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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 26</text>
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            <text>Foreign Language debate</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>The ParksideDiscussion&#13;
&#13;
Students on RANGER faculty&#13;
Wednesday, February 26, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 26,&#13;
Speaking in tongues&#13;
Foreign lang. debate&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
A s uggestion that the existing&#13;
foreign language requirement at&#13;
Parkside be changed, was made&#13;
by Dwayne Olsen, assistant&#13;
professor of Education, during a&#13;
public hearing on the&#13;
requirement on Thursday, Feb.&#13;
20.&#13;
Olsen suggested that a&#13;
distinction in degrees-between a&#13;
Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor&#13;
of Science-be used in determining&#13;
whether a foreign&#13;
language is necessary.&#13;
The hearing last Thursday was&#13;
the first of two public hearings&#13;
scheduled by an Ad Hoc Committee&#13;
on the Foreign Language&#13;
Requirement. The second&#13;
hearing will be held this week&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
The committee is to make a&#13;
report with recommendations by&#13;
March 15 to Eugene Norwood,&#13;
acting vice chancellor, on&#13;
whether the current foreign&#13;
language requirement should be&#13;
retained, modified or eliminated.&#13;
Foreign language is not a&#13;
requirement for students&#13;
majoring within the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
Zeigler &amp; Dean&#13;
Speaking at last week's&#13;
hearing, Philip Burnett,&#13;
professor of Social Science,&#13;
stressed the importance of&#13;
studying a foreign language for&#13;
the knowledge it contributes to&#13;
understanding English grammar.&#13;
&#13;
However, Burnett did not think&#13;
that one year of a foreign&#13;
language was very useful.&#13;
"At least two years of a foreign&#13;
language is necessary for any&#13;
real feeling of the language," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Olsen commented that he has&#13;
no deep feeling for either&#13;
retaining or dropping the foreign&#13;
language requirement.&#13;
He recommended though, that&#13;
Parkside should develop a&#13;
bilingual teaching program due&#13;
to the large Spanish-speaking&#13;
population in Racine.&#13;
Harry Walbruck, professor of&#13;
German, stated that in Wisconsin&#13;
there are 43 nationalities&#13;
represented and that one-third of&#13;
the state's total population is&#13;
foreign born.&#13;
"It is my opinion that the&#13;
student who misses the opportunity&#13;
to learn a foreign&#13;
language is closing the door to&#13;
other points of interest.&#13;
"One doesn't have to have it as&#13;
a major to study a foreign&#13;
language."&#13;
A member of the committee,&#13;
Richard Keehn, associate&#13;
professor of Economics, asked&#13;
Walbruck to clarify how&#13;
beneficial it would be if all&#13;
students were required to take a&#13;
foreign language.&#13;
Walbruck said that foreign&#13;
language should be judged on its&#13;
own merits as a "most important&#13;
part of a general study option."&#13;
Burnett then asked Walbruck&#13;
how valuable is one year of st udy&#13;
of a foreign language.&#13;
"Not very valuable," Walbruck&#13;
responded.&#13;
Jeanette Crossland was the&#13;
only student to speak at the&#13;
hearing.&#13;
She said that it was a mistake&#13;
on the part of students not to take&#13;
a foreign language.&#13;
Crossland recommended that a&#13;
year of foreign language be&#13;
required and a semester of&#13;
continued on page 4&#13;
by Cathy Mech&#13;
The right for students to sit on&#13;
faculty committees, especially&#13;
those regarding tenure, was the&#13;
major topic of discussion at the&#13;
rather sparsely attended open&#13;
hearing of the University&#13;
Committee's proposed faculty&#13;
personnel rules on Feb. 20.&#13;
The hearing was necessary,&#13;
according to William Murin,&#13;
chairman, because the Board of&#13;
Regents requires that "appropriate&#13;
students" have a&#13;
chance to read the draft and&#13;
express their opinions before it is&#13;
approved by the faculty senate.&#13;
However, Murin said, the&#13;
Regents did not specify who&#13;
"appropriate students" are, so&#13;
all official student organizations&#13;
on campus were informed of the&#13;
hearing in hope that this would&#13;
satisfy the Regents' requirement.&#13;
In his opinion, the proposed rules&#13;
are not drastically different in&#13;
terms of operating procedure,&#13;
although there is some money&#13;
lost. Parkside, along with other&#13;
campuses, must change its rules&#13;
to satisfy the joint academic staff&#13;
rules of the merged University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Wisconsin State&#13;
system, and the problems&#13;
Parkside faces are not unique.&#13;
The most outspoken complaints&#13;
of the few students that attended&#13;
the hearing was the scarcity of&#13;
time allowed to read the proposed&#13;
rules thoroughly, and the lack of&#13;
student participation and input in&#13;
faculty committees.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
comm.&#13;
of the P.S.G.A., Inc., read a&#13;
prepared statement that called&#13;
for a P.S.G.A.-sponsored faculty&#13;
evaluation questionnaire, the&#13;
emphasis of the importance of&#13;
present evaluation forms, and&#13;
.that the results of the forms be&#13;
made available to students. He&#13;
also called the proposed rules&#13;
"just a sham" because of the lack&#13;
of student input. Mike Marron,&#13;
University Committee member,&#13;
said the purpose of this hearing&#13;
was to gather student ideas and&#13;
opinions to add to what the&#13;
committee members felt was a&#13;
proper proposal.&#13;
Milutinovich and Hayes&#13;
Norman, president of Third&#13;
World, felt students were intellectual&#13;
enough to be&#13;
represented on committees&#13;
dealing with tenure. Marron said&#13;
tenure is basically a "peer&#13;
review, "-an evaluation by&#13;
people working on the same level,&#13;
pressures and criteria, but the&#13;
"student is the expert" concerning&#13;
the teacher's ability in&#13;
the classroom. Alan Shucard,&#13;
another committee member, said&#13;
the rules do not prohibit students&#13;
on committees, but had "ambivalent&#13;
feelings" on the subject.&#13;
Students are the most reliable&#13;
sources for teaching ability, but&#13;
they might not be qualified to&#13;
give an opinion concerning a&#13;
professor's "scholarly activity."&#13;
Other students at the hearing&#13;
felt that student participation in&#13;
such matters would increase&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
by John Ghrist&#13;
Watergate figures rake it in&#13;
(CPS)--Watergate is a big&#13;
seller on college and university&#13;
campuses this spring, as two&#13;
major figures in Richard Nixon's&#13;
White House are raking in&#13;
several thousand dollars per&#13;
campus appearance.&#13;
John Dean, former counsel to&#13;
the President whose testimony&#13;
blew the cover off White House&#13;
involvement, will be traveling&#13;
around the country telling college&#13;
audiences how power was abused&#13;
by high officials.&#13;
Dean's tour began February 2&#13;
at the University of Virginia,&#13;
which paid $4000 t o be the first&#13;
stop. The event was heavily&#13;
covered by broadcast media and&#13;
preceded by complaints from&#13;
many who felt that Dean had&#13;
turned the tables on ethics by&#13;
making a fortune from his past&#13;
illegal activities.&#13;
According to Dean's agent,&#13;
Robert Walker of the American&#13;
Program Bureau, such talk&#13;
almost convinced Dean to give up&#13;
the tour before it started. By and&#13;
large, however, Dean found his&#13;
audiences willing to pay to hear&#13;
what he had to say-without&#13;
complaint.&#13;
In general, Dean has been&#13;
warmly received by recordbreaking&#13;
crowds. He will visit&#13;
more than 50 campuses across&#13;
the country between now and&#13;
March 15, for which he will&#13;
receive more than $100,000, all of&#13;
it going to pay legal debts and&#13;
other obligations accumulated&#13;
over the last two years. Until the&#13;
start of the tour, Dean had been&#13;
unemployed after leaving the&#13;
I 1 1 1 n 1 » l &lt;&#13;
HARVARD LAW SCHOOL&#13;
"Pr~je,2&lt;2&gt;7vbs&#13;
[»ULf CtfS&#13;
DON'T APPLAUD! JUST THROW ROYALTIES AND HONORARIUMS!&#13;
White House.&#13;
There have been some protests&#13;
against Dean, however,&#13;
primarily because of his high&#13;
fees: $3000 or more plus expenses&#13;
for each one-hour talk, according&#13;
to Walker.&#13;
At the University of Maryland,&#13;
the student government reported&#13;
that calls against paying Dean&#13;
ran 11-1 after an announcement&#13;
that he would speak. This&#13;
reaction plus some interorganizational&#13;
disputes&#13;
caused the student government to&#13;
freeze the funds of the group&#13;
arranging campus speaker appearances.&#13;
&#13;
The University of Montana saw&#13;
a similar confrontation between&#13;
student government and speaker&#13;
bureau. After the Program&#13;
Council announced Dean would&#13;
appear, the UM Central. Board&#13;
voted to forbid payment to Dean.&#13;
Program Council head Dave&#13;
Snyder insisted the Board had no&#13;
veto power over speakers, and&#13;
after a week of co nfrontation the&#13;
Central Board rescinded its&#13;
order.&#13;
Over in the Ziegler camp, there&#13;
is less candor. Unlike Walker,&#13;
agent William Leigh of the&#13;
Colston-Leigh Agency refused to&#13;
give details of the number of&#13;
colleges Ziegler would visit, his&#13;
fees, or the dates involved. According&#13;
to other reports,&#13;
however, Ziegler has been offered&#13;
between $2000 and $2500 an&#13;
appearance.&#13;
Ron Ziegler has also had his&#13;
share of pre-appearance&#13;
protests, although Leigh said he&#13;
was "not particularly" aware of&#13;
protests against Ziegler. "The&#13;
Boston incident was a little inflated&#13;
by the press," he insisted.&#13;
In that confrontation, the&#13;
Boston University speaker's&#13;
group contracted to pay Ziegler&#13;
$2500 b ut the money was withdrawn&#13;
by the student government.&#13;
Following local protests&#13;
that BU was stifling free speech,&#13;
BU President John Silber offered&#13;
to pay Ziegler $1000 out of&#13;
university funds, but Leigh&#13;
turned down the offer as too low.&#13;
Nevertheless, Ziegler's&#13;
proposed appearance has caused&#13;
controversy elsewhere-even&#13;
more so than Dean has.&#13;
The Michigan State University&#13;
student government also withdrew&#13;
financial support for&#13;
Ziegler, but by charging admission&#13;
and using up the rest of&#13;
their budget, the MSU Lecture&#13;
Concert Series said they could&#13;
still foot the bill and Ziegler&#13;
would speak. Student body&#13;
president Tim Cain has called for&#13;
mass picketing and a boycott of&#13;
the speech.&#13;
The Wisconsin Student&#13;
Association at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison passed a&#13;
resolution asking the UWM&#13;
Lecture society to cancel&#13;
Ziegler's appearance and plans&#13;
to organize a picket line if they&#13;
refuse.&#13;
"I feel it is wrong for anyone&#13;
involved in Watergate to make a&#13;
profit from criminal activity,"&#13;
argued one student who captured&#13;
the essence of anti-Ziegler&#13;
thought elsewhere. "This is the&#13;
continued on page 8 &#13;
1975&#13;
$elling&#13;
the&#13;
Centennial&#13;
The celebration of our country's two hundredth birthday&#13;
is approaching rapidly. Throughout the country&#13;
we hear of the plans of various groups to stage activities&#13;
in conjunction with the bicentenial. One group that is&#13;
being heard from with increasing regularity and with&#13;
increasing sense is the Peoples Bicentennial Commission&#13;
(PBC).&#13;
Based in Washington D.C., the PBC is an independent&#13;
organization of people through out the country that&#13;
believe we have strayed from the revolutionary principles&#13;
that not only established this country but also for&#13;
the first time in man's history established the principle&#13;
that governments are derived for the benefits of all&#13;
citizens. Without seeking any government dole, the PBC&#13;
has developed a complete program for celebrating our&#13;
countries birthday that concentrates on the principles&#13;
and history of our political beliefs. This contrasts with&#13;
the multi-million dollared government organization that&#13;
as one of its first efforts held an organizational meeting&#13;
for big business so that ways could be explored to exploit&#13;
our celebration through the sales of "Spirit of America"&#13;
Is this what&#13;
America's 200&#13;
th&#13;
. birthday&#13;
is all about?&#13;
Cheverolets, exact duplicates of George Washingtons&#13;
sword, and other "trinkets."&#13;
For those of you that find the continuing exploitation&#13;
of the ideals of America by the corporations that have&#13;
plundered our country of it's basic wealth and concentrated&#13;
that wealth in the hands of the Fourth Branch&#13;
of Government- Coporate Branch -we say join the&#13;
Peoples Bicentennial in making the revolution or 76 the&#13;
revolution of 1976. For more information' PBC will send&#13;
a free packet -- write to: Peoples Bicentennial Commission,&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20036. Editors Note: In&#13;
keeping with the spirit of the original revolution&#13;
RANGER inaugurates with this issue a series of&#13;
historical articles relating those principles we feel are&#13;
the basis and justification for government.&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Cut the jive-tell it like it isTo&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
I am writing in regard to the&#13;
article concerning Black History&#13;
Week, in the Feb. 12th issue of the&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
The article and its glaring&#13;
errors were an insult to the Black&#13;
students of Parskide and I ask&#13;
you to publish this letter as a&#13;
correction.&#13;
1. The members of the Third&#13;
World Organization did not&#13;
"designate" Feb. 11-14 as B lack&#13;
History Week. The second-week&#13;
in February has been&#13;
traditionally held as a week of&#13;
celebration and affirmation of&#13;
Black historical achievements.&#13;
With more Black Americans&#13;
becoming aware of their true&#13;
Another view&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It's always an experience to&#13;
hear from one of our more&#13;
traveled alums, Mr. Arthur&#13;
Gruhl. It is good to know that he&#13;
is getting an inside view of&#13;
Rhodesia. I do wish that he could&#13;
visit with an acquaintance of&#13;
mine who is, I believe, still&#13;
somewhere in Rhodesia. I last&#13;
knew the man when we were&#13;
attending the same seminary in&#13;
the Boston area. Unfortunately,&#13;
Rear guarding&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Recently, People For A NonSexist&#13;
Society^ sponsored the&#13;
First Annual* "Pick Your&#13;
Favorite Gluteus Maximus"&#13;
Contest. The contest was initiated&#13;
in a spirit of good humor and funit&#13;
was hoped that the Parkside&#13;
community would respond in&#13;
kind. The notion was entertained&#13;
that, in laughing at the specific&#13;
idea of students' asses competing&#13;
for a trophy, a question about the&#13;
Editorial paltering?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to your editorial on&#13;
the LLC cafeteria. We feel that&#13;
your opinion on t his subject was&#13;
really gross. .&#13;
If you can visit this area at&#13;
seven-a.m. any day of the week&#13;
and show us the trash left on the&#13;
tables and floor from the&#13;
previous night we will gladly&#13;
retract this statement.&#13;
For your information the&#13;
custodial staff cleans this area&#13;
every night of the week, this&#13;
includes empyting receptacles&#13;
cleaning tables and floor. We find&#13;
that you must be the biggest&#13;
identity, the entire month of&#13;
February, is known as "Black&#13;
Liberation Month".&#13;
2. The Black History Week&#13;
Committee and the members of&#13;
the Third World Organization&#13;
decided on the theme of&#13;
"UJAMAA: Black Love Is Black&#13;
Wealth." The RANGER article,&#13;
written by Bonne Haas combined&#13;
the theme altogether. UJAMAA&#13;
is a Swahili word meaning&#13;
"familyhood" which has an&#13;
important meaning for our&#13;
people as we strive for greater&#13;
unity in the Race. The author's&#13;
ignorance of the Afrikan&#13;
language was surpassed only by&#13;
the negligence to seek out&#13;
complete news coverage of this&#13;
event.&#13;
3. Dr. Margaret Aboagye, true&#13;
enough, is from Ghana, Afrika.&#13;
However, it seems logical that&#13;
coming from a devloping continent,&#13;
and a member of the Third&#13;
World community of nations, her&#13;
nation would not have a special&#13;
"Afrikan School of Dentistry", in&#13;
fact, she received her college and&#13;
graduate degrees from European&#13;
and American universities.&#13;
In the future, Ms. Haas, as well&#13;
as RANGER editorial staff, may&#13;
I suggest that you interview&#13;
Third World members seeking&#13;
reliable information concerning&#13;
our events and involvements.&#13;
Sleeper awake,&#13;
Sis. Arlene Martin,&#13;
Chairperson, Black History&#13;
Week.&#13;
however, Ndabaningi Sithole&#13;
("Daba" as his friends called&#13;
him) does not live in a large&#13;
ranch-type home with 4,600&#13;
square feet, six bedrooms, four&#13;
baths, a fleet of cars, six servants,&#13;
etc., etc. No. For about the&#13;
last fifteen years Daba has been&#13;
separated from his wife and&#13;
family and put in a "holding&#13;
camp." He was seen as&#13;
dangerous by the Rhodesian&#13;
government because he was&#13;
actively seeking to establish both&#13;
racial dn economic justice in his&#13;
country. But that, of course,&#13;
would make it more difficult for&#13;
some to own a large ranch-type&#13;
home, with three bath rooms, six&#13;
servants, etc., etc. Perhaps Daba&#13;
could have helped Arthur see a&#13;
little more of Rhodesia.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Wayne G. Johnson&#13;
Assoc. Professor of Philosophy&#13;
validity of any contest wherein&#13;
one part of someone's body was&#13;
matched against someone else's&#13;
would arise. The contest was an&#13;
exercise in reductio ad absurdum&#13;
and was intended to convey a&#13;
valid viewpoint, while providing&#13;
a measure of laughter to a&#13;
university that truly needs it.&#13;
For their trouble, People For A&#13;
Non-Sexist Society was rewarded&#13;
with a visit from one of Bauer's&#13;
flunkies in Student Life (name&#13;
and position unknown) who&#13;
requested that the contest portraits&#13;
be taken down, adding that&#13;
assistance in dismantling the&#13;
contest could be easily procured.&#13;
He indicated that certain administrators&#13;
were unamused and&#13;
unenlightened. Apparently they&#13;
are also unaware of the Bill of&#13;
Rights.&#13;
Sexism is a social disease-it&#13;
seems Parkside has a good dose.&#13;
Barb Hanson&#13;
damn prevaricator on (P.U.&#13;
Campus).&#13;
If you found an abundance of&#13;
debris on the tables and floor&#13;
during the day it is because of all&#13;
your apathetic people here at&#13;
Parkside who apparently forget&#13;
other people are to share these&#13;
facilities.&#13;
It is impossible and impractical&#13;
to caretake this area&#13;
twenty-four hours a day. Our&#13;
prime time is from eleven-p.m. to&#13;
seven-a.m. any trash found in&#13;
this area after these hours is not&#13;
carried over from the night&#13;
before.&#13;
Please note the receptacles for&#13;
trash and racks for trays placed&#13;
throughout the dining area,&#13;
people completely ignore these&#13;
items and depart leaving a mess&#13;
behind them. So, why don't you&#13;
place the blame where it belongs.&#13;
If you have a hang-up with the&#13;
Canteen Corp please leave us out&#13;
of it and while writing on the&#13;
subject of trash how can you&#13;
justify your editorial on the LLC&#13;
cafeteria?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Joe O'Hara and Francisco&#13;
Ytuarte.&#13;
Anti-Semitism generations of abuse&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
A few weeks ago on the&#13;
program Sixty Minutes on&#13;
television, they showed how the&#13;
Jewish people in Syria are forced&#13;
to live. They are continually&#13;
watched and are unable to leave&#13;
the country. What really got to&#13;
me was when they showed an&#13;
interview with a Jewish family&#13;
and the father stated that he&#13;
wanted his children when they&#13;
grew up to join the Syrian army&#13;
and fight Israel. It should be&#13;
obvious to anyone who watched&#13;
this program that this man was&#13;
under great pressure to say these&#13;
things for fear of the lives of his&#13;
family. It is about time attrocities&#13;
like this against the&#13;
Jewish people are stopped.&#13;
nntT 1 thK JeWlsh people been&#13;
put through enough torture? This&#13;
jsn t the only place in the world&#13;
his is happening-for example&#13;
Russia and Poland. Even in this&#13;
country Jewish people are&#13;
Plagued by sick antiemetic&#13;
gioups. What this country needs&#13;
•s a strong-National Jewish&#13;
Organization and leader who will&#13;
be "ontmuously in the limelight&#13;
whose duty it would be to combine&#13;
all small Jewish groups into&#13;
one National Jewish&#13;
Organization for the purpose of&#13;
restoring Jewish pride, stopping&#13;
antisemitism, and fighting attrocities&#13;
against Jews all over the&#13;
world. Can we as Jewish students&#13;
at Parkside do anything to help'' I&#13;
think so, by forming a Parkside&#13;
Jewish Association. If you are&#13;
interested in forming such a&#13;
group please contact Gary Rothman&#13;
or Kurt Muller.&#13;
Gary Rothman &#13;
1776 to 1976&#13;
Wednesday, February 26, 1 975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Problems much the same&#13;
by Ted Howard&#13;
w PBC&#13;
We are not as far removed from the America of the 1770s a s we&#13;
thlir dil!1&#13;
" t^&#13;
0 hundred years a8° today- our ancestors sat around&#13;
halls faV°&#13;
rite Pubs&#13;
' 0r in ^ town meeting halls, and pondered and debated the issues of their day.&#13;
nn th?'&#13;
38 n&#13;
°&#13;
W:&#13;
there Was an abundance of small talk. Hem-lines were&#13;
'rnnZ -&#13;
an&#13;
i&#13;
causm^ no end of scandal&#13;
- Remarked one observer,&#13;
Considering the present dress of our women of fashion, there&#13;
emams no further step to be taken except absolute nakedness." A&#13;
generation gap was fast emerging, as one letter writer noted: "It is&#13;
now grown too common for our children and youth to swear and curse&#13;
on the streets and to abuse with foul language, not only one another,&#13;
Shinmp&#13;
1^&#13;
811^!&#13;
0^' ^ WeU" And&#13;
' °&#13;
f C0UrSe&#13;
'&#13;
the qU£dity 0f ^ newest&#13;
shipments of beer and rum were frequent topics of discussion.&#13;
suhWtJnfth311&#13;
!'&#13;
th* conversation always turned to the two crucial&#13;
subjects of the day-the economy and the government. By 1775, th ere&#13;
was a lot to be said about each.&#13;
Beginning in the mid-1760's, King George's government had&#13;
managed, through inept policy, arrogance and blunder, to thoroughly&#13;
an gonize Americans. First there was a tax on newspapers. That had&#13;
been opposed by Americans and defeated. Then came a tax on glass&#13;
and paint. That too was opposed and defeated. Still, the politicians who&#13;
worked for King George simply couldn't get it through their heads that&#13;
taxation without representation was something the Americans subjects&#13;
would never stand for.&#13;
J* °PP°&#13;
sition t0 Government policies reached a fever pitch in&#13;
73. Tha t year Ben Franklin, the American representative in London&#13;
managed to leak secret government papers to Sam Adams and John&#13;
Hancock. One of these documents outlined a government conspiracy&#13;
to repress the civil liberties of the American people. The publication of&#13;
this document sent a shock wave throughout the colonies. Previously&#13;
loyal subjects began questioning the honesty of h igh government officials.&#13;
&#13;
Just six months after this political scandal, an economic scandal of&#13;
major proportions rocked the country. The East India Company the&#13;
world's largest corporation, was near bankruptcy due to inept&#13;
management. Its owners lobbied Parliament for a subsidy to bolster&#13;
the floundering economic interest of the company. Members of&#13;
Parliament, many of whom owned stock in the company were eager to&#13;
assist the E.I.C. by granting a 2 million pound subsidy and a monopoly&#13;
on the world-wide British tea trade. Parliament also legislated a tax&#13;
on all tea sold by the company in North America.&#13;
When news of this corporate-government collusion reached the 13&#13;
colonies, outraged subjects began mobilizing in swift opposition. And&#13;
on December 16,1773 the Sons of Liberty staged the Boston Tea Party.&#13;
By the time they boarded the tea ships to destroy the cargo, the&#13;
Bostonians were less concerned about the tea tax than the fact that the&#13;
East India Company had amassed enough political clout to convince&#13;
the government to impose the tax in the first place. As one patriot&#13;
explained in a public broadside:&#13;
"The East India Company, if once they get footing in this once happy&#13;
country, will leave no stone unturned to become your masters. They&#13;
are an oppulent body, and money or credit is not wanting amongst&#13;
them. They have a designing, depraved and despotic ministry to assist&#13;
and support them. They themselves are well versed in tyranny,&#13;
plunder, oppression and bloodshed. Whole provinces laboring under&#13;
the distresses of oppression, slavery, famine and the sword are&#13;
Correction&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reference to the review of&#13;
the January 29th concert of&#13;
Woody Herman, which appeared&#13;
in the February 12th RANGER, I&#13;
believe that some very important&#13;
corrections are in order. I suppose&#13;
that I can begin with the&#13;
second paragraph where the&#13;
writer begins his "tour-de-farce"&#13;
by reviewing the Parkside Jazz&#13;
Band. First of a ll, I'm sure Mr.&#13;
Hanrahan is quite surprised that&#13;
the song he arranged has had a&#13;
name change. The correct title is&#13;
"Simone", not "Sea Moon." Mr.&#13;
Hanrahan arranged the song, and&#13;
had the solo. The next mistake&#13;
was the title "Sun Catcher",&#13;
should be properly named "The&#13;
Sun Catchers".&#13;
I'm sure that our trombonists&#13;
Classified&#13;
G I RL WA N T E D live in Racine with faculty&#13;
family. Light housework and child care&#13;
evenings free. $50 per week plus free room&#13;
and board Flexible schedule for summer&#13;
and fall semester Call after 5 p.m. at 633&#13;
0991&#13;
Favorite Rust colored corduroy blazer type&#13;
tacket left in the Union Fri., Feb. 21 R eward.&#13;
No questions. Please phone 654-1945.&#13;
got a real kick out of y our racial&#13;
slur about the solos being grey.&#13;
Cute, but in poor taste. The last&#13;
song was called "Turquoise", but&#13;
it was written and arranged by&#13;
Sanford Kelly, a student at North&#13;
Texas State, not at Parkside.&#13;
Your last sentence about the&#13;
applause for the band made it&#13;
sound like "Gee, I gues the band&#13;
must be good, listen to the people&#13;
clap," as if the writer was not&#13;
quite sure himself. I think more&#13;
credit or added credit should be&#13;
given to other players in the&#13;
band. The group on the whole,&#13;
and especially our director,&#13;
Robert Thomason (not&#13;
previously mentioned in the&#13;
article) should also recieve a lot&#13;
of c redit.&#13;
The band worked damn hard to&#13;
ART CLASSES&#13;
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familiar to them. They have encroached themselves-thus they have&#13;
become the most powerful trading company in the Universe."&#13;
Within months of the Tea Party the state of the economy became an&#13;
ever greater object of concern. Inflation replaced taxation as the&#13;
number one issue of the day. A writer in Needham, Massachusetts&#13;
printed a broadside that went to the heart of the matter:&#13;
"If the traders in this land had managed their commercial concerns&#13;
with any tolerable regard to the good of the public, we should have&#13;
been at this day in happy circumstances, compared with what we now&#13;
are. To what can it be attributed but the excessive love traders have to&#13;
their own precious selves, that they put such an extravagant price&#13;
upon the commodities they have to sell. It has occasioned the undue&#13;
rise of everything we depend upon for the support and comfort of life.&#13;
In truth, our traders are the real cause of the monstrously high price of&#13;
everything."&#13;
At the same time, there was a growing scarcity of vital goods-food,&#13;
clothing, blankets, shoes. While business interests maintained that the&#13;
scarcity was real, the patriots began to doubt it. Wrote Samuel&#13;
Webster, "There is sufficiency in the land of the necessities of life.&#13;
How then comes it to pass as to make an artificial scarcity, where we&#13;
all know there is none?"&#13;
By 1776, the economy was in a shambles. The working men of Boston&#13;
and New York withheld their labor from all government projects.&#13;
Wealthy aristocrats and merchants who supported the King, were&#13;
forced to flee the country to Canada or back to England.&#13;
This was America as 1775 dawned. Never had the affairs of the&#13;
country been in such disarray. Never had the future looked darker&#13;
Never had Americans gazed with less hope on tomorrow.&#13;
And t hen, within 18 months, what had seemed an impossibility in&#13;
January of 177 5 was a reality by July 4,1776. America was free-free&#13;
because Americans met the challenge. They raised themselves from&#13;
their despair, from their powerlessness, from their fear and&#13;
frustration. They stood up to be counted, and when that happened, no&#13;
amount of Kings, East India Companies and corrupt government&#13;
bureaucrats could stop them.&#13;
The Challenge is clear, the moment is now.&#13;
A thousand voices from our past call us to act for our future and the&#13;
future of our country.&#13;
Who w ill take up the banner of liberty and freedom that Adams,&#13;
Paine and Jefferson led into battle nearly 200 years ago?&#13;
Who will be the first among us to step forth and honor our ancient&#13;
principles with a renewed commitment to reclaim our destiny as a&#13;
people?&#13;
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is now a candidate for Judge of&#13;
the Racine County Court, Branch&#13;
III. Students and faculty interested&#13;
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put that show together, and each&#13;
member played hard and well. As&#13;
for the rest of t he article, I feel a&#13;
great injustice was done to&#13;
Woody a nd his band. I hope for&#13;
our sake he never,sees that article,&#13;
or I'm sure that he and his band&#13;
will never "thunder their way&#13;
back" to Parkside again.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Garry S. Wolk&#13;
Member, Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
&#13;
Editor's Note: RANGER&#13;
apologizes for the errors in two&#13;
song titles. The review did not&#13;
state, however, that "Turquoise"&#13;
was written by a Parkside&#13;
student.&#13;
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STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
foreign culture.&#13;
Besides the hearings, the Ad&#13;
Hoc Committee on the Foreign&#13;
Language Requirement^ is&#13;
seeking additional input from&#13;
students and faculty through a&#13;
survey.&#13;
The committee's report to&#13;
Norwood will also include a&#13;
survey on foreign language&#13;
requirements at other universities&#13;
in the UW system and&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
If the committee recommends&#13;
a change in the current foreign&#13;
language requirement, the&#13;
recommendation will go before&#13;
the Faculty Senate for approval.&#13;
Greg Hawkins, a student&#13;
member of that committee, made&#13;
the motion to review the&#13;
requirement.&#13;
"Foreign language as it stands&#13;
now, does not apply itself to the&#13;
educational goals of a majority of&#13;
students on this campus.&#13;
"The present requirement does&#13;
not give enough foreign language&#13;
to be of any practical use.&#13;
"Secondly, the intrinsic value&#13;
of a foreign language can also be&#13;
satisfied by a number of other&#13;
courses such as linguistics,&#13;
culture courses or literature in&#13;
translation.&#13;
"My particular feeling is that&#13;
the present foreign language&#13;
requirement should be dropped&#13;
completely," Hawkins said.&#13;
James Shea, chairperson of the&#13;
ad hoc committee and professor&#13;
of Earth Science, said that he is&#13;
in favor of a foreign language&#13;
requirement.&#13;
Shea emp hasized though, that&#13;
he is withholding judgment until&#13;
the hearings and the survey are&#13;
completed.&#13;
He further said that he did not&#13;
know whether the other committee&#13;
members felt that the&#13;
current foreign language&#13;
requirement is adequate enough.&#13;
The committee includes:&#13;
Keehn; Diane German, assistant&#13;
professor of Education; and&#13;
August Wegner, assistant&#13;
professor of Music.&#13;
The second public hearing on&#13;
the requirement is scheduled for&#13;
this week, Thursday, in LLC D174&#13;
fr om 2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m .&#13;
Walter&#13;
lllbrichts&#13;
The Man in the Glas Booth&#13;
This is the second season of the American Film Theatre, a fusion of&#13;
superb plays, actors, and filmmakers. From the best plays of the&#13;
Broadway and London stage, five extraordinary films are offered to&#13;
the discriminating viewer.&#13;
Each film is shown no more than four times, and each -ouch- has a&#13;
high price tag ($5.00 f or an evening performance). But, then, excellence&#13;
never does come cheap.&#13;
This season opened with "The Man in the Glass Booth," a shattering&#13;
enigma of guilt and innocence. The film grabs a weary subject-Nazi&#13;
atrocities against the Jews- and turns the guts inside out.&#13;
Maximilian Schell, an outstanding international actor, brilliantly&#13;
demonstrates an awesome range of talent. As Mr. Goldman, a Jewish,&#13;
New York real estate baron, Schell takes us down the depths of a&#13;
distressed psyche, a quagmire of past and present guilt.&#13;
From his penthouse balcony, not unlike Hitler's eerie in Berchtesgaden,&#13;
Goldman spews self-abuse, lusts for a Miss America, and&#13;
is assailed by paranoid images.&#13;
"I have built a city of concrete on the bleached skulls of&#13;
dinosauers," confesses Goldman, his hands spastically grasping the&#13;
air. He is powerful. He is witty. He is self-destructive.&#13;
As Goldman indulges in masochistic exercises, including a Dance of&#13;
Death before the urn containing his wife's ashes, he also prophesizes&#13;
the "second" coming of Colonel Dorf: an S.S. officer who is wanted as&#13;
a war criminal.&#13;
Goldman's inner conflict-"Dorf wants to be me" - explodes into a&#13;
reversal of roles. Israeli commandoes, convinced by medical records&#13;
that Goldman is the elusive, infamous Colonel Dorf, break into his&#13;
sanctuary. He is kidnapped and brought to trial as a mass-murderer in&#13;
Jerusalem.&#13;
Goldman offers no resistance and insists on wearing the uniform of a&#13;
S.S. colonel. He refuses counsel, confident of his ability to defend&#13;
himself against the "Higher Law" which demands his death.&#13;
Sealed in a sound-and-bullet proof booth, Goldman argues that his&#13;
crimes must be tried on a relaistic basis - the laws of men, not the&#13;
ambiguous, unwritten moral law.&#13;
This is Schell's finest hour. He cajoles with smooth gestures and&#13;
rages with the hysteria of a Nazi party rally. His fingertips tease his&#13;
captors while his eyes bulge and burst sweating blood. He pulls the&#13;
viewer into a frightening hypnosis. He casts a spell as absorbing as the&#13;
Fuehrer.&#13;
Goldman's transformation is not rational. Neither was the slaughter&#13;
of six million people. Neither was the passive resistance of its victims.&#13;
There lies the power and profundity of "The Man in the Glass&#13;
Booth." History can not be heremetically examined like glass slide&#13;
specimens. Truth and its consequences are never indisputably clear.&#13;
THERE ARE THINGS&#13;
HAPPENING IN HAIR.&#13;
DON'T LET IT BE A BAD&#13;
HAPPENING&#13;
NOW STYLING - DONE RIGHT&#13;
637^630,&#13;
—A&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
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Special veiwing:&#13;
Wednesday, February 26, 19 75 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Antonia&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Jill Godmillow will bring her&#13;
award-winning film "Antonia" to&#13;
Parkside this Friday, Feb. 28, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the CommArts&#13;
Theater. She will also conduct a&#13;
film editing workshop Saturday,&#13;
March 1, at 10 a.m. in CA D-155A.&#13;
Both activities are free and open&#13;
to th e general public.&#13;
After editing "The Candidate"&#13;
and "The Godfather," Jill&#13;
Godmillow got together with&#13;
folksinger Judy Collins to make a&#13;
touching film about the story of&#13;
Antonia Brico's life as an orchestra&#13;
conductor. The film has&#13;
won seven national and three&#13;
international film awards, including&#13;
the 1974 London Film&#13;
Festival.&#13;
"I have seen the film three&#13;
times. It's the kind of fil m people&#13;
get excited about. People&#13;
literally stood and applauded&#13;
between scenes," says Sandy&#13;
Thomason, Parkside film&#13;
production specialist.&#13;
Antonia Brico was ten years old&#13;
with a nail biting problem when&#13;
her doctor prescribed piano&#13;
lessons. Antonia quickly found&#13;
pleasure and strength in music.&#13;
"Music became my sanity...my&#13;
reason." She waited for "the&#13;
signs" to tell her to go on&#13;
studying and prepare herself for&#13;
a life of music.&#13;
In the film Antonia tells a story&#13;
about accompanying her mother&#13;
to a seance and being told by a&#13;
medium that Beethoven and Liszt&#13;
had told her she would be a great&#13;
musician.&#13;
At the age of 30, Antonia had&#13;
received the best music&#13;
education possible at the time at&#13;
the University of California in&#13;
Berkeley and the Berlin State&#13;
Academy of Conducting in&#13;
Germany. She was ready.&#13;
In 1931 touring as the conductor&#13;
of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra&#13;
she received acclaim and&#13;
shocked reviewers with her&#13;
power and strength.&#13;
After a lavish homecoming her&#13;
music career began to stagnate.&#13;
The novelty of a woman conductor&#13;
was wearing off and&#13;
Antonia became a conductor&#13;
without an orchestra. Could a&#13;
free society accept an individual's&#13;
talent beyond her sex?&#13;
Eleanor Roosevelt thought so,&#13;
joined Antonia's board of&#13;
Sfafi&#13;
D A ILY I O A A « N 194 &amp; 50&#13;
• Pr e s e nts *&#13;
JR. BIZARRE&#13;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28&#13;
• APPEARING*&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 1&#13;
ZIGGY&#13;
&amp; THE ZEU&#13;
with&#13;
ENA ANKA&#13;
directors, and helped to organize&#13;
the New York Women's Symphony.&#13;
It was a short-lived&#13;
success and Antonia was forced&#13;
to move on again.&#13;
Antonia rushed to Denver in&#13;
1947 on the promise of a position&#13;
with a new orchestra being&#13;
formed there. After many successes&#13;
and failures she founded&#13;
Jill Godmillow's(below) award-winning film&#13;
on the life of Antonia Brico(above), will be&#13;
shown this Friday at 7:30p.m. in the CommArts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
the Brico Symphony in Denver,&#13;
and 27 y ears later she still conducts&#13;
the orchestra despite her&#13;
age. Antonia is 73.&#13;
"Antonia" is a moving film of a&#13;
love and a life of music. Antonia&#13;
Brico teaches, jokes, plays and&#13;
still explodes in anger as she tells&#13;
her life story.&#13;
"Antonia" is modest only in&#13;
aspect, not in intention. Collins&#13;
and Godmillow mean to show&#13;
that a musician of invigorating&#13;
talent was shunted aside because&#13;
of a prejudice against her sex&#13;
that still prevails...a loving and&#13;
urgent document," wrote Jay&#13;
Cocks of Time magazine.&#13;
NOTE: Last week the Bugle&#13;
American was bombed. If&#13;
you wish to donate money&#13;
or back issues for their&#13;
files, contact the Mil.FM&#13;
rock stations for info on&#13;
benifit concerts &amp; sho ws.&#13;
U.W.-PA RKSIDE ACTIVITIES B OA R D&#13;
PRESEN TS&#13;
\ i&#13;
An illustrated lecture on&#13;
FLYING SAUCERS ARE R EAL"&#13;
by N ucle ar Physicist&#13;
S T A N TON T. F R IEDM A N&#13;
ADMISSION WE D N ES DA Y , M A R CH 5 , 8 : 0 0 P .M.&#13;
$ 1&#13;
5 0 g e n e r a l COMMUNICATION S ART T HE A T E R&#13;
$ 1&#13;
0 0 U.W.-P arkside st ud e n ts&#13;
Tickets&#13;
a v a il a b l e a t&#13;
U.W.-Parkside&#13;
info. Kisok&#13;
E I L E M AN S M&#13;
I*&#13;
w&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
Sunday, March 2&#13;
AMATEUR GO-GO&#13;
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Wis. I.D. Required&#13;
FREE PIZZA&#13;
1st Prize&#13;
2nd Prize&#13;
3rd Prize&#13;
1 Bottle of Champagne to all entries&#13;
6 P.M. - 'til Closing&#13;
No Cover Charge with Student I.D.&#13;
GIRLS WANT ED&#13;
Go-Go Girls, Waitresses, Bartenders&#13;
TOP WAGES $2.00 - $7.00 Hou rly CALL 634-9369 &#13;
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Toasted English Muffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Delicious Paslnos Juice and&#13;
collee Has container and will&#13;
travel&#13;
We'll pack it to go, but somehow&#13;
it never seems to make it&#13;
out the door&#13;
Egg iimple but elegant- . cheese. Canadian&#13;
bacon neatly stacked on a&#13;
toasted English Muttin Choose&#13;
a tuice and coffee and you're&#13;
ready to battle traffic&#13;
A man-sized sausage patty&#13;
surrounded by two light, golden&#13;
hotcakes cooked to order,&#13;
served with butter and syrup&#13;
Your choice of four |uices and&#13;
a cup of great coffee&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, February 26, 1975&#13;
ilr UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
/f SPRINGBREAK TRIP&#13;
TO:&#13;
lilEXiCO&#13;
CITY&#13;
Brief News&#13;
MARCH 30 - APRIL 6&#13;
ONLY *274 COMPLETE&#13;
• Round Trip let Airfare&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tips &amp; T axes&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUSTRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
The liturgy celebration at CHI RHO CENTER on Sunday, March 2 at 11:15 a.m. will beqin&#13;
a week of activity related to Christian vocation, man's response to God. Guests at the Sunday&#13;
celebration will be members of the Archdiocecan Vocation Team&#13;
The vocation personnel will spend Monday at Carthage College, talking with students&#13;
''buiiSfn^Sr wor.S^&#13;
PeOP'&#13;
e f&#13;
° eXP'°&#13;
re ^ m6anin9&#13;
°&#13;
f S6rViCe and i,s »'«"'«cance for&#13;
On Tuesday the team will visit Parkside University, and on Wednesday and Thursday thev&#13;
respective I y.m 6 TeChniCa&#13;
' '&#13;
nS,itU,eS ,he Kenosha and&#13;
^ciJecampuses&#13;
The culmination of the week's activities on Thursday, March 6 will be a "Live Talk Show"&#13;
neecd 572?Z TooE ZvJ"™ ^ Piousness of the&#13;
r Jwtp3d Se&#13;
f&#13;
S,L°n&#13;
' ,heexcl?&#13;
an9&#13;
eof ideas&#13;
- ^e questions and answers will be held at CHI RHO ssssssszsxzE &amp;jra t 3 8 2 5 i2, h s t&#13;
-&#13;
at 8 p m - *»• «&gt;»-&#13;
Two University of Wisconsin-Parkside staff members are among appointees of the&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission (SWERPC) to a Technical Advisory&#13;
Committee to prepare a prospectus for an engineering study to determine the most&#13;
economical method of abating water pollution in the Kenosha Planning District&#13;
™m™i,,&#13;
&lt;&#13;
eemen E. Galbraith, Director of Planning and Construction&#13;
at UW-Pand a former Wisconsin state architect, and Chelvadural Manogaran, a&#13;
professor of geography who has done extensive research on pollution problems of the Pike&#13;
River and is an authority on the relationships between plant life and water quality.&#13;
PAB presentsn&#13;
E-tn a mSD1T'-in n&#13;
Bm UA'!.&#13;
Y&lt;:&#13;
26:&#13;
t&#13;
P ^ B,,&#13;
WhiteSkellar presen,s 2 'olksingers, Phil Livingston,&#13;
.30 a.m. 12.30 p.m., and Sue Zietz, 12:30 p.m. • 1:3 0 p.m., in the coffeehouse (GR D201)&#13;
Free and open to the public. ''&#13;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28: Live entertainment in the S.A.B. 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. (during&#13;
Happy Hour ) - King Kenosha and the Frostops, and an open mike anyone who would like&#13;
to come down and iam is wejeome! Free.&#13;
f'&#13;
L&#13;
^r/.-VreSentS&#13;
"&#13;
Paper Chase&#13;
'" 8 pm" S A B" emission $1, Parkside and state&#13;
«• u. s required.&#13;
rtJI cAlUUlt Ui rtiiiucui avuipvuiv. i —*" *•&#13;
Ladisias Segy of the Segy Gallery of New York City will open Tuesday,&#13;
March 4, at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery.&#13;
The opening of the show will coincide with an illustrated lecture on&#13;
"African Sculpture and Modern Art" by Segy, an artist, art critic,&#13;
appraiser and author, whose collection of African sculpture&#13;
represents work of some of the most artistic tribes in West Africa.&#13;
His lecture at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theater which&#13;
adjoins the gallery, will include color slides and a color-sound film in&#13;
which the significance of sculpture in the life of Central and West&#13;
African natives will be explained. The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Regular gallery hours are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and&#13;
Fridays and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.&#13;
Visits to planet earth&#13;
UFO Lecture&#13;
SUNDAY, MARCH 2: FILM: "Paper Chase,&#13;
state I.D.'s required. Presented by P.A.B.&#13;
7:30 p.m., S.A.B., admission $1, Parkside and&#13;
if •&#13;
mE?&#13;
Nft&#13;
D|&#13;
AY.' MARC" 5: P A B- Performing Arts and Lectures committee presents an&#13;
i l l u s t r a t e d l e c t u r e b y S t a n t o n F r i e d m a n o f " F l y i n g S a u c e r s A R E R e a l , " 8 p m C AT&#13;
Tickets are $1 tor students, $1.50 for guests, and are available at the Info Kiosk or at the door'&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 8: P.A.B. concert committee presents "Short Stuff," a Milwaukee&#13;
"&#13;
a&#13;
'&#13;
in concert&#13;
'' P-m„ S.A. B. Tickets are $1.25 for students in advance, $1.75 for guests&#13;
and at the door, and are available at the Info Kiosk. Parkside and state I .D.'s required.&#13;
Wu?&#13;
NEu?&#13;
AY' MARCH 12: PAB- presents Keith Berger, mime, 8 p.m., C.A.T. A completely&#13;
self taught master of this ancient art, he has spellbound audiences throughout the country&#13;
the new Marcel Marceau. Not to be missed, particularly if you've never seen mime before!&#13;
Admission (reserved seating): students $1.50 and guests $2.00. Tickets are available at the&#13;
info Kiosk.&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
"Flying Saucers ARE Real" is&#13;
the title of an illustrated lecture&#13;
to be presented by nuclear&#13;
physicist Stanton T. Friedman at&#13;
8 p.m. Wednesday, March 5 in the&#13;
UW-Parkside Communications&#13;
Arts Theatre. The program is&#13;
being sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. Tickets are&#13;
$1.50 for public and $1.00 for&#13;
Parkside students. They are&#13;
available at the Info kiosk.&#13;
Mr. Friedman is the only space&#13;
scientist in the western&#13;
hemisphere known to be devoting&#13;
DAYTONA BEACH&#13;
EXPRESS&#13;
MARCH 2 9 - APRIL 6&#13;
SPRINGBREAK&#13;
$ 135 COMPLETE&#13;
• TRANSPORTATION VIA DELUXE&#13;
MOTOR COACH&#13;
•SIX NIGHTS LODGING AT THE&#13;
DAYTONA BEACH SH ORES SH ERATON IN N|&#13;
•ALL ROOMS WITH KITCHENETTE&#13;
• DISNEYWORLD OPT ION-MO&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION &amp; APPLICATION&#13;
CONTACT: CAMPUS TR AVEL C ENTER LL C D197&#13;
CALL: 553-2279&#13;
full time to UFOs. Since 1972 he&#13;
has lectured to overflow crowds&#13;
at more than 225 colleges in 40&#13;
states. He was one of the few&#13;
scientists featured in the NBC TV&#13;
Documentary "UFOs: Do You&#13;
Believe?" broadcast nationwide&#13;
on December 15, 1974 , and seen&#13;
by more than 44 perc ent of TV&#13;
viewers. His unique professional&#13;
background includes 14 yea rs of&#13;
industrial experience in the&#13;
development of advanced&#13;
nuclear and space systems such&#13;
as nuclear aircraft, nuclear&#13;
rockets, fusion rockets, and&#13;
compact nuclear reactors for&#13;
space applications. He also&#13;
worked on the Pioneer 10 and 11&#13;
spacecraft which have flown out&#13;
past the planet Jupiter. His past&#13;
employers include General&#13;
Electric, Westinghouse, General&#13;
Motors, and most recently TRW&#13;
Systems in Redondo Beach,&#13;
California. He is a member of&#13;
num ero us s c i e n t ifi c&#13;
organizations and of several UFO&#13;
groups and is a Fellow of the&#13;
British Interplanetary Society.&#13;
He received Bachelor's and&#13;
Master's degrees in Physics from&#13;
the University of Chicago.&#13;
"After 16 years of study and&#13;
investigation, I am convinced&#13;
that the evidence is overwhelming&#13;
that Planet Earth is&#13;
being visited by intelligently&#13;
controlled vehicles from off the&#13;
Earth. The Cosmic Watergate is&#13;
being treated like the Mad&#13;
Hatter's Tea Party, but progress&#13;
is being made as more and more&#13;
professionals get involved in&#13;
Ufology-the scientific study of&#13;
UFOs," said the 40-year-old&#13;
scientist. His talk will cover five&#13;
large-scale scientific studies: Air&#13;
Force data not generally&#13;
discussed, UFO landings, reports&#13;
of creatures, travel to the stars,&#13;
and the arguments of the&#13;
educated non-believers. Many&#13;
slides will be shown during his&#13;
program, and a question and&#13;
answer session will follow ^&#13;
AlcDonakfs Breakfast /Menu A „ m 3926-52nd st . Five qreat ways to start the day 31i6-22.ni Ave. /V \.&#13;
f® KENOSHA Served 8:00a.m. until 11:00a.m. daily-Noon Sundays KENOSHA |mcp 1 (£) &#13;
Wednesday, February 26, 1975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
V&#13;
Joseph&#13;
Parkside's bowlers include (1-r) Georee Kniiot, ....&#13;
Brazeau of Milwaukee, Lee Edmark of Kenosha and a Tt&#13;
8&#13;
' Starszak of Muskego, Brian&#13;
UWP Bowlers to Nationals&#13;
Parkside's bowling team has&#13;
its sights set on the National&#13;
Association of College Unions&#13;
title in April. The tourney will be&#13;
held in conjunction with the&#13;
American Bowling Congress&#13;
national tourney in Dayton, Ohio.&#13;
Parkside passed the first&#13;
hurdle with a record-setting&#13;
victory over 18 other schools&#13;
from Region 8, which includes&#13;
Wisconsin, Upper Michigan and&#13;
Chicago, earlier this month. To&#13;
make the finals in Dayton,&#13;
Parkside must beat either the&#13;
University of Iowa or the Illinois&#13;
regional winner at a site and date&#13;
to be determined next month.&#13;
Parkside looks like a good bet on&#13;
the basis of its performance at&#13;
LaCrosse, where it nipped the&#13;
host school by 33 p ins - 8568 to&#13;
8535 - in the nine game tourney.&#13;
UW-M, t he pre-tourney favorite,&#13;
was third at 8533. Parkside entered&#13;
the final three games 184&#13;
pins down, but rolled a region 8&#13;
record 3028 on games of 1053,1083&#13;
For a delicious hot pizza try&#13;
Jensens''&#13;
large cheese &amp; only $430 &amp; t ax&#13;
sausage "Free Delivery"&#13;
FREE&#13;
Quart o f 7 -up or C ola in our&#13;
container w ith each large 16" p izza,&#13;
"PICKED-UP&#13;
MON., W ED&#13;
THURS.&#13;
Jtu Jensens\&#13;
Fine F ood &amp; Spirits&#13;
8021 22nd Avenue&#13;
Ph 654-3581&#13;
and 892.&#13;
Parkside's Brian Brazeau,&#13;
from Milwaukee, won the allevents&#13;
title with a 203.7 ninegame&#13;
average. He was followed&#13;
by George Krulatz of Kenosha,&#13;
199, Lee Edmark of Kenosha,&#13;
186.5, Andy Vacca of Racine,&#13;
183.2, and Mark Starszak of&#13;
Muskego, 179.4. The team&#13;
averaged a record-setting 190.2&#13;
for the nine games. Brazeau, by&#13;
winning the all-events title,&#13;
qualified for the national individual&#13;
finals in Dayton.&#13;
tup&#13;
u UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
SPRINGBREAK TRIP TO:&#13;
MARCH 2 7-APRIL 4&#13;
ONLY $369 C OMPLETE&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET AIRFARE&#13;
•7 NIGHTS DELUXE LODGING&#13;
•Ground Transfers&#13;
•Tips &amp; Taxes •&#13;
For application or information&#13;
('ontaot&#13;
&lt; AM I'I S I K WT .I. (T:\TKR&#13;
fslS 1-LC I)-197 ( all : r.53-2294&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS&#13;
THE B OOKSTORE&#13;
IS P REPARING F OR T HE&#13;
RETURN O F A LL TEXTBOOKS&#13;
TO T HE P UBLISHERS&#13;
PLEASE PURCHASE ALL&#13;
TEXTBOOKS&#13;
YOU STILL NEED&#13;
NOW I&#13;
PARKSIDE U NIVERSITY B OOKSTORE&#13;
Tuesday Night&#13;
Is Bonanza&#13;
Special Night.&#13;
[(•1.69 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
(*1.49 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)]&#13;
Lur y\&#13;
i* Feed a child in America for 49C.&#13;
We've got just the right amount of food to make a kid smile - a hamburger,&#13;
an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price - 49c - to make you smile. '&#13;
Wll lave iLVboll low it&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY&#13;
IN KENOSHA TRY &#13;
save&#13;
saving&#13;
saved&#13;
The most comforting&#13;
verb in any&#13;
language.&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Jobs For&#13;
Summer&#13;
Look&#13;
Promising&#13;
Informed sources report that&#13;
summer job opportunities for&#13;
college students "look good" this&#13;
year. National Parks. Dude&#13;
Ranches, Guest Resorts, Private&#13;
Camps, and other tourist areas&#13;
throughout the nation are now&#13;
seeking student applications.&#13;
Summer job placement coordinators&#13;
at Opportunity Research&#13;
(SAP) report that despite national&#13;
economics tourist areas are&#13;
looking for a record season. Polls&#13;
indicate that people may not go&#13;
for the big purchases such as new&#13;
cars, new homes, furniture or&#13;
appliances, but most appear to be&#13;
planning for a big vacation.&#13;
A free booklet on student job&#13;
assistance may be obtained by&#13;
sending a self-addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Opportunity Research,&#13;
Dept. SJO, 55 Flathead Dr.,&#13;
Kalispell, MT 59901. Student job&#13;
seekers are urged to apply early!&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712 -57th slreet&#13;
Cagers in playoffs Thur&#13;
Leartha Scott (31) and Stevie King (21) prevented a UW-Green Bay basket and the Rangers went&#13;
on to win their 19th game of the season. They lost a close game to Northern Michigan Saturday,&#13;
however, finishing the season with a 19-9 record. Tournament playoff games begin for Parkside&#13;
tomorrow night, Thursday, when the cagers will host either Carthage or St. Norbert at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Drag yourself and a friend (or two, if you have them)&#13;
over to |)t^a Parlor&#13;
for Sud's Sipping Time.&#13;
3-5 MON. thru FRI.&#13;
Lathrop and 21st, (almost) Racine&#13;
» LARGE FROSTY PITCHERS&#13;
OF BEER ONLY $1.25&#13;
their relevance to the rest of the&#13;
student body. One said there&#13;
should be "students expressing&#13;
the ideas of students" on committees,&#13;
and another felt more&#13;
than one student should be&#13;
represented, thus preventing that&#13;
student being called a "token&#13;
student."&#13;
The results of faculty&#13;
evaluation forms are available to&#13;
students, despite the accusations&#13;
of those students present. The&#13;
Business-Management Division&#13;
makes their results available at&#13;
registration in a booklet, and the&#13;
Science Division- has sent theirs&#13;
to the Archives.&#13;
Both the committee members&#13;
and the students that attended&#13;
this hearing felt the present&#13;
evaluation forms were not&#13;
adequate, but they were still&#13;
important because they are a&#13;
"uniform means of input" by&#13;
students. *&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COONSELING&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, February 26, 1 9" , e&#13;
Students — -continued from page 1-&#13;
Watergate .continued from page 1&#13;
man who told us Watergate was a&#13;
third-rate burglary. If he lied to&#13;
us then, he's going to lie to us&#13;
now."&#13;
The motion passed and the&#13;
Lecture Society has attempted to&#13;
cancel.&#13;
Other schools, such as Florida&#13;
International University, opposed&#13;
appearances by either&#13;
Ziegler or Dean at first, but then&#13;
agreed to allow the appearances&#13;
in the interest of free speech.&#13;
Besides evoking controversy,&#13;
the two Watergate tours share&#13;
similar subject matter. Ziegler&#13;
plans to speak on the use and&#13;
abuse of power, according to his&#13;
agent. In particular, he will&#13;
discuss how power should be&#13;
properly used.&#13;
Dean has been talking about his&#13;
personal experiences, blaming&#13;
the scandal on executive power&#13;
gone berserk in an atmosphere of&#13;
political surveillance.&#13;
"When I first got to the White&#13;
House I quickly learned that if&#13;
you wanted to succeed, you had to&#13;
have political tidbits," Dean&#13;
commented to his Virginia&#13;
audience. For example, within&#13;
hours of the news of Sen. Ted&#13;
Kennedy's accident at Chappaquiddick,&#13;
the White House sent&#13;
Anthony Ulasawicz to&#13;
Massachusetts to conduct an&#13;
investigation, he noted.&#13;
Dean has also revealed that&#13;
after his tour is over and his&#13;
memoirs are written, he plans to&#13;
devote himself to prison reform&#13;
as a result of the psychological&#13;
effects he experienced while in&#13;
jail.&#13;
Switchboard&#13;
24 hours </text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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