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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, issue 27</text>
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            <text>Lay offs at UWP</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Rangers win!!&#13;
Next stop Stout&#13;
Stories inside-pgs. 7&amp;8&#13;
5-?':; : S^?SSS8SesSSS88S888&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, March 5, 1975 Vol III No. 27&#13;
Lay offs at UWP&#13;
photo by Frederickson&#13;
FCC orders&#13;
media breakup&#13;
(CPS)--The Federal Communications&#13;
Commission, after a&#13;
year of deliberation and many&#13;
years of government consideration,&#13;
has ruled that&#13;
newspaper owners may not buy&#13;
radio or television stations&#13;
serving the same market as the&#13;
newspapers.&#13;
In 1970, the FCC agreed to&#13;
consider the Justice Department&#13;
recommendation of a breakup of&#13;
media ownership two years&#13;
before. But after a year and a&#13;
half of hearings and heated&#13;
debate, the FCC dropped the idea&#13;
temporarily. The Nixon administration&#13;
liked the idea,&#13;
however, and hearings were&#13;
again held, eventually resulting&#13;
in new radio ruling.&#13;
In justifying its action, the FCC&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Faced with required cuts of&#13;
$659,600 in its 1975-76 operating&#13;
budget, the University of&#13;
Wiscorisin-Parkside announced&#13;
recently that it must layoff 21&#13;
staff members over the next 16&#13;
months and eliminate another 21&#13;
vacant positions from the budget.&#13;
Nine other staff were reduced in&#13;
work load or shifted from state to&#13;
federal funding.&#13;
There were no teaching faculty&#13;
or teaching vacancies among the&#13;
cuts.&#13;
Acting Chancellor Otto F.&#13;
Bauer said, "In implementing&#13;
these mandatory budget cuts,&#13;
great care was taken to insure&#13;
that current and future academic&#13;
programs, including graduate&#13;
work in the School of Modern&#13;
Industry, would not be adversely&#13;
affected.&#13;
"The first priority of a&#13;
university in a belt-tightening&#13;
situation must be to protect the&#13;
welfare of its students and&#13;
1 preserve its educational mission&#13;
to the area it serves.&#13;
"I think we've accomplished&#13;
that and managed to effect the&#13;
required cuts in as humane and&#13;
fair a manner as possible under&#13;
the circumstances," he said.&#13;
"Everyone affected will receive&#13;
from four to 16 months notice."&#13;
Bauer said the moratorium on&#13;
hiring which he imposed in&#13;
January resulted in enough&#13;
dollar savings to enable Parkside&#13;
to give a liberal notice to laid off&#13;
employees.&#13;
The moratorium also reduced&#13;
the number of layoffs necessary&#13;
by providing vacant positions,&#13;
rather than people, to be&#13;
eliminated in a number of instances.&#13;
&#13;
Bauer pointed out that both&#13;
position and dollar reduction&#13;
goals had to be met as a result of&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey's proposed&#13;
1975-77 state budget and UW&#13;
System "equity studies" among&#13;
state campuses.&#13;
Gov. Lucey's proposed base&#13;
budget and productivity&#13;
reductions for the UW System&#13;
total about $9.7 million, of which&#13;
Parkside's share is about $429,600&#13;
for 1975-76. Another $230,000 was&#13;
cut as a result of the UW equity&#13;
studies.&#13;
About $266,800 of the total was&#13;
specifically earmarked by the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
studies for physical plant&#13;
reductions at Parkside, a&#13;
category which includes maintenance&#13;
and custodial functions,&#13;
grounds, safety and security.&#13;
Cuts there included 14 staff&#13;
members and 4 vacant positions.&#13;
The equity cuts ipiposed by the&#13;
continued on page 5&#13;
Presidential candidate&#13;
Harris in Racine&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
"We haven't had a citizen President since&#13;
Harry Truman, and it's about time we had&#13;
one."&#13;
Presidential hopeful, Fred Harris, made&#13;
this statement while speaking at the Racine&#13;
labor Center last Saturday.&#13;
Harris, a former Democratic Senator&#13;
from Oklahoma, says you have to be a&#13;
"citizen candidate" before"you're a "citizen&#13;
president" and this is exactly his intent.&#13;
Unlike other candidates, Harris stays at&#13;
the home's of friends while out campaigning&#13;
rather than staying in hotels and says he&#13;
travels without any staff whatsoever.&#13;
He explained, "You don't need a great&#13;
herd of staff grabbing your coat and picking&#13;
up your bag and all that business."&#13;
Harris who was born into a sharecropping&#13;
family in Oklahoma in 1930 is married to&#13;
LaDonna Harris who is also from&#13;
Oklahoma.&#13;
LaDonna, a Comanche Indian, is&#13;
President of Americans for Indian Opportunity&#13;
and has long been active in the&#13;
field of women's and minority rights.&#13;
During his appearance in Racine, Harris&#13;
came out with some strong statements&#13;
concerning military spending and foreign&#13;
affairs.&#13;
Advocating a cut inn military spending, he&#13;
sees the need for "a President who not only&#13;
knows how and what to cut but also knows&#13;
how to defeat those Admirals and Generals.&#13;
"They'll scare you to death! If you were&#13;
going to cut a handgrenade, they'd have the&#13;
people worried that the Russians were going&#13;
to be on our doorstep."&#13;
While questioning the necessity of c urrent&#13;
requests for military spending, Harris told&#13;
the audience: "Our President wants us to&#13;
spend eight billion dollars more for the&#13;
military, not only for exzmple to keep&#13;
150,000 troops in Europe 30 years after&#13;
WWII, but to increase that number. He also&#13;
wants to send more money to President&#13;
Thieu in Vietnam.&#13;
"You would have thought we'd spent more&#13;
than enough lives and more than enough&#13;
money out there. We ought to cut that off."&#13;
Harris disagrees with present foreign&#13;
policy and the way in which it is made.&#13;
"If you start with the assumption that&#13;
people are smart enough to govern themselves,&#13;
you can't have the kind of secret and&#13;
elitist foreign policy we've had.&#13;
"When you get a few people who think&#13;
they're the only ones who know anything&#13;
about foreign policy, then you wind up with a&#13;
situation where the Cambodians knew we&#13;
were bombing the Cambodians, it was the&#13;
Americans that didn't know it."&#13;
He also cited elitist policy-making as&#13;
responsible for U.S. citizens being over&#13;
taxed in order to establish dictatorships all&#13;
over the world. "We don't have the right to&#13;
meddle in other people's businesss or impose&#13;
dictatorships on theip," he declared.&#13;
Former Senator Fred Harris (right), now presidential candidate with John Siefert (center)&#13;
at the Racine Labor Center.&#13;
With regard to internal affairs, Harris policy for employment rather than a&#13;
submitted that the big question for '76 "is defensive policy for unemployment. Money,&#13;
whether our government is going to look he said, is needed in order to do this and&#13;
after the interests of the corporations and pointed to federal subsidies amounting to 94&#13;
the super-rich or whether it's going to look billion dollars peryear which are now being&#13;
after the interests of the average family." given to such things as railroad and oil&#13;
/ He advocated the imposition of price companies.&#13;
controls on monopolistic industries and Voicing support for past programs such as&#13;
vigorous enforcement of the antitrust laws, the WPA (Work Progress Administration)&#13;
1 Accusing the government of protecting and the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corncertain&#13;
industries from competition, Harris mission), Harris questioned: "Why should&#13;
warned: ."They (industries) say they we make unemployment compensation&#13;
believe in free enterprise and I'm going to automatic, as we should, but not make a job&#13;
give them a pretty strong dose of it." automatic?"&#13;
He spoke of the large tax decrease Harris served two terms in the Senate and.&#13;
necessary to keep money in the hands of the&#13;
people who need it. He recommended "a tax&#13;
increase for the Nelson Rockefellers , the J.&#13;
Paul Gettys who are not paying their share&#13;
of the dues in our society."&#13;
Harris stressed the need for affirmative&#13;
then decided not to seek reelection intending&#13;
to run for President in 1972 but, as he says,&#13;
he went broke.&#13;
"You couldn't talk about the kind of things&#13;
I was talking about then and raise the&#13;
continued on page 7 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 5, 1 975&#13;
Policy on&#13;
Double talk&#13;
letters&#13;
In recent weeks various members of the RANGER&#13;
staff have been questioned as to why certain letters to&#13;
the editor did not appear in the RANGER. It is the policy&#13;
of RANGER to print all letters to the editor that we&#13;
receive. In the past few weeks the number of letters&#13;
received in our offices has increased tremendously. A$&#13;
RANGER is limited in the size of newspaper that can be&#13;
printed it has become necessary to be selective in to&#13;
which letters are to appear in print. We do not discard&#13;
letters that are not printed but retain them until space Is&#13;
available on the editorial page.&#13;
Our criteria for printing of letters are based on interest&#13;
to the student body as a whole, timeliness,&#13;
criticism of the newspaper and personal expressions in&#13;
that order.&#13;
RANGER believes that this newspaper has an&#13;
overriding responsibility to express student sentiment.&#13;
The letters to the editor are the students most direct and&#13;
forceful means of making themsely^lfieard on campus.&#13;
We will continue to produce this paper with the thought&#13;
that it is for the conveyance of Student opinion and interest.&#13;
Keep those cards and letters coming folks.&#13;
Sensory delight&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Last evening (Feb. 19), whilst&#13;
lounging in Main Place, P.U.,&#13;
awaiting the proper time of day&#13;
to start the long trek down to CI/-&#13;
2001 for Archeology and what was&#13;
to become Ms. Zimmerman's&#13;
lecture on "the secret of life,'-"&#13;
sounds of music reverberated•&#13;
thruout the deadened atmosphere.&#13;
A lone violin alternately&#13;
laughed and cried and&#13;
danced its way into the heart and&#13;
mind of at least one avid fan,&#13;
while several other organisms&#13;
participated in this auditory&#13;
sensory stimulation as listeners.&#13;
Some few fellow student&#13;
organisms stopped to&#13;
acknowledge the expertise of the&#13;
dashing young freak who reposed&#13;
with his stringed love in the&#13;
darkened corridor's shadows.&#13;
X&#13;
Excerpts from Boneparte's&#13;
Retreat, from unnamed classics,&#13;
as well as tidbits from The&#13;
Theme From Young Frankenstein&#13;
and foot-stomping fiddlin'&#13;
were the offerings which ended in&#13;
a second rendition of the NOW&#13;
; Inf amous Mousetrap Concerto for&#13;
One Violin-ended with a note of&#13;
both joy and sadness interspersed&#13;
among his playing.&#13;
"Everyone laughs at the kind of&#13;
music I like," I surprisedly heard&#13;
him say. Not everyone my friend-&#13;
-and herewith I wish to extend&#13;
gratitude to ALL you musicians&#13;
out there for ymjr diligence in&#13;
practice and creative musical&#13;
outpourings which provide THIS&#13;
freak With much pleasure 'on the&#13;
highway.' Keep on play-in'.&#13;
No. 387-42-2922&#13;
(ralph waldo scbwartz)&#13;
Bookstore complaints&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It has come to the attention of&#13;
the University Bookstore&#13;
Committee that patrons of the&#13;
Bookstore may be unaware of the&#13;
outlets for complaints and&#13;
problems regarding the&#13;
Bookstore.&#13;
We therefore wish to suggest a&#13;
three-step procedure for dealing&#13;
with such matters.&#13;
1. The bookstore manager, Ted&#13;
Wood, should be approached first&#13;
regarding the problem.&#13;
2. If the problem is not&#13;
satisfactorily resolved, Dave&#13;
Bishop, Coordinator of. Auxiliary&#13;
Services should be the next&#13;
person contacted. Dave acts as a&#13;
liaison between the University&#13;
and various services under&#13;
contract with Parkside, including&#13;
the Bookstore.&#13;
3. If the problem remains&#13;
unresolved, a complaint should&#13;
be directed to the University&#13;
Bookstore Committee. The&#13;
reason for placing the Committee&#13;
at the end of the procedures is&#13;
that in those instanced where&#13;
time is of the essence, committee&#13;
action often does n ot provide a&#13;
satisfactory alternative.&#13;
However, we invite your comments&#13;
and complaints at any&#13;
time.&#13;
The Committee is also&#13;
soliciting names of students&#13;
interested in serving on the&#13;
Committee. We invite any interested&#13;
student to contact Ron&#13;
Singer, Chairperson - CLA 380,&#13;
Ext. 2275.&#13;
Ronald Singer&#13;
Chairperson University&#13;
Bookstore Committee&#13;
Who???&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
WE ALL LIVE IN A "WHAT&#13;
IF" SOCIETY.&#13;
Glen A. Christensen&#13;
Student of Law&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
It would seem as if you have&#13;
finally mastered that fine art of&#13;
being able to talk out of both sides&#13;
of your mouth at the same time!&#13;
In the RANGER issue of&#13;
February 19, 197 5, second page,&#13;
you no sooner finish off column&#13;
one with a statement of apology&#13;
for editorializing in a title of a&#13;
letter by Ms. J. Scott, than begin&#13;
column two by editorially&#13;
elevating a letter by an irate'"&#13;
feminist, which attacks the Scott&#13;
letter title as showing simplistic&#13;
thinking on your part, to the fioble&#13;
position of (jaesthming; your&#13;
joiimglistic ethicsC&#13;
• I&amp;nnot directly CtS&amp;sfc&amp;g the&#13;
titles that you use, Fpf example,&#13;
ht the Scott letter, £ eottht very&#13;
easily approve of the title as&#13;
being both accurate at thought,&#13;
find appropriate in wordhtg for&#13;
thefolkwing reason: if, white my&#13;
•vri'fa was carrying her child,&#13;
SSWeral people would attack her,&#13;
Error? I—&#13;
and force saline solution into her&#13;
womb, thereby "salting out our&#13;
problem," I would feel that they&#13;
would be responsible for murder;&#13;
I would feel the same if it happened&#13;
to anyone else's wife.&#13;
Even so, when one looks at the&#13;
title of the third letter, (second&#13;
left out for obvious reasons) in&#13;
which Ms, M. Kropp castigates,&#13;
the students using the cafeteria&#13;
?;&#13;
for their slovenly behavior, your&#13;
"Emily Post Where are you?"&#13;
seems to place the students' lack&#13;
of common c&amp;uhtesy; Itte&#13;
u p h e m i s t i c r £ 8 a p r o p ei&#13;
etiquette."&#13;
It is indeed Strange that,, only&#13;
now, after you have entitled so&#13;
many letters to die editor, people&#13;
write in to compfeifi In this instance-maybe&#13;
it hurts their&#13;
sensitive valu^^^^^^iade&#13;
experts in the lleid of moral&#13;
issues. In that case, I am entirely&#13;
for abortions, except in situations&#13;
where the woman is pregnant.&#13;
Of course, you can always&#13;
reply with the old "The captain&#13;
was sober today" philosophy, but&#13;
please be a little less hypocritical&#13;
in the future.&#13;
Perhaps, the most desirable&#13;
solution to your problem would be&#13;
to put a title on the letter only&#13;
when the writer suggests one,&#13;
such as, "Moral values&#13;
questioned."&#13;
Yours in ZPG,&#13;
Edward Arndt&#13;
Editor's note: The "The&#13;
captain was sober today"&#13;
philosophy refers to the theory&#13;
that the editor has, not only the&#13;
right, but the responsibility to&#13;
sensationalize in the headlines&#13;
for purposes of increasing the&#13;
readability of the paper.&#13;
As for the letter from the&#13;
feminist, that was not on page&#13;
two. It was on page three. The&#13;
letter headed with Journalistic&#13;
ethics questioned, was Prof.&#13;
Wayne G. Johnson's.&#13;
To the iSdttdr:&#13;
In response to Arlene Martin's&#13;
letter to the editor, in the Feb. 6&#13;
issue of the RANGER. I wish to&#13;
apologize for the insolent errors&#13;
and (pardon the expression) cut&#13;
the jive and tell it likejfeis-&#13;
•' So February 11-14 teas Black&#13;
History Week. For some reason I&#13;
have always envisioned a week&#13;
as a period of 7 days and consider&#13;
the possibility Of a 4 day week&#13;
rather unlikely Thus the Third&#13;
World Organization obviously&#13;
DESIGNATED these 4 days of&#13;
the 7 day week for their&#13;
celebration.&#13;
In her letter Ms. Martin&#13;
suggested that I, as well as the&#13;
RANGER Editorial Staff, seek&#13;
reliable informatics concerning&#13;
the events and involvements of&#13;
the Third World Organization.&#13;
Obviously she doc&amp;n't consider&#13;
the president of th|j organization&#13;
a reliable source for information&#13;
because I obtained all my&#13;
propaganda from him. In-|&#13;
eidently, Arlene's name was&#13;
mentioned during the interview. I&#13;
looked tier name up M the&#13;
directory the following morning&#13;
intending to contact her for&#13;
further information concerning&#13;
the article only to discover she&#13;
has no phone. , «&#13;
I would like to suggest that the&#13;
next time Ms. Martin frit ends to&#13;
expose her creative efforts with a .&#13;
letter to the editor that she also &gt;&#13;
submit to the RANGER a playby-pl^v&#13;
schedule of her activities&#13;
So that someone may contact her&#13;
if they are in^p^'of accurate&#13;
• informatipsOTricerning the Third&#13;
Wopp#ganization.&#13;
v.vXv-' , ''&#13;
r Bonne Has®&#13;
Student government-Huh?&#13;
: To the Editor :&#13;
What is Parkside student&#13;
government? My answer is a&#13;
farce.&#13;
The meeting of Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 19 was a great proof of this. I&#13;
say this bccafrseofthe things that:&#13;
happened -that night a certiapi&#13;
female senator called for a&#13;
quorum call and left during the&#13;
roll call with five other female&#13;
senators. Thi® was a planed move&#13;
to disrupt the meeting-so business&#13;
could not be done.&#13;
1 myself do believe in women's&#13;
| lib but with acts such the one&#13;
| pulled by the female senators on&#13;
Feb. 19, mabee some of the&#13;
•f arguments against women's lib&#13;
are rational such as they are&#13;
unreliable, pig headed,&#13;
irrational, and if they dont get&#13;
there way they will cause caios&#13;
untill they get there way.&#13;
Women of Parkeside who are&#13;
not senators prove to everyone&#13;
that theese charges are false&#13;
because Parkside women&#13;
senators just enhance theese&#13;
charges.&#13;
Ed Mattner&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senator&#13;
Dr. Knight'&#13;
BACK/ THAT Sensational SMASH MTT...&#13;
CONDITIONAL AMNESTY&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, March ? at J:30&#13;
p.m. in GR D101, tee will be a&#13;
hearing on Dr. Knights tenure. I&#13;
urge all those students who care,&#13;
to come and .see how the&#13;
illustrious tenured people at&#13;
Parkside handle their "peer"&#13;
group. Come see how the Publish&#13;
or Perish system works. Come&#13;
see how teaching is evaluated by&#13;
teachers without students'&#13;
evaluations. Students will be&#13;
there to speak but not to vote. The&#13;
Merger Law requires that&#13;
students be consulted. That&#13;
doesn't mean they be ignored. If&#13;
students attend these hearings,&#13;
they might not be ignored. If&#13;
students could show they care,&#13;
maybe some teachers would&#13;
show t hey care.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers &#13;
Wednesday, March 5, 197 5 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Noui ani) then- the state of fee nation&#13;
A $tmt of iReuolutron&#13;
On June 11, 1974, Jeremy Rifkin of the&#13;
Peoples Bicentennial Commission spoke&#13;
before a Bicentennial conference of over 300&#13;
corporate executives. What follows is an&#13;
edited version of the speech. For more information&#13;
contact : Peoples Bicentennial&#13;
Commission, Washington, D.C. 20036.&#13;
Back in 1971, Mr. Guelich, the Chairman&#13;
of the Public Relations Society of America,&#13;
said that the Bicentennial will' be the&#13;
greatest, single peace time public opinion,&#13;
mobilization effort in our nation's history.&#13;
And well it will be. A New York advertising&#13;
executive, writing in the New York Times,&#13;
put it much more bluntly. He said, "If we&#13;
can sell millions of bottles of soda each year,&#13;
why can't we sell Life, Liberty, and the&#13;
Pursuit of Happiness? If we can sell coffee&#13;
to Americans, why can't we sell America to&#13;
Americans?" The answer he suggests is&#13;
quite simple; to get a good advertising&#13;
agency and get on with the business of&#13;
selling America.&#13;
Let me give you a little flavor for the&#13;
historical period of the Revolution because&#13;
there has been very little said about it this&#13;
morning.&#13;
Historians call tb£.1760's the Decade of&#13;
Protest- There were student strikes at&#13;
Harvard, Yale, and William and Mary.&#13;
There were Black insurrections on the landowning&#13;
estates of the very wealthy&#13;
throughout the colonies- There were,.,&#13;
protests and insurrections over rising prices ;&#13;
and inflation by artisans and mechanics in&#13;
all of the major urban areas on the East&#13;
Coast at that time. Much of this was spontaneous&#13;
and much of it gravitated towards&#13;
the Stamp Act in 1765. Protests continued to&#13;
mount through the later part of the 1760's&#13;
culminating in a watershed event, The&#13;
Boston Massacre, where four people were&#13;
slain by government troops almost 200 years&#13;
ago, to the month, of Kent State.&#13;
Historians call 1771-'73, the Silent Years.&#13;
A man by the name of Lord North came&#13;
along and took over the reins of government.&#13;
He gained a reputation for cooling off the&#13;
colonies, for stopping the protests. And in&#13;
case you are wondering where the term&#13;
"Silent Majority" came from, those were&#13;
the exact words that Lord North used to&#13;
explain the political mood of the colonists in&#13;
1771 t o '73. It got so bad for activists and&#13;
radicals that many of them quit the scene.&#13;
They went and got little farms out in the&#13;
western parts of Pennsylvania and&#13;
Maryland. They went to "do their own&#13;
thing." Many of them thought that it was all&#13;
over; that the protests didn't amount to&#13;
anything; that the people would not rise up;&#13;
that the rich aristocracy and government&#13;
interests were too powerful to challenge.&#13;
Sam Adams, one of the few who stuck it out,&#13;
kept writing letter after letter, to his fellow&#13;
activists saying, Don't give up now; you&#13;
must understand that the silence that you&#13;
see is really only a sullen silence. The&#13;
Boston Massacre has created a situation of&#13;
self-reflection. People are asking themselves&#13;
whether it's worth committing their&#13;
lives to the cause. People are reappraising&#13;
and absorbing everything from that past&#13;
decade of p rotest; and soon they will stand&#13;
up as a united force against their oppressors.&#13;
&#13;
Then, in 1773, two things occurred which&#13;
were to change the course of history in this&#13;
country and throughout the world. In the&#13;
spring of that year Benjamin Franklin,&#13;
while in London, secured hundreds and&#13;
hundreds of secret documents "leaked" to&#13;
him from Parliament, these documents&#13;
written between Gov. Hutchinson of&#13;
Massachusetts and Lord North, outlined an&#13;
elaborate plan to repress the civil liberties&#13;
of the people. Ben Franklin took those&#13;
documents and sent them to Sam Adams,&#13;
who gave them to John Hancock, who&#13;
distributed them to every newspaper in the&#13;
colonies, where they appeared in banner&#13;
headlines for several months. The instant&#13;
shock waves that went through the country&#13;
were enormous. Everything that the&#13;
radicals and activists had said during the&#13;
decade of protest was now verified in the&#13;
very documents of the government.&#13;
In the fall of that year another event&#13;
happened. The East India Company, the&#13;
first of the giant, multi-national corporations,&#13;
with far-flung investments&#13;
throughout the world, was going bankrupt.&#13;
Members of Parliament owned stock in the&#13;
East India Company, and they did not want&#13;
it to go under. So, they bailed it out with a&#13;
two million pound subsidy and, then, gave it&#13;
a monopoly on the tea trade in North&#13;
America. Now a lot of people are under a&#13;
misconception about why the people in the&#13;
colonies turnecMsfcek the tea, burned it,&#13;
destroyed it and confiscated it. It was not&#13;
because the tea was more expensive wife •&#13;
the tax on it, was&#13;
cheaper than the smuggled tea fe&amp;tihe&#13;
p e o p le a l r e a d y e n j o v e d P a r l i a m e n t a&#13;
calculated risk. These people in Norfe.&#13;
America would rather go for a cheap item&#13;
and forget the question of political power&#13;
and political principle; and once we get J$j||&#13;
foot in the door we are going to be able to do&#13;
whatever we want. But, by that time, after a&#13;
decade of protest, after a few years, of&#13;
thinking it over, after the leak of sec^|&#13;
papers incriminating officials, the people&#13;
were no longer willing to accept corporate&#13;
and government collusion. And we had the|&#13;
Boston Tea Party.&#13;
1774, '75, and '76 were marked by protest,&#13;
repression and more protest. It all&#13;
culminated on July 4th, 1776, with the&#13;
signing of the Declaration of I ndependence.&#13;
That is the document we are paying homage&#13;
to during America's Bicentennial.&#13;
Prudence indeed will dictate that&#13;
governments long established should not be&#13;
changed for light and transient causes; and&#13;
accordingly all experience has shown that&#13;
mankind are more disposed to suffer while&#13;
evils are sufferable than to right themselves&#13;
by aboiishing the forms to which they are&#13;
accustomed. But when a long train of abuses&#13;
and usurpations, pursuing invariably the&#13;
same Object, evinces a design to reduce&#13;
them under absolute Despotism, it is their&#13;
right, it is their duty, to throw off such&#13;
Government, and to provide new Guards for&#13;
their future security.-Such has been the&#13;
patient sufferance of these Colonies; and&#13;
such is now the necessity which constrains&#13;
them to alter their former Systems of&#13;
Government. The history of repeated injuries&#13;
and usurpations, all having in direct&#13;
object the establishment of an absolute&#13;
Tyranny over these States.&#13;
In every stage of the Oppressions We have&#13;
Petitioned for Redress in the most humble&#13;
terms and our repeated Petitions have been&#13;
answered only by repeated injuries. A&#13;
Prinee, whose character is thus marked by&#13;
every act which may define a Tyrant, is&#13;
unfit to be the ruler of a free people.&#13;
That is the document that you and I are&#13;
celebrating during America's Bicentennial&#13;
observances.&#13;
Let me touch on one more thing before we&#13;
go on. The attitudes of some of the major,&#13;
self-appointed, alleged, self-styledrevolutionaries&#13;
of 200 years ago toward i&#13;
business, finance and the economy. I think&#13;
this will be of particular interest to the&#13;
corporations here, so, I would like to quote&#13;
from a few of the founders on this.&#13;
If you have a pen and pad handy you&#13;
might want to jot these quotes down and&#13;
take them back to your board of directors'&#13;
meeting.&#13;
m Tfee accumulates ftf great wealth is, in&#13;
many instances, the effect of paying too&#13;
little for the labor that produced It, the&#13;
consequence of which is that fee working&#13;
.&#13;
• : I-;:-' . ••&#13;
esfebbshmefes are more dnngerons than&#13;
THOMAS JEFFERSON&#13;
A field of battle covered wife desd bodies&#13;
patrifying in fee open air is an awful and&#13;
distressiu e; hut a nation debased&#13;
hi the love of money and ex ill the&#13;
\tces and crimes usually eonheeied wit&#13;
that passion is a spectacle far tttore awful,&#13;
distressing and offensive.&#13;
BENJAMIN RUSH&#13;
It is said that Paper systems being open to&#13;
all are not monopolies; he who has money&#13;
can buy some stock. All then is fair as every&#13;
man, meaning every moneyed man, may&#13;
share in the plunder. Well, every person&#13;
may enlist in an army yet an army may&#13;
enslave a nation.&#13;
JOHN TAYLOR&#13;
(And finally) No man is entitled to a&#13;
greater portion of this earth than another.&#13;
Land was made for the use of all.&#13;
PENNSYLVANIA FARMERS&#13;
Now that you know what we are&#13;
celebrating, you must decide how your&#13;
company will tie in to the revolution. In&#13;
making that determination, you might apply&#13;
a simple litmus test to your own corporation.&#13;
It could go something like this: If&#13;
the president or board chairman of my&#13;
corporation were alive 200 years ago, which&#13;
side of the fence would be be on? Would he&#13;
be op. fefe side cf fee Tories, the wealthy&#13;
bankers, merchants, lead owners, or on the&#13;
side of: fee rebels? Would he sign the&#13;
DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE or&#13;
fight the Dec^trafem of Independence&#13;
Would he sanction confiscation of land&#13;
and property or oppose it? #&#13;
ggPut another way: if Sam Adams, Tom&#13;
Paine, and Jefferson were all alive today,&#13;
Wfiich side Of fee fence would they be on?&#13;
Would they fee likely to belong to your boss's&#13;
country cltib? Would they be likely to work&#13;
for your boss at General Motors, Exxon, or&#13;
ITT? It's something to think about&#13;
Finally, it is time for Americans across&#13;
feis land to begin to stand up once again for&#13;
$8trfofesm, It is time for people to stand up&#13;
for the Declaration of independence, it is&#13;
time for people to pledge their commitment&#13;
to the Bili of Rights and the Constitution and&#13;
to make their voice heard. I'd like to ask all&#13;
of yo u who believe that it IS time to stand up&#13;
for those principles, who believe that it's&#13;
time to pledge your lives, your fortunes, and&#13;
your sacred honor to what that revolution&#13;
f$;as all about to stand up and make your&#13;
commitment:, outside Of the anonymity of&#13;
your corporation and fee seat in which you&#13;
sit...,&#13;
(At this point, ashence fell over the room,&#13;
a single itive rose from&#13;
his sent, i&#13;
AR i ight, then, We should ail heed the&#13;
words of Sam Adams:&#13;
If yo u tove wealth better than liberty, the&#13;
tranquility of servitude better feus the&#13;
animated contest of freedom, go home from&#13;
us In peace, ('roach down and lick feefrftnds&#13;
w hich feed^ou, may your ehains set lightly&#13;
upon you, and amy posterity forget feat you&#13;
were oar countrymen.&#13;
Stop the fighting&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
There has been a lot of fighting&#13;
in psga, and I am asking&#13;
everyone to stop now. I have been&#13;
involved in it, so has everyone&#13;
I s ee the light-&#13;
'o the editor:&#13;
Why are so many'lights needed&#13;
)' light up our campus and&#13;
arking lots on weekend&#13;
venings? I have driven by the&#13;
fniversity on Saturday evenings&#13;
t midnight to find the east most&#13;
arking lot completely&#13;
luminated and the walk up thg&#13;
ill completely illuminated with&#13;
Dt a car or person in sight. It&#13;
ould seem with the energy&#13;
risis and the price of electricity&#13;
le University should do its part&#13;
else. We have only a few more&#13;
months left, and so far we've&#13;
accomplished nothing. From&#13;
what I hear, the administration is&#13;
going to recognize us as the&#13;
in cutting down on their usage&#13;
too!!!&#13;
If they are going to be so free&#13;
with the lighting they surely&#13;
could afford to let visitors park&#13;
free instead of installing parking&#13;
meters and charging five cents&#13;
for 15 minutes. Why must citizens&#13;
and visitors be charged to tour or&#13;
do business with our University?&#13;
Why is UWP so careless in one&#13;
area and tight in another?&#13;
Marilyn Ladwig&#13;
Student&#13;
representatives of the students.&#13;
Why? I haven't any idea, because&#13;
so far all we've represented are&#13;
our own petty grudges. I really&#13;
think that each of us became&#13;
senators because we wanted to do&#13;
something for the students and&#13;
this-campus. But we can't do&#13;
business when there are snide&#13;
comments, inuendos and out and&#13;
out fighting both in and out of the&#13;
meetings. I don't believe that any&#13;
senator walks away from a&#13;
ipeeting without feeling that he or&#13;
she has been treated badly, and it&#13;
shouldn't have to be like that. To&#13;
anyone who feels that I have&#13;
wronged them, I apologize. To&#13;
the wrongs that I felt were done&#13;
to me, that is in the past, and I'm&#13;
looking towards the future. But I&#13;
can't help wondering if psga has&#13;
one...&#13;
Carrie Ward, senator&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Public hearings on civil legal services in Kenosha will b e held in room 200B ol City Hall on&#13;
Wednesday. March 5 and March 19. beginning at 7 30 p m&#13;
The hearings, being organi zed by the Kenosha Lega l Action Coalition and the Citizen's&#13;
Committee on Legal Services, are being held to find out what civil legal needs are not being&#13;
met by current programs in t he area Findings will be utilized i n p lanning future programs&#13;
onvernTZ k Com&#13;
K&#13;
m u n i ,V ^oups such as Switchboard, as well as units of c ity and county&#13;
teret,r^^ ara&#13;
n&#13;
,:rr,:°d&#13;
S&#13;
t&#13;
Po1p&#13;
k&#13;
e&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
,K,he 00 *&#13;
thn|&#13;
l ,&#13;
,«&#13;
e n S&#13;
,&#13;
Wh&#13;
.&#13;
0&#13;
,&#13;
W'&#13;
5 h '° '°'&#13;
n t h e Ci, iz e n&#13;
'&#13;
s Committ ee which will preside over the hearings&#13;
¥ZZT °"&#13;
KLAC *' 454 "" b"&#13;
w~"&#13;
The Pre Law Club will hold its next'meetlng on Wednesday. March 5 at 4 p.m. in the Li6rary&#13;
Learning Center projection room.&#13;
Scheduled is a movie produced in 1968 b y CBS The film is an interview with one of the most&#13;
influential Supreme Court Justices in the history ot America, Mr Hugo Black&#13;
Parkside Christian Fellowship's Outreach Lecture, "Is Christianity&#13;
Credible?" has been changed from March 5 to March 19 at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
WEDNESDAY. MARCH 5 P A B presentsVirginiaKing.inWhiteskellarcotteehouse.il 30&#13;
am to 1 3 0 p m Free and open to the public LECTURE PAB presents an Illustrated&#13;
lecture, "Flying Saucers are real," by nuclear physicist Stanton Friedman, B 00pm in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater Tickets are Si 00 lor students. Si.50 for guests, pnd are available at the&#13;
Info Kiosk of af the door.&#13;
FRIDAY. MARCH 7 Mark Sheldon and Will Dresse r will perform in t he Union, 3 30 to 5:30&#13;
p m So come on down it's tree!&#13;
SATURDAY, MA«CH 8 CONCERT: "Short Sufff," an excellent Milwaukee blues band. 9&#13;
p.m . S A B Admission SI.25, students in advance, SI 75, Guests a n d at the door. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Into Kiosk Parkside and state ID'S required A P A B. p roduction&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12 PAB Performing Arts and Lectures committee pres ents in&#13;
ternationally acclaimed mimist Keith Berger, 8 00 p.m , C. A T Tickets (reserved seating)&#13;
are Si 50 for students, S2 00 for general public, and are available at the Info Kiosk. Not to be&#13;
missed, particularly if you've never seen mime beforel &#13;
4 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 5, 197 5&#13;
An evening at&#13;
the Theater&#13;
Museum without walls&#13;
THE COURT STREET THEATER'S&#13;
SECOND SEASON TO OPEN ON APRIL 3&#13;
Milwaukee, Feb. 21-The Court Street Theater, MRT's disarmingly&#13;
innovative and exciting alternate stage, will open its second season on&#13;
Thursday, April 3 with the presentation of a comic, surreal and satiric&#13;
bill of pl ays entitled, "Bag." Consisting of three new works, CLOCKS&#13;
by Carl Larsen, CHAMBER PIECE by Nagle Jackson and COMMITMENTS&#13;
AND OTHER ALTERNATIVES by Norman Kline,&#13;
"Bag" will run through April 20.&#13;
On April 24, the Court Street Theater's second season will continue&#13;
with another bill, "Duet," comprised of two plays for two pairs of&#13;
actors. THE GREAT NEBULA IN ORION, an astringently witty yet&#13;
sad play for two women by Lanford Wilson, will be performed each&#13;
night with Harold Pinter's incredibly suspenseful work, THE DUMB&#13;
WAITER, a puzzling play with two male characters. "Duet" will&#13;
complete its run and the Court Street season on May 11.&#13;
Located at 315 W. Court St., across from the Jos. Schlitz Brewery&#13;
and only six blocks from the Milwaukee Repertory Theater Company's&#13;
mainstage home in the Performing Arts Center, the Court&#13;
Street Theater is a converted warehouse which MRT inaugurated last&#13;
spring as an auxiliary place for the creation of d ramatic experience.&#13;
Performances at the Court Street Theater will be nightly from&#13;
Wednesday through Sunday. (No performances on Mondays and&#13;
Tuesdays.) There will be two performances on Saturdays at 5:00 and&#13;
9:30 p.m., while all other nights have a curtain time of 8:0 0 p.m. All&#13;
tickets are $3.00, except at the Friday and Saturday performances, for&#13;
which tickets are $3.25.&#13;
To order tickets, or for more information, contact Jan Miner at the&#13;
MRT business office, 929 N. Water St., Milwaukee, Wis. 53202.&#13;
Telephone 273-7121 Ex. 329 or 334.&#13;
THE 1975 COURT STREET THEATER SEASON&#13;
"Bag" - Ap ril 3 thru April 20&#13;
CLOCKS by Carl Larsen. - A dramatic situation is evolved from the confrontation of four&#13;
clocks. Although the dialogue seldom varies from "tick-tock" the tensions, comic confrontations&#13;
and eventual resolution are very human, very funny and intriguing.&#13;
CHAMBER PIECE by Nagle Jackson. - An experiment in form. Modeled after a string&#13;
quartet, this piece in rondo form takes a dramatic theme and passes it from actor to actor as it&#13;
goes through statement, variation and recapitulation. The plot concerns a man, who in the&#13;
middle of his years, finds himself lost in a department store.&#13;
COMMITMENTS AND OTHER ALTERNATIVES by Norman Kline. A series of vignettes,&#13;
slightly surreal but grounded in true life. America today, from the backyard barbecue to the&#13;
problems of permissive education, is examined and neatly skewered in a kind of shlsh kebab&#13;
revue format. A very funny series of "out-takes" of America in the 70s.&#13;
"Duet" - April 24 thru May 11&#13;
THE GREAT NEBULA IN ORION by Lanford Wilson. - A warm study of two women&#13;
sharing their disillusionments by the author of HOT L BALTIMORE. Two college friends&#13;
rediscover one another years later shopping at Bergdorf's in Manhattan. Their instant&#13;
reunion takes place in the apartment of one of them. They talk to each other and to the&#13;
audience. We share, with trenchant wit, their sadnesses.&#13;
THE DUMB WAITER by Harold Pinter. - Vintage Pinter and one of his most important&#13;
works. Gus and Ben in a basement room are ordered and threatened by the dumb waiter&#13;
which descends with orders from "him" upstairs. On this bare action line, a chilling experience&#13;
unfolds.&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
ANTONIA&#13;
"The most valuable films are those that are free, without scripts,"&#13;
said Jill Godmilow, director and editor of Antonia. Speaking before a&#13;
full house in the Comm-Arts Theatre Friday, Godmilow remarked&#13;
that, "It's much more interesting to see someone reveal themself."&#13;
Antonia is more than a portrait of a woman, as subtitled, it is an&#13;
intimate close-up of a brilliant artist denied professional recognition&#13;
and personal expression. The film is a sensitive documentary of Antonia&#13;
Brico, a 73-year-old conductor, teacher and activist for female&#13;
recognition and opportunity in music.&#13;
During the 30's and 40's she conducted many of Europe's and&#13;
America's great orchestras, but was unable to find a permanent&#13;
position because of her sex, not ability.&#13;
Today, in Denver, she conducts the Brico Symphony which she&#13;
founded.&#13;
Director Godmilow and producer-folksinger Judy Collins, a former&#13;
student of Brico, transform the cold documentary camera into a very&#13;
personal window. It weaves through Antonia's life like a bitter-sweet&#13;
melody in a symphony: her unhappy childhood, flashes of international&#13;
triumph, heartbreak of senseless frustration, and her&#13;
indefatigable moral strength.&#13;
The paradoxes which mark Antonia's career also characterize her&#13;
personality. Before her orchestra, she is commanding and dynamic;&#13;
yet, she patiently reminds a musician the basic value of an eighth&#13;
note. As a teacher, she tempers her strict demands with tender understanding.&#13;
&#13;
The wealth of material in the&#13;
visual that a museum makes&#13;
available to those frequenting the&#13;
place is impossible to ascertain.&#13;
The only trouble is that many of&#13;
the same master's works are not&#13;
contained in one place for&#13;
viewing. The Learning Center&#13;
and the Art Department of&#13;
Parkside have taken care of t his&#13;
problem, by presenting on five&#13;
consecutive Tuesdays, a series of&#13;
films on the ages and movements&#13;
in the arts called: Museum&#13;
Without Walls.&#13;
Last Tuesday, the 25th of&#13;
February, the first two films in&#13;
this series were presented. The&#13;
first was Giotto and the PreRenaissance.&#13;
This film, dealing&#13;
with the master art critics hold to&#13;
be the father of Renaissance&#13;
painting, was full of movement&#13;
and was accompanied by an&#13;
original score. The narration was&#13;
meant to inform and, therefore,&#13;
presented the viewer with&#13;
various terms dealing with the&#13;
period and the aesthetic in&#13;
general. The benefit of viewing&#13;
art on film is that one can&#13;
chronologically follow the&#13;
development of the artist, and&#13;
through the contrasting .examples&#13;
of his contemporaries,&#13;
analyze the style and inventions&#13;
that were the personal contribution&#13;
of the man to his age&#13;
and to the art that subsequently&#13;
followed. Mass and dimension&#13;
were Giotto's achievements. The&#13;
solidarity, naturalism and expressive&#13;
quality in Giotto's&#13;
figures is an incredible advancement&#13;
when one considers&#13;
the flat, patterned, stylized icons&#13;
that were figures in the art of t he&#13;
Middle Ages.&#13;
Unlike the first film, the&#13;
second: Crete and Mycenae, did&#13;
not discuss the personality that&#13;
created the art of the time, but&#13;
A suggestion for the chancellor&#13;
No cuts&#13;
(CPS)-At least there are a few people left in the world who are&#13;
dedicated to their jobs.&#13;
When Dr. Joseph S. Murphy, president of the City University of New&#13;
York (CUNY) Queens College, was ordered to pare $160,000 from the&#13;
school's budget, he refused. Instead, he offered to sell his official&#13;
residence as college president to make up the deficit.&#13;
"As soon as I receive your approval, I will make the appropriate&#13;
arrangements for my family and myself," Murphy said in a letter to&#13;
CUNY system chancellor Robert Kibbee. Murphy said that to comply&#13;
with the budget cut order would force the college to "dismiss faculty&#13;
and to reduce and dilute our educational offerings."&#13;
Chancellor Kibbee has not formally responded to Murphy's&#13;
suggestion, but a spokesman pointed out that under the bylaws of the&#13;
Board of Hi gher Education for the city, each of the presidents of the&#13;
City University's 10 senior colleges "shall live in a residence provided&#13;
for him-her by the board."&#13;
When asked how he felt about giving up the house, Dr. Murphy said,&#13;
"My family and I have lived in a lot of p laces...so I guess we won't&#13;
suffer."&#13;
Jill Godmillow at her l ecture last Friday .&#13;
But it is Antonia's remarkable candor and warmth which capture&#13;
our sympathy. Completely open with her feelings and memories&#13;
Antonia stands naked, vulnerable, and totally human before us Near&#13;
the conclusion of t he film, an ancient 78 rpm record of Antonia conducting&#13;
at Carnegie Hall appears on the screen and soundtrack In&#13;
delibly scarred by deep scratches, the symphony gradually dissolves&#13;
to Antonia's tearful voice.&#13;
The rhythm of the scratches becomes a subtle aural painting the&#13;
exposed, raw nerves of a painful remembrance. We see Antonia as&#13;
pathetic and noble, a superb giant and an awkward dwarf.&#13;
Antonia is a touching tribute to one woman's special greatness and&#13;
one director's certain sensitivity and intelligence.&#13;
the culture that contributed to the&#13;
art. The unnamed artisans that&#13;
worked in the ancient&#13;
civilizations were full of the&#13;
primitive symbols that formed&#13;
the representational base of their&#13;
religions. The film was very&#13;
much like a travelogue, moving&#13;
from one archeological site to&#13;
another.&#13;
If you cannot afford the extensive&#13;
traveling needed to see&#13;
the masterpieces and newest&#13;
inventions of the world's artists,&#13;
then these films will be an invaluable&#13;
experience. The second&#13;
part of the series was shown&#13;
yesterday. The films in that&#13;
series were: Picasso: War,&#13;
Peace and Love and Goya.&#13;
Museum Without Walls allows&#13;
for the invaluable experience of&#13;
art history and understanding the&#13;
reasons of personality and&#13;
culture behind great art. It can be&#13;
seen at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
Hall, room 103. The next films&#13;
are:&#13;
Le Corbusier and&#13;
The Greek Temple - March 11&#13;
The Cubist Epoch, and&#13;
Germany-Dada - March 18&#13;
The Impressionists, Kinetic Art&#13;
in Paris, and The Art Conservator&#13;
&#13;
- March 25 by amy&#13;
Events&#13;
in the&#13;
Arts&#13;
by Susan Shemanske&#13;
The Contemporary Music&#13;
Ensemble from Northwestern&#13;
University will present an improvisatory&#13;
concert Friday,&#13;
March 7, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The concert is one of several&#13;
events sponsored this semester&#13;
by the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, which also will bring&#13;
the National Shakespeare&#13;
Company to Parkside in April.&#13;
The Contempory Music Ensemble,&#13;
directed by Stephen&#13;
Syverud and William Karlins,&#13;
will present an extremely&#13;
modern, electronic type of music&#13;
featuring improvisation with two&#13;
, synthesizers and acoustic intruments.&#13;
The ensemble will&#13;
present a lecture demonstration&#13;
on improvisation and interpretation&#13;
in the theatre at 2:00&#13;
p.m. March 7. Both the concert&#13;
and demonstration are free.&#13;
On Thursday, April 10 the&#13;
National Shakespeare Company&#13;
will present "Two Gentlemen of&#13;
Verona" in the Comm-Arts&#13;
Theatre at 7:30 p.m. Twelve&#13;
members of the company, based&#13;
in New York City, will travel to&#13;
Parkside to present the play - a&#13;
lively, delightful comedy farce.&#13;
The emphasis of the play is on&#13;
youth, its attitudes, and two of the&#13;
subjects that concern the young -&#13;
love and friendship. Tickets for&#13;
"Two Gentlemen of V erona" will&#13;
be $3.00 a nd $2.00.&#13;
An "Ethnic Program" planned&#13;
for Sunday, May 11 will feature&#13;
Mario Escudero, worldly acclaimed&#13;
Flamenco guitarist. The&#13;
New York Times called Escudero&#13;
"a Spanish Flamenco guitarist of&#13;
truly virtuosic stature." His&#13;
concert is scheduled for 3 p.m. in&#13;
the theatre. &#13;
Review&#13;
Wednesday, March 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Police power&#13;
(A review of The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence by Victor Marchetti&#13;
and John D. Marks. Knopf, New York 1974. $8.95; and State&#13;
Secrets, Police Surveillance in America by Paul Cowan, Nick Egleson&#13;
and Nat Hentoff. Holt Rinehart Wilson, New York 1974. $10.00.)&#13;
(CPS)-The US government has ten distinct agencies which together&#13;
spend well over $6 billion annually gathering and analyzing foreign&#13;
and domestic intelligence.&#13;
This "intelligence community," including the Army, Navy and Air&#13;
Force Intelligence, the National Security Agency, the Central Intelligence&#13;
Agency (CIA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation&#13;
(FBI), by its own admission has engaged in a massive overlap of&#13;
activities.&#13;
Given huge amounts of money and personnel, the possibility for&#13;
useless, excessive, and-as recent reports have confirmed-criminal&#13;
surveillance, is immense.&#13;
•These books, The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence, and State Secrets&#13;
each analyze from a different viewpoint the threat surveillance&#13;
agencies pose to our society-one rapidly being suffocated by datagathering&#13;
units and systems.&#13;
Each book, through its accounting of surveillance methods, concludes&#13;
that a fear of criminal behavior and political repression by&#13;
state police is well-founded.&#13;
As the most terrifying of the books, The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence&#13;
is an extremely enlightening and well-organized work that&#13;
explores the structure, mentality and covert activities of that agency.&#13;
A 14-year veteran of the CIA, author Marchetti writes with an&#13;
authority unique in the world of police-watchers.&#13;
Readers will have a difficult time ingesting all the CIA's incredible&#13;
activities. Marchetti's calm narrative style belies the shock value of&#13;
such CIA exploits as bombing runs by its own B-26s, the attempted&#13;
overthrow of Indonesian President Sukarno in 1958, the infiltration of&#13;
college campuses and the unscrupulous ownership and management&#13;
of dozens of front organizations-ranging from airlines to radio&#13;
stations.&#13;
Marchetti's clear and comprehensive bias does not damage the&#13;
book's credibility, which has been strengthened by the agency's intense&#13;
opposition to its publication. The CIA failed in its attempt to halt&#13;
publication but did manage to delete 168 passages which it claimed&#13;
were harmful to national security.&#13;
These deletions may still be reinstated by court order, but rather&#13;
than delay publication, the editors decided to publish the book with&#13;
blank spaces indicating the exact location and length of the deletions.&#13;
They published in boldface 171 other passages that the CIA originally&#13;
ordered excised and then reluctantly permitted to be reinstated.&#13;
Despite his obvious disgust with what the CIA has become, Marchetti&#13;
contends that the CIA has a legitimate right to exist "as a&#13;
coordinating agency responsible for gathering, evaluating and&#13;
preparing foreign intelligence," as its charter provides.&#13;
Unfortunately, he says, this function has assumed a secondary&#13;
importance and the CIA has become "an operational arm, independent&#13;
and unaccountable...whose purpose is interference in the&#13;
domestic affairs of other nations."&#13;
While The CIA primarily analyzes surveillance abroad, State&#13;
Secrets examines how federal and local police monitor political activists.&#13;
&#13;
In six essays the three authors of State Secrets analyze the effectiveness&#13;
of provacateurs, wiretaps, informers, electronic surveillance,&#13;
grand juries, grants of immunity, data banks and computer&#13;
interfacing.&#13;
This attempt to touch on all aspect of the government's invasion of&#13;
privacy is, in fact., too energetic, giving readers more material than&#13;
they can co mprehend without a well-organized framework.&#13;
For instance, Nick Egleson's opening essay attempts to de-mythify&#13;
the James Bond image of FBI agents, while a later one by Nat Hentoff&#13;
re-emphasizes the immediate and pressing threat .of electronic surveillance&#13;
and sophisticated gadgetry.&#13;
As a whole, however, the book elicits from the reader its intended&#13;
alarm over police infringement of constitutional freedoms and each&#13;
essay makes for fascinating reading.&#13;
Lay offscontinued&#13;
from page 1&#13;
UW System were in the areas of&#13;
academic support services,&#13;
general administration and&#13;
student services. Cuts included 7&#13;
staff members, 17 vacant&#13;
positions, and seven staffers&#13;
reduced in work load.&#13;
- System equity studies aim at&#13;
approximate equalization of&#13;
operational costs among similar&#13;
campuses. In the past, Parkside&#13;
had received proportionally&#13;
higher funding, in "start-up"&#13;
dollars because it was a new&#13;
campus and because it had been&#13;
established as a University of&#13;
Wisconsin campus before merger&#13;
with the former state universities.&#13;
Parkside's high percentage&#13;
of part-time students&#13;
also raises the per-student cost&#13;
factor.&#13;
Faculty instructional costs had&#13;
been approximately equalized&#13;
relative to other campuses by&#13;
budget-related cuts the last two&#13;
years. That, combined with the&#13;
fact that under the proposed&#13;
budget UW campuses will have to&#13;
absorb enrollment increases this&#13;
fall with no additional funding,&#13;
made further faculty adjustments&#13;
unnecessary at this&#13;
time.&#13;
In addition to the current cuts,&#13;
various mandated budget&#13;
reductions have pared $640,000&#13;
from the Parkside budget overthe&#13;
past four years.&#13;
Bauer said that even if UW's&#13;
effort to restore funding for&#13;
enrollment increases this fall is&#13;
successful, the money would not&#13;
be available iqitil summer of 1976&#13;
because the UW System has&#13;
moved to an annual method of&#13;
counting enrollment.&#13;
"That wouldn't help us meet&#13;
our budget retrenchment&#13;
requirements for the fiscal year&#13;
beginning this July," he said.&#13;
Both administrative staff and&#13;
faculty were involved in the&#13;
budget cut deliberation..&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 5, 1975&#13;
The gypsy life of Milton Staskus&#13;
A wanderer at Parkside&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
Milton Staskus is the grinning little old&#13;
man that students see i n the cafeteria,&#13;
winding a path through the aisles, a portable&#13;
garbage can in tow.&#13;
Staskus has been working at Parkside&#13;
for three years and retired from American&#13;
Motors Co. ten years ago. He says that he&#13;
continues to work because "if I stop&#13;
working I'm soon six feet under."&#13;
Staskus was born in Lithuania and&#13;
graduated from an engineering school in&#13;
Moscow. He will tell you that he served in&#13;
the armed forces during W.W.I, and he&#13;
grins broadly as he recounts that he was&#13;
captured and imprisoned in German&#13;
P.O.W. camps twice. He successfully&#13;
engineered escapes both times.&#13;
After the war, Staskus returned to&#13;
Russia and was employed as an engineer&#13;
to build locomotives throughout eastern&#13;
Europe. He was transferred from country&#13;
to country and says that is why he speaks&#13;
so many languages, Ukranian and&#13;
Czechoslavakian included. Staskus smiles&#13;
and says, "I was like a gypsy, you know."&#13;
In 1922, Staskus became unhappy with&#13;
his work in Siberia and concerned over the&#13;
growing power of Communism in eastern&#13;
Europe. Fearing that soon Lithuania&#13;
would lose its independence, Staskus&#13;
immigrated to the United States.&#13;
Because Staskus was a Lithuanian&#13;
citizen, although working in Siberia, he&#13;
was able to leave for the States with a&#13;
minimum amount of hassle from the&#13;
Russian government. They were upset&#13;
over loosing a highly trained multi-lingual&#13;
engineer.&#13;
Staskus then came to the mid-west&#13;
searching for employment similar to that&#13;
which he had been trained for in Moscow.&#13;
He met with disappointment, as personnel&#13;
managers explained that although he was&#13;
highly qualified, his English was&#13;
inadequate and he lacked U.S. citizenship.&#13;
He then entered night school in&#13;
Waukegan Illinois to perfect his English&#13;
and to study for his citizenship. Staskus&#13;
remembers those years fondly. He met&#13;
friends and joined three piece band.&#13;
"People sleep too much," Staskus says.&#13;
"When I was young, I never slept; too&#13;
much to see-too much to learn."&#13;
Staskus won his citizenship in 1928 and&#13;
married for the second time in 1950. He&#13;
had been working at AMC since after the&#13;
depression.&#13;
He now keeps busy through his job at&#13;
Parkside, a garden he tends at home and&#13;
fishing trips he takes with his wife. He also&#13;
owns two pieces of property in Arizona&#13;
that he says he will retire to if "Parkside&#13;
ever closes." .. ,&#13;
Staskus feels he has truly realized the&#13;
American Dream of a land of opportunity.&#13;
America" pride he wears around his neck,&#13;
a silver dollar minted in 1922; the year he&#13;
entered the U.S.&#13;
Is he happy at Parkside? Staskus beams&#13;
and says "Oh yes. I wish, though, that&#13;
more students at Parkside could speak&#13;
some of the languages I've learned -1 mis&#13;
that."&#13;
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FCC—&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
essentially agreed with media&#13;
critics. "It was unrealistic to&#13;
expect true diversity from a&#13;
commonly owned stationnewspaper&#13;
combination...! than)&#13;
if they were antagonistically&#13;
run," the FCC official ruling&#13;
stated.&#13;
WHYNOT?&#13;
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and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
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632-SI9SMilton&#13;
entertains the cafeteria troops as he makes his rounds to clean&#13;
the tables.&#13;
AT&amp;T&#13;
Monopolies win&#13;
new power&#13;
(CPS)-In an unprecedented decision, the phone company in New&#13;
Jersey has won the right to automatically increase its rates without&#13;
holding a public hearing.&#13;
The New Jersey Supreme Court has ruled that the state public utility&#13;
commission acted within the law when it granted New Jersey Bell the&#13;
right to raise rates based on cost increases without a complete public&#13;
rate proceeding, which usually lasts about eight months.&#13;
In accordance with the utility commission's ruling, the AT&amp;T affiliate&#13;
boosted its rates $19.3 million in December, even though it had&#13;
been sued by New Jersey's new Public Advocate.&#13;
In several states, power companies have been allowed to increase&#13;
their rates automatically to reflect alleged changes in fuel prices. But&#13;
the phone company has never been allowed that authority.&#13;
Because all AT&amp;T affiliates must apply for rate increases&#13;
separately, the New Jersey Bell decision does not extend to other&#13;
states.&#13;
Even though an AT&amp;T spokesperson claimed there weren't any&#13;
plans to go for automatic adjustments elsewhere "at this time,"&#13;
Illinois Bell recently asked its utilities commission for the same&#13;
power.&#13;
PARKSIDE A CTIVITIES B OARD PRESENTS&#13;
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TICKETS A T T HE I NFO. CENTER &#13;
m Wednesday, March 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Harris&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
money."&#13;
In most cases his voting record in the&#13;
Senate tends to reflect the same views he&#13;
voices now.&#13;
The record shows him opposing both the&#13;
ABM, anti-ballistic missile system, and the&#13;
SST, supersonic transport plane. He also&#13;
came out against the use of plant killing&#13;
chemicals in Vietnam and the no-knock&#13;
policy concerning police search authority.&#13;
Harris supported the use of federal funds&#13;
for busing in order to achieve racial balance&#13;
in schools, limitations on military spending,&#13;
increased federal spending on prisons,&#13;
establishment of the 18 year old vote and the&#13;
reduction of marijuana penalties.&#13;
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632-7754&#13;
Parkside escaped with a&#13;
narrow 84-78 victory over Platteville&#13;
Monday night before a&#13;
capacity crowd at the P.E.&#13;
Building.&#13;
Once again it was Gary Cole&#13;
providing the punch with 28&#13;
points and 8 r ebounds.&#13;
From the opening tipoff it was&#13;
a hard-fought battle. The first&#13;
half seesawed back and forth&#13;
with neither team leading by&#13;
more than two after the early&#13;
moments.&#13;
Steve Krebsbach and Jeff&#13;
Zaharias provided the punch for&#13;
Platteville, while Cole was&#13;
continually double-teamed and&#13;
held to 11 points. Malcom Mahone&#13;
and Leartha Scott both chipped in&#13;
8 p oints to keep the Rangers in&#13;
the game.&#13;
The half ended with Platteville&#13;
ahead 38-36.&#13;
The second half started with&#13;
the Pioneers dominating the&#13;
game with blistering outside&#13;
shooting and stretched their lead&#13;
to six before the Rangers started&#13;
to ge t into the game again.&#13;
Cole went on a rampage&#13;
midway through the period and&#13;
tied the game with a three-point&#13;
play. From there the Rangers&#13;
built up a nine-point lead. Platteville&#13;
then closed within two at&#13;
75-73 with 1:20 to play.&#13;
The Rangers moved in front by&#13;
four when Elvin Jaconson of&#13;
Platteville took a swing at&#13;
Leartha Scott, but ended up on&#13;
the floor after Scott's retaliation&#13;
punch.&#13;
A double foul was called and&#13;
both Scott and Jacobson were&#13;
ejected.&#13;
Each team was awarded two&#13;
free throws. Rod Bush of Platteville&#13;
missed both throws with 32&#13;
seconds on the clock and the&#13;
Rangers coasted to the win.&#13;
Parkside is now 21 and 6 and&#13;
meets Stout State tonight for a&#13;
NAIA playoff berth.&#13;
photo by Frederickson&#13;
The hand is quicker than the eye&#13;
Sunday, March 9&#13;
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8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 5, 19 7 5&#13;
Ozone&#13;
to you&#13;
(CPS)-Well, it's back to those&#13;
messy tubes, gooey jars, greasy&#13;
kid stuff-and hot stuffy rooms.&#13;
Two new Congressional bills have&#13;
been recently introduced to take&#13;
the pffsst out of aerosol, spray&#13;
cans and the coolants out of&#13;
coolers.&#13;
The retreat from the push&#13;
button age back to the manual&#13;
age may occur because of a&#13;
growing concern that the&#13;
chemicals used in refrigeratorfreezers,&#13;
air conditioners and&#13;
aerosol spray cans are collecting&#13;
in the upper atmosphere and may&#13;
be causing the gradual&#13;
destruction of the earth's&#13;
protective ozone layer.&#13;
The aerosol spray can bill&#13;
introduced in the House would&#13;
severely limit production of these&#13;
cans because of their anti-ozone&#13;
spray propellants.&#13;
According to one congressional&#13;
source, the aerosol bill "may be&#13;
the sleeper of the year.&#13;
Everybody uses shaving cream&#13;
and deodorants. People may now&#13;
think, 'is nothing sacred?' But the&#13;
choice may be 'Do you want&#13;
ozone or the dry look?' "&#13;
The second House bill would&#13;
limit the chemical coolants in air&#13;
conditioners and refrigeratorfreezers.&#13;
When appliances are&#13;
discarded, these chemicals&#13;
produce harmful fluorcarbons&#13;
which are released into the atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
It is reported that 800,000 ton s&#13;
of fluorocarbons are produced&#13;
worldwide each year, 60 percent&#13;
of which are used in spray&#13;
propellants and 25 percent in&#13;
coolants.&#13;
Already there is a one percent&#13;
annual depletion rate in the ozone&#13;
shield which could rise to 2&#13;
percent over the next decade.&#13;
Rangers whip&#13;
St. Norberts&#13;
Photo by Frederick son&#13;
Cole shows how to dominate on rebounds.&#13;
by Dick Ahlgrimm&#13;
The Rangers opened their bid&#13;
for the District 14 NAIA tournament&#13;
spot with a sometimes&#13;
puzzling nine point victory over&#13;
St. Norberts.&#13;
Earlier this year, Parkside&#13;
destroyed St. Norberts 96 to 42;&#13;
but according to Coach Steve&#13;
Stevens "Anything can happen in&#13;
a tournament."&#13;
St. Norbert got as far as the&#13;
Parkside match by upsetting&#13;
Carthage earlier in the week,&#13;
which ruined Parkside's plans&#13;
for a Kenosha showdown with the&#13;
Redmen.&#13;
In the early going of Thursdays&#13;
game St. Norbert's had the crowd&#13;
wondering whether Parkside&#13;
would be the next upset victim, as&#13;
they hit on six of their first eight&#13;
field goal attempts to go ahead 12&#13;
to 2. But Gary Cole put on a&#13;
dazzling one man show to bring&#13;
the Rangers to life. At the half,&#13;
Cole had scored 21 points and had&#13;
boosted the Rangers into the lead&#13;
41-38.&#13;
St. Norberts Chuck Eichstedt&#13;
proved to be almost as unstopable&#13;
as Cole by pumping in&#13;
seventeen points by half time.&#13;
After the intermission, both&#13;
teams altered their defensive&#13;
strategy with St. Norberts double&#13;
teaming Cole and Parkside&#13;
switching Malcolm Mahone on&#13;
Eichstedt. Cole was "limited" to&#13;
fourteen more points while&#13;
Eichstedt, suffering from foul&#13;
trouble, never scored again.&#13;
The game finished much closer&#13;
than it was played as Parkside&#13;
dominated the game but could&#13;
not break it open.&#13;
The devastating offensive&#13;
display by Cole was tremendous&#13;
for the fans but the game couldn't&#13;
have been won without the added&#13;
rebounding by Bill Sobanski,&#13;
timely scoring of Malcom&#13;
Mahone and exciting floor play&#13;
from Stevie King. Parksides&#13;
second leading scorer, Leartha&#13;
Scott finished the game with&#13;
fourteen points.&#13;
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5006 - 7th Avonua&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
(414) 652-6468&#13;
NISHIKI MONDIA CINEILI&#13;
This semester,&#13;
your reading assignments will probably&#13;
require around 500 hours of your time.&#13;
You could cut it&#13;
to 150.&#13;
Or 100. Or even 80 hours.&#13;
Thousands of students throughout&#13;
the country already have done so.&#13;
Including students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin and the University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
And you can, too.&#13;
Plan to enroll in the Evelyn Wood Reading&#13;
Dynamics classes being&#13;
offered on campus.&#13;
GUARANTEE&#13;
The EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS&#13;
course is so educationally sound - we&#13;
Guarantee to Refund the entire Tuition of any&#13;
student who does not triple his Reading Efficiency.&#13;
(Reading Efficiency is a combination&#13;
of speed and comprehension, not just&#13;
speed.)&#13;
What's more, once you take the&#13;
course, you're automatically a lifetime&#13;
member. Which means you can retake&#13;
the course free any irate. And as&#13;
often as you like.&#13;
One more thing. The on-campus&#13;
program is offered at a reduced tuition&#13;
and all faculty, staff and students are&#13;
eligible to enroll.&#13;
Take a free Mini-Lesson&#13;
WIN A&#13;
FREE SCHOLARSHIP&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
(Michigan Room) Located in the College Center&#13;
WEDNESDAY, March 5th - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY, March 6th - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Classes scheduled to begin Thur. March 13th on-campus&#13;
If you cannot attend a Mini-Lesson - call Pamela Modica at 236-1996 for information and registration.&#13;
(Call Collect)&#13;
Ffl Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics&#13;
180North Michigan Ave., • Chicago, Illinois 60601 • Ph one 236-1966&#13;
FREE&#13;
MINI-LESSON&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
THERE'S&#13;
NO EXCUSE&#13;
TO READ&#13;
sipwix </text>
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