;
Michael Oszyk&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
Since the ratification of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. constitution in&#13;
September, there have been&#13;
political conflicts between the&#13;
legislative and executive&#13;
branches in PSGA.&#13;
Specifically, differences have&#13;
arisen over who has authority to&#13;
make amendments to the constitution.&#13;
&#13;
The senate believes that they&#13;
have primary responsibility in&#13;
making constitutional proposals&#13;
whereas Dennis Milutinovich,&#13;
president, supports working with&#13;
an outside studentadministrative&#13;
committee, the&#13;
Merger Implementation Task&#13;
Force.&#13;
The conflict is further compounded&#13;
by personality clashes&#13;
between Milutinovich and certain&#13;
senators in PSGA.&#13;
In early January, Milutinovich&#13;
physically attacked John Kontz,&#13;
president pro tempore of the&#13;
senate, on a dispute over the&#13;
process to be used in sending&#13;
senate constitutional amendments&#13;
to the assistant chancellor.&#13;
Allen Dearborn and eventually to&#13;
the Task Force.&#13;
Milutinovich was officially&#13;
reprimanded for attacking Kontz&#13;
through a substitute motion&#13;
passed during a senate meeting&#13;
on Thursday, Jan. 16. There were&#13;
eight senators voting yes, three&#13;
no and two abstentions.&#13;
A censure motion introduced&#13;
by Joyce Jansen earlier at the&#13;
meeting was defeated. It called&#13;
for the immediate resignation of&#13;
Milutinovich.&#13;
"For the past three weeks this&#13;
organization has come to the&#13;
brink of destruction," said Kontz.&#13;
"Tensions between the&#13;
legislative and executive&#13;
branches have increased to the&#13;
point where they are now intolerable.&#13;
At least six senators&#13;
have been driven to the brink of&#13;
resignation. These tensions have&#13;
been the direct result of&#13;
disagreements between the&#13;
president and the senate."&#13;
Kontz said that Milutinovich&#13;
has accused him of being on an&#13;
"ego centered power trip."&#13;
"Everytime the president gets&#13;
oppostion from the senate it's&#13;
called a power play or power&#13;
politics. Members of the senate&#13;
are accused by the president of&#13;
being mucous minded, gossip&#13;
spewing, voyeurs who will use&#13;
anything as an excuse to get what&#13;
they want."&#13;
Meanwhile, Milutinovich&#13;
charged that the senate and&#13;
Kontz in particular have been&#13;
% negligent in keeping a journal of&#13;
the senate's proceedings, which&#13;
is required by the constitution.&#13;
According to Milutinovich&#13;
there are approximately eight&#13;
untyped minutes to senate&#13;
meetings since the constitutional&#13;
referendum in late September.&#13;
Milutinovich said that business&#13;
that has transpired during these&#13;
meetings has not been recognized&#13;
as legal motions made by the&#13;
senate.&#13;
In October, the senate appointed&#13;
students to serve on&#13;
various university committees.&#13;
However, the students have not&#13;
taken their seats on the committees&#13;
because the appointments&#13;
were never presented&#13;
to Milutinovich and approved by&#13;
the chancellor.&#13;
"As a student legally I would&#13;
have the right to take PSGA to&#13;
the divisional executive committees.&#13;
&#13;
Walter Feldt, assistant&#13;
professor of Engineering Science&#13;
and member of the Task Force,&#13;
pointed out that some executive&#13;
committees would have a&#13;
majority of students if there were&#13;
5 representatives on each&#13;
committee.&#13;
The open hearing adjourned 7&#13;
minutes after it was called to&#13;
order.&#13;
Dearborn said that the Task&#13;
Force will now proceed to draw&#13;
up a list of recommendations for&#13;
the implementation of the section&#13;
of the Merger Bill 36.09(5).&#13;
"The recommendations will be&#13;
submitted to Otto Bauer, Acting&#13;
Chancellor, on January 29 and&#13;
submitted to the Board of&#13;
Regents for approval no later&#13;
than February 15," said Dearborn.&#13;
&#13;
The Task Force, which, according&#13;
to Dearborn, was&#13;
selected by Bauer along with&#13;
PSGA, consists of Dearborn,&#13;
Feldt, and three students; Carol&#13;
Merrick, Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
and Lee Wagner.&#13;
WET DIAPERS?&#13;
court because it has violated nonstock&#13;
corporate laws," Kai Nail,&#13;
president of the Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition, pointed out.&#13;
"Announcement of meetings&#13;
and setting agendas for all the&#13;
senators are some of the things&#13;
that have not been done according&#13;
to law."&#13;
Milutinovich agreed with Nail&#13;
saying that, "we are all a part of&#13;
student government, we are all&#13;
here to represent the students&#13;
and we haven't been doing it."&#13;
"The majority of students on&#13;
this campus do not relate to this&#13;
organization as being viable:&#13;
they do not relate to it as being&#13;
representative," was another&#13;
comment expressed by Tom&#13;
Kennedy, a former senator of&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
A present senator of PSGA,&#13;
Debora Donatt, said that "all of&#13;
us are at fault for not really doing&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Tenants picket because of rent increase. Additional photos on page 3.&#13;
Rent strike explained&#13;
J. D. Garoutte&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
There is a rent strike&#13;
in Kenosha which, according to&#13;
Paul Fictum, spokesman for the&#13;
strikers, could have great implications&#13;
for the entire city of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Fictum has acquired the&#13;
services of Walter Stern, a&#13;
Kenosha lawyer, who recommended&#13;
forming a tenant's union&#13;
in an attempt to get uniformity in&#13;
rent increases in Kenosha.&#13;
Fictum said, "After talking to&#13;
some people who live in Parkside&#13;
Village, this tenant's union would&#13;
help them a lot. According to&#13;
these students I talked to, the&#13;
buildings are terribly over priced&#13;
for the condition they are in."&#13;
The strike, which is being held&#13;
by a group of renters from the&#13;
Fairview West Apartments, is&#13;
the result of a rent increase of $40&#13;
to $70 per month.&#13;
The increase was brought&#13;
about by the new owner, John&#13;
Graham of Elm Grove in&#13;
Milwaukee, who bought the&#13;
apartment complex this month.&#13;
Fictum said, "We feel the'&#13;
improvements in the complex do&#13;
not warrant the increase in rent&#13;
and therefore we are outwardly&#13;
expressing our displeasure."&#13;
The strike which started&#13;
several weeks ago will probably&#13;
not be settled until the February&#13;
rents are due. Fictum said, "we&#13;
have placed our rents in escrow&#13;
as of January, plus an 11 percent&#13;
increase which we feel as a group&#13;
is more than fair. We're hoping to&#13;
go to court and see if the courts&#13;
can decide if this increase is&#13;
really warranted."&#13;
Fictum explained that feelings&#13;
around the city are mixed, most&#13;
people are waiting to see whati&#13;
happens with this situation before&#13;
they commit themselves.&#13;
Fictum would rathernot&#13;
go to court. He said, "I wish the&#13;
owner would see our problems&#13;
and allow us to stay at the present&#13;
price because a lot of these&#13;
people are layed off of their jobs&#13;
with many more expecting lay&#13;
offs in the near future. We just&#13;
could not pay the increase as it is&#13;
now." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER/ Wednesday/ January 29, 1975&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Phantom&#13;
Leader&#13;
(Who knows what lurks&#13;
in the meeting rooms?)&#13;
Parkside's Merger Implementation Task Force met&#13;
Thursday to answer the question: Who are students?&#13;
Well, if on e goes by the turnout of students at the Task&#13;
Force open hearing one would think Parkside consisted&#13;
of Faculty, Administration, a few PSGA members and&#13;
no students.&#13;
But we know there are students out there--we see them&#13;
sucking coffee in the cafeteria-scratching in notebooks&#13;
in the classrooms. But then we can't expect students to&#13;
be any better than their leader, the President of the&#13;
student body-he spent his time in a Campus Planning&#13;
Committee meeting rather than attending the Task&#13;
Force.&#13;
When the majority of students are given the opportunity&#13;
to present themselves and state their position, do not&#13;
appear, one can only assume that those that did not&#13;
appear do not have an opinion.&#13;
And so at Parkside we have that "silent majority"--&#13;
silent because they are either unwilling or unable to&#13;
form an opinion-any opinion.&#13;
It falls to a handful of student activists on this campus to&#13;
carry the burden of r epresenting student opinion to the&#13;
administration and faculty. To that handful of students&#13;
we say "Thank You," if it weren't for them there would&#13;
be no expression from the student body. And to those&#13;
that don't like the opinions expressed-tough-if you&#13;
don't like it do something about it. Get up and say your&#13;
piece, make your ideas a part of Parkside. To those that&#13;
sit there silently-you had your chance.&#13;
MISSION?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Mission on Parkside's&#13;
campus is totally ignorant, inane,&#13;
assholular, etc. A public&#13;
university has no right to cut out&#13;
humanities and communications&#13;
which are important aspects to&#13;
the community and human&#13;
beings. A p ublic university must&#13;
be balanced in its interests for&#13;
students.&#13;
If Parkside is to survive, it&#13;
offer all subjects, not just&#13;
business and modern industry&#13;
classes. The whole campus&#13;
community will become stale in&#13;
thoughts and action without the&#13;
Arts. What will happen to&#13;
students with an interst in art?&#13;
They must go elsewhere, if of&#13;
course they have enough money&#13;
to move to Madison or wherever,&#13;
and if they like that type of a&#13;
living situation.&#13;
Do not people see that people in&#13;
the arts are very useful in society&#13;
as well as business people? One&#13;
balances with the other, one&#13;
needs the other.&#13;
Parkside should 'get it all&#13;
together' and grow up well&#13;
balanced;furthuring the needs of&#13;
students and community.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Debora Donatt&#13;
Senator&#13;
must&#13;
11 Lots" of Stupidity&#13;
22 January 1975&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Your editorial of January 22nd&#13;
explained to me why I and&#13;
probably about 50-100 other&#13;
people received parking tickets&#13;
in the Union lot on January 21st.&#13;
Apparently, in order to disguise&#13;
their overselling of $14. white&#13;
parking tags, somebody came up&#13;
with the brilliant idea of changing&#13;
the designation of half of the&#13;
Union lot. So they put up two little&#13;
signs with one inch high letters&#13;
(not very obvious to those&#13;
rushing to their 8:30 a.m.&#13;
classes) and immediately began&#13;
spewing out $3. violation tickets&#13;
to those cars with red tags, the&#13;
owners of which, incidentally,&#13;
had parked legally in the lot since&#13;
last semester.&#13;
I have never had any objection&#13;
to the Administration of this&#13;
University-in fact, I think that its&#13;
the best-run. most-helpful&#13;
bureaucracy I've ever run&#13;
across~but I think it should&#13;
review the equity of its Union lot&#13;
decisions.&#13;
In addition to the many people&#13;
who received what I feel to be&#13;
unfair fines (in lieu of a simple&#13;
notification of their newlydeclared&#13;
violation), many others&#13;
are now paying $14. to park in&#13;
spots several feet closer than&#13;
those costing $7.&#13;
Jay Grassell&#13;
Faith. Hope and Charity&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is a desperate plea for&#13;
assistance and help from the&#13;
charitable members of the&#13;
Parkside community. Due to the&#13;
capriciousness of the Racine&#13;
Municipal Court, I am faced with&#13;
the unpleasant prospect of&#13;
spending ten days in the Racine&#13;
City Jail unless I can come up&#13;
with $40.00 Ransom by March 1st.&#13;
Being a poor destitute student,&#13;
I am beside myself with grief and&#13;
worry. If any Parkside student&#13;
could afford a small donation to&#13;
my bail fund I would be forever&#13;
grateful. Contributions will be&#13;
most appreciatingly accepted in&#13;
the RANGER office. Contact&#13;
Greg Hawkins.&#13;
I am (will be?), forever grateful&#13;
Thomas Graddy Kennedy III&#13;
When Knighthood was in flower&#13;
Dear Dr. Greenebaum:&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We the undersigned, feel that&#13;
Dr. Homer Knight is a very&#13;
valuable and knowledgeable&#13;
teacher in the field of analytical&#13;
chemistry. He dedicates much of&#13;
his time and energy to the Quant&#13;
Lab and to students participating&#13;
in various independent study&#13;
programs. We feel it would be a&#13;
great loss to the university and a&#13;
mistake on your part if he shoudl&#13;
have to leave.&#13;
We also feel that you should&#13;
take into consideration the recent&#13;
edit implying no vacancies in the&#13;
university will be filled in the&#13;
coming year. If we loose Dr.&#13;
Knight, our analytical chemist,&#13;
Unknown to PAB,&#13;
who then would be as qualified on&#13;
the present staff to take over?&#13;
Without a well qualified instructer&#13;
in this area, students&#13;
majoring in chemistry, pre-med&#13;
or medical technology would be&#13;
at a great disadvantage.&#13;
sincerely,&#13;
Editors Note: This letter was&#13;
signed by more than 25&#13;
Chemistry Majors.&#13;
NOTICE TO ALL READERS&#13;
If you are going to submit items for publication in the&#13;
RANGER, we would like to request that they be typed,&#13;
double-spaced, and delivered to our office NO LATER&#13;
than 9 a.m. on the Friday before the desired date of&#13;
publication. If for any reason you are unable to do this,&#13;
please contact the RANGER one week before the date&#13;
the item is to appear.&#13;
The ParksideThe&#13;
PARKSI DE RANGER i s a wholly independenl&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2 287.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Kenneth Pestka&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Greg Hawkins W&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Jeannine Sipsma om NOM *&#13;
HUMANITIES EDITOR: amy 8 TuSKr!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Bonne Haas ^ J&#13;
-&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
A*&#13;
HE MO&#13;
Writers: Michael Olszyk, J.D. Garoutte, Betsy Neu,&#13;
Cliff Chambers, Nathan Jones, Walt Ulbricht&#13;
Photographer: Michael Nepper&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
My name is Natasha Foiling. I&#13;
am an active member of the&#13;
Third World Organization and I&#13;
am also a student representative&#13;
on the Search and Screen&#13;
Committee for the Chancellor.&#13;
In reading an article in the 1-15-&#13;
75 issue of the Ranger, I noticed it&#13;
was not expressed clearly as to&#13;
how I was elected to the Search&#13;
and Screen Committee. Let me&#13;
make it clear right now.&#13;
I was elected by the Third&#13;
World Student Organization, to&#13;
contend as a candidate for the&#13;
Search and Screen Committee for&#13;
the Chancellor.&#13;
I was told that I was to write a&#13;
short biography on myself and&#13;
my accomplishments till present&#13;
and present the material to the&#13;
PAB office. I did just that.&#13;
I was told at the PAB office that&#13;
my biography would be considered.&#13;
I asked how I would be&#13;
contacted in case my biography&#13;
was accepted and was then instructed&#13;
to leave my telephone&#13;
number. I did just that.&#13;
A week went by and PAB gave&#13;
me no response.&#13;
Arlene Martin, Vice President&#13;
of Third World Organization and&#13;
also a student government&#13;
senator informed me on a social&#13;
encounter that a PAB member&#13;
told her my biography had been&#13;
rejected on the grounds that I&#13;
•"didn't know enough people".&#13;
This was not only an invalid&#13;
reason, but even so, should this&#13;
necessarily be a criteria of&#13;
selection?&#13;
Anyway, student government&#13;
held an election for the names of&#13;
nominees to be sent to Madison&#13;
and all student organizations&#13;
were involved, and each&#13;
organization made their&#13;
nominations. My name was on&#13;
the list of students that were sent&#13;
to President Weaver in Madison.&#13;
I was informed by letter later&#13;
that I had been appointed to the&#13;
Search and Acreen Committee by&#13;
President Weaver.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Natasha Foiling&#13;
Knightly support&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Concerning the Tenure Faculty&#13;
Division committee's decision&#13;
and their comments on the tenure&#13;
of Dr. Knight, I have some&#13;
comments. The TFD committee's&#13;
decision not to grant&#13;
tenure was very close (8-6). The&#13;
executive committee of the&#13;
Science division had recommended&#13;
that tenure be granted.&#13;
At the TFD's open hearing the&#13;
students in attendance were&#13;
generally overlooked.&#13;
The statement overheard&#13;
(attributed to a "no" vote)-"with&#13;
all that expensive chemistry&#13;
equipment up there, how come&#13;
Dr. Knight doesn,t t publish&#13;
more." I can answer that-it is&#13;
because Dr. Knight spends 95&#13;
percent of his time helping&#13;
students and teaching instead of&#13;
furthering his own ego. The point&#13;
is as long as teachers (only) have&#13;
the power to hire-fire teachers&#13;
they will not use teaching as the&#13;
major criteria. When students&#13;
have a real say (as the Merger&#13;
Law states they should) in tenure&#13;
decisions, then teaching will play&#13;
a major role in those decisions&#13;
Chemistry is divided into four&#13;
major areas-Organic, Inorganic&#13;
Physical, and Analytical. If we&#13;
lose Dr. Knight, we have no one&#13;
who is qualified to teach&#13;
Analytical Chemistry. It would&#13;
be the same as telling potential&#13;
chemistry, pre-med, and med&#13;
tech. students that you can only&#13;
learn three-fourths of your&#13;
chemistry at Parkside and you&#13;
will have to go somewhere else&#13;
for the other one-fourth. Under&#13;
recent statements made by the&#13;
governor and chancellor, no one&#13;
new can be hired-i.e. no new&#13;
analytical chemistry professors.&#13;
If you want to destroy the&#13;
chemistry department at&#13;
Parkside and get rid of a man&#13;
who has three times as many&#13;
students on independent study as&#13;
most other teachers and is a&#13;
damn good teacher-then don't&#13;
grant tenure to Dr. Knight.&#13;
Parkside has a record of&#13;
removing the cream and giving&#13;
us students the skim milk.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Chemistry Major &#13;
Wednesday, January 29, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
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$250. Ph. 859 2642 or 637-3361.&#13;
Paul Fictum&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
Children join parents in&#13;
picketing Fairview West&#13;
Apartments.&#13;
RIGHT Paul Fictum spokesman for&#13;
group.&#13;
Conflicts continued from page 1&#13;
our jobs. Yet, there are alot of&#13;
people on campus who are trying&#13;
to help us and they want us to&#13;
continue."&#13;
"I'd like to stick together to&#13;
but, if the conditions are such&#13;
that it's not getting better and&#13;
things aren't getting done, then&#13;
there's no point in staying&#13;
together," remarked Eric&#13;
Bingen, a senator of PSGA.&#13;
"In the situation where a&#13;
person is choking, you're saying,&#13;
'go ahead and breath'. But he's&#13;
saying, 'I can't, I have a bolder in&#13;
my throat'. Now this thing has&#13;
come to a head and it has to be&#13;
resolved."&#13;
"The point of whether we really&#13;
were or are or could ever be able&#13;
to compromise with each other&#13;
again, is open to alot of doubt,"&#13;
Kontz said about Milutinovich.&#13;
"I for one am tired of being&#13;
accused of playing power politics&#13;
by the president, I am tired of&#13;
being verbally and physically&#13;
assaulted by the president and I&#13;
am tired of watching senators be&#13;
intimidated by the questionable&#13;
methods of the president."&#13;
Donatt disagreed with Kontz,&#13;
saying that, "I really don't think&#13;
it's quite fair to impeach or "ask&#13;
someone to resign because of an&#13;
emotional outburst."&#13;
"I for one have not been intimidated&#13;
by anyone, be it other&#13;
senators or the president."&#13;
Keith Chambers, a former&#13;
senator, said that one of the&#13;
reasons he resigned from PSGA&#13;
was that he "couldn't stand to&#13;
come and sit through marathon&#13;
meetings of three hours and&#13;
spend two and a half of those&#13;
hours discussing each others&#13;
personalities."&#13;
"There's alot of business to be&#13;
done and as a student I'd like to&#13;
see student government start&#13;
getting to that business."&#13;
"If you can't get on with the&#13;
show then the administration will&#13;
have to make some other&#13;
arrangements for representation&#13;
of students on this campus,"&#13;
Dearborn told the PSGA.&#13;
Nail commented that PSGA&#13;
has received approximately&#13;
$1,600 from the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee and $500 in additional&#13;
money lend to them for this&#13;
academic school year.&#13;
"Now of all that money, I would&#13;
like the senate to come up with&#13;
one project where the students&#13;
have benefited by what you've&#13;
done.&#13;
"As a student, I just don't see&#13;
how anyone that knows anything&#13;
'about PSGA and how they&#13;
operate, can ever except you as a&#13;
viable student government."&#13;
SME awarded&#13;
scholarships&#13;
Susan Shemanske&#13;
RANGERStaff&#13;
FOR YOUR COMPLETE&#13;
SKIING NEEDS VISIT&#13;
1101 N . M ain St. Racine&#13;
633-5244&#13;
The Sales and Marketing Executives (SME) of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
awarded six $50 scholarships to outstanding students at "Education&#13;
Night" held January 20 in the Library Learning Center cafeteria.&#13;
Parkside's Bob Petrouske and Bob Unger were among those&#13;
receiving the awards at the dinner-meeting. The Parkside chapter of&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon, a national marketing fraternity, jointly sponsored&#13;
the evening with SME.&#13;
SME awarded the scholarships to the outstanding sales and&#13;
marketing students from the area's three educational institutions:&#13;
Parkside, Carthage and Gateway.&#13;
Jeffrey Anderson and Sharon Robly of Carthage and Carol Propson&#13;
and Kathy Neitzel of Gateway also received scholarships.&#13;
Dr. Shelby Hunt, chairman of the Marketing Department at UWMadison's&#13;
School of Business, addressed the group of about 60&#13;
executives, students and faculty members. Hunt subsituted as a guest&#13;
speaker for UW Chancellor Edwin Young, unable to attend because of&#13;
illness.&#13;
Hunt spoke of an "Era of S carcity" and the implications shortages&#13;
would have on marketing- He warned, "We're in for some bad times&#13;
and things are going to get worse before they get better."&#13;
Parkside's Gamma Beta chapter of Pi Sigma Epsilon was chartered&#13;
in March 1974. PSE presently has 16 members. Professor Richard&#13;
Yanzito is the club's adviser.&#13;
In its first nine months PSE has undertaken several projects including&#13;
the schoolwide promotion of career day ("Fix on the Future")&#13;
held on April 9,1974, a survey for the Adult Student Program in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties, a General Public Attitundinal Survey and most&#13;
recently a new member drive and iniation program.&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, January 29, 1975&#13;
Brief News&#13;
Meetings&#13;
The Camera Club will hold an organizational meeting on Jan. 31, at 2&#13;
p.m. in LLC D-174. Availability of darkroom space and scheduled&#13;
Photo-Art show will be discussed. For further information contact&#13;
Philip Livingston at 652-6340.&#13;
PEOPLE FOR A NON-SEXIST SOCIETY: Meetings will be held&#13;
Thursday and Friday in room LLC 173 at 12:30.&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29: P.A.B. Whiteskellar coffeehouse&#13;
presents Mike Massa, from the Id and Eggo coffeehouse in&#13;
Milwaukee, performing very original folk and blues, 11:30-1:30, GR&#13;
D201. Free and open to the public.&#13;
Concert: P.A.B. presents Woody Herman and his orchestra in&#13;
concert, 8 p.m., in the Comm Arts Theater. The Parkside Jazz Band&#13;
will provide the opening act. Tickets are $3 for students, $4 for general&#13;
public, and are available at the Info Kiosk.&#13;
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1: P.A.B. and Carthage College are cosponsoring&#13;
a dance, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., here in the S.A.B., with music by&#13;
Farm. Admission $1.25. So if you're tired of the same old bodies, be&#13;
there! Parkside or Carthage and state I.D.'s required.&#13;
Courses &amp; Clinics&#13;
An "Anti-Cram Clinic" will be held next week to provide college&#13;
students with hints for more effective studying. The first in a series of&#13;
three study-skills workshops, the topic will be How To Take Class&#13;
Notes. It will be offered in the Library on Monday, Feb. 3, 3:30-5 p.m.&#13;
and repeated on Tuesday, Feb. 4, 7:30-9 p.m.&#13;
The next workshop, scheduled for the week of Feb. 10, will be concerned&#13;
with Preparing For Exams (essay and multiple choiceobjective).&#13;
The dates for the last workshop, Term Paper Research,&#13;
will be announced.&#13;
The sessions are being sponsored by the Adult Student Association,&#13;
in cooperation with the Library.&#13;
Phyllis Lidberg of the ASA explained that many students who have&#13;
not been in school for awhile feel out of practice in taking notes and&#13;
studying, and quite apprehensive about exams and term papers.&#13;
"Even freshmen just out of high school are worried about exams and&#13;
don't know where to start with a research paper, but the adult&#13;
students' fears are sometimes intensified by their absence from a&#13;
school environment for a number of years."&#13;
Lidberg added that the sessions are open to all interested students,&#13;
but asks that people wishing to attend sign up at the Information&#13;
Center in Main Place so clinic coordinators will know how many to&#13;
expect. Participants will meet at the Library Circulation Desk at the&#13;
scheduled time.&#13;
The sessions are geing conducted by Carla Stoffle of the Library, Jo&#13;
Herrick of the Learning Center, and A1 Grace of the Academic Skills&#13;
Program. Stoffle and Herrick taught a one-credit Study Skills class&#13;
last semester ; Grace currently is currently teaching such a course.&#13;
The Campus Security Department is again offering the National&#13;
Safety Council's Defensive Driving Course for those employees or&#13;
students who have not had the opportunity to take the course.&#13;
The course will be presented at Classroom Building, Room No. 149, on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 8, 1975, starting at 8:30 a.m. The class should' be&#13;
completed at approximately 2:30 p.m.&#13;
For informational purposes, the film "Signal 30," considered to be&#13;
repulsive by many individuals, is no longer being shown as part of the&#13;
Defensive Driving Course.&#13;
Appointments&#13;
Health&#13;
"Safe Snowmobiling" is the Health-Line Highlight for January 24&#13;
"^&#13;
Call 553-2588 to hear taped tips on safe, sensible, and responsio e&#13;
snowmobiling. . f&#13;
Health-Line Highlights is a free, 24-hour service of the University- ot&#13;
UW-Madison Center for Health Sciences, and is supported by the&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Medical Program. It is sponsored in this area by&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
A new recorded message begins at 4 p.m. each Friday.&#13;
P.S.G.A. News&#13;
There are currently vacancies in the following P.S.G.A. Inc. Senate&#13;
Seats: Labor Economics Division, Humanities Division, Social&#13;
Science Division, and one "at large" seat. These vacancies will be&#13;
filled through appointments by the President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. Senate, John Kontz. Such Senate appointments must be&#13;
confirmed by a majority vote of the entire Senate. Any students who&#13;
are interested in being appointed to one of these Senate seats should&#13;
contact John Kontz at the P.S.G.A. INC. office, LLC D-193, or call 553-&#13;
2244.&#13;
Deadlines&#13;
Deadline for student teaching applications for Fall Semester 1975. or&#13;
Summer 1975 is February 3. Applications and information available in&#13;
GRQ 210 (phone 553-2305).&#13;
Deadline for intern teaching applications for Fall Semester 1975 and&#13;
Spring Semester 1976 i s February 3. Applications and information&#13;
available in GRQ 210 ( phone 553-2305).&#13;
Information sesgion on teaching internships through the Wisconsin&#13;
Improvement Program will be held Monday, February 3, at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
in CL D113. Program will include a panel of former interns. Information&#13;
available in GRQ 210 (phone 553-2305).&#13;
Student Staff directories are still available (free) at the information&#13;
kiosk.&#13;
Racine experiment;&#13;
Intensive care&#13;
for delinquents&#13;
"Joy&#13;
of Sex"&#13;
EARTH NEWS&#13;
What may turn out to be the&#13;
most controversial book of 1975 is&#13;
a children's book called "Show&#13;
Me." Its editor, Paul De Angelis&#13;
of St. Martin's Press, describes it&#13;
as a sort of "Joy of Sex" for&#13;
children.&#13;
The book, which features large&#13;
and elegant photos of lots of&#13;
naked kids, is designed as a&#13;
serious sex education manual.&#13;
The big difference between it and&#13;
other attempts is that the photos&#13;
depict children engaged in what&#13;
some folks will almost certainly&#13;
consider pornographic activities.&#13;
In a style written for children,&#13;
the text discusses the entire&#13;
range of human sexuality in&#13;
blunt, no-nonsense language. De&#13;
Angelis admits that the book will&#13;
stir controversy when it's&#13;
released in May. But he says the&#13;
publisher is confident that it will&#13;
pass all legal tests, and major&#13;
retailers are already beginning to&#13;
order it. The book originally&#13;
appeared last year in West&#13;
Germany where it weathered a&#13;
serious court challenge as obscene.&#13;
It went on to become a&#13;
strong best seller there following&#13;
dismissal of charges.&#13;
Prof. Paul Kleine, chairman of the education division at the&#13;
University of WisconsinpParkside, is one of 29 persons appointed by&#13;
UW System President John Weaver to a study committee to make&#13;
recommendations on how to "phase out, phase down or consolidate"&#13;
existing physical facilities and programs in the system.&#13;
The committee was formed in response to a request from Governor&#13;
Patrick Lucey to UW Regent President F.J. Pelisek asking such a&#13;
study.&#13;
The committee includes student, faculty and administration&#13;
representatives from the various units of t he university and members&#13;
of the central administration. It is chaired by UW System Senior Vice&#13;
President Donald K. Smith.&#13;
Betsy Neu&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
The Racine County Juvenile&#13;
Probation Department is experimenting&#13;
with a new concept&#13;
called the intensive caseworker.&#13;
The department employees&#13;
eight court workers (or probation&#13;
officers) and one supervisor.&#13;
While seven of these court&#13;
workers carry a case load&#13;
averaging sixty-three clients, the&#13;
other court worker has a small,&#13;
intensive case load of twelve to&#13;
fifteen clients.&#13;
The position of intensive&#13;
caseworker was created to offer&#13;
a small number of clients the&#13;
frequent and sometimes' day-today&#13;
contact they need.&#13;
A1 De Maio, the intensive&#13;
caseworker, said that the one&#13;
thing each of these clients has in&#13;
common is a "poor self-image".&#13;
According to D Maio, when most&#13;
of these clients are referred to&#13;
him by one of his colleagues, the&#13;
teenager often feels that he is of&#13;
little worth or importance to his&#13;
family and peers.&#13;
De Maio stated that a great&#13;
deal of attention on a one-to-one&#13;
basis is necessary before the&#13;
client begins to feel his selfyou'll&#13;
love it.&#13;
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confidence returning. With the&#13;
return of self-confidence comes&#13;
the ability to cope with problems&#13;
in the home, at school and at&#13;
work.&#13;
He described one client six&#13;
months ago, whom we shall refer&#13;
to as "John", as being "hell-on&#13;
wheels", involved heavily in the&#13;
drug scene, and suffering from&#13;
frequent depression. He would&#13;
accept no responsibility for the&#13;
problems in his personal life, but&#13;
preferred to let his temper flare&#13;
and blame those nearest at hand&#13;
for his hassles. John was also&#13;
having trouble at school and&#13;
coped with it only by being&#13;
consistantly truant and spending&#13;
his days in front of the television&#13;
set.&#13;
De Maio contructed a case plan&#13;
that called for the two of them&#13;
spending time together, not only&#13;
in the office but in the. more informal&#13;
and comfortable atmosphere&#13;
of their homes and&#13;
local restaurants. The aim of&#13;
these informal meetings was to&#13;
establish a mutual respect&#13;
relationship.&#13;
According to De Maio, John in&#13;
the last six months has responded&#13;
verv positively . His attendance at&#13;
school and at his job has been&#13;
consistent. As his temper has&#13;
cooled, so he is now able to&#13;
calmly discuss and work out his&#13;
hassles on his own.&#13;
De Maio said the first step to&#13;
this was for the caseworker to&#13;
take a "low-key approach"&#13;
towards the client. Within a short&#13;
time John saw De Maio as a nonthreating&#13;
entity. Unlike most&#13;
authority figures in his life John&#13;
perceived De Maio as neither a&#13;
critic nor as a prying detective.&#13;
De Maio emphasized that in&#13;
cases like this, acceptance and&#13;
encouragement are paramount.&#13;
He feels that a client with a "poor&#13;
self-image" will only begin to&#13;
accept himself when others are&#13;
accepting him.&#13;
He also said that encouragement&#13;
too, leads to a&#13;
better self-image. As De Maio&#13;
and John spent time together, De&#13;
Maio often expressed praise for&#13;
John's achievements, small and&#13;
large.&#13;
De Maio has also worked with&#13;
John's mother. He states that&#13;
John's mother has learned to&#13;
have a more open attitude&#13;
towards John., to talk over their&#13;
disagreements and to trust John&#13;
with the family car and other&#13;
responsibilities.&#13;
When asked how he would like&#13;
to see the intensive caseworker&#13;
concept developed, De Maio said&#13;
that it would be ideal to have&#13;
three or four court workers,&#13;
carrying a small case load of ten&#13;
to twelve clients.&#13;
He also said that a woman and&#13;
a black intensive case worker are&#13;
needed, because they would be&#13;
better qualified to relate to&#13;
problems that are unique to&#13;
women and blacks. He said that a&#13;
woman case worker in this&#13;
position would be helpfulin&#13;
another capacity. De Maio explained&#13;
that since so much time is&#13;
spent with the client out of the&#13;
office, a chaperone of some sort&#13;
is necessary if it is a female client&#13;
and a male case worker that are&#13;
meeting to talk. At this time the&#13;
possibility of additional intensive&#13;
caseworkers is undecided but De&#13;
Maio and his supervisor are both&#13;
enthusiastic over the idea.&#13;
More news briefs&#13;
Kaliedoscope Radio is having an open house, Wednesday, February&#13;
5th from 1:30-4 pm. in CA. D157. We would like to show you around the&#13;
studios and get you acquainted with our programming. So come one&#13;
come all&#13;
Pictured above are Douglas Redmond (right), president of Pi Sigma&#13;
Epsilon and former Racine mayor, Kenneth Huck: in a photo from the&#13;
fraternity's awards banquet.&#13;
Fnianeml Aids applications now available for 75-76 terms. Priority&#13;
date for submission is April 1st. &#13;
Wednesday January 29 1975 THE PARKSIDERANGER 5 Student exchange&#13;
ends at U.C.&#13;
..THE only \ REASOIV HE'D SEE *the&#13;
^TOWERING&#13;
JJ INFERNO" %AFTER THOSE ^reviews.is&#13;
y)fT FEATURES&#13;
O H E -&#13;
/ \THI&#13;
•f \&#13;
H 0 T 6J&#13;
[ 1HIGH/&#13;
EARTH NEWS&#13;
A ten-year old faculty and&#13;
student exchange program&#13;
between the University of Chile&#13;
and the University of California&#13;
has been indefinitely suspended&#13;
as the result of alleged political&#13;
harassment by officials of the&#13;
Chilean military junta.&#13;
The program was founded in&#13;
j964 with a $1 million-a-year&#13;
grant from the Ford Foundation.&#13;
It was designed principally to&#13;
expose Chilean academics to&#13;
graduate study in the United&#13;
States in preparation for teaching&#13;
careers in Chilean universities.&#13;
The program has involved both&#13;
faculty and student exchanges.&#13;
The suspension came when&#13;
information reached University&#13;
of California officials that a&#13;
participant in the program, Dr.&#13;
Boris Chornik, physics professor&#13;
at the University of Santiago and&#13;
a U.C.-Berkeley graduate, had&#13;
been arrested by the junta's&#13;
him.&#13;
Following several appeals to&#13;
the Chilean government for&#13;
ecplanations, U.C.L.A. Chancellor&#13;
Charles Young, who&#13;
directs the program at U.C.,&#13;
announced that he had wired the&#13;
University of Chile to announce&#13;
an indefinite suspension of the&#13;
program until the two issues can&#13;
be resolved.&#13;
H Said Chancellor Young,, "We&#13;
believe this situation constitutes&#13;
a threat to (the) continued ability&#13;
to obtain and maintain wellqualified&#13;
professionals with the&#13;
University of Chile."&#13;
Chilean students and faculty&#13;
members currently enrolled&#13;
under the program on University&#13;
of California campuses will be&#13;
allowed to continue their&#13;
studeies. There currently are no&#13;
California students or faculty&#13;
engaged in the program in Chile.&#13;
South readys&#13;
for deseg. drive&#13;
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eliminate segregation. Most of&#13;
the proposals, Griffin says,&#13;
contain admission tests that fail&#13;
to account for cultural differences.&#13;
And, he notes, many of&#13;
the plans don't provide the level&#13;
of financial aid needed by many&#13;
black students.&#13;
Black colleges, in particular,&#13;
have been opposed to full&#13;
desegregation. While they are&#13;
willing to admit some white&#13;
students, they fear that full&#13;
desegregation would destroy the&#13;
unique role they have played in&#13;
the education of black&#13;
Americans. And, they fear that&#13;
their campuses would become&#13;
second-rate institutions because&#13;
they would have to compete with&#13;
the larger, more established&#13;
white colleges and universities&#13;
for both students and funds.&#13;
Nonetheless, the HEW activities&#13;
could mean a drastic&#13;
change in the make-up of&#13;
Southern universities in the not--&#13;
too-distant future. Already, the&#13;
state of Louisiana is being sued&#13;
by the U.S. government for&#13;
failure to submit a desegregation&#13;
proposal.&#13;
by George Wood&#13;
EARTH NEWS SERVICE&#13;
(EARTH NEWS) -- The next&#13;
big desegregation drive is&#13;
shaping up against Southern&#13;
universities. While Southern&#13;
elementary and secondary&#13;
schools have cooperatied with&#13;
desegregation orders handed&#13;
down in recent years, most&#13;
universities and colleges in the&#13;
Zouth are still 90 to 95' percent&#13;
white. The Southern population is&#13;
only about 80 percent white.&#13;
Of the three dozen or so formerly&#13;
all black colleges in the&#13;
region, at least two dozen are still&#13;
90 p ercent black.&#13;
Now, the U.S. Department of&#13;
Health, Education, and Welfare&#13;
has decided to finally begin&#13;
carrying out an 18-month old&#13;
federal court order to- cut off&#13;
federal aid to 10 Southern and&#13;
border states with less than fully&#13;
desegregated systems of higher&#13;
education.&#13;
According to the executive&#13;
director of the Southern&#13;
Educational Foundation, John&#13;
Griffin, few of the integration&#13;
proposals submitted so far by&#13;
Southern states would really&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, January 29, 1975&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
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The aftermath of a political birth&#13;
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WEEKS IN EUROPE, AFRICA,&#13;
ASIA. Nationwide educational&#13;
organization needs qualified&#13;
leaders for H.S. and College&#13;
groups. Send name, address,&#13;
phone, school, resume, leadership&#13;
experience to: Center for&#13;
Foreign Study, P.O. Box 606, Ann&#13;
Arbor, MI 48107.&#13;
Editor's note this is the first&#13;
article in a two-part series&#13;
covering the activities of&#13;
Parkside's Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition. RANGER hopes to&#13;
feature other organizations in the&#13;
upcoming months, so that&#13;
students are introduced to the&#13;
personalities involved in the&#13;
groups that concern themselves&#13;
with students and campus&#13;
welfare at U.W.P.&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 Eighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
'ACROSS FROM UNION PARK"&#13;
A Different&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S ROLLER R INK&#13;
6220-67th ST. PH. 652-8198 KENOSHA&#13;
'•Dicqnis&#13;
'•Financed&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Membpr of Federal Fteserve System • Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp&#13;
by amy&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
RANGER conducted an interview&#13;
last week with three&#13;
members of the Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition (C.S.C.) The&#13;
reporter spoke with Cliff&#13;
Chambers, who resigned last&#13;
Wednesday (Jan. 22) as vicepresident,&#13;
but is remaining a&#13;
member; and Janet Scott, the&#13;
chairperson for C.S.C.'s Campus&#13;
Affairs Committee: and later,&#13;
with Chambers and . Kai Nail,&#13;
president of the Coalition&#13;
seperately.&#13;
C.S.C. is currently on the verge&#13;
of actualizing some projects that&#13;
have been months in the planning&#13;
stages. These projects include a&#13;
Student Food Co-op and Financial&#13;
Aids Counselling Committee.&#13;
The difficulty in ever establishing&#13;
services of this proportion on the&#13;
campus is sizable, and since&#13;
C.S.C. is a relatively new&#13;
organization on campus,&#13;
RANGER felt it would be interesting&#13;
both to student's and&#13;
other student organizations to&#13;
trace the evolution of this group,&#13;
their decisions on policy and the&#13;
present directions they are&#13;
channelling their efforts in.&#13;
Background information on the&#13;
origin of the Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition was told by Cliff&#13;
Chambers, who was one of the&#13;
original founders of the C.S.C.&#13;
Chambers: In the spring of 1974&#13;
there was an issue on this campus&#13;
that dealt with the construction of&#13;
the present Comm-Arts and&#13;
Classroom building, parking lots.&#13;
Many people were involved in a&#13;
petition drive and were concerned&#13;
with the physical state of&#13;
the campus. At this time I encountered&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich,&#13;
the president of P.S.G.A. Dennis&#13;
and I wanted to activate the&#13;
campus. The first step would be a&#13;
political step. The ISSUE was the&#13;
parking lots. We organized&#13;
ourselves. We were concerned&#13;
about the University, and so&#13;
Dennis, myself, and a few other&#13;
students formed the C.S.C. We&#13;
would run candidates. P.S.G.A.&#13;
was the vehicle to help accomplish&#13;
our goals. We became&#13;
politically successful and drew&#13;
the largest voter turnout in the&#13;
school's history. Then, the&#13;
Coaltition went to other area's.&#13;
We generated interest from nonpolitical&#13;
students. At this time the&#13;
Coalition was looking for a&#13;
president. Kai Nail joined the&#13;
group and everyone was aware&#13;
that he had leadership potentials.&#13;
The members of the Coalition&#13;
proposed an Ecology Day Benefit&#13;
Concert for the summer. We&#13;
acted on this in order to raise&#13;
money for plants on the campus.&#13;
The Coalition hit a plateau in the&#13;
summer, during which various&#13;
ideas were proposed for future&#13;
projects. Food Co-op, Women's&#13;
groups, Minorities, Financial&#13;
Aids and. Housing were&#13;
suggested. Later, during the fall&#13;
semester, the Women projects&#13;
and the Minorities information&#13;
idea were dropped because&#13;
People for a Non-sexist Society&#13;
and Third World were formed,&#13;
and duplication of the activities&#13;
of organizations became a major&#13;
issue and occupied a great deal of&#13;
the Coalition's time. We also:&#13;
were undergoing a structural&#13;
reshaping internally.&#13;
Members of the Coalition don't&#13;
feel they are a governing body,&#13;
but rather an organization that&#13;
gives support to individuals and&#13;
individual causes. Chambers&#13;
called the group "the alternative&#13;
organization."&#13;
RANGER: I know that you are&#13;
involved in he t Food Co-op, which&#13;
we will discuss later, but what&#13;
other projects are you involved&#13;
in?&#13;
Seott: Financial Aids Counselling&#13;
Committee is just starting.&#13;
They will be there to advise&#13;
those interested in obtaining&#13;
monies from this student service.&#13;
There's a lot of money no one's&#13;
getting and we ant to show people&#13;
north&#13;
side&#13;
location&#13;
Presents&#13;
their Annual Efih. Sale&#13;
Our Haircuts are Beautiful&#13;
Specialized&#13;
in Men's and Women's Styling&#13;
[George's Beauty Salon&#13;
Phone:637-6305&#13;
506 Goold St,&#13;
Racine, Wis&#13;
the options that are open.&#13;
The Financial Aids service offered&#13;
by the C.S.C. is designed to&#13;
help students get through the&#13;
forms that must be filled out. 75&#13;
percent of the students on this&#13;
campus never even apply for&#13;
financial aid of any kind. Individuals&#13;
who are familiar with&#13;
the forms will donate hours in&#13;
order to make this process&#13;
easier.&#13;
The Coalition will hold regular&#13;
office hours for this service on the&#13;
third floor of the Library's west&#13;
side. They will try to keep&#13;
statistics of the students that&#13;
avail themselves of this service.&#13;
A projected goal for this service,&#13;
is that Financial Aids will take&#13;
this service over and adopt it if&#13;
they see the proportion of interested&#13;
students increasing.&#13;
Those individuals that work with&#13;
students are going to get students&#13;
through the forms in a decided&#13;
time limit of 15 minutes. The&#13;
more students apply for financial&#13;
assistance, the more money will&#13;
be given to the campus to&#13;
distribute to the students.&#13;
RANGER: With projects that&#13;
require planning and active&#13;
participation by those hoping to&#13;
accomplish some goal, individuals&#13;
are obviously investing&#13;
a good deal of time: and since&#13;
motiviating people on this&#13;
campus has always been a major&#13;
obstical for organizations to&#13;
overcome, I'm interested in&#13;
learning how you view student&#13;
apathy.&#13;
Scott: It is difficult to motivate&#13;
people on the campus. Things&#13;
take time. I f you want to show&#13;
something physical to the&#13;
students that you have invested&#13;
time in, and hope they will, it&#13;
must be well-planned so that it&#13;
lasts. We try to present students&#13;
with a sign of activity. Hopefully&#13;
this will encourage activity on&#13;
their part. Many people become&#13;
disillusioned with groups. Some&#13;
think that organizations are&#13;
exclusive or little cliques.&#13;
¥&#13;
TO;&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
SPRINGBREAK TRIP&#13;
lilEXiCO&#13;
CITY&#13;
MARCH 30 - APRIL 6&#13;
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includes&#13;
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1* or application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
^AMPUSTRAVELCENTER&#13;
LLC I)-197 Call: 553-2294 &#13;
Wednesday, January 29, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
future projects&#13;
Chambers: I think the composition&#13;
of the Coalition is different&#13;
than that of the campus in&#13;
general. We have workers-doers.&#13;
We try to support each other&#13;
internally. Within the Coalition&#13;
(and you must remember the&#13;
very title of the organization-for&#13;
Concerned Students-people with&#13;
different directions and personalities,&#13;
bonded by the&#13;
Coalition to accomplish the tasks&#13;
they plan) we aren't so diverse&#13;
we can't see the tasks we startthrough.&#13;
Another reason the&#13;
organization works well is&#13;
because no single personality or&#13;
group within the Coalition&#13;
dominates the others. We've had&#13;
no serious internal disagreements*&#13;
&#13;
Scott: Another thing is that we&#13;
don't have a rigid format at our&#13;
meetings.&#13;
-=SL_&#13;
Chambers: Meetings are announced&#13;
at least two days in&#13;
advance. We have never had a&#13;
closed meeting. Any member&#13;
present can vote on any action&#13;
proposed. I think members&#13;
realize the importance of their&#13;
vote. Anyone attending our&#13;
meetings can participate in the&#13;
Coalitions discussions on&#13;
business and projects. I feel that&#13;
the reason our meetings are&#13;
friendly and more like a conversation&#13;
between interested,&#13;
intelligent persons, is because of&#13;
Kai's leadership and levelheaded&#13;
approach to things.&#13;
Scott: The leadership of an&#13;
organization is extremely important.&#13;
An organization functions&#13;
because of good leadership.&#13;
Kai is an excellent organizer. He&#13;
sees things in a vast way, an&#13;
honest way. Students have&#13;
financial problems, job&#13;
problems, and academic&#13;
problems. He looks at them with&#13;
all these factors in mind. He's&#13;
also a good listener. If an issue&#13;
arises that causes dissention in&#13;
the group or between members,&#13;
Kai looks at all aspects and tries&#13;
to satisfactorily resolve the&#13;
away °&#13;
f letting jt fade&#13;
RANGER: What do you feel&#13;
are the reactions of other&#13;
organizations and the administration&#13;
in relation to C.S.C&#13;
Chambers: I think the P.A.B is&#13;
slightly jealous of the Coalition,&#13;
r or instance, when we threw the&#13;
Ecology Day Concert, we saw the&#13;
burecratic runaround we would&#13;
get into if we held the event on&#13;
campus. So, we took it off&#13;
campus. We took a detour and&#13;
gave Parkside student's an event&#13;
in a different environment. The&#13;
P.A.B., because of affliation,&#13;
can t take these kind of detours.&#13;
They're locked into certain&#13;
channels.&#13;
Vet's Club gives a grudging&#13;
respect to us. During the planting&#13;
of trees on campus, we had a&#13;
decent encoutner with them. I&#13;
believe that, though everyone&#13;
didn't agree with us on the&#13;
parking lots, they respect our&#13;
opinions on the issue. We aren't&#13;
afraid to ask for advise, or go off&#13;
the campus to get this advice.&#13;
Scott: I think the administration&#13;
respects the&#13;
Coalition. We aren't defensive or&#13;
antagonistic.&#13;
Chambers: We make promises&#13;
of some sense and do our best to&#13;
keep them.&#13;
Next week RANGER'S conversations&#13;
with Kai Nail and Cliff&#13;
Chambers on the interal&#13;
workings of the organization and&#13;
on the Food Co-op project will be&#13;
printed, as the second article in&#13;
this series.&#13;
SORRY 'BOU T THAT&#13;
The moratorium that was called last week on the&#13;
hiring of any full time staff was not the idea of Governor&#13;
Lucey as the RANGER story of last week stated. The&#13;
moratorium was the idea of Acting Chancellor Otto&#13;
Bauer in response to preliminary signals on the&#13;
Governor's budget that will be released today. Sorry&#13;
'bout that Guv...&#13;
-f + Gregory J. Hawkins Managing Editor&#13;
make&#13;
•adate&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
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DRIVERSWRITERS&#13;
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ph. 553-2295&#13;
roller skate&#13;
SHOW COLLEGE I.D. &amp;&#13;
SKATE FOR $1.25 ANY LATE&#13;
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THURS. 9:15-11:15&#13;
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Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
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Located on Concoursi&#13;
between Library&#13;
^learning center 3&#13;
Greenquist Hal&#13;
A BUS TRIP&#13;
to the&#13;
Parkside v.s.&#13;
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Feb. 4&#13;
*3.50 includes&#13;
bus ticket&#13;
&amp; game&#13;
TICKETS AT INFO DESK W SIGN UP NOW&#13;
LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, January 29, 1975&#13;
Grapplers meet&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The Parkside Wrestling Team&#13;
will host its first meet ever with&#13;
Carthage College tonight at 8:00&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
On February 1 the Rangers will&#13;
host their final home meet for the&#13;
season at 12:00 noon with Eastern&#13;
Illinois, Augustana College and&#13;
Michigan Tech with a triple dual.&#13;
This date has been designated&#13;
as Bill West and Randy Skarda&#13;
Day, as the two senior defending&#13;
National Champions will be&#13;
wrestling their last home meet.&#13;
West is currently leading the&#13;
team as the defending National&#13;
Champion with an undefeated&#13;
streak of 41 matches. Skarda is&#13;
11-3, but has been slowed by an&#13;
injury.&#13;
The Rangers are currently&#13;
ranked number three nationally&#13;
in the NAIA and have set their&#13;
goal on winning the National&#13;
Championship which is scheduled&#13;
for March 6,7 and 8 at Sioux City,&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
Pool league started&#13;
There will be an intramural pool league starting on February 4 and&#13;
February 5, to be played at the Pub and Grub. Play will be from 1/30 to&#13;
4:30 for the day that the person signs up. Cost will be 35 cents per&#13;
game, and three games will be played.&#13;
If interested please call Loran Hein at the Phy Ed Bldg ext 2162 or&#13;
2245 and leave your name and the day that desire to play.&#13;
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL&#13;
The intramural basketball department opened up its 13-team league&#13;
on Sunday and its 4-team league on Wednesday. Here are Sunday's&#13;
results: The Dribblers over IBM 43-27; the Gang losing to the Bombers&#13;
29-48; the Obnoxious slipping past Rooty Toots 47-43; the Ardvarks&#13;
beating the Panthers 59-41; Sigma Pi losing to the Tinhorns 52-55; and&#13;
Yantze Kiang demolishing the Jefferson Starship 86-13.&#13;
The results in Wednesday's league: the Net Swishers beating the Go&#13;
A's 39-34; and the Vets Club downing the Staffers 35-27.&#13;
Top scorers in league play were:&#13;
Jeff Christensen 28&#13;
Phi Onosko 24&#13;
Tom Nelson 20&#13;
Pete Woods 18&#13;
Tom Barnhill 18&#13;
Sfofa&#13;
194 &amp; 50&#13;
* Presents •&#13;
TRAVIS&#13;
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Friday FREE Admission With&#13;
UW-P Student I.D.&#13;
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UNCLE SAM&#13;
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Sunday, February 9 th&#13;
TRUC&#13;
SeMuna the. QUteit&#13;
Pvyja &amp; Oialuut tyoodi.&#13;
&amp; ~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Lumberjacks&#13;
toppled&#13;
by Bonne Hass&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Saturday nights basketball&#13;
action led the Rangers to their&#13;
13th consecutive win against the&#13;
Northland College Lumberjacks&#13;
with a score of 74-55.&#13;
The Rangers played a patient&#13;
first half while the Lumberjacks,&#13;
from Ashland Wisconsin,&#13;
demonstrated player control and&#13;
stalling.&#13;
"We played more to stay close&#13;
than we did basketball,"&#13;
remarked Ranger coach Steve&#13;
Stephens.&#13;
A half time score of 33-20 introduced&#13;
a strong 2nd half for the&#13;
never trailing Rangers as they&#13;
showed no sympathy for the&#13;
Lumberjacks.&#13;
They advanced as a team with&#13;
remarkable poise and vitality.&#13;
The Lumberjacks were busy&#13;
"double teaming Gary Cole and&#13;
Leartha Scott, leaving Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and Stevie King wide&#13;
open," said Stephens.&#13;
Mahone shot 12 of his 16 game&#13;
points in this period with utmost&#13;
control while Marshall Hill&#13;
plucked 7 of his 10 totaled&#13;
rebounds off the boards.&#13;
The Rangers outrebounded&#13;
Northland 28-18.&#13;
Hill and Cole dumped 17 and 13&#13;
points respectively to balance the&#13;
scoring for the Rangers.&#13;
High scorers for the Lumberjacks&#13;
were Bill Huempfner&#13;
with 27 and Ron Benson with 10&#13;
points.&#13;
Parkside connected on 33 out of&#13;
77 shots for 42.8 percent and&#13;
Northland hit on 25 out of 40 a ttempts&#13;
for a 62.5 percentage. The&#13;
Rangers currently stand with a&#13;
season record of 14-3.&#13;
After Tuesdays Indiana StateEvansville&#13;
game the Rangers&#13;
will return to the road to meet&#13;
with Wayne State, Whitewater,&#13;
Eastern Illinois and others until&#13;
Feb. 18 when they will take on&#13;
UW-Green Bay at 7:30 in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Building.&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
UW^ParCsIde&#13;
WINTER CARNIVAL&#13;
February 7.8,9 Ski Mt. La Crowe&#13;
PRICE: 35. 0 0 per person&#13;
/^ACCOMODATIONS:&#13;
LIFTS:&#13;
ME A L S :&#13;
i T A X E S :&#13;
Fou r person s&#13;
Inn o f&#13;
0 ? ? J ! t t h e H ° H d « y&#13;
"n o f La C r o ss e , Wisco nsin&#13;
Of Mt.' La&#13;
1 n ?&#13;
e a k f a&#13;
?&#13;
ts ( S a t&#13;
-. S u n.)&#13;
J Dinn er ( S a t .) '&#13;
All st a te and l o c a l&#13;
t a x e s, t i p s, and g r a t u i t i e s&#13;
a r e I n clu d e d.&#13;
^EN T E R T AIN M E N T : Dance to a l i v e&#13;
band on Sat urd ay N i g h t.&#13;
Sign Up at Information Desk&#13;
HEIL EMA NS&#13;
did&#13;
64&#13;
•i Pure Brewed&#13;
Vj From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap at the Union" </text>
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              <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 22, January 29, 1975</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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