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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 23</text>
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            <text>UW-P feels economic pinch</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>UW-P feels economic pinch&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Economic conditions are effecting&#13;
Parkside and the UW&#13;
system in several ways:&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey has had&#13;
a committee organized to phase&#13;
out, phase down or consolidate&#13;
institutions and programs in the&#13;
system; Otto Bauer, acting&#13;
chancellor, has imposed a&#13;
moratorium on the hiring of&#13;
additional faculty or administrative&#13;
personnel at&#13;
Parkside; and it is becoming&#13;
increasingly difficult for&#13;
Parkside faculty to receive&#13;
tenure.&#13;
Phase out - Phase down&#13;
Professor Paul Kleine,&#13;
chairman of the Education&#13;
Division and member of the&#13;
Phase out - Phase down Committee,&#13;
said that so far the&#13;
committee has discussed&#13;
projected enrollments for the UW&#13;
system.&#13;
Kleine said, "Parkside looks&#13;
good compared to other campuses."&#13;
&#13;
He said Parkside's enrollment&#13;
has been steadily increasing and&#13;
will continue to increase until&#13;
peak enrollment is reached in&#13;
1980. After this point enrollment&#13;
will begin to spiral downward.&#13;
Parkside's 1974 fall enrollment&#13;
was 5,260 which shows an increase&#13;
of almost 1,000 students&#13;
since 1972 when enrollment was&#13;
4,366.&#13;
Peak enrollment in 1980 is&#13;
expected to equal 6,322 but by&#13;
1984 the projected enrollment&#13;
shows a drop to 5,948 students.&#13;
Hiring Moratorium&#13;
Kleine said the hiring&#13;
moratorium was called because&#13;
of budgetary uncertainities.&#13;
Shortly after Bauer called the&#13;
moratorium, Lucey announced&#13;
his recommended budget but this&#13;
will have to be passed through the&#13;
state legislature for approval and&#13;
then the UW system allocation&#13;
will have to be divided among the&#13;
campuses by Central Administration.&#13;
&#13;
Kleine said that Bauer has to&#13;
predict what Parkside's budget&#13;
will be and the moratorium was&#13;
called to prevent over-guessing&#13;
on the budget and possibly having&#13;
to break newly made contracts.&#13;
He said, "There's constant&#13;
guessing on what kind of&#13;
operating budget Parkside will&#13;
be receiving. It used to be that&#13;
you'd guess on how much more&#13;
money would be allocated than&#13;
the year before, but now we don't&#13;
know if it will be more, less or the&#13;
same."&#13;
He explained that Bauer has&#13;
called a moratorium on making&#13;
new contracts but that&#13;
recruitement procedures are&#13;
being followed as usual.&#13;
According to Kleine, the best&#13;
time for recruitement is during&#13;
the months of January, February&#13;
and March and Parkside is going&#13;
ahead with the usual procedure.&#13;
The only difference is that no&#13;
firm offers will be extended to&#13;
new people until the moratorium&#13;
is lifted.&#13;
Eugene Norwood, Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society,&#13;
said, "We'll get more specific&#13;
budgetary information in a&#13;
couple of weeks and it will get&#13;
more and more specific until we&#13;
have a good idea of what our&#13;
budget will be. We'll have some&#13;
idea about what we're getting by&#13;
this spring."&#13;
With regard to hiring&#13;
procedures for positions open&#13;
next fall, Norwood said that&#13;
recruitement is not taking place&#13;
for all open positions but&#13;
recruitement procedures are&#13;
taking place for most of the open&#13;
faculty positions.&#13;
He said, "Most faculty&#13;
positions will be filled. We don't&#13;
expect any dramatic reductions&#13;
as far as faculty are concerned."&#13;
He explained that money which&#13;
is usually used to hire full time&#13;
faculty may be split up in order to&#13;
hire more part time lecturers.&#13;
Norwood said that the vast bulk&#13;
of faculty will be hired before this&#13;
summer.&#13;
When questioned as to what&#13;
solution there would be to the&#13;
problem of the growing&#13;
enrollment coupled with the&#13;
possibility of a smaller budget&#13;
and thus fewer faculty, Norwood&#13;
replied, "The Governor said that&#13;
if there's an enrollment growth in&#13;
the University, it will have to&#13;
absorb it."&#13;
Norwood listed as possible&#13;
solutions; the enlargement of&#13;
classes or the hiring of faculty in&#13;
those areas which have the&#13;
highest student enrollment&#13;
rather than in the areas where&#13;
the vacancies exist.&#13;
Bauer said of the hiring&#13;
situation, "By the middle of&#13;
February we hope to know&#13;
enough (about the budget) to&#13;
start hiring (new faculty). We're&#13;
trying to maintain the same level&#13;
of staffing as in the '74-'75 school&#13;
year."&#13;
Tenure&#13;
When asked if Parkside could&#13;
refuse someone tenure because of&#13;
economic problems, Bauer said,&#13;
"Yes we can. We have to weigh&#13;
the number of faculty in that area&#13;
(in which the person teaches),&#13;
the number of student hours (he&#13;
teaches) and the importance of&#13;
the area (before tenuring a&#13;
faculty member)."&#13;
Parkside tenure guidelines&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-Wednesday, February 5, 1975 V ol. Ill No. 23&#13;
Academic poverty&#13;
Intellectual Biafra 1975&#13;
C/Af'&#13;
Education to suffer&#13;
Weaver says&#13;
Nicholas Burckel. director of the University Archives, is chairperson&#13;
of the Parkside Bicentennial Committee which has planned a&#13;
Bicentennial celebration to run from September of 1975 until&#13;
December of 1976. The story is on page 3.&#13;
Search screen comm.&#13;
seeks criteria input&#13;
The Chancellor Search and Screen Committee will hold open&#13;
hearings on Tuesday, February 11, from 10:00-11:30 a.m. and from&#13;
7:30-9:00 p.m., in room D115 in the Classroom Building. The hearings&#13;
are to seek guidance from students, faculty, academic and classified&#13;
staff, and the general public on criteria to be used in the selection of a&#13;
new Chancellor.&#13;
Speakers will sign up as they arrive at the hearing and will be&#13;
allowed five minutes to present their views. Written statements may&#13;
be submitted, whether or not an individual or group wishes to make an&#13;
oral presentation.&#13;
The hearings are not for the purpose of nominating or supporting&#13;
individual candidates. Nominations should be sent in writing to John&#13;
Campbell, Chairperson, Chancellor Search and Screen Committee,&#13;
room 368 Classroom Building.&#13;
According to John C. Weaver,&#13;
president of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, "real danger" of the&#13;
1975-77 budget recommended by&#13;
the governor for the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System "is visited&#13;
squarely on the students."&#13;
"It is the students who are hurt&#13;
by the dramatic fee increases,"&#13;
he told the Madison Rotary Club&#13;
in a "State of the University&#13;
System" address.&#13;
"It is the students who are hurt&#13;
when faculty numbers decline&#13;
and student numbers grow, and&#13;
as a result classes grow larger&#13;
and less personalized. It is the&#13;
students who are hurt as the&#13;
purchasing power of a static&#13;
budget brings critical shortages&#13;
of books, laboratory equipment,&#13;
paper and other basic instructional&#13;
supplies.&#13;
"This is why I'm uptight about&#13;
this budget. What, above&#13;
everything else, I'm fretting&#13;
about is the welfare of our yoting&#13;
people - the young people who&#13;
are all the future this state has."&#13;
He described the state of the&#13;
UW System as "remarkably good&#13;
- considering the restraints&#13;
under which it has been operating&#13;
and the problems we have had to&#13;
solve" since the system was&#13;
created by a merger three years&#13;
ago. But, he warned, there is&#13;
reason to worry about its future.&#13;
Weaver identified as&#13;
"ingredients of decline" in the&#13;
quality of education in the&#13;
Governor's budget:&#13;
Lack of funding for 6,000 additional&#13;
students.&#13;
Lack of any new support&#13;
dollars for operational supplies&#13;
"in years of double-digit inflation."&#13;
&#13;
Further layoff of staff "we are&#13;
told to arrange in the magic&#13;
name of 'productivity' ".&#13;
Weaver said that in a retrenchment&#13;
period it may seem&#13;
reasonable to ask the universities&#13;
to continue at approximately the&#13;
present level of expenditures for&#13;
the next two years - "until you&#13;
add growing enrollments and&#13;
runaway inflation into the socalled&#13;
'steady-state' formula."&#13;
He reported that in the last four&#13;
years more than 600 faculty and&#13;
academic staff people had been&#13;
"terminated or laid off for budget&#13;
reasons" and that the governor's&#13;
recommended budget would&#13;
require the universities to teach&#13;
6,000 more students than at&#13;
present while simultaneously&#13;
eliminating over 300 more staff&#13;
positions.&#13;
Among cost increases which&#13;
the governor's recommended&#13;
budget would require the UW&#13;
System to "absorb," Weaver&#13;
said, are:&#13;
A $17 million increase thus far&#13;
in the cost of supplies and&#13;
equipment -- "books, chemicals,&#13;
pencils, frogs and postage" -&#13;
which will increase even more as&#13;
inflation continues in the next two&#13;
years.&#13;
A projected $5.2 million in&#13;
utilities costs.&#13;
A $1.2 million increase in annual&#13;
debt service on buildings.&#13;
A $2.8 million minimum wage&#13;
adjustment required by federal&#13;
law.&#13;
A $ 6.1 million increase to make&#13;
up the cost of the instruction of&#13;
4.500 new students accepted this&#13;
year.&#13;
There is much misunderstanding,&#13;
Weaver said, about&#13;
enrollment trends in the UW&#13;
System. He said that the&#13;
governor was influenced by&#13;
enrollment forecasts when he&#13;
asked the Board of Regents to&#13;
prepare a plan by April 15 on the&#13;
possible ways to phase down and&#13;
phase out programs and even to&#13;
close campuses.&#13;
He said that it was difficult for&#13;
him to see how a "phase-down or&#13;
phase-out" plan can be prepared&#13;
which will preserve both&#13;
educational quality and&#13;
educational access, as the&#13;
governor has requested.&#13;
"Certainly access must suffer&#13;
if educational opportunity is&#13;
available in fewer locations, and&#13;
quality must suffer if we are&#13;
required to maintain all existing&#13;
points of sccess without adequate&#13;
funding." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February s, ,975&#13;
RANGER Letters to the editor&#13;
Editorial/Opinion— Hahner sick of 'dealing'&#13;
Austerity?&#13;
Not at&#13;
Parkside!&#13;
If you cannot handle the money you have we will give&#13;
you more. This could almost be a quote from the recent&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee meeting of January 29&#13;
After consistently doling out student funds for entertainment&#13;
that few, if any, students enjoy or attend,&#13;
the Campus Center Programming (under the direction&#13;
of Anthony Totero) came forward on January 29 with a&#13;
requested increase in their budget of 25 percent&#13;
Through the kindness of the Segregated Fees Committee,&#13;
Campus Center Program received a 60 percent&#13;
increase.&#13;
Our Chancellor places a moratorium on faculty hiring&#13;
and Campus Center Programming receives excess&#13;
funds to hire an assistant programmer. So look forward&#13;
to more and more uninteresting entertainment (the&#13;
assistant will have to generate losers, that's the&#13;
philosophy of CCP) and less professors to teach.&#13;
And the hiring goes on. Not students though. They are&#13;
"unprofessional" to quote Bill Neibuhr, director of&#13;
Student Life. So Student Life and Auxiliary Services will&#13;
be able to hire a "part-time professional" secretary&#13;
with the gracious increase allotted by Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee. Fine, a professional secretary to type up&#13;
those beautiful travel folders on trips arranged by&#13;
Student Programming-no students can afford the trips&#13;
but at least they can dream of far-off places with&#13;
Parkside travel folders.&#13;
RANGER calls on Chancellor Bauer and Central&#13;
Administration to freeze segregated fees for the&#13;
Parkside Campus at the present $88.00 and send the&#13;
proposed budget back to our student Segregated Fees&#13;
•Committee for reappraisal. In an era of austerity and in&#13;
the midst of a nation-wide depression there can be no&#13;
justification for the excesses that are in the present&#13;
Segregated Fees budget.&#13;
'• * ^ ' ' - - - - • ^j«gi&#13;
EDITORS NOTE: On January 29, 1975 the UW-Parkside&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee finalized their proposals&#13;
for the 1975-76 school term. Segregated fees are a portion&#13;
of the tuition of each student at Parkside. The&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee decides the amount each&#13;
student will contribute towards various departments&#13;
and activities on campus. In keeping with Merger&#13;
Implementation this year's committee consisted&#13;
students as the only voting members. The Segregated&#13;
Fees Committee has decided to raise the amount of that&#13;
fee from the present $88.00 to $97.00. The increase will be&#13;
added to next semesters tuition for each student.&#13;
The following is the finalized proposal budget for 1975-&#13;
76:&#13;
Academic Year&#13;
Union Reserve&#13;
Fine Arts &amp; Lectures&#13;
Student Life &amp; Aux. Service&#13;
Student Programming&#13;
Student Health&#13;
Transportation&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
Student Group Support&#13;
Student Newspaper&#13;
Total Academic Year&#13;
Summer Session&#13;
Union Reserve&#13;
Student Programming&#13;
Transportation&#13;
Student Newspaper&#13;
1975-76 Increase&#13;
Proposal Decrease&#13;
$38.50 -&#13;
1.50 -&#13;
9.50 $ +4.50&#13;
12.00 +4.50&#13;
3.00 + 1.00&#13;
10.00 (4.00)&#13;
11.00 +2.00&#13;
8.25 + .25&#13;
2.75 + .25&#13;
.50 + .50&#13;
$97.00 $+9.00&#13;
$11.00&#13;
3.75&#13;
5.00&#13;
3-25&#13;
$22.00&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to thank all future&#13;
students for they have purchased&#13;
a student constitution at the&#13;
ridiculously low cost of $4.50 a&#13;
head. It is hard in such times of&#13;
inflation to find a bargain of this&#13;
sort. However our Student Body&#13;
President (?), Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich did his best to make&#13;
sure the students wouldn't be&#13;
outbid. It was just 5 days ago that&#13;
he was telling me that this was&#13;
one way to make sure that&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Student&#13;
Services, Allen B. Dearborn,&#13;
would find it much easier to&#13;
accept our constitution, if we&#13;
would give Student Life (PAB) a&#13;
piece of pork barrel allocation,&#13;
via a you scratch my back I'll&#13;
scratch yours scheme. Therefore&#13;
I ask you to call Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
in his office at 553-2332 or at&#13;
home 554-6288, and voice your&#13;
opinions about such inflationary&#13;
matters to the chief cheerleader&#13;
who urged the Student&#13;
Segregated Fee Allocation&#13;
Committee to adopt such inflationary&#13;
measures. Also&#13;
students may voice complaints to&#13;
Student Body President (?)&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, who voted&#13;
for the increase at his home at&#13;
658-3690 or at his office 553-2244 if&#13;
one is lucky to find him in. If you&#13;
are sick and tired of the "Lets&#13;
Make a Deal" type of collusion on&#13;
this campus, stand up for your&#13;
constitutional rights, it's your&#13;
money so stand up for it. The&#13;
following motion will be introduced&#13;
at the P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
meeting of Monday, Feb. 3, 1975,&#13;
call the above numbers and voice&#13;
your support for it.&#13;
Whereas the Student&#13;
Segregated Fee Allocation&#13;
Committee has allocated Student&#13;
Life (PAB) and increase of $4.50&#13;
over last years allocation, to a&#13;
new high of $12.00 o ut of each&#13;
students tuition in the proposed&#13;
1975-76segregated fee budget, for&#13;
Where is McCarthy now&#13;
the purposes of hiring a&#13;
programmer and "additional&#13;
programming" and,&#13;
Whereas the Chancellor has&#13;
declared a moratorium on&#13;
faculty hiring and,&#13;
Whereas it appears that the&#13;
Central Administration in&#13;
Madison will be forced to increase&#13;
student's tuition due to&#13;
inflationary pressures and,&#13;
Whereas the PSGA Inc. Constitution&#13;
requires the student&#13;
senate to review the allocations&#13;
committee budget, congnizant of&#13;
these facts we therefore call upon&#13;
the acting Chancellor to either&#13;
follow the student constitution&#13;
and allow a budget review conducted&#13;
by the student senate or&#13;
intercede himself and strike&#13;
down the fiscally irresponsible&#13;
actions of the segregated fee&#13;
allocations committee.&#13;
THANK YOU,&#13;
Authorized and Paid for by&#13;
AWOL&#13;
Michael G. Hahner President,&#13;
and Student Senator&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am responding to the&#13;
RANGER Editorial of Jan. 29,&#13;
1974 in which you correctly stated&#13;
that I was not present at the&#13;
Merger Implementation task&#13;
force meeting on Jan. 23, 1975.&#13;
Unlike other Presidents, your&#13;
Student Government President&#13;
never received any form of&#13;
immunity, including immunity&#13;
from the Flu. (The RANGER&#13;
reader looks up from her-his&#13;
paper and instinctively rolls hisher&#13;
eyes toward the cafeteria&#13;
ceiling and a look of disgust&#13;
slowly creeps across her-his face,&#13;
thinking aloud, "who cares?")&#13;
On t he date in question, I had&#13;
the flu and because of that was&#13;
unabel to attend a segregated fee&#13;
meeting in the morning. I intended&#13;
to stay home and shake it&#13;
off until 1 received a phone call&#13;
reminding me that there was a&#13;
Campus Planning Committee&#13;
meeting where it would be&#13;
decided what to do with all the&#13;
students that had purchased red&#13;
parking permits for the Comm.&#13;
Arts building. As I am* sure you&#13;
all know by now, red parking&#13;
permits entitled you to park in a&#13;
certain part of the Comm. Arts&#13;
Parking lot. Well, at least until&#13;
the permit sellers oversold the&#13;
white permits in which case the&#13;
Reds (Yes, there is a story in this&#13;
also) were ticketed for parking in&#13;
the now newly designated White&#13;
area. Not only is this&#13;
misrepresentating concerning&#13;
the Reds but also smacks of a&#13;
tinge of segregation (white&#13;
supremacy in the Comm. Arts&#13;
parking lot).&#13;
Being the only student on the&#13;
Campus Planning Committee I&#13;
felt it was of the utmost importance&#13;
that I get to that&#13;
meeting and insure that the&#13;
rights of the Reds (well, there&#13;
goes my chance for any Civil&#13;
Service job) were not neglected.&#13;
The Administrative proposal was&#13;
to make the Comm. Arts lot an all&#13;
White Lot. My motion was to&#13;
make it a first come first serve&#13;
lot. My motion was ammended by&#13;
a faculty member to make only&#13;
the Southwest quadrent red&#13;
territory. This passed. My next&#13;
motion was to invalidate all&#13;
parking tickets given to the Reds&#13;
in question. This did not even&#13;
recieve a second.&#13;
As to why I didn't go to the Task&#13;
Force meeting:&#13;
1. Red permit holders were&#13;
entitled to be represented at&#13;
a meeting where there is only one&#13;
voting student member.&#13;
2. Both meetings were being&#13;
held at the same time and unfortunately&#13;
I cannot be in two&#13;
places at the same time.&#13;
3. The task force meeting was&#13;
being taped.&#13;
4. My sole function at that&#13;
hearing was to be there in body&#13;
and listen to the comments being&#13;
made. I was not there to engage&#13;
in discussion or debate.&#13;
5. Putting into proper perspective&#13;
the importance of the&#13;
two meetings I elected to attend&#13;
the Campus Planning meeting to&#13;
insure student representation&#13;
and decided to listen to the tapes&#13;
at the next Task Force meeting.&#13;
I had requested numerous&#13;
students to attend the Task Force&#13;
meeting. As to why they didn't&#13;
show up, your guess is as good as&#13;
mine.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President P.S.G.A.Inc.&#13;
Selfish pipe dreams&#13;
($24.25 f or&#13;
Summer 1976)&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Being a person of no great&#13;
importance, i.e. a student, I&#13;
would like to express my hardly&#13;
coh ere nt r u m i n a t i o n s ,&#13;
cerebrations, and all around&#13;
preoccupations concerning the&#13;
current state of (or lack of) affairs&#13;
in the P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
I must also confess to being a&#13;
student senator - an appointed&#13;
one who theoretically represents&#13;
the student body at large.&#13;
(Perhaps I should begin to truly&#13;
represent the students "at large"&#13;
and not say anything at all. But it&#13;
is so hard to break habits!) Since&#13;
I was not "elected" by students, I&#13;
feel I owe them an insight into the&#13;
"raised" conscience of one&#13;
person involved in the P.S.-G.A.&#13;
rumblings, and make known my&#13;
future actions regarding the&#13;
predicament.&#13;
I entered P.S.G.A. after much&#13;
deliberation, and for quite selfish&#13;
reasons~I blush to admit. Observing&#13;
the organization intermittantly&#13;
throughout the&#13;
summer and increasing my&#13;
connections with it during the&#13;
first semester, I had the unfortunate&#13;
opportunity to see&#13;
many, too many, brawls, battles&#13;
and belligerent contentions&#13;
resu ting m resignations by those&#13;
involved and those disgusted with&#13;
those involved. Standing back&#13;
and looking at the organization I&#13;
asked myself if I wanted to be&#13;
associated with such rampant&#13;
c o n f u s i o n. A fte r verb all y attacking&#13;
myself for even considering&#13;
such a notion, I looked at&#13;
it from a different angle; what&#13;
could P.S.G.A. do for me&#13;
9&#13;
Considering it as a chance for&#13;
personal growth in which I would&#13;
seek out (rather than be subjected&#13;
to) both sides of the two&#13;
obviously diverse "camps" and&#13;
make an honest attempt to increase&#13;
my decision making&#13;
Powers, I sought out the an&#13;
pointment.&#13;
Ah — wh at pipe dreams! Soon&#13;
I too was involved and bogged&#13;
down by the infighting. It was&#13;
shattering when I realized what I&#13;
was doing. My first impulse was&#13;
o resign and get as far away&#13;
trom student government and&#13;
governors as possible. But&#13;
looking at those who had resigned&#13;
before me, I saw that they were&#13;
still involved - emotionally if not&#13;
physically. These are people I&#13;
admire; they care about this&#13;
campus and its inhabitants, and&#13;
have ended up being very&#13;
frustrated at not being able to&#13;
help the students grow along with&#13;
the rest of the campus. And then&#13;
I understood that I too wanted to&#13;
help students, wanted to help&#13;
myself, strive towards a better&#13;
educational system.&#13;
The way to do this is not to&#13;
resign. I therefore refuse to&#13;
participate in any more political&#13;
games, and when an issue arises&#13;
which essentially concerns only&#13;
personalities, I will abstain from&#13;
voting, even if I have an opinion.&#13;
When the question reaches such&#13;
low levels, the students are being&#13;
abandoned. I will not allow&#13;
myself, hence the students I&#13;
aspire to "represent," be enslaved&#13;
and entrapped by&#13;
destructive rivalry.&#13;
Janet L. Scott&#13;
Senator P.S.G.A &#13;
Wednesday, February 5, 1975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Materialism and philosophies&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter will deal with two&#13;
topics, 1) The recent actions of&#13;
the segregated fee allocations&#13;
committee and 2) An article&#13;
entitled Conflicts in the P.S.G.A.&#13;
which appeared in the Wed., Jan.&#13;
29 issue of the Ranger.&#13;
During the past week the&#13;
segregated fee allocations&#13;
committee has voted to increase&#13;
the allocation for the Student Life&#13;
Department and the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB) by $4.50&#13;
per student. This brings the&#13;
allocation to an all time high of&#13;
$12.00 per student. Part of this&#13;
increased allocation is to be used&#13;
to hire a new programmer. It&#13;
seems ironic to me that shortly&#13;
after Acting Chancellor Bauer&#13;
has called for a moratorium on&#13;
hiring of additional faculty, the&#13;
segregated fee committee has&#13;
voted to allocate money to enable&#13;
the P.A.B. to hire an additional&#13;
employee to be paid approximately&#13;
$10,000 per year out&#13;
of student money. This is the&#13;
same committee which virtually&#13;
had to be begged to raise student&#13;
group support allocations by 25&#13;
cents per student. This is the fund&#13;
which supports most campus&#13;
organizations. I would urge all&#13;
students to contact the asst.&#13;
chancellor for student services,&#13;
Allen Dearborn and the president&#13;
NCAA BOWS&#13;
of the P.S.G.A. Inc. Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich, who is a member of&#13;
the committee and who also&#13;
voted for the allocation. Express&#13;
to them your disatisfaction with&#13;
the proposed allocations. This is&#13;
money which will be taken from&#13;
your pocket, you have an&#13;
obligation to make your feelings&#13;
known.&#13;
In conclusion I would like to&#13;
clear up some misconceptions&#13;
caused by the article dealing with&#13;
conflicts in the P.S.G.A. which&#13;
appeared in last weeks ranger.&#13;
First the conflict is over&#13;
philosophy and not personalities.&#13;
I believe that the senate should be&#13;
consulted before major actions&#13;
are taken by the president, the&#13;
president has often disagreed&#13;
with me. This has led to friction. I&#13;
personally do not believe that this&#13;
could ever justify the actions of&#13;
the president, i.e. a physical&#13;
attack upon myself in front of 3&#13;
other senators, threats of&#13;
lawsuits or ass -beating, and&#13;
name calling, for example,&#13;
calling certain senators gossip&#13;
spewing mucous voyeurs. These&#13;
methods would not be used by a&#13;
person who wants to command&#13;
the respect of the student body&#13;
which he supposedly leads.&#13;
Many other accusations have&#13;
been made. I hope that the&#13;
Ranger will in the immediate&#13;
future delve into the background&#13;
information which has led to the&#13;
recent incidents.&#13;
John Kontz,&#13;
President pro-tempore,&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. Senate&#13;
Anyone&#13;
out there?&#13;
To the Students:&#13;
Hi gang, I know you're out&#13;
there, I can hear you breathing.&#13;
And sometimes on my jaunts&#13;
through the halls I can hear the&#13;
distant rumblings of discontent.&#13;
But golly gee, PSGA could forget&#13;
that thhir were any such people,&#13;
ie students, if it weren't for the&#13;
nice picture window in the&#13;
meeting room. Maybe it's time&#13;
students took an interest in their&#13;
governing bod. Some new faces&#13;
would be a refreshing, ie&#13;
faroutski, change. For sure they&#13;
can't be any worse $han some of&#13;
the old ones.&#13;
Petulently yours,&#13;
Sandy Beach&#13;
P.S. In the level of existence&#13;
that is known as reality, I am&#13;
known as Carrie ward.&#13;
PP. And I don't mean business.&#13;
AIAW wins&#13;
recognition&#13;
After a controversial false start&#13;
the nation's most prominent&#13;
student athletic association voted&#13;
to consult with a women's&#13;
athletic organization before&#13;
deciding to conduct pilot&#13;
programs for national women's&#13;
intercollegiate athletic championships.&#13;
&#13;
The National Collegiate&#13;
Athletic Association (NCAA) had&#13;
earlier opted to establish test&#13;
programs on its own for women's&#13;
championships in track and&#13;
tennis for this spring, followed by&#13;
pilot championships for as many&#13;
as ten other sports in the next&#13;
four years.&#13;
The change was seen as a&#13;
minor victory for women's sports&#13;
groups, because the earlier&#13;
resolution failed to provide for&#13;
consultation or cooperation with&#13;
women's athletic organizations,&#13;
notably the Association for Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for&#13;
Women(ATAW).&#13;
The action came during&#13;
NCAA's 69th annual convention&#13;
in early January in Washington,&#13;
DC and was prompted by complaints&#13;
from the convention floor&#13;
and stiff criticism by AIAW officials.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lee Morrison, AIAW&#13;
president, expressed shock and&#13;
disappointment when informed ot&#13;
the original NCAA proposal to&#13;
press ahead alone with women's&#13;
championships.&#13;
"We have been trying to work&#13;
with the NCAA to iron out some of&#13;
the problems common to&#13;
women's atletics," she said. "If&#13;
this program is intended to&#13;
replace ones women have&#13;
developed, I would be very&#13;
concerned and upset."&#13;
"I would say they are trying to&#13;
infringe upon opportunities&#13;
women have provided for&#13;
women," Morrison said.&#13;
The revised resolution called&#13;
for a joint AIAW-NCAA committee&#13;
to study the issue of&#13;
women's intercollegiate athletics&#13;
and to report back in time for the&#13;
1976 NCAA convention.&#13;
The resolution then calls for the&#13;
NCAA Council, the organization's&#13;
policy-making body, to suggest&#13;
whether or not "it would be&#13;
desirable or legally necessary"&#13;
for the NCAA to conduct women's&#13;
championships. The action bars&#13;
any pilot programs for this year.&#13;
According to NCAA Executive&#13;
Director Walter Byers the two&#13;
sports associations have been in&#13;
close, though unfruitful contact&#13;
on the simmering issue of&#13;
women's championships already.&#13;
Parkside plans&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
. by Brenda Mead&#13;
The Parkside Bicentennial&#13;
Committee has planned a&#13;
Bicentennial celebration to run&#13;
from September of 1975 until&#13;
December of 1976.&#13;
The Committee, under the&#13;
leadership of Nicholas Burckel,&#13;
Director of the University Archives,&#13;
has already planned a&#13;
number of activities and events.&#13;
All faculty, staff and students are&#13;
being requested to suggest&#13;
projects, displays and other&#13;
activities for this celebration.&#13;
Two major exhibits will be on&#13;
loan from the Smithsonian Institute&#13;
in Washington, D.C., for&#13;
their viewing at Parkside.&#13;
The first exhibit, "Five Critical&#13;
Election," will be here from&#13;
October 9th until November 7th to&#13;
coincide with the 1975 election&#13;
period. The second,&#13;
"Manuscripts of the American&#13;
Revolution," will be here from&#13;
January 10th until February 8th&#13;
of 1976. They will be on display&#13;
for the general public.&#13;
The Parkside Bicentennial&#13;
Committee is working with the&#13;
Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
Bicentennial Commission, and&#13;
both the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
County Bicentennial Committee's.&#13;
They plan to coordinate&#13;
county-wide activities during the&#13;
period, such as guest lecturers,&#13;
displays, discussions, concerts,&#13;
and dramatic production.&#13;
Burckel said that the Parkside&#13;
Bicentennial Committee is&#13;
limited in their planning since&#13;
they must use "existing&#13;
resources and financial constraints."&#13;
&#13;
He was enthusiastic that the&#13;
commemoration will be exciting&#13;
and interesting for all.&#13;
Any suggestions for activities,&#13;
or people desiring to volunteer&#13;
their services should contact&#13;
Burckel in the University Archives,&#13;
located in room D-276 of&#13;
the Wyllie Library Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Byers was quoted by Higher&#13;
Education Daily as saying the&#13;
women's group did not seem to be&#13;
interested in cooperating with the&#13;
NCAA.&#13;
In a move destined to further&#13;
heighten tensions between the&#13;
sports groups, the NCAA Council&#13;
in its report to convention&#13;
delegates underlined what it felt&#13;
was the value of having a single&#13;
association control both men's&#13;
and women's intercollegiate&#13;
athletics.&#13;
"The only satisfactory approach...&#13;
to the necessary institutional&#13;
control of all its intercollegiate&#13;
athletic programs,"&#13;
the council said, "is to place&#13;
men's and women's programs&#13;
under the same administration,&#13;
the same legislative body and the&#13;
same eligibility rules."&#13;
No throw&#13;
wins MOO&#13;
(CPS) -- Drinking 11 ounces of chewing tobacco spit may never beat&#13;
streaking in popularity but it has earned an Oregon State University&#13;
student $100.&#13;
Taking a dare from his Delta Tau Delta fraternity brother,&#13;
sophomore Tim Lee agreed to swallow a spittle full of "chew brew,"&#13;
the spit remains of chewing tobacco, for the $100 reward, and of&#13;
course, the glory.&#13;
"Chewing" consists of sticking a bit of t obacco between one's lower&#13;
teeth and gums and then "relaxin," according to television commercials.&#13;
&#13;
The dare began when Lee and John Heller were driving back from a&#13;
gambling venture in Reno, Nevada. Lee had lost money while Heller&#13;
had won, so Heller proposed the event. The only stipulation was that&#13;
Lee could not throw up for an hour. Despite prodding from 25&#13;
onlookers Lee lasted the hour and even felt fine the next day.&#13;
"He almost threw it up two or three times," said Heller, "and I tried&#13;
to psyche him into doing it. But after a while, I figured he deserved the&#13;
money."&#13;
"I'll drink anything for the right reward," said Lee, "If the price is&#13;
right, you bet I'll do it again."&#13;
Books to Vietnam&#13;
(CPS) - More than $50,000 worth of school composition books will&#13;
soon be shipped to North Vietnam by the American Friends Service&#13;
Committee (AFSC) as "an initial step in a program of reconstruction&#13;
and reconciliation."&#13;
AFSC was asked by the North Vietnamese government to provide&#13;
books when an AFSC delegation asked what it could do to solve' the&#13;
immediate needs of the nation, which is experiencing, among other&#13;
things, a paper shortage.&#13;
Efforts will be made to involve American schoolchildren in fundraising&#13;
efforts to help their North Vietnamese counterparts, according&#13;
to AFSC.&#13;
Fast or Slow&#13;
Rangers streak at 15&#13;
Lambda chi alpha&#13;
names o ffi c e rs&#13;
James Franklin, a sophomore, has been elected President of the&#13;
Parkside Colony of the Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity. Franklin, who&#13;
lives at 2318 Grove Ave. in Racine, is a Mathematics major seeking&#13;
teacher certification.&#13;
Other offices filled at Sunday's election are Vice President, Matt&#13;
Sehliesman; Secretary, Ron Bayer; Treasurer, Joseph Ousley;&#13;
Membership Recruitment Chairman, Don Gramza; Social Chairman,&#13;
Mark Badtke; Ritualist, Robin Pulda; Educational Chairman. John&#13;
Morris: and Fraternity Educator, Bob Thomas.&#13;
Lambda Chi Alpha, the Fraternity of Honest Friendship, is one of&#13;
the largest fraternities in the world with over 175 chapters throughout&#13;
the United States and Canada.&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Last Tuesday nights basketball&#13;
game against Indiana StateEvansville&#13;
had to be the slowest&#13;
of the past three home games but&#13;
it didn't stop the Rangers from&#13;
winning with a score of 57-34.&#13;
"I hope these last three games&#13;
in slowdown style haven't hurt us&#13;
for when we tackle someone who&#13;
can really come after us."&#13;
remarked coach Steve Stephens&#13;
in reference to the next seven 'on&#13;
the raod' games.&#13;
Gary Cole and Leartha Scott&#13;
pumped in 23 and 22 points&#13;
respectively, to lead the Rangers&#13;
to a 80-66 victory over Wayne&#13;
State in Detroit Saturday afternoon&#13;
in their first game'of the&#13;
tour.&#13;
This marked the 15th consecutive&#13;
win and a record of 16-3&#13;
on the season.&#13;
The Evansville Eagles spent&#13;
most of their offensive evening&#13;
passing the ball in their fore court&#13;
connecting on a total of 17 out of&#13;
32 field goals for a 53 per cent&#13;
shooting average. The Rangers&#13;
hit on 25 out of 53 attempts for 47&#13;
per cent.&#13;
The Eagles double teamed Cole&#13;
allowing him to sink 11 points&#13;
while they left 'Scottie' wide open&#13;
to dump 25 points.&#13;
High scorers for the Eagles&#13;
were DoJuan Rowser with 12 and&#13;
Ernie Brothers with 10 points.&#13;
The Rangers out rebounded the&#13;
Eagles 24-19.&#13;
Cole dominated the defensh&#13;
backboards in Satudays garr&#13;
with 19 rebounds allowing tl&#13;
intrepid Ranger team to oi&#13;
rebound the Tartars 60-50.&#13;
"Our rebounding was a ver&#13;
key thing in the game," sai&#13;
Stephens "and I'm pleased wil&#13;
the victory."&#13;
The Rangers connected on :&#13;
out of 28 attempts from the fie!&#13;
at the half for 68 percent and :&#13;
out of 65 for a 54 percent at tl&#13;
end of the game.&#13;
The Rangers will take c&#13;
Eastern Illinois February 6 ar&#13;
head south to tour Dixieland ar&#13;
meet with the Universities i&#13;
New Orleans, South Alabama ar&#13;
Delta State College in Mississip&#13;
February 10-13. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February 5, 1975&#13;
Establishing a power position&#13;
CO-OPeration and Concern&#13;
Editor's Note: This is the second&#13;
in a two-part series regarding the&#13;
activities of Parkside's Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition.&#13;
RANGER hopes to feature other&#13;
organizations in the up coming&#13;
months so students are introduced&#13;
to the various personalities&#13;
involved in the groups&#13;
that concern themselves with&#13;
students and campus welfare at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
Next, RANGER spoke with Cliff&#13;
Chambers a CSC member and&#13;
Kai Nail, C.S.C. President, on the&#13;
internal workings of and issues&#13;
Concerned Student Coalitionwith&#13;
which its members have become&#13;
involved.&#13;
Coalition's Concern for Student&#13;
Problems&#13;
Nail; The ideal goal as I see it,&#13;
is that students can come to the&#13;
Coalition and present us with a&#13;
EIGHTH AVEHUE&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 Eighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
'ACROSS FROM UNION PARK'&#13;
problem; knowing that we will&#13;
work to solve it. The trust of the&#13;
students is important. We want to&#13;
be known for getting something&#13;
done.&#13;
As far as other organizations&#13;
are concerned, we are still&#13;
evolving and therefore, they&#13;
don't consider us established.&#13;
Our organization was ignored&#13;
when students were being appointed&#13;
to the Search and Screen&#13;
Committee for a new chancellor.&#13;
I can understand this, but I can't&#13;
understand why an organization&#13;
like Third World was ignored and&#13;
had to get their candidate in&#13;
through P.S.G.A.&#13;
As far as motivation and&#13;
organization are concerned,&#13;
trying to get any group moving&#13;
from its origin is a problem. The&#13;
. things I look for is the proportion&#13;
of people on campus that are&#13;
being reached by any given&#13;
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activity. What an organization&#13;
does must have an affect. We are&#13;
aiming to change the atmosphere&#13;
on this campus.&#13;
Chambers; We started a&#13;
mental turn-around on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Nail; I realize we must begin&#13;
projects slowly. When we&#13;
establish a project we try to&#13;
judge the amount of individuals it&#13;
will deal with or service. Internally,&#13;
we are a liberal&#13;
organization. Our structure is&#13;
relaxed. We encourage people&#13;
who attend our meetings to voice&#13;
their concern over problems&#13;
facing them as students.&#13;
For instance, student Debora&#13;
Donatt made us aware of&#13;
Parkside's "mission" and in a&#13;
newsletter, that was released&#13;
this week, and in it we gave&#13;
a description of this&#13;
"mission." We are genuinely&#13;
concerned about the academic&#13;
aspects of this university, not just&#13;
the social interaction among&#13;
students. Supposedly, the&#13;
"mission" is to phase out the&#13;
liberal arts aspects of the campus&#13;
and if this aim were accomplished,&#13;
it would be to the&#13;
loss of creative inter-change&#13;
among both students and faculty&#13;
alike. We took up Debora&#13;
Donatt's individual cause&#13;
because it was of importance to&#13;
all sectors of the campus.&#13;
Relationship with Administration&#13;
Kai Nail had a different view of&#13;
how the administration sees the&#13;
Coalition. Chambers mentioned&#13;
that he felt Kai was "selling the&#13;
Coalition short", in his view of&#13;
other organizations reactions and&#13;
also administrive reaction. Kai&#13;
explained his view to RANGER...&#13;
Nail: We're not dealing with&#13;
the administration like the Vet's&#13;
Club does, or Adult Student&#13;
Association, or P.A.B. They are&#13;
established on the campus in&#13;
terms of power, priority, and&#13;
offices. The sheer population of&#13;
their membership gives them&#13;
incredible support. When the&#13;
University includes us on their&#13;
registration interest sheets, gives&#13;
us an office and treats us in accordance&#13;
with our position; we&#13;
will be what I feel is accepted.&#13;
We've had good cooperation&#13;
with the administration. I was&#13;
under the impression from&#13;
Dearborn (Chancellor for&#13;
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Student Service) and Bauer&#13;
(Acting Chancellor) that they&#13;
were genuinely interested in the&#13;
things that affect students. The&#13;
Task Force on merger implementation&#13;
and Segregated&#13;
Fees are good examples of the&#13;
administration wanting student&#13;
input. We inform the administration&#13;
of our forthcoming&#13;
actions and the communication&#13;
makes things better. Surprises&#13;
are foolish. We try to be completely&#13;
open and fair. We want to&#13;
act fairly.&#13;
I deal with Echelbarger&#13;
(Assoc. Dean of Students),&#13;
Dearborn and Bauer. I think&#13;
these people are truly concerned&#13;
about helping the campus to&#13;
grow. They are optimistic. If an&#13;
individual student had a serious&#13;
problem and wanted to go to the&#13;
administration directly, I would&#13;
advise that they see Echelbarger&#13;
first, then Dearborn, and finally,&#13;
Bauer.&#13;
Chambers: I think that&#13;
organizations have the edge over&#13;
individual students, in getting the&#13;
attention of the administration of&#13;
problems. They represent a&#13;
number of students. This is not to&#13;
say that the administration&#13;
wouldn't hear the complaint of a&#13;
single member of the student&#13;
body.&#13;
Organization of Food Co-op&#13;
RANGER next inquired on the&#13;
Food Co-op that C.S.C. hopes to&#13;
have working by March of this&#13;
year. Kai Nail described in detail&#13;
various aspects of the oeration,&#13;
with relation to age group, individual&#13;
buyer and set-up.&#13;
Although some of the information&#13;
is still in the tenative stage; it is&#13;
included to show the serious&#13;
consideration with which C.S.C.&#13;
has treated this project.&#13;
Nail; The Co-op will start out as&#13;
a food buying organization on the&#13;
University campus. Students will&#13;
order and pay for their merchandise&#13;
in advance. This will be&#13;
at a reduced rate in comparison&#13;
to most stores. Then, they will&#13;
pick it up at a decided delivery&#13;
point about two days later. This&#13;
operation will continue until the&#13;
fall of 1975 when, hopefully, we&#13;
will begin the Food Co-op Store.&#13;
Members of the store will be in&#13;
iwu different classes, and cards'&#13;
for the members will cost $5.00&#13;
for an individual and $10.00 for a&#13;
family. This will give us some&#13;
capital to work with and it insures&#13;
us that they are serious in&#13;
their support of the Co-op.&#13;
There will most likely be three&#13;
prices on food. 1. Standard price&#13;
for non-members, which will be&#13;
as low as chain store prices. 2.&#13;
Regular member's prices will be&#13;
at some sort of discount. In this&#13;
category we might also let senior&#13;
citizens and perhaps handicapped&#13;
students have membership&#13;
without paying a fee for&#13;
the card. 3. Finally, the individuals&#13;
that work in the Co-op&#13;
would (after buying the members'&#13;
card) be able to get their&#13;
food at almost the wholesale&#13;
prices&#13;
The Co-op will have to be&#13;
bonded and incorporated when it&#13;
is a store. I would still like to see&#13;
the ordering service continued&#13;
even after the store is opened. We&#13;
also hope to have a catalogue of&#13;
all the items that can be purchased&#13;
and their price so that the&#13;
buyers will know in advance how&#13;
much things will cost. If they&#13;
ordered in bulk they would leave&#13;
a deposit on the items and pay the&#13;
rest of the price when they picked&#13;
the items up.&#13;
We are considering the green&#13;
building on the corner of "A" and&#13;
Wood Road for the Co-op once it&#13;
has been vacated. Our hours&#13;
would probably be from 9 a.m. to&#13;
9 p.m. We will probably deal with&#13;
the Milwaukee wholesalers and&#13;
MACS (Milwaukee Area Co-op&#13;
Service), will be the agency we&#13;
join. The services of the Co-op&#13;
will only be available to students&#13;
in order not to interfere with the&#13;
business men in the area. If we&#13;
took the business away from&#13;
stores in the area, we would run&#13;
into community problems.&#13;
RANGER hopes that the students&#13;
avail themselves of the services&#13;
offered by the Coalition and the&#13;
other organizations on campus.&#13;
The organizations (or most of&#13;
them) were founded in order to&#13;
accomplish various projects and&#13;
services needed on this campus.&#13;
There are numerous groups that&#13;
students may channel their&#13;
energies into. RANGER did this&#13;
interview with the Coalition&#13;
because they are an active&#13;
organization, with diversified&#13;
projects and an openness to&#13;
student input in any area. And&#13;
though they have existed for less&#13;
than a year, their ability to deal&#13;
with the needs of the university is&#13;
more than evident in the&#13;
creativity of their projects and&#13;
their concern on all levels of&#13;
academic and social life at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Gay claim&#13;
(CPS).&#13;
Insisting they are legally&#13;
married, two male gays have&#13;
refused a $309 tax refund from&#13;
the federal government.&#13;
An Internal Revenue Service&#13;
examing officer ruled that a joint&#13;
filing between two males was not&#13;
valid and issued the refund on the&#13;
basis of single returns.&#13;
J. Michael McConnell and Jack&#13;
Baker, former president of the&#13;
University of Minnesota student&#13;
body, filed an appeal with the IRS&#13;
January 1 to stop the government&#13;
from issuing the refund.&#13;
Although the Minnesota&#13;
Supreme Court has ruled that&#13;
same-sex marriages are&#13;
prohibited, the two men maintain&#13;
that a marriage license issued to&#13;
them in 1971 is valid.&#13;
Baker said that he and McConnell&#13;
are refusing the refund in&#13;
part because married couples&#13;
have "a hell of a lot more advantages&#13;
than single people when&#13;
tax deductions are concerned&#13;
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DETROIT!&#13;
!DATE: COST&#13;
jTues., March 4 s5.00 in cludes&#13;
J bus &amp; tickets&#13;
• bus leaves Tallent Hall at 6,&#13;
•&#13;
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• SIGN UP AT IN FO DESK&#13;
I LIMITED S EATS AVAILABLE&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
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Brief news&#13;
Wednesday, February 5, 1975 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
"Preparing For Exams" is the topic of the sernnH&#13;
Cram Clinics, this one scheduled for Monday, Feb 10 3-30?n n&#13;
will be repeated on Tuesday, Feb. 11,7:30-9 pm ' * P&#13;
'&#13;
m"&#13;
The clinic will include suggestions for studying for and writing hnfh&#13;
essay and objective (eg. multiple choice, true-false, matchingHests&#13;
-The sessions are free and open to all interested students, who should&#13;
sign up at the Information kiosk prior to the clinic. It will be held in ^&#13;
Library ; participants will meet at the Circulation Desk&#13;
The clinic is being sponsored by the Adult Student Association in&#13;
cooperation with the Library. The last topic, "Term Paper S^rch "&#13;
will be offered sometime in March. arch,&#13;
The sessions are conducted by Carla Stoffle of the Library To&#13;
Herrick of the Learning Center, and A1 Grace of the Academic Skills&#13;
Program.&#13;
CELLIST David Littrell will present a faculty recital at Parkside at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 7, in the Communication Arts Theater He&#13;
will be assisted by pianist Mary Ann Littrell.&#13;
Prof. Littrell joined the Parkside faculty in 1973. He currently plays&#13;
in the Kenosha and Racine symphonies and with the Parkside&#13;
Chamber Players.&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's gymnastics team will be hosting a&#13;
quadrangular meet with UW-Whitewater, UW-Platteville, and the&#13;
University of Chicago, at 1 p.m., Saturday, February 8,1975.&#13;
The U.S. Navy Show Band of Great Lakes Naval Training Center&#13;
will present a free public concert at 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday Feb 5 in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater. ' ' '&#13;
Two ensembles drawn from the band, a ten piece variety group&#13;
known as "The Anchormen" and a brass quintet, also will perform&#13;
The band is directed by MUC Anthony Dilanni.&#13;
The first meeting of the Parkside Anthropology Club will be held&#13;
Thursday, February 6 at 4 p.m. in room 324 of the Classroom Building&#13;
All students interested in informal discussion and meeting with&#13;
faculty members are cordially welcomed.&#13;
The Adult Student Association will hold an open meeting on Monday,&#13;
Feb. 10., in D187 of the LLC from 4:30 to 6 p.m.&#13;
The Third World will hold a meeting Wednesday and Thursday,&#13;
February 4 and 5 at 11:30 a.m. in LLC D-174.&#13;
Frozen operation&#13;
While many areas of the world&#13;
are gripped in famine-producing&#13;
drought, a few scientists have&#13;
begun plans to free two-thirds of&#13;
the world's supply of fresh water&#13;
that lies entombed in iceAntarctic&#13;
ice.&#13;
According to a Rand&#13;
Coporation think tank, harvesting&#13;
icebergs could double the&#13;
US water supply without&#13;
depleting the bergs or doing&#13;
damage to the Antarctic.&#13;
In the current fantasy, the&#13;
bergs would be roped with cables&#13;
and arranged into trains up to 50&#13;
miles long. This is possible, the&#13;
scientists have said, since Antarctic&#13;
icebergs, unlike their&#13;
Arctic cousins, are relatively&#13;
smooth and flat on top.&#13;
To avoid refueling problems,&#13;
the berg caravan's 12-month trip&#13;
from Antarctica to Southern&#13;
California would require atomic&#13;
powered tugs accompanied by an&#13;
array of launches, and&#13;
helicopters.&#13;
Once the ice reaches its new&#13;
home, huge strip mining&#13;
machines anchored off the&#13;
continental shelf would be used to&#13;
scoop chunks of ice into an underwater&#13;
pipe that would carry&#13;
them, melting along the way, to a&#13;
storage plant on land.&#13;
A Rand scientist admitted that,&#13;
although simple, the plan did&#13;
have a few bugs.&#13;
"It would take the largest&#13;
mining machine that we&#13;
know...thousands of them to&#13;
harvest the ice from just one of&#13;
these large bergs," he said. In&#13;
addition, the disposal of nuclear&#13;
wastes from the yet-to-be&#13;
developed atomic powered&#13;
tugboats would pose another&#13;
stumbling block.&#13;
Nevertheless, the scientists&#13;
clamimed that iceberg water&#13;
could cool the throats of millions&#13;
for a mere $25 an acre foot, as&#13;
compared with $65 for aqueduct&#13;
water and $100 for desalinized sea&#13;
water. (CPS)&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
5 ' "&#13;
^ V&#13;
\OV&#13;
Financial Aids applications now available for 1975-76 terms. Priority&#13;
date for submission is April 1st. Forms are available in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Neuma n c en t e r sched ul e&#13;
The Newman Center's new name is CHI - RHO CENTER. The&#13;
location is the same: the corner of Hwy. E and JR, southwest of the&#13;
Parkside fieldhouse. A new sign marking the site will be there shortly.&#13;
Both campus ministers are available on the Parkside Campus.&#13;
Sister Colette, 552-8626, is here on Monday. Father Wayne, 657-3408, on&#13;
Thursdays. Both are available for personal counseling by appointment.&#13;
&#13;
Beginning February 16, the Sunday Mass will begin at 11:15 a.m. at&#13;
the Center.&#13;
Second semester programs include the following:&#13;
An open house at CHI - RHO CENTER on Monday, Feb. 10 from 7*30&#13;
to 10:30 p.m.&#13;
A communal penance service is scheduled for Ash Wednesday, Feb.&#13;
12 at 8:00 p.m. at the Center. On each of the following Wednesdays&#13;
during the Lenten season, scripture discussions will be held at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Beginning Monday, Feb. 24 and on the next three consecutive&#13;
Mondays, at 8:00 p.m., a partner-relationship series will be offered at&#13;
the CHI - RHO Center. Guest speakers and the campus ministers will&#13;
explore the psychological, physiological, spiritual and financial&#13;
dimensions of a relationship. Interested couples, those to be married&#13;
or couples already married are invited to register. Phone 552-8626 or&#13;
657-3408 for more information. Reservation by Feb. 17.&#13;
Sunday, March 2 has been set aside to explore man's Christian&#13;
vocation. Guests at the CHI - RHO CENTER will include a team of&#13;
explorers.&#13;
Holy Week services will be held at the CENTER. Included in the&#13;
celebration will be a SEDER MEAL on Holy Thursday evening.&#13;
A one-day retreat experience is scheduled for Saturday, April 19&#13;
beginning at 6:00 p.m. and concluding with breakfast at 8:00 a.m. on&#13;
Sunday. Reservations and added information are available before&#13;
April 15 by phoning the CENTER.&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February 5, 1975&#13;
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SPHINGBREAK TRIP TO.&#13;
Boycott tuna-save dolphins&#13;
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•Tips &amp; T axes&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPIS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
(CPS)&#13;
Before you bite into that succulent&#13;
tuna-salad sandwich,&#13;
Project Jonah wants to ask you a&#13;
question:&#13;
How many dolphins and porpoises&#13;
were killed last year by the&#13;
tuna-fishing industry-the "incidental"&#13;
victims of technology&#13;
employed by some of the big&#13;
brand tuna-packers?&#13;
The estimated kill runs from&#13;
200,000 to 400,000 annually, according&#13;
to officials of Project&#13;
Jonah, who have launched a&#13;
nationwide tuna boycott in an&#13;
effort to stop what they call a&#13;
mindless and needless slaughter.&#13;
The practice Jonah wants to&#13;
eliminate is called "fishing on&#13;
porpoise," and is limited to&#13;
yellowfin tuna, which follow the&#13;
porpoises and dolphins and feed&#13;
on their leftovers. Yellowfin&#13;
comprise 60 percent of the annual&#13;
US catch, and 60 percent of the&#13;
Pinch&#13;
yellowfin are caught by multmillion&#13;
dollar vessels called&#13;
purse-seiners.&#13;
Jonah's Eugenia McNaughton&#13;
said the seiners are like the huge&#13;
whale factory-boats. The tuna&#13;
catch is cleaned aboard the ships,&#13;
then frozen for ultimate delivery&#13;
to the canneries.&#13;
When a herd of porpoises is&#13;
spotted, the seiner drops its&#13;
speedboats which, under radio&#13;
direction from the big ship's&#13;
captain, "herd" the porpoises&#13;
into a compact bunch.&#13;
Then a skiff is dropped, holding&#13;
one end of the net. It follows the&#13;
big ship in a tightening circle&#13;
around the porpoises (and tuna).&#13;
Once the net is "set", its top is&#13;
drawn tight like the top of a&#13;
drawstring purse, trapping both&#13;
the sought-after tuna and the&#13;
unwanted porpoises.&#13;
When the catch is hauled&#13;
aboard, the tuna are sorted out&#13;
and the porpoises-many badly&#13;
maimed, many already dead&#13;
from suffication--are dumped&#13;
unceremoniously back into the&#13;
sea.&#13;
Jonah has learned that a&#13;
scientific survey shows "the&#13;
porpoise population has been&#13;
drastically reduced," over the&#13;
past two year.&#13;
Said McNaughton, "the case is&#13;
stronger and more urgent than&#13;
even we had thought "-and the&#13;
boycott has now become a hard&#13;
reality.&#13;
Main targets of the boycott are&#13;
Star-Kist Foods, Inc, and Van&#13;
Camp Sea Food Co. (a division of&#13;
Raston-Purina), both of Terminal&#13;
Island Island, California,&#13;
and Bumble-Bee Seafoods,&#13;
Astoria, Oregon.&#13;
Jonah has urged boycotting&#13;
consumers to switch to chicken&#13;
Fish warfare&#13;
salad and to quit buying any tuna&#13;
packed by the producers named.&#13;
With few exceptions, the cans&#13;
don't say what kind of tuna is&#13;
inside, or how it was caught. This&#13;
leaves it up to consumers to find&#13;
independent canneries, probably&#13;
in Washington and Oregon.&#13;
"We don't want to put the&#13;
small, independent tuna man out&#13;
of business," says Mclntyre.&#13;
"What we're against is&#13;
agribusiness in the sea."&#13;
Jonah has chosen an unlikely&#13;
weapon for their new campaigna&#13;
comic book called "Net Profit."&#13;
The book extolls the intelligence&#13;
and friendliness of porpoises and&#13;
dolphins-and describes in&#13;
graphic detail how the big ships&#13;
stalk and trap them&#13;
The book, and other information,&#13;
is available from&#13;
Project Jonah, P.O. Box 476,&#13;
Bolinas, CA 94924.&#13;
continued from pg„ 1&#13;
state, "faculty members should&#13;
be evaluated on the three duties:&#13;
teaching, scholarly activity, and&#13;
service."&#13;
During an interview several&#13;
north&#13;
side&#13;
location&#13;
Presents&#13;
their Annual Eoh. 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 Go old St.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
weeks ago, Robert Canary,&#13;
professor of English and member&#13;
of the Tenure Faculty Division,&#13;
was asked whether the bad&#13;
economic state of the university&#13;
would be cited as a reason for&#13;
denying tenure or whether there&#13;
would be mention of this circumstance&#13;
in any records of the&#13;
people who were denied tenure.&#13;
He answered, "No, the official&#13;
reasons will be that the candidate&#13;
wasn't good enough in some&#13;
area."&#13;
Bauer said that he didn't know&#13;
if any faculty would be denied&#13;
tenure this year because of&#13;
economic conditions but that&#13;
there would be some administrators&#13;
released for that&#13;
reason.&#13;
He said, "There's more contract,&#13;
or shall I say, letter of&#13;
appointment protection for&#13;
faculty than administrators.&#13;
Administrators don't receive&#13;
tenure, they get a letter of appointment.&#13;
This means that some&#13;
serve at the pleasure of the Board&#13;
(Board of Regents) and some&#13;
serve at the pleasure of other&#13;
administrators."&#13;
Ocean resources&#13;
depleted&#13;
(CPS) - "While people worry about the energy crises, rising food&#13;
costs and pollution, the oceans that were supposed to feed the world&#13;
when all the food ran out are rapidly being depleted."&#13;
So says the California Student Research Institute, which recently&#13;
reported that there are fewer fish in the world's waters than there&#13;
were 20 years ago. Some 30 species of fish are now nearly depleted due&#13;
to overfishing and ocean pollution.&#13;
A report by the Student Research Institute noted an international&#13;
fishing warfare was being waged.&#13;
Competition between nations for the dwindling supplies of ocean&#13;
protein was a focus of the recent Law of the Sea Conference in&#13;
Venezuela. And last year Britain and Iceland nearly got into a&#13;
shooting war over disputed cod fishing grounds in the North Atlantic.&#13;
For its part the U.S. Senate has been studying a proposal to extend&#13;
this country's 12-mile territorial limits 200 miles out to sea. But while&#13;
this would give the U.S. greater control over some species, it would&#13;
severely jeopardize tuna and shrimp industries that now operate&#13;
within 200 miles of foreign shores.&#13;
Scholarship in drag&#13;
(CPS)&#13;
An anonymous donor at Sir George Williams University in Montreal&#13;
Ontario, has set up what's believed to be the first college scholarship&#13;
iund exclusively for homosexuals.&#13;
The $200 annual grant will be awarded to a male or female&#13;
homosexual who shows outstanding distinction in his or her junior&#13;
year.&#13;
J&#13;
Applicants must state in the application forms that they are&#13;
homosexuals. "After all," said Haffey, "we aren't going to have&#13;
luSlS.&#13;
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IN KENOSHA TRY &#13;
parkside&#13;
goalies&#13;
win&#13;
by Brenda Mead&#13;
The hockey club has a record of&#13;
16 wins, and 3 defeats, with&#13;
twelve games remaining. Last&#13;
Friday, January 30, they&#13;
defeated UW-Whitewater, 15 to 6,&#13;
which was their highest scoring&#13;
game so far. Sunday, February 2,&#13;
they defeated Marquette, by a&#13;
score of 6 to 2. They have 12&#13;
straight wins, and two home&#13;
games this weekend. Friday they&#13;
will challenge Stevens Point at&#13;
5:30 and on Saturday they will&#13;
meet with Madison Area&#13;
Technical College, at 8:30.&#13;
Jim Nehls was the high scorer&#13;
in the Whitewater game, with&#13;
four goals. The player-coach,&#13;
Gary Cukla, scored a 'hat-trick'&#13;
of three goals.&#13;
Parkside's high scorer for the&#13;
Marquette game was Bill Isermann,&#13;
with two goals. Parkside&#13;
scored two goals in each of the&#13;
three periods.&#13;
Parkside's goalie, Bob Arneson,&#13;
has a record of allowing&#13;
only 3.3 goals to be scored against&#13;
him per game, which is compatable&#13;
to a professional goalie's&#13;
average. The team scored an&#13;
average of 7.1 goals per game.&#13;
They have accumulated 128&#13;
gaols, and have allowed only 68 to&#13;
be scored against them.&#13;
Leading scorers for Parkside&#13;
are: Jim Nehls, 19 goals; Jerry&#13;
Simonsen, 15 goals; and Bill&#13;
Isermann, with 15 goals. Other&#13;
scorers are: John Bruneau, 9&#13;
goals; Roy Swartz, 8 goals; Steve&#13;
Bentel 7 goals; John Culotta, 7&#13;
goals; Gary Cukla, 5 goals; Jerry&#13;
Madala, 4 goals; Robin Lipski, 2&#13;
goals; George Krulatz, 2 goals;&#13;
Bill Evans, 1 goal.&#13;
Other team members include:&#13;
Wednesday, February 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Wrestlers take on&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
of 16&#13;
"to. -d 3 defeats, with&#13;
Stevens Point and 0n ^ 3t h&#13;
°&#13;
me&#13;
' they wiU cha,,eng&#13;
e&#13;
Technical College.&#13;
' v uicj win cnauenge&#13;
Saturday they meet with Madison Area&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
The Ranger Wrestlers hosted&#13;
their final home meet for the&#13;
season Saturday defeating&#13;
Augustana College (22-12),&#13;
Eastern Illinois (24-15) and&#13;
Michigan Tech (21-16).&#13;
Triple match winners were&#13;
Rich Baron, wrestling at 158&#13;
pounds, Rich Shaumberg at 118&#13;
pounds and Joe Landers at 134&#13;
pounds.&#13;
Baron's current record stands&#13;
at 18 wins with 0 loses for the&#13;
season.&#13;
Double match winners were&#13;
defending all American National&#13;
Champion Bill West at 150&#13;
pounds, Rich Langer at 142&#13;
pounds and Rico Savaglio at 126&#13;
pounds.&#13;
West remains undefeated after&#13;
two years with a record of 44&#13;
straight wins.&#13;
The Rangers defeated Carthage&#13;
College last Wednesday&#13;
(39-9) and will meet with them&#13;
again tonight, February 5 at 6:30&#13;
at Carthage.&#13;
On Thursday, February 6, they&#13;
will travel to meet with&#13;
nationally ranked number two in&#13;
the NAIA, UW Whitewater.&#13;
The Rangers are nationally&#13;
ranked number three among the&#13;
NAIA Schools and hold a record&#13;
of 6 wins, 1 loss and 1 tie for the&#13;
season.&#13;
the alternate goalie, Darrel&#13;
Pickerign, Walt Onushko, Ron&#13;
Andro, Ken Langehaug, Kurt&#13;
Sandien, Keith Church, John&#13;
Lulewicz.&#13;
The three loses have been to&#13;
Purdue (4-3), Northern Illinois&#13;
(9-3), and LaCrosse (5-3). They&#13;
have defeated the Parkside&#13;
Alumni team (9-8); Marquette (5-&#13;
2, and 6-2); Eau Claire (10-5);&#13;
North East Illinois (6-0, and 8-2);&#13;
Northern Illinois (5-1); Beloit (7-&#13;
3); Lewis (4-3); St. Norbert (5-4);&#13;
Madison Area Technical College&#13;
(10-5); Ripon (12-1) and&#13;
Whitewater (15-6).&#13;
All home games are played at&#13;
the Kenosha Ice Arena, 7727 60th&#13;
Street, one block east of Highway&#13;
31. Plans are underway for an&#13;
Invitational Tournament to be&#13;
held at the end of March.&#13;
h e i l e m a n s&#13;
111 J&#13;
Sj's I Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tan fit flip TTiiinti&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, February 5&#13;
WHITESKELLAR: P.A.B. Whiteskellar presents auditions for the&#13;
coffee-house, beginning at 11:30 a.m., in GR D201. Anyone interested&#13;
in auditioning can sign up in the P.A.B. office, LLC D195, or just come&#13;
down to the coffeehouse. Or, if you just want to listen, come on down&#13;
too-it's free and open to the public.&#13;
Film; P.A.B. presents "Steelyard Blues," a hilarious sendup of every&#13;
high adventure story you've ever seen, starring Donald Sutherland&#13;
Jane Fonda, 7:30 p.m., C.A.T., admission $1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
Thursday. February 6&#13;
FILM: P.A.B. presents "Steelyard Blues," 7:30 p.m. C.A.T., admission&#13;
$1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
you'll jove it.&#13;
BONANZA&#13;
BONANZA&#13;
BONANZA&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
and TAPES&#13;
4 SOW&#13;
IS?*,. V&#13;
&lt; TRUCK on DOWN&#13;
Environmental&#13;
Furniture and Lighting&#13;
Quality Leather Goods Tapestries&#13;
Pipes Papers Ethnic Jewelry&#13;
Phone 654-3578&#13;
more than a spring &amp; padding mattress&#13;
more than a waterbed...&#13;
ffiQ Jlirform ^Safer effiattress&#13;
ijl" lb&#13;
gives orthopedic comfort that&#13;
. . . returns man to his source&#13;
"SPECIAL"&#13;
SPLASH&#13;
SALE!!&#13;
A C OMPLETE&#13;
WATERBED S ET-UP&#13;
• Deluxe Frame&#13;
•Headboard&#13;
• edP estal&#13;
• iner L&#13;
.Mattress&#13;
ONEr^WEET&#13;
DREAM&#13;
also has&#13;
a fine selection of Bean&#13;
Bags and a complete line&#13;
of waterbed products&#13;
including&#13;
Aqua Qu een&#13;
(U_L _ pj o v e d _H e a t e r s)&#13;
Keep your energy high and your mind mello with Pyramid Products. &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February 5, 1975&#13;
AA McDonald's Breakfast /Menu&#13;
/XL Five great ways to start the day&#13;
McDonald'^&#13;
" " ®&#13;
iHl nnV'ii^i A iii^i mn*r&#13;
FORGET&#13;
•n&#13;
Jewelry&#13;
%&#13;
Plants&#13;
ft&#13;
Cards •&#13;
Discount&#13;
Books &amp; Records&#13;
Jerry's&#13;
Pet Originals&#13;
LOVE BOOKS AND POETRY&#13;
Spectrum of Love • My Gift to You • Nimoy's - Will I Think of You • Kahlil Gibran&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
W'A1 " vt' •" »» A »I 'A " 'A' U'A </text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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