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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 4, issue 26</text>
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            <text>Library and learning center to merge</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Beecham Robinson&#13;
director of the Learning Center&#13;
Library and Learning Center to merge&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The budget priorities advisory&#13;
committee heard arguments for&#13;
and against a proposed merger of&#13;
the Library and Learning Center&#13;
functions last Wednesday in a&#13;
two-hour session that found the&#13;
directors of those two functions at&#13;
odds with each other, and ended&#13;
with a vote to support the&#13;
merger.&#13;
The controversy stemmed&#13;
from a recent report submitted to&#13;
director of planning and budget&#13;
analysis Gary Goetz", by Joseph&#13;
Boisse, director of libraries, after&#13;
Boisse showed some disgust with&#13;
the original report submitted by&#13;
the subcommittee which was&#13;
directed to look into the functions&#13;
for both the library and Learning&#13;
Center as well as other&#13;
academic support facilities.&#13;
The subcommittee consists of&#13;
Connie Cummings, specialist in&#13;
Student Services, Dennis&#13;
Huebschman, personnel administrator,&#13;
and Peter Martin,&#13;
associate professor of English.&#13;
They recommended to the whole&#13;
that the two areas merge,&#13;
transferring the "library-like&#13;
functions" of the Learning Center&#13;
to the Library and the moneys&#13;
controlled by the Learning&#13;
Center to be put under the control&#13;
of the Library, since the Committee&#13;
of Principal's (COP)&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
recommendation for a Center of&#13;
Academic Excellence in Undergraduate&#13;
Education would&#13;
usurp some of the present functions.&#13;
&#13;
Beecham Robinson, director of&#13;
the Learning Center, questioned&#13;
the ability of the Library to&#13;
handle the functions of the&#13;
Learning Center including giving&#13;
it its fair share of support, as well&#13;
as fulfilling the commitment to&#13;
give the faculty alternative&#13;
sources of education other than a&#13;
lecture situation. Boisse rejected&#13;
this implication since people with&#13;
audio-visual responsibilities&#13;
reported to him when he occupied&#13;
a former position in Vermont.&#13;
Larry Duetsch, LibraryLearning&#13;
Center committee&#13;
chairperson, supported the&#13;
merger on the rationale that the&#13;
two areas would maintain a&#13;
standard of excellence as one&#13;
whole unit, and that the Center&#13;
would take care of most of the&#13;
functions of the current Learning&#13;
Center, thusly eliminating the&#13;
need for the Learning Center as it&#13;
currently exists.&#13;
The media production facility&#13;
came under fire by several&#13;
members of the committee. The&#13;
subcommittee recommended&#13;
that production be played down&#13;
and Dean Eugene Norwood&#13;
questioned the production concept's&#13;
necessity. Goetz also&#13;
stated that tangible goods had a&#13;
much higher priority than being&#13;
innovative.&#13;
In a later part of the meeting,&#13;
Chancellor Alan Guskin queried&#13;
the committee about the media&#13;
development. Some of the staff&#13;
members involved in the move&#13;
stated that it would increase the&#13;
amount of money available for&#13;
positions hiring for the fall.&#13;
After the two-hour discussion,&#13;
it was decided by the committee&#13;
to support the merger as stated in&#13;
the Boisse report and to send the&#13;
sub-committee report back to the&#13;
subcommittee for rewriting.&#13;
Vol. IV No. 26 Wednesday March 31, 1976&#13;
University women displeased&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Affirmative action was the&#13;
main topic discussed in a meeting&#13;
last week between the women&#13;
faculty and instructional staff&#13;
which comprise the Women's&#13;
Action Group, and Chancellor&#13;
Alan Guskin. The women expressed&#13;
general displeasure with&#13;
the present program and made&#13;
suggestions as to how to improve&#13;
it.&#13;
They requested that the&#13;
Chancellor establish a task force&#13;
which would monitor all hiring&#13;
and be involved with all practices&#13;
pertaining to affirmative action.&#13;
Guskin did not object to having&#13;
a study group dealing with the&#13;
subject, but questioned whether&#13;
this should be done through his&#13;
office since "it would become a&#13;
Affirmative action task force requested&#13;
political football." In reference to&#13;
this, Sara Sheehan, lecturer in&#13;
Political Science, said, "It's an&#13;
institutional problem and the&#13;
institution should deal with it."&#13;
In response to the proposition&#13;
that the task force be involved&#13;
with current hiring, Guskin&#13;
maintained that he himself could&#13;
temporarily monitor the hiring&#13;
process by inspecting all candidate&#13;
pools thus guaranteeing&#13;
that women and minorities are&#13;
prepresented.&#13;
Carol Saffioti, lecturer in&#13;
English, questioned Guskin:&#13;
"Why should we believe that the&#13;
same people are going to do&#13;
hiring different than before.&#13;
Guskin responded: "You all have&#13;
suspicions on what was done&#13;
past. I can't change the past but I&#13;
plan on changing the future."&#13;
Guskin expressed a deep&#13;
commitment to affirmative&#13;
action programs, but this apprently&#13;
did not satisfy some of the&#13;
women. Carole, Vopat, associate&#13;
professor of English, said, "What&#13;
is needed in this University is a&#13;
visable sign of t his commitment.&#13;
That's why we're arguing for just&#13;
one more committee.&#13;
Also unsatisfied with the&#13;
present situation, Lorraine&#13;
Zimmerman, visiting assistant&#13;
professor in Anthropology&#13;
remarked, "You've got 11 women&#13;
on your faculty. There's no&#13;
evidence this (affirmative action)&#13;
ever took place."&#13;
The issue was brought up that&#13;
there would be no women in the&#13;
new Social Science Division next&#13;
fall. Sheehan contended that&#13;
women are not being effectively&#13;
educated because of the lack of&#13;
women faculty. "This is a&#13;
university for men." Vopat&#13;
agreed with this line of re asoning&#13;
saying that you can't have a&#13;
complete program in any area&#13;
without someone teaching from&#13;
the female perspective.&#13;
Aiina Williams, associate&#13;
professor in Life Science, did not&#13;
agree with the idea that women&#13;
could not be educated effectively&#13;
without women faculty. She&#13;
emphasized that Sheehan was not&#13;
speaking for the entire group&#13;
when she made that statement.&#13;
It was also brought up that&#13;
hiring women as part-time&#13;
teachers had been used in the&#13;
past as the answer to affirmative&#13;
action. Guskin agreed with the&#13;
women that this was not an effective&#13;
solution. "I think what&#13;
matters is getting women and&#13;
minorities on the tenure track."&#13;
The group also discussed the&#13;
prevalent attitudes which keep&#13;
women from operating' effectively&#13;
within the university&#13;
system. Guskin said the solution&#13;
is to get more women on&#13;
university committees. He&#13;
believes that different decisions&#13;
result when women and&#13;
minorities are makilig them&#13;
because people argue differently&#13;
when they're fighting for survival.&#13;
&#13;
When asked how to get men to&#13;
hire females, Guskin said that&#13;
making people conscious of&#13;
discrimination in practice was&#13;
one answer, since most people&#13;
aren't aware that they're being&#13;
discriminatory.&#13;
Fear and fun in flying&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
Photos by Diane Carlson&#13;
Flying is fear, fun, or a combination of both, called thrill. There are&#13;
few more thrilling experiences than controlling an air craft, resembling&#13;
a Volkswagen beetle with wings and a propeller.&#13;
Every sense in one's body is at attention while handling a plane&#13;
through a 500 feet per minute climb, with the sensation of rapid upward&#13;
action, the roar of the engine, and the pull of the earth's gravity.&#13;
There are few experiences more thrilling than the descent and landing,&#13;
one of t he most critical points of flight, where the plane and its&#13;
occupants rush towards the runway, and only the experienced pilot&#13;
can make the wheels touch the blacktopped landing strip smoothly and&#13;
safely.&#13;
Taking off&#13;
Imagine yourself taking the first flying lesson from Tim Anderson, a&#13;
bearded 25-year-old Parkside student, and a Federal Aviation Board&#13;
certified flight instructor insingleand multi-engine craft. You and your&#13;
friends would meet Anderson at the Kenosha Municipal Airport, rent a&#13;
plane for $15 an hour and prepare to take off.&#13;
If your reaction was like mine, you would be thinking of the experience&#13;
of the trip, but at the same time would be mumbling to&#13;
yourself "We're going to get killed."&#13;
After logging a few items, checking the weather and picking up the&#13;
plane's keys, all would climb aboard, two in the back, and yourself and&#13;
Anderson in the front, with the instrument panel and one of two sets of&#13;
controls at your fingertips.&#13;
Anderson would "pre-flight" the plane, checking for correct&#13;
operation. Then he would walk around the plane, moving flaps and&#13;
rudders to make sure they are working, checking for cracks on the&#13;
continued on page 10&#13;
Taxiing down runway for takeoff. The final moments of being a "landlubber". &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 31, 1976&#13;
EDITORIAL/OPTNION&#13;
Student evaluations confidential&#13;
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have found a state law (ChapAsr "19.21 subchapter II or.&#13;
•fh6' Wrscb^ih: mfe 'S^f.ufes&gt; which sayslhai Uifiess'&#13;
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merit increase considerations." An excerpt concerning&#13;
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service to students by conducting their own evaluations&#13;
and deeming the results public information. This has not&#13;
ptappfi •:ptacr•:&#13;
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-&#13;
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r$mnt[ mffesi Ar A:Tjie v Af 44 A' iSii!'Ahhowever,&#13;
resume conducting these evaluations using the&#13;
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these records. We found a general lack of knowledge on&#13;
the subject and a variety of d ifferent procedures.&#13;
Stevens Point keeps records completely open. Results&#13;
of the evaluations are on file in the library, student&#13;
government office and departmental offices. The&#13;
evaluation forms are made up by a committee con&#13;
sisflhg of-students, faculty and administrators, and its&#13;
work is approved by the Faculty Senate and administration.&#13;
, -&#13;
Oshkosh transferred this question from the Chanh\:'&#13;
: 4 'V- hirv^or o"&#13;
the Testing Center's office. He said the results go&#13;
directly to the professors, are treated as their personal&#13;
not required to appear in personnel&#13;
' files. He could not c ite any law or university policy to,&#13;
• :p,.; - y P—A&#13;
Madison .does not |jjenerally consider student&#13;
evaluations public information, but the policy may&#13;
^;3Ar.frojry4p&gt;hr-hvieni 4 deer;-; rami. As- rcs.sA are&#13;
used in personnel files. The only law which was cited in&#13;
defense of this system was the Open Meeting Law which&#13;
allows for meetings to be closed due to discussion of&#13;
personnel matters. There was no known university&#13;
policy which would p ertain to the matter.&#13;
Milwaukee seems to have a different policy depending&#13;
upon who you talk to. One office reported that the files&#13;
jj were kept in divisional offices In a semi-private state;&#13;
released to certain people at certain times. Another&#13;
person disagreed with this, saying that all departments&#13;
don't even obtain the evaluations. So, the procedure is&#13;
rather vague, but it does appear that these files, if there&#13;
" are any, are mi public. ' V|&#13;
One administrator at this campus had an interesting&#13;
philosophy concerning public information. He&#13;
unassuredly guessed that student evaluations would&#13;
probably legally be considered public information if&#13;
copies existed apart from personnel files. However, the&#13;
legal question did not seem to mean a great deal to him.&#13;
He said, "I don't see anyone coming off the street has&#13;
the right to see any departmental files...practice and&#13;
»law are different."&#13;
Possibly the man is right In his statement that&#13;
practice and iaw are different. No one seems to know of&#13;
any laws except that concerning open meetings which&#13;
would even hint that student evaluations are confidential,&#13;
yet, these files remain closed. Ranger remains&#13;
in search of the answer.&#13;
L OCT5 I, tor are we,come&#13;
. Contributions of up&#13;
to 250 words are due by Thursday of each week. The&#13;
Ranger editorial staff shall reserve the right to edit&#13;
for length and correct spelling.&#13;
A..' -V&#13;
Mi&#13;
M&#13;
wm&#13;
To Parkside Students:&#13;
Last week, we announced our&#13;
candidacy for the P.S.G.A.&#13;
elections. Kai Nail for President&#13;
of P.S.G.A. and Rusty Tutlewski&#13;
for Vice President. This week we&#13;
will explain in greater detail&#13;
some of the projects and issues&#13;
we would bring into P.S.G.A.&#13;
We have a very effective, plan&#13;
that will allow students the opportunity&#13;
to have a voice in the&#13;
quality of the faculty at Parkside.&#13;
If elected, we would obtain&#13;
copies of all the faculty&#13;
evaluation forms that are filled&#13;
out on faculty members by&#13;
students at the end of this&#13;
semester. During the summer,&#13;
we would compile the data from&#13;
those sheets and have it&#13;
published. The booklet would be&#13;
ready by fall registration and&#13;
students could use this booklet&#13;
when selecting a course.&#13;
If an overall rating of a faculty&#13;
member is fairly low, the&#13;
enrollment in that person's&#13;
classes is going to drop by a large&#13;
amount.&#13;
If an overall rating of a faculty&#13;
member is fairly low, the&#13;
Nail, Tutlewski speak on platform&#13;
enrollment Pnt in flint .. .. ... in that person's&#13;
classes is going to drop by a large&#13;
amount. Professors that are&#13;
rated high will have increased&#13;
class enrollment. Remember, we&#13;
would not make the judgement of&#13;
whether or not a faculty member&#13;
was good or not. This would be&#13;
determined only by. the data from&#13;
the faculty evaluation forms.&#13;
This process would give&#13;
students a big voice as to who&#13;
they think should stay and go. To&#13;
say the least, professors may&#13;
begin to listen when students talk&#13;
about tenure decisions and other&#13;
faculty matters.&#13;
Another very important concern&#13;
is what is going on with the&#13;
Dean of Students Office. The&#13;
position of the Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Student Services was&#13;
vacated when Chancellor Guskin&#13;
removed Allen Dearborn from&#13;
that position. The Chancellor has&#13;
established a Search and Screen&#13;
Committee to review applications&#13;
for the position. But,&#13;
something has been changed in&#13;
the process. The position has&#13;
been cut in half. That's right, and&#13;
the other half is going to take up&#13;
the responsibilities of being boss&#13;
of Academic Staff. That means&#13;
that one person is going to be&#13;
hired to take care of both the area&#13;
of Academic Staff and Student&#13;
Services. Academic Staff include:&#13;
all Lectures and Ad Hoc&#13;
professors, administration&#13;
people, Athletics, Library staff&#13;
and Computer Center Staff.&#13;
Student Services include:&#13;
Counseling, Financial Aids,&#13;
Admissions, Student Records,&#13;
P.S.G.A., Student Life, P.A.B.,&#13;
Ranger, all the student&#13;
organizations, Auxiliary Services&#13;
and many more student area.&#13;
We think that students are&#13;
going to be left out in the cold. In&#13;
effect, there will not be any real&#13;
top administrative person that&#13;
will be spending much of their&#13;
time on students.&#13;
The only answer to this&#13;
problem is to notify the Board of&#13;
Regents that this is happening&#13;
and try to put an end to this. If&#13;
this went through, we would be&#13;
the only school in the system that&#13;
does not have a full position in the&#13;
upper administration for&#13;
Dean of Students.&#13;
Because of the limited space,&#13;
we would like to just list the other&#13;
projects we want to bring into&#13;
P.S.G.A. They include: Cooperative&#13;
book store and housing&#13;
project, getting students in on the&#13;
negotiation process when signing&#13;
contracts with the food service&#13;
and book store, an Executive&#13;
Advisory Board, a Wisconsin&#13;
Homestead Tax Credit Service, a&#13;
Financial Aids Service and other&#13;
student service projects.&#13;
We would like the chance to get&#13;
these things going and work w&#13;
students to make P.S.G.A.&#13;
truely representative body,&#13;
want to spread out the resp&#13;
sibility in P.S.G.A. so tl&#13;
decisions that are made, ;&#13;
made with the input of a lot&#13;
people instead of a few, as il&#13;
now.&#13;
We promise to work hard anc&#13;
stick in when things get rou&#13;
We would appreciate your vc&#13;
Thank you. KaiNj&#13;
Rusty Smith Tutlews&#13;
Tenure denial questioned&#13;
the&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
It saddens me greatly that Dr.&#13;
Corwin King was denied on&#13;
Tuesday, 9 March, 1976 both&#13;
tenure and renewal by the&#13;
Division of Humanistic Studies&#13;
Executive Committee. We are&#13;
not only losing someone who&#13;
possesses a high caliber of&#13;
mastery in the school of communications,&#13;
but also a man who&#13;
has demonstrated much interest&#13;
and sensitivity towards his&#13;
students. Certainly there are to&#13;
be found an ample amount of&#13;
professors who excel in one such&#13;
area or the other. However, those&#13;
excelling in both are perhaps far&#13;
and few between.&#13;
I do not believe that his committee&#13;
acted in the best interest&#13;
of student community of this&#13;
campus in its decision to force the&#13;
departure of Dr. King. Nor do 1&#13;
believe it is in the best interest ol&#13;
this student community not tc&#13;
continued on pg 3 &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 31, 1976 3&#13;
Political analysis&#13;
Ronnie barnstorms Racine&#13;
by Mick Andersen&#13;
Considering that the polls in North Carolina had opened only hours&#13;
earlier, with the pundits predicting another step towards Jack Ford&#13;
having a four year option to smoke dope in Lincoln's bedroom, the&#13;
introduction seemed as wistful as it was meant to be ferverent.&#13;
However improbable, bravery overtook discretion and Oshkosh State&#13;
Senator Jack Steinhilber continued, "Ladies and gentlemen, I'd like&#13;
you to welcome the next president of the United States."&#13;
Enter Ronald Reagan, B-movie actor, former governor of the&#13;
nation's most populous state, a fire-eating troglodyte capable of the&#13;
igniting Americana's long smoldering romanticism, and most of a ll,&#13;
friend and foe alike, a "Day of the Locust" glitter-critter, with the&#13;
ability to reveal and inflame the country's innermost secrets about&#13;
itself. The welcome given by a breakfast audience of over 400 persons&#13;
in Racine last Tuesday was proof that Reagan, even if a failing candidate,&#13;
could still wow them.&#13;
Declaring that "free enterprise is under assault for the second&#13;
time this century" and that "profit has become a dirty word" Reagan&#13;
offered a plethora of c onservative rhetoric, as fulsome as the country's&#13;
problems are myriad. "Contrary to the popular opinion, business&#13;
has the least voice in the government" Reagan stated, charging that&#13;
the federal bureaucracy has become the new special interest in&#13;
America today.&#13;
The bureaucrats took a beating in Reagan's speech as the candidate&#13;
enumerated Washington's sins against the populace: an urban&#13;
renewal boondoggle in which for the last twenty years "has destroyed&#13;
three and a half homes for every home built, plagued by&#13;
mismanagement and corruption"; the enormity of the deficit spending&#13;
by the federal government, with all governments ranking off 44&#13;
cents out of ev ery dollar earned and spending hundreds of thousands&#13;
every minute; and welfare, which he charges is not really reaching&#13;
Commentary&#13;
the people who need it the most, while being made available to those&#13;
who don't. In Reagan's view many of th e programs designed to solve&#13;
the nation's social problems have caused overwhelming problems of&#13;
their own. "It used to be that if you built a better mousetrap the people&#13;
would beat a path to your door. Now the government comes along and&#13;
builds a better mouse," he joked to good effect.&#13;
Reagan's solution to the bureaucratization of America is to bring the&#13;
expertise of citizens back into the government. Reagan sees himself as&#13;
an example of what he seeks on the federal level, saying that he never&#13;
intended to seek public office, and did so only to represent the citizen&#13;
against the unwarranted intrusion by the government into the private&#13;
sector.&#13;
On other issues Reagan accused President Ford and Secretary of&#13;
State Henry Kissinger of deception with regard to the nation's military&#13;
strength. "We are no longer number one in the ability to defend ourselves,"&#13;
Reagan warned, adding "I think we can have the will to be&#13;
first again." He also called for the establishment of more nuclear&#13;
power plants to keep the nation from being reliant on imported energy&#13;
sources. "If we don't meet the energy problem we will have a&#13;
recession," Reagan asserted. "With or without an embargo, we will&#13;
have brownouts in industry in five years." Although Reagan supports&#13;
nuclear power in the short run, he sees a role for the private sector to&#13;
develop alternative energy sources, especially in the area of solar&#13;
exploitation.&#13;
Reagan's speech was well received by the well dressed, nearly all&#13;
white audience. The crowd seemed representative of conservative&#13;
AAmerica, anxious, well-intentioned, hungry for the familiarity of the&#13;
old order. If there was a working-class person in the audience,&#13;
someone who worked with their hands, it was not apparent to this&#13;
reporter in his furtive examination of Reagan supporters' appendages.&#13;
Reagan may do well on the gold coast, but as the old Nixon&#13;
crew used to say, "Will he play in Peoria? "&#13;
Need for 'Neo-]&#13;
by David Larsen&#13;
The question has occured within my mind, do we need any form of&#13;
social reform? If one examines our high unemployment rate, our high&#13;
crime rate, and the involvement (or lack of involvement) by our&#13;
{federal, state and local governments in these problems, I would answer&#13;
yes, we need some form of social change within our society. The&#13;
problem then is how do we deal with what is confronting our peoples&#13;
today in the United States.&#13;
Consider that there are a few individuals within our cultural niche,&#13;
i.e., (Harold Geneen, head of IT T), who are scraping vast amounts of&#13;
monev off of the toil and sweat of a large amount of workers. Could not&#13;
some form of federal, state and local governmental arbitration of&#13;
these national and multi-national corporations executives salaries by&#13;
utilized for creating new jobs for the unemployed or used to train new&#13;
workers. I am speaking now of g roup survival not individual survival.&#13;
Can one blame a doctor in California for not practicing when after&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Presidential polit&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
There in the starting gate ladies and gentleman are the thoroughbreds&#13;
of A merican politics, racing for the prize of p resident of t hese&#13;
United States. The bookies have set the odds. Starting for the&#13;
Republicans is Gerald Ford, rated an even bet to retain the&#13;
Republican nomination over a new upstart, Ronald (Smiley) Reagan,&#13;
who is a two to one shot. Ford is steady in all furlongs of the race and&#13;
unless he brakes a leg, he should pull away coming down the stretch.&#13;
The Democrats have a wide field entered in the event. The conservative&#13;
horses start with James Carter, or just "good ole Jimmy" a&#13;
quarterhorse from Georgia who runs with endless energy. Carter has&#13;
run strong in Florida and Illinois and is rated 2 to 1 to win the&#13;
Democratic nomination. Next comes George Corley Wallace, a verteran&#13;
warhose from Alabama. Wallace has much more experience in&#13;
residential races and has run from behind since 1968. He is rated at 3&#13;
to 1 odds. The last of the conservative breed is Henry "Scoop"&#13;
Jackson. Jackson has strong ties with the labor bettors and could be&#13;
the darkhorse in the conservative stable, he is also a 3 to 1 shot.&#13;
For the Liberal-Progressives the frontrunner has to be a Arizona&#13;
sunhorse, Morris Udall, or just "Mo". Mo has also gained strong ties&#13;
with liberal labor bettors and appears to gaining ground on the conservative&#13;
animals. Udall is followed by slightly limping horses by the&#13;
names of Sargeant Shriver and Fred Harris. Udall is a 4 to 1 shot with&#13;
Harris 5 to 1 and Shriver 6 to 1. The most appealing part of this race to&#13;
gambling fanatics are two horses who are biding their time in the&#13;
stable. One hails from Minnesota and is waiting patiently for the other&#13;
horses to clear a path so he can slip through. Hubert H. Humphrey, or&#13;
HHH, is best remembered by race enthusiasts for his impressive&#13;
showing in the 1968 Washinton Sweepstakes. In a photo finish he was&#13;
defeated by Richard Nixon. Humphrey will play havoc at the&#13;
Dmocratic National Convention. No odds have been set for HHH, but&#13;
you can keep him in the back of yo ur sheet. The other horse who may&#13;
be waiting is Ted Kennedy, a quarterhorse from Massachusetts, he is&#13;
the last of the famous Kennedy trio and could also be waiting for the&#13;
Vew Deal' seen&#13;
years of study and experience he is asked to pay an outrageous&#13;
amount of m oney for malpractice insurance. Could they not become&#13;
state or federal employees with wages on a graduating scale according&#13;
to type of practice and skill and then allow plaintiffs to appeal&#13;
to some form of civil or state court system. We need doctors.&#13;
China and Cuba both have a viable form of p risoner rehabilitation&#13;
programs, rather than lock a person away for a few years and then&#13;
release hifti, (or her), resocialize him using behavior modification&#13;
techniques or put him throught some form of ed ucational process so&#13;
that he may become a productive member of o ur society. This undoubtedly&#13;
will reduce the number of returnees to our penal institutions.&#13;
&#13;
What I'm speaking of i s a form of Neo-"New Deal." This country&#13;
needs very drastically a restructuring of many insitutions. Capitalism&#13;
is very rapidly becoming like what hedonism was to the Greeks when&#13;
they flourished as a society.&#13;
ics a horse-race&#13;
other horses to clear a path on the track. This is strictly saved for&#13;
speculative gamblers.&#13;
Other horses that may throw mud if given the chance are Richard J.&#13;
Daley, racing out of Chicago along with his "favorite son" Adlai&#13;
Stevenson Jr. And of course don't forget Edmund Muskie from Maine&#13;
who could kick up a few sparks. So there you have it ladies and gentlemen,&#13;
place your bets and may the best horse win.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Mike Palecek&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Mike Terry&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Mick Andersen&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Thorn Aiello&#13;
VISAGE EDITOR: jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
PRODUCTION MANAGER: Bruce Wagner&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Cathy Brnak&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Gerry Ferch&#13;
PHOTO EDITOR: Michael Nepper&#13;
WRITERS: Judy Trudrung (events), Betsy Neu, Carol Arentz,&#13;
Thomas A. Merrram, Fred Johnson, Diane Carlson, Phil Hermann^&#13;
Terri Gayhart, Ron Parker, David Brandt, Kai Nail, Bill Barke,'&#13;
Thomas Heinz, Terry A. Maraccini&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, jeffrey j. swencki, Terri&#13;
Gayhart, Van Thompson&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is written and edited by the students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside who are solely responsible for its&#13;
editorial policy and content. Editorial and Business 553-2287;&#13;
..Newsroom 553-2295.&#13;
Commoner&#13;
to speak on&#13;
energy,&#13;
environment,&#13;
employment&#13;
Environmentalist Barry&#13;
Commoner will keynote an allday&#13;
conference on "Energy, the&#13;
Environment and Employment"&#13;
at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
on Saturday, April 10, in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Dr. Commoner is director of&#13;
the Center for Biology of N atural&#13;
Systems and professor of environmental&#13;
science at&#13;
Washington University, St. Louis,&#13;
and author of a book, "The&#13;
Closing Circle," which attributes&#13;
blame for the environmental&#13;
crisis on misuse of technology&#13;
and refutes theories which cite&#13;
the population explosion as the&#13;
principal culprit. The volume&#13;
won the 1972 Phi Beta Kappa&#13;
Award and the 1973 International&#13;
Prize for Safeguarding the Environment.&#13;
&#13;
In his pioneering studies at the&#13;
Center for Biology of Natural&#13;
Systems, the first of its kind in&#13;
the United States, Commoner has&#13;
involved both science and social&#13;
science disciplines in tracing the&#13;
roots of e nviornmental problems&#13;
to political and social systems.&#13;
The conference is open to the&#13;
public and is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, University Extension,&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens&#13;
for the Environment, Scientists'&#13;
Institute for Public Information,&#13;
a national group which provides&#13;
technical and scientific information&#13;
as a basis*for public&#13;
judgements, and the Committee&#13;
for Jobs and the Environment, a&#13;
newly-formed coalition of area&#13;
representatives of environmental,&#13;
labor and consumer&#13;
interests, headed by Parkside&#13;
earth science professor Henry S.&#13;
Cole and Ruben Carreno,&#13;
president of Local 1403, Retail&#13;
Clerks AFL-CIO.&#13;
Registration information is&#13;
available from the University&#13;
Extension Office at Parkside&#13;
(Phone 553-2312). The&#13;
registration fee of $6 includes&#13;
lunch. Students and senior&#13;
citizens may register for $3 including&#13;
lunch or for $1 not including&#13;
lunch. Sessions begin&#13;
with registration at 8:45 a.m. and&#13;
end at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
continued from pg. 2&#13;
have students to represent their&#13;
community on this committee.&#13;
We haven't even a token. Bah,&#13;
humbug to the Henny Youngmans&#13;
of this university. It's time that&#13;
students have the chance to&#13;
crack a few jokes in these matters&#13;
too. Unfortunately as this&#13;
things stand now, with the loss of&#13;
Dr. King and the non-students&#13;
participation in that decision, the&#13;
jokes are on us. Well, I for one am&#13;
not laughing. I think its time that&#13;
either the act cleans up its&#13;
material, or that we start&#13;
looking for a new act. Funny...&#13;
Glen A. Christensen&#13;
Communications and&#13;
Psychology Major &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 31, 1976&#13;
Student union nears completion&#13;
A look at the&#13;
bazaar from&#13;
the second floor&#13;
of the union.&#13;
&lt;_&#13;
photos by Michael Nepper&#13;
^&#13;
On lunch break,&#13;
a worker contemplates&#13;
the rest of the working&#13;
day while sitting in the&#13;
second floor corridor.&#13;
Students will be able&#13;
to enjoy a scenic view&#13;
of Petrifying Springs while&#13;
dining in the second floor&#13;
dining room.&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
The Student Union is currently on schedule for&#13;
completion in August, according to Brien Murray,&#13;
assistant director of Planning and Construction.&#13;
The self-amortising structure is almost complete&#13;
with the roof yet to be complete and the glass to be fully&#13;
installed.&#13;
Since the bridge between the classroom building and&#13;
the Union is being used as a deliver point, the glass is&#13;
only 40 percent installed. The seling of the roof has&#13;
been delayed because of the rain and snow that the&#13;
area had a few weeks and the building needs to dry out&#13;
before they complete any final work on the roof.&#13;
The construction crews are now busily working on&#13;
the interior drywall and masonry while those departments&#13;
who will be running the structure are in the&#13;
process of deciding on the colors for the Union and the&#13;
types of furniture for each area of the building.&#13;
• Murray stated that the bowling lanes, slated for the&#13;
basement of the building should be completed roughly&#13;
a month thereafter on August first.&#13;
The Office of Student Life, which will be directly&#13;
responsible for the operation, will have its&#13;
headquarters on the second level, which will also include&#13;
the poster shop, as well as all Student Life functions.&#13;
This level will also contain a meeting area for&#13;
groups and the main mechanical systems for the&#13;
building.&#13;
"The 'bazaar,' " stated Murray, "is a smaller Main&#13;
Place with a character of its own." The two story area&#13;
of th e Union will contain a campus convenience store,&#13;
the entrances to the box office of the 400 seat cinema&#13;
theater, and the "rathskellar."&#13;
As an extension of the concourse in the new union,&#13;
the bridge runs into the first level of the building, which&#13;
has the main food service area. This area seats 500-600&#13;
people. A. much larger meeting rrom, along with a&#13;
small lounge and the cinema theatre's control area is&#13;
also on this floor.&#13;
The ground level of the Union contains the bottom&#13;
level of the "bazaar" and the main entrance to various&#13;
functions of the Union.&#13;
The "rathskellar" is not the name of the entertainment&#13;
area as Murray states, but a genetic name&#13;
for the "rough and fun" area, which will be a combination&#13;
of the Student Activities Building and the&#13;
current Skellar.&#13;
Downstairs is the game area and a possible coffeehouse.&#13;
The D2 level contains various amusement&#13;
tables along with the aforementioned bowling lanes.&#13;
The coffeehouse needs lighting and several other&#13;
things before it is complete, including the money.&#13;
Outside of the new Union is an area for outdoor activities&#13;
located just outside the "rathskellar" area,&#13;
which will be used for the end of school activities&#13;
known as "THE END," or for pickup softball or&#13;
football games.&#13;
With all this activity going on in the Union, what will&#13;
happen to the other end of the campus at the Library&#13;
Learning Center? RANGER talked to some of the&#13;
parties involved and the report will appear in next&#13;
week's RANGER.&#13;
NEXT: What happens to the Library-Learning&#13;
Center? '&#13;
A worker signals the crane operator to lower him to the floor&#13;
of the bazaar. &#13;
193g&gt;A(giE&#13;
m&#13;
1 ^$2* "fa**&#13;
UumW Vtr eVterv&#13;
%fefer^&#13;
wss or agsp&#13;
joir 1^e&#13;
orjerjgs? ojp&#13;
•&#13;
2?eZJ /c c/s music&#13;
THE N ATIONAL TOURING COMPANY P RESENTS&#13;
LIVE ON S TAGE&#13;
"A theatrical miracle" - Life Magazine.&#13;
Direct from New York to Racine&#13;
Tuesday, April 6, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, April 7, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
at&#13;
RACINE MEMORIAL HALL&#13;
72 - 7th St., Racine&#13;
Tickets now on sale at:&#13;
• Memorial Hall Box Office (Racine)&#13;
• Sears (Racine and Kenosha)&#13;
• J &amp; J's Audio Capital (Racine &amp; Kenosha)&#13;
• Beautiful Day (Racine) • One Sweet Dream (Kenosha)&#13;
*5 &amp; *6 reserve seats&#13;
RACINE MEMORIAL HALL&#13;
\yFQR TICKET INFORMATION AND GROUP DISCOUNTS CALL 636-9169 J&#13;
the underlying meaning&#13;
(of (anything of s orts) )&#13;
lies between the lines&#13;
of a worried man's face.&#13;
between the black printed letters of sp ace&#13;
myself You see&#13;
the black printed letters my soul emits&#13;
emptied by Your black printed words&#13;
upon a memory too long held&#13;
and the rhythm goes on&#13;
and the words don't stop&#13;
and i return by night&#13;
to ball bounding bouncing&#13;
back &amp; back&#13;
from wall &amp; wall&#13;
in lone child one child tennis game&#13;
to ball of pocketless pool b reak&#13;
ing sunrise.&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
Galaxy Set&#13;
I had to evoke a giant troll&#13;
while sterling toads&#13;
grasped at scarabs.&#13;
Reformationkind&#13;
of s trange&#13;
yeh,&#13;
sure,&#13;
giggle, giggle&#13;
meanings phrased.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
Chicago's&#13;
econd S Citv&#13;
improvisational&#13;
theater at&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
7:30 pm Apr.3&#13;
Comm Arts&#13;
Theater&#13;
w&#13;
ADM.&#13;
$2, public - $1.50,&#13;
UW-P students&#13;
Tickets at&#13;
the Info Center&#13;
in Main Place&#13;
by Thomas S. Heinz&#13;
Musicians, in a sense, live in a world of their own. A&#13;
world, full of soul searching, and the never ending&#13;
quest for the magical chord or the mystical key. A&#13;
world many of us think we understand, but we barely&#13;
manage to skim the crust. For there are wanderers,&#13;
lost in the hype of "t op forty" who worship their AM&#13;
radio as a saint. We have the heavy-duty FM club at&#13;
Space Headquarters, who have their "heads together",&#13;
but don't mention Chuck Mangione, they may mistake&#13;
it for a new munchie delight at "Submarine City."&#13;
Timothy Bell, a member of our music faculty, is a&#13;
prime example of a person who doesn't listen to music,&#13;
he feels it. His concentrated charisma, be it in&#13;
class, or on stage, directing and playing with our Jazz&#13;
Ensemble is quite apparent. His talent on the sax and&#13;
clarinet is remarkable.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, he was a musician, on&#13;
the road day after day, searching for the new lick in the&#13;
game of improvisation, for he was a jazz man. A jazz&#13;
man who san the blues, whenever the blues crept into&#13;
his sax. I'm sure he lived and died in between cities, for&#13;
this I give him credit, and my respect, for the road is&#13;
the ture root fof the blues.&#13;
Arise, Jazz Appreciation 206, with instructor&#13;
Timothy Bell. An opportunity to express inner -&#13;
release, for a man who'ioves the stage, who may per&#13;
form here today, and not have to travel to Dubuque&#13;
tomorrow. If all the professors and students had his&#13;
enthusiasm in class, the learning process would no&#13;
longer be a chore, but a pleasure. So if you're not into&#13;
jazz, take it to learn about a dynamic entity, you might&#13;
find yourself learning and appreciating both.&#13;
But what I enjoy most, is professor Bell putting on a&#13;
Cannonball Adderly album and watching his facial&#13;
expression as he eleaborates "This cooks".&#13;
LIFE&#13;
For if you walk ahead,&#13;
there is no one to follow.&#13;
But if you walk behind,&#13;
the pace is not yours,&#13;
walk side by side,&#13;
and have no fear;&#13;
to hold a hand.&#13;
Thomas S. Heinz&#13;
J"4&#13;
'&#13;
new kindergarten&#13;
nev nursery&#13;
X see &lt;*. Kcxvigcvroo&#13;
V\opp'»my e.*yes&#13;
LooK inside -Hie poocK&#13;
ojaA. see a. Svrpr'ifie&#13;
3*y Ke j L&#13;
New Kindergarten is on open classroom program, based primarily on the&#13;
developmental theory of Jean Piaget - stressing individual oriented learning&#13;
experiences through a rich and diverse environment that works within&#13;
developmental stages, not chronological age.&#13;
In short, New Kindergarten is an exceptional school for children. Sound&#13;
interesting??? There will be an open informational meeting on Monday,&#13;
April S, at "New Kindergarten" located in:&#13;
St. J OSEPH H IGH S CHOOL&#13;
2401 - 69th St., Kenohsa Phone: 654-6536&#13;
For more information, call Karen Malsch at 654-7389&#13;
To My Lady of the SEA (C.H.F.)&#13;
Living Loving Laughing&#13;
so far away,&#13;
togetherness yesterday&#13;
now,&#13;
the joy of growing alone,&#13;
accept your fertility;&#13;
Bloom F orever!&#13;
Thomas S. Heinz&#13;
Upon hearing another word...&#13;
Life is a thing to be lost, according to some people.&#13;
Someone I know fought for a long&#13;
time&#13;
to&#13;
keep&#13;
but lost. ^&#13;
I wanted to bring her back, everyone knows it.&#13;
but I do&#13;
remember&#13;
her in&#13;
my&#13;
ever-saddened&#13;
mind.&#13;
which&#13;
(sort of)&#13;
brings her caresses and&#13;
life back...&#13;
but there&#13;
still remains&#13;
the&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
s&#13;
s&#13;
I and others feel,&#13;
bruce wagner &#13;
6&#13;
Poetrydestroys&#13;
minds&#13;
Fritz Perls tells us that Actualized People don't brag&#13;
about it. Although this bit of psychiatric dogma means&#13;
that few of us will have the chance to converse freely&#13;
with an actualized person, it does prevent them from&#13;
having the evangelistic tirades that other religious&#13;
people so often impose.&#13;
The religion which places the most emphasis on its&#13;
members "giving the Word to the world" is the&#13;
Religion of Imagery (or Poetry). As with other&#13;
religions, most of the membership is silent and of those&#13;
who do spread the Word there are those who do so with&#13;
style, originality, and flair. The majority of the&#13;
followers of this faith spread the word with stolen&#13;
styles, ideas that haven't anything new aside from&#13;
their punctuation, and strings of words so incomparably&#13;
incoherent that a poem of only 5 lines&#13;
quickly transforms one from a state of inquiry into a&#13;
state of bored confusion.&#13;
Perhaps it would be acceptable for poets to use their&#13;
queer imageries if they were used because it was the&#13;
best way to put across an emotion or idea. Unfortunately,&#13;
the imagery is used when the poet wants&#13;
us to become aware of the inner recesses of his mind&#13;
and personality and in other such cases where the&#13;
subject is hard enough to understand correctly without&#13;
having to muddle (and sometimes, hack) your way&#13;
through the poets weird imageries in order to reach his&#13;
even weirder mind.&#13;
The glowing generalizations that poets use often&#13;
serve to simply obscure the poet's feelings towards&#13;
specifics of e veryday life. Poets are often attempting&#13;
to represent such abstract items as compassion&#13;
and love by using such statements as "Knowing how&#13;
much it means to you to do the things you do, I want&#13;
you to know I'm with you which every way you&#13;
choose." While knowing that the author of this poem&#13;
claims that he will accept me however I happen to be, I&#13;
am left unsure as to whether the poet would not withdraw&#13;
his hand if he noticed that my forearm was&#13;
pocketed with needle marks or whether he would offer&#13;
the same non-judgemental acceptance if I were a&#13;
torturer of Haitian political prisoners.&#13;
The sad fact of literary life is that the general public&#13;
is possessed with little taste in such matters as poetry&#13;
and those poets who are capable of making the most&#13;
sweeping generalizations about how the world would&#13;
be if it were theirs to manipulate and control will&#13;
probably find that such endeavors bring financial&#13;
success and social prestige. Allen Ginsberg, a writer,&#13;
once proclaimed that he had seen "the best minds of&#13;
my generation destroyed by madness." The poet slips&#13;
farther and farther into his land of imagery despite the&#13;
cries of fellow humans to be viewed as they really are&#13;
rather than to be viewed as analogies. The elimination&#13;
of hu man excrement is presently viewed as beneficial&#13;
only for the excreter. The excrement of poets are&#13;
beneficial to no one except the feceologists like myself&#13;
who fear that they may someday be compelled to howl,&#13;
"I have seen the best minds of my generation&#13;
destroyed by poetry."&#13;
Name withehld upon request&#13;
Title Remarks&#13;
The king spelt scenes&#13;
little rubbed&#13;
by strong ratings&#13;
It's not difficult&#13;
for figures to change.&#13;
It's completed because&#13;
we saw figures&#13;
read by dissolving bells&#13;
while other bodies&#13;
sang for a life&#13;
long sought by violence.&#13;
Doonan&#13;
Living on the Lane&#13;
As I walk down poetry lane,&#13;
I search for the words,&#13;
that will ignite the inferno&#13;
of understanding,&#13;
between you and I.&#13;
My life on Poetry Lane;&#13;
Mirrored walls and ceilings&#13;
Reassure me;&#13;
There exists,&#13;
a me.&#13;
Thomas S. Heinz&#13;
come rhyme&#13;
well&#13;
inside you&#13;
is forever&#13;
and i&#13;
nearing.&#13;
museums and women&#13;
Love poems&#13;
bear children,&#13;
Ghosts&#13;
conceived in womb,&#13;
Quiver to wiggle&#13;
through slipstream&#13;
chamber.&#13;
"A play in darkness,"&#13;
muses the supernatural,&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
fne&amp;eut*&#13;
€ut often ftoe&amp;uf xeaduuf&#13;
7{2{J^P Student* &amp; paeutty&#13;
Apult4t6,. Zp*K&#13;
2nd oventaaA lounge&#13;
My Wrist is limp.&#13;
Pondering a limpened wrist while SUCKING on&#13;
a straw in a glass of koolaid I feel Horny.&#13;
Swirling seating sensous GRAPE - CHERRY that&#13;
rolls in the glass pulsating sex.&#13;
I could marry you watery wonderful mix,&#13;
But what would our kids say? Their mouths HANG&#13;
open with questions of&#13;
SUGAR FREE DOCTOR PEPPER. What will we&#13;
say? (Un - other problem to solve.).&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
APEACE&#13;
on a day of melting&#13;
on a day of&#13;
melting snow and wind&#13;
You enter me&#13;
cardinal shrill&#13;
canticles to robins&#13;
walking&#13;
the dancing trees&#13;
this is a rapise to&#13;
You and sunlife&#13;
You, Lord&#13;
whose names are great&#13;
the light i see&#13;
in the darkness of myself now&#13;
lives&#13;
with the first ray&#13;
of&#13;
day&#13;
You are the dawn&#13;
Lord&#13;
that i could become&#13;
a part of&#13;
You as&#13;
You became a part of me in the&#13;
ago&#13;
the knowledge of&#13;
Your beauty elates me&#13;
the perfection of&#13;
Your faith in us&#13;
causes me shame in our lack&#13;
of&#13;
You&#13;
joy to my heart is&#13;
Your Peace&#13;
on a day of&#13;
melted snow and wind&#13;
You enter me&#13;
new buds rise&#13;
as if their third day had&#13;
arrived&#13;
growing&#13;
the dancing limbs&#13;
of dancing trees&#13;
the sunlife and i&#13;
praise&#13;
You, Lord&#13;
whose names are great&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
jazz sax&#13;
somewhere&#13;
between jazz sax and juke box&#13;
evolving dimness&#13;
bottom of blues begins -&#13;
silent words,&#13;
notes, floating smoke waves breath&#13;
reflecting&#13;
glass filling ashtray bottle of beer -&#13;
Time&#13;
suspends winding itself &amp; i wander Your face&#13;
digging thru&#13;
memories of smiles living on alone&#13;
behind the liquor lights nights&#13;
lacking&#13;
You -&#13;
chase You in moments of gone&#13;
when street corner bus stops happen&#13;
too late for peace change&#13;
&amp; drifting&#13;
thoughts cycle&#13;
stoplights -&#13;
now it begins&#13;
bottom of blues swaying in stagnent breeze&#13;
running over our faces&#13;
running into the ni-gh-ts&#13;
running brimmed by hats &amp; hair &amp; hoods &amp; hells&#13;
untold ungone uncontrollable uncoordinatable&#13;
dream&#13;
by day&#13;
bye&#13;
word of soul -&#13;
somehwere&#13;
between jazz sax and juke box&#13;
eye emits&#13;
a bloody tear -&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
and all human dreams&#13;
so we beat on boats&#13;
and old islands,&#13;
as the moon rises high&#13;
over this blue lawn,&#13;
a fairyboat crosses vast obscurity,&#13;
and lowers Dutch sailors' eyes,&#13;
vanishing trees&#13;
in whispers&#13;
beyond city&#13;
gradually i become aware&#13;
of fresh green breats&#13;
and dark fields&#13;
believe in the green light.&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
life and death of a salem witch&#13;
found himself earthbound&#13;
doomed to live&#13;
and feel&#13;
and love&#13;
lodt in the carcass of a dead cat&#13;
once again to live&#13;
take my soul and destroy it&#13;
I have no further use for it&#13;
never shall I find myself trapped in another animal&#13;
forgiving my ritousness&#13;
or forgiving others&#13;
but I shall lose all thoughts of you&#13;
and start my life with death&#13;
Hyram Alouisious&#13;
COCKTAILS QUIET&#13;
24th and 25th on 60th St. Kenosha. Wisconsin &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 31, 1976 7&#13;
Kenosha Mall&#13;
Downtown revitalized&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
by Mike Palecek&#13;
The Central Business District&#13;
(CBD) has been described as&#13;
having congested streets with&#13;
inadequate parking facilities and&#13;
off-street loading facilities. It is&#13;
not compactly organized for&#13;
shopper convenience and difficult&#13;
to redevelop because of overvalue&#13;
of land and ownership by a&#13;
great many persons, many of&#13;
which are nonresidents, who&#13;
often cannot agree on policies of&#13;
renovation. The CBD is generally&#13;
old in appearance, unattractive&#13;
and lacking in an architecturally&#13;
integrated design.&#13;
Unless one can see such an&#13;
example, this description serve&#13;
only the uses of a student in urban&#13;
studies. But the above described&#13;
situation was a pretty accurate&#13;
summary of downtown Kenosha&#13;
two years ago.&#13;
Last chance&#13;
At that time, businessmen had&#13;
criticized the mall.&#13;
The Titan article charged that:&#13;
1) there is garbage all over the&#13;
place, 2) no new stores have yet&#13;
located in or near the mall, 3) the&#13;
mall did not raise the tax base, 4)&#13;
there is no outside competition to&#13;
the downtown mall, 5) the maU is&#13;
not enclosed, 6) the mall is not&#13;
expansive, 7) there was no&#13;
taxpayer contribution to the&#13;
mall, and 8) the mall has not been&#13;
accepted by the public.&#13;
The Titan article can easily be&#13;
refuted. Yes, there are times&#13;
when there is garbage on the&#13;
Kenosha mall, as a Titan photo&#13;
showed in their article. But little&#13;
has been said about the mall&#13;
being cleaned daily by the city&#13;
because it is a public road.&#13;
New stores have located in the&#13;
mall area very recently, and&#13;
other businesses have moderCanopy&#13;
planned&#13;
Dickleman stated that an&#13;
enclosed mall in Kenosha was a&#13;
severe hazard, for if fire would&#13;
ever break out, the fire would&#13;
sweep the mall with a tunneling&#13;
effect, leaping from store to&#13;
store, many of which are nonfireproof,&#13;
and would be impossible&#13;
to fight. For this reason,&#13;
the enclosed mall was prohibited&#13;
from use in downtown Kenosha.&#13;
A substitute for a temperaturecontrolled&#13;
mall, a canopy of&#13;
oxidized steel and a transparent&#13;
plastic is being planned for future&#13;
construction. This would protect&#13;
shoppers from rain and snow&#13;
along most of the mall.&#13;
The mall is only three blocks in&#13;
length, with two "anchors,"&#13;
temperature controlled bus&#13;
stations. The mall is not expansive,&#13;
because it is not expensive,&#13;
according to Dickleman.&#13;
The mall was paid for by the&#13;
businessmen whose stores meet&#13;
the mall. Only the sewage work&#13;
already attempted twice to&#13;
renovate the area, but to no avail.&#13;
According to Ralph Dickleman,&#13;
president of the Downtown&#13;
Kenosha Association (DKA),&#13;
local businessmen felt that this&#13;
era was their last chance for&#13;
improvement downtown. This&#13;
was due to action by the city to&#13;
rip up the streets to put in&#13;
separate storm sewers from&#13;
regular piping systems. Without&#13;
separate storm sewers, when&#13;
there was a heavy rain, the&#13;
sewage system would overflow&#13;
into Lake Michigan.&#13;
Dickleman said that the DKA&#13;
studies possibilities for downtown&#13;
renovation. There were&#13;
possibilities for fully enclosed&#13;
malls, open malls without street&#13;
intersection, partial malls, and&#13;
the current mall, an open mall&#13;
with street intersection hut with&#13;
no traffic allowed on the mall&#13;
itself. This pedestrian mall has&#13;
future plans for canopy construction&#13;
of metal and glass-like&#13;
material guard walkers from the&#13;
weather.&#13;
Titan studies mall&#13;
Dickleman told the Ranger that&#13;
many citizen groups come to&#13;
Wisconsin's only pedestrian mall&#13;
to study it. One recent group,&#13;
several reporters from the UWOshkosh&#13;
Advance Titan, recently&#13;
nized, including Republic&#13;
Savings, and nearby Lake&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
Tax base high&#13;
It is not necessarily good for&#13;
the downtown tax base, which is&#13;
extremely high, to increase,&#13;
since that rate will be passed on&#13;
to the consumer. Dickleman felt&#13;
that downtown was already being&#13;
taxed too much and received less&#13;
services than other areas of the&#13;
city (such as trash collection and&#13;
educational services). City officials&#13;
stated that they predict an&#13;
increase in the not-to-distant&#13;
future.&#13;
Dickleman agreed with the&#13;
Titan article expressing that&#13;
there was no other mall competition&#13;
in Kenosha, but that&#13;
Kenosha has to compete with&#13;
mall-like Pershing Plaza, as well&#13;
as uptown Kenosha on 22nd Ave.,&#13;
and the agglomerations on the&#13;
south side, surrounding downtown,&#13;
near Villa Capri and along&#13;
Roosevelt Road. Kenosha&#13;
merchants, he said, must also&#13;
compete, with Racine shopping&#13;
centers and malls and business&#13;
districts in both metro-Chicago&#13;
and Milwaukee.&#13;
and some street improvement&#13;
was paid for by the taxpayers.&#13;
Mall's success&#13;
Asking whether the mall has&#13;
been fully accepted by the public,&#13;
is a difficult question to answer.&#13;
Downtown businessmen feel that&#13;
it will be, but after only five&#13;
months of operation, it is hard to&#13;
say for sure. According to&#13;
Dickleman, DKA members had&#13;
unusual prosperity during&#13;
November, December and part of&#13;
January, with business dropping&#13;
off during mid-January and into&#13;
February. He attributes the dropoff&#13;
to city unrest and layoffs. The&#13;
only way to measure for sure is to&#13;
look back on earnings and see if&#13;
earnings are higher than the&#13;
regional average. If so, then the&#13;
mall is truely successful.&#13;
It's too early to tell, but maybe&#13;
the DKA has solved the Central&#13;
Business District problem, at&#13;
least in Kenosha.&#13;
Capsule college&#13;
Capsule College '76, an&#13;
academic and cultural program&#13;
for the community, as well as for&#13;
interested students, will be held&#13;
April 21 and 22 at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside. Deadline&#13;
for reservations is April 5.&#13;
The registration fee, which&#13;
includes luncheon, is $6 per day.&#13;
(There are additional nominal&#13;
materials fees for several of the&#13;
sessions.)&#13;
IRISH SETTERS 2 mo. old, champion&#13;
bloodline, wormed, trained, AKC registered,&#13;
$100 Call Dinesh Sharma (608) 221 4149.&#13;
REWARD OFFERED Turquoise Bracelet&#13;
lost at U.W.P. High Sentimental Value. If&#13;
found please call 639 2783.&#13;
31,7&#13;
FOR SALE: Camera 8. gadget bag. 2 outside&#13;
pockets, fashionable brown leather and&#13;
tweed $4. Mike, 859 3102 a fter 6 p .m.&#13;
31,7&#13;
PLEASE NOTE . Photography and Sorority&#13;
people, the letters that you will receive are&#13;
incorrect as to the dates, the meeting is on&#13;
Tuesday, March 30, not March 29. Bridge&#13;
and Foreign Students people, your date is&#13;
also incorrect; it is April 1, not March 31.&#13;
FOR SALE: BSR turntable, Realistic&#13;
assette deck plus various prerecorded&#13;
cassettes. Whole package only $175 or make&#13;
an offer. Call 552-7113 after 6 and ask for,&#13;
Bruce,&#13;
PERSONAL: Bob Thomason, Tim Bell and&#13;
Glenn Doston see you at "Young&#13;
Frankenstein" or else an F in movie at&#13;
tendance.&#13;
PERSONAL: T.K. sorry I missed you at the&#13;
phone booth, see you at "Young Franken&#13;
stein" Thurs. April 1, 7:30 S.A.B.&#13;
FOR SALE: Camping tent, 2 antique chairs.&#13;
633 1724 o r 553 2476.&#13;
31.7&#13;
FOR SALE: '73 Comet - 6cyl., automatic, air&#13;
cond., extra wharp, best offer. Call after 5 30&#13;
p.m. 694 3639.&#13;
7 31&#13;
FOR SALE: 1964 C HEVELLE, auto, 6 cyl.,&#13;
good body, interior, AM and tape, snowtires.&#13;
Best offer. Must sell 654-9351.&#13;
31,7&#13;
IRISH SETTERS 2 mo. old, champion&#13;
bloodline, wormed, trained. AKC registered,&#13;
$100. Call Dinesh Sharma (608) 221 4149.&#13;
:H IC AGO - LUXEMBOURG- CHICAGO&#13;
GROUP DEPARTURE5&#13;
f^AY 30-31,1976&#13;
544 State St.&#13;
Madison, Wis.&#13;
53703&#13;
(608) 256-5551&#13;
Minimum group size 25 people. Applies only to U.W.-Parkside&#13;
students, faculty, staff and their immediate families.&#13;
cay* a. - •&#13;
PLEASE 5&amp;MD ME&#13;
INFORMATION! ABOUT&#13;
ICELANDIC FLIGHTS&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS.&#13;
PHONE.&#13;
S44 State St.&#13;
f"ladisc*\,U)is. S3T03&#13;
(60S) 2.S6-S5SI&#13;
VINO'S&#13;
Northside 3728 D ouglas&#13;
639-7115&#13;
Southside 1816-16th St.&#13;
634-1991&#13;
FINE F OODS&#13;
&amp; C OCKTAILS&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
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LASAGANA&#13;
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BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
HEY PARKSIDE!!&#13;
Oly Draft is Here&#13;
"Its the Water ®&#13;
OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY OLYMPIA • ST. PAUL&#13;
Dist. by C.J.W. Inc.&#13;
3637 - 30th Avenue. Kenosha &#13;
8 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER March 31, 1976&#13;
)^Gra&lt;^Scho^&#13;
by Dave Brandt&#13;
If there were one common goal held by all college students it would&#13;
be to graduate. And, upon graduating, if there were one common&#13;
decision it would be to choose between pursuing a graduate degree or&#13;
seeking employment.&#13;
In a two part series we'll explore these two alternatives and present&#13;
the pros and cons of each. First a look at pursuing a graduate degree&#13;
Then, next week, a look at seeking employment.&#13;
To begin with, graduate study in business is not just for the business&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club if]Joseph.&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
•STEREO C OMPONENTS&#13;
Tapedecks, televisions &amp; complete&#13;
turntable packages&#13;
WHOLESALE PRICES&#13;
All major brands available,&#13;
all guaranteed&#13;
HEILEMAN'S&#13;
43 Id Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On tap at the Skellar&#13;
With vacation time fast approaching,&#13;
many of you will no doubt be traveling&#13;
to Mexico. Some of you. might even be&#13;
coming back. Here are some helpful&#13;
hints.&#13;
1. A man on a burro always has the&#13;
right of way, unless he. appears to be&#13;
a weakling.&#13;
2. In local cantinas, pouring a shot of&#13;
Cuervo down a man's collar is not&#13;
thought to be humorous.&#13;
3. Failing onto a cactus, even an&#13;
actual Cuervo cactus, can be&#13;
a sticky proposition.&#13;
4. It is tough to find hamburger&#13;
"rolls in the smaller towns; it's&#13;
best to bring your own.&#13;
major. "Business, like law school, has people coming in from all over&#13;
the map. There is no special requirement, no pet curriculum as far as&#13;
we're concerned," says Harold Metcalf, Director of Alumni and&#13;
Student Affairs at the University of C hicago Business School. Take&#13;
Harvard for instance, roughly 53 percent of thi s year's entering class&#13;
came from the humanities or social sciences, with 15 percent from&#13;
business administration, 20 percent engineering, and 12 percent pure&#13;
science. It's a wide open degree and a good many non-business majors&#13;
are taking advantage of it.&#13;
Probably the single most frequently sighted reason for pursuing a&#13;
graduate business degree is because of the increased opportunities.&#13;
According to Dean Metcalf MBA's can claim more job offerings with&#13;
higher starting salaries and faster promotions then people directly&#13;
from college. Business schools see a masters degree in their field as&#13;
the key to the job market. Many admission directors see the demand&#13;
for managers surpassing even the demand for lawyers in the next ten&#13;
to fifteen years.&#13;
If y ou're not sure you want to pursue an MBA degree right away,&#13;
you ca n defer entrance for a year or more and get some practical&#13;
knowledge. T.J. Gibson of the University of Texas law school is&#13;
strongly in favor of this approach and states, "I don't think that&#13;
there's any doubt that the more experience a person has had, the more&#13;
meaningful school is to them." Harvard Business school seems to&#13;
agree with this philosophy as only 120 of this year's incoming class of&#13;
750 came directly from college.&#13;
What do graduate schools of business look for in prospective&#13;
students? Morris Gelblum of U.N.C. Law says that "the majority of&#13;
schools in the country are making their decision on applicants on&#13;
essentially two factors; grade point average and test scores.&#13;
If admissions isn't the problem then it's probably paying for it once&#13;
you get in. If this is the case then you should look for a tuition reimbursement&#13;
program. Basically these programs provide for employees&#13;
of corporations to attend the University's night MBA sessions with the&#13;
company paying up to 80 percent of the bill. It's a standard feature of&#13;
industries across the country. Both the University of Chicago Business&#13;
School and the Advanced Management Institute at Lake Forest have&#13;
such programs.&#13;
I wish I could claim all this brilliant empirical research, but such is&#13;
not the case. This article is based on information from the Business&#13;
Today staff of Princeton University and they have summed up the&#13;
siutation quite well. "The only way to approach the incredible range of&#13;
directions got for the years after college is to investigate as many&#13;
possibilities, as thoroughly as possible and recognize that in graduate&#13;
school programs and career options there are no sterotypes."&#13;
Internship program generates&#13;
enthusiasm, rewards&#13;
by Terri Gayhart&#13;
"I hope that the administration&#13;
is farsighted enough to provide&#13;
funds to expand the internship&#13;
program."&#13;
Such was the enthusiasm&#13;
displayed by Student Dean Nees&#13;
towards the newly organized&#13;
political science internship&#13;
program.&#13;
The student interns receive&#13;
between 3 and 12 credits for work&#13;
in the surrounding communities&#13;
related to political science. Their&#13;
opportunities range from&#13;
working in a congressman's&#13;
office, or the police department,&#13;
to working with the public&#13;
defenders.&#13;
Each intern is required to read&#13;
from 3 to 6 books and write a&#13;
paper from 5 to 20 pages in length&#13;
relating their experiences to their&#13;
reading. The participants are&#13;
also expected to keep a daily&#13;
IMPORTED AND B&#13;
JOSE CUERVO* TEQUILA. 80 PROOF&#13;
OTTLED BY ©1975. HEUBLEIN. INC.. HARTFORD. CONN.&#13;
Spring is Cycling Season&#13;
to get your bicycle in shape, why not try our&#13;
Spring Check-up&#13;
All Bikes *9.95&#13;
with each check-up we inspect and adjust your gears,&#13;
brakes, hubs and cones, bottom bracket, headset, tires&#13;
(pressure), and tighten all nuts and bolts&#13;
Specializing in Miyata &amp; Jeunet&#13;
They are here - the complete line&#13;
of Viscount bicycles and accessories&#13;
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY BICYCLES&#13;
1647 Taylor Ave.&#13;
Racine, WI&#13;
634-3009&#13;
I&#13;
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OPEN&#13;
MON.-fRI. 10 o.m. - 8 p.i&#13;
SAT. 10 o.m. - 6 p.m.&#13;
CLOSED SUNDAY&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
J&#13;
journal describing work done and&#13;
insights into the legal system or&#13;
government.&#13;
Chris Meyer's internship is in&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin's office&#13;
doing case work, however, since&#13;
Aspin has endorsed Mo Udall for&#13;
president, Chris has been&#13;
working on his campaign. She&#13;
has organized a student group at&#13;
Parkside for Udall for President&#13;
and has participated in campaign&#13;
work in the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
headquarters under her internship.&#13;
&#13;
When she returns to Aspin's&#13;
office after the Wisconsin&#13;
primary, Chris will return to her&#13;
regular case work, that is settling&#13;
the problems which disgruntled&#13;
constituents have brought to the&#13;
Congressman's doorstep.&#13;
The entire internship program&#13;
has proved to be very rewarding&#13;
for Chris. Through her work at&#13;
Aspin's office, Chris is pleased to&#13;
be a part of the process that&#13;
proves that "individuals are&#13;
important, and are heard."&#13;
Dean talked about his experience&#13;
working in the public&#13;
defenders office. "Without a&#13;
doubt this is the best learning&#13;
experience a law student could&#13;
have."&#13;
Interns working in the public&#13;
defenders office, such as Dean,&#13;
do superficial investigations of&#13;
possible clients before the attorney&#13;
is assigned to see if he-she&#13;
is actually indigent and eligible&#13;
for the services, and to get&#13;
background information. They&#13;
also do legal research to establish&#13;
what elements must have been&#13;
perpetrated to be charged with&#13;
continued on pg. 9 &#13;
Oneida, Latino experiences&#13;
compared, contrasted&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 31,&#13;
EUROPE&#13;
1976 9&#13;
BMVAM&#13;
by Pam Mottl&#13;
Ramirez came to Parkside in 1972, straight out of Waupun, because&#13;
he wanted to read and write poetry in Spanish. He has since become a&#13;
sociology major and because of his previous work with the Spanish&#13;
Center as a counselor to drug addicts, finds little time for his poetry.&#13;
Dan was trained by the Racine Mental Health Association for his&#13;
position as counselor but has now obtained the Directorship of the drug&#13;
program which has expanded to include Kenosha. It was through his&#13;
efforts that this program which received $1,300 from the Racine&#13;
Kiwanis Qub in 1973 to mushroom to a program which now re ceives&#13;
some $41,500 in g rants.&#13;
The contrast in style presented by Ken and Dan is readily apparent.&#13;
However, throughout the two hours a common thread wove itself in&#13;
and out tying the two into one. The two individuals are minority group&#13;
members to the two different but parallel life experiences there was&#13;
one response; escape through alcohol and drugs. Though they were&#13;
two potential losers both became winners. And there was one&#13;
effect. Ken descnbed how the assundation process contrih,.taHfn»,s; thelr Presence. No textbook could convey the importance for&#13;
Ken W ebster, Oneida Indian, and Dan Rami^ T&#13;
to present their personal account of how the educati^'teamed Up&#13;
general, and teacher attitude toward minoriHp!&#13;
nal process&gt;&#13;
in&#13;
produced the negative self concepts which prerinih!? ,^tlCUlar&#13;
'&#13;
escape through drugs and alcohol. Speaking h!? l life&#13;
Happel's Teaching for the Multicultural Society ^Ren'&#13;
addressed themselves to the problems caused mfnn • ' Dan&#13;
in the "Melting pot theory" I contrastTtte^&#13;
through the concept of a pluralistic society deemed&#13;
ONEIDA HISTORY&#13;
Ken began his presentation with a brief histnrv nf ^&#13;
from their initial contact with the white man n7h! °&#13;
neida Mans&#13;
their land, their right of self^™Tce?fte 1^'*&#13;
educational and religious institutions with calculltLn&#13;
deliberation stripped the Indian of his culture, the loss of tte,&gt; hi *•I&#13;
as people as they became wards of the FederalGovfrn™^&#13;
introduction of alcoh ol by the dominant society create?derieS&#13;
eHect. Ken described how the assimilation processTo^ibSt Ms&#13;
life of alcohol and incarceration which reinforced hi* A&#13;
concept which led tomore drinking and mor? a?to? ^&#13;
It was during the Wounded Knee occupation Wh»n&#13;
directed to him by whites were unanswereable, that he began a concenh-ated&#13;
study of Indian people, particularly his won Oneil culte&#13;
so that he became proud of who he was. He enrolled in K.T.I. pTrtttae&#13;
while working full time as a welder and transferred to ParksMte in the&#13;
faring of 1973. In 1975 Ken began working full time as a »r a&#13;
ttie American Indian Council of Alcoholism in Milwaukee whUe attending&#13;
Parkside as a full time student. He has prepared and&#13;
presented a paper on the Oneida Indian and alcohol at the&#13;
cthnohistonca Meeting[at St. Paul, Minnesota and his participation&#13;
as a discussant at tiie Southeastern Tribal Governance meeting in&#13;
Gainsvtlle, Florida has led to his popularity as a speaker throughtou&#13;
tnis area.&#13;
Dan Ramirez&#13;
Dan began his presentation to the class by reciting his poetry as a&#13;
commentary on his life. In contrast to Ken, who is Articulate&#13;
categorical and deliberately caustic, Dan is articulate, quiet, and&#13;
reflective. His poetry reveals the harsh reality of his life i e drues at&#13;
nine years of age heroin at eleven, eighth grade drop-out','fourteen&#13;
years in and out of pr ison. Had a teacher been perceptive to'his drug&#13;
habit inspned in him a belief in himself, the tide may have turned for&#13;
him. His message to the class underlined three words: love, hope and&#13;
conern. And the ability and desire to listen. He too was stripped oi his&#13;
identity by the educational process by the forbidding of his native&#13;
tongue. Because of thi s his hope is for a bi-lingual method of teaching.&#13;
Dan's desire to return to school was instilled by a cellmate who had&#13;
been to college and believed in Dan's ability to make it and in his love&#13;
for his poetry.&#13;
Ko-Thi Dancers&#13;
to perform&#13;
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multicultural concepts and attitudes, on the part of te achers and in&#13;
educational programming as vividly as did Ken Webster and Dan&#13;
Ramirez.&#13;
InternsThe&#13;
Ko-Thi Dancers, a company&#13;
of young Black dancers and&#13;
drummers from Milwaukee's&#13;
inner city, will present a program&#13;
of Afro-A merican dances at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at 8&#13;
p.m. on Friday, April 2.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public. Under sponsorship&#13;
of the campus Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee, the program is&#13;
part of Parkside's "Accent on&#13;
Enrichment" series.&#13;
The Ko-Thi company was&#13;
founded in 1969 by its artistic&#13;
director, Ferne Cauker-Bronson,&#13;
a native of Sierra Leone, West&#13;
Africa, who studied music and&#13;
dance first in England and later&#13;
with the National Dance Ensemble&#13;
of Ghana and at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
Ko-Thi means "to go Black, to&#13;
be Black" in the Shebro dialect of&#13;
Sierra Leone. The company's&#13;
dances mirror the African tribal&#13;
experience as well as the Black&#13;
experience in America. Its&#13;
choreography has been compared&#13;
by critics to that of Alvin&#13;
Ailey.&#13;
Mrs. Caulker-Bronson's studies&#13;
have been supported in part by an&#13;
S&#13;
-C. Johnson Foundation study&#13;
grant and a Milwaukee Modern&#13;
Dance Council scholarship.&#13;
Originally a student of classical&#13;
ballet, Caulker-Bronson, 27, says&#13;
she eventually found more expression&#13;
and freedom in modern&#13;
dance and then in the native&#13;
dances of Afri ca. "In the dances&#13;
of Africa, and then in the AfroAmerican&#13;
dances of this country,&#13;
I found the truest expression of&#13;
the Black esthetic," she said.&#13;
" she said. "To the Africans,&#13;
dance is a functional part of t heir&#13;
society."&#13;
continued from pg. 8&#13;
the crime.&#13;
"The courtroom is the only&#13;
place you can gain good practical&#13;
experience," according to Dean&#13;
who feels he is getting that good&#13;
practical experience and is&#13;
assured he is one step ahead for&#13;
it.&#13;
Still others work along with the&#13;
police department. Those involved&#13;
with the Racine police&#13;
department are revising the&#13;
police manual.&#13;
Above all the program is&#13;
bringing Parkside closer to the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha communities.&#13;
The students are&#13;
providing a valuable service to&#13;
the cities and improving the&#13;
image of the Pa rkside University&#13;
as an involved campus working&#13;
for the betterment of soci ety.&#13;
The only requirement for the&#13;
program is "The American&#13;
Political System" course,&#13;
Political Science 100. The&#13;
program's co-ordinator,&#13;
Assistant Professor Sam Pernacciaro&#13;
urges that any student&#13;
interested in the program should&#13;
feel free to come into the Social&#13;
Sciences office and fill out an&#13;
application as there are many&#13;
openings left for the summer and&#13;
fall semesters.&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, March 31&#13;
Skeller: Dave Rodgers from 11:30-1:30 p.m.&#13;
Guest concert: Racine's J.I. Case High School choir at 12-30 p m in&#13;
CA D 118.&#13;
Thursday, April 1&#13;
Movie: "Young Frankenstein" at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB. Admission is&#13;
$1.00&#13;
Art exhibit and sale: Marsin Oriental Art Exhibit &amp; Sale from 9 a.m. to&#13;
9 p.m. in the WLLC Main Place.&#13;
Friday, April 2&#13;
Movie: "Young Frankenstein" at 8 p.m. in the SAB. Admission is $1.&#13;
Saturday, April 3&#13;
Satirical comedy: "Second City Revue" at 7:30 p .m. in the CAT.&#13;
Admission is $1 for students and $2 for the general public.&#13;
Sunday, April 4&#13;
Concert: Parkside Guitar Society at 3:30 p.m. in GR 103. Movie:&#13;
"Young Frankenstein" at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB. Admission is $1.&#13;
Tuesday, April6&#13;
Outdoor track meet: UW-Parkside vs. Loyola at 2:30 p.m. by the Phy&#13;
Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Coming Up&#13;
Kentucky Derby weekend: Sign up at the Info Kiosk for the bus trip for&#13;
the weekend of April 30, May 1 and 2.&#13;
Daytona Beach: Information for the April 16 to 24 trip from WLLC D&#13;
197 or call 553-2294.&#13;
mar,lynLANGD0N&#13;
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COME TO WHERE&#13;
THE RECORDS ARE&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST&#13;
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Phone 632-8841 1230 Lathro|&gt; Ave.&#13;
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with any steak dinner&#13;
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Services Include:&#13;
* Hair S tyling&#13;
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Four stylists to serve you&#13;
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Appointments not necessary&#13;
Phone 554-7939 &#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 31, 1976&#13;
Elect Bill "Blue"&#13;
JENKINS&#13;
for School B oard&#13;
Racine Unified&#13;
"Everybody se ems to f orget&#13;
about th e ki ds"&#13;
Paid for by Leroy Wooley, Sec.&#13;
1328 Hamilton Street, Racine&#13;
SCHWINN PEUGEOT&#13;
NISHIKI MONDIA CINELLI&#13;
Don Gill Bicycle Shop&#13;
BICYCLES ARE OUR&#13;
ONLY BUSINESS&#13;
Complete Line of Cycling Clothing&#13;
Phone (414) 652-6468&#13;
5006 - 7th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
DON AVIS&#13;
Priestly&#13;
Men&#13;
Prayer!&#13;
We don't sleep in&#13;
sackcloth and ashes hat&#13;
w e, as Pallottine Pothers&#13;
and Brothers, have&#13;
found that prayer is&#13;
vital to our renewal.&#13;
The Pallottine Fathers and&#13;
Brothers have dedicated&#13;
their lives to a unity of&#13;
mission and a diversity of&#13;
service. They exercise their&#13;
responsibility toward their&#13;
neighbor by acknowledging&#13;
the needs that are&#13;
present and doing something&#13;
about them. They are&#13;
a small group, but they&#13;
have the spirit.&#13;
Write to: Fr. Jim Heisler, SAC&#13;
Pallottine Community House&#13;
5424 West Bluemound Road&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53208&#13;
I am interested in being a&#13;
LJ Priest • Brother&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
~y rip&#13;
Telephone&#13;
Flying&#13;
continued from pg. 1&#13;
wings, fuelage and propeller, and draining a little high-octane fuel&#13;
from each tank so he is sure there is no water in the gas tanks, for the&#13;
water may stall the plane in midair. *&#13;
After untying some ropes that secure the plane to the airstrip, going&#13;
rough a pre-flight checklist, pilot Anderson primes the engine&#13;
selects the proper fuel mixture and flips the key. The propeller spins'&#13;
providing power, and releasing the brakes, the four adventurers begin&#13;
to taxi down the 5000 foo t long runway.&#13;
At the approach, Anderson calls the control station by radio for take&#13;
off c learance, checking for other planes that might be landing. With&#13;
flaps up, nose slightly up, and throttle advanced, the plane moves into&#13;
the 25 m.p.h. wind, lifting off the ground in 1000 feet at an 80 m p h&#13;
climbout speed.&#13;
invision falling out, although there is a door between you and the&#13;
earth. Incidently, the gravity pulls you in two directions, one towards&#13;
the door, and the other towards your seat (earth's pull and thrust).&#13;
That's all part of the thrill of flying.&#13;
Slowly, the plane completes a full circle. Then it's your turn to do it&#13;
alone. All one can think of is flipping and falling. But the only way to&#13;
learn to fly is to do it. And it's not as bad as it looks. After a short while,&#13;
one gets the hang of turns also.&#13;
Everyone soon begins to feel queezy from the thin air, and fatigue&#13;
from so much excitement. But that is not enough. There is still the&#13;
climbing turn. In this maneuver, the pilot must turn at a 30 degree&#13;
bank, use the rudders to help stabilize the plane from centrifugal&#13;
force, use the throttle to provide more power, and keep the nose up,&#13;
watching altitude, air speed, and rate of c limb all at the same time.&#13;
You don't have to say a word, chattering one's teeth is more than&#13;
sufficient.&#13;
After reaching safe altitude and leveling off, the pilot pulls back on&#13;
the throttle and controlling the plane with the "H" shaped curved&#13;
steering wheel, the plane roars and climbs to the heavens The&#13;
passengers are all pinned to the seats by the thrust. The altimeter&#13;
hands spin upward to 2600 feet, when the pilot finally levels off the&#13;
plane's nose and readjusts the fuel input for a smooth flight.&#13;
Pilot Anderson then explains how to keep the plane level, saying one&#13;
must look out both side windows and keep the wings above the horizon&#13;
at equal levels. This is done by moving the steering column left or&#13;
right in the direction one wishes to balance the plane. Then the plane&#13;
must be kept with its nose level, so altitude is maintained. This is&#13;
accomplished by pushing in or pulling out on the steering column. One&#13;
can tell the plane is relatively level when about three-quarters of the&#13;
windshield reveals land and the top quarter shows sky.&#13;
"I'm going to let you fly," Anderson will turn to you and say. "I'm&#13;
going to give it to you a little at a time." Now, keep it all level, and it's&#13;
yours." Grasping on to the controls, you panic (slightly), noticing the&#13;
wings becoming unbalanced, and one feels like they are sitting in the&#13;
middle of an airborn seesaw and must keep both ends equal.&#13;
After trying to convince yourself that you can balance the plane&#13;
rather than crashing it, you will probably overreact, making the plane&#13;
off-balanced the other way, or react the wrong way, making the&#13;
siutation worse. The important thing to remember is to keep a cool&#13;
head. _ ,. Banking&#13;
An e ven calmer temperment is needed for the next lesson: An&#13;
even calmer temperment is needed for the next lesson: "Banking." A&#13;
bank is the procedure of turning the plane around. In the air, you&#13;
cannot turn the vehicle, as one would turn a car around the corner,&#13;
though the principle is pretty similar.&#13;
Anderson says to you, the pilot, "We'll go through this one once&#13;
together." Then he tips the plane 30 degrees to one side, and instead of&#13;
looking at the horizon when looking out the side window, one sees the&#13;
ground, almost 3000 feet below. Without a seat-belt on, it's easy to&#13;
C5&#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;
CL±CL dccfz ZL&#13;
2J2Q&#13;
D^znoiticL, H/VLL.&#13;
Anderson helps by reminding the student pilot of critical factors,&#13;
such as too much bank, not enough climb or nose angle, or any of a&#13;
number of other factors. He also works the throttle and assures you&#13;
that everything is ok. When it's all over, he says "See how easy that&#13;
was."&#13;
A " birds-eye" view&#13;
The "birds-eve" view of flying is gorgeous, where homes seem to be&#13;
the size of those little green houses used to play Monopoly, cars look&#13;
like ants, and people like dots. Huge lakes look like puddles, and large&#13;
hills are only dirt mounds. Traveling 25 miles in 10 minutes introduces&#13;
a new concept to time, and never worrying about traffic confestion is&#13;
refreshing. Flying is memorable.&#13;
One flaw, is getting used to thin air and fast motion. In thirty&#13;
" fL^Tsickness^ a~d&#13;
er.and gl&#13;
" fee&#13;
"&#13;
ng * ^&#13;
Reminded of the hangover, the experienced can truly say in more&#13;
ways than one "Did we ever get high." It certainly was a trip of a trip&#13;
that one will never forget.&#13;
INTRODUCING&#13;
The Skellar&#13;
(FORMERLY W HITESKELLAR)&#13;
HOURS&#13;
10:00 a .m.&#13;
10:30 p .m.&#13;
Mon.-Thurs.&#13;
10:00 a. m.-&#13;
6:30 p. m.&#13;
Fridays Located a t the bottom o f the sta irs&#13;
where G reenquist Hall &amp; The L LC i &#13;
RANGER&#13;
.Sports&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 31, 1976 11&#13;
Athletic club places first&#13;
by Thorn Aiello&#13;
It was another busy week of&#13;
track for Parkside's men and&#13;
women. The highlight was the&#13;
Parkside Athletic Club taking&#13;
first place honors in last Sunday's&#13;
Wisconsin AAU Championships,&#13;
held at Whitefish Bay High&#13;
School.&#13;
Last Wednesday, Parkside&#13;
placed fifth in the five-team&#13;
women's meet at UW-Oshkosh.&#13;
UW-Stevens Point won the meet.&#13;
Other teams were: UWWhitewater&#13;
and UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
- Parkside, without the services of&#13;
top-runner Kim Merritt, competed&#13;
with only two women last&#13;
week.&#13;
Chris Susterich led the Ranger&#13;
squad at Oshkosh by placing&#13;
second in the discus, with a&#13;
school record of 1097", second in&#13;
the shot-put with a 39'7", and a&#13;
sixth place in the javelin,&#13;
establishing another school&#13;
record with 70'%". Kathy&#13;
DeBaere finished fifth in the 1000&#13;
yard run and sixth in the 880.&#13;
On F riday afternoon Parkside&#13;
hosted its second annual Ranger&#13;
Road Race, spanning a distance&#13;
of 6.1 miles. College of St. Francis&#13;
won^th op0&#13;
^ then Parkside&#13;
had 19 points. Four schools were&#13;
represented among the 18 runners.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside's Ray Fredericksen&#13;
«^ race with a of&#13;
30.32. Mike Rivers, placing sixth,&#13;
was the only other Ranger&#13;
breaking the top-ten. Jim Heiring&#13;
won the 6.1 mile walking event&#13;
staged at the same time, for&#13;
Parkside. His time of 48.02 beste d&#13;
his five-man opposition.&#13;
Sunday the Parkside Athletic&#13;
Club, so-called as to allow a few&#13;
non-students to compete witn tne&#13;
team, won the State Amateur&#13;
Athletic. Union Championships&#13;
for the second straight year. Six&#13;
teams were included in the&#13;
scoring, though many other&#13;
schools were represented by&#13;
runners competing unattached.&#13;
Parkside's 55 points were well&#13;
ahead of t he 30 compiled by UWMilwaukee.&#13;
Marquette, Kegonsa&#13;
Track Club, and St. Norbert's&#13;
were the next three finishers.&#13;
Lucian Rosa led the Parkside&#13;
squad in scoring by winning the&#13;
mile, two-mile, and the 1000.&#13;
LeRoy Jefferson won the 65 yd.&#13;
high hurdles and the low hurdles.&#13;
Jeff Sitz captured first in the&#13;
long-jump and Heiring set a state&#13;
and school record in winning the&#13;
one-mile walk with a 6:41.&#13;
Parkside took the first four&#13;
spots in the walk, with Chris&#13;
Hansen, John Van Den Brandt,&#13;
and A1 Halbur following in order.&#13;
after Heiring. Fredericksen&#13;
placed second behind Rosa in the&#13;
2-mile run.&#13;
Rivers took second in the halfmile&#13;
run, while Shaunte Stills&#13;
came in right behind Sitz in the&#13;
long-jump. Pat Burns also took&#13;
seconds in the shot-put and the 35-&#13;
pound weight throw. Paul Nelson&#13;
ended-up third in the low hurdles&#13;
event.&#13;
For the women, Susterich won&#13;
the shot-put with a 40'6", while&#13;
DeBaere finished second in the&#13;
880 with a 2:50.3 clocking. Not&#13;
team scores were kept for the&#13;
women.&#13;
This Saturday, at 12 noon, the&#13;
men are at the Chicago Circle&#13;
Relays in Chicago, 111.&#13;
Baseball season winds up&#13;
by Phil Hermann&#13;
Parkside will start the spring&#13;
baseball season on Tuesday,&#13;
March 30 wit h a southern trip.&#13;
Starting at Kaskaskia College&#13;
inCentrelia, 111., the Rangers will&#13;
play a doubleheader. After&#13;
moving to Clarksville, to play&#13;
Austin Peay University a&#13;
doubleheader on March 31 and a&#13;
single game on April 1. April 2nd&#13;
will find them playing the&#13;
University of Tennessee at&#13;
Martin in a doubleheader. Games&#13;
on the way home will include a&#13;
rematch with Kaskaskia and&#13;
whoever else can be scheduled.&#13;
Coach Red Oberbruner said,&#13;
"The squad is much improved&#13;
over last year. There is more&#13;
experience at the skill positions.&#13;
Although we are a very young&#13;
team most of the men have&#13;
played considerably in high&#13;
school."&#13;
A tentative starting line-up for&#13;
the trip includes Walker Davison&#13;
at lb, the double-play veterans&#13;
from last year, John Gardner and&#13;
Arnie Shaick at 2b and shortstop,&#13;
respectively. Anchoring third&#13;
base will be Glen Manarik and&#13;
catching responsibilities go to cocaptain&#13;
Jim McKenna. Other&#13;
players vying for positions are&#13;
Dan Brieski, Andy Johnson, Jim&#13;
Jerirane and Bill Sweetman. In&#13;
the outfield, two returning leL&#13;
termen will anchor, Jack Granitz&#13;
and Mark Schultz, followed by&#13;
Gary Bishop, Walter Fula, Jim&#13;
Ludka, Steve Ward and John&#13;
Christenson. Oberbruner and&#13;
assistant Tom Javhne had 24&#13;
players turn out this year, the&#13;
best in the three year history of&#13;
Parkside baseball. "It looks like&#13;
baseball is here to stay, this&#13;
squad is enthusiastic and willing&#13;
to work," commented Oberbruner.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside will open its defense&#13;
of the WICA (Wisconsin Interscholastic&#13;
College&#13;
Association) title on Wednesday,&#13;
April 7th at 1:00 p.m. on&#13;
Parkside's home field against&#13;
rival Carroll College. In the&#13;
WICA division, along with UWP,&#13;
are Carthage, Carroll, Milton,&#13;
Lakeland, MSOE (Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering) and St.&#13;
Norbert. Last year Parkside was&#13;
rated number one in the division&#13;
but was upset by Lakeland in the&#13;
playoffs.&#13;
I H&#13;
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ROOM 115 TALLENT HALL &#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER March 3 1, 1976&#13;
Festival of children&#13;
NAIA Soccer All-American&#13;
Sendelbach makes&#13;
by Thorn Aiello&#13;
About a year and a half ago,&#13;
soccer player Steve Sendelbach&#13;
was told by doctors that his&#13;
playing days were over. The&#13;
reason: he had just had a tumor&#13;
removed from his spinal column.&#13;
Because his weight had dropped&#13;
from 165 pounds to 129 pounds&#13;
rather quickly, doctors had&#13;
feared cancer was involved.&#13;
Though part of his backbone was&#13;
removed, Sendelbach had a&#13;
consolation of sorts - cancer was&#13;
not present.&#13;
This year, after the operation&#13;
laid him up for about a year,&#13;
Sendelbach proved the medics&#13;
wrong, by a long-shot. Not only •&#13;
did he play soccer for Parkside,&#13;
but the sophomore made the&#13;
NAIA equivalent of A ll-America.&#13;
He was voted to the second team&#13;
of the all-NAIA. The National&#13;
Soccer Coaches Association&#13;
(NSCAA) picked the team for the&#13;
first time and it includes the top&#13;
30 NAIA players.&#13;
The two-time letterman from&#13;
Wauwatosa, and Milwaukee Pius&#13;
High School, was also named&#13;
Parkside's most valuable player,&#13;
NAIA all-district 14 team&#13;
member, and NSCAA allMidwest&#13;
team member. Sendelbach,&#13;
20, played defensive&#13;
fullback.&#13;
What did Sendelbach think&#13;
when he first heard the news thathe&#13;
couldn't play soccer again? "I&#13;
was pretty disappointed. Soccer&#13;
is such a big part of my life."&#13;
When he first started playing&#13;
again, Senaeioach said, "I was&#13;
kind of scared...But, gradually,&#13;
the fear went away." He said he&#13;
"had to start slow," when&#13;
making his come-back, so Hal&#13;
Henderson, Parkside's coach&#13;
watch him carefully in practices&#13;
to make sure he wouldn't over-do&#13;
it.&#13;
Sendelbach did not think about&#13;
being honored as All-America.&#13;
"It (the honor) was a big surprise,"&#13;
he said. If Sendelbach&#13;
was surprised, Henderson&#13;
probably wasn't. "My comments&#13;
about Steve are similar to those&#13;
of many opposing coaches. He's&#13;
probably one of the finest&#13;
defensive fullbacks in the Midwest&#13;
and certainly one of the&#13;
finest I've ever coached," said&#13;
Henderson.&#13;
The head coach continued his&#13;
prise of Sendelbach, "He continually&#13;
drew comments from&#13;
comeback&#13;
spectators for his spectacular&#13;
play, which included unbelievable&#13;
diving headballs. He&#13;
has the uncanny ability to always&#13;
get his head or feet on the ball."&#13;
Certainly not a bad appraisal for&#13;
a guy who wasn't supposed to&#13;
play the rough game of soccer&#13;
anymore.&#13;
Sendelbach said he has some&#13;
trouble with his leg which had a&#13;
blood clot that ended-up&#13;
damaging some veins. He said it&#13;
doesn't bother his running much,&#13;
but there is some swelling, which&#13;
forces him to keep the leg&#13;
elevated at night.&#13;
Over the winter, Sendelbach&#13;
played indoor soccer for the&#13;
Croatian Eagles in Milwaukee.&#13;
This spring he will be playing&#13;
again for the Parkside soccer&#13;
club. He's glad he didn't take the&#13;
doctors' words as fact. Being out&#13;
playing soccer has to beat&#13;
staying in bed hour after hour.&#13;
For sure.&#13;
A "Festival of the Week of the&#13;
Young Child" featuring a&#13;
demonstration by recording&#13;
artist-educator-entertainer Ella&#13;
Jenkins and a variety of&#13;
workshop sessions will be held at&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
on Sunday, April 4,&#13;
from 4 to 6 p.m. in Main Place of&#13;
Wyllie Library-Learning Center.&#13;
She will demonstrate her&#13;
techniques working with a group&#13;
of young area children at 5:3o&#13;
p.m. In addition, seven different&#13;
workshops on other topics will be&#13;
repeated every 20 minutes durine&#13;
the festival.&#13;
The event is free and open to&#13;
the public and is sponsored by a&#13;
number of community groups&#13;
concerned with the education of&#13;
young children in cooperation&#13;
with the university and its&#13;
"Accent on Enrichment" series.&#13;
GOOD FOOD&#13;
RESTAURANT HOURS:&#13;
Mon. - THURS 6 a.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 6 a.m. - 1 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 6 a.m. - 8 D.m&#13;
245&#13;
Uklff-PUC£ latv&#13;
HOTEL R ESTAURANT B AR //*&#13;
SINCE 1918&#13;
LOCATED AT 245 MAIN STREET IN RACINE&#13;
Personalized Men's Hair Styling by an all female staff!&#13;
• Permanent Waving • Hair Coloring&#13;
• Complete Hair Styling • Straightening&#13;
• Manicuring • Beard &amp; Mustache Shaping&#13;
617-Main Street, Racine&#13;
92.00 OFF&#13;
on hair styling with this ad&#13;
(Good thru April 14, 1976)&#13;
Phone 634-2141&#13;
¥ PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD &amp; THE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE&#13;
invite you to spend a fun-filled weekend at&#13;
THE 102nd R UNNING OF&#13;
THE KENTUCKY DERBY&#13;
APRIL 30 - MAY 2 *40 includes:&#13;
Round trip transportation v ia t he "Midnight S pecial" C harter G reyhound - air conditioned &amp;&#13;
bathroom equipped&#13;
• Bedroll l odging at t he U . o f L ouisville R ed Baron Activities C tr.&#13;
• '10 i nfield ticket t o h istoric Churchill D owns&#13;
• FREE coffee &amp; donuts e ach m orning, s hower f acilities a nd l ive N ashville p erformer S at. n ight&#13;
Souvenir D erby Trip T-Shirt&#13;
• (Fri. n ight A llman Brothers concert, m int ju leps, f ried c hicken a nd D erby&#13;
tips a vailable b ut n ot i ncluded)&#13;
ONLY 42 SPACES AVAILABLE!!' FIRST COME, F IRST SERVED - SIGN U P A T THE I NFO. CTR. K IOSK&#13;
•- - -— - • </text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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