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              <text>"Students" discussed by Task Force</text>
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              <text>Opinions on Merger Bill?&#13;
II Students" discussed by Task Force&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The open hearing of the Task&#13;
Force o'n Implementation of&#13;
36.09(5), Wis. Stats, was called to&#13;
order with an assemblage of 15&#13;
people.&#13;
The purpose of the open&#13;
hearing was to give students an&#13;
opportunity to voice their&#13;
opinions on how that section of&#13;
the Merger Bill should be implemented&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
Allen Dearborn, assistant&#13;
chancellor for Student Services,&#13;
said, "I can't understand why the&#13;
student government isn't here or&#13;
the student organizations. We&#13;
have two members of student&#13;
government but we're missing&#13;
the president (Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich, president of&#13;
Parkside Student Gov.'t&#13;
Association) who's a member of&#13;
this committee."&#13;
Dearborn said that the topics&#13;
which the hearing would be&#13;
concerned with were: the&#13;
definition of "students" in the&#13;
Merger Implementation Act, the&#13;
allocation of student fees and the&#13;
role of students in faculty&#13;
governance.&#13;
He announced that each&#13;
student would have 5 m inutes in&#13;
which to speak.&#13;
Only one student, Edward&#13;
Arndt, senator of PSGA, spoke at&#13;
the hearing.&#13;
Arndt stressed the need for&#13;
student representation on&#13;
committees dealing with faculty&#13;
tenure.&#13;
He recommended that 3&#13;
student representatives sit on the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division and that&#13;
5 representatives sit on each of&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
•Wednesday, January 29, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 22&#13;
Students battle student*&#13;
Conflicts in PSGA&#13;
Michael Oszyk&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
Since the ratification of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association, Inc. constitution in&#13;
September, there have been&#13;
political conflicts between the&#13;
legislative and executive&#13;
branches in PSGA.&#13;
Specifically, differences have&#13;
arisen over who has authority to&#13;
make amendments to the constitution.&#13;
&#13;
The senate believes that they&#13;
have primary responsibility in&#13;
making constitutional proposals&#13;
whereas Dennis Milutinovich,&#13;
president, supports working with&#13;
an outside studentadministrative&#13;
committee, the&#13;
Merger Implementation Task&#13;
Force.&#13;
The conflict is further compounded&#13;
by personality clashes&#13;
between Milutinovich and certain&#13;
senators in PSGA.&#13;
In early January, Milutinovich&#13;
physically attacked John Kontz,&#13;
president pro tempore of the&#13;
senate, on a dispute over the&#13;
process to be used in sending&#13;
senate constitutional amendments&#13;
to the assistant chancellor.&#13;
Allen Dearborn and eventually to&#13;
the Task Force.&#13;
Milutinovich was officially&#13;
reprimanded for attacking Kontz&#13;
through a substitute motion&#13;
passed during a senate meeting&#13;
on Thursday, Jan. 16. There were&#13;
eight senators voting yes, three&#13;
no and two abstentions.&#13;
A censure motion introduced&#13;
by Joyce Jansen earlier at the&#13;
meeting was defeated. It called&#13;
for the immediate resignation of&#13;
Milutinovich.&#13;
"For the past three weeks this&#13;
organization has come to the&#13;
brink of destruction," said Kontz.&#13;
"Tensions between the&#13;
legislative and executive&#13;
branches have increased to the&#13;
point where they are now intolerable.&#13;
At least six senators&#13;
have been driven to the brink of&#13;
resignation. These tensions have&#13;
been the direct result of&#13;
disagreements between the&#13;
president and the senate."&#13;
Kontz said that Milutinovich&#13;
has accused him of being on an&#13;
"ego centered power trip."&#13;
"Everytime the president gets&#13;
oppostion from the senate it's&#13;
called a power play or power&#13;
politics. Members of the senate&#13;
are accused by the president of&#13;
being mucous minded, gossip&#13;
spewing, voyeurs who will use&#13;
anything as an excuse to get what&#13;
they want."&#13;
Meanwhile, Milutinovich&#13;
charged that the senate and&#13;
Kontz in particular have been&#13;
% negligent in keeping a journal of&#13;
the senate's proceedings, which&#13;
is required by the constitution.&#13;
According to Milutinovich&#13;
there are approximately eight&#13;
untyped minutes to senate&#13;
meetings since the constitutional&#13;
referendum in late September.&#13;
Milutinovich said that business&#13;
that has transpired during these&#13;
meetings has not been recognized&#13;
as legal motions made by the&#13;
senate.&#13;
In October, the senate appointed&#13;
students to serve on&#13;
various university committees.&#13;
However, the students have not&#13;
taken their seats on the committees&#13;
because the appointments&#13;
were never presented&#13;
to Milutinovich and approved by&#13;
the chancellor.&#13;
"As a student legally I would&#13;
have the right to take PSGA to&#13;
the divisional executive committees.&#13;
&#13;
Walter Feldt, assistant&#13;
professor of Engineering Science&#13;
and member of the Task Force,&#13;
pointed out that some executive&#13;
committees would have a&#13;
majority of students if there were&#13;
5 representatives on each&#13;
committee.&#13;
The open hearing adjourned 7&#13;
minutes after it was called to&#13;
order.&#13;
Dearborn said that the Task&#13;
Force will now proceed to draw&#13;
up a list of recommendations for&#13;
the implementation of the section&#13;
of the Merger Bill 36.09(5).&#13;
"The recommendations will be&#13;
submitted to Otto Bauer, Acting&#13;
Chancellor, on January 29 and&#13;
submitted to the Board of&#13;
Regents for approval no later&#13;
than February 15," said Dearborn.&#13;
&#13;
The Task Force, which, according&#13;
to Dearborn, was&#13;
selected by Bauer along with&#13;
PSGA, consists of Dearborn,&#13;
Feldt, and three students; Carol&#13;
Merrick, Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
and Lee Wagner.&#13;
WET DIAPERS?&#13;
court because it has violated nonstock&#13;
corporate laws," Kai Nail,&#13;
president of the Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition, pointed out.&#13;
"Announcement of meetings&#13;
and setting agendas for all the&#13;
senators are some of the things&#13;
that have not been done according&#13;
to law."&#13;
Milutinovich agreed with Nail&#13;
saying that, "we are all a part of&#13;
student government, we are all&#13;
here to represent the students&#13;
and we haven't been doing it."&#13;
"The majority of students on&#13;
this campus do not relate to this&#13;
organization as being viable:&#13;
they do not relate to it as being&#13;
representative," was another&#13;
comment expressed by Tom&#13;
Kennedy, a former senator of&#13;
PSGA.&#13;
A present senator of PSGA,&#13;
Debora Donatt, said that "all of&#13;
us are at fault for not really doing&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Tenants picket because of rent increase. Additional photos on page 3.&#13;
Rent strike explained&#13;
J. D. Garoutte&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
There is a rent strike&#13;
in Kenosha which, according to&#13;
Paul Fictum, spokesman for the&#13;
strikers, could have great implications&#13;
for the entire city of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Fictum has acquired the&#13;
services of Walter Stern, a&#13;
Kenosha lawyer, who recommended&#13;
forming a tenant's union&#13;
in an attempt to get uniformity in&#13;
rent increases in Kenosha.&#13;
Fictum said, "After talking to&#13;
some people who live in Parkside&#13;
Village, this tenant's union would&#13;
help them a lot. According to&#13;
these students I talked to, the&#13;
buildings are terribly over priced&#13;
for the condition they are in."&#13;
The strike, which is being held&#13;
by a group of renters from the&#13;
Fairview West Apartments, is&#13;
the result of a rent increase of $40&#13;
to $70 per month.&#13;
The increase was brought&#13;
about by the new owner, John&#13;
Graham of Elm Grove in&#13;
Milwaukee, who bought the&#13;
apartment complex this month.&#13;
Fictum said, "We feel the'&#13;
improvements in the complex do&#13;
not warrant the increase in rent&#13;
and therefore we are outwardly&#13;
expressing our displeasure."&#13;
The strike which started&#13;
several weeks ago will probably&#13;
not be settled until the February&#13;
rents are due. Fictum said, "we&#13;
have placed our rents in escrow&#13;
as of January, plus an 11 percent&#13;
increase which we feel as a group&#13;
is more than fair. We're hoping to&#13;
go to court and see if the courts&#13;
can decide if this increase is&#13;
really warranted."&#13;
Fictum explained that feelings&#13;
around the city are mixed, most&#13;
people are waiting to see whati&#13;
happens with this situation before&#13;
they commit themselves.&#13;
Fictum would rathernot&#13;
go to court. He said, "I wish the&#13;
owner would see our problems&#13;
and allow us to stay at the present&#13;
price because a lot of these&#13;
people are layed off of their jobs&#13;
with many more expecting lay&#13;
offs in the near future. We just&#13;
could not pay the increase as it is&#13;
now." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER/ Wednesday/ January 29, 1975&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Phantom&#13;
Leader&#13;
(Who knows what lurks&#13;
in the meeting rooms?)&#13;
Parkside's Merger Implementation Task Force met&#13;
Thursday to answer the question: Who are students?&#13;
Well, if on e goes by the turnout of students at the Task&#13;
Force open hearing one would think Parkside consisted&#13;
of Faculty, Administration, a few PSGA members and&#13;
no students.&#13;
But we know there are students out there--we see them&#13;
sucking coffee in the cafeteria-scratching in notebooks&#13;
in the classrooms. But then we can't expect students to&#13;
be any better than their leader, the President of the&#13;
student body-he spent his time in a Campus Planning&#13;
Committee meeting rather than attending the Task&#13;
Force.&#13;
When the majority of students are given the opportunity&#13;
to present themselves and state their position, do not&#13;
appear, one can only assume that those that did not&#13;
appear do not have an opinion.&#13;
And so at Parkside we have that "silent majority"--&#13;
silent because they are either unwilling or unable to&#13;
form an opinion-any opinion.&#13;
It falls to a handful of student activists on this campus to&#13;
carry the burden of r epresenting student opinion to the&#13;
administration and faculty. To that handful of students&#13;
we say "Thank You," if it weren't for them there would&#13;
be no expression from the student body. And to those&#13;
that don't like the opinions expressed-tough-if you&#13;
don't like it do something about it. Get up and say your&#13;
piece, make your ideas a part of Parkside. To those that&#13;
sit there silently-you had your chance.&#13;
MISSION?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Mission on Parkside's&#13;
campus is totally ignorant, inane,&#13;
assholular, etc. A public&#13;
university has no right to cut out&#13;
humanities and communications&#13;
which are important aspects to&#13;
the community and human&#13;
beings. A p ublic university must&#13;
be balanced in its interests for&#13;
students.&#13;
If Parkside is to survive, it&#13;
offer all subjects, not just&#13;
business and modern industry&#13;
classes. The whole campus&#13;
community will become stale in&#13;
thoughts and action without the&#13;
Arts. What will happen to&#13;
students with an interst in art?&#13;
They must go elsewhere, if of&#13;
course they have enough money&#13;
to move to Madison or wherever,&#13;
and if they like that type of a&#13;
living situation.&#13;
Do not people see that people in&#13;
the arts are very useful in society&#13;
as well as business people? One&#13;
balances with the other, one&#13;
needs the other.&#13;
Parkside should 'get it all&#13;
together' and grow up well&#13;
balanced;furthuring the needs of&#13;
students and community.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Debora Donatt&#13;
Senator&#13;
must&#13;
11 Lots" of Stupidity&#13;
22 January 1975&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Your editorial of January 22nd&#13;
explained to me why I and&#13;
probably about 50-100 other&#13;
people received parking tickets&#13;
in the Union lot on January 21st.&#13;
Apparently, in order to disguise&#13;
their overselling of $14. white&#13;
parking tags, somebody came up&#13;
with the brilliant idea of changing&#13;
the designation of half of the&#13;
Union lot. So they put up two little&#13;
signs with one inch high letters&#13;
(not very obvious to those&#13;
rushing to their 8:30 a.m.&#13;
classes) and immediately began&#13;
spewing out $3. violation tickets&#13;
to those cars with red tags, the&#13;
owners of which, incidentally,&#13;
had parked legally in the lot since&#13;
last semester.&#13;
I have never had any objection&#13;
to the Administration of this&#13;
University-in fact, I think that its&#13;
the best-run. most-helpful&#13;
bureaucracy I've ever run&#13;
across~but I think it should&#13;
review the equity of its Union lot&#13;
decisions.&#13;
In addition to the many people&#13;
who received what I feel to be&#13;
unfair fines (in lieu of a simple&#13;
notification of their newlydeclared&#13;
violation), many others&#13;
are now paying $14. to park in&#13;
spots several feet closer than&#13;
those costing $7.&#13;
Jay Grassell&#13;
Faith. Hope and Charity&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is a desperate plea for&#13;
assistance and help from the&#13;
charitable members of the&#13;
Parkside community. Due to the&#13;
capriciousness of the Racine&#13;
Municipal Court, I am faced with&#13;
the unpleasant prospect of&#13;
spending ten days in the Racine&#13;
City Jail unless I can come up&#13;
with $40.00 Ransom by March 1st.&#13;
Being a poor destitute student,&#13;
I am beside myself with grief and&#13;
worry. If any Parkside student&#13;
could afford a small donation to&#13;
my bail fund I would be forever&#13;
grateful. Contributions will be&#13;
most appreciatingly accepted in&#13;
the RANGER office. Contact&#13;
Greg Hawkins.&#13;
I am (will be?), forever grateful&#13;
Thomas Graddy Kennedy III&#13;
When Knighthood was in flower&#13;
Dear Dr. Greenebaum:&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
We the undersigned, feel that&#13;
Dr. Homer Knight is a very&#13;
valuable and knowledgeable&#13;
teacher in the field of analytical&#13;
chemistry. He dedicates much of&#13;
his time and energy to the Quant&#13;
Lab and to students participating&#13;
in various independent study&#13;
programs. We feel it would be a&#13;
great loss to the university and a&#13;
mistake on your part if he shoudl&#13;
have to leave.&#13;
We also feel that you should&#13;
take into consideration the recent&#13;
edit implying no vacancies in the&#13;
university will be filled in the&#13;
coming year. If we loose Dr.&#13;
Knight, our analytical chemist,&#13;
Unknown to PAB,&#13;
who then would be as qualified on&#13;
the present staff to take over?&#13;
Without a well qualified instructer&#13;
in this area, students&#13;
majoring in chemistry, pre-med&#13;
or medical technology would be&#13;
at a great disadvantage.&#13;
sincerely,&#13;
Editors Note: This letter was&#13;
signed by more than 25&#13;
Chemistry Majors.&#13;
NOTICE TO ALL READERS&#13;
If you are going to submit items for publication in the&#13;
RANGER, we would like to request that they be typed,&#13;
double-spaced, and delivered to our office NO LATER&#13;
than 9 a.m. on the Friday before the desired date of&#13;
publication. If for any reason you are unable to do this,&#13;
please contact the RANGER one week before the date&#13;
the item is to appear.&#13;
The ParksideThe&#13;
PARKSI DE RANGER i s 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, 553-2 287.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Kenneth Pestka&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Greg Hawkins W&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Jeannine Sipsma om NOM *&#13;
HUMANITIES EDITOR: amy 8 TuSKr!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Bonne Haas ^ J&#13;
-&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
A*&#13;
HE MO&#13;
Writers: Michael Olszyk, J.D. Garoutte, Betsy Neu,&#13;
Cliff Chambers, Nathan Jones, Walt Ulbricht&#13;
Photographer: Michael Nepper&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
My name is Natasha Foiling. I&#13;
am an active member of the&#13;
Third World Organization and I&#13;
am also a student representative&#13;
on the Search and Screen&#13;
Committee for the Chancellor.&#13;
In reading an article in the 1-15-&#13;
75 issue of the Ranger, I noticed it&#13;
was not expressed clearly as to&#13;
how I was elected to the Search&#13;
and Screen Committee. Let me&#13;
make it clear right now.&#13;
I was elected by the Third&#13;
World Student Organization, to&#13;
contend as a candidate for the&#13;
Search and Screen Committee for&#13;
the Chancellor.&#13;
I was told that I was to write a&#13;
short biography on myself and&#13;
my accomplishments till present&#13;
and present the material to the&#13;
PAB office. I did just that.&#13;
I was told at the PAB office that&#13;
my biography would be considered.&#13;
I asked how I would be&#13;
contacted in case my biography&#13;
was accepted and was then instructed&#13;
to leave my telephone&#13;
number. I did just that.&#13;
A week went by and PAB gave&#13;
me no response.&#13;
Arlene Martin, Vice President&#13;
of Third World Organization and&#13;
also a student government&#13;
senator informed me on a social&#13;
encounter that a PAB member&#13;
told her my biography had been&#13;
rejected on the grounds that I&#13;
•"didn't know enough people".&#13;
This was not only an invalid&#13;
reason, but even so, should this&#13;
necessarily be a criteria of&#13;
selection?&#13;
Anyway, student government&#13;
held an election for the names of&#13;
nominees to be sent to Madison&#13;
and all student organizations&#13;
were involved, and each&#13;
organization made their&#13;
nominations. My name was on&#13;
the list of students that were sent&#13;
to President Weaver in Madison.&#13;
I was informed by letter later&#13;
that I had been appointed to the&#13;
Search and Acreen Committee by&#13;
President Weaver.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Natasha Foiling&#13;
Knightly support&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Concerning the Tenure Faculty&#13;
Division committee's decision&#13;
and their comments on the tenure&#13;
of Dr. Knight, I have some&#13;
comments. The TFD committee's&#13;
decision not to grant&#13;
tenure was very close (8-6). The&#13;
executive committee of the&#13;
Science division had recommended&#13;
that tenure be granted.&#13;
At the TFD's open hearing the&#13;
students in attendance were&#13;
generally overlooked.&#13;
The statement overheard&#13;
(attributed to a "no" vote)-"with&#13;
all that expensive chemistry&#13;
equipment up there, how come&#13;
Dr. Knight doesn,t t publish&#13;
more." I can answer that-it is&#13;
because Dr. Knight spends 95&#13;
percent of his time helping&#13;
students and teaching instead of&#13;
furthering his own ego. The point&#13;
is as long as teachers (only) have&#13;
the power to hire-fire teachers&#13;
they will not use teaching as the&#13;
major criteria. When students&#13;
have a real say (as the Merger&#13;
Law states they should) in tenure&#13;
decisions, then teaching will play&#13;
a major role in those decisions&#13;
Chemistry is divided into four&#13;
major areas-Organic, Inorganic&#13;
Physical, and Analytical. If we&#13;
lose Dr. Knight, we have no one&#13;
who is qualified to teach&#13;
Analytical Chemistry. It would&#13;
be the same as telling potential&#13;
chemistry, pre-med, and med&#13;
tech. students that you can only&#13;
learn three-fourths of your&#13;
chemistry at Parkside and you&#13;
will have to go somewhere else&#13;
for the other one-fourth. Under&#13;
recent statements made by the&#13;
governor and chancellor, no one&#13;
new can be hired-i.e. no new&#13;
analytical chemistry professors.&#13;
If you want to destroy the&#13;
chemistry department at&#13;
Parkside and get rid of a man&#13;
who has three times as many&#13;
students on independent study as&#13;
most other teachers and is a&#13;
damn good teacher-then don't&#13;
grant tenure to Dr. Knight.&#13;
Parkside has a record of&#13;
removing the cream and giving&#13;
us students the skim milk.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
Chemistry Major &#13;
Wednesday, January 29, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
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RIGHT Paul Fictum spokesman for&#13;
group.&#13;
Conflicts continued from page 1&#13;
our jobs. Yet, there are alot of&#13;
people on campus who are trying&#13;
to help us and they want us to&#13;
continue."&#13;
"I'd like to stick together to&#13;
but, if the conditions are such&#13;
that it's not getting better and&#13;
things aren't getting done, then&#13;
there's no point in staying&#13;
together," remarked Eric&#13;
Bingen, a senator of PSGA.&#13;
"In the situation where a&#13;
person is choking, you're saying,&#13;
'go ahead and breath'. But he's&#13;
saying, 'I can't, I have a bolder in&#13;
my throat'. Now this thing has&#13;
come to a head and it has to be&#13;
resolved."&#13;
"The point of whether we really&#13;
were or are or could ever be able&#13;
to compromise with each other&#13;
again, is open to alot of doubt,"&#13;
Kontz said about Milutinovich.&#13;
"I for one am tired of being&#13;
accused of playing power politics&#13;
by the president, I am tired of&#13;
being verbally and physically&#13;
assaulted by the president and I&#13;
am tired of watching senators be&#13;
intimidated by the questionable&#13;
methods of the president."&#13;
Donatt disagreed with Kontz,&#13;
saying that, "I really don't think&#13;
it's quite fair to impeach or "ask&#13;
someone to resign because of an&#13;
emotional outburst."&#13;
"I for one have not been intimidated&#13;
by anyone, be it other&#13;
senators or the president."&#13;
Keith Chambers, a former&#13;
senator, said that one of the&#13;
reasons he resigned from PSGA&#13;
was that he "couldn't stand to&#13;
come and sit through marathon&#13;
meetings of three hours and&#13;
spend two and a half of those&#13;
hours discussing each others&#13;
personalities."&#13;
"There's alot of business to be&#13;
done and as a student I'd like to&#13;
see student government start&#13;
getting to that business."&#13;
"If you can't get on with the&#13;
show then the administration will&#13;
have to make some other&#13;
arrangements for representation&#13;
of students on this campus,"&#13;
Dearborn told the PSGA.&#13;
Nail commented that PSGA&#13;
has received approximately&#13;
$1,600 from the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee and $500 in additional&#13;
money lend to them for this&#13;
academic school year.&#13;
"Now of all that money, I would&#13;
like the senate to come up with&#13;
one project where the students&#13;
have benefited by what you've&#13;
done.&#13;
"As a student, I just don't see&#13;
how anyone that knows anything&#13;
'about PSGA and how they&#13;
operate, can ever except you as a&#13;
viable student government."&#13;
SME awarded&#13;
scholarships&#13;
Susan Shemanske&#13;
RANGERStaff&#13;
FOR YOUR COMPLETE&#13;
SKIING NEEDS VISIT&#13;
1101 N . M ain St. Racine&#13;
633-5244&#13;
The Sales and Marketing Executives (SME) of Racine and Kenosha&#13;
awarded six $50 scholarships to outstanding students at "Education&#13;
Night" held January 20 in the Library Learning Center cafeteria.&#13;
Parkside's Bob Petrouske and Bob Unger were among those&#13;
receiving the awards at the dinner-meeting. The Parkside chapter of&#13;
Pi Sigma Epsilon, a national marketing fraternity, jointly sponsored&#13;
the evening with SME.&#13;
SME awarded the scholarships to the outstanding sales and&#13;
marketing students from the area's three educational institutions:&#13;
Parkside, Carthage and Gateway.&#13;
Jeffrey Anderson and Sharon Robly of Carthage and Carol Propson&#13;
and Kathy Neitzel of Gateway also received scholarships.&#13;
Dr. Shelby Hunt, chairman of the Marketing Department at UWMadison's&#13;
School of Business, addressed the group of about 60&#13;
executives, students and faculty members. Hunt subsituted as a guest&#13;
speaker for UW Chancellor Edwin Young, unable to attend because of&#13;
illness.&#13;
Hunt spoke of an "Era of S carcity" and the implications shortages&#13;
would have on marketing- He warned, "We're in for some bad times&#13;
and things are going to get worse before they get better."&#13;
Parkside's Gamma Beta chapter of Pi Sigma Epsilon was chartered&#13;
in March 1974. PSE presently has 16 members. Professor Richard&#13;
Yanzito is the club's adviser.&#13;
In its first nine months PSE has undertaken several projects including&#13;
the schoolwide promotion of career day ("Fix on the Future")&#13;
held on April 9,1974, a survey for the Adult Student Program in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha counties, a General Public Attitundinal Survey and most&#13;
recently a new member drive and iniation program.&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, January 29, 1975&#13;
Brief News&#13;
Meetings&#13;
The Camera Club will hold an organizational meeting on Jan. 31, at 2&#13;
p.m. in LLC D-174. Availability of darkroom space and scheduled&#13;
Photo-Art show will be discussed. For further information contact&#13;
Philip Livingston at 652-6340.&#13;
PEOPLE FOR A NON-SEXIST SOCIETY: Meetings will be held&#13;
Thursday and Friday in room LLC 173 at 12:30.&#13;
Entertainment&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29: P.A.B. Whiteskellar coffeehouse&#13;
presents Mike Massa, from the Id and Eggo coffeehouse in&#13;
Milwaukee, performing very original folk and blues, 11:30-1:30, GR&#13;
D201. Free and open to the public.&#13;
Concert: P.A.B. presents Woody Herman and his orchestra in&#13;
concert, 8 p.m., in the Comm Arts Theater. The Parkside Jazz Band&#13;
will provide the opening act. Tickets are $3 for students, $4 for general&#13;
public, and are available at the Info Kiosk.&#13;
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1: P.A.B. and Carthage College are cosponsoring&#13;
a dance, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., here in the S.A.B., with music by&#13;
Farm. Admission $1.25. So if you're tired of the same old bodies, be&#13;
there! Parkside or Carthage and state I.D.'s required.&#13;
Courses &amp; Clinics&#13;
An "Anti-Cram Clinic" will be held next week to provide college&#13;
students with hints for more effective studying. The first in a series of&#13;
three study-skills workshops, the topic will be How To Take Class&#13;
Notes. It will be offered in the Library on Monday, Feb. 3, 3:30-5 p.m.&#13;
and repeated on Tuesday, Feb. 4, 7:30-9 p.m.&#13;
The next workshop, scheduled for the week of Feb. 10, will be concerned&#13;
with Preparing For Exams (essay and multiple choiceobjective).&#13;
The dates for the last workshop, Term Paper Research,&#13;
will be announced.&#13;
The sessions are being sponsored by the Adult Student Association,&#13;
in cooperation with the Library.&#13;
Phyllis Lidberg of the ASA explained that many students who have&#13;
not been in school for awhile feel out of practice in taking notes and&#13;
studying, and quite apprehensive about exams and term papers.&#13;
"Even freshmen just out of high school are worried about exams and&#13;
don't know where to start with a research paper, but the adult&#13;
students' fears are sometimes intensified by their absence from a&#13;
school environment for a number of years."&#13;
Lidberg added that the sessions are open to all interested students,&#13;
but asks that people wishing to attend sign up at the Information&#13;
Center in Main Place so clinic coordinators will know how many to&#13;
expect. Participants will meet at the Library Circulation Desk at the&#13;
scheduled time.&#13;
The sessions are geing conducted by Carla Stoffle of the Library, Jo&#13;
Herrick of the Learning Center, and A1 Grace of the Academic Skills&#13;
Program. Stoffle and Herrick taught a one-credit Study Skills class&#13;
last semester ; Grace currently is currently teaching such a course.&#13;
The Campus Security Department is again offering the National&#13;
Safety Council's Defensive Driving Course for those employees or&#13;
students who have not had the opportunity to take the course.&#13;
The course will be presented at Classroom Building, Room No. 149, on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 8, 1975, starting at 8:30 a.m. The class should' be&#13;
completed at approximately 2:30 p.m.&#13;
For informational purposes, the film "Signal 30," considered to be&#13;
repulsive by many individuals, is no longer being shown as part of the&#13;
Defensive Driving Course.&#13;
Appointments&#13;
Health&#13;
"Safe Snowmobiling" is the Health-Line Highlight for January 24&#13;
"^&#13;
Call 553-2588 to hear taped tips on safe, sensible, and responsio e&#13;
snowmobiling. . f&#13;
Health-Line Highlights is a free, 24-hour service of the University- ot&#13;
UW-Madison Center for Health Sciences, and is supported by the&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Medical Program. It is sponsored in this area by&#13;
UW-Parkside.&#13;
A new recorded message begins at 4 p.m. each Friday.&#13;
P.S.G.A. News&#13;
There are currently vacancies in the following P.S.G.A. Inc. Senate&#13;
Seats: Labor Economics Division, Humanities Division, Social&#13;
Science Division, and one "at large" seat. These vacancies will be&#13;
filled through appointments by the President Pro Tempore of the&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. Senate, John Kontz. Such Senate appointments must be&#13;
confirmed by a majority vote of the entire Senate. Any students who&#13;
are interested in being appointed to one of these Senate seats should&#13;
contact John Kontz at the P.S.G.A. INC. office, LLC D-193, or call 553-&#13;
2244.&#13;
Deadlines&#13;
Deadline for student teaching applications for Fall Semester 1975. or&#13;
Summer 1975 is February 3. Applications and information available in&#13;
GRQ 210 (phone 553-2305).&#13;
Deadline for intern teaching applications for Fall Semester 1975 and&#13;
Spring Semester 1976 i s February 3. Applications and information&#13;
available in GRQ 210 ( phone 553-2305).&#13;
Information sesgion on teaching internships through the Wisconsin&#13;
Improvement Program will be held Monday, February 3, at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
in CL D113. Program will include a panel of former interns. Information&#13;
available in GRQ 210 (phone 553-2305).&#13;
Student Staff directories are still available (free) at the information&#13;
kiosk.&#13;
Racine experiment;&#13;
Intensive care&#13;
for delinquents&#13;
"Joy&#13;
of Sex"&#13;
EARTH NEWS&#13;
What may turn out to be the&#13;
most controversial book of 1975 is&#13;
a children's book called "Show&#13;
Me." Its editor, Paul De Angelis&#13;
of St. Martin's Press, describes it&#13;
as a sort of "Joy of Sex" for&#13;
children.&#13;
The book, which features large&#13;
and elegant photos of lots of&#13;
naked kids, is designed as a&#13;
serious sex education manual.&#13;
The big difference between it and&#13;
other attempts is that the photos&#13;
depict children engaged in what&#13;
some folks will almost certainly&#13;
consider pornographic activities.&#13;
In a style written for children,&#13;
the text discusses the entire&#13;
range of human sexuality in&#13;
blunt, no-nonsense language. De&#13;
Angelis admits that the book will&#13;
stir controversy when it's&#13;
released in May. But he says the&#13;
publisher is confident that it will&#13;
pass all legal tests, and major&#13;
retailers are already beginning to&#13;
order it. The book originally&#13;
appeared last year in West&#13;
Germany where it weathered a&#13;
serious court challenge as obscene.&#13;
It went on to become a&#13;
strong best seller there following&#13;
dismissal of charges.&#13;
Prof. Paul Kleine, chairman of the education division at the&#13;
University of WisconsinpParkside, is one of 29 persons appointed by&#13;
UW System President John Weaver to a study committee to make&#13;
recommendations on how to "phase out, phase down or consolidate"&#13;
existing physical facilities and programs in the system.&#13;
The committee was formed in response to a request from Governor&#13;
Patrick Lucey to UW Regent President F.J. Pelisek asking such a&#13;
study.&#13;
The committee includes student, faculty and administration&#13;
representatives from the various units of t he university and members&#13;
of the central administration. It is chaired by UW System Senior Vice&#13;
President Donald K. Smith.&#13;
Betsy Neu&#13;
RANGER Staff&#13;
The Racine County Juvenile&#13;
Probation Department is experimenting&#13;
with a new concept&#13;
called the intensive caseworker.&#13;
The department employees&#13;
eight court workers (or probation&#13;
officers) and one supervisor.&#13;
While seven of these court&#13;
workers carry a case load&#13;
averaging sixty-three clients, the&#13;
other court worker has a small,&#13;
intensive case load of twelve to&#13;
fifteen clients.&#13;
The position of intensive&#13;
caseworker was created to offer&#13;
a small number of clients the&#13;
frequent and sometimes' day-today&#13;
contact they need.&#13;
A1 De Maio, the intensive&#13;
caseworker, said that the one&#13;
thing each of these clients has in&#13;
common is a "poor self-image".&#13;
According to D Maio, when most&#13;
of these clients are referred to&#13;
him by one of his colleagues, the&#13;
teenager often feels that he is of&#13;
little worth or importance to his&#13;
family and peers.&#13;
De Maio stated that a great&#13;
deal of attention on a one-to-one&#13;
basis is necessary before the&#13;
client begins to feel his selfyou'll&#13;
love it.&#13;
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confidence returning. With the&#13;
return of self-confidence comes&#13;
the ability to cope with problems&#13;
in the home, at school and at&#13;
work.&#13;
He described one client six&#13;
months ago, whom we shall refer&#13;
to as "John", as being "hell-on&#13;
wheels", involved heavily in the&#13;
drug scene, and suffering from&#13;
frequent depression. He would&#13;
accept no responsibility for the&#13;
problems in his personal life, but&#13;
preferred to let his temper flare&#13;
and blame those nearest at hand&#13;
for his hassles. John was also&#13;
having trouble at school and&#13;
coped with it only by being&#13;
consistantly truant and spending&#13;
his days in front of the television&#13;
set.&#13;
De Maio contructed a case plan&#13;
that called for the two of them&#13;
spending time together, not only&#13;
in the office but in the. more informal&#13;
and comfortable atmosphere&#13;
of their homes and&#13;
local restaurants. The aim of&#13;
these informal meetings was to&#13;
establish a mutual respect&#13;
relationship.&#13;
According to De Maio, John in&#13;
the last six months has responded&#13;
verv positively . His attendance at&#13;
school and at his job has been&#13;
consistent. As his temper has&#13;
cooled, so he is now able to&#13;
calmly discuss and work out his&#13;
hassles on his own.&#13;
De Maio said the first step to&#13;
this was for the caseworker to&#13;
take a "low-key approach"&#13;
towards the client. Within a short&#13;
time John saw De Maio as a nonthreating&#13;
entity. Unlike most&#13;
authority figures in his life John&#13;
perceived De Maio as neither a&#13;
critic nor as a prying detective.&#13;
De Maio emphasized that in&#13;
cases like this, acceptance and&#13;
encouragement are paramount.&#13;
He feels that a client with a "poor&#13;
self-image" will only begin to&#13;
accept himself when others are&#13;
accepting him.&#13;
He also said that encouragement&#13;
too, leads to a&#13;
better self-image. As De Maio&#13;
and John spent time together, De&#13;
Maio often expressed praise for&#13;
John's achievements, small and&#13;
large.&#13;
De Maio has also worked with&#13;
John's mother. He states that&#13;
John's mother has learned to&#13;
have a more open attitude&#13;
towards John., to talk over their&#13;
disagreements and to trust John&#13;
with the family car and other&#13;
responsibilities.&#13;
When asked how he would like&#13;
to see the intensive caseworker&#13;
concept developed, De Maio said&#13;
that it would be ideal to have&#13;
three or four court workers,&#13;
carrying a small case load of ten&#13;
to twelve clients.&#13;
He also said that a woman and&#13;
a black intensive case worker are&#13;
needed, because they would be&#13;
better qualified to relate to&#13;
problems that are unique to&#13;
women and blacks. He said that a&#13;
woman case worker in this&#13;
position would be helpfulin&#13;
another capacity. De Maio explained&#13;
that since so much time is&#13;
spent with the client out of the&#13;
office, a chaperone of some sort&#13;
is necessary if it is a female client&#13;
and a male case worker that are&#13;
meeting to talk. At this time the&#13;
possibility of additional intensive&#13;
caseworkers is undecided but De&#13;
Maio and his supervisor are both&#13;
enthusiastic over the idea.&#13;
More news briefs&#13;
Kaliedoscope Radio is having an open house, Wednesday, February&#13;
5th from 1:30-4 pm. in CA. D157. We would like to show you around the&#13;
studios and get you acquainted with our programming. So come one&#13;
come all&#13;
Pictured above are Douglas Redmond (right), president of Pi Sigma&#13;
Epsilon and former Racine mayor, Kenneth Huck: in a photo from the&#13;
fraternity's awards banquet.&#13;
Fnianeml Aids applications now available for 75-76 terms. Priority&#13;
date for submission is April 1st. &#13;
Wednesday January 29 1975 THE PARKSIDERANGER 5 Student exchange&#13;
ends at U.C.&#13;
..THE only \ REASOIV HE'D SEE *the&#13;
^TOWERING&#13;
JJ INFERNO" %AFTER THOSE ^reviews.is&#13;
y)fT FEATURES&#13;
O H E -&#13;
/ \THI&#13;
•f \&#13;
H 0 T 6J&#13;
[ 1HIGH/&#13;
EARTH NEWS&#13;
A ten-year old faculty and&#13;
student exchange program&#13;
between the University of Chile&#13;
and the University of California&#13;
has been indefinitely suspended&#13;
as the result of alleged political&#13;
harassment by officials of the&#13;
Chilean military junta.&#13;
The program was founded in&#13;
j964 with a $1 million-a-year&#13;
grant from the Ford Foundation.&#13;
It was designed principally to&#13;
expose Chilean academics to&#13;
graduate study in the United&#13;
States in preparation for teaching&#13;
careers in Chilean universities.&#13;
The program has involved both&#13;
faculty and student exchanges.&#13;
The suspension came when&#13;
information reached University&#13;
of California officials that a&#13;
participant in the program, Dr.&#13;
Boris Chornik, physics professor&#13;
at the University of Santiago and&#13;
a U.C.-Berkeley graduate, had&#13;
been arrested by the junta's&#13;
him.&#13;
Following several appeals to&#13;
the Chilean government for&#13;
ecplanations, U.C.L.A. Chancellor&#13;
Charles Young, who&#13;
directs the program at U.C.,&#13;
announced that he had wired the&#13;
University of Chile to announce&#13;
an indefinite suspension of the&#13;
program until the two issues can&#13;
be resolved.&#13;
H Said Chancellor Young,, "We&#13;
believe this situation constitutes&#13;
a threat to (the) continued ability&#13;
to obtain and maintain wellqualified&#13;
professionals with the&#13;
University of Chile."&#13;
Chilean students and faculty&#13;
members currently enrolled&#13;
under the program on University&#13;
of California campuses will be&#13;
allowed to continue their&#13;
studeies. There currently are no&#13;
California students or faculty&#13;
engaged in the program in Chile.&#13;
South readys&#13;
for deseg. drive&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
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PIZZA&#13;
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eliminate segregation. Most of&#13;
the proposals, Griffin says,&#13;
contain admission tests that fail&#13;
to account for cultural differences.&#13;
And, he notes, many of&#13;
the plans don't provide the level&#13;
of financial aid needed by many&#13;
black students.&#13;
Black colleges, in particular,&#13;
have been opposed to full&#13;
desegregation. While they are&#13;
willing to admit some white&#13;
students, they fear that full&#13;
desegregation would destroy the&#13;
unique role they have played in&#13;
the education of black&#13;
Americans. And, they fear that&#13;
their campuses would become&#13;
second-rate institutions because&#13;
they would have to compete with&#13;
the larger, more established&#13;
white colleges and universities&#13;
for both students and funds.&#13;
Nonetheless, the HEW activities&#13;
could mean a drastic&#13;
change in the make-up of&#13;
Southern universities in the not--&#13;
too-distant future. Already, the&#13;
state of Louisiana is being sued&#13;
by the U.S. government for&#13;
failure to submit a desegregation&#13;
proposal.&#13;
by George Wood&#13;
EARTH NEWS SERVICE&#13;
(EARTH NEWS) -- The next&#13;
big desegregation drive is&#13;
shaping up against Southern&#13;
universities. While Southern&#13;
elementary and secondary&#13;
schools have cooperatied with&#13;
desegregation orders handed&#13;
down in recent years, most&#13;
universities and colleges in the&#13;
Zouth are still 90 to 95' percent&#13;
white. The Southern population is&#13;
only about 80 percent white.&#13;
Of the three dozen or so formerly&#13;
all black colleges in the&#13;
region, at least two dozen are still&#13;
90 p ercent black.&#13;
Now, the U.S. Department of&#13;
Health, Education, and Welfare&#13;
has decided to finally begin&#13;
carrying out an 18-month old&#13;
federal court order to- cut off&#13;
federal aid to 10 Southern and&#13;
border states with less than fully&#13;
desegregated systems of higher&#13;
education.&#13;
According to the executive&#13;
director of the Southern&#13;
Educational Foundation, John&#13;
Griffin, few of the integration&#13;
proposals submitted so far by&#13;
Southern states would really&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, January 29, 1975&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
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groups. Send name, address,&#13;
phone, school, resume, leadership&#13;
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Foreign Study, P.O. Box 606, Ann&#13;
Arbor, MI 48107.&#13;
Editor's note this is the first&#13;
article in a two-part series&#13;
covering the activities of&#13;
Parkside's Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition. RANGER hopes to&#13;
feature other organizations in the&#13;
upcoming months, so that&#13;
students are introduced to the&#13;
personalities involved in the&#13;
groups that concern themselves&#13;
with students and campus&#13;
welfare at U.W.P.&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 Eighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
'ACROSS FROM UNION PARK"&#13;
A Different&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S ROLLER R INK&#13;
6220-67th ST. PH. 652-8198 KENOSHA&#13;
'•Dicqnis&#13;
'•Financed&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Membpr of Federal Fteserve System • Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp&#13;
by amy&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
RANGER conducted an interview&#13;
last week with three&#13;
members of the Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition (C.S.C.) The&#13;
reporter spoke with Cliff&#13;
Chambers, who resigned last&#13;
Wednesday (Jan. 22) as vicepresident,&#13;
but is remaining a&#13;
member; and Janet Scott, the&#13;
chairperson for C.S.C.'s Campus&#13;
Affairs Committee: and later,&#13;
with Chambers and . Kai Nail,&#13;
president of the Coalition&#13;
seperately.&#13;
C.S.C. is currently on the verge&#13;
of actualizing some projects that&#13;
have been months in the planning&#13;
stages. These projects include a&#13;
Student Food Co-op and Financial&#13;
Aids Counselling Committee.&#13;
The difficulty in ever establishing&#13;
services of this proportion on the&#13;
campus is sizable, and since&#13;
C.S.C. is a relatively new&#13;
organization on campus,&#13;
RANGER felt it would be interesting&#13;
both to student's and&#13;
other student organizations to&#13;
trace the evolution of this group,&#13;
their decisions on policy and the&#13;
present directions they are&#13;
channelling their efforts in.&#13;
Background information on the&#13;
origin of the Concerned Student&#13;
Coalition was told by Cliff&#13;
Chambers, who was one of the&#13;
original founders of the C.S.C.&#13;
Chambers: In the spring of 1974&#13;
there was an issue on this campus&#13;
that dealt with the construction of&#13;
the present Comm-Arts and&#13;
Classroom building, parking lots.&#13;
Many people were involved in a&#13;
petition drive and were concerned&#13;
with the physical state of&#13;
the campus. At this time I encountered&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich,&#13;
the president of P.S.G.A. Dennis&#13;
and I wanted to activate the&#13;
campus. The first step would be a&#13;
political step. The ISSUE was the&#13;
parking lots. We organized&#13;
ourselves. We were concerned&#13;
about the University, and so&#13;
Dennis, myself, and a few other&#13;
students formed the C.S.C. We&#13;
would run candidates. P.S.G.A.&#13;
was the vehicle to help accomplish&#13;
our goals. We became&#13;
politically successful and drew&#13;
the largest voter turnout in the&#13;
school's history. Then, the&#13;
Coaltition went to other area's.&#13;
We generated interest from nonpolitical&#13;
students. At this time the&#13;
Coalition was looking for a&#13;
president. Kai Nail joined the&#13;
group and everyone was aware&#13;
that he had leadership potentials.&#13;
The members of the Coalition&#13;
proposed an Ecology Day Benefit&#13;
Concert for the summer. We&#13;
acted on this in order to raise&#13;
money for plants on the campus.&#13;
The Coalition hit a plateau in the&#13;
summer, during which various&#13;
ideas were proposed for future&#13;
projects. Food Co-op, Women's&#13;
groups, Minorities, Financial&#13;
Aids and. Housing were&#13;
suggested. Later, during the fall&#13;
semester, the Women projects&#13;
and the Minorities information&#13;
idea were dropped because&#13;
People for a Non-sexist Society&#13;
and Third World were formed,&#13;
and duplication of the activities&#13;
of organizations became a major&#13;
issue and occupied a great deal of&#13;
the Coalition's time. We also:&#13;
were undergoing a structural&#13;
reshaping internally.&#13;
Members of the Coalition don't&#13;
feel they are a governing body,&#13;
but rather an organization that&#13;
gives support to individuals and&#13;
individual causes. Chambers&#13;
called the group "the alternative&#13;
organization."&#13;
RANGER: I know that you are&#13;
involved in he t Food Co-op, which&#13;
we will discuss later, but what&#13;
other projects are you involved&#13;
in?&#13;
Seott: Financial Aids Counselling&#13;
Committee is just starting.&#13;
They will be there to advise&#13;
those interested in obtaining&#13;
monies from this student service.&#13;
There's a lot of money no one's&#13;
getting and we ant to show people&#13;
north&#13;
side&#13;
location&#13;
Presents&#13;
their Annual Efih. Sale&#13;
Our Haircuts are Beautiful&#13;
Specialized&#13;
in Men's and Women's Styling&#13;
[George's Beauty Salon&#13;
Phone:637-6305&#13;
506 Goold St,&#13;
Racine, Wis&#13;
the options that are open.&#13;
The Financial Aids service offered&#13;
by the C.S.C. is designed to&#13;
help students get through the&#13;
forms that must be filled out. 75&#13;
percent of the students on this&#13;
campus never even apply for&#13;
financial aid of any kind. Individuals&#13;
who are familiar with&#13;
the forms will donate hours in&#13;
order to make this process&#13;
easier.&#13;
The Coalition will hold regular&#13;
office hours for this service on the&#13;
third floor of the Library's west&#13;
side. They will try to keep&#13;
statistics of the students that&#13;
avail themselves of this service.&#13;
A projected goal for this service,&#13;
is that Financial Aids will take&#13;
this service over and adopt it if&#13;
they see the proportion of interested&#13;
students increasing.&#13;
Those individuals that work with&#13;
students are going to get students&#13;
through the forms in a decided&#13;
time limit of 15 minutes. The&#13;
more students apply for financial&#13;
assistance, the more money will&#13;
be given to the campus to&#13;
distribute to the students.&#13;
RANGER: With projects that&#13;
require planning and active&#13;
participation by those hoping to&#13;
accomplish some goal, individuals&#13;
are obviously investing&#13;
a good deal of time: and since&#13;
motiviating people on this&#13;
campus has always been a major&#13;
obstical for organizations to&#13;
overcome, I'm interested in&#13;
learning how you view student&#13;
apathy.&#13;
Scott: It is difficult to motivate&#13;
people on the campus. Things&#13;
take time. I f you want to show&#13;
something physical to the&#13;
students that you have invested&#13;
time in, and hope they will, it&#13;
must be well-planned so that it&#13;
lasts. We try to present students&#13;
with a sign of activity. Hopefully&#13;
this will encourage activity on&#13;
their part. Many people become&#13;
disillusioned with groups. Some&#13;
think that organizations are&#13;
exclusive or little cliques.&#13;
¥&#13;
TO;&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
SPRINGBREAK TRIP&#13;
lilEXiCO&#13;
CITY&#13;
MARCH 30 - APRIL 6&#13;
ONLY$274 COMPLETE&#13;
includes&#13;
• Round Trip Jet A irfare&#13;
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• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tips &amp; T axes&#13;
1* or application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
^AMPUSTRAVELCENTER&#13;
LLC I)-197 Call: 553-2294 &#13;
Wednesday, January 29, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
future projects&#13;
Chambers: I think the composition&#13;
of the Coalition is different&#13;
than that of the campus in&#13;
general. We have workers-doers.&#13;
We try to support each other&#13;
internally. Within the Coalition&#13;
(and you must remember the&#13;
very title of the organization-for&#13;
Concerned Students-people with&#13;
different directions and personalities,&#13;
bonded by the&#13;
Coalition to accomplish the tasks&#13;
they plan) we aren't so diverse&#13;
we can't see the tasks we startthrough.&#13;
Another reason the&#13;
organization works well is&#13;
because no single personality or&#13;
group within the Coalition&#13;
dominates the others. We've had&#13;
no serious internal disagreements*&#13;
&#13;
Scott: Another thing is that we&#13;
don't have a rigid format at our&#13;
meetings.&#13;
-=SL_&#13;
Chambers: Meetings are announced&#13;
at least two days in&#13;
advance. We have never had a&#13;
closed meeting. Any member&#13;
present can vote on any action&#13;
proposed. I think members&#13;
realize the importance of their&#13;
vote. Anyone attending our&#13;
meetings can participate in the&#13;
Coalitions discussions on&#13;
business and projects. I feel that&#13;
the reason our meetings are&#13;
friendly and more like a conversation&#13;
between interested,&#13;
intelligent persons, is because of&#13;
Kai's leadership and levelheaded&#13;
approach to things.&#13;
Scott: The leadership of an&#13;
organization is extremely important.&#13;
An organization functions&#13;
because of good leadership.&#13;
Kai is an excellent organizer. He&#13;
sees things in a vast way, an&#13;
honest way. Students have&#13;
financial problems, job&#13;
problems, and academic&#13;
problems. He looks at them with&#13;
all these factors in mind. He's&#13;
also a good listener. If an issue&#13;
arises that causes dissention in&#13;
the group or between members,&#13;
Kai looks at all aspects and tries&#13;
to satisfactorily resolve the&#13;
away °&#13;
f letting jt fade&#13;
RANGER: What do you feel&#13;
are the reactions of other&#13;
organizations and the administration&#13;
in relation to C.S.C&#13;
Chambers: I think the P.A.B is&#13;
slightly jealous of the Coalition,&#13;
r or instance, when we threw the&#13;
Ecology Day Concert, we saw the&#13;
burecratic runaround we would&#13;
get into if we held the event on&#13;
campus. So, we took it off&#13;
campus. We took a detour and&#13;
gave Parkside student's an event&#13;
in a different environment. The&#13;
P.A.B., because of affliation,&#13;
can t take these kind of detours.&#13;
They're locked into certain&#13;
channels.&#13;
Vet's Club gives a grudging&#13;
respect to us. During the planting&#13;
of trees on campus, we had a&#13;
decent encoutner with them. I&#13;
believe that, though everyone&#13;
didn't agree with us on the&#13;
parking lots, they respect our&#13;
opinions on the issue. We aren't&#13;
afraid to ask for advise, or go off&#13;
the campus to get this advice.&#13;
Scott: I think the administration&#13;
respects the&#13;
Coalition. We aren't defensive or&#13;
antagonistic.&#13;
Chambers: We make promises&#13;
of some sense and do our best to&#13;
keep them.&#13;
Next week RANGER'S conversations&#13;
with Kai Nail and Cliff&#13;
Chambers on the interal&#13;
workings of the organization and&#13;
on the Food Co-op project will be&#13;
printed, as the second article in&#13;
this series.&#13;
SORRY 'BOU T THAT&#13;
The moratorium that was called last week on the&#13;
hiring of any full time staff was not the idea of Governor&#13;
Lucey as the RANGER story of last week stated. The&#13;
moratorium was the idea of Acting Chancellor Otto&#13;
Bauer in response to preliminary signals on the&#13;
Governor's budget that will be released today. Sorry&#13;
'bout that Guv...&#13;
-f + Gregory J. Hawkins Managing Editor&#13;
make&#13;
•adate&#13;
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RANGER&#13;
NEEDS&#13;
DRIVERSWRITERS&#13;
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ph. 553-2295&#13;
roller skate&#13;
SHOW COLLEGE I.D. &amp;&#13;
SKATE FOR $1.25 ANY LATE&#13;
WEEKEND SESSION.&#13;
THURS. 9:15-11:15&#13;
FRI.&amp; SAT. 9:30-11:30&#13;
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Mon. thru Fri.&#13;
10 A.M. -&#13;
4 P.M.&#13;
Located on Concoursi&#13;
between Library&#13;
^learning center 3&#13;
Greenquist Hal&#13;
A BUS TRIP&#13;
to the&#13;
Parkside v.s.&#13;
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Feb. 4&#13;
*3.50 includes&#13;
bus ticket&#13;
&amp; game&#13;
TICKETS AT INFO DESK W SIGN UP NOW&#13;
LIMITED SEATS AVAILABLE &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, January 29, 1975&#13;
Grapplers meet&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The Parkside Wrestling Team&#13;
will host its first meet ever with&#13;
Carthage College tonight at 8:00&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
On February 1 the Rangers will&#13;
host their final home meet for the&#13;
season at 12:00 noon with Eastern&#13;
Illinois, Augustana College and&#13;
Michigan Tech with a triple dual.&#13;
This date has been designated&#13;
as Bill West and Randy Skarda&#13;
Day, as the two senior defending&#13;
National Champions will be&#13;
wrestling their last home meet.&#13;
West is currently leading the&#13;
team as the defending National&#13;
Champion with an undefeated&#13;
streak of 41 matches. Skarda is&#13;
11-3, but has been slowed by an&#13;
injury.&#13;
The Rangers are currently&#13;
ranked number three nationally&#13;
in the NAIA and have set their&#13;
goal on winning the National&#13;
Championship which is scheduled&#13;
for March 6,7 and 8 at Sioux City,&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
Pool league started&#13;
There will be an intramural pool league starting on February 4 and&#13;
February 5, to be played at the Pub and Grub. Play will be from 1/30 to&#13;
4:30 for the day that the person signs up. Cost will be 35 cents per&#13;
game, and three games will be played.&#13;
If interested please call Loran Hein at the Phy Ed Bldg ext 2162 or&#13;
2245 and leave your name and the day that desire to play.&#13;
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL&#13;
The intramural basketball department opened up its 13-team league&#13;
on Sunday and its 4-team league on Wednesday. Here are Sunday's&#13;
results: The Dribblers over IBM 43-27; the Gang losing to the Bombers&#13;
29-48; the Obnoxious slipping past Rooty Toots 47-43; the Ardvarks&#13;
beating the Panthers 59-41; Sigma Pi losing to the Tinhorns 52-55; and&#13;
Yantze Kiang demolishing the Jefferson Starship 86-13.&#13;
The results in Wednesday's league: the Net Swishers beating the Go&#13;
A's 39-34; and the Vets Club downing the Staffers 35-27.&#13;
Top scorers in league play were:&#13;
Jeff Christensen 28&#13;
Phi Onosko 24&#13;
Tom Nelson 20&#13;
Pete Woods 18&#13;
Tom Barnhill 18&#13;
Sfofa&#13;
194 &amp; 50&#13;
* Presents •&#13;
TRAVIS&#13;
FRIDAY, JANUARY 31st.&#13;
Friday FREE Admission With&#13;
UW-P Student I.D.&#13;
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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1st.&#13;
UNCLE SAM&#13;
* COMING *&#13;
Sunday, February 9 th&#13;
TRUC&#13;
SeMuna the. QUteit&#13;
Pvyja &amp; Oialuut tyoodi.&#13;
&amp; ~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
Lumberjacks&#13;
toppled&#13;
by Bonne Hass&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Saturday nights basketball&#13;
action led the Rangers to their&#13;
13th consecutive win against the&#13;
Northland College Lumberjacks&#13;
with a score of 74-55.&#13;
The Rangers played a patient&#13;
first half while the Lumberjacks,&#13;
from Ashland Wisconsin,&#13;
demonstrated player control and&#13;
stalling.&#13;
"We played more to stay close&#13;
than we did basketball,"&#13;
remarked Ranger coach Steve&#13;
Stephens.&#13;
A half time score of 33-20 introduced&#13;
a strong 2nd half for the&#13;
never trailing Rangers as they&#13;
showed no sympathy for the&#13;
Lumberjacks.&#13;
They advanced as a team with&#13;
remarkable poise and vitality.&#13;
The Lumberjacks were busy&#13;
"double teaming Gary Cole and&#13;
Leartha Scott, leaving Malcolm&#13;
Mahone and Stevie King wide&#13;
open," said Stephens.&#13;
Mahone shot 12 of his 16 game&#13;
points in this period with utmost&#13;
control while Marshall Hill&#13;
plucked 7 of his 10 totaled&#13;
rebounds off the boards.&#13;
The Rangers outrebounded&#13;
Northland 28-18.&#13;
Hill and Cole dumped 17 and 13&#13;
points respectively to balance the&#13;
scoring for the Rangers.&#13;
High scorers for the Lumberjacks&#13;
were Bill Huempfner&#13;
with 27 and Ron Benson with 10&#13;
points.&#13;
Parkside connected on 33 out of&#13;
77 shots for 42.8 percent and&#13;
Northland hit on 25 out of 40 a ttempts&#13;
for a 62.5 percentage. The&#13;
Rangers currently stand with a&#13;
season record of 14-3.&#13;
After Tuesdays Indiana StateEvansville&#13;
game the Rangers&#13;
will return to the road to meet&#13;
with Wayne State, Whitewater,&#13;
Eastern Illinois and others until&#13;
Feb. 18 when they will take on&#13;
UW-Green Bay at 7:30 in the Phy.&#13;
Ed. Building.&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
UW^ParCsIde&#13;
WINTER CARNIVAL&#13;
February 7.8,9 Ski Mt. La Crowe&#13;
PRICE: 35. 0 0 per person&#13;
/^ACCOMODATIONS:&#13;
LIFTS:&#13;
ME A L S :&#13;
i T A X E S :&#13;
Fou r person s&#13;
Inn o f&#13;
0 ? ? J ! t t h e H ° H d « y&#13;
"n o f La C r o ss e , Wisco nsin&#13;
Of Mt.' La&#13;
1 n ?&#13;
e a k f a&#13;
?&#13;
ts ( S a t&#13;
-. S u n.)&#13;
J Dinn er ( S a t .) '&#13;
All st a te and l o c a l&#13;
t a x e s, t i p s, and g r a t u i t i e s&#13;
a r e I n clu d e d.&#13;
^EN T E R T AIN M E N T : Dance to a l i v e&#13;
band on Sat urd ay N i g h t.&#13;
Sign Up at Information Desk&#13;
HEIL EMA NS&#13;
did&#13;
64&#13;
•i Pure Brewed&#13;
Vj From God's Country.&#13;
On Tap at the Union" </text>
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              <text>Volume 3, issue 23</text>
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        <element elementId="96">
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            <elementText elementTextId="64991">
              <text>UW-P feels economic pinch</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="95">
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            <elementText elementTextId="65001">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89961">
              <text>UW-P feels economic pinch&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Economic conditions are effecting&#13;
Parkside and the UW&#13;
system in several ways:&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey has had&#13;
a committee organized to phase&#13;
out, phase down or consolidate&#13;
institutions and programs in the&#13;
system; Otto Bauer, acting&#13;
chancellor, has imposed a&#13;
moratorium on the hiring of&#13;
additional faculty or administrative&#13;
personnel at&#13;
Parkside; and it is becoming&#13;
increasingly difficult for&#13;
Parkside faculty to receive&#13;
tenure.&#13;
Phase out - Phase down&#13;
Professor Paul Kleine,&#13;
chairman of the Education&#13;
Division and member of the&#13;
Phase out - Phase down Committee,&#13;
said that so far the&#13;
committee has discussed&#13;
projected enrollments for the UW&#13;
system.&#13;
Kleine said, "Parkside looks&#13;
good compared to other campuses."&#13;
&#13;
He said Parkside's enrollment&#13;
has been steadily increasing and&#13;
will continue to increase until&#13;
peak enrollment is reached in&#13;
1980. After this point enrollment&#13;
will begin to spiral downward.&#13;
Parkside's 1974 fall enrollment&#13;
was 5,260 which shows an increase&#13;
of almost 1,000 students&#13;
since 1972 when enrollment was&#13;
4,366.&#13;
Peak enrollment in 1980 is&#13;
expected to equal 6,322 but by&#13;
1984 the projected enrollment&#13;
shows a drop to 5,948 students.&#13;
Hiring Moratorium&#13;
Kleine said the hiring&#13;
moratorium was called because&#13;
of budgetary uncertainities.&#13;
Shortly after Bauer called the&#13;
moratorium, Lucey announced&#13;
his recommended budget but this&#13;
will have to be passed through the&#13;
state legislature for approval and&#13;
then the UW system allocation&#13;
will have to be divided among the&#13;
campuses by Central Administration.&#13;
&#13;
Kleine said that Bauer has to&#13;
predict what Parkside's budget&#13;
will be and the moratorium was&#13;
called to prevent over-guessing&#13;
on the budget and possibly having&#13;
to break newly made contracts.&#13;
He said, "There's constant&#13;
guessing on what kind of&#13;
operating budget Parkside will&#13;
be receiving. It used to be that&#13;
you'd guess on how much more&#13;
money would be allocated than&#13;
the year before, but now we don't&#13;
know if it will be more, less or the&#13;
same."&#13;
He explained that Bauer has&#13;
called a moratorium on making&#13;
new contracts but that&#13;
recruitement procedures are&#13;
being followed as usual.&#13;
According to Kleine, the best&#13;
time for recruitement is during&#13;
the months of January, February&#13;
and March and Parkside is going&#13;
ahead with the usual procedure.&#13;
The only difference is that no&#13;
firm offers will be extended to&#13;
new people until the moratorium&#13;
is lifted.&#13;
Eugene Norwood, Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society,&#13;
said, "We'll get more specific&#13;
budgetary information in a&#13;
couple of weeks and it will get&#13;
more and more specific until we&#13;
have a good idea of what our&#13;
budget will be. We'll have some&#13;
idea about what we're getting by&#13;
this spring."&#13;
With regard to hiring&#13;
procedures for positions open&#13;
next fall, Norwood said that&#13;
recruitement is not taking place&#13;
for all open positions but&#13;
recruitement procedures are&#13;
taking place for most of the open&#13;
faculty positions.&#13;
He said, "Most faculty&#13;
positions will be filled. We don't&#13;
expect any dramatic reductions&#13;
as far as faculty are concerned."&#13;
He explained that money which&#13;
is usually used to hire full time&#13;
faculty may be split up in order to&#13;
hire more part time lecturers.&#13;
Norwood said that the vast bulk&#13;
of faculty will be hired before this&#13;
summer.&#13;
When questioned as to what&#13;
solution there would be to the&#13;
problem of the growing&#13;
enrollment coupled with the&#13;
possibility of a smaller budget&#13;
and thus fewer faculty, Norwood&#13;
replied, "The Governor said that&#13;
if there's an enrollment growth in&#13;
the University, it will have to&#13;
absorb it."&#13;
Norwood listed as possible&#13;
solutions; the enlargement of&#13;
classes or the hiring of faculty in&#13;
those areas which have the&#13;
highest student enrollment&#13;
rather than in the areas where&#13;
the vacancies exist.&#13;
Bauer said of the hiring&#13;
situation, "By the middle of&#13;
February we hope to know&#13;
enough (about the budget) to&#13;
start hiring (new faculty). We're&#13;
trying to maintain the same level&#13;
of staffing as in the '74-'75 school&#13;
year."&#13;
Tenure&#13;
When asked if Parkside could&#13;
refuse someone tenure because of&#13;
economic problems, Bauer said,&#13;
"Yes we can. We have to weigh&#13;
the number of faculty in that area&#13;
(in which the person teaches),&#13;
the number of student hours (he&#13;
teaches) and the importance of&#13;
the area (before tenuring a&#13;
faculty member)."&#13;
Parkside tenure guidelines&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-Wednesday, February 5, 1975 V ol. Ill No. 23&#13;
Academic poverty&#13;
Intellectual Biafra 1975&#13;
C/Af'&#13;
Education to suffer&#13;
Weaver says&#13;
Nicholas Burckel. director of the University Archives, is chairperson&#13;
of the Parkside Bicentennial Committee which has planned a&#13;
Bicentennial celebration to run from September of 1975 until&#13;
December of 1976. The story is on page 3.&#13;
Search screen comm.&#13;
seeks criteria input&#13;
The Chancellor Search and Screen Committee will hold open&#13;
hearings on Tuesday, February 11, from 10:00-11:30 a.m. and from&#13;
7:30-9:00 p.m., in room D115 in the Classroom Building. The hearings&#13;
are to seek guidance from students, faculty, academic and classified&#13;
staff, and the general public on criteria to be used in the selection of a&#13;
new Chancellor.&#13;
Speakers will sign up as they arrive at the hearing and will be&#13;
allowed five minutes to present their views. Written statements may&#13;
be submitted, whether or not an individual or group wishes to make an&#13;
oral presentation.&#13;
The hearings are not for the purpose of nominating or supporting&#13;
individual candidates. Nominations should be sent in writing to John&#13;
Campbell, Chairperson, Chancellor Search and Screen Committee,&#13;
room 368 Classroom Building.&#13;
According to John C. Weaver,&#13;
president of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, "real danger" of the&#13;
1975-77 budget recommended by&#13;
the governor for the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System "is visited&#13;
squarely on the students."&#13;
"It is the students who are hurt&#13;
by the dramatic fee increases,"&#13;
he told the Madison Rotary Club&#13;
in a "State of the University&#13;
System" address.&#13;
"It is the students who are hurt&#13;
when faculty numbers decline&#13;
and student numbers grow, and&#13;
as a result classes grow larger&#13;
and less personalized. It is the&#13;
students who are hurt as the&#13;
purchasing power of a static&#13;
budget brings critical shortages&#13;
of books, laboratory equipment,&#13;
paper and other basic instructional&#13;
supplies.&#13;
"This is why I'm uptight about&#13;
this budget. What, above&#13;
everything else, I'm fretting&#13;
about is the welfare of our yoting&#13;
people - the young people who&#13;
are all the future this state has."&#13;
He described the state of the&#13;
UW System as "remarkably good&#13;
- considering the restraints&#13;
under which it has been operating&#13;
and the problems we have had to&#13;
solve" since the system was&#13;
created by a merger three years&#13;
ago. But, he warned, there is&#13;
reason to worry about its future.&#13;
Weaver identified as&#13;
"ingredients of decline" in the&#13;
quality of education in the&#13;
Governor's budget:&#13;
Lack of funding for 6,000 additional&#13;
students.&#13;
Lack of any new support&#13;
dollars for operational supplies&#13;
"in years of double-digit inflation."&#13;
&#13;
Further layoff of staff "we are&#13;
told to arrange in the magic&#13;
name of 'productivity' ".&#13;
Weaver said that in a retrenchment&#13;
period it may seem&#13;
reasonable to ask the universities&#13;
to continue at approximately the&#13;
present level of expenditures for&#13;
the next two years - "until you&#13;
add growing enrollments and&#13;
runaway inflation into the socalled&#13;
'steady-state' formula."&#13;
He reported that in the last four&#13;
years more than 600 faculty and&#13;
academic staff people had been&#13;
"terminated or laid off for budget&#13;
reasons" and that the governor's&#13;
recommended budget would&#13;
require the universities to teach&#13;
6,000 more students than at&#13;
present while simultaneously&#13;
eliminating over 300 more staff&#13;
positions.&#13;
Among cost increases which&#13;
the governor's recommended&#13;
budget would require the UW&#13;
System to "absorb," Weaver&#13;
said, are:&#13;
A $17 million increase thus far&#13;
in the cost of supplies and&#13;
equipment -- "books, chemicals,&#13;
pencils, frogs and postage" -&#13;
which will increase even more as&#13;
inflation continues in the next two&#13;
years.&#13;
A projected $5.2 million in&#13;
utilities costs.&#13;
A $1.2 million increase in annual&#13;
debt service on buildings.&#13;
A $2.8 million minimum wage&#13;
adjustment required by federal&#13;
law.&#13;
A $ 6.1 million increase to make&#13;
up the cost of the instruction of&#13;
4.500 new students accepted this&#13;
year.&#13;
There is much misunderstanding,&#13;
Weaver said, about&#13;
enrollment trends in the UW&#13;
System. He said that the&#13;
governor was influenced by&#13;
enrollment forecasts when he&#13;
asked the Board of Regents to&#13;
prepare a plan by April 15 on the&#13;
possible ways to phase down and&#13;
phase out programs and even to&#13;
close campuses.&#13;
He said that it was difficult for&#13;
him to see how a "phase-down or&#13;
phase-out" plan can be prepared&#13;
which will preserve both&#13;
educational quality and&#13;
educational access, as the&#13;
governor has requested.&#13;
"Certainly access must suffer&#13;
if educational opportunity is&#13;
available in fewer locations, and&#13;
quality must suffer if we are&#13;
required to maintain all existing&#13;
points of sccess without adequate&#13;
funding." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February s, ,975&#13;
RANGER Letters to the editor&#13;
Editorial/Opinion— Hahner sick of 'dealing'&#13;
Austerity?&#13;
Not at&#13;
Parkside!&#13;
If you cannot handle the money you have we will give&#13;
you more. This could almost be a quote from the recent&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee meeting of January 29&#13;
After consistently doling out student funds for entertainment&#13;
that few, if any, students enjoy or attend,&#13;
the Campus Center Programming (under the direction&#13;
of Anthony Totero) came forward on January 29 with a&#13;
requested increase in their budget of 25 percent&#13;
Through the kindness of the Segregated Fees Committee,&#13;
Campus Center Program received a 60 percent&#13;
increase.&#13;
Our Chancellor places a moratorium on faculty hiring&#13;
and Campus Center Programming receives excess&#13;
funds to hire an assistant programmer. So look forward&#13;
to more and more uninteresting entertainment (the&#13;
assistant will have to generate losers, that's the&#13;
philosophy of CCP) and less professors to teach.&#13;
And the hiring goes on. Not students though. They are&#13;
"unprofessional" to quote Bill Neibuhr, director of&#13;
Student Life. So Student Life and Auxiliary Services will&#13;
be able to hire a "part-time professional" secretary&#13;
with the gracious increase allotted by Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee. Fine, a professional secretary to type up&#13;
those beautiful travel folders on trips arranged by&#13;
Student Programming-no students can afford the trips&#13;
but at least they can dream of far-off places with&#13;
Parkside travel folders.&#13;
RANGER calls on Chancellor Bauer and Central&#13;
Administration to freeze segregated fees for the&#13;
Parkside Campus at the present $88.00 and send the&#13;
proposed budget back to our student Segregated Fees&#13;
•Committee for reappraisal. In an era of austerity and in&#13;
the midst of a nation-wide depression there can be no&#13;
justification for the excesses that are in the present&#13;
Segregated Fees budget.&#13;
'• * ^ ' ' - - - - • ^j«gi&#13;
EDITORS NOTE: On January 29, 1975 the UW-Parkside&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee finalized their proposals&#13;
for the 1975-76 school term. Segregated fees are a portion&#13;
of the tuition of each student at Parkside. The&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee decides the amount each&#13;
student will contribute towards various departments&#13;
and activities on campus. In keeping with Merger&#13;
Implementation this year's committee consisted&#13;
students as the only voting members. The Segregated&#13;
Fees Committee has decided to raise the amount of that&#13;
fee from the present $88.00 to $97.00. The increase will be&#13;
added to next semesters tuition for each student.&#13;
The following is the finalized proposal budget for 1975-&#13;
76:&#13;
Academic Year&#13;
Union Reserve&#13;
Fine Arts &amp; Lectures&#13;
Student Life &amp; Aux. Service&#13;
Student Programming&#13;
Student Health&#13;
Transportation&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
Student Group Support&#13;
Student Newspaper&#13;
Total Academic Year&#13;
Summer Session&#13;
Union Reserve&#13;
Student Programming&#13;
Transportation&#13;
Student Newspaper&#13;
1975-76 Increase&#13;
Proposal Decrease&#13;
$38.50 -&#13;
1.50 -&#13;
9.50 $ +4.50&#13;
12.00 +4.50&#13;
3.00 + 1.00&#13;
10.00 (4.00)&#13;
11.00 +2.00&#13;
8.25 + .25&#13;
2.75 + .25&#13;
.50 + .50&#13;
$97.00 $+9.00&#13;
$11.00&#13;
3.75&#13;
5.00&#13;
3-25&#13;
$22.00&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to thank all future&#13;
students for they have purchased&#13;
a student constitution at the&#13;
ridiculously low cost of $4.50 a&#13;
head. It is hard in such times of&#13;
inflation to find a bargain of this&#13;
sort. However our Student Body&#13;
President (?), Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich did his best to make&#13;
sure the students wouldn't be&#13;
outbid. It was just 5 days ago that&#13;
he was telling me that this was&#13;
one way to make sure that&#13;
Assistant Chancellor for Student&#13;
Services, Allen B. Dearborn,&#13;
would find it much easier to&#13;
accept our constitution, if we&#13;
would give Student Life (PAB) a&#13;
piece of pork barrel allocation,&#13;
via a you scratch my back I'll&#13;
scratch yours scheme. Therefore&#13;
I ask you to call Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
in his office at 553-2332 or at&#13;
home 554-6288, and voice your&#13;
opinions about such inflationary&#13;
matters to the chief cheerleader&#13;
who urged the Student&#13;
Segregated Fee Allocation&#13;
Committee to adopt such inflationary&#13;
measures. Also&#13;
students may voice complaints to&#13;
Student Body President (?)&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, who voted&#13;
for the increase at his home at&#13;
658-3690 or at his office 553-2244 if&#13;
one is lucky to find him in. If you&#13;
are sick and tired of the "Lets&#13;
Make a Deal" type of collusion on&#13;
this campus, stand up for your&#13;
constitutional rights, it's your&#13;
money so stand up for it. The&#13;
following motion will be introduced&#13;
at the P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
meeting of Monday, Feb. 3, 1975,&#13;
call the above numbers and voice&#13;
your support for it.&#13;
Whereas the Student&#13;
Segregated Fee Allocation&#13;
Committee has allocated Student&#13;
Life (PAB) and increase of $4.50&#13;
over last years allocation, to a&#13;
new high of $12.00 o ut of each&#13;
students tuition in the proposed&#13;
1975-76segregated fee budget, for&#13;
Where is McCarthy now&#13;
the purposes of hiring a&#13;
programmer and "additional&#13;
programming" and,&#13;
Whereas the Chancellor has&#13;
declared a moratorium on&#13;
faculty hiring and,&#13;
Whereas it appears that the&#13;
Central Administration in&#13;
Madison will be forced to increase&#13;
student's tuition due to&#13;
inflationary pressures and,&#13;
Whereas the PSGA Inc. Constitution&#13;
requires the student&#13;
senate to review the allocations&#13;
committee budget, congnizant of&#13;
these facts we therefore call upon&#13;
the acting Chancellor to either&#13;
follow the student constitution&#13;
and allow a budget review conducted&#13;
by the student senate or&#13;
intercede himself and strike&#13;
down the fiscally irresponsible&#13;
actions of the segregated fee&#13;
allocations committee.&#13;
THANK YOU,&#13;
Authorized and Paid for by&#13;
AWOL&#13;
Michael G. Hahner President,&#13;
and Student Senator&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am responding to the&#13;
RANGER Editorial of Jan. 29,&#13;
1974 in which you correctly stated&#13;
that I was not present at the&#13;
Merger Implementation task&#13;
force meeting on Jan. 23, 1975.&#13;
Unlike other Presidents, your&#13;
Student Government President&#13;
never received any form of&#13;
immunity, including immunity&#13;
from the Flu. (The RANGER&#13;
reader looks up from her-his&#13;
paper and instinctively rolls hisher&#13;
eyes toward the cafeteria&#13;
ceiling and a look of disgust&#13;
slowly creeps across her-his face,&#13;
thinking aloud, "who cares?")&#13;
On t he date in question, I had&#13;
the flu and because of that was&#13;
unabel to attend a segregated fee&#13;
meeting in the morning. I intended&#13;
to stay home and shake it&#13;
off until 1 received a phone call&#13;
reminding me that there was a&#13;
Campus Planning Committee&#13;
meeting where it would be&#13;
decided what to do with all the&#13;
students that had purchased red&#13;
parking permits for the Comm.&#13;
Arts building. As I am* sure you&#13;
all know by now, red parking&#13;
permits entitled you to park in a&#13;
certain part of the Comm. Arts&#13;
Parking lot. Well, at least until&#13;
the permit sellers oversold the&#13;
white permits in which case the&#13;
Reds (Yes, there is a story in this&#13;
also) were ticketed for parking in&#13;
the now newly designated White&#13;
area. Not only is this&#13;
misrepresentating concerning&#13;
the Reds but also smacks of a&#13;
tinge of segregation (white&#13;
supremacy in the Comm. Arts&#13;
parking lot).&#13;
Being the only student on the&#13;
Campus Planning Committee I&#13;
felt it was of the utmost importance&#13;
that I get to that&#13;
meeting and insure that the&#13;
rights of the Reds (well, there&#13;
goes my chance for any Civil&#13;
Service job) were not neglected.&#13;
The Administrative proposal was&#13;
to make the Comm. Arts lot an all&#13;
White Lot. My motion was to&#13;
make it a first come first serve&#13;
lot. My motion was ammended by&#13;
a faculty member to make only&#13;
the Southwest quadrent red&#13;
territory. This passed. My next&#13;
motion was to invalidate all&#13;
parking tickets given to the Reds&#13;
in question. This did not even&#13;
recieve a second.&#13;
As to why I didn't go to the Task&#13;
Force meeting:&#13;
1. Red permit holders were&#13;
entitled to be represented at&#13;
a meeting where there is only one&#13;
voting student member.&#13;
2. Both meetings were being&#13;
held at the same time and unfortunately&#13;
I cannot be in two&#13;
places at the same time.&#13;
3. The task force meeting was&#13;
being taped.&#13;
4. My sole function at that&#13;
hearing was to be there in body&#13;
and listen to the comments being&#13;
made. I was not there to engage&#13;
in discussion or debate.&#13;
5. Putting into proper perspective&#13;
the importance of the&#13;
two meetings I elected to attend&#13;
the Campus Planning meeting to&#13;
insure student representation&#13;
and decided to listen to the tapes&#13;
at the next Task Force meeting.&#13;
I had requested numerous&#13;
students to attend the Task Force&#13;
meeting. As to why they didn't&#13;
show up, your guess is as good as&#13;
mine.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President P.S.G.A.Inc.&#13;
Selfish pipe dreams&#13;
($24.25 f or&#13;
Summer 1976)&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Being a person of no great&#13;
importance, i.e. a student, I&#13;
would like to express my hardly&#13;
coh ere nt r u m i n a t i o n s ,&#13;
cerebrations, and all around&#13;
preoccupations concerning the&#13;
current state of (or lack of) affairs&#13;
in the P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
I must also confess to being a&#13;
student senator - an appointed&#13;
one who theoretically represents&#13;
the student body at large.&#13;
(Perhaps I should begin to truly&#13;
represent the students "at large"&#13;
and not say anything at all. But it&#13;
is so hard to break habits!) Since&#13;
I was not "elected" by students, I&#13;
feel I owe them an insight into the&#13;
"raised" conscience of one&#13;
person involved in the P.S.-G.A.&#13;
rumblings, and make known my&#13;
future actions regarding the&#13;
predicament.&#13;
I entered P.S.G.A. after much&#13;
deliberation, and for quite selfish&#13;
reasons~I blush to admit. Observing&#13;
the organization intermittantly&#13;
throughout the&#13;
summer and increasing my&#13;
connections with it during the&#13;
first semester, I had the unfortunate&#13;
opportunity to see&#13;
many, too many, brawls, battles&#13;
and belligerent contentions&#13;
resu ting m resignations by those&#13;
involved and those disgusted with&#13;
those involved. Standing back&#13;
and looking at the organization I&#13;
asked myself if I wanted to be&#13;
associated with such rampant&#13;
c o n f u s i o n. A fte r verb all y attacking&#13;
myself for even considering&#13;
such a notion, I looked at&#13;
it from a different angle; what&#13;
could P.S.G.A. do for me&#13;
9&#13;
Considering it as a chance for&#13;
personal growth in which I would&#13;
seek out (rather than be subjected&#13;
to) both sides of the two&#13;
obviously diverse "camps" and&#13;
make an honest attempt to increase&#13;
my decision making&#13;
Powers, I sought out the an&#13;
pointment.&#13;
Ah — wh at pipe dreams! Soon&#13;
I too was involved and bogged&#13;
down by the infighting. It was&#13;
shattering when I realized what I&#13;
was doing. My first impulse was&#13;
o resign and get as far away&#13;
trom student government and&#13;
governors as possible. But&#13;
looking at those who had resigned&#13;
before me, I saw that they were&#13;
still involved - emotionally if not&#13;
physically. These are people I&#13;
admire; they care about this&#13;
campus and its inhabitants, and&#13;
have ended up being very&#13;
frustrated at not being able to&#13;
help the students grow along with&#13;
the rest of the campus. And then&#13;
I understood that I too wanted to&#13;
help students, wanted to help&#13;
myself, strive towards a better&#13;
educational system.&#13;
The way to do this is not to&#13;
resign. I therefore refuse to&#13;
participate in any more political&#13;
games, and when an issue arises&#13;
which essentially concerns only&#13;
personalities, I will abstain from&#13;
voting, even if I have an opinion.&#13;
When the question reaches such&#13;
low levels, the students are being&#13;
abandoned. I will not allow&#13;
myself, hence the students I&#13;
aspire to "represent," be enslaved&#13;
and entrapped by&#13;
destructive rivalry.&#13;
Janet L. Scott&#13;
Senator P.S.G.A &#13;
Wednesday, February 5, 1975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Materialism and philosophies&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter will deal with two&#13;
topics, 1) The recent actions of&#13;
the segregated fee allocations&#13;
committee and 2) An article&#13;
entitled Conflicts in the P.S.G.A.&#13;
which appeared in the Wed., Jan.&#13;
29 issue of the Ranger.&#13;
During the past week the&#13;
segregated fee allocations&#13;
committee has voted to increase&#13;
the allocation for the Student Life&#13;
Department and the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board (PAB) by $4.50&#13;
per student. This brings the&#13;
allocation to an all time high of&#13;
$12.00 per student. Part of this&#13;
increased allocation is to be used&#13;
to hire a new programmer. It&#13;
seems ironic to me that shortly&#13;
after Acting Chancellor Bauer&#13;
has called for a moratorium on&#13;
hiring of additional faculty, the&#13;
segregated fee committee has&#13;
voted to allocate money to enable&#13;
the P.A.B. to hire an additional&#13;
employee to be paid approximately&#13;
$10,000 per year out&#13;
of student money. This is the&#13;
same committee which virtually&#13;
had to be begged to raise student&#13;
group support allocations by 25&#13;
cents per student. This is the fund&#13;
which supports most campus&#13;
organizations. I would urge all&#13;
students to contact the asst.&#13;
chancellor for student services,&#13;
Allen Dearborn and the president&#13;
NCAA BOWS&#13;
of the P.S.G.A. Inc. Dennis&#13;
Milutinovich, who is a member of&#13;
the committee and who also&#13;
voted for the allocation. Express&#13;
to them your disatisfaction with&#13;
the proposed allocations. This is&#13;
money which will be taken from&#13;
your pocket, you have an&#13;
obligation to make your feelings&#13;
known.&#13;
In conclusion I would like to&#13;
clear up some misconceptions&#13;
caused by the article dealing with&#13;
conflicts in the P.S.G.A. which&#13;
appeared in last weeks ranger.&#13;
First the conflict is over&#13;
philosophy and not personalities.&#13;
I believe that the senate should be&#13;
consulted before major actions&#13;
are taken by the president, the&#13;
president has often disagreed&#13;
with me. This has led to friction. I&#13;
personally do not believe that this&#13;
could ever justify the actions of&#13;
the president, i.e. a physical&#13;
attack upon myself in front of 3&#13;
other senators, threats of&#13;
lawsuits or ass -beating, and&#13;
name calling, for example,&#13;
calling certain senators gossip&#13;
spewing mucous voyeurs. These&#13;
methods would not be used by a&#13;
person who wants to command&#13;
the respect of the student body&#13;
which he supposedly leads.&#13;
Many other accusations have&#13;
been made. I hope that the&#13;
Ranger will in the immediate&#13;
future delve into the background&#13;
information which has led to the&#13;
recent incidents.&#13;
John Kontz,&#13;
President pro-tempore,&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. Senate&#13;
Anyone&#13;
out there?&#13;
To the Students:&#13;
Hi gang, I know you're out&#13;
there, I can hear you breathing.&#13;
And sometimes on my jaunts&#13;
through the halls I can hear the&#13;
distant rumblings of discontent.&#13;
But golly gee, PSGA could forget&#13;
that thhir were any such people,&#13;
ie students, if it weren't for the&#13;
nice picture window in the&#13;
meeting room. Maybe it's time&#13;
students took an interest in their&#13;
governing bod. Some new faces&#13;
would be a refreshing, ie&#13;
faroutski, change. For sure they&#13;
can't be any worse $han some of&#13;
the old ones.&#13;
Petulently yours,&#13;
Sandy Beach&#13;
P.S. In the level of existence&#13;
that is known as reality, I am&#13;
known as Carrie ward.&#13;
PP. And I don't mean business.&#13;
AIAW wins&#13;
recognition&#13;
After a controversial false start&#13;
the nation's most prominent&#13;
student athletic association voted&#13;
to consult with a women's&#13;
athletic organization before&#13;
deciding to conduct pilot&#13;
programs for national women's&#13;
intercollegiate athletic championships.&#13;
&#13;
The National Collegiate&#13;
Athletic Association (NCAA) had&#13;
earlier opted to establish test&#13;
programs on its own for women's&#13;
championships in track and&#13;
tennis for this spring, followed by&#13;
pilot championships for as many&#13;
as ten other sports in the next&#13;
four years.&#13;
The change was seen as a&#13;
minor victory for women's sports&#13;
groups, because the earlier&#13;
resolution failed to provide for&#13;
consultation or cooperation with&#13;
women's athletic organizations,&#13;
notably the Association for Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics for&#13;
Women(ATAW).&#13;
The action came during&#13;
NCAA's 69th annual convention&#13;
in early January in Washington,&#13;
DC and was prompted by complaints&#13;
from the convention floor&#13;
and stiff criticism by AIAW officials.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lee Morrison, AIAW&#13;
president, expressed shock and&#13;
disappointment when informed ot&#13;
the original NCAA proposal to&#13;
press ahead alone with women's&#13;
championships.&#13;
"We have been trying to work&#13;
with the NCAA to iron out some of&#13;
the problems common to&#13;
women's atletics," she said. "If&#13;
this program is intended to&#13;
replace ones women have&#13;
developed, I would be very&#13;
concerned and upset."&#13;
"I would say they are trying to&#13;
infringe upon opportunities&#13;
women have provided for&#13;
women," Morrison said.&#13;
The revised resolution called&#13;
for a joint AIAW-NCAA committee&#13;
to study the issue of&#13;
women's intercollegiate athletics&#13;
and to report back in time for the&#13;
1976 NCAA convention.&#13;
The resolution then calls for the&#13;
NCAA Council, the organization's&#13;
policy-making body, to suggest&#13;
whether or not "it would be&#13;
desirable or legally necessary"&#13;
for the NCAA to conduct women's&#13;
championships. The action bars&#13;
any pilot programs for this year.&#13;
According to NCAA Executive&#13;
Director Walter Byers the two&#13;
sports associations have been in&#13;
close, though unfruitful contact&#13;
on the simmering issue of&#13;
women's championships already.&#13;
Parkside plans&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
. by Brenda Mead&#13;
The Parkside Bicentennial&#13;
Committee has planned a&#13;
Bicentennial celebration to run&#13;
from September of 1975 until&#13;
December of 1976.&#13;
The Committee, under the&#13;
leadership of Nicholas Burckel,&#13;
Director of the University Archives,&#13;
has already planned a&#13;
number of activities and events.&#13;
All faculty, staff and students are&#13;
being requested to suggest&#13;
projects, displays and other&#13;
activities for this celebration.&#13;
Two major exhibits will be on&#13;
loan from the Smithsonian Institute&#13;
in Washington, D.C., for&#13;
their viewing at Parkside.&#13;
The first exhibit, "Five Critical&#13;
Election," will be here from&#13;
October 9th until November 7th to&#13;
coincide with the 1975 election&#13;
period. The second,&#13;
"Manuscripts of the American&#13;
Revolution," will be here from&#13;
January 10th until February 8th&#13;
of 1976. They will be on display&#13;
for the general public.&#13;
The Parkside Bicentennial&#13;
Committee is working with the&#13;
Wisconsin American Revolution&#13;
Bicentennial Commission, and&#13;
both the Racine and Kenosha&#13;
County Bicentennial Committee's.&#13;
They plan to coordinate&#13;
county-wide activities during the&#13;
period, such as guest lecturers,&#13;
displays, discussions, concerts,&#13;
and dramatic production.&#13;
Burckel said that the Parkside&#13;
Bicentennial Committee is&#13;
limited in their planning since&#13;
they must use "existing&#13;
resources and financial constraints."&#13;
&#13;
He was enthusiastic that the&#13;
commemoration will be exciting&#13;
and interesting for all.&#13;
Any suggestions for activities,&#13;
or people desiring to volunteer&#13;
their services should contact&#13;
Burckel in the University Archives,&#13;
located in room D-276 of&#13;
the Wyllie Library Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Byers was quoted by Higher&#13;
Education Daily as saying the&#13;
women's group did not seem to be&#13;
interested in cooperating with the&#13;
NCAA.&#13;
In a move destined to further&#13;
heighten tensions between the&#13;
sports groups, the NCAA Council&#13;
in its report to convention&#13;
delegates underlined what it felt&#13;
was the value of having a single&#13;
association control both men's&#13;
and women's intercollegiate&#13;
athletics.&#13;
"The only satisfactory approach...&#13;
to the necessary institutional&#13;
control of all its intercollegiate&#13;
athletic programs,"&#13;
the council said, "is to place&#13;
men's and women's programs&#13;
under the same administration,&#13;
the same legislative body and the&#13;
same eligibility rules."&#13;
No throw&#13;
wins MOO&#13;
(CPS) -- Drinking 11 ounces of chewing tobacco spit may never beat&#13;
streaking in popularity but it has earned an Oregon State University&#13;
student $100.&#13;
Taking a dare from his Delta Tau Delta fraternity brother,&#13;
sophomore Tim Lee agreed to swallow a spittle full of "chew brew,"&#13;
the spit remains of chewing tobacco, for the $100 reward, and of&#13;
course, the glory.&#13;
"Chewing" consists of sticking a bit of t obacco between one's lower&#13;
teeth and gums and then "relaxin," according to television commercials.&#13;
&#13;
The dare began when Lee and John Heller were driving back from a&#13;
gambling venture in Reno, Nevada. Lee had lost money while Heller&#13;
had won, so Heller proposed the event. The only stipulation was that&#13;
Lee could not throw up for an hour. Despite prodding from 25&#13;
onlookers Lee lasted the hour and even felt fine the next day.&#13;
"He almost threw it up two or three times," said Heller, "and I tried&#13;
to psyche him into doing it. But after a while, I figured he deserved the&#13;
money."&#13;
"I'll drink anything for the right reward," said Lee, "If the price is&#13;
right, you bet I'll do it again."&#13;
Books to Vietnam&#13;
(CPS) - More than $50,000 worth of school composition books will&#13;
soon be shipped to North Vietnam by the American Friends Service&#13;
Committee (AFSC) as "an initial step in a program of reconstruction&#13;
and reconciliation."&#13;
AFSC was asked by the North Vietnamese government to provide&#13;
books when an AFSC delegation asked what it could do to solve' the&#13;
immediate needs of the nation, which is experiencing, among other&#13;
things, a paper shortage.&#13;
Efforts will be made to involve American schoolchildren in fundraising&#13;
efforts to help their North Vietnamese counterparts, according&#13;
to AFSC.&#13;
Fast or Slow&#13;
Rangers streak at 15&#13;
Lambda chi alpha&#13;
names o ffi c e rs&#13;
James Franklin, a sophomore, has been elected President of the&#13;
Parkside Colony of the Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity. Franklin, who&#13;
lives at 2318 Grove Ave. in Racine, is a Mathematics major seeking&#13;
teacher certification.&#13;
Other offices filled at Sunday's election are Vice President, Matt&#13;
Sehliesman; Secretary, Ron Bayer; Treasurer, Joseph Ousley;&#13;
Membership Recruitment Chairman, Don Gramza; Social Chairman,&#13;
Mark Badtke; Ritualist, Robin Pulda; Educational Chairman. John&#13;
Morris: and Fraternity Educator, Bob Thomas.&#13;
Lambda Chi Alpha, the Fraternity of Honest Friendship, is one of&#13;
the largest fraternities in the world with over 175 chapters throughout&#13;
the United States and Canada.&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
Last Tuesday nights basketball&#13;
game against Indiana StateEvansville&#13;
had to be the slowest&#13;
of the past three home games but&#13;
it didn't stop the Rangers from&#13;
winning with a score of 57-34.&#13;
"I hope these last three games&#13;
in slowdown style haven't hurt us&#13;
for when we tackle someone who&#13;
can really come after us."&#13;
remarked coach Steve Stephens&#13;
in reference to the next seven 'on&#13;
the raod' games.&#13;
Gary Cole and Leartha Scott&#13;
pumped in 23 and 22 points&#13;
respectively, to lead the Rangers&#13;
to a 80-66 victory over Wayne&#13;
State in Detroit Saturday afternoon&#13;
in their first game'of the&#13;
tour.&#13;
This marked the 15th consecutive&#13;
win and a record of 16-3&#13;
on the season.&#13;
The Evansville Eagles spent&#13;
most of their offensive evening&#13;
passing the ball in their fore court&#13;
connecting on a total of 17 out of&#13;
32 field goals for a 53 per cent&#13;
shooting average. The Rangers&#13;
hit on 25 out of 53 attempts for 47&#13;
per cent.&#13;
The Eagles double teamed Cole&#13;
allowing him to sink 11 points&#13;
while they left 'Scottie' wide open&#13;
to dump 25 points.&#13;
High scorers for the Eagles&#13;
were DoJuan Rowser with 12 and&#13;
Ernie Brothers with 10 points.&#13;
The Rangers out rebounded the&#13;
Eagles 24-19.&#13;
Cole dominated the defensh&#13;
backboards in Satudays garr&#13;
with 19 rebounds allowing tl&#13;
intrepid Ranger team to oi&#13;
rebound the Tartars 60-50.&#13;
"Our rebounding was a ver&#13;
key thing in the game," sai&#13;
Stephens "and I'm pleased wil&#13;
the victory."&#13;
The Rangers connected on :&#13;
out of 28 attempts from the fie!&#13;
at the half for 68 percent and :&#13;
out of 65 for a 54 percent at tl&#13;
end of the game.&#13;
The Rangers will take c&#13;
Eastern Illinois February 6 ar&#13;
head south to tour Dixieland ar&#13;
meet with the Universities i&#13;
New Orleans, South Alabama ar&#13;
Delta State College in Mississip&#13;
February 10-13. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February 5, 1975&#13;
Establishing a power position&#13;
CO-OPeration and Concern&#13;
Editor's Note: This is the second&#13;
in a two-part series regarding the&#13;
activities of Parkside's Concerned&#13;
Student Coalition.&#13;
RANGER hopes to feature other&#13;
organizations in the up coming&#13;
months so students are introduced&#13;
to the various personalities&#13;
involved in the groups&#13;
that concern themselves with&#13;
students and campus welfare at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
Next, RANGER spoke with Cliff&#13;
Chambers a CSC member and&#13;
Kai Nail, C.S.C. President, on the&#13;
internal workings of and issues&#13;
Concerned Student Coalitionwith&#13;
which its members have become&#13;
involved.&#13;
Coalition's Concern for Student&#13;
Problems&#13;
Nail; The ideal goal as I see it,&#13;
is that students can come to the&#13;
Coalition and present us with a&#13;
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658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
'ACROSS FROM UNION PARK'&#13;
problem; knowing that we will&#13;
work to solve it. The trust of the&#13;
students is important. We want to&#13;
be known for getting something&#13;
done.&#13;
As far as other organizations&#13;
are concerned, we are still&#13;
evolving and therefore, they&#13;
don't consider us established.&#13;
Our organization was ignored&#13;
when students were being appointed&#13;
to the Search and Screen&#13;
Committee for a new chancellor.&#13;
I can understand this, but I can't&#13;
understand why an organization&#13;
like Third World was ignored and&#13;
had to get their candidate in&#13;
through P.S.G.A.&#13;
As far as motivation and&#13;
organization are concerned,&#13;
trying to get any group moving&#13;
from its origin is a problem. The&#13;
. things I look for is the proportion&#13;
of people on campus that are&#13;
being reached by any given&#13;
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activity. What an organization&#13;
does must have an affect. We are&#13;
aiming to change the atmosphere&#13;
on this campus.&#13;
Chambers; We started a&#13;
mental turn-around on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Nail; I realize we must begin&#13;
projects slowly. When we&#13;
establish a project we try to&#13;
judge the amount of individuals it&#13;
will deal with or service. Internally,&#13;
we are a liberal&#13;
organization. Our structure is&#13;
relaxed. We encourage people&#13;
who attend our meetings to voice&#13;
their concern over problems&#13;
facing them as students.&#13;
For instance, student Debora&#13;
Donatt made us aware of&#13;
Parkside's "mission" and in a&#13;
newsletter, that was released&#13;
this week, and in it we gave&#13;
a description of this&#13;
"mission." We are genuinely&#13;
concerned about the academic&#13;
aspects of this university, not just&#13;
the social interaction among&#13;
students. Supposedly, the&#13;
"mission" is to phase out the&#13;
liberal arts aspects of the campus&#13;
and if this aim were accomplished,&#13;
it would be to the&#13;
loss of creative inter-change&#13;
among both students and faculty&#13;
alike. We took up Debora&#13;
Donatt's individual cause&#13;
because it was of importance to&#13;
all sectors of the campus.&#13;
Relationship with Administration&#13;
Kai Nail had a different view of&#13;
how the administration sees the&#13;
Coalition. Chambers mentioned&#13;
that he felt Kai was "selling the&#13;
Coalition short", in his view of&#13;
other organizations reactions and&#13;
also administrive reaction. Kai&#13;
explained his view to RANGER...&#13;
Nail: We're not dealing with&#13;
the administration like the Vet's&#13;
Club does, or Adult Student&#13;
Association, or P.A.B. They are&#13;
established on the campus in&#13;
terms of power, priority, and&#13;
offices. The sheer population of&#13;
their membership gives them&#13;
incredible support. When the&#13;
University includes us on their&#13;
registration interest sheets, gives&#13;
us an office and treats us in accordance&#13;
with our position; we&#13;
will be what I feel is accepted.&#13;
We've had good cooperation&#13;
with the administration. I was&#13;
under the impression from&#13;
Dearborn (Chancellor for&#13;
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(Acting Chancellor) that they&#13;
were genuinely interested in the&#13;
things that affect students. The&#13;
Task Force on merger implementation&#13;
and Segregated&#13;
Fees are good examples of the&#13;
administration wanting student&#13;
input. We inform the administration&#13;
of our forthcoming&#13;
actions and the communication&#13;
makes things better. Surprises&#13;
are foolish. We try to be completely&#13;
open and fair. We want to&#13;
act fairly.&#13;
I deal with Echelbarger&#13;
(Assoc. Dean of Students),&#13;
Dearborn and Bauer. I think&#13;
these people are truly concerned&#13;
about helping the campus to&#13;
grow. They are optimistic. If an&#13;
individual student had a serious&#13;
problem and wanted to go to the&#13;
administration directly, I would&#13;
advise that they see Echelbarger&#13;
first, then Dearborn, and finally,&#13;
Bauer.&#13;
Chambers: I think that&#13;
organizations have the edge over&#13;
individual students, in getting the&#13;
attention of the administration of&#13;
problems. They represent a&#13;
number of students. This is not to&#13;
say that the administration&#13;
wouldn't hear the complaint of a&#13;
single member of the student&#13;
body.&#13;
Organization of Food Co-op&#13;
RANGER next inquired on the&#13;
Food Co-op that C.S.C. hopes to&#13;
have working by March of this&#13;
year. Kai Nail described in detail&#13;
various aspects of the oeration,&#13;
with relation to age group, individual&#13;
buyer and set-up.&#13;
Although some of the information&#13;
is still in the tenative stage; it is&#13;
included to show the serious&#13;
consideration with which C.S.C.&#13;
has treated this project.&#13;
Nail; The Co-op will start out as&#13;
a food buying organization on the&#13;
University campus. Students will&#13;
order and pay for their merchandise&#13;
in advance. This will be&#13;
at a reduced rate in comparison&#13;
to most stores. Then, they will&#13;
pick it up at a decided delivery&#13;
point about two days later. This&#13;
operation will continue until the&#13;
fall of 1975 when, hopefully, we&#13;
will begin the Food Co-op Store.&#13;
Members of the store will be in&#13;
iwu different classes, and cards'&#13;
for the members will cost $5.00&#13;
for an individual and $10.00 for a&#13;
family. This will give us some&#13;
capital to work with and it insures&#13;
us that they are serious in&#13;
their support of the Co-op.&#13;
There will most likely be three&#13;
prices on food. 1. Standard price&#13;
for non-members, which will be&#13;
as low as chain store prices. 2.&#13;
Regular member's prices will be&#13;
at some sort of discount. In this&#13;
category we might also let senior&#13;
citizens and perhaps handicapped&#13;
students have membership&#13;
without paying a fee for&#13;
the card. 3. Finally, the individuals&#13;
that work in the Co-op&#13;
would (after buying the members'&#13;
card) be able to get their&#13;
food at almost the wholesale&#13;
prices&#13;
The Co-op will have to be&#13;
bonded and incorporated when it&#13;
is a store. I would still like to see&#13;
the ordering service continued&#13;
even after the store is opened. We&#13;
also hope to have a catalogue of&#13;
all the items that can be purchased&#13;
and their price so that the&#13;
buyers will know in advance how&#13;
much things will cost. If they&#13;
ordered in bulk they would leave&#13;
a deposit on the items and pay the&#13;
rest of the price when they picked&#13;
the items up.&#13;
We are considering the green&#13;
building on the corner of "A" and&#13;
Wood Road for the Co-op once it&#13;
has been vacated. Our hours&#13;
would probably be from 9 a.m. to&#13;
9 p.m. We will probably deal with&#13;
the Milwaukee wholesalers and&#13;
MACS (Milwaukee Area Co-op&#13;
Service), will be the agency we&#13;
join. The services of the Co-op&#13;
will only be available to students&#13;
in order not to interfere with the&#13;
business men in the area. If we&#13;
took the business away from&#13;
stores in the area, we would run&#13;
into community problems.&#13;
RANGER hopes that the students&#13;
avail themselves of the services&#13;
offered by the Coalition and the&#13;
other organizations on campus.&#13;
The organizations (or most of&#13;
them) were founded in order to&#13;
accomplish various projects and&#13;
services needed on this campus.&#13;
There are numerous groups that&#13;
students may channel their&#13;
energies into. RANGER did this&#13;
interview with the Coalition&#13;
because they are an active&#13;
organization, with diversified&#13;
projects and an openness to&#13;
student input in any area. And&#13;
though they have existed for less&#13;
than a year, their ability to deal&#13;
with the needs of the university is&#13;
more than evident in the&#13;
creativity of their projects and&#13;
their concern on all levels of&#13;
academic and social life at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Gay claim&#13;
(CPS).&#13;
Insisting they are legally&#13;
married, two male gays have&#13;
refused a $309 tax refund from&#13;
the federal government.&#13;
An Internal Revenue Service&#13;
examing officer ruled that a joint&#13;
filing between two males was not&#13;
valid and issued the refund on the&#13;
basis of single returns.&#13;
J. Michael McConnell and Jack&#13;
Baker, former president of the&#13;
University of Minnesota student&#13;
body, filed an appeal with the IRS&#13;
January 1 to stop the government&#13;
from issuing the refund.&#13;
Although the Minnesota&#13;
Supreme Court has ruled that&#13;
same-sex marriages are&#13;
prohibited, the two men maintain&#13;
that a marriage license issued to&#13;
them in 1971 is valid.&#13;
Baker said that he and McConnell&#13;
are refusing the refund in&#13;
part because married couples&#13;
have "a hell of a lot more advantages&#13;
than single people when&#13;
tax deductions are concerned&#13;
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711 COUNSELING III AND GENERAL&#13;
M\i INFORMATION&#13;
"THE O LD LAIR IS BACK WITH A NEW FACE"&#13;
OPENING JAN. 31. 3:00 P.M.&#13;
24th and 25th on 60t» St. KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
A Different&#13;
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Saturday Night&#13;
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6220-67th ST. PH. 652-8198 KENOSHA&#13;
I PAB invites you to the&#13;
DETROIT!&#13;
!DATE: COST&#13;
jTues., March 4 s5.00 in cludes&#13;
J bus &amp; tickets&#13;
• bus leaves Tallent Hall at 6,&#13;
•&#13;
• game starts at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
• SIGN UP AT IN FO DESK&#13;
I LIMITED S EATS AVAILABLE&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
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!-57 th street &#13;
Brief news&#13;
Wednesday, February 5, 1975 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
"Preparing For Exams" is the topic of the sernnH&#13;
Cram Clinics, this one scheduled for Monday, Feb 10 3-30?n n&#13;
will be repeated on Tuesday, Feb. 11,7:30-9 pm ' * P&#13;
'&#13;
m"&#13;
The clinic will include suggestions for studying for and writing hnfh&#13;
essay and objective (eg. multiple choice, true-false, matchingHests&#13;
-The sessions are free and open to all interested students, who should&#13;
sign up at the Information kiosk prior to the clinic. It will be held in ^&#13;
Library ; participants will meet at the Circulation Desk&#13;
The clinic is being sponsored by the Adult Student Association in&#13;
cooperation with the Library. The last topic, "Term Paper S^rch "&#13;
will be offered sometime in March. arch,&#13;
The sessions are conducted by Carla Stoffle of the Library To&#13;
Herrick of the Learning Center, and A1 Grace of the Academic Skills&#13;
Program.&#13;
CELLIST David Littrell will present a faculty recital at Parkside at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 7, in the Communication Arts Theater He&#13;
will be assisted by pianist Mary Ann Littrell.&#13;
Prof. Littrell joined the Parkside faculty in 1973. He currently plays&#13;
in the Kenosha and Racine symphonies and with the Parkside&#13;
Chamber Players.&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's gymnastics team will be hosting a&#13;
quadrangular meet with UW-Whitewater, UW-Platteville, and the&#13;
University of Chicago, at 1 p.m., Saturday, February 8,1975.&#13;
The U.S. Navy Show Band of Great Lakes Naval Training Center&#13;
will present a free public concert at 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday Feb 5 in&#13;
the Communication Arts Theater. ' ' '&#13;
Two ensembles drawn from the band, a ten piece variety group&#13;
known as "The Anchormen" and a brass quintet, also will perform&#13;
The band is directed by MUC Anthony Dilanni.&#13;
The first meeting of the Parkside Anthropology Club will be held&#13;
Thursday, February 6 at 4 p.m. in room 324 of the Classroom Building&#13;
All students interested in informal discussion and meeting with&#13;
faculty members are cordially welcomed.&#13;
The Adult Student Association will hold an open meeting on Monday,&#13;
Feb. 10., in D187 of the LLC from 4:30 to 6 p.m.&#13;
The Third World will hold a meeting Wednesday and Thursday,&#13;
February 4 and 5 at 11:30 a.m. in LLC D-174.&#13;
Frozen operation&#13;
While many areas of the world&#13;
are gripped in famine-producing&#13;
drought, a few scientists have&#13;
begun plans to free two-thirds of&#13;
the world's supply of fresh water&#13;
that lies entombed in iceAntarctic&#13;
ice.&#13;
According to a Rand&#13;
Coporation think tank, harvesting&#13;
icebergs could double the&#13;
US water supply without&#13;
depleting the bergs or doing&#13;
damage to the Antarctic.&#13;
In the current fantasy, the&#13;
bergs would be roped with cables&#13;
and arranged into trains up to 50&#13;
miles long. This is possible, the&#13;
scientists have said, since Antarctic&#13;
icebergs, unlike their&#13;
Arctic cousins, are relatively&#13;
smooth and flat on top.&#13;
To avoid refueling problems,&#13;
the berg caravan's 12-month trip&#13;
from Antarctica to Southern&#13;
California would require atomic&#13;
powered tugs accompanied by an&#13;
array of launches, and&#13;
helicopters.&#13;
Once the ice reaches its new&#13;
home, huge strip mining&#13;
machines anchored off the&#13;
continental shelf would be used to&#13;
scoop chunks of ice into an underwater&#13;
pipe that would carry&#13;
them, melting along the way, to a&#13;
storage plant on land.&#13;
A Rand scientist admitted that,&#13;
although simple, the plan did&#13;
have a few bugs.&#13;
"It would take the largest&#13;
mining machine that we&#13;
know...thousands of them to&#13;
harvest the ice from just one of&#13;
these large bergs," he said. In&#13;
addition, the disposal of nuclear&#13;
wastes from the yet-to-be&#13;
developed atomic powered&#13;
tugboats would pose another&#13;
stumbling block.&#13;
Nevertheless, the scientists&#13;
clamimed that iceberg water&#13;
could cool the throats of millions&#13;
for a mere $25 an acre foot, as&#13;
compared with $65 for aqueduct&#13;
water and $100 for desalinized sea&#13;
water. (CPS)&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
5 ' "&#13;
^ V&#13;
\OV&#13;
Financial Aids applications now available for 1975-76 terms. Priority&#13;
date for submission is April 1st. Forms are available in Tallent Hall.&#13;
Neuma n c en t e r sched ul e&#13;
The Newman Center's new name is CHI - RHO CENTER. The&#13;
location is the same: the corner of Hwy. E and JR, southwest of the&#13;
Parkside fieldhouse. A new sign marking the site will be there shortly.&#13;
Both campus ministers are available on the Parkside Campus.&#13;
Sister Colette, 552-8626, is here on Monday. Father Wayne, 657-3408, on&#13;
Thursdays. Both are available for personal counseling by appointment.&#13;
&#13;
Beginning February 16, the Sunday Mass will begin at 11:15 a.m. at&#13;
the Center.&#13;
Second semester programs include the following:&#13;
An open house at CHI - RHO CENTER on Monday, Feb. 10 from 7*30&#13;
to 10:30 p.m.&#13;
A communal penance service is scheduled for Ash Wednesday, Feb.&#13;
12 at 8:00 p.m. at the Center. On each of the following Wednesdays&#13;
during the Lenten season, scripture discussions will be held at 7:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Beginning Monday, Feb. 24 and on the next three consecutive&#13;
Mondays, at 8:00 p.m., a partner-relationship series will be offered at&#13;
the CHI - RHO Center. Guest speakers and the campus ministers will&#13;
explore the psychological, physiological, spiritual and financial&#13;
dimensions of a relationship. Interested couples, those to be married&#13;
or couples already married are invited to register. Phone 552-8626 or&#13;
657-3408 for more information. Reservation by Feb. 17.&#13;
Sunday, March 2 has been set aside to explore man's Christian&#13;
vocation. Guests at the CHI - RHO CENTER will include a team of&#13;
explorers.&#13;
Holy Week services will be held at the CENTER. Included in the&#13;
celebration will be a SEDER MEAL on Holy Thursday evening.&#13;
A one-day retreat experience is scheduled for Saturday, April 19&#13;
beginning at 6:00 p.m. and concluding with breakfast at 8:00 a.m. on&#13;
Sunday. Reservations and added information are available before&#13;
April 15 by phoning the CENTER.&#13;
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TRUC &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February 5, 1975&#13;
Classified&#13;
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2°77 m°&#13;
del 255°- REWARD- Call 6 34-&#13;
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H UW- PARKSIDE&#13;
SPHINGBREAK TRIP TO.&#13;
Boycott tuna-save dolphins&#13;
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•Tips &amp; T axes&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPIS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
(CPS)&#13;
Before you bite into that succulent&#13;
tuna-salad sandwich,&#13;
Project Jonah wants to ask you a&#13;
question:&#13;
How many dolphins and porpoises&#13;
were killed last year by the&#13;
tuna-fishing industry-the "incidental"&#13;
victims of technology&#13;
employed by some of the big&#13;
brand tuna-packers?&#13;
The estimated kill runs from&#13;
200,000 to 400,000 annually, according&#13;
to officials of Project&#13;
Jonah, who have launched a&#13;
nationwide tuna boycott in an&#13;
effort to stop what they call a&#13;
mindless and needless slaughter.&#13;
The practice Jonah wants to&#13;
eliminate is called "fishing on&#13;
porpoise," and is limited to&#13;
yellowfin tuna, which follow the&#13;
porpoises and dolphins and feed&#13;
on their leftovers. Yellowfin&#13;
comprise 60 percent of the annual&#13;
US catch, and 60 percent of the&#13;
Pinch&#13;
yellowfin are caught by multmillion&#13;
dollar vessels called&#13;
purse-seiners.&#13;
Jonah's Eugenia McNaughton&#13;
said the seiners are like the huge&#13;
whale factory-boats. The tuna&#13;
catch is cleaned aboard the ships,&#13;
then frozen for ultimate delivery&#13;
to the canneries.&#13;
When a herd of porpoises is&#13;
spotted, the seiner drops its&#13;
speedboats which, under radio&#13;
direction from the big ship's&#13;
captain, "herd" the porpoises&#13;
into a compact bunch.&#13;
Then a skiff is dropped, holding&#13;
one end of the net. It follows the&#13;
big ship in a tightening circle&#13;
around the porpoises (and tuna).&#13;
Once the net is "set", its top is&#13;
drawn tight like the top of a&#13;
drawstring purse, trapping both&#13;
the sought-after tuna and the&#13;
unwanted porpoises.&#13;
When the catch is hauled&#13;
aboard, the tuna are sorted out&#13;
and the porpoises-many badly&#13;
maimed, many already dead&#13;
from suffication--are dumped&#13;
unceremoniously back into the&#13;
sea.&#13;
Jonah has learned that a&#13;
scientific survey shows "the&#13;
porpoise population has been&#13;
drastically reduced," over the&#13;
past two year.&#13;
Said McNaughton, "the case is&#13;
stronger and more urgent than&#13;
even we had thought "-and the&#13;
boycott has now become a hard&#13;
reality.&#13;
Main targets of the boycott are&#13;
Star-Kist Foods, Inc, and Van&#13;
Camp Sea Food Co. (a division of&#13;
Raston-Purina), both of Terminal&#13;
Island Island, California,&#13;
and Bumble-Bee Seafoods,&#13;
Astoria, Oregon.&#13;
Jonah has urged boycotting&#13;
consumers to switch to chicken&#13;
Fish warfare&#13;
salad and to quit buying any tuna&#13;
packed by the producers named.&#13;
With few exceptions, the cans&#13;
don't say what kind of tuna is&#13;
inside, or how it was caught. This&#13;
leaves it up to consumers to find&#13;
independent canneries, probably&#13;
in Washington and Oregon.&#13;
"We don't want to put the&#13;
small, independent tuna man out&#13;
of business," says Mclntyre.&#13;
"What we're against is&#13;
agribusiness in the sea."&#13;
Jonah has chosen an unlikely&#13;
weapon for their new campaigna&#13;
comic book called "Net Profit."&#13;
The book extolls the intelligence&#13;
and friendliness of porpoises and&#13;
dolphins-and describes in&#13;
graphic detail how the big ships&#13;
stalk and trap them&#13;
The book, and other information,&#13;
is available from&#13;
Project Jonah, P.O. Box 476,&#13;
Bolinas, CA 94924.&#13;
continued from pg„ 1&#13;
state, "faculty members should&#13;
be evaluated on the three duties:&#13;
teaching, scholarly activity, and&#13;
service."&#13;
During an interview several&#13;
north&#13;
side&#13;
location&#13;
Presents&#13;
their Annual Eoh. Sale&#13;
Our Haircuts are Beautiful.&#13;
Specialized&#13;
in Men's and Women's Styling&#13;
George's Beauty Salon&#13;
Phone :637-6305&#13;
506 Go old St.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
weeks ago, Robert Canary,&#13;
professor of English and member&#13;
of the Tenure Faculty Division,&#13;
was asked whether the bad&#13;
economic state of the university&#13;
would be cited as a reason for&#13;
denying tenure or whether there&#13;
would be mention of this circumstance&#13;
in any records of the&#13;
people who were denied tenure.&#13;
He answered, "No, the official&#13;
reasons will be that the candidate&#13;
wasn't good enough in some&#13;
area."&#13;
Bauer said that he didn't know&#13;
if any faculty would be denied&#13;
tenure this year because of&#13;
economic conditions but that&#13;
there would be some administrators&#13;
released for that&#13;
reason.&#13;
He said, "There's more contract,&#13;
or shall I say, letter of&#13;
appointment protection for&#13;
faculty than administrators.&#13;
Administrators don't receive&#13;
tenure, they get a letter of appointment.&#13;
This means that some&#13;
serve at the pleasure of the Board&#13;
(Board of Regents) and some&#13;
serve at the pleasure of other&#13;
administrators."&#13;
Ocean resources&#13;
depleted&#13;
(CPS) - "While people worry about the energy crises, rising food&#13;
costs and pollution, the oceans that were supposed to feed the world&#13;
when all the food ran out are rapidly being depleted."&#13;
So says the California Student Research Institute, which recently&#13;
reported that there are fewer fish in the world's waters than there&#13;
were 20 years ago. Some 30 species of fish are now nearly depleted due&#13;
to overfishing and ocean pollution.&#13;
A report by the Student Research Institute noted an international&#13;
fishing warfare was being waged.&#13;
Competition between nations for the dwindling supplies of ocean&#13;
protein was a focus of the recent Law of the Sea Conference in&#13;
Venezuela. And last year Britain and Iceland nearly got into a&#13;
shooting war over disputed cod fishing grounds in the North Atlantic.&#13;
For its part the U.S. Senate has been studying a proposal to extend&#13;
this country's 12-mile territorial limits 200 miles out to sea. But while&#13;
this would give the U.S. greater control over some species, it would&#13;
severely jeopardize tuna and shrimp industries that now operate&#13;
within 200 miles of foreign shores.&#13;
Scholarship in drag&#13;
(CPS)&#13;
An anonymous donor at Sir George Williams University in Montreal&#13;
Ontario, has set up what's believed to be the first college scholarship&#13;
iund exclusively for homosexuals.&#13;
The $200 annual grant will be awarded to a male or female&#13;
homosexual who shows outstanding distinction in his or her junior&#13;
year.&#13;
J&#13;
Applicants must state in the application forms that they are&#13;
homosexuals. "After all," said Haffey, "we aren't going to have&#13;
luSlS.&#13;
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3928 - 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
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Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
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IN KENOSHA TRY &#13;
parkside&#13;
goalies&#13;
win&#13;
by Brenda Mead&#13;
The hockey club has a record of&#13;
16 wins, and 3 defeats, with&#13;
twelve games remaining. Last&#13;
Friday, January 30, they&#13;
defeated UW-Whitewater, 15 to 6,&#13;
which was their highest scoring&#13;
game so far. Sunday, February 2,&#13;
they defeated Marquette, by a&#13;
score of 6 to 2. They have 12&#13;
straight wins, and two home&#13;
games this weekend. Friday they&#13;
will challenge Stevens Point at&#13;
5:30 and on Saturday they will&#13;
meet with Madison Area&#13;
Technical College, at 8:30.&#13;
Jim Nehls was the high scorer&#13;
in the Whitewater game, with&#13;
four goals. The player-coach,&#13;
Gary Cukla, scored a 'hat-trick'&#13;
of three goals.&#13;
Parkside's high scorer for the&#13;
Marquette game was Bill Isermann,&#13;
with two goals. Parkside&#13;
scored two goals in each of the&#13;
three periods.&#13;
Parkside's goalie, Bob Arneson,&#13;
has a record of allowing&#13;
only 3.3 goals to be scored against&#13;
him per game, which is compatable&#13;
to a professional goalie's&#13;
average. The team scored an&#13;
average of 7.1 goals per game.&#13;
They have accumulated 128&#13;
gaols, and have allowed only 68 to&#13;
be scored against them.&#13;
Leading scorers for Parkside&#13;
are: Jim Nehls, 19 goals; Jerry&#13;
Simonsen, 15 goals; and Bill&#13;
Isermann, with 15 goals. Other&#13;
scorers are: John Bruneau, 9&#13;
goals; Roy Swartz, 8 goals; Steve&#13;
Bentel 7 goals; John Culotta, 7&#13;
goals; Gary Cukla, 5 goals; Jerry&#13;
Madala, 4 goals; Robin Lipski, 2&#13;
goals; George Krulatz, 2 goals;&#13;
Bill Evans, 1 goal.&#13;
Other team members include:&#13;
Wednesday, February 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Wrestlers take on&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
of 16&#13;
"to. -d 3 defeats, with&#13;
Stevens Point and 0n ^ 3t h&#13;
°&#13;
me&#13;
' they wiU cha,,eng&#13;
e&#13;
Technical College.&#13;
' v uicj win cnauenge&#13;
Saturday they meet with Madison Area&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
The Ranger Wrestlers hosted&#13;
their final home meet for the&#13;
season Saturday defeating&#13;
Augustana College (22-12),&#13;
Eastern Illinois (24-15) and&#13;
Michigan Tech (21-16).&#13;
Triple match winners were&#13;
Rich Baron, wrestling at 158&#13;
pounds, Rich Shaumberg at 118&#13;
pounds and Joe Landers at 134&#13;
pounds.&#13;
Baron's current record stands&#13;
at 18 wins with 0 loses for the&#13;
season.&#13;
Double match winners were&#13;
defending all American National&#13;
Champion Bill West at 150&#13;
pounds, Rich Langer at 142&#13;
pounds and Rico Savaglio at 126&#13;
pounds.&#13;
West remains undefeated after&#13;
two years with a record of 44&#13;
straight wins.&#13;
The Rangers defeated Carthage&#13;
College last Wednesday&#13;
(39-9) and will meet with them&#13;
again tonight, February 5 at 6:30&#13;
at Carthage.&#13;
On Thursday, February 6, they&#13;
will travel to meet with&#13;
nationally ranked number two in&#13;
the NAIA, UW Whitewater.&#13;
The Rangers are nationally&#13;
ranked number three among the&#13;
NAIA Schools and hold a record&#13;
of 6 wins, 1 loss and 1 tie for the&#13;
season.&#13;
the alternate goalie, Darrel&#13;
Pickerign, Walt Onushko, Ron&#13;
Andro, Ken Langehaug, Kurt&#13;
Sandien, Keith Church, John&#13;
Lulewicz.&#13;
The three loses have been to&#13;
Purdue (4-3), Northern Illinois&#13;
(9-3), and LaCrosse (5-3). They&#13;
have defeated the Parkside&#13;
Alumni team (9-8); Marquette (5-&#13;
2, and 6-2); Eau Claire (10-5);&#13;
North East Illinois (6-0, and 8-2);&#13;
Northern Illinois (5-1); Beloit (7-&#13;
3); Lewis (4-3); St. Norbert (5-4);&#13;
Madison Area Technical College&#13;
(10-5); Ripon (12-1) and&#13;
Whitewater (15-6).&#13;
All home games are played at&#13;
the Kenosha Ice Arena, 7727 60th&#13;
Street, one block east of Highway&#13;
31. Plans are underway for an&#13;
Invitational Tournament to be&#13;
held at the end of March.&#13;
h e i l e m a n s&#13;
111 J&#13;
Sj's I Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tan fit flip TTiiinti&#13;
Events&#13;
Wednesday, February 5&#13;
WHITESKELLAR: P.A.B. Whiteskellar presents auditions for the&#13;
coffee-house, beginning at 11:30 a.m., in GR D201. Anyone interested&#13;
in auditioning can sign up in the P.A.B. office, LLC D195, or just come&#13;
down to the coffeehouse. Or, if you just want to listen, come on down&#13;
too-it's free and open to the public.&#13;
Film; P.A.B. presents "Steelyard Blues," a hilarious sendup of every&#13;
high adventure story you've ever seen, starring Donald Sutherland&#13;
Jane Fonda, 7:30 p.m., C.A.T., admission $1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
Thursday. February 6&#13;
FILM: P.A.B. presents "Steelyard Blues," 7:30 p.m. C.A.T., admission&#13;
$1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
you'll jove it.&#13;
BONANZA&#13;
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ffiQ Jlirform ^Safer effiattress&#13;
ijl" lb&#13;
gives orthopedic comfort that&#13;
. . . returns man to his source&#13;
"SPECIAL"&#13;
SPLASH&#13;
SALE!!&#13;
A C OMPLETE&#13;
WATERBED S ET-UP&#13;
• Deluxe Frame&#13;
•Headboard&#13;
• edP estal&#13;
• iner L&#13;
.Mattress&#13;
ONEr^WEET&#13;
DREAM&#13;
also has&#13;
a fine selection of Bean&#13;
Bags and a complete line&#13;
of waterbed products&#13;
including&#13;
Aqua Qu een&#13;
(U_L _ pj o v e d _H e a t e r s)&#13;
Keep your energy high and your mind mello with Pyramid Products. &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February 5, 1975&#13;
AA McDonald's Breakfast /Menu&#13;
/XL Five great ways to start the day&#13;
McDonald'^&#13;
" " ®&#13;
iHl nnV'ii^i A iii^i mn*r&#13;
FORGET&#13;
•n&#13;
Jewelry&#13;
%&#13;
Plants&#13;
ft&#13;
Cards •&#13;
Discount&#13;
Books &amp; Records&#13;
Jerry's&#13;
Pet Originals&#13;
LOVE BOOKS AND POETRY&#13;
Spectrum of Love • My Gift to You • Nimoy's - Will I Think of You • Kahlil Gibran&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
W'A1 " vt' •" »» A »I 'A " 'A' U'A </text>
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              <text>Hard to define 'Student*&#13;
Task force may miss deadline&#13;
by Terry A. Maraccini&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
The Task Force for Implementation&#13;
of 36.09(5) Wis.&#13;
Stats, is moving toward&#13;
presenting their recommendations&#13;
to the Board of&#13;
Regents, but, according to Allen&#13;
Dearborn, assistant chancellor&#13;
for Student Services, the outlook&#13;
for doing so before the February&#13;
15 deadline seems unlikely.&#13;
The task force will be making&#13;
recommendations concerning the&#13;
following: the definition of&#13;
"students" in the Merger Implementation&#13;
Act, student involvement&#13;
in the allocation of&#13;
student fees, and the role of&#13;
students in faculty governance.&#13;
Dearborn said, "It may be&#13;
impossible to meet the deadline&#13;
because of the amount of work&#13;
left to be done on that document."&#13;
According to Dearborn, the&#13;
major problems center around&#13;
the final wording of the recommendations.&#13;
Final wording of th e&#13;
document must be in accordance&#13;
with the wording of the Merger&#13;
Bill and with the Amended&#13;
Constitution of P.S.G.A. Inc.,&#13;
which has not yet been ratified by&#13;
the student body.&#13;
Den nis M i lut ino vic h,&#13;
President of Parkside Student&#13;
Government, and member of t he&#13;
task force, expressed the hope&#13;
that a referendum to amend the&#13;
constitution could be placed on a&#13;
ballot at the soonest possible&#13;
date.&#13;
According to Dearborn, no&#13;
votes have been taken on the&#13;
Task Force recommendations,&#13;
and none will until current&#13;
problems are resolved. He cited&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
Wednesday, February 12, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 24&#13;
the vague wording of th e Merger&#13;
Bill as one of the main reasons&#13;
why the question of student&#13;
governance is still unresolved.&#13;
The Merger Bill states that,&#13;
"The students... shall be active in&#13;
the immediate governance of and&#13;
policy developments for such&#13;
institutions."&#13;
The bill allows for students to&#13;
take an active role in the tenure&#13;
procedure, said Dearborn, but it&#13;
does not specify how they shall be&#13;
allowed to do so. He said it cannot&#13;
necessarily be interpreted to&#13;
mean that students will be able to&#13;
vote on tenure committees or&#13;
have any power other than&#13;
serving as an advisory body.&#13;
Dearborn also mentioned that&#13;
the Task Force will be having&#13;
another open hearing once their&#13;
recommendations are finalized.&#13;
This open hearing will take place&#13;
some time after the Feb. 15&#13;
deadline.&#13;
In the meantime, an interim&#13;
progress report detailing the&#13;
work of the Task Force will be&#13;
forwarded to the Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Events to take place&#13;
Third world calls&#13;
black history week&#13;
White stickers sold by&#13;
'Misrepresentation'&#13;
by Susan Shemanske&#13;
Erwin Zuehlke, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor for Business Affairs,&#13;
admitted that the parking permit&#13;
sales policy during registration&#13;
did misrepresent the parking&#13;
situation to the students.&#13;
The "misrepresentation"&#13;
resulted in the change of&#13;
restricted (white permit) areas&#13;
in the Comm Arts lot and the&#13;
issuance of tickets to students&#13;
parked in the newly restricted&#13;
areas with red permits.&#13;
Ron Singer, chairman of the&#13;
Parking and Transportation subcommittee,&#13;
said that his committee&#13;
had adopted the policy of&#13;
granting appeals to those&#13;
students fined for parking in&#13;
restricted areas in the Comm&#13;
Arts lot with red permits.&#13;
However these appeals will be&#13;
granted only to those students&#13;
fined during the week of J anuary&#13;
20-24, who appealed their tickets'&#13;
within five days of the issuance&#13;
date.&#13;
The original proposal adopted&#13;
by the Campus Planning Committee&#13;
upon recommendations&#13;
from the Parking and Transportation&#13;
Comm. at their&#13;
meeting on December 12, 1974,&#13;
stated that both the Comm Arts&#13;
and Union lots would be divided&#13;
into white and red permit areas&#13;
(approximately half and half),&#13;
but that the Assistant Chancellor&#13;
for Business Affairs would have&#13;
reasonable flexibility to establish&#13;
appropriate boundaries for these&#13;
areas according to the number of&#13;
permits sold. At that time there&#13;
was no set limit on the number of&#13;
white permits that would be sold.&#13;
For the first three days of&#13;
registration week, maps showed&#13;
that half of the Comm Arts lot&#13;
would be for white permits, half&#13;
for red. By Wednesday, however,&#13;
Zuehlke reported that the Comm&#13;
CIA spys on&#13;
women leaders&#13;
(CPS) - In a story certain to send more shock waves through the&#13;
already shell-shocked Central Intelligence Agency, a group of intelligence-watchers&#13;
in Washington has revealed documentation to&#13;
prove that the CIA has secretly funded an overseas project of the&#13;
league of Women Voters in order to spy on emerging women leaders&#13;
in Third World countries.&#13;
The CIA has exerted its influence through the Overseas Education&#13;
Fund (OEF) of the League, said the Organizing Committee for a Fifth&#13;
Estate in a news conference held January 24 in the nation's capital.&#13;
The Fifth Estate is an independent organization formed several&#13;
years ago to keep track of the encroachment of the government intelligence&#13;
community into the lives of private citizens.&#13;
The first hint of CIA involvement came through an OEF employee,&#13;
Ann Roberts, who became concerned when she noticed the group was&#13;
receiving funding through the Asia Foundation, a conduit the CIA&#13;
admitted it used in funding the National Student Association from 1951&#13;
to 1967.&#13;
Roberts also noticed that OEG reports contained large amounts of&#13;
biographical data on women's leaders in South America and Asia. She&#13;
investigated further and found that 70 percent of the group's budget&#13;
came through the State Department and the Agency for International&#13;
Arts lot had been sold out with&#13;
white permits. The boundaries&#13;
were changed making Comm&#13;
Arts a white permit lot only.&#13;
Sales of white permits were&#13;
restricted from that date. According&#13;
to Duane Nuendorf, a&#13;
member of the Parking and&#13;
Transportation Comm., about&#13;
1030 white permits were sold,&#13;
with 640 going to students, while&#13;
2406 re d permits were sold.&#13;
During the first week of cl asses&#13;
those students with red permits&#13;
who parked in the Comm Arts lot,&#13;
under the assumption that it was&#13;
half red and half white received&#13;
warning tickets, with the reason&#13;
for the violation noted. Zuehlke&#13;
said that temporary signs indicating&#13;
a white permit only area&#13;
were up but they were not as&#13;
visible as those signs that are&#13;
now displayed in the lots. He said&#13;
that parking during the first week&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
The Third World Organization&#13;
has designated February 11-14 as&#13;
"Black History. Week."&#13;
A series of events with&#13;
corresponding themes have been&#13;
scheduled to increase social&#13;
awareness and present many of&#13;
the formalities that make the&#13;
black culture as unique as it is.&#13;
The schedule began yesterday&#13;
with Julian Thomas and Thomas&#13;
White, both of the NAACP,&#13;
speaking on "Get Up To Get&#13;
Down" and "Ujamaa the Black&#13;
Love is the Black Wealth,"&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Following Thomas and White,&#13;
The Bronze Movement, a dance&#13;
group, performed.&#13;
Today's theme is "Free Your&#13;
Mind For The Movement."&#13;
Aluerman Leroy Wooley of&#13;
Racine will speak on the&#13;
possibilities for advancement in&#13;
city government for black people&#13;
from 7-9:00 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. No&#13;
admission will be charged&#13;
T h u r s d a y 's t h e m e,&#13;
"Rememberance of Things&#13;
Afrikan" will present Margaret&#13;
Aboagye speaking on African&#13;
dentistry, and a fashion show in&#13;
the Student Activities Building&#13;
from 7-9:00 p.m. No admission&#13;
will be charged.&#13;
Friday will feature a "Soul&#13;
Dinner" in the Buffet Room&#13;
(D187 LLC) from 11-1 p.m.&#13;
The menu will include chicken,&#13;
turkey, BBQ ribs, sweet potatoes,&#13;
potato salad, green string beans,&#13;
crowder peas, cornbread and lots&#13;
more.&#13;
ICON&#13;
inside&#13;
&gt; '*:&#13;
: 1 - Au.'U-r'i&#13;
PRESIDENT'S&#13;
COMMISSION TO&#13;
INVESTIGATE&#13;
THE CIA&#13;
,f!&#13;
-i® ' I&#13;
''! VP- W; ®&#13;
m&#13;
rtHNKOW CHECKS&#13;
continued on paqe 7&#13;
'LET'S GO OVER THE PART ABOUT THEM TRIPPING UP ALL THEM NO G OOD,&#13;
PINKO, H IPPIE RADICALS!I' &#13;
2THE PA R K S I D E R A N G ER Wednesday, February 12, 1975&#13;
————&#13;
Letters to the editor RAIMGER&#13;
— Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
UWP's dump&#13;
LLC cafeteria&#13;
Canteen Corps, contract comes up for reapraisal in a&#13;
few months. In all probability the same old monopolistic&#13;
situation that has existed in the past will be continued.&#13;
With one supplier handling both food service and vending&#13;
service its an easy step to see that the quality of the&#13;
food in either service is kept to a profitably low level. If&#13;
the case should ever arise where different companies,&#13;
one specializing in vending, the other specializing in&#13;
food service, should ever come to Parkside we might see&#13;
a situation in which the competition between the two&#13;
would raise the quality of food on campus.&#13;
RANGER is sure that with the present filthy conditions&#13;
in the LLC eating area and the lack of staff to&#13;
service the students Canteen Corps, is experiencing its&#13;
most profitable year at Parkside. All well and good for&#13;
the various managers whose bonus depends on exX&#13;
GUESS U)E*ftE&#13;
Goin6 To srr ow&#13;
"THE Ftooft Afci&#13;
V —4&#13;
CAFtTlftlfi&#13;
I0», OH 00 S.«€&#13;
Dl - 6EJceeding&#13;
fixed profit levels but every student is aware of&#13;
what this does to our campus. Visit the LLC cafeteria on&#13;
Saturday morning and you can get an exact count on&#13;
everything that was eaten there on Friday from the&#13;
rubbish left on the floor and tables.&#13;
Filth like this has a way of changing peoples attitudes&#13;
about the place they work in and the people they serve.&#13;
Canteens attitude seems to be that the students can eat&#13;
in filthy surroundings perhaps the next step is filthy&#13;
food.&#13;
It's time for more competition for the students' food&#13;
dollar. RANGER calls for more companies to be&#13;
represented on campus so that capitalist competition&#13;
can do justice to the students.&#13;
Murder a private decision?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Because of the 1973 U.S.&#13;
Supreme Court decision which&#13;
legalized abortions, women are&#13;
now free to choose whether to&#13;
bear a child or obtain an abortion.&#13;
&#13;
But, since that decision, there&#13;
has been much activity on the&#13;
part of anti-abortionists to limit&#13;
or even reverse the Supreme&#13;
Court's ruling. Right now, a flood&#13;
of legislation, including some&#13;
Constitutional amendments,&#13;
threatens to undermine the&#13;
Supreme Court's decision. In&#13;
fact, some of this legislation has&#13;
already been passed, at both the&#13;
state and federal levels. Terminating&#13;
a pregnancy should&#13;
remain a matter of personal&#13;
liberty and privacy, to be decided&#13;
by individuals, not the state.&#13;
A Wisconsin-based group,&#13;
COALITION FOR RIGHT TO&#13;
CHOICE, has organized to&#13;
counteract abortion foes. In&#13;
Kenosha, a branch of the&#13;
coalition has recently been&#13;
started. They would like to start a&#13;
24-hour telephone answering&#13;
service for women who have&#13;
questions or problems concerning&#13;
pregnancy, birth control,&#13;
or related areas. Abortion&#13;
Neophyte returns&#13;
To our most beloved Editor^and&#13;
his erectifing staff and to all you&#13;
gossip spewing mucous minded&#13;
students (Senators and NonSenators&#13;
included):&#13;
Greetings: I am replying to M.&#13;
Hahner, Pres. of AWOL, and J.&#13;
Kontz, Pres Pro-tem of P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc, (God knows what the hell&#13;
for?) letters as they appeared in&#13;
the RANGER issue of 2-5-75.&#13;
Regarding your authorized and&#13;
paid for by AWOL letter, let me&#13;
just say this: opinions are like&#13;
assholes and you've already used&#13;
up your allotment. As for PAB, at&#13;
least they are giving the students&#13;
something for their money.&#13;
Unfortunately, the same can't be&#13;
said for the two organizations you&#13;
happen to belong to. As for "let's&#13;
make a deal," isn't that what you&#13;
were playing with the administration&#13;
when you were&#13;
trying to stop the building of the&#13;
new Student Union?&#13;
As for the RANGER'S article&#13;
on P.S.G.A Inc, you hit it right on&#13;
the head when you said the&#13;
problems stemmed from personality&#13;
problems rather then&#13;
philosophical problems. I must&#13;
commend your reporter for&#13;
noticing that. With the exception&#13;
of a few, there are no&#13;
philosophies in P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
As for myself, I am hereby&#13;
calling for the immediate&#13;
resignation of all student&#13;
government members except for&#13;
the treasurer (who doesn't do&#13;
anything anyway) for the&#13;
following reasons:&#13;
1. They are taking things to&#13;
seriously and because of this&#13;
attitude are creating problems.&#13;
2. They are then taking these so&#13;
called problems and trying to&#13;
make us, the student body, take&#13;
these problems seriously.&#13;
3. they are trying to get us to&#13;
them seriously.&#13;
4. They are forcing us to stretch&#13;
our imaginations to the hilt in&#13;
keeping up with their psudeoeverything-matters&#13;
type of attitude.&#13;
&#13;
5. They refuse to accept the fact&#13;
that a vast majority of us don't&#13;
care.&#13;
6. They refuse to acknowledge&#13;
the fact that most of us firmly&#13;
believe that one problem is one&#13;
too m any. The P.S.G.A. Inc. at&#13;
this point in time "is one too&#13;
manv."&#13;
7. Because of their refusal to&#13;
Segregated fees vote&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To the P.S.G.A.Inc. Senate:&#13;
Due to the controversy that has&#13;
arisen since the segregated Fee&#13;
Committee has finished its job, I&#13;
am sending to the P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
Senate the following Executive&#13;
motion:&#13;
The budget shall be itemized and a Yes&#13;
and No block shall appear after each&#13;
itemized budget. This will be put before the&#13;
student body along with the proposed con&#13;
stitutional amendments.&#13;
I will be seeing actingchancellor&#13;
Bauer Feb. 10 or 11 to&#13;
see if this can be accomplished&#13;
within the time frame established&#13;
for him by the Board of Regents.&#13;
Parkside closing?-&#13;
counseling is another project&#13;
they are interested in.&#13;
The purpose of the Coalition is&#13;
to insure that each individual has&#13;
the right to choice concerning&#13;
abortion, contraception and&#13;
sterilization, that church and&#13;
state remain separate, as stated&#13;
in the United States Constitution&#13;
and that no church, institution or&#13;
government, at any level, interferes&#13;
with the individual's&#13;
right to choice.&#13;
If anyone is interested in&#13;
getting involved in this&#13;
organization, please contact&#13;
Janet Scott at 652-4686. Thank&#13;
you.&#13;
accept points 5 and 6, they are&#13;
resorting to Police Gazzete type&#13;
of sensationalism, i.e. ass&#13;
beatings (with or without rubber&#13;
hoses) physical attack (wgs it in&#13;
a fit of love or rage?) and finally&#13;
NAME CALLING (booger or ?-!-&#13;
+ ;—) in order for us not only to&#13;
take notice, but take them&#13;
seriously.&#13;
The treasurer should be the&#13;
only person to be allowed to have&#13;
anything to do with the {&#13;
P.S.G.A.Inc. It is she and she&#13;
alone that has carried out the&#13;
wishes and dreams of the vast&#13;
majority of us. Who cares? We&#13;
don't and she doesn't either. Keep&#13;
up the good work Treasurer and&#13;
the rest of you crawl back into the&#13;
.woodwork and don't come back&#13;
until the next century mark.&#13;
Authorized and layed for by&#13;
NYMPHS FOR NEOPHYTE&#13;
Normal Nice Neophyte,&#13;
President&#13;
High Priest of the Swami Swams&#13;
Ltc.&#13;
Reigning Kenosha Snow Queen&#13;
and&#13;
President of Society for the&#13;
prevention of cruelty to Cherubs.&#13;
P.S. Keep our oceans wet and&#13;
wild and our dreams to.&#13;
I must urge that the senate act&#13;
promptly on this matter. I&#13;
estimate that this can and must&#13;
be put before the student body&#13;
with in three weeks.&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich&#13;
President P.S.A. Inc.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
A task force has been set up by&#13;
the Universities central administration&#13;
in Madison to&#13;
recommend ways to save money.&#13;
The task force is to report to U. W.&#13;
president John C. Weaver.&#13;
A study committee of this task&#13;
force on economy is conducting&#13;
simulated studies on closing&#13;
parts of campuses. At Parkside&#13;
the study involves the simulated&#13;
closing of junior and senior work&#13;
in the college of science and&#13;
society, leaving only freshman&#13;
and sophomore programs in the&#13;
humanities, social science,&#13;
science and education.&#13;
While this is supposedly only a&#13;
simulated study, even the&#13;
suggestion of such a curtailment&#13;
of programs is ominous. Many&#13;
faculty members have been or&#13;
soon will be released in these&#13;
areas. If these proposals are ever&#13;
implemented Parkside would&#13;
grant only business related&#13;
degrees and would be relegated&#13;
to the role of a junior college in all&#13;
other areas.&#13;
It seems that the College of&#13;
Science and Society is trapped in&#13;
a vicious circle. As faculty&#13;
members art cut in these areas&#13;
more students switch majors or&#13;
leave the university; as a result&#13;
of this additional faculty&#13;
reductions are made. The current&#13;
fiscal emergency is providing tne&#13;
perfect excuse for further&#13;
reductions.&#13;
The citizens of southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin were promised a&#13;
comprehensive four year&#13;
university. Now is the time to&#13;
build program &gt;t, Parkside, not&#13;
to eliminate Liberal Arts&#13;
prograr &gt; na ve been allowed to&#13;
decline too far already, the&#13;
Parkside administration, faculty,&#13;
and students must act now to&#13;
prevent any further decline. The&#13;
situation has gone too far when&#13;
numerous faculty members are&#13;
advising their students to transfer&#13;
to another university,&#13;
because in their estimation a&#13;
degree in the liberal arts from&#13;
Parkside will soon not be worth&#13;
the paper it is printed on.&#13;
I would like to take this opportunity&#13;
to invite all interested&#13;
parties to attend the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. Senate meeting to be held&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 13, 197 5 a t 4:00&#13;
p.m. in LLC-D174. Student&#13;
governments response to these&#13;
proposals will be discussed.&#13;
John Kontz,&#13;
president pro tempore&#13;
P.S.G.A Inc Senate &#13;
Wake,&#13;
and hear the silence&#13;
of the pinesand&#13;
see the doe&#13;
walking by&#13;
If on ly from the tracks&#13;
of h er passingyou&#13;
will know&#13;
in time&#13;
That you&#13;
live—&#13;
Michael Nepper 1975&#13;
UNTITLED STUDY&#13;
Time&#13;
Was in nothing but the&#13;
Grimace and Resolve...&#13;
But to utter it to&#13;
The Soul...&#13;
Escape....&#13;
Doonan, 12-1974&#13;
Actualization&#13;
Beyond secrecy,&#13;
patterned and untrue.&#13;
Inadequate expectations&#13;
beyond analysis,&#13;
giving way to alternatives always&#13;
always.&#13;
A rutt&#13;
A rutless ritual presents itself&#13;
itself,&#13;
bilingual&#13;
in involution and dimension:&#13;
To try, to learn&#13;
To risk, to grow.&#13;
-Martin Andersen&#13;
BURIED SELVES&#13;
History tales bury something&#13;
for its art towers to the natural guides&#13;
of wounded icons...&#13;
Now...&#13;
confronted by the brown, underlined saying&#13;
each smile breaksunder&#13;
aversion \&#13;
with the God under stone gravel.&#13;
He tapes his lips to pointless ecstasy&#13;
from the honest globe&#13;
revolving blue states that show&#13;
pictures of the past.&#13;
The sublime tale enjoys power&#13;
for good trials of the jungle&#13;
Curfew...&#13;
for the brother's way.&#13;
Doonan, 1975&#13;
photo b\ miehael nepper&#13;
who was it that said beauty is only skin deep?&#13;
beauty is like a single candle in the dark&#13;
from wherever it shines&#13;
to where you see it&#13;
radiating in every direction&#13;
to where you are&#13;
not an image, not from the surface&#13;
but as a single candle&#13;
it glows with warmth&#13;
from within&#13;
-Greg &#13;
ICON Vol. 1 No. 4 pg. 2&#13;
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Calm after the storm&#13;
Woody Herman&#13;
and His Thundering Herd&#13;
by Keith Cliff Chambers&#13;
On January 28 there was a thunderstorm&#13;
in Kenosha and Racine, complete with&#13;
thunder and lightning. It was most unusual&#13;
for January. The next night, January 29,&#13;
Woody Herman and His Thundering Herd&#13;
played at Parkside to a sold-out, Comm.&#13;
Arts Theater audience. It was most&#13;
unusual for Parkside.&#13;
The musical evening started out with&#13;
Parkside's Jazz Band which played four&#13;
songs beginning with "Sea Moon" and a&#13;
fine alto sax solo by Curt Hanrahan. The&#13;
second song was the rockish "Sun Catcher"&#13;
and was received well by the crowd.&#13;
The third song, even closer to rock, was&#13;
Janis Joplin's "Move Over" which contained&#13;
a trumpet solo, and two&#13;
trombone solos which were grey (a&#13;
combination of black and white). The&#13;
fourth and final song "Turquoise" was&#13;
arranged by a student. Jim Sodke sounded&#13;
good on fugelhorn. The audience liked the&#13;
Parkside Jazz Band, evinced by the applause.&#13;
&#13;
After a few minute break, out came the&#13;
Thundering Herd and Woody Herman. As&#13;
they sat down behind the raven-adorned&#13;
music stands, two thoughts flashed in my&#13;
mind. One was that it was not a very big&#13;
band to be labeled the big band sound (16&#13;
counting Woody). Two, was that they&#13;
looked like a bunch of long-haired freaks,&#13;
not nearly as conservative-looking as the&#13;
type of people that the music was to appeal&#13;
to.&#13;
They started out with "Woodchopper's&#13;
Ball" in which the string bass with electric&#13;
hook-up sounded very nice. The next tune&#13;
was a Chic Corea tune called "Spain". It&#13;
started out very mellow with a lead-in by a&#13;
bassoon and had a nice fugelhorn solo.&#13;
The Thundering Herd had three tenor&#13;
and one baritone saxes. From time to time&#13;
Woody Herman would play alto sax,&#13;
soprano sax or clarinet. The next tune&#13;
"Early Autumn" featured some very good&#13;
sax playing. The fourth song "Giant&#13;
Steps" was the title song from their&#13;
The second set started with the piano&#13;
players own composition "Lake Taco." It&#13;
was his last performance with Woody and&#13;
Woody played a real fine soprano sax solo.&#13;
One of the best trombone solos came in&#13;
the next song "What Are You Doing the&#13;
Rest of Your Life" which was a very&#13;
mellow song. The best baritone sax solo&#13;
came in the next song, "Crosswind". In&#13;
keeping with the mood of the night and&#13;
knowing Valentine's Day is just around the&#13;
corner, Woody and his herd played "My&#13;
Funny Valentine". They then played&#13;
another familar tune, "McArthur Park".&#13;
Woody Herman and His Thundering&#13;
Herd finished the night with a very loose,&#13;
jazzy song, complete with percussion&#13;
provided by every horn player in the band&#13;
(excluding Woody). Horn players set down&#13;
tneir horns and beat out a rythmn with&#13;
sticks, blocks, trombones, and tapped,&#13;
thumped, banged their way to a finale. The&#13;
crowd applauded but not enough to bring&#13;
them back for an encore, which I thought&#13;
they deserved.&#13;
grammy award winning album. Dennis&#13;
Johnson played an excellent fugelhorn solo&#13;
in the next tune "Come Rain, Come&#13;
Shine." One of the golden oldies in which&#13;
The Four Brothers demonstrated how well&#13;
the brass section played together.&#13;
One of Wisconsin's sons, Buddy Powers&#13;
did a very fine trumpet solo in "I Can't Get&#13;
Started With You". Up until then,&#13;
theThundering Herd were featured almost&#13;
exclusively, but then Woody did'his thing&#13;
(cause he came to sing.) He sang the next&#13;
song This Time." The crowd loved it. Most&#13;
of the program contained big band and&#13;
jazz sounds. One of the jazziest tunes was&#13;
the Temptation's song "I Can't Get Next&#13;
To You, Baby", featuring Gregory Herbert&#13;
with a powerful tenor sax solo to&#13;
conclude the first set.&#13;
It was a good concert, although I heard&#13;
some say Woody did not play enough.&#13;
Woody did not have to for he led the band. I&#13;
was surprised that Woody didn't play all&#13;
nostalgia tunes, but instead he included&#13;
many modern jazz tunes. I'm glad that he&#13;
did, as he gave a free concert that afternoon&#13;
and spent the day with various&#13;
music students. Hopefully Woody Herman&#13;
and his Thundering Herd thunder their&#13;
way back again to Parkside.&#13;
In keeping with his majesty's, King&#13;
Jerry, proclamation of t his being women's&#13;
year, and the very noticeable fact that the&#13;
Parkside Jazz Band and Woody Herman's&#13;
Ihundering Herd are all male, the next&#13;
review will feature a band containing&#13;
women members as well as men. &#13;
pg. 3 ICON&#13;
HARD PLACE NOT TO BE&#13;
Anywhere&#13;
_ is a hard place to be&#13;
when i need to be&#13;
another&#13;
place -&#13;
time ticked &amp; tocked twelve&#13;
hours twice&#13;
since i thought&#13;
to think to be at all -&#13;
concrete voices bid me i cannot hear&#13;
to sense their direction&#13;
to eat&#13;
to sleep&#13;
to see - my eyes are windows&#13;
shaded from the day -&#13;
i s ense my falling unhampered&#13;
unbroken time in place&#13;
unfaltered emptiness&#13;
unknown past&#13;
apathetic morrows i spend lonely&#13;
contemplate lonely&#13;
wordy phrases no one has spoken -&#13;
Jeffrey j.swencki&#13;
photo by m ichael ncpper&#13;
UNTITLED STUDY&#13;
The Birth Shriek&#13;
forms depth&#13;
by confronting a detail&#13;
of absent form... of space.&#13;
Doonan, 12-1974&#13;
HOMAGE TO NIGHT&#13;
Revenge,&#13;
the Silent projection&#13;
of Forever&#13;
Now,&#13;
persists in the Mind&#13;
Ever&#13;
without...&#13;
Why...&#13;
rebirth.&#13;
Doonan, 1-75&#13;
lover, mother- ofpearl&#13;
skin on the heart of s ighs&#13;
a thousand answers&#13;
and no one forms the question&#13;
how tlid i say it?&#13;
it was never right&#13;
and you seeing past the eyes and lines&#13;
understood my blood and wounds&#13;
understood the moon-timing of my body&#13;
warm&#13;
scarlet flowing, rain down peaks to the sea&#13;
from all silence&#13;
to all life&#13;
you are walking from the shore, living&#13;
in individual infancies&#13;
decides each moment, and there are seconds in love&#13;
- amy&#13;
HE&#13;
HE&#13;
HELD HIS BRUSHES&#13;
WI TH THE EASE OF THE PAI NTER&#13;
DABBING A LITTLE, LIGHTLY AT FIRST&#13;
AND THEN, IN A LOVER'S CONFIDENCE&#13;
HE STRUCK&#13;
WI TH HIS BLUES&#13;
AND HIS WHITES&#13;
HE STRUCK AT THE CANVAS EMPTY'WHITE^&#13;
IN COLORLESS COLORS OF JOY&#13;
AND WHEN THE CANVAS HAD FILLED&#13;
WI TH HIM&#13;
he vanished&#13;
-M. Nepper&#13;
photo b\ michael nepper&#13;
ICON&#13;
contributors: Cliff Ch ambers&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki, Greg&#13;
Michael Nepper, Doonan&#13;
Martin Andersen&#13;
The Bach Chamber Choir and Orchestra of Milwaukee will present a&#13;
free public concert on Saturday, February 15 at 8 p.m. in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre.&#13;
The concert is being sponsored by Parkside's Humanities Division.&#13;
Photography by John Schulze and some of his students at the&#13;
University of Iowa will be on display at the Parkside Comm Arts&#13;
Gallery Feb. 12 through 27. Regular gallery hours are 3 to 5 p.m.&#13;
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and&#13;
Thursdays.&#13;
Schulze will be on campus on Feb. 20 to present a free public lecture&#13;
on "New Dimensions in Photography" at 7 p.m. in Room D155A of th e&#13;
Comm Arts Building. The lecture and show are sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside art faculty. &#13;
ICON pg, 4&#13;
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OPENING JAN. 31, 3:00 P.M.&#13;
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5006 - 7th Avenu*&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
NISHIKI MONDIA CINELLI&#13;
Pictures talk.&#13;
Some little&#13;
boysdont&#13;
Some inner cities have special schools. For&#13;
little boys who don't talk.&#13;
Not mute little boys. But children so withdrawn,&#13;
so afraid of failure, they cannot make the slightest&#13;
attempt to do anything at which they might fail.&#13;
Some don't talk. Some don't listen. Most don't&#13;
behave. And all of them don't learn.&#13;
One day someone asked us to help.&#13;
Kodak responded by working with the teachers.&#13;
Showed them how, through the language of pictures,&#13;
the children could communicate as they never could&#13;
before. And the teachers sent the kids out to take&#13;
pictures with their cameras.&#13;
And then the miracle. Little boys who had never&#13;
said anything, looked at the pictures and began to&#13;
talk. They said "This is my house." "This is rriy dog."&#13;
"This is where I like to hide." They began to explain,&#13;
to describe, to communicate. And once the channels&#13;
of commumcation had been opened thev&#13;
began to learn. ' 1&#13;
,&#13;
does Kodak stand to gain from this'? Well&#13;
we re showing how our products can help a teacher'&#13;
and maybe creating a whole new market And&#13;
we re also curtivating young customers who will&#13;
fhaTth®.&#13;
buy&#13;
,&#13;
their&#13;
°&#13;
wn cameras and film. But more&#13;
who , m WS x cu&#13;
'&#13;
t,val,n9 alert, educated citizens&#13;
Who will someday be responsible for our society&#13;
After all, our business depends on society So&#13;
we care what happens to it.&#13;
y&#13;
"&#13;
Kodak.&#13;
Kore than a business. &#13;
mL. 1 lif™.' I&#13;
I'lUVleKVil&#13;
quadrant of the Comm Arts lot.&#13;
The two southern quadrants of&#13;
the Union lot are restricted to&#13;
white permits while the back&#13;
quadrants are open to both red&#13;
and white permit parking.&#13;
misrepresented those students&#13;
who had purchased red permits,&#13;
and left them under the&#13;
assumption of be ing able to park&#13;
in the back half of the Comm Arts&#13;
lot. The Committee approved a&#13;
The Parkside Association of Wargamers will be meeting every&#13;
Sunday at 1:30, Tuesday and Thursday at 6 p.m. and Wednesday at 7&#13;
p.m. in CL 140. Meetings are open to all who are interested&#13;
IIIH &lt;ikI&#13;
24 hours Soprano Eileen Swedish and Pianist Stephen Swedish, of the&#13;
Parkside music faculty, will present a free public recital at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Feb. 9, in the Comm Arts Theater. The program will include&#13;
songs of Rossini, Schumann, Debussy, Duparc and Menotti.&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12: P.A.B. Whiteskellar coffeehouse committee presents Mike&#13;
Gorman, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 .mp ., GR D201, no admission charge.&#13;
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13: FILM: P.A.B. presents Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight in&#13;
"Midnight Cowboy," 11:30a .m., C.A.T., admission $1. Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14: FILM: P.A.B. p resents "Midnight Cowboy," 11:30 a.m., C.A.T.&#13;
and 8 p.m., S.A.B., admission Si. Parkside and state l.D.'s required.&#13;
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 16: FILM: P.A.B. presents "Midnight Cowboy," 7:30 p.m., S.A.B.,&#13;
admission $1, Parkside and state l.D.'s required.&#13;
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18: FILM: "The Wild Bunch," 11:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., C.A.T.,&#13;
admission $1, Parkside I.D. required. Sponsored by P.A.B.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19:: FILM: P.A.B. presents "The Wild Bunch, " 11:30 a.m. and&#13;
7.30 p.m., C.A.T., admission $1, Parkside I.D. required.&#13;
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22: P.A.B. presents a dance featuring the soulful music of Harvey&#13;
Scales and the Seven Sounds, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., S.A.B. Tickets are $1.50 in advance for students&#13;
and $2.00 for guests and at the door Special: During Black History Week (Feb. 1014) student&#13;
tickets will be sold for only $1. Tickets are available at he t Info Kiosk.&#13;
H E I L E M A N 'S&#13;
P&#13;
Pure Brewed From God's Country,&#13;
On Tap at the Union"&#13;
Drag yourself and a friend (or two, if you have them)&#13;
over to Hfjafeeps; Parlor&#13;
for Sud's Sipping Time.&#13;
3-5 MON. thru FRl. I LARGE FROSTY PITCHERS&#13;
OF BEER ONLY $1.25&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
1Joofcw&#13;
Lathrop and 21st, (almost) Racine&#13;
Misrepresentation&#13;
Wednesday, February 12, 1 975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
0f classes was a very confusing&#13;
situation for the students.&#13;
Director of Planning and&#13;
Construction, James Galbraith,&#13;
said that much of the problem&#13;
was due to a mistake in&#13;
judgement as to the number of&#13;
white permits students would&#13;
buy. F&#13;
ar more students&#13;
^an&#13;
were anticipated by the Campus&#13;
planning Comm. bought white&#13;
permits and indicated a&#13;
preference for the Comm Arts&#13;
lot. Campus Planning and advanced&#13;
the policy that those&#13;
students with white permits&#13;
would have some kind of&#13;
reserved space.&#13;
At the Campus Planning&#13;
Committee meeting, called&#13;
January 23, to review the parking&#13;
situation, Dennis Milutinovich,&#13;
P.S.G.A. Pres. said that the&#13;
adminis tration h a d&#13;
motion to make tl,e southwest&#13;
quadrant of the Comm Arts lot&#13;
available for both white and red&#13;
permit parking.&#13;
Milutinovich also said that&#13;
students with red permits, who*&#13;
parked in the Comm Arts lot&#13;
under the assumption that it was&#13;
legal but were fined, should have&#13;
their tickets voided. Ronald&#13;
Bnnkman, Director of Security,&#13;
said that warning tickets had&#13;
been issued the first week of the&#13;
semester therefore those tickets&#13;
received after that date should&#13;
not be voided. The Parking and&#13;
Transportation sub-committee&#13;
has, however, adopted the policy&#13;
of accepting the appeals under&#13;
the conditions stated before.&#13;
As for the present situation in&#13;
the Comm Arts and Union&#13;
parking lots, red permit parking&#13;
is allowed only in the southwest&#13;
rief news&#13;
A stu dent organization, Inter-Connection, will sponsor a Valentine&#13;
Sweetheart contest February 10 through 13. Students will have an&#13;
opportunity to vote for their favorite set of li ps, owned by such personages&#13;
as Acting Chancellor Bauer, Assistant Chancellor Allen&#13;
Dearborn and other members of the Parkside staff. Voting will take&#13;
place next to "Ye Olde Candy Shoppe" Monday-Thursday from 10&#13;
a.m. to 3 p.m. The winning lips will be displayed on Friday, Valentine's&#13;
Day, along with the winner's name. The Valentine Sweetheart&#13;
will receive a box of candy.&#13;
A blood drive will be held for the Veterans at Woods Hospital on&#13;
Thursday, March 6, between the hours of 2 p.m . and 8:30 p.m. at the&#13;
Somers American Legion Post (located on County Highway E, 2V2&#13;
miles east of 1-94).&#13;
The purpose of the drive is to replace blood used by Kenosha County&#13;
Veterans.&#13;
If i nterested, send a notice to the American Legion Hall, Hy. E -&#13;
Somers stating that you wish to donate blood. Include name, address,&#13;
phone number and signature.&#13;
For more information call Steve Savas 859-2222, Tom Cox 859-2323 or&#13;
Floyd Hughes 694-3341.&#13;
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Wednesday, February T2, 1 975&#13;
FOR YOUR COMPLETE&#13;
SKIING NEEDS VISIT&#13;
We Sell I nstant F un!&#13;
1101 N . M ain St. Racine&#13;
633-5244&#13;
by Brenda Mead&#13;
The Parkside Hockey Club had&#13;
their 12 game winning streak&#13;
broken by Stevens Point on«&#13;
Friday, February 7. The game&#13;
- was called off by the referees in&#13;
the third period with less than&#13;
five minutes remaining.&#13;
Parkside was losing by the score&#13;
of 9 to 3, and held no hopes for&#13;
victory in the fight marred game.&#13;
The referees were kept very&#13;
busy calling penalties throughout&#13;
the game, with five major game&#13;
misconduct penalties for each&#13;
team, resulting in ten players&#13;
being ejected from the game. The&#13;
Parkside players kicked out&#13;
were: Steve Bentel, Roy Swartz,&#13;
Kurt Sandien, Gary Cukla, and&#13;
Robin Lipski.&#13;
The only scorers for Parkside&#13;
were Keith Church, for his second&#13;
goal; John Bruneau, for his tenth&#13;
goal; and Jerry Simonsen, the&#13;
second highest scorer, connected&#13;
for his 16th goal of the season.&#13;
Stevens Point had 58 s hots on&#13;
goal during the game, but only&#13;
managed to get past Parkside's&#13;
goalie, Bob Arneson for nine&#13;
goals. Parkside attempted 35&#13;
times, but only hit on three goals.&#13;
Saturday, February 8,&#13;
Parkside regained their winning&#13;
status by defeating the Madison&#13;
Area Technical College team by&#13;
the score of 10 to 1. Parkside's&#13;
record is now at 17 wins and 4&#13;
loses.&#13;
The Madison team was understrength&#13;
due to illness and&#13;
injuries, and played most of the&#13;
game with just one replacement&#13;
player. Parkside played a more&#13;
subdued game, with only five&#13;
penalties for the night.&#13;
Parkside's high scorers for the&#13;
game were Jim Nehls, with five&#13;
goals, and Jerry Madala, with&#13;
two goals. Other scorers were&#13;
Roy Swartz, Keith Church and&#13;
John Bruneau. Jim Nehls is still&#13;
the team's high scorer with a&#13;
total of 24 g oals.&#13;
This weekend the team plays&#13;
Eau Claire on Saturday February&#13;
15, a nd Lewis College in Illinois&#13;
on Sunday 16 February. The next&#13;
home game will be Sunday,&#13;
February 23 a gainst Platteville.&#13;
Rangers down Whitewater&#13;
lose to Illinois&#13;
rebounds, Leartha Scott dumped&#13;
23 points, Malcolm Mahone 10,&#13;
and Marshall Hill shot 6 and&#13;
made 9 rebounds.&#13;
Whistles were blown as the&#13;
fouls were called and the&#13;
Rangers were concerned with&#13;
fouling out, so they took it very&#13;
easy on the boards during the&#13;
second half.&#13;
The last minute of the game led&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, Stevie King&#13;
and Cole to the bench with their&#13;
final fouls while the Panthers&#13;
went to the ine l to shoot their final&#13;
points.&#13;
Fred Myers and Brad Warble&#13;
made 16 buckets each while Steve&#13;
Rich and Bev Mitchell respectively,&#13;
hit on 14 and 13 to display&#13;
the balance on the Panther team.&#13;
Eastern Illinois is currently&#13;
ranked 5th in the nation in the&#13;
NCAA Division 2.&#13;
The Rangers outshot the&#13;
Panthers, connecting on 30 ou t of&#13;
67 attempts for 45 p ercent while&#13;
Eastern hit on 28 of 66 attempts&#13;
for 42 p ercent.&#13;
Leartha Scott stole the scene&#13;
with 30 points as he led the&#13;
Rangers to their 17th victory of&#13;
the season against the&#13;
Whitewater Warhawks in&#13;
Tuesday night's game with a&#13;
final score of 84-78.&#13;
Whitewater, in tight zone&#13;
defense, shot over Parkside&#13;
defense, allowing the battle to&#13;
begin early in the first half. It&#13;
wasn't until the second half that&#13;
the Rangers dumped enough&#13;
points to run away with the lead.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens said, "I&#13;
was pleased with the way we&#13;
stayed in during the first half and&#13;
made it in the second half.&#13;
The Warhawks keyed in on&#13;
Marshall but he played an excellent&#13;
game, dumping 19 points.&#13;
Gary Cole added to Hill and&#13;
Scottie's scoring with 22 points.&#13;
The Rangers connected on 33 of&#13;
64 baskets for 52 percent while&#13;
Whitewater hit 33 out of 84 for 39&#13;
percent.&#13;
The Rangers will challenge&#13;
four more teams on the road and&#13;
then return home for their final&#13;
game on Tuesday, Feb. 18 when&#13;
they meet with UW-Green Bay.&#13;
8-25 AMPEG AMPLIFIER for sale, slightly&#13;
used. Good condition. BEST OFFER over&#13;
$250. Ph. 859 2642 or 637 3361.&#13;
Roommate wanted, female preferred, share&#13;
rent, phone 652 2366 after 4 p.m.&#13;
A D ifferent&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
REWARD LOST bracelet in the library,&#13;
first week of classes. Sentimental value.&#13;
REWARD. Call 657 6294 for more information.&#13;
&#13;
to Stevens Point&#13;
by Bonne Haas&#13;
The Rangers gained a measure&#13;
of revenge against Whitewater&#13;
last Tuesday night to make it 16&#13;
straight and broke the streak&#13;
Thursday night when they lost to&#13;
Eastern Illinois on the free throw&#13;
line.&#13;
The Rangers led 32-30 at the&#13;
half but the Eastern Illinois&#13;
Panthers cashed in for a game&#13;
total of 23-31 free throws and a 79-&#13;
72 victory during the second half.&#13;
This was the Panthers" 13th&#13;
straight win on their home court.&#13;
High scorers for Parkside were&#13;
Gary Cole with 26 p oints and 11&#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;
Ranger goalie Bob Arneson blocks an attempted goal of a UW-Stevens Point puckster.&#13;
UWP pucksters lose&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-71&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROC&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
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iPORTS&#13;
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DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME </text>
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              <text>Parking Permits</text>
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              <text>II Don't screw the students&#13;
Parking&#13;
ir&#13;
Permits&#13;
by Cathy Mech&#13;
There is talk of designating&#13;
Wood Road as a dividing line for&#13;
all white or all red permit&#13;
parking, according to the&#13;
Parking and Transportation Subcommittee&#13;
that met February 10&#13;
to discuss next year's budget. It&#13;
was felt this would eliminate the&#13;
roaming in the lots, especially for&#13;
those who try to find a space in&#13;
the Comm. Arts lot after 9:30&#13;
A.M.&#13;
A three rate structure was also&#13;
discussed, which would make it&#13;
cheaper to park in the far east lot&#13;
and most expensive in the Comm.&#13;
Arts lot. This would increase the&#13;
use 01 the shuttle busses and add&#13;
to present costs. The general&#13;
opinion was that students should&#13;
be encouraged to park as close as&#13;
possible to the buildings to cut&#13;
bussing expenses.&#13;
One sub-committee member&#13;
said the parking system should&#13;
be as lucrative to the students as&#13;
to the faculty and staff. Another's&#13;
parting comment was, "Don't&#13;
screw the students."&#13;
An annual parking permit is&#13;
also available, which the committee&#13;
members felt not many&#13;
people were aware of. This annual&#13;
permit would save the&#13;
hassle of buying permits at&#13;
second semester registration.&#13;
Bicyclists can also turn their&#13;
parking permits in for a partial&#13;
refund when they start riding&#13;
their bikes to school to save gas.&#13;
However, there was general&#13;
reluctance to encourage other&#13;
types of transportation to the&#13;
campus other than cars since&#13;
parking permits are the major&#13;
source of re venue used to operate&#13;
the lots.&#13;
Also discussed, was an option&#13;
to allow faculty and staff&#13;
members to buy a red permit&#13;
instead of being required to buy a&#13;
white one. This has been brought&#13;
up before, but had been voted&#13;
down by the Campus Planning&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
— Wednesday, February 19, 1975 V ol. Ill No. 25&#13;
Black History week&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Third World organized a series&#13;
of events from February 11&#13;
through the 14th in recognition of&#13;
Black History Week. Events&#13;
included speakers, a fashion&#13;
show and a "Soul Food Dinner."&#13;
Last Wednesday, Alderman&#13;
lieroy Wooley of Racine spoke of&#13;
the importance of black people&#13;
becoming involved in the political&#13;
process. He stressed the importance&#13;
of government at the&#13;
local level.&#13;
Wooley said, "You can't take&#13;
an apathetic position. Nothing&#13;
has happened since the 60's and&#13;
some of the things which were&#13;
gained are being taken away.&#13;
"Infiltrate the system and&#13;
make yourself heard. You don't&#13;
accomplish things by scaring&#13;
people anymore like in the 60's.&#13;
It's a more sophisticated process&#13;
now."&#13;
He suggested taking advantage&#13;
of groups which are already&#13;
organized in order to get into the&#13;
political system. He also mentioned&#13;
that there are very few&#13;
qualifications which are&#13;
necessary to run for office.&#13;
Duke Hamilton, who is on the&#13;
board of directors of the Opportunities&#13;
Industrialization&#13;
Center, OIC, also spoke that&#13;
evening.&#13;
He talked about the OIC, an&#13;
organization that trains people&#13;
for specific jobs, and encouraged&#13;
listeners to become involved with&#13;
the project if they weren't interested&#13;
in a college education.&#13;
On Tuesday, Feb. 11, Julian&#13;
Thomas and Thomas White, both&#13;
from the NAACP, spoke at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Thomas spoke on black history&#13;
and the importance of getting an&#13;
education and putting it to use.&#13;
White talked about the advantages&#13;
of getting involved with&#13;
the NAACP and getting into the&#13;
main stream of things.&#13;
Both speakers suggested that a&#13;
chapter of the NAACP be formed&#13;
on campus.&#13;
Last Thursday, Margaret&#13;
Aboagye, a Racine dentist and&#13;
native of Ghana, spoke on the&#13;
theme "Rememberance of&#13;
Things Afrikan," after which&#13;
Third World staged a fashion&#13;
show.&#13;
Aboagye spoke mostly on the&#13;
subjects of Women's liberation&#13;
and education in the U.S. and&#13;
Ghana.&#13;
She said that at first she didn't&#13;
understand the concept of&#13;
Women's Liberation.&#13;
"I know I'm liberated. I don't&#13;
think of women as being secondrate."&#13;
&#13;
"Females are important, not&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Mass&#13;
Transit&#13;
by Gary Nickolai&#13;
When Parkside was planned in&#13;
1966-68, a commuting student&#13;
body was anticipated. The&#13;
ultimate projection for 25,000&#13;
students included an assumption&#13;
that most of these would use their&#13;
cars to get to and from campus.&#13;
With the present enrollment of&#13;
5200 students, the predominant&#13;
mode of transportation is indeed&#13;
the automobile.&#13;
By means of a recent survey, it&#13;
has been concluded that there is a&#13;
definite demand among Parkside&#13;
students, staff, and faculty for&#13;
mass transit. Brian Murray,&#13;
Assistant" Director of Planning&#13;
and Construction, considers this&#13;
a "major concern," and offers an&#13;
encouraging note as to what is&#13;
being done.&#13;
This survey was made possiDie&#13;
through the cooperation of the&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Regional&#13;
Pla nni ng Com miss ion&#13;
(SEWRPC) with the cities of&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, and by way&#13;
of a grant from the Urban Mass&#13;
Transit Authority. It was found&#13;
that 76.5 percent of the students&#13;
and 83 percent of the faculty and&#13;
staff currently use their private&#13;
automobile as their cource of&#13;
transportation to and from&#13;
campus. The main concern of this&#13;
survey, however, was to discover&#13;
how great the need for improved&#13;
bus service actually is. The final&#13;
figures indicated that 51.24&#13;
percent of students from the&#13;
cities of Kenosha and Racine who&#13;
responded stated they would take&#13;
coniimii-tl on ( 3&#13;
Next year's situation?&#13;
Y£AH. £tREEK/&#13;
STICK ER5&#13;
PARV&lt; IN&#13;
MICHIGAN.&#13;
/&#13;
Studies in progress&#13;
UW-P Phase-out&#13;
Phase-down&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
The effects of "phasing out" or "phasing down" the University of&#13;
H~Ta"k rote"&#13;
6 ^ S&#13;
'&#13;
Udied by 3 ™ SySt™ Ad™°&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
The Task Force, through the first of its four study committees, will&#13;
0f&#13;
"&#13;
phasmS out&#13;
" six universities: UW-Green Bay&#13;
UW-Platteville, UW-River Falls, UW-Superior, UW-Parkside and UWStevens&#13;
Point, according to Donald K. Smith, UW senior' vice&#13;
president and chairman of the Task Force.&#13;
In a memo to chancellors, Smith noted that the studies concerning&#13;
the phase out' of P arkside and Stevens Point were only to be done if&#13;
time would allow. However, study committee No. 1 estimated that&#13;
simulations on all six universities could be done in the time allotted.&#13;
The same study committee will also consider the effects of "phasing&#13;
out" the following UW System centers: UW Center-Baraboo-Sauk UW&#13;
Center-Barron County, UW Center-Marinette, UW Center-Medford&#13;
UW Center-Richland, UW Center-Marshfield and UW Center-Rock&#13;
County.&#13;
A second study committee will study the effects of " phasing down"&#13;
10 UW System universities-including Parkside.&#13;
The committee will consider the "phase out" of P arkside's level two&#13;
i upp er division) work in the College of Science and Society, with the&#13;
College of M odern Industry remaining as a baccalaureate level unit.&#13;
Under this proposal, the Education program would be phased out.&#13;
The two other committees making up the Task Force will also&#13;
conduct studies, in addition to those cited. Study committee No. 3 will&#13;
study the effects of phasing down specific programs—graduate&#13;
progiams offered at more than one location, summer sessions, interim&#13;
sessions, athletic programs and research prograrrk Study&#13;
committee No. 4 will study five organizational or policy planning&#13;
approaches including imposed enrollment limits at several campuses,&#13;
including Madison, Milwaukee and Eau Claire; externally imposed&#13;
cost-pei-student targets and the establishment of regional universities.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside Acting Chancellor Otto F. Bauer offered a reminder to&#13;
arkside s faculty and staff, in a memo dated Feb. 6, stating that&#13;
simulations are NOT factual outcomes."&#13;
T am confident that the simulation studies will reveal the importance&#13;
of Parkside's program areas to Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
demonstrating that the potential program cutbacks for Parkside are&#13;
simply unreasonable, unworkable, and intolerable for the students we&#13;
f&#13;
d Bauer&#13;
- "Our objective is educational service to toe&#13;
^ sheer foTv."&#13;
rea ^ ^ ^ T&#13;
° Sight&#13;
°&#13;
f ob&#13;
i&#13;
ective would&#13;
Bauer added that an Academic Planning Council' is in the process of&#13;
)eing formed on the Parkside campus to assist the System Task&#13;
N-™ h %°&#13;
UP&#13;
\&#13;
b&#13;
a&#13;
ing&#13;
°&#13;
rganized b* Actin§ v&#13;
^e Chancellor Eugene&#13;
Norwood, will indude one student among its membership, according&#13;
to Bauer, and will assist the Task Force in two ways: (a) it will&#13;
provide validation of th e accuracy of information developed by staffrei&#13;
elalattioion n to to ththe '" sim^ ulation studies. ^&#13;
The group is expected to be formed by the end of this week. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, February 1 9, 1 9 7 5&#13;
Letters to the Editor&#13;
Point&#13;
of view&#13;
by Stan Nover and Terrie Caffery&#13;
Parkside has a policy which restri cts all students&#13;
under the age of eight een from ente ring the Student&#13;
Activities Building. This means that a student under 18&#13;
is not allowed to attend any of the danc es and movies&#13;
taking pla ce at the SAB. A student cannot even walk into&#13;
the S.A.B. for a game of fooseball.&#13;
This new policy has caused some hea ted response by&#13;
Pa rkside students, especia lly those under eighteen who&#13;
a re dire ctly affec ted by the rule . One minor says, " I&#13;
think it's terribly unfair that I a m not allowed to go to&#13;
most activiti es. Not only does this hurt my social life but&#13;
it makes me feel as if I d on't really belong here at&#13;
Pa rkside."&#13;
According to Tony Tote ro, coordina tor of Student&#13;
Programming, there were, as of September 1974, 276&#13;
students who were under eighte en. Why then would&#13;
Pa rkside exclude 6 perc ent of its student body from&#13;
soci al activities? " It's not Pa rkside's policy. It's the&#13;
st ate law which requir es that minors may not be present&#13;
where alcohol is served," said Bill Niebuhr, direc tor of&#13;
Student Life. He added that he thought, "It's unfair but&#13;
it's still the law." If this js the st ate law, how can&#13;
Niebuhr expl ain that minors are allowed into&#13;
re staurants, bowling alleys and countle ss othe r&#13;
establishments whe re alcohol is served?&#13;
Out of every full-time student's tuition, $4.50 per&#13;
semeste r goes to the Student Life Office which supports&#13;
all entertainment activiti es. Individually, $4.50 is hardly&#13;
a st aggering cost but, when multiplied by 276 m inors,&#13;
Student Life reaps $1,242.00 a t the beginning of the first&#13;
semeste r from students ba rred from activiti es which&#13;
they are paying for.&#13;
Niebuhr wa s asked if h e thought it was fair for minors&#13;
to have to pay this price when the option to attend wasn't&#13;
even open to them. He replied, "What about thos e adults&#13;
that have the option to attend but don't wish to go, or&#13;
what about the persons whose religion doesn't allow&#13;
them to drink?"&#13;
Niebuhr has mentioned that adults may not wish to&#13;
attend activities, but at least the option is open to them.&#13;
They can go if th ey want to, whe reas minors can't. He&#13;
also us ed people who aren't allowed to drink a s an&#13;
example of people paying segregated fee money for&#13;
events they wouldn't go to. Niebuhr seems to forget that&#13;
thes e people could still go to an activity without&#13;
drinking. Obviously, when one goes to a dance, he or she&#13;
is not f orced to guzz le be er.&#13;
Parkside students under eighteen should be allowed&#13;
into the S.A.B. to attend events ther e. They should&#13;
simply not be served alcohol. Instead of c arding people&#13;
a t the door, bart ende rs could ask for identification when&#13;
a person wishes to purcha se a drink. While this solution&#13;
may be somewhat inconvenient, it is a fa ir and sensible&#13;
solution to the problem.&#13;
Mor e and more high school students a re graduating&#13;
early, or at lea st taking several college c ourses. In th e&#13;
future this will me an that there will be increa sing&#13;
numbers of minors attending Parkside. If these students&#13;
ar e to have a fulfilling social life surely they will want to&#13;
attend Pa rkside activiti es. The current policy ba rring&#13;
minors from attending ac tivities is clearly unfair.&#13;
In last week s RANGER (Feb. 12, Vol. Ill No. 24) I editoralized in a&#13;
headline placed above a I ,etter to the Editor by Janet Scott. It has been&#13;
brought to my attention that a serious question of ethics is involved in&#13;
such an act. I now realize that form affects content and that a more&#13;
proper form of editorializing on my part could have been more forceful&#13;
and would not have detracted from an opinion I respect yet&#13;
disagree with. In the future I will limit my comment on the various&#13;
viewpoints expressed on this page to editorials or editor's note.&#13;
Journalistic ethics questioned&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I want to protest the&#13;
irresponsible decision of some&#13;
member of your staff which&#13;
allowed the heading "Murder a&#13;
private decision?" to be placed&#13;
over a fair and generally&#13;
thoughtful letter by Janet ficott in&#13;
Tuition increase challenged&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Segregated Fees committee&#13;
has come up with its&#13;
allocations for the 1975-1976&#13;
school year. I, for one, was&#13;
greatly disturbed by the seeming&#13;
lack of fiscal responsibility&#13;
shown by the members of this&#13;
committee. Throughout the&#13;
nation, great care is being taken&#13;
by all governmental bodies to&#13;
avoid implementation of any&#13;
policies which may be deemed&#13;
inflationary. True, costs of&#13;
carrying on any activity have&#13;
increased, and it is easy to excuse&#13;
such necessary increases as the&#13;
$0.50 per student given to&#13;
RANGER. However, it is impossible&#13;
to affirm the staggering&#13;
sixty percent increase granted to&#13;
Campus Center Programming,&#13;
particularly in light of the fact&#13;
that they asked for a mere&#13;
twenty-five percent. It of course&#13;
must be noted that Campus&#13;
Center Programming, in the&#13;
past, lias managed to find all&#13;
Emily Post where are you?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This letter is in response to&#13;
your editorial of Feb. 13, 1975&#13;
regarding the filthy conditions of&#13;
the LLC eating area, affectionately&#13;
dubbed The Burger&#13;
Shop.&#13;
I agree with the RANGER that&#13;
the conditions in this area are&#13;
filthy and deplorable, but to&#13;
solely blame Canteen for these&#13;
conditions ignores the most&#13;
obvious cause' of the&#13;
filth...Students. There is no excuse&#13;
for the laziness and gross&#13;
lacK of consideration shown by&#13;
the majority of cafeteria users&#13;
who do not exert the effort to pick&#13;
up their garbage and deposit it&#13;
into the proper receptacle. It's&#13;
high time to realize that Mommy&#13;
and Daddy are not here to follow&#13;
you around and pick up after you.&#13;
It is also time to realize that as&#13;
adults, students have the&#13;
responsibility of acting with&#13;
common courtesy toward each&#13;
other. It doesn't take much effort&#13;
to pick up after yourselves and&#13;
the results would certainly be&#13;
From Africa-with love&#13;
TO THE EDITOR:&#13;
There has been a very happy&#13;
reunion in Rhodesia. JeanneMarie&#13;
Ma lan, the Rotary Exchange&#13;
Student who attended&#13;
Parkside this past semester and&#13;
The Gruhls were together the&#13;
past couple of days. While in&#13;
Wisconsin Jeanne-Marie lived&#13;
with the McCourt and Soetenga&#13;
families in Burlington. While in&#13;
America she was at our home on&#13;
several occasions and we became&#13;
good friends.&#13;
Now, for a change, Ruth and I&#13;
have been at her home and our&#13;
visit there qualifies for our&#13;
special categaory of "Memorable&#13;
Occasion". What a&#13;
Family!....What a home! HerDad&#13;
is a Doctor Her Mother is the&#13;
beautiful and vivacious "I^dy-inCharge".&#13;
Then there are four&#13;
brothers, all younger than&#13;
Jeanne-Marie and several dogs&#13;
who think they are people.&#13;
The Malan Home is a large&#13;
ranch-type home on a beautiful&#13;
lot in the town of Marrandells, 40&#13;
kms from Salisbury. Actually&#13;
the house has 4,600 square&#13;
feet...six bedrooms, four baths,&#13;
two kitchens, a dining room, two&#13;
living rooms (on for the kids) a&#13;
fleet of cars, motorbikes and&#13;
bicycles, six servants (more or&#13;
less) and everything goes&#13;
smoothly under the quiet&#13;
supervision of the Lady-inCharge.&#13;
Most of all there is much&#13;
I -ove in the home. Grace is said at&#13;
every meal. Father is all. Mother&#13;
is second in command. If one of&#13;
the kids doesn't behave he gets a&#13;
licking. Permissiveness here&#13;
simply means parental approval.&#13;
Jeanne-Marie is, now enrolled&#13;
in the Medical School at the&#13;
University of Pretoria in South&#13;
Africa. It's a tradition in her&#13;
family to graduate from there...a&#13;
dozen have done so through the&#13;
years. Thanks to her chemistry&#13;
and a couple of other courses&#13;
taken at Parkside she will skip&#13;
one year of p re-med. She had her&#13;
18th birthday last November.&#13;
She'll have a Doctor of Medicine&#13;
Degree when she's twenty-four&#13;
WOW!&#13;
One of the things which is&#13;
bugging Jeanne-Marie right now&#13;
is that all students at Pretoria U&#13;
must be in their room by eightthirty&#13;
each weekday evening. On&#13;
Friday evening curfew is at ten&#13;
Providing you have your parents'&#13;
permission you may be off&#13;
campus from 8:00 A.M. to&#13;
midnight on Saturdays and on&#13;
Sundays from 8:00 A.M. until&#13;
five Sunday afternoon.&#13;
Somehow or other the School&#13;
Administrators there seem to&#13;
have gotten the quaint idea that&#13;
you go to a university to study&#13;
and learn and that there will be&#13;
Plenty of time to goof-off on your&#13;
own time..after you graduate. All&#13;
of the women students wear&#13;
skirts and all of the men wear&#13;
coats and ties at Pretoria&#13;
University. Incidentally, there&#13;
are no athletic scholarships at&#13;
Rhodesian and South African&#13;
schools.&#13;
Jeanne-Marie speaks well of&#13;
Burlington High School and of&#13;
arkside.She's a very perspective&#13;
voung woman. The way kids skip&#13;
classes at Parkside and the fact&#13;
that people can get a university&#13;
the February 12 issue of the&#13;
RANGER. To be sure, abortion is&#13;
a complex and tangled issue. I&#13;
am quite certain, however, that&#13;
such a heading represents only&#13;
simplistic thinking which throws&#13;
little or no light on the significant&#13;
and difficult moral issue. Do your&#13;
editorializing, please, in the&#13;
editorial column. You abused Ms.&#13;
Scott in a most inappropriate&#13;
way.&#13;
Sincerely.&#13;
Wayne G. Johnson&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
sorts of ways of disposing of the&#13;
students' monies with nebulous&#13;
benefits to the students. This has&#13;
been particularly evident in the&#13;
administration of the P.A B&#13;
allocations. In any case, I find it&#13;
hard to accept any increase in the&#13;
students' tuition, and I would like&#13;
to see the chancellor eliminate&#13;
the openly inflationary portions&#13;
of this budget.&#13;
Edward R. Arndt&#13;
Student Senator&#13;
more aesthetically pleasing.&#13;
I too believe that the food offered&#13;
by Canteen is of poor&#13;
quality and overpriced, but the&#13;
problem of filthy conditions of the&#13;
eating area can be solved without&#13;
waiting for contracts to expire or&#13;
committees to be formed or investigated.&#13;
This problem can be&#13;
solved now, by us.&#13;
I do not hold any distinguished&#13;
title granted to me by the&#13;
students of UW-Parkside to put&#13;
after my name, so, simply sign&#13;
me....&#13;
Marian A. Kropp&#13;
Peon student&#13;
diploma on simply a 2 point grade&#13;
average appalls her. "It doesn't&#13;
work that way here". That's the&#13;
truth. It doesn't.&#13;
But Jeanne-Marie has much&#13;
love and appreciation for the&#13;
friends she made in America. She&#13;
was a fine representative of&#13;
Rhodesia while she was with us.&#13;
Now that she's home she will be&#13;
asked many time what America&#13;
is really like. We can count on her&#13;
sense of fair play and good&#13;
judgment.&#13;
Now a word about the Polaroid&#13;
picture I am enclosing. What I&#13;
am wearing is called a safari&#13;
suit. I call it my "African&#13;
tuxedo". Usually I wear shorts&#13;
and my knees are getting nice&#13;
and brown. Furthermore, my&#13;
knees are dimpled and very&#13;
photogenic so this picture really&#13;
doesn't do me justice. But&#13;
Jeanne-Marie makes up for it.&#13;
Ixjve to all and do your best&#13;
ARTHUR GRUHL &#13;
Letters&#13;
More normal—&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, our&#13;
student body president-Normal&#13;
Neophyte:this is the type of&#13;
nonsense that the student senate&#13;
has had to work with, especially&#13;
in the last two months.&#13;
Michael G. Hahner&#13;
Student Senator&#13;
P'AnSS&#13;
exposed&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I address this letter to our&#13;
beloved "Parkside People For a&#13;
Non-Sexist Society." I would like&#13;
to congratulate them on their&#13;
latest effort in addorning the&#13;
profound fluteus maximus. In&#13;
doing so, PFANSS have shown us&#13;
their stalwart stance,their&#13;
devastating knowledge of Latin,&#13;
their peculiar wit, and the truly&#13;
amazing way they have of&#13;
making asses out of themselves!&#13;
Thank you PEOPLE,&#13;
Greg Burmeister&#13;
Senior&#13;
Mass transit&#13;
Wednesday, February 19, „75 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
The Brother Grinv&#13;
To die Editor:&#13;
Yes folks, this is a "Dear John"&#13;
letter, addressed to John Kontz,&#13;
pres. pro tern of the senate. It's&#13;
going to be a shorty so pay attention.&#13;
Not to say this was an&#13;
attempt at political ass-asination,&#13;
but upon reading your article I&#13;
almost choked on my chocolate&#13;
shake. You sincerely stated that&#13;
the arguing done in the psga (no&#13;
capital letters till we earn them)&#13;
was "one of philosophy and not&#13;
personalities." Really! I did not&#13;
know that when I and others who&#13;
disagreed with a senator and&#13;
were called bitch, slut, etc..., that&#13;
it was on the level of a&#13;
philosophical argument. As for&#13;
the president calling some&#13;
senators "gossip spewing&#13;
mucous voyers," all I can say is&#13;
that the students missed some&#13;
real whoppers, and I suggest that&#13;
some senators should follow Hans&#13;
Christian Anderson's lead and&#13;
start writting. Sorry, this letter is&#13;
longer that I expected. Almost as&#13;
long as John's conclusion.&#13;
Carrie in Wonderland&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. Senator - Carrie&#13;
Ward&#13;
Tougue-lashings continued&#13;
tHE RE450N&#13;
TERRY FORp's SO&#13;
UPS£T ABOUT T HE&#13;
MOKS, IS BECAU5E&#13;
HE can't WRITE!&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This is a response to an&#13;
editorial appearing in the&#13;
February 12 letters to the Editor.&#13;
'Die article concerned an individual's&#13;
right to choice about&#13;
abortion. Clearly, the editor did&#13;
not read or comprehend the main&#13;
idea put forth in the article. The&#13;
heading assigned, by the editor,&#13;
warps the entire point of the&#13;
article by title it "Murder-A&#13;
Private Decision?" Is it that the&#13;
editor doesn't yet understand&#13;
that editorials are designed to&#13;
allow the writer to express a&#13;
personal viewpoint, and that it is&#13;
not an editor's job to make a&#13;
moral decision about the point of&#13;
view put forth? The editor has&#13;
clearly misused and outstepped&#13;
his sphere of influence.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Mary Beth Looncek&#13;
continued from page V&#13;
a conveniently routed and timed&#13;
bus. It was further revealed that&#13;
67 percent of the faculty and staff&#13;
who responded also indicated&#13;
they would ride a bus.&#13;
At present, there is only limited&#13;
bus service from the City of&#13;
Kenosha, and the only regular&#13;
service coming&#13;
ming from Racine is provided by&#13;
the Veterans Club. On arriving at&#13;
the campus, the student has the&#13;
use of th e on-campus shuttle bus,&#13;
which is paid for by student&#13;
segregated fees.&#13;
Both Racine and Kenosha are&#13;
receiving assistance in expanding&#13;
and strengthening their&#13;
present bus systems by the Urban&#13;
Mass Transit Authority.&#13;
According to Murray, Parkside is&#13;
very interested in becoming a&#13;
part of the improved systems of&#13;
both cities, as substantial&#13;
ridership by Parkside students&#13;
and staff would not only make&#13;
broader coverage economically&#13;
feasible for Racine and Kenosha,&#13;
but also greatly alleviate&#13;
automobile travel to and from&#13;
Black History—&#13;
Watergate again&#13;
Boycott Books&#13;
During a televised interview recently on NBC last Thursdav Ford&#13;
stated that I wouldn't buy the book" of any WatergateSeiSit&#13;
Ford "lade the statement when asked about the fortunes being&#13;
amassed by former Vice President Spiro Agnew since Agnew left the&#13;
z^x^&#13;
aboat the huge b Mk&#13;
thJir&#13;
r&#13;
r&#13;
Said h&#13;
! ?&#13;
0Uf&#13;
ht 11 was wron§ toat some people work hard all&#13;
their lives and barely earn enough to live on, while convicted felons&#13;
write IT F positions to make financial killings on books they&#13;
campus.&#13;
Already the city of Kenosha has&#13;
passed a revised routing plan&#13;
that includes Parkside with&#13;
improved service. Although not&#13;
yet established, the proposed&#13;
routes are planned to go into&#13;
effect in the fall of 1975. Though&#13;
nothing definite has yet been&#13;
decided, the city of Ra cine is also&#13;
in the process of including&#13;
Parkside in its improving bus&#13;
system.&#13;
The Union and Comm. Arts&#13;
parking lots built last fall,&#13;
Murray noted, should take care&#13;
of Parkside's needs for the next 3-&#13;
5 years, depending on&#13;
enrollment. However, he emphasized&#13;
the desirability of a&#13;
good mass transit system as it&#13;
would not only conserve energy,&#13;
but also minimize the future need&#13;
for building bigger and more lots.&#13;
The survey's conclusion was&#13;
that regular bus service between&#13;
the campug and the city of&#13;
Kenosha be continued, and that&#13;
bus service from the city of&#13;
Racine be started.&#13;
Segregated fees&#13;
allocation explained&#13;
continued on page I&#13;
only in Ghana but also in Racine.&#13;
In Ghana there are seven females&#13;
to every male so females play an&#13;
important role. The economy is&#13;
controlled by females."&#13;
"The people of Ghana think&#13;
that males and females are&#13;
equal."&#13;
Aboagye, who studied in&#13;
Ehgland, said that most schools&#13;
in Ghana are owned by the&#13;
government so it is not necessary&#13;
to be rich in order to get an&#13;
education.&#13;
"I wouldn't send my kid to an&#13;
elementary school in the U.S."&#13;
She also made comments on&#13;
the actions of missionaries in&#13;
Africa.&#13;
"The missionaries did more&#13;
harm than good to the country.&#13;
"Most of what the missionaries&#13;
did was to make their own&#13;
countries rich."&#13;
The Third World fashion show&#13;
was coordinated by Natasha&#13;
Foiling and included both men's&#13;
and women's fashions.&#13;
Some of the clothes which were&#13;
modeled were borrowed courtesy&#13;
of "Colony I" and "George &amp;&#13;
Lester's," both of Racine. Most of&#13;
the clothes came from the&#13;
models' own closets.&#13;
Friday's "Soul Dinner"&#13;
marked the end of activities for&#13;
Black History Week. The dinner&#13;
included ribs, black-eyed peas&#13;
and cornbread.&#13;
According to Foiling, Third&#13;
World was not satisfied with the&#13;
outcome of the dinner. She said,.&#13;
"Our intention was to cook it&#13;
ourselves and sell it as a dinner.&#13;
They didn't give us half of the&#13;
food we had on the menu and it&#13;
was not sold as a dinner but&#13;
rather as separate items."&#13;
Arlene Martin was allowed to&#13;
supervise the preparation of the&#13;
food but no one but Canteen cooks&#13;
were allowed to touch anything,&#13;
said Foiling.&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
The '75-'76 budget recommendations&#13;
which the Ad Hoc&#13;
Segregated Fees Committee&#13;
turned over to Otto Bauer, acting&#13;
chancellor, on February 4th&#13;
contain increases in allocations&#13;
which will add an extra $9 to the&#13;
cost of tuition next school year.&#13;
Gary Stewart, chairperson of&#13;
the Segregated Fees C&#13;
mmittee, explained why certain&#13;
groups received larger&#13;
allocations this year.&#13;
Student Programming&#13;
requested a $3.50 increase and&#13;
was recommended to receive a&#13;
$4.50 increase. (Figures are&#13;
portions of each student's tuition)&#13;
Steaart said this increase will&#13;
be used to hire a full time&#13;
assistant for Tony Totero, coordi&#13;
ator of Student Programming,&#13;
and to sponsor big name enter&#13;
tainmen.&#13;
Totero said the reas&#13;
n why the recommended&#13;
allocation exceeded his request&#13;
was because he had planned for&#13;
small concerts not big name&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
He said, "This is basically&#13;
experimental, to see if it would&#13;
work. From all the people I&#13;
talked to around the country, it's&#13;
a risk."&#13;
Totero, who coordinates over 40&#13;
student organizations, explained&#13;
that he needs a full time assistant&#13;
because it has come to the point&#13;
where there's too many activities&#13;
going on.&#13;
He said, "The student&#13;
organizations say they can't get&#13;
enough help and PAB (Parkside&#13;
Activities Board) says they can't&#13;
get enough help because I'm busy&#13;
with the other organizations. I'm&#13;
also responsible for the PAB&#13;
budget."&#13;
"The organizations are suppose&#13;
to have advisors but it&#13;
doesn't work. Most advisors don't&#13;
take enough time or interest in&#13;
the organizations."&#13;
According to the 5 year plan for&#13;
his department, Totero said that&#13;
he should have had a full time&#13;
assistant by the fall of '73. He also&#13;
said that the Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee of last year recommended&#13;
that he have the&#13;
assistant but it was vetoed by the&#13;
Chancellor.&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) has voiced&#13;
opposition to the $4.50 increase&#13;
recommended for Student&#13;
Programming.&#13;
The Senate passed a resolution&#13;
stating; whereas the chancellor&#13;
has declared a moretorium on&#13;
hiring and whereas it appears&#13;
that Central Administration will&#13;
be forced to increase tuition and&#13;
whereas the PSGA constitution&#13;
requires that the Senate review&#13;
the allocation committee's&#13;
budget, the Senate calls on the&#13;
Chancellor to follow the student&#13;
constitution or intercede himself&#13;
to strike down the irresponsible&#13;
actions of the Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The Senate also delegated&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president,&#13;
and John Kontz, president pro&#13;
tempore to discuss the subject&#13;
with Bauer.&#13;
Milutinovich, being a member&#13;
of the Segregated Fees Committee,&#13;
voted in favor of that&#13;
particular allocation hike.&#13;
Student Life and Auziliary&#13;
Services was also recommended&#13;
a $4.50 budget increase.&#13;
Stewart says the increase is&#13;
mainly due to inflation but it also&#13;
allows for a part time secretary&#13;
for David Bishop, coordinator of&#13;
Auxiliary Services.&#13;
Totero said that Bishop already&#13;
has a part time secretary which&#13;
is a Limited Time Employee&#13;
(LTE) but an LTE is only hired to&#13;
work for a total of 1,04 4 h ours so&#13;
Bishop will be needing a&#13;
replacement.&#13;
The replacement, he said,&#13;
would also be a LTE.&#13;
Totero said, "It's just refilling&#13;
an old position, not creating a&#13;
new one."&#13;
According to Stewart, the&#13;
secretary would not be a LTE,&#13;
but would hold a permanent part&#13;
time position with all the benefits&#13;
(i.e. retirement and Health) of&#13;
any other employee.&#13;
He said, "I was never satisfied&#13;
with that (particular) budget. I&#13;
didn't vote for the increase.&#13;
There's a question on where they&#13;
got the funds for the secretary&#13;
they have right now."&#13;
Student Health was recommended&#13;
a. $1 increase over last&#13;
year's budget.&#13;
Stewart said the extra money&#13;
would be used to pay some of t he&#13;
employees which were originally&#13;
salaried through a federal fund&#13;
which is no longer in existence&#13;
and also to hire a doctor who&#13;
would stop in one afternoon a&#13;
week.&#13;
He said the doctor would be at&#13;
Parkside for four hours a week&#13;
and would hold a regular clinic,&#13;
treating patients without cost. &#13;
4 THE PARKS IDE RANGER, Wed nesday, February 19, 19 75&#13;
Spectrum of S.Africa&#13;
Attempting freedom&#13;
Rusch to speak&#13;
on cancer&#13;
"The War on Cancer and the Role of the Comprehensive Cancer&#13;
Center" will be the topic of a free public lecture by Dr. Harold P.&#13;
Rusch, director of the Clinical Cancer Center at UW-Madison at 7-30&#13;
p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 20, at UW-Parkside in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Rusch, who enjoys a world-wide reputation in cancer research, was&#13;
named to the U.S. Senate's National Panel of Consultants on the&#13;
Conquest of Cancer, popularly known as the national War on Cancer&#13;
in 1970.&#13;
He is a past president of the American Association for Cancer&#13;
Research, the Association of American Cancer institutes and the&#13;
Wisconsin Division of the American Cancer Society. He received the&#13;
American Cancer Society's Annual National Award in 1972 and is the&#13;
author of more than 150 articles on cancer.&#13;
His lecture is sponsored by the Parkside life science faculty and the&#13;
lecture and fine arts committee.&#13;
(CPS)-For the first time in its&#13;
history, the Union of South Africa&#13;
has officially declared that it&#13;
intends a shift away from its&#13;
traditional race-segregation&#13;
policy of apartheid.&#13;
South African Ambassador&#13;
R.F. Botha told the UN Security&#13;
Council in a recent speech that&#13;
his country would "do everything&#13;
in our power to move away from&#13;
discrimination based on race or&#13;
color." The announcement was&#13;
speculated to be the last bid to&#13;
prevent the nation from being&#13;
expelled by the United Nations.&#13;
In attempting to defend his&#13;
country's policies, Botha stated,&#13;
"We do have discriminatory&#13;
practices and we do have&#13;
discriminatory laws. But that&#13;
discrimination must not be&#13;
equated with racism."&#13;
A black liberation spokesman&#13;
branded the speech as "new&#13;
words for old policies of white&#13;
supremacy."&#13;
Apartheid * was originally&#13;
adopted to encourage more white&#13;
settlement in an overwhelmingly&#13;
black land.&#13;
Botha offered his own explanation.&#13;
"A policy such as ours,&#13;
which is designed to avoid&#13;
disaster, to eliminate friction and&#13;
confrontation between different&#13;
peoples, to eliminate domination&#13;
of one group by another and to&#13;
give to every man his due, can&#13;
surely not be said to run counter&#13;
to civilized concepts of human&#13;
dignities and freedoms."&#13;
Nonetheless, black South&#13;
Africans are still unable to vote&#13;
or own land outside of their slum&#13;
developments and are accorded&#13;
second-class status in a land&#13;
where they remain the majority.&#13;
One supposed purpose of the&#13;
verbal about-face is a desire to&#13;
identify its interests with the&#13;
African continent.&#13;
In keeping with this goal, South&#13;
African blacks are already enjoying&#13;
improved pay scales,&#13;
health care, education, and social&#13;
amenities, according to some&#13;
political observers. They are now&#13;
allowed to ride the same buses as&#13;
whites and dine at the same&#13;
restaurants, although many&#13;
blacks shy away from these&#13;
opportunities because of the&#13;
intense hostility they encounter.&#13;
A c entral complaint of various&#13;
African states against South&#13;
Africa is its illegal occupation of&#13;
the territory of Southwest Africa,&#13;
a land rich in several profitable&#13;
minerals and inhabited solely bb&#13;
black tribesmen.&#13;
Botha declared, "The South&#13;
African government has always&#13;
recognized that Southwest Africa&#13;
has a distinct international&#13;
status. We have no designs on it."&#13;
He went on to say that Southwest&#13;
Africa may achieve a measure of&#13;
self-rule within ten years.&#13;
Africans have also accused&#13;
South Africa of plotting with&#13;
racist Rhodesia to repress its&#13;
black insurgents. Botha allowed&#13;
that his country is doing its utmost&#13;
to prevent civil hostilities in&#13;
Rhodesia.&#13;
Although most observers felt&#13;
that the ambassador's words&#13;
were just that-words-they have&#13;
admitted that their mere utterance&#13;
indicates a meaningful&#13;
new trend. One African delegate&#13;
noted, "At least our joint indignation&#13;
has stirred South&#13;
Africa to think about reform, if&#13;
only for purposes of selfpreservation."&#13;
&#13;
Catalytic&#13;
converters&#13;
backfire&#13;
(CPS)--The Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency (EPA) has&#13;
announced that the idea behind&#13;
the anti-pollution devices&#13;
required on all 1975 model cars&#13;
has backfired. The catalytic&#13;
converters may in the long run be&#13;
more of a pollution problem than&#13;
engines without converters.&#13;
The catalysts control&#13;
hydrocarbon and carbon&#13;
monoxide emissions from auto&#13;
exhausts, but new tests show that&#13;
the catalysts increase sulfate&#13;
emissions-, a potentially worse&#13;
health problem than hydrocarbons&#13;
and carbon monoxide.&#13;
According to EPA spokesman&#13;
Roger Strelow, "If we don't take&#13;
steps there is a potential for a&#13;
bigger problem than we solved."&#13;
Strelow says he will advocate&#13;
redesigning the converters to&#13;
trap sulfates and reduce the level&#13;
of sulfur permitted in gasoline.&#13;
He concedes that the two actions&#13;
will probably raise both the cost&#13;
of the converters and the cost of&#13;
gasoline.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
•Rock *Jazz -Pop -Folk&#13;
• PiJiccipol&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
vvw*&#13;
The Place to buy records&#13;
Hard Bop review&#13;
EIGHTH AVEHUE&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 E ighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
'ACROSS F ROM UNION PARK'&#13;
by Cliff Chambers&#13;
Donut trombone jazz Sneaky Pete's Hard Bop Jazz Band (Group)&#13;
starring Jim Kishline on bass and vocals, Deb Donatt on trombone,&#13;
Dave Piggins on trumpet and fugelhorn, Carol Weiss with some&#13;
vocals, Jim Sodke on piano and Mike Stevesand on drums.&#13;
Who? The Hard Bop Jazz Band is a Kenosha band which has some&#13;
unusual properties not found in most local bands. One is the fact that&#13;
they do not play "boogie" music. "Boogie" music is the kind most bar&#13;
owners like to have (providing it draws a crowd) because when&#13;
patrons boogie and dance, they get hot and thirsty for more drinks.&#13;
Hard Bop Jazz Band doesn't play music that one has to be in an&#13;
alcoholic stupor to enjoy. They play jazz-some light and green, some&#13;
sharp and blue. The band consists of two women and four men, and&#13;
they have played in Kenosha, Racine and Milwaukee. Two members&#13;
are Parkside students, and the band draws a crowd because they play&#13;
good-very good.&#13;
To start the musical month of February, I saw Hard Bop at Sneaky&#13;
Pete's on the 1st and 2nd. On the first night they started a little slow,&#13;
not unexpected because of the addition of a female vocalist to the&#13;
group. "Hands" was one of the early songs in which Carol sang andl&#13;
the group seemed a little tense. They loosened up and sounded fine&#13;
as the place got crowded.&#13;
Jim Kishline did his best vocal on the song, "King Harvest" but I'm&#13;
glad that they have a new vocalist because Jim is a better bass player&#13;
than singer. The quality of the horn playing was very good, especially&#13;
on "Dolphin Dance" and "Doctor My Eyes." The band ended the first&#13;
set on both Friday and Saturday nights with "Compared to What," a&#13;
tune very close to rock mixed with sharp blue jazz.&#13;
Deb Donatt was really fine on both nights, but she was a bit better on&#13;
Saturday. She plays a super start up for the song, "You Got to Get&#13;
Happy"; Dave Piggins did a trumpet solo in "Straight-No Chaser"&#13;
that was enough to melt your ears.&#13;
The band plays their own material: "Walking," "Dance of t he Data&#13;
Iapes, Ashes of a Snapshot," as well as songs of others: "Take the&#13;
A Train," "The Letter," and "Coconut Grove." Although Mike&#13;
Stevesand didn't do the flashy solos that the others did, he did have the&#13;
ight, crisp drumming that glued all the solos into songs. Jim Sodke&#13;
plays piano in this group, even though he plays trumpet in the&#13;
Parkside Jazz Band. Kishline does the electric bass playing, some of&#13;
the singing and song writing. He also talks a lot between songs but&#13;
t at s good because most of the bar patrons talk between songs too.&#13;
During the songs, patrons are listening.&#13;
There are other good bands in Kenosha but they don't play jazz. It is&#13;
nice to know that people do listen to jazz in Kenosha, Racine and&#13;
|B # _ Milwaukee, right here in the heart of beer boogie land"&#13;
Pollutions financial effect&#13;
I&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
Service&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
M0N. T HRU THURS.&#13;
7:30 A .M.-6:30 P.M.&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
7:30 A .M.-2:00 P .M.&#13;
Library Learning Center&#13;
BUFFET ROOMS&#13;
I 11:00 A .M-1:30 P .M.&#13;
{FRIDAY 11:00 A .M.-l:00 P .H.I&#13;
(CPS)-Environmentalists and big business have always been at&#13;
each other's throats. Now the White House has stepped into the act.&#13;
A White House advisory council has sharply disagreed with&#13;
widespread claims by manufacturers that the cost of federallyrequired&#13;
pollution control equipment will hurt industry's ability to&#13;
expand or modernize over the next ten years.&#13;
In a recent study on the economic impact of environmental&#13;
programs, the US Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) further&#13;
concluded that environmental programs have little impact on Gross&#13;
National Product growth or the rate of inflation and unemployment.&#13;
The CEQ cited a federal survey of pollution control expenditures in&#13;
which only two percent of the firms sampled claimed that pollution&#13;
control spending had displaced any of their planned investments for&#13;
expanding or modernizing their production capacity.&#13;
The CEQ noted, however, that some industries including petroleum,&#13;
iron and steel, electrical utilities, glass, chemicals and food are now&#13;
spending from 10 to 20 percent of their total expenditures on pollution&#13;
abatement.&#13;
"Rut even here environmental expenditures are not a large&#13;
proportion of total value added in the industry and therefore should not&#13;
e a substantial impact upon prices or output," the CEQ said.&#13;
I he CEQ also concluded that:&#13;
~^&#13;
U!&#13;
Jti&#13;
f&#13;
0&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
! COntro1 costs were responsible for only one-half of one&#13;
°f Zlease b the Price Index, which shot up 17&#13;
percent from 1973 to 1974;&#13;
NaHnn^p" a™!™1 C°&#13;
StS 31110111116(1 to about 0.7 percent of the Gross&#13;
Id 2n dTdine " ^ 30(1 ^ inCFeaSe l&#13;
° ab&#13;
°&#13;
Ut L4 V*™*&#13;
1 ta 1976&#13;
ThT^fnPh,a lU $194&#13;
'&#13;
8 billion on P°&#13;
lluti&#13;
°n control during 1973-1983.&#13;
vironmpnt n ° .? c and Private expenditures and covers enwastpc&#13;
a a Z ° relatln8 air&#13;
- water, noise, radiation, solid&#13;
wastes and strip mining;&#13;
in vest mpn to6&#13;
°&#13;
f pollution con&#13;
trol costs will represent capital&#13;
oneratino T P 3nd equiP&#13;
rnent and the rest will stem from&#13;
operating and maintenance costs;&#13;
Snendfnp TnfC°&#13;
nn&#13;
&lt;n'7&#13;
&lt;&#13;
ii,StS WiU account for one percent of total federal&#13;
Spending in fiscal 1974 and 1.3 percent in fiscal 1975. &#13;
Brief News&#13;
Wednesday, Februa ry 19, 197 5 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Harvey Scales and the Seven Sounds, a nationals lfnn„,&#13;
will be featured by the P.A.B. on February 22. group,&#13;
Specializing in original soul-rock composition* thQ „&#13;
f0ur&#13;
p&#13;
sets of music. TVo sets will ^&#13;
Seven Sounds and two sets will exclusively feature the Seven Sn,&#13;
O ri g i n a l l y f r om M i l w a u k e e , t h e e i g h t - p i e c e e r o u n r f ? u T&#13;
the east coast and Canada. Harvey Scales and the Seven SoLds&#13;
Ured&#13;
peared previously to a sell-out crowd at Parkside ap&#13;
"&#13;
Tickets are $1.50 in advance and $2.00 in the StnrW A&#13;
Building. Parkside and Wisconsin I.D.s are required Actlvltles&#13;
Capsule College 75, an academic and cultural program for the&#13;
community and for Parkside students, will be held April 2 an d&#13;
Parkside. Deadline for reservations is March 10&#13;
Participants may attend one or both days of the program Complete&#13;
course listings andregistration forms are available at the Inf ormation&#13;
kiosk.&#13;
The registration fee, which includes luncheon, is $5 per day.&#13;
Now on exhibit* in library U.W.P. Collegiate Sports display The&#13;
display ends March 7. J&#13;
'&#13;
P.A.B. presents&#13;
W E DNE SDA Y, FEBRUARY 19 -- P.A.B. Whiteskpllar&#13;
excellent musician who mixes classical guitar techniques with populaTfolk IonasRf°'&#13;
a n d&#13;
' ^&#13;
entertaining show, ,1:30a.m. to, :30p.m., GR D201. Free and open ?o he puSlic ' * V # r V&#13;
FILM: "The Wild Bunch,"11:30a.m„ C.A.T., and 7 30 pm Gr 103 *rtmc&#13;
I D required. Presented by P.A.B. " ' a dmiss,&#13;
°n $1- P arkside&#13;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21-Live entertainment, 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. durinq "Haoov Hour" •„«,&#13;
S.A.B J azz and blues by Deb Donatt, sponsored by P.A.B. appy Hour in the&#13;
S A T U R D A Y , FEBRU ARY 22- Dance to the soulful music of Harvey Scales and tho s&#13;
Sounds, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., S.A.B. Tickets are $1.50 for students in advance $2 OO^alsts and&#13;
8 Va&#13;
"&#13;
a b ,e 3 t t h e ,n f&#13;
° k i 0 S k&#13;
" P a r K S id e stat^ D 's are^required A&#13;
A P. A.B. survey table will b e up next to the Sweet Shoppe, Feb. 19. 20 24 and 25 9 a m t« •&gt;&#13;
p.m. Two committees will be emphasized on each day: Feb. 19, dance and conce'rt FTh 20&#13;
film and video; Feb. 24, games and outing; Feb. 25, coffeehouse and nerfnrm nn' f a&#13;
lectures. Surveys will be distributed and collected so we can have more student input fn future&#13;
programs. Anyone with any questions or suggestions is encouraged to stop by.&#13;
The Parkside Anthropology Club is announcing a conference at the&#13;
ewberry Library, 60 W. Walton St., Chicago. The conference will&#13;
convene Friday afternoon, Feb. 21, at 2 p.m., with sessions to be held&#13;
th 3y t !f&#13;
rn00n and evemng&gt; Saturday morning and afternoon. The&#13;
theme of th e conference is "The American Indian and the American&#13;
devolution: Problems in the Recovery of a Usable Past."&#13;
The noted Indian author Vine Deloria will comment on the papers&#13;
and on the general conference theme. Registration at the door is $6.00&#13;
tor faculty and $2.00 for students and general public.&#13;
Rides for a few people will be provided by the Parkside Anthropology&#13;
Club. If interested, sign up in the Social Science Division&#13;
Office, CL 266.&#13;
The Pre-Law Club will hold a meeting February 19 at 4 p.m. in LLC&#13;
D-174.&#13;
Agenda includes a lecture by William J. Murin, Assistant Professor&#13;
of Political Science. The topic will be "Politics and Constitutional&#13;
Lsw."&#13;
All interested parties are invited to attend.&#13;
FPh To J fo mg °&#13;
f ^ Parkside Payers on Wednesday,&#13;
PA ?, ™ P&#13;
'&#13;
m'&#13;
m 016 Green Room of the Thea^e (CA-D173).&#13;
arkside Players is an organization whose purpose is to promote&#13;
active interest and participation in theatrical events at Parkside and&#13;
to educate its members in all aspects of theatrical production. Anyone&#13;
interested is invited to attend this meeting.&#13;
, ^&#13;
1S&#13;
,&#13;
C,&#13;
0nsin Bad§&#13;
er CamP has started a fund raising drive in an effort&#13;
to build a permanent campsite for the over-300 people who attend the&#13;
camp each summer.&#13;
Wisconsin Badger Camp is a camp for the mentally retarded and&#13;
handicapped people of Wisconsin. Because of the ever-growing&#13;
number of people who wish to attend the camp each summer the&#13;
rented campsites formerly used by the Camp are no longer feasible.&#13;
order to construct a main, all-purpose building on property&#13;
already owned by the camp, approximately $96,000 must be collected&#13;
from private sources, according to Richard Fuller, camp director&#13;
PlattevmrwTs&#13;
ay53«8&#13;
Sent WiSCOnSi" Badger CamP&#13;
' B°&#13;
X M°'&#13;
N O T I C E O F R I G H T S T O A C C E S S T O S T U D E N T&#13;
R E C O R D S A N D D I R E C T O R Y I N F O R M A T I O N D E F I N I T I O N&#13;
U N D E R T H E F A M I L Y E D U C A T I O N A L R I G H T S&#13;
A N D P R I V A C Y A C T O F 197k&#13;
Stu den ts a re hereby n o t i f i e&#13;
Rig hts and Priva cy A c t of 1 9 7 A ,&#13;
f i l e s , docum ents and o t h e r m a te&#13;
r e l a t e d to you whic h a re maint ai&#13;
understood t h at you m ay r e quest&#13;
tio ns issued by the Sec ret ary of&#13;
t h e c o n ten t of your e ducat ion re&#13;
a r e not ina ccu rate , misl eadi ng,&#13;
Y o u m a y i n s e rt in your recor ds a&#13;
of such reco rds if your sugge ste&#13;
the U n ive rsi ty.&#13;
d tha t pursuant to the Family Educational&#13;
you a r e e n t i t l e d to review t hose reco rds,&#13;
r i a ls which c o ntai n information d i r e c t l y&#13;
ned by the Univ ersi ty. It is f u rth er&#13;
a hea ring , in accord ance w ith the regu laHeal&#13;
th, Education and W elfare, to chall enge&#13;
c o rds , in o rde r to insur e tha t the recor ds&#13;
or othe rwis e in vio lat ion of your rig h t s,&#13;
w r itt en expl anat ion resp ecti ng the con ten ts&#13;
d cor rec tio ns o r d e let ion s a r e not m a de by&#13;
Y o ur a c ces s and review is sub jec t to the followi ng con diti ons :&#13;
1. The Uni vers ity has ^5 days to com ply with your wri tte n request&#13;
to review your rec ord s;&#13;
2. A l l i n f o r m a t i o n d e c l a r ed c o n f i d e n tia l by the A ct or e x c l u d ed&#13;
from the d e f i n i t i on of "educa tion reco rds" in the Act , is&#13;
not a v a i l a b l e f o r your insp ecti on;&#13;
3 . A f ter reviewing your reco rds, you m ay req uest the u n it maint aining&#13;
the recor d to rem o v e o r modify information you bel iev e is mis ­&#13;
lead ing or inac cura te o r inap prop riat e. If yourreque st is refu sed,&#13;
y o u . m a y ins ert in your record s a w r itt en expl anat ion resp ecti ng&#13;
t h e con ten ts you obj ect to or you m ay f i l e an appea l wit h the&#13;
C h anc ell or' s O ffi ce which w i ll be heard by a person o r committ ee&#13;
desi gnat ed by the Chanc ellor.&#13;
Y o u a re f u r t h e r n o tif i e d t h at the Act s t a t es tha t the followi ng i n f o r ­&#13;
mation can be c o nstru ed to be d ire cto ry information which is a v a i l a b l e to&#13;
the pub lic and we hereby so dec lar e i t to be suc h dir e c t o ry inform ation:&#13;
nam e, a d dre ss, telep hone l i s t i n g , dat e o f b i r t h, major f i e l d of stu d y,&#13;
p a r t i c i p a t i o n in o f f i c i a l l y recognized a c t i v i t i e s and s p o r t s , wei ght and&#13;
heig ht of m e m b ers of a t h l e t i c teams, d a tes of atte nda nce , d egre es and awards&#13;
rec eiv ed, and the most rece nt previo us e ducat ional agency o r i n s t itu tio n&#13;
a t ten d e d. Y ou have the rig ht to inform t h e Uni vers ity t h at any o r a ll of&#13;
the unde rline d information should not be relea sed witho ut your p r i or cons ent.&#13;
If you wish to r e s t r i c t the rel eas e of t h is information you m ust complete a&#13;
w r i t t e n requ est to t h at e f f e c t, a t the Stude nt Records Off ice . Aft er y o u&#13;
have f i l e d t h e req uire d w rit t e n req ues t, the Univ ersi ty w i l l n o tif y the&#13;
a p p r o p ria te o f f i c e s and begin to com ply with your requ est as soon a s pos sib le&#13;
A n y informatio n oth er than the items l i s t ed above w i ll not be relea sed&#13;
with out your s p e c i f ic w r itt en permission exce pt as provided by law.&#13;
This advertisement paid for by Dean of Students office&#13;
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(414) 652-6468&#13;
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• Round T rip J et Airfare&#13;
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• Ground T ransfers&#13;
• Tips &amp; Taxes&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
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639 5305 554 7334&#13;
PIZZA CHICKEN&#13;
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11:30 P.M.&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11:30 A.M.-12:30 A.M.&#13;
iU?&#13;
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MARCH 27-APRIL 4&#13;
ONLY $369 COMPLETE&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
•ROUND TRIP JET AIRFARE&#13;
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•Ground Transfers&#13;
•Tips &amp; Taxes&#13;
For application or mtormation&#13;
Contact&#13;
C AM 1' I S TK A VKI.C K NTKR&#13;
I IA D-197 Call: 55H-2294 &#13;
6 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesday, February 19, 19 75&#13;
UW System may cutback&#13;
staff and services&#13;
Brief News&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey's 1975-77&#13;
higher education budget&#13;
recommendations, if enacted by&#13;
the Legislature, will force the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
to cutback its staff and services,&#13;
John C. Weaver, UW System&#13;
president, told Regents Friday in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Weaver said that Lucey's&#13;
$600.6-million proposed budget,&#13;
excluding faculty pay increases&#13;
being considered as a separate&#13;
package, would be "seriously&#13;
crippling to public higher&#13;
education in this state."&#13;
Late last year, the UW Board of&#13;
Regents asked for $683.6 million&#13;
in state funds, excluding faculty&#13;
salary increases, for the first&#13;
year of the upcoming biennium.&#13;
Continuation of otir current&#13;
state budget level for two more&#13;
years does not mean continuation&#13;
of th e same staff and services we&#13;
have now," said Weaver. "We&#13;
must retrench our current level&#13;
of effort and staff in order to&#13;
cover the increased cost of some&#13;
unavoidable technical and formula&#13;
adjustments."&#13;
Weaver called attention to a&#13;
pair of "pink documents" that&#13;
were distributed to chancellors&#13;
earlier in the week. The&#13;
documents propose that two&#13;
immediate steps be instituted by&#13;
chancellors and administrators&#13;
on each campus:&#13;
"First, review your vacant&#13;
positions, your current nontenured&#13;
faculty and academic&#13;
staff apointments and your&#13;
Tell us&#13;
whafe bugging you&#13;
about your&#13;
money problems&#13;
so we can serve you better.&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Member ol Federal Reserve System . Member Federal Deoos,. Insurance Corp&#13;
"THE OLD LAIR IS B ACK WITH A NEW FACE"&#13;
OPENING JAN. 31, 3:00 P.M,&#13;
24th and 25th on 60U St. KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
classified staff appointments by&#13;
major functional area (teaching,&#13;
support, administration, etc.) to&#13;
determine to what extent you&#13;
would meet retrenchment&#13;
requirements by release or&#13;
reduced time assignment of these&#13;
employees.&#13;
"Second, to the extent that step&#13;
one does not meet your&#13;
requirement, undertake the steps&#13;
prescribed in the UWS Faculty&#13;
Personnel Rules (5.04 and 5.05)&#13;
relative to planning a declaration&#13;
of fiscal emergency. Necessary&#13;
consultations with the appropriate&#13;
faculty committee&#13;
should begin before midFebruary&#13;
if possible; the&#13;
declaration action would have to&#13;
be placed before the Board of&#13;
Regents in May."&#13;
In addition, a moratorium on&#13;
1975 summer session employment&#13;
commitments has been&#13;
enacted, to continue in force until&#13;
lifted.&#13;
Weaver concluded by calling&#13;
for a redoubling of efforts "to&#13;
inform the Legislative branch of&#13;
state government of our potential&#13;
difficulties and of our urgent&#13;
needs" as a University.&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF DOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
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3ra_— &lt;S"^£+.&#13;
632-S I9S" •&#13;
A series of scripture discussions will be held each Wednesday&#13;
evening at 7:30 p.m. at the Newman Center during the Lenten season.&#13;
Anyone interested in discovering what the Bible says to a twentieth&#13;
century Christian is invited.&#13;
A partner-relationship series will be held at the CHI-RHO CENTER&#13;
on four consecutive Mondays at 8 p.m. beginning with February 24.&#13;
The campus ministers and guest speakers will explore the&#13;
psychological, physiological, spiritual and financial aspects of a&#13;
partnership. Married couples or persons interested in a partnerrelationship&#13;
are invited to make reservations by phoning 552-8626 or&#13;
657-3408.&#13;
Mass is celebrated each Sunday at 11:15 a.m. at CHI-RHO CENTER.&#13;
&#13;
Two television courses, one on production techniques, and the other&#13;
on using video tape equipment in programming, will be offered in&#13;
February by the University of Wisconsin-Extension.&#13;
Enrollment is limited for both of these classes and those interested&#13;
are asked to contact University Extension at 553-2312.&#13;
A s eminar entitled "Don't Yell Rape, Yell Fire" will be held at&#13;
Carthage College, Tuesday, February 25, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan&#13;
Room. It will be conducted by two members of the Wisconsin Task&#13;
Force on Rape.&#13;
Education Division Executive Committee: February 26, 1975 - 9:30&#13;
a.m. to 1:30 p.m. General subject matter: Open hearing for Dr. Robert&#13;
Grueninger.&#13;
"Five Modern Masterpieces at the Art Institute of Chicago" will be the&#13;
topic of a series of illustrated lectures sponsored by University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension which began Feb. 13 at 7 p.m. In addition to five&#13;
weekly lectures, a Saturday trip to the Art Institute will be arranged&#13;
Registration can be made by contacting the University Extension&#13;
Office m Tallent Hall (phone 553-2312). The fee is $11 for individuals&#13;
$16 for married couples. '&#13;
WHITEWATER - A month-long tour of South Sea Islands-Tahiti,&#13;
Moorea, Fiji, Hawaii, New Zealand-the continent of Australia and the&#13;
Great Barrier Reef is offered starting July 20 by UW-Whitewater.&#13;
People of all ages may participate in the tour, which may be taken&#13;
for three university credits, and will cost $1,575, including transportation&#13;
from Chicago, lodging, much sightseeing, and tuition.&#13;
Emphasis will be on observing as much as possible in the time&#13;
available, rather than on plush accommodations and food, according&#13;
to Prof. R. G. Nash, who will conduct the tour.&#13;
Additional information, including a detailed itinerary, is available&#13;
from Dr. R. G. Nash, Department of Biology, UW-Whitewater,&#13;
Whitewater, Wis., 53190. (414)472-1072 or 473-2939.&#13;
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F " " * " " • " " ™ F « » » • • » '&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Proposed Faculty Personnel Rules&#13;
CHAPTER 46&#13;
FACULTY PERSONNEL&#13;
46.01 Definition of Faculty Appointment,&#13;
Types of Faculty Appointments&#13;
46.02 Probationary Appointments&#13;
46.03 A ppointment, Reappointment, Tenure,&#13;
and Nonrenewal of Instructors&#13;
46.04 A ppointment, Reappointment, Tenure,&#13;
and Nonrenewal of Assistant Professors&#13;
46.05 Renewal of Appointments and&#13;
Granting of Tenure&#13;
46.06 Nonrenewal of Probationary Ap&#13;
pointments&#13;
46.07 A ppeal of Nonrenewal Decision&#13;
46.08 Notification of Reappointment or&#13;
Nonreappointment&#13;
46.09 L imitation on Appointments&#13;
46 10 R ecruitment&#13;
46.11 P eriodic Review&#13;
46.12 Layoff and Termination for Reasons of&#13;
Financial Emergency&#13;
46.01 Definition of Faculty Appointment;&#13;
Types of Faculty Appointments&#13;
(1) "Faculty appointment" means an&#13;
appointment at the rank of professor,&#13;
associate professor, assistant prof essor, or&#13;
instructor in an ac ademic division.&#13;
(2) Faculty appointments are tenure or&#13;
probationary:&#13;
(a) "Tenure appointment" means an&#13;
appointment for an unlimited period by the&#13;
Board upon the recommendation of an&#13;
academic division and the Chancellor&#13;
through the President of the UW System.&#13;
(b) "Probationary appointment" means&#13;
an appointment by the Board upon the&#13;
recommendation of an academic division&#13;
and the Chancellor, and held during the&#13;
period which precedes a tenure ap&#13;
pointment.&#13;
(3) Each person to whom a faculty ap&#13;
pointment is offered shall be sent by an&#13;
authorized official of UW Parkside a letter of&#13;
appointment which specifies the terms and&#13;
conditions of the appointment; salary)&#13;
starting date; ending date; general position&#13;
responsibilities,- probationary, tenured, or&#13;
temporary status; and crediting of prior&#13;
service. Accompanying the letter of ap&#13;
pointment shall be a statement of the UW&#13;
Parkside and UW System rules relating to&#13;
faculty appointments. If t he appointment is&#13;
subj ect to the advance approval of the&#13;
Board, a statement to this effect shall be&#13;
included in the letter of appointment.&#13;
(4) An academic staff appointment may be&#13;
converted into a faculty appointment by the&#13;
Board upon the recommendation of the&#13;
executive committee of an academic&#13;
division and the Chancellor&#13;
(5) An individual holding a fa culty ap&#13;
pointment shall not lose that appointment by&#13;
accepting a limited appointment to a&#13;
designated administrative position.&#13;
(6) "Temporary appointment" means an&#13;
appointment other than a tenure or&#13;
probationary appointment. Temporary&#13;
appointments shall be made to meet in&#13;
structional needs, and may be full time or&#13;
part time. Temporary faculty appointments&#13;
shall be de signated by the word "visiting"&#13;
prefixed to the faculty title. Individuals with&#13;
temporary faculty appointments may&#13;
participate fully in fa culty governance,&#13;
unless tenure status is required for par&#13;
tic ipation Temporary appointments to the&#13;
academic sta ff to meet instructional needs&#13;
shall be designated by the title "lecturer. "&#13;
individuals with temporary appointments as&#13;
lecturers shall not be eligible to participate&#13;
m faculty governance except as provided by&#13;
42.03(1), u nless granted faculty st atus. Each&#13;
person to whom a temporary appointment is&#13;
offered shall be sent a letter of appointment,&#13;
as provided by 46.01(3).&#13;
46.02 Probationary Appointments&#13;
(1)A period of service in a temporary&#13;
appointment or a part time appointment&#13;
shall be excluded in calculating the&#13;
probationa ry period.&#13;
(2) A period of leave of absence, sab&#13;
batical leave, or teacher improvement&#13;
assignment shall be excluded in calculating&#13;
the probationary period but shall not con&#13;
stitute a break in continuous service.&#13;
(3) Previous full t ime service in other&#13;
colleges or universities within or outside of&#13;
the UW System at a rank equivalent to a&#13;
faculty appointment at UW-Parkside, shall&#13;
be included in calculating the probationary&#13;
period, so that the probationary period shall&#13;
not exceed seven years; provided that if a&#13;
person receives a probationary appointment&#13;
after a period of service of more than three&#13;
years in one or more other institutions, his&#13;
probationary period at the UW Parkside&#13;
may extend for as long as four years, even&#13;
though his total probationary period is&#13;
thereby extended beyond the normal&#13;
maximum of seven years.&#13;
(4) Previous full time service In other&#13;
colleges or universities within or outside of&#13;
the UW System before the doctoral degree&#13;
(or the degree typi cally consider ed terminal&#13;
in a discipline) is conferred, with the written&#13;
consent of the person concerned and the&#13;
written agreement of the dean and the&#13;
executive commitiee of an academic&#13;
division, may be excluded in calcula ting the&#13;
probationary period at UW Parkside.&#13;
46.03 Appointment, Reappointment, Tenure,&#13;
and Nonrenewal of Instructors&#13;
(1) An instructor shall be appointed for a&#13;
probationary period of one year and may be&#13;
reappointed at this rank for the same period&#13;
not more than six times, unless appointed as&#13;
a tenured instructor After not more than&#13;
seven years of service as a full time&#13;
probationary instructor at UW Parkside,&#13;
whether continuous or not, an individual&#13;
shall not be renewed, or shall be promoted to&#13;
assistant prof essor with tenure, or, in ex&#13;
ceptional cases, appointed as an instructor&#13;
with tenure&#13;
12) These provisions do not imply any&#13;
obligation of reappointment from year to&#13;
year, n or do they preclude recommending a&#13;
probationary instructor for promotion at any&#13;
time A decision to promote, nonrenew, or&#13;
appoint without promotion but with tenure&#13;
shall be made by the executive committee of&#13;
an academic division and the ad&#13;
ministration, and the individual concerned&#13;
shall be informed in writing of that decision&#13;
before the end of his sixth year as an in&#13;
structor at UW Parkside.&#13;
46.04 Appointment, Reappointment, Tenure,&#13;
and Nonrenewal of Assistant Professors&#13;
ID An initial appointment to the rank of&#13;
assistant professor shall normally be made&#13;
periot^ma , h r e e ve a rs a ,f h o u 9h a shorter&#13;
period may be specified.&#13;
12) After not more than seven years of fullUwVarkc&#13;
H6 aS a n a ssis,a n t professor at&#13;
' °&#13;
r a f, e r 3 ,0 ,a l of n o » more&#13;
than seven years of full-time service as an&#13;
instructor and assistant professor at UWarkside,&#13;
an assistant professor shall either&#13;
be granted tenure with or without promotion&#13;
ornmnLb e r&#13;
,&#13;
e c om me n d e d for retention!&#13;
promotion, or tenure, and notified in writing&#13;
of this decision one year before the termination&#13;
of his current appointment.&#13;
3) These provisions do not imply any&#13;
obligation of reappointment, nor do they&#13;
prec'ude recommending an assistant&#13;
professor for promotion or tenure after a&#13;
years' °' f u , , , ime s e r v i c e l e&#13;
ss than seven&#13;
46.05 Renewal of Appointments and&#13;
Granting of Tenure&#13;
(1) General&#13;
(a) Faculty appointments may be&#13;
granted only upon the recommendation of&#13;
the executive committee of an academic&#13;
division and the Chancellor of UW-Parkside&#13;
When specified bv the Board, the UW&#13;
Rarkside recommendation shall be tran&#13;
smifted by the President with his recom&#13;
mendation to the Board&#13;
(b) A tenure appointment may be&#13;
granted to any faculty member who holds or&#13;
will hold a half-time appointment or more.&#13;
The proportion of time provided for in the&#13;
appointment may not be diminished or increased&#13;
without the mutual consent of the&#13;
faculty member and UW-Parkside, unless&#13;
the faculty membe r is dismissed for just&#13;
cause pursuant to UWS 4, or is terminated or&#13;
laid off pursuant to UWS 5.&#13;
&lt;c) Before a tenure appointment, or an&#13;
appointment to associate professor when&#13;
tenure has been previously granted at a&#13;
lower rank, the dean shall ask the advice of&#13;
the Executive Committee of the Tenure&#13;
Faculty Division.&#13;
(d) Tenure shall not be granted solely&#13;
because of number of years of service, and&#13;
shall be granted only by specific ad&#13;
ministrative action. The provisions of this&#13;
chapter regarding the duration of the&#13;
probationary period are intended to&#13;
establish, for the benefit of UW Parkside and&#13;
its faculty members, limits beyond which&#13;
administrative action may not be delayed.&#13;
(2) Criteria&#13;
(a) The decision regarding a recom&#13;
mendation to renew an appointment or to&#13;
make a tenure appointment shall be based&#13;
primarily on a faculty member's con&#13;
tribution in the areas of teaching, scholarly&#13;
activity, and service. Special consideration&#13;
shall be given to contributions in t he area of&#13;
teaching. At the academic division level,&#13;
programmatic, considerations shall also be&#13;
taken into consideration. Every recommendation&#13;
for renewal or granting of tenure&#13;
shall be accompanied by a statement setting&#13;
forth the evaluations in each area on which&#13;
the recommendation is based.&#13;
(b) Teaching&#13;
Definition. Teaching includes any&#13;
activity related to course development,&#13;
course presentation, course related in&#13;
teraction with students, evaluation of&#13;
student progress, tutoring, advising, and to&#13;
other learning services required by students.&#13;
Evaluation. The primary source of&#13;
information regarding the quality of&#13;
eaching shall be student course evaluations&#13;
conducted each fall and spring semester. A&#13;
faculty member shall be afforded opportunity&#13;
to present other evidence regar&#13;
ding t eaching quality, such as reading lists,&#13;
course outlines, innovations, samples of&#13;
student work, reports of colleague ob&#13;
servers, participation in teaching im&#13;
provement workshops, videotapes of&#13;
presentations, and impact on former&#13;
students. Evidence from all sources shall be&#13;
considered in the evaluation of teaching&#13;
quality.&#13;
(c) Scholarly activity&#13;
De finition. S cholarly activity consists&#13;
of published work (or the equivalent in the&#13;
fine or performing arts) and papers&#13;
presented at professional meetings and&#13;
colloquia. Manuscripts in preparation for&#13;
publication may be considered as evidence&#13;
of scholarly activity. Publications include&#13;
monographs, editec works, textbooks,&#13;
journal articles, book reviews, and resear ch&#13;
reports.&#13;
Evaluation. Quality shall be considered&#13;
more important than quantity in the&#13;
evaluation of scholarly activity. There&#13;
should be evidence of sustained scholarly&#13;
a c , i v i ,V- ,d) Service&#13;
Definition. Service consists of&#13;
contributions to he t affairs of the University,&#13;
community, and profession. University&#13;
service includes contributions to the&#13;
governance, administration, and operation&#13;
(but excluding teaching) of UW Parkside or&#13;
the UW System; community service includes&#13;
only those contributions In w hich the&#13;
faculty member represents UW Parkside or&#13;
his profession, and professional service&#13;
includes contributions beyond mere&#13;
membership to the organization, ad&#13;
ministration, governance, and operation of&#13;
professional organizations.&#13;
Evaluation. Evaluations of service&#13;
shall be based on an assessment of the&#13;
overall quality of the record of service.&#13;
Contributions in all three areas of service&#13;
shall not be required.&#13;
(e) Programmatic considerations&#13;
include an assessment of the present and&#13;
future needs of an academic program, and&#13;
the rela tive importance to the program of&#13;
the faculty member under review.&#13;
(f) The relative importance of the&#13;
criteria of teaching, scholarly activity, and&#13;
service, and programmatic considerations,&#13;
shall be judged by the faculties of the&#13;
ac ademic divisions and the College and&#13;
School, except that special consideration&#13;
shall be given to contributions in the area of&#13;
teaching&#13;
(3! Procedures&#13;
(a) The divisional chairman shall&#13;
notify the faculty member in writing of the&#13;
divisional review at least 20 days before the&#13;
date of the divisional review&#13;
'&#13;
b ) T h e faculty member concerned&#13;
shall be afforded an opportunity to review&#13;
the entire contents of his file without exception,&#13;
and to present additional information.&#13;
&#13;
(c) When a divisional executive&#13;
committee makes a decision on recommending&#13;
renewal of a probationary appointment&#13;
or on recommending a tenure&#13;
appointment, it shall agree on and record the&#13;
reasons for its decision.&#13;
(d) The recommendation of the&#13;
executive committee shall be transmitted to&#13;
the dean. The recommendation shall be&#13;
ac companied by a statement of reasons, and&#13;
a record of ayes, nayes, and abstentions, but&#13;
not the identity of the voters. Positive&#13;
recommendations shall be accompanied by&#13;
a st atement setting forth the evaluations in&#13;
the areas of teaching, scholarly ac tivity, and&#13;
service, and programmatic considerations,&#13;
as provided by 46.05(2)(e).&#13;
(e ) If the appointment is not to be&#13;
renewed, the procedure set forth in 46.06&#13;
shall be followed. If th e recommendation for&#13;
renewal is positive, the dean shall notify the&#13;
faculty member concerned within 20 days&#13;
after final approval at the unit level. The&#13;
dean's notification of renewal letter shall&#13;
specify the period of the renewal (beginning&#13;
and ending dates). If, during the unit review,&#13;
a positive recommendation is denied, the&#13;
procedures set forth In 46.06 shall be&#13;
followed.&#13;
(f) If t he recommendation is to grant&#13;
tenure, the dean shall ask the advice of the&#13;
Executive Committee of the Tenure Faculty&#13;
Division before making a positive recom&#13;
mendation to the Chancellor. If a positive&#13;
recommendation is denied during unit&#13;
review, the procedure s set forth in 46.06 shall&#13;
be followed.&#13;
(g) The faculty membe r concerned&#13;
shall be notified in writing through the&#13;
divisional chairman within 20 d ays of each&#13;
decision at each reviewing level of the&#13;
division. The dean shall notify the faculty&#13;
membe r of the final decision at the unit&#13;
level.&#13;
(h) The faculties of the academic&#13;
divisions and the College and School may&#13;
establish detailed procedures consistent&#13;
with these general procedures.&#13;
46.06 Nonrenewal of Probationary Appointments&#13;
&#13;
(1) If a probationa ry appointment is n ot&#13;
to be renewed, the dean shall notify the&#13;
faculty member conc erned within 20 days of&#13;
receipt of the recommendation of an&#13;
academic division, or, if the case was&#13;
referred to the Executive Committee of the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division, within 20 days of&#13;
receipt of the recommendation of the&#13;
Executive Committee.&#13;
(2) Upon written request of the faculty&#13;
member concerned, the dean shall provide a&#13;
written statement.of the actual reasons for a&#13;
nonrenewal decision. A request for a&#13;
statement of reasons shall be made within 20&#13;
days after receipt of the notification of&#13;
nonrenewal, and the dean shall respond&#13;
within 15 days after receipt of a request. The&#13;
statement of reasons shall become pa rt of&#13;
the personnel file of the faculty member.&#13;
(3) Upon the written request of the&#13;
faculty membe r concerned, there shall be a&#13;
reconsideration of a nonrenewal decision. A&#13;
request for a reconsideration shall be made&#13;
within 20 days of the receipt of a statement of&#13;
reasons for the nonrenewal decision. A&#13;
reconsideration of a nonrenewal decision&#13;
shall be held not later than 20 days after&#13;
receipt of the request, except that this time&#13;
limit may be extended by the mutual consent&#13;
of the parties concerned, or by the order of&#13;
the executive committee or the official&#13;
conducting the reconsideration. The faculty&#13;
member concerned shall be given at least 10&#13;
days notice of the reconsideration.&#13;
(4) if th e dean denies a recommendation&#13;
for tenure or promotion without seeking the&#13;
advice of the Tenure Faculty Division&#13;
Executive Committee, then the dean shall&#13;
advise the divisional chairman of th e basis of&#13;
the decision, if the divisional executive&#13;
committee does not accept the dean's&#13;
decision, it may request a review of the&#13;
tenure or promotion recommendation by the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division Executive Committee.&#13;
The Executive Committee shall&#13;
transmit its advice and the divisional&#13;
recommendation to the Chance llor.&#13;
(5(a) The purpose of a reconsideration&#13;
of a nonrenewal decision shall be to provide&#13;
an opportunity for a fair and full consideration&#13;
of t he decision, and to insure that&#13;
all relevant material is considered. A&#13;
reconsideration is not a hearing or an appeal,&#13;
and shall be nonadtfersary in nature.&#13;
(b) A reconsideration shall be undertaken&#13;
by the official or committee&#13;
making the nonrenewal decision. The faculty&#13;
membe r concerned shall be afforded an&#13;
opportunity to respond to the written&#13;
statement of reasons, and to present any&#13;
relevant written or oral evidence or&#13;
arguments. The faculty member concerned&#13;
shall be notified in writing of the result of a&#13;
reconsideration within ten days after&#13;
reconsideration is held.&#13;
(c) If a reconsideration results in a&#13;
reaffirmation of the original nonrenewal&#13;
decision, the procedures set forth in 46.07&#13;
shall be followed for appe al.&#13;
46.07 Appeal of a Nonrenewal Decision&#13;
(1) Upon written appeal of the faculty&#13;
member concerned, there shall be a review&#13;
of a nonrenewal decision by the Hearings&#13;
and Appeals Committee established by&#13;
46.07(4). The appeal for a review shall be&#13;
made within 20 days of rece ipt of the notice&#13;
that a reconsideration conducted under 46.06&#13;
has reaffirmed the original nonrenewal&#13;
decision, or 25 days if such notice is by first&#13;
class mail and publication. The review shall&#13;
be held not later than 20 days after receipt of&#13;
the request from a faculty member, except&#13;
that this time limit may be extended by the&#13;
mutual consent of the parties, or by order of&#13;
the Hearings and Appeals Committee. The&#13;
faculty membe r shall be given at least 10&#13;
days notice of the review by the Hearings&#13;
and Appeals Committee.&#13;
(2) The burden of proof in an appeal of a&#13;
nonrenewal decision shall be on the faculty&#13;
member concerned, and the scope of the&#13;
review shall be limited to the question of&#13;
whether the nonrenewal decision was based&#13;
in any significant degree upon one or more of&#13;
the following factors, resulting in material&#13;
prejudice to the faculty member concerned:&#13;
(a) Conduct, expressions, or beliefs&#13;
which are constitutionally protected, or&#13;
protected by the principles of academic&#13;
freedom; or&#13;
(b) Factors proscribed by applicable&#13;
State or Federal law regarding fair employment&#13;
practices; or&#13;
(c) Improper consideration of&#13;
qualifications for reappointment or renewal.&#13;
For purposes of this section, "Improper&#13;
consideration" shall be deemed to have been&#13;
given to the qualifications of a faculty&#13;
membe r if m ateria l prejudice to the faculty&#13;
member resulted from any of the following:&#13;
1. The procedures required by the&#13;
rules of the Board or of the Faculty were not&#13;
followed; or&#13;
2. Available information bearing&#13;
materially on the quality of performance&#13;
was not considered; or&#13;
3. Unfounded, arbitrary, or&#13;
irrelevant assumptions of fact were made&#13;
about work or conduct.&#13;
(3) The Hearings and Appeals Committee&#13;
shall report its finding as to the&#13;
validity of an appeal to the committee or&#13;
official who made the nonrenewal decision,&#13;
and to he t dean and Chancellor. The report of&#13;
the Committee may Include r emedies which&#13;
(without limitation because of enumeration)&#13;
may take the form of a reconsideration by&#13;
the committee or official who made the&#13;
nonrenewal decision with or without instructions&#13;
from the Committee, or a&#13;
recommendation to the next higher appointing&#13;
level. All c ases shall be remanded&#13;
for reconsideration to the committee or&#13;
official who made the nonrenewal decision,&#13;
unless the Committee specifically finds with&#13;
respect to a pa rticular case that remand&#13;
would serve no useful purpose. The Committee&#13;
shall retain jurisdiction during&#13;
reconsideration. The decision of the Chan&#13;
cellor on an appeal shall be final.&#13;
(4) The He arings and Appeals Committee&#13;
shall consist of nine members of the&#13;
Faculty, distributed among the academic&#13;
divisions as follows: two members from the&#13;
Soc ial Science division, t wo members from&#13;
the Science division, two members from the&#13;
Humanities division, one member from the&#13;
Education division, and two members from&#13;
the School qf Modern Industry. No person&#13;
who is a membe r of the University Committee&#13;
or of the Executive Committee of the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division shall be eligible to&#13;
serve on the Committee. Members shall be&#13;
elected by the Faculty at-large for three&#13;
year staggered terms. To achieve staggered&#13;
terms, of those initially elected to the&#13;
Committee according to the divisional&#13;
distribution specified above, the three&#13;
candidates receiving the highest number of&#13;
votes shall serve three year terms, the three&#13;
candidates re ceiving the next highest&#13;
number of votes shall serve two year terms,&#13;
and the three candidates receiving the&#13;
smallest number of votes shall serve one&#13;
year terms.&#13;
46.08 Notification of Reappointment or&#13;
Nonreappointment&#13;
(1) A faculty member on a probationary&#13;
appointment shall be given written notice of&#13;
reappointment or nonr eappointment for an&#13;
additional year in advance of the expiration&#13;
of his current appointment, as follows:&#13;
(a) If the appointment expires at the end&#13;
of a n academic year, not later than Mar ch&#13;
1st of the first ac ademic year, and not later&#13;
than December 15th of the second con&#13;
secutive academic year, of service;&#13;
(b) If an initial one year appointment&#13;
expires during an academic year, at least&#13;
three months prior to its expiration; if a&#13;
second consecutive one year appointment&#13;
expires during the academic year, at least&#13;
six months prior to its expiration.&#13;
(c) After 2 or more years of continuous&#13;
service, notice of reappointment or&#13;
nonreappointment shall be given at least 12&#13;
months before the expiration of the ap-&#13;
( pointment.&#13;
(2) If notice of reappointment or&#13;
nonreappointment is not given in accordance&#13;
with 46.08(1), the faculty member shall be&#13;
entitled to a one year terminal appointment,&#13;
but no such terminal appointment shall&#13;
result in the granting of tenure.&#13;
46.09 Limitation on Appointments&#13;
Tenure and probationary appointments&#13;
are to particular unit faculties of the UW&#13;
System, except that units may agree&#13;
through established procedures to share&#13;
tenure appointments. Shared tenure appointment&#13;
agreements shall specify the&#13;
tenure responsibility and budget responsibility&#13;
of each unit sharing the appointment.&#13;
46.10 Recruitment&#13;
(1) The executive committees and&#13;
chairmen of academic divisions shall have&#13;
primary responsibility for recruitment for&#13;
faculty appointments. Recruitment shall be&#13;
conducted under policies and procedures&#13;
established by the Chancellor in accordance&#13;
with Board policy and State and Federal law&#13;
concerning nondiscrimination and affirmative&#13;
action in recruitment. Candidate&#13;
pools and candidates for interviews shall be&#13;
recommended by majority vote of executive&#13;
committees. Faculty appointments shall be&#13;
made only upon the affirmative recommendation&#13;
of divisional executive committe&#13;
es, as provided by 46.01.&#13;
(2) Divisional executive committees&#13;
may delegate functional responsibility for&#13;
recruitment to subcommittees, as provided&#13;
by 42.05(4), but such subcommittees shall&#13;
operat e under the general direction and&#13;
authority of divisional executive committees&#13;
and chairmen, who shall retain final&#13;
responsibility for recruitment procedures&#13;
, and decisions, and for maintaining&#13;
necessary files and records.&#13;
46.11 Periodic Review&#13;
The faculties of the College and School&#13;
shall provide for reviews of the performance&#13;
of all faculty members by their divisional&#13;
executive committees, to be conducted each&#13;
year afte r the beginning of the se cond&#13;
semester: The reviews shall be based on&#13;
writt en reports from faculty members&#13;
describing their activities during the&#13;
preceding calendar year in the areas of&#13;
teaching, scholarly activity, and service;&#13;
and on the results of student evaluations of&#13;
faculty conducted at least annually. On the&#13;
basis of this and other information,- the&#13;
divisional executive committee shall&#13;
prepare an annual evaluation of the per&#13;
formance of each faculty member. Annual&#13;
evaluations, together with the information&#13;
on which they are based, shall become part&#13;
of the personnel file of the faculty member&#13;
concerned.&#13;
46.12 Layoff and Termination for Reasons of&#13;
Financial Emergency&#13;
(1) The form of "seniority" to be con&#13;
sidered under UWS 5.08 shal be by rank, and&#13;
within rank according to total years of&#13;
service at UW-Parkside and its predecessor&#13;
units, UW-Rac ine Center and UW-Kenosha&#13;
Center.&#13;
(2) The "faculty hearing committee"&#13;
provided by UWS 5.11 shall be the Hearings&#13;
and Appeals Committ ee established by&#13;
46.07(4).&#13;
Hearing on Proposed Faculty&#13;
Personnel Rules&#13;
The University Committee will&#13;
hold a public hearing on the&#13;
Parkside Faculty Personnel Rules&#13;
on Thursday February 20th, in&#13;
Classroom 113 beginning at 1 p.m.&#13;
The period from 1 - 2 p.m.&#13;
will be reserved for students and&#13;
the period from 2:15 to 3:15 p.m.&#13;
for faculty members and others.&#13;
Following is the text of the&#13;
proposed rules. * &#13;
« THE PARKSIDE RANGER, Wednesda y, Feb ruary ,9, ,975&#13;
Unanimously named&#13;
Cole is MVP&#13;
Steve&#13;
Stephens&#13;
Gary Cole and coach Steve&#13;
Stephens, were selected as player&#13;
and coach of the year, respectively,&#13;
by the members of the&#13;
Wisconsin Independent College&#13;
Association (WICA) meeting at&#13;
Stevens Point last Wednesday.&#13;
Cole, a 6-9 junior forward from&#13;
Racine (Park) averaging better&#13;
than 23 points and ten rebounds a&#13;
game, was a unanimous choice as&#13;
WICA MVP. Stephens, in his&#13;
sixth year of heading the varsity&#13;
cage program at Parkside, had&#13;
guided his 1974-75 team, his finest&#13;
ever, to a 18-7 mark as of Monday.&#13;
&#13;
Filling out the all-WICA team&#13;
were 6-4 sophomore forward&#13;
I Martha Scott of Parkside, senior&#13;
Jeff Koenitzer of Carthage and&#13;
senior Johnny Campbell of&#13;
lakeland.&#13;
Accorded honorable mention&#13;
were Parkside's Chuck Chambliss,&#13;
a 6-2 senior guard from&#13;
Racine (Park), and 6-10 Chicago&#13;
sophomore Marshall Hill.&#13;
TuevSday Night&#13;
Is Bonanza&#13;
Special Night.&#13;
[(•1.69 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
(*1.49 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)]&#13;
y&#13;
• Feed a child in America for 49&lt;X&#13;
Wo ve «(.t just the right amount ul food to make- a kid smile - a barnburner&#13;
an order of trench fries, and a lollipop. And a price - 49&lt;j - to make you smile.'&#13;
1&#13;
wu love it. Wll love ft.&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY&#13;
I&#13;
THERE ARE T HINGS&#13;
HAPPENING IN HAIR.&#13;
DON'T LET IT BE A BAD&#13;
HAPPENING&#13;
NOW STYLING - DONE RIGHT&#13;
ft&#13;
(low&amp;fih 5 0 6 G O O LD&#13;
. ( N O R TH SIDE)&#13;
R A CIN E&#13;
637-6305&#13;
Cager Bill Sobanski takes aim against Illinois-Edwardsville while&#13;
the Rangers went on to win their 18th game. Sobanski made 23 points&#13;
and 17 rebounds during the game. Gary Cole broke a 61-61 tie with 9&#13;
seconds remaining. The win broke Parkside's four-game losing&#13;
streak. They are now 18-7 fo r the season.&#13;
S&amp;utinCf lite, tf-Ute&amp;t&#13;
Pvyy* £ 9 folia* tyoxuti.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
B A D ifferent&#13;
\ ' ^&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
ii.11&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220-67 st. Ph. 6 52-8198 Kenosha&#13;
H i: I I. KM A N s&#13;
Play-off&#13;
tickets&#13;
on sale&#13;
Tickets for the Feb. 27, WICA&#13;
basketball playoff game between&#13;
Parkside and either Carthage or&#13;
St. Norbert will be on sale to all&#13;
students, faculty and staff today,&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 19, and&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 20, at the&#13;
Physical Education office.&#13;
Hours for the sale are 8 a.m. to&#13;
8 p.m. today and 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.&#13;
Thursday. Each student, faculty&#13;
or staff member may purchase&#13;
two tickets for each I.D. card for&#13;
$1 each. The Physical Education&#13;
office is the only outlet for playoff&#13;
tickets and all seats are reserved.&#13;
After Thursday, any tickets&#13;
still unsold for the Feb. 27&#13;
Parkside game will be offered to&#13;
the general public.&#13;
In the Feb. 27 game, Parkside,&#13;
which was seeded No. 1 in the&#13;
Wisconsin Indepe&#13;
dent College Association (WICA)&#13;
playoffs, will face the winner of&#13;
the Carthage-St. Norbert game,&#13;
to be played Feb. 25 at Carthage.&#13;
If Parkside wins the Feb. 27&#13;
game, it will play the runner-up&#13;
in the Wisconsin State University&#13;
Conference at 7:30 p.m., Monday,&#13;
Mar. 3 at Parkside. Ticket information&#13;
for that game is:&#13;
Tickets for students, faculty&#13;
and staff only, will go on sale at 8&#13;
a.m. on Friday, Feb. 28, in the&#13;
Physical Education office. The&#13;
general public will not be able to&#13;
begin purchasing tickets until&#13;
noon.&#13;
Prices for the Mar. 3 game are&#13;
$1.50 for all students with ID&#13;
cards and for children, $3 for all&#13;
others, including faculty and&#13;
staff. No person may buy more&#13;
than two tickets. Students may&#13;
buy one ticket at the $1.50 price&#13;
but must pay $3 if they desire a&#13;
second ticket.&#13;
The championship game will be&#13;
played Wednesday, Mar. 5. If&#13;
Parkside is a participant in&#13;
the finals, it would host the game&#13;
only if the opponent is Milton or&#13;
Carroll.&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
5.5%&#13;
(Compounds in noall.v l o ,1 .112%)&#13;
t 4 /&#13;
ll\ ItKl.l 1.111&#13;
sunns&#13;
rum: inucunr iiinimvs&#13;
I'.W. Parkside - Hmtm 2:15. T alleni H all&#13;
ISO M. rh ivvlnul Si. . Bm iiniiliin&#13;
•12116 Washiiiuimi hi1&#13;
.. It aiinc&#13;
Old&#13;
I* Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union" </text>
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              <text>Foreign Language debate</text>
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              <text>The ParksideDiscussion&#13;
&#13;
Students on RANGER faculty&#13;
Wednesday, February 26, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 26,&#13;
Speaking in tongues&#13;
Foreign lang. debate&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
A s uggestion that the existing&#13;
foreign language requirement at&#13;
Parkside be changed, was made&#13;
by Dwayne Olsen, assistant&#13;
professor of Education, during a&#13;
public hearing on the&#13;
requirement on Thursday, Feb.&#13;
20.&#13;
Olsen suggested that a&#13;
distinction in degrees-between a&#13;
Bachelor of Arts and a Bachelor&#13;
of Science-be used in determining&#13;
whether a foreign&#13;
language is necessary.&#13;
The hearing last Thursday was&#13;
the first of two public hearings&#13;
scheduled by an Ad Hoc Committee&#13;
on the Foreign Language&#13;
Requirement. The second&#13;
hearing will be held this week&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
The committee is to make a&#13;
report with recommendations by&#13;
March 15 to Eugene Norwood,&#13;
acting vice chancellor, on&#13;
whether the current foreign&#13;
language requirement should be&#13;
retained, modified or eliminated.&#13;
Foreign language is not a&#13;
requirement for students&#13;
majoring within the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
Zeigler &amp; Dean&#13;
Speaking at last week's&#13;
hearing, Philip Burnett,&#13;
professor of Social Science,&#13;
stressed the importance of&#13;
studying a foreign language for&#13;
the knowledge it contributes to&#13;
understanding English grammar.&#13;
&#13;
However, Burnett did not think&#13;
that one year of a foreign&#13;
language was very useful.&#13;
"At least two years of a foreign&#13;
language is necessary for any&#13;
real feeling of the language," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Olsen commented that he has&#13;
no deep feeling for either&#13;
retaining or dropping the foreign&#13;
language requirement.&#13;
He recommended though, that&#13;
Parkside should develop a&#13;
bilingual teaching program due&#13;
to the large Spanish-speaking&#13;
population in Racine.&#13;
Harry Walbruck, professor of&#13;
German, stated that in Wisconsin&#13;
there are 43 nationalities&#13;
represented and that one-third of&#13;
the state's total population is&#13;
foreign born.&#13;
"It is my opinion that the&#13;
student who misses the opportunity&#13;
to learn a foreign&#13;
language is closing the door to&#13;
other points of interest.&#13;
"One doesn't have to have it as&#13;
a major to study a foreign&#13;
language."&#13;
A member of the committee,&#13;
Richard Keehn, associate&#13;
professor of Economics, asked&#13;
Walbruck to clarify how&#13;
beneficial it would be if all&#13;
students were required to take a&#13;
foreign language.&#13;
Walbruck said that foreign&#13;
language should be judged on its&#13;
own merits as a "most important&#13;
part of a general study option."&#13;
Burnett then asked Walbruck&#13;
how valuable is one year of st udy&#13;
of a foreign language.&#13;
"Not very valuable," Walbruck&#13;
responded.&#13;
Jeanette Crossland was the&#13;
only student to speak at the&#13;
hearing.&#13;
She said that it was a mistake&#13;
on the part of students not to take&#13;
a foreign language.&#13;
Crossland recommended that a&#13;
year of foreign language be&#13;
required and a semester of&#13;
continued on page 4&#13;
by Cathy Mech&#13;
The right for students to sit on&#13;
faculty committees, especially&#13;
those regarding tenure, was the&#13;
major topic of discussion at the&#13;
rather sparsely attended open&#13;
hearing of the University&#13;
Committee's proposed faculty&#13;
personnel rules on Feb. 20.&#13;
The hearing was necessary,&#13;
according to William Murin,&#13;
chairman, because the Board of&#13;
Regents requires that "appropriate&#13;
students" have a&#13;
chance to read the draft and&#13;
express their opinions before it is&#13;
approved by the faculty senate.&#13;
However, Murin said, the&#13;
Regents did not specify who&#13;
"appropriate students" are, so&#13;
all official student organizations&#13;
on campus were informed of the&#13;
hearing in hope that this would&#13;
satisfy the Regents' requirement.&#13;
In his opinion, the proposed rules&#13;
are not drastically different in&#13;
terms of operating procedure,&#13;
although there is some money&#13;
lost. Parkside, along with other&#13;
campuses, must change its rules&#13;
to satisfy the joint academic staff&#13;
rules of the merged University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Wisconsin State&#13;
system, and the problems&#13;
Parkside faces are not unique.&#13;
The most outspoken complaints&#13;
of the few students that attended&#13;
the hearing was the scarcity of&#13;
time allowed to read the proposed&#13;
rules thoroughly, and the lack of&#13;
student participation and input in&#13;
faculty committees.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovich, president&#13;
comm.&#13;
of the P.S.G.A., Inc., read a&#13;
prepared statement that called&#13;
for a P.S.G.A.-sponsored faculty&#13;
evaluation questionnaire, the&#13;
emphasis of the importance of&#13;
present evaluation forms, and&#13;
.that the results of the forms be&#13;
made available to students. He&#13;
also called the proposed rules&#13;
"just a sham" because of the lack&#13;
of student input. Mike Marron,&#13;
University Committee member,&#13;
said the purpose of this hearing&#13;
was to gather student ideas and&#13;
opinions to add to what the&#13;
committee members felt was a&#13;
proper proposal.&#13;
Milutinovich and Hayes&#13;
Norman, president of Third&#13;
World, felt students were intellectual&#13;
enough to be&#13;
represented on committees&#13;
dealing with tenure. Marron said&#13;
tenure is basically a "peer&#13;
review, "-an evaluation by&#13;
people working on the same level,&#13;
pressures and criteria, but the&#13;
"student is the expert" concerning&#13;
the teacher's ability in&#13;
the classroom. Alan Shucard,&#13;
another committee member, said&#13;
the rules do not prohibit students&#13;
on committees, but had "ambivalent&#13;
feelings" on the subject.&#13;
Students are the most reliable&#13;
sources for teaching ability, but&#13;
they might not be qualified to&#13;
give an opinion concerning a&#13;
professor's "scholarly activity."&#13;
Other students at the hearing&#13;
felt that student participation in&#13;
such matters would increase&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
by John Ghrist&#13;
Watergate figures rake it in&#13;
(CPS)--Watergate is a big&#13;
seller on college and university&#13;
campuses this spring, as two&#13;
major figures in Richard Nixon's&#13;
White House are raking in&#13;
several thousand dollars per&#13;
campus appearance.&#13;
John Dean, former counsel to&#13;
the President whose testimony&#13;
blew the cover off White House&#13;
involvement, will be traveling&#13;
around the country telling college&#13;
audiences how power was abused&#13;
by high officials.&#13;
Dean's tour began February 2&#13;
at the University of Virginia,&#13;
which paid $4000 t o be the first&#13;
stop. The event was heavily&#13;
covered by broadcast media and&#13;
preceded by complaints from&#13;
many who felt that Dean had&#13;
turned the tables on ethics by&#13;
making a fortune from his past&#13;
illegal activities.&#13;
According to Dean's agent,&#13;
Robert Walker of the American&#13;
Program Bureau, such talk&#13;
almost convinced Dean to give up&#13;
the tour before it started. By and&#13;
large, however, Dean found his&#13;
audiences willing to pay to hear&#13;
what he had to say-without&#13;
complaint.&#13;
In general, Dean has been&#13;
warmly received by recordbreaking&#13;
crowds. He will visit&#13;
more than 50 campuses across&#13;
the country between now and&#13;
March 15, for which he will&#13;
receive more than $100,000, all of&#13;
it going to pay legal debts and&#13;
other obligations accumulated&#13;
over the last two years. Until the&#13;
start of the tour, Dean had been&#13;
unemployed after leaving the&#13;
I 1 1 1 n 1 » l &lt;&#13;
HARVARD LAW SCHOOL&#13;
"Pr~je,2&lt;2&gt;7vbs&#13;
[»ULf CtfS&#13;
DON'T APPLAUD! JUST THROW ROYALTIES AND HONORARIUMS!&#13;
White House.&#13;
There have been some protests&#13;
against Dean, however,&#13;
primarily because of his high&#13;
fees: $3000 or more plus expenses&#13;
for each one-hour talk, according&#13;
to Walker.&#13;
At the University of Maryland,&#13;
the student government reported&#13;
that calls against paying Dean&#13;
ran 11-1 after an announcement&#13;
that he would speak. This&#13;
reaction plus some interorganizational&#13;
disputes&#13;
caused the student government to&#13;
freeze the funds of the group&#13;
arranging campus speaker appearances.&#13;
&#13;
The University of Montana saw&#13;
a similar confrontation between&#13;
student government and speaker&#13;
bureau. After the Program&#13;
Council announced Dean would&#13;
appear, the UM Central. Board&#13;
voted to forbid payment to Dean.&#13;
Program Council head Dave&#13;
Snyder insisted the Board had no&#13;
veto power over speakers, and&#13;
after a week of co nfrontation the&#13;
Central Board rescinded its&#13;
order.&#13;
Over in the Ziegler camp, there&#13;
is less candor. Unlike Walker,&#13;
agent William Leigh of the&#13;
Colston-Leigh Agency refused to&#13;
give details of the number of&#13;
colleges Ziegler would visit, his&#13;
fees, or the dates involved. According&#13;
to other reports,&#13;
however, Ziegler has been offered&#13;
between $2000 and $2500 an&#13;
appearance.&#13;
Ron Ziegler has also had his&#13;
share of pre-appearance&#13;
protests, although Leigh said he&#13;
was "not particularly" aware of&#13;
protests against Ziegler. "The&#13;
Boston incident was a little inflated&#13;
by the press," he insisted.&#13;
In that confrontation, the&#13;
Boston University speaker's&#13;
group contracted to pay Ziegler&#13;
$2500 b ut the money was withdrawn&#13;
by the student government.&#13;
Following local protests&#13;
that BU was stifling free speech,&#13;
BU President John Silber offered&#13;
to pay Ziegler $1000 out of&#13;
university funds, but Leigh&#13;
turned down the offer as too low.&#13;
Nevertheless, Ziegler's&#13;
proposed appearance has caused&#13;
controversy elsewhere-even&#13;
more so than Dean has.&#13;
The Michigan State University&#13;
student government also withdrew&#13;
financial support for&#13;
Ziegler, but by charging admission&#13;
and using up the rest of&#13;
their budget, the MSU Lecture&#13;
Concert Series said they could&#13;
still foot the bill and Ziegler&#13;
would speak. Student body&#13;
president Tim Cain has called for&#13;
mass picketing and a boycott of&#13;
the speech.&#13;
The Wisconsin Student&#13;
Association at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison passed a&#13;
resolution asking the UWM&#13;
Lecture society to cancel&#13;
Ziegler's appearance and plans&#13;
to organize a picket line if they&#13;
refuse.&#13;
"I feel it is wrong for anyone&#13;
involved in Watergate to make a&#13;
profit from criminal activity,"&#13;
argued one student who captured&#13;
the essence of anti-Ziegler&#13;
thought elsewhere. "This is the&#13;
continued on page 8 &#13;
1975&#13;
$elling&#13;
the&#13;
Centennial&#13;
The celebration of our country's two hundredth birthday&#13;
is approaching rapidly. Throughout the country&#13;
we hear of the plans of various groups to stage activities&#13;
in conjunction with the bicentenial. One group that is&#13;
being heard from with increasing regularity and with&#13;
increasing sense is the Peoples Bicentennial Commission&#13;
(PBC).&#13;
Based in Washington D.C., the PBC is an independent&#13;
organization of people through out the country that&#13;
believe we have strayed from the revolutionary principles&#13;
that not only established this country but also for&#13;
the first time in man's history established the principle&#13;
that governments are derived for the benefits of all&#13;
citizens. Without seeking any government dole, the PBC&#13;
has developed a complete program for celebrating our&#13;
countries birthday that concentrates on the principles&#13;
and history of our political beliefs. This contrasts with&#13;
the multi-million dollared government organization that&#13;
as one of its first efforts held an organizational meeting&#13;
for big business so that ways could be explored to exploit&#13;
our celebration through the sales of "Spirit of America"&#13;
Is this what&#13;
America's 200&#13;
th&#13;
. birthday&#13;
is all about?&#13;
Cheverolets, exact duplicates of George Washingtons&#13;
sword, and other "trinkets."&#13;
For those of you that find the continuing exploitation&#13;
of the ideals of America by the corporations that have&#13;
plundered our country of it's basic wealth and concentrated&#13;
that wealth in the hands of the Fourth Branch&#13;
of Government- Coporate Branch -we say join the&#13;
Peoples Bicentennial in making the revolution or 76 the&#13;
revolution of 1976. For more information' PBC will send&#13;
a free packet -- write to: Peoples Bicentennial Commission,&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20036. Editors Note: In&#13;
keeping with the spirit of the original revolution&#13;
RANGER inaugurates with this issue a series of&#13;
historical articles relating those principles we feel are&#13;
the basis and justification for government.&#13;
Letters to the editor&#13;
Cut the jive-tell it like it isTo&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
I am writing in regard to the&#13;
article concerning Black History&#13;
Week, in the Feb. 12th issue of the&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
The article and its glaring&#13;
errors were an insult to the Black&#13;
students of Parskide and I ask&#13;
you to publish this letter as a&#13;
correction.&#13;
1. The members of the Third&#13;
World Organization did not&#13;
"designate" Feb. 11-14 as B lack&#13;
History Week. The second-week&#13;
in February has been&#13;
traditionally held as a week of&#13;
celebration and affirmation of&#13;
Black historical achievements.&#13;
With more Black Americans&#13;
becoming aware of their true&#13;
Another view&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It's always an experience to&#13;
hear from one of our more&#13;
traveled alums, Mr. Arthur&#13;
Gruhl. It is good to know that he&#13;
is getting an inside view of&#13;
Rhodesia. I do wish that he could&#13;
visit with an acquaintance of&#13;
mine who is, I believe, still&#13;
somewhere in Rhodesia. I last&#13;
knew the man when we were&#13;
attending the same seminary in&#13;
the Boston area. Unfortunately,&#13;
Rear guarding&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Recently, People For A NonSexist&#13;
Society^ sponsored the&#13;
First Annual* "Pick Your&#13;
Favorite Gluteus Maximus"&#13;
Contest. The contest was initiated&#13;
in a spirit of good humor and funit&#13;
was hoped that the Parkside&#13;
community would respond in&#13;
kind. The notion was entertained&#13;
that, in laughing at the specific&#13;
idea of students' asses competing&#13;
for a trophy, a question about the&#13;
Editorial paltering?&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to your editorial on&#13;
the LLC cafeteria. We feel that&#13;
your opinion on t his subject was&#13;
really gross. .&#13;
If you can visit this area at&#13;
seven-a.m. any day of the week&#13;
and show us the trash left on the&#13;
tables and floor from the&#13;
previous night we will gladly&#13;
retract this statement.&#13;
For your information the&#13;
custodial staff cleans this area&#13;
every night of the week, this&#13;
includes empyting receptacles&#13;
cleaning tables and floor. We find&#13;
that you must be the biggest&#13;
identity, the entire month of&#13;
February, is known as "Black&#13;
Liberation Month".&#13;
2. The Black History Week&#13;
Committee and the members of&#13;
the Third World Organization&#13;
decided on the theme of&#13;
"UJAMAA: Black Love Is Black&#13;
Wealth." The RANGER article,&#13;
written by Bonne Haas combined&#13;
the theme altogether. UJAMAA&#13;
is a Swahili word meaning&#13;
"familyhood" which has an&#13;
important meaning for our&#13;
people as we strive for greater&#13;
unity in the Race. The author's&#13;
ignorance of the Afrikan&#13;
language was surpassed only by&#13;
the negligence to seek out&#13;
complete news coverage of this&#13;
event.&#13;
3. Dr. Margaret Aboagye, true&#13;
enough, is from Ghana, Afrika.&#13;
However, it seems logical that&#13;
coming from a devloping continent,&#13;
and a member of the Third&#13;
World community of nations, her&#13;
nation would not have a special&#13;
"Afrikan School of Dentistry", in&#13;
fact, she received her college and&#13;
graduate degrees from European&#13;
and American universities.&#13;
In the future, Ms. Haas, as well&#13;
as RANGER editorial staff, may&#13;
I suggest that you interview&#13;
Third World members seeking&#13;
reliable information concerning&#13;
our events and involvements.&#13;
Sleeper awake,&#13;
Sis. Arlene Martin,&#13;
Chairperson, Black History&#13;
Week.&#13;
however, Ndabaningi Sithole&#13;
("Daba" as his friends called&#13;
him) does not live in a large&#13;
ranch-type home with 4,600&#13;
square feet, six bedrooms, four&#13;
baths, a fleet of cars, six servants,&#13;
etc., etc. No. For about the&#13;
last fifteen years Daba has been&#13;
separated from his wife and&#13;
family and put in a "holding&#13;
camp." He was seen as&#13;
dangerous by the Rhodesian&#13;
government because he was&#13;
actively seeking to establish both&#13;
racial dn economic justice in his&#13;
country. But that, of course,&#13;
would make it more difficult for&#13;
some to own a large ranch-type&#13;
home, with three bath rooms, six&#13;
servants, etc., etc. Perhaps Daba&#13;
could have helped Arthur see a&#13;
little more of Rhodesia.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Wayne G. Johnson&#13;
Assoc. Professor of Philosophy&#13;
validity of any contest wherein&#13;
one part of someone's body was&#13;
matched against someone else's&#13;
would arise. The contest was an&#13;
exercise in reductio ad absurdum&#13;
and was intended to convey a&#13;
valid viewpoint, while providing&#13;
a measure of laughter to a&#13;
university that truly needs it.&#13;
For their trouble, People For A&#13;
Non-Sexist Society was rewarded&#13;
with a visit from one of Bauer's&#13;
flunkies in Student Life (name&#13;
and position unknown) who&#13;
requested that the contest portraits&#13;
be taken down, adding that&#13;
assistance in dismantling the&#13;
contest could be easily procured.&#13;
He indicated that certain administrators&#13;
were unamused and&#13;
unenlightened. Apparently they&#13;
are also unaware of the Bill of&#13;
Rights.&#13;
Sexism is a social disease-it&#13;
seems Parkside has a good dose.&#13;
Barb Hanson&#13;
damn prevaricator on (P.U.&#13;
Campus).&#13;
If you found an abundance of&#13;
debris on the tables and floor&#13;
during the day it is because of all&#13;
your apathetic people here at&#13;
Parkside who apparently forget&#13;
other people are to share these&#13;
facilities.&#13;
It is impossible and impractical&#13;
to caretake this area&#13;
twenty-four hours a day. Our&#13;
prime time is from eleven-p.m. to&#13;
seven-a.m. any trash found in&#13;
this area after these hours is not&#13;
carried over from the night&#13;
before.&#13;
Please note the receptacles for&#13;
trash and racks for trays placed&#13;
throughout the dining area,&#13;
people completely ignore these&#13;
items and depart leaving a mess&#13;
behind them. So, why don't you&#13;
place the blame where it belongs.&#13;
If you have a hang-up with the&#13;
Canteen Corp please leave us out&#13;
of it and while writing on the&#13;
subject of trash how can you&#13;
justify your editorial on the LLC&#13;
cafeteria?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Joe O'Hara and Francisco&#13;
Ytuarte.&#13;
Anti-Semitism generations of abuse&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
A few weeks ago on the&#13;
program Sixty Minutes on&#13;
television, they showed how the&#13;
Jewish people in Syria are forced&#13;
to live. They are continually&#13;
watched and are unable to leave&#13;
the country. What really got to&#13;
me was when they showed an&#13;
interview with a Jewish family&#13;
and the father stated that he&#13;
wanted his children when they&#13;
grew up to join the Syrian army&#13;
and fight Israel. It should be&#13;
obvious to anyone who watched&#13;
this program that this man was&#13;
under great pressure to say these&#13;
things for fear of the lives of his&#13;
family. It is about time attrocities&#13;
like this against the&#13;
Jewish people are stopped.&#13;
nntT 1 thK JeWlsh people been&#13;
put through enough torture? This&#13;
jsn t the only place in the world&#13;
his is happening-for example&#13;
Russia and Poland. Even in this&#13;
country Jewish people are&#13;
Plagued by sick antiemetic&#13;
gioups. What this country needs&#13;
•s a strong-National Jewish&#13;
Organization and leader who will&#13;
be "ontmuously in the limelight&#13;
whose duty it would be to combine&#13;
all small Jewish groups into&#13;
one National Jewish&#13;
Organization for the purpose of&#13;
restoring Jewish pride, stopping&#13;
antisemitism, and fighting attrocities&#13;
against Jews all over the&#13;
world. Can we as Jewish students&#13;
at Parkside do anything to help'' I&#13;
think so, by forming a Parkside&#13;
Jewish Association. If you are&#13;
interested in forming such a&#13;
group please contact Gary Rothman&#13;
or Kurt Muller.&#13;
Gary Rothman &#13;
1776 to 1976&#13;
Wednesday, February 26, 1 975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Problems much the same&#13;
by Ted Howard&#13;
w PBC&#13;
We are not as far removed from the America of the 1770s a s we&#13;
thlir dil!1&#13;
" t^&#13;
0 hundred years a8° today- our ancestors sat around&#13;
halls faV°&#13;
rite Pubs&#13;
' 0r in ^ town meeting halls, and pondered and debated the issues of their day.&#13;
nn th?'&#13;
38 n&#13;
°&#13;
W:&#13;
there Was an abundance of small talk. Hem-lines were&#13;
'rnnZ -&#13;
an&#13;
i&#13;
causm^ no end of scandal&#13;
- Remarked one observer,&#13;
Considering the present dress of our women of fashion, there&#13;
emams no further step to be taken except absolute nakedness." A&#13;
generation gap was fast emerging, as one letter writer noted: "It is&#13;
now grown too common for our children and youth to swear and curse&#13;
on the streets and to abuse with foul language, not only one another,&#13;
Shinmp&#13;
1^&#13;
811^!&#13;
0^' ^ WeU" And&#13;
' °&#13;
f C0UrSe&#13;
'&#13;
the qU£dity 0f ^ newest&#13;
shipments of beer and rum were frequent topics of discussion.&#13;
suhWtJnfth311&#13;
!'&#13;
th* conversation always turned to the two crucial&#13;
subjects of the day-the economy and the government. By 1775, th ere&#13;
was a lot to be said about each.&#13;
Beginning in the mid-1760's, King George's government had&#13;
managed, through inept policy, arrogance and blunder, to thoroughly&#13;
an gonize Americans. First there was a tax on newspapers. That had&#13;
been opposed by Americans and defeated. Then came a tax on glass&#13;
and paint. That too was opposed and defeated. Still, the politicians who&#13;
worked for King George simply couldn't get it through their heads that&#13;
taxation without representation was something the Americans subjects&#13;
would never stand for.&#13;
J* °PP°&#13;
sition t0 Government policies reached a fever pitch in&#13;
73. Tha t year Ben Franklin, the American representative in London&#13;
managed to leak secret government papers to Sam Adams and John&#13;
Hancock. One of these documents outlined a government conspiracy&#13;
to repress the civil liberties of the American people. The publication of&#13;
this document sent a shock wave throughout the colonies. Previously&#13;
loyal subjects began questioning the honesty of h igh government officials.&#13;
&#13;
Just six months after this political scandal, an economic scandal of&#13;
major proportions rocked the country. The East India Company the&#13;
world's largest corporation, was near bankruptcy due to inept&#13;
management. Its owners lobbied Parliament for a subsidy to bolster&#13;
the floundering economic interest of the company. Members of&#13;
Parliament, many of whom owned stock in the company were eager to&#13;
assist the E.I.C. by granting a 2 million pound subsidy and a monopoly&#13;
on the world-wide British tea trade. Parliament also legislated a tax&#13;
on all tea sold by the company in North America.&#13;
When news of this corporate-government collusion reached the 13&#13;
colonies, outraged subjects began mobilizing in swift opposition. And&#13;
on December 16,1773 the Sons of Liberty staged the Boston Tea Party.&#13;
By the time they boarded the tea ships to destroy the cargo, the&#13;
Bostonians were less concerned about the tea tax than the fact that the&#13;
East India Company had amassed enough political clout to convince&#13;
the government to impose the tax in the first place. As one patriot&#13;
explained in a public broadside:&#13;
"The East India Company, if once they get footing in this once happy&#13;
country, will leave no stone unturned to become your masters. They&#13;
are an oppulent body, and money or credit is not wanting amongst&#13;
them. They have a designing, depraved and despotic ministry to assist&#13;
and support them. They themselves are well versed in tyranny,&#13;
plunder, oppression and bloodshed. Whole provinces laboring under&#13;
the distresses of oppression, slavery, famine and the sword are&#13;
Correction&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reference to the review of&#13;
the January 29th concert of&#13;
Woody Herman, which appeared&#13;
in the February 12th RANGER, I&#13;
believe that some very important&#13;
corrections are in order. I suppose&#13;
that I can begin with the&#13;
second paragraph where the&#13;
writer begins his "tour-de-farce"&#13;
by reviewing the Parkside Jazz&#13;
Band. First of a ll, I'm sure Mr.&#13;
Hanrahan is quite surprised that&#13;
the song he arranged has had a&#13;
name change. The correct title is&#13;
"Simone", not "Sea Moon." Mr.&#13;
Hanrahan arranged the song, and&#13;
had the solo. The next mistake&#13;
was the title "Sun Catcher",&#13;
should be properly named "The&#13;
Sun Catchers".&#13;
I'm sure that our trombonists&#13;
Classified&#13;
G I RL WA N T E D live in Racine with faculty&#13;
family. Light housework and child care&#13;
evenings free. $50 per week plus free room&#13;
and board Flexible schedule for summer&#13;
and fall semester Call after 5 p.m. at 633&#13;
0991&#13;
Favorite Rust colored corduroy blazer type&#13;
tacket left in the Union Fri., Feb. 21 R eward.&#13;
No questions. Please phone 654-1945.&#13;
got a real kick out of y our racial&#13;
slur about the solos being grey.&#13;
Cute, but in poor taste. The last&#13;
song was called "Turquoise", but&#13;
it was written and arranged by&#13;
Sanford Kelly, a student at North&#13;
Texas State, not at Parkside.&#13;
Your last sentence about the&#13;
applause for the band made it&#13;
sound like "Gee, I gues the band&#13;
must be good, listen to the people&#13;
clap," as if the writer was not&#13;
quite sure himself. I think more&#13;
credit or added credit should be&#13;
given to other players in the&#13;
band. The group on the whole,&#13;
and especially our director,&#13;
Robert Thomason (not&#13;
previously mentioned in the&#13;
article) should also recieve a lot&#13;
of c redit.&#13;
The band worked damn hard to&#13;
ART CLASSES&#13;
(For Adults &amp; Young Adults)&#13;
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March. 10 Day &amp; Evening.&#13;
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familiar to them. They have encroached themselves-thus they have&#13;
become the most powerful trading company in the Universe."&#13;
Within months of the Tea Party the state of the economy became an&#13;
ever greater object of concern. Inflation replaced taxation as the&#13;
number one issue of the day. A writer in Needham, Massachusetts&#13;
printed a broadside that went to the heart of the matter:&#13;
"If the traders in this land had managed their commercial concerns&#13;
with any tolerable regard to the good of the public, we should have&#13;
been at this day in happy circumstances, compared with what we now&#13;
are. To what can it be attributed but the excessive love traders have to&#13;
their own precious selves, that they put such an extravagant price&#13;
upon the commodities they have to sell. It has occasioned the undue&#13;
rise of everything we depend upon for the support and comfort of life.&#13;
In truth, our traders are the real cause of the monstrously high price of&#13;
everything."&#13;
At the same time, there was a growing scarcity of vital goods-food,&#13;
clothing, blankets, shoes. While business interests maintained that the&#13;
scarcity was real, the patriots began to doubt it. Wrote Samuel&#13;
Webster, "There is sufficiency in the land of the necessities of life.&#13;
How then comes it to pass as to make an artificial scarcity, where we&#13;
all know there is none?"&#13;
By 1776, the economy was in a shambles. The working men of Boston&#13;
and New York withheld their labor from all government projects.&#13;
Wealthy aristocrats and merchants who supported the King, were&#13;
forced to flee the country to Canada or back to England.&#13;
This was America as 1775 dawned. Never had the affairs of the&#13;
country been in such disarray. Never had the future looked darker&#13;
Never had Americans gazed with less hope on tomorrow.&#13;
And t hen, within 18 months, what had seemed an impossibility in&#13;
January of 177 5 was a reality by July 4,1776. America was free-free&#13;
because Americans met the challenge. They raised themselves from&#13;
their despair, from their powerlessness, from their fear and&#13;
frustration. They stood up to be counted, and when that happened, no&#13;
amount of Kings, East India Companies and corrupt government&#13;
bureaucrats could stop them.&#13;
The Challenge is clear, the moment is now.&#13;
A thousand voices from our past call us to act for our future and the&#13;
future of our country.&#13;
Who w ill take up the banner of liberty and freedom that Adams,&#13;
Paine and Jefferson led into battle nearly 200 years ago?&#13;
Who will be the first among us to step forth and honor our ancient&#13;
principles with a renewed commitment to reclaim our destiny as a&#13;
people?&#13;
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Manny Brown, a member of&#13;
Parkside's Board of Visitors and&#13;
a former legislator prominent in&#13;
the efforts to establish Parkside,&#13;
is now a candidate for Judge of&#13;
the Racine County Court, Branch&#13;
III. Students and faculty interested&#13;
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asked to contact Robert H.&#13;
Canary, professor of English.&#13;
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put that show together, and each&#13;
member played hard and well. As&#13;
for the rest of t he article, I feel a&#13;
great injustice was done to&#13;
Woody a nd his band. I hope for&#13;
our sake he never,sees that article,&#13;
or I'm sure that he and his band&#13;
will never "thunder their way&#13;
back" to Parkside again.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Garry S. Wolk&#13;
Member, Parkside Jazz Ensemble&#13;
&#13;
Editor's Note: RANGER&#13;
apologizes for the errors in two&#13;
song titles. The review did not&#13;
state, however, that "Turquoise"&#13;
was written by a Parkside&#13;
student.&#13;
We'll restring your racquet so you'll get a better HIT -&#13;
Tournament Nylon -&#13;
$700&#13;
Is your racquet old &amp; tired - it's worth $3.00 in trade on the&#13;
purchase of any new racquet. A&#13;
Wilson Optic Yellow balls jf&amp;l Patrick Tennis Shoes&#13;
Reg. $3.49 Leather. Reg. $24.49&#13;
Sale, $049 ^ $ 1 ^L95&#13;
! .S^^i^ice^^Udjvhen this £0^wiy^e£entedT]&#13;
l+H Calender's all sport ltd. 240 Main St., Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
632-7754&#13;
SCHWINN PEUGEOT&#13;
(414 ) 652-6468&#13;
DON GILL BICYCLE SHOP&#13;
Everything for the Cyclist&#13;
5006 - 7th Avenue&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
NISHIKI MONDIA&#13;
S&amp;tuincj the Qinedt&#13;
Ptyy&#13;
2&#13;
' £ Station, rf-oodi.&#13;
(9® ~&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA-551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, February 26, 1975&#13;
DINO'S&#13;
1816 1 6 S treet&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; C OCKTAILS&#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;
Speaking&#13;
"THE O LD LAIR IS B ACK W ITH A NEW FACE"&#13;
OPENING JAN. 31, 3:00 P.M.&#13;
24th and 25th on 60t&gt; St. KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
A Different&#13;
7 type of&#13;
CP&#13;
V A V||fe Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
6220-67 s t. Ph. 6 52-8198 Kenosha&#13;
THE&#13;
Nm&#13;
iiLlttL&#13;
1 irtMARCH&#13;
1&#13;
rne&#13;
PACK SHOP&#13;
5033-6th Ave., Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
foreign culture.&#13;
Besides the hearings, the Ad&#13;
Hoc Committee on the Foreign&#13;
Language Requirement^ is&#13;
seeking additional input from&#13;
students and faculty through a&#13;
survey.&#13;
The committee's report to&#13;
Norwood will also include a&#13;
survey on foreign language&#13;
requirements at other universities&#13;
in the UW system and&#13;
throughout the country.&#13;
If the committee recommends&#13;
a change in the current foreign&#13;
language requirement, the&#13;
recommendation will go before&#13;
the Faculty Senate for approval.&#13;
Greg Hawkins, a student&#13;
member of that committee, made&#13;
the motion to review the&#13;
requirement.&#13;
"Foreign language as it stands&#13;
now, does not apply itself to the&#13;
educational goals of a majority of&#13;
students on this campus.&#13;
"The present requirement does&#13;
not give enough foreign language&#13;
to be of any practical use.&#13;
"Secondly, the intrinsic value&#13;
of a foreign language can also be&#13;
satisfied by a number of other&#13;
courses such as linguistics,&#13;
culture courses or literature in&#13;
translation.&#13;
"My particular feeling is that&#13;
the present foreign language&#13;
requirement should be dropped&#13;
completely," Hawkins said.&#13;
James Shea, chairperson of the&#13;
ad hoc committee and professor&#13;
of Earth Science, said that he is&#13;
in favor of a foreign language&#13;
requirement.&#13;
Shea emp hasized though, that&#13;
he is withholding judgment until&#13;
the hearings and the survey are&#13;
completed.&#13;
He further said that he did not&#13;
know whether the other committee&#13;
members felt that the&#13;
current foreign language&#13;
requirement is adequate enough.&#13;
The committee includes:&#13;
Keehn; Diane German, assistant&#13;
professor of Education; and&#13;
August Wegner, assistant&#13;
professor of Music.&#13;
The second public hearing on&#13;
the requirement is scheduled for&#13;
this week, Thursday, in LLC D174&#13;
fr om 2:30 p.m. to 4 p.m .&#13;
Walter&#13;
lllbrichts&#13;
The Man in the Glas Booth&#13;
This is the second season of the American Film Theatre, a fusion of&#13;
superb plays, actors, and filmmakers. From the best plays of the&#13;
Broadway and London stage, five extraordinary films are offered to&#13;
the discriminating viewer.&#13;
Each film is shown no more than four times, and each -ouch- has a&#13;
high price tag ($5.00 f or an evening performance). But, then, excellence&#13;
never does come cheap.&#13;
This season opened with "The Man in the Glass Booth," a shattering&#13;
enigma of guilt and innocence. The film grabs a weary subject-Nazi&#13;
atrocities against the Jews- and turns the guts inside out.&#13;
Maximilian Schell, an outstanding international actor, brilliantly&#13;
demonstrates an awesome range of talent. As Mr. Goldman, a Jewish,&#13;
New York real estate baron, Schell takes us down the depths of a&#13;
distressed psyche, a quagmire of past and present guilt.&#13;
From his penthouse balcony, not unlike Hitler's eerie in Berchtesgaden,&#13;
Goldman spews self-abuse, lusts for a Miss America, and&#13;
is assailed by paranoid images.&#13;
"I have built a city of concrete on the bleached skulls of&#13;
dinosauers," confesses Goldman, his hands spastically grasping the&#13;
air. He is powerful. He is witty. He is self-destructive.&#13;
As Goldman indulges in masochistic exercises, including a Dance of&#13;
Death before the urn containing his wife's ashes, he also prophesizes&#13;
the "second" coming of Colonel Dorf: an S.S. officer who is wanted as&#13;
a war criminal.&#13;
Goldman's inner conflict-"Dorf wants to be me" - explodes into a&#13;
reversal of roles. Israeli commandoes, convinced by medical records&#13;
that Goldman is the elusive, infamous Colonel Dorf, break into his&#13;
sanctuary. He is kidnapped and brought to trial as a mass-murderer in&#13;
Jerusalem.&#13;
Goldman offers no resistance and insists on wearing the uniform of a&#13;
S.S. colonel. He refuses counsel, confident of his ability to defend&#13;
himself against the "Higher Law" which demands his death.&#13;
Sealed in a sound-and-bullet proof booth, Goldman argues that his&#13;
crimes must be tried on a relaistic basis - the laws of men, not the&#13;
ambiguous, unwritten moral law.&#13;
This is Schell's finest hour. He cajoles with smooth gestures and&#13;
rages with the hysteria of a Nazi party rally. His fingertips tease his&#13;
captors while his eyes bulge and burst sweating blood. He pulls the&#13;
viewer into a frightening hypnosis. He casts a spell as absorbing as the&#13;
Fuehrer.&#13;
Goldman's transformation is not rational. Neither was the slaughter&#13;
of six million people. Neither was the passive resistance of its victims.&#13;
There lies the power and profundity of "The Man in the Glass&#13;
Booth." History can not be heremetically examined like glass slide&#13;
specimens. Truth and its consequences are never indisputably clear.&#13;
THERE ARE THINGS&#13;
HAPPENING IN HAIR.&#13;
DON'T LET IT BE A BAD&#13;
HAPPENING&#13;
NOW STYLING - DONE RIGHT&#13;
637^630,&#13;
—A&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
•&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
JJoo&amp;W&#13;
\^muh(L&#13;
6, 14 _Uv&lt;5j. 3\ i _- • ^ st. &#13;
Special veiwing:&#13;
Wednesday, February 26, 19 75 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Antonia&#13;
by Philip L. Livingston&#13;
Jill Godmillow will bring her&#13;
award-winning film "Antonia" to&#13;
Parkside this Friday, Feb. 28, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the CommArts&#13;
Theater. She will also conduct a&#13;
film editing workshop Saturday,&#13;
March 1, at 10 a.m. in CA D-155A.&#13;
Both activities are free and open&#13;
to th e general public.&#13;
After editing "The Candidate"&#13;
and "The Godfather," Jill&#13;
Godmillow got together with&#13;
folksinger Judy Collins to make a&#13;
touching film about the story of&#13;
Antonia Brico's life as an orchestra&#13;
conductor. The film has&#13;
won seven national and three&#13;
international film awards, including&#13;
the 1974 London Film&#13;
Festival.&#13;
"I have seen the film three&#13;
times. It's the kind of fil m people&#13;
get excited about. People&#13;
literally stood and applauded&#13;
between scenes," says Sandy&#13;
Thomason, Parkside film&#13;
production specialist.&#13;
Antonia Brico was ten years old&#13;
with a nail biting problem when&#13;
her doctor prescribed piano&#13;
lessons. Antonia quickly found&#13;
pleasure and strength in music.&#13;
"Music became my sanity...my&#13;
reason." She waited for "the&#13;
signs" to tell her to go on&#13;
studying and prepare herself for&#13;
a life of music.&#13;
In the film Antonia tells a story&#13;
about accompanying her mother&#13;
to a seance and being told by a&#13;
medium that Beethoven and Liszt&#13;
had told her she would be a great&#13;
musician.&#13;
At the age of 30, Antonia had&#13;
received the best music&#13;
education possible at the time at&#13;
the University of California in&#13;
Berkeley and the Berlin State&#13;
Academy of Conducting in&#13;
Germany. She was ready.&#13;
In 1931 touring as the conductor&#13;
of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra&#13;
she received acclaim and&#13;
shocked reviewers with her&#13;
power and strength.&#13;
After a lavish homecoming her&#13;
music career began to stagnate.&#13;
The novelty of a woman conductor&#13;
was wearing off and&#13;
Antonia became a conductor&#13;
without an orchestra. Could a&#13;
free society accept an individual's&#13;
talent beyond her sex?&#13;
Eleanor Roosevelt thought so,&#13;
joined Antonia's board of&#13;
Sfafi&#13;
D A ILY I O A A « N 194 &amp; 50&#13;
• Pr e s e nts *&#13;
JR. BIZARRE&#13;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28&#13;
• APPEARING*&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 1&#13;
ZIGGY&#13;
&amp; THE ZEU&#13;
with&#13;
ENA ANKA&#13;
directors, and helped to organize&#13;
the New York Women's Symphony.&#13;
It was a short-lived&#13;
success and Antonia was forced&#13;
to move on again.&#13;
Antonia rushed to Denver in&#13;
1947 on the promise of a position&#13;
with a new orchestra being&#13;
formed there. After many successes&#13;
and failures she founded&#13;
Jill Godmillow's(below) award-winning film&#13;
on the life of Antonia Brico(above), will be&#13;
shown this Friday at 7:30p.m. in the CommArts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
the Brico Symphony in Denver,&#13;
and 27 y ears later she still conducts&#13;
the orchestra despite her&#13;
age. Antonia is 73.&#13;
"Antonia" is a moving film of a&#13;
love and a life of music. Antonia&#13;
Brico teaches, jokes, plays and&#13;
still explodes in anger as she tells&#13;
her life story.&#13;
"Antonia" is modest only in&#13;
aspect, not in intention. Collins&#13;
and Godmillow mean to show&#13;
that a musician of invigorating&#13;
talent was shunted aside because&#13;
of a prejudice against her sex&#13;
that still prevails...a loving and&#13;
urgent document," wrote Jay&#13;
Cocks of Time magazine.&#13;
NOTE: Last week the Bugle&#13;
American was bombed. If&#13;
you wish to donate money&#13;
or back issues for their&#13;
files, contact the Mil.FM&#13;
rock stations for info on&#13;
benifit concerts &amp; sho ws.&#13;
U.W.-PA RKSIDE ACTIVITIES B OA R D&#13;
PRESEN TS&#13;
\ i&#13;
An illustrated lecture on&#13;
FLYING SAUCERS ARE R EAL"&#13;
by N ucle ar Physicist&#13;
S T A N TON T. F R IEDM A N&#13;
ADMISSION WE D N ES DA Y , M A R CH 5 , 8 : 0 0 P .M.&#13;
$ 1&#13;
5 0 g e n e r a l COMMUNICATION S ART T HE A T E R&#13;
$ 1&#13;
0 0 U.W.-P arkside st ud e n ts&#13;
Tickets&#13;
a v a il a b l e a t&#13;
U.W.-Parkside&#13;
info. Kisok&#13;
E I L E M AN S M&#13;
I*&#13;
w&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
Sunday, March 2&#13;
AMATEUR GO-GO&#13;
#•&#13;
$&#13;
CONTEST&#13;
% $50&#13;
00&#13;
$25°°&#13;
M0&#13;
00&#13;
2130 Racine St.&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
Wis. I.D. Required&#13;
FREE PIZZA&#13;
1st Prize&#13;
2nd Prize&#13;
3rd Prize&#13;
1 Bottle of Champagne to all entries&#13;
6 P.M. - 'til Closing&#13;
No Cover Charge with Student I.D.&#13;
GIRLS WANT ED&#13;
Go-Go Girls, Waitresses, Bartenders&#13;
TOP WAGES $2.00 - $7.00 Hou rly CALL 634-9369 &#13;
Two twenty cent Donuts&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Two Pastries&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Hotcakes &amp; Sausage&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Egg McMuffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Toasted English Muffin&#13;
Juice and Coffee&#13;
Delicious Paslnos Juice and&#13;
collee Has container and will&#13;
travel&#13;
We'll pack it to go, but somehow&#13;
it never seems to make it&#13;
out the door&#13;
Egg iimple but elegant- . cheese. Canadian&#13;
bacon neatly stacked on a&#13;
toasted English Muttin Choose&#13;
a tuice and coffee and you're&#13;
ready to battle traffic&#13;
A man-sized sausage patty&#13;
surrounded by two light, golden&#13;
hotcakes cooked to order,&#13;
served with butter and syrup&#13;
Your choice of four |uices and&#13;
a cup of great coffee&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, February 26, 1975&#13;
ilr UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
/f SPRINGBREAK TRIP&#13;
TO:&#13;
lilEXiCO&#13;
CITY&#13;
Brief News&#13;
MARCH 30 - APRIL 6&#13;
ONLY *274 COMPLETE&#13;
• Round Trip let Airfare&#13;
• 7 Nights Lodging&#13;
• Ground Transfers&#13;
• Tips &amp; T axes&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUSTRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
The liturgy celebration at CHI RHO CENTER on Sunday, March 2 at 11:15 a.m. will beqin&#13;
a week of activity related to Christian vocation, man's response to God. Guests at the Sunday&#13;
celebration will be members of the Archdiocecan Vocation Team&#13;
The vocation personnel will spend Monday at Carthage College, talking with students&#13;
''buiiSfn^Sr wor.S^&#13;
PeOP'&#13;
e f&#13;
° eXP'°&#13;
re ^ m6anin9&#13;
°&#13;
f S6rViCe and i,s »'«"'«cance for&#13;
On Tuesday the team will visit Parkside University, and on Wednesday and Thursday thev&#13;
respective I y.m 6 TeChniCa&#13;
' '&#13;
nS,itU,eS ,he Kenosha and&#13;
^ciJecampuses&#13;
The culmination of the week's activities on Thursday, March 6 will be a "Live Talk Show"&#13;
neecd 572?Z TooE ZvJ"™ ^ Piousness of the&#13;
r Jwtp3d Se&#13;
f&#13;
S,L°n&#13;
' ,heexcl?&#13;
an9&#13;
eof ideas&#13;
- ^e questions and answers will be held at CHI RHO ssssssszsxzE &amp;jra t 3 8 2 5 i2, h s t&#13;
-&#13;
at 8 p m - *»• «&gt;»-&#13;
Two University of Wisconsin-Parkside staff members are among appointees of the&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission (SWERPC) to a Technical Advisory&#13;
Committee to prepare a prospectus for an engineering study to determine the most&#13;
economical method of abating water pollution in the Kenosha Planning District&#13;
™m™i,,&#13;
&lt;&#13;
eemen E. Galbraith, Director of Planning and Construction&#13;
at UW-Pand a former Wisconsin state architect, and Chelvadural Manogaran, a&#13;
professor of geography who has done extensive research on pollution problems of the Pike&#13;
River and is an authority on the relationships between plant life and water quality.&#13;
PAB presentsn&#13;
E-tn a mSD1T'-in n&#13;
Bm UA'!.&#13;
Y&lt;:&#13;
26:&#13;
t&#13;
P ^ B,,&#13;
WhiteSkellar presen,s 2 'olksingers, Phil Livingston,&#13;
.30 a.m. 12.30 p.m., and Sue Zietz, 12:30 p.m. • 1:3 0 p.m., in the coffeehouse (GR D201)&#13;
Free and open to the public. ''&#13;
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28: Live entertainment in the S.A.B. 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. (during&#13;
Happy Hour ) - King Kenosha and the Frostops, and an open mike anyone who would like&#13;
to come down and iam is wejeome! Free.&#13;
f'&#13;
L&#13;
^r/.-VreSentS&#13;
"&#13;
Paper Chase&#13;
'" 8 pm" S A B" emission $1, Parkside and state&#13;
«• u. s required.&#13;
rtJI cAlUUlt Ui rtiiiucui avuipvuiv. i —*" *•&#13;
Ladisias Segy of the Segy Gallery of New York City will open Tuesday,&#13;
March 4, at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside Communication&#13;
Arts Gallery.&#13;
The opening of the show will coincide with an illustrated lecture on&#13;
"African Sculpture and Modern Art" by Segy, an artist, art critic,&#13;
appraiser and author, whose collection of African sculpture&#13;
represents work of some of the most artistic tribes in West Africa.&#13;
His lecture at 7:30 p.m. in the Communication Arts Theater which&#13;
adjoins the gallery, will include color slides and a color-sound film in&#13;
which the significance of sculpture in the life of Central and West&#13;
African natives will be explained. The program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Regular gallery hours are 3 to 5 p.m. Mondays, Wednesdays and&#13;
Fridays and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.&#13;
Visits to planet earth&#13;
UFO Lecture&#13;
SUNDAY, MARCH 2: FILM: "Paper Chase,&#13;
state I.D.'s required. Presented by P.A.B.&#13;
7:30 p.m., S.A.B., admission $1, Parkside and&#13;
if •&#13;
mE?&#13;
Nft&#13;
D|&#13;
AY.' MARC" 5: P A B- Performing Arts and Lectures committee presents an&#13;
i l l u s t r a t e d l e c t u r e b y S t a n t o n F r i e d m a n o f " F l y i n g S a u c e r s A R E R e a l , " 8 p m C AT&#13;
Tickets are $1 tor students, $1.50 for guests, and are available at the Info Kiosk or at the door'&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 8: P.A.B. concert committee presents "Short Stuff," a Milwaukee&#13;
"&#13;
a&#13;
'&#13;
in concert&#13;
'' P-m„ S.A. B. Tickets are $1.25 for students in advance, $1.75 for guests&#13;
and at the door, and are available at the Info Kiosk. Parkside and state I .D.'s required.&#13;
Wu?&#13;
NEu?&#13;
AY' MARCH 12: PAB- presents Keith Berger, mime, 8 p.m., C.A.T. A completely&#13;
self taught master of this ancient art, he has spellbound audiences throughout the country&#13;
the new Marcel Marceau. Not to be missed, particularly if you've never seen mime before!&#13;
Admission (reserved seating): students $1.50 and guests $2.00. Tickets are available at the&#13;
info Kiosk.&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
"Flying Saucers ARE Real" is&#13;
the title of an illustrated lecture&#13;
to be presented by nuclear&#13;
physicist Stanton T. Friedman at&#13;
8 p.m. Wednesday, March 5 in the&#13;
UW-Parkside Communications&#13;
Arts Theatre. The program is&#13;
being sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. Tickets are&#13;
$1.50 for public and $1.00 for&#13;
Parkside students. They are&#13;
available at the Info kiosk.&#13;
Mr. Friedman is the only space&#13;
scientist in the western&#13;
hemisphere known to be devoting&#13;
DAYTONA BEACH&#13;
EXPRESS&#13;
MARCH 2 9 - APRIL 6&#13;
SPRINGBREAK&#13;
$ 135 COMPLETE&#13;
• TRANSPORTATION VIA DELUXE&#13;
MOTOR COACH&#13;
•SIX NIGHTS LODGING AT THE&#13;
DAYTONA BEACH SH ORES SH ERATON IN N|&#13;
•ALL ROOMS WITH KITCHENETTE&#13;
• DISNEYWORLD OPT ION-MO&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION &amp; APPLICATION&#13;
CONTACT: CAMPUS TR AVEL C ENTER LL C D197&#13;
CALL: 553-2279&#13;
full time to UFOs. Since 1972 he&#13;
has lectured to overflow crowds&#13;
at more than 225 colleges in 40&#13;
states. He was one of the few&#13;
scientists featured in the NBC TV&#13;
Documentary "UFOs: Do You&#13;
Believe?" broadcast nationwide&#13;
on December 15, 1974 , and seen&#13;
by more than 44 perc ent of TV&#13;
viewers. His unique professional&#13;
background includes 14 yea rs of&#13;
industrial experience in the&#13;
development of advanced&#13;
nuclear and space systems such&#13;
as nuclear aircraft, nuclear&#13;
rockets, fusion rockets, and&#13;
compact nuclear reactors for&#13;
space applications. He also&#13;
worked on the Pioneer 10 and 11&#13;
spacecraft which have flown out&#13;
past the planet Jupiter. His past&#13;
employers include General&#13;
Electric, Westinghouse, General&#13;
Motors, and most recently TRW&#13;
Systems in Redondo Beach,&#13;
California. He is a member of&#13;
num ero us s c i e n t ifi c&#13;
organizations and of several UFO&#13;
groups and is a Fellow of the&#13;
British Interplanetary Society.&#13;
He received Bachelor's and&#13;
Master's degrees in Physics from&#13;
the University of Chicago.&#13;
"After 16 years of study and&#13;
investigation, I am convinced&#13;
that the evidence is overwhelming&#13;
that Planet Earth is&#13;
being visited by intelligently&#13;
controlled vehicles from off the&#13;
Earth. The Cosmic Watergate is&#13;
being treated like the Mad&#13;
Hatter's Tea Party, but progress&#13;
is being made as more and more&#13;
professionals get involved in&#13;
Ufology-the scientific study of&#13;
UFOs," said the 40-year-old&#13;
scientist. His talk will cover five&#13;
large-scale scientific studies: Air&#13;
Force data not generally&#13;
discussed, UFO landings, reports&#13;
of creatures, travel to the stars,&#13;
and the arguments of the&#13;
educated non-believers. Many&#13;
slides will be shown during his&#13;
program, and a question and&#13;
answer session will follow ^&#13;
AlcDonakfs Breakfast /Menu A „ m 3926-52nd st . Five qreat ways to start the day 31i6-22.ni Ave. /V \.&#13;
f® KENOSHA Served 8:00a.m. until 11:00a.m. daily-Noon Sundays KENOSHA |mcp 1 (£) &#13;
Wednesday, February 26, 1975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
V&#13;
Joseph&#13;
Parkside's bowlers include (1-r) Georee Kniiot, ....&#13;
Brazeau of Milwaukee, Lee Edmark of Kenosha and a Tt&#13;
8&#13;
' Starszak of Muskego, Brian&#13;
UWP Bowlers to Nationals&#13;
Parkside's bowling team has&#13;
its sights set on the National&#13;
Association of College Unions&#13;
title in April. The tourney will be&#13;
held in conjunction with the&#13;
American Bowling Congress&#13;
national tourney in Dayton, Ohio.&#13;
Parkside passed the first&#13;
hurdle with a record-setting&#13;
victory over 18 other schools&#13;
from Region 8, which includes&#13;
Wisconsin, Upper Michigan and&#13;
Chicago, earlier this month. To&#13;
make the finals in Dayton,&#13;
Parkside must beat either the&#13;
University of Iowa or the Illinois&#13;
regional winner at a site and date&#13;
to be determined next month.&#13;
Parkside looks like a good bet on&#13;
the basis of its performance at&#13;
LaCrosse, where it nipped the&#13;
host school by 33 p ins - 8568 to&#13;
8535 - in the nine game tourney.&#13;
UW-M, t he pre-tourney favorite,&#13;
was third at 8533. Parkside entered&#13;
the final three games 184&#13;
pins down, but rolled a region 8&#13;
record 3028 on games of 1053,1083&#13;
For a delicious hot pizza try&#13;
Jensens''&#13;
large cheese &amp; only $430 &amp; t ax&#13;
sausage "Free Delivery"&#13;
FREE&#13;
Quart o f 7 -up or C ola in our&#13;
container w ith each large 16" p izza,&#13;
"PICKED-UP&#13;
MON., W ED&#13;
THURS.&#13;
Jtu Jensens\&#13;
Fine F ood &amp; Spirits&#13;
8021 22nd Avenue&#13;
Ph 654-3581&#13;
and 892.&#13;
Parkside's Brian Brazeau,&#13;
from Milwaukee, won the allevents&#13;
title with a 203.7 ninegame&#13;
average. He was followed&#13;
by George Krulatz of Kenosha,&#13;
199, Lee Edmark of Kenosha,&#13;
186.5, Andy Vacca of Racine,&#13;
183.2, and Mark Starszak of&#13;
Muskego, 179.4. The team&#13;
averaged a record-setting 190.2&#13;
for the nine games. Brazeau, by&#13;
winning the all-events title,&#13;
qualified for the national individual&#13;
finals in Dayton.&#13;
tup&#13;
u UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
SPRINGBREAK TRIP TO:&#13;
MARCH 2 7-APRIL 4&#13;
ONLY $369 C OMPLETE&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET AIRFARE&#13;
•7 NIGHTS DELUXE LODGING&#13;
•Ground Transfers&#13;
•Tips &amp; Taxes •&#13;
For application or information&#13;
('ontaot&#13;
&lt; AM I'I S I K WT .I. (T:\TKR&#13;
fslS 1-LC I)-197 ( all : r.53-2294&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS&#13;
THE B OOKSTORE&#13;
IS P REPARING F OR T HE&#13;
RETURN O F A LL TEXTBOOKS&#13;
TO T HE P UBLISHERS&#13;
PLEASE PURCHASE ALL&#13;
TEXTBOOKS&#13;
YOU STILL NEED&#13;
NOW I&#13;
PARKSIDE U NIVERSITY B OOKSTORE&#13;
Tuesday Night&#13;
Is Bonanza&#13;
Special Night.&#13;
[(•1.69 for a rib eye steak dinner!)&#13;
(*1.49 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)]&#13;
Lur y\&#13;
i* 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;
Wll lave iLVboll low it&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KENOSHA ONLY&#13;
IN KENOSHA TRY &#13;
save&#13;
saving&#13;
saved&#13;
The most comforting&#13;
verb in any&#13;
language.&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Jobs For&#13;
Summer&#13;
Look&#13;
Promising&#13;
Informed sources report that&#13;
summer job opportunities for&#13;
college students "look good" this&#13;
year. National Parks. Dude&#13;
Ranches, Guest Resorts, Private&#13;
Camps, and other tourist areas&#13;
throughout the nation are now&#13;
seeking student applications.&#13;
Summer job placement coordinators&#13;
at Opportunity Research&#13;
(SAP) report that despite national&#13;
economics tourist areas are&#13;
looking for a record season. Polls&#13;
indicate that people may not go&#13;
for the big purchases such as new&#13;
cars, new homes, furniture or&#13;
appliances, but most appear to be&#13;
planning for a big vacation.&#13;
A free booklet on student job&#13;
assistance may be obtained by&#13;
sending a self-addressed stamped&#13;
envelope to Opportunity Research,&#13;
Dept. SJO, 55 Flathead Dr.,&#13;
Kalispell, MT 59901. Student job&#13;
seekers are urged to apply early!&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712 -57th slreet&#13;
Cagers in playoffs Thur&#13;
Leartha Scott (31) and Stevie King (21) prevented a UW-Green Bay basket and the Rangers went&#13;
on to win their 19th game of the season. They lost a close game to Northern Michigan Saturday,&#13;
however, finishing the season with a 19-9 record. Tournament playoff games begin for Parkside&#13;
tomorrow night, Thursday, when the cagers will host either Carthage or St. Norbert at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Drag yourself and a friend (or two, if you have them)&#13;
over to |)t^a Parlor&#13;
for Sud's Sipping Time.&#13;
3-5 MON. thru FRI.&#13;
Lathrop and 21st, (almost) Racine&#13;
» LARGE FROSTY PITCHERS&#13;
OF BEER ONLY $1.25&#13;
their relevance to the rest of the&#13;
student body. One said there&#13;
should be "students expressing&#13;
the ideas of students" on committees,&#13;
and another felt more&#13;
than one student should be&#13;
represented, thus preventing that&#13;
student being called a "token&#13;
student."&#13;
The results of faculty&#13;
evaluation forms are available to&#13;
students, despite the accusations&#13;
of those students present. The&#13;
Business-Management Division&#13;
makes their results available at&#13;
registration in a booklet, and the&#13;
Science Division- has sent theirs&#13;
to the Archives.&#13;
Both the committee members&#13;
and the students that attended&#13;
this hearing felt the present&#13;
evaluation forms were not&#13;
adequate, but they were still&#13;
important because they are a&#13;
"uniform means of input" by&#13;
students. *&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COONSELING&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, February 26, 1 9" , e&#13;
Students — -continued from page 1-&#13;
Watergate .continued from page 1&#13;
man who told us Watergate was a&#13;
third-rate burglary. If he lied to&#13;
us then, he's going to lie to us&#13;
now."&#13;
The motion passed and the&#13;
Lecture Society has attempted to&#13;
cancel.&#13;
Other schools, such as Florida&#13;
International University, opposed&#13;
appearances by either&#13;
Ziegler or Dean at first, but then&#13;
agreed to allow the appearances&#13;
in the interest of free speech.&#13;
Besides evoking controversy,&#13;
the two Watergate tours share&#13;
similar subject matter. Ziegler&#13;
plans to speak on the use and&#13;
abuse of power, according to his&#13;
agent. In particular, he will&#13;
discuss how power should be&#13;
properly used.&#13;
Dean has been talking about his&#13;
personal experiences, blaming&#13;
the scandal on executive power&#13;
gone berserk in an atmosphere of&#13;
political surveillance.&#13;
"When I first got to the White&#13;
House I quickly learned that if&#13;
you wanted to succeed, you had to&#13;
have political tidbits," Dean&#13;
commented to his Virginia&#13;
audience. For example, within&#13;
hours of the news of Sen. Ted&#13;
Kennedy's accident at Chappaquiddick,&#13;
the White House sent&#13;
Anthony Ulasawicz to&#13;
Massachusetts to conduct an&#13;
investigation, he noted.&#13;
Dean has also revealed that&#13;
after his tour is over and his&#13;
memoirs are written, he plans to&#13;
devote himself to prison reform&#13;
as a result of the psychological&#13;
effects he experienced while in&#13;
jail.&#13;
Switchboard&#13;
24 hours </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 3, issue 26, February 26, 1975</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Lay offs at UWP</text>
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              <text>Rangers win!!&#13;
Next stop Stout&#13;
Stories inside-pgs. 7&amp;8&#13;
5-?':; : S^?SSS8SesSSS88S888&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, March 5, 1975 Vol III No. 27&#13;
Lay offs at UWP&#13;
photo by Frederickson&#13;
FCC orders&#13;
media breakup&#13;
(CPS)--The Federal Communications&#13;
Commission, after a&#13;
year of deliberation and many&#13;
years of government consideration,&#13;
has ruled that&#13;
newspaper owners may not buy&#13;
radio or television stations&#13;
serving the same market as the&#13;
newspapers.&#13;
In 1970, the FCC agreed to&#13;
consider the Justice Department&#13;
recommendation of a breakup of&#13;
media ownership two years&#13;
before. But after a year and a&#13;
half of hearings and heated&#13;
debate, the FCC dropped the idea&#13;
temporarily. The Nixon administration&#13;
liked the idea,&#13;
however, and hearings were&#13;
again held, eventually resulting&#13;
in new radio ruling.&#13;
In justifying its action, the FCC&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Faced with required cuts of&#13;
$659,600 in its 1975-76 operating&#13;
budget, the University of&#13;
Wiscorisin-Parkside announced&#13;
recently that it must layoff 21&#13;
staff members over the next 16&#13;
months and eliminate another 21&#13;
vacant positions from the budget.&#13;
Nine other staff were reduced in&#13;
work load or shifted from state to&#13;
federal funding.&#13;
There were no teaching faculty&#13;
or teaching vacancies among the&#13;
cuts.&#13;
Acting Chancellor Otto F.&#13;
Bauer said, "In implementing&#13;
these mandatory budget cuts,&#13;
great care was taken to insure&#13;
that current and future academic&#13;
programs, including graduate&#13;
work in the School of Modern&#13;
Industry, would not be adversely&#13;
affected.&#13;
"The first priority of a&#13;
university in a belt-tightening&#13;
situation must be to protect the&#13;
welfare of its students and&#13;
1 preserve its educational mission&#13;
to the area it serves.&#13;
"I think we've accomplished&#13;
that and managed to effect the&#13;
required cuts in as humane and&#13;
fair a manner as possible under&#13;
the circumstances," he said.&#13;
"Everyone affected will receive&#13;
from four to 16 months notice."&#13;
Bauer said the moratorium on&#13;
hiring which he imposed in&#13;
January resulted in enough&#13;
dollar savings to enable Parkside&#13;
to give a liberal notice to laid off&#13;
employees.&#13;
The moratorium also reduced&#13;
the number of layoffs necessary&#13;
by providing vacant positions,&#13;
rather than people, to be&#13;
eliminated in a number of instances.&#13;
&#13;
Bauer pointed out that both&#13;
position and dollar reduction&#13;
goals had to be met as a result of&#13;
Gov. Patrick Lucey's proposed&#13;
1975-77 state budget and UW&#13;
System "equity studies" among&#13;
state campuses.&#13;
Gov. Lucey's proposed base&#13;
budget and productivity&#13;
reductions for the UW System&#13;
total about $9.7 million, of which&#13;
Parkside's share is about $429,600&#13;
for 1975-76. Another $230,000 was&#13;
cut as a result of the UW equity&#13;
studies.&#13;
About $266,800 of the total was&#13;
specifically earmarked by the&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
studies for physical plant&#13;
reductions at Parkside, a&#13;
category which includes maintenance&#13;
and custodial functions,&#13;
grounds, safety and security.&#13;
Cuts there included 14 staff&#13;
members and 4 vacant positions.&#13;
The equity cuts ipiposed by the&#13;
continued on page 5&#13;
Presidential candidate&#13;
Harris in Racine&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
"We haven't had a citizen President since&#13;
Harry Truman, and it's about time we had&#13;
one."&#13;
Presidential hopeful, Fred Harris, made&#13;
this statement while speaking at the Racine&#13;
labor Center last Saturday.&#13;
Harris, a former Democratic Senator&#13;
from Oklahoma, says you have to be a&#13;
"citizen candidate" before"you're a "citizen&#13;
president" and this is exactly his intent.&#13;
Unlike other candidates, Harris stays at&#13;
the home's of friends while out campaigning&#13;
rather than staying in hotels and says he&#13;
travels without any staff whatsoever.&#13;
He explained, "You don't need a great&#13;
herd of staff grabbing your coat and picking&#13;
up your bag and all that business."&#13;
Harris who was born into a sharecropping&#13;
family in Oklahoma in 1930 is married to&#13;
LaDonna Harris who is also from&#13;
Oklahoma.&#13;
LaDonna, a Comanche Indian, is&#13;
President of Americans for Indian Opportunity&#13;
and has long been active in the&#13;
field of women's and minority rights.&#13;
During his appearance in Racine, Harris&#13;
came out with some strong statements&#13;
concerning military spending and foreign&#13;
affairs.&#13;
Advocating a cut inn military spending, he&#13;
sees the need for "a President who not only&#13;
knows how and what to cut but also knows&#13;
how to defeat those Admirals and Generals.&#13;
"They'll scare you to death! If you were&#13;
going to cut a handgrenade, they'd have the&#13;
people worried that the Russians were going&#13;
to be on our doorstep."&#13;
While questioning the necessity of c urrent&#13;
requests for military spending, Harris told&#13;
the audience: "Our President wants us to&#13;
spend eight billion dollars more for the&#13;
military, not only for exzmple to keep&#13;
150,000 troops in Europe 30 years after&#13;
WWII, but to increase that number. He also&#13;
wants to send more money to President&#13;
Thieu in Vietnam.&#13;
"You would have thought we'd spent more&#13;
than enough lives and more than enough&#13;
money out there. We ought to cut that off."&#13;
Harris disagrees with present foreign&#13;
policy and the way in which it is made.&#13;
"If you start with the assumption that&#13;
people are smart enough to govern themselves,&#13;
you can't have the kind of secret and&#13;
elitist foreign policy we've had.&#13;
"When you get a few people who think&#13;
they're the only ones who know anything&#13;
about foreign policy, then you wind up with a&#13;
situation where the Cambodians knew we&#13;
were bombing the Cambodians, it was the&#13;
Americans that didn't know it."&#13;
He also cited elitist policy-making as&#13;
responsible for U.S. citizens being over&#13;
taxed in order to establish dictatorships all&#13;
over the world. "We don't have the right to&#13;
meddle in other people's businesss or impose&#13;
dictatorships on theip," he declared.&#13;
Former Senator Fred Harris (right), now presidential candidate with John Siefert (center)&#13;
at the Racine Labor Center.&#13;
With regard to internal affairs, Harris policy for employment rather than a&#13;
submitted that the big question for '76 "is defensive policy for unemployment. Money,&#13;
whether our government is going to look he said, is needed in order to do this and&#13;
after the interests of the corporations and pointed to federal subsidies amounting to 94&#13;
the super-rich or whether it's going to look billion dollars peryear which are now being&#13;
after the interests of the average family." given to such things as railroad and oil&#13;
/ He advocated the imposition of price companies.&#13;
controls on monopolistic industries and Voicing support for past programs such as&#13;
vigorous enforcement of the antitrust laws, the WPA (Work Progress Administration)&#13;
1 Accusing the government of protecting and the CCC (Civilian Conservation Corncertain&#13;
industries from competition, Harris mission), Harris questioned: "Why should&#13;
warned: ."They (industries) say they we make unemployment compensation&#13;
believe in free enterprise and I'm going to automatic, as we should, but not make a job&#13;
give them a pretty strong dose of it." automatic?"&#13;
He spoke of the large tax decrease Harris served two terms in the Senate and.&#13;
necessary to keep money in the hands of the&#13;
people who need it. He recommended "a tax&#13;
increase for the Nelson Rockefellers , the J.&#13;
Paul Gettys who are not paying their share&#13;
of the dues in our society."&#13;
Harris stressed the need for affirmative&#13;
then decided not to seek reelection intending&#13;
to run for President in 1972 but, as he says,&#13;
he went broke.&#13;
"You couldn't talk about the kind of things&#13;
I was talking about then and raise the&#13;
continued on page 7 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 5, 1 975&#13;
Policy on&#13;
Double talk&#13;
letters&#13;
In recent weeks various members of the RANGER&#13;
staff have been questioned as to why certain letters to&#13;
the editor did not appear in the RANGER. It is the policy&#13;
of RANGER to print all letters to the editor that we&#13;
receive. In the past few weeks the number of letters&#13;
received in our offices has increased tremendously. A$&#13;
RANGER is limited in the size of newspaper that can be&#13;
printed it has become necessary to be selective in to&#13;
which letters are to appear in print. We do not discard&#13;
letters that are not printed but retain them until space Is&#13;
available on the editorial page.&#13;
Our criteria for printing of letters are based on interest&#13;
to the student body as a whole, timeliness,&#13;
criticism of the newspaper and personal expressions in&#13;
that order.&#13;
RANGER believes that this newspaper has an&#13;
overriding responsibility to express student sentiment.&#13;
The letters to the editor are the students most direct and&#13;
forceful means of making themsely^lfieard on campus.&#13;
We will continue to produce this paper with the thought&#13;
that it is for the conveyance of Student opinion and interest.&#13;
Keep those cards and letters coming folks.&#13;
Sensory delight&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Last evening (Feb. 19), whilst&#13;
lounging in Main Place, P.U.,&#13;
awaiting the proper time of day&#13;
to start the long trek down to CI/-&#13;
2001 for Archeology and what was&#13;
to become Ms. Zimmerman's&#13;
lecture on "the secret of life,'-"&#13;
sounds of music reverberated•&#13;
thruout the deadened atmosphere.&#13;
A lone violin alternately&#13;
laughed and cried and&#13;
danced its way into the heart and&#13;
mind of at least one avid fan,&#13;
while several other organisms&#13;
participated in this auditory&#13;
sensory stimulation as listeners.&#13;
Some few fellow student&#13;
organisms stopped to&#13;
acknowledge the expertise of the&#13;
dashing young freak who reposed&#13;
with his stringed love in the&#13;
darkened corridor's shadows.&#13;
X&#13;
Excerpts from Boneparte's&#13;
Retreat, from unnamed classics,&#13;
as well as tidbits from The&#13;
Theme From Young Frankenstein&#13;
and foot-stomping fiddlin'&#13;
were the offerings which ended in&#13;
a second rendition of the NOW&#13;
; Inf amous Mousetrap Concerto for&#13;
One Violin-ended with a note of&#13;
both joy and sadness interspersed&#13;
among his playing.&#13;
"Everyone laughs at the kind of&#13;
music I like," I surprisedly heard&#13;
him say. Not everyone my friend-&#13;
-and herewith I wish to extend&#13;
gratitude to ALL you musicians&#13;
out there for ymjr diligence in&#13;
practice and creative musical&#13;
outpourings which provide THIS&#13;
freak With much pleasure 'on the&#13;
highway.' Keep on play-in'.&#13;
No. 387-42-2922&#13;
(ralph waldo scbwartz)&#13;
Bookstore complaints&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It has come to the attention of&#13;
the University Bookstore&#13;
Committee that patrons of the&#13;
Bookstore may be unaware of the&#13;
outlets for complaints and&#13;
problems regarding the&#13;
Bookstore.&#13;
We therefore wish to suggest a&#13;
three-step procedure for dealing&#13;
with such matters.&#13;
1. The bookstore manager, Ted&#13;
Wood, should be approached first&#13;
regarding the problem.&#13;
2. If the problem is not&#13;
satisfactorily resolved, Dave&#13;
Bishop, Coordinator of. Auxiliary&#13;
Services should be the next&#13;
person contacted. Dave acts as a&#13;
liaison between the University&#13;
and various services under&#13;
contract with Parkside, including&#13;
the Bookstore.&#13;
3. If the problem remains&#13;
unresolved, a complaint should&#13;
be directed to the University&#13;
Bookstore Committee. The&#13;
reason for placing the Committee&#13;
at the end of the procedures is&#13;
that in those instanced where&#13;
time is of the essence, committee&#13;
action often does n ot provide a&#13;
satisfactory alternative.&#13;
However, we invite your comments&#13;
and complaints at any&#13;
time.&#13;
The Committee is also&#13;
soliciting names of students&#13;
interested in serving on the&#13;
Committee. We invite any interested&#13;
student to contact Ron&#13;
Singer, Chairperson - CLA 380,&#13;
Ext. 2275.&#13;
Ronald Singer&#13;
Chairperson University&#13;
Bookstore Committee&#13;
Who???&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
WE ALL LIVE IN A "WHAT&#13;
IF" SOCIETY.&#13;
Glen A. Christensen&#13;
Student of Law&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
It would seem as if you have&#13;
finally mastered that fine art of&#13;
being able to talk out of both sides&#13;
of your mouth at the same time!&#13;
In the RANGER issue of&#13;
February 19, 197 5, second page,&#13;
you no sooner finish off column&#13;
one with a statement of apology&#13;
for editorializing in a title of a&#13;
letter by Ms. J. Scott, than begin&#13;
column two by editorially&#13;
elevating a letter by an irate'"&#13;
feminist, which attacks the Scott&#13;
letter title as showing simplistic&#13;
thinking on your part, to the fioble&#13;
position of (jaesthming; your&#13;
joiimglistic ethicsC&#13;
• I&amp;nnot directly CtS&amp;sfc&amp;g the&#13;
titles that you use, Fpf example,&#13;
ht the Scott letter, £ eottht very&#13;
easily approve of the title as&#13;
being both accurate at thought,&#13;
find appropriate in wordhtg for&#13;
thefolkwing reason: if, white my&#13;
•vri'fa was carrying her child,&#13;
SSWeral people would attack her,&#13;
Error? I—&#13;
and force saline solution into her&#13;
womb, thereby "salting out our&#13;
problem," I would feel that they&#13;
would be responsible for murder;&#13;
I would feel the same if it happened&#13;
to anyone else's wife.&#13;
Even so, when one looks at the&#13;
title of the third letter, (second&#13;
left out for obvious reasons) in&#13;
which Ms, M. Kropp castigates,&#13;
the students using the cafeteria&#13;
?;&#13;
for their slovenly behavior, your&#13;
"Emily Post Where are you?"&#13;
seems to place the students' lack&#13;
of common c&amp;uhtesy; Itte&#13;
u p h e m i s t i c r £ 8 a p r o p ei&#13;
etiquette."&#13;
It is indeed Strange that,, only&#13;
now, after you have entitled so&#13;
many letters to die editor, people&#13;
write in to compfeifi In this instance-maybe&#13;
it hurts their&#13;
sensitive valu^^^^^^iade&#13;
experts in the lleid of moral&#13;
issues. In that case, I am entirely&#13;
for abortions, except in situations&#13;
where the woman is pregnant.&#13;
Of course, you can always&#13;
reply with the old "The captain&#13;
was sober today" philosophy, but&#13;
please be a little less hypocritical&#13;
in the future.&#13;
Perhaps, the most desirable&#13;
solution to your problem would be&#13;
to put a title on the letter only&#13;
when the writer suggests one,&#13;
such as, "Moral values&#13;
questioned."&#13;
Yours in ZPG,&#13;
Edward Arndt&#13;
Editor's note: The "The&#13;
captain was sober today"&#13;
philosophy refers to the theory&#13;
that the editor has, not only the&#13;
right, but the responsibility to&#13;
sensationalize in the headlines&#13;
for purposes of increasing the&#13;
readability of the paper.&#13;
As for the letter from the&#13;
feminist, that was not on page&#13;
two. It was on page three. The&#13;
letter headed with Journalistic&#13;
ethics questioned, was Prof.&#13;
Wayne G. Johnson's.&#13;
To the iSdttdr:&#13;
In response to Arlene Martin's&#13;
letter to the editor, in the Feb. 6&#13;
issue of the RANGER. I wish to&#13;
apologize for the insolent errors&#13;
and (pardon the expression) cut&#13;
the jive and tell it likejfeis-&#13;
•' So February 11-14 teas Black&#13;
History Week. For some reason I&#13;
have always envisioned a week&#13;
as a period of 7 days and consider&#13;
the possibility Of a 4 day week&#13;
rather unlikely Thus the Third&#13;
World Organization obviously&#13;
DESIGNATED these 4 days of&#13;
the 7 day week for their&#13;
celebration.&#13;
In her letter Ms. Martin&#13;
suggested that I, as well as the&#13;
RANGER Editorial Staff, seek&#13;
reliable informatics concerning&#13;
the events and involvements of&#13;
the Third World Organization.&#13;
Obviously she doc&amp;n't consider&#13;
the president of th|j organization&#13;
a reliable source for information&#13;
because I obtained all my&#13;
propaganda from him. In-|&#13;
eidently, Arlene's name was&#13;
mentioned during the interview. I&#13;
looked tier name up M the&#13;
directory the following morning&#13;
intending to contact her for&#13;
further information concerning&#13;
the article only to discover she&#13;
has no phone. , «&#13;
I would like to suggest that the&#13;
next time Ms. Martin frit ends to&#13;
expose her creative efforts with a .&#13;
letter to the editor that she also &gt;&#13;
submit to the RANGER a playby-pl^v&#13;
schedule of her activities&#13;
So that someone may contact her&#13;
if they are in^p^'of accurate&#13;
• informatipsOTricerning the Third&#13;
Wopp#ganization.&#13;
v.vXv-' , ''&#13;
r Bonne Has®&#13;
Student government-Huh?&#13;
: To the Editor :&#13;
What is Parkside student&#13;
government? My answer is a&#13;
farce.&#13;
The meeting of Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 19 was a great proof of this. I&#13;
say this bccafrseofthe things that:&#13;
happened -that night a certiapi&#13;
female senator called for a&#13;
quorum call and left during the&#13;
roll call with five other female&#13;
senators. Thi® was a planed move&#13;
to disrupt the meeting-so business&#13;
could not be done.&#13;
1 myself do believe in women's&#13;
| lib but with acts such the one&#13;
| pulled by the female senators on&#13;
Feb. 19, mabee some of the&#13;
•f arguments against women's lib&#13;
are rational such as they are&#13;
unreliable, pig headed,&#13;
irrational, and if they dont get&#13;
there way they will cause caios&#13;
untill they get there way.&#13;
Women of Parkeside who are&#13;
not senators prove to everyone&#13;
that theese charges are false&#13;
because Parkside women&#13;
senators just enhance theese&#13;
charges.&#13;
Ed Mattner&#13;
P.S.G.A. Senator&#13;
Dr. Knight'&#13;
BACK/ THAT Sensational SMASH MTT...&#13;
CONDITIONAL AMNESTY&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Friday, March ? at J:30&#13;
p.m. in GR D101, tee will be a&#13;
hearing on Dr. Knights tenure. I&#13;
urge all those students who care,&#13;
to come and .see how the&#13;
illustrious tenured people at&#13;
Parkside handle their "peer"&#13;
group. Come see how the Publish&#13;
or Perish system works. Come&#13;
see how teaching is evaluated by&#13;
teachers without students'&#13;
evaluations. Students will be&#13;
there to speak but not to vote. The&#13;
Merger Law requires that&#13;
students be consulted. That&#13;
doesn't mean they be ignored. If&#13;
students attend these hearings,&#13;
they might not be ignored. If&#13;
students could show they care,&#13;
maybe some teachers would&#13;
show t hey care.&#13;
Keith Cliff Chambers &#13;
Wednesday, March 5, 197 5 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Noui ani) then- the state of fee nation&#13;
A $tmt of iReuolutron&#13;
On June 11, 1974, Jeremy Rifkin of the&#13;
Peoples Bicentennial Commission spoke&#13;
before a Bicentennial conference of over 300&#13;
corporate executives. What follows is an&#13;
edited version of the speech. For more information&#13;
contact : Peoples Bicentennial&#13;
Commission, Washington, D.C. 20036.&#13;
Back in 1971, Mr. Guelich, the Chairman&#13;
of the Public Relations Society of America,&#13;
said that the Bicentennial will' be the&#13;
greatest, single peace time public opinion,&#13;
mobilization effort in our nation's history.&#13;
And well it will be. A New York advertising&#13;
executive, writing in the New York Times,&#13;
put it much more bluntly. He said, "If we&#13;
can sell millions of bottles of soda each year,&#13;
why can't we sell Life, Liberty, and the&#13;
Pursuit of Happiness? If we can sell coffee&#13;
to Americans, why can't we sell America to&#13;
Americans?" The answer he suggests is&#13;
quite simple; to get a good advertising&#13;
agency and get on with the business of&#13;
selling America.&#13;
Let me give you a little flavor for the&#13;
historical period of the Revolution because&#13;
there has been very little said about it this&#13;
morning.&#13;
Historians call tb£.1760's the Decade of&#13;
Protest- There were student strikes at&#13;
Harvard, Yale, and William and Mary.&#13;
There were Black insurrections on the landowning&#13;
estates of the very wealthy&#13;
throughout the colonies- There were,.,&#13;
protests and insurrections over rising prices ;&#13;
and inflation by artisans and mechanics in&#13;
all of the major urban areas on the East&#13;
Coast at that time. Much of this was spontaneous&#13;
and much of it gravitated towards&#13;
the Stamp Act in 1765. Protests continued to&#13;
mount through the later part of the 1760's&#13;
culminating in a watershed event, The&#13;
Boston Massacre, where four people were&#13;
slain by government troops almost 200 years&#13;
ago, to the month, of Kent State.&#13;
Historians call 1771-'73, the Silent Years.&#13;
A man by the name of Lord North came&#13;
along and took over the reins of government.&#13;
He gained a reputation for cooling off the&#13;
colonies, for stopping the protests. And in&#13;
case you are wondering where the term&#13;
"Silent Majority" came from, those were&#13;
the exact words that Lord North used to&#13;
explain the political mood of the colonists in&#13;
1771 t o '73. It got so bad for activists and&#13;
radicals that many of them quit the scene.&#13;
They went and got little farms out in the&#13;
western parts of Pennsylvania and&#13;
Maryland. They went to "do their own&#13;
thing." Many of them thought that it was all&#13;
over; that the protests didn't amount to&#13;
anything; that the people would not rise up;&#13;
that the rich aristocracy and government&#13;
interests were too powerful to challenge.&#13;
Sam Adams, one of the few who stuck it out,&#13;
kept writing letter after letter, to his fellow&#13;
activists saying, Don't give up now; you&#13;
must understand that the silence that you&#13;
see is really only a sullen silence. The&#13;
Boston Massacre has created a situation of&#13;
self-reflection. People are asking themselves&#13;
whether it's worth committing their&#13;
lives to the cause. People are reappraising&#13;
and absorbing everything from that past&#13;
decade of p rotest; and soon they will stand&#13;
up as a united force against their oppressors.&#13;
&#13;
Then, in 1773, two things occurred which&#13;
were to change the course of history in this&#13;
country and throughout the world. In the&#13;
spring of that year Benjamin Franklin,&#13;
while in London, secured hundreds and&#13;
hundreds of secret documents "leaked" to&#13;
him from Parliament, these documents&#13;
written between Gov. Hutchinson of&#13;
Massachusetts and Lord North, outlined an&#13;
elaborate plan to repress the civil liberties&#13;
of the people. Ben Franklin took those&#13;
documents and sent them to Sam Adams,&#13;
who gave them to John Hancock, who&#13;
distributed them to every newspaper in the&#13;
colonies, where they appeared in banner&#13;
headlines for several months. The instant&#13;
shock waves that went through the country&#13;
were enormous. Everything that the&#13;
radicals and activists had said during the&#13;
decade of protest was now verified in the&#13;
very documents of the government.&#13;
In the fall of that year another event&#13;
happened. The East India Company, the&#13;
first of the giant, multi-national corporations,&#13;
with far-flung investments&#13;
throughout the world, was going bankrupt.&#13;
Members of Parliament owned stock in the&#13;
East India Company, and they did not want&#13;
it to go under. So, they bailed it out with a&#13;
two million pound subsidy and, then, gave it&#13;
a monopoly on the tea trade in North&#13;
America. Now a lot of people are under a&#13;
misconception about why the people in the&#13;
colonies turnecMsfcek the tea, burned it,&#13;
destroyed it and confiscated it. It was not&#13;
because the tea was more expensive wife •&#13;
the tax on it, was&#13;
cheaper than the smuggled tea fe&amp;tihe&#13;
p e o p le a l r e a d y e n j o v e d P a r l i a m e n t a&#13;
calculated risk. These people in Norfe.&#13;
America would rather go for a cheap item&#13;
and forget the question of political power&#13;
and political principle; and once we get J$j||&#13;
foot in the door we are going to be able to do&#13;
whatever we want. But, by that time, after a&#13;
decade of protest, after a few years, of&#13;
thinking it over, after the leak of sec^|&#13;
papers incriminating officials, the people&#13;
were no longer willing to accept corporate&#13;
and government collusion. And we had the|&#13;
Boston Tea Party.&#13;
1774, '75, and '76 were marked by protest,&#13;
repression and more protest. It all&#13;
culminated on July 4th, 1776, with the&#13;
signing of the Declaration of I ndependence.&#13;
That is the document we are paying homage&#13;
to during America's Bicentennial.&#13;
Prudence indeed will dictate that&#13;
governments long established should not be&#13;
changed for light and transient causes; and&#13;
accordingly all experience has shown that&#13;
mankind are more disposed to suffer while&#13;
evils are sufferable than to right themselves&#13;
by aboiishing the forms to which they are&#13;
accustomed. But when a long train of abuses&#13;
and usurpations, pursuing invariably the&#13;
same Object, evinces a design to reduce&#13;
them under absolute Despotism, it is their&#13;
right, it is their duty, to throw off such&#13;
Government, and to provide new Guards for&#13;
their future security.-Such has been the&#13;
patient sufferance of these Colonies; and&#13;
such is now the necessity which constrains&#13;
them to alter their former Systems of&#13;
Government. The history of repeated injuries&#13;
and usurpations, all having in direct&#13;
object the establishment of an absolute&#13;
Tyranny over these States.&#13;
In every stage of the Oppressions We have&#13;
Petitioned for Redress in the most humble&#13;
terms and our repeated Petitions have been&#13;
answered only by repeated injuries. A&#13;
Prinee, whose character is thus marked by&#13;
every act which may define a Tyrant, is&#13;
unfit to be the ruler of a free people.&#13;
That is the document that you and I are&#13;
celebrating during America's Bicentennial&#13;
observances.&#13;
Let me touch on one more thing before we&#13;
go on. The attitudes of some of the major,&#13;
self-appointed, alleged, self-styledrevolutionaries&#13;
of 200 years ago toward i&#13;
business, finance and the economy. I think&#13;
this will be of particular interest to the&#13;
corporations here, so, I would like to quote&#13;
from a few of the founders on this.&#13;
If you have a pen and pad handy you&#13;
might want to jot these quotes down and&#13;
take them back to your board of directors'&#13;
meeting.&#13;
m Tfee accumulates ftf great wealth is, in&#13;
many instances, the effect of paying too&#13;
little for the labor that produced It, the&#13;
consequence of which is that fee working&#13;
.&#13;
• : I-;:-' . ••&#13;
esfebbshmefes are more dnngerons than&#13;
THOMAS JEFFERSON&#13;
A field of battle covered wife desd bodies&#13;
patrifying in fee open air is an awful and&#13;
distressiu e; hut a nation debased&#13;
hi the love of money and ex ill the&#13;
\tces and crimes usually eonheeied wit&#13;
that passion is a spectacle far tttore awful,&#13;
distressing and offensive.&#13;
BENJAMIN RUSH&#13;
It is said that Paper systems being open to&#13;
all are not monopolies; he who has money&#13;
can buy some stock. All then is fair as every&#13;
man, meaning every moneyed man, may&#13;
share in the plunder. Well, every person&#13;
may enlist in an army yet an army may&#13;
enslave a nation.&#13;
JOHN TAYLOR&#13;
(And finally) No man is entitled to a&#13;
greater portion of this earth than another.&#13;
Land was made for the use of all.&#13;
PENNSYLVANIA FARMERS&#13;
Now that you know what we are&#13;
celebrating, you must decide how your&#13;
company will tie in to the revolution. In&#13;
making that determination, you might apply&#13;
a simple litmus test to your own corporation.&#13;
It could go something like this: If&#13;
the president or board chairman of my&#13;
corporation were alive 200 years ago, which&#13;
side of the fence would be be on? Would he&#13;
be op. fefe side cf fee Tories, the wealthy&#13;
bankers, merchants, lead owners, or on the&#13;
side of: fee rebels? Would he sign the&#13;
DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE or&#13;
fight the Dec^trafem of Independence&#13;
Would he sanction confiscation of land&#13;
and property or oppose it? #&#13;
ggPut another way: if Sam Adams, Tom&#13;
Paine, and Jefferson were all alive today,&#13;
Wfiich side Of fee fence would they be on?&#13;
Would they fee likely to belong to your boss's&#13;
country cltib? Would they be likely to work&#13;
for your boss at General Motors, Exxon, or&#13;
ITT? It's something to think about&#13;
Finally, it is time for Americans across&#13;
feis land to begin to stand up once again for&#13;
$8trfofesm, It is time for people to stand up&#13;
for the Declaration of independence, it is&#13;
time for people to pledge their commitment&#13;
to the Bili of Rights and the Constitution and&#13;
to make their voice heard. I'd like to ask all&#13;
of yo u who believe that it IS time to stand up&#13;
for those principles, who believe that it's&#13;
time to pledge your lives, your fortunes, and&#13;
your sacred honor to what that revolution&#13;
f$;as all about to stand up and make your&#13;
commitment:, outside Of the anonymity of&#13;
your corporation and fee seat in which you&#13;
sit...,&#13;
(At this point, ashence fell over the room,&#13;
a single itive rose from&#13;
his sent, i&#13;
AR i ight, then, We should ail heed the&#13;
words of Sam Adams:&#13;
If yo u tove wealth better than liberty, the&#13;
tranquility of servitude better feus the&#13;
animated contest of freedom, go home from&#13;
us In peace, ('roach down and lick feefrftnds&#13;
w hich feed^ou, may your ehains set lightly&#13;
upon you, and amy posterity forget feat you&#13;
were oar countrymen.&#13;
Stop the fighting&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
There has been a lot of fighting&#13;
in psga, and I am asking&#13;
everyone to stop now. I have been&#13;
involved in it, so has everyone&#13;
I s ee the light-&#13;
'o the editor:&#13;
Why are so many'lights needed&#13;
)' light up our campus and&#13;
arking lots on weekend&#13;
venings? I have driven by the&#13;
fniversity on Saturday evenings&#13;
t midnight to find the east most&#13;
arking lot completely&#13;
luminated and the walk up thg&#13;
ill completely illuminated with&#13;
Dt a car or person in sight. It&#13;
ould seem with the energy&#13;
risis and the price of electricity&#13;
le University should do its part&#13;
else. We have only a few more&#13;
months left, and so far we've&#13;
accomplished nothing. From&#13;
what I hear, the administration is&#13;
going to recognize us as the&#13;
in cutting down on their usage&#13;
too!!!&#13;
If they are going to be so free&#13;
with the lighting they surely&#13;
could afford to let visitors park&#13;
free instead of installing parking&#13;
meters and charging five cents&#13;
for 15 minutes. Why must citizens&#13;
and visitors be charged to tour or&#13;
do business with our University?&#13;
Why is UWP so careless in one&#13;
area and tight in another?&#13;
Marilyn Ladwig&#13;
Student&#13;
representatives of the students.&#13;
Why? I haven't any idea, because&#13;
so far all we've represented are&#13;
our own petty grudges. I really&#13;
think that each of us became&#13;
senators because we wanted to do&#13;
something for the students and&#13;
this-campus. But we can't do&#13;
business when there are snide&#13;
comments, inuendos and out and&#13;
out fighting both in and out of the&#13;
meetings. I don't believe that any&#13;
senator walks away from a&#13;
ipeeting without feeling that he or&#13;
she has been treated badly, and it&#13;
shouldn't have to be like that. To&#13;
anyone who feels that I have&#13;
wronged them, I apologize. To&#13;
the wrongs that I felt were done&#13;
to me, that is in the past, and I'm&#13;
looking towards the future. But I&#13;
can't help wondering if psga has&#13;
one...&#13;
Carrie Ward, senator&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Public hearings on civil legal services in Kenosha will b e held in room 200B ol City Hall on&#13;
Wednesday. March 5 and March 19. beginning at 7 30 p m&#13;
The hearings, being organi zed by the Kenosha Lega l Action Coalition and the Citizen's&#13;
Committee on Legal Services, are being held to find out what civil legal needs are not being&#13;
met by current programs in t he area Findings will be utilized i n p lanning future programs&#13;
onvernTZ k Com&#13;
K&#13;
m u n i ,V ^oups such as Switchboard, as well as units of c ity and county&#13;
teret,r^^ ara&#13;
n&#13;
,:rr,:°d&#13;
S&#13;
t&#13;
Po1p&#13;
k&#13;
e&#13;
a&#13;
a&#13;
,K,he 00 *&#13;
thn|&#13;
l ,&#13;
,«&#13;
e n S&#13;
,&#13;
Wh&#13;
.&#13;
0&#13;
,&#13;
W'&#13;
5 h '° '°'&#13;
n t h e Ci, iz e n&#13;
'&#13;
s Committ ee which will preside over the hearings&#13;
¥ZZT °"&#13;
KLAC *' 454 "" b"&#13;
w~"&#13;
The Pre Law Club will hold its next'meetlng on Wednesday. March 5 at 4 p.m. in the Li6rary&#13;
Learning Center projection room.&#13;
Scheduled is a movie produced in 1968 b y CBS The film is an interview with one of the most&#13;
influential Supreme Court Justices in the history ot America, Mr Hugo Black&#13;
Parkside Christian Fellowship's Outreach Lecture, "Is Christianity&#13;
Credible?" has been changed from March 5 to March 19 at 2:00 p.m.&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
WEDNESDAY. MARCH 5 P A B presentsVirginiaKing.inWhiteskellarcotteehouse.il 30&#13;
am to 1 3 0 p m Free and open to the public LECTURE PAB presents an Illustrated&#13;
lecture, "Flying Saucers are real," by nuclear physicist Stanton Friedman, B 00pm in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater Tickets are Si 00 lor students. Si.50 for guests, pnd are available at the&#13;
Info Kiosk of af the door.&#13;
FRIDAY. MARCH 7 Mark Sheldon and Will Dresse r will perform in t he Union, 3 30 to 5:30&#13;
p m So come on down it's tree!&#13;
SATURDAY, MA«CH 8 CONCERT: "Short Sufff," an excellent Milwaukee blues band. 9&#13;
p.m . S A B Admission SI.25, students in advance, SI 75, Guests a n d at the door. Tickets are&#13;
available at the Into Kiosk Parkside and state ID'S required A P A B. p roduction&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12 PAB Performing Arts and Lectures committee pres ents in&#13;
ternationally acclaimed mimist Keith Berger, 8 00 p.m , C. A T Tickets (reserved seating)&#13;
are Si 50 for students, S2 00 for general public, and are available at the Info Kiosk. Not to be&#13;
missed, particularly if you've never seen mime beforel &#13;
4 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 5, 197 5&#13;
An evening at&#13;
the Theater&#13;
Museum without walls&#13;
THE COURT STREET THEATER'S&#13;
SECOND SEASON TO OPEN ON APRIL 3&#13;
Milwaukee, Feb. 21-The Court Street Theater, MRT's disarmingly&#13;
innovative and exciting alternate stage, will open its second season on&#13;
Thursday, April 3 with the presentation of a comic, surreal and satiric&#13;
bill of pl ays entitled, "Bag." Consisting of three new works, CLOCKS&#13;
by Carl Larsen, CHAMBER PIECE by Nagle Jackson and COMMITMENTS&#13;
AND OTHER ALTERNATIVES by Norman Kline,&#13;
"Bag" will run through April 20.&#13;
On April 24, the Court Street Theater's second season will continue&#13;
with another bill, "Duet," comprised of two plays for two pairs of&#13;
actors. THE GREAT NEBULA IN ORION, an astringently witty yet&#13;
sad play for two women by Lanford Wilson, will be performed each&#13;
night with Harold Pinter's incredibly suspenseful work, THE DUMB&#13;
WAITER, a puzzling play with two male characters. "Duet" will&#13;
complete its run and the Court Street season on May 11.&#13;
Located at 315 W. Court St., across from the Jos. Schlitz Brewery&#13;
and only six blocks from the Milwaukee Repertory Theater Company's&#13;
mainstage home in the Performing Arts Center, the Court&#13;
Street Theater is a converted warehouse which MRT inaugurated last&#13;
spring as an auxiliary place for the creation of d ramatic experience.&#13;
Performances at the Court Street Theater will be nightly from&#13;
Wednesday through Sunday. (No performances on Mondays and&#13;
Tuesdays.) There will be two performances on Saturdays at 5:00 and&#13;
9:30 p.m., while all other nights have a curtain time of 8:0 0 p.m. All&#13;
tickets are $3.00, except at the Friday and Saturday performances, for&#13;
which tickets are $3.25.&#13;
To order tickets, or for more information, contact Jan Miner at the&#13;
MRT business office, 929 N. Water St., Milwaukee, Wis. 53202.&#13;
Telephone 273-7121 Ex. 329 or 334.&#13;
THE 1975 COURT STREET THEATER SEASON&#13;
"Bag" - Ap ril 3 thru April 20&#13;
CLOCKS by Carl Larsen. - A dramatic situation is evolved from the confrontation of four&#13;
clocks. Although the dialogue seldom varies from "tick-tock" the tensions, comic confrontations&#13;
and eventual resolution are very human, very funny and intriguing.&#13;
CHAMBER PIECE by Nagle Jackson. - An experiment in form. Modeled after a string&#13;
quartet, this piece in rondo form takes a dramatic theme and passes it from actor to actor as it&#13;
goes through statement, variation and recapitulation. The plot concerns a man, who in the&#13;
middle of his years, finds himself lost in a department store.&#13;
COMMITMENTS AND OTHER ALTERNATIVES by Norman Kline. A series of vignettes,&#13;
slightly surreal but grounded in true life. America today, from the backyard barbecue to the&#13;
problems of permissive education, is examined and neatly skewered in a kind of shlsh kebab&#13;
revue format. A very funny series of "out-takes" of America in the 70s.&#13;
"Duet" - April 24 thru May 11&#13;
THE GREAT NEBULA IN ORION by Lanford Wilson. - A warm study of two women&#13;
sharing their disillusionments by the author of HOT L BALTIMORE. Two college friends&#13;
rediscover one another years later shopping at Bergdorf's in Manhattan. Their instant&#13;
reunion takes place in the apartment of one of them. They talk to each other and to the&#13;
audience. We share, with trenchant wit, their sadnesses.&#13;
THE DUMB WAITER by Harold Pinter. - Vintage Pinter and one of his most important&#13;
works. Gus and Ben in a basement room are ordered and threatened by the dumb waiter&#13;
which descends with orders from "him" upstairs. On this bare action line, a chilling experience&#13;
unfolds.&#13;
"Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
ANTONIA&#13;
"The most valuable films are those that are free, without scripts,"&#13;
said Jill Godmilow, director and editor of Antonia. Speaking before a&#13;
full house in the Comm-Arts Theatre Friday, Godmilow remarked&#13;
that, "It's much more interesting to see someone reveal themself."&#13;
Antonia is more than a portrait of a woman, as subtitled, it is an&#13;
intimate close-up of a brilliant artist denied professional recognition&#13;
and personal expression. The film is a sensitive documentary of Antonia&#13;
Brico, a 73-year-old conductor, teacher and activist for female&#13;
recognition and opportunity in music.&#13;
During the 30's and 40's she conducted many of Europe's and&#13;
America's great orchestras, but was unable to find a permanent&#13;
position because of her sex, not ability.&#13;
Today, in Denver, she conducts the Brico Symphony which she&#13;
founded.&#13;
Director Godmilow and producer-folksinger Judy Collins, a former&#13;
student of Brico, transform the cold documentary camera into a very&#13;
personal window. It weaves through Antonia's life like a bitter-sweet&#13;
melody in a symphony: her unhappy childhood, flashes of international&#13;
triumph, heartbreak of senseless frustration, and her&#13;
indefatigable moral strength.&#13;
The paradoxes which mark Antonia's career also characterize her&#13;
personality. Before her orchestra, she is commanding and dynamic;&#13;
yet, she patiently reminds a musician the basic value of an eighth&#13;
note. As a teacher, she tempers her strict demands with tender understanding.&#13;
&#13;
The wealth of material in the&#13;
visual that a museum makes&#13;
available to those frequenting the&#13;
place is impossible to ascertain.&#13;
The only trouble is that many of&#13;
the same master's works are not&#13;
contained in one place for&#13;
viewing. The Learning Center&#13;
and the Art Department of&#13;
Parkside have taken care of t his&#13;
problem, by presenting on five&#13;
consecutive Tuesdays, a series of&#13;
films on the ages and movements&#13;
in the arts called: Museum&#13;
Without Walls.&#13;
Last Tuesday, the 25th of&#13;
February, the first two films in&#13;
this series were presented. The&#13;
first was Giotto and the PreRenaissance.&#13;
This film, dealing&#13;
with the master art critics hold to&#13;
be the father of Renaissance&#13;
painting, was full of movement&#13;
and was accompanied by an&#13;
original score. The narration was&#13;
meant to inform and, therefore,&#13;
presented the viewer with&#13;
various terms dealing with the&#13;
period and the aesthetic in&#13;
general. The benefit of viewing&#13;
art on film is that one can&#13;
chronologically follow the&#13;
development of the artist, and&#13;
through the contrasting .examples&#13;
of his contemporaries,&#13;
analyze the style and inventions&#13;
that were the personal contribution&#13;
of the man to his age&#13;
and to the art that subsequently&#13;
followed. Mass and dimension&#13;
were Giotto's achievements. The&#13;
solidarity, naturalism and expressive&#13;
quality in Giotto's&#13;
figures is an incredible advancement&#13;
when one considers&#13;
the flat, patterned, stylized icons&#13;
that were figures in the art of t he&#13;
Middle Ages.&#13;
Unlike the first film, the&#13;
second: Crete and Mycenae, did&#13;
not discuss the personality that&#13;
created the art of the time, but&#13;
A suggestion for the chancellor&#13;
No cuts&#13;
(CPS)-At least there are a few people left in the world who are&#13;
dedicated to their jobs.&#13;
When Dr. Joseph S. Murphy, president of the City University of New&#13;
York (CUNY) Queens College, was ordered to pare $160,000 from the&#13;
school's budget, he refused. Instead, he offered to sell his official&#13;
residence as college president to make up the deficit.&#13;
"As soon as I receive your approval, I will make the appropriate&#13;
arrangements for my family and myself," Murphy said in a letter to&#13;
CUNY system chancellor Robert Kibbee. Murphy said that to comply&#13;
with the budget cut order would force the college to "dismiss faculty&#13;
and to reduce and dilute our educational offerings."&#13;
Chancellor Kibbee has not formally responded to Murphy's&#13;
suggestion, but a spokesman pointed out that under the bylaws of the&#13;
Board of Hi gher Education for the city, each of the presidents of the&#13;
City University's 10 senior colleges "shall live in a residence provided&#13;
for him-her by the board."&#13;
When asked how he felt about giving up the house, Dr. Murphy said,&#13;
"My family and I have lived in a lot of p laces...so I guess we won't&#13;
suffer."&#13;
Jill Godmillow at her l ecture last Friday .&#13;
But it is Antonia's remarkable candor and warmth which capture&#13;
our sympathy. Completely open with her feelings and memories&#13;
Antonia stands naked, vulnerable, and totally human before us Near&#13;
the conclusion of t he film, an ancient 78 rpm record of Antonia conducting&#13;
at Carnegie Hall appears on the screen and soundtrack In&#13;
delibly scarred by deep scratches, the symphony gradually dissolves&#13;
to Antonia's tearful voice.&#13;
The rhythm of the scratches becomes a subtle aural painting the&#13;
exposed, raw nerves of a painful remembrance. We see Antonia as&#13;
pathetic and noble, a superb giant and an awkward dwarf.&#13;
Antonia is a touching tribute to one woman's special greatness and&#13;
one director's certain sensitivity and intelligence.&#13;
the culture that contributed to the&#13;
art. The unnamed artisans that&#13;
worked in the ancient&#13;
civilizations were full of the&#13;
primitive symbols that formed&#13;
the representational base of their&#13;
religions. The film was very&#13;
much like a travelogue, moving&#13;
from one archeological site to&#13;
another.&#13;
If you cannot afford the extensive&#13;
traveling needed to see&#13;
the masterpieces and newest&#13;
inventions of the world's artists,&#13;
then these films will be an invaluable&#13;
experience. The second&#13;
part of the series was shown&#13;
yesterday. The films in that&#13;
series were: Picasso: War,&#13;
Peace and Love and Goya.&#13;
Museum Without Walls allows&#13;
for the invaluable experience of&#13;
art history and understanding the&#13;
reasons of personality and&#13;
culture behind great art. It can be&#13;
seen at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
Hall, room 103. The next films&#13;
are:&#13;
Le Corbusier and&#13;
The Greek Temple - March 11&#13;
The Cubist Epoch, and&#13;
Germany-Dada - March 18&#13;
The Impressionists, Kinetic Art&#13;
in Paris, and The Art Conservator&#13;
&#13;
- March 25 by amy&#13;
Events&#13;
in the&#13;
Arts&#13;
by Susan Shemanske&#13;
The Contemporary Music&#13;
Ensemble from Northwestern&#13;
University will present an improvisatory&#13;
concert Friday,&#13;
March 7, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theatre at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The concert is one of several&#13;
events sponsored this semester&#13;
by the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, which also will bring&#13;
the National Shakespeare&#13;
Company to Parkside in April.&#13;
The Contempory Music Ensemble,&#13;
directed by Stephen&#13;
Syverud and William Karlins,&#13;
will present an extremely&#13;
modern, electronic type of music&#13;
featuring improvisation with two&#13;
, synthesizers and acoustic intruments.&#13;
The ensemble will&#13;
present a lecture demonstration&#13;
on improvisation and interpretation&#13;
in the theatre at 2:00&#13;
p.m. March 7. Both the concert&#13;
and demonstration are free.&#13;
On Thursday, April 10 the&#13;
National Shakespeare Company&#13;
will present "Two Gentlemen of&#13;
Verona" in the Comm-Arts&#13;
Theatre at 7:30 p.m. Twelve&#13;
members of the company, based&#13;
in New York City, will travel to&#13;
Parkside to present the play - a&#13;
lively, delightful comedy farce.&#13;
The emphasis of the play is on&#13;
youth, its attitudes, and two of the&#13;
subjects that concern the young -&#13;
love and friendship. Tickets for&#13;
"Two Gentlemen of V erona" will&#13;
be $3.00 a nd $2.00.&#13;
An "Ethnic Program" planned&#13;
for Sunday, May 11 will feature&#13;
Mario Escudero, worldly acclaimed&#13;
Flamenco guitarist. The&#13;
New York Times called Escudero&#13;
"a Spanish Flamenco guitarist of&#13;
truly virtuosic stature." His&#13;
concert is scheduled for 3 p.m. in&#13;
the theatre. &#13;
Review&#13;
Wednesday, March 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Police power&#13;
(A review of The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence by Victor Marchetti&#13;
and John D. Marks. Knopf, New York 1974. $8.95; and State&#13;
Secrets, Police Surveillance in America by Paul Cowan, Nick Egleson&#13;
and Nat Hentoff. Holt Rinehart Wilson, New York 1974. $10.00.)&#13;
(CPS)-The US government has ten distinct agencies which together&#13;
spend well over $6 billion annually gathering and analyzing foreign&#13;
and domestic intelligence.&#13;
This "intelligence community," including the Army, Navy and Air&#13;
Force Intelligence, the National Security Agency, the Central Intelligence&#13;
Agency (CIA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation&#13;
(FBI), by its own admission has engaged in a massive overlap of&#13;
activities.&#13;
Given huge amounts of money and personnel, the possibility for&#13;
useless, excessive, and-as recent reports have confirmed-criminal&#13;
surveillance, is immense.&#13;
•These books, The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence, and State Secrets&#13;
each analyze from a different viewpoint the threat surveillance&#13;
agencies pose to our society-one rapidly being suffocated by datagathering&#13;
units and systems.&#13;
Each book, through its accounting of surveillance methods, concludes&#13;
that a fear of criminal behavior and political repression by&#13;
state police is well-founded.&#13;
As the most terrifying of the books, The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence&#13;
is an extremely enlightening and well-organized work that&#13;
explores the structure, mentality and covert activities of that agency.&#13;
A 14-year veteran of the CIA, author Marchetti writes with an&#13;
authority unique in the world of police-watchers.&#13;
Readers will have a difficult time ingesting all the CIA's incredible&#13;
activities. Marchetti's calm narrative style belies the shock value of&#13;
such CIA exploits as bombing runs by its own B-26s, the attempted&#13;
overthrow of Indonesian President Sukarno in 1958, the infiltration of&#13;
college campuses and the unscrupulous ownership and management&#13;
of dozens of front organizations-ranging from airlines to radio&#13;
stations.&#13;
Marchetti's clear and comprehensive bias does not damage the&#13;
book's credibility, which has been strengthened by the agency's intense&#13;
opposition to its publication. The CIA failed in its attempt to halt&#13;
publication but did manage to delete 168 passages which it claimed&#13;
were harmful to national security.&#13;
These deletions may still be reinstated by court order, but rather&#13;
than delay publication, the editors decided to publish the book with&#13;
blank spaces indicating the exact location and length of the deletions.&#13;
They published in boldface 171 other passages that the CIA originally&#13;
ordered excised and then reluctantly permitted to be reinstated.&#13;
Despite his obvious disgust with what the CIA has become, Marchetti&#13;
contends that the CIA has a legitimate right to exist "as a&#13;
coordinating agency responsible for gathering, evaluating and&#13;
preparing foreign intelligence," as its charter provides.&#13;
Unfortunately, he says, this function has assumed a secondary&#13;
importance and the CIA has become "an operational arm, independent&#13;
and unaccountable...whose purpose is interference in the&#13;
domestic affairs of other nations."&#13;
While The CIA primarily analyzes surveillance abroad, State&#13;
Secrets examines how federal and local police monitor political activists.&#13;
&#13;
In six essays the three authors of State Secrets analyze the effectiveness&#13;
of provacateurs, wiretaps, informers, electronic surveillance,&#13;
grand juries, grants of immunity, data banks and computer&#13;
interfacing.&#13;
This attempt to touch on all aspect of the government's invasion of&#13;
privacy is, in fact., too energetic, giving readers more material than&#13;
they can co mprehend without a well-organized framework.&#13;
For instance, Nick Egleson's opening essay attempts to de-mythify&#13;
the James Bond image of FBI agents, while a later one by Nat Hentoff&#13;
re-emphasizes the immediate and pressing threat .of electronic surveillance&#13;
and sophisticated gadgetry.&#13;
As a whole, however, the book elicits from the reader its intended&#13;
alarm over police infringement of constitutional freedoms and each&#13;
essay makes for fascinating reading.&#13;
Lay offscontinued&#13;
from page 1&#13;
UW System were in the areas of&#13;
academic support services,&#13;
general administration and&#13;
student services. Cuts included 7&#13;
staff members, 17 vacant&#13;
positions, and seven staffers&#13;
reduced in work load.&#13;
- System equity studies aim at&#13;
approximate equalization of&#13;
operational costs among similar&#13;
campuses. In the past, Parkside&#13;
had received proportionally&#13;
higher funding, in "start-up"&#13;
dollars because it was a new&#13;
campus and because it had been&#13;
established as a University of&#13;
Wisconsin campus before merger&#13;
with the former state universities.&#13;
Parkside's high percentage&#13;
of part-time students&#13;
also raises the per-student cost&#13;
factor.&#13;
Faculty instructional costs had&#13;
been approximately equalized&#13;
relative to other campuses by&#13;
budget-related cuts the last two&#13;
years. That, combined with the&#13;
fact that under the proposed&#13;
budget UW campuses will have to&#13;
absorb enrollment increases this&#13;
fall with no additional funding,&#13;
made further faculty adjustments&#13;
unnecessary at this&#13;
time.&#13;
In addition to the current cuts,&#13;
various mandated budget&#13;
reductions have pared $640,000&#13;
from the Parkside budget overthe&#13;
past four years.&#13;
Bauer said that even if UW's&#13;
effort to restore funding for&#13;
enrollment increases this fall is&#13;
successful, the money would not&#13;
be available iqitil summer of 1976&#13;
because the UW System has&#13;
moved to an annual method of&#13;
counting enrollment.&#13;
"That wouldn't help us meet&#13;
our budget retrenchment&#13;
requirements for the fiscal year&#13;
beginning this July," he said.&#13;
Both administrative staff and&#13;
faculty were involved in the&#13;
budget cut deliberation..&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 5, 1975&#13;
The gypsy life of Milton Staskus&#13;
A wanderer at Parkside&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
Milton Staskus is the grinning little old&#13;
man that students see i n the cafeteria,&#13;
winding a path through the aisles, a portable&#13;
garbage can in tow.&#13;
Staskus has been working at Parkside&#13;
for three years and retired from American&#13;
Motors Co. ten years ago. He says that he&#13;
continues to work because "if I stop&#13;
working I'm soon six feet under."&#13;
Staskus was born in Lithuania and&#13;
graduated from an engineering school in&#13;
Moscow. He will tell you that he served in&#13;
the armed forces during W.W.I, and he&#13;
grins broadly as he recounts that he was&#13;
captured and imprisoned in German&#13;
P.O.W. camps twice. He successfully&#13;
engineered escapes both times.&#13;
After the war, Staskus returned to&#13;
Russia and was employed as an engineer&#13;
to build locomotives throughout eastern&#13;
Europe. He was transferred from country&#13;
to country and says that is why he speaks&#13;
so many languages, Ukranian and&#13;
Czechoslavakian included. Staskus smiles&#13;
and says, "I was like a gypsy, you know."&#13;
In 1922, Staskus became unhappy with&#13;
his work in Siberia and concerned over the&#13;
growing power of Communism in eastern&#13;
Europe. Fearing that soon Lithuania&#13;
would lose its independence, Staskus&#13;
immigrated to the United States.&#13;
Because Staskus was a Lithuanian&#13;
citizen, although working in Siberia, he&#13;
was able to leave for the States with a&#13;
minimum amount of hassle from the&#13;
Russian government. They were upset&#13;
over loosing a highly trained multi-lingual&#13;
engineer.&#13;
Staskus then came to the mid-west&#13;
searching for employment similar to that&#13;
which he had been trained for in Moscow.&#13;
He met with disappointment, as personnel&#13;
managers explained that although he was&#13;
highly qualified, his English was&#13;
inadequate and he lacked U.S. citizenship.&#13;
He then entered night school in&#13;
Waukegan Illinois to perfect his English&#13;
and to study for his citizenship. Staskus&#13;
remembers those years fondly. He met&#13;
friends and joined three piece band.&#13;
"People sleep too much," Staskus says.&#13;
"When I was young, I never slept; too&#13;
much to see-too much to learn."&#13;
Staskus won his citizenship in 1928 and&#13;
married for the second time in 1950. He&#13;
had been working at AMC since after the&#13;
depression.&#13;
He now keeps busy through his job at&#13;
Parkside, a garden he tends at home and&#13;
fishing trips he takes with his wife. He also&#13;
owns two pieces of property in Arizona&#13;
that he says he will retire to if "Parkside&#13;
ever closes." .. ,&#13;
Staskus feels he has truly realized the&#13;
American Dream of a land of opportunity.&#13;
America" pride he wears around his neck,&#13;
a silver dollar minted in 1922; the year he&#13;
entered the U.S.&#13;
Is he happy at Parkside? Staskus beams&#13;
and says "Oh yes. I wish, though, that&#13;
more students at Parkside could speak&#13;
some of the languages I've learned -1 mis&#13;
that."&#13;
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continued from page 1&#13;
essentially agreed with media&#13;
critics. "It was unrealistic to&#13;
expect true diversity from a&#13;
commonly owned stationnewspaper&#13;
combination...! than)&#13;
if they were antagonistically&#13;
run," the FCC official ruling&#13;
stated.&#13;
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First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Mvmbti o» F. ih'Mi Rt'v"v«« SvMP"« • Feae»A&lt; Depotil ln*u'anc« Ccp&#13;
i—|m mm&#13;
WIDEST S ELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
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PAPER DACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT S PECIAL&#13;
ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
614-59^^&#13;
&amp;S0-3£&gt;£2-&#13;
flfUMft*.&#13;
632-SI9SMilton&#13;
entertains the cafeteria troops as he makes his rounds to clean&#13;
the tables.&#13;
AT&amp;T&#13;
Monopolies win&#13;
new power&#13;
(CPS)-In an unprecedented decision, the phone company in New&#13;
Jersey has won the right to automatically increase its rates without&#13;
holding a public hearing.&#13;
The New Jersey Supreme Court has ruled that the state public utility&#13;
commission acted within the law when it granted New Jersey Bell the&#13;
right to raise rates based on cost increases without a complete public&#13;
rate proceeding, which usually lasts about eight months.&#13;
In accordance with the utility commission's ruling, the AT&amp;T affiliate&#13;
boosted its rates $19.3 million in December, even though it had&#13;
been sued by New Jersey's new Public Advocate.&#13;
In several states, power companies have been allowed to increase&#13;
their rates automatically to reflect alleged changes in fuel prices. But&#13;
the phone company has never been allowed that authority.&#13;
Because all AT&amp;T affiliates must apply for rate increases&#13;
separately, the New Jersey Bell decision does not extend to other&#13;
states.&#13;
Even though an AT&amp;T spokesperson claimed there weren't any&#13;
plans to go for automatic adjustments elsewhere "at this time,"&#13;
Illinois Bell recently asked its utilities commission for the same&#13;
power.&#13;
PARKSIDE A CTIVITIES B OARD PRESENTS&#13;
Nationally Acclaimed&#13;
MIMIST&#13;
KEITH BERGER&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MA RCH 12 8:00 P.M&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADMISSION: $1.50 - Student&#13;
$2.00 - General&#13;
TICKETS A T T HE I NFO. CENTER &#13;
m Wednesday, March 5, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Harris&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
money."&#13;
In most cases his voting record in the&#13;
Senate tends to reflect the same views he&#13;
voices now.&#13;
The record shows him opposing both the&#13;
ABM, anti-ballistic missile system, and the&#13;
SST, supersonic transport plane. He also&#13;
came out against the use of plant killing&#13;
chemicals in Vietnam and the no-knock&#13;
policy concerning police search authority.&#13;
Harris supported the use of federal funds&#13;
for busing in order to achieve racial balance&#13;
in schools, limitations on military spending,&#13;
increased federal spending on prisons,&#13;
establishment of the 18 year old vote and the&#13;
reduction of marijuana penalties.&#13;
Classified&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1970 Maverick, . 6 cycl.. auto, trans., power&#13;
steering, 8 track stereo, runs good, body&#13;
needs some work. $700. or best offer. 632 4183&#13;
after 4 p.m.&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 E ighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
'ACROSS F ROM UNION PARK'&#13;
COUPON 30°/« o Off&#13;
COUPON&#13;
Cagers win at&#13;
free throw line&#13;
All Hockey Equipment - Wilson&#13;
Protective products, Nort&#13;
Jelinek Hockey Skates from Canada featuring&#13;
balistic nylon uppers trimmed with leather,&#13;
Sheffield Steel blades from England, plus&#13;
some gals figure skates. *&#13;
v -'&#13;
Refrigiware - Snowmobile Suits, Ice fishing two piece suits ^ %&#13;
Good to 50 degrees F below. JAO/&#13;
NOW *111 /O SAVINGS&#13;
[Sale jiru'es^valid^ when this FoupoiTpTesentedj&#13;
l+H Calender's all sport ltd. 240 Main St., Racine, Wisconsin&#13;
632-7754&#13;
Parkside escaped with a&#13;
narrow 84-78 victory over Platteville&#13;
Monday night before a&#13;
capacity crowd at the P.E.&#13;
Building.&#13;
Once again it was Gary Cole&#13;
providing the punch with 28&#13;
points and 8 r ebounds.&#13;
From the opening tipoff it was&#13;
a hard-fought battle. The first&#13;
half seesawed back and forth&#13;
with neither team leading by&#13;
more than two after the early&#13;
moments.&#13;
Steve Krebsbach and Jeff&#13;
Zaharias provided the punch for&#13;
Platteville, while Cole was&#13;
continually double-teamed and&#13;
held to 11 points. Malcom Mahone&#13;
and Leartha Scott both chipped in&#13;
8 p oints to keep the Rangers in&#13;
the game.&#13;
The half ended with Platteville&#13;
ahead 38-36.&#13;
The second half started with&#13;
the Pioneers dominating the&#13;
game with blistering outside&#13;
shooting and stretched their lead&#13;
to six before the Rangers started&#13;
to ge t into the game again.&#13;
Cole went on a rampage&#13;
midway through the period and&#13;
tied the game with a three-point&#13;
play. From there the Rangers&#13;
built up a nine-point lead. Platteville&#13;
then closed within two at&#13;
75-73 with 1:20 to play.&#13;
The Rangers moved in front by&#13;
four when Elvin Jaconson of&#13;
Platteville took a swing at&#13;
Leartha Scott, but ended up on&#13;
the floor after Scott's retaliation&#13;
punch.&#13;
A double foul was called and&#13;
both Scott and Jacobson were&#13;
ejected.&#13;
Each team was awarded two&#13;
free throws. Rod Bush of Platteville&#13;
missed both throws with 32&#13;
seconds on the clock and the&#13;
Rangers coasted to the win.&#13;
Parkside is now 21 and 6 and&#13;
meets Stout State tonight for a&#13;
NAIA playoff berth.&#13;
photo by Frederickson&#13;
The hand is quicker than the eye&#13;
Sunday, March 9&#13;
AMATEUR GO-GO r.&#13;
$50°° a&#13;
$25°°&#13;
$10°°&#13;
30 Racine St.&#13;
seine, Wisconsin&#13;
is I D. Required&#13;
FREE pizza&#13;
»&gt; CONTEST&#13;
1st Prize&#13;
2nd Prize&#13;
3rd Prize&#13;
1 Bottle of Champagne to all e ntries&#13;
6 P.M. - 'til Closing&#13;
No Cov er Charge with Student I.D.&#13;
GIRLS W ANTED&#13;
Go-Go Girls, Waitresses, Bartenders&#13;
TOP WAGES $2.00 - $7-00 Hourly CAL^j4jj369&#13;
&gt;\&#13;
^ V&#13;
Tuesday Night&#13;
Is Bonanza&#13;
Special Night,&#13;
[(•1.69 for a rib eye $teak dinner!)&#13;
(&#13;
$1.49 for a chopped sirloin dinner!)]&#13;
\w Y\&#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;
WUIoveiLWUIowlL&#13;
AVAILABLE IN KEN OSHA ONLY &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 5, 19 7 5&#13;
Ozone&#13;
to you&#13;
(CPS)-Well, it's back to those&#13;
messy tubes, gooey jars, greasy&#13;
kid stuff-and hot stuffy rooms.&#13;
Two new Congressional bills have&#13;
been recently introduced to take&#13;
the pffsst out of aerosol, spray&#13;
cans and the coolants out of&#13;
coolers.&#13;
The retreat from the push&#13;
button age back to the manual&#13;
age may occur because of a&#13;
growing concern that the&#13;
chemicals used in refrigeratorfreezers,&#13;
air conditioners and&#13;
aerosol spray cans are collecting&#13;
in the upper atmosphere and may&#13;
be causing the gradual&#13;
destruction of the earth's&#13;
protective ozone layer.&#13;
The aerosol spray can bill&#13;
introduced in the House would&#13;
severely limit production of these&#13;
cans because of their anti-ozone&#13;
spray propellants.&#13;
According to one congressional&#13;
source, the aerosol bill "may be&#13;
the sleeper of the year.&#13;
Everybody uses shaving cream&#13;
and deodorants. People may now&#13;
think, 'is nothing sacred?' But the&#13;
choice may be 'Do you want&#13;
ozone or the dry look?' "&#13;
The second House bill would&#13;
limit the chemical coolants in air&#13;
conditioners and refrigeratorfreezers.&#13;
When appliances are&#13;
discarded, these chemicals&#13;
produce harmful fluorcarbons&#13;
which are released into the atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
It is reported that 800,000 ton s&#13;
of fluorocarbons are produced&#13;
worldwide each year, 60 percent&#13;
of which are used in spray&#13;
propellants and 25 percent in&#13;
coolants.&#13;
Already there is a one percent&#13;
annual depletion rate in the ozone&#13;
shield which could rise to 2&#13;
percent over the next decade.&#13;
Rangers whip&#13;
St. Norberts&#13;
Photo by Frederick son&#13;
Cole shows how to dominate on rebounds.&#13;
by Dick Ahlgrimm&#13;
The Rangers opened their bid&#13;
for the District 14 NAIA tournament&#13;
spot with a sometimes&#13;
puzzling nine point victory over&#13;
St. Norberts.&#13;
Earlier this year, Parkside&#13;
destroyed St. Norberts 96 to 42;&#13;
but according to Coach Steve&#13;
Stevens "Anything can happen in&#13;
a tournament."&#13;
St. Norbert got as far as the&#13;
Parkside match by upsetting&#13;
Carthage earlier in the week,&#13;
which ruined Parkside's plans&#13;
for a Kenosha showdown with the&#13;
Redmen.&#13;
In the early going of Thursdays&#13;
game St. Norbert's had the crowd&#13;
wondering whether Parkside&#13;
would be the next upset victim, as&#13;
they hit on six of their first eight&#13;
field goal attempts to go ahead 12&#13;
to 2. But Gary Cole put on a&#13;
dazzling one man show to bring&#13;
the Rangers to life. At the half,&#13;
Cole had scored 21 points and had&#13;
boosted the Rangers into the lead&#13;
41-38.&#13;
St. Norberts Chuck Eichstedt&#13;
proved to be almost as unstopable&#13;
as Cole by pumping in&#13;
seventeen points by half time.&#13;
After the intermission, both&#13;
teams altered their defensive&#13;
strategy with St. Norberts double&#13;
teaming Cole and Parkside&#13;
switching Malcolm Mahone on&#13;
Eichstedt. Cole was "limited" to&#13;
fourteen more points while&#13;
Eichstedt, suffering from foul&#13;
trouble, never scored again.&#13;
The game finished much closer&#13;
than it was played as Parkside&#13;
dominated the game but could&#13;
not break it open.&#13;
The devastating offensive&#13;
display by Cole was tremendous&#13;
for the fans but the game couldn't&#13;
have been won without the added&#13;
rebounding by Bill Sobanski,&#13;
timely scoring of Malcom&#13;
Mahone and exciting floor play&#13;
from Stevie King. Parksides&#13;
second leading scorer, Leartha&#13;
Scott finished the game with&#13;
fourteen points.&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
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NISHIKI MONDIA CINEILI&#13;
This semester,&#13;
your reading assignments will probably&#13;
require around 500 hours of your time.&#13;
You could cut it&#13;
to 150.&#13;
Or 100. Or even 80 hours.&#13;
Thousands of students throughout&#13;
the country already have done so.&#13;
Including students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin and the University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
And you can, too.&#13;
Plan to enroll in the Evelyn Wood Reading&#13;
Dynamics classes being&#13;
offered on campus.&#13;
GUARANTEE&#13;
The EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS&#13;
course is so educationally sound - we&#13;
Guarantee to Refund the entire Tuition of any&#13;
student who does not triple his Reading Efficiency.&#13;
(Reading Efficiency is a combination&#13;
of speed and comprehension, not just&#13;
speed.)&#13;
What's more, once you take the&#13;
course, you're automatically a lifetime&#13;
member. Which means you can retake&#13;
the course free any irate. And as&#13;
often as you like.&#13;
One more thing. The on-campus&#13;
program is offered at a reduced tuition&#13;
and all faculty, staff and students are&#13;
eligible to enroll.&#13;
Take a free Mini-Lesson&#13;
WIN A&#13;
FREE SCHOLARSHIP&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
(Michigan Room) Located in the College Center&#13;
WEDNESDAY, March 5th - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY, March 6th - 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Classes scheduled to begin Thur. March 13th on-campus&#13;
If you cannot attend a Mini-Lesson - call Pamela Modica at 236-1996 for information and registration.&#13;
(Call Collect)&#13;
Ffl Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics&#13;
180North Michigan Ave., • Chicago, Illinois 60601 • Ph one 236-1966&#13;
FREE&#13;
MINI-LESSON&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
THERE'S&#13;
NO EXCUSE&#13;
TO READ&#13;
sipwix </text>
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              <text>UFOs Exist</text>
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              <text>'UFO's exist'&#13;
phenomena such as air planes&#13;
and baloons and others labeled as&#13;
"unknown" .&#13;
Friedman claimed that the&#13;
unknowns must be vehicles&#13;
manufactured somewhere other&#13;
than planet Earth. His reasoning&#13;
for this conviction was that in&#13;
1955when the Project Blue Book&#13;
study was completed, no&#13;
technology yet on Earth could&#13;
have produced vehicles that both&#13;
looked and acted like the&#13;
reported UFOs.&#13;
Thes "flying saucers" have&#13;
been ,described as "round diskshaped&#13;
vehicles which are bigger&#13;
in diameter than in thickness,&#13;
ranging from a few to a&#13;
hundred feet in length or&#13;
diameter" and which are often&#13;
reported emmitting a sourceless&#13;
glow of light. Others thought to be&#13;
the mother ships of the disks are&#13;
cigar shaped vehicles which are&#13;
continued on .page 7&#13;
RANGERS WIN&#13;
Story page 12&#13;
The Parksidef-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
------Wednesday. March12.1975Vol III No.28&#13;
Effects of phase out&#13;
Task force report&#13;
by Paul M. Aodersoa&#13;
00 Feb. 3. Donald K. Smith,&#13;
UW senior vice president and&#13;
director of the System Advisory&#13;
Planning Task Force, issued to&#13;
chancellors a report on the status&#13;
of the Task Force simulation&#13;
studies.&#13;
The report stated that the Task&#13;
Force was comprised of four&#13;
study committees: study committee&#13;
No.1 was to study through&#13;
simulation, the effects of&#13;
"phasing out" six universities.&#13;
including Parkside; committee&#13;
No. 2 was to study the effects of&#13;
"phasing down" several campuses&#13;
and programs, including&#13;
the "phasing out" of Parkside's&#13;
level two (upper division)&#13;
programs in the College of&#13;
Science aod Society.&#13;
In addition, the report called&#13;
for the establishment of a&#13;
"campus reference group" on all&#13;
campuses to aid the various&#13;
study committees.&#13;
The report offered the&#13;
following explanation:&#13;
"As early as possible in the&#13;
week of February 10, we hope to&#13;
have in your hands the protocol&#13;
for the simulation studies of&#13;
campus phase out to 'be undertaken.&#13;
We will need&#13;
assistance from the campuses or&#13;
Indians sue military&#13;
by Neil Klotz&#13;
~CPS)-Two years to the day after the armed&#13;
ilans?fWoundedKnee began, lawyers for the In·&#13;
Ile InVolVedhave filed a $90 million suit against&#13;
~ military leaders who authorized and&#13;
.... the illegal use of federal troops during the&#13;
......&#13;
...~ ~gal activity of the military first came to&#13;
'-n duringthe eight month trial of American InPant&#13;
Movement (AIM) leaders conducted in SI.&#13;
last year Earl . Iiainsi last summer five of the ten federal charges&#13;
\leans AIM leaders Dennis Banks. and Russell&#13;
!'red lVere dismissed when US DiStrict. Judge&#13;
,~'ChOI ruled that US Army activity durmg the&#13;
!l&lt;leraed Knee occupation was in. violation of the&#13;
tlliJ Ilaws requiring that the. President declare a&#13;
~SOrder before the military can be used for&#13;
-the C purposes. Nichol later dismissed the rest&#13;
~ charges against Banks and Means for other&#13;
1Iiretacts of government misconduct like illegal&#13;
1b \liling.&#13;
tJ.J.: new suit by the Wounded Knee Legal&#13;
~:()ffense Committee cites the sa~e. federal&#13;
~IaryPosse Commitatus Act prohibIting the&#13;
"'1iIo b-o~ enforcing civil law-as the baSIS for&#13;
...... m.llion action.&#13;
~ng, those named in the suit are former&#13;
ntial aide Gen. Alexander Haig; Wayne&#13;
Colburn, head of the Special OperatiOns Group of&#13;
the US Marshals Service; fromer Atty. Gen.&#13;
Richard Lleindienst, and Gen. Volney Warner of the&#13;
82nd Airborne Division who clandestinely directed&#13;
federal material and manpower at Wounded Knee.&#13;
M nwhile on the Pine Ridge ReservatIon where&#13;
th ~ounded Knee confrontation began, more&#13;
vi:lence has erupted which has ca~d. the&#13;
. American Indian Movement to declare a national&#13;
emergency." team&#13;
Five members of the Wounded Knee defense&#13;
and one defendant have charged they were beaten&#13;
on February 26 by the private police of Pine Ridge&#13;
Tribal Chairman Ricard Wilson. Four persons were&#13;
hospitalized. od th US Civil&#13;
Both the US Justice Department a e&#13;
. ommission have previously ruled that&#13;
RIghts C n the last tribal election illegally. It&#13;
Wilson wo . AIl' (BfA) . f the Bureau of Indian airs remains or ff- move Wilson from 0 Ice.&#13;
however, to re 'the beatings, the defense comIn&#13;
response to. disrni •• all pending . ha fled motions to =.- mittee s I es because it cannot conduct&#13;
W ded Knee cas oun th reservation without harassment.&#13;
research on e . of beatings by Wilson's soJr&#13;
. ally a series oDIC , d" despite protests to local BfA&#13;
called "goon squPina. Ridge Oglala Civil Rights&#13;
r led the e in th&#13;
po Ice. . to ask for assistance from AIM m e OrgaDlzatlOn .&#13;
lirst place two years ago.&#13;
institutions in two ways: (a)&#13;
validation of the accuracy of&#13;
information developed by staff;&#13;
and (b) development of information&#13;
on certain questions&#13;
raised in the protocol.&#13;
"I would suggest that your&#13;
campus reference group can&#13;
direct its energy most effectively&#13;
if it awaits information on the&#13;
protocol of the study. which will&#13;
identify the points at which&#13;
campus input will be most&#13;
urgent If at that time the campus&#13;
believes there are questions&#13;
concerning consequences which&#13;
should be included, but which&#13;
have not been, then these can be&#13;
In a telephone conversation&#13;
with Norwood Friday, he said&#13;
that lhe Council has been&#13;
establIshed and includes sil&#13;
Parkside faculty ,nembef's and&#13;
one student, ~.. t to be selected. He&#13;
added that the Council ha met&#13;
once SUlCe .ts establishment and&#13;
will meet again this w""k.&#13;
According to Bauer, a set uf&#13;
protocols from the Task Force&#13;
study committees, dated Feb. 22,&#13;
were sent to Parulde and&#13;
arrived on Feb. 25, at 12:00 noon.&#13;
According to Norwood, the&#13;
protocols reached his desk at 3:00&#13;
p.m. that same day and ere to&#13;
be acted upon and returned to&#13;
Madison by t:00 p.m. the next&#13;
day.&#13;
When asked by a reporter if the&#13;
Academic P1anrong Council had&#13;
reviewed any information pertaining&#13;
to the studies being&#13;
carried out by committee o. 2 on&#13;
the "phasing out" of upper level&#13;
courses in the Coil e of Science&#13;
and Society, Norwood aald,&#13;
, othing has been reviewed by&#13;
our Council on that." adclng "we&#13;
sent a partial response to their&#13;
(the Task Force) inquiry. We did&#13;
not even have time to caU a&#13;
council meeting."&#13;
eeeuec d on pa 7&#13;
Related story&#13;
page 6&#13;
identified. "&#13;
In response to the report,&#13;
Parkside's Acting Chancellor&#13;
Otto F. Bauer called for the&#13;
establishment of an "Academic&#13;
Planning Council"&gt; on the&#13;
Parllside campus to serve as a&#13;
reference group for the current&#13;
studies arxl for future studies.&#13;
The Council would be organize&lt;1&#13;
and directed by Acting Vice&#13;
Chancellor Eugene Norwood.&#13;
PEACE! Of course we want peace&#13;
for both OUR SIDES!&#13;
RANGER WIN&#13;
Story page 12&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-------Wednesday, March 12, 1975 Vol 111 o. 28&#13;
Effects of phase out&#13;
Task force report&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
friedman states&#13;
'UFO's exist'&#13;
On Feb. 3, Donald K. Smith,&#13;
UW senior vice president and&#13;
director of the System Advisory&#13;
Planning Task Force, issued to&#13;
chancellors a report on the status&#13;
of the Task Force simulation&#13;
studies.&#13;
The report stated that the Task&#13;
Force was comprised of four&#13;
study committees: study committee&#13;
No. 1 was to study through&#13;
simulation, the effects of&#13;
"phasing out" six universities,&#13;
including Parkside; committee&#13;
No. 2 was to study the effects of&#13;
" phasing down" several campuses&#13;
and programs, including&#13;
the "phasing out" of Parkside's&#13;
level two ( upper division)&#13;
programs in the College of&#13;
Science and Society.&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
Nuclear physicist, Stanton&#13;
Friedman, last Wedne~day night&#13;
:old a Parkside audience of 500&#13;
:hat "planet Earth is being&#13;
l'l.lited by intelligently pioloted&#13;
!ltraterrestrial vehicles. "&#13;
Friedman said that the&#13;
mdence is at once overwhehning&#13;
DI at the same time frustrating.&#13;
lie called it "a pain in the neck to&#13;
!ilysicists" since it consists only&#13;
~ witness reports and&#13;
!EQtographs.&#13;
However Friedman said that&#13;
:nany of the sightings and photos&#13;
nre made by competent and&#13;
1'Sponsible people; among them&#13;
lltronauts, Air Force pilots and&#13;
~ experts. Friedman spoke&#13;
at length of Project Blue Book&#13;
:he UFO study that was spon:&#13;
Sired by the United States Air&#13;
force. The study listed several&#13;
llagories of UFO reports which&#13;
"1'e labeled either as natural&#13;
~gal activity&#13;
phenomena such as air planes&#13;
and baloons and others labeled as&#13;
" unknown" .&#13;
Friedman claimed that the&#13;
unknowns must be vehicles&#13;
manufactured somewhere other&#13;
than planet Earth. His reasoning&#13;
for this conviction was that in&#13;
1955 when the Project Blue Book&#13;
study was completed, no&#13;
technology yet on Earth could&#13;
have produced vehicles that both&#13;
looked and acted like the&#13;
reported UFOs.&#13;
Thes "flying saucers" have&#13;
been described as "round diskshaped&#13;
vehicles which are bigger&#13;
in diameter than in thickness,&#13;
ranging from a few to a&#13;
hundred feet in length or&#13;
diameter" and which are often&#13;
reported emmitting a sourceless&#13;
glow of light. Others thought to be&#13;
the mother ships of the disks are&#13;
cigar shaped vehicles wl'!ich are&#13;
continued on p ag e 7&#13;
In addition, the report called&#13;
for the establishment of a&#13;
"campus reference group" on all&#13;
campuses to aid the various&#13;
study committees.&#13;
The report offered the&#13;
following explanation :&#13;
"As early as possible in the&#13;
week of February 10, we hope to&#13;
have in your hands the protocol&#13;
for the simulation studies of&#13;
campus phase out to be undertaken.&#13;
We will need&#13;
assistance from the campuses or&#13;
Indians sue military&#13;
by Neil Klotz&#13;
(cPS)-Two years to the day after the armed&#13;
!lege ~f Wounded Knee began, lawyers for the ln-&#13;
~ns involved have filed a $90 million suit against&#13;
~ US military leaders who authorized and&#13;
Si ected the illegal use of federal troops during the&#13;
ege,&#13;
~e ill~gal activity of the military first crone to&#13;
dia during the eight month trial of American InPauin&#13;
Movement (AIM) leaders conducted in St.&#13;
last year E 1 . ag ar Y last summer five of the ten federal charges&#13;
\\ a~t AIM leaders Dennis Banks and Russell&#13;
~ ea~ Were dismissed when US District Judge "~~ . Y{lllllld tchol ruled that US Army activity ~urmg the&#13;
feoe led Knee occupation was in_ violation of the&#13;
Ci1,1{~. laws requiring that the President declare a&#13;
~Ill 1&#13;
~0rder before the military can be used for&#13;
"th~tic Purposes. Nichol later dismissed the reSt&#13;
~Ian charges against Banks and Means for other&#13;
"ir tace~ of government misconduct like illegal&#13;
~ PPtng,&#13;
~/ new suit by the Wounded Knee Legal&#13;
laiii-t~e-Offense Committee cites the same federal&#13;
lllilita e Posse Commitatus Act prohibitin~ the&#13;
the $9ory f~o~ enforcing civil law-as the basis for&#13;
Ainottllion action.&#13;
~esid g. th0se named in the suit are former&#13;
entia1 aide Gen. Alexander Haig; Wayne&#13;
Colburn, head of the Special Operations Group ot&#13;
the US Marshals Service; fromer Atty. Gen.&#13;
Richard Lleindienst, and Gen. Volney _Warne~ of the&#13;
82nd Airborne Division who clandestinely directed&#13;
federal material and manpower at Woun~d Knee.&#13;
Meanwhile, on the Pine Ridge I_teservation where&#13;
th Wounded Knee confrontation began, more&#13;
vi~lence has erupted which has ca~d. the&#13;
. American Indian Movement to declare a national&#13;
emergency." team&#13;
Five members of the Wounded Knee defense&#13;
and one defendant have charged ~ey w~e ~ten&#13;
February 26 by the private police of Pine Ridge&#13;
~ibal Chairman Ricard Wilson. Four persons were&#13;
hospitalized. th US Civil&#13;
Both the US Justice Department and e&#13;
. Commission have previously ruled that&#13;
Ri_ghts the last tribal election illegally. It&#13;
Wilson won · Aff · (BIA) . f the Bureau of Indian airs remains or ff"&#13;
to remove Wilson from o ice. however' to ·the beatings the defense com- In response '. . all ding fled motions to dismiss pen&#13;
mittee has i cases because it cannot conduct&#13;
Wounded Kn; reservation without harassment.&#13;
resear_ch on :eries of beatings by Wilson's s&lt;r&#13;
Iromcally, a ,, ·te rotests to local BIA&#13;
called "goon squPina~ dRie~~ige tglala Civil Rights&#13;
r led the e · th&#13;
po ice . t· to ask for assistance from AIM m . e Qrgamza ion&#13;
first place two years ago.&#13;
institutions in two ways: (a)&#13;
va lidation of the accura~ of&#13;
infonnation developed by staff;&#13;
a nd ( b ) development of information&#13;
on certain que ·ans&#13;
raised in the protocol.&#13;
"I would suggest that ) our&#13;
campus reference group can&#13;
direct its energy most eff ctively&#13;
if it awaits information on the&#13;
protocol of the study, which will&#13;
identify the points at hich&#13;
campus input ill be mo t&#13;
urgent. ll at that time the campus&#13;
believes there are que tlons&#13;
concerning consequen hich&#13;
should be included, but hich&#13;
have not been, then th can be&#13;
Related story&#13;
page 6&#13;
identified."&#13;
In response to the r port&#13;
Parkside's Acting Chancellor&#13;
Otto F. Bauer called for th&#13;
establishment of an "Academic&#13;
Planning Council"- on the&#13;
Parkside campus to serve as a&#13;
reference group for the current&#13;
studies and for future tud es.&#13;
The Council ould be organ z.ecl&#13;
and directed by Acting Vt e&#13;
Chancellor Eugene orwood.&#13;
PEA CE . Of cour e w want p&#13;
for both O UR ID 1 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER We"I.day, Mardi 12. 1975&#13;
o PBS Alcohol policy explained&#13;
opPQrIu I 0 ma e a serious&#13;
8y serious contribution&#13;
In regard to your "Point of View"&#13;
coIwnn published in the Wednesday,&#13;
February 19 edition. of&#13;
Ranger dealing with the subject&#13;
01 minors (those under the age of&#13;
IS years) attending events in the&#13;
.""tiVlOes Building when beer is&#13;
bemg sold, I would like to share&#13;
the foUowmg Information and&#13;
thou,;,ts:&#13;
UW.Parkslde, as alb o~&#13;
campuses in "'I)ue '\&#13;
ext ctdlt ..&#13;
WI •• 1 ,. ....&#13;
'4 ''I.af lIle Uai'u. as&#13;
....... ., .. Beantfll Rl,....&#13;
IIrlII Wbc T&#13;
*&#13;
BlIIIe Slid ' IS&#13;
aed ~ Ad·&#13;
auiDiIlard" C8de qlII&amp;e clellrlY&#13;
_ tile 8lIIlject af OIl,.e.tlr oe&#13;
of ,.::r: ill pltlclell ..,we&#13;
rII beveratft are belIl8&#13;
Cf' arid. 'l1le- laws stete&#13;
wblID "'''''''l'''''''d by •&#13;
....,sIfIl may a mlnor&#13;
IIIdI ~&#13;
Cf'e 110 ermpus policy&#13;
pblJoropby of dle Sllldent&#13;
Cf' AuldIIarr Servll.'e$ OfficeS&#13;
CIlJ!opaS .... idI deIermlDt bow&#13;
lind yoomger are to be&#13;
.... ~. but rather l1 IS ll)' Stale&#13;
put all attempt s&#13;
lit Pal bade to..mut such&#13;
~~~~to r activities by&#13;
rge Identifymg marks&#13;
OIl the1r hands lo indicate they&#13;
aid nol served or sold beer.&#13;
H ever. under the conditions of&#13;
a wded buildmg and dim&#13;
we 'Were not always&#13;
SUl:c:e"ful m our attempt to&#13;
lor this, Another problem&#13;
t U10se who were 18 or&#13;
ma es a ailable an&#13;
• cost of crime ---------&#13;
(e en r&#13;
I&#13;
go to&#13;
ad back-&#13;
, Read about&#13;
•'eophyte" contr.&#13;
. • who backed or OPposed&#13;
•. ormal." and connections&#13;
between these people and PAB&#13;
then Dean llearborn As t~&#13;
""'&gt; PAR acts as It does 'Iets&#13;
111 tune go&#13;
In the fall of 1972 a dispute&#13;
came 0\ r comnuttee tin&#13;
a then ex sea g of&#13;
.......... lSting SllJdent Union&#13;
.. ~ncl·. In the cec TllDI W . . haSSle&#13;
ass, then chauman of th&#13;
tude"t Union C . e&#13;
IPSGAlorSuew sl omm.ttee&#13;
D._u. t e eY,then PAB&#13;
.. ~n were bein .&#13;
for the POst Ma' g eonsldered&#13;
,"_ .• non Machon and&#13;
"""n Dearborn. th&#13;
~Uor of SllJde'::'taSSistant&#13;
ad\"UOd lhat S Sel'Vlces&#13;
.~ """ Ue Wesley be&#13;
- • o&gt;UA dtsagteed&#13;
Dd R. ulatioDs . Laws&#13;
(kalh "'-t state&#13;
. ~.. one of th fi&#13;
nts on the e ve&#13;
eomnuttee shaU&#13;
of --- __&#13;
older were purchasing beer for&#13;
those who were not, so the&#13;
problem was still not brought&#13;
under control. It is not a matter of&#13;
whether a student who is 18 can&#13;
better handle his beer than one&#13;
who is only 17. It is a mailer of&#13;
adhering to laws which carry&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
William R. Niebuhr&#13;
Director of Student Life&#13;
be the Slti$tit&#13;
Se&lt;lRangej,&#13;
Iml&#13;
In lhe.De¢;' ANGER it :,;~# the CCC seated&#13;
wlllrWt!stley the PAB president&#13;
~ut voting power. That same&#13;
meetmg saw Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
then ASSIstant Dean of Students&#13;
suggest that $500.00 could be&#13;
shIfted from the Student&#13;
Government allotment H id W dr . er fdea&#13;
as opped. The CCC created&#13;
the Ranger Advisory Board that&#13;
Year. They choose the Ran&#13;
Editor in Chief. gers&#13;
thin the Jan. 17, 1973 RANGER is&#13;
e story' "PSG : A, PAB skirmish&#13;
Over Union board min ,,' . • programW&#13;
g. Some of It goes "Tom&#13;
elSSstaled he felt that the SUC&#13;
Was a b tt e er vehicle for programmi PAB H ng events than the&#13;
. e also 'stated "We don't&#13;
want to I ' rep ace anYbody" Hi remarks . . s&#13;
ti ~ere lnterrupted from&#13;
me to time b .&#13;
refutat" Y questIons and&#13;
Ion fromm the P AB&#13;
members and ad ..&#13;
personnel" La rnInlstrative . leronS W says "PAR d ue esley&#13;
to br'· . oesn't ask if its OK&#13;
109 In Ed tt.mc Its en Stone for a&#13;
com~ 'tt the decision of the&#13;
• ee and th ministration ha e ads&#13;
never vetoed&#13;
GE nesday,&#13;
or&#13;
rch 12, 1975&#13;
Alcohol policy explained- -------..._&#13;
older were purchasing beer for toward campus&#13;
In regard to your ··P?int of View"&#13;
umn published m the Wedy,&#13;
February 19 edition_ of&#13;
Ran er ahn with the subJect&#13;
minors (those under the age of&#13;
18 attending events in the&#13;
u,ities Building when beer is&#13;
Jd I uld like to share&#13;
folio ·og information and&#13;
those who were not, so the approximatelv Progr&#13;
roblem was still not brought $1.50 of that· a~~~nt SI&#13;
~der control. It is not a matter of supports those aciti .&#13;
whether a student who is 18 can beer or other alcoh Vlties&#13;
better handle his beer than one '.11"e sold. Admittedi°~ beiwho&#13;
is only 17. It is a matter of mclude all of th }.&#13;
adhering to laws which carry ~-:ain number o~ ~ f&#13;
with them serious consequences I s, but there are 5&#13;
if not followed. If, for example, a other programs such&#13;
®Uld:· · Pm}sibW ·'·be jeopardized uncomfortable position&#13;
fr&lt;im ·such an occurrence . law to accommodat&#13;
Comparing the Activities to a ttend beer e\'ents&#13;
Building to a restaurant or a do not in any way pro&#13;
bowling alley makes no sense at support through pa~&#13;
all, as it is neither. If a label had segregated fees. As r&#13;
to be placed on the building for who are actually 17 all&#13;
definition purposes, it would have most of the year, I am ai&#13;
to be called a pub or a beer bar will just have to watt&#13;
and, therefore, cannot enjoy the legal age as I and mar:,&#13;
exceptions that are made for had to until we were 2&#13;
such establishments.&#13;
In regard to the $4.50 per&#13;
semester that each student pays&#13;
through his segr egated fee&#13;
be th Student Uni~n&#13;
,se Ranger- pf Wed.w, 19i2) i/,j •i,C/&#13;
In Uie Pee 13! 1Wi2RANGER it&#13;
is reported tfa.ff the CCC seated&#13;
~e Westley the PAB president&#13;
~ ~ut voting power. That same&#13;
meetmg saw J ewel Echelbarger&#13;
then Assistant Dean of Studen~&#13;
s~gest that $500.00 could be&#13;
shifted from the Student&#13;
Government allotment. Her idea&#13;
was dropped . The CCC crea ted&#13;
the Ranger Advisory Boa rd that&#13;
year· They choose th Ran Editor in Chief. e gers&#13;
In the Jan. 17, 1973 RANGER. the story · "PS is '. GA, PAB skirmish&#13;
over union board ming ,, So . , program- W . . me of it goes "Tom&#13;
e1ss stated he felt that the sue was a b tt e er ve hicle for progra · PAB mmmg events than the&#13;
. He also stated "We don't want to l • rep ace anybody ,, H" remarks . · 1s time to ti~ere interrupted from me by q t· refutat" ues ions and memb ion fro mm the P AB e rs and ad .. personnel ,, La mm1strative&#13;
says " PAB d ter on Sue Wesley&#13;
to br' · . oesn't ask if its OK&#13;
mg tn Ed&#13;
dJilCt!. lts the en ~~ne for a comm·tt dec1s1on of the I ee and th mirustration e ad- has never vetoed&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
William R. Niebuhr&#13;
Director of Student Lu&#13;
.. any yet .. And later&#13;
change, "Weiss a ·ed&#13;
wasn't granted the&#13;
dule events. Dearborn&#13;
" Because PAB 1&#13;
r epresentative, more&#13;
and doing a better job&#13;
and J oe Harris."' HarrtS&#13;
then PSGA vice-preside::&#13;
A Feb. 21 , !973 IC&#13;
editorial congradulta&#13;
members of the a•&#13;
Allocation Committee fer&#13;
other things, propos~&#13;
Lecture and Fine Art5&#13;
mittee be phased out b)&#13;
75 academic year and 1&#13;
be taken o,·er by 1hr Pl&#13;
eluded on that comrn1tt&#13;
Marion Mochon, SUS&amp;ll&#13;
and William • ·,ebu!lr,&#13;
Coordinator of Student U:&#13;
chairman of the COf1Ulll1&#13;
This and other ar&#13;
research will go a 1&#13;
clarifying why the ,&#13;
troubles. The adrrurustr•&#13;
its student lackeys hB'&#13;
period of time conct&#13;
power in Universil)&#13;
mittees and this [n{lu&#13;
touched the RANGER, ~&#13;
PAB, and even the I'S(,&#13;
p av1d • &#13;
Jlr example, the ride of Emily Geiger may&#13;
y be under consideration for a television&#13;
tary. It offers all the ingredients of a&#13;
hit, i.e., sex. conflict, and a historical&#13;
cance that will allow a network to advertise it&#13;
.. educationalprogram.&#13;
1M! story of this "Carolina" woman's perilous&#13;
atrikesa samiliar note when one combines the&#13;
o! Paul Revere with the untimely end of&#13;
"master Nathan Hale. Be that as it may, the&#13;
-poem, tells of an important message that had&#13;
• carried. to lithe Carolina Gamecock," General&#13;
Sumpter.A call was made for a volunteer ...&#13;
There was a sudden silence,&#13;
Butnot a man replied;&#13;
Theyknew too well of the peril&#13;
Of onewho dared that ride.&#13;
Outspokethen Emily Geiger&#13;
Witha rich flush on her cheek-&#13;
"Give me the message to be sent;&#13;
I amthe one you seek.&#13;
For I am a Southern woman;&#13;
andI'd rather do and dare&#13;
Thansit by a lonely fireside,&#13;
Myheart gnawed through with care.&#13;
".Geiger made that ride, but as fate would have&#13;
!be Wascaptured by the Tories and locked in a&#13;
ouse while the men sought a woman to&#13;
her. Fortunately she was given the time&#13;
\htehaplessNathan Hale lacked: Where he was&#13;
IVlththe evidence ...&#13;
~ lime did she lose in bewailing;&#13;
the bolt creaked in the lock,&#13;
~e ""ickly drew the precious note&#13;
at was hidden in her frock.&#13;
Wednesday. Milrch 12. 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
And sbe read it through&#13;
with burried care •&#13;
Th ' en ate It, piece by piece,&#13;
And calmly sat ber down to wait&#13;
TIll time should bring release.&#13;
A WOman was found to search Emil .&#13;
there was no evidence of her 1Il1SS1' .y 8IlshdSIDCe&#13;
released to lin on, e was con ue her journey to General Sumpter.&#13;
The poem concludes "Long sball th B'tish rue that h' e n&#13;
marc , and Emily Geiger's Ride"&#13;
Then there is the story of Dame Batherwlck T'&#13;
her may go the credit for the first British . . 0&#13;
of the war. According to Dr. Pratt, Ms a:=,:&#13;
was. working in the fields outside Concord on that&#13;
fateful da~, when the "shot heard around the world&#13;
was fired. She heard shopting and shouting about&#13;
war and th.en saw British soldiers fleeing Concord in&#13;
her direction.&#13;
"In an' t t" I ~ an, Dr. Pratt writes, "her quick&#13;
woman S Wit took in the whole situation. Drawing&#13;
herself p~oudly up (musket in hand) her eyes&#13;
flashing fICe she cired "Halt! As ye value life, advance&#13;
ye not another step."&#13;
Continuing the story in poem ...&#13;
"Ye are my prisioners, sirs!&#13;
March on! she said;&#13;
Then dropped her plants and&#13;
pointing out to them the way.&#13;
She drove them quickly on,&#13;
as she had oft abead&#13;
Driven the kine across the fields,&#13;
at sel of day;&#13;
And they, "King George's Own,"&#13;
without a word obeyed.&#13;
In Ms. Pratt's work, most of the aforementioned&#13;
men and many others receive their due. Howevert&#13;
there are many enlightening stories on the con·&#13;
tributions and achievements of women and girls.&#13;
Although the historical accuracy of many is dif·&#13;
ficult, if not impossible, to prove, the spirit and&#13;
intention of Ms. Pratt should he recognized and&#13;
applauded. For, regardless of their veracity, these&#13;
stories have their roots in our American heritage&#13;
and will certainly be the cause of much research&#13;
during the next two years.&#13;
One final lady of note was Nancy Hart who was&#13;
"known throughout the South in RevolutIOnary&#13;
times as "the giantess" (she stood over SlX feet tall)&#13;
and the "heroine of Georgia."&#13;
111 "heroinic" deeds of this woman alone eer·&#13;
tainl; merit a go minute special. Suffice-to.say: she&#13;
took several prisoners and smgle.handedly saved a&#13;
fort occupied only with women and children from&#13;
the British skirmishers. .&#13;
What became of Nancy Hart? Followmg the war&#13;
ttl rs were moving to GeorgIa so she fled to&#13;
many se e "So many&#13;
the wilderness of Kentucky because,&#13;
neighbors leave me no room to brea~.l1 We ~an&#13;
anI wonder if she crossed paths Wl~ aoo er&#13;
see~ing "elbow room" in Kentucky. - Darnel Boone.&#13;
As we approach our bicentenmal W1~ a n~w&#13;
. history these books and theICstoCles&#13;
perspectIve on . from the writers of television&#13;
will bring a prermum allk The stories of these&#13;
fiS and historians e.&#13;
progra t he told for, as Dr. Pratt wrote 85 years&#13;
wom~,~~~~s a mean cowardly maD who would say&#13;
ago, ' women'didn't go forth in battle array&#13;
,that ~ca':;:~n't do their half in saving our country&#13;
that ey ."&#13;
from the British soldiers.&#13;
ptr.l1ptrttut.6&#13;
,.mtrican ~trstnrtl&#13;
byGordon C. Mcu;an&#13;
~ charge that history is' biased&#13;
b and large, the recorders of human&#13;
, y..... n WASp·MCPs may well have been 111ft ""_. . thepast. However, as we approach our&#13;
~ many historians and writers of&#13;
'magazine, and television stories are&#13;
athistorY with a new perspective. All are&#13;
for "new" and unusual events and&#13;
Is of the Revolutionary period that&#13;
be of interest totoday's readers and viewers.&#13;
difficultassignment. -&#13;
• studentof history is already familiar with&#13;
c deeds of men like George Washington,&#13;
Franklin, Horatio Gates and the men who&#13;
the Declaration of Independence. More&#13;
in this era of ethnic pride, the deeds of the&#13;
'Baron von Steuban, the Polish Casimir&#13;
, the Jewish Haym Salomon, and the black&#13;
IAttucks have been receiving more and&#13;
attention.&#13;
whalof the distaff side of the Revolution.&#13;
national attention on the Equal Rights&#13;
t and related activities, certainly some&#13;
of the Revolution can be acclaimed.&#13;
. wouldappear to have been the objective of&#13;
.. Prall, M.D. who begins a chapter in her&#13;
History Stories series with the statement&#13;
"PeoPlewho write histories always tell how&#13;
and boldand patriotic the men and boys are;&#13;
~ seldomdo they think it worth while to tell&#13;
bravedeeds of women and girls. Now, I don't&#13;
Ibis is very' fair ...&#13;
1Ilimelyas this philosophy would appear, the&#13;
thing about this series is that it was&#13;
by the Educational Publishing Company&#13;
the same year that four states entered the&#13;
andthe Shennan Antitrust Act was passed-&#13;
---Brief news&#13;
Abortion&#13;
_(CPS) . An estimated 900.000&#13;
legal abortions wer.e perfonned&#13;
, 1974 making II the most&#13;
~~eque~tly performed legal&#13;
. I procedure after the&#13;
surg1ca&#13;
tonsillectomy.&#13;
The report came in a stndy of&#13;
the effects of the Supreme Courl&#13;
decision on abortion publiShed ~&#13;
the January-February iSSue.&#13;
'1 Planning Perspective.&#13;
F~~ y'.&amp;7.&lt;', THE YEAR&#13;
BEFORE THE supreme Court&#13;
tr k down state laws that&#13;
S UC. ted the operation, there&#13;
restnc .&#13;
600000 legal abortions.&#13;
were •&#13;
~AY, March 7' MUSIC ENSEMBLE: Northweste~n Univers~ty&#13;
.-"""Por K l' co-&lt;lICectors.7.30 IJn. . ary, Stephen Syverud &amp; William ar Ins d&#13;
~ \he111 the Communication Arts Theater. Admission is free an open&#13;
Public.&#13;
Q)FFEE H 'd the Frost Tops, in&#13;
\Stud • OUSE: Featuring King Kenosha an&#13;
entActivities Bldg. From 3:30 to 5: 30 p.m.&#13;
~AY lIIarcb 9 CHI.RHO CENTER' Mass at 11:15a.m. , d ....lI8m . . . II conductor an&#13;
~ B E ORCHESTRA: Featuring Da",d Liltr~ Arts Thealer at&#13;
:IIIp.II1edf~rd, harpsichord, in the CommuDlcatlO&#13;
.AdmiSSionis free and open to the pubbc.&#13;
----...1Brief new&#13;
AI this time, the Search and Screen Committee wiIheI to emphuiIie&#13;
that it is actively seeking nomInalions m Indi~ ",..U!!ed lor tile&#13;
post of Chance11or. PIeaae forward the names of ncminees, lDplber&#13;
with whatever background information lDlly be avlli1llble to you, to:&#13;
PARKSIDE SEARCH AND SCREEN COMMITfEE&#13;
.10m Campbell, O&gt;airman&#13;
P.O. Box 900&#13;
Kenooha, WI 53140&#13;
The Committee re&lt;JIesIs that nominallons be submllIed u -.. u&#13;
possible. The dead1ine for submialll ... is Aprillli,lm.&#13;
P.A.B. EVENTS&#13;
WEDNESDAY. MARCM 12 WHIT.SKILU. ~ ~fttt!''' tol'lt, ft'tu.ic by ()4c:1Il&#13;
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FREE ••ntt-leUniOtl.' J01vS JOom o...ow-. .. ~ eorn.Ofloc-t'l&#13;
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TUESOAY, MARC.HU: FILM I~r ..,....._., "Cor"*, .fttII .. ~,. " ]I. 1ft ~&#13;
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o RDUMDTaF lET A.fARE&#13;
01 MCHIS DElUXE LOBCIS&#13;
o Croud Tmslers&#13;
oTips , Tam&#13;
F"or appllcalion or information&#13;
('ontaCl&#13;
C~\IF'I'STR \\ELIE,n:R&#13;
• LU D·197 Call: S53·m.&#13;
• 1_ III letAnan&#13;
• 1 Iljpts lMtilll&#13;
• GI1II. IrllSl.s&#13;
• r,s l lues&#13;
For application or mformation&#13;
Contact.&#13;
(",\)lPl'S TRA\"ELCE. 'TER&#13;
• LLCD·197 Call: ,SJ·22!Oj&#13;
itU1 ptrsptrtiuts Wednesday, March 12, 197S THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
,American 4trstnru&#13;
by Gordon C. McLean&#13;
· ular charge that history is biased&#13;
~ pO~ and large, the recorders of human&#13;
~· y1&gt;een WASP-MCPs may well have been&#13;
~have&#13;
,..- . the past. However, as we approach our&#13;
_,c,se ~al, many historians -~d wri~rs of&#13;
~- magazine, and telev1s1on stories are&#13;
~~ bistorY with a new perspective. All are&#13;
~ for "new" and unusual events and&#13;
~ents of the Revolutionary period that&#13;
--~ of interest to, today's readers and viewers.&#13;
~ difficult assignment. ·&#13;
ts• student of history is already familiar with&#13;
£¥e%ic deeds of men like George Washington,&#13;
~aminFranldin, Horatio Gates and the men who&#13;
1111,...the Declaration of Independence. More&#13;
~ in this era of ethnic pride, the deeds of the&#13;
y, Baron von Steuban, the Polish Casimir&#13;
:: the Jewish Haym Salomon, and the black&#13;
•' Att~cks hav.e been receiving more and&#13;
,ieattenuon.&#13;
ai~ what of the distaff side of the Revolution.&#13;
tlb national attention on the Equal Rights&#13;
ID!erxlment and related activities, certainly some&#13;
l!IIJUle5 of the Revolution can be acclaimed.&#13;
tllis would appear to have been the objective of&#13;
lfl L. Pratt, M.D. who begins a chapter in her&#13;
•ncan History Stories series with the statement&#13;
Ill "People who write histories always tell how&#13;
1nve and bold and pa trio tic the men and boys are;&#13;
111very seldom do they think it worth while to tell&#13;
ithebrave deeds of women and girls. Now, I don't&#13;
1iJi this is very fair ...&#13;
A.I timely as this philosophy would appear, the&#13;
JiereSting thing about this series is that it was&#13;
flblished by the Educational Publishing Company&#13;
1Boston the same year that four states entered the&#13;
lbon and the Sherman Antitrust Act was passed111.&#13;
&#13;
For example, the ride of Emily Geiger may&#13;
ieady be under consideration for a television&#13;
mentary. It offers all the ingredients of a&#13;
~ hit, i.e., sex. conflict, and a historical&#13;
iWtificance that will allow a network to advertise it&#13;
• an educational program.&#13;
The story of this "Carolina" woman's perilous&#13;
mestrikes a samiliar note when one combines the&#13;
me of Paul Revere with the untimely end of&#13;
thoolrnaster Nathan Hale. Be that as it may, the&#13;
tiry-poem, tells of an important message that had&#13;
lobe carried to "the Carolina Gamecock," General&#13;
lliomas Sumpter. A call was made for a volunteer ...&#13;
There was a sudden silence,&#13;
But not a man replied;&#13;
They knew too well of the peril&#13;
Of one who dared that ride.&#13;
Outspoke then Emily Geiger&#13;
With a rich flush on her cheek-&#13;
"Give me the message to be sent;&#13;
1 am the one you seek.&#13;
For I am a Southern woman;&#13;
and I'd rather do and dare&#13;
Than sit by a lonely fireside,&#13;
My heart gnawed through with care.&#13;
, Ms. Geiger made that ride but as fate would have ., sh ' . e was captw-ed by the Tories and locked m a&#13;
~dhouse while the men sought a woman to&#13;
:ch her. Fortunately, she was given the time&#13;
ta lhe h~pless Nathan Hale lacked: Where he was&#13;
light with the evidence ...&#13;
No time did she lose in bewailing;&#13;
As the bolt creaked in the lock,&#13;
~e WUickly drew the precious note&#13;
hat Was hidden in her frock.&#13;
'-----Brief newsAnd_&#13;
she read it through&#13;
with hurried care&#13;
Then ate it, piece b~ piece,&#13;
And calmly sat her down to wait&#13;
Till time should bring release.&#13;
A woman wa~ found to search Emil and . there was no evidence of her . . Y smce&#13;
released to continue her journey =n~::i;u:as&#13;
ter. The poem concludes "Long shall the B _tishP- rue that m h ' . n arc ' and Emily Geiger's Ride "&#13;
Then there is the story of Dame Batherwick T.&#13;
her may go the credit for the first British priso~er~&#13;
of the wai:, A~cording to Dr. Pratt, Ms Batherwich&#13;
was_ working m the fields outside Concord on that&#13;
fatef~ day when the "shot heard around the world&#13;
was fired." She heard shooting and shouting about&#13;
war ~d th_en saw British soldiers fleeing Concord in&#13;
her direction.&#13;
"In an instant," Dr. Pratt writes "ber quick&#13;
woman's wit took in the whole situation. Drawing&#13;
hers~lf P:oudly up (musket in hand) her eyes&#13;
flashing fire she cired "Halt! As ye value life, advance&#13;
ye not another step."&#13;
Continuing the story in poem ...&#13;
"Ye are my prisioners, sirs!&#13;
March on! she said;&#13;
Then dropped her plants and&#13;
pointing out to them the way.&#13;
She drove them quickly on,&#13;
as she had oft ahead&#13;
Driven the kine across the fields,&#13;
at set of day;&#13;
And they, "King George's Own,"&#13;
without a word obeyed.&#13;
In Ms. Pratt's work, most of the aforementioned&#13;
men and many others receive their due. Ho ever,&#13;
there are many enlightening stories on the contributions&#13;
and achievements of women and girls.&#13;
Although the historical accuracy of many is dif.&#13;
ficult, if not impossible, to prove, the spirit and&#13;
intention of Ms. Pratt should be recognized and&#13;
applauded. For, regardless of their veracity, these&#13;
stories have their roots in our American heritage&#13;
and will certainly be the cause of much research&#13;
during the next two years.&#13;
One final lady of note was Nancy Hart w~ was&#13;
"known throughout the South in Revolut1onar ·&#13;
times as ''the giantess'' ( she stood over six feet tall)&#13;
and the "heroine of Georgia."&#13;
The "heroinic" deeds of this won:an alon certainly&#13;
merit a 90 minute spe~ial. Suffice-to-say: she&#13;
took several prisoners and smgle-handed!y sa,;ed a&#13;
fort occupied only with women and children from&#13;
the British skirmishers. _ What became of Nancy Hart? Fol~owmg the war&#13;
many settlers were moving to Georgia so-~ fl~~~ the wilderness of Kentucky because, .~. m )&#13;
neighbors leave me no room to brea~. We ~an&#13;
onl wonder if she crossed paths w1~ ano er&#13;
Yk·ng "elbow room" in Kentucky - Daruel Boone. see 1 ·a1 'th a new As we approach our bicentenm w1 - -&#13;
. history these books and thel.I' stories&#13;
~rspe_ctive o~emium from the writers of television&#13;
will brmg a P . . alik The stories of these ro ams and historians e. P gr t be told for, as Dr. Pratt \\Tote 85 years&#13;
wom~,n ~~~s a mean, cowardly man who would say&#13;
ago, O, didn't go forth in battle array&#13;
.that ~cai:::t:~:t~eir half in saving our country&#13;
that ey di ,, from the British sol ers.&#13;
Abortion&#13;
~~lelDAY, March 7MUSIC ENSEMBLE: Northwestei:n Univer7s~io&#13;
. (CPS) . An estimated 900.000&#13;
legal abortions wei:e performed&#13;
. 1974 making it the most&#13;
~~eque~tly performed legal . 1 procedure after the surg1ca&#13;
---Brief newca--&#13;
At this tim , the&#13;
that it is acti ·ely in n&#13;
post of Chancellor. Pl f ard&#13;
with hate ·er background infonna ·&#13;
PARKSIDE SEARCH •o&#13;
John Campbell, Cllalrman&#13;
P.O. Box 900&#13;
Keno.5ha, WI 53140&#13;
RE&#13;
a,u, .... , ...... on&#13;
P.A.B, 'E\'&#13;
Adm ion SI, Par&#13;
FREE,&#13;
MARCH JI - APR 6&#13;
ONLY s274 CO PLETE&#13;
• Ro d T · Jet Airfare&#13;
CAT ""' pm, A&#13;
adff1ln~11n II&#13;
em&#13;
ARCH 27-APRIL 4&#13;
0 LY 369 CO PLETE&#13;
I CLUDES:&#13;
rnporar St . . K i·ns co-directors. . PJ!l · Y, ephen Syverud &amp; Wilham ari . ci&#13;
to th Ill the Communication Arts Theater. Admission is free an open&#13;
e PUblic.&#13;
tonsillectomy· The report came in a study of •&#13;
the effects of the Supren:e Coll:t&#13;
decision on abortion pub~ed ~ the January-February 1SSue_ o&#13;
• 1 Ni ts L dg' g&#13;
• Gro Tr sfers&#13;
• ROU D TR JET Al f ARE&#13;
• 1 161\TS DELUXE l0D6 6&#13;
•Gro d Trans ers&#13;
C01i'FEE H d the Frost Tops, in lhestu • OUSE: Featuring King Kenosha an&#13;
dent Activities Bldg. From 3: 30 to 5: 30 p.m.&#13;
~~AYMarch9CHI-RHOCENTER: Mass at 1l:l5a.md tor and&#13;
trances ~IDE ORCHESTRA: Featuring David _Lltt~ell~~~ T~:ater at&#13;
l:~P.rn eclfo_rd, harpsichord, in the eommun~cation&#13;
· Adnussion is free and open to the public.&#13;
·1 Planning Perspective.&#13;
Fanu y THE YEAR IN is&amp;1s14,&#13;
BEFORE THE Supreme Court&#13;
k down state laws that&#13;
struc . th&#13;
trl·cted the operation, ere res . 600 000 legal abortions. were ,&#13;
• r s &amp; Taxes&#13;
For application or mf mation&#13;
Contact·&#13;
c.u1n .- R \ \'EL E. 'TER&#13;
• Tips &amp; Taxes&#13;
For pphc t1 n r mf rm 11&#13;
nt t ·&#13;
R ER&#13;
11 :553 ~ &#13;
4 THE PARK51DE RANGER Wednesday. Mardi 12. lt75&#13;
ape laws: archaic values and myths&#13;
Anti-Rape Qland1. att.emPted to&#13;
dr-my1tlI)' rape. "'lbere is DO&#13;
~ n.pe vicum-.nyboolY&#13;
.,.. be l'lIP"d. More oft8l&#13;
IIlm not. lbe rapist - y.....&#13;
bas probably studied your&#13;
mo emOlllJl and planDed bis&#13;
.. tacit. It .... baAJeD anytimO. mypIace". ADtbcmy expI.tned.&#13;
As lor !be rapist 1IlmseIf. be is&#13;
~ not lbe ~ penert&#13;
- otenoIypeS propoot. ~&#13;
CCI"IIiIII CO .. ,c" ,'C!':al test&#13;
resullJ1. .bleb are etted by&#13;
AJnit ill Pa_ ..&#13;
..-- Raft (lJaIftnlty 01&#13;
0lIcac0 ~ I. 0IlIy 3 perceot 01&#13;
IIIJ """ "'''''.s could be caJIed I*YdloCle. kw. dID&amp; to stallslics&#13;
pe.. ed by !be WIIIIwlglOn D.C.&#13;
Rape CriIb Ceat.er:&#13;
10 percent of rapes are pial&gt;-&#13;
ned.&#13;
50 pen:ent of rapes are committed&#13;
in the borne·&#13;
50 pen:ent 01 rapes are committed&#13;
by an assaiJant )mow to&#13;
tile victim. lwI&gt;-IhiJ'd5 of convicted rapists&#13;
are married and have regular&#13;
""". According to Anthony. "One of&#13;
tile main ~s we have to do is&#13;
raise awareness. AI! the recent&#13;
media attention bas brought&#13;
home !be fact that the woman is&#13;
not guilty-the rapist is."&#13;
Along with theis awakened&#13;
awareness have come demands&#13;
for cbanges in the statutory&#13;
treatment of rape. As a member&#13;
of the WiscOnsin Task Force on&#13;
Rape. Ullchny is working toward&#13;
the passage of Senate Bill 233.&#13;
'I1ris bill, which is currenUy&#13;
under study by the Wisconsin&#13;
State Judiciary and Comsuiner&#13;
Affairs Committee, would&#13;
remove rape from its present&#13;
.category of "crimes against life&#13;
fCC asles for new 'aws&#13;
on obscenity&#13;
(cps) -'!be Federal eommunicationsCommission (FCC) has asked&#13;
Congress to pass new laws clearly giving it the authority to forbid&#13;
"depktion of obscene or indecent material" on television, and to&#13;
atend its authority to include cable television.&#13;
'!be FCC said this was needed to protect children from "bannful&#13;
material" such as sex and violence in evening programming.&#13;
At the same lime. tile FCC said that self...egulation by the broadcast&#13;
Industry was preferable to rigid federal standards and praised the&#13;
ne~ks for agreeing to keep such material from being broadcast&#13;
during the first hour of prime-lime programming.&#13;
.It .also said it believes parents should bave the primary responSlllility&#13;
for controlling what their children view on TV.&#13;
"This traditional and revered principle ... has been adversely aff~ted&#13;
by the corrosive processes of technological and social changes.&#13;
• everthe1ess, we believe that it (power to forbid certain programnungl&#13;
deserves continuing affirmation."&#13;
'!be FCC ackno~ledged that regulatory action in television&#13;
::gramnung dec~ons, could risk improper governmental in- .w::: III subjeCtive programming decisions, freeze present&#13;
and discourage creative development in television.&#13;
2&#13;
Training Sale&#13;
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IN STOCK&#13;
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NOWI&#13;
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TUESDA!,&#13;
LADIES'&#13;
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KENOSHA, WISCONSIN A GLASS&#13;
A Different&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
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and Trust Co~pany of Racine&#13;
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CancerII'"&#13;
(CPS) • Sclentilll II&#13;
National Cancer bIIlIIt&#13;
isolated for the 8nl1la'&#13;
closely associated wtIb III1IlII&#13;
III humans.&#13;
According to the ....&#13;
discovery may belp lIID",&#13;
new approaches II ....&#13;
diagnosis and .....&#13;
leukemia and olber _&#13;
Intensive Ulsls" fa&#13;
isolated virus to be eftIJ"&#13;
to another virus kDoIIIl II_&#13;
some types of caooer• .,.&#13;
The scientists ....... II&#13;
. however, that thecllaMJlI.&#13;
way means thaI .- II&#13;
contagious disease, but_&#13;
probably caused by, ....&#13;
factors, includingw.t....&#13;
work together to ca. -&#13;
------&#13;
I I&#13;
, I&#13;
I I ,...=0&#13;
1/lIi&#13;
==CJ&#13;
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lin&#13;
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OF BOOKS II_&#13;
• •&#13;
PAPER BACKSfII&#13;
THE DISCRIIIA1J&#13;
RUDEl&#13;
•&#13;
PROMPT sl'ECII&#13;
ORDER SE.-&#13;
BRoWSERS_&#13;
AtCMtlAM..,.tt. JJ'&#13;
K-Ji&amp;~&#13;
GI4-59U,9';&#13;
65A-3bS"&#13;
GE&#13;
¼&#13;
s: archaic values and myths&#13;
ay, rch 12, 1975&#13;
oc&#13;
ned. 50 percent of rapes are committed&#13;
in the home. SO percent of rapes are committed&#13;
by an as,sailant know to&#13;
the ~&#13;
\ictim. of convicted rapists&#13;
are married and have regular&#13;
AccOrding to Anthony, "One of&#13;
the main things we have to do is&#13;
raise awareness. All the recent&#13;
media attention has brought&#13;
home the fact that the woman is&#13;
not guilty-the rapist is."&#13;
Along with theis awakened&#13;
awareness have come demands&#13;
for changes in the statutory&#13;
treatment of rape. As a member&#13;
of the Wisconsin Task Force on&#13;
Rape, UlichnY is working toward&#13;
the passage of Senate Bill 233.&#13;
This bill, which is currently&#13;
under study by the Wisconsin&#13;
State Judiciary and Comsuiner&#13;
Affairs Committee, would&#13;
remove rape from its present&#13;
category of "crimes against life&#13;
,FCC aslcs for new laws&#13;
on obscenity&#13;
) -The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has asked&#13;
rror,nr&lt;&gt;= to ~ n laws clearly giving it the authority to forbid&#13;
• piction of obscene or indecent material" on television, and to&#13;
its uthority to include cable television.&#13;
Th FCC said this was needed to protect children from "harmful&#13;
mat · I'' ch as sex and violence in evening programming.&#13;
At th same time, the FCC said that self-regulation by the broadcast&#13;
ind • was p-eferable to rigid federal standards and praised the&#13;
for agreeing to keep such material from being broadcast&#13;
th first hour of prime-time programming.&#13;
It . . said it ~eves par~nts ~ould have the primary respontilit&#13;
for controlling what thei.r children view on TV.&#13;
'1llis tradit onal _and revered principle ... has been adversely afr.&#13;
ted by th corrost~e proc~ of technological and social changes.&#13;
l , e believe that 1t (power to forbid certain program-&#13;
) · continuing affirmation."&#13;
The FCC a . ~ledged that regulatory action in television&#13;
t...-J_amrru .. ., ~ dee~~· could risk improper governmental in- C: m ~bJective programming decisions, freeze present&#13;
a and discourage creative development in television.&#13;
"THE OLD LAIR IS BACK WITH A NEW FACE"&#13;
OPEN AT 3:00 P.M.&#13;
TUESDAY,&#13;
LADIES'&#13;
WINE&#13;
254&#13;
A GLASS&#13;
~~, A Different&#13;
}J type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
220-67 ~ED'S ROLLER RINK&#13;
· Ph. 652-8198 K enosha&#13;
Mott&#13;
Amtncen&#13;
Cancer linked&#13;
(CPS) • Scientists 1,&#13;
~ational Cancer lnstilll&#13;
isolated for the first time 1&#13;
closely associated with&#13;
in humans.&#13;
According to the sci&#13;
discovery may help them&#13;
new approaches to de&#13;
diagnosis and treatm&#13;
leukemia and other canan&#13;
Intensive tests show the&#13;
isolated virus t.o be every&#13;
to another virus known ID&#13;
some types of cancer In&#13;
The scientists hastened&#13;
however, that the disrorel;&#13;
way means that cancer&#13;
contagious disease, but ra&#13;
probably caused by a&#13;
factors, including viruses,&#13;
work together t.o call5e&#13;
-------· I&#13;
I&#13;
I \&#13;
= 1! 1&#13;
=n_J&#13;
-· --......... ---~~ WIDEST SELECT!&#13;
Of BOOKS IN TO&#13;
• PAPER BACKS fO&#13;
THE OISCRIMINATI&#13;
READER&#13;
• PROMPT SPECI&#13;
ORDER SERYIC(&#13;
BROWSERS~&#13;
A\c.-lM.Mwdl~&#13;
~ !{~&#13;
Gl4-59ti-9; 3 2- i;gt·li&#13;
65A·3bc;2--&#13;
III!! ---.:- i-. ____ .. &#13;
Wednesday, Milrch 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Moral: try a llttle IeDdnn&#13;
wlute rat bwnbb.ng, stumbling,&#13;
crashing into wall after wall anes- all,&#13;
lnPPl/lg through gateways,&#13;
bloodily cormng to the end&#13;
of the labr}llth.&#13;
meanwhile, the soent t&#13;
coldly elalTUmngwlule rat&#13;
movements. observing&#13;
without tenderness or feelinll.&#13;
confused ramblings&#13;
of blood-necked rat,&#13;
you,who profess to caretoo much.&#13;
experimenting, observing.&#13;
HYPOTHESIS: TIiAT A WO.lA.:·&#13;
WOULD RELIEVE YOU FRO.l YOUR&#13;
JLL.FITTED MONIED .lARRIAGE.&#13;
DATA: SUBJECf OF EXPERIMENT&#13;
TRIES TO DIE. LITERALLY SY'lBOUCALl.Y,&#13;
REPEATEDLY; EXPERIME TOR CAl . LY&#13;
OBJEcrIVELY OBSERVE.&#13;
CO/;CLUSIO, : HYPOTHESIS I. 'CORRECf&#13;
Moral: try a litUe tenderness.&#13;
..I.b.&#13;
As achild, Keith often dreamed of himself as a boy made of wood, much like&#13;
muchLike .PmocchlO. He also dreamed of a mysterious, magical Pierrot clown&#13;
Oneday, III hIS home town of Los Angeles, he saw a man in a store window who&#13;
stoodand moved as if he were a mechanical man. Keith watched for hour s with&#13;
profoundfascination.&#13;
As he grew older, he studied and worked as an actor. He practiced and observed&#13;
thedance, and even toured for. a little while with a small circus as a clown.He&#13;
discoveredthat the secret of good theatre was magic, and the key was silence.&#13;
KeithBerger sought to recreate what he had envisioned as a child. He did just&#13;
thatby painstakingly teaching himself a style of silent performing, referred to&#13;
asthe art of Mjrne ,&#13;
If the success of his art can be measured in the response of his audience, then,&#13;
KeithBerger has succeeded completely,' Today, you can see the vehicle of all&#13;
art-the body- used to the .point of lyrical genius and sensitivity.&#13;
TODAY, you can experience KEITH BERGER.&#13;
'*' Weory&#13;
experience (life)&#13;
cannot be squeezed,&#13;
slrunk,&#13;
pushed into a symmelncal&#13;
square,&#13;
crammed into a jar&#13;
like herring;&#13;
it must be&#13;
cherished.&#13;
held in the hand&#13;
like a porelain sparrow&#13;
with a tirJle.broken wmg.&#13;
.J.b.&#13;
ee •• ,,,&#13;
ee ,IIMI=_ •&#13;
we&#13;
• I'm weory&#13;
tolk to me,&#13;
touch me,&#13;
understond my lOll&#13;
of the sun todoy--&#13;
until tomorrow&#13;
when the sIn&#13;
comes ogoin • h&#13;
Wit&#13;
LAST LETTER TO A RADICAL WOMAN&#13;
Radical woman&#13;
"flowers to the rebels failedl&#13;
'&#13;
were Sacco {;Vanzetti'S&#13;
last gasping dream.&#13;
They never forgot&#13;
the accident of their origins J&#13;
just as you won't forgive&#13;
the accident of USo&#13;
Your harsh words how unlfke&#13;
the gentler world&#13;
transcending gender,&#13;
that was their.&#13;
universal communication.&#13;
Radical woman,&#13;
with your right- on pose&#13;
and your put-on&#13;
Sappho smile,&#13;
.vour crotch politics&#13;
may get you to Washington---&#13;
but I never wore&#13;
com bat boots&#13;
for anyone.&#13;
Radical woman,&#13;
I won't. fight for slJoils&#13;
in a hitcb -goddew system.&#13;
The tail of -a tige~&#13;
just isn't my&#13;
kind of ride, '&#13;
and 1 can't&#13;
love alone, anymore.&#13;
MIck Ande.rsen&#13;
Ille--- Miclloel&#13;
Me"er&#13;
Humanities&#13;
,&#13;
Wednesday, March 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
1 1:&#13;
• oral: try litU&#13;
As a.child_, Keit~ often dreamed of himself as a boy made of wood, much like&#13;
much hke.P1~occh10. He also dreamed of a mysterious, m a gica l P ierrot clown&#13;
One day, 1n his home town of Los Angeles, he saw a man in a s tor e window who&#13;
stood and moved as if he were a mechanical man. Keith watched for hours with&#13;
profound fascination.&#13;
As he grew older, he studied and worked as an actor. He pr act iced and observed&#13;
the dance, and even tour e d for _ a little while with a small c ircu s as a clown.He&#13;
discovered that the secret of good theatre was magic, and the key was silence .&#13;
Keith Berger sought to recreate what he had envisioned as a c hild . He did just&#13;
that by painstakingly teaching himself a style of silent performing, referred to&#13;
as the art of Mi-m.e.&#13;
If the success of his art can be measured in the r e spon s e of his audience, then,&#13;
Keith Berger has succeeded completely. Today, you can s ee the vehicle of all&#13;
art-the body- used to the .point of lyrical genius and sensitivity.&#13;
TODAY, you can experience KEITH BERGER. "Jlc Weary&#13;
ee®®®***®***®®®®M&#13;
LAST LETTER TO A RADICAL WOMAN&#13;
Radical woman&#13;
"flowers to the rebels failed"&#13;
were Sacco &amp; Vanzetti's&#13;
last gasping dream.&#13;
They n ever forgot&#13;
the accident of their origins,&#13;
just as you won't forgive&#13;
the accident of us.&#13;
Your' harsh words how unlike&#13;
the gentler world&#13;
transcending gender,&#13;
that was the ir&#13;
universal communication.&#13;
R adical wom.an ,&#13;
with your right- on pose&#13;
and your put- on&#13;
Sappho smile,&#13;
.:y our crotch politics&#13;
m ay get you to Washington---&#13;
but I n eve r wore&#13;
com bat boots&#13;
for anyone .&#13;
Radical woman ,&#13;
I won't fight for spoils&#13;
in a bitc h-goddess sySt em •&#13;
The t a il of -a t iger&#13;
JUSt isn't my&#13;
kind of ride,&#13;
and I can't&#13;
love alone, anymore . Mick An de.rsen&#13;
•&#13;
······-&#13;
Humanities&#13;
I'm weary&#13;
talk to me,&#13;
touch me,&#13;
understand my loss&#13;
of the sun today--&#13;
until tomorrow&#13;
when the sun&#13;
comes again .&#13;
Wtt&#13;
li e&#13;
"th&#13;
me---&#13;
mu&#13;
hand&#13;
.l.b.&#13;
j r&#13;
ic oel&#13;
Nepp r&#13;
J .. &#13;
Co-op&#13;
E 5&#13;
b lchae\ 0 zyk&#13;
NOTESNote snote s&#13;
Moishe Smith, associate&#13;
professor of art at the University&#13;
or W"lSCOnsin·Parkside, is one of&#13;
six well-known American graphic&#13;
artists invited to contribute a&#13;
representative work for inclusion&#13;
in the I50th annual exhibition of&#13;
the National Academy of Design&#13;
through March 16 at the&#13;
Academy galleries in New York&#13;
City.&#13;
Peter Martins' appeal for tenure hearing is schedu1edlor .&#13;
l1:30a.m. inroomD-174. This will be an openhearlngUlhl ....&#13;
who support Prof. Martin are urged to attend. Hyou WIIltlt~&#13;
call Lise Iwon at 637-3098.&#13;
----&#13;
Evening Student services are now being offered OIl 1'ulIdIIr&#13;
Wednesday nights from 5:30-8:30 p.m. in the alcove 1lelrttollle':&#13;
Shop on the concourse of the Wyllie Library Learning Cenlllr&#13;
Placement testing, academic planning, and general&#13;
'*' 7&#13;
about campus events, student services and special ~&#13;
available.&#13;
The service is staffed on Tuesday evenings by PhylllaLkIIerI,MI&#13;
Student Program intern, and on Wednesdays by COUIIIeIar 0IIIt&#13;
Cummings.&#13;
Lack of faculty consultation&#13;
draws fire&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
The lack of faculty consultation&#13;
on administrative decisions that&#13;
affect the university is "irnproper&#13;
procedure" and should be&#13;
"rectified," UW Regent Arthur&#13;
DeBardeleben, Park Falls, told&#13;
UW President John C. Weaver&#13;
Friday.&#13;
"Is this going to be a pattern&#13;
that any important decisions b~&#13;
done without faculty consideration?"&#13;
asked DeBardeleben,&#13;
at the Regents' regular&#13;
monthly board meeting in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The clash between Weaver and&#13;
DeBareleben followed a report&#13;
given by the Regents' Executive&#13;
Committee on the enaclmen&#13;
enactment of student enrollment&#13;
ceilings at four UW campuses;&#13;
Madison, LaCrosse Eau&#13;
Claire and Stout-to help th·~UW&#13;
system cope with an austerity&#13;
budget proposed by Gov. Patrick&#13;
Lucey.&#13;
~ ceilings are designed to re-&#13;
. el :"dents, most likely&#13;
tneoming eslunen, who are non.&#13;
commuters and have undeclared&#13;
~18tors. to other campuses more&#13;
~ handle increasing&#13;
ts economically&#13;
fallThe limits, to take err';"t this&#13;
. are a Partial r~&#13;
Gov Luce . dir -""nse to&#13;
. y s ectorate of J&#13;
requesting the R an. 8&#13;
de egents to&#13;
velop plans for "pha . phasu,g down sing out,&#13;
lRStituti ' or consolidating&#13;
ODS and programs "&#13;
A set of guidelin .&#13;
mendabons e recom_&#13;
to tho are to be sulxnitted&#13;
"lias~""'r:::rAlX"il IS.&#13;
gIVen tho etta ty ever been&#13;
nee to respond?"&#13;
DeBardeleben asked UW Senior&#13;
Vice President Donald Percy,&#13;
who reported for the committee.&#13;
"We certainly had some&#13;
reaction, (though) not extensive,"&#13;
said Percy, citing that a&#13;
memo was sent out to all "faculty&#13;
concerns" and chancellors.&#13;
"I do think it's unfortunate in&#13;
an institution that faculty cannot&#13;
be heard," responded DeBardeleben.&#13;
Percy told DeBardeleben, "I&#13;
apologize for the fact that we&#13;
couldn't consult as extensively as&#13;
possible with faculty," adding&#13;
that "because of short&#13;
deadlines (the Governor's), there&#13;
was not adequate consultation for&#13;
everybody."&#13;
Regent Mrs. Robert R.&#13;
Williams, Stevens Point, said&#13;
that she and others had "talked&#13;
informally about enrollment&#13;
ceilings" before the Governor's&#13;
request was issued-talks that&#13;
included members of faculty&#13;
groups and chancellors. She said,&#13;
however, that the talks were in&#13;
light of "educational planning"&#13;
rather than "fiscal problems."&#13;
"I do deplore the fact that it&#13;
~as not given faculty consideratinn'&#13;
DeBardeleben again ~&#13;
contended, adding that&#13;
something must be done to&#13;
"rectify improper procedure."&#13;
Weaver answered DeBardeleben&#13;
by· .&#13;
saymg that possible&#13;
enrollment I· . . muts for Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee were studied a&#13;
ye,,:,"ago by the Board of Visitors.&#13;
The subject has had some&#13;
ventilation in advance ,. h .d&#13;
He dde ' esal.&#13;
an: d that, "I don't think&#13;
y ne 10 the system· . diff IS 10-&#13;
. erent to or insensitive of the&#13;
::,::rtance of faculty input. We&#13;
under some very difficult&#13;
time constraints."&#13;
He said that the IIlIllIr&#13;
tentative" and slID .. II&#13;
discussion and added, II&#13;
sure I'd say we apoloPo. ..&#13;
Percy does, because I""'"&#13;
we had a better Wl7 we ..&#13;
have operated in. IpnfIrli&#13;
the word "unfortlllate" till&#13;
pressures on us don' ••&#13;
consult faculty CII rJ&#13;
Weaver said thatbe'"&#13;
preferred to have seen II&#13;
requested by the GflIIIII&#13;
carried out over a ...,.,&#13;
period, rather than In.''&#13;
"I'm dismayed b7&#13;
Weaver's statement" rfI/IIA&#13;
DeBardeleben. "U .. ..., ..&#13;
time for adequate ~&#13;
then we need newmeaUW·MadisonIaw~&#13;
II&#13;
Finman, chalrmaa" •&#13;
University Committee.'"III&#13;
from the audiencec:.:!:.&#13;
. "the real test of a lllIIt&#13;
shared governance (II&#13;
faculty) cornes.IIff.::.,&#13;
there are easy limIII&#13;
ficult limes." III •&#13;
"We'll have tll ~&#13;
mind against tile "lit'&#13;
goals of the m~":'"fIlA&#13;
DeBardeleben l1li'-......&#13;
that "due process ~&#13;
designed for hard ....... ~.&#13;
well as easy ones.&#13;
"I didn't saY, sir,&#13;
without faculty&#13;
I said Weaver, ci~&#13;
members are ~.&#13;
on the System A(jvilI1:1&#13;
Task Force.&#13;
DeBardeleben&#13;
subject after ~ ....&#13;
Renk, Sun Prairie,&#13;
"defended the a&#13;
and the Executl\'t&#13;
the action tbeY toOkGE&#13;
nesday, rch 12,&#13;
Co-op&#13;
s&#13;
01&#13;
···········===&#13;
ceeeewweeeeeeeeeee \. . . . . .--,- . '&#13;
...&#13;
NOTESNotesnotes&#13;
Moishe Smith, associate&#13;
professor of art at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, is one of&#13;
ix well-known American graphic&#13;
artists invited to contribute a&#13;
representative work for inclusion&#13;
in the 150th annual exhibition of&#13;
the ational Academy of Design&#13;
through March 16 at the&#13;
Academy galleries in New York&#13;
City.&#13;
Peter Mar~s' appeal for te~ur~ hearing is scheduled for Marth U&#13;
11:30a.m. m room 0-174. Tlus will be an open hearing and allstudeala&#13;
who support Prof. Martin are urged to attend. H you want to '11!4&gt;&#13;
call Lise Iwon at 637-3098.&#13;
Evening Student Services are now being offered on Tuesday&#13;
Wednesday nights from 5:30-8:30p.m. in the alcove next to the 11111&#13;
Shop on the concourse of the Wyllie Library Leaming Center&#13;
Placement testing, academic planning, and general inf&lt;nna&#13;
about campus events, student services and special progrlllIII&#13;
available. art&#13;
The service is staffed on Tuesday evenings by Phyllis Lidberg&#13;
Student Program intern, and on Wednesdays by counselor Onllt&#13;
Cummings.&#13;
Lack of faculty consultation&#13;
draws fire&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
The lack of faculty consultation&#13;
on administrative decisions that&#13;
affect the university is "improper&#13;
procedure" and should be&#13;
'rectified," UW Regent Arthur&#13;
DeBardeleben, Park Falls, told&#13;
UW President John C. Weaver&#13;
Friday.&#13;
''Is this going to be a pattern&#13;
that any important decisions b~&#13;
done without faculty consideration?"&#13;
asked DeBardeleben,&#13;
at the Regents' regular&#13;
monthly board meeting in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The clash between Weaver and&#13;
~Bareleben followed a report&#13;
given by the Regents' Executive&#13;
Committee on the enactmen&#13;
en~~IInent of student enrollment&#13;
ceilings a~ four UW campuses;&#13;
Madison, Lacrosse Eau&#13;
Claire and Stout-to help th·~ UW&#13;
• tern cope with an austerity&#13;
butlg!"t proposed by Gov. Patrick&#13;
Lucey.&#13;
ct!e ceilings are designed to re-&#13;
~ students, most likely&#13;
freshmen, who are noncommuters&#13;
and have undeclared&#13;
n j , to other campuses&#13;
pt to h di more ,-i,___ an e increasing&#13;
vumt:nts economically Th limi . ts, to take effect th'&#13;
fall, e a partial res lS&#13;
Gov. I.u v' dir ponse to . ., ectorateofJan 8&#13;
tin th · e Regents to&#13;
plans for "phasing out&#13;
·tuti do en, or consolidating&#13;
and programs "&#13;
A t g ·ct • ·&#13;
tio w eline recomre&#13;
to be submitted&#13;
Go,; ernor by April 1s&#13;
the faculty ever been&#13;
nc to respond?"&#13;
DeBardeleben asked UW Senior&#13;
Vice President Donald Percy,&#13;
who reported for the committee.&#13;
"We certainly had some&#13;
reaction, (though) not extensive,"&#13;
said Percy, citing that a&#13;
memo was sent out to all " faculty&#13;
concerns" and chancellors.&#13;
"I do think it's unfortunate in&#13;
an institution that faculty cannot&#13;
be heard," responded DeBardeleben.&#13;
&#13;
Percy told DeBardeleben "I&#13;
apologize for the fact that' we&#13;
couldn't consult as extensively as&#13;
possible with faculty," adding&#13;
that "because of short&#13;
deadlines (the Governor's), there&#13;
was not adequate consultation for&#13;
everybody."&#13;
Regent Mrs. Robert R.&#13;
Williams, Stevens Point, said&#13;
that she and others had "talked&#13;
informally about enrollment&#13;
ceilings" before the Governor's&#13;
request was issued-talks that&#13;
included members of faculty&#13;
groups and chancellors. She said,&#13;
however, that the talks were in&#13;
light of "educational planning"&#13;
rather than "fiscal problems "&#13;
"I do deplore the fact that ·it&#13;
~as not given faculty consideration,"&#13;
DeBardeleben again&#13;
contended, adding that&#13;
something must be done to&#13;
"rectify improper procedure."&#13;
Weaver answered DeBardeleben&#13;
by saying that possible&#13;
enro~ent limits for Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee were studied a&#13;
ye.~ ago by the Board of Visitors.&#13;
v ,:tie . subject has had some&#13;
entilahon in advance " h 'd He dd , e sa1 . a ed that, "I don't th'nk&#13;
anyone in th . l&#13;
differ ~ system is in- . ent to or insensitive of the&#13;
unportance of faculty input We&#13;
were und · er some very difficult&#13;
time constraints."&#13;
He said that the matter&#13;
tentative" and still open&#13;
discussion and added, "I'm&#13;
sure I'd say we apologiz.e,as&#13;
Percy does, because I elm&#13;
we had a better wa} we&#13;
have operated in. I prefer&#13;
the word "unfortunate"&#13;
pressures on us don't allOI'&#13;
consult faculty on 'l1 c&#13;
Weav~r said that he would&#13;
preferred to have seen the&#13;
requested by the G&#13;
carried out over a&#13;
period, rather than in 90&#13;
"I'm dismayed by ~&#13;
Weaver's statement" r&#13;
DeBardeleben. "If we don t&#13;
time for adequate coosulll&#13;
then we need new methodSUW-Madison&#13;
law profes$T&#13;
Finman, chairman d&#13;
University Committee,&#13;
from the audience, argufl(&#13;
"the real test of a cOffillll&#13;
shared governance ( ID&#13;
faculty) comes not onlr&#13;
there are easy wnes i-it&#13;
ficult times."&#13;
"We'll have to keep&#13;
mind against the sh(tl t ,, ht&#13;
goals of the momen ·&#13;
DeBardeleben agreecl~&#13;
that "due process&#13;
designed for hard si~&#13;
well as easy ones. "'&#13;
"I didn't say, sir, lbal&#13;
without facult~. in~·-""', _-,.&#13;
, said Weaver, citi.ng&#13;
members are currently&#13;
on the System AdvisOl'Y&#13;
Task Force. ~&#13;
DeBardeleben dr tilfl&#13;
subject after f_le_gen~id -'&#13;
Renk, Sun Praine, in1S&#13;
"defended the ad~-&#13;
and the Executive c~: ... - the action theY took· &#13;
cOntin:lCd from page I&#13;
visual contact and -----&#13;
found that the Ol'bProtmptly&#13;
ec had&#13;
manue,vered to the rear of the Air&#13;
Force let and was now ch '&#13;
The Condon report :smg it.&#13;
which conclUded that' study&#13;
te' no extra- rrestrial vehicle had visited&#13;
Em:th;, stated that the radar and&#13;
!~t incident in England was onl&#13;
a natural phenomanum so y&#13;
th t i h rare a It as never happened bef&#13;
or smce." ore&#13;
Friedman attempted to&#13;
discr~it arguments made b&#13;
skeptics that no UFOs ..Y&#13;
b&#13;
exist&#13;
ecause travel b t&#13;
, e ween&#13;
w!ar systems is .impossible,&#13;
He said th t '&#13;
terstellar traffic is pgSSi~?-&#13;
because it violates no laws o~&#13;
phYSICS, but merely requires a&#13;
technology more advanced than&#13;
our own. . r&#13;
The governm tal&#13;
classifying m en h praCtice of&#13;
formati uc of the in.&#13;
on on UFo " Secret" s as Top&#13;
Fri dma came under attack by&#13;
e n Wednesds .&#13;
said "for de .Y. mght. He&#13;
un r a million dollars&#13;
We could find out who is co .&#13;
here Why". Friedman no lIUng&#13;
only one of the fourtee ted that&#13;
n reports&#13;
prepared by Project Blue Book&#13;
Was ever released to the public&#13;
while the other thirt ' ' 1 if een remain c ass led as top secret. He said&#13;
that .With a whole-sale public&#13;
relations campaign ur '&#13;
. gJng the&#13;
openmg of these files and urging&#13;
research in the area of UFOs&#13;
~we could blow the lid off th~&#13;
osrrue Watergate ...you can bet&#13;
that (With prize money available)&#13;
researchers would dig for in.&#13;
formation where no one has ever&#13;
dared dig before".&#13;
f------- conlinued hom page 1 _&#13;
added, "We)lid the&#13;
could,but it was simply&#13;
to more than pull&#13;
administratively tbe&#13;
to the specific factual&#13;
that Ithey had. We&#13;
even pretend to una&#13;
thoughtfuldiscussion&#13;
aboutthe answers to&#13;
_lheir other questions." "ed what those "other&#13;
" were, Norwood cited&#13;
les: the first concerns&#13;
sessionsat Parkside:&#13;
ibe the simula ti ve&#13;
out' 'of summer&#13;
i describe the comqualityof&#13;
life factors; .&#13;
the potential cons&#13;
of the simulative&#13;
tic 'phase out' to the&#13;
'ty qualityuf life."&#13;
second concerns the&#13;
programs offered at&#13;
asked us how valid we&#13;
lIleir criteria were for&#13;
'ng academic degree&#13;
s: what more aplactors&#13;
might be in-&#13;
~ the screening criteria;&#13;
or important aspects&#13;
Il'Ogramsdo you feel&#13;
might not be fairly represented&#13;
by their screening criteria."&#13;
, Norwood conunented, "That's&#13;
'not the sort of thing one. answers&#13;
in a half hour."&#13;
. He added, however, that he is&#13;
"less. concerned, at the moment&#13;
with the system-wide Advisor;&#13;
Planning Task Force." He said&#13;
.that the Task Force is proceeding&#13;
to meet the April 15 deadline&#13;
"with only hasty consultation&#13;
with the campuses." But, he&#13;
explained that "the whole point of&#13;
this April 15thing is that both the&#13;
system and the campuses are&#13;
engaged in long-range academic&#13;
planning, not a one-shot affair."&#13;
Mitchell in danger&#13;
(CPS-LNS) • Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell's life might&#13;
be in danger if he were sent to prison and other prisoners were allowed&#13;
access to him, according to J eb Stuart Magruder.&#13;
Magruder, who was released from prison January 7 after serving&#13;
seven months on Watergate conspiracy charges, said that some&#13;
prisoners might hold Mitcbell personally responsible for their jail&#13;
terms,&#13;
"I think there is no question tbat someone wbo has been Attorney&#13;
General of the United States, as far as many convicts are concerned, is&#13;
the one that put them away," Magruder said. .&#13;
"So I think (it would be dangerous) for someone of that stature to&#13;
have to go to a regular prison where there are inmates ... wbo might&#13;
feel very comfortable in becoming famous by eliminating the exAttorney&#13;
General."&#13;
Mitchell was foundguilty January 1 of having taken part in the&#13;
Watergate cover-up. Sentencing bas been postponed pending appeals&#13;
but the former government official could get a maximum of twenty&#13;
five years in prison.&#13;
Sunday;' March 16&#13;
AMATEUR GO·GO&#13;
~'\&gt;~ CONTEST ~~&#13;
.~~~~ . lst Prize $50°0 ~J&gt;&lt;?'4&#13;
2nd Prize' $25°0&#13;
3rd Prize $1000&#13;
•&#13;
1 Bottle of Champagne to all entries&#13;
6 P.M•• 'til Closing&#13;
atsc Featuring&#13;
A PIZZA EATING CONTEST&#13;
No cover charge with student I.D.&#13;
GIRLS WANTED&#13;
Go-Go Girls, Waitresses, Bartenders&#13;
TOP WAGES $2.00- $7.00 Hourly CALL 634-9369&#13;
PARKS IDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS I&#13;
Nationally Acclaimed&#13;
MIMIST&#13;
.KEI'TH BERGER&#13;
RCH 12 a·OO P.M. WEDNESDA Y, MA .•&#13;
(OMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
. ADMISSiON: 51.50 • Student&#13;
. 52.00. General&#13;
TICKETS AT THE INFO. CENTER&#13;
Wednescl8V. March 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Paekstde 200&#13;
National Va.rsity Club&#13;
§?~~'UIt~&#13;
194.. SO&#13;
• Pre.ents.&#13;
SILVER BULL~T&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 14th&#13;
..............................&#13;
. .&#13;
• Appearlng.&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 15th&#13;
DR. BOP&#13;
&amp;&#13;
THE HEADLINERS&#13;
featuring&#13;
THE WHITE RA YEN&#13;
................................................... , .&#13;
Advance Ticket. '2'0 At Door '3'0&#13;
EVELYN WOOD&#13;
READING DYNAMICS&#13;
THERE ARE STILL A FEW&#13;
PLACES AVAILABLE IN OUR&#13;
CLASS SCHEDULED TO BEGIN&#13;
AT&#13;
7 :00 P.M. -AT CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
THURSDAY, MARCH 13th&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CALL COLLECT&#13;
312-236-1996&#13;
Wednesday, March 12, 197S THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
continued fron&#13;
l page l ------~-----&#13;
visual cont t found ac and promptly that the ojbect had&#13;
mF anue_vetred to the rear of the Air&#13;
orce Je and was now ch .&#13;
The Condon report :smg it.&#13;
which concluded that, no estutrdy&#13;
te tr. l X a- rres ia vehicle had visited&#13;
~~th;_ stated that the radar and&#13;
Jet mc1dent in England was onl&#13;
"a natural phenomanum so Y&#13;
th . rare at _it has never happened bef or smce." ore&#13;
Friedman attempted to&#13;
discr~it arguments made b&#13;
b&#13;
skeptics that no UFOs exisi&#13;
ecause . travel b t e ween !i!&gt;lar systems is impossible.&#13;
He said that . terstella_r traffic is poss1Jr·&#13;
beca~e it violates no laws 0~&#13;
physics, but merely requires a&#13;
technology more advanced than&#13;
our own. ·&#13;
The governmental . classifying much ~ractice. of&#13;
formation on UFo o the mSecret"&#13;
ca s as "Top Fr· dm me under attack by&#13;
_ie " an Wednesday night. He&#13;
said for under a milli we could find ?n dollars&#13;
out who 15 co · here why" F ·edm mmg · ri an noted that only one of the fourtee n reports prepared by Project Blue Book&#13;
w~ ever released to the public&#13;
while the other thirt . '&#13;
1 u· een remain c ass l~ as top secret. He said&#13;
that . With a whole-sale public&#13;
rela~ons campaign urging the&#13;
openmg of these files and urging&#13;
research in the area of UFO&#13;
"we could blow the lid off ths, Cosmi W e c atergate ... you can bet&#13;
that ( with prize money available)&#13;
researchers would dig for information&#13;
where no one has ever&#13;
dared dig before".&#13;
P--------- conlinued from page 1&#13;
-------- added, "We did the&#13;
"rould, but it was simply&#13;
· e to more than pull&#13;
r administratively the&#13;
to the specific factual&#13;
that they had. We&#13;
i even pretend to una&#13;
thoughtful discussion&#13;
r,:u)ty about the answers to&#13;
it their other questions."&#13;
asked what those "other&#13;
· " were, Norwood cited&#13;
Jes: the first concerns&#13;
sessions at Parkside:&#13;
cribe the simulative&#13;
· g out' · of summer&#13;
; describe the comquality&#13;
of life factors;&#13;
· e the potential conces&#13;
of the simulative&#13;
tic 'phase out' to the&#13;
·ty quality of life."&#13;
second concerns the&#13;
programs offered at&#13;
asked us how valid we&#13;
their criteria were for&#13;
ing academic degree&#13;
. s; what more aple&#13;
factors might be in-&#13;
~ the screening criteria;&#13;
lllque or important aspects&#13;
irograms do you feel&#13;
might not be fairly represented&#13;
by their screening criteria."&#13;
Norwood commented, "That's&#13;
not the sort of thing one answers&#13;
in a half hour."&#13;
He added, however, that he is&#13;
· "less.concerned, at the moment&#13;
with the system-wide Advisor;&#13;
Planning Task Force." He said&#13;
that the Task Force is proceeding&#13;
to meet the April 15 deadline&#13;
"with only hasty consultation&#13;
with the campuses." But, he&#13;
explained that "the whole point of&#13;
this April 15 thing is that both the&#13;
system and the campuses are&#13;
engaged in long-range academic&#13;
planning, not a one-shot affair. "&#13;
Mitchell in danger&#13;
(CPS-LNS)-Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell's life might&#13;
be in danger if he were sent to prison and other prisoners were allowed&#13;
access to him, according to Jeb Stuart Magruder.&#13;
Magruder, who was released from prison January 7 after serving&#13;
seven months on Watergate conspiracy charges, said that some&#13;
prisoners might hold Mitchell personally responsible for their jail&#13;
terms.&#13;
"I think there is no question that someone wbo has been Attorney&#13;
General of the United States, as far as many convicts are concerned, is&#13;
the one that put them away," Magruder said.&#13;
"So I think (it would be dangerous) for someone of that stature to&#13;
have to go to a regular prison where there are inmates ... who might&#13;
feel very comfortable in becoming famous by eliminating the exAttorney&#13;
General."&#13;
Mitchell was found guilty January 1 of having taken part in the&#13;
Watergate cover-up. Sentencing has been postponed ~ending appeals&#13;
but the former government official could get a maximum of twenty&#13;
five years in prison.&#13;
Sunday, March 16&#13;
AMATEUR GO-GO&#13;
~'\,~ CONTEST ~~ i&gt; ~ . $5000 ~ J&gt;~&#13;
_ ~~ . 1st Pri~e $2500 &lt;4&#13;
2nd Prize&#13;
3rd Prize $J 0°0 •&#13;
1 Bottle of Champagne to all entries&#13;
6 p .M .. 'til Closing also Featuring&#13;
A PIZZA EATING CONTEST No cover charge with Student I. D.&#13;
GIRLS WANTED&#13;
Go-Go Girls, Waitresses, Bartender-s&#13;
TOP WAGES $2.00 • $7 .00 Hourly CALL 634-9369&#13;
PARKSIDE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
Nationally Acclaimed&#13;
Mll,1151&#13;
. KEITH BERGER&#13;
CH 12 8·00 P.M. WEDNESDAY, MAR .&#13;
COMM. ARTS THEATRE&#13;
ADMISSION: $ 1.50 . Student&#13;
$2.oo . General&#13;
TICKETS AT THE INFO. CENTER&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M ember Pu ide 200&#13;
N,tional Vanity Chlb&#13;
4437 - 22nd A enu K no h&#13;
· Wiscon in Phone 654- 7 4&#13;
r.(Jle *B'Ult . 194&#13;
~ &amp;. so&#13;
•Presents•&#13;
SILVER BULLET&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 14th&#13;
···························································&#13;
•Appearing•&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 15th&#13;
DR. BOP&#13;
&amp;&#13;
THE HEADLINERS&#13;
featuring&#13;
THE WHITE RA VEN&#13;
....•..........•..............•.................... , ..... . Advance Tickets '2'° At Door •3so&#13;
EVELYN WOOD&#13;
READING DYNAMICS&#13;
THERE ARE STILL A FEW&#13;
PLACES AVAILABLE IN OUR&#13;
CLASS SCHEDULED TO BEGIN&#13;
AT&#13;
7:00 P.M. AT CARTHAGE COLLE 7E&#13;
THURSDAY, MARCH 13th&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION&#13;
CALL COLLECT&#13;
312-236-1996 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDERA GER"'. IIday. March12.&#13;
EIGEI&#13;
1l1lltiOllJ&#13;
YGId apoa&#13;
r:::::III lIIlIon on S aIld ~. 1,.4 1bIs&#13;
c.- ..... lbo .. 1e&#13;
I tIolI of Ille Parklide&#13;
Go •• a:wat AIIOdatkm&#13;
aIld lbo IIlIdtal body aIld&#13;
OIl!)' 1O.-dmeD .&#13;
Parkllde Siudeni&#13;
or "men I Inc sIloll be ":=~lOlbo studtllls Iithe II Ii Partside&#13;
be oobje&lt;l lD \be&#13;
RllpolIllillllltJ. IllII JlOft'I of \be&#13;
III Rec.. to, lbo PlEsiclelll&#13;
,.....,.\be QIoDceUor&#13;
.Poi' " ODd lbo Ia&lt;u1Iy&#13;
-Poi bide IDlI lbo. efoa e&#13;
" nan) ••&#13;
~:::-::':"~": at 5 0 , , JDbolaaIloi&#13;
nJDpll otadenl&#13;
.1&#13;
I " 1 d..s&#13;
Ie&#13;
Ii ..mcll ...m be&#13;
October and the&#13;
e\eCltd 1Il .'Pro&#13;
s\IoII be lor one&#13;
cfucis&gt;OIU 01 Science.&#13;
ce, HumanlSUC&#13;
s;::~~~~e rlllg ience,&#13;
~ nl enee, Labor&#13;
and undeclared&#13;
ve one Se/IOtor.&#13;
ruebirJg 52S tudents the&#13;
""'1&lt;11'" dd ooe senator,&#13;
mil lbol DO more than ooe&#13;
a;au be iicIded iJI any&#13;
",..I Iri&lt;c_. An ad,i1bonal&#13;
be added lor each&#13;
adCtiticaal __ students within&#13;
div\siOl1 Each d",slOn shall&#13;
ft al least one Senator. Only&#13;
Unl&gt; rsaty 01 WiscOnsinPar&#13;
side students who have&#13;
dedamla major b) the previous&#13;
.-mester tnll be aDowed to run&#13;
far senator lJl the undecJared&#13;
division. A sllIdenl who has&#13;
dedaml majors, or major area&#13;
01 Interest. in more than one&#13;
dIvision. in the previous&#13;
sen ester. can only run and be&#13;
elected lrun one division. Only&#13;
_ students who have declared&#13;
majors, or major area of interest,&#13;
lJl lbo previous semester in the&#13;
designaled divisions will be&#13;
aticwed to vote lor the respective&#13;
senaton. '!bose students who&#13;
bave not declared a major in the&#13;
p....mollS semester wiD vote lor&#13;
5enalOr (.) running in the undeclared&#13;
major division. A&#13;
student whohas declared majors,&#13;
or major area of interest, in more&#13;
than one division in previous&#13;
..mosters can only vote in one&#13;
division. 0 sllIdenl who has&#13;
dedared a major in the previous&#13;
_or may run lor Senator in&#13;
lbo UDdecIared major division.&#13;
II&gt;d no studenl who has declared&#13;
a major in \be previous semester&#13;
may vote lor • Senator in the&#13;
IIIIdedared major division. The&#13;
ab".. procedure tnll cortstitule&#13;
\be ....... lor \be October e1ecIiODL&#13;
In lbo evenl a new division&#13;
IS created by \be Univenily, the&#13;
said division sbaU be required to&#13;
in eJISIence lor a period 01 one&#13;
ye. before a senator may be&#13;
_I InIm thai division.&#13;
The remaJJllIll! baH of lbe&#13;
IOnsbaU be e\ecIed at large&#13;
no reqwnment as to are. 01&#13;
major. There tnll be an equal&#13;
IIWllbor Ii at large Senalors as&#13;
cI I Senators. The above&#13;
CIlIlSliIW \be ru1es lor the&#13;
election.&#13;
•• YW~.~lD ..&#13;
a&lt;adetU&lt; 1Ih1SlOaili leal the&#13;
re- •• J.ia. dl\'lsl~ •• 1&#13;
..,.:-Ii&gt; ITiiiii Li scblKll&#13;
• ~r SLaB 8O~1e •&#13;
!!!dot! Ie lID \be vo&lt;!l!9.&#13;
• '!l"'MrI etC1lrS ill aD&#13;
1&amp;5e t. the ........ la!!c al&#13;
.... IiOd _lea&#13;
'" IIIl ~ !Il&lt;y. Aller&#13;
I!!!c -1loR. die&#13;
1&amp; Tem ...... silaIJ IDi&#13;
l WliIi iIlOIl&lt;arrt.....&#13;
Parkside&#13;
lion&#13;
C:PScity. fie residing offi~r o[&#13;
Ibe seoate sball vote only m lbe&#13;
"'eDt of a tie. the president Pro&#13;
Tempore shall be a senator and&#13;
shaD be a member of all Senate&#13;
committees. A simple majority of&#13;
the total Senate shall constitute a&#13;
quorum to do businessSECTION&#13;
IV&#13;
The senate shall have the sole&#13;
power 01 impeachment and the&#13;
power to try all impeachments.&#13;
When sitting lor that purpose&#13;
lbey shall be 01 oath or affImlation.&#13;
When the President of&#13;
the Parkside Student GovernInc.&#13;
is tried, the Chiel Justice of&#13;
. lbe Judicial Court shall preside,&#13;
and no person shall be convicted&#13;
wiUlOutthe concurrence of twothirds&#13;
01 the entire Senate.&#13;
Judgment in cases of impeachment&#13;
shall not extend&#13;
further than removal from office&#13;
and diS-&lt;jualification to hold and&#13;
enjoy any ollice or position that&#13;
the Parkside Government&#13;
Association Inc. has jurisdiction&#13;
over, appointment to, or election&#13;
lor impeachment will not begin&#13;
until two-lbirds 01 the entire&#13;
senate 01 the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
have voted to hold an impeachment&#13;
hearing.&#13;
SECTION V&#13;
The Senate 01 lbe Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall have the power to&#13;
determine the rules of its&#13;
proceedings, censure its mem·&#13;
bers for disorderly conduct and&#13;
with lbe concurrence of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate expel a&#13;
member. The senate shall keep a&#13;
journal 01 its proceediDgs, aud&#13;
p"blisb ibe same monlbly (at a&#13;
mlDImDlD, a copY 01 the journal&#13;
sbaD be available lor review by&#13;
sludenls al Ibe Information&#13;
centen, lbe Ubrary desk aud lbe&#13;
Parkside Student Governmenl&#13;
Association -Inc. offices); the&#13;
yeas and neys of the memhers on&#13;
any question shall, at the desire&#13;
of one member of lbe senate, be&#13;
entered on the journal. The&#13;
senate of lbe Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
shaDmeet at an established place&#13;
and time no less than once a week&#13;
during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, and no less than twice&#13;
a monlb during the summer&#13;
sessions. Roberts Rules of Order&#13;
shaD govern tbe proceedings of&#13;
all Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. meetings except&#13;
when mconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
Upon presentation of a petition&#13;
bY a sunple majority of the entire&#13;
senate a meeting shall be caDed&#13;
bY lbe VIce President or in th&#13;
case 01 the Vice PreSident':&#13;
absence lbe Present Pro Tempore&#13;
shaD have lbe responsibility&#13;
to caD a meeting.&#13;
SECTION VI&#13;
thBills may eilber originate in&#13;
see Senate Or be sent to the&#13;
G nate from lbe Parkside Student&#13;
E:ern~ent Association Inc&#13;
ry bill, order resoluti .&#13;
vote on which th • on, or&#13;
!be senate' e concurrence of&#13;
have passedlSthnecessary shall&#13;
e senate b&#13;
sunple majority. hall y a&#13;
becomes la's ,belore it&#13;
presented toW, or regulation, be&#13;
Parkside Stlbe PresIdent of the&#13;
udent G Association 1 overnment&#13;
nco " lbe Pres'd molt 'e1oe Ibe leglsla I enl&#13;
lilfi tion, he shall&#13;
Pul tot-te, A two- c Gtlce&#13;
thirds vole 01 Ihe entire Senale&#13;
shaD be required to override lbe&#13;
veto. But in all such cases the&#13;
~ of the Senate shall be&#13;
d&#13;
termined by a roll call vote, e .&#13;
and the names of per~ons voting&#13;
for and againSt the bill shall be&#13;
entered in the journal 01 the&#13;
senate. II any bill shall not be&#13;
returned by the President within&#13;
5 school days after it has been&#13;
presented to him, the same shall&#13;
become law, in like manner as if&#13;
he had signed it. All proceedings&#13;
01 the Senate 01 the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall be sent to the executive&#13;
Ior incorporation purposes.&#13;
SECTION VII&#13;
The Senate shall have the&#13;
power to make motions,&#13;
resolutions, or take legal actions&#13;
which shall be necessary and&#13;
proper for carrying into&#13;
execution the foregoing powers,&#13;
and all other powers vested by&#13;
this constitution in the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
SECTION vm&#13;
The Seuate' 01 lbe Parkside&#13;
Siudent Government Association&#13;
Inc., whenever two-lhirds of lbe&#13;
entire Senate shall deem it&#13;
necessary, shall propose&#13;
amendments to this constttudon&#13;
or, on the application of proposed&#13;
amendments signed by ten&#13;
percent of the entire University·&#13;
Parkside student body, which in&#13;
eilber case, shall be valid to aU&#13;
iJlients and purposes, as part of&#13;
lbis constitution when ralified by&#13;
a simple majority vote on either&#13;
lbe Oclober or April election&#13;
dates, or a speCial referendum on&#13;
election dale,&#13;
SECTION IX&#13;
The ele~ted academic&#13;
divisional representatives, excluding&#13;
the undeclared major&#13;
divisional representatives, to the&#13;
Parkside Student GoveriiiDeiil&#13;
Association Inc., shall be those&#13;
students as stated in Wisconsin&#13;
Slatute 36.13 (3), the Merger&#13;
Implementation Law, The above&#13;
eleeted academic divisional&#13;
represeulatives shall be voting&#13;
members of their respective&#13;
Divisional Executive Committees&#13;
and voting participants&#13;
at divisional faculty meetings ..&#13;
The divisional represenlatives,&#13;
excluding the undeclared major I&#13;
shall be voting members of the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division.&#13;
SECTION X&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall keep records and&#13;
receipts on all expenditures of aD&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. monies and shall&#13;
make such records public at&#13;
every meeting.&#13;
SECTION XI&#13;
it standing Senate Committee,&#13;
lbe Student Organization Council,&#13;
shall be established consisting of&#13;
tbe Presidents' (or their&#13;
designees) 01 all student&#13;
organizations who choose to&#13;
participate.&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
SECTION&#13;
~l executive powers, within&#13;
thiS article, shall be vesled in the&#13;
President 01 the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION II&#13;
The President shall be. a&#13;
Parkside student, shall carry no&#13;
less than 6 credits, must not be on&#13;
aca~emic probation and must&#13;
have completed no less than 12&#13;
credIts at the University of&#13;
Wlsconsin-Parkside,&#13;
The President shall hold the&#13;
office during the term of one year&#13;
~ther with the Vice President&#13;
~ will be chosen for the same&#13;
rm. They shall be eligible lor&#13;
1975&#13;
• or major area of interest,&#13;
~ ous semester in the&#13;
n ted divisions will be&#13;
o to \'Ole for the respective&#13;
nators. Those students who&#13;
,-e not declared a major in the&#13;
pre ious semester will vote for&#13;
tor (;) running m the wideclared&#13;
major division. A&#13;
nt who has declared majors,&#13;
or major area of interest, in more&#13;
division in previous&#13;
sei:nesters can only vote in one&#13;
on. ·o student who has&#13;
""'~".,.._. a major in the previous&#13;
serne!;ter may run for Senator in&#13;
major division,&#13;
ho has declared&#13;
In shall choose their own ofd&#13;
also 8 President Pro&#13;
firers an The Vice President of&#13;
Tempore. ud t Q-Overn· th Par Ide St en nt . octation, Inc. shall be&#13;
~ PreS dent and presiding ofcer&#13;
r tbe S nate. In bis-her&#13;
b ence. the President Pro&#13;
Tern r ball en·e in the_ same&#13;
P?cit). The pre iding officer of&#13;
the nate ball ,·ote only In the&#13;
, nt of a tie. The President Pro&#13;
Tempore shall be a senator and&#13;
U a member of all Senate&#13;
mmittees. A simple majority of&#13;
th total Senate shall constitute a&#13;
quorum to do business.&#13;
. IV&#13;
The Senate shall have the sole&#13;
po er of impeachment and the&#13;
po er to try all impeachments.&#13;
When sitting for that purpose&#13;
th y shall be of oath or affirmation.&#13;
When the President of&#13;
th Parkside Student GovernInc.&#13;
i tried, the Chief Justice of&#13;
• th Judicial Court shall preside,&#13;
and no person shall be convicted&#13;
·thout the concurrence of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate.&#13;
Judgment in cases of impeachment&#13;
shall not extend&#13;
further than removal from office&#13;
and dis-Qualification to hold and&#13;
enjoy any office or position that&#13;
the Parkside Government&#13;
Association Inc. has jurisdiction&#13;
over, appointment to, or election&#13;
for impeachment will not begin&#13;
until two-thirds of the entire&#13;
Senate of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
have voted to hold an impeachment&#13;
hearing.&#13;
SECTION V&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall have the power to&#13;
determine the rules of its&#13;
proceedings, censure its members&#13;
for disorderly conduct and&#13;
with the concurrence of twothirds&#13;
of the entire Senate expel a&#13;
member. The Senate shall keep a&#13;
journal of its proceedings, and&#13;
publish the same monthly (at a&#13;
minimum, a copy of the journal&#13;
shall be available for review by&#13;
students at the Information&#13;
Centers, the library desk and the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association ·Inc. offices); the&#13;
yeas and neys of the members on&#13;
any question shall, at the desire&#13;
of one member of the Senate, be&#13;
entered on the journal. The&#13;
Senate of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
shall meet at an established place&#13;
and time no less than once a week&#13;
during the fall and spring&#13;
semesters, and no less than twice&#13;
a month during the summer&#13;
sessions. Roberts Rules of Order&#13;
shall govern the proceedings of&#13;
all Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. meetings except&#13;
when inconsistent with the&#13;
Constitution of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
U~n presentation of a petition&#13;
by a sunple majority of the entire&#13;
Senate a meeting shall be called&#13;
by the Vice President or in the&#13;
case of the Vice President's&#13;
absence the Present Pro Ternpore&#13;
shall have the responsibility&#13;
to call a meeting.&#13;
E IO,· VI&#13;
th Bills may either originate in&#13;
nate or be sent to th&#13;
G °:'te from the Parkside Studen~&#13;
E~"e:n1:1ent Association Inc&#13;
t; btll, order, resoluti . vote on ·h· h th on, or th IC • e concurrence of&#13;
,. nate ts necessary shall&#13;
pa ed the Senate b&#13;
ma1· ·t Y a m on Y: shall, before it&#13;
law, or regulation b&#13;
nted to th Pr . ' e . de e es1dent of the . Student Govern&#13;
alion Inc If th ment _ the 1 1- e President&#13;
End It b g lation, he Shall&#13;
the nate&#13;
th. ds vote of the entire Senate&#13;
rr "d th shall be required to ovem e e&#13;
veto. But in all such cases the&#13;
~ of the Senate shall be&#13;
determined by a roll call vote,&#13;
and the names of persons voting&#13;
for and against the bill shall be&#13;
entered in the journal of the&#13;
Senate. If any bill shall not be&#13;
returned by tbe President within&#13;
5 school days after it has been&#13;
presented to him, the same shall&#13;
become law, in like manner as if&#13;
he had signed it. All proceedings&#13;
of the Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall be sent to the executive&#13;
for· incorporation purposes.&#13;
SECTION VII&#13;
The Senate shall have the&#13;
power to make motions,&#13;
resolutions, or take legal actions&#13;
which shall be necessary and&#13;
proper for carrying into&#13;
execution the foregoing powers,&#13;
and all other powers vested by&#13;
this constitution in the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc.&#13;
SECTION VIII&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
student Government Association&#13;
Inc., whenever two-thirds of the&#13;
entire Senate shall deem it&#13;
necessary, shall propose&#13;
amendments to this constitution&#13;
or, on the application of proposed&#13;
amendments signed by ten&#13;
percent of the entire UniversityParkside&#13;
student body, which in&#13;
either case, shall be valid to all&#13;
Intents and purposes, as part of&#13;
this constitution when ratified by&#13;
a simple majority vote on either&#13;
the October or April election&#13;
dates, or a special referendum on&#13;
election date.&#13;
SECTION IX.&#13;
The elected academic&#13;
divisional representatives, excluding&#13;
the undeclared major&#13;
divisional representatives, to the&#13;
Parkside student Goveminent&#13;
Association Inc., shall be those&#13;
students as stated in Wisconsin&#13;
Statute 36.13 (3), the Merger&#13;
Implementation Law. The above&#13;
elected academic divisional&#13;
representatives shall be voting&#13;
members of their respective&#13;
Divisional Executive Committees&#13;
and voting participants&#13;
at divisional faculty meetings.&#13;
The divisionaf representatives,&#13;
excluding the undeclared major,&#13;
shall be voting members of the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Tenure Faculty Division.&#13;
SECTION X&#13;
The Senate of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. shall keep records and&#13;
receipts on all expenditures of all&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. monies and shall&#13;
make such records public at&#13;
every meeting.&#13;
SECTION XI&#13;
It standing Senate Committee,&#13;
the Student Organization Council,&#13;
shall be established consisting of&#13;
the Pl'esidents · ( or their&#13;
designees) of all student&#13;
organizations who choose to&#13;
participate.&#13;
ARTICLE II&#13;
SECTION&#13;
~ executive powers, within&#13;
th1s article, shall be vested in the&#13;
President of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
SECTION II&#13;
The President shall be a&#13;
Parkside student, shall carry no&#13;
less than 6 credits, must not be on&#13;
academic probation and must&#13;
have completed no less than 12&#13;
cr~its at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
~e President shall hold the&#13;
office during the term of one year&#13;
togeth ·th er Wt the Vice President&#13;
Who ·u b wi e chosen for the same&#13;
term. They shall be eligible for &#13;
we parkside Govern-&#13;
.~tion Inc. to Sign&#13;
Il""-provided tha t a&#13;
~~ the entire Senate&#13;
IV t shall take care&#13;
~tilution of the&#13;
!be l,\SSOciationInc. and&#13;
be faithfullYexecuted.&#13;
~, Vice Presid?nt&#13;
ofllcers of the Parkside&#13;
(JoVel1UDimtAssociation&#13;
be removedfrom office&#13;
Ilon of duty or failure,&#13;
lIN that the constitution&#13;
,.uide student Govern-&#13;
. tionInc. and its byIIfailbfullyexecuted.&#13;
AII1'ICLEIll&#13;
I&#13;
)Ifici8l powers of the&#13;
student Government&#13;
Inc.shall be vested in&#13;
court, an appellate&#13;
inlowercourts that the&#13;
01 the Pilrkside Student&#13;
at Association Inc.&#13;
. Thejudges, of all&#13;
shall maintain good&#13;
and character during&#13;
of office.&#13;
n&#13;
I members of the&#13;
!ranchof the Parkside&#13;
GovernmentAssociation&#13;
11 'be University of&#13;
·a·Parkside students,&#13;
no less than 6 credits,&#13;
DOlbe on academic&#13;
must have completed&#13;
lban 12 credits, at the&#13;
ty of Wisconsin-&#13;
,and must be confirmed&#13;
ChanceJJor of the&#13;
of WisconsinParkside&#13;
approval by the&#13;
Sellateof the Parkside&#13;
GovernmentAssociation&#13;
Administrative apto&#13;
the judicial branch&#13;
P1rksideStudent Govern-&#13;
. UonInc. shall hold&#13;
subject to the apOf&#13;
the Senate of the&#13;
Student GOvernment&#13;
Inc. Terms of office&#13;
for4 years.&#13;
III&#13;
)KIiciarycourt and the&#13;
Court shan convene no&#13;
10,and no more than 14&#13;
~ alter a case has been&#13;
10 the court from the&#13;
. disciplinary head of&#13;
. Irative branch of the&#13;
Ity of Wisconsin&#13;
, or as requested by a&#13;
·The jUdiciarycourt shaJJ&#13;
once a month at an&#13;
d Place and time IV .&#13;
JUdicial court shaJJ Of f ' ,&#13;
J .Our JUdges and one&#13;
· umiceWho shaJJ, have&#13;
cllon to' over aJJ cases&#13;
It by the designated&#13;
rar head of the ad- rste&#13;
branch of the&#13;
· y of Wisconsin-&#13;
, or as requested by a&#13;
Of, •and shaH extend its&#13;
JUdI' I ' ro."Utu CIareVIewto decide&#13;
~ th tionality of the ace&#13;
Parkside Student&#13;
llt1~tAssocia.tionInc. and&#13;
.. pass Its judgement&#13;
'der:,estion being&#13;
the ' In. the case of&#13;
"'" conslttutionality of ~.ons f Go 0 the Parkside&#13;
~ vernment Association&#13;
. OosshaH be binding on&#13;
edlll:0lVed,and shaJJ he&#13;
o the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of th&#13;
ministrativ" branch ~ adUniversity&#13;
of Wisconsin pO k ~he&#13;
or to th - ar Side . e appropriate aUthorities&#13;
for unp1ementation.&#13;
SECTION V&#13;
The appeJJate court shaJJ&#13;
consist of three )'udges hihsh ,oneof&#13;
W&#13;
w.c . all be a University of&#13;
Isconsm-Parkside student and&#13;
th? . oth~ two shall be ad-&#13;
~lIustratlve appointments. Upon&#13;
e appeal of a negative decision&#13;
by a student defendant, the appellate&#13;
court shall have the po&#13;
~ review the case in question ::&#13;
elth.e~ uphold or overturn the&#13;
deCISIOnof the judicial court Th&#13;
~ecision rendered, by a maj~;&#13;
vote of the appellate court shall&#13;
be binding upon all parties involved.&#13;
'&#13;
SECTION VI&#13;
The members ,of the P.8.G.A.&#13;
Inc. JUdiciary Court aball be&#13;
members of the appropriate&#13;
committee designated to bear&#13;
appeals of parking vlolatloos&#13;
Issued by Safety and Seeurlly.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
ARTICLE IV-I&#13;
An applicant shall not be&#13;
denied admission to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
for reasons of race, color I&#13;
national origin, religious creed&#13;
sex, previous criminal record'&#13;
political beliefs or political ac:&#13;
tion.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-2&#13;
Financial aid shaJJ not be&#13;
denied for reasons of race color&#13;
national origin, religious' creed:&#13;
sex, previous criminal recor.d,&#13;
political belief or political action.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-3&#13;
Students shall have the right of&#13;
freedom of expression, as defined&#13;
in the Constitution of the United&#13;
States in all classrooms.&#13;
ARTICLE IVol&#13;
Students are free to take exception&#13;
to the data presented or&#13;
views offered in any course of&#13;
study and may advocate alter&#13;
native opinions to those&#13;
presented within the classroom.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-5&#13;
All students shall have the right&#13;
to due process of law as&#13;
guaranteed by the United States&#13;
Constitution.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-6&#13;
Any student shall have the&#13;
right to request in those areas of&#13;
student disciplinary matters that&#13;
are referred to the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of the admirustration,&#13;
a hearing by the&#13;
judiciary court of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government ASsociation&#13;
Inc. and that request shall be&#13;
binding on all parties involved.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-7&#13;
Students shall be evaluated&#13;
only on their knowledge of the&#13;
subject and academic per·&#13;
formance and in turn are&#13;
responsible to maintain standards&#13;
of academic performance&#13;
established for each course they&#13;
have enrolled in.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-S&#13;
Disclosure of students' political&#13;
or personal beliefs, in connection&#13;
with course work shal1 not be&#13;
made public without express&#13;
permission of the student.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-9 .&#13;
Student records on academIC&#13;
performance and disciplinary&#13;
actions shall be separate.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-IO .&#13;
Information from counsehng&#13;
and disciplinary files shal1 not be&#13;
made available to persons on or&#13;
off campus without the express&#13;
consent of the student invol~ed,&#13;
except under legal compulSIOn.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-ll .&#13;
All records and information&#13;
kept on file shal1 be readily aCcessible&#13;
to the student to whom&#13;
they pertain.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-12 Wednesday, March 12, 1975 THE PARKS'OE RANGER 9&#13;
The student. .... 11 l!I!'!!!g!ete offici.). ne Auillaat Q!uceUw IblnIo 01 .. AUocatiou C __&#13;
and, in eonjUlletioa witb A' for StadeBI Affain, Tbe A.uiltul mJuu. Dc Cpm'", ....0 bc&#13;
Cbancel10r Ibe Cban""Uor I... '''_~~N_ titllted N boo 1 I dis' 'approve tbe ftUIIUIIIa ..... _ ttC9II .,yee [0&#13;
tributioa of Ibe aIIo bIe agd the D!Rs:!pr oJ IIpdftt every lear. Memben may .t&#13;
~istrative portlo:: of n=,_ Pygalll 'bill ,It wltk t_e serve mere _ !we .... s.a.t&#13;
Segregated University F nu: Commltke II IU-yotlll Icrpy, l1lr Deal" ...,.......&#13;
.I!0rtl.n laclndes th ee. members. No member mlY iIIJ.ber ""IS!!! IilaII be a _&#13;
admtpt'b'aUve COItt!~: e-CIIITeIl!1y eene as • P.s.GA ft_ lDe"r of eM c..&#13;
with aU studeal aetlvt;e;;; iIIc. seular officer. adUee. EK"!f! f.... CIIaIrstUdent&#13;
prosrammlns b ei~ The ....n mIcw" ~.- -1 serve&#13;
serVice, pnbllcationS ea d memb&lt;nbJp 01 .. AIIosatiou ~ .. die S.G.F.C.&#13;
orgaalzatlonsj athletl I~ Committee Immetliitel, after aid .. AIIosa_ e.-JUee ...&#13;
lramprals and elnb eDe : eacb eIedIoa Ie ...... lIlat •• omc;r ... lie •• Ii die&#13;
auxi1iary Services, INIltiilIrtl! .."., mn pi • mterthr P.s.G.A W.&#13;
lransl!O!1atloo). - ud mem..... II'e servIIK .... B. Pr ........&#13;
ARTICLE IV-O Commllke. Uan" tken Upo. tile eaII tI .. PI lJer'&#13;
In the administration 01 ~ .... 1s II9t b±·....lIIe SeuIe "Pwrbtdc· Pc' roftO c'&#13;
segregated fee budget the !fi8n ·tIfi~ PiN!'~nt if ""d'. lie. 1M: c•• !Strr&#13;
s~dents of the University of P.B.GoA. Iae. II..... _ aM ,kill I.rm .... te a semblled&#13;
Wlsconain.Parkside in tile ..... Ish. " Ar1ide IV, ........\ ~ !!gP!rt t&#13;
cordance with Arti 1 'IV ac- SedIon 17, Z oMIJ be re,leat I.r Ute AlI t1.u&#13;
evaluate servi c ~ -16,shall JMd IemeUEE ' Ie" C.mmlltee lId Iller IV&#13;
their needs an':"co~. ataff as to C&#13;
el&#13;
-&#13;
mUter&#13;
.... IIRI I!Ic g- sgrecated U!Iy!nIty lee ...&#13;
ARTICLEIV14 Pd crow ill II tIM:II a.etaded. bece 'IIeczSnl U*.g 'Ie me ..,&#13;
The resPo~Sibility and ac- 'Tht, PresIdeat ~ lwe" ~ resemmeldaU.u lor tke&#13;
countability lor all of the two memben "';LiD llIIbanaI 01 all IUds alJecaled&#13;
pre.ceding articles shall be r:;.'I1le~~ .jfl f"'Re":Zl':=i:.!i::.u.:~&#13;
mamtamed by the students of the lake ~ ~ _ Ie&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside officeNNe~ lUii1 serve f1"pmlUee I.. lIIe d!f!MorMI .-&#13;
. dan' - year. e _,serve lIIe 8W&lt;!1 Gr!9 porU!! ., tile&#13;
m aecor ce WIthArticle IV-16. more tho _ tumCbair- ~ated U~ fee IIi&amp;D&#13;
ARTICLE IV-15 •&#13;
Th tud po....... oat Ie iIlO r 1pp!Y1lJ&#13;
, e s ents of the University B. ProeednreI br a 1D8jor1"tY .f lIIe eatlre&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside shall work UJNlnthe eaII of the Cban""Uw Seaale. 'ftie .....,..,.....iiIII_&#13;
closely WIththe OlanceUor or the and Ibe Prelideal of Porbide gll ... t be aJDeDded by ..&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside St"'ent GovenuDOlt __ Seaale.&#13;
or ~IS staff, m aecordance with lac.. Ibe COIIUIIIttee shall .... iii cue of re""'tioa, tile _&#13;
Artlcle IV-16, in developing the llII811yPrepare reeomJDendatiOlll mItted bad&amp;et sball be seal .. cl&#13;
segregated fee budget. on tbe dl'bursal .1 tbe to lbe Slgdnt Gr.up Innd&#13;
ARTICLE IV·IS Segregated Unlveulty Fee. Committee wilb ,tated reaIOIlI.&#13;
The Parks ide student Sbould Ibe P.S.G.A. 1Dc. CODCIU' Afler Ibe third re!e&lt;;1!oD, tile&#13;
Go~ernment Association Inc. in tbe recolDDJendaUon, tbe Senate .ball take .rl,laal&#13;
subject to the responsibilities and President of Parbide Studenl juriadictioo I... the dtJburlal of&#13;
powers of the Board of Regents, Government Allo&lt;lati.n Inc. Ibe St"'ent Gr9QPSueport fundi.&#13;
the President of the University of shaJJ so advtse Ibe C!wlcellor ARTICLE IV 19&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor and tbe Cbalrpers.n .1 tbe Provtsions lor , student health&#13;
of the University of Wisconsin- AllocatiOllS COIDIIlittee. Should service as detemuned by the&#13;
Parkside and the faculty of the Ibe Chancellor concur in Ibe Parkside Student Government&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside P.S.G.A 1Dc. recommendatioo, Association lnc. m consultatlon&#13;
shall be active participants in the be-sbe shall arrange lor Its 1m. with the Chancellor, or deaigne ,&#13;
inunediate governance of and plementallon. Should tbe of the Unh'ersity 01 Wisconsin-&#13;
,policy development for such Chancellor not concur, Ibe Parkside shall be made 10 insure&#13;
institutions. As such, the provlsi ... under ue,otiati... that the student body shall hav&#13;
Parkside Student Government shall be used. the right 10 adequate health care.&#13;
Association Inc. shall have Rejecti.n or Ibe Commlttee's ARTICLE IV·!lI&#13;
primary responsibility for the reconunendati.n takes a s-s vote All auxiliary enterprises shall&#13;
formulation and review of of Ibeentire Senate. Iathe cue 01 be subject to review by the&#13;
policies concerning student life, rejecti.n by the Senate, Ibe Parkside Student Government&#13;
services and interests. The reasons for rejection shall be Association Inc. 10 msure that the&#13;
Parkside Student Government agreed to and forwarded 10 Ibe rights and interests of the student&#13;
Association Inc. in consultation Cbairperson of the Allocations body are met.&#13;
with the Chancellor 01 the C.mmlttee. Tbe AlI.catioAl ARTiCLE IV·!1&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Committee sball recoosJder Its All transportation proposals&#13;
and subject to the final con- recommeDdallon and again mcluding parldng sball likewise&#13;
firmation of the Board 01Regents forward it to Ibe Senate. be subje&lt;:t 10 review.&#13;
shaJJ have tbe responsibility for C. Negotiatio... ARTICLE 1V·1t&#13;
the disposition of .those student ne President and PresideDt Affiliation with an extramural&#13;
fees which constitute substantial Pro tem of Ibe Parblde Studsot organization sh'" not In Itself&#13;
support for campus student GoyernmeD! AlloclaUoA lAC. disqualify a student 01' anlzation&#13;
activities. shall be Iberepn:senlatives ollbe from student government&#13;
As such, the Parkside Student Parblde St"'eD! Government recognition or IDstitutlonal&#13;
Government Association Inc. Association 1Dc. in any COD- Uroverslty rules and regulations.&#13;
shall be the sole representative sultatlons with the Olancell ... or ARTICLE IV·Z3&#13;
student group of the students of his-ber designee in dealing wilb ARTICLE 1V-Z3&#13;
the University of Wisconsin- Ibe Parblde Student Govern- No Student Shall be dented&#13;
Parkside aJJowed 10 participate meg! ,ysoctallon IDc, membership to· any on-&lt;:ampus&#13;
in institutional governance. AllocstioD Committee recom- organizatlon for reasons of race,&#13;
ARTICLE IV.17 mendati..... color, religious creed. nlItionlll&#13;
ln a~cordance with Article IV- II tbe Parkslde Student origin, sex, past criminal record,&#13;
16an Allocation Committee shall Government Association lac. a'" political belief or political action.&#13;
be established or designated by Ibe Chancellor canoot reconcile ARTICLE IV-If&#13;
Government Association Inc. for Ibeir differences in the aIIocati.n Students shall have the right to&#13;
reviewing requests for program 01 tbe allocable portion of mVlte and hear speakers of their&#13;
support and budget allocations of segregated University fees, eacb choice and approval shall nol be&#13;
the alloctable portion of the will submit a set 01 rec.m· withheld by the Parkslde Studenl&#13;
gregated University fee and all mendations to Ibe Board 01 Government Association lnc or&#13;
se tion of said committee shaH be Regents lor final dispOSitiOn. University authorities for pur-&#13;
:~bject to the final approval of Article IV-1S pose of censorshtp.&#13;
the Parkside Student Govern- Student Group FundlDg ARTICLE IV·ZS&#13;
ment Association Inc. m con- Committee . Students shall be lree to&#13;
. nction with the ChanceJJor 01 A. Membership assemble, to demonst"t., to i~University of Wisconsin- The Stullenl Group Funding conununicate, and to ~rotest&#13;
e k 'd Conunittee sball conslsL of 7 mdividual1y or through a student&#13;
~rme. . .&#13;
The Allocations committee members' 511 members selected orgamzation so long as no&#13;
M bershlp by Ibe Chairpers.n of the Student federal, state or municipal I."IS&#13;
A'Th:mAllocatiOns Committee Organiz~tion CounCil, from violated.&#13;
shall consist of 11 voting m~m. amo.ng itS mem=,pof a~d ARTICLE 1V-Z6&#13;
rs (except 'additional voting confirmed by. tw~ e Students shall be free Lo use&#13;
be b' may be added under Student OrgallWltion Councll and campus lacilities lor meetings 01&#13;
mem ers . ions of the next one member. who shall serve as student organizationst SUbject to&#13;
the provis U el ted b Ib hl 5 elected in Ibe fa Ibe Chairpersoo, s ec Y e&#13;
~ragrap _' b Ib Cb' I the All ti and 5 elected in the spring Y e 8lrperson 0 oca ODS&#13;
dents at large. and Ibe Committee Irom among tbe&#13;
stu 'd t .1 the Student elected 'D1embers of thai ComPresl&#13;
en . of'- ed b t . tiOD CouDcil (ex- mlttee and co urn Y WOO OrgaDIZa&#13;
Continued&#13;
Page 9&#13;
Public Notice&#13;
• • I' t. •&#13;
Parkside Govern- .1 the . Ill iation Inc. to sign&#13;
~ rovided that a&#13;
acts, pthe entire Senate&#13;
t)' of&#13;
. ident shall draw up&#13;
~de Student GovernparkS\ation&#13;
1nc. budget and&#13;
~ r..egislative Branch&#13;
~ to ~~de Student Governpar&#13;
· ation Inc. for ?PASf,OClrresident&#13;
may sign '!11e 'th th only consistent wi e&#13;
~JV 'dent shall take care&#13;
~onstitution of the&#13;
the t AS50ciation Inc. and&#13;
be faithfully executed .&#13;
.iaws51.dent Vice President&#13;
Pre ' • f{icers of the ParkS1de&#13;
;It ~vernment Associa~on&#13;
~ be removed from office&#13;
jfeliction of duty or failure&#13;
care that the constitution&#13;
Parkside Student GovernlJt&#13;
A5,10Ciation Inc. and its bybe&#13;
faithfully executed. ·&#13;
ARTICLE III&#13;
ONI&#13;
judicial powers of the&#13;
. Student Government&#13;
· tion Inc. shall be vested in&#13;
court, an appellate&#13;
and in lower courts that the&#13;
of the Parkside Student&#13;
nment Association Inc.&#13;
establish. The judges, of all&#13;
shall maintain good&#13;
' and character during&#13;
fa1llS of office.&#13;
ON II&#13;
ent members of the&#13;
branch of the Parkside&#13;
t Government Association&#13;
shall be University of&#13;
nsin-Parkside students,&#13;
carry no less than 6 credits,&#13;
not be on academic&#13;
tion, must have completed&#13;
than 12 credits, at the&#13;
rsity of Wisconsin-&#13;
. , and must be confirmed&#13;
the Chancellor of the&#13;
·ty of Wisconsin Parkside&#13;
atwo-thirdsapproval by the&#13;
Senate of the Parkside&#13;
t Government Association&#13;
Administrative apts&#13;
to the judicial branch&#13;
Parkside Student GovernA&amp;,ociation&#13;
Inc. shall hold&#13;
office subject to the apof&#13;
the Senate of the&#13;
Student Government&#13;
· tion Inc. Terms of office&#13;
be for 4 years.&#13;
ON Ill&#13;
judiciary court and the&#13;
le court shall convene no&#13;
Qian IO, and no more than 14&#13;
days after a case has been&#13;
ed to the court from the&#13;
~ disciplinary head of&#13;
~ strative branch of the&#13;
ers1ty of w· . de isconsm&#13;
' or as requested by a&#13;
t. The judiciary court shall&#13;
once a month at an&#13;
tished Place and time&#13;
IV .&#13;
Judicial court shall&#13;
of four · ' J . Judges and one . Ustice who shall . ha&#13;
iction ve ed to . over all cases&#13;
iplin it by the designated&#13;
,str:tr_Y head of the adtve&#13;
bra h ·1ersit nc o{ the&#13;
·d Y of Wisconsine,&#13;
or as nt requested by a&#13;
o·fj:r shall_ extend its&#13;
ionstitutal r~view to decide&#13;
~ th 10nahty of the acetnrn&#13;
e Parkside Student&#13;
ent Asso . t· onJy . c1a 10n Inc. and&#13;
the Pass 1~S judgement&#13;
~ider:estion being&#13;
ng th · In . the case of&#13;
action: constitutionality of&#13;
t G of the Parkside&#13;
·derj8·overnment Association&#13;
Parti~~ns shall be binding on&#13;
arde;n~olvect, and shall be&#13;
0 the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of th · · t t· e ad-&#13;
;•?1s r~t ive branch of the&#13;
mvers1 y of Wisconsin p k . or to th . - ar side . e appropriate authoriti&#13;
for unplementar es 100.&#13;
SECTION V&#13;
Th_e appellate cotirt shall&#13;
co~s:t ~f three judges, one of&#13;
Ww. c s_ all be a University of&#13;
isconsm-Parkside student and&#13;
th~ . othe~ two shall be ad-&#13;
~rustrative appointments. Upon&#13;
e appeal of a negative decision&#13;
by a student defendant the&#13;
pellat~ court shall have the po::&#13;
~ review the case in question and&#13;
e1th_e~ uphold or overturn the&#13;
decision of the judicial court Th&#13;
~ecision rendered by a maj~ri;&#13;
vote of the appellate court shall&#13;
be binding upon all parties involved.&#13;
•&#13;
SECTION VI&#13;
The members of the P.S.G.A.&#13;
Inc. Judiciary Court shall be&#13;
members of the appropriate&#13;
committee designated to hear&#13;
appeals of parking violations&#13;
issued by Safety and Security.&#13;
ARTICLE IV&#13;
ARTICLE IV-1&#13;
An applicant shall not be&#13;
denied admission to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
for reasons of race, color&#13;
national origin, religious creed'&#13;
sex, previous criminal record'&#13;
political beliefs or political ac:&#13;
tion.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-2&#13;
Financial aid shall not be&#13;
denied for reasons of race, color,&#13;
national origin, religious creed,&#13;
sex, previous criminal recor.d,&#13;
political belief or political action.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-3&#13;
Students shall have the right of&#13;
freedom of expression, as defined&#13;
in the Constitution of the United&#13;
States in all classrooms.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-4&#13;
Students are free to take exception&#13;
to the data presented or&#13;
views offered in any course of&#13;
study and may advocate alter&#13;
native opinions to those&#13;
presented within the classroom.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-5&#13;
All students shall have the right&#13;
to due process of law as&#13;
guaranteed by the United States&#13;
Constitution.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-6&#13;
Any student shall have the&#13;
right to request in those areas of&#13;
student disciplinary matters that&#13;
are referred to the designated&#13;
disciplinary head of the administration,&#13;
a hearing by the&#13;
judiciary court of the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
Inc. and that request shall be&#13;
binding on all parties involved.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-7&#13;
Students shall be evaluated&#13;
only on their knowledge of the&#13;
subject and academic performance&#13;
and in turn are&#13;
responsible to maintain standards&#13;
of academic performance&#13;
established for each course they&#13;
have enrolled in.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-8&#13;
Disclosure of students' political&#13;
or personal beliefs, in connection&#13;
with course work shall not be&#13;
made public without express&#13;
permission of the student.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-9 . Student records on academic&#13;
performance and disciplinary&#13;
actions shall be separate.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-10 . Information from counseling&#13;
and disciplinary files shall not be&#13;
made available to persons on or&#13;
off campus without the express&#13;
consent of the student invol~ed,&#13;
except under legal compulsion.&#13;
ARTlCLE IV-11 . All records and infor1?abon&#13;
kept on file shall be readily accessible&#13;
to the student to whom&#13;
they pertain.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-l2 Wednes~ay, March 12, 197S THE PARKSIDE NGER 9&#13;
The students shall f and · . - _ormulate&#13;
- ' 1D con1unction with th&#13;
Chancellor e distributi • approve the - on of the allo bl administr ti ca e non- Se a ve P&lt;&gt;rtions of the&#13;
gr~gated University Fee. This&#13;
l!_ortion includes th&#13;
admini b'a e non- . s tive cos~ associated&#13;
.wtth all student activities ( e g&#13;
student programming, heaith&#13;
!!rvice, publications and&#13;
organizations i athletics, intra~urals&#13;
and club sports i&#13;
aUXi.liary services, parting and&#13;
transportation).&#13;
ARTICLE IV-13&#13;
In the administration of&#13;
segregated fee budget the&#13;
s~dents . of the University of&#13;
Wiscons10-Parkside, in accordance&#13;
with Article IV-lS shall&#13;
ev~uate services and staff as to&#13;
their needs and cost.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-M&#13;
The responsibility and accountability&#13;
for all of the&#13;
preceding articles shall be&#13;
maintained by the students of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
in accordance with Article IV-16.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-15&#13;
The students of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside shall work&#13;
closely with the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
or his staff, in accordance with&#13;
Article IV-16, in developing the&#13;
segregated fee budget.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-16&#13;
The Parkside student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
subject to the responsibilities and&#13;
powers of the Board of Regents,&#13;
the President of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system, the Chancellor&#13;
of the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
and the faculty of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
shall be active participants in the&#13;
immediate governance of and&#13;
policy development for such&#13;
institutions. As such, the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. shall have&#13;
primary responsibility for the&#13;
formulation and review of&#13;
policies concerning student life,&#13;
services and interests. The&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. in consultation&#13;
with the Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
and subject to the final confirmation&#13;
of the Board of Regents&#13;
shall have the responsibility for&#13;
the disposition of .those student&#13;
fees which constitute sub.5tantial&#13;
support for campus student&#13;
activities.&#13;
As such, the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc.&#13;
shall be the sole representative&#13;
student group of the students of&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
allowed to participate&#13;
in institutional governance.&#13;
ARTICLE IV-17&#13;
In accordance with Article IV16&#13;
an Allocation Committee shall&#13;
be established or designated by&#13;
Government Association Inc. for&#13;
reviewing requests for program&#13;
support and budget allocations of&#13;
the alloctable portion of the&#13;
segregated Universf~y fee and all&#13;
action of said conuruttee shall be&#13;
subject to the final approval of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. in conjunction&#13;
with the Cha~cellor . of&#13;
the University of W1sconsmParkside.&#13;
. The Allocations Committee&#13;
A. Membership . The Allocations Committee&#13;
shall consist of 11 voting m~mbers&#13;
( except additional votmg&#13;
members maY be added under&#13;
the provisions of the next&#13;
ragraph), 5 elected ?1 the fall&#13;
ii'd 5 elected in the sprmg by the&#13;
students at large, and the&#13;
'dent of the Student pres1 . Organization Council ( exPub&#13;
Ii C Notice •.. ' ';&#13;
Funding&#13;
Committee&#13;
A. Membership&#13;
'lbe Stutlent Gr up&#13;
Committee shall con i l of&#13;
members; six members selected&#13;
bv the Chairperson of th Stu.dent&#13;
Organization Council from&#13;
among its member hip and&#13;
confirmed b,· hn-third of the&#13;
Student Organization Council and&#13;
one member, who hall serve as&#13;
the Chairperson. selected b:y the&#13;
Chairper on of the Allocations&#13;
Committee from among the&#13;
elected member of that Committee&#13;
and confirmed by tw~&#13;
fr ~o&#13;
tr t«&gt;, to&#13;
communicate, and to ,.ro t&#13;
indi ·idually or through a tud nt&#13;
organization o long&#13;
fed ral, late municipal In&#13;
violated.&#13;
ARTI LE l\'-%6&#13;
udents shall be free to&#13;
campus faciliti for m ti s of&#13;
udent organizations, ub] t to&#13;
Continued&#13;
Page 9 &#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednescl.y, fMrch 12, 1975&#13;
of ....&#13;
•&#13;
9&#13;
of&#13;
In DO ... y shall the ceoslIl1ltional&#13;
rigbls III any ......... t.&#13;
as slated In the Umted Stales&#13;
CansIltaaion, ....... be denied by&#13;
aD)·on. in autbority at tne&#13;
Um•• rslty 01 WisconsinPartsidt&#13;
ARTICLE IV4t&#13;
1bt .........1press sba11 be ne&#13;
III ctI&gt;IQr'ShIp and advanct approval&#13;
III ""PY. and its editors&#13;
sbaII be 11ft to cit ...... tbtir own&#13;
••litorlal policIes and n... s&#13;
.......-age.&#13;
ARTICLE IV"&#13;
1bt sbIdtaI press shall be&#13;
....... dod aU \hoot nghts as&#13;
bted In th. United States&#13;
ConslIlaaion.&#13;
ARTICLE 1V-31&#13;
ubject 10 UDI•• rsity&#13;
_. stodtnts shall ha••&#13;
the I to dislribute or oeIl&#13;
Ulfonnallcln of a pnnted nall1rt&#13;
t d nol cennict .. ,th&#13;
t)·of I8COf\Wl-Parllsidt&#13;
conlrads&#13;
.utTICLE (\'-3Z&#13;
"- ..... 1 1 • ReaD u.....&#13;
.!!!.!!!!!:-&#13;
1, F.. a dh 10.. 1 recaU&#13;
.a ta t..... ,~~.~ly&#13;
" W ....... Parbidt lladtat&#13;
I..- the dIvisIGD may start a&#13;
recaU DdilloD ....... bIa-1Jtr&#13;
SC!'lIrJijIiV :twIegta from that&#13;
cMvls10D may sip It. 15Sof&#13;
the dIvisIGD mliSisip peullon&#13;
f« .aIIdItY ' For a n:can agaiDIt au al-1arl·&#13;
Se_tor .. omeer of piii'b!d.&#13;
...... t Gov~t ~lIon&#13;
1IIc. uy Uaiv~ty of WtscollSiD- •&#13;
~ stDdtDt may start the&#13;
pelilloo and any UnI.erslty of&#13;
w~ParbIdt studeDt may&#13;
!!&amp;!J!,.&#13;
%) 111. recaU ~tlon must&#13;
ha •• a slaltre""t Of1lle reason!s}&#13;
I. removal Ir&lt;Im ofllet, 'I1aJs&#13;
m.. t dtaI with actlous COlDmItIt&lt;I&#13;
In the preseat term 01&#13;
qUia: U. Sepptgr or OffIcer&#13;
reslJDI and Is rt!J!POiDted to a&#13;
I!!!llloD wlthID the term 01 the&#13;
offke be last bt1d, It shaD be&#13;
l'9fIIlfkmI only a coatIDnalion 01&#13;
bIs term.&#13;
S) 111. sludeul(s) shall pres.nt&#13;
lb. polill., to a;;; StJaate. Upon&#13;
ncelvlng verification of tbe&#13;
polilion lb. Senate must im·&#13;
mediately oollfy the school paper&#13;
that a recaD is lD progress and a&#13;
"P"clal .Ieclloo wID tat. plac •.&#13;
lb.re must be an .lecUoD. There&#13;
must be au election within 15&#13;
school days after notification of&#13;
the valid petition Is recel.ed by&#13;
lbe Senate.&#13;
4) Upou receiving the recall&#13;
pelltion lbe Senate must im·&#13;
mediately turn It o.er to the&#13;
elecllon commltlee. The election&#13;
committee sb8ll 68ve five days to&#13;
verify lbe names on lbe petillon,&#13;
ID tbe event tbat lbere Is no&#13;
elecllon commltlee, tbe Senate&#13;
must aPJlOlnt one within five&#13;
days,&#13;
If illegal names are found on&#13;
the petition, and the Dumber of&#13;
legal names drop to less Iban 15&#13;
percent, Ibe election commltlee&#13;
must notify tile stUdent!s} wbo&#13;
presented the petition. Upon&#13;
notification, tbe students bave&#13;
five school days to get Iberequired&#13;
number 01 names, If&#13;
Ibey fall to do so, tbelr recall&#13;
pettttou sball be declared null, At&#13;
Ibe request of Ibe student who&#13;
presented the petition, the&#13;
election committee must show&#13;
that the names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed&#13;
'rom the petltton after filing.&#13;
Once Ibe petitton is presented to&#13;
Ibe Senate. It cannot be wilb·&#13;
President of tIae&#13;
electtons&#13;
20 dayS,&#13;
ask Force on Impl~mentatio&#13;
A co ImTIEE \,&#13;
, ;0.1\ EBSITY Of lIilSCQ • rsP.UlKSIDE&#13;
CIlA.l'TI:R 44&#13;
44. &amp;1 tlo BOariI&#13;
1bt lorce recognizes a&#13;
Ira d111ou.aI and justIfiable&#13;
predominant faculty role In the&#13;
r Vl w and control of intercoUe&#13;
late athletics We&#13;
Is role concermng inand&#13;
III be&#13;
e suggest a&#13;
~:::~ lIItte&amp;Se the P lion of dents and ~=~&#13;
lact that the D of tiCS IS, and IS&#13;
to remam, a faculh&#13;
member • est that th~&#13;
IMmbersh P COllSIt 01 tbe&#13;
ot tics tJ:~mC:lo).&#13;
lacult). Olle communiI)'&#13;
member four studen ,no&#13;
oue of .. hUD hall&#13;
particlpat. In Intercollegiate&#13;
os a member 01 the&#13;
dra al1enbon to 44.08&#13;
SUl~st that "to the&#13;
aU Committee ~ be&#13;
added after bxI el."&#13;
under ~.08 (3) 10 we&#13;
recommend Ih. addition&#13;
to the la&lt;ull)' and&#13;
ot d through the&#13;
G A Inc Irom time to&#13;
have its runctions changes&#13;
somewhal and will no longer&#13;
have a direct policy role. We&#13;
recommend no change in&#13;
membership.&#13;
44.11 Lectures and floe Arts&#13;
Commitlee&#13;
Sillce lItiS committee no longer&#13;
utilizes Segregated Fee lunds,&#13;
Ibe present constitutency and&#13;
charge seem appropriate.&#13;
44.1% Campus Coocerns Committee&#13;
---we- recommend extensive&#13;
changes in Ibis committee. The&#13;
membership, we believe, should&#13;
be 4 students (selected by the&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc.), 2 laculty&#13;
(selected by the University&#13;
Committee;, 2 members 01 the&#13;
academic staff (one selected by&#13;
the Dean of Students and one&#13;
selected by the Oiancellor) and&#13;
one member 01 the classified&#13;
slafi !selecled by the O1an.&#13;
cellor).. This membership&#13;
dl.stiibubon necessitates that the&#13;
committee no longer be a laculty&#13;
corruruttee since the membership&#13;
00 longer contains a majority or&#13;
laculty.&#13;
,~~e.runctions and responsdililtes&#13;
should include:&#13;
(I) acting as a liaison between&#13;
student organizations and the&#13;
adminislr.ation when a student&#13;
organIZation so requests&#13;
(2) offering advi~e ~nd&#13;
re,commendations to the d&#13;
IlI1Jlislr I' . a - alan m matters which&#13;
are not the p";mo~, sibilil I . -._, responyo&#13;
either laculty staff&#13;
students. " or&#13;
(31 off . , enng advice on specific&#13;
lSSUes not predominatel&#13;
COIIcern I Y the =~~o another COmmill&#13;
th:. ",:,st oIth~ lac~;'&#13;
!4) the luncti admimstration.&#13;
ons 01the Co&#13;
Ceremonies Commit'- mpus&#13;
44.211. = (UW.p&#13;
I 5) the lunctions 01&#13;
munlcation Arts And' the Com·&#13;
Gallery Commillte ltonum and&#13;
(6) Ihe luncti~ns&#13;
Umversity Book t 01 the&#13;
mittee. Sore Com_&#13;
~.13 University Co .&#13;
lUi Codlflcaif mmlttte&#13;
44.15NOIlllnaU:n&#13;
Com!lUltee&#13;
W os Commitle&#13;
e recommend e Publl tha~ these&#13;
e Notlee&#13;
committees continue to be&#13;
composed exclusively of faculty,&#13;
which seems to us appropriate.&#13;
We do, however, suggest that&#13;
under 44.14 (2) the lollowing be&#13;
added: "The Commillee shall&#13;
consull with students through&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. where appropriate."&#13;
44.16 Student Financial Aids&#13;
Committee&#13;
Recognizing that such a&#13;
co~mittee is necessary. we&#13;
believe the current constituency&#13;
is adequate.&#13;
44.17 Library and Learning&#13;
Center Committee&#13;
The present constituency&#13;
seems adequate, though the&#13;
Committee seems unusually&#13;
large.&#13;
44.18 Campus Planniog Committee&#13;
We leel that students are under-represented&#13;
on this committee.&#13;
One studenl should be&#13;
added, necessitating one faculty&#13;
member being added, the latter&#13;
bemg elected at large. The&#13;
PreSident 01P.S.G.A. Inc. (or hisherdeslgnee)&#13;
shall be a member.&#13;
Particular attenlion should be&#13;
paid to (3) (a) with regard to the&#13;
membership 01 sub-committees&#13;
and provisions should be made&#13;
that when sulH:ommittees deal&#13;
~th "pol.icies concerning student&#13;
life, serVIces, and interests" that&#13;
any recommendations or actions&#13;
be lorwarded to the P.S.G.A Inc.&#13;
and to the O1ancellor&#13;
44.19 Natural Scientific Areas&#13;
Committee&#13;
The co 't . mm. tee currently&#13;
can tams no students. We&#13;
recommend thai two students&#13;
mSc~Jormg in the Division of&#13;
lence be added.&#13;
44.20 Acade~' P I' . mittee u.u.C 0 lCles Com~&#13;
de=le this commiltee clearly&#13;
. m matters that are a runary responsibility· 01 the&#13;
acuity, significant student&#13;
mwembership seems j'ustillable&#13;
e rec .&#13;
added ~mmend two students be&#13;
com . give a lotal 01four on the&#13;
di I mltlee. In light of Ihe&#13;
s nbutional . facult. reqU1reme~t for&#13;
, y, 11seems appropriate to&#13;
reqUlre that no more than two&#13;
THE P R SIDE RA GER esd•y,&#13;
from the divisioa may scan a&#13;
rttaU ~titioa agaJnst bis-her&#13;
sc11tor, Qgly stgdepta from tbat&#13;
di may sign It, 15 percent of&#13;
~ divisJGa mast sip the petition&#13;
for aUdJty.&#13;
For a rttall against an at-large&#13;
aator or Officer of Parkside&#13;
adent Govenuneat Association&#13;
~- HY Ualvenlty of Wisconsin-.&#13;
ParbJde student may start the&#13;
petitioa and any Unlvenity of&#13;
in-Parbide student may&#13;
~ ! 1 The recall petition must&#13;
hue a statf'a:mt of the reasoo(s)&#13;
fw removal from office. 1bJs&#13;
m t deal with actions commldNI&#13;
In the present term of&#13;
qffk:r u a Seutor or Officer&#13;
ps and ls reapeolnf;ed to a&#13;
ltioa Idun the term of the&#13;
be la held, It shall be&#13;
must be an election within 15&#13;
school days after notification of&#13;
the valid petition is received by&#13;
the Senate.&#13;
4) Upon receiving the recall&#13;
petition the Senate must immediately&#13;
turn Jt over to the&#13;
election committee. The election&#13;
committee shall have five days to&#13;
verify the names on the petition.&#13;
In the event that there is no&#13;
election committee, the Senate&#13;
must aepolnt one within five&#13;
days.&#13;
If illegal names are found on&#13;
the petition, and the number of&#13;
legal names drop to less than 15&#13;
percent, the election committee&#13;
must notify the student( s) who&#13;
presented the petition. Upon&#13;
notification, the students have&#13;
five school days to get therequired&#13;
number of names. H&#13;
they fail to do so, their recall&#13;
petition shall be declared null. At&#13;
the request of the student who&#13;
presented the petition, the&#13;
election committee must show&#13;
that the names are illegal.&#13;
No legal name can be removed&#13;
'rom the petition after filing.&#13;
Once the petition is presented to&#13;
the Senate, it cannot he withce&#13;
on lmplementatio&#13;
functions changes&#13;
nd will no longer&#13;
committees continue to be&#13;
composed exclusively of faculty,&#13;
which seems to us appropriate. v du- t policy role. We&#13;
recommend no change in&#13;
and Fine Arts&#13;
. The functions and responibiliti&#13;
should include:&#13;
1 &gt; ting as a liaison between&#13;
nt or anizations and th&#13;
~ tr_ation when a studen~&#13;
organization so requests.&#13;
2 offering advice and&#13;
r .c~mmendations to the admuustration&#13;
in matters which&#13;
are no the prim,,,.., bil t r . --·-.1 respon1&#13;
Y o either faculty staff&#13;
dents. • , or&#13;
( 3) offering advice on specific&#13;
not predominatel th&#13;
COllmf Ye&#13;
o another COJlUnitt&#13;
bod)de• at the request of the fac~tyor&#13;
nts or the &lt;&gt;-A_,_. tr . • 4) the f . a-.uunis ation&#13;
unctions of th Ca · monies Commitie: mpus&#13;
44 21 ). (UW.p&#13;
(S) the functions or the&#13;
muniration Arts AUdito . Comallery&#13;
Committe nurn and&#13;
( &amp;) the funct~~&#13;
mversity Book tns of the&#13;
rnitte . s ore Com.&#13;
Ul nh·ersity Co . iU4 Cocrn mnuttee I cation Co .-&#13;
We do, however, suggest that&#13;
under 44.14 (2) the following be&#13;
added : "The Committee shall&#13;
consult with students through&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. where appropriate."&#13;
&#13;
44.16 Student Financial Aids&#13;
Committee&#13;
Recognizing that such a&#13;
coI?mittee is necessary, we&#13;
believe the current constituency&#13;
is adequate.&#13;
44.17 Library and Learning&#13;
Center Committee&#13;
The present constituency&#13;
seems adequate , though the&#13;
Committee seems unusually&#13;
large.&#13;
44.18 Campus Planning Committee&#13;
&#13;
Wefeel that students are und~r-represented&#13;
on this comrruttee.&#13;
One student should be&#13;
added, necessitating one faculty&#13;
m:mber being added, the latter&#13;
bem~ elected at large. The&#13;
President of p .S.G .A. Inc. ( or hisher&#13;
~esignee) shall be a member .&#13;
Pa.rticular attention should be&#13;
paid to (3) (a) with regard to the&#13;
membership of sub-committees&#13;
and provisions should be made&#13;
th.at when sub-committees deal&#13;
~th "po~cies concerning student&#13;
hfe, semces, and interests" that&#13;
any recommendations or actions&#13;
be forwarded to the P.S.G.A Inc.&#13;
and to the Chancellor&#13;
44.19 Natural Scientific A&#13;
Committee reas&#13;
Th&#13;
e. committee currently&#13;
;ontams no students. We&#13;
ec?m_mend that two students&#13;
;~Jormg in the Division of&#13;
ience be added&#13;
..!!:20 Academic .Policies Com-&#13;
.!!!_1ttee&#13;
de:I~ this committee clearly&#13;
. m matters that are a&#13;
runary responsibility of the&#13;
acuity' significant student&#13;
::~bership seems justifiable.&#13;
add ecom_mend two students be&#13;
com ed ~ give a total of four on the&#13;
distr~It~ee · In light of the&#13;
facultbut~onal requirement for&#13;
r . Y' it seems appropriate to&#13;
equu-e that no more than two &#13;
INO:S FINE FOODS CHICkEN \ Visit KenOSha's Largest STEAKS ,&#13;
Record Department SPORTS 4, &amp; COCKTAILS SEAFOOD&#13;
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°ClaSSical ...... 551..1&amp;11 l'IZl \ (III( Kt:&#13;
GNOceHI laCine,WisconslO SPAGHETTI LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
2121· Unci S"H' ''0 FISII('\RR\,OVrs SANDWICHES&#13;
~~&#13;
KENOSHA,WIS SJ,.. _E 634-1991 BOMBERS&#13;
ANYTIMEI&#13;
HAMBURGERS Parts a.~ Service far BEER&#13;
~&#13;
SOFT DRI'NKS All 1II,.rle~ Cars PICK UP OR&#13;
WINES oTFOODS&#13;
also MOUltS s- .....&amp; '""'" II JI • M&#13;
PIPING~O YOUR HOME&#13;
The Place to buy records _ QUALITY ROAD SERVlCE 11." M • "LiVEdO&#13;
'n.a.s.at n MA.M ".AM,&#13;
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RCH 29 ..APRIL 6&#13;
ONLY $135&#13;
COMPLETE.&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
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fA a Beach Shores wn Inn&#13;
Rooms with Kitchenette&#13;
YWorld Option _ $10&#13;
'.ap li '&#13;
P vatlon Or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
'SI&#13;
.nAVEI.CE"TER&#13;
,I~'D&#13;
-197 ('all: 55:~.22~4&#13;
r-:::-:-- .:Wednesdily, March 12, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
If you think Koda&#13;
is just pretty pictures&#13;
you ought to have&#13;
your chest exa i e&#13;
~-:;;;&#13;
radiologist-and, most important, reduced radi..&#13;
ation exposure. , .&#13;
Researching and crealin~ better x-ray fIlms&#13;
is good for our business, which ,ISwhy we went&#13;
Ontothem in the first place. But It does our SOCII&#13;
t ood too-which isn't a bad feeling. After all, eyg , . ty&#13;
ur business depends on our socie -so we o .&#13;
care what happens to It.&#13;
. '~'~'ws that you have a&#13;
When a chest x-ray s cer it's not a pretty , I'k TB or can , 't p~otentialkiller Ie, rtant picture because I&#13;
picture, But it's an Imcf~ ct and catch the killer&#13;
can' help the doctor e e&#13;
in time, ut to catch these poten-&#13;
. When doctors are ~ sharpest, clearest x..ray&#13;
tial killers, th&amp;Ywa~t ~nd that's why people a~&#13;
films they can ge, hours creating new an&#13;
K dak spend so m~ny t Already, the results&#13;
b~tter x-ray film ,equIP~~~he patient, economy&#13;
'nclude convenience 0 more useful tool for the . I 't I an even for the hOSPIa , .&#13;
INof~ FINE FOODS&#13;
~ &amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
1816 16 Street. •&#13;
l&#13;
·fte Wisconsin 1ac" ,&#13;
~ONE 634-1991 - PICKUP OR ~ SOFT DRINKS WINES&#13;
, ·R~k •Jazz •Pop •Folk&#13;
·Classical&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
1721 . S2nd Strut&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS Sll40&#13;
Parts and Service for HOT FOODS All I ported Cars ANYTIME! pl PING TO YOUR HOME&#13;
o1~1veRED&#13;
PEUGEOT&#13;
MONDIA&#13;
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~OK STOREKenosha&#13;
&#13;
SS fROM UNION PARK'&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL . ' .&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
lfl'W .PARKSIDE&#13;
YTONA BEACH&#13;
EXPRESS&#13;
ARCH 29-APRIL 6&#13;
ONLvs135&#13;
COMPLETE.&#13;
INCLUDES:&#13;
Transp t . lloto oration via Deluxe Ix r Coach&#13;
Dayt~~gahts Lodging at the&#13;
ltierato Beach Shores&#13;
'.\II n Inn&#13;
·~ Roorns With Kitchenette&#13;
Y World Option - $10&#13;
p~ . apphc t·&#13;
a ion or information&#13;
1 \" Contact: l~Plis,-&#13;
11, itAVELC'ENTER&#13;
. ,( D.197 Call· s··1 ·,2n• .... a .... ;-,-.&#13;
The Place to buy records&#13;
also&#13;
QUAun· ROAD ERVJC[&#13;
. I! you think Koda&#13;
1s Just pretty picture&#13;
you ought to h v&#13;
-your chest examine&#13;
, shows that you have a&#13;
When a chest x-ray cer ·1t's not a pretty&#13;
· . l'k TB or can , . potential kill~; I e . ortant picture becau~e it&#13;
picture. But its an imp t t and catch the killer&#13;
can· help the doctor de ec&#13;
in time. ut to catch these potenWhen&#13;
doctors ar~~ sharpest, clearest x-ray&#13;
tial killers, they wa~t ~nd that's w~y people a~&#13;
f i I ms they can ge . hours creating new an&#13;
Kodak spend so m8:ny t Already, the results&#13;
better x-ray film _equ1p~~~he patient, economy&#13;
include con~enien~~en more useful tool for the&#13;
for the hospital, an&#13;
- ...... ~ri&#13;
radiologist-and, most important, reduced radiation&#13;
exposure. . . Researching and creating better x-ray films&#13;
is good for our business, which _is why we wen!&#13;
into them in the first place. But 1t do_es our society&#13;
good, too-which isn't a bad feel~ng. After all,&#13;
our business depends on our society-so we&#13;
care what happens to_ it._&#13;
~ Kodak. ~ More than a blislness. &#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Weclnesd• .,. March 12. 1975&#13;
PSE starts&#13;
cancer drive&#13;
wtlI be p1a)~ opemng with contests&#13;
I 1.-" wiD meet II 2::10SltunlIy 1/IemoOIl.&#13;
212. BIACH RD. KENOSHA·551.1tTI&#13;
LIQUOR STORE. BAR. DINING ROOM&#13;
nd from lelt) of the fraternity is shown presenting tickets to his brolber BIIlu..&#13;
Bob Ung';'" (seen _.'Afttor while Ranger iceman Jerry Madala (left) and John Bl'1IIleIUlaot ..&#13;
eancer SOCIetycoo.=- •&#13;
Cole and Chambliss stand out&#13;
Playoffs&#13;
The Rangers wipped Morningside&#13;
of Sioux City Iowa in&#13;
tbe1r first game of the MAlA&#13;
playoffs in Kansas City yesterday&#13;
by a score of 57-54.&#13;
After cold shooling by the&#13;
Rangers in the first haH, the&#13;
Rangers came back from a 2&amp;-24&#13;
deficit to take the lead with 44-38&#13;
and 9: 12 lefl in the game.&#13;
Gary Cole. Parksides leading&#13;
se&lt;rer with 2S points fouled out&#13;
with 3:12 left in the game.&#13;
Morningside made a determined&#13;
effort to cut the lead with Cole out&#13;
bringing the score to $4-50 with&#13;
1:03 left.&#13;
Parkside called a time out with&#13;
the score ~2 and 32 seconds left&#13;
to go. King inbounded to Learths&#13;
Scott who was shoved out of&#13;
bounds with 31 seconds on the&#13;
clock. Scott hit on one free throw&#13;
to bring the score to 55-52.&#13;
Lomack of Morningside hustled&#13;
the ball down court and hit to&#13;
make it 55-54. Chambliss hit on a&#13;
charity shot with IS to go and the&#13;
score stood at 57-54. King was&#13;
fouled with 7 seconds to go. He&#13;
missed his shot and time ran out&#13;
as Morningside got the throw&#13;
away. .&#13;
On the last play of the game&#13;
Marshall Hill went up for the&#13;
rebound and came down on his&#13;
bad ankle. There is no word as&#13;
yet if he will be available for&#13;
todays game against Marymount&#13;
College of Kansas. Parkside&#13;
plays Marymount at 11: 15 this&#13;
morning. Marymount is slated as&#13;
the number four leam in the&#13;
tourney.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
••&#13;
: "SPECIAL"&#13;
: SPLASH:&#13;
: SALE!! •&#13;
: A COMPLETE&#13;
• WATER BED SET.lJp.&#13;
: .Deluxe Frame •&#13;
• • Headboord •&#13;
• .Pedestol&#13;
.• .Liner&#13;
•&#13;
• • Mottress $1 rt/tfS&#13;
• only vt .&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
and TAPES&#13;
Environmental&#13;
Furniture and Lighting&#13;
Quality Leather Goods&#13;
-'&#13;
'lflC~ 06 DOWN&#13;
P/wM 654·3578&#13;
Pipes Papers&#13;
Tapestries&#13;
Ethnic Jewelry&#13;
m re than a spring &amp; padding mattress ...&#13;
m re than a waterbed ...&#13;
• ONEJ'W4&#13;
ET•&#13;
• DRE$v1 •&#13;
• olso hos&#13;
: 0 fine selection of ~&#13;
• Bags ond 0 complete&#13;
• af woterbed prodUCts&#13;
• including&#13;
• Aqua Queen&#13;
.: (U.L. AP~rov.ed.H~~&#13;
•••••••&#13;
IRe Jlir/orm ~fer cJJraffre88&#13;
gives orthopedic comfort that&#13;
"""returns man t h" . 0 IS source&#13;
2 E PAR SIDE RA GER ednesday, March 12, 1975 ~-·-~~&#13;
S1&#13;
E starts&#13;
canc,er 1&#13;
drive&#13;
( nd from left) of the fraternity is shown presenting tickets to his brother Bill U&#13;
Bob Ung~ tyseco dinator while Ranger iceman Jerry Madala (left) and John Bruneau look,,.. Cancer Soc1e coor , ....&#13;
Cole and Chambliss stand out&#13;
The Rangers wipped Mor-&#13;
'de of Sioux City Iowa in&#13;
their first game of the MAIA&#13;
play in Kansas City yesterday&#13;
by a score of 57--M.&#13;
Al cold shooting by the&#13;
Ran _ ers in the first half, the&#13;
Rangers came back from a ~24&#13;
deficit to take the lead with 44-38&#13;
and 9:12 left in the game.&#13;
Gary Coie, Parksides leading&#13;
r with 2S points fouled out&#13;
"th 3:12 left in the game.&#13;
orning de made a determined&#13;
effort to cul the lead with Cole out&#13;
bringing the score to 54-50 with&#13;
1:03 lef&#13;
Parkside called a time out with&#13;
the scoce ~2 and 32 seconds left&#13;
to go. King inbounded to Learths&#13;
Scott who was shoved out of&#13;
bounds with 31 seconds on the&#13;
Playoffs&#13;
clock. Scott hit on one free throw&#13;
to bring the score to 55-52.&#13;
Lomack of Morningside hustl!!d&#13;
the ball down court and hit to&#13;
make it 55-54. Chambliss hit on a&#13;
charity shot with 15 to go and the&#13;
score stood at 57--M. King was&#13;
fouled with 7 seconds to go. He&#13;
missed his shot and time ran out&#13;
as Morningside got the throw&#13;
away.&#13;
On the last play of the game&#13;
Marshall Hill went up for the&#13;
rebound and came down on his&#13;
bad ankle. There is no word as&#13;
yet if he will be available for&#13;
todays game against Marymount&#13;
College of Kansas. Parkside&#13;
plays Marymount at 11: 15 this&#13;
morning. Marymount is slated as&#13;
the number four team in the&#13;
tourney.&#13;
~arymount beat M&#13;
therr game Monday b} 1&#13;
82-76 and now stands&#13;
for the season.&#13;
Cole stood out 85&#13;
standing player scoring&#13;
pulling in 6 re&#13;
blocking 4 shots.&#13;
seored 11 and pu!kd&#13;
rebounds. Bill Sobanski&#13;
rebounders with n ai.i&#13;
points.&#13;
Chuck Chambliss S&lt;X!&#13;
four points but two of&#13;
with 15 seconds on the&#13;
give the Rangers their&#13;
margin.&#13;
The pressure of&#13;
play showed in the&#13;
percentage figures&#13;
Rangers scoring ooly3U&#13;
overall and 24.3 in the ~&#13;
Parksides record no,r atm&#13;
23.8.&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
and TAPES&#13;
Environmental&#13;
Furniture and Lighting&#13;
•• •• • •••&#13;
: "SPECIAL"&#13;
: SPLASH :&#13;
: SALE!! :&#13;
• A COMPLETE t&#13;
: WATERBED SET-UP:&#13;
• •Deluxe Frame f&#13;
Qualit · Leather Goods Tapestries • • •Headboard • 1&#13;
h n&#13;
!Re&#13;
Pipe Papers Ethnic Jewelry&#13;
· paddin mattre&#13;
'Uric rm ~fer cJJ'{affresa&#13;
gives orthopedic comfort that&#13;
. returns man t h" . 0 is source&#13;
• •Pedestal t&#13;
• •Liner t&#13;
: • Mattress $1999s:&#13;
• only&#13;
• •&#13;
oN£J'WEET&#13;
DREifo&#13;
• also hos f&#13;
• . . of Bear t&#13;
• a fine selection Ir. t&#13;
• Bags and a complete t&#13;
• of waterbed products I&#13;
• including :&#13;
</text>
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                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="65069">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="65072">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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              <text>Paper anti-cram</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89967">
              <text>What goes on J&#13;
V^O' talk talk&#13;
V&#13;
;&#13;
i=if§INP*c§&#13;
ews 'U K&lt;&#13;
,c^N&#13;
grievance table will Fr&#13;
°m 11:30-1;:&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MARCH&#13;
fe another one).&#13;
editorial decorum&#13;
( o f f c o u r s e ^&#13;
Students °n this carnpus^ndan^&#13;
interested are encouragedJojtteSl__---- : ^&#13;
rp, . . _ . ^Iff'-C.who says)&#13;
^hisjs Parkside of course of course&#13;
RH™e&#13;
S» —&#13;
toe church'q nL u ervice will hail Jesus Chriof 15 a m- at CHIHoly&#13;
Week""&#13;
1 °&#13;
f "* Pa5ch^Myster.v ^ ^ntaues&#13;
1175" ©&#13;
t a l k t a l k t a l k&#13;
i W The Parkside&#13;
GRANGER&#13;
Wednesday, March 19, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 29-&#13;
Paper anti-cram&#13;
The third Anti-Cram Clinic, on&#13;
the topic of "Term Paper&#13;
Research," will be held in the&#13;
Library on Tuesday, March 25 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. and repeated on&#13;
Wednesday, March 26 at 3:30&#13;
p.m. The clinic is designed to help&#13;
students organize their research&#13;
and find the information they&#13;
need for their papers. It will be&#13;
conducted by Carla Stoffle of the&#13;
Library Reference department.&#13;
Sponsored by the Adult Student&#13;
Association in cooperation with&#13;
LD-New&#13;
certification&#13;
by Betsy Neu&#13;
beginning with the fall semester of 1974, P arkside is now offering&#13;
teacher certification in Learning Disabilities (LD), an area of Special&#13;
Education.&#13;
Diane German, director of the LD program at Parkside, described&#13;
the LD child with a three-clause definition.&#13;
First, German said, "the child has integrities (or strengths) in the&#13;
areas of hearing, vision, motor (responses), emotional stability and&#13;
intelligence."&#13;
Secondly, although the child has strong potentials for all of the&#13;
above, a discrepancy exists between those potentials and what the&#13;
child is actually achieving.&#13;
German said "achievement may be down in the areas of language&#13;
learning, reading, math and written, language."&#13;
The third clause is an attempt to explain why the child is not&#13;
achieving. German termed this clause "the processing clause,"&#13;
because it states that there is a processing deficit in the areas of&#13;
auditory, visual and-or tactile abilities.&#13;
German emphasized that the child must fit all three clauses if he is&#13;
to be identified as a child with a learning disability.&#13;
Seven courses currently make up the LD program at Parkside. They&#13;
include: Teaching the Exceptional Child, Theories of Learning&#13;
Disabilities, Language and Cognitive Development, and Diagnostic&#13;
Procedures in Learning Disabilities.&#13;
To remain in the program students working towards their certification&#13;
must receive a "B" or better in each course and must take&#13;
the course in a prescribed sequence.&#13;
Because no major or degree is offered in LD at Parkside, the fiftyfive&#13;
students currently in the program are advised to major in&#13;
psychology.&#13;
Jane Becker, a graduate of the College of Racine with a degree in&#13;
LD, is one of the three students that has earned an LD teacher certification&#13;
from the state through Parkside. She was hired by Racine&#13;
Unified School District No. 1 in February, and is currently teaching&#13;
continued on page 8&#13;
Keeping up the morale&#13;
the Library, the clinic coincides&#13;
with the Library's week-long&#13;
focus on Term Paper Research.&#13;
Handouts, guides and books will&#13;
be available in the Library, as&#13;
well as a display explaining the&#13;
steps in gathering information&#13;
for research papers. Anyone&#13;
wishing information and&#13;
assistance should contact the&#13;
librarian at the Library Information&#13;
Desk.&#13;
Persons wishing to attend a&#13;
session of the Anti-Cram Clinic&#13;
should meet , inside the Library&#13;
Main Entrance at the scheduled&#13;
time. It would be beneficial to&#13;
students to come prepared to do&#13;
actual research on their topics.&#13;
The second annual New Music&#13;
Concert sponsored by the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
chapter of Music Educators&#13;
National Conference (MENC)&#13;
will be held at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, March 21, in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater. The&#13;
program is free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Parkside students whose works&#13;
will be performed are Robert&#13;
Davies, 1620 Deane Blvd.,&#13;
Racine; Debra Donatt, Libertyville,&#13;
111.; D eborah Metke, 9832&#13;
Seven Mile Road, Franksville;&#13;
Paula Novak, 4918 17th St.,&#13;
Kenosha; and Grant Richter,&#13;
4837 Hwy. 38, Franksville.&#13;
The Davies and Richter works&#13;
are realized on two-channel&#13;
magnetic tape and the other&#13;
student works are for various&#13;
chamber music combinations.&#13;
A new piano work by August&#13;
Wegner of the Parkside music&#13;
faculty also will be presented.&#13;
Student fun loan&#13;
A student Fun Loan is being set&#13;
up to provide any registered&#13;
Parkside student with small&#13;
loans of 5 to 10 dollars, designed&#13;
primarily to help students over&#13;
those last few days before a&#13;
paycheck.&#13;
The Fun Loan will be located at&#13;
the Financial Aids office at&#13;
Tallent Hall. In order to receive&#13;
the loan, a receipt must be filled&#13;
out and two sources of identification&#13;
(a Parkside LD. and&#13;
one other) presented. The loan&#13;
will then be given out directly in&#13;
cash. Then, a 25 cent service&#13;
charge will be made for the first&#13;
ten school days after withdrawal&#13;
of the loan, and a $1.00 service&#13;
charge after that. This should&#13;
encourage quick repayment of&#13;
the loan, which must be made in&#13;
cash, to keep the fund in&#13;
operation. Any unpaid loan will&#13;
be treated like any other debt&#13;
owed to the University, and a&#13;
student that is delinquent could&#13;
have his transcript withheld.&#13;
The money for this fund will&#13;
come from student support of&#13;
activities sponsored by various&#13;
organizations contributing to the&#13;
fund. The Fun Loan is being set&#13;
up by Interconnection in&#13;
cooperation with UWP and&#13;
various organizations on campus.&#13;
The Fun Loan can be in operation&#13;
as soon as students support the&#13;
project, which needs a minimum&#13;
of $200.00 to open. It is totally&#13;
dependent on student support to&#13;
open and continue running.&#13;
Pay protest&#13;
by Cathy Mech&#13;
of RANGER Staff&#13;
Most students here at Parkside have probably seen flyers posted by&#13;
People for a Non-Sexist Society about leafletting Sears, Roebuck and&#13;
Co., for discrimination against women. This incident last December&#13;
wasn't only the action of P.F.N.S.S. but also the responsibility of the&#13;
local chapters of the National Organization of Women and part of a&#13;
national campaign against Sears that started last April.&#13;
The specific charges are unequal opportunities for promotioh and&#13;
training, placement of salespeople, and pay and benefits. Marsha Schwartz,&#13;
of the Kenosha chapter of N.O.W., said there were no complaints&#13;
against the Sears stores here, but that the chapters parcontinued&#13;
on page 8 &#13;
2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 19, 1975&#13;
VVAID?.,.. AID?.... DID I HEAR A CRY ROR AID?"&#13;
Each man-a will&#13;
Racism&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I truly appreciate the article&#13;
written on March 5, "A Time Of&#13;
Revolt." Your comparisons were&#13;
drawn beautifully and you gave&#13;
one of the most interesting and&#13;
practical history lessons with&#13;
which I have ever come in contact.&#13;
I am writing this letter to&#13;
first express my gratitude, and&#13;
second, to give a warning to the&#13;
student body, faculty and staff of&#13;
this university.&#13;
God has given each man a will.&#13;
By will I mean the ability to make&#13;
a choice. Now each choice has a&#13;
result. God has also made each&#13;
parent, wives against husbands,&#13;
and husbands against God. The&#13;
obvious result is disorder and a&#13;
great lack of lo ve for each other&#13;
and for God.&#13;
The people of America won&#13;
their freedom through revolution.&#13;
You are presently free to the will&#13;
of God because Jesus Christ&#13;
Fun loan7&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It must appear to some that the&#13;
students at Parkside are not&#13;
getting ripped off enough so they&#13;
invented a "Fun Loan." I would&#13;
think that a 64.25 Annual Percentage&#13;
Rate on a $10.00 loan is&#13;
immoral, if not illegal, and&#13;
challenge the organizations involved&#13;
to find other ways of&#13;
raising revenue and needy&#13;
students, if they must, to borrow&#13;
from a friend.&#13;
Nobody's friend,&#13;
Ken Polzin, Jr.&#13;
PS. Is it true that Interconnection&#13;
is an Irish Gav&#13;
club?&#13;
Senate openings&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
There are currently vacancies&#13;
in the labor economics,&#13;
humanities, and undecided&#13;
P.S.G.A. Inc. senate seats. The&#13;
term of office for these seats&#13;
extends until the third week in&#13;
October 1975. These vacancies&#13;
will be filled through appointment&#13;
by the president pro&#13;
tempore of the senate, John&#13;
Kontz. Any students interested in&#13;
getting involved in the student&#13;
government should contact John&#13;
Kontz.at the P.S.G.A. Inc. office,&#13;
LLC-D193, ph. 553-2244 after 1&#13;
p.m. Monday-Friday.&#13;
John Kontz&#13;
man accountable for his own&#13;
choice.&#13;
Today there is world-wide&#13;
revolution. But against who or&#13;
what are these revolts taking&#13;
place. Revolution can be seen in&#13;
business, government and&#13;
schools. Children rebel against&#13;
rebelled against the sin in this&#13;
world by dying for each of you.&#13;
You can accept this freedom or&#13;
reject it. It is your perogative.&#13;
BUT YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE&#13;
FOR YOUR OWN DECISION.&#13;
Remember, whenever you&#13;
revolt, think first of whether you&#13;
are rebelling against God or Evil.&#13;
"For the wrath of God is&#13;
revealed against all ungodliness&#13;
and unrighteousness of m en who&#13;
hold the truth in&#13;
unrighteousness." -(Rom. 1:18)&#13;
Anthony Burke, President&#13;
Parkside Christian Fellowship&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On April 4th, thousands of&#13;
youth will be demonstrating&#13;
around the world in support of&#13;
young people in America&#13;
struggling against racism. April&#13;
4th was chosen to symbolize the&#13;
great humanity and concern&#13;
which was so much a part of Dr.&#13;
Martin Luther King's life, on the&#13;
date of his assassination. There&#13;
will be a multi-cultural dance and&#13;
demonstration in Milwaukee on&#13;
April 5th in accordance with this&#13;
international day of solidarity.&#13;
Exact time and place has not yet&#13;
been completed. The spirit of&#13;
multi-culturalism will be the&#13;
emphasis of the day, and it is&#13;
important that ALL youth join&#13;
and share in real unity. It is&#13;
especially important that white&#13;
youth come and let it be known&#13;
that the poison of racism, which&#13;
is so much a part of their (our)&#13;
past, tvill no longer be tolerated&#13;
by them. Please come-your&#13;
sincere efforts are always appreciated.&#13;
For more information&#13;
call 694-5920, Kenosha. I thank&#13;
you for your time. Peace.&#13;
Debbie Kreuser&#13;
3n honor of i.i.&amp;ockefeaer&#13;
'A motet proposal'&#13;
(Establishment of the Corporate Branch of Government)&#13;
SECTION 1. In addition to the three branches of government&#13;
established under Articles I, II, and III (legislative, executive and&#13;
judicial), there shall henceforth be established a fourth branch of t he&#13;
Federal Government, to be known as the Corporate Branch.&#13;
Power to effect the decisions and policies of the other three branches&#13;
shall rest solely in the Corporate Branch. The system of C hecks and&#13;
Balances and the doctrine of the Separation of P owers shall apply in&#13;
all matters to the legislative, executive and judicial branches, but&#13;
shall not be construed as to apply between the Corporate Branch and&#13;
the other three.&#13;
Specifically, the Corporate Branch shall have the following&#13;
relationship to the other three:&#13;
Executive. The President, as Chief Executive of the United States,&#13;
shall have the power of appointment, including the selection of cabinet&#13;
officers, staff advisors and board members of the several regulatory&#13;
agencies. Upon the advice and consent of the Corporate Branch, such&#13;
appointments shall be formally submitted by the Executive to the&#13;
legislative branch for approval.&#13;
The advice of said cabinet officers, staff advisors and board&#13;
members shall be followed in all matters, domestic and foreign, unless&#13;
die Corporate Branch shall specifically determine otherwise, and so&#13;
inform the Executive.&#13;
Power to set fiscal and monetary policy, to let government contracts&#13;
and to enforce laws of taxation shall rest within the Executive Branch&#13;
and shall continue to operate for and to the benefit of the Corporate&#13;
Branch.&#13;
The Executive's power to carry out relations with foreign governments&#13;
and to maintain the National Security shall remain inviolable.&#13;
National Security shall be construed to mean the securing of the&#13;
foreign property, investments and holdings of t he Corporate Branch.&#13;
Legislative. Congress shall, in all matters and in all instances,&#13;
establish laws the most just and necessary for executing the policies&#13;
and decisions of t he Corporate Branch. To provide for this, the Corporate&#13;
Branch shall sponsor candidates for Congressional office, and&#13;
shall act as financial backers of said candidates. Further, the Corporate&#13;
Branch shall continue to sponsor Congressional lobbyists to&#13;
fully inform Congress of the Corporate position on pending legislation,&#13;
said lobbyists to act as disbursing agents for Corporate funds to&#13;
members of the House and Senate as shall seem most fitting and&#13;
proper for the carrying into execution the charge of this Constitutional&#13;
Amendment.&#13;
Judicial. The Judicial Power of the United States shall operate,&#13;
within the Constitutionally proscribed limits of th e law, to the benefit&#13;
and furtherance of t he Corporate Branch. In particular, the various&#13;
regulatory laws and checks on the Corporate Branch shall be interpreted&#13;
with proper restraint, realizing that all aspects of such&#13;
matters must be taken into account if justice is to be served.&#13;
Specifically:&#13;
The privilege of the people to a clean and healthy environment shall&#13;
be weighed and balanced with the economic necessities of the Corporate&#13;
Branch; laws regulating monopolies shall be weighed and&#13;
balanced with the right of the stockholders to a profit (of such size as&#13;
shall be determined by the individual Corporations); questions of&#13;
prices and wages shall be weighed and balanced with the expansion,&#13;
research and development plans of the Corporate Branch; laws&#13;
1 eg ula ting corporate campaign contributions and various other laws&#13;
on bribery and influence-peddling shall be weighed and balanced with&#13;
the right and the duty of the Corporate Branch to effect legislation and&#13;
executive policy.&#13;
SECTION 2. The enumeration of such duties and priveleges of the&#13;
legislative, executive and judicial branches shall not be construed to&#13;
deny or disparage others retained solely by the corporate branch.&#13;
SECTION 3. The right of the citizen to participate in freely held,&#13;
democratic elections shall be guaranteed to all persons of eighteen&#13;
years of a ge or older, irregardless of c olor, sex or economic status.&#13;
However, the election of candidates to the offices of the legislative and&#13;
executive branches shall not be construed to effect the relationship of&#13;
the Corporate Branch to the other three branches, as set down in&#13;
Section 1 of this Constitutional Amendment.&#13;
qt&#13;
EJ?&#13;
TI?^ 4&#13;
'3he Supreme Court decision of Chief Justice of the United&#13;
States John Marshall, handed down in the early days of th is Republic&#13;
reaffirmed™ 1815)&#13;
' ShaU herG be formally set down and&#13;
nrh!i °&#13;
rP&#13;
°&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
ati0n iS a legal person&#13;
' en&#13;
i°y&#13;
in8 all the rights and&#13;
L ivprl i QfT pers&#13;
?&#13;
n&#13;
i&#13;
that said corP°&#13;
ration shall be chartered by&#13;
remain invini h,i S&#13;
' ^ once chartered, said corporation shall&#13;
thrcnr^t ;&#13;
ai&#13;
l f ^ °&#13;
f ^ SUteS may alter 0r abolish&#13;
the corporation, its life given in perpetuity.&#13;
th?rt'arp^amJn f Branch sha&#13;
ll consist of those corporations&#13;
f t l e ^ t ^ t l &lt; k ° ° l a J&#13;
geSt financia l ^itu tions o f t h e U n i t e d&#13;
^v corooration^hat ? Pti&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
°&#13;
f ^ Constitutional Amendment.&#13;
(to he determ a k !v!&#13;
S netasse&#13;
tsof a certain proscribed amount&#13;
llmattanvT ^ ^ C°&#13;
rp0rate Branch ^ a whole) shall&#13;
shalUherehv eniv!" T^&#13;
VSUp within ^ Corporate Branch, and&#13;
Anv cornoratinn°y h ° e rigllts and P&#13;
rivi&#13;
leges enumerated above.&#13;
^movXnrl th r 86&#13;
"f aSSetS fal1 below said level shall be&#13;
corporation shall6 0rp&#13;
°&#13;
ra e Branch&gt; and the representatives of sa id&#13;
shall forfeit all nf th^T t0 the P°&#13;
sition °f private citizen and&#13;
rfeit a11 of the aforementioned rights and privileges.&#13;
aDnrovine 1&#13;
the 500 members of Corporate Branch&#13;
approving this amendment, it shall become the law of the land. &#13;
NAIA action&#13;
by Dick Ahlgrimm&#13;
The Parkside Rangers have&#13;
returned from a somewhat&#13;
disappointing, but very succ3-&#13;
ssful tournament in Kansas City.&#13;
For us, the real highlight of t he&#13;
week was the upset of fourthseeded&#13;
Marymount. No one was&#13;
really sure how good we were,&#13;
even after topping Morningside&#13;
in the first round on Tuesday.&#13;
After William Jewell College&#13;
(the local favorite from&#13;
Missouri) fell by the wayside on&#13;
Monday, the fans turned to&#13;
Marymount of Kansas. With little&#13;
support, other than the&#13;
courageous fans who journeyed&#13;
to Kansas City, the Rangers&#13;
carried out the task at hand to&#13;
defeat them in one of the most&#13;
exciting games of the entire&#13;
tournament. After a very cold&#13;
first half which saw the Rangers&#13;
blow An ea rly 17-13 l ead and let&#13;
Marymount score thirteen&#13;
straight points, they came on&#13;
strong with a tenacious defense&#13;
and a very deliberate offense,&#13;
waiting for the good shot. It was&#13;
successful until the end when&#13;
Marymount, trailing by one, had&#13;
a chance for the victory, but&#13;
thanks to some timely&#13;
harassment from Stevie King,&#13;
blew the lay-up. Gary Cole, after&#13;
Task force&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Pages 8, 9 and 10 of the March&#13;
12th issue of Ranger contained a&#13;
three page public notice informing&#13;
the students of an 6pen&#13;
hearing of the task force on&#13;
merger implementation. Also&#13;
appearing was a revised version&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association Inc. constitution,&#13;
prepared by the task&#13;
force. The explanation of this&#13;
public notice was entirely&#13;
inadequate.&#13;
The current P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
constitution was passed by the&#13;
students on Sept. 24th and 25th.&#13;
1974. The P.S.G.A. has been&#13;
operating under that constitution&#13;
since Sept. 26th, 1974. The&#13;
parkside administration has not&#13;
yet recognized the legitimacy of&#13;
this constitution. The president of&#13;
the P.S.G.A. and the president&#13;
pro tempore began informal&#13;
negotiations with the Acting&#13;
Chancellor in November. His&#13;
main concerns at that time were&#13;
an outstanding game against&#13;
Morningside was double-teamed&#13;
most of the time and held to only&#13;
fifteen points, but destroyed&#13;
Marymount with nine defensive&#13;
rebounds and five blocked shots.&#13;
With Cole shut off, Parkside went&#13;
to Bill Sobanski for scoring. He&#13;
responded with ten of fourteen&#13;
from the field and two free&#13;
throws for 22 points while hauling&#13;
in 10 b oards.&#13;
The quarter-finals turned out to&#13;
be a jynx for Parkside as it ran&#13;
into powerful Grand Canyon&#13;
College of Arizona. Led by 6-10&#13;
Ail-American Bayard Forrest,&#13;
the Antelopes advanced through&#13;
the tourney by toppling&#13;
Willamette of Oreg on and edging&#13;
Illinois Wesleyen.&#13;
The Rangers, after leading 2-0&#13;
on Cole's twelve-footer, fell apart&#13;
and found themselves down 10-2&#13;
with six minutes gone on the&#13;
clock. They fought back to trail&#13;
16-14 with seven minutes left but&#13;
couldn't do much else and trailed&#13;
28-23 at the half.&#13;
After the intermission, the&#13;
game see-sawed between a three&#13;
and seven point lead for Canyon.&#13;
Malcolm Mahone cut the lead&#13;
to 40-39 with a 25-footer at 11:36 of&#13;
the game. Rod Hightower of&#13;
Canyon and Marshall Hill each&#13;
clarifications of lo cal, state, and&#13;
federal laws, along with several&#13;
jurisdictional questions. The&#13;
Merger task force was then&#13;
appointed by the Acting Chancellor,&#13;
to make specific&#13;
recommendations to him on the&#13;
changes which would have to be&#13;
made to include students in&#13;
campus governance as required&#13;
under the merger law.&#13;
The preliminary task force&#13;
proposals which appeared in the&#13;
Ranger last week amount to&#13;
drastic revisions in the spirit and&#13;
letter of the constitution. It is&#13;
obvious that the task force intends&#13;
to attempt to revamp the&#13;
entire allocation process as well&#13;
as the relationships between the&#13;
executive, legislative, and&#13;
judicial branches. The merger&#13;
implementation law grants&#13;
students the right to organize&#13;
themselves in a manner which&#13;
they determine. The students at&#13;
Parkside have done this. Any&#13;
changes which are to be made in&#13;
added 3-point plays making it 43-&#13;
42 with 9:35 left. The rest of the&#13;
game, after too many fouls by&#13;
Parkside was all Grand Canyon.&#13;
They connected on fourteen&#13;
straight free throws in one-andone&#13;
situations, putting the game&#13;
out of reach.&#13;
The Rangers handled Forrest&#13;
quite well, but couldn't contain&#13;
Mike Haddow, a 6-5 guard, as he&#13;
hit eight field goals en route to a&#13;
20 po int night. Gary Cole again&#13;
led the Rangers in scoring with&#13;
20, bu t the Antelopes cut off the&#13;
boards most of the game.&#13;
Alcorn State, which scored 101&#13;
points the night before against&#13;
Malone (the team which upset&#13;
No. 1-seeded Kentucky State)&#13;
was totally helpless as it fell to&#13;
Canyon 88-68. Their next opponent,&#13;
Midwestern (Texas) had&#13;
a tough game before the&#13;
championship showdown. Facing&#13;
the number 3-seeded St. Mary's,&#13;
which featured 6-"9 D avid Bulik&#13;
from Racine St. Catherine's and&#13;
6-5 Gary Tomaszewski of&#13;
Milwaukee Don Bosco, they&#13;
barely survived 65-60.&#13;
Grand Canyon, apparently&#13;
didn't let any thing stand in their&#13;
way and won the title game 65-54&#13;
to finish the season with 30 wins&#13;
and only 3 losses.&#13;
the constitution at this time must&#13;
be passed by a two thirds vote of&#13;
the entire senate and signed by&#13;
the president before they can go&#13;
into effect, and they must be&#13;
ratified by the students at the&#13;
next election if they are to remain&#13;
in the constitution. The students&#13;
may also place amendments on&#13;
the ballot by submitting a petition&#13;
containing the signatures of ten&#13;
percent of the student body.&#13;
During the next two to three&#13;
weeks the senate will be considering&#13;
the task force proposals.&#13;
The decisions which are made&#13;
will effect the future and form of&#13;
student participation in campus&#13;
governance at Parkside. The&#13;
times and locations of these&#13;
senate meetings will be posted. I&#13;
hope anyone who has an opinion&#13;
or suggestion concerning these&#13;
proposals will attend.&#13;
John Kontz&#13;
President pro tempore&#13;
P.S.GA.A. Inc. Senate&#13;
Photos by Allen Fredericksen&#13;
Stephens checks the clock during a timeout.&#13;
SHORECREST GEORGETOWN&#13;
Wednesday, Mar ch ly, 1975 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
NISHIKI MONDIA CINELLI&#13;
ipipipipipipipipr^ipip&#13;
Marshall Hill grapples&#13;
for ball against&#13;
Moringside.&#13;
Food Co-op Day&#13;
March 25,1975&#13;
2:30-4:30&#13;
Greenquist 103&#13;
Four lecturers will&#13;
speak about what the food&#13;
co-op c an do for you and&#13;
what you can do for the coop.&#13;
&#13;
Food ordering dates:&#13;
Wed. 11:00-2:00 and 4:00-&#13;
6:00; Thurs. 11:00-2:00.&#13;
Food pick-up th e following&#13;
week: Thurs. 11:00 a.m.-&#13;
8:00 p.m. Membership:&#13;
$5.00 Stu dents, $7.00 nonstudents.&#13;
&#13;
| * ®&#13;
J CANTEEN&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
| Service&#13;
I OPEN:&#13;
I MON. T HRU THURS.&#13;
I 7:30 A.M.-6:3U P.M.&#13;
| FRIUAY&#13;
| 7:30 A.M.-4:3U P.M.&#13;
•&#13;
Library Learning Center&#13;
BUFFET RUUMS&#13;
I 11:00 A.M.-1:3U P.M.&#13;
I&#13;
SCHWINN PEUGEOT&#13;
DON GILL BICYCLE SHOP&#13;
Everything for the Cyclist&#13;
5006 - 7tH Avenue&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
(414) 652-6468 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 19, 19 75&#13;
TO&#13;
•&#13;
S 38jgt&#13;
A 1 » HP M,&#13;
i , J&#13;
SW ^&#13;
MARCH TO MARCH 20th 27th&#13;
&gt;/ ^8"&#13;
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PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE &#13;
Wednesday, March 19, 1975 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Watching the sun rise&#13;
Listening to its whisperings&#13;
softly, dream like,&#13;
promising that in this day&#13;
there is&#13;
a wealth of life.&#13;
Carol Nordstrom&#13;
loving a woman&#13;
loving a woman,&#13;
being a woman,&#13;
is not falling in love with yourself,&#13;
she is day, i am night:&#13;
opposites, if opposites exist,&#13;
same only in the label that we wear:&#13;
our bodies say women,&#13;
and we love,&#13;
each other,&#13;
as humans,&#13;
as women.&#13;
separates: but equal.&#13;
s.l.b.&#13;
die, die, die&#13;
you bastard!&#13;
inflicting pain&#13;
on all you meet,&#13;
blind indifference&#13;
to sharp knives&#13;
poised to strike&#13;
you down;&#13;
die, you bitch, you.&#13;
stay within your walls&#13;
of hate&#13;
and do not venture out&#13;
into the violet dark&#13;
night of l ove&#13;
where you strew&#13;
your decaying flowers of&#13;
doubting lies,&#13;
die, you bastard!&#13;
die!&#13;
have courage&#13;
enough to kill&#13;
yourself&#13;
before they&#13;
do it&#13;
for you. &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Mar ch 19, 1975&#13;
Silent speech&#13;
MRT TO HOST TWO SPECIAL PERFORMANCES OF&#13;
THE REID GILBERT MIME SHOW AT ITS&#13;
COURT STREET THEATER ON APRILS AND29&#13;
In an effort to make the Court Street Theater truly a place for expansion&#13;
of the theatrical experience, the Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theater Company will present the new Reid Gilbert Mime Show for&#13;
two performances only, as a special adjunct to the upcoming schedule&#13;
of Court St. productions. MRT's second stage, the Court Street&#13;
Theater, will feature the Reid Gilbert Mime Show on April 8 and 29..&#13;
Highlighting the Wisconsin Mime Company's numerous programs,&#13;
the Gilbert Mime Show is really a compendium of variety acts. The&#13;
production employs music, puppets and magic, as well as traditional&#13;
mime.&#13;
While mime has been a part of every theatrical era, modern&#13;
America has come to know it as being confined to the silent acting of a&#13;
solo performer (such as Marcel Marceau) who creates many realities&#13;
in an exciting illusory form. The Reid Gilbert Mime Show uses this&#13;
background of technique, and makes it a basis for going beyond its&#13;
own limitations.&#13;
Director Reid Gilbert says of the show, "Mime, as exemplified by&#13;
this production, is moving again toward a more total theatermovement&#13;
and immobility, sound and silence."&#13;
Dr. E. Reid Gilbert founded the Wisconsin Mime Company and&#13;
School at the Valley Studio, Spring Green, Wisconsin in 1969. Prior to&#13;
that he had studied mime with Etienne Decroux, Marcel Marceau's&#13;
master and taught in several colleges in this country as well as the&#13;
National School of Drama in India while doing research for his Ph.D.&#13;
in Asian Theatre from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.&#13;
The Wisconsin Mime Company is well known throughout the Midwest&#13;
for its performances and workshops conducted for schools and&#13;
other groups. The Valley Studio offers a full-time Apprentice Program&#13;
during the academic year involving extensive mime, dance and&#13;
theater training.&#13;
The production which the Milwaukee Repertory Theater Company&#13;
will sponsor at its Court Street Theater on April 8 and 29 will feature, in&#13;
addition to Reid Gilbert himself, Terry Kerr, John Aden and Kaye&#13;
Dubie Potter, all members of the regular Wisconsin Mime Company.&#13;
As the show opens, the stage is set with a chaotic array of packing&#13;
boxes and is gradually transformed by the actors into a series of&#13;
platforms and ramps. This complex provides the theatrical context of&#13;
the various scenes.&#13;
The element of comedy is foremost in the white face mime sketches,&#13;
but they are also subtly laced with pathos, loneliness, despair, failure&#13;
and many of the other conditions which create the tapestry of human&#13;
existence. The Reid Gilbert Mime Show is a dazzling and uniquely&#13;
refreshing theatrical experience that involves every audience in the&#13;
delight, wonder and mystery of life. It should not be missed.&#13;
MRT's Court Street Theater, located at 315 W. Court St. across from&#13;
the Jos. Schlitz Brewery, is a converted warehouse with only 99 seats.&#13;
Consequently, the total number of tickets available for this special&#13;
presentation of the Reid Gilbert Mime Show is only 198. Both performances&#13;
(April 8 and 29) will be at 8:00 p.m. All tickets are $4.00 and&#13;
may be obtained by contacting the Milwaukee Repertory Theater&#13;
Business Office, 929 N. Water St., Milwaukee, Wis. 53202. Te lephone&#13;
273-7121.&#13;
"THE OLDJLAIR I S B ACK WITH A HEW FACE'&#13;
OPEN AT 3:00 P.M.&#13;
24th and 25th on 60th St. KENOSHA, WISCONSIN A G LASS&#13;
ALL YOU&#13;
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ALL YOO&#13;
Vf clt c r .&#13;
Ulbricnts&#13;
Foot-Long Frank&#13;
There's a method to the&#13;
madness of Mel Brooks. Eyes&#13;
bulging and lips tightly drawn&#13;
against foaming teeth, he mercilessly&#13;
pounces on a classic&#13;
form, say, a Broadway musical&#13;
or the good, old Western and&#13;
wildly tosses the crushed bones&#13;
and bits of muscle of his victim&#13;
over his shoulder.&#13;
In "The Producers", Brooks'&#13;
first feature film, the chorus girls&#13;
are dressed in Gestapo outfits as&#13;
they goose-step to a revolving&#13;
swastika and sing a tender ballad&#13;
called "Springtime for Hitler."&#13;
Brooks replaces the western&#13;
drawl and tobacco chewing of&#13;
John Wayne in "Blazzing Saddles"&#13;
with a hip, black urbanite&#13;
who rolls a neat, thick joint.&#13;
By Brooks' earlier standards,&#13;
Young Frankenstein is a gentle&#13;
rape of the 1931 Boris Karloff&#13;
classic. Tightly scriptec by&#13;
Brooks and Gene Wilder, the film&#13;
escapes the chaotic centrifugal&#13;
force of rapid-fire gags and&#13;
absurdities.&#13;
In fact, Young Frankenstein is&#13;
a tongue-in-cheek tribute to&#13;
director James Whalen and&#13;
Universal Pictures, the creators&#13;
of horror movies that relied more&#13;
on dense gothic atmosphere than&#13;
free-flowing blood and gore.&#13;
Kenneth Strickfaden, the special&#13;
set designer of the Karloff films,&#13;
meticulously reconstructed the&#13;
bizarre laboratory equipment&#13;
and mysterious castle for Brooks.&#13;
Cinematographer Jerry Hirschberg&#13;
nostagically captured&#13;
"Of course, the rates have gone&#13;
up," reminds this hunchedbacked&#13;
"Eye-Gore" (Marty&#13;
Feldman), his eyes rolling like a&#13;
pair of spastic billiard balls.&#13;
Frederick also meets a "piece"&#13;
of old world hospitality, the&#13;
lovely serv.ant Inga who invites&#13;
him to a friendly "roll in the&#13;
hay."&#13;
Frau Blucher (Cloris Leachman)&#13;
is the castle's housekeeper,&#13;
warm and charming like a&#13;
winter's stroll through the Black&#13;
Forest. She lures young&#13;
Frederick with a haunting violin&#13;
melody to the secret laboratory&#13;
of the former landlord.&#13;
Frederick can not resist&#13;
reading the dusty notes ("How I&#13;
Did It" by Victory Frankenstein).&#13;
Inevitably, Frederick and&#13;
Eye-Gore resurrect the dead art&#13;
of grave robbing.&#13;
Frederick discusses the&#13;
designs of his TVz foot creation&#13;
over a dinner of long Transylvanian&#13;
sausages. "Ach, mein&#13;
Himmel," coos Inga, wiggling&#13;
her hips, "That means the&#13;
creature would have a very big&#13;
Schwanstiicker."&#13;
Of course, the experiment is&#13;
doomed. The monster (Peter&#13;
Boyle) escapes from the castle&#13;
Mmd over Madder: Frederick Frankenstein (Gene Wilder) and&#13;
his creation (Peter Boyle).&#13;
NOW PAYING&#13;
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5200 W ashington A ve., Ra cine&#13;
the impenetrable shadows and&#13;
grainy black and white effects of&#13;
the original.&#13;
Gene Wilder plays Frederick&#13;
Frankenstein (pronounced&#13;
Fronk-en-steen), an American&#13;
neurosurgeon and grandson of&#13;
the infamous scientist. At a train&#13;
depot choking with shadows and&#13;
restless blasts of steam from the&#13;
locomotive, he leaves his high&#13;
society fiance, Elizabeth&#13;
(Madeline Kahn) to claim the&#13;
family homestead in Transylvania.&#13;
&#13;
He steps off a train into 3-plythick&#13;
waves of fog (a subtle&#13;
foreshadowing) and meets the&#13;
grandson of Igor, Frankenstein's&#13;
lab assistant.&#13;
and terrorizes the countryside.&#13;
Only a bold, second experiment&#13;
can save the monster from the&#13;
fire and fury of the villagers.&#13;
Frederick attempts to share his&#13;
brain and personality with the&#13;
creature, but the villagers interrupt&#13;
the transformation.&#13;
However, the exchange is not a&#13;
one-way street. The monsterous&#13;
"Knockwurst" is the tool of the&#13;
film's happy ending. As in every&#13;
bedtime story, love conquers all.&#13;
Mel Brooks, I heard, is now&#13;
working on a sequel based on a&#13;
contemporary horror story. He&#13;
plans to update the Robert Louis&#13;
Stevenson fable. The title: "Dr.&#13;
Jackyl and Mr. Haldemann" ...&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
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Icarus&#13;
"Don't stray too far ahead of the fleet,&#13;
lest you fall over the edge of the earth."&#13;
-Pre-Columbian Mariner's truism&#13;
Icarus,&#13;
being is believing&#13;
and we know you&#13;
were, if only&#13;
because Mishima&#13;
would not sacrifice&#13;
himself in hollow form&#13;
to protest&#13;
against emptiness.&#13;
Icarus,&#13;
they say it took&#13;
unenviable self-love&#13;
("conceit," they whisper)&#13;
to defy&#13;
conventional wisdom&#13;
and place yourself above&#13;
the milling diligent, the&#13;
professional believers.&#13;
Icarus,&#13;
they allowed your flight&#13;
not through tolerance&#13;
but to preside over&#13;
your destruction.&#13;
Self-immolation&#13;
is a right, they chortle as&#13;
they modify their doctrine&#13;
to allow&#13;
The Wright Brothers.&#13;
Mick Andersen&#13;
EVEN 2-17-75ING&#13;
perhaps&#13;
there is another form for this,&#13;
other words and ways,&#13;
but i must settle&#13;
for these few scribbled sylables&#13;
to pass my content on to Youthis&#13;
restlessness&#13;
that wakes me at night,&#13;
this emptiness i fill&#13;
with frosty evening walks,&#13;
this loneliness&#13;
cannot be written,&#13;
spoken,&#13;
or realized by Youperhaps&#13;
&#13;
there are moments in Your day&#13;
when death lingers in Your soul too,&#13;
but in these pieces of nonexistance&#13;
You need not be alone&#13;
as i was once not alone&#13;
when Your love&#13;
covered me&#13;
with Godand&#13;
&#13;
now these wits and wisdoms&#13;
fall short of any meaning&#13;
as paper meets pen,&#13;
as mind meets mouthorganized&#13;
sounds form a chaos&#13;
of grunts &amp; groans assigned to objects&#13;
• objectives&#13;
objections and We&#13;
turn meaning to matter&#13;
and matter to muck&#13;
jeffrey j. swencki&#13;
.01J&#13;
s 11 k'&#13;
Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union&#13;
99&#13;
Wednesday, March 19, 1975 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
PBS: Humanities Programs&#13;
March 19, 8:00 p.m. PAGLIACCI The full-length opera filmed&#13;
especially for television at Milan's La Scala stars Jon Vickers, Raina&#13;
Corsi-Kabaivanska and Peter Glossop, and is conducted by Herbert&#13;
von Karajan. Stereo-simulcast with WFMT-FM. Also aired at 9:00&#13;
p.m. Friday, March 21.&#13;
Wednesday, March 19, 9:30 p.m. SCHOOL FOR WIVES Internationally&#13;
known choreographer Birgit Cullberg presents her latest&#13;
ballet for television, "School For Wives." An adaptation of the work by&#13;
17th century French playwright Moliere, it's the story of an aging&#13;
bachelor who keeps and trains a young woman as his ward, intending&#13;
to marry her when she comes of age. Unfortunately for him she&#13;
prefers a young man named Horace. The ensuing pursuit of the old&#13;
man and the two young lovers creates the tension that appealed to&#13;
Cullberg when she created her ballet. This program will also be aired&#13;
again, on Sat. March 22, a t 9:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday, March 21, 8:00 p.m. CHAGALL: A CHICAGO MOSAIC A&#13;
special local tribute which includes an award-winning film about the&#13;
creation of the Chagall mosaic, "The Four Seasons" in the First&#13;
National Bank Plaza. Host is Norman Ross, vice president of the First&#13;
National; also appearing are Mrs. William Wood-Prince, one of the&#13;
underwriters of the Chagall mosaic; and architects Carter Manny and&#13;
Alain Devy.&#13;
Saturday, March 22,8:00 p.m. DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI Oliver&#13;
Reed, whose principal credits include co-starring roles in the films&#13;
"Oliver!" and "Women In Love," portrays the tormented and erratic&#13;
painter-poet, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, (1828-1882) in this film directed&#13;
by Ken Russell. An Italian who lived his life in London, Rossetti was&#13;
co-founder of the "pre-Raphaelite" school of painting, an English&#13;
offshoot of nineteenth-century romanticism. With Judith Paris and&#13;
Andrew Faulds.&#13;
Dear Magnellum,&#13;
The large pond of water, latently rich with thick sprewed fresh blood, began to drip from my face.&#13;
I, not so withstanding, ordered a platoon to find the leak of this blood-water. As they searched, I&#13;
became obscessed with the thought of taking some of this water home with me. The melting boundaries&#13;
of it certainly were far cooler than 32 degrees Fahrenheit. This could have a new revelation&#13;
upon our modern day scientists. A few days later I had contacted a most noble scientist in her field,&#13;
owing to her immense unpopular studies with canine teeth, gravity, anti-gravity and the last, water.&#13;
She carefully examined every detail under microscope, the properties owned by this particular&#13;
water. Days and weeks went by, she was still studying its properties and would have gone on, but I&#13;
had put a plan together where neither of us would ever be concerned with this matter again. I&#13;
proceeded to write a comedy play to be performed here in Paris in the next month. In this play we&#13;
decided to bottle up the blood-water into liquor bottles, giving them to the players of the cast in which&#13;
their parts would have them unbottle the blood-water, unleashing it over the entire stage.&#13;
The play opened on a Thursday nite. Critics, reporters, other playwrights were there. The theatre&#13;
was sold out. The play proceeded with no difficulties. The moment the bottles were unleashed, the&#13;
blood pouring over the entire stage, the people began to scream, aghaust at its rare qualities. Such&#13;
confusion! The blood-water dripped unto the musicians in the pit below, causing them to become&#13;
unable to play any longer. The play was ending earlier as I planned. The blood-water was now in this&#13;
theatre as I planned, making a scandal as I planned, and all was working well!! Lphoned the&#13;
scientest telling her the good news, after which she left town. I faced the press and public well&#13;
enough, with the blood-water all over myself. They were too angry and totally frightened of me to do&#13;
much of anything, they just turned back around to leave me alone in peace.&#13;
Hence I have succeeded with a few things in my life.&#13;
Magnellum - from her journal&#13;
Sunday, March 23&#13;
AMATEUR GO-GO m&#13;
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Wis. I.D. Required&#13;
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00&#13;
1 Bottle of Champagne to all entries&#13;
6 P.M. - 'til Closing&#13;
also Featuring&#13;
A PIZ ZA EATING CONTEST&#13;
No cover charge with Student I.D.&#13;
GIRLS WANTED&#13;
Go-Go Girls, Waitresses, Bartenders&#13;
TOP WAGES $2.00 - $7.00 Hourly CALL 634-9369&#13;
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X' p u b -t y pe b a tte r.&#13;
" p . •f C o l e S law or Sa l a d . m^|&#13;
* F r e n ch Fri es or •&#13;
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8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 19, 1 975&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION&#13;
OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
PAPER PACKS FOR&#13;
THE DISCRIMINATING&#13;
READER&#13;
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Pa^ — continued from page 1&#13;
ticipated to show support for the campaign and also that they are&#13;
concerned and watching.&#13;
Things began last April in Chicago when numbers of complaints&#13;
came to the N.O.W. office from women employed mainly at the Sears&#13;
Tower. An investigation followed, and enough evidence had been&#13;
collected by May to file charges. A suit has not been filed, but it is&#13;
being seriously considered.&#13;
Sears, Roebuck and Co. is the country's largest retailer and the fifth&#13;
largest corporation. Anne Ladky, president of Chicago N.O.W.'s task&#13;
force on Sears, said they decided to put pressure on Sears because it is&#13;
so large. "If pressure is put on them, the impact will be felt throughout&#13;
the industry," she stated.&#13;
Since it is also under federal contract as a government supplier,&#13;
Sears must also publish an affirmative action plan that shows how&#13;
women and minorities are hired and promoted. N.O.W. is charging&#13;
that Sears has refused to do this. Sears is currently filing suit against&#13;
the government so it does not have to publish the plan, another point&#13;
N.O.W. is making known to the consumer through this campaign.&#13;
An employee at a local Sears store, who declined to be identified,&#13;
said he couldn't say whether the charges are true or false. "As a&#13;
federal supplier," he said, "we have to pay people doing the same job&#13;
the same rate." Sears must also follow government rules about hiring&#13;
women and minorities or face a fine, so Sears "can't be wrong." He&#13;
also urged anyone concerned to come into the store and see for&#13;
themselves that there are females in all departments and "have been&#13;
for a long time."&#13;
A Sears public relations spokesman in Chicago said that N.O.W.'s&#13;
charges were simply "allegations" and that no charges have been&#13;
filed as yet. He offered to send a copy of Sears' annual report to show&#13;
how the statistics dispute the allegations.&#13;
In the February issue of Ms. magazine, Marsha Schwartz said Sears&#13;
had bought a full page ad, saying how they did "Such wonderful things&#13;
for women." "Either they're coming around," Marsha said, "or&#13;
they're being clever." - ... . Classified&#13;
P.A.B. EVENTS&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19: Yves Allard and Dave Kteczka will be performing in the&#13;
Whiteskellar coffeehouse, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Free and open to the public.&#13;
FILM: Ingmar Bergman's classic "Cries and Whispers," starring Liv Ullman, 7:30 p.m..&#13;
Comm. Arts Theatre. Admission $1. Parkside l.D. required.&#13;
FRIDAY, MARCH 21: In the Union, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Dave Duffeck will be performing. FREE.&#13;
TUESDAY, MARCH 25: FILM: Al Paclno in "Serpico," 7:30 p.m., Comm. Arts Theatre.&#13;
Admission $1. Parkside l.D. required.&#13;
L D continued from page 1&#13;
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658«help&#13;
children with learning disabilities at Crestview School.&#13;
Becker who now has seven children under her tutelage, described&#13;
the state-prescribed process through which a child enters the LD&#13;
program with Racine Unified. "Basically a regular classroom teacher&#13;
sees that a child is not achieving at his potential. The teacher then&#13;
refers the child's case to the Exceptional Education Department with&#13;
Unified and they in turn assign a diagnostic team to test and observe&#13;
the child."&#13;
This multi-disciplinary team then meets and writes a report which&#13;
includes their recommendations. If placement in the LD program is&#13;
recommended, a social worker will contact the parents and obtain&#13;
written permission for placement of the child.&#13;
As the child is officially enrolled in the LD program with the state&#13;
the assigned teacher may then do more extensive testing and will plan&#13;
a totally individualized remediation program which will be suited to&#13;
the child's specific needs and problems.&#13;
Because the remediation program is so individualized, Becker&#13;
works on a one-to-one basis with the children. Becker said, "I am&#13;
constantly teaching and testing, teaching and testing, unlike a'regular&#13;
classroom situation" where testing doesn't always immediately follow&#13;
the teaching of a specific skill.&#13;
Becker stated that because brain research is still at such a primitive&#13;
stage and because LD is a relatively new area of research itself, surefire&#13;
remediation techniques do not yet exist.&#13;
She explained that teaching the child with a learning disability can&#13;
be "very frustrating because I don't know day-to-day whether a&#13;
particular teaching technique is going to eventually result in&#13;
alleviating (the child's) problem."&#13;
Becker added that it is important that the layman understand that a&#13;
child with a learning disability is not mentally retarded or&#13;
behaviorally disturbed. She agreed with German that it is important&#13;
when considering the LD child, to remember that there exists a&#13;
discrepancy between real potential and actual achievement.&#13;
Becker explained that the cause of this discrepancy is considered by&#13;
many theorists to be a disfunction of the brain; this is related to the&#13;
processing deficit earlier described by German. Just exactly how or&#13;
why this disfunction occurs is not currently understood although&#13;
research is continuing in the area.&#13;
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1816 16 Street&#13;
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22nd Ave. &amp; 3 927 - 52nd St. </text>
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              <text>Education quality may fail</text>
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              <text>Committee review&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•Wednesday, March 26, 1975 Vol. Ill No. 30&#13;
Propose change in&#13;
grade policy&#13;
President Weaver&#13;
Ed. quality may fall&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
If University of Wisconsin&#13;
budgetary cutbacks demand a&#13;
tradeoff between quality and&#13;
accessibility of higher education&#13;
in Wisconsin, then maintaining&#13;
quality will take top priority,&#13;
John C. Weaver, president of the&#13;
UW System, told a State&#13;
Legislative joint committee last&#13;
Wednesday in Madison.&#13;
"We have taken very seriously&#13;
in the intent of state government&#13;
for economy and retrenchment,"&#13;
said Weaver. "(But,) the only&#13;
way we're really going to save&#13;
any drastic amounts of money is&#13;
to deny educational opportunity&#13;
to some specific number of&#13;
students."&#13;
Weaver's remarks came&#13;
during a joint session of the&#13;
Senate and Assembly education&#13;
committees. The committees are&#13;
attempting to assess the effects&#13;
of Gov. Patrick J. Lucey's&#13;
proposed UW budget on&#13;
educational policies.&#13;
Weaver told the 20-member&#13;
panel that he doesn't want to see&#13;
"Wisconsin give anybody second&#13;
class education." He also made&#13;
an appeal for the restoration of&#13;
some $24.7-million to the&#13;
Regents' proposed 1975-'77&#13;
budget.&#13;
Late last year, the Regents&#13;
asked the state for $683-million&#13;
for the biennium, exclusive of&#13;
faculty compensation proposals&#13;
being considered on a separate&#13;
budgetary track. Gov. Lucey&#13;
recommended approval of $606.6&#13;
million.&#13;
The 1973-75 UW budget included&#13;
$579.9-million in state&#13;
funds.&#13;
For the upcoming biennium,&#13;
the Regents requested increases&#13;
in 30 budget areas; Gov. Lucey&#13;
disapproved all 30 requests,&#13;
except for automatic increases in&#13;
the sum sufficient accounts for&#13;
utilities.&#13;
Weaver, appearing with other&#13;
key UW administrators, urged&#13;
the restoration of funds in four of&#13;
the thirty areas-a request which&#13;
carries a $24.7-million price tag:&#13;
Restore $9.5 - million in state&#13;
funds to teach an estimated 6,000&#13;
new students that will enter the&#13;
UW system in 1975-77.&#13;
"Enrollments are continueing&#13;
to rise on virtually all university&#13;
campuses," said Weaver.&#13;
He cited that the Governor&#13;
made "sever reference to&#13;
enrollment declines" in the&#13;
future.&#13;
Lucey told the Regents in&#13;
January to begin planning for&#13;
Students demonstrate&#13;
i i Imperialist war / #&#13;
by Paul M. Anderson&#13;
of RANGER staff&#13;
MADISON-About 600 demonstrators marched from the University&#13;
of Wiscon sin campus to the state capitol here Saturday, demanding a&#13;
complete cut-off of A merican supplies, funds and military equipment&#13;
and personnel to South Vietnam and Cambodia.&#13;
Chants of "No more Imperialist war" arose from the group as they&#13;
made the 20-minute march up State Street from the campus to the&#13;
Capitol.&#13;
Early afternoon traffic was tied and backed up for blocks a.t some&#13;
intersections, as the block-long band, escorted front and rear by&#13;
police, made their way to the cascading stairs leading to the top of&#13;
Capitol hill.&#13;
A host of camera-clad photographers and TV newsmen led the&#13;
group, kneeling and retreating until the group reached the Capitol and&#13;
gathered around the west portico.&#13;
I^ong clot h banners and numerous posters rose above the crowd,&#13;
reading "Victory to the Indochinese People," "U.S. Out NowCambodia,&#13;
Vietnam," "No U.S. Arms to Ethopia or Southeast Asia,"&#13;
and "For International Working Class Solidarity."&#13;
Several groups of students and distracted shoppers watched as&#13;
speakers representing various campus affiliations took the podium&#13;
and made an hour-long presentation.&#13;
Ms. Debra Foster, a representative of the United Front in Madison,&#13;
addressed the crowd, calling for "complete independence of Indochina,"&#13;
and making numerous accusations of the U.S. installing&#13;
"puppet governments" in Southeast Asia and in other parts of the&#13;
world.&#13;
She cited that the "National Liberation Forces" are sweeping the&#13;
northwest provinces of South Vietnam, with what she termed "deeply&#13;
rooted people support."&#13;
She added, "Saigon forces are not fighting for their army; they were&#13;
recruited against their own will."&#13;
Ms. Foster claimed that the National Liberation forces are fighting&#13;
for the country in an attempt to restore the "historical unity of North&#13;
"phasing down, phasing out, or&#13;
consolidating university&#13;
programs and campuses" to&#13;
meet projected deadlines. A list&#13;
of "guidelines" for meeting&#13;
future forcasts are to be submitted&#13;
to him by April 15th.&#13;
Weaver however, that "there is&#13;
much public misunderstanding&#13;
as to the magnitude of enrollment&#13;
declines and the time they will&#13;
occur."&#13;
"Our enrollments will increase&#13;
for the next five years," he said,&#13;
"and will not stop until 10 years&#13;
from now."&#13;
He added that in the early&#13;
1990s-the low point in the future&#13;
projected enrollment-the&#13;
number of students attending UW&#13;
will equal the number enrolled in&#13;
1969.&#13;
Weaver also speculated that&#13;
the governor may have&#13;
"ignored" one important aspect&#13;
of education in the future: he said&#13;
that the forecasts consider only&#13;
college age youth, and exclude&#13;
the increasing need of adult&#13;
education in a changing society.&#13;
"We may face growth if we&#13;
meet the services asked for by&#13;
the people of t he state," he said.&#13;
Restore $7.7 million to offset&#13;
the loss of purchasing power for&#13;
essential teaching and library&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
Among topics under discussion&#13;
at last Wednesday's Academic&#13;
Planning Committee meeting,&#13;
was a proposal that Parkside&#13;
investigate the possibilities of a&#13;
change in grading policy. As&#13;
described by Assoc. Prof. Wayne&#13;
Johnson, chairman of the committee,&#13;
the proposed system is&#13;
now being used at the Madison&#13;
Campus, and would include a&#13;
plus and minus policy.&#13;
Using the standard "A, B, C,&#13;
D" letter grading system has&#13;
been the policy at Parkside, but&#13;
the new proposal would make it&#13;
possible for students to earn a&#13;
plus or minus with the letter&#13;
grade. This change, if adopted&#13;
would be carried into gradepoint&#13;
averages, with each one point&#13;
grade being divided into thirds.&#13;
Disadvantages of the system&#13;
"Pitch In!"&#13;
would be the cost of computerization&#13;
at a time when&#13;
budgets are being cut. It was also&#13;
noted that "migration" might&#13;
still occur, resulting in the&#13;
grading system clustering into&#13;
grade catagories. One advantage&#13;
to the proposed system, according&#13;
to Johnson, is that it&#13;
would give a more accurate indication&#13;
of st udent performance.&#13;
He feels that "our current system&#13;
has a sharp breaking point, and&#13;
at times the decision seems&#13;
unfair."&#13;
Additional research on the&#13;
system is being done by student&#13;
committee member James D.&#13;
Smith. Students wishing to&#13;
submit their opinions concerning&#13;
the proposed change, are encouraged&#13;
to write Wayne&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
UWP award winner&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
has been notified that it&#13;
is among 1974 Merit Award&#13;
winners in the National College'&#13;
"Pitch In!" Week program, an&#13;
annual ecological effort sponsored&#13;
by Budweiser and ABC&#13;
radio. Parkside is the only&#13;
Wisconsin school among the&#13;
winners.&#13;
The award-winning program at&#13;
Parkside involved planting of a&#13;
number of trees and shrubs and a&#13;
general clean-up on the campus.&#13;
The Parkside Veterans Club and&#13;
a number of other student groups&#13;
and individuals participated. The&#13;
program was coordinated by Jan&#13;
related story&#13;
page 7&#13;
Ocker, executive director of&#13;
student services.&#13;
The 1975 "Pitch In!" program&#13;
will be held April 7 through 11.&#13;
Last Saturday's Madison demonstrators&#13;
heard numerous speakers on American&#13;
involvement in the Indochina war.&#13;
and South Vietnam."&#13;
"In Vietnam," she said, "the puppet army is retreating-beyond&#13;
anybody's expectations."&#13;
Meanwhile, Madison newspapers carried wire service reports that&#13;
communist-led North Vietnamese forces now control all of the South&#13;
Vietnam western central highlands stretching from Kontum in the&#13;
north, 200 miles south through Phuoc Long to within 50 miles of Saigon.&#13;
In addition, the reports claimed that two U.S. cargo planes in&#13;
Cambodia were reported hit by rocket fire, forcing a temporary&#13;
suspension of the American airlift there.&#13;
During the rally, leaflets were distributed at street corners by a&#13;
group called "Friends of INPRECOR Co-thinkers of the Fourth International."&#13;
The leaflets called for a "victory to the Liberation&#13;
Forces of S outheast Asia" and "victory to the Liberation Forces of&#13;
Ethopia."&#13;
The final paragraphs of the leaflet read:&#13;
"The Pentagon has ordered the helicopter carrier Okinawa, with a&#13;
battalion of marines aboard, to stand by in the Gulf of Siam off&#13;
Cambodia, and has alerted a marine unit on Okinawa for possible&#13;
'evacuation duty in Cambpdia' ." Washington has already funneled&#13;
some $1.8 billion to its Cambodian clients, and about $5 billion has been&#13;
spent on bombing the countryside.&#13;
"The revulsion of th e American people at the ruthless slaughter in&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Career&#13;
center&#13;
explained&#13;
by Gary Nickolai&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
Designed to aid all students,&#13;
ranging from the beginning&#13;
freshman to the alumni career&#13;
changers, the Career Resource&#13;
Center offers a vast wealth of&#13;
information to any individual&#13;
who will take advantage of this&#13;
unique service. Located on the&#13;
first floor of Tallent Hall, the&#13;
Center became an organized&#13;
entity after the creation of the&#13;
Office of Career Planning &amp;&#13;
Placement in July, 1973, but it&#13;
was not until the Spring of 1974&#13;
that the Center's present&#13;
operational nature was realized.&#13;
Mr. John F. Elmore, Director&#13;
of Planning &amp; P lacement stated&#13;
that the Center's purpose is to&#13;
provide University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
students with the&#13;
necessary materials for them to&#13;
explore career opportunities in a&#13;
wide variety of alternatives. He&#13;
further explained that due to the&#13;
wide disparity between the needs&#13;
of different students very general&#13;
information is made available as&#13;
well as specific materials. All&#13;
resources are divided into three&#13;
continued on page 6 &#13;
2 T H E PARKSIDE RANG ER Wednesday, March 2 6 , 1 9 7 5&#13;
Fun loon explain&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reply to the letter to the&#13;
editor concerning the Fun Loan, I&#13;
would like to make the following&#13;
comments:&#13;
1' The most anyone would have&#13;
to pay for usage is a $.25 service&#13;
charge and a $1.00 fine if paid&#13;
back after 10 school days. No&#13;
additional charges will be&#13;
Surveying the greens&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am shocked at the way the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
has neglected to take care of the&#13;
plants distributed throughout the&#13;
building. I am sure our taxes and&#13;
tuition pays the caretakers of this&#13;
building well enough to keep&#13;
these plants living.&#13;
I am not a Horticulture major,&#13;
nor do I have a green thumb, but I&#13;
do know enough about plants to&#13;
be able to see that 75 percent of&#13;
the once full of life organisms are&#13;
dying. Their green have turned&#13;
brown from lack of water, plant&#13;
food (such as fertilizers) and&#13;
general care. If you will take the&#13;
time to look at them, the roots of&#13;
many of the plants have out&#13;
assessed. The only reason tor the&#13;
$1.00 late payment fine is to&#13;
encourage quick turnover so&#13;
more students could utilize the&#13;
fund. It is not cumulative.&#13;
2) The money in the fund&#13;
belongs to the students and is&#13;
only supervised by UWP for&#13;
convenience. It does not belong to&#13;
any single organization;&#13;
therefore, no organization can&#13;
grown the pots that they were&#13;
planted in. Would you send your&#13;
children to school in a pair of&#13;
shoes that they have out grown&#13;
years ago?&#13;
The care of these plants is&#13;
probably not easy and probably&#13;
very time consuming, but if we&#13;
cannot afford to have them&#13;
properly cared for, they don't&#13;
belong here. They are living just&#13;
as we are, and the pushing&#13;
around they get from the students&#13;
hurts them.&#13;
Take a good look at them. Their&#13;
sick leaves should be pulled off t o&#13;
avoid further infection. Do you&#13;
realize that without plants the&#13;
human being cannot exist? Inpossibly&#13;
make a revenue from it.&#13;
The service charge and late&#13;
payment fine will go back into the&#13;
fund to build it so more loans can&#13;
be given out.&#13;
If the writer of the last letter&#13;
had understood these points, I'm&#13;
sure he would not have needed to&#13;
make his criticisms.&#13;
David J. Brandt&#13;
stead of abusing them, we should&#13;
stop and be thankful for them.&#13;
Please take the time to give&#13;
them proper care. If Parkside&#13;
can keep their floors shining,&#13;
their windows clean, their&#13;
bathrooms sanitary, and yet let&#13;
its plants die, well all I can say is&#13;
I'd be ashamed to bring my&#13;
friends who are Horticulture&#13;
majors on a tour through the&#13;
University that I so highly speak&#13;
of.&#13;
Very Concerned Students&#13;
Gail Allison Lamar&#13;
Randy Hughes&#13;
P.S. Have you thanked a green&#13;
plant today?&#13;
Appointment&#13;
Parkside Senior, Doug Redmond, has been appointed News Editor of&#13;
the RANGER newspaper and as a member of the RANGER Board of&#13;
Directors. His responsibilities will include the assigning of a rticles to&#13;
staff writers, editing of articles, and general layout of the paper.&#13;
Redmond is a past president of the Pi Sigma Epsilon business&#13;
fraternity, holds an associate degree in marketing, and was appointed&#13;
by Acting Chancellor Bauer as a member of the Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee. He is currently conducting an attitudinal survey for the&#13;
School of Modern Industry concerning Parkside's image.&#13;
Rerun&#13;
Editors Note: Due to errors in&#13;
the layout of last weeks paper the&#13;
subsequent letter did not run in&#13;
the correct sequence. RANGER&#13;
extends it's apologies for the&#13;
error. The corrected letter&#13;
follows in its entirety.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I truly appreciate the article&#13;
written on March 5, "A Time Of&#13;
Revolt." Your comparisons were&#13;
drawn beautifully and you gave&#13;
one of the most interesting and&#13;
practical history lessons with&#13;
which I have ever come in contact.&#13;
I am writing this letter to&#13;
first express my gratitude, and&#13;
second, to give a warning to the&#13;
student body, faculty, and staff of&#13;
this university.&#13;
God has given each man a will.&#13;
By will I mean the ability to make&#13;
a choice. Now each choice has a&#13;
result. God has. also made each&#13;
man accountable for his own&#13;
chpice.&#13;
Today there is world-wide&#13;
revolution. But against who or&#13;
wh^J; are these revolts taking&#13;
place. Revolution can be seen in&#13;
business, government and&#13;
schools. Children rebel against&#13;
parent, wives against husbands,&#13;
and husbands against God. The&#13;
obvious result is disorder and a&#13;
great lack of love for each other&#13;
and for God.&#13;
The people of America won&#13;
their freedom through revolution.&#13;
You are presently free to the will&#13;
of God because Jesus Christ&#13;
rebelled against the sin in this&#13;
world by dying for each of you.&#13;
You can accept this freedom or&#13;
reject it. It is your perogative.&#13;
BUT YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE&#13;
FOR YOUR OWN DECISION.&#13;
Remember, whenever you&#13;
revolt, think first of whether you&#13;
are rebelling against God or Evil.&#13;
"For the wrath of God is&#13;
revealed against all ungodliness&#13;
and unrighteousness of men who&#13;
hold the truth in&#13;
unrighteousness." - (Rom. 1:18)&#13;
Anthony Burke, President&#13;
Parkside Christian Fellowship&#13;
A Jfaurth Estate&#13;
Among other engines which have raised the present commotion,&#13;
next to the indecent harangues of the preachers none has had a more&#13;
extensive or stronger influence than the newspapers of the respective&#13;
colonies.&#13;
Ambrose Series&#13;
Tory Publisher&#13;
Were it left for me to decide whether we should have a government&#13;
without newspapers, br newspapers without a government, I should&#13;
not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.&#13;
Thomas Jefferson&#13;
The free Press was born during the struggle between Great Britain&#13;
and ner thirteen North American colonies. It was in the colonies that&#13;
for the first time in world history, a poeple used the mass media for&#13;
uncensored debate, agitation and political organization. A central&#13;
force in the groundswell of democratic thinking, the Free Press&#13;
rapidly 'became vital to the Revolution itself. Newspapers were&#13;
available throughout the colonies, providing information, ideas and&#13;
leadership. Within seventy-two years of its birth, the mass media had&#13;
become a Fourth Estate - a citizen's voice, free of influence from the&#13;
church, aristocracy or government. Such national power in the hands&#13;
of t he public was unheard of in the conservative societies of Europe.&#13;
This Fourth Estate was small but formidable. A mere 49&#13;
newspapers (44 Whig and 5 Tory) comprised the colonial news&#13;
medium by 1783. The average paper printed at most 3000 c opies of&#13;
each issue, but papers were generally handed around or posted on&#13;
walls and read aloud.&#13;
Despite their immense popularity, most newspapers were not&#13;
profitable businesses. Even prominent publishers such as James&#13;
F ranklin and John Zenger led lives of h ard work, political persecution&#13;
and continual poverty. Advertising was not yet essential to most&#13;
businesses, so newspapers were largely dependent for their survival&#13;
upon donations, subscriptions and whatever commercial printing jobs&#13;
their publishers could perform.&#13;
There was an "outlaw" quality to the colonial press. Even before the&#13;
Stamp Act, the majority of Whig papers published without the&#13;
required government permits. Since newspapers were forums for&#13;
public debate, the most rebellious and outrageous ideas often first&#13;
appeared in newsprint. Boycotts on Toryand British goods were announced&#13;
and sometimes organized by the colonial press. The public&#13;
first met Tom Paine, Ben Franklin, Sam Adams and other leaders&#13;
through the pages of the radical media. The colonists depended on&#13;
newspapers for news about the Declaration of. Independence&#13;
government corruption, and Lexington and Concord. It is little wonder&#13;
that the British tried so hard to suppress the media for the&#13;
newspapers kept issues and ideas burning in the public consciousness&#13;
The new-born Free Press gave a sense of unity to many of its&#13;
readers. At last, the thoughts and actions of one region could be known&#13;
and understood quickly by other people near and far. The onceisolated&#13;
colonists could identify common problems, develop common&#13;
tactics and, in time, revolt together as a people. Without the&#13;
revolutionary printers, the democratic movement would have been&#13;
much slower to mature; and the War for Independence much harder&#13;
to initiate and win.&#13;
Today, the mass media is anything but rebellious. Unlike the young&#13;
upstarts who founded the Free Press, today's publishers and broadcasters&#13;
have deeply-rooted interests in keeping society exactly as it is.&#13;
Two-hundred years ago, the Boston Gazette staff organized the Boston&#13;
lea Party. Our present day news establishment would be more likely&#13;
to own the tea company. News today is big business.&#13;
NBC (owned by RCA) is the wealthiest of the networks. It owns,&#13;
among other things, five major publishing .houses and its parent&#13;
company has extensive links with the military due to RCA's electronics&#13;
and computer production. These links were pointed out by&#13;
RCA s past chairman David Sarnoff in 1965 when he addressed the&#13;
Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association, of w hich&#13;
no" is a permanent director. AFCEA's charter states the&#13;
organization exists to "serve the industrial military team" and Sarnoff&#13;
had these words for,-its annual convention;&#13;
the working alliance of industrial and military leadership&#13;
represented m this organization...has fashioned a community of ineres&#13;
so c o selv interwoven that whatever affects the progress of one&#13;
partner is reflected in the progress of the other.&#13;
&lt;=ALOQTt"&gt;!'VCrT&#13;
perce nt of RCA'S total income during 1964 was from&#13;
s 0 ( government - this was one year before Sarnoff's&#13;
f!^nT quoted above, and the year in which U.S. troops first arrived in&#13;
force in Viet Nam.&#13;
The romantic image of newspapers in hot competition for a local&#13;
scoop is outdated today. Only 14.4 percent of all U.S. cities are served&#13;
i_ °&#13;
re lan uae newspaper. This shortage of diverse sources of new s&#13;
ZZ 1 W0FSe / thG heayy reliance of most papers on AP and UPI&#13;
N 1 VlCe s ories» syndicated editorials and opinion columns.&#13;
one annth^^ different&#13;
-&#13;
cities often seem to be carbon copies of&#13;
l " W1*&#13;
h&#13;
°&#13;
nly the&gt;rnames giving away the difference.&#13;
Hrori a ar (1 ei ent mass media than the one born here two hunvovprnmpnt&#13;
^5°' S&#13;
f&#13;
eking freedom from a wealthy and powerful&#13;
rehellinn tn th 6 C° sts used the Presses to bring their message of&#13;
was inpvnpn ^ "&#13;
a !?"' The press belong&#13;
ed to the people then, for it&#13;
of n ational S1V6&#13;
°&#13;
Pen f&#13;
°&#13;
r comrflunity input. Today, the channels&#13;
o T dPd C°™C,&#13;
ati&#13;
°&#13;
n closed to most of us. Witti the exception&#13;
Press" he Inn G u&#13;
[ "nancially weak alternative papers, our "Free&#13;
vested Slf ^ C°&#13;
rporations&#13;
-&#13;
11 is voice of wealthy and&#13;
about national change"" '°&#13;
nger 3 t001 by WhiCh people migM bri&#13;
"&#13;
g&#13;
Matt Rat0c ; .&#13;
by Matthew Bates&#13;
s a member of t he Storrs, Connecticut PBC. &#13;
Woodcock in Kenosha&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1975 3&#13;
MWHesor* PNU ct$&#13;
Deep recession&#13;
by Susan Shemanske&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
u™ted Auto Workers International Union President Leonard&#13;
woodcock expects signs of a comeback in the economy around July-if&#13;
necessary actions are taken.&#13;
Woodcock described the current recession - the deepest, longest&#13;
recession since 1937 - as "a crisis in confidence" unlike the 1930's.&#13;
The money is out there," he says, adding, "if Washington takes the&#13;
necessary actions we can turn the economy around."&#13;
The 64-year-old head of the UAW was in Kenosha March 17 to speak&#13;
at the annual meeting of the United Way of Kenosha County.&#13;
A native of Rhode Island, Woodcock took over as head of the UAW in&#13;
1970 after Walter Reuther died. He was elected to a full term in 1972&#13;
and reelected to a 3-year term in 1974. Woodcock has been in&#13;
Washington the past several months, asking Congress to take the&#13;
actions necessary to turn the economy around.&#13;
Woodcock praised the Senate for its proposed $30 billion tax cut, an&#13;
increase from the $21.3 billion proposal which he though was too low.&#13;
The tax cuts should be geared to the low and middle income groups&#13;
who will spend the money and not save it, he said.&#13;
Woodcock believes the tax cut should be followed by a five per cent&#13;
tax credit for new housing and reduced withholding tax starting July 1.&#13;
Wisconsins' Congressman Reuss and Senator Proxmire were&#13;
praised for their relentless pressure on the Federal Reserve Board to&#13;
increase the money supply. "Without it, a tax cut would be ineffective,"&#13;
Woodcock said.&#13;
He stressed the need for an employment plan and the revival of the&#13;
public employment program stating that there was no better project&#13;
than the renovation of the railroads.&#13;
A well funded summer youth program to provide jobs for the 18.4 per&#13;
cent unemployed youth (41 per cent among black youths) should be&#13;
undertaken even though it would cost an estimated $1 billion.&#13;
Woodcock said he was asking Congress to pick up the premiums on&#13;
health insurance for those workers layed-off or unemployed stating&#13;
that "the American worker is among the highest paid and most insecure&#13;
- because health insurance is tied to having a job." Ours is the&#13;
only industrial country in the world without a national health insurance&#13;
program. He added that a federally administered unemployment&#13;
compensation program should be effected.&#13;
Other subjects Woodcock addressed himself to were the enerev&#13;
program and the budget deficit.&#13;
Woodcock said the price of OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting&#13;
Countries) countries is slipping. He said that U.S. should not&#13;
reduce oil imports by either taxes or the quota system - pointing out&#13;
that the world has a surplus of oil and the administration's plan to keep&#13;
prices artificially high to justify costs of developing alternative energv&#13;
sources is unreasonable.&#13;
Woodcock called for the establishment of a National Energy&#13;
Production Board, the regulation of natural gas use, the development&#13;
of the huge underground Eastern coal reserves and the development&#13;
of research on solar energy. "Developing alternative resources (of&#13;
energy) should be regulated and subsidized by the federal government,"&#13;
he says, adding that it is necessary for national defense.&#13;
Although many of Woodcock's proposals would make the budget and&#13;
deficit bigger, he did not feel that this would be a great problem.&#13;
"Large deficits are products of recessions," he asserted.&#13;
"The quickest, most sensible way to balance the budget is to use&#13;
whatever stimulus is necessary (including a large deficit) while&#13;
avoiding military entanglements in Southeast Asia."&#13;
Woodcock cautioned against attempting to cut the deficit too rapidly&#13;
as was done during the Eisenhower years. A large deficit must be&#13;
phased out gradually to avoid those problems (three depressions in&#13;
eight years), he said.&#13;
Woodcock concluded, "We can pull ourselves out of this mess we're&#13;
in and I'm confident we are going to do it."&#13;
Task&#13;
Force&#13;
Candidates announcements&#13;
Lee Wagner and Kai C. Nail announced their candidacy for the office&#13;
of President of P.S.G.A. Inc. and Vice-President of P.S.G.A. Inc.&#13;
respectively, today.&#13;
Lee Wagner presents a variety of experiences having worked as&#13;
Housing Director and Consumer Education Co-ordinator for the Urban&#13;
league of Racine. Wagner is the author of a Consumer Education&#13;
Manual currently being used in the Unified School District in Racine.&#13;
Kai C. Nail is running with Lee Wagner as his Vice-Presidential&#13;
nominee. He is currently president of the Concerned Student Coalition&#13;
and is the chairperson of the Campus Concerns Committee's subcommittee&#13;
dealing with increased recognition and support for student&#13;
organizations on campus. Nail also is a student-to-student counselor&#13;
and served on the Search and Screen Committee that approved the&#13;
hiring of three counselors on campus. Nail is 20 years old and is a&#13;
sophomore.&#13;
Discrimination&#13;
John D. Kontz, president pro tempore of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association Inc. senate, announced today that he would&#13;
be a candidate for president of the P.S.G.A. Inc. in the upcoming&#13;
general election. Kontz named Thomas J. Olson as his vicepresidential&#13;
running mate.&#13;
Kontz was elected to the P.S.G.A. Inc. senate as an independent&#13;
candidate in April of 1974. In September of 1974 he was elected by the&#13;
senate to serve as president pro tempore and in November was&#13;
reelected to the same office.&#13;
Olson was a member of the Democratic Party, 1972-74, Democratic&#13;
State Convention and District Convention delegate, 1973 an d 1974,&#13;
member of the Executive Board of Kenosha County Democratic&#13;
Party, 1973, member of the Parkside Chess Club, 1972, member of the&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus of Wisconsin, 1972-. Olson is also currently&#13;
a member of the Parkside Coalition Political Congress.'&#13;
O&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Since enrolling at Parkside, I&#13;
have subsequently witnessed&#13;
more discrimination than any&#13;
federally and state funded institution&#13;
is legally allowed to get&#13;
away with. The main problem is&#13;
the University administrators&#13;
refusal to accept Black and other&#13;
minorities as a visible part of the&#13;
student's life. Parkside's&#13;
basketball team (congratulations&#13;
to the players) predominantly&#13;
Black, have given Parkside a&#13;
new image. Their victorious&#13;
record was good for the players&#13;
and it also gave the school new&#13;
prestige.&#13;
The refusal of the University&#13;
administrators to accept Black&#13;
students as a visible part of&#13;
student life was reflected in the&#13;
recent Black History Week activities&#13;
when the Third World&#13;
Organization was refused a&#13;
special dinner plate at plate&#13;
prices as was reflected on March&#13;
17, St. Patrick's Day in the&#13;
cafeteria when such a dinner&#13;
existed but Third World&#13;
Organization was told it WAS. IN&#13;
VIOLATION OF THE&#13;
UNIVERSITY CONTRACT.&#13;
Third World Organization had to&#13;
suggest that awareness be made&#13;
of Black History Month but "Irish&#13;
Day" comes along and its a&#13;
"GREAT DAY!!!!!" How did the&#13;
Irish contribute to the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
Basketball Team!! At two of&#13;
Parkside's games, six students&#13;
carried signs voicing their&#13;
opinion about Parkside administration's&#13;
abusive power.&#13;
Did the Ranger even once&#13;
acknowledge these students?&#13;
Yet, Ranger saw fit to&#13;
acknowledge a janitor who gets&#13;
paid a good salary to do a job in&#13;
the Canteen. Not only are&#13;
Ranger's opinions of newsworthy&#13;
events questionable, but also&#13;
their policy for criticisms of&#13;
reporters leaves much to be&#13;
desired. Also, correct me if I'm&#13;
wrong, the Ranger has one Black&#13;
reporter. When does he report&#13;
stories? Don't bring up last&#13;
semester's coverage of a Third&#13;
World Organizational meeting!!&#13;
Another outrageous person at&#13;
Parkside is the Student Government&#13;
president. This young man&#13;
is playing with fire and he is on an&#13;
ego trip so heavy he can't see the&#13;
danger. I am not attacking this&#13;
person but what has student&#13;
government done for the&#13;
students? What has Mr.&#13;
President proposed from the&#13;
minority statement?&#13;
These are only a few facts&#13;
where the administration know&#13;
they are lacking. I personally did&#13;
not come to college to be&#13;
ostracized because of my color;&#13;
however, when negotiations fail&#13;
only those who stand as total men&#13;
and women can exist in a white&#13;
supremacy.&#13;
"All men are the same for&#13;
neither has the power to do that&#13;
which was done first. He cannot&#13;
be the source of himself." Taken&#13;
from the African Testament.&#13;
"The Freed Mind"&#13;
Name Withheld&#13;
on request&#13;
by Cathy Mech&#13;
of Ranger Staff&#13;
The question of whether or not&#13;
students were interested enough&#13;
in expressing their opinions was&#13;
raised by Assistant Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn while waiting for&#13;
students and other concerned&#13;
persons to attend the open&#13;
hearing on the Task Force&#13;
Committee for Merger Implementation&#13;
on March 17.&#13;
Two of the students, John Kontz&#13;
and Ed Arndt, read statements.&#13;
Kontz statement included&#13;
recommendations for the size of&#13;
student government, the amount&#13;
of time after elections before&#13;
assumption of office, and the&#13;
equality of numbers of students&#13;
as compared to faculty on&#13;
various committees. Arndt stated&#13;
his support for the Kontz&#13;
statement and commended the&#13;
committee for the work they&#13;
were performing. Both Kontz and&#13;
Arndt felt the proposed&#13;
representation of students in the&#13;
student senate would be too&#13;
cumbersome to work with and&#13;
make it difficult to hold quorum.&#13;
Statements were also submitted&#13;
by Carol Merrick and the&#13;
executive Council of Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. Merrick felt&#13;
citizens from Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties should also be&#13;
allowed to sit on committees&#13;
since Parksides "primary function&#13;
is to serve the community."&#13;
PAB stated that enough time&#13;
has not been given to students&#13;
and faculty "to digest and&#13;
comment on your recommendations."&#13;
&#13;
APPLICATIONS FOR EDITOR&#13;
Applications for the position of Editor-in-chief of&#13;
RANGER 1975-76 must be submitted to Don Kopriva&#13;
Ranger advisor by 12 noon Thursday, April 17, 1975,&#13;
at 288 Tallent Hall.&#13;
Applicants must be Parkside students who will Carry 8 !&#13;
or more credits during each semester of the 1975-76 •&#13;
school year.The position carries a salary of $50 per week.&#13;
Applicants must submit a letter stating plans for RANGER!;&#13;
Ranger experience and qualifications. Applicants will be&#13;
interviewed beginning at 4 P M-,&#13;
Thursday, April 17, in D-174 LLC. &#13;
THE P A RK SI DE R A N GER Wednesday, March 2 6 ,&#13;
Walter&#13;
Ulbrichts&#13;
1975&#13;
LfeNNY&#13;
Film review by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
himsdf S&#13;
°&#13;
Clety WhiCh senselessly Persecuted him, and to&#13;
Eight years after his mysterious death of a heroin overdose («m&#13;
spiracy theories of police complicity still linger) the mat • J&#13;
.&#13;
tclub comedian and S&#13;
°&#13;
dal CritiG has turned int0 a&#13;
' Priceless pearl&#13;
Critics who once branded him as "sick" or "subvert &gt;!! • *&#13;
him as a prophet or genius. To some he .worshippTas aTuhhem&#13;
and a poet of America's spiritual condition ™ ' her&#13;
°&#13;
Bruce's popularity climbs to beatification in Lenny Based on thP&#13;
successful play by Julian Barry, director Bob Fosse's^("Cabien&#13;
interpretation of the witty, self-destructive hipster is a c^matic&#13;
u ogy of a martyred, misunderstood saint. From the opening credits&#13;
Ledpy is alienated, confined, and doomed by an oppressive dSness&#13;
Schneider" SUff0Cates ^ gosP&#13;
el according to Leonard Alfred&#13;
We quickly learn who wears the black hat and who rides the&#13;
nrlfpU l' 6 charger 38 (Dustin Hoffman) exposes his&#13;
p ofessional scars under a harsh spotlight. "Talking makes vou thP&#13;
worst person in the community," he says firmlv grinnina w&#13;
microphone, a fragile umbilical cord through the darkness andWafts'&#13;
of smoke to an audience he cannot completely see oTnh""^&#13;
Pointing it all out: Dustin Hoffman as Lenny Bruce.&#13;
But Lenny Bruce doesn't talk-he gives electric shock treatments:&#13;
We a ll want for a wife, a combination $500 a night hooker and a&#13;
Sunday school teacher." Or, about anti-Semitism, "There should be a&#13;
statute of limitations for killing Christ, but we're still paying for it."&#13;
T e motivation of the brilliant iconoclast is never adequately explained&#13;
m Lenny. Mock documentary scenes with Bruce's wife the&#13;
stripper Honey Harlowe (Valerie Perrine), his mother (Jan Miner)&#13;
and business agent, surrealistically blend past and present events in'&#13;
Lenny s life but never touch a clear, honest basis for his evangelism&#13;
Instead of a rational progression of character, Bruce is painted as a&#13;
Kafkaesque hero. He is trapped in a hostile environment and unable to&#13;
comprehend the justice which condemns him. Although Dustin Hoffman&#13;
superbly captures Bruce's onstage electric improvisation, a&#13;
white-water run of verbal barbs building in force and rhythm like a&#13;
sexual climax, Hoffman is locked into a dead-end role He is&#13;
mysteriously deserted by family, friends and audience while he is&#13;
systemically attacked by the monolithic courts and press for obscenity&#13;
charges. Bruce's vitality and wit disintegrate into a lifeless slag heap&#13;
of painful memories and cold shadows.&#13;
The spirit of Bruce's message is absent in Lenny. He saw our society&#13;
as a garbage can of h yprocisy, bigotry and ignorance, but he placed&#13;
his bets on our innate wisdom, unpolluted by contemporary lies and&#13;
b* ""U &gt;&#13;
We are the creators of our environment, he said, the dictators of our&#13;
destiny, ^&#13;
CAMPUS MINISTERS ANNOUNCE HOLY WEEK SCHEDULE&#13;
AND INVITE YOUR PARTICIPATION AT CHI-RHO CENTER&#13;
On Wednesday evening, March 26, at 7:30 p.m. there will be a&#13;
scripture session which will concentrate on taking a deeper look into&#13;
thepass&#13;
10&#13;
" account as recorded by John. Everyone is welcome&#13;
Witt tteZ^y f Seder MeaI is planned in conjunction with the celebration of Jesus' institution of the Eucharist. The seder is&#13;
tte Jewish Passover celebration. This year the Jewish and the Gentile&#13;
calendar dates for the Old and New Testament celebrations coincide&#13;
A potluck supper will complete the evening. Everyone is invited to&#13;
needed f&#13;
°&#13;
r plannin«' Please Phone DD2-«626 or 657-3408 be fore Wednesday noon.&#13;
The Friday service will be held at 1:30 p.m. at the CENTER.&#13;
The celebration of the Paschal Mystery will continue on Saturday at&#13;
6:30 p.m. During the Easter Vigil service, Gretchen and Erica&#13;
Widener will be welcomed into our Christian Community through the&#13;
sacrament of Baptism. The liturgy of the Word and the Eucharist will&#13;
complete that day's service.&#13;
CENTER lU be ^ HtUrgy CGlebrated 0n Easter Sunday at CHI-RHO&#13;
Alibi&#13;
You&#13;
plead self-defense&#13;
in killing the&#13;
creative&#13;
space&#13;
growing&#13;
between us.&#13;
Babe,&#13;
mutilation&#13;
alters&#13;
justification&#13;
and you've shot&#13;
me&#13;
full of holes.&#13;
Mick Andersen&#13;
MIRAGE&#13;
lovely floating&#13;
apparition&#13;
beckoning&#13;
calling&#13;
pleading with me.&#13;
this way lies&#13;
life, happiness&#13;
contentednessso&#13;
following,her image,i stumble&#13;
and&#13;
fall against&#13;
myselfbrick&#13;
wall of&#13;
guilt.&#13;
only looking up&#13;
from underground&#13;
she remains&#13;
far in the distance&#13;
beckoning, calling&#13;
pleading; picking&#13;
myself off&#13;
the ground - out of&#13;
the grave - i begin&#13;
again&#13;
to unquestionable&#13;
trapse&#13;
after her shadow.&#13;
s.l.b.&#13;
April&#13;
exhibit&#13;
On April 22, 1975 the Sunshine&#13;
Student Art Co-op (SSAC) will&#13;
present the Parkside Student Art&#13;
Exhibit in. the gallery of the&#13;
Comm-Arts Theatre. Hours of the&#13;
show are: Monday, Wednesday,&#13;
Friday from 3 to 5 and Tuesday,&#13;
Thursday from 6 to 9.&#13;
In announcing the exhibit&#13;
Kathy Bouterse, president of the&#13;
SSAC, asked that art students&#13;
interested in organizing the&#13;
exhibit attend a meeting on&#13;
Thursday March 27 at 12:30 to be&#13;
held in D140 of Comm-Arts. The&#13;
meeting will be held to discuss&#13;
"the possibilities of a juror and to&#13;
finalize procedures for entrants&#13;
and awards.&#13;
Students interested in&#13;
exhibiting their work are&#13;
requested to fill out the entry&#13;
forms and submit them with their&#13;
works on April 16 and 17. Entries&#13;
will be accepted at D155A,&#13;
Comm-Arts- from 10 a.m. to 5&#13;
p.m. on both dates. Entries are&#13;
limited to five per student.&#13;
Bouterse also announced that&#13;
Acting Chancellor Otto Bauer&#13;
will present the awards on April&#13;
22 at the awards presentation to&#13;
be held in the Gallery from 5 to 6.&#13;
The reception will be held immediately&#13;
following the awards&#13;
presentation and will run from 6&#13;
to 9.&#13;
THE ARTS&#13;
Shakespeare&#13;
One of Shakespeare's earliest comedies, THE TWO GENTLEMEN&#13;
OF VERONA, will be presented at Comm-Arts Theatre on April 10 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. by the National Shakespeare Company under the sponsorship&#13;
of Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
This is a play about the young, its attitude and its emphasis are&#13;
youthful, there are no specifically old people in it and no bitterness&#13;
cynicism or talk about the past. The play is about two subjects that&#13;
much concern the young: love and friendship.&#13;
In THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERNONA the friendship between&#13;
the two young men, Valentine and Proteus, is established in the&#13;
opening scene but at the same time the difference between them is&#13;
made apparent. Proteus is the less self-sufficient, the weaker of the&#13;
two. He has more need of both friendship and love. Valentine is portrayed&#13;
as a model of youthful magnanimity. He is amused at the&#13;
devastation that love has worked in Proteus and at the same time&#13;
slightly scornful about it. Friendship touched him more deeply that it&#13;
does Proteus, and when he falls in love, he is more deeply moved. Yet&#13;
he has less need than Proteus of the supports of l ove and friendship'&#13;
and can therefore be less selfish about them.&#13;
Moliere&#13;
Two plays by Moliere are to be presented April 24-27. Th e Jealous&#13;
Husband and The Physician In Spite of Himself, farces, are being&#13;
directed by Richard Carrington. The stress of the production has been&#13;
placed on the acting company and not specific character parts, in an&#13;
attempt to resemble Moliere's company. Ticket prices are $1.00 for&#13;
students, $2.00 for general public, and may be purchased from&#13;
members of Pi Sigma Epsilon business fraternity, which is responsible&#13;
for oi. " ampus promotion.&#13;
P.B.S. Programs March 30-April 5&#13;
SUNDAY, MARCH 30&#13;
11:00 A.M. SPECIAL: BACH MASS IN B MINOR. Karl Richter&#13;
conducts the Munich Bach Orchestra and the Munich Bach Choir in an&#13;
awe-inspiring performance of Johann Sebastian Bach's "Mass in B&#13;
Minor." Internationally-acclaimed baritone Hermann Prey, soprano&#13;
Gundula Janowitz, mezzo soprano Hertha Topper and tenor Horst&#13;
Lauoenthal are the feature vocal soloists.&#13;
1:30 P.M. THE JAPANESE FILM: GATE OF HELL. Stunning color&#13;
photography accents Teinosuke Kinugasa's classic film of war torn&#13;
medieval Japan and a Samurai's tragic love for a married woman.&#13;
Cast:&#13;
Moritoh.., Kazuo Hasegawa&#13;
Kesa Machiko Kyo&#13;
3:30 P.M. THE ROMANTIC REBELLION. Kenneth Clark sumhZf"&#13;
t&#13;
dramatlc events which lad to the romantic rebellion and&#13;
introduces the great artists who fought tte battles between classic and&#13;
~„rrhe time °&#13;
f the French Revoiuti°&#13;
n to the&#13;
™ K .'SSZSSSTn&#13;
'tteePpr&#13;
0o«am 79&#13;
' ^ CWCag&#13;
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Muriel Bach Nar 1 Tan Pellegrini&#13;
' N°&#13;
rma&#13;
" Gottschalk and iviuriei Bach. Narrator is Marty Robinson.&#13;
Dr° SowT ASCENT&#13;
°&#13;
F MAN' "Generation Upon Generation,"&#13;
Ltonce L thme fte C°&#13;
mpleX COde that g°™rns&#13;
p r fse T t t e T t ' K e n n e th C l a r k&#13;
KST.&#13;
3nd h&#13;
'&#13;
S playad a *-ct -.e in the&#13;
(RepeatT' ™E ASCENT&#13;
°&#13;
F MAN' "Generation Upon Generation"&#13;
8-nn p yi FRIDAY, APRIL4&#13;
narrates a new ^ °1 A DREAM" Actor Ja™s Earl Jones&#13;
King's movement anl"!&#13;
611 *7 sbowing 016 dramatic impact of Dr.&#13;
film festival awards toisTita"^ **** ^ Winn&lt;?r&#13;
°&#13;
f f&#13;
°&#13;
Ur&#13;
from the 50's and rn&gt;' ^ mcorporates stark newsreel footage&#13;
stMrs&#13;
-&#13;
coretta King and&#13;
IN AMEMcl&#13;
P&#13;
"TOe School For Scandal,"&#13;
on iaXZv I&#13;
3&#13;
?'&#13;
8 PerfeCt C°&#13;
medy classic&#13;
' a stylized&#13;
Minn^poHs Minnesota " * The Guth™ " "&#13;
f &#13;
FUTURE CPA'S&#13;
Learn Now About the&#13;
next CPA Exam.&#13;
Becker CPA Review Course&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
414-276-7271&#13;
OUR SUCCESSFUL STUDENTS REPRESENT&#13;
1/4 OF US A&#13;
[COURSES BEGIN JUNE 1st . DEC 1st&#13;
THE U.W. PARKSIDE SEARCH AND SCREEN COMMITTEE&#13;
INVITES YOUR NOMINATIONS FOR&#13;
Chancellor of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Nominations sho uld be mailed to: U.W. Parksid e Se arch and&#13;
Sc reen Committe e, John Campbell, Chairman , P.O. Box 900,&#13;
Kenosh a, Wi. 531 40. Th e University of Wisconsi n is an&#13;
Equal Opportun ity - Affirmati ve Action Emp loy er.&#13;
Brief News&#13;
The Security Department has numberous watches and rings (both&#13;
ladies and mens) which can be called for upon giving a valid&#13;
description of the item&#13;
The department also has some calculators on hand which can be&#13;
claimed upon giving an accurate description of the model and serial&#13;
number.&#13;
The above are in addition to many other items such as notebooks,&#13;
text books, gloves, mittens, scarves, caps and sweaters.&#13;
Please keep the model, name and serial numbers of items such as&#13;
radios, recorders, calculators and watches in case these items are&#13;
stolen or missing. This would enable their return to the proper owner&#13;
when found and turned in to our Department, as it is very difficult to&#13;
return one model of a calculator to six persons claiming the same&#13;
model when none of th em have a serial number,&#13;
This week next to the Sweet Shoppe there will be a table set up where&#13;
you will have a chance to fill UWP's Easter Basket with eggs to build&#13;
the Student Fun Loan Fund through your donations. The money in the&#13;
fund is put into an account under the supervision of UWP for all&#13;
students to use. It does not belong to UWP, Interconnection, or any&#13;
other single organization. It belongs to you, the students.&#13;
Medical technology students are invited to the Racine-Kenosha&#13;
Medical Technology Society's meeting on Tuesday, April 1, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the cafeteria of St. Mary's Hospital, 717 - 15th St., Racine.&#13;
Students now interning in Racine and Kenosha hospitals will talk&#13;
about their internships, and there will be a tour of the lab.&#13;
Week of the Young Child is April 6-12&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center will be having an OPEN HOUSE on&#13;
A pril 6 from 2:00-4:00. The public is invited to come and see our new&#13;
center. Located on Highway E just after Junction JR.&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center will be open for Capsule College&#13;
April 2nd and 3rd. Advance registration is required, payment in advance;&#13;
you may stop by to register between the hours of 8:00-5:00&#13;
Monday through Friday. Fee will be $5.00 for a full day and $3.00 for a&#13;
half day. Juice, milk and snacks are provided. Bring disposable&#13;
diapers if your child wears diapers.&#13;
Register immediately as we can only accommodate 6 children&#13;
between the ages of 1-2 and 29 of ages 2-7. Our number is 553-2227&#13;
Ixicated on Highway E just after Junction JR.&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1 975 5&#13;
"Outstanding"&#13;
Food Co-op&#13;
Classified&#13;
•••••••••••••••••&#13;
FUTURE CPA'S learn how to prepare tor&#13;
the CPA Exam Becker CPA Review Course&#13;
Call Collect, Milwaukee 414 276 7271&#13;
Weekly orderlist WANTED -- Song leader and musical&#13;
talent for church in Racine. Call Bible&#13;
Baptist Church, 554-6149.&#13;
•••••••••&#13;
Curt Hanrahan solos&#13;
Food ordering dates: Wed. 11-2&#13;
and 4-6; Thurs. 11-2. Food pick-up&#13;
the following week: Thurs. 11&#13;
a.m.-8 p.m. Membership: $5&#13;
Students, $7 non-students.&#13;
CANNED GOODS&#13;
.43 SF Fruit Cocktail 16 oz.&#13;
.41 SF Slic YC Peaches 16 oz.&#13;
.44 FK Pear Halves 16 oz.&#13;
.64 Camp Tomato Juice 46 o z.&#13;
.33 SF Cut Gr Beans 16 oz.&#13;
.29 SF Cut Wax Beans 15V2 oz.&#13;
.37 Stokely Golden Wh Kr Corn 17&#13;
oz.&#13;
.36 SF Early June Peas 17 oz.&#13;
.35 FK Tomatoes 16 oz.&#13;
.49 Contadina Tomato Paste 12&#13;
oz.&#13;
.19 SF Tomato Soup 10 % oz.&#13;
.22 Camp Chicken Noodle Soup&#13;
103&#13;
/4 OZ.&#13;
.22 Camp Cream of Mushroom&#13;
103&#13;
/4 OZ.&#13;
.54 B&amp;M Oven Baked Beans 18 oz.&#13;
.81 Lachoy Beef Chow Mein 16 oz.&#13;
.60 Milw Plain Dills 16 oz.&#13;
.60 Milw Kosher Dills 16 oz.&#13;
.51 Milw Sweet Relish 16 oz.&#13;
.44 Milw Hamb Dill Pickles 16 oz.&#13;
1.18 Iccy Sticcy Peanut Butter 28&#13;
oz.&#13;
.13 SF Iodized Salt 26 o z.&#13;
1.71 FK Shortening 3 lbs.&#13;
CHEESE&#13;
1.27 Cheddar, Raw Milk, Aged,&#13;
Yellow 1 lb.&#13;
1.14 Cheddar, Mild, Yellow 1 lb.&#13;
1.13 Colby, Mild Yellow 1 lb.&#13;
1.17 Mozzarella 1 lb.&#13;
1.37 Swiss Cut, Mild 1 lb.&#13;
GRAINS&#13;
1.12 Wheat Flakes 5 lbs.&#13;
.47 Bran Flakes 5 lbs.&#13;
1.63 Rice, Brown 5 lbs.&#13;
1.73 Rice, White, Long 5 lbs.&#13;
BEANS &amp; PEAS&#13;
1.46 Black Eye 5 lbs.&#13;
1.14 Green Split Peas 5 lbs.&#13;
2.19 Kidney Beans 5 lbs.&#13;
1.63 Baby Lima Beans 5 lbs.&#13;
SF equals Sure Fine Brand&#13;
FK equals Food King Brand&#13;
JJerryle ALLen( Left) a nd Ken Gleason(to the right) perform as&#13;
part of the band's fabulous brass line-up during the concert.&#13;
The University of Wisconsinparkside's&#13;
Jazz Band led off the&#13;
final judging session of the MidWest&#13;
College Jazz Festival with a&#13;
performance that won them the&#13;
honor of being named as an&#13;
outstanding band in the invited&#13;
competition. Two members of the&#13;
Parkside group, trumpeter Tim&#13;
Burke and trombonist Nate&#13;
Jones, were selected to lead their&#13;
sections in the festival's "All Star&#13;
Band" which presented a performance&#13;
in the final session on&#13;
the Elmhurst College Campus.&#13;
Under the direction of Bob&#13;
Thomason of U.S.-Parkside's&#13;
music discipline, the nineteen&#13;
member contingent drew high&#13;
praise from each of the festivals&#13;
minutes program which the&#13;
U.W.-Parkside Jazz Band&#13;
presented was extremely enthusiastic.&#13;
&#13;
The 3 day festival began on&#13;
Friday, March 15, 1975, and was&#13;
held on the Campus of Elmhurst&#13;
College in Elmhurst, 111. Participation&#13;
by the seventeen bands&#13;
and eight combo's was by invitation.&#13;
Each group submitted&#13;
an audio recording for&#13;
evaluation.&#13;
In addition to the U.W.-&#13;
Parkside jazz group, bands from&#13;
Chicago State, DePaul, Oakland,&#13;
and Western Michigan Universities&#13;
were cited by the judges as&#13;
presenting outstanding performances.&#13;
.&#13;
MVIjpenter I&#13;
Phone 65 2-6667 I&#13;
2728-52nd Street&#13;
KEN OSH A, WIS. 531 40&#13;
Parts and Service for&#13;
All I mported Cars&#13;
also&#13;
QUALITY ROAD SERVICE &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1975&#13;
Imperialist— — continued from page 1&#13;
Indochina on behalf of the most corrupt and dictatorial regimes&#13;
eventually forced Nixon to withdraw the U.S. combat forces in those&#13;
areas.&#13;
"This resentment must once again be expressed by holding mass&#13;
demonstrations to stop all military aid to Indochina and other outposts&#13;
of U.S. imperialism."&#13;
After marching back to the campus, the crowd dispersed peacefully,&#13;
with many gathering around the campus mall and student union,&#13;
basking in the afternoon sun and enjoying the mid-50s temperatures.&#13;
The rally and march bore only a mild resemblance to those of t he&#13;
late sixties and early seventies, when the voices of rock-hurling activist&#13;
groups and the explosions of tear gas canisters thrown by&#13;
National Guard troops and police echoed on campus.&#13;
Bicentennial pageant&#13;
Directors named&#13;
Career center continued from page 1&#13;
Pageant directors for the more&#13;
than 20 performances planned in&#13;
1975 and 1976 by the Kenosha&#13;
County Bicentennial Commission&#13;
have been announced by Commission&#13;
Chairman Edwin M.&#13;
Andersen.&#13;
They are Thomas Reinert,&#13;
theater manager at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
and Robert Kiser,&#13;
director of student activities at&#13;
Carthage College.&#13;
According to Mrs. Ralph&#13;
(Fran) Jaeschke, chairman of&#13;
the Commission's Festival&#13;
Committee, Reinert and Kiser&#13;
will have joint responsibility for&#13;
scheduling, directing, staging&#13;
and managing 10 weekend performances&#13;
during July and&#13;
August of both 1975 and 1976, i n&#13;
addition to two "main events" on&#13;
July 4, 1976: an ecumenical&#13;
service in the morning and an&#13;
evening performance involving a&#13;
"famous local person" and&#13;
capped by a giant fireworks&#13;
display.&#13;
Mrs. Jaeschke said that the&#13;
events will be free and held in a&#13;
large outdoor area, such as&#13;
Washington Bowl or Carthage&#13;
Field.&#13;
"We are anxious to have as&#13;
broad a representation of area&#13;
groups and entertainment as&#13;
possible," Mrs. Jaeschke said.&#13;
"We'll be considering performing&#13;
organizations of a ll kinds, young&#13;
and old, ethnic, light and heavy.&#13;
Those with specific ideas should&#13;
contact the pageant directors."&#13;
P.A.B. EVEN T S&#13;
W E D N ESD A Y , MAR CH 26: C O F F E E H O U S E: Clark Anderson, "King of the Blues," will be&#13;
performing in the Whiteskellar (GR D201), 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Free and open to the public.&#13;
FILM: Al Pacino in "Serpico," 11:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m., Comm. Arts Theatre. Admission $1.&#13;
Parkside ID required.&#13;
THUR SDA Y, MARCH 27: DAN CE: Annual Easter dance featuring "Diamond Rio," 9 p.m. 1&#13;
a.m., S. A. B. U W-P students $1, guest $1.50. Parkside and state I D's required.&#13;
COMI NG U P:&#13;
WED NES DAY , A P RIL 9: "The Conspiracy That Murdered JFK," an illustrated...&#13;
leaturing theZapruder film by R. F. Ralston, 7:30 p.m., Comm. Arts Theatre. Admission: 50c&#13;
for UW-P students and $1 for general public. Tickets are available at the Info kiosk or at the&#13;
door.&#13;
LIBRARY HOURS&#13;
FOR&#13;
SPR ING VACAT ION&#13;
Friday, March 28 7:45 -12:00 Noon&#13;
Saturday, March 29 CLOSED&#13;
Sunday, March 30 CLOSED&#13;
Monday - Friday, March 31 - April 4 8:00 - 5 • 00&#13;
Saturday, April 5 CLOSED&#13;
Sunday, April 6 RESUME NORMAL HOURS&#13;
INTERESTED IN MUSIC? ^&#13;
S The Bible Baptist Church of Racine&#13;
is looking for singers and any other&#13;
musical personnal.&#13;
SO GET INVOLVED!&#13;
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL 554-6149&#13;
We'll help you do&#13;
what's best for you.&#13;
Choose your skill and earn good pay in the&#13;
Air Force. Benefits include: advancement&#13;
opportunity, 30 days' paid vacation, travel,&#13;
job s ecurity, and medical care.&#13;
Contact your Air Force Recruiter&#13;
Sgt. Dan Christoffersen at 419 Main St.,Racine&#13;
or call 414-632-6487 collect.&#13;
Look up. Be looked up to.&#13;
Air Force&#13;
categories: continuing education&#13;
information, career resources,&#13;
and placement information.&#13;
With regard to continuing&#13;
education, the staff suggests the&#13;
user to start with the general&#13;
materials and work towards&#13;
more specific information,&#13;
General directories such as the&#13;
College Blue Book and Lovejoy's&#13;
College Guide are examples of&#13;
what the student can start with,&#13;
after which evaluations of the&#13;
institutions chosen by the individual&#13;
can be found in the&#13;
College Handbook published by&#13;
the College Entrance&#13;
Examination Board. Some&#13;
preliminary choices having been&#13;
made, the student then can use&#13;
any of 550 graduate- school&#13;
catalogues which answer&#13;
questions about programs, cost&#13;
and deadlines. Catalogues from&#13;
120 law schools and 100 m edical&#13;
and dental schools in the United&#13;
States, as well as information on&#13;
foreign colleges and universities,&#13;
are also provided by the Center.&#13;
The necessary forms for&#13;
registering for graduate or&#13;
professional school admissions&#13;
tests are then available once the&#13;
student has narrowed the choice&#13;
of graduate schools. The Center&#13;
also has test study guides to&#13;
assist the student in preparing for&#13;
the major tests. While students'&#13;
choice of graduate schools are&#13;
most greatly affected by the&#13;
faculty, the function of the&#13;
Resource Center is to provide&#13;
technical and procedural&#13;
assistance in addition to counselling&#13;
when requested.&#13;
The Center views career&#13;
planning, the second major area,&#13;
as a long range identification of&#13;
the direction an individual will&#13;
take in life. The staff feels it their&#13;
responsibility to make known to&#13;
the student the available opportunities&#13;
and to provide the&#13;
resources to answer short term&#13;
questions, as well as examine the&#13;
long term implications of the&#13;
decisions taken.&#13;
In career exploration, the user&#13;
of the Center should begin with&#13;
general occupational resources&#13;
wuch as the Occupational&#13;
Outlook Handbook or OCCUPATIONAL&#13;
Briefs, which&#13;
cover a wide range of occupations&#13;
and give information&#13;
on the nature of the work,&#13;
training required, earning, and&#13;
sources for more detailed information.&#13;
The student is then&#13;
directed to resource information&#13;
on the specific careers chosen.&#13;
This can be found in publications&#13;
such as Health Career Guidebook&#13;
and Career Choices for the 1970's.&#13;
After some general reading is&#13;
done, the student can then go on&#13;
to more detailed material. This&#13;
can be found in two different&#13;
areas of the Center. The first is a&#13;
collection of o ver 200 hard bound&#13;
books on careers which are fairly&#13;
easy reading and relatively&#13;
short. The second area is an&#13;
extensive file system containing&#13;
400 occupational areas&#13;
categorized according to general&#13;
occupational themes.&#13;
Thirdly, placement information&#13;
is available to the user&#13;
of the Resource Center. As it is&#13;
difficult to separate where career&#13;
exploration stops and job search&#13;
begins, updated information on&#13;
the current job market is&#13;
maintained.&#13;
Two types of job search&#13;
methods can be used. The most&#13;
fruitful approach is to apply for&#13;
positions that have been announced.&#13;
The Center has a&#13;
number of sources of current&#13;
openings such as the Wisconsin&#13;
Career Candidate listing,&#13;
newspapers, and openings&#13;
received directly by the&#13;
Placement Office.&#13;
The other method is to directly&#13;
contact specific organizations in&#13;
which the student is interested.&#13;
This, of course, yields a lower&#13;
success rate, but it is necessary&#13;
for those individuals interested in&#13;
specialized careers or&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The Resource Center's function&#13;
is to provide information on a&#13;
wide variety of potential employers.&#13;
&#13;
Dunn and Bradstreet, Standard&#13;
and Poor's, and the College&#13;
Placement Annual are only three&#13;
of several materials available for&#13;
such use.&#13;
Once the student has identified&#13;
a potential employer, an extensive&#13;
collection of corporate&#13;
information is at hand. The&#13;
Center has contacted 1400 of the&#13;
largest corporations in this&#13;
country in addition to all the&#13;
companies in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha Counties, resulting in a&#13;
large store of information which&#13;
fills five five-drawer file&#13;
cabii.ets.&#13;
After identifying a career&#13;
direction and a specific occupation&#13;
with possible employers,&#13;
the student can then&#13;
utilize the Center's resources&#13;
concerning "how to do it"&#13;
materials. These include workbooks&#13;
and hard bound books such&#13;
as Successful Executive Job&#13;
Hunting, How to Get a Better Job&#13;
Quicker, and The Professional&#13;
Student groups support&#13;
applications deadline (CCC)&#13;
Budget requests for funds to be allocated through student group&#13;
support (CCC), are to be submitted by student organizations to the&#13;
Assistant Dean of St udents office by April 8. Forms are available at&#13;
the Information Kiosk, Student Life Office, and the Dean of S tudents&#13;
office. For more information call 533-2342.&#13;
t)lN0'S&#13;
1816 16 S treet&#13;
Racine, W isconsin&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
PICK UP OR&#13;
PIP ING H OT FOO DS&#13;
D E LIV E R ED TO YOUR H OME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHI CKE N&#13;
STE AKS&#13;
SEA F O OD&#13;
CHO PS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAG ANA&#13;
RAVIO LI&#13;
MOSTAC CIOLI&#13;
GNOC CHI&#13;
SPA GHE TTI&#13;
SAN DWI CHE S&#13;
B O M B ERS&#13;
H A M B U R G E RS&#13;
B E ER&#13;
S O FT D RIN KS&#13;
W I N E S&#13;
Job Hunting System. These&#13;
materials used together with&#13;
staff assistance help the student&#13;
prepare for effective and efficient&#13;
job hunting.&#13;
It is the Center's intention to&#13;
provide an environment to encourage&#13;
users to find information&#13;
on their own, although minimal&#13;
staff direction makes more effective&#13;
utilization. With a&#13;
Parkside identification card most&#13;
of the materials can be checked&#13;
out for seven days. Mr. Elmore&#13;
called attention to the concourse&#13;
in Greenquist where all preprofessional&#13;
as well as career&#13;
counselling information is posted&#13;
on a bulletin board. There is also&#13;
a bulletin board with placement&#13;
information on it at Room 105 in&#13;
the Classroom Building.&#13;
Barbara Larson, another&#13;
career counselor, works in the&#13;
Resource Center and is&#13;
responsible for pre-professional&#13;
counselling. Besides counselling,&#13;
personality and aptitude tests&#13;
can be given the student. The&#13;
Center is here, Mr. Elmore&#13;
stated, "to help students if they&#13;
want the help."&#13;
Resource centers have not been&#13;
around too long on the college&#13;
scene, with most of them being&#13;
poorly conceived and implemented.&#13;
Parkside's Career&#13;
Resource Center is a unique&#13;
example of the type of center&#13;
other institutions are striving for.&#13;
Local&#13;
elections&#13;
Gordon Mcintosh, Parkside&#13;
student, has been endorsed by the&#13;
Racine Education Association,&#13;
Independent Voters of Racine,&#13;
and The Alliance of Labor, for the&#13;
School Board of Unified School&#13;
District No. 1 of Racine County.&#13;
Danny Trotter has announced&#13;
his candidacy for the office of&#13;
State Senator representing the&#13;
22nd district. Trotter, a Parkside&#13;
graduate, is running as an independent&#13;
in the April 1 election.&#13;
Joseph J. Attwell, Special&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor for&#13;
Affirmative Action, at Parkside,&#13;
is a candidate for Municipal&#13;
Justice of Sturtevant, Wisconsin.&#13;
Attwell, a member of the&#13;
Wisconsin and Illinois Bar&#13;
Associations, has tried in excess&#13;
of 7000 cases, as a private&#13;
practitioner, and Assistant&#13;
States' Attorney in Chicago.&#13;
SCHWINN PEUGEOT&#13;
DON GILL BICYCLE SHOP&#13;
Everything for the Cyclist&#13;
5006 - 7th Avenue&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
(414 ) 6 5 2-64 68&#13;
NISHIKI MONDIA CINELLI&#13;
Visit Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Record Department&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
•Rock -Jazz »Pop -Folk&#13;
•Classical&#13;
LOWEST PRICES ALWAYS&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
The Place to buy records &#13;
Ed quality Announcement&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1975 7&#13;
continued from page ]&#13;
materials.&#13;
"In flation has eroded our&#13;
buying power by $19-million in&#13;
the last year," said Weaver.&#13;
"This seriously curtails our&#13;
objective of quality education."&#13;
He cited that price increases&#13;
for laboratory equipment in the&#13;
last two years range from 49 t o&#13;
1919 percent; book prices from 17&#13;
to 49 p ercent; periodicals up 40&#13;
percent; paper and paper&#13;
products up 68 percent.&#13;
Restore $5.9-million to&#13;
eliminate special fee increases&#13;
proposed for graduate and adult&#13;
education students.&#13;
He said that under the&#13;
Governor's budget, graduate fees&#13;
will increase by 25 to 40 percent.&#13;
Undergraduate fees will also&#13;
increase.&#13;
He added that resident and nonresident&#13;
graduate fees are now&#13;
among the highest in the country.&#13;
Weaver asked the committee if&#13;
it is "wise public policy" to&#13;
impose a 40 percent increase,&#13;
adding that "the results are going&#13;
to be disasterous to the internationally&#13;
famous graduate&#13;
school (Madison) you have on the&#13;
hill here."&#13;
Weaver also critized the&#13;
Governor's proposed increases&#13;
fee to adult education students.&#13;
Currently, these students pay&#13;
70 percent of cost for their&#13;
programs. Under the Governor's&#13;
proposal, their average percentage&#13;
of cost would increase to&#13;
85 p ercent.&#13;
"I question that this is a wise&#13;
public policy when the need for&#13;
educational renewal and uplifting&#13;
are demanded," said Weaver.&#13;
According to Weaver, the increased&#13;
costs would have an&#13;
adverse effect on the access of&#13;
educational ppograms to lower&#13;
income groups. He cited that a 15&#13;
percent increase in cost would&#13;
cause a 15 percent decrease in&#13;
access for lower income groups.&#13;
Lower income groups now&#13;
comprise 30 pe rcent of the adult&#13;
education programs.&#13;
The issue of increased fees set&#13;
off a 45-minute debate between&#13;
UW central administration and&#13;
Department of Administration&#13;
(DOa) officials reporting for the&#13;
Governor.&#13;
Budget analyst Marvin&#13;
Goldstein took issue with the fee&#13;
increases for graduate students.&#13;
He said the increases recommended&#13;
by the Governor were&#13;
only $30 t o $40 m ore than those&#13;
recommended by the Regents.&#13;
He added that 50 percent of outof-state&#13;
graduate students&#13;
(comprising 65 percent of th e UW&#13;
graduate school) receive fee&#13;
remissions-that is, they pay instate&#13;
rather than out-of-state&#13;
tuition.&#13;
Uw Vice President Donald&#13;
Percy, in a concluding rebuttal,&#13;
accused Goldstein and the DOA&#13;
of using a "strange sort of logic."&#13;
"The university in its request&#13;
would have raised fees, yes,"&#13;
said Percy, "but you (students)&#13;
would be getting something for&#13;
them."&#13;
He cited that the quality of&#13;
education would have increased&#13;
if the 30 Regent requests had&#13;
been granted, thus making the&#13;
increases justified.&#13;
Rep. Marjorie Miller (DMadison)&#13;
also questioned&#13;
Goldstein and the DOA Proposal.&#13;
She asked Goldstein if it was a&#13;
logical gamble to try and save $4-&#13;
million in state funds by increasing&#13;
graduate student fees&#13;
and losing "good" graduate&#13;
students. She explained that if&#13;
you can't attract students, you&#13;
lose faculty, and possibly some&#13;
$80-million a year in Federal&#13;
research grants awarded to the&#13;
UW.&#13;
"Isn't that a pretty heavy&#13;
gamble'" she asked.&#13;
Goldstein replied, "They (the&#13;
Regents) didn't consider it. I&#13;
don't see why we should be overly&#13;
considerate. They haven't&#13;
suggested that the increases&#13;
would mean a collapse in&#13;
graduate programs."&#13;
Restore $1.5-million in funds&#13;
for retraining permanent employees&#13;
to accommodate&#13;
changing needs and "ease layoff&#13;
potential for future years."&#13;
The committee took no action;&#13;
however, in coming weeks the&#13;
budget proposals will go to both&#13;
houses for approval.&#13;
Rep. R. Michael Ferrall (DRacine),&#13;
co-chairman of the&#13;
committee, asked Weaver if he&#13;
considered Lucey's budget a&#13;
move "to economize" or a move&#13;
to "reduce Wisconsin's commitment&#13;
to quality education."&#13;
Weaver replied, "I'm sure the&#13;
state has a great need to&#13;
economize. But the extent of the&#13;
economizing will go beyond&#13;
economizing and belt-tightening&#13;
to the heart of quality&#13;
education."&#13;
Sen. James C. Devitt (RGreenfield),&#13;
also co-chairman of&#13;
the committee, asked Weaver,&#13;
"Would you be willing to take a&#13;
one year increase that would be&#13;
one-half that request ($24.7-&#13;
million), then come back in&#13;
January of next year for a budget&#13;
review?"&#13;
"I think that is a most&#13;
reasonable suggestion," Weaver&#13;
replied.&#13;
# / Pitch In! # #&#13;
Second Annual National&#13;
College "Pitch in!" week&#13;
scheduled for April 7-11.&#13;
College and universities&#13;
throughout the country are being&#13;
invited to participate in the&#13;
second annual National College&#13;
Pitch In! Week, April 7-11.&#13;
Instituted last year, the event&#13;
will again be co-sponsored by&#13;
Budweiser Beer and the ABC&#13;
Contemporary Radio Network. It&#13;
is based on the nationwide Pitch&#13;
In! anti-litter program. Participation&#13;
may be from the entire&#13;
student body or approved individual&#13;
campus organizations.&#13;
The basic idea is for college&#13;
students to team up in ridding&#13;
their campus and-or surrounding&#13;
community of a litter problem.&#13;
This year, participants are also&#13;
encouraged to consider projects&#13;
such as tree-planting and park&#13;
beautification.&#13;
Grand prizes consisting of $1000&#13;
educational scholarships will be&#13;
awarded in each of five regions&#13;
for the most creative and effective&#13;
Pitch In! efforts.&#13;
Over 300 colleges and&#13;
organizations participated in the&#13;
1974 effort. The Grand Prize&#13;
Winners were University of&#13;
Hawaii, University of Houston,&#13;
Pennsylvania State University,&#13;
Kent State University, and&#13;
Florida A&amp;M U niversity.&#13;
To enter this year's competition,&#13;
colleges or&#13;
organizations should send a letter&#13;
indicating their desire to participate&#13;
to: 1975 College Pitch In!&#13;
Week, ABC Contemporary Radio&#13;
Network, 1330 Avenue of the&#13;
Americas, New York, New York,&#13;
10019.&#13;
To be eligible for this year's&#13;
awards, colleges or organizations&#13;
must submit evidence of their&#13;
participation. Documentation of&#13;
their efforts may be in the&#13;
form of written summary, along&#13;
with photos, newspaper clippings,&#13;
audio tapes, motion picture&#13;
film, official letters of appreciation&#13;
from civic officials.&#13;
A Different&#13;
type of&#13;
Saturday Night&#13;
RED'S R OLLER R INK&#13;
6220-67 st. Ph. 6 52-8198 Kenosha&#13;
H E I L E M A N 'S&#13;
Mi Pure Brewed&#13;
From God's Country.&#13;
"On Tap at the Union"&#13;
etc. Reports on individual Pitch,&#13;
In! projects must be reported no&#13;
later than May 16, 1975.&#13;
Five Regional winners of $1000&#13;
educational awards, along with&#13;
five runner-up winners of $500&#13;
awards, will be selected by a&#13;
panel of judges in New York. All&#13;
entries become the property of&#13;
ABC Contemporary Radio&#13;
Network.&#13;
The sponsors point out that&#13;
College "Pitch In!" week&#13;
concerned students an opportunity&#13;
to work together on a&#13;
worthwhile project with both&#13;
immediate and lasting benefits to&#13;
their campuses and communities.&#13;
Research shows that&#13;
littered areas attract more litter,&#13;
but clean areas influence people&#13;
to behave more considerately.&#13;
%witc filKtinl&#13;
24 hours&#13;
FREE&#13;
CONFIDENTIAL&#13;
COUNSELING&#13;
AND GENERAL&#13;
INFORMATION&#13;
1712-57 th street&#13;
C*5§~lielp&#13;
EIGHTH AVENUE&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
4601 Eighth A venue&#13;
658-2709 Kenosha&#13;
'ACROSS FROM UNION PARK'&#13;
"THE OLD LAIR IS BACK WITH A NEW FACE'&#13;
OPEN AT 3:00 P.M.&#13;
24th and 25th on 60th S t. KENOSHA, WISCONSIN A G LASS&#13;
#lhe&#13;
jj&gt;toe e t ^hoppe&#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;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, March 26, 1975&#13;
rebounds &amp; points&#13;
Cole leads&#13;
cagers&#13;
Gary Cole, who led the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
to the quarter-finals of t he NAIA&#13;
national tournament, finished as&#13;
UW-P's leading scorer and&#13;
rebounder for the 1974-75 season&#13;
in final statistics released today.&#13;
Cole, a 6-9 junior forward from&#13;
Racine (Park), scored 767 points&#13;
for a 23.2 season average and&#13;
pulled down 353 rebounds for a&#13;
10.7 average. He started in each&#13;
of the Rangers' 33 contests and&#13;
scored 20 p oints or better on 12&#13;
occasions. His single game high&#13;
of 47 a gainst St. Xavier College&#13;
on Dec. 26, 1974, tied his own&#13;
school scoring mark.&#13;
Finishing second to Cole in the&#13;
scoring derby was 6-4 sophomore&#13;
forward Leartha Scott of&#13;
Chicago, 111., (Gordon Tech).&#13;
Scott, a transfer from St. Louis&#13;
University who became eligible&#13;
firc$tone&#13;
RACINE STORE ONLY&#13;
709 Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
Expert&#13;
637-9591&#13;
LUBE &amp; OIL CHANGE&#13;
$i!88&#13;
• Moil&#13;
American&#13;
ALL YOU&#13;
FRIDAY £&#13;
FISH FRY &gt;&#13;
Delicious golden&#13;
brown fish with&#13;
traditional English&#13;
pub-type batter.&#13;
f Cole Slaw or Salad.&#13;
A French Fries or&#13;
Baked Potato.&#13;
* Bonanza Toast.&#13;
34th 4 52nd St.&#13;
ALL YOO°&#13;
at mid-year, averaged 19.5 ppg&#13;
and had 428 points in his abbreviated&#13;
season.&#13;
Rounding out the top five&#13;
scorers were Bill Sobanski, a 6-7&#13;
junior center from Oak Lawn, 111.&#13;
(Chicago Mt. Carmel), with 11.8&#13;
scoring and 8.5 rebounding&#13;
averages; Kenosha (Chicago&#13;
Gordon Tech) junior guard&#13;
Malcolm Mahone at 6-9 and&#13;
Racine (Park) senior guard&#13;
Chuck Chambliss at 6.7.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens' team&#13;
finished 24-9 on the season, with a&#13;
10-1 home record and a 14-8 mark&#13;
on unfriendly or neutral courts.&#13;
The 24 win s were the most ever&#13;
by a Parkside team and the NAIA&#13;
quarter-finals marked the furthest&#13;
a Parkside. team had&#13;
ever advanced in the six year&#13;
history of the school.&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
in NAIA&#13;
action&#13;
The UW-Parkside men's&#13;
gymnastics team traveled to UWOshkosh&#13;
Friday and Saturday,&#13;
March 14 and 15, for the NAIA&#13;
National Gymnastics Meet. Five&#13;
of the six team members&#13;
qualified to compete, although&#13;
they did not compete as a team,&#13;
but as individuals. The performers&#13;
were: Kevin O'Neil,&#13;
Tom Kasprovich, Scott Levandoski,&#13;
Brian Hill and Tim Petro.&#13;
Kevin O'Neil missed being an&#13;
Ail-American and second place&#13;
on rings by two-tenths of a point,&#13;
finishing third on that apparatus,&#13;
and eighth on parallel bars. Tom&#13;
Kasprovich put up a good&#13;
showing placing fourth on the&#13;
Pommelled Horse.&#13;
The gymnasts placed ninth as a&#13;
team.&#13;
I 4&gt;&#13;
SHORECRE ST&#13;
639 5305&#13;
GEORGETOW N&#13;
554 7334&#13;
PIZZA C HICKEN&#13;
AND FISH CARRYOUTS&#13;
ANYTIME!&#13;
HOURS: Son. Wed. &amp; Thurs. 11:30 A M&#13;
11:30 P.M.&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11:30 A.M.-12:30 A.M.&#13;
fa&#13;
in&#13;
OPENS AT&#13;
8:00 A.M.&#13;
Letter awards&#13;
winners named&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
UW-Parside wrestling coach Jim Koch has named 12 wrestlers as&#13;
letterwinners for 1974-75.&#13;
Heading the list are seniors Bill West and Randy Skarda. West, from&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper), won his second consecutive NAIA 134-lb. national&#13;
crown and finished his collegiate career with a 58-bout win streak&#13;
Skarda, a national champion in 1974 at 150 lbs., battled injury&#13;
throughout the season and compiled a 24-5 mark. He is from Coleman.&#13;
West's letter was his fourth and Skarda's his third.&#13;
Winning his third letter at 126 lbs, was Kenosha (Tremper) junior&#13;
Rico Savaglio; lettering for the second time were three Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) juniors, Rich Schaumberg at 118, Joe Landers, the NAIA&#13;
sixth place finisher, at 126, Rich Barron at 158.&#13;
First-time award winners include freshment Dan O'Connell of&#13;
Mazomanie (Wisconsin Heights) at 126, Rick Langer of Ellsworth at&#13;
134, Rick Kubiak of Pulaski at 150, Lo nnie Petersen of G reenfield at&#13;
167; Terry Rysewyk of Coleman at 167 through Hwt.; and Dave&#13;
Wagner of Peshtigo at 177.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
UW-Parskide fencing coach Loran Hein has named five men and three&#13;
women as letterwinners on the 1974-75 U W-P men's and women's&#13;
teams.&#13;
Heading the men's awardwinners are junior David Baumann of&#13;
Racine (Case), who compiled a 33-21 record in epee and earned his&#13;
third letter, and Park Ridge, 111. (Maine South) freshman Jim&#13;
Herring, who won 44 of his 51 matches and also captured the U.S.&#13;
junior Olympic under-20 foil title.&#13;
The three distaff letterwinners, who took the Parkside women's&#13;
squad to a 7-3 dual record and combined for a 74-40 record in foil, are&#13;
freshmen Iris Gericke and Jean Hess of Racine (Case) and junior&#13;
Bridgitta Lindberg of Kenosha.&#13;
Other men winning letters include junior Brett Mandernack of&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) and Mark Mulkins, a senior from Racine&#13;
(Horlick), each for the third time; and Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
sophomore Gene Renzoni for the first time.&#13;
Gymnastic*&#13;
UW-Parkside gymnastics coach Doug Davis has named seven&#13;
letterwinners for the 1974-75 season.&#13;
Heading the list is four-time award winner Kevin O'Neil of Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper), who place third on the still rings and fourth on the parallel&#13;
bars in the NAIA championships at Oshkosh. O'Neil the first four time&#13;
letterwinner in UW-P gymnastics history, captained the Ranger&#13;
squad, which took ninth nationally.&#13;
Tim Petro, a junior from Racine (Horlick), earned his third letter&#13;
while sophomores Scot Levandoski of Racine (Park) and Brian Hill of&#13;
Racine (Case) won their second letters.&#13;
First-time letterwinners include freshment Tom Kasprovich of&#13;
Racine (Park), who placed fourth in the nationals on the side horse;&#13;
Steve Seitz of Hartland (Arrowhead) and manager John Petro of&#13;
Racine (Horlick).&#13;
Basketball — _&#13;
UW-Parkside basketball coach Steve Stephens has named the ten&#13;
terwinners NAIA Dlstnct 14 champion squad as 1974-75 le tWinning&#13;
his fourth letter, the first athlete in Parkside basketball&#13;
history to do so, was senior Chuck Chambliss of Racine (Park).&#13;
( P a STa n d ^ mS q °h ^&#13;
W ®r® j U n i °&#13;
rS GaFy Cole of Racin e&#13;
Twii? Bll&#13;
l&#13;
Sobanskl of 0ak Lawn, III. (Chicago Mt. Carmel).&#13;
Two-time award winners include senior Calvin Denson of Muskegon,&#13;
Mich., sophomore Rade Dimitrijevic of Kenosha (Tremper)-&#13;
sophomore Mike Hanke of Milwaukee (Hamilton); and junior&#13;
Malcolm Mahone of Kenosha (Chicago Gordon Tech).&#13;
T kf*&#13;
6&#13;
" R)Fthe&#13;
u&#13;
first time were sophomores Marshall Hill and&#13;
Leartha Scott and freshman Stevie King, all of Chicago (Gordon&#13;
S&amp;UM4Uf J/ut Qinedt&#13;
4/¥¥tJL 9ialui4t fyoodd.&#13;
UOUOR QTrTo&#13;
0, K E N 0 S H A-551-7171 LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM </text>
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