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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Wyllie, 54, dies</text>
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              <text>rvm Wyllie chosen^ Chance\\0r Wyfe&#13;
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The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 13&#13;
Realities of solar pQyyflT&#13;
Economical but politically stymied&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
All speakers at the Oct. 25 "Time of the Sun...&#13;
Solar Power" conference agreed that the basic&#13;
decision to use solar energy is political in nature.&#13;
Solar energy is already economically competitive in&#13;
many areas and is internationally used.&#13;
The speakers, all recognized authorities in the&#13;
field of solar energy, in order of appearance were:&#13;
Dr. John Duffie, director of the Solar Energy&#13;
Laboratory at the University of Wisconsin in&#13;
Madison ; John Kopecky, project engineer of Solar&#13;
Energy at Honeywell, Inc. of Minneapolis, Minn.;&#13;
William Heronemus, wind engineering systems&#13;
expert and professor of engineering at the&#13;
University of Massachusetts in Boston; and Dr.&#13;
George Lof, president of the International Solar&#13;
Energy Society.&#13;
A near capacity crowd of over 655 persons filled&#13;
the Communication Arts theater for the Midwest's&#13;
first conference dealing with the practical application&#13;
of solar energy.&#13;
The conference began about 20 minutes behind&#13;
schedule with a welcome by Edith Sobel, chairperson&#13;
of the Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment; that group co-sponsored the conference&#13;
with the University of Wisconsin Extension&#13;
and Parkside.&#13;
Duffie, the first speaker, gave an overview of&#13;
solar energy: its history, applications and successes.&#13;
&#13;
Duffie explained that the sun is a "fusion reactor"&#13;
whose use as an energy resource is intermittent and&#13;
of low density. The sun is intermittent since sunshiny&#13;
predictably occurs only during the day but is&#13;
unpredictable in terms of weather. The density of&#13;
the sun is known as the "sun constant" or 1- 1.4&#13;
kilowatts (kw.) per square meter.&#13;
Duffie showed slides of solar energy being used&#13;
all over the world. In "Australia, where Duffie&#13;
himself has lived, solar energy is the standard way&#13;
of heating water. It is a 1.5 - 2 million dollar industry.&#13;
&#13;
Israel uses 20 percent solar heat for their water.&#13;
Japan has sold half a million solar water heaters in&#13;
the past.&#13;
The main parts of the solar heating system are&#13;
flat-plate collectors which trap the sun's heat&#13;
through glass onto black metal on the roof, a&#13;
storage tank, piping, and an auxiliary source of&#13;
power if needed. When water tanks are located oh&#13;
the roof, pumps are not needed.&#13;
Duffie showed famous examples of solar energy&#13;
use in the world from the Pyrenees of France to&#13;
MIT's slanted-roof experimental house that was&#13;
built in 1958.&#13;
MIT's house was used for three seasons but then&#13;
was dismantled in 1962 because it did not appear&#13;
economically viable at that time.&#13;
At about the same time the MIT house was built,&#13;
Lof built a solar house that is still providing heat|&#13;
hot water and air conditioning today.&#13;
Besides flat plate collectors located on buildings&#13;
for heat energy, experiments world-wide are being&#13;
made on focusing collector systems that generate&#13;
electricity.&#13;
Focusing collector systems use mirrors and&#13;
require maintenance to keep the mirrors shiny.&#13;
Economic problems have not been solved yet and&#13;
the generation of electricity by solar energy has a&#13;
long way to go. Solid state devices used in Sky Lab&#13;
have not been perfected for terrestial use and are&#13;
too expensive at the present time.&#13;
The basic reason solar energy has not been used is&#13;
that until now, other sources have been inexpensive,&#13;
especially natural gas. Oil, however, has tripled in&#13;
cost over three years in Madison (where Duffie&#13;
lives). Solar energy can now cost less than some of&#13;
the other systems. An optimal amount of solar&#13;
energy with an auxiliary source of power, is considered&#13;
the most practical and economical system.&#13;
Aesthetically, there are few problems which&#13;
cannot be incorporated into a design as they were in&#13;
Lof's house.&#13;
It was Duffie's opinion that where we stand now is&#13;
that the technology for solar heat is available; it is&#13;
proven workable (as in Lof's house for over 15&#13;
years), and can be economically feasible in some&#13;
areas. But the basic decision is political. It will&#13;
become politically unacceptable soon to pour&#13;
money into other countries for energy resources,&#13;
said Duffie.&#13;
Paul Sobel, introducing Kopecky, said that the&#13;
sun is starting to look "green" now: solar energy&#13;
can be a billion dollar industry to the business&#13;
community.&#13;
Honeywell, Kopecky's employer, mainly works&#13;
with solar energy for central electric power and is&#13;
building climate control systems at the earliest&#13;
commercial feasibility, two projects they are&#13;
working on in conjunction wit^the National Science&#13;
Foundation.&#13;
Kopecky showed slides of the six programs they&#13;
are working on now, including a transportable solar&#13;
lab; heating a junior high in Minnesota with&#13;
collectors located near the building but not on the&#13;
roof; heating post offices by solar energy roof&#13;
collectors; designing a cheaper flat plate collector;&#13;
researching selective coatings to insure more heat&#13;
gain and less heat loss from collectors, and testing&#13;
solar heated houses.&#13;
Two bills introduced by Senators Humphrey and&#13;
McCormick, propose a billion dollars in research&#13;
funding over the next five years so solar power can&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, October 30, 1974&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
His&#13;
contributions&#13;
In RANGER'S association with Chancellor Wyllie, we&#13;
found him to be both receptive to and interested in&#13;
students.&#13;
He played the role of a watchful, guiding image to&#13;
students who attended the University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
He took great pride when students confided in him! He&#13;
tried to instill in these students a model of working&#13;
within the university rather than outside the university.&#13;
Although at times RANGER has disagreed with the&#13;
Chancellor on certain policies, at no time did we fail to&#13;
note the sincerity and diplomacy he displayed.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie was a sensitive man. There were&#13;
many times when he faced tough decisions which he&#13;
knew could not possibly please everyone. However, the&#13;
long-range welfare of the university always came first&#13;
to him.&#13;
As Arthur Gruhl says this week in a letter to the&#13;
editor, "He was the kind of administrator who thought&#13;
not only with his mind but with his heart."&#13;
During a ceremonial address, on July 1, 1969, at the&#13;
new Wood Road campus, Chancellor Wyllie said, "We at&#13;
Parkside strive for excellence and, at the same time, we&#13;
will try. to reach out to new constituencies and new&#13;
opportunities for young people and adults living in this&#13;
area."&#13;
He contributed much toward this goal.&#13;
Parkside is a planned university, not the end product&#13;
of haphazard growth and development.&#13;
Through Chancellor Wyllie's dynamic leadership, the&#13;
university grew from nothing to a $40 million campus&#13;
with 5,261 students and about 250 faculty.&#13;
In terms of size, Parkside is big enough to offer a&#13;
broad and varied program, and small enough to permit&#13;
easy personal contact and stimulating encounter among&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Parkside has fit its academic program to the students,&#13;
rather than the other way around.&#13;
The passing of Chancellor Wyllie will leave a void at&#13;
Parkside that will not soon be filled. The intellect and&#13;
responsiveness of the man will be sorely missed.&#13;
One has to wonder at the accomplishments that would&#13;
lay in store for him had he not been taken at such an&#13;
early age.&#13;
But this type of contemplation means little when one&#13;
becomes aware of the goals he set for himself and attained&#13;
in the brief time that was allotted him.&#13;
For RANGER, it was an experience to have known&#13;
this truly remarkable man who devoted so.much to the&#13;
building of this university.&#13;
The staff of RANGER extends their heartfelt sympathy&#13;
to the family of Irvin Wyllie.&#13;
HZ The ParksideRAIMGER&#13;
&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independeni&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
kV jTZTKORG&#13;
HEria&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Eck lurid&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen, Dave Keller, Rita Ohm,&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
Memories&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am certain that there are&#13;
hundreds of Parkside alumni who&#13;
share the grief now borne by the&#13;
family of Chancellor Wyllie and&#13;
by his associates at the school.&#13;
It was my pleasure to get to&#13;
know Dr. Wyllie while I was&#13;
attending Parkside. We weren't&#13;
close friends, but good friends&#13;
who enjoyed short visits together.&#13;
Those occasions are now&#13;
cherished membories.&#13;
I was always impressed by his&#13;
calmness and dedication to his&#13;
job and the University. Since&#13;
Parskde was, and still is, in its&#13;
formative years, he faced&#13;
problems which I am sure took&#13;
their toll. He was a sensitive&#13;
Misquote&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a recent Vets Newsletter&#13;
written to the veterans on&#13;
campus, I was" misquoted as&#13;
saying that "Congress...after 18&#13;
months, has finally taken action&#13;
to increase and adjust G.I. Bill&#13;
education benefits." This should&#13;
read as follows: "Congress has&#13;
taken action to increase and&#13;
adjust existing G.I. benefits..."&#13;
Also I would like to give credit&#13;
to Gary Stewart for his aid in&#13;
passing this valuable information&#13;
on to you, the Vets.&#13;
Bill Noll&#13;
Racine Student&#13;
man. I know that there were&#13;
many times when he had to make&#13;
hard decisions which he knew&#13;
could not possibly please&#13;
everyone but the long-range&#13;
welfare of the school came first.&#13;
He was the kind of administrator&#13;
who thought not only with his&#13;
mind but with his heart. Parkside&#13;
has suffered a great loss.&#13;
I hope that one of the facilities&#13;
which will be built on the&#13;
Parkside Campus in the years&#13;
ahead will bear his name.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie was truly one&#13;
of the Founding Fathers of our&#13;
school and the beautiful facilities&#13;
we enjoy are part of him&#13;
monument.&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Alumnus, Class of '74.&#13;
Money&#13;
All student organizations&#13;
requiring funds from the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee for 1974-75&#13;
are advised that the deadline for&#13;
applications for such funds is 12&#13;
noon on Tuesday, Nov. 5. All&#13;
budget requests should be in the&#13;
hands of Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
Associate Dean of Students, by&#13;
that time. No requests received&#13;
past that date and time will be&#13;
considered. Echelbarger's office&#13;
is on the first floor of Tallent Hall.&#13;
NOTE: Funds are short.&#13;
Organizations are advised to&#13;
keep their budgets trimmed to&#13;
essential expenses only.&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
S&#13;
^.&#13;
YS ™E G00D GLD DAYS ARE GONE FOREVER9 We&#13;
can tag them back if only we're willing to try! We don't ta™ to wait&#13;
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now! (Some people can't afford cars and we don't want those who can&#13;
to have an unfair advantage do we?) And of course we'l have to nut a&#13;
i.m,t on the amount one can spend for books and cut back on The&#13;
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by Betsy Neu&#13;
Although the total project is&#13;
still suffering delays,&#13;
preparatory construction has&#13;
begun on Parkside's new Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
To retain government financing,&#13;
Parkside is required to have&#13;
the Union under construction by&#13;
November l, 1974.&#13;
To satisfy this requirement&#13;
Parkside's Office of Planning and&#13;
Construction, under the direction&#13;
of J ames Galbraith, has closed a&#13;
$7800 contract with Camosy&#13;
Construction for site preparation.&#13;
Site preparation involves no&#13;
actual construction of the Union&#13;
itself, but rather a fence erected&#13;
around the construction site,&#13;
installation of a sidewalk at the&#13;
bus stop and the removal of all&#13;
gravel now covering the site.&#13;
Although Galbraith says he has&#13;
"high hopes" that the Union will&#13;
be ready for occupancy by the&#13;
fall of 1976, his office is still&#13;
frustrated by delays.&#13;
The exterior sketch of the&#13;
Union, drawn by architect&#13;
Kenton Peters, was released&#13;
Friday, October 25, four week&#13;
overdue. Galbraith said that this&#13;
delay was due to "refinement&#13;
changes."&#13;
The final architectural&#13;
drawings were due October 15.&#13;
Galbraith now hopes to have&#13;
them to release to the bidders by&#13;
mid-November.&#13;
Barring any more delays,&#13;
Galbraith expects to have the&#13;
bids from contractors by midJanuary.&#13;
&#13;
Five separate contracts will be&#13;
bid on. They are: general;&#13;
heating, cooling and ventilating;&#13;
electrical; plumbing; and&#13;
equipemtn.&#13;
Galbraith said that after bids&#13;
are awarded, contractors will&#13;
immediately begin to order&#13;
construction supplies and "we'll&#13;
probably see a bulldozer out&#13;
there in March" of 1975.&#13;
After that, speed of construction&#13;
will depend heavily on&#13;
weather-related problems.&#13;
The crucial point will come in&#13;
the late fall of 1975. If the summer&#13;
has not seen heavy rainfall and if&#13;
the building can be enclosed&#13;
before cold weather sets in, interior&#13;
construction will continue&#13;
through the winter, making a fall&#13;
'76 occupancy possible.&#13;
Artists conception of the planned Student Union as seen from the South.&#13;
Bazaar: hub of Union life&#13;
View of the Student Union from the North parking lot.&#13;
by Terrie Caffery&#13;
The new St 1.dent Union may hold many answers&#13;
to campus social needs after the four story&#13;
building is completed in two years.&#13;
Parkside students, as well as alumni, will be able&#13;
to spend their spare time here, indulging in&#13;
anything and eveything from bowling and good food&#13;
to live entertainment and dancing.&#13;
According to Bill Niebuhr, Director of Student&#13;
Life, the building will be layed out as follows:&#13;
The first floor, located one level underground, is&#13;
the recreation area. It will include 8 bowling lanes&#13;
with enough expansion room for 12, 8 billiard tables,&#13;
3 ping pong tables, plus various mechanical games&#13;
such as foosball, airhockey, and pinball. Also on this&#13;
floor will be a lounge area with a television set.&#13;
The second multi-leveled floor is the main floor&#13;
and will houge the 'Bazaar.' "The Bazaar can be&#13;
compared to the present'Main Place' located in the&#13;
Library Learning Center, and will be the center of&#13;
activity," said Niebuhr.&#13;
Directly off of the Bazaar will be an information&#13;
desk, the box office, a number of lockers for student&#13;
use, a sundry counter where such things as&#13;
newspapers, magazines, cigars, and candy will be&#13;
sold, and an Outing Area where students can rent&#13;
various sports equipment. Skies, bikes, canoes, and&#13;
camping and hiking necessities will be among the&#13;
inventory of the Outing Center.&#13;
A 400 seat cinema theater will also be located on&#13;
the main floor. The theater will primarily be used&#13;
for cinematic productions, however it will also be&#13;
equipped with a small 12 foot stage for speakers or&#13;
small groups.&#13;
Lastly, a place called the "Rathskeller" will be&#13;
found on this floor. "It will be a lounge with 'atmosphere';&#13;
a place where students can hang out,"&#13;
said Niebuhr. The Rathskeller will house a beerserving&#13;
bar and a quick-order restaurant that will&#13;
serve pizza, fish n' chips, and burger baskets.&#13;
The restaurant will provide a stand-up counter as&#13;
well as a number of booths situated on a multi-level&#13;
base so that patrons can enjoy the comfort and&#13;
privacy of a booth while eating, yet also be able to&#13;
view any entertainment that may be performing on&#13;
the stage in this area.&#13;
The stage will be large enough to. accomodate&#13;
singing roups, comedians, and one-act performances,&#13;
and can also serve as an eating area&#13;
when not in use as a stage. The Rathskeller will also&#13;
be the action grounds for all dances.&#13;
The third floor, at a concourse level, will be&#13;
connected to the present Classroom Building by an&#13;
enclosed bridge running above the loop road. This&#13;
floor will house the main dining room. Niebuhr&#13;
defines this particular facility as a cafeteria with a&#13;
"scatter system" food service. The scatter system&#13;
assures quick service by eliminating the long lines&#13;
of a buffet system.&#13;
Another lounge will be found off of the dining&#13;
room area, and over Poking the Bazaar on the next&#13;
lower floor.&#13;
The rest of the space in the building has been&#13;
reserved for business-connected activities&#13;
associated with student affairs. Two meeting rooms&#13;
for luncheons and student organizational meetings,&#13;
assigned module desks where student organizations&#13;
can permanently be situated, and unassigned&#13;
cubicles that can be reserved upon request for other&#13;
organizations are designed to be located here.&#13;
The fourth and last level has been allocated for&#13;
two more meeting rooms, a poster print shop, and&#13;
offices of staff members that are associated with&#13;
student affairs. These members will include the&#13;
Director of Student Life Bill Niebuhr, two&#13;
programmers, the Coordinator of Student Planning&#13;
and his assistant, the Campus Advisor, bookkeeper,&#13;
accountant, Coordinator of Auxiliary Services, the&#13;
on-campus food service manager, and whoever will&#13;
be in charge of receiving and custodial services at&#13;
that time.&#13;
Niebuhr gave the impression that the new Student&#13;
Union and all of its facilities are definitely worth&#13;
waiting for.&#13;
JON BLON&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED.. FRI. SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
OCT. 30, N OV. 1, 2, 3&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(former ly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay R oad Phone 6 54-0485&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
1601 - Kighth Avenue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
"ACROSS FROM ONION PARK"&#13;
WE OFFER A 5% COLLEGE REBATE&#13;
WED. &amp; THURS.&#13;
OCT. 3 0 &amp; OCT. 3 1&#13;
Comm. Aris Theatre&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
$1.00&#13;
I. O.'s Required&#13;
Sex,Songs and Satire!&#13;
Can Heironymus Merkin&#13;
everforget&#13;
Mercy Humppt&#13;
andfindtrue&#13;
happiness &amp;&#13;
FRIDAY, N OV. 1&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Students A ctivities&#13;
$1.00&#13;
I. D.'s Required&#13;
SJiidfenlUnion&#13;
Wednesday, October 30, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Site prep,&#13;
to begin &#13;
"He was eager to have his friends achieve their highest&#13;
potentials, and to share with them the joy of t hese accomplishments."&#13;
&#13;
HnHHMiiuHiiiiiinimiiiiiiniumiiHiiiiiiiiiiHiiiHimHmiimimiiHimHHmHHHniHHimiiiiiHiiHHiiiiiHHiimiiinnniiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimnni,,,,,&#13;
IIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII=&#13;
If things work out I greatly prefer southeastern Wisconsin because I&#13;
regard the location as better, the growth opportunities better, and the&#13;
political and developmental problems more challenging...So it happened&#13;
that in May, 1966 the Regents named me Chancellor for the&#13;
southeastern campus, with the appointment to take effect July l. What&#13;
I then knew, and what anyone in Wisconsin then knew about new&#13;
campus development was next to nothing.&#13;
Son of an electrician, Wyllie was born and raised in Pittsburgh-like&#13;
Kenosha, a heavy-industrial town. Much of his academic work centered&#13;
on thinking of business leaders.&#13;
Clearly the time squeeze is on. California takes the position that five&#13;
years are needed to open any kind of higher education institution.&#13;
We've got two-and-a-half.&#13;
The first and most important lesson is that the most distinctive thing&#13;
about new universities is that they are new, and that their newness&#13;
requires them to address themselves to problems that are not of major&#13;
concern on long-established campuses (crash building programs,&#13;
overnight development of comprehensive academic plans, and the&#13;
quick recruiting of entire new faculties, for example). The second and&#13;
more dismal lesson is that the traditional system mechanisms&#13;
available for the accomplishment of these tasks are hopelessly archaic.&#13;
&#13;
He graduated from Allegheny High School, Pittsburgh, with highest&#13;
honors in 1937. Westminster College (Pa.) where Wyllie ranked first in&#13;
his 1941 graduating class, honored the historian with its Alumni&#13;
Achievement Award in 1965. Wyllie received his master's degree from&#13;
Oberlin College, Ohio, in 1942 and his Ph.D. from Wisconsin in 1949. He&#13;
served on the history faculty at the University of Maryland, 1947-48&#13;
and University of Missouri, 1948-57.&#13;
No doubt about it, the development of new campuses has been infinitely&#13;
more difficult here than in mainly other states. But that,&#13;
together with the tighter time schedule with which we have had to&#13;
work, gives us all the more pride in what we have been able to achieve&#13;
in Wisconsin.&#13;
Ideally, we were told, the mission should reflect the dominant activities&#13;
of the region in which the University was located, and should&#13;
meet the special educational needs of the people that it was created to&#13;
serve. Thus did UW-Parkside make an early choice of its "industrial&#13;
society" mission, a mission that seemed especially appropriate for&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. Along with that choice went a determination&#13;
to meet the cultural and social as well and the business and technical&#13;
needs of young people and adults who would live and work and try to&#13;
fulfill their life's ambitions in this part of the state.&#13;
A widely recognized scholar, teacher, and author, Wyllie has&#13;
specialized in American social and intellectual history, and more&#13;
recently in the history of American philanthropy. His book on "The&#13;
Self-Made Man in America: the Myth of Rags and Riches" was&#13;
selected for inclusion in the permanent White House Library, He is&#13;
author of numerous articles in scholarly journals.&#13;
Among American university campuses UW-Parkside is well on its&#13;
way to becoming an architectural jewel. That will be increasinglv&#13;
apparent when the Campus Union and the Modern Industry buildings&#13;
are completed, when the new roadways are established, and when our&#13;
natural landscaping plan has been fully implemented.&#13;
It's inconceivable to me that we could be an effective missionoriented&#13;
institution without the Modern Industry building and without&#13;
provide&#13;
63 ® outreach caPa*»iHties such a building would&#13;
4 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, October 30, 19 74&#13;
|&#13;
"He was a compassionate man. The&#13;
beauty of this was that he never sought&#13;
credit for it." &#13;
. . ''W h a t e v e r he&#13;
demanded of others, he&#13;
gave in full expression of&#13;
himself." §&#13;
A Wisconsin faculty member since 1957 Wviiio »&#13;
of the history department there in 1964.' m chairman&#13;
We have programs that need strengthening and&#13;
need research and other kinds of professional ril!i meml&gt;ers who&#13;
We need more innovative programs and mm ;Pment support,&#13;
new instructional method. AsLeNorth with&#13;
Association observed in certifying our total in sin! ,&#13;
Accrediting&#13;
have been more conservative in ourTariv ^ducaH T*' qUaUty&#13;
' we&#13;
than is appropriate in a new university.! stated difflr pr&#13;
.&#13;
0gramming&#13;
missed some opportunities to be both good and different ****&#13;
He was a member of the Commission nn • .&#13;
the Association of American Colleges and a Con™u&#13;
I"&#13;
1Strati?&#13;
n&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
North Central Association of Colleges and q om"&#13;
llssloner of the&#13;
ssvsr—&#13;
In many cases the students seem to be testing tua . .&#13;
and adults. Many tin.es they ate tr^g ££&#13;
sXae".rr&#13;
eact or w m one °&#13;
f&#13;
—&#13;
p&#13;
f:&#13;
s .„&#13;
d&#13;
Wyllie accepted the position at Parkside for a number of reasonsdo&#13;
The job expenence&#13;
'&#13;
the leadershiP challenge and a belief he col&#13;
We are taking the school to the community. Funding is a problem&#13;
but we are seekmg new ways to bring other courses outside. Th&#13;
Uu.yers.ty of the future w,ll do more off-campus teaching, and in It&#13;
pubhc serv.ce role w.ll become more deeply involved In problem&#13;
solving relationships with local units of government.&#13;
Wyllie was much sought after for administrative posts In April and&#13;
May of 1966 he was offered at least two college presidencies on the&#13;
West Coast. While Chancellor at Parkside, he wis Ler consfderat on&#13;
for the pres.denc.es of he Un.versity of Oklahoma (Norman, Okla )&#13;
and Northern Illinois University at DeKalb.&#13;
They say it takes 10 years to measure a new campus. We have come&#13;
to maturity much faster than anyone might reasonably have expected&#13;
Highly visible achievements in the first three or four years are in the&#13;
areas of student attraction, enrollment and academic offerings&#13;
It is no accident that Parkside has been the fastest growing campus&#13;
in the state since its opening in the fall of 1969. Not all of our students&#13;
are heppy here, and not all of them find the specialized programs they&#13;
need and want. But most do, and it is a fact that many more students&#13;
transfer in than transfer out.&#13;
What does our clouded crystal ball say of Parkside's future"&#13;
Parkside will continue to grow, but at a slower rate than originally&#13;
anticipated. This will occur at a time when other universities will be&#13;
leveling off or falling back in their enrollments. In response to a slower&#13;
rate of enrollment growth, the building program will probably slow&#13;
down for a decade.&#13;
I a m often asked, "When will the campus be complete, when will&#13;
everything be finished?" The answer is, never. Harvard, America's&#13;
first university, was founded in 1636. It is still a developing university,&#13;
as Parkside will be through many years and many future generations!&#13;
Wyllie's death on October 25, 1974 was due to an apparent heart&#13;
attack. He is survived by his wife Harriet, son Gordon, daughters Kay&#13;
and Laura, father Gordon, and the University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
the institution he helped establish, build, and to which he gave so&#13;
much.&#13;
Wednesday, October 30, 1974 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
MPS .r. v&#13;
"He was liked and disliked; he was nevr&#13;
overwhelmed by either."&#13;
"There never was any&#13;
need to guess what his&#13;
views were; he told you&#13;
with admirable eloquence&#13;
and honesty." &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, October 30, 1974&#13;
New environ, group&#13;
' A l l sa n e pe o p l e&#13;
1&#13;
Solar conference participants,&#13;
besides hearing well-known&#13;
speakers and seeing displays,&#13;
also got the chance to let&#13;
Congress know their feelings&#13;
(pro-solar and anti-nuclear&#13;
power) by signing clean-energy&#13;
petitions.&#13;
Edith Sobel, chairperson of the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment, announced during&#13;
the conference that the petitions&#13;
were in the display room and&#13;
outside the theater entrance.&#13;
Besides letting national&#13;
government know that the environment&#13;
is important to the&#13;
citizens of the U.S., Parkside&#13;
students were given a chance to&#13;
sign up for a new environmental&#13;
group locally.&#13;
Hank Cole, associate professor&#13;
of Earth Science at Parkside,&#13;
was handing out information&#13;
addressed to "All sane people,"&#13;
concerning the subject:&#13;
"Parkside Citizens for the Environment."&#13;
&#13;
The hand-out said that "a&#13;
number of students and faculty at&#13;
UW-P are forming an environmental&#13;
action group...to&#13;
increase the environmental&#13;
awareness of the Parkside&#13;
community and to work to&#13;
protect and improve the environment&#13;
of the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha areas."&#13;
An organizational meeting in&#13;
the near future will be announced.&#13;
&#13;
New frat on campus&#13;
Parkside will have its second&#13;
nationally-affiliated fraternity on&#13;
campus when a Lambda Chi&#13;
Alpha colony is officially&#13;
established with the initiation of&#13;
the first 15 or so members on&#13;
Saturday, November 9.&#13;
Though the fraternity is just&#13;
being organized, it is already&#13;
planning some service projects,&#13;
according to fraternity secretary&#13;
Ron Bayer. "We will be giving&#13;
Thanksgiving baskets to the&#13;
needy, Christmas baskets and&#13;
toys, and we are planning a&#13;
campus clean-up in the spring."&#13;
Classified&#13;
EARN UP TO $1200 a school year hanging&#13;
posters on campus in spare time. Send&#13;
name, address, phone and school to:&#13;
Coordinator of Campus Representatives,&#13;
P.O. Box 1384, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106.&#13;
In striving to achieve this goal,&#13;
Lambda Chi offers its members&#13;
tutoring services, many social&#13;
activities, and each chapter has&#13;
teams in "practically every&#13;
sport."&#13;
Presently the officers are John&#13;
Morris, President; James A.&#13;
Foulke, Vice President; Ronald&#13;
Bayer, Secretary; Robert&#13;
Thomas, Treasurer ; and Richard&#13;
Kenney, Chairman of the&#13;
membership committee.&#13;
One of the future plans of&#13;
Lambda Chi is to have a&#13;
fraternity house on campus, but&#13;
most other plans will not be made&#13;
until new members are initiated&#13;
and the group is organized.&#13;
Lambda Chi Alpha is one of the&#13;
largest fraternities, claiming&#13;
over 200 chapters in 44 states and&#13;
three Canadian provinces, worldwide&#13;
alumni groups and about&#13;
125,000 members.&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
/76e 'Stat&#13;
DAILY - _ _ j 194 &amp; 50&#13;
* Presents*&#13;
Z O I D&#13;
FRI. N OV. 1st&#13;
FREE ADMISSION W ITH U .W.-P STUDENT I. D&#13;
^APPEARING LIVE*&#13;
SATURDAY NOV. 2 nd&#13;
/ A T H E w I innetna^&#13;
SHOW REVIEW&#13;
Solar&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
supply 15-30 percent of the nation's energy by the&#13;
year 2000.&#13;
The only way solar energy is feasible, Kopecky&#13;
contends, is through governmental participation.&#13;
"We're not at cost yet," he said, but agreed with&#13;
Duffie that "we are very close in some areas and&#13;
maybe even closer than some say."&#13;
When asked how governmental help can be obtained&#13;
with the influence of major oil companies in&#13;
the way, Kopecky answered, "A lot would say we&#13;
can't but solar power looks better because others&#13;
look a lot worse."&#13;
State Senator Douglas LaFollette said it is&#13;
"important to bridge the gap between science and&#13;
politics...Duffie mentioned it: things work through&#13;
politics." Each of us is responsible if we're going to&#13;
move things into the political spectrum, said&#13;
LaFollette. He discussed giving a tax break to users&#13;
of solar heat or air conditioning because social,&#13;
economic and political motivations are important.&#13;
LaFollette, introducing Heronemus, a windpower&#13;
expert, said his now-famous bill, Senate Bill&#13;
702, proposing the use of windmills, was laughed at&#13;
by 32 of the 33 senators present. "I didn't laugh," he&#13;
said. Jokes like "using the hot air of the legislature&#13;
to propel those windmills" were made.&#13;
Heronemus wrote a 50-page report for windmills&#13;
in Wisconsin which LaFollette distributed in the&#13;
state legislature.&#13;
Heronemus bluntly asked the audience "Why are&#13;
we here?" He proceeded by the use of charts to&#13;
explain that the U.S. is "high on the hog," surpassing&#13;
all other countries in increased energy&#13;
consumption and correspondingly high Gross&#13;
National Product.&#13;
The first president who got around to establishing&#13;
an energy policy was Nixon in 1971. But, Heronemus&#13;
added, his treatment of the subject left much to be&#13;
desired.&#13;
Nixon's energy policy said that our way of life&#13;
depended on exponential growth of energy in terms&#13;
of gas, oil, coal and nuclear fuels. Solar energy was&#13;
not mentioned.&#13;
In essence, the report said that when our reserves&#13;
ran out, we would continue to use gas and oil at the&#13;
same rate by "putting the Almighty U.S. dollar on&#13;
the table and getting some."&#13;
After running out of uranium for our nuclear&#13;
plants in 20 years, says Nixon's energy policy, we'd&#13;
either trade on the international market or we'd&#13;
convert to plutonium breeder reactors, which are&#13;
considered dangerous. Heronemus called this idea&#13;
of proliferating nuclear power plants the "most&#13;
fallacious of all."&#13;
Heronemus answered his original question,&#13;
saying, "We are all here because this adds up to&#13;
trouble. But is there a way out? Of course. Use the&#13;
energy resource that is much jarger than all of&#13;
this."&#13;
Wind power must be able o t compete by providing&#13;
electricity, not just when the wind blows, but it must&#13;
be self-contained, reconverted, and available on&#13;
demand.&#13;
In some places, individual wind generators are&#13;
cheaper to use than the flat plate collector.&#13;
"If windmills are offensive to the sight that's too&#13;
bad because they sure don't,belong underground,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
Solar energy, however, can be harnassed under&#13;
water, and this is where the largest potential for&#13;
energy lies, said Heronemus. Questions were raised&#13;
concerning possible effects on the oceans.&#13;
Heronemus said that there were three opinions:&#13;
that it would cool the ocean, it would heat the ocean,&#13;
or it would have no effect. Heronemus doesn't&#13;
believe that underwater solar energy collectors&#13;
would harm the environment.&#13;
He said it is almost impossible to make solar&#13;
energy pollute, though "if we really worked at it, we&#13;
might be able to screw it up."&#13;
"Many of you will be living in solar-heated and&#13;
maybe solar-cooled homes," Lof said. "I'm here to&#13;
bring us back to earth by talking about the heating&#13;
of buildings."&#13;
The most important application of solar energy is&#13;
water heating. Hot water runs Lof's cooling system,&#13;
being the only solar-cooled system in a Northern&#13;
Hemisphere building.&#13;
Lof's house, which has been running for 17 years&#13;
with no maintenance, has an air-heated system too.&#13;
If the air in the furnace is not warm enough, an&#13;
auxiliary heater turns on..There is also an auxiliary&#13;
gas fired water tank.&#13;
Some days, solar heating is used 100 percent and&#13;
other days the auxiliary system is used 100 percent.&#13;
He gave figures for two random days which showed&#13;
both systems in use.&#13;
By next summer a report should be out on how&#13;
performance of the systems may have been affected&#13;
by 17 years of use.&#13;
Lof produced data showing that the cost of&#13;
heating homes with electricity is more than with&#13;
solar energy. This is not particularly true of gas,&#13;
which is a bargain if it is available.&#13;
Solar heating can compete with oil and propane,&#13;
and may even be ahead, said Lof. "These figures&#13;
are not for 10 years down the road or the 21st century,&#13;
but for today."&#13;
Solar heating can be incorporated into existing&#13;
buildings which are reasonably close to new&#13;
designs, said Lof. Either a flat roof is best or one&#13;
that is sloping as nearly south as possible.&#13;
The rest of the afternoon was spent in further&#13;
analysis of solar energy in four different workshops.&#13;
Each workshop was held twice and was attended by&#13;
one of the four guest speakers and other guest&#13;
panelists.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
WEATHER FORECAST: L0NC, C OLD WINTER A HEAD!&#13;
Plan t o e scape o ver semester break...join t hose w ho h ave a lready p laced th eir&#13;
deposit a nd s ecured th eir s pace f or a fu n-filled, sun-filled week in&#13;
ACAPUIC0 M0NTEG0 BAY&#13;
BOTH TRIPS: J AN. 3 -10, 1975 FROM $264 COMPLETE&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
Round T rip J et Airfare&#13;
• First Class t o D eluxe L odging&#13;
Welcome C ocktails&#13;
• Ground T ransfers&#13;
Tour E scort&#13;
• Gratuities &#13;
Rigid election&#13;
guidelines set&#13;
Wednesday, October 30, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
by Dan McDonald&#13;
PSGA Inc. has approved a set of&#13;
rules to control student government&#13;
elections coming up this&#13;
November.&#13;
Elections Committee chairperson&#13;
Debra Friedell, .assisted&#13;
by Kai Nail and John Kontz, will&#13;
be responsible for cordinating&#13;
elections and enforcing the rules.&#13;
Of the ten standards proposed,&#13;
PSGA rejected only one, a rule&#13;
that would have required voters&#13;
to leave books, leaflets or similar&#13;
materials outside the voting&#13;
booths. However, Election&#13;
Committee member Kai Nail will&#13;
ask students to voluntarily leave&#13;
materials they are carrying at a&#13;
table that will be set up outside&#13;
the booth. Poll workers will be&#13;
instructed to watch the materials&#13;
while the student is voting.&#13;
Citing an incident during the&#13;
PSGA Inc. constitutional&#13;
referendum when a marked&#13;
ballot was found in a voting&#13;
booth, Nail said, "to prevent that&#13;
type of thing from reoccuring,&#13;
we'll ask students to adopt the&#13;
rule voluntarily."&#13;
Required procedures at the&#13;
polls will include a rule&#13;
demanding voters to first&#13;
produce a student I.D. The card&#13;
will be punched by the poll&#13;
worker and the voter's name will&#13;
be crossed off a computer printout&#13;
sheet also containing social&#13;
security numbers and academic&#13;
majors of a ll Parkside students.&#13;
liie printout will be considered&#13;
confidential material until&#13;
elections are terminated. According&#13;
to Nail, there have been&#13;
requests by potential candidates&#13;
to obtain copies of the list for&#13;
campaigh purposes. In fact,&#13;
some members of PSGA Inc.&#13;
SHORECREST&#13;
639-5305&#13;
GEORGETOWN&#13;
554-7334&#13;
PIZZA CHICKEN&#13;
AND FISH CARRYOUTS&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
HOURS: Sun. Wed. &amp; Thurs. 11:30 A.M.&#13;
U 30 P.M.&#13;
Fri 8. Sat. 11:30 A.M. 12:30 A.M.&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
5.5%&#13;
(Compounds A nnually to 5. 62%)&#13;
Rlffl!L1R&#13;
( tjj I PASSBOOK&#13;
**0,T-US*° mm&#13;
TIIRKE I'OMKNIENT LWITH.VS:&#13;
WW. Pa rkside - Room 2 :15. T allent H all&#13;
ISO W . Ch estnut St.. Bu rlington&#13;
5200 W ashington Av e.. Ra tine&#13;
Open: 6 a.m. Mon. thru Thurs.&#13;
8 a.m. Sun.&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
30th Ave. &amp; Roosevelt Rd.&#13;
argued extensively against the&#13;
decision to keep the printout&#13;
secret, contending that the list&#13;
is payed for by students and&#13;
should be made public."&#13;
^ of those arguments,&#13;
Nail said he is determined to keep&#13;
the material in his possession&#13;
arguing that it should be considered&#13;
confidential, "and not be&#13;
used for the purpose of political&#13;
gain."&#13;
To prove that such a possibility&#13;
exists, Nail said, "Senators&#13;
Hahner and Eric Bingen openly&#13;
told me that they wanted the&#13;
printout to get the names and&#13;
majors of students for campaign&#13;
purposes." Both Hahner and&#13;
Bingen are presidents of student&#13;
organizations running senatorial&#13;
candidates in this election.&#13;
Other rules approved by PSGA&#13;
grant the Elections Committee&#13;
and PSGA Inc. the responsibility&#13;
of handling and storing ballots.&#13;
No candidates, electioneers or&#13;
government official other than&#13;
PSGA Inc. may review or handle&#13;
ballots until elections are officially&#13;
over. The date of expiration&#13;
is yet to be determined.&#13;
The rules also require that poll&#13;
workers may not participate in&#13;
any campaign and all volunteers&#13;
for poll positions must be&#13;
screened by the Elections&#13;
Committee. An Election Committee&#13;
member will be present at&#13;
the polls at all times.&#13;
According to Nail, poll workers&#13;
are needed. Anyone wishing to&#13;
volunteer may contact PSGA Inc.&#13;
or any member of the Elections&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The elections will be held&#13;
November 13 and 14 from 9 a.m.&#13;
to 9p.m. and November 15 from 9&#13;
a.m. to 5 p.m.&#13;
Campus ministry&#13;
Sunday Mass celebrations are held each Sunday at 12:15 p.m&#13;
Nov. 3 - Newman Center (corner of E &amp; Jr)&#13;
Nov. 10 - Carthage Meditation Chapel&#13;
Nov. 17 - Newman Center&#13;
Nov. 24 - Carthage Meditation Chapel&#13;
Mass will be celebrated at 5 p.m. at Carthage Meditation Chapel on&#13;
Friday, Noveber 1, 1974, ALL SAINTS DAY!&#13;
i experience on November 1-5-17 is open to anyone interested&#13;
in probing some deeper questions. Reservations before November 10&#13;
by phoning 552-8626 or 657-3408.&#13;
Discussions at St. Patrick's School in Room 206 at 8 p m&#13;
Monday, Nov. 4 - VALUES SHAPE OUR LIVES&#13;
Monday, Nov. 18 - SCRIPTURE IS ALL ABOUT LIVING&#13;
Discussions at St. George Parish (lower level) at 8 p.m&#13;
Monday, Nov. 11 - SCRIPTURE, IS IT REALLY JESUS' STORY?&#13;
Marines to recruit here&#13;
The Marine Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Team will visit&#13;
Parkside on November 11th, 12th,&#13;
13th, and 14th to interview&#13;
students interested in becoming&#13;
commissioned officers.&#13;
The Officer Selection Team will&#13;
be located in the passageway&#13;
between Greenquist Hall and the&#13;
Library Learning Center from&#13;
10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. to provide&#13;
information pertaining to Marine&#13;
Corps Officer programs, according&#13;
to Lieutenant Michael E.&#13;
Ennis, the Officer Selection&#13;
Officer.&#13;
The Marine Corps offers&#13;
programs leading to a commission&#13;
as a 2nd Lieutenant.&#13;
These programs are open to&#13;
undergraduates as well as&#13;
graduating seniors. To be&#13;
eligible, students must have a&#13;
"C" or better average, pass a&#13;
written examination, be&#13;
physically qualified and have the&#13;
leadership potential required of a&#13;
Marine Officer.&#13;
Aviation Officer programs are&#13;
open to highly qualified students.&#13;
Woman Officer programs are&#13;
available to junior and senior&#13;
women.&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
j)U»* Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Gre en Bay Rd.&#13;
Intro.&#13;
TM lecture&#13;
free&#13;
The Students International&#13;
Meditation Society (SIMS) will&#13;
hold its first free introductory&#13;
lecture on Thursday, Oct. 31, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Classroom Building&#13;
113.&#13;
SIMS is a non-profit&#13;
educat ional organi zation&#13;
associated with the International&#13;
Meditation Society. The group&#13;
has been practicing and teaching&#13;
transcendental meditation in this&#13;
area for about four years and&#13;
believes it has reached over 200&#13;
students. Cindy Gray is the&#13;
president of the local SIMS&#13;
chapter.&#13;
The Halloween lecture is&#13;
designed to introduce students to&#13;
transcendental meditation and&#13;
possibly create interest in further&#13;
study of it. Four consecutive days&#13;
of training in TM beyond the&#13;
introductory lecture would cost&#13;
the college student $65. This&#13;
amount would include a lifetime&#13;
membership in SIMS and entitle&#13;
the member to further training in&#13;
the Advanced Program.&#13;
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PHY. ED. BU I L D I N G&#13;
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Information D esk, P arkside&#13;
SKY KING PRODUCTIONS &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, October 30, 1 974&#13;
Yoga must&#13;
experienced&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
In a cultural realm where social and physical&#13;
identity have become the keys to the universe,&#13;
many routes have been established and&#13;
rediscovered with the aim of m aking identity roles&#13;
more easily attainable. An old route, new to many&#13;
Parkside students this semester, is Yoga.&#13;
Instructed by Carol (Chandra) Merrick, the class&#13;
is an enlightening mental and physical experience.&#13;
Chandra is Carol's chosen Indian name meaning&#13;
"moon."&#13;
Chandra claims that Yoga must be experienced to&#13;
be completely understood.&#13;
In the accompanying picture, Chandra is practicing&#13;
the popular Yoga hand position. The thumb,&#13;
representing the universe, is joined with the&#13;
forefinger, representing the person.&#13;
Representing the "tamasic," "rajacic" and&#13;
"sattvic" states, the other three fingers point&#13;
outward.&#13;
The little finger in the "tamasic" state stands for&#13;
questioning one's life and not wanting an answer.&#13;
The fourth finger in the "rajacic" state stands for&#13;
questioning one's being or anything and only&#13;
wanting reaffirmation.&#13;
The third finger in the "sattvic" state stands for&#13;
questioning with a "pure" mind~to really want the&#13;
answer.&#13;
When a person (forefinger) goes through these&#13;
three states, he or she becomes one with the&#13;
universe (thumb), and the two fingers join to make&#13;
a circle. This is Yoga.&#13;
In Yoga the mind is calmed through meditation or&#13;
"mantra." Meditative positions called "asanas"&#13;
are used to increase total awareness of the internal&#13;
as well as external forces acting upon the body.&#13;
Dr. Richard Alpert describes the study of Asanas&#13;
in Be Here Now in the following way: "In undertaking&#13;
Asanas it is desirable to have a teacher&#13;
who can demonstrate the correct positions and&#13;
correct any bad habits that develop in your performance&#13;
of the Asanas."&#13;
Through proper breathing, one can remain&#13;
motionless in these positions for long periods of time&#13;
with little effort.&#13;
To guarantee proper breathing, it is necessary to&#13;
clear the mucus from one's nose, throat and chest&#13;
area prior to meditation.&#13;
This is done by placing the thumb on the right&#13;
nostril and the fourth finger on the left. While&#13;
pressing the thumb against the nostril, release the&#13;
fourth finger and exhale with gusto. Reverse and&#13;
repeat again and again until the passage is clear.&#13;
To clear excess mucus from the throat and chest&#13;
area, the "Bramidi" technique is used.&#13;
Sitting up straight in the lotus position, take a&#13;
deep breath, inhale and snore.&#13;
These cleansing methods will improve breathing&#13;
and posture, they will achieve calmness, and&#13;
hopefully utilize the "prana" or energy created in&#13;
order to proceed with the Asanas or meditation.&#13;
At this point, one can arrive at a certain&#13;
neutrality of the senses where consciousness is no&#13;
longer troubled by the presence of the body.&#13;
In Yoga, mental and natural powers are looking&#13;
to you to give you something that you have never&#13;
experienced before. These powers will enrich you&#13;
with divine and everlasting energy. Before birth&#13;
and after death, where no material things can go&#13;
with you, natural forces will be serving you.&#13;
Parkside will host various&#13;
regional and national U.S. Track&#13;
and Field (USTFF) cross country&#13;
championships Saturday, Nov. 2,&#13;
over the challenging Parkside&#13;
running trails.&#13;
Four national women's&#13;
championships will be held&#13;
beginning at 10 a.m. The girls' (10&#13;
and under) one mile race will&#13;
start the day's action followed by&#13;
a pair of tw o miles races at 10:20&#13;
a.m. (girls 11-13) and 10:50 a.m.&#13;
(girls 14-16). A women's open for&#13;
all ages will be held over a three&#13;
mile course at 11:20 a.m.&#13;
Three boy's races will be held.&#13;
A two mile race for boys 12 and&#13;
under will start at noon, followed&#13;
by another two mile run for boys&#13;
13-15 at 12:20 p.m. A three mile&#13;
Mid-America junior championship&#13;
race for boys 18 and&#13;
under will be run at 1:50 p.m.&#13;
Two more USTFF national title&#13;
races, both over three miles, will&#13;
be held for veterans and masters.&#13;
The veterans' race, open to men&#13;
30-39, will be run at 12:50 p.m.&#13;
and the masters' race for men 40&#13;
and older will be run at 1:20 p.m.&#13;
Awards will be given in all&#13;
races. There are varying entry&#13;
fees for all races. The deadline&#13;
for entries is Friday, Nov. 1, and&#13;
there will be additional fees for&#13;
late entries on race day. For&#13;
information, contact meet&#13;
director Vic Godgrey, Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. or phone 553-&#13;
2245.&#13;
Both gained eligibility last week&#13;
after making up incomplete&#13;
courses.&#13;
Coach Hal Henderson reports&#13;
that Rick Kilps is questionable&#13;
for the game because of a twisted&#13;
knee and Rico Savaglio is still&#13;
going at half-speed because of a&#13;
sprained ankle.&#13;
The Rangers will remain on the&#13;
road next Saturday (Nov. 2) as&#13;
they travel to Lockport, 111., to&#13;
take on Lewis University.&#13;
The Parside soccer team, with&#13;
two players newly eligible, will&#13;
swing back into action on the&#13;
road Wednesday against Lake&#13;
Forest College. Game time is 3&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The Rangers, 3-5-2 on the&#13;
season after a 3-0 win over&#13;
Marquette here last Wednesday,&#13;
will have Joe Orr and Tom&#13;
Jaehne eligible for the contest.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
SKIERS&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY TOO!&#13;
20% OFF&#13;
WHEN THIS AD PRESENTED&#13;
The Metropolitan Officials&#13;
Association (MOA) will sponsor&#13;
its second annual Basketball&#13;
Officials Clinic here Saturday&#13;
(Nov. 2) in cooperation with&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The clinic, to be held at the&#13;
Physical Education Building, will&#13;
feature talks and demonstrations&#13;
on officiating by various members&#13;
of the MOA, headquartered&#13;
in the Chicago area.&#13;
Registration is from 8:15 to 9&#13;
a.m. at the P.E. Building. The&#13;
program begins at 9 a.m. with a&#13;
lunch break from noon to 1 p.m.&#13;
The afternoon session will run&#13;
from 1-4:30 p.m. A demonstration&#13;
by the UW-P varsity team will&#13;
also be included.&#13;
Cost for coaches and any other&#13;
interested persons is $10 in advance&#13;
or at the door. The fee&#13;
includes lunch. For information,&#13;
contact Rudy Collum, Physical&#13;
Education Bldg.&#13;
Parkside's women's gymnastics&#13;
team split a triangular&#13;
meet at Carroll College Wednesday&#13;
night with a win over the&#13;
host school and a loss to UWOshkosh.&#13;
High scorers for&#13;
Parkside were Leslie Thompson&#13;
with three second places and two&#13;
third places, and Micki&#13;
Mataresse with two seconds.&#13;
Final team totals are as follows:&#13;
Parkside 110.38, Carroll 54.43,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh 142.72.&#13;
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SIGN UP IN R O OM 0197. LIB RARY L EARNING CE NTER. MAKE CH ECKS PA YABLE T O: UW-PARKS1DL </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 13, October 30, 1974</text>
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                <text>1974-10-30</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64823">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
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        <name>solar energy</name>
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              <text>ICON</text>
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              <text>&#13;
2 ICON Wednesday, October 30, 1974&#13;
LAST IMAGES&#13;
Dave Keller&#13;
The day is of the past, because&#13;
when I think of typing the letter&#13;
"a" in my mind, it is in the&#13;
future. By the time the letter "a"&#13;
is typed, it is the present, but only&#13;
for as long as it takes for me to&#13;
type it, then it is a thing of the&#13;
past. So the only thing that really&#13;
exists is the past, because the&#13;
future is the present and the&#13;
present is only a split second&#13;
before it becomes the past. Then&#13;
this must be a remnant of the&#13;
past, but the other thing different&#13;
is that Marijuana is of both tenses&#13;
of time and is also legal, whereas&#13;
alcohol is of the past tense and is&#13;
not legal. In this part of time the&#13;
latter has taken the role of unjust,&#13;
unlawful and immoral.&#13;
In a darkened corner of a room&#13;
some books lay, with dust as&#13;
blankets to hide them from what&#13;
was, and to keep their knowledge&#13;
secret forever. Yet a puff of a&#13;
person's breath opened their&#13;
knowledge once more, a&#13;
knowledge that should be&#13;
forgotten as the books once were.&#13;
The sort of knowlege that made&#13;
the difference between now and&#13;
the other time.&#13;
The breath was then inhaled,&#13;
held, then slowly exhaled with an&#13;
odor that was not uncommon at&#13;
the time. The small cloud rose&#13;
towards the broken plastered&#13;
ceiling, then crawled along until&#13;
it vanished. The hallucinating&#13;
smoke was inhaled once again as&#13;
the books in hand moved towards&#13;
a different position in the room.&#13;
The small hands laid the battered&#13;
books on a small table as squirts&#13;
of d ust squeezed out between the&#13;
books' resting place and the table&#13;
top.&#13;
Carmen opened the one book&#13;
with slight suspicion and giggly&#13;
delight. A multitude of brilliant&#13;
colors seemed to dance within the&#13;
boundaries of the book's covers&#13;
as Carmen paged through it. Old&#13;
laws and their interpretations&#13;
existed in the confusion of words&#13;
that created this book, which at&#13;
that time were used to stop the&#13;
very thing that Carmen was&#13;
doing, smoking grass.&#13;
Carmen's glass-like eyes&#13;
stared at the pages as they&#13;
flipped repeatedly by them, as if&#13;
they would go by a second and&#13;
third time. She felt entirely&#13;
relaxed and she loved the things&#13;
that made her existence possible,&#13;
calm and peaceful. She was&#13;
overwhelmed at the golden ray of&#13;
sun which cast over her shoulder&#13;
onto the pages; yes indeed,&#13;
Carmen was in a state of&#13;
euphoria. She loved the things&#13;
around her and she loved her&#13;
inner being, the self of which&#13;
made her what she* was deep&#13;
inside, the everything that she&#13;
was and would be, the greatness&#13;
of the whole universe. Her fingers&#13;
drifted through the pages of the&#13;
book as the hallucinating smoke&#13;
was inhaled another time. Unreal&#13;
things began to happen, things&#13;
that only Mary Jane could do to&#13;
her mind. The letters began to&#13;
take strange shapes that would&#13;
smile at her as the glassy eyes&#13;
skimmed over them; some words&#13;
laughed while others gave wide&#13;
smiles.&#13;
Her dreamy eyes stopped at the&#13;
back of the book, where laws or&#13;
restrictions were given by the&#13;
states in which they were enforced.&#13;
Kansas, Kentucky,&#13;
Louisiana,— her eyes froze at the&#13;
point where the word d-e-a-t-h&#13;
was printed, no doubt existed,&#13;
that word did exist where her&#13;
eyes lay, even in the state of mind&#13;
that she was in, it stared back.&#13;
Her eyes left the page abruptly,&#13;
as the mind tried to forget what it&#13;
had noticed. That word had not&#13;
been used for a long time, and&#13;
when it was, it meant that&#13;
someone had gone against the&#13;
System. That word had only one&#13;
meaning, that someone had been&#13;
caught with alcohol, and in both&#13;
cases the penalty was that of&#13;
death, in the same state that&#13;
grass had been.&#13;
The other book opened before&#13;
her blue eyes, as they concentrated&#13;
on focusing on the&#13;
letters in the words. Many articles&#13;
about days before, noticed&#13;
problems in and about the&#13;
society. Problems that were&#13;
caught in marriage, work and in&#13;
trying to be a part of the society.&#13;
Problems in drug using and&#13;
addiction to them seemed to be a&#13;
real hassle to the people that&#13;
were 'Society,' and they had&#13;
many interesting ways to handle&#13;
this problem. They, 'Society,' had&#13;
a fantastic comprehension of how&#13;
drugs affected the user and the&#13;
society surrounding them.&#13;
The pages flipped by with&#13;
daintiness and delight in the&#13;
glassy blue eyes. Carmen was as&#13;
high as she felt she would want,&#13;
for now, anyway; she seemed&#13;
interested in this book, but her&#13;
mind wouldn't let her eyes focus.&#13;
The quiet room became the&#13;
playground for her thoughts and&#13;
responses to the writings of the&#13;
authors. She could hear her&#13;
thoughts bounce off the walls and&#13;
ceiling and she could answer&#13;
back with sort of a giggle. It&#13;
became wonderful to be able to&#13;
read and at the same time hear&#13;
her thoughts. To giggle at some of&#13;
the stupid ideas and answers the&#13;
people of the book had and have&#13;
the whole room agree in likeness.&#13;
"The mental changes following&#13;
marijuana use are variable and&#13;
depend...; the individual is often&#13;
garrulous, giggly, and talk is&#13;
disconnected. Increased&#13;
suggestibility, decreased&#13;
judgment, and change of effect&#13;
may be followed by depression&#13;
and sleep. There may also be&#13;
delusions, hallucinations,&#13;
suspiciousness, panic..." panic,&#13;
her mind went on a wild search to&#13;
Miss Racine '75 Hopefuls Sought now by The Racine Optimists.&#13;
&#13;
Persons interested may submit their names and address to&#13;
the entries chairman Gil Zimprich 1638 Washington Ave. or&#13;
for further information call 634-5523.&#13;
To Enter women must be between the ages of 17 and 28 years&#13;
old and a high school graduate by Sept. 1,1975.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
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I INSIDE:&#13;
Short Stories&#13;
Poetry&#13;
Photography&#13;
Fine Arts Calendar pg. 6&#13;
Thanks to our many contributors&#13;
&gt;x»:&#13;
H&#13;
M&#13;
n&#13;
&gt;JK&#13;
M $&#13;
$&#13;
ft&#13;
m&#13;
P&#13;
H&#13;
M&#13;
P&#13;
P&#13;
n&#13;
If ft&#13;
p&#13;
ft&#13;
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ft&#13;
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remember what that meant.&#13;
Words began to get mixed up with&#13;
thoughts and thoughts with words&#13;
and the difference was not&#13;
noticeable. She threw the book&#13;
away in anger because the word&#13;
'panic' didn't have a meaning, it&#13;
existed without the meaning that&#13;
should be with it. It angered her&#13;
to a state of complete sleep.&#13;
Minutes only passed, but&#13;
Carmen woke up in hours that&#13;
seemed to have passed and the&#13;
word which only a few minutes&#13;
ago brought anger had an answer&#13;
to it, a meaning was there.&#13;
Carmen leaned back against&#13;
the wall, as the golden beam of&#13;
sun became only a reflection off&#13;
the windows of the buildings&#13;
across the street. She couldn't&#13;
get that idea out of h er head; the&#13;
thought of panic stayed and&#13;
wouldn't be shaken loose. The&#13;
thought forced its way to the front&#13;
of her mind, as tears emerged&#13;
from the glassy-blue eyes. The&#13;
word transformed into a feeling&#13;
and Carmen couldn't figure out&#13;
how to cope with such a feeling.&#13;
Her hands began to sweat, tears&#13;
slowly ran down her tanned face,&#13;
and her heart beat faster and&#13;
louder. She tried to be rational&#13;
and logical, she had to overcome&#13;
what was happening to her this&#13;
very moment; but how could&#13;
logic overcome illogic and&#13;
rational ideas become the past&#13;
irrational ideas?&#13;
The walls stared back at her&#13;
with giggling faces, and yet they&#13;
were showing the same tears that&#13;
were running down her face. Her&#13;
heartbeat seemed louder and it&#13;
filled the emptiness in the room&#13;
with its unchanging tone, getting&#13;
louder and louder, using the room&#13;
as its amplifier. Carmen lay&#13;
there, yet the room wasn't&#13;
motionless; the walls and&#13;
ceiling were dusty and drab, yet&#13;
colors smashed together to&#13;
create different colors. Her&#13;
hands trembled and tear drops&#13;
were now streams of tears, she&#13;
squeezed close to herself, the&#13;
small room became a vast emptiness.&#13;
The heartbeat filled the&#13;
loneliness of the colorful horror&#13;
and became a penetrating noise&#13;
that shook her entire body.&#13;
Giggles, loud laughing roars, and&#13;
tears came from within the&#13;
boundaries of the room. Carmen&#13;
couldn't withstand the room's&#13;
existence to any further point;&#13;
her mind was confused with what&#13;
should be and what seemed to be,&#13;
the room didn't exist, it...&#13;
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DINO'S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, W isconsin&#13;
PIC K U P OR&#13;
P I P I NG HOT F OO D S&#13;
P E U V E R E D TO YO U R HO M F&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
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SPA G H ETT I&#13;
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B O M B E R S&#13;
H A M B URG E R S&#13;
B E ER&#13;
S O FT DRIN KS&#13;
W I N E S &#13;
Wednesday, October 30, 1974 3&#13;
ODE TO WILL ROGERS&#13;
Laughter gone.&#13;
Sardonic alienation turned bitter.&#13;
Doting empathy to selected groups&#13;
from select groups.&#13;
But what of understanding?&#13;
Yes, our neighbors live next door.&#13;
What did you think?&#13;
Dummy.&#13;
Laughter gone.&#13;
Will Rogers,&#13;
be with us.&#13;
-Martin Andersen&#13;
photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
by amy&#13;
Charles Bukowski began&#13;
writing poetry at the age of&#13;
thirty-five, in the mid 1950's.&#13;
After reading his poetry one feels&#13;
they know him very well indeed.&#13;
He is a man that can take you&#13;
down to the brass tacks of reality,&#13;
or even lower; to the stark tin&#13;
cans and alley sexuality that&#13;
makes up the interludes of&#13;
sensitive, abandoned people.&#13;
Bukowski's poetry is now&#13;
collected in a paperback volume&#13;
called, Burning in WaterDrowning&#13;
in Flame. It costs only&#13;
$4.00 and has poems from his&#13;
work, beginning in 1955 and&#13;
ending with samples from as late&#13;
.as 1973. He has written a great&#13;
amount of poetry and this&#13;
collection presents some of the&#13;
finest. Still, don't get the idea that&#13;
Charles Bukowski's poetry is&#13;
solely sober or pessimistic. For&#13;
the most part he is imbued with&#13;
love, drunk, at the height of&#13;
passion and brilliantly witty. He&#13;
beams with raw humor, almost to&#13;
the point of a unique and&#13;
outrageously obscene perspective.&#13;
&#13;
Bukowski is a full-bodied,&#13;
meaty poetizer. His verse cusses&#13;
and caresses, it is always intense&#13;
and often blatantly physical. This'&#13;
wonderful insight into the carnal&#13;
and spiritual linkage that dwells&#13;
in men and women alike may be&#13;
the single, most appealling&#13;
aspect of his work. He has been&#13;
left high and dry, in a real sense,&#13;
by women he idolized. He has&#13;
ODE TO WILL ROGERS 11&#13;
Gee, we've come&#13;
a long way Will.&#13;
"Could really use&#13;
a broad smile,&#13;
a twinkling eye,&#13;
your Cherokee mirth,&#13;
'bout now.&#13;
Aw shucks. Will ...&#13;
Laughter gone&#13;
('Been gone a long while)&#13;
... Will Rogers,&#13;
are you coming?&#13;
Martin Andersen&#13;
fM-L HEAR HOW&#13;
FROM A&#13;
L Q zoO? KNOW&#13;
cv^&#13;
c&#13;
7? the FOOD/&#13;
GO TO So(r5b ot:&#13;
IN KEMOSHA,&#13;
&gt;AND ORDER&#13;
1 -thru. 10 of thcjr&#13;
S A N D W l C H F S f ^ ^ M l&#13;
„7rnm7!mSOtAE HOtAS rq '&#13;
M//mkwto\x^ ^oor&#13;
it's not pleasant to die on the cross,&#13;
it's'much more pleasant to hear your name whispered in&#13;
the dark&#13;
Charles Bukowski is perpetually&#13;
imprisoned in the&#13;
madness love can wrought. The&#13;
beauty of women. the&#13;
fascinations of people whose lives&#13;
have been well lived, the impact&#13;
of re-realized emotional&#13;
illusions; these are the things&#13;
that take their toll on his heart&#13;
and flame up in verbal lightening&#13;
from the recesses of his soul, or&#13;
maybe all this comes from the&#13;
stomach. Certainly, Bukowski&#13;
writes gut verse, but even this is&#13;
somewhat interpreted. intellecutalized.&#13;
It amazes me to&#13;
find that the later-half of the&#13;
twentieth century is producing&#13;
been left to reflect in the&#13;
darkness and frustration that&#13;
followed and condemned himself&#13;
to the exaggerated emotions one&#13;
achieves when greatly&#13;
inebriated. Through all this he&#13;
does not look remorsefully at the&#13;
women who loved and left him.&#13;
Recollections of them are full of&#13;
fresh conversation and good sex.&#13;
All things memorable come-in&#13;
the middle of the night. If there&#13;
romantics, lovers who love endlessly....&#13;
&#13;
they feel no terror&#13;
at not loving&#13;
or at not&#13;
being loved&#13;
so many, many, many&#13;
of my fellow&#13;
creatures&#13;
Love. The stuff of poetry, the&#13;
dream in the midst of loneliness.&#13;
For Charles Bukowski the real&#13;
fear is not being hurt by love's&#13;
commitments, it is being&#13;
deprived of the opportunity to&#13;
feel this perfect pain, an admirable&#13;
insight for a man living&#13;
at any time in history.&#13;
WIH Mil Hi Y&#13;
4 P.M.&#13;
(DiBttTMi MdDHJJR&#13;
4 T07FJ1O&#13;
ALL BADNJKS SOi&#13;
ST. lOtfSMA. W-1U.Z&#13;
UMEH. LEYEl IIU-W-JFAM&#13;
are any regrets, it is over a&#13;
woman who goes through life&#13;
with her legs crossed. In one of&#13;
his poems he openly laments the&#13;
preserved virginity of an&#13;
aquaintance. This is not just&#13;
some physical preservation of&#13;
purity, it is the unfeeling constructions&#13;
that lie in her mind.&#13;
There is through all his poetry the&#13;
need for humanity, sensitivity... &#13;
4 ICON Wednesday, October 30, 1974&#13;
LOVE OF LIFE&#13;
On a Day of Wind,&#13;
the flight&#13;
of the Field-leaf&#13;
in all its Life.&#13;
Inspiration,&#13;
a mad-twitch,&#13;
and the Wind blew me away...&#13;
Carried by the Flow of ThoughtI&#13;
journeyed past reason,&#13;
and gazed toward&#13;
the Sky.&#13;
I saw the clouds,&#13;
and the Silence&#13;
that only breathes,&#13;
and only move.&#13;
My Life had shown itself&#13;
in mirrors of Air.&#13;
And I know&#13;
I shall live my Life,&#13;
my Destination.&#13;
On a Day of Wind,&#13;
ever-lasting ripples of Water...&#13;
Arising,&#13;
I spoke and removed&#13;
by the Leaf.&#13;
The stealing of Life&#13;
only returned,&#13;
and crying,&#13;
he heard his Voice.&#13;
Distant Highway...&#13;
the echo of a Million Years.&#13;
Bird calling...&#13;
Sweet Breeze&#13;
to vibrate my Soul.&#13;
Love of Life,&#13;
the gain of Nothing...&#13;
The loss&#13;
of Tears.&#13;
About the Ground,&#13;
the Grasshopper&#13;
and the sound of Grain.&#13;
The Person of Temptation&#13;
had asked..&#13;
and walked behind.&#13;
Nothing,&#13;
is the sound of Trees.&#13;
Disappointment overruled,&#13;
the Thought of Wind&#13;
is not.&#13;
And the Star,&#13;
drifted closer&#13;
on a Day of Wind.&#13;
Again,&#13;
by the Acorn-row.&#13;
Ever-Life&#13;
of Youth attaining Nothing...&#13;
Secrets&#13;
of an Oak,&#13;
within and without.&#13;
A. Alteran.&#13;
Upon arising,&#13;
the Dragon-fly&#13;
beckoned.&#13;
By Strangeness,&#13;
She gathered her Hair...&#13;
Appointed interest&#13;
in Grasses,&#13;
She lit off the Ground&#13;
and flew away&#13;
quietly.&#13;
(but I slipped away)&#13;
Crossing the onward Train,&#13;
the roar&#13;
of cold rust&#13;
slipped at my feet,&#13;
and I changed hands.&#13;
Onward,&#13;
I passed the container&#13;
of Blue love&#13;
awaiting Passion.&#13;
Again the Highway...&#13;
Interest, in the scent of Fields.&#13;
Suddenly..&#13;
the loud Cry&#13;
turns sharply...&#13;
Breathing.&#13;
This,&#13;
is always Here.&#13;
ads and the Co.&#13;
other we are true lovers, I hide incite fantasv it wMs^rc I S&#13;
° that snow and 1 k™w «&#13;
Today now for preseniness it bewildered m^ ^°&#13;
W"&#13;
foul mistak e. What the hell is it now? what is calling afte™T S&#13;
C&#13;
T&#13;
reatlVi&#13;
ty&#13;
'.&#13;
shattered by so&#13;
taken away again again again. Seet loneliness where did vn u am afraid of jt afraid to&#13;
mind soul. Cry for me lost lover we will meet my bTatbfu? wh?t^&#13;
y f™ 1 T?&#13;
aid now? Capture 11&#13;
scent then I will be right? People places now anXfo?e emDt?ftd 1 IT?*' UIcan catch that sec&#13;
shiver at nite so are the mountains too far away to reach is ]f&#13;
mpty&#13;
f&#13;
swee&#13;
! nothln8 rhymes. \&#13;
generations NO don't destroy (what I have created) favorite pastime of futi&#13;
photo by Cliff Croxford &#13;
(Turns to stage center with repentant expression)&#13;
I'm not so mean as you might think&#13;
I just fulfill my niche.&#13;
Ecology says I must eat.&#13;
Why must the fishies bitch?&#13;
(Wraps around self and hugs lovingly)&#13;
When I hold you in my arms&#13;
You'll be out of luck.&#13;
I will squeeze you oh so tight&#13;
And you will feel me suck.&#13;
(A small fish ventures forth and is captured)&#13;
OCTOPUS: Gotcha! Ha, I snarf you up&#13;
Goodness gracious me!&#13;
Now I'll hickey you to death&#13;
Far beneath the sea.&#13;
FISH: Eeeee!&#13;
(Octopus starts dragging fish behind a small rock shelter)&#13;
OCTOPUS: But first I'll tell you what I'm going to do:&#13;
I'm going to peel all the scales off your cold hard body&#13;
And wrap my arms around&#13;
And then I'm going to&#13;
Such you, fish. That's right,&#13;
I'm gonna suck you, gonna eat you right up.&#13;
Gonna, squeeeeze your cold wet slippery body.&#13;
Gonna swallow you whole.&#13;
Gonna suck you, fish, till you die.&#13;
FISH: Hey, those aren't your lines at all! Ow! You're&#13;
hurting me! Aah! AaaaaaH! AAAAAAAAAAHHHH!!&#13;
OCTOPUS: Through pulsating madness this cry of delight:&#13;
"Let morsels be eaten! Let daytime be light!"&#13;
This primary logic must guide us in sin:&#13;
This primary logic must guide us in sin:&#13;
To love is to stumble; to rape is to win.&#13;
The other fish, sensing they had made a mistake in offering him a&#13;
lead role, scattered and tried to escape as best they could. The play&#13;
seemed to be at an end. and I decided to surface .More of that later.&#13;
Bye now.&#13;
Billy S.&#13;
reg Hershman _ , „ . . " OCTOPUS: I haven t eaten in a week.&#13;
I've got to catch some fish.&#13;
I'd love to find a snail or crab;&#13;
Oh! what a tasty dish.&#13;
. CHANCE POEM I&#13;
four-way course," season.&#13;
RHMchS if&#13;
dded&#13;
'- previous tournaments and titles, "There winner&#13;
flnH n 1 ?&#13;
SG Wlnner was the y&#13;
ea&#13;
r's scramble out appearance the not&#13;
yt le uplfThXuh"&#13;
0 0Pe&#13;
,&#13;
nH in 1%4&#13;
' PGAfor&#13;
playing 18 thlS enj0y host a easy of in this the or I&#13;
CHANCE POEM II (UNSCRAMBLE)&#13;
article something meal distasteful." Episcopal appeared yesterday's&#13;
Rev. thomas for News, teach (UPI) looked sex gourmet and healthier&#13;
would rather as his adults, they The "people of wife church education&#13;
than Rev. a St. class (left) said, in The be lot sex a if as on&#13;
Magnellum&#13;
ICON Wednesday, October 30, 1974 5&#13;
photo by Cliff Croxford&#13;
Something the fishies taught me when I fell off the bridge into the&#13;
river:&#13;
'Spanding, 'spanding into my lung, draw into my bosom sweet&#13;
waters. Light and lacy, I feel the swirling aginst every sac, every cell.&#13;
Cooling my feverish pride, soothing my sorrowful heart. Cast away,&#13;
my clothes drift aimlessly and I am as the salamander.&#13;
At first it was not so easy, when I tried to breathe. The water is so&#13;
heavy. But now I know I do not have to force it, it flows of itself,&#13;
bringing me soft oxygens. And I am content, walking along the bottom,&#13;
for there are no autos here, no fences, no factories.&#13;
I had walked as far as Virginia when I first tried to surface (a&#13;
disaster, as we may see in a later letter). A brilliant day. Sunlight&#13;
filtering down to the floor created a blue-green ballet upon the crannied&#13;
rocks. Delicate fibers of seaweed were all the props. Impromptu&#13;
choreography by the Virginia School of Fish turned the day into a&#13;
festival. While these silver-skinned artists pirouette and dip, we are&#13;
introduced to the principal actors:&#13;
(Enter a CRAB, dancing upon one row of stilted legs, then the other.)&#13;
Turning his stalked eyes to a clump of seaweed he monotomes;&#13;
How soon we lowly creatures all forget&#13;
How long ago it was our eyes were wet&#13;
With salty running tears of agony&#13;
Adding to the saltness of the sea.&#13;
(Seaweed rustles and a graceful young SNAIL emerges)&#13;
SNAIL: Oh what, great father, caused all that woe?&#13;
What, diet some monster gobble up our roe?&#13;
Pray do not tell such awful things to me.&#13;
Life is so pleasant here beneath the sea.&#13;
CRAB: Sorry to tell you, 'twas not always so.&#13;
Once on a time, the way most stories go.&#13;
There was a most obnoxious octopus,&#13;
Who tried to eat up every one of us.&#13;
(The scene changes quickly to one of the recent past. Exit crab and&#13;
snail into surrounding crannies, shooing school of fish before them.&#13;
Enter antagonist, a ferocious OCTOPUS, eyes flashing, "every-which&#13;
way," so to speak.)&#13;
Hi w orm. How are you today?&#13;
What's that, you don't feel too&#13;
good? Some idiot stapeled you to&#13;
the ground so a robin would get a&#13;
hernia? That has got to be the&#13;
meanest thing I have ever heard.&#13;
That's just the beginning huh?&#13;
What happened next? Oh, I see,&#13;
some nut sprayed water all over&#13;
the ground so that you about&#13;
drowned. Had to come up for air&#13;
and he grabbed you and threw&#13;
you into a can with a bunch of&#13;
your neighbors that you couldn't&#13;
stand. What happened next?&#13;
Huh? Went for a ride in a car?&#13;
Oh, and then in a boat and the&#13;
man would pull out one of the&#13;
other guys and only put half of&#13;
him back into the can. That's&#13;
awful.&#13;
. - Hey, listen worm, see you lateT,&#13;
ok? I see another firend over&#13;
there.&#13;
Life on a&#13;
Sidewalk &#13;
6 ICON Wednesday, October 30, 1974&#13;
DIAGNOSES&#13;
Saturday drip by drip evaporates,&#13;
tesefged^665 h&#13;
°&#13;
Wl ^ Scrape their furry bou8hs against the&#13;
House.&#13;
I gaze at the aching gray sky, burnished with the tinsel-like&#13;
rays of a retreating sun&#13;
tucked under a fuzzy blanket to the west.&#13;
Should I submit to another darkness?&#13;
Let me run off to the bars and parties&#13;
stale and sterile with grinning masks and ribboning smoke&#13;
the well-chewed cud of parrot chatter vomited into cold air'&#13;
on blue afternoons.&#13;
Each his own.&#13;
Shall I&#13;
in the bleak and fading room&#13;
Shadows of brittle chairs&#13;
Crawl toward me across the rutted carpet.&#13;
Through which the screaming provides balm for gutted mindsthe&#13;
jangling pictures whirling across the screen.&#13;
Candied pablum for the mushroom masses.&#13;
The carousel turns but moves nowhere.&#13;
E. Bingen&#13;
birds drifting on a pastel sky&#13;
gliding down to a wind whipped lake&#13;
the sun gently unfolding its light&#13;
the morning still enclosed in magical softness&#13;
as the world awakens&#13;
to a timeless day&#13;
Carrie&#13;
a stage set&#13;
props placed&#13;
scenery up&#13;
my life&#13;
waiting for the play to begin&#13;
the actors are in the wings&#13;
scripts well memorized&#13;
professionals all&#13;
now the audience fills in&#13;
blank faces reflecting the emptiness of their souls&#13;
drawing satisfaction&#13;
from other's dreams&#13;
actors places&#13;
house lights out&#13;
curtain up&#13;
attention&#13;
another play is about to begin&#13;
will it never end&#13;
Carrie&#13;
w&#13;
&gt;1K&#13;
H&#13;
&gt;«•:&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
H&#13;
M&#13;
n&#13;
n&#13;
e&#13;
a&#13;
m&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
m&#13;
tt&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
n&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
Fine Arts Calendar&#13;
Music&#13;
Charles Aznavour, 8:30 p.m. Friday, Chicago&#13;
Auditorium.&#13;
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Carlo MariaGuilini&#13;
returns, conducting Bach's Third Brandenburg&#13;
Concerto and Bruckner's Ninth Symphony. Thursday&#13;
at 8:15 and Saturday at 8:30. In Orchestra&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Alirio Diaz, guitarist. Nov. 3 at 7 p.m. in Orchestra&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Elton John, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the&#13;
Chicago Stadium.&#13;
Fine Arts String Quartet. Opens their fall concert&#13;
series at the Goodman Theater. Info pending.&#13;
Vladimir Horowitz, pianist. The master virutuoso&#13;
returns to Chicago for a 4 p.m. recital at Orchestra&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Lyric Opera of Chicago. Falstaff on Friday. And&#13;
Don Pasquale on Saturday. Performances are at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Civic Opera House.&#13;
Andre Marchal, organist. In recital at Northwestern's&#13;
Alice Millar Chapel, Sheridan Road and&#13;
Chicago Avenue, Evanston. 8:15 tomorrow.&#13;
Lou Reed, 8 p.m. Friday at the Auditorium.&#13;
Parkside Jazz Ensembles; Nov. 3, the notable&#13;
groups first appearance this semester. 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm-Arts Theater. Recommended!&#13;
Piano Concert: Stephen Swedish at 7:30 in the&#13;
C.A.T. Nov. 10&#13;
Piano Trio: Nov. 17 in the C.A.T. at 7:30p.m.&#13;
i;»;I &gt;;«;i »;•;« &gt;;»;&lt; t^i- _&#13;
»W5?« &gt;T5% »!•% »T5T« »!•% »Vi iT« »75T« »T3T« »!5!t »!5! m&#13;
M&#13;
i m&#13;
Art n&#13;
jfcj&#13;
Art Institute; Max Ernst, an exhibition of paintings&#13;
and drawings, in the Morton Wing thru Nov. "jH*!&#13;
17...Alberto Giacometti, prints, drawings, sculpture,&#13;
and paintings from the Ratner Collection in -'wj&#13;
Gallery 108 opens Saturday. : i&#13;
&gt;u»:&#13;
Jacques Baruch Gallery, 900 N. Michigan Ave. Suite&#13;
605, Comtemporary Tapestries, thru Nov. 23.&#13;
&gt;ik&#13;
Circle Gallery, 108 S. Michigan Ave., Paintings and&#13;
Lithographs by LeBaDang, opens Thursday. i t&#13;
&gt;JK&#13;
Center of Photographic Arts 364 W. Erie St. The !•](*!&#13;
Photography Of Playboy until Sunday&#13;
Beverly Art Center, 2153 W. 11th St. Prize-winning&#13;
prints by Illinois printmakers, on Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
M Maurice Spertus Museum of Judacia, 618 S. * i&#13;
Michigan Ave. A show of Magic and Superstition in&#13;
the Jewish Tradition, continuing. &gt;K&lt;&#13;
&gt;1K&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art. 237 E. Ontario St.;&#13;
Alexander Calder Retrospective, thru Dec. 8 i t&#13;
&gt;u»:&#13;
Richard Gray Gallery 620 N. Michigan Ave. William M&#13;
deKooning: 1944-1959, thru Nov. 16. &gt;j£&#13;
Chicago Press Club 162 E. Ohio St. The Photography&#13;
of Helen Harvey Mills, thru Nov. 30.&#13;
Theater&#13;
M&#13;
&gt;1K&#13;
M&#13;
Spoon River Anthology; Nov. 21-24 in the C.A.'!^&#13;
Theater, 8 p.m. Tickets: $1 students, $2 public.&#13;
Upcoming: Student Concert Recitals--info in nexftir?&#13;
RANGER ::&#13;
&gt;JtSpecial&#13;
Events&#13;
WOMANVIEW: Oct. 30 to Nov. 2, at Iowa Memorial&#13;
Union, University of Iowa. A series of o ver 50 films&#13;
by and about women or dealing with the female&#13;
image will be shown in Iowa City, Iowa. There will&#13;
also be speakers and workshops for women interested&#13;
in the arts. Info can be obtained in the&#13;
Ranger office LLC D194 if you wish to attend this&#13;
event.&#13;
The Milton Tercentenary Conferences: Three-part&#13;
conference being held from Nov. 14:17 at U.W,&#13;
Milwaukee; from Nov. 17-18 at Marquette&#13;
University, and on Nov. 19 at Parkside. The event&#13;
will include lecturers, music recitals, and various&#13;
shows of artwork and books dealing with Milton and&#13;
his times. Anyone wishing more particular info may&#13;
contact Prof. Andrew McLean in CA or the&#13;
Humanities Editor of RANGER.&#13;
—6k.&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS W ELCOME&#13;
jSoo&amp;btO'&#13;
\fenodia. fipcvn,&#13;
6'4-59^S^. 312.— St.&#13;
6SR-365Z. 632-SI9S" I&#13;
m&#13;
I&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
M&#13;
m&#13;
M&#13;
M $&#13;
n&#13;
n&#13;
M&#13;
'*£»' *'-*'* *;•:« Si&#13;
.•«*.&#13;
BHCHELDB'E H&#13;
5601-24 AVE. K ENOSHA&#13;
DOUBLE-BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR&#13;
Monday thru S aturday&#13;
4:00-9:00 P.M.&#13;
3 FOOSBALL TABLES&#13;
2 POOL TABLES&#13;
(CITY CHAMPS) Men &amp; Women&#13;
"Best Stereo S ound'&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
* OPENING SOON *&#13;
The Smoke 'ouse &#13;
Humanities News Notes ———&#13;
WEDNESDAY-Oct. 30 WHITFSKFi i ad ^ . .&#13;
and friends, 3 p.m. in Greenquisi Hall, rooSSSio^free"&#13;
STUDENT MUSIC RECITAL: A t 3 3n n™ 5 tu „&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission is free and open to the nnhlto munication&#13;
FILM: The Other" sponsored hv D I •&#13;
beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the Communtolr A Activities Board&#13;
is $1.00. Parkside I.D. ^s reqtored " ArtsTheatr&#13;
e. Admission&#13;
THURSDAY - Oct. 31 - FILM- "TBorui, &gt;. u •&#13;
in the Communication Arts Theatre. Admission isToo&#13;
88&#13;
'&#13;
7130&#13;
"'"&#13;
1&#13;
'&#13;
Berre^oprano and ^An^LU^U^pimKfh^'"^ - ^&#13;
orot&#13;
^ Marie&#13;
^Communication Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
FILM: "Can Hieronymous Merkin Ever Forget Mercv ^&#13;
Find True Happiness?" sponsored by the Parkside Activities R^rH^&#13;
span, in the Student Activities Bldg. Admission is $1 PaSsfdeYd&#13;
and proof of age are required. ue l u&#13;
-&#13;
SATURDAY Nov. 2 - DANCE: Featuring "Punch" k .u&#13;
Parkside Activities Board from 9 p.m. -lam in the Sto!w ar y&#13;
-&#13;
Bidg. Admission is $1.50. ParsideTD. A^Dpr^f aget"e r^reT&#13;
SUNDAY Nov 3 - NEWMAN CENTER, Celebrate 12:15 Mass at the&#13;
Newman Center. Coffee and rolls afterward. 3825 - 12th Street&#13;
Kenosha ' ouwl»&#13;
SUNDAY Nov 3 - JAZZ CONCERT: Featuring UW-parkside Jzz&#13;
Ensemble Fall concert at 7:30 p.m. in the Communtoation Arts&#13;
Theatre. Admission is $1 f or everyone. Tickets available at the In&#13;
formation Center, LLC Main Place.&#13;
SEMESTER BREAK - TWO TRIPS: ACAPULCO AND JAMAICA -&#13;
BOTH BETWEEN JANUARY 3 - 10, 1975&#13;
ACAPULCO: $244 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room Includes&#13;
round trip transportation. 7 nights at the deluxe El Matador&#13;
Hotel &amp; Racquet Club. Yacht cruise of Acapulco Bay with a welcoming&#13;
Margarita party. Includes tips and taxes. For further information&#13;
contact the Student Life Office, LLCD197 or phone 553-2294&#13;
JAMAICA&#13;
MONTEGO BAY: $279 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room&#13;
Includes round trip transportation. 7 nights at Toby Inn only a short&#13;
walk from famous Doctor's Cave Beach. Tips and taxes included.&#13;
OCHO RIOS: $309 plus $20 tax and service based on 3 to a room Includes&#13;
round trip transportation. 7 nights at Shaw Park located on the&#13;
beach on Cutlass Bay. A welcoming Rum Swizzle Party and unlimited&#13;
free tennis are included as well as reduced golf rates at Upton Country&#13;
Club. For further information, contact the Student Life Office LLC&#13;
D197 or phone 553-2294.&#13;
ICON Wednesday October 30, 1974 7&#13;
FALLING&#13;
It's cold&#13;
and the leaves&#13;
have hardly begun to fall,&#13;
quite unlike the snow&#13;
and&#13;
my self-esteemMichael&#13;
Nepper&#13;
Once&#13;
We were young and morning-faced,&#13;
And all our fields&#13;
Were full of grain.&#13;
We waited for no time or place,&#13;
But walked the old, dard-acorned wood&#13;
And all our scented days&#13;
Were good:&#13;
For Love was just another word&#13;
That need not be expressed -&#13;
As we ran races with the world,&#13;
And hardly stopped&#13;
To rest.&#13;
When was it&#13;
That we must have paused,&#13;
To watch the sun go down&#13;
And feel the wind from some far sea&#13;
Blow through our special town?&#13;
Margaret L. Robinette&#13;
Icon&#13;
Vol. I No.2&#13;
editor:' amy&#13;
staff: dave keller, cliff croxford&#13;
contributors: Greg, Magnellum&#13;
Margaret L. Robinette, A. Alteran&#13;
Michael Nepper, Martin Andersen&#13;
Carrie, E. Bingen, Billy S.&#13;
jjFront an d back page photos by C.Croxford&#13;
TRIBUTE&#13;
I was terrified of him, just thinking that I had to meet him. But then&#13;
he came bobbing toward me in that funny side-to-side gait that I had&#13;
always thought was because of the toe he'd lost years ago But&#13;
everyone said he'd always walked like that. And there was a grin on&#13;
his face that made him look friendly and soft and good, kinda hazy&#13;
because his face was smooth and soft. He held out his hand to me and&#13;
then kissed me and I was still afraid of him but I knew I'd like him&#13;
soon.&#13;
When I married his son, I got to know him better, and he really was&#13;
soft and kind, always ready to tell a joke-but the joke was always ad&#13;
lib, not worth repeating but worth remembering and smiling secretly&#13;
about because no one could say it like he had. Then, I noticed that he&#13;
was strong too. That, in between an argument, his words were still&#13;
soft but full of something called wisdom or maybe he just knew more&#13;
than we did. And we listened, maybe angry, maybe sorry, but we&#13;
hfnTln h&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
d&#13;
aLl&#13;
;&#13;
eBargUement ^ ®W®y ^ He&#13;
"&#13;
eVer ™Sed his hand to blight his own anger. He was gentle-a word that means&#13;
everything good to me. In the middle of one of those infrequent fights&#13;
he turned to me, his eyes shining out behind thick glasses, and asked&#13;
me to call him 'Dad.' My anger fell away.&#13;
Then, he fell asleep one night and didn't get up the next morning His&#13;
son came to me and cried. "My dad is dead." The words were like&#13;
some descending weight that hits quickly again and again, and doesn't&#13;
leave and makes you hurt. My dad died.&#13;
In between the tears and the fast and slow hours of busy&#13;
arrangements that must be made, I was left alone with his grandson&#13;
He wanted to play with his Big Wheel and his blocks and I wanted to&#13;
tell him something I was not sure of myself. Then, I reached for him&#13;
and tried so seriously and so casually to tell him his grandpa was&#13;
gone...gone away...dead. He wasn't sad, but wanted to know where&#13;
Grandpa had gone. Catholic catachism and half-belief in ghosts&#13;
spirits, and the soul ran around in my head and I stumbled over my&#13;
own words of 'Jesus', 'God,' 'Heaven,' and --. But then he wanted to&#13;
know when Grandpa was going to come back so he could tell Grandma.&#13;
Almost laughing, almost crying, I told him that he wasn't coming&#13;
back. A look of surprise, and he wanted to know why. I felt I could not&#13;
explain it to him. I wanted to tell him so many things about Grandpa&#13;
to remember him, to remember that Grandpa had loved him, that&#13;
Grandpa had never gotten mad when his grandson was noisy and he&#13;
was tired, to remember that... But he was getting nervous, sitting&#13;
there on my lap, and he still wanted to know why Grandpa wasn't&#13;
going to come back. So, I shut my mind away and told him that some&#13;
day, we would go where Grandpa was~with Jesus. For a second he&#13;
frowned, and demanded that Daddy and I take him with us when' we&#13;
go. I saw a way to end the talk and said of course, we'd all go someday&#13;
I wanted to tell him more, but I couldn't. I was afraid he would ask me&#13;
a question I couldn't answer. I was afraid that he would cry But he&#13;
only smiled at me and tugged at me to play with him. And I wondered&#13;
if my grief and rage at death was any better than a grandson's&#13;
curiosity and acceptance of it. He had just wanted to know about it and&#13;
then go on playing. It seemed natural to him to go on playing. So whv&#13;
was I crying?&#13;
Jean Stencel&#13;
NOW-NOW&#13;
We just are&#13;
as Waves break&#13;
with the Wind&#13;
and blend&#13;
Peacefully with the Sea:&#13;
Entering again&#13;
the ever-changing&#13;
Stillness&#13;
Ebony swirls&#13;
and madness of Dust:&#13;
The wanton Love&#13;
of Someone&#13;
seeking&#13;
but never looking&#13;
Center&#13;
of Time&#13;
placement of None:&#13;
Cries of Life&#13;
the Fate&#13;
of acceptance&#13;
again&#13;
the Tide receeds&#13;
and agin:&#13;
Crystals of Dust&#13;
in passionate&#13;
Sounds&#13;
Seeking to See&#13;
whn Seeing&#13;
is Hearing:&#13;
A. Alteran.&#13;
4 5010 7th Are.&#13;
K'*-&#13;
•.AA-.&#13;
&#13;
on DOWN&#13;
vv#' «*"•&#13;
; V Phone 654-3578&#13;
•i*&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
and TAPES&#13;
Environmental&#13;
Furniture and Lighting&#13;
Quality Leather Goods Tapestries&#13;
Pipes Papers Ethnic Jewelry&#13;
more than a spring &amp; padding mattress...&#13;
more than a waterbed. . .&#13;
tfie Jlirform 'ffiahr cflLaffress&#13;
gives orthopedic comfort that&#13;
. . . returns man to his source&#13;
Keep your energy high and your mind mello with Pyramid Products. &#13;
a worn heart&#13;
crushed flower&#13;
bleached dreams touching your fingertips&#13;
why do we need reasons to sleep at night&#13;
what will steal our peace if we lie alone&#13;
- amy </text>
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              <text>Bauer acting chancellor</text>
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              <text>Bauer acting chancellor&#13;
The appointment of Otto F.&#13;
Bauer as Acting Chancellor of&#13;
Parkside was announced today&#13;
by UW System President John C.&#13;
Weaver. Irvin G. Wyllie, the&#13;
founding Chancellor of Parkside&#13;
in 1966, died Oct. 25 of an apparent&#13;
heart attack.&#13;
Bauer, 42, haser, 42, has been&#13;
Vice Chancellor, the second&#13;
ranking administrative position&#13;
at UW-P, since Sept. 1, 1971.&#13;
In his letter of appointment to&#13;
Bauer, President Weaver said, "I&#13;
am grateful for your willingness&#13;
to serve as we move through the&#13;
formal search and screen process&#13;
to find a successor to Irv Wyllie.&#13;
His untimely passing thrusts a&#13;
special obligation of those who&#13;
remain in leadership positions at&#13;
the campus. I pledge you the&#13;
support of our Central (Administration)&#13;
staff in this time of&#13;
leadership transition."&#13;
The new acting Chancellor&#13;
came to Parkside in 1971 from&#13;
Bowling Green (Ohio) University,&#13;
where he was Assistant Vice&#13;
President for Student Affairs, he&#13;
also had served as Assistant&#13;
Dean of the Graduate School and&#13;
Director of Graduate Admissions&#13;
and Fellowships at Bowling&#13;
Green.&#13;
Bauer took all three of his&#13;
degrees at Northwestern&#13;
University, receiving his Ph. D.&#13;
in 1959 in public address and&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Petitions for a declaratory&#13;
ruling filed on behalf of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc., (PSGA) on Oct.&#13;
15, 1974 seeking certain&#13;
declaratory rulings as on interpretation&#13;
of section 36.09 (5)&#13;
Wisconsin State Statutes, were&#13;
denied Friday, Nov. 1, by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Board of&#13;
Regents in Madison.&#13;
The petitions, filed on behalf of&#13;
PSGA by John Siefert, a Kenosha&#13;
attorney, asked that the Regents&#13;
clarify the manner in which&#13;
students select representatives to&#13;
take part in institutional&#13;
governance, and compile for&#13;
presentation to the Chancellor a&#13;
budget involving the disposition&#13;
of student fees which support&#13;
campus student activities.&#13;
PSGA's petition came after the&#13;
Board of Regents instituted a set&#13;
of interim guidelines on merger&#13;
implementation drafted by&#13;
Central Administration. The&#13;
primary source of debate between&#13;
administrators and&#13;
students stemmed from a phrase&#13;
in the merger law which gives&#13;
students "primary responsibility&#13;
for the formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests."&#13;
Specifically, student leaders&#13;
and chancellors disagreed on the&#13;
issue of determining the&#13;
allocation of student fees and on&#13;
who would designate&#13;
representatives to various&#13;
university committees.&#13;
PSGA's petition asked that the&#13;
"Regents declare that all&#13;
requisitions from the allocable&#13;
portion of the segregated&#13;
university fees made subsequent&#13;
to July 8.1974. be made only after&#13;
students selected by the Student&#13;
Otto F. Bauer&#13;
group communication. He taught&#13;
at the United States Air Force&#13;
Academy from 1959-1961, when he&#13;
joined the Bowling Green faculty.&#13;
He rose to full professor by 1968,&#13;
and was chosen Faculty Man of&#13;
the Year by a student-faculty&#13;
committee in 1967.&#13;
In 1969 Bauer was selected to&#13;
be an American Council on&#13;
Education administrative intern&#13;
at California-Berkeley, where he&#13;
served under both the Chancellor&#13;
and Vice Chancellor. At&#13;
Berkeley, he was directly involved&#13;
in a wide range of administrative&#13;
activities, including&#13;
supervision of the Student Affairs&#13;
Office during the Spring turmoil.&#13;
As Vice Chancellor, the Deans&#13;
Body at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside to participate&#13;
in institutional governance,&#13;
or their designees, sign or&#13;
certify that the requisition is&#13;
being made in accordance with&#13;
the policies concerning student&#13;
life, services, and interests."&#13;
The PSGA petition further&#13;
stipulated that the "Regents&#13;
declare vacant all students' seats&#13;
on committees involved on the&#13;
process of institutional governance&#13;
which have not been filled&#13;
according to the procedures set&#13;
forth in the Constitution of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc., or in the ByLaws&#13;
and resolutions adopted&#13;
pursuant to that constitution, but&#13;
instead have been filled by appointment&#13;
by the Chancellor of&#13;
the Dean of Students."&#13;
In addition, the petition asked&#13;
that the "Regents declare that all&#13;
committees involved in the&#13;
formulation, and, review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests, have a&#13;
majority of student members."&#13;
Accordingly, the PSGA petition&#13;
asked that the Regents consult&#13;
with PSGA on the rules before&#13;
they are submitted for a public&#13;
hearing.&#13;
Regent President, Frank&#13;
Pelisek, Milwaukee, introduced&#13;
the resolution denying the&#13;
declaratory ruling, further citing&#13;
that "the president of the board&#13;
of University of Wisconsin&#13;
System shall advise the&#13;
petitioners in writing the denial&#13;
of such petitions in accordance of&#13;
section 22.6 of Wisconsin&#13;
statutes."&#13;
Pelisek further resolved that&#13;
"further inquiries of the matter&#13;
set forth shall be referred to the&#13;
administration of the University&#13;
•- en I intied on page 6&#13;
of the UW-P academic units, the&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
and The School of Modern Industry,&#13;
reported to Bauer, as did&#13;
the Assistant Chancellor for&#13;
Student Services, the directors of&#13;
Library, Learning Center,&#13;
Athletics, Computing Center,&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty, and the&#13;
E d u c ati o n al O p por tun ity&#13;
coordinator. He represented the&#13;
campus to various state agencies&#13;
and to other parts of the&#13;
university.&#13;
He has leadership roles on both&#13;
UW System and campus committees,&#13;
including chairmanship&#13;
of the System-wide Ad Hoc&#13;
Committee for Student&#13;
Disciplinary Guidelines, the UWP&#13;
Campus Planning Committee&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Regent Ed Hales, Racine, said&#13;
the first step in the process of&#13;
selecting a new chancellor for&#13;
Parkside will be the selection of a&#13;
Search and Screen Committee&#13;
(SSC). He-guessed this process&#13;
would take place within a month.&#13;
The committee will be made up&#13;
of faculty, administrators and&#13;
student(s) who will be appointed&#13;
by John Weaver, president of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system.&#13;
Hales said the student(s) will&#13;
be selected from Parkside. He&#13;
also said that at least a majority&#13;
of the faculty will be selected&#13;
from Parkside and the administration&#13;
will probably come&#13;
and the UW-P Ten-Year&#13;
Academic Planning Committee.&#13;
UW System committees include&#13;
Academic Misconduct,&#13;
Health Science Task Force and&#13;
Medical Technology Advisory&#13;
group. He is a member of the&#13;
joint UW-Vocational Technical&#13;
Regional Council, the Allied&#13;
Health Education Coordinating&#13;
Council of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and the Administrative&#13;
Council of&#13;
University Extension.&#13;
Despite his busy administrative&#13;
schedule, he finds&#13;
time to teach a class in speech&#13;
each year at Parkside.&#13;
A full professor, Bauer is&#13;
widely published in the fields of&#13;
semantics and debate and has&#13;
from Parkside and Central&#13;
Administration.&#13;
The student(s) selected to&#13;
serve on the SSC will probably be&#13;
active in the University, such as&#13;
someone from the student&#13;
government, said Hales.&#13;
The size of the SSC varies, but&#13;
according to Hales the committee&#13;
would consist of possibly seven or&#13;
eight people.&#13;
"Anybody can nominate a&#13;
person for chancellor; a student,&#13;
housewife or businessman,"&#13;
Hales said. "The person may&#13;
simpjy send the SSC a name for&#13;
consideration and that person&#13;
will be contacted and asked for a&#13;
resume."&#13;
As far as qualifications for the&#13;
conducted a number of studies on&#13;
"the trust phenomenon" among&#13;
students, faculty and administrators.&#13;
He presented an&#13;
invited lecture on that subject at&#13;
Cornell University last Spring.&#13;
He has served as chairman of the&#13;
General Semantics Interest&#13;
Group of the Speech Communications&#13;
Association and as&#13;
an officer of "The Journal of the&#13;
American Forensic Association."&#13;
A Kenosha resident (6913-5th&#13;
Ave.), Bauer is a member of&#13;
Rotary West and on the Board of&#13;
Directors of Kenosha County&#13;
United Way. A native of Elgin,&#13;
111., and a former pilot and officer&#13;
in the Air Force, he is married&#13;
(Jeanette) and the father of two&#13;
boys (Steven 12 and Eric 8).&#13;
job are concerned, Hales said&#13;
that there are no set rules but&#13;
that Weaver and his staff would&#13;
probably establish the general&#13;
criteria.&#13;
The SSC will review and screen&#13;
applicants and a list of the top&#13;
candidates, consisting of not less&#13;
than three people, will be sent to&#13;
Weaver.&#13;
The President of the Board of&#13;
Regents will then appoint a&#13;
committee of Regents who, in&#13;
consultation with Weaver, will&#13;
select the chancellor of Parkside.&#13;
With regard to the&#13;
qualifications required for&#13;
chancellor, Allen Dearborn,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor of Students,&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
Regents honor Wyllie&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
"THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that on the&#13;
sad occasion of his untimely death on October 25,&#13;
1974, the members of the UW System Board of&#13;
Regents do hereby extend to his wife and family, as&#13;
well as to the entire Parkside campus community,&#13;
their deep personal sympathy, and in sending this&#13;
message do transmit their sincere appreciation for&#13;
the many years of distinguished service given to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System by Chancellor Irvin&#13;
G. Wyllie."&#13;
November 1,1974&#13;
Board of Regents&#13;
A lull of silence settled over Room 1820 Van Hise&#13;
Hall on the UW-Madison campus Friday morning,&#13;
Nov. 1, as members of the UW-Board of Regents,&#13;
chancellors and administrators from throughout&#13;
the system and various visitors and representatives&#13;
of t he press rose and stood in silence, paying a final&#13;
tribute to the late Irvin G. Wyllie, former Chancellor&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
The late Chancellor Wyllie, 54, died October 25,&#13;
1974, after having served as Chancellor for the&#13;
Parkside campus since its birth in 1966.&#13;
Following the Regent's tribute honoring Wyllie,&#13;
Regent President Frank Pelisek deviated from the&#13;
regular agenda and called upon Regent Ed Hales.&#13;
Racine, who introduced a resolution to the board-a&#13;
portion of which appears above.&#13;
Hales praised Wyllie's devotion to education as a&#13;
"disting uish ed teach er, histor ian , and administrator&#13;
who advanced the frontiers of&#13;
knowledge in his areas of intellectual interest."&#13;
In addition. Hales cited Wyllie as a man who&#13;
served "a leader- role in American higher&#13;
education as counselor to -many colleges and&#13;
universities, chaired the UW-Madison department&#13;
of history, and held professorships at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin, Missouri, and Maryland, as well a:&#13;
selection as a Ford Faculty Fellow and Fulbrigh&#13;
Lecturer."&#13;
Hales spoke highly of the steps taken by Wyllie t(&#13;
transform "the dream of comprehensivt&#13;
educational opportunity in southeastern Wisconsir&#13;
into the reality of a University of Wisconsin cam&#13;
pus. Hales added that the "founding chancellor'!&#13;
vigor, dedication . . 4 compassion, candor anc&#13;
courage," were attributes which "marked both hi:&#13;
personal and professional life and were tin&#13;
hallmarks of his administration in the face of dif&#13;
ficult decisions."&#13;
The motion offered by Hales was seconded by th&lt;&#13;
entire board and unanimously adopted.&#13;
Shortly thereafter, UW President John C. Weave:&#13;
announced to the board that he had appointed Ott&lt;&#13;
F. Bauer as acting chancellor of Parkside, citinj&#13;
that "I appoint him as acting chancellor withou&#13;
reservation and with full confidence that he will no&#13;
only provide interim administration to that campus&#13;
but will carry the campus progress forward.&#13;
In addition, Weaver assured members of thi&#13;
board, as well as acting administrators at Parkside&#13;
that 'As quickly as we can do so, vie&#13;
President Donald Smith and I will be instituting th&lt;&#13;
appropriate search and screen procedures for ;&#13;
permanent appointment at that campus."&#13;
In other board action, a proposal to build a $4.&#13;
million Modern Industry Building at Parkside wa,&#13;
reinstated in the 1975-77 UW building budget by a 9-&#13;
vote. The Friday vote overruled action takei&#13;
Tuesday by the board's" Physical Planning an&lt;&#13;
Development Committee, which voted to defer tfo&#13;
project for possible consideration in its 1976 budge&#13;
review. The Regents' vote reinstates the building t&#13;
its 10th priority rank in the 1975-77 building budget&#13;
Thic ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
— Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 14&#13;
Students on SSC&#13;
Thumbs down to psga Picking Q chancellor&#13;
Regents&#13;
rule &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov 6&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Lett er s t o t he E r fi tf f r&#13;
Editor's Note: RANGER has printed the following letter and form&#13;
because we feel the establishment of a strong organizaZ&#13;
representing the third world is a necessity at Parkside. RANGER does&#13;
not feel obliged to print at the request of organizations but only those&#13;
items we feel are important to the campus.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Recently, Third World&#13;
Organization, mailed out a&#13;
questionaire titled; "To All&#13;
Concern Students". The purpose&#13;
of this questionaire was to find&#13;
out multi-cultural students interests.&#13;
This survey was to be&#13;
used for the future planning of&#13;
events sponsored by Third World.&#13;
On the questionaire there were&#13;
two locations; Red Pyramid and&#13;
the Information Desk, Third&#13;
World World boxes were put at&#13;
both places. Within a two day&#13;
span both boxes disappeared.&#13;
What happened to the boxes?&#13;
Third World would like to know.&#13;
The boxes were clearly labeled&#13;
with the organization's name,&#13;
therefore maintainance people&#13;
should have not moved them.&#13;
Students what happened to the&#13;
boxes?&#13;
Third World, not to be stopped&#13;
by any small inconviences, wants&#13;
the questionaire printed in the&#13;
TO ALL CONCERNED STUDENTS:&#13;
We have organized a club called "The Third World&#13;
Organization."&#13;
Our purpose is to unite the multi-cultural students who&#13;
want to see changes that are needed in student activities&#13;
at Par-.side. The organization will be meeting every&#13;
Thursday at 12:30 p.m. in room D174 until further&#13;
notification is made.&#13;
If you would like to become involved, please write a time&#13;
that will be suitable for you to attend future meetings.&#13;
The time most suitable for&#13;
is&#13;
(name) (time) (day)&#13;
WOULD LIKE FOR YOU TO ANSWER THESE&#13;
QUESTIONS AND DROP THIS FORM IN A BOX AT&#13;
THE INFORMATION BOX - or - AT "THE PYRAMID."&#13;
1. Do you want to see fellow students of various racialethnic&#13;
groups involved in the student government'&#13;
YES NO&#13;
2. Are you willing to voice YOUR rights on this campus'&#13;
YES NO&#13;
3. Would you like to read more about multi-cultural&#13;
campus life and other activities related to students of&#13;
various ethnic backgrounds printed in "The Ranqer"?&#13;
YES NO&#13;
4. Attended a good dance, concert, or good entertainment&#13;
on campus lately? YES&#13;
NO&#13;
5. If there were activities available would you get involved&#13;
in these multi-cultural interests' YES&#13;
NO&#13;
6. Do you have any ideas for activities pertaining to&#13;
multi-cultural interests? YES NO&#13;
WHAT ARE YOUR IDEAS???&#13;
7. Would you like to get involved in&#13;
organization? YES&#13;
Ranger. By this publication of the&#13;
questionaire, "To All Concern&#13;
Students", any student may&#13;
reply. And the ones that received&#13;
the mailed letters, are advised to&#13;
personally give your answered&#13;
reply to any member of Third&#13;
World organization.&#13;
The temporary officers are&#13;
N.Haynes, A. Martin, N. Jones,&#13;
V. Napus, L. Vinson, N. Foiling,&#13;
L. Wagner, and T. Jones.&#13;
Students not knowing any one&#13;
from the names above should&#13;
bring their reply to D174 at 12:30,&#13;
Thursday Nov. 7. (D174 is&#13;
directly across from the information&#13;
desk.)&#13;
Also anyone who would like to&#13;
copy and answer the questionaire&#13;
on note-book paper; including&#13;
your name and time best for&#13;
attending meetings, are encouraged&#13;
to do so. Your ideas will&#13;
be given deep consideration by&#13;
the group.&#13;
A. Martin&#13;
Vice-Pres., Third World.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Crutches&#13;
Legalize Marijuana-a commonly heard phrase these&#13;
days. Bronson Laxollette calls for the&#13;
"decriminalization" of possession of Mary Jane. Ad&#13;
rightly so. We have decriminalized alcoholism and&#13;
society allows all types of self abuse-why not this one.&#13;
Pot smokers claim that there is no physical damage to&#13;
the user. At this point it is impossible to prove that extended&#13;
use of this drug causes ill effects. Only the widespread&#13;
use of grass by a large segment of the population&#13;
over a period of years will supply the necessary&#13;
statistical data to show if marijuana is "safe".&#13;
Possible ill effects aside: our society allows the&#13;
alcoholic to abuse himself, his surroundings and&#13;
ultimately all of us. Are we justified in not allowing pot&#13;
smokers the same right? We assume the responsibilities&#13;
of the nine million alcoholics among us-we surely can&#13;
sustain a few million high-seekers.&#13;
To those smokers among our readers that may decry&#13;
the relationship drawn between alcohol and marijuana—&#13;
physically there may be no relationship, but&#13;
psychologically? The alcoholic craves the next shot-the&#13;
next jug of wine-needs it to survive the day. The&#13;
pothead marks the day by the times he can sneak off to&#13;
gain another "high".&#13;
Is there much difference if the crutch be made of&#13;
walnut or maple? Alcohol or marijuana: those that&#13;
would abuse one would abuse the other.&#13;
So legalize marijuana; those that need the crutch of a&#13;
high w.l go to any extreme to find it-prohibition proved&#13;
hat. Only after legalization will we begin to transfer the&#13;
thP rPh^iT^ b&#13;
//u&#13;
hG incarcerati&#13;
°n of pot smokers to&#13;
the rehabilitation of those who need the out of a drug.&#13;
a multi-cultural&#13;
NO&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
uT'p-ST&#13;
thVnterests&#13;
' °Pin&#13;
'ons, and concerns of' the fsr w s rn-&#13;
^&#13;
arl&#13;
Wisconsin siun Pl ' _ ^ Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
p&#13;
*"'&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper °&#13;
hm'&#13;
§ V s&#13;
KEM6 &#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Doston on multicultural Mfiofy&#13;
A professor comments&#13;
#1 &lt;n&#13;
James DuRell Smith Jr.&#13;
^ reIS&#13;
K Y&#13;
1&#13;
0U'YE&#13;
d&#13;
G0T Y0UR UPS AND DOWNS? Take a ride on&#13;
e,rr!;°i&#13;
Be first kid&#13;
°&#13;
n y&#13;
°&#13;
ur bi&#13;
°&#13;
ck to ride the iibrar&#13;
y&#13;
then he hu aTih ' Stare at 3 closed door for thirty seconds and&#13;
" s&#13;
h&#13;
"&#13;
rdled down to 2-D for free, with no fuss, no bother, no buttons&#13;
to press Our circus ride for roaming readers is brought to you through&#13;
Uiecourtesy of an unknow benefactor to be found somehwere along the&#13;
underetandatde8&#13;
" ^ pr&#13;
°&#13;
duction&#13;
-&#13;
His desire to remain anonymous is&#13;
RESULTS, I LIKE RESULTS! Not two days after this paper printed&#13;
comment on the obscure philosophy of Parkside pavement planning&#13;
^&#13;
uly bad the unadulterated joy of walking from the&#13;
Tallent Hall parking lot to the door of the SAB via a sidewalk that&#13;
o lowed the path through the grass that people had worn through&#13;
taking the logical route. Oh, unparalledled pleasure!&#13;
ALL KIDDING ASIDE. Have you ever wondered why you're asked&#13;
to take a shower before going into the pool? I never would have&#13;
believed it and almost don't now, even after it's happened a dozen&#13;
times or more, but if I'm swimming along free-style in a deserted&#13;
(except for me and guards) pool and cannot see anything but a blurr, if&#13;
someone who needs a shower jumps in without having taken one, I can&#13;
smell it in the water soon after. Amazing perhaps, but where do men&#13;
think their deodorant goes? And women their hairspray? I can tell&#13;
you, before it gets to the filters, it goes all over the pool. Those who&#13;
should enforce rules that are made for all but don't think they're doing&#13;
somebody a favor. I would ask them to think again.&#13;
AND YOU TEL L TERRY&#13;
T H A T J F E E L L I K E&#13;
A DAM N/ H Y P O C R I T E&#13;
\ A S T A N D I N G -&#13;
3/&gt;! V (c,/'/?&lt;/&#13;
New insight&#13;
into gas crisis&#13;
WAN TED : Work StuOy Sec to work for&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. Senate, 15hrs. per week, must&#13;
type. Call 553 2244, or inquire at L.L.C.&#13;
D193B. John Kontz.&#13;
MORR ETTI BY FIAT -- Unique four&#13;
cylinder small car by Fiat Excellent gas&#13;
mileage. Engine rebuilt &amp; blueprinted.&#13;
Exterior needs some work. Must sell, call&#13;
553 2295.&#13;
FOR S A LE -• G uita r amplifier, Baldwin Dl,&#13;
35 watts, 5 way equaliser, $125. Call John at&#13;
652 2662 f or information.&#13;
FUT URE CPA'S learn how to prepare for&#13;
the CPA Exam. Becker CPA Review Course&#13;
Call Colle ct. Milwaukee 414 276 7271.&#13;
FOR S ALE, FOR D VAN, 1965 In GOOD&#13;
running condition. $300.00 or reasonable&#13;
offer Apply at WARDS CLEANERS. 3815&#13;
14th Ave., Kenosha. Phone 652 2693.&#13;
EAR N U P TO S12C0 a school year hanging&#13;
posters on campus in spar e time. Send&#13;
name, address, phone and school to:&#13;
Coordinator of Campi^ Representatives,&#13;
P.O. Box 1384. Ann Arbor, Ml 48106.&#13;
by Carole Wilson&#13;
"You're kidding!" was the&#13;
thought that crossed the mind of&#13;
at least one student when a&#13;
young, black man announced he&#13;
was Glenn Doston the instructor&#13;
of "Teaching for the&#13;
Multicultural Society." Why such&#13;
a stupified reaction? Well, apparently&#13;
few students and even&#13;
faculty are aware that there are&#13;
black professors teaching fulltime&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
According to Doston, another&#13;
student's father, upon hearing&#13;
that "one of those people" was&#13;
instructing one of her classes,&#13;
refused to pay anymore of her&#13;
tuition at Parkside. These are&#13;
precisely some things Doston&#13;
wants to get out and rap on in his&#13;
classes.&#13;
His classes include Society and&#13;
School, Values Clarification and&#13;
Affective Education, and&#13;
Teaching for the Multicultural&#13;
Society. All these classes, in&#13;
essence, deal with peoples'&#13;
beliefs or values. Schools play an&#13;
important part in developing and&#13;
sustaining our society and he&#13;
feels the quality of the teacher&#13;
will reflect the quality of our&#13;
society.&#13;
When asked what he essentially&#13;
hoped to accomplish in his&#13;
classes he commented,&#13;
"basically what we're doing in&#13;
the Values Clarification and&#13;
Affective Education course is&#13;
placing ourselves under a&#13;
microscope and using an array of&#13;
value strategies to find our where&#13;
they come, why we have certain&#13;
values, how we got our values&#13;
and to give us a chance to think&#13;
about the kind of people we are,&#13;
and also to show people that they&#13;
don't necessarily have to have&#13;
the same values that other people&#13;
have, but to at least respect each&#13;
others' values."&#13;
In the classroom Doston relates&#13;
to his experiences and draws out&#13;
the students to discuss openly&#13;
by Greg Hershman&#13;
I have a new plan for saving&#13;
gasoline.&#13;
Up until now, the President and&#13;
everybody else has been telling&#13;
us to slow down on the highway.&#13;
This, they say, will help conserve&#13;
gas because a car uses less gas at&#13;
50 mph than at 70 mph.&#13;
At first glance this may seem&#13;
like the right answer but one&#13;
small item is left out. At 50 mph&#13;
fewer people are killed than at 70&#13;
mph which means that there will&#13;
be more people driving.&#13;
What should be done instead is&#13;
how they feel about experiences&#13;
they have had. During 1968 a nd&#13;
69, he was a Second Lieutenant&#13;
Tank Unit Commander patrolling&#13;
the Czechoslovakia!! border&#13;
during the Russian occupation.&#13;
After going through U.S. Intelligence&#13;
School in Maryland he&#13;
spent approximately a year in&#13;
Vietnam as an advisor to Vietnamese&#13;
soldiers. Some of his&#13;
values changed because of experiences&#13;
that took place during&#13;
this time in his life.&#13;
Upon being discharged from&#13;
the Army, Doston re-entered&#13;
Southern University, where he&#13;
had gotten his B.A. in 1968. In&#13;
1972, he completed his Masters in&#13;
Social Science, then applied and&#13;
was accepted at Northwestern&#13;
University in Evanston, Illinois&#13;
where he received his Ph. D. in&#13;
Social Science Education this&#13;
past August.&#13;
That is where he met Marvin&#13;
Happel, an Assistant Professor of&#13;
Education at Parkside. Happel&#13;
was instrumental in Doston's&#13;
applying here through informing&#13;
him of the positions available.&#13;
When asked how he felt about&#13;
the "honor" bestowed upon him&#13;
as one of Parkside's first fulltime&#13;
teaching black professors of&#13;
Education, Doston replied, "I&#13;
think through Paul Kleine, the&#13;
Division Chairman of Education,&#13;
and other members in the&#13;
Division of Education, that we'll&#13;
see this trend continue, where&#13;
Parkside will have minority&#13;
people, black and brown, in other&#13;
areas of the university. I think&#13;
they're headed that way, at least&#13;
I hope so."&#13;
Concerning Parkside students&#13;
and the area in which the&#13;
university is located, Doston&#13;
said, "It's the kind of situation&#13;
where I like the kind of students&#13;
that basically we have at&#13;
Parkside. I think the communities,&#13;
Racine and Kenosha,&#13;
are both workable communities.&#13;
"The Division of Education is&#13;
making efforts to become closer&#13;
to the communities, and through&#13;
efforts like these, the University&#13;
will be living up to their function,&#13;
to raise the speed limit to 120&#13;
mph. This would cause more&#13;
accidents which would mean&#13;
more deaths which would mean&#13;
fewer drivers.&#13;
When the number of drivers&#13;
gets down to two, I'll make you a&#13;
deal. You stay out of my way and&#13;
I'll stay out of yours.&#13;
that being to provide services for&#13;
the community to make it a&#13;
better place to live and to improve&#13;
the lots of people."&#13;
One of the services Parkside is&#13;
involved with is the Title Four&#13;
and Seven programs in the&#13;
Racine Unified School District. It&#13;
is a program of workshops&#13;
designed to help teachers,&#13;
students and parents adjust,&#13;
understand; in essense, prepare&#13;
for the desegregation plan being&#13;
instituted in the Racine Schools.&#13;
Doston is one of the workshop&#13;
leaders.&#13;
This is closely related to the&#13;
objectives Aimed for in&#13;
"Teaching for the Multicultural&#13;
Society" which Doston stated to&#13;
be, "where teachers and people&#13;
being certified for the teaching&#13;
profession can learn how to cope&#13;
with a growing multicultural&#13;
society."&#13;
"We can see that people have&#13;
numerous conflicts in our public&#13;
schools today and we're trying to&#13;
teach teachers how to handle&#13;
kids. Teaching them about the&#13;
different cultures and values&#13;
people have in different cultures.&#13;
"We try to establish a format in&#13;
this course where people can talk&#13;
about the racial issues, the drug&#13;
issues and the sexual issues. To&#13;
provide the kind of environment&#13;
where people will feel free to&#13;
express themselves.&#13;
"We try to provide the kind of&#13;
environment in which people will&#13;
not feel threatened by me or&#13;
other class members. We try to&#13;
reach honest conclusions and&#13;
discover ourselves.&#13;
"It's not a course where the&#13;
instructor presents the "model"&#13;
person to the students. It's a selfsearching&#13;
course, and hopefully,&#13;
through meaningful dialogue we&#13;
can resolve some of the problems&#13;
and help some teachers when&#13;
they enter the classrooms for the&#13;
first time, who don't have experiences&#13;
with different kinds of&#13;
ethnic groups they may have to&#13;
come in contact with as public&#13;
school teachers."&#13;
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Brief News&#13;
Tuesday, November 5: Film, "Billy Jack," 7:30 p.m., Gr. 103. Admission&#13;
$1, Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
Wednesday, November 6: Whiteskellar presents Steve Miller, local&#13;
folksinger, in the coffeehouse, 1-3 p.m. Admission free.&#13;
Film, "Billy Jack," 7:30 p.m., Gr. 103. Admission $1. Parkside I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
Thursday, November 7: There will be an organizational meeting of&#13;
the Women's Caucus at 12:30 in LLC D-174 (the lounge next to the&#13;
Information kiosk).&#13;
Friday, November 8: Hayrideand square dance. PAB presents "Git&#13;
Down to Some Fast-Stompin' Music and Rollin' in the Hay!" Square&#13;
dance instructions by a professional caller; contest (hog calling, apple&#13;
bobbing, best dancer); spiked cider! Admission $1, Parkside and state&#13;
I.D.'s required.&#13;
Sunday, November 10: Film, "Acapulco Gold," documentary on the&#13;
cultivation and distribution of marijuana in North America. A special&#13;
premiere showing at 8 p.m. in the SAB. Admission $1, open to the&#13;
public, state I.D. required.&#13;
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GO To &#13;
4 T H E PARKSIDE R ANGER Wednesday, N o v. 6, 1 9 7 4&#13;
WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 6&#13;
STUDENT CONCERT: Beginning at 3:30 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
FILM: "Billy Jack" sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in Greenquist Hall, room 103. Admission is $1.00. Parside&#13;
I-D. is required. One guest is permitted.&#13;
THURSDAY NOVEMBER7 CONCERT: Featuring the Parkside&#13;
Orchestra at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre. Admission&#13;
is free and open to the public. The orchestra is conducted by Professor&#13;
David Littrell.&#13;
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 8 HAYRIDE AND SQUARE DANCE: Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board, $1.00 includes the hayride&#13;
which departs from the Student Activities Bldg. and also the square&#13;
dance. The caller for the dance will also be teaching you as you dance.&#13;
Refreshments include beer, spiked cider.&#13;
SUNDAY NOVEMBER 10 RECITAL: Featuring Professor Stephen&#13;
Swedish, on piano at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theatre.&#13;
Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
FILM: "Acapulco Gold" sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Student Activities Bldg. Admission is $1.50 and open&#13;
to the public with proof of age required. Film on growing and harvesting&#13;
of pot in the United States and parts of Mexico. Premiere&#13;
showing.&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 12 JACKSON BROWNE CONCERT:&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Activities Board. 8:00 p.m. in the Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. gym. Tickets are $4.00 for Parkside students and $4.50&#13;
for the genral public. Tickets are available at the Information Center&#13;
LLC Main Place.&#13;
Trick or treating with Lou Reed&#13;
'Take a walk&#13;
on the wild side'&#13;
'Spoon River' next in Nov.&#13;
The Parkside players are&#13;
preparing their second&#13;
production of the year, Edgar&#13;
Lee Masters' Spoon River Anthology&#13;
under the direction of&#13;
Tom Reinert.&#13;
From Thursday, November 21&#13;
through Sunday, Nov. 24, the 10&#13;
actors and 2 singers will give life&#13;
to the deceased residents of&#13;
Spoon River, Illinois.&#13;
The cast includes Glen&#13;
Christensen, Mike Clickner,&#13;
Keith Gayhart, Charles Johnson,&#13;
Jody Jones, Kathy Kah, Jeff&#13;
Kiehlbach, Annette LoCante,&#13;
Nancy Johnson, Carrie Ward,&#13;
Michael Ward, and Susan Zietz.&#13;
A multi-level formal set has&#13;
been designed for the show by&#13;
Rick Ponzio. It will be executed&#13;
by the technical director Ted&#13;
Paone. The costumes have been&#13;
designed and will be executed by&#13;
June Christianson. The lighting&#13;
will be designed and executed by&#13;
Rudy Lineau. The stage manager&#13;
is Sue Wille. The other crews will&#13;
be announced Nov. 7.&#13;
by Cliff Chambers&#13;
It seemed like a lot of&#13;
Milwaukee mothers sent their&#13;
kids to the Lou Reed concert on&#13;
Halloween night rather than take&#13;
a chance on trick or treat candy.&#13;
It was a good choice since no one&#13;
died from arsenic poisoning at&#13;
the sold-out Auditorium. The&#13;
concert was billed as a costume&#13;
party and contest.&#13;
There were many gaily dressed&#13;
concert goers this night. Witches&#13;
and ghosts and pirates and&#13;
cowboys and police officers and&#13;
ushers and Sesame Street&#13;
characters and a carrot and a&#13;
white rabbit showed up for the&#13;
concert. The latter should have&#13;
appropriately received a ticket to&#13;
the upcoming Gracie Slick and&#13;
Jefferson Starship concert on&#13;
Nov. 15 at the Arena.&#13;
The Lou Reed concert started&#13;
with an eerie stage show which&#13;
let us know the bad news right&#13;
away-the P.A. system was&#13;
horrible. Anyway, the crowd was&#13;
more interested in each other's&#13;
costumes rather than the skit or&#13;
the magic show that followed.&#13;
Without a decent P.A. system,&#13;
the skit, magic show and winners&#13;
of the costume contest were&#13;
meaningless past the first 25 rows&#13;
of seats. The crowd was constantly&#13;
moving around. Thus the&#13;
crowd provided most of the show.&#13;
Another distraction was the&#13;
constant "anti-smoking" announcements&#13;
followed by leaving&#13;
some of the lights on. Hopefully,&#13;
the fire marshals could see how&#13;
badly the announcements were&#13;
being ignored.&#13;
After a long delay, Dr. John&#13;
and the Night Trippers was the&#13;
first band to appear. Dr. John&#13;
M&#13;
I&#13;
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From God's Country.&#13;
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• Serve you food that's hot, or we'll&#13;
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• Clean your table, or the meal's&#13;
on us.&#13;
• Give you a courteous "thank you,'&#13;
or there's no charge.&#13;
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isn't known for fine quality music&#13;
but he is known for putting out a&#13;
good stage show.&#13;
Halloween night proved to be&#13;
Dr. John's excuse for dressing&#13;
elaborately. Dr. John was&#13;
dressed in a white feather and&#13;
silver sequin suit with a beard&#13;
also full of sequin and glitter. The&#13;
bass player was dressed in zebra&#13;
stripes, the guitar player dressed&#13;
in a green and white puffball&#13;
pyramid, and the drummer in a&#13;
silver-aluminum costume with&#13;
antenaes. The two female&#13;
vocalists were dressed in red&#13;
print and in blue chiffon sparkles&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Dr. John's music was better&#13;
than expected. By the song, "Let&#13;
the Good Times Roll" the crowd&#13;
had started to boogie. Dr. John's&#13;
raspy voice cut through the&#13;
smoke bombs, streamers, steam&#13;
gushes, and glitter showers.&#13;
However, the P.A. system wasn't&#13;
going to allow 80 percent of the&#13;
crowd to understand the words. It&#13;
didn't matter much and the&#13;
crowd greatly appreciated his&#13;
one recognizable song, "Right&#13;
Place at the Wrong Time." Dr.&#13;
John finished in a hail of glitter&#13;
showers and smoke bombs and&#13;
the crowd called them back for&#13;
one more song. The party was in&#13;
full swing.&#13;
Another long delay while the&#13;
equipment changes were made.&#13;
Meanwhile, the crowd paraded&#13;
around looking at itself.&#13;
Then, Lou Reed burst upon the&#13;
stage and started out with "Sweet&#13;
Jane."&#13;
He received a tremendous&#13;
welcome from the crowd. He was&#13;
dressed in dark sunglasses, a&#13;
black T-shirt, and blue jeans. His&#13;
short peach-blond hair glistened&#13;
in the lights.&#13;
Lou Reed sings and acts out his&#13;
songs incredibly well, however,&#13;
he was plagued by the bad&#13;
acoustics in the auditorium. The&#13;
back-up band played very well&#13;
and made up for the loss of&#13;
clarity in the lyrics.&#13;
The second song Reed did was&#13;
"Vicious." He sang a long rendition&#13;
of it. Afterwards he slid&#13;
smoothly into "Ride, Sally Ride."&#13;
During this song the crowd&#13;
finally sat down to listen and&#13;
watch.&#13;
Next, Reed went through the&#13;
motions of finding a vein and&#13;
shooting up while doing the song,&#13;
"Heroin."&#13;
The subtleness of the conFREE&#13;
DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
nection between "Heroin" and&#13;
the following song, "Kill Your&#13;
Sons" was lost by most of the&#13;
crowd. The apparent tolerance of&#13;
drugs displayed in "Heroin" was&#13;
rejected through the lyrics to&#13;
"Kill Your Sons." Had the&#13;
acoustics allowed the crowd to&#13;
hear the words, it might have&#13;
been more powerful.&#13;
The organ playing on "Kill&#13;
Your Sons" was especially good.&#13;
The best drumming came on&#13;
the sixth song, "N.Y. Stars" as&#13;
the yellow lights flashed and&#13;
reflected off the bald drummer's&#13;
head.&#13;
"Animal Language" was the&#13;
shortest song of the evening and&#13;
it was done well. "Sally Can't&#13;
Dance," the title song to Reed's&#13;
newest album, was the only time&#13;
the organ and lead players helped&#13;
out on the vocals. The song came&#13;
off well. After the cheering died&#13;
down, the bass player went into a&#13;
very exciting solo that led into&#13;
"Walk on the Wild Side."&#13;
An instance of mingling with&#13;
the audience happened during&#13;
this song. Reed sang "take a walk&#13;
on the wild side" while accepting&#13;
a strange-looking cigarette from&#13;
a person in the audience. He took&#13;
a deep toke and tossed it back out&#13;
into the audience. He was enjoying&#13;
the Halloween party as&#13;
much as the party was enjoying&#13;
him.&#13;
Reed finished the performance&#13;
with the Velvet Underground's&#13;
classic song, "White Light-White&#13;
Heat," in which both Reed and&#13;
the organ player removed their&#13;
shirts while white light throbbed&#13;
behind the drummer.&#13;
Reed and his band left the stage&#13;
amidst thunderous clapping as&#13;
the crowd applauded for a full&#13;
fifteen minutes. Finally, Reed&#13;
came back out and sang the song&#13;
everyone was waiting for, "Rock&#13;
and Roll." The band did a version&#13;
that featured a very fine lead&#13;
guitar solo.&#13;
Lou Reed did an excellent&#13;
concert on Halloween in&#13;
Milwaukee and made David&#13;
Bowie's performance last month&#13;
look pretty bad. The only&#13;
drawback to the concert was the&#13;
bad P.A. system not being able to&#13;
convey the lyrics of Reed's songs&#13;
adequately enough. His lyrics&#13;
would have shown how his body&#13;
motions were related to the&#13;
images. All in all, it was enough&#13;
to make you want to give up trick&#13;
or treating.&#13;
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Jaskiorceconteit Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
United council wins award&#13;
Two prop.osals for an over-all recognize facultv W W als for an over-all recognize fa on it v&#13;
plan to permit collective a udque. more&#13;
bargaining by faculty on wages, form of decision makfne for&#13;
3 h&#13;
^&#13;
e&#13;
„!.™ited »d its J3g. StoS&#13;
economic issues-without upsetting&#13;
traditional faculty control&#13;
of academic matters-were&#13;
awarded a total $1,500 in prizes&#13;
Friday by a judging panel of four&#13;
UW System Regents.&#13;
Dennis H. Blumer of the&#13;
University of Maryland and Neil&#13;
Bucklew of Central Michigan&#13;
University evenly split the&#13;
award.&#13;
Meanwhile, a $500 prize for the&#13;
best single idea also was equally&#13;
divided. Half was awarded to&#13;
Prof. Michael Bleicher, a&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
faculty union local leader who&#13;
proposed a method for preventing&#13;
faculty strikes as well as a&#13;
means of exempting individual&#13;
faculty from union membership&#13;
if collective bargaining comes to&#13;
the campus.&#13;
The United Council of&#13;
University of Wisconsin Student&#13;
Governments received the other&#13;
half of the award for a proposal&#13;
that students be included in&#13;
faculty-state collective&#13;
bargaining. Faculty and students&#13;
would negotiate first, before the&#13;
faculty negotiated with the state.&#13;
The supporting rationale is that&#13;
student fees and tuition would&#13;
finance 25 percent of any faculty&#13;
salary increases achieved in&#13;
collective bargaining.&#13;
Blumer is presently the&#13;
executive assistant to the&#13;
chancellor of the University of&#13;
Maryland and was formerly head&#13;
of the Academic Collective&#13;
Bargaining Information Service&#13;
in Washington, D.C. Bucklew is a&#13;
vice president of Central&#13;
Michigan University. Blumer&#13;
and Bucklew are considered&#13;
among the foremost experts on&#13;
the rising phenomena of&#13;
collective bargaining among&#13;
college and university faculty.&#13;
Each man submitted a separate&#13;
plan, but in the opinion of the&#13;
judges, the two were so similar&#13;
and complementary that&#13;
together they made a very well&#13;
developed proposal deserving the&#13;
prize for the most innovative.&#13;
Instead of calling for&#13;
traditional collective bargaining&#13;
on all issues on the university&#13;
scene, the Blumer and Bucklew&#13;
proposals limit bargaining to&#13;
economic issues and then&#13;
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true since faculty governance is&#13;
also non-adversary in nature and&#13;
»^&#13;
nS53ipn,"^&#13;
,0,he&#13;
th^sS!&#13;
eicher&#13;
'&#13;
who won ha,f&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
the $500 prize, is former chairman&#13;
uw-Madison campus&#13;
math department and currently&#13;
president of the United FacultyAmerican&#13;
Federation of&#13;
Teachers local on the Madison&#13;
campus. Bleicher's entry&#13;
represents his and not the United&#13;
Faculty's thinking. His basic idea&#13;
is to avoid strikes by requiring&#13;
r.u faculty put a Percentage&#13;
ot their salaries into an escrow&#13;
fund to be matched by an even&#13;
greater amount from the state&#13;
instead of stopping work in a&#13;
strike. Then, if the impasse&#13;
between the faculty and state&#13;
continued for too long a time,&#13;
there would be the possibility of&#13;
losing their dollars in escrow on a&#13;
schedule increasing with the&#13;
length of the impasse.&#13;
Bleicher's plan recognizes that&#13;
in a strike between the faculty of&#13;
a public university and the state,&#13;
neither of the two parties really&#13;
has a stake in the outcome akin to&#13;
the stake of the other affected&#13;
party-the students and the&#13;
taxpayers.&#13;
The student group which&#13;
shared the $500 prize is the United&#13;
Council of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments&#13;
which represents 110,000 students&#13;
in the 140,000 student UW System.&#13;
The proposal of the faculty&#13;
negotiating with the students&#13;
before negotiating with the state&#13;
is based, not only on the premise&#13;
that the students pay 25 percent&#13;
of any monies the teaching&#13;
faculty receive, but also that&#13;
three-sided bargaining-faculty,&#13;
state, student-is not realistic.&#13;
Hence, the United Council&#13;
proposal is directed towards a&#13;
two-stage, two-sided bargainingfaculty&#13;
and student; then faculty&#13;
and state.&#13;
The UW System Regents announced&#13;
the contest in July. They&#13;
indicated that they were&#13;
"seeking innovative" ideas from&#13;
within the American academic&#13;
community, as well as from&#13;
knowledgeable non-academics.&#13;
They wanted ideas which would&#13;
solve the real problems of&#13;
university faculty while doing as&#13;
much as possible to lessen or&#13;
avoid the adversary nature of&#13;
collective bargaining.&#13;
For the prizes, the Regents&#13;
used $2,000 given to them by The&#13;
Johnson Foundation of Racine,&#13;
Wis. to support research or&#13;
otherwise to explore the&#13;
ramifications of faculty collective&#13;
bargaining. They offered a&#13;
$1,500 a ward for the best single&#13;
idea.&#13;
The contest was conducted by&#13;
the UW System Regents in&#13;
connection with the work of a&#13;
special Task Force made up of&#13;
regents, legislators, faculty&#13;
leaders, labor leaders, industrialists&#13;
and students. The&#13;
Task Force is systematically&#13;
studying the subject.&#13;
In announcing the winners of&#13;
the contest, Regent John M.&#13;
Lavine, the Task Force chairman,&#13;
said the group was&#13;
"overwhelmed and very grateful&#13;
for the quantity and quality of the&#13;
entries received."&#13;
"There were 75 entries from&#13;
across the states. They ranged in&#13;
length from one to forty pages&#13;
and were submitted by private&#13;
citizens, lawyers who specialize&#13;
in industrial relations,&#13;
academics, students...In total&#13;
one set of all of the entries&#13;
weighed over six pounds."&#13;
Lavine emphasized that "the&#13;
choosing of the winners does not&#13;
indicate endorsement of their&#13;
ideas either by the UW Board of&#13;
Regents or the Regents' Task&#13;
Force on University Governance&#13;
and Collective Bargaining."&#13;
"Rather, while the four regents&#13;
who judged the contest believe&#13;
that these are innovative ideas&#13;
which could go a long way to&#13;
lessen adversary relations, the&#13;
purpose of the contest was to&#13;
generate for the Regent Task&#13;
Force all of the ideas from all of&#13;
the entries; the Task Force&#13;
received copies of each entry. It&#13;
is likely that in its work the Task&#13;
Force will use variations of many .&#13;
ideas found not only in the winning&#13;
entries, but also in many of&#13;
the other entries. Because of this,&#13;
everyone should understand that&#13;
while worthy of substantial merit&#13;
and consideration, the winning&#13;
entries are not endorsed and may&#13;
or may not be used in whole or in&#13;
part by the Task Force."&#13;
UW-P to host crime forum&#13;
Two nati onal ly-k now n&#13;
aut hor itie s on crime and&#13;
delinquency will keynote sessions&#13;
of a citizen conference on&#13;
criminal justice titled "Strantegies&#13;
to Reduce Crime" on&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 9, at Parkside.&#13;
Registration for the day-long&#13;
session beginning at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
can be made by contacting the&#13;
University Extension office at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Milton Rector, president of the&#13;
National Council on Crime and&#13;
Delinquency and a former&#13;
director of parole services in Los&#13;
Angeles, will keynote the morning&#13;
sessions.&#13;
Jerome Miller, advisor to the&#13;
Governor of Illinois on Juvenile&#13;
Justice and a former Commissioner&#13;
of Youth for the state&#13;
of Massachusetts, will keynote&#13;
afternoon sessions.&#13;
Following the keynote addresses,&#13;
conference participants&#13;
will attend workshops on community&#13;
crime prevention, law&#13;
enforcement, courts, corrections&#13;
and rehabilitation, chaired by&#13;
resource persons from various&#13;
community agencies. Morning&#13;
workshops will compare Racine&#13;
as a laboratory community to&#13;
national criminal justice standards&#13;
and goals. Afternoon&#13;
workshops will focus on citizen&#13;
involvement in reducing crime.&#13;
The conference is sponsored by&#13;
University Extension, and the&#13;
Racine Branch of the American&#13;
Association of University Women&#13;
in cooperation with Parkside, the&#13;
Joh nso n Fou nda tio n, Racine&#13;
Crime C o m m ission , Racine&#13;
Office of Urban Concern, Racine&#13;
Unified School District Departments&#13;
of Personnel and Guidance&#13;
and the Racine Bar Association,&#13;
Junior League, Lawyer's Wives&#13;
and League of Women Voters.&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday / Nov. 6, 1 9 7 4&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
Old friends,&#13;
Winter companions,&#13;
The old men&#13;
Lost in their overcoats,&#13;
Waiting for the sunset.&#13;
"Old Friends" by Paul Simon&#13;
HARRY AND TONTO&#13;
Searching for America and oneself is not the exculsive property of&#13;
the young. As long as we breathe and dream, our hands itch to grasp&#13;
the horizon.&#13;
In "Harry and Tonto" director-author Paul Mazursky introduces&#13;
Geritol to "Easy Rider", creating a modern allegory of man's&#13;
restlessness and ignorance. 72 year old Harrv (Art Carney) is the&#13;
geriatric variation to Every-man, proud, vital, and falsely selfconfident.&#13;
Evictedfrom his New York apartment, an elephant's&#13;
graveyard of brittle memories, Harry picks up his cat Tonto to search&#13;
for a new life.&#13;
The opening montage of old people pushed by traffic focuses Harry's&#13;
alienation. He is out of step with time, struggling to get the latest&#13;
edition of the Times. A former English teacher, Harry cannot "read"&#13;
the headlines. His neighborhood, like his body and spirit, is&#13;
deteriorating. He has been mugged four times; his home is being&#13;
replaced by a parking lot.&#13;
Harry's friend Jacob, a lonely, pathetic Marxist echoes the blind&#13;
desperation of old age. He insists that capitalism is the common&#13;
enemy of everything and "must be fought in the streets."&#13;
Harry symbolically takes his advice. He first travels to the streets of&#13;
the suburbs and moves in with his son's family. But Harry's intrusion&#13;
accelerates the family's disintergration. Getting up one night "to&#13;
relieve his old body", Harry is mistaken for a burgler by his pistoltotin'&#13;
son. Grandpa comes to dinner, but no one recognizes him.&#13;
••••/%e "Siat Sfek DAILY n f 194 &amp; 50&#13;
* Presents*&#13;
MOORS&#13;
CREEK&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
NOVEMBER 8th &amp; 9th&#13;
FREE ADMISSION WITH U . W. -P STUDENT I.D.&#13;
Harry follows the setting sun to Chicago, intending to visit his&#13;
daughter (Ellen Burstyn). But contemporary insensitivity frustrates&#13;
his life and journey. At the airport Tonto must be separated from&#13;
Harry for security clearnace. Harry takes the bus then, but neither&#13;
time nor Greyhound waits for Tonto to take a piss.&#13;
Harry buys a customized '55 Chevy "with no passing power" and&#13;
picks up Ginger, a 16 year old runaway and alter ego. There exists no&#13;
generation gap for them because both are fleeing unpleasant realtities&#13;
for effervesent fantasies. Ginger is escaping to a Colorado commune;&#13;
Harry retreats to his memories of old lovers.&#13;
Hequickly leaves Chicago (It's much colder here") for a transfer at&#13;
Monument Valley, Arizona. Too close to his final destination at&#13;
Hollwood-the last refuge for dreams and illusions-he detours and&#13;
thumbs a ride to Las Vegas. Picked up by a hooker, Harry gambles at&#13;
sex and craps. In jail, Harry loses his pragmatism and pride. A&#13;
medicine man, Chief Two Feathers (Chief Dan George) relieves&#13;
Harry's bursitis.&#13;
Harry loses his identity and Tonto in Hollywood. His son (Larry&#13;
Hagman) comments that Harry "looks like a Hollywood extra."&#13;
Ironically, both father and son scrape the bottom of the barrel: they're&#13;
broqe, dispossessed, and lonely.&#13;
Harry's odyssey comes full circle on a beach in Southern California.&#13;
He sits down to a game of c hess, a reference to Ingmar Bergman's&#13;
game with Death in "The Seventh Seal", but runs away from it to&#13;
chase an illusion of Tonto. Finally, Harry meets a boy building a large&#13;
fortress of sand castles, a mirror image of his own futile actions.&#13;
Harry peacefully smiles at the child (in himself) and at the sunset ( of&#13;
his life).&#13;
"Harry and Tonto" is a fresh interpretation of an old story-man&#13;
meets death. It is vibrant, poignant, and instructive.&#13;
However, Paul Mazursky is sometimes heavy-handed with the&#13;
symbolism and strained situations. Art Carney's great performance&#13;
often collapses under the weight of rhetoric which replaces feeling&#13;
with philosophy.&#13;
Concert Nov. 7&#13;
UWP symphony&#13;
Bach's Orchestral Suite No. 4 in&#13;
D Major.&#13;
Prof. Littrell, who joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in 1973, received&#13;
his bachelor's degree at Kansas&#13;
State University and his master's&#13;
degree at the University of&#13;
Texas-Austin.&#13;
He appeared as soloist with the&#13;
Topeka (Kans.) Symphony at 16,&#13;
won the Wichita Symphony's&#13;
Naftzger Prize in 1970 and was a&#13;
finalist in the Music Teachers&#13;
National Association Contest in&#13;
Chicago in 1971. He formerly was&#13;
assistant principal cellist with&#13;
the Austin Symphony and&#13;
currently plays in the Kenosha&#13;
and Racine Symphony Orchestras&#13;
and with the Parkside&#13;
Piano Trio and Parkside&#13;
Chamber Players.&#13;
Regents&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Symphony Orchestra&#13;
will present a free public concert&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 7,&#13;
in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. David Littrell will&#13;
conduct.&#13;
Mary Manulik, a Parkside&#13;
sophomore from Kenosha who is&#13;
majoring in paino and cello, will&#13;
be piano soloist with the orchestra&#13;
for Mozart's Concerto&#13;
No. 20 in D Minor, K 466. Miss&#13;
Manulik was the 1974 winner of&#13;
the Kenosha Symphony Youth&#13;
Auditions and is a member of t he&#13;
Kenosha orchestra's cello section.&#13;
She studies piano with&#13;
Stephen Swedish and cello with&#13;
Lttrell.&#13;
The Parkside orchestra also&#13;
has programmed Mendelssohn's&#13;
Overture to Ruy Bias and J.S&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, W isconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT POODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
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&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
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CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
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GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
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BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside for appropriate&#13;
consideration under the&#13;
interim guidelines on implementation&#13;
of 36.09(5) a dopted&#13;
by the board on Oct. 4, 1974."&#13;
In a discussion prior to the&#13;
board vote, Regent Pelisek cited&#13;
that "a full hearing on the&#13;
petition at this time would appear&#13;
to be a circumvention of our prior&#13;
determination that each unit&#13;
should do the upmost to implement&#13;
the letter and spirit of&#13;
section 36.09(5) at the local&#13;
level."&#13;
Regent Roy Kopp, Platteville,&#13;
further supported Pelisek's&#13;
motion by saying that "I can best&#13;
summarize my view in saying&#13;
that normally we exhaust our&#13;
remedy in the lower court before&#13;
we go to a higher court: There are&#13;
exceptions in the higher court in&#13;
unusual cases, but, clearly, this is&#13;
not a matter that should be&#13;
considered by the board until&#13;
every opportunity has been&#13;
exhausted on the Parkside&#13;
campus."&#13;
Regent Ed Hales, Racine, was&#13;
the only one who spoke in support&#13;
of the petition during the&#13;
discussion, citing that certain&#13;
"misunderstandings" of the&#13;
implementation bill on the local&#13;
level should be cleared up.&#13;
Following the Regents'&#13;
decision, members of PSGA and&#13;
Siefert expressed concern over&#13;
the petition ruling. Specifically, it&#13;
appeared that various members&#13;
of the board of Regents had not&#13;
obtained a copy of the petition,&#13;
nor its accompanying memo by&#13;
Pelisek.&#13;
Furthermore, during the&#13;
Regents' discussion, Pelisek&#13;
stated that "I advised him&#13;
(Siefert) on Monday that this&#13;
matter would be presented to the&#13;
Regents. I was hoping that&#13;
Siefert would indicate his side to&#13;
you."&#13;
In a telephone interview with&#13;
Siefert Monday, Siefert stated&#13;
that he had found out about the&#13;
Regents' meeting on Friday,&#13;
Nov. 1 at 1:00 p.m., by mail.&#13;
"Mr. Pelisek did not talk to me&#13;
at any time prior to the Regents'&#13;
meeting," said Siefert. "He&#13;
corresponded with me by mail in&#13;
a late letter dated Oct. 28, mailed&#13;
on Oct. 30 th according to its&#13;
postmark, and received on Nov. 1&#13;
in the afternoon."&#13;
In further questioning, Siefert&#13;
remarked that the Regents "are&#13;
not acting in good faith, quite&#13;
clearly." He added that "the&#13;
petition will be petitioned for&#13;
judicial review in the Circuit&#13;
Court of Dane County."&#13;
a#&#13;
v&#13;
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IET AIR FARE • FIRST CLASS TO DELUXE LODGING • WELCOME COCKTAILS&#13;
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to beat inflation.&#13;
The Tuesday Night Price Bonanza.&#13;
( 1.49 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
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$1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)&#13;
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• Feed a child in America ft* 49*&#13;
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* up-The seconds are on ns*&#13;
At Bonanza, you get free refills on all soft drinks, coffee, and ice tea.&#13;
Wll love it WU love It&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY &#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
There is a $1.00 charge for classified ads.&#13;
Just fill in this form and send it to: Ads will run for one week&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
only. Renewals can be made&#13;
by calling the Friday&#13;
preceding the next&#13;
publication.&#13;
NAME .&#13;
A n n R FC ; q DATF&#13;
r ITY PHONF N O&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before uub,ie„,„„&#13;
ssc&#13;
Student problem* «irPTj&#13;
Financial aid hearings&#13;
On N ovember 15th and 16th the&#13;
Student Advisory Committee of&#13;
the College Scholarship Service&#13;
(a panel of students from across&#13;
the country concerned with&#13;
student financial aid) will conduct&#13;
a series of public hearings&#13;
on financial aid. These hearings&#13;
will be held in the state capitol in&#13;
Madison. The two days of&#13;
hearings will, according to a&#13;
spokesman for the Committee,&#13;
"expose to the public problems&#13;
which students in the State of&#13;
Wisconsin have experienced in&#13;
learning about, applying for and&#13;
obtaining student financial aid."&#13;
The Student Advisory Committee&#13;
plans to hear testimony&#13;
from students attending both&#13;
public and private collegiate and&#13;
vocational institutions.&#13;
The Committee intends to&#13;
make a complete public record&#13;
of first hand student experiences&#13;
with financial aid in the State of&#13;
Wisconsin. Seth Brunner from&#13;
California, the chairman of the&#13;
nationwide group said, "institutions,&#13;
financial aid officers&#13;
and administrators have all had&#13;
many opportunities to describe&#13;
student problems, but we feel&#13;
that students haven't been&#13;
directly asked to describe their&#13;
own problesms. We intend to hear&#13;
students talk about student&#13;
problems."&#13;
Brunner went on to say that the&#13;
CSS Student Advisory Committee&#13;
intends to run similar public&#13;
hearings throughout the country&#13;
in a nationwide attempt to collect&#13;
first hand data on student&#13;
financial aid problems. The CSS,&#13;
Student Committee is particularly&#13;
interested in investigating&#13;
:&#13;
--the "expected family com&#13;
tribution" (a determination&#13;
made before any financial aid is&#13;
awarded). It has been widely&#13;
suggested that significant&#13;
discrepancies exist between what&#13;
the "expected" contribution is,&#13;
and what many families can&#13;
actually come up with in the&#13;
current era of inflation.&#13;
—the determination of an&#13;
"independent student" for obtaining&#13;
financial aid-^what&#13;
constitutes independence from&#13;
one's parents?&#13;
—have older students, nontraditional&#13;
students and veterans&#13;
been treated equitably under the&#13;
current financial aid practices?&#13;
—have student encountered&#13;
problems in learning about&#13;
available financial aid? Are the&#13;
current information services&#13;
adequate?&#13;
Students from the UW System,&#13;
the vocational schools and the&#13;
private institutions are encouraged&#13;
to present their experience&#13;
with financial aid in&#13;
Wisconsin. If you would like to&#13;
appear before this committee&#13;
please contact Peter Coye at 263-&#13;
3644 or 257-7505.&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
A World Premiere Movie&#13;
(about the eighth wonder of the world)&#13;
Acapulco Gold&#13;
by U o K ottke, t he F lying B urrito Brothers&#13;
Santana &amp; M any Others&#13;
Nee. 10,1974&#13;
$"|50&#13;
8 p.m&#13;
Student A ctivities B uilding&#13;
State I.D. required.&#13;
JON BLON&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., F RI. S AT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
NOV. G , 8,9, 10&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
said that usually a chancellor&#13;
must have at one time been a&#13;
professor, have a Ph.D., have&#13;
som e a d m i nis tra tiv e&#13;
background, and have the ability&#13;
to communicate to groups outside&#13;
the University.&#13;
Dearborn said, "I hope they&#13;
look for administrative ability&#13;
instead of the number of books&#13;
written."&#13;
Dearborn said he doesn't plan&#13;
on applying for the position as&#13;
chancellor since the job isn't in&#13;
his field and he probably wouldn't&#13;
qualify.&#13;
"I'm very sensitive to the&#13;
whole thing," Dearborn said.&#13;
"I'm one of t he last to remain of&#13;
the old administration and want&#13;
to continue what we started. I can&#13;
do best where I am."&#13;
Dearborn commented that he&#13;
hoped Otto Bauer, Acting&#13;
Chancellor, would apply for the&#13;
job. "I think highly of Bauer. I&#13;
want him to have as good a&#13;
chance as anybody else."&#13;
There would be advantages and&#13;
disadvantages of having the&#13;
chancellor chosen from within&#13;
Parkside, as well as from outside&#13;
of the institution, said Dearborn.&#13;
"Chancellor Wyllie always&#13;
wanted a good mix of people from&#13;
different places."&#13;
When questioned on the&#13;
possibility of changes in Parkside&#13;
being brought about by a new&#13;
FANTASTIC&#13;
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IN PROGRESS&#13;
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THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
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ORDER SERVICE&#13;
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QtlaA ^evicts Book/ties&#13;
chancellor, Dearborn said, "Any&#13;
chancellor places his mark on an&#13;
institution, particularly a new&#13;
one."&#13;
Bauer declined comment when&#13;
questioned on who possible&#13;
candidates for the position might&#13;
be, but said, "The SSC will be a&#13;
very confidential operation. They&#13;
probably won't announce the&#13;
names of the candidates during&#13;
the process. I probably won't&#13;
even be informed myself as to&#13;
who they are."&#13;
When asked if h e himself would&#13;
apply for the position as chancellor,&#13;
he said that it was inappropriate&#13;
for him to discuss that&#13;
at the present time and indicated&#13;
that he would have to wait until&#13;
the SSC was established and&#13;
certain guidelines set.&#13;
O&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
614-59th St.&#13;
658-3652&#13;
Racine&#13;
312-6th St.&#13;
632-5195 I&#13;
Most banks chain their&#13;
pens to the counters to&#13;
keep them from disappearing.&#13;
At First National we do it&#13;
to make sure there's&#13;
always one there for you!&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Ra cine&#13;
'• • • w -;-,- t,. OPOSH insu 'anct Corp&#13;
500 WIS. AVE. 633-8201 | &#13;
8 THE PARK SIDE RANG ER Wedn esda y, No v . 6, 1974&#13;
Cross&#13;
country&#13;
record&#13;
The Parkside cross country&#13;
team ended a successful Dual&#13;
Meet season here on Oct. 29 with 4&#13;
wins and 1 loss.&#13;
Carthage College captured the&#13;
meet with a team total of 46&#13;
points.Parkside took second with&#13;
54 p oints while Loras College of&#13;
Iowa finished third with 68 points.&#13;
Individually, Parkside's&#13;
Lucian Rosa placed first in the&#13;
five mile with a record-breaking&#13;
performance of 24 minutes and&#13;
40.7 seconds.&#13;
Wayne Rhody, also of&#13;
Parkside, placed third in the fine&#13;
mile with a time of 26 minutes&#13;
and 18 seconds.&#13;
Ticket&#13;
sales&#13;
begin&#13;
The basketball season is just&#13;
around the corner, with the&#13;
opening game scheduled for&#13;
Saturday evening, Nov. 30 with&#13;
UW-Whitewater.&#13;
There has been a change in&#13;
ticket sales this year with the&#13;
addition of a reserved seating&#13;
section. All tickets for the north&#13;
side of the gymnasium will be&#13;
sold on a reserved seat basis&#13;
only. The south side will be open&#13;
to general admission as was in&#13;
the past.&#13;
Reserved seat tickets will not&#13;
cost anymore, still $5.00 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
$10.00 for general public. Tickets&#13;
may be purchased at the information&#13;
desk and at the&#13;
physical education building office.&#13;
&#13;
RANGER HOCKEY TEAM&#13;
1974-75 HOME SCHEDULE&#13;
November&#13;
9 Sat.&#13;
16 Sat.&#13;
24 Sun.&#13;
30 Sat.&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Purdue&#13;
UW-Eau Claire&#13;
Nor the ast ern Illino is&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
4:30 PM&#13;
4:00 PM,&#13;
4:30 PM&#13;
December&#13;
7 Sat.&#13;
8 Sun.&#13;
13 Fri.&#13;
UW-La Crosse&#13;
Northern Illinois&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
4:00 PM&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
January&#13;
10 Fri.&#13;
12 Sun.&#13;
18 Sat.&#13;
19 Sun.&#13;
31 Fri.&#13;
Beloit&#13;
Lawrence&#13;
Lewis&#13;
St. Norbert&#13;
UW-Whitewater&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
4:00 PM&#13;
5:00 PM&#13;
4:00 PM&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
February&#13;
2 Sun.&#13;
7 Fri.&#13;
8 Sat.&#13;
Marquette&#13;
UW-Stevens Point&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical College&#13;
6:00 PM&#13;
5:30 PM&#13;
8:30 PM&#13;
March&#13;
8 Sat.&#13;
9 Sun.&#13;
Ripon&#13;
Northwestern University&#13;
4:30 PM&#13;
6:00 PM&#13;
Special Events for the month&#13;
Wed. Nov. 6 - Soccer vs. UW-GreenBay, 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun. Nov. 10 - Parkside Judo Tournament, 9:00 am-7:00 p.m.&#13;
Tues. Nov. 12 - Jackson Brown Concert, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sat. Nov. 23 - Ranger Invit. Swim Meet, 12 noon&#13;
Sat. Nov. 30 - Basketball vs. UW-Whitewater, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Campus Trap &amp; Skeet Tournament - Wed. evening, Oct. 30. Open to all&#13;
students, staff, faculty and employees of Parkside. Ask at information&#13;
desk for particulars or call L. Hein, 2162. Prizes and awards to winners!!!!&#13;
&#13;
Hockey season open&#13;
The Ranger ice hockey club&#13;
will open their pre-season this&#13;
Friday, Nov. 8, at 8:30 p.m., with&#13;
a home game against the Alumni.&#13;
It is in preparation for the&#13;
Rangers first season game&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 16, against&#13;
Purdue.&#13;
The Rangers this year will be&#13;
coached by Gary Cukla. Tom&#13;
Krimmel, last year's coach,&#13;
resigned.&#13;
Cukla, who had started playing&#13;
hockey many years ago at the&#13;
Polar Dome in Chicago, has since&#13;
gained experience playing and&#13;
coaching the Kenosha Flyers and&#13;
the Zion Jets.&#13;
Also, the Rangers this year will&#13;
be strenghtened with the addition&#13;
of eight new players. Three new&#13;
players that show much potential&#13;
are Bob Arneson, a goalie, John&#13;
Faust, playing defense and Jim&#13;
Hehls, a forward.&#13;
The Alumni will prove to be a&#13;
powerful oponent for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
Many of the Alumni are playing&#13;
semi-pro. Mike Broderick, who&#13;
played with the Rangers three&#13;
years ago, has since played with&#13;
the Milwaukee Admirals and the&#13;
Kenosha Flyers. Currently, he is&#13;
playing with the Zion Wings. He&#13;
will lead .the Alumni this Friday&#13;
against Parkside.&#13;
The Alumni will feature Mark&#13;
Tutlewski, Ron Eiffler, Tom&#13;
Krimmel, Bill Westerlund, and&#13;
the three Rosko brothers.&#13;
Drive&#13;
for RANGER&#13;
call 553-2295&#13;
£*noin(f tUe tfinedt&#13;
Ptyfa &amp; OiaUoH- fyoodi.&#13;
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r Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
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CROSS COUNTRY TOO!&#13;
20% OFF&#13;
WHEN THIS AD PRESENTED&#13;
, ^ ^ , NOVEMBER 7TH THRU 16TH&#13;
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WEEKEND SESSION.&#13;
THURS.9:15-11:15&#13;
FRL&amp; SAT. 9:30-11:30&#13;
1825 SYCAMORE AVENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53406&#13;
CALL 633-4493&#13;
Parkside A ctivities&#13;
Board presents:&#13;
9* %&#13;
TICKETS:&#13;
$4.00 U .W.-P students a dvance&#13;
$4.50 advance&#13;
$5.00 day of p erformance&#13;
with Special Guest&#13;
WENDT WALDHAH&#13;
UWParkside&#13;
PHY. ED. BUILDING&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Tues,Nov. 1 2&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE:&#13;
JJ T apes &amp; Records - Racine, K enosha&#13;
Beautiful D ay - Racine&#13;
Brandt's, R acine&#13;
One S weet D ream, K enosha&#13;
Inlftmation D esk, P arkside&#13;
SKY KING PRODUCTIONS </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 14, November 6, 1974</text>
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              <text>Probation and drop policy ready</text>
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              <text>Probation &amp; drop policy ready&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
A draft eliminating Parkside's&#13;
no-drop policy was submitted at&#13;
the Nov. 5 meeting of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee by&#13;
the sub-committee which has&#13;
been working on probation and&#13;
drop procedures for the past&#13;
month.&#13;
According to the one student&#13;
sub-committee member James&#13;
Smith, the draft fulfilled the&#13;
original intention of the subcommittee&#13;
which was "to help a&#13;
student on his way to not getting a&#13;
degree and unaware of it, to find&#13;
out about it."&#13;
At the present time, students&#13;
can continue on probation indefinitely&#13;
at Parkside, but&#13;
students not maintaining a twopoint&#13;
grade average (GPA) or&#13;
better are not able to graduate.&#13;
Under proposal, all students,&#13;
regardless of cumulative GPA's,&#13;
are sent Academic Warnings&#13;
when GPA's for any semester are&#13;
between 1.5 and 2.0.&#13;
This, warning is intended to&#13;
remind students of the need for&#13;
improved performance to&#13;
maintain the 2.0 or higher GPA&#13;
necessary for eventual&#13;
graduation.&#13;
The sub-committee's draft&#13;
states that "a student who has&#13;
received a warning should&#13;
consult an advisor and consider a&#13;
reduced course load."&#13;
The sub-committee took into&#13;
consideration the fact that there&#13;
are many part-time students at&#13;
Parkside carrying less than .15&#13;
Norwood named&#13;
Vice Chancellor&#13;
Eugene Norwood, Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society,&#13;
was named Acting Vice Chancellor&#13;
Monday, Nov. 11, by Acting&#13;
Chancellor Otto Bauer. The&#13;
appointment is effective immediately.&#13;
&#13;
Norwood, 48, will continue to&#13;
serve as Dean of the College,&#13;
which is the larger of Parkside's&#13;
two academic units.&#13;
In his letter of appointment to&#13;
Norwood, Bauer said, "In addition&#13;
to many other activities&#13;
associated with the office, I&#13;
would like your major objectives&#13;
to center on effective and fair&#13;
application of personnel policies&#13;
and procedures, careful review&#13;
and re-drafting of the long range&#13;
academic plan, and supervision&#13;
of undergraduate program&#13;
review.&#13;
"Your willingness to serve in&#13;
this capacity during this critical&#13;
period is appreciated greatly,"&#13;
Bauer continued.&#13;
Bauer, who previously was&#13;
Vice Chancellor, was named&#13;
Acting Chancellor by UW System&#13;
President John C. Weaver&#13;
following the death of Chancellor&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie Oct. 25.&#13;
Bauer said that his assistant as&#13;
Vice Chancellor, John Zarling,&#13;
associate professor of&#13;
engineering science, would assist&#13;
Norwood by supervising the&#13;
academic support services of&#13;
Computing Center, Learning&#13;
Center and Library, which had&#13;
reported to Bauer.&#13;
Also reporting through Norwood,&#13;
as they did through Bauer,&#13;
are the Dean of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry and the&#13;
Director of Athletics.&#13;
Eugene Norwood&#13;
The Assistant Chancellor of&#13;
Student Services and the&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty will&#13;
continue to report to Bauer, as&#13;
they did when he was Vice&#13;
Chancellor.&#13;
Directors and assistants who&#13;
reported to the late Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie will now report to Acting&#13;
Chancellor Bauer. Those who&#13;
reported to the Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Administration&#13;
will continue to do so.&#13;
Norwood was appointed Dean&#13;
of the College of Science and&#13;
Society Sept. 1,1971. The College&#13;
contains the academic divisions&#13;
of Science, Social Science,&#13;
Humanistic Studies and&#13;
Education.&#13;
He came to Parkside from UWMilwaukee,&#13;
where since 1969 he&#13;
had served as Associate Dean&#13;
and then Acting Dean of the UWM&#13;
Graduate School. Between 1967&#13;
and 1969 he was a professor and&#13;
chairman of Germanic Language&#13;
and Literature at the University&#13;
of Kansas.&#13;
will be removed from academic&#13;
probation.&#13;
Students on probation will be&#13;
dropped for one semester if their&#13;
next block of 15 credits earned&#13;
does not average 2.0 or better.&#13;
Students who are dropped for&#13;
one semester may be readmitted&#13;
after that time by requesting a&#13;
permit, to register from an&#13;
academic dean.&#13;
The purpose of requiring a&#13;
dean to permit readmission is to&#13;
"establish control" and to "get&#13;
the student at the entry point&#13;
immediately in touch with&#13;
counselors," according to Norwood.&#13;
He said that readmission is&#13;
automatic, but a student must&#13;
request it instead of just going&#13;
straight to a terminal and&#13;
registering.&#13;
The student is then placed on&#13;
Final Academic Probation and&#13;
will be dropped from the&#13;
university for two years if any&#13;
subsequent block of 15 credits&#13;
earned falls below a 2.0 GPA.&#13;
After two years, the student&#13;
must request readmission by&#13;
making a written application to&#13;
the appropriate committee&#13;
within CSS or SMI. The applicant&#13;
must present evidence that&#13;
previous academic problems&#13;
have been recently&#13;
with the university&#13;
discussed&#13;
counseling&#13;
credits a semester. Placing a&#13;
student on probation or dropping&#13;
a student would occur only after&#13;
completion of each block of 15&#13;
credits, regardless of how many&#13;
semesters it takes to complete&#13;
those credits.&#13;
Under the proposed plan,&#13;
Eugene Norwood, Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
(CSS) and sub-committee&#13;
member, said, "A student can&#13;
have two bad semesters before he&#13;
can be dropped, except, for first&#13;
semester freshmen with less than&#13;
a 1.0 GPA (for 15 credits), who&#13;
are dropped immediately (for&#13;
one semester)."&#13;
Freshmen receiving a GPA&#13;
between 1.0-1.5 for their first&#13;
fifteen credits are put on&#13;
probation.&#13;
The sub-committee recommends&#13;
that " a student on&#13;
probation who wishes to continue&#13;
college work is urged to seek&#13;
advice and counsel from the&#13;
Office of Student Affairs, the&#13;
office of the Associate Dean of&#13;
CSS or the Dean of S MI, or from&#13;
his major professor." There is&#13;
also an Academic Skills Program&#13;
which provides individualized&#13;
help for any student on probation&#13;
or with an Academic Warning.&#13;
When a cumulative GPA of 2.0&#13;
or better is reached, the student&#13;
service, other academic advisor&#13;
or with the Director of the&#13;
Academic Skills Program.&#13;
"The committee recommendations&#13;
will be sent to the&#13;
Associate Dean of CSS or the&#13;
designated official of SMI who&#13;
will issue a permit to register to&#13;
students whose requests have&#13;
been approved," the proposal&#13;
reads. "Denial of a readmission&#13;
request may be appealed directly&#13;
to the Dean of CSS or SMI, whose&#13;
decision is final."&#13;
An appeals procedure was also&#13;
written into the draft. The draft&#13;
stated that "Appeals should be&#13;
based on exceptional circumstances&#13;
beyond the control of&#13;
the student."&#13;
The period of dismissal may be&#13;
waived by making a&#13;
- written&#13;
request to the Associate Dean of&#13;
CSS or the designated official of&#13;
SMI. "The student's written&#13;
request must be accompanied by&#13;
a formal statement from either&#13;
the university counseling office&#13;
or other academic advisor, or&#13;
Director of Academic Skills&#13;
program as proof of consultation&#13;
and of serious effort on the part of&#13;
the student to assess and solve his&#13;
problems."&#13;
If the decision is negative, a&#13;
student may appeal to the apcontinued&#13;
on page 5&#13;
K The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
—Wednesday, November 13, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 15 —&#13;
Aff. Action report out&#13;
by Dan McDonald&#13;
Affirmative Action is being'&#13;
instituted at Parkside to implement&#13;
fair labor practices in&#13;
the hiring of university employees.&#13;
&#13;
Attorney Joseph Attwell, appointed&#13;
by the late Irvin Wyllie as&#13;
special assistant to the chancellor&#13;
for Affirmative Action, has&#13;
made public a report revealing&#13;
under-representation of&#13;
minorities and women in&#13;
Parkside's workforce.&#13;
According to Attwell,&#13;
minorities consist of little more&#13;
than six percent of university&#13;
personnel, while women&#13;
represent roughly twenty-seven&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Some bills unpaid&#13;
Financial trouble is the tune of&#13;
the times, and is no different at&#13;
the Child Care Center at the&#13;
Kenosha campus.&#13;
According to Marge Hall,&#13;
bookkeeper and treasurer, "We&#13;
have somehow been able to stay&#13;
in the black. But, because our&#13;
services are used and then&#13;
payment is made, we have run&#13;
into some problems."&#13;
"An example is the outstanding&#13;
bills totalling $477.50 for the&#13;
period ending October 25.&#13;
"This is not to say parents don't&#13;
pay but some pay rather late, and&#13;
this makes balancing the budget,&#13;
difficult. We do have some outstanding&#13;
accounts."&#13;
There are 3 outstanding accounts&#13;
from summer school&#13;
totaling $121.00. Two of the accounts&#13;
are students who may&#13;
have financial problems, and one&#13;
administrator.&#13;
Salaries range from $2.00 to&#13;
$2.50 per hour.&#13;
"If we run short on money, we&#13;
curtail some of our miscellaneous&#13;
items to another time.&#13;
"We did receive an $800.00&#13;
grant from Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee (CCC). Most of that is&#13;
gone because of purchases made&#13;
when we moved from the church&#13;
to Kenosha Campus."&#13;
Sherry Svatek, director of the&#13;
center, states: "People are not&#13;
aware we are a non-profit&#13;
organization not in any way&#13;
subsidized by the university.&#13;
"We have had in the past,&#13;
parents dropping off their child&#13;
with no registration and no&#13;
payment because they don't&#13;
understand our position in&#13;
relation to the university."&#13;
Another problem is the&#13;
January move to the Student&#13;
Activities Building. "We are&#13;
concerned with the move because&#13;
there are going to be a lot of&#13;
things we need and we simply&#13;
may not have the money to get&#13;
them."&#13;
Elaborating further, she&#13;
states: "We are now using&#13;
dividers provided by the&#13;
university but don't know if this&#13;
will continue. We don't knowabout&#13;
the janitorial service, and&#13;
we don't know about student&#13;
reaction.&#13;
Many things are up in the air at&#13;
the present time and we don't&#13;
know where we stand.&#13;
"To put it bluntly, almost all&#13;
our problems stem from money,&#13;
or rather the lack of it."&#13;
percent of the total.&#13;
While women are underrepresented&#13;
percentage-wise,&#13;
Attwell also pointed out that&#13;
three-fourths of the 124 women&#13;
employees are "clustered in&#13;
stereotyped, so-called 'female'&#13;
occupations - clerks and&#13;
typists."&#13;
In his report, Attwell produces&#13;
statistics to prove his claims.&#13;
Parkside's workforce, a total of&#13;
460 full-time employees, is&#13;
divided into three categories:&#13;
faculty, non-instructional, and&#13;
classified.&#13;
"There are 19 women on the&#13;
faculty out of 180 and that constitutes&#13;
an underrepresentation,"&#13;
writes Attwell&#13;
in the report.&#13;
Also out of that total "there are&#13;
10 minorities-2 Blacks, 6&#13;
Orientals and 2 SpanishAmericans.&#13;
There is an underrepresentation&#13;
of minoritiesparticularly&#13;
Blacks on the&#13;
faculty."&#13;
The "non-instructional staff"&#13;
consists of 90 employees: 39 officials&#13;
and managers and 51&#13;
professionals and specialists.&#13;
Of the 39 officials and&#13;
managers, two are women and&#13;
three are minority persons. Out&#13;
of the 51 professionals and&#13;
specialists, 15 are women and&#13;
three are minorities.&#13;
"Thus the non-instructional&#13;
staff as a whole shows underr.epresentation&#13;
of minoritiesthere&#13;
being a total of only six&#13;
minority persons out of a total 90.&#13;
Since there are only 15 women on&#13;
the non-instructional staff, there&#13;
is an under-utilization of women&#13;
in that area also."&#13;
In the "classified" staff, there&#13;
are 190 employees. Included are&#13;
87 women in civil service, but&#13;
Joseph Attwell&#13;
again Attwell points out that "78&#13;
are clustered in typical, so-called&#13;
female jobs. There are no women&#13;
managers, officials or skilled&#13;
craftsmen or semi-skilled&#13;
operators." However, "there are&#13;
six women (all white)&#13;
technicians out of nine."&#13;
Also in this catagory, "there&#13;
are nine Blacks, two SpanishAmericans&#13;
and one American&#13;
Indian, making a total of 12&#13;
minorities out of 190. There are&#13;
no minority officials and&#13;
managers nor specialists out of a&#13;
total of five managers, three&#13;
professionals and nine&#13;
technicians."&#13;
Attwell has already run into&#13;
problems in his attempt to&#13;
achieve Equal Employment&#13;
Opportunity standards.&#13;
Following investigations of&#13;
problem areas, he must decide&#13;
who is responsible for implementing&#13;
Affirmative Action in&#13;
that area.&#13;
If there is unequal balance in&#13;
the School of Modern Industry, he&#13;
continued on page 3 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, November 13, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Under any&#13;
'label,' it's&#13;
discrimination&#13;
Recently the Wisconsin Department of Industry&#13;
Labor and Human Relations saw fit to declare illegal&#13;
Wisconsin's preferential hiring program for women and&#13;
non-whites.&#13;
The Commission based its findings on the fact that this&#13;
law has caused preferential treatment which&#13;
discriminated against others. The specific case involved&#13;
a white male who was refused a position because of the&#13;
lack of women or non-whites in that position at the time.&#13;
Some state agencies have argued that there is no&#13;
alternative to limited recruitment as a means of attaining&#13;
better employment opportunities for women and&#13;
non-whites. We feel that such a policy is an attempt to&#13;
visit the sins of the fathers upon the sons. To refuse a&#13;
man a position and perhaps condemn him to the welfare&#13;
roles in order to correct the inequities in the job market&#13;
has no justification.&#13;
Some good beginnings have been made in correcting&#13;
the discriminatory policies of our ancestors (and a few&#13;
recalcitrant contemporaries). Only through the conmo&#13;
Uok.T °&#13;
f P°&#13;
McieS that a,low discrimination against&#13;
NO one; can we eliminate the structures in our society&#13;
which pass from generation to generation the fallacies&#13;
that one race or one sex is intrinsically superior.&#13;
Discrimination under any label, be it "separate but&#13;
equal or "Affirmative Action," only helps to continue a&#13;
practice which breeds the rationalization that&#13;
discrimination to achieve a valued end is a "good" while&#13;
discrimination in general is a "bad." Once we begin to&#13;
allow the idea to gain credence that in particular cases&#13;
discrimination is justifiable, we open the door to any&#13;
case of unequal treatment being justifiable.&#13;
We! call for the elimination of ALL discriminatory&#13;
practices in hopes that we can break the vicious cycle of&#13;
discrimination breeding discrimination and hate&#13;
breeding hate.&#13;
The ParksideThe&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independent&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
&gt; ud ents, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.'&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen, Dave Keller, Rita Ohm,&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
m&#13;
f0"-rotEHM?E1S&#13;
f&gt; kemo | y&#13;
NOW, IT'S OUR BALL!&#13;
•AND WE AIN'T G-OIN'A"&#13;
Marijuana cesspoolTo&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
In reply to your Nov. 6, 1974,&#13;
Point of View Column in the&#13;
Ranger; you claim that the pot&#13;
smoker should be just as stupid&#13;
as the alcoholic. First you say&#13;
that the alcoholic is dangerous to&#13;
the user and other surrounding&#13;
people. The author then goes on&#13;
to say that the pot smoker should&#13;
have the right to be as dangerous&#13;
as the alcoholic. If one asshole&#13;
jumps in the cesspool should the&#13;
other one jump in also? We have&#13;
the problem of alcoholics in our&#13;
hands; why cause another&#13;
potential problem? In this article&#13;
you also claimed that the alcoholic&#13;
waits to get another sip or&#13;
lest (sic) he suffers. According to&#13;
the author pot is safe yet he says&#13;
that the smoker can't wait untill&#13;
(sic) the next day that he can get&#13;
high! If pot was not made so&#13;
avialable (sic) it would be used&#13;
as a detterent (sic) to a beginning&#13;
potential smoker. Prohibition did&#13;
not work because so called&#13;
"gansters" capitalized on&#13;
producing booze. So legalize (sic)&#13;
dope would only cause more&#13;
problems. "Two wrongs don't&#13;
make a right."&#13;
If the author believes so&#13;
strongly in what he said, why&#13;
didn't he sign his name in the&#13;
Nov. 6 a rticle.&#13;
Charles R. Latus&#13;
Student&#13;
According to NORML&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I found the marijuana&#13;
legalization editorial of Nov. 6 for&#13;
the most part disgustingly&#13;
frivolous. According to figures&#13;
compiled by NORML (The&#13;
National Organization for the&#13;
Reform of Marijuana Laws),&#13;
enough people were arrested on&#13;
marijuana-related charges in&#13;
1973 to empty the city of Minneapolis&#13;
(about 500,000). Any&#13;
policy which disrupts so many&#13;
lives each year is not something&#13;
to joke about.&#13;
The main question in the&#13;
marijuana debate is whether the&#13;
dangers of marijuana usage&#13;
justify society's prohibition.&#13;
Many groups would say no (such&#13;
as the American Bar Association,&#13;
the American Medical&#13;
Association and the National&#13;
Council of Churches), but this&#13;
was not considered. Instead you&#13;
chose to ask whether the&#13;
"Prohibition" was effectively&#13;
stopping abuse of the drug. You&#13;
correctly deduced it was not, but&#13;
this alone is not reason enough to&#13;
legalize marijuana. What should&#13;
be considered is how the&#13;
prohibition affects those persons&#13;
who do not abuse the drug. Many&#13;
people use marijuana as a&#13;
"sociogen" (which could be&#13;
described as a non-essential&#13;
crutch) or as a tool which is used&#13;
to gain personal insight.&#13;
Marijuana use is not essential to&#13;
the everyday functioning of these&#13;
people, nor is it used to escape&#13;
reality; marijuana use becomes&#13;
a sometimes social act which&#13;
they feel helps them grow. This is&#13;
quite different from the abuser&#13;
for whom smoking becomes&#13;
antisocial and self-destructive.&#13;
It was also pointed out that we&#13;
Tenure in Chem. dept.&#13;
have nine million alcoholic* in&#13;
the US today. Alcoholics&#13;
sometimes die from the&#13;
deteriorating effect that alcohol&#13;
has on the body before they can&#13;
be treated. People that become&#13;
psychologically addicted to&#13;
marijuana tend to have only&#13;
minimal deterioration from the&#13;
effect of the drug (as was shown&#13;
in US Army studies on soldiers&#13;
who smoked the equivalent in&#13;
hashish of 200 joints per day).&#13;
Perhaps we should consider&#13;
marijuana as another aid in the&#13;
fight against alcoholism rather&#13;
than an additional addiction&#13;
problem.&#13;
I agree with the Ranger's stand&#13;
that marijuana should be&#13;
legalized, but I think that it is&#13;
important to consider some of the&#13;
other Pro-legalization reasons.&#13;
T. Speaker&#13;
Junior&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Each year a number of&#13;
teachers are considered for&#13;
tenure and this year some of my&#13;
former chemistry instructors are&#13;
being considered. This prompted&#13;
the following thoughts and&#13;
suggestions:&#13;
1) When enrolled in Dr&#13;
Knight's course, I observed that&#13;
at no time was a member of the&#13;
Executive Committee ever in&#13;
attendance at any of the lectures&#13;
or labs.&#13;
2) The most logical person to&#13;
evaluate a teacher's performance&#13;
would be a student&#13;
which the Executive Committee&#13;
does not have as a member nor&#13;
have they solicited a student's&#13;
opinion directly.&#13;
1 have the following suggestion&#13;
and will use the Chemistry&#13;
Discipline as an example but the&#13;
idea can be applied to all&#13;
Instead of (or in&#13;
addition to) using teacher&#13;
evaluation forms that were filled&#13;
no u l&#13;
Gu&#13;
d&#13;
°&#13;
f the course&#13;
- why&#13;
hsts of ih PaSt 3 years class lists Of the instructor being&#13;
considered (before Pe0p"e&#13;
dropped) and match up those&#13;
names with the students that&#13;
chemistry Th^ " maj0&#13;
'' in&#13;
enerrustry. Then send out a letter&#13;
to all matched names (nearly all&#13;
chemistry majors have had' Dr&#13;
Knight and-or Dr. Quass» ^&#13;
them to send in an evaluation'^&#13;
the instructor and how thev view&#13;
ns-her contribution (or lack of it &gt;&#13;
T°hXr k&#13;
,T&#13;
U'&#13;
dge&#13;
^of chemisl&#13;
I he point being that a c».,h&#13;
cannot always evaluate anin&#13;
structor immediately&#13;
completion of his her course hut&#13;
have a better idea alter ,hev&#13;
how it fits into the rest of the&#13;
major a year or two later. Also it&#13;
might be a bad idea to solicit&#13;
opinions from other science&#13;
majors whose names match the&#13;
lists to see if they could give an&#13;
evaluation also. Not only would&#13;
chemistry majors have a fair&#13;
evaluation of the instructor in&#13;
question, but they would also&#13;
know the state of the chemistry&#13;
department in general and could&#13;
see how retention or nonretention&#13;
would affect the entire&#13;
department.&#13;
I realize that it may take some&#13;
extra work to go over class lists&#13;
and declaration lists but when a&#13;
person's job is being considered,&#13;
no source of information should&#13;
ix&gt; overlooked.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Kenosha Senior &#13;
Affirmative Actioi&#13;
-continued from page !•&#13;
may contact Dean Moy or some&#13;
other administrator or personnel&#13;
director.&#13;
Said Attwell, "I found that&#13;
because of the system of committees&#13;
in the faculty and the&#13;
tenure system, that ascertaining&#13;
what professors had responsibility&#13;
for hiring and promotions&#13;
in salary was not so easy to&#13;
determine."&#13;
For that reason, a meeting was&#13;
held on July 17, 1974, during&#13;
which the objectives of the&#13;
Equal Employment Opportunity&#13;
Act of 1972 were explained.&#13;
Attending the meeting were&#13;
directors, personnel managers,&#13;
department chairpersons and&#13;
many other professors and administrators.&#13;
&#13;
There they were notified by&#13;
Attwell that "each and every&#13;
individual who in any way participated&#13;
in any of the processes&#13;
concerned with employment of&#13;
faculty, civil service employees&#13;
or administrative staff were&#13;
legally responsible under federal&#13;
and state laws for fully executing&#13;
principles of Affirmative Action&#13;
and Equal Employment Opportunities&#13;
(EEO)."&#13;
Attwell also pointed out that&#13;
"Chancellor Wyllie spoke out&#13;
very clearly in pointing out individual&#13;
responsibilities. He&#13;
stated that principles of Affirmative&#13;
Action would be&#13;
followed."&#13;
Presently, Attwell is forming a&#13;
staff that will consist of seven&#13;
appointees to represent the&#13;
campus community. Students&#13;
with at least two years of&#13;
university education are being&#13;
hired and trained as Interns in&#13;
Affirmative Action.&#13;
The campus workforce will be&#13;
monitored on a nearly daily&#13;
basis. Job vacancies, as they&#13;
occur, will be sent to the Vice&#13;
Chancellor.&#13;
At that point, the position&#13;
vacated will be reviewed through&#13;
consultation with the Affirmative&#13;
Action officer. Methods in&#13;
compliance with Affirmative&#13;
Action will be discussed before&#13;
the vacancy is filled.&#13;
AAIP to choose Fellows&#13;
by Terrie Caffery&#13;
The American Administration&#13;
Internship Program (AAIP) is&#13;
nearing its final stages for the&#13;
1975-76 class, in selecting&#13;
qualified "Fellows" for internship&#13;
work. Recommendations&#13;
have now been&#13;
forwarded to the American&#13;
Council on Education (ACE) for&#13;
review.&#13;
The chancellor can choose no&#13;
more than two candidates who he&#13;
forwards to ACE for review. ACE&#13;
must choose from over 200&#13;
candidates nominated from&#13;
educational institutions all over&#13;
the U.S. A maximum of 40 who&#13;
meet the requirements and prove&#13;
to be promising individuals will&#13;
be selected for internship.&#13;
By November 15, all credentials&#13;
must be received by the&#13;
ACE Review Council.&#13;
Chancellor selection&#13;
SSC procedures&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
In a Tuesday (Nov. 5) meeting&#13;
of the University Committee,&#13;
procedures were discussed for&#13;
the establishment of the Search&#13;
and Screen Committee (SSC)&#13;
which is the first step in hiring a&#13;
new chancellor.&#13;
The SSC is appointed by John&#13;
Weaver, president of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system,&#13;
and is responsible for screening&#13;
the applications for chancellor.&#13;
According to William Murin,&#13;
associate professor of political&#13;
science and chairperson of the&#13;
University Committee, there will&#13;
be two student positions, six&#13;
faculty positions, and one administrative&#13;
position on the SSC&#13;
if the procedure used is the same&#13;
as that employed on the&#13;
Milwaukee and Oshkosh campuses.&#13;
&#13;
Murin said that Parkside will&#13;
send Weaver two faculty and&#13;
student nominees for each&#13;
position on the committee.&#13;
A request for the University&#13;
Committee to select faculty&#13;
nominees for the SSC is expected&#13;
from Central Administration,&#13;
said Murin, which would mean&#13;
that the nominations would not go&#13;
through the office of Otto Bauer,&#13;
Acting Chancellor.&#13;
"We will recruit (faculty&#13;
nominees) very, very carefully,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
During a discussion regarding&#13;
qualifications for faculty&#13;
nominees, it was stated and&#13;
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generally agreed upon that one or&#13;
two of the nominees should have&#13;
had previous experience on a&#13;
search and screen committee,&#13;
that there should be a&#13;
representative of the University&#13;
Committee nominated, and that&#13;
the total number pf nominees&#13;
should reflect a broad area of&#13;
interests.&#13;
"One of the big questions is how&#13;
students should be nominated,"&#13;
said Murin. "We (the University&#13;
Committee) want to stay as far&#13;
away from that as possible."&#13;
In a later interview he said that&#13;
student nominations would&#13;
probably be coordinated through&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for student services&#13;
and, like faculty nominations,&#13;
would not pass through the office&#13;
of the acting chancellor.&#13;
The selection of a new chancellor&#13;
was also discussed in more&#13;
general terms during the&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Jarftes Shea, associate&#13;
professor of earth science, said,&#13;
"Otto (Bauer) is obviously going&#13;
to be considered for the job."&#13;
In a later discussion Murin&#13;
said, "It is increasingly&#13;
becoming University policy that&#13;
the chancellor will come from&#13;
outside the system. What I heard&#13;
is that the Regents won't&#13;
seriously consider a candidate&#13;
from inside the system."&#13;
Murin also said that "it would&#13;
be unreasonable to expect a new&#13;
chancellor to be chosen before&#13;
July 1."&#13;
PORTS&#13;
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ENTER&#13;
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Wednesday, November 13, 1974 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
A place to go when no one listens&#13;
Campus ombudsman&#13;
proposed for UW-P&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
A campus ombudsman is a mediator to help&#13;
students solve the problems resulting from a&#13;
bureaucratic education system by having one&#13;
centralized office where students can take complaints.&#13;
&#13;
In January 1973, Parkside's Faculty Rights and&#13;
Responsibilities Committee was asked by Orpheus&#13;
Johnson, then Chairperson of the University&#13;
Committee, to "prepare, for recommendation to the&#13;
benate, policies and procedures for the registration&#13;
consideration, and resolution of student grievances&#13;
against faculty members." Out of this grew the idea&#13;
of the ombudsman.&#13;
If tbe student did not "receive satisfaction&#13;
hrough dealing directly with the instructor or staff&#13;
member, or if the student deems it unwise or unworkable&#13;
to confront directly the instructor or staff&#13;
member, he is then urged to bring the matter to the&#13;
ombudsman."&#13;
East April, a report was submitted to the&#13;
Faculty Senate by the Faculty Rights and&#13;
Responsibilities Committee which contained the&#13;
above quote.&#13;
The report also explained the rationale behind the&#13;
ottice of campus ombudsman.&#13;
The primary objective of the campus ombudsman&#13;
is to help individuals resolve grievances&#13;
created by the institution," thereby adding to the&#13;
general academic well-being of the institution. "His&#13;
secondary goal is to reduce the number and degree&#13;
of student problems by detecting patterns of&#13;
complaints and recommending desirable changes&#13;
in policies and procedures."&#13;
The ombudsman is a mediator and does not have&#13;
any official power or authority in his own office.&#13;
The April report added, "He should not have&#13;
authority to take disciplinary action, reverse&#13;
decisions, or circumvent regulations or due&#13;
procedures. His power must lie in his prestige&#13;
persuasiveness, and persistence in stating his views&#13;
to persons involved in a grievance and, if necessary,&#13;
to their organizational superiors."&#13;
Examples of problems to be considered by an&#13;
ombudsman included grievances regarding&#13;
professional conduct, such as an instructor who is&#13;
chronically late for class or belittles students, and&#13;
grievances about unjust grading procedures, such&#13;
as an instructor who failed to indicate that class&#13;
attendance was the only criterion for the grade.&#13;
If the office of ombudsman is instituted at&#13;
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Parkside, specific problems that can be brought to&#13;
the ombudsman should be agreed upon beforehand,&#13;
said ombudsman Ralph Poblano (San Jose State&#13;
College in California) in an article on ombudsmanship.&#13;
Otherwise "conflicting expectations&#13;
on the part of administrators, faculty, staff and&#13;
students make the role vague and difficult."&#13;
The Faculty Senate voted last April to refer the&#13;
matter back to the committee. Since then, the&#13;
committee has done further work on specific&#13;
structures for student appeals.&#13;
Wayne Johnson, chairperson of the committee,&#13;
said at the last meeting on Nov. 6, "We're breaking&#13;
new ground. There is very little at any university&#13;
I've written to for appeal procedures for students."&#13;
David Beach, associate professor of Psychology&#13;
and new member of the committee, said that he&#13;
came from a campus where one administration was&#13;
m tavor of having an ombudsman but the office was&#13;
dead within a month when a new administration&#13;
came in.&#13;
Members of the committee were assigned to talk&#13;
to William Moy, Dean of the School of Modern Industry&#13;
and Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students.&#13;
The April report to the Senate described the office&#13;
of campus ombudsman as equivalent in prestige to&#13;
that of a high-level administrative position The&#13;
ombudsman would be selected from the ranks of&#13;
associate or full professors and voted on in an allcampus&#13;
election. The ombudsman should have&#13;
experience in teaching and advising and be highly&#13;
respected by students, colleagues and administration.&#13;
&#13;
Beach said, "The implications of having an&#13;
T.&#13;
budsman are not trivial." He also said that the&#13;
office would fall through if there were not enough ad&#13;
hoes to take over the ombudsman's teaching load&#13;
(which would have to be reduced by 1-3).&#13;
The ombudsman would also need a separate office&#13;
from his teaching office, Beach added. "If these&#13;
and other necessisties are not underwritten, this&#13;
may be a vacuous endeavor."&#13;
Feedback on the idea of the ombudsman is being&#13;
sought by the committee. The committee plans to&#13;
take the matter to the student government (PSGA)&#13;
and especially wants attention given to the ombudsman&#13;
concept in Ranger.&#13;
Any comments on the idea of t he ombudsman can&#13;
be directed to Wayne Johnson, acting chairperson&#13;
of the committee at ext. 2532 in CA 210.&#13;
The committee will meet again on Nov. 25.&#13;
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4 THE^PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday/ November 13, 19 74&#13;
W^nesday, November 13; Parkside Boxing Club meets today at 2:30&#13;
t&#13;
,&#13;
he B(&gt;xing-Wrestling room of the Phy Ed. Building. All persons are&#13;
welcome. For more information contact Richard Pomazal in 346&#13;
Greenquist Hall, (553-2343).&#13;
Wednesday, November 13:. Whiteskellar presents Virginia King&#13;
from 1-3 p.m. in the coffeehouse (Greenquist D-201). Admission is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
Student music recital beginning at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
Thursday, November 14: A meeting of the People For a Non-Sexist&#13;
Society will be held at 12:30 in CL D-128. The hows and whys of consciousness&#13;
raising will be discussed, and there will be a consciousness&#13;
raising session on sexuality.&#13;
Friday Number 15: Film, "Emperor of the North" sponsored by&#13;
PAB will be shown at 8 p.m. in the Student Activities Building. Admission&#13;
is $1. Parkside I.D. and proof of age are required&#13;
Saturday, November 16: Fifth Annual Wrestling Clinic will begin at&#13;
8:30 a.m. in the Phy. Ed. gymnasium. Registration fee is $1. For more&#13;
information, contact Coach Koch, 553-2267 or 553-2245.&#13;
Sunday, November 17: Mass at Newman'Center begins at 12:15&#13;
p.m., corner of County JR and E. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Piano Trio concert featuring Maria Mutchler, Stephen Swedish, and&#13;
David Littrell begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts Theater Admission&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Film, "Emperor of the North," starts at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB. Admission&#13;
is $1. Parkside I.D. and proof of age are required.&#13;
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Nov. 14-19 at UW-M &amp; UW-P&#13;
Milton conference&#13;
Scholars from throughout the&#13;
English-speaking world will&#13;
convene Nov. 14 through 19 for&#13;
the Milton Tercentenary Conferences&#13;
being sponsored by&#13;
Parkside, UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Marquette Univeristy to mark&#13;
the 300th anniversary of the death&#13;
of English poet and moralist John&#13;
Milton in 1674.&#13;
Collectively titled "The Great&#13;
Consult," the initial conference&#13;
sessions will be held in&#13;
Milwaukee with the concluding&#13;
sessions on Nov. 19 at Parkside.&#13;
All sessions are open to the public&#13;
as well as the invited scholars&#13;
from the U.S., Canada and Great&#13;
Britain.&#13;
"The main purpose of the&#13;
conferences is to serve as a&#13;
forum and discussion center for&#13;
the advancement of Milton&#13;
Studies—not only for specialized&#13;
scholarship but also for the&#13;
improvement of teaching&#13;
methods," according to the&#13;
organizers, "and with emphasis&#13;
on what will be significant for&#13;
undergraduate students,&#13;
graduate students and for the&#13;
general public."&#13;
The Milton Tercentenary is&#13;
also being marked by a number&#13;
of festivals in England and&#13;
special events at several other&#13;
U.S. universities, but in scope&#13;
and size the Wisconsin tercentennial&#13;
observance will be the&#13;
most comprehensive, its&#13;
organizers say. The state of&#13;
Wisconsin has long been a major&#13;
center for the study of Milton,&#13;
with a number of eminent Milton&#13;
scholars on the faculties of its&#13;
higher education institutions,&#13;
they add, and this has attracted&#13;
conference participants from&#13;
throughout the U.S. and abroad.&#13;
The conference organizers say&#13;
they feel Milton's work is particularly&#13;
relevant to today.&#13;
Credited with helping to overthrow&#13;
England's monarchy by&#13;
the power of h is pen, he defended&#13;
a free press and, in his masterpiece&#13;
"Paradise Lost," emphasized&#13;
that the root of all man's&#13;
evil is pride and that his great&#13;
need is religious humility.&#13;
The Parkside sessions of the&#13;
conference are jointly sponsored&#13;
by the Division of Humanistic&#13;
Studies, the Division of&#13;
Education and the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee. Andrew M.&#13;
McLean of the humanistic studies&#13;
faculty is among the conferences&#13;
organizers along with colleagues&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
The Parkside morning session&#13;
will begin at 10 a.m. and will&#13;
include papers by Joseph Anthony&#13;
Wittreich Jr., of UWMadison,&#13;
on "The Angel of the&#13;
Apocalypse": Blake's Idea of&#13;
Milton; Thomas W. Hayes&#13;
Baruch College of CUNY, 0ri&#13;
Milton and History; E.R&#13;
Gregory, University of Toledo, on&#13;
Milton and Clio: Muse of Fame&#13;
and Glory; and J. Max Patrick,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee, on Milton and&#13;
Women.&#13;
A 17th century musicale from l&#13;
to 1:45 p.m. by Frances Bedford,&#13;
UW-Parkside harpsichordist;&#13;
Lee Dougherty, soprano; and&#13;
Louise Austin, recorder, will&#13;
precede the afternoon session.&#13;
The afternoon session!&#13;
beginning at 2 p.m., will include&#13;
papers by John T. Shawcross of&#13;
CUNY, on Milton and 1674;&#13;
James H. Sims, University of&#13;
Oklahoma, on Milton and the&#13;
Bible as Literature; and Roger&#13;
H. Dundell, UW-Milwaukee, on&#13;
Teaching Milton. The papers will&#13;
be followed by a round-table&#13;
discussion on teaching Milton.&#13;
Morning sessions will be held in&#13;
Classroom Building Room 129,&#13;
the musicale in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater and&#13;
afternoon sessions in Classroom&#13;
Building Room D-189.&#13;
In conjunction with the conference,&#13;
the Parkside Library&#13;
will have an exhibit of Miltonic&#13;
and related books and the&#13;
Learning Center will feature&#13;
Milton Tercentenary listening&#13;
booths.&#13;
CCC allocates funds&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC) met Tuesday,&#13;
November 5, to consider over&#13;
$8000 in budget requests from&#13;
thirteen student organizations.&#13;
The committee disbursed $708&#13;
in base allocations, $1250 in advances&#13;
or loans, and $345 in&#13;
publicity funds, leaving the CCC&#13;
with a $68 slush fund.&#13;
Among the organizations&#13;
receiving the largest funds were:&#13;
the Parkside Players: $550,&#13;
AWOL (Action Within Our&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
Lifetime)! $440,1 PCFC (ParksidtT&#13;
Coalition Political Congress):&#13;
$290, The Poetry Forum: $350, Pi&#13;
Sigma Epsilon: $250, Lambda Chi&#13;
Alpha: $250 and People for a Nonsexist&#13;
Society: $350.&#13;
Other allocations were&#13;
awarded to the Parkside&#13;
Christian Fellowship, the International&#13;
Meditation Society,&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc.,&#13;
Kaleidoscope, and Students for&#13;
Better Government.&#13;
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(Compounds A nnually to 5.62%)&#13;
PASSBOOK&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
\ J&#13;
THRIK Cf lWKMUM I.OItTIIIVi:&#13;
I .ft. Parkside - Room 235. Tallenl Ha ll&#13;
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5200 Washington Ave .. Ra tine&#13;
Open: 6 a.m. Mon. thru Thurs.&#13;
x a.m. Sun.&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
30th Ave. &amp; Roosevelt Rd. &#13;
Wednesday, November 13, 197 4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Delay PSGA elections&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
PSGA elections will be postponed&#13;
until Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday of next week. This is&#13;
because of a poor turn-out: not of&#13;
voters, but candidates.&#13;
As of now, there are only six&#13;
petitions confirmed. According to&#13;
PSGA senator Mike Hahner, one&#13;
of the reasons for the small&#13;
number of candidates is the&#13;
requirement that petitions must&#13;
be signed by students who have&#13;
declared a major in the same&#13;
division as the candidate they are&#13;
signing for. Mistakes are made,&#13;
and the petition is not confirmed.&#13;
The other reason is student&#13;
apathy. Even if all petitions were&#13;
confirmed, there would only be&#13;
eleven total candidates.&#13;
There are 17 positions to be&#13;
filled: 8senate (one from each of&#13;
the seven divisions and one from&#13;
the undecided), 8 members for&#13;
the allocations committee, and&#13;
one for the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
With the delay of the election&#13;
there is still time for anyone&#13;
interested to submit a nomination&#13;
petition.&#13;
If there are still not enough&#13;
candidates, the PSGA constitution&#13;
calls for the President&#13;
and senate to make appointments&#13;
to the remaining positions&#13;
CHET ANDERSON, Candidate:&#13;
Allocations Committee&#13;
and Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
&#13;
The main problem in both of&#13;
the committees, according to&#13;
Anderson, is that "the student&#13;
body is not represented a lot of&#13;
the time."&#13;
His plan for better&#13;
representation includes "polling&#13;
the student body from time to&#13;
time " in order to achieve&#13;
greater student input.&#13;
Union plans revealed&#13;
He also added that "I'll be&#13;
representing the total student&#13;
body" and "I would like to get for&#13;
the students what's coming to&#13;
them."&#13;
ERIC BINGEN, candidate:&#13;
Allocations Committee and&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
According to Bingen, one of the&#13;
problems is that "students do not&#13;
know what happens to their&#13;
money," and that "not enough&#13;
money is going into student&#13;
organizations."&#13;
He believes that "student&#13;
representatives should oversee&#13;
the money."&#13;
"If elected, I hope to set up&#13;
tables around campus where we&#13;
can take care of grievances&#13;
which the CCC is responsible&#13;
for."&#13;
On the CCC, Bingen remarked&#13;
that "many students don't even&#13;
know it exists."&#13;
DOUG REDMOND Candidate:&#13;
Student groups&#13;
allocated space&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
When occupancy of the new&#13;
Student Union is transformed&#13;
from a dream into a reality, most&#13;
student organizations will be&#13;
headquartered on the upper two&#13;
floors of the building.&#13;
According to Tony Totero of the&#13;
Student Life ,Office,, .the third&#13;
floor will have accommodations&#13;
for approximately twenty&#13;
organizations.&#13;
This "club area," as it is&#13;
referred to in the preliminary&#13;
drawings, will include a series of&#13;
cubicles, each containing a desk,&#13;
chair and file cabinet. It will be&#13;
possible to lock these enclosures&#13;
to insure privacy of files and&#13;
records.&#13;
Within the same area will be a&#13;
general workroom in which&#13;
typewriters, work tables and&#13;
telephones will be made&#13;
available on a sharing system to&#13;
the organizations located in the&#13;
nearby enclosures.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will occupy private offices on the&#13;
fourth floor, near the poster&#13;
production room and the new&#13;
offices of Student Life.&#13;
Although a small first-aid&#13;
station will be established in the&#13;
Union, the main offices of Student&#13;
Health will be relocated in the&#13;
offices vacated by Student Life in&#13;
the LLC complex.&#13;
The Ranger will remain where&#13;
it is currently located, and expansion&#13;
into the office vacated by&#13;
Student Health is a possibility.&#13;
The other major student&#13;
organization slated to remain in&#13;
its current location is the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. (PSGA).&#13;
According to Senator Eric&#13;
Bingen, PSGA had hoped to&#13;
occupy offices in the new Union&#13;
and were disappointed to learn&#13;
that none had been assigned to&#13;
them.&#13;
Bingen claims that in the&#13;
financial, agreement between the&#13;
office of Housing and Urban&#13;
Development (HUD) and&#13;
Parkside, HUD had set down&#13;
guidelines stipulating that office&#13;
space must be made available to&#13;
student government.&#13;
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MEMBER OF- TH E FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION&#13;
Allocations Committee and&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
"I'd like to see student&#13;
organizations represented better&#13;
in the allocating of funds," said&#13;
Redmond. He also believes that&#13;
"the allocations Committee&#13;
should function independently of&#13;
student government."&#13;
"I'm in favor of a segregated&#13;
fees committee responsible in&#13;
making suggestions to the&#13;
Chancellor involving allocations&#13;
of student organization funds."&#13;
On the CCC, he added that&#13;
"I've been to several meetings .&#13;
and I'd like to see them run more&#13;
smoothly. If elected, I will have a&#13;
greater opportunity to make&#13;
suggestions and work with&#13;
them."&#13;
Prob. &amp; drop&#13;
continued from page I&#13;
propriate faculty committee&#13;
established in CSS and in SMI. A&#13;
student has the option to appear&#13;
in person on his-her own behalf.&#13;
The third and final appeal can&#13;
be made to the appropriate Dean&#13;
if the committee's decision is&#13;
negative. The Dean's decision is&#13;
final.&#13;
The student who is readmitted&#13;
on appeal will be placed on final&#13;
academic probation until his&#13;
cumulative GPA is 2.0 or above.&#13;
Committee members will ask&#13;
for feedback on the proposal in&#13;
their respective disciplines&#13;
before the next meeting on Nov.&#13;
12.&#13;
If the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee approves the&#13;
probation and drop procedures&#13;
draft, the matter could be placed&#13;
on the December agenda of the&#13;
Faculty Senate for discussion,&#13;
amending and final approval.&#13;
Smith wins at&#13;
Chicago art show&#13;
Moishe Smith, associate&#13;
professor of art at Parkside,&#13;
received a second place prize and&#13;
the M.A. Pfaelzer Bowers&#13;
Printing Ink Co. $250 purchase&#13;
prize for his print, "The Glory&#13;
That Was Rome," in the annual&#13;
print and drawing show of the&#13;
Artists Guild of Chicago, (AGC).&#13;
The show is on display in the AGC&#13;
Gallery, 54 Es Erie, Chicago,&#13;
through Nov. 15.&#13;
A Different&#13;
mil -3 1&#13;
) type of&#13;
\l /l&#13;
M Saturday Night&#13;
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The Players of UW-Parkside present&#13;
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8 P.M.&#13;
NOV. 21-22 -23-24&#13;
COMM ARTS THEATER&#13;
A DM I SSIO N: $ 2 Pub lic,&#13;
S 1 UW-P St u d e n t s/ St a f f.&#13;
T i c k e ts a t Info . Kios k &amp;&#13;
th e Do o r&#13;
1 Produced by special arrangement with Samuel French, Inc.&#13;
Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
OINO'S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
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SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES &#13;
6 THE PARKSI DE RANGER Wed nesd ay, N o vember 1 3 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
Parkside sponsors wrestling clinic&#13;
Parkside will sponsor its fifth&#13;
annual wrestling clinic Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 16, at the Physical&#13;
Education Building.&#13;
Registration begins at 8:30&#13;
a.m. There is a $1 fee for each&#13;
participant. Lunch will be&#13;
available at noon and each&#13;
participant will receive a complete&#13;
copy of clinic notes.&#13;
Six of the most vital areas in&#13;
wrestling will be covered and&#13;
each participant will be able to&#13;
spend an hour each on four areas&#13;
of his choice. Each session will&#13;
consist of approximately 50&#13;
percent instruction and 50 per0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
Most banks chain their&#13;
pens to the counters to&#13;
keep them from disappearing.&#13;
At First National we do it&#13;
to make sure there's&#13;
always one there for you!&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Bacine&#13;
cent application.&#13;
Instructors will include former&#13;
Parkside ail-American Ken&#13;
Martin, defending NAIA national&#13;
134 lb. champion Bill West, and&#13;
Parkside coach and clinic&#13;
director Jim Koch. Serving as&#13;
guest instructors will be former&#13;
NCAA champion Bill Harlow,&#13;
now coach at Mt. Prospect (111.)&#13;
High School; former UWMadison&#13;
NCAA champion Rick&#13;
Lawninger, now coaching at&#13;
Spring Green River Valley High&#13;
School; and Tom Adams, 1973&#13;
NAIA champion for Carthage and&#13;
now a teacher and coach at&#13;
McKinley Junior High School in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The six wrestling areas and&#13;
Dont let the price&#13;
of a college&#13;
education stop&#13;
you.&#13;
The price of a college education&#13;
is skyrocketing. The Air&#13;
Force has done something&#13;
about it. For the first time,&#13;
the Air Force ROTC Scholarships&#13;
include the 2-year&#13;
program, for men and women.&#13;
If you qualify, the Air Force&#13;
will pay for the remainder of&#13;
your college education. Not&#13;
only do AFROTC 2-year&#13;
scholarships cover full tuition,&#13;
reimbursement for textbooks,&#13;
lab and incidental fees, and&#13;
$100 a month, tax-free.&#13;
To cash in on all this apply&#13;
qualify, and enroll in the Air&#13;
Force ROTC at_&#13;
U-WU. Madison or Suporior. Wrlta: AFROTCAOCO,&#13;
1815 Univers'ly Ava., Madison. Wis.&#13;
53708.&#13;
It's a great way to finish your&#13;
college education in the money,&#13;
and build a future as an Air&#13;
Force officer.&#13;
make the most of it&#13;
L il I I&#13;
—rfL&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF DOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
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PAPER DACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
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BROWSERS W ELCOME&#13;
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658-3652 632-5195 M&#13;
their instructors are as follows:&#13;
Area 1: Leg Wrestling (Martin,&#13;
West); Area 2: Takedown&#13;
Counters and Set Ups&#13;
(Lawninger, Adams); Area 3:&#13;
Takedowns (Harlow); Area 4:&#13;
Escapes and Reversals (Martin,&#13;
West); Area 5: Breakdowns,&#13;
Rides and Pins (Lawninger,&#13;
Adams); Area 6: International&#13;
Style-with Application to High&#13;
School Style (Harlow).&#13;
The time schedule: 8:30-9:45&#13;
a.m.-registration and dressing;&#13;
9:45-10 a.m.-welcome and introductions;&#13;
10-11 a.m.-areas 1, 2&#13;
and 3; 11 a.m.-noon-areas 1, 2&#13;
and 3; noon-1:30-lunch break and&#13;
film; 1:30-2:30 p.m.-areas 4, 5&#13;
and 6; 2:30-3:30 p.m.-areas 4, 5&#13;
and 6; 3:30-4 p.m.-individual&#13;
help from clinic staff.&#13;
All participants are asked to&#13;
bring locks, towels and other&#13;
necessary equipment.&#13;
For information, contact the&#13;
clinic director, Jim Koch,&#13;
Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
An aerial view shows the Comm. Arts parking lot which will open on Monday, November 18. Cars&#13;
isp aying permits for the lot that is Closing across from the Classroom Building will be allowed to&#13;
park in this lot.&#13;
New lots to open&#13;
According to James Galbraith,&#13;
director of Planning and Construction,&#13;
the new Comm. Arts&#13;
parking lot will be open on&#13;
Monday Nov. 18 and the Union lot&#13;
will open on Sunday Dec. 1.&#13;
At the time that these open, the&#13;
parking lot across from the&#13;
Classroom Building will close,&#13;
said Walter Shirer, director of&#13;
Public Information.&#13;
He said that the parking permits&#13;
sold for the upper lot can be&#13;
used for the Comm. Arts lot and&#13;
the permits used for the two&#13;
bottom lots can be used for the&#13;
Union lot.&#13;
The hours of enforcement for&#13;
the new lots will be the same as&#13;
those for the old ones. They will&#13;
be open for general use after 7:30&#13;
p.m. and on weekends.&#13;
Trees and shrubbery will be&#13;
planted around the new parking&#13;
lots and on the interior islands.&#13;
Shirer said that "the attempt is to&#13;
make the lots as aesthetically&#13;
pleasing as a pile of asphalt can&#13;
be."&#13;
The new lots will each contain&#13;
about 10 new handicappe&#13;
spaces, 10 new visitors space&#13;
which will be equipped wit&#13;
parking meters, and 10 to 12 ne^&#13;
reserved spaces, said Shirer.&#13;
The permits for reserve&#13;
spaces, which may be purchase&#13;
by staff and students, are sellin&#13;
for $100 and are honored for a fit&#13;
year.&#13;
According to Shirer, ap&#13;
proximately 20 of these permit&#13;
have already been sold, some c&#13;
them purchased by students.&#13;
ANTIFREEZE SALE&#13;
BOTH TRIPS: JAN. 3-10, 1 975 FROM $264 COMPLETE&#13;
JET AIR FARE • FIRST CLASS TO DELUXE LODGING • WELCOME COCKTAILS&#13;
• GROUND TRANSFERS • TOUR ESCORT • GRATUITIES &amp; TAXES&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER. L LC 0-197 553-2294&#13;
I 500 W IS. AVE. 633-8201&#13;
TRY SPANKY'S&#13;
IN THE AFTERNOON! &#13;
Wedne sday, November 13, 197 4 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Cogers starting line-up set&#13;
'Sometimes they look so good&#13;
they scare me and other times&#13;
they get a little too loose or&#13;
careless," Parkside basketball&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens said in&#13;
analyzing his 1974-75 outfit that&#13;
may be one of the best in the&#13;
NAIA come next March.&#13;
"We're a little ahead of where I&#13;
had figured we'd be at this time,"&#13;
the veteran coach said after&#13;
nearly four weeks of drills, "but&#13;
then, we've got a veteran troup&#13;
together and we're not starting&#13;
from scratch with new players as&#13;
we have sometimes in the past."&#13;
Stephens has been happy with&#13;
the effort in the pre-season shown&#13;
by his two transfers from St.&#13;
Louis University, 6-10 Marshall&#13;
Hill and 6-4 Leartha Scott, both of&#13;
whom will become eligible for&#13;
play Jan. 8, 1975. And the only&#13;
freshman on the varsity unit, 5-10&#13;
guard Stevie King of Chicago&#13;
(Gordon Tech), has adapted&#13;
"quicker than I thought he&#13;
would," according to Stephens,&#13;
and may be the quickest man on&#13;
the squad.&#13;
"The new players have shown&#13;
good ability and we expect to get&#13;
help in every area from them,"&#13;
Stephens said. Scott, an outstanding&#13;
one-on-one player, can&#13;
go at either guard or forward and&#13;
will likely be used by Stephens as&#13;
a swing man depending on who&#13;
else is in the game at that time.&#13;
But Stephens' efforts now are&#13;
directed toward finding a starting&#13;
lineup for the Rangers' Nov.&#13;
30 opener here against UWWhitewater,&#13;
which downed the&#13;
Rangers twice last year.&#13;
Starters now would be 6-7&#13;
junior Bill Sobanski at center, 6-4&#13;
sophomore Mike Hanke and 6-9&#13;
junior Gary Cole at forwards.&#13;
Senior Chuck Chambliss (6-2)&#13;
and 'junior Malcolm Mahotie 16-3)&#13;
would start at the guard spots.&#13;
Also pressing for a starting&#13;
spot at forward is 6-7 Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic, who Stephens said&#13;
has matured greatly as a player&#13;
and will see plenty of action&#13;
during this season.&#13;
Expected to add depth for the&#13;
Rangers are 6-2 transfer guard&#13;
Elmer McCaskill, and two&#13;
seniors who saw a good deal of&#13;
action last year, forward Calvin&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; G reen Bav Rd.&#13;
Denson 6-2 and Roscoe Chambers&#13;
The Stephens squad this year&#13;
hough geared as always toward&#13;
good offensive play, WjH be&#13;
primarily an offensive club The&#13;
coach has enough flexibility with&#13;
his different players that he can&#13;
substitute freely, and, in so doing&#13;
change his offense. But it will be&#13;
geared toward Cole in the 11&#13;
games before Scott becomes&#13;
eligible and, after that, will&#13;
feature Scott and Cole as the&#13;
main guns.&#13;
"We've been a control club in&#13;
the past and that won't really&#13;
change that much," Stephens&#13;
said "We will place emphasis on&#13;
the break and we'll try to be&#13;
opportunistic and adjust our&#13;
offense to any changing&#13;
situations within a game.&#13;
"But I do think we have the&#13;
potential of being a fine defensive&#13;
club, ' he added. "We have good&#13;
overall size with some very quick&#13;
players. They've got some pretty&#13;
good instincts on what to do and&#13;
that's something a coach can't&#13;
really teach."&#13;
Stephens pointed out that the&#13;
team has "come together" with&#13;
kind of a "singleness of purpose."&#13;
While not entirely pleased with&#13;
the execution of his patterns&#13;
throughout the pre-season,&#13;
Stephens noted that the team is&#13;
working as a real unit.&#13;
The Rangers have also been&#13;
• FREE•&#13;
Quart of 7-up&#13;
or Cola in our&#13;
container with&#13;
each large&#13;
16" pizza.&#13;
MON., WED.,&#13;
THURS.&#13;
rcffe,&#13;
Jensens'&#13;
1&#13;
Fine F ood &amp; Spirits&#13;
8021 22nd Avenue&#13;
Ph 654-3581&#13;
"Home Of Pma Tech Pizza'&#13;
petflfiie ]&#13;
£§&gt;toee oppe&#13;
OPEN&#13;
Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 A.M. -&#13;
4 P.M.&#13;
Located on Concourse&#13;
between Library&#13;
^learning center &amp;&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
injury-free so far this fall,&#13;
Steohens reports. No one has&#13;
missed a day of practice&#13;
because of either illness or injury.&#13;
&#13;
The Rangers will first go into&#13;
action for the public on Thursday,&#13;
Nov. 21, when the Green-White&#13;
game is set for the Physical&#13;
Education Building at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The composition of the teams&#13;
hasn't yet been determined but&#13;
Stephens promises that they'll be&#13;
some interesting matchups for&#13;
Parkside fans.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
MUST SELL: 1964 American, 2 door&#13;
automatic, good condition. Call after 5 p.m.&#13;
859-2194.&#13;
FOR SALE: Scuba gear: tank, backpack,&#13;
wetsuit. All new equipment used only a few&#13;
times! Asking $175 or make me an offer.&#13;
Must sell. Call Dan, 658-8346.&#13;
FUTURE CPAs learn how to prepare for the&#13;
CPA Exam. Becker CPA Review Course.&#13;
Call collect Milwaukee 414 276-7271.&#13;
Wrestlers bombed&#13;
in intramural football&#13;
The intramural football&#13;
program held its championship&#13;
game Thursday, October 31,&#13;
between the Bombers and&#13;
Wrestlers. The game was won by&#13;
the Bombers by a 13-12 score.&#13;
The Bombers executed a drive&#13;
early in the game and scored with&#13;
a pass from Kenny Schultz to&#13;
Raul Medina; the conversion&#13;
attempt by Tom Rachel was&#13;
good.&#13;
With one play left in the first&#13;
half Schultz hit Scott Nelson in&#13;
the end zone for a 13-0 first-half&#13;
score.&#13;
The Wrestlers came out fired&#13;
up in the second half as Dean&#13;
Dehnert hit Kenny Martin and&#13;
Scott Hintz for touchdown scores&#13;
but fell short by one as their&#13;
conversion attempts failed.&#13;
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SKI PACKAGE 127&#13;
Skit—Boots—Poles—Bindings—Installation&#13;
BINDINGS 1 /3 OFF&#13;
Closeouts Models from Slalom, Marker,&#13;
Tyrolia and Look. Supply Limited.&#13;
g»ki auk Sports (Ehatft - K ENOSHA&#13;
5038 - 6th Ave., Phone 658-8515 &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, November 1 3 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
HHCHELDR'S II&#13;
5601-24 AVE. K ENOSHA&#13;
DOUBLE-BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Saturday&#13;
4:00-9:00 P.M.&#13;
UW-P hockey team wins&#13;
it 4 III 04 &lt;11(1&#13;
24 hours&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712-57 th street&#13;
6(58~help&#13;
Rosa sets&#13;
NAIA record&#13;
In the first 16:04 minutes of the&#13;
second period Keith Church and&#13;
Bentell each scored an unassisted&#13;
goal; then Church assisted&#13;
Bentell in another goal, changing&#13;
the tie score to 5-2.&#13;
At 17:08 Dave Bradshaw,&#13;
assisted by Gordie Bradshaw,&#13;
scored a goal for the Alumni. In a&#13;
minute and 13 seconds the score&#13;
was again tied at 5-5 for the&#13;
remainder of the second period.&#13;
The third period began with&#13;
two tie-breaking goals by&#13;
Alumnus Gordie Bradshaw.&#13;
The remainder of the game was&#13;
governed by Parkside as they&#13;
skated their way to victory.&#13;
This Friday the Rangers will&#13;
travel to Northern Illinois for&#13;
their first away game of the&#13;
season. On Saturday they face&#13;
Purdue who captured first place&#13;
over Indiana, Illinois and Northwestern&#13;
Universities in the Big&#13;
10 play-offs last season.&#13;
Having never met Purdue in&#13;
the history of Parkside ice&#13;
hockey, the Rangers will be wellprepared&#13;
and on guard for the&#13;
makings of a great game.&#13;
The game will be played at 4:30&#13;
p.m. at the Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Cross country places 2nd&#13;
3 F00SBALL TABLES&#13;
2 POOL TABLES&#13;
(CITY CHAMPS) M en &amp; Women&#13;
"Best Stereo S ound"&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Parkside finished third&#13;
Saturday in the NAIA District 14&#13;
Cross Country meet held at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Park.&#13;
In a record-breaking performance,&#13;
Lucian Rosa' placed&#13;
first with a time of 24:39 on the&#13;
five-mile course.&#13;
Chuck Dettman, also of&#13;
Parkside, placed fourth with a&#13;
record-breaking time of 25:16.&#13;
UW-LaCrosse captured the&#13;
meet with 36 p oints, UW-Stevens&#13;
Point placed second with 72 and&#13;
Parkside scored 80.&#13;
Plapino ac nna r\f tVio tnn Ihroo&#13;
teams, Parkside will be entering&#13;
the NAIA nationals in Salina&#13;
Kansas on Saturday, Nov. 16.&#13;
Wayne Rhody was 16th for the&#13;
Rangers, Joe Belanger 29th, Jim&#13;
DeVasquez 30th and Gary Priem&#13;
39th.&#13;
Coach&#13;
x Vic Godfrey felt they&#13;
had two great performances by&#13;
Rosa and Dettman, but feels that&#13;
Rhody, Belanger and DeVasquez&#13;
can run better.&#13;
He said they ran below what&#13;
was expected of them in this meet&#13;
and that for the nationals they'll&#13;
be running the way they're&#13;
capable of running.&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
"Its great to win," said Gary&#13;
Cukla, Parkside's new ice hockey&#13;
player-coach.&#13;
The team opened its season&#13;
with a 9-8 victory over the Alumni&#13;
team Friday night at the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Arena.&#13;
Steve Bentell, assisted by John&#13;
Faust, opened the Parkside&#13;
scoring at 3:15 in the first period.&#13;
Assisted by Terry Flatley, Mark&#13;
Tutlenski tallied a score for the&#13;
Alumni at 12:30.&#13;
Another goal for the Rangers&#13;
and the Alumni tied the score at&#13;
2-2 by the end of the first period.&#13;
finished third with 72 points.&#13;
Other competing schools were&#13;
Kegonsa Track Club of Madison,&#13;
the University of Chicago, UWMilwaukee&#13;
and Marquette.&#13;
In first place with a time of&#13;
29:33 was Parkside's Lucian&#13;
Rosa. He showed his fellow&#13;
contestants that they had* no&#13;
claim to triumph over his 6 mile&#13;
terrain.&#13;
Second place was taken by Pat&#13;
Mandera of UCTC "A" with a&#13;
time of 30:07. One second behind&#13;
Mandera was Dave Casellas of&#13;
St. Francis with a time of 30:08,&#13;
taking a close third.&#13;
Other Ranger runners were&#13;
Chuck Dettman 9th, Wayne&#13;
Rhody 16th, Jim Devasquez 18th,&#13;
Gary Priem 33rd, Joe Delanger&#13;
42nd, Gary Lance 52nd and Jim&#13;
Heiring 63rd.&#13;
* OPENING SOON *&#13;
The Smoke ' ouse&#13;
Lucian Rosa strides easily along with none of his rivals in sight to&#13;
win the five-mile race for Parkside in the Petrifying Springs cross&#13;
country meet last Saturday.&#13;
Parkside's cross country team&#13;
finished 2nd among 11 competing&#13;
teams in the U.S. Track and Field&#13;
Federation National and MidAmerican&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
Championships held here&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 2.&#13;
Capturing the meet with a team&#13;
total of 24 points was UCTC "A"&#13;
of Chicago. The Ranger couriers&#13;
collected a total of 68 points while&#13;
St. Francis of Joliet, Illinois&#13;
photo by Bonne Haas &#13;
^&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, November 13, 1974&#13;
"S&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Under any&#13;
'label,' It's&#13;
discrimination&#13;
Recently the Wisconsin Department of Industry,&#13;
Labor and Human Relations saw fit to declare illegal&#13;
Wisconsin's preferential hiring program for women and&#13;
non-whites.&#13;
The Commission based its findings on the fact that this&#13;
law has caused preferential treatment which&#13;
discriminated against others. The specific case involved&#13;
a white male who was refused a position because of the&#13;
lack of women or non-whites in that position at the time.&#13;
Some state agencies have argued that there is no&#13;
alternative to limited recruitment as a means of attaining&#13;
better employment opportunities for women and&#13;
non-whites. We feel that such a policy is an attempt to&#13;
visit the sins of the fathers upon the sons. To refuse a&#13;
man a position and perhaps condemn him to the welfare&#13;
roles in order to correct the inequities in the job market&#13;
has no justification.&#13;
Some good beginnings have been made in correcting&#13;
the discriminatory policies of our ancestors (and a few&#13;
recalcitrant contemporaries). Only through the continuation&#13;
of policies that allow discrimination against&#13;
NO ONE can we eliminate the structures in our society&#13;
which pass from generation to generation the fallacies&#13;
that one race or one sex is intrinsically superior...&#13;
Discrimination under any label, be it "separate but&#13;
equal" or "Affirmative Action," only helps to continue a&#13;
practice which breeds the rationalization ' that&#13;
discrimination to achieve a valued end is a "good" while&#13;
discrimination in general is a "bad." Once we begin to&#13;
allow the idea to gain credence that in particular cases&#13;
discrimination is justifiable, we open the door to any&#13;
case of unequal treatment being justifiable.&#13;
We call for the elimination of ALL discriminatory&#13;
practices in hopes that we can break the vicious cycle of&#13;
discrimination breeding discrimination and hate&#13;
breeding hate.&#13;
The ParksideThe&#13;
PARMIDE RANGER is a wholly independenl&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D&gt;94 LLC. U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
S won v&#13;
fc HE no&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen, Dave Keller, Rita Ohm&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
NOW, IT'S OUR BALL!&#13;
AND WE AIN'T G-OIN'A"&#13;
Marijuana cesspoolTo&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
In reply to your Nov. 6, 1974,&#13;
Point of View Column in the&#13;
Ranger; you claim that the pot&#13;
smoker should be just as stupid&#13;
as the alcoholic. First you say&#13;
that the alcoholic is dangerous to&#13;
the user and other surrounding&#13;
people. The author then goes on&#13;
to say that the pot smoker should&#13;
have the right to be as dangerous&#13;
as the alcoholic. If one asshole&#13;
jumps in the cesspool should the&#13;
other one jump in also? We have&#13;
the problem of alcoholics in our&#13;
hands; why cause another&#13;
potential problem? In this article&#13;
you also claimed that the alcoholic&#13;
waits to get another sip or&#13;
lest (sic) he suffers. According to&#13;
the author pot is safe yet he says&#13;
that the smoker can't wait untill&#13;
(sic) the next day that he can get&#13;
high! If pot was not made so&#13;
avialable (sic) it would be used&#13;
as a detterent (sic) to a beginning&#13;
potential smoker. Prohibition did&#13;
not work because so called&#13;
"gansters" capitalized on&#13;
producing booze. So legalize (sic)&#13;
dope would only cause more&#13;
problems. "Two wrongs don't&#13;
make a right."&#13;
If the author believes so&#13;
strongly in what he said, why&#13;
didn't he sign his name in the&#13;
Nov. 6 article.&#13;
Charles R. Latus&#13;
Student&#13;
According to NORML&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I found the marijuana&#13;
legalization editorial of Nov. 6 for&#13;
the most part disgustingly&#13;
frivolous. According to figures&#13;
compiled by NORML (The&#13;
National Organization for the&#13;
Reform of Marijuana Laws),&#13;
enough people were arrested on&#13;
marijuana-related charges in&#13;
1973 to empty the city of Minneapolis&#13;
(about 500,000). Any&#13;
policy which disrupts so many&#13;
lives each year is not something&#13;
to joke about.&#13;
The main question in the&#13;
marijuana debate is whether the&#13;
dangers of marijuana usage&#13;
justify society's prohibition.&#13;
Many groups would say no (such&#13;
as the American Bar Association,&#13;
the American Medical&#13;
Association and the National&#13;
Council of Churches), but this&#13;
was not considered. Instead you&#13;
chose to ask whether the&#13;
"Prohibition" was effectively&#13;
stopping abuse of the drug. You&#13;
correctly deduced it was not, but&#13;
this alone is not reason enough to&#13;
legalize marijuana. What should&#13;
be considered is how the&#13;
prohibition affects those persons&#13;
who do not abuse the drug. Many&#13;
people use marijuana as a&#13;
"sociogen" (which could be&#13;
described as a non-essential&#13;
crutch) or as a tool which is used&#13;
to gain personal insight.&#13;
Marijuana use is not essential to&#13;
the everyday functioning of these&#13;
people, nor is it used to escape&#13;
reality; marijuana use becomes&#13;
a sometimes social act which&#13;
they feel helps them grow. This is&#13;
quite different from the abuser&#13;
for whom smoking becomes&#13;
antisocial and self-destructive.&#13;
It was also pointed out that we&#13;
have nine million alcoholics in&#13;
the US today. Alcoholics&#13;
sometimes die from the&#13;
deteriorating effect that alcohol&#13;
has on the body before they can&#13;
be treated. People that become&#13;
psychologically addicted to&#13;
marijuana tend to have only&#13;
minimal deterioration from the&#13;
effect of the drug (as was shown&#13;
in US Army studies on soldiers&#13;
who smoked the equivalent in&#13;
hashish of 200 joints per day).&#13;
Perhaps we should consider&#13;
marijuana as another aid in the&#13;
fight against alcoholism rather&#13;
than an additional addiction&#13;
problem.&#13;
I agree with the Ranger's stand&#13;
that marijuana should be&#13;
legalized, but I think that it is&#13;
important to consider some of the&#13;
other Pro-legalization reasons.&#13;
T.Speaker&#13;
Junior&#13;
Tenure in Chem. dept.&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Each year a number of&#13;
teachers are considered for&#13;
tenure and this year some of my&#13;
former chemistry instructors are&#13;
being considered. This prompted&#13;
the following thoughts and&#13;
suggestions:&#13;
1) When enrolled in Dr.&#13;
Knight's course, I observed that&#13;
at no time was a member of the&#13;
Executive Committee ever in&#13;
attendance at any of the lectures&#13;
or labs.&#13;
2) The most logical person to&#13;
evaluate a teacher's performance&#13;
would be a student,&#13;
which the Executive Committee&#13;
does not have as a member nor&#13;
have they solicited a student's&#13;
opinion directly.&#13;
I have the following suggestion&#13;
and will use the -Chemistry&#13;
Discipline as an example but the&#13;
idea can be applied to all&#13;
disciplines. Instead of (or in&#13;
addition to) using teacher&#13;
evaluation forms that were filled&#13;
out at the end of the course why&#13;
not check the past 3 years class&#13;
lists of the instructor being&#13;
considered (before peopll&#13;
dropped) and match up those&#13;
names with the students that&#13;
have declared a major in&#13;
chemistry. Then send out a letter&#13;
to all matched names (nearly all&#13;
chemistry majors have had Dr&#13;
Kmght and-or Dr. Quass) asking&#13;
them to send in an evaluation of&#13;
the instructor and how they view&#13;
his-her contribution (or lack of it)&#13;
to their knowledge of chemistry&#13;
The point being that a student&#13;
cannot always evaluate an instructor&#13;
immediately upon&#13;
completion of his-her course, but&#13;
have a better idea after they see&#13;
how it fits into the rest of the&#13;
major a year or two later. Also it&#13;
might be a bad idea to solicit&#13;
opinions from other science&#13;
majors whose names match the&#13;
lists to see if they could give an&#13;
evaluation also. Not only would&#13;
chemistry majors have a fair&#13;
evaluation of the instructor in&#13;
question, but they would also&#13;
know the state of the chemistry&#13;
department in general and could&#13;
see how retention or nonretention&#13;
would affect the entire&#13;
department.&#13;
I realize that it may take some&#13;
extra work to go over class lists&#13;
and declaration lists but when a&#13;
person's job is being considered,&#13;
no source of information should&#13;
be overlooked.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Kenosha Senior </text>
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              <text>Two year drop cut to one</text>
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              <text>PAB removes reporter&#13;
Charges filed&#13;
HZ. The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 16&#13;
Two year drop cut to one&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee received feedback on&#13;
their probation and drop policy&#13;
draft and made revisions at their&#13;
Nov. 12 meeting.&#13;
Discussion centered around the&#13;
proposed two-year drop period&#13;
which the majority of the committee&#13;
members felt was too&#13;
strict.&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association was&#13;
given a copy of the draft, and&#13;
President Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
also felt two years was too strict.&#13;
Students are initially dropped&#13;
for one semester if, as first&#13;
semester freshmen, their grade&#13;
point average (GPA) for the first&#13;
15 credits is less than 1.0 or if,&#13;
while on probation, any subsequent&#13;
block of 15 credits falls&#13;
below a 2.0.&#13;
Students who are readmitted&#13;
are placed on Final Academic&#13;
Probation and are dropped for&#13;
two years if their GPA for any&#13;
subsequent block of 15 credits&#13;
falls below a 2.0.&#13;
John Zarling, assistant&#13;
professor of Engineering&#13;
Science, commented that the&#13;
chances are slimmer that a&#13;
student would come back after&#13;
two years rather than one,&#13;
because the person would get into&#13;
another mainstream of life.&#13;
John Rodgers, an academic&#13;
advisor, agreed that the job&#13;
market would absorb the student,&#13;
since this is an industrial area,&#13;
and he doubted that the student&#13;
would return after two years.&#13;
Committee members were&#13;
unsure whether a two-year drop&#13;
would give the student time to&#13;
grow up or would just force him&#13;
into the job market. At the end of&#13;
the meeting, the committee voted&#13;
to change the drop period to one&#13;
year.&#13;
The committee also discussed&#13;
whether a student should be&#13;
urged, as the draft now states, or&#13;
required to get assistance from&#13;
the Academic Skills Program,&#13;
university counseling office, or&#13;
an academic advisor.&#13;
Stella Gray, professor of&#13;
English, asked whether the&#13;
Academic Skills Program wants&#13;
those students who are forced to&#13;
seek help.&#13;
Zarling said that at least the&#13;
student would make initial&#13;
contact with the program and be&#13;
aware that it exists.&#13;
James Smith, a" student on the&#13;
committee, said that the student&#13;
is "salvageable early and you&#13;
must get the student in for help&#13;
while on probation."&#13;
Rodgers suggested that the&#13;
Office of Student Affairs could&#13;
act as "a more efficient&#13;
clearinghouse" since the&#13;
student's high school record,&#13;
rank and other facts are&#13;
available. The student could be&#13;
directed for help to the appropriate&#13;
office out of the five or&#13;
six available, such as tutoring or&#13;
Academic Skills. The advice&#13;
from the Student Affairs Office&#13;
could be forwarded to the&#13;
department that the student was&#13;
recommended to see.&#13;
Gray suggested a "registration&#13;
packet insert" which would state&#13;
that a student on probation must&#13;
contact the Office of Student&#13;
Affairs for an appointment before&#13;
completing registration.&#13;
Rodgers said a table could be&#13;
set up at registration with the&#13;
student's records so that the&#13;
appropriate appointments could&#13;
be made. Help would be offered&#13;
on courses and loads a student&#13;
could carry.&#13;
Wayne Johnson, chairperson of&#13;
the committee, suggested&#13;
checking with the academic&#13;
deans before any action is taken.&#13;
The committee has not yet&#13;
approved the draft and will meet&#13;
again on Nov. 21 for further&#13;
discussion. The final draft will be&#13;
brought before the Faculty&#13;
Senate for a vote in December.&#13;
by Gregory Hawkins&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
On October 7, 1974, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board's&#13;
(PAB's) Executive Board&#13;
removed from their meeting a&#13;
RANGER reporter while he was&#13;
attempting to cover this meeting.&#13;
This reporter was removed&#13;
because a portion of the meeting&#13;
was to be a closed session for the&#13;
purpose of discussing what was&#13;
termed "internal problems."&#13;
After the reporter informed the&#13;
chairperson of the meeting that&#13;
this removal from the meeting&#13;
was a potential violation of the&#13;
anti-secrecy law, the chairperson&#13;
insisted that the reporter remove&#13;
himself from the meeting. He left&#13;
immediately.&#13;
On October 8,1974 the Editor of&#13;
RANGER wrote a letter to&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie, claiming that&#13;
a "serious breach of state&#13;
statutes" had occurred during&#13;
this episode.&#13;
In responding to this complaint&#13;
for the Chancellor, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services&#13;
Allen Dearborn stated that it was&#13;
the contention of the PAB's advisor&#13;
that the closed session was&#13;
for personnel matters, and that if&#13;
further follow-up of the situation&#13;
was desired, RANGER should&#13;
put their interpretations of this&#13;
situation in writing.&#13;
A letter explaining the specific&#13;
portions of the anti-secrecy law&#13;
that the RANGER felt were&#13;
violated was written and sent to&#13;
the parties concerned on October&#13;
25.&#13;
In this letter, three possible&#13;
violations of Chapter 297&#13;
Wisconsin Statutes, 66.77, and in&#13;
particular in section five (5),&#13;
were discussed.&#13;
In response to these specific&#13;
complaints, Allen Dearborn&#13;
again contacted RANGER, and&#13;
stated that he had asked the&#13;
advisor of the PAB to initiate a&#13;
meeting of representatives of the&#13;
two organizations involved, "in&#13;
order that collectively you can&#13;
reach a satisfactory resolution to&#13;
your request."&#13;
On November 8, RANGER&#13;
initiated the meeting with PAB's&#13;
advisor and after some time&#13;
arrived at a conclusion to this&#13;
situation that required: (1) a&#13;
statement of admission that there&#13;
was a failure to comply with the&#13;
law, (2) an apology, (3) a&#13;
statement of policy to insure that&#13;
this sort of situation would not, by&#13;
accident, reoccur, and finally, (4)&#13;
a promise to the effect that the&#13;
policy outlined in number three&#13;
would be followed, and that the&#13;
situation would not occur again.&#13;
This statement was to be sent to&#13;
the RANGER office after it was&#13;
drafted.&#13;
On November 14, RANGER&#13;
again initiated contact with PAB&#13;
to find out if the requested&#13;
memorandum was being drafted.&#13;
RANGER at this point was informed&#13;
that PAB would get to&#13;
this matter in "their good time."&#13;
Immediately scheduling another&#13;
conference with PAB's advisor,&#13;
RANGER was informed that the&#13;
agreement reached the week&#13;
before was not going to be&#13;
followed, "as we don't feel that&#13;
we've done anything wrong."&#13;
The next day RANGER&#13;
continued on page 6 rhe story of a well-rounded musician&#13;
Bach, Brubeck and the Beatles&#13;
by Dan McDonald&#13;
Resting on the plywood-surfaced stage is a threewheeled&#13;
object resembling a piano. Unlike other&#13;
three-wheeled pianos, this particular instrument&#13;
has its shortcomings. It might be compared to a&#13;
Cadillac that had been waxed with someone's dirty&#13;
feet. And whoever did the wax job completely&#13;
overlooked the buffing.&#13;
People file into the theater, seating themselves&#13;
largely on the far side of the auditorium in order to&#13;
have the instrument's keys in good view.&#13;
When most are settled, the lights are dimmed.&#13;
Seconds later, a tuxedo-clad man appears on stage.&#13;
Meekly bowing to a light applause, he seats himself&#13;
before the ill-kept piano, creating a contrast that&#13;
would embarrass any good stage manager.&#13;
With great concentration, the musician studies&#13;
the keyboard for a moment. Then, by the touch of a&#13;
finger, he begins a whole new story for the gloomylooking&#13;
instrument. Suddenly, through the hands of&#13;
Stephen Swedish, the mood has been brightened.&#13;
The music of Chopin comes alive.&#13;
Such is the magic of an excellent musician.&#13;
Swedish carried his audience through thoughts of&#13;
passion, sadness, cheerfulness and many other&#13;
emotions in a matter of an hour. As one witness&#13;
commented, "He lets you see how the piano can&#13;
really be played."&#13;
Swedish began improvising on the piano when he&#13;
was six years old. Noticing this, the "stern hand" of&#13;
his father decided it was time for lessons, so the&#13;
young man was sent to a teacher in Milwaukee who&#13;
had previously been Liberace's instructor. .&#13;
The young Swedish enjoyed his new life. In a&#13;
matter of five or six years, he was doing public&#13;
recitals. By the time he graduated from high school,&#13;
he was already an accomplished musician.&#13;
He was offered recording contracts and had been&#13;
doing concert tours for quite some time, but instead&#13;
of continuing along that road, he chose to attend the&#13;
University of Indiana, considered the biggest and&#13;
possibly the best school of music in the country. And&#13;
so on.&#13;
So much for history. Swedish is as bored with it as&#13;
anyone else. He'd rather talk about Bach, Brubeck&#13;
or the Beatles.&#13;
Being a good musician is one great accomplishment.&#13;
Being well-rounded is another.&#13;
Stephen Swedish is both. He can knowledgeablv&#13;
discuss classical, jazz, rock, just about, anything&#13;
Stephen Swedish&#13;
you're into.&#13;
One of his favorite bands is Pink Floyd; he calls&#13;
them "some of the most creative artists in modern&#13;
music. On the other hand, he is currently&#13;
preparing to do a concert at Milwaukee's Performing&#13;
Arts Center featuring the ragtime sounds&#13;
of Scott Joplin. Then, a few days later, he'll do the&#13;
piano work in a Brahms Trio. Who knows what&#13;
follows?&#13;
Swedish is also an instructor at Parkside. In spite&#13;
of his love for public performances, teaching is at&#13;
the top of his list. Formerly, he'd been director of&#13;
chamber music at Texas Tech. a much larger and&#13;
highly-rated school. So why come to Parkside?&#13;
There are a number of reasons. Says Swedish,&#13;
"the money is good, I love the area, and I was told&#13;
I'd have the flexibility and freedom to do what I&#13;
thought best for the music department here. I'm&#13;
also allowed to do public performances. Many&#13;
universities look down on the idea of faculty&#13;
members doing concerts during semester periods."&#13;
Whenever possible, Swedish combines his&#13;
teaching with his public tours. "I like to perform&#13;
works that I'm currently teaching to my students. It&#13;
allows them to better identify with the piece by&#13;
watching and listening to it at a live performance."&#13;
Considering teaching the most important part of&#13;
his Parkside life, Swedish says, "If I can make&#13;
someone curious enough to listen to and learn to&#13;
enjoy some kind of music, I feel great satisfaction. I&#13;
also would like to do something to raise the standard&#13;
of artistic performance at Parkside."&#13;
One of the classes Swedish teaches is Music&#13;
Appreciation. A survey course, it covers all types of&#13;
music starting from the year 900 and ending with&#13;
the present. Though his favorite period is the 19th&#13;
Century (Beethoven, Chopin, Haydn, and so on), he&#13;
has great respect for the 20th Century eras of jazz&#13;
and rock.&#13;
Swedish predicts: "One of the most important&#13;
periods of 20th Century music will be the rock era. I&#13;
think jazz, classical and rock are coming together.&#13;
For that, the Beatles may take responsibility. When&#13;
they came out of England, many people thought&#13;
they were just four scrawny kids who couldn't carry&#13;
a tune, but they have written some music that is&#13;
unbelieveably good."&#13;
Whichever way the musical trend moves, Swedish&#13;
encourages people to move with it and become&#13;
interested and active. When asked it if was&#13;
necessary to start at an early age to become a good&#13;
musician, Swedish replied, "There's a lot of talent&#13;
around that isn't being used. If you're 22 or over 50,&#13;
you're at a good age to start playing music. If&#13;
someone 22 years old thought it was too late to&#13;
learn, I'd tell them they were crazy. We have introductory&#13;
courses at Parkside that offer the opportunity&#13;
to learn any instrument desired. I'd encourage&#13;
anyone with any interest at all to give it a&#13;
try."&#13;
While it's never too late, it's never too early for&#13;
some people, either. Swedish has a one-year-old&#13;
daughter who already insists on "banging on the&#13;
keys whenever she can." Who knows what she'll&#13;
achieve by the time she graduates from high.school.&#13;
And, to avoid a humiliating thought, if a one-yearold&#13;
kid can do it. so can we, right? &#13;
2 THE PAR K SIDE R ANGER W e dn e s da y , N o vem b e r 2 0 , 1974&#13;
•Editorial/OpinionNo&#13;
one&#13;
is above&#13;
the law&#13;
Chapter 297 Wisconsin Statutes 66.77 section (1) states&#13;
that:&#13;
''In recognition of the fact that a representative&#13;
government of the American type is&#13;
dependent upon an informed electorate, it is&#13;
declared to be the policy of this state that the&#13;
public is entitled to the fullest and most complete&#13;
information regarding the affairs of government&#13;
as is compatible with the conduct of governmental&#13;
affairs and the transaction of aovernmental&#13;
business."&#13;
The Open Meeting Law affects not only the State&#13;
Government, but County and Village Boards, City&#13;
Councils, and the University. This law applies directly&#13;
to any agency which receives funds from the state&#13;
treasury.&#13;
There are eight reasons that are considered cause for&#13;
an organization to convene in closed session under this&#13;
law, and no other reasons legally warrant a closed&#13;
meeting. Meetings that are held in violation of this law&#13;
are voidable, and there are specified punishments, not&#13;
only to the organization, but to the individual participants&#13;
involved in the violation, provided by this&#13;
statute.&#13;
At Parkside there have been potentially illegal&#13;
situations that have arisen as a result of this law and&#13;
there have been violations. One problem which has&#13;
arisen is the form of the announcement used to publicize&#13;
meetings of the executive committees in the Division of&#13;
Science. These meetings are closed sessions, which is&#13;
normal procedure.&#13;
Any committee dealing with personnel matters, under&#13;
sub-sections (b) or (e) of section (4) of t his law, has the&#13;
prerogative of c onvening in closed session. All th at has&#13;
to be done is to announce the "general nature of the&#13;
material to be discussed" in the meeting announcement.&#13;
The problem arises when one considers the violation&#13;
of a person's right to keep any potentially damaging&#13;
information from being disclosed about his or her&#13;
situation in the University, and yet follow the guidelines&#13;
set forth in the law. It is to the credit of this administration&#13;
that the situation in the Science Division&#13;
was, when questioned, corrected without discord and&#13;
with due haste.&#13;
On the other hand, there are organizations on campus&#13;
that feel they may be immune from the effects of this&#13;
law, and it may come as a surprise to them when they&#13;
discover that it is the policy of this newspaper to&#13;
this law, and to report any and all violations that cannot&#13;
be handled from within the University. This law may or&#13;
may not have been intended to affect this University,&#13;
but at this time the question is moot. The law is in effect&#13;
and will be followed.&#13;
Editor's Note: On Friday, November 15, RANGER filed&#13;
a formal complaint with the Kenosha County District&#13;
Attorney. The action concerns certain events which&#13;
took place on October 7, 1974, at a Parkside Activities&#13;
Board Meeting.&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Arthur will b e back...God willing&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On the chance that I still have&#13;
some friends at Parkside who&#13;
might be interested in knowing&#13;
where I am and what I am doing,&#13;
I'll write and tell you about my&#13;
plans for the immediate future.&#13;
Shortly after Thanksgiving my&#13;
dear wife Ruth and I will leave&#13;
for Rhodesia. Our plans are to be&#13;
in that part of the world for about&#13;
three months ... God willing.&#13;
Why Rhodesia? Well, because&#13;
we have a life-long friend named&#13;
Lawrence Hautz living near&#13;
Salisbury. Larry and I grew up in&#13;
the same neighborhood on the&#13;
south side of Milwaukee over 60&#13;
years ago. We went to the same&#13;
high school (Bay View High) and&#13;
went through Scouting together.&#13;
After fumbling attempts at&#13;
college I went into Scouting&#13;
professionally and Larry had a&#13;
successful business career in&#13;
Milwaukee. About 20 years ago&#13;
Larry and his wife Carol decided&#13;
to serve God by becoming&#13;
Pioneers for the Baha'i World&#13;
Faith. They sold their prospering&#13;
insurance agency and their&#13;
beautiful home on North Lake&#13;
Drive in Milwaukee and moved to&#13;
Rhodesia. (We Methodists call&#13;
sucfypeople "Missionaries".)&#13;
Larry and Carol (she died in&#13;
1971) used their resources to&#13;
begin a new life in Rhodesia.&#13;
They bought some acreage about&#13;
14 kilometers outside of&#13;
Salisbury. There they built the&#13;
first American-type motel on the&#13;
long road to Victoria Falls. And&#13;
they started a school for black&#13;
children. It's called The&#13;
Salisbury Motel School because&#13;
the motel supports the school.&#13;
Ruth and I will spend part of our&#13;
time helping there. What does a&#13;
history major teach children who&#13;
are only a few steps away from a&#13;
tribal environment? Love will&#13;
point the way.&#13;
As young men Larry and I&#13;
started out to change the world.&#13;
But that's easier said than done.&#13;
Experience insisted that we scale&#13;
our goals down to a manageable&#13;
size by working to the best of our&#13;
ability on the problems nearest at&#13;
hand... beginning with ourselves.&#13;
Larry has succeeded in that&#13;
respect far better than I. With&#13;
unstinting dedication he has&#13;
planted orchards, made a lake by&#13;
darning up a meandering stream,&#13;
established a snake "farm" from&#13;
which venom for medicinal use is&#13;
sent to many parts of the world,&#13;
developed a nursery which grows&#13;
beautiful hybrid roses, founded a&#13;
school which helps hundreds of&#13;
families and he has made a&#13;
beauty spot out of what was once&#13;
African bushland. Some day a&#13;
beautiful Baha'i House of Worship&#13;
will be built on the land he&#13;
has prepared.&#13;
Parenthetically, in my opinion,&#13;
Baha'is are a special kind of&#13;
people. As I understand it, they&#13;
consider the Baha'i Faith as&#13;
further revelations of Christ's&#13;
teaching. They believe that "The&#13;
World is one country and&#13;
Mankind its citizens." Also, that&#13;
people should (and will eventually)&#13;
live together, "not with&#13;
uniformity but with unity through&#13;
diversity."&#13;
To me that sounds like a&#13;
paradoxical arrangement but&#13;
there are no "impossible"&#13;
dreams for people like Larry&#13;
Hautz. Suggestion: For those of&#13;
you who are still searching for&#13;
soil in which to root your Credo,&#13;
check up on what The Baha'i&#13;
World Faith has to offer. A visit&#13;
to the Baha'i House of Worship in&#13;
Wilmette, Illinois would be most&#13;
enlightening. End of parenthesis&#13;
and back to Larry and the upcoming&#13;
trip.&#13;
In our intermittent exchanges&#13;
of letters, Ruth and I got the&#13;
feeling that Larry was impatient&#13;
and possibly discouraged as he&#13;
waited for his better world to&#13;
materialize. In a letter written a&#13;
few months after Carol had died&#13;
he wrote, "I am now facing the&#13;
fact that I am approaching the&#13;
twilight of my life. When I was&#13;
young, I always thought that I&#13;
had plenty of time to accomplish&#13;
the things I wanted to do but now,&#13;
as I look back, I realize that I&#13;
have just scratched the surface."&#13;
And then he added this postscript:&#13;
"As I read what I have&#13;
just typed, I could not hold back a&#13;
flow of tears." Such a postscript&#13;
did not sound like the Larry we&#13;
knew whose out-going personality&#13;
always seemed to overflow&#13;
with energy and selfconfidence.&#13;
But I could understand&#13;
his frustrations. As I&#13;
thought about his letter I realized&#13;
that the Four Horsemen of the&#13;
Apocalypse are still plaguing the&#13;
world - war, pestilence, famine&#13;
and death. And two more riders&#13;
have joined the terrorists - greed&#13;
and inflation. It was after the&#13;
arrival of Larry's "postscript&#13;
letter" that Ruth and I began&#13;
thinking seriously of going to&#13;
• Rhodesia. After all,, he'd been&#13;
inviting us for years.&#13;
We learned in another letter&#13;
that Larry had been ill and a few&#13;
months ago he fell out of a tree&#13;
with a live chain saw in his hands&#13;
Of all things! Fortunately he&#13;
wasn't badly hurt but it helped us&#13;
make up our minds that maybe&#13;
Larry and I ought to get together&#13;
... that maybe he could use a little&#13;
help at the school or in some&#13;
other ways ... But no tree climbing!&#13;
So we have bought our&#13;
plane tickets and will go to the&#13;
Salisbury Motel School and share&#13;
our ecumenical spirit in our own&#13;
way ... By helping.&#13;
I must, however, confess to&#13;
some selfish motivation in&#13;
making this trip. Ruth and I&#13;
have been in over 50 countries&#13;
together but never to southern&#13;
Africa. Now, not only will we be&#13;
able to hopefully help a friend&#13;
but I will also be able to visit&#13;
places made famous by two of my&#13;
boyhood heroes - Baden-Powell,&#13;
the Founder of the Boy Scout&#13;
Movement and David Livingston,&#13;
the medical missionary who gave&#13;
his life in Christian service to the&#13;
natives of central Africa. Many&#13;
times, as we move about&#13;
Rhodesia and South Africa, we&#13;
will cross the paths once trod by&#13;
Baden-Powell and Livingston. At&#13;
times it will be like a pilgrimage.&#13;
So now you know why you won't&#13;
see me around for a few months.&#13;
We will begin our long flight to&#13;
Rhodesia on December 3rd. We&#13;
will arrive in Salisbury on the 9th&#13;
after a four day rest stop in&#13;
Johannesburg. For me Parkside&#13;
will be 8,000 miles away ... but&#13;
seldom out of mind. But don't&#13;
forget me! And while I'm away&#13;
continue to build good Traditions&#13;
for our Alma Mater ... Like good&#13;
class attendance ... and having a&#13;
litter-free campus ... And always&#13;
doing your best... and being kind&#13;
to one another.&#13;
I'll see you sometime in March&#13;
... God willing.&#13;
Arthur Gruhl&#13;
Alumnus, Class of '74.&#13;
PSGA says Regents play dirty&#13;
ME The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independenl&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140 . Phones 553-2295, 55 3-2287.&#13;
'OSt&#13;
£ JTCROIRO&#13;
0 A* (v NEMO&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen, Dave Keller, Rita Ohm,&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government, P.S.G.A. Inc., had a&#13;
declaratory petition brought&#13;
before the Board of Regents of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System. This declaratory petition&#13;
was issued by the Parkside&#13;
Student Government after an&#13;
overwhelming majority of the&#13;
students, in a record-breaking&#13;
voter turnout, ratified the new&#13;
student constitution in a&#13;
University referendum. The&#13;
purpose of the declaratory&#13;
petition was to make the Board of&#13;
Regents decide whether or not to&#13;
accept the voice of the Parkside&#13;
students. In its worst, but most&#13;
accurate, connotation the actions&#13;
of the Board of Regents have&#13;
prostituted the ideals of&#13;
American democracy and&#13;
justice The Board of Regents not&#13;
only did not inform the Student&#13;
S°™™me,,t here at Parkside&#13;
that this would be on the agenda&#13;
but also Frank Pelisek, President&#13;
of the Board of Regents, claimed&#13;
that he had informed John&#13;
Siefert, attorney for the Student&#13;
Government, that he should&#13;
appear at the meeting. However,&#13;
John Siefert was not informed to&#13;
appear until five hours after the&#13;
Board had handed down its&#13;
decision. The Board of Regents&#13;
then voted down the petition for a&#13;
declaratory ruling when some of&#13;
'ts members did not even have a&#13;
copy of the declaratory petition&#13;
Pelisek, after verbally noting this&#13;
condition, proceeded with the&#13;
meeting anyway.&#13;
The Board of Regents&#13;
viously knows ihat^he'stldem"&#13;
Government does not have the&#13;
money necessary for legal&#13;
counsel or action. It is interesting&#13;
to note that the quality and&#13;
measure of justice one receives is&#13;
directly related to the financial&#13;
resources a party has at its&#13;
disposal. When P.S.G.A. Inc. has&#13;
no money and was deliberately&#13;
obstructed by the Board of&#13;
Regents, how can we, as the sole&#13;
governing authority of the&#13;
students, uphold and protect the&#13;
rights of the students? It was&#13;
indeed unfortunate that the&#13;
Board of Regents had to play&#13;
administrative politics at the&#13;
expense of the students at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
Senate,&#13;
P.S.G.A, Inc. &#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 19 74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Spoon River"— Preview&#13;
ThreeJ-'Spoon River" inhabitants strike the attitudes they'll assume in the Nov. 21-24 production bv&#13;
the Parkside Players: left to right are Jody Jones. Keith Gayhart and Michael Ward.&#13;
&lt;M,Uct,on by&#13;
by amy&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
It is difficult, very difficult, to&#13;
do justice to the work that moves&#13;
in and out of the psychological&#13;
social dimensions of a person]&#13;
and even more trying to present&#13;
this sensitive and raw side of the&#13;
whole generation that has passed&#13;
through a town. The problems&#13;
develop in the translation of such&#13;
a piece. One must be presented&#13;
with honest sentiment, real pain,&#13;
and robust anger. Otherwise, the&#13;
dramatization becomes so much&#13;
corn, surface pettiness and soap&#13;
opera affectation, that it is impossible&#13;
for any human quality to&#13;
be detected in the character&#13;
portrayed. The Parkside&#13;
production of Edgar Lee&#13;
Masters' "Spoon River Anthology"&#13;
has achieved in its&#13;
translation a rare melancholy,&#13;
sincerity, and truthfulness.&#13;
In the preview performance on&#13;
Thursday, November 15, the 12-&#13;
member cast delivered more&#13;
than 70 characters with sensitivity&#13;
and insight. The setting is&#13;
stark-like the bare wires of&#13;
nerves and minds in the now&#13;
dead, tormented inhabitants of&#13;
Spoon River. The characters&#13;
stand, silent and silhouetted,&#13;
separated by light and empty&#13;
space. They stand frozen between&#13;
their speeches like statues in a&#13;
garden, or perhaps a museum;&#13;
like the unspeaking stone they&#13;
were while alive. There was no&#13;
vocal communication among&#13;
them then, and so the confessions&#13;
and admissions go on now as&#13;
their stifled souls rage and weep&#13;
from the grave.&#13;
Someone once said, "truth will&#13;
out," and one could suppose if not&#13;
in life, then in death. It is this&#13;
truth, the stuff in the core of a&#13;
soul, that lays itself open in this&#13;
penetrating production of Spoon&#13;
River.&#13;
Music, emotion and silence&#13;
weave together in a tapestry of&#13;
strangled reality that will not&#13;
rest. Virginia King and Glen&#13;
Christiansen do an extraordinary&#13;
job of translating the honest&#13;
sentiment of Midwestern folk&#13;
songs in contrast to the&#13;
frustrated, deceiving characters&#13;
that lived in the midst of such&#13;
music, and now, have been lost to&#13;
their personal solitary.&#13;
Michael Ward is subtle, but&#13;
exploding beneath the calm is&#13;
hungry love, great longing. Jeff&#13;
Kiehlbach is sensual, insane as&#13;
a pyromaniac, and equally excellent&#13;
in all his roles. Michael&#13;
Clickner's Fiddler Jones has a&#13;
compelling rural brilliance.&#13;
Keith Gayhart is raw, seething&#13;
energy, while Charles Johnson&#13;
sensitively brings the regret and&#13;
loneliness of his characters to&#13;
life.&#13;
The women of Spoon River,&#13;
whore and bleed and scream&#13;
their existences to reality. They&#13;
are reality. They motivated the&#13;
children, seduced the men,&#13;
embraced the love of others&#13;
deeply. Susan Zietz becomes the&#13;
most holy and the most immoral&#13;
of women interchangeably, and&#13;
to perfection. Carrie Ward proves&#13;
she can play more than the&#13;
society ladies of her former roles,&#13;
achieving the poignant beauty of&#13;
women full of life, robbed of this&#13;
secret gift. Jody Jones is catty,&#13;
tender, crushing the things that&#13;
simultaneously attract and&#13;
repulse her lovers and the&#13;
audience. Kathy Kah lures you,&#13;
runs from your admirations and&#13;
then begs for them again in the&#13;
realization of some ever-present&#13;
emptiness which threatens to&#13;
engulf her characters. Nancy&#13;
Johnson presents women filled&#13;
with eternal visions and women&#13;
of biting self-ihterest.&#13;
The reason I have described&#13;
the actors as possessing certain&#13;
qualities instead of the characters&#13;
themselves is because these&#13;
actors are the characters.&#13;
The kiss just now out of reach&#13;
because of death, the factual&#13;
commitment of one spirit to&#13;
another: all things supremely&#13;
human are rendered in this&#13;
production. If they 'gift- ydirwith&#13;
what I had the pleasure of&#13;
viewing, you will have one of the&#13;
finest translations of Masters'&#13;
work you are likely to see.&#13;
Parkside no-shows&#13;
Milwaukee shows for Jackson Browne&#13;
johi ana jams rius&#13;
Finally, at 8:25, Wendy Waldman and her bass&#13;
player started out. Wendy has a good voice and at&#13;
times sounded like Joni Mitchell's high and floaty&#13;
at others like Janis Joplin's low and raspy. She kind&#13;
of made up for the long delays. Her music was good,&#13;
as was her conversation between songs. She played&#13;
guitar, then a dulcimer, and piano. Some of the&#13;
notable songs included "Train Song," "Your&#13;
Constant Companion" and "Turn a Cold Back on&#13;
Me. After she finished, I was surprised that an&#13;
impatient crowd appreciated her enough to call her&#13;
back for another song. She also seemed surprised&#13;
and flattered.&#13;
Bomb Threat Not Announced&#13;
Then came the longest delay, almost another&#13;
hour The reason for it was later discovered to be a&#13;
bomb threat. I was told about it the next day. To&#13;
leave 1300 people in the dark about this is horrible.&#13;
We are adults and could have made the decision to&#13;
stay or leave as we saw fit. We should not have to&#13;
take that kind of bullshit from someone who decided&#13;
that we were not in danger. No excuse-not even one&#13;
oi potential panic-warranted not telling the crowd&#13;
The alleged bomb was to go off at 10 p.m.&#13;
At 10:10, Jackson Browne appeared and&#13;
apologized for being late. He shouldn't have had to&#13;
apologize for the way the whole thing was handled&#13;
He opened with "Redneck Friend" and went in to&#13;
Ready or Not." during which there was a lot of&#13;
static coming from the right-hand set of speakers&#13;
By the third song. "The Road*and the Skv." the&#13;
problem was corrected, and the sound in the gvm&#13;
was so good that even Jackson Browne himself&#13;
commented on the sound quality.&#13;
Plays Most pf New Album&#13;
Browne switched back and forth from guitar to&#13;
piano. He did "Fountain of Sorrow" next: 'Tor&#13;
Everyman from his second album sounded reallv&#13;
nice. Browne spoke of a dead'friend for whom "For&#13;
by Cliff Chambers&#13;
With the appearance of Jackson Browne on&#13;
November 12, Parkside opened the door to the&#13;
formerly untapped resource of Milwaukee area&#13;
concert-goers. WQFM radio of Milwaukee cosponsored&#13;
the concert, and through its efforts,&#13;
provided most of the crowd of 1300. I am told that&#13;
less than 400 students at Parkside took advantage of&#13;
having this concert in their own "back yard." It is&#13;
too bad because we don't often get musicians of&#13;
Jackson Browne's caliber to play here at Parkside.&#13;
The music flowed smoothly, the show did not. At&#13;
7:30, a half-hour before the scheduled start, a lot of&#13;
people had to stand outside the P.E. building in the&#13;
cold. When finally admitted, there were manycomplaints&#13;
about having to pay $5 to sit on the gym&#13;
floor. After the delay to get in, the delay before the&#13;
show started did not set well with many in attendance.&#13;
&#13;
a Dancer" was written, the song he performed next. ,&#13;
Upon learning that Lake Michigan was nearby (it is&#13;
not as polluted as Browne thinks it is), he sang&#13;
"Rock Me on the Water." From his latest album he&#13;
played "Walking Slow," "Late for the Sky" (the&#13;
title cut), and "Before the Deluge." He finished the&#13;
set with his AM standard, "Doctor My Eyes " After&#13;
enthusiastic applause (for 1300) he encored with&#13;
"Take It Easy" and slid into "Your Love Keeps&#13;
Lifting Me Higher." Out of eight songs on his new&#13;
album he played six.&#13;
The music for the night was good and the sound&#13;
was good. The poor judgment of the person who&#13;
decided the bomb threat was not to be announced&#13;
shouldn't detract from the music. What was also&#13;
distressing was the fact .that Milwaukee provided&#13;
three-fourths of the crowd. Parkside has a ways to&#13;
go before it can successfully put on a concert by&#13;
itself. Let's hope we don't abandon the idea of good&#13;
music being performed here. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesda y/ November 20, 1974&#13;
Brief News&#13;
Wednesday, November 20; Whiteskellar presents Barry Patton from&#13;
Milwaukee playing original folk and blues from 1-3 p.m. in the coffeehouse&#13;
(GR D-201). No admission charge.&#13;
Student music recital begins at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
Film: "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich," based on the Nobel&#13;
Prize-winning novel by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, will begin at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in GR 103. Admission is $1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
^&#13;
Ur&#13;
day&#13;
;,&#13;
November 2I: People for a N°n-Sexist Society will meet at&#13;
12:30 in Classroom D-128.&#13;
Attention Pre-Pharmacy Students: Pam Palmer from the Madison&#13;
School of Pharmacy will be on campus on Thursday, Nov. 21 from 9&#13;
a.m. to noon in Tallent Hall room 121. Call Placement Office, 553-2452&#13;
for an appointment.&#13;
Film: "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" at 7:30 p.m. in GR&#13;
103. Admission is $1 and UW-P I.D. is required.&#13;
"Spoon River Anthology" will begin at 8 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. Admission is $1 for UW-P students and staff and $2 for the&#13;
general public. Tickets are available at the Information kiosk or at the&#13;
door. The play continues through Sunday, November 24.&#13;
FAST FOR A WORLD HARVEST sponsored by the Newman Club in&#13;
conjunction with Americans across the nation.&#13;
Friday, November 22; Film: "Twelve Chairs," a Mel Brooks creation&#13;
will begin at 8 p.m. in the Student Activities Building. Admission is $1*&#13;
UW-P and state I.D's required.&#13;
Sunday, November 24; Vets Club meeting at 4 p.m. in the SAB.&#13;
Ragtime Rangers Ski Show from 12 noon to 6 p.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building. Admission is $1 and is open to the public. Includes fashion&#13;
show, booths set up for ski resorts, ski patrol, orienting, movies, and&#13;
ski swap.&#13;
Mass at Newman Center beginning at 12: 15 p.m. at the Carthage&#13;
College Meditation Chapel. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Film: "Twelve Chairs," at 7:30 p.m. in the SAB. UW-P and state&#13;
I.D.'s required.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 26&#13;
"The Church Today" - a discussion at St. George School at 8 p.m. by&#13;
Fr. Richard Schlenker. Everyone interested is most welcome.&#13;
December 8: The Vets Club will sponsor a paper drive from 8 a.m. -&#13;
3:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall parking lot. The drive is to help support&#13;
the operation of the Racine Vets Bus&#13;
VOTE&#13;
it's to uyop u&#13;
MOCK US TAP&#13;
FMK UIKir&#13;
THURSDAY, F RIDAY, S ATURDAY;&#13;
Bonanza's&#13;
three-point program&#13;
to beat inflation.&#13;
The Tuesday Night Price Bonanza.&#13;
(*1.49 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
(*1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)&#13;
Tuesday night will never be the same again.&#13;
• Feed a child in America for 49C.&#13;
We've got just the right amount of food to make a kid smile — a hamburger,&#13;
an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price — 49c - to make you smile.&#13;
• Drink up. The seconds are on us*&#13;
At Bonanza, you get free refills on all soft drinks, coffee, and ice tea.&#13;
\buTI love H.M love it.&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY&#13;
Bogus bomb threat&#13;
delays Browne concert&#13;
According to Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of Student&#13;
Programming, a bomb threat&#13;
delayed for about 20 minutes the&#13;
Jackson Browne concert which&#13;
was held in Parkside's Physical&#13;
Education Building, on Tuesday,&#13;
Nov. 12.&#13;
He said that the estimated 1300&#13;
to 1500 people attending the&#13;
concert were not informed of the&#13;
bomb threat.&#13;
Deputy Dale Crichton of the&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff's Dept. said that&#13;
the threat was called in to the&#13;
Kenosha Police Dept. by a young&#13;
male who said the bomb was to go&#13;
off at 10 p.m.&#13;
At 8:59 p.m. the Kenosha Police&#13;
Dept. contacted the Sheriff's&#13;
Dept. which sent out four&#13;
deputies and two detectives.&#13;
They searched the building,&#13;
along with Parkside's Safety and&#13;
Security force, from 9:15 until 10&#13;
p.m. but failed to find a bomb.&#13;
Crichton said that the decision&#13;
not to inform the audience about&#13;
the bomb scare was made by&#13;
Erwin Zuehlke, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor of Administration.&#13;
Crichton also said that he was&#13;
informed that there had been at&#13;
least four bomb scares in the last&#13;
two months at Parkside.&#13;
Zuelke commented that there&#13;
have been three bomb scares&#13;
since Labor Day and it was his&#13;
decision not to announce any of&#13;
them.&#13;
He said that Parkside has been&#13;
getting bomb scares ever since&#13;
the buildings were opened, but&#13;
that this is not a unique situation&#13;
since many institutions receive&#13;
threats.&#13;
When a bomb threat is received&#13;
at Parkside, the procedure is not&#13;
to inform faculty or students of&#13;
the threat, but to make a&#13;
thorough search of the building&#13;
and then decide whether or not to&#13;
evacuate, Zuelke said.&#13;
He mentioned that the&#13;
evacuation measure has never&#13;
been taken and that to his&#13;
knowledge, a bomb scare has&#13;
never been announced to the&#13;
students at Parkside.&#13;
"We try to be as inconspicuous&#13;
as possible when something like&#13;
this happens," Zuelke said. "The&#13;
caller wants to disrupt things and&#13;
we don't want to give him the&#13;
satisfaction of doing so. The less&#13;
that is said, the better off we&#13;
are."&#13;
UW p roposes SSC make-up&#13;
Minorities left out&#13;
Donald Smith, senior vice&#13;
president of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System, sent a letter to&#13;
the presidents of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB), the&#13;
Adult Student Association (ASA),&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. (PSGA)&#13;
and the Vet's Club concerning,&#13;
among other things, the process&#13;
whereby students will be&#13;
nominated to the Search and&#13;
Screen Committee (SSC).&#13;
The SSC is responsible for&#13;
screening applications for&#13;
chancellor and will consist of&#13;
students, faculty, and administrators.&#13;
&#13;
In this letter, Smith requested&#13;
that each of the above&#13;
organizations submit at least two&#13;
nominations for each of the two&#13;
student positions on the committee.&#13;
He also mentioned that&#13;
attention was to be given "to the&#13;
inclusion of women and-or&#13;
minorities among the nominees."&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
of PSGA, said that Smith ignored&#13;
feminist groups and minority&#13;
groups such as Third World.&#13;
He said, "I think it's wrong for&#13;
any single organization to send&#13;
potential nominees for the SSC,&#13;
the reason being that some&#13;
organizations were ignored.&#13;
What I want is for all&#13;
organizations to pick the&#13;
nominees together."&#13;
Milutinovich has sent a letter&#13;
which should reach every student&#13;
organization on campus,&#13;
requesting that a meeting take&#13;
place to discuss student nominees&#13;
to the SSC.&#13;
According to Milutinovich, he&#13;
is requesting that the presidents&#13;
of all interested organizations&#13;
come to the meeting with a list of&#13;
nominees which will be screened&#13;
by this council and sent to Smith.&#13;
He said that those&#13;
organizations which were&#13;
mentioned in Smith's letter would&#13;
still have the prerogative of&#13;
sending Smith their own&#13;
nominations in addition to those&#13;
sent by the council of presidents.&#13;
Milutinovich said, "Instead of&#13;
relying on input from separate&#13;
organizations, this would insure&#13;
greater student input."&#13;
Christmas spirit&#13;
hits Sigma Pi&#13;
Christmastime is just around&#13;
the corner and Sigma Pi&#13;
Fraternity is once again donning&#13;
its Santa suit in order to conduct&#13;
its 3rd annual TOY DRIVE. The&#13;
proceeds collected from this&#13;
year's drive will be donated to&#13;
various charity organizations in&#13;
the Kenosha - Racine area including&#13;
the Parkside Day Care&#13;
Center.&#13;
The TOY DRIVE will run from&#13;
November 20 to December 13&#13;
with collection stations placed at&#13;
the following locations: the Information&#13;
Kiosk in the Library&#13;
Learning Center, the corridor&#13;
between LLC and Greenquist&#13;
Hall, inside the main entrance to&#13;
the Classroom Building, the main&#13;
corridor of the Comm. Arts&#13;
Building, and inside the main&#13;
entrance of Tallent Hall. Sigma&#13;
Pi brothers will be out making&#13;
door-to-door collections and&#13;
soliciting local merchants for&#13;
donations throughout the period.&#13;
Last year's TOY DRIVE was&#13;
an overwhelming success, according&#13;
to Jerry Ferch, this&#13;
year's social-publicity chairperson,&#13;
and a repeat performance&#13;
is expected.&#13;
FREE DEL IVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
?&lt;&#13;
SHO REC RES T&#13;
639 5305&#13;
GEOR GETOW N&#13;
554 7334&#13;
PIZZA CHICKEN&#13;
AND FISH CARRYOUTS&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
HOURS: Sun. Wed. &amp; Thurs. 11:30 A.M.&#13;
11:30 P.M.&#13;
Fr i. &amp; Sat. 11:30 A.M.-12:30 A.M.&#13;
""UNION&#13;
APPEARING&#13;
WED., FRI. SAT. &amp; SUN.&#13;
NOV. 20, 22, 23, 24&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay R oad Phone 654-0485 &#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
Art faculty to bare all&#13;
Art profs show stuff&#13;
^ , w f THE TRIAL OF BILLY JACK&#13;
There s a ot of truth in the old saying that "the guilty cry the loudest&#13;
for justice. Remember John Mitchell's witch-hiL for nattona&#13;
subversives or Richard Nixon's pledges to eet to thl JSfl I&#13;
Watergate? I get that uncomfortable feeline with th bott&#13;
°™ of&#13;
Laughlin-Delores Taylor epic agS ^s^'L'Sfy Stf IZ&#13;
Released from prison, Billy Jack returns to the Arizona Indim&#13;
reservation and picks up the truth crusade (any similarity to B1W&#13;
Graham is purely intentional). During his absence, Our Miss BrS&#13;
Jean Roberts, at the progressive Freedom School has made a few&#13;
changes. The students aren't the drop-outs one step away from crime&#13;
or jail as portrayed he first flick, but left-overs from Cleara™&#13;
commercials, turned self-styled Nader Raiders&#13;
Through government grants and in the "spirit of love" the kids have&#13;
the ultimate toybox: a TV station, a recording studio, Yoga Sport, an&#13;
international center for the study of human rights, and of course a&#13;
Peter Pan retreat from warped adult society.&#13;
But this paradise is threatened by the lecherous, blood-thirsty&#13;
townfolk. And why not? These hip kids have expensive ski outfits&#13;
belly-dancei classes, an olympic-size swimming pool, and wall-to-wall&#13;
color TV sets, the essence of the American Dream. The outside world&#13;
naturally wants an equal share of that wealth plus that envious&#13;
freedom from taxation, work, and responsibility.&#13;
Billy Jack pretends to defend the helpless students (they already&#13;
imported a Korean Karate instructor) and the oppressed minority&#13;
(the Indian brothers are never seen swimming in the integrated pool),&#13;
but Billy s bravado and Jean's saccharine philosophy of love and&#13;
brotherhood are cleverly distinguished hypes.&#13;
It's the old shell game. Keep the Indians happy with colored beads&#13;
and never worry about rent. Espouse virtue and collect federal funds.&#13;
Their "heroics" are selfish, exploitative impulses. Marjoe the&#13;
hustling evangelist, resembles a canonized saint against this deceitful&#13;
duo.&#13;
We've been Billy-Clubbed!&#13;
"Fast for a World Harvest&#13;
Members of the UW-Parkside&#13;
art faculty will hold their first&#13;
joint show in the Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery Nov. 21 through&#13;
Dec. 13. An opening reception will&#13;
be held Thursday, Nov 21, from 6&#13;
to 8 p.m. Regular gallery hours&#13;
are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays and 6 to 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays.&#13;
Robert Cadez and Erik Forrest&#13;
will be represented by paintings&#13;
and prints, Moishe Smith by&#13;
etchings, Rollin Jansky by&#13;
sculpture in fiber glass reinforced&#13;
resin and John Murphy by&#13;
ceramic pieces and ceramic&#13;
sculpture. Also included are&#13;
paintings by David Zaig, who was&#13;
a visiting faculty member at&#13;
Parkside in 1972-73 and has&#13;
continued to teach on a part-time&#13;
basis. The show is made up of&#13;
recent work by the various artists.&#13;
&#13;
Cadez has recently had shows&#13;
of his paintings at the Bradley&#13;
Galleries in Milwaukee, at the&#13;
Parkside Gallery and at the&#13;
Rockford (111.) Art Association's&#13;
Burpee Gallery. He works&#13;
principally in water color and&#13;
acrylics. A native of Michigan, he&#13;
received his master of fine arts&#13;
degree from UW-Madison. His&#13;
work has been included in a&#13;
number of juried shows and invitational&#13;
exhibitions and has&#13;
won awards on the local, regional&#13;
and national levels. He is&#13;
represented in the permanent&#13;
ff&#13;
Help the hungry&#13;
A nationwide "Fast for a World&#13;
Harvest" on Thursday,&#13;
November 21, sponsored by the&#13;
Newman Club, will invite wellfed&#13;
Americans to share the&#13;
hunger that is the daily experience&#13;
of one billion of the&#13;
earth's people. The money saved&#13;
by going hungry for one day will&#13;
help small farmers in Asia,&#13;
Africa and Latin America grow&#13;
more food in the areas where&#13;
most of these people live. Kurt&#13;
Waldheim, Secretary General of&#13;
the United Nations, says; " 'Fast&#13;
for a World Harvest', sponsored&#13;
by Oxfam-America, is a welcome&#13;
example of how individuals have&#13;
a chance to join together in&#13;
ACCOUNTING A ND&#13;
FINANCE MAJORS&#13;
Let us help you:&#13;
PLAN AHEAD&#13;
To Become a CPA&#13;
THE BECKER&#13;
CPA REVIEW COURSE&#13;
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414-276-7271&#13;
Our Successful Students Represent&#13;
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creating greater awareness of&#13;
alarming global food shortages&#13;
and in sharing their resources&#13;
with those in greater need."&#13;
"Fast for a World Harvest"&#13;
will be nationally observed by&#13;
colleges, churches, high schools,&#13;
community organizations and&#13;
individuals who feel that a more&#13;
equitable distribution of the&#13;
world's resources is needed.&#13;
Contributions will be used for&#13;
development programs such as&#13;
water storage, better seeds, and&#13;
i m p r o v ed liv e s toc k&#13;
management.&#13;
The Fast will also direct&#13;
national attention to the critical&#13;
global food shortage. Drought,&#13;
floods, and fertilizer shortages&#13;
have reduced farm yields in&#13;
many parts of the world. Increasing&#13;
population in the&#13;
developing countries and dietary&#13;
changes in affluent nations are&#13;
compounding food shortages. The&#13;
average American now requires&#13;
almost a ton of grain a year&#13;
(much of it to feed animals for&#13;
meat), while the average Bengali&#13;
is lucky to receive the equivalent&#13;
of a pound of grain a day. Implications&#13;
for the future are&#13;
particularly grim for children,&#13;
whose growth and mental&#13;
development are seriously and&#13;
permanently impaired by&#13;
malnutrition.&#13;
A SPECIAL THANKSGIVING DINNER&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
NOV. 2 6, 1 974&#13;
HAM OR TURKEY&#13;
WITH ALL&#13;
THE TRIMINGS&#13;
• NEW HOURS •&#13;
L.L.C. MOD., T HRU THURS. - 7:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.&#13;
FRI 7:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.&#13;
BUFFET ROOMS&#13;
M0N-THURS 11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m.&#13;
FRI 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m.&#13;
m Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union&#13;
99&#13;
collections of Cotey College (Mo.)&#13;
and the Flint (Mich.) Institute of&#13;
Arts.&#13;
Forrest, an internationallyknown&#13;
art educator and painter,&#13;
has had one-man shows in major&#13;
English and American cities and&#13;
has frequently served as a juror&#13;
for exhibitions. Before coming to&#13;
Parkside in 1969, he was assistant&#13;
head of the school of art&#13;
education at the College of Art in&#13;
Birmingham, England. During&#13;
the 1965-66 academic year, he&#13;
was an artist-in-residence at UWMadison.&#13;
He is a graduate of&#13;
George Hariot's School and the&#13;
College of Art, both in Edinburgh,&#13;
Scotland and also has done postgraduate&#13;
work at a number of&#13;
English institutions.&#13;
Smith, a printmaker, has had&#13;
one-man shows in Italy, Switzerland&#13;
and throughout the U.S.&#13;
and has been represented in&#13;
invitational exhibitions in Germany,&#13;
Spain, Italy, Mexico and&#13;
the U.S. His work is in more than&#13;
70 permanent collections in&#13;
Europe and the U.S. including&#13;
that of the Elvehjem Art Center&#13;
in Madison. He previously taught&#13;
at Southern Illinois University&#13;
and Stout State University (now&#13;
UW-Stout) and has been a&#13;
visiting faculty member at UWMadison,&#13;
Ohio State University,&#13;
Utah State University and the&#13;
University of Iowa. His work has&#13;
won numerous prizes and&#13;
purchase awards. He received&#13;
his masters degree at the&#13;
University of Iowa and also did&#13;
graduate work at the Academia&#13;
of Florence (Italy).&#13;
Jansky, who won second prize&#13;
last year in a national sculpture&#13;
exhibition, "Sculpture'73"&#13;
sponsored by the Southern&#13;
Association of Sculptors, works in&#13;
polyester impregnated fiberglass&#13;
with emphasis on pigmentation of&#13;
resin finishes through a variety of&#13;
experimental methods. He has&#13;
had one-man shows of his&#13;
distinctive modular works at a&#13;
number of Midwestern institutions&#13;
and is represented in&#13;
several permanent collections.&#13;
On the UW System art faculty&#13;
since receiving his graduate&#13;
degree from UW-Madison in 1965,&#13;
he was on leave from Parkside in&#13;
1971-72 as a senior lecturer in&#13;
sculpture at Cheltenham College&#13;
of Art and Design at Gloucester,&#13;
England.&#13;
Ceramist Murphy has&#13;
exhibited his work throughout the&#13;
United States and in Canada and&#13;
is the winner of numerous awards&#13;
on the local, state and national&#13;
levels. Much qf his recent work is&#13;
in stoneware with lustre and&#13;
white earthenware. He received&#13;
his graduate degree at the&#13;
University of Montana and came&#13;
to Parkside in 1969.&#13;
Zaig, who was born in&#13;
Jerusalem and received his art&#13;
training in London, is a painter,&#13;
printmaker and filmmaker.&#13;
Before coming to the U.S., he&#13;
taught at several English institutions.&#13;
His work is in the&#13;
collections of the Victoria and&#13;
Albert Museum and several other&#13;
English collections and he has&#13;
exhibited in the U.S., Portugal&#13;
and London.&#13;
Krekling&#13;
takes&#13;
singing&#13;
finals&#13;
Douglas Krekling, Racine, won&#13;
the finals (upper male division)&#13;
of the National Association&#13;
Teachers of Singing at Lawrence&#13;
University this past weekend. He&#13;
was competing with other singers&#13;
from Madison, Eau Claire and&#13;
Milwaukee. Krekling is a senior&#13;
at Parkside and is a voice student&#13;
of Lee Dougherty.&#13;
A Different&#13;
, ru type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S R OLLER R INK&#13;
6220 -67th ST. PH. 652-8198 KENOSHA&#13;
SILVER&#13;
BULLET&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT.&#13;
NOVEMBER 22nd &amp; 23rd&#13;
FRIDAY FREE ADMISSIO N WITH&#13;
UW-P STUDENT I.D.&#13;
.THANKSGIVING H OLIDAY&#13;
THE UNION&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat. Nov. 27th, 28th, 29th, 30th &#13;
6 THE PARK SIDE RANGER W e dnes day, N ovember 2 0 , 1 9 7 4&#13;
More tar less dust&#13;
Com&lt;z,,com&lt;2&gt;&#13;
That'5 no n&#13;
way for a&#13;
I senatorial&#13;
^candidate&#13;
/Vto act.&#13;
Parking lot opens,&#13;
parking lot closes&#13;
PS. 6. A&#13;
offi ce&#13;
Traffic and parking patterns at&#13;
Parkside changed completely&#13;
Monday morning, Nov. 18, when&#13;
the first of two new "close-in"&#13;
parking lots opened, as well as&#13;
the public access road to serve&#13;
them.&#13;
Opening Monday was the&#13;
"Arts-Athletics" lot which holds&#13;
485 vehicles and is convenient to&#13;
the Physical Education building&#13;
and the Communication Arts&#13;
building, which houses the&#13;
theater and the Library-Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Opening no later than Sunday,&#13;
Dec. 1, is the Union parking lot,&#13;
with 525 spaces convenient to the&#13;
classroom building, Greenquist&#13;
Hall and the proposed Student&#13;
Union.&#13;
The new public access road&#13;
which opened Monday runs from&#13;
30th Ave., near the HeatingChilling&#13;
plant, to Hy. JR, which&#13;
connects Hy. E and Hy. 31. It is a&#13;
two-way road which must be used&#13;
to reach the new lots.&#13;
The temporary gravel lot on&#13;
the Student Union site closed&#13;
permanently Sunday night.&#13;
There will be no access to&#13;
either new lot from the "BusService"&#13;
road, which encircles&#13;
the academic buildings and&#13;
which is familiar to those who&#13;
have driven the campus or ridden&#13;
shuttle busses from the Tallent&#13;
Hall parking areas. Shuttle&#13;
busses will continue to run from&#13;
the Tallent and East lots around&#13;
the "bus-service" road.&#13;
Parking regulations for the&#13;
public who are not students or&#13;
staff at Parkside remain the&#13;
same. The public may park in&#13;
any space in any campus lot after&#13;
7:30 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday, after 5 p.m. Friday,&#13;
and all day on weekends and&#13;
holidays. Weekdays after 6 a.m.,&#13;
the public must park in visitors&#13;
spaces which are marked in all&#13;
lots or obtain a temporary&#13;
parking permit from the Safety&#13;
and Security Office at the rear of&#13;
Tallent Hall. Parking for handicapped&#13;
is also marked in all&#13;
lots.&#13;
PSGA p roposes referendum&#13;
Elect PAB executives&#13;
Charge by Terrie Caffery&#13;
PSGA has proposed an advisory&#13;
referendum stating that&#13;
the,members of the Executive&#13;
Board on the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) should be elected at&#13;
large by the Student body. The&#13;
present structure of PAB is set up&#13;
in such a way that anyone&#13;
wishing to participate would&#13;
apply, be interviewed, and if&#13;
qualified, would serve by&#13;
working on a committee and then&#13;
possibly be elected to the&#13;
Executive Board.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, President&#13;
of PSGA said that trying to improve&#13;
that structure by way of an&#13;
advisory referendum is totally&#13;
legal. "It's just to see if the&#13;
majority of the student body&#13;
approves or not. If not, O.K.,&#13;
we'll drop it. But if they do, it's up&#13;
to the Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC) and other student&#13;
administrative channels to take&#13;
action."&#13;
The reason for an attempt to&#13;
change PAB's structure relates&#13;
to a sideline of the constitution&#13;
that says the entire student body&#13;
should be represented. If the&#13;
members were elected, it would&#13;
give students the opportunity to&#13;
choose members that would&#13;
reflect their desires.&#13;
One function of PAB is to bring&#13;
continued from page 1 in outside entertainment for&#13;
P a r k s i d e 's a c tiv iti es.&#13;
Milutinovich claims that PAB is&#13;
bringing in entertainment that&#13;
does not reflect the students'&#13;
interests.&#13;
He pointed out that less than&#13;
one percent of Parkside's student&#13;
body is represented by PAB&#13;
members, yet they make all the&#13;
decisions for entertainment and&#13;
use of the students' tuition money&#13;
to do so. Milutinovich said,&#13;
MIf&#13;
they are willing to share the&#13;
responsibilities that affect the&#13;
remaining student body, they&#13;
damn well better be elected!"&#13;
However, Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
Director of Student Life, and&#13;
Tony Totero, PAB's advisor,&#13;
argue that present PAB members&#13;
will resent the elected&#13;
students for attaining power and&#13;
position through a popular vote,&#13;
rather than serving on the&#13;
committee before proving to be&#13;
qualified.&#13;
It is known that PSGA and PAB&#13;
aren't on friendly terms, but&#13;
Milutinovich said, "We're not&#13;
doing this to get down on PAB. It&#13;
is reasonable, if you just look at&#13;
the facts."&#13;
representatives met with the&#13;
Kenosha County District Attorney&#13;
to discuss this situation. It&#13;
was at this meeting that it was&#13;
determined that there was a good&#13;
chance that a violation of state&#13;
law had in fact occurred.&#13;
Later that afternoon, the&#13;
RANGER Editorial Board met&#13;
and decided that the next course&#13;
of action would be to file a formal&#13;
complaint against PAB concerning&#13;
this matter. The complaint&#13;
was filed promptly with the&#13;
Kenosha County District Attorney,&#13;
who stated that the&#13;
matter would be investigated to&#13;
see if the situation warranted&#13;
legal action.&#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;
B^ASS&#13;
ALBEY.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
*Rock*Jazz*Pop*Folk*&#13;
•Classical*&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
PipesV&#13;
JewelrjNr^i&#13;
Imported&#13;
""^Clo^hes,&#13;
Brass Buckles.&#13;
Candles .&#13;
2124 16th St/gj&#13;
RACINE®-'&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
OPEN SUNDAY&#13;
%u1t&lt; ihm am&#13;
24 hours&#13;
EDGEWATER&#13;
MOTOR INN&#13;
TWIN L AKES enue&#13;
"ACROSS FROM ONION PARK"&#13;
15% Discount with Parkside I.D&#13;
1 NOVEMBER 20th thru N OV. 26th&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
ALSO APPEARING&#13;
BLOOD MONEY &#13;
Wednesday, November 20, 1974 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Muscles!&#13;
Approximately 600 men and boys attended&#13;
Parkside's fifth annual Wrestling Clinic last&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 16.&#13;
Mark Massery, former NCAA champion and now&#13;
assistant coach at Northwestern University,&#13;
demonstrates all-star technique as participants of&#13;
all ages and sizes look on.&#13;
Six different areas of wrestling were offered in&#13;
hour-long workshops. The clinic ran from 8:30 a.m.&#13;
to 4&#13;
PHY. ED. BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
November 23: Ranger Invitational Swim Meet, 12 Noon, POOL.&#13;
November 27: Building open regular hours; will close at 9:30 p.m.&#13;
November 28: Thanksgiving. Building will be closed.&#13;
November 29: Building will be closed, but athletes may practice.&#13;
November 30: Building will be closed until 4 p.m. JV basketball at&#13;
5:30 p.m. Rangers face Whitewater in season&#13;
opener at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
December l: Building open as usual: 6 p.m.-9:30 p.m.&#13;
Intramural&#13;
eager league&#13;
The Intramural Department is&#13;
holding a basketball league on&#13;
Wednesday and Sunday&#13;
evenings. Entry blanks may be&#13;
obtained at the Phy. Ed. Building&#13;
office. All entries are due&#13;
November 28. For further information,&#13;
contact Loren Hein,&#13;
P.E. extension 2162.&#13;
Season&#13;
opener&#13;
Parkside's basketball team&#13;
will be holding their annual&#13;
green-white varsity' scrimmage&#13;
on November 21 at 7:30 PM in the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
Admission is free, and this would&#13;
be a good chance for the Parkside&#13;
community to preview this year's&#13;
team.&#13;
U&#13;
WIDESfSELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS W ELCOME&#13;
Kenosha Racine&#13;
614-59th St. 312-6th St.&#13;
658-3652 632-5195 I&#13;
n&#13;
•* &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, November 20, 1974&#13;
Ski show Sunday&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Parkside's Third Annual Ski &amp;&#13;
Outdoor Recreation Show will be&#13;
held in the Physical Education&#13;
Building this Sunday, Nov. 24,&#13;
from noon to 6 p.m. Admission is&#13;
$1, with children under 12 admitted&#13;
free.&#13;
The Rag Time Rangers Ski&#13;
Club has merged with the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board's&#13;
Outing Club to present an afternoon&#13;
of displays and&#13;
demonstrations to acquaint the&#13;
outdoors person with the&#13;
equipment necessary to experience&#13;
and explore the great&#13;
outdoors.&#13;
Scuba diving, canoeing and&#13;
kayaking demonstrations will&#13;
take place in the pool. Rappelling&#13;
from the bleachers and rafters in&#13;
the gym will be Morris&#13;
Firebaugh, demonstrating rock&#13;
climbing maneuvers and knotmaking.&#13;
&#13;
With the main emphasis of the&#13;
show being skiing, the wrestling&#13;
room will offer a chance for the&#13;
showgoers to view a continuous&#13;
series of ski flicks.&#13;
The local ski patrol will be&#13;
demonstrating splinting and&#13;
taping techniques in preparation&#13;
for the upcoming season.&#13;
Cross-country and downhill&#13;
exhibits will appeal to beginning&#13;
and advanced skiers alike, as&#13;
they look over the new lines of&#13;
equipment and talk with the local&#13;
ski shop owners.&#13;
The latest in ski fashions will be&#13;
modeled at 1, 3 and 5 p.m.&#13;
For the dare-devils, a display&#13;
of hang gliders may prove to be&#13;
the most exciting exhibit at the&#13;
show.&#13;
. Information on various ski&#13;
areas and trips will also be&#13;
available.&#13;
An informal ski swap for&#13;
selling off or purchasing usedbut-in-good-condition&#13;
s ki&#13;
equipment will be an dei al way to&#13;
conserve dollars in outfitting the&#13;
new skier for the slopes. Anyone&#13;
interested in selling equipment&#13;
should contact Student Life at&#13;
553-2278 or bring it to the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building Sunday morning prior to&#13;
the show.&#13;
Skis, poles and assorted door&#13;
prizes will be raffled during the&#13;
show.&#13;
Caaers open Thursday&#13;
Season tickets on sale&#13;
Season tickets for basketball&#13;
and other winter sports are still&#13;
on sale at the Information kiosk&#13;
Main Place and at the Physical&#13;
Education Building. Reserved&#13;
seating in the north bleachers is&#13;
being offered as an option for the&#13;
first time with the basketball&#13;
season passes, priced at $5 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff, and&#13;
are going fast, according to the&#13;
athletic department.&#13;
Unreserved seating is also&#13;
available for season ticket&#13;
purchasers anywhere in he t south&#13;
bleachers or in unreserved seats&#13;
in the north bleachers. The cost&#13;
Just Stop In!&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
of an unreserved pass is also $5.&#13;
Cost to the general public is $10.&#13;
The season pass will admit the&#13;
bearer to nine home basketball&#13;
games and all home contests in&#13;
wrestling, gymnastics and&#13;
fencing. Single game admission&#13;
for basketball is priced at $2 for&#13;
the general public, $1 for&#13;
students, faculty and staff and&#13;
free for children under 12.&#13;
Parkside will go into action for&#13;
the first time at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thursday in the Green-White&#13;
game, with the varsity team split&#13;
in half and freshmen filling in&#13;
both rosters. Admission is free.&#13;
The first regular season action is&#13;
scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 30, at the Physical&#13;
Education Building against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
A superb performance of grace&#13;
and beauty led Parkside women&#13;
gymnasts to victory in a meet&#13;
Friday with UW-Whitewater.&#13;
Parkside collected a total of 106&#13;
points while Whitewater finished&#13;
with 78.&#13;
Demonstrating their gymnastic&#13;
abilities, Parkside's two&#13;
advanced competitors, Jackie&#13;
Levonian and Paris Wohlust,&#13;
received the highest individual&#13;
scores in all their events.&#13;
=K= =3f=&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; Green Bay Rd.&#13;
g&amp;uuttf UtB O-ineAt&#13;
PiyyL &amp; Otaluut Qoodd. 63 ~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
THE&#13;
TRUIlIf&#13;
LUGGAGE &amp; LEATHER&#13;
10% DISCOUNT T O&#13;
STUDENTS W ITH T HIS A D.&#13;
1412 WASHINGTON AVE.&#13;
RACINE 634-4672&#13;
PARKSIDE V ARSITY C LUB P RESENTS&#13;
BADGE&#13;
(Formaly Caravan)&#13;
- 1:00&#13;
SAT N OV. 2 3rd&#13;
Student Act. Bldg.&#13;
$1°° Advance Tickets&#13;
$1&#13;
50 At Door&#13;
ID's REQUIRED&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Desperately need typists to type research&#13;
paper over Thanksgiving Holiday Weekend.&#13;
Approxgnately 25 pages lonq. Call 632 4$34&#13;
evenings.&#13;
For Sxle: Complete set of The Great Books&#13;
of the Western World. It includes a complete&#13;
set of Gateway to the great Books, in&#13;
troduction set and book case. Excellent&#13;
condition. Call 634 6459 this week.&#13;
FUTURE CPA'S learn how to prepare for&#13;
the CPA Exam. Becker CPA Review Course.&#13;
Call Collect, Milwaukee 414 276 7271.&#13;
LOST: one pair black gloves and grey liners&#13;
Comm. Arts boys can 100 l evel. $5 reward,&#13;
633-7814 a sk for Pat or see info desk.&#13;
FIAT 1971, 850 Spider. Excellent condition,&#13;
under 20,000 miles. Perfect for student or&#13;
second car. Best offer. Call 1 312 872 7025.&#13;
BHCHELOH S U&#13;
5601-24 AVE. K ENOSHA&#13;
DOUBLE-BUBBLE COCKTAIL HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Saturday&#13;
4:00-9:00 P.M.&#13;
3 FOOSBALL TABLES&#13;
2 POOL TABLES&#13;
(CITY C HAMPS) Men &amp; W omen&#13;
"Best Stereo S ound"&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
* OPENING S OON *&#13;
The Smoke 'ouse </text>
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              <text>Bauer Meets&#13;
and Confers&#13;
by Nathan Jones&#13;
"The large portion of my evenings are spent at&#13;
desk work, while most of my day is spent in meeting&#13;
and conferring." Otto F. Bauer characterized his&#13;
primary functions as the acting chancellor of&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In fulfilling the term of the deceased Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie, he has encountered a number of pressing&#13;
issues which have greatly absorbed his time.&#13;
However, he also sees as priorities, the need to&#13;
decrease the level of alienation that a period of&#13;
instability carries with it and increase the level of&#13;
communication, trust and cooperation between the&#13;
students, faculty and administrators.&#13;
Since Fall 1971, Bauer has been involved in an&#13;
administrative role in the Univeristy, a rofe which&#13;
has provided what he called "my greatest opportunity&#13;
for self-fulfillment. It has been the&#13;
definition of my life."&#13;
Bauer Faces Problems&#13;
While the process of se arching for and screening&#13;
possible candidates for chancellor continues, there&#13;
exist issues which need immediate attention, such&#13;
as the question of ju stice in one case, and expansion&#13;
of the present academic facilities in another.&#13;
Bauer appeared to be deeply attuned to the&#13;
seriousness of the complaints issued against&#13;
Parkside in regard to its alleged discriminatory&#13;
hiring and promotional practices. "We are trying&#13;
desperately to cope with these complaints and&#13;
retrieve these cases back into the University itself"&#13;
rather than have an outside institution solve these&#13;
Call for HUD&#13;
could stop&#13;
union&#13;
Election results&#13;
Few voters&#13;
photo by Michael Nepper&#13;
Otto Bauer acting chancellor&#13;
problems, he said.&#13;
"We have inherited social problems which we&#13;
have also helped create...we are going to respond&#13;
the best we can as an institution to correct it."&#13;
Bauer said that "ultimately, we won't be&#13;
evaluated on the various programs we have (here at&#13;
Parkside) but on whether or not we actually increase&#13;
employees."&#13;
SMI Building A Concern&#13;
Also drawing upon the energies of the acting&#13;
chancellor has been the construction of t he Modern&#13;
Industry Building which still awaits the approval of&#13;
the UW Board of Regents, as well as the state&#13;
legislature. Bauer is also addressing himself, along&#13;
with his staff, to the broadening of the undergraduate&#13;
program in the engineering technology&#13;
and the creation of a Master's degree program in&#13;
administrative and technological sciences. He&#13;
pointed out that these proposals have already been&#13;
submitted to the UW central administration.&#13;
Other on-going efforts that consume the daily&#13;
hours of Bauer and his acting vice chancellor,&#13;
continued page 4&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
A t urnout of about 300 vo ters,&#13;
less than 5.6 per cent of the&#13;
student body, voted last week&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, Nov.&#13;
20 and 21, in the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
election.&#13;
Many of the students who did&#13;
note complained that there were&#13;
few, if any, people running in&#13;
their own division.&#13;
Under the new PSGA constitution,&#13;
half of the Senate shall&#13;
be elected in the fall from the&#13;
divisions of Science, Social&#13;
Science, Humanistic Studies,&#13;
E n g i n e e r i n g S c i e n c e ,&#13;
Management Science, Labor&#13;
Economics and undeclared.&#13;
However, in last week's&#13;
elections, no one ran in the&#13;
divisions of Scocial Science,&#13;
Engineering Science or Labor&#13;
Economics.&#13;
According to the new constitution,&#13;
"When vacancies&#13;
happen in the representation&#13;
from any academic division or at&#13;
large seat, the President Pro&#13;
Tempore shall fill such vacancies&#13;
with the concurrence of a simple&#13;
majority of the entire legislative&#13;
branch of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc."&#13;
John Kontz, president pro&#13;
tempore, said that appointments&#13;
to the Senate will be made soon&#13;
after the Thanksgiving holiday,&#13;
when the newly- elected members&#13;
are seated.&#13;
The election results of those&#13;
senatorial condidates who did run&#13;
are as follows:&#13;
Theresa Noto, running for&#13;
senator in the Humanities&#13;
division, won with 20 votes, while&#13;
William Noll received 17.&#13;
Kathy Sodomka, running for&#13;
senator in the Management&#13;
Science division, won with 36&#13;
votes, while Bill Ferko received&#13;
one write-in vote.&#13;
Joyce Jansen, running for&#13;
senator in the Science division,&#13;
won with 45 votes. She was&#13;
unopposed.&#13;
Lisa Iwon, running for senator&#13;
as an Undeclared Major, won&#13;
with 25 votes. She also was&#13;
unopposed.&#13;
A seat on the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee, which is open for&#13;
election, was won by Eric Bingen&#13;
with 135 votes. Chet Anderson&#13;
placed second with 93 votes,&#13;
while Doug Redmond received&#13;
25.&#13;
continued page3&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
"I'll do anything I can to get a&#13;
full-scale HUD investigation of&#13;
the new Union building," said&#13;
Michael Hahner, a senator of t he&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Int.&#13;
The application which&#13;
Parkside submitted to the&#13;
Department of Housing and&#13;
Urban Development for a $3.5&#13;
million federal grant, will help&#13;
finance the new Student Union.&#13;
According to Hahner the&#13;
present floor plans, which are a&#13;
revised form of the old plans,&#13;
don't include a Student government&#13;
office or a health service&#13;
area. Instead a one-cot room is&#13;
provided.&#13;
Hahner said that he thinks&#13;
Parkside should live up to their&#13;
contract with HUD or take&#13;
Student Life and Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) offices out&#13;
of th e plan since most of t he area&#13;
in the Union is supposed to be&#13;
self-amortizing.&#13;
If the Union can cut selamortizing&#13;
areas and enlarge&#13;
non-self amortizing areas such as&#13;
Student Life and PAB offices,&#13;
then it can also afford to have a&#13;
larger health service and a&#13;
student government office, says&#13;
Hahner.&#13;
According to William Niebuhr,&#13;
director of Student Life, HUD is&#13;
aware of the revisions made on&#13;
the Union floor plan.&#13;
When Hahner was asked if he&#13;
was aware that HUD has seen the&#13;
revised floor plans, he said, "This&#13;
is what I've been told but then&#13;
why doesn't Niebuhr want us&#13;
(PSGA) to talk to them (HUD).&#13;
"Everytime you check on these&#13;
people (administrators) they're&#13;
I'm basing my whole&#13;
argument on the assumption that&#13;
HUD doesn't have .the plan&#13;
changes."&#13;
Niebuhr said that the Union&#13;
project is on a tight schedule and&#13;
if for any reason there is any&#13;
more delay in the process,&#13;
Parkside will lose the HUD grant&#13;
and thus the Union. V&gt;\ V&#13;
• Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 17&#13;
In response to Niebuhr's&#13;
statement Hahner said, "I've&#13;
been told there's a deadline (on&#13;
beginning construction of the&#13;
Union) but I don't know if I&#13;
believe it. I don't really know if&#13;
they'll lose funds if the deadline&#13;
isn't met. I haven't looked into it.&#13;
I feel there's fraud going on&#13;
here."&#13;
When asked if PSGA is going to&#13;
take any action on the issue&#13;
Hahner said, "If PSGA doesn't&#13;
want to do anything, then I will,&#13;
but I think they will (want to take&#13;
action)."&#13;
To the same question, John&#13;
Kontz, President Protempore of&#13;
PSGA, said, "I can't tell you our&#13;
strategy before we do it if you're&#13;
going to print it."&#13;
Hahner said that he plans on&#13;
acting through one of Wisconsin's&#13;
congressmen by sending all the&#13;
necessary documents and a&#13;
request for a full HUD investigation.&#13;
Hahner said he would probably&#13;
go to Rep. Les Aspin's office in&#13;
Racine on Monday Nov. 25 a nd&#13;
present the issue. Hahner also&#13;
said that "If it looks like it's going&#13;
to be dragged out by Aspin, I'll go&#13;
to HUD myself."&#13;
John Siefert a Kenosha attorney,&#13;
said that it is PSGA's&#13;
position that the maximum&#13;
amount of usable space in the&#13;
Union should be used to produce&#13;
moeny in order to help pay for the&#13;
building. Therefore PSGA should&#13;
have a say about what goes into&#13;
the Union that isn't selfamortizing.&#13;
PSGA doen't think Student Life&#13;
and PAB offices should be&#13;
located in the Union, said Siefert,&#13;
but an exception should be made&#13;
for PSGA, who would pay rent if&#13;
they had an office in the Union.&#13;
When asked if there had been&#13;
any contact with HUD since this&#13;
issue arose, Siefert said, "Dennis&#13;
(Milutinovich) has been in&#13;
constant contact with HUD all&#13;
along."&#13;
continued page 3&#13;
Low attendance&#13;
PAB faces loss&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
and J. D. Garoutte&#13;
In sharp contrast to last year's attendance&#13;
records, the Parkside Activities Board (PAB) is&#13;
having serious difficulty attracting students to its&#13;
programs.&#13;
According to Tony Totero, PAB's advisor, this&#13;
live entertainment.&#13;
PAB has had successful dances in the last three&#13;
years, and those profits have always helped to cover&#13;
possible losses on the more expensive concerts and&#13;
movies.&#13;
This has not been the case this semester.&#13;
Local Bands Too Expensive&#13;
When asked if PAB has considered bringing in&#13;
some of the more popular local bands to draw a&#13;
crowd, Totero said that the price of these bands is&#13;
prohibitive.&#13;
He said that the bars in the community are able to&#13;
afford these expensive bands because they often&#13;
demand higher cover charges and can also make up&#13;
what they lose at the door by selling mixed drinks at&#13;
the bar.&#13;
photo by Michael Nepper&#13;
Tony Totero&#13;
year's poor attendance at concerts, movies and&#13;
dances is a direct by-product of the country's inflationary&#13;
economy.&#13;
Totero said, "We've enjoyed tremendous success,&#13;
the last three years, but we're getting caught up in&#13;
the problem that nearly every other campus is&#13;
facing: inflation."&#13;
Gas Shortage Blamed&#13;
Totero also said that PAB's problem is compounded&#13;
by the fact that Parkside is a commuter&#13;
campus. He theorized that due to the sharp increase&#13;
in gasoline prices, students are no longer willing to&#13;
make a special trip to Parkside on the weekend to&#13;
attend a dance,'especially when an increasing&#13;
number of ba r's in Racine and Kenosha are offering&#13;
Barb Burke&#13;
Parkside's Student Activities Building is licensed&#13;
to sell only beer, and the revenue from that is absorbed&#13;
not by PAB but by Auxiliary Services.&#13;
Student Requests Unrealistic&#13;
Through its periodic surveys, PAB has tried to&#13;
ascertain which attractions Parkside students are&#13;
continued page 5&#13;
2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Tuesdayf Nov. 26, 19 74&#13;
RANGER • Editorial/Opinion— Faculty&#13;
Art&#13;
On November 21 the faculty art show opened at the&#13;
Theatre Gallery. We welcome the opportunity for&#13;
students to view the works of the art faculty. To students&#13;
in the humanities, it often seems that the criticism of&#13;
student works can be answered by "well, let's see you do&#13;
better." We have the chance to see.&#13;
RANGER will not attempt a critique at this time, as&#13;
we have planned a discussion for art majors on the&#13;
show. In doing this, we offer the art faculty an opportunity&#13;
to hear their students' reactions and an opportunity&#13;
for students to utilize their education in an&#13;
honest evaluation of faculty work.&#13;
A first reaction is some slight disappointment at the&#13;
lack of adequate facilities to allow a comprehensive&#13;
showing of the individual professors. As it is, each of the&#13;
exhibitors are allowed to show only five or six examples&#13;
of their work:'We would hope that as a continuation of&#13;
this first showing, each of the art faculty would do an&#13;
individual retrospective showing so that students could&#13;
see the progression of faculty careers.&#13;
We invite the public to take this opportunity to see the&#13;
show and to share their opinion with the art faculty and&#13;
RANGER. Election&#13;
/lonjjv s&gt; »&gt;a fi Flop&#13;
Disappointing. The elections are over and they can&#13;
only be termed disappointing. A turnout of only a few&#13;
hundred students in last Wednesday's and Thursday's&#13;
voting for PSGA offices could well sound the final note&#13;
for student government. The claim of the elected&#13;
senators that they represent the student body of&#13;
Parkside will fall on deaf ears in the administration.&#13;
Although this will represent little change from past&#13;
experience, those that see student government as a&#13;
fraternal order rather than an effective force on campus&#13;
will have new ammunition with the recent vote total.&#13;
Much of the fault for an uninspiring election that&#13;
failed to draw student interest, lies with the present&#13;
members of PSGA. This is not to say that PSGA must&#13;
create controversy to gain the attention of students, but&#13;
rather that a greater effort must be made to inform&#13;
students of the present actions of PSGA and the events&#13;
occurring throughout the UW system that may affect&#13;
students.&#13;
We call on Student Government to do its homework,&#13;
present a coherent case and show unity of purpose. In&#13;
this way students will begin to realize the potential of&#13;
student government and take the time to become interested&#13;
enough to vote.&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independeni&#13;
publication of the students, of the U W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553 2295 , 553-2287.&#13;
$ XOK ^&#13;
(ft -ROUEW KKE OK&#13;
jTCRGttO ft \ HE MO&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen, Dave Keller, Rita Ohm,&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
v&#13;
letters to the Editor&#13;
Third World&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
There is now a vacancy in the&#13;
administrative offices, due to the&#13;
passing of Chancellor Wyllie. As&#13;
of November 14th, I found out&#13;
that there were letters sent out, to&#13;
help in the choosing of a chancellor,&#13;
to groups that are supposedly&#13;
representative of the&#13;
student body here at Parkside,&#13;
that is, with the exception of&#13;
"Third World" (people of color&#13;
and those who are sympathetic to&#13;
our goals). We are an&#13;
organization which was expressly&#13;
developed to add our&#13;
values to this system. The "Third&#13;
World" organization here at&#13;
Parkside is not communist, but&#13;
is, and will be progressive in any&#13;
means to achieve a level of&#13;
educational and social&#13;
awareness. I think our being&#13;
neglected is a direct slap in the&#13;
face. Now is the time we can&#13;
grow together, but only through&#13;
timely input in all facets of this&#13;
bureaucracy. That is the only&#13;
way a true cross-section of the&#13;
student body can be achieved.&#13;
Hayes D. Norman&#13;
Third World President&#13;
ssc&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To: Otto Bauer, Acting Chancellor&#13;
Allen Dearborn. Assistant&#13;
Chancellor, for Student Services&#13;
President. Parkside Activities&#13;
board&#13;
President, Veteran's Club&#13;
President, P.S.G.A&#13;
President, Adult Student&#13;
Association&#13;
As you all know, a new chancellor&#13;
is being selected for&#13;
Parkside. A letter was sent to&#13;
various student organizations&#13;
inviting them to participate in the&#13;
selection process. The various&#13;
groups involved represent only a&#13;
small fraction of the total student&#13;
body. In order to bring about a&#13;
*, y, *, „ . . .group&#13;
decision, a meeting was&#13;
suggested by P.S.G.A.&#13;
Selection of a new chancellor is&#13;
o very important decision which&#13;
affects all students. Manv&#13;
students and organizations are&#13;
ver-y concerned and have&#13;
threatened protests if the totai&#13;
student body is not represented.&#13;
In order to avoid any type of&#13;
confrontation, it is imperative&#13;
that some type of compromise&#13;
which is fair to all be worked out.&#13;
As responsible leaders on&#13;
campus, I ma urging you to&#13;
contact P.S.G.A. immediately so&#13;
this matter can be dealt with.&#13;
Lee Wagner&#13;
President,&#13;
United Council of&#13;
•' §Utd£p(.«Organizations&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Tuesday, November 26: Film (Intro, to Film 210): "Seventh Seal" and&#13;
public^* 3t 7 P m in CL 105' Admission is free and open to the&#13;
Band concert, conducted by Robert Thomason at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
S?m- ' * JTheater. Admission is free and open to the public&#13;
Wednesday, Novemhpr 27; Whitewkriiar presents Debbie Do^ from&#13;
1-2 p.m. and Phil Smith from 2-3 p.m. in the coffeehouse (GR D-201).&#13;
Free and open to the public.&#13;
Club meets every Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. building Boxing-Wrestling Room. All persons are welcome.&#13;
da^me information contact RichardPomazal, 346 GR, 553-2343.&#13;
PAB presents its "Turkey Dance," with music by Beau Geste&#13;
(playing tunes by Yes, Gypsy, Alice Cooper, Doobie Bros., The Who&#13;
and others), 9 p.m. -1 a.m. in the SAB. Admission for UW-P students is&#13;
vito' ^uests $150- l^'s required. Thursday, November 28: HAPPY&#13;
TURKEY DAY! Classes resume Monday, December 2.Saturday,&#13;
November 30: OGP (Order of Guitar Players) will present a concert at&#13;
7:30p.m. at St. George Church, 4800-8th Ave., Kenosha. Reception will&#13;
follow.&#13;
First basketball game of the season, Parkside vs. Whitewater, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the P.E. building gym. Admission is $2 for the general&#13;
public, $1 for students.&#13;
Dance, sponsored by the Parkside Varsity Club, featuring Badge,&#13;
from 9 p.m.-l a.m. in the SAB. Admission is $1.50 at the door. UW-P&#13;
I D. and proof of age are required.Sunday, December l: Mass&#13;
celebrated at the Newman Center at 12:15 p.m. Coffee and rolls after&#13;
the liturgy. Everyone welcome.&#13;
Flute quartet recital, beginning at 4 p.m. in Greenquist 103. A dmission&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
December 3:Discussion at St. George School (lower level) at 8 p.m.&#13;
Topic: Infallibility. Speaker: Fr. Richard Schlenker. December 4:&#13;
Communal Penance Celebration at 8 p.m. at the Newman Center.&#13;
Everyone interested in a new approach to Penance is welcome.&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimHiiiiiiiiiuininiiiiiiiiii! iiiniiiHiiiiiimiMiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&#13;
Dave Bishop, Coordinator of Auxiliary Services, said that the&#13;
Library-Learning Center cafeteria will close at 2 p.m. instead of 4 p m&#13;
on Fridays only.&#13;
Elections — —&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Also voted for were&#13;
eightAllocations Committee&#13;
seats. The PSGA constitution&#13;
calls for the establishment of a&#13;
committee for reviewing&#13;
requests for program support&#13;
and budget allocations of the&#13;
allocatable portion of s egregated&#13;
fees.&#13;
Chet Anderson received 47&#13;
votes, Doug Redmond 30 and Eric&#13;
Bingen 27. There are still five&#13;
vacancies on the Allocations&#13;
Committee.&#13;
According to the new constitution,&#13;
"Vacancies on the&#13;
Allocations Committee shall be&#13;
filled by executived appointment&#13;
subject to approval by a majority&#13;
of the entire Senate."&#13;
In other election results, the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board advisory&#13;
referendum was passed by&#13;
a vote of 217 yes to 66 no.&#13;
The PAB advisory referendum&#13;
asked, "Shall the Executive&#13;
Booard of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board and or Student Union&#13;
Board consist of 7 members&#13;
elected from the Academic&#13;
Division, 4 members elected at&#13;
large and 1 member chosen from&#13;
each committee of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board and or Student&#13;
Union Board and shall the&#13;
president of the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board and or Student&#13;
Union Board be elected by the&#13;
student body?"&#13;
HUDcontinued&#13;
from page 1&#13;
Milutinovich denied any&#13;
knowledge of the proposed HUD&#13;
investigation, When questioned&#13;
on a comment which he had&#13;
allegedly made concerning the&#13;
proposed investigation,&#13;
Milutinovich admitted he had&#13;
heard that Hahner was considering&#13;
requesting an investigation&#13;
of the new Union but&#13;
had not yet spoken to him on the&#13;
subject.&#13;
During a later interview&#13;
Milutinovich said that he realized&#13;
a HUD investigation would&#13;
probably stop the construction of&#13;
the Union and that he didn't plan&#13;
on initiating an investigation.&#13;
He said that he wants to meet&#13;
with Student Life and the planners&#13;
of the Union and discuss&#13;
changes in the occupancy of the&#13;
rooms, not their reconstruction.&#13;
When asked if he believed HUD&#13;
had the revised plans for the&#13;
Union, Milutinovich said, "I&#13;
assume not becuase when we&#13;
asked HUD for information on&#13;
the Union they sent us the old&#13;
floor plans."&#13;
With, regard to claims made&#13;
that HUD does in fact know of the&#13;
new plans, Milutinovich said,&#13;
"They're lying. We've got them&#13;
(administration) by the ass."&#13;
He said, "I would like to be&#13;
quoted as saying that at this point&#13;
I'm trusting that the administration&#13;
is telling the truth&#13;
(about HUD's knowledge of the&#13;
revised plans)."&#13;
Milutinovich added later, "I'm&#13;
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Third world:&#13;
A cultural experience&#13;
by Carole Wilson&#13;
"If we-and I mean the relatively conscious&#13;
whites and the relatively conscious blacks, who&#13;
must, like lovers, insist on, or create the consciousness&#13;
of ot hers-do not falter in our duty now,&#13;
we may be able, handful that we are, to end the&#13;
racial nightmare of our country and change the&#13;
history of the world."&#13;
James Baldwin...in Conversation&#13;
Black Voices&#13;
Dan Georgakas-Anthologist&#13;
The Third World Organization, through the objectives&#13;
it has set forth, is working to do this at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
One member, Nathan Jones, secretary of Third&#13;
World, says that people are at different levels of&#13;
consciousness, and we should respect each other for&#13;
this. At the same time, the organization is working&#13;
towards opening the eyes of people to the fact that&#13;
oppression is much wider than the experience of&#13;
black people in this country. Oppression is an international&#13;
reality, says Jones, that is a part of a&#13;
system dominated by the philosophy of white&#13;
supremacy, domination as physical and&#13;
j psychological control.&#13;
One of the ways they hope to instill this idea in&#13;
people is through group solidarity. This encompasses&#13;
the creation of social awareness, the&#13;
multicultural experience and methods persons of&#13;
color use to make it from day to day. These methods&#13;
include the various psychological efforts employed&#13;
to resist the impression given through comments,&#13;
innuendoes, looks and subtleties, that people of&#13;
color are inferior and helpless.&#13;
Third World also deals with changes needed in&#13;
society for all people, regardless of c olor, to reach&#13;
their potential of growth and freedom in this world.&#13;
Just recently, Cornelius Gordon, chairperson of&#13;
the Communication Committee of Third World,&#13;
made arrangements with the Parkside Bookstore to&#13;
sell the Racine Star Times, a Racine-based&#13;
minority newspaper. Third World feels that access&#13;
to the paper will help provide a cultural sharing of&#13;
experience for the students at Parkside.&#13;
Some of the other areas Third World will be&#13;
working on at Parkside. include securing positions&#13;
for more minority faculty and general employees&#13;
(This is a long-range goal and Hayes Norman,&#13;
president of Third World, pointed out that it appeared&#13;
the Affirmative Action Officer is working in&#13;
this direction.), and scheduling social activities&#13;
such as lectures or dances featuring minority&#13;
speakers and artists.&#13;
One area of importance Third World members&#13;
feel needs to be dealt with is Classroom material.&#13;
Arlene Martin, vice president of Third World, spoke&#13;
of sociology and political science courses she has&#13;
that are not dealing with multicultural people or&#13;
experiences.&#13;
Martin feels these to be vital disciplines in which&#13;
to institute social awareness, instructors should be&#13;
made aware of the fact, she said, and material of&#13;
this nature should be implemented into the course&#13;
syllabus.&#13;
Norman pointed out that the administration and&#13;
faculty have not gone out of their way to back up the&#13;
organization.&#13;
When Third World recently attempted to sponsor&#13;
a concert featuring "The Chambers Brothers," they&#13;
were thwarted by administrative red tape. Some&#13;
members said that it appeared to be an "administrative&#13;
run-around for nebulous reasons."&#13;
For that concert, Tony Totero, Parkside Activities&#13;
Board (PAB) advisor, was one of the&#13;
primary sources consulted by Third World. According&#13;
to Totero, there was a time scheduling&#13;
conflict surrounding this event that presented the&#13;
biggest problem.&#13;
Totero did say that the minority students have not&#13;
been catered to to any extent and thought the&#13;
problem to be widespread in the University. He&#13;
analogized it as a microcosm of the world situation,&#13;
but doesn't know what can be done to solve the&#13;
predicament.&#13;
Arlene Martin of T hird World met with Totero,&#13;
and out of this meeting came a recommendation,&#13;
approved by the PAB Board, to co-sponsor an activity&#13;
in February during National Black Week.&#13;
Jesse Jackson is a prospective candidate.&#13;
Another incident Hayes mentioned was when&#13;
Third World presented the film "Attica." Sociology&#13;
instructors did not attend its showing, although it is&#13;
described as a fine example of social awareness.&#13;
In this case, members considered the possibility&#13;
that their communication structure might be at&#13;
fault. They are attempting to correct this by looking&#13;
for new means of posting events and contacting&#13;
people.&#13;
The question of why there were no white members&#13;
in Third Werld.was discussed and a variety of&#13;
kreasons projected. Norman and Martin spoke of one&#13;
possible reason, that being that whites may be intimidated&#13;
by having to take a backseat position, so&#13;
to speak. The American Way usually has whites in&#13;
control of white-oriented organizations, they said.&#13;
Other causes brought out were fear of being in a&#13;
predominately black and brown environment, or&#13;
maybe not knowing whether or not whites were&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Third World is just beginning to carry out its&#13;
objectives. Martin said they must begin to set up&#13;
committees to carry out the formats which have&#13;
been laid down. Ideas are forthcoming, but they&#13;
need people to follow through qn them. Anyone&#13;
sympathetic to the cause, she said, is welcome to&#13;
&gt;articipate.&#13;
taking their (administration's)&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1974&#13;
Lawsuit awaits UC membership&#13;
by Michael Oiszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association, Inc.&#13;
recently decided not to join the&#13;
United Council of Student&#13;
Governments at this time, and&#13;
possibly will not until a contractual&#13;
agreement is received&#13;
from them.&#13;
Legal action could be taken to&#13;
enforce the PSGA constitution, if&#13;
PSGA joined United Council.&#13;
United Council has become the&#13;
largest statewide advocacy&#13;
organization with 10 of th e 13 UWSystem&#13;
student governments as&#13;
members.&#13;
Michael Hahner, PSGA&#13;
senator, said that "It's not a&#13;
question of jo ining United Council&#13;
or not, it's a question of joining&#13;
with a contract.&#13;
"Currently, they want us to&#13;
voice our opinion in the affirmative&#13;
and pay membership&#13;
fees."&#13;
To join United Council by the&#13;
spring semcster; it would cost&#13;
PSGA $750. Membership fees for&#13;
an entire academic school year&#13;
total $1500.&#13;
Harvey Hedden, another PSGA&#13;
senator, also objects to joining, at&#13;
this time, with United Council&#13;
without a contract.&#13;
"If it's money that was raised&#13;
by taxpayers or students, I can't&#13;
see just throwing it away with no&#13;
guarantee of any action."&#13;
According to a summary and&#13;
estimated cost statement on&#13;
possible legal action at Parkside,&#13;
United Council states, "A&#13;
referendum was held September&#13;
24 and 25, 1974, at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside on&#13;
whether or not to accept the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. as the&#13;
legitimate student representative&#13;
on campus. The referendum&#13;
passed.&#13;
"The association then asked for&#13;
authority to allocate student&#13;
activity fees in accordance with&#13;
36.09 (5 ) (Merger Statute). The&#13;
request was denied"&#13;
A c ase on this issue could be&#13;
filed immediately in the circuit&#13;
court of Dane County and would&#13;
be handled by John Siefert, a&#13;
Kenosha attorney.&#13;
The case would cost a&#13;
maximum of $2000, while the&#13;
estimated actual cost is $1000.&#13;
This would cover only the cost of&#13;
the initial case. Appeals would&#13;
have similar cost and would be&#13;
acted uppn by the Executive&#13;
Board of United Council before&#13;
proceeding.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
of PSGA, said that if student&#13;
government is going to take any&#13;
legal action, they would have to&#13;
join United Council now.&#13;
Milutinovich told a Nov. 14&#13;
meeting of the PSGA Senate that&#13;
"none of the other schools have&#13;
contracts with United Council&#13;
and you're not going to get a&#13;
contract.&#13;
"The key thing is that if&#13;
kiss United Council goodbye S?&#13;
can kiss merger implement^&#13;
goodbye, or any court battle7'&#13;
Meanwhile, the UW-Milwan'u&#13;
Student Association receS&#13;
served papers on the Board 2&#13;
Regents and UW-M Chanceli!&#13;
Werner Baum in a law*,&#13;
disputing the Milwaukee chan*&#13;
cell or's interpretation of Z&#13;
continued next page e&#13;
Bauercontinued&#13;
from page l&#13;
Eugene Norwood, are the long-range academic&#13;
plans (LORAP) and the evaluation and review of&#13;
the existing academic programs.&#13;
Unaware of "Favoritism"&#13;
Asked if he had been aware of a policy of&#13;
"favoritism" in the promotion of Parkside employees&#13;
prior to his latest appointment, he said that&#13;
it was only in the final weeks before Chancellor&#13;
^V^Jhe^dif^ the many com-&#13;
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these complaints was because of a n existing n0ijc&#13;
which says that persons named in complain/&#13;
should be the ones who respond to them. And sine&#13;
his name appeared nowhere in the text of ft6&#13;
complaint, he was left unaware of their existence6&#13;
Bauer said that such a "favoritism" policy i s not&#13;
justified and he cannot defend such an action&#13;
because it would imply that an employee is&#13;
promoted and salaried in a manner not reflective of&#13;
his or her performance.&#13;
Speaking of his great pride in the physical plant of&#13;
the school, the former professor-turnedadministrator&#13;
lauded the Parkside community for&#13;
its respect of the buildings and property. He als o&#13;
expressed happiness with the excellence achieved&#13;
in the evaluation given the school by the North&#13;
Central Accreditation Committee, and the&#13;
academic expertise of Parkside's faculty, as well as&#13;
the academic planning that is underway.&#13;
Bauer Optimistic&#13;
As an experienced administrator, however&#13;
Bauer realizes that the school has not yet reached&#13;
the level of development to provide satisfaction and&#13;
equitable service to minorities, women and&#13;
veterans. "We recognize the needs in these areas,&#13;
but need the time to generate the programs&#13;
necessary" to fulfill these needs.&#13;
Presently, he perceives a willingness on the part&#13;
of th e students, faculty, staff and administrators to&#13;
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PAB&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. U, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
continued from preceding page&#13;
Merger Statute.&#13;
The Milwaukee Student&#13;
Association started legal action&#13;
Xt Chancellor&#13;
^ ruled '"valid a student&#13;
appointment to one of the&#13;
university committees.&#13;
Chancellor Baum, in rejecting&#13;
t}ie Milwaukee Student&#13;
Association appointments,&#13;
the'liwiir ?1 UndSr Provision of&#13;
ft™* 311(1 re8u'ations,&#13;
he has the sole authority to appoint&#13;
students to committees.&#13;
MikS? PeLo"ay' President of the&#13;
Milwaukee Student Association&#13;
ttke? n f" Merger Law takes precedence over the&#13;
re8ulations and thus&#13;
students should take the&#13;
responsibility of appointing&#13;
members to university committees.&#13;
United Council recently voted&#13;
to support the Milwaukee&#13;
lawsuit. James Hamilton,&#13;
president of United Council, also&#13;
elsewhere1 legal action&#13;
"We anticipate that there may&#13;
be additional lawsuits forthcoming&#13;
if valid interpretations&#13;
of me Merger Statute cannot be&#13;
established on other campuses&#13;
around the state."&#13;
Curry First, a Milwaukee attorney&#13;
is currently on retainer&#13;
for the Milwaukee Student&#13;
Association. He will handle the&#13;
S?e ^hen il reaches the&#13;
Milwaukee County Circuit Court&#13;
early next year&#13;
Pipe policy retonciitorn^i&#13;
interested in. According to PAB's program&#13;
director, Sue Wesley, Parkside students have no&#13;
realistic idea of how much these attractions cost.&#13;
Some of the most frequently requested attractions&#13;
and their prices are: Alice Cooper, $50,000; John&#13;
Denver, $25,000; Howard Cosell, $10,000; and Ralph&#13;
Nader, $2,500.&#13;
Totero said that even if Parkside were able to&#13;
draw enough ticket buyers from the University and&#13;
the community to cover the cost of the concert or&#13;
lecture, the facilities here simply aren't large&#13;
enough to accommodate such an enormous&#13;
audience.&#13;
PAB has also had trouble drawing audiences for&#13;
its films this semester. Again Totero cited the expense&#13;
of travel as the reason, and said that the&#13;
weekday films offered this semester have drawn a&#13;
larger crowd because students were already on&#13;
campus and didn't need to make an extra trip.&#13;
Erotic Films Profitable&#13;
Barb Burke, president of PAB, said that the New&#13;
York Erotic Film Festival, which was shown&#13;
several times on weekdays, realized a profit for&#13;
PAB in September.&#13;
Zarling drafts alternative&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee voted to consider a&#13;
different probation and drop&#13;
policy proposal besides the&#13;
original sub-committee draft,&#13;
and to revise the policy that&#13;
makes counseling a requirement&#13;
while on probation.&#13;
The proposal, made by John&#13;
Zarling, assistant professor of&#13;
engineering science, and&#13;
modified by Wayne Johnson,&#13;
chairperson of the committee,&#13;
was an attempt to "simplify" the&#13;
original draft, according to&#13;
Zarling.&#13;
The changes made include&#13;
evaluating students after every&#13;
semester instead of after every&#13;
block of 15 credits, as the original&#13;
draft states. Students must&#13;
complete 12 credits before being&#13;
dropped.&#13;
A student is placed on&#13;
academic probation if his&#13;
cumulative grade point average&#13;
(GPA) for up to 29 credits accumulated&#13;
is less than a 1.7, or if&#13;
his cumulative GPA is less than a&#13;
2.0 for 30 through 120 c redits.&#13;
Under Zarling's proposal, a&#13;
student is dropped if his&#13;
cumulative GPA for 0-29 credits&#13;
is less than 0.8; for 30-59 credits is&#13;
less than 1.6; for 60-89 credits is&#13;
less than 1.8 and for 90-120 credits&#13;
is less than 2.0.&#13;
The rest of the alternate policy&#13;
proposal is the same as the&#13;
original sub-committee draft.&#13;
Discussion followed on whether&#13;
or not the second policy would&#13;
"introduce wrinkles that were&#13;
not in the block system" according&#13;
to Eugene Norwood,&#13;
acting vice chancellor. He&#13;
suggested taking a transcript and&#13;
trying it on the system.&#13;
The committee hopes to vote on&#13;
the proposals Nov. 26 since it is&#13;
the last meeting before the&#13;
December Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting. The sooner a policy is&#13;
accepted, the sooner practical&#13;
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Totero said that PAB is now exploring the&#13;
possibility of showing daytime films on weekdays so&#13;
students may view them while already on campus.&#13;
However, there is again the problem of facilities&#13;
since the theater and most large lecture halls are in&#13;
use throughout most of the day.&#13;
What will happen now that PAB isn't drawing the&#13;
revenue that had been projected in its budget?&#13;
Solutions Being Sought&#13;
A possible answer now being considered by PAB&#13;
is to cancel some dances and films and replace&#13;
them with the more successful mini-concerts.&#13;
Another possibility would be to reschedule some&#13;
films to weekdays when prospective ticket buyers&#13;
are more accessible.&#13;
Burke also said that PAB has been contacted by&#13;
its counterpart at Carthage College and the two&#13;
organizations are now considering the possibility of&#13;
co-sponsoring some dances and concerts in the&#13;
future.&#13;
Totero said that PAB was never meant to be a&#13;
profit-making organization, but is comparable to&#13;
athletics in that it offers activity and entertainment&#13;
to the students and is university funded. He added&#13;
that it (PAB) is an organization of students, not a&#13;
student organization."&#13;
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Harriers awarded letters&#13;
Eight members of the 1974&#13;
Parkside cross country team&#13;
havebeen awarded letters, coach&#13;
Vic Godfrey announced Monday.&#13;
Winning their fourth letters&#13;
were senior Lucian Rosa of&#13;
Kandy, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), and&#13;
senior Chuck Dettman of&#13;
Marinette. Earning letters for the&#13;
second time were sophomores&#13;
Jim DeVasquez of Waukegan,&#13;
111., and Wayne Rhody of&#13;
Waterford. First-time letterwinners&#13;
included sophomores&#13;
Joe Bel anger of Salem (Central)&#13;
I1"!, Heiring of Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford) and freshmen Gary&#13;
Pnem of Racine (Case) and Curt&#13;
Spieker of Racine (Horlick)&#13;
Rhody was named captain of&#13;
the team.&#13;
PArkside place 15th as a team&#13;
in the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
national championships Sa&#13;
day, Nov. 9, and previously&#13;
taken third in the NAIA Dist&#13;
14 meet and runner-up honor:&#13;
the U.S. Track and Fi&#13;
F e d e r a t i o n Mid-Ame r&#13;
championships.&#13;
Rosa won the district title&#13;
the fourth consecutive year&#13;
placed fifth in the nationals&#13;
earn ail-American honors for&#13;
third straight time.&#13;
While Stephens also expressed&#13;
pleasure with his team's attitude&#13;
and praised the team's unity even&#13;
in a hard-fought intrasquad&#13;
game, the coach was displeased&#13;
with some basic things.&#13;
"I wasn't pleased with our&#13;
offensive continuity~we looked a&#13;
bit ragged at timeds—but we&#13;
have concentrated on defense in&#13;
practice and we have tried to&#13;
open our game up considerably,"&#13;
Stephens said. "Our overall shot&#13;
selection was good, however, a nd&#13;
both teams shot over 50 percent.&#13;
"I was happy with the play of&#13;
the freshmen since they came&#13;
into the game cold and had not&#13;
practiced a minute with the&#13;
avrsity," Stephens added. "It's a&#13;
testimonial to (assistant coach)&#13;
Rudy Collum that the job is being&#13;
done with the freshmen&#13;
program."&#13;
Stephens lamented Parkside's&#13;
ability to come up with a steal or&#13;
force a loose ball but then be&#13;
unable to come up with the&#13;
recovery. The coach also warned&#13;
of problems if Sobanski and Cole&#13;
get into early foul trouble as they&#13;
did in the Green-White contest.&#13;
"We're also having trouble&#13;
converting from offense to&#13;
defense and we'll have to work on&#13;
that." Stephens said.&#13;
In Whitewater, Parkside will&#13;
be facing a team that has built a&#13;
winning tradition. "Even though&#13;
\yhitewater has a new coach this&#13;
year I expect that they'll continue&#13;
to do things as they have in the&#13;
past," Stephens said. "You don't&#13;
monkey around with success."&#13;
Coach Jim Miller, scouting the&#13;
Parkside intra-squad game, said&#13;
his team will run more this year&#13;
than in the past. His top players&#13;
are 6-4 twins Garry and Larry&#13;
Grimes. The two forwards have&#13;
started 77 straight games over&#13;
the past three seasons for&#13;
Whitewater and have identical&#13;
career averages of 12.6 points per&#13;
game.&#13;
Other Whitewater starters are&#13;
6-7 Gerald Coleman at center and&#13;
6-2 Ken Peyer, a former Parkside&#13;
player, and 5-8 Tyron Brown at&#13;
guards.&#13;
"Our biggest weakness is not&#13;
having played as a unit under&#13;
fire," Miller said. "We have a&#13;
number of new people and the&#13;
twins are the main people back."&#13;
""We'll be facing them cold,"&#13;
Stephens said. "They've seen us&#13;
play and know more about us&#13;
than we do about them. It should&#13;
be a great game with some fine&#13;
matchups."&#13;
Likely matchups include&#13;
Parkside's most physical player,&#13;
Sobanski, against the 6-7, 220 lb. ,&#13;
Coleman, and Parkside forwards&#13;
Cole and Hanke against the&#13;
Grimes brothers. Parkside's&#13;
fastest man, will likely be&#13;
matched with Brown, the small&#13;
but quick guard.&#13;
After the Whitewater game,&#13;
Parkside will go on the road for&#13;
the first time for a three-game&#13;
swing through Michigan. The&#13;
Ranger's will face a vastly-i&#13;
vastly-improved University of&#13;
Detroit team that's been ranked&#13;
high nationally among the major&#13;
colleges, in the Titans' opener&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 3. Parkside will&#13;
then hopscotch scross the state to&#13;
Rochester for a game against&#13;
Oakland University on Dec. 5 and&#13;
Grand another against Grand&#13;
Valley State College in Allendale&#13;
(near Grand Rapids) Dec. 7.&#13;
The Rangers will not be home&#13;
again after the Whitewater game&#13;
until Jan. 4 against St. Xavier&#13;
College.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Tuesday, Nov. 26 , 1974 Open season&#13;
Cagers begin&#13;
Nov. 30&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
FfllK M IKIP&#13;
THURSDAY, F RIDAY, S ATURDAY,&#13;
657-9791&#13;
games with a broken thumb while&#13;
Sobanski averaged 15.0 points&#13;
and 7.8 rebounds despite missing&#13;
half the season with a broken&#13;
foot.&#13;
They'll go at forward and&#13;
center, respectively, while Mike&#13;
Hanke, a 6-4 sophomore from&#13;
Milwaukee (Hamilton) will go at&#13;
the other forward spot. He sat out&#13;
last year but started as a freshman&#13;
in 1972-73 and averaged 13.7&#13;
points a game.&#13;
At guards will be 6-2 senior&#13;
captain Chuck Chambliss of&#13;
Racine (Park) and 6-4 junior&#13;
Malcolm Mahone of Kenosha&#13;
(Chicago Gordon Tech). Top&#13;
reserves are 6-7 forward Rade&#13;
Dimitrijevic of Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) and 5-11 guard Stevie&#13;
King of Chicago (Gordon Tech).&#13;
"We found out that our&#13;
rebounding and our depth are two&#13;
of our biggest strengths,"&#13;
Stephens said after the Thursday&#13;
night game in which the&#13;
"Whites" (the above-mentioned&#13;
starters) dropped the "Greens"&#13;
89-67. "I was pleased because we&#13;
got a good look at a number of&#13;
people in a game situation for the&#13;
first time this year. Our outside&#13;
shooting was also much improved&#13;
with Hanke and, particularly,&#13;
with Sobanski."&#13;
Cole was the game's leading&#13;
scorer with 27 points while&#13;
Sobanski tallied 21 and Hanke,&#13;
Mahone and Chambliss were also&#13;
in double figures. Leading the&#13;
"Green" squad were Leartha&#13;
Scott with 14 and freshman Frank&#13;
Watkins with 13.&#13;
Scott, a 6-4 guard, along with 6-&#13;
10 Marshall Hill, will be on the&#13;
sidelines until Jan. 8 when the&#13;
p a i r g a i n s e l i g i b i l i t y a f t e r&#13;
transferring to Parkside from St.&#13;
Louis University.&#13;
A confident and talented&#13;
Parkside basketball team will&#13;
open its season Saturday night,&#13;
Nov. 30 at home against defending&#13;
Wisconsin State University&#13;
Steve Stephens&#13;
Conference co-champion UWWhitewater.&#13;
Game time at the UW-P&#13;
Physical Education Building is&#13;
7:30 p.m. Admission is $2 f or the&#13;
general public and $1 to all&#13;
students with I.D.s. Children&#13;
under 12 are admitted free.&#13;
For Parkside Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens, this is the year his&#13;
Rangers are aiming at a trip to&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FUTURE CPA'S learn how to prepare for&#13;
the CPA Exam. Becker CPA Review Course.&#13;
Call Collect, Milwaukee 414-276-7271.&#13;
the NAIA national tournament in&#13;
Kansas City. But the 27-game&#13;
schedule begins here and&#13;
Stephens' team will have to&#13;
hurdle formidable opponents&#13;
such as Whitewater within the&#13;
state if i t's to make the national&#13;
tourney trip.&#13;
Parkside was 14-15 last year&#13;
and two of those losses were&#13;
against the Warhawks, 70-56 at&#13;
Parkside and 81-69 at&#13;
Whitewater. Whitewater, 21-5&#13;
last season, lost to UW-Eau&#13;
Claire in the NAIA District 14&#13;
Championship game. Eau Claire&#13;
had defeated the Rangers 50-46 to&#13;
knock Parkside out of the tournament&#13;
in the district semifinals.&#13;
"I'll be disappointed if we don't&#13;
have a good year," Stephens says&#13;
"And frankly, I'll be disappointed&#13;
if we don't make a strong run at&#13;
the national tournament."&#13;
"As evidenced by our&#13;
GreenWhite game Thursday&#13;
night, we've got much better&#13;
depth this year although we don't&#13;
want any injuries and obviously&#13;
Gary Cole or Bill Sobanski would&#13;
be hard to replace."&#13;
Both Cole and Sobanski missed&#13;
different halves of t he season last&#13;
year with injuries.&#13;
Cole, a 6-9 junior from Racine&#13;
(Park), and Sobanski, a 6-7 junior&#13;
from Oak Lawn, HI. (Chicago Mt.&#13;
Carmel), are the two big cogs in&#13;
the Parkside game plan this first&#13;
month of the season.&#13;
Cole averaged 22 points and 12&#13;
rebounds a game last year&#13;
despite missing the first seven&#13;
photo by Cliff Croxford&#13;
ICON pg. 2 Tuesday November 26&#13;
StawAifi fate&#13;
by Cliff Chambers&#13;
Grace Slick and the JEFFERSON STARSHIP (formerly JEFFERSON&#13;
AIRPLANE) landed at the Milwaukee Arena, on November&#13;
15 and again at the Chicago Auditorium, on November 17. Both performances&#13;
were first class, but there were differences.&#13;
One significant difference was the 'back-up' bands. Both TRIUMV1RAT&#13;
(Milw.) and TIDAL POWER (Chicago) are comprised of 3&#13;
musicians each, the only thing they have in common. TRIUMVIRAT,&#13;
probably Germany's best rock band, consists of a drummer, bass&#13;
guitar, &amp; moog-keyboards players. Their sound is very close to&#13;
Emerson, Lake, &amp; Palmer's music (perhaps where E L &amp; P were a&#13;
year ago). They played good complex rock, but the solos (especially&#13;
moog) just don't compare with E L &amp; P's solos. The light show was&#13;
good and not overdone. They played for 50 pleasandt minutes.&#13;
TIDAL POWER, in the Chicago performance, stunk. They were&#13;
extremely loud and eo-centered. The lead guitar, bass guitar and&#13;
drummer, if compared to the loud GRAND FUNK, make GRAND&#13;
FUNK sound great. The only possible reason for them to play was to&#13;
show how really dynamic and polished the JEFFERSON STARSHIP&#13;
is.&#13;
GRACE SLICK and the JEFFERSON STARSHIP played the same&#13;
set of songs in Milwaukee as in Chicago.&#13;
"Ride The Tiger"&#13;
".. .its like a tear in the hands of a western man&#13;
tell you about salt, carbon, and water..."&#13;
JEFFERSON STARSHIP has a new lead guitarist and bass&#13;
guitarist. To dispel any doubts about the new lead player's ability, the&#13;
STARSHIP started out both concerts with "Ride the Tiger," in which&#13;
the lead player does a short solo. His energetic style fits in nicely with&#13;
Grace's voice.&#13;
"Devils Den"&#13;
"... every answer you think you've ever said is&#13;
just a guess and the king of clocks just locks&#13;
up-every day..."&#13;
The old black man who plays electric violin in STARSHIP is Papa&#13;
John Creach. He kinda hops, shuffles, boogies, dances, slides, bounces&#13;
across the stage and plays exrraordinary violin! He played slightly&#13;
more fantiastic in Chicago than he did in Milwaukee.&#13;
"Wooden Ships"&#13;
The light show was similar in both cities, though the one in&#13;
Milwaukee was somewhat better. It was most noticable on the next&#13;
son "Wooden Ships," which featured a good lead solo both times. It&#13;
was the only song featured that was not written by a member of&#13;
JEFFERSON STARSHIP-AIRPLANE.&#13;
"Come Again? Tocan"&#13;
"...Miss takes are made are maid because worlds&#13;
are miss under stud. It's all in vowel you talk..."&#13;
They next did "Come Again? Tocan" from Grace Slick's single&#13;
album "Manhole." That album was advertised as "Grace Slick-the&#13;
voice that lauunched a thousand trips." David Freiberg played good&#13;
jazz-rock piano on this one.&#13;
"Hyperdrive"&#13;
"...I never thought there were corners in time&#13;
til I was told to stand in one..."&#13;
"Hyperdrive" off their new album was a good sample of their music ^&#13;
and how the seven people in STARSHIP blend their sounds in harmonious&#13;
space-rock music.&#13;
"I'm a Bum"&#13;
Papa John Creach then sang a fine blues number, his only vocal in&#13;
the set. He brought both Chicago and Milwaukee audiences to their&#13;
feet, cheering, at the conclusionof his violin solo. It was incredible&#13;
when I heard it in Milwaukee and even when I expected it in Chicago,&#13;
it still shot rushes up and down my backbone. Papa John is probably&#13;
the oldest rock idol working today.&#13;
"Better Lying Down"&#13;
"...She doesn't recognize you standing up~&#13;
she thinks you look better lying down..."&#13;
Grace can sing the blues too. In her son "Better Lying Down" she&#13;
proved that. The new bass guitar player Pete Sears proved he could&#13;
play piano, as Dave Freiberg proved he could play bass. They switched&#13;
instruments for a few songs, this being the first one. In&#13;
Milwaukee Grace said Paul Kantner "wasn't getting into it, but he&#13;
will, as soon as we get back to the Holiday Inn, bless his little ass."&#13;
"That's For Sure&#13;
"...all things that live have a right to be free..."&#13;
John Barbata delivered a dazzling drumming display in tne song&#13;
"That's For Sure." The packed house in Chicago gave a larger vocal&#13;
response which in turn resulted in a longer ( and better) drum solo.&#13;
"All Fly Away"&#13;
"...as I drift into a dream and&#13;
I feel the comet scream..."&#13;
Grace did an expressive vocal on this one, from the new STARSHIP&#13;
album "Dragonfly." Five other songs playered were from&#13;
"Dragonfly." Two from Grace's solo album, one from Papa John's,&#13;
one from "Long John Silver," one from "Volunteers," one from&#13;
"Surrealistic Pillow." The majority of the material was recent.&#13;
"Come To Life"&#13;
In this song, the new bass guitar player Pete Sears, shows his style,&#13;
and what he can do in a bass solo, and why he deserves to play with the&#13;
STARSHIP. What really struck me was that both new members of the&#13;
group, lead and bass guitars, did not remain obscure in the&#13;
background and let Grace and the old Jefferson Airplane members&#13;
carry them along, but instead stood out when they should and blended&#13;
in when needed.&#13;
.O&#13;
0&#13;
' Z&#13;
A&#13;
/ /&#13;
jk//'/&#13;
7 / !&#13;
UltllL&#13;
"Milk Train"&#13;
"...have a little taste of mine. It'll cost you&#13;
nothing..."&#13;
Grace's voice got together with Papa John's violin to put feeling intc&#13;
the song they co-authored, "Milk Train." At the Chicago performance.&#13;
John was slightly better than Grace; while at the Milwaukee performance,&#13;
Grace was slightly better than John.&#13;
"Have You Seen The Stars Tonight"&#13;
In Milwaukee, Grace asked the audience if they would like to hear&#13;
"a forty minute song complete with feedback." They did, of course&#13;
Sure enough, it lasted over forty minutes complete with extra good&#13;
bass and lead and violin solos, powerful vocals midpoint where the&#13;
only lights that remained on in the whole place were the off-on lights&#13;
on the amps, and Grace's words ending the song and the set "...Car&#13;
you believe it?--no more war."&#13;
TCiey received a standing ovation that was near pandemonium ir&#13;
Chicago. Also in Chicago, when they came back to play the encore, a&#13;
member of the audienceplaced a wrapped box on stage for Grace She&#13;
opened it, removed the red roses it contained, and sang:&#13;
"Somebody To Love"&#13;
The JEFFERSON AIRPLANE song that rocked the country in 1967&#13;
the song that made America aware of the strange goings-on in the&#13;
Haight-Asbury district of S an Francisco, the song that brought manj&#13;
beautiful people into contact with each other, the song that took u&lt;&#13;
back and there again. Or there and back again.&#13;
" Volunteers "&#13;
Then they played a second encore song (most unusual in these days&#13;
of rock ripoffs), "Have a Revolution." Grace sang and marched bact&#13;
and forth across the stage and the hearts of the audience. She couldn'i&#13;
have been better. *&#13;
In total: the concert at the Chicago Auditorium had two things goinc&#13;
for it that the Milwaukee Arena concert did not: (1) It was sold oui&#13;
Milwaukee was % full) and (2) the Auditorium has better acoustics&#13;
In Chicago, STARSHIP seemed more polished and responsive to th&lt;&#13;
louder crowd reaction. Chicago also had higher prices ($1.50 higher!&#13;
and a bad back-up band. Paul Kantner apologized for the high price?&#13;
in Chicago and had made arrangements for some $4000 worth o&#13;
posters to be given away at the end of the concert.&#13;
the rock scene in America today, I honestly believe tha:&#13;
JEFFERSON STARSHIP is the best American rock band. In an ag(&#13;
where ERIC CLAPTON plays for 1 hour 20 minutes, DAVID BOWIE ]&#13;
hour 5 minutes, LOU REED 1 hour 35 minutes, it was nice to heai&#13;
somone good who can play energetic rock music for 2'/2 hours or&#13;
Friday, Sunday, and Monday and still apologize for the high price o&#13;
tickets. Don't you want somebody to love. JEFFERSON STARSHIP&#13;
some of us still do.&#13;
WMtrfwrrtss Tistvs&#13;
'heir SeC°nd ediUo" of ™E&#13;
students to be handed out to thA fi ry(only)writtenbythe&#13;
sasBscBs^^ss.-:&#13;
foremost a WOMAN and most of her ^ Sexton was first and&#13;
— withAmeSeJrt„„^„me^S^.rra„^™S&#13;
ICON pg. 3 Tuesday November 26&#13;
Prints by Moishe Smith,&#13;
associate professor of art at&#13;
Parkside are in four current&#13;
exhibitions in Segovai, Spain,&#13;
New York City, Madison and&#13;
Nashua, N.H.&#13;
Two of Smith's prints, "Roman&#13;
Holiday" and "Sierra Nevada,"&#13;
are included in the first international&#13;
Biennial Exhibition of&#13;
Graphic Art and Multiples&#13;
organized by the Fundacion&#13;
Enrique IV de Castilla in&#13;
Segovia, Spain.&#13;
His etching, "Green Apples," is&#13;
included in the Fortieth Anniversary&#13;
Exhibition of&#13;
Associated American Artists on&#13;
display through Nov. 27 in New&#13;
York and in the Collector's&#13;
Choise Exhibition at the Elvehjem&#13;
Art Center in Madison&#13;
through Dec. 15.&#13;
Another print, "The Oaks," is&#13;
included in the Second New&#13;
Hamps h i r e I n t e r n a t i o n a l&#13;
Graphics Annual at the Arts and&#13;
Science Center, Nashua, N.H.,&#13;
through Nov. 23.&#13;
Artist participating in the first joint show by members of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside art&#13;
m«Jude, from left, Robert Cadez, Erik Forrest, Rolin Jansky and David Zaig. The sculpture,&#13;
foreground, is one of Jansky s distinctive polyester impregnated fiberglass works. Paintings in the&#13;
background are by Forrest. The show will be on display through Dec. 13 in Parkside's new Com-&#13;
«" Gallery ^Regular gallery hours are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays&#13;
SI F f Tuesdays and Thursdays. The show includes paintings, prints, ceramics and&#13;
sculpture. Artists represented in addition to those pictured are John Murphy and Moishe Smith.&#13;
«ww „ u u by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
down, up ££ ^ g'aSS b°™Ce 3"d&#13;
agIWX^ai™tSl„bd"Sr:harder' a"dliktog d *"•«&#13;
She stopped when the drink spilled on the front of her shirt. The finger, held up close for scrutinv&#13;
was red and scraped. Delighted, she plunged it back in the cold liquid. "Yikes'" The alcohol bit hard&#13;
on the scraped spots^Licked quickly, then plunged back in the drirlk, licked again&#13;
Games, games. Shit. What next.&#13;
''aS/SSaSS SilUng U? jS en°Ugh t0 see" "Aha!" That was a g°°d 0"e. "Aha!" Louder.&#13;
Ahh! Haa! A blank echo made it sinister, deee-lightful.&#13;
tho ffamp kS J",?*acigaretteThe flame was nice. Up close it filled the room. She waved&#13;
n ' ^C, Tu ? m r°nt °f her eyes" 11 danced-il dickered, it spun and spun.&#13;
Whoa-ho. The flame licked her fingers, dropped burning to her lap. One-handed brush, to the&#13;
iioor, stamped out.&#13;
«wuneu fl?mt1,i,tT]ler,erS' wide: lauShin8' absorbed. Swish, swish, she made the sound for it.&#13;
Whush, whush Back, forth, until flame met fingers, dropped again, wait. One second, two, three,&#13;
then brush, off, to the floor, out. A smouldering hole left in her pants, put out with a drop from the end&#13;
of her finger.&#13;
"Flame game." A small laugh met her lips, escaped, blew out the next match. She sighed tiring of&#13;
it, lit a cigarette finally. B&#13;
The last of the liquid left the glass. "Hm, hm." Trying twice, she stood up, moved in a shuffle to the&#13;
kitchen. A chair placed itself in front of her toes, stubbed. "Shit!" Rage tore a growl from her throat&#13;
she kicked at the chair, missing.&#13;
Madder and madder, her uncovered feet aimed again, again at the offender. The room went white&#13;
her teeth bit hard together, tight screams coming out between them. A fl ying kick tipped the chair&#13;
and toes throbbing, the rage escaped.&#13;
The light came down, a large sigh settled the room. On to the cupboard, take the bottle down&#13;
another drink. A quick hard shot, then half a glass to sip. Back to the other room. Full circle.&#13;
this drumming in my brain, come out next Friday nite. worse or for less I have seen enough of it&#13;
all. I waxed all the proportions I watched the sun trying to come through, but it never could.&#13;
We will all freeze up. Love that cold Love Love that cold. cold. cold.&#13;
as being a critic I often go nutty after gazing blankly at sentences, paragraphs, pages and books. My&#13;
thought of t heir type of li fe was probably as hopeful as yours. Beg my pardon if I am wrong but the&#13;
better for you.&#13;
As for me the little old critic never reaching her real goal of writer I must check new tales of&#13;
unknown each day. How dry does one get after seeing the familiar pattern. But I must not complain&#13;
or feel sorry it is bad for ones person. Just pass me that drink. I k now all the drinks in t he world. Lots&#13;
of p eople do, but I, oh I am a specially good critic of the damn drinks all their tastes let not one nite&#13;
pass oh I would have tasted a drop of something.&#13;
It is at the roots, the roots where I must keep watered daily with the preciousness of t aste. Leave&#13;
me now. Stop by again, soon.- Magnellum&#13;
llimilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIIMIIIMIMIIMIIMIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIII&#13;
the healing of hearts is a gift *&#13;
that children and wise ancients possess&#13;
where no kisses exist&#13;
and no curses live&#13;
there is only perfection, the clear honesty&#13;
of a childe's song&#13;
or an old woman's hands&#13;
-amy nov. 1974&#13;
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The person they knew disappears, as it seems,&#13;
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But where are you really? Who are you inside?&#13;
What did you feel like the last time you died?&#13;
Once you were someone else, now you've gone blind,&#13;
Lost in the shadows you form in your mind.&#13;
Content in the darkness you sit and you wait,&#13;
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ICON pg. 4 Tuesday November 26&#13;
Sta^,n .f h? because he d»dn't want her to know&#13;
that in the shadows and the paths of the sheets&#13;
the heat had fled&#13;
he sat at the counter and rubbed his eyes and&#13;
f«s face in Je "mber reflections of the coffee cup&#13;
and told us how she hurt him,&#13;
by wanting him so much&#13;
all he wanted was a little love&#13;
oh, her breasts were incredible, beautiful&#13;
and her wet darkness could tighten and torch icewater&#13;
and her hands knew how to touch the velvet of his pride&#13;
and excite, but&#13;
she didn't ever get enough&#13;
and he couldn't give her any more&#13;
and she Wouldn't take a lover, as he asked her to&#13;
may be... someone younger,&#13;
someone new&#13;
he laid his head in his hands and cried&#13;
because she never kissed him anymore, she only reached for what is&#13;
the breakfast plates rattled and the waitress wiped her eyes&#13;
-amy nov. 1974&#13;
The faces group round,&#13;
Pale eyelids raise.&#13;
(How does it go; like this?)&#13;
Words faint and far,&#13;
Tears for a deed.&#13;
(How does it go; like this?)&#13;
They cry and they pay&#13;
Turn the knife deep. Jjfr (How does it go; like this?)&#13;
' / N -Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
a non analytic&#13;
the mother of your dreams and lost faith&#13;
unborn children&#13;
enters&#13;
eternally beautiful&#13;
her body like a mountain against life&#13;
as it desires you death&#13;
her arms are black holes in torment&#13;
freeing you from age and guilt&#13;
all here&#13;
she knows everything&#13;
knowing herself&#13;
amy 1974&#13;
~ II a„ is an end,ess&#13;
the Refusal of it all therefore free in formulating wild pasfion Dl^AMS 6 C°U'd ^ WH Y?&#13;
You still amaze me You are You I lo ve YOU the You that is free \rn r •&#13;
such freedom, sometimes I yearn for that kind of flavor BUT i hawmv SUch ima8inat'on&#13;
How exciting Is life this PLAYGROUND my °Wn Waysall&#13;
children we are I prove that child in us all....&#13;
watch me dance, scream, listen I am child&#13;
and old and ridiculous&#13;
THERE is nothing left this pen doesn't write eood anvm/»D anymore I feel lost 8ooa anymore the writer doesn't write good&#13;
Apple Blossssooommm&#13;
Blossom blosm blossom&#13;
, 1. 4. tree&#13;
, 5. crickett&#13;
3. 6. shoe . *&#13;
over defined - and under nourished - well adjusted - low visability&#13;
easy to Hold&#13;
i feel like an asshole I am embarrassed for what I have ever done&#13;
-Magnellum&#13;
Make-Be lieve&#13;
A lig ht faintly shaded,&#13;
A fe eling of death.&#13;
(How does it go; like this?)&#13;
-amy nov. 1974&#13;
To let people shape you, be what they want, h&#13;
You're hurting yourself, you're losing your Self&#13;
To wear a character like a mask&#13;
When inside you. are coming apart,&#13;
To say "I am one with you"&#13;
When there is nothing for which you can sav&#13;
"This is me,"&#13;
Then you have lost yourself.&#13;
Be what you are.&#13;
the love sonata&#13;
the kiss,&#13;
suffered at the hands of your lover&#13;
down a thousand filthy alleys and&#13;
a thousand black&#13;
a body rejected, a soul locked inside the rejector&#13;
now,&#13;
we will say good-byes with&#13;
our hellos&#13;
i will hold your hand and wave it away&#13;
then, with brown images and thoughts&#13;
of p ain and great impress *&#13;
i will guess what you've become&#13;
moving always forward and&#13;
beyond me&#13;
into the music of white white&#13;
of brittle roses&#13;
with their rotting stems still in stagnent water&#13;
A silence in the morning&#13;
As the stars disappear;&#13;
No sound is needed&#13;
For the glory of golden sun.&#13;
It's brightness fills the skies,&#13;
It's bigness fills your minds.&#13;
Burning away the foggy dew.&#13;
Reaching out to life on earth.&#13;
What could be more beautiful?&#13;
Not the stars, never.&#13;
ICON pg.5 Tuesday November 26&#13;
should true winter come:&#13;
like you&#13;
then, it would be thw rold's winter; with its&#13;
great cleansing and crystal&#13;
if it is your winter&#13;
then, i suppose some overwhelming personal&#13;
cruelty and tragedy will overtake the flight&#13;
of lovers&#13;
(as they become angels with love)&#13;
it will not breath or speak&#13;
but remain self-indulging, unconscious of all but&#13;
itself&#13;
over which it constantly fawns&#13;
with despair&#13;
pity and sometimes consolation&#13;
winter in hell ;&#13;
no fire,&#13;
just ice on the cheeks of a million demons&#13;
amy nov. 1974&#13;
When y ou are feeling very small and sad,&#13;
Remember there are others worse off than you.&#13;
Find someone who needs your help;&#13;
Take him by the hand, look in his face,&#13;
And kick the living shit out of him.&#13;
Thus do you become a true Man.&#13;
« * »vg.*"'* '*• •*"'&lt; * '* ' " &lt;&#13;
my autumn harvest heart&#13;
childe,&#13;
waiting for a childe&#13;
waiting&#13;
what is beautiful perishes&#13;
mystery to mystery&#13;
beyond the far-yields&#13;
of gold and russet&#13;
in the orb-organisms of suspicion&#13;
to you&#13;
seasonal dressful undressing&#13;
your great single eye thick in the darks&#13;
of your face&#13;
a boon to superstition&#13;
dear searich evenings&#13;
lights so numerous dreams attend&#13;
you unprivate body preludes icy death&#13;
you cool-grassed hips deny it&#13;
-amy 1974&#13;
pale good morning&#13;
where the virgin verdant illusions flicker stil&#13;
pale flicker&#13;
ashen flame&#13;
unmentioned sorrow, here to dwell&#13;
deep, well deep, in your gut&#13;
more swift than the unleashed blood of great wounds&#13;
faster. \ •-&#13;
even faster than death&#13;
take away the manners of love&#13;
remove the rites of kiss, of dream&#13;
pale, unspeakable&#13;
the images unquiver and smash in shafts lifelessly&#13;
through your mind&#13;
-amy 1974&#13;
so now, good morning&#13;
lest we miss the deeds you'd do today&#13;
the new torments&#13;
still waiting for him&#13;
behind the arches of your eyes&#13;
ICON pg.6 Tuesday November 26&#13;
Ante&#13;
locate*&#13;
Goners by Conrad Bishop; 8 p.m. weekends thru&#13;
Dec. 22; at the Body Politic, 2257 N. Lincoln Ave.&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
The House of Bernardo Alba by Lorca; presented by&#13;
Theater First, at 8:30 p.m. Friday for weekends&#13;
thru Dec. 8; Athenaeum Theater, 2936 N. Southport&#13;
Ave., Chicago.&#13;
The Sea by Edward Bond, an American premiere •&#13;
since last Tuesday thru Dec. 22 at 7:30 p.m •&#13;
Goodman Theater Center, 200 S. Columbus Dr.&#13;
A Li ttle Night Music with Jean Simmons, Margaret&#13;
Hamilton, George Lee Andrews; thru Jan. 4 except&#13;
Sundays; Shubert Theater, 22 W. Monroe St&#13;
Meanwhile, Back on the Couch; thru Dec. 11 except&#13;
Mondays; Shady Lane Theater, Marengo.&#13;
Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, with Chicago&#13;
Group Theater; opens Dec. 9 for Mondays only thru&#13;
Dec. 30.&#13;
The Good Doctor by Neil Simon; Chicago premiere&#13;
Dec. 19 thru Feb. 2; Forum Theater.&#13;
13 Rue de 1'amour by Feydeau, with Leslie Caron,&#13;
Louis Jourdan; opens Dec. 6 for an indefinite run;&#13;
Aldington Park Theater, Arlington Heights.&#13;
fftu&amp;Cc a*ut V&lt;utcc&#13;
Coming: The Nutcracker, the Ballet will be held at&#13;
McCormick Place beginning Dec. 18 thru Jan. 4.&#13;
For further information contact the Chicago&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
National Dance Company of Senegal, Nov. 27 and&#13;
28; Auditorium Theater.&#13;
Artemisia, 226 E. Ontario St. Paintings by Vera&#13;
Klement, closed Sundays.&#13;
Art Institute: Max Ernst closes on Sunday. The&#13;
sculpture, drawings, paintings and prints of Alberto&#13;
Giacometti, an exhibition from the Rather&#13;
Collection in Gallery 108, thru Jan. 12. Triptychs&#13;
and Diptychs from the Buckingham Collection in&#13;
Gallery 114, thru Jan. 5. Contemporary Japanese&#13;
Prints from private Chicago Collections in Gallery&#13;
113, thru Jan. 12.&#13;
Jacques Baruch Gallery, 900 N. Michigan Ave.&#13;
Contemporary Tapestries, thru Nov. 30.&#13;
Hyde Park Art Center, 5236 S. Blackstone Ave.&#13;
"Images derived from Photographs" thru&#13;
November.&#13;
Museum of Contemporary Art: Alexander Calder&#13;
Retrospective, thru Dec. 8.&#13;
Dorthy Rosenthal Gallery, 223 E. Ontario St.,&#13;
Picasso graphics and Ceramics, continuing.&#13;
Maurice Sternberg Gallery 140 E. Ontario St.,&#13;
Chagall, Agam, Calder, and Miro, thru Nov. 30.&#13;
Circle Gallery 108 Michigan Ave. Paintings and&#13;
lithographs by LeBaDang, thru November.&#13;
Parkside Theater Gallery, the work of the art&#13;
faculty. On exhibit thru Dec. 12.&#13;
Rubino Galleries, 18 E. Delaware PI. Alfred Louis&#13;
Menotti, and C. R. Petrauskas, thru Dec. 14.&#13;
Museum of Judaica, 618 S. Michigan Ave., "Magic&#13;
and Superstition in the Jewish tradition, thru Jan.&#13;
26, and "Solomon" thru Feb. 8.&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
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(Compounds A nnually to 5 .62%)&#13;
ON REGULAR&#13;
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THREE CO NVENIENT LO CATIONS:&#13;
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ACCOUNTING AND&#13;
FINANCE MAJORS&#13;
Let us help you:&#13;
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Milton, thou should'st be living at this hour," the poet Wordsworth wrote in the 19th Century and&#13;
contemporary scholars concurred Tuesday as they held concluding sessions of a four-day Milton&#13;
ercentenary Conference at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside marking the 300th anniversary of&#13;
tne death of English poet and moralist John Milton in 1674. The conference drew Milton scholars from&#13;
throughout the English-speaking world including left to right, Vincent Leitch of Mercer University&#13;
ndrew McLean, coordinator of t he Parkside sessions, John T. Shawcross of City University of New&#13;
k S S„ °{ 1116 University of Oklahoma. Shawcross and Sims were among those&#13;
presenting papers on Milton and his work. Initial sessions of the conference were held at UWMilwaukee&#13;
and Marquette University which sponsored the event with UW-P. In conjunction with the&#13;
Included^rp a m r d'SplayS °f Milt0nk work' which are °Pen t0 the Public- Rpipfnfn- h 19th Century Book of Common Prayer and a 1680 edition of Milton's "Paradise&#13;
°f 17th Ce."^ Miltonic manuscripts including five&#13;
Mi."°n's ""J"- ? 1629 Bible a book of Milton's poems published in 1673, a year&#13;
before his death, will be on display in the Special Collections Area of the Library through Nov. 21&#13;
? y contemPorary Milton books will remain on display in the Circulation Area through&#13;
mid-December.&#13;
0?ewuvio&gt;4&#13;
SHORECREST GEORGETOWN&#13;
639 5305 554-7334&#13;
PIZZA CHICKEN&#13;
AND FISH CARRYOUTS&#13;
ANYTIME! HOURS: Sun. Wed. &amp; Thurs. 11:30 A.M.'&#13;
11:30 P.M.&#13;
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Just Stop In!&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
Open:&#13;
Daily 6:00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
County E &amp; G reen Bay Rd.&#13;
PORTS&#13;
AR&#13;
ENTER&#13;
PHit 152-6667&#13;
2728 - 52nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS. 53140&#13;
Parts a nd S ervice f or&#13;
All I mported C ars&#13;
also&#13;
QUALITY ROAD SERVICE&#13;
roller skate&#13;
SHOW COLLEGE I.D. &amp;&#13;
SKATE FOR $1.25 ANY LATE&#13;
WEEKEND SESSION&#13;
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FRI. &amp; SAT. 9:30-11:30&#13;
SKatetomt&#13;
1825 SYCAMORE AVENUE&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53406&#13;
CALL 633-4493&#13;
The&#13;
Great Old Lunch&#13;
Is Back 11:00-4:00 MONDAY-FRIDAY* NO SUBSTITUTES • POTATO EXTRA&#13;
('1.19 for a chopped s teak, salad &amp; toast!)&#13;
('1.19 for a ranch s teak, sa lad &amp; toast!)&#13;
Tuesday Night&#13;
Is Bonanza&#13;
Special Night&#13;
^°F a e^e steak dinner!)&#13;
( 1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)&#13;
• Feed a child in America for 49C.&#13;
an n!wf0t '"g ri8h*a*°"™ of food to make a kid smile - a hamburger.&#13;
. an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price - 49c - to make you smile.&#13;
*oTl kwe itWII love ft.&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY</text>
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              <text>Begin search for counselor</text>
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              <text>Remember the hassles of scheduling classes? What to take, how to fill out the cards...and the&#13;
people - they were everywherel But contrary to recent rumors, there ARE counselors available&#13;
to nelD VOU out. To n UO - i •&#13;
l _ i _ A _ , , * • • • « , • « m r e c o u n s e l o r s avaiii&#13;
to help you out To give students a head start on the process, there will be an Academic&#13;
Planning Week Dec. 9-13 in the LLC Concourse. C&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
— Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 18&#13;
Conflict over S$C nominee?&#13;
Groups grope&#13;
Begin search&#13;
for counselor&#13;
ApP&#13;
1&#13;
.&#13;
,&#13;
1&#13;
cants are stil1 being screened for two other openfngs&#13;
caunsehng&#13;
-&#13;
A11 interested students are invited to meet each of the&#13;
candidates according, to the following schedule:&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 3-4 p.m. -Brenda Peterson&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 3-4 p .m. --Connie Cummings&#13;
The candidates will be in LLC D173 (RKR room - behind the Information&#13;
kiosk) at the above times.&#13;
"The position they have applied for involves personal, social and&#13;
educational counseling, as well as ectensive work as an academic&#13;
advisor to freshmen and sophomore students," explained Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, associate dean of students.&#13;
The finalists were selected by a committee composed of three&#13;
students, two counselors, two other academic staff, one civil service&#13;
person and Echelbarger.&#13;
Peterson earned her MEd. in College Counseling and Student&#13;
Personnel Administration from the University of Maryland earlier&#13;
this year. She has been working as the Dean of Student Services at&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Regents to vote on&#13;
faculty guidelines&#13;
Among the items to be voted upon at the Board of&#13;
Regents Thursday and Friday (Dec. 5 and 6)&#13;
meeting in Milwaukee are proposed UW System&#13;
faculty personnel guidelines.&#13;
The guidelines will be the first to govern the UW&#13;
System. Portions of them were drawn from old UW&#13;
and WSU rules and from provisions of the Merger&#13;
Implementation Statute.&#13;
The guidelines will govern hiring, granting of&#13;
tenure, dismissal, grievance procedures and layoff&#13;
during times of financial emergency. Community&#13;
activities of faculty members will also be governed&#13;
by the new rules.&#13;
A public hearing on these areas was already held&#13;
in late November by the Regents.&#13;
Also in November, the Regents approved a twoyear,&#13;
30 percent pay increase for faculty.&#13;
Faculty salaries will increase by 17 percent in&#13;
1975-76 and by 13 percent in 1976-77. The increase&#13;
next year will be made up of an 11 percent cost-ofliving&#13;
adjustment, 4 percent merit pay increase,&#13;
and a 2 percent raise to compensate for a decrease&#13;
in real wages over 1973-74. The 1976-77 raise will 1&#13;
percent cost-of-living and 5 percent merit.&#13;
The proposal must still be passed with the res&#13;
the UW biennial budget by Gov. Patrick Lucey&#13;
the state legislature. Joe Nusbaum, secretary of&#13;
Department of Administration, has said that&#13;
proval of the 30 pe rcent increase is unlikely.&#13;
This measure, which the Regents considered&#13;
number one priority item on the 1975-77 UW budi&#13;
passed the board as Central Administration 1&#13;
submitted it by a 12 to 1 vote.&#13;
The single dissenting vote came from Reg&#13;
Walter Renk, Sun Prairie, who said the propc&#13;
was asking too much from Wisconsin taxpayers,&#13;
earlier motion by Renk to reduce the askedamount&#13;
failed.&#13;
The total amount of the salary increase plar&#13;
$105.2 m illion. If the resident tuition stabilizat&#13;
and reduction plan is passed for the next bienniu&#13;
$91.6 million of the faculty salary increase will&#13;
paid with state funds.&#13;
- c ontinued on page S&#13;
Tuition to rise&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER staff&#13;
Students and faculty are now in&#13;
the process of selecting their&#13;
nominees for the Search and&#13;
Screen Committee (SSC) which&#13;
will be screening applications for&#13;
chancellor.&#13;
Union&#13;
seeks&#13;
funds&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
James Galbriath, director of&#13;
Planning and Construction,&#13;
appeared before the State&#13;
Building Commission in Madison&#13;
on November 22 to make a plea&#13;
for supplementary funding for&#13;
the new student union.&#13;
The Bureau of Facilities&#13;
Managment which is located in&#13;
Madison, presented the proposal&#13;
for an extra $200,000 and&#13;
recommended that the Building&#13;
Commission grant Parkside's&#13;
request.&#13;
The Commission voted to delay&#13;
a final decision until bids are&#13;
received from the contractors in&#13;
late January.&#13;
The figure of $200,000 relates to&#13;
two areas of the union. One of&#13;
these is the pedestrian bridge&#13;
which will run over the inner loop&#13;
road, connecting the Union to the&#13;
Classroom Building. The other&#13;
area concerned is the loading&#13;
dock which will be located at the&#13;
west end of the building.&#13;
In speaking of the request for&#13;
the extra $200,000, Galbraith said,&#13;
"the rate of inflation has risen to&#13;
the point where we welcome any&#13;
relief we can get."&#13;
Galbraith, though disappointed&#13;
that the request wasn't granted&#13;
immediately, is optomistic that&#13;
the funding will eventually be&#13;
appropriated.&#13;
He explained that "the commission&#13;
approved it (the request&#13;
for extra funding) in principle...and&#13;
I feel that the delay of&#13;
a decision isn't bad news, only a&#13;
postponement of good news".&#13;
There has been disagreement&#13;
among the four student&#13;
organizations which were&#13;
requested by Donald Smith,&#13;
senior vice president of the UW&#13;
System, to choose student&#13;
nominees for the committee as to&#13;
how this should be accomplished.&#13;
The organizations involved are&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc., Parkside&#13;
Activities Board, Adult Student&#13;
Association, and Vets Club.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
of PSGA, whose aim is to have&#13;
the presidents of all student&#13;
organizations form a council&#13;
which would select student&#13;
nominees, said that all&#13;
organizations have agreed to this&#13;
procedure except for PAB, ASA&#13;
and Vets Club.&#13;
Neglected to Acknowledge&#13;
According to Milutinovich,&#13;
these organizations have&#13;
neglected to acknowledge his&#13;
letter requesting the formation of&#13;
this council.&#13;
Milutinovich said, "You'd think&#13;
that they (PAB, ASA and Vets&#13;
Club) would at least have the&#13;
common courtesy to reply (to the&#13;
letter). What do these&#13;
organizations have to do with&#13;
picking a chancellor anyway?&#13;
Why do we have a student&#13;
government? They (PAB, ASA&#13;
and Vets Club) want to pick their&#13;
own people (for nominees). They&#13;
don't care about student&#13;
representation."&#13;
Asked if PSGA would also send&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
"It looks like tuition for UW&#13;
undergraduates will go up at&#13;
least $210 in the next two years,"&#13;
James Hamilton, president of the&#13;
United Council of Student&#13;
Governments, predicted at a&#13;
recent press conference held in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
"Our tuition is tied to the&#13;
faculty salary issue," Hamilton&#13;
said.&#13;
The UW faculty have presented&#13;
a compensation package to&#13;
Central Administration for its&#13;
approval which calls for a salary&#13;
increase of $118 million or 18&#13;
percent over the next two years.&#13;
Hamilton said, "since 80&#13;
percent of tuition paid by UW&#13;
students goes directly ito faculty&#13;
salaries, that means an&#13;
inevitable rise in tuition."&#13;
He explained that the faculty&#13;
compensation package will, if&#13;
implemented, cause a 39 percent&#13;
increase in UW undergraduate&#13;
tuition over the next two years.&#13;
"This 39 percent increase or&#13;
$210 per student only accounts for&#13;
80 percent of tuition charges. The&#13;
other 20 percent for&#13;
miscellaneious expenses will&#13;
inevitably rise at least at the rate&#13;
of inflation," Hamilton said. "If&#13;
this trend continues we may see&#13;
tuition soar to $1,000 per year by&#13;
1978."&#13;
United Council though, is not&#13;
opposed to the faculty's compensation&#13;
package. "We feel that&#13;
an 18 percent increase over a two&#13;
year period is not out of line,"&#13;
Hamilton continued. "We must&#13;
maintain the high quality of&#13;
education the citizens of this state&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
TERRY, YOU'VE REALLY&#13;
PILLED MY SHOES,&#13;
—V '&#13;
X'M&#13;
PROUD . P&#13;
OF" You, / fccS)&#13;
BOY &#13;
2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
'How to Lose&#13;
the Battle'&#13;
• • •by General&#13;
Confusion&#13;
The Search and Screen Committee that will select the&#13;
next Chancellor of Parkside is in the process of formation.&#13;
This process includes the need for students to&#13;
choose two members of the student body as their&#13;
representatives. At this point the various student groups&#13;
on campus are showing their usual inability to cooperate&#13;
and have failed to come up with a plan for choosing.the&#13;
candidates. This is an impossible situation and could&#13;
severely damage the cause of student rights.-&#13;
This past semester has seen the passage of a student&#13;
government constitution by the student body as a whole.&#13;
This constitution laid out the means for matters of this&#13;
kind to be handled. RANGER feels that the students of&#13;
this campus have chosen their form of government and&#13;
their representatives. If such groups as Adult Student&#13;
Association and the Parkside Activities Board refuse to&#13;
cooperate in the form of government chosen by students&#13;
and would rather continue on in their insulated fashion,&#13;
the PSGA should ignore them and continue on in the&#13;
selection of candidates.&#13;
We ask: Who chose Student Government membersstudents.&#13;
Who chose PAB members-they chose&#13;
themselves. Who votes in ASA elections-anyone who&#13;
has survived past their prime (that includes this editor,&#13;
although I am not a member of ASA).&#13;
A good case could be made for PSGA to be the only&#13;
nominator of candidates for Search and Screen but&#13;
PSGA has instead chosen to work with the other student&#13;
organizations on campus to insure a representative&#13;
form of selection.&#13;
We call on PSGA to continue in their efforts to&#13;
establish such a committee.&#13;
If student organizations cannot work together in this&#13;
case, there is little hope that opportunities for student&#13;
expression in matters that deeply affect them will be&#13;
presented to them again.. Factionalism only dilutes&#13;
student power and if continued long enough, can destroy&#13;
it.&#13;
1 TheParksideThe&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independenl&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2287.&#13;
Editor Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Advertising Manager John Sacket&#13;
Business Manager Steve Johnson&#13;
Managing Editor Greg Hawkins&#13;
News Editor Michael Olszyk&#13;
Humanities Editor amy cundari&#13;
Copy Editor Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
News Department Paul Anderson, Jeannine Sipsma,&#13;
Mike Nepper&#13;
Humanities Department Walter Ulbricht, Fred Bultman&#13;
Photographers Dale Allen,&#13;
Dave Dretzka, Mike Nepper&#13;
cm *&#13;
0&gt;&lt;&#13;
K Tountae&#13;
K }&#13;
r^cdRa $ Ad 'N HEMO&#13;
Normal gets nasty&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Vets Club, Adult Student&#13;
Assoc., P.A.B., and P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
have been asked to make&#13;
nominations to the Search and&#13;
Screen comm. In a letter from&#13;
President Weaver we were asked&#13;
to give attention to minority and&#13;
female nominees, yet Third&#13;
World and People for a NonSexist&#13;
Society were not included&#13;
in this selection process. Also not&#13;
included were Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition, Ranger and United&#13;
Council of Student Organizations.&#13;
All of the above organizations are&#13;
major organizations that&#13;
represent a broad spectrum of&#13;
the student body. I'm not faulting&#13;
President Weaver because he&#13;
received his list of major&#13;
organizations from our Administration.&#13;
Of the four student&#13;
organizations selected two have&#13;
membership requirements that&#13;
are restrictive (A.S.A. age, Vets&#13;
Club past occupation). The third&#13;
one deals with campus entertainment&#13;
and has been&#13;
described by it's administrative&#13;
director as not a "student&#13;
organization but an organization&#13;
of students" (shades of doublethink).&#13;
&#13;
I have requested that all of the&#13;
above organization come&#13;
together and form a comm. to , in&#13;
effect, search and screen our&#13;
nominees. This would allow for&#13;
added and much more student&#13;
input. All of the nominees would&#13;
be interviewed and voted on by&#13;
all of the above organizations. A&#13;
composite list would then be sent&#13;
to President Weaver.&#13;
My letter was dated Nov. 14,&#13;
1974 as of Nov. 27 the A.S.A, Vets&#13;
Club, and PAB have shown no&#13;
willingness on their part to have&#13;
their selections screened by other&#13;
organizations. In fact what they&#13;
are saying to you the students&#13;
"we don't need more student&#13;
input". These organizations don't&#13;
even have the common courtesy&#13;
to reply to the letters I have sent&#13;
and the numerous letters they&#13;
have received from other concerned&#13;
organizations. Yet these&#13;
are the same groups that were in&#13;
the forefront preaching "more&#13;
student input, n^e student&#13;
representation during formation&#13;
of the student constitution.&#13;
What HYPOCRACY!!&#13;
Is this how we are to select a&#13;
Chancellor? All of the other&#13;
organizations are saying no but&#13;
While Arthur is away&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
I thoroughly enjoyed Mr.&#13;
Gruhl's letter which was featured&#13;
in your November 20th issue of&#13;
the Ranger. Having alumni, or&#13;
anyone else for that matter, write&#13;
in like this is a terrific idea!&#13;
At the same time, I thought&#13;
perhaps you'd enjoy hearing&#13;
about my plans. No, I'm not an&#13;
alumni—I'm a student, or should&#13;
I say I was a student? I went to&#13;
Parkside for three semesters and&#13;
completed 33 credits of strict premed.&#13;
I maintained a 3.33 GPA.&#13;
But, I soon became weary of&#13;
school, decided to drop out, run&#13;
away, and join the circus, where I&#13;
became a sword-swallower and&#13;
sold beef jerky on the side. After&#13;
three months of this, I again&#13;
became weary, and longing for&#13;
extraterrestrial adventure, I&#13;
hopped a freight train bound for&#13;
PFANSS seeks&#13;
To the Ediotr:&#13;
We, the co-chairpersons of&#13;
People For A Non-Sexist Society,&#13;
believe that the Search and&#13;
Screen Committee should include&#13;
members who represent the&#13;
student body at their best. "Their&#13;
best" implies those student who&#13;
have most energetically carried&#13;
out the collective trust, i.e.Third&#13;
World, P.F.A.N.S.S., P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc., etc. Whether the methods of&#13;
that trust are consolidated&#13;
matters little, (we are sure that&#13;
Tierra del Fuego, where I&#13;
became involved in underworld&#13;
intrigue and Presbyterian&#13;
ministers. (We Hebrews call&#13;
them bastards.)&#13;
Well, I guess that lets you know&#13;
something about my past. You're&#13;
probably wondering about my&#13;
plans for the future. I don't actually&#13;
have any set plans,&#13;
although the thought of becoming&#13;
an Australian sheep-herder has&#13;
always been one of my pet&#13;
aspirations.&#13;
The Australian coast appeals to&#13;
me. I can see it all now. Armies of&#13;
tiny sandcrabs litter the shore as&#13;
they advance and retreat with the&#13;
onslaught of each angry wave.&#13;
Fluttering shorebirds dart in and&#13;
out amongst the eddies created&#13;
by these waves, as they continue&#13;
in their quest for illusive,&#13;
phantom-like Crustacea. And in&#13;
the big three are saying yes. ONE&#13;
has even gone so far as to ask&#13;
other organizations to submit&#13;
names. This is not added input for&#13;
one simple reason, these names&#13;
will be screened by a small group&#13;
of people, from their own&#13;
organization (kind of reminds&#13;
you of the old skeleton crew&#13;
theory that was put forth by this&#13;
group).&#13;
Oh yes the administration.&#13;
During our constitutional&#13;
referendum you were screaming&#13;
"more student input". Now you&#13;
are as silent as you can be. I&#13;
believe it's safe to assume that&#13;
the idea of added student input is&#13;
only important when it serves&#13;
your own purposes. To think we&#13;
are being called self-serving&#13;
bastards, I guess it takes one to&#13;
KNOW one.&#13;
In closing I would like to thank&#13;
P.A.B., Vets Club, A.S.A. and the&#13;
administration for their underwhelming&#13;
show of concern&#13;
towards increased student input.&#13;
Of course maybe we are looking&#13;
for a Chancellor that is an adult&#13;
(how obvious), "a vet, and an&#13;
entertainer.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
the air, huge sea-birds soarin&#13;
like giganitc kites, survey th&#13;
watery countryside. Palm tree&#13;
stand strong and tall in silen&#13;
testimony for all creatures t&#13;
witness. Beautiful aborigin&#13;
maidens caress my ear lobes, as&#13;
writhe in blissful ecstasy.&#13;
Diversity is one aspect of thi&#13;
paper that has been sadl;&#13;
lacking. I appreciate and enjo;&#13;
the diversity that Arthur Gruh&#13;
has presented to this paper ove:&#13;
the years. At the same time,&#13;
encourage you students to writi&#13;
in. I'd like to hear what you've al&#13;
been up to!&#13;
Oh! One final thought. Gooc&#13;
luck and a pleasant journey&#13;
Arthur, to you and your wife&#13;
Have a safe and enlightening&#13;
trip, and remember to write! It's&#13;
a Walt Disney world—Dig it!!&#13;
Sincerelj&#13;
- m Name withheld upon reque&#13;
fair representation&#13;
you will agree). After all, the&#13;
student body is a diverse and&#13;
divided group.&#13;
What is most important - far&#13;
more important than power plays&#13;
or petty politics, which are better&#13;
left to the administration, is that&#13;
the total student body be&#13;
represented fairly on the Search&#13;
and Screen Committee.&#13;
Our feeling are best expressed&#13;
in the words of Harriet Mill: "We&#13;
deny the right of any portion of&#13;
the species to decide for another&#13;
portion, or any individual for&#13;
PAB disowns referendum&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to the Ranger&#13;
article of Nov 26 concerning the&#13;
election results, we would like to&#13;
point out that the proposed&#13;
referendum was not originated&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
as may be implied in the article.&#13;
We b elieve that the referendum&#13;
could imply that the Executive&#13;
Council, which is composed of the&#13;
president, vice-president, and the&#13;
10 committee chairpeople, is&#13;
presently not representative of&#13;
the student body, and we would&#13;
like to clarify some misunderstandings.&#13;
&#13;
1. P.A.B. is open for membership&#13;
to all students on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
2. All P.A.B. members are&#13;
eligible for the Executive&#13;
Vets: remove SPN nos. from DD2l4's&#13;
another individual, what is an&#13;
what is not their "prope&#13;
sphere." The proper sphere fc&#13;
all human beings is the larges&#13;
and highest which they are abl&#13;
to attain to." We, as represer&#13;
tatives of P.F.A.N.S.S., realiz&#13;
that in order for the students c&#13;
Parkside to obtain our "prope&#13;
sphere," it is essential and vitc&#13;
to act as a cohesive unit i&#13;
determining the futur&#13;
figurehead of this university.&#13;
Janet L.Scol&#13;
Lise Iwo&#13;
Council.&#13;
3. Therefore, we believe&#13;
the Executive Council make&#13;
effort to be fair and repre&#13;
tative of the student body sin&#13;
allows and encourages anyor&#13;
join the board who is interest&#13;
learning to program activ&#13;
through continued experie&#13;
Barbara Burke, president P.­&#13;
Sharon Goff, vice-presii&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
As a continuing effort on behalf&#13;
of the Parkside Veterans, the&#13;
Veterans Service Office is offering&#13;
pre-printed forms for&#13;
removal of separation no's. (SPN&#13;
nos.) from D.D: 214's. The&#13;
Veteran need only stop in at the&#13;
Vets Service Office for instructions&#13;
on use of the nre&#13;
printed form.&#13;
pre&#13;
"&#13;
vFt°&#13;
r the i&#13;
nformat&#13;
»°n of those&#13;
Veterans who have not yet heard&#13;
of the removal of the SPN no&#13;
from discharge papers, the&#13;
removal is due to a possible effect&#13;
on some job seeking&#13;
Removal of SPN. nos.&#13;
enhance the job getting abili&#13;
those Veterans who previi&#13;
had SPN. nos. on their disch&#13;
papers.&#13;
Bill&#13;
Secretary and Treai&#13;
of the Vets &#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
PSGA gets things straight&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
I would like to take this opportunity&#13;
to clarify the position of&#13;
the P.S.G.A. Inc. Senate on the&#13;
following issues, the proposed&#13;
student union, the recent&#13;
P.S.G.A. elections, and the new&#13;
constitution.&#13;
First the P.S.G.A. Inc. senate&#13;
does not wish to prevent construction&#13;
of the union. However it&#13;
has come to our attention that the&#13;
administration in their application&#13;
for an approximately&#13;
3.5 million dollar Dept. of&#13;
Housing and Urban Development&#13;
federal interest subsidy included&#13;
a multiroom, modern health&#13;
center as well as offices for&#13;
student government in the&#13;
building plan. The latest union&#13;
floor plans include neither. We&#13;
feel that the physical welfare of&#13;
the Parkside community&#13;
requires adequate health care&#13;
facilities. The present plan is to&#13;
keep the nurses office in the&#13;
lower 1.1.c. area. It is obvious that&#13;
an effective health care facility&#13;
must be in an area which is&#13;
readily accessible to large&#13;
numbers of students. We feel that&#13;
the original union plan to include&#13;
a health center must be followed.&#13;
The administration argues that&#13;
there is no room for the health&#13;
center in the union. However&#13;
almost the entire fourth level of&#13;
the union is to be occupied by the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board and&#13;
Student Life officies, conference&#13;
rooms, and a poster shop. The&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. is willing to stay in&#13;
our current offices but we feel&#13;
that the P.A.B. and offices of&#13;
student life should also remain in&#13;
their current locations, so that&#13;
the health center may be included&#13;
in the union as the H.U.D.&#13;
interest subsidy application&#13;
states it will be. I would also like&#13;
to make it clear to everyone, that&#13;
attorney John Seifert has not&#13;
been retained by the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. and that any statements&#13;
which he makes are his own and&#13;
are not reflective of the position&#13;
of the P.S.G.A.Inc.&#13;
In regard to the recent&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. election, we believe&#13;
that the poor voter turnout was&#13;
largely due to these factors. First&#13;
this was the first election run&#13;
under the new system of&#13;
academic divisional representation,&#13;
and this was inititally&#13;
confusing to potential voters.&#13;
Also the rules for this election&#13;
had to be extremely strict in&#13;
order to prevent any recurrence&#13;
of the election contestations&#13;
which were filed after the last&#13;
election. Another factor was&#13;
inadequate publicity due to our&#13;
lack of sufficient funds.&#13;
In regard to the new P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. constitution, the senate has&#13;
instructed the president of&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. and the president&#13;
pro tempore of the senate to&#13;
begin negotiations with Acting&#13;
Chancellor Bauer in order to&#13;
attempt to reach a mutual&#13;
agreement on the constitution&#13;
without resorting to litigation.&#13;
Chancellor Bauer has indicated&#13;
that he is interested in trying to&#13;
work out an agreement.&#13;
John Kontz&#13;
president pro tempore&#13;
P.S.G.A.Inc. Senate&#13;
Counseling -continued from page 1&#13;
Ocean City College in Maryland, where she was responsible for administration&#13;
of various services including counseling, housing,&#13;
financial aid, and personal development education. She has also&#13;
taught physical education, environmental studies, and biology. While&#13;
an undergraduate at Texas Women's University she was a residence&#13;
hall counselor and student government treasurer, as well as President&#13;
of Mortarboard, an honorary society which recognizes women college&#13;
students for scholarship and student leadership.&#13;
Cummings received her M.S. in Education, concentrating in&#13;
Counselor Education, from Southern Illinois University in 1973. While&#13;
at SIU (Edwardsville) she worked as a research assistant and&#13;
program counselor in the School of Business to develop and implement&#13;
an interdisciplinary learning program. Her responsibilities included&#13;
interviewing students, career planning, academic advising and&#13;
personal and social counseling. She has also done research on "SelfActualization&#13;
and the Student Wife."&#13;
Students meeting the candidates will have an opportunity to provide&#13;
feedback to the screening committee.&#13;
Jamaica trip&#13;
in doubt&#13;
Tuition- -continued from page 1 •&#13;
are accustomed to and rightly&#13;
deserve."&#13;
He suggested that the faculty&#13;
salary increase be covered by&#13;
state GPR (general purpose&#13;
revenue) funds-which have&#13;
accumulated huge surpluses over&#13;
the first year of the biennium.&#13;
He said further that United&#13;
Council is "against any property&#13;
or income tax hike for Wisconsin&#13;
taxpayers.&#13;
However, "if the governor is&#13;
hell-bent on raising taxes, then&#13;
let me suggest a 2 cents increase&#13;
on the cigarette tax," Hamilton&#13;
said. "It is seems better to pedal&#13;
cancer at a higher cost than to&#13;
provide university education at a&#13;
higher cost."&#13;
Hamilton spoke strongly in&#13;
favor of the Regents' proposal to&#13;
lower tuition by 50 percent in the&#13;
next two years. Citing studies on&#13;
financial aid in Wisconsin, he&#13;
pointed out that while higher&#13;
education costs keep rising, there&#13;
is less money available for&#13;
grants, scholarships and loans.&#13;
Consequently, students are either&#13;
forsaking higher education or&#13;
incurring huge debts on their way&#13;
through the university.&#13;
Hamilton called for Governor&#13;
Lucey's support of the Regents'&#13;
low tuition proposal.&#13;
"If Governor Lucey truly has&#13;
f the interests of the state at heart,&#13;
he will do Wisconsin a favor by&#13;
supporting this proposal and&#13;
opening the doors of higher&#13;
education to Wisconsin residents&#13;
who wish to enter the university,&#13;
but cannot because of the unbearably&#13;
high cost."&#13;
Lucey has previously called the&#13;
measure inflationary and a "pie&#13;
in the sky."&#13;
Groups- -continued from page l&#13;
a list of nominees separate from&#13;
those of the proposed council,&#13;
Milutinovich said, "Probably not.&#13;
We'll probably pick such good&#13;
nominees that everyone (on the&#13;
council) will agree with them."&#13;
As of Tuesday, Nov. 26,&#13;
Milutinovich said there had been&#13;
no meeting of the council and that&#13;
he was going to wait another&#13;
week for a reply from PAB, ASA&#13;
and Vets Club before he takes any&#13;
further action. He expects the&#13;
council to send a list of nominees&#13;
to Smith sometime before&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
Boycott Nominations&#13;
United Council of Student&#13;
Organizations sent a letter dated&#13;
Nov. 21 to several student&#13;
organizations requesting a&#13;
boycott of the student&#13;
nominations because of the lack&#13;
of student positions on the SSC.&#13;
In regard to this proposition&#13;
Milutinovich said, "A boycott&#13;
would be a good idea except that&#13;
some groups, i.e. PAB, wouldn't&#13;
go along with it. Any&#13;
organizations not going along&#13;
with the boycott are responsible&#13;
for the lack of student&#13;
representation on the committee."&#13;
&#13;
When asked if PSGA would&#13;
boycott the nominations,&#13;
Milutinovich said, "It's obvious&#13;
other organizations won't boycott&#13;
so PSGA won't either."&#13;
According to Sharon Goff, vice&#13;
president of PAB, PAB is planning&#13;
on sending a letter to John&#13;
Weaver, president of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, which&#13;
will recommend that there be&#13;
more student positions cm the SSC&#13;
and also explain why PAB has&#13;
decided not to participate in the&#13;
council proposed by&#13;
Milutinovich.&#13;
When questioned about the&#13;
reasons for not working through&#13;
the council, Goff said, "Why&#13;
should we (PAB) work with&#13;
PSGA when they're doing nasty&#13;
things to us?"&#13;
More Student Positions&#13;
She further said, "We didn't&#13;
work with PSGA because this&#13;
way we get a larger amount of&#13;
names to choose from." Rudy&#13;
Lienau, a member of PAB,&#13;
clarified this statement, saying&#13;
•that some organizations will want&#13;
to work with PSGA while others&#13;
will prefer to work through PAB&#13;
and thus there's likely to be more&#13;
student input.&#13;
Lienau also said that "the&#13;
Board (PAB) feels that there is&#13;
not just one governing group on&#13;
campus and in a sense PAB is a&#13;
governing body."&#13;
At an Executive Board meeting&#13;
of the PAB, Peter Strutynski, a&#13;
member of PAB, said, "Since&#13;
these other organizations&#13;
(referring to those who wish to&#13;
participate in the council&#13;
proposed by Milutinovich) are&#13;
trying to discredit us, we feel we&#13;
have to act independently."&#13;
According to Goff, PAB has sent&#13;
a letter to every student&#13;
organization at Parkside&#13;
requesting that each group send&#13;
them the names of two nominees&#13;
for the SSC with a short&#13;
biographical sketch of each one.&#13;
A subcommittee of PAB will&#13;
then pick four students out of all&#13;
the nbmiiiees and forward their&#13;
recommendations to the&#13;
Executive Council of PAB, said&#13;
Goff. She expected that PAB&#13;
would decide on their nominees&#13;
by Dec. 9.&#13;
Carol Andrea, co-chairperson&#13;
of ASA, said that by the time they&#13;
(ASA) had read the letter from&#13;
Milutinovich and the letter from&#13;
United Council, the group had&#13;
already begun nomination&#13;
procedures.&#13;
She said they found that the&#13;
Vets Club was disregarding both&#13;
letters, and then at a meeting on&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 26, ASA also&#13;
decided to proceed as planned.&#13;
According to Andrea, ASA has&#13;
chosen two nominees but because&#13;
of some complications they are&#13;
not yet final. She s aid that the&#13;
nominees would be members of&#13;
the ASA.&#13;
Dorene Bloss, co-chairperson&#13;
of ASA, said that ASA&#13;
nominations would probably be&#13;
finalized by Dec. 3.&#13;
Select Own Membership&#13;
Dietmar Schnieder, president&#13;
of Vets Club, said that the Vets&#13;
Club would be selecting nominees&#13;
out of their own membership. He&#13;
said that since there are 710 Vets&#13;
on campus, their nominees&#13;
should be fairly representative of&#13;
the whole student population.&#13;
On Tuesday, Nov. 26 the&#13;
University Committee selected&#13;
faculty nominees for the SSC.&#13;
According to the chairperson of&#13;
the committee, William Murin,&#13;
associate professor of Political&#13;
Science, the committee is now&#13;
waiting for a response from the&#13;
nominees as to whether they will&#13;
accept the nomination. He expects&#13;
the University Committee&#13;
to send a list of faculty nominees&#13;
to Smith by the end of this week,&#13;
Murin said of student&#13;
nominations, "I hope the students&#13;
get going so we can start the&#13;
process (of hiring a new chancellor).&#13;
The worst thing the&#13;
students could do is boycott the&#13;
nominations. It would set the&#13;
precedent of students not being&#13;
included (in the search and&#13;
screen process)."&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
William Niebuhr, director of Student Life, met early this week with&#13;
Air Jamaica officials in an attempt to "negotiate" a smaller size trip&#13;
to Jamaica during semester break than originally planned.&#13;
Currently, only about 20 people have signed up for the trip which has&#13;
been advertised throughout this semester. Niebuhr estimated that a&#13;
total of about 40 people are "realistically" needed by early December&#13;
in order to run the program as scheduled.&#13;
The air fare for participants is the "pro-rata" share based on full&#13;
utilization of the plane. This means that participants must also pay for&#13;
the unsold seats on the flight.&#13;
"There is a better chance of a Jamaica trip than not," Niebuhr said&#13;
last Friday. "However, at this time, there is no definite yes or no&#13;
answer."&#13;
Two Trips Offered&#13;
LaMacchia Travel of Kenosha is the tour operator for this program&#13;
which is divided into two trips: one to Montego Bay and another to&#13;
Ocho Rios. Cost for the Montego Bay trip is $279 plus $20 ta x and&#13;
service, based on triple occupancy. The Ocho Rios trip is slightly&#13;
higher at $309 plus $20 tax and service, based on triple occupancy.&#13;
Tour participants will leave January 3 and return January 10. According&#13;
to Niebuhr, it will be the least participated-in travel program&#13;
in three years at Parkside.&#13;
The lack of participation is "obviously tied to the whole nation-wide&#13;
economic situation," Niebuhr said.&#13;
Another reason for poor participation is that the "spring programs&#13;
tend to do better than winter ones."&#13;
Niebuhr said that this is the first time Parkside has offered two&#13;
winter programs. Besides the Jamaica tour, there is an Acapulco visit&#13;
scheduled from January 4 thr ough 11.&#13;
Like the Jamaica program, the Acapulco one is suffering from a&#13;
lack of participation. Currently, only about 40 people have signed up&#13;
for this vacation, which is about half he t number expected.&#13;
Both the Jamaica and Acapulco flights are being shared by the&#13;
College of Lake Gray in Illinois. There will be about 35 people f rom&#13;
Lake Gray on the Acapulco flight. A third party from Chicago will also&#13;
share this flight.&#13;
Price Increase&#13;
The Acapulco program had a price increase in early November of&#13;
$19, from $239 to $258, plus $25 t ax and service, based on triple occupancy.&#13;
Niebuhr said that the price hike was due to changing from a&#13;
charter flight, Modern Air, to a commercial flight, Braniff International&#13;
Airlines. He also said that a fuel surcharge and rising&#13;
tariffs contributed to the price adjustment.&#13;
Niebuhr said that the decision to run two winter tours was made in&#13;
summer "before we could foresee the economic problems."&#13;
Last spring, Parkside experienced "phenomenal success" in offering&#13;
tours to both Jamaica and Greece.&#13;
"The Jamaica tour sold out in a week and a half," Niebuhr said.&#13;
"There were 90 people signed up in each tour."&#13;
He said that as a result of the tours this winter, Parkside would seek&#13;
one low-cost travel program this coming spring that will not be&#13;
responsible for filling an entire aircraft.&#13;
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4 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1974&#13;
The American Indian&#13;
study of the Oneidas&#13;
by amy&#13;
The American Indian has been&#13;
the subject of anthropological&#13;
study and sociological study for&#13;
decades. Many whites, educated&#13;
in these fields, have observed and&#13;
recorded the structure of their&#13;
society, law and religion. Yet, the&#13;
difficulty is in translating the&#13;
abstractions and symbols of the&#13;
native culture so that other&#13;
cultures and societies understand&#13;
these personal images and&#13;
beliefs.&#13;
This last summer, at the&#13;
American Ethnohistorical&#13;
Society, Ken Webster read a&#13;
paper on a phenomena among his&#13;
own people, the Oneida Indians.&#13;
Webster, a Parkside student, has&#13;
studied and written a paper on&#13;
The Whitney Park Alcoholics: An&#13;
Oneida Urban Band. He is able to&#13;
communicate the personal and&#13;
psychological reasons of this&#13;
subculture's existence in the&#13;
larger Indian band, because he&#13;
has known these men all his life.&#13;
"Professor Dubbins made me&#13;
aware of the Enthohistorical&#13;
Society and encouraged me to&#13;
attend and present my study,"&#13;
said Ken. "The paper seemed to&#13;
be very well received."&#13;
Unless the Indian is able to see&#13;
some option to this lower industrial&#13;
society, he will not try to&#13;
achieve a better education and a&#13;
better life. "The Oneidas are an&#13;
educated tribe by comparison&#13;
with other tribes." The children&#13;
are sent to school, and Ken&#13;
himself was encouraged by his&#13;
grandparents, with whom he&#13;
lived, to continue his education. It&#13;
is typical for the oldest child to&#13;
live with his grandparents on his&#13;
mother's side.&#13;
Because of Ken's unique&#13;
position, an Indian studying&#13;
Indians, he was quickly adopted&#13;
by the band and brought into its&#13;
routines. In his involvement with&#13;
these men (average age 45) in&#13;
Whitney Park, Green Bay, he&#13;
came to an even greater understanding&#13;
of the psychological&#13;
dilemmas and social behaviors&#13;
that have resulted in these men&#13;
choosing their particular way of&#13;
life.&#13;
"I don't want to merely observe.&#13;
I enjoy the participation in&#13;
activities I involve myself in."&#13;
This explains the private information&#13;
and comradeship Ken&#13;
Webster was able to establish.&#13;
Ken SDoke on the various instances&#13;
which robbed the&#13;
Oneidas of pride and land. Before&#13;
the 1887 Allotment Act, the people&#13;
of his tribe owned 36,000 acres.&#13;
After the Act went into effect, the&#13;
amount of acreage was reduced&#13;
to a meager 1,000 acres. As a&#13;
result the population decreased&#13;
and the young people went away&#13;
to find work, breaking the intimate&#13;
family ties which are&#13;
important to the Indians. Yet,&#13;
Ken explained, the young people&#13;
are now homing back or staying&#13;
in the area to work for the betterment&#13;
of their tribe.&#13;
Ken said he was optimistic&#13;
about the tribe's progress and&#13;
happy with the direction his own&#13;
life is taking. After a varied and&#13;
interesting education and various&#13;
employment, Ken now hopes to&#13;
develop his paper on the alcoholic&#13;
subculture into a major study and&#13;
perhaps publish it around 1976.&#13;
"When I was young, I was&#13;
encouraged to read. I escaped in&#13;
my reading, and this particular&#13;
form of escape benefitted me,"&#13;
he said. "While my friends and&#13;
others used alcohol to escape,&#13;
this became one of their&#13;
nrAklAmc "&#13;
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If you're one of tomorrow's physicians,&#13;
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today.&#13;
For instance. You should know about the op&#13;
portunities offered by Armed Forces Health&#13;
Care. As an officer in the service of your&#13;
choice you'll work in modern facilities. With&#13;
up-to-date equipment. And modern, up-todate&#13;
professionals in every area of Health&#13;
Care.&#13;
For example. You should know that&#13;
Armed Forces Health Care offers opportunities&#13;
for initial training and advanced study in&#13;
practically every specialty. Not to mention&#13;
the opportunity to practice it.&#13;
You should know, too, that we make it&#13;
possible for you to pursue a post-residency&#13;
fellowship at either military or civilian institutions.&#13;
&#13;
And if a ll this strikes a spark, then you&#13;
should certainly know about our scholarship&#13;
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If you qualify, the tuition for your medical&#13;
education will be covered fully while you&#13;
participate in the program. And during that&#13;
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Just one more thing...we think if you&#13;
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one of us tomorrow.&#13;
Find out. Send in the coupon and get&#13;
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or academic year 1975-1976.&#13;
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Academic advice&#13;
December 9 - 13&#13;
.. It's that time of year again, when everyone is feeling that tingle of&#13;
anticipation, that sense that something is coming. There's excitement&#13;
in the air - it won't be long now until that joyous occasion when&#13;
students finally get it together, when they learn where they've been&#13;
and where they're going (and those who've been especially good all&#13;
year may even discover why) -it's that time of year when Semester II&#13;
Timetables decorate the halls, when Registration packets once more&#13;
put in an appearance, and when students again have that special&#13;
opportunity to bring a little cheer into the ho-hum life of a counselor or&#13;
their major advisor. Peace (of mind) is the greeting of the season and&#13;
soon the time will be here - it will be Academic Planning Week •&#13;
An academic advising outpost is being set up during the last week of&#13;
classes (Dec. 9-13) in the alcove north of the Bookstore on the LLC&#13;
Concourse. This will be the focus of a ctivity for Academic Planning&#13;
Week, designed to make it easy for students to drop by between&#13;
classes and talk to a counselor or student advisor about what's happening&#13;
next semester.&#13;
Timetables will be available and students may pick up their&#13;
Registration packets in the Classroom Bldg. concourse.&#13;
Academic planning, which includes discussion of degree&#13;
requirements, majors, course selection and electives, will take place&#13;
during the hours of 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. Monday through&#13;
Thursday and 9-4 on Friday. Students who have filed a declaration of&#13;
major form are encouraged to arrange a conference with their faculty&#13;
advisors.&#13;
Counselor John Rodgers, who will be on the advisors working at the&#13;
outpost, suggests that students "shop early" for courses, choosing&#13;
those which will fulfill general and major degree requirements as well&#13;
as spending their elective credits wisely to get a balanced schedule.&#13;
Debra Friedell, a senior, talked to a counselor during Academic&#13;
Planning Week last spring. She commented that "I went in by accident&#13;
but ended up talking to a counselor. I didn't think I needed advising -1&#13;
was a junior majoring in English and knew how to read the catalogue.&#13;
But I met an advisor Barb Larson (Career counselor) who showed me&#13;
how to pick up a second, more practical major in Communications,&#13;
fulfill all the general and major requirements, and still graduate on&#13;
schedule."&#13;
Friedell said there are things that are good to know that aren't clear&#13;
iust from looking at the catalogue.&#13;
"All students should have some type of academic counseling for&#13;
their own personal use-it's available, it's convenient, and there are so&#13;
many things a student, especially a newer one, doesn't know," explains&#13;
Roscoe Chambers, a student-to-student advisor. "It's important&#13;
to see an advisor because you have so many credits it's easy to take&#13;
courses that don't really benefit you, you're just wasting time''&#13;
Kai Nail, another student advisor, feels that even seniors often don't&#13;
realize what requirements still have to be met. "They end up with a lot&#13;
of courses to take in their last year that should have been out of the&#13;
way sooner." Nail, who has been working with freshmen in education,&#13;
says most students are confused about what the requirements are for&#13;
a major and for graduation. "Academic Planning Week should be a&#13;
good chance for students to get things figured out, before they write&#13;
exams and then leave school for a month."&#13;
While counselors will be available at Registration, students are&#13;
advised to avoid the rush and plan early.&#13;
N\\\"&#13;
The&#13;
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Is Back 11:00-4:00 MONDAY-FRIDAY* NO SUBSTITUTES • POTATO EXTRA&#13;
(&#13;
$1.19 for a chopped steak, s alad &amp; toast!)&#13;
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Special Night.&#13;
('1.49 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
( 1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)&#13;
• Feed a child in America for 49&lt;;&#13;
We ve got ,ust the right amount of food to make a kid smile - a hamburger,&#13;
an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price - 49&lt;t - to make you smile.&#13;
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AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY&#13;
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Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Campus events&#13;
Friday Dec. 6: The Vets Club will sponsor a paper drive from 8 a m to&#13;
3:30 p.m. in the Talent Hall parking lot. The drive is to help support the&#13;
operation of the Racine Vets Bus.&#13;
Wed. Dec. 4: Whiteskellar presents Larry Penn, a Pete Seegar-type&#13;
folksinger, top performer from the Id and Ego coffeehouse in&#13;
Milwaukee. Time 1-3 p.m. in the Coffeehouse (GR D 201), no admission&#13;
charge and open to the public.&#13;
Thurs. Dec. 5: Larry Penn, 1-3 p.m. in the Coffeehouse. "Clockwork&#13;
Orange" 7:30 p.m. Comm Arts Theater&#13;
Friday Dec. 6: Clockwork Grange 11:30 a.m. C.A.T. and 8.00 S.A.B.&#13;
Saturday Dec. 7: Mission Mountain Wood Band 9:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Student activities Building. Admission $1.50 advance $2.00 at the door&#13;
Sunday Dec. 8: Clockwork Orange 7:30 p.m. S.A.B.&#13;
The Parkside Guitar Society directed by James Yoghourtjian will&#13;
present a free public concert at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday (Dec 4) in&#13;
Room 103 Greenquist Hall at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Participating students are Kurt Harff and Shelly Host of Kenosha&#13;
and Tony Roland and Gary Wolk of Racine. Their program will include&#13;
a quartet as well as solo work. Yoghourtjian, playing tenor&#13;
gamba, will join Harff for two numbers and Harff and Wolk will&#13;
conclude the program with a light set of three jazz classics,&#13;
. The music programmed spans the period from the 16th through the&#13;
20th Century.&#13;
An inte rnationally-known concert and recording artist, Yoghourtjian&#13;
teaches at Parkside and at Milwaukee College conservatory.&#13;
Students who have a declared major or major area of interest in the&#13;
division of Engineering Science or Labor Economics and are in&#13;
terested in being appointed to their divisions' P.S.G.A. Inc senate seat&#13;
should contact John Kontz at the P.S.G.A. Inc. office, LLC-D193 oh&#13;
553-2244 as soon as possible. '&#13;
Regent* -continued from page 1&#13;
However, there is concern that&#13;
the resident student fee reduction&#13;
plan, which is second only to&#13;
faculty salaries in priority, won't&#13;
receive much support from the&#13;
governor and legislature.&#13;
The total increase in state&#13;
funds for the UW operating&#13;
budget is about $171 million. This&#13;
does not include funds for construction&#13;
on UW campuses.&#13;
Sigma Pi elections&#13;
Sigma Pi fraternity held&#13;
elections for officers last&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 21, for this&#13;
coming semester.&#13;
Jerry Ferch was elected to the&#13;
position of sage. This semester's&#13;
president was Daniel&#13;
Duchesneau.&#13;
Other elected officers were Bill&#13;
Ferko as third council&#13;
(treasurer); Tom Barnhill, first&#13;
council; Jim Rae, second council&#13;
(vice president); Tim Seymour,&#13;
fourth council (secretary) and&#13;
Warren Dagenbach, re-elected as&#13;
herald.&#13;
We feel the new executive&#13;
board, along with the new pledge&#13;
class, will achieve much in the&#13;
coming year, said Dagenbach.&#13;
He said that one of the first&#13;
tasks undertaken by the newlyelected&#13;
officers will be to appoint&#13;
committee heads and lay the&#13;
ground work for the spring&#13;
semester.&#13;
Since we are a social&#13;
organization, Dagenbach said,&#13;
we plan on having at least one&#13;
party or get-together a month&#13;
and one banquet or semi-formal&#13;
each semester.&#13;
by amy&#13;
This week in RANGER and&#13;
next week in the special&#13;
Christmas issue, this column will&#13;
make recommendations for&#13;
Christmas book buying. The&#13;
publications briefly reviewed and&#13;
recommended will come in a&#13;
variety of price ranges and for a&#13;
variety of ages and interests.&#13;
For those interested in a good&#13;
comprehensive history of the&#13;
United States, The Glory and the&#13;
Dream by William Manchester,&#13;
is a fine narrative of America&#13;
between 1932 and 1972. Unlike the&#13;
prose we normally associate with&#13;
historical literature, Manchester's&#13;
double volume has a&#13;
conversational flow and among&#13;
the hard facts are political quips&#13;
and satirical verse. The 1700-&#13;
page publication costs $20.00 and&#13;
is well worth the investment for&#13;
its uncompromising honesty and&#13;
brilliant perspective on&#13;
American life spanning the last&#13;
four decades.&#13;
The Juniper Tree was&#13;
published last year and remains&#13;
to date one of the most extraordinary&#13;
books for children, or&#13;
for those who collect great&#13;
children's literature. The&#13;
beautiful box set contains two&#13;
volumes of stories by the&#13;
brothers Grimm, with ink&#13;
illustrations by Maurice Sendak.&#13;
Sendak's ability for creating&#13;
masterpieces of visual fantasy&#13;
has no equal in the field. The text,&#13;
freshly translated by Lore Segal&#13;
and Randall Jarrell is alive and&#13;
intense compared with most&#13;
translations now in print. Sendak's&#13;
fantasies accompany the&#13;
prose. These illustrations become&#13;
overwhelming, with their&#13;
meticulous detail and expressive,&#13;
timeless characters, when you&#13;
realize that they were drawn to&#13;
size (4" by 3"). The Farrar,&#13;
Strause and Giroux publication&#13;
sells for $12.95.&#13;
While on the subject of&#13;
illustrations, most especially that&#13;
of fantasy, Ballantine Books has&#13;
published an inexpensive&#13;
paperback collection of the work&#13;
by creators of this sort of art. The&#13;
12" by 9" book with glossy paper&#13;
(the illustrations are even&#13;
suitable for posters or framing, if&#13;
you so desire) costing only $4.95,&#13;
is titled The Fantastic Kingdom&#13;
and contains the work of Kay&#13;
Nielsen, Edmund Dulac, Jean&#13;
deBosschere, Maxfield Parrish,&#13;
Harry Clarke, Arthur Rackham&#13;
and others, who have contributed&#13;
profoundly to the images that&#13;
touch and torment children in&#13;
their waking and dreaming&#13;
hours, and still lurk somewhere&#13;
in the subconscious of certain&#13;
adults.&#13;
If one's preference is fiction,&#13;
The Ebony Tower by John&#13;
Fowles is a good buy. The $7.95&#13;
book contains the title work and&#13;
four short pieces, all in Fowles'&#13;
lucid prose. The future of writing&#13;
is shorter works, novellas, if you&#13;
like. People like to begin and end&#13;
their reading in one sitting. They&#13;
also seem to want the intense&#13;
emotional and intellectual impact&#13;
shorter pieces can offer in&#13;
the fast progression from initial&#13;
incident to conclusion. With the&#13;
continual infringement on our&#13;
free hours and private moments,&#13;
those who enjoy reading will find&#13;
that the work of this Englishman&#13;
present the challenges of&#13;
struggles with self-discipline,&#13;
evil, sensuality and morality in a&#13;
not-too-long sitting.&#13;
Perhaps you would like some&#13;
literature from the female&#13;
perspective. Then let me&#13;
recommend Winter Trees by&#13;
Sylvia Plath. Winter Trees is full&#13;
of the painful admissions and&#13;
hysterical tensions that made&#13;
Ariel (1965) so compelling.&#13;
Winter Trees and Crossing the&#13;
Water are the last of Plath's&#13;
works, both published in 1972 by&#13;
Harper and Row. Although many&#13;
of the poems in Winter Trees can&#13;
be found in other volumes, it does&#13;
contain the superb verse play&#13;
Three Women. It costs $5.95.&#13;
We move from Plath herself, to&#13;
a critical study of the woman&#13;
herself in relation to her intensive&#13;
bout with creative energies and&#13;
also to the historical views of&#13;
suicide. The Savage God: A&#13;
Study of Suicide by A. Alvarez, a&#13;
poet himself and friend of Plath,&#13;
examines his subject with&#13;
brilliant sensitivity. The Random&#13;
House book may be purchased for&#13;
$7.95 and is the finest literary&#13;
analysis to come out in recent&#13;
years on this subject, especially&#13;
when compared to the numerous&#13;
volumes written on Marilyn&#13;
Monroe treating suicide as&#13;
sensational or hinting at some&#13;
"profound intent" only as deep as&#13;
a tin surface.&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed nesd ay, Dec . 4, 1 9 7 4&#13;
4 years of&#13;
excellence&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Lucian Rosa is a name that will never be&#13;
forgotten in the history of Parkside. Now in&#13;
his fourth year at the university, he is&#13;
completing his final year of collegiate&#13;
running. Rosa has achieved records that&#13;
will be challenged by Parkside runners for&#13;
years to come.&#13;
Majoring in business management, Rosa&#13;
came to Parkside in 1971 from Ceylon (now&#13;
the Republic of S ri-Lanka) leaving friends&#13;
and family 15,000 miles behind.&#13;
Rosa was discovered by two Parkside&#13;
coaches, Tom Rosandich and Bob Lawson.&#13;
They were representing the United States at&#13;
the Asian Games in Bangkok during 1970.&#13;
Gold Medal Winner&#13;
At these games, Rosa was the gold medal&#13;
winner in both the 5000 and 10,000 meter&#13;
events.&#13;
"The Japanese were real good runners,"&#13;
said Rosa, "and they have always won this&#13;
race."&#13;
Prior to the 10,000 meter event, a&#13;
Japanese coach was cited as saying, "if my&#13;
runner gets beat by Lucian I will resign."&#13;
"I didn't lead the race until the last 300&#13;
yards," said Rosa. "The Japanese runner&#13;
was leading at the halfway mark so I took&#13;
off and beat him by 4 seconds. The next day I&#13;
read in the papers 'Japanese Coach&#13;
Resigns' ."&#13;
Awarded Scholarships&#13;
Following the Asian Games Rosa was&#13;
awarded scholarships from East and West&#13;
Germany, Japan and the United States.&#13;
After considering the advantages and&#13;
disadvantages of the four scholarships, "I&#13;
consulted with Mrs. Sirimavo R. D. Bandaranaike,&#13;
the Prime Minister of Ceylon,"&#13;
said Rosa.&#13;
"She told me that if she were in my&#13;
position she would accept the American&#13;
Scholarship."&#13;
In admiration and respect of his Prime&#13;
Minister, Rosa chose to attend Parkside and&#13;
run under coaches Vic Godfrey and Bob&#13;
Lawson.&#13;
Lawson convinced Rosa that his strongest&#13;
event would be marathon running in the&#13;
Olympics. He said the 5'6V2", 105 lb . Rosa&#13;
had the endurance but not the build nor&#13;
speed for the mile.&#13;
Began in High School&#13;
"My running began in high school when I&#13;
was 15 years old," said Rosa. "I did not run&#13;
very good my first year with the road race&#13;
team (the equivalent to the American term&#13;
"cross-country"). But in my second and&#13;
third years I became the number-one man."&#13;
As top man on the team Rosa was sent to&#13;
the nationals but did not place. Misfortune&#13;
struck as Rosa fell victim to another runner's&#13;
unsportsmanlike conduct of tripping a&#13;
fellow competitor.&#13;
Rosa also played volleyball, soccer and&#13;
field hockey throughout high school,&#13;
demonstrating his diversified interests in&#13;
athletic competition.&#13;
"I graduated from high school at 17 and&#13;
worked as a private businessman for 9&#13;
months. I joined the Ceylonese Army when I&#13;
was 18," Rosa said.&#13;
He continued his athletic career with&#13;
wrestling. "In my first year I was runner-up&#13;
in the 95 lb. class and army champion at 102&#13;
lb. in my second year."&#13;
The rest of his time in the army was spent&#13;
running 10 miles a day with the Army Team.&#13;
Even though he had qualifying times in&#13;
the 5000 and 10,000 meter events for the 1968&#13;
Olympics in Mexico City, Rosa was unable&#13;
to participate due to lack of sufficient funds.&#13;
Came to Parkside&#13;
When he came to Wisconsin to run for&#13;
Parkside, Rosa had only heard of sn ow but&#13;
never seen it. "In my first year here I had a&#13;
hard time with cold weather but when it's&#13;
snowing and not windy, I really like to run,"&#13;
said Rosa.&#13;
"In 1970 at the Asian Games I was the only&#13;
one who did not wear shoes to run. I never&#13;
ran with a pair of shoes on my feet until I&#13;
came to Parkside. I ran my first full crosscountry&#13;
season barefoot."&#13;
Rosa ran his first marathon event in&#13;
December of '71 at North Central University&#13;
in Illinois.&#13;
"Coach Lawson said to me, Lucian, you&#13;
can't run barefoot, it's 10 degrees and&#13;
snowing outside. You have to wear shoes."&#13;
"I ran 18 miles with the shoes, I was&#13;
slowing down so I took them off, gave them&#13;
to the time keeper and ran the last eight&#13;
miles barefoot. I finished 16th and my feet&#13;
were frozen. It was the slowest time I ever&#13;
had."&#13;
Rosa has been living with the Kenneth&#13;
Jonas family in Kenosha since his arrival.&#13;
Jonas is a member of t he Parkside 200 club&#13;
which supports Parkside athletics.&#13;
Likes America&#13;
Noting a difference in life styles, Rosa&#13;
said, "I really like living in America; the&#13;
boys and girls have so much freedom here.&#13;
In my country the girls have to be home by&#13;
6:00 and the guys by 9:30 unless you are&#13;
married.&#13;
"I am also impressed with the right of th e&#13;
Americans to criticize the government. One&#13;
cannot do this in my country."&#13;
Rosa does not follow a strict diet but eats&#13;
three regular meals a day and plans on over&#13;
eight hours of sleep each night.&#13;
Rosa is admired by the neighborhood&#13;
children and has started an informal running&#13;
club with the kids. "I like younger kids&#13;
and would like to coach junior high when I&#13;
stop competitive running."&#13;
Rosa acknowledges that the training he&#13;
has received at Parkside has enabled him to&#13;
run his best.&#13;
Natural Leader&#13;
Coach Lawson says, "Lucian is a natural&#13;
leader and the best athlete a coach could&#13;
have. He has a great personality and is&#13;
always helping his teammates. He's a&#13;
champion on the field and off."&#13;
During his international running career&#13;
Rosa has won 13 medals, 11 of which are&#13;
gold and two bronze. Losing to Japan, he&#13;
picked up the two bronze medals during his&#13;
first international competition in 1966.&#13;
Rosa's most satisfying accomplishment to&#13;
date is his fourth place in the 1972 B oston&#13;
Marathon.&#13;
"I was looking forward to running this&#13;
race when I first came to the U.S.," said&#13;
Rosa.&#13;
Over a 26-mile, 385-yard course his time&#13;
was 2:15:53, which bettered his old record&#13;
by 6.5 minutes.&#13;
During competition Rosa prefers to pace&#13;
himself with someone of equal ability. If t he&#13;
pace is slow he will set his own. While&#13;
running, "I listen for my time so I can judge&#13;
my position," said Rosa.&#13;
Rosa's daily mileage varies with each&#13;
running season. "In cross-country season I&#13;
run 15 miles a day, for indoor track I run 12&#13;
miles and in outdoor track I run 20 miles a&#13;
day."&#13;
Two days prior to the Olympiad in&#13;
Munich, Rosa was sick, which affected his&#13;
running in the 10,000 meter event where he&#13;
placed 16th and in the marathon where he&#13;
did not finish.&#13;
Disappointment in his '72 performance&#13;
has not discouraged Rosa from training for&#13;
the '76 Olympics which will be his last attempt&#13;
at an Olympic Gold medal.&#13;
'76 Olympics&#13;
Coach Lawson said, "Lucian should place&#13;
among the top 10 in the marathon at the '76&#13;
Olympics. He has a small build and is at a&#13;
great anatomical advantage."&#13;
When asked what he thought of U.S. Wbrld&#13;
Record holder for the mile, Jim Ryan, Rosa&#13;
replied, "He's one of the greatest and is still&#13;
good."&#13;
Admired most by Rosa is Frank Shorter,&#13;
American Gold Medalist in the marathon at&#13;
the '72 Olympics in Munich.&#13;
"After the '76 Olympics I would like to&#13;
start a business," said Rosa. "If I go back to&#13;
Ceylon I could get things done much better&#13;
than they're being done now."&#13;
The thought of applying for American&#13;
citizenship has crossed Rosa's mind but he&#13;
definitely will not apply until after the '76&#13;
Olympics.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
neads a copy&#13;
editor&#13;
appli now!&#13;
Lucian Rosa: &#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Cagers lose opener 82 - 89&#13;
by Philip Livingston&#13;
Parkside's basketball team&#13;
missed an opportunity to squash&#13;
an old fo e as the Rangers lost 82-&#13;
89 to the Warriors of Whitewater&#13;
Saturday night. More than 1400&#13;
fans filled the gym to watch an&#13;
exciting opener for both teams. A&#13;
large crowd came from&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
The first half belonged to&#13;
Rangers' Gary Cole, forward&#13;
from Racine-Park, as he led in&#13;
early scoring. Malcom Mahone&#13;
burst into the first half with four&#13;
impressive field goals that were&#13;
only stained by his three fouls.&#13;
Coach Stephens feared last week&#13;
his main players would play a&#13;
physical game and foul out early.&#13;
Coach Stephens pulled Mahone&#13;
and cued Racine-Park's Gary&#13;
Cole, who started to stretch his&#13;
lead in first period scoring.&#13;
One couldn't help but notice&#13;
Whitewater's inability to net the&#13;
ball during the first half, sinking&#13;
only 16 out of 42 a ttempts. This&#13;
appeared to shake the Warriors.&#13;
Although Ranger defense was not&#13;
spectacular, victory seemed&#13;
possible as the first half closed&#13;
with Rangers in the lead 46 to 42.&#13;
Rangers' Gary Cole dominated&#13;
Jock shorts&#13;
Parkside's Men's Swim Club is&#13;
looking forward to a good 1974-75&#13;
swim season. The club will be&#13;
competing against many strong&#13;
teams this season and is&#13;
prepared to accept many honors.&#13;
Dennis Steeves, Rich Kwas,&#13;
Jim Wilbershide and Mike&#13;
Olesen-all of Racine Case-have&#13;
given swim coach Barb Lawson&#13;
gooch-eason to have confidence in&#13;
the club this season.&#13;
The swimming season is barely&#13;
underway and many new freshmen&#13;
and returnees have broken&#13;
last year's pool records.&#13;
The club will face Carthage&#13;
College on Saturday, Dec. 7 at&#13;
Carthage for their first meet&#13;
away, at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Any swimmers interested in&#13;
joining the club can contact Barb&#13;
Lawson at the Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
Practices are held daily at 3:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
SHORECREST&#13;
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GEORGETOWN&#13;
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FUTURE CPA'S&#13;
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next CPA Exam,&#13;
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1/4 OF USA&#13;
the first 10 minutes of t he second&#13;
half by netting four and completing&#13;
two free throws but was&#13;
benched to save him from fouling&#13;
out. At the same time&#13;
Whitewater's Gerald Coleman&#13;
was getting warmed up to steal&#13;
the show as he consistently&#13;
penetrated Rangers' defense.&#13;
With 9 minutes and 26 seconds&#13;
left in the second half, Rangers&#13;
held a 10-point lead over the&#13;
Warriors, 70 to 60. At the five&#13;
minute mark Coach Stephens put&#13;
Gary Cole back in to spice up the&#13;
game but suddenly Ranger&#13;
defense turned into jello during&#13;
the last three minutes, letting&#13;
Whitewater's Coleman net some&#13;
effortless points, bringing the&#13;
final score to the Warriors' 89 to&#13;
Parkside's 82.&#13;
The Rangers displayed good&#13;
offensive strategy for their first&#13;
game. One of the highlights was&#13;
Ranger freshman Stevie King&#13;
from Chicago's Gordon Tech. He&#13;
displayed cool control and contributed&#13;
to the relaxed and&#13;
confident offensive game that&#13;
kept the close edge on the&#13;
Warriors.&#13;
Whitewater's heavy number&#13;
was supposed to be the Grimes&#13;
brothers, who just never panned&#13;
out. Keeping those 6'4" forwards&#13;
at bay was the only trophy of&#13;
Rangers' defense.&#13;
The Rangers lost on small&#13;
things near the end of the game.&#13;
Coach Stephens admitted a few&#13;
changes in the last five minutes&#13;
could have made the difference.&#13;
Stephens attributed the loss to&#13;
a "lack of poise" and "not&#13;
picking up on the defense" in the&#13;
last period.&#13;
All in all, it was a dramatic&#13;
first game for Parkside as the&#13;
huge crowd kept hoping they&#13;
would pull off a victory. The&#13;
Rangers are much better than&#13;
last year. The talent is definitely&#13;
present and the key to success for&#13;
the Rangers is in the development&#13;
of a sophisticated defensive&#13;
strategy that can last until&#13;
shower time.&#13;
The next game for the Rangers&#13;
is against Detroit in "motown." A&#13;
recent Sports Illustrated refers to&#13;
Parkside as a lollipop for llthranked&#13;
Detroit. Coach Stephens&#13;
and -the Rangers will have to&#13;
sweat a little in the next practice&#13;
sessions to taste the victories&#13;
they are capable of earning.&#13;
The Ranger Athletic&#13;
Association (RAA) will again be&#13;
sponsoring the Holiday Gold&#13;
Medal Basketball Tournament&#13;
Dec. 27-29 at the UW-Parkside&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
The tourney is split into A and&#13;
B divisions, with eight teams&#13;
participating in Class A and 16 in&#13;
Class B. The Class A division is&#13;
open to any team while the Class&#13;
B bracket is limited to teams and&#13;
players not currently playing in&#13;
their city's top league.&#13;
Drawings and pairing will be&#13;
made after entries are closed.&#13;
For additional information,&#13;
contact Ranger Athletic&#13;
Association, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Physical Education Bldg.,&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 or telephone&#13;
553-2245.&#13;
Fifteen soccer players at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
have been awarded letters for the&#13;
1974 season, Coach Hal Henderson&#13;
announced Wednesday.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
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LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
The Place to buy records&#13;
Three seniors, Rick Lechusz of&#13;
Milwaukee (Don Bosco), Rick&#13;
Kilps of Milwaukee (Boy's Tech)&#13;
and Dietmar Schneider of Ra cine&#13;
(Fairbault, Minn., H.S.), were&#13;
awarded their fourth letters in&#13;
the sport. Tashe Bozinovski, a&#13;
junior from Racine (Case),&#13;
earned his third letter.&#13;
Winning their second letters&#13;
were sophomores Carl Kurtagic&#13;
of Milwaukee (Madison), Stan&#13;
Stadler of Milwaukee (Boys'&#13;
Tech), Andy Gutierrez of&#13;
Milwaukee (Thomas More) and&#13;
senior Frank Liu of Ke nosha (St.&#13;
Joesph).&#13;
First-time letterwinners include&#13;
sophomore Frank Szarzynski&#13;
of Milwaukee (Greenfield),&#13;
freshman Mark Hagen of&#13;
Milwaukee (Custer), freshman&#13;
Bob Petkovich of Racine&#13;
(Horlick), freshman Bill Orr of&#13;
Milwaukee (Washington)&#13;
sophomore Vince Ruffolo of&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford), junior Rico&#13;
Savaglio of Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
and freshman Mike Olesen of&#13;
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WE OFFER A 5% COLLEGE REBATE&#13;
Garv^Hmp^ ®wanke TkeS a ,ayup shot against Whitewater's &lt;i,ary Grime, The Warriors beat Parkside 89 to 82.&#13;
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• »-&#13;
TRUC &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday/ Dec. 4, 1974&#13;
n.% *&#13;
•1 $&#13;
"S,&#13;
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Come To Our&#13;
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Kenosha, Wiscon&amp;itifyfflMO&#13;
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              <text>D.A. won't act</text>
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              <text>D.A. won't act&#13;
photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
Child Care Center in conference house&#13;
Kids move again&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
The Child Care Center, with an&#13;
enrollment of ninety children,&#13;
will soon be making a move from&#13;
its current location at the&#13;
Kenosha Campus to the Chancellor's&#13;
Conference Center on&#13;
Kenosha County, Hwy E.&#13;
Sherry Svatek, director of the&#13;
Child Care Center, indicated that&#13;
when the search was begun for a&#13;
new location, the Student Activities&#13;
Building was initially&#13;
considered.&#13;
That location, however, would&#13;
have caused a considerable inconvenience&#13;
to the Child Care&#13;
Center personnel, in that all&#13;
equipment would have to be&#13;
broken down and stored each&#13;
evening to make room for student&#13;
use of the building.&#13;
The suggestion use the&#13;
Chancellor's Conference Center&#13;
was not made until after the&#13;
death of Chancellor Irvin Wyllie,&#13;
since he had used the Conference&#13;
Center extensively as an&#13;
auxiliary working area.&#13;
Brian Murray, assistant&#13;
director of Planning and Construction&#13;
said that some&#13;
renovation of the Conference&#13;
Center will begin in the next few&#13;
weeks .to meet state structural&#13;
requirements for day care&#13;
centers.&#13;
Murray said that these&#13;
renovations include the addition&#13;
of extra toilet facilities in the&#13;
main building, and heating and&#13;
LLC&#13;
renamed&#13;
for&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
Parkside's Library Learning&#13;
Center has been formally named&#13;
the Irvin G. Wyllie LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, following action&#13;
taken by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Board of Regents&#13;
Friday, Dec. 6, in Milwaukee.&#13;
The memorial resolution,&#13;
recommended by the faculty at&#13;
Parkside and passed by the&#13;
faculty senate, was unanimously&#13;
approved in honor of t he founding&#13;
chancellor of Parkside who died&#13;
in October.&#13;
Regent President Frank J.&#13;
Pelisek introduced the measure&#13;
to the board, citing that the&#13;
naming of the building after&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie would honor&#13;
"his commitment to and&#13;
realization of quality education."&#13;
Parkside's Library-Learning&#13;
Center, designed by Gyo Obata of&#13;
St. Louis, opened in the fall of&#13;
1972, and has since then drawn&#13;
much national attention because&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
new tiled flooring in the adjacent&#13;
garage, which will become the&#13;
art and lunch room.&#13;
Asked when the building will be&#13;
ready for occupancy, Murray&#13;
said, "We're aiming for&#13;
February first." He did say,&#13;
however, that this is a tentative&#13;
date since problems such as late&#13;
supply deliveries are difficult to&#13;
predict.&#13;
Svatek said she has mixed&#13;
feelings over the move to the&#13;
Conference Center. While&#13;
equipment may be left intact&#13;
each evening, the center does not&#13;
offer as much space as the&#13;
Student Activities Building. This&#13;
lack of space will, according to&#13;
Svatek, make it impossible to&#13;
operate #a nursery on the&#13;
premises.&#13;
She explained that state&#13;
regulations require a minimum&#13;
of thirty-five square feet per&#13;
child. "This is open space,"&#13;
Svetek said. "Kitchen, cup,&#13;
board and closet space can't be&#13;
counted."&#13;
Although Child Care Center&#13;
personnel are confident that next&#13;
semester's enrollment could&#13;
easily match this semester's,&#13;
they also feel that they will not&#13;
have enough room.&#13;
According to Svatek, the&#13;
capacity load of the Chancellor's&#13;
Conference Center as the new&#13;
Child Care Center will be decided&#13;
upon by Alberta Whitaker, a state&#13;
inspector for the Division of&#13;
Family Services.&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER staff&#13;
During a meeting on Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 4, Bruce Schroeder,&#13;
the Kenosha District Attorney,&#13;
announced that he would not&#13;
prosecute Barb Burke, president&#13;
of the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
(PAB), in connection with a&#13;
complaint filed by RANGER&#13;
accusing PAB of violating the new&#13;
Open Meeting Law.&#13;
"I don't think there was ever a&#13;
deliberate attempt on PAB's part&#13;
to violate the Open Meeting&#13;
Law," Schroeder said.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, Associate&#13;
Dean of Students, said that she&#13;
had been in contact with&#13;
Schroeder "so he could understand&#13;
the University's concern&#13;
about the organizations&#13;
(PAB and RANGER)" and "to&#13;
see if the (Associate Dean of&#13;
Students) office could be of&#13;
assistance."&#13;
She said that she "expressed&#13;
the opinion" to the D.A. "that the&#13;
case should be handled out of&#13;
court."&#13;
Asked how she felt about&#13;
RANGER's decision to file a&#13;
complaint against PAB,&#13;
Echelbarger said, "I think it was&#13;
the responsibility of the paper to&#13;
bring the case before the D.A. if&#13;
they felt that strongly about it."&#13;
Barb Burke, citing reasons why&#13;
she believes Schroeder did not&#13;
prosecute the case, said that&#13;
many people had probably&#13;
inadvertently misinterpreted the&#13;
Open Meeting Law (including&#13;
RANGER), and that since it's a&#13;
confusing issue it shouldn't be&#13;
prosecuted.&#13;
A member of RANGER staff,&#13;
who was present at the Dec. 4&#13;
meeting, said Schroeder mentioned&#13;
the possibility that&#13;
RANGER was violating the same&#13;
law, since meetings have not&#13;
been announced to the Secretary&#13;
of the Faculty.&#13;
Dan McDonald, RANGER&#13;
reporter, was also present at the&#13;
meeting, and remarked that&#13;
"Schroeder said that you&#13;
(RANGER) are calling&#13;
somebody else in violation of the&#13;
law when you are yourself."&#13;
During a later interview,&#13;
Schroeder was asked if he&#13;
thought the Open Meeting Law&#13;
had been violated by PAB and&#13;
was reminded of his earlier&#13;
statement that "in my opinion,&#13;
RANGER is in violation with the&#13;
same law.&#13;
"I am not certain that it was&#13;
violated," hp said. "T d on't know&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
1 The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 Vol. Ill No. 19&#13;
Violence in Santa's workshop&#13;
Hairy Christmas&#13;
by Dan McDonald&#13;
Along with feelings of joy and exultation and "Peace to all men"&#13;
rhetoric, Christmas is a time of buying. Clever advertisement&#13;
agencies flood the media with thoughts of gift-giving and commercialism.&#13;
Department store shelves are lined with countless&#13;
numbers of games and toys that are all the "perfect Christmas gift for&#13;
your loved one."&#13;
And, as usual, current fads are the subject matter, along with the&#13;
more traditional-type commodities like war games, cologne, and&#13;
Monopoly. Kung Fu, Monday night football, dirty politics, and hot cars&#13;
take the place of the traditional visions of sugar plumbs dancing about&#13;
in our heads.&#13;
Poor Saint Nick. Can you imagine him climbing down the chimney&#13;
with a bag full of games labelled "LIE, CHEAT, and STEAL" that&#13;
offer the everyday person a chance to "wheel and deal in the game of&#13;
politics? Use vote certificates, blackmail, and all the other methods&#13;
used by the experts."&#13;
Then, for the younger, less aggressive tykes, CLASSY CHRASHERS&#13;
might be appropriate. "Smash 'em up! Luxury Limo and Sedan&#13;
Royale take off fast, zoom off ramps and crash together « hoods,&#13;
doors, wheels and trunk lids go flying. Beautifully detailed cars."&#13;
And in case your CLASSY CRASHER had any passengers aboard&#13;
Santa might want to leave an OPERATION game: "the electric game&#13;
where you are the doctor." This game is also handy in the event you&#13;
might have a SHOOT OUT AT O.K. CORRAL.&#13;
'However, there is one game with less severe results. In fact, you&#13;
won't need OPERATION for this one. Only aspirin. It's called&#13;
HEADACHE... merely give your opponent a headache "by taking all&#13;
his pieces."&#13;
And let's not forget those characters who immediately rose to fame&#13;
between Saturday morning cartoons: G.I. Joe, Big Jim, Big Josh, Big&#13;
Jeff and Big Jack. Musclebound, daring, and heroic, they perform&#13;
feats unknown to common men. They kick holes in brick walls and&#13;
chop bamboo poles in half while clad in bermuda shorts and cowbov&#13;
hats. Unreal! .&#13;
Poor Santa. Imagine him riding along in his sleigh when Baby&#13;
Yawnny suddenly crawls out of one of his bags and says, "Santa, Baby&#13;
Yawnny gots to go poddy!"&#13;
And if that isn't enough, Big Jim decides he and Barby are hungry.&#13;
What does poor Santa do when Big Jim decides to have Rudolph for&#13;
supper? Why, he pulls out his "Ghost Gun" so he can shoot Big Jim&#13;
"without any noise or missiles" and presumably without drawing&#13;
blood.&#13;
And to top that off, G.I. Joe has rounded up as many tanks and guns&#13;
he could find in Santa's bag of goodies and is now launching an all-out&#13;
war on little children.&#13;
Well, Santa decides to turn back in the interest of humanity. After&#13;
all, there's enough trouble in the world without unleashing another&#13;
offensive-espeeially by someone as merciless as G.I. Joe.&#13;
But back in department stores, where shelves are lined with&#13;
countless numbers of games and toys, is a G.I. Joe "Trouble Shooter"&#13;
with a "talking communications center." At this very minute, it is&#13;
broadcasting orders to other G.I. Joes. So if you're hit with a ball from&#13;
a SKITTLE SHOOT game, or run over by an "Imposter Volkswagon"&#13;
that is usually "mild mannered" but "turns into a track-eating&#13;
monster," don't say I didn't warn you. Those department stores are to&#13;
be entered at your own risk. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday/ Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
' J m ...-the cJSSYLUM winteR swards&#13;
("called "The, Nutc^ackeRO&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion&#13;
'Right to know'&#13;
usurped&#13;
Once again administrative fog has come rolling in.&#13;
Our administration sees fit to involve themselves in the&#13;
internal affairs of student groups because of some&#13;
warped sense of protecting the community image of&#13;
Parkside. Case in point: The suit RANGER filed with '&#13;
the Kenosha County District Attorney against PAB was&#13;
to be definitive in nature. Little is known about the&#13;
responsibilities of student groups as concerns the antisecrecy&#13;
law. The Parkside Activities Board, as an&#13;
alleged violator of the present law, was to be taken to&#13;
court so that a "confusing situation" could be once and&#13;
for all cleared up by the judicial branch of our government.&#13;
Our district attorney, in all his wisdom, has&#13;
chosen to usurp that power of our court system that&#13;
states when citizens have conflicting views the court&#13;
shall be the final arbitrator.&#13;
Among the overt and covert reasons for the District&#13;
Attorney's decision are: no deliberate attempt to violate&#13;
the law, others are violating the law, "a confusing&#13;
issue." If these are the the criteria for nonenforcement&#13;
of the law, I would suggest that Kenosha is fertile&#13;
ground for any criminal activity.&#13;
Among the covert activities-we find our Assistant&#13;
Dean of Students seeking to assist the student groups&#13;
involved. RANGER feels that a better method of attempting&#13;
to alleviate the situation would have been to&#13;
contact the student groups-not the District Attorney.&#13;
RANGER finds it hard to believe that the meeting of&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger with Bruce Schroeder was only to&#13;
offer "assistance"; perhaps it was a means of seeing&#13;
that the outside world does not become aware that the&#13;
beautiful Parkside Campus could possibly hide discord&#13;
among the students.&#13;
In our conferences with the District Attorney, the&#13;
question of possible violation of the anti-secrecy law by&#13;
the Editorial Board of the RANGER was never mentioned&#13;
until AFTER the offer of assistance by the Dean&#13;
of Students Office.&#13;
We, as members of the press, cannot allow the hidden&#13;
threat of legal action sway us from a course that can&#13;
only benefit the campus by clarifying a confusing issue.&#13;
RANGER calls on the Dean of Students, the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board and other campus groups to assist us in&#13;
the search for clarity of the law. We will continue our&#13;
legal course of action so that all of us will be aware of&#13;
our responsibilities under the law.&#13;
Wrapping it up&#13;
in bright paper&#13;
With this issue Ranger will cease publication for the&#13;
Christmas break. We will begin publishing again on&#13;
January 15, 1975. A s the semester comes to a close, we&#13;
feel a bit of retrospection on the school year is in order.&#13;
RANGER feels that there has been some good done and&#13;
some failures.&#13;
The good includes the passage of a strong student&#13;
government constitution (the failure to implement that&#13;
document does not detract from it). Other successes&#13;
include the action taken in the areas of affirmative&#13;
action and obtaining sufficient counselors. We have to&#13;
balance these positive actions against such failures as&#13;
the administration and certain student groups who&#13;
continue to maintain a fragmented attitude towards the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Ranger feels strongly that once Parkside can function&#13;
in a unified manner we will begin to make this a&#13;
"community" and not the "islands of isolation" that&#13;
now exist.&#13;
We have an opportunity to start a new semester in a&#13;
new year. Perhaps the break from the grind of school&#13;
will allow time for the irritations and angers to subside,&#13;
and perhaps the spirit of goodwill of the holidays will&#13;
continue into the new semester.&#13;
We have all learned much and the holiday break will&#13;
give us all time to analyze our various failures and&#13;
successes and come back in '75 wiser and better able to&#13;
handle our tasks. ^ &lt;&#13;
The staff at Ranger wishes you all a happy holiday&#13;
and a safe vacation.&#13;
NutCRackeR5)&#13;
J PON'T GET TO "COME" OUT" MUCH""&#13;
n ANYMORE,... with all -that-time in the&#13;
closet J had hm&lt;L to think, about"&#13;
worthy people,to vUhorn we owe praise&#13;
X came up with these....&#13;
TOM REINERT Tor cL-fine.&#13;
performance,,...^ product^!&#13;
PQG As old members,-for belnq&#13;
\ -the- part of -fhe body JT mosk&#13;
' aet into..-&#13;
DEAN DEARBORN for bclnq&#13;
L a Sport.... J&#13;
KEN PE5TKA, who gets&#13;
,the Snow Queen.&#13;
Award-for his&#13;
) tacky mouth—&#13;
horny behav/OR?&#13;
Unfair to athletes&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in regards to any&#13;
of the students or faculty who are&#13;
interested in the welfare and&#13;
education of minority students&#13;
here at Parkside. We were&#13;
recruited from out of state and&#13;
were given information regarding&#13;
Parkside and other&#13;
necessary matters which was not&#13;
true. According to the circumstances&#13;
which confronted us&#13;
when we arrived here, we were&#13;
told we would receive food&#13;
stamps, convenient transportation,&#13;
sufficient funds to&#13;
complete our educational needs,&#13;
and some sort of social activity&#13;
on campus.&#13;
There are athletic students who&#13;
were under the impression that&#13;
they would receive a fair chance&#13;
on the basketball squad, but they&#13;
were not allowed to show their&#13;
true potential due to the fact that&#13;
the varsity squad had been&#13;
chosen prior to our arrival. This&#13;
is not fair to the athlete that is&#13;
capable of playing and not given&#13;
a chance.&#13;
We feel that Rudy Collum is not&#13;
qualified to recruit minority&#13;
students. We feel that we have&#13;
been tricked into coming to&#13;
Parkside, and this is not fair to&#13;
us.&#13;
Several students went in to talk&#13;
about the situation with Rudy&#13;
Collum and the situation was&#13;
taken personally. We don't think&#13;
that he is qualified, so we ask the&#13;
administration to look into this&#13;
matter and take action to better&#13;
protect the welfare and education&#13;
of minority sttudents here at&#13;
Parkside, or the Federal&#13;
government will be notified.&#13;
We don't need someone who is&#13;
only interested in his payroll and&#13;
not the students that he&#13;
represents.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Minority students of&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Bauer under fire from Kenosha attorney&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The reluctance of acting&#13;
chancellor Otto Bauer to abide by&#13;
the merger implementation law&#13;
argues strongly against student&#13;
representatives on the Search&#13;
and Screen Committee giving&#13;
him serious cosideration as a&#13;
permanent chancellor for the&#13;
Parkside campus.&#13;
The merger law provides that&#13;
"students shall have the right to&#13;
organize themselves in a manner&#13;
in which they determine, and to&#13;
select their representatives to&#13;
participate in institutional&#13;
governance."&#13;
The student representatives on&#13;
the Search and Screen Committee&#13;
are the most important&#13;
representatives to participate in&#13;
institutional governance that this&#13;
student body may ever have.&#13;
Yet they are not being selected&#13;
in a manner in which students&#13;
have determined. Instead, the&#13;
process of selection is being "coordinated"&#13;
by the office of the&#13;
associate dean of students.&#13;
Students selected in&#13;
this manner are certainly open to&#13;
challenge. They very well may&#13;
have to defend themselves in&#13;
court against a writ of quo&#13;
warranto i.e. a court proceeding&#13;
challenging by what right do they&#13;
hold office.&#13;
But the Search and Screen&#13;
committee is just one area in&#13;
which student rights to self&#13;
organization are being denied.&#13;
The merger implementation law&#13;
provides that "students&#13;
shall have the primary responsibility&#13;
for the disposition of those&#13;
funds which constitute substantial&#13;
support for campus&#13;
student activities."&#13;
In a referendum on September&#13;
24 and 25 of this year, the&#13;
Parkside student body determined&#13;
that such disposition&#13;
should be done through an&#13;
allocations committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc.&#13;
That allocations committee has&#13;
the responsibility to recommend&#13;
a level for the segregated student&#13;
fee for academic year 1975 76. To&#13;
date, however, Bauer has&#13;
refused to instruct the appropriate&#13;
non-instructional&#13;
personnel and staff in auxiliary&#13;
services to co-operate with this&#13;
Committee in arriving at a&#13;
segregated fee level.&#13;
Instead, he seems bent on&#13;
creating his own committee to&#13;
perform this task which the law&#13;
has delegated to students.&#13;
Bauer's refusal to implement&#13;
the student rights section of the&#13;
merger law not only argues&#13;
against his being given serious&#13;
consideration as a permanent&#13;
Parkside chancellor but provokes&#13;
dissention and argument that&#13;
may jeopardize legislative approval&#13;
of the proposed School of&#13;
Modern Industry as well.&#13;
John Siefert&#13;
Kenosha attorney&#13;
Food&#13;
To the Ediotr,&#13;
Human beings at Parkside do&#13;
not get hungry after 2 p.m. on&#13;
Fridays. I guess I will have to&#13;
condition my body to that&#13;
schedule so I will be able to&#13;
survive, and think, and worry&#13;
and become well adjusted.&#13;
Debora Donatt&#13;
Multicultural input&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To the Members of Third World:&#13;
The Concerned Students&#13;
Coalition suffers from many of&#13;
the same problems, such as&#13;
recognition, as your organization&#13;
and many other student&#13;
organizations face.&#13;
I personally feel that the&#13;
University is making a grave&#13;
mistake by not tapping the only&#13;
direct and accessible source for&#13;
multicultural input - through&#13;
your organization.&#13;
As you may already know the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee is&#13;
making an honest effort to make&#13;
to exist °&#13;
r Student organizations&#13;
? exist on campus and have&#13;
mofeen&#13;
re°rganiZati0ns become&#13;
more represented in studentcampus&#13;
affairs. ^"aentThe&#13;
concerns you voice are&#13;
basic concerns of all student&#13;
organizations. In answer to your&#13;
-rsrcisrs&#13;
mittee's sub-committee on&#13;
Student Organizations. Second, to&#13;
participate in Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association s&#13;
selection of candidates to the&#13;
Search and Screen Committee to&#13;
select a new chancellor.&#13;
This, in my opinion, is the sure&#13;
way to total imput from a'J&#13;
factions of student interest an&#13;
student organizations.&#13;
Thank you. , „&#13;
Kai Christian Nail&#13;
President - C.S-L &#13;
UW president&#13;
defends budget&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
The University of Wisconsin&#13;
System has done all it can to bear&#13;
its share of austerity in preparing&#13;
its 1975-77 b iennial budget, John&#13;
C. Weaver, president of the UW&#13;
System told Regents in&#13;
Milwaukee Friday.&#13;
The proposed $1.33 billion&#13;
budget, excluding faculty&#13;
compensation proposals, was&#13;
passed in October and submitted&#13;
to the state legislature for consideration&#13;
in the upcoming 1975-&#13;
77 state budget. Further&#13;
recommendations for faculty&#13;
compensation, carrying a&#13;
cumulative two-year cost of&#13;
$105.2 million, were passed in&#13;
November.&#13;
Weaver's statement reflected&#13;
his initial response to the first of&#13;
many day-long public hearings&#13;
that Governor Lucey is conducting&#13;
around the state. The&#13;
hearings air a wide range of&#13;
issues and policy questions&#13;
confronting the state legislature&#13;
as it considers the state budget.&#13;
The first hearing was held&#13;
Monday, Dec. 2.&#13;
"The hearing centered itself&#13;
particularly around the massive&#13;
problems of inflation and&#13;
recession," said Weaver, adding&#13;
that "It is abundantly clear that&#13;
the Governor and Legislature are&#13;
confronted with a serious&#13;
discrepency between projected&#13;
income and state expenditure&#13;
needs, as represented by the&#13;
several state agencies."&#13;
In light of this discrepency,&#13;
Weaver noted that the University's&#13;
budget request "received&#13;
more than a little critical attention."&#13;
He went on to say, "we&#13;
of the public university are no&#13;
strangers to austerity and&#13;
retrenchment," and added that&#13;
"no one in the university is insensitive&#13;
to the confounding&#13;
realities of the fiscal problems&#13;
the state faces. None of us seeks&#13;
more than our fair share of what&#13;
modest increases the state will be&#13;
able to grant, and I find myself&#13;
facing the first stages of budget&#13;
negotiations with a sense of real&#13;
Dride in the responsibility and&#13;
restraint which our requests&#13;
clearly represent."&#13;
Weaver defended the UW&#13;
System's requests by citing three&#13;
areas of budget planning in which&#13;
the percentage increases&#13;
reflected in the university's&#13;
requests fall below those of other&#13;
state agencies:&#13;
1. Whereas the total nonsalary&#13;
programmatic increases&#13;
requested by all state agencies&#13;
represent a 36 percent increase&#13;
over current levels, the increases&#13;
aimed for by' the university&#13;
represent only one half that-18&#13;
percent;&#13;
2. The UW System's faculty&#13;
cost of living and merit salary&#13;
increase requests of 30 percent&#13;
over a two-year period~17 percent&#13;
the first year, and 13 percent&#13;
the second-is the lowest percentage&#13;
increase request yet&#13;
advanced by any major state&#13;
employee group, with the next&#13;
Buying term papers&#13;
illegal in Wisconsin&#13;
Academic Material Unfair&#13;
Trade Practices is an administrative&#13;
rule designed to&#13;
prevent the operation of so-called&#13;
"term paper mills" in Wisconsin,&#13;
according to Tom Crist, director&#13;
oi the Bureau of Consumer&#13;
Protection in Madison.&#13;
Violators of this rule can be&#13;
prosecuted in court and if found&#13;
guilty, fined for each offense not&#13;
to exceed $5,000 and-or be imprisoned&#13;
in the county jail for not&#13;
more than one year (section&#13;
100.26 (3), Wis. Stats.).&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
of its unique architecture.&#13;
Following the resolution's&#13;
adoption, Pelisek asked members&#13;
of the board, chancellors&#13;
and administrators from&#13;
throughout the system, and&#13;
representatives of the press and&#13;
public to stand in silence, offering&#13;
a final tribute to the late chancellor.&#13;
&#13;
Other actions taken by the&#13;
Regents include the following:&#13;
-Adoption of a new set of&#13;
faculty personnel rules. The new&#13;
rules culminated a series of&#13;
discussions and debates between&#13;
faculty and administrators, including&#13;
a public hearing on the&#13;
proposed rules in Madison on&#13;
Nov. 22. The rules will govern&#13;
hiring, granting of tenure,&#13;
dismissal, grievance procedures&#13;
and layoffs during times of&#13;
financial emergency.&#13;
-The voting down of a proposal&#13;
denying outside religious groups&#13;
the use of UW buildings "for the&#13;
advancement of their sectarian&#13;
purposes." Regent Arthur&#13;
DeBardeleben, Park Falls,&#13;
argued for the prohibition, citing&#13;
that the pse of UW buildings by&#13;
religious groups is probably&#13;
unconstitutional. DeBardeleben&#13;
also objected to a presentation&#13;
made to a Board of Regents&#13;
committee the day before by four&#13;
clergymen from campus&#13;
ministries. The religious&#13;
representatives distributed&#13;
written descriptions of their work&#13;
on the campuses to the committee&#13;
members. DeBardeleben&#13;
considered this action "fine in&#13;
church, but it has no place, in my&#13;
opinion, in this university."&#13;
-Reversal of a Regent policy&#13;
decision made in November&#13;
stopping a. new undergraduate&#13;
Mechanical Engineering&#13;
program at UW-Platteville. The&#13;
Board voted to enact the program&#13;
by a 9-7 margin. Regent Mrs.&#13;
Robert R. Williams, Stevens&#13;
Point, introduced the proposal to&#13;
rescind the action taken the&#13;
month before. She cited a change&#13;
in thePlatteville faculty's morale&#13;
and a reassessment of the issue&#13;
as the reasons behind her change&#13;
of vote.&#13;
-Approval of a new academic&#13;
calendar for UW-Oshkosh. The&#13;
calendar includes a- 14-week&#13;
spring and fall semester, with&#13;
each segment broken into two&#13;
seven-week terms. In addition,&#13;
an extra three-week term is&#13;
provided in January.&#13;
UW Senior Vice President&#13;
Donald K. Smith called the&#13;
project an "experimental one";&#13;
however, he added that the&#13;
program represents a&#13;
"tremendously important piece&#13;
of systemwide innovation."&#13;
UW-Oshkosh Chancellor&#13;
Robert Birnbaum said the&#13;
calendar would: allow students to&#13;
move through the university at&#13;
their own pace, gearing themselves&#13;
according to their learning&#13;
speed and financial capabilities;&#13;
allow for students who can only&#13;
afford short terms in the&#13;
university to attend; and allow&#13;
professors free terms to do&#13;
research or take part in public&#13;
service projects.&#13;
LW Regent John M. Lavine, chairman of the Regents Education Committee (forefront), and&#13;
Regent Bertram N. McNamara share a few moments of intellectual relaxation before a recent&#13;
Regent meeting in Madison. The Regents gather monthly to consider a variety of administrative&#13;
policies for the University of Wisconsin system. Their most recent discussions centered on the&#13;
proposed UW System budget, calling for some $1.43 billion in funds for upcoming 1975-77 biennium&#13;
(photo by Paul Anderson)&#13;
lowest at 51 percent;&#13;
3. The UW System's request for&#13;
capital building and remodeling&#13;
programs are below the commonly&#13;
accepted professional&#13;
standard~V2 of one percentage&#13;
point, as compared to a 2 percent&#13;
professional standard.&#13;
He further supported his view&#13;
by adding that "the record shows&#13;
that the University System accomplished&#13;
the largest dollar,&#13;
and percentage, reduction in&#13;
base budget through productivity&#13;
savings during the biennium now&#13;
drawing to a close."&#13;
Specifically, the UW System&#13;
generated 49 percent of the&#13;
state's total productivity savings,&#13;
while comprising only one-fifth of&#13;
the total state expenditure&#13;
budget^&#13;
"Not only have we understood&#13;
our state's needs for fiscal&#13;
prudence qnd exonomy, we have&#13;
done something about it," he&#13;
commented.&#13;
Weaver was careful to concede,&#13;
however, that if the fiscal&#13;
situation in Wisconsin for the&#13;
next biennium demands further&#13;
cuts in state agency budgets,&#13;
"the University of Wisconsin&#13;
System is again prepared to&#13;
shoulder its share of the&#13;
responsibility of adjusting to such&#13;
fiscal realities."&#13;
No mention was made as to&#13;
Unfreezing the clocks&#13;
About 1,200 area grade school children will see performances of&#13;
James Thurber's fairy tale "The Thirteen Clocks" as guests of the&#13;
Players of University of Wisconsin-Parkside at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Dec. 13 in the Communication Arts Theater. Additional performances,&#13;
open to the public, are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Friday,&#13;
Dec. 13, and 10 a.m. on Saturday, Dec. 14. Public admission is 50 cents&#13;
for both children and adults.&#13;
Don Rintz, who will direct the production, says the tale can be enjoyed&#13;
by all ages. "The Thirteen Clocks" tells the story, in song and&#13;
poetry, of a wicked Duke who lives in a castle where time is frozen&#13;
with his niece, the Princess Saralinda.&#13;
When suitors come to the castle to woo the Princess, the Duke sets&#13;
impossible tasks for them to do to win Saralinda's hand. All the suitors&#13;
fail until a handsome Prince, disguised as a minstrel, carries out the&#13;
tasks of finding a thousand jewels and making the thirteen frozen&#13;
clocks in the palace work once again.&#13;
The book is by Fred Sadoff and the music by Marc Bucci.&#13;
Peter Strutynski of South Milwaukee is cast as the Duke, Annabelle&#13;
Current of Racine plays the Princess and Keith Gayhart of Racine is&#13;
the Prince. Michael Ward, Racine, is cast as Golux, who tells the story&#13;
of the play and helps the Prince win the hand of Saralinda.&#13;
The Duke's henchman, Hark, is portrayed by Tim Seymour,&#13;
Kenosha, and Jody Jones, Racine, plays Hagga, a remarkable woman&#13;
who weeps jewels. Completing the cast are Art Dexter, Union Grove;&#13;
Chris Simpson, Kenosha; and Steve Ltt, Racine.&#13;
Piano accompanist will be Gerald Bailey of Chicago.&#13;
which university programs would&#13;
be cut in the event that such&#13;
further cuts did occur.&#13;
He concluded with the&#13;
following plea:&#13;
"If the retrenchment era we&#13;
have experienced these past four&#13;
years is of necessity to continue,&#13;
then let all of the recipients of&#13;
state tax support be treated fairly&#13;
and equitably on whatever&#13;
common foundation of support&#13;
the state determines it can&#13;
sustain with appropriate&#13;
recognition being provided to&#13;
those who have already&#13;
sacrificed in unusual measure&#13;
during the current biennium."&#13;
D.A.r 57T&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
who you're trying to knife, but it's&#13;
water over the dam. I don't think&#13;
it matters what I think because&#13;
the case was dropped."&#13;
Ken Pestka, editor-in-chief of&#13;
RANGER, was asked whether he&#13;
thought RANGER had been in&#13;
violation of the law. He pointed&#13;
out that RANGER doesn't actually&#13;
hold meetings as defined in&#13;
the Open Meeting Law, so the&#13;
paper couldn't have violated it.&#13;
"What bearing does this have&#13;
on the case, if any," he asked. "If&#13;
anybody thinks we're in violation&#13;
of the law, let them file a complaint&#13;
with the D.A. and let a&#13;
judge decide."&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
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CAMPUSTRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIOE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
Majors review faculty work&#13;
This is a review by four senior art majors on the&#13;
Faculty Art Exhibit, which will close Friday of this&#13;
week. It was taped last Thursday evening and is&#13;
presented as a conversation on art as you might hear in&#13;
walking through a gallery.&#13;
RANGER: The first criticisms will center on the&#13;
two-dimensional work presented in the gallery. Let's&#13;
begin with the work of Erik Forrest.&#13;
Major l: Viewing this first canvas, Two Friends and&#13;
Auld Reeky, the artist's work has an illustrative&#13;
quality. The colors are intense in some sections of the&#13;
painting, almost uncontrolled for this particular&#13;
composition.&#13;
Major 2: There seems to be a confusion of d epth in&#13;
this piece and in the other pieces. Mr. Forrest has&#13;
chosen a rainbow symbol for this canvas and the next&#13;
one, titled Rainbow, but its use is obviously highly&#13;
personal and subjective.&#13;
Major 3: I like Rainbow. It is very psychological.&#13;
One thing his imagery in all these pieces shares, is the&#13;
quality of be ing derived from collective dreams This&#13;
piece has a purposeful handling of color and of the&#13;
application of brushstrokes to the canvas. There are&#13;
finely applied transparencies in the sheets and body&#13;
for instance.&#13;
Major l: His work is difficult to decipher. I agree&#13;
that the images are dreamlike. The perspective in&#13;
these pieces is hard to take, or so it seems to me. For&#13;
instance, in the piece Waterloo Place, we see the right&#13;
side of the canvas is painted with a classical perspective&#13;
that abruptly switches to almost the reverse&#13;
planes on the other side of the painting. In fact, the&#13;
perspective changes at least three times on this side of&#13;
the work.&#13;
Major 3: It is almost as though the foreground was&#13;
seen through a concave mirror; then, we are looking&#13;
out the window at a completely different horizon.&#13;
Major 2: Right. Another thing that obviously contributes&#13;
to his subject matter is his European&#13;
background.&#13;
RANGER: Does anyone find that the female image&#13;
is another unifying characteristic in his work or is this&#13;
just my impression?&#13;
Major 3: No. I think the female element definitely&#13;
can be seen in his work. Look at this next canvasTregonna--the&#13;
female nude in the window and the&#13;
previous pieces all have women in them. The image of&#13;
a woman allows for certain automatic associations,&#13;
both emotional and psychological.&#13;
Major l; The use of symbolism is apparent in images&#13;
and in titles. The unparticipated picnic spread in the&#13;
foreground of T regonna is suggestive and in the next&#13;
painting, Morning of Kin g Arthur, the title, because it&#13;
is accessible from literature and legend, also brings&#13;
certain concepts of time and manner to mind.&#13;
Major 2: The interesting thing to note about this final&#13;
piece of Erik Forrest's is the style in which it is&#13;
painted; it's more primative technique lends force to&#13;
the use of p lanes. The fractured segments of t he piece&#13;
achieve a much better effect than in the other paintings,&#13;
at least for me.&#13;
RANGER: How about the four pieces by Moishe&#13;
Smith....&#13;
Major 2: The first thing to say is they are all prints,&#13;
and all landscaped in one way or another. The one that&#13;
stands out immediately is the color print Afternoon of a&#13;
Cow. The sky in this one has a remarkably painterly&#13;
quality.&#13;
Major 1: The two scenes of Europe have an incredible&#13;
amount of de tail in the architectural parts of&#13;
the prints. Then, the images of p eople on the steps in&#13;
the foreground of S mith's Roman Holiday are almost&#13;
cartooned, when compared to the detailed rendering of&#13;
the buildings.&#13;
Major 3: The second piece-The Glory that was&#13;
Rome-again has that incredible detail.&#13;
RANGER: It pulls you right up to it, so you can&#13;
examine every part.&#13;
Major 2: The last piece's title is undecipherable. This&#13;
print was made this year. Compared to the others, it's&#13;
extremely unfinished. But here again, we find the&#13;
snapshot image. It would be interesting to find out how&#13;
these effects in the color print and in The Glory that&#13;
was Rome were achieved. Especially the watercolor&#13;
effects in Afternoon of a Cow.&#13;
Major l: This next selection of paintings by Robert&#13;
Cadez shows the use of one simple image, developed&#13;
and slightly varied in a number of works.&#13;
Major 3: The use of c olors to accomplish variations&#13;
in dimension is what he's after. Look at the variations&#13;
in blues at the corners of the piece titled Intussusception.&#13;
&#13;
RANGER: Pond at RonDeau employs the same&#13;
algaelike image only with a florescent and highly&#13;
luminous network of lines around the shapes.&#13;
Major 2: This one gives the effect of plant forms&#13;
under a microscope.&#13;
Major l: The next painting has a fine finger-painting&#13;
quality.&#13;
RANGER: You're referring to Clandestine.&#13;
Major l: Yes. This one's much more developed, even&#13;
subtle.&#13;
Major 3: It has somewhat the same effect as looking&#13;
through colored lead glass. You get impressions of a&#13;
sort of c ityscape with movement.&#13;
Major 2: I get the impression of transparence and&#13;
light. Stained effect. Much more involved use of the&#13;
forms.&#13;
RANGER: The next two pieces by Cadez are the&#13;
algae image on plexiglass; one in blue, Construction I&#13;
and one in yellow, Construction II. (The colors blue and&#13;
yellow are the background undercoating.)&#13;
Major 2: The Constructions use color and space quite&#13;
effectively. It is interesting to note that he painted both&#13;
sides of the plexiglass.&#13;
RANGER: The last artist, working in twodimensional&#13;
media, is David Zaig.&#13;
Major 2: Mr. Zaig has only two pieces in the show.'&#13;
The smaller one is a photosilkscreen. This is a recent&#13;
technique. The out-of-focus background and the&#13;
floating Mirolike shapes on the surface remind me of&#13;
images glued to, say, a window that is being rinsed,&#13;
with rain. (This piece was untitled.)&#13;
Major 3: The larger work--Cul de Sac"is a&#13;
surrealistic work. It is the largest painting in the&#13;
gallery. He has created an extraordinarily threedimensional&#13;
space in the piece.&#13;
Major 3: The painting is done with precision; it's&#13;
obvious that the scope and arrangement were decided&#13;
with considerable thought. The effect of the objects&#13;
floating freely and the counter-image of th eir shadows&#13;
also in the air, is incredible....&#13;
Major 2: The light that created those shadows could&#13;
be coming from the gallery lights themselves. I think&#13;
it's handled well.&#13;
RANGER: If that's all on the two-dimensional&#13;
presentations, then, we'll move on to the threedimensional&#13;
work. Let's start with the ceramic work of&#13;
John Murphy.&#13;
Major 3: Without being specific to any one individual&#13;
piece, the one thing all of Mr. Murphy's work has in&#13;
common is that it was all executed with quality.&#13;
Major 2: Exactly. The work is exceptional, when&#13;
compared with some of the seemingly unfinished and&#13;
erratic work previously viewed.&#13;
Major l: He has, for instance, used some of the same&#13;
symbols as the previous artists, yet treated them in a&#13;
personal manner. His work has a style that belongs&#13;
uniquely to Mr. Murphy himself.&#13;
Major 2: One of the things to note is that he is not tied&#13;
down to one mode of expression in this media and he is&#13;
willing to state the particulars of his craft, such as&#13;
firings and glazes.&#13;
Major 3: He seems to be using an ecological theme&#13;
and yet he has peraonalized it. The work is somewhat&#13;
surreal in the handling of the images.&#13;
RANGER: Anything else that needs to be said?&#13;
Alright, let's move on to the sculptures of Roliin&#13;
Jansky.&#13;
Major I: The rather feminine form with the flecked&#13;
finish is Sur la Pointe. The technical aspects of a ll his&#13;
work is exceptional.&#13;
Major 2: I find it interesting to see this piece in the&#13;
middle of the gallery and then find one shaped just like&#13;
it, but not put together, on the wall....&#13;
RANGER: Thump Counter Thump is the one being&#13;
referred to.&#13;
Major 2: Yes. I am curious as to why he did that.&#13;
Couldn't he get them together?&#13;
RANGER: It seems to me that there is substantial&#13;
reasoning behind that arrangement.&#13;
Major 2: Perhaps. Still, I'm suspicious.&#13;
Major 3: Look at the work Terminus ad Quem. The&#13;
piece is appealing for the artistic irony it has.&#13;
Major l: All his pieces have beautiful finishes....&#13;
Major 2: This was the piece which won the National&#13;
Sculpture Association award and toured the country.&#13;
Major 3: This piece is humorous. I don't mean he&#13;
didn't do it seriously, I mean that the ironic element, as&#13;
stated before, is most apparent on seeing the piece.&#13;
Humor in art is a sophisticated development. The&#13;
comical element is what arouses the interest.&#13;
RANGER: The last piece to view is Intransition.&#13;
Major 3: This is an interesting piece.&#13;
Major 2: There are some good things happening on&#13;
the surface. There is quite a bit of tension in the piece,&#13;
and though it lacks the brilliant finishes of his most&#13;
recent works, I find it the most appealing. This work&#13;
was definitely not meant to be exhibited in a gallery of&#13;
this size.&#13;
Major 3: I agree. It should have some sort of landscape&#13;
to be viewed properly.&#13;
Major l: This one has a flowing quality and internal&#13;
dynamism.&#13;
RANGER: If that's it, I'd like to thank you all and&#13;
call it a night.&#13;
- - amy&#13;
New course line-up for 2nd sem.&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
Both the College of Science and Society (CSS) and the School of&#13;
Modern Industry (SMI) are offering new courses in all divisions.&#13;
Science Division&#13;
In the Division of Science, CSS, there are the following new courses:&#13;
Chemistry 11-495 Seminar in Polymer Chemistry. 1 cr&#13;
Earth Science 12-490 (sec. 1), Special Topics: Environmental&#13;
Communications. 3 cr. According to a flyer on the course, "Environmental&#13;
Communications is a workshop (not a lecture) for science&#13;
students and communications students who want to bridge the&#13;
communications gap.' Students will prepare newspaper articles,&#13;
press releases, magazine features, radio features, videotapes etc&#13;
and will receive feedback from fellow students, instructors, and media&#13;
professionals.&#13;
12-490 Special Topics sec. 2: Energy Management. 1 cr. cross-listed&#13;
as Physics 15-490, se c. 2.&#13;
Psychology 16-225. Psychology of Personal Adjustment. 3 cr. Study&#13;
and practice of self-management: modifying habits and phobias and&#13;
increasing effectiveness in interpersonal relationships, life planning&#13;
and problem solving. Prerequ: Psych. 101.&#13;
16-222. Psychology of Drug Use. 3 cr. Social psychological aspects of&#13;
the use and misuse of depressants, stimulants, and psychedelics,&#13;
including marijuana, LSD, speed, alcohol, tobacco and over-thecounter&#13;
drugs. Prerequ: Psych 101, or LS101, or LS119.&#13;
16-230 Psychology of Human Sexuality. 3 cr. Human sexual&#13;
behavior: variations and frequencies, normal sexual behavior and&#13;
development, myths and fallacies, dysfunctions, deviations, learning&#13;
and modification, attitudes and personal codes. Prereq: Psych 101.&#13;
New in Social Science&#13;
The Division of Social Science is offering the following new courses:&#13;
Anthropology. 21-426 Developmental Change. 3 cr. or Cross-listed as&#13;
Sociology 27-475. Bui lding on the basics of culture change, examines&#13;
the dynamics of macro changes at national and international levels&#13;
Economics 22-205. Economics of Urban Problems. 3 cr. Economics&#13;
of s uch urban problems as housing, urban renewal transnnrtatinn&#13;
and 11,6 finandn&#13;
s&#13;
and Labor Relations. 3 cr. Economics of&#13;
c l S f ,ssue s&#13;
'&#13;
i n&#13;
Geography: Jin America. 3 cr.&#13;
mysical, cultural and economic characteristics of Latin America.&#13;
as Humanities 30-290. 108&#13;
raphy and History. 3 cr. Cross-listed&#13;
Imperial perbd and coventrates ontheR^ 3 hr surveys the&#13;
Hepub^ctl^S^ (191M949)&#13;
more traditional approach^thi^cours °&#13;
f ^&#13;
lsconsin&#13;
-&#13;
3 cr Besides the&#13;
portunity of a more personal H Provide students the oppreservation,in7efro™cmistd0h&#13;
ery&#13;
°&#13;
f their own P&#13;
ast and&#13;
Cons. Instr. Cltles and homes&#13;
. as well as the classroom.&#13;
America. 3 cr. S^enHhrecled^n6^ ^ Relations in Latin&#13;
slavery, abolition, and race relations^6 f&#13;
aI,ng ^ ^&#13;
e nature of&#13;
Cons, instru. s ,n contemporary Latin America.&#13;
Issues: W«menTubertuonS&#13;
rcrkIsemS&#13;
,h&#13;
Cont&#13;
,&#13;
emP°rar&gt;' Political&#13;
Hberatiom" ^ ™d CughTe K'To^&#13;
tensive feeding ?&#13;
uraaucratia Politics. 3 cr. Inorganization&#13;
theory, budgetary ^ na&#13;
' and contemporary&#13;
Prerequ: Pol. Sci. 26-350 o r cons iiS?' 3nd bureaucr&#13;
atic politics.&#13;
Sociology 27-490 Soec'-l T •&#13;
social-psychological asp^ts aTd'pro^ms G&#13;
f&#13;
eronto,&#13;
°g-v&#13;
-&#13;
SociaI and&#13;
continued on next h ° &#13;
libtng&#13;
Eoom&#13;
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AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ARTHUR NICKLE&#13;
ANOTHER ONE OF THOSE DAYS&#13;
IN THE LIFE OF....&#13;
the question still remains.&#13;
Forward by Magnellum&#13;
"I've seen you lots of times. You referring to&#13;
good old Marilyn Morsel herself,&#13;
shit, Old M.M. man!! heavy&#13;
let me explain...."&#13;
Arthur Nickle wrote an autobiography, he never&#13;
once mentioned her, (Marilyn Morsel). Old M.M.&#13;
took it upon herselves to talk with the bastard, easy&#13;
going arthur nicle was in for the surprise of his&#13;
boring life.&#13;
The outlook upon these two human beings&#13;
meeting together is just utterly absurd in the&#13;
wondering eyes of humanity.&#13;
If there is anything left of them the world will&#13;
have a hell of a lot to talk or gossip about (as the&#13;
case may be), IN THIS CASE it is clearly noted as&#13;
gossip along with assholeular behaviour. Such&#13;
assininity is expected to occur with two assholes&#13;
meeting together.&#13;
IN Arthur's statement that these names have&#13;
been changed to protect the guilty; for what I have&#13;
absolutly NO idea, but unfortunatly everything still&#13;
stands together as one or two or three or more, (just&#13;
don't fall on the floor.) In case many of you do not&#13;
understand my review, here is an explanation. Here&#13;
is a section of Chapter 18.&#13;
"My stand on this issue is very much nil marilyn.&#13;
now I expect you to understand me and just tell&#13;
yourselves that this is how I am. I am always nil on&#13;
just about any controversy subject on earth. I am&#13;
not sorry for this fault or gain of mine, in fact I am&#13;
proud. I feel good about this being my ways, my&#13;
personality. I never would have thought that&#13;
someone, especially you, my dear, would be so&#13;
spiteful, full of anger, of pressing views. No, no, that&#13;
is not my view, please you have your views I have&#13;
mine. Why I don't find faults with your views even&#13;
though I do not agree with them or more factually I&#13;
don't understand them. If I were you I would have&#13;
never bothered with an old, ugly man such as&#13;
myselves."&#13;
"Arthur you are not old. For God's sake you're&#13;
only thirty-five. Shit man where's you're head at&#13;
anyhow?"&#13;
" ah Marilyn it is so good to hear a defense from&#13;
you in my behalf. Oh how shall I repay that outburst&#13;
of anger?"&#13;
"What Arthur, what? Speak up you old aging man&#13;
speak up!"&#13;
"I cannot lip read too well, what did you say?"&#13;
"Oh damn it man, turn up your hearing aid. You&#13;
just melt into the furniture you sit in or lie in&#13;
whichever is the case. Why only last nite as I was&#13;
spying on you through my bedroom window IN THE&#13;
NUDE you couldn't even see far enough to see my&#13;
beautiful body."&#13;
"Your body sweetheart?"&#13;
"Yes Arthur, my own body a woman's body. You&#13;
do prefer women's bodies don't you?"&#13;
"Why yes I...."&#13;
"Oh shit you bastard. You tell me what you have&#13;
written in your goddam autobiography and I'll tell&#13;
you that there was never one mention of me in it.&#13;
Nothing, just nothing whatsoever. I would even be&#13;
proud of you if you wrote pornography of me just&#13;
anything."&#13;
"Marilyn stop screaming stop, stop. And don't tell&#13;
me I have my aid up too high, it is on the lowest&#13;
level. Now sit down. Remember girl, respect your&#13;
elders. But I don't know, I'm not really that old,&#13;
twenty eight, that ain't too old. Ah, those old days,&#13;
Marilyn if you lived back then you would see clearly&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
QUINCY KILOMETER.&#13;
WHAT A MAN!!&#13;
ALL 95 POUNDS OF HIM ALL 2 INCHES OF&#13;
PRICK ALL THREE HAIRS ON HIS BONEY&#13;
CHEST HIS FADED BLUE EYES MIDDLEAGED&#13;
UGLY MAN EVERY WOMAN&#13;
PASSES HIM BY WITHOUT NOTICING HIS&#13;
HEROIC ACTS SUCH AS HIS RESCUE OF A&#13;
CAT IN A TREE THIS MORNING, IT&#13;
SCRATCHED THE HELL OUT OF HIM.&#13;
Such comments fill minds with wonder of this&#13;
man this great man. So noble so honest, hot as hot&#13;
milk can get.&#13;
Ha many writers have written about the extreme&#13;
opposite but not old Arthur Nickle who met Quincy&#13;
Kilometer in the 50's, of what century Arthur still&#13;
does not know. (That's the only problem of his&#13;
autobiography) in the meantime old Q.K. keeps on&#13;
trucking....&#13;
IT'S THE DOUBLE HEX, the sirens singing in&#13;
the nite, the emergency door blocked off by&#13;
proceeding obsenities. How can one person communicate&#13;
to the next?&#13;
"Each of us is on our own. We go our own personal&#13;
ways, someone interferes and one will get mad or&#13;
accept the new idea. Find your hopes keep them,&#13;
but don't tell anyone about them. I will try to please,&#13;
only my rationality is all wrong. Too many people&#13;
wish an end to bad things, but yet give them away to&#13;
be bad again. In my life I have seen lots of&#13;
characters and none have been happy to say the&#13;
least. No one would believe me if I told them I was&#13;
happy yesterday or am happy today, I simply will&#13;
be happy. Do not deny your own feelings, whatever&#13;
they are, we are false to ourselves and need to&#13;
learn. We all must learn, we all must learn."&#13;
SUCH A SPEECH OF QUINCY KILOMETER TO&#13;
THE&#13;
CRICKETS, BIRDS, MUSHROOMS AND SKY.&#13;
enjoyed thoroughly by all and by all are anxious&#13;
for&#13;
more words from the lips of Quincy Kilometer.&#13;
OUR FINDINGS SHOW 31 PERCENT USE SOAP&#13;
14 PERCENT DON'T 3 PERCENT UNANSWERED&#13;
85 percent of the votes were yes 50 percent no 13&#13;
percent don't know&#13;
16 million were born today 2 million die today&#13;
SOS SOS&#13;
use your heads use your heads&#13;
of what I mean. Now back in the nineteenth century&#13;
would have been a good time for you and I."&#13;
Arthur, honey, no time would have been good to&#13;
us. We should have been born a century apart!"&#13;
"We were born a century apart, you just don't&#13;
believe me. My whole life has been known of what I&#13;
have already done. Three hundred years from now I&#13;
shall be a psychology professor at Harvard and you&#13;
shall be an unknown student of mine, even though I&#13;
know you."&#13;
"My goodness, if you aren't senile at age twenty&#13;
three? I don't believe it. Let me out of here for God's&#13;
sake. Let me out!! You're cracked!! Madnym!"&#13;
"Marilyn, Marilyn sit down you are in hysterics.&#13;
Shut up! You old goat of a Morsel, shut up! Shut up&#13;
Shut up...."&#13;
WITH BOTH SCREAMING AT THE TOP&#13;
OF THEIR LUNGS&#13;
WE WILL SWITCH OVER TO NONE&#13;
OTHER THAN...OLD BASS LINE HIMSELVES&#13;
&#13;
New course offerings continued from preceding pageNew&#13;
SMI Courses&#13;
The School of Modern Industry is offering the following courses in its&#13;
three divisions.&#13;
Under the Division of Engineering Science, the Applied Science and&#13;
Technology there are three new courses.&#13;
51-308. I ntroduction to Materials Science. 3 cr. Individual study of&#13;
the basic structure and resulting properties, phase equilibria,&#13;
metastability, rate and growth processes in solids using videocassettes.&#13;
Prereq: Physics 201, cons, instr.&#13;
51-428. Introduction to Numerical Control. 3 cr. Individual study of&#13;
principles of numerical control systems, design consideration, manual&#13;
programming, computer-aided programming languages, economic&#13;
aspects and related laboratory experiments on numerically controlled&#13;
machine tools using video-cassettes. Prereq: AST 114 or cons, instr.&#13;
Business Management&#13;
The Division of Management Science (Business Management) is&#13;
offering the following courses:&#13;
61-100 Introduction to Business. 3 cr. An introduction to the role of&#13;
business in modern society; the functional areas of the business environment.&#13;
&#13;
61-202 Accounting Principles I. 3 cr. Introduction to accounting&#13;
emphasizing basic concepts and procedures used by service and&#13;
merchandising organizations in the accumulation and processing of&#13;
financial information with emphasis on presentation of financial&#13;
statements. Prereq: Second semester freshman or cons. intr.&#13;
61-203 Accounting Principles II. 3 cr. Continuation of 61-202.&#13;
Financial statement interpretation and uses of accounting data by&#13;
management for planning and control; accounting for debt and equity&#13;
issues of business corporations, compound interest applications and&#13;
introduction to concepts of cost. Prereq: Bus. Mgt. 202 or equivalent.&#13;
61-303 Accounting and Management Action. 3 cr. Managerial&#13;
aspects of accounting including analysis of financial statements and&#13;
investment analysis, cash flow and funds flow, manufacturing cost&#13;
flows and income. Prereq: Bus. Mgt. 61-200.&#13;
Computers in Business&#13;
61-319 Information Systems Analysis. 3 cr. System study techniques;&#13;
methods of improving and optimizing existing information systemsprocedure&#13;
flow analysis; management presentations; preparation of&#13;
functional flows and specifications for computer programs Prereo*&#13;
AST 220 o r 420 a nd cons, instr.&#13;
61-320 Applications Programming-Batch. 3 cr. COBOL and BAL&#13;
computer languages, file and record design; tape handling and&#13;
characteristics. Each student will write and test a series of computer&#13;
routines and programs. Prereq: AST 220 or 420, and cons. intr.&#13;
61-321 Ap plications Programming: On-line. 3 cr. On-line and communications&#13;
programming problems for industry: fallback, recovery,&#13;
audit trails, and fail-safe systems; each student will write a series of&#13;
on-line routines and programs; Basic Assembler Language (BAL)&#13;
Prereq: AST 220.&#13;
61-322 Designing Information Systems, 3 cr. Feasibility studies; MIS&#13;
vs EDP; error handling; exception reporting; estimating costs, effort,&#13;
and benefits. Each student will design a complete system using&#13;
manual and EDP tools. Prereq: AST 220.&#13;
Further information on new classes can be obtained from the&#13;
Division offices. Descriptions of new courses are due in the division&#13;
offices by Friday, Dec. 13. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
A personal experience&#13;
FLIGHT&#13;
It was dark and the air was getting cold as we&#13;
entered the terminal. With one hand I held a suitcase,&#13;
the other, a shoulder. Her coat was brown and&#13;
coarse and warm under my hand. As we walked&#13;
down the corridors it made a soft, scratching sound&#13;
rubbing against the side of my leg. We found her&#13;
harder feelmg a ,ltUe sick&gt; gripped her shoulder&#13;
A small woman in a grey uniform stood across the&#13;
desk from us and asked in an even smaller voice,&#13;
Smoking or non?" We moved past her, past a man&#13;
wearing another grey-colored uniform, walking and&#13;
knowing we had to say good-bye. She looked up at&#13;
me with sad eyes and said, "I don't want to go back&#13;
there. Her sadness reached around me, squeezing&#13;
me, and I couldn't breathe. I realized that every&#13;
parting in every movie I had ever seen was just a&#13;
hopeless, dead imitation. "I'll miss you." As I spoke&#13;
those words I thought again of the movies, of all the&#13;
times I had heard that line and I was afraid that it&#13;
wouldn t mean anything, that all its meaning was&#13;
used up But then I was kissing her and I forgot to be&#13;
atraid. And then she was gone, a part of the line&#13;
moving away from me. I watched her disappear&#13;
into the tunnel leading to the airplane.&#13;
I looked around me. There were several groups of&#13;
small white chairs arranged in rows. Most of them&#13;
were facing the huge observation window that&#13;
looked out towards the plane. As I turned and&#13;
walked towards the window a feeling of loss and of&#13;
emptiness rushed up my body and my eyes began to&#13;
sting^l reached the window and leaned against it I&#13;
felt the cold even through my coat.&#13;
It seemed like she had been here such a long time&#13;
It had only been a few days but it still seemed like&#13;
such a long time. I couldn't remember what it was&#13;
like for her not to be here. It was autumn. She had&#13;
come in the autumn because we both loved that time&#13;
of year better than any other. The sky is so big and&#13;
the trees are beautiful. But the frost came before&#13;
she did. It came early and hard and I was afraid&#13;
that the leaves would all have fallen before she&#13;
arrived. A few had waited, however, and as I leaned&#13;
against the window I held in my mind an image of us&#13;
walking down a path in a woods that was brown and&#13;
yellow and a little red and so, so silent that the&#13;
crunching of the leaves under our feet hurt my ears&#13;
Overhead the sky rolled and threatened and cursed&#13;
under its breath. The air was sharp and thick, full of&#13;
waiting for something to happen. It was so silent&#13;
that we could hear and feel the waiting and the&#13;
energy and as we walked through it we were almost&#13;
a part of it, of the waiting and the silence of the&#13;
forest and the sky full of power.&#13;
I drew back from the window and stared at the&#13;
plane. It was very close and took up almost the&#13;
entire window. The darkness made it difficult to see&#13;
and the only details that I could make out were the&#13;
two large capital A's on its tail. Next to the plane I&#13;
could see the outside of the tunnel down which she&#13;
had walked. It was sort of an enclosed gangway that&#13;
went straight out from the terminal and then, as it&#13;
drew near the plane, bent at a right angle and was&#13;
connected towards the front, near the nose. Just&#13;
after the bend there was a small window through&#13;
which I could see into the gangway. A bright yellow&#13;
light bulb briefly illumined each of the passengers&#13;
as they passed underneath it in single file. I fixed&#13;
my attention on that window. A half dozen people&#13;
went by before I saw her. It was difficult to see and I&#13;
wouldn't have known it was her if I hadn't&#13;
recognized the coat. The line hesitated and she&#13;
stood for a moment underneath the yellow light&#13;
bulb. I wanted her to look but she didn't. She just&#13;
stood there, framed by the window in that deathly,&#13;
unnatural light, like a yellowing, lifeless snapshot.&#13;
The line moved again and someone in a white hat&#13;
took her place under the light.&#13;
There was nothing more to see. I turned and&#13;
walked away from the window. I found a chair&#13;
behind the desk that was a little bit off by itself and I&#13;
sat down. It was one of those little white chairs&#13;
arranged in rows and facing the window. I was&#13;
sitting so that my body was flat except for my head&#13;
which was bent forward to see out the window.&#13;
Behind me I could still hear the small voice asking,&#13;
"Smoking or non?"&#13;
A man in a red coat stepped up to the window,&#13;
blocking my view. He seemed excited, almost&#13;
nervous, and kept shifting his weight from one leg to&#13;
the other. There was something familiar about him.&#13;
The way his coat was bunched in the back, and those&#13;
brown buttons. Of course, his coat and mine were&#13;
identical. He turned to the man next to him and&#13;
asked him something, pointing to his watch. The&#13;
man's reply seemed to reassure him, and he left his&#13;
spot at the window and began to walk across the&#13;
room. I followed him with my eyes. As I looked at&#13;
his coat I thought that it was perhaps a bit less red&#13;
and slightly more worn than mine. And I didn't like&#13;
his pants. They were a weak grayish-brown and&#13;
didn't go at all with the coat. I looked up in time to&#13;
see him scrutinizing me closely. He stopped in front&#13;
of a vacant seat next to a thin, blonde-haired girl in&#13;
a yellow nylon jacket. He bent over her with this big&#13;
smile on his face and said something which I&#13;
couldn't quite make out and she laughed and bit his&#13;
arm. I decided that I didn't like his smile, either.&#13;
Just then the engines started up again and began to&#13;
resonate in my stomach. He began to talk to her in&#13;
earnest and I couldn't hear anything anymore&#13;
because of the engine noise. I saw him gesture&#13;
towards his coat and then towards me and she&#13;
turned around and gave me a big, wide-eyed stare.&#13;
Her face reminded me of a question mark. I decided&#13;
to answer. I sat up a little and called out over the&#13;
engine noise, "Yeah, they're the same." They&#13;
smiled an embarrassed little smile, as if I had&#13;
spoken out of turn, and then they looked at each&#13;
and laughed and smiled again. He turned to me and&#13;
said something, pointing at his coat. But I couldn't&#13;
hear because of the crescendoing engines and I&#13;
turned away just in time to see the plane pull away.&#13;
My eyes began to sting again and I realized that&#13;
they weren't the same. They weren't the same at&#13;
all.&#13;
- Mike Gorman&#13;
A woman to belt&#13;
feeling as a woman&#13;
her body changing&#13;
monthly&#13;
She feels the warm blood&#13;
soothing and flowing from&#13;
between her tender&#13;
thighs&#13;
Thoughts of a woman, maybe&#13;
feeling a loss of&#13;
child, instead of&#13;
blood&#13;
-Magnellum&#13;
Open: 6 a.m. Mon. thru Thurs.&#13;
8a.m. Sun.&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
30th Ave. &amp; Roosevelt Rd.&#13;
Cold hard glass encircles me,&#13;
cuts me off from people&#13;
who walk past- unseeing,&#13;
unhearing,&#13;
uncaring,&#13;
wrapped in their shallowness&#13;
they move about-bumping into&#13;
each other only to&#13;
recoil in fear of touching&#13;
someone.&#13;
I reached out in fear of not touching&#13;
someone.&#13;
And found&#13;
a Hand that closed about&#13;
mine&#13;
and a voice that said&#13;
"dare to trust"&#13;
-Carol Nordstrom&#13;
Today 1974&#13;
Money is equal to respect&#13;
Lies are valid&#13;
Truth is a legal tender&#13;
Break-ins and burglary is praised&#13;
And honored in all states&#13;
Shoplifting a medium of exhange&#13;
Stealing means to take the Fifth&#13;
Sixth, Seventh, Amendments&#13;
A dollar bill is white&#13;
Grass is green&#13;
Inflation is a gift&#13;
Kickbacks are common business transactions&#13;
Checks are worthless to the poor&#13;
Embezzlements are safes&#13;
Fraud is a Racist Option&#13;
Social Security is having the best part&#13;
Of a homemade apple pie "The Crust"&#13;
Real Estates biggest owner "God"&#13;
Crime is a good judge, and a good lawyer&#13;
Credit is a Jim Crow Slavery Device&#13;
The Stock Market can handle the hay&#13;
Jews can save the dollar&#13;
Insurance premiums can take Healthy Examinations&#13;
-Howard Hill&#13;
KM.**».Oi* Cvi* Si* Kim Kim ^-m ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
Politics and a Flag&#13;
Masterpiece I&#13;
Excuse Me,&#13;
For my dumbness and my intelligence:&#13;
But I didn't know God&#13;
Flew in a Red, White, Blue&#13;
Silk Cloth waving high on a pole&#13;
I though he was in the&#13;
Hearts of man&#13;
Seeking Unity with His Fellow&#13;
Brother&#13;
Under the Banner of God&#13;
Which has No Color&#13;
OH! I didn't know a honorable&#13;
Form of Elite Men could make a&#13;
Law&#13;
Like Women baking a home made&#13;
Cake&#13;
To force a man into an Army&#13;
To Kill another Man&#13;
And that Same Form of Honorable&#13;
Elite Men profit Money, from that&#13;
Life which was turn to Death&#13;
Excuse me,&#13;
Is all this under a Flag and&#13;
Honorable Form Elite Men, who call&#13;
This Politics, Sorry I didn't Know&#13;
-Howard Hill&#13;
Real Estates&#13;
Modern Building ten thousand feet high&#13;
Small roaches crawl low&#13;
Elevators lodge up&#13;
VIP Executives sit in coference&#13;
Good product on the market&#13;
Ghetto's still in bloom&#13;
Let's buy a share&#13;
Like Flies over&#13;
Shit&#13;
-Howard Hill&#13;
OtNO'S&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
Racine, W isconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
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;
Just be heaT'alom?Kor"sTeeDine^ m&lt;&#13;
th° beautiful days? sha11 1&#13;
no wine to drink no Comfort n t'J "° °&#13;
ne t0 enjoy my company&#13;
being. What a shame my sober&#13;
today? Am I too mimh? u atraid&#13;
- Do they not wish to see me&#13;
smoke again today, tomorrow ^e^fold H™,many cigarettes shall I&#13;
spirit? tomorrow toniPht t ' ,&#13;
y sterday Wh&#13;
en will I feel free in my&#13;
Today I got up. I started r&#13;
S &gt;&#13;
eep? When do I become free in spirit?&#13;
like it. Then half a n hour ft&#13;
e n&lt;&#13;
j Anais Nin&#13;
's Novel of the Future I&#13;
hamburger, beanssomenoJ°^ 1 got tired of reading I ate a&#13;
called amy and CliCd S r'.mi,k&#13;
' StUdied my music theory,&#13;
guitar and sang. Went for a mt? played my trombone, then played&#13;
think read MS turned on 'me ,.^ G°&#13;
l 3 Candy bar(s) wrote 1&#13;
hamburger because couldn't a ums 8&#13;
0t high on jazz ate another&#13;
listening to Lampoon Radio it l'T Read more MS whi,e half&#13;
writing again. stunk. Turned on Leonard Cohen and&#13;
These are iust fartc m&#13;
Many things. Got my letted radium" w°k me far away from hear&#13;
"&#13;
of things said in my imarinat- ,,&#13;
m to transportation dept. Lots&#13;
T.V. for three minutes YeS 1 danced t0&#13;
° today. Watched&#13;
-by Magnellum &#13;
RANGER wishes everyone&#13;
a happy holiday&#13;
•for Everyone&#13;
ov\ your List....&#13;
Tourquise jewelry and other associated Jewelry.&#13;
pj^ Blouses, Sweaters, Handbags and Wallets, j&#13;
| j Orange Door&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
GC&amp;ta&#13;
345 MAIN ST.&#13;
*Uttitpni 9 1&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
Rock Jazz Pop Folk&#13;
PI oCCIPQ 1&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
Place to buy records&#13;
(Part II)&#13;
A Matter of Gray&#13;
A wodden box,&#13;
over-full,&#13;
begins to break.&#13;
Is it the content&#13;
that strains&#13;
at the seams and&#13;
splits them wide?&#13;
Is it the weakness&#13;
of the structure,&#13;
that it cannot hold&#13;
what is within?&#13;
Is it the design&#13;
of the builder,&#13;
faulty to start and&#13;
insufficient for the need?&#13;
Tout le monde, tout le monde.&#13;
-Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Of a Martian&#13;
(Parti)&#13;
Taling&#13;
with him,&#13;
with me,&#13;
with who?&#13;
Of rocks, and hills, the sun,&#13;
laughter, life, of Love?&#13;
Did I know you?&#13;
Did I want to know you?&#13;
You wanted to learn of me;&#13;
Pulling,&#13;
pushing,&#13;
prying&#13;
until I flowed to you entirelyBut&#13;
entirely too late;&#13;
He had gathered you&#13;
to him—&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
I'm still hanging,&#13;
groping,&#13;
grasping&#13;
to the piecesWill&#13;
you pull the pieces together,&#13;
rebuild the puzzle?&#13;
If you do, please Hurry~&#13;
They're slipping&#13;
away—&#13;
-Michael Nepper&#13;
The Elite Man&#13;
It's twisted or something, the whole&#13;
What I see, you kn&#13;
Torsion&#13;
Maybe it's the dilation that's making the shadows.&#13;
Maybe they aren't really looking&#13;
don't say that&#13;
Maybe they aren't really whispering&#13;
stop thinking that&#13;
It will go away&#13;
It always has&#13;
Nine or ten hours?&#13;
(why did he start again? (I-he thought he quit&#13;
Never We're-it's inside now&#13;
who said that? *&#13;
A Woman is Man&#13;
She's backbone of his vertabre&#13;
Out of Man Came Woman&#13;
Man has no man&#13;
Beckon cause of his fellow man&#13;
The Elite Class of Man (Well Educated)&#13;
Elite Man has given Woman&#13;
That which God gave to Man Period&#13;
Dominion to be Head&#13;
In this phrase Destiny&#13;
Not the Weaker Vessel&#13;
There's no one in my head no one in my&#13;
must believe, must not think bad things.&#13;
Must not say "must not think bad things"&#13;
must not think about not thinking about&#13;
But I&#13;
it's only a trip. I'm having fun.&#13;
-billy s. IRacine &amp; 'KeKO&amp;fa't *?utl Service So-xd4foxe4&#13;
tfoutomd* oj qtfa idetu fax CdxUtma*..&#13;
StoHetditg fax SvexyoMt OK (fo -ttx @&amp;xi4tm&amp;&amp;&#13;
• ^KcluctiKg •&#13;
ROCK DREAMS by Popular L ibrary&#13;
WHOLE EARTH EPILOG by Penguin&#13;
SNOOPY FESTIVAL by Holt R ienhart&#13;
CENTENNIAL by Random House&#13;
and fax to. fUeaAe faiotoU o-x xclaiiac tu-c have&#13;
Gent^UateA&#13;
FREE GIFT WRAPPING!!&#13;
t\aiiiux. {&gt;oo&amp;aW»&#13;
614-59 311.—&#13;
650-3652- G3T2.-&#13;
It (love) came about so soon,&#13;
But does It matter?&#13;
Time is so uncertain of it's path&#13;
Flying,&#13;
Floating,&#13;
flounderingDoes&#13;
it, did it, will it&#13;
matter&#13;
in the end— -Michael Nepper&#13;
photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
-Howard Hill &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
Ode to a Friend&#13;
I'm back again,&#13;
I g uess it's been a long time.&#13;
Do you know who I am?&#13;
I've changed you know.&#13;
Do you remember the last time&#13;
I came?&#13;
Rember how lonely I was,&#13;
how lost I felt?&#13;
Well, I'm not lost or lonely&#13;
anymore,&#13;
But it's good to know old friends&#13;
so I came to say hello&#13;
and probably goodbye&#13;
for a while&#13;
Because I've found something to&#13;
cling to--&#13;
But don't Cry,&#13;
I'll be back somedaySomeday&#13;
&#13;
when I've lost myself again&#13;
and need you to find&#13;
me-&#13;
-Michael Nepper&#13;
the theme has not spent all the images&#13;
the song requires further, future dances&#13;
the feelings of a heart&#13;
to some other, symbol of deceit&#13;
tell me your dreams i'll tell you mine&#13;
fond words&#13;
parting with thoughts of reunion&#13;
if there is love once, real love&#13;
it stays forever&#13;
blood in the body, fevers in the soul&#13;
-amy 1974&#13;
I&#13;
michael say farewell to the fears that hold you \&#13;
the sons and daughters&#13;
of new images gather, stars on your brow&#13;
rings for your fingers&#13;
i am gone in the darkness lost in the soft shades of your eyes&#13;
coming close and not capable to touch at all&#13;
soon the sins will singe the soul&#13;
and render us silent,&#13;
farther, farther than your last dream has fled&#13;
remember the first overture of my heart&#13;
a beat,&#13;
fit into dark&#13;
rythms of the centuries&#13;
describe a kiss, a bird that entered your throat&#13;
and died, perfectly, near your heart&#13;
III&#13;
come far out on the rim of heaven&#13;
and i will tell you, how your name began&#13;
the music of the spheres....the figment of a lover's longing&#13;
-amy nov. 1974&#13;
photo by Mike Nepper&#13;
My dear Icon:&#13;
Here is a song that goes exactly like this:&#13;
I boils my soks in pure grain sugar&#13;
I likes the sweetness on my feet.&#13;
I casts my undies in the water&#13;
To add some flavor to my seat.&#13;
I likes to drive my power rider,&#13;
Impress the chickies in the street.&#13;
I use my gas to light their fire,&#13;
My air condish'ner cools their heat.&#13;
I drinks my beer from painted poptops,&#13;
Big juicy steaks is what I eat.&#13;
I got no use fer slimey algae&#13;
Don't want no soybeens in my meat.&#13;
I sees this world's in lots of trouble,&#13;
Some people just can't make ends meet.&#13;
I think that someone should do something,&#13;
God knows I'd try, but's time to eat.&#13;
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5260 W ashington Ave.. Ra cine&#13;
THE PLAYERS&#13;
of t he&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will p resent&#13;
THIRTEEN CLOCKS&#13;
a musical fairy tale for parents and their children based on&#13;
the story&#13;
by JAMES THURBER&#13;
Two P erformances O nly!&#13;
Friday e vening, D ecember 1 3 at 7 :30&#13;
Saturday m orning, D ecember 1 4 a t 1 0:00&#13;
Communication A rts T heater&#13;
The entire entertainment lasts only one hour!&#13;
(Parents can make plans for later in the evening and&#13;
children can be gotten to bed on Friday. All will be home in&#13;
time for lunch on Saturday.)&#13;
Be Prompt!&#13;
Performances will start on time!&#13;
All s eats 5 0°&#13;
Tickets at the Door&#13;
See you next year!&#13;
MOCKUS TAP&#13;
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We the One Sweet Dream people,&#13;
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We realize we wouldn't be here without you, the customer.&#13;
Waterbeds —&#13;
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Albums, Tapes —&#13;
A great selection of albums,&#13;
tapes, and casettes. Including&#13;
an outstanding selection&#13;
of Imported Albums, plus&#13;
first hand availability of&#13;
new releases.&#13;
Leather Goods —&#13;
Quality leather goods from&#13;
belts and purses to visors&#13;
and watchbands.&#13;
Jewelry —&#13;
We offer a unique assortment&#13;
of feather, silver, and&#13;
leather — nec klaces, bracelets,&#13;
and rings.&#13;
Pyramid Products —&#13;
Developed by Dr. G. Patrick Flanagan to establish&#13;
a new source of biocosmic energy which:&#13;
— he lps milk keep fresh without refrigeration.&#13;
— makes plants grow faster and healthier. '&#13;
— ripens fruit. '&#13;
— mellows tobacco.&#13;
— makes cheap wine taste like aged wine.&#13;
— ta kes the bitterness out of coffee.&#13;
— enhances the flavor of meat.&#13;
— pr eserves cut flowers. .&#13;
— improves a persons sex life. &#13;
10THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
Campus event. N&lt;) jncrease&#13;
in text prices&#13;
Wednesday, December 11: PAB presents a big end-of-theyear show in&#13;
the Whiteskellar from 12-3 p .m. Dave Duffeck will be featured on&#13;
guitar from 12-1 p.m. and 2-3 p.m. and Bob Bohm, a semi-professional&#13;
magician from Racine will perform from 1-2 p.m. Admission is free&#13;
and open to the public.&#13;
People For a Non-Sexist Society will meet at 12:30 in LLC D174&#13;
(lounge next to Info, kiosk).&#13;
Student music recital, beginning at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater, is free and open to the public.&#13;
Film, "Scarecrow," sponsored by PAB, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm. Arts Theater. The film stars A1 Pac ino and Gene Hackman.&#13;
Admission is $1; UW-P I.D. is required.&#13;
Thursday, December 12: Third World meeting, 12:30-1:30 p.m. in LLC&#13;
D174 (lounge next to Info, kiosk). Election of officers for second&#13;
semester, news that concerns all minorities, especially blacks: high&#13;
percentage of minorities on academic probation; Faculty Senate vote&#13;
on academic drop policy on Dec. 17 - do you know how it will affect&#13;
you? Third World office hours are 11 a.m.-l p.m. Monday through&#13;
Friday, third floor library. Stop for a rap.&#13;
Friday, December 13: Parkside Jazz Ensemble II in concert at the&#13;
Student Activities building from 3:30-4:30 p.m. Free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Play, "The Thirteen Clocks," begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Comm. Arts&#13;
Theater. All tickets are 50 cents and will be sold at the door.&#13;
Saturday, December 14: Play. "The Thirteen Clocks," begins at 10&#13;
a.m. in the Comm. Arts Theater. All tickets 50 cents and sold at the&#13;
door.&#13;
Campus Ministers Announce: all liturgies beginning Dec. 12-15 will&#13;
be held at the Neuman Center (corner of H wy. SE and JR), and will&#13;
begin at 12:15.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Saturday, December 21: Dance! PAB presents the "Christmas&#13;
Dance," 9:30-1 a.m., with Winfield Road (songs by Emerson, Lake &amp;&#13;
Palmer, Yes, Jethro Tull, Beatles). Admission is $1.25 for Parkside&#13;
students and $1.50 for guests. Student and state I.D.'s required.&#13;
Sigma Pi, a social fraternity, is having a semi-formal dance this&#13;
Friday,.Dec. 13. It is being held at Maplecrest Country Club and will&#13;
feature music by McHenry. A cocktail hour will be held from 6:30 p.m.&#13;
to 7:30 p.m. followed by a steak dinner. There will be dancing until 2&#13;
a.m. Tickets are available at the Information kiosk for twenty dollars&#13;
per couple.&#13;
'tis the&#13;
reason&#13;
3&#13;
a&#13;
by J.D. Garoutte&#13;
According to Ted Wood,&#13;
manager of the Parkside&#13;
University Bookstore, there will&#13;
be no general increase in the&#13;
price of textbooks for the upcoming&#13;
semester.&#13;
This does not mean that all&#13;
textbooks will be the same price&#13;
as in the past. Since some of those&#13;
prices did not increase in July,&#13;
they may be raised now.&#13;
"Our large increase in prices&#13;
came last semester, ranging&#13;
from 25 cents to 75 cents per&#13;
book," Wood said.&#13;
The increase did not depend on&#13;
textbooks being soft cover or&#13;
hard cover, but more on the&#13;
various publishers of the textbooks.&#13;
&#13;
Asked if students would receive&#13;
a larger refund when selling&#13;
books back to the store, Wood&#13;
replied, "The price paid students&#13;
for used books depends on what&#13;
the price of the book was when&#13;
bought, not the current price."&#13;
There might be a price increase&#13;
in new-title books and in&#13;
books that were not increased in&#13;
September.&#13;
Discussing increases in other&#13;
items on sale in the Bookstore,&#13;
Wood said, "Increases are made&#13;
when we reorder such items. An&#13;
example is Bic has raised the&#13;
price on their pens but because of&#13;
the stock we had at that time we&#13;
did not raise prices, but will do so&#13;
when we reorder."&#13;
Bic pens will increase from the&#13;
3 to be&#13;
s&#13;
2&#13;
A pre-paid&#13;
Christmas is&#13;
a reason to be&#13;
jolly -&#13;
A First National Christmas Club&#13;
Savings Account is a way&#13;
to get a pre-paid Christmas.&#13;
Open yours soon!&#13;
1 First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
5} Member 0 I Federal Reserve System • Member Federal Deoosit Insurance Corp&#13;
Ted Wood, Manager of the Bookstore&#13;
present price of 19 cents to 25&#13;
cents sometime in the near&#13;
future. Other items that may see&#13;
an increase in price are&#13;
stationery, greeting cards and Tshirts.&#13;
&#13;
Because the Bookstore is a&#13;
profit-making business, there is a&#13;
I&#13;
The&#13;
Great Old Lunch&#13;
Is Back&#13;
11:00-4:00 MONDAY-FRIDAY* NO SUBSTITUTES • POTATO EXTRA&#13;
(*1.19 for a chopped steak, s alad &amp; toast!)&#13;
(*1.19 for a ranch steak, s alad &amp; toast!)&#13;
Tuesday Night&#13;
Is Bonanza&#13;
Special Night.&#13;
(•1.49 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
(•1.29 for a chopped sirloin dinner!&#13;
• Feed a child in America for 49$.&#13;
We've got just the right amount of food to make a kid smile — a hamburger,&#13;
an order of French fries, and a lollipop. And a price — 49c — to make you smile.&#13;
markup of about 20 percent on all&#13;
items. After paying shipping&#13;
costs, it equals out to I8V2 percent.&#13;
Unlike other bookstores&#13;
where the cost of shipping is&#13;
passed on to the cosumer, this&#13;
store absorbs that cost, according&#13;
to Wood.&#13;
The family of the late Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie wishes to thank the&#13;
students of Parkside for the&#13;
bouquet of red roses that was sent&#13;
in their name at the time of the&#13;
late Chancellor's death. "There&#13;
is no way," wrote Harriet, Kay,&#13;
Laura and Gordon Wyllie, "as&#13;
much as we wish we could, that&#13;
we can personally thank&#13;
everyone."&#13;
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Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
probation &amp; drop finalized&#13;
by Colleen Dorsey&#13;
A probation and drop policy&#13;
was approved by the Academic&#13;
policies Committee for Faculty&#13;
Senate consideration in&#13;
December&#13;
The policy is a simplified&#13;
version of the Nov. 5 draft submitted&#13;
by the Academic Policies&#13;
subcommittee. John Zarling,&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
Engineering Science, revised the&#13;
original draft.&#13;
Evaluation of students after&#13;
completion of 15-credit blocks, in&#13;
the original draft, was changed to&#13;
evaluation of students after each&#13;
semester regardless of the&#13;
number of credits attempted.&#13;
Eugene Norwood, Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society,&#13;
said there would be more clerical&#13;
and administrative work created&#13;
by requiring a block GPA (grade&#13;
point average) in addition to&#13;
cumulative and semester GPA's&#13;
(which have to be done regardless).&#13;
Zarling's proposal of&#13;
evaluating students every&#13;
semester eliminates that work&#13;
load and is a real simplification,&#13;
he said.&#13;
Students will initially be&#13;
evaluated after completing 12&#13;
credits instead of 15, as in the&#13;
original draft.&#13;
Academic Warnings will be&#13;
given regardless of students'&#13;
cumulative GPA when any&#13;
semester GPA falls between 1.5&#13;
and 2.0. This will remind them of&#13;
the need for maintaining the 2.0&#13;
or higher GPA necessary for&#13;
eventual graduation.&#13;
The committee also revised the&#13;
probation and drop cut-off points&#13;
in the approved policy.&#13;
A student who has attempted&#13;
up to 29 credits will be placed on&#13;
Academic Probation if his or her&#13;
cumulative GPA is below a 1.8.&#13;
Students who do not attain a 2 0&#13;
between 30-120 credits attempted&#13;
will be placed on Academic&#13;
Probation.&#13;
A student who has completed 12&#13;
credit hours or more and whose&#13;
GPA drops below the values&#13;
indicated in the table under&#13;
Academic Drop will be dropped&#13;
from the University for' one&#13;
semester.&#13;
The cut-off points in the&#13;
Academic Drop table are 0.8&#13;
cumulative GPA for 0-29 credits&#13;
attempted, 1.6 cumulative GPA .&#13;
for 30-59 credits attempted, 1.8&#13;
cumulative GPA for 60-89 credits&#13;
attempted and 1.9 cumulative&#13;
GPA for 90-120 credits attempted.&#13;
However, students on&#13;
probation who maintain a&#13;
semester GPA of 2.0 or better will&#13;
not be dropped. They will be&#13;
removed from probation when&#13;
their cumulative GPA is 2.0 or&#13;
better.&#13;
The policy also states that&#13;
students on probation must&#13;
report to the Office of Counseling&#13;
within six weeks of the subsequent&#13;
semester. Failure to do&#13;
so will endanger academic appeals&#13;
made by a student.&#13;
Students who are dropped for&#13;
one semester may be readmitted&#13;
after that time by requesting a&#13;
permit to register from an&#13;
academic dean.&#13;
The student is then placed on&#13;
Final Academic Probation and&#13;
will be dropped from the&#13;
university for one year if a 2.0&#13;
semester GPA is not maintained&#13;
every subsequent semester.&#13;
The student who is dropped for&#13;
one year may request readmission&#13;
after that time from the&#13;
appropriate committee within&#13;
CSS or SMI by making a written&#13;
application. This must include&#13;
evidence that previous academic&#13;
problems have been recently&#13;
discussed with the Office of&#13;
Counseling or other Academic&#13;
advisor. The same evidence must&#13;
be presented in an appeal case.&#13;
The approved policy also&#13;
maintains the original draft's&#13;
three-level appeal system. First,&#13;
the request is made to the&#13;
Associate Dean of CSS or the&#13;
designated official of SMI. If the&#13;
student is rejected, the appeal&#13;
may be made to the appropriate&#13;
faculty committee established in&#13;
CSS or SMI. The last appeal is&#13;
made to the appropriate Dean,&#13;
whose decision is final. Appeals&#13;
may be made in person.&#13;
The committee voted to send&#13;
the proposal to the Faculty&#13;
Senate with recommendations&#13;
for its acceptance.&#13;
27 days left til&#13;
O«N&#13;
• AM&#13;
T AM&#13;
DAILY&#13;
Only 27 more planning days&#13;
until Registration. Instead of&#13;
sitting home wreathed in&#13;
timetables, catalogues, previous&#13;
grade reports and little colored&#13;
cards with holes all over them,&#13;
why not do your second semester&#13;
class scheduling the easy way?&#13;
Take a few minutes to let an&#13;
advisor explain - in conversational&#13;
English - everything&#13;
you need to know about how to&#13;
graduate. Special this week - all&#13;
the info you need and want is&#13;
available free at the advising&#13;
outpost on the LLC Concourse&#13;
north of the Bookstore, or from&#13;
faculty members by appointment.&#13;
Outpost hours are 9&#13;
a.m.-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. WedClassified&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE: Twin Bed Complete (wicker&#13;
headboard, recently bought); Oak Library&#13;
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$250. Ph. 859 2642 or 637 3361.&#13;
FOR SALE: refrigerator, good condition,&#13;
$35. Typewriter with undersized keyboard&#13;
for small hand, $25. Desk, $5. Call Collen or&#13;
John, 637 7002.&#13;
nesday and Thursday, and&#13;
Friday 9-4. Or, call Tallent Hall&#13;
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anytime. Give yourself a&#13;
Christmas present - get good info&#13;
now and graduate later.&#13;
OPEN&#13;
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DECEMBER 13th &amp; 14th&#13;
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FRIDAY, DEC. 20th&#13;
SATURDAY, D ECEMBER 21st.&#13;
SHOW REVIEW&#13;
WILLIAM TELL&#13;
FRIDAY, DEC. 27th&#13;
BEAU GESTE&#13;
SATURDAY, DEC. 28th&#13;
^YEARS^&#13;
TRUC&#13;
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FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY&#13;
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HAPPY HOLIDAYS! &#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
A need for awareness&#13;
'The gift of womanhood'&#13;
by Nathan Jones&#13;
With the growing self-awareness of w omen to the&#13;
gift of their womanhood, the emergence of women's&#13;
caucuses have become familiar, even on the UW-P&#13;
campus.&#13;
On Thursday, Nov. 7, twelve women and three&#13;
male sympathizers met to set the tone of a newlyforming&#13;
student organization known as "People for&#13;
a Non-Sexist Society."&#13;
During this organizational meeting, men and&#13;
women were gathered together who are actively&#13;
contributing to the eradication of sexism in&#13;
American male-dominated society and are eager to&#13;
involve more Parkside women and men in this&#13;
common effort.&#13;
In dialogue, it was discovered that female&#13;
students at Parkside experience "a sense of&#13;
estrangement from everything" and are "fed-up"&#13;
with the struggles they must endure in order to be&#13;
totally themselves: women and free. "We have to&#13;
act as a cohesive unit for what we feel we deserve as&#13;
women, with men backing us up," said one member.&#13;
&#13;
Some of the most frequently voiced goals of the&#13;
People for a Non-Sexist Society were: a strong&#13;
desire to raise the consciousness of wo men to their&#13;
plight as one of America's oppressed and underrated&#13;
groups, to promote career motivation, and&#13;
to strive to change sexist role perceptions that both&#13;
men and women maintain.&#13;
Janet Scott, a co-chairperson of the burgeoning&#13;
organization, pointed out the need to increase the&#13;
awareness of the instructors at Parkside of the false&#13;
and stifling feminine stereotypes they are perpetuating&#13;
by their lack of consciousness. She also&#13;
said that "the counselling efforts directed toward&#13;
the students are so academically oriented, whereas,&#13;
our organization plans to provide counselling to&#13;
women on campus that will be much more personal&#13;
in orientation."&#13;
"We have to act as a cohesive unit for what we&#13;
feel we deserve as women, with men backing us&#13;
up."&#13;
As the group is in contact with local National&#13;
Organization of Women (NOW) chapters, said&#13;
freshman Lisa Iwon, the student body and faculty&#13;
can expect to find these goals realized with the help&#13;
of a systematic exposure of sexism in textbooks,&#13;
dramatic skits, and a variety of forthcoming services&#13;
to the various groups of women on cpmpus&#13;
(the working wife and mother, the older woman, the&#13;
freshman).&#13;
Since the last meeting, a consciousness-raising&#13;
session was held which involved an even number of&#13;
women and men. They discussed sexuality, growing&#13;
up from adolescence, fears. Participants reportedly&#13;
People for a Non Sexist Society&#13;
left with a "penetrating sense of s atisfaction" and&#13;
members hope that this sort of exchange will occur&#13;
again.&#13;
Scott stated that, at this time, there are plans to&#13;
co-sponsor a lecture by the president of Radcliffe&#13;
College, Matina Horner, with the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
"The counselling efforts directed toward the&#13;
students are so academically oriented, whereas,&#13;
our organization plans to provide counselling to&#13;
women on campus that will be much more personal&#13;
in orientation."&#13;
Feminist consciousness is nothing new on the&#13;
Parkside campus, although the Women's Caucus of&#13;
previous years has broadened to include male&#13;
participation. The presence of such feminist&#13;
organizers as Sara Sheehan, visiting professor of&#13;
political science from the University of California at&#13;
Riverside, as well as Teresa Peck, assistant&#13;
professor of ed ucation who is presently teaching a&#13;
successful and exciting course at Parkside on "An&#13;
Analysis of Sexism in Education," are providing&#13;
necessary direction for the group.&#13;
Sheehan was a primary force behind the creation&#13;
of a vital feminist movement on the UC-Riverside&#13;
campus (comparable in size to Parkside) which&#13;
attempted to respond to the women's needs for&#13;
counselling, dialogue with professional and successful&#13;
women in the community, practical skills,&#13;
and educational and career planning. Starting from&#13;
a small group of determined and pioneering women,&#13;
they were able to become a stimulating and effective&#13;
presence on the UC campus.&#13;
Being a force that seeks change now, says&#13;
Sheehan, "feminism will, by its very nature,&#13;
alienate some people because it is most basically a&#13;
power struggle. But this isn't our motive (to&#13;
alienate), but change stands as a definite focus of&#13;
our collective attention."&#13;
Illustrating the group's desire to affect changes&#13;
on campus, People For a Non-Sexist Society&#13;
members confronted the Parkside Bookstore about&#13;
the large number of s exist magazines (Penthouse,&#13;
Playgirl, Qui, to name a few) displayed on the&#13;
"Feminism will by its very nature alienate some&#13;
people because it is most basically a power&#13;
struggle. But this isn't our motive (to alienate)."&#13;
shelves for sale. Said Scott, "We were very&#13;
disappointed with the response we received which,&#13;
in effect, told us that the bulk of the Bookstore's&#13;
profit comes from such magazines. However, we&#13;
hadn't asked that they (the magazines) be immediately&#13;
cleared, but simply reduced in number."&#13;
During registration for the second semester, a&#13;
table will be provided where representatives of&#13;
People for a Non-Sexist Society will be available to&#13;
respond to inquiries from any interested person.&#13;
They hope to make themselves as accessible as&#13;
possible to the entire student body and hope that&#13;
students will make a point of coming to them.&#13;
Free checking...Free checks *&#13;
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FOR YOUR COINVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS&#13;
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MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION&#13;
Students commence&#13;
on Dec. 22&#13;
Mid-year commencement&#13;
exercises will be held at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 22, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. About&#13;
140 students are candidates. The&#13;
ceremony is open to the public.&#13;
Degree candidates are asked to&#13;
report to their assigned rooms in&#13;
the Communication Arts Building&#13;
by 1:15 p.m. to begin forming the&#13;
academic procession.&#13;
Parking will be in the new ArtsAthletics&#13;
Lot just west of t&#13;
Theater. No shuttle busses w&#13;
run from the Tallent Lots.&#13;
Caps and gowns ai&#13;
graduation announcements a&#13;
still available in the Book Stan&#13;
The Parkside Alum&#13;
Association will host a receptii&#13;
for the degree candidates ai&#13;
their guests in Main Place ir&#13;
mediately after the ceremony&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
OCD&#13;
3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member FD.I.C, &#13;
New tenure&#13;
rules 'conflict'&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The Tenure and Promotion&#13;
policies Committee has been&#13;
working on a new set of tenure&#13;
and promotion rules for approximately&#13;
ten months. At the&#13;
last meeting, where they&#13;
finalized their version of the&#13;
rules, it was brought out by David&#13;
Beach, assistant professor of&#13;
psychology, and John Zarling,&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
Engineering Science, that the&#13;
rules were in conflict with the&#13;
broad gu idelines for tenure and&#13;
promotion which were being&#13;
developed by the Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Before going to the Faculty&#13;
Senate, where they were to be&#13;
voted on, Parkside's proposed&#13;
rules were being held by the&#13;
University Committee until the&#13;
Regents finalize the broad&#13;
guidelines, said Beach.&#13;
When asked how it happened&#13;
that Parkside's proposed rules&#13;
came in conflict with the broad&#13;
guidelines, Beach said that close&#13;
attention was not being payed to&#13;
progression of the broad&#13;
guidelines.&#13;
According to Beach, there are&#13;
two main points on which&#13;
Parkside's proposed rules and&#13;
the broad guidelines are in&#13;
conflict.&#13;
The broad guidelines state,&#13;
said Beach, that if a person wants&#13;
to appeal a negative decision&#13;
(one in which tenure is denied), a&#13;
body separate from that which&#13;
made the negative decision must&#13;
determine whether or not an&#13;
appeal is in order and send this&#13;
recommendation to the original&#13;
committee. The committee which&#13;
made the negative decision is&#13;
also the body which must hear&#13;
the appeal, if it is in order&#13;
According to Beach, under&#13;
Parkside's proposed rules,&#13;
anyone who wants to appeal their&#13;
case may do so, and the appeal&#13;
would be heard by a committee&#13;
other than the one which made&#13;
the original negative decision.&#13;
The second inconsistency&#13;
occurs at the point in the&#13;
documents where they state&#13;
under what conditions an appeal&#13;
of a negative decision can occur.&#13;
According to Beach, Parkside's&#13;
proposed rules overstep the&#13;
broad guidelines at this point by&#13;
listing additional grounds which&#13;
would permit a rehearing.&#13;
Beach said that if certain&#13;
sections of the broad guidelines&#13;
are made final by the Regents in&#13;
their present form, the Tenure&#13;
and Promotion Policies Committee&#13;
would have to reconvene&#13;
and make changes in Parkside's&#13;
proposed rules.&#13;
The broad guidelines were&#13;
adopted by the Regents on Dec. 6&#13;
without significant changes in&#13;
these sections.&#13;
There are several differences&#13;
between Parkside's proposed&#13;
rules and Parkside's set of&#13;
present rules.&#13;
The proposed rules, said&#13;
Beach, stress teaching abilityabove&#13;
scholarly activity* and&#13;
service to university, community&#13;
and profession, whereas the&#13;
present rules take these three&#13;
areas as equal.&#13;
He also said that the proposed&#13;
rules provide for a broader&#13;
definition of teaching and and a&#13;
broader range of criteria for&#13;
evaluating teaching ability.&#13;
The present rules downgrade&#13;
unpublished material, said&#13;
Beach whereasdie proposed rules&#13;
seem to give it more importance.&#13;
Parkside's proposed rules also&#13;
conform to the new open meeting&#13;
iaw. They give the candidates for&#13;
tenure access to all evidence, the&#13;
right to present their own case,&#13;
and allow them to request that&#13;
the hearings be open to the&#13;
public, said Beach.&#13;
Present rules give candidates&#13;
the right to request a written&#13;
explanation of a negative&#13;
decision, but the explanations&#13;
that they received were very&#13;
vague at times, said Beach. The&#13;
proposed rules call for a more&#13;
detailed and comprehensive&#13;
written explanation of the&#13;
negative decision.&#13;
Another difference between the&#13;
two sets of rules, said Beach, is&#13;
that the proposed rules give&#13;
candidates the right to make oral&#13;
presentations of their cases&#13;
before any decisions are made&#13;
concerning them, while the old&#13;
rules make no mention of the&#13;
candidates' right to make their&#13;
own presentations until after a&#13;
negative decision is reached.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. It, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 13&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
committee&#13;
formed&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
Parkside has formed a&#13;
Bicentennial Committee in&#13;
response to suggestions from UW&#13;
President John Weaver, the&#13;
Board of Regents and the&#13;
Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
Bicentennial Commission.&#13;
The objectives of the state&#13;
commission are to achieve&#13;
greater understanding of the&#13;
ideals of the founding fathers,&#13;
better awareness of the&#13;
relevance of those ideals in&#13;
meeting many of the needs of&#13;
society today, and heightened&#13;
concern to be guided by those&#13;
ideals in the future development&#13;
of the state and nation.&#13;
Nicholas Burckel, director of&#13;
the University Archives and&#13;
chairperson of the Parkside&#13;
committee, said that each&#13;
campus in the system is attempting&#13;
to develop and implement&#13;
a program within the&#13;
context of existing resources and&#13;
financial constraints that will&#13;
celebrate the country's 200th&#13;
birthday in a fashion appropriate&#13;
to academic institutions.&#13;
He said that the committee&#13;
wishes to involve as many individuals,&#13;
units ana&#13;
organizations as possible in plans&#13;
for the 1975-76 academic year.&#13;
To do this, the committee is&#13;
soliciting program proposals.&#13;
"We do not intend to dictate&#13;
programs but rather hope to act&#13;
as a clearinghouse for ideas&#13;
which you suggest," Burckel&#13;
.said.&#13;
Completed forms should be&#13;
sent before December 11 to any&#13;
member of the committee. The&#13;
committee will act on the&#13;
proposals during its December 18&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Members of the committee are&#13;
Burckel; Kathleen Ackermann,&#13;
student representative; Leon&#13;
Applebaum, associate dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society;&#13;
Kim Baugrud, coordinator of the&#13;
University Extension; Joseph&#13;
Boisse, director of the Library;&#13;
John Campbell, chairperson of&#13;
the Social Science Division;&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, associate&#13;
dean of students; Ronald Gottesman,&#13;
professor of English and&#13;
Humanities; Donald Rintz,&#13;
assistant professor# of Communications;&#13;
and Walter Schirer,&#13;
director of Public Information.&#13;
ON THE BEST-GIVING LISTS&#13;
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WINTER RECESS HOURS:&#13;
Tues., D ec. 2 4, 9 :00 - 1:00&#13;
Wed., D ec. 2 5, CLOSED&#13;
Thurs., D ec. 2 6, 9 :00 - 4:30&#13;
Mon., D ec. 3 0, 9 :00 - 4:30&#13;
Tues., D ec. 31,9:00 -1:00&#13;
Wed., J an. 1 , CLOSED&#13;
Thurs., J an. 2 ,9:00 - 4:30&#13;
Fri., D ec. 2 7 , 9 :00 - 1:00 Fri., J an. 3,9:00 -1:00&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE &#13;
14 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974&#13;
UWP hosts track meet&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Parkside hosted its First Annual&#13;
Indoor Track Training Meet&#13;
last Friday night. It was the first&#13;
meet ever held indoors at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
A small number of competitors&#13;
representing Carthage and&#13;
Loyola Colleges took part in the&#13;
events, but the advantage of&#13;
having a larger number of&#13;
participants allowed Parkside to&#13;
accept many honors.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon&#13;
accepts members&#13;
Sophomores Shaunte Stills and&#13;
Pat Burns set new school records&#13;
for Parkside.&#13;
Stills leaped the high jump at&#13;
6'6" and Burns threw the shot put&#13;
a distance of 49'6V2" (the indoor&#13;
record).&#13;
Jim Heiring took first place in&#13;
the one mile walk with a time of&#13;
7:18.0, while Bob Meekma placed&#13;
first in pole vaulting at ll'O" and&#13;
Don Lewis placed first in the 40&#13;
yd. dash with :04.9.&#13;
Head Track Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
is looking forward to a good&#13;
season. Freshman Jeff Sitz will&#13;
be sprinting and long and triple&#13;
jumping. Lawson said Sitz has&#13;
"good athletic abilities" and&#13;
considers him a promising&#13;
newcomer to the club.&#13;
This Friday, Dec. 13, at 6:30&#13;
p.m., the track club will host"&#13;
another Training Meet at the&#13;
phy. Ed. Building&#13;
NSF grant&#13;
• &lt;; Happy&#13;
Holidays&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon accepted&#13;
eight new members into its&#13;
fraternity on Sunday, Dec. 8. A&#13;
secret ceremony was held&#13;
initiating into the organization&#13;
David Brandt, Daniel Thomsen,&#13;
Mike Pulda, Todd Manning, Joe&#13;
Smolic, Cindy Gray, Judy&#13;
Shemanske, Rodney Foss, Jim&#13;
Sweetman and Pete Fitzgerald.&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon is a&#13;
nationally recognized fraternity&#13;
which has recently accepted&#13;
women into their organization.&#13;
The fraternity's goals are to&#13;
prepare men and women for&#13;
careers in marketing, sales and&#13;
sales management through&#13;
active participation in area&#13;
corporations.&#13;
A National Science Foundation&#13;
Grant of $11,758 in continuing&#13;
support of research by a&#13;
Parkside biologist on the effects&#13;
of environmental stress on a&#13;
genetic abnormality was accepted&#13;
last Friday by the Board&#13;
of Regents.&#13;
The UW-P researcher is Joseph&#13;
S. Balsano, associate professor of&#13;
life science, who is conducting&#13;
the study with a Marquette&#13;
University biologist,EllenRasch.&#13;
Population biology aspects of the&#13;
study are carried out at Parkside&#13;
and cell biology aspects at&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
The studv is formally titled&#13;
"Cytogenetics of the Gynogenetic&#13;
Teloest, Poecilia Formosa."&#13;
Poecilia Formosa is a small fish&#13;
native to eastern Mexico which is&#13;
widely used by researchers&#13;
SKI PANTS SPECIAL&#13;
20% OFF&#13;
AT&#13;
If you've&#13;
wanted to&#13;
work on&#13;
RANGER Streaking in&#13;
because all genetic characteristics&#13;
are determined by&#13;
heredity through the female line.&#13;
The genetic abnormality involved&#13;
in the study is called&#13;
triplody, in which three&#13;
genetically distinct sets of&#13;
chromosomes occur in the cells of&#13;
the same organism.&#13;
The study was initiated in 1971&#13;
and since that time, Balsano has&#13;
received almost $48,000 in&#13;
National Science Foundation&#13;
Grants (NSF) for his work at&#13;
Parkside. The study is slated to&#13;
continue through 1975 and, during&#13;
that period, NSF grants for the&#13;
study to UW-P and Marquette are&#13;
expected to total $120,000.&#13;
The researchers work to date&#13;
has resulted in a number of&#13;
scholarly papers and&#13;
publications.&#13;
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It looks as tho ugh streaking at&#13;
Parkside is not yet dead. Last&#13;
Wednesday night, after the pool&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Building closed, a&#13;
small group of five people&#13;
streaked once or twice around the&#13;
pool and back into the safety of&#13;
the locker rooms.&#13;
Is this any indication of what is&#13;
to happen in the future? Is this&#13;
any indication of anything at all?&#13;
Perhaps it is, since one of the&#13;
streakers was a University&#13;
employee.&#13;
So keep an eye on the Phv. Ed.&#13;
building to see if anything&#13;
develops...rumor has it that a&#13;
large order of goldfish is being&#13;
sent for.&#13;
JUSTJEANS&#13;
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apparel m.iiiulaimrod onlv hv II k l\.rr..r,A.L.nt,, &#13;
Kick Barron of Parkside makes a takedown asainowhi^ . ,&#13;
Ray Jacobsen to end the match with a 5-2 victory. hitewater s&#13;
UWP first in&#13;
WIC meet&#13;
of Parkside placed first and third&#13;
respectively in the 150 lb. class&#13;
with Mike Jarecki of Marquette&#13;
second and Pete Hartziem of&#13;
Whitewater fourth.&#13;
Rick Barron of Parkside took&#13;
the 158 lb. championship followed&#13;
by Ray Jacobsen of Whitewater,&#13;
Wayne Chojnacski of Stevens&#13;
Point, and Dave Goesch of&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
Lonnie Peterson of Parkside&#13;
took first place in the 167 lb. class&#13;
over Ron Haidingep* of&#13;
Whitewater, Dare Klass and Lee&#13;
Jerrett of Platteville.&#13;
Heavyweight Dean Dehnert of&#13;
Parkside finished third with Fred&#13;
Boskowich of Whitewater first, •&#13;
Ben Guido of Marquette second,&#13;
and Joe, Johnson of Stevens Point&#13;
fourth.&#13;
Also placing third for Parkside&#13;
was Rick Shaumberg with Fred&#13;
Townsend and Gary Zizzo of&#13;
Whitewater first and second, and&#13;
Steve St. John of Northland&#13;
fourth.&#13;
Wrestling coach Jirrt Koch&#13;
remarked, "I knew that we had a&#13;
really good team but I didn't&#13;
think we could do so good against&#13;
Whitewater, which was the&#13;
favorite. It took a super effort but&#13;
we did it."&#13;
As for future hopes, Koch said,&#13;
"we've got a strong wrestler in&#13;
every weight class and some&#13;
good tournament strength for the&#13;
nationals."&#13;
Parkside goes to Evanston, 111.,&#13;
December 13-14 for the&#13;
Whitewater Invitational and to&#13;
Waukesha December 27-28 for the&#13;
Midlands Tournament.&#13;
The next home match will be&#13;
the Carroll Invitational January&#13;
11 at 3 p.m. in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 11, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 15&#13;
Fri. Dec. 13&#13;
Sat. Dec. 14&#13;
Sun. Dec. 15&#13;
Mon. Dec. 1&#13;
Tues. Dec. 17&#13;
Wed. Dec. 18&#13;
Thurs. Dec. 19&#13;
Fri. Dec. 2&#13;
Sat. Dec. 21&#13;
Sun. Dec. 22&#13;
Mon. Dec. 23&#13;
Tues. Dec. 24&#13;
Wed. Dec. 25&#13;
Thurs. Dec. 26&#13;
Fri. Dec. 27&#13;
Sat. Dec. 28&#13;
Sun. Dec. 29&#13;
Mon. Dec. 30&#13;
Tues. Dec. 31&#13;
Wed. Jan. l&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 2&#13;
Fri. Jan. 3&#13;
Sat. Jan. 4&#13;
Sun. Jan. 5&#13;
Mon. Jan. 6&#13;
Christmas&#13;
schedule&#13;
Recreational&#13;
Building Hours&#13;
30 a m-4:30 pm&#13;
30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
00 p m-9:30 pm&#13;
:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
bldg. closed&#13;
8:30 am-9:30 pm&#13;
Pool closed Dec. 23-Jan. 3 for cleaning and repairs.&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team&#13;
opened its season last Saturday in&#13;
the Wisconsin Intercollegiate&#13;
Championships held here at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Competing in the event were&#13;
teams from Carroll College,&#13;
Carthage, Gateway, Lakeland&#13;
Marquette, Milwaukee, Northland,&#13;
Parkside, Platteville,&#13;
Stevens Point, and Whitewater.&#13;
Parkside, who finished third in&#13;
the NAIA national tournament&#13;
last season, took first place in the&#13;
Wisconsin Championships with&#13;
141 points. Second place went to&#13;
Whitewater with 135 points while&#13;
Marquette placed third with 85&#13;
points and Platteville fourth with&#13;
46 points.&#13;
Individual championships for&#13;
Parkside numbered six. In the&#13;
126 lb. class, Parkside's Rico&#13;
Savaglio took first place over&#13;
Dave Conner and Robin Bender&#13;
from Whitewater and Paul&#13;
Clementi of Marquette.&#13;
The 134 lb. championship went&#13;
to Joseph Landers of Parkside,&#13;
followed by Greg Smith (Platteville),&#13;
Kevin Morin&#13;
(Marquette), and Mark Heinzelmann&#13;
(Carroll).&#13;
Bill West of Parkside captured&#13;
first place in the 142 lb. class&#13;
followed by John Harrison of&#13;
Whitewater, Jerry Carr of&#13;
Northland, and Mike Fox of&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Randv Skarda and Rick Kubiak&#13;
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 19, December 11, 1974</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="64928">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>1974-12-11</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Phase Out</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 20&#13;
M M Phase Out"&#13;
by Paul Anderson&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey last&#13;
week ordered the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Board of Regents to&#13;
formulate plans for financial&#13;
retrenchment, including the&#13;
"phasing out, phasing down, or&#13;
the consolidating of institutions&#13;
and programs."&#13;
The directive was conveyed by&#13;
letter to Regent President Frank&#13;
J. Pelisek, Milwaukee, on&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 9. It was the first&#13;
formal response to the proposed&#13;
1975-'77 UW billion dollar budget,&#13;
currently being considered by the&#13;
governor in the upcoming state&#13;
budget.&#13;
Lucey cited that the state is&#13;
facing a "time of rigid fiscal&#13;
constraints," and that predictions&#13;
indicate "a substantial&#13;
decline in numbers of students&#13;
seeking higher education in the&#13;
decade just ahead."&#13;
"For these reasons," said&#13;
Lucey, "I am asking that the&#13;
Board of Regents carefully weigh&#13;
the alternatives and make&#13;
specific recommendations for&#13;
phasing out, phasing down, or&#13;
consolidating existing centers,&#13;
campuses, colleges, and&#13;
programs."&#13;
The deadline for the recommendations&#13;
is April 15.&#13;
In Milwaukee Thursday afternoon,&#13;
speaking at the&#13;
Wisconsin Taxpayers Conference,&#13;
Lucey stated that his&#13;
directive was to insure that UW&#13;
administrators begin long range&#13;
planning now.&#13;
When asked by a reporter&#13;
whether he was seeking immediate&#13;
savings, Lucey&#13;
responded, "No, this will not save&#13;
one dime immediately. We will&#13;
not close any campuses in this&#13;
(75-77) budget."&#13;
He added that "Unless we get&#13;
people's feet to the fire, there will&#13;
be procrastination."&#13;
Lucey's directive also gave&#13;
warning that "the university&#13;
system will need to live within its&#13;
current year supply and expense&#13;
budget, and find room for additional&#13;
productivity savings."&#13;
The UW System, encompassing&#13;
27 campuses, is now spending&#13;
$507 million a year, and the&#13;
Regents have requested a budget&#13;
of $681 million for the first half of&#13;
the 1975-'77 biennium. The&#13;
Regent's proposals include a 30&#13;
percent salary increase for&#13;
faculty members ~ 17 percent the&#13;
first year, and 13 percent the&#13;
second and an undergraduate&#13;
tuition cut of 50 percent in the&#13;
second vear of the biennium.&#13;
According to a Wisconsin State&#13;
Journal report, Lucey recently&#13;
responded to the tuition proposal,&#13;
calling it "completely&#13;
unrealistic" and a "little pie in&#13;
the sky," but has refrained from&#13;
commenting on the faculty salary&#13;
increase proposal.&#13;
Task Force to be Formed&#13;
Board President Pelisek&#13;
responded to Lucey's call for&#13;
retrenchment at the regular&#13;
regents meeting in Madison&#13;
Friday:&#13;
"We must respond to the&#13;
governor's charge, even though&#13;
we may not believe that phasing&#13;
out or phasing down centers and&#13;
campuses is necessarily in the&#13;
best interest of the university&#13;
system and the state."&#13;
In order to fulfill the governor's&#13;
request, Pelisek called for the&#13;
creation of a special task force to&#13;
develop a plan for UW cutbacks.&#13;
Pelisek told UW System&#13;
President John Weaver that he&#13;
hoped the committee, to be&#13;
composed of between 20 and 25&#13;
faculty members, administrators&#13;
and students, would be picked&#13;
within the next week to 10 days.&#13;
He added that the task force is&#13;
to provide an interim report to&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
No fix on books&#13;
by J. D. Garoutte&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Allegations have been made to RANGER by&#13;
numerous students in recent weeks concerning the&#13;
possibility of some type of price gouging or fixing by&#13;
the campus bookstore.&#13;
One student claimed selling a text titled Anthropology&#13;
to the bookstore for $5.25 which&#13;
originally sold for $11.25. The text was then sold by&#13;
the bookstore for $8.45.&#13;
Another claimed selling a communication text&#13;
titled Discussion, Conference and Group Process,&#13;
for $4.25 and it is now selling used for $7.15.&#13;
Publishers Trade List Annual is a publication of&#13;
FINE! YOU BUT NEW YORK AND I'LL BY NEW&#13;
JERSEY, THEN WE'LL SUGGEST ALL TH E TEW5&#13;
MOVE THERE.&#13;
Money, money, money&#13;
Vets benup ifi&#13;
Parkside soccer ace Joseph Orr combined parenting with&#13;
registration for second semester classes last week. Son Christopher&#13;
Joseph, ft months, solemnly observed the proceedings as Orr signed up&#13;
for classes.&#13;
publishers retail prices on books. In comparing the&#13;
prices listed in the Annual with books being sold in&#13;
the bookstore, it appears price gouging or fixing is&#13;
not the case with new texts.&#13;
However, the possibility of this happening with&#13;
used textbooks is still questioned by some students.&#13;
According to Ted Wood, manager of the&#13;
bookstore, the allegations of price fixing are not&#13;
true. "Students are given the highest possible price&#13;
for the book, especially if it is to be used the next&#13;
semester."&#13;
According to Wood, a student could receive at&#13;
least 50 percent of t he original price. If it is not to be&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
Records&#13;
open&#13;
Students at the nation's&#13;
colleges and universities now&#13;
have the right to see most of their&#13;
scholastic records and control&#13;
release of their records to others&#13;
as a result of implementation on&#13;
Jan. 1 of the Family Education&#13;
Rights and Privacy Act of 1974&#13;
(the so-called "Buckley&#13;
Amendment").&#13;
At Parkside. however, no&#13;
students have as yet asked to&#13;
inspect their records, according&#13;
to Allen B. Dearborn, assistant&#13;
chancellor for student services.&#13;
He attributed the lack of&#13;
requests, at least in part, to the&#13;
university's practice of allowing&#13;
students liberal access to Records&#13;
directly concerning them individually&#13;
and such continuing&#13;
practices as releasing transcripts&#13;
only at the request of students.&#13;
The new law covers official&#13;
university records including&#13;
continued On page 4&#13;
The new Vietnam era G.I. bill&#13;
passed last month not only increases&#13;
educational benefits&#13;
about $60 per month immediately&#13;
but also is retroactive to Sept. 1,&#13;
1974.&#13;
Kenneth (Red) Oberbruner,&#13;
Parkside counselor and coordinator&#13;
of veterans' services,&#13;
said, "Any vet who attended&#13;
Parkside last semester and has&#13;
questions about additional&#13;
payments which are due him&#13;
retroactively should contact my&#13;
office and we'll try to help."&#13;
He pointed out that veterans&#13;
with no dependents who are fulltime&#13;
students now get $270 per&#13;
month, compared to $220 under&#13;
the old rates. Those with one or&#13;
two dependents get $321 and $366,&#13;
respectively, compared to former&#13;
rates of $261 and $298.&#13;
Veterans get another $22 for each&#13;
additional dependent.&#13;
Comparable new rates for&#13;
three-quarter time students are&#13;
$203. $240, $275 and $17, and for&#13;
half-time students $135, $160, $182&#13;
and $11, respectively. That&#13;
represents increases ranging&#13;
from $35 to $51.&#13;
Oberbruner said that veterans&#13;
also may be eligible for the&#13;
Wisconsin Benefit Program,&#13;
which adds another $400 per year&#13;
in grants if married and $200 if&#13;
single.&#13;
Additional benefits under the&#13;
new bill are an extension of&#13;
eligibility time from 36 to 45&#13;
months for undergraduate work&#13;
and up to $600 in federal lowinterest&#13;
loans.&#13;
"There are many additional&#13;
benefits which we would like to&#13;
point out to vets if they'll call or&#13;
stop in and see us," Oberbruner&#13;
said. "They have certainly&#13;
earned these benefits and it's&#13;
about time the government&#13;
recognized it. Now it's up to the&#13;
vets to use them."&#13;
Normal hours for the Veterans'&#13;
Office are 8-4:30 p.m. For information,&#13;
call 553-2481.&#13;
Search and screen&#13;
Members selected&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Two students, five faculty and&#13;
one Parkside administrator,&#13;
along with one representative of&#13;
central administration have been&#13;
selected to sit on the Search and&#13;
Screen Committee (SSC) which&#13;
will be screening applications for&#13;
the position of chancellor.&#13;
The faculty representatives are&#13;
John Campbell, associate&#13;
professor of geography; Ben&#13;
Greenebaum, associate professor&#13;
of physics; Teresa Peck,&#13;
assistant professor of education;&#13;
Alan Shucard, associate&#13;
professor of English; and Larry&#13;
Shirland, assistant professor of&#13;
business management.&#13;
Campbell will be chairing the&#13;
committee.&#13;
Jan Ocker, executive director&#13;
of student services, will&#13;
represent Parkside's administration&#13;
and Adolph Wilburn,&#13;
associate vice president of&#13;
academic affairs, will represent&#13;
central administration on the&#13;
SSC.&#13;
The students which will serve&#13;
on the committee are Jane&#13;
Schliesman and Natasha Foiling.&#13;
Last month there was a dispute&#13;
between student organizations&#13;
about how student nominees for&#13;
the SSC should be selected.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
tPAB), Parkside Student Govt.&#13;
Association (PSGA), Adult&#13;
Student Association (ASA) and&#13;
Vets Club, which were the four&#13;
student organizations that were&#13;
requested by central administration&#13;
to submit&#13;
nominations for the two student&#13;
positions, went about the task in&#13;
different ways.&#13;
PAB requested nominations&#13;
from all other student&#13;
organizations at Parkside,&#13;
screened the applications&#13;
through a sub-committee, and&#13;
then voted on the nominations in&#13;
the Executive Council.&#13;
PAB nominated the following&#13;
people: Jane Schliesman, Debra&#13;
Friedell, Peter Strutynski,&#13;
Richard Kilps, Carol Merrick and&#13;
Ed Bielarczyk.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
of PSGA, originally requested&#13;
that a council consisting of the&#13;
presidents of all student&#13;
organizations be formed to select&#13;
the nominees.&#13;
When questioned as to what&#13;
action had actually taken place&#13;
with regard to the nominations,&#13;
Milutinovich answered that a few&#13;
organizations had gotten together&#13;
to select nominees. He said that&#13;
no minutes had been taken at the&#13;
meeting and that he was unable&#13;
to furnish the names of the&#13;
nominees because he had lost the&#13;
list of n ames and could not recall&#13;
them. He did mention, though,&#13;
that the two students which were&#13;
chosen to serve on the committee&#13;
were on that list.&#13;
The Vets Club chose to&#13;
continued on pa-ge 4 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan . 15 , 1 975&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
— Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
A much&#13;
needed&#13;
change&#13;
As part of merger implementation Parkside now has a&#13;
Segregated Fee Committee to disburse the 1975-76&#13;
segregated fees. The committee, composed of nine&#13;
students, is under the obligation of accepting and&#13;
reviewing requests from various organizations on&#13;
campus for operating funds. RANGER welcomes this&#13;
opportunity for students to take control of those aspects&#13;
of the university that do not deal with their academic&#13;
life. Students should have a say in course structure and&#13;
content but in such areas as Student Life, Athletics and&#13;
Health, where value judgments predominate and little&#13;
expertise in judging overall value is necessary, students&#13;
should have the final say in how their money is spent.&#13;
The Segregated Fees Committee now has the chance&#13;
to restructure activities on campus to reflect the desires&#13;
of students and not the desires of administrators who&#13;
most often are concerned with "community image"&#13;
rather than student need.&#13;
RANGER hopes that those students on the Segregated&#13;
Fees Committee will do their homework and take a good&#13;
hard look at ALL areas involved with segregated fees&#13;
and not fear innovation and change for the better.&#13;
Sidney Chafetz&#13;
A group of prints by Sidney Chafetz, including etchings and woodcuts&#13;
satirizing human frailities, will be on display at the Parkside&#13;
Communication Arts Gallery from Jan. 15 t hrough Feb. 3. Regular&#13;
gallery hours are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and 6&#13;
to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. The gallery also is open on most&#13;
occasions when public events are scheduled in the adjoining theater.&#13;
A professor of art at Ohio State University, Chafetz takes particular&#13;
delight in twitting at the foibles of academe in his etchings and&#13;
woodcuts. Signs and banners carrying Latin inscriptions underscore&#13;
his bargs in many of the works. The artist is perhaps best known for&#13;
his woodcuts, which include a number of portrait studies.&#13;
Chafetz studied at the Rhode Island School of Design, at the&#13;
Academie Julian in Paris, and with artists Fernand Leger and S. W.&#13;
Hayter. He was awarded a Tiffany Fellowship, a Fulbright Fellowship&#13;
to Paris, and several research grants from Ohio State.&#13;
He has had one-man shows in Paris, London, New York and many&#13;
other U.S. cities. His honors include awards from L'Ecole Des Beaux&#13;
Arts, Fontainebleau and the Library of Congress. His work is in major&#13;
public and private collections in the U.S., Africa, Europe, South&#13;
America, Israel and Japan.&#13;
Chafetz was a recipient of the major purchase and cash awafd at the&#13;
First Bienalle de la Gravure sur Bois in Banska, Czechoslovakia in&#13;
1970, and he was one of six artists chosen to represent the U.S. in the&#13;
Second Triennale Internationale Delia Xilographia Contemporanea at&#13;
Capri, Italy in 1972. He lectured and visited artists and schools in the&#13;
spring of 1973 in several eastern European countries as a cooperating&#13;
fellow with the U.S. Information Agency.&#13;
Recently, three of his prints were acquired by the Dahlem-Berlin&#13;
Staatliche Museen for its permanent collection.&#13;
What a relief!&#13;
December 21, 1974&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To the members of the honorable&#13;
Senate of the PSGA, Inc.:&#13;
Many things have happened&#13;
since last April 10 when I was&#13;
elected senator. I remember how&#13;
a group of students, coming from&#13;
various backgrounds, banded&#13;
together to form a coalition to try&#13;
to be representatives of the&#13;
students, i.e. student government.&#13;
They brought with them a&#13;
hope as fresh as the breath of&#13;
spring in which that hope was&#13;
spawned. They had a common&#13;
bond of belief in student's rights&#13;
and a concern for Parkside's&#13;
environment. I was very proud to&#13;
be a member of that group of&#13;
students.&#13;
Our actions resulted in the&#13;
largest voter turnout that&#13;
Parkside ever had and we won&#13;
easily. Student government&#13;
became a part of the parking lot&#13;
controversy. PSGA took a stand,&#13;
united, in opposition to the&#13;
parking lots and even went as far&#13;
as to try to change the law of the&#13;
land. We almost succeeded.&#13;
Summer arrived and our&#13;
members dwindled and a&#13;
"student rights" constitution was&#13;
written. Many people contributed&#13;
to this constitution and it was a&#13;
good one.&#13;
The fall arrived, and with it,&#13;
the student body and the&#13;
remaining people in the PSGA&#13;
armed' with the best student&#13;
government constitution ever&#13;
presented at Parkside, arrived.&#13;
Also that fall, opposition to the&#13;
PSGA arrived., It became a very&#13;
strong issue and even the&#13;
typically apathetic students at&#13;
Parkside began to show signs of&#13;
interest. The members of PSGA&#13;
had to fight like hell to get the&#13;
constitution before the student&#13;
body to vote it up or down. It did&#13;
go before the student body and&#13;
the referendum drew an unpredicted&#13;
20 percent of the&#13;
student body (unheard of before&#13;
and double the national average,&#13;
and third-highest in the history of&#13;
student governments in&#13;
Wisconsin) to give their overwhelming&#13;
approval, nearly 2 to 1.&#13;
Ever since this band of&#13;
students took office, they had&#13;
been under pressure. Pressure&#13;
from the administration,&#13;
pressure from special interest&#13;
groups, pressure from themselves.&#13;
After the constitution&#13;
passed, I had to relieve some of&#13;
the pressure which I had placed&#13;
on myself from neglecting my&#13;
studies.&#13;
As a result of the passage, the&#13;
members of student government&#13;
had increased their- power and&#13;
influence. Personalities surfaced&#13;
that may have otherwise not&#13;
surfaced without that power. I do&#13;
not say power is evil, I just say&#13;
that with power comes the&#13;
capacity to abuse power. I have&#13;
seen some abuses of that power.&#13;
It takes a sincere effort not to&#13;
abuse that power.&#13;
Eventually the fall elections&#13;
and appointments took place. The&#13;
vacant seats of the PSGA were&#13;
refilled (almost). With the new&#13;
members comes a freshness&#13;
similar to the freshness brought&#13;
about last spring. The new&#13;
members may not be aware of&#13;
what took place to get PSGA&#13;
where it is now, but they have a&#13;
responsibility to the students and&#13;
to the PSGA. That responsibility&#13;
is to represent the students at&#13;
Parkside to the best of their&#13;
ability and to use the power of&#13;
their office wisely and in the&#13;
interest of all the students, not&#13;
just themselves.&#13;
I have set some personal&#13;
standards to which I' have attempted&#13;
to live up to as a senator.&#13;
I have not always been able to&#13;
live up to these standards but can&#13;
honestly say that I have done my&#13;
best. I hope that in some way I&#13;
had contributed to the passage of&#13;
the best student government&#13;
constitution that Parkside has&#13;
ever had.&#13;
I have made obligations in&#13;
many areas and I now find that I&#13;
may not be able to meet all these&#13;
obligations. I find that I have to&#13;
set priorities. Because of my&#13;
obligation to complete my undergraduate&#13;
education by May, I&#13;
cannot live up to the standards&#13;
that I have set for myself.&#13;
Because of this, I respectfully&#13;
submit my resignation to you&#13;
tonight. I hope to serve PSGA in&#13;
some small capacity in the upcoming&#13;
semester. Best wishes.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
PAB not representative&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reference to the letter by Ms.&#13;
B. Burke and Ms. S. Goff of Dec.&#13;
4, the following comments are in&#13;
order. The aforementioned individuals&#13;
seem mystified that in&#13;
the referendum of Nov. 20-21,&#13;
more than 75 percent of the votes&#13;
cast called for student-elected&#13;
officials in P.A.B. The letter then&#13;
goes on to assure the students&#13;
that P.A.B. officers are&#13;
representative of the student&#13;
body.&#13;
They feebly attempt a defense&#13;
of their position by claiming that&#13;
P.A.B. is open to all students on&#13;
this campus and, as such, can be&#13;
directed by any student on&#13;
campus. What they fail to note,&#13;
however, is that only a certain&#13;
type of individual will have the&#13;
time, the capability and the&#13;
temperament which membership&#13;
in an organization such as P.A.B.&#13;
demands. Add to this the further&#13;
qualifications that are necessary&#13;
for election to the executive&#13;
council of P.A.B. (i.e., have ideas&#13;
which are very similar to a&#13;
majority of these individuals),&#13;
and any expectation of a&#13;
universally representative&#13;
student is rendered inane.&#13;
It has also been clearly evident&#13;
that student input has been&#13;
discouraged in that most&#13;
suggestions (all reviewed by the&#13;
council) are subsequently&#13;
rejected on the grounds that they&#13;
are unreasonable. As a direct&#13;
result of their intractability,&#13;
P.A.B. has been operating at a&#13;
loss. In their complete disregard&#13;
for the students' interests, they&#13;
have almost wound un in court&#13;
over an alleged anti-secrecy law&#13;
violation, and have become indignant&#13;
at even a request for&#13;
student voting of officers.&#13;
While it may be argued that all&#13;
clubs may be forced to have&#13;
student-elected officials, it must&#13;
be noted that clubs dedicated to&#13;
the interests of a minority of&#13;
students (e.g. Chess Club, Vet's&#13;
Club) receive only a small portion&#13;
of the segregated fees,&#13;
whereas organizations which&#13;
represent the student body as a&#13;
whole (e.g. P.A.B., PSGA Inc.)&#13;
receive large allocations and,&#13;
consequently, should also have&#13;
student-elected officers.&#13;
Clearly, if P.A.B. is to present&#13;
suitable entertainment, they&#13;
must not turn a deaf ear to the&#13;
students!&#13;
Edward R. Arndt&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
Apology&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
My urging my friends to sign&#13;
my name to a petition for my&#13;
recall was poor judgment and&#13;
unethical but not illegal. I hereby&#13;
apologize to all parties involved&#13;
and assure them that it won't&#13;
happen again.&#13;
Michael G. Hahner&#13;
Student senator&#13;
US' The Parkside —&#13;
"RANGER&#13;
The PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly~indepehdenl&#13;
publication of the students'" of the U W Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible tor its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in 0194 LLC, U.W Parkside, Kenosha&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553 2287. &#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Newforifiy&#13;
Pope's concordance&#13;
Art news&#13;
A two-volume concordance to&#13;
the poems of Alexander Pope,&#13;
one of the most widely quoted&#13;
poets in English, has been cocompiled&#13;
by Emmett G. Bedford,&#13;
assistant professor of English at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Bedford is itl erary editor of the&#13;
concordance, which is published&#13;
by Gale Research Company,&#13;
Detroit. The other compiler is the&#13;
technical editor, Robert J.&#13;
Dilligan, assistant professor of&#13;
English at the University of&#13;
Southern California, who&#13;
developed special programs for&#13;
the computer-assisted reference&#13;
work.&#13;
The Pope concordance is the&#13;
first to use the technique of optical&#13;
scanning in which the lines&#13;
of poetry are "read" by a&#13;
mechanism somewhat like a&#13;
camera light meter. The&#13;
mechanism automatically encodes&#13;
the printed words on&#13;
magnetic tape in computerreadable&#13;
form.&#13;
This method, bypassing the&#13;
conventional keypunched IBM&#13;
cards, results in greater accuracy&#13;
and reduces the cost of&#13;
preparing the magnetic tape,&#13;
Bedford said.&#13;
At the next stage, editing&#13;
changes are made by keypunching&#13;
cards for the lines that&#13;
must be corrected or edited.&#13;
Subsequently, the lines of&#13;
poetry are "sorted" by computer&#13;
and arranged in concordance&#13;
form, so that when a reader looks&#13;
up a word alphabetically, he will&#13;
find listed under it all the lines of&#13;
Pope's poems containing the&#13;
word. Thus the book functions as&#13;
a dictionary of quotations.&#13;
Bedford has been invited to&#13;
present a paper detailing the&#13;
process at the Second International&#13;
Conference on&#13;
Computers and the Humanities to&#13;
be held April 3 through 6 at the&#13;
University of Southern&#13;
California.&#13;
The Pope concordance was also&#13;
the first to use the computer to&#13;
control the typesetting when the&#13;
book was prepared for&#13;
publication. This method puts the&#13;
lines of poetry on the printed&#13;
page in the same form as the&#13;
original, retaining capitals, small&#13;
letters, italics, and various accent&#13;
marks just as Pope used&#13;
them.&#13;
Previously, most computerassisted&#13;
concordances have&#13;
appeared in the format of a&#13;
standard computer printout with&#13;
the familiar "typewriter" style of&#13;
typefaces, usually all capitals.&#13;
The concordance lists 20,892&#13;
word forms, which may be&#13;
considered a measure of Pope's&#13;
vocabulary. Altogether there are&#13;
269,625 quoted lines in the concordance.&#13;
&#13;
In editing the concordance&#13;
from the standard Twickenham&#13;
edition of Pope's poetry, Bedford&#13;
established the 3,164 variant lines&#13;
Pope wrote and selected for the&#13;
concordance the 2,489 he considered&#13;
significant.&#13;
He also filled in the names of&#13;
numerous historical persons&#13;
whom Pope satirized without&#13;
identifying, often referring to&#13;
them only by initial.&#13;
The concordance provides a&#13;
word frequency table designed by&#13;
Dilligan that makes possible a&#13;
linguistic analysis of each word&#13;
Pope used.&#13;
Bedford is a specialist in&#13;
English literature of the&#13;
Restoration and 18th Century.&#13;
His doctoral dissertation, at&#13;
Southern Illinois University, was&#13;
written on Pope's use of Christian&#13;
symbolism. Bedford was a&#13;
Washington, D.C. journalist&#13;
before beginning his university&#13;
teaching career. He joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in 1970.&#13;
Two prints by Moishe Smith, associate professor of art have been&#13;
purchased for permanent collections. "The Glory That Was Rome"&#13;
has been added to the Western Kentucky University Collection and&#13;
The Wmo" was purchased for the Rockford (111.) College of Art&#13;
Collection.&#13;
"The Wino" was part of a recent joint show by Smith and sculptor&#13;
Julius Schmidt at the Rockford gallery.&#13;
Smith's print, "The Oaks," is included in a juried members' show at&#13;
the Philadelphia Print Club through this week and another of his&#13;
works "Liguria," is included in Bradley University's 15th National&#13;
Print Show which will open Jan. 18 in Peoria, 111.&#13;
A one-man show of paintings, silkscreen prints and plexiglas constructions&#13;
by Robert Cadez, assistant professor of art, is on displav&#13;
through Feb. 2 at the West Bend Gallery, West Bend.&#13;
Cadez has exhibited his work in 19 regional exhibits since 1969 and&#13;
eight invitational shows since 1967. H e has won awards on the local&#13;
regional and national level. He has recently had shows of his work at&#13;
the Bradley Galleries in Milwaukee, at the Parkside Gallery and at the&#13;
Rockford (111.) Art Association's Burpee Gallery. He is epr resented in&#13;
the permanent collections of Cotey College (Mo.) and the Flint (Mich )&#13;
Institute of Arts.&#13;
New Physical Program&#13;
The Department of Physical&#13;
Education will offer a spring&#13;
semester class in Prescribed&#13;
Exercise, Monday, Wednesday&#13;
and Friday, 11:30-12:20. The&#13;
class will be designed to provide&#13;
individual instruction and&#13;
guidance for those with physical&#13;
disabilities that either preclude&#13;
or inhibit their enrollment in&#13;
regular activity classes.&#13;
Examples of such conditions&#13;
would include the following:&#13;
orthopedic problems, e.g. those&#13;
resulting from sports injuries,&#13;
from disease (polio, encephalitis),&#13;
from accidents or&#13;
strains (including low back&#13;
syndrome), or from congenital&#13;
causes (cerebral palsy); visual&#13;
handicaps; and other organic&#13;
impairments, ranging from asthma&#13;
to epilepsy, diabetes and&#13;
heart conditions.&#13;
Brief News&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15: Whiteskellar Coffeehouse presents&#13;
"Clover," a jazz band, from 11:30 to 1:30. Gr. 201, free.&#13;
THURSDAY, JANUARY 16: PAB presents movie, "Jeremiah&#13;
Johnson," at 11:30 a.ifi. and 7:30 p.m. in Comm Arts Theater, $1.&#13;
I D. required.&#13;
Friday. January 17: Movie, "Blume in Love," 11:30 a.m. in Comm&#13;
Arts Theatre and 8:00 p.m. in SAB, $1.1.D. required.&#13;
SATURDAY. JANUARY 18: PAB presents a "greaser" dance--4&#13;
hours of 50s' rock'n roll with "William Tell." Contests in jitterbugging,&#13;
twisting and best costume; from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Admission $1 for&#13;
those in 50s' costume, $1.50 f or all others. Parkside and state I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
SUNDAY. JANUARY 19: Movie, "Blume in Love," 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
SAB. $1.&#13;
TUESDAY. JANUARY 21: Michael Johnson in concert, 8:00 p.m. in&#13;
Comm Arts Theatre. Tickets $1.50 - general public $2. Tickets&#13;
available at Information kiosk.&#13;
The Parkside Chess Club will hold a chess tournament on January 18&#13;
and 19. The tournament will run from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday,&#13;
and from noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday. The top four finishers will&#13;
represent Parkside at the Association of College Unions-International&#13;
tournament to be held in LaCrosse on January 30. The Parkside&#13;
tourney will offer cash prizes for the best first time player and the best&#13;
female player. Entry fee is 50 cents and registration is at the Student&#13;
Life Office, D-194 LLC. Deadline is 4:30 p.m. Friday, January 17.&#13;
L :&#13;
Since the class is being offered&#13;
first in order to ascertain the&#13;
interest in and need for special&#13;
physical education, and also&#13;
because of the late date, the&#13;
course will be offered on a nocredit,&#13;
no-cost basis,&#13;
physician's referral may&#13;
requested, depending upon&#13;
nature and severity of an&#13;
dividual's condition; similarly,&#13;
medical advice may be sought in&#13;
order to ensure that the program&#13;
a person follows will provide&#13;
maximum possible benefits,&#13;
enjoyment and safety. Inquiries&#13;
should be directed to Bob&#13;
Grueninger, Human Performance&#13;
Laboratory, 553-2318 or&#13;
553-2519.&#13;
A&#13;
be&#13;
the&#13;
infeature&#13;
&#13;
film series&#13;
today &amp; tomorrow&#13;
JEREMIAH&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
Wed., Jan. 15 &amp; Thurs., Jan 16&#13;
11:30 &amp; 7:30 p.m.&#13;
s1.00&#13;
COMM. ARTS T HEATRE&#13;
this weekend&#13;
BLUME IN LOVE&#13;
Fri., Jan 17 - Sun., Jan 19&#13;
8:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Next Week&#13;
CAMEL0T&#13;
Wednesdav &amp; Thursday&#13;
Jan.,22 Jan., 23&#13;
7:30&#13;
The Concerned Student Coalition is the donor of a gift of $27 to be&#13;
used for plantings on the campus.&#13;
Free checking...Free checks*&#13;
No minimum balance&#13;
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE...EXTRA BANKING HOURS&#13;
Our entire office including lobby and drive-in&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7:00-5:30&#13;
OPEN I Friday 7:00-8:00&#13;
Snt II rd ay 8:00-Noon&#13;
•M 'lie intersection 01 Highways 11 and 31&#13;
lor details.&#13;
6125 Durand Avenue • Racine, Wisconsin 53406 Phone 414-554-6500&#13;
MEMBER OE THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION &#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
S&amp;UUMf i/te QineAt&#13;
Ptyy* &amp; Stolid*, fyoodi&#13;
HAPPY H OURS&#13;
FRI DAYS&#13;
£,'30 +o (o'.ZO&#13;
S , A , &amp; .&#13;
s&#13;
tcAaer»+* activities builcU&#13;
THIS FRIDAY&#13;
[Clover&#13;
3.'30 5; 30&#13;
59 °ff oil beer&#13;
Come or7 qet htiip/oy&#13;
Ojiik. us // y&#13;
\ OShIda S color woodcut of "Cherry Blossoms by the Gate is one of&#13;
" tIM D,n&#13;
f&#13;
S l,&#13;
l&#13;
is artist in th&#13;
e Ferdinand Roten Galleries collection.&#13;
ne Farkside Activities Board collection of original graphics. A&#13;
will sponsor an exhibit and sale of&#13;
approximately 1,000 original&#13;
prints from the famed Fedinand&#13;
Roten Galleries collection on&#13;
Monday, Jan. 20. The event will&#13;
be held at Middle Main Place.&#13;
Works spanning six centuries&#13;
will be featured in the show,&#13;
which will include prints by such&#13;
masters as Rouault, Hogarth,&#13;
Goya, Miro and Picasso, plus&#13;
many of today's artists. In addition.&#13;
there will be a collection of&#13;
Western and Oriental manuscript&#13;
pages, some dating to the 13th&#13;
Century. Prices start at $10 and&#13;
most of the works are under $100.&#13;
Area residents will have an&#13;
opportunity not only to view but&#13;
to leaf through an outstandin&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 Eighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
"ACROSS F ROM UNION PARK"&#13;
"FULL LINE OF&#13;
CLASSICS AND MODERN AMERICAN" NOVELS&#13;
world-respected authority on&#13;
graphics of all types, Roten&#13;
mounts over 400 exhibits annually&#13;
for major museums&#13;
throughout the United States and&#13;
Canada. These exhibits, utilized&#13;
by museums to extend the range&#13;
of their shows, are in addition to&#13;
the 1,500 exhibits and sales&#13;
arranged by Roten each year for&#13;
universities, community&#13;
organizations and corporations.&#13;
All of the work in the forthcoming&#13;
show is displayed informally&#13;
so that visitors may see&#13;
each print at close range. The&#13;
public is invited to come and ask&#13;
questions about the work, artists&#13;
and the various graphic&#13;
techniques. Exhibit hours are&#13;
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
Search and&#13;
screen&#13;
nominate two of their own&#13;
members: Bill Noll and Garv&#13;
Stewart.&#13;
According to Phyllis Lidberg&#13;
member of ASA, the association&#13;
looked for older students to serve&#13;
as nominees for the SSC though&#13;
she said that not many were&#13;
interested. The ASA nominated&#13;
the following people: John&#13;
Mcaleer, Louise Woiteshek,&#13;
Jeanette Crossland and Carol&#13;
Merrick.&#13;
Records&#13;
See page 1&#13;
academic records, Dearborn&#13;
said. Counseling and health&#13;
records are not retained as a part&#13;
of the students' permanent official&#13;
records, he said.&#13;
Dearborn said Parkside faculty&#13;
and administrative staff had&#13;
followed development of the&#13;
legislation from the initial&#13;
proposal through the current act&#13;
as amended. The law as amended&#13;
will require little change in the&#13;
university's record keeping, he&#13;
said.&#13;
Students who find what they&#13;
consider to be inaccurate information&#13;
in their records may&#13;
request correction from the office&#13;
administering the record. Cases&#13;
of disagreement over the accuracy&#13;
of records may be appealed&#13;
to the Dean of Students&#13;
Office pending development of a&#13;
formal appeals procedure.&#13;
As originally drafted, the law&#13;
raised concern among university&#13;
faculty and administrators&#13;
throughout the country over the&#13;
status of confidential letters of&#13;
recommendation for students.&#13;
Under a subsequent amendment,&#13;
letters of recommendation&#13;
written prior to Jan. 1 with the&#13;
understanding of confidentiality,&#13;
are not open to students.&#13;
Jack Elmore, director of&#13;
career planning and placement,&#13;
said the revise'd statute allows&#13;
students to waive the right to&#13;
inspect placement files if they&#13;
wish, so that letters of recommendation&#13;
may remain confidential.&#13;
A confidential letterone&#13;
recommending a student to&#13;
an employer or graduate school,&#13;
for instance-is generally conceded&#13;
to carry more weight,&#13;
Elmore said, and he expects&#13;
many students to submit the&#13;
required written waivers to seal&#13;
their placement files.&#13;
Parents also had expressed&#13;
concern over the original statute&#13;
draft, which could have made&#13;
parents' confidential financial&#13;
statements, filed by parents of&#13;
students seeking financial aid,&#13;
available to their student offspring&#13;
for examination. The&#13;
amended law retains confidentiality&#13;
of the parent&#13;
statements.&#13;
Certain classes of information,&#13;
such as a student's name, address&#13;
and telephone number, are&#13;
classified as "public information"&#13;
under the new law&#13;
and may be released to anyone&#13;
unless a student files a form&#13;
forbidding release. No other&#13;
information about a student can&#13;
be given to anyone without the&#13;
student's permission, except to&#13;
parents who listed the student as&#13;
a dependent on their income tax&#13;
forms for the previous year.&#13;
/McDonald's Breakfast/Menu&#13;
/YL Five great ways to start the day AA&#13;
* ® Served 8: 00a.m. until 11: 00a. m. daily-Noon Sundays |McDonaU&#13;
Hotcakes &amp; Sausage&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Egg McMuffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Toasted English Muffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
A man-sized sausage party&#13;
surrounded by two light, golden&#13;
hotcakes cooked to order,&#13;
served with butter and syrup&#13;
Your choice of tou r luices and&#13;
a cup ot great coffee.&#13;
^99- cheese, Canadian&#13;
bacon neatly stacked on a&#13;
toasted English Muffin Choose&#13;
a juice and coffee and you're&#13;
ready to battle traftic&#13;
Simple but elegant&#13;
Two Pastries&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Delicious Pastries Juiceand&#13;
coffee Has container and will&#13;
travel&#13;
Two twenty cent Donuts&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
4 T H E P A R K S I D E R A N G ER W e d n e s d a y , J a n . 15, 1975 &#13;
Counselors&#13;
Review applicants&#13;
Applicants are currently being&#13;
interviewed for a counseling&#13;
position in the Dean of Students&#13;
Office. The job responsibilities&#13;
include counseling students on&#13;
academic probation; working&#13;
with the Tutorial Service;&#13;
general personal, social and&#13;
educational counseling; and&#13;
dealing directly with minority&#13;
students.&#13;
Three candidates for the&#13;
position are: Eddie L. Chambers,&#13;
Helen Abisola Gallagher, and&#13;
Consuelo Contreras Reyes.&#13;
Chambers, who is presently a&#13;
counselor with the Division of&#13;
Student Educational Opportunities&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Wyoming in Laramie, was on&#13;
campus last week and met with&#13;
various students, faculty and&#13;
staff in addition to the members&#13;
of the Counselor Screening&#13;
Committee. He earned his M.A.&#13;
in Sociology in 1973 from Atlanta&#13;
University. Originally from Ohio,&#13;
he has worked with Upward&#13;
Bound students, and also did&#13;
community work as a tutorcounselor&#13;
with the Big BrotherBig&#13;
Sister Program, speaks&#13;
Spanish, and is active in sports.&#13;
Gallagher will be on campus&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday of this&#13;
week (Jan. 15-16), and will be&#13;
available in the WRKR Room&#13;
(LLC D173, behind the Information&#13;
kiosk), at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday to meet with any&#13;
interested students. Her M.S. in&#13;
Counselor Education-Student&#13;
Personnel Services was from&#13;
UW-Whitewater in 1974. She is&#13;
currently an intern in educational&#13;
administration with Central&#13;
Administration in Madison&#13;
concentrating on academic affairs&#13;
and affirmative action. She&#13;
has also worked as a teachercounselor&#13;
with the Model Cities&#13;
Program in Chicago, and has&#13;
been coordinator of two Sickle&#13;
Cell Anemia Programs in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Reyes, who earned her M.A. in&#13;
College Student Personnel&#13;
Services from Bowling Green&#13;
State University in 1974, will&#13;
tentatively be at Parkside on Jan.&#13;
21-22, and would meet with interested&#13;
students at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 22 in LLC D173.&#13;
She recently worked as a&#13;
Hispanic Affairs specialist at&#13;
Bowling Green, where her&#13;
respons ibil ities included&#13;
recruitment and counseling of&#13;
minority students; supervision of&#13;
student recruiters, tutors and&#13;
peer counselors; and work with&#13;
financial aids. Last summer she&#13;
was coordinator of a Summer&#13;
Migrant Head Start Program&#13;
conducted by La Raza Unida de&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
Anyone wishing further information&#13;
about the candidates&#13;
or the counseling position may&#13;
contact Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
associate dean of students, in&#13;
TallentHall 115, phone (553-)2342.&#13;
The screening committee encourages&#13;
all interested persons to&#13;
take advantage of this opportunity&#13;
to meet the job applicants&#13;
and provide feedback to&#13;
committee members to assist&#13;
them with the hiring decision.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our&#13;
advertisers!&#13;
Michael Johnson will appear in the Communication Arts Theatre on&#13;
January 21. Student tickets are $1.50. Tickets for the General public&#13;
are $2.00. The performance begins at 8 p.m.&#13;
NOW&#13;
OPEN&#13;
inc.&#13;
1170 N. 22nd, Ave.&#13;
| SEE YOU&#13;
AFTER T HE GAME!&#13;
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We need&#13;
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THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
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for Sud's Sipping Time.&#13;
3-5 MON. thru THURS&gt; LARGE FROSTY PITCHERS&#13;
Lathrop and 21st, (almost) Racine OF BEER ONLY $1.25 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesda y, Jan. 1 5, 1 9 75&#13;
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CUSTOM-MADE BAR LAMPS to accent any&#13;
decor. Lamps made from Pabst, Coors, Bud,&#13;
or any other can. For more information&#13;
contact Jon Olson, Racine 634-0414.&#13;
B-25 AMPEG AMPLIFIER for sale, slightly&#13;
used. Good condition, BEST OFFER over&#13;
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6220 -67th ST. PH. 652-819(1 KENOSHA&#13;
Classified&#13;
Cagers cream&#13;
cougars&#13;
by John Gesquiere&#13;
of RANGER Ranger&#13;
While the Southern IllinoisEdwardsville&#13;
Cougars were&#13;
concentrating on boxing-in Gary&#13;
Cole Saturday night, Leartha&#13;
Scott dumped in 31 points to lead&#13;
the Rangers to their eighth&#13;
straight victory by a score of 81-&#13;
67. Scott became eligible to play&#13;
January 8, after transferring&#13;
from St. Louis University.&#13;
Scott was backed up by Gary&#13;
Cole who added 18 points, and Bill&#13;
Sobanski with 16. High scorer for&#13;
the Cougars was Keith McFarland&#13;
with 23 points.&#13;
The contest put an end to the&#13;
Edwardsville seven-game&#13;
winning streak and raised the&#13;
Rangers' record to 9-3.&#13;
Though the Rangers started out&#13;
slow, they were leading at the&#13;
half 41-36. Edwardsville tied the&#13;
score at 43 with six minutes left in&#13;
the game. The game was very&#13;
close for two minutes as the lead&#13;
bounced back and forth until the&#13;
Rangers put on a great final&#13;
effort to achieve a 14-point&#13;
spread.&#13;
Parkside out-rebounded the&#13;
Cougars 40-31. Cole had 15 of the&#13;
rebounds and Sobanski 13. The&#13;
Rangers hit 50 percent of shots&#13;
from the field compared to 44&#13;
percent for the Cougars.&#13;
The Rangers' next home game&#13;
is Thursday night at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
against Loras College. Saturday&#13;
night the Rangers will host St.&#13;
Norbert College at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Phy Ed Building. &#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
ii Phase out VI&#13;
the regents at their February&#13;
meeting and then give a final&#13;
report to the board at a special&#13;
meeting before the April 15&#13;
deadline.&#13;
Regent Arthur DeBardeleben,&#13;
park Falls, objected to the April&#13;
!5 deadline, citing that the&#13;
governor's goal "could not but&#13;
result in a hasty, ill conceived&#13;
Nojix&#13;
conclusion."&#13;
asked Sj&#13;
eSP°&#13;
nded 8131 he had&#13;
asked the governor for more time&#13;
that Toe er 016 alterna«ves, but UiatLucey masted on the April 15&#13;
date Pehsek added h&#13;
hat the April 15 report is m&#13;
mtended as a dt ^ ^&#13;
r a t h e r g u 1 d el i n e -1 y pe&#13;
statements." y p&#13;
used again, a student would receive wholesale price&#13;
for the book, which is considerably less than 50&#13;
percent.&#13;
The contract between Follett Corporation, owners&#13;
of t he bookstore, and the university, prohibits the&#13;
sale of b ooks on campus by anyone other than the&#13;
bookstore.&#13;
When asked about competition on campus, Wood&#13;
stated, "I personally would like to see some form of&#13;
competition because it would keep me on my toes."&#13;
Asked if it would lower book prices, Wood stated,&#13;
"What it would really do is not allow me to be forced&#13;
to reorder books that were short in numbers for any&#13;
particular class. I could refer them to the competition.&#13;
Book prices would be about the same."&#13;
At UW-Milwaukee there is a co-op bookstore run&#13;
Mike Zannin has announced his&#13;
candidacy for State Senator from&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
by the student government. Students set their own&#13;
prices. A charge of 10 cents per book is made when&#13;
the book is brought in. An additional charge of 10&#13;
cents is made for books selling under a dollar and 35&#13;
cents for books selling over a dollar to cover employment&#13;
cost.&#13;
According to Jim Wexler, student coordinator of&#13;
the bookstore, "we have been very successful the&#13;
past couple of years, more so in the spring than the&#13;
fall."&#13;
The store gives students the opportunity to&#13;
receive more for their books than offered by the&#13;
local bookstore; it allows students to purchase&#13;
books at a lower price than at the local bookstore,&#13;
Wexler explained.&#13;
IiIm ,IHl&#13;
24 hours&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712-57th street&#13;
6&lt;58~help&#13;
Rangers rampage&#13;
The last Ranger basketball&#13;
game before the semester break&#13;
was a victory over UW-Oshkosh&#13;
which brought Parkside's season&#13;
record to 5-3.&#13;
That game marked four consecutive&#13;
wins by the Rangers.&#13;
During the semester break,&#13;
Parkside won three more times&#13;
to achieve a record of 8-3 and&#13;
seven straight wins.&#13;
The first of these was in the&#13;
Spring Arbor Holiday Tournament&#13;
in Michigan, which ran&#13;
from December 26-28. Parkside&#13;
defeated Ferris State 67-63, led by&#13;
Gary Cole with an amazing 31 of&#13;
the 67 points scored. High scorer&#13;
for Ferris was Greg McGown&#13;
with 16 poi nts.&#13;
Cole also led the Rangers in the&#13;
January 4 home game against St.&#13;
Xavier College of Chicago with 34&#13;
points. Head coach Steve&#13;
Stephens remarked, "Gary Cole&#13;
has been playing excellent ball&#13;
every game. It was just a normal&#13;
game for him."&#13;
The Rangers downed Xavier&#13;
100-76, with strong support by&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, 24 points; Bill&#13;
Sobanski, 18; and Malcolm&#13;
Mahone, 16.&#13;
Leading scorers for Xavier&#13;
were Pat Devine and A1&#13;
Nemantis, with 21 and 20 points&#13;
respectively.&#13;
The latest game was played on&#13;
January 6 against Northern&#13;
Michigan here at Parkside.&#13;
Though the Rangers were down&#13;
at the half 37-27, they came&#13;
through with a 52-point blitz in the&#13;
second half to defeat Northern&#13;
Michigan 79-73.&#13;
This blitz was led by Mike&#13;
Hanke who scored 18 of his 22&#13;
points in the second half.&#13;
The overall high scorer was&#13;
again Gary Cole who dumped 27&#13;
points, raising his season's total&#13;
to 311.&#13;
Northern Michigan held the&#13;
lead for the first 11 minutes of the&#13;
second half until the Hanke-Cole&#13;
rush took it away.&#13;
Bill Sobanski dumped in 13 o f&#13;
the remaining 30 p oints.&#13;
FOR YOUR COMPLETE&#13;
SKIING NEEDS VISIT&#13;
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</text>
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              <text>At personnel expense</text>
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              <text>TENURE&#13;
•Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 21&#13;
Tenure crunch&#13;
Breakfast of&#13;
Champions&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Robert Canary, professor of&#13;
English, described Parkside as&#13;
having a "budgetary crunch"&#13;
and said that because of this&#13;
Eugene Norwood, dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society,&#13;
told all executive committees in&#13;
the college that there is a need to&#13;
restrict tenure this year.&#13;
Canary said, "Tenure is getting&#13;
pretty difficult here. People are&#13;
being denied tenure who would&#13;
have recieved it (if they were up&#13;
for tenure) even as early as last&#13;
year."&#13;
"The horrible thing is, we had&#13;
some very good people come here&#13;
six years ago when Parkside was&#13;
growing, and now they're up for&#13;
tenure. There's an awful lot of&#13;
good people going."&#13;
He also remarked that people&#13;
are being refused tenure in those&#13;
areas which have a low&#13;
enrollment.&#13;
When questioned as to whether&#13;
the bad economic state of the&#13;
university would be cited as a&#13;
reason for denying tenure or&#13;
whether there would be mention&#13;
of this circumstance in any&#13;
records of the people who are&#13;
denied tenure, Canary replied,&#13;
"No, the official reasons will be&#13;
little, star&#13;
itow I wonder what tjou are&#13;
that the candidate wasn't good&#13;
enough in some area."&#13;
He said, "Standards in the&#13;
three areas of evaluation&#13;
(teaching, scholarly activity and&#13;
service) are being raised. The&#13;
candidates have to have a better&#13;
record than someone who came&#13;
up for tenure two years ago."&#13;
The set of tenure and&#13;
promotion rules for Parkside&#13;
which were completed last&#13;
semester are not being used for&#13;
the tenure proceedings this year&#13;
since they were never voted on by&#13;
the Faculty Senate due to&#13;
discrepancies between those&#13;
rules and the broad guidelines set&#13;
by the Regents.&#13;
These proposed rules declared&#13;
that a candidate would be entitled&#13;
to a rehearing if there were inconsistancies&#13;
between a negative&#13;
decision rendered in his case and&#13;
decisions rendered in the bulk of&#13;
similar cases.&#13;
When questioned on what&#13;
would happen to the people who&#13;
are refused tenure this year,&#13;
Canary said, "It's particularily&#13;
hard on good teachers. If you're a&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
As a result of. the merger&#13;
legislation of 1974, an Ad Hoc&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee&#13;
made up of students has been&#13;
established and is currently&#13;
working on the segregated fees&#13;
budget.&#13;
According to Gary Stewart,&#13;
chairperson of the committe, the&#13;
committee has in previous years&#13;
been made up primarily of administrators&#13;
but is now student&#13;
dominated because of merger&#13;
legislation which specifies that&#13;
students have input concerning&#13;
the allocation of segregated fees.&#13;
Only students are voting&#13;
members on the committee but&#13;
the approval of Acting Chancellor&#13;
Bauer will be required on all&#13;
budget decisions. Stewart plans&#13;
to be in constant contact with&#13;
Bauer during the entire&#13;
budgeting process.&#13;
Stewart explained that tuition&#13;
is divided into two categories;&#13;
instructional fees and segregated&#13;
fees. Segregated fees help to&#13;
finance such things as Parkside's&#13;
health service, bus service and&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
which allocates money to student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The constitution which was&#13;
proposed by Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA)&#13;
and accepted by student vote last&#13;
September, states that PSGA&#13;
shall have the right to establish&#13;
an allocations committee to work&#13;
on the segregated fees budget.&#13;
The committee is to be made up&#13;
of students elected by their major&#13;
academic divisions and an equal&#13;
number of representatives&#13;
chosen at large.&#13;
Elections for these positions&#13;
were held in November but&#13;
because there were no candidates&#13;
running under most divisions,&#13;
only three representatives were&#13;
elected to sit on the committee.&#13;
According to Stewart, the&#13;
constitutional process for&#13;
organizing the committee was&#13;
not inacted because PSGA was&#13;
Dressed for time, so Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich PSGA President&#13;
and John Kontz President protempore,&#13;
drew up a list of names,&#13;
including those of the three&#13;
elected representatives, and sent&#13;
them to Bauer who then appointed&#13;
them to the committee.&#13;
Stewart said, "The student&#13;
representatives derive their&#13;
legitimacy from the authority of&#13;
appointment by the chancellor."&#13;
Students serving on the committee&#13;
are members of various&#13;
student organizations; Gary&#13;
Stewart (vice-president of Vets&#13;
Club), Gary Petersen (Parkside&#13;
Activities Board), Hayes Norman&#13;
(president of Third World),&#13;
Jeannette Crossland (Adult&#13;
Student Association), Michael&#13;
Kopczynski (president of Varsity&#13;
Club) Chet Anderson (Vets Club),-&#13;
Eric Bingen (PSGA, Parkside&#13;
Coalition Political Congress),&#13;
Douglas Redmond (Pi Sigma&#13;
Epsilon) and Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
(president of PSGA). . "&#13;
Stewart said that Ervin&#13;
Zuehlke, assistant chancellor for&#13;
administration, Gary Goetz,&#13;
director of Budget Planning, and&#13;
Allen Dearborn, assistant&#13;
chancellor for Student Services,&#13;
are non-voting members of the&#13;
continued on page 7 .&#13;
Student implementation&#13;
Merger task forced&#13;
by J. D. Garoutte&#13;
Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in lecture&#13;
hall 105 of the classroom&#13;
bldg. there will be an open&#13;
hearing conducted by the Acting&#13;
Chancellor's Task Force on the&#13;
Implementation of Wis. Stats.,&#13;
36.09(5), better known as the&#13;
Merger Bill.&#13;
The hearing is being called so&#13;
the Task Force can obtain the&#13;
ideas of the students attending&#13;
this university and recommend to&#13;
Acting Chancellor Bauer what&#13;
the policy will be at this institution&#13;
concerning three areas.&#13;
1. Who constitutes "the&#13;
students."&#13;
2. How the segregated fee&#13;
monies shall be allocated.&#13;
3. How the students will be&#13;
involved in Faculty governance.&#13;
According to Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Student Services&#13;
Allen Dearborn, "we are concerned&#13;
with student voice in the&#13;
governance of the institution. The&#13;
committee as a whole has been&#13;
meeting for the past two weeks&#13;
but has taken no official action o?&#13;
made any motions pertaining to&#13;
this bill."&#13;
There is a procedure for&#13;
speaking at this hearing,&#13;
Dearborn said. "Anyone wishing&#13;
to speak should notify my office&#13;
in advance and register. They&#13;
will be given five minutes. If one&#13;
does not wish to speak they can&#13;
submit a written statement for&#13;
the record." There will also be a&#13;
chance for people to be&#13;
recognized from the floor if time&#13;
permits.&#13;
After this hearing the committee&#13;
will be meeting in open&#13;
session under the open meeting&#13;
law and will make motions to&#13;
provide recommendations to the&#13;
. c hancellor regarding the policy&#13;
of this campus. "It then goes&#13;
through central administration to&#13;
the Board of Regents as our&#13;
policy," said Dearborn.&#13;
Governor calls moratorium&#13;
At personnel expense&#13;
by Brenda Mead&#13;
Acting Chancellor Otto Bauer&#13;
addressed the faculty and staff on&#13;
Thursday, 16 January in the&#13;
Communicative Arts Theater.&#13;
The major announcements&#13;
concerned Governor Lucey's&#13;
budget cutting requests.&#13;
Chancellor Bauer discussed the&#13;
topical issue of possible&#13;
University closings, which should&#13;
not involve the Parkside campus.&#13;
The unpleasant information dealt&#13;
with the moratorium placed on&#13;
niring of additional faculty and&#13;
administration personnel&#13;
throughout the state university&#13;
System.&#13;
The University phase out will&#13;
probably not affect Parkside&#13;
because of it's strategic location,&#13;
the fine community relations,&#13;
and the continuous enrollment&#13;
increase.&#13;
The hiring moratorium is an&#13;
attempt to increase the overall&#13;
productivity of faculty and administrative&#13;
staff. There will be&#13;
no hiring of new personnel, the&#13;
present faculty will have to increase&#13;
work loads, and the entire&#13;
University staff will have to cut&#13;
expenses wherever possible.&#13;
Acting Chancellor Bauer&#13;
outlined five tasks for Parkside&#13;
faculty and staff to be concerned&#13;
with. 1) Reviewing the personnel&#13;
selection-retention procedures.&#13;
2) The long-range academic&#13;
planning programs. 3) The&#13;
physical planning and construction&#13;
to be completed, particularily&#13;
the Student Union and&#13;
the Modern Industry Building. 4)&#13;
The development of the students,&#13;
primarily the participation in the&#13;
Academic Skills program. 5)&#13;
Increasing favorable Community&#13;
relations.&#13;
^ US' The Parkside —&#13;
"RANGER&#13;
Acting Chancellor Otto Bauer&#13;
Claiming legitimacy&#13;
Fee voting &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1975&#13;
Who are&#13;
students?&#13;
On Thursday students will have an opportunity to&#13;
express their views on such questions as Who are&#13;
students? How s hall we spend their money? And what&#13;
say do students have in taculty affairs? If you, as a&#13;
student, have any concern on your academic affairs this&#13;
is your chance. There will be meetings after this one but&#13;
first impressions make the difference. A large turnout of&#13;
concerned students will place the Task Force on&#13;
Implementation on notice that they will be watched and&#13;
that student rights must be granted. Too often apathy&#13;
allows committees to work in the shadows of the administration.&#13;
Their decisions are based on the&#13;
knowledge of tho se in th e committee, when few students&#13;
come forth to express their views. The administration is&#13;
always present at these committ&amp;e meetings - they're&#13;
paid for it. But it takes a student with the knowledge that&#13;
what he does now, may well lock future students into a&#13;
system that denies them their rights/o come forward&#13;
and express the views of students. It is the time of&#13;
student governance at Parkside, whether the system is&#13;
one of student design or administrative desire is our&#13;
question. Will any students answer?&#13;
"Simple"&#13;
Economics&#13;
Capitalism comes to Parkside. When you've got a&#13;
product-sell it. And with the old con man's delightbetter&#13;
to sell a product you haven't got. To all you&#13;
students with white parking stickers welcome to&#13;
Parksides new economics. During our recent&#13;
registration someone in the Bursars Office decided that&#13;
it was better to sel I fourteen dol lar parking stickers than&#13;
seven dollar stickers - \ never mind if there are more&#13;
stickers than spaces. Look at all the money thats coming&#13;
in. And now that they have the money you can bet their&#13;
going to keep it.&#13;
After selling far more stickers than spaces in the&#13;
restricted white parking area the administration has&#13;
decided to condone misrepresentation and false advertising&#13;
by enlarging the white parking area. Those&#13;
people that paid hard cash for the right to park within&#13;
close walking distance of the Comm-Arts building are&#13;
now told "sorry you bought nothing." Students are toldand&#13;
forcefully-obey the regulations or pay. Who enforces&#13;
the regulations when the administration steps&#13;
outside the law?&#13;
There is still time for the administration to save some&#13;
face in this ludicrous situation-call back all the oversold&#13;
white stickers and refund the money. Those that bought&#13;
white stickers early would keep theirs and those that&#13;
bought because of the false advertising of the administration&#13;
would at least have their money if not the&#13;
product they wanted.&#13;
NOTE: Parkside offers excellent courses in basic&#13;
bookkeeping (although a basic knowledge of addition&#13;
and subtraction are a prerequisite.&#13;
The ParksideThe&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER is a wholly independent&#13;
publication of the students of the U.W. Parkside, ex&#13;
pressing the interests, opinions, and concerns of the&#13;
students, and responsible for its contents. Offices are&#13;
located in D194 LLC, U.W. Parkside, Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin 53140. Phones 553-2295, 553-2 287.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Kenneth Pestka&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Greg Hawkins&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Jeannine Sipsma M H°H %&#13;
HUMANITIES EDITOR: amy $&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Bonne Haas 1 r&lt;28*® R&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Debra Friedell \ KE&#13;
"° /&#13;
Writers: Michael Olszyk, J.D. Garoutte, Betsy Neu,&#13;
Cliff Chambers, Nathan Jones, Walt Ulbricht&#13;
Photographer: Michael Nepper&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We the tenants of Fairview&#13;
West Apartments, located at&#13;
5037-58th St., Kenosha, have&#13;
united together to fight against&#13;
unfair rent increases which have&#13;
been forced upon us by a new&#13;
owner, John J. Graham of Elm&#13;
Grove in Milwaukee.&#13;
The rent increases range from&#13;
$40 to $70 monthly and are to be&#13;
effective February 1, 1975. These&#13;
increases are not justified by the&#13;
buildings condition or warranted&#13;
by any improvements, as none&#13;
have been made.&#13;
Therefore, the tenants have&#13;
united together and have sought&#13;
legal counsel. Walter Stern will&#13;
represent the tenants of Fairview&#13;
Apartments concerning any legal&#13;
actions. The tenants have&#13;
decided to withhold all their rent&#13;
payments from the landlord by&#13;
placing them in an escrow account&#13;
at one of the Kenosha banks&#13;
until he is ready to negotiate what&#13;
we feel is a fair increase.&#13;
We tenants are willing to go as&#13;
far as an 11 percent increase for&#13;
the entire year and we stand&#13;
firm.&#13;
Some of us tenants in the&#13;
complex are presently unemployed,&#13;
some on welfare, and&#13;
even one who survives solely on&#13;
Social Security. When we were&#13;
presented with the news of these&#13;
sudden, unfair increases we were&#13;
appaled and shocked to say the&#13;
least. We are not prepared&#13;
financially to meet these increases&#13;
at a time when the&#13;
economic situation is so crucial.&#13;
This situation has placed us&#13;
tenants in a position where we&#13;
have to take food off the table to&#13;
meet our rent increases.&#13;
Has this man no knowledge of&#13;
moral rights? Here comes a man&#13;
from another city trying to take&#13;
advantage of Kenosha tenants&#13;
Are we the people of Kenosha&#13;
going to let this man act unjust&#13;
and unfairly, or are we going to&#13;
pUi,.&#13;
a s&#13;
f&#13;
op t0 his un&#13;
fair actions?&#13;
lhis is a S.I.N, (stop inflation&#13;
now). Help us with your support&#13;
now, so it won't happen to you&#13;
next.&#13;
If you are willing to support our&#13;
protest against unfair rent increases&#13;
contact Paul Fictum at&#13;
Fairview Apartments - 5037 -&#13;
58th St. Kenosha.&#13;
Your support is greatly appreciated.&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
Paul Fictum&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
AIRPORT'75&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
Theaters should be as considerate&#13;
as the airlines and place&#13;
those convenient baggies for airsickness&#13;
behind every seat. That&#13;
would give the audience a bonus&#13;
touch of realism and the chance&#13;
to politely relieve themselves&#13;
after this film.&#13;
Keeping in the profitable spirit&#13;
of epic disasters, the producers of&#13;
Airport once again exploit the&#13;
national paranoia of air travel. A&#13;
collage of humanity is assembled&#13;
(that is, everyone except an&#13;
albino transvestite dwarf) and&#13;
pushed inside a doomed 747,&#13;
bound from Washington to Los&#13;
Angeles. Somewhere near Salt&#13;
Lake City, a collision with a&#13;
small, private plane wipes out the&#13;
flight crew. Who's going to fly the&#13;
jumbo jet through the friendly&#13;
skies now?&#13;
The fate of the 120 passengers&#13;
hinges on Karen Black, the&#13;
resourceful senior stewardess&#13;
and wooden symbol of liberated&#13;
woman. Director Don Smight&#13;
emphasizes her ability in a crisis&#13;
but at the cost of her feminity or&#13;
wholeness.&#13;
Like Professor Henry Higgins&#13;
rkfrfrln8 l&#13;
c&#13;
G&#13;
"&#13;
perfect&#13;
" Liza&#13;
ulu' might righteously&#13;
^hed her troublesome feminine&#13;
behavior. Karen Black does not&#13;
develop into a greater character&#13;
she only boorows her boyfriend's&#13;
(Charlton Heston) ruggedness.&#13;
Airport is glutted with stars&#13;
Who hide behind onionskin parts&#13;
hi bno f&#13;
Swt&#13;
nson 8&#13;
ets a special&#13;
billing for being her boring self&#13;
Myrna Loy, Dana Andrews, and&#13;
.&#13;
(&#13;
r&#13;
aesar are rescued from an&#13;
elephant's graveyard of obscurity.&#13;
&#13;
Helen Reddy kicks the habit&#13;
and plays a singing nun. Linda&#13;
Blair, the most obnoxious&#13;
nonentity in the business,&#13;
duplicates another vomitgagging&#13;
act as a critically ill&#13;
kidney patient who inundates the&#13;
aisles of the first class cabin with&#13;
sickening sweetness. Reality and&#13;
illusion spin into a tasteless blur.&#13;
As usual, the plot is an implausible&#13;
string of crises instead&#13;
of solid characterizations or&#13;
penetrating situation. These lifeand-death&#13;
scenes are suppose to&#13;
test the courage and strength of&#13;
the hero(ine), but they really try&#13;
the audience's patience. After a&#13;
while, who cares if the ill-fated&#13;
plane lands safely?&#13;
I say, be merciful and put these&#13;
fools out of their misery. Let's be&#13;
honest. The real disaster with&#13;
today's flights is the six mile high&#13;
price for air fares. &#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Justice at Jackson&#13;
Although it charged Mississippi&#13;
highway patrolmen with using-&#13;
"excessive" and "deadly" force&#13;
to quell the students' May 1970&#13;
campus disturbance, a federal&#13;
appeals court nonetheless denied&#13;
damages to students killed and&#13;
wounded at Mississippi's Jackson&#13;
State College.&#13;
This seemingly contradictory&#13;
ruling is the keystone for an&#13;
upcoming appeal of the case to&#13;
the US Supreme Court, a lawyer&#13;
close to the case has revealed.&#13;
The action came in a $13.8&#13;
million suit filed on behalf of the&#13;
next of kin of two dead and three&#13;
wounded students againstmembers&#13;
of the Mississippi Highway&#13;
Patrol and the Jackson&#13;
Police Department plus the State&#13;
of Mississippi, theCity of&#13;
Jackson, and various other officials.&#13;
&#13;
The law firm that handled&#13;
much of the earlier appeal work&#13;
is expected to file a bid to argue&#13;
the case before the Supreme&#13;
Court.&#13;
The appeals court decision had&#13;
noted that two black students&#13;
died and 12 were wounded when&#13;
38 patrolmen aimed at the&#13;
students and opened fir—30 with&#13;
shotguns, five with their personal&#13;
military carbines, two with&#13;
submachineguns, and one with a&#13;
.308 rifle-for 29 seconds.&#13;
During those 29 seconds the&#13;
officers discharged from 121 to&#13;
153 rounds of ammunition containing&#13;
between 793 and 1001&#13;
separate projectiles, the court&#13;
said.&#13;
Yet the appeals court upheld&#13;
both the trial jury's decision&#13;
exonerating the lawmen from&#13;
liability and the trial judge's&#13;
ruling that the city and state were&#13;
immune from suit.&#13;
"Having found wrongful&#13;
conduct," the CPS source said,&#13;
"the Court of Appeals failed to&#13;
find anybody liable."&#13;
A second basis for the appeal to&#13;
the Supreme Court is the 14th&#13;
Amendment, which holds that&#13;
persons cannot be deprived of life&#13;
or liberty without due process of&#13;
law.&#13;
The 14th Amendment was&#13;
originally passed in order to&#13;
prevent capricious action by&#13;
states in civil rights matters, like&#13;
Jackson State, some have observed.&#13;
&#13;
But the original trial and appeals&#13;
court noted that states have&#13;
traditionally been immune to suit&#13;
under the 11th Amendment, even&#13;
though agents of the state may be&#13;
guilty of wrongful conduct.&#13;
The appeal to the Supreme&#13;
Court will argue that states&#13;
should be held accountable to the&#13;
federal government for the&#13;
protection of an individual's civil&#13;
rights.&#13;
The Mississippi shootings&#13;
occurred after two nights of rockthrowing&#13;
and minor confrontations&#13;
between law enforcement&#13;
officers and students&#13;
on the virtually all-black campus.&#13;
As a force of 69 police and&#13;
patrolmen confronted a crowd in&#13;
Leary Turns Songster&#13;
by Jon Stewart&#13;
EARTH NEWS SERVICE&#13;
Since the former acid&#13;
"visioner" and high guru turned&#13;
government informer last&#13;
summer, he has been the subject&#13;
of a smear campaign by former&#13;
friends, the focus of a major&#13;
Justice Department investigation&#13;
of t he Weathermen, the epicenter&#13;
of g ale-force rumors, and ~ most&#13;
significantly — virtually incommunicado.&#13;
&#13;
For six months, either the U.S.&#13;
Bureau of Prisons, or Leary, or&#13;
both, have resisted efforts by&#13;
Leary's friends and associates to&#13;
sit down for a face-to-face&#13;
meeting. Speculation has been&#13;
rife that Leary's exile is involuntary.&#13;
The Justice Department&#13;
and the Bureau of Prisons&#13;
insists that Leary does not want&#13;
to see anyone. Says U.S. Bureau&#13;
of Prisons spokesperson Mike&#13;
Aun, "Leary is singing. He's&#13;
talking about a multi-million&#13;
dollar drug scheme; and he&#13;
knows there are a lot of people&#13;
who want to silence him."&#13;
Nonetheless, friends of Leary,&#13;
including poet Allen Ginsberg&#13;
and daughter Susan Leary, have&#13;
retained Boston attorney Harvey&#13;
Silverglade to investigate the&#13;
possibility of filing for a writ of&#13;
habeus corpus to produce Leary.&#13;
So far, no action has been taken,&#13;
and Silverglade remains noncommital&#13;
as to whether there is&#13;
legal ground for such action.&#13;
In the meantime, Leary's&#13;
whereabouts remain top secret.&#13;
It is known that during August he&#13;
was held at a federal prison in&#13;
Minnesota, presumably to appear&#13;
before a grand jury&#13;
scheduled to convene in nearby&#13;
Chicago. That grand jury was&#13;
abruptly halted by orders from&#13;
Assistant Attorney General&#13;
Henry Peterson. Speculation was&#13;
that the investigation was put in&#13;
limbo because of an intradepartmental&#13;
investigation of the&#13;
Justice Department's bungling of&#13;
numerous recent political cases.&#13;
The Wounded Knee trial had just&#13;
been dismissed by Judge Fred&#13;
Nichol, who declared that U.S.&#13;
prosecutor Guy Goodwin and&#13;
other government attorneys had&#13;
prepared such a poor shambles of&#13;
a case that it bordered on&#13;
misconduct. Goodwin, who had&#13;
prosecuted and lost in the&#13;
Berrigan case, the Vietnam&#13;
Veterans Against the War case,&#13;
and the Leslie Bacon case, was at&#13;
the time heading the Leary investigation.&#13;
&#13;
Since Peterson resigned in&#13;
November and Goodwin was&#13;
pulled from the Leary case,&#13;
there's reason to believe that the&#13;
so-called Leary grand jury may&#13;
be reconvened somewhere other&#13;
than Chicago.&#13;
The latest word on Leary's&#13;
whereabouts was that he was&#13;
being held under "extreme&#13;
security" somewhere in the Los&#13;
Angeles area. In a recent letter to&#13;
the Los Angeles Free Press,&#13;
Leary's former associate and&#13;
known drug informer Dennis&#13;
Martino insisted that he had seen&#13;
Leary "several times" and that&#13;
he was content and happy.&#13;
Martino assailed those who had&#13;
conducted the so-called smear&#13;
campaign against Leary, including&#13;
Jerry Rubin, journalist&#13;
Ken Kelly, and Leary's son Jack.&#13;
The latest twist in the increasingly&#13;
Kafkaesque case was&#13;
revealed this month by a small&#13;
newspaper in Vaeaville,&#13;
California, home of the notorious&#13;
Vaeaville Prison where Leary&#13;
spent some time. According to&#13;
the Vaeaville Reporter, Leary is&#13;
scheduled to appear as a star&#13;
witness for the state in a case&#13;
involving a former prison&#13;
psychologist, Dr. Wesley Hiler.&#13;
Dr. Hiler was fired last fall for&#13;
allegedly smuggling a tape&#13;
recording made by Leary out of&#13;
the prison and delivering it to a&#13;
magazine editor. Dr. Hiler says&#13;
that if the state won't produce&#13;
Leary for his reinstatement&#13;
hearing on January 27th, he'll&#13;
have him subpoenaed as a&#13;
defense witness.&#13;
Dr. Hiler adds that Leary,&#13;
while at Vaeaville, had become&#13;
convinced that he had a mission&#13;
to get out of prison and to&#13;
organize a group of 5000 people to&#13;
accompany him on a space&#13;
journey in search of "higher&#13;
intelligences." Hiler maintains&#13;
that Leary sought financial aid&#13;
for the project from numerous&#13;
backers, and actually received&#13;
some support. He says that&#13;
Leary's decision to turn informer&#13;
was a result of his determination&#13;
to get out of prison and undertake&#13;
the space journey.&#13;
If Timothy Leary does make a&#13;
public appearance af the January&#13;
27th hearing in Vaeaville. it will&#13;
mark the first time since "last&#13;
summer that anyone, other than&#13;
Martino and Leary's self-styled&#13;
wife, Joanna Harcourt-Smith,&#13;
has seen him.&#13;
front of a dormitory-estimated&#13;
variously at between 40 and 400&#13;
students-a sharp sound was&#13;
heard, several of the lawmen&#13;
cried "Sniper," and the officers&#13;
opened fire.&#13;
While many involved in the&#13;
case have concluded that there&#13;
probably was a sniper, the appeals&#13;
court nonetheless said "the&#13;
barrage of gunfire far exceeded&#13;
the response that was appropriate."&#13;
&#13;
"This conclusion is not judicial&#13;
second-guessing of o fficers faced&#13;
with danger, rendered from the&#13;
quiet and safety of judges'&#13;
chambers," the appeals court&#13;
said. "It is what the evidence&#13;
shows...the fire was excessive in&#13;
volume and intensity, and the&#13;
size of the area subjected to fire&#13;
was beyond the physical limits of&#13;
justifiable response."&#13;
One of the dead students was&#13;
found behind the police line&#13;
across the street from the dormitory&#13;
where the sniper was&#13;
supposed to be. Another student&#13;
was shot while sitting in a TV&#13;
lounge. A reporter on the scene&#13;
said it appeared that the police&#13;
fired "systematically" into the&#13;
dormitory from the top lloor&#13;
down to the bottom.&#13;
The President's Commission on&#13;
Campus Unrest reported that&#13;
"the physical evidence and the&#13;
positions of the victims indicate&#13;
that the officers were firing indiscriminately&#13;
into the crowd, at&#13;
ground level, on both sides of the&#13;
street."&#13;
The President's Commission&#13;
also concluded that "a significant&#13;
cause of the deaths and injuries&#13;
at Jackson State is the confidence&#13;
of white officers that if they fire&#13;
weapons during a black campus&#13;
disturbance they will face neither&#13;
stern departmental discipline nor&#13;
criminal prosecutions or convictions.&#13;
&#13;
So far both a local and federal&#13;
grand jury have held&#13;
deliberations on the tragedy,&#13;
though neither indicted any law&#13;
officers. The local jury did,&#13;
however, indict a black man for&#13;
arson and inciting a riot.&#13;
The local jury also issued a&#13;
report stating, "WJien&#13;
people...engage in civil dis- and&#13;
riots, they must expect to be&#13;
injured or killed when law enforcement&#13;
officers are required&#13;
to reestablish order." &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan . 2 2 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
Brief News&#13;
Wednesday, January 22&#13;
WHITESKELLAR: P.A.B. Whiteskellar Coffeehouse opens its 2nd&#13;
semester programs with two hours of folk music by Terry Eliot, 11:30&#13;
am to 1:30 pm, GR, D-201, free and open to the public.&#13;
FILM: P.A.B. presents "Camelot," starring Richard Harris and&#13;
Vanessa Redgrave. 11:30 am and 7:30 pm, C.A.T., admission $1&#13;
Parkside ID required.&#13;
THURSDAY, January 23,&#13;
FILM: P.A.B. presents "Camelot," 11:30 am and 7:30 pm, C.A.T.&#13;
admission $1, Parkside ID required.&#13;
Wednesday, January 29&#13;
CONCERT: P.A.B. presents Woody Herman and his orchestra in&#13;
concert, 8:00 pm C.A.T. Parkside Jazz Band will also appear, as&#13;
opening act. Tickets are $3 for students, $4 for general public and are&#13;
available at the Information Kiosk.&#13;
A gift of $400 from several community physicians to fund scholarships&#13;
for senior pre-medical students at the University of WisconsinMadiswT&#13;
W3S a6Cepted Friday&gt; January 10 by the Board of Regents in&#13;
The regents also accepted a gift of $27 from the Parkside Concerned&#13;
Students Coalition for the purchase of p lants and shrubs for the UW-P&#13;
campus.&#13;
Remember Pi Sigma Epsilon's "Pot of Gold" penny count last&#13;
semester? The correct amount of pennies in the gallon jar was 5063&#13;
and the winners have been determined. Beth Johnson was the closest&#13;
with a guess of 5039 and received the $20 first prize, Bernadine Giriens&#13;
placed second with 5105 and won $10, and Charles A. Wortman won $5&#13;
with his guess of 5000.&#13;
Put your name and address in your books so that Lost and Found can&#13;
contact you if you lose them. All books not picked up after one week of&#13;
notification will be sold or destroyed.&#13;
Canada may soon abolish its ancient law banning the immigration of&#13;
gay people. Canadian Minister of Immigration Robert Andras has&#13;
announced that he intends to recommend to the Canadian Cabinet that&#13;
all references to sexual preference be removed from immigration law.&#13;
The announcement followed protests over the deportation of a gay&#13;
activist last September.&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
Service&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
MON. THRU THURS.&#13;
7:30 A.M.-6:30 P.M.&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
7:30 A.M.-4:30 P.M.&#13;
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AND GENERAL&#13;
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drive for&#13;
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call 553-2295&#13;
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WINES&#13;
The Way of the Pilgrim&#13;
and&#13;
The Pilgrim Continues His Way&#13;
Organized religion is presently&#13;
and fashionably out of favor. Or&#13;
perhaps i should say that&#13;
Western Civilization's contributions&#13;
to religious ideologies&#13;
are out of favor, because the&#13;
organized aspects of Eastern&#13;
Religious are increasing in their&#13;
attractiveness to people in the&#13;
Western world. Organized&#13;
religions no matter what their&#13;
origin, have promised their&#13;
followers and monitary supporters&#13;
many rewards. The most&#13;
noteworthy is some sort of&#13;
heavenly existence in the next&#13;
life. If you are a leader in a major&#13;
religion, your reward is the&#13;
earthly respect given you by&#13;
virtue of some title bestowed on&#13;
you by the religion itself; like&#13;
guru, perfect master, bishop or&#13;
patriarch.&#13;
Still, the greatest asset of any&#13;
religious concept or organization&#13;
is the belief of the masses that&#13;
continue to support it. The support&#13;
of these believers is what&#13;
lends the holiness we associate&#13;
with religions; sacredness&#13;
because of faith. The divine is not&#13;
assertainable. Yet, the divine is&#13;
believible to people who scholars&#13;
would say have no 'mind' for the&#13;
intricate philosophies that deal&#13;
with concepts of the divine.&#13;
Simple people are the beauty of&#13;
religions. Their dedication to&#13;
moral and holy ideals. Their&#13;
faith.&#13;
The idea of 'faith' is an elusive&#13;
one. As elusive as the abstractions&#13;
and unseen dieties the&#13;
believers' convictions support.&#13;
The faith of a simple man is the&#13;
force of the book The Way of the&#13;
Pilgrim and The Pilgrim Continues&#13;
His Way. These are the&#13;
spiritual discoveries of a Russian&#13;
peasant in the 18th century. The&#13;
book is translated by R.M.&#13;
French from the original Russian&#13;
document. It is an incredible&#13;
expression of struggles with&#13;
theological concepts and spiritual&#13;
destiny as examined and lived by&#13;
one individual. Not since&#13;
medieval times has such a simple&#13;
soul's quest after some sort of&#13;
Dark humor&#13;
continuous spiritual exercise by&#13;
which devotion to the divine&#13;
attains perfection, been collected&#13;
into a private diary. Church&#13;
doctors and theologians have&#13;
written extensively on the experience&#13;
of the divine, but in&#13;
terms that are inapplicable to&#13;
real or should i say ordinary,&#13;
everyday living. The terms are&#13;
as distant as the divinity they&#13;
attempt to describe. The&#13;
arguments over semantic&#13;
definition among scholars&#13;
themselves is proof enough that&#13;
the use of language in the&#13;
discussion of the spiritual is farremoved&#13;
from the grasp of the&#13;
masses of believers. The Pilgrim&#13;
is no scholar. He can not bring the&#13;
aspects of faith to universal light&#13;
like Teilhard de Chardin, a man&#13;
whose conceptions of intangibles&#13;
and humanity are themself incredible;&#13;
or Thomas A Kempis&#13;
whose Imitatio Christi (1380-1410&#13;
A.D.) offers itself as a model of&#13;
Christian living. The Pilgrim&#13;
never intended his private search&#13;
to serve as a model for others&#13;
who struggle with their actualizations&#13;
of r eligious concepts,&#13;
or are looking for some way to&#13;
put faith into operation. A&#13;
Kempis' writing is a manual of&#13;
universal Christian attitudes,&#13;
intended for mass use. But the&#13;
problems for even simple&#13;
believers revolve around individual&#13;
expression and personal&#13;
spiritual destiny. The believer&#13;
privately 'tests' himself. He&#13;
actively challenges himself to&#13;
prove his firm conviction in his&#13;
religious truths. First, he accuses&#13;
himself of imperfection and inferior&#13;
faith. He is frustrated by&#13;
the method of his communication&#13;
with the divine. He disclaims his&#13;
former self, by disclaiming the&#13;
direction of his life. His previous&#13;
life was shallow and will remain&#13;
inadequate until he has experienced&#13;
the divine.&#13;
Like Siddartha, in the Herman&#13;
Hesse novel by the same name,&#13;
the Pilgrim (his name is never&#13;
revealed) goes in search of&#13;
private and personal&#13;
spiritualism. It seems that we&#13;
associate the spiritual quest only&#13;
with the East. This is partly due&#13;
to the way we, as a Western&#13;
culture, have examined our&#13;
theologies. We disclaim the&#13;
existence of the Divine, and i am&#13;
not just speaking of God at this&#13;
point, but the idea of the Holy as&#13;
it relates to humanity; that which&#13;
is 'holy' in the human. The&#13;
Eastern view of religion does not&#13;
include the disclaiming of the&#13;
self, or the holy. All this exists,&#13;
and is not cause for the&#13;
questioning; the study or search&#13;
conerns itself with the way to&#13;
express that which is spiritual or&#13;
sacred. The expression is personal,&#13;
the method is revealed&#13;
from within and thereby becomes&#13;
individual. The Eastern masters&#13;
say you draw the knowledge from&#13;
within as from a spring and that&#13;
all knowledge vital to the person&#13;
is in the person. The way is important.&#13;
And so, pilgrims in&#13;
'faith' devote themselves to&#13;
discovering their own path to the&#13;
holy.&#13;
The Pilgrim's way is to be able&#13;
to "pray continually." His&#13;
praying is not for special intentions&#13;
or for penance, but for&#13;
the glorification of God. Like the&#13;
angels that biblical writers say&#13;
surround the throne of God and&#13;
unceasingly exlaim "Holy, Holy,&#13;
Holy....," the Pilgrim wishes to&#13;
eternally praise the Creator. In&#13;
his internal pilgrimage, he also&#13;
makes a physical pilgrimage.&#13;
This, too, seems to be common to&#13;
those in search of spiritual&#13;
fullfillment. Those whose search&#13;
becomes a matter of divine&#13;
rapture and unity with the divine&#13;
become mystics. The expressions&#13;
of their faith becomes lyrical,&#13;
poetic. The Pilgrim's diary&#13;
becomes literature, and his&#13;
language, universal. Faith is the&#13;
thing that unifies all men who&#13;
achieve the dimension of the&#13;
spiritual. This book has given the&#13;
subtle and fragile character of&#13;
belief back to the physical giant&#13;
Christiandom has become. It's&#13;
expressions are beautiful, simple&#13;
and accessible. The believers&#13;
sare the beauty of religious&#13;
communities, sustaining the&#13;
doctrines of various faiths&#13;
through their discovery of the&#13;
divine. In this they arrive at all&#13;
that is admirable in the realm of&#13;
the human.&#13;
by amy&#13;
Chafetz reviewed&#13;
by Kenneth Pestka&#13;
Harsh blacks, vivid whites -&#13;
the hammered strokes of metal&#13;
biting wood. Sidney Chafetz intertwines&#13;
humor and technique to&#13;
make stark comments on the&#13;
idiocy and weaknesses of man.&#13;
The show of prints now on&#13;
display at the Comm-Arts&#13;
Gallery is balanced between the&#13;
almost cartoon like represenClassified&#13;
&#13;
Please help- Ride needed for handicapped&#13;
student; 1 p.m. pick up at 7302 14th Ave&#13;
Kenosha and return at 3 p .m. on Mondays&#13;
and Wednesdays. Willing to pay. Please&#13;
contact Campus Health Office LLC D 198 or&#13;
call Ext. 2366 for further information.&#13;
B-25 AMPEG AMPLIFIER for sale,&#13;
slightly used. Good condition, BEST&#13;
OFFER over $250. Ph. 859 2642 or 637 3361.&#13;
We Pay Drivers&#13;
Call 5 53-2295&#13;
tations of the foibles and failures&#13;
of man's academic and political&#13;
life and Chafetz' of the strength&#13;
and character of the individual.&#13;
In "I am my own good fortune"&#13;
Chafetz presents the portrait of a&#13;
full bearded, arrogant man. The&#13;
figure stares out at the viewer&#13;
almost daring him to make some&#13;
critical comment so that the&#13;
figure could make that forceful&#13;
repartee that would cut the&#13;
viewer dead in his tracks. In this&#13;
example of Chafetz control of the&#13;
wood cut media he shows the&#13;
ability of wood to convey its&#13;
organic origin and contrast this&#13;
with the harshness of Black&#13;
against white.&#13;
This harshness of the media is&#13;
used for comic relief in "Sardat"&#13;
-- the black robed academician&#13;
tripping along with paint brushes&#13;
in hand. Chafetz shows this&#13;
figure, of evident scholarly attainment,&#13;
merrily dancing forward&#13;
to prostitue his artistic&#13;
abilities in the world of commerce&#13;
-- to join the bourgeoise.&#13;
To all of us in the academic&#13;
community Sidney Chafetz has&#13;
much to say that ridicules the&#13;
egotist in all of us. And to those&#13;
that value the individual, Chafetz&#13;
presents the strengths and needs&#13;
through his portriture.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774 &#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Plea for subtle whores&#13;
by Kenneth pestka&#13;
Subtlety, is that elusive&#13;
phantasm of delight chased with&#13;
vigor and perseverance by man.&#13;
The fine nuance that only with&#13;
effort can be discerned is the&#13;
epitome of art. Man cannot love a&#13;
whore. He must clothe her in&#13;
values beyond the physical&#13;
gratification he receives. The&#13;
obvious must be made obscure so&#13;
that only by effort is the truth&#13;
known. His physical pleasure&#13;
must be interwoven with the&#13;
mental exhileration of obstacles&#13;
overcome and dilemma resolved.&#13;
So it is, that when faced with the&#13;
subtle, man can find his&#13;
gratification in his ability to&#13;
perceive and overcome.&#13;
Humor is the commonest form&#13;
of the subtle that hides within&#13;
itself a wealth of connotations.&#13;
The story told in a dry and factual&#13;
manner, building a facade of&#13;
truthfulness which is suddenly&#13;
revealed to be a house of glass&#13;
rather than a brick highrise by&#13;
the final discovery of the truth, is&#13;
the form of most humor. The&#13;
ability to Derceive the incongruities,&#13;
connotations and&#13;
underlying truths in humor is&#13;
requirement of an audience. It is&#13;
required of the artist to utilize his&#13;
materials and mental faculties to&#13;
create a vehicle which contains&#13;
these subtle aspects. It is not the&#13;
garish statement of the vulgarly&#13;
displayed sexuality of a pornographic&#13;
movie ( although the&#13;
statements and forms may be&#13;
real) that give one an . in sight to&#13;
an ultimate truth. It is in the&#13;
presentation of the underlying&#13;
emotions that raises the blatantly&#13;
physical stimulation to a level&#13;
where physical and mental&#13;
stimulation occur as one. Humor&#13;
displays this simultaneous&#13;
arousal of physical and mental&#13;
senses. The physical response,&#13;
laughter, united with the mental&#13;
response, imagery and interconnection,&#13;
creates an art&#13;
form far more subtle and&#13;
satisfying than the physical act&#13;
of tickling.&#13;
In humor the audience is called&#13;
upon to participate in an active&#13;
manner: active in the willingness&#13;
to make the mental associations&#13;
that call forth the physical&#13;
responses. This responsibility of&#13;
the audience is called for in all&#13;
the arts. The viewer of a painting&#13;
must attempt to coordinate the&#13;
artists presentation with his own&#13;
mental images and emotions. In&#13;
this way the viewer is led to find&#13;
the underlying facets of the&#13;
painting; those facets the artist&#13;
visulaized and then attempted to&#13;
convey through the act of painting.&#13;
In the literary field an&#13;
author, if ordained with perception&#13;
and ability, can, by&#13;
searching out situations, phrases,&#13;
and patterns of composition, fully&#13;
express the obvious statement&#13;
while giving to the discerning&#13;
reader secondary and tertiary&#13;
experiences.&#13;
The secondary and tertiary&#13;
experiences, those once and&#13;
twice removed from the level of&#13;
obviousness, fall into the realm of&#13;
subtlety. The whore clothed in&#13;
fine garments, her price beyond&#13;
the reach of a poor man, holds&#13;
infinitely more fascination than&#13;
the free and easy streetwalker.&#13;
The whore's charms are more&#13;
discreetly displayed if not entirely&#13;
hidden and her attainment&#13;
far more costly. Thus the subtle&#13;
phrase, the fine nuance, is&#13;
discrete in appearance and costly&#13;
in mental exertion but the&#13;
charms hidden within are well&#13;
worth the effort.&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
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Tri 8. Sf il 11 30 AM 1?:30 A.M.&#13;
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Febuary 7,8,9 Ski Mt. La Cross&#13;
: UW-Parkside (fr&#13;
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PRICE: o b .00 p e r pers on&#13;
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ONLY$369&#13;
Sign Up at Information Desk&#13;
Limited space only 30 places remainin &#13;
•is&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday/ Jan. 22, 1975&#13;
• FREE •&#13;
Quart of 7 -up&#13;
or C ola in our&#13;
container w ith&#13;
each large&#13;
16" pizza.&#13;
"PICKED-DP"&#13;
MON., W ED.,&#13;
THURS.&#13;
For a delicious&#13;
hot pizza try&#13;
jenseiw&#13;
large cheese &amp;&#13;
sausage&#13;
on |y $430 &amp; tax&#13;
Free Delivery"&#13;
JL&#13;
Jensens'&#13;
1&#13;
Fine F ood &amp; Spirits&#13;
8021 22nd Avenue&#13;
Ph. 654-3581&#13;
"Home Ol Pma Tech Pizza"&#13;
Breakfast&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
good scholar you have it on&#13;
paper, but how do you show&#13;
someone you're a good teacher?"&#13;
Peter Martin, assistant&#13;
professor of English, said, "It&#13;
will force some people out of the&#13;
profession because it's hard to&#13;
get hired someplace else at this&#13;
time."&#13;
Martin mentioned that Norwood&#13;
had personally denied some&#13;
people tenure without going&#13;
through the usual procedure of&#13;
referring their cases to the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Committee.&#13;
He also said that Norwood&#13;
warned the Humanities&#13;
Executive Committee not to&#13;
tenure a lot of people and told&#13;
them that "tenured people would&#13;
be protected to the end (in case of&#13;
a fiscal emergency)."&#13;
One source mentioned that it's&#13;
possible that executive committees&#13;
are denying a lot of&#13;
people tenure this year because&#13;
these people who are already&#13;
NOW PAVING&#13;
5.5* 0&#13;
(Compounds A nnually to 5 .62%)&#13;
ON REGULAR ( ta j PASSBOOK&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
THRKK CM VBMBNT L OCATIONS:&#13;
II.W. P ark,side -- Room 235. Ta llenl I&#13;
ISO W . C hestnut St., B urlington&#13;
5200 W ashington A ve., R acine&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
A Different&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S ROLLER R INK&#13;
6220 -67th ST. KENOSHA&#13;
B&amp;utuuf Ut&amp; tf-medt&#13;
Pifja &amp; Stalkut Qoodl&#13;
2^29 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR. DINING ROOM&#13;
tenured don't want to risk their&#13;
jobs by putting the candidates on&#13;
their level. Parkside is having&#13;
fiscal problems and may eventually&#13;
have to declare an&#13;
emergency, in which case the&#13;
untenured people will usually be&#13;
released before those who are&#13;
already tenured, said the source.&#13;
David Beach, assistant&#13;
professor of Psychology, said&#13;
that he believed Norwood&#13;
foresaw the disciplines' urge to&#13;
tenure more faculty at this time&#13;
since tenured faculty are harder&#13;
to get rid of during a fiscal&#13;
emergency. Since Norwood's&#13;
concern is with the whole campus,&#13;
he wants to keep things open&#13;
so no department will end up&#13;
over-staffed or completely wiped&#13;
out because of an economic&#13;
emergency.&#13;
According to Canary,&#13;
"Parkside is not as bad off&#13;
(economically) as some other&#13;
UW campuses." He said the real&#13;
problem is that "people don't&#13;
want to spend tax dollars on&#13;
education as they did in the&#13;
Ws."&#13;
Free Tax&#13;
Service&#13;
Kim Baugrud, director of adult&#13;
education programs for&#13;
University of Wisconsin Extension,&#13;
announced his candidacy&#13;
for the seat of supervisor No. 1 n i&#13;
the Town of Mt. Pleasant.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
•Rock -Jazz *Pop *Folk&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
The Place to buy records&#13;
The Kenosha-Racine Voluntary&#13;
Service Committee is&#13;
establishing a service to help low&#13;
and low middle income people in&#13;
the Racine and Kenosha County&#13;
areas to: get the full benefit of the&#13;
present tax laws, by having tax&#13;
forms filled out by sympathetic,&#13;
concerned volunteers, without&#13;
fees. (Donations needed and&#13;
accepted, but not required);&#13;
become acquainted with the&#13;
government programs and with&#13;
the citizen projects and ac.tion&#13;
centers which can serve them;&#13;
become aware of their eligibility&#13;
for income maintenance and&#13;
social services available to them&#13;
that they may not know of, such&#13;
as the homestead tax relief&#13;
benefits, reduced-cost school&#13;
lunches, food stamps, medical&#13;
card coverage, etc. Many people&#13;
are not made aware that they are&#13;
eligible for such programs.&#13;
And, to build grass-roots&#13;
support for reforms increasing&#13;
justice and equity in America's&#13;
tax laws, by the use of posters,&#13;
conversation and hand-out&#13;
literature at these offices&#13;
describing inequities in our&#13;
present tax structure.&#13;
By providing a service for all&#13;
people of low and low-middle&#13;
income who wish to come, the&#13;
Voluntary Service Committee&#13;
hopes to help break down distrust&#13;
and bias between the poor and&#13;
relatively poor, America's&#13;
middle class and wage earners&#13;
who have one foot in poverty and&#13;
the other on a banana peel. They&#13;
also hope to break down&#13;
prejudices between people who&#13;
are receiving AFDC and lowincome&#13;
people who are not.&#13;
The tax-preparers will be&#13;
required to keep total confidentiality&#13;
and will not keep any&#13;
records or notes on people. The&#13;
preparers will not participate in&#13;
any evasion.&#13;
The centers are located at: 1226&#13;
State Street in Racine, the&#13;
storefront offices of the Racine&#13;
Welfare Rights Organization,&#13;
Project HELP, the Racine&#13;
County-Wide Housing Coalition&#13;
and the Legal Action Coalition;&#13;
6603 26th Ave. in Kenosha, the&#13;
offices of the Kenosha Action&#13;
Center which also houses United&#13;
Migrant Opportunity Service and&#13;
the Kenosha Spanish Center, as&#13;
well as the Welfare Rights&#13;
Organization in Kenosha and the&#13;
Child Care Service Project; and&#13;
the third center will be a moving&#13;
one located at Paddock Lake,&#13;
Bristol, Twin Lakes, and Wilmot&#13;
in Kenosha County, and at&#13;
Burlington in Racine County.&#13;
The Racine and Kenosha offices&#13;
will be open at the same&#13;
time, evenings from 7:00 to 9:30&#13;
p.m. and on Saturday afternoons&#13;
from 1 to 5 p .m.&#13;
The dates for the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Centers will be:&#13;
January - 21 and&#13;
28 (Tuesdavs)&#13;
February - 4, 8, 11, 15, 18, 22,&#13;
and 25 (Tuesdays and Saturdays)&#13;
March - 1, 8, 11, 15, 18,&#13;
22 ,25 , and 29 (Tuesdays and&#13;
Saturdays)&#13;
April - 1, 3, 5, 8, 10, 12, and&#13;
15 (Tuesdays, Thursdays and&#13;
Saturdays)&#13;
Thq west of 1-94 Project will be&#13;
held on Wednesday nights 7:00 to&#13;
9:30 p.m.:&#13;
January 29 - Christ Lutheran&#13;
Church, Paddock Lake&#13;
February 12 - Bristol Methodist&#13;
Church, Bristol&#13;
February 26 - S.E. Wis.&#13;
Housing Corp., 320 N . Pine St.,&#13;
Burlington&#13;
March 12 - Messiah Lutheran&#13;
Church, Twin Lakes&#13;
March 26 - 320 N . Pine St.,&#13;
Burlington&#13;
April &lt; and 9 - 320 N. Pine St.,&#13;
Burlington&#13;
April 14 - Wilmot Lutheran&#13;
Church, Wilmot&#13;
Contacts&#13;
1. General Information: Racine&#13;
Urban Ministry, 815 Silver Street,&#13;
Racine, Wi. 53404, Phone: Racine&#13;
637-9651, Kenosha 552-7966.&#13;
2. Chairpersons: Dr. John&#13;
Merrick (Kenosha), Phone&#13;
(office) 658-2566, (home) 654-&#13;
4851; Dorothy Gustavson&#13;
(Racine), Phone (home) 639-&#13;
6951; Susan Hohn Ellsworth (W&#13;
og 1-94), Phone (home) 889-4746.&#13;
3. Scheduling Coordinator:&#13;
Tom Speaker (Kenosha), Phone&#13;
(office) 654-2816, (home) 652-0457.&#13;
Old&#13;
IWs&#13;
66&#13;
r&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap at the Union 99&#13;
pab presents&#13;
January 29th&#13;
8:00 p.m. Comm. Arts Theatre&#13;
$3.00 U W-P Students&#13;
$4.00 General&#13;
Tickets at the Info. Center &#13;
Wrestlers in&#13;
dual meet&#13;
weane sday, Jan. 22, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
The dual meet portion of its&#13;
schedule begins Friday for the&#13;
Parkside wrestling team when&#13;
the Rangers host UW-LaCrosse in&#13;
a dual at 3 p.m. in the Phy Ed.&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
The Rangers, who finished&#13;
second to UW-Whitewater in the&#13;
Carroll Invitational last&#13;
weekend, will also compete in a&#13;
dual-type affair Saturday,&#13;
meeting UW-Milwaukee, UWOshkosh&#13;
and Southern IllinoisCarbondale&#13;
in triple-dual action&#13;
at Milwaukee. Each team in that&#13;
meet will vie against each other.&#13;
In LaCrosse, Parkside will be&#13;
facing a young and largely untested&#13;
squau that is coached by A1&#13;
Freeman, coach at Kenosha&#13;
Tremper High School last year.&#13;
Parkside finished 7-4-1 in dual&#13;
action last year and Coach Jim&#13;
Koch is banking on his undefeated&#13;
trio of Bill West (11-0,&#13;
142lbs.), Randy Skarda (10-0, 150&#13;
lbs.) and Rich Baron (10-0, 158&#13;
lbs.) to pace the Rangers in duals&#13;
this campaign.&#13;
Koch will g0 with the following&#13;
jeu?&#13;
The Parkside dual lineup with&#13;
season records following :U8&#13;
K&gt;ch Schaumberg, junior&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) (10-2); 126 -&#13;
(Trl a&#13;
?&#13;
0&#13;
' Senior&#13;
T&#13;
' Kenosha remper) (7.3). 134; Joe&#13;
(Tr#&gt;rn&#13;
FS&#13;
' \ JUni0r&#13;
' Kenosha (Tremper) (ll-l); i42: Bill West&#13;
senior, Kenosha (Tremper) (n0);&#13;
150: Randy Skarda, senior,&#13;
Coleman (10-0); 158: Rich Baron&#13;
junior, Kenosha (Tremper) lol&#13;
pl'if' Dave Wagner, freshman,&#13;
Peshtigo (5-4); 177: Jim Van&#13;
Dyke, freshman, Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) (0-2); or Rick Kubiak,&#13;
freshman, Pulaski (5-3)- 190-&#13;
Brad Freberg, junior, Racine&#13;
(Case) (2-5); HWT: to be&#13;
determined.&#13;
Constance Jensen Cummings has joined the student services staff at&#13;
Parkside as a general and academic counselor. She also has&#13;
responsibility for the Adult Student Program.&#13;
Cummings received her master of science degree in education with&#13;
a concentration in counselor education from Southern Illinois&#13;
University' (SIU). Her previous counseling posts have been with SIU&#13;
and the Madison County (111.) Department of Mental Health.&#13;
REGULAR SCHEDULE&#13;
Voting&#13;
Buildihg Hours&#13;
Gymnasiums&#13;
Pool Hours&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday Thursday,&#13;
Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
Sunday&#13;
8:30 am-9:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-4:30 pm&#13;
6:00 pm-9:30 pm&#13;
^thletic team practice occupies the gyms from 3:30 pm to&#13;
/.30 pm Monday-Friday.&#13;
-Intramural basketball uses two courts on Sunday and&#13;
Wednesday nights, 7:30 to 9:30 pm.&#13;
Monday • Thursday,&#13;
Friday &amp;. S aturday&#13;
Sunday&#13;
11:30 am-1:30 pm and&#13;
6:30pm-9:00pm (tentative)&#13;
11:30 am-2:30 pm&#13;
6:00 pm-9:00 pm&#13;
continued from page l&#13;
committee with Zuehlke and&#13;
Goetz as sources for budget information.&#13;
&#13;
This ad hoc committee was&#13;
described by Stweart as a&#13;
''transitional type thing" in that&#13;
it is now a student rather than&#13;
administrative committee but&#13;
the process whereby it was&#13;
organized doesn't follow the&#13;
guidelines set in the PSGA&#13;
constitution.&#13;
Stewart said, "The success or&#13;
failure of this committee will&#13;
affect the chances of later&#13;
student committees."&#13;
All organizations requesting&#13;
segregated fees must have done&#13;
so by Jan. 16 and must have a&#13;
representative appear before the&#13;
committee to substantiate their&#13;
request. The Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee must complete the&#13;
segregated fees budget and have&#13;
the chancellor's approval by&#13;
February l. The budget will then&#13;
be sent to central administration&#13;
for approval.&#13;
The committee's meetings are&#13;
open to the public. There will be a&#13;
meeting Wednesday Jan. 22 at&#13;
7:30 a.m. in room D-174 of the&#13;
LLC.&#13;
Monday-Thursday 8:30am-9:30pm (not open on.Mon. 8. Wed&#13;
till 10:30 am)&#13;
Friday 8. Saturday 8;30 am.4:30 pm&#13;
Sunday 6:00 pm-9:30 pm&#13;
Weight-training Room Hours same as building hours above&#13;
Human Performance Lab Hours by appointment-call 553-2245 for Dr. Grueninger&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS&#13;
These events will alter the above regular scheduling as listed.&#13;
Sat. Jan. 25- Basketball vs. Northland 7-30pm&#13;
Tues. Jan. 28 Basketball vs. Indiana Siate-Evansville 7 30pm&#13;
Wed. Jan. 29 Wrestling vs. Carthage College 8 00 pm&#13;
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• ••••&lt; it &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1975&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens called&#13;
his team "poised and confident"&#13;
Thursday night after completing&#13;
their 9th straight win against the&#13;
Loras College Duhawks with a&#13;
score of 102-72.&#13;
The Rangers took it upon&#13;
themselves to show the Duhawks&#13;
they had no claim to supremacy&#13;
over their home court as they&#13;
opened the scoring and led to the&#13;
finish.&#13;
Leartha Scott dazzled the fans&#13;
with 39 points for the Rangers&#13;
while the Duhawks attended to&#13;
every move made by Gary Cole.&#13;
Out with back to back fouls&#13;
during the first half Cole dumped&#13;
a total of 12 points and Malcolm&#13;
Mahone backed up the team with&#13;
were Bob Wagner with 22 and&#13;
Mike Weeber with 16.&#13;
Stephens was concerned with&#13;
temporarily sidelined Bill&#13;
Sobanski but hopes to see him&#13;
back in action soon. Sobanski is&#13;
out with a spasm in his back.&#13;
Stephens hoped the team&#13;
doesn't become "overly confident"&#13;
but says "we are&#13;
definately much stronger with&#13;
Marshall Hill and Leartha&#13;
Scott."&#13;
Saturday nights action led to a&#13;
final score of 96-54 over St.&#13;
Norbert College. This sets the&#13;
record thus far at 11 wins and 3&#13;
loses.&#13;
The Rangers will travel to UWGreen&#13;
Bay on Tuesday and&#13;
return home to challenge Northland&#13;
College on Saturday, Jan.&#13;
25 at 7:30 p.m. in the Phy. Ed&#13;
:orer: Bide.&#13;
YOUR KIND&#13;
ARE </text>
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