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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 4, issue 19</text>
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            <text>Structure change proposed</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Shotgun marriage avoided&#13;
by Betsy Neuand&#13;
Rita Nicholas&#13;
The Committee of Principals&#13;
(COP) met for the last time&#13;
February 3 and proposed a&#13;
substantial reorganization of&#13;
Parkside's academic structure.&#13;
The fourteen page proposal&#13;
Structure change d that ggooeess before tthhee FPAacPHuUltyV proposed&#13;
Senate for ratification later this&#13;
month, suggests that the School&#13;
of Modern Industry (SMI) and&#13;
the College of Science and Society&#13;
(CSS) may be realigned into a&#13;
single unit.&#13;
This will necessitate a new&#13;
structure of officials Tnctood 0f&#13;
having a dean in charge of each&#13;
unit as is the system presently&#13;
used, the Vice Chancellor will&#13;
also be given the title Dean of&#13;
Faculty and will oversee the&#13;
entire academic structure&#13;
previously under the direction of&#13;
the two deans.&#13;
William Moy recently resigned&#13;
as Dean of SMI and Eugene&#13;
Norwood is presently serving as&#13;
Dean of CSS.&#13;
Directly below the Vice&#13;
Chancellor-Dean of Faculty in&#13;
the chain of command will be the&#13;
divisional chairpersons. Saying&#13;
that this position "has been more&#13;
administrative and clerical than&#13;
it has been agenda setting and&#13;
policy making in nature" COP&#13;
determined that "additional&#13;
powers must be vested in the&#13;
office of the divisional chairperson."&#13;
What those additional&#13;
powers will be was not further&#13;
specified in the proposal.&#13;
The new structure, if accepted&#13;
by the Faculty Senate, will be&#13;
implemented with the fall&#13;
semester in 1976.&#13;
Major reorganization is still to&#13;
come for the Science Division and&#13;
the Communication Discipline,&#13;
although what direction that will&#13;
take is as yet unknown.&#13;
Working under the assumption&#13;
that the Science Division is&#13;
presently too large, it has been&#13;
suggested that the division be&#13;
separated into two distinct&#13;
divisions, incorporating Applied&#13;
Sciences (now part of SMI into&#13;
one of them. One division may&#13;
consist of Physics, Math and&#13;
Applied Science, while the other&#13;
would include Chemistry, Life&#13;
Science, Earth Science and&#13;
Medical Technology. This is only&#13;
one of s everal suggestions.&#13;
Several members said that&#13;
both Math and Applied Science&#13;
are likely to resist the suggestion&#13;
while Chancellor Alan Guskin&#13;
and others expressed a concern&#13;
over a "shotgun marriage."&#13;
No f inal solution was reached&#13;
and a "three plus three" committee&#13;
is proposed to study the&#13;
problem.&#13;
The committee will be composed&#13;
of six faculty members,&#13;
three from Applied Science and&#13;
three from the Science Division,&#13;
one of whom must be a&#13;
representative from the&#13;
Mathematics discroline.&#13;
^ V W . l l . M V V V continued. on (p-a-g3e 1 0. Gun fired, officer suspended&#13;
The National Dance Company of Mexico performed here before a&#13;
full house last Saturday night. This dancer is portraying a graceful&#13;
young deer being stalked, and finally killed by Indian hunters. The&#13;
Dance of a Deer is one of Mexico's oldest national dances. (More&#13;
photos on p. 9) ph0(0 by Mike Nepper&#13;
Bathtub gin and jazz&#13;
It was a&#13;
by Jim Yorgan&#13;
The Wolverine Classic Jazz&#13;
Orchestra treated a small crowd&#13;
of Parkside revellers to the type&#13;
of entertainment your parents&#13;
may have seen, had they chanced&#13;
being caught at a speakeasy&#13;
during prohibition.&#13;
They play jazz from the 1920's.&#13;
Their arrangements are transcribed&#13;
note for note, including&#13;
the solos, from original albums&#13;
by the likes of Fletcher Henderson,&#13;
Paul Whiteman, Fats&#13;
Waller, Django Reinhardt, and&#13;
Clarence Williams.&#13;
Their efforts to recreate the&#13;
1920's do not stop there. Many of&#13;
the horns used are from the&#13;
classic jazz age, including an old&#13;
soprano sax with a turned up bell.&#13;
Their tuxedos are from an old&#13;
Minneapolis singing group, "The&#13;
Apollo Club," who sang their last&#13;
chorus many years ago.&#13;
A few students were dressed&#13;
appropriately for the extravaganza&#13;
and the bath tub gin&#13;
being served in Main Place was&#13;
an unexpected and pleasant&#13;
surprise that added to the overall&#13;
atmosphere.&#13;
The music, performed with the&#13;
Wolverines spirit and&#13;
musicianship is a delight to hear.&#13;
by Tom Kennedy&#13;
A University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside police officer has been&#13;
suspended for five days without&#13;
pay. Officer Lawrence S.&#13;
Augustine, Kenosha, was&#13;
suspended for discharging his&#13;
service revolver on campus,&#13;
January 31, 1976; in violation of&#13;
Parkside policy.&#13;
Augustine discharged his&#13;
revolver while apprehending&#13;
Monty R. Beckwith; North&#13;
Chicago, Illinois, outside the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
Beckwith was suspected by&#13;
Augustine of possessing stolen&#13;
university property. Beckwith is&#13;
not a Parkside student.&#13;
Augustine had been informed&#13;
earlier by Allen C. Fredrickson&#13;
Parksides photographer, that&#13;
Beckwith appeared to have in his&#13;
possession a camera lens&#13;
belonging to Parkside. The lens&#13;
classical gas&#13;
Ted Unseth, the leader, said that&#13;
they never know how a crowd will&#13;
react but usually by the end of the&#13;
show, they are drawn into the&#13;
time warp.&#13;
The vocal interpretations were&#13;
handled nicely by Joe Demiko&#13;
and Joni Gudmestad. The reed&#13;
section demonstrated much&#13;
versatility, particularly Dave&#13;
Sletten who switched instruments&#13;
frequently, playing bass, tenor,&#13;
alto, and soprano saxes. The&#13;
rhythm section included Mark&#13;
Bryn haunched over the ivories,&#13;
Brett Forberg on drums, and&#13;
Charles Greve on bass. Solists&#13;
were applauded enthusiastically.&#13;
Their last song, "Charleston,"&#13;
drew demands for an encore. Ted&#13;
called the band back on stage,&#13;
raised his hand, and signalled the&#13;
downbeat. As the bass sax played&#13;
the first five notes of the theme&#13;
from "Perry Mason," I knew I'd&#13;
been slayed along with everyone&#13;
else in the room.&#13;
The Wolverines play in Minneapolis&#13;
at the "Longhorn" every&#13;
Sunday and will be fronting for&#13;
the Earl Hines Orchestra, March&#13;
2 through 8, at "Ratso's" in&#13;
Chicago. Take my advice! Don't /&#13;
let your meat loaf and 23 skidoo to&#13;
"Ratso's" and squeeze it easy.&#13;
in question had been stolen while&#13;
Fredrickson had been&#13;
photographing a Parkside&#13;
basketball game in Kirkwood,&#13;
Missouri January 31, 1975.&#13;
Augustine and University of&#13;
Wisconsin police officer Arthur&#13;
D. Blish detained Beckwith in the&#13;
Physical Education Building and&#13;
asked him to accompany them&#13;
for questioning. According to&#13;
unofficial sources within the&#13;
Security Office, Beckwith agreed&#13;
to go with the officers, but ran out&#13;
the Northeast door of the&#13;
building. Blish and Augustine&#13;
followed in pursuit.&#13;
Once outside the building&#13;
Augustine fired one shot from his&#13;
revolver, Beckwith immediately&#13;
surrendered and was taken to the&#13;
security office for questioning.&#13;
Beckwith was unarmed.&#13;
During the interrogation of&#13;
Beckwith a radio transmission&#13;
from Erwin F. Zuehlke, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Administration,&#13;
was received in the security&#13;
office. This conversation was&#13;
overheard by several people in&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
the office. Zuehlke, speaking over&#13;
a walkie talkie from the Physical&#13;
Education Building, ordered&#13;
Beckwith released. Beckwith was&#13;
then released with no charges&#13;
having been made. His camera&#13;
bag however, was held pending&#13;
an investigation.&#13;
Sources in the Security&#13;
Department, not wishing to be&#13;
identified for fear of d isciplinary&#13;
action stated, "A lens matching a&#13;
description of t he stolen one was&#13;
recovered. The officers also&#13;
found two large sandwich bags of&#13;
what they suspected to be&#13;
marijuana."&#13;
Possession of more than an&#13;
ounce and a half of marijuana in&#13;
Wisconsin is a felon y.&#13;
After Beckwiths release,&#13;
Augustine was informed by&#13;
Ronald D. Brinkmann, Director&#13;
of Safety and Security, that at the&#13;
termination of his shift he was&#13;
relieved of h is duties until asked&#13;
to return. This order originated&#13;
from Zuehlke, according to&#13;
sources in Security. Zuehlke is&#13;
continued on page 10.&#13;
RANGER Vol. IV. No, 19 February 11, 1976&#13;
Students dance to Wolverine Calssic Jazz Orchestra.&#13;
photo by Al Fredrick;&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 11, 1976&#13;
A E The Parkside-&#13;
Proposed breadth requirement disputed EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
B Sg lgj&#13;
Ranger demands freedom of choice&#13;
Ranger strongly objects to the new breadth&#13;
requirement which the Committee of Principals (COP)&#13;
is about to impose on us. We feel that the proposed&#13;
requirement is too specific, will not be received well by&#13;
the students and will thus initiate the deterioration of the&#13;
quality of education at Parkside.&#13;
The proposal as stated at the time of this writing&#13;
would require students to take a minimum of two&#13;
"specifically designed" classes (six credits) in each of&#13;
the following areas: The Natural Universe, Human&#13;
Behavior and Organizations, Cultural and Intellectual&#13;
Heritage, The Aesthetic World and The Technological&#13;
Society.&#13;
This 30 credit requirement would have to be completed&#13;
by the end of a student's sophomore year. In other&#13;
words, half of a student's first two years would be spent&#13;
taking these classes.&#13;
These courses will not be chosen from the present&#13;
curriculum but will be "specifically designed" to deal&#13;
with issues concerning the quality of life in the modern&#13;
industrial society.&#13;
Considering that at least ten new classes would have&#13;
to be developed just to impose such a requirement, it&#13;
seems doubtful that there would be very many alternative&#13;
courses open to the student. Consider the present&#13;
American Language requirement;'this area contains a&#13;
large number of diverse classes, but the requirement&#13;
still seems disagreeable to students. Imagine five such&#13;
required courses.&#13;
Ranger doesn't oppose the philosophy behind having a&#13;
breadth requirement; experience in many areas is&#13;
necessary for a well rounded education. We object to the&#13;
specificity of t his particular proposal and the prospect&#13;
of being herded into a series of very general "trash"&#13;
courses.&#13;
What happens when strict requirements are imposed&#13;
on students? Just look at your local high school;&#13;
motivation goes down, attendance goes down, grades&#13;
fall and the learning process is slowed to a crawl. When&#13;
students aren't motivated to work in a class, the courses&#13;
must be made easier just to drag them through. The&#13;
result: "trash" classes which the students dread taking&#13;
and which have little if a ny educative value.&#13;
There are not very many people who can say that they&#13;
had a very challenging and stimulating high school&#13;
education. It would be unfortunate if t hese views were&#13;
also applied to a college education at Parkside. We were&#13;
just getting away from the "enlarged high school"&#13;
image.&#13;
The administrators and faculty cannot shove an&#13;
education down our throats. They may think they have a&#13;
captive audience at Parkside since many students come&#13;
here because of the convenient location. Ranger would&#13;
like to remind administrators and faculty that Lake&#13;
Michigan is also close to home, but that doesn't mean&#13;
we're going to go drown ourselves in it.&#13;
There must be some freedom of choice in the learning&#13;
process. If restrictive requirements throw a student into&#13;
a course that he-she is not interested in at that particular&#13;
time, than the amount of learning which is to&#13;
take place will be diminished. That student would have&#13;
been better off in a class which motivated him-her to&#13;
learn something...anything.&#13;
This new requirement would not pertain to students&#13;
already enrolled at Parkside, but we must think of the&#13;
welfare of entering freshmen and the reputation of the&#13;
school from which we will receive our diplomas. The&#13;
future quality of Parkside is going to reflect on the worth&#13;
of the degree which you received here.&#13;
The classes developed for the purpose of f ulfilling the&#13;
breadth requirement will aim to "relate to the quality of&#13;
life in the modern industrial (and post-industrial)&#13;
society." One characteristic relating to the quality of&#13;
life in such a society involves the continuing process of&#13;
fitting people into common molds. Just as American&#13;
Motors chucks out Gremlins and Pacers, society chucks&#13;
out factory workers and lawyers.&#13;
Of course it's easier to "educate" students if they&#13;
have 30 cr edits worth of classes in common with each&#13;
other by the end of their sophomore year. Just run us&#13;
down the line; it's helpful to know what's already gone&#13;
into a product before adding on the next part. But, what&#13;
ever happened to individualism and freedom of choice.&#13;
Ranger feels that the new breadth requirement actually&#13;
reflects some of the same societal problems&#13;
which it hopes to get students to study.&#13;
It brings to mind the lyrics of a song written by&#13;
Melvina Reynolds: "Little people in the houses all went&#13;
to the University where they were put in boxes and they&#13;
came out all the same. And there's doctors and there's&#13;
lawyers and business executives and they're all made of&#13;
ticky tacky and they all look just the same."&#13;
ILGWGGg&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to the recent termination&#13;
of Professors Baudhuin&#13;
and King, I feel it was unfair and&#13;
an unjust action. It is no secret&#13;
that the Communications&#13;
Department, among others, here&#13;
at Parkside is going through&#13;
radical changes which is causing&#13;
great concern throughout the&#13;
student body and other faculty&#13;
members. As a former student of&#13;
Professor Crowin King, it is of&#13;
my opinion that he is quite&#13;
qualified in teaching communications&#13;
and incorporates&#13;
stimulating lectures in his&#13;
classes. So why fire members&#13;
who are qualified, experienced,&#13;
and familiar with the students&#13;
and the "system?" If the&#13;
hierarchy at Parkside feels our&#13;
faculty is good enough to teach&#13;
the required number of years and&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. Ail letters on&#13;
any subject of interest to students, faculty, or staff must&#13;
be confined to 250 words or less, typed and doublespaced.&#13;
The editors reserve the right to edit letters for&#13;
length and good taste. All letters must be signed and&#13;
include address, phone number, and student status or&#13;
faculty rank. Names will be withheld upon request. The&#13;
editors reserve the right to refuse to print any letters.&#13;
Deadline for all copy is Thursday noon.&#13;
yet are not qualified to receive&#13;
tenure, then that isn't saying&#13;
much for the University in&#13;
retrospect. That's cheap&#13;
education at a high price!&#13;
Sandi Nelson&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
Dear Madam Editor:&#13;
I am going crazy in this rathole&#13;
some people call the&#13;
RANGER office.&#13;
I can't find anyone to drive to&#13;
Zion with our copy. No one wants&#13;
to pick up an easy $3.50 for an&#13;
hour's work. Like Barke says in&#13;
that column of his, "it's just as&#13;
easy as kicking a cripple."&#13;
You tell those people wanting to&#13;
pick up a little money driving to&#13;
Zion to stop down to the&#13;
RANGER office, LLC D194 or&#13;
call 553-2287, as soon as possible.&#13;
Your most maligned production&#13;
manager.&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
Dear Readers:&#13;
Ranger would like to hear what other students think aboul&#13;
^71rf f»S (C0P) Pr°P°sed breadth requirement.&#13;
f!r,n t0tna ! l0Ur VIGW' now we'd like t0 Publish yours 11 form of letters to the Editor.&#13;
thJhnrir„?U!rement nt" yet flnalized 311(1 is stil&gt; betag revised&#13;
the original proposal mentioned in the editorial.&#13;
According to William Murin, co-chairperson of COP, some o:&#13;
specifics such as the 30 credit requirement will be deleted fron sSrtcw srredto0,3Facuitysenatef°rw™™ said that COP will seek approval for the principle of a bre&#13;
deSeSrvpTd draailS ^ ** WOrked out later- At *** P°iw&#13;
iumD on nnp nf th P™?0^; somebody at the Senate meeting&#13;
sSdMurin a"d WC'U Spe"d h0urs to work 11&#13;
obfeVcbnona°hlf!,theSet rellli0ns wiU • m'S Pr°P0PSarIo'bwale» sytU e1d itte eolu 1t1 s1o31m e ofn ethceeS ri&#13;
WtTn he?™ , Pmi°.n 0"tUs rePulrement in its original form.&#13;
orS scribe emuntatl°n Pr°CeSS U slarled. 11 saams lhal 1&#13;
"My best mtess uTh tT^n88"1 be Up f0r consideration. Murin i&#13;
will be a verv limita ll1wl!lcome back ^"8 like 30 credits. Ti&#13;
areas." selection (between courses) in each of the&#13;
react"now3" 1,16 p0lley ls pul lnl° effect. Ranger urges studen&#13;
Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 11, 1 97 6 3&#13;
New Division discussed Dr. Doolittle returns?&#13;
by Diane Carlson&#13;
In mid-December interested&#13;
faculty from the Anthropology,&#13;
Psychology, and Sociology&#13;
disciplines met to discuss the&#13;
formation of a new Behavioral&#13;
Sciences Division. Their reason&#13;
for this amalgamation is that&#13;
they feel "their traditional foci&#13;
and subject matter overlap, and&#13;
they share many common areas&#13;
of research interest."&#13;
Since January 1, interested&#13;
faculty members have broken&#13;
down into four work groups -&#13;
D i v i s i o n a l Org a n i z a t i o n ,&#13;
Curriculum, Faculty and Budget,&#13;
and Tenure Promotion Policy. On&#13;
February 9, there will be a&#13;
workgroup report to the members&#13;
of all work groups. Then&#13;
they will begin to codify&#13;
recommendations.&#13;
Sometime later this month, it is&#13;
expected that COP will meet to&#13;
Enrollments&#13;
figured&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
The threat of limited&#13;
enrollment in the near future is a&#13;
real possibility, according to&#13;
Dave Vogt, Director of Information&#13;
Analysis. Vogt stated&#13;
that if enrollment increases by&#13;
approximately 300 to 500 from the&#13;
Fall 1975 figure of 5400, a nd the&#13;
budget does not significantly&#13;
increase, there will probably be a&#13;
ceiling limitation at Parkside.&#13;
The reason, Vogt explained, is&#13;
primarily that Parkside can&#13;
educate only so many students&#13;
with so many dollars. If dollars&#13;
do not increase, then enrollments&#13;
cannot become much larger.&#13;
Gary Goetz, Budget director,&#13;
said that the budget for 1976-77&#13;
should remain about the same as&#13;
for the 1975-76 ye ar.&#13;
Unofficial reports project Fall&#13;
1976 enrollments to approach&#13;
5600.&#13;
Vogt stated that systemwide&#13;
there is much concern regarding&#13;
limitations in enrollment. During&#13;
Fall 1975, four UW campuses had&#13;
limitations; this semester, only&#13;
Madison has restrictions.&#13;
Vogt said that the system is&#13;
currently giving priority to&#13;
quality, not quantity education.&#13;
Current Parkside registration&#13;
for the Spring semester is 4901, a&#13;
decrease of 3.4 percent from a&#13;
year ago. Vogt reasoned that the&#13;
causes of this are increased&#13;
positions in the job market, the&#13;
'effect of the new academic drop&#13;
policy which eliminated 50 to 150&#13;
students, and an increase in audit&#13;
fees.&#13;
There are 125 persons enrolled&#13;
under age 18, an increase of 5.9&#13;
percent over Spring 1975,&#13;
showing that there is extra&#13;
money around for education.&#13;
There are 2663 aged 18-22&#13;
students, a drop of 5.2 percent,&#13;
reflecting that more students are&#13;
postponing school, to earn&#13;
money. There is a 6.4 percent&#13;
increase for ages 23-24, s howing&#13;
committed and entiring older&#13;
students in attendance, and a&#13;
drop of 4.8 percent for the 25-61&#13;
age bracket, reflecting the rise in&#13;
audit tuition.&#13;
Parkside has 2486 full-time&#13;
students this semester (down 2.4&#13;
percent) and 2415 part-timers&#13;
(down 4.3 percent).&#13;
act on the proposal, and the&#13;
matter will go to the Faculty&#13;
Senate for a decision. With&#13;
Senate approval, the Board of&#13;
Regents must finalize the&#13;
decision to form a Behavioral&#13;
Sciences Division and Major.&#13;
The proposed division would&#13;
include development of: a core of&#13;
methodology courses, a common&#13;
core curriculum for all majors,&#13;
cooperation and coordination of&#13;
experimental courses (research&#13;
appointment internships, externships,&#13;
independent study),&#13;
courses to fill general university&#13;
requirements in Behavioral&#13;
Sciences, upper division and&#13;
elective courses, and cooperation&#13;
and coordination of competing&#13;
courses.&#13;
The experimental work which&#13;
will, hopefully, be a large part of&#13;
the major, will consist in part of&#13;
externships. Dave Beach,&#13;
associate professor of&#13;
Psychology, said that there is&#13;
some difficulty involved in obtaining&#13;
"host" organizations&#13;
where students can work and&#13;
learn simultaneously, but that&#13;
"There are many ways we can&#13;
find cooperative organizations."&#13;
He said that sometimes students&#13;
or faculty members have contacts,&#13;
and sometimes interested&#13;
organizations contact the school.&#13;
The idea of a Behavioral&#13;
Sciences Division was conceived&#13;
in early November, 1975, when&#13;
faculty from the three currently&#13;
concerned divisions realized the&#13;
need for cooperation of&#13;
disciplines which were so related,&#13;
and yet so separate, both&#13;
physically and politically. Beach&#13;
said that the change in attitude&#13;
came about very quickly, that&#13;
"People who wouldn't even talk&#13;
to each other before were having&#13;
meetings between Christmas and&#13;
New Years to discuss this."&#13;
There is a general feeling&#13;
among involved faculty that the&#13;
proposed division looks like it will&#13;
be accepted, and if it does, the&#13;
program will be formed in&#13;
summer and through most of the&#13;
following academic year. Beach&#13;
said the program would begin one&#13;
year later.&#13;
Commenting about student&#13;
involvement, he said that&#13;
students are not currently involved&#13;
because "this is an internal&#13;
structural change,"&#13;
stating that students are crucail&#13;
to curricular changes. "When the&#13;
program reaches the point of&#13;
forming a curriculum, we will&#13;
ask for student input." He&#13;
assumes that this input will come&#13;
through student organizations&#13;
related to the Behavioral&#13;
Sciences.&#13;
i K The Parkside-&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
CO-NEWS EDITORS: Michael Palecek and Mike Terry&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Bill Robbins&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Thorn Aiello&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Gerry Ferch&#13;
PRODUCTION MANAGER: Bruce Wagner&#13;
PHOTO COORDINATOR: Michael Nepper&#13;
VISAGE EDITOR: jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
WRITERS: Judy Trudrung (events), Mike Terry, Betsy Neu, Carol&#13;
Arentz, Jerry Pate, Thomas A. Merriam, Fred Johnson, Diane E.&#13;
Carlson, Phil Hermann, David Brandt, Kathie Drysdale, Barbe&#13;
Beardsley, Kai Nail, Bill Barke, Terry Gayhart, Ron Parker, Jim&#13;
Yorgan.&#13;
Michelle Smith.&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is written and edited by the students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and they are solely responsible&#13;
for its editorial policy and content. Offices are located in D194 WLLC,&#13;
U W. Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553 -2287,'&#13;
End of Season&#13;
Clearance Sale&#13;
Men's Clothing&#13;
Storewide bargains in all departments&#13;
20% - 70%&#13;
off regular price&#13;
madai^s men's shop&#13;
'The Big and&#13;
Tall Specialists"&#13;
"Do animals think?" will be&#13;
the topic of a lecture Thursday,&#13;
February 12, by Dr. Anthony&#13;
Kenny of Oxford University.&#13;
Kenny will give a 2:30 lecture at&#13;
GR 101, and then travel to&#13;
Marquette to give an 8 p.m.&#13;
lecture on "Practical Reasoning&#13;
and the Freedom of the Will."&#13;
The Parkside lecture is sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside&#13;
Philosophical Association and the&#13;
public is invited.&#13;
Bonanza&#13;
Free with this coupon&#13;
a bottle of beer&#13;
with any steak dinner&#13;
3315 52 St., Kenosha&#13;
Girls like it.°&#13;
Is there a better reason&#13;
to send an FTD LoveBundle?&#13;
Maybe because she'll like you better for it.&#13;
Send it to your special Valentine today. She'll get&#13;
the message. Your FTD Florist will send your&#13;
LoveBundle™ almost anywhere. Order Early!&#13;
Usually available C f rf)fi*&#13;
for less than&#13;
v *Asan independent&#13;
businessman, each FTD Member&#13;
Florist sets his own prices. M&#13;
1. Reach out and touch her,the FTD Florist way! if&#13;
Florist s ' Transworld Delivery&#13;
5014 7th ave. kenosha,wis. (414)657 $675&#13;
1. Fill a glass with nice, clean snow.&#13;
(White only, please.)&#13;
2. Add Cuervo Gold Especial.&#13;
3. See it turn yellow?&#13;
4. Put a straw in and drink.&#13;
5. If snow is unavailable, use crushed ice.&#13;
Or, forget the snow, and just put a straw&#13;
in the bottle. Or forget the straw and&#13;
just pour some Gold in a glass. Or just&#13;
have some water. Must we make&#13;
all these decisions for you?&#13;
IMPORTED AND CONN.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 11, 1976 Contact&#13;
by Kai Nail&#13;
Weekly from student government&#13;
thatV/hi oVG i^.0 followin* RANGER lately, you have noticed&#13;
ttiat the faculty is proposing to change quite a few things around&#13;
here. Specifically, the Committee of Principals (COP) is proposing to&#13;
change the number of required courses a student would need to&#13;
graduate from Parkside and to change the College - School structure&#13;
by combining specific majors into broad-area disciplines. Out of t he&#13;
120 credits needed to graduate, the faculty is proposing to allow a&#13;
student only 23 electives. The other 97 credits would be required, some&#13;
being specifically required courses.&#13;
This proposed change will obviously effect students, but students&#13;
are not being asked what they think about the whole thing. About a&#13;
dozen students have participated in the work groups, but students&#13;
have not been allowed to sit on the Committee of Principals, the group&#13;
that votes on the proposals. Furthermore, students are not being given&#13;
the chance to respond to the proposals before they are finalized. The&#13;
faculty has not even bothered to have open hearings for students to&#13;
respond to the proposals. The Ranger is the only source that is informing&#13;
the students on this issue.&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association feels that if the faculty&#13;
will not include students in this important process, we have the&#13;
responsibility to make the students opinion on this topic clear to the&#13;
Chancellor and the Board of Regents. In a student Senate meeting of&#13;
February 3, P.S.G.A. developed three committees to deal with his&#13;
campus problem. The committees will report to the Executive branch&#13;
of R-s-§ A„ but will consist primarily of non P.S.G.A. students.&#13;
The three committees are as follows:Committee on Faculty&#13;
Evaluation, Committee on Curriculum and Academic Program&#13;
Evaluation, and the Committee on Student Life and Programming&#13;
Evaluation.&#13;
The Committee on Faculty Evaluation will try to get a student&#13;
response to the C.O.P.'s sub-committee on instructional Methods and&#13;
Innovations report on faculty attitudes toward Parkside students. The&#13;
committee will also give students a chance to evaluate overall faculty&#13;
performance and classroom structure.&#13;
The Committee on Curriculum and Academic Program Evaluation&#13;
will get students response to C.O.P.'s proposal to change the structure&#13;
of th e University and the change in the requirements for graduation&#13;
from Parkside. The committee will try to get student's evaluation of&#13;
Parkside's curriculum.&#13;
The Committee on Student Life and Programming Evaluation will&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
BY-UNE by Dave Brandt&#13;
The School of Modern Industry's business management major offers&#13;
students a wide selection of specialty packages. Of the seven available&#13;
packages students most frequently choose accounting. The latest&#13;
figures show that 30 percent of declared business management majors&#13;
are specializing in accounting, making it the largest of the seven&#13;
specialties. The trend appears to be toward continued growth and with&#13;
the excellent career opportunities available in accounting it doesn't&#13;
come as much of a surprise.&#13;
To facilitate the growing interest in accounting the business&#13;
management department has released a new booklet entitled Accounting&#13;
at UW-Parkside. Written by accounting lecturer Claude&#13;
Renshaw, the 16 page booklet contains a complete run down of career&#13;
opportunities and degree requirements.&#13;
Topics covered in the booklet include: major fields in accounting,&#13;
accounting pay scales, the accounting program at UW-Parkside, the&#13;
CPA exam, and the CMA exam. Completing the booklet is a suggested&#13;
course sequence and a summary of the CPA requirements in the state&#13;
of Wisconsin. Clear, concise, and easy to read this publication should&#13;
prove an invaluable aid to accounting students.&#13;
The purpose of the booklet is to answer questions about the accounting&#13;
field in general and the program at Parkside. According to&#13;
Renshaw, the most frequently asked question centers around the&#13;
requirements to sit for the Wisconsin CPA examination. Students have&#13;
expressed concern over these requirements because Parkside is not&#13;
officially designated by the Accounting Examining Board. Only six&#13;
Wisconsin colleges have standards of education and training that&#13;
qualify. They are Milwaukee, Madison, Eau Claire, Oshkosh,&#13;
Marquette and Whitewater.&#13;
But as Renshaw points out the problem is not with the curriculum.&#13;
The booklet emphasizes the fact that the program does provide sufficient&#13;
preparation and states, "If it were just the courses to be concerned&#13;
with, UW-Parkside students following the program above&#13;
would have no problem being granted eligibility in Wisconsin."&#13;
Nevertheless, as the booklet explains, students must still obtain a&#13;
certificate of e quivalency. This shouldn't prove much of a problem,&#13;
but students should read this booklet carefully and understand the&#13;
additional requirements that must be met if they plan to sit for the&#13;
CPA exam in Wisconsin.&#13;
Copies of the booklet are available and can be obtained at the&#13;
business management divisional office.&#13;
center it's interest on the present problems that affect non-academic&#13;
student interests. Included in this committee's area of concern is:&#13;
student programming, health services, student organizations,&#13;
housing, counseling, administrative attitudes, etc.&#13;
These committees will hold a series of open hearings, public forums,&#13;
and distribute information on each area. It will all end with reports&#13;
made by the committees to be sent to Chancellor Guskin, the Board of&#13;
Regents, and the Faculty Senate. The committee work will take 10 to&#13;
12 weeks.&#13;
Any student interested in working on these committees can do so by&#13;
contacting Student Government in room D-193, WLLC, call 553-2244 or&#13;
you can attend any Student Government meeting on Tuesdays at 4:30&#13;
in room D-174, WLLC (room across from the Info Desk).&#13;
Same fees&#13;
requested&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
A major concern of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
executive council, comprised of&#13;
the committee heads from each&#13;
of the nine committees, was the&#13;
segregated fees allocation for the&#13;
1976-77 school year.&#13;
Student programming advisor&#13;
Tony Totero reported that the&#13;
Office of Student Life did not&#13;
make any change in their annual&#13;
request for monies. This was due,&#13;
according to Totero, to the fact&#13;
that the new Campus Center will&#13;
provide more revenue for PAB&#13;
events sponsored in the union.&#13;
In other actions taken by the&#13;
Activities Board Council, the&#13;
outing committee will sponsor a&#13;
trip to Olympia Village near&#13;
Hurley, Wisconsin in early&#13;
March.&#13;
The video committee reported&#13;
that they were in the process of&#13;
broadcasting a news show to the&#13;
student body, produced by their&#13;
advertising department.&#13;
Jazz trio&#13;
to appear&#13;
The Jamaica-based Monty&#13;
Alexander Jazz. Trio will appear&#13;
in concert at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 11, in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
under sponsorship of the student&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Tickets are $2 and are&#13;
available at the Parkside Information&#13;
Center in Main Place&#13;
of Wyllie Library-Learning&#13;
Center, Sears in Kenosha and&#13;
Team Electronics, Elmwood&#13;
Plaza, Racine.&#13;
Get "a grasp of the whole&#13;
language of piano jazz"...&#13;
WITH&#13;
THE MONTY&#13;
ALEXANDER&#13;
JAZZ TRIO&#13;
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 11 8:00 P.M.&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
Admission: *1.50 UW-P students&#13;
'2.00 General&#13;
A P.A.B. Production&#13;
Lecture&#13;
Dr. Ed Frierson, a nationallyknown&#13;
expert on Learning&#13;
Disabilities, will be the keynote&#13;
speaker for a free seminar titled&#13;
"Focus on the Exceptional Child&#13;
in the Regular Classroom" at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday,&#13;
Feb. 14.&#13;
Dr. Frierson's talk, "The Three&#13;
Teaching R's," deals with&#13;
teacher attitudes, understandings&#13;
and practical&#13;
procedures for helping the&#13;
handicapped, gifted and otherwise&#13;
deviant child in the regular&#13;
classroom.&#13;
The Italian cook respects food. The spice&#13;
of a sauce. the fine texture of warm, fresh&#13;
bread, the consistancy of a melted cheese&#13;
sauce. For him the reward is the pleasure&#13;
of those who enjoy his work. Experience&#13;
this pleasure.&#13;
Ct±,CL&#13;
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• free checking - no service&#13;
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You become a Charter Customer&#13;
when you open a personal&#13;
checking account with us while&#13;
our new building i8 being&#13;
completed. That's all it takes to&#13;
qualify for these free services.&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 • Phone 554-6500&#13;
MONDAY-THURSDAY 7:00-5:30 . FRIDAY 7:00-8:00 . SATURDAY 8:00-NOON&#13;
opposition totheTigrUng toe ^faratiorof^ndr^d ^ ther?n|inental Congress firmly state their&#13;
presented by Continental Theatre Company ""6' Y 31,(1 "*** mUsica1' "1776'" is&#13;
"1776" to hit UW-P The hit Broadway musical&#13;
"1776" will be presented at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
by the Continental Theater&#13;
Company, a professional acting&#13;
troupe, at 7:30 p.m. on Monday,&#13;
Feb. 16, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
The production is part of UWP's&#13;
"Accent on Enrichment"&#13;
series and is sponsored by the&#13;
student Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB).&#13;
Admission is $3 for the public&#13;
and $2 for UW-P students. Tickets&#13;
are now on sale at the Parkside&#13;
Information Center in Main&#13;
Place of Wyllie Library-Learning&#13;
Center, Sears in Kenosha, and&#13;
Team Electronics, Elmwood&#13;
Plaza, Racine.&#13;
PAB's salute to the nation's&#13;
Bicentennial, the patriotic&#13;
musical about the signing of the&#13;
Declaration of Independence won&#13;
both the New York Drama&#13;
Critics' Award for best musical&#13;
and the Tony Award for best&#13;
musical in its first season on&#13;
Broadway.&#13;
The touring company's 19-&#13;
member cast is made up of&#13;
professional actors with a wide&#13;
background of experience&#13;
ranging from Broadway and off-&#13;
Broadway to summer stock,&#13;
dinner theater, repertory and&#13;
academic theater. The company&#13;
currently is on a U.S. tour of&#13;
colleges and universities.&#13;
The show tells the tale of what&#13;
led up to the pealing of the&#13;
Liberty Bell in song ans tory, full&#13;
of humanizing detail about the&#13;
signers of the Declaration of&#13;
Independence as well as littleknown&#13;
historical facts. Fourteen&#13;
of the declaration's signers are&#13;
seen in the musical including&#13;
Benjamin Franklin, John Adams,&#13;
John Hancock and Thomas&#13;
Jefferson.&#13;
In history books, the founding&#13;
fathers are often painted in&#13;
heroic poses as foresighted&#13;
patriotic and selfless statesmen.&#13;
"1776" portrays them differently&#13;
- as human, fallible, sometimes&#13;
petty, sometimes magnificent&#13;
men with a variety of s trengths,&#13;
problems and weaknesses, a&#13;
clear-eyed, light-hearted look at&#13;
the nation's beginnings&#13;
Red parking permitted&#13;
Faculty Emancipated&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
There will be more parking&#13;
spaces for students in the white&#13;
permit parking lots next year.&#13;
This is the planned result of&#13;
action taken by the Campus&#13;
Planning Committee (CPC) who&#13;
opted to sell red parking permit&#13;
stickers to the faculty.&#13;
The Faculty will now be&#13;
allowed to buy the cheaper&#13;
stickers, paying the same price&#13;
as the students, and park in the&#13;
east parking lots. .Hopefully this&#13;
will eliminate some of the&#13;
overcrowding that is common in&#13;
the lot this year. Some provision&#13;
will also be made for part-time&#13;
employees of UW-P so that the&#13;
stickers will be available at a&#13;
reduced rate.&#13;
If the student Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee elects to subsidize the&#13;
Racine bus, next year's permits&#13;
will cost one dollar more to cover&#13;
the cost of chartering another bus&#13;
from the Racine area to the&#13;
compus.&#13;
In other action, the CPC also&#13;
voted to charge a two dollar&#13;
replacement fee for lost parking&#13;
permits. Plans were also&#13;
discussed to make the plastic&#13;
permit holders smaller to&#13;
prevent them from being stolen.&#13;
Students have complained that&#13;
the overleaf of pl astic that hangs&#13;
outside the car is enough that it&#13;
can be pried out of the window.&#13;
This change was recommended&#13;
to the committee by CPC&#13;
members Ronald Singer and&#13;
Ervin Zuehlke.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb . 11, 1976 5&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 11, 1976&#13;
Humanities Section&#13;
• • • CO Visage The Black Bird's Back&#13;
e$?e Wc&#13;
bovO^amc&#13;
iss or&#13;
by Thomas L. Merriam&#13;
A Poem for a Non-existant Lover&#13;
you left me many years ago&#13;
and i was quiet; i didn't say&#13;
a single word.&#13;
neither did you and it hurt me.&#13;
yet in the years that you've been gone,&#13;
i never wept, never screamed,&#13;
never yelled in frustration.&#13;
then you returned, thinking that i,&#13;
the young girl you left many years ago,&#13;
was still the same loving person that you knew&#13;
ahh, but there you are wrong. I have found&#13;
a new lover, one that will not leave me&#13;
standing alone&#13;
in the cold.&#13;
if you ask yourself why, think of what&#13;
you did. then you will know all the hurt&#13;
i felt.&#13;
Kat&#13;
"The Frustrated man. "&#13;
"Lucifer!" cried the frustrated man.&#13;
"I hate God!"&#13;
A so litary figure, arms outstratched toward a&#13;
silent sea of stars,&#13;
He waited.&#13;
"Lucifer!" screamed the frustrated man.&#13;
"I hate God!"&#13;
Silence.&#13;
"Lucifer!" wailed the frustrated man.&#13;
"I hate God!"&#13;
From his eyes streamed forth the liquid&#13;
of ageless despair.&#13;
"Lucifer!" shrieked the frustrated man.&#13;
"I offer you my soul!"&#13;
There was no reply.&#13;
Bill Robbins&#13;
THE WHORE&#13;
THE TREE&#13;
forty feet tall,&#13;
roots anchored unevenly beneath the grass,&#13;
my ship sailed the seven seas and universe,&#13;
fought hostile tribes in africa,&#13;
entertained world leaders;&#13;
while i,&#13;
seated in my limb throne,&#13;
sipped great wines&#13;
and conversed with wise men.&#13;
i led my legions&#13;
in undefeated battle&#13;
and steered the frigate&#13;
to a victory celebration on jupiter.&#13;
many days i securely spent&#13;
in my kingdom home observing&#13;
family and friends succeed in their own lives.&#13;
i knew, of c ourse,&#13;
someday i'd leave my world&#13;
entering theirs willingly&#13;
or unwillingly if it came to that,&#13;
the day did come,&#13;
unwillingly,&#13;
and i was born into the world of&#13;
material matter and moving vans,&#13;
as i descended from the uppermost mast&#13;
of my tree for the last time&#13;
i realized for the first time that&#13;
one&#13;
by&#13;
one my toy dreams were crumbling&#13;
and soon i might do the same.&#13;
those dreams have gone now&#13;
to seek out another child to believe in.&#13;
yesterday i took a drive&#13;
past the old house.&#13;
through the alley i paused as time stood still,&#13;
there a young boy i saw&#13;
climb to the bridge,&#13;
raise the flag,&#13;
and sail on past yesterday&#13;
through today&#13;
until tomorrow,&#13;
there i saw myself&#13;
so many fears ago.&#13;
(t. jeffrey j. swen cki 1975&#13;
There is a There is a whore that lives in me.&#13;
She never comes out to create a scene in my nonerotic experience.&#13;
But when you hold me near, she breaks out in a fury to sell herself to you.&#13;
She tantalizes until you scream.&#13;
And before you know it, she collapses in your arms.&#13;
But when we awake, I am once again beside you.&#13;
And as for the whore?&#13;
She lays dormant for the time being. Sue Helfrich&#13;
*&#13;
MOST sequels are made for financial reasons, namely to draw back&#13;
the audience from a box office smash and milk them for more money.&#13;
^ THE BLACK BIRD isn't just a sequel, since it was written thirty years&#13;
after the original film, but it fits the description well, including a&#13;
.o, rather watery plot.&#13;
George Segal (or is that Sequel) plays the leading role as Sam Spade 7 Jr. The role of a cynic seemed a bit out of character for a nice fella like&#13;
{J George, but he played the role well. He gave the audience the im-&#13;
TT pression that he would lie, cheat, and steal to get out of the private&#13;
"H* de tective business, and gave it well.&#13;
«§£ Mr. Segal's co-stars are: Stephane Audran, the beautiful dissident&#13;
from the Soviet Union who wants the black bird, Lee Patrick, Sam's&#13;
secretary, who is described by Sam as having the "personality of a&#13;
,c&gt; cold sore, "and last, but not least, Lionel Stander, who plays a hood&#13;
r, that tries to get the bird until his boss dies and then decides that he will&#13;
7 work for Sam (Yeh, dat's right youz guys.).&#13;
All three were good in there respective roles, but were little help in&#13;
g paper weighting a light-weight script. The lines they had were&#13;
"o delivered well, hence they were all a delightful addition to Mr. Segal's&#13;
fine performance.&#13;
«§£ The story itself was written by Don M. Mankiewicz and Gordon&#13;
Catler, and transformed into a screenplay by David Giler. Mr. Giler&#13;
sL seems to see life at present with an eye of pessimism, since the area in&#13;
which Sam has his office is almost completely deteriorated to a slum,&#13;
TT rampant with crime and drugs. The role of Sam Spade is depressing,&#13;
7 in a sense, since there is no longer the professional pride that Bogey&#13;
had as a private dick. All through the movie there is a comical conflict&#13;
7 between real characters of th e 1970's and figures from the past (and&#13;
ifr the original 'Maltese Falcon.') After watching the movie, one sensed&#13;
that money was the key for Sam Spade Jr.'s happiness. This is rather&#13;
unfortunate short term thinking, since this reviewer feels that there is&#13;
nothing at all heroic about materialism. Hence, The Black Bird really&#13;
^ didn't have a hero in it at all. Only real life people, who aren't real at&#13;
t, all, hold this dim-witted capitalistic value. TT The Black Bird is essentially more an entertainment film rather&#13;
7 than a film for budding intellectuals. Despite its short-comings, it is a&#13;
"g pleasant and funny film, equipped with midget nazis, the maltese&#13;
T? falcon, chase scenes, a little violence, a little sexism, and some very&#13;
&amp; comical, racial humor. It is a film to make you feel good rather than to&#13;
expand your mental capacities.&#13;
A Wilderness Tale&#13;
Quicksand&#13;
on the tundra, so&#13;
apparently cold to other windows,&#13;
in the snow the birds,&#13;
lady black and strung on telephone wires&#13;
tight, expecting&#13;
the bread&#13;
of unsaid&#13;
fires&#13;
and old,&#13;
old mysteries...&#13;
There may be many ways&#13;
to move around this soiled space you say&#13;
and so the sea&#13;
consumes its own in flames, her&#13;
tigers burn,&#13;
their fires like all creation&#13;
save,&#13;
save&#13;
the love that feels your own...&#13;
Here, then,&#13;
in this timeless&#13;
still and scattered moment,&#13;
the winds&#13;
with empty howls unwinding&#13;
in the night, still&#13;
there is no fear.&#13;
dark horses ride&#13;
into the night without me.&#13;
Brian Kipp&#13;
SOUND STRUCTURES&#13;
You baby,&#13;
Your shoulders shake,&#13;
Your receipts parlour.&#13;
Very sexual.&#13;
How lo ng does it take?&#13;
Cockroach roars&#13;
as somebody sang:&#13;
All art is accidental.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
TO AN UNKNOWN SOUL&#13;
Behold.&#13;
I stare at you,&#13;
But you never look back.&#13;
Yellow gooddess in distress&#13;
You loo k for some one,&#13;
But not for me.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
HONEY PRESAGE&#13;
Great goats by seconds escaped&#13;
Buttoned collars on the breast&#13;
Famous arms crushed blue Buddl&#13;
Neckerchiefed captains&#13;
enjoyed the sea.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 11, 1976 7&#13;
So Where Does That Leave December?&#13;
Now w hen all the winds die down&#13;
will all the flowers be forgotten?&#13;
Singing strings and breezes on the wing,&#13;
dandelions on the lawn...&#13;
Will you remember forget-me-nots?&#13;
And what about those burning lilies,&#13;
tall by the creek and Turkish-capped?&#13;
Some say the future has already been...&#13;
yesterdays mean nothing, I think,&#13;
remembered as they are against my better judgement,&#13;
those very same songs&#13;
eternally in tune,&#13;
though presently unevenly...&#13;
This Chinese Gong rings still in my ears:&#13;
As the sun comes up everyday,&#13;
So the winds die down.&#13;
Day Away No. 1&#13;
-Brian Kipp&#13;
December, 1975&#13;
It's broken zero&#13;
Without even looking&#13;
back-&#13;
And yet&#13;
The day was cold enough&#13;
Before,&#13;
It didn't need any&#13;
help-&#13;
Michael Nepper&#13;
Window Shopping&#13;
It looks like snow&#13;
And my feet&#13;
Have blisters from boots&#13;
That are old-&#13;
And window reflections,&#13;
Some with people behind them-&#13;
Some with books and brass-&#13;
Seem to bear all of the weight&#13;
That I've found&#13;
In your absence-&#13;
But it's good to walk,&#13;
It's good to walk—&#13;
Michael Nepper&#13;
GAME'S END&#13;
Fading athlete,&#13;
improbably boasting&#13;
a scarlet letter-jacket,&#13;
alone&#13;
in a crowd&#13;
of other-directed fans,&#13;
You should have scored&#13;
something more than a time-out&#13;
from Mary Sue, after your penipatetic&#13;
lust in the backseat&#13;
of that La Salle coupe.&#13;
Oatmeal sinew&#13;
and instant replays as&#13;
endless manifestos&#13;
won't resurrect from nostalgia&#13;
the dead applause,&#13;
the dying admiration,&#13;
of those who&#13;
just&#13;
can't&#13;
seem&#13;
to&#13;
remember&#13;
your name.&#13;
Barke's Gas Co. by Bill Barke&#13;
Network television's annual crib-deaths have once again decimated&#13;
the crowded airways of shows that were really never meant for human&#13;
intelligence anyway. Altogether, twenty-seven shows turned blue in&#13;
mid-season, died horribly, and were toe-tagged by those execs and&#13;
sponsors whose only concern after all are financial prodigies.&#13;
Among the thirty shows newly adopted for a "second season" debut,&#13;
twenty-three are situation comedies, five are police dramas, one is a&#13;
variety show, and one is a news program of th e magazine format type&#13;
like "60 Minutes".&#13;
For example: Guiseppi Montebello, Janitor- An old Italian sanitary&#13;
engineer owrking the graveyard shift at a Black University offers his&#13;
ethnic wit to late-cramming students with surprising results. (Like the&#13;
plot suggests, we should all be sleeping while he's working.)&#13;
The Big Apple Corps - A free-wheeling, fun-loving group of m uggerrapists&#13;
turn New York upside down with their droll sadism and&#13;
refreshing lack of human value.&#13;
The Streets of Ke nosha - A cool, cynical cop who likes to take all the&#13;
hard cases; do things his way, and would rather use his fists now, talk&#13;
later, gets busted from the force in the first episode and turns to&#13;
managing a donut shoppe across from a high school. The only surveillance&#13;
he does for the next thirteen episodes is of deep fried crullers&#13;
and late night crimes of passion in the schoolyard.&#13;
SVEN - At the turn of the century, a meek, middle-aged Swedish&#13;
immigrant who can speak no English gets a job at the Chicago Stock&#13;
Yards. Comedy results as he tries to adjust while being ripped off&#13;
for all he's got.&#13;
The variety show, meanwhile, is called Colonial Capers and features&#13;
a weekly anthology of sketches and song and dance numbers&#13;
dedicated to the crazy, zany customs of our founding fathers, and how&#13;
they came to shape today's fads and social habits. It's regulars are&#13;
Soupy Sales, Leonard Nimoy, and Eve Arden.&#13;
And the news magazine format show, called The American Thirteen&#13;
is another salute to the Bicentennial with reproduced demonstrations&#13;
of life as it was, with all it's customs and rich expression, in the&#13;
original thirteen colonies.&#13;
The M'bulus - The warm and human story of the joys and struggles of&#13;
a black family enroute to America on board a crowded slave ship&#13;
infested with malaria.&#13;
Peebles and the Pusher - This hilarious series concerns a jobless&#13;
young dope addict who, in each episode, must find some ingenious or&#13;
desperate method of producing the cash to support his $50-a-day habit.&#13;
Ronny Howard, as Peebles, shows his comic prowess most brilliantly&#13;
irnii^Mo^ar^it^^col^urke^^^^&#13;
Mick Andersen&#13;
photo by Michael Nepper&#13;
Ode To Robert&#13;
I look up into the starry sky and&#13;
Wonder.&#13;
Who am I? How did I become what I am?&#13;
As I looked into the moonlit sky,&#13;
I knew who I was, why I had become what I was.&#13;
I had found what I was searching for:&#13;
LOVE.&#13;
It was there all the time, all those long years&#13;
As I ran after something to believe in.&#13;
And now I've found it.&#13;
YOU.&#13;
You are always there when I need someone&#13;
To cling to, someone to talk to, someone&#13;
To be with.&#13;
Someone who I know will return my love,&#13;
As I return yours.&#13;
Do you know who I'm talking to?&#13;
You should. For I told you that I loved you.&#13;
Three small words. But they mean very much to us,&#13;
As they did the night I told you I'd become your wife&#13;
Someday.&#13;
They say someday never comes.&#13;
But with you, it will ... Someday.&#13;
The starry sky; Look into it and you will find what&#13;
I have found. I know it.&#13;
THE ME IN Y OU&#13;
living monastic (quite alone)&#13;
worshiping the daily sunset&#13;
because no other could keep&#13;
the silent splendor close to heart,&#13;
no Tibetan shamangrey&#13;
eyed gurujesus-&#13;
jumping jesuit he,&#13;
with a mantra selected of&#13;
top forty rock and soul,&#13;
a major in mcluhan&#13;
he mastered marcuse,&#13;
and was healed by&#13;
doctor dao and&#13;
a litany of ribald isms,&#13;
don't look for him at the mountaintop&#13;
he'll be not revelaed by the sea,&#13;
nor pent&#13;
housed in Manhattan,&#13;
he may be standing next to you&#13;
or be&#13;
the me&#13;
you see&#13;
in you.&#13;
Mick Andersen&#13;
i write all my own songs,&#13;
for what use are someone else's words&#13;
when speaking my love for You?&#13;
You are fairer than any day,&#13;
more beautiful than life itself.&#13;
You a re all the riches of Solomon&#13;
and all the songs he sang.&#13;
You're a breath of fresh air&#13;
after the storm and sorrow.&#13;
Your black-light blue green eyes&#13;
sparkle in my memory like stars&#13;
as Your morning sun smile&#13;
rises into my soul.&#13;
You Are all that's beautiful in life,&#13;
my love for You is the sky;&#13;
You are the four winds,&#13;
and all the wine of time.&#13;
jeffrey j. s wencki&#13;
Kat&#13;
TO KATHIE&#13;
You&#13;
are love by being&#13;
while i&#13;
must settle for these mere words&#13;
so i have come to carrying a camera&#13;
to catch Your being&#13;
on wordless paper&#13;
now on this scrap sheet of words&#13;
i must wait for the morrow&#13;
before i can tell You&#13;
only some bats&#13;
suck blood&#13;
only some men look&#13;
for more in a Woman&#13;
than to be wanted&#13;
needed for a moment&#13;
so i have come to carrying a camera&#13;
and thinking in a whisper&#13;
i try to scream&#13;
You make morning a celebration&#13;
and thinking in a whisper&#13;
this fantasy of You&#13;
and Your silver rings&#13;
drives the harsh darkness of night&#13;
into a quiet peace&#13;
a new&#13;
way into spring&#13;
a new&#13;
way into me&#13;
down sandless beaches, the borders&#13;
of s leeplessness my whispers&#13;
superimpose&#13;
onto You&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 11, 1 976&#13;
Wednesday, February 11&#13;
Bake sale: Will be in Main Place starting at 8:30 a.m. and is sponsored&#13;
by various student organizations for the Sickle Cell Anemia Fund.&#13;
Skeller: Featuring Faye Jackson at 11:30 a.m.&#13;
Concert: The Monty Alexander Jazz Trio from Jamaica at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the CAT. Tickets are on sale at the Info. Kiosk for $1.50 for students&#13;
and $2.00 fo r general public.&#13;
Thursday, February 12&#13;
Film Festival: Featuring "Brothers and Sisters in Concert to Save the&#13;
Children" and "Conrack" at 6:30 p.m. in the CAT. Admission is free&#13;
with donations to the Sickle Cell Anemia Fund appreciated.&#13;
Friday, February 13&#13;
Basketball game: UW-Parkside vs. Oakland University at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the P.E. Bldg. Admission is $2.00 at the door, or $1.00 for advance&#13;
tickets,at the Info Kiosk.&#13;
Dance: In SAB at 9 p.m. with "Love Expression." Admission is free&#13;
with donations to the Sickle Cell Anemia Fund appreciated.&#13;
Saturday, February 14&#13;
Basketball game: UW-Parkside vs. Northland College at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the P.E. Bldg. Admission charge.&#13;
Sunday, February 15&#13;
Concert: Parkside Chamber Orchestra playing Beethoven's Concerto&#13;
No. 2 at 3:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Concert: Blues pianist Blind John Davis at 7:30 p.m. in the CAT.&#13;
Tickets are $1 for students and $2 general at the Info. Kiosk.&#13;
Monday, February 16&#13;
Broadway musical hit: "1776" by Continental Theatre Company at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the CAT. Admission is $2 fpr students and $3 for general&#13;
public.&#13;
Tuesday, February 17&#13;
Basketball game: UW-Parkside vs. UW-Green Bay at 7:30 in the P.E.&#13;
Bldg. Admission charge.&#13;
COCKTAILS QUIET&#13;
24th and 25th on 60th St. Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Say Happy&#13;
Valentine's Day&#13;
with flowers&#13;
from&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/6m*-&#13;
Since 188 6&#13;
6068 40th AVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS 53l7oT^^n&#13;
Don't get pushed around&#13;
by Diane E. Carlson&#13;
you have been standing in lin&lt;&#13;
for 25 minutes waiting to get tc&#13;
the registration terminal, biting&#13;
your nails wprrying that your&#13;
Woodworking 480 course will be&#13;
closed by the time you get there.&#13;
A girl in a yellow sweater slowly&#13;
creeps into line directly in front&#13;
of you. Do you tell her to get lost&#13;
(nicely, of course), or do you just&#13;
slink along behind her, cursing&#13;
under your breath? If you are one&#13;
of the many who say nothing in&#13;
situations like this, you are a&#13;
candidate for "Assertiveness&#13;
Training."&#13;
On January 20 and 27,&#13;
Parkside, Carthage, and GTI,&#13;
sponsored a program in Assertiveness&#13;
Training. Offered as&#13;
part of a series of programs in&#13;
observance of International&#13;
Women's Year, the program was&#13;
directed mainly at women, but&#13;
was helpful to anyone wh has&#13;
trouble asserting themselves. As&#13;
Wendy Withers, teacher of the&#13;
class, said, "Women seem to toe&#13;
most in need of assertiveness&#13;
training. They are alwys told that&#13;
they should be nice, compassionate,&#13;
always giving instead&#13;
of taking." Although she feels&#13;
that a woman should be compassionate,&#13;
she should be so&#13;
because she chooses to, not&#13;
because she feels she should, and&#13;
not to the exclusion of her own&#13;
feelings.&#13;
The idea of A.T. has been&#13;
around since the late 60's and&#13;
stems from the practice of&#13;
behavior modification. After&#13;
attending a workshop in A.T. in&#13;
April, 1975, Ms. Withers and a cocounselor&#13;
recognized that there&#13;
was a need for this type of&#13;
training in the community. Now&#13;
the program, which is taught out&#13;
of the Woman's Bureau of GTI, is&#13;
being offered in the Fall, Winter,&#13;
and Spring of each year, with the&#13;
next class to be held in March.&#13;
The 45 women and three men&#13;
who attended the January class&#13;
at GTI's Kenosha campus were&#13;
anywhere from 18 years old up,&#13;
and the atmosphere of the group&#13;
was friendly, open, and war. The&#13;
meeting began with discussion&#13;
among the group members of the&#13;
problems they had faced the&#13;
previous week in being assertive&#13;
("the steak I ordered 'well done'&#13;
came back 'rare', and I was too&#13;
these situations in the future,&#13;
embarrassed to send it back"),&#13;
and possible ways to deal with&#13;
After the discussion, the group&#13;
was given the experience of&#13;
"relaxation training." A tenet of&#13;
A.T. is that you can't keep your&#13;
cool and face up to a threatening&#13;
situation if you are too tense to&#13;
think straight. The training&#13;
consisted of deep breathing&#13;
exercises and a series of tensingrelaxing&#13;
movements of all the&#13;
major muscle groups of the body.&#13;
After relaxing like this with the&#13;
lights out, group members were&#13;
ready to split into small groups&#13;
for role-playing.&#13;
In the role-playing "feedback"&#13;
groups, each participant acted&#13;
out a particular situation in&#13;
which he or she felt a need for&#13;
greater assertion on their part.&#13;
Other group members acted as&#13;
the objects of this assertive&#13;
behavior. Throughout the experience&#13;
each member gave&#13;
feedback and suggestions as to&#13;
how the others might be able to&#13;
improve their behavior.&#13;
The people who attended the&#13;
A.T. class were just like everyone&#13;
else; basically happy with&#13;
themselves, but feeling that they&#13;
occasionally sold themselves&#13;
short by being too passive or&#13;
aggressive.&#13;
What A.T. hopefully did was to&#13;
make one more ware of his or her&#13;
non-assertive actions. As Wendy&#13;
Withers said, "After you do&#13;
something passive you can be&#13;
aware of it, and after a while&#13;
catch yourself doing it closer and&#13;
closer to the act. Then one time&#13;
you'll say 'Heh, why am I doing&#13;
that?"&#13;
Be C hoosy...&#13;
Rto Try O ur T hin 'n&#13;
-Hut&#13;
It's Pizza Hut's u original nationally famous&#13;
pizza. Specially formulated to have a light,&#13;
crisp crust and covered edge to edge with&#13;
our unique and tangy sauce, mozzarella cheese&#13;
and generous amounts of whatever toppings&#13;
you desire.&#13;
IN KENOSHA:&#13;
4608 - 75th Strut Phone 694-0745&#13;
"Oat people make it better''&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
SPRING BREAK IN&#13;
APRIL 16-24, 1 976&#13;
*389 PER PERSON COMPLETE INCLUDES:&#13;
• ROOND TRIP J ET AIR FROM CHICAGO&#13;
• 7 N IGHTS FIRST C LASS LODGING (LONDON-PENTA)&#13;
• CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST DAILY&#13;
• GROUND TRANSFERS &amp; P ORTERAGE IN LONDON&#13;
• TOUR ESCORT THROUGHOUT&#13;
• ALL TIPS &amp; TAXES ON THE ABOVE&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER WLLC 0-197 553-2294&#13;
PARKSIDE FOOD SERVICE&#13;
YANKEE DOODLE&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
MON., F EB. 1 6, 1 976&#13;
• Alarm Clock Give Away&#13;
Win 2 tickets t o the m usical 1 776 Mon., F eb. 1 6,&#13;
Comm. A rts Thtr. (1 2 p airs t o he g iven a way)&#13;
* Geo. Washington Birthday Lunch&#13;
Yankee P ot R oast, b rowned potatoes, g reen p eas,&#13;
roll'n butter, M.40 i n the Buffet R oom&#13;
(Apple p ie e xtra)&#13;
folklorieo&#13;
The Tarascons, an historic&#13;
tribe that lived in Western&#13;
Mexico, entertained rather&#13;
unique matrimonial symbolism.&#13;
In this wedding dance, the brides'&#13;
virginity is represented by&#13;
oranges pierced with swords.&#13;
Americans of Mexican descent&#13;
had great reason to be proud last&#13;
Saturday night. The gala included&#13;
Mexican food, Mexican&#13;
music, and a festive array of&#13;
Mexican arts and crafts. To top it&#13;
off, the National Dance Company&#13;
of Mexico gave a stupendous&#13;
performance inside a positively&#13;
jam packed Comm. Arts Theater.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RAN GER Feb. 1 1, 1976 9&#13;
BLIND JOHN DflVIS&#13;
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
S1 00 UW P Students&#13;
$2.00 General&#13;
Tickets at Into Center&#13;
+ at the door&#13;
BLUES AND BOOGIE WOOGIE&#13;
Steflcaa&#13;
HaUtfiat met CIHCC UMUHCK&#13;
Services i nclude:&#13;
• Hair c oloring&#13;
• Beard a nd m ustache t rims&#13;
• Creative h air s tyling&#13;
• Custom hair r eplacements&#13;
-k Perma s tyles, C uries o r W aves&#13;
For a ppointment c all&#13;
694-4603&#13;
OPEN WEEKLY&#13;
. Thru Fri. 8:30 A.M.&#13;
• C«- iloosaerud aMiuonnodaayy&#13;
king's lew&#13;
Styling oi Studio&#13;
7509 45th AVE.&#13;
Town &amp; Country Shopping Center&#13;
VOTE&#13;
JOHN D. BILOTTI&#13;
for&#13;
Mayor&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
on&#13;
Tuesday, Feb. 17&#13;
Listen to 'The Peoples Right to Know" on WLIP AJVt.&#13;
on Saturday mornings at 8:35.&#13;
Authorized and Paid for by John D. Bilotti For Mayor Campaign. Paid for by&#13;
John D. Bilotti, 2208 - 54th St., Kenosho, Wis.&#13;
in the&#13;
Great Lakes Room&#13;
this week featuring&#13;
"Paramount Recording Artists"&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Drinking and Dancing&#13;
Doors Open 7:00&#13;
Music starts 8:30&#13;
•1.00 Cover&#13;
633-3551 6th at Main RACINE&#13;
^JMOTOR INN&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 11, 1976&#13;
Structure Change&#13;
continued from page 1.&#13;
The suggested solution(s) will&#13;
be due March 31. The Task Force&#13;
on Academic Planning and&#13;
Program Review (a committee&#13;
whose top priority will be to&#13;
implement COP's proposal) will&#13;
then review the "three plus&#13;
three" committee's suggestion&#13;
and make a final decision as to&#13;
the fate of the Science Division by&#13;
Mary 31. Implementation for this&#13;
will come in the fall semester of&#13;
1977.&#13;
Communication, the other&#13;
major area destined for change&#13;
will be separated from it's&#13;
Dramatic Arts option which will&#13;
become a disipline itself under&#13;
the new division of Visual and&#13;
Performing Arts.&#13;
The two surviving options for&#13;
those majoring in Communication&#13;
are Public Information&#13;
and Organizational&#13;
Communication. Which division&#13;
the Communication Discipline&#13;
would fall under in its reduced&#13;
state or whether it will remain as&#13;
a majoring offer at all, is still up&#13;
in the air. To study this problem&#13;
COP has suggested a second&#13;
committee.&#13;
This "review group" will include&#13;
representatives from the&#13;
Humanities and the Social&#13;
Sciences as well "other interested&#13;
groups." It's mission as&#13;
stated in COP's proposal is to&#13;
"report on what communication&#13;
is and ought to be a UWParkside."&#13;
The fourteen page proposal&#13;
including these and other&#13;
suggestions for change at&#13;
Parkside will be released in its&#13;
edited form February 12. Copies&#13;
will be distributed to the&#13;
divisional offices and the library.&#13;
Additional documents explaining&#13;
the proposal in more detail will&#13;
also be distributed. After giving&#13;
the Faculty Senate members&#13;
Sports Commentary&#13;
Talk it up Rangers&#13;
by Thorn Aiello&#13;
Season record: 16 wins, 5 loses.&#13;
Home winning-streak: 18 games, including last year.&#13;
Recent crowds: around one-half capacity, tops.&#13;
Enthusiasm level: Nearly zilch, save a few big plays.&#13;
The preceding represents the unusual circumstances surrounding&#13;
Parkside basketball, especially of late.&#13;
Yes, it is somewhat unusual that a small and relatively new&#13;
university such as Parkside can field such a competent team, and the&#13;
18 consecutive victories indicate that it is not just an overnight occurance.&#13;
A string of 18 in a row does not happen overnight - it takes a&#13;
couple of years.&#13;
It is also somewhat unusual that so many consecutive wins can&#13;
occur in such a conservative, sparse crowd. Granted, the home&#13;
schedule is not quite as demanding as the road schedule, but being&#13;
unbeaten at home is still an achievement. Aren't most long winning&#13;
streaks a result of "snake-pits," places where crowds surround the&#13;
action on court with the utmost in cheering, supporting volume?&#13;
A team with a fine record. A team with some fantastic ballplayers&#13;
perhaps future professional athletes. A team capable, probably, of&#13;
beating every other team in the state, except, probably, a crew that&#13;
wears yellow and blue. A team that went to quarterfinal rounds of a&#13;
national tournament last year and stand a chance of taking home all of&#13;
the marbles this time. Is it so unusual to expect capcity corwds for a&#13;
team such as this?&#13;
Somewhat unusual. Why the crowd that is in attendance cannot clap&#13;
their hands, stamp their feet, or even shout insults to the opposing&#13;
teams. Why a handful or so, of cheerleaders and a rowdy, tough&#13;
limited, congregation from Milton College have been producing the&#13;
most noise, or cheering, of anyone in the past several weeks. Just&#13;
seems somewhat unusual, that's all.&#13;
Where are the crowds? Watching television? At the movies?&#13;
Drinking? Bowling? Taking speed-reading courses in their own&#13;
homes?&#13;
Whatever happened to "pep" bands? Watch other teams on TV, go&#13;
to other schools (UW-Madison, UW-Milwaukee, etc.). See the intensity&#13;
and escitement oft times created. Why is it so unusual to have a band&#13;
in the corner, next to the bleachers, at Parkside games? In past years,&#13;
at times, the musical inspirational attempts were there.&#13;
Parkside, 16-5, with 18 straight home wins, will play three home&#13;
games in a row - Friday, Saturday, and next Tuesday nights.&#13;
Somewhat unusual for Parkside.&#13;
Perhaps a good surprise for the team, which after the three games&#13;
will play one more road game before tourney beginnings, would be to&#13;
do something considered somewhat unusual. Fill the stands. Be vocal.&#13;
Get a band in there, or else just bring a horn and blow it. See what&#13;
happens. Perhaps there will be a surprise for everyone involved -&#13;
something somewhat unusual. Something good.&#13;
H i: 11. L M A N s m •j Pure Brewed&#13;
|J From God's Country.&#13;
approximately two weeks to&#13;
study these documents, the&#13;
University Committee will&#13;
present the proposal to the&#13;
Faculty Senate for ratification.&#13;
An all day Senate meeting is&#13;
planned some time at the end of&#13;
the month with an informational&#13;
session in the morning and a&#13;
legislative session in the evening.&#13;
COP has said that minor&#13;
amendments may be made on the&#13;
Senate floor but that any&#13;
amendments proposed by the&#13;
Senate involving a substantial&#13;
change from the original&#13;
proposal must be referred back&#13;
to the University Committee.&#13;
As Guskin adjourned COP for&#13;
the last time he said, "If this&#13;
thing (the proposal) goes through&#13;
the Senate it will have a&#13;
tremendous effect on the&#13;
University; I'm very pleased&#13;
with it."&#13;
Suspension&#13;
continued from page 1.&#13;
Brinkmanns superior.&#13;
When questioned about the&#13;
events of January 31 Brinkmann&#13;
would make no comment. He also&#13;
refused access to any records or&#13;
documents pertaining to Beckwiths&#13;
detention or Augustines&#13;
suspension.&#13;
Chancellor Alan E. Guskin&#13;
stated, "campus policy makes it&#13;
very clear that guns are not to be&#13;
unholstered unless there is a&#13;
threat of bodily harm." When&#13;
questioned about the specifics of&#13;
Beckwiths detention Guskin said,&#13;
"My own concern is not to interfere&#13;
in police matters. That is&#13;
a police matter and should be a&#13;
police matter."&#13;
Zuehlke could not be reached&#13;
for comment, due to an off&#13;
campus appointment.&#13;
The Racine Journal Times&#13;
later reported, that Zuehlke&#13;
questioned those sources&#13;
charging him with issuing the&#13;
order for Beckwiths release. He&#13;
was quoted in the same story,&#13;
however, as saying, "I won't&#13;
confirm or deny anything.&#13;
Augustine is expected to return&#13;
to work this week.&#13;
Financial aid&#13;
Financial aid applications for&#13;
semester II, 1976, must be submitted&#13;
to the Financial Aids&#13;
Office, Tallent 107 , by March 1,&#13;
1976. No applications will be&#13;
accepted after that date.&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
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3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
I SUje fGnattge&#13;
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Presenting ... on Thursday nights "SO6 Nite"&#13;
for Parkside Students (50c for standard Highball&#13;
drinks, etc. or beers with Parkside I.D.)&#13;
And for your enjoyment - JU-JU on 'The Lounge's Fantastic Stereo&#13;
System" playing hits from '66 to '76 while you enjoy pool,&#13;
foosball or Electronic tennis.&#13;
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Hours: 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. Phone.- 634-5335&#13;
Pick the Valentine for&#13;
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from Kenosha's most&#13;
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Be Choosy...&#13;
Try our t hick 'n&#13;
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This is the one! A special Pizza Hut" recipe&#13;
for those who prefer a thicker crust and a&#13;
chewy, cheesy taste. Covered with lots of&#13;
mozzarella cheese, delicate sauce, and a&#13;
generous amount of your favorite toppings.&#13;
IN KENOSHA:&#13;
4604 - 75th Stmt H(N 694-0745&#13;
"Out feeete make it better'&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
INVITES YOU TO SPEND SPRING BREAK IN DAYTONA&#13;
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$LD5 NASED ON 4 TO A ROOM 1 INCLUDES:&#13;
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THE PARKSIDE R ANGER Feb. 11, 1 976 11&#13;
Winning-streak&#13;
continues&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
In two contrasting games last&#13;
week, the results were the same:&#13;
two wins for the Parkside&#13;
basketball team. Running its&#13;
home winning-streak to 18 games&#13;
last Tuesday, the Rangers&#13;
breezed by Milton College, 97-73.&#13;
It was a different story Saturday&#13;
night in Lakeland, where&#13;
Parkside nipped its opposition,&#13;
75-73.&#13;
The Rangers, in wallopping the&#13;
Wildcats, were once again led by&#13;
the one-two scoring punch of&#13;
Leartha Scott and Gary Cole,&#13;
with 24 and 23 points respectively.&#13;
Showing good spark off the&#13;
bench for Parkside were freshmen&#13;
Joe Foots and Marvin&#13;
Chones, both netting 9 points.&#13;
Parkside, now 16-5, took a big&#13;
step into securing the number one&#13;
seed for post-season tournament&#13;
play by edging Lakeland.&#13;
The game was close in many&#13;
respects. At half-time the contest&#13;
was tied-up at 39. Meanwhile, for&#13;
the game, UWP outshot&#13;
Lakeland, 48 pe rcent to 42 percent,&#13;
outrebounded them, 4943,&#13;
and had three less turnovers. But&#13;
the home team won the freethrow&#13;
battle, making 17 of 27&#13;
while t he Rangers hit 9 of 15, as&#13;
Parkside was whistled for 23&#13;
fouls compared to only 14 cal led&#13;
against Lakeland.&#13;
Track&#13;
continued from page 12.&#13;
Pat Burns, who won th e shot put&#13;
with 51' I IV2", a meet record by&#13;
over a foot. Other good performances&#13;
came from: Herb&#13;
DeGroot, second in the 440 yd.&#13;
dash; Mike Rivers, third in the&#13;
880 yd. run; freshman Bob&#13;
Downs,, third in pole vaulting;&#13;
and a third place by the six lap&#13;
relay team.&#13;
Jefferson and Sitz also are&#13;
qualified to compete in the&#13;
Nationals.&#13;
In the meet, no team scoring&#13;
was kept, and it will not be kept in&#13;
Oshkosh either where the men&#13;
take part in the Titan Open this&#13;
Saturday (11 a.m.).&#13;
While about ten schools&#13;
competed in men's competition,&#13;
about eight schools were&#13;
represented in the women's track&#13;
action.&#13;
The outstanding showing here&#13;
came from Parkside's Kim&#13;
Merritt, who set meet records in&#13;
the one mile and the two mile run.&#13;
Her 4:49.6 mile was also a school&#13;
record. Merritt's two mile time&#13;
was 10:32.5.&#13;
Others showing for Parkside&#13;
were: Chris Susterich, second in&#13;
the shot put with a school record&#13;
of 35' 10V; Marilyn Phillips,&#13;
fifth in the long jump and seventh&#13;
in the 300 y d. dash; and Kathy&#13;
DeBaere, who finished ninth in&#13;
the 440.&#13;
FOR YOUR COMPLETE SKIING&#13;
NEEDSJISIT&#13;
PORTS dHORTS&#13;
We S ell In stant Fun!&#13;
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Fencing&#13;
MlPa:tiletfrCing SqUads had a busy Saturday in northeastern&#13;
lost to n'J?n theycomPeted a' Trt-state College. The men's team&#13;
Tr'-StateiLfa3'm annd 10 Way"e State (Mich )'2M'but slashed i-htate, 15-12. The men have a 3-5 seasonal record now.&#13;
Corbett Chri WaS 7"2, and Mike 01son was M in M11&#13;
Sun th^t r"' I' ^ Redm°nd' and Ned HarPer' 1-8. took&#13;
Mainland Ijf J Mainland, 3-6, sco'r ed mC eUprete S atuctdieoyn'. VIa&lt;*. 3-6, and Mike&#13;
OVCTNX^" FENCERJ'W ON y&lt;™. toed much better, winning 7-2&#13;
State 7 2 °Ver Tri"State' be£ore sliced by Wa&gt;™&#13;
The fencers are in action again this Saturday at Michigan State,&#13;
with Michigan-Dearborn and UW-Madison a lso participating.&#13;
Swimming&#13;
Parkside's men's swimming club won two and lost one in hosting&#13;
what amounted to five double-dual meets last Friday. The Rangers&#13;
outswam UW-Milwaukee, 6546, a nd squeaked by Lake Forest (111.),&#13;
56-55, but were sunk, 84-29, by Carthage College.&#13;
• Parkside was strong in one meter and three meter diving as John&#13;
Pietkivitch took first in both, while Mike Hawley ended-up second in&#13;
both events. Though third overall, Rich Kwas set a team record with&#13;
2:19.45 in the 200 bu tterfly and Keith Kruger set a Parkside team&#13;
record with his time of 2:28.96 in t he 200 backstroke. UWP also took&#13;
i thirds in the 400 medlay and the free-style relays.&#13;
The swimmer's next splash in Saturday (10 a.m.) in a dual meet at&#13;
UW-Milwaukee. The club, coached by Barb Lawson, is now 5-6 for the&#13;
year, by far the best ever for Parkside.&#13;
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12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Feb. 11, 1976&#13;
SICKLE CEU&#13;
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FEB. 9 -13&#13;
HOURS- 3 p.m. fo 1 a.m. 4917" 7ttl AV©&#13;
Joe Landers&#13;
Landers said, "Last year I had&#13;
some good matches against some&#13;
good people." Koch said Landers&#13;
"developed some consistency"&#13;
last season and started doing&#13;
well.&#13;
Come to Nature's Way for that&#13;
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Nature S \^ay In Kenosha's Southport&#13;
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Until March 31, we will&#13;
take 4 4x5 pictures of anyone&#13;
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FOR SALE: 1967 Honda Scrambler CL 160,&#13;
$300.00. Call 694-0838 (after 5 p.m.).&#13;
Car pool information is available at Information&#13;
Kiosk.&#13;
Student Recital: Mary Manulik, cello,&#13;
assisted by Stephen Swedish, piano. CATheater.&#13;
WANTED: Experienced or interested&#13;
students for publication of informative&#13;
minority newsletter. Please contact Arlene&#13;
Martin 637-1456 or Abisola Gallagher - 553-&#13;
2576.&#13;
FOR SALE: Track Bike, Schwinn&#13;
Paramount all campy parts, two years old&#13;
and never been crashed, 24" inch silver&#13;
frame. Call Tim at 654-6037. Asking price:&#13;
$275.&#13;
Landers, 21, began wrestling in&#13;
junior high school, but his real&#13;
start came at Tremper when&#13;
Jerry Barr, then the Trojan's&#13;
coach, approached Landers in&#13;
the hall and asked him to come&#13;
out for the team.&#13;
From those roots Landers&#13;
skyrocketed to an undefeated&#13;
senior year, until his loss attempting&#13;
to capture the state&#13;
title. When the match ended&#13;
Landers said, "I waited for the&#13;
ref to raise my hand....I didn't&#13;
know how to lose."&#13;
Landers was heavily recruited&#13;
by many schools after his successful&#13;
high school career,&#13;
though much of the "recruiting"&#13;
came in the form of many letters.&#13;
Winona State (Minn.) did offer&#13;
him scholarship money though,&#13;
and Landers was informed that&#13;
the money would be cut in half.&#13;
The night of the bad news&#13;
Landers had a "chance meeting"&#13;
at an Open Pantry store with&#13;
Koch. Landers decided to attend&#13;
Parkside then and, after he did,&#13;
former Ranger star Bill West&#13;
beat him out. With just a 4-2&#13;
freshman record, Landers was&#13;
disappointed and quit the team.&#13;
Later he "realized that life's too&#13;
short, " and that he could work&#13;
later, and he made another go at&#13;
wrestling.&#13;
Koch said that, as a freshman,&#13;
Landers had no direction or&#13;
motivation. "I knew he had the&#13;
physical ability," Koch said, but&#13;
the coach never thought Landers&#13;
had the ingredients of becoming a&#13;
champion. As a coach, Koch said&#13;
it is "satisfying" to see a guy&#13;
develop "as a student, an athlete,&#13;
and an individual," as Landers&#13;
has.&#13;
One of the most important&#13;
factors involved in Landers'&#13;
wrestling, among other things, is&#13;
his wife of about two and one-half&#13;
years, Brenda. Landers said, "I&#13;
think marriage had a real&#13;
positive effect on wrestling." He&#13;
said now he stays home nights&#13;
instead of "chasing around," and&#13;
this helps him.&#13;
"Joe's wife has made some&#13;
sacrifices," said Koch. He said&#13;
TOildett&#13;
(Zaltwi&#13;
Now . . . 5 1^ § S&#13;
For only •&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
Led by four of the top competitors&#13;
in the three-mile walk,&#13;
Parkside's men had a "pretty&#13;
good meet" in the third annual&#13;
Parkside Indoor Invitational,&#13;
according to head coach Bob&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
Jim Heiring won the walk in&#13;
21:56 and was followed by Chris&#13;
Hansen, John Van Den Brandt,&#13;
and A1 Halbur in the meet at Park&#13;
High School in Racine last&#13;
Saturday morning. All of the&#13;
walkers have qualified for the&#13;
Nationals, where UWP would like&#13;
to finish in the top five, according&#13;
to Lawson.&#13;
Leroy Jefferson, with a 7.7&#13;
time, won the high hurdles, with&#13;
Paul Nelson finishing fifth;&#13;
former Parkside star Lucian&#13;
Rosa won the two-mile run; Jeff&#13;
Sitz won the long-jump (23'&#13;
11%"), with Shaunte Stills&#13;
coming in third; Stills also placed&#13;
second in both the triple jump&#13;
and the high jump, where he also&#13;
qualified for Nationals.&#13;
Another National qualifier is&#13;
continued on page 11&#13;
by Thom Aiello&#13;
For senior wrestler Joe Landers,&#13;
winning the NAIA national&#13;
championship this year is his&#13;
goal. Landers, who placed sixth&#13;
last year, said, "I think I have a&#13;
good shot at it." His head coach,&#13;
Jim Koch, said, "I don't think&#13;
he'd settle for anything less than&#13;
- championship this year."&#13;
That is a fairly lofty goal, but&#13;
Landers certainly can justify&#13;
such notions with a look to the&#13;
past. In his senior year at&#13;
Tremper High School (Kenosha),&#13;
Landers finished second in the&#13;
state. His sophomore year here&#13;
he carried an 11-5-1 record, losing&#13;
his last two meets. That year&#13;
Landers "ripped-up" his knee.&#13;
But he came back strong last&#13;
year and finished with a 30-6-1&#13;
record, losing his last three&#13;
contests.&#13;
she has done this "because she&#13;
understands that it's important to&#13;
Joe," and now it is important to&#13;
her too. Brenda also helps by&#13;
working at American Hospital&#13;
Supply Corp. (Waukegan), since&#13;
her husband is on leave from&#13;
American Motors, where he has&#13;
worked the past three years.&#13;
Landers, a business major,&#13;
earned well over a 3.0 grade point&#13;
last semester, despite carrying 14&#13;
credits and putting-in all the&#13;
wrestling time. He said, "It's&#13;
really a bear to come home and&#13;
make yourself study," when you&#13;
haven't been able to eat or drink&#13;
for so long (to keep at the proper&#13;
weight).&#13;
Putting in about 12 practice&#13;
hours a week, Landers said, is not&#13;
enough. "Wrestling is a twentyfour&#13;
hour a day sport," the full&#13;
year around, Landers said. He&#13;
added, "You have to keep your&#13;
body in shape."&#13;
Wrestling in college has helped&#13;
Landers be "calm" while performing,&#13;
as well as trying to&#13;
"relax" himself. He explained,&#13;
"It's a thinking sport .... one&#13;
mistake against a good wrestler&#13;
can kill you."&#13;
Parkside, 9-2-1 in dual meets&#13;
thus far, hosts tough UWWhitewater&#13;
this Tuesday (7:30&#13;
p.m.). On Friday, 3 p.m., the&#13;
grapplers are at UW-La Crosse.&#13;
Besides Landers, O'Connell and&#13;
John Gale, both sporting 20-3&#13;
records, will lead the Raneers.&#13;
A walk to victory</text>
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