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              <text>Merger Bill--what it is and why it's delayed</text>
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              <text>University&#13;
without walls?&#13;
Renovation of Tallent Hall isn't without its ups and downs — as walls&#13;
go up on level one they are being torn down on the second floor. Amidst&#13;
construction workers in hard hats, Student Services personnel and&#13;
others in Tallent Hall proceed as normally as possible, as ey^denced&#13;
. . „„ ohoto by De bra F riedell&#13;
by counselor Ken (Red) Oberbrunner, left, and Shirley Schmerling,&#13;
right, coordinator of housing. Various Student Services offices will&#13;
soon be located on the first floor as work there is completed.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, March 20, 1974 Vol. II No. 25&#13;
Merger bill-what it is&#13;
and why it's delayed&#13;
Monday, March 25 is the&#13;
final date to submi t applications&#13;
for the position&#13;
of editor-in-chief for the&#13;
1974-75 RANGER. Applications&#13;
should be sent to&#13;
Geoff Blae sing, who chairs&#13;
the RANGER advisory&#13;
board, c-o RANGER, LLC&#13;
D194.&#13;
All Parkside student s&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight credits per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which i s made on a September&#13;
to May basi s .&#13;
Each candidate i s asked&#13;
to include in his-her application&#13;
details of journalistic&#13;
experience and a&#13;
statement of plans for the&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates and&#13;
plans to announce i ts&#13;
selection before spr ing&#13;
break.&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
The merger implementation&#13;
bill (AB 930-A) which is designed&#13;
to complete the 1971 merger law&#13;
that united the old State&#13;
University System with the&#13;
University of Wisconsin is still&#13;
awaiting Assembly action, with&#13;
state lawmakers scheduled to go&#13;
home at the end of the month.&#13;
Governor Lucey had listed the&#13;
merger implementation bill as&#13;
one of his top priorities for the&#13;
current legislative session, and it&#13;
has been threatened that he will&#13;
call a special session of the&#13;
Legislature this summer if action&#13;
is not taken on the bill.&#13;
Administratively the merger&#13;
has already been implemented;&#13;
what is being discussed now are&#13;
the guidelines under which the&#13;
system will operate. It specifies&#13;
the responsibilities of the&#13;
regents, the administration, the&#13;
faculty and the students.&#13;
Amendments Being Rejected&#13;
Numerous amendments have&#13;
been proposed and many rejected&#13;
by the Assembly. The original&#13;
bill, introduced last May,&#13;
provided that the regents have&#13;
certain powers of appointment,&#13;
including a president of the&#13;
system and a chancellor for each&#13;
institution; requires the regents&#13;
to establish admission standards;&#13;
and grants the regents&#13;
concurrent police power with&#13;
ROTC - will it&#13;
come to UW-P?&#13;
local authorities.&#13;
It provides for chancellors to be&#13;
the executive head of their&#13;
respective facilities and, in&#13;
cooperation with the faculties, to&#13;
design curricula and set degree&#13;
requirements.&#13;
The faculty would be responsible&#13;
for the immediate governance&#13;
of each institution and&#13;
shall actively participate in the&#13;
institutional policy development&#13;
and may determine its own&#13;
organizational structure. It also&#13;
provides for tenure for faculty&#13;
members serving a half-time or&#13;
more appointment who have&#13;
served a probationary period of&#13;
not to exceed seven consecutive&#13;
academic years in a full-time&#13;
position, and continue tenure of&#13;
present faculty. Tenure will be&#13;
limited to the institution to which&#13;
appointed. The board of regents&#13;
may lapse an appointment if&#13;
iunds are not available, but no&#13;
other person may fill that&#13;
position within two years.&#13;
Students would have primary&#13;
responsibility for policies of&#13;
student life and use of student&#13;
fees, and also should actively&#13;
participate in the immediate&#13;
governance and policy&#13;
development of institutions.&#13;
Student Involvement in&#13;
Faculty Review&#13;
In addition, the board and&#13;
faculty must consult with "appropriate&#13;
students" before&#13;
adopting rules fortenure,&#13;
probationary appointments,&#13;
faculty dismissal or nonretention&#13;
or for review of f aculty&#13;
performance. The Merger Implementation&#13;
Committee, after&#13;
discussing the role of the students&#13;
in formulating campus tenure&#13;
rules, decided that the bill should&#13;
continue to include a provision&#13;
for student involvement but the&#13;
nature of this could vary from&#13;
campus to campus.&#13;
Major opposition to the bill ha s&#13;
come from Republican&#13;
legislators, citing what they&#13;
consider to be inadequacies and&#13;
oversights in it. They feel these&#13;
could have serious consequences&#13;
because the separate statutes&#13;
governing the old state university&#13;
Professor of military science at&#13;
IJW-Whitewater, Mike Larson,&#13;
visited the Parkside campus&#13;
early last week to begin an investigation&#13;
into how students,&#13;
faculty and administrators would&#13;
react to ROTC here. Larson&#13;
explained that other colleges in&#13;
the area are also being explored&#13;
to determine the prospects of&#13;
having combined ROTC&#13;
programs with them as well.&#13;
Members of Whitewater's&#13;
ROTC program will be here to&#13;
speak to interested men and&#13;
women today and Thursday from&#13;
8 a.m. until 9 p.m.. and Friday&#13;
and Monday from 8 a.m. until&#13;
4:30 p.m. in the LLC concourse.&#13;
Said Larson, the role of ROTC&#13;
would be similar to a department&#13;
in the College of Science and&#13;
Society or the School of Modern&#13;
Industry ; would be a subordinate&#13;
member in t he College or School&#13;
such as English or engineering;&#13;
and would answer to the&#13;
academic deans, Norwood and&#13;
Moy. All c osts for having ROTC&#13;
on campus, if it should be well&#13;
received by the students, would&#13;
be absorbed by the federal&#13;
government, he explained.&#13;
However. Larson stated that the&#13;
University does not receive a&#13;
kickback from the government&#13;
for having ROTC.&#13;
The obligation for having the&#13;
adequate number of faculty to&#13;
teach ROTC courses will rest on&#13;
the University but no faculty&#13;
member would be required to&#13;
teach ROTC courses unless he or&#13;
she so desired, Larson continued.&#13;
In most cases students would&#13;
not have to be enrolled in the&#13;
ROTC program to take courses in&#13;
it, said Larson. In fact, he added,&#13;
at Whitewater a number of&#13;
students take courses in ROTC as&#13;
electives.&#13;
Larson feels the benefits of&#13;
ROTC to students should attract&#13;
enrollees. Those selected for the&#13;
program in their junior and&#13;
senior years receive $100 per&#13;
month for 10 months both years.&#13;
One is also obligated for reserve&#13;
participation and receives a&#13;
commission during that time.&#13;
Veterans would also be eligible to&#13;
enlist in ROTC.&#13;
Larson also feels that employment&#13;
prospects upon&#13;
graduation are often more&#13;
favorable for an ROTC graduate.&#13;
"The military is only as good as&#13;
the people in it." Larson emphasized.&#13;
saying that the citizens&#13;
of the United States deserve&#13;
educated leaders whom they can&#13;
trust as commissioned officers.&#13;
He said that education in this&#13;
manner may help to prevent&#13;
more Mai Lai's.&#13;
Students engage in fund drive&#13;
College of Racine&#13;
files bankruptcy&#13;
system and the UW system are to&#13;
be repealed by the implementation&#13;
bill.&#13;
Rep. John Niebler (ROconomowoc)&#13;
sought to strike&#13;
from the bill a clause providing&#13;
for a jail term for violation of&#13;
student university conduct rules,&#13;
saying "There's no way on God's&#13;
green earth that you can put&#13;
somebody in prison for violating&#13;
university rules." His amendment&#13;
failed, as did other GOPsponsored&#13;
amendments.&#13;
The importance of the merger&#13;
bill is in the fact that it would set&#13;
out some hard statutory lines for&#13;
the governing of th e UW system,&#13;
where there are none now on the&#13;
central administration, according&#13;
to Rep. Anthony Earl (DWausau),&#13;
majority leader.&#13;
Earl indicated that the conflict&#13;
on the measure was being&#13;
created by legislators with old&#13;
state university system campuses&#13;
in their districts who are&#13;
worried about central administration&#13;
usurping too much&#13;
power.&#13;
The bill needs a two-thirds&#13;
majority vote to move it up on the&#13;
State Assembly's agenda. Such a&#13;
vote to schedule the bill has&#13;
alreadv failed once.&#13;
College of Racine junior Jean Newton helps coordinate canvassing&#13;
in the fund-raising effort by the College's students.&#13;
An a ttorney for the College of&#13;
Racine filed a bankruptcy action&#13;
in Mi lwaukee Federal Court last&#13;
Friday. As a result of th at action&#13;
the school has 85 days to find a&#13;
way out of its financial mess or&#13;
close its doors as an accredited&#13;
college. At least $1,209,000 in gift&#13;
income over the next 18 months is&#13;
needed to stay open, according to&#13;
Dean Russell, acting president.&#13;
Barry McCabe, academic vicepresident,&#13;
explained that the&#13;
money being donated now is&#13;
"strictly to be used to close the&#13;
school in an orderly fashion." He&#13;
told students at a rally Friday&#13;
that he thought fund drives would&#13;
be good, "but it's going to take a&#13;
big donation from some other&#13;
place than here to keep us open."&#13;
Assistant Chancellor-Dean of&#13;
Students at Parkside, Allen&#13;
Dearborn, said Monday that he's&#13;
hoping that the College of Racine&#13;
won't have to close its doors. He&#13;
added that the University doesn't&#13;
want to be "sitting here like&#13;
vultures" waiting for its&#13;
students. "We'll help to expedite&#13;
transfer if i t comes to that," he&#13;
said.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Mar. 20, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion—•&#13;
Merger may help&#13;
students if they&#13;
help themselves&#13;
For many months the state legislature has been&#13;
working on Assembly Bill 930-A, known as merger&#13;
implementation. One of the clauses in that bill would&#13;
provide that students have the main responsibility for&#13;
policies concerning student life and the disposition of&#13;
student fees for student activities, as well as actively&#13;
participating in the governance of institutions.&#13;
While some Republican legislators have argued&#13;
against giving students even a muted voice in their&#13;
education or the policies of their universities, RANGER&#13;
and others have in the past frequently stated that this is&#13;
a right students are fighting for, not a privilege to be&#13;
graciously or condescendingly granted. Especially in&#13;
the area of student life and use of the segregated fee,&#13;
students must demand control. An example is this&#13;
year s segregated fee allocation committee, which&#13;
made recommendations to the chancellor on the use of&#13;
that portion of tuition which goes to support various&#13;
student life, health, programming and athletic activities&#13;
and so forth. The composition of the committee was such&#13;
that students held six out of thirteen seats, or one short&#13;
of a majority. This is the largest contingent of student&#13;
representatives ever on that committee, but one may&#13;
ask why any faculty and staff seats were allotted when&#13;
discussing uses of student monies supporting services&#13;
for students. Perhaps the expertise of a couple of these&#13;
people was necessary, but they could have served in an&#13;
advisory capacity as ex officio members of the committee&#13;
rather than voting. Next year students would do&#13;
well to press for such a composition if it is not&#13;
specifically set up by central administration per merger&#13;
guidelines.&#13;
The example of student fees is only one area of many&#13;
where student participation would not only be allowed&#13;
but mandated throughout the entire UW system.&#13;
We feel that requisite to any such student involvement&#13;
in a real and meaningful way at Parkside is the&#13;
establishment of a viable student government. Petitions&#13;
are currently available for the April general election&#13;
which will provide office holders for the next year.&#13;
These are the people who will be charged not only with&#13;
revitalizing PSGA but also with defining and extending&#13;
its power and the general position of students with&#13;
regard to the governing structure of this campus.&#13;
Responsible students from all organizations, majors,&#13;
and the student body at large are needed as representatives&#13;
in the decision-making processes of the&#13;
University. The origin of their input can and should be&#13;
PSGA. If the state Legislature makes such participation&#13;
statutory then the regents, central administration, and&#13;
the faculty and administrators on each campus will be&#13;
required to grant students certain of their rights. It will&#13;
then be incumbent upon students to exercise them.&#13;
Should they choose to forfeit they will have no ground to&#13;
stand upon later with complaints, and cannot blame&#13;
other elements of the campus for overlooking their&#13;
concerns.&#13;
US' The Parkside&#13;
"RANGER&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Thomas J. Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Heddon&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Kathryn Kah,&#13;
Michael Olsyzk, Marilyn Schubert, Debbie&#13;
Strand, Walt Ulbricht, Carrie Ward, Mike&#13;
Winslow&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Allen Fredrickson,&#13;
Debra Friedell, Debby Scenters, Ray Waldie&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari, Denny Kroll&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: ateve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to thank all the&#13;
students, faculty and staff who&#13;
have attended the shows in the&#13;
Whiteskellar so far this semester.&#13;
Because of you, we (myself and&#13;
the rest of the committee) would&#13;
like to offer you something to do&#13;
on Sunday, March 24 fr om 1 till&#13;
about 7 p.m. We're planning a&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Your readers may be interested&#13;
in the somber reflection&#13;
of Mr. Robert Vlach, a student in&#13;
my English 210 class, about&#13;
streaking as an art form troubled&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
As a visitor to your campus this&#13;
afternoon I was appalled at the&#13;
unsightly mess that greeted me.&#13;
Residue was omnipresent. Soda&#13;
cans, candy wrappers, waste&#13;
paper and the ever-present&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Some random thoughts on&#13;
tenure, promotion, student input&#13;
and so forth:&#13;
It is really unnecessary for&#13;
Parkside (or for any other&#13;
university) to have to subject its&#13;
junior faculty to "extensive&#13;
reviews" at tenure or retention&#13;
time. For the time to go over&#13;
someone with the proverbial finetooth&#13;
comb is before he or she is&#13;
hired. Barring major breakdown&#13;
or serious disillusionment, the&#13;
person once hired should have&#13;
every reason to expect tenure as&#13;
a matter of course.&#13;
Now, one of the chief reasons&#13;
that Parkside goes through annual&#13;
hoo-hahs over faculty&#13;
review is the sloppy way in which&#13;
Parkside goes about hiring new&#13;
faculty in the first place. For one&#13;
thing, students are seldom&#13;
allowed to have private question&#13;
and answer sessions with candidates&#13;
for vacant positions; but&#13;
then individual faculty members&#13;
are seldom allowed these&#13;
sessions either! Typically, a&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
(To the members of the Social&#13;
Science Executive Committee)&#13;
I am not a member of the&#13;
faculty so I can't speak of Dr.&#13;
Folan's worth as a colleague. Nor&#13;
am I a member of the Latin&#13;
community, so I will leave the&#13;
discussion of his activities in the&#13;
Racine Spanish Center to other&#13;
more knowledgeable parties. I&#13;
am "only" a student of Dr.&#13;
Folan's, and at the risk of being&#13;
told that my best interests are&#13;
more accurately ascertained by&#13;
others,' I would like to speak of&#13;
Dr. Folan as an instructor.&#13;
Immediately placing him in the&#13;
upper 50 pe rcent of the faculty.&#13;
Dr. Folan cares. He cares enough&#13;
to recognize each student as an&#13;
individual and recognizes their&#13;
inalienable right of dignity.&#13;
Never in the two semesters that I&#13;
have studied under him have I&#13;
heard him even harmlessly&#13;
ridicule a student, a quality that&#13;
is not shared by many of his&#13;
colleagues in university instruction.&#13;
His attitude has never&#13;
shown evidence of patronization&#13;
or condescension. Dr. Folan&#13;
Springfest in the .Student Activities&#13;
Building which will&#13;
feature some of the musicians&#13;
from previous Whiteskellar&#13;
shows plus various acts from&#13;
Southeast Wisconsin. There will&#13;
be no admission charged and&#13;
everyone is welcome. The bar&#13;
will be open for those who desire&#13;
a beer but remember to bring&#13;
by that esthetic flaw termed a&#13;
Pathetic Fallacy (Phallusy):&#13;
" a n y f a l s e&#13;
emotionalism...resulting in a too&#13;
impassioned description of&#13;
nature" (from A Handbook to&#13;
cigarette butts which littered the&#13;
corridor floors as if they were one&#13;
large ash tray.&#13;
Are not the students of&#13;
Parkside members of the ecology&#13;
generation. The impression a&#13;
visitor gets is that proper&#13;
person being considered for a&#13;
position here is dragged onto&#13;
campus at ten in the morning and&#13;
promptly subjected to a sort of&#13;
"round-table" group session in a&#13;
conference room with upwards to&#13;
ten faculty members present&#13;
variously throughout. (Inevitably&#13;
few of them have much&#13;
knowledge of the candidate's&#13;
background, and it is thus that a&#13;
lot of dumb questions get asked.&#13;
One can only wonder what&#13;
conclusions the candidates draw&#13;
about Parkside from those&#13;
sessions.) The candidate is then&#13;
shlepped off to the Dean's office&#13;
for a 45-minute interview (the&#13;
session with the Dean is of major&#13;
consequence). Then it's off to&#13;
lunch, typically with the very&#13;
same people who were responsible&#13;
for bringing the candidate to&#13;
campus in the first place (and&#13;
who thus have no need to "get to&#13;
know" the candidate better; the&#13;
ones who do are the other&#13;
members of the candidate's&#13;
prospective division as well as&#13;
selected members of the student&#13;
recognizes our ability to think&#13;
rather than parrot on an exam or&#13;
in an oral report the tidbits of&#13;
information so evident in most&#13;
instructors' lectures and the&#13;
$15.00 texts.&#13;
If it weren't apparent that his&#13;
successful style of lecture were a&#13;
totally natural process, one&#13;
would term him a craftsman&#13;
Uncluttered by an overabundance&#13;
of technical terminology&#13;
- freeflowing, conversational&#13;
and often humorous -&#13;
Dr. Folan has achieved the&#13;
ultimate in providing a truly&#13;
enjoyable learning experience.&#13;
All of the above qualities&#13;
would, however, be of little value&#13;
were Dr. Folan as ignorant of&#13;
the subject matter of his course&#13;
as are some Parkside instructors.&#13;
While other professors literally&#13;
read their lectures from large&#13;
typewritten notes and discourage&#13;
questions of the students with&#13;
monosyllabic answers. Dr. Folan&#13;
draws the concise, factual&#13;
material needed for each lecture&#13;
Irom' memory and succeeds in&#13;
along your Wis. I.D. Also, there&#13;
will be a show every Wed. and&#13;
Thurs. for the rest of the&#13;
semester in the Whiteskellar and&#13;
I think we'd all be a little happier&#13;
if you stopped down and participated.&#13;
Gary Petersen&#13;
Chairman Coffeehouse Committee&#13;
Literature). To which I can only&#13;
add Imlac's observation in&#13;
Johnson's Rasselas that the true&#13;
poet "does not number the&#13;
streaks of the tulip."&#13;
Henry Kozicki&#13;
Assistant professor of English&#13;
disposal of one's own refuse is&#13;
below the dignity of college&#13;
students.&#13;
However, credit must be given&#13;
where it is due: the efforts of the&#13;
students certainly insures&#13;
janitorial jobs.&#13;
Edward A. Goering&#13;
body, perhaps some of those&#13;
majoring in the candidate's&#13;
academic area). Following lunch&#13;
the candidate is "run through"&#13;
the library and then whipped&#13;
back up to Mitchell Field on the&#13;
double. Some on-campus interviews&#13;
are handled in a fashion&#13;
even more cursory.&#13;
It is no wonder, then, that&#13;
Parkside ends up yearly with an&#13;
treasonably large number of&#13;
'clashes" over promotion,&#13;
retention and tenure.&#13;
For all its manifest defects,&#13;
though, the present hiring system&#13;
represents a marked improvement&#13;
over the one that was&#13;
in effect when I and other&#13;
members of the "class of '69"&#13;
were hired. In those days faculty&#13;
were often purchased sight unseen.&#13;
I myself had to request a&#13;
visit to campus, and have vivid&#13;
memories of the "interview" I&#13;
had with the man then occupying&#13;
the Deanship (he has fortunately&#13;
gone elsewhere since).&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Richard V. Teschner&#13;
Assistant Professor of Spanish&#13;
producing a spontaneous yet&#13;
logically ordered hour of lecture.&#13;
More to his credit, he encourages&#13;
questions from his students,&#13;
shows no impatience in our&#13;
naivete and is careful to answer&#13;
in as much detail as is needed to&#13;
dissolve the expression of puzzlement&#13;
on the students' faces.&#13;
On the rare occasion when he&#13;
doesn t know the answer, he is&#13;
again differentiated from many&#13;
of our instructors in that he admits&#13;
his ignorance and, furthermore,&#13;
he supplies the answer&#13;
at the next meeting.&#13;
I have thought it might be futile&#13;
to appeal to you - that you would&#13;
never repeal your decision. I&#13;
realize you are educators, not&#13;
legislators. But. nevertheless, I&#13;
have faith that you will listen to&#13;
the voices of the students and&#13;
others who support Dr. Folan,&#13;
and you will retain him on the&#13;
staff of Parkside as well as do all&#13;
in your power to supply us with&#13;
more fine educators of his&#13;
caliber.&#13;
Most Sincerely.&#13;
Betsy Neu&#13;
.Sdphomore: RtfClne&#13;
Guest t*ditariff Wednesday, Mar. 20, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Parking lots—why are they lying to us?&#13;
Editor's note: The following&#13;
article was written by a Parkside&#13;
student and outlines his feelings&#13;
about the proposed new parking&#13;
lots and the University's apparent&#13;
lack of genuine environmental&#13;
concern as he sees&#13;
it.&#13;
by Keith C. Chambers&#13;
Parkside is going to get two&#13;
new close - in parking lots and an&#13;
additional access road, a bright&#13;
little Parkside newsletter&#13;
proclaims. Parkside's office of&#13;
Public Information is informing&#13;
the public that the parking lots&#13;
and road are approved and&#13;
should be constructed in time for&#13;
the second semester next year&#13;
before the Kenosha campus is&#13;
closed. The public is being told&#13;
this even though the environmental&#13;
impact report hasn't&#13;
been completed, nor has the&#13;
public hearing been held as&#13;
required by law. Does this mean&#13;
that the parking lots and road are&#13;
approved without any chance for&#13;
concerned people to present their&#13;
views? Parkside's administrators&#13;
are no fools, but&#13;
they have got a brand new&#13;
problem they hadn't counted onpublic&#13;
opposition. Ecology freaks&#13;
and those damn nature-lovers are&#13;
trying to stop the destruction of&#13;
wildlife and the natural beauty of&#13;
the Parkside-Petrified Springs&#13;
area. The University has got to&#13;
move fast if it is going to ram this&#13;
one through.&#13;
I will give a brief sketch of the&#13;
parking lot-roadway system and&#13;
some comments. All quotes are&#13;
from the Preliminary Report on&#13;
the environmental impact.&#13;
1. Description of Project&#13;
"Two parking lots will provide&#13;
parking for approximately 1,045&#13;
vehicles. Land area covered will&#13;
be 10 acres. Construction will&#13;
include grading the contours:&#13;
backfilling with thoroughly&#13;
compacted, coarse granular&#13;
material base ... the parking&#13;
surface will be interrupted with&#13;
islands to permit grassed&#13;
drainage ways .. planted with&#13;
trees and grasses .. drainage&#13;
through natural courses to&#13;
nearby Pike River." Actually,&#13;
this is a great idea for a parking&#13;
lot-provided you need a parking&#13;
lot at this particular site. Note&#13;
that grading and backfilling are&#13;
involved, as this is important in&#13;
the next section. "The roadway is&#13;
to follow natural contours ... and&#13;
will be constructed with enough&#13;
width to permit two-way traffic&#13;
plus a bicycle path along one side&#13;
of the drive." I agree with the&#13;
part about a bicycle path.&#13;
2. Probable Impact Of The&#13;
Project On The Environment&#13;
"The project will improve&#13;
traffic circulation by providing a&#13;
separate and diversified traffic&#13;
and vehicular storage system.&#13;
Public traffic will be more&#13;
dispersed and will be entirely&#13;
separated from service vehicles&#13;
and bus traffic. Safety and&#13;
convenience to campus visitors&#13;
will increase." Notice how safety&#13;
and convenience to campus&#13;
visitors is under the impact on&#13;
the environment part. Also,&#13;
improved traffic circulation&#13;
means more traffic-one car every&#13;
three seconds was the estimate&#13;
given to me by Planning &amp;&#13;
Construction-this ought to do&#13;
wonders for peaceful study.&#13;
"No serious visual problems&#13;
will occur as a result of this&#13;
project ... tree planting in&#13;
grassed areas will increase the&#13;
screening of the cars from view."&#13;
Again, more concern for looks&#13;
than life. "The physical impact&#13;
on the environment is minimal."&#13;
That's hard to swallow,&#13;
especially when they need&#13;
grading and backfilling.&#13;
"The sites for this project are&#13;
open land formerly used as&#13;
farmland. There are no trees&#13;
growing on the sites. They are&#13;
presently devoid of animal&#13;
life..." This is an outright lie. I&#13;
personally went out-with witnesses-&#13;
and physically counted&#13;
(triple-checked) over 400 trees on&#13;
the north parking lot site as&#13;
outlined on the report's map&#13;
(counted only trees over 6' in&#13;
height). There are many animals&#13;
living on the sites, as attested to&#13;
by professors Esser and Balsano,&#13;
and if you haven't seen the&#13;
pheasants and birds and rabbits&#13;
and more obvious creatures of&#13;
the field, you haven't walked&#13;
through these sites. I would&#13;
suggest that whoever writes up&#13;
these environmental reports&#13;
should at least get out of his-her&#13;
office and walk over the proposed&#13;
site area just once during the&#13;
spring, summer, or fall and then&#13;
look me in the eye and tell me the&#13;
area is "devoid of animal life."&#13;
Probable Adverse Environmental&#13;
Effects Which&#13;
Cannot Be Avoided&#13;
Here the report talks about&#13;
Located within the boundaries for one of the proposed parking lots is&#13;
his home for wildlife which, according to the Preliminary Environmental&#13;
Impact Report, does not exist in the area.&#13;
runoff after rains and the advantages&#13;
of green areas. This&#13;
part is good but says nothing&#13;
about how 400+ trees have to&#13;
come down (you cannot grade&#13;
and backfill if trees are in the&#13;
way) or what happens to the&#13;
animals that live, hunt, nest, and&#13;
migrate through these areas.&#13;
4. Alternatives Considered&#13;
With Evaluation Of Each&#13;
Parkside's planners looked at&#13;
one alternate site at the east end&#13;
of the campus and said it was too&#13;
far to walk. They also said it&#13;
would be too costly to bus from.&#13;
This report is a lot like Watergate&#13;
- the closer you look at it, the&#13;
more incredible it becomes.&#13;
There are more alternatives and&#13;
I will try to present a sketch of&#13;
those, too.&#13;
5. Relationship Between Local,&#13;
Short-Term Uses Of Man's Environment&#13;
And The Maintenance&#13;
&amp; Enhancement Of Long-Term&#13;
Productivity.&#13;
There is more thought put into&#13;
the title of this part than the&#13;
descriptive paragraph under it. It&#13;
boils down to convenience for&#13;
P.E. Building-Theater Complex&#13;
and Campus Union.&#13;
6. Irreversible And&#13;
Irretrievable Commitment Of&#13;
Resources&#13;
Again stresses convenience for&#13;
campus visitors as best use for&#13;
land.&#13;
7. Public Awareness Or Objections&#13;
To Project And&#13;
Resolution&#13;
"Based on user complaints&#13;
directed at remote parking lots,&#13;
the provision of close-in parking&#13;
will meet with enthusiastic and&#13;
universal approval from&#13;
students, faculty, staff, and the&#13;
general public." That is the&#13;
complete statement of this part.&#13;
How do they explain that over 80&#13;
percent of the students I t alked to&#13;
were opposed to this project.&#13;
Even if I have a prejudiced&#13;
sample (students) so do they, as&#13;
it was based only on user complaints.&#13;
There will be user&#13;
complaints to anything that isn't&#13;
perfect and to say there is&#13;
universal and enthusiastic approval&#13;
is like saying I have 65&#13;
percent of the popular vote and I&#13;
can do anything I want.&#13;
8. Agencies Consulted About&#13;
The Project&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Regional Planning Commission,&#13;
and Department Of Natural&#13;
Resources&#13;
)). Reasons Why Proposed&#13;
Action Is Believed To Be Best&#13;
Course Of Action&#13;
"The two 1045-car parking lots&#13;
are necessary to handle the&#13;
campus parking load." I disagree&#13;
and will hopefully show you in a&#13;
bit. "The proposed solution will&#13;
save many thousands of dollars&#13;
per year for transportation costs,&#13;
will improve convenience and&#13;
save time for users, and will not&#13;
occupy a site that has present&#13;
ecological value." I suppose the&#13;
same person who determined the&#13;
absense of trees and animals&#13;
determined the ecological value&#13;
of the site.&#13;
The reasons for close-in&#13;
parking are based on user&#13;
complaints about remote&#13;
parking. The Master Plan did not&#13;
call for close-in parking. Who did&#13;
and why? The administrators I&#13;
talked to were not pushing closein&#13;
parking and chancellor Wyllie&#13;
himself was opposed (at first).&#13;
Many students agree that at&#13;
times remote parking is a hassle&#13;
but also say they like to study and&#13;
learn without being surrounded&#13;
by parking lots and traffic. Who&#13;
then? You guessed it - the most&#13;
powerful, elite group on campus -&#13;
the faculty! Not all. but many.&#13;
Why? Convenience for sure, but&#13;
more importantly-status. User&#13;
fees are coming in the near&#13;
future The closer the lot the&#13;
photo by Dave Keller&#13;
This photograph was taken at the north parking lot site where&#13;
pheasants (circled) and trees are plainly evident. "There are no trees&#13;
growing on the sites. They are presently devoid of animal life...," says&#13;
the Preliminary Report on environmental impact.&#13;
more expensive it will be the&#13;
more status attached. Faculty&#13;
will be able to afford the higher&#13;
fee better than the students. Also,&#13;
, the much-mentioned group in the&#13;
preliminary report-the general&#13;
public, desire it. It has been said&#13;
that to get the general public to&#13;
support and use our Physical&#13;
Education Building, Theatre, and&#13;
the proposed Union we must have&#13;
close-in parking. Forget what the&#13;
students want and how they put&#13;
up with remote parking for yearsthere's&#13;
money involved here.&#13;
Funny how the student union&#13;
can't get by with students but&#13;
needs outside help. Same with&#13;
P.E. and the Theatre. Is business&#13;
really that bad with remote&#13;
parking? Decent facilities, good&#13;
entertainment, good food and&#13;
good service would be better that&#13;
close-in parking to attract the&#13;
general public to parkside.&#13;
The reasons for the access road&#13;
are easier to take. Safety is a big&#13;
plus. It would lessen the chance&#13;
of walkers and bike riders getting&#13;
run down, by channelling the&#13;
heaviest traffic farther from the&#13;
buildings. It also provides an&#13;
incentive to mass transit from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine because&#13;
they would have a back-up route&#13;
to stay on schedule in case the&#13;
inner road is blocked for some&#13;
reason, according to Planning &amp;&#13;
Construction. I'm not exactly&#13;
sure where the road will be and&#13;
cannot state what the ecological&#13;
damage will be, but doubt it will&#13;
be "minimal" or "on land of no&#13;
ecological value"! Here there&#13;
appears to be no special interests&#13;
pushing for the road - it just&#13;
seems to be a by-product of the&#13;
parking lots.&#13;
Alternatives&#13;
What about the alternatives?&#13;
One of the first and most important&#13;
questions remains&#13;
unanswered: Do we really need&#13;
additional parking? Maybe. It is&#13;
possible that it could take two&#13;
years for completion. Can you&#13;
say that in two years the energy&#13;
shortage will get better? Can you&#13;
say it will get better by next&#13;
January? What do we do with&#13;
additional parking lots if the use&#13;
of private vehicles starts to&#13;
decline, perhaps sharply? Are we&#13;
willing to gamble 400+ trees and&#13;
uncounted wild-life users of these&#13;
areas for parking a form of&#13;
transportation that may become&#13;
obsolete? Is this the way to&#13;
promote mass transit? Is the&#13;
answer to full parking lots to&#13;
build new ones? Does Parkside&#13;
really need additional parking? I&#13;
am not convinced we do and think&#13;
the environmental cost is too&#13;
high.&#13;
Assuming we do need additional&#13;
parking, what are the&#13;
possibilities of additional remote&#13;
parking? Nowhere in the study is&#13;
any mention made of possible&#13;
expansion of exisiting parking&#13;
facilities. Even with close-in&#13;
parking, we would still have to&#13;
operate a shuttle service for&#13;
existing parking lots. We would&#13;
still have to pay for the shuttle&#13;
service, so why not expand our&#13;
present service instead of&#13;
operating a dual system.&#13;
At what point does the convenience&#13;
of close-in parking for&#13;
the faculty and the well-to-do&#13;
student outweigh the value of&#13;
400+ trees? The value of a&#13;
natural setting has not been&#13;
determined in dollars yet. Few&#13;
artists get their inspirations from&#13;
parking lots. Few biologists&#13;
agree that man can control his&#13;
environment as well as Mother&#13;
Nature. Aside from the intangible&#13;
values, the birds in these areas&#13;
help control the insect&#13;
population. If you think the flies,&#13;
etc. were bad last year, wait 'til&#13;
the parking lots are in. The&#13;
pollution from 1045 vehicles will&#13;
not help the nearby plants and&#13;
animals either. You have to&#13;
breathe the same air as they. Do&#13;
you want 1045 exhaust pipes&#13;
pumping it out at you?&#13;
The alternatives have not been&#13;
considered. I have spoken to&#13;
James Galbraith, Director of&#13;
Planning &amp; Construction. I was&#13;
surprised to find the interest he&#13;
showed me and the knowledge&#13;
and courtesy he has. Yet he must&#13;
consider the wishes of all concerned&#13;
people. If he believes&#13;
there is an overwhelming&#13;
demand for close-in parking, then&#13;
he will sacrifice any ecological&#13;
viewpoint he may personally&#13;
hold. Unfortunately, not all the&#13;
assumptions made are true. The&#13;
environmental impact study is a&#13;
joke at best. We should not allow&#13;
special interest groups to control&#13;
our University without public&#13;
scrutiny and approval. Parkside&#13;
has a chance to show&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin how to&#13;
exist in harmony with its environment.&#13;
Parkside is guilty of&#13;
suppressing meaningful input in&#13;
many areas - teaching&#13;
evaluation, proposed parking&#13;
lots, etc. A public hearing will be&#13;
scheduled, but it will be&#13;
meaningless if no one goes or if&#13;
none of the alternatives&#13;
presented are not listened to.&#13;
Parkside is trying to schedule the&#13;
hearing for the summertime in&#13;
hopes that no one will be here to&#13;
oppose their plans. This is your&#13;
chance to show concern for life&#13;
instead of looks. This is your&#13;
chance to have your views heard&#13;
instead of those of the elite few. I&#13;
will be there-will -you? Please&#13;
comment to me in care of&#13;
RANGER and comment to the&#13;
office of Planning &amp; Construction.&#13;
When the public&#13;
hearing is set, I'll have it announced&#13;
and urge all to attend&#13;
and comment.&#13;
4 THE PARKSl D E RANGE R We d n e s d a y / Mar . 2 0 &gt; 1 9 7 4&#13;
Union to be "town square YV&#13;
by Jerry T. Delcore&#13;
Imagine here on campus a place where one can&#13;
watch"I • CaTeS or hiking equipment, bowl,&#13;
watch a movie, shoot pool or dine in an elegant&#13;
restaurant entertained by nightclub performers.&#13;
This image is moving step-by-step closer to reality&#13;
for the new Campus Center at Parkside will be just&#13;
such a place.&#13;
The long awaited student union scheduled for&#13;
completion in the fall of 1976, has been authorized at&#13;
an estimated $3,523,800. It is now entering the final&#13;
stages of drafting, and according to assistant&#13;
chancellor Allen Dearborn, "All the necessary steps&#13;
have been taken - approval by the Board of Regents&#13;
and the State Building Commission, and&#13;
authorization of funds by the Bureau of Facilities.&#13;
We even have our architect."&#13;
The building will be constructed north of the&#13;
Classroom Building on the site of the present&#13;
temporary faculty-staff parking lot. It will be&#13;
connected to the Classroom Building by an enclosed&#13;
walkway over the loop road. An adjacent parking&#13;
lot with a 512 car capacity and a second, outer loop&#13;
road are scheduled for completion this fall, if approved.&#13;
James Galbraith, Parkside Planning and Construction&#13;
director, views the center as the campus&#13;
town square" and feels "the purpose of this&#13;
project is to serve the special needs of the commuting&#13;
student who constitutes the large majority&#13;
of o ur enrollment. It will be a place where students&#13;
and faculty can mix, exchange views and become&#13;
acquainted in a personal and casual environment."&#13;
Built with the same brick coloring and connected&#13;
to the Classroom Building, the Campus Center will&#13;
blend in with the other buildings but it will be obvious&#13;
to anyone, either student or visitor, that it is&#13;
the center of campus activity. This will be ac-&#13;
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complished by distinctive architectural design as&#13;
well as scenic landscaping techniques.&#13;
Inside the Campus Center will be even more inviting,&#13;
with three levels providing more than 45,000&#13;
usable square feet for various activities to suit a&#13;
variety of needs.&#13;
The ground level will be the focal point of the&#13;
center with eight bowling alleys, a billiard room,&#13;
table tennis room, and a rathskellar. The&#13;
rathskellar will be a rustic area consisting of booths&#13;
and tiered seating, set in a semi-dark atmosphere.&#13;
Along with bar facilities, plans include a charcogriHe&#13;
for bratwurst, steaks and hamburgers, and&#13;
many campus night activities will take place there.&#13;
Across the level will be a 400 seat cinema theatre&#13;
and an adjacent concession stand, patterned after&#13;
some of the local theaters but having more&#13;
reasonable rates.&#13;
In the center of the ground level will be an area&#13;
the architect calls the "bazaar" because of its&#13;
central location and anticipated social mingling&#13;
aspects. The bazaar will be the entrance to the&#13;
campus with buses stopping out front, and will&#13;
provide a General Information Center, a lot of open&#13;
room and specific areas for group activities and&#13;
meetings. In the center of the bazaar will be a&#13;
unique free standing elevator to the second and&#13;
third floors.&#13;
The second floor will be the main food service&#13;
area of the campus. It is to include a cafeteria&#13;
operating under a "scatter" system with station-tostation&#13;
food service to avoid long lines, and a nearby&#13;
restaurant-night club area with varied menus,&#13;
waitered dining, and a night club atmosphere with a&#13;
view of Petrifying Springs and adjacent terrace as&#13;
some of its features.&#13;
The third floor will be the administrative center&#13;
with office space for the Campus Center director,&#13;
Activities Board and a poster print shop. The&#13;
Campus Center will be controlled by a Campus&#13;
Center Operating Board, comprised of students,&#13;
faculty and advisory help from the administration&#13;
and alumni. The Board will serve the function of&#13;
determining policy, while the Activities Board will&#13;
continue to organize the majority of activities.&#13;
Dearborn considers the Campus Center as one of&#13;
his pet concerns for the Parkside Campus and now&#13;
that things are finally going to start his excitement&#13;
is clearly visible.&#13;
"We look on this building as being a place where&#13;
students can have fun and relaxation at the same&#13;
time. It's not a conference center. We hope it will be&#13;
a really happy building."&#13;
For many of us currently on the campus, the fall&#13;
of 1976 s eems like a long way off, especially for&#13;
those who will graduate in the next two years. But&#13;
Dearborn assured this reporter that the Campus&#13;
Center will indeed be open to alumni; in fact, he was&#13;
quite emphatic in pointing this out.&#13;
"Those students who have been a part of this&#13;
campus and watched it grow will definitely be&#13;
welcomed back to our new center. We only wish we&#13;
could have had it for them all along."&#13;
So everyone whether still attending Parkside or&#13;
not, can watch with a great deal of interest as the&#13;
new Campus Center becomes more and more a&#13;
reality.&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
ZARDOZ&#13;
In the year 2293 man has achieved immortality but has lost the&#13;
desire to live. Zed, Sean Connery, is a brutal Exterminator who hunts&#13;
human game outside a society of intellectual and perpetually young&#13;
immortals. By hiding inside the gigantic flying mask of Zardoz, the&#13;
god of Death, Zed travels to the paradise of the eternal Vortex and&#13;
disrupts its tranquility.&#13;
John Boorman has written, produced and directed this unsuccessful&#13;
black parody that asks whether man can exist without his innate instinct&#13;
of aggression. Boorman's earlier films, Point Blank and&#13;
DELIVERENCE also examined the role of violence in society but&#13;
Zardoz is a hopelessly shallow confusion of Technique over Substance.&#13;
Boorman exploits both the mystery and cinematography of Stanley&#13;
Kubrick's vastly superior 2001 and the result is a gimmicky&#13;
derivative. There is the flying mask of Zardoz, a conspicuous imitation&#13;
of Kubrick's monolith; an inverted vision of creation where the&#13;
ominous voice of Zardoz commands that "Gun is good. Penis is evil;&#13;
"an attempt by David Munrow's music (including a gratuituous&#13;
Beethoven Sonata) to create mood and meaning and an overkill of&#13;
dazzling colors and shapes that left me with a headache.&#13;
Zardoz is a chaotic grabbag of visual gags. Boorman's satire has a&#13;
non-stop pace like Woody Allen's madness but he lacks Allen's wit and&#13;
originality. After Zed, the film's savior, arrives in the Vortex he&#13;
becomes a baker's helper passing out bread to the colony of&#13;
"apathetics," eunachs incapable of feeling. Later Zed escapes by&#13;
throwing flour (grace) into the crowd and performing a mighty feat -&#13;
punching his way out of an enormous Baggie.&#13;
Besides the film's structural and cinematic mess Zardoz is a selfmockery.&#13;
The first sequence introduces Zardoz, as Arthur Fray (or&#13;
Boorman himself?) who is known to his friends as an eccentric artist&#13;
"with imagination." Near the conclusion two prisoners of Vortex&#13;
come to a realization. Punished by spending eternity as senile guests&#13;
in ruined nightclub where the party is eternally boring and&#13;
meaningless they admit, "We've all been used and abused." I cannot&#13;
disagree.&#13;
This Week's Shovelful of Schlock: The bad news is that the spiritualgeneral&#13;
of the U.S., the Rev. Billy Graham, has determined that&#13;
viewing The Exorcist is dangerous to your health. "I myself am afraid&#13;
to see the film, " replied the evangelist in an interview in The National&#13;
Enquirer, "Besides the great danger of being overcome by evil forces,&#13;
they (the audiences) risk mental confusion, perhaps of a serious&#13;
nature."&#13;
The good news is that spring is coming early to Montreat, North&#13;
Carolina. Rumor has it that a massive transplantation of garlic plants&#13;
will grace the perimeter of Graham's estate. His neighbors look&#13;
forward to a bit of color and fragrance outside the ground's security&#13;
system of police dogs, cyclone fencing and television monitors.&#13;
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students to revise or rewrite entri-f T* t0 April 22 to allow&#13;
will be announced in the May l issue o^RANGER38^ Winners&#13;
Ecology stationary now a„nu„^r&#13;
The Vets Club has announced that thQ 1&#13;
arrived and that any students who ordered h ml ustationary has&#13;
Tallent Hall room 237 between 8 a.m. and 4:3(1pm °F herS up in&#13;
Concert presents r&gt;nnina[ stuA&gt;w«&#13;
music students and facuUywm^held^"sund^ ^ Parkside&#13;
p.m. in theComm Arts Theater Thefnii Sunda/- March 24 at 7:30&#13;
compositions performed: Debora Dona«WFred^fl^k haVG their ss«^Sr*Jss5&#13;
Newman club announcemo»*«&#13;
Thursday, April 4^ Tpm'the 7777Cenfer" wflfho'Sda'communa"&#13;
penance and eucharist celebration. Any interestedindfvS a^&#13;
retreat o°r t^New!regardmg ^ "&#13;
Sigma Pi to meet Thursday night,&#13;
„7T,^atermty,T" be holdinS weekly meetings on Thursday&#13;
nights at 9.30 p m. in LLC D174. Any interested student is invited to&#13;
attend. For further information about Sigma Pi contact Red Oberbruner&#13;
in Tallent Hall 237.&#13;
Aid money still available for sfdont.&#13;
Financial Aid is still available for students for this semester who&#13;
demonstrate financial need. Those students already receiving&#13;
financial aid may appeal for additional money based on unmet need&#13;
for direct educational expenses. Students in the work-study program&#13;
are being advised by the financial aids office to request additional&#13;
work-study dollars so they may continue their employment. The&#13;
Financial Aids Office is still accepting applications for the next&#13;
academic year's financial aid. Interested students may contact the&#13;
Financial Aids Office in Tallent Hall or call 553-2291.&#13;
Glass blowing to be demonstrated&#13;
On Thursday, March 21 the PAB will sponsor glassblower Gene&#13;
Cleereman who will demonstrate the art of glass blowing techniques.&#13;
Cleereman will also sell his products. The event will take place in&#13;
Main Place from 11 a.m. until 5 p.m.&#13;
UW-P musicians win soloist awards&#13;
The Jazz Band travelled to the Eau Claire Jazz Festival last&#13;
weekend where two soloists from Parkside won outstanding musician&#13;
awards. They were Bob Borchardt on trumpet and Brian Ford on&#13;
drums.&#13;
Participating in the Festival were 20 university bands from&#13;
Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois and Minnesota.&#13;
Costume workshop slated&#13;
There will be a costume workshop on Saturday, March 23, from 1-4&#13;
p.m. in the theater. All interested students are invited to help develop&#13;
a permanent wardrobe for Parkside theatre.&#13;
Wednesday,, Mar. 20,,1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, March 20: Whiteskellar features Virginia King on guitar&#13;
™ A A p m'ln Whiteskellar. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday March 20: Film "Romeo and Juliet" at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm. Arts Theater. No admission charged&#13;
Wednesday, March 20: Adult Student Association "Coffee" at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the CL concourse L-l level overlooking bus stop.&#13;
Thursday March 21: Glassblower Gene Cleereman in Main Place&#13;
sponsored by PAB from 11 a.m. until 5 p.m. '&#13;
Thursday March 21: Cartoons in the Whiteskellar atlpm No admission&#13;
charged. H '&#13;
Thursday March 21: Concert featuring the Monteverdi Chamber&#13;
-rK ? P'm'in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
Thursday, March 21: Sigma Pi Fraternity meeting in LLC D174 at 9:30&#13;
Friday, March 22: Concert featuring the UW-M Wind Ensemble at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in theComm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
MaFChf=LaS Vegas Night sP°nsored by Sigma Pi Fraternity&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the SAB. Prizes will be auctioned. Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Saturday March 23: Concert sponsored by PAB featuring "Uncle&#13;
I t , P'm' m th e SAB' Admi ssion i s $1.50. Tickets are availab l e&#13;
at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Sunday, March 24: Spring Folk Fest sponsored by PAB from 1 p.m.&#13;
until 7 p.m. in the SAB. No admission charged.&#13;
Sunday, March 24: Concert "Contemporary Music Forum" at 7 30&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
March 28: Parkside Chorale Concert "St. Matthew's Passion" at 7 30&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
April l: "Halfway to Somewhere" in the Comm Arts Theater at 8 p.m.&#13;
No admission charged.&#13;
April 3: CLIO lecture by Irvin Wylie, Chancellor, "The Cultural Values&#13;
and Commitments of American Businessmen," in CL-Dlll at 7 30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
PCCC expresses gratitude to Church&#13;
In the article about the Parkside Child Care Center which appeared&#13;
in last week's RANGER, concern was expressed for the possible need&#13;
to relocate in the immediate future. The board and staff of the Center&#13;
would like to emphasize that without the generosity and good will of&#13;
the people of the Parkside Baptist Church for the past two and a half&#13;
years, PCCC might never have existed at all. "Sincere thanks is due&#13;
Parkside Baptist Church for their kindness, patience and concern "&#13;
commented Charlotte Chell of the Center's board.&#13;
TAUWF takes position on terminations&#13;
The membership of Parkside TAUWF (The Association of&#13;
University of Wisconsin Faculty) has announced its position regarding&#13;
recent faculty terminations.&#13;
"The chapter will act as amicus curiae on behalf of any terminated&#13;
faculty member at any reconsideration hearings and provide other&#13;
assistance and counsel to the extent possible."&#13;
It supports the presence of University Committee observers at the&#13;
appeal hearing and subsequent deliberations.&#13;
William Morrow, president of the Parkside TAUWF chapter said&#13;
anyone wishing to inquire further regarding TAUWF's action mav get&#13;
m touch with him.&#13;
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SISHT'n&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
MINIMUM RECOMMENDED&#13;
SPECIFICATIONS FOR RECEIVERS&#13;
(Keep this column for future reference.&#13;
Take it along with you when you shop for a&#13;
high fidelity receiver.)&#13;
These are the minimum acceptable&#13;
performance criteria you should seek in a&#13;
high fidelity receiver. When shopping, you&#13;
may tolerate slight departures under these&#13;
criteria for certain specifications, if other&#13;
specifications and-or features are more&#13;
important to you. Criteria are based on,&#13;
but not necessarily limited to, the tests&#13;
described in existing IHF Standards for&#13;
tuners and amplifiers respectively. (Note:&#13;
the symbol* means the higher the number&#13;
the better; the symbol t means the lower&#13;
the number the better.)&#13;
FM Tuner Section&#13;
IHF sensitivity 5pVt with ultimate&#13;
noise plus distortion down 40 dB* for 1000 yV&#13;
Signal to noise ratio—55 dB*&#13;
Total harmonic distortion mono (at 400&#13;
Hz—1 percent t&#13;
Total harmonic distortion, stereo, either&#13;
channel (at 400 Hz) 1.5 percent t&#13;
Drift 30 kHzt after allowing 1 minute of&#13;
warm up&#13;
Frequency response— ±2 dBt, 50 Hzt to&#13;
15 kHz*&#13;
Capture ratio-3 dBt&#13;
Selectivity, alternate channel—35 dB*&#13;
IM distortion l percent t&#13;
Spurious response rejection—80 dB*&#13;
AM suppression 50 dB*&#13;
Stereo channel separation 25 d£* at&#13;
mid frequencies, 20 dB* from 300 Hzt to 8&#13;
kHz*&#13;
Multiplex pilot and subcarrier sup&#13;
pression each, 50 dB*&#13;
Controls and features tuning knob;&#13;
accurately calibrated station dial; off on&#13;
switch, stereo indicator; tuning meter&#13;
(center of.channel or maximum strength&#13;
type); rear, antenna input for 300 ohm&#13;
twin lead (long wire terminal for AM&#13;
section)&#13;
AM Tuner Section&#13;
Sensitivity 300 &gt;,vt i f given in (jV&#13;
per meter; 30 „vt if given in absolute&#13;
Frequency response ( 3 dB points)—60&#13;
Hzt to 8 kHz*&#13;
THD 1 p ercent&#13;
Selectivity 30 dB*&#13;
Amplifier Section&#13;
(Preamp and power amp subsections&#13;
are normally evaluated as one section in&#13;
integrated units,)&#13;
Power output requirements will&#13;
depend on such factors as speaker ef&#13;
ficiency and room size; typical figures for&#13;
a single pair of average efficiency&#13;
speakers might be 15 watts* music power&#13;
per channel or 10 watts*" continuous&#13;
power per channel, with reference to 1&#13;
percent THDt. both channels driven&#13;
simultaneously&#13;
Power bandwidth- for rated distortion&#13;
(not to exceed 1 percent t), from 30 Hzt to&#13;
15 kHz*&#13;
THD vs. power output full power, less&#13;
than 2 p ercent t, 20 Hzt to 20 kHz*; half&#13;
power, less than 1.5 percent t, 20 Hzt to 20&#13;
kHz*"&#13;
IM distortion at any output impedance,&#13;
less than 2 percent t up to full rated power&#13;
Input sensitivity for rated output phono&#13;
and other low level inputs, 2 to6 millivolts;&#13;
aux and other high level inputs, 0.2 to 1.5&#13;
volts&#13;
Signal to noise ratio, for rated output&#13;
any input, 60 dB*&#13;
Frequency response ±2 dBt, 20 Hzt to&#13;
20 kHz*&#13;
Output impedance- nominally 4 to 16 oh&#13;
ms&#13;
Damping factor 10*&#13;
Features and controls—off on switch;&#13;
input program selector; volume control;&#13;
separate treble and bass tone controls;&#13;
channel balance control; stereo mono&#13;
mode switch, rear: inputs for magnetic&#13;
phono pickup, plus two high level sources;&#13;
outputs for speakers and tape recorder&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Mar. 20, 1974&#13;
Harvey" a step in the learning process&#13;
'':.dit°r S "0te: Last week's Production of "Har-&#13;
. ls reviewed here by Terry Kollman, a senior&#13;
English and communications major.&#13;
Parkside Players production of Harvey, directed&#13;
y associate professor of communications Dr.&#13;
Richard Carrington, opened last Thursday evening&#13;
to a small crowd. The first act moved rather slowly&#13;
however, by the second act opening night jitters&#13;
were gone, and the play began to go. Gregory B.&#13;
Gregory did an outstanding job as the insane yet&#13;
lovable milktoast Elwood P. Dowd. His comic&#13;
timing, line delivery, and physical gestures made&#13;
mm a unique yet believable character. Myrtle Mae,&#13;
portrayed by Kris Simpson, was an equally fine job!&#13;
Unfortunately, Veta Louise Simmons (Beth&#13;
Collova) was a weak link. As Myrtle Mae's mother,&#13;
the age difference did not come across. The&#13;
characterization (if there was any) came off stiff,&#13;
as though she were reading the lines rather than&#13;
living the part. Her sing-songy delivery became&#13;
irritating at times.&#13;
Some of the minor characters did very fine work,&#13;
adding greatly to the humor. Ted Paone, as the&#13;
hospital orderly Duane Wilson, was particularly&#13;
tunny. His facial expressions and comic timing&#13;
proved the old adage that "there are no small parts,&#13;
only small actors."&#13;
Dr. Lyman Sanderson (Jeff Kiehlbach) did a&#13;
commendable job; however, he seemed to push at&#13;
times, making the character younger than he&#13;
should have been. Mark Shimkus as Dr. William&#13;
Chumley provided humor and a good age contrast to&#13;
his assistant Sanderson. Shimkus' stereotyped&#13;
Viennese psychiatrist worked well, but the accent&#13;
(New York truck driver who forgot to blow his nose)&#13;
was a bit overdone. On the whole, the acting far&#13;
surpassed some artistic inadequacies.&#13;
The set was disappointing, but considering that&#13;
two completely different sets had to be constructed,&#13;
obvious flaws can be overlooked. The amazing&#13;
aspect of this particular set is that within a matter&#13;
of minutes an entire (box set) living room is&#13;
changed into Chumley's Rest, a mental institution,&#13;
a feat which is to be applauded. The design worked&#13;
well; however, the color of the rest home was annoying.&#13;
Have you ever seen a bright blue institution?&#13;
The library set, a combination of medium&#13;
pinks and browns was, on the other hand, attractive.&#13;
While the set was adequate, the charming touches&#13;
such as decorative items and props which made the&#13;
Virus set outstanding, were sorely lacking.&#13;
The costumes, supposedly done in 1940's styles,&#13;
were inconsistent. Chic, modern day dress would&#13;
have served the purpose, and would have saved the&#13;
costume designer, Louise Woiteshek, many&#13;
headaches. Another problem was that several&#13;
costumes were the same color as the set and&#13;
therefore blended right in.&#13;
Finally, the blocking at times seemed clumsy.&#13;
There were several cases of upstaging, movements&#13;
were unnatural, and the actors occasionally had to&#13;
strain their positions in order to deliver a line.&#13;
In spite of some problems, the show ran very&#13;
smoothly with no noticeable technical flaws. Many&#13;
people put in many hours to get this production&#13;
ready and their efforts are to be applauded. The&#13;
only way we learn is by doing, and it will take many&#13;
productions with many mistakes before we will&#13;
learn the limitations and capabilities of the new&#13;
theatre.&#13;
Public invited to&#13;
environmental hearing&#13;
on physical plant&#13;
Dr. Sanderson (Jeff Kiehlbach) right, looks on as Elwood P. Dowd (Gregory B. Gregory) checks&#13;
TJX™LhlS 7 &lt;left)- The ParkSide Harvey ran for four nights last week. P,a*ers' Of Mary Chayse-s p ay-&#13;
A public hearing on the environmental&#13;
impact of the&#13;
physical plant building to be&#13;
constructed at Parkside will be&#13;
held April 1 to 3:30 p.m. in room&#13;
D105 of the Classroom building,&#13;
Planning and Construction&#13;
Director James Galbraith announced&#13;
last week.&#13;
The public is invited to express&#13;
opinion on the project at the&#13;
hearing, which is being held in&#13;
compliance with the Environmental&#13;
Policy Act.&#13;
Galbraith said copies of the&#13;
impact statement are available&#13;
at his office and at the library, as&#13;
well as at Racine and Kenosha&#13;
public libraries and the Somers&#13;
Town Hall.&#13;
Galbraith said the physical&#13;
plant hearing should not be&#13;
confused with one to be held in&#13;
late April or early May on construction&#13;
of new parking lots.&#13;
Both projects fall under the&#13;
Environmental policy Act but are&#13;
subject to different regulations.&#13;
The one-story structure, which&#13;
has been approved by the Board&#13;
of Regents and State Building&#13;
Commission, will be located just&#13;
east of the heating-chilling plant&#13;
and north of the Tallent parking&#13;
lot on open, flat land without&#13;
trees or wildlife.&#13;
According to the report, there&#13;
will be no adverse environmental&#13;
effects to life systems,&#13;
congrestion or health because of&#13;
the building. The Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Planning&#13;
Commission and the Department&#13;
of Natural Resources has been&#13;
consulted about the project.&#13;
The building will provide space&#13;
for fleet maintenance and garage&#13;
facilities, campus storage,&#13;
maintenance shop areas for&#13;
groundskeeping, carpentry,&#13;
locksmith, painting, plumbing,&#13;
electrical and mechanical&#13;
operations, and staff offices.&#13;
Galbraith said the centralized&#13;
facility will result in substantial&#13;
savings in electrical energy and&#13;
fuel and increase work efficiency.&#13;
since various physical&#13;
plant operations are now scattered&#13;
in former residences on&#13;
campus which are ill-designed&#13;
and inadequate for such functions.&#13;
The p lace to go&#13;
for P ants&#13;
and things!&#13;
ISEftMANN'S&#13;
THE&#13;
[American'&#13;
614 - 56th Street&#13;
Nevadas [PCES has made its way to Parkside...&#13;
VEGAS NITE&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 23,8 P.M. - 1 A.M.&#13;
Student U nion Admission $ 1.50 p er $ 500 s take&#13;
Prize Auction held at evenings close&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. I.D.s required.&#13;
P.A.B. PRESENTS&#13;
THE&#13;
OUTRAGEOUS. . .&#13;
UNCLE&#13;
VINTY&#13;
LIVE IN PERSON!&#13;
SAT. MARCH23-8:00&#13;
$1.50 UWP STUDENTS ADVANCE&#13;
$2.0O()THERS &amp; AT DOOR&#13;
PAB slates outings, will&#13;
conduct outing clinic&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 20, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
An Outing Clinic is being&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, the purpose of&#13;
which is to provide information&#13;
that will be useful to out-door&#13;
enthusiasts.&#13;
The Clinic, slated for Wednesday,&#13;
March 27, 7:30 to 9 p.m.&#13;
in the Phy Ed Building, will include&#13;
three different sessions.&#13;
The rock climbing (or mountain&#13;
climbing) session will be&#13;
conducted by Morris Firebaugh,&#13;
associate professor of physics.&#13;
He will explain equipment and&#13;
terminology and will show slides&#13;
of some of his expeditions.&#13;
Canoe safety and wilderness&#13;
first aid will be explained by&#13;
Robert Grueninger, assistant&#13;
professor of physical education.&#13;
This session will be held in the&#13;
pool area.&#13;
Jack Elmore, director of&#13;
Career Planning and Placement,&#13;
will conduct a back-packing&#13;
session; he will talk about&#13;
clothing, equipment, procedures,&#13;
and other aspects of backpacking.&#13;
Besides the three sessions&#13;
outlined here, there will be&#13;
equipment displays and various&#13;
other activities going on at the&#13;
Clinic.&#13;
All students are invited&#13;
attend this free event, especially&#13;
those who plan to participate in&#13;
upcoming PAB outings.&#13;
One of those outings will be a&#13;
weekend camping trip to the&#13;
Devils Lake area on April 26, 27,&#13;
and 28. The campers will be&#13;
canoeing, hiking, and climbing.&#13;
On May 3, 4 a nd 5, the PAB is&#13;
organizing a canoe trip to the&#13;
Waupaca Chain of Lakes area.&#13;
And on May 20 (right after&#13;
finals week), a nine-day canoeing&#13;
and camping trip will leave out of&#13;
the Grand Marre, Minnesota&#13;
area and travel into Canada.&#13;
Teammates vote Cole&#13;
most valuable player&#13;
Gary Cole, 6-9 sophomore&#13;
center, has been selected as the&#13;
most valuable basketball player&#13;
at Parkside by vote of his&#13;
teammates, Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens has announced.&#13;
Cole emerged as the big man in&#13;
Parkside's final 1973-74&#13;
basketball statistics released last&#13;
week.&#13;
The 6-9 sophomore topped all&#13;
Parkside scorers with a 22.0 point&#13;
per game average for the 22&#13;
games he played in after missing&#13;
the first seven with a broken&#13;
thumb. He also averaged 12&#13;
rebounds a contest to lead&#13;
Parkside in that department.&#13;
Cole also led all regulars in&#13;
shooting percentage, making 205&#13;
of 360 attempts from the field for&#13;
a 56.9 percent mark and 75 of 99&#13;
from the free throw line for a 75.8&#13;
percent mark. His 47 points&#13;
against Northern Michigan,&#13;
setting a Parkside varsity&#13;
record, and 20 rebounds against&#13;
SIU-Edwardsville were also&#13;
Parkside season highs.&#13;
Three other Rangers averaged&#13;
in double figures. Sophomore Bill&#13;
Sobanski, who missed 16 games&#13;
with a broken foot, finished at&#13;
15.0 in scoring and 7.8 in&#13;
rebounding while Malcolm&#13;
Mahone, sophomore, who was not&#13;
eligible until Jan. 7 after transferring,&#13;
averaged 13.6 points a&#13;
game in 18 games and pulled&#13;
down an average of 7.3 rebounds.&#13;
Junior Chuck Chambliss, the&#13;
Rangers' leading scorer his first&#13;
two seasons, stayed in double&#13;
figures at 12.6 while his fellow&#13;
starter in every game at guard,&#13;
junior co-captain Joe Hutter&#13;
averaged 6 points a game.&#13;
The Rangers averaged 68.2&#13;
points a game to the opposition's&#13;
67.5 and 41.6 rebounds a contest to&#13;
their foes' 38.2. Parkside shot 43.8&#13;
percent from the floor and 66.7&#13;
percent from the line while the&#13;
opposition combined for a 43.7&#13;
mark from the field and 64&#13;
percent from the stripe.&#13;
Parkside ended its season with&#13;
a 50-46 loss to NAIA District 14&#13;
champion UW-Eau Claire on the&#13;
Blugolds' floor. The Rangers&#13;
finished 14-15, winning five and&#13;
losing six at home and breaking&#13;
1 Year Ago Today; It Was \&#13;
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p e n e t r a t i n g s h r i l l b un g s h e lp i n a hu r r y . Th e ne x t d a r k&#13;
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even on the road at 9-9. The semifinal&#13;
round in District play was&#13;
the furthest Parkside has advanced&#13;
in its five-year basketball&#13;
history.&#13;
Two gymnasts qualify&#13;
for championships&#13;
Classified&#13;
Mother ' s helper: Girl to live in for&#13;
summer. 2 children, 9 and 5. Must swim&#13;
Also interested in girl looking for&#13;
housing next fa l l . Call Mrs. Nelson, 654&#13;
9251, Kenosha&#13;
LOST: Cassette tape recorder. $10 if&#13;
found. 552 8603 Ask for Ron.&#13;
Personals&#13;
BLITZ!! Announcing another infrequent&#13;
meeting of the Women' s Wednesday night&#13;
stormtroopers conversation club Tonit e we&#13;
will be taking over a bar in Racine. All&#13;
par t icipants cordially invited See you ther&#13;
K.W. IN P.S. • T ennessee walt z beaut i ful but&#13;
sad Glad you're joining us tonight for a l i t tle&#13;
Wisconsin cheer .&#13;
J.E. , C.V., K.S. a nd others&#13;
too. Please come.&#13;
you're invited&#13;
Two Parkside gymnasts have&#13;
qualified for the 1974 National&#13;
Gymnastics Championships&#13;
scheduled for March 22-23 at Fort&#13;
Hayes, Kansas State College.&#13;
Freshman Brian Hill qualified&#13;
on the pommell horse while&#13;
Kevin O'Neil, a junior, qualified&#13;
in three events: pommell horse,&#13;
still rings and parallel bars.&#13;
O'Neil took third in the 1973&#13;
championships and just missed&#13;
All-America honors. In his third&#13;
year at the nationals, he is given&#13;
a good chance to receive the All-&#13;
American status.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
Quality 10-Speed bikes&#13;
Alan Wal lace, Prop.&#13;
Dan Werve, Salesman&#13;
Head Mechanic&#13;
Falcon *&#13;
Bot tecchia&#13;
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Cazenave&#13;
REPAI RS ON ALL MAKES&#13;
18th &amp; Grand, Racine, Wis.&#13;
6 3 2 - 0 0 0 7&#13;
OPEN&#13;
9 AM&#13;
1 AM&#13;
DAILY&#13;
SAT. ONLY, MARCH 23&#13;
DR. BOP &amp; M HEADLINERS&#13;
FEATURING THE white Raven&#13;
$300 Advance *3S0 Door&#13;
Tickets a vailable a t the Brat and a ll J &amp; J T ape C enters&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 22&#13;
PALMER HOUSE&#13;
Scuulovit/t&amp;l Octft Sfieciatbf&#13;
H&amp;e&gt; SctQwrft&amp;i * TWIN LAK ES&#13;
WED., FRI., &amp; SAT. MARCH 20, 22,&amp; 23&#13;
GENEVA CONVENTION&#13;
YOU CAN HAVE A NEW PROGRAM&#13;
ON CAMPUS&#13;
ROTC&#13;
Academic courses w/o obligation for freshman and&#13;
sophomores.&#13;
A commission as an Officer at the same time you get your&#13;
degree.&#13;
A QUICK LOOK&#13;
WHAT IS ROTC&#13;
IF ENOUGH STUDENTS ARE INTERESTED&#13;
THERE CAN BE AN ARMY ROTC PROGRAM&#13;
HERE AT&#13;
A GENERAL MEETING&#13;
WILL BE HELD FOR ALL STUDENTS&#13;
Main Concourse, LLC D-185&#13;
March 20, 21, 22 &amp; 26&#13;
9 a.m. - 3 p.m. everyday&#13;
5:30 - 9 p.m. on March 20 &amp; 21&#13;
$100 a month in vour last two years — up to 10 months per school&#13;
year.&#13;
Obligation - as little as 3-6 months, or 2 years, or 3 years, or 4&#13;
years on active duty. 20-30 careers available.&#13;
Flight training program.&#13;
Scholarships available to ROTC students.&#13;
Graduate schooling for present seniors.&#13;
Open to women as well as men. VETERANS GET SPECIAL consideration</text>
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              <text>Increase recommended in student fees</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, March 13, 19 74 Vol. II No. 24&#13;
Increase recommended&#13;
in student fees&#13;
Segregated Fee Allocation&#13;
*73-'74&#13;
Union Reserve&#13;
Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts&#13;
Student Life&#13;
Student Health&#13;
Transportation&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Intramurals &amp;&#13;
Club Sports&#13;
Student Group&#13;
Support&#13;
Recommended Allocation&#13;
'74-'75&#13;
$38.50 $38.50&#13;
L50 1.50&#13;
9.00 12.00&#13;
2.00 4.50&#13;
18.00 16.00&#13;
9.00 11.00&#13;
8.00 8.00&#13;
2.00 3.00&#13;
Total 88.00&#13;
The Segregated Fee Allocation&#13;
Committee has completed its&#13;
deliberations and made certain&#13;
recommendations to Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie regarding the use of&#13;
student monies, including an&#13;
increase in the Segregated Fee of&#13;
$6.50 yearly. The recommendations&#13;
will be studied by the&#13;
chancellor this week and, if&#13;
approved, must be forwarded to&#13;
Madison for approval by Central&#13;
Administration and ultimately&#13;
the Board of Regents.&#13;
The committee was composed&#13;
of six students, three faculty,&#13;
three staff and one civil service&#13;
representative. It was charged&#13;
with determining a break-down&#13;
for distribution of the $88 dollars&#13;
per year currently paid by each&#13;
student as part of the tuition.&#13;
$38.50 of that amount is nonallocatable&#13;
as it comprises the&#13;
94.50&#13;
Union Reserve and is a fixed&#13;
amount. The balance must be&#13;
distributed among Student Life,&#13;
Health, Transportation,&#13;
Athletics, and Student Group&#13;
support.&#13;
Transportation-the shuttle bus&#13;
and parking lot fees-has&#13;
previously been fixed at $18 but&#13;
will drop to $16 for 1974-75 due to&#13;
the elimination of the Kenosha&#13;
bus run second semester of next&#13;
year.&#13;
Increase Necessary&#13;
But an increase in the&#13;
Segregated Fee to $94.50 was still&#13;
deemed necessary because of the&#13;
unique situation at Parkside&#13;
which supports shuttle bussing&#13;
through the segregated fee.&#13;
Parkside, along with Green Bay,&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee has the&#13;
lowest segregated fee in the&#13;
system. The latter two campuses&#13;
have thousands more students to&#13;
generate more total dollars from&#13;
the fee. Green Bay has proposed&#13;
a three dollar increase in its fee.&#13;
The next closest fee is at Stout&#13;
and Eau Claire, which take $128.&#13;
No other camDus must support&#13;
on campus bussing; Parkside has&#13;
less allocatable dollars than any&#13;
other school after the Union&#13;
Reserve and Transportation&#13;
money is taken off the top.&#13;
The committee felt this put "a&#13;
heavy and unusual burden" on&#13;
the segregated fee on this&#13;
campus and did recommend that&#13;
other sources for funding&#13;
Transportation should be investigated.&#13;
"This amount taken&#13;
out of the fee affects the quantity&#13;
and quality of other programs&#13;
funded by the fee," said the&#13;
report. "This committee felt it&#13;
had to request an increase in the&#13;
fee, not only to continue existing&#13;
programs but to remain competitive&#13;
with other campuses."&#13;
L &amp; FA Money To Students&#13;
Specific allocations would&#13;
include transference of control of&#13;
the $1.50 for Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts programming from the&#13;
current faculty codified committee&#13;
to the student-run&#13;
Parkside Activities Board. The&#13;
money will remain in a separate&#13;
fund from PAB's other funds, and&#13;
the Board has already sent out&#13;
questionaires to faculty seeking&#13;
Streak! Parkside, too, joined the rush -&#13;
story and more pictures on page&#13;
5.&#13;
input from them as well as&#13;
students regarding program&#13;
selection.&#13;
An increase of $3 was&#13;
recommended for the Student&#13;
Life area for an additional staff&#13;
position and program expansion&#13;
in the areas of video and outdoor&#13;
recreation, and to fight inflation&#13;
in prices for films, lectures and&#13;
live entertainment.&#13;
For Health services an additional&#13;
$2.50 was requested by&#13;
the committee for expansion of&#13;
staffing and to cover increased&#13;
costs for medical services and&#13;
supplies.&#13;
In that area of Transportation,&#13;
the committee has recommended&#13;
earmarking $3500 out of the&#13;
campus Transportation fund to&#13;
support mass transit, currently&#13;
in the form of the indebted&#13;
Racine bus service (now&#13;
operated by the Vets Club) and&#13;
for maintenance of the car pool&#13;
program. The money will be&#13;
made available by a carry-over&#13;
from termination of the Kenosha&#13;
shuttle and through small shifts&#13;
in service if necessary.&#13;
A $2 increase in the area of&#13;
Athletics was recommended to&#13;
replace worn equipment, cover&#13;
increased costs of salaries, officiating&#13;
for competition, and&#13;
varsity travel expenses, and&#13;
general maintenance of existing&#13;
programs in varsity athletics.&#13;
More CCC Funds&#13;
Student Group Support, the&#13;
money distributed by the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee, was upped&#13;
$1 due to the increased number of&#13;
organizations to be served and&#13;
larger requests from them. It is&#13;
specifically to enable certain&#13;
groups to travel to conferences&#13;
and seminars, and, for example,&#13;
to send the Debate and Forensics&#13;
club to various contests.&#13;
Another recommendation from&#13;
the committee was regarding use&#13;
of the Phy Ed building. It was felt&#13;
that faculty and staff should&#13;
contribute financially in some&#13;
way for use of the building.&#13;
Currently it is student money&#13;
through the segregated fee which&#13;
is used to operate the facilities&#13;
and faculty and staff are using&#13;
them free. "They should share in&#13;
the financial support," stated the&#13;
committee, "for faculty and staff&#13;
are receiving free what students&#13;
are paying for, and this is not&#13;
equitable and should be&#13;
changed."&#13;
LCSFC rally&#13;
Speakers criticize review, back Folan&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Over 200 people attended the&#13;
rally held last Thursday in mid-&#13;
Main Place, at which many&#13;
speakers expounded on the&#13;
termination of William Folan,&#13;
assistant professor of anthropology,&#13;
and the problems of&#13;
the faculty review process.&#13;
Folan received a letter from&#13;
Dean Norwood of the College of&#13;
Science and Society explaining&#13;
that "The evidence submitted by&#13;
Professor Folan in regard to&#13;
teaching excellence and to institutional&#13;
service was, in the&#13;
judgement of the Executive&#13;
Committee, not sufficiently&#13;
meritorious to warrant renewal."&#13;
Students of Folan and others&#13;
have since formed a committee&#13;
called Latino and Concerned&#13;
.Students for Dr. Folan, who hope&#13;
to have the termination&#13;
recommendation reversed and&#13;
have joined with a student&#13;
coalition called Majority of the&#13;
Student Body (MSB) to force&#13;
faculty Executive Committees to&#13;
find a viable way to gain student&#13;
input into the review process.&#13;
Although invitations had been&#13;
extended to members of the&#13;
Social Science Executive&#13;
Committee, none came to the&#13;
rally.&#13;
The rally's first speaker was&#13;
Wayne Ramirez of the Student&#13;
Services staff, who expressed&#13;
hope that the evidence submitted&#13;
by rally participants in behalf of&#13;
Folan was something the&#13;
Executive Committee would take&#13;
into consideration in the appeals&#13;
hearing. He said. "I believe Dr.&#13;
Folan has contributed much&#13;
time, effort, and expertise to the&#13;
Latino community and Racine.&#13;
We feel he has excelled in all&#13;
three areas the Executive&#13;
Committee deems as prime&#13;
criteria in the review (teaching,&#13;
community service, scholarship).&#13;
Gonzalas: Usually&#13;
Don't Make Threats&#13;
Jesse Gonzalas, Spanish Center&#13;
director, said of Folan, "the truth&#13;
is that he has served the Latino&#13;
community and many Chicanos&#13;
here know that. We need more&#13;
Bill Folans at this University and&#13;
throughout the world. I will stop&#13;
short of nothing," Gonzalas&#13;
added, "to keep Folan here at&#13;
Parkside. And I usually don't&#13;
make threats."&#13;
Student Dan Ramirez spoke of&#13;
Folan as "a tremendous human&#13;
being." He said that as a student&#13;
of Folan's for two years, he has&#13;
found him to be "an individual&#13;
who can contribute to others."&#13;
Ramirez expressed his distaste&#13;
for professors who are "robots"&#13;
and attempt to make robots out of&#13;
their students. "Teachers" he&#13;
said, "for the most part, tell you&#13;
what they want you to know and&#13;
lecture on what they want you to&#13;
hear." Ramirez said that Folan&#13;
"is not that kind of teacher. He&#13;
has had the problems of the&#13;
people. Our culture (Chicano) is&#13;
with us all of the time, we have&#13;
pride in our existence and our&#13;
heritage. People have to learn&#13;
from each other and be capable&#13;
of communicating and accepting&#13;
Hayes Norman&#13;
to cope with this society." said&#13;
Ramirez. "Bill Folan is this kind&#13;
of person."&#13;
Ramirez said about the review&#13;
process that "any administrative&#13;
body which has the power to ruin&#13;
the life of an individual, and shut&#13;
off the University's flow into the&#13;
community, ought to have a good&#13;
close look at itself. There has to&#13;
be some means to check the&#13;
review system."&#13;
Norman: Stabbing&#13;
Chicanos In The Back&#13;
Third World president Hayes&#13;
Norman supported the efforts of&#13;
the Latino and Concerned&#13;
Students for Dr. Folan Committee,&#13;
saying that "we have a&#13;
man here (Folan) who wants to&#13;
do something," adding that&#13;
students who don't help the&#13;
Chicano community in their&#13;
efforts to save Folan's position at&#13;
the University are "stabbing the&#13;
Chicanos in the back." Norman&#13;
said that it is "not enough to tear&#13;
down the outside" or getting only&#13;
Folan's termination recommendation&#13;
reversed, but that&#13;
"we've got to do something about&#13;
the inside" and change the entire&#13;
review system so that it becomes&#13;
one that the students trust.&#13;
Dick Pautzke, MSB member,&#13;
advocated a review system in&#13;
which students too would sit in&#13;
decision-making chairs of the&#13;
Executive Committees. Pautzke&#13;
said that MSB suggest three&#13;
students, majoring in the field of&#13;
the faculty member who is being&#13;
reviewed, be allowed as voting&#13;
members of an Executive&#13;
Committee. Pautzke urged&#13;
students to unify rather than&#13;
form splinter groups in order to&#13;
change the review process.&#13;
"Unless we start now we will&#13;
never have a voice," he ended.&#13;
Gatoutte: Personality&#13;
Conflicts the Issue ,&#13;
Student James Gatoutte said&#13;
that in Folan's case "personality&#13;
conflicts were the issue." "If you&#13;
want to bring teaching excellence&#13;
into it," he exclaimed, "let's&#13;
bring in some of those teachers&#13;
on the Executive Committee.&#13;
Bring Nachlas (Morton Nachlas,&#13;
associate professor of sociology)&#13;
down here. You have to be a good&#13;
teacher to be able to judge one,"&#13;
he ended. This drew applause&#13;
from the audience.&#13;
Thomas Callanan, assistant&#13;
professor of sociology, and the&#13;
only faculty member who participated&#13;
at the rally, said that&#13;
teaching excellence was defined&#13;
as something a faculty member&#13;
has "if the Executive Committee&#13;
likes you. If you kiss the right&#13;
asses you have teaching excellence,&#13;
if you don't, you don't."&#13;
Callanan said that the SCAFE&#13;
(Student Course and Faculty&#13;
Evaluations) were used in much&#13;
the same manner. "If they&#13;
(Executive Committee members)&#13;
like you the SCAFE works&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Petitions are now&#13;
available at the Information&#13;
kiosk for anyone&#13;
wishing to seek office in&#13;
the April elections for the&#13;
P a r k s i d e S t u d e n t&#13;
Government Association.&#13;
Offices include president,&#13;
vice president, treasurer&#13;
and senate seats.&#13;
Elections a re slated for&#13;
the second week of April&#13;
and winners will hold&#13;
office th rough graduation&#13;
in May , 1975. On t he back&#13;
of the petitions are included&#13;
the by-laws to the&#13;
Constitution governing&#13;
candidate qualifications.&#13;
Completed petitions&#13;
must be turned in to the&#13;
assistant dean of students'&#13;
office, T 284, no lat er than&#13;
March 25, 1974. Cam&#13;
paigning will begin on the&#13;
26th.&#13;
2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Mar. 13, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
Fight now&#13;
or forever have no say&#13;
is students' choice&#13;
Two very different kinds of rallies were held in Main&#13;
Place last week. The first, attended by a couple of&#13;
hundred people, was to show support for Bill Folan,&#13;
assistant professor of anthropology, whom the&#13;
University wants to terminate; the second, attended by&#13;
nearly a thousand people, was to show interest in bare&#13;
bodies streaking past waiting eyes.&#13;
We will not dwell on the age-old problem that what is&#13;
significant is not interesting and what is interesting is&#13;
not significant. We are concerned only with responsiveness&#13;
and responsibility, specifically regarding&#13;
persons who should have been at Thursday's rally but&#13;
didn't make it until Friday.&#13;
We refer in particular to members of the Social&#13;
Science Division Executive Committee and in general to&#13;
other administrators and members of executive committees,&#13;
whose behavior leads us to conclude that they&#13;
must feel students should be seen and not heard. We beg&#13;
to differ.&#13;
It is students who have the greatest stake in a&#13;
university, for while their tuition covers only one&#13;
quarter of teachers' salaries and other educational&#13;
expenses, without that quarter there would be no need&#13;
for the teachers or the administrators or the library&#13;
books or the buildings. The students are both the employers&#13;
and the consumers. Without the consumers&#13;
there is no market for the product; without the employers&#13;
there are no employees; and as employerconsumers&#13;
they have certain expectations of quality.&#13;
We understand that the Executive Committee&#13;
members could not discuss specific personnel matters -&#13;
there are laws prohibiting this which could easily have&#13;
been referred to should such specific questions have&#13;
arisen. But there are no laws against committee&#13;
members, deans and other administrators hearing the&#13;
views of students. One would think that in the interests&#13;
of fairness they would want to acquire as much input as&#13;
possible (if it is possible to pierce the screens of&#13;
congnitive dissonance). They only hurt their own&#13;
credibility and incur increasing doubts about an already&#13;
severly criticized review process when they ignore the&#13;
opinions of students (and the community, which was&#13;
also representated at the rally).&#13;
Obviously, students are completely justified in their&#13;
frustration and anger. Even those who were reluctant&#13;
before to believe faculty were being less than fair when&#13;
judging their junior colleagues must now conclude that&#13;
faculty review is a farce, a game of giving tenure to the&#13;
ass-kissers so they will perpetuate ass-kissing and&#13;
students be damned.&#13;
This conclusion is inevitable when those with the&#13;
responsibility to make decisions apparently do not feel&#13;
that included in that responsibility is a duty to be&#13;
responsive to students' concerns. It would seem that in a&#13;
university which "places a first priority emphasis on&#13;
teaching excellence," or even includes teaching as one&#13;
of three criteria (and community service as another) of&#13;
review, someone in a decision-making position would&#13;
have felt some obligation to hear what students had to&#13;
say about Folan and the review process, not to mention&#13;
members of the community this University serves.&#13;
Fortunately for the future, the regents have just&#13;
mandated that some viable form of student evaluation&#13;
of faculty must be devised and used in the review&#13;
process on each campus. Now, through regent&#13;
pressure, people at Parkside may be forced to act on the&#13;
general dissatisfaction with SCAFE (Student Course&#13;
And Faculty Evaluation) and put together a more&#13;
reliable instrument. But this is not good enough.&#13;
Students must participate directly as well as indirectly&#13;
in the decisions to insure their rights as employerconsumers&#13;
are not violated.&#13;
Meanwhile, we still have lost and are losing some good&#13;
teachers. Three years ago students rallied in support of&#13;
faculty this University was trying to terminate. They&#13;
won some impressive battles but appear to be losing the&#13;
war. We must do it again and this time strike at the&#13;
heart of the process itself, not just skirmish on vhe&#13;
surface and inflict minor cuts and bruises.&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I would like to commend D.&#13;
Friedell and the RANGER for the&#13;
excellent article on gays that&#13;
appeared in the last issue. The&#13;
article-interview was fair and&#13;
open without being coy, or&#13;
apologetic, or laden with radicalchic&#13;
rhetoric ; it was honest and&#13;
personal-a very human treatment&#13;
of a subject that rarely&#13;
receives such perceptive and&#13;
sympathetic coverage in any of&#13;
the straight mass media. The&#13;
only thing lacking was the&#13;
identity of the interview's&#13;
speakers.&#13;
I know that it has been the&#13;
policy of the RANGER to give an&#13;
anonymous treatment to the&#13;
speakers in these articles&#13;
throughout the series. And I can&#13;
see some very good reasons for&#13;
doing this: it avoids the whole&#13;
"fame" trip, for it is the general&#13;
subject area you are exploring,&#13;
and not any one particular&#13;
person's situation, and it allows&#13;
the subjects to speak more freely&#13;
than they might if they were to be&#13;
named. Though I understand and&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
1 congratulate the people&#13;
working on the RANGER for&#13;
doing a tremendous job. These&#13;
people work their heads off&#13;
writing good articles that are&#13;
truthful and meaningful.&#13;
I especially enjoy the series of&#13;
articles about groups or individuals&#13;
that are oppressed by&#13;
American society. This shows&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
(This is a copy of a letter sent to&#13;
the Division of Social Sciences.)&#13;
With all due respect to this&#13;
office (Social Science Divisional&#13;
Office), I feel compelled to&#13;
respond to student appeals&#13;
concerning Dr. Folan. It was with&#13;
great dismay and concern that I&#13;
learned you people are willing to&#13;
let this man go. I think this would&#13;
be a terrible loss-to the&#13;
University and all students. I am&#13;
not involved with the Latin-&#13;
Spanish students' concern&#13;
(although I feel they are not&#13;
without merit, and have a&#13;
legitimate gripe). I am merely a&#13;
former student of his Anthropology&#13;
100 class. However, I&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
In papers recently circulated&#13;
among the U.W. faculty, there&#13;
seems to exist some doubt and&#13;
some conflict about which&#13;
organization deserves what&#13;
credit for helping "laid-off"&#13;
tenured teachers hold their jobs.&#13;
As a once "laid-off" but now reinstated&#13;
tenured teacher, I wish&#13;
to make my individual position&#13;
clear upon the record.&#13;
While it is true that some individual&#13;
persons associated with&#13;
other organizations did offer&#13;
moral support and may have&#13;
spoken individually on my behalf,&#13;
appreciate these reasons and&#13;
concerns, I think that gayness is&#13;
a special case that may merit a&#13;
different approach.&#13;
For the distinguishing feature&#13;
of being gay is its anonymity. A&#13;
gay person is not like a black, and&#13;
Indian, or physically handicapped&#13;
person. These are&#13;
identified by their very presence;&#13;
but gay people have the unfortunate&#13;
option of hiding. This&#13;
hiding has saved many people&#13;
from losing their jobs, the love of&#13;
their families and friends, and&#13;
sometimes even their lives. But it&#13;
is this same hiding that makes all&#13;
these losses possible, indeed, that&#13;
creates the climate that can&#13;
make b ing gay so difficult.&#13;
Not only are honesty and&#13;
openness healthier, but in the&#13;
long run they are safer and&#13;
happier for both gays and&#13;
straights. This is how things&#13;
change: attitudes, laws, and&#13;
people.&#13;
I do not, however, presume to&#13;
judge the interviewees' personal&#13;
decision to remain anonymous.&#13;
Each person's circumstances,&#13;
that the people on the RANGER&#13;
staff are creative, expressive and&#13;
understanding individuals.&#13;
These people deserve a huge&#13;
feast and drinks on the administration&#13;
for all their worthy&#13;
efforts before they leave this&#13;
school.&#13;
Debora Donatt&#13;
Kenosha freshman&#13;
feel I benefitted greatly under his&#13;
tutelage. He has an inimitable&#13;
style which is stimulating, interesting&#13;
and thought-provoking.&#13;
He contains the ability to make&#13;
facts and learning come alive and&#13;
be great fun. This is a quality that&#13;
should not be overlooked in an&#13;
instructor. He also has a real&#13;
humanitarian drive: he cares&#13;
about the student's career!&#13;
Anthropologically speaking--he&#13;
would be a great enhancement to&#13;
the department. Love of his&#13;
subject and the vigor with which&#13;
he displays it in his instruction,&#13;
cannot but help the aspiring&#13;
anthropology student, and&#13;
stimulate the credit-bound&#13;
learning student.&#13;
LETTERS continued on page 3&#13;
awareness, and readiness are&#13;
unique-and we can only do what&#13;
we're ready to do. But I know that&#13;
as a publicly acknowledged gay&#13;
student at Parkside, I have felt&#13;
more isolated than at any of the&#13;
other campuses I have attended.&#13;
I have never once been the&#13;
subject of ostracism by straight&#13;
students or faculty here, but I&#13;
have been very lonely when it&#13;
comes to gay company.&#13;
Perhaps I am just "out of it,"&#13;
being a relatively new student. At&#13;
any rate, my situation is&#13;
peripheral to the real issue. If the&#13;
speakers in your article had&#13;
identified themselves publicly&#13;
(or do in the future) more of the&#13;
still-closeted gays here might&#13;
have felt better about themselves&#13;
and been able to come out, too.&#13;
Who knows-perhaps the&#13;
RANGER could have sparked (or&#13;
still will) the beginnings of a real&#13;
"coming together" of gays at&#13;
Parkside, something that would&#13;
have been good for all men and&#13;
women here, whomever they&#13;
might love.&#13;
Jeff Hunter&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Trying to condense a review -&#13;
save words, save space - does not&#13;
work. The review of Joni Mitchell's&#13;
album, court and spark,&#13;
read like a fourth grade book&#13;
report, an injustice to a beautiful&#13;
lady, a beautiful album-&#13;
It's a shame, it's a crying&#13;
shame.&#13;
Barbara Scott&#13;
Sophmore&#13;
UW Stevens Pt.&#13;
You must forgive me if this&#13;
appeal sounds like Dr. William&#13;
Folan fan mail. I wanted to&#13;
respond without being a discredit&#13;
to the man, so felt it mandatory to&#13;
express my concern along with&#13;
my gratitude for having had the&#13;
privilege of being a recipient of&#13;
his instructions. I trust sincerely&#13;
that you people will give deep&#13;
thought and deliberation in&#13;
reconsidering your decision&#13;
before letting such a unique&#13;
person with the high calibre of&#13;
qualification for his job slip&#13;
through your doors. I feel&#13;
universities could benefit greatly&#13;
with more Dr. Folans around,&#13;
Carol Larsen&#13;
Kenosha Freshman&#13;
TAUWF was the only&#13;
organization which did anythingand&#13;
it did everything.&#13;
Without the immediate support&#13;
which TAUWF offered, I doubt&#13;
that a defense would have been&#13;
made at all. TAUWF provided&#13;
moral support, practical advice,&#13;
and legal counsel. As a result, my&#13;
"lay-off" was rescinded; I was&#13;
fully reinstated.&#13;
TAUWF deserves the credit&#13;
and my thanks.&#13;
Thomas L. Scarseth&#13;
Instructor&#13;
English Department&#13;
University of Wisconsin-La&#13;
Crosse&#13;
CR ANGER&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF: Jane M. Schl ,""\_&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Thomas J- Pe, e&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Heddon&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch. Ka ,hr . v np hhie&#13;
Michael Olsyik, Marilyn Schuber,&#13;
Strand, Wal t Ulbricht , Carrie Ward, Mike&#13;
Winslow vkson,&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Allen Fr*dr l ' l d i e&#13;
Debra Friedell, Debby Scenters, «ay&#13;
ARTIST, amy cundari , Denny Kroll&#13;
«t\ 1 1 j 1 . amy v w • . . - .&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnso&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 13, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
»»wi e i emui&#13;
i t A rr MM31&#13;
l&gt;.V Jane Schliesman&#13;
Au Naturel&#13;
1 he chancellor reportedly is praying for colder weather these days,&#13;
the reason -- streaking has struck Parkside.&#13;
nf try.f? refrain from forcing upon my readers one after another&#13;
ot the terrible puns which have characterized the media's coverage&#13;
no pun intended) of this phenomenon. However, in researching my&#13;
column this week I was exposed (no pun intended) to some comments&#13;
, '7fst quote ln order t0 supply you with even the barest (no pun&#13;
intended) facts regarding the situation at Parkside. Please bear (no&#13;
pun intended) with me --1 had to listen to these in the flesh (no pun&#13;
intended).&#13;
ThLba&lt;lCuCOnCern for many Persons is the penalty for getting&#13;
«aU| u'L That'" indicated assistant chancellor Allen Dearborn&#13;
would be a bad streak of luck." Regarding his own role in discipline&#13;
Dearborn said, "I'm not going to go out and buy a pair of binoculars so&#13;
I can check the campus-although that's probably foolish on my part!"&#13;
He did say "streaking" is not covered in the regent regulations, and he&#13;
feels campus administrators are better trained to handle students&#13;
striking than streaking. He was also overheard to say something like&#13;
he s more concerned about stroking than streaking!&#13;
The rumors about this new sport joining the athletic roster turned&#13;
out to be naked lies. Vic Godfrey, who coordinates club sports, said&#13;
there is "little chance for funding--the students would have to raise&#13;
their own money." Perhaps they could dash for cash or go buff for&#13;
bread, but the question arises of just what they need money for. I&#13;
mpan, certainly not uniforms! Further checking revealed that funds&#13;
would be required to cover fines, lawyers' fees and court costs for slow&#13;
streakers.&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, director of athletics, said there is no possibility for&#13;
it to be made a varsity sport because there is no one on the staff&#13;
qualified to coach it.&#13;
My own raw emotion when the speakers first did their thing at&#13;
Parkside last week was immense relief. A number of dedicated&#13;
members of the RANGER staff were determined that Parkside was&#13;
going to show its stuff, but it was my feeling that it is tlje student&#13;
newspaper's responsibility to report the news, not make it. Hence,&#13;
when other spirited students exhibited their courage (among other&#13;
things) we were off the hook.&#13;
It would seem, after last week's rush, that streaking has peaked at&#13;
Parkside. It is difficult to imagine that so large a group could get it up&#13;
again like at last Friday's rally, which attracted upwards of a&#13;
thousand streaker-seekers, all massed in Main Place. I found extraordinary&#13;
the display of unity and the atmosphere of social intercourse&#13;
that was evident on campus at the end of last weekcomplete&#13;
strangers had become friends and everyone was participating&#13;
in something together. It almost seemed possible that indifference&#13;
was out, involvement in. The word, by the way, is that&#13;
streaking is out, skinny dipping in~in Lake Wyllie. I can see the&#13;
headline now: "Apathy dies at Parkside-students make waves" (pun&#13;
intended).&#13;
CLIP lecture&#13;
Johnson to speak&#13;
on r i p-of f s&#13;
"The Rip-Off: A Defense in the&#13;
Context of a World View" is the&#13;
title of a free public lecture by&#13;
associate professor of philosophy&#13;
Wayne Johnson at 3:30 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, March 13, in the&#13;
Classroom Building, room D-lll.&#13;
The program is a part of the&#13;
CLIO Association lecture series&#13;
on "The Humanities in an Industrial&#13;
Society" initiated this&#13;
year at Parkside. The association&#13;
is affiliated with "CLIO," an&#13;
interdisciplinary journal of&#13;
literature, history and philosophy&#13;
of history, published at Parkside.&#13;
Johnson will discuss the "ripoff"&#13;
as a way of l ife in the United&#13;
States, reaching "from the&#13;
federal government to the five&#13;
and dime." He will relate the&#13;
various forms of cheating involved&#13;
in the "rip-off" to some&#13;
traditional philosophical&#13;
disciplines including the emotive&#13;
theory of ethics and the&#13;
philosophy of David Hume.&#13;
A member of the Parkside&#13;
faculty since 1970, Johnson&#13;
received his Ph.D. degree in&#13;
religion and philosophical theory&#13;
from the University of Iowa. He&#13;
also holds an undergraduate&#13;
degree in civil engineering and a&#13;
bachelor of divinity degree. He&#13;
previously taught at the&#13;
University of Iowa and at Carthage&#13;
College.&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie will&#13;
present a CLIO lecture April 3 on&#13;
"The Cultural Values and&#13;
Commitments of American&#13;
Businessmen" and the concluding&#13;
program will consist of&#13;
prize-winning essays by Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Appl icat ions for the&#13;
Dosition of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1974-75 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper ' s advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight credi t s per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basi s .&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
to submi t detai l s of h is-her&#13;
journal i st i c experience&#13;
and a statement of plans&#13;
for the RANGER to Geoff&#13;
Blaesing, c-o RANGER,&#13;
LLC D194.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates and&#13;
plans to announce i ts&#13;
selection before spr ing&#13;
break.&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
In the lead article of the&#13;
RANGER, February 27, Dick&#13;
Pautzke is quoted as saying, "To&#13;
get a viable student input into the&#13;
review process is something&#13;
you'd think the University would&#13;
want to do." To that I add,&#13;
"Amen!" I personally believe&#13;
that a great majority of faculty&#13;
members do, indeed, want&#13;
student input. The difficulty&#13;
comes in establishing what is&#13;
viable. Executive Committees do&#13;
look at student evaluation forms;&#13;
members do read letters from&#13;
students. But are students aware&#13;
of the problems created for the&#13;
Executive Committees by the&#13;
kinds of information they&#13;
presently receive?&#13;
First, I doubt if anyone is entirely&#13;
satisfied with the forms&#13;
used for student evaluations.&#13;
Computer experts point out that&#13;
they are often statistically invalid;&#13;
directions are not always&#13;
clear; some questions are&#13;
phrased in such a way that a&#13;
subjective rather than an objective&#13;
response is elicited; and&#13;
so on. But the forms do represent&#13;
one kind of tangible student input.&#13;
What do the formal&#13;
evaluations now used (SCAFE&#13;
for the Humanities Division)&#13;
actually reveal to the teacher?&#13;
That he is good or average or&#13;
poor? Perhaps, but not always&#13;
with any degree of clarity.&#13;
The forms present other&#13;
problems. Let's suppose I am&#13;
teaching an introductory&#13;
literature survey of a particular&#13;
historical period and I get a&#13;
returned evaluation form with a&#13;
poor rating. I turn the paper over&#13;
hoping for an explanation of my&#13;
failings as viewed by this student.&#13;
I find that the course and teacher&#13;
are rated "poor" because there's&#13;
too much poetry and the student&#13;
doesn't happen to like the poetry&#13;
of that period. If the chief literary&#13;
figures of that time are poets&#13;
instead of novelists or essayists,&#13;
why am I downgraded for the&#13;
emphasis on poetry? The student,&#13;
really, in this instance, isn't&#13;
especially well qualified to make&#13;
a judgment on course content.&#13;
Nevertheless, his printed&#13;
evaluation is strongly negative&#13;
and has become a matter of&#13;
record. When I recognize such a&#13;
situation in the evaluation of my&#13;
own teaching, can I be blamed for&#13;
taking with a good many grains&#13;
of salt the evaluations accorded&#13;
to my colleagues? There is&#13;
unquestionably a real problem in&#13;
assessing the validity of results&#13;
now available, both for the&#13;
teacher and for the Executive&#13;
Committee. The whole matter is&#13;
much more complex than trying&#13;
once again to rephrase the&#13;
questions.&#13;
In the Humanities Division, in&#13;
our search for a balanced&#13;
judgment of teaching&#13;
proficiency, we have also instituted&#13;
another procedure-class&#13;
visitation (followed by written&#13;
commentary) by colleagues, but&#13;
only at the request of and with the&#13;
full knowledge of the teacher&#13;
visited. The written report of the&#13;
observer's reaction-as often&#13;
positive as negative-is presented&#13;
to the teacher and he has every&#13;
opportunity to comment upon it,&#13;
to accept or reject it. This&#13;
procedure, too, is not foolproof&#13;
and probably has only marginal&#13;
benefits since the minute "outsiders"&#13;
enter that classroom, the&#13;
situation ceases to be "normal"&#13;
or "typical."&#13;
I have limited my remarks&#13;
primarily to the evaluation of&#13;
teaching so that students may,&#13;
hopefully, get a broader view of&#13;
the problem that faces senior&#13;
faculty members who spend&#13;
many, many hours attempting to&#13;
make a fair and balanced review&#13;
of a colleague's teaching. As if&#13;
the complications already&#13;
discussed were not enough, we&#13;
are frequently reminded in addition,&#13;
that classroom instruction&#13;
is not the onl;, responsibility of a&#13;
teacher. Students have recently&#13;
been invited to contribute their&#13;
opinions concerning the three&#13;
traditional areas of academic&#13;
performance (teaching,&#13;
scholarly research, and&#13;
university service) as valid&#13;
criteria for judging a faculty&#13;
member's status. Quite obviously,&#13;
the concepts of research&#13;
and service are as susceptible to&#13;
a variety of interpretations as is&#13;
teaching. Yet Executive Committees&#13;
continue to striveseriously&#13;
and at great length-for&#13;
a balanced judgement.&#13;
The RANGER article accuses&#13;
Executive Committees of making&#13;
decisions by manipulating&#13;
evidence to fit personal bias-&#13;
"whether a person is liked or not."&#13;
This is unfair generalization.&#13;
Executive Committees consist of&#13;
Rally&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
for you, if they don't like you the&#13;
SCAFE works against you."&#13;
Callanan said that Folan's termination&#13;
was due to "a personality&#13;
conflict between Mochon&#13;
(Marion Mochon, Chairperson of&#13;
the Social Science Division) and&#13;
Folan." Callanan stated that&#13;
"this was substantiated by letters&#13;
from "Van Willigan and Stoffle&#13;
(of anthropology) saying that&#13;
Folan is bad."&#13;
Callanan: Faculty&#13;
Review Screws Faculty&#13;
Callanan said that the review&#13;
process "was created by the&#13;
faculty to screw themselves. It is&#13;
like a fraternity or a gentleman's&#13;
club where people say I want to&#13;
suck your ass until you let me be&#13;
one of you."&#13;
Student Elaine Birch, who has&#13;
had Folan in three classes and is&#13;
now involved in an independent&#13;
study program under his&#13;
direction, doing survey work in&#13;
the Chicano community of&#13;
Racine said, "he made me think.&#13;
He didn't give knowledge to me,&#13;
he made me seek it out, look, and&#13;
find it for myself. This is true&#13;
learning." She elaborated on how&#13;
the things she has been taught by&#13;
Folan have been things which she&#13;
can put into practice in the&#13;
community while helping the&#13;
community at the same time.&#13;
However, Birch expressed&#13;
discouragement that the rally&#13;
would be helpful in giving the&#13;
Executive Committee some input&#13;
before the appeals hearing. She&#13;
said, "this University is a coffin.&#13;
Nothing we say today will have a&#13;
chance in hell" to help Folan.&#13;
Before the crowd dispersed,&#13;
Wayne Ramirez said, "if the&#13;
Executive Committee does&#13;
reverse its recommendation to&#13;
terminate Bill Folan, I hope they&#13;
don't see it as a sign of weakness.&#13;
It would be a sign of strength."&#13;
f&#13;
human beings, and they are no&#13;
more capable of complete objectivity&#13;
than are students. Most&#13;
faculty members could, on occasion,&#13;
plead guilty to not&#13;
overlooking "petty philosophical,&#13;
character, and personaltiy differences"&#13;
as the RANGER&#13;
suggests. But the notion that this&#13;
is a pervasive pattern of behavior&#13;
is simply not true. Do students&#13;
really believe that an Executive&#13;
Committee of 15-20 people is so&#13;
swayed by occasional personal&#13;
biases that superficial, callous&#13;
decisions prevail? I have yet to&#13;
meet a faculty member with a&#13;
personality so overpowering that&#13;
he can dictate policy for groups&#13;
the size of our Executive Committees!&#13;
I sincerely believe that&#13;
the integrity of most members of&#13;
Executive Committees is high. I&#13;
have not always voted with the&#13;
majority in personnel decisions,&#13;
and I have been saddened by&#13;
some decisions. Never have I felt&#13;
that final personnel decisions&#13;
(even those necessitated by&#13;
budget exigencies) were dictated&#13;
by personal whim or based on&#13;
petty grounds, nor that the whole&#13;
procedure is~as the RANGER&#13;
claims-"polluted with personality&#13;
politics."&#13;
At long last I return to the&#13;
fundamental concern that&#13;
prompted this letter-valid&#13;
student input into personnel&#13;
decisons. It is often said that the&#13;
time for a student to evaluate a&#13;
teacher most justly is ten years&#13;
after the course. At that time he&#13;
is more likely to recognize from&#13;
whom he really learned and what&#13;
courses truly benefited him.&#13;
Unfortunately we cannot wait for&#13;
the long range evaluation. I&#13;
understand the students' bitterness&#13;
and frustration and&#13;
sympathize with them; there is&#13;
faculty frustration, too, at all&#13;
levels. I wish I had an easy and&#13;
swift solution, but I don't, either&#13;
for the short or the long haul. But&#13;
let's not give up. Let us all,&#13;
students and faculty, try to find&#13;
some form of student participation&#13;
in the review process&#13;
that both students and faculty&#13;
can approve, support, and&#13;
trust! Stella C.Gray&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
Editor's note: For space&#13;
reasons it was necessary to edit&#13;
Dr. Gray's letter. The complete&#13;
text is available upon request in&#13;
the RANGER office.&#13;
The p lace t o 9 0&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and th ings!&#13;
ISER MANN'S&#13;
THE&#13;
[&amp;mettcan]&#13;
614 - 56th Street&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
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REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES&#13;
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632-0007&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Mar. 13, 1974&#13;
Few immediate alternatives&#13;
in mass transit for UW-P&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Editor's note: This is the second of two parts on&#13;
mass transportation for the University. This week's&#13;
article deals with criticisms of UWM's UBUS and&#13;
the transportation outlook for Parkside.&#13;
The immediate success of UBUS has not&#13;
necessarily paved the way for further experimentation&#13;
in mass transportation at UWM.&#13;
Although there has been a reduction of between 100&#13;
and 350 le ss cars parked in the UWM area this&#13;
school year, UBUS has succeeded only in keeping&#13;
the residential congestion from getting worse.&#13;
Criticism exists mainly over the future spending&#13;
of state tax dollars, specifically, an anticipated&#13;
$226,000 to be allocated by the State Legislature&#13;
during the second portion of this biennium. About&#13;
half of that amount appears earmarked for the&#13;
continued operation of the North Ave. UBUS. The&#13;
remainder could go towards one of two major&#13;
desires. One is the Milwaukee East Side Jitney&#13;
Cooperative, which would serve UWM students&#13;
living within two miles of the campus. The other is a&#13;
proposal by the university to utilize the remote&#13;
"Blue Hole" parking lot on the west bank of the&#13;
Milwaukee River, and transport students with a&#13;
shuttle system appropriated through state funds.&#13;
Subsidize City Buses&#13;
However the University Student Government&#13;
(USG) and other student organizations at UWM see&#13;
UBUS service as competing with the now running&#13;
Milwaukee and Suburban Transport Company&#13;
buses, rather than creating an efficient transit&#13;
system. USG feels that the present 40 minute delay&#13;
between UBUS runs is too unwieldy. The&#13;
organization advocates using state money in&#13;
providing fare subsidies for student passes and&#13;
tickets on daily city buses with headways to UWM of&#13;
only 15 minutes.&#13;
In relationship to the construction of remote&#13;
parking lots, student senator Dave Peckarsky&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
HiFi Performance Specifications&#13;
Although we buy a high fidelity stereo or&#13;
quad receiver primarily for the sound&#13;
quality it can deliver, it is possible to select&#13;
the best one within our budget without ever&#13;
hearing it perform.&#13;
The reason this is possible is that quality&#13;
component manufacturers publish extensive&#13;
specifications which can be&#13;
compared, provided you know what to look&#13;
for, or have the guidance of a&#13;
knowledgeable counselor such as a cer&#13;
tified audio consultant.&#13;
The most important timer "specs" on&#13;
which to make your judgment are:&#13;
FM Sensitivity (Quieting Level)&#13;
Signal to Noise Ratio&#13;
Total Harmonic Distortion&#13;
Frequency Response&#13;
Stereo Separation&#13;
Capture Ratio&#13;
Selectivity&#13;
Spurious Response&#13;
AM Suppression&#13;
Amplifiers are judged on:&#13;
Power Output&#13;
Power Band Width&#13;
Input Sensitivities&#13;
Damping Factor&#13;
Next week I'll give you the minimum&#13;
recommended specifications for&#13;
receivers. These can become your&#13;
"shopping guide" for a receiver and you&#13;
might want to keep it for future reference.&#13;
***&#13;
With summer just around the corner,&#13;
you should be thinking about your outdoor&#13;
music needs. Portable radios, cassette&#13;
players. TV's, car stereos, etc. are all preseason&#13;
priced at Sight'n Sound. Stop in now&#13;
while supplies are complete and the prices&#13;
are low. This is also a good time to stock up&#13;
on records and tapes.&#13;
***&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
TV * HI FI * RADIOS&#13;
RECORDS * TAPES&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 'til 6&#13;
charged that instead of implementing a high quality&#13;
bus service, the university was making it easier for&#13;
students to drive to UWM. Peckarsky stated that&#13;
the Blue Hole site would make students more&#13;
dependable on driving their cars to an area which is&#13;
designated as future parkland.&#13;
Parkside: More Parking Lots&#13;
While parking and circulation plans at Parkside&#13;
call for the building of two new parking lots with a&#13;
total capacity of 1,045 spaces by next fall, (the net&#13;
gain will be 225 spaces a year from now, due to the&#13;
loss of 320 temporary spaces here and 500 spaces at&#13;
the Kenosha center which will close in January) it is&#13;
doubtful that Parkside will soon, if ever have a&#13;
parking situation such as exists at UWM today.&#13;
Comprehensive development plans in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties indicate that not until 1990 will&#13;
Parkside be completely surrounded by urbanized&#13;
area. Yet there is an ongoing need to develop and&#13;
provide mass transportation for approximately 300&#13;
Parkside students who rely on either the Kenosha&#13;
Transit Commission, the Veterans Club, or car&#13;
pools to get to school.&#13;
Financial provisions for an expanded bus service&#13;
to Parkside could be allocated directly through the&#13;
Legislature in Madison or requested by UW-Central&#13;
Administration. Another possibility would be&#13;
having local municipalities sponsor an Operating&#13;
Subsidy Program or a Planning and Demonstration&#13;
Project which would include Parkside.&#13;
Senator Henry Dorman (D-Racine), a member of&#13;
the state Joint Finance Committee, said recently&#13;
that he would support an amendment to the present&#13;
state budget, requesting funds to operate the Jelco&#13;
bus to Racine. Dorman though, at this time, viewed&#13;
such a proposal pessimistically, citing the&#13;
Legislature's disagreement over UWM's use of&#13;
state dollars in solving their transportation&#13;
problem.&#13;
Murin: Restrict Parking Here&#13;
According to Parkside associate professor of&#13;
political science William Murin, who is the chairperson&#13;
of Racine's Mass Transportation Technical&#13;
Coordinating Advisory Committee and a member of&#13;
Kenosha's similar transit planning committee, the&#13;
key factors involved in obtaining local transportation&#13;
to Parkside include: the ordering of new&#13;
buses; the rescheduling of existing transit routes;&#13;
and the anticipated ridership generated by expanded&#13;
service. Although 2,455 students this&#13;
semester live in the Racine area, only about 125 ride&#13;
the Jelco bus regularly. The same holds true in&#13;
Kenosha, where 1,951 members of Parkside's&#13;
population live but approximately 75 commute on&#13;
the Kenosha Transit Commission service.&#13;
To encourage people to commute by bus or car&#13;
pool, Murin suggested that Parkside restrict car&#13;
spaces and stop constructing future parking lots. He&#13;
commented that if the state gets more serious about&#13;
gas rationing, the impact would greatly increase&#13;
bus ridership. Murin claimed that the general state&#13;
trend in urban mass transportation was still toward&#13;
decreased ridership, increased costs, and greater&#13;
need for public assistance to deray operating expenses.&#13;
Committee Hearings This Month&#13;
Later this month when the Racine committee&#13;
begins to consider "inter-city service," Louisette&#13;
Kluge, a Parkside student, will testify with regard&#13;
to the University's transit needs. Kluge petitioned&#13;
Mayor Stephen Olsen last semester requesting a&#13;
Purse-Size Vigilant Alarm Is The Answer&#13;
Muggers, rapists and worse are not what you went to&#13;
college for. We know it and the Vigilant Alarm knows it.&#13;
This amazing device, small enough for your purse, is set&#13;
off by your touch (or his) and produces an ear shattering&#13;
noise you can stake your reputation on ... . and still&#13;
keep it. Just two penlight batteries are all it takes to get&#13;
it started and keep him stopped. No wires to connect.&#13;
Comes in a complete kit for use on doors, windows and&#13;
purse. With super simple instruction.&#13;
SUPPLY LIMITED . . . MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY'&#13;
I enclose $5.00 (or each Vigilant Alarm.&#13;
I understand that if I am not totally&#13;
satisfied, I will receive a complete refund&#13;
if returned within 10 days.&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESSCITY&#13;
Family Jewels Ltd.&#13;
3431 West Villard Avenue&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53209&#13;
.STATE. _z IPhearing&#13;
on Parkside's transportation problem, but&#13;
was unsuccessful. She recently has bfeen notified&#13;
that Racine's Mass Transportation committee will&#13;
review the problem and hear her.&#13;
Murin speculated that when the Racine task force&#13;
completes its report in late May, and seeks the joint&#13;
approval of the Racine City Council along with&#13;
SEWRPC, boundaries for a possible expanded&#13;
transit system in Racine would border Highway 31,&#13;
west; Three Mile Road, north; and Meachem Road,&#13;
south. An additional nine or ten buses would be&#13;
needed by the Flash Transport Company, with two&#13;
or three providing service to Parkside. Murin said&#13;
the problem of such a system succeeding concerns&#13;
paying for the equipment, storage, and maintenance&#13;
of the buses.&#13;
At Least A Year's Wait&#13;
The report most likely will be used to apply for&#13;
federal grants in purchasing capital equipment.&#13;
Murin cautioned that a federally subsidized bus&#13;
service to Parkside wouldn't be available until at&#13;
the very earliest next spring semester, due to a 12-18&#13;
month waiting period involved in receiving federal&#13;
funds. (Kenosha applied to the Urban Mass&#13;
Transportation Act (UMTA) for federal funding in&#13;
June 1972 and is still awaiting approval.&#13;
It is hoped that within 1975 mas s transportation&#13;
between Racine and Kenosha will become a reality.&#13;
During this interm period the Vets club will continue&#13;
to operate the Racine bus. Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
assistant dean of students, said that the Vets were&#13;
for the first time making a small profit this&#13;
semester by selling approximately 30 one way 75&#13;
cent passes per week. She attributes the increase in&#13;
bus passes to car poolers who sometimes are unable&#13;
to catch a ride from a friend who may leave earlier&#13;
than expected.&#13;
Segregated F eeS upport?&#13;
To further help finance the Racine bus the&#13;
Segregated Fee Committee last week recommended&#13;
setting aside $3,500 from the campus&#13;
transportation fund which ordinarily goes toward&#13;
the operation of the shuttle bus system. The&#13;
proposal now awaits Chancellor Wyllie's signature&#13;
and the Board of Regents approval. The allocation&#13;
is continent upon the legality of using segregated&#13;
fees to provide transportation for students to and&#13;
from home. Also, a student survey might be taken if&#13;
the recommendation is approved, with regard to a&#13;
majority of students paying for transportation of a&#13;
minority student group.&#13;
But as Echelbarger pointed out, it might be&#13;
construed as equally unfair for those persons riding&#13;
the Racine bus and Kenosha city transit to Parkside&#13;
The Racine Bus photo by Kris Gardner&#13;
to be supporting parking and shuttle buses which&#13;
they never use.&#13;
Echelbarger said the money set aside by the&#13;
Segregated Fee Committee for the Racine bus&#13;
would be controlled primarily through the dean of&#13;
students office and the Vets club. The additional&#13;
lunding could be used this fall to strengthen&#13;
Echelbarger's position in bargaining for the continued&#13;
operation of the Racine bus and the greater&#13;
refinement of car pools, since it would indicate the&#13;
University is behind the project, not just one student&#13;
organization. On the other hand, the $3,5000 might&#13;
go towards paying the $3,100 de bt accumulated a&#13;
year and a half ago when the Vets took over the&#13;
Racine bus.&#13;
1 T'SOTM P.A.B. PRESENTS&#13;
THE&#13;
1 OUTRAGEOUS. ..&#13;
UNCLE&#13;
VINTY&#13;
LIVE IN PERSON!&#13;
SAT. MARCH 23 -8:00&#13;
I $1.50 UWP STUDENTS ADVANCE IV $2.00 OTHERS &amp; AT DOOR&#13;
1 f x 1 1 X N 1 XX « x* $ STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
1 D 'S REQUIRED&#13;
_ • • n Wednesday, Mar. 13, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3 All the nudes that fit we print!&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
The first streaker at Parkside&#13;
was a woman who "wanted&#13;
someone else to do it." She went&#13;
outside in front of the Library-&#13;
Learning Center when she heard&#13;
two guys were going to streak.&#13;
"I was waiting for them for a&#13;
few minutes and I decided the&#13;
hell with this fooling around. I&#13;
was walking up the sidewalk and&#13;
took off my sweater...then my Tshirt~&#13;
it felt really nice. I just&#13;
decided if I was halfway there I&#13;
may as well do it all the way, so&#13;
took off my shoes and socks,&#13;
pants and underwear."&#13;
She says she felt "total&#13;
freedom" in the sun and the air&#13;
and being outside. "It's totally&#13;
you. nature-your skin and the&#13;
sun and the air. You have to do&#13;
it."&#13;
There were no inhibitions, she&#13;
indicates, but just a beautiful&#13;
thing. "I wasn't even going to&#13;
streak, just experience the&#13;
outside. But then I decided to do&#13;
it—for Parkside or whate\ jr."&#13;
She started running, crossing&#13;
in front of LLC and then entering&#13;
the southeast doors. "I was&#13;
concentrating on running, totally.&#13;
I wasn't thinking that I was&#13;
naked, that people were seeing&#13;
me."&#13;
She streaked through the&#13;
cafeteria and then up through the&#13;
concourse to Greenquist. While&#13;
traversing upper Main Place "I&#13;
heard thunder belting out of the&#13;
cafeteria-it was sensational! The&#13;
floor was vibrating as I ran on it;&#13;
with my arms outstretched, I felt&#13;
like everything and nothing."&#13;
(The noise, she learned later,&#13;
was a standing ovation in her&#13;
honor; it prompted a call from&#13;
the chancellor's secretary,&#13;
located two floors up. to the Information&#13;
Center to find out&#13;
"what's going ON down there?").&#13;
Also while crossing upper&#13;
MainPlace she bi-sected a group&#13;
of high school students on tour&#13;
from St. Bona venture's.&#13;
"I got some bad vibes in the&#13;
Greenquist concourse-no one&#13;
wanted to recognize that&#13;
someone was running through in&#13;
the nude," she remarked.&#13;
She ran outside from&#13;
Greenquist and "friends were out&#13;
there urging me to put on clothes&#13;
fast because the cops might&#13;
come. 1 thought, 'the COPS?&#13;
That's right!' It never clicked in&#13;
my head that what 1 was doing&#13;
was illegal. I just felt total, absolute&#13;
freedom."&#13;
"It was a rush." she continues.&#13;
"the running in the nude and the&#13;
feeling of unity I was getting&#13;
from students-fantastic experience-&#13;
and unexpected."&#13;
She says that afterwards&#13;
everyone was congratulating her&#13;
and the teachers just dug it.&#13;
"Everyone seems to have loved&#13;
it-especially the women. It was a&#13;
woman who did it first, kind of a&#13;
sisterhood thing."&#13;
"Sometimes I think, 'Did I&#13;
really do it?' Then I remember&#13;
my bare feet hitting the concrete-&#13;
-and I have sore heels." She says&#13;
she gets looks from people now&#13;
and "I can hear the 'S's'-'She's&#13;
the streaker!' "&#13;
Asked if she would do it again,&#13;
her reply was that "I feel it has&#13;
been done now, it would be&#13;
redundant for me or anyone else&#13;
to do it here. The second time it&#13;
wouldn't be as free. The beauty is&#13;
the spontaneity. I wasn't even&#13;
going to do it-something else&#13;
made me-it just happened. It&#13;
really tripped me out!"&#13;
Her philosophy about the whole&#13;
event is that "this is the natural&#13;
way people are; they have&#13;
bodies. I'm the one who was&#13;
being natural...just me. free,&#13;
skin, the body that everybody&#13;
has." Her conclusion: "I was one&#13;
person annihilating or denying&#13;
customs and laws, by myself, and&#13;
yet collectively."&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
l 5010 ye.*&#13;
Wear Green&#13;
on Sunday for&#13;
StPafrickls&#13;
Day&#13;
SPECIALS!&#13;
Wear enG SRtE. EPNa ts Day tor Off&#13;
on AH Pipes &amp; Waterbeds&#13;
FREE Gifts to the v/earers of the&#13;
green!&#13;
"Open 365 Days A Year" • PHONE 654-3578 • TRUCK ON DOWN&#13;
6 T H E PARKSI D E RANGE R Wednesday, Mar. 13, 1974 Brief news&#13;
Scholarship applic ations available&#13;
for IhP-4~Clal .Aids office has announced that a list of scholarships&#13;
ior tnt , 4-, a academic year is available in that office, T 288.&#13;
dic tedTn thpT , 'I n0t neJessarily a factor-qualifications are intu!&#13;
tf?0me sucholarships have an April deadline, so it is&#13;
suggested that students check the listings.&#13;
PYC to meet&#13;
There will be a meeting of the Parkside Democratic Youth Caucus&#13;
on \\ ednesday. March 13 at 7 p.m. in LLC D174. Subjects on the agenda&#13;
include constitutional revision and the appointment of a projects&#13;
committee. The meeting is open to all students and the public.&#13;
F ollowing the meeting there will be a caucus of convention delegates&#13;
interested individuals are asked to attend the meeting or contact&#13;
Jerry Jasmont (632-7152).&#13;
Students to give free concert&#13;
A free public concert by instrumental music students will be&#13;
presented at 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 13, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Building Room D-118.&#13;
Soloists will be Mary Manulik and Jean Tashoff, both piano; John&#13;
Tredon, violin; Susan Lasco, alto saxophone; Cindy Ford, clarinet;&#13;
and Sue Kraschnewski, cello. Jeff Zalesak and Dennis McGraw&#13;
will play a trombone duet.&#13;
An original composition by student Debora Donatt will be presented&#13;
by an ensemble including Paula Novak, flute; Debbie Metke, oboe;&#13;
Cindy Ford, clarinet; Pat Yarbrough, horn; Jim Sodke, piano; and&#13;
Kraschnewski, cello.&#13;
Vet s express thanks to cont ributor .&#13;
The Vets Club has announced that it made over $100 on the March 1&#13;
paper drive. The proceeds will be used to sponsor club projects, which&#13;
include such things as the Racine bus service, and the club wishes to&#13;
thank everyone who contributed paper.&#13;
Classified&#13;
Wanted: A chemistry major to do qualitative&#13;
analysis. Will pay. Call 553-2295 and ask for&#13;
Debra.&#13;
LOST: Reward of $5 for set of car keys lost ii&#13;
Petrifying Springs. Please call 652-3679.&#13;
Will do all typing expertly in home. Nextday&#13;
service. Pick-up and deliver on campus.&#13;
Reasonable, Nancy Schipper 877-2459.&#13;
WANTED TO RENT: Preferably an upper&#13;
flat with a few large rooms, little space area&#13;
in the backyard A country atmosphere is&#13;
desired. (Interested party has reference and&#13;
is reliable and dependable business student.)&#13;
Phone 633-2871 after 5 p.m. Willing to pay&#13;
$130-$150. P.S. acceptance of pets.&#13;
CAR FOR SALE: 1961 VW.&#13;
Good mechanical condition. Call 657-3464.&#13;
7624 15th Ave. Kenosha. Ask for Ted.&#13;
tMNO'S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
§ni r i9qqDf i Z fonw&#13;
photo by Debra Friedel l&#13;
Most of these youngsters will probably be in school by the time the Child Care Center is located on&#13;
campus, but that long-standing goal moved a step closer to realization last week for the Center.&#13;
Child Care Center may move&#13;
operations on campus&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
The Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center has been operating for two&#13;
years in the Parkside Baptist&#13;
Church, located south of the&#13;
campus on County Trunk EE.&#13;
The possibility now exists for a&#13;
change of location for the Center,&#13;
a change which would put the&#13;
Center on campus within two&#13;
years.&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor and Dean of Students,&#13;
explained that the Board of&#13;
Regents, with prodding from the&#13;
federal government, is encouraging&#13;
UW system campuses&#13;
to increase their financial support&#13;
of child care facilities.&#13;
Parkside's Center has been&#13;
receiving $800 from segregated&#13;
fees through the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee, which is used&#13;
for equipment and supplies, and&#13;
has been using work-study&#13;
students as employees. Its main&#13;
problem is with the church.&#13;
Sherry Svatek, director of the&#13;
Center, believes that the&#13;
congregation of the church is&#13;
generally against the idea of day&#13;
care, especially since the Center&#13;
is not their own. The problem now&#13;
is to convince the church to allow&#13;
the Center to use its building for&#13;
another two years.&#13;
Dearborn hopes that a meeting&#13;
between the church's board of&#13;
directors and university&#13;
representatives will solve the&#13;
problem. "I'm hoping they'll let&#13;
us stay," said Dearborn.&#13;
The idea is to move the Center&#13;
into the Student Activities&#13;
Building when the new Student&#13;
Union is completed in two years.&#13;
Said Dearborn, "We've got to do&#13;
something with the Activities&#13;
Building." Dearborn believes&#13;
that since the Activities Building&#13;
was built with student money&#13;
(segregated fees), it should be&#13;
available for use by a student&#13;
service organization such as the&#13;
Child Care Center.&#13;
PAB presents "Uncle Vinty"&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will be presenting "Uncle Vinty"&#13;
March 23, in the Student Activities&#13;
Building. His act, called a&#13;
cross between The Ringling&#13;
Brothers, Tiny Tim, and an&#13;
English music hall, consists of&#13;
old singalong tunes, original&#13;
material, and children's stories.&#13;
According to his reviews, Uncle&#13;
Vinty "makes happiness, plays&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOST ACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
the piano not very well, sings not&#13;
very well, but entertains exceedingly&#13;
well." His appearances&#13;
with other name entertainers have&#13;
been known to get more praise&#13;
than the top billing. He has&#13;
performed with such acts as The&#13;
Who, Edgar Winter, Cheech &amp;&#13;
Chong, and numerous others.&#13;
"He puts on one of the most&#13;
outrageously funny shows I've&#13;
ever seen in my life, said John&#13;
Graham of the Activities Board,&#13;
"extremely entertaining."&#13;
"What can you say about&#13;
someone who comes on stage&#13;
with Viking armor on under a&#13;
laboratory smock?"&#13;
Uncle Vinty plays the piano and&#13;
sings his own versions of&#13;
singalongs while getting the&#13;
audience involved in the chorus.&#13;
The highlight of the night is&#13;
reported to be his story time&#13;
which would make the original&#13;
authors turn over in their graves&#13;
from laughter. "You have to see&#13;
it to believe it. I have never seen&#13;
anyone so amazingly weird as he&#13;
is," said Gary Petersen of the&#13;
Activities Board, "You have to&#13;
leave laughing."&#13;
Advance tickets for UW-P&#13;
students is $1.50; at the door and&#13;
for guests $2.00. The show starts&#13;
at 9 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
P.A.B. MOVIE&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 15 8:00&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
PARKSIDE &amp; WISC. I.D.'s REQUIRED&#13;
*•••&#13;
3E =&#13;
0&#13;
ac&#13;
00&#13;
, , •&#13;
&lt;a&#13;
o_&#13;
—1&#13;
THIRD WORLD presents&#13;
DANCAE&#13;
Lowe Expressions&#13;
Seek by Popular Demand!&#13;
Sat, March 16, 9 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
liaiiii&#13;
"AT LAST, A&#13;
COMPASSIONATE&#13;
AND&#13;
LOVING FILM&#13;
ABOUT BEING&#13;
BLACK IN&#13;
AMERICA.&#13;
- JAY COCKS,&#13;
Time Magazine&#13;
T !r. .^Radnitz / MATTEL Productions&#13;
Presents 'SOUNDER" A Robert B. Radnitz/ Martin Ritt Film&#13;
PANAVISION® COLOR BY DE LUXE®&#13;
i&#13;
TWENTIETH&#13;
CENHJRY-K*&#13;
Stud. Act. Bldg. $1.50 admission&#13;
General public invited!&#13;
Proof of age required. -&#13;
SUNDAY, MARCH 17 7:30&#13;
PARKSIDE I.D. &amp; WISC. REQUIRED&#13;
ADMISSION 75 C&#13;
I t 's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, March 13: Whiteskellar will be feat„H T ,&#13;
and Dennis Lindgren at 1 p.m. in the WhiteskdE?M Graham&#13;
charged. nueskellar. No admission&#13;
Wednesday, March 13: CLIO lecture by Wavne T.k&#13;
professor of philosophy, on "The Rip Off - A ,.on"son. associate&#13;
World View" in CL Dill at 3:30 p.m. Admission is fr*Jntext of a&#13;
public. tree and open to the&#13;
Wednesday, March 13: Student concert at 3in „&#13;
Arts Bldg. room D118. Admission is free and open tothl' "Li?16 Comm&#13;
Wednesday,March 13: PSGAGrievanceandcipan S&#13;
at 11:30 a.m. in LLC D174. Admission open to all meetin§&#13;
Wednesday, March 13: Meeting of the Democratic YonthVtUdentS'&#13;
7 p.m. in LLC D174. All interested students are invited Cauc"s at&#13;
Thursday, March 14: Whiteskellar presents old tin*&#13;
p.m. in the Whiteskellar. Admission is free cartoons at 1&#13;
Thursday, March 14: Play "Harvey" at 8 D M in «,* N&#13;
Theater. Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk ArtS&#13;
15: "Sounder" o'&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the SAB.&#13;
Friday, March PAB movie&#13;
Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Friday, March 15: Play "Harvey" at 8 d m in th« n&#13;
Theater. Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk ArtS&#13;
Saturday, March 16: Dance featuring "Love Expression" ,&#13;
by the Third World from 9 until 1 p.m. in the SAR AH • PONSORED&#13;
Saturday, March 16: Play "Harvey'' at8 p^ "$L50*&#13;
Theater. Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk S&#13;
Sunday. March 17: PAB movie "Sounder" at 7:30 p.m in the SAR&#13;
Admission is 75 cents. H 111 ine &amp;AB.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING m.,c( U .&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication „t the issueT^ich&#13;
an item is to appear. uc ,n wnicn&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 13, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Gregory B. Gregcry, left, and Mark Shimkus rehearse for "Harvey,"&#13;
directed by R.chard Carrington. The play opens Thursday at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater and will run through Sunday. Tickets&#13;
are $1 for students, $2 for faculty, staff and general public, and are&#13;
available at the Information kiosk. photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
•NTEN TREAT&#13;
BurgerChef&#13;
I SKIPPER&#13;
Af f i rm. act ion, Keno campus&#13;
discussed by regents&#13;
&amp; LARGE DRINK&#13;
&amp; FRENCH FRIES j&#13;
All For Only $&#13;
plus tax i|&#13;
3400 Sheridan Rd. &amp; 6926 39th Ave.&#13;
Some members of the&#13;
Board of Regents expressed&#13;
chsmay Friday at the lack of&#13;
detailed information on the hiring&#13;
status of women and minorities&#13;
on the University of Wisconsin&#13;
campuses.&#13;
The dismay came after a&#13;
report from Marian Swoboda&#13;
coordinator of the Affirmative&#13;
Action Program for Women in&#13;
the UW system, that shows&#13;
minimal increases in the percentages&#13;
of women faculty at&#13;
Madison, Milwaukee, Parkside&#13;
and the UW extension system&#13;
since 1970.&#13;
Her report also shows that the&#13;
largest increases came in the&#13;
instructor level and not in the&#13;
tenured positions.&#13;
Most vocal in expressing their&#13;
displeasure at the lack of more&#13;
detailed information were&#13;
regents John Lavine, Chippewa&#13;
Falls, and Edward Hales,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Lavine commented that he&#13;
would like to see more specific&#13;
reports that would pinpoint&#13;
problem areas and detail ways to&#13;
overcome them.&#13;
Donald Percy, UW senior vice&#13;
president and the system's top&#13;
affirmative action officer, explained&#13;
that his office was&#13;
moving ahead on the matter as&#13;
rapidly as it could.&#13;
Before specific recommendations&#13;
could be made, he&#13;
continued, the base information&#13;
has to be gathered from the&#13;
campuses. He added that there&#13;
have been some problems in&#13;
getting the employment data.&#13;
Percy suggested that the Board&#13;
of Regents might want to issue a&#13;
"mandate" that would enable the&#13;
central administration to get the&#13;
information quicker.&#13;
At that point, Hales declared he&#13;
was "shocked" that the central&#13;
administration thought it needed&#13;
a "mandate" from the regents.&#13;
There are several federal and&#13;
state laws dealing with this issue,&#13;
he said.&#13;
UW President John Weaver&#13;
also said the central administration&#13;
couldn't be an enforcing&#13;
agency since it couldn't&#13;
review the appointment in each&#13;
department on every campus.&#13;
Rather, he said, the responsibility&#13;
lies with each campus.&#13;
Swoboda's report shows that&#13;
only six of the 13 campuses have&#13;
written affirmative action&#13;
programs that satisfy the 10&#13;
components outlined by Weaver&#13;
in a policy memorandum issued&#13;
Feb. 6, 1973.&#13;
Parkside's program addresses&#13;
itself to nine of those components&#13;
but not monitoring procedures.&#13;
In other action, thr regents&#13;
approved extending the Parkside&#13;
occupancy of the center building&#13;
at Washington Road and 39th&#13;
Ave. in Kenosha for seven&#13;
months beyond the deadline of&#13;
July 1, 1974.&#13;
The Kenosha City Council and&#13;
the Kenosha County Board have&#13;
already adopted the resolution.&#13;
However, the agreement is&#13;
"with the understanding that this&#13;
is the final granting of an extension&#13;
of occupancy."&#13;
In a letter to the regents.&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie explained&#13;
that the extension was of&#13;
benefit to not only the city and&#13;
county, but also to the university.&#13;
While the Kenosha City Council&#13;
and the Kenosha County Board&#13;
had previously notified the&#13;
regents that the building was to&#13;
be vacated no later than July 1,&#13;
1974, Wyllie wrote that they&#13;
needed additional time to consider&#13;
the building's possible&#13;
future uses and make plans.&#13;
As for the university, Wyllie&#13;
wrote, "It has been painfully&#13;
clear for some time that there is&#13;
no possibility of completing the&#13;
planned remodeling of&#13;
Greenquist Hall by the beginning&#13;
of the fall semester."&#13;
By Joseph&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
He added that there would be&#13;
no suitable facilities for the&#13;
science program next fall, unless&#13;
the university has access to the&#13;
laboratories, classrooms and&#13;
other space in the center&#13;
building.&#13;
Wyllie further explained that&#13;
the initiative for the extension&#13;
was taken by the city and the&#13;
county.&#13;
"The Boyf riend"&#13;
t ryout s to be hel d&#13;
Tryouts for "The Boyfriend"&#13;
will be heid on Monday, March 18&#13;
from 7-10 p.m. in CA D115, which&#13;
is backstage of the theater.&#13;
Additional information is&#13;
available from Beecham&#13;
Robinson in LLC D175, ext. 2129.&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
We^oi" V SvM#«»&#13;
o*oo$.i insure® Co'p&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
8THE PARKS I D E RANGE R Wed n e s d a y , M a r . 1 3 , 1 9 7 4 RANGER —— .Sports&#13;
Phy* Ed. Bldg. schedule&#13;
Wednesday Mar. 13&#13;
Thursday Mar. 14&#13;
Friday Mar. 15&#13;
Gyms open for recreation&#13;
Handball Courts open&#13;
Pool and Sauna open&#13;
Gyms open for recreation&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool &amp; Sauna open&#13;
OLYMPIC FILM SHOWING&#13;
(students invited)&#13;
Gym open for recreation&#13;
Volleyball Club practice&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open &amp; Sauna&#13;
Saturday Mar. 16 WOMEN'S TRACK AND FIELD CLINIC&#13;
Sunday Mar. 17&#13;
Monday Mar. 18&#13;
Tuesday Mar. 19&#13;
Gyms open for recreation&#13;
Pool and Sauna open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
•&#13;
Gyms open for recreation&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool &amp; Sauna open&#13;
Gyms open for recreation&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool and Sauna open&#13;
12:30 pm-1:30 pm&#13;
7 pm 9:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am 9:30 pm&#13;
12:30 pm 2 pm&#13;
3:30 pm-9:30 pm&#13;
10:30 pm 1:30 pm&#13;
8 pm-9:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am 10:30 am&#13;
12:30 pm-9:30 pm&#13;
11:30 am i :30 pm&#13;
3:30 pm 6 pm&#13;
Classroom D105 12:30 pm&#13;
10:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
12 on south court&#13;
8:30 am 4:30 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-3:30 pm&#13;
THE BUILDING WILL BE&#13;
CLOSED ALL DAY TODAY&#13;
3 pm 9:30 pm&#13;
3 pm-9:30 pm&#13;
3 pm 9:30 pm&#13;
12:30 pm 1:30 pm&#13;
5:30 pm 9:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-9:30 pm&#13;
12:30 pm 2 pm&#13;
3:30 pm 6 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-1:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am 9:30 pm except for&#13;
10:30 am-12:30 pm&#13;
11:30 am 1:30 pm&#13;
1:30 pm 7:15 pm&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
In a gymnastics meet held at Parkside last SatSda^SiSewater&#13;
won with 104.10 points, Stevens Point's was second with 92.25 and&#13;
Parkside third with 87.55.&#13;
For the Rangers Brian Hill was first in floor exercises and Kevin&#13;
won stillrings, was second in parallel bars and third on high&#13;
bars. &amp;&#13;
OPEN&#13;
9 AM&#13;
1 AM&#13;
DAILY&#13;
SW Stofi 194 &amp; 50&#13;
"Az-ls"&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat., M arch 15 &amp; 16&#13;
SanduUcAe^ Oun Sfieccatef&#13;
Sdqetw TWIN LAKES&#13;
Adrian Smith&#13;
Wed., F ri., &amp; Sat., M arch 13, 1 5 &amp; 16&#13;
Coming Next Week&#13;
Dr. B op &amp; The Headliners&#13;
Featuring: The White Raven&#13;
Will b e a t th e&#13;
BRATSTOP: Sat., M arch 23&#13;
for in formation c all 4 14-857-2011&#13;
2 ,or /&#13;
BAR DRINKS ONLY&#13;
.m.to11p.m., M ar. 15th &amp; 16th Edgewater o r B ratstop&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
Service&#13;
ST. PATRICKS DAY&#13;
SPECIAL!&#13;
BEEF STEW&#13;
STUFFED CABBAGE&#13;
Thursday, M arch 14,1974&#13;
The dile&#13;
of being a&#13;
wM- -k.&#13;
W&#13;
We know. We understand. We care.&#13;
Our Women's Service Division includes a modern, fully&#13;
licensed clinic, complete with a superior medical and&#13;
professional staff. Outstanding service is provided in a&#13;
wid§ variety of areas such as pregnancy testing and&#13;
counseling, pregnancy termination (up to the first 12 weeks)&#13;
and menstrual extraction (starts period up to 14 days kite).&#13;
For further information or an appointment, call us in&#13;
confidence. %&#13;
Midwest Population Center&#13;
(312) 644-3410&#13;
100 East Ohio&#13;
Chicago, Illinois 60611&#13;
A non-profit organization&#13;
M£.&#13;
H&#13;
Limif one coupon per cust.&#13;
Grapplers third&#13;
in nationals&#13;
Parkside wrestlers placed&#13;
third in the NAIA national&#13;
championships in River Falls last&#13;
week. Central Washington was&#13;
first with 102, Central Oklahoma&#13;
second with 80.5. The Rangers&#13;
had 66 points.&#13;
Other Wisconsin schools in&#13;
competition were Whitewater,&#13;
which placed 7th, River Falls&#13;
13th, and Stevens Point 18th.&#13;
Parkside came out with two&#13;
national champions and a runnerup,&#13;
to be the only school in&#13;
Wisconsin ever to have more than&#13;
one national champion.&#13;
Bill West at 134 won 5 matches&#13;
to take a championship, finishing&#13;
the season with a 27-0 record and&#13;
making him the first UW-P&#13;
wrestler to finish the season&#13;
undefeated.&#13;
At 150 lbs. Randy Skarda&#13;
defeated 6 opponents in the threeday&#13;
meet to finish the season with&#13;
a 28-1 record, a school record for&#13;
the most wins in a season.&#13;
Ken Martin, last year's&#13;
national champ at 134 lbs., moved&#13;
up to 142 for this year's meet and&#13;
"wrestled one of the greatest&#13;
matches of all time," exclaimed&#13;
coach Jim Koch. He went against&#13;
the defending 142 lb. national&#13;
champion, Kit Shaw, and at the&#13;
end of regulation time was tied 6-&#13;
6. At the end of overtime they&#13;
were tied 2-2 so it became a&#13;
judges' decision. Shaw won a&#13;
split vote and was then named&#13;
outstanding wrestler of the&#13;
tournament on the basis of his&#13;
win over Martin. Both wrestlers&#13;
received a standing ovation.&#13;
Rico Savaglio at 118 lbs. lost his&#13;
first match but wrestled back and&#13;
decisioned two opponents before&#13;
being eliminated from the&#13;
tournament. Joe Landers at 126&#13;
also won two matches.&#13;
Koch said this was the highest&#13;
any Wisconsin team had ever&#13;
placed in the national tournament.&#13;
"I'm pleased with&#13;
everyone's effort, especially the&#13;
three who got into the finals. It&#13;
took a lot of hard work during the&#13;
year.&#13;
Fencers finish&#13;
fourth&#13;
Parkside finished fourth in the&#13;
Great Lakes fencing championships&#13;
in Detroit last Saturday.&#13;
The winner was Wayne State&#13;
with 107 points, followed by Notre&#13;
Dame with 76 and Detroit, 55&#13;
Parkside had 47. The meet included&#13;
12 colleges.&#13;
Bernie Vash had an 11-3 record&#13;
for the Rangers and was voted&#13;
the outstanding entry in epee.&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier and John&#13;
Tank were second and third, with&#13;
13-2 and 13-3 records respectively&#13;
in foil.&#13;
Rick Moffet was eliminated in&#13;
the second round in saber while&#13;
Dave Bauman reached the semifinals&#13;
in epee before being&#13;
ousted.</text>
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              <text>LCSFC schedules rally Thursday</text>
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              <text>LCSFC schedules rally Thursday&#13;
by Debra Friedell * W&#13;
The Latino and Concerned&#13;
Students for Dr. Folan Committee&#13;
(LCSFC) have scheduled&#13;
a rally for Thursday, March 7 at&#13;
noon in mid-Main Place. The&#13;
rally is being held to discuss the&#13;
faculty review system and give&#13;
students a chance to air their&#13;
concerns about that system,&#13;
explains Emiliano Contreras, a&#13;
member of LCSFC. Contreras&#13;
added that Executive Committee&#13;
members and administrators&#13;
involved with the review process&#13;
are invited to attend the rally and&#13;
answer the questions of students.&#13;
The LCSFC has had no&#13;
response to its letter, sent Feb. 20&#13;
to Marion Mochon, chairperson&#13;
of the Social Science Division,&#13;
asking for specific reasons for the&#13;
termination notice given to&#13;
Bill Folan&#13;
William Folan, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology. Folan&#13;
has, however, received a letter&#13;
from Dean Norwood of the&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
which states, "The evidence&#13;
submitted by Professor Folan in&#13;
regards to teaching excellence&#13;
and to institutional service was,&#13;
in the judgment of the Executive&#13;
Committee, not sufficiently&#13;
meritorious to warrant renewal."&#13;
Folan's SCAFE (Student Course&#13;
and Faculty Evaluation) results&#13;
for last semester rate him&#13;
generally higher than Divisional&#13;
averages.&#13;
Students of Folan have accumulated&#13;
approximately 300&#13;
names on a petition in his support&#13;
which will be distributed to Social&#13;
Science Executive Committee&#13;
members before Folan's appeals&#13;
hearing. That hearing will be&#13;
held within the next two weeks. In&#13;
addition, the Spanish Center in&#13;
Racine has written to Mochon&#13;
commending Folan's contributions&#13;
to the Racine Chicano&#13;
community. Members of the&#13;
Spanish Center said in their&#13;
meeting of Feb. 27 that "Folan&#13;
had fulfilled well the criteria of&#13;
community service" and that it&#13;
was "inconsistent for the&#13;
University to have used his activities&#13;
as evidence of Affirmative&#13;
Action steps and then&#13;
terminate him."&#13;
Folan has requested an open&#13;
hearing for his appeals at which&#13;
some of his students will be invited&#13;
to speak, members of the&#13;
University Committee (faculty&#13;
grievance committee) will be&#13;
asked to attend and a member of&#13;
the RANGER staff may be&#13;
present.&#13;
Ken Webster, a member of&#13;
LCSFC, expressed hope that the&#13;
Executive Committee will&#13;
reverse their termination&#13;
recommendation, saying that,&#13;
"Folan's termination will affect&#13;
all minorities in that they will&#13;
lose any faith they had in the&#13;
University's plans for affirmative&#13;
action." Contreras&#13;
added that "students have every&#13;
right to show concern about their&#13;
faculty. That is why we invite&#13;
them to attend the rally slated for&#13;
Thursday."&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday,Mar ch6, 1974 Vol. I I No.23&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1974-75 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight credits per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to Mav basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
to submit details of his-her&#13;
journa listic experience&#13;
and a statement of plans&#13;
for the RANGER to Geoff&#13;
Blaesing, c-o RANGER,&#13;
LLC D194.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates and&#13;
pl ans to announce its&#13;
sele ction before spring&#13;
break.&#13;
UW-P looking&#13;
forward to&#13;
mass transit&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Last September 4, UWM chartered two&#13;
Milwaukee and Suburban Transport Company&#13;
buses for the purpose of operating a test route&#13;
among the University's larger residential concentrations.&#13;
UBUS service runs every 45 minutes on&#13;
regular school days, from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. All UWM&#13;
students, faculty and staff who present university&#13;
ID cards are allowed to ride free of charge.&#13;
"Funds were set aside by the Legislature for a&#13;
pilot experiment to reduce parking congestion in a&#13;
metropolitan area that hindered students getting to&#13;
class on time," said Donovan Riley, UWM assistant&#13;
chancellor for community relations. "We were&#13;
forced to look at a severe problem involving the&#13;
neighborhood and an increased enrollment of 1,650&#13;
students which meant less parking on the&#13;
residential streets adjacent to the University. Our&#13;
goal was to get the most people possible into buses."&#13;
Ridership Multiplying Fast&#13;
Since UBUS serwce began, student, faculty and&#13;
staff response has been far greater than anyone&#13;
anticipated. Daily ridership, originally estimated to&#13;
be 948 riders, turned out last semester to be 1,500&#13;
and has since increased to 2,200. Two chartered&#13;
buses have expanded to five, contracted with the&#13;
Transport Company. Increased ridership has also&#13;
made UBUS service more costly. The service had&#13;
been expected to cost about $42,000 a year, but is&#13;
now running at an annual rate of about $90,000.&#13;
Transportation Planning For Parkside&#13;
Central Administration is requesting from the&#13;
State Building Commission an allotment of $75,000&#13;
and the authority to use an anticipated total of&#13;
$100,000 (in matching grant monies - $40,000 federal&#13;
and $60,000 local) for the preparation of transportation,&#13;
planning, and technical studies in&#13;
several UW-System campus communities. These&#13;
projects include Parkside, LaCrosse, Milwaukee,&#13;
Oshkosh and Stout.&#13;
"The objective of this effort is to seek the release&#13;
of funds and authority to use these funds on a&#13;
shared-cost participation with local communities in&#13;
the development of solutions to increasing circulation,&#13;
parking and mass transit problems and&#13;
their related environmental and energy impacts,"&#13;
said Donald Gerhard, UW-senior director of&#13;
Campus Planning and Environmental Impact.&#13;
Assistance From SEWRPC Study&#13;
In relationship to Parkside, Gerhard stated that&#13;
the request for funds and grants was part of the&#13;
current South Eastern Wisconsin Regional Planning&#13;
Commission (SEWRPC) study. A "unified&#13;
work program" in conjunction with SEWRPC's&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Spring?&#13;
Temperatures rose into the low 70's last Sunday, the snow of a week&#13;
before was rapidly melting, and Petrifying Springs park was, of&#13;
course, flooded. It was also crowded for a day in early March, so these&#13;
two students paddled off in search of their own kind of solitude.&#13;
"transit development plans" (underway with advisory&#13;
task forces in Milwaukee, Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties) will assist the UW-System in&#13;
analyzing the economical operation of bus service&#13;
to Parkside.&#13;
Three Types of Mass Transit Needs&#13;
Both the Department of Transportation (DOT)&#13;
and the federal Urban Mass Transportation Act&#13;
(UMTA), mentioned Gerhard, anticipate substantial&#13;
investments to maintain, improve and&#13;
develop existing mass transit systems in Wisconsin.&#13;
Three types of needs were defined as: Capital&#13;
facilities and equipment; operating assistance; and&#13;
planning and demonstration projects.&#13;
Mass transit funds in the state budget total $7&#13;
million, to be administered by the DOT over the&#13;
present biennium for transportation aid programs.&#13;
Out of $5 million allocated in the budget, the DOT&#13;
may grant recipients up to two-thirds of the total&#13;
operating deficit, not including depreciation or&#13;
return on investments. The second part of the mass&#13;
transit budget provides $2 million for aid to mass&#13;
transit demonstration and planning projects&#13;
designed to increase the availability and quality of&#13;
mass transit, or otherwise improve urban transportation.&#13;
Cities, villages, towns and counties&#13;
which subsidize or operate transit systems are&#13;
eligible to apply for state assistance.&#13;
Ultimate Goal: Local Transportation to the Campus&#13;
Robert Winter, UW vice-president, said the&#13;
ultimate goal for Parkside's commuting needs was&#13;
to get local transportation out to the campus and&#13;
provide the university with operating assistance.&#13;
Although bus service from Racine is an immediate&#13;
problem, as Winter admitted, relief sought in the&#13;
form of municipalities receiving capital grants will&#13;
not be possible until 1975 due to a nine to 12 month&#13;
waiting time involved in applying for federal funds.&#13;
Requesting dollars directly from the State&#13;
Legislature, Winter felt, was not the answer to&#13;
solving a $2,000 operating deficit that the Vets Club&#13;
incurred last year when they took over the Racine&#13;
bus service. Earlier last year UWM ran a budgeted&#13;
item through the state Joint Finance Committee&#13;
resulting in the Legislature setting aside approximately&#13;
$100,000 for the 1973-74 budget year and&#13;
$200,000 for the 1974-75 period to experiment in&#13;
creating competitive public transportation alternatives&#13;
to the automobile. The "UBUS" route, a&#13;
free crosstown bus service to UWM has stabilized&#13;
parking on a campus of approximately 7,250 cars&#13;
that has accommodations for only 2,000 vehicles.&#13;
Future Problems For UBUS?&#13;
"General purpose revenue, appropriated by the&#13;
Legislature to demonstrate alternative solutions to&#13;
transportation at UWM is not self-amortizing. It&#13;
may in the future complicate their position to get&#13;
further financial assistance...it boxes them in, away&#13;
from federal funds," commented Winter. "This is&#13;
not to say that the UBUS is not a success, but there&#13;
is a need of some special study with regards to&#13;
restricting parking on streets around the UWM&#13;
community."&#13;
Present Service Remains for Immediate Future&#13;
Winter believed that since the Vets' bus service to&#13;
Racine was now self-supporting, it would&#13;
strengthen Parkside's position in gaining access to&#13;
local transit routes, since demonstration projects&#13;
require the applicant to be able to continue the&#13;
project beyond the demonstration phase. However,&#13;
until the city of Racine has the ability to sponsor a&#13;
Planning and Demonstration project or include&#13;
Parkside in an Operating Subsidy program, said&#13;
Winter, the Vets will be forced to continue raising&#13;
money through dances, paper drives and candy&#13;
sales.&#13;
Meanwhile, Racine students wishing to ride the&#13;
continued on page 3 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Mar. 6, 1974&#13;
Apathy dies&#13;
at Parkside —&#13;
for one day&#13;
Last week four student groups got together and pulled&#13;
off a benefit for the Al Lansdowne family, whose home&#13;
was recently completely destroyed by a fire. The sale of&#13;
RANGERs for this worthy endeavor netted $373.14 for&#13;
Lansdowne, who is a Parkside student (as is his son).&#13;
The family moved into a new apartment over the&#13;
weekend and is getting reorganized and together again.&#13;
The money will be used to aid them in getting settled&#13;
(anyone still wishing to contribute to the Lansdowne&#13;
fund may do so in the Bursar's Office, Tallent218).&#13;
RANGER, along with the Adult Student Association,&#13;
the Vets Club, and members of the IS (Industrial&#13;
Society) class wishes to thank everyone who contributed.&#13;
We find it encouraging that the general indifference&#13;
which usually characterizes this campus can&#13;
be forgotten when it comes to helping one of us in need.&#13;
It has been said often enoOgh that Parkside lacks a&#13;
sense of community but this proves that we can act as&#13;
neighbors and get it together when it's for one of our&#13;
own.&#13;
One student* hearing the story of the fire as she&#13;
purchased a RANGER, muttered philosophically, "isn't&#13;
life shit?" And, although it is at imt es, it is only when the&#13;
&amp; students of this University work as a whole to help each&#13;
. other, that Parkside pulls'itseif out of ihe quicksand&#13;
1 helplessness of apathy and gains for itself a name of&#13;
respect.&#13;
m*n (km MUrX&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
An Open Letter to the Special Committee on Tenure&#13;
and Promotion Policies&#13;
A couple of weeks ago I submitted my comments regarding faculty&#13;
review criteria on the form printed in RANGER. After much further&#13;
consideration I wish to amend my remarks on that form.&#13;
The universities in this country seem to be gradually assorting&#13;
themselves into one or the other of two categories: the teaching institution&#13;
or the research institution. Some schools have had one&#13;
reputation or the other for a long time; others are now moving in one&#13;
or the other direction. For a new university such as Parkside, the&#13;
choice is clearly present as to what type of an institution it shall be,&#13;
and we can set our sights one way or the other and proceed but it does&#13;
not seem possible that we can long stand at the crossroads and say we&#13;
are advancing.&#13;
In my response to your questions on the form I indicated that I felt&#13;
all three of the present criteria (as I understand them) are valid; the&#13;
problems lie in their application. It seems to me now that if indeed&#13;
Parkside does have the choice I have alluded to above, we must move&#13;
in the direction of a teaching institution.&#13;
The basic mission of this campus is to serve the industrial society of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The people of this area whose tax dollars&#13;
support this institution welcomed Parkside because it would provide a&#13;
needed four-year school of higher learning to educate themselves and&#13;
their children. Their thoughts were, I am sure, more toward quality in&#13;
the classroom where it could directly benefit the students, rather than&#13;
toward quantity in the scholarly journals, read, for the most part, by&#13;
the author's learned colleagues and doctoral candidates.&#13;
Before I continue I should clarify that I am NOT derogating&#13;
research and publication in any way, but merely asserting that their&#13;
place at Parkside should not be in the limelight of the focus and&#13;
direction of this campus. Nor should they be hiding in the wings, subtle&#13;
prompters in the review process. They are, to me, extras on the stage,&#13;
contributing to an overall effect but not absolutely necessary to the&#13;
success of the production. The "production" in this case remains an&#13;
undergraduate institution. Hopefully we will move into master's&#13;
programs in the SMI area in the near future, but we are not and never&#13;
will be able to catch up with the Madisons-it is economically and&#13;
politically unfeasible.&#13;
Hence, when hiring, reviewing and tenuring or firing faculty&#13;
members there is really only one overriding criterion tc be looked at&#13;
and that is teaching performance. As I indicated in my original&#13;
response and on other occasions, the responsibility for determining&#13;
teaching excellence must lie with those who are in the classroom day&#13;
after day and attempting to learn from (s)he who would teach. Under&#13;
no circumstance should a worthy teacher be allowed to leave Parkside&#13;
under other than his or her own volition. For this to happen is a&#13;
betrayal of the students and a denigration of their education.&#13;
We get letters&#13;
/I HOPE:&#13;
STREAKING^'&#13;
GETS POPULAR&#13;
A R O U N D H E R E&#13;
S° T CAN CRECK&#13;
THE. \&#13;
GOODS &gt;&#13;
(jBEFORL&#13;
.BUYING!&#13;
io me isaitor:&#13;
I have been attending Parkside&#13;
in one form or another for the&#13;
past six years. During the last&#13;
two years I have been haunted by&#13;
an enduring question which has&#13;
r e m a i n ed u n a n s w ere d&#13;
throughout the scope of my&#13;
academic endeavors. I have been&#13;
tormented by the thought that I&#13;
may have to leave this institution&#13;
forever this spring without finding&#13;
the answer to my question,&#13;
which is: "WHO THE HELL IS&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL?"&#13;
I have faithfully read his&#13;
"Letters to the Editor" which we&#13;
are periodically subjected to in&#13;
the RANGER. While I must&#13;
concede that these letters consist,&#13;
for the most part, of asinine&#13;
reasoning, they are nevertheless&#13;
entertaining-an Archie Bunkertype&#13;
relief. However, in view of&#13;
Mr. Gruhl's most recent critique&#13;
on the .morality of America (Feb.&#13;
27) I find my amusement and&#13;
curiosity with him has dissipated.&#13;
The article to which I am&#13;
referring is Mr. Gruhl's&#13;
enlightened expose on the&#13;
reasons why women REALLY&#13;
get raped. Mr. Gruhl asserts&#13;
(among other juicy revelationsyou&#13;
must read it to believe it)&#13;
that: "...seduction is a two way&#13;
street. If it isn't, then why do girls&#13;
wear makeup and perfume?"&#13;
(How true! I always make a&#13;
conscious effort to plan my day's&#13;
seductions while applying my&#13;
makeup.)&#13;
I haven't the space here to give&#13;
Mr. Gruhl a complete or even&#13;
concise rebuttal, I would merely&#13;
suggest that he check the facts&#13;
before displaying his ignorance&#13;
publicly. Criminal rapes are&#13;
committed upon females of all&#13;
moralities (whatever that&#13;
means), all colors, shapes,&#13;
classes and age-from children to&#13;
senior citizens. The ONLY&#13;
category indicative of rape&#13;
victims is the category of f emale&#13;
(and even this has been debated).&#13;
This is a matter of statisticsrecords&#13;
are readily available to&#13;
persons who care to substantiate&#13;
allegations with facts.&#13;
Unless Mr. Gruhl can prove&#13;
that the women he so explicitly&#13;
described as "swiveling down the&#13;
hall," as "just asking for it,"&#13;
have been or will be raped, I deny&#13;
him the right to generalize them&#13;
into the category of (potential)&#13;
rape victims.&#13;
I take the time to respond to&#13;
Mr. Gruhl's letter because there&#13;
is a very real danger in perpetuating&#13;
his type of theory. His&#13;
reasoning is specifically that&#13;
justification given by rapists ("I&#13;
know she really wanted it"). Mr.&#13;
Gruhl is also one reason why this&#13;
type of crime persists and is&#13;
continually ignored, condoned,&#13;
dismissed and excused.&#13;
Peggy Holtman&#13;
Kenosha Junior&#13;
To the Editor (and, incidentally,&#13;
Mr. Gruhl):&#13;
It is extremely admirable that&#13;
a man such as Mr. Gruhl can&#13;
voice his opinions so eloquently.&#13;
However, he should understand&#13;
that facts, not opinions, should be&#13;
the basis of any logical&#13;
argument. Let me help you get&#13;
the facts straight, Mr. Gruhl.&#13;
According to the federal&#13;
government, and state and local&#13;
police forces, a rape is taking&#13;
place in this country every 7&#13;
minutes, 24 hours a day, 365 days&#13;
a year. Only 10 percent (approximately)&#13;
of these assaults&#13;
are reported. Among the rape&#13;
victims are women of all agesyoung&#13;
girls (who, as far as I&#13;
know, have not yet become&#13;
voluptuous creatures"), women&#13;
who are ugly (by standards of our&#13;
society), women who are&#13;
beautiful, women who are fat&#13;
women who are thin, women who&#13;
are middle-aged, and women who&#13;
are old (in one case in California&#13;
recently, the victim was 93 years&#13;
of age!).&#13;
Not all of these women could&#13;
possibly be wearing the type of&#13;
attire which Mr. Gruhl described&#13;
in his,letter. Not all of the women&#13;
at Parkside wear the clothing you&#13;
depicted, Mr. Gruhl; perhaps you&#13;
should turn your "girl-watching"&#13;
eyes to the women who dress in&#13;
the manner you prefer (not every&#13;
woman wishes your attention).&#13;
It must be understood that men&#13;
in this country have been brought&#13;
up differently than women&#13;
regarding sex. A man is taught to&#13;
be active, virile, masculine: a&#13;
"young buck." A woman is&#13;
taught to be passive, feminine,&#13;
silly: a "hen." Both are taught&#13;
that, though the man is the&#13;
initiator, fcthe woman is the one&#13;
continued on page 3 &#13;
letters&#13;
continued from page 2&#13;
who must say "no" to having&#13;
sexual intercourse. However,&#13;
(since men are generally&#13;
physically stronger) what does&#13;
the woman do when the man&#13;
assumes that her "no" really&#13;
means "yes?" She gets raped; if&#13;
the "blood pressure of t he 'young&#13;
buck' " is high enough.&#13;
With your "historical perspective&#13;
of 72 years," Mr. Gruhl,&#13;
are you familiar with any of the&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Two girls sort of ambushed me&#13;
and told me that they didn't like&#13;
what I wrote about the way&#13;
Parkside girls dressed.&#13;
(RANGER, Feb. 27) Other than&#13;
debunking the Stroaska (sic)&#13;
lecture on rape (which, by the&#13;
way, did cost Parkside over $900)&#13;
my letter commented on what I&#13;
considered the under-dressed&#13;
women around here. But I did&#13;
NOT say that ALL Parkside&#13;
women dressed like "tramps."&#13;
Actually there are some very&#13;
well-groomed women around&#13;
here-starting with some of the&#13;
faculty and many of those on the&#13;
secretarial work force, plus some&#13;
undergraduates. Anyhow, after a&#13;
half minute of sparring it was&#13;
agreed that I was talking about a&#13;
very small minority. Luckily for&#13;
me, a couple of girls went past us&#13;
as we were talking and proved&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I am writing this as a way to&#13;
show my disappointment at the&#13;
termination of Prof. Joseph&#13;
Neville. This semester marks the&#13;
fourth time I have studied under&#13;
Dr. Neville, and I felt compelled&#13;
to recommend a reversal of a&#13;
termination that would deprive&#13;
our university of an able and&#13;
enthusiastic scholar.&#13;
Before continuing, I would like&#13;
to sketch a brief background of&#13;
myself. My major field of endeavor&#13;
here began in Life Science&#13;
in 1970. I not only enrolled in&#13;
courses designed for a pre-med&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
About tenure, how are instructors&#13;
evaluated here at&#13;
Parkside? In particular, I was&#13;
wondering about Dr. Folan, the&#13;
assistant professor of anthropology&#13;
who is about to be&#13;
dismissed if the tenure board (I&#13;
guess) doesn't give him another&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As a student at Parkside, I am&#13;
very disturbed and concerned to&#13;
see Professor Folan dismissed.&#13;
I might not be aware of the&#13;
cause of his discharge, however,&#13;
I cannot see anything that&#13;
William Folan could have done to&#13;
deserve such treatment, and I am&#13;
convinced it is a matter of personality&#13;
politics.&#13;
I have taken two of Dr. Folan's&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
mass transitRAIMGER&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Thomas J. Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Heddon&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Kathryn Kah,&#13;
Michael Olsyzk, Marilyn Schubert, Debbie&#13;
Strand, Walt Ulbricht, Carrie Ward, Mike&#13;
Winslow&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Allen Fredrickson,&#13;
Debra Friedell, Debby Scenters, Ray Waldie&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari, Denny Kroll&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
meager penalties for rape? Are&#13;
you familiar with the statistics&#13;
which report that rape is the most&#13;
frequent major crime in this&#13;
country but holds the least&#13;
amount of penalty? Are you&#13;
familiar with the court reports&#13;
which allow 98 percent of indicted&#13;
rapists to go free even though&#13;
they may have beaten their&#13;
victims to unconsciousness&#13;
before they raped them?&#13;
my "tramp" point for me. So,&#13;
what began as sort of a confrontation&#13;
ended up as a friendly&#13;
rap session.&#13;
For instance, (and since they&#13;
asked me) I told them that in my&#13;
opinion real feminine attractiveness&#13;
comes from posture,&#13;
good grooming and from the&#13;
eyes, providing they're not&#13;
plastered with too much purple&#13;
makeup. Then the conversation&#13;
shifted to pants and jeans worn&#13;
by women. I agreed with the girls&#13;
that wearing pants was probably&#13;
"more practical" but that too&#13;
often they make a woman look as&#13;
though she has a text-book in&#13;
each hip pocket and that really&#13;
isn't true. I've checked it out. You&#13;
can tell by pinching.&#13;
This present unisex style fad,&#13;
however, has made it pretty&#13;
difficult to tell the difference&#13;
education, but also took electives&#13;
in the social sciences, including&#13;
history. Two professors in this&#13;
latter discipline were to&#13;
have a profound influence on my&#13;
educational development at&#13;
Parkside. One was Dr. Neville,&#13;
for whom I have the greatest&#13;
respect. Largely thru my experiences&#13;
in his History 119 a nd&#13;
120 classes, I decided to declare a&#13;
second major - one in history.&#13;
Last semester I completed&#13;
History 409 with Dr. Neville and&#13;
this semester I am enrolled in&#13;
410.&#13;
Many of my colleagues felt just&#13;
chance to upgrade his class.&#13;
Here at Parkside we don't have&#13;
many instructors that are interested&#13;
in minority problems&#13;
that are actually doing something&#13;
of value in the Kenosha, Racine&#13;
community, or even in school. I,&#13;
Latino, and many of his students&#13;
classes. One last semesterChicano&#13;
culture-and the census&#13;
and survey project in the city of&#13;
Racine this semester, both of&#13;
which have proven more&#13;
beneficial to me than any other&#13;
social science class, simply by&#13;
virtue of his teaching ability. For&#13;
example, in discussing a particular&#13;
chapter of the course,&#13;
students searched additional&#13;
information on their own and&#13;
conducted a small survey similar&#13;
to the one in the chapter,&#13;
analyzing the present reaction of&#13;
people at our particular location&#13;
and then making a comparison&#13;
between their data and that of the&#13;
text. Naturally there were a few&#13;
who did not benefit as much from&#13;
the course, yet this is to be expected&#13;
in any class.&#13;
I could say so much more...I&#13;
shall simply add that Dr. Folan is&#13;
a true friend of the students. He is&#13;
free of hypocrisy, vanity...he is&#13;
always at our level of understanding,&#13;
at our reach. To&#13;
dismiss Dr. Folan from Parkside&#13;
would be unfortunhtie *' for&#13;
Parkside as a growing inYou&#13;
speak about the "virtue"&#13;
of "modesty" which is lacking in&#13;
women. What about the same&#13;
virtue in men? Realize, sir, that&#13;
both the rapist and the raped are&#13;
victims of the perverted sense of&#13;
value which is apparent in this&#13;
society, where money has&#13;
preempted humanity and respect&#13;
for other human beings.&#13;
Susan L. Burns&#13;
Racine Freshman&#13;
between the girls and the boys&#13;
these days-with the fellows&#13;
wearing long hair and the girls&#13;
wearing pants. The other day I&#13;
was in a washroom. I was&#13;
fascinated by a guy putting on&#13;
eye makeup. He saw the incredulous&#13;
look on my face in the&#13;
mirror, grabbed his books and&#13;
beat it. He left in such a hurry&#13;
that he forgot his Revlon. I'm&#13;
sure that I was in the right&#13;
washroom because I looked at the&#13;
sign on the door on my way out.&#13;
But things are looking up.&#13;
Style-makers have decreed that&#13;
men will soon be wearing their&#13;
tresses shorter and that pants are&#13;
"Out" and swirley skirts "In"&#13;
and that suits me fine. For me&#13;
there's nothing lovlier than a&#13;
pretty girl in a swirley skirt.&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Senior, Racine&#13;
as disappointed as I did when&#13;
made aware of the untimely&#13;
termination.&#13;
My studies at Parkside end this&#13;
year, but concern for the future&#13;
development of this institution&#13;
has prompted this letter. If&#13;
decision making policies continue&#13;
along the path of terminating&#13;
high quality personnel such as&#13;
Dr. Neville, I will find it increasingly&#13;
difficult to say that I&#13;
am proud of the place where my&#13;
undergraduate work was done.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
James G. Caya&#13;
Senior, Kenosha&#13;
submit that Dr. Folan is doing&#13;
something we as students believe&#13;
is valuable to our education, and&#13;
has the potential to help in understanding&#13;
of the Latino culture&#13;
to anyone interested. Thank you.&#13;
Hayes D. Norman&#13;
President: Third World&#13;
The p lace to go&#13;
for P auls&#13;
and t hings!&#13;
JSERMANRTS&#13;
THE&#13;
614 - 56H» Street&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Jelco bus will keep paying for $45 semester passes&#13;
(prorated after the start of each semester) or&#13;
purchasing the 75 c ent one-way passes. Kenosha&#13;
students will continue to transfer downtown from&#13;
one of t he five area routes to the Saxony-Carthage&#13;
(Rt. 4) line and pay a 25 cent fare.&#13;
"Parkside may decide though, to change its attitude&#13;
towards using institutional funds for&#13;
transporting students to and from their homes "&#13;
added Winter (something which is currently being&#13;
considered by the Segregated Fees Committee, but&#13;
has heretofore faced strong opposition). "But in&#13;
that respect the campus would have to determine&#13;
whether or not they're in the bus service business."&#13;
NEXT WEEK: CRITICISM OF UBUS AND THE&#13;
POSSIBLE EMERGENCE OF MASS TRANSPORTATION&#13;
AT PARKSIDE&#13;
Journalism!&#13;
Ranger a nnounces a staff meeting.&#13;
Discussions: n ews, f eature, &amp; sports w riting; p hotography;&#13;
layout; business &amp; advertising&#13;
Wed. M arch 6 - 3:30 pm Thurs. M arch 7 - 10:00 am&#13;
Ranger o ffice, L LC 0194&#13;
TRIPLE TREAT "ciSy&#13;
BurgerChef ^&#13;
iCHEESE BURGER Va&#13;
| • . . S H A K E&#13;
\ FRIES S ir-wOj&#13;
3400 SOeridai 00 . 0 0920 3910 An.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
Quality 10-Speed bikes&#13;
stitution-and I am beginning to&#13;
wonder whether I want to continue&#13;
to be part of such an institution.&#13;
&#13;
Shing-Mei Kelly&#13;
Burlington Freshman&#13;
Falcon&#13;
Bottecchia&#13;
Ficelle&#13;
Allan Wallace, Prop.&#13;
Dan Werve, Salesman &amp;&#13;
Head Mechanic&#13;
REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES&#13;
18th &amp; Grand, Racine, Wis.&#13;
632-0007&#13;
TH&#13;
Announc ing GRAND OPENING&#13;
Friday. March 8&#13;
I m&#13;
205 Main St. Racine&#13;
Presenting:&#13;
The Buddy Montgomery Quintet&#13;
Featuring: Juonita Ellington&#13;
7 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
Entertainment cover&#13;
Starts at 9 charge *1 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE R ANGER Wedne sday , Mar. 6, 1 9 7 4&#13;
Re: faculty terminations&#13;
Support growing for MSB&#13;
Shing-Mei Kelly,&#13;
by JaneSchliesman _&#13;
"Everyone says it's not going to help unless we go&#13;
to the regents. I tell them that if all of us said that, 20&#13;
years from now we'd still have the same situation.&#13;
If our ancestors had said that, where would we be? "&#13;
The speaker is Shing-Mei Kelly, a freshman at&#13;
Parkside and one of the newest members of MSB&#13;
("Majority of the Student Body"), a coalition of&#13;
students concerned about faculty terminations.&#13;
Kelly lives with her husband in Burlington but&#13;
came here from Portugal. She is impressed with the&#13;
opportunities in America: "I'm told of&#13;
freedom...the pursuit of happiness..and how each&#13;
vote is counted. I look and see if this is true and&#13;
realize much of it is. But how come in our university&#13;
we don't have such a democracy? I am shocked at&#13;
that."&#13;
University Hypocrisy&#13;
She says it is a long drive for her from Burlington&#13;
to Parkside but, "I am going to become a citizen&#13;
and I want to be an intelligent one, to vote with&#13;
intelligence. I am coming to school for the&#13;
education, to be a better person." However, "where&#13;
my life is centered (the University)," she says it is&#13;
not the way the book she is studying for citizenship&#13;
claims it is in America. "There is a lot of h ypocrisy&#13;
here-we have forms to fill out rating teachers but&#13;
then we're told they're not worth anything. There is&#13;
a paper shortage so why waste the paper-to make&#13;
us believe we're important?"&#13;
Since it is just as far to Milwaukee from&#13;
Burlington as it is to Parkside, she thinks, "maybe&#13;
I'm in the wrong place, maybe I should look into&#13;
another school."&#13;
She is disappointed in the University, for it is not&#13;
what she expected. "The University is supposed to&#13;
be an educational and cultural center. I am paying&#13;
to come here and be a better person. But I come and&#13;
hear of gossip and stabbing in the back. You can&#13;
find that on the streets."&#13;
Concerned With Entire Review Process&#13;
Kelly happens to know some of the professors who&#13;
are being terminated but remarks, "we can't limit&#13;
ourselves to those we know. We should be concerned&#13;
with the whole process."&#13;
She feels that students in each discipline must be&#13;
involved in decisions about that discipline (one of&#13;
the goals of MSB is to have three student&#13;
representatives on each executive committee,&#13;
senior majors in the field of the faculty member&#13;
being reviewed). "After all," comments Kelly, "we&#13;
are tuition and tax payers. If they want to add&#13;
publishing and community work (as criteria for&#13;
tenure) I guess they have that prerogative, but&#13;
primarily a person should have to be a good&#13;
JON BLON&#13;
March 6, 8, 9, 10&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay R oad Phone 654-0485&#13;
IDES &amp; SHAMES UNION&#13;
IDES OF&#13;
MARCH 'Vehicle"&#13;
'L.A. G oodbye'&#13;
CRY AN "Upon the Roof"&#13;
SHAMES "Sugar &amp; Spice"&#13;
"It C ould B e W e're In L ove'&#13;
£cO%e TiJaten&#13;
Fri., M arch 8&#13;
'2 Advance; '3 at th e Door&#13;
Saturday; B LACKWATER GOLD&#13;
SW Stafi&#13;
Sat., M arch 9&#13;
*2 A dvance; * 3 a t the D oor&#13;
Friday; K OKE&#13;
oxen, Sftec&amp;U tc}&#13;
2 for 1 Coupon&#13;
Bar Drinks O nly&#13;
8 p.m. t o 11 p.m. M arch 8 &amp; 9&#13;
Limit o ne to a customer. EDGEWATER or BRATST0P&#13;
COMING!&#13;
'"DfLCfo* Sofa'&#13;
&amp; ,07*ctc'&#13;
teacher "if he doesn't excel in the other stuff, I don't&#13;
care!"&#13;
Regarding publishing Kelly feels that there&#13;
shouldn't be such pressure to produce. Counting&#13;
how much per year a person publishes isn't&#13;
relevant. The majority of graduates here remain in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, she says, and the local&#13;
reputation of Parkside is based on the quality of the&#13;
teaching. The research image is important with&#13;
other institutions but our value in the local job&#13;
market is Parkside's local image-and this business&#13;
(upset over terminations) isn't helping.&#13;
About "community service" she says, "I don't&#13;
understand that-is it community-local, or community-campus?&#13;
Or whichever a person isn't&#13;
doing?"&#13;
Concerning the validity of student input her&#13;
comment is that "I don't mind discipline or a&#13;
reasonably demanding professor-easy isn't&#13;
necessarily good. I think most students will appreciate&#13;
the one who is teaching them something.&#13;
This is not like high school, we're paying for this&#13;
education, taking the time to be here."&#13;
No Use For Tenure&#13;
She talks of problem teachers who are arrogant&#13;
and belittle students, who test "not how much&#13;
you've learned but how much of an idiot you arethey&#13;
have no place here. If tenure is for the purpose&#13;
of keeping them here then I've no use for tenure." A&#13;
person may become mediocre without sufficient&#13;
consequences to dissuade him-her, and "we have to&#13;
strive to always better the university."&#13;
Kelly thinks that the University should renew a&#13;
professor's contract as long as that person is a good&#13;
teacher. Currently, if a fter six years here a person&#13;
is not tenured, he-she usually is automatically out.&#13;
The University may hesitate to grant tenure in case&#13;
enrollment drops and they have to cut back.&#13;
"The students have to say something in the&#13;
decision of wh o is good and who is bad. I don't care&#13;
if a teacher gets along with his colleagues or&#13;
socializes-he was hired to teach, not socialize."&#13;
Kelly believes faculty must still be involved in the&#13;
review process, for "the students can judge how&#13;
well a teacher performs in class-getting the&#13;
material across, helpful not intimidating-what does&#13;
a colleague know about that?-but the faculty can&#13;
judge the person's broader knowledge, beyond a&#13;
given course.&#13;
Kelly wishes more students would get involved&#13;
"because in the end we get hurt and must take the&#13;
consequences, but if we'd correct the mistakes as&#13;
we go along less people would get hurt."&#13;
Disillusioned By Pettiness&#13;
Describing herself as "thrilled" to be studying in&#13;
this country, Kelly admits her disillusionment that&#13;
everyone is not as enthusiastic, including faculty.&#13;
"They should stop these petty quarrels," she&#13;
continues. "I want to believe professors are above&#13;
that. It is petty for one to condemn another because&#13;
of personality conflict. So what if someone has&#13;
different ideas-the whole world is made of that, and&#13;
they should know that. If we were all alike it would&#13;
be a sad place." She likened an executive committee&#13;
meeting to the stereotype of "a bunch of&#13;
neighborhood women getting together...."&#13;
Kelly is a student of assistant professor of Fr ench&#13;
Pierre Goumarre, who received his termination&#13;
notice last year (a faculty member being let go may&#13;
stay one year after being reviewed). She feels his&#13;
leaving "doesn't make sense." He has a doctorate&#13;
from a university in France and lived there more&#13;
than 30 years, "so knows the background of the&#13;
literature, the culture as well as the language." Yet&#13;
they are hiring someone less qualified, with only a&#13;
master's degree in French studies from an&#13;
American university. If they say they have to cut&#13;
back why are they hiring anyone at all? And why&#13;
someone with a master's when they are firing other&#13;
people in languages for not having a PhD.?&#13;
Student of Wm. Folan&#13;
She also is a student of Bill Folan, assistant&#13;
professor of a nthropology, who is in the process of&#13;
appealing the decision that he be terminated. She&#13;
remarks that Folan's courses have "changed my&#13;
perspective on people, I've become aware of a&#13;
whole new world."&#13;
This semester she is one of Folan's Independent&#13;
Study students doing survey work for the Racine&#13;
Spanish Center. "I admire Folan for getting involved&#13;
and giving students the opportunity to see&#13;
these life styles and understand their hardships and&#13;
learn what they think, in addition to the benefits of&#13;
the survey itself."&#13;
Kelly concluded by saying that she is anxious and&#13;
"appy t0&#13;
"° something to help make the University&#13;
a better place. It was her choice to come to Parkside&#13;
and develop her mind and learn of "American"&#13;
culture. She is glad to be in this country and feels&#13;
the university is the logical place to study about her&#13;
new home. Ironically, she felt compelled to add that&#13;
s e hopes she hasn't said anything which would in&#13;
any way jeopardize the success of her application&#13;
or citizenship. Hopefully, supporting such things as&#13;
rreedom and democracy, she hasn't. &#13;
Brief news&#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Y j W o o C f l m m i t i » a f - n i n i n n r r i u&#13;
The PAB's Video Committee will be training ^&#13;
productions, on Thursday, March 8. Students interest f&#13;
°&#13;
r ^&#13;
ticipating are asked to stop at the Activities Office IXC Di^&#13;
1 pi?-"&#13;
next video productions will be Thursday March 8 at 11 S&#13;
Whiteskellar and Friday, March 9 in the WRKR room (I&#13;
B o w e r j B o y s w i l l b e f e a t u r e d i n " G h o s t s o n t h " ^&#13;
ftSA a c t i v i t y n f * o r y l n f t n&#13;
The Adult Student Association will sponsor a oi • u-,&#13;
ternoon on Sunday, March 10 from 3-7 p m at the Ph^^R^SFamily&#13;
and friends of ASA are invited. CeinteresM ?&#13;
are asked to bring towel, cap if n eeded, and Parkside I ninlTl&#13;
8&#13;
interested in a cross country ski trail walk ^ask^to&#13;
skis and poles. If snow conditions are poor a trail hike will S&#13;
UW-P ha s highest Cnr»||mrnf ^&#13;
Parkside had the highest rate of second semester enrollment increase&#13;
of any UW campus, according to UW System enrollment&#13;
figures.&#13;
UW-P increased 7 percent to 4,425, up 282 students from last year at&#13;
this time. UW campuses at Madison, Milwaukee and Eau Claire increased&#13;
3 percent, those at LaCrosse and River Falls increased&#13;
fractionally, while enrollment at the other seven four-year campuses&#13;
decreased from 8 percent at Platteville to l percent at Green Bay The&#13;
two-year Center System went up 8 percent.&#13;
Total system enrollment is 125,976, up 812 students from 1973.&#13;
P r e - m e d s t o h o l d m M | j n ,&#13;
There will be a meeting of all interested pre-med students on&#13;
Wednesday, March 6 at 8:30 p.m. in the faculty-staff lounge in LLC.&#13;
The topic of discussion at this meeting will be the Madison Medical&#13;
School.&#13;
Volleyball club seeks&#13;
All men and women intersted in joining the Parkside volleyball club&#13;
are invited to gather at the Phy Ed Building at noon on Fridays for&#13;
practice. The first game will be played against Carthage College in&#13;
mid-March. For additional information contact Vic Godfrey at 2245 or&#13;
in the Phy Ed building room 137.&#13;
Assemblymen denounced&#13;
for voting "no" on bill&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, March 6: Whiteskellar presents "Lynn and Sue" at 1&#13;
p.m. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, March 6: Youtkevich's Othello (1955; a classic Russian&#13;
iilm) at7:30p.m. in GR101. No admission charged.&#13;
^?i&#13;
nesAay&#13;
' March 6: Film "Portnoy's Complaint" at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
GK 103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Wednesday, March 6: Meeting of pre-med students at 8:30 p.m in&#13;
the faculty-staff lounge of LLC. '&#13;
Thursday, March 7: Rally of all students in regards to the faculty&#13;
review process at noon in mid-main place.&#13;
Thursday, March 7: Video production featuring the Bowery Boys in&#13;
Ghosts on the Loose" at 11 a.m. in the Whiteskellar. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
Friday. March 8: Video production featuring the Bowery Boys in&#13;
Ghosts on the Loose" at 11 a.m. in the WRKR room (LLC D173). No&#13;
admission charged.&#13;
Friday, March 8: Hockey-Parkside vs. Whitewater at 5:30 p.m. at&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena. Admission charged.&#13;
Saturday, March 9: Gymnastics-Parkside vs. Stevens Point and&#13;
DuPage at 1 p.m. in the Phy Ed Building. Admission charged.&#13;
Saturday, March 9: Dance in the SAB from 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. Admission&#13;
is $1.50 and Parkside I.D. and proof of age is required.&#13;
Sunday, March 10: Parkside athletic appreciation night in the SAB.&#13;
Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk for $1.50, includes beer and&#13;
lood. All students are invited to attend.&#13;
March 10: Adult Student Association is sponsoring a swimski-hike&#13;
afternoon from 3 p.m. until 7 p.m. at the Phy Ed Building&#13;
Family and friends invited.&#13;
Monday, March 11: "Sherlock, Jr.," "Cops" and "The Navigator"&#13;
will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in GR 103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Elections Committee&#13;
chooses election day&#13;
John Siefert, a third-year law&#13;
student at Madison, from Racine,&#13;
has denounced two area&#13;
assemblymen for voting Wednesday&#13;
to deny UW system&#13;
students control over student fees&#13;
and services.&#13;
Siefert singled out representatives&#13;
Henry Rohner (R-Racine)&#13;
and Russell Olsen (R-Kenosha)&#13;
for voting to delete the section of&#13;
the merger implementation bill&#13;
which provides that students&#13;
shall be active participants in&#13;
governing each educational institution.&#13;
&#13;
The bill provides that students&#13;
shall have primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life&#13;
services and interests,&#13;
provides that students shall have&#13;
the responsibility for the&#13;
disposition of those student fees&#13;
which support campus student&#13;
It&#13;
activities.&#13;
"Both Rohner and Olsen voted&#13;
to delete the sections of the bill&#13;
that would give students control&#13;
over how their fees are spent,"&#13;
said Siefert. "Apparently they&#13;
think students cannot be trusted&#13;
with this kind of responsibility.&#13;
Fortunately, a majority of the&#13;
assembly disagreed."&#13;
The vote was 68 to retain&#13;
student control provisions and 30&#13;
to delete them. However, the&#13;
complete bill still must go&#13;
through one additional vote in the&#13;
assembly this week.&#13;
The measure providing student&#13;
control over student fees was&#13;
strongly supported by the United&#13;
Council of UW Student Governments&#13;
and by student&#13;
newspapers throughout the UW&#13;
system. It faces an uncertain&#13;
future in the conservative state&#13;
senate though, concluded Siefert.&#13;
r UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
invites you&#13;
to spend&#13;
Easter in...&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
The Elections Committee, in a&#13;
letter sent to the members of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association on Feb. 21, decided to&#13;
hold both the special make-up&#13;
and the regular Spring Elections&#13;
on April 9 and 10. Petitions will be&#13;
available at the Information&#13;
kiosk on March 11 and campaigning&#13;
is to begin at 8 a.m. on&#13;
March 25. Those elected will&#13;
serve through May of 1975 and a&#13;
special election will be held the&#13;
first Tuesday and Wednesday in&#13;
October to fill any vacancies.&#13;
Election Committee chairperson&#13;
Tom Jennett and&#13;
Assistant Dean of Students Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger said the Committee&#13;
felt it was in the best interests of&#13;
student government to hold both&#13;
elections at the same time. But&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senator Mike Hahner&#13;
said the Elections Committee had&#13;
"ample opportunity" to hold&#13;
elections in the period of time&#13;
allotted by the Senate, but the&#13;
Committee "dragged its feet"&#13;
and finally set up elections for&#13;
April. (Elections were to be held&#13;
within the first 20 school days of&#13;
the second semester by directive&#13;
of the Student Senate.) The&#13;
Elections Committee contends&#13;
that this deadline was unrealistic&#13;
since no one notified Echelbarger&#13;
that she was to appoint such a&#13;
committee, under the directive,&#13;
until it was too late to meet the&#13;
deadline.&#13;
Classified&#13;
FULL TIME EMPLOYMENT- day shift&#13;
orderly. Contact Barbara Boren, Director of&#13;
Nursing at the Addiction Center, 2000&#13;
Domanik Drive or call 632-6141.&#13;
TUTORS WANTED- to work with migrant&#13;
Spanish speaking children after school hours&#13;
in the child's home. $1.65 per hour....&#13;
maximum ten hours per week. Tutors must&#13;
be able to communicate in Spanish. Contact:&#13;
Irene Dominguez, Federal Projects,&#13;
telephone 652-5965.&#13;
NEEDED: Girl to share large 3 bedroom&#13;
apartment with 2 other girls. Rent is $44 per&#13;
person, including heat (utilities extra).&#13;
Located in West Racine. Leave name and&#13;
Phone at Information desk if interested. If&#13;
this isn't possible call 632-1164 between 3-5 MF,&#13;
and between 9-1 Sat. Ask for Betsy.&#13;
PAPERS NOTARIZED on the spot. See Mrs.&#13;
Betty Briggs, Business Management major,&#13;
evening classes. 634-2886.&#13;
FOR SALE: 15-gallon fish tank with accessories,&#13;
$15 or best offer. Call 634-6365&#13;
weekends.&#13;
FOR Sale: Early American antiques from&#13;
Pennsylvania. $100 and up. Call 657-7683 or&#13;
stop in at 5732 13th Court in Kenosha.&#13;
INTERESTED IN APPLICATIONS of&#13;
hypnosis in law? Help design experiments or&#13;
be a volunteer. Call Steve at 652-6123&#13;
evenings or weekends.&#13;
FOR SALE: Yamaha guitar, steel string,&#13;
and Wurlitzer electronic piano. Best offer.&#13;
552 8027.&#13;
SOLD OUT&#13;
CHECKING is&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
yon write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Member o« Federal Reterve S ystem&#13;
Member Federal Depo sit insurance Corp&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Mar. 6, 1974&#13;
Myths not relevant&#13;
Gay population seeking acceptance&#13;
Editor's note: This is the fifth&#13;
in a series of articles dealing with&#13;
groups or individuals who are&#13;
oppressed by American society.&#13;
The following is written as told to&#13;
RANGER feature editor Debra&#13;
Friedell, by two people who are&#13;
homosexual. One is male and one&#13;
is female.&#13;
"If people knew I was gay I&#13;
wouldn't be a human being to&#13;
them, he said mid-way through&#13;
the interview after a discussion of&#13;
the myths and stereotypes that&#13;
pursue homosexuals.&#13;
"Society has put such strict&#13;
limitations on people. The hardest&#13;
thing is accepting the fact&#13;
that you are gay after you are&#13;
taught to want to get married, to&#13;
have children, to like women, and&#13;
that being gay is a sickness or&#13;
disease."&#13;
In addition to the burden of&#13;
having a society ostracize the gay&#13;
faction as "just plain sick,"&#13;
homosexuals must also stare,&#13;
everyday, at myths which hold no&#13;
credence or relevance.&#13;
"Often, when found out, the&#13;
homosexual will lose a job,&#13;
because it is thought that 'gay'&#13;
means unreliable, sick, and that&#13;
they will corrupt other workers.&#13;
People don't want their children&#13;
to go near us, it's hard to find a&#13;
place to rent, and it can be very&#13;
lonely."&#13;
The Texas murders in which&#13;
many young boys were killed has&#13;
hurt the gay population, he added,&#13;
in that everyone relates it to&#13;
homosexuality and comes up&#13;
with the notion that all gays are&#13;
capable of this type of violence&#13;
and crime. "They can't accept&#13;
that this person was just sick but&#13;
insist on stereotyping all gay&#13;
males in this category of personality&#13;
disorder. On the other&#13;
hand, the Richard Speck case in&#13;
Chicago in which several nurses&#13;
were murdered, was not&#13;
publicized as a heterosexual&#13;
murder. It was easy to see that&#13;
^peck was sick.&#13;
Likewise, when a man rapes a&#13;
little girl you don't just say he's&#13;
heterosexual. But, if he molests a&#13;
little boy you label him&#13;
"homosexual" because that&#13;
implies sickness.&#13;
"Gay people do a lot more than&#13;
go to bed with each other. Sex is&#13;
not the most important thing, as&#13;
it is not most important in a&#13;
heterosexual relationship. In the&#13;
same light, a gay male makes&#13;
choices within the gay circle of&#13;
whom he will sleep with and&#13;
whom he chooses not to. A lot of&#13;
people think we're after&#13;
everything that wears pants."&#13;
The woman is stereotyped also,&#13;
even in a university in a free&#13;
country. A straight woman&#13;
listening in says, "at Parkside I&#13;
can't get through any of my art&#13;
classes without being told that if&#13;
a woman is a good artist she has&#13;
either an excess of male hormones&#13;
or is a lesbian. They tell&#13;
you that all of the time." It&#13;
doesn't even make sense because&#13;
there are a lot of male artists who&#13;
are gay and-or effeminate.&#13;
Homosexuality has greater&#13;
acceptance now and many artists&#13;
and musicians are publicizing&#13;
their sexual preference. "Maybe&#13;
it's a fad," he commented, "but&#13;
Likewise, when a man&#13;
rapes a little girl you don't&#13;
just say he's heterosexual.&#13;
But, if he molests a little&#13;
boy you label him&#13;
"homosexual" because&#13;
that implies sickness.&#13;
maybe they can admit it now,&#13;
whereas 20 years ago they would&#13;
have been thrown out, ridiculed,&#13;
never made it." But "it's another&#13;
myth that all or most creative&#13;
people are homosexual." "It's&#13;
not true but even if it were it's&#13;
ridiculous to let their career&#13;
'excuse' their sexual lives. They&#13;
don't need excuses for this!"&#13;
emphasizes the straight woman.&#13;
The gay woman comments,&#13;
"With me, I just want everything&#13;
to be equal, even sex. A lot of&#13;
older gay women stick to playing&#13;
roles because society forces it on&#13;
them. We're so indoctrinated into&#13;
male-female and masculinefeminine&#13;
that even in gay&#13;
relationships role-playing occurs-&#13;
-the dyke or butch who is super&#13;
masculine, really exaggerated,&#13;
and the femme who is, well,&#13;
feminine. I think younger women&#13;
are getting away from that."&#13;
"Younger people are coming&#13;
out more, too. I don't think there&#13;
are more homosexuals, they're&#13;
just making themselves more&#13;
visible," he added. The straight&#13;
people in high school and college&#13;
now are more understanding&#13;
also!" That's what will gradually&#13;
make society more tolerant." He&#13;
doesn't think it will be really&#13;
accepted in our generation but by&#13;
the next, people will realize that&#13;
what you like to do in bed doesn't&#13;
make you what you are. Sylvia&#13;
Plath wrote in The Bell Jar that&#13;
she had a hard time imagining&#13;
two of her friends in bed, and the&#13;
whole thing is that you shouldn't&#13;
think of people in terms of their&#13;
sex lives. That doesn't matter. If&#13;
they are a person to you before&#13;
you find out what they do in bed,&#13;
it shouldn't change how you look&#13;
at them. Once you can know some&#13;
gay people you realize that's&#13;
what they are-people. There's&#13;
good ones^and bad ones, and ordinary&#13;
ones and extraordinary&#13;
ones.&#13;
Economics often makes life&#13;
difficult for the gay woman, she&#13;
explains. Despite equal employment&#13;
and opportunity laws,&#13;
women often need the financial&#13;
support and stability of a male's&#13;
income. However, by social&#13;
In addition to the burden&#13;
of havi ng society ostracize&#13;
the gay faction as "just&#13;
plain sick," homosexuals&#13;
must also stare, everyday,&#13;
at myths which hold no&#13;
credence or relevance.&#13;
mores women may live together&#13;
easier than men. Women, it is&#13;
added, have a greater opportunity&#13;
to express feelings,&#13;
even for each other. It is taboo for&#13;
men to display emotion publicly&#13;
at all.&#13;
Although both agreed that&#13;
society's attitude against the&#13;
homosexual is changing, many&#13;
states, including Wisconsin, still&#13;
cite homosexuality as illegal.&#13;
"Who gives anyone the right to&#13;
legislate sex?" These are crimes&#13;
without victims. Nobody forces&#13;
anybody to do anything.&#13;
He pointed out that if he loses&#13;
his job because of what he likes to&#13;
do at home in bed, "I have no&#13;
legal recourse. I can't sue if I'm&#13;
fired for being illegal."&#13;
"It always comes to games,"&#13;
he remarkedf'There are a lot of&#13;
people in this town that can't&#13;
afford to be found outbusinessmen,&#13;
teachers, a lot of&#13;
people. I can understand why&#13;
many gay people are frustrated.&#13;
It can be very lonely when you&#13;
have problems, not necessarily&#13;
even problems with your gay life,&#13;
and no one to talk to about them."&#13;
He has "cruised" and&#13;
"tricked" on the streets of New&#13;
York, but had his first&#13;
homosexual experience while in&#13;
college, in Wisconsin, when a&#13;
wealthy man picked him up. "It&#13;
was in New York that I realized I&#13;
could live my life and do what I&#13;
want to do and still be gay. It was&#13;
easier coming out there than it&#13;
would be in a setting like&#13;
Kenosha. There was a complete&#13;
gay community in which I lived,&#13;
where one even went to dentists&#13;
and doctors who were&#13;
If people meet me and&#13;
don't know I'm gay, they&#13;
accept or reject me for&#13;
me, not my sexual&#13;
preference. If they later&#13;
find out and it makes a&#13;
difference, then they're&#13;
not worth worrying about,&#13;
if they're so narrowminded.&#13;
&#13;
homosexual. It's a relief not to&#13;
worry anymore about being&#13;
found out." A major reason that&#13;
coming out is so difficult is one's&#13;
family, he says. You want to&#13;
protect them, and protect&#13;
yourself from them. Social&#13;
strictures deem homosexuality&#13;
morally wrong, so it hurts your&#13;
parents.&#13;
"Gay people are very sensitive,"&#13;
he continues. "I'm not a&#13;
woman and I don't care to be I&#13;
prefer men. 'Drag queens' don't&#13;
interest me. I know a lot of them&#13;
and a lot of them are my friends.&#13;
I don't want to have sex with&#13;
them though.&#13;
"I don't care to speculate as to&#13;
why some people are gay and&#13;
Why some aren't, he says and she&#13;
adds that "when people ask me&#13;
why I'm a lesbian, I say 'why are&#13;
you heterosexual?"&#13;
Neither wished to speculate on&#13;
the percentage of the population&#13;
which is homosexual, although&#13;
"one quarter of the world" was&#13;
mentioned. "Third world"&#13;
countries apparently do not&#13;
consider people's sex lives&#13;
something to worry about, for&#13;
there aren't moral or legal&#13;
con stra int s reg ard ing&#13;
homosexuality in these societies.&#13;
"If people meet me and don't&#13;
know I'm gay, they accept or&#13;
reject me for me, not my sexual&#13;
preference. If they later find out&#13;
and it makes a difference, then&#13;
they're not worth worrying&#13;
about, if they're so narrow&#13;
minded," he comments.&#13;
He feels he is somewhat unique&#13;
in gay circles, since so many of&#13;
his friends are straight. "They're&#13;
a minority among straights," he&#13;
adds. "They understand&#13;
homosexuality as preference in&#13;
bed, and they see that as&#13;
irrelevant to my value as a&#13;
person, a friend. And they know&#13;
I'm not dangerous, I'm not going&#13;
to do anything to them even if&#13;
they're male."&#13;
Regarding bi-sexuality or&#13;
enjoying sexual relations with&#13;
A major reason that&#13;
"coming out" is so difficult&#13;
is one's family. You&#13;
want to protect them, and&#13;
protect yourself from&#13;
them. Social strictures&#13;
deem homosexuality&#13;
morally wrong, so it hurts&#13;
your parents.&#13;
either males or females, he feels&#13;
that it is entirely possible for a&#13;
person to be bi-sexual. She&#13;
disagrees, saying she thinks it is&#13;
a way of not completely admitting&#13;
homosexuality, of&#13;
clinging to a thread of social&#13;
mores. Many gays do in fact get&#13;
married and have children, only&#13;
to return to a homosexual life&#13;
later or continue in both kinds of&#13;
relations. Other people may have&#13;
their first homosexual experience&#13;
later in life. The federal&#13;
government's Kinsey Report did&#13;
cite statistics indicating that a&#13;
high proportion of people have&#13;
sexual experiences with members&#13;
of the same sex while in&#13;
junior high or high school.&#13;
One of the sad things is that&#13;
unless two people live together&#13;
it's hard to maintain a&#13;
relationship. But moving in&#13;
together incurs all the problems&#13;
of social taboo and pressure and&#13;
oppression. "I think I can make a&#13;
gay relationship work," he&#13;
concludes. "People need to be&#13;
wanted and loved. But few&#13;
relationships are permanent.&#13;
Everything is against you."&#13;
ParKsfcle Theater&#13;
nlarcH m-15*- I6tw-i7+h&#13;
8-&#13;
00 "Prn&#13;
T/cke.+s on -Sale. Feb.20*&#13;
Cj-en. ftdm *2®°&#13;
Tfcrkside Studerife $ 1°° &#13;
Wednesday, Mar. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Parkside's hopes for a NAIA wrestling title rest mainly with these&#13;
four men, who've compiled an 80-6-1 record this season Fr«™ iff*&#13;
they are Bill West at 134 lbs.; Ken Martin at l^ LXskard ™&#13;
and Rico Savaglio at 118.&#13;
y SKarda at 150=&#13;
Fourth place wrestlers&#13;
seek championship&#13;
shot at top honors in the 134 lb.&#13;
class. He last lost a match a year&#13;
ago in the NAIA final at 126 lbs.&#13;
and he hasn't been beaten since.&#13;
He, too, may face the same&#13;
problem" as Martin in that&#13;
some of his competitors may&#13;
move to 134 to avoid him only to&#13;
find that the Kenoshan is there&#13;
waiting for them.&#13;
Skarda at 150 l eads the Rangers&#13;
in pins with 10 and has compiled a&#13;
22-1 r ecord this past year. Koch&#13;
calls him a definite contender for&#13;
top honors at his weight. Skarda,&#13;
like Martin and West, won three&#13;
different tournament titles&#13;
during the regular season so is&#13;
well versed on what it takes to&#13;
win in a multi-team tourney.&#13;
Savaglio and Landers rate as&#13;
Parkside's other two bright&#13;
hopes. Savaglio, who wrestled at&#13;
126 through much of the season&#13;
and posted a 16-4-1 record, should&#13;
be stronger for the 118 lbs. he'll&#13;
wrestle at, according to Koch.&#13;
Landers, too, could be in the&#13;
money, according to Koch. Inconsistency&#13;
is his main problem&#13;
and Koch figures he could beat&#13;
nearly anyone in his weight class&#13;
as well as lose to nearly anyone.&#13;
But he's been coming on strong in&#13;
recent weeks and had upped his&#13;
record to 9-3-1 at season's end.&#13;
Another key man for the&#13;
Rangers is Baron, wrestling at&#13;
167 instead of his usual 158. With a&#13;
14-8-2 record over the regular&#13;
season and moving up to one of&#13;
the more open weight classes,&#13;
Parkside's heaviest entry,&#13;
Freberg, will go at 177 and Koch&#13;
figures he has a chance to score.&#13;
"He's probably the most improved&#13;
wrestler on our team,"&#13;
the coach said. His 6-14-1 re cord&#13;
includes four pins.&#13;
Parkside, rated fourth in the&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) by&#13;
Amateur Wrestling News, will&#13;
enter seven wrestlers in the&#13;
NAIA wrestling championships&#13;
Thursday through Saturday at&#13;
UW-River Falls.&#13;
The Rangers, who finished&#13;
ninth nationally last year, figure&#13;
to have a shot at the NAIA crown&#13;
behind their two returning ailAmericans,&#13;
Ken Martin and Bill&#13;
West.&#13;
But it's more difficult than it&#13;
looks, even though Martin, the&#13;
defending champion, and West, a&#13;
1973 runner-up, are both back.&#13;
The two top Ranger grapplers&#13;
will each be moving up a weight&#13;
class, and Koch asserts that this&#13;
could be both good and bad for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
His first five entries (at the five&#13;
lowest weights) include men who&#13;
have a combined 89-9-2 record&#13;
this year. They include&#13;
sophomore Rico Savaglio with a&#13;
16-4-1 re cord at 118; sophomore&#13;
Joe Landers with a 9-3-1 mark at&#13;
126; junior West with a perfect 22-&#13;
Oat 134; senior Ken Martin with a&#13;
20-1 mark at 142; and junior&#13;
Randy Skarda with a 22-1 campaign&#13;
at 150.&#13;
Koch's other two entries are&#13;
sophomore Rich Baron with a 14-&#13;
8-2 m ark at 167 and sophomore&#13;
Brad Freberg with a 6-14-1 record&#13;
at 177.&#13;
Martin, with a career mark of&#13;
82-7-2, could become the first&#13;
Wisconsin wrestler ever to win&#13;
two NAIA wrestling titles. Four&#13;
others besides Martin have won&#13;
one crown. No others have&#13;
earned all-America honors three&#13;
times as has Martin.&#13;
West figures to have a good&#13;
tHNO'S&#13;
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BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
Interviewing students&#13;
Ten job recruiters&#13;
on campus in March&#13;
Recruiters will be on campus&#13;
this month to interview students&#13;
for positions. Interviewees are&#13;
asked to sign up in the Placement&#13;
Office, Tallent Hall room 286,&#13;
well in advance of the interview&#13;
date.&#13;
The recruiters are American&#13;
Motors Corp., March 6 (applied&#13;
science technology and business&#13;
management majors); Connecticut&#13;
Mutual Insurance,&#13;
March 6 (all majors); Wisconsin&#13;
State Government, March 7 (all&#13;
majors); Northwestern Mutual&#13;
Insurance, (all majors); Social&#13;
Security Administration, March&#13;
14 (all majors); Rex-Nord,&#13;
March 18 (applied science&#13;
technology); Manitowoc Public&#13;
Schools, March 20 (all majors);&#13;
Racine Unified School District,&#13;
March 20 (all majors); Commercial&#13;
Union Insurance, March&#13;
21 (all majors); and UWMilwaukee&#13;
School of Business&#13;
Administration, March 25 (all&#13;
majors).&#13;
A special appeal is being made&#13;
to all minority students to see&#13;
recruiters from the Wisconsin&#13;
State Government Bureau of&#13;
Personnel on March 7.&#13;
Applications available&#13;
for UN summer seminar&#13;
The University of WisconsinMilwaukee&#13;
and the Institute for&#13;
World Order (New York) announce&#13;
the ninth annual&#13;
Wisconsin University United&#13;
Nations Summer Seminar,&#13;
scheduled to run from July 1 to&#13;
August 10, 1974. This program,&#13;
open to all units of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin system, i is a sixweek&#13;
program of intensive study&#13;
of the United Nations. The first&#13;
two weeks take place on the&#13;
UWM campus and the last four&#13;
weeks are spent in New York City&#13;
in the vicinity of the United&#13;
Nations itself.&#13;
Parkside is permitted to select&#13;
one student for participation in&#13;
the 1974 U.N. Seminar. This&#13;
selection process will be competitive&#13;
and will be handled by a&#13;
committee of faculty members.&#13;
The student selected, along with&#13;
students from other UW campuses,&#13;
will enroll at UWMilwaukee&#13;
for six credits of&#13;
summer work. Costs of the&#13;
program will vary from student&#13;
to student, but it is intended that&#13;
the cost of attending the U.N.&#13;
Seminar in New York should be&#13;
no greater than the cost of taking&#13;
the same courses at UWM. To&#13;
make this possible, the program&#13;
pays a substantial proportion of&#13;
the living and travel expenses.&#13;
^••••••••••••••*&#13;
J Patronize J&#13;
} *&#13;
* our J&#13;
J *&#13;
J Advertisers J&#13;
JOBS&#13;
in&#13;
EUR OPE&#13;
(ages 17 to 24)&#13;
Temporary openings for any&#13;
six to thirteen-week period year&#13;
'round; employment guaranteed&#13;
before departure for&#13;
Europe; protected by strict&#13;
local and federal regulation;&#13;
foreign language helpful but not&#13;
required.&#13;
Complete package includes&#13;
round trip on schedutod jet (NO&#13;
CHARTERS), onentation,&#13;
room, board, all documentation.&#13;
&#13;
EUROJOBS&#13;
For application and complete&#13;
information, write or telephone&#13;
Box 1108, Milwaukee, Wis. 53201&#13;
(or telephone 414-258-6400)&#13;
Admission to the U.N. Seminar&#13;
is open to sophomores, juniors&#13;
and seniors with an interest and&#13;
background in international&#13;
relat ions. Minim um&#13;
requirements for the program&#13;
are:&#13;
(1) A substantial number of&#13;
college credits in the social&#13;
sciences.&#13;
(2) A basic course in political&#13;
science, preferably in international&#13;
relations.&#13;
(3) grade point average of 2.50&#13;
or above.&#13;
Information and application&#13;
materials relating to the U.N.&#13;
SIGHT 'n&#13;
by Jerry Oubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
What is a Stereo Receiver?&#13;
Although a receiver is contained in a&#13;
single cabinet it really consists of three&#13;
separate components a timer (for&#13;
detecting radio signals), a pre amplifier&#13;
(for equaliz ation, some amplification&#13;
and switching features), and a power&#13;
amplifier (for changing minute elec&#13;
tri cal signals into the power needed to&#13;
drive loud speakers).&#13;
Unfortunately the most inferior type of&#13;
table radio is often dressed up to look&#13;
like a high fidelity receiver, but without&#13;
high fidelity performance, in other&#13;
words, the prospective buyer must judge&#13;
on more than appearance if he wants the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Each element in a receiver may be&#13;
evaluated on the basis of performance&#13;
specifications as well as controls and&#13;
extra features.&#13;
The desirability of certain control&#13;
features depends primarily on your&#13;
ta stes and knob twirling inclinations.&#13;
Beyond establishing what controls you&#13;
need to accomplish what you want to do&#13;
with your system, evaluate additional&#13;
controls against their cost and make no&#13;
mistake they do all add cost.&#13;
Next week we will start discussing&#13;
performance specifications defining&#13;
them as to their function and what to&#13;
look for&#13;
***&#13;
Our great Winter Clearance Sale&#13;
starts this week and we've got some&#13;
really gr eat buys on componentsreceivers,&#13;
speakers, turntables, tape&#13;
decks, etc. We've got some items where&#13;
you'll save as much as SO pe rcent or&#13;
more-so come in, look around, ask&#13;
questions and take advantage of these&#13;
***&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
TV * HI FI * RADIOS&#13;
RECORDS * TAPES&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun.'til 6&#13;
Seminar are available from&#13;
Frederick Becker, assistant&#13;
professor of political science, in&#13;
CL 364. Completed applications&#13;
must be submitted no later than&#13;
April 5, 1974, to the office of&#13;
Eugene Norwood, Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society, in&#13;
Comm Arts 266.&#13;
cd = m&#13;
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R^FEK5H&gt;E UH«ER5ITV FE(K»OTOHE&#13;
Liiarar^ Looming Oarffar&#13;
W« will be dosed&#13;
f^i., March 2TIW&#13;
Sat, March 30* ^ror Inventory&#13;
Pucksters play Fri.&#13;
in last home game&#13;
The Ranger hockey team will&#13;
play its last home game of the&#13;
season against Whitewater this&#13;
Friday, March 8, at the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Arena. Face off will be at 5:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The Ranger record for the&#13;
season is 6 wins and 13 losses and&#13;
their record for the Wisconsin&#13;
College Hockey League is 5 wins&#13;
and 4 l osses.&#13;
The last time the Rangers met&#13;
Whitewater they lost 3 to 1, so the&#13;
team will be looking for revenge&#13;
in this, their last home game.&#13;
There will be a "shoot the puck&#13;
in the net" contest during halftime&#13;
in which the 10 winnrs will&#13;
take home a case of Pabst beer.&#13;
There will also be a figure&#13;
skating demonstration during&#13;
half-time by Anita Hartshorn of&#13;
Salem, who is a member of the&#13;
United States Figure Skating&#13;
Association, and Paul Cormier of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
On Saturday at 8 p.m. the&#13;
hockey team will play Marquette&#13;
at the State Fair Park in West&#13;
Allis.&#13;
Ranger fencers&#13;
go for title&#13;
This could be the year for&#13;
something big in Parkside fencing.&#13;
&#13;
The Rangers, perennial&#13;
bridesmaids to Wayne State,&#13;
Detroit and Notre Dame in the&#13;
Great Lakes Fencing Championships,&#13;
expect to be fighting&#13;
with those three squads for top&#13;
honors in the Saturday meet at&#13;
Wayne State in Detroit.&#13;
Parkside recently completed&#13;
one of its most successful seasons&#13;
as the Rangers won 14 meets&#13;
against only five losses. Among&#13;
the UW-P victories were wins&#13;
over Michigan State, Detroit,&#13;
UW-Madison, Minnesota and&#13;
Purdue.&#13;
So Parkside Coach Loran Hein&#13;
has hopes for a team title at the&#13;
Great Lakes, based on the win&#13;
over Detroit but also because of&#13;
the presence of three top-notch&#13;
title contenders in Bernie Vash,&#13;
John Tank and Keith Herbrechtsmeier.&#13;
&#13;
In Vash, Hein has one of the&#13;
Midwest's premier epeeists. The&#13;
senior compiled a 49-7 won-lost&#13;
record this season. In seniors&#13;
Tank and Herbrechtsmeier Hein&#13;
can boast two "Class A" foil&#13;
fencers. Parkside is the only&#13;
Midwest university to have two&#13;
"Class A" foilists._&#13;
Other Parkside entries--and&#13;
only two from each school are&#13;
allowed per event-include&#13;
sophomore David Baumann in&#13;
epee, Kenosha senior Rick&#13;
Moffett and freshman John&#13;
Badtke.&#13;
Women will also be included in&#13;
the Great Lakes meet for the&#13;
second year, a practice that was&#13;
initiated at Parkside when the&#13;
meet was here last year. Two&#13;
entries from Hein's squad will be&#13;
one of Sweden's professional&#13;
women jockeys, Birgitte Lindberg,&#13;
and Racine's Cindy Nolen.&#13;
Both will be fencing foil.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed nesd ay, Mar. 6, 1 9 7 4&#13;
Rebound it! Gary Cole (43) tries to, as did Bill Sobanski (53) but the likely Ranger recipient is Joe&#13;
Hutter (21). The scene is last week's playoff game against Lakeland, which Parkside won to go on to&#13;
Eau Claire.&#13;
Cagers win at home; lose&#13;
to Eau Claire in playoffs&#13;
GGararv y CoCole le scscor ored ed 38 33 nnpoinints ts in in Diit,nntA»„,„nn — nu„" , -&#13;
the Rangers 71-68 victory over&#13;
Lakeland College last Thursday&#13;
in a Wisconsin Independent&#13;
College Association playoff&#13;
game.&#13;
This was the fifth meeting&#13;
between Parkside and Lakeland&#13;
with the Muskies winning the&#13;
playoff game last year 62-55 at&#13;
Sheboygan. This latest contest&#13;
earned the Rangers the right to&#13;
go against Eau Claire last&#13;
Monday night, where they played&#13;
against the co-champion of the&#13;
Wisconsin State University&#13;
Conference.&#13;
But victory was just beyond the&#13;
Rangers grasp in Eau Claire in&#13;
the semi-finals. Although they&#13;
trailed all the way, the final&#13;
buzzer sounded with the Parkside&#13;
netmen only four points behind&#13;
the Bluegolds. The score at the&#13;
end was 50-46.&#13;
At the half the Rangers were&#13;
behind 31-19. Gary Cole broke the&#13;
ice in the second half with a field&#13;
goal at the six minute mark, but&#13;
it still took Eau Claire a few more&#13;
minutes to gain their first points&#13;
of the last half.&#13;
The final minutes of play saw&#13;
the Rangers really tearing up the&#13;
court as they closed the gap. Said&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens after the&#13;
game, "It was in those last few&#13;
minutes that we realized how&#13;
good we are, that we could beal&#13;
them. It was a hard one to lose&#13;
but especially because we came&#13;
so close."&#13;
Cole was top scorer for the&#13;
Rangers; Bill Sobanski was also&#13;
in double figures.&#13;
Stephens was already looking&#13;
to next year, when his entire&#13;
squad will be returning. "We&#13;
should be in good shape," he said.&#13;
"We've got the confidence now." </text>
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              <text>Faculty get termination notices. Student action appears likely</text>
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              <text>Cagers to enter playoffs!&#13;
Cole makes all -WICA t eam story on page 7&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1974 V ol. II No. 22&#13;
As announced in last week's&#13;
paper, the RANGER this week is&#13;
being distributed by members of&#13;
the Adult Student Association,&#13;
the Vets Club and the IS (Industrial&#13;
Society program) class,&#13;
in exchange for donations to&#13;
benefit the A1 Lansdowne family.&#13;
Lansdowne and his son&#13;
are Parkside students whose&#13;
home was completely burned to&#13;
the ground on Feb. 13. Members&#13;
of the above-named groups have&#13;
been authorized to accept&#13;
donations to aid the family in&#13;
exchange for the newspapers,&#13;
and are wearing name tags to&#13;
officially identify themselves as&#13;
part of this project.&#13;
On Thursday all remaining&#13;
papers will be placed in the&#13;
RANGER boxes for normal, free&#13;
distribution.&#13;
10 faculty get termination natire&gt;c&#13;
Student action appears likely&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Apathy-passive by definition, frightening in practice. Because of&#13;
apathy wars have been started, corrupt individuals are allowed to&#13;
take office, people starve, innocent victims rot in prisons, the land of&#13;
the free becomes the land of the corporation, Universities fail to strive&#13;
for a wholesome truth, and the word "responsibility" is muddied and&#13;
disintegrates somewhere into the depths of a polluted environment.&#13;
What does this have to do with Parkside, you say? That University&#13;
which is only a finger on the hands of a University of Wisconsin&#13;
System, located somewhere between the farms of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
Counties, buried amongst the wooded hillsides of a friendly park which&#13;
protects naturally its squirrels, racoons, pheasants, and foliage.&#13;
The students of that University sit silent while some corporate body,&#13;
called CA by those who say it so often that it becomes a familiar dinner&#13;
table topic and short form for Central Administration, dictates the&#13;
University's every move. From somewhere in that computer&#13;
conglomerate of CA the word has come down that in the faculty review&#13;
process, first priority emphasis is to be on teaching. If the faculty&#13;
object, no one knows because they sit huddled in the corner of their&#13;
box-like offices, armchair intellectuals, reading and writing some&#13;
distant words that become entombed somewhere in the innermost&#13;
portions of their brains.&#13;
And at review time, a small group of tenured faculty sit away in&#13;
some long lost conference room around a table and decide the fate of&#13;
their colleagues not yet tenured. What they say, what they know, no&#13;
one else hears or knows of, as all is as quiet and confidential as a&#13;
snowflake seeping through heaven and landing secretly unnoticed in&#13;
the back forty.&#13;
Dick Pautzke&#13;
Student&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(SCAFE)&#13;
Executive&#13;
are faculty&#13;
recommend&#13;
Course and&#13;
Evaluation forms&#13;
are invalid." Yet&#13;
Committees, which&#13;
committees who&#13;
termination or&#13;
Editor's note:&#13;
To RANGER'S knowledge, ten&#13;
faculty members received notice&#13;
of termination this month.&#13;
Rumor has it that two of those&#13;
decisions have been reversed&#13;
through appeals. The following&#13;
faculty are waiting for letters&#13;
from Dean Norwood stating the&#13;
reason for termination. Many of&#13;
the requests for reasons were&#13;
sent over two weeks ago.&#13;
HUMANITIES: John Murphy,&#13;
assistant professor of art (will&#13;
appeal); Gerald Musich, instructor&#13;
of English (considering&#13;
appeal); SOCIAL SCIENCE:&#13;
Reginald Carter, assistant&#13;
professor of sociology (considering&#13;
appeal); Stauros&#13;
Daoutis, assistant professor of&#13;
sociology (will appeal); Roland&#13;
Derenne, assistant professor of&#13;
sociology (will not appeal);&#13;
William Folan, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology (will&#13;
appeal); Joseph Neville,&#13;
assistant professor of history&#13;
(will appeal); SCIENCE:&#13;
Michael Williams, assistant&#13;
professor of mathematics (will&#13;
appeal).&#13;
Senior Dick Pautzke,&#13;
spokesman for an informal group&#13;
calling itself the "Majority of the&#13;
Student Body" (MSB), recently&#13;
said in an interview that "the&#13;
faculty and the administration&#13;
rely on student apathy" in so far&#13;
as tenure or termination are&#13;
concerned.&#13;
"Everybody I've talked to,"&#13;
complains Pautzke, "says the&#13;
tenure, continue to say they use&#13;
them in deciding the excellence&#13;
or non-excellence of any faculty&#13;
member's teaching abilities. Say&#13;
MSB, "If you come to this&#13;
University, pay your tuition and&#13;
attend classes, but have no input&#13;
into the review and who comes&#13;
and who is discharged ~ it has got&#13;
to be changed. It's the students&#13;
who are affected by these&#13;
decisions."&#13;
Pautzke explained that the&#13;
MSB hopes the situation can be&#13;
remedied peacefully. They ask&#13;
that students write letters immediately&#13;
to the Divisional&#13;
Chairpersons in regard to the&#13;
decisions that were made this&#13;
semester, stating why they think&#13;
any decision was a just or an&#13;
unjust one; both negative and&#13;
positive comments on any&#13;
professor are encouraged.&#13;
Pautzke, however, is skeptical&#13;
about the benefit of such letters.&#13;
"I have heard from Executive&#13;
Committee members," he said,"&#13;
Students organize to protest&#13;
Folan's terminaton&#13;
by Rebecca Eckiund&#13;
A group of more than 20&#13;
students attended the second&#13;
meeting of the Latino and Concerned&#13;
Students for Dr. Folan&#13;
Committee (LCSFC) last Wednesday,&#13;
February 20.&#13;
The purpose of the group is to&#13;
organize a protest against the&#13;
termination of William J. Folan,&#13;
assistant professor of anthropology.&#13;
Folan has been active&#13;
in the Spanish-speaking&#13;
community, specifically within&#13;
the Racine Spanish Center.&#13;
Some of the courses of action&#13;
decided upon at the first meeting&#13;
of the LCSFC are already in&#13;
progress.&#13;
A letter has been sent to Marion&#13;
Mochon, associate professor of&#13;
anthropology and chairperson of&#13;
the social science division, John&#13;
Van Willigen and Richard Stoffle,&#13;
assistant professors of anthropology,&#13;
and Alan Shucard,&#13;
associate professor of English&#13;
and chairperson of the University&#13;
Committee. A co py of that letter&#13;
appears in the "We get letters"&#13;
section of this issue of RANGER.&#13;
Petitions are presently being&#13;
circulated by members of the&#13;
LCSFC which protest Folan's&#13;
termination.&#13;
Individuals who have been or&#13;
are now students of Folan are&#13;
asked to write letters to members&#13;
of t he executive committee of the&#13;
social science division or to&#13;
Mochon, voicing their opinions of&#13;
Folan.&#13;
Folan is appealing the decision&#13;
of his termination, which was&#13;
originally made by the Social&#13;
Science division executive&#13;
committee, the same committee&#13;
which will hear the appeal. The&#13;
date for the appeal hearing has&#13;
not yet been scheduled.&#13;
Emiliano Contreras, one of the&#13;
originators of the LCSFC, feels&#13;
that Folan's termination was&#13;
bascially a political decision, that&#13;
the executive committee and&#13;
certain individuals disliked&#13;
Folan's pctivities and concerns&#13;
with the Spanish-speaking&#13;
communities on and off campus.&#13;
"I take it personally," said&#13;
Contreras.&#13;
Wayne Ramirez, who is on the&#13;
advising staff and who serves as&#13;
advisor to the Third World&#13;
Organization, praised Folan's&#13;
work with Latinos. "He is one guy&#13;
who has rolled up his sleeves and&#13;
done something. He's concerned,&#13;
positive person."&#13;
"We can document what he's&#13;
done in the community," continued&#13;
Ramirez, "and students&#13;
can document what he's done in&#13;
the classroom. This expands into&#13;
an Affirmative Action issue."&#13;
that they often discount student&#13;
letters by saying, 'Oh, these are&#13;
just letters from friends.' "&#13;
"Use" of Politics&#13;
"The way Executive Committers&#13;
manipulate evidence is&#13;
what bothers us," said Pautzke,&#13;
and this is the main concern of&#13;
the MSB. "They use findings of&#13;
SCAFE or any other material&#13;
they have whichever way they&#13;
want to, depending on whether a&#13;
person is liked or not." Pautzke&#13;
explained that often decisions are&#13;
made on the basis of conflict or&#13;
friendship between Executive&#13;
Committee members and those&#13;
who are being reviewed. "One&#13;
would think," he reminds us,&#13;
"that PhD's could overlook petty&#13;
philosophical, character, and&#13;
personality differences."&#13;
Because of politics, should we&#13;
have to sit in a classroom with&#13;
someone who can't teach?" he&#13;
asks. The decisions, explains&#13;
another MSB member, should be&#13;
based on the three criteria that&#13;
have been set up-teaching,&#13;
scholarly work, and community&#13;
service - but there is no equality,&#13;
conformity or validity in the&#13;
recommendations that come out&#13;
of the Executive Committees.&#13;
Plans of Protest&#13;
Maybe the letters will be&#13;
enough, MSB members hope.&#13;
However, says Pautzke, "A&#13;
mediod^TUKt^e^develo^e^^&#13;
which there is student input that&#13;
is used and used effectively."&#13;
Pautzke explained that the MSB&#13;
hopes for three student&#13;
representatives on each&#13;
executive committee. The&#13;
students, he says, may be senior&#13;
majors in the field that the&#13;
faculty member being reviewed&#13;
is in. This, or a comparable&#13;
method must be established now,&#13;
say MSB, or action will never be&#13;
taken. "I think that this is one&#13;
matter where Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
can side with the students against&#13;
the powerful Executive Committees&#13;
about the review process&#13;
and about their judgements,"&#13;
says Pautzke. "To get a viable&#13;
student input into the review&#13;
process is something you'd think&#13;
the University would want to do,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
If it doesn't, a one-day peaceful&#13;
boycott of classes is being&#13;
organized by MSB. The&#13;
Executive Committees hold the&#13;
power and "if they don't give&#13;
students any voice in the&#13;
educational and review process,&#13;
they don't relinquish any power.&#13;
So, they win," says Pautzke.&#13;
"The question," says another&#13;
MSB member, "is what to do to&#13;
get them to relinquish."&#13;
If all else fails, a publicity&#13;
campaign is in the offing. "It will&#13;
be a campaign," remarks&#13;
Pautzke, "to urge people not to&#13;
attend Parkside. This is what the&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
No news&#13;
is bad news&#13;
The Vets Club's second paper&#13;
drive is coming on Friday, March f&#13;
1, with all proceeds going toward (&#13;
the Racine bus service. Gary £&#13;
Stewart, above left, and Dietmar ;&#13;
Schmeider bundle an advance&#13;
contribution. Anyone with paper '&#13;
to donate may bring it to th«&#13;
truck which will be in the Tallent&#13;
Hall parking lot. &#13;
2 T H E P A RKS IDE R ANGER Wednesday, Feb. 2 7 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
Termination ire&#13;
proves it - there&#13;
must be a better&#13;
review system&#13;
"If you come to this University and attend classes, but have no input&#13;
into the review (of faculty) and who comes and who is discharged - it&#13;
has got to be changed. It's the students who are affected by these&#13;
decisions."&#13;
--Dick Pautzke, Parkside senior and&#13;
spokesman for MSB ("Majority the&#13;
Student Body")&#13;
Last November 28 RANGER published a commentary on "Teaching&#13;
excellence -- who defines it?" The last paragraph of that article read&#13;
"As faculty committees hold most of the power, it is essential that they&#13;
immediately devise a system in which student input will not only be&#13;
reliable but will be used. Until then students are left no alternative but&#13;
to assume that their considerations of what constitutes teaching excellence&#13;
being used in the review procedure is a myth."&#13;
Although that article caught the attention of the faculty and a&#13;
number of irate responses appeared in the following issue, it has&#13;
apparently taken the students three months to realize the sad truth of&#13;
our words.&#13;
Whether or not the faculty accepted what was said, a few of them on&#13;
a committee studying tenure and promotion policies decided to solicit&#13;
student feelings about the criteria used in review. Unfortunately, only&#13;
a handful of people have responded on the form we printed for that&#13;
committee two weeks ago.&#13;
Students are, however, rallying in support of individual faculty&#13;
members who have received letters of termination. RANGER supports&#13;
the activities of The Latino and Concerned Students for Dr.&#13;
Folan Committee (LCSFC), as well as the efforts of other students&#13;
circulating petitions for retention of individuals they feel are too good&#13;
to lose. We wish to remind these students that, in our opinion, the&#13;
reason these faculty members were terminated in the first place was&#13;
because the process of reviewing them is polluted with personality&#13;
politics and is devoid of authentic and meaningful student input.&#13;
Further, even if some of the termination decisions are reversed in the&#13;
appeals process, there is nothing to stop many of these faculty from&#13;
receiving the same letters of good-bye next year.&#13;
A group is now emerging which calls itself the "Majority of the&#13;
Student Body." These students are concerned with the broader picture,&#13;
the review procedure itself and its shameful lack of regard for&#13;
students' feelings. RANGER is in complete accord with the philosophy&#13;
and goals of this group and is prepared to back its efforts to achieve&#13;
reform 100 p ercent.&#13;
We are hopeful that such change can come about quickly and&#13;
without disruption, but we are committed to insuring that the change&#13;
does come and will be lasting. Therefore, if it is necessary to call for a&#13;
boycott of classes (and capture the attention of local media) this will&#13;
be done and we will support it. If it is necessary to go further, as&#13;
outlined in the story on the MSB this week, RANGER must support&#13;
that also, for we feel that this issue strikes at the very basis of our&#13;
education within this institution -- the quality of the teaching, and also&#13;
our right as tuition (and tax) payers to have a say in the hiring and&#13;
firing practices of the University.&#13;
In the news recently have been reports of other schools facing&#13;
demonstrations, strikes and class boycotts because of similar&#13;
frustrations with faculty terminations. They are demanding a voice in&#13;
determining who has earned the right to teach them and who has&#13;
failed. These decisions cannot be made by other faculty alone, for it is&#13;
the students who pay the money to sit in the classroom and be taught,&#13;
and it is they who know at the end of a course whether they have&#13;
learned something and been respected in the process (Hopefully they&#13;
have learned not to passively accept everything which is done to&#13;
them). Besides, it is already wholly evident that the present method&#13;
just doesn't work.&#13;
UOT The Parkside&#13;
"HANGER&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Thomas J. Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Heddon&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Kathryn Kah,&#13;
Michael Olsyzk, Marilyn Schubert, Debbie&#13;
Strand, Walt Ulbricht, Carrie Ward, Mike&#13;
Winslow&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Allen Fredrickson,&#13;
Debra Friedell, Debby Scenters, Ray Waldie&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari, Denny Kroll&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confined&#13;
to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It has come to the attention of&#13;
several Latino students, the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
refusal to renew the&#13;
contract of Dr. William Folan,&#13;
and thus denying him tenure. A&#13;
number of the Lationo students&#13;
as well as the Latino community&#13;
of Racine and Kenosha have been&#13;
so disturbed over this decision&#13;
that we have formed a committee&#13;
to deal with this matter. We feel a&#13;
great deal of indifference by the&#13;
faculty toward the Latino student&#13;
and community with the exception&#13;
of Dr. Folan. You and&#13;
your colleagues must certainly&#13;
be aware of Dr. Folan's excellent&#13;
work with the Spanish speaking&#13;
population of UW-Parkside,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha. It is baffling&#13;
and insulting to us that we&#13;
have not been considered in this&#13;
situation. Therefore, we are&#13;
requesting specific information&#13;
in writing, justifying your actions&#13;
on Dr. Folan's dismissal and&#13;
tenure denial. We would also like&#13;
detailed information regarding&#13;
your Affirmative Action Plan and&#13;
implementation precedures.&#13;
Emiliano Contreras&#13;
Soph. Racine&#13;
and The Latino and&#13;
Concerned Students for&#13;
Dr. Folan Committee&#13;
Editor's Note: RANGER has&#13;
attempted to obtain a copy 0f&#13;
Parkside's Affirmative Action&#13;
Plan which was completed in&#13;
early December. The plan was&#13;
denied us by Eugene Norwood&#13;
Dean of the College of Science&#13;
and Society and Affirmative&#13;
Action Officer. Also, today's&#13;
RANGER carries a story&#13;
concerning William Folan,&#13;
assistant professor of anthropology,&#13;
and his involvement&#13;
with the Latino community.&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
50 cents worth of mary jane&#13;
please.&#13;
Yes students it's true, Happening&#13;
right under our noses, in&#13;
the MAIN concourse!&#13;
Here's my story:&#13;
Monday morning 11 a.m.:&#13;
because of my strange yearning,&#13;
craving for food, I went to the&#13;
sweet shop. I could of settled with&#13;
that crap out of the canteen&#13;
machines in front of and behind&#13;
the counters, but I needed the&#13;
real thing!&#13;
As I approached the candy&#13;
counters, I noticed that the nice&#13;
young woman servicing the&#13;
shoppe had a strange glaze in&#13;
her eyes.&#13;
"What's good today?" I asked.&#13;
"The virgin peanuts are&#13;
fresh", she said as she drooled&#13;
down her blouse.&#13;
I couldn't decide, then I saw it,&#13;
right there in broad daylight, top&#13;
shelf to the left; MARY JANE —&#13;
50 cents - V2 l b. wrapped in yellow&#13;
paper with a picture of a little&#13;
girl. I had finally found what I&#13;
started my quest for.&#13;
"50 cents worth of MARY&#13;
Jane, Please."&#13;
John Nowicki&#13;
Junior, Racine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To: Peggy Hansen, Sue Johnson,&#13;
Cliff Croxford, Amy Cundari, and&#13;
others;&#13;
This letter is in response to the&#13;
letter printed in the RANGER&#13;
Feb. 13, from the above mentioned&#13;
individuals. As a review,&#13;
these individuals felt Security&#13;
was not doing its job on the night&#13;
of Tuesday, Feb. 5 (the big&#13;
snowstorm). They stated that we&#13;
seemed to hurry our patrol of the&#13;
parking lots and that it was&#13;
impossible to flag the squad&#13;
down. They were right! We had&#13;
only one squad on the road, we&#13;
were in a hurry; in a hurry to get&#13;
the vehicles that were stuck on&#13;
the main road, that being Highway&#13;
"G" (Wood Rd.). Between&#13;
the hours of 4:00 p.m. and 11:30&#13;
p.m. that night, we assisted 8&#13;
vehicles that were stuck in ditches&#13;
and since we don't have the&#13;
facilities to tow the vehicles out,&#13;
we had to direct traffic until the&#13;
tow truck came and removed the&#13;
vehicle. These vehicles were a&#13;
hazard to traffic and were in&#13;
greater need of removal than the&#13;
vehicles in the parking lots.&#13;
There were no county snow plows&#13;
out that night and these roads had&#13;
only one lane of traffic open to&#13;
travel and in some cases, you had&#13;
to make your own lane.&#13;
Also, if those who were in need&#13;
of jumper cables, which our&#13;
squad carries, they could have&#13;
used them if they would have&#13;
contacted our office. There's a&#13;
free phone in the East Tallent lot&#13;
or the Student Union. However,&#13;
due to the possibility of our squad&#13;
radio shorting out, we cannot use&#13;
our vehicle to give jump starts.&#13;
Obviously, you need another&#13;
vehicle to start your vehicle, but&#13;
you must provide it by some&#13;
means yourself.&#13;
PS: Since Feb. 15, 1974, we&#13;
have had 48 motorist assists and 4&#13;
rescue runs this year. Case&#13;
Closed!!!&#13;
Off. Dennis L. Chartier&#13;
Dept. of Safety and Security&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
On Valentine's Day some of the&#13;
women of Parkside attended a&#13;
lecture advertised as "To Be or&#13;
Not to Be Raped" by Frederic&#13;
Stroaska. (Someone thought&#13;
themselves pretty cute when they&#13;
picked that date!) RANGER&#13;
didn't report on what was decided&#13;
but it was probably a split&#13;
decision with an undetermined&#13;
number of vicarious responses.&#13;
When a handsome 31-year old ailAmerican&#13;
male like Frederic&#13;
comes along and lectures women&#13;
about rape it reminds me of the&#13;
fox being in the hen-coop ... or&#13;
maybe it's the other way 'round.&#13;
I'm not trying to be funny or&#13;
amusing when I say that a&#13;
representative from any local&#13;
police department or I could have&#13;
given the Ms (plural, please)&#13;
better advice on how to avoid that&#13;
revolting experience for a heck of&#13;
a lot less than the $900 the Activities&#13;
Board paid to serve an&#13;
audience of "from 80 to 100."&#13;
(Boy, I'll bet Mr. S. laughed all&#13;
the way back to his pad.)&#13;
I have no easy solution as to&#13;
how to handle the morons who hit&#13;
and run like barnyard animals.&#13;
Such creeps can only be handled&#13;
by the woman involved, by the&#13;
police and psychiatrists. But the&#13;
fact remains that over half of the&#13;
rapes are committed by friends&#13;
or relatives, and my guess is that&#13;
in most of those cases the guy&#13;
was probably roused into action&#13;
by the behavior of the woman. So,&#13;
when Stroaska says that it's a&#13;
"myth" that women somehow&#13;
entice a man into raping them, he&#13;
is simply talking nonsense and&#13;
telling his audience what he&#13;
figures they'd like to hear&#13;
Believe me . seduction is a twoway&#13;
street. If it isn't, then why do&#13;
girls wear makeup and perfume?&#13;
Stroaska served another thick&#13;
slice of baloney when he said that&#13;
he didn't come to advise women&#13;
to wear long skirts and how not to&#13;
cross their legs and so forth&#13;
Again, he was just telling them&#13;
what he thought they'd like to&#13;
hear. Now listen to me! ... In my&#13;
opinion women would spend a lot&#13;
less time fighting-off would-be&#13;
rapists if they learned the difference&#13;
between decent and&#13;
indecent exposure when in public&#13;
places. Some girls walk around&#13;
here as though they invented legs&#13;
and that the more they can show&#13;
them off, the "sexier" they&#13;
become. A sight that makes even&#13;
me bug-eyed is the voluptuous&#13;
creature who always wears a&#13;
crotch-length tutu, swiveling her&#13;
way down the concourse daintily&#13;
holding her can of coke in one&#13;
hand as though it were a martini&#13;
glass, and in the other hand is a&#13;
cigarette held as though it were a&#13;
lighted firecracker. She's a living&#13;
facsimile of a dame on the prowl&#13;
at a cocktail party. Boy, what&#13;
body language! Where are her&#13;
textbooks? I dunno ... she&#13;
probably forget them in the&#13;
washroom.&#13;
Then there are the show-offs&#13;
whose skirts are so short that&#13;
when they sit down and cross&#13;
their legs they not only expose&#13;
their thighs but areas of the&#13;
buttocks ... and that's not good ...&#13;
especially when they have a run&#13;
in their pantyhose.&#13;
If those over-exposed women&#13;
continued on page 3 &#13;
Terminations&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 19 74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
University fears more than&#13;
anything else since every cent it&#13;
gets depends on enrollment."&#13;
I autzke explained that next year&#13;
students could also choose not to&#13;
sign up for classes taught by&#13;
Executive Committee members.&#13;
Hoping for a Solution&#13;
These protests are a last resort&#13;
for the MSB, however. It is&#13;
hoping that the University administration&#13;
will encourage&#13;
Executive Committees to work"&#13;
on a viable solution to the&#13;
problems of the faculty review&#13;
process. "We're not saying to&#13;
throw out the tenure system, to&#13;
throw-out the Executive Committees,&#13;
or to throw-out the administration,"&#13;
says Pautzke.&#13;
"We only want student input and&#13;
to be assured that the decisions&#13;
being made by Executive&#13;
Committees are indeed correct&#13;
ones. It's only logical that there&#13;
be an effective student input."&#13;
MSB urges all students to get&#13;
involved in writing letters to&#13;
Executive Committees, for if&#13;
they don't participate, "It will&#13;
show that general apathy still&#13;
reigns."&#13;
Letters&#13;
continued from page 2&#13;
realized how much their&#13;
showomanship raised the blood&#13;
pressure of the young bucks&#13;
around here they'd run home to&#13;
mother before they were caught&#13;
in their own trap. Some women&#13;
must want to live in a jungle ... or&#13;
they wouldn't dress the way they&#13;
do. With the historical perspective&#13;
of 72 years of girlwatching&#13;
it seems to me that the&#13;
higher women hoist their skirts&#13;
above the knee, the lower goes&#13;
public morals ... and then you&#13;
hear women cry, "Help! Help!&#13;
Rape!"&#13;
1 remember back when you&#13;
would hear the saying, "Modesty&#13;
is a virtue" ... like honesty and&#13;
fidelity. I also recall a class I took&#13;
in philosophy (Ethics) when the&#13;
word "Virtue" came up in connection&#13;
with a fellow named&#13;
Aristotle. Big deal! But not a&#13;
word was said about making&#13;
virtue relevant to today's&#13;
problems ... such as rape. Maybe&#13;
the words "Modesty" and&#13;
"Virtue" are foreign to today's&#13;
liberated women. Nevertheless, I&#13;
suggest that sensible modesty in&#13;
dress is one way of cutting down&#13;
the probability of being raped, A&#13;
little more clothing covering&#13;
certain places'... looking less like&#13;
a tramp and more like a wellgroomed&#13;
woman ... would go a&#13;
long way in giving a girl a&#13;
fighting chance to be the kind of a&#13;
person she really wants to be.&#13;
Now, I hope, you see the difference.&#13;
Mr. Stroaska told you&#13;
what to do to put out a fire that&#13;
has started. My suggestions have&#13;
to do with fire prevention&#13;
they didn't cost Parkside&#13;
bucks.&#13;
And&#13;
900&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
Editor's note: The fee for&#13;
Frederic Storaska was $675 plus&#13;
$75 fpr travel and lodging expenses.&#13;
&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
The Exorcist&#13;
Don't think that the cinema audience of 1974 is jaded or protected in&#13;
rationalism. I attended a midnight performance and found an impressionable&#13;
and hysterical audience equaling the anxiety of those&#13;
who viewed A Hard Day's Night 9 years ago. Seventeen year olds to&#13;
senior citizens nervously waited outside, rushed like cattle to get&#13;
tickets and scrambled in a frenzy to seats.&#13;
Regardless how many Oscars The Exorcist accumulates it will be&#13;
he greatest horror-fantasy to date. But not the best. The film suffers&#13;
from as many inadequencies as its number of aural and visual shocks.&#13;
Friedkins direction is pot-holed with ambiguities and disunities.&#13;
nHrlntT h ^&#13;
,UenCe&#13;
'„&#13;
41 beautifully Photographed impression&#13;
of Iraq that ends with an excellent expressionistic encounter between&#13;
Max von Sydow and a santanic figure. Structurally, the sequence adds&#13;
nothing to the narrative but confusion. How does the strange&#13;
medallion get in the hands of the younger priest and why does he later&#13;
have the same weird dreams of a clock as von Sydow?&#13;
P nedkin wants the viewer to feel without perception, hence the&#13;
numerous technical and artistic faults. Von Sydow's make-up&#13;
noticably calls attention to itself. Wires can easily be seen supporting&#13;
the girl in m.d-air during the exorcism. The controversial headturning&#13;
shots are achieved by an unconvincing dummy torso&#13;
Yet The Exorcist is immensely powerful. The fine recording of the&#13;
chilling voice and eerie sounds from the possessed girl together with&#13;
the visually shocking face contribute to an effect that is unique in&#13;
cinema-the capacity to blend asynchronous sound with an incongruous&#13;
visual image. Without this powerful synthesis, the tension&#13;
generated from the girl's appearance and speech. The Exorcist would&#13;
only be a bland serving of occultism. With it the film is genuinely headspinning.&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
Day For Night&#13;
(Showing: Southtown in Milwaukee and Coronet in&#13;
Evanston, Illinois, with English subtitles.)&#13;
Francois Truffaut's latest film is an absorbing education and a&#13;
delightful pleasure. Day for Night reveals the technicalities and&#13;
problems of movie-making plus a voyeur-like experience into the&#13;
lives; of the director, actors and technicians. The film's opening scene&#13;
startles the viewer by exposing a sunny Parisian street as a set. The&#13;
director, played by Truffaut, yells "Cut!" and the illusion is shattered&#13;
Our persistence of vision sustains the illusion of viewing a film&#13;
1 ruffaut reminds us that the mystery and magic of film-making is also&#13;
an illusion The camera is a scalpel, not a magic wand. A director&#13;
reality and arranges them for impression and effect-note&#13;
that the film s title refers to the cinemagraphic practice of using&#13;
filters with daylight to simulate night shots.&#13;
Truffaut insists that films do not "go like trains in the night " An&#13;
actor s performance is like getting a cat to drink milk from a saucer&#13;
apparently easy but sometimes impossible.&#13;
Day For Night's disorientating but provocative frame of referencea&#13;
film within a film inside a director's mind-typifies the artistic selfconsciousness&#13;
of the New Wave of French cinema that erupted in the&#13;
late 50 s. Truffaut's earlier films - 400 BLows, Shoot the Piano Player&#13;
and Jules and Jim also present a personal statement of his art&#13;
References to other directors plus the trademarks of improvisation&#13;
and illusion suggest that film is art and not a central reality&#13;
Appli cations for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1974-75 RANGER&#13;
a re now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
lea st eight credits per&#13;
semeste r are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Ea ch candidat e is asked&#13;
to submit details of his-her&#13;
journalistic experi ence&#13;
and a st atement of plans&#13;
for the RANGER to Geoff&#13;
Bla esing, c-o RANGER,&#13;
LLC D194.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates and&#13;
plans to announc e its&#13;
sele ction before sprina&#13;
br eak.&#13;
FREE DELIVER V&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 27, 1974&#13;
Folan's students involved&#13;
with Chicano community&#13;
Student Life sponsoring trip&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Seventeen Parkside students&#13;
are presently involved in a three&#13;
credit Independent Study&#13;
program under the direction of&#13;
William Folan, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology, which&#13;
involves census and survey&#13;
projects in the city of Racine.&#13;
Said Folan, the initiative for&#13;
the Independent Study class&#13;
^ came last semester after com-&#13;
^ pletion of a class he taught in&#13;
Mexican and Chicano culture,&#13;
when a number of the students&#13;
approached him wanting to do&#13;
some type of follow up work in the&#13;
Racine community, working with&#13;
area Chicanos. Folan, who is a&#13;
member of the Board of Directors&#13;
of the Racine Spanish&#13;
Center, arranged for the students&#13;
to complete a Spanish Center&#13;
census study which had&#13;
previously been abandoned due&#13;
to lack of funds.&#13;
The census is needed, say&#13;
Folan's students, because in&#13;
order to get funding or assistance&#13;
from agencies for the Spanishspeaking,&#13;
statistics are wanted&#13;
as to the number of people that&#13;
will benefit from any service.&#13;
These statistics are essential&#13;
before discussion can begin on&#13;
such things as health clinics,&#13;
transportation systems, interpreters&#13;
and bilingual&#13;
lawyers.&#13;
To Study Biiingualism&#13;
Jubentino Gonzales, Spanish&#13;
Center Director, explained that&#13;
U.S. census figures show 4,000&#13;
Spanish-speaking people in&#13;
Racine whereas census&#13;
organizers feel the number is&#13;
closer to eight or ten thousand.&#13;
The survey, which has not yet&#13;
been started, will be a study of&#13;
biiingualism and the attitudes&#13;
and opinions of the community&#13;
towards the bilingual. Folan said&#13;
that "millions of dollars are spent&#13;
to teach Anglos Spanish but when •&#13;
Spanish speak Spanish they are&#13;
often put down immediately and&#13;
attacked for it." The survey&#13;
questionaire, which was&#13;
prepared by Steve Daoutis,&#13;
assistant professor of sociology,&#13;
is arranged to decipher what&#13;
things have influenced individuals&#13;
or groups to accept or&#13;
reject biiingualism. No moral&#13;
judgements are to be made with&#13;
the results, said Folan; it is to be&#13;
a survey data study done by the&#13;
Independent study class.&#13;
Students will learn backgrounds&#13;
and community policy which tend&#13;
to influence attitudes for or&#13;
against biiingualism.&#13;
Folan has been on the Board of&#13;
Directors for the Spanish Center&#13;
since last summer and is&#13;
described by Gonzales as being&#13;
"very well-liked by the Chicano&#13;
community, receptive to our&#13;
needs, and understanding of the&#13;
Chicano culture." Gonzales&#13;
added that Folan has given much&#13;
technical advice to the United&#13;
Migrant Opportunity Service and&#13;
remarked that "I know I am&#13;
speaking for hundreds of&#13;
Chicanos in saying that if there&#13;
were more Bill Folan's the world&#13;
would be a much better place to&#13;
live." He has helped set policy in&#13;
financing, social service, youth&#13;
programs, driver education, and&#13;
adult education.&#13;
Folan said he became involved&#13;
with the Spanish Center because&#13;
he wanted to "lend whatever&#13;
expertise I have." He added that&#13;
"the Spanish-speaking people are&#13;
a large population which feel&#13;
alienated. They need a place and&#13;
people to go to who understand&#13;
the language and culture, and&#13;
who can help them cope with this&#13;
society."&#13;
Folan's Background&#13;
Since 1954 Folan, as an anthropologist,&#13;
has been involved in&#13;
25 major and minor excavations&#13;
(dryland and underwater), many&#13;
in Mexico where he lived for nine&#13;
years, and many of which he was&#13;
director. He has published 22&#13;
articles on archeological investigations,&#13;
has two books which&#13;
have been accepted for&#13;
publication, and six manuscripts&#13;
in preparation.&#13;
Dan Ramirez, one of Folan's&#13;
students, spoke of him as being&#13;
"a man who takes the Spanish&#13;
culture to heart." Another&#13;
student pointed out that "in this&#13;
Independent Study we have&#13;
learned to deal with people, to&#13;
talk and learn of backgrounds.&#13;
For myself, I can see that the&#13;
problems of the parents are often&#13;
the problems of the children, and&#13;
the system either does not deal&#13;
with the problems of the Chicano&#13;
or it is blind. Folan helped me&#13;
guide my education so that I&#13;
know how to help." Ramirez&#13;
added that Folan is a "tremendous&#13;
teacher whom the&#13;
University should feel proud to&#13;
have."&#13;
Jamaica trip filling up fast&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Thirty people have already&#13;
made a down-payment on 8 days&#13;
and 7 nights in Jamaica, and at&#13;
least 30 more are on a list of&#13;
"interested" people. According&#13;
to William Niebuhr, director of&#13;
Student Life and coordinator of&#13;
the trip, attempts are being made&#13;
to extend the return date by one&#13;
day to accommodate more than&#13;
THE BIG TREAT&#13;
Af T he&#13;
the seating capacity of 60 o n the&#13;
return flight.&#13;
Seating capacity on the jet&#13;
flights is restricted for this trip&#13;
because participants will travel&#13;
on regularly scheduled Air&#13;
Jamaica flights, not chartered&#13;
flights as in the past.&#13;
Participants will board the jet&#13;
in Chicago, a jet that Air Jamaica&#13;
calls "the love bird." While in the&#13;
air, passengers will enjoy a&#13;
SUPER CHEF 80&#13;
FRIES &amp;&#13;
LARGE DRINK&#13;
$136&#13;
plus tax&#13;
3400 S heridan R d. &amp; 6 926 39th A ve.&#13;
fashion show (featuring colorful,&#13;
native Jamaican costumes),'&#13;
Jamaican music and food, and&#13;
free Rum Bamboozles.&#13;
The love bird will put down at&#13;
Montego Bay, Jamaica, where&#13;
the travelers will be staying in&#13;
the Casa Montego Hotel. These&#13;
first-class accommodations are&#13;
located directly across from&#13;
Montego Bay's major beaches&#13;
and adjacent to the famous&#13;
Montego Arcade, a shopping&#13;
plaza which offers many Swissmade&#13;
items at half the U.S. price&#13;
as Montego Bay is a duty-free&#13;
port.&#13;
Several side trips will be offered&#13;
at extra cost: a rafting&#13;
excursion down the Martha Brae&#13;
River; a jungle garden tour; a&#13;
plantation tour; a night trip down&#13;
the Great River to a torchlight,&#13;
riverside dinner with a Jamaican&#13;
floor show; and scuba diving&#13;
excursions supervised by Jim&#13;
Walters of Water World in&#13;
Kenosha and Parkside scuba&#13;
instructor.&#13;
LaMacchia Travel of Kenosha&#13;
is the tour operator for this trip&#13;
and is offering a special group&#13;
rate for Parkside. Niebuhr&#13;
stressed the fact that the price for&#13;
this trip is not available for individual&#13;
trips, as some of the&#13;
applicants seemed to believe.&#13;
Many travel agencies around the&#13;
country made bids on the tour&#13;
and LaMacchia of Kenosha just&#13;
happened to turn in the lowest&#13;
bid.&#13;
A new feature is being added to&#13;
this trip. There will be a&#13;
Jamaican Orientation evening&#13;
scheduled within 2 or 3 weeks&#13;
prior to departure. A&#13;
representative from the&#13;
Jamaican Tourist Board will be&#13;
present, along with an employee&#13;
of LaMacchia Travel who has&#13;
been to Jamaica 13 times.&#13;
Niebuhr will also attend; all&#13;
participants in the tour will be&#13;
invited to ask questions and a&#13;
film will be shown.&#13;
Tour participants will leave&#13;
April 14 and return April 21, a&#13;
time period which encompasses&#13;
Parkside's spring break. Cost for&#13;
the trip is $249 plus $20 tax and&#13;
service, based on triple occupancy.&#13;
Total cost for double&#13;
occupancy, including tax and&#13;
service, is $279. For further information&#13;
or application, in-&#13;
"Crimson and Clover"&#13;
by Tommy James &amp; The Shondells&#13;
And It's Also Still Available along with 5,000 other Oldies at&#13;
"D&amp;7K Saba&#13;
^ 191!) TAYLOR AVENUE, RACINE 637-2212.&#13;
terested persons may contact&#13;
Campus Travel Center, LLC&#13;
197, or call 553-2294.&#13;
Niebuhr added that there an&#13;
spaces left on the trip to Gree&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-pag'&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.C&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time&#13;
1 t o 2 days).&#13;
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11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #1&#13;
LOS AN GELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213)477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material is sold for&#13;
research assistance only. &#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 17, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Buzz Faust, right, who is President of the Parkside Activities RnarH r ,Lnil..&#13;
STttai *11° P&#13;
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Wer&#13;
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he Sn0WSt0™ lhe Sh»™ »-caTc&#13;
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abu',1 big* IfhedulS&#13;
Education and entertainment&#13;
are aims of PAB&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
"What student organization holds dances,&#13;
presents films, week-day entertainment, outings!&#13;
concerts, lectures and video productions?" said the&#13;
sphinx to the Parkside student. "Answer correctly&#13;
or you are doomed to a fate worse than death--an&#13;
uninterrupted week of classes in the Parkside&#13;
desert."&#13;
For others, lest they too are caught by the sphinx,&#13;
Parkside Activities Board (PAB) is a student&#13;
organization open to all. It contains nine committees:&#13;
Dance, Film, Coffeehouse, Outing, Pop&#13;
and Mini Concert, Performing Arts and Lecture,&#13;
Fames, Video, House and Publicity. Each committee&#13;
handles programs in their area, final&#13;
authority resting with an executive committee&#13;
composed of all the committee chairpersons plus&#13;
the president and vice-president.&#13;
The Dance Committee, chaired by Hans Ebert,&#13;
plans and presents a variety of dances in the&#13;
Student Activities Building. According to PAB&#13;
president Buzz Faust, Parkside is one of the few&#13;
places where dances have really been successful.&#13;
Dances usually draw 250 to 350 people and on some&#13;
occasions have had close-out crowds of over 500. As&#13;
with other committees, the Dance Committee tries&#13;
to bring in many different types of groups - not just&#13;
those specializing in "top 40" music, but blues and&#13;
soul as well. Past groups have included Black&#13;
Society, Circus, Daddy Whiskers and the Johnny&#13;
Young Blues Band.&#13;
Barb Burke chairs the Film Committee, which&#13;
brings in recently released films for weekend&#13;
viewing and old favorites during the week. The new&#13;
theater has improved the atmosphere in which&#13;
some films are presented, she said, but increased&#13;
film rental prices have necessitated a 25 cent increase&#13;
in ticket price. The Committee must schedule&#13;
films a year in advance and also has problems&#13;
getting certain films because they are often under&#13;
contract for two years after their release.&#13;
Lectures, theatrical productions, art exhibits and&#13;
other such events are handled by the Performing&#13;
Arts and Lecture Committee, chaired by Greg&#13;
Klema. As opposed to the faculty Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee, which Faust said seems to cater to&#13;
academic needs, this committee "fills in the gap"&#13;
with people such as Bill Sanders, Maynard&#13;
Ferguson, Gill Eagles, and most recently, Frederic&#13;
Storaska - people Faust described as "more entertaining&#13;
but educational too." They will be&#13;
bringing Norman Bigelow, whose stage name is&#13;
Reincarnated Houdini," to Parkside on April 10.&#13;
Aim for a Concert Each Semester&#13;
The Pop and Mini Concert Committee is chaired&#13;
by John Graham. It presents a wide variety of pop&#13;
music, trying to bring in a concert every semester.&#13;
Problems arise, however, with Parkside's&#13;
proximity to both Chicago and Milwaukee which he&#13;
feels reduces the potential audience, and also with&#13;
the high price of performers and the limited&#13;
audience capacity on campus.&#13;
Other committees and their chairpersons are as&#13;
follows: Coffeehouse-Gary Petersen, Outing-Karin&#13;
Haglof and Terry Hagemann, Games - Ted Paone,&#13;
and Video-Glen Christensen. Variously, they&#13;
present week-day entertainment in the&#13;
Whiteskellar, outdoor trips and recreation, chess,&#13;
table tennis and foosball tournaments, and studentdirected&#13;
video productions.&#13;
PAB is also responsible for physical set-up and&#13;
audio-visual operation during all of their events and&#13;
for coordinating publicity annected with them.&#13;
These tasks are handled specifically by the House&#13;
Committee, chaired by Rudy Lineau, and the&#13;
Publicity Committee, chaired by PAB vicepresident&#13;
Keith Kramer.&#13;
Working With Other Students&#13;
Said Faust, "PAB has a lot to offer; you meet a lot&#13;
of different people, you're able to plan an event and&#13;
see it through, and you pick up leadership qualities&#13;
working with other students. If you get involved you&#13;
find out Parkside isn't such a bad place. It's true&#13;
everywhere, if you don't get involved you don't feel&#13;
part of the school."&#13;
"The participation over the last few years has&#13;
improved." added Kramer, citing the fact that the&#13;
number of events has increased from two years ago&#13;
to 90 last year to well over 100 planned for this year.&#13;
"We hope it will continue to improve," continued&#13;
Kramer. "If students show up and we make a profit,&#13;
more events can be programmed."&#13;
Students interested in becoming a member of&#13;
PAB or who would like more information may&#13;
inquire at the Student Activities Office, LLC D-196.&#13;
Both Faust and Kramer agreed, "We're looking for&#13;
people who are genuinely interested in serving the&#13;
students' best interests."&#13;
budget time&#13;
CCC re quests groups to plan ahead&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee,&#13;
which is responsible for&#13;
allocating funds to student&#13;
organizations, has issued a&#13;
request to existing groups to&#13;
attempt to begin formulating&#13;
their plans for next year.&#13;
The committee deliberated&#13;
until last December before&#13;
allotting funds for the '73-'74&#13;
school year. It had requested&#13;
budget requests from the&#13;
organizations after the start of&#13;
the academic year in the fall, and&#13;
hopes that by encouraging spring&#13;
planning on the part of groups it&#13;
will be able to allocate some&#13;
funds to enable organizations to&#13;
operate on a yearly basis rather&#13;
than waiting until spring&#13;
semester to get money and&#13;
sponsor activities.&#13;
The committee won't know for&#13;
awhile yet how much money it&#13;
will have but it expects the&#13;
amount will be relatively the&#13;
same as this year. By receiving&#13;
as many requests as possible this&#13;
spring CCC will also get an idea&#13;
of what it will be dealing with&#13;
next year.&#13;
A copy of the general&#13;
guidelines for budgets is&#13;
available from Walter Feldt who&#13;
chairs the committee, or Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, assistant dean of&#13;
students. Students needing&#13;
financial counseling or advice&#13;
regarding activities m&amp;y contact&#13;
Echelbarger, Tony Totero who&#13;
coordinates student activities&#13;
(LLC D197), student Buzz Faust&#13;
who is president of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board, or their advisor.&#13;
&#13;
The Raven&#13;
by Mike Winslow&#13;
Court and Spark&#13;
Joni Mitchell&#13;
(Asslyum 7E-1001)&#13;
Someday I'm going to review an album of a normal rock and roll&#13;
band and I'll be able to tell you all of the people on the album. You&#13;
know, Joe plays guitar, Bill plays drums and so on. This is the third&#13;
album in a row that has a lot of people on it (20 in fact). Crosby, Nash,&#13;
Joe Sample, Robbie Robertson, Jose Feliciano, the list goes on.&#13;
Before I heard this album, I read several good reviews and had also&#13;
been told that it was good. Expecting a good album, Joni Mitchell has&#13;
released an extremely human album that was even better than I&#13;
thought it would be. The words and music fit together perfectly like the&#13;
pieces of a puzzle.&#13;
The first song is the title tune "Court and Spark," a slow intimate&#13;
tale of how she felt someone she loved saw her. "He saw me&#13;
mistrusting him, and still acting kind," The ending leaves the listener&#13;
with the feeling that things didn't work out. "Help Me" and "Free Man&#13;
in Paris" really set the album on its way, both having great interplay&#13;
between the words and music. "Free Man" seems to be the most interesting&#13;
rhythmically.&#13;
The pace slows a bit with "People's Parties" in which Joni describes&#13;
the people at a party which could be any party. "Some are friendly&#13;
some are cutting, some are watching it from the wings some are&#13;
standing in the center giving to get something."&#13;
A beautiful and haunting song, "The Same Situation" describes the&#13;
feelings of a woman towards a man who is involved with other women&#13;
I've never heard Joni Mitchell in better form because every song on&#13;
this album is a winner. I'm going to pick out only the highlights of side&#13;
two, but it's really impossible because each song is a highlight in itself&#13;
"Raised on Robbery" is Joni Mitchell doing rock and roll and is also&#13;
one of the songs that is getting airplay on the radio. It opens with a few&#13;
vocal lines a sung in harmony. Then the band kicks in and the song&#13;
takes off.&#13;
A slow jazzy number, "Twisted" which even includes Cheech and&#13;
Chong doing a small bit, is a song that's really out of Joni Mitchell's&#13;
"style." It's the only song Joni didn't write and it's about a person who&#13;
thinks they're a genius and feelings about an analyst who tells them&#13;
they're crazy. The melody of the song twists and turns like the mind of&#13;
a person who is crazy and makes a perfect accompanyment for the&#13;
words. Perhaps the analyst was right.&#13;
There are four more songs on the second side and three of them&#13;
"Car on a Hill," "Down to You," and "Just Like This Train," are&#13;
gems in themselves. The other song, "Trouble Child" is good but is&#13;
overshadowed by the depth of these.&#13;
Joni Mitchell has released a dynamite album. It's lyrical and as&#13;
easy to listen to as relaxing in a favorite chair. Song after song unfolds,&#13;
each seeming to be better than the ones before it from the&#13;
beginning to the end. It's great!&#13;
(Record courtesy J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Journalism&#13;
Ranger announces a meeting&#13;
for all interested persons.&#13;
Discussions: -n ews, fe ature, &amp; sports w riting&#13;
-photography&#13;
-layout&#13;
-business a nd advertising&#13;
Times: W ed. M arch B - 3:30 p m Thurs March 7 - 10:00 am&#13;
Place: R anger o ffice, L LC 0194&#13;
Anyone t hinking o f w orking f or P arkside's&#13;
student n ewspaper is certainly i nvited.&#13;
4 SOW 7th Ave.&#13;
K...&#13;
• LEATHER GOODS: •WATER BEDS • PAPERSV&#13;
• JEWELRY. ' «BEAN BAGS , • TAPES/!&#13;
• BATH PRODUCTS "i RECORDS, - • PIPES&#13;
"Open 365 days a year"&#13;
Phone 6 54-3578 Truck On &#13;
6 THE PARKSI DE RANGER Wedne sday , Feb. 2 7 , 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 27: Varsity baseball organizational meeting at 4&#13;
p.m . in the Phy Ed Bldg. Any interested student is invited.&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 27: Whiteskellar presents Clark Anderson at 1 p.m.&#13;
No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 27: PAB sponsors the film "Billy Jack" at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission charge is 75 cents.&#13;
Thursday. Feb. 28: PAB movie in the Whiteskellar "Freaks" at 1 p.m.&#13;
No admission charged.&#13;
Friday, March 1: Vets Club paper drive in the Tallent Hall parking lot&#13;
from 8:15 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. For information call 553-2481.&#13;
Friday, March 1: Lecture and demonstration of Indian music by&#13;
Malini Sampath from 2:30 until 4 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. No&#13;
admission charged.&#13;
Friday, March 1: PAB sponsors film "Dirty Harry'" at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, March 2: Dance in the SAB at 9 p.m. Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday, March 2: PAB sponsors film "Dirty Harry" at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Sunday, March 3: Faculty concert featuring Maria Mutschler, violin,&#13;
Stephen Swedish, piano, and David Littrell, cello, at 7 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater. Admission is free.&#13;
COMIN G U P&#13;
March 14-17: Mary Chase's prize winning play "Harvey" in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theater at 8 p.m. each night. Tickets are now on sale at the Information&#13;
kiosk for $1.&#13;
All items for IT S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Brief news&#13;
All invited to party&#13;
honoring athletes&#13;
An evening of music, dancing, food and drink is being arranged to&#13;
which all members of the campus community are invited, in honor of&#13;
the fall and winter varisty sports participants. To be called "Parkside&#13;
Athletic Appreciation Night," the event will feature the Jazz Band,&#13;
conducted by Robert Thomason of the music faculty.&#13;
To be held on Sunday evening, March 10, from 7:30-11:30 p.m., the&#13;
cost is $1.50 per person. This charge will cover everything including&#13;
beer, poor boy sandwiches, cake and coffee.&#13;
Reservations are necessary and may be made at the Information&#13;
kiosk. Money must be in by March 6 to allow the coordinator of the&#13;
event, Shirley Schmerling, to arrange for proper quantities of food.&#13;
iE . 194 &amp; 50&#13;
Now Appearing,&#13;
BUS STOP&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. MARCH 1 &amp; 2&#13;
Siattoundt S $*tcUuicAe4&gt; Oun Specialty&#13;
TWIN LAKES&#13;
LE PUNKS&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. MARCH 1 &amp; 2&#13;
Returning N ext W eek!&#13;
IDES &amp; SHAMES UNION&#13;
(Ides o f M arch &amp; Cryan S hames)&#13;
EDGEWATER: Fr L, March 8&#13;
BRATSTOP: Sat., M arch 9&#13;
tor information c all 4 14-857-2011&#13;
Deadline extended for review forms&#13;
The deadline for returning responses on faculty review criteria has&#13;
been extended to this Thursday, Feb. 22. A box is available at the&#13;
Information kiosk to deposit the forms in, and copies of the form,&#13;
which was printed in the RANGER of Feb. 13, are available at the&#13;
RANGER office (LLC D194).&#13;
The two-question form was prepared by the Special Commitee on&#13;
Tenure and Promotion Policies, a faculty committee which is studying&#13;
the faculty review process. Signing the form is optional and may be&#13;
done only if the person wishes to be called by the committee to give&#13;
amplified oral testimony.&#13;
Defensive driving set for March 4&#13;
The Department of Safety and Security is again offering the&#13;
National Safety Council's Defensive Driving Course for employees or&#13;
students who have not taken the course.&#13;
The Defensive Driving Course has been a prerequisite for the&#13;
operation of all state-owned vehicles since December, 1970. Parkside&#13;
employees who intend to use state-owned vehicles are required to take&#13;
this course before permission can be granted to drive state-owned&#13;
vehicles (employees are considered to be faculty, staff or volunteer&#13;
drivers).&#13;
The course will be held at the Classroom Building, room D101 on&#13;
Saturday, March 9, 1974, starting at 9 o'clock A.M. The course should&#13;
be completed somewhere around 3 p.m.&#13;
Please submit to this department as soon as possible the names of&#13;
those individuals who will be taking the course.&#13;
Piano Trio offers free recital&#13;
™Th&#13;
,&#13;
e Parkside Piano Trio, a faculty ensemble composed of Violinist&#13;
Maria Mutschler, Cellist David Littrell and Pianist Stephen Swedish,&#13;
will present a free public program at 7:30 p.m. on Mar. 3 in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater. They will play Schubert's Trio in B flat&#13;
major, Opus 99, and Brahms' Trio in B major, Opus 8.&#13;
Varsity baseball&#13;
N A meeting of all interested Varisty baseball prospects will be held on&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 27, at 4 p.m. in the Physical Education Building.&#13;
Practice and time schedules will be discussed. We will meet in the&#13;
hallway outside the wrestling room.&#13;
UW-P senior named Miss Kenosha&#13;
The new Miss Kenosha is 22 year old Connie O'Mara, a senior at UWP.&#13;
She was picked last Saturday night and will go on to compete for the&#13;
Miss Wisconsin title in Oshkosh.&#13;
Rational Behaviorisms hold seminar&#13;
A seminar, "Working With Acting-Out Adolescents: A Rational&#13;
Approach will be held on Sat., March 2, from 9 a.m. until 4:30 p m at&#13;
McCarthy Hall in Racine. Maxie C. Maultsby, Director-Psychiatric&#13;
Outpatient Clinic of the University of Kentucky Medical Center and a&#13;
leading figure in Rational Behavior Therapy will present the rational&#13;
approach to working with acting-out adolescents. Maultsby will deal&#13;
with the accurate recognition of acting-out adolescents versus antisocial,&#13;
normal, psychotic or mentally defective adolescents To&#13;
register it is necessary to send $15 to the Association of Rational&#13;
Thinkers, c-o Bette Annis, 1436 North Main Street, Racine. Further&#13;
information is available by calling 639-5967 evenings.&#13;
Marine Coras schedules reen.ltmont&#13;
The Marine Corps officer selection team will visit Parkside on&#13;
March 4th, 5th, and 6th to interview students interested in becoming&#13;
commissioned officers. The recruiters will be located in the concourse&#13;
between Greenquist and the LLC from 10 a.m. until 4 p .m. to provide&#13;
information pertaining to programs.&#13;
Racine man wint 1st d»nrPo b l a rlr bp|f&#13;
Rick Lee, Racine Sophmore, was recently promoted to nidan (first&#13;
degree black belt in karate) by Young Id Uh, Burbank, California and&#13;
President of the American Taek-Wan-Do Association.&#13;
Lee has been trained by Larry Yarber of Racine. Yarber will be&#13;
returning to California soon, turning over directorship of the school&#13;
of self defense in Racine to Lee.&#13;
Lucev visits Kenosha today&#13;
Governor Patrick J. Lucey will be in Kenosha all day today (Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 27). He will be available to answer questions in the&#13;
evening at the Italian-American hall on 52nd St. beginning at 7:30 p m&#13;
This will be a "town hall" type of meeting and is open to the public.&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16 S treet&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIP ING H OT FOODS&#13;
D E LIV E R ED TO YOUR H OME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHI CKE N&#13;
STE AKS&#13;
SEA FOO D&#13;
CHO PS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAG ANA&#13;
RAVIOL I&#13;
MOS T ACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCC HI&#13;
SPA GHE TTI&#13;
SAN DWIC HES&#13;
B O M B ERS&#13;
H A M B URG ERS&#13;
B E ER&#13;
S O FT DRIN KS&#13;
WIN ES&#13;
DYC&#13;
announces&#13;
support&#13;
for Folan&#13;
The Parkside Democratic&#13;
Youth Caucus announced last&#13;
Wednesday that they have&#13;
unanimously endorsed the aims&#13;
of The Latino and Concerned&#13;
Students for Dr. Folan Committee.&#13;
Dan Nielsen, chairperson&#13;
of the DYC stated, "we feel that&#13;
Dr. Folan is truly an outstanding&#13;
member of the Parkside faculty&#13;
and the community as a whole.&#13;
His dedication to the community,&#13;
particularly the Chicano community,&#13;
has marked him as an&#13;
invaluable asset to the University.&#13;
His termination is a&#13;
grievous mistake and an insult to&#13;
all of the students at Parkside."&#13;
CO&#13;
CD&#13;
CO&#13;
GO&#13;
3©&#13;
C"D —I CD CD 72 ••i •&#13;
GO mmmmm &#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 17, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Bill Sobanski&#13;
75'&#13;
STU. ACT. BLDG.&#13;
I.D.s REQUIRED&#13;
Cagers open p l a y o ffs&#13;
at home Thurs. night&#13;
NIU ends Rangers' regular season&#13;
P.A.B. MOVIE&#13;
Clint E astwood&#13;
DIRTY&#13;
HARRY&#13;
Fri., M arch 1 - 8 :00&#13;
Sun., M arch 3 - 7 :30&#13;
Gateway Conference champion&#13;
Milton College was selected&#13;
Sunday as the No. 1 team in the&#13;
Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
Association (WICA) playoffs&#13;
beginning Thursday.&#13;
UW-Parkside was rated second&#13;
in the voting by coaches at independent&#13;
colleges in Wisconsin&#13;
NAIA District 14. Lakeland&#13;
College was seeded third and St.&#13;
Norbert College fourth.&#13;
Milton, 18-10 after an 81-77&#13;
overtime win over Lakeland&#13;
Saturday night, will be home&#13;
Thursday night at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
against St. Norbert, 13-10.&#13;
Parkside, 13-14, will face&#13;
Lakeland, 21-5, at the UWParkside&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
Building. That game is also&#13;
slated for a 7:30 p.m. start on&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
The Milton-St. Norbert winner&#13;
will be home to the Wisconsin&#13;
State University Conference&#13;
(WSUC) runner-up UW4&#13;
Thl d i j "&#13;
UUdy» ma&#13;
rcn 4. The Parkside-Lakeland winner&#13;
will play at the site of the WSUC&#13;
champion UW-Eau Claire, that&#13;
same night. The, Monday winners&#13;
will play Wednesday, March 6,&#13;
for the NAIA District 14 championship&#13;
and the trip to the&#13;
national tournament (March 11-&#13;
16) in Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Parkside season passes are not&#13;
valid for admission to the&#13;
Thursday night game here&#13;
Admission is $2 for the general&#13;
public and $1 for all students with&#13;
I.D.'s and children.&#13;
Parkside and Lakeland have&#13;
met five times in the past, with&#13;
the Rangers sandwiching one win&#13;
in the series among four&#13;
Lakeland wins. Parkside won 118-&#13;
99 here in the 1970-71 season,&#13;
while Coach Duane "Moose"&#13;
Woltzen's Huskies won the WICA&#13;
playoff game last year at&#13;
Sheboygan, 62-55. The two teams&#13;
have not met this season. ihe 1973-74 Ranger basketball team, 1. to r.: Coach Steve Stephens, Malcolm Mahone, Bill&#13;
Sobanski, Claude Harris, Gary Cole, Rade Dimitrijevic, Don Snow, assistant coach Rudy Collum;&#13;
front row: manager John Bonaretti, Roscoe Chambers, Joe Hutter, Chuck Chambless, Cal Denson&#13;
and Jeff Gottfried.&#13;
on a sour note&#13;
Gary Cole&#13;
Parkside netman Gary Cole has been chosen as a&#13;
member of the all-WICA (Wisconsin Independent&#13;
College Association) basketball team. Cole has been a&#13;
top scorer for the Rangers all season. Chuck Chambliss&#13;
and Bill Sobanski received honorable mention.&#13;
DE KALB, 111.—UW-Parkside&#13;
fell victim to its own cold&#13;
shooting here Saturday night as&#13;
Northern Illinois of the MidAmerican&#13;
Conference ended the&#13;
Rangers' regular season by&#13;
handing Steve Stephens' crew a&#13;
65-51 setback.&#13;
Parkside shot 30 per cent from&#13;
the floor for the game, hitting on&#13;
21 of 70 shots. The NIU Huskies&#13;
couldn't do much better,&#13;
however, making 27 of 77 shots&#13;
for a 35 per cent shooting mark.&#13;
Parkside ended its regular&#13;
season at 13-14 while Northern,&#13;
with two games left on its slate,&#13;
upped its mark to 7-16. Parkside&#13;
will host Lakeland College&#13;
Thursday night at UW-P in the&#13;
Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
Association playoffs. Game time&#13;
is 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Gary Cole was again the big&#13;
man for Parkside, scoring 22&#13;
points to lead all scorers and&#13;
pulling down 15 rebounds. Bill&#13;
Sobanski, though not starting,&#13;
saw heavy action for the first&#13;
time since recovering from a&#13;
broken foot and scored 16 po ints.&#13;
NIU had four men in double&#13;
figures. Tim Bryant led with 12,&#13;
Dwayne Caldwell 11, and Pete&#13;
Valaika and John Fisher 10 each.&#13;
Valaika had 16 rebounds for the&#13;
Huskies.&#13;
Parkside played catch-up from&#13;
the start of the game and finally&#13;
tied it for the first time at 14-all&#13;
with 9:41 remaining in the first&#13;
half. The Rangers tied it again at&#13;
16 two minutes later but NIU&#13;
went ahead 18-16 with 6:24 left on&#13;
a Tim Bryant tipin and Northern&#13;
never again lost the lead. Northern&#13;
went up by seven at 27-20&#13;
with three minutes left but the&#13;
Rangers closed it to 27-24 with&#13;
1:53 remaining on two Cole free&#13;
throws and a Cole layup. NIU&#13;
pulled away in the closing minute&#13;
to make it 33-26 a t the half.&#13;
Parkside could hit on only nine&#13;
of 40 shots in the first half for a&#13;
22.5 percentage while Northern&#13;
made 13 of 31 for a 41.9 per cent&#13;
mark. NIU outrebounded&#13;
Parkside 28 to 23 in the opening&#13;
stanza.&#13;
Parkside twice closed the NIU&#13;
lead to three points, early in the&#13;
Classified&#13;
FUL L TIME EMP LOY MEN T- day shift&#13;
orderly. Contact Barbara Boren, Director of&#13;
Nursing at the Addiction Center, 2000&#13;
Domanik Drive or call 632 6141.&#13;
TUTORS WAN TED to work with migrant&#13;
Spanish speaking children after school hours&#13;
in the child's home. Si.65 pe r hour...-&#13;
maximum ten hours per week. Tutors must&#13;
be able to communicate in Spanish, Contact:&#13;
Irene Dominguez, Federal Projects,&#13;
second half as Sobanski hit on a&#13;
breakaway layup to make it 39-36&#13;
and then Cole made a 7-footer&#13;
from in the lane at 14:08 to close&#13;
the gap to 41-38.&#13;
NIU pulled away, though, with&#13;
eight straight points and had&#13;
made the score 49-38 before&#13;
Sobanski got a layup after a&#13;
three-minute Parkside scoring&#13;
drought. The Rangers could&#13;
never get closer than seven after&#13;
that and lost Cole and Chuck&#13;
Chambliss on fouls before Northern&#13;
ended the contest with a&#13;
seven point burst in the final&#13;
minute and one-half to give the&#13;
Huskies the final victory margin.&#13;
Parkside outrebounded Northern&#13;
56-52.&#13;
In JV action, NIU defeated&#13;
Parkside 71-53 as Tim Hubbard&#13;
had 15 points for the losers.&#13;
In Monday action (Feb. 18) the&#13;
Rangers defeated Oakland&#13;
University of Michigan 82-62.&#13;
N E E D E D : Girl to share la rge 3 bedroom&#13;
apartment with 2 other girls. Rent is $44 per&#13;
person, including he at (utilities extra).&#13;
Located in West Racine. Leave name and&#13;
Phone at Information desk if interested. If&#13;
this isn't possible call 632 1164 between 3-5 M&#13;
F, and be tween 9 1 Sal Ask for Betsy.&#13;
E L D E R L Y WOM AN seeking live-in&#13;
employment. Babysitting, care of an older&#13;
person, and or light housework. Contact&#13;
Mary Pearson at 5547160.&#13;
CAMER A for sale. Yashica 35mm SLR with&#13;
3 l enses and case. Call Bob a t 658-4048. &#13;
8 T H E PAR KSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, Feb. 2 7 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
The Parkside Judo Club won the team competition Sunday as they&#13;
sponsored a National Invitational Men's Collegiate Invitational Judo&#13;
Tournament. Placing first were Emiliano Contreras, White Belt-light;&#13;
and Jim Pattersen, White Belt-medium. Six judo clubs participated in&#13;
the event, with at least one Parkside competitor placing in each of the&#13;
seven divisions.&#13;
Pucksters split pair&#13;
over weekend&#13;
In hockey action over the&#13;
weekend the Parkside pucksters&#13;
scored a win and a loss. The loss&#13;
was at home on Friday against&#13;
Marquette by a score of 6-1.&#13;
Parkside's only goal came in the&#13;
first period by John Bruneau,&#13;
assisted by Jerry Madala.&#13;
In the second game against&#13;
UW-Milwaukee in Milwaukee,&#13;
Parkside won 7-3. John Culotta&#13;
scored the first goal with an&#13;
assist by Jerry Simonsen. Then&#13;
Madala got the Rangers second&#13;
hat trick of the season when he&#13;
scored three in a row. All were&#13;
assisted by Tad Ballantyne and&#13;
Culotta also helped out on the&#13;
third goal.&#13;
Bill Iserman, assisted by&#13;
Reggie Carter scored the&#13;
Rangers fifth; Ballantyne&#13;
assisted by Culotta got the sixth;&#13;
and Robin Lipske scored the&#13;
Parkside's final goal with an&#13;
assist from John Lulewicz.&#13;
The next game and last home&#13;
game will be March 8 at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena against&#13;
Whitewater. Face off is at 6 p.m.&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
team&#13;
loses&#13;
to Oshkosh&#13;
Parkside's gymnastics team&#13;
bowed to UW-Oshkosh, the NAIA&#13;
champions, in a meet at the Phy&#13;
Ed building Saturday. Oshkosh&#13;
had 143.75 points and won all&#13;
events, with Parkside taking two&#13;
seconds and a third. Kevin O'Neil&#13;
won those in the side horse, the&#13;
still rings and the parallel bars.&#13;
Fencers&#13;
better&#13;
their&#13;
record&#13;
The fencers won two contests&#13;
and lost another in a quadruple&#13;
meet at home last Saturday.&#13;
They beat the University of&#13;
Chicago 24-3 and Milwaukee Area&#13;
Technical College 26-6 and lost to&#13;
Ohio State 16-11. Parkside has a&#13;
14-4 r ecord so far this season.&#13;
In epee competition Bernie&#13;
Vash was 8-1, Mark Mulkins 6-3&#13;
and John Badtke 4-5. In foil, John&#13;
Tank was 8-1, Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
8-1 and Brett&#13;
Mandernack 5-4. In sabre, Rick&#13;
Moffett and David Bauman were&#13;
7-2 while Bill Rouse was 8-1.&#13;
The Ranger fencers will vie in&#13;
the Great Lakes tournament for&#13;
all non-Big Ten schools at Wayne&#13;
State on March 9.&#13;
The p lace t o go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and t hings!&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. schedule&#13;
Wednesday Feb. 27 Gyms open for recreation 12:30-1:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 8. Sauna 12:30-2 p.m. and 3:30-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramural basketball 8 p.m. till closing&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 28 Gyms open 10:30a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 8-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Rugby Club Practice in middle gym 8-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30-10:30 a.m. and 12:30-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 3:30-6 p.m.&#13;
Friday Mar. 1 Gyms open 10:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. volleyball in middle&#13;
court noon&#13;
Soccer Club practice in gym 8 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11 a.m.-l p.m.&#13;
Saturday Mar. 2 Gyms open 9:30-4 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30-4 p.m.&#13;
Sunday Mar. 3 Gyms open 3-6:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramurals in gyms 6:30 - c losing&#13;
Pool open 3 9:30 p.m. swim group also 7 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 3-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Monday Mar. 4 Gyms open 12:30-1:30 p.m. and middle court open 8&#13;
9:30 p.m.&#13;
Golf team practice on north court 8 p.m. till closing&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30-2 p.m. and 3:30 6 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday Mar. 5 Gym open 12:30-1:30 p.m. and middle court 8-9:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Golf team practice on north court 8 - closing&#13;
Handball courts open all day except 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 6-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Reminder: Sauna hours are the same as hours posted for pool.&#13;
Varsity athletics occupy the gyms everyday from 3:30-8 p.m.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Now you can&#13;
protect yourself&#13;
against muggers, rapists&#13;
and worse with this&#13;
amazing new whistle. Wear it&#13;
as a necklace or carry it as a key chain. Its long-range&#13;
penetrating shrill brings help in a hurry. The next dark&#13;
night (that's tonight!) you'll feel a lot safer just knowing&#13;
you have the greatest protection in the world. Gives&#13;
obscene phone callers a shrilling earful, too&#13;
GET IT BEFORE YOU HAD IT!&#13;
COME IIM OR MAIL HANDY COUPON&#13;
Yes! I w ant to be saved! Send me London-Like Whistles&#13;
Key Chain—Necklace (Number) Chrome&#13;
I e nclose $5.00 for each London-Like&#13;
Whistle. I u nderstand that if I a m not&#13;
totally satisfied, I w ill receive a complete&#13;
refund if returned in 10 days.&#13;
NAME.&#13;
Family Jewels Ltd.&#13;
3431 West Villard Avenue&#13;
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53209&#13;
STREET NUMBER.&#13;
CITY STATE.&#13;
NOW PAVING 5.4%&#13;
(Compounds Annually to 5.51%)&#13;
ON REGULAR&#13;
CRED PASSBOOK IT&#13;
UNION&#13;
THREE C ONVENIENT L OCATIONS:&#13;
U.W. Parkside - Room 219, Tallent Hall&#13;
ISO W. Chestnut St.. B urlington&#13;
52119 Washington Ave., Racine </text>
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              <text>Environmental report out on new parking lots</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1974 Vol. II No. 21&#13;
Environmental report out&#13;
on new parking lots&#13;
In conformance with the&#13;
Wisconsin Environmental Policy&#13;
Act, Parkside has announced that&#13;
a preliminary environmental&#13;
report on the construction of two&#13;
new parking lots and a campus&#13;
access road is available to the&#13;
public for review and comment.&#13;
Copies of the preliminary&#13;
report are available at the&#13;
library and at the Kenosha and&#13;
Racine city libraries. Additional&#13;
copies have been sent to Racine&#13;
and Kenosha city and county&#13;
officials and agencies, Somers&#13;
officials, district offices of appropriate&#13;
state agencies, the&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Planning&#13;
Committee, and other interested&#13;
area organizations. The report&#13;
has also been distributed to state&#13;
and federal agencies, the&#13;
governor, and the Legislative&#13;
Reference Bureau by UW Central&#13;
Administration.&#13;
Circulation of the preliminary&#13;
report and incorporation of&#13;
public reaction to it is the first&#13;
step under the Environmental&#13;
Policy Act for state projects&#13;
which affect the environment.&#13;
Written comments on the&#13;
preliminary report will be accepted&#13;
by the Parkside Office of&#13;
Planning and Construction and&#13;
incorporated into the final report&#13;
if received before March 4, according&#13;
to Director of Planning&#13;
and Construction James&#13;
Galbraith.&#13;
The final report will then be&#13;
circulated in the same manner as&#13;
the preliminary report and will&#13;
be the basis of a public hearing on&#13;
the proposed project to be held on&#13;
campus this spring at a date to be&#13;
announced.&#13;
Principal elements of the&#13;
project call for construction of&#13;
two new parking lots with a total&#13;
capacity of 1,045 ve hicles, to be&#13;
built as soon as possible near the&#13;
academic buildings which attract&#13;
the largest numbers of students,&#13;
staff and visitors, and construction&#13;
of a public access road&#13;
which will connect to the existing&#13;
and new lots and encircle the&#13;
academic area. One lot will be&#13;
west of the Communication Arts&#13;
building and within walking&#13;
distance of the Physical&#13;
Education building; the other&#13;
will run east from the future&#13;
campus union which is scheduled&#13;
for completion in 1976 and which&#13;
will connect to the Classroom&#13;
building on the northern edge of&#13;
the academic complex.&#13;
The new lots are needed to&#13;
alleviate the tight parking&#13;
situation. However, the net gain&#13;
from the new lots will be only 225&#13;
spaces a year from now, since&#13;
Parkside will lose 320 temporary&#13;
spaces due to campus development&#13;
and 500 spaces at the&#13;
Kenosha campus which will be&#13;
vacated in January. Parkside&#13;
currently has 1,350 permanent&#13;
spaces on the main campus.&#13;
The project was approved last&#13;
month by the Board of Regents&#13;
and the state Bureau of Facilities&#13;
Benefit planned&#13;
Fire destroys home&#13;
of two students&#13;
Two Parkside freshmen, A1&#13;
(Nello) Lansdowne and his son A1&#13;
Jr., of 8067 Sheridan Rd.,&#13;
Kenosha who moved to Wisconsin&#13;
last September, had their trailer&#13;
home burned to the ground last&#13;
Wednesday. While no one was&#13;
seriously injured in the blaze, the&#13;
family literally lost everything&#13;
but the clothes on their backs.&#13;
Lansdowne Sr. is a member of&#13;
the board of the Adult Student&#13;
Association (ASA), and that&#13;
group is engaging in a combined&#13;
fund raising effort with the Vets&#13;
Club, RANGER, and others to aid&#13;
the Lansdownes.&#13;
Since Lansdowne and his son&#13;
are students here, a plan has&#13;
been devised to allow members of&#13;
the campus community the opportunity&#13;
to easily contribute to&#13;
the effort. Next Wednesday, Feb.&#13;
27, the normally free PARKSIDE&#13;
RANGER will be distributed by&#13;
members of the ASA and Vets&#13;
Club in exchange for donations to&#13;
benefit the fire victims.&#13;
So, instead of being placed in&#13;
the boxes next Wednesday,&#13;
RANGER will be offered by these&#13;
students in exchange for&#13;
whatever each person wants to&#13;
give. On Thursday all remaining&#13;
papers will be placed in the boxes&#13;
for free distribution.&#13;
Management. Detailed study by&#13;
private planning consultants, in&#13;
participation with Parkside,&#13;
Central Administration and the&#13;
Bureau, confirmed the&#13;
desirability of the project.&#13;
SEWRPC and the Department of&#13;
Natural Resources were also&#13;
consulted about the project.&#13;
Funding has already been&#13;
approved and appropriated in&#13;
current biennial budgets for the&#13;
project.&#13;
The preliminary environmental&#13;
report says that&#13;
"physical impact on the environment&#13;
will be minimal." It&#13;
points out that project sites are&#13;
open land without trees and&#13;
wildlife, formerly used for farming,&#13;
and that UW-P's substantial&#13;
areas of natural&#13;
vegetation and wildlife to the&#13;
north and west won't be affected.&#13;
Visual problems will be minimal,&#13;
according to the report, because&#13;
the sites are located in natural&#13;
depressions and will be further&#13;
screened by tree planting.&#13;
Parking surfaces will be interrupted&#13;
by islands, planted&#13;
with trees, to permit natural&#13;
drainage ways. Heavy-rooted&#13;
grasses will be planted on the&#13;
drainage ways to prevent soil&#13;
erosion and will be swaled to&#13;
prevent flooding by reducing the&#13;
runoff rate and permitting much&#13;
of the water to soak into the soil,&#13;
to evaporate or to seep slowly&#13;
into the groundwater.&#13;
Rape &amp; assault: myth vs. fact&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
"The boundaries within which&#13;
you can react safely to a rape&#13;
situation are limited only by your&#13;
imagination. Your most powerful&#13;
weapon is your brain."&#13;
Frederic Storaska delivered a&#13;
lecture in the theater here last&#13;
Thursday night; the title of that&#13;
lecture was "To Be or Not To Be&#13;
Raped," or, as Storaska&#13;
amended it, "Rape and Assault:&#13;
Myth versus Fact."&#13;
Storaska began his lecture with&#13;
a discussion of some of the most&#13;
common myths surrounding the&#13;
subject of rape.&#13;
Society uses two methods of&#13;
talking about rape to female&#13;
children, said Storaska. Number&#13;
one, they are given the "ostrich&#13;
story," the one that says "it can't&#13;
happen to you, it won't ever&#13;
happen to you." Or else women&#13;
are told "don't walk alone at&#13;
night, wear long skirts, be careful&#13;
how you cross your legs, don't&#13;
smile, don't go near a place&#13;
where men might be."&#13;
Women are taught to believe&#13;
that rapists are "monstrous,&#13;
martian-like things," said&#13;
photo by Allen Fredrickson&#13;
"If you do something and it doesn't help you, make sure it doesn't&#13;
hurt you either," was the point Frederic Storaska emphasized&#13;
repeatedly during his lecture on rape prevention last Thursday. He&#13;
stressed that aggravating an assailant by screaming or struggling will&#13;
usually make matters worse, Hjs talk was concerned with "what to do&#13;
if what you do doesn't work."&#13;
Storaska, "completely inhuman,&#13;
when the fact is that most rapes&#13;
are committed by a man the&#13;
woman knows well (boy friend,&#13;
fiance) or is at least acquainted&#13;
with."&#13;
Storaska blames the sexual&#13;
double standard for most of&#13;
society's false notions about the&#13;
rape victim. Women are taught&#13;
that sex is unnatural for them,&#13;
explained Storaska, but completely&#13;
natural for men. Thus the&#13;
woman who has been raped is&#13;
considered by society to be&#13;
defiled, dirty and evil.&#13;
Storaska pointed out another&#13;
mythical idea that has been&#13;
fostered by the double standard,&#13;
the notion that all women are&#13;
teasers, they want to be raped,&#13;
that an attractively dressed&#13;
woman is "asking for it."&#13;
"Consider a woman in hot&#13;
pants and a halter top," said&#13;
Storaska. "She could be thinking&#13;
a number of different things, like&#13;
'It's hot and I'm comfortable in&#13;
these clothes,' or, 'I like to look&#13;
attractive,' or 'Eat your heart&#13;
out, brother.' She could be&#13;
thinking many things. But does&#13;
she deserve rape as her punishment?&#13;
In the twentieth century?&#13;
Does she?"&#13;
Popular Defense Methods&#13;
Storaska went on to talk about&#13;
three of the popular methods of&#13;
warding off assault that are&#13;
supposed to work.&#13;
He has a great deal of confidence&#13;
in the martial arts&#13;
(karate, jujitsu, judo and so on)&#13;
as means of self-defense, but&#13;
considers them almost- totally&#13;
invalid because people are unwilling&#13;
to take the time to learn&#13;
enough to effectively defend&#13;
themselves. (Storaska himself&#13;
has a third degree black belt in&#13;
karate.)&#13;
The second popular method of&#13;
warding off assault is screaming.&#13;
"They tell you, 'Scream. People&#13;
will hear you.' Sure. That's not a&#13;
lie. Lots of people will hear you.&#13;
But what they don't tell you is&#13;
that you may be stabbed or&#13;
strangled to death if you do&#13;
scream." r"&#13;
The third method is struggling,&#13;
putting up a fight against an&#13;
assailant. Storaska said that one&#13;
of two things will result from&#13;
this: mutilation of the victim's&#13;
vagina or sexual stimulation of&#13;
the rapist.&#13;
"Of course," said Storaska,&#13;
"you are told that if the assailant&#13;
has a weapon you should do none&#13;
of these things-no screaming or&#13;
struggling. Well, how the hell do&#13;
you know if he has a weapon or&#13;
not? Most attacks come from&#13;
behind in the dark."&#13;
Storaska believes that if you&#13;
are attacked, you should go along&#13;
with the assailant, do what he&#13;
wants attitudinally, until you see&#13;
or create a chance to safely&#13;
react, UNLESS you are in immediate&#13;
danger of losing your&#13;
life. Try communicating with&#13;
him, be humble, try and understand&#13;
him.&#13;
Storaska stressed again and&#13;
again that "if you do something&#13;
and it doesn't help you, make&#13;
sure it won't hurt you, either."&#13;
That is, if you are being sexually&#13;
attacked, don't take any action&#13;
that will antagonize the rapist,&#13;
because it might not work-you'll&#13;
only make him angry enough to&#13;
beat you or kill you. "Once&#13;
violence sets in, you can toss a&#13;
coin to see who wins."&#13;
Two Physical Techniques&#13;
Storaska actually gave only&#13;
two specific physical techniques&#13;
for dealing with a rapist. One&#13;
method can be used when the&#13;
assailant is face-to-face with the&#13;
victim, especially if he is&#13;
strangling her and she has a very&#13;
short time to live.&#13;
The idea is for the victim to put&#13;
her hands on his cheeks, as if to&#13;
embrace him, then move the&#13;
thumbs over his eyes and poke&#13;
them in. "You think you can't do&#13;
this," said Storaska, "and maybe&#13;
some of you can't. But your brain&#13;
will take advantage of any information&#13;
available to it in order&#13;
to survive.&#13;
"You're probably also&#13;
thinking, 'How gruesome.' But&#13;
that's not nearly as gruesome as&#13;
some of the perverted things that&#13;
are done to women's bodies."&#13;
The second technique that&#13;
Storaska advocates can be used&#13;
even if the rapist grabs the victim&#13;
from behind and holds her so she&#13;
can't move her arms.&#13;
Almost every sexual assailant&#13;
will force the victim to touch his&#13;
genital area, said Storaska, so&#13;
this second technique uses that&#13;
fact as a weapon. The idea is to go&#13;
along with the rapist, even anticipate&#13;
him by reaching (slowly&#13;
and gently) for his genitals,&#13;
carefully locating one or both&#13;
testicles, and smashing them in&#13;
the hands.&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1974-75 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight credits per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked!&#13;
to submit details of hls-herf&#13;
journalistic experience!&#13;
and a statement of plansf&#13;
for the RANGER to Geoff|&#13;
Blaesing, c-o RANGER,!&#13;
LLC D194.&#13;
The advisory board will!&#13;
interview candidates and!&#13;
plans to announce its|&#13;
selection before sprinq?&#13;
break. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1974&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Tf"-. | Mt&#13;
fiotfbook&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
HEW forces&#13;
discrimination&#13;
Despite the claims that our country is based on the&#13;
notion of democracy and equality the federal government&#13;
continues to screw up financial aid programs and&#13;
regulations so that discrimination must be practiced by&#13;
universities in order to keep federal monies coming in.&#13;
A letter sent to financial aid recipients by Parkside's&#13;
Office of Financial Aids reads that "the federal&#13;
government requires that we monitor the on-campus&#13;
payroll to determine if financial aid recipients become&#13;
employed. This employment is not permissible under&#13;
current federal regulations." Also, "if you have a workstudy&#13;
award you may work on campus but only to the&#13;
limit of your award."&#13;
The reasoning is that the financial aid and work-study&#13;
was designed to meet the needs of students and no&#13;
student could possibly need any more money for&#13;
educational costs or living expenses than the government&#13;
says they do.&#13;
Sue Johnson of the Financial Aids Office agrees that it&#13;
is considered a problem and discriminatory against&#13;
those receiving financial aid."&#13;
RANGER also considers these regulations&#13;
discriminatory against the poor. Students who, it has&#13;
been determined, are not in financial need or eligible for&#13;
work-study may be employed on campus and there are&#13;
no ceilings as to the amount of money they may earn.&#13;
I he fault of these inconsistencies lies on the shoulders of&#13;
the evermore unsympathetic and corrupt federal&#13;
government, not the University.&#13;
RANGER urges state financial aid officers to demand&#13;
from the federal government the opportunity to grant&#13;
m«&#13;
ne&#13;
J fiT 1&#13;
i&#13;
,&#13;
0bS equal|&#13;
y and fai|&#13;
-ly to all students who&#13;
attend the University. We urge students who are not&#13;
them wEth^p tbdir financiai aid packages to discuss&#13;
them with Parkside financial aids people to see if a more&#13;
equitable package can be arranged. RANGER asks that&#13;
a I employers on campus not discriminate against&#13;
students receiving financial aid, nor against those who&#13;
are ineligible for It.&#13;
Finally, we challenge the Department of Health,&#13;
Education and Welfare to create regulations and&#13;
programs which discriminate against no one, if it is&#13;
capable of such a noble act.&#13;
Frederic Storaska is accustomed to lecturing to large groups, full&#13;
houses, in all parts of the country. Frederic Storaska lectures on a&#13;
topic which should be of concern to everyone-women, men, and even&#13;
children. Frederic Storaska's lectures have probably saved a lot of&#13;
lives since he began them nine years ago. Frederic Storaska lectures&#13;
on rape.&#13;
Last Thursday he spoke at Parkside in the Comm Arts Theaterseating&#13;
capacity 675. His talk was heard by about 90 people, ranging in&#13;
age from 12 up to 60 or so, with about one quarter of the audience male.&#13;
One speculation on the scant attendance is the publicity job done by&#13;
the Activities Board people. They counter that it was promoted as well&#13;
as the very successful show by Gil Eagles, "the entertaining psychic."&#13;
Perhaps it is my own bias but I feel that saving the lives and bodily&#13;
integrity of human beings deserves better than that. I also think that&#13;
Storaska's subject matter had some built-in problems for publicity, in&#13;
that he was not expected to be entertaining (he was, as those who were&#13;
there will attest, but his excellent handling of a delicate subject could&#13;
not have been anticipated by those who knew nothing about him).&#13;
There are a number of reasons for the inertia which prevented many&#13;
from going to hear Storaska. One is the age-old "it can't happen to&#13;
me" syndrome. Just telling you that it can won't change your mind,&#13;
but it is thought provoking to realize that 75 p ercent of rapes are&#13;
committed by someone the victim knows-boyfriend, relative,&#13;
acquaintance. If you can't picture yourself in a situation where you&#13;
would get attacked by a stranger, think of yourself in your own home.&#13;
A second reason isn't really one of inertia at all. It's avoidance.&#13;
Granted, rape is an ugly word, it has many unpleasant physical and&#13;
emotional connotations. But it is also a fact of life, and refusing to&#13;
acknowledge it doesn't make it easier to cope with it when you might&#13;
have to. Yet, a number of people have told me that they tried to get&#13;
their friends to come and were simply told, "I'm not going to listen to&#13;
anyone talk about that."&#13;
Storaska mentioned that he expected this area was "conservative,"&#13;
and he was happily surprised that about a third of the audience were&#13;
members of the community. Actually, most of the older people there&#13;
were adult students or University employees. I wish more of them had&#13;
been there, as well as more of the younger students and people from&#13;
the community. I would have hoped that common sense would tell&#13;
people the ostrich is dead. It was killed hiding its head in the sand.&#13;
Storaska mentioned that he had offered his program free to the high&#13;
schools in a city out east and was told "no thanks." He told of&#13;
universities booking him and not being allowed to use the word "rape"&#13;
in publicizing his lecture. We in the audience were chagrined by these&#13;
and other dangerous attitudes which would potentially sacrifice&#13;
human beings for unrealistic moral platitudes. It's like the husband&#13;
whose wife comes home and says she's been raped and he is upset&#13;
because she isn't dead or badly mutilated-it's a question of values&#13;
and human life and self-protection are losing.&#13;
RANGER has covered Storaska's lecture in detail, in the hopes that&#13;
those who were too shy to show up will hide themselves away&#13;
somewhere and read it, those who were too busy will take a few&#13;
minutes now which may help them later, and those who were indifferent&#13;
may have nothing better to do than skim through it. It is not&#13;
as powerful and helpful as hearing Storaska in person, but please think&#13;
about it. As Storaska himself says, "your best weapon is your mind."&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am pleased to say that Dr&#13;
William Folan has made many&#13;
important contributions in the&#13;
educat and Latino Corn- ion&#13;
munity.&#13;
His knowledge and understanding&#13;
of our peoples'&#13;
Black and Anglo students in the&#13;
Community is most valuable anc&#13;
appreciated.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of. The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553 -2295.&#13;
-Ji&#13;
he&#13;
.&#13;
Parkside Ran«&#13;
er »s an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
'etters for length and good taste. Al letters must be signed and include&#13;
1 1 '&#13;
n u m b e r a n d s t u d e n t s t a t u s o r f a c u l t y r a n k . N a m e s w i l l&#13;
be wi thheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Thomas J. Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Heddon&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR. Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Kathryn Kah, Michael Olsyzk, Marilyn Schubert, Debbie Strand&#13;
Walt Ulbricht, Carrie Ward, Mike Winslow&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Allen Fredrickson, Debra Friedell, Debby Scenters, Ray Waldie&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari, Denny Kroll&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pe*fka&#13;
^ •&#13;
Latino Community through the nrnhlp™ icl °/ oar&#13;
TTPeoP.&#13;
les&#13;
' We all are grateful to the UV&#13;
Racine Spanish Center. Besides to aDolv his JraH ablllt&#13;
y Parkside for providing us will&#13;
the f art th a t rw- ~ , _&#13;
pp y hls ?&#13;
cademic expertise such a valuable and outstandin' the fact that Dr. Folan is a Board&#13;
Member of the Racine Spanish&#13;
Center, attending all meetings&#13;
and providing valuable service,&#13;
he has ridged a gap between the&#13;
academic circles of higher&#13;
in support and assistance to solve&#13;
our sociological problems has&#13;
been commendable. His work&#13;
W1 h the La Raza Project is&#13;
outstanding. His special class&#13;
projects, involving Latino,&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As I said before, Parkside does&#13;
not need more parking lots. I&#13;
have discovered since my first&#13;
letter that what Parkside has&#13;
done in approving the new&#13;
parking lots and road is illegal&#13;
As I understand it, Parkside must&#13;
submit an environmental impact&#13;
study which includes public&#13;
hearings for any new construction&#13;
with the Environmental&#13;
of contact for me in care of the&#13;
RANGER office. As far as the&#13;
parking lots are concerned, I&#13;
could not say anything better&#13;
than Joni Mitchell's song, "Big&#13;
Yellow Taxi" (1969 Siquomb Pub&#13;
Co.):&#13;
"They paved paradise&#13;
And put up a parking lot&#13;
on utuui With a pink hotel, a boutique i wan me c-nvironmental a„h • a uoui&#13;
Protection Agency. Parkside has rw? f&#13;
W!&#13;
ngm8 hot spot&#13;
not done this nor have they held ThY a&#13;
!&#13;
ways see™ to go&#13;
any public hearings. If anyone ,&#13;
you don&#13;
't k&#13;
"ow what you've&#13;
else is concerned about our en- Til, it'c „&#13;
vironment and-or concerned th g0?&#13;
e&#13;
about illegalities performed bv a !!y pa Parad&#13;
ise&#13;
Parkside's Administration PUt Up a Parking lot. .&#13;
please help me get a public&#13;
hearing scheduled and come&#13;
voice your opinion. If you want to&#13;
help, leave your name and means&#13;
They took all the trees&#13;
And put them in a tree museum&#13;
,i^ n 6 a&#13;
l' the People&#13;
A dollar and a half just to see 'em&#13;
man as Dr. William Folan and w&lt;&#13;
are looking forward for hi:&#13;
continuing service. Thank yoi&#13;
very much.&#13;
Jubentino Gonzales&#13;
Executive Directoi&#13;
Racine Spanish Centei&#13;
Don't it always seem to go&#13;
That you don't know what you'v&#13;
got&#13;
Till it's gone&#13;
They paved paradise&#13;
And put up a parking lot.&#13;
Hey farmer farmer&#13;
Put away that DDT now&#13;
Give me spots on my apples&#13;
But leave me the birds and thi&#13;
bees&#13;
Please!&#13;
Don't it always seem to go&#13;
That you don't know what you'vi&#13;
got&#13;
Till it's gone&#13;
They paved paradise&#13;
And put up a parking lot...." \&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Kenosha Senioi&#13;
•Ji / • '• •! A {j • J &#13;
More letters&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Alan B. Wallace has left an&#13;
impression on me. The first time&#13;
I met him, Steve Miller and I&#13;
were waiting for the bus outside&#13;
the classroom building. Alan&#13;
Wallace was leaving school and&#13;
asked us if we needed a ride down&#13;
the hill. I was unaware at the&#13;
time of his status at Parkside.&#13;
The next time I ran into him&#13;
happened to be in the Kenosha&#13;
campus parking lot. My car&#13;
wouldn't start, and Steve was&#13;
under the hood trying to figure&#13;
out what steps had to be taken to&#13;
get it running. Alan Wallace,&#13;
apparently leaving after one of&#13;
his educational and interesting&#13;
classes, stopped to give us aid.&#13;
I discovered he was teaching&#13;
American Language 101 and&#13;
asked permission to enter his&#13;
class. I was disappointed in the&#13;
section I was presently enrolled&#13;
in. This class was of trivial&#13;
content not related to experience&#13;
and didn't measure up to my&#13;
expectation. Hostility lurked in&#13;
the room, and the assignments&#13;
were a drag. Would you consider&#13;
writing a 500 word essay&#13;
describing a coconut very exciting?&#13;
I couldn't wait to change&#13;
classes. Alan Wallace's section 8,&#13;
American Language 101, titled&#13;
"Past and Future Shock" was a&#13;
pleasure to attend. It opened my&#13;
eyes to many new ideas and&#13;
heightened my awareness to&#13;
matters I knew in passing, but&#13;
hadn't really thought about.&#13;
There was such a contrast&#13;
between the two classes I must&#13;
comment. In my former class&#13;
there was a rigid teacher-student&#13;
relationship. This Dr. of&#13;
Philosophy in English cited his&#13;
schooling ai.d intimidated and&#13;
belittled the students every&#13;
chance he could. Also, he&#13;
wouldn't explain the assignments&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
Service&#13;
CHICKEN &amp; RIBS&#13;
In A Basket&#13;
Thursday, F ebruary 28&#13;
-v*&#13;
95&#13;
c&#13;
"DON'T MISS THIS!""&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
presents&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
Pat Ireland&#13;
also featuring: TONY &amp; JUMBO&#13;
Saturday Feb. 23&#13;
Showtime 8:30 p.m.&#13;
TICKETS: $1.50 PARKSIDE STUDENTS ADVANCE&#13;
$2.00 GUESTS AND AT DOOR&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT INFO KIOSK&#13;
HAPPY-HOUR 8:00-9:00 BEER 20c , V,&#13;
IDS REQUIRED&#13;
clearly. I felt my learning&#13;
process was impeded by his&#13;
impersonal approach to teaching&#13;
and by this hostile and pedantic&#13;
atmosphere. As a member of&#13;
Alan Wallace's class I felt&#13;
relaxed and part of a friendly&#13;
group. There were discussions&#13;
which enabled members of the&#13;
class to freely express ideas and&#13;
past experiences which related to&#13;
the daily topics. There was a real&#13;
exchange between teacher and&#13;
student. Alan Wallace discussed&#13;
daily topics thoroughly and explained&#13;
things carefully. He&#13;
tailored class discussion to&#13;
current interest and national&#13;
events. His students respected&#13;
him, and he respected his&#13;
students.&#13;
I was shocked when I first&#13;
heard of his termination. I&#13;
couldn't understand how a&#13;
growing school could let an&#13;
"excellent teacher" go. For, isn't&#13;
that what good schools are made&#13;
of? I was going to write a letter to&#13;
O. Johnson (chairperson of the&#13;
Humanities Division), but didn't&#13;
think it would do any good. I&#13;
decided to start a petition and get&#13;
a few people who felt the same&#13;
way I do about this matter to&#13;
sign. There are nearly 300&#13;
students concerned about losing a&#13;
good teacher. That is more than&#13;
half of the people who voted in the&#13;
last election at Parkside.&#13;
Alan Wallace has taught here&#13;
for four years and has done an&#13;
excellent job. How long does it&#13;
take for a man to qualify for his&#13;
job? His student evaluations have&#13;
been consistently high, particularly&#13;
in the upper division&#13;
courses. For example, in one&#13;
class he received an overall&#13;
average of about 4.75 out of 5.00.&#13;
In 20 of the 22 categories he&#13;
received significantly higher&#13;
than divisional averages. What&#13;
good does this evaluation do? It&#13;
doesn't do any good, one way or&#13;
the other-can't get rid of bad&#13;
teachers or keep good teachers.&#13;
Parkside is advertised as a&#13;
teaching-oriented undergraduate&#13;
institution. Therefore, teaching&#13;
should be of p rimary importance.&#13;
Makes you wonder, what are real&#13;
priorities around Parkside?&#13;
I am concerned about a good&#13;
teacher getting fired. I plan on&#13;
spending money at Parkside for&#13;
three more years and want to be&#13;
taught by people whom I know&#13;
are excellent instructors.&#13;
Anna Marie Dimeo&#13;
Kenosha Freshman&#13;
The dile&#13;
of being a&#13;
Rape&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
"Forget about the knee-to-thegroin&#13;
technique," he said. "The&#13;
groin is very small in comparison&#13;
to the entire upper thigh area and&#13;
the chances are good that you'll&#13;
miss. Besides, the testicles are&#13;
protected by the penis, and it&#13;
would have to be a pretty solid&#13;
and direct hit to be effective."&#13;
If either of these two methods&#13;
are interrupted before they are&#13;
completed, explained Storaska,&#13;
the rapist won't even be aware of&#13;
what was about to happen. In&#13;
each case, the action seems to be&#13;
a caress; interruption of either&#13;
action would simply allow the&#13;
victim additional time to think of&#13;
something else to do.&#13;
Storaska talked about&#13;
situations which might not&#13;
warrant such violent action as&#13;
poking out eyes or smashing&#13;
testicles (both methods could kill&#13;
the assailant).&#13;
Few Rapes Committed&#13;
By Strangers&#13;
Storaska said that most rapes&#13;
are committed by a woman's boy&#13;
friend, fiance, date or husband,&#13;
when the sexual situation just&#13;
gets out of control. The man gets&#13;
sexually stimulated fastest, said&#13;
Storaska, since men have been&#13;
taught to be sexually aggressive.&#13;
To prevent rape in this type of&#13;
situation, the first concern of the&#13;
woman must be, "How can I turn&#13;
him off?" But, at the same time,&#13;
he said, she must not humiliate&#13;
the man by laughing or telling&#13;
him he's a lousy lover or some&#13;
such thing, because his uncontrolled&#13;
passion could easily&#13;
become uncontrolled hatred and&#13;
turn to violence.&#13;
Storaska reported the cases of&#13;
two women who had been to his&#13;
lecture, both of whom got into&#13;
potential rape situations with&#13;
their boy friends. One woman, in&#13;
desperation, urinated on her&#13;
assailant; the other forced&#13;
herself to vomit. Both pleaded&#13;
physical illness, placing guilt on&#13;
themselves, but also effectively&#13;
preventing rape.&#13;
Storaska reported another case&#13;
in which a woman, hoping to stop&#13;
her fiance from raping her,&#13;
began laughing hysterically. He&#13;
choked her to death.&#13;
Rapist's Personality&#13;
Storaska talked about the type&#13;
of personality a rapist has.&#13;
Generally, a rapist is likely to&#13;
have over-idealized his mother,&#13;
he has an inferiority complex,&#13;
has been rejected by women he&#13;
holds in high esteem, puts all&#13;
women on a pedestal, and by&#13;
We know. We understand. We care.&#13;
Our Women's Service Division includes a mo&#13;
licensed clinic, complete with a superior medical&#13;
professional staff. Outstanding service is provide&#13;
wid§ variety of areas such as pregnancy testing a,&#13;
counseling, pregnancy termination (up to the first'&#13;
and menstrual extraction (starts period up to 14 day&#13;
For further information or an appointment, call us in&#13;
confidence.&#13;
Midwest Population Center&#13;
(312) 644-3410&#13;
100 East Ohio&#13;
Chicago, Illinois 60611&#13;
A non-profit organization&#13;
raping them, drags them down to&#13;
what he sees as his own level,&#13;
humiliating and defiling them.&#13;
A rapist, said Storaska, is a 100&#13;
percent pure sexist: "He thinks&#13;
that when women say 'no' they&#13;
mean 'yes," when they say&#13;
'maybe' they mean 'yes,' and&#13;
when they say nothing they're&#13;
thinking 'yes.' "&#13;
Part of the prevention of rape,&#13;
said Storaska, is to treat the&#13;
assailant as a person with an&#13;
emotional problem, not as a&#13;
freak. Saying things like "you&#13;
make my skin crawl" only&#13;
reinforces the assailant's beliefs&#13;
about women that cause him to&#13;
rape in the first place.&#13;
A reaction which might prevent&#13;
rape is for the woman to pretend&#13;
to be willing or even anxious for&#13;
intercourse with her assailant.&#13;
This will either defeat his purpose&#13;
in committing the act, or,&#13;
in the case of a man who is being&#13;
forceful but is not necessarily&#13;
psychotic, willingness on the&#13;
woman's part will often put him&#13;
at ease and allow her to escape&#13;
before the act is committed.&#13;
In general, Storaska advised&#13;
women to try his way first&#13;
because "you can always scream&#13;
and kick later, but if you scream&#13;
and kick first, you may not be&#13;
around to try my way later."&#13;
Storaska made a comment&#13;
about women that he said seems,&#13;
to the men in his audiences, to be&#13;
a very radical one: "This is&#13;
America, right? And what&#13;
America means to me is the&#13;
freedom to do what you want as&#13;
long as you don't hurt anyone&#13;
else-and that means freedom for&#13;
everyone: men, women, old,&#13;
young-whatever. So, if on a&#13;
sexual scale of 1 to 10, a woman&#13;
chooses to go to point number 9&#13;
and no further, that is her right,&#13;
her choice. We've got to start&#13;
treating women like people and&#13;
not like pillows to be beat on."&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
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LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
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research assistance only.&#13;
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For application and complete&#13;
information, unite or telephone&#13;
EUROJOBS&#13;
Box 1108, Milwaukee,' Wis. 53201&#13;
(or telephone 414-258-6400) &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1974&#13;
The prose problem , or, why c&#13;
by Sandy Busch&#13;
Throughout the nation, student SAT and ACT test&#13;
scores have been dropping.&#13;
Educational Testing Service personnel claim&#13;
college board scores in English are dropping.&#13;
At UW-Madison, enrollment in English 101, the&#13;
remedial English course, has greatly increased&#13;
because of poor placement scores.&#13;
Have entering Parkside students fallen into this&#13;
trend? Are freshmen here low in language art&#13;
abilities?&#13;
According to Clay Barnard, career planning&#13;
specialist in placements, this is a probability.&#13;
Barnard observed, "Since this last fall there has&#13;
been an increase in the number of English 010&#13;
(remedial English) sections. In American&#13;
Language sections, there hasn't been as large an&#13;
increase."&#13;
Parkside professors, instructors and specialists&#13;
had diverse opinions on the writing abilities of&#13;
Parkside students.&#13;
According to Walter Graffin, assistant professor&#13;
of English, the average Parkside freshman is no&#13;
different than any other university freshman. He&#13;
felt problems in student writing do exist; however,&#13;
it is not just a contemporary problem. "The&#13;
problem has been around for 50 years. Theories&#13;
have been as numerous as people teaching English.&#13;
There is no definitive answer or we'd be using it,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Henry Kozicki, assistant professor of English,&#13;
agreed with Graffin in that the average Parkside&#13;
student is no different than any other college&#13;
student, at least within the UW-system.&#13;
Kozicki noted a tremendous influx of poorly&#13;
prepared people, however, and stated, "I would say&#13;
the well-prepared students are still here but in&#13;
smaller numbers."&#13;
Stanford Orme, instructor in business&#13;
management, observed, "I haven't taught in&#13;
another school, but at Parkside there is more of a&#13;
problem than I would expect to find."&#13;
Marion Mochon, associate professor of Anthropology&#13;
and chairperson of the Social Science&#13;
division, found writing problems in lower level&#13;
classes but relatively few in the upper classes.&#13;
"Generally, there are no failures in upper level&#13;
writing," she added.&#13;
Problem Does Exist&#13;
Regardless of the magnitude of the problem, it&#13;
would seem that according to various test findings&#13;
and instructor observations, the problem itself does&#13;
exist.&#13;
Many Parkside interviewees felt that the problem&#13;
should be tackled as it exists when a student enters&#13;
college. Why the writing ability is low is not as&#13;
important as what can be done about it.&#13;
In what aspects of writing does the problem exist?&#13;
Peter Martin, associate professor of English, felt&#13;
that such problems are not easily divisible. He&#13;
observed that areas of trouble in writing vary&#13;
greatly with each person.&#13;
The majority of instructors agreed that while&#13;
grammar mistakes were the most bothersome,&#13;
most students had the most trouble in organizing&#13;
their thoughts.&#13;
Observations by Orme and specialist Mary&#13;
Renshaw, who assists business management&#13;
students in composition, impart the general view:&#13;
"Punctuation and sentence construction are the&#13;
most bothersome as you can't figure out what the&#13;
student is saying; but there is an equal problem in&#13;
logical flow," said Orme.&#13;
IDES &amp; SHAMES&#13;
IDES O F&#13;
MARCH&#13;
"Vehicle"&#13;
'L.A. Good B ye'&#13;
UNION&#13;
Appearing at&#13;
CRYAN&#13;
SHAMES&#13;
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We're in L ove"&#13;
Sdyewat&amp;i&#13;
FBI., F EB. 2 2&#13;
T W IN LAKES&#13;
7&amp;e 0W• Sfofa&#13;
SAT., F EB. 2 3 "&#13;
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00 At the Door&#13;
Available at Brat &amp; Edgewater&#13;
&amp; Both J&amp;J Record Stores.&#13;
nTTTT'T V1 VT'IT'i' 1VIV I '.TTTTT&#13;
SQ OO&#13;
Organization is Biggest Problem&#13;
Renshaw agreed, "Organizing thoughts,&#13;
especially in the beginning of the paper, is the&#13;
biggest problem. After that comes punctuation,&#13;
sentence structure, and vocabulary."&#13;
Reflecting upon their problems, most Parkside&#13;
students agreed with the above comments.&#13;
"My biggest problem is organization of the&#13;
paper; for example, a term paper's outline," said&#13;
freshman Cindy Noble.&#13;
Sophomore Robert Vlach commented, "My&#13;
largest problem in starting a paper is organizing an&#13;
outline including a concise topic and all points&#13;
needed to be said in a sufficient length."&#13;
"My biggest problem is writing clearly and&#13;
concisely within the time I'm given to do the work,"&#13;
agreed senior Kathy Bush.&#13;
Other problems mentioned by Parkside instructors&#13;
were plagiarism, due to incorrect or&#13;
nonexistent footnotes, and a lack of knowledge in&#13;
regard to finding library materials needed for some&#13;
written work.&#13;
While citing particular aspects of writing&#13;
problems, students often could not pinpoint exactly&#13;
why they had problems. To discover if one of the&#13;
possible reasons could be an insufficient high school&#13;
English background, six area high school English&#13;
departments were contacted.&#13;
In most local high schools, students are required&#13;
to take at least two years of English. Usually, the&#13;
average student is required to take one semester of&#13;
composition, where a term paper is often written,&#13;
and one semester of literature. Classes during the&#13;
remaining two semesters can be selected by the&#13;
student, often from up to 20 different English&#13;
electives.&#13;
College-bound students are advised to choose&#13;
college prep classes, and to take more than the&#13;
required English load. They are advised what&#13;
courses to take before their junior year, but independent&#13;
when making the final schedule&#13;
decisions.&#13;
Motivation is Difficult&#13;
The largest problem faced when teaching high&#13;
school English, it was agreed by most high school&#13;
instructors, is that of motivating a student to learn&#13;
to write.&#13;
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February 22 &amp; 23 Ugtm[er 0r Brats,op&#13;
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jo&#13;
When given a choice of subject&#13;
increases.&#13;
Chairperson of Racine St.&#13;
Department, Michael Zele&#13;
today's society has become&#13;
consciousness; the "do your&#13;
Students do not use rational&#13;
realize that grammar rules m&#13;
of individualism.&#13;
Washington Park's Englis&#13;
person, Eugenia Huggins, eneffects&#13;
of the "do your own t&#13;
revealed that because of this&#13;
Department was pressured&#13;
choose more electives. I&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
G u ys &amp; Gals need ed for s u m m er&#13;
e mp l o y m e nt at Nat ion al Park s,&#13;
Private Camps, D ude Ranches and&#13;
R e s o rts t h r o u g h o ut t h e natio n.&#13;
Ove r 50,000 stud ents aid ed each&#13;
y e a r. F or FR E E inf orm atio n on&#13;
stud ent assista nce progra m send&#13;
self-ad dressed STA M P ED envelop&#13;
e to O p p o rtu n i ty R e sea rch ,&#13;
D e p t . S J O , 5 5 F l ath e a d Driv e,&#13;
Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
....YOU M U ST APPLY EARLY....&#13;
THIS STUDENT ASSISTANCE PROGRAM MAS BEEN&#13;
REVIEWED BV THE FEDERAl TRADE COMMISSION&#13;
The p lace to go&#13;
for P ants&#13;
and t hings!&#13;
JSEftMIANN'&amp;&#13;
THE&#13;
(&amp;meucan]&#13;
614 - S6lh Street &#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER&#13;
cop'* college students write?&#13;
•' ff&#13;
,«/ btftTH- of&#13;
AS.HLEtn/M?&#13;
?&#13;
students Choose the easier classes to get an "easy&#13;
exclatmS ^ ™g SCh00&#13;
' iiliterate!&#13;
" ^e&#13;
/c&#13;
°ssn&#13;
En^fXrl&#13;
eSS&#13;
°&#13;
f problems arising in high school&#13;
English requirements, all instructors had plenty of&#13;
provemen^&#13;
0 ^ CoUege writing is in need of imtefrhpr^&#13;
H^n the&#13;
.Problem to both high school&#13;
teachers and college instructors was a comment by&#13;
Trempers English Department head, Herbert&#13;
Gladding. He stated, "The bonds of communication&#13;
:Sn&#13;
^&#13;
geS and high sch00ls are not strong&#13;
enough^ Problems in college student writing could&#13;
De c ited then strengthened more in high schools&#13;
within the college-bound students."&#13;
ects the motivation to write&#13;
St. Catharine's English&#13;
Selenski, observed that&#13;
me one of the individual&#13;
'our own thing" attitude,&#13;
inal thought processes to&#13;
ts must be used regardless&#13;
Two Semesters of Composition?&#13;
Many Parkside professors agreed that perhaps&#13;
one semester of composition through the American&#13;
Language class is not enough.&#13;
Martin observed, "It wouldn't be a bad idea to&#13;
have a two semester course for everybody, as long&#13;
as the second semester wouldn't sacrifice some&#13;
other class of particular importance."&#13;
He went on to explain the new self-paced composition&#13;
program to begin next fall. After taking a&#13;
diagnostic test to determine his-her abilities, a&#13;
student will then work at various speeds and in&#13;
various areas of interest. Such a program would&#13;
allow a capable student needing English 010 to&#13;
complete it, as well as the American Language, in&#13;
one semester.&#13;
Orme found a lack of library skills to be the root of&#13;
many problems in student papers. Renshaw agreed&#13;
in that it takes some students three hours just to find&#13;
minor information. This cuts down on time allotted&#13;
to the actual writing of the paper.&#13;
Garla Stoffle, library specialist, pointed out the&#13;
magnitude of the problem: "Student use of the&#13;
libraries since about 1934 has been appalling. A 1934&#13;
study revealed that 90 percent of the students didn't&#13;
know much pertaining to library skills."&#13;
Stoffle revealed that according to faculty feedback,&#13;
students having library instruction turn in&#13;
much better papers. Three possible procedures for&#13;
such instruction are a 1-2 credit library course, a&#13;
basic self-paced exercise book, and bibliography&#13;
consultation where a specialist goes into classes and&#13;
gives 1-8 sessions on library skills.&#13;
Both English and non-English Parkside instructors&#13;
realized the importance of continuous&#13;
emphasis in all classes on good writing skills.&#13;
However, non-English professors claimed that&#13;
while they try to correct grammar and composition&#13;
mistakes, they could hardly lower a grade because&#13;
of stjch mistakes.&#13;
As to possible remedies for such a problem, it was&#13;
suggested that the English instructors provide a set&#13;
of grammar and composition guidelines for all&#13;
departments to follow.&#13;
students to write effectively in college for college&#13;
work."&#13;
Sheldon Harsel, instructor in communications,&#13;
pointed out characteristics in the students themselves&#13;
which help to cause writing problems. "The&#13;
present student responds to many things in life&#13;
emotionally. Emotional responses are important;&#13;
however, in strict language use, rational thinking is&#13;
more important than emotional."&#13;
Harsel also observed a lack of reading and&#13;
writing practice exists in many students. He emphasized&#13;
in particular that writing should be done&#13;
on a subject where they can be testing somehow if&#13;
they are expressing their feelings. Reading&#13;
materials should contain opposing viev^points in&#13;
order for the reader to expose himself to methods&#13;
with which writers express their particular view.&#13;
Many instructors, as well as Parkside students,&#13;
felt that when given a choice within a range of&#13;
subjects to be written on, the motivation not only to&#13;
write but to write well increases.&#13;
Graffin also pointed out that if a student is interested&#13;
in the topic, he-she is less likely to use&#13;
outside sources mechanically; to "borrow" their&#13;
ideas, and then because of insufficient or incorrect&#13;
footnoting, be guilty of plagiarism.&#13;
The fact that there is a student writing problem&#13;
has caused high school English departments to&#13;
juggle courses and requirements, college instructors&#13;
to try one solution after another, and&#13;
many people to complain in despair. But whether&#13;
any of it will have an effect may ultimately depend&#13;
on the students themselves.&#13;
glish Department Chair-&#13;
, emphasized the harmful&#13;
vn thing" movement. She&#13;
this attitude, the English&#13;
red to allow students to&#13;
&gt;. Many college-bound&#13;
Teacher Expectations Unclear&#13;
Graffin pointed out that teacher expectations,&#13;
especially in non-English classes, are not made&#13;
clear. Often one term paper will be assigned, and&#13;
that will never be returned for the student to see&#13;
what was expected and where he went wrong.&#13;
Many instructors agreed with Graffin's view on&#13;
exactly what the professors do expect. He added&#13;
that "people aren't equal in ability. The average&#13;
student shouldn't be expected to be a good writer;&#13;
the view is out of perspective. Our goal is to teach&#13;
Classified&#13;
FULL TIME EMPLOYMENT-- day shift&#13;
orderly. Contact Barbara Boren, Director of&#13;
Nursing at the Addiction Center, 2000&#13;
Domanik Drive or call 632-6141.&#13;
TUTORS WANTED to work with migrant&#13;
Spanish-speaking children after school hours&#13;
in the child's home. SI.65 per hour...-&#13;
maximum ten hours per week. Tutors must&#13;
be able to communicate in Spanish. Contact:&#13;
Irene Dominguez, Federal Projects,&#13;
telephone 652 5965.&#13;
TO LITTLE SISTERS: Thanks for the office&#13;
display and the Valentine card. We love ya.&#13;
Sigma Pi.&#13;
CAMERA for sale. Yashica 35mm SLR with&#13;
3 lenses and case. Call Bob at 658-4048.&#13;
LOST: 1 mitten, on Tuesday, Feb. 12,&#13;
somewhere in the buildings. Many colors,&#13;
mostly orange. Call extension 2411, Patsy.&#13;
INTERESTED IN APPLICATIONS of&#13;
hypnosis in law? Help design experiments or&#13;
be a volunteer. Call Steve at 652-6123&#13;
evenings or weekends.&#13;
ANSWER TO CONFIDENTIAL: Unless you&#13;
come to see P.A.B.'s second VIDEO&#13;
PRODUCTION OF "FLICKS" with the&#13;
MARX BROTHERS in 'Night at the Opera,'&#13;
STUPH!, and 8&#13;
12 Parkside service&#13;
nouncements down in the&#13;
WHITESKELLAR, Thursday, and across&#13;
from the WRKR room in LLC D174 Friday,&#13;
at 11 a.m. the entire crew and cast will&#13;
commit mass SUICIDE in all of the&#13;
bathrooms leaving the rest of Parkside in&#13;
want of such facilities and consequently&#13;
desecrating discomfort!&#13;
t)IN0$ FINE F OODS&#13;
&amp; C OCKTAILS&#13;
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FOR PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
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CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
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LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
™W¥«IP&#13;
Uncaged and Available Now&#13;
...&#13;
5O/o ?t/L&#13;
"Rock n Roll Animal \ fCc&#13;
The Live Recording of v&gt;iV '&#13;
V*. i'1-&#13;
Lou Reed's concert&#13;
at&#13;
The Academy of Music&#13;
on RCA Records &amp; Tapes&#13;
Phone 654-3578 "Open 3 65 d ays a year" Jmck On &#13;
6 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 2 0 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
Car pool progress report&#13;
Waiting to run out of gas?&#13;
by Debbie Strand&#13;
"The enclosed sheet is your key&#13;
to carpool participation," began&#13;
the letter which Student Services&#13;
enthusiastically mailed out to&#13;
more than 600 students who&#13;
declared interest in the idea by&#13;
filling out a blue card marked&#13;
TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION&#13;
during Spring&#13;
semester registration.&#13;
The "enclosed sheet" was a&#13;
long list with the name, address,&#13;
class schedule and phone number&#13;
of every student in the area of the&#13;
recipient of the letter who was&#13;
also interested in getting a&#13;
carpool together. The list was&#13;
based on the computer area&#13;
number which was figured out by&#13;
pinpointing where one lived on a&#13;
map divided into numbered&#13;
sections which appeared on the&#13;
backside of the card, and the&#13;
times one intended to commute to&#13;
and from Parkside each day,&#13;
both of which had been&#13;
keypunched from the appropriate&#13;
card at registration.&#13;
"We thought we'd be a computer&#13;
dating service overnight!"&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Member of fed eral Reserve System&#13;
Member Federal Deposit insurance Corp&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
laughed Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
Assistant Dean of Students, but&#13;
then admitted regretfully,&#13;
"We're a little disappointed in&#13;
students' reactions," hastening&#13;
to add that "The entire effort was&#13;
not in vain...there are a few in&#13;
operation. Burlington has a very&#13;
well-organized carpool." As a&#13;
matter of fact, it was explained,&#13;
those outside the cities of Racine&#13;
and Kenosha-those most in need-&#13;
-showed the most interest in&#13;
carpools and several have been&#13;
established.&#13;
But .only several? That surely&#13;
couldn't account for all 600&#13;
students who had shown interest&#13;
at registration, many from within&#13;
the cities of Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
Waiting Until Necessary&#13;
One speculation made was that&#13;
"most students have the mailing&#13;
and are waiting for the time they&#13;
run out of gas, or for that little&#13;
extra pressure to come up."&#13;
Echelbarger then went on to&#13;
explain more about the carpool&#13;
system. One arrangement is that&#13;
"everyone takes a week and&#13;
drives "--which is workable if&#13;
everyone has a car. However,&#13;
students sometimes must work&#13;
around a parent's car, or nondrivers&#13;
might pay several dollars&#13;
a week to make sure that the&#13;
driver doesn't get stuck paying&#13;
for all the gas. Of course, the&#13;
more riders the less the cost.&#13;
It was suggested to the students&#13;
that "monetary arrangements be&#13;
worked out among themselves...we&#13;
couldn't establish a&#13;
suggested rate due to changing&#13;
gas costs," said Echelbarger,&#13;
"but we are compiling statistics&#13;
of costs to possibly get the rate&#13;
per mile.&#13;
"We'd really like for students&#13;
to make their own arrangements&#13;
rather than doing it for them."&#13;
But the issue of lack of response&#13;
kept popping up. Finally,&#13;
Echelbarger ventured what&#13;
seems to be at the root of the&#13;
problem: "It's just a guess but...I&#13;
think students are a little bashful&#13;
to call students they don't know."&#13;
It seems that students look down&#13;
the lists to see if they know&#13;
anybody who is on it. Most of the&#13;
carpools operating are two or&#13;
three people at most, and these&#13;
are usually friends. It is rare for&#13;
a student to call an unknown&#13;
person on the list.&#13;
Need to be Aggressive&#13;
"The way to make carpools&#13;
work is for people to be&#13;
aggressive! Call someone you&#13;
don't know-add a new person to&#13;
your carpool...." suggests&#13;
Echelbarger simply.&#13;
Aside from that major obstacle-Parkside&#13;
students' apparent&#13;
isolationist, nonaggressive&#13;
nature-the main&#13;
problem according to&#13;
'.Echelbarger, "Isn't one of&#13;
payment but one of convenience."&#13;
If a person has to&#13;
leave for work at 3:00 there's no&#13;
getting around it. And if a student&#13;
finds oneself here at Parkside,&#13;
"It's our hope that there will be a&#13;
way to get that student back&#13;
home."&#13;
But, of course, there must be&#13;
cooperation and, most importantly,&#13;
participation. Paging&#13;
through some sheets,&#13;
Echelbarger read off some of the&#13;
towns where students had shown&#13;
interest in carpools: Sturtevant,&#13;
Burlington, Union Grove, South&#13;
Milwaukee, such places as Great&#13;
Lakes and Antioch in Northern&#13;
Illinois, and many suburbs of&#13;
Milwaukee, to name a few. "No&#13;
section was so small (in student&#13;
interest) that a carpool wasn't&#13;
possible."&#13;
This is only the beginning of an&#13;
all-out effort to get these carpools&#13;
established.&#13;
"The Veterans on campus have&#13;
been really helpful," says&#13;
Echelbarger, and Student Services&#13;
is beginning to call students&#13;
back to get random samplings,&#13;
checking out more precisely how&#13;
carpools are progressing.&#13;
"We have revised and&#13;
sophisticated our carpool information&#13;
and will try to get out&#13;
another mailing," adds&#13;
Echelbarger.&#13;
Any student interested in&#13;
getting on the list may contact&#13;
Gail Hinks at the Information&#13;
kiosk in Main Place, telephone&#13;
(553-)2345, which is serving as&#13;
Parkside's carpool information&#13;
center, or get in touch with&#13;
Echelbarger at (553-)2342 or John&#13;
Rodgers, a member of the&#13;
Assistant Dean of Students staff.&#13;
Faculty and Staff Invited&#13;
Admitting that "We haven't&#13;
been serving our faculty and staff&#13;
as well as we should be...our lists&#13;
are all of students," Student&#13;
Services invites both faculty and&#13;
staff to participate also in this&#13;
program.&#13;
If one misses getting on the list,&#13;
"pick one up and do some calling.&#13;
We want to make our lists&#13;
available for anyone to look at,"&#13;
says Echelbarger. "If things just&#13;
don't seem to be working out or&#13;
everything is going wrong,&#13;
Student Services will try to right&#13;
your problems and "lend an&#13;
eager ear in which to air your&#13;
grievances."&#13;
People need not let bashfulness&#13;
hold them back from saving on&#13;
gas and money while becoming a&#13;
real part of this Parkside community&#13;
effort. As the letter which&#13;
Student Services sent out at the&#13;
beginning of the semester, and&#13;
which students may be biding&#13;
their time on before pursuing,&#13;
states:&#13;
"The success of the carpool is&#13;
now up to you."&#13;
r UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
invites you&#13;
to spend&#13;
Easter in...&#13;
APRIL 14-21 8 DAYS - 7 NIGHTS&#13;
$249 PLUS $20 TAX &amp; S ERVICE&#13;
BASED ON 3 TO A ROOM&#13;
includes:&#13;
ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
TRANSFERS&#13;
FIRSTCLASS HOTEL&#13;
TIPS &amp; TAPES&#13;
For application or information Contacts&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20: Whiteskellar auditions for new acts in the&#13;
Whiteskellar at 1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20: Adult Student Association coffee break at 7&#13;
p.m. in LLC D187.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20: PAB sponsors "Gone With The Wind" at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission charge is $1.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20: Burge's "Othello" at 7:30 p.m. in GR 101. No&#13;
admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20: Lecture "The Great House in 19th Century&#13;
English Literature" by Henry Kozicki, sponsored by CLIO at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in CL Dill. Admission is free.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 21: PAB sponsors "Gone With The Wind" at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission is $1.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 21: Newman Center lecture on the "Christian&#13;
Mission" at 7:30 p.m. at the Newman Center. Admission is free.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 21: Sigma Pi fraternity meeting in LLC D174.&#13;
Friday, Feb. 22: Hockey-Parkside vs. Marquette at 6 p.m. at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena. No admission charged.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 23: Gymnastics meet at 1 p.m. Parkside vs. George&#13;
Williams College and UW-Oshkosh in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 23: Fencing-Parkside vs. Ohio State, University of&#13;
Chicago and M.A.T.C. at 8:30 p.m. in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 23: Folk rock concert featuring "Patrick Ireland" at&#13;
9 p.m. in the SAB. Tickets on sale for $1.50 at the Information kiosk, $2&#13;
at the door.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Grievance Comm.&#13;
hears more gripes&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
The Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) met last&#13;
Wednesday to continue hearing&#13;
complaints from students. The&#13;
committee, co-chaired by PSGA&#13;
senators Mike Hahner and Tom&#13;
Petersen, was meeting for the&#13;
third time this semester.&#13;
Three students showed up at&#13;
the meeting to air grievances.&#13;
James Smith complained of the&#13;
lack of wall lockers on campus&#13;
for storage of coats and books&#13;
and so on. He also complained of&#13;
the small size of the gym lockers&#13;
in the Phy Ed building locker&#13;
rooms.&#13;
Smith would like to see the&#13;
swimming pool open for more&#13;
hours and for those hours to be&#13;
accurate. He also complained&#13;
about the lack of a direct bus&#13;
route between the Phy Ed&#13;
building and the academic&#13;
complex of buildings, especially&#13;
in winter when there are&#13;
snowdrifts on the paths.&#13;
Smith also voiced a complaint&#13;
about the amount of student&#13;
money taken out of tuition for the&#13;
Student Union which he will not&#13;
be able to use since he will be&#13;
graduating before it is built.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich protested&#13;
the delay in re-running student&#13;
government elections; PSGA&#13;
declared itself invalid last&#13;
semester after illegal election&#13;
procedures were brought to its&#13;
attention and new elections are&#13;
slated for April.&#13;
Jeanette Crossland also&#13;
complained about the lack of wall&#13;
lockers in the school. She believes&#13;
they could be installed in the.&#13;
basement areas and paid for in*&#13;
part if students were charged a&#13;
small fee for their use.&#13;
Crossland also would like to see&#13;
separate hot and cold food lines in&#13;
the cafeteria.&#13;
G&#13;
TOGETHER&#13;
FINAL CLOSEOUT! 50% OFF!&#13;
GOLDEN HANGER&#13;
Slacks &amp; Jeans&#13;
Sweaters&#13;
Jackets&#13;
Shirts &amp; To ps&#13;
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Jackets&#13;
Dresses&#13;
Slacks&#13;
[Sweaters &amp; Top:&#13;
Top of th o Stairs Golden Hanger&#13;
DOWNTOWN 632-1 138&#13;
MONDAY AND FRIDAY 'TIL 9 &#13;
Brief news&#13;
rUO lecture today&#13;
"The Great House As a Symbol in 19th Century English I »&#13;
will be the next lecture in the CLIO Association serief Prof Honrf,&#13;
Kozicki of the UW-P English faculty will present the addr«? y i&#13;
slides at 3 p.m on Wednesday (Feb. 20, in (Lssrolm Budd.ng DAU&#13;
The "great house is symbolic of an organic hierarchical ,1 \&#13;
order that binds classes in mutual responsibility, says Kozicki "i^/h&#13;
industrial society of the 19th century, these bonds decayed and he&#13;
house and its aristocratic inhabitants became inimical to other nrrw!&#13;
of society. The architecture and landscaping of the ea l,&#13;
declined with its role in literature," he said.&#13;
LCSFC me e ts today&#13;
There will be a meeting of the Latino and Concerned St.„Wc f&#13;
Folan Committee today, Wednesday, Feb. 20, at noon in LLC Dm All&#13;
students whoareanterested in protesting the termination of William J&#13;
Folan, assistant professor of anthropology, are asked to attend '&#13;
Philosophy sponsors Modicnn [ f&#13;
The Philosophy discipline is sponsoring a guest lecturer Professor&#13;
Robert Ammerman from UW-Madison, who will be speaking on&#13;
"Wittgenstein and Kierkegaard on God." The lecture will be held&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 21 at 3:30 p.m. in the overlook lounge on the second&#13;
floor of the library. Everyone is welcome and an opportunity will he&#13;
provided for questions.&#13;
3 ue&#13;
Shuttle to stop on weekend*&#13;
The subcommittee on parking and transportation has announced&#13;
that due to lack of use, the weekend bus service will be discontinued&#13;
starting March 2. Students may use the faculty-staff lot on weekends&#13;
and the bus cost for events held on campus on weekends will be absorbed&#13;
by,the department putting on the event. This decision is vet to&#13;
be approved by the Campus Planning Committee.&#13;
Religious retreats offered&#13;
The Newman Center is offering a retreat on the weekends of&#13;
February 23-24 a nd March 23-24. Phone 552-8626 fo r information or&#13;
reservations.&#13;
Exhibit highlights Black culturo&#13;
An e xhibit of books and recordings from the Parkside library's&#13;
collection highlighting Black contributions to art, literature and music&#13;
is currently on display in the library circulation area. Both African&#13;
and Afro-American materials are included. It is open during regular&#13;
library hours and will remain on display through mid-March.&#13;
Boxes ava il able for compla ints&#13;
PSGA BITCH Boxes have been distributed around the campus at the&#13;
following locations: the Information kiosk, the cafeteria at the&#13;
Kenosha Campus, and in the Student Activities Building.&#13;
The procedure for the use of these boxes is as follows: state name&#13;
ai\d phone number, state nature of the complaint, state who is involved&#13;
and what occurred.&#13;
"Alice " conte st forms he r e&#13;
Applications for the "Alice in Dairyland" contest are available in&#13;
the Student Activities Office LLC D195. "Alice" will be a full-time civil&#13;
service employee of the Department of Agriculture and receives a&#13;
salary in excess of $8500 as well as travel expenses.&#13;
"Flicks " to fe a tur e student originals&#13;
Parkside Activities Board will be giving its second VIDEO&#13;
production of " Flicks" this Thursday in the Whiteskellar and Friday&#13;
across from the WRKR room in LLC D174. "Flicks" will feature this&#13;
week the Marx Brothers in 'Night at the Opera,' along with STUPH!,&#13;
and a number of student original bits on upcoming Parkside events.&#13;
This program has been entirely written, produced, directed, performed&#13;
and crewed by students. Showtime is at 11 a.m. and there is no&#13;
admission charge.&#13;
Pat Ire land to appe a r on Sa t.&#13;
Pat Ireland is coming back. He performed at Parkside last year and&#13;
"had his audience clapping their hands, stomping their feet, and&#13;
laughing their heads off," according to Keith Kramer of P AB. Ireland&#13;
will pe rform on Saturday, Feb. 23 in the Student Activities Building.&#13;
Appearing also will be Tony and Jumbo. The show starts at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
and a "happy hour" will be featured from 8-9 p.m. with 20 cent beer.&#13;
Admission is $1.50 for Parkside students in advance (at the Information&#13;
Center) and $2 for guests and at the door.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
r 10 YEARS AGO TODAY&#13;
I Wanna Hold Your Hand"&#13;
by the Bea tl e s wa s Number l!&#13;
and It's Still&#13;
Available at&#13;
J919 TAYLOR .AVENUE, RACINE 637-2212.&#13;
Cagers onew, iln ose one&#13;
The UW-Parkside basketball&#13;
team saw its record drop to 12-13&#13;
Saturday at UW-Green Bay as&#13;
me Phoenix defeated Parkside&#13;
65-49 at Green Bay. The Rangers&#13;
had whipped College of Racine&#13;
71-66 earlier in the week at&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The Rangers will close out their&#13;
season Saturday night at DeKalb&#13;
Ul., when they take on luckless&#13;
Northern Illinois, which has a 4-&#13;
15 record and has lost three of its&#13;
starters to injury and-or&#13;
ineligibility.&#13;
Parkside stayed close to Green&#13;
Bay in the early going Saturday&#13;
but foul calls took their toll on the&#13;
Rangers, as Gary Cole and Don&#13;
Snow each had three in the first&#13;
half, and Green Bay led 34-23 at&#13;
the half. The Phoenix hit on 12 of&#13;
12 free throws in the first half&#13;
while Parkside was 1-2 from the&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Parkside eager Roscoe Chambers tries for two points in the contest&#13;
against College of Racine. The Rangers won the game in front of a&#13;
large crowd of spirited fans for both teams.&#13;
ONE NIGHT ONLY!&#13;
P. A. B.&#13;
Movie&#13;
BILLY J ACK&#13;
V5"£D. FEB.f27&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
$1 00&#13;
Purse-Size Vigilant Alarm Is The Answer&#13;
Muggers, rapists and worse are not what you went to&#13;
college for. We know it and the Vigilant Alarm knows it.&#13;
This amazing device, small enough for your purse, is set&#13;
off by your touch (or his) and produces an ear shattering&#13;
noise you can stake your reputation on ... . and still&#13;
keep it. Just two penligfu batteries are all it takes to get&#13;
it started and keep him stopped. No wires to connect.&#13;
Comes in a complete kit for use on doors, windows and&#13;
purse. With super simple instruction.&#13;
SUPPLY LIMITED . . . MAIL THIS COUPON TODAYI&#13;
I enc lose $5.00 for each Vigilant A larm.&#13;
I un de rst and that if I a m not t otally&#13;
satisfi ed, I will rec eive a compl ete refund&#13;
if re turned within 10 days.&#13;
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NAME&#13;
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line.&#13;
Cole, Snow and Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic all fouled out in the&#13;
game. Dimitrijevic was the&#13;
Rangers' high scorer with 13&#13;
points and top rebounder with 7.&#13;
Cole had 12 points and Malcolm&#13;
Mahone 11.&#13;
Against Racine on Tuesday, it&#13;
was a different story as Parkside&#13;
jumped to a big first half lead,&#13;
with a 30-17 margin with 6:20 left&#13;
in the half. But Racine closed&#13;
with a rush and it was Parkside&#13;
leading 38-29 at the intermission.&#13;
The Rangers held seven and&#13;
eight point leads through much of&#13;
the second half but Racine closed&#13;
to within two at 62-60 with 4:05&#13;
remaining. But Parkside upped&#13;
the margin to seven again on five&#13;
charity tosses by Chuck&#13;
Chambliss, Mahone and Cole,&#13;
and held on to win.&#13;
Chambliss led all scorers with&#13;
21 points while Cole and Mahone&#13;
each had 14; Cole topped all UWP&#13;
rebounders with 10 as the&#13;
Rangers outrebounded the&#13;
Lakers 42 to 37.&#13;
worn&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Si9ht 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
There are basically three types of&#13;
people who need the services of an audio&#13;
consultant: the novice, the hobbyist and&#13;
the audiophile.&#13;
The novice needs to be guided by the&#13;
consultant and helped to understand the&#13;
specifications and language of the art of&#13;
sound reproduction. He soon learns to&#13;
trust the consultant's knowledge to lead&#13;
him to the best sound for his need and&#13;
budget.&#13;
The hobbyist is usually trying to&#13;
pgrade his present stereo system. He&#13;
needs the consultant because he is&#13;
familiar with the equipment he has and&#13;
understands the more mature sound the&#13;
hobbyist is trying to achieve.&#13;
The audiophile is knowledgeable of the&#13;
technical language of Hi-Fi and can&#13;
communicate with the audio consultant&#13;
on his level. The consultant keeps him&#13;
up-to-date on new equipment and advances&#13;
in the state of the art.&#13;
To sum it up, a certified audio consultant&#13;
will be patient with the novice,&#13;
understanding of the hobbyist and up-todate&#13;
with the audiophile. Most important,&#13;
while his knowledge of sound&#13;
equipment is considerable, it a question&#13;
arises he can't answer, he'll honestly&#13;
say: "I don't know, but I w ill find out tor&#13;
you," instead of giving the prospective&#13;
customer a "snow-job" just to make a&#13;
sale.&#13;
The audio consultant knows that a HiFi&#13;
system will only be as good as its&#13;
weakest link. To help avoid such imbalance,&#13;
he will design your system&#13;
using some basic rules of thumb. For&#13;
example, if you want to buy a receiver,&#13;
turntable and two speakers and have&#13;
$500 to spend, he will recommend a&#13;
receiver in the$225 range (45 percent), a&#13;
turntable for around $125 (25 percent),&#13;
and speakers costing approximately&#13;
$150 (30 percent) a pair. It makes little&#13;
sense to pair off a superb receiver with a&#13;
meek speaker system or equip a' top&#13;
turntable with a so-so cartridge.&#13;
•••&#13;
If you have some spare bread, here&#13;
are some great buys!&#13;
« Portable mini-AM radio with&#13;
leatherette carrying case, reg. $9.95,&#13;
now only $4.95. (These make great&#13;
gifts.)&#13;
• Deluxe AC-DC Cassette Recorder with&#13;
remote control mike, case, earphone,&#13;
batteries and free cassette. Reg.&#13;
$39.95, now only $27.95.&#13;
• Complete stereo system includes AMFM,&#13;
phono, 8-track and free roll-about&#13;
cart. You won't believe the price...only&#13;
$129.95.&#13;
• Special Sale of Hi-Fi gear demos and&#13;
overstock...receivers, speakers, etc.&#13;
All priced to move.&#13;
• Latest releases on albums and tapes&#13;
discount priced. Free posters with&#13;
purchase (while supply lasts).&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo - TV - Records - Tapes&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor®Racine* 634-4900&#13;
Open Daily 'til 9 Sat. &amp; Sun 'til 6 &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RAN GER Wedne sday , F eb. 2 0 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
Star fencers face last&#13;
home meet Saturday&#13;
by Kathryn L. Kah&#13;
John Tank, Parkside's star&#13;
class A foilest, will fence his last&#13;
home meet this Saturday.&#13;
Tank, whose home is&#13;
Wauwatosa, started fencing at&#13;
the age of 10 in the Wauwatosa&#13;
Recreation Department. His&#13;
coach was Ed Sampon. His&#13;
success in fencing continues from&#13;
that point on to the time he won&#13;
his class A classification at the&#13;
unclassified meet in foil in March&#13;
1970.&#13;
In the fall of 1970 Tank came to&#13;
Parkside. In two years, by&#13;
February of 1972, he won the&#13;
State closed foil tournament.&#13;
Because of the number of entries&#13;
and the number of class A fencers&#13;
present, Tank won the meet and&#13;
the coveted class A ranking.&#13;
There are only 15 class A foilers&#13;
in the Great Lakes states.&#13;
This past fencing season Tank&#13;
won every foil tournament in&#13;
Wisconsin sponsored by the&#13;
Amateur Fencing League of&#13;
America.&#13;
In the 1972-73 season Tank won&#13;
six consecutive meets, his record&#13;
was 53 victories and seven&#13;
defeats.&#13;
So far this season he has&#13;
continued successfully by not&#13;
losing any college match, and&#13;
also winning one Amateur&#13;
Fencing League tournament.&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier will&#13;
also fence his last home meet this&#13;
Saturday. According to Coach&#13;
Loran Hein, his most remarkable&#13;
feat was performed his first year&#13;
of fencing when he won his class&#13;
A ranking in less than 12 months.&#13;
"This is like finding a diamond in&#13;
Relay team&#13;
takes first&#13;
The Parkside 880 relay team&#13;
took first in the Titan Invitational&#13;
Track Meet in Oshkosh Saturday.&#13;
Runners were Lee Broadway,&#13;
Herb DeGroot, Cornelius Gordon&#13;
and Walt Smith.&#13;
Gordon also took first in the 440&#13;
yard dash.&#13;
Pat Burns finished fourth in&#13;
shot put with a throw of 48'4%",&#13;
setting a new school record for&#13;
Parkside. Keith Merritt took first&#13;
in the triple jump.&#13;
Lucien Rosa was first in the&#13;
two mile run and third in the&#13;
mile, and is now going into&#13;
training for the Boston Marathon.&#13;
Other teams participating were&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, UW-Whitewater,&#13;
UW-Stevens Point, UW-Oshkosh,&#13;
Marquette, Carroll College,&#13;
Carthage and the University of&#13;
Chicago track club.&#13;
* Patronize J&#13;
* *&#13;
*&#13;
* our&#13;
* Advertisers *&#13;
John Tank&#13;
your driveway!" said Hein.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier did not start&#13;
to fence until his sophomore&#13;
year; however, he rose quickly to&#13;
the top of his weapon, the foil. At&#13;
the end of his fourth year at&#13;
Parkside, he went into the Army.&#13;
He was the assistant fencing&#13;
coach at West Point for two&#13;
years.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier is now back&#13;
for his last fling at college fencing.&#13;
His and Tank's last goal will&#13;
be to win the Great Lakes Fencing&#13;
Championship on March 9 at&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Fencers win two in Detroit&#13;
In fencing over the weekend&#13;
Parkside won two and lost two in&#13;
a four team fencing meet in&#13;
Detroit. The Rangers beat the&#13;
University of Detroit 13-11 and&#13;
Detroit State College 19-8. T hey&#13;
lost to Wayne State University 17-&#13;
10 a nd the University of Illinois&#13;
15-12. Wayne State took third in&#13;
NCAA standings last year.&#13;
Compiling the best records in&#13;
the meet were John Tank and&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier with 10-2&#13;
records in Foil competition. In&#13;
Epee, Bernie Vasch had an 11-1&#13;
mark.&#13;
1 PACK SHOP&#13;
5033-6th Ave., Kenosha, Wis. 53140 (414) 654-3351&#13;
With down clothing, sleeping bags, cross country&#13;
skis, t ents, c ompasses, b ackpacks, b ooks,&#13;
compact s toves, and more...&#13;
Featuring equipment b y:&#13;
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Phy. Ed. Bldg. schedule&#13;
This Week!!! Some changes in opening &amp; closing hours, please&#13;
note!!!! Last Fencing Meet at home. Men's&#13;
Gymnastics Meet here, Judo Tournament on&#13;
Sunday, Sauna is still operating fine.&#13;
Wed. Feb. 20&#13;
Thurs. Feb. 21&#13;
Fri. Feb. 22&#13;
Sat. Feb. 23&#13;
Gym open 12:30-1:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-9:30 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30-2 pm &amp; 3:30-9:30 pm&#13;
Intramural basketball 8 pm til closing&#13;
Gym open 10:30 am-l:30 pm 8&lt; 7 :30-9:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-10:30 am &amp; 12:30-&#13;
9:30 pm&#13;
Pool open 11:30 am-1:30 pm &amp; 3:30-6 pm&#13;
Gym open 10:30 am-4:30 pm - S occer practice 8 pm&#13;
Volleyball net will be set up in one gym from 12-2&#13;
pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
IMPORTANT: THE GYMS ARE NOT OPEN FOR&#13;
RECREATION TODAY&#13;
Handball courts open 9 am-4 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30-4 pm&#13;
Last home Fencing meet at 8:30 am&#13;
Men's Gymnastics Meet following the completion&#13;
of Fencing&#13;
Judo Tournament today 11 am-5:30 pm&#13;
Gym open for recreation at 7 pm-9:30 pm (1 only)&#13;
Intramurals 6:30 pm - closing&#13;
Pool and handball courts open 3 pm-9:30 pm&#13;
Gym open 12:30-1:30 pm 8&lt; 7: 30-9:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-9:30 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30-2 pm &amp; 3:30-6 pm&#13;
Gym open 12:30-1:30 pm 8&lt; 7: 30-9:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open all day except 10:30 am-12:30&#13;
pm&#13;
Pool open 11:30 am-l:30 pm 8. 6-9:30 pm&#13;
SAU NA hours are the same hours that the pool is scheduled to be open.&#13;
Sun. Feb. 24&#13;
Mon. Feb. 25&#13;
Tues. Feb. 26&#13;
Grapplers lose to&#13;
Eastern III. and Indiana&#13;
Parkside wrestlers fought&#13;
three dual meets over the&#13;
weekend, winning 45-12 over&#13;
Chicago State and losing 25-14 to&#13;
Eastern Illinois and 27-12 to Indiana&#13;
State/Eastern Illinois and&#13;
Indiana are top NCAA schools.&#13;
In the Chicago meet Parkside&#13;
grapplers won all weight&#13;
categories except two which were&#13;
lost in forfeits, since UW-P has no&#13;
wrestlers in those categories.&#13;
Pins were scored by Rico&#13;
Savaglio, Ken Martin, Randy&#13;
Scarda, Rich Baron, Tom Beyer&#13;
and Brad Frieburg. "The&#13;
highlight of the meet," according&#13;
to Coach Koch, "was Joe Landers&#13;
defeat over Chicago's Mel Bland,&#13;
who had previously been 25-0&#13;
before losing this match."&#13;
Against Eastern Illinois&#13;
Parkside winners were West,&#13;
Martin and Scarda. The Indiana&#13;
contest saw Savaglio, West and&#13;
Scarda defeat their opponents.&#13;
Martin suffered his first career&#13;
loss, making him 20-1, losing to&#13;
Indiana's Steve Barkman 4-3.&#13;
Parkside's current dual meet&#13;
record stands at seven wins, four&#13;
losses and one draw. Coming up&#13;
for the grapplers is the National&#13;
Tournament on March 7, 8 and 9&#13;
in River Falls.&#13;
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              <text>Union Approved by Regents</text>
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              <text>Union approved by regents&#13;
Parkside's long-awaited&#13;
student union is a step closer to&#13;
construction with the approval&#13;
granted last Friday by the Board&#13;
of Regents. Construction is expected&#13;
to begin by late fall, with&#13;
completion scheduled for early&#13;
1976.&#13;
The project, costing an&#13;
estimated $3,523,800, will provide&#13;
more than 45,000 usable square&#13;
feet for such activities as dining&#13;
(with both rathskellar and&#13;
cafeteria-style food service&#13;
areas), recreation, movies,&#13;
lectures, lounges, lockers,&#13;
meeting rooms. There will also&#13;
be space for student organization&#13;
offices.&#13;
The building will be constructed&#13;
north of the Classroom&#13;
Building on the site of the present&#13;
temporary faculty-staff parking&#13;
lot. It will be linked to the&#13;
Classroom Building by an enclosed&#13;
walkway over the loop&#13;
road. An adjacent parking lot is&#13;
scheduled for completion this&#13;
fall.&#13;
The University has received a&#13;
federal interest subsidy grant of&#13;
about $1 million and expects to&#13;
accumulate $1,020,500 by 1975-76&#13;
from segregated fees - a balance&#13;
which university officials say&#13;
assures the union can be selfsustaining&#13;
with no fee allocation&#13;
increase for at least 12 years.&#13;
James Galbraith, Parkside&#13;
Planning and Construction&#13;
director, said he views the union&#13;
as the campus "town square."&#13;
"The purpose of this project is&#13;
to serve the special needs of the&#13;
commuting student who conThe&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1974 Vol. II No. 20&#13;
Step-by-step chronology&#13;
Faculty review process&#13;
clarified&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Editor's Note: Every year Parkside faculty&#13;
members as well as faculty from throughout the&#13;
UW system are reviewed to determine whether a&#13;
merit pay increase or promotion is due.&#13;
This year in particular students have been in&#13;
contact with the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association and RANGER with questions and&#13;
complaints about the review process. In this article&#13;
RANGER will out-line the chronological steps involved&#13;
when a faculty member is reviewed&#13;
regarding his or her reappointment, tenure, or&#13;
termination.&#13;
In all committees which concern themselves with&#13;
personnel matters, strict adherence must be&#13;
maintained to the "University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside Rules and Regulations" handbook and the&#13;
"Regents' Statement of Policy."&#13;
In most cases a faculty member is hired as an&#13;
instructor or an assistant professor for a period of&#13;
one year and is reappointed in that same rank for a&#13;
similar period not more than six times. In rare&#13;
instances an individual could receive a termination&#13;
notice before the sixth year. Also, promotion and-or&#13;
tenure may be granted at any time, not necessarily&#13;
in the sixth year.&#13;
However, after not more than seven years in the&#13;
rank of instructor or assistant professor one must&#13;
either be given tenure without promotion, given&#13;
tenure and a promotion, or be terminated. Usually&#13;
one will be notified in the sixth year that both&#13;
promotion and tenure have been granted or termination&#13;
has been decided.&#13;
Divisional Executive Committees&#13;
Each academic division within the University has&#13;
an Executive Committee where the review process&#13;
begins. The Executive Committee is made up of a ll&#13;
the associate and full professors of that division,&#13;
and a faculty member is reviewed by the divisional&#13;
Executive Committee in which he or she teaches.&#13;
The various divisional executive committees are&#13;
Science, Social Science, Humanities, Education and&#13;
the School of Modern Industry (SMI).&#13;
(SMI does not have the required number of&#13;
associate and full professors and therefore has one&#13;
Executive Committee, appointed by the chancellor,&#13;
No user fees, but...&#13;
which does the reviewing for all divisions within&#13;
SMI.)&#13;
Executive Committee members have access to&#13;
personnel files kept on all faculty members within&#13;
their academic division. Files contain such things&#13;
as student evaluation results, information on&#13;
publications and scholarship, awards, and any&#13;
other information faculty members submit for&#13;
placement in their files on their own behalf.&#13;
Executive committees review personnel in their&#13;
respective divisions and make a recommendation&#13;
on each case to their respective Dean-either Dean&#13;
Moy of SMI or Dean Norwood of the College of&#13;
Science and Society.&#13;
The Dean's Recommendation&#13;
The Dean, once he receives a recommendation&#13;
from an Executive Committee, has many options&#13;
open to him. No matter what the recommendation&#13;
calls for he may send it back to the divisional&#13;
Executive Committee asking for more information.&#13;
If the recommendation calls for tenure and-or&#13;
promotion he will send it to the Tenure Faculty&#13;
Division Executive Committee (TFD) to acquire&#13;
another source of input. If it calls for termination&#13;
and the Dean approves, he will retain the recommendation&#13;
until deliberation over all individuals is&#13;
completed and at that time will notify everyone&#13;
reviewed by letter of the decision respecting&#13;
themselves.&#13;
TFD Makes Recommendation&#13;
The TFD is an all-campus faculty committee and&#13;
its existence is based on the need for the Deans to&#13;
get a total faculty input in personnel decisions, as&#13;
opposed to the academic Executive Committee&#13;
input which is specialized by academic area.&#13;
The TFD is comprised of three tenured faculty&#13;
members from each division, elected by all the&#13;
faculty members in each division. TFD makes a&#13;
recommendation to the Dean in cases involving&#13;
tenure and promotion but not those involving termination.&#13;
Ben Greenebaum, associate professor of&#13;
physics and chairperson of the TFD, explained that&#13;
it is not common for the TFD to reverse a decision&#13;
made by an executive committee.&#13;
From the TFD the recommendation is returned to&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Phy Ed faculty on notice&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Four Physical Education&#13;
faculty members are to be terminated&#13;
at the end of this&#13;
semester unless the state&#13;
legislature acts to put back at&#13;
least some of the $70,000 that was&#13;
cut from Parkside's Athletics&#13;
budget last year by the Governor.&#13;
According to Wayne Dannehl,&#13;
Director of Physical Education&#13;
and Athletics, the P.E. faculty&#13;
were given notice about a year&#13;
ago when it was realized that the&#13;
department could not make up&#13;
the $70,000 budget cut through the&#13;
use of User Fees. The cuts were&#13;
to be made in coaches salaries,&#13;
but since the coaches also teach&#13;
both Athletics and Physical&#13;
Education will feel the effects of&#13;
the cut.&#13;
"The same problem exists on&#13;
every campus in the state," said&#13;
Dannehl. Madison is losing a&#13;
quarter of a million dollars as a&#13;
result of budget cuts, and according&#13;
to Dannehl they have&#13;
been unable to raise the destitutes&#13;
the large majority of our&#13;
enrollment," he said. "Ifwill be a&#13;
place where students and faculty&#13;
can mix, exchange views and&#13;
become acquainted in a personal&#13;
and casual environment. Our&#13;
commuters don't have a dormitory&#13;
or apartment to return to&#13;
between classes," he said, "so&#13;
the union will be another way to&#13;
give them, and others on campus,&#13;
the richness and variety of a&#13;
university community."&#13;
Galbraith said the building will&#13;
utilize the space concepts that&#13;
went into Main Place of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center and the&#13;
pedestrian corridors which&#13;
connect campus buildings and&#13;
widen into lounge and study&#13;
concourses.&#13;
The union was on the priority&#13;
list for the past biennium, but&#13;
was delayed by a series of&#13;
reviews, site studies, and&#13;
changes within the architectural&#13;
firm selected to design it - Peters&#13;
and Martinsons Architects, Inc.&#13;
ference through User Fees even&#13;
though they have enormous&#13;
sports facilities.&#13;
Dannehl stated that he believed&#13;
most of the funds would be put&#13;
back into the budget, but that it&#13;
still might be necessary to terminate&#13;
some faculty if they do&#13;
not receive the $70,000. The&#13;
Governor has stated that he has&#13;
lost the battle over user fees but&#13;
Dannehl replied that "we can't&#13;
rehire people on the gracious&#13;
statements by the Governor in&#13;
the paper."&#13;
Students affected&#13;
by tax changes&#13;
Changes in the Wisconsin Tax&#13;
Law may affect many students&#13;
who are self-supporting, since the&#13;
Homestead Credit Claim has&#13;
been extended to include persons&#13;
who are 18 years of age and over,&#13;
according to Shirley Schmerling,&#13;
Housing Coordinator at Parkside.&#13;
Until this year the Homestead&#13;
Program benefitted only senior&#13;
citizens.&#13;
Wisconsin Homestead Credit is&#13;
designed to soften the impact of&#13;
property taxes and rent on those&#13;
who are least able to pay. For&#13;
those who are eligible it means a&#13;
credit on their Wisconsin Income&#13;
Tax or, for those who don't have&#13;
to file state tax forms, it may&#13;
mean a check will be due them.&#13;
A p erson may qualify whether&#13;
he-she rents or owns a home or&#13;
mobile home. Otherqualifications&#13;
include having&#13;
been at least 18 years old by Dec.&#13;
31,1973; a total household income&#13;
under $7000; renting or owning&#13;
the homestead occupied during&#13;
the year; living in Wisconsin all&#13;
of last year; not owing any&#13;
delinquent taxes on the&#13;
homestead; not claimed as a&#13;
dependent on someone else's&#13;
federal tax return for 1971,1972 or&#13;
1973; and not receiving general&#13;
relief or AFDC (aid to families&#13;
with dependent children)&#13;
payments.&#13;
All of these requirements must&#13;
be met to be eligible for a tax&#13;
benefit.&#13;
To file, one must include a copy&#13;
of his-her property tax bill if a&#13;
home-owner, or a certification of&#13;
rent paid (a certificate for this&#13;
purpose is included inside the&#13;
front cover of the Wisconsin&#13;
Income Tax booklet , signed by&#13;
the landlord.&#13;
The filing date extends to Dec.&#13;
31,1974 for the Homestead Claim.&#13;
However, for people required to&#13;
file a state income tax return by&#13;
April 15, 1974, their Homestead&#13;
Claim should accompany it.&#13;
A filing form for Homestead&#13;
Credit is included in all Wisconsin&#13;
income tax booklets this year,&#13;
identified as "Schedule H."&#13;
Further information is&#13;
available by calling a Department&#13;
of Revenue office (in&#13;
Milwaukee, the nearest office,&#13;
the number is 224-4000) or by&#13;
contacting Shirley Schmerling in&#13;
the Housing Office, Tallent 215,&#13;
phone (553-) 2320.&#13;
Parkside student Dennis Biel recently broke a national track record&#13;
when he won the national title at 1,000 yards in the NAIA indoor&#13;
championship meet, and he's looking forward to the outdoor meet in&#13;
May. Biel, a junior, is featured in an article on page 7.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Respond&#13;
about&#13;
faculty review&#13;
For several months students have been complaining&#13;
to RANGER, to PSGA, and among themselves about the&#13;
faculty review process. RANGER has come out on a&#13;
number of occasions criticizing the ways in which&#13;
review decisions are reached, the ways criteria are&#13;
used, and the lack of meaningful student input into the&#13;
process.&#13;
Now, all of us have the opportunity to voice our&#13;
opinions and make suggestions about faculty review.&#13;
Printed on this page is a form prepared by the Committee&#13;
on Tenure and Promotion Policies. This is a&#13;
faculty committee, composed of one tenured and one&#13;
non-tenured faculty member elected from each division,&#13;
which has been established to study review criteria and&#13;
is soliciting students' feelings in this matter.&#13;
RANGER is cooperating with the Committee and&#13;
printing the form because we feel that faculty review is&#13;
a concern of utmost importance to students. We also&#13;
hold that it is the right of students to have some say in&#13;
the hiring and firing practices of their University.&#13;
We urge all students to complete the form and be&#13;
available to the Committee to provide verbal input as&#13;
well. Since there are no students on the Committee this&#13;
may well be our only formal chance of gaining student&#13;
representation in the formulation of any new&#13;
suggestions about faculty review.&#13;
We also urge the Committee to be responsive to&#13;
student opinion. We hope this is the first step, though&#13;
long overdue, toward creating an equitable procedure&#13;
for reviewing faculty members, a procedure which&#13;
recognizes and respects the value of students' feelings&#13;
as well as faculty's.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Speed up&#13;
food service&#13;
by Ken Pestka&#13;
At one time or another we have all been the victim of Canteen Corps&#13;
"slow crawl." The line of hungry students inching closer and closer to&#13;
food yet stymied from fulfillment by the nauseatingly slow pace of&#13;
service. Once the "slow crawl" has been performed the student is&#13;
rewarded with Canteen Corps profitable servings of food-meager&#13;
portions-sometimes cold-always overcooked. Added to the foregoing&#13;
pleasures is the opportunity to play "table hop" ~ try to find a seat in&#13;
an area designed to serve one third the present number of patrons.&#13;
The present food service area was designed as a hamburger and hot&#13;
dog snack shop. The overall layout of Parkside called for the bulk of&#13;
food service to take place in the Student Union (not to be confused with&#13;
the beer bar). In the planning of the construction stages of Parkside no&#13;
one took into account the availability of an eating area that could efficiently&#13;
serve the student body prior to completion of the Union. This&#13;
original lack of foresight is the major excuse of Auxiliary Services and&#13;
Student Life for the present situation.&#13;
The manager of the food service also uses that (now old) excuse&#13;
"the architects did it." This reasoning doesn't explain away the fact&#13;
that present service could be speeded by rearranging the present&#13;
facilities and by properly scheduling the work load of the women&#13;
behind the counter. During the peak hours of the cafeteria's day it is&#13;
common to see one or two of the waitresses doing food preparation&#13;
(which should be completed before the rush hour) while the line of&#13;
waiting customers does that "slow crawl."&#13;
Perhaps it is true that the bureaucracy has fallen prone to the&#13;
"government by crisis" syndrome. To get the bureaucrats to move&#13;
one must create a crisis that stimulates action. Perhaps Canteen Corp.&#13;
would think less of its profits if there were No sales ~ Auxiliary Services&#13;
would think less of Candy Stores if there were No sales - Student&#13;
Life would think less of Greece if there were No sales - and think more&#13;
about the immediate needs of the Student.&#13;
In order for the Special Committee on Tenure and Promotion Policies to assess&#13;
student impressions of the policies regarding faculty tenure and promotion at&#13;
Parkside, we ask that you answer the following questions. Completed forms may&#13;
be turned in at the Information kiosk, or any divisional office.&#13;
Status:&#13;
Major (if declared)&#13;
Freshman. Sophomore Junior Senior&#13;
What is your impression of the criteria that are in fact presently being applied&#13;
in decisions regarding hiring, retention, promotion and termination of Parkside&#13;
faculty?&#13;
If you personally disagree in any way with these criteria, please indicate what&#13;
changes you favor and why?&#13;
(Attach additional sheet if necessary.)&#13;
If you want the opportunity to be called by the committee to elaborate upon&#13;
your written statement, kindly print your name and a telephone number at which&#13;
you can be reached.&#13;
Name. Telephone.&#13;
Return on or before February 21.&#13;
(This form has been authorized&#13;
by the Committee on Tenure and&#13;
Promotion Policies)&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confined&#13;
to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Why, in this age of Women's&#13;
Lib, Gay Lib, and Black Powers,&#13;
do the powers here at Parkside&#13;
feel it necessary to discriminate&#13;
against those students who are&#13;
not old enough to acquire a&#13;
Wisconsin I.D.?&#13;
Whereas it is logical to require&#13;
a Parkside and Wisconsin I.D. for&#13;
admittance to activities that may&#13;
involve the sale of alcohol, there&#13;
is no need for such requirements&#13;
at movies and other activities&#13;
that a minor may freely indulge&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The function of the security&#13;
police on this campus, is the&#13;
same as the function of any other&#13;
police force; to serve and to&#13;
protect. While they could&#13;
probably do a good job protecting,&#13;
they do a miserable job&#13;
serving the student community.&#13;
We say this in retrospect of the&#13;
Tuesday night snow storm, and'&#13;
the circumstances which&#13;
prevailed in the parking lots.&#13;
As we understand it the&#13;
security police have jumpercables&#13;
in their vehicles, yet when&#13;
numerous students were&#13;
stranded because of dead batteries,&#13;
they didn't stop to help.&#13;
They actually seemed to hurry&#13;
their patrol of the parking lots so&#13;
that it was impossible to even try&#13;
to flag them down.&#13;
If security was not doing it's&#13;
job then a few student&#13;
Samaritans were. We would&#13;
especially like to congratulate&#13;
the guy in the green and white&#13;
jeep, license number E12-122 f or&#13;
trying to tow people out of drifts&#13;
or until they got enough traction&#13;
to pop a clutch. This remarkable&#13;
person was out there for about&#13;
two hours. Thanks also to the&#13;
students who pushed others out of&#13;
ditches and snow banks, it shows&#13;
that many, people reach out in&#13;
some of life's little crises.&#13;
Peggy Hansen&#13;
Sue Johnson&#13;
Cliff Croxford&#13;
amy cundari&#13;
himself in off campus.&#13;
There are students who,&#13;
through outstanding academic&#13;
performance in high school have&#13;
earned the right to become&#13;
Parkside students before&#13;
becoming of legal age.&#13;
They are expected to accept the&#13;
responsibilities of being a college&#13;
student and yet they are denied&#13;
the right to socialize at planned&#13;
events with fellow students&#13;
simply because they are not&#13;
eighteen years of age.&#13;
Those who regulate these&#13;
events would do well to reexamine&#13;
their reasons for&#13;
requiring dual identification at&#13;
activities where simply being a&#13;
Parkside student should be&#13;
enough.&#13;
Art Leccese&#13;
Kenosha Special Student&#13;
C RAIMGER&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M.&#13;
Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Michael&#13;
Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels,&#13;
Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken&#13;
Pestka&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
c. Photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Kris Simpson (left) of the "Harvev" east ic titt-A u , •&#13;
I I Harvey" moves into&#13;
production stages&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Parkside's spring theatre&#13;
production, "Harvey," is getting&#13;
underway. The cast has undergone&#13;
one revision: the part of&#13;
Dr. Sanderson will be played by&#13;
Jeffery Kiehlbauch instead of&#13;
Marc Harrison. The change&#13;
occurred because of rehearsal&#13;
scheduling conflicts.&#13;
Associate professor of communications&#13;
Richard Carrington&#13;
is director of the play. The&#13;
central idea in the play, explained&#13;
Carrington, is to point out&#13;
that everyone lives in their own&#13;
world of illusion, thinking it is&#13;
reality. To bring this idea out for&#13;
the audience, Carrington plans&#13;
for certain aspects of lines and&#13;
blocking (movement of a ctors) to&#13;
be emphasized.&#13;
An important visual aspect of&#13;
the play, the set, has been&#13;
designed by Tom Reinert,&#13;
theatrical productions coordinator,&#13;
and is under construction&#13;
at this time. "Actually,&#13;
this show "Harvey" is a two-set&#13;
show," commented Carrington.&#13;
"We're working for a 30 to 60&#13;
second change in the scenery - a&#13;
quick shift."&#13;
Louise Woiteshek, a student, is&#13;
the costume mistress for the&#13;
play. She is responsible for&#13;
another important visual aspect&#13;
of the production, that of portraying&#13;
through costumes an&#13;
authentic 1943 time period. That&#13;
was the year that "Harvey" was&#13;
first produced.&#13;
Woiteshek is looking for&#13;
donations or loans of old clothing,&#13;
or patterns for making&#13;
them. She has gone over the play&#13;
and has made a chart of the&#13;
costume that each character will&#13;
wear for each event in every&#13;
scene of the entire play. She has&#13;
prepared sketches of the&#13;
costumes for each major&#13;
character and is now searching&#13;
for clothing or patterns that will&#13;
help create those costumes.&#13;
All donations of clothing are&#13;
tax deductible, all loaned apparel&#13;
will be properly cared for and&#13;
returned.&#13;
Carrington is working closely&#13;
with Reinert and Woiteshek to&#13;
create what he calls a "unity of&#13;
design" in the play. He stressed&#13;
the importance of the learning&#13;
experience for the students involved&#13;
in the production. "Our&#13;
educational theatre emphasis is&#13;
on giving as much experience to&#13;
as many people as possible."&#13;
Anyone who is interested in&#13;
working in the production crews&#13;
of "Harvey" can sign up on the&#13;
sheet that is attached to Reinert's&#13;
office door Comm Arts 240,&#13;
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Faculty review&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
the Dean. Alter the Dean has approved the&#13;
recommendation it is sent to the Vice-Chancellor,&#13;
the Chancellor, and finally the Board of Regents. A&#13;
small percentage are changed after the Dean has&#13;
approved a recommendation; however, Norwood&#13;
stated that the further up the ladder a recommendation&#13;
is, the more the concern is on equity and&#13;
comparison between divisions and the College and&#13;
the School rather than on individual cases.&#13;
Appealing a Decision&#13;
After all recommendations have been received by&#13;
the proper Dean and after all those not involving&#13;
termination have been approved by the TFD and&#13;
returned to the Dean, letters are sent out to faculty&#13;
members who have been reviewed adivising them&#13;
as to their status.&#13;
Until this point all meetings and recommendations&#13;
are closed and secret, and except for&#13;
rumor no one is advised as to where he or she&#13;
stands. The reason for the secrecy is that many&#13;
cases are reconsidered or changed, at various steps&#13;
in the process.&#13;
In a letter of termination the Dean will not give&#13;
the reason for termination, in that often faculty do&#13;
not want this information placed in their files as it&#13;
seems easier to find other employment without it.&#13;
A faculty member may, however, request in&#13;
writing the specific reasons for termination in&#13;
which case the Dean will supply it. To appeal one&#13;
must notify his or her Executive Committee within&#13;
10 days upon receipt of the Deans' letter.&#13;
In appealing a case, the steps are the same. The&#13;
divisional Executive Committee which made the&#13;
original recommendation is required to re-evaluate&#13;
its decision. The appeal is called a "hearing" and&#13;
the individual may have either an open or closed&#13;
hearing, bring in witnesses to testify, and have a&#13;
lawyer present. If the original recommendation is&#13;
changed and tenure granted the case goes to the&#13;
Dean, to the TFD, back to the Dean, and on up the&#13;
ladder. If the decision is not changed the Dean will&#13;
once again notify the individual that he or she is&#13;
being terminated.&#13;
II a faculty member feels that his or her case was&#13;
treated in an unfair manner they may contact the&#13;
University Committee which handles faculty&#13;
grievances. It is one of the most powerful faculty&#13;
committees but is not part of the normal review&#13;
process.&#13;
Outlook this year&#13;
Personnel matters are confidential and records&#13;
are not open to the public. To RANGER' S&#13;
knowledge nine faculty members will have received&#13;
notification of termination by this week. Faculty&#13;
members who are terminated in their sixth year&#13;
receive one "terminating year" in which they&#13;
remain on the staff which gives them time to seek&#13;
other employment.&#13;
Norwood explained that no terminations made&#13;
this year were due to budget cut-backs. He did say&#13;
that vacant positions would not necessarily be&#13;
refilled. Money to hire an individual can be transferred&#13;
into other academic areas. .&#13;
In short then, the process of review begins with&#13;
faculty committees and recommendations come&#13;
from faculty committees. Administrators have the&#13;
option of a pproving or returning a recommendation&#13;
for further consideration.&#13;
SHERWOOD&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine &gt;&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
TEAC • ALTEC • KOSS • SENNHISER •&#13;
4 THE PARKSI D E RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1974 Brief news&#13;
ParksMp wp™ fa L" SUPP°rl 0t student financial aids at the&#13;
The m„nf • ,C? , Fnday by the UW System Boar&lt;i of Regents.&#13;
Enforcement Z 7 $5'50° 'he U.S. Department of Justic? Law&#13;
n orcement Assistance Administration for the Law Enforcement&#13;
suDDOTt for tho°rra"|1 (LEEE) at Park support for the fiscal year ending June 3s0ti od e$1,0 ,0b0r0in. ging total LEEP&#13;
pniwlf , Pr0gram,is desi8ned to assist currently employed law&#13;
duties Personnel m taking courses relating to their professional&#13;
Seven students are currently enrolled under the program at&#13;
i~ a"d 63 have been in the program since its inception in the&#13;
1969-70 academic year. Total funding for the project at Parkside in the&#13;
past five years has been $46,081.&#13;
The regents also accepted a gift of $25 to be added to the Kenneth L.&#13;
Greenquist Memorial Scholarship fund from Seymour I. Burton of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Porkside Plovers will meet Monday&#13;
The Parkside Players invite any interested students to attend their&#13;
meeting in GR101 at 2:30 p.m. on Feb. 18. A discussion will be held&#13;
concerning upcoming projects and workshops. Workshops include&#13;
media, acting, technical theater and costuming. The Players are&#13;
dedicated to the goal of creating "Theater" within the university. In&#13;
order to make their goal a reality the Players encourage student involvement&#13;
and participation.&#13;
XC ski championships here Sunday&#13;
On Sunday, February 17, beginning at 2:30 p.m., the Parkside Intramural&#13;
Cross Country Ski Championships will be held. The event is&#13;
open to all students, faculty and staff.&#13;
The classes are: Men's open, three miles; Women's open, two&#13;
miles; Faculty men, three miles; Faculty women, two miles.&#13;
,arbciPantf must furnish their own equipment. For entry blanks&#13;
and additional information Vic Godfrey in Athletics may be contacted,&#13;
at ext. (553-) 2245 or 554-9210.&#13;
Poetry needed for Broken Horn&#13;
The Broken Horn, Parkside's poetry magazine, is now soliciting&#13;
contributions (poems and illustrations) for its second is sue of this&#13;
school year. Work may be sent to The Broken Horn, in care of&#13;
assistant professor of English Carl Lindner, CA 218. The deadline for&#13;
contributions is March 22.&#13;
The first issue is currently available free on a table in the Library,&#13;
just to the left of the main entrance. The magazine is a student-run&#13;
operation, with the editorial staff composed of student volunteers who&#13;
read and evaluate all entries.&#13;
NSF grants to UW-P now total »1Qf*«i&#13;
Sc|ence Foundation institutional grant of $5,400 to&#13;
ms&amp;rtStes"research was accepted Friday by 11,6 uw&#13;
The latest grant brings the total given to Parkside under this NSF&#13;
director* ^ 81' ViCG Chancellor otto F- Bauer is the project&#13;
Prize in free throw contest 1, n.rza L"A sP°"»"s *°authority&#13;
On Thursday, Feb. 14 at 8 p.m. the Athletic Department will hold a&#13;
Valentine s Day Free Throw Contest. There will be three classes for&#13;
entry—men, women, and basketball players. The winners will receive&#13;
a free pizza from Casa Capri. Admission to the contest is 25 cents.&#13;
Extension offers fun and games in math&#13;
Beauty, humor, and surprise found in mathematics will be&#13;
examined in a University Extension course entitled "Mathematical&#13;
Games." Instructor Donald Piele, Parkside assistant professor of&#13;
math, says that students will be taken on a "mathematical trip for the&#13;
fun of it. This pleasant side of mathematics is for anyone interested,&#13;
and will be of special value mathematics teachers in junior and senior&#13;
high schools.&#13;
The noncredit 7-week course will begin February 14, 7:30 p m and&#13;
meet for 7 Thursdays at the Kenosha Campus. Contact University&#13;
Extension at Parkside for registration information.&#13;
Wrinkle to do FEPA re search&#13;
Parkside faculty member Robert D. Wrinkle has been named a&#13;
senior research political scientist to examine public attitudes toward&#13;
environmental protection measures by the Federal Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency (FEPA) effective immediately.&#13;
The study is funded by a $27,730 agency contract.&#13;
Wrinkle is on leave from Parkside for the period through Jan. 6,&#13;
1975, t o originate and conduct the research project in Washington'&#13;
D.C.&#13;
The au thor of several studies on political-environmental interest&#13;
interactions, Wrinkle also served as an FEPA consultant in&#13;
Washington during the summer of 1972, immediately before coming to&#13;
Parkside as an assistant professor of political science.&#13;
His previous faculty posts were at The University of New Mexico,&#13;
where he was assistant director of the Division of Government&#13;
Research and its Institute for Social Research and Development, and&#13;
at Southwest Texas State University and the University of Arizona.&#13;
Wrinkle, 32, received his B.A. degree in economics from Texas&#13;
College of Arts and Industries, his M.A. in economics from Texas Tech&#13;
and his Ph. D. in government from the University of Arizona.&#13;
The World Food Crisis" will be the topic of a free public lecture&#13;
scheduled for Monday, Feb. 18, at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist 103. Georg&#13;
Borgstrom, internationally known author and professor at Michigan&#13;
State University, will speak on world food resources and their&#13;
utilization. Henry Cole, assistant professor of earth science, is coordinating&#13;
Borgstrom's appearance on campus, and the lecture is being&#13;
sponsored by the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. Borgstrom will&#13;
also be speaking to several classes on Tuesday, Feb. 19.&#13;
UW-P profs conduct&#13;
environmental study&#13;
A federal grant of $46,200 in&#13;
continuing support of an environmental&#13;
impact study&#13;
related to Project Sanguine by a&#13;
team of Parkside researchers&#13;
was announced last week,&#13;
bringing total federal support for&#13;
the investigation to $115,115.&#13;
The new award from the U.S.&#13;
Office of Naval Research extends&#13;
the period and scope of the&#13;
Parkside study of the effects of&#13;
low frequency electromagnetic&#13;
fields on cellular growth and&#13;
development of a primitive plant&#13;
form called Physarum&#13;
Polycephalum, a slime mold&#13;
growing on decaying vegetation.&#13;
The study is related to debate&#13;
over the environmental effects of&#13;
Project Sanguine, an underground&#13;
radio antenna system&#13;
aimed at establishing a worldwide&#13;
communication system and&#13;
proposed by the Navy as particularly&#13;
useful for contacting&#13;
submarines. The antenna system&#13;
would generate electromagnetic&#13;
fields similar to those being used&#13;
in the Parkside experiments,&#13;
which seek to determine their&#13;
effects on biological life systems.&#13;
The study, initiated in 1971 and&#13;
extended under the new grant&#13;
through next June, is being&#13;
conducted by Eugene M.&#13;
Goodman associate professor of&#13;
life science and principal investigator,&#13;
Michael T. Marron&#13;
associate professor of chemistry;&#13;
and Ben Greenebaum associate&#13;
professor of physics..&#13;
The team plans shortly to&#13;
publish findings from the first&#13;
two years of the study.&#13;
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contest&#13;
by Debbie Strand&#13;
CLIO, an interdisciplinary,&#13;
internationally known academic&#13;
journal of Literature, history and&#13;
the philosophy of history has&#13;
announced an essay contest&#13;
designed to: "Foster interest&#13;
among our students in the&#13;
humanities, particularly interest&#13;
in the humanities as they affect&#13;
the modern industrial society,"&#13;
says Andy McLean, assistant&#13;
professor of English, who helps&#13;
edit the journal.&#13;
CLIO, published at Parkside,&#13;
opens its contest to all Parkside&#13;
students, holding as added incentive&#13;
free dinner at the Windjammer&#13;
Restaurant in Kenosha&#13;
and cash prizes for the winners.&#13;
As guidelines, all entries must&#13;
be typed, double-spaced, with&#13;
name, home address and phone&#13;
number appearing on the first&#13;
page, and should deal with the&#13;
humanities or some aspect of&#13;
humanistic studies. They can be&#13;
papers written any time while in&#13;
school for such classes as&#13;
philosophy, English, art or&#13;
foreign language. There are no&#13;
restrictions on length but ten to&#13;
twenty pages or the average&#13;
length of a t erm paper may give&#13;
one an idea. The finished product&#13;
may then be turned over to Bob&#13;
Canary, Editor of CLIO, in room&#13;
232 of the Communication Arts&#13;
bldg. or dropped off at the&#13;
Humanities office, CA 226, no&#13;
later than April 29th.&#13;
"We have confidence in our&#13;
students' ability to express&#13;
themselves and deal with&#13;
humanistic problems," says&#13;
McLean as a note of encouragement.&#13;
This ability will be&#13;
demonstrated not only by&#13;
publication in CLIO but also, on&#13;
the afternoon of May 8th when the&#13;
winners will read their papers&#13;
aloud in a room of the Classroom&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
As for whether or not this&#13;
contest will become an annual&#13;
event, McLean says, "This is the&#13;
first time we've ever done i t ...&#13;
we'll see how it goes."&#13;
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Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
UW-P student experiences different life in South&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
^erront Parkside's participant in the&#13;
North-South student exchange program, came&#13;
wTtt n 3 vSit last weekend- Perroni is attending&#13;
North Carolina Central University (NCCU) in&#13;
Durham, N C. this semester. RANGER took a few&#13;
minutes of his limited time here to record some of&#13;
his impressions after a month at NCCU.&#13;
anHHffeXPe«enCe iS °Pening mind to new ideas&#13;
Ncn te"rTs °f living'" Perroni be§an' "At&#13;
Sf htr minonty-I feel like an NCCU £ rw 1 am in the minority gro up&#13;
there. Everyone knows who I am because I'm one of&#13;
the few white students."&#13;
He explained that the white students there are&#13;
mostly commuters, whereas the blacks are in&#13;
residence. Commenting on the racial balance he&#13;
said, it s like Parkside in reverse "&#13;
The school has black students from all over the&#13;
country and from Nigeria, Ethiopa, Jamaica, and&#13;
other black nations. "Integration is being forced on&#13;
them but most of the blacks are very proud and&#13;
don t want it. They came to NCCU because thev&#13;
wanted to go to a black school," Perroni commented.&#13;
The teachers, too-almost all seem extremely&#13;
interested in teaching blacks. Several of&#13;
them are really excellent, like from Harvard."&#13;
Black Perspective in Courses&#13;
He went on at length about his teacher for Black&#13;
History, who is personally acquainted with several&#13;
African revoluntionaries and who "really gets vou&#13;
thinking," Perroni said.&#13;
u£e -S alS° takinS a sociology course, titled&#13;
Marriage and the Family," which he says is&#13;
"taught from a black perspective-the examples&#13;
and illustrations are related to the socio-economic&#13;
level of the students, and the course presents black&#13;
ideas and black family life." Perroni often finds&#13;
himself being singled out in class to provide&#13;
examples from his experience, too.&#13;
He is currently carrying 21 credits but says he will&#13;
drop three. He is not working and has so far not&#13;
gotten involved in any extra-curricular activities,&#13;
but he is thinking of joining the history club. As a&#13;
resident on campus, he finds that he spends more&#13;
time than he used to on school work.&#13;
Social life is centered around basketball games&#13;
and a few dances and parties. "Everyone is in a frat&#13;
or sorority," he noted (Perroni is a member of&#13;
Sigma Pi at Parkside, which does not have a&#13;
chapter at NCCU).&#13;
Enjoys Basketball Games&#13;
"One of the things I enjoy most is going to the&#13;
basketball games," he remarked. "There's an&#13;
African rhythm to the music and cheers, and the&#13;
whole audience becomes involved. NCCU is a small&#13;
school, so its not big-time basketball, but North&#13;
Carolina has two teams in the top five in the&#13;
country."&#13;
Concerts are also big, with the students often&#13;
travelling to nearby Duke University. This week&#13;
Churk Pprrnni A - photo by Debr V Perroni discusses some of his exneriencps nfa aF riedell&#13;
Perroni will hear Seals &amp; Crofts there, and in March&#13;
will come the Allman Brothers.&#13;
vonon?^6 "° bars ?own therc&gt; said Perroni, and&#13;
you can t buy a mixed drink. The school has a union&#13;
r-™ °!- y game r00ms~and again, no alcohol.&#13;
Commenting on student government there&#13;
Perroni said it is "excellent." Last semester, for&#13;
example, there was a problem with the food service&#13;
rlS^i 8 hours- the food preparation, and&#13;
cleanliness. The student government gained concessions&#13;
on almost all the demands, after a wellorganized&#13;
boycott.&#13;
Perroni was elected Vice President of the&#13;
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stop in at 5732 13th Court in Kenosha.&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association last fall,&#13;
and concerning PSGA he said that "things are&#13;
happening like I thought-fragmenting, nothing&#13;
happening, people losing interest." When reminded&#13;
that the Grievance Committee of PSGA seems to be&#13;
working he agreed that this was a hopeful sign.&#13;
No Major Issues on Campus&#13;
Commenting on one of the major discussions in&#13;
the Grievance Committee meetings, which is&#13;
faculty terminations, Perroni said that "students&#13;
need to get together again and rally around this&#13;
issue." At NCCU there are no major issues on&#13;
campus at present, certainly not the fate of faculty.&#13;
"You don't hear much about research eitherthere's&#13;
not one teacher who won't take time for oneon-&#13;
one contact with each student."&#13;
The issue that is big in North Carolina right now is&#13;
an argument over the death penalty "which&#13;
presently is the mandatory sentence for conviction&#13;
of rape, first degree murder, and even burglary,"&#13;
said Perroni.&#13;
Perroni reiterated that he is very happy he has&#13;
taken this opportunity to go to NCCU. "It's very&#13;
broadening, I look at myself differently now~I try to&#13;
look at my behavior and see it as they would. There&#13;
are lots of deeply-rooted prejudices I wasn't aware&#13;
of that are surfacing."&#13;
At one point in the interview history professor&#13;
John Buenker came by to ask "how a nice Italian&#13;
kid from Kenosha" was getting along at NCCU.&#13;
Perroni replied that many of his new friends had&#13;
mistaken his ancestry and started telling Polish&#13;
jokes when they first met him. "Blacks have just as&#13;
many stereotypes about whites as whites do about&#13;
blacks," Perroni concluded.&#13;
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6 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1974&#13;
American Dream fails&#13;
for many Chicanos&#13;
Editor's Note: The following is&#13;
the fourth in a series of articles&#13;
dealing with individuals or&#13;
members of groups who are&#13;
oppressed by our system of&#13;
politics and economics as well as&#13;
our social institutions. The story&#13;
here is written as told to&#13;
RANGER Feature Editor Debra&#13;
Friedell by a Parkside student.&#13;
I was the youngest in a family&#13;
with nine children and was born&#13;
in Texas about 150 miles from the&#13;
Mexican border. I say that&#13;
because it's important to know&#13;
that a lot of Mexicans emigrated&#13;
to Texas, illegally and legally,&#13;
which put a big strain on the work&#13;
force. Wages were so low that a&#13;
family like ours could not afford&#13;
school, food and clothes solely on&#13;
my father's income. He was a&#13;
carpenter.&#13;
Th'e first time I was in trouble&#13;
with the police was when I was&#13;
about 6 or 7.1 got caught stealing&#13;
apples and oranges and my&#13;
pockets were so full that I&#13;
couldn't run fast enough to get&#13;
away. I was put in a detention&#13;
home for a couple of weeks.&#13;
My father signed the whole&#13;
family up to work in the migrant&#13;
stream to supplement our income.&#13;
Some migrant workers&#13;
stay in just one state, but our&#13;
family, like most, moved around&#13;
from state to state through the&#13;
"I got caught stealing&#13;
apples and oranges and&#13;
my pockets were so full&#13;
that I couldn't run fast&#13;
enough to get away."&#13;
midwest. It is called the central&#13;
migrant stream, which is made&#13;
up mostly of Chicanos. The&#13;
eastern migrant stream works&#13;
from Florida to New York and is&#13;
comprised of Cubans, Puerto&#13;
Ricans and some blacks. The&#13;
western stream works California&#13;
to Washington and is made up of&#13;
poor whites, Chicanos and&#13;
blacks. We worked in Indiana&#13;
picking tomatoes, cherries in&#13;
Wisconsin, sugar beets in&#13;
Michigan, and other places as&#13;
well.&#13;
Usually canning companies&#13;
and large farmers work through&#13;
agencies to hire hands. The&#13;
agency will recruit the work&#13;
when it is notified by the company&#13;
or farmer. They provide the&#13;
transportation, housing, grocery&#13;
store, and often own a&#13;
cafeteria. Single men are&#13;
preferred, as then the farmer can&#13;
profit from them eating in his&#13;
cafeteria.&#13;
The workers are brought to the&#13;
area oftentimes a month or&#13;
longer before they are actually&#13;
needed. As they rarely have any&#13;
money when they get there the&#13;
"Everybody wants to be&#13;
happy but no one really&#13;
knows quite how to. Maybe&#13;
you st art drinking a little&#13;
or taking drugs and you're&#13;
happy for a while so you do&#13;
it more often and eventually&#13;
you don't stop."&#13;
farmer will allow them credit at&#13;
his grocery store. By the time&#13;
they've started working most&#13;
money earned in wages goes&#13;
back to the farmer to pay for the&#13;
debt accumulated in buying&#13;
groceries. After working five or&#13;
six months a family like ours&#13;
would return to Texas with five or&#13;
six hundred dollars. That's not&#13;
much when one considers there&#13;
were 9 or 10 of us working 16&#13;
hours per day.&#13;
Before I was 17 I was picked up&#13;
twice on drug charges in Texas. I&#13;
served about a year each time.&#13;
Everybody wants to be happy but&#13;
no one really knows quite how to.&#13;
Maybe you start drinking a little&#13;
or taking drugs and you're happy&#13;
for a while so you do it more often&#13;
and eventually you don't stop. I&#13;
dropped out of school in eighth&#13;
grade.&#13;
The first factory I worked in&#13;
was in Rockfield, Wisconsin when&#13;
I was 17. I started going into&#13;
Milwaukee and saw how the&#13;
Chicanos there seemed to be&#13;
surviving all right. Then I was&#13;
busted for possession of drugs.&#13;
There weren't any drugs but they&#13;
told me to go home to Texas or I&#13;
would be put in jail. I went to&#13;
Texas and was told never to&#13;
return to Wisconsin.&#13;
I came back to Wisconsin when&#13;
I was 18 and got busted right&#13;
away for shoplifting. I was sent to&#13;
Green Bay for a year. I was&#13;
paroled to Milwaukee and after&#13;
getting out was to report right&#13;
away to my parole officer. I had&#13;
it in my mind that I wanted to&#13;
make it and thought that the&#13;
parole office was the place where&#13;
people could help me make my&#13;
way into society a little easier.&#13;
But in Milwaukee I had a hard&#13;
time finding my way around the&#13;
city on the buses. I got lost and&#13;
showed up late for my appointment&#13;
at the parole office.&#13;
They jumped on my case right&#13;
away and harrased me so much&#13;
that by the time I left I vowed&#13;
never to go back again.&#13;
I was a runaway from the state&#13;
of Wisconsin so couldn't ask for&#13;
assistance from anyone. I went to&#13;
Chicago and in time found a job&#13;
as a dishwasher. That didn't pan&#13;
out though because I couldn't&#13;
even make enough money to pay&#13;
my rent. I also had a heroin habit&#13;
and was forced to either steal or&#13;
peddle to support it. I started&#13;
stealing and got busted.&#13;
I spent six months in the Cook&#13;
County Jail. It's run by inmate&#13;
tier bosses, the king of the floor.&#13;
He tells you what you can eat,&#13;
where you can sit, who must do&#13;
the work, and he's got his right&#13;
arm men to make sure you do&#13;
what you're told.&#13;
They let me out with fifty cents&#13;
in my pocket in the cold of winter.&#13;
I had no coat, nowhere to stay,&#13;
and no food. I wanted to save the&#13;
money so I walked downtown&#13;
rather than take a bus. When I&#13;
got there I didn't know what to do&#13;
but I saw a church and thought&#13;
that maybe a priest could help&#13;
me. Although the church was big&#13;
and beautiful and I'm sure accumulated&#13;
plenty of money from&#13;
its congregation I didn't take into&#13;
account that it was located on the&#13;
edge of skid row and saw many&#13;
derelicts enter its doors for&#13;
warmth, food and protection. I&#13;
"Discouraged as I w as, I&#13;
checked out the employment&#13;
office and explained&#13;
my circumstances.&#13;
They put me&#13;
on a list. I went to the&#13;
Salvation Army and was&#13;
told it would take two&#13;
months to process my&#13;
application."&#13;
went in and talked to the priest,&#13;
telling him that I wanted to make&#13;
it, that I was willing to work, and&#13;
that I needed his help. He gave&#13;
me a peanut butter sandwich and&#13;
the address of the employment&#13;
office and sent me on my way.&#13;
Discouraged as I was, I checked&#13;
out the employment office and&#13;
explained my circumstances.&#13;
They put me on a list. I went to&#13;
the Salvation Army and was told&#13;
it would take two months to&#13;
process my application.&#13;
Finally, I gave up. The only&#13;
thing in which I had any ability&#13;
was stealing. By that night I had&#13;
$120 in my pocket. I was on that&#13;
same cycle again of stealing and&#13;
drugs, the same merry-go-rcund&#13;
of drugs. Within two weeks I got&#13;
busted and was sent to Vandalia&#13;
"I was on that same cycle&#13;
again of stealing and&#13;
drugs, the same merry-goround&#13;
of drugs. Within two&#13;
weeks I got busted again."&#13;
for eleven months. There I&#13;
worked in the kitchen, seven days&#13;
per week from 4 a.m. until 10&#13;
p.m. They had no facilities for&#13;
recreation.&#13;
After that I went back to&#13;
Milwaukee. For eleven months I&#13;
was strung-out and stealing. I got&#13;
busted again and spent six and a&#13;
half months in solitary confinement.&#13;
I went back to Chicago and&#13;
within six weeks I was busted for&#13;
stealing, trying to support my&#13;
"I know families with&#13;
three generations hooked&#13;
on heroin-grandparents,&#13;
parents and children."&#13;
habit. I spent one year at a house&#13;
of correction called Bridewell. It&#13;
was an institution for alcoholics,&#13;
drug addicts, and derelicts who&#13;
had committed petty crimes.&#13;
When I got out I was in the&#13;
same situation. I was determined&#13;
not to shoot up but wanted help&#13;
desperately. I wanted some one&#13;
to help me. I stole and sold&#13;
enough so that I could return to&#13;
Texas. There, I got a job in a&#13;
bakery.&#13;
I hate the circumstances&#13;
society imposes on people with&#13;
problems. With all the combined&#13;
research and technology, the&#13;
system insists on punishing those&#13;
with problems because it doesn't&#13;
know how to help them. Punishment&#13;
is a fallacy as a deterrent, it&#13;
only keeps people in line for a&#13;
little while. I know families with&#13;
three generations hooked on&#13;
heroin-grandparents, parents&#13;
and children.&#13;
I stayed off smack for one year&#13;
in San Antonio. It was hard&#13;
because there is so much of it&#13;
there and I knew everyone. I had&#13;
clothes, a job and a place to stay&#13;
but I didn't feel good about&#13;
myself. I was drinking to stay&#13;
away from dope. It was only a&#13;
matter of time before I'd be&#13;
shooting. As long as I stayed high&#13;
by drinking I wasn't handling my&#13;
problems.&#13;
I got strung-out and busted in&#13;
Texas for selling heroin. I did 43&#13;
months of a six year sentence in&#13;
prison. There we had to pick&#13;
cotton and we had a quota which&#13;
had to be met every day. If the&#13;
quota was not reached I could not&#13;
sleep, eat, shower, or change&#13;
clothes. We were given a can of&#13;
water twice a day. We worked&#13;
under a gun and dogs. I saw&#13;
people literally die from&#13;
exhaustion and sun-stroke.&#13;
I got out in 1966 and went to&#13;
stay with my sister in San Antonio.&#13;
I was scared of people, of&#13;
myself. I had seen so much&#13;
hatred and anger that I didn't&#13;
want any contact with anyone. I&#13;
stayed in her house for three&#13;
weeks, never going outside.&#13;
I had a brother living in&#13;
Milwaukee and I came to live&#13;
with him. He was strung-out on&#13;
heroin too. I got a job in a bakery&#13;
and stayed off smack for 14&#13;
months. In 1967 I was busted for&#13;
selling it.&#13;
In Waupun I started writing&#13;
some poetry. I also worked in the&#13;
bakery and was an assistant&#13;
teacher of adult basic education.&#13;
I was then sent to Fox Lake which&#13;
is a minimum security prison&#13;
where I was a priest's clerk.&#13;
There I got my general high&#13;
school diploma. From Fox Lake&#13;
they sent me to the Walworth&#13;
camp where I worked as a&#13;
secretary to a social worker. My&#13;
final 15 months were spent at the&#13;
Union Grove prison farm where I&#13;
was a baker.&#13;
At this time I continued to write&#13;
poetry and began to recite it.&#13;
Sometimes groups from outside&#13;
would come in and hear me and&#13;
they encouraged me to send some&#13;
of my poetry to Parkside. When I&#13;
did, a visiting professor of&#13;
English, Martin Seymour-Smith,&#13;
came out to visit me. I guess he&#13;
thought I'd plagiarized it but&#13;
when he was convinced it was my&#13;
own he came out once a week to&#13;
hold class with me. I was&#13;
determined to go to college. The&#13;
prison administration refused to&#13;
"With all the combined&#13;
research and technology,&#13;
the system insists on&#13;
punishing those with&#13;
problems because it&#13;
doesn't know how to help&#13;
them."&#13;
let me out to take courses at&#13;
Parkside, but by the time I got&#13;
out Vocational Rehabilitation had&#13;
given me a grant so that I could&#13;
attend.&#13;
I lived in Parkside Village until&#13;
the owner, Abendroth, found out I&#13;
was an ex-con and terminated my&#13;
lease. I now have accumulated 52&#13;
credits and have a grade point&#13;
average of 3.44. I want to major&#13;
in English or Spanish. At first&#13;
Spanish was very difficult. I was&#13;
expected to do well because it&#13;
was "my" language, "my"&#13;
culture, but I'd never read a book&#13;
in Spanish in my life, and was in&#13;
fact punished in prison and school&#13;
for speaking Spanish.&#13;
Since I got out of Union Grove&#13;
I've seen a lot of glaring needs in&#13;
this community. Kenosha can't&#13;
compare with Racine's social&#13;
agencies. There are a lot of&#13;
people who want to help but the&#13;
system hampers communication&#13;
and stifles the help. Racine has&#13;
the social agencies and could&#13;
expand with the slightest encouragement.&#13;
People are beginning to realize&#13;
the court system is not working,&#13;
and they are referring people to&#13;
the Addiction Center and the&#13;
Mental Health Association as&#13;
alternatives to punishment. I&#13;
work as a drug counselor, trained&#13;
by the Mental Health&#13;
Association.&#13;
A lot of people still believe in&#13;
the American Dream ~ that is,&#13;
everyone can pull himself up by&#13;
his bootstraps. A lot of people&#13;
can't do that. People want to&#13;
relate to life, to others, to&#13;
themselves. I have learned to&#13;
deal with my problems. To look&#13;
at them, examine, and change&#13;
when I can. If there is nothing 1&#13;
can do- I must accept that.&#13;
The National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
outdoor meet, scheduled for&#13;
Arkadelphia, Ark., May 23-25,&#13;
isn t as far off in Dennis Biel's&#13;
mind as the calendar might indicate&#13;
it should be.&#13;
Although Biel has much of the&#13;
indoor season and nearly a whole&#13;
outdoor campaign ahead of him&#13;
before those May dates, he can't&#13;
help but look forward to it.&#13;
Biel, a junior, broke the&#13;
national 12-lap board track&#13;
record and the NAIA record as he&#13;
won the national title at 1,000&#13;
yards in the NAIA national indoor&#13;
championship meet recently in&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
His 2:11.5 effort eclipsed the old&#13;
record, shared by two runners,&#13;
by seven-tenths of a second and&#13;
made him the fastest 1,000-yard&#13;
man ever on a 12-lap banked&#13;
board track.&#13;
For the second consecutive&#13;
year, Biel was named all-&#13;
America. But he's still not&#13;
pleased.&#13;
"I'm happy I won the race," he&#13;
relates, "But I'm really not&#13;
satisfied because I still think I&#13;
could have gone faster."&#13;
In retrospect, Biel was still&#13;
moving pretty well. He went&#13;
through the half-mile mark in&#13;
1:54.6, which would have given&#13;
him a better than two second&#13;
margin over the 880-yard winner,&#13;
Tommy Fulton of Texas&#13;
Southern.&#13;
Unlike some big men, Biel (6-2,&#13;
165) did not have trouble on the&#13;
tight curves of the Kansas City&#13;
Auditorium track.&#13;
"I felt relaxed at the start,"&#13;
Biel said, "and I knew that I had&#13;
to get out quickly and get the lead&#13;
from the start to win. I wanted to&#13;
go through the half in 1:55 so my&#13;
time there was just what I&#13;
wanted."&#13;
Biel ran 1:50.4 last year in the&#13;
NAIA outdoor meet at&#13;
Arkadelphia, a Parkside varsity&#13;
record, but failed to advance to&#13;
the finals. This year, Biel plans to&#13;
run fast enough to be in those&#13;
finals (although 1:50.4 is usually&#13;
good enough in almost any meet&#13;
to qualify) and his main competition&#13;
in the 800 race may well&#13;
be Texas Southern's Fulton, last&#13;
year's champ and the indoor&#13;
titlist.&#13;
Biel candidly admits that he's&#13;
pointing for a 1:46 or 1:47 halfmile&#13;
outdoors, which would rank&#13;
him among the nation's best,&#13;
collegiate or post-collegiate.&#13;
And Parkside track coach Bob&#13;
Lawson figures Biel's potential is&#13;
well near unlimited.&#13;
"He has now established&#13;
himself as one of the top distance&#13;
runners in Mid-America,"&#13;
Lawson said, "I rank him up&#13;
there with Mark Winzenried&#13;
(former UW-Madison 880 star&#13;
from Monroe) in potential.&#13;
Dennis can go as far as he wants&#13;
to go in track."&#13;
Biel, a former state prep&#13;
champion at Wausau East under&#13;
Coach Dick Smiley, has run the&#13;
mile often and while he likes the&#13;
race, Lawson calls him a true&#13;
half-miler.&#13;
"His temperament is better for&#13;
the middle distances although he&#13;
has great physical ability for the&#13;
mile," Lawson explained. "But&#13;
for him every race is an all-out&#13;
effort and in the half he can run&#13;
that kind of race. In the mile he&#13;
can't."&#13;
Biel posted a 4:09.7 mile, a&#13;
career best, last Friday at&#13;
Madison in a special mile with&#13;
University of Chicago Track Club&#13;
stars Tom Bach and Lowell Paul&#13;
and former Wisconsin all-&#13;
America Glenn Herold. So a&#13;
better effort in the mile outdoors&#13;
would seem likely, although he'll&#13;
be concentrating on the 880.&#13;
Regardless of which type of&#13;
race he runs, or what distance,&#13;
Dennis Biel should be a name to&#13;
remember in Midwest and&#13;
national track circles.&#13;
* Pat roni ze 1&#13;
J Adver t i ser s *&#13;
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9 AM&#13;
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The progress and growth of the high&#13;
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counsel those who are considering the&#13;
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The bociety of Audio Consultants&#13;
cer t ifies those individuals who can pass&#13;
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There are far too many individuals&#13;
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who cannot meet the high standards of&#13;
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because the "bargain system" they&#13;
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for the use intended.&#13;
The audio will do more than just sell&#13;
you a system. He will make sure that it&#13;
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The world of hi-fi components is an&#13;
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FREE DELIVERY&#13;
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Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
charged.Phil LiVingSt™ "1 Whitest.&#13;
pre-meds p.- *&#13;
Porkside's trackster Biel&#13;
one of nation's best&#13;
^nHEPARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1974&#13;
All eyes are on Parkside's Gary Cole (43) as he climbs toward&#13;
heaven m last Saturday's game against Grand Valley. Cole was top&#13;
point-getter for the Rangers, who lost the contest 92-78, while Malcolm&#13;
Mahone (23) was Parkside's second-highest scorer.&#13;
Cagers win at Milton,&#13;
lose at home&#13;
UW-Parkside came out on the&#13;
shoft end of a 92-78 game&#13;
Saturday night against Michigan&#13;
NAIA power Grand Valley State&#13;
after drubbing Milton 80-58&#13;
earlier in the week at Milton.&#13;
The Grand Valley loss dropped&#13;
the Rangers' record to 11-12&#13;
heading into a game last night&#13;
(Tuesday) at College of Racine.&#13;
Parkside will be at UW-Green&#13;
Bay Saturday afternoon, seeking&#13;
revenge for a 62-53 trimming&#13;
administered by the Phoenix in&#13;
mid-December.&#13;
The Rangers return home next&#13;
Monday for their last home&#13;
contest of the season against&#13;
Oakland University of&#13;
Rochesterm, Mich. Parkside will&#13;
close its regular season the&#13;
following Saturday night (Feb.&#13;
23) at Northern Illinois:&#13;
Against Grand Valley, the&#13;
Rangers got behind early in the&#13;
game and were forced to play&#13;
catch-up ball.&#13;
Grand Valley led 47-40 at&#13;
halftime behind 62 per cent&#13;
shooting from the field. The&#13;
closest Parkside could get in the&#13;
second half after the first five&#13;
minutes was 10 points.&#13;
Gary Cole had 23 points for&#13;
Parkside while Malcom Mahone&#13;
had 19 and Chuck Chambliss 14.&#13;
The Rangers shot 42.8 per cent to&#13;
the visitors' 56.5 p er cent from&#13;
the field.&#13;
Earlier in the week, however, it&#13;
was a different story as Parkside&#13;
surprised Gateway Conference&#13;
leader Milton at home. The&#13;
Rangers took command from the&#13;
start and spurted to a 44-25&#13;
halftime lead with 10 points each&#13;
from Cole, Mahone and Chambliss.&#13;
The closest Milton could come&#13;
in the second half was 56-41 with&#13;
14:46 remaining in the game but&#13;
the Rangers put it away for good&#13;
after that with a ten point burst&#13;
that made the lead 66-43.&#13;
Cole led the Ranger scoring&#13;
with 32 points. Mahone had 16 and&#13;
Chamblis 14.&#13;
Hockey team suffers&#13;
weekend losses&#13;
In hockey over the weekend&#13;
Parkside lost both its contests, to&#13;
St. Norbert's 7-3 on Saturday and&#13;
to Harper College (111.) 7-5 on&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
In the Saturday game goals for&#13;
Parkside were, in the first period,&#13;
by Bill Iserman from Jerry&#13;
Madala and John Lulewicz, and&#13;
by John Culotta from Chuck&#13;
Andersen and Robin Lipske. In&#13;
the second period Lipske scored&#13;
with an assist from Andersen.&#13;
Against Harper College&#13;
Parkside scored three goals in&#13;
the second period, by Lulewicz&#13;
from Randy Robarge and Iserman,&#13;
Bby Iserman from Robarge&#13;
and Lulewicz, and by Robarge&#13;
from Bill Evans and George&#13;
Krulatz. The third period saw&#13;
John Bruneau score unassisted&#13;
and Bill Evans gained Parkside's&#13;
last goal of the game on a play&#13;
from Jerry Simonsen.&#13;
Next week the pucksters will&#13;
journey to Niles for a game&#13;
against Northeastern Illinois at&#13;
10 p.m. on Saturday. Sunday they&#13;
go against Lewis College at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena. Face off will&#13;
be at 6 p.m.&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at National Parks,&#13;
Private Camps, Dude Ranches and&#13;
Resorts throughout the nation.&#13;
Over 50,000 students aided each&#13;
year. For FREE information on&#13;
student assistance program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED envelope&#13;
to Opportunity Research,&#13;
Dept. SJO, 55 Flathead Drive,&#13;
Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
....YOU MUST APPLY EARLY....&#13;
IF WE DON'T HAVE IT WHO DOES? %&#13;
From&#13;
THE ASSOCIATION to THE ZOMBIES&#13;
Z&gt; &amp;M TfUUc Sale*.&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE, RACINE 637-2212.&#13;
Wrestlers are victors at&#13;
Michigan, fourth in NAIA&#13;
NAIA fifth ranked Parkside&#13;
wrestlers travelled to Houghton,&#13;
Michigan where they scored a&#13;
victory and a draw over&#13;
Michigan Tech and Bemidgi&#13;
State in 'a dual meet last Saturday,&#13;
which moves them to fourth&#13;
in the NAIA.&#13;
The Ranger grapplers defeated&#13;
Michigan Tech 34-4. Winning for&#13;
Parkside were Ricco Savaglio,&#13;
Joe Landers, Bill West, Ken&#13;
Martin, Randy Scarda, Rich&#13;
Baron, Tom Beyer and Brad&#13;
Fencers&#13;
beat&#13;
Big Ten&#13;
teams&#13;
Parkside came up with four&#13;
wins against four Big Ten fencing&#13;
teams in duel meets at home last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
They beat the University of&#13;
Minnesota 19-8 P urdue 19-8, UWMadison&#13;
14-13, and Michigan&#13;
State 15-12.&#13;
In four year's competition this&#13;
was the first time the fencers&#13;
were able to beat Michigan State.&#13;
The one point decision against&#13;
Madison was won by Mark&#13;
Mulkins in Epee.&#13;
Frieburg.&#13;
The draw came against&#13;
Bemidgi State with the point&#13;
standings tied at 19. Winning for&#13;
Parkside were Savaglio, Landers,&#13;
West and Martin.&#13;
Martin defeated NCAA&#13;
divisional champion Jerry&#13;
Cleveland and was voted outstanding&#13;
wrestler for his efforts.&#13;
Coming up is the National&#13;
Tournament, to be held at River&#13;
Falls on March 7, 8 and 9. Coach&#13;
Koch said that all the wrestlers&#13;
will be moving down one weight&#13;
class to their normal weight for&#13;
the nationals.&#13;
He said he feels that the&#13;
competition and experience they&#13;
got wrestling one weight class&#13;
higher was good preparation,&#13;
even if it may have hurt their&#13;
standings a little until now.&#13;
First place in the NAIA is held&#13;
by Central Oklahoma, second by&#13;
Adam State and third by Central&#13;
Washington, with UW-P in fourth.&#13;
Whitewater is ranked sixth,&#13;
LaCrosse fourteenth, and River&#13;
Falls seventeenth.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. schedule&#13;
Wed., Feb. 13 Gym open 12:30-1:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30-2 p.m. and 3:30-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramural basketball in gym 8 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
Special swim group in pool 7 p .m.-9 p.m.&#13;
Thurs., Feb. 14 Happy St. Valentine's Day - Va lentine's Day Free Throw Contest&#13;
Gym open 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m. - 10:3 0 a.m. and 12:30-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 3:30-6 p.m.&#13;
Free Throw Contest in Gym 8 p.m. open to all - prize: a free pizza&#13;
Fri. Feb. 15 Gym open 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball Courts open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11 a.m.-l p.m.&#13;
Building closes at 5 p .m.&#13;
Sat. Feb. 16 Gym open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30-4:30 p.m.&#13;
Sun, Feb. 17 Cross Country Ski Race today..2:30 p.m.,behind P.E. Building&#13;
Gym open 2-6:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramural basketball in gym 6:30-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool and Handball courts open 2-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Mon., Feb. 18 Last home Basketball game at 7:30 p.m., JV game at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Gym open 12:30-1:30 p.m. only&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30-2 p.m.&#13;
Tues., Feb. 19Gym open 12:39-1:30 p.m. and7:30p.m. -9:30p.m.&#13;
H andba 11 cou rts open a 1 da y except 10:30a.m. -12:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. and 6-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Note: Sauna open same hours as pool.&#13;
Ever Eat a Cheese Wedge?&#13;
at SPANKY'S 2325 52nd Street</text>
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              <text>Second Semester Enrollment Sets Record</text>
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              <text>Second semester&#13;
enrollment sets record&#13;
Second semester enrollment at&#13;
Parkside is 4,425, a record high&#13;
for the Spring semester.&#13;
Current enrollment is seven&#13;
percent, or 282 students, more&#13;
than second semester last year&#13;
when 4,143 registered. The attrition&#13;
from first semester's alltime&#13;
high of 4,856 is considered a&#13;
normal drop from the Fall to&#13;
Spring semesters by Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn.&#13;
"Although second semester&#13;
data is preliminary, the final&#13;
figures won't vary much and&#13;
there are some very encouraging&#13;
signs," Dearborn said. He cited a&#13;
29 percent increase in the number&#13;
of freshmen over a year ago, a&#13;
doubling of minority students,&#13;
and what appears to be a good&#13;
retention rate in both categories&#13;
from first semester.&#13;
Freshman are up from 1,198&#13;
last year at this time to 1,554, and&#13;
down only six percent from Fall.&#13;
There are 222 minorities at&#13;
Parkside, more than twice the 110&#13;
last year, including 148 blacks, up&#13;
from 68 last year. There was&#13;
virtually no change from the 224&#13;
minorities who began the Fall&#13;
semester at UW-P.&#13;
"Another encouraging sign is&#13;
the expanded geographical base&#13;
from which our students are&#13;
coming," Dearborn said.&#13;
Students from outside Kenosha&#13;
and Racine counties are up 21&#13;
percent from last year, from 329&#13;
to 399. Local students also are up,&#13;
from 1,729 to 1,803 (four percent)&#13;
in Kenosha county and from 2,085&#13;
to 2,223 (seven percent) in Racine&#13;
county.&#13;
"I'm also pleased with the&#13;
number of transfer students who&#13;
are coming to us from other&#13;
schools as upperclassmen," he&#13;
said. "It showed up dramatically&#13;
last Fall and seems to be continuing.&#13;
A lot of area students are&#13;
rehiring to Parkside after&#13;
starting somewhere else."&#13;
This is borne out by the fact&#13;
that not only are Parkside's 839&#13;
seniors up 10 percent from last&#13;
year's 765, they also are up from&#13;
the 799 of last Fall despite 150 who&#13;
graduated in January.&#13;
Female students have increased&#13;
12 percent, from 1,560 to&#13;
1,755, while males are up three&#13;
percent, from 2,583 to 2,670.&#13;
The number of sophomores and&#13;
juniors are virtually unchanged&#13;
from last year and the number of&#13;
"specials" (those not in degree&#13;
programs or otherwise unclassified)&#13;
is down from last&#13;
year.&#13;
Financial aid proposal&#13;
Loan program would abolish state grants&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
A new student financial aids program for the state&#13;
of Wisconsin has been proposed by James Jung&#13;
executive secretary of the Higher Educational Aids&#13;
Board.&#13;
The main feature of the plan is that all state grant&#13;
and loan programs that exist now would be&#13;
eliminated and replaced by one large program of&#13;
loans that would be available to all resident&#13;
students. 1 e hstudent need not use the money in the&#13;
state of Wisconsin, but could attend any university&#13;
in the country.&#13;
The proposal, called the Wisconsin Guaranteed&#13;
Higher Education Plan (WGHEP), says that all&#13;
students may borrow up to $2500 per year for four&#13;
years of college, with repayment contingent upon&#13;
income level after graduation. This means that&#13;
repayment of the loan would be made based on the&#13;
individual's ability to pay. If a person's income is&#13;
low, payments will be less than those of someone&#13;
whose income is high. If after 25 years the loan is&#13;
not repaid in full, the remaining amount will be&#13;
forgiven. However, a person who has a high income&#13;
may end up paying more than was originally&#13;
borrowed, even beyond the interest on that amount.&#13;
Such a consequence might be necessary to make up&#13;
for those who cannot pay, according to Jan Ocker&#13;
director of Financial Aids at Parkside.&#13;
Aid Now Based on Need&#13;
Financial aid is presently based on need, which&#13;
considers the parents' ability to pay. Many minority&#13;
and disadvantaged students now qualify for grant&#13;
money but under WGHEP, state grants would no&#13;
longer be available. It is a known fact in the&#13;
financial aids community, said Ocker, that there is&#13;
a reluctance on the part of low-income, minority&#13;
students to accept loans, especially in the large&#13;
amounts that WGHEP would require&#13;
Ocker fears that graduates who have a large debt&#13;
to repay will be reluctant to accept high paying&#13;
jobs, fearing that their payments will be high and&#13;
that the total amount will be in excess of what they&#13;
borrowed. This could be a potential loss to the entire&#13;
work force, said Ocker.&#13;
He also fears that there will be a large increase in&#13;
tuition under WGHEP. Where tuition now makes up&#13;
P6r&#13;
^&#13;
nt 0f 1116 total costs of education,&#13;
WGHEP would make it justifiable for tuition to be&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
by Kathryn L. Kah&#13;
It works! After being on the&#13;
blink since last March, the sauna&#13;
has been fixed.&#13;
Apparently this was not a&#13;
simple matter. According to John&#13;
Galbraith of Planning and&#13;
Construction, the Metos sauna,&#13;
manufactured in Helsinki,&#13;
Finland, was the victim of&#13;
unusual circumstances.&#13;
When the State has a building&#13;
constructed, there are usually&#13;
several prime contractors involved&#13;
in the construction of the&#13;
building. A prime contractor is&#13;
the company which signs the&#13;
contract with the State; it is&#13;
usually the lowest bidder. One&#13;
company does the building,&#13;
another company does the&#13;
plumbing, another heating, and&#13;
still another does the electrical&#13;
work.&#13;
In the case of the Physical&#13;
Education Building, the original&#13;
prime electrical contractor from&#13;
Bellview, Washington went into&#13;
receivership-that is, broke. This&#13;
company obtained the sauna&#13;
from the manufacturer in&#13;
Finland and installed it. The&#13;
original cost was $850.&#13;
The State has a bonding&#13;
company, an insurance company,&#13;
which takes over in the&#13;
event that one of the prime&#13;
contractors goes broke. There is&#13;
also a one-year period during&#13;
which the original prime contractor&#13;
must fix anything that&#13;
goes wrong with its work.&#13;
The sauna failed within the oneyear&#13;
guarantee period, the&#13;
company had gone broke, and the&#13;
bonding company had to take&#13;
over.&#13;
Since the bonding company is&#13;
only an insurance company, it&#13;
had to hire a new electrical&#13;
contractor to fix the sauna. This&#13;
took until July.&#13;
According to Galbraith, It took&#13;
until sometime last September to&#13;
determine what was actually&#13;
wrong with the unit.&#13;
It seems that the failure may&#13;
have been due to improper installation.&#13;
The unit shorted out&#13;
and some of the wires burned.&#13;
The improper hook-up was&#13;
probably aggravated by people&#13;
pouring large quantities of pool&#13;
water on it.&#13;
The sauna is primarily dry&#13;
heat. It is permissible to pour a&#13;
dipperful at a time of pure water&#13;
on the stones, but NOT pool&#13;
water. Saunas of this type are&#13;
usually trouble-free if not abused.&#13;
When the trouble was finally&#13;
discovered, the whole unit was&#13;
shipped to California to the new&#13;
contractor hired by the bonding&#13;
company. Once the sauna finally&#13;
reached someone who knew what&#13;
they were doing, and the new&#13;
contractor was paid by the&#13;
bonding company, it was fixed in&#13;
short order. The cost was $150.&#13;
So people may certainly go use&#13;
the sauna once again, but please&#13;
don't pour a bucket of pool water&#13;
on it!&#13;
w The Parkside&#13;
"RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 Vol. II No. 19&#13;
The sad saga of the sauna,&#13;
or , where were you&#13;
when the pipes went out?&#13;
The lock is off, the door is open! After being inoperative for almost a&#13;
year, the sauna is once again functioning and available for use.&#13;
nf «hrr°&#13;
U&#13;
^&#13;
P,a*",&#13;
tS (S0P) was an effort that hadn,t really gotten out&#13;
the nrnhi T ! °&#13;
f e&#13;
'&#13;
ght or nine students started cleaning up NLK^s&#13;
Fcy&#13;
-»tr5.&#13;
here a re D"&#13;
b Donatt a nd &#13;
2 THE PARKSFDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
•Editorial/OpinionAid&#13;
proposal&#13;
not good&#13;
enough&#13;
"The College Money Crunch" is the title of a recent&#13;
television documentary dealing with the rising costs of&#13;
higher education. The central point was that the wealthy&#13;
people can afford to go to college, the poor get financial&#13;
aid, and the middle-class gets squeezed out.&#13;
The plight of middle-income families whose tax&#13;
dollars support financial aid but whose children are not&#13;
eligible for it, has come to the attention of the Wisconsin&#13;
Higher Educational Aids Board (HEAB) and it has&#13;
produced a controversial proposal to try and rectify the&#13;
situation. While we applaud the effort, we cannot support&#13;
the plan as it now stands, for it would create more&#13;
problems than it would solve.&#13;
The proposal would replace the present stat^ grants&#13;
and scholarships with a program of loans. A student&#13;
could borrow the dollars to meet all his-her educational&#13;
costs and would be obliged to pay back the debt within 25&#13;
years of leaving school, predicated on income.&#13;
Many well-founded objections have arisen regarding&#13;
the proposal, some of them being that the loan program&#13;
would discourage students in financially poor circumstances&#13;
from attending college and incurring heavy&#13;
debts, that tuition rates would skyrocket and everyone&#13;
would be forced to borrow money, and that graduates&#13;
might be reluctant to take a higher paying job because&#13;
they would then be required to repay higher amounts.&#13;
Current loan and grant programs are based considerably&#13;
on the parents' financial status and questions&#13;
are being raised as to whether or not the parents of&#13;
students over 18 are responsible for debts and tuition&#13;
payments of their children. The HEAB proposal does&#13;
anticipate judicial sanction of students' emancipation&#13;
and attempts to alleviate other inequities and&#13;
inadequacies in the present financial aid system. For&#13;
example, the student from a middle-income background&#13;
is ignored by financial aid officers and by university&#13;
offices hiring students for part-time work. It is much&#13;
cheaper to give a job to a student on work study, for the&#13;
federal government pays 80 percent of the wages, but it&#13;
leaves out in the cold those students who aren't eligible&#13;
for aid but need a job to keep going.&#13;
While the proposal aims at a fairer system of aid for&#13;
all, we feel it just is not comprehensive enough to meet&#13;
the needs of middle and lower income students. Further,&#13;
the cost of administering it would be staggering. The&#13;
best system would be one which combines present&#13;
programs (relaxing requirements and treating each&#13;
case as individually as possible) with such guaranteed&#13;
loans as HEAB has proposed. "Need" must be&#13;
realistically redefined, and as a recent Racine Journal&#13;
Times editorial stated, "the best form of student&#13;
assistance is low tuition."&#13;
Hence, while we do not support the proposed loan plan&#13;
as the sole state financial aid program, we feel HEAB is&#13;
on the right track. We hope the plan is not completely&#13;
rejected for we would like to see its good points incorporated&#13;
into a new proposal which will give everyone&#13;
an equal chance at higher education and encourage&#13;
people to take advantage of such opportunities.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M.&#13;
Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Michael&#13;
Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels,&#13;
Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken&#13;
Pestka&#13;
We gletters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I applaud the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board selection of a&#13;
nationally known expert, Mr.&#13;
Frederic Storaska, to speak&#13;
here on Feb. 14 about "Rapes and&#13;
Other Assaults on Women."&#13;
However, I feel that advertising&#13;
this program as a "Valentine's&#13;
Day Special" is in poor taste.&#13;
After discussing this with the&#13;
individual responsible for&#13;
selecting the date, I realized the&#13;
choice of Feb. 14 was i ntentional&#13;
and that it was meant to be&#13;
ironic.&#13;
Unfortunately, this advertising&#13;
has caused concern and some&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Before everyone has finished&#13;
congratulating each other on the&#13;
fine job in building Parkside, I&#13;
would like to present a point of&#13;
view which receives much lip&#13;
service but not much elseecology.&#13;
I remember when&#13;
Greenquist was built and how it&#13;
was designed so that no parking&#13;
lot with its polluting cars would&#13;
be nearby. I remember how a&#13;
fancy expensive bus service was&#13;
instituted to preserve the natural&#13;
beauty of the Parkside-Petrified&#13;
Springs area. I was proud to be a&#13;
student here. Now I am ashamed.&#13;
Why is Everyone so happy about&#13;
the new parking lots and road to&#13;
be built around Parkside? No one&#13;
said anything when the facultystaff&#13;
parking lot was set up&#13;
during the summer (when no&#13;
student government or&#13;
organizations were present to&#13;
protest). I didn't hear a sound&#13;
from any one of our ecological&#13;
life science professors-they&#13;
bring up their cars to the lot with&#13;
the rest of the professors and&#13;
administrators who are too good&#13;
to ride the buses and use the&#13;
sidewalks with the rest of us&#13;
commoners.&#13;
How many acres of fertile land&#13;
will Parkside cover with asphalt&#13;
and concrete? How many more&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Parkside has been infiltrated&#13;
by a tribe of scofflaws...people&#13;
who know what the rules are and,&#13;
unfortunately, think that they can&#13;
break them at will and get away&#13;
with it. My guess (and hope) is&#13;
that this cadre of litter-bugs is the&#13;
tail-end of a generation which&#13;
should have been spanked instead&#13;
of "Spocked" by permissive&#13;
mothers who always (?)&#13;
picked up after their kids.&#13;
The rules here are that there is&#13;
to be no smoking in classrooms&#13;
and auditoriums. That's a State&#13;
Law. Another rule is that no food&#13;
or drinks are to be taken into&#13;
classrooms. Yet these rules are&#13;
being broken all of the time. The&#13;
proprietors of the library are the&#13;
only people around here with guts&#13;
enough to see that these rules are&#13;
observed.&#13;
Scofflaws come in all colors,&#13;
sexes, shapes and size. A weird&#13;
example of scofflawism in action&#13;
would be the young woman who&#13;
would be beautiful were it not for&#13;
the fact that she sits in class&#13;
chewing gum, sucking a cigarette&#13;
and draining a can of coke, while&#13;
taking notes...while a seemingly&#13;
oblivious professor lectures a few&#13;
feet away. Her coordination is&#13;
fantastic in an unbecoming sort&#13;
of way. And wheji class is over,&#13;
she walks out, leaving all of her&#13;
sick humor. Some people&#13;
evidently believe that an individual&#13;
who freely chooses&#13;
sexual intimacy with another&#13;
subconsciously welcomes sexual&#13;
assault. In certain instances, law&#13;
enforcement agencies and&#13;
defense attorneys have used this&#13;
premise to unjustly attack a rape&#13;
victim's credibility. For these&#13;
reasons, I consider the choice of&#13;
date and the manner of publicity&#13;
unfortunate. It highlights the&#13;
dilemma many victims face and&#13;
pinpoints the reason so many&#13;
refuse to bring charges.&#13;
Rape is not purely a feminine&#13;
problem. Recently a male inmate&#13;
cars will we accommodate to&#13;
choke our trees and plants and&#13;
run over our animals and waste&#13;
our fuel resources? What happened&#13;
to encouraging car pools&#13;
and bicycles and walking?&#13;
Speaking of dirty deals last&#13;
summer, why do we have an&#13;
instant lawn which makes&#13;
everyone so proud of the way&#13;
Parkside looks? How many&#13;
families of rabbits, squirrels and&#13;
other field creatures now live in&#13;
our freshly mowed lawn-not&#13;
many I'll bet. Why weren't the&#13;
natural plants and animals&#13;
allowed to live at our doorstep?&#13;
Now we look like a city school and&#13;
have to pay to have the lawn cut&#13;
and watered. I suppose that we&#13;
will need herbicides, pesticides&#13;
and fertilizer to keep the lawn&#13;
looking "nice." Also, do we have&#13;
to use rock salt on the sidewalks?&#13;
What's the matter with sand and&#13;
cheap student labour (to shovel)&#13;
instead of salt and tractors that&#13;
chew up the lawn?&#13;
I am a chemist, a scientist and&#13;
an ecologist. Why in the interest&#13;
of science and the name of&#13;
knowledge must we destroy in&#13;
order to learn? What causes a&#13;
teacher to ask his mushroom&#13;
class to collect 25 species of&#13;
muchrooms each, when he knows&#13;
Pets is right next to us and you&#13;
garbage behind her. Incidentally,&#13;
I've been told that it is the&#13;
professor's responsibility to&#13;
control what goes on in the&#13;
classroom.&#13;
Some of our classrooms and&#13;
lecture halls look like bars where&#13;
the help went on strike...tin cans&#13;
and ash trays on desks, tin cans&#13;
along the walls and even on top of&#13;
hat racks. (I wonder who it is who&#13;
encourages smoking by putting&#13;
those ash trays in "No Smoking"&#13;
areas...and who removes the "No&#13;
Smoking" signs when they're put&#13;
up?)&#13;
Notice sometime, the number&#13;
of cigarette butts littering the&#13;
floor outside the library entrances.&#13;
And that double-decked&#13;
seating arrangement in Main&#13;
Place! ...It is usually littered with&#13;
lunch left-overs and tin cans&#13;
Sometimes it looks like a&#13;
pyramid of people trying to hatch&#13;
the cans. You'd think that their&#13;
bottoms would hurt.&#13;
When on campus we are&#13;
seldom more than fifty feet away&#13;
from a waste basket of some sort&#13;
Why not use 'em? Then, when a&#13;
waste container gets filled to&#13;
over-flowing so that it makes a&#13;
messy-looking area, the&#13;
janitorial crew will then be at&#13;
fault for not emptying it more&#13;
often. Our litterbugs should attend&#13;
Moscow U in the USSR Do&#13;
charged in court that he had been&#13;
sexually assaulted by another&#13;
prisoner. The court held that this&#13;
type of rape was impossible&#13;
Evidently the judge has seen&#13;
penal institutions only from a&#13;
distance.&#13;
I encourage all people concerned&#13;
about the serious problem&#13;
of rape to attend Mr. Storaska's&#13;
lecture and see his demonstration&#13;
of simple self-defense techniques&#13;
The evening may be one of the&#13;
most informative you will ever&#13;
spend.&#13;
Kathleen Sweeney&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
couldn't find a mushroom in the&#13;
park all fall? Other life science&#13;
professors do the same. Why? To&#13;
add to their personal collections?&#13;
I know knowledge doesn't come&#13;
free but why are so many living&#13;
things killed in order to study&#13;
them? Why does Parkside claim&#13;
to be ecological when it is not?&#13;
Why does an institution-when it&#13;
has a chance to lead its community&#13;
and preserve the natural&#13;
beauty of the area-act like a&#13;
fancy factory and be concerned&#13;
with looks instead of life?&#13;
Ecology at Parkside-bullshit.&#13;
I don't have all the answers,&#13;
but sometime, somewhere,&#13;
someone has to raise a voice of&#13;
protest against unnecessary&#13;
development. The answer to full&#13;
parking lots is not to build new&#13;
ones b ut to provide alternatives&#13;
to one-person, one-car parking.&#13;
Parkside has done seme&#13;
ecological things and I appreciate&#13;
those. I just care enough&#13;
to say something before it happens&#13;
not afterwards like&#13;
everyone else. Don't build the&#13;
new road and parking lots-we&#13;
don't need them. What we need is&#13;
concern for the world we live and&#13;
learn in.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
any littering there and within&#13;
minutes you'd be hauled before a&#13;
panel of your peers and assigned&#13;
to twenty hours of work...usually&#13;
policing the grounds of the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Here's a suggestion to the&#13;
addicts who can't do without a&#13;
smoke or drink for an hour or so.&#13;
If the existing rules impose a&#13;
hardship on you, get organized&#13;
and work through the Grievance&#13;
Committee of PSGA and see i f&#13;
you can have the rules&#13;
changed...like having "Smoking"&#13;
and "No Smoking" areas in&#13;
classrooms like they now do on&#13;
airplanes. You'd better talk to the&#13;
Regents, too.&#13;
We are all privileged to use a&#13;
25-million dollar facility, thanks&#13;
to the foresight and generosity of&#13;
the people of Wisconsin. The way&#13;
things stand now a visitor could&#13;
walk around our ipdoor campus&#13;
and conclude that we're a bunch&#13;
of ungrateful slobs.&#13;
I'm sorry if it appears that I'm&#13;
scolding because I don't like to be&#13;
scolded. But it's high time that&#13;
someone talked about the smoke&#13;
pollution, cans and garbage&#13;
around here. If you want to do&#13;
something about your environment,&#13;
here is a good place to&#13;
begin.&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
Racine Senior &#13;
More letters&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reply to David Myer's letter&#13;
of Jan. 30, in which he derided the&#13;
university and faculty for&#13;
teaching so-called "unproven&#13;
theories, Freudian dogma, explanatory&#13;
fiction, subjective&#13;
observation, and information&#13;
useful to professors in their&#13;
research and to students meeting&#13;
requirements," I would ask him&#13;
how else he would propose to&#13;
teach courses in psychology and&#13;
sociology.&#13;
The study of these two&#13;
disciplines must in fact be taught&#13;
on a theoretical basis because&#13;
that is the only basis for explanations&#13;
of phenomenon which&#13;
occur within their scopes. There&#13;
is no such thing as an objective&#13;
fact or a law within these fields&#13;
because almost all proposed laws&#13;
are able to be disproved in a&#13;
given situation. These fields do&#13;
not seek absolutes but rather try&#13;
to explore all possibilities in the&#13;
hope that the future will be able&#13;
to apply the hypotheses with a&#13;
reasonable degree of predictability.&#13;
&#13;
These disciplines, in short, are&#13;
not taught to students so as to be&#13;
applied strictly, as the laws of&#13;
science, but to awaken the minds&#13;
of students to the large range of&#13;
possible explanations, so that a&#13;
student will be free to choose the&#13;
explanation which best suits a&#13;
given situation, or if there is no&#13;
explanation, he will be able to&#13;
arrive at his own independent&#13;
situation to a problem.&#13;
For this reason, I think the&#13;
teaching of theories is important&#13;
because we must attempt to&#13;
teach our students to think and to&#13;
reason or else we shall become&#13;
subservient to any authoritarian&#13;
society which has the might to&#13;
enforce its demands.&#13;
Peter L. Strutynski&#13;
South Milwaukee Junior&#13;
flotfboojt&#13;
Loans&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
raised to cover 100 percent of total educational&#13;
costs, Ocker explained. Thus, while more money&#13;
will be available to all students, those who are&#13;
presently able to bear the cost of their own&#13;
education would, under WGHEP, be forced to&#13;
borrow money.&#13;
Ocker believes that WGHEP would cost the state&#13;
two to three times as much money as the present&#13;
program and that paperwork involved in following&#13;
up loan repayments for 25 years would be excessive.&#13;
More Accessible to Middle Income Students&#13;
The program was designed to make financial aid&#13;
more accessible to middle income students who,&#13;
under existing programs^are ineligible for financial&#13;
assistance because of their parents' income.&#13;
WGHEP is also designed to deal with the 18-yearold&#13;
Age of Majority Law. One portion of that law&#13;
stipulates that parents may not be held financially&#13;
responsible for the debts of their children who are&#13;
over 18 years of age. That portion of the law is now&#13;
being tested in court and, should the law be upheld,&#13;
existing loan programs in Wisconsin could become&#13;
illegal, according to Ocker. WGHEP would be a&#13;
solution to that problem, since need would not be&#13;
determined by parental income.&#13;
Ocker explained that under WGHEP, some grants&#13;
and work-study money would still be available.&#13;
Wisconsin would still receive federal money for&#13;
grants and work-study and the Tuition Grant&#13;
Program, which sets aside money for students&#13;
attending private colleges in Wisconsin, would be&#13;
retained under WGHEP.&#13;
Ocker outlined the type of financial aid program&#13;
that he would support. He would like to retain most&#13;
of the features of the present system, but also include&#13;
a type of loan not based on need, specifically&#13;
to aid the middle income student. Ocker would also&#13;
like to see a diversity of grant programs based on&#13;
need, relaxing that need requirement should tuition&#13;
rise.&#13;
Senator Dorman Opposes Plan&#13;
State Senator Henry Dorman (D-Racine) sits on a&#13;
subcommittee of the Joint Committee of Finance of&#13;
the state legislature. That group studies any&#13;
proposals for new student financial aid systems.&#13;
The Higher Educational Aids Board (HEAB)&#13;
passed WGHEP on principle, which means that&#13;
while HEAB does not necessarily support the plan,&#13;
it will be allowed to go to the legislature for further&#13;
study.&#13;
Dorman has taken a stand against WGHEP; his&#13;
complaints about the plan closely parallel those of&#13;
Ocker.&#13;
Like Ocker, Dorman is in favor of improving the&#13;
present system rather than replacing it entirely&#13;
with a new plan. He would like to see a "balanced&#13;
aid program of scholarships, grants, work-study,&#13;
and loans."&#13;
Increased Tuition?&#13;
Dorman pointed out that aid programs like&#13;
WGHEP have been instituted at other universities&#13;
and that under these programs tuition has gone up&#13;
very quickly.&#13;
Dorman says that WGHEP will not be passed by&#13;
the legislature "because not only do I not like it, but&#13;
the UW Administration does not like it, VocationalTechnical&#13;
people do not like it, and HEAB does not&#13;
like it."&#13;
James Jung, executive secretary of HEAB and&#13;
proponent of WGHEP, explained that this plan is&#13;
not a final one and should be developed with full&#13;
public discussion, including student participation.&#13;
"You'll notice," said Jung, "that the only support&#13;
for the plan is from students." He says that the&#13;
United Council of Student Governments in&#13;
Wisconsin has come out in favor of WGHEP.&#13;
Limited Funds Available&#13;
Jung outlined some of the basic concepts of the&#13;
plan, saying that WGHEP was designed to deal with&#13;
the Age of Majority Law, to recognize that 18-yearolds&#13;
are adults and responsible for their debts.&#13;
He explained that with the limited resources&#13;
available in the state, the plan was designed to get&#13;
the most out of what Wisconsin has in the way of&#13;
funds for financial aid. "It will not be cheap for the&#13;
state," Jung said, "but it (WGHEP) targets the&#13;
money to where it's needed most."&#13;
Jung also expressed concern for the middle class&#13;
students. "They are finding it increasingly difficult&#13;
to finance their education." Jung believes that the&#13;
state has an obligation to underwrite every student&#13;
and that post-secondary education should be&#13;
available to everyone.&#13;
He pointed out that at present, 63 percent of all&#13;
state financial aid is loans (Dorman puts the figure&#13;
at 50 percent), and that repayment on these loans is&#13;
not contingent on income after graduation.&#13;
WGHEP, he said, is not a loan in the true sense of&#13;
the word: it becomes an obligation only if the&#13;
graduate's income can support it.&#13;
Ocker made this final statement on WGHEP: "All&#13;
indications I have say that the disadvantages&#13;
outweigh the advantages of this proposal. The&#13;
likelihood of it becoming a reality is very slim at&#13;
this time."&#13;
by Jane Schllesman&#13;
^&#13;
rst RANGER of this semester, reference was made to the&#13;
staff s plans for expanded coverage of campus news and events and&#13;
our hopes for 16 page papers every other week. Shortly after this&#13;
announcement we were told by our printer, Zion Benton Publishing&#13;
Company, that there is still a grave paper shortage and we will have to&#13;
hold to eight p&amp;ges every week. At the present time the printer has&#13;
enough newsprint to get us through March.&#13;
What this means is that the space problems we experienced last&#13;
semester will become even more acute, since we can no longer put out&#13;
an occassional 12 page issue to alleviate some of the strain. It means&#13;
we may from time to time be printing on poor quality paper. It means&#13;
that, effective last week, we print only 4,000 c opies instead of 5 000&#13;
since that not only saves paper but helps the budget (with the increase&#13;
in the price of newsprint it will cost as much to print 1,000 fewer&#13;
copies).&#13;
The premium on space in each issue will make it difficult to justify&#13;
many and large pictures, as we had hoped to be able to have. It will&#13;
necessitate putting many important pieces of information in Brief&#13;
News when we would otherwise have done a larger article. Much post&#13;
event coverage of lectures and concerts will have to be foregone as in&#13;
last semester.&#13;
We want to continue to provide in-depth reporting of c ertain issues,&#13;
and special features perhaps not directly related to life at Parkside in&#13;
particular. It is my feeling that such articles are not only informative&#13;
but also thought-provoking.&#13;
Some would argue that it is our charge as a campus newspaper to&#13;
put Parkside events first and I agree up to a point. We owe people here&#13;
first class reporting of PSGA decisions, faculty and administrative&#13;
moves, and coverage of what students are up to. But we also must be&#13;
concerned with broader matters that affect us as well as with life&#13;
beyond the acreage of UW-P. I put coverage of the new financial aid&#13;
proposal, for example, ahead of a P.A.B. lecture, or the academic&#13;
advising issue before homecoming. Likewise, a feature on alcoholism&#13;
or mass transit takes precedence over what's new in the Whiteskellar&#13;
or in some cases what a student organization may be doing. Each issue&#13;
will have to be judged on what I feel will be its appeal to the students&#13;
and in many cases an article will be held for several weeks until there&#13;
is space available for it.&#13;
I want people to continue to contact us when they feel they have a&#13;
story or information of i nterest to the campus community. But I also&#13;
hope our sources and readers will understand if we have to put many&#13;
items in Brief News and-or It's What's Happening, or if we cannot&#13;
cover an event at all.&#13;
Finally, I want to thank several people on campus who, when they&#13;
heard about our paper problem, immediately began calling around the&#13;
state in efforts to help us out-and they're still trying! They are&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn, Dale Irish in Purchasing, and&#13;
Don Kopriva in Public Information. Their concern and assistance is&#13;
greatly appreciated by the whole staff, and I trust also by our readers.&#13;
Storaska to lecture on rape and defense&#13;
Frederic Storaska has been&#13;
lecturing for six years about the&#13;
prevention of assault on women,&#13;
men and children. He has spoken&#13;
to about two million students at&#13;
over 300 colleges and universities&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
Documented reports say that&#13;
Storaska's lectures have&#13;
"prevented serious assault andor&#13;
saved lives" in some 273 cases.&#13;
Storaska's concern for the&#13;
prevention of a ssault stems from&#13;
an incident he witnessed in 1964.&#13;
A young girl was brutally attacked&#13;
by several boys, and&#13;
though Storaska was able to fight&#13;
off her assailants, the girl was&#13;
seriously injured.&#13;
This incident led Storaska to&#13;
seek information on assaults at a&#13;
number of universities. When he&#13;
found that little or none existed,&#13;
Storaska set out on an intensive&#13;
research project that eventually&#13;
led to requests for lecture appearances.&#13;
&#13;
Storaska now speaks on four&#13;
major topics: Child Abuse,&#13;
Assaults on Men, and Sex and&#13;
Surviving the Dating Game are&#13;
three of those topics. The fourth&#13;
topic, and the one he will speak on&#13;
at Parkside, is To Be or Not To Be&#13;
Raped-Prevention of Assaults on&#13;
Women. The topic deals&#13;
specifically with the myths that&#13;
surround rape, the popular&#13;
methods of defense that are&#13;
supposed to work, the make-up of&#13;
the assailant (who he is, what he&#13;
wants, what he needs), and the&#13;
victim (realistic attitudes and&#13;
techniques within which a woman&#13;
can safely react in any given&#13;
assault).&#13;
Storaska's lecture is scheduled&#13;
for Thursday, Feb. 14, at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theater. Admission&#13;
price for students is $1,&#13;
for the general public it is $1.50.&#13;
The lecture is being sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
2 TEXAS-SIZE SAVINGS&#13;
TWO BONANZA&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St. &#13;
4 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
Terminations again dominate&#13;
grievance committee meeting&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
The Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) met last&#13;
Wednesday, January 30, in Upper&#13;
Main Place to hear student&#13;
complaints and to discuss issues&#13;
that had been brought up at the&#13;
first meeting on Jan. 23.&#13;
The major issue under&#13;
discussion was the protest of&#13;
faculty terminations. Anna&#13;
Hendricks, a student,&#13;
represented Alan Wallace, an&#13;
instructor of English who has&#13;
been terminated, and read a&#13;
statement that had been&#13;
prepared by Wallace. In that&#13;
statement, Wallace explained&#13;
that there are three criteria for&#13;
review of a faculty member:&#13;
ratings on SCAFE forms&#13;
(Student Course and Faculty&#13;
Evaluation), campus and&#13;
community service, and&#13;
academic research and&#13;
publication (which includes the&#13;
completion of the Ph.D dissertation).&#13;
Faculty are expected to&#13;
excell in two out of the three&#13;
areas.&#13;
Wallace explained in his&#13;
statement that he has rated&#13;
highly on SCAFE forms,&#13;
especially in upper division&#13;
courses, and that he is very active&#13;
in community service. He is&#13;
a member of the Southside&#13;
Revitalization Corporation Board&#13;
in Racine, and is a member of the&#13;
Citizen's Advisory Panel to the&#13;
State Revolutionary War&#13;
Bicentennial Commission. He has&#13;
not completed his Ph.D dissertation.&#13;
Since Wallace's termination&#13;
becomes effective at&#13;
the end of this semester, he no&#13;
longer has any recourse for&#13;
appeal, although the opportunity&#13;
was there when he was notified&#13;
last year of his termination.&#13;
Most of the students at the&#13;
meeting seemed to be concerned&#13;
about what course of action they&#13;
can take now on behalf of&#13;
professors who are presently up&#13;
for review or have already been&#13;
terminated. Thomas Callanan,&#13;
assistant professor of Sociology,&#13;
was present at the meeting "to&#13;
answer questions," he said. His&#13;
suggestions included finding out&#13;
who has been terminated and&#13;
why, looking up Tenure and&#13;
Termination guidelines in the&#13;
University Rules and&#13;
Regulations, and obtaining a&#13;
copy of the "COPP" committee&#13;
report.&#13;
PSGA senators Tom Petersen&#13;
and Mike Hahner have attempted&#13;
to obtain a listing of the status of&#13;
all faculty members, but were&#13;
refused that information. They&#13;
are presently trying to obtain a&#13;
document, the Humanities&#13;
Review Criteria for Faculty,&#13;
which was released just prior to&#13;
Thanksgiving, 1973.&#13;
Three other grievances were&#13;
aired at the meeting. One student&#13;
questioned the increase in the&#13;
price of a can of soda from 20&#13;
cents to 25 cents. He said he had&#13;
observed no increased prices in&#13;
Canteen-operated machines off&#13;
campus.&#13;
Another student complained of&#13;
the shortage of tables in the&#13;
cafeteria during rush hours and&#13;
requested that something be done&#13;
to obtain more places to sit.&#13;
A third student, Keith&#13;
Chambers, protested the construction&#13;
of new parking lots and&#13;
roads in the Comm Arts and&#13;
Classroom Building area.&#13;
PSGA meets, discusses&#13;
elections, grievances&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association met on&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29, a nd discussed&#13;
elections and heard a report from&#13;
the Grievance and Clearinghouse&#13;
Committee.&#13;
New elections were requested&#13;
for sometime late this month or&#13;
early March, to be run according&#13;
to PSGA election laws. (The&#13;
Elections Committee met the&#13;
following Thursday and agreed to&#13;
come before the Senate and&#13;
explain some of the problems&#13;
with this and recommend that&#13;
elections be held in April, according&#13;
to the referendum passed&#13;
last semester.)&#13;
The Senate, which was not at&#13;
quorum strength, then heard a&#13;
report from Senator Mike Hahner&#13;
of the Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee.&#13;
Hahner said the committee was&#13;
investigating problems concerning&#13;
slow school clocks, the&#13;
lack of pencil sharpeners, canteen&#13;
services, termination of&#13;
faculty and also complaints that&#13;
Parkside students under 18 are&#13;
denied entrance to Student Activity&#13;
Board functions.&#13;
Ken Konkol, former PSGA&#13;
presidential candidate, took the&#13;
opportunity to criticize the&#13;
Elections Committee for their&#13;
"bias" and failure to hold elections&#13;
within the prescribed 20-day&#13;
period. Konkol also stated he&#13;
would work to defeat an earlier&#13;
proposed referendum to postpone&#13;
the regular April elections until&#13;
the Fall.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovic announced&#13;
he will be a candidate for PSGA&#13;
president in the upcoming&#13;
election. Thus far only&#13;
Milutinovic and Dan Nielsen&#13;
have announced candidacy for&#13;
this office.&#13;
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When the clock struck&#13;
nine it wasn't on time&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
The clocks at Parkside perform&#13;
a very necessary and vital function&#13;
for the students, but unfortunately&#13;
they are not always&#13;
accurate. To find out why this is,&#13;
RANGER asked Norman Madsen&#13;
of Physical Plant how the clocks&#13;
operate and how they are&#13;
maintained.&#13;
The clocks in the Library&#13;
Learning Center, Classroom&#13;
Building and Greenquist receive&#13;
hourly signals from the master&#13;
clock in the hallway in&#13;
Greenquist. The Communication&#13;
Arts Building has not actually&#13;
been completed. When it is done&#13;
and paid for, these clocks will be&#13;
connected to the rest of the&#13;
system.&#13;
The clocks themselves are&#13;
made by Simplex, and can be&#13;
found in many public schools and&#13;
state universities. Madsen said&#13;
the reason the clocks are not&#13;
fixed immediately when they fail&#13;
is that he has no means of&#13;
monitoring them. In our first&#13;
interview, on Thursday, Jan. 28&#13;
this reporter asked Madsen if he&#13;
was aware that the clock in the&#13;
cafeteria was not in order.&#13;
Madsen said he was not and the&#13;
next day the same clock had been&#13;
taken away for repairs.&#13;
For the benefit of our readers,&#13;
RANGER attempted to construct&#13;
a chart listing each main clock in&#13;
the academic complex and&#13;
showing how fast or slow each&#13;
was in relation to the master&#13;
clock. It was found, however, that&#13;
each clock varies so much from&#13;
hour to hour thai the information&#13;
would not have been timely by&#13;
the time it was printed.&#13;
.SS^Gj)&#13;
AKAI • DUAL • WATTS • SHURE • JVC • TECHNICS •&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center*&#13;
H&#13;
Super Low Prices §&#13;
SHERWOOD&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine &gt;&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha ^&#13;
TEAC • ALTEC • KOSS o SENNHISER • &#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
The Raven&#13;
by Mike Winslow&#13;
Students will care for&#13;
concourse plants&#13;
E. H. in the U. K.&#13;
(The Eddie Harris London Sessions)&#13;
(Atlantic SD1647)&#13;
Most of today's music defies definitions. If you call it this it's that&#13;
and vice versa. As I must venture to describe this music it's simnlv&#13;
Eddie Harris an accomplished jazz saxophonist jamming with some&#13;
of England's best rock musicians, including Jeff Beck Albert Lee&#13;
Stevie Winwood, Rick Grech, Chris Squire and Alan White the latter&#13;
two, members of YES.&#13;
Having heard some of Eddie Harris' adventures with other iazzmen&#13;
and Beck and Winwood's albums with their respective bands I was&#13;
interested to see how this fusion of rock and jazz would sound' I was&#13;
hoping for big things, few of which got off the ground. It's not the songs&#13;
themselves that are disappointing but that the musicians don't seem to&#13;
be at their best.&#13;
"Baby" opens side one with Eddie Harris playing electric sax and&#13;
trumpet and doing the vocal (singing through his horn). The theme of&#13;
the song is stated by Eddie's "singing" but he fails to elaborate upon it&#13;
very much except when the guitar, sax and piano take short solos The&#13;
band could have done more with this song.&#13;
The next song, "Wait a Little Longer," is a funky jam with the&#13;
saxophone taking the lead and wailing. This builds to a peak but finally&#13;
returns to the opening statement featuring sax and guitar which&#13;
closes the song in a fitting way. This is followed by "He's Island Man"&#13;
which contains a mediocre sax solo which doesn't get off. Neither does&#13;
the song.&#13;
"I've Tried Everything" is the best song on the album. Jeff Beck&#13;
plays the first guitar solo, but gone is his powerhouse guitar style.&#13;
Instead he substitutes clean, mellow licks which compliment the&#13;
music. Following Beck's lead, Stevie Winwood does a fine solo on&#13;
electric piano and is followed by Eddie Harris and Albert Lee completing&#13;
the song in good style, adding their own personal touches to the&#13;
jam.&#13;
A moog synthesizer opens "I Waited for You," the only song not&#13;
written by Harris. The song opens slowly and the moog is well played&#13;
by Tony Kaye. The mood of this song is laid back and relaxed as&#13;
Harris on saxophone joins along with the moog to complete the&#13;
number.&#13;
"Conversations of Everything and Nothing," over 15 minutes long,&#13;
ends the album. The first half of the song is wasted time in which the&#13;
musicians seem to be making a vague stab in the dark in an attempt to&#13;
make music. Even when the song begins to pick up, there isn't very&#13;
much "oomph" in the playing. Harris gets a few good licks in on sax&#13;
but the listener is sidetracked by a bass and-or drums that tend to get&#13;
in the way by playing too loudly and not very well.&#13;
The album is OK. Not bad but not great. Most of the songs are good&#13;
but the musicians seem to be holding back. There isn't any song where&#13;
everybody plays like they're really getting off. In other words, the&#13;
musicians seem to be suffering from a lack of feeling.&#13;
(Record courtesy J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester&#13;
underway&#13;
"The Throne of Blood,"&#13;
Japanese director Kurosawa's&#13;
1957 adaptation of Macbeth as a&#13;
15th Century Samurai warrior,&#13;
will be shown today (Feb. 6), the&#13;
second in a series of&#13;
Shakespearean films being&#13;
screened during Parkside's&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester."&#13;
All of the films are at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist Hall, Room 101,&#13;
and are free and open to the&#13;
public. Others in the series are&#13;
Welles' "Macbeth," Feb. 13;&#13;
Burge's "Othello," Feb. 20;&#13;
Youtkevich's "Othello,";&#13;
Castellani's "Romeo and Juliet,"&#13;
March 20; Reinhart's "Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream," April&#13;
3; Olivier's "Hamlet," April 24;&#13;
and Kosinstev's "Hamlet," May&#13;
8.&#13;
Dates for two other&#13;
"Shakespeare Semester" events&#13;
have been changed. The New&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at National Parks,&#13;
Private Camps, Dude Ranches and&#13;
Resorts throughout the nation.&#13;
Over 50,000 students aided each&#13;
year. For FREE information on&#13;
student assistance program send&#13;
self-addressed STAMPED envelope&#13;
to Opportunity Research,&#13;
Dept. SJO, 55 Flathead Drive,&#13;
Kalispell, MT 59901.&#13;
.. .YOU MUST APPLY EARLY....&#13;
#0$ STiiDbN' A SS'ST ANt.F PROGRAM MAS B16N AfVlEWtOBv T Mf t F OF RA i iR AQf C OMMISSION&#13;
Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco, originally scheduled&#13;
to present "Romeo and Juliet" at&#13;
Parkside on March 1, now will&#13;
offer "Midsummer Night's&#13;
Dream" on April 9 in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. A daylong&#13;
symposium on&#13;
"Shakespeare, the Media and the&#13;
Secondary School," first slated&#13;
for March 30, has been changed&#13;
to April 6.&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
In October of 1972, prior to the&#13;
open house held for the Library&#13;
Learning Center, the University&#13;
obtained plants for the plant bay&#13;
along the concourse of LLC next&#13;
to the library. Getting the plants&#13;
was not easy and one reason was&#13;
that both Central Administration&#13;
and the architect preferred that&#13;
Parkside have green plastic&#13;
plants instead of real ones. As the&#13;
University is desirous of&#13;
aesthetic beauty, however, the&#13;
plants were finally purchased&#13;
through a broker and came from&#13;
California, Florida, and Arizona.&#13;
At the present time many of the&#13;
plants have died, some have&#13;
drowned, some have been stolen,&#13;
and some of those which are left&#13;
are infested with tropical insects.&#13;
One of those which was stolen&#13;
was a cactus nursed and owned&#13;
for 32 years by Robert Esser,&#13;
associate professor of life&#13;
science.&#13;
Eugene Gas iokiewicz,&#13;
professor of life science, explained&#13;
that when purchased, the&#13;
plants appeared to be nsi ect free.&#13;
However, put in the environment&#13;
of the LLC with air conditioning&#13;
and heating, the insects have&#13;
emerged. Gasiorkiewicz also said&#13;
that since some of the plants were&#13;
taken from a tropical rain forest&#13;
with limited light and a high&#13;
temperature and humidity they&#13;
cannot be expected to grow the&#13;
same way. The plants, he said,&#13;
were started on a trial and error&#13;
basis and were chosen for diverse&#13;
characteristics, and one could not&#13;
predict the success or failure of&#13;
any plant.&#13;
The plant bay, designed by LLC&#13;
architects, should not be located&#13;
where it is, said Gasiorkiewicz. A&#13;
better locale would have been on&#13;
the other side of the concourse&#13;
where the lighting is more ample.&#13;
When the plants arrived the&#13;
responsibility for their care was&#13;
placed on one individual from the&#13;
Physical Plant who worked with&#13;
the plants during the day. Since&#13;
then the Physical Plant, as well&#13;
as the rest of the University, has&#13;
suffered from budget cuts and&#13;
since June the night crew janitors&#13;
have watered the plants once per&#13;
week.&#13;
Recently Gasiorkiewicz has&#13;
received the revenue to hire two&#13;
students to care for the plants&#13;
and the city of Racine has&#13;
donated two greenhouses to&#13;
Parkside. Gasiorkiewicz expressed&#13;
hope that one greenhouse&#13;
Budweiser&#13;
K I N G o r B E E R S S&#13;
So - you still h aven't t hought o t a gift f or y our&#13;
"Kissing B uddy" o n Valentines D ay.&#13;
Stop and talk t o the Bud girl a t 1 831 55th Street&#13;
for a Budweiser l abel g ift i tem.&#13;
She has s uch things a s. . .&#13;
K H ^&#13;
E JQ&#13;
&gt; tt&#13;
S S L E&#13;
T&#13;
S&#13;
H&#13;
I&#13;
R&#13;
T&#13;
F&#13;
R&#13;
I&#13;
S&#13;
B&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
E&#13;
steins&#13;
PR&#13;
O&#13;
S&#13;
T&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
S&#13;
'&gt;&#13;
r&#13;
/&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Numerous plants such as these in the LLC concourse by the library&#13;
windows have died due to lack of care. Approximately $2000 was spent&#13;
to purchase the plants but when Physical Plant suffered budget cuts&#13;
last spring, it could no longer afford to look after them.&#13;
would be up this summer and&#13;
would be used as a recovery&#13;
clinic for dying plants.&#13;
The students will water, dust,&#13;
and clean up the plants as well as&#13;
label them. Gasiorkiewicz said&#13;
that many students had sought&#13;
him out concerned about the&#13;
welfare of the plants and that any&#13;
SISHT'n&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
"Music for Lovers" •• th at's the name&#13;
ot a popular album — b ut also a great&#13;
gift idea for Valentine's Day. So if your&#13;
favorite guy or chick digs music come&#13;
around to Sight 'n Sound for the latest&#13;
albums and tapes at special discount&#13;
prices.&#13;
If you're a math freak; we've got&#13;
electronic calculators for as low as&#13;
$29.95. Great for doing homework and if&#13;
you haven't got enough bread for one,&#13;
tell the old man you'll let him use it to&#13;
work on his taxes if he'll help you out.&#13;
Now that we got the commercials out&#13;
of the way, let's talk seriously about&#13;
selecting audio gear.&#13;
Let's clear up one misconception,&#13;
right away - all stereo is not hi-fi and all&#13;
hi-fi is not stereo.&#13;
Stereophonic sound is simply sound&#13;
that derives from two separate sound&#13;
sources and is reproduced through two&#13;
or more speakers. This can be done by a&#13;
$19.95 phonograph or a stereo system&#13;
costing hundreds or even thousands of&#13;
dollars. The difference is fidelity - the&#13;
ability of the equipment to reproduce the&#13;
sounds as closely as possible to the way&#13;
they were originally recorded.&#13;
Although we have not reached perfection,&#13;
and probably never will, (sorry,&#13;
Memorex) good equipment is available&#13;
at modest cost.&#13;
Companies like Marantz, Superscope,&#13;
Pioneer Sherwood in receivers; Jensen,&#13;
Cerwin Vega, Rectifinear and AR in&#13;
speakers; Dual, BSR and Garrard in&#13;
turntables haveexcellent units available&#13;
in all price ranges. Also, by buying&#13;
components, you can build your system&#13;
gradually.&#13;
if you are seriously considering the&#13;
purchase of hi-fi gear in the near future,&#13;
the first step is to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the products available.&#13;
Talk with knowledgeable people, read&#13;
the manufacturers' literature and listen&#13;
to the equipment.&#13;
The Society of Audio Consultants has&#13;
published an Audio Primer which is&#13;
most helpful. It regularly sells for $1.25,&#13;
but we'll give a copy free to the first 50&#13;
who come in and mention this ad.&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo - TV&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
Records - Tapes&#13;
21st&amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 'til 6&#13;
student who likes to work with&#13;
plants is welcome to help.&#13;
S OO&#13;
e 5&#13;
2&#13;
a» §&#13;
n ni&#13;
&lt;/&gt; &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 6: Whiteskellar auditions new acts in the&#13;
Whiteskellar at 1 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday. Feb. 6: Shakespeare film festival presents Kurosawa's&#13;
"The Throne of Blood" a Japanese adaptation of Macbeth at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6: PAB movie, "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter" at&#13;
7:30p.m. in GR103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. ?: Third World organizational meeting at 11 a.m. in&#13;
LLC D174.&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 7: Ronald Gottesman, professor of English, will&#13;
present a lecture, "King Kong: Myth, Monster, Movie" CL D105 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. No admission charged.&#13;
Friday, Feb. 8: "Mission Mountain Wood Band" at 9 p.m. in the&#13;
SAB. Tickets are now on sale at the Information kiosk for $1.50.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9: Fencing: UW-Parkside vs UW-Madison, Michigan&#13;
State and Purdue at 10 a.m. in the Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9: Basketball: Parkside vs Grand Valley at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Phy Ed Building. Admission is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Midwest open bike roller race at noon in the Phy&#13;
Ed Building. Admission is $1.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Hockey: Parkside vs Harper at 6 p.m. at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena. Admission charged.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 10: Faculty recital featuring David Littrell and Mary&#13;
Ann Littrell at 4 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
February 14: Fredric Storaska lecture on "Rapes and&#13;
Other Assaults" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Admission is $1.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
• No m inimum&#13;
balance re quired&#13;
• No li mit to t he&#13;
number o f checks&#13;
you w rite&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT F IRST N ATIONAL&#13;
OF R ACINE&#13;
Open y our free ch ecking&#13;
account soon a t&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
MemDer 9&lt; Federal Reserve System Mernoer Federal Deposit In surance Corp&#13;
500 W isconsin A ve. Racine&#13;
Classified&#13;
AFRO DANCE CLASS, also Physical Fitness&#13;
Exercise class. 7:00-7:45 p.m. and 7:45-&#13;
8:15 p.m. respectively. Wed. nights, call&#13;
Mrs. Dowman, 633-3503.&#13;
If anyone knows of any Look Nevada&#13;
bindings and some good 180 CM skis for sale&#13;
please contact Greg 639-1342.&#13;
FOR SALE: Small cabinet stereo, 2&#13;
speakers, good mechanical condition, $50.&#13;
Call 694-1873.&#13;
Personals&#13;
WENDY -- See you last nite. The trio.&#13;
K.W. IN P.S. Can you ioin us for dinner&#13;
tonite? Off campus, we promise. Jane 8.&#13;
Deb.&#13;
CLIO lecture Brief news&#13;
Gottesman Harvard accepts UW-P senior&#13;
to speak&#13;
on&#13;
"King Kong n&#13;
A talk titled "King Kong:&#13;
Myth, Monster and Movie" will&#13;
begin the second semester CLIO&#13;
Association lecture series.&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, Parkside&#13;
professor of English and&#13;
humanities and an internationally&#13;
recognized&#13;
authority on film, will present the&#13;
slide-illustrated lecture at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Feb. 7 in the Classroom&#13;
Building Room 105.&#13;
CLIO lectures, on the&#13;
theme "The Humanities in an&#13;
Industrial Society," are free and&#13;
open to the public. The CLIO&#13;
Association is an international&#13;
organization connected with&#13;
"CLIO: An Interdisciplinary&#13;
Journal of Literature, History&#13;
and the Philosophy of History"&#13;
which is published at Parkside.&#13;
Gottesman, who came to&#13;
Parkside in June, 1972, from&#13;
Rutgers University is author andor&#13;
editor of a number of books on&#13;
film and film-makers and is&#13;
secretary of the Society for&#13;
Cinema Studies.&#13;
He is the recipient of a number&#13;
of awards including an International&#13;
Affairs Center Grant&#13;
to work in Moscow's Central&#13;
State Archives for Art and&#13;
Literature in 1966 and a&#13;
Guggenheim Fellowship in 1970-&#13;
71. He received his Ph.D. degree&#13;
from Indiana University.&#13;
Other CLIO lectures for second&#13;
semester, all at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Classroom Bldg. Room D-lll,&#13;
are: "The Great House in 19th&#13;
Century English Literature" by&#13;
Henry Kozicki, assistant&#13;
professor of English and an&#13;
editor of "CLIO," on Feb. 20;&#13;
"The Rip-Off: A Defense in the&#13;
Context of a World View" by&#13;
Wayne Johnson, associate&#13;
professor of philosophy, on&#13;
March 13; "The Cultural Values&#13;
and Commitments of American&#13;
Businessmen" by Irvin G. Wyllie,&#13;
chancellor and professor of&#13;
history, on April 3; and prizewinning&#13;
essays by Parkside&#13;
students on May 8.&#13;
Mark Leuck, a Parkside senior from Kenosha, has been accepted for&#13;
admission by the Harvard University Law School and plans to begin&#13;
professional studies there next fall. Harvard accepts about 500 law&#13;
students each year out of more than 5,000 applicants. Leuck scored 756&#13;
out of a possible 800 on the standardized Law School Admissions Test&#13;
to place in the top one percent of students tested. He also was accepted&#13;
by the law schools at UW-Madison and Stanford&#13;
University, the only other schools where he applied.&#13;
Sigma Pi collects for March of Dimes&#13;
Sigma Pi fraternity kicked off their drive for the March of Dimes at&#13;
the Parkside-UW-Milwaukee basketball game, collecting $29. Accompanied&#13;
by their "Little Sisters," members of the fraternity caught&#13;
coins in the Sigma Pi banner while the basketball team impressively&#13;
beat UW-M. The fraternity would like to thank all who contributed and&#13;
intends to hold a basketball marathon to collect more money for the&#13;
March of Dimes.&#13;
Stage crew forming for "Harvey"&#13;
The crew sign-up sheet for the next production in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater will be posted on Tom Reinert's office door, CA 240, on&#13;
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of this week. People signing up can&#13;
indicate a preference for lights, props, make-up, costumes, sound,&#13;
stage crew and so on. Assignments will be posted next week and the&#13;
first crew meeting held.&#13;
Third World to meet&#13;
The Third World organization will hold its first meeting of the&#13;
second semester on Thursday, Feb. 7 at 11 a.m. in D174 of the LLC.&#13;
This will be an organizational meeting and all minority students are&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
Business irat invites new members&#13;
Students interested in establishing contacts with business, sales and&#13;
marketing executives are invited to join the National Business&#13;
fraternity, Pi Sigma Epsilon, every Sunday in the Classroom Building&#13;
D105 at 7 p.m.&#13;
Littrell to give cello recital&#13;
Cellist David Littrell will make his second public appearance as a&#13;
member of the music faculty in a 4 p.m. recital on Feb. 10 (Sunday) in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
Littrell and his wife, pianist Mary Ann Littrell, will perform&#13;
Beethoven's 18th Century work, Twelve Variations in G Major on a&#13;
theme from Handel's oratorio, "Judas Maccabaeus," and three 20th&#13;
Century compositions: Prokofiev's Sonata in C Major Op. 119&#13;
Webern's Three Little Pieces Op. 11 and Martinu's Sonata No. 2.&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 1 6 S treet&#13;
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Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
THE STING&#13;
Director George Roy Hill reunites Paul Newman K&#13;
Redford in another cops and robbers nostalgic spoof Butch r A&#13;
and the Sundance Kid are now affable con men oSn^n ™aS5&#13;
't&#13;
S o u t h S i d e i n 1 9 3 6 . H e n r y G o n d o r f ( N e w m a T a&#13;
5&#13;
with his apprentice Johnny Hooker (Redford) a half-million rinii'a^ ?&#13;
UP against an Irish Mafia boss. Gondorf s professional£e sS the&#13;
S murder "" Ho0ker hun&#13;
^ ™lcat&#13;
Hill opens a bag of gimmicks to capture the Chicago of the soc Ufl&#13;
interjects a half dozen illustrations from an early Norman Rockwell&#13;
s c h o o l to i n t r o d u c e t h e f i l m 's s c e n e s . A h e a v y h u e o f g r a n f S t o&#13;
evoke a nostalgic tone. Hill previously used a delicate sepia finish in&#13;
Butch Cassidy, but this result in The Sting is a te^ SacUon as&#13;
unimaginative as the ubiquitous green of Soylent Green. FinaT an&#13;
overkill of wipes and ,ns outs destroys narrative continuity Like an&#13;
amateur freaking out with a zoom lens Hill could not film a transition&#13;
without this peeling or zeroing effect Bon&#13;
Worst of all. Hill's Chicago insults me. 1 have an affectionate and&#13;
persona^feelmg for it. During the Depression crafty Uncle Bruno ran&#13;
bootleg booze and smalltime operations. G-men followed him thrnunh&#13;
World War II. Dad endured the stockyards' stench tX yZ^Antl&#13;
dug the largest collection of rusty nails and bottle caps in the block&#13;
from the alley s asphalt.&#13;
I can suspend my disbelief to accept the historical inaccuracy of the&#13;
numerous NRA posters in the film (in 1935 the Supreme Court ru rf&#13;
the NRA as unconstitutional), but I refuse to allow Hollywood's false&#13;
preconceptions to erase Chicago's greatness-its squalor and scum&#13;
Whfdy City ^ "&#13;
L&#13;
" Stations without graffiti do not exist in the&#13;
Despite Hill's inadequacies The Sting is enjoyable entertainment&#13;
Newman displays a mature self-assuredness in his underplaying. He&#13;
fades into the woodwork, but it is Newman who captures the film's&#13;
warmth and delightfulness, a subtlety which Redford has not yet&#13;
mastered.&#13;
Tonight, Wednesday, Feb. 6 Parkside has two excellent films. At&#13;
7:30 in the Comm-Arts Theater Akira Kurasawa's Throne of B lood, a&#13;
magnificent adapatation of Macbeth, will be shown. Kurasawa's&#13;
conception of Macbeth as a 15th Century Samurai is the best cinematic&#13;
interpretation of Shakespeare's tragedy of conscience and power.&#13;
In Greenquist 103, also at 7:30 tonight, Alan Arkin's outstanding&#13;
performance in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter completes the fine&#13;
double feature. Arkin is a deaf mute whose sense of t ouch influences a&#13;
small Alabama town. His performance as the silent and lonely Mr.&#13;
Singer is truly tender and poignant. Compare Arkin's role with Cliff&#13;
Robertson's Academy Award winning performance in Charley. Both&#13;
Arkin and Robertson were nominated that year as Best Actor, yet I&#13;
still consider Arkin's performance to be distinctly superior.&#13;
SAB to be closed for conce rt se tup&#13;
The Student Activities Building will be closed from 6-8 p.m. on&#13;
Friday to allow for set-up for the Mission Mountain Wood Band concert&#13;
that evening.&#13;
Table tennis playe rs plan pr ac ti ce&#13;
Students interested in playing table tennis are invited to contact&#13;
eitner Omar Amin in GR 341 or Vic Godfrey in the Phy Ed Bldg.&#13;
ractices are at 4:30 p.m. on Sundays, and the first match will be held&#13;
on Feb. 17.&#13;
, «&#13;
II ii PACK SHOP&#13;
5033-6th Ave., Kenosha, Wis. 53140 (414) 654-3351&#13;
With down clothing, sleeping bags, cross country&#13;
skis, t ents, c ompasses, b ackpacks, b ooks,&#13;
compact s toves, a nd more...&#13;
Featuring equipment by:&#13;
M ALPINE DESIGN l#FIW#&#13;
Vets club outlines&#13;
future plans&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Since Parkside Vets Club was the only club to&#13;
receive all the C.C.C. funds it asked for-$1410-&#13;
RANGER talked with its president, Chet Anderson,&#13;
to find out what they are doing as a club and how&#13;
they plan to use the money.&#13;
Vets Club was organized in August of 1972 by Red&#13;
Oberbruner, director of Veterans Affairs, and&#13;
Chuck St. Pierre, who served as its first president.&#13;
The purposes of the club are to provide help for the&#13;
vets and to unite them so they can help each other,&#13;
said Anderson. "You've been out for four years, you&#13;
don't know what to do or where to get your&#13;
benefits...It's mainly to help each other out."&#13;
In answer to the $1410 question many students are&#13;
probably asking, a large share of the money will be&#13;
used to generate funds to pay the $2000 de bt owed&#13;
Jelco Bus Company since last school year when the&#13;
Racine bus operated at a deficit. The remaining&#13;
portion of the budget request will go to support the&#13;
recycling campaign.&#13;
The Racine bus is now self-supporting, but the&#13;
club is undertaking many avenues of fund raising to&#13;
reduce last year's debt. In addition to holding&#13;
dances, they are selling candy, and decided at their&#13;
Jan. 27 meeting to sell "totally recycled"&#13;
stationery. The stationery is totally recycled&#13;
because in addition to being made of recycled&#13;
paper, it comes in a poster instead of a throw-away&#13;
box and does not require an envelope.&#13;
In line with their environment-conscious attitude,&#13;
the Vets Recycling committee, chaired by Dietmar&#13;
Schneider, is investigating the possibility of&#13;
recycling soda cans and considering the purchase of&#13;
a can crusher. They will also sponsor another paper&#13;
drive March 1 and are hoping for better student&#13;
support than they received last semester.&#13;
"We're hoping it will pay for itself, but we don't&#13;
know if it will," said Anderson, "please urge&#13;
everyone to save their papers for us."&#13;
Vets Club meetings are held twice a month at the&#13;
Student Activities Building; officers in&#13;
addition to Anderson are John DeLaO, vice&#13;
president, and Dick Pautzke, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
In order that their 75 members be kept informed&#13;
about such things as new grants and early&#13;
registration, Vets Club publishes a monthly&#13;
newsletter. Other activities include sponsoring the&#13;
car pool program, a toy drive for underprivileged&#13;
children and the Parkside Day Care Center, and an&#13;
August beer party to get the Vets out and inform&#13;
them what benefits are available. They also would&#13;
like to get a book co-op started, but this is still being&#13;
investigated.&#13;
Chet Anderson, left, president of the Vet's Club, and secretary-treasurer Dick Pautzke, prepare to&#13;
conduct a recent Sunday afternoon meeting in the Student Activities Building. Any veteran is&#13;
welcome to become an active member of the group, which is oriented toward campus and membership&#13;
service.&#13;
Str a ight from Las Vegas&#13;
Nationa l Recording Artists&#13;
*******&#13;
Top Ten H it!&#13;
"SUNSHINE RED WINE"&#13;
CRAZY&#13;
ELEPHANT&#13;
at&#13;
2nd National&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road FEB. 8 &amp; 9 Phone 654-0485 &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1974&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. schedule&#13;
IDENTIFICATION REQUIRED FOR USE OF FACILITIES: Effective immediately, inly&#13;
I D. cards that have been validated tor second semester use will be honored.&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-l:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30 pm-2 pm &amp; 3:30-10 pm&#13;
Gym open 10:30 am-1:30 pm &amp; 7:30 pm-lOpm&#13;
Handball courtsopen8:30am-10:30am&amp; 12:30pm-lOpm&#13;
Pool open 11:30 am-l:30 pm 8&lt; 3:30- 6 pm&#13;
Gym open 10:30 am-5 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-5 pm&#13;
Pool open 11 a m-1 pm&#13;
Entire building closes at 5 pm every Friday and Sat. except for special events.&#13;
Fencing meet today - Madison, Mich. State, Purdue 10 am-Gym. Gyms will be closed all day&#13;
today.&#13;
Basketball game tonight - Grand Valley 7:30 pm-JV's at 5:30 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-4 pm only&#13;
Swimming pool open 12:30-4 pm only&#13;
Bike Race in Gym I -12 noon. Other gyms open 2-6:30 pm. Pool 8. Handball courts open 2 pm-10&#13;
pm&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-1';30 pm &amp; 7:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
Pool open 12:30 pm-2 pm 8. 3:30-6 pm&#13;
Wrestling meet tonight - Marquette Univ. 8 pm in gym.&#13;
Gym open 12:30 pm-l:30 pm only&#13;
Track practice in gym 3:30-5:30&#13;
Handball courts open all day except 10:30 am-12:30 pm&#13;
Pool open 11:30 am-1:30 pm 8.6 pm-10 pm&#13;
UW-P 13th in NAIA contest&#13;
Parkside has finished 13th in&#13;
the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
All-Sports Championship for 1972-&#13;
73.&#13;
Ranger teams compiled 84V2&#13;
points in national competition to&#13;
rank 13th nationally. U.S. International&#13;
University of San&#13;
Diego compiled 157V2 points to&#13;
take first place honors, just&#13;
ahead of Eastern New Mexico,&#13;
with 157. UW-Oshkosh had 128 in&#13;
third. Nebraska-Omaha (123)&#13;
and Central Washington State&#13;
(12iy2) rounded out the top five.&#13;
Area 4, composed of NAIA&#13;
schools in District 13 (Minnesota),&#13;
District 14 (Wisconsin),&#13;
District 15 (Iowa), and District 16&#13;
(Missouri), rates as the top NAIA&#13;
area nationally. And Wisconsin,&#13;
with Oshkosh, LaCrosse and&#13;
Parkside all in the top 13, rates as&#13;
the top national district.&#13;
Parkside athletic director&#13;
Wayne Dannehl, who saw Ranger&#13;
squads reach the lofty national&#13;
plateau during his first year on&#13;
the job, praised Parkside athletes&#13;
and coaches for their efforts.&#13;
"I think it shows that the&#13;
student-athletes we have here at&#13;
Parkside rank right up there with&#13;
the nation's best," Dannehl said.&#13;
"It's also a fine reflection of the&#13;
job which our coaching staff has&#13;
done in helping these athletes&#13;
reach their full potential. It's my&#13;
hope that we'll do as well or&#13;
better during the 1973-74 year and&#13;
in succeeding years."&#13;
The Rangers' national ranking&#13;
was based on national finishes by&#13;
teams and individuals in the top&#13;
ten in cross country, wrestling,&#13;
gymnastics, and indoor and&#13;
outdoor track.&#13;
The Winners&#13;
rarKsme cagers shocked UW-M in a 73-59 upset last week in what&#13;
both schools consider a final meeting. Gary Cole (43) led the Ranger&#13;
attack, pumping in 27 points. Chuck Chambliss (25) pushed his career&#13;
total over the 1,000 point mark, scoring 18 p oints.&#13;
Cagers dump UWM&#13;
and Northern Mich.&#13;
Gary Cole poured in 47 p oints&#13;
Saturday afternoon and broke the&#13;
UW-Parkside single game&#13;
scoring record as the Rangers&#13;
edged Northern Michigan 88-86 at&#13;
Marquette, Mich.&#13;
For Parkside, it was the ninth&#13;
win in 13 g ames and raised the&#13;
Rangers' season record to 10-11&#13;
with a game Tuesday night at&#13;
Milton College. A win at Milton&#13;
would give Parkside the chance&#13;
to go over the break-even mark&#13;
for the first time this season with&#13;
a win Saturday night at the&#13;
Physical Education Building,&#13;
over Grand Valley State. Game&#13;
time is 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Cole's 47-point production&#13;
broke the old varsity mark set by&#13;
Eli Slaughter against Grand&#13;
Valley State in the 1969-70 season.&#13;
Cole's previous high was the 31&#13;
points he had against Aquinas&#13;
College nearly two weeks ago.&#13;
Parkside's win over Northern&#13;
Michigan gave the Rangers a&#13;
measure of revenge for the 76-66&#13;
loss suffered at Parkside earlier&#13;
in January. And it followed up a&#13;
tremendous week for Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens and his team&#13;
which saw them upset a major&#13;
college, UW-Milwaukee Tuesday&#13;
at Parkside, 73-59.&#13;
Against NMU, Cole pumped in&#13;
21 field goals on 31 attempts and&#13;
made five of seven from the free&#13;
throw line. He had 22 points in the&#13;
first half and 25 i n the second.&#13;
The big sophomore from Racine&#13;
also pulled down 17 rebounds.&#13;
Parkside and the Wildcats&#13;
were tied at 42 at the half and&#13;
Northern jumped out to a five&#13;
point lead early in the second half&#13;
but the Rangers never let the lead&#13;
get any bigger than that and&#13;
moved into the lead at 65-64 with&#13;
10:30 left in the game when Chuck&#13;
Chambliss hit on a driving layup.&#13;
The lead seesawed until Parkside&#13;
hit eight straight points to open a&#13;
75-70 lead with 6:27 left. Northern&#13;
tied the game at 77 and again at&#13;
79 before taking an 82-80 lead with&#13;
3:16 remaining.&#13;
Cole hit on a free throw with&#13;
1:59 left to reduce NMU's margin&#13;
to one at 82-81 a nd then Chambliss&#13;
made a breakaway layup&#13;
with 1:33 to go as the Rangers&#13;
moved in front, 83-82. A three&#13;
point play by Cole made it 86-82&#13;
before NMU's Kurt Ekberg put&#13;
the Cats back within two at 86-84&#13;
with 43 seconds left.&#13;
A Malcolm Mahone baseline&#13;
shot from 14 feet with 27 seconds&#13;
left moved the Rangers up by&#13;
four again. A Gene Conley layup&#13;
for Northern ended the scoring&#13;
with 13 s econds left.&#13;
Mahone had 17 p oints for the&#13;
Rangers, Chambliss 12, Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic and Joe Hutter five&#13;
and Calvin Denson two.&#13;
Parkside shot 47.5 percent to&#13;
Northern's 54.4 percent but the&#13;
Rangers converted on 10 of 15&#13;
free throws while NMU was able&#13;
to can only 12 of 26 from the&#13;
stripe. NMU outrebounded&#13;
Parkside 46 to 39.&#13;
Against Milwaukee, Cole&#13;
scored 27 p oints as the Rangers&#13;
took a 41-34 half-time lead and&#13;
parlayed it into their first win&#13;
ever over UW-M. Mahone and&#13;
Chambliss were also in double&#13;
figures with 18 points each.&#13;
Chambliss also set Parkside&#13;
history in that game as he scored&#13;
the 1,000th point of his three-year&#13;
career to become the first man in&#13;
UW-P basketball history to reach&#13;
that milestone.&#13;
w MED 1&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
• N mm&#13;
PRODI EMS?&#13;
may oiler RX via&#13;
overseas training&#13;
For the session starting Fall, 1974&#13;
Euromed will assist qualified Amer&#13;
ican students in gaining admissioi&#13;
to recognized overseas medica&#13;
schools.&#13;
And that's just the beginning.&#13;
Since t he language barrier constitute:&#13;
the preponderate difficulty in succeed&#13;
ing at a f oreign school, the Euromei&#13;
program also includes an intensivi&#13;
12 week medical and conversationa&#13;
language course, mandatory for al&#13;
students. Five hours daily, 5 days pe&#13;
week (12-16 weeks) the course i:&#13;
given in the country where the studen&#13;
will attend medical school.&#13;
In addition, Euromed provides stu&#13;
dents with a 12 week intensive cul&#13;
tural orientation program, witl&#13;
American students no w stu dying medi&#13;
cine in that particular country servini&#13;
as counselors.&#13;
Senior or graduate students currentl&#13;
enrolled in an American university ar&#13;
eligible to participate in the Euronlei&#13;
program.&#13;
For application and further&#13;
info rma tion , phone toll free&#13;
(800) 645-1234&#13;
or write,&#13;
Euromed, Ltd.&#13;
170 Old Country Road&#13;
Mineola, N Y. 11501&#13;
Highway 1-94 &amp; 50&#13;
| Open 9:00 A M to 1 A.M. Daily&#13;
| Sandwiches served at all times&#13;
BRATWURST OU R SPECIALITY!&#13;
All Regular Mixed&#13;
DRINKS SO&#13;
live Entertainment Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
ADRIAN S MITH&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Coming Soon TRUC"&#13;
"ZIGGY &amp; T HE ZEU"&#13;
"IDES &amp; SHAMES"&#13;
FEB. 23.&#13;
Cocktail waitress wanted for Fri. 8. Sat&#13;
nites - Apply in person at the BRAT.</text>
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              <text>PSGA grievance committee meets&#13;
Terminations concern students&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
The Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) met last&#13;
Wednesday to hear complaints&#13;
from students about all factions&#13;
of campus life.&#13;
The meeting, co-chaired by&#13;
PSGA senators Mike Hahner and&#13;
Tom Petersen, dealt with two&#13;
major questions.&#13;
The first discussion centered on&#13;
the power and validity of the&#13;
committee and of PSGA itself,&#13;
considering the fact that the&#13;
November (1973) elections have&#13;
been declared invalid and new&#13;
elections are scheduled for&#13;
March. The senators pointed out&#13;
that they and the other officers&#13;
are acting as an interim student&#13;
government.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovic, also known&#13;
as Normal Neophyte, stated that&#13;
according to state law new&#13;
elections must be held within 20&#13;
days of the first week of second&#13;
semester by (February 8), since&#13;
the elections of last November&#13;
have been declared invalid.&#13;
The second major discussion&#13;
concerned the termination of&#13;
three faculty members in particular,&#13;
and the review procedure&#13;
and status of all faculty in&#13;
general. (RANGER contacted&#13;
the three teachers involved for&#13;
permission to print their names.&#13;
One of them declined to be&#13;
identified).&#13;
Anna Marie Hendricks, a&#13;
student, protested the terminations&#13;
of Alan B. Wallace,&#13;
instructor of English, and&#13;
Kenneth A. Holstein, assistant&#13;
professor of Spanish. Hendricks&#13;
has collected almost 300&#13;
signatures on a petition that&#13;
protests Wallace's termination,&#13;
but came to PSGA in the hope of&#13;
"putting a student voice into&#13;
faculty terminations." She feels&#13;
that, "as one student alone," she&#13;
can do nothing.&#13;
Another student, Glenn&#13;
Christensen, protested the termination&#13;
of a faculty member&#13;
who, RANGER later found,&#13;
prefers to remain anonymous.&#13;
"We are losing some great&#13;
faculty and we must do&#13;
something about it," said&#13;
Christensen.&#13;
Senators Hahner and Petersen&#13;
will attempt to obtain a listing of&#13;
the status of all faculty members,&#13;
and also find out what the&#13;
standards are for review of&#13;
faculty. They also plan to make&#13;
the protests known to those in&#13;
authority.&#13;
Other complaints lodged by the&#13;
seven students at the meeting&#13;
included the charge of 5c by&#13;
Canteen for a cup of hot water,&#13;
the inaccuracy of the clocks on&#13;
campus, and the unavailability of&#13;
the PSGA office.&#13;
Since the meeting, Canteen has&#13;
agreed not to charge for hot&#13;
water (if the student brings his or&#13;
her own cup), and the Physical&#13;
Plant is going to check on the&#13;
clocks. The Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee is&#13;
meeting again today (Wednesday)&#13;
in Upper Main Place at&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
Governor to announce&#13;
user fees decision&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1974 Vol. II No. 18&#13;
Agreement reached on&#13;
academic advising&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee met last Friday and&#13;
unanimously approved a&#13;
proposal on academic advising&#13;
which will now be sent on to the&#13;
faculty senate as a recommendation&#13;
to vote on. The&#13;
proposal calls for the two&#13;
academic deans to be responsible&#13;
for advising of students who have&#13;
declared a major, the Dean of&#13;
Students responsible for the&#13;
advising of students who are&#13;
undecided, and a joint effort&#13;
between the offices of the&#13;
academic deans and the Dean of&#13;
Students to advise students who&#13;
have declared an area of interest.&#13;
The proposal was worked out&#13;
by Allen Dearborn, Dean of&#13;
Students, William Moy, Dean of&#13;
the School of Modern Industry&#13;
and Eugene Norwood, Dean of&#13;
the College of Science, and&#13;
Society.&#13;
The academic advising battle&#13;
began with a proposal made by&#13;
Allan Shucard, associate&#13;
professor of English, at a faculty&#13;
senate meeting which called for&#13;
all academic advising to be&#13;
handled through the academic&#13;
Deans' offices with faculty advising.&#13;
&#13;
Shucard said of the new&#13;
recommendation "it could&#13;
conceivably provide an improvement&#13;
in advising if it works&#13;
out." Shucard added that he&#13;
would "probably" withdraw his&#13;
proposal on the senate floor&#13;
saying he has "no commitment to&#13;
any proposal. If we find an&#13;
arrangement that brings better&#13;
advising then that's fine."&#13;
Norwood said at the Academic&#13;
Policies meeting that the new&#13;
agreement is something that the&#13;
three (Norwood, Moy and&#13;
Dearborn) can work with. "The&#13;
staffing and budget is available&#13;
and makes it possible for all of u s&#13;
to do some specific things to&#13;
improve advising." He emphasized&#13;
the need for a formalized&#13;
organizational structure&#13;
to make sure it works.&#13;
Dearborn agreed and said "I&#13;
think we can make it work and it&#13;
will be better for the students.&#13;
We're going to make some&#13;
mistakes but we're going to try."&#13;
Discussion then turned to ways&#13;
in which to get students in for&#13;
advising who have declared only&#13;
an area of interest. None was in&#13;
favor of a mandatory advising&#13;
system, but student Kay&#13;
Sweeney said, "You can't&#13;
register if you owe a $5 parking or&#13;
library fine. However, students&#13;
are allowed to go through the&#13;
registration line completely&#13;
screwing up in their academic&#13;
area without,being stopped."&#13;
Moy suggested that if "we have&#13;
done a good job in writing the&#13;
catalogue and timetable students&#13;
may not need any academic&#13;
advising. Said Lee Applebaum,&#13;
associate dean of the College,&#13;
"Sometimes students don't read&#13;
the catalogue or may not understand&#13;
it. I might add that&#13;
there are faculty who don't read&#13;
it and aren't aware of what it&#13;
says."&#13;
The proposal will be sent to the&#13;
faculty senate whose next&#13;
meeting will be on February 19.&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
A few months ago, Governor&#13;
Patrick Lucey "line vetoed" one&#13;
million dollars of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin system's budget and&#13;
recommended that the&#13;
Universities raise that sum&#13;
through "User Fees." The&#13;
Assembly subsequently has&#13;
overridden the veto and the User&#13;
Fee proposal. The question now&#13;
awaits action by the State Senate.&#13;
User Fees are collected at the&#13;
entrance of the activity or event&#13;
in addition to standard admission&#13;
and segregated fees. Parkside&#13;
would be expected to raise $70,000&#13;
through this system, but one&#13;
campus source said we could&#13;
actually raise only about a tenth&#13;
of that figure.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen&#13;
Dearborn said the primary&#13;
impact of these fees would be in&#13;
the physical education area but&#13;
that they would be used in many&#13;
other areas. Dearborn stated that&#13;
the only advantage of this system&#13;
would be to the tax-payer,&#13;
because the student would be&#13;
paying more of the share for his&#13;
education. Consequently, this is&#13;
undesirable for the students,&#13;
faculty and staff that use these&#13;
facilities and would have to pay&#13;
this User fee. Dearborn further&#13;
stated that "the cost of administration&#13;
would negate&#13;
anything you would save."&#13;
Dearborn said he has information&#13;
from a very reliable&#13;
source that the Governor will&#13;
back down from his original&#13;
proposal. Both the Regents and&#13;
the central administration have&#13;
voiced their opposition to the plan&#13;
and instead have called for&#13;
"economizing in the area of intercollegiate&#13;
athletics." The&#13;
Governor now has on his desk a&#13;
report from the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in opposition to User&#13;
fees. Its impact will be known&#13;
when the Governor gives his&#13;
budget message today before a&#13;
joint session of the legislature,&#13;
when he will announce his&#13;
decision about User fees.&#13;
C II ast of "Harvey&#13;
announced&#13;
The cast of Harvey has been chosen and rehearsals began on&#13;
Monday, Jan. 28. The part of Elwood will be played by Gregory B.&#13;
Gregory, Dr. Sanderson by Marc Harrison, Wilson by Ted Paone, Dr.&#13;
Chumbley by Mark J. Shimkus, Judge Gaffney by Bruce Wagner, E.J.&#13;
Lofgren by Steve Lott, Veta by Beth Collova, Myrtle Mae by Kris&#13;
Simpson, Mrs. Chauvenet by Carrie Ward, Miss Johnson by Laurel C.&#13;
Hiess, Miss Kelly by Jean Duerst, and Mrs. Chumbly by Ilene Levin.&#13;
All persons who tried out for the play but did not get a part are urged&#13;
to take part in the production in some other capacity, according to Ed&#13;
Huck, student coordinator of publicity for the play.&#13;
Advance tickets are now on sale at the Information kiosk for the Feb. 8 appearance of the Mission&#13;
Mountain Wood Band. The group has been called "one of the world's greatest electric blues bands."&#13;
Originally from Missoula, Montana they have travelled throughout the south picking up bluegrass&#13;
techniques from backwoods musicians. Their repertoire ranges from country to folk rock to straight&#13;
rock to bluegrass. A limited number of tickets are available for the event, which is to be held at the&#13;
Student Activities Building. Beer will be 15 cents per glass between 8 and 9 p.m. Tickets are $1.50. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1 974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Sorority discouraged&#13;
but shouldn't give up&#13;
it&#13;
fcw#&#13;
flotrbvpk&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Last week it was announced that the homecoming, set&#13;
for the weekend of Feb. 8, is cancelled. The Interfraternity&#13;
Council which initiated the event and&#13;
began planning it last semester has suffered from internal&#13;
non-cooperation almost from the beginning, with&#13;
much of t he organizational burden falling on the small&#13;
membership of the new sorority.&#13;
"Homecoming" implies an event for which graduates&#13;
return to the campus for a sports event and party, but&#13;
out of 1200 a lumni only a handful responded to the invitation.&#13;
Present students had bought only three tickets&#13;
through last week.&#13;
Numerous changes in plans were made before the&#13;
decision to abandon the event altogether. It was decided&#13;
to lower the price and forego the dinner in hopes of a ttracting&#13;
more students for the game and party, but the&#13;
sorority, discouraged at seeing its efforts amounting to&#13;
nought, felt it could not go through with anything unless&#13;
it had the help of the fraternities and other campus&#13;
organizations. That help was not forthcoming. Hence,&#13;
what could have been a lot of fun for many people has&#13;
withered and died in the sight of apathy.&#13;
The sorority is a small but dedicated group and it is&#13;
sad to see their disillusionment. The Interfraternity&#13;
Council was granted $270 by CCC for homecoming. It&#13;
had arranged for Parkside's impressive Jazz Band to&#13;
play at the event, and the Activities Board had booked&#13;
the Mission Mountain Wood Band as part of the&#13;
weekend's entertainment. The latter group are still&#13;
coming on Friday night (Feb. 8), and the basketball&#13;
team is still playing against Grand Valley on Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
RANGER suggests that perhaps the Interfraternity&#13;
Council could get it together and, at the expense of one&#13;
more change in plans, arrange a simple bash in the&#13;
Student Activities Building after the game, with the Jazz&#13;
Band and beer and free snacks, using its money to rent&#13;
the building and provide the food.&#13;
Since the alumni are apparently disinterested and&#13;
students are notoriously poverty-stricken, such an&#13;
inexpensive evening of partying seems more in order&#13;
anyway. It would take minimal organization and would&#13;
be an event for people now at Parkside, the only cost to&#13;
students being the tickets to the game and later their&#13;
beer.&#13;
We hope all members of the Interfraternity Council&#13;
will consider this suggestion, but even if t hey don't we&#13;
want the sorority to know that it isn't alone in its&#13;
discouragement. RANGER respects their efforts and&#13;
hopes they will survive this hassle and remain concerned,&#13;
involved, do-something students.&#13;
'•Oe VsoaJC&#13;
-Owo-'V NooovL, \au-V oe.&#13;
Wo&lt;L a- \ °~&lt;a^&#13;
Se-\ec.-L\ov\ o-f booVC -&#13;
Wdor vCtL f- S ,&#13;
UlWEJRSl&#13;
or&#13;
O&#13;
&lt;D&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
•&lt;&#13;
*&#13;
"Plagiarize: to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as&#13;
one's own; use (a created production) without cred.ting the source; to&#13;
commit literary theft; present as new and original an idea or product&#13;
derived from an existing source."&#13;
Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary&#13;
There is a letter to the editor in this week's paper which should&#13;
properly be addressed to our readers. It is from Kurt A. Muller and&#13;
was written at my request. I wanted a direet^tement from him&#13;
explaining why a number of people had approached me after reading a&#13;
short story in RANGER last week, claiming they had read it before in&#13;
PLAYBOY. Muller had given us the story to print with his own name&#13;
credited as author (it is a theme he "wrote" for an American&#13;
Language class last semester).&#13;
It is my opinion, after reading the original story by Shel Silverstein&#13;
in the December, 1970 issue of PLAYBOY and comparing it with Mr.&#13;
Muller's version, that "the recesses" of h is mind must not be too deep&#13;
if h e can call up from these "recesses" an almost perfect word-forword&#13;
transcription of th e original article. Aside from the omission of&#13;
three sentences, some modifications in punctuation, and one rewrite of&#13;
a sentence-ending, it is exactly the same story with the same wording&#13;
and not just "similar wording" as Mr. Muller characterizes it in his&#13;
letter.&#13;
Needless to say I and the rest of the staff were appalled when we&#13;
learned of Muller's assinine and galling behavior, and further ired by&#13;
his apparent refusal to acknowledge that anyone might be so intelligent&#13;
as to compare the two stories. To do so can only render his&#13;
letter an insult added to the injury.&#13;
Plagiarism on the part of college students continues to be a problem,&#13;
especially on larger campuses like Madison where it is often&#13;
manifested in the form of purchased term papers. The ethical&#13;
questions here are obvious to most of us who are struggling to make it&#13;
with our own sweat and brainpower. If there were a student court at&#13;
Parkside I would press charges against Kurt Muller, not only as the&#13;
editor whom he deceived but on behalf of all the students who not only&#13;
read the RANGER but compete in the grading system with him. He&#13;
has compromised RANGER'S integrity and offended every decent&#13;
student at Parkside.&#13;
As editor I am ultimately responsible for the content of the paper. I&#13;
accepted on good faith the story Muller submitted just as I did all the&#13;
exceptional student poetry which appeared in our final issue of last&#13;
semester. I hope that all of our readers will excuse me from&#13;
negligence regarding Muller, for as something less than a regular&#13;
reader of PLAYBOY I could not be expected to be aware of the&#13;
existence of the original work.&#13;
I also hope PLAYBOY will absolve RANGER of a ny responsibility&#13;
in this matter. A copy of t his and last week's RANGER, along with a&#13;
letter of ap ology, will be sent to that publication and it as well as the&#13;
true author of "The End" are, of course, free to pursue the issue if they&#13;
wish. The letter will explain RANGER'S lack of knowledge and intent,&#13;
and we'll hope for the best!&#13;
x\ A&#13;
4-c The ParkskteThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibrarvLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The&#13;
^&#13;
arkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on anv subject of&#13;
interest to students faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
hS wHhhSrt&#13;
0nenUrn&#13;
^r a&#13;
"&#13;
d student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
pri^t any letters ^ " r6SerVe the Tight t0 refuse t0&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR! Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch. Michael Olsiyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
warn &#13;
THe&#13;
PACK SHOP&#13;
5033-6th Ave., Kenosha, Wis. 53140 (414) 654-3351&#13;
With down clothing, sleeping b ags, cross country&#13;
skis, t ents, c ompasses, b ackpacks, b ooks,&#13;
compact s toves, a nd more...&#13;
Featuring equipment b y:&#13;
ALPINE DESIGN LAFUMA&#13;
CflMP 7 CIIDCKA OPTIMUS&#13;
SVEA tU,M SUVA&#13;
Wednesday, Jan 30, 1974 THE PARKS IDE RANGER&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974,&#13;
your paper published a short&#13;
story by me, entitled, "The End."&#13;
Basically a story of God's entertainment&#13;
of 'the thought of&#13;
ending the world, it was derived&#13;
from an article by Shel Silverstein,&#13;
Playboy Magazine _ 1970,&#13;
with the same central idea, and&#13;
title, along with similar wording.&#13;
While my intention was not to&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Imagine if you will, the science&#13;
dept. here and at other universities&#13;
teaching courses in&#13;
Alchemy and telling their&#13;
students this knowledge is important&#13;
to them as chemists and&#13;
physicists. Or having Chariots of&#13;
the Gods? by Erich Von Daniken&#13;
be required reading for Anthropology&#13;
and Geology classes.&#13;
But here and everywhere else&#13;
the bulk of material in&#13;
psychology and often sociology&#13;
courses consists of unproven&#13;
theories, Freudian dogma, explanatory&#13;
fictions, subjective&#13;
observation, and information&#13;
useful to professors in their&#13;
research and to students meeting&#13;
requirements, but seldom useful&#13;
to those being studied. The&#13;
following is one of many&#13;
examples I've run into in psych&#13;
and soc classes: "Girls, by&#13;
contrast, although expressing a&#13;
complementary disdain for boys,&#13;
nevertheless carry along a&#13;
romantic vision of d omesticity in&#13;
which they picture themselves as&#13;
brides and even as mothers and&#13;
housewives, but mated to misty&#13;
figures bearing no resemblance&#13;
to the grubby, uncouth boys they&#13;
know in real life. In the same&#13;
vein, girls of this age may enjoy&#13;
"love" movies, whereas boys are&#13;
plagiarize Mr. Silverstein's work,&#13;
I may have inadvertently&#13;
brought about a close resemblance&#13;
while merely trying to&#13;
provide some entertainment to&#13;
the weekly readers of the&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
I sincerely hope that no one was&#13;
offended by this act, and, that the&#13;
RANGER will not be held&#13;
responsible for something that it&#13;
had no knowledge of, and, that I&#13;
volubly disgusted by them. It&#13;
should be stressed that many&#13;
mature young women enter&#13;
marriage in the spirit of the&#13;
young girl's daydreams, with&#13;
almost any presentable male cast&#13;
in the role of groom, and with the&#13;
focus on an elaborate nuptial&#13;
ceremony and reception, with&#13;
what comes later left in the vague&#13;
realm of 'happily ever after'."&#13;
This passage came from a section&#13;
on sex differences and roles,&#13;
in Childhood &amp; A dolescence page&#13;
371 2nd paragraph. Similar&#13;
beliefs are taught to thousands of&#13;
students in countless psych and&#13;
soc classes, all justified by&#13;
"research" and observation.&#13;
Frequent use of undefinable&#13;
phrases and assinine&#13;
overgeneralizations appear in&#13;
this and other books on related&#13;
matter.&#13;
Another example: "The sex&#13;
cleavage shows up too in attitudes&#13;
toward pets. Boys and&#13;
girls both love animals, but with&#13;
a difference. Girls typically love&#13;
puppies and kittens, which some&#13;
would interpret as an expression&#13;
of a maternal instinct, and such&#13;
relatively inert • creatures as&#13;
guinea pigs, rabbits, fish (the&#13;
heroic measures some girls will&#13;
take to keep guppies from eating&#13;
their young are a wonder to&#13;
PSGA GRIEVANCE AND CLEARINGHOUSE COMMITTEE&#13;
Meeting t oday&#13;
Jan. 3 0 2:30 pm UpperMainplace&#13;
NOW PAVING 5.4*&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
UNION&#13;
0&#13;
(Compounds Annually to 5.51%)&#13;
ON REGULAR&#13;
PASSBOOK&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:&#13;
II.W. Parkside ~ Room 219. Tallent Hall&#13;
ISO W. Chestnut St.. B urlington&#13;
5200 Washington Ave.. R acine&#13;
You can't miss us now. . . "&#13;
ge (Dltie J§&gt;toeet ^Roppe&#13;
did not intentionally plagiarize,&#13;
but may have retained in the&#13;
recesses of my mind when&#13;
writing this article.&#13;
In the future, I shall be more&#13;
careful, and continue to look up to&#13;
the RANGER for its maintenance&#13;
of high journalistic quality.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Kurt A. Muller&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Editor's note: "The Editor's&#13;
Notebook" this week provides&#13;
further information on this&#13;
matter.&#13;
behold), and parrots in all their&#13;
varieties. Boys, by contrast, like&#13;
dogs, who can serve as companions&#13;
and stunt artists. Boys&#13;
used to like horses, perhaps in&#13;
identification with cowboy&#13;
heroes, but seem to have transferred&#13;
their affections to&#13;
motorcycles and motorcars.&#13;
Girls on the other hand, love&#13;
horses to the point of mania,&#13;
collecting pictures and figurines&#13;
and begging for riding lessons.&#13;
Girls have been known to select a&#13;
college because it had its own&#13;
stables. Some psychoanalysts&#13;
have interpreted the girl's affection&#13;
for horses as an expression&#13;
of the masculine protest&#13;
and an accompanying penis envy&#13;
(see p. 178). In this view, control&#13;
over such a powerful creature&#13;
would be a symbolic subordination&#13;
(and perhaps&#13;
castration) of the male." pp. 371-&#13;
372 same book.&#13;
We are told this will be useful&#13;
as we teach, counsel, and continue&#13;
our "education." These&#13;
teachings are an outrage to all&#13;
reasoning people who seek out&#13;
factual information of t heir world&#13;
and its people- If we are to be fed&#13;
fiction, let it be called that. I want&#13;
useful and fairly accurate&#13;
material: I paid dearly for it.&#13;
David Myer&#13;
Kenosha senior&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Parkside Activities Boai&#13;
(PAB) arranged a fine pe&#13;
formance for us Wednesda;&#13;
January 23. Bob Rohan's song&#13;
and the guitar arrangements fc&#13;
both Bob and Larry were a\&#13;
preciated by all who were then&#13;
I'm hoping that the PAB wi&#13;
have Bob and Larry here agai&#13;
real soon.&#13;
Thank you PAJE&#13;
Harry Dingfelde&#13;
Racin&#13;
&lt; —4&#13;
m a;&#13;
C/jm&#13;
m QQ&#13;
mm GO 2 S3 H H&#13;
5)1 m ^ m&#13;
m 2 GO&#13;
2 CD s 30 H0 • mm&#13;
r&#13;
C&#13;
^ I&#13;
•H 3&#13;
in rr, I U CO 3 i3i O"&#13;
10 A.M. - 4 P.M.&#13;
DAILY&#13;
"Main Concourse&#13;
between Greenquist&#13;
and LLC"&#13;
FRI. FEB. 1-8:00p.m.&#13;
SUN. FEB. 3 -7:30P.M&#13;
ADMISSION 75c&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
I.D .'S R E Q U I R ED &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE R ANGER Wednesday, Jan . 30, 1974&#13;
Robert Ulbricht (above) is a licensed animal caretaker. The&#13;
animals he takes care of are white mice and rats. These animals are&#13;
kept m a university-owned house located on County Trunk JR It is&#13;
called, naturally, the Animal House.&#13;
TT.K TUH G H°&#13;
USe haS 136611 in fuU&#13;
°P&#13;
eration for three years and&#13;
Ulbricht, who has a BS degree in biology from Whitewater, has been&#13;
the caretaker for that same length of time.&#13;
The House is funded mostly by the university and partly by the&#13;
Atomic Energy Commission as part of an immunology proiect that it&#13;
supports at Parkside.&#13;
These white rats are only three of the some 400 a nimals that now&#13;
occupy the House. There is a constant turnover in the population at the&#13;
House: just this week, 50 female rats will be used by immunology&#13;
students. Last month, there were 165 rats involved in projects, and 200&#13;
animals were used last year in Racine's Sickle Cell Anemia project.&#13;
Life science and psychology students use the animals for experiments,&#13;
as do instructors. The animals are also available for independent&#13;
study projects.&#13;
At one time, there were as many as 1500 animals at the House, but&#13;
there were also three students working with Ulbricht. The House is&#13;
now suffering severe budget cuts, so Ulbricht can't hire student help.&#13;
"Mouse House" is habitat&#13;
for furry four hundred&#13;
RANGER photos by A l len&#13;
Fredericksen&#13;
Ulbricht holds a young rat which has just been weaned from its&#13;
mother. In his three years at the House, Ulbricht has never been&#13;
bitten.&#13;
The animal caretaker has many, many duties. There is the day-today&#13;
care, of course: filling all food bins and water bottles. Then all the&#13;
cages must be changed and washed twice a week, and water'bottles&#13;
must be changed and sanitized once a week. In addition to all of this&#13;
Ulbricht takes activity wheel measurements, records weights takes&#13;
urine samples, conducts scheduled mating, weans and rehouses the&#13;
offspring, gives injections, keeps file cards up to date, and assists in&#13;
experiments In general, Ulbricht sees to it that the House operates&#13;
smoothly and efficiently. "It's a seven-day-a-week job," he said.&#13;
residence^ The'ra °&#13;
n&lt;L°&#13;
f ^ three ma&#13;
J&#13;
or rooms in the former&#13;
are some rats in fhe 'larger m°&#13;
S&#13;
"&#13;
y miCe&#13;
' th&#13;
°&#13;
Ugh there&#13;
certairfume^urinp^h si™ulat&#13;
^&#13;
d nig&#13;
bt system, which means that at a&#13;
S hght eom&#13;
d&#13;
e&#13;
UJ on *:&#13;
hite flourescent lights go off and a&#13;
scientist to measure K f exP&#13;
lain&#13;
ed that this system allows the&#13;
rodents) without th'p n Vi y rat6S of nocturnal animals (such as&#13;
SndSS exlr lt P™bl6™ ot g&#13;
etti«g "P at two in the morning to&#13;
lightTn the rcZ ^fn;&#13;
nCe&#13;
i iriSCS&#13;
°&#13;
f rodents&#13;
' eyes are red&#13;
-&#13;
the red&#13;
animals. &gt;ltered out and the room appears dark to the&#13;
understrictreeulatf^nh ^&#13;
eilsed by the federal government and is&#13;
Hh&#13;
oe&#13;
uLn&#13;
Sfc^t^ -'i/-med&#13;
C&#13;
a&#13;
y&#13;
ir^ th^sTeaTo^^t^&#13;
con, recycled air 5 '"T &#13;
All who applied Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1974 THE PARKS"DE RANGER 5&#13;
Eight students accepted by med schools&#13;
Eight Parkside Pre-med&#13;
students have applied to and been&#13;
accepted by both the Madi§on&#13;
Medical School and the Medical&#13;
College of Wisconsin, which is in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Four of the students have&#13;
decided to attend Madison; they&#13;
are James Wishau, Lisa Lichter,&#13;
Michael Rizzo, and Hugh Gately.&#13;
The other four will attend the&#13;
Medical College of Wisconsin.&#13;
Those students are O'Brian C.&#13;
Smith, James Caya, Bruce&#13;
Green, and Christine Miller.&#13;
This is the second year that any&#13;
sizeable number of pre-med&#13;
students from Parkside has&#13;
applied to medical schools. Last&#13;
year, seven students applied and&#13;
all seven were accepted. That&#13;
was the first class of pre-meds&#13;
who had been counseled in their&#13;
field for all four of their college&#13;
years.&#13;
All of the above eight students&#13;
submitted their applications to&#13;
the medical schools between July&#13;
1 and September of 1973, which is&#13;
the proper time to do so. Three of&#13;
the applicants (Wishau, Smith,&#13;
and Caya) asked for early&#13;
decision. This means that the&#13;
applicants have already decided,&#13;
at the time of application, where&#13;
they want to attend medical&#13;
school and are confident that&#13;
their grades and test scores are&#13;
good enough to get them into the&#13;
school they request. Those applicants&#13;
who request early&#13;
decision are considered by the&#13;
schools before any of the other&#13;
applicants and are notified of&#13;
their acceptance or nonacceptance&#13;
before anyone else.&#13;
The first notification date after&#13;
early decision notification was&#13;
December 15, 1973, a nd all of the&#13;
remaining five were notified of&#13;
their acceptance at one or the&#13;
other or both of the Wisconsin&#13;
medical schools on that date.&#13;
All of the students are now in&#13;
their senior year at Parkside and&#13;
have been counseled throughout&#13;
their college career by Anna M.&#13;
Williams, associate professor of&#13;
life science and advisor to the&#13;
pre-med club.&#13;
Pre-med students pictured above are: Top row,1. to r.,Lisa Lichter,&#13;
Bruce Green, and Christine Miller. Bottom row, Michael Rizzo, James&#13;
Caya, O'Brian Smith, and Anna Marie Williams (pre-med advisor).&#13;
Not pictured are Hugh Gately and James Wishau.&#13;
Psychic entertains Parkside audience&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
Does ESP exist? On Jan. 23, Gil Eagles gave a&#13;
performance here to prove that it does. Before his&#13;
show, he talked with students to answer any&#13;
questions they might have concerning ESP or&#13;
hypnosis.&#13;
One of the students asked the psychic how old he&#13;
was when he discovered he had ESP. Eagles answered,&#13;
"I did not discover I had ESP. As I&#13;
remember, I came to a gradual understanding of&#13;
what I had. At about the age of 12 I first heard the&#13;
term ESP. Friends told me that I had it. When I&#13;
went to England, a psychics master was doing ESP&#13;
tests and I scored very highly."&#13;
Another student asked if he could tell the future,&#13;
to which he responded, "Yes, but I don't get involved&#13;
in that. The future is strictly speculaton."&#13;
One question was, what is ESP or telepathy?&#13;
Eagles replied, "I don't know." One question&#13;
concerning hypnosis was whether or not you can&#13;
hypnotize yourself. In answering that question, he&#13;
said, "There is no such defined state as hypnosis .&#13;
Hypnosis is the power of suggestion." Eagles then&#13;
induced self-hypnosis and said that his left hand&#13;
would feel no pain. He took a match and moved it&#13;
closely around his hand, singing the hair on it. Then&#13;
he dramatically ground a cigarette into the palm of&#13;
his hand.&#13;
One student asked why Eagles did not use his gift&#13;
for humanitarian purposes. Eagles replied that it&#13;
was not a "gift" but an ability. "I enjoy taking the&#13;
talent I have and exploiting it onstage, having fun. .&#13;
.to have you laugh, and to amaze all. I wish more&#13;
people were less humanitarian and more selfish,&#13;
would want to help others less. The wars and trouble&#13;
in the world are probably because someone wanted&#13;
to help someone else."&#13;
At the evening performance, the first area that&#13;
Eagles went into was ESP. He had himself blindfolded&#13;
by putting two silver dollars over his eyes&#13;
and covering them with surgical tape, and over that&#13;
he pat a black leather blindfold. He had two&#13;
volunteers choose a colored marker and write a&#13;
word on a black poster. Eagles then proceeded to&#13;
guess the color and the word. The volunteers then&#13;
took items from the audience such as shoes, wallets,&#13;
even a toy mouse, all of which were correctly&#13;
identified. He had trouble with one item, though-the&#13;
psychic described it as a mirror ; it was a picture of&#13;
himself.&#13;
There was a short break, then the hypnosis&#13;
started. Promising not to embarrass anyone,&#13;
Eagles called for 13 volunteers. About 30 people&#13;
mobbed the stage. When he had narrowed the&#13;
number to 13, Eagles hypnotized them. To&#13;
demonstrate to the audience that his subjects were&#13;
under control, he took a girl to the center of the&#13;
stage and told her she would feel no pain in her&#13;
cheek or hand. He held a match to her hand and&#13;
ground a pin into her cheek.&#13;
The psychic then had the group do or become&#13;
various things, such as typewriters and rose bushes.&#13;
Next he informed them that they were going to view&#13;
a new, scientifically-designed movie, geared to&#13;
bring out certain emotions. Eagles told them thfey&#13;
were seeing a comedy and they started howling with&#13;
laughter. When they were told a tragedy was being&#13;
shown, some started crying. Finally a romantic&#13;
movie was "shown", and they fell into each other's&#13;
arms. One couple began necking enthusiastically.&#13;
At one point he had them take off their right shoe&#13;
and put it in their hand. Upon waking they would&#13;
notice that their shoe was gone but would not find it&#13;
until he blew the whistle. They would realize then&#13;
that it was in their hand. They started frantically&#13;
searching for their shoes, one student accused&#13;
another in the audience of having it and grabbed&#13;
him by the foot and turned him upside down on the&#13;
seat to see if he was wearing it. When the whistle&#13;
blew they returned sheepishly to their chairs.&#13;
Eagles next selected three people ~ one to be a&#13;
martian, another a reporter from the RANGER, the&#13;
third to be an interpreter, and they proceeded to&#13;
conduct an interview.&#13;
One subject under hypnosis did an imitation of&#13;
Kung Fu. He told the audience the story of why he&#13;
had to flee his homeland and gave what many&#13;
considered a surprisingly good demonstration of&#13;
Kung Fu.&#13;
Upon telling the audience he would have to stop&#13;
the performance because the buses would stop&#13;
running soon, Eagles was told they would walk and&#13;
wanted him to continue.&#13;
For the final scene Eagles told one student, David&#13;
Daniels, that whenever he heard Eagles stamp his&#13;
feet three times he would leap out of his chair,&#13;
having felt an electric shock given by his friend in&#13;
the audience, Dave Dearborn. The first time he did&#13;
this, Daniels jumped from his chair, looked around&#13;
the audience, and went after Dearborn, demanding&#13;
to know why he had given him the shock. The second&#13;
time he grabbed Dearborn by the collar and told&#13;
him not to do it again. The third time it happened&#13;
Daniels leapt out of his chair and tore off across the&#13;
stage. Meanwhile, Dearborn, apparently thinking&#13;
that discretion was the better part of valor, fled the&#13;
theater.&#13;
This act was billed as pure entertainment and did&#13;
not teach about hypnosis or ESP, nor did Gil Eagles&#13;
seek to give psychic help to anyone. Some people&#13;
later complained that this was a disappointment but&#13;
most of the audience appeared to this reporter to&#13;
have enjoyed themselves and been highly amused.&#13;
2 TEXAS-SIZE SAVINGS&#13;
AT&#13;
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IN&#13;
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SAVE 50% i ,&#13;
JA { 5010 7th Are. }&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
New "l|&#13;
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"Open 365 days a year"&#13;
Phone 6 54-3578 Truck On&#13;
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FEB. 1 &amp; 2; F RI. &amp; SAT. O NLY!&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
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(form erly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 G reenbay R oad Phone 6 54-0485 &#13;
6 ^eclriesdayj Jan^lo,' 1974&#13;
Brief news&#13;
..UW-P services directory available&#13;
The 1974 edition of the Parkside Community Services Directory now&#13;
is available at the Parkside Public Information Office and at public&#13;
libraries in Racine, Kenosha, Burlington, Union Grove, Waterford and&#13;
Lake Geneva.&#13;
The directory includes a speakers bureau and a performing arts&#13;
directory listing programs available to area civic, cultural social&#13;
service and professional groups.&#13;
The speakers bureau lists 67 faculty and academic staff members&#13;
available to speak on almost 200 different topics and the performing&#13;
arts directory lists a number of faculty and student musical programs&#13;
poetry readings, film programs and sports demonstrations&#13;
The volume also includes a translation service listing 12 foreign&#13;
languages-Arabic, Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian&#13;
Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish and Swedish-in which staff&#13;
members are fluent.&#13;
Physical facilities available to off-campus groups at Parkside and&#13;
campus tour information also is detailed along with Library-Learning&#13;
resources for public use.&#13;
The directory also contains listings of professors available to advise&#13;
business, industry and governmental units in the areas of their expertise&#13;
and a similar listing of resource professors for the media.&#13;
Yearbook schedules meeting&#13;
The Parkside yearbook will be holding its first meeting of the new&#13;
semester on February 5,1974 in CL 322 at 11:30 a.m.&#13;
interested students wanting to become involved with the next&#13;
yearbook should attend this meeting. If you can't attend, contact&#13;
either Dawn Williams, 637-5474, Bruce Wagner, 552-9462, or Milan&#13;
Miskovic, 634-4810.&#13;
Resource people from all of the areas mentioned on the student&#13;
activities questionnaire will be there to answer any and all questions&#13;
regarding the yearbook. y questions&#13;
Homecoming cancelled&#13;
The Interfraternity Council has announced that homecoming,&#13;
scheduled for Feb. 8,9, and 10, has been cancelled. A spokesperson for&#13;
Delta Gamma Phi, the sorority who originated the idea, blamed&#13;
organizational problems and lack of interest for the cancellation.&#13;
Extension offers courses in Chinese&#13;
Mandarin Chinese, beginning and intermediate language courses,&#13;
will be taught by Bessie Tang as a University of Wisconsin-Extension&#13;
course this semester. Mrs. Tang studied at Taiwan Normal University&#13;
and has her master's degree from Columbia University.&#13;
The beginning Chinese class will meet on Tuesdays, beginning&#13;
January 29, 6 :30 p.m.; and the intermediate Chinese on Saturdays,&#13;
beginning February 2. Both classes will meet once a week for 10&#13;
weeks, at the Kenosha Campus. There is a $25 fee for each course.&#13;
Each session will center on a topic related to Chinese culture and&#13;
customs, and will emphasize vocabulary and oral work through&#13;
pronunciation, reading aloud and conversation.&#13;
For further information contact University Extension at (553)2312.&#13;
Vets ask for paper&#13;
The Vets Club will be sponsoring a paper drive on March 1 to&#13;
generate money for the Racine bus service and to initiate more&#13;
recycling projects. Students, staff, and faculty are asked to save&#13;
papers for the drive.&#13;
Students earn straight A averages&#13;
Ninety-one students with perfect 4.0 (straight-A) gradepoint&#13;
averages head the Dean's List for first semester.&#13;
Students named to the Dean's List must carry at least 12 credits and&#13;
earn at least a 3.25 (B-plus) average. Eighteen of the total of 564&#13;
students on the fall semester list achieved scholastic honors while&#13;
carrying 20 or more credits, including one student, Dennis Kehoe of&#13;
Kenosha, who scored a perfect 4.0 average on 29 credits. Five of the&#13;
straight A students have cumulative averages of 4.0 on more than one&#13;
semester of work.&#13;
Classified&#13;
If anyone knows of any Look Nevada&#13;
bindings and some good 180 CM skis for sale&#13;
please contact Greg 639-1342.&#13;
Typing done in my home. Call Nancv 619&#13;
2667.&#13;
Interested in applications of Hypnotism in&#13;
law? Help design experiments or be ;&#13;
subject. Call Steve, 652-6123, evening&#13;
weekends. *&#13;
WANTED: Senior Chemistry major toi&#13;
conduct experiment(s). Includes qualitative&#13;
analysis. Contact Ted, c-o Ranger, LLC&#13;
D194.&#13;
WANTED: Journalism major or someone&#13;
"with the ability to write clear legible news&#13;
stories on a very part-time basis. Small&#13;
weekly in Zion, III. needs occasional help in&#13;
covering various municipal functions,&#13;
usually in the evening. Pay isn't good and the&#13;
assignments are sometimes dry but the&#13;
experience is great. Call 312-872-4572 for&#13;
details. Ask for Shirley.&#13;
Proof reader-TY PI ST needed! Call 552-8859&#13;
on Thursday after 7 p.m. and ask for Roger.&#13;
Girl wanted to share 3 bedroom apt. Near&#13;
Parkside via Racine. Rent $100 per mo. 637-&#13;
2080 after 6 p.m. Price.&#13;
PAPERS NOTARIZED on the spot. See&#13;
Betty Briggs, Business Management major,&#13;
evening classes 6:15-9:15. 634-2886.&#13;
INCOME TAX PREPARATION. Ex&#13;
perienced and reasonable. Discount to&#13;
Parksiders. Call 633-0416 for appointment.&#13;
FOR SALE: Stereo FM-AM car radio. Works&#13;
great. 654-0030 evenings.&#13;
AQUARIUM WITH FISH and accessories&#13;
Cheap. Call 552-8584. Ask for Jeff.&#13;
Wr&#13;
o9 Urn&#13;
h* GfcS C-D&#13;
QBm &lt;C&#13;
3 Qu&#13;
ooo&#13;
&amp; fit&#13;
Tox&#13;
&#13;
—J&#13;
ymmmm Q2 CJ&gt;&#13;
OS&#13;
Q_ 3E&#13;
ooo&#13;
Children's lit, taught bv Extension&#13;
Any student that needs to take Introduction to Children's Literature&#13;
and has a schedule conflict may take it through University Extension&#13;
correspondence as the class has now been reinstated. Contact the&#13;
University Extension Office, 206 Tallent Hall or call 553-2312.&#13;
Collections taken for Jomcc Fine f.mrl&#13;
The Department of Safety and Security, on behalf of Parkside, is&#13;
collecting donations for the widow and three children of slain police&#13;
officer Detective James Fine. Detective Fine of the Racine Police&#13;
Department was shot and killed January 11 while answering a routine&#13;
Tt f/ZoLo mi&#13;
ribUti&#13;
°&#13;
nS throug&#13;
hout the Racine community have&#13;
totaled $2,643. Those interested in raising that total are asked to stop&#13;
by the Information kiosk no later than Friday, February 1,1974.&#13;
Income tax seminar here&#13;
Do you know what deductions you can make? Should you claim one&#13;
dependent or none? What forms are the right ones for you: 1040,1040A&#13;
No. 1, 1A, short forms, long forms, schedules A, C, or E7 These and&#13;
other questions will be answered at the second annual Income Tax&#13;
Help Seminar sponsored by Alpha Kappa Lambda Fraternity. All&#13;
questions will be fielded by Claude D. Renshaw, lecturer of business&#13;
management, on Wednesday, February 6 from 10:30-1:30 or Harold W&#13;
^&#13;
e&#13;
f&#13;
eoA ass&#13;
;&#13;
st&#13;
^nt p&#13;
rofessor of business, on Thursday, February 7 from&#13;
11-2:30 in LLC-D174.&#13;
Federal and state income tax forms and all W-2 slips will be needed&#13;
Extra forms and calculators will be available.&#13;
Olsen heads Clinical Experience&#13;
Dwayne G. Olsen, assistant professor of education, has been named&#13;
to head the Clinical Experience program for teacher trainees.&#13;
Education Division Chairman Paul Kleine, who made the appointment,&#13;
said "the clinical program represents one of the most&#13;
crucial aspects of teacher training, and Professor Olsen has both the&#13;
professional background and personal interest in students to handle&#13;
these new responsibilities well."&#13;
Clinical experience includes the various student teaching, intern&#13;
and field experience programs at Parkside. It has been coordinated by&#13;
Marilyn Scamman, who is leaving because her husband was recently&#13;
appointed Superintendent of Schools at Stevens Point.&#13;
Olsen, 39, earned his Ph. D. and taught in the department of&#13;
secondary education at Iowa State University from 1970 until joining&#13;
the UW-P faculty last fall. He has taught in several Iowa and South&#13;
Dakota secondary schools since 1954, including Ankeny, Iowa where&#13;
in 1968 h e was named Outstanding Young Educator by the'Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commerce and Teacher of the Year.&#13;
He has been active in professional education groups at the local&#13;
state and national level, has several scholarly publications to his&#13;
credit, and has been a member of examining teams for the National&#13;
Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education. His doctoral&#13;
research focused on comparisons of experimental and traditional&#13;
approaches to preparing teachers.&#13;
A native of Estherville, Iowa, Olsen received his B.A. from&#13;
Augustana (S.D.) College and his M.A. from the University of Northern&#13;
Colorado. He is married and lives in Racine.&#13;
Openings in Child Care Center&#13;
I he Parkside Child Care Center has announced that it's license has&#13;
been increased, resulting in more open spots for children of Parkside&#13;
students. Openings exist for both the morning and afternoon and&#13;
urther information is available by calling the center at 552-8322. '&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
ONE BEDROOM RANCH STYLE&#13;
TWO BEDROOM RANCH STYLE&#13;
TWO BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE&#13;
THREE BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE&#13;
PriC?Frt.?^^rSf&#13;
0&#13;
.&#13;
nSsh&#13;
#&#13;
'rr&#13;
5 CarPe&#13;
"&#13;
n9 ' EleC"'&#13;
C rfm9&#13;
e and self-cleaning oven&#13;
^L°&#13;
U&#13;
U&#13;
RF&#13;
0RAT0R FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
Models also open weekdays 1 to 8&#13;
Or by personal showing at your convenience&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE 1—552-9339&#13;
PARKSIDE REALTY IMC.&#13;
Developed and Built bv U S General. Inc &#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30: Dave Duffek at 1 p^m. in the Whiteskellar No&#13;
admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30: PSGA Grievance and Clearinghouse Committee&#13;
meeting at 2:30 p.m. in upper main place. All students&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30: PAB movie "Fanny Hill" at7:30 p.m. in Gr 103&#13;
Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 31: Wrestling-UW-P vs. UW-Milwaukee at 8 p m in&#13;
the phy Ed Bldg. Admission charged.&#13;
y&#13;
' '&#13;
Friday, Feb. 1: PAB movie "Catch-22" at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 2: Wrestling-UW-P vs. Northern Michigan at 3 d m&#13;
in the Phy Ed Bldg. Admission charged.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 2: Track and Field—Parkside Indoor Invitational at&#13;
park High School in Racine.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 2: Dance sponsored by the Parkside Hockey Club at&#13;
9 p.m. in the SAB. Admission is $1.50. Parkside I.D. and proof of age&#13;
required.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 3: PAB movie "Catch-22" at 7:30 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is 75*cents.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 3: Hockey--UW-P vs. Western Illinois University at 6&#13;
p.m. at the Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Monday, Feb. 4: Movie "Lady from Shanghai" at 7:30 p.m in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6: Whiteskellar auditions for new acts at 1 p m in&#13;
the Whiteskellar.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6: PAB movie "The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter" at&#13;
7:30p.m. in Gr 103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Feb. 7: Ronald Gottesman, Professor of English will present a&#13;
lecture "King Kong: Myth, Monster, Movie" Cl D105 at 7:30 p.m No&#13;
admission charged.&#13;
Feb. 8: Mission Mountain Wood Band at 8 p.m. in SAB. Tickets on&#13;
sale at the Information Kiosk.&#13;
Feb. 10: Faculty recital with David and Mary Ann Littrell. Comm&#13;
Arts Theater at 4 p.m.&#13;
AH it ems for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
oiiio's&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
FOR PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
7T UW PARKSIDE&#13;
EASTER IN ATHENS&#13;
APRIL 12-21. 1974&#13;
SJAA p|us $2° tax&#13;
#• $JUi &amp; s ervice based on&#13;
™T»Bm B ? to a room&#13;
plus $20 tax&#13;
&amp; service based on&#13;
2 to a room&#13;
include&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 n ights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
• 2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sightseeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz.&#13;
• Tour escort&#13;
« Tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVELCENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
Students, faculty, and others&#13;
to present numerous concerts&#13;
The spring concert calendar&#13;
offers a diverse range of&#13;
programs from the classical&#13;
composers to contemporary&#13;
works by Parkside students.&#13;
The 23 programs are open to&#13;
the public. All are free except the&#13;
Jazz Ensemble concert on March&#13;
31.&#13;
Faculty recitals are scheduled&#13;
for Feb. 10, David Littrell, cello,&#13;
with Mary Ann Littrell, piano;&#13;
March 3, The Parkside Piano&#13;
Trio, Maria Mutschler, violin,&#13;
Stephen Swedish, piano, and&#13;
Littrell, cello; April 4, Sonata&#13;
Recital, Mutschler, violin, and&#13;
Swedish, piano; and May 5, Lee&#13;
Dougherty, soprano, and Frances&#13;
Bedford and Frank Mueller,&#13;
harpsichords.&#13;
The Feb. 10 and May 5 recitals&#13;
are at 4 p.m. and the others are at&#13;
7:30 p.m. All are in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Guest concerts scheduled&#13;
during the semester are "20th&#13;
r—&#13;
Century Music for Winds" by a&#13;
UW-Milwaukee Wind Ensemble&#13;
under the direction of Robert&#13;
Cesario on March 22 and a "New&#13;
Music Concert" by a group of&#13;
Northwestern University performers&#13;
on April 5. Both&#13;
programs are at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Parkside student music groups&#13;
have a number of performances&#13;
slated as well.&#13;
Vocal music programs under&#13;
the direction of Mueller include&#13;
the Chamber Singers performing&#13;
Monteverdi madrigals on March&#13;
21, the Chorale performing&#13;
Kuhnhausen's St. Matthew&#13;
Passion on March 28, and the&#13;
combined Chorus and Chorale&#13;
presenting sacred music of Anton&#13;
Bruckner on April 28. All are at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the theater.&#13;
Instrumental programs include&#13;
the Parkside Jazz Ensembles at 2&#13;
p.m. on March 31 in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building, the Concert Band at&#13;
IF WE DON'T HAVE IT WHO DOES?&#13;
QLDIES&#13;
From&#13;
THE ASSOCIATION to THE ZOMBIES&#13;
*D &amp; 'Wt 'Wtuaic SaleA&gt;&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE, RACINE 637-2212.&#13;
Joseph.&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
•&#13;
SPANKY'S&#13;
7:30 p.m. on April 7 in the theater&#13;
and the Symphony Orchestra at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on May 9 in the theater.&#13;
The jazz ensembles and band are&#13;
directed by Robert Thomason&#13;
and the symphony by Littrell.&#13;
Original compositions by&#13;
Parkside music students will be&#13;
presented at a Contemporary&#13;
Music Forum at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
March 24 in the theater and piano&#13;
students will perform "Keyboard&#13;
Music of J.S. Bach," with a&#13;
lecture by faculty pianist Stephen&#13;
Swedish, at 7:30 p.m. on March&#13;
31, a lso in the theater.&#13;
Guitarist Patrick Noe will play&#13;
a student recital on May 1 and the&#13;
Parkside Guitar Society will&#13;
perform on May 8. Both&#13;
programs are at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Gertrude Sheridan will present a&#13;
student vocal recital at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Jan. 27 in the theater.&#13;
Other student concerts for the&#13;
semester, all at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm Arts Bldg., Room D-118,&#13;
are Feb. 13, March 13, April 10&#13;
and 24 a nd May 1 and 8.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Dopot.l Co'D&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1974&#13;
Biel wins&#13;
national title&#13;
UW-Parkside trackmen placed&#13;
ninth in the NAIA national indoor&#13;
championships last weekend as&#13;
Dennis Biel won the national title&#13;
at 1,000 yards.&#13;
Biel, a junior from Wausau&#13;
(East), covered the distance in&#13;
2:11.5 to win the national crown.&#13;
He was third in the same event a&#13;
year ago so this marks the second&#13;
time he has earned all-America&#13;
honors.&#13;
Freshman Jim Heiring of&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) also earned&#13;
all-America honors with his third&#13;
pl&amp;ce finish in the two mile walk.&#13;
His time for the distance 14:57.6.&#13;
He is the second walker in&#13;
Parkside track history (the other&#13;
was Mike DeWitt) to gain allAmerica&#13;
status.&#13;
Other Parkside placers included&#13;
Racine freshman Walt&#13;
Smith, fifth in the long jump at 23-&#13;
2, a varsity record, and Lucian&#13;
Rosa, sixth in the mile. Racine&#13;
freshman Bob Meekma placed a&#13;
non-scoring eighth in the pole&#13;
vault at 14-0.&#13;
For Parkside, the 19 points was&#13;
a team high in national competition&#13;
and marked the second&#13;
successive ninth place national&#13;
finish for Coach Bob Lawson's&#13;
Rangers. Parkside will host an&#13;
indoor meet at Racine Park High&#13;
School Saturday morning at 10&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Fencers win twice&#13;
over weekend&#13;
Cagers out shoot&#13;
Aquinas College 73-59&#13;
The Parkside cagers scored&#13;
their eighth win of the season&#13;
Saturday night in Grand Rapids,&#13;
Mich., as the Rangers upended&#13;
Aquinas College 73-59.&#13;
Aquinas, a hot-shooting outfit&#13;
which ranked fifth in the NCAA in&#13;
field goal shooting percentage,&#13;
never let Parkside get away to a&#13;
big lead although the Rangers&#13;
held a 34-28 h alf-time lead and&#13;
had maintained a six point&#13;
margin through much of the&#13;
second half.&#13;
Aquinas tied the score midway&#13;
through the second stanza at 50&#13;
but Parkside pulled in front 52-50&#13;
and was able to hold a two and&#13;
four point margin the rest of the&#13;
way.&#13;
"We played one of our best&#13;
total games," Parkside coach&#13;
Steve Stephens said after the&#13;
game. "We were able to work the&#13;
ball inside to Cole and he was&#13;
able to put it in. Aquinas just had&#13;
too much trouble with him and&#13;
that was the difference."&#13;
For the first time this year, the&#13;
Rangers won a game on the freePucksters&#13;
defeat&#13;
Beloit in overtime&#13;
The Parkside hockey team&#13;
came back from a 3-0 deficit&#13;
against Beloit College in the final&#13;
period to score a 4-3 victory with&#13;
:42 left in overtime on a shot by&#13;
Bill Isermann.&#13;
This win gives the Ranger a&#13;
three and two record in the&#13;
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Hockey&#13;
League.&#13;
The Buccaneers from Beloit&#13;
had things going their way until&#13;
the third period when Robin&#13;
Lipski scored on an assist by Bill&#13;
Evans and John Culotta.&#13;
Moments later Jerry Madala&#13;
scored again on an assist by&#13;
Jerry Simonsen and Tad&#13;
Ballantyne.&#13;
George Krulatz tied up the&#13;
Mat men win their&#13;
fourth dual meet&#13;
score two minutes later on a 30&#13;
footer from the angle.&#13;
It was almost 24 minutes later&#13;
that Isermann slapped home the&#13;
winning goal. The Rangers made&#13;
a vicious attack on the Beloit&#13;
goalie in the last period but he&#13;
was up to the occasion until the&#13;
last shot.&#13;
John Burch, the Ranger goalie,&#13;
was also outstanding making 34&#13;
saves. The Rangers have a busy&#13;
week ahead of them playing&#13;
Lawrence at Appleton on Friday,&#13;
UW-LaCrosse at the Kenosha Ice&#13;
Arena at 4:30 on Saturday and&#13;
Illinois State Sunday at 6:00 at&#13;
the KIA.&#13;
Parkside won its fourth dual&#13;
wrestling meet of the season last&#13;
Friday, defeating LaCrosse 30-14.&#13;
LaCrosse is 7th in the NIAA and&#13;
Parkside is fifth.&#13;
Champions for Parkside were&#13;
Rich Schaumberg at 118 pounds,&#13;
Rico Savaglio at 126, Bill West at&#13;
134, Ken Martin at 142, Randy&#13;
Scarda at 150, Rich Baron at 158,&#13;
Brad Frieberg at 167 and Tom&#13;
Beyer at 177.&#13;
On Saturday the matmen&#13;
journeyed to the North Park&#13;
Invitational where they captured&#13;
first place with 77 and a half&#13;
points. UW-M was second with 68,&#13;
Grand Valley third and Carthage&#13;
College fourth in the 8 team&#13;
competition.&#13;
Parkside had five champions in&#13;
this contest: Savaglio, West,&#13;
Martin, Scarda and Baron.&#13;
Martin was voted the meet's&#13;
outstanding wrestler. He has a 75&#13;
and 6 career record.&#13;
On Thursday at 8 p.m.&#13;
Parkside's wrestling team will&#13;
host UW-M. The Rangers are&#13;
counting on Scarda who has a 15&#13;
and 0 record, West with a 14 and 0&#13;
record, Martin with 13 and 0,&#13;
Baron with 12 and 4, Savaglio&#13;
with 10 and 3, Shaumberg with 7&#13;
and 4 and Joel Landers with 5 and&#13;
1.&#13;
On Saturday the wrestlers will&#13;
meet Northern Michigan here at&#13;
Parkside at 3 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 12 has been declared Ken&#13;
Martin night, since this will be his&#13;
last wrestling meet at the&#13;
collegiate level. The Rangers will&#13;
go against Marquette here at&#13;
home in that contest.&#13;
throw line. Parkside converted&#13;
on 13 of 15 free throw opportunities&#13;
and since Aquinas&#13;
had one more field goal, 31, t han&#13;
the Rangers, it made the difference&#13;
with the Tommies&#13;
shooting only 7 of 14 from the&#13;
stripe.&#13;
Cole was the game's top scorer&#13;
with 31 points, a season high for&#13;
him and second on the squad only&#13;
to Bill Sobanski's 32 point out put&#13;
in December against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
Malcolm Mahone had 14 points&#13;
while Chuck Chambliss added 12&#13;
to bring him with 11 of the 1,000&#13;
point scoring plateau in his threeyear&#13;
Parkside career.&#13;
The Rangers met UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Home Tuesday&#13;
night before heading on the road&#13;
for two contests, a Saturday&#13;
afternoon date at Northern&#13;
Michigan and a Tuesday, Feb. 5,.&#13;
contest at Milton College.&#13;
Both contests will be broadcast&#13;
by WRJN (1400). Game time at&#13;
NMU is 2:30 p.m. Saturday and at&#13;
Milton 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The Parkside fencers traveled&#13;
to Minneapolis last weekend and&#13;
swashbuckled their way to a 17-10&#13;
victory over the University of&#13;
Minnesota, and a 21-6 over&#13;
University of Minnesota-Duluth.&#13;
This victory brings their season&#13;
record to four wins and one loss.&#13;
Individual results on foil were&#13;
John Tank and Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
6-0, and Bret&#13;
Mandernack 4-2. On sabre both&#13;
Rick Moffett and Dave Baumann&#13;
were 5-1. Bernie Vash came up&#13;
with 4-2 on epee, while Mark&#13;
Mulkins was 3-3, and John Babtke&#13;
was 0-6.&#13;
This Saturday Parkside will&#13;
host Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College, Notre Dam,e and&#13;
University of Illinois-Circle&#13;
Campus. Coach Loran Hein&#13;
believes it will be a tough&#13;
weekend, as the team has never&#13;
yet beaten Notre Dame, and U of&#13;
I-CC will be looking for revenge&#13;
on a previous defeat at the hands&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
Those of you who plan on being&#13;
spectators this weekend might be&#13;
interested in the weapons used.&#13;
The electrical foil-ir^foil, the&#13;
target area is the torso which is&#13;
covered with a metalic cloth&#13;
jacket. This serves as a conductor&#13;
to complete a circuit when&#13;
a touch is made. A good touch&#13;
results in a red light on the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
WHd&#13;
an&#13;
JHah&#13;
n&#13;
a,f" GV,&#13;
m°&#13;
Pen 12:30&#13;
^&#13;
pm"&#13;
1::30P'&#13;
m' '"^murais8p.m.-lOp.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-lO p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30 p.m. - 2 p.m. and 6-10 p.m.&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 31 - Gym open 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.&#13;
Wrestling meet here at 8 p.m. 10:30a.m. and 12:30 p.m.-10 p.m&#13;
Swim Meet Here at 4 p .m.&#13;
Fr&#13;
'' F®J?.&#13;
1&#13;
" Gy&#13;
m open 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Building closes at 5 p.m. on Fri&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11 a.m.-l p.m.&#13;
Sa&#13;
.&#13;
t&#13;
„&#13;
Fe&#13;
^.'&#13;
2&#13;
' closed al1 day to recreation Fencing meet at 9:30a m&#13;
Wrestling meet at 3 p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford and Tremper basketball game at 6:30 p m&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30-5 p.m.&#13;
Swimming pool open 12:30-5 p.m.&#13;
Sun. Feb. 3 - Entire building open for recreation 2 p.m.-10 p m&#13;
Intramurals in gym 6:30 p.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
Mond. Feb. 4-Gym open 12:30-1:30 p.m. and 8-10 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30 p.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
Tues, Feb. 5 - Gy m open 12:30 p.m.-l :30 p.m. and 6 p.m.-lO p m&#13;
Track practice in gym 3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open all day except 1:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30a.m.-l :30 p.m. and 6 p.m.-10p.m.&#13;
SPECIAL NOTE: Effective immediately, only I.D. cards that are stamped for the current&#13;
SSS ,0r StUdent USC °&#13;
f the PhVSiCal edUCa,i0n faCMitieSThiS&#13;
to&#13;
DEADLINE&#13;
FEBRUARY 11. 1974&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WISCONSIN PHYSICIANS SERVICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
insurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
Send premium and application to&#13;
Wisconsin Physicians Service&#13;
Kenosha District Office&#13;
P.O. Box 869&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Tel: 414-654-5774&#13;
scoring apparatus, while a touch&#13;
to the non-target area produces a&#13;
white light.&#13;
The electrical epee: this is the&#13;
only weapon in which&#13;
simultaneous touches are&#13;
counted. A touch may be scored&#13;
anywhere on the fencer, but must&#13;
be made with the tip in order to&#13;
be recorded.&#13;
Sabre: all parts of the body&#13;
above the hips are valid target,&#13;
and touches may be made by&#13;
means of cuts or thrusts. This&#13;
event is officiated by an impartial&#13;
director and two fencers&#13;
from each school who act as&#13;
judges. A judge raises his hand&#13;
when he sees a touch land as a&#13;
signal to the director to halt the&#13;
bout. After polling the judges, the&#13;
director decides whether or not a&#13;
touch is to be awarded.&#13;
The p lace to go&#13;
for Panto&#13;
and t hings!&#13;
JSERMAMM'S&#13;
THE l&amp;meWcan]&#13;
614 - S6th S treet&#13;
SIGHT 'n&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight -n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
ARE YOU PLAYING YOUR RECORDS&#13;
OR RUINING THEM?&#13;
If you're like most music listeners, you&#13;
never think about your records after&#13;
putting them on your record player. You&#13;
just sit back and enjoy the music.&#13;
Chances are you'd be less relaxed if&#13;
you knew that your records might be&#13;
losing something with every play. It's&#13;
something to think about when you&#13;
consider how many hundreds or even&#13;
thousands of doljars you have invested in&#13;
your record collection-and will be investing&#13;
in the future.&#13;
Even the cheapest record changer can&#13;
bring its tone arm to the record and lift it&#13;
off again. But what happens during the&#13;
interim is something else.&#13;
That is why serious music lovers won't&#13;
play their records on anything but a&#13;
precision turntable and frequently&#13;
change the stylus. If you're ready for a&#13;
new needle, bring in your old one and&#13;
we'll allow you $2 trade-in toward a new&#13;
Fidelitone diamond needle. This offer&#13;
ends February 5, 1974.&#13;
LOOKING FOR ANOTHER&#13;
BARGAIN? SUPERSCOPE'S FM CAR&#13;
RADIO CONVERTER CAN LET YOU&#13;
ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE FM&#13;
STATION FROM YOUR AM CAR&#13;
RADIO. INSTALLS IN MINUTES.&#13;
ONLY $29.95.&#13;
Improve your grades-save time on&#13;
homework! Our electronic calculators&#13;
start at only $29.95 for a four-function, 6-&#13;
digit machine that will do chain&#13;
calculations. Works on a 9-volt battery&#13;
or AC, is small enough to fit into shirt&#13;
pocket or purse. Complete selection of&#13;
Texas Instruments including famous&#13;
SR10 electronic slide rule.&#13;
if you have a question about audio&#13;
equipment, call, write or stop in. If it's of&#13;
general interest, I'll discuss it in this&#13;
column. Let's hear from you! OK?&#13;
Are You Playing Your Records&#13;
Or Ruining Them?&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo - TV - Records - Tapes&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor *Racine# 634-4900&#13;
Open Daily til 9 Sat. &amp; Sun'til 6&#13;
• AKAI • DUAL • WATTS • SHURE • JVC • TECHNICS •&#13;
I J &amp; J&#13;
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I Super Low Prices I&#13;
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^ 2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine &gt;&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha »&#13;
• SHERWOOD m TEAC • ALTEC • KOSS • SENNHISER • </text>
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              <text>Advising battle continues</text>
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              <text>Will build new road, parking lots&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Parkside students may find it&#13;
easier to park next fall because of&#13;
two new parking lots scheduled to&#13;
be built. The lots will be located&#13;
near the Communication Arts&#13;
Building and the proposed site for&#13;
the new student union and will&#13;
have a combined capacity of 1,045&#13;
vehicles. The lots are needed&#13;
because of increased student&#13;
enrollment, and the eventual&#13;
closure of the Kenosha Campus.&#13;
Work will also begin this summer&#13;
on the new Student Union across&#13;
the loop road from the Classroom&#13;
Building and, as a result, the&#13;
faculty parking lot will be lost.&#13;
The net gain in parking spaces&#13;
will be 225. If this fall it is evident&#13;
that more parking spaces are&#13;
needed, another 450-vehicle lot&#13;
could be constructed behind the&#13;
P.E. Building by the fall of 1975,&#13;
according to James Galbraith of&#13;
Planning and Construction. On&#13;
the basis of estimates that only 46&#13;
percent of the student body is on&#13;
campus at any one time, and with&#13;
increasing reliance on car pools&#13;
and mass transit due primarily to&#13;
the energy crisis, Galbraith&#13;
believes that the 225 space net&#13;
increase should be sufficient for&#13;
next year. Galbraith also stated&#13;
that the "back-up" parking lot&#13;
across the street from the heating&#13;
plant could be put into service if&#13;
the need arose.&#13;
Gil Eagles, "the entertaining psychic," will demonstrate his extrasensory&#13;
perception tonight in the Comm Arts Theater, sponsored&#13;
by the Activities Board. Story on page 3.&#13;
In addition to the new parking&#13;
lots, work may also be started on&#13;
a new outer loop road that would&#13;
be constructed outside the&#13;
present one and would be the only&#13;
access to the two new parking&#13;
lots. Shuttle buses and service&#13;
vehicles would still use the old&#13;
loop road. Plans for the new road&#13;
have not yet been approved by&#13;
the Building Committee, but even&#13;
if they are, Galbraith said he&#13;
doubts that the road could be&#13;
completely surfaced by this fall.&#13;
All of this and more is part of&#13;
the so-called "Master Plan" that&#13;
one day envisions Parkside&#13;
becoming a campus of 25,000&#13;
students. Total costs for this&#13;
phase of the plan, which includes&#13;
the two new parking lots and the&#13;
new outer loop road amounts to&#13;
$776,900. The total costs for these,&#13;
the third lot behind the P.E.&#13;
Building, the completed outer&#13;
loop road, lights and sidewalks&#13;
would be $1,030,000.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 Vol. II No. 17&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Elections committee named&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Last semester began like any&#13;
other for the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association.&#13;
Petitions were circulated, candidates&#13;
campaigned and&#13;
caucused and finally, on Nov.&#13;
20th and 21st, approximately 11&#13;
percent of the student body voted&#13;
for the candidates of their choice.&#13;
When the votes were tallied, Tom&#13;
Jennett had been elected&#13;
President, Chuck Perroni to&#13;
C.C.C. and Vice President, Mary&#13;
Clare Werve was elected&#13;
Treasurer, and 17 other students&#13;
were elected Senators.&#13;
The primary issue that faced&#13;
P.S.G.A. was that of Senatorelect&#13;
Normal Neophyte. Controversy&#13;
arose when Neophyte's&#13;
election was challenged on the&#13;
grounds that he violated&#13;
Wisconsin Election Laws by not&#13;
running under his legal name. At&#13;
the first meeting of the newly&#13;
elected Senate, Neophyte was&#13;
refused a seat for that reason.&#13;
After much deliberation&#13;
P-S G.A. unanimously decided to&#13;
abide by P.S.G.A. election laws&#13;
and Wisconsin election laws&#13;
where they apply, and to hold&#13;
new elections in, the Spring&#13;
Semester. Toward that end, the&#13;
Assistant Dean of Students appointed&#13;
a new Elections Committee&#13;
as requested by P.S.G.A.&#13;
Appointed to the committee&#13;
were: Buzz Faust, president of&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board;&#13;
P.S.G.A. President Tom Jennett&#13;
and Senator Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
(neither is running for reelection);&#13;
and Jane Schliesman&#13;
editor of the RANGER.&#13;
At the most recent P.S G A&#13;
meeting, last Friday, Jennett&#13;
announced that future meetings&#13;
would be videotaped by Student&#13;
Life. Jem&amp;tt also asked that&#13;
Senate Committees formed&#13;
earlier in the year meet, organize&#13;
and start working on their&#13;
assigned tasks. The Grievance&#13;
and Clearinghouse Committee&#13;
will meet at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday,&#13;
Jan. 23 in LLCD174;&#13;
students are welcome to attend.&#13;
The only known candidate for&#13;
P.S.G.A. President thus far is&#13;
Lan Nielsen. When asked for his&#13;
candid opinion of P.S G A&#13;
Nielsen said, "It's a mess, I'd like&#13;
to clear it up."&#13;
Advising battle continues&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to debate the issue of academic advising,&#13;
more specifically the' proposal by Alan Shucard!&#13;
associate professor of E nglish, which calls for "the&#13;
offices of academic advising to be staffed by faculty&#13;
members who will be appropriately rewarded for&#13;
advising."&#13;
Last December a recommendation came from the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee in which those&#13;
students who have declared a major or an area of&#13;
interest would be advised by faculty. Those students&#13;
who are undecided would continue to receive&#13;
academic advising through the Student Services&#13;
Office administered by Allen Dearborn, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor and Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant Dean&#13;
of Students.&#13;
Shucard's proposal would place all academic&#13;
advising in the hands of the faculty to be administered&#13;
through the academic Deans' offices&#13;
(Dean Moy of the School of Modern Industry and&#13;
Dean Norwood of the College of Science and&#13;
Society) with "non-academic staff (supposedly the&#13;
Student Services Office} assisting."&#13;
No recommendation came out of Thursday's&#13;
meeting; however, sessions will be held between the&#13;
Deans of the College and the School with Dearborn's&#13;
staff in which it is hoped some agreements can be&#13;
made.&#13;
Most discord appeared to be between the College&#13;
of Science and Society and the Student Services&#13;
Office. Echelbarger said, "Our people are&#13;
professionals who do not see themselves as faculty&#13;
assistants."&#13;
Norwood felt that although Shucard's proposal&#13;
involves the advising of 1200 students, he was&#13;
"baffled that a proposal that says substantially the&#13;
same thing as the proposal the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee originally sent out can cause so much&#13;
controversy...The proposal Shucard has advanced&#13;
eliminates some of the options."&#13;
Shucard claimed that "contrary to opinions that&#13;
have been bandied about, I am not acting as the&#13;
Dean's (Norwood) or Otto Bauer's (Vice-&#13;
Chancellor) messenger boy." (A RANGER&#13;
editorial called the proposal politically motivated in&#13;
order to give more power to the academic deans'&#13;
and create and save faculty positions.)&#13;
No Money Available&#13;
Insofar as financing the operation and hiring&#13;
faculty while present faculty handle advising&#13;
Norwood said, "Money to fund such a proposal is&#13;
not available in the College's budget. That is not to&#13;
say the campus administration, in its infinite&#13;
wisdom, can't find or take money from other&#13;
areas."&#13;
James Dean, chairperson of the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee, questioned those present to&#13;
consider which system gives a higher degree of&#13;
effectiveness.&#13;
Barb Larson of the Student Services staff explained&#13;
that career counseling and academic advising&#13;
overlap. "If you separate the two," she said&#13;
students will suffer." Dearborn added that&#13;
academic advising is often just an excuse for a&#13;
student to enter an advisor's door with personal&#13;
problems. "Academic advising is a blur which&#13;
encompasses many things," he said.&#13;
Moy asked Shucard to elaborate on why the&#13;
faculty is more capable of advising than the Student&#13;
Sei vices staff. Shucard said the career counseling&#13;
could still be handled by the Student Services Office&#13;
while academic advising could be carried out&#13;
through the academic deans' offices bv the facultv&#13;
Moy again asked Shucard, "But what are the advantages&#13;
of faculty advising?" Said Shucard,&#13;
There is a short circuit in communications between&#13;
the Dean's office and the Student Services •&#13;
office. I don't know whose fault it is and I'm not&#13;
interested. I would like to short circuit that communication&#13;
need." Moy questioned whether or not&#13;
the breakdown would not exist between the Dean's&#13;
office-and the faculty as well.&#13;
Vay n e J o h n s o n , a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r o f&#13;
?il?S?.?uy' thcT suS§ested changing the proposal to&#13;
ead, The offices of academic advising are to be&#13;
staffed by faculty as well as the Student Services&#13;
Office....&#13;
Said Dearborn, "If you do that I'll pull out completely.&#13;
I cannot just assign my staff over to the&#13;
Deans administration." Echelbarger added that,&#13;
Our staff are already under an administrative&#13;
structure. It would be very difficult to have them&#13;
report to the academic Deans as well."&#13;
Strictly a Faculty Operation&#13;
Dearborn added, "The proposal makes no&#13;
reference to us, it is strictly a faculty operation I&#13;
am not prepared to tell my staff to be assistants out&#13;
of either of the academic Deans' offices." Dearborn&#13;
said that the original proposal in which Student&#13;
Services advised those students who were undeclared,&#13;
"is working with the School and it can&#13;
work with the College." But under this proposal&#13;
Dearborn said the College would have the Student&#13;
Services staff working whenever the faculty didn't&#13;
want to, such as between semesters, nights and&#13;
during the peak times.&#13;
He continued, "Here we are arguing about&#13;
budgets, Student Services and faculty. We're not&#13;
talking about the students."&#13;
Norwood agreed to a meeting with Dearborn and&#13;
his staff, as Moy and Dearborn had set up earlier to&#13;
work out some agreements and report back to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee this week.&#13;
In ending, Dearborn said, "I am proud of my&#13;
staff. They are young, and growing. All I ask is give&#13;
us some stature."&#13;
Shucard told Dearborn to "Stick to the issues and&#13;
refrain from imputing other motives as you have&#13;
been doing this past week." Dearborn interrupted,&#13;
tolling Shucard, "If you want to give me a lecture&#13;
come to my office. But I'm not the only one who's&#13;
been thinking those thoughts."&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee will meet&#13;
again on Friday, Jan. 25 at 1 p.m. in Comm Arts&#13;
room 233.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974&#13;
RANGER 1— Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Dangerous&#13;
intersections&#13;
need 4-way stop&#13;
Definite iraffic safety probiems exist at two intersections&#13;
adjacent to the campus. Since Parkside&#13;
came into existence, and with its increasing population,&#13;
the corners of County Trunk A and Wood Road and A&#13;
and County Trunk Y (near the northeast end of the&#13;
campus) have become hazardous.&#13;
At A and Wood Road there is a visibility problem due&#13;
to the hill just west of Wood Road on A. There is also a&#13;
congestion problem when classes let out and a large&#13;
volume of people are leaving at the same time.&#13;
Congestion is even worse at the other intersection, for&#13;
Y is a main route between Racine and Kenosha and not&#13;
only University people use it but many other residents of&#13;
both cities. Cars on A tend to dart out when there is the&#13;
slightest opening.&#13;
A four-way stop at both intersections would reduce the&#13;
.hazards and hasten the flow of traffic, especially for&#13;
cars at A and Y. We suggest that people at Parkside&#13;
request Kenosha County to investigate this situation&#13;
before anyone is injured or even killed. Since we have a&#13;
commuter campus, and since statistics show that most&#13;
accidents happen within 10 miles of home, this is a&#13;
matter of concern to all of us.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Bad deal&#13;
for terminated&#13;
employe&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Kent Mayes was a police officer with the Parkside Safety and&#13;
Security force from November 1, 1971 until May 23, 19 73. T hen as a&#13;
result of Governor Lucey's announced productivity gain savings and&#13;
low priority requirements for the 1973-75 biennial budget, Mayes' job&#13;
was terminated. His salary of $8376 comprised part of the $16,736&#13;
savings from a 13 percent low priority requirement for Safety and&#13;
Security. (Another $8508 was cut also from this department for the&#13;
productivity allotment.)&#13;
As a civil service employe, Mayes decided to appeal his case to the&#13;
State Personnel Board in early summer. The Board agreed to hear&#13;
Mayes' appeal later that summer on the grounds that the performance&#13;
evaluation he had received as part of his lay-off procedure was considered&#13;
to be invalid.&#13;
A period of four months followed from the August 17 hearing until&#13;
the Board finally issued its opinion on December 20, 19 73. It was a&#13;
rugged time for Mayes who forfeited his unemployment checks; he&#13;
attended Gateway Technical Institute during the day, thus completing&#13;
a degree in police science. But in light of the Board's ruling of "full&#13;
reinstatement immediately," the long wait seems so mehow recon&#13;
ciled, that is until one considers that the Board has no legal recourse to&#13;
enforce its ruling.&#13;
Today Mayes remains unemployed while Parkside appeals the&#13;
Board's ruling. James Greenwald, legal advisor for the Board, said&#13;
that by delaying the remedy the Board had given the employe, the&#13;
chances of that employe returning to his original job grew dimmer.&#13;
This seems especially true and unfortunate now, considering that,&#13;
after an-eight-month layoff, Mayes must go out and hire his own&#13;
counsel to sue Parkside within 60 days of the Board's ruling so that he&#13;
may return to Work.&#13;
|&#13;
f)oti&gt;book&#13;
bv Jane Schliesman&#13;
"When major campus groups are at odds with each other the future&#13;
of a quality University is dimmed."&#13;
-RANGER editorial, Jan. 16,1974&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee meeting last Thursday was at&#13;
best an exercise in frustration, but to this student observer it was a&#13;
disillusioning and disheartening display of academicians thinking in&#13;
circles, chasing themselves round and round the track and revving&#13;
their engines in attempts to lure Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn&#13;
out of the pit to show his stuff. When he finally accepted the challenge&#13;
he apparently surprised at least a few persons present with his direct&#13;
driving style and guts. The race was for real and the conflict no longer&#13;
subtle.&#13;
To be fair, it must be stated that a number of committee members&#13;
watched this contest from the sidelines or waved the yellow caution&#13;
flag. While there is solidarity among the Student Services staff, the&#13;
faculty apparently are in a bit of a quandary as to what the whole thing&#13;
is all about.&#13;
I still defend RANGER'S analysis of it last week as a "power play,"&#13;
for it calls for the academic deans to administer the advising, taking it&#13;
away from Student Services. Involved, therefore, is money and&#13;
positions (the overt and covert foci of discussion) and therefore power&#13;
for the deans. Shucard may not have intended this-he seems&#13;
genuinely interested in a good advising system, even if he did say he&#13;
didn't care whose fault the present communication problems in advising&#13;
are-but Norwood is gunning for the checkered flag on this one.&#13;
Confusion is understandable, for I'm still not sure whether Shucard&#13;
or Norwood is the mechanic, and which of them is the driver, but their&#13;
car was frequently seen going off the track into the sidelines of general&#13;
degree requirements, budget, revision approvement process, and&#13;
other potholes. The central issue here-what is best for the studentswas&#13;
referred to as "obvious" and thus summarily dismissed for most&#13;
of the meeting.&#13;
It is my feeling that if they had dwelled on the obvious for a few&#13;
minutes they could have avoided hassles that are likely to leave longlasting&#13;
scars on relations between faculty and counselors. For&#13;
example, Shucard said that faculty doing academic advising would be&#13;
"volunteers who are good at it." If one-third of the full-time faculty&#13;
here volunteered and were good at it (which seems a high estimate),&#13;
there would be 57 faculty advisors. It is obvious that if you turn over&#13;
3400 und eclared or undecided students to 57 faculty, each faculty&#13;
member would be advising 60 stu dents over and above his or her&#13;
declared majors. This would make it difficult for many students to&#13;
even get an appointment, let alone try and walk in without one (not to&#13;
mention the strain on these teachers).&#13;
It is further obvious that these faculty members would be giving up&#13;
vacation time between semesters, since that is when students seek&#13;
advising, in exchange for a "reward" such as a reduced class load&#13;
during the semester. It seems to me that the faculty members who&#13;
would be good at academic advising are those who can establish good&#13;
rapport with students, those who are sought after for classes. To&#13;
"reward" them by letting them work less in their chosen career seems&#13;
rather paradoxical anyway, but also obviously hurts the students who&#13;
could otherwise be exposed to the classroom experience with these&#13;
people.&#13;
Finally, since money does seem to be one of the considerations in&#13;
this proposal, and since most of the cogs in the University wheel are&#13;
facing budget cutbacks or at best holding, it just makes good economic&#13;
sense to upgrade the present system if it is a viable one (which it&#13;
certainly is) rather than start over with a whole new system.&#13;
So this is my personal plea—one voice, but I think I speak for many&#13;
students for I've discussed this with many of them-to both faculty and&#13;
Student Services staff. The present system needs improvement in&#13;
communication, but it is a good system and I would like to see i t&#13;
retained. It keeps the faculty teaching and it provides the students&#13;
with readily available, unbiased, understanding help from trained&#13;
professionals in the field of advising and counseling. What the present&#13;
system needs most is a higher measure of respect for each other on the&#13;
part of the opposing entities in this conflict, and more generally on the&#13;
part of everyone at Parkside-students, staff, faculty and administration&#13;
alike.&#13;
Tell ihe "truth,&#13;
AriDTHE TRUTH&#13;
» , ,Y'L,L 5ET YOU FREE.'&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 TH E PARKSI D E RANGER 3&#13;
UW-P appeals officers reinstatement&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Parkside has decided to appeal&#13;
the State Personnel Board's&#13;
ruling on Dec. 20, concerning the&#13;
layoff of police officer Kent&#13;
Mayes. According to Charles&#13;
Stathas, a University System&#13;
attorney, Gov. Patrick Lucey&#13;
was to appoint a special council&#13;
to represent Parkside last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
A petition of review to the&#13;
circuit court was also to have&#13;
been issued Jan. 18, 1974 by the&#13;
University Legal System-within&#13;
30 days of the original Personnel&#13;
Board ruling.&#13;
The Board ordered that, "the&#13;
Respondent (John C. Weaver,&#13;
President, University of&#13;
Wisconsin) immediately reinstate&#13;
the Appellant (Mayes) to&#13;
his former position, without any&#13;
loss of seniority or other benefits&#13;
and with full back pay, from the&#13;
date of his layoff (May 23,1973) to&#13;
the date of his receipt of the&#13;
Respondent's written unconditional&#13;
offer of recall to&#13;
active employment."&#13;
Personal Basis for Layoff&#13;
Mayes, who was laid off due to&#13;
cuts in appropriations, appealed&#13;
to the Board June 5, 1973 objecting&#13;
to the performance&#13;
evaluation he had received as&#13;
part of the layoff procedure by&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, director of&#13;
Safety and Security. He contended&#13;
that his layoff was based&#13;
on "a very personal basis and&#13;
was not fairly done," citing&#13;
written proof that he was better&#13;
qualified than one other officer,&#13;
Laurence Augustine.&#13;
Based upon the evidence given&#13;
at the hearing Aug. 17, 1973 at&#13;
Parkside, the Board ruled that&#13;
"the Appellant was not the least&#13;
efficient and effective employe&#13;
amongst those employes in the&#13;
layoff group in the police officer&#13;
class."&#13;
"The departure from previous&#13;
Board cases concerning whether&#13;
or not the burden of proof that&#13;
rests upon the appointing&#13;
authority is the same as showing&#13;
discharge for just cause, is the&#13;
procedural question that the&#13;
University plans to appeal the&#13;
case on," said Stathas.&#13;
Procedure is Provided&#13;
At the outset of the Mayes v.&#13;
Weaver hearing, the burden of&#13;
proof rested on the counsel for&#13;
Weaver to prove to a reasonable&#13;
certainty that the facts as relied&#13;
on and stated in the layoff notice&#13;
were in fact true and constituted&#13;
just cause for the action taken.&#13;
The State Bureau of Personnel&#13;
provides for the procedure to be&#13;
used in determining which employe&#13;
shall be laid off when a&#13;
reduction in force is necessary. It&#13;
specifies that the three lowest&#13;
ranking in seniority shall be&#13;
evaluated by their superior based&#13;
upon each employe's services&#13;
and demonstrated competence&#13;
and fitness.&#13;
According to the Board's&#13;
opinion, "the Respondent's only&#13;
proferred evidence on this issue&#13;
was the executed 'Layoff Performance&#13;
Rating Scale' forms for&#13;
the Appellant and Officer&#13;
Augustine, which were prepared&#13;
by Brinkmann on May 16, 1973."&#13;
These forms gave numerical&#13;
values to such "rating factors"&#13;
as quality and quantity of work,&#13;
work habits, work interest, and&#13;
personal relations with the&#13;
director.&#13;
"The Respondent did not try to&#13;
establish by witnesses or records&#13;
why higher ratings were given&#13;
Officer Augustine than the Appellant&#13;
for any of the rating&#13;
factors listed in the form," the&#13;
Board's opinion stated.&#13;
With regard to Mayes' principal&#13;
witness, another police&#13;
officer on the Security force, the&#13;
Board's opinion believed his&#13;
testimony to be "credible and&#13;
plausible," saying that, "it&#13;
constitutes almost the sole&#13;
testimony to the job performance&#13;
of the Appellant and Officer&#13;
Augustine."&#13;
James Greenwald, legal advisor&#13;
for the State Personnel&#13;
Board, said that the Mayes v.&#13;
Weaver case was one of the first&#13;
layoffs in which the "preponderence&#13;
of evidence" rested on&#13;
the employer, rather than the&#13;
employe. This new "standard of&#13;
proof" was based on what he&#13;
called the "landmark" civil&#13;
service law, Dec. 1971, involving&#13;
Reinke v. Personnel Board. This&#13;
law states that "in discharge&#13;
proceedings before the ~ State&#13;
Personnel Board, appointing&#13;
authority has burden of proving&#13;
that discharge was for just&#13;
cause."&#13;
"Prior to this, discharge for&#13;
just cause had to be proven false&#13;
by the employe," said Greenwald.&#13;
Parkside's Personnel director,&#13;
Richard Sarto, has yet to&#13;
acknowledge, according to&#13;
Mayes, the Board order for his&#13;
reinstatement. Mayes was informed&#13;
by Sarto on Jan. 5 of this&#13;
year that the University planned&#13;
to appeal the Board ruling.&#13;
No Way to Enforce&#13;
Greenwald commented that the&#13;
"remedy" the Board gives the&#13;
employe is poor in the sense that&#13;
the statutes do not provide for an&#13;
enforcement provision, in which&#13;
the Board may go to court to&#13;
enforce its ruling, such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Employment Peace&#13;
Act enables the Employment&#13;
Relations Commission to do so.&#13;
Instead, statutes 16.05 (l)(e)&#13;
reads, "any action brought&#13;
against an appointing authority&#13;
by an employe for failure to&#13;
comply with the order of the&#13;
board shall be brought and&#13;
served within 60 days after the&#13;
date of the board's finding."&#13;
"Right now I'm exploring the&#13;
possibility of an act to put into&#13;
force, to affect, implementation&#13;
pending appeal," Greenwald&#13;
said. "When the attorney general&#13;
represents our ruling in court, I&#13;
plan to- ask, 'how can the&#13;
University appeal it without&#13;
applying to it?' "&#13;
Gil Eagles to demonstrate ESP&#13;
Gil Eagles, credited by news&#13;
accounts with driving a car&#13;
blindfolded around a race track&#13;
and through an infield obstacle&#13;
course using the minds of&#13;
passengers as eyes, will&#13;
demonstrate his extrasensory&#13;
perception (ESP) to the public&#13;
Jan. 23 (Wednesday) at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Admission for students is $1.50,&#13;
everyone else $2. Tickets can be&#13;
purchased at the Information&#13;
Center or at the door the night of&#13;
the performance.&#13;
Eagles, who has appeared on&#13;
national television but emphasizes&#13;
the college entertainment&#13;
circuit, performed&#13;
his driving feat last April in&#13;
Kingston, Ontario. He was accompanied&#13;
by the city police&#13;
constable and members of the&#13;
press. His eyes were covered by&#13;
silver dollars, adhesive tape, a&#13;
leather blindfold, then more tape.&#13;
He was handcuffed to the wheel.&#13;
"Their minds were my eyes,"&#13;
he was quoted as saying after the&#13;
incident-free trip. "I've never&#13;
done that before," he said. "Kind&#13;
of fun, wasn't it?"&#13;
During his performance, which&#13;
ranges in length from one to three&#13;
hours, "depending on the endurance&#13;
of the audience," Eagles&#13;
demonstrates ESP with members&#13;
of the audience. He identifies&#13;
serial numbers without&#13;
seeing the object, reads minds,&#13;
and sometimes gives psychic&#13;
counselling to audience members&#13;
who pre-submit questions.&#13;
Eagles has been the subject of&#13;
experiments by serious scholars&#13;
who are studying psychic&#13;
phenomena throughout the&#13;
world. He also. conducts communication&#13;
clinics and has had&#13;
considerable success writing and&#13;
adapting his abilities to the industrial&#13;
and trade show markets.&#13;
Reviewers have praised his&#13;
stage presence and entertainment&#13;
ability as well as&#13;
expressing amazement at his&#13;
demonstrations.&#13;
Although Eagles is billed as&#13;
"the entertaining psychic," the&#13;
entire process of physic&#13;
phenomena has been receiving&#13;
considerable attention in recent&#13;
years, much of it serious.&#13;
Commander Edgar Mitchell&#13;
experimented with earth communication&#13;
from the moon, it is&#13;
being studied at university institutes,&#13;
and the Russians claim&#13;
to have advanced the study of&#13;
thought transference through&#13;
ESP. There are even machines&#13;
on the market today to assist&#13;
persons in their every day&#13;
practice of ESP.&#13;
STAFF MEETING&#13;
Wed. Jan. 23 2:30 p.m.&#13;
RANGER LLC D194&#13;
All interes ted persons welcome&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: Beginning this week film student Walt Ulbricht&#13;
will be writing a column of re views in RANGER. His column will focus&#13;
on local offerings in the community as well as at Parkside.&#13;
Ingmar, Orson and Will&#13;
This semester offers an outstanding opportunity for film enthusiasts.&#13;
Ronald Gottesman's Film Directors course, Humanities&#13;
310, a nd Andrew McLean's Shakespeare and Film, Humanities 240,&#13;
will screen cinema masterpieces. Critically acclaimed films of&#13;
Ingmar Bergman, Orson Welles, Laurence Olivier and Akira&#13;
Kurosawa will be shown for both registered students and interested&#13;
friends of film.&#13;
Gottesman specifically examines Bergman's search for Soul and&#13;
Meaning and the enigmatic world of Welles. Seven Bergman films&#13;
profile themes of God, Death and the Individual. Wild Strawberries,&#13;
Virgin Spring, Winter Light and the powerful religious allegory, The&#13;
Seventh Seal trace Bergman's beauty and mystery. Eight films of&#13;
Welles (probably Kenosha's only genius) include the classic Citizen&#13;
Kane, his experimental Macbeth and The Trial, Kafka's nightmare of&#13;
deadly justice.&#13;
McLean explores the problem of cinematic adaptation. Can&#13;
Shakespeare's suggestive imagery be translated into a visual&#13;
language? Nine discriminating and diverse Shakespearean films&#13;
contrast the interpretation and technique of Olivier, Kurosawa, Welles&#13;
and Castellani. The lavish 1935 Max Rheinhardt production of A&#13;
Midsummer Night's Dream with interesting performances by James&#13;
Cagney, Dick Powell and Mickey Rooney can not be adequately&#13;
compared to Kurosawa's Throne of Bl ood, an excellent interpretation&#13;
of Macbeth as a 15th Century Samurai.&#13;
Never before has Parkside assembled a greater collection of&#13;
superlative films. Combined with thfe comfort of th e handsome Comm-&#13;
Arts Theater where most of these films will be shown, this semester&#13;
will indeed be a "Magnum Force." Go to these shows and grow a little.&#13;
Film Directors:&#13;
Welles and Bergman&#13;
Mondays 7:00 - 10:00&#13;
28 Jan. The Stranger&#13;
4 Feb. Lady from Shanghai&#13;
11 Feb. Macbeth&#13;
18 Feb. Mr. Arkadin&#13;
25 Feb. Touch of Evil&#13;
4 Mar. The Trial&#13;
Bergman:&#13;
11 Mar. Smiles of a Summer Night&#13;
18 Mar. The Seventh Seal&#13;
25 Mar. Wild Strawberries&#13;
8 Apr. Virgin Spring&#13;
22 Apr. Winter Light&#13;
29 Apr. The Silence&#13;
6 May Persona&#13;
Shakespeare and Film:&#13;
Wednesdays 7:30-10:00&#13;
6 Feb. Kurosawa's Throne of&#13;
Blood&#13;
13 Feb. Welles' Macbeth&#13;
20 Feb. Burge's Othello&#13;
6 Mar. Youtkevich's Othello&#13;
20 Mar. Castellani's Romeo&#13;
and Juliet&#13;
3 Apr. Reinhardt's Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream&#13;
24 A pr. Olivier's Hamlet&#13;
8 May Kozinstev's Hamlet&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Librarv-&#13;
Learnmg Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
ietters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters. °&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Michael Olsiyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
1 tUTA. *" w-&#13;
'Easter in Athens&#13;
trip organizing&#13;
Ninety people have already&#13;
signed up to spend Easter in&#13;
Athens. The Campus Travel&#13;
Center is coordinating a package&#13;
trip to Greece for not only&#13;
Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
alumni, but for other schools as&#13;
well. The increased scope of&#13;
participatiQn is made possible by&#13;
the fact that the vacationers will&#13;
travel on a commercial airline&#13;
(Swissair) rather than a charter.&#13;
The package includes seven&#13;
nights in Athens, where the group&#13;
will be staying in the Greek&#13;
section of the city at the Omonia&#13;
Hotel. Side trips will include a&#13;
cruise to the islands of Hydra,&#13;
Poros and Aegina, and a sightseeing&#13;
tour of Athens.&#13;
The eighth night will be spent in&#13;
Zurich, Switzerland at the Nova&#13;
Park Hotel on the return leg of&#13;
the trip. The group will attend a&#13;
fondue party at one of the famous&#13;
Swiss fondue restaurants.&#13;
Also included in the package is&#13;
the round-trip flight, two meals&#13;
daily, tour escort, and taxes and&#13;
service. The cost of the trip os&#13;
$499 plus $20 tax and service&#13;
based on two persons per room.&#13;
The group will leave for Athens&#13;
on April 12 and return April 21, a&#13;
time period which encompasses&#13;
Parkside's Spring Recess.&#13;
For additional information or&#13;
SAVE 50%&#13;
7,h*" \ Kenojha&#13;
6 6&#13;
New&#13;
DYLAN " n0„ *3&#13;
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Phone 6 54-3578&#13;
"Open 36 5 da ys a y ear"&#13;
Truck On&#13;
Kenosha's Finest Condominiums&#13;
Why rent when you can own a condommihome&#13;
for about the same monthly payment&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
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• rounfrv rhthhn *Dlshwash"' • Food waste disposal .Cen„al FM/TV antenna&#13;
• Country clubhouse, with sauna .And many other design and convenience features.&#13;
SEE OUR DECORATOR FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
Models also open weekdays 1 t o 8&#13;
Or by personal showing at your convenience&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE 1— 552-9339&#13;
PARK5IDE REALTY INC.&#13;
Developed and Built by U S General. Inc&#13;
applications, contact the Campus&#13;
Travel Center at (553-)2294 or&#13;
stop in at the Center, LLC D-197.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: Film Society sponsors the film "Rebel Without&#13;
A Cause" and "Wild One" at 7:30 p.m. in Gr. 103. Admission is 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: Whiteskellar presenting Bob Rohan from 1-3&#13;
p.m. in Gr. D103. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: E.S.P. lecture featuring Gil Eagles and&#13;
sponsored by the PAB. 8-10 p.m. in C.A.T. Tickets on sale at Information&#13;
kiosk for $1.50 students and $2 general public.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 25: Third World Organization sponsoring David Sanchez&#13;
at 1:30 in Gr. 103.&#13;
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 25-27: Ragtime Rangers Mt&#13;
Telemark Ski weekend. Contact Information kiosk for further details&#13;
Saturday, Jan, 26: Hockey, UW-P vs. UW-LaCrosse at 10:30 a m at&#13;
the Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 26: Dance from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in SAB, Admission is&#13;
$1.50 and Parkside I.D. as well as proof of age, is required.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: Vets Club meeting at4 p.m. in SAB.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: Student recital from 3 to 4:30 p.m in C A T&#13;
and open to the public. ' ' "&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: UW-P vs. Illinois State in hockey. 6pm at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29: Basketball UW-P vs. UW-Milwaukee at 7 30 n m&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Bldg. p,m-&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Jan. 29: Film on physical fitness from 7-8 p.m. in Gr. 103 No char^P&#13;
wE? . 6n Au?t,ons of new acts Whiteskellar at 1 p.m. ^ the Whiteskeilar in thee&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted in&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear. n&#13;
Behavior modification&#13;
is vehicle for change&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
William R. Morrow, professor&#13;
of psychology, will again involve&#13;
his Advanced Behavior&#13;
Modification class in the practical&#13;
aspects of clinical experimentation.&#13;
Student volunteers will participate&#13;
in a program that is&#13;
designed to change their&#13;
behavior in one of four ways:&#13;
overcome test anxiety, control&#13;
eating, quit smoking, and&#13;
overcome shyness with the opposite&#13;
sex.&#13;
Morrow's seven students will&#13;
be following the basic procedures&#13;
of behavior modification, adjusting&#13;
those procedures to fit the&#13;
needs of the two or three individuals&#13;
that each student will&#13;
be working with.&#13;
Morrow stressed the point that&#13;
each participant must help him&#13;
or herself, must do the work that&#13;
is involved in overcoming the&#13;
individual problem. The behavior&#13;
modification procedures can be&#13;
used to structure and aid the&#13;
process of changing behavior.&#13;
Basically the same experiment&#13;
was conducted in the spring&#13;
semester of 1973 by Morrow's&#13;
class with a fairly high percentage&#13;
of success. That&#13;
program was the subject of a&#13;
paper submitted by Morrow at&#13;
William Morrow&#13;
the annual meeting last month of&#13;
the Association for the Advancement&#13;
of Behavior Therapy.&#13;
In that paper, Morrow reported&#13;
58 percent of the clients&#13;
m a r k e d l y i m p r o v e d "&#13;
(meaning, for example, in the&#13;
area of smoking, that 58 percent&#13;
quit smoking for at least the&#13;
period of follow-up); 25 percent of&#13;
the clients showed moderate&#13;
improvement (meaning, again in&#13;
the smoking area, at least a 50&#13;
percent reduction in the consumption&#13;
of cigarettes); t:&#13;
remaining 17 percent show&#13;
negligible improvement.&#13;
The program will begin in tl&#13;
fourth week of classes, but a&#13;
pointments and interviews wi&#13;
applicants will be held befo&#13;
that time. Each student volunte'&#13;
will attend a total of eig&#13;
sessions, each session consistir&#13;
of 45 minutes apiece. The timi&#13;
for these sessions will 1&#13;
arranged by the volunteer and h&#13;
or her trainer.&#13;
Students wishing to participal&#13;
in the program can pick up flyei&#13;
at the Information Center or th&#13;
Library Circulation Desk. Boxt&#13;
for dropping off the registratio&#13;
forms will also be available £&#13;
these two locations. Th&#13;
registration forms can also b&#13;
sent to Morrow, Greenquist 35'&#13;
by either inter-campus or U.S&#13;
mail.&#13;
7inn nf "JPersons wi»h car to drive&#13;
oav J ™ °n b.USin6SS for ,he RANGER. Wi&#13;
miU alPfVr'P Which is approximately :&#13;
trii from ia !S ab0Ut °ne h0Ur ,0r ,he r0un&#13;
n or neTr 7 S'de- "deal for persons livin&#13;
RANrt o .I"' Contact Tom Petersen in th&#13;
"ANGER office, LLC D194.&#13;
JAN. 2 3, 2 5, 2 6, &amp; 27&#13;
Kenosha s Newest Nitespot 2nd National OHO 1% (formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbav R oad Rhone 6 54-0485&#13;
Audio visual products Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Creative new media taking hold&#13;
f, - -by °ebra Friedell&#13;
00™'r rent&#13;
that of showing video tapes-they makeThem 'b™&#13;
"It may be the biggest project vet at thiJ T' , ,&#13;
claim Christensen and Rudy Lienau who works''on&#13;
t h e t e c h n i c a l c r e w . " B u t w e n e e d n P n n! » f&#13;
volved. This is not just fo7eSaXL g6t in"&#13;
but for education and involvement ™ PUrf&gt;°Se&#13;
In starting out, the video committee has selected&#13;
a few films from the library, such as Niirht it It Opera with the Marx Brothers, Buster Keaton molt&#13;
Again and Pardon Us, a Laurel and HarriJ1&#13;
which they will take a film and^mateTp^am&#13;
around it A host will introduce and g,ve S&#13;
background of the film and there will be sufh things&#13;
as advertising and commercials concerning h ngs&#13;
going on at Parkside. Says Christensen, "This wll&#13;
give us a chance to experiment and be creative We&#13;
have writers, performers, directors, producers&#13;
who want to work. Video is a new media and an&#13;
expanding one. We need experience and we want to&#13;
get students ,n on all levels of video production "&#13;
There will also be a spot in the show for talent&#13;
Before the semester is over the committee has&#13;
plans for moving into broadcasting news satires&#13;
Although the ideas have not been fully developed&#13;
Christensen explained hopes for such things as the&#13;
campus news parody, soap opera type of shows on&#13;
campus life, feature shorts on future shock and&#13;
straight reporting of news events. "We are open to&#13;
many ideas in many areas," said Christensen&#13;
These are just things in planning."&#13;
The committee hopes to put monitors in high&#13;
traffic areas on campus to show the tapes and then&#13;
keep them in the Library Learning Center on file for&#13;
later viewing. Said Christensen, "There is a good&#13;
chance of getting closed circuit television within six&#13;
months, and we'd like to get a channel on it."&#13;
The technical crew was trained by Dave Campbell,&#13;
coordinator of the media production facility,&#13;
and Beecham Robinson, director of the Learning&#13;
Center. "Our crew is trained at a much quicker&#13;
pace than anyone imagined," Lienau exclaimed. "A&#13;
lot of doors were open with little red tape, which is&#13;
unusual with a bureaucracy."&#13;
In regard to funding, Lienau explained that the&#13;
Activities Board has given the video committee $100&#13;
and that there is no charge for the use of the&#13;
Homecoming tickets&#13;
now on sale&#13;
Parkside's two fraternities and&#13;
sorority are planning the&#13;
University's first homecoming to&#13;
be held the weekend of Feb. 8, 9&#13;
and 10. The "informal"&#13;
homecoming will center around&#13;
the Grand Valley State vs.&#13;
Parkside basketball game on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9. A dinner and&#13;
dance will follow the 7:30 p.m.&#13;
basketball game. The Parkside&#13;
Stage Band will perform and&#13;
liquor and beer will be served.&#13;
On Friday night there will be a&#13;
dance at the Student Activities&#13;
Building in which a blue-grass&#13;
band, Mission Mt. Wood Band,&#13;
will be featured.&#13;
Tickets are on sale for $2.50 at&#13;
the Information kiosk in Main&#13;
Place. This ticket allows students&#13;
to receive a reduced price entrance&#13;
to both Friday night's&#13;
dance and Saturday's basketball&#13;
game, besides admission to&#13;
Saturday night's dinner and&#13;
dance.&#13;
All students are invited to&#13;
attend and become involved.&#13;
Promoters emphasize the&#13;
casualness of Parkside's first&#13;
homecoming and encourage all&#13;
students to participate.&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Glenn Christensen, shown here in the control room of the audio&#13;
visual production studio, explained that he has tried to select films&#13;
that offer continuous entertainment--a student may walk in at any&#13;
point and enjoy the program.&#13;
equipment. Money from outside advertising is being&#13;
investigated; however, there may be some legal&#13;
problems involved.&#13;
In a tour of the video production center,&#13;
Christensen demonstrated some of the art&#13;
techniques one is capable of accomplishing when&#13;
working with video. The facility accommodates two&#13;
cameras plus two portapack mobile units. One can&#13;
create all sorts of special effects such as those&#13;
which can be created by CBS, said Lienau. They&#13;
included such things as superimposition, using&#13;
slides and live performance simultaneously,&#13;
dissolves, cuts and wipes.&#13;
The timing is extremely important in audio-visual&#13;
production. Christensen explained that not only are&#13;
the production deadlines so close together but so&#13;
Literary magazine&#13;
published&#13;
many things happen at once during production.&#13;
"The 'we' is very important. Because of the fast&#13;
pace there is a tendency to lose your sensitivity to&#13;
one another," said Christensen. "Everyone has to&#13;
work together as one entity. You can't be anything&#13;
in this media without knowing something about&#13;
people. You learn from others."&#13;
The first show, to be broadcast this February, will&#13;
feature Christensen as producer and Maria Breach,&#13;
a secretary in the audio production center, as&#13;
director.&#13;
Christensen stressed the want and need for more&#13;
students to get involved with all the levels of&#13;
production-from talent to technical. He asked that&#13;
anyone interested stop at the Student Activities&#13;
Office in LLC D195.&#13;
Dwarves, a new locally-based&#13;
literary magazine published by&#13;
many of the same people involved&#13;
in such past literary and&#13;
journalistic endeavors as&#13;
Newscope, Indications and the&#13;
Nickel Bag is now on sale at bars,&#13;
bookstores and in the very wide&#13;
halls of Parkside itself.&#13;
Dwarves includes selected&#13;
poetry by Diane Lawler, Clark&#13;
Anderson and Ryan Higgins,&#13;
short fiction by Jim Koloen, Marc&#13;
Eisen and Paul Lomartire,&#13;
drawings by John Sieger and&#13;
Casey Higgins and photographs&#13;
by Brian Ross.&#13;
Not a "student" literary&#13;
magazine, Dwarves is an offcampus&#13;
publication which will&#13;
continue to afford an outlet for&#13;
serious creative efforts by&#13;
students as well as non-students.&#13;
The price is one dollar per copy.&#13;
Student Activities calendars&#13;
for second semester are now&#13;
available at the Information&#13;
kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for P ants&#13;
and things!&#13;
ISEftMIANN'S&#13;
THE&#13;
[American]&#13;
614 - 5 6th S treet&#13;
V/ednesd&#13;
Qr. ±o3 Cky, vJcxn. 7:30pm.&#13;
. 1 F 1 c ? / v ^&#13;
- SI GNS OP T H E I R T \VHE S =&#13;
S&#13;
ESIBSk,&#13;
S\&#13;
Brando&#13;
•3 BOB&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday , J a n . 23, 1974&#13;
_Ashortf short&#13;
The End&#13;
by Kurt Alexander Muller&#13;
And God Looked Down Over All&#13;
The Earth And He Was Sick Unto&#13;
His Stomach....&#13;
"O.K." He said, "All right! I&#13;
am fed up...I am disgusted...I&#13;
have had it! Enough is&#13;
enough...Gabriel, blow your&#13;
damned horn! I am putting an&#13;
end to all that crap down there!!"&#13;
"Well, it's about time," Gabriel&#13;
replied, taking his horn out of its&#13;
case. "Do you want a nice&#13;
modern riff or something&#13;
military, like taps, or maybe one&#13;
good long, strong-"&#13;
"I don't care what you blow,"&#13;
said God, "Just blow! Make it&#13;
loud; make it solid and final and&#13;
of a ll eternity-make it ring from&#13;
heaven to hell and back...make it&#13;
reach into all men's souls and fill&#13;
them with the realization that&#13;
this is IT. Make it bang!!"&#13;
"All right," Gabriel said, "All&#13;
right, but don't yell at me. After&#13;
all, I am a musician, not a&#13;
plumber. I've waited a long time&#13;
for this gig and I'm not going to&#13;
goof it. You just tell me how&#13;
you're going to end it and I'll&#13;
come up with something that&#13;
cooks.'' And he fit the mouthpiece&#13;
into his horn. "You going to have&#13;
it rain for forty days and forty&#13;
nights again?"&#13;
"Well," God said, "I haven't&#13;
really given it much thought."&#13;
"Well, if you're thinking of&#13;
having it rain, you'd better forget&#13;
it-they got new drainage systems&#13;
down there!!"&#13;
"Maybe I'll have an earthquake,"&#13;
God said, "that would siewh&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
It's simply amazing how electronic&#13;
calculators have become a "must" Item&#13;
for every student (as well as&#13;
housewives, salesmen, businessmen, or&#13;
any guy or gal who has trouble balancing&#13;
the old checkbook).&#13;
What has greatly contributed to their&#13;
popularity of course besides their&#13;
usefulness, Is the low price.&#13;
At $29.95 for a four function model&#13;
capable of doing chain and mixed&#13;
calculations, you simply can't afford to&#13;
be without one. We just received a new&#13;
supply and believe me, they're going&#13;
fast.&#13;
The new Artarantz SQ full logic IC chip&#13;
will be available within the next 30 days,&#13;
we are told and if you don't know what it&#13;
is, let me lay it on you straight... it will&#13;
allow you to listen to stereo records,&#13;
tapes and broadcasts (as well as SQ&#13;
disks) with 4-channel separation so close&#13;
to discrete that I defy you to tell the&#13;
difference.&#13;
I predict that this introduction will&#13;
revolutionize Quad in a number of ways:&#13;
Obviously, any 4 channel receiver not&#13;
equipped with or capable of receiving&#13;
this chip will be obsolete. Just as important,&#13;
this could be the beginning of&#13;
the end for CD 4 --- the four channel disk&#13;
system developed and promoted by RCA&#13;
and JVC. I simply can't conceive that&#13;
anyone will spend the extra $200 or more&#13;
for the extra equipment needed for CD 4&#13;
to gain those extra 4 db's of separation.&#13;
By the way, we've got some terrific&#13;
buys on records and tapes. From cutouts&#13;
at 3 for $1.00 to the latest releases at&#13;
$3.79. 8-track tapes from $1.99 and up.&#13;
Come in and browse -- you're sure to find&#13;
something you'll.like.&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo-TV&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
Records - Tapes&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 'til 6&#13;
said Gabriel. "I&#13;
I&#13;
get&#13;
really-"&#13;
"No good&#13;
could give you some great&#13;
quakey music-but lots of those&#13;
houses are quakeproof, and&#13;
imagine that you want to&#13;
them all at the same time."&#13;
"Of course, of course," said&#13;
God. "I know that. I wasn't&#13;
seriously thinking of earthquakes...&#13;
a plague is more my&#13;
style-maybe a plague that would&#13;
knock down every living--"&#13;
"They're all vaccinated!"&#13;
"Vaccinated? Hmmm...of&#13;
course...that is a shame,&#13;
though...in the old days you could&#13;
make a plague that would strike&#13;
down everything, Man, woman-"&#13;
"I suppose everything is&#13;
fireproof?" Gabriel interrupted.&#13;
"Everything except the&#13;
slums," said God, "and if you&#13;
burn those out they'll just rebuild&#13;
with modern developments."&#13;
Gabriel fingered his valves&#13;
while God sat back and thought&#13;
for a while. "Listen," God finally&#13;
said, smiling weakly, "what the&#13;
hell. Maybe I'll give them some&#13;
more time-after all, they are my&#13;
own children aren't they?"&#13;
"O.K. by me," said Gabriel.&#13;
"You wanna hear a little&#13;
something any way... I mean as&#13;
long as I already got the horn&#13;
out?"&#13;
More silence.&#13;
"All right," God finally said&#13;
softly, leaning back, "Play me&#13;
some blues!!"&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
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&amp;3TZ-SI9SThe&#13;
Raven&#13;
by Mike Winslow&#13;
Wanted Dead or Alive&#13;
David Bromberg&#13;
(Columbia KC 32717)&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: Gary Jensen, who wrote "The Raven" for two&#13;
semesters, is not attending Parkside this semester. His column will be&#13;
written by Mike Winslow and will appear bi-weekly.&#13;
I've never heard David Bromberg before except for his version of&#13;
Mr. Bojangles" which I but dimly remember. What prompted me to&#13;
review his album was the cover, which is a black and white&#13;
photograph of Bromberg clinging to the radio tower of the Empire&#13;
tate Building, clutching an airplane in one hand like King Kong. The&#13;
rear cover shows him as a giant face gazing through a bedroom&#13;
window at a startled girl, with a "King Kong" look on his face.&#13;
first side of the album was recorded in San Francisco using&#13;
some of the local musicians. Side two was cut in New York and three of&#13;
mnsfr. CUtSf T , Since Brombei'g uses so many different&#13;
musicians to back him it wouldn't be practical to name them, but rest&#13;
• f 1 F e g ° ° d ' ° n e 1 ) 0 1 1 1 1 t o n o t e i s h o w t h e y c o m b i n e d a f i d d l e&#13;
rlh°rnnSrajSeVeral °f the songs with g00d results- Another is how&#13;
Bromberg s dry voice fits in with the music&#13;
andhCnrTuTnS Wir5 "T,he H°ldup" Written j°intly ^ Bromberg&#13;
feitimM ? t f fl0"' S 3 fast"paced sonS witb a catchy melody and&#13;
tastv tnimnpf h" S°me °f th° gUltar parts and in a short but&#13;
he'shniT « a' S°ng 1S directed from a bandit to the persons&#13;
holding up and although the words are serious they sometimes&#13;
seem comical when combined with the music. A good song.&#13;
nhc Pmeo"e Else s Blues" is about a guy who has everything "two&#13;
hecks in the mail and a refund on my union dues,...all the dope I can&#13;
smoke, all the chicks I can use." This is followed by "Danger Man " a&#13;
blues shuffle with guitar, sax and trumpet solos plus the Sweet' Inspirations&#13;
singing background vocals. There's a hot jam, but it would&#13;
have been nice if it had lasted longer.&#13;
The last song on the first side, "The Main Street Moan" is done&#13;
fshnrtr3 lhW KtW° gVltars' mandolin and bass. It's a nice tune with&#13;
die street &amp; y°U migHt "ke t0 Sing WhiIe walking down&#13;
Send Me to the 'lectric Chair" (copyright 1927) nnens the COnnnj&#13;
side m a Dixieland style featuring clarinet and cornet solos It tells the&#13;
story of a man who's committed a murder and rather than srLnd his&#13;
hfe in jail pleads with the judge to send him to the 'lectric chaTr 'This&#13;
' Vc®nfination of two more old blues tunes, "Statesboro&#13;
ues - Church Bells Blues." It's Bromberg playing the blues alone&#13;
and improvising some of the lyrics.&#13;
• Wallflawer," a Bob Dylan tune in a country vein is a good song but&#13;
is eclipsed by the next tune, a live version of "Kansas City" which is&#13;
ynamite. The saxes scream and the trumpets wail while the pianist&#13;
improvises the blues and Bromberg plays guitar P&#13;
A fitting conclusion to the album is "The New Lee Highway Blues "&#13;
LitTr fiL?1UeS,deSCribing Hfe on the road eompYet? wlth banjo&#13;
pnH nf'in m J™ minutes of good pickin' and fiddlin' at the&#13;
end of the song. This is one of the best songs on the album.&#13;
This album is David Bromberg "fiddlin' " around with the blues&#13;
Sfl! i t (?3re blUGS but with a different flavor There's a&#13;
blues The °u Dlxl0land&gt; country blues and even "regular" type&#13;
aaflnfkndittyv ffoorr fthheT hb lyu e1sS,n yo3u m11 pdr So°bnagb l0yn ltihkee ailtb. um and if you have an&#13;
(Record Courtesy J&amp;J Tape &amp; Record Center)&#13;
Any hassles, p roblems, c omplaints?&#13;
The PSGA Grievance and Clearinghouse&#13;
Committee will deal w ith them.&#13;
Meeting: Wed., Jan. 2 3, L LC D174&#13;
ESP &amp; PSYCHIC&#13;
DEMONSTRATIONS&#13;
Tonight, Jan. 23rd 8 p.m.&#13;
Comm. Ar t s Theat r e Adm. »2&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
InFo Center - LLC Main Place, At Door&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Peace Corps . Vi s t a ^mn„. t^„y&#13;
ACTION'S Peace Corps and VISTA will be on camnm ,,&#13;
programs° "** P°tenUal aPP"CantS t0 the ""&#13;
rtSne?.rraswe,iastK—1&#13;
Moyle explains, "Many people believe that filling out an anniwj&#13;
obligates the applicant to join Peace Corps or VISTA This fi nitt ?&#13;
I t mer e l y g i v e s P e a c e C o r p s a n d V ISTA t h e &lt;tace t o ma£ht J&#13;
plicanfs abilities and talents with the requests from host comm^Ues&#13;
here and overseas. An applicant makes his or her decision al&#13;
tesed on the matching ~&#13;
thlS="e haS t0 P,an ahead «"» " h-He is Just&#13;
Applicants from practically every field of study are needed for the&#13;
training cycles that start m spring, summer and fall This includes&#13;
liberal arts and social science as well as specific studies&#13;
Peace Corps service is overseas for two years and that of VISTA is&#13;
here in the U.S. for one year. All travel, health and living expenses arc&#13;
paid while the volunteer serves the community that requested him.&#13;
Broomball teams organic&#13;
Co-ed broomball teams are being set up now to play at the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Arena on Monday and Friday noons. Skates are not needed&#13;
",'mgXm ?a7rt,Clpatin® sh°uld «»««* Vic Godfrey intte&#13;
S&amp;S becomes L&amp;F&#13;
The Department of Safety and Security has become the central&#13;
collection agency on campus for lost and found items to be claimed or&#13;
turned in. Individuals wishing to claim lost articles may either drop in&#13;
at the security budding or call extension 2455 between Sam and&#13;
midnight on weekdays. Found articles may be turned in at either the&#13;
security building or the Information Center. Articles which are unclaimed&#13;
after 60 days will be sold or turned over to the finder according&#13;
to state law.&#13;
East lot wil l be i n touch&#13;
Due to the isolation of the east parking lot, an inter-campus&#13;
heew f3S installed fere so assistance can be summoned in&#13;
the event of an emergency. The phone is located at the east end of the&#13;
walkway from Tallent Hall. For assistance between the hours of 8 a m&#13;
and midnight, dial 2455 or the operator.&#13;
Racine AAUW to award scholarship&#13;
The Racine Branch of the American Association of University&#13;
Women has announced that applications are now being accepted for&#13;
the $400 scholarship which AAUW awards annually to a Racine County&#13;
woman.&#13;
The scholarship award, which is based on academic achievement&#13;
and financial need, is awarded each year to a Racine County woman&#13;
beginning the first or second semester of her junior year at any accredited,&#13;
degree-granting college or university the fall after the grant&#13;
is awarded.&#13;
Deadline for filing applications is April 1. The scholarship will be&#13;
awarded at AAUW's annual banquet in May.&#13;
Application blanks may be obtained from Mrs. W. Robert Jennings,&#13;
1219 South Main St., Racine, Wis. 53403, the scholarship committee&#13;
chairman, or from deans or student affairs directors at a student's&#13;
college or university.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned to Mrs. Jennings along with a&#13;
transcript of the student's credits for her college work to date.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
OINO'S&#13;
1816 1 6 Street&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
FOR PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOST ACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
Ml l W !•&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
Service&#13;
SOME LIKE IT HOT&#13;
in January&#13;
Mexican Special&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29&#13;
Respi ratory exhibi t now i n l ibrary&#13;
Associati^TW1? °ffiCe' irlconjunction with The Wisconsin Lung&#13;
= r?,can Cancer Society and the Pathology Se showPn«f rha Mernal Hospital- opened its first exhibitin&#13;
Sf® ,floor of the library last Monday-Jan- 21.&#13;
three^IrtV i ™ ASm°king and Your Health" and is displayed in&#13;
Svstem ? fo°my, and Physiology of ^ Respiratory&#13;
Have Ri'JhJt r * Smoking on the Body; 3. The Non-Smokers&#13;
^ s, Too. Free educational literature will be available.&#13;
Teaching appl icat ions avai labl e&#13;
durfng1htm4U5^w,UdentS Wh° P,3n t0 intern or student teach&#13;
soon L noss/ht J?","® Urged t0 COmplete aPPdcations as&#13;
Hall ThfrELn ' Apphcat,on forms are available in 210 Greenquist&#13;
WinJSf deadhne for intern applications for Fall Semester 1974 and ^aSmrefoJ^n 19?4" Students who plan t0&#13;
March 1, 1974 SemeStGr 1974 must complete aPPhcations by&#13;
For further information about any of these programs contact&#13;
phonM553)O230S5SOr °f Education Dwayne Olsen, 210 Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Films about rebel lion open^mester&#13;
^,?Uth in rebe,lion- "Rebel Without a Cause" and&#13;
Society at n m 0PS ^ semester of the Parkside Film&#13;
730 Pm- °n Wednesday, Jan. 23 in Greenquist Hall 103&#13;
«^n k\ 2rei?pen t0 publ,c'and admission is 75 cents.&#13;
mirSf iWltbout a Cause." starring the late James Dean, deals with&#13;
"The Wiinn "ag,!rS.revolt PrinciPa"y against their parents.&#13;
JthI \ ? StarS Mar,on Brand0 and Lee Marvin. deals&#13;
niral towiv m° yClegang and the results of its invasion of a small&#13;
Both films are marked by a number of violent episodes (or at least&#13;
what passed for violence when "Wild One" was made in 1953 and&#13;
Rebel in 1955), and both have happy endings, of sorts; cop-outs say&#13;
some reviewers. J&#13;
Remaining films in the series are "Forbidden Games" (Feb 1 1 ) -&#13;
three Buster Keaton films: "Sherlock Jr.," "Cops" and "The&#13;
Navigator" (March 11); "Day at the Races (March 27); and&#13;
Lavender Hill Mob" (April 10).&#13;
Chancello r vi s i t ing Kent Stat e&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie is heading North Central Association&#13;
examining teams which are undertaking complete institutional accrediting&#13;
reviews of Notre Dame and Kent State. Wyllie is in Kent,&#13;
Ohio this week leading a 10-member North Central team at Kent State'&#13;
He will head another 10-member North Central examining team&#13;
March 18-20 at Notre Dame. Both periodic reviews cover the entire&#13;
University operation including academic review of undergraduate&#13;
through doctoral.&#13;
****************-*******************&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our&#13;
Advertisers •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••i t*&#13;
JOHN W. MERRICK, D .V.M.&#13;
announces the association ot&#13;
JOHN WENTLAND, D.V.M.&#13;
and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
Villa Capri Shopping Center&#13;
North 22nd Ave. Kenosha; (Ohio St. Racine)&#13;
552-9122 Day and Evening Hours by Appointment&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
HBUILDING^H&#13;
V&amp; v&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED: Senior Chemistry major to&#13;
conduct experiment(s). Includes qualitative&#13;
analysis. Contact Ted, c-o Ranger, LLC&#13;
D194.&#13;
WANTED: Journalism major or someone&#13;
with the ability to write clear legible news&#13;
stories on a very part-time basis. Small&#13;
weekly in Zion, III. needs occasional help in&#13;
covering various municipal functions&#13;
usually in the evening. Pay isn't good and the&#13;
assignments are sometimes dry but the&#13;
experience Is great. Call 312-872-4572 for&#13;
details. Ask for Shirley.&#13;
Proof reader-TY PI ST needed! Call 552-8859&#13;
on Thursday after 7 p .m. and ask for Roger.&#13;
Girl wanted to share 3 bedroom apt. Near&#13;
Parkside via Racine. Rent $100 per mo. 637-&#13;
2080 after 6 p.m. - Price.&#13;
PAPERS NOTARIZED on the spot. See&#13;
Betty Briggs, Business Management major,&#13;
evening classes 6:15-9:15. 634-2886.&#13;
INCOME TAX PREPARATION. Ex&#13;
perienced and reasonable. Discount to&#13;
Parksiders. Call 633-0416 for appointment&#13;
FOR SALE: Stereo FM-AM car radio. Works&#13;
great. 654-0030 evenings.&#13;
AQUARIUM WITH FISH and accessories&#13;
Cheap. Call 552-8584. Ask for Jeff.&#13;
Personals&#13;
HAS ANYONE FOUND my seaweed? I lost&#13;
it at registration. Contact Karen Paal,&#13;
Admissions Office.&#13;
KAY W. IN P.S. We're looking for a circulation&#13;
manager and heard you've got&#13;
experience. 5000 copies per week. Interested?&#13;
Not lucrative but safe. R.S.&#13;
CT3&#13;
mmmm&#13;
03&#13;
&amp;) 5&#13;
3&#13;
go P™&#13;
m&#13;
GO&#13;
•9*&#13;
&lt;73&#13;
-3=&#13;
i mmsmm &amp;) r—&#13;
CO CSSP&#13;
3&#13;
-H&#13;
CO&#13;
CO&#13;
IT*&#13;
P"&#13;
m&#13;
CO&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. ja„. 23, 1974&#13;
Phy. Ed. SIdg. Schedule&#13;
Wed. Jan. 16 - Gym open for recreation&#13;
intramural basketball&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 17 - Gym open for recreation&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Fri. Jan. 18 -&#13;
Sat. Jan. 19&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Basketball games&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Sun. Jan. 20 - B|dg open af 2 pm 1Q pm&#13;
Mon. Jan. 21 •&#13;
Tues. Jan. 22 -&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
12:30 pm-l:30 pm&#13;
8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-2 pm &amp; 6 pm-10 pm&#13;
10:30 am 1:30 pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10:30 am &amp; 12:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
11:30 am-l:30 pm&#13;
10:30 am-5 pm&#13;
8:30 am 5 pm Entire bldg. closes 5:00&#13;
11 am 1:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-4 pm&#13;
JV-5:30 Varsity-7:30&#13;
8:30 am-5 pm&#13;
3:30 pm-5 pm&#13;
All facilities available except for&#13;
intramurals in gyms at 6:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-l :30 pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-2 pm&#13;
12:30pm • 1: 30pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
all day except between 10:30 am &amp; 12:30 prr&#13;
11:30 am-1:30 pm 8. 6 pm-10 pm&#13;
Mat men extend&#13;
winning record&#13;
Parkside's wrestling team ran&#13;
its record to 3-0 Saturday, beating&#13;
Western Dlinois at Macomb 29-20.&#13;
Randy Skarda, 150 pounder,&#13;
won his 11th without a loss,&#13;
pinning his opponent in 3:33. Bill&#13;
West at 134 pounds is now 10-0&#13;
after pinning Scott Pickford in&#13;
7:41, and Ken Martin at 142&#13;
pounds is 9-0 for the season on a&#13;
pin over Tom Arlis in 2:55.&#13;
Other Ranger winners were&#13;
Rick Schovan (118) on a pin in&#13;
7:14, and 126-pound Ricco&#13;
Savaglia on a 6-2 decis ion. Tom&#13;
Beyer at 177 pounds drew his&#13;
match 9-9.&#13;
The Ranger mat team is&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to -date, 160-page,&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
1 to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material is sold for&#13;
research assistance only.&#13;
ranked fifth in the NAIA midwest&#13;
region.&#13;
Cagers defeat Wayne State&#13;
Parkside's cagers unleashed&#13;
their biggest scoring explosion of&#13;
the year Saturday night at the&#13;
Physical Education Building as&#13;
the Rangers overpowered Wayne&#13;
State 89-65.&#13;
The Rangers, with Gary Cole&#13;
scoring 27 points and pulling&#13;
down 17 rebounds, hit on 37 of 78&#13;
shots from the field for a 47&#13;
percent mark while Wayne could&#13;
only make 23 of 69 for 33 percent.&#13;
Four other Parkside players&#13;
were in double figures. Malcolm&#13;
Mahone had 12, Calvin Demson 11&#13;
and Rade Dimitrijevic and Chuck&#13;
Chambliss 10 each.&#13;
The Rangers never trailed in&#13;
the game. They jumped out to a&#13;
quick 13-6 le ad in the first five&#13;
and one-half minutes of play and&#13;
had pushed the lead to 46-39 at&#13;
half-time. Wayne State had&#13;
threatened late in the half and&#13;
had closed the gap to 33-32 wi th&#13;
5:19 remaining but the Rangers&#13;
hit on seven straight points, three&#13;
by Denson and four by Don Snow&#13;
(seeing his first action since Dec.&#13;
14 after his recovery from a&#13;
broken cheekbone) and were out&#13;
Trackmen&#13;
looking for&#13;
honors&#13;
Three Parkside trackmen will&#13;
compete Friday and Saturday in&#13;
the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
indoor championship meet at&#13;
Kansas City.&#13;
Juniors Lucian Rosa and&#13;
Dennis Biel and freshman Jim&#13;
Heiring will be Parkside's entries.&#13;
For Rosa, a junior from Kandy,&#13;
Ceylon, and Biel, a junior from&#13;
Wausau (East), the meet will&#13;
mean another chance for the all-&#13;
America honors each grabbed&#13;
last season. For Heiring, a&#13;
walker from Kenosha (Bradford),&#13;
it's his fi rst trip to the meet&#13;
where Mike DeWitt established&#13;
the Parkside walking tradition by&#13;
taking all-America honors two&#13;
seasons ago.&#13;
Rosa placed fourth in the mile&#13;
and second in the two-mile last&#13;
year and will be aiming at a win&#13;
in the longer distance this time,&#13;
although he'll again be entered in&#13;
both. Biel posted one of the&#13;
NAIA's top 1,000-yard times last&#13;
weekend at Madison in winning&#13;
the USTFF Open at the UW&#13;
fieldhouse and could be the&#13;
favorite in that event at Kansas&#13;
City."&#13;
of danger.&#13;
Parkside stormed out in the&#13;
half and by midway through the&#13;
final stanza had upped its lead to&#13;
18 at 70-52. The Rangers' biggest&#13;
lead of the night came at 3:38&#13;
when Dean Christensen drove in&#13;
for a layup and gave Parkside a&#13;
27-point bulge at 83-56.&#13;
The Rangers outrebounded&#13;
Wayne 58-35 as Mahone had nine&#13;
rebounds, Dimitrijevic seven and&#13;
Snow six in addition to Cole's 17.&#13;
In action Tuesday, Jan. 15,&#13;
Parkside defeated St. Xavier&#13;
College 63-61 at Chicago as Cole&#13;
led all scorers with 19 points.&#13;
Chambliss had 16, Mahone 10 and&#13;
Denson 10 as th e Rangers held a&#13;
35-31 half-time lead, lost it near&#13;
the end and came back on a shot&#13;
by Cole with 1:08 left in the&#13;
contest to grab the win.&#13;
Parkside met Indiana State-&#13;
Evansville Monday and Southern&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville on the road&#13;
as the Rangers attempted to&#13;
better their 6-10 season mark.&#13;
Parkside will play at Aquinas&#13;
College in Grand Rapids, Mich.,&#13;
Saturday night before returning&#13;
home next Tuesday to take on a&#13;
rugged UW-Milwaukee squad at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Physical&#13;
Education Building.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building policy&#13;
Family Identification Card&#13;
1 1. The Parkside family identification card is a convenience for the immediate family&#13;
(spouse and children only; of faculty, staff and students who use the athletic facilities.&#13;
2. When using the athletic facilities, the family of faculty, staff and students may present&#13;
either the family identification card or the identification card of the faculty member, staff&#13;
member or student. Further proof of identification may be required by those managing the&#13;
facility.&#13;
3. Family identification cards may be secured from the physical education office Monday&#13;
through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. beginning January 14,1974.&#13;
4. The charge for the card will be $1.00 (The charge for the second semester, 1973-74 will be&#13;
$.50) Beginning with the academic year 1974-75, cards will be sold on a yearly basis only from&#13;
September 1 to August 31. The charge will beSl.OO regardless of time of purchase.&#13;
5. Only one family identification card per family will be issued.&#13;
6. Family identification cards will list the name (s) of the spouse and children on the card.&#13;
7. Those allowing unauthorized persons to use the family identification card will lose the&#13;
identification card and surrender the privilege of using the physical education building.&#13;
8. Family members may bring one guest to the facility for a $1.00 charge.&#13;
9. ALL PERSONS USING THE ATHLETIC FACILITIES MUST OBEY THE FOLLOWING&#13;
RULES AND REGULATIONS:&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
1. Anyone using the athletic facilities must have an ID card.&#13;
2. The ID card must be shown upon request at the athletic facility.&#13;
3. Those using the pool and sauna must exercise special care. The following rules govern&#13;
their use:&#13;
a. No running, pushing or shoving on the pool deck or in the pool area.&#13;
b. Only one person at a time may use the diving board.&#13;
c. Persons in street clothes will not be allowed on the pool deck.&#13;
d. Food is prohibited in the pool area.&#13;
e. Artificial swim devices are not allowed in the pool. The use of fins, masks and goggles is&#13;
prohibited.&#13;
f. No one is permitted in the guard tower except the lifeguard.&#13;
g. Leaders of organized groups visiting the pool shall assume full responsibility for the conduct&#13;
of their groups.&#13;
h. Patrons should acquaint themselves with the various depths of the pool.&#13;
8. No glass containers are allowed in the bathhouse or pool area.&#13;
i. The lifeguard may expel from the pool anyone violating these rules,-or anyone whose conduct&#13;
is jeopardizing the safety or pleasure of others.&#13;
4. Family members must provide all clothing, towels and locks. Empty lockers are&#13;
available in locker areas. No locks may be left on the lockers at the end of the day.&#13;
5. PARENTSMUSTSTAY WITH CHILDREN AGETWELVE OR UNDER.&#13;
6. ANYONE VIOLATING THE RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE ATHLETIC&#13;
FACILITY WILL BE ASKED TO LEAVE!&#13;
7. Those using the Sauna must strictly adhere to the following instructions:&#13;
a. Minimum of two people in the Sauna.&#13;
b. Maximum of twelve people in Sauna.&#13;
c. Swim suits only.&#13;
d. Keep hands off controls.&#13;
e. Limit use to fifteen minutes.&#13;
f. Caution extended stay may cause dizziness.&#13;
g. Absolutely no one allowed in the Sauna alone.&#13;
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 17, January 23, 1974</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>shucard proposes faculty do advising&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
sal to reorganize the academic advising&#13;
A pro,:; Parkside was made by Alan Shucard,&#13;
system te professor of English, at the last faculty&#13;
ass&lt;JCIameeting. A surprise to the Student Services&#13;
-;Ie hich it directly affects, the proposal calls for&#13;
sta '~ces of academic advising to be staffed by&#13;
u~~ ~embers." At the present time, students&#13;
fa bave declared a major are advised by faculty.&#13;
whO 3400 students who have not currently declared a&#13;
Tb~ receive academic advising from the coun-&#13;
~JOI' tall ofthe Student Services office. Under the&#13;
~~ plan all students would receive advising&#13;
from faculty. .&#13;
A brief discussion followed the reading of the&#13;
posaI and it was sent to the Academic Policies&#13;
P'" 'tlee for further study. The discussion cen-&#13;
::F.round the need for hiring additional faculty&#13;
release those faculty members who are involved&#13;
to demic advising from part of theIr class loads,&#13;
maca f Ity d . d" and as a reward for those ,aell . omg ,3 VISIng.&#13;
In an interview Shucard saId that 10 talkIng to and&#13;
advisingmajors be found they were not adequately .&#13;
advised and that academic advice given by an&#13;
academician who is closest to the reqwrements IS 10&#13;
the best interests of the students. He added that&#13;
academ!c a,dvice is net given to the student early&#13;
eno~~ In his or her college career. "The academic&#13;
advising .system which is most effective for the&#13;
students IStbe one I proposed," be said. When asked&#13;
Wbether.or not the prOposed system may force a cut&#13;
10 posrticns for tbe student services counseling&#13;
staff, Shucard said, "If you have a system that&#13;
doesn't work effectively you have to find a different&#13;
way, not keep an old system to save jobs. "&#13;
James Dean, ChairJ&gt;erson of the Academic&#13;
POhCles Committee, said the committee would&#13;
research SUch factors as cost and the need to hire&#13;
addllIonal faculty. He said he felt that "people are&#13;
not getting good advice" and the "Organization of&#13;
the system as it stands now is not l'eSponsive 10 change."&#13;
AlIen Dearborn, Assistant OlanceUor and Dean of&#13;
StUdents, claimed that contrary 10 the College of&#13;
&amp;ience and Society. the School of Modern In'*'slry&#13;
H&#13;
wants&#13;
to keep Us posted Onall academic revisions.&#13;
They send US everything." Dearborn questioned&#13;
whether or not the new proposal perhaps was&#13;
motivated to save and create faculty positions. He&#13;
said that "if it is an idea that has the students' best&#13;
interests in mind then I'm all for it. II He added,&#13;
however, that if the move is one "for faculty power&#13;
or academic deans' power, I'm not going to support&#13;
It - and 111do aU I can to dIacour ell"&#13;
Dearborn sa'd that no eee " U ta II1Onf7 from&#13;
the Student , (undlng 10 put to .cademlc&#13;
adv etse..ben. "If facult)' arerull)' ...."&#13;
he added, "or "ere lIncere f... the t. t fl. n,&#13;
they should ha, e been I f... mo lUdml&#13;
/"VIces tall It'. I'" to cntlclze than aa...&#13;
~ ... advice. Ex pifor a fN' ... members&#13;
of the faculty I ha, e oev... had • facull member&#13;
ceene to me '""8I1Ung 10 olfer ad "I\lPPO&lt;1 "&#13;
Je"-el Ecbelbarg.... nl an of udell •&#13;
explained thal the colnlellll/l !J ..... III the&#13;
studenl as a '''''iloIe _" not just to academia&#13;
She explamed Illat ber 1la.!J .pproxuna Iy&#13;
per ~nt of tbetr ume 10 acadernic ad whldl&#13;
mvol.es a lot of ume and IaIow "II.&#13;
professJonal responsjbtluy," laid&#13;
Ecbelbarg ... apla1Ded that the C&lt;JUIIIehna IUIf&#13;
ftnd theIr peak 01 academJc ad. .1 the&#13;
~ and the end of the san u 'Well u&#13;
heNeen san~. when f.cuIty areoIlen lltlId.l,.&#13;
papers and exams or ] ..... '·allabl For "' .......&#13;
and pan-t1me Itllden ,advis«'a ...... , ilable b)'&#13;
appomtment and at the Informounn four&#13;
nights per "eel&lt;&#13;
W,Ill regard 10 tudenl "m ha"e not d&lt;clared a&#13;
major, Ecbelbarger lr'esIed the need f... U&#13;
cont""- Of' ... I&#13;
TheParkside!--- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974 Vol. II No. 16&#13;
!yCCC&#13;
Student funds allocated&#13;
Or(aalzatlon&#13;
Porbide Village Student&#13;
Aaociation&#13;
Amenian Club&#13;
AdultStudents&#13;
a-Club&#13;
OliId Care Center&#13;
Debaleand Forensics&#13;
I'Irbide Players&#13;
PbolGgraphyClub&#13;
Pre-MedClub&#13;
RInger •&#13;
Third World&#13;
Yearbook&#13;
DellaGamma Phi (sorority)&#13;
Interfraternity Council&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
VeteransClub&#13;
SigmaPi &lt;fraternity)&#13;
Ouistian Fellowship&#13;
NewmanClub&#13;
IledilationSociety&#13;
DemocraticYouth Caucus&#13;
Young RePUblicans&#13;
ftlct;me Rangers&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
SI&gt;im Club&#13;
PomPorn Squad&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
PSGA&#13;
by Haney V. Hedden&#13;
Atthe close of last semester the&#13;
Carnpus Concerns Committee&#13;
ICCC) concluded its&#13;
deliberations on funding of&#13;
stUdentorganizations. Of the 28&#13;
organizations that requested&#13;
fllJIds all received money for&#13;
;:':,hng and duplicating costs.&#13;
'lOg only $6900 to work with&#13;
cec could not possibly satisfy all&#13;
OI'gaJUzahons'requests which&#13;
;anged from $20 to $4103.60. In&#13;
'ct, the total funds originally&#13;
~IIeSled by the organizations&#13;
OlDItedto $22,663.&#13;
.,lYhe. CCC asked these&#13;
~IZations to revise their&#13;
Witht req~ests in accordance&#13;
guider fundIng criteria and&#13;
'nes set up by CCC few&#13;
~zatlons scaled back their&#13;
.... I requests and some did&#13;
COnunl'eapond at all. As a resull, the&#13;
a.-. Itlee was forced 10 reduce&#13;
o.••~orgalUzations'requests and&#13;
~--y appropriated $6,219 for&#13;
Amount&#13;
Requested&#13;
Amount&#13;
Received&#13;
$50&#13;
340&#13;
525&#13;
943&#13;
3104&#13;
779.75&#13;
342&#13;
167&#13;
50&#13;
2515&#13;
875&#13;
3188&#13;
470&#13;
146&#13;
601&#13;
1410&#13;
665&#13;
215&#13;
$25&#13;
25&#13;
150&#13;
25&#13;
BOO&#13;
120&#13;
100&#13;
o&#13;
15&#13;
500&#13;
190&#13;
200&#13;
270&#13;
o&#13;
200&#13;
1410&#13;
100&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
450&#13;
210&#13;
o&#13;
129&#13;
300&#13;
4103.60&#13;
2425&#13;
318&#13;
500&#13;
329&#13;
student organizations. edTfhe&#13;
remaining funds will be us or&#13;
loans to the organizat~ons an~f~~&#13;
mailing and duplicatmg cos .&#13;
all groups. that some&#13;
The reason . d only a&#13;
organizations receive. uest&#13;
all percentage of their req&#13;
~~ nothing at all is in some c~=&#13;
due to their access r t~un~ing.&#13;
sources of Teve~ue ~ed by the&#13;
The money a Dca d fee or&#13;
cce is from the se!p'"eg~~ion of&#13;
"student money alP f ••• per .. A tot 0""" yearly tUItIOn.ar constitutes the&#13;
student per ye d this is broken&#13;
segregated fee, an d' g for the&#13;
down to provide fun In the&#13;
'Id' g reserve, Union bUi In Arl Com- od Fine 5 . Lecture a H Ith BUSing . t Student ea , mit ee, . Athletics, In.&#13;
and parlklOS~~dent Activities,&#13;
tramura S, rt The&#13;
and Student Group S;;~'li~rs' per&#13;
last receIVes two f ece to&#13;
student per year or&#13;
a1lllcate. 'de Village Student The Parksl&#13;
Association received $25, the&#13;
Adult Students $150. and Third&#13;
World $190 for dances, lectures&#13;
and other programs the)" mtend&#13;
to sponsor. In addihon, Adult&#13;
Students can obtain $350 and&#13;
Third World $410 in loans to&#13;
finance their daoces. .&#13;
The Child care Center receIved&#13;
$BOO for equipment and supplies&#13;
necessary for its operation. The&#13;
Parkside Players plan to put on a&#13;
studio production this spnng and&#13;
received $100 and an addIuonal&#13;
$100 loan for that purpose.&#13;
The RANGER recei.ed $400 for&#13;
editors' salaries an~ an additional&#13;
$100 for supplies and-or&#13;
salaries. The .Yearbook&#13;
organization decided It '-"as loa&#13;
late in the school year to publISh a&#13;
yearbook for 19'14 but they dId&#13;
receive $200 for initJal expenses&#13;
for next year's yearbook&#13;
The Vet's Club was the only&#13;
organization to receive. Its to.u:1&#13;
original request, WhlCh was&#13;
$1410. These funds will be used&#13;
for their recycling proJect and to&#13;
genera et money to ehmmate&#13;
their Racine Bus debt.&#13;
Organizations such as the&#13;
Christian Fellowship,. ~he&#13;
N an Club, Medllatlon&#13;
ewm . \. th Society the Democratic au&#13;
• , and lhe Young Caucus ..&#13;
Republicans did not .r~cel\. e&#13;
program funding for POhhca~:;r&#13;
religious reasons. They I.&#13;
however, receive ~e (~dUlg for&#13;
mailing and dup1l~atUlg ~sf~&#13;
Hockey Club receIved $4 .&#13;
. because the AthletIC&#13;
~l~~~~~ent had difficulty in&#13;
Cunding th~~~kside Student&#13;
The ment Association Govern . I&#13;
. d $300 for secret8n3 receive I'&#13;
ograms and supp les.&#13;
costs,. pr De of Students AsSIstant an . ed&#13;
I Echelharger predlcl&#13;
Jewe CCC will set up&#13;
that next y.ear. and criteria&#13;
definite gUldelmes . f ding&#13;
udent orgamzatJon un ..&#13;
for st lubs ",,;U submit theLr&#13;
The c . the faU and money&#13;
requests In .sted in the could be appropn&#13;
spring.&#13;
Hedden appointed&#13;
News Editor&#13;
\heR&#13;
lember,&#13;
&lt;4f;R&#13;
ma)orl&#13;
lIa"'t~ tttdckn&#13;
Th appoonlment of Harv&#13;
Hedden as • 'e" EdItor for Ille&#13;
R.~ G ER " announced by the&#13;
paper at Ille c1... (&gt;( lall&#13;
semester Hedden a freshman&#13;
"00 entered Parks"le and joined&#13;
Getting Mom&#13;
registered&#13;
\lice Itan hom, ont of e\ eral&#13;
mtmbft'1; of thp "-dult tUdent&#13;
oC'iation "bo \oluntttred&#13;
their lime at regi lration, gives&#13;
l,hi dl intt.resled part)· a tour of&#13;
regi lration ~hile- Mom braves&#13;
the computer terminal lines. Also&#13;
pictured is Kay S~tenty, another&#13;
adult student.&#13;
shucard proposes faculty do adv.sing by Debra Friedell&#13;
sal to reorganize the academic advising&#13;
A pro~ Parkside was made by Alan Shucard,&#13;
systeJ? ~ professor of English, at the last faculty&#13;
associa meeting. A surprise to the Student Services&#13;
senate hich it directly affects, the proposal calls for&#13;
staff, ~f es of academic advising to be staffed by&#13;
··the O ~embers." At the present time, students&#13;
faculty declared a major are advised by faculty.&#13;
whO ~e tudents who have not currently declared a&#13;
'lb~ t!:eive academic advising from the counm~Jor&#13;
~ff of the Student Services office. Under the&#13;
i,-opos&#13;
sebng ~ plan all students would receive advising&#13;
from faculty. . brief discussion followed the reading of the&#13;
A sal and it was sent to the Academic Policies&#13;
i,-opo ·ttee for further study. The discussion cen-&#13;
~1round the need for hiring additional faculty&#13;
to rele~ those faculty members wh~ are involved&#13;
. demic advising from part of their class loads, 111 aca&#13;
d reward for those f ac ulty d 01ng · d · · a vismg. 811 In:~ ~terview Shucard said that in talking to and&#13;
advising majors he found ~ey wde~e not_ adequbately .&#13;
advised and that academic a VIce _given Y_ ~&#13;
academician who is closest to the reqwrements 1s m&#13;
the best interests of the students. He added that&#13;
academic advice is not given to the u&#13;
eno~~ in his or her college career. "The advising system which is mo t effecti&#13;
students is the one I proposed," he aid. Wh&#13;
:,Vhether or not the proposed y tern ma force a cu&#13;
m positions for the student sel"'.1c · c 1&#13;
staff, ,Shucard sai~, "If you have a ) em th t&#13;
doesn t work effectively you have to find a different way, not keep an old system to save jobs."&#13;
James Dean, Chairperson of the Academ c Policies Committee, said the committee d&#13;
research such factors as cost and the need to hire&#13;
additional faculty. He said he felt that • people are&#13;
not getting good advice" and the "organization or&#13;
the system as it stands now is not r ponshe to change."&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Assistant Chancellor and Dean of&#13;
Students, claimed that contrary to the College of&#13;
Science and Society, the School of odern In&#13;
"wants to keep us posted on all academic r .- · .&#13;
They send us everything." Dearborn que tioned&#13;
whether or not the new proposal perhaps a&#13;
motivated to save and create faculty positio H&#13;
said that "if it is an idea that has the tuden '&#13;
interests in mind then I'm all for it." He added&#13;
however, that if the move is one " for faculty po&#13;
or academic deans' power, I'm not going to&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
Hedden appointed&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974 Vol. II No. 16&#13;
By CCC&#13;
Student funds allocated&#13;
Organization&#13;
Parkside Village Student&#13;
Association&#13;
Armenian Club&#13;
Adult Students&#13;
Chess Club&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Debate and Forensics&#13;
Parkside Players&#13;
Photography Club&#13;
Pre-Med Club&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Third World&#13;
Yearbook&#13;
Delta Gamma Phi (sorority)&#13;
lnterfraternity Council&#13;
Poetry Forwn&#13;
Veterans Club&#13;
Sigma Pi (fraternity)&#13;
Ouistian Fellowship&#13;
1 ewman Club&#13;
Meditation Society&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus&#13;
Young Republicans&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Swim Club&#13;
Porn Porn Squad&#13;
Oieerieaders&#13;
PSGA&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
At the close of last semester the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
ICCCJ concluded its&#13;
deliberations on funding of&#13;
tudent organizations. Of the 28&#13;
organizations that requested&#13;
fu~~ all received money for&#13;
~~•hng and duplicating costs.&#13;
•1&lt;1Ving only $6900 to work with&#13;
CCC c?uld not possibly satisfy all&#13;
organizations' requests, which&#13;
~angea from $20 to $4103.60. In&#13;
act, the total funds originally&#13;
reqllf!sted by the organizations am~unted to $22,663.&#13;
When CCC asked these&#13;
~anizations to revise their&#13;
get requests in accordance&#13;
""1&#13;
!h funding criteria and gl.l!del.ines set up by CCC few&#13;
Otganizations scaled back their&#13;
OfiginaJ requests and some did&#13;
:nre~pond at all. As a result, the&#13;
~tttee was forced to reduce&#13;
rlllall llrganizations' requests and&#13;
Y lpPropriated $6,219 for&#13;
Amount&#13;
Requested&#13;
$50&#13;
340&#13;
525&#13;
943&#13;
3104&#13;
779.75&#13;
342&#13;
167&#13;
50&#13;
2515&#13;
875&#13;
3188&#13;
470&#13;
146&#13;
601&#13;
1410&#13;
665&#13;
215&#13;
4103.60&#13;
2425&#13;
318&#13;
500&#13;
329&#13;
Amount&#13;
Received&#13;
$25&#13;
25&#13;
150&#13;
25&#13;
800&#13;
120&#13;
100&#13;
0&#13;
15&#13;
500&#13;
190&#13;
200&#13;
270&#13;
0&#13;
200&#13;
1410&#13;
100&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
450&#13;
210&#13;
0&#13;
129&#13;
300&#13;
. t' ns The stud~n~ orgdsamz~/~e ~sed for&#13;
remammg fun w1 d f r loans to the organ.izat~ons a~ts ~f mailing and duphcating co •&#13;
all groups. that some&#13;
The :eason ·ved only a&#13;
organizations recef\heir request all percentage o&#13;
~; nothing a~ all is in so:e ~~: due to their acces~r funding .&#13;
sources of Tev:fi~~ated by the&#13;
The money ted fee or CCC is from the segrega t' of " por 10n "student money f $88 per · · A total o Yearly twtwn. t'tutes the Year cons 1 student per d this is broken segregated fe~, an ding for the down to provide fun the 'ld' g reserve, Union bu• m . Arts Com- nd Fine Lecture . a H Ith Busing&#13;
m1ttee, · Student ea ' . Athletics, In·&#13;
and Parkinit~dent Activities, tramurals, Support The and Student Group dollars. per&#13;
last receives two for CCC to student per year&#13;
al~cate. 'd Village student The Parks1 e&#13;
Getting Mom&#13;
registered &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
_______ RANGER&#13;
Editoriol/Opinion&#13;
Should defeat&#13;
power play&#13;
proposal&#13;
A proposal to be discussed Thursday at the meeting of&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee (at 1 p.m, in CA 233)&#13;
calls for putting all academ Ie advising In the hands of&#13;
the academic deans' offices and the faculty. At present,&#13;
faculty advise those students who have declared&#13;
malors, and all other advising is handled through the&#13;
Student Services office.&#13;
RANGER urges the faculty and the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee to consider very carefully all the&#13;
ramilicalions of the proposal. which appears to be a&#13;
politically motivated one.&#13;
During the Faculty senate meeting at which the&#13;
proposal was first read, no senate member questioned&#13;
or even mentioned which system might be most helpful&#13;
to students,which It Is to serve. Deplorable enough, what&#13;
turther rankled our sensllivltles was that all discussion&#13;
centered around the need (or opportunity) for more&#13;
money and more faculty to carry out the plan.&#13;
Since that meeting RANGER has spoken with&#13;
students, faculty and Student Services staff. All complain&#13;
about the poor communication lines between the&#13;
office of Student services and the two academic deans'&#13;
offices. However, the problem is most acute in the&#13;
College of Science and Society. It appears that&#13;
notillcation of revisions and changes within the College&#13;
stopped coming to the Student Services office last&#13;
summer. Could it be that the college is trying to embarrass&#13;
Student services by deliberately creating its&#13;
tack of upto-date Information for advising, thus paving&#13;
a clearer way for a power play such as this proposal?&#13;
Dean Eugene Norwood of the college claims the first&#13;
time he heard the proposal was at the December&#13;
Faculty Senate meeting. However, sources say the&#13;
proposal actually originated in Norwood's office.&#13;
RANG E R is skeptical about the plan for other&#13;
reasons, too. Students must be assured that faculty can&#13;
devote the lime to be available during the day and&#13;
evenings (for night students) and throughout the&#13;
semester. By far the heaviest advising load comes from&#13;
the end of finals week through the end of the following&#13;
registration period, a time when faculty are grading&#13;
exams lind then often on vacation. During the semester&#13;
they are, of course, busy with their teaching jobs, as&#13;
well as research and committee work. Also, it is&#13;
essential that faculty members advising undecided&#13;
students be open-minded enough that there is no bias&#13;
and pigeon·holing.&#13;
We suggest that when the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
and Faculty senate consider this proposal, they&#13;
support the system which is best for the students. We&#13;
are conndent that with cooperation and support, the&#13;
present problems experienced in academic advising can&#13;
be solved, and communIcation lines between faculty,&#13;
counselors and students completely opened. But as long&#13;
as major campus groups areat odds with each other, the&#13;
future of a quality University is dimmed.&#13;
o IT'S MY DISCIPliNE&#13;
ouR DEPAlITMENT&#13;
WE'LL PO IT!&#13;
Wf"GET"&#13;
TO DO I ./1&#13;
",;,.(' ~"'NIiL&gt;&#13;
~rr'&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Mr. Ronald Brinkmann must&#13;
be the campus representative, for&#13;
Male Chauvinism.' He certainly&#13;
has the knack (or intimidati~&#13;
women employees on this&#13;
campus.Not only doeshe display&#13;
his qualifications in this area, ~ut&#13;
we understand he caTTleS&#13;
references.&#13;
Oneshouldadmire any person&#13;
who stands on his convictions, but&#13;
when his convictions are&#13;
detrimental to this University.&#13;
we feel concerned opinions&#13;
shouldbe heard.&#13;
First let us turn to page 65,&#13;
verses1 through8 and read aloud&#13;
everything Mr. Brinkmann IS&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Groups of individuals having&#13;
group power persuade American&#13;
society. and one should not&#13;
separate professors from this&#13;
type of association. Any group&#13;
that is not aware of its collective&#13;
power - and living in America -&#13;
is a dying body.&#13;
As the writer Dickens might&#13;
have phrased it: uWe're living in&#13;
the best of times, and we're living&#13;
in the worst of times. II&#13;
If you think your campus is&#13;
secure and administration .is&#13;
about tbe businessof being fair&#13;
and just, then you are living in&#13;
the worst of times; however, if&#13;
youare concernedthat all higher&#13;
education areas are under attack&#13;
and you are about the business of&#13;
doing something about it, then&#13;
you are living in the best of times.&#13;
The agenda of this article is&#13;
addressed primarily to&#13;
professors in Wisconsin. It rises&#13;
most naturally out of the bloody&#13;
struggleto get complacent,selfsatisfied&#13;
educators organized, for&#13;
it is they who are dying-and no&#13;
onecan help them; they have to&#13;
be willing to help themselves.&#13;
The simple fact is that no truly&#13;
basic change for our benefit takes&#13;
place in America unless we&#13;
organize to initiate that change.&#13;
This fact assumes that we must&#13;
have some essential agreement&#13;
on overall objectives, even&#13;
though we may differ on many&#13;
specifics. Therefore, let us come&#13;
together around the crucial&#13;
issues of survival-and control of&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I wouldfirst like to thankall the&#13;
students,faculty and staff persons&#13;
who came down to see the&#13;
performances in the Whiteskellar&#13;
during the first semester.&#13;
Because of you all, we were able&#13;
to put on bigger and, hopefully,&#13;
better shows. This semester&#13;
should be the best yet. Our&#13;
openingshowwill be Bob Rohan&#13;
onthe23rdof Januaryfrom 1-3in&#13;
the afternoon. There will be a&#13;
show every Wednesday from then&#13;
on and everyone is welcome to&#13;
come down for a break from&#13;
cl~ss. On February 6, auditions ",11 be held in the Whileskellar&#13;
for performers for the rest of the&#13;
semester. Anyone who is interested&#13;
in auditioning can stop in&#13;
to the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
office in LLC-D-195and sign up&#13;
for an audition time. Everyone&#13;
should come to this show to give&#13;
the performers a taste of what an&#13;
audIence show is. Again many&#13;
thanks and I hope that my&#13;
committee and myself can give&#13;
you continuing good times.&#13;
GaryS.Petersen&#13;
. Chairman Coffeehouse Commlttee&#13;
. ~ :8. Anyone interested in&#13;
JO~OIngthe Coffeehouse Com.&#13;
mlllee or just helping us out&#13;
please stop in and see me as soo~&#13;
as possible.&#13;
really running around shouting&#13;
(in his circumventive way).&#13;
I Ronald Brinkmann am the&#13;
he~d of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Campus&#13;
police Force. I exhaust and&#13;
enforce every regula~ion I ~an&#13;
possiblyfind. I am doing my Job&#13;
and I demand compliance with&#13;
Police Regulations.&#13;
This should make Brinkmann&#13;
feel swelledwith pride. Now, We&#13;
ask, why he demands students,&#13;
staff, and faculty eooperation&#13;
when in fact, he does not&#13;
cooperate or com~ly wi~ other&#13;
University regulatlOns which are&#13;
directly related to student, staff,&#13;
ourselves as educators.&#13;
The American educational&#13;
system does not work for most&#13;
people unless it is forced to, and it&#13;
cannot be made to work without&#13;
our involvement. In view of the&#13;
realities of our situation as&#13;
educators, we are confronted&#13;
with a choice.&#13;
Will we believe the truth that&#13;
the past has shown us·-or will we&#13;
try to hide?Will the small favors&#13;
some of us have received blind us&#13;
to the larger sufferings of our&#13;
ranks, or will we open our views&#13;
to the testimony of our past&#13;
history?&#13;
For more years than we would&#13;
care to count, we have followed&#13;
the path of dependence on&#13;
political administrators and their&#13;
systems. From the Liberty Party&#13;
in the decades before the Civil&#13;
War to the Republican Party of&#13;
Richard Nixon, we trusted in&#13;
other men and their politics as&#13;
our deliverers. Let there be no&#13;
more of that.&#13;
The challenge is thrown to us,&#13;
to save ourselves. It is the&#13;
challenge to consolidate and&#13;
organize our own ranks as the&#13;
vanguard in the struggle for a&#13;
new academic role. To accept&#13;
that challenge is to move the&#13;
unorganized to the point of being&#13;
organized. There can be no&#13;
equivocation on this issue. The&#13;
spirit of the times leaves us no&#13;
choice.&#13;
Politics has not and cannot&#13;
bring the changes we need unless&#13;
we get involved. We delude&#13;
and faculty.&#13;
We ask why he feelsh&#13;
govern other departments e. c~&#13;
this University whenthe ~lhin&#13;
in compliance with Sty t ....&#13;
U&#13;
·· " .~ DIversity regulations. Wedo'""'-&#13;
revolve around one m lW)t&#13;
Brinkmann, but around ;n'ksiMr&#13;
.&#13;
as a whole unit, doing 0: .dt&#13;
with one goal in mind. to lobs&#13;
this University the best mak,&#13;
Parkside offering th - Wllh&#13;
educationalopportunities'f best&#13;
people. or all&#13;
Are you too husyshiningy&#13;
handcuff tie clip or is til 00r&#13;
h bei ..... uman emg somewhere behind&#13;
that semi-uniform?&#13;
ConcernedParksideWOIIl&#13;
(NameswithheldUponreq"';&#13;
\-- .&#13;
ourselvesIf wethinkthatchang&#13;
can . ~e achieved witbot&#13;
orgamzmg our power. ut&#13;
Relevanceis the key issue&#13;
education. As new paths in~&#13;
education are developingand&#13;
brought to maturity, educatiOllai&#13;
institutions are (aced with the&#13;
need to provide a systemlhat&#13;
facesthe challengesandrealilis&#13;
of the modernworldor die.&#13;
The educatormust seek .ftlr&#13;
an educational experience that ..&#13;
consistent with the rapid&#13;
developments and improvements&#13;
of a modern world. He or •&#13;
must be willing to acceptlite&#13;
many responsibilities that&#13;
academic relevance demudl&#13;
Through the active,intellig"ll&#13;
participation of the educator.&#13;
significant changes can bt&#13;
achieved.&#13;
The Wisconsin Educatioo&#13;
Association Council offers tbt&#13;
professors of the state the vehicle&#13;
with which to organize.The&#13;
WEAChasbeenthehase sllJlllOll&#13;
for educators in Wisconsin sirrt&#13;
1855.&#13;
Membershipin theWEAC CIIl&#13;
benefit professors in the areas of&#13;
economics, bargaining, job&#13;
security and contract mainterrance-along&#13;
with all the othfr&#13;
services available to K-12&#13;
teachers.&#13;
The power is on the campusesit&#13;
must be organizedto be .f·&#13;
fective.&#13;
John Mack&#13;
Higher Education Consultant&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academIC&#13;
year by the. students of The University of Wisconsin·parkSlde,&#13;
Kenos~a. WIsconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-I94 Llbrat)·&#13;
Learnmg Center, 'telephone {414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Pa.rkside Ranger is an 'independent newspaper Oplnlt)ll5&#13;
reflected 10 columns and editorials are not necessarily the ofhCI"&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. -&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subjeCtGf&#13;
interest Jo students, faculty or staff"must be confined to 250words~&#13;
less, typed lind double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to ec!Jt&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and Include&#13;
addr~ss, phone number and student status or faculty rank. ~amesWIU&#13;
be. Withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse\0&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.IN_CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom· Petersen ~&#13;
. NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Frieden&#13;
COpy EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch. Michael Olszyk. Marilyn Schubert. c.rrle w,rd&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels. Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISIN,G MANAGER: Ken Peslka&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
RANGER We get letters&#13;
"-------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Should defeat&#13;
power play&#13;
proposal&#13;
hen the Academic Policies Comna&#13;
consider this proposal, they&#13;
hich is best o the students. We&#13;
Ith cooperation and support, the&#13;
n problems ex rienced in academic advising can&#13;
olv d, nd communica ion lines between faculty,&#13;
lors nd ud n complete y opened. But as long&#13;
m for c mpusgroups a eat odds wl h each other, the&#13;
futur o a qu It y Universi y Is di med.&#13;
lT'S M'( OISCtPl.tNE&#13;
OU~ t&gt;EPAfITMENT&#13;
WE'LL l&gt;O IT!&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Ir Ronald Brinkmann must&#13;
bet~ campus representative_ for&#13;
lale Chauvinism .. He certa~y&#13;
has the knack for intimidat~g&#13;
women employees on this&#13;
campus. Not only _doe~ he display&#13;
his qualifications m this area, ~ut&#13;
we understand he carries&#13;
references.&#13;
One should admire any person&#13;
who stands on his convictions, but&#13;
when his convictions are&#13;
detrimental to this University,&#13;
we feel concerned opinions&#13;
should be heard.&#13;
First let us turn to page 65,&#13;
verses 1 through 8 and read alm~d&#13;
everything Mr. Brinkmann 1s&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Groups of individuals having&#13;
group power persuade American&#13;
society. and one should not&#13;
eparate professors from this&#13;
type of association._ Any gr~up&#13;
that i not aware of its collective&#13;
power - and living in America -&#13;
i a dying body.&#13;
As the writer Dickens might&#13;
have phrased it: "We're living in&#13;
the best of times, and we're living&#13;
in the worst of times."&#13;
U you think your campus is&#13;
secure and administration ,is&#13;
about th business of being fair&#13;
and just. then you are living in&#13;
the worst of times; however, if&#13;
vou are concerned that all higher&#13;
education areas are under attack&#13;
and you are about the business of&#13;
doing something about it, then&#13;
you are living in the best of times.&#13;
The agenda of this article is&#13;
addressed primarily to&#13;
professors in Wisconsin. It rises&#13;
most naturally out of the bloody&#13;
truggle to get complacent, self- .&#13;
satisfied educators organized, for&#13;
ii is they who are dying-and no&#13;
one can help them; they have to&#13;
be \\illing to help themselves.&#13;
The simple fact is that no truly&#13;
basic change for our benefit takes&#13;
place in America unless we&#13;
organize to initiate that change.&#13;
This fact assumes that we must&#13;
have some essential agreement&#13;
on overall objectives, even&#13;
though we may differ on many&#13;
pecifics. Therefore, let us come&#13;
together around the crucial&#13;
issues of ~urvival-and control of&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would first like to thank all the&#13;
tudents, faculty and staff persons&#13;
who came down to see the&#13;
performances in the Whiteskellar&#13;
during the first semester.&#13;
Because of you all, we were able&#13;
to put on bigger and. hopefully,&#13;
better shows. This semester&#13;
should be the best yet. Our&#13;
opening show will be Bob Rohan&#13;
on the 23rd of Januarv from 1-3 in&#13;
the afternoon. There will be a&#13;
how every Wednesday from then&#13;
on and everyone is welcome to&#13;
come down for a break from&#13;
class. On February 6, auditions&#13;
will be held in the Whiteskellar&#13;
for performers for the rest of the&#13;
semester. Anyone who is interested&#13;
in auditioning can stop in&#13;
to the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
office in LLC-D-195 and sign up&#13;
for an audition time. Everyone&#13;
should come to this show to give&#13;
--.. , the performers a taste of what an ' audience show is. Again many&#13;
thank~ and I hope that my&#13;
committee and myself can give&#13;
you continuing good times.&#13;
Gary S. Petersen . Chairman Coffeehouse Committee&#13;
&#13;
. !':S. Anyone interested in&#13;
Jo~nmg the Coffeehouse Commmee&#13;
or just helping us out&#13;
please stop in and see me as soo~&#13;
as possible.&#13;
really running ar~und shouting&#13;
(in his circumventive way).&#13;
I Ronald Brinkmann am the&#13;
he~d of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Campus&#13;
Police Force. I exhaust and&#13;
enforce every regula~ion I &lt;:an&#13;
possibly find. I am do~ng my J_ob&#13;
and I demand comphance wi_th&#13;
Police Regulations.&#13;
This should make Brinkmann&#13;
feel swelled with pride. Now, We&#13;
ask, why he demands stude~ts,&#13;
staff, and faculty cooperat10n&#13;
when in fact, he does not&#13;
cooperate or comi;&gt;lY wi~ other&#13;
University regulat10ns which are&#13;
directly related to student, staff,&#13;
ourselves as educators.&#13;
The American educational&#13;
system does not work for mo~t&#13;
people unless it is forced to, and 1t&#13;
cannot be made to work without&#13;
our involvement. In view of the&#13;
realities of our situation as&#13;
educators, we are confronted&#13;
with a choice.&#13;
Will we believe the truth that&#13;
the past has shown us--or will we&#13;
try to hide? Will the small favors&#13;
some of us have received blind us&#13;
to the larger sufferings of our&#13;
ranks, or will we open our views&#13;
to the testimony of our past&#13;
history?&#13;
For more years than we would&#13;
care to count, we have followed&#13;
the path of dependence on&#13;
political administrators and their&#13;
systems. From the Liberty Party&#13;
in the decades before the Civil&#13;
War to the Republican Party of&#13;
Richard Nixon, we trusted in&#13;
other men and their politics as&#13;
our deliverers. Let there be no&#13;
more of that.&#13;
The challenge is thrown to us,&#13;
to save ourselves. It is the&#13;
challenge to consolidate and&#13;
organize our own ranks as the&#13;
vanguard in the struggle for a&#13;
new academic role. To accept&#13;
that challenge is to move- the&#13;
unorganized to the point of being&#13;
organized. There can be no&#13;
equivocation on this issue. The&#13;
spirit of the times leaves us no&#13;
choice.&#13;
Politics has not and cannot&#13;
bring the changes we need unless&#13;
we get involved. We delude&#13;
and faculty.&#13;
We ask why he feels h&#13;
govern other departments e. c~&#13;
this University when they ~thin&#13;
in compliance with Stat 8ft&#13;
University regulations. We ~a'-1&#13;
revolve around one man lkll&#13;
Brinkmann, but around p~ks~&#13;
as a whole unit, doing our .&#13;
1&#13;
de&#13;
with one goal in mind . to JObs&#13;
this University the best _ ~~ke&#13;
Parks~de offering the ~ educational opportunities for t&#13;
people. an&#13;
Are you too busy shining YOUr&#13;
handcuff tie clip or is ther&#13;
h b - ea&#13;
uman emg somewhere behu.!&#13;
that semi-uniform?&#13;
Concerned Parkside Worn&#13;
(Names withheld upon reque:&#13;
ou'rselves if we think that chang&#13;
can . ~e achieved Withou~&#13;
organizmg our power.&#13;
Releyance is the key issue In&#13;
edullat~on. As new paths in hi&amp;hef&#13;
education are developing and&#13;
brought to maturity, educatiOlll)&#13;
institutions are faced with the&#13;
need to provide a system that&#13;
faces the challenges and realitia&#13;
of the modern world or die.&#13;
The educator must seek afte,&#13;
an educational experience that&#13;
consistent with the rapid&#13;
developments and improvemen&#13;
of a modern world. He or •&#13;
must be willing to accept the&#13;
many responsibilities that&#13;
academic relevance demands&#13;
Through the active, intelligent&#13;
participation of the educator&#13;
significant changes can be&#13;
achieved.&#13;
The Wisconsin Education&#13;
Association Council offers the&#13;
professors of the state the vehicle&#13;
with which to organize. The&#13;
WEAC has been the base support&#13;
for educators in Wisconsin since&#13;
1855.&#13;
Membership in the WEAC can&#13;
benefit professors in the area of&#13;
economics, bargaining, job&#13;
security and contract mamtenance--along&#13;
with all the other&#13;
services available to K-1!&#13;
teachers.&#13;
The power is on the campusesit&#13;
must be organized to be effective.&#13;
&#13;
John Mack&#13;
Higher Education Consultant&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library·&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an ' independent newspaper. Opmi~&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the offlcia&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. · of&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any sub)e&lt;:I or&#13;
interest Jo students, faculty or staff· must be confined to 2~0 wordsedil&#13;
less, typed ,ind double-spaced . The editors reserve the right to e&#13;
letters for length and good taste . All letters must be signed and iocl~~II&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank . Names&#13;
be_ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse 10&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom· Petersen.&#13;
. NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedel!&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Michael Olsiyk, Marilyn sc11ubert, Carrie ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka &#13;
h)"Jane Schliesm~n&#13;
Y k University in Toronto, Canada is a few years older th&#13;
Paf~ide.It'S much larger than UW-P, divided as it is into half a doz:~&#13;
collegeswith enroUments of about 5,000 each. I spent some time in&#13;
Torontoduring seme~t.er break WIth frt~nds who are York students,&#13;
d tookthe opportumty to learn something of student life there Th&#13;
an dentnewspaper there, Excalibur, is also the Source of some of the&#13;
:owing -inforn:ati~n, ~or I thought it int~resting to compare an~&#13;
conU'astthetwo mstttUh.ons on ~ couple of points.&#13;
11lere was an Excahbur edito~lal r~centl~ .dealing with quality&#13;
teaching versus research and umve~slty politics, the obvious conclUSionbeing&#13;
that students pay the pnce when teaching excellence is&#13;
of less than utmost concern. Many of you will recall a Ranger commentarY&#13;
last semester or;this s~bjec~, as. :"ell as frequent reference to&#13;
itatother times. Itremains a.dlstu~bmg Issu~here and at York.&#13;
Another point of comparison IS regarding adult and part-time&#13;
students.Parkside embarked on an Adult Student program last faU to&#13;
servethe special needs of the, older students and those attending&#13;
schoolevenings, for they C?nst1tute 30 percent of our student body.&#13;
YorI&lt;,withits larger population and facilities (not to mention budget!)&#13;
baS an entire college accommodating these students,&#13;
Thestudents at York demonstrate an ability to get things together&#13;
fir the common good, something which so far seems lacking at&#13;
Parkside.One example is the university-wide boycott of the hot food&#13;
serviceat York, The grievances are prices, food quality, and failure to&#13;
hire students for the part-time cafeteria jobs.&#13;
Anotherexample of involvement is in student government, Much&#13;
like Ranger, Excalibur finds editorial substance in suggesting&#13;
improvementsin student government and constitutional changes, but&#13;
lIllikeherethe paper at York does find much to report on what is being&#13;
done by the Council of the York Student Federation (CYSF). Last&#13;
monthl&#13;
amongother things, CYSF voted to set aside $300 to assist York&#13;
studentsinvblved in litigation revolving around one of the most bitter&#13;
strikes in Toronto's history, which had attracted the support and&#13;
participation (and hence arrest) of many students, clergymen and&#13;
members of city council.&#13;
Studentsolidarity is further evident in CYSF's membership in a&#13;
national student rights union. Parkside Student Government&#13;
associationhas so far not deigned to join even the United Council of&#13;
StudentGovernments in Wisconsin, and now PSGA's future appears&#13;
so Wlcertain that we can question just what collective recourse&#13;
students here have if they feel they are being victimized.&#13;
All inall, it wasan interesting'visit--York has an impressive campus&#13;
w11b new, modern buildings and parking lots primarily around the&#13;
perimeter-but on returning to Parkside and looking around, one sees&#13;
much the same thing here, U's below the surface where the life (or&#13;
death&gt; is that makes for more valid comparisons.&#13;
Womanstudent&#13;
issecurity officer&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Eileen Reilly recently became&#13;
Parltside's first woman security&#13;
oIIicer. According to Ronald&#13;
Brinkmann, director of Safety&#13;
and Security, she is one of the&#13;
first womento operate strictly as&#13;
an officerwithin the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Campus Security&#13;
System.&#13;
~e functions of a security&#13;
Offl~er include protecting&#13;
equipment rooms; checking&#13;
doors in unoccupied areas'&#13;
assisting stUdents, faculty and&#13;
ltaft; aod issuing parking tickets&#13;
to unauthorized vehicles ob-&#13;
!lructingloading docks.&#13;
Altbough the actual per-&#13;
~~ance ofthese duties is new to&#13;
neilly, the exposure and&#13;
knowl""l!eof a security officer's&#13;
~ ISOt. Since October of 1972,&#13;
8Ildhas been employed by Safety&#13;
Secunty as a part-time&#13;
stUdentdispatcher.&#13;
DeDue to changes in the Security&#13;
aefuartmenl'S work schedule,&#13;
'N y, a sophomore will now r:~thr~ days a W";k, filling in&#13;
theiruII-time security officers on&#13;
shift normal days off. The new&#13;
6 191SChedule,implemented Jan.&#13;
~d 4,p~ansto reduce overtime&#13;
for prOVIdeadditional protection&#13;
roal;"hce ofhcers working on the&#13;
lIegarding the ability of a&#13;
:::~; performing the tasks of a&#13;
statedl.~ .Ofhcef' Brinkmann&#13;
800d ' Eileen's been doing darn&#13;
down Work as a radio operator&#13;
~ here at the station. She&#13;
"JJe'WS the same capability and&#13;
"ortence as any other student&#13;
"..: under. me,"&#13;
not as mterested in what&#13;
Eileen Reilly&#13;
others think of me doing this job,&#13;
as I am in performing it to ~~&#13;
best of my capabilitie~,". sal&#13;
Reilly, referring to mdlrect&#13;
comments reportedly made by&#13;
first shift officers unfavorable to&#13;
her new position. bl&#13;
"We're students and p~oba .y&#13;
'11 ha e a better relatIOnship&#13;
WI v th present&#13;
with other stu~ents an" was&#13;
security officers do,&#13;
another viewppint expresse~o b~&#13;
Bill Spreeberg, student emp y&#13;
filling in for' a securIty officer on&#13;
a leave of absence: the third&#13;
Tom Speaker IS d&#13;
d by Safety an&#13;
student employe 1 fUed in for&#13;
Security, a~d has a ~ei~ days off.&#13;
security officers on&#13;
Wednesday. Jan. 16. 1974THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Shucard----------&#13;
Conl,nlJe'd ~ ~ 1&#13;
people to guide students In decISion-malting&#13;
~~ocess~s, Counselor Wendy MUSJch added that&#13;
ademic advising invohres workmg' .... th f I&#13;
and not a' th. -. acu h&#13;
.~amsl em, In a joint effort to he! ~&#13;
student.. However," she said "a lot of um:S&#13;
academic adivsing personal problem. come u~&#13;
~~~~:l~~~,staff is capable of seeing that and able to&#13;
du~~lIiam Moy, Dean of tbe School of .Iodem In.&#13;
y, agreed that poor advice given to students&#13;
was the fault of the commumcatioo lines bet ..-een&#13;
the academic deans' offices and the counsel&#13;
team. Moy was skeptical of the proposal and ;~&#13;
that whereas faculty are discipline-oriented the&#13;
counseling staff are student'«ientated • And his&#13;
business management faculty already ad\ise fiO.8)&#13;
majors each, as the program is set up now. v&#13;
explained. He further worried about facuJtv bia4&#13;
pushed on to students who had DOtyet decl8red a&#13;
major, and felt that students need the dlanee to&#13;
Advice given on careers&#13;
and job placement&#13;
b)' Sand)' Busch&#13;
With tnday's highly compeutive job market.&#13;
employers are more selective than ever One bears&#13;
continuously the despairs of college gradua&#13;
currently seeking jobs. As one former P de&#13;
student put it; "Looking for andacqUlring a job that&#13;
you want is the hardest job there IS Somel1m It's&#13;
even harder than the job you finally end p thP&#13;
•&#13;
Graduating students and alumru ..,lh&#13;
problem will find a istance in Parks de s&#13;
Piacement Office. located in Tallent2ll6. InaddlUOrl&#13;
to Jack Elmore. director and recruiter far&#13;
educational institutions, IS ind "trial recruHtt&#13;
Verna Zimmermann. Counselors CIa. Barnard 800&#13;
Barb Larsen provide career planrun a lance In&#13;
Tallent 284&#13;
According to Elmore, most too&#13;
in the office do not understand the rna tud of&#13;
and job findings. One student exdauned ·'1 didn t&#13;
know what I didn·t knO\\ I&#13;
Students can begIn ttp to becom&#13;
"knowledgeable" durmg earl_ college fur&#13;
through Career Planning Sen ce- The goats of the&#13;
services are to aid student 10 de\elopmg obJfC&#13;
and provide information concermrJg career 0pportunities.&#13;
Students are aided m looking at thm tnt&#13;
abilities, and e~rlence In educet on and ark&#13;
Vocational materials fe\:eal how C'a~ ate'&#13;
organized. taterial 1 available on \liMt typt' of&#13;
jobs are obtainable v.ith ~hat,spedflC ma)Or information&#13;
includes job description .' ptClrlc dUll&#13;
and special qualificallons desIred&#13;
Career Oe\oelopment Coo ..&#13;
Barnard revealed that plllns for a ...,...,..&#13;
development course are noy, at be¢nnu,g la&#13;
Such a class would Incorporate r 1&#13;
tools and career information for rreshrocn and&#13;
sophomores. At the jUnior le\ el ou. d n&#13;
professional orientation and necessar)' mrormauon&#13;
concerning the recrUltmg world and . teps for job&#13;
placement. By the seruor )ear •. tudents v.ouJd&#13;
usually be able to pin do"n a profe-S1on. and up&#13;
independent study program m accordance th&#13;
,....---------;&#13;
The dile&#13;
of being a&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
STUDEr-'T ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
FRI' 8:00 p.M - JA: 18th&#13;
SUN: 7:30 P.M -JA:' 20th&#13;
A.dm, j5 c::enlS&#13;
Midwest Population Center&#13;
312 644-341'&#13;
Il East 01&gt;10&#13;
Chicago. 60611&#13;
A non·pr t orgontzo&#13;
parUodlt a. .... sc I 0 ~&#13;
requ rltd&#13;
Wednesday. J n. 16, 7 THE PARKSIDE A G R&#13;
Shucard---------&#13;
b) Jane Schliesman&#13;
York University in Toronto, Canada is a few years older th&#13;
Parkside. It's much larger than UW-P, divided as it is into half a doz:&#13;
colleges with enrollments of abou~ 5,00,0 each. I spent some time in&#13;
roronto during seme~ter break with fr1~nds who are York students,&#13;
d took the opportunity to learn something of student life there Th&#13;
an dent newspaper there, Excalibur, is also the source of some ~f the&#13;
r:owing infor~ati~n, ~or I thought it int~resting to compare an~&#13;
contrast the two mstitut~ons on~ col:lple of points.&#13;
There was an Excahbur edito~ial r~centl)'. _dealing with quality&#13;
teaching versus research and umve~s1ty pohtics, the obvious conJusion&#13;
being that students pay the price when teaching excellence is&#13;
~f Jess than utmost concer~. Ma~y of you will recall a Ranger commentary&#13;
last semester o~ this s!-1bJec~, as_ well as frequent reference to&#13;
ii at other times. It remains a_ d1stu~bing 1ssu~ here and at York.&#13;
Another point of comparison 1s regarding adult and part-time&#13;
students. Parkside embarked on an Adult Student program last fall to&#13;
cont&#13;
serve the special needs of the_ older students and those attending A d • •&#13;
school evenings, for they c~nst1tute 3~ ~rcent of our student body. VI Ce g I ve n On CO re e rs&#13;
York, with its larger population and fac1htles (not to mention budget!)&#13;
has an entire college accommodating these students.&#13;
The students at York demonstrate an ability to get things together&#13;
for the common good, something which so far seems lacking at d • b ' f&#13;
Parkside. One example is the university-wide boycott of the hot food a n f o p a c em en&#13;
service at York. The grievances are prices, food quality, and failure to&#13;
hire students for the part-time cafeteria jobs.&#13;
Another example of involvement is in student government. Much&#13;
like Ranger, Excalibur finds editorial substance in suggesting&#13;
unprovements in student government and constitutional changes, but&#13;
unlike here the paper at York does find much to report on what is being&#13;
oone by the Council of the York Student Federation (CYSF). Last&#13;
month, among other things, CYSF voted to set aside $300 to assist York&#13;
tudents involved in litigation revolving around one of the most bitter&#13;
strikes in Toronto's history, which had attracted the support and&#13;
participation (and hence arrest) of many students, clergymen and&#13;
members of city council.&#13;
Student solidarity is further evident in CYSF's membership in a&#13;
national student rights union. Parkside Student Government&#13;
association has so far not deigned to join even the United Council of&#13;
Student Governments in Wisconsin, and now PSGA's future appears&#13;
so uncertain that we can question just what collective recourse&#13;
students here have if they feel they are being victimized.&#13;
All in all, it was an interesting·visit--York has an impressive campus&#13;
with new, modern buildings and parking lots primarily around the&#13;
perimeter-but on returning to Parkside and looking around, one sees&#13;
much the same thing here. It's below the surface where the life (or&#13;
death) is that makes for more valid comparisons.&#13;
Woman student&#13;
is security officer&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Eileen Reilly recently became&#13;
Pa~kside's first woman security&#13;
officer. According to Ronald&#13;
Brinkmann, director of Safety&#13;
and Security, she is one of the&#13;
first women to operate strictly as&#13;
ai_ioffice~within the University of&#13;
V.1scons1n Campus Security&#13;
ystem.&#13;
,:tie functions of a security&#13;
ofh~er include protecting&#13;
equ1pm_ent rooms; checking&#13;
doors m unoccupied areas·&#13;
assisting students, faculty and&#13;
taff; and issuing parking tickets&#13;
to unauthorized vehicles obstructing&#13;
loading docks.&#13;
Although the actual per-&#13;
~ance of these duties is new to&#13;
kneilly, the exposure and&#13;
OWledge of a security officer's :k isn't. Since October of 1972,&#13;
has been employed by Safety&#13;
and Security as a part-time&#13;
tudent dispatcher.&#13;
o;&gt;ue lo changes in the Security&#13;
R partment's work schedule e1l) ' Y, a sophomore will now&#13;
:~ thr~e days a w~k, filling in&#13;
th . ull-ttme security officers on sJ;~ _normal days off. The new&#13;
6 1 ~chedule, implemented Jan. ~t'4· P_lans to reduce overtime&#13;
for Provide ~dditional protection&#13;
roar.hce officers working on the&#13;
.,,,.:egarding the ability of a&#13;
se~:~ perfor_ming the tasks of a&#13;
Slated t.r . Olhcel" Brinkmann&#13;
gOO(j ' Eileen's been doing darn&#13;
down work as a radio operator&#13;
Sho here at the station. She ex;~ the same capability and&#13;
ortence as any other student&#13;
"I' ing under me " rn . . not as interested in what&#13;
Eileen Reilly&#13;
others think of me doing this job,&#13;
as I am in perfor~i~~ it } 0 ~~ best of my capabihtie~, . sa t&#13;
Reilly' referring to rnd1rec&#13;
comments reportedly made by&#13;
first shift officers unfavorable to&#13;
her new position. 1 "We're students and p~obab_y&#13;
·11 have a better relationship w1 th resent with other students an R was security officers do, . another viewp~int expressed b)&#13;
Bill Spreeberg, student er:nploye&#13;
filling in for a security officer on&#13;
a leave of absence: the third&#13;
T Speaker 1s om d b Safety and&#13;
student employe I y filled in for&#13;
Security' and has a so . off&#13;
security officers on their days&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
OIANAROSS&#13;
§ BILLIE HOLIDAY&#13;
i'f&#13;
SINGS&#13;
THE&#13;
BLUES&#13;
srt.:DE, :,- ACTl\'lTl&#13;
B ILDI "G&#13;
Adm. ;;; cent&#13;
Par s e &amp;. s.c I O&#13;
reciv rC'CI&#13;
The dile&#13;
of being a&#13;
idwest Population&#13;
(312) 10&#13;
1&#13;
11&#13;
en er &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
Drama conciousness is goal&#13;
of Parkside Players&#13;
-rea: Paone ollhe Park-side Players makes lighting adjustments&#13;
ill "r Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Parkside Players has been around since Parkside&#13;
was still the extension in Kenosha, according to Ray&#13;
Waldie who serves as its president. However, he is&#13;
pcesidenl only in the sense that be is the one to fill&#13;
oulthe lorms necessary lor organization. The group&#13;
doesn't have the usual president, vice-president,&#13;
secretary or treasurer. but is led by a board 01 live&#13;
which takes on these lunctions and reports, lor&#13;
example, on linancial activities. This system was&#13;
chosen 10 eliminate competition lor o!lices which,&#13;
Waldie said, tends to be divisive, and also to give the&#13;
members more incentive to be involved.&#13;
Parkside Players is the mainstay lor theatrical&#13;
productions at Parkside. It encompasses people&#13;
lrom all aspects 01 dramatic production - not just&#13;
actors, but also makeup, stagecraft, lighting and&#13;
audio-visual people. The objectives of the group are&#13;
to provide training in all aspects of theatre and to&#13;
develop a company attitude and drama consciousness&#13;
among members.&#13;
Training will be accomplished through productions&#13;
such as Tbe Virus. but the organizers hope it&#13;
will be personally rewarding as well as a means 01&#13;
providing skills. Waldie explained the goal 01 a&#13;
company attitude by describing the theatre company:&#13;
"It is a totally interactive concept," he said.&#13;
"Actors pound nails and everybody works together&#13;
to get the show accomplished. Every person gives&#13;
what he can of himself and appreciates the freely&#13;
given talents of others."&#13;
Board member Amy Cundari said they hoped "to&#13;
form a group that was drama conscious, and would&#13;
say no to things like Harvey!'&#13;
She would like to get diflerent types 01plays being&#13;
performed, for example, Greek plays or&#13;
Shakespeare instead of musicals; or more&#13;
generally, plays in whicb actors could get into the&#13;
psyche of the characters, and those which have&#13;
diflerent types 01settings. "I think they're insulting&#13;
the audience by putting on things like TIJ~Boyfriend&#13;
and Harvey," she continued, "I can't think of a&#13;
student who would want to play an eight loot rabbit.&#13;
"&#13;
She also outlined financial reasons for doing other&#13;
kinds 01 plays, such as Greek or those written by&#13;
Albee. One reason is that these sets are very&#13;
surrealistic and simple, in some cases consisting&#13;
merely 01 a backdrop and spotlight. This she contrasted&#13;
with productions such as The Boyfriend,&#13;
which has many different and complex scenes.&#13;
Costuming in The Boyfriend, she said, is also more&#13;
expensive than in, say, a Greek play, where only&#13;
white robes are required.&#13;
Previous productions staged by the Players have&#13;
included The London Merchant, directed by Don&#13;
Bintz, Firebugs, and SChoollor Wives, both directed&#13;
by Marilyn Ilaxter. These were performed in the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts room at Kenosha Campus.&#13;
The Players have now formed a group within&#13;
themselves to simply read plays and set up a season&#13;
so that there will always be some activity going on.&#13;
They are still in the planning stage, however.&#13;
Cundari said they would delinitely be holding a&#13;
high school workshop, probably in late January.&#13;
Students would be instructed in how to "get into"&#13;
different roles and in studio technique, such as&#13;
lighting, costuming, props, makeup, and set&#13;
building and design.&#13;
Membership is limited to "breathing students."&#13;
However, those who don't wish to join are still invited&#13;
and encouraged to become involved.&#13;
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Tt:\C • ..\1.1'1';(' • KOSS. SE~~IIISER •&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Republicans&#13;
discuss&#13;
Nixon&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Parkside has two Republican groups on campus'&#13;
College Republicans and Young Republicans'&#13;
RANGER has interviewed the leaders 01 both l~&#13;
find out what activities they are planning and how&#13;
they react to recent events on the national level&#13;
College Republicans was organized bere' last&#13;
year. They would like to c,,?perate with the&#13;
Democrattc Youth Caucus 10 bringing in opposing&#13;
speakers as well as civic speakers on the en.&#13;
vironment and other topics.&#13;
Onthe state level, Wiscon~n College Republicans&#13;
recently held a Leadership Training SChoolin&#13;
Madison, featuring National College RepUblican&#13;
Congressional and legislative leaders as speakers:&#13;
They also filled Republican legislative seats in a&#13;
model legislature they co-sponsored with the&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus of Wisconsin, and will"be&#13;
holding fundraising dirmers and a state conventiCXI&#13;
in March.&#13;
While College Republicans is confined to college&#13;
campuses, the Wisconsin Federation of y~&#13;
Republicans has area units in Racine and Kenosha&#13;
as well as at Parkside, The club here plans to&#13;
sponsor a chess tournament, hold memberslup&#13;
drives, and bring in legislative and other speakers&#13;
in a format similar to those of the Dye and CR',.&#13;
They recently sponsored two candidates in Iht&#13;
PSGA elections, and circulated petitions oP~&#13;
Ute impeachment of the president. Two memben,&#13;
Treasurer Brad McCrorey and President Harvey&#13;
Hedden, presented a resolution supporting&#13;
President Nixon and urging the state legislature to&#13;
get back to the business at hand at legislative&#13;
hearings on presidential impeachment held&#13;
recently in Madison.&#13;
As a state organization the WFYR also helda&#13;
Leadership Training School recently and will be&#13;
convening in March. Other activities includea blood&#13;
bank drive and the sponsoring of a South Viet·&#13;
namese child.&#13;
When asked what the effects 01Watergate will be,&#13;
Ross Workman, chairperson of Parkside College&#13;
Republicans, said it would set politics back quite 1&#13;
while and also that in firing Cox, Nixon wastaking 1&#13;
lot of risks and those risks were hurting the&#13;
Republican party a lot. "Kids, especially, are&#13;
turned off on politics," he stated. "Beth parties will&#13;
have to work to overcome this, rather than the&#13;
Republicans going out to screw the Democrats«&#13;
vice-versa."&#13;
Workman did not think Watergate wouldhave'&#13;
marked effect on the local level, but said, "It will be&#13;
difficult to convince people to vote Republican,bUt.'&#13;
have faith in the American people that they wool&#13;
vote on Richard Nixon."&#13;
Young Republican president, Harvey H~~&#13;
responded to the same question by saymgl&#13;
basically belleve Watergate is a symptom of !DO&#13;
much government, as far as the effects go.Ireel ,It&#13;
may contribute to public apathy. I hope the ~bliC&#13;
will be understanding and consider WatergateIn Its&#13;
perspective." He also said he believes tbt&#13;
Republlcan party does and will support tbt&#13;
President. slid&#13;
In regard to the Agnew resignation, Hedden 1M&#13;
he thought it was unfair of Agnew to accept&#13;
Vice-Presidency with that kind 01 "skel~n :::.&#13;
closet," although he commended Agnews&#13;
years of public service. He declined to pre&lt;l&lt;l&#13;
results 01 state elections, saying they. w~&#13;
determined by the attitudes 01 the media -&#13;
people. He appraised Nixon's attack 01the Ill_~&#13;
saying they were not above criticism, ~ tba&amp;'i!&#13;
plained whenever Nixon criticized them. If&#13;
true he concluded, "the media are a greater&#13;
to the United States than Watergate, the&#13;
crisis or the Soviet Union."&#13;
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THE PARKS I DE RA1&#13;
NGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
Drama conciousness is goal&#13;
of Parkside Players&#13;
b ' larityn hubert&#13;
Park de Player has been around since Parkside&#13;
till the extension in Kenosha, according to Ray&#13;
W die who rve ~ it president. However, he is&#13;
pr ident nly in the nse that he is the one to fill&#13;
out the form nece ry for organization. The group&#13;
n't have the u ·ual president, vice-president,&#13;
r tary or tre urer. but i led by a board of five&#13;
ch tak on the e function and reports, for&#13;
mple, on financial activities. Th.is system was&#13;
ch to eliminate competition for offices which,&#13;
W die sa d. ten to be divi ive, and al o to give the&#13;
m mber more inct!lltive to be involved.&#13;
P rk ide Play rs is the mainstay for theatrical&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
productions at Parkside. It encompasses pe~ple&#13;
from all aspects of dramatic production - not Just&#13;
actors, but also makeup, stagecraft, lighting and&#13;
audio-visual people. The objectives of the group are&#13;
to provide training in all aspects of theatre and to&#13;
develop a company attitude and drama consciousness&#13;
among members.&#13;
Training will be accomplished thro~gh produ&lt;:-&#13;
tions such as The Virus, but the orgamzers hope 1t&#13;
will be personally rewarding as well as a means of&#13;
providing skills. Waldie explained the goal of a&#13;
company attitude by describing the theatre company:&#13;
"It is a totally interactive concept," he said.&#13;
"Actors pound nails and everybody works together&#13;
to get the show accomplished. Every person gives&#13;
what he can of himself and appreciates the freely&#13;
given talents of others."&#13;
Board member Amy Cundari said they hoped "to&#13;
form a group that was drama conscious, and would&#13;
ay no to things like Harvey."&#13;
e would like to get different types of plays being&#13;
performed, for example , Greek plays or&#13;
Shakespeare instead of musicals; or more&#13;
generally, plays in which actors could get into the&#13;
psyche of the characters, and those which have&#13;
different types of settings. "I think they're insulting&#13;
the audience by putting on things like The Boyfriend&#13;
and Harvey," she continued, "I can't think of a&#13;
student who would want to play an eight foot rabbit&#13;
'&#13;
She also outlined financial reasons for doing other&#13;
kinds of plays, such as Greek or those written by&#13;
Albee . One reason is that these sets are very&#13;
surrealistic and simple, in some cases consisting&#13;
merely of a backdrop and spotlight. This she contrasted&#13;
~;th productions such as The Boyfriend,&#13;
which has many different and complex scenes.&#13;
Costwning in The Boyfriend, she said, is also more&#13;
expensive than in, say, a Greek play, where only&#13;
white robes are required.&#13;
Previous productions staged by the Players have&#13;
included The London Merchant, directed by Don&#13;
Rintz, Firebugs, and School for Wives, both directed&#13;
by Marilyn Baxter. These were performed in the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts room at Kenosha Campus.&#13;
The Players have now formed a group within&#13;
themselves to simply read plays and set up a season&#13;
so that there will always be some activity going on.&#13;
They are still in the planning stage, however.&#13;
Cundari said they would definitely be holding a&#13;
high school workshop, probably in late January.&#13;
Students would be instructed in how to "get into"&#13;
different roles and in studio technique, such as&#13;
lighting, costuming, props, makeup, and set&#13;
building and design.&#13;
Membership is limited to "breathing students."&#13;
However, those who don't wish to join are still invited&#13;
and encouraged to become involved.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Republicans&#13;
discuss&#13;
Nixon&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Parkside has two Republican groups on campus,&#13;
College Republicans and Young Republican ·&#13;
RANGER has in~e~~iewed the leaders of both :~ find out what actlv1ties they are planning and ho&#13;
they react to recent events on the national level w&#13;
College Republicans was organized here· last&#13;
year. They would like to cooperate with the&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus in bringing in opposing&#13;
speakers as well as civic speakers on the en,&#13;
virorunent and other topics.&#13;
On the state level, Wisconsin College Republicans&#13;
recently held a Leadership Training School in&#13;
Madison, featuring National College Republican&#13;
Congressional and legislative leaders as speakers'.&#13;
They also filled Republican legislative seats in a&#13;
model legislature they co-sponsored with the&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus of Wisconsin, and will be&#13;
holding fundraising dinners and a state convention&#13;
in March.&#13;
While College Republicans is confined to college&#13;
campuses, the Wisconsin Federation of Young&#13;
Republicans has area units in Racine and Kenosha&#13;
as well as at Parkside. The club here plans to&#13;
sponsor a chess tournament, hold membership&#13;
drives, and bring in legislative and other speakers&#13;
in a format similar to those of the DYC and CR's.&#13;
They recently sponsored two candidates in the&#13;
PSGA elections, and circulated petitions opposirl&#13;
the impeachment of the president. Two members&#13;
Treasurer Brad Mccrorey and President Harvey&#13;
Hedden, presented a resolution supporting&#13;
President Nixon and urging the state legislature to&#13;
get back to the business at hand at legislative&#13;
hearings on presidential impeachment held&#13;
recently in Madison.&#13;
As a state organization the WFYR also held a&#13;
Leadership Training School recently and will be&#13;
convening in March. Other activities include a blood&#13;
bank drive and the sponsoring of a South Vietnamese&#13;
child.&#13;
When asked what the effects of Watergate will be,&#13;
Ross Workman, chairperson of Parkside College&#13;
Republicans, said it would set politics back quite a&#13;
while and also that in firing Cox, Nixon was taking a&#13;
lot of risks and those risks were hurting the&#13;
Republican party a lot. "Kids, especially, are&#13;
turned off on politics," he.stated. ''Both parties will&#13;
have to work to overcome this, rather than the&#13;
]:lepublicans going out to screw the Democrats or&#13;
vice-versa."&#13;
Workman did not think Watergate would have a&#13;
marked effect on the local level, but said, "It will be&#13;
difficult to convince people to vote Republican, but ,1&#13;
have faith in the American people that they won 1&#13;
vote on Richard Nixon."&#13;
Young Republican president, Harvey _Hed&lt;I~&#13;
responded to the same question by saying, 1&#13;
basically believe Watergate is a symptom of 00:0&#13;
much government, as far as the effects go. I feel .&#13;
11&#13;
may contribute to public apathy. I hope the ~b!1&#13;
c&#13;
will be understanding and consider Watergate JO its&#13;
perspective." He also said he believes the&#13;
Republican party does and will support the&#13;
President.&#13;
In regard to the Agnew resignation, Hedden S:&#13;
he thought it was unfair of Agnew to ac~&#13;
Vice-Presidency with that kind of "skeleton tn bil&#13;
closet," although he commended Agnew's m:&#13;
years of public service. He declined to predi;~ be&#13;
results of state elections, saying they. w~ die&#13;
determined by the attitudes of the media lit&#13;
people. He appraised Nixon's attack of the media COIi"&#13;
saying they were not above criticism, ~ut tbll'I&#13;
plained whenever Nixon criticized them. If thfdl&#13;
true he concluded, "the media are a greater ra&#13;
to the United States than Watergate, the ene&#13;
crisis or the Soviet Union."&#13;
JAN. 16, 18, 19 , 20&#13;
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FOR PICK UP OR&#13;
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Advice "Shakespeare Semester"&#13;
continued from page 3&#13;
d'SCussed. Video tape equipment is&#13;
"",-",IS f~ role playing and resulting instant&#13;
""able&#13;
~ck. us interviews are scheduled to provide&#13;
on-eampand registrants WIth an opportunity to&#13;
""playersutoalinterests. Employers are provided&#13;
jSCl1SSm registrant's credentials upon the&#13;
wIthth~,srequest, and facilities are provided for&#13;
~L5tr~ucting of mtervtews .. Seve~ to ,IO-day&#13;
me, co s to when compames will be interviewing&#13;
1IOI1«5,:n in a glassed·in bulletin board in the&#13;
are ~ Buildingupper concourse.&#13;
(laSS. Iration steps should be taken during a&#13;
:~'s last semester of his or her junior year; no&#13;
n&#13;
thanfaU of the senior year. According to&#13;
Iotef ard although the job market is tbe best it's&#13;
Bal1l in u,ree years, it is still very tight. For this&#13;
~ especially,students should be prepared for&#13;
MUte career plans by the semor year.&#13;
students Must Take Initiative&#13;
samard emphasized that juniors and ~eniors&#13;
DEltakethe initiative to use placements. It IS up to&#13;
lit individual student to seek out contacts&#13;
....... 11' in his job search.&#13;
"I'dliketo see 100 percent of future graduates&#13;
registet' in placements," Elmore commented.&#13;
~enlS don't understand the payoff, both in&#13;
mooeyand job satisfaction, of the best positive&#13;
approach to acquiring a position."&#13;
Although a positive approach may be executed,&#13;
Elm&lt;re stressed placemE;nts does not guarantee&#13;
Old! registrant a position. College may be one of&#13;
many stepstoward a future preferred job. Barnard&#13;
IisO emphasizedthat college is preparation for the&#13;
future; for a future of many possible career&#13;
changes.Placements can help college be a step in&#13;
the right direction.&#13;
Advice For Job-Seekers&#13;
Recruitingpractices bring Placements personnel&#13;
do contact with personnel men and women who&#13;
lifer furthur advice. Elmore discovered: "Peranetpeople&#13;
in education are optimistic. There are&#13;
..... a fewjobs for aggressive, good, professional&#13;
lUalors. Many candidates in the past have been&#13;
.. weak in aggressiveness and ability that they&#13;
..... 1finding jobs. Students must be aggressive."&#13;
"Grade point average is important, but not allImJDrtant.&#13;
It means much less if one's comIIllIlicationand&#13;
personality are poor. Students&#13;
IlaIkl take communication and English classes if&#13;
IlIir abilities to communicate intelligently, both&#13;
tll'bally and in written form, are not proficient,"&#13;
lIIIIDlentedH. D. Mellin, employment manager of&#13;
llIicago'sMarshall Field &amp; Co.&#13;
Likewise,Elmore also stressed the importance of&#13;
Ibe iDdirldual: "Degrees, resumes, and paper&#13;
alDfidentials only get you into an interview. From&#13;
there, theseplus you as a person count in whether or&#13;
lilt they need you."&#13;
Elnure offered additional advice to graduates.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1'74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
His observations have r&#13;
ratio of men to women siani&#13;
I&#13;
ed that at Parkside the underway here&#13;
three to one During th Iglnmgfup for interviews are&#13;
h&#13;
. east ew years .&#13;
ave begun seeking min '1' ' companIes&#13;
requirements. Organiz 0;1 res to meet employment&#13;
women. a IOns are anxious to hire&#13;
Zimmer~ann commented that students should&#13;
get acquamted with someone in PI way a stud t . acements. This&#13;
hiliti en WIth suitable personality traits and&#13;
a I lies can be found r&#13;
specific kind of person. 01 a company desiring a&#13;
In . regard to students in general Elmore&#13;
~,uggested "strongly .that they broaden their&#13;
horizons. Organizations observe the acquiring of&#13;
?ew. a~d-or relevant experiences outside of the&#13;
mstitution and the area as a favorable asset&#13;
Students should seek these opportunities through&#13;
suc~ methods as summer jobs, educational ex.&#13;
perrences, and field work.&#13;
Ad.vice to graduates is not limited to Placement&#13;
Services. One of the best sources of information is&#13;
the current or recent job-seeker.&#13;
"S~udents should get as much field experience as&#13;
possible: broaden their backgrounds. Also, enough&#13;
electives should be taken in order for the student to&#13;
have s.orne other field to fall back on," commented&#13;
Parkside student Kathy Gipp. Gipp's lack of field&#13;
experience J?C~taining to her sociology major&#13;
caused her difficulty while job hunting.&#13;
Bruce Hoffman, January 1973 Parkside graduate&#13;
with a major in math and a minor in computer&#13;
programming, agreed with Gipp, "If I'd had&#13;
anywhere from a month to three months of on-thejob&#13;
experience about six months ago, I'd be a lot&#13;
better off. Iwould advise students to get a part-time&#13;
job in some field related to their major ..&#13;
Past psychology major and 1971 Parkside&#13;
graduate, Charles Monroe, is currently a doclOral&#13;
student of sociology at Marquette, but remembered&#13;
plenty of interviews. He feels pursual of a graduate&#13;
degree is advisable for students in helping&#13;
professions, but offered advice to future jobseekers:&#13;
"Don't come on overly aggressh'e and&#13;
overbearing during an interview; the job market&#13;
doesn't need people with this trait. Personality&#13;
factors are very important."&#13;
Parks ide student Mike Krekling revealed that the&#13;
interview's purpose is not to get a job offer but to&#13;
cooperate, to make a favorable impression, and to&#13;
be called back for a second interview.&#13;
May 1973 graduate John Hanson chose com·&#13;
munication as a major, as it would help him in later&#13;
years. He feels a degree should not be observed as&#13;
an assurance of a future job, but as a desirable&#13;
educational background. Hanson stressed, "College&#13;
helps one see things clearly, ~ .aware. of events&#13;
occurring, and grasp new prmclples, Ideas, and&#13;
terminology. The series of experiences offered by&#13;
college are much more beneficial than, say, those m&#13;
a factory or a store; they aren't as limited."&#13;
A travelmg exlubll from the&#13;
hakespeare Librar 10&#13;
lI'aslnngtoo, DC. includ&gt;ne a&#13;
number of rare man npta is&#13;
the first In a senes 01 f"\ e'1'I&#13;
scheduled dur ing Park Id~'&#13;
"~ake~peare Sem ..&#13;
The exhrbn ,,;U be on dJspIay In&#13;
the library's peciaJ CoIl&#13;
display area on I el lWO from&#13;
Jan. 1~through Feb. I from 74$&#13;
a.m to 4-30 p.rn fonda)&#13;
through Frida,&#13;
Olber e'en planned for lIle&#13;
"Shakespeare s.m ., lDdude&#13;
a prcducuon b\ The .to"&#13;
Shakespeare Company of&#13;
Franeisce on larch I and a&#13;
symposium on "Shakespeare. the&#13;
,Iedia and the Secondar) SChool"&#13;
00 •larch 30. featunr« nat onalIy&#13;
recognized hi espearean&#13;
scholars&#13;
A n"" lhree credit elWlll&#13;
coun;e on "Shakespure and&#13;
Film" ill be offered IhroIlIhOUt&#13;
the semester on ·edntsda and&#13;
Thursda~ boguuung Jan 16 and&#13;
,,;U feature lU rJlms Tbesl!&#13;
millS, though pan of the courst'&#13;
are free and open to the po&#13;
and ",11 open ,Ih Oliv' ... •&#13;
"Hen!')' \, followed by III&#13;
Japanese aclaplauon of' ae,&#13;
belll." Kurosa"a· "~Throne&#13;
of Blood" CFeb. 6 • ca. l\ani's&#13;
"Romeo and Juliel" I.lor 20),&#13;
Classified&#13;
r ........... ' TT~ln .......-.0&#13;
Of'l~,,"'~lp .........&#13;
U.rt ...-rtH '0 INn S ~ ...&#13;
P.- ......... • 10 6U&#13;
Jaf~.P!l'l ,.,.&#13;
~ ftl cetrICI t&#13;
toItfoctWl .. • ... G • ...&#13;
kUP'''' _IRI DteI- ~."s. .. I ...&#13;
Personals&#13;
QLDIBS&#13;
10years ago "Fun Fun Fun:' by The Beach&#13;
Boys.was on the charts, and it is available along&#13;
with 4500others in stock.&#13;
Advice&#13;
continued from page 3&#13;
discussed. Video tape equipment is&#13;
rtsl for role playing and resulting instant&#13;
,,-ailab e&#13;
eediJaCk.pus interviews are scheduled to provide&#13;
()1-C~; and registrants with an opportunity to&#13;
ernpl~) mutual interests. Employers are provided&#13;
~he registrant's credentials upon the&#13;
11~ nt's request, and facilities are provided for&#13;
registra . t . S t ducting of m erv1ews. even o 10-day&#13;
e_ conas to when companies will be interviewing&#13;
n,llce~ven in a glassed-in bulletin board in the&#13;
. ~oom Building upper concourse.&#13;
0:: istration steps should be taken during a&#13;
W:nt's last semester of his or her junior year; no than fall of the senior ypar. According to&#13;
~~rd although the job market is the best it's&#13;
in three years, it is still very tight. For this&#13;
son especially, students sho~ld be prepared for&#13;
MUrt? career plans by the semor year.&#13;
Students Must Take Initiative&#13;
earnard emphasized that juniors and seniors&#13;
t take the initiative to use placements. It is up to&#13;
individual student to seek out contacts&#13;
i!tCfSS3rY in his job search.&#13;
··rd like to see 100 percent of future graduates&#13;
~ ter in placements," Elmore commented.&#13;
-students don't understand the payoff, both in&#13;
ey and job satisfaction, of the best positive&#13;
proach to acquiring a position."&#13;
Although a positive approach may be executed,&#13;
Elmore stressed placem(lnts does not guarantee&#13;
ch registrant a position. College may be one of&#13;
many steps toward a future preferred job. Barnard&#13;
emphasized that college is preparation for the&#13;
ture; for a future of many possible career&#13;
changes. Placements can help college be a step in&#13;
the right direction.&#13;
Advice For Job-Seekers&#13;
Recruiting practices bring Placements personnel&#13;
o contact with personnel men and women who&#13;
dfer furthur advice. Elmore discovered: "PerSOllllel&#13;
people in education are optimistic. There are&#13;
~ite a few jobs for aggressive, good, professional&#13;
educators. Many candidates in the past have been&#13;
Wednesd y, Jan. 16, 1 7 HE PARKSID&#13;
11 Shakespea e Se&#13;
His observations have rev d h&#13;
ratioofmentowome . ~led thatatPark idethe Un erway e Jr,e&#13;
three to one Du · nhsignmg up for interview are h · rmg t e last few ave begun seeking minor·r to years, compani&#13;
requirements. Organiza/ ies meet ~mploym nt&#13;
women. ions are anx1ou to hire&#13;
Zimmermann commented ha&#13;
get acquainted with some t _ ~ students hould&#13;
way a student with . one m lacement! . This&#13;
abilities can be fou~~t~ble personality traits and&#13;
specific kind of per o1 a compar.y d irin a&#13;
1 son . n regatd to students in&#13;
suggested strong! general, Elmore&#13;
"h . " Y that they broaden th ·r&#13;
onzons. Organizations observe the acquiring of&#13;
~e;.t a~d-or relevant experiences outside of th&#13;
ms I u on and the area as a favorable t&#13;
Students should seek these opportunities through&#13;
sue? methods as summer jobs. educational • penences, and field work.&#13;
Ad_vice to graduates is not limited to Placement&#13;
SerVIces. One of the best sources or information .&#13;
th~ current or recent job-seeker.&#13;
S~udents should get as much field e. ·perience a&#13;
poss1_ble; broaden their backgrounds. Also, enough&#13;
electives should be taken in order for the tudent to&#13;
have ~ome other field to fall back on," commented&#13;
Parks_1de student Kathy Gipp. Gipp's lack of field&#13;
experience ~~taining ~o her sociology maj&#13;
caused her difficulty while job hunting.&#13;
_Bruce Ho_ffm~n, January 1973 Parkside graduat&#13;
with a ma!or m math and a minor in computer&#13;
programming, agreed with Gipp, "If I'd had&#13;
anywhere from a month to three months of on-th&#13;
job experience about six months ago, I d be a lot&#13;
better off. I would advise students to get a part-time&#13;
job in some field related to their major."&#13;
Past psychology major and 1971 Park id&#13;
graduate, Charles Monroe, is currentlv a doctoral&#13;
student of sociology at Marquette, but ;emembered&#13;
plenty of interviews. He feels pursual of a graduate&#13;
degree is advisable for students in help&#13;
professions, but offered advice to future jobseekers:&#13;
"Don't come on overly aggressiv and&#13;
overbearing during an interview; the job ma ·et&#13;
doesn't need people with this trait. Personality&#13;
A G 5&#13;
e ter"&#13;
weak in aggressiveness and ability that they&#13;
aren't finding jobs. Students must be aggressive."&#13;
uGrade point average is important, but not allportant.&#13;
It means much less if one's comunication&#13;
and personality are poor. Students&#13;
factors are very important." C I • f • d&#13;
Parkside student Mike Krekling revealed that th Q 55 e •&#13;
interview's purpose is not to get a job offer b to 1-----;:;;..;:;;_,._;:....;;;....;;:;....;=._+-__ ...;;;;...;;;...;~.;;...;;_;,...:::..,:..;;;_,.1&#13;
cooperate, to make a favorable impre ion, and to&#13;
be called back for a second interview.&#13;
~d ta~~ communication and English classes if&#13;
their ab1hties to communicate intelligently, both&#13;
mbally and in written form, are not proficient,"&#13;
~e~ted H. D. Mellin, employment manager of&#13;
~go.s Marshall Field &amp; Co.&#13;
Li~ew_1se, Elmore also stressed the importance of&#13;
_1nd1~1dual: "Degrees, resumes, and paper&#13;
Clllfidenttals only get you into an interview. From&#13;
• these plus you as a person count in whether or they need you "&#13;
Elmore offered additional advice to graduates.&#13;
Q~DIES&#13;
May 1973 graduate John Hanson ch com·&#13;
munication as a major, as it would help him in later&#13;
years. He feels a degree should not be observed&#13;
an assurance of a future job, but a a d irabl&#13;
educational background. Han on tr ~sed "Coll&#13;
helps one see things clearly, be aware of •&#13;
occurring, and grasp new principl • ideas, and&#13;
terminology. The series of experiences offered by&#13;
college are much more beneficial than, y, th in&#13;
a factory or a store; they aren't a limited."&#13;
l0 years ago "Fun Fun Fun," by The Beach&#13;
Boys, was on the charts and it is available along&#13;
with 4500 others in sto~k. &#13;
6 THE PARKISDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
Brief news&#13;
SAB restricted to persons over 17&#13;
oIlhe' tudeDt Activities Building will be restricted to persons t8&#13;
of age and older ,,"ben beer is being served. it was announeed&#13;
~ ooly Urn beer not ser ved is during special events&#13;
&lt;:II are open IDthe public. w hieh are rare&#13;
~ new ~tJoD de\'eJoped as a result of a CODtroI problem in&#13;
th 17 Y r aids .,.."""'t Underage persons were&#13;
and d tbere be aDy' trouble. University personnel as&#13;
ud&lt;nt bamnden and aDyone else providing beer to minors.&#13;
hable lor """"",ution l1timately. the privilege to serve beer&#13;
00 urn c d be ..... oIled&#13;
C rdinator of AuxUuu'y Servi Dave BIShop explained that&#13;
reJao y I Par de ludell!.! are afleeted by this. although there&#13;
ar ho are 17or younger. . Ily high school students taking&#13;
only or Jwo _"...".&#13;
II. ho I t dunn the,. k aD area can be enclooed for beer&#13;
the of lh building kept available to all students But lor&#13;
ad rnaVl uch a d Ignatlon 's ,mp&lt;NlbJe. Bishop leels. so&#13;
lIloJ the new Union built th restriction WIll be Ul loree.&#13;
Information center to cash checks&#13;
~Dg a chc'ck-casluDg servtce at the&#13;
tudell!.!.laculty and stafl beginDing looday.&#13;
ted Ul partiCIpating may' register at the 10·&#13;
Par de 1 0 and ooe other lorm of Identilicatioo m~~~re::~~, m order to regiSleI'. and Par 'de 1.0. must be&#13;
po dt urne a ch k IS c ed PersooaJ checks lor S5 or less&#13;
(00 per day) and there ,.,11 be a lSo&lt;:entservIce charge&#13;
p"r c&#13;
Bill "ebIlbr. D1reetorof ,tUdeDt Ule said a "e&lt;}' striclattitude will&#13;
dopIed lOI' rd noc..wt!c'eIlt lund checIts, A $1 penally will be&#13;
rged In order lor th "Tller of such checks to coolinue using the&#13;
r pUon of lh bad cheek For ludenls who ha"e an&#13;
!.!l:lndulll debt the end of th m ler. grades will be ,.ithheJd&#13;
tu !.!will not be alIo .. ed to regISter lor the next semester&#13;
debt Is pa.d. bubr described the servIce as "taking care of&#13;
nt".o lOX"" by tuden We are not going to be a bank, though.&#13;
Just to help peopl t through the day "&#13;
Costume Shop has openings&#13;
The Parksi The !er's Costume hop ha OpeOUlgS lor people ined&#13;
orklng on costumes. This will ,nclude repair, main·&#13;
aDd truet 00 01 costlDDea Opportunities will exist to&#13;
....."nM~C also t can be obtained lor this .. ork. For&#13;
CCXltaetfaculty members Tom Rel1lert ext 2S&amp;l or 2568. or&#13;
o k Carrington I 2102&#13;
Graduate scores in top one percent&#13;
de graduate lory Anne PietkiVltch 2115 laSalle SI., Racine.&#13;
n no ed that e ored ID the top one percent of the 5.673&#13;
recently tooll the American Society 01 Clinical&#13;
ationa! R"II try E. am lor .Iedical Te&lt;:hnologists, the&#13;
leve! P e lor med teebs&#13;
pnng. 1m medIcal technology grad Pletkivitch interned at SI.&#13;
Luke'. II pial where she nOVo's employed as a med tech, As an&#13;
lDldcrgraduate at Parkslde. she was a M)TOn O. Lawson Foundation&#13;
balarllillp udellt&#13;
Reaents approve mission&#13;
ha roved the select mission statement for&#13;
TheBoardolRegents s app , 1 d t . .ch will 1I0w the UniversIty to deve op gra ua e&#13;
Parkaide '::hll le d';ree programs in fields allied to business and&#13;
programs "as rs s-e " ight bezi .&#13;
industry, or tying into the industrial society miSSIOn, IDt gin In&#13;
the lall 01 1975.&#13;
Foreign athletes need room and board&#13;
. et several foreign athletes from&#13;
Parkside has. an opportumt~o~ldg class athletes, who in many cases&#13;
Sweden and Africa. Thesear~ tries in the Olympics in track and&#13;
have or wo~d repr~ent fthel~C~~fferroom and board for four years&#13;
field. What 15 needed IS a ar:nt Y ted in opening their home to one of&#13;
for these athletes. Anyone meres t Orby MosS Assistant Athletic&#13;
th.ese athl~tes is :~kedE~o~::~g. Lucian R~sa from Ceylon is&#13;
Director. m the y., f gram currently at Parkside through this type 0 pro .&#13;
Film Society to meet&#13;
Th will be an organizational meeting 01 the Parkside Film&#13;
,ere Wed d January 16at7'30p,m, in Dl74LLC. Everyone&#13;
Society on nes ay. .&#13;
is welcome.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building policy&#13;
faCUlty&#13;
receive&#13;
state&#13;
Family Identlflution Card&#13;
1 1 The p"rkSide family identification card is a convenience for the. ;mm:e.d~ate family&#13;
(,\pouw&amp;ttdchildrenonly; of faculty. staff and studenf5 who use the athletiC faCIlities.&#13;
2 When US,ng the athletic fiKlllties. the family of faculty, staff and students may present&#13;
e-,the1' tM' family identification card or the identification card ~ the faculty membe~, staff&#13;
~ or studftlt, Furth"'" proof of Identification may be requIred by those managing the&#13;
'.K,My I "ff' Mo d&#13;
3 Fam,ly identificahon cards may be ~cured trom the physica educa Ion a Ice n ay&#13;
Ihrough Friday Iromla.m, t04 p.m. beginning January 1&lt;1, 1974.&#13;
.. The' charge tor Ihecard will be $1.00 (The charge for the second semester. 1973·14 will be&#13;
~~) Beg,nn,ngwith Ihe ecademic yur 1974·7S, cards will be SOl? on a yearly basis only trom&#13;
September 1 to Augl,4t 31, The charge will be $l.?O r~ardl~s of time of purchase.&#13;
S only one lemily idenf;licatlon card per family will be Issued. .&#13;
6 Family identif,cation cards will list the name (s) of the spouse and children on the card,&#13;
7 ThOSe allow;1'l9 uneuthorlzed persons to use the family ick!ntification card will lose the&#13;
~l f.cat'OI\card and surrender the privilege of using the physical education building.&#13;
• Fam,ly memben mey bring one guest to Ihefacilltyfor a $1.00 charge.&#13;
, ALL PERSONS USING THE ATHLETIC FACILITIES MUST OBEY THE FOLLOWING&#13;
RULES AND REGULATIONS:&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
1 AJ'lyone using the athletic lacilitles must have an I D card.&#13;
'2 The 10 card must be shoWn upon request at the athletic tacility.&#13;
J, Tl'IOH gsi09 the pool and sauna must exerCise special care. The following rules govern&#13;
the.r VSt'&#13;
•. No rvnn 09. pushing or snoving 011 Ihe pool deck or in the pool area.&#13;
b ()nly onle penon at a timle may use Ihe diving board.&#13;
c P~s i" street c\(ltheswill not be allowed on the pool deCk.&#13;
d Food.s protlib,tf'd in the pool area .&#13;
e ArtifiCIal sw m devict'S are not allowed in the pool. The use of fins. masks and goggles is&#13;
pNlhib,le&lt;!&#13;
I NOone ISpermi"ed in Iheguard tower except the lifeguard.&#13;
9 Leaden 01 organiZe&lt;! groups visiting the pool shall assume full responsibility for the can·&#13;
duct of the r groups.&#13;
h Patrons shOuld acQuaint themselves With the various depths of 'he pool.&#13;
I. N09'aucontein.ersareallowed in the bathhouse Or pool area.&#13;
The lifeoguard may expel from the pool anyone violating these rules, or anyone whose can·&#13;
duel s ieopardizing the safety or pleasure of others.&#13;
• Family members mus' provide all clothing, towels and locks. Empty lockers are&#13;
ava,l.ble in locklerareas. No locks may be left on the lockers at Iheend of the day.&#13;
S. PARENTS MUST STAY WITH CHILDREN AGE TWELVE OR UNDER,&#13;
6, ANYONE VIOLATING THE RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE ATHLETIC&#13;
FACILITY WILL BE ASKED TO LEAVE!&#13;
1, l'hoseusng the Sa\Jfla musl strictly adhere to the following instructions:&#13;
a Nt n,mum 01 two people in the Sauna.&#13;
b. Maximum 01 twelve people in Sauna.&#13;
c Swim suits only.&#13;
d Keep hanas off contrOls.&#13;
e L,mit use 10 fillMn minutes.&#13;
f caut,on e-x1ende&lt;l sfay may cause diuiness.&#13;
"" Absolutely no one allowed in the Sauna alone.&#13;
r&#13;
grants&#13;
Parkside has been&#13;
UW Central Adtninis~OlIf""&#13;
members of its facult ~~&#13;
awarded two UndY \e&#13;
Teaching Improve ergra&#13;
totaling $15.224, tnenl ~&#13;
The grants are&#13;
totaling $15925' ha&#13;
,,",,,, , , w Icb&#13;
selected from 105&#13;
submitted by facully rP"PoIolt&#13;
univer-ai tiag and 141'01r1 ~&#13;
Centers in the uw ttr.".,&#13;
Twelve campuses S~&#13;
awards. r~&#13;
Receiving grants art "&#13;
Graflin and Peter II&#13;
assistant professors ol&#13;
$7,979 lor the project "A&#13;
Pacing Program f~&#13;
Composition," and Man&#13;
llappel, assistant pro! ,.&#13;
Education, $7,245,for ~ ....&#13;
"utilization of pa ...nt.~&#13;
Teams in a MUlti!:&#13;
Teacher Education C.....&#13;
The Graflin-Martln pr&#13;
covering the current ~&#13;
summer session .lad&#13;
semester, will focus (II&#13;
truction of a personalW!d,&#13;
pacmg system of instruc.tia&#13;
better teach necessary&#13;
freshman compositiCII&#13;
in a time p"riod nollimlled&#13;
traditional semesler,1be&#13;
will initially he tried •&#13;
sections of English 010, •&#13;
man course for stooenb&#13;
instruction in basic writiDI&#13;
and, if successful, will be&#13;
to all first-year com&#13;
courses and any other&#13;
who may need such help&#13;
Happel's project. w&#13;
being begun this sem_&#13;
supplement an existing&#13;
"Teaching lor the M&#13;
Society." Teacher tra&#13;
enrolled in the COursE'&#13;
taught by a tealn comJlOlM&#13;
Happel and five ~&#13;
representing the cultural&#13;
of an inner city area. Thf&#13;
will be taught at Vi&#13;
Park high school in Ra_&#13;
the parents are Black aodLlIiI&#13;
American.&#13;
liGHT 'n - ·It&#13;
e&#13;
Iii&#13;
by J,rry ~_...-.&#13;
Sight 'n Sound ..._Io~ NoW that the holidaYS' " """..&#13;
your pockets are .bUl9lnG ~ ~&#13;
cash gifts you re&lt;el"'fCl, y041yf1# ...&#13;
wondering hOW to sper!d&#13;
wisely. . QUII'" rtf/I#&#13;
Why not in....esl,lt III ..-. fI'&#13;
equipment? Sight n ~ "" ffII&#13;
suit ants will helP you ",'" •&#13;
gear from suct! famous,P1fI1lI'I-'&#13;
Marantz, Sony, supers.e; '(OIl ....&#13;
many others. We'll urrtf'"&#13;
match components 10 ~"&#13;
present system, take v;::;, ."'"&#13;
in trade on a new sYS ,&#13;
from scratch. ~111'!~&#13;
Best of aiL Sight 'n loI"~'"&#13;
for every ear, a price ,&#13;
"",...... If you woul~ lik~ t~IIII'&#13;
Hi.Fidelity, SIght n PIU",.I' ~&#13;
number 01 AUDIO vtfret ", ..&#13;
$1 25) which yOli can lI·thiS rJ'W ..&#13;
in' and say yOl! seW•&#13;
rt toP'&#13;
RANGE,R. If YO~HI"'¥If I"'"&#13;
electrOniCS CISa ca 'etY ol .w"~&#13;
hOW to join lhe SO&lt;;~e "" ~&#13;
sultants and recel&#13;
ron&#13;
training lor certitica ' r1fII..&#13;
,IDU'I'I - II'&#13;
Need some new 1111'fIIIIII&#13;
Sight 'N sound is Il~u J til ftII'&#13;
reduction ~Ie. Cllt'll' ,.eI •&#13;
others as loW 'S,l';' D&#13;
Tapes as lOW,I· UN&#13;
SIGHT'nsO .1ft'&#13;
Stereo' - ...... TV It""""gA..&#13;
Hi Fi CoP'r-- pt-..&#13;
Rariutf&#13;
21st&amp;Tayl?re&#13;
S.l.'-&#13;
Open Daily tU9&#13;
6 THE PARK SOE RA1 GER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
s&#13;
Co&#13;
news&#13;
r cted o persons over 17&#13;
h checks&#13;
n top one percent&#13;
,Racine,&#13;
the 5 673&#13;
of Oinical&#13;
the&#13;
Regents approve mission&#13;
roved the select mission statement for&#13;
The ~oard ~f Reg~ts ~fs apfhe University to develop graduate&#13;
Parkside which w a ow . fields allied to business and&#13;
gram ~tasters degree programs m . . "gh be . . fr'Justrv ~; tying into the industrial society m1ss1on, m1 t gm m&#13;
the fali ~f 1975.&#13;
. thletes need ro o m a nd bo a r d&#13;
Fore ig n a&#13;
. to get several foreign athletes from&#13;
Park ide has. an opportumty rid class athletes, who in many cases&#13;
eden and Africa. These ar~ wo untries in the Olympics in track and&#13;
have or \\O~d repr~ent thei.; c~o offer room and board for four years&#13;
field. 1-'hat 1s n eded is a faJ?~ Y sted in opening their home to one of&#13;
for e athlet: · Any~ne 10 e~~ct Orby Moss, Assistant Athletic&#13;
th -e athl~te is as~e Edto Bco 'lding. Lucian Rosa from Ceylon is&#13;
Director m the Ph, . · Ill&#13;
curr nu.'· at Parkside through this type of program.&#13;
film Society to meet&#13;
There will be an organizational meeting of the Parkside Film&#13;
·etyon Wednesday, January 16 at7:30 p.m. in D174 LLC. Everyone&#13;
· welcome.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building policy&#13;
F•mlly Identification Card&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
l An us ng theathlttic facilit ies m ust have an ID card. , e 1O card mus' beshown upon request at the athletic facility.&#13;
3. T e 115lng he pool and sauna m ust exercise special care. The following rules govern&#13;
ATHLETIC&#13;
pens At 8:00a.rn.&#13;
Faculty&#13;
receive&#13;
state&#13;
grants&#13;
Parkside has been&#13;
UW Central Adminis:uri&#13;
members of its facuitv ~ awarded two Und·&#13;
T h. er r2 eac mg Improvem&#13;
totaling $15,224. ent C&#13;
The grants are&#13;
totaling $159,254 W~tc&#13;
selected from 105&#13;
su~mittE:&lt;1_ by faculty r:n&#13;
umvers1t1es and 14 1&#13;
Centers in the W oTwelve&#13;
campuse.&#13;
awards.&#13;
Receiving grants are&#13;
Graffin and Peter&#13;
assistant professors of&#13;
$7,979 for the project&#13;
Pacing Program rO:.&#13;
Composition," and . tan&#13;
Happel, assistant prci&#13;
Education, $7,245, for th&#13;
"Utilization or ParentTeams&#13;
in a .1ulttc&#13;
Teacher Education Cou&#13;
The Graffin-Martin p&#13;
covering the current&#13;
summer session and&#13;
semester, will focu&#13;
truction of a per onal&#13;
pacing system or in&#13;
better teach necessaf)&#13;
freshman compo ition&#13;
iri a time period not limit&#13;
traditional seme ter Tot&#13;
will initially be tried&#13;
sections of English 010 1&#13;
man course for stud n&#13;
instruction in basic wn&#13;
and, if successful, mil be&#13;
to all first-year com&#13;
courses and any other&#13;
who may need such h Ip&#13;
Happel's project&#13;
being begun this em&#13;
supplement an exi Ung&#13;
"Teaching for the lul&#13;
Society." Teacher tra&#13;
enrolled in the course&#13;
taught by a team co&#13;
Happel and five par&#13;
representing the cultural&#13;
of an inner city area. 'The&#13;
will be taught at W&#13;
Park high school in Ra&#13;
the parents are Black a&#13;
American.&#13;
by Jerry OUb&lt;fl&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Aucho '°" Now that the holidays "'&#13;
your pockets are _ooig.n; •&#13;
cash gifts you received, ~&#13;
wondering how to sP""'&#13;
wisely. . n QIII&#13;
Why not invest +t ' od&#13;
equipment? Sight 'n 50" ltCI&#13;
sultants will help you st i,- •&#13;
gear from such fa"'°"' F lfll&#13;
Marantz, Sony, supe~ yf1I&#13;
many others. We'll r,ortfil '{Ill&#13;
match components to ~,i,&#13;
present system, take v"" ., • in trade on a new sySfl!fll,&#13;
from scratch . ,ed ,,,;&#13;
Best of all. Sight 'n ~ r,,rr&#13;
for every ear, a price&#13;
t ,,.rnrrrlff 11 you would lik~ ~nd s,11&#13;
Hi-Fidelity, Sight n pRIMftS&#13;
number ~f AUDIO havttrft #'&#13;
Sl.25) wh+ch you canw '"" fl"'&#13;
in and sav you sa ,re cer. RANGER . If you~ Ylf'J&#13;
electronics as a ~,et~ of t,;ll4i' how to 101n the . rt,&lt; and rectrvf sultants ·rcation&#13;
training for cert1 i&#13;
1 1out11• " Need some new vtnt • 5""&#13;
Sight 'N sound ,s ~:uts • I ";&#13;
reduct ion sale. cu Sl lf •"'&#13;
others as low as ft&#13;
Tapes as 10w as Sl . OU,.O&#13;
SIGHT'n S ...... n&#13;
V f{tCOrv-' Stereo-T - H' Fi cornpontll I cinr• 21st &amp; Taylor•lla_ t&#13;
• ·19 "a · Open Daily ti • &#13;
STAFF MEETING&#13;
Wed. Jan. 23 2:30 p.m.&#13;
RANGER LLC D194 .&#13;
All interested persons welcome&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 16. 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
.. 8&#13;
_LIlt'" 10&#13;
Ia _llidl&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phon 65 -25 -&#13;
J'Dlc..&#13;
NOTICE .....&#13;
SU... lllol.1ICoual&#13;
OF TME nATE Of' II.. yOltk&#13;
COUNTY OJ' "I(W yOalC&#13;
- ,....-&#13;
=&#13;
CV&#13;
....&#13;
OQ_.&#13;
N&#13;
CV&#13;
=-&#13;
-&#13;
Villa Capri Shoppfug Center&#13;
SSz North 22nd Ave. Kenosha; (Ohio St. Racine)&#13;
-1122 Day and Evening Hour5 by APpoin,ment&#13;
announces the association of&#13;
JOHN WENTlAND, D.V.M.&#13;
and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
START THE SEMESTER&#13;
OUT RIGHT&#13;
SE88M&#13;
Electronic slide file&#13;
with a .e or,&#13;
..... -&#13;
.....&#13;
oC'1:I&#13;
GJ[[1[il&#13;
GJGJGJ&#13;
GJGJI2J&#13;
80&#13;
- ,....-&#13;
=&#13;
cv&#13;
....&#13;
OQ_.&#13;
N&#13;
cv&#13;
=-~&#13;
~&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
America&#13;
392 60th t. Phon&#13;
STAFF MEETING&#13;
Wed. Jan. 23 2:30 p.m.&#13;
RANGER LLC D194 ·&#13;
All interested persons welcome&#13;
JOHN W. MERRICK, D.V.M. announces the association of&#13;
JOHN WENTLAND, D.V.M. and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
Villa Capri Shopping Center&#13;
., North 22nd Ave. Kenosha; (Ohio St. Racine)&#13;
•·9122 Day and Evening Hours by Appointment&#13;
START THE SE E&#13;
OUT RIGHT&#13;
SES&#13;
0&#13;
-&#13;
----&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
OIC&#13;
.....&#13;
c:,&#13;
-&#13;
- Cl)&#13;
Cl.&#13;
--&#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER wednesdlly, ".n. 16, 1974&#13;
Sportsfest&#13;
m 11 al borne against tbe Wa)ne Slate&#13;
from ~II, Ilc!l 'Ibis . turday's contesl against Wayne&#13;
I eould IWOvlde e IDtet1'Slillgba etball. a first year coach al&#13;
yn !lob mar an Ict.·ocate of "Blitz Basketball," a press·&#13;
run lorm thai ulihzeo 10-12 players per game. 'Ibis style of&#13;
'-'lkelhaJl Ill' e&gt;el'}'Olle00 hIS and the opponent's team, a real&#13;
koul The fast pace abould be the tnJe lesl foc the Rangers, who&#13;
r\ll m I 10 th a lillIe peed of therr nYo" in QlllCk Qlambliss,&#13;
m I De d Joe HUller, all of whoco have added a hlUe&#13;
10 the olf ,e scorin&amp; pot.&#13;
Croll country ski races&#13;
here Saturday&#13;
Plrk ide's trOSS country&#13;
nmung lr Us will be the SIte 01&#13;
flnl annual Par ide Cr06S&#13;
Qlunlr)' ill~ OlarnPlllllSrups 10&#13;
held turday. January 19&#13;
tllim&#13;
The IllrtlDl line foc the 13&#13;
rae will oppo&amp;Ite Petrifying&#13;
Park ID Kenosha county,&#13;
00 tbe Par de campus. The&#13;
m ..illsIar1 with the Class&#13;
racers cocnpeling 00 the 15&#13;
10m rcourse (9.3 miles). For&#13;
there will also be divisions&#13;
for B, Veterans Collegiate&#13;
and the loUowll~ 1ge dlvisiorlS:&#13;
111-17 14-n, 12·13. and 11 and&#13;
11 and under which will be 2.5&#13;
kIDs.&#13;
Bill Knutti, veteran Kenosba&#13;
skier. ",'ill serve as the race&#13;
director with Vic Godfrey t&#13;
CoordinalOr of Club Sports at&#13;
Parkside, heading up the entries.&#13;
The entry lee is $2.00 with a $3.00&#13;
fee for late entries. Contestants&#13;
must possess a current Central&#13;
United Slates Ski Association&#13;
membership card.&#13;
!edals will be awarded In the&#13;
lOp three in each class.&#13;
The ttl races ",11 be five&#13;
3 I mil I In four&#13;
th the e""",,Uoo of the&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things! HOFF 'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5107 • Silttl "' •.&#13;
...... 6M - 56th Street&#13;
FREE DEL/FER Y&#13;
44 7 nnd A venue Kenosha&#13;
Wi con in Phone 654-0774&#13;
Cagers&#13;
split pair&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. SchedUI&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE JAN ,&#13;
TE' The gym is usually closed from 3:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Mol'ldey th 1'-12&#13;
NO. t .m' practice. On Sunday and Wednesday evenings 6'''' rv Frilltr ..&#13;
athletiC e . I b 1 th ' . P.m. &amp;rid&#13;
tively u"ntil10 p.m.. intra murals wu e us n9 egyms. IIlIJI&#13;
TUes. Jan. 22 - Gym Open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
Gym Open for recreation&#13;
Intramural basketball&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 17 - Gym Open for recreation&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
Wed. Jan. 16 . The Rangers defealed&#13;
hSSOUri-81.Louis 87-76 Frtday&#13;
night at the Physical Education&#13;
Building behind sop~omore&#13;
center Gary Cole's 24 pOints and&#13;
then 1051 saturday night, 66-61, to&#13;
Southern fllinois·Edwardsville.&#13;
Parkside's record stood at 4-10&#13;
heading Into a game Tuesday&#13;
night at SI. Xavier College 10&#13;
Chicago. The Rangers will meet&#13;
Wayne Slate here Saturday. at&#13;
7:30 p.m. at the Phy Ed BUIlding&#13;
before beading to sQ..uthern&#13;
Illinois and Indiana (or games&#13;
Monday and Tuesday with Indiana&#13;
State-Evansville ~nd&#13;
Southern lIlinois-Edwardsvllle.&#13;
Against UMSL, Parkslde&#13;
jumped off 10 a quick 8-0 lead in&#13;
the first half before UMSL was&#13;
able to get on the board. The&#13;
Rangers, with Malcolm Mahone&#13;
hitting a number of short jurnpers&#13;
and baseline shots, led 24-11&#13;
midway through the half.&#13;
Parkside beld a 42-32 halftime&#13;
lead.&#13;
The Rangers came out fast in&#13;
the second stanza and had upped&#13;
their margin to 18 points before&#13;
UMSL whittled the lead to 12&#13;
midway through the half.&#13;
Parkside rallied and upped the&#13;
lead to 83-64.&#13;
Cole pulled down 18 rebounds in&#13;
addition to his 24 points while&#13;
~Iahone had 18 points and 10&#13;
boards. Chuck Chambliss with 16&#13;
and Joe Hutter with 10were also&#13;
Fri. .ren. 18 - Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
sat. Jan. 19 . Gym Open&#13;
Basketball games&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
sun. Jan. 20 .&#13;
ftNJn. Jan. 21 Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
Joe Hutter&#13;
~~~i1'~&#13;
Oelftj&#13;
SUPER CHEF&#13;
~&#13;
, ... 34ll Sb";d'! Rd. "92&amp; 391h....&#13;
~?~~F.~Pa ~ - &gt;~:::ii".liiii::!~&#13;
12:30 p.m .. ':3O P.m.&#13;
a p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m. - 10 e.rn.&#13;
12:30p.m .. " p.m. &amp;6&#13;
P.m. lOp.""&#13;
lO:30a,m""30pm I..&#13;
8:30a.m. 10;30a'm'&amp;'pI'II· 1CI1l111&#13;
11:30 e.rn. _ l:30·p.~. 2:lOp", lI,&#13;
10:30 a.rn. ·5 p.rn&#13;
8:30 e.m. -5 p.m. E~tjr&#13;
11 a.m .. 1:30 p.m. ebtlilOirlgara..1&#13;
9:30 a.m .. 4 p.m.&#13;
JV·S:30 Varslly . 7:)0&#13;
8:30 e.m .. S p.en.&#13;
3:30 p.m .. S p.m.&#13;
but Chambliss' fifth ,.&#13;
SIU's Don Koppeaha&#13;
charity tosses which....&#13;
Ice the game. SIUhit..&#13;
fnul shots and a&#13;
Parkside a baaIili&#13;
Dimitrijevic before1IIe&#13;
out.&#13;
Building open at 2 p.m .. 10 c.m. ~11 lacltiti~ available&#13;
mlramurals in gvmsl -- ...&#13;
12:3Op.m. ·1:3OP.m.&amp;,p,~_.'&#13;
8:30 e.m. _ 10 p.re. "II&#13;
12:30 p,m .. 2 p.m.&#13;
12:30 p.m. -1:3OP.m.&amp;,&#13;
all day except between I:;;' '"&#13;
ll:JOa.m, ·1:3Op.m. &amp;6P",~'~:1J&#13;
• NolIililO&#13;
balance r.'"&#13;
• Nolillilll"&#13;
number of.&#13;
you wrill&#13;
AT FIRST UOF&#13;
RACIIl&#13;
CHECI'&#13;
IS&#13;
~&#13;
AT FIRST NAil'"&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your Ifee --&#13;
account 5011 -&#13;
First Nati~~",&#13;
and Trust Com ~&#13;
..'&#13;
.- "........,..,~&#13;
Cro s country ski races&#13;
here Saturday&#13;
/\I' R&#13;
11 nd under ·hich will be 2.5&#13;
km .&#13;
Bill Knutti, veteran Kenosha&#13;
· , '&gt;I.ill ·e a the race&#13;
dir ctor with Vic Godfrey,&#13;
rdinator of Club Sports at&#13;
Par ide, heading up the entries.&#13;
Th entry fee is $2.00 with a $3.00&#13;
fee for late entries. Contestants&#13;
must possess a current Central&#13;
mted tate Ski Association&#13;
member hip card .&#13;
• tedal will be awarded to the&#13;
top three in each class.&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
614 - S6lh Street&#13;
· nue K no ha.&#13;
Phone 65 -0 4&#13;
Cagers&#13;
split pair&#13;
The Rangers defe~ted • t Louis 87-76 Friday I n · ti . t at the Phy ical Educa on&#13;
:~ding behind sop~omor~&#13;
center Garv Cole's 24 pomts an n lo t Sa·turday night, 66-6~, to&#13;
th uthern Illinoi -Edwardsville.&#13;
P ·de' record stood at 4-10&#13;
ar I Tu day heading into a game es . night at t. Xavier Co~lege m&#13;
Chicago. The Rangers will me:~&#13;
Warne tale here Satur~y.&#13;
;-30 p.m. at the Phy Ed Building&#13;
b~fore heading to S(!.Uthern&#13;
Winoi and Indiana for _games&#13;
tonday and Tuesday with Indiana&#13;
tale-Evansville ~nd&#13;
Southern Illinois-Edwardsv~e. . t u••SL Parkside gain ,n ' . ·umped off to a quick 8--0 lead m&#13;
fiie first half before UMSL was&#13;
able to get on the board. The&#13;
Ran~ers. with Malcolm Ma~one&#13;
hitting a number of short Jumpers&#13;
and ba eline shots, led 24-11&#13;
midway through the h~lf.&#13;
Park ide held a 42-32 halftime&#13;
I d. f t . Th Rangers came out as m&#13;
the econd tanza and_had upped&#13;
th ·r margin to 18 pomts before&#13;
t L hittled the lead to 12&#13;
m.idwav through the half.&#13;
Par ide rallied and upped the&#13;
lead to 83-64.&#13;
ole pulled down 18 rebounds in&#13;
ddition to hi 24 points while&#13;
1ahone had 18 points and 10&#13;
board . Chuck Chambliss with 16&#13;
and Joe Hutter with 10 were also&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. Schedlll&#13;
HYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE JAN . ''-U P ·s usually closed from 3:30 p.m . to 8 p.m . Monday lhr F NOTE : The gym 'rce on Sunday and Wednesday evenings, 6:30 P Ill u t C..,&#13;
athletic teams prac_ 'tr~murals will be us1ng the gyms. lflG&#13;
lively until 10 p.m ., ,n&#13;
Gym Open for recreation 11 :30 p.m.- l :30 P-m. Wed- Jan. 16 . Intramural basketball 8 p.m . 10 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m . · to P-m.&#13;
Pool open 12 :30p.m.- 2p.m. &amp;6p.m lOp&#13;
7 • Gym Open for recreation&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 1 Handball courts open&#13;
Fri Jan . 18 ·&#13;
sat. Jan. 19 ·&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym Open&#13;
Basketball games&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
10 :J0a.m . - 1:J0p.m,&amp;ap IT\.&#13;
8.JOa.m.- 10 :30am. &amp;ll )Op g&#13;
11 :30 a.m .. 1 30 P-m.&#13;
10:30 a.m .. s p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m .. S p.m. Entiret,u Id 11 a.m .. 1:30 P.m .&#13;
8:30 a.m . . • P-m.&#13;
JV-5:30 Varsity 7 )0&#13;
8:30 a.m . . s P.m.&#13;
3:30 p.m .. s p.m.&#13;
Sun. Jan. 20 ·&#13;
MOn. Jan. 21&#13;
Building open at 2 p.m . · 10 p.m . all facllilies avallablt&#13;
intra murals 10 QYmu, !';,• i.&#13;
Gym open 12 :30p.m.- 1:l0p.m. &amp;apm P&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m .. 10 p.m. · · IOp&#13;
Pool open 12 :30 p.m. 2 P.m&#13;
Tues. Jan. 22 . Gym Open Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
. regarding the above schedule or any scheduling of lht Pt, All queSliohns Id be directed to the departmental office. Building s ou&#13;
in double fig~es for the Ran~ers.&#13;
Against SIU-E Saturday mght,&#13;
a team which had defeated&#13;
Parkside 58-50 on a neutral floor&#13;
in December, Parkside never 1~.&#13;
The Rangers got behind 10-4 m&#13;
the game's early minutes and&#13;
were forced to play catch-up ball&#13;
the rest of the way.&#13;
The Rangers moved to within&#13;
five and three points in the&#13;
waning minutes before SIU&#13;
center Leon Wright hit twice on&#13;
the bonus with 1:36 remaining to&#13;
move SIU ahead 61-57. Parkside&#13;
again narrowed the gap to two as&#13;
Chambliss hit on two free throws&#13;
• No mini111&#13;
balance re,n&#13;
• No limit t1 IN&#13;
number of CICb&#13;
you write&#13;
SUPER CHEF</text>
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