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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>For UW-P Union: Madison architect named</text>
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              <text>The Parkside Winter Carnival&#13;
continues this week&#13;
Wednesday, February 21, 1973 Vol. I, No. 18&#13;
For UW-P Unio„&#13;
Madison architect named&#13;
The firm of Peters and Martinsons&#13;
Architects, Inc., of&#13;
Madison has been selected to&#13;
design the $3.5 million Campus&#13;
Union.&#13;
Parkside officials were notified&#13;
of the choice by the State Bureau&#13;
ot Facilities Management in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
James Galbraith, director of&#13;
Planning and Construction at&#13;
Parkside, said he was hopeful&#13;
that construction could be started&#13;
within a year and the facility&#13;
opened by early 1975. The facility&#13;
was approved in the 1971-73&#13;
biennial building program.&#13;
The campus union will be&#13;
located in the central academic&#13;
area, just north of the loop road,&#13;
connected to the new classroom&#13;
building by an enclosed walkway&#13;
over the road.&#13;
The new union will have both&#13;
rathskellar and cafeteria-style&#13;
food service areas, a 400-seat&#13;
movie theater with stage, eight&#13;
bowling alleys, television lounges&#13;
and games rooms, all-purpose&#13;
meeting rooms, student&#13;
organization headquarters,&#13;
lockers, concessions and union&#13;
staff offices.&#13;
The cafeteria will feature&#13;
several service areas for different&#13;
types of foods rather than&#13;
the traditional continuous line.&#13;
The dining area associated with&#13;
the cafeteria will be able to accommodate&#13;
up to 600 persons for&#13;
banquets and other large events,&#13;
or be divided into several smaller&#13;
rooms. The rathskellar will be a&#13;
separate facility within the&#13;
building.&#13;
Galbraith expressed pleasure&#13;
with the choice of architects. He&#13;
said that Kent Peters of the&#13;
Madison firm "designs in the&#13;
same spirit" as Gyo Obata, internationally&#13;
known architect of&#13;
Hellmuth, Obata and Kassabaum&#13;
(HOK) of St. Louis, who designed&#13;
Parkside's new LibraryLearning&#13;
Center and Greenquist&#13;
and Tallent Halls. Galbraith said&#13;
Peters also is "totally sympathetic"&#13;
toward the architectural&#13;
guidelines of the&#13;
master development plan for the&#13;
campus which was designed bv&#13;
HOK. J&#13;
It's the week of the big band sound on campus with two&#13;
public performances scheduled by the Parkside Stage&#13;
Band and its Jazz Ensemble. The 20-member group will&#13;
play at a basketball "appreciation night " for the Ranger&#13;
team following the final home game on Tuesday, Feb.&#13;
20, and at a free progr am from noon to 1 p.m. on F riday,&#13;
Feb. 23, in the Activities Building. The group also has&#13;
scheduled several guest appearances at area high&#13;
schools. Robert Thomason, director, points out that the&#13;
group uses current arrangements directly from the big&#13;
bands-Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, Count Basie,&#13;
Buddy Rich-sinc e most stage band arrangementw are&#13;
"watered down."&#13;
Obata is known as "a master&#13;
organizer of space," according to&#13;
Galbraith. That "trademark" is&#13;
apparent in the Library-Learning&#13;
Center's impressive "main&#13;
place," the large tri-leveled open&#13;
space which rises four stories to a&#13;
skylight roof and which is flanked&#13;
on two sides by a three-story solid&#13;
glass wall looking out to a woods&#13;
and by ribbons of glass defining&#13;
four levels of the library.&#13;
Galbraith said he expects the&#13;
main entrance to the campus&#13;
union to reflect that design&#13;
concept, though on a much&#13;
smaller scale.&#13;
Buildings connected by singlelevel&#13;
pedestrian corridors which&#13;
widen into concourses containing&#13;
lounge and study areas within&#13;
each building is another spaceuse&#13;
concept of the master plan&#13;
which will be applied to the&#13;
campus union.&#13;
Such "convenience space" is&#13;
considered a key to fulfilling the&#13;
special needs of Parkside's many&#13;
commuter students who don't&#13;
have a dormitory or apartment to&#13;
return to between classes.&#13;
Winter Carnival continues this&#13;
week, culminating with the&#13;
"Snowball" dance on Saturday,&#13;
Feb. 24. The dance, in the Student&#13;
Activities Building, will feature&#13;
the Bob Writeman Rock Revival,&#13;
with rock songs of the 50's.'&#13;
Presentation of trophies for&#13;
carnival events will also take&#13;
"place at this time.&#13;
On Thursday, Feb. 22, at 2:30&#13;
p.m. on the "lake," the&#13;
B r o o m b all T o u r n a m e n t&#13;
Championship is scheduled. This&#13;
is followed by the Longest Kiss&#13;
Contest at 4 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building. The last three couples&#13;
to stop kissing shall receive&#13;
trophies. Lips must remain in&#13;
contact during the entire time or&#13;
the contestants shall be&#13;
disqualified. It is acceptable to&#13;
use elevating devices to compensate&#13;
for differences in height.&#13;
At 7 p.m. comes the judging in&#13;
the knee-painting contest. Knees&#13;
will be judged on design, relation&#13;
to the theme "Greasey Ice,"&#13;
color, and originality. Painting&#13;
shall be confined to an area&#13;
beginning six inches below the&#13;
knee and ending six inches above&#13;
with the design centered around&#13;
the kneecap.&#13;
7:30 p.m. is the time for the&#13;
Cherry Pie Eating Contest (in&#13;
honor of Washington's birthday),&#13;
where trophies will go to the first&#13;
three persons to totally consume&#13;
one whole cherry pie. The pie&#13;
must be swallowed. This is&#13;
followed by the Beer Dunking.&#13;
Contest at 9:30 p.m. Winners in&#13;
this event will be the three persons&#13;
who can keep their heads&#13;
submerged in a tub of beer for the&#13;
longest time. All these Thursday&#13;
events will be in the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
Haack resigns as&#13;
PSGA president&#13;
by Terri Gogola&#13;
Tom Haack resigned as&#13;
president of the student government&#13;
association last Tuesday.&#13;
His resignation, effective immediately,&#13;
came because of lack&#13;
of time to devote to studies, his&#13;
workstudy job, veteran's club,&#13;
the student government itself and&#13;
the fact that he will be attending&#13;
college out of state next year.&#13;
Haack's resignation places Joe&#13;
Harris, vice-president, as the&#13;
acting president of PSGA.&#13;
Haack's term would have expired&#13;
in October.&#13;
Spring elections will be held&#13;
March 5-7. In addition to the&#13;
office of president, seven senate&#13;
seats are open as well as the&#13;
positions of treasurer and&#13;
recording secretary. The ballot&#13;
will include a referendum concerning&#13;
constitutional changes. Tom Haack&#13;
Fine Arts, newspaper rates changed&#13;
Wyllie OKs fee distribution&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
The Segregated Fee&#13;
Allocations Committee dollar&#13;
amount distribution was accepted&#13;
by Chancellor Wyllie last&#13;
week. Two changes were made&#13;
over last year's rates.&#13;
One change cuts the present&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
rate from $2.00 to $1.50.&#13;
The fifty cents per capita difference&#13;
will be added to the&#13;
Student Activities area. The&#13;
committee also recommended&#13;
that $2500, out of the estimated&#13;
$6500 available for general&#13;
programming through summer&#13;
fees, be added as a line item for&#13;
the support of the student&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
The second section of the five&#13;
page report, written by William&#13;
Niebuhr. Coordinator of Student&#13;
Life and chairman of the committee,&#13;
"contains recommandations&#13;
that are of a nondollar&#13;
nature, but that the&#13;
committee nevertheless felt&#13;
important to mention in its&#13;
report."&#13;
The first four of the eight&#13;
recommendations concerned&#13;
what could be done with monies&#13;
in case of overages or shortages&#13;
of f ees resulting from fluctuating&#13;
enrollment. The committee&#13;
suggested that in the case of a&#13;
shortage $2500 for the Student&#13;
Newspaper should remain a&#13;
constant line item and that&#13;
Student Activities should take the&#13;
reduction in budget. If there is an&#13;
overage they suggested the&#13;
student newspaper could get up&#13;
to an additional $500.&#13;
The committee also suggested&#13;
in case of overages that the&#13;
money be given to the University&#13;
budget committee for their use to&#13;
off-set possible deficits experienced&#13;
in the other segregated&#13;
fee areas during the academic&#13;
year. If there are no deficits to be&#13;
off-set from the academic year&#13;
excess funds should be&#13;
distributed proportionately to all&#13;
segregated fee line areas.&#13;
The fifth suggestion was that a&#13;
new method of funding for&#13;
campus transportation be found.&#13;
$18 per person are presently&#13;
being spent. The committee felt&#13;
this to be a "heavy and unusual&#13;
burden on the fixed $88.00&#13;
amount."&#13;
The sixth suggestion was that&#13;
Faculty and staff who wish to use&#13;
physical education facilities&#13;
should share in their financial&#13;
support.&#13;
Similarly, the seventh&#13;
suggestion was that "faculty and&#13;
staff should be charged admissions&#13;
(in some degree greater&#13;
than those being charged&#13;
students) for all lecture and fine&#13;
arts events." The thinking is that&#13;
members of the faculty and staff&#13;
can "more easily afford the price&#13;
of admission and are receiving&#13;
the same benefits that ~'udents&#13;
are despite the fact tha students&#13;
are paying to support these&#13;
programs with their segregated&#13;
fee dollars while the faculty are&#13;
contributing nothing."&#13;
The last suggestion was that by&#13;
the 1974-75 academic year the&#13;
current faculty codified Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee should&#13;
be phased out and this function,&#13;
picked up by the Union&#13;
Programming (Student Activities)&#13;
Board. In doing this it&#13;
would be understood that there&#13;
still would be faculty input into&#13;
the selection of programs to&#13;
insure program stability in the&#13;
area of lecture and fine arts.&#13;
In a letter congratulating the&#13;
committee for doing "a thorough,&#13;
thoughtful, and responsible job,"'&#13;
the Chancellor said he would take&#13;
the recommendations under&#13;
advisement, particularly as they&#13;
relate to user fees for busing, use&#13;
of facilities, and admissions to&#13;
campus events. He will pass the&#13;
suggestion about the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee to the&#13;
University Committee for its&#13;
consideration. Because the first&#13;
four proposals rest on "complete&#13;
uncertainties the Chancellor said&#13;
he could give no assurances in&#13;
regard to them. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. Feb. 21, 1973&#13;
The ParkskieRANGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
We would like to congratulate the members of the&#13;
Segregated Fee Allocation Committee for a job well&#13;
done.&#13;
The members are: James Croxford,student/Thomas&#13;
Haack, former president of the PSGA; David Holle,&#13;
staff; Marion Mochon, assistant professor in anthropology;&#13;
Jerry Murphy, student; Duane Neuendorf,&#13;
business staff; Virginia Scherr, Special Assistant to the&#13;
Vice Chancellor; Donnie Snow, student; Susan Wesley,&#13;
President of t he Parkside Activities Board, John Zarling&#13;
assistant professor of e ngineering science and William&#13;
Niebuhr, Coordinator of Student Life and chairman of&#13;
the committee.&#13;
The recommendations which these committee&#13;
members made can help change the campus in a&#13;
positive way. Especially important are the suggestions&#13;
which the committee had in regard to long range&#13;
planning. The Chancellor has not committed himself on&#13;
most of the suggestions because most of them depend on&#13;
things which might happen. In regards to one item we&#13;
hope he takes action to make it a reality.&#13;
The committee proposed that the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee be phased out by the 1974-75 academic&#13;
year and that its duties be taken over by the Student&#13;
Activities Board. We see this as a very reasonable and&#13;
realistic change. As the committee argued in its report,&#13;
it would be much more appropriate for a student&#13;
oriented group to be responsible for developing lecture&#13;
and fine arts programs inasmuch as they are paying for&#13;
them.&#13;
The reason in this argument is quite easy to follow and&#13;
the added element of expertise in coordinating and&#13;
presenting programs of all natures should help in the&#13;
over-all production of the performances.&#13;
Faculty input will be necessary as the committee&#13;
pointed out, but the majority of the decision-making in&#13;
this area can be switched over to a student oriented&#13;
group.&#13;
May we suggest that this change begin as soon as&#13;
possible if th e Chancellor does indeed decide to take the&#13;
committee's advice. If t he phase out does not begin to&#13;
occur and if th ere are no indications that it will, we will&#13;
begin to look for solid rationale behind that policy.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
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So IMPORTANT&#13;
Student Government elections are coming up March 5, 6, and 7 to fill&#13;
those vacancies which have occurred since the last election which&#13;
°&#13;
CSince that election, vacancies have occurred in at least seven Senate&#13;
seats, the office of Recording Secretary, the office of President and the&#13;
office of Treasurer. m a . ,&#13;
I was going to put in some snide remark about the President of&#13;
PSGA not being able to Haack it, but I changed my mind Like other&#13;
Presidents in other universities before him, Tom Haack tried to take&#13;
too much on himself - and got burned out in the process.&#13;
Because of the late notice of the vacancies in the offices of President&#13;
and Treasurer, the deadline date for filing of candidate petitions has&#13;
been moved back to Friday, Feb. 23. Only willing workers need apply.&#13;
The last Student Government Election saw only 671 p eople or 15.4&#13;
percent of the student body cast ballots. That was pitiful. Because of&#13;
such a low level of s uffrage, some of the administrators on campus&#13;
have been insinuating that the Student Senate is truly not representative&#13;
of the student body.&#13;
In order to increase the effectiveness of the Student Senate, more&#13;
recognition is going to have to be given by the administration. To&#13;
really achieve this, it would be nice if we could get at least half the&#13;
student body to cast ballots. I do not consider this an unreasonable&#13;
request.&#13;
Volunteers are being sought to man the polling places. One poll will&#13;
be set up in Greenquist. If there are sufficient volunteers to man an&#13;
additional poll at all times, one may be set up in Kenosha. People&#13;
interested in assisting are asked to please contact Elections Chairman&#13;
Mike Wickware at the Student Government offices.&#13;
The next Student Senate meeting will be held Thursday, Feb. 22.&#13;
Prospective candidates and other interested persons are invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
There is something on the related topic of student governments&#13;
occurring at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.&#13;
There, the legality of university parking fines is being taken to court&#13;
by UW-0 students. A class-action suit against the Board of Regents,&#13;
the University of Wisconsin and the Oshkosh City Council was filed the&#13;
week of F ebruary 1.&#13;
Thanks to a story in the Oshkosh Advance-Titan written by Gail&#13;
Trowbridge, students at UW-O, and now students here at Parkside,&#13;
can be informed that only the judicial branch of government can&#13;
impose fines. Since the University has no judicial powers, parking&#13;
fines as now levied are constitutional.&#13;
Since the state constitution limits parking fines to a figure of $10,&#13;
additional punishments involving withholding of grades, suspension&#13;
and freezing of records, are also unconstitutional.&#13;
According to Oshkosh attorney Buz Barlow, who is representing the&#13;
students, the amount being sued for is in excess of $10,000. Should the&#13;
suit be successful at Oshkosh, you can bet that the other twelve&#13;
University campuses will follow suit.&#13;
In order to solicit establishment opinion on the situation, RANGER&#13;
contacted Parkside Director of Security Ronald Brinkmann.&#13;
Brinkmann had no comment to make on the suit itself ; he merelysuggested&#13;
the adoption of a "wait and see" attitude.&#13;
io ! gni;!&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
AAANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Geoff Blaesing&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch, Kathryn Wellner&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
.ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
WRITERS: Ken Konkol, Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
Bldhd&#13;
CARTOONIST: Gary Huck Bob Rohan&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ken Konkol, Al Craig, Bill Noll, Dennis Doonan, Greg Syston&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva i-&gt;enau&#13;
?&#13;
, REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
Nationtl Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Avt., New York, N. i. 10017&#13;
by Gary Huck &#13;
Wed., Feb. 21, 1 973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Love and a good 5&#13;
C contraceptive&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
What the world needs now is&#13;
love and a good 5 cent contraceptive!&#13;
&#13;
The Parkside chapter of ZPG&#13;
(Zero Population Growth) has&#13;
recently put out the 1973 edition of&#13;
the Parkside Birth Control Information&#13;
Pamphlet, which lists&#13;
some local services in the areas&#13;
of contraceptives, VD screening,&#13;
pregnancy testing, pregnancy&#13;
and abortion counseling and&#13;
referral, and vasectomy. In&#13;
preparing the pamphlet, the&#13;
group surveyed doctors, clinics&#13;
and hospitals in the area for their&#13;
views on contraception, whether&#13;
or not they would prescribe birth&#13;
control devices to females under&#13;
various circumstances, and the&#13;
services they offer. Twenty&#13;
doctors from Racine and&#13;
Kenosha responded, and they&#13;
constitute a private list with&#13;
names available upon request to&#13;
Parkside ZPG. This pamphlet, as&#13;
well as birth control handbooks,&#13;
buttons, bumper stickers and&#13;
information about ZPG, will be&#13;
available at a table in Main Place&#13;
on Feb. 21, 22 and 23.&#13;
ZPG is a nationwide non-profit&#13;
organization formed in 1968 for a&#13;
single purpose: to stop the&#13;
population explosion-first in the&#13;
U.S. and then in the rest of the&#13;
world. It urges immediate action&#13;
be taken to voluntarily reduce&#13;
our birth rate. By now many&#13;
people realize that one condition&#13;
for zero population growth is that&#13;
each couple must have an&#13;
average of two natural children,&#13;
thereby replacing themselves.&#13;
But not many are aware that&#13;
immediate and widespread&#13;
adoption of the two-child family&#13;
would not bring about a rapid end&#13;
to population growth in this&#13;
country. In short, instant twochild&#13;
families does not mean&#13;
instant zpg. It has been estimated&#13;
that, at best, it will take 70 years&#13;
to stabilize the population, due to&#13;
the relatively large number of&#13;
young people in the populace.&#13;
ZPG concentrates its efforts in&#13;
education, lobbying and in&#13;
support of population-informed&#13;
candidates. Through education,&#13;
ZPG is working to inform the&#13;
general public of the facts of the&#13;
population problem, and of the&#13;
threats it poses to the well-being&#13;
and very survival of humankind.&#13;
Through lobbying, ZPG is&#13;
working for greater awareness of&#13;
population and for legislation&#13;
that will help stop the population&#13;
explosion. Currently, Parkside&#13;
ZPG is interested in repeal of the&#13;
Wisconsin statute (450.11) on&#13;
contraceptives, and information&#13;
regarding this will also be&#13;
available at their table. (Also see&#13;
related article on this law in "the&#13;
Movement" column.) ZPG is,&#13;
among other things, urging a&#13;
letter-writing campaign to state&#13;
representatives and local&#13;
newspapers regarding this issue.&#13;
Membership in ZPG is $8.00 per&#13;
year for students and $15.00 per&#13;
year for non-students. All&#13;
members receive the ZPG&#13;
National Reporter monthly&#13;
magazine. For further information&#13;
contact Robert J.&#13;
Moore, faculty advisor to ZPG or&#13;
write Parkside ZPG, Box 127,&#13;
Student Organizations, UWParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, 53140, or visit&#13;
their table in Main Place this&#13;
week.&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In regard to your article&#13;
praising the Segregated Fees&#13;
Committee established by the&#13;
Chancellor; I would like to know&#13;
how you can conclude that a&#13;
committee appointed by the&#13;
Chancellor, or any one person in&#13;
a position of authority, can be a&#13;
microcosm of a truly&#13;
representative campus government?&#13;
&#13;
Would not some sort of election&#13;
process be in order to have a&#13;
representative committee?&#13;
As in the past, you have again&#13;
broken your supposed autonomy.&#13;
Any time administration initiates&#13;
something you view it positively,&#13;
but any suggestion or act that&#13;
comes from student sources you&#13;
draw negative connotations to it,&#13;
especially if that student source&#13;
happens to be the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Assn. There&#13;
is no other elected group on&#13;
campus for student representation.&#13;
There is no other vehicle&#13;
on campus that makes an attempt&#13;
at the democratic process.&#13;
The sooner you realize that your&#13;
anticipatory reference group is&#13;
not your reference group at&#13;
present, the better.&#13;
I would like to commend&#13;
Chancellor Willie for his foresight&#13;
in appointing a black student to&#13;
this committee. Most times&#13;
blacks are not considered in the&#13;
least at Parkside.&#13;
Joe Harris&#13;
Vice-president, PSGA&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would just like to express a&#13;
few words of appreciation to all&#13;
those connected with bringing the&#13;
tutorial service to Parkside. In&#13;
the three years I have been attending&#13;
school here, this is the&#13;
first program I have come in&#13;
contact with where the primary&#13;
purpose is to help you as an individual.&#13;
There are no lengthy&#13;
forms to fill out or permission&#13;
slips to get signed, and the best&#13;
part yet, the service is free.&#13;
Ison Fern who is in charge of&#13;
the program will do everything&#13;
possible to get you help in the&#13;
area you need and at a time that&#13;
will fit your schedule.&#13;
Mike Zizich&#13;
Junior, Kenosha&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am disappointed with the&#13;
quality of the editorials that have&#13;
recently appeared in the&#13;
RANGER. I have read accusations,&#13;
suggestions, and&#13;
predictions and yet none of them&#13;
have been backed up. Where are&#13;
the facts? I'd like to think that&#13;
they are intelligently derived at&#13;
and not based solely on personal&#13;
bias, but I have my doubts.&#13;
Parkside students are not mindless&#13;
receptacles. They deserve&#13;
much better than this. If these&#13;
are the best editorials the&#13;
RANGER can come up with, I&#13;
suggest that you replace them&#13;
with guest editorials, freeclassified&#13;
ads, or, if necessary,&#13;
shorten the paper.&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It is with absolute disgust that I&#13;
receive the news that the Nixon&#13;
administration plans to cut aid to&#13;
our disabled veterans by 160&#13;
million dollars a year. This will&#13;
undoubtedly mean severe hardship&#13;
for many disabled veterans&#13;
and their families. Those hardest&#13;
hit would be veterans disabled in&#13;
Vietnam.&#13;
Following Nixon administration&#13;
economic precedent&#13;
the money stolen from the&#13;
disabled veterans will be absorbed&#13;
by economic aid&#13;
programs to both North and&#13;
South Vietnam. Or, perhaps, it&#13;
will be swallowed by our absurd&#13;
defense budget and used to create&#13;
a new genre of super-weapons.&#13;
Apparently Richard M. Nixon&#13;
expects our disabled veterans to&#13;
lift themselves up by their&#13;
bootstraps while he bolsters the&#13;
Swiss bank accounts of the dictators&#13;
in both North and South&#13;
Vietnam and virtually subsidizes&#13;
the defense industries.&#13;
Jeffrey A. Cook&#13;
the&#13;
Movement&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement is a regular feature in the Ranger&#13;
dealing with women's concerns at Parkside and in society in general.&#13;
Guest writers are invited.&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Do you think contraception is indecent?&#13;
Our state law says it is.&#13;
The Madison chapter of the NOW (National Organization of Women)&#13;
Task Force on Reproduction is, like many other groups and individuals,&#13;
working for total repeal of Wis. statute 450.11. They have&#13;
summarized the five parts of this law as follows:&#13;
1. Contraceptives are defined as "indecent articles."&#13;
2. No one may "offer or advertise any indecent article for sale," nor&#13;
may he (or she!) exhibit or display them.&#13;
3. Selling condoms in vending machines is a very bad no-no.&#13;
4. Sale of contraceptives to unmarried persons is prohibited, and&#13;
sale to married persons is limited to pharmacies and physicians.&#13;
5. Provides the penalty "shall be fined not less than $100 nor more&#13;
than $500 or imprisoned for not to exceed six months, or both."&#13;
The most oppressive provision of the law is certainly the prohibition&#13;
of contraceptives to unmarried persons. According to a decision of the&#13;
Supreme Court on March 23, 1972 in the Baird case out of&#13;
Massachusetts, a state cannot outlaw the distribution of contraceptives&#13;
to single persons when they are legally available to&#13;
married ones. When a state respects a married person's right of&#13;
privacy it cannot deny single people equal protection of the law by&#13;
treating them differently. Further, according to the majority opinion,&#13;
"If the right of privacy means anything, it is the right of the individual,&#13;
married or single, to be free from unwarranted government&#13;
intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a person as the&#13;
decision whether to bear or beget a child."&#13;
The Supreme Court decision in the Massachusetts case is not&#13;
necessarily applicable here unless a Wisconsin citizen brings suit to&#13;
test the constitutionality of our state law. And there are other serious&#13;
difficulties with this law that necessitate not just amendment or&#13;
liberalization, but complete repeal.&#13;
The ban on selling condoms in vending machines is another&#13;
problem. They are a packaged product, not needing the professional&#13;
touch of a pharmacist. Men frequently need them when drugstores are&#13;
closed. A law which restricts the sale of packaged contraceptives to&#13;
pharmacies only serves to limit their distribution and keeps prices&#13;
higher than necessary. Use of condoms is also a simple, effective way&#13;
to control the spread of VD. Thus, to impede their distribution&#13;
demonstrates lack of concern for the safety and welfare of citizens,&#13;
which is what laws are supposed to be about.&#13;
Likewise, limiting the sale of contraceptive creams, jellies and&#13;
foams only to drug stores is restrictive. Why shouldn't these items be&#13;
available in department and grocery stores as well? And no extra law&#13;
is needed to limit the sale of oral contraceptives ("the pill") to&#13;
pharmacies, since that is totally and clearly covered under existing&#13;
law on pharmacy (450.04).&#13;
The display prohibition, too, is archaic. A display of condoms or&#13;
contraceptive foam on a store counter is not going to hurt people; it&#13;
probably may help them avoid unwanted pregnancies. It does not'do&#13;
much good to stop calling contraceptives "indecent articles" if we still&#13;
must, by law, treat them as though they were indecent by hiding them&#13;
under counters. This prohibition is also too often interpreted to mean&#13;
there may be no education about contraceptives. There were over&#13;
6,000 illegitimate births in Wisconsin in 1971--education on contraception&#13;
has obviously been hindered.&#13;
This infamous statute has hampered Wisconsin women far too longwe&#13;
need to get rid of "the whole thing." Everyone can help by writing&#13;
letters to newspapers, contacting state legislature representatives,&#13;
and getting various groups-professional groups, social groups, church&#13;
groups, book clubs, any group-to endorse TOTAL REPEAL. Written&#13;
endorsements can also be sent to NOW Task Force on Reproduction&#13;
P.O. Box 2062, Madison, Wis., 53701.&#13;
The Cartoon Strip by Bob Rohan&#13;
OH r R .UNICED MY six WEEK- ^&#13;
EYAM.,.. T OWE FIFTEEM PEoPL^&#13;
MONEY foR MY BOOKS/; I LOST&#13;
TWO TgxT BOOKS N THE&#13;
last month!! 6ot fiftBO fHI&#13;
FROM MY fWPTT(ME 006..&#13;
MA PAN O FF WITH A TEACHER HERE&#13;
AT WRKSIDE AND FA O lEO OF SHOCK?&#13;
J LOST TWO OOLLARS IN "T HE SODA&#13;
MACHINE GOTTA RASH FROM THE&#13;
SECONP FIOOR LATRINE J &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Feb. 21, 1973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
There are several striking features of SPLIT ENDS that identifies it&#13;
from other current records. The number and duration of the cuts. The&#13;
quantity of other bands that are simulated. The lack of a total theme,&#13;
which in no way mars any quality of the sound.&#13;
On the album there are 12 songs, so naturally they are short. Each&#13;
song is in itself a complete trip. All the songs have the characteristics&#13;
of singles, each one being concise and having its own special attentiongrabbing&#13;
sounds attached. It does in a sense seem a justifiable means&#13;
for balancing out the other extreme or the tendency for songs to&#13;
become longer during the last several years. Of course, it's true that&#13;
neither long or short songs are necessarily better, the purpose should&#13;
dictate the length. However, when every other album appearing on the&#13;
scene has a 15-minute cut which consists mostly of solo turns from the&#13;
drums, bass and guitar; it is quite likely that you may find yourself&#13;
desiring to hear other musical ideas.&#13;
As far as the styles go the move on SPLIT ENDS, resembles many&#13;
different bands. In just the first song "Do Ya," at least four different&#13;
bands are simulated. At times they sound like the Kinks, the Beach&#13;
Boys, the Beatles, Alice Cooper, Chuck Berry, Jerry Lee Lewis and&#13;
the Bee Gees. The Move seems to have the ability to adapt to any style&#13;
they desire with their instruments while their voices usually identify&#13;
them as the Move. The vocals are good harmonies which also take on&#13;
many styles except for the dominate styles like Mick Jagger an&lt;j Alice&#13;
Cooper. There are also several cuts done in the ancient madness style&#13;
of the ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA, a record which two members&#13;
of the present Move were part of.&#13;
There is no one thesis applying to the whole package. It is not&#13;
dedicated to politics, ecology or anti-humanism. Oh, the moods vary&#13;
along the manic-depressive scale but there is hardly anything too&#13;
serious. "The Minister" appears as the only song with a social&#13;
message, and truly no subject is worthier of attack.&#13;
SPLIT ENDS comes across as largely hard driving, and completely&#13;
magnificent vibrations with all its varying aspects. However, at this&#13;
point, a fear (maybe unjustifiable) arises from the Move trying to&#13;
grasp so many ideas at once.&#13;
Let me offer a parable: A brilliant philosopher is on the verge of&#13;
finding truth. His mind is comprehending more thoughts with each&#13;
passing second and he is beginning to correlate them. More and more&#13;
additions to the premise he is forming are constantly being realized.&#13;
He keeps on stretching his mind because he feels every detail is vitally&#13;
important. Finally his brain cells can no longer continue to expand&#13;
their function. The complete idea falls apart and all the pieces become&#13;
unrecognizable to him. There he sits on the floor, a babbling idiot, once&#13;
a full-fledged genius.&#13;
But this hasn't happened to the Move yet and SPLIT ENDS is good&#13;
time music.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
WWWWW4 C O U P O N 1AWWWVWWWWA&#13;
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PIZZA&#13;
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COUPON1400&#13;
Milwaukee Ave.&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 7:30-9:00&#13;
Saturday 7:30-5:30&#13;
Sunday 9:00-1:00&#13;
AUTO &amp;&#13;
TRUCK&#13;
PARTS GORDON&#13;
^ AUTO PARTS, INC.&#13;
Complete Machine Shop Service&#13;
Paint &amp; Body Shop Supplies&#13;
High Performance Work.&#13;
Discount to Parkside Students&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. S PECIAL:&#13;
THIS&#13;
COUPON)&#13;
20&#13;
off&#13;
ON ANY&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
GOOD THRU MARCH 2, 1 973&#13;
'Simon'&#13;
is Film Society&#13;
feature&#13;
SIMON OF THE DESERT,&#13;
Luis Bunuel's 1965 satire on&#13;
religion, based on the life of a 15th&#13;
century saint who withdrew from&#13;
the world to commune with God&#13;
atop a pillar in the middle of the&#13;
desert, is Parkside Film&#13;
Society's feature for Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 21. There will also be two&#13;
shorts: RAIN, a classic, lyrical&#13;
documentary by the famous&#13;
Dutch director and&#13;
cinematographer Ivor Ivens; and&#13;
PARIS QUI DORT, Rene Clair's&#13;
fantasy of what happens when a&#13;
"Crazy Ray" mesmerizes almost&#13;
everyone in Paris. The showings&#13;
begin at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
103, a nd admission is 60 cents.&#13;
Throughout his long career,&#13;
Luis Bunuel has constantly attacked&#13;
the Church, but never&#13;
without some element of humor.&#13;
SIMON OF THE DESERT is his&#13;
most outwardly comic work: a&#13;
relaxed, entertaining fable that&#13;
manages to attack Christianity&#13;
as savagely as have his more&#13;
serious films.&#13;
Critic Judith Crist has said of&#13;
it, "The brilliance of the Bunuel&#13;
film is given the added glitter of&#13;
laughter; it is, without doubt, the&#13;
sharpest and wittiest of his&#13;
savage insights on humans and&#13;
his ferocious forays against&#13;
religiosity...a taut and terse little&#13;
film, jammed with faces and&#13;
forms to provide the ultimate&#13;
scathing comment."&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
— BOTH UNDER SAME OWNERSHIP —&#13;
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DELIVERY&#13;
WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 6th AVE.&#13;
"A picture shows me at a glance what it takes dozens&#13;
of pages of a book to expound, " the 19th century Russian&#13;
novelist Turgenev wrote in "Fathers and Sons." Alas,&#13;
poor Turgenev predated ultra-microfiche, a&#13;
photographic process capabl e of reducing 1,000 standard&#13;
size book p ages onto a 3x5 inch sheet of film and&#13;
then, through a "reader," blowing them up again a page&#13;
at a time to more than original size. UW-Parkside&#13;
student Jan Feifer illustrates how the system works&#13;
using as her example of the Library of American&#13;
Civilization collection which packs the equivalent of&#13;
20,000 books into the 30 f ile drawers surrounding the&#13;
reader. To read one of the film books, Miss Feifer&#13;
selects an envelope holding the film rof m the file, places&#13;
the film in the viewer and focuses the machine. The&#13;
system has cost and space advantages in addition to&#13;
making available rare and out-of-print material. Miss&#13;
Feifer, of 8414 26th Ave. , Kenosha, is a junior majoring&#13;
in Spanish. A part-time employee in the campus library,&#13;
she plans a career a s a teacher.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
******* A* A* A* A********** A* A* **************1 M&#13;
ULLETIN&#13;
(7QJG&#13;
mwwms&#13;
BOOKS • MAGAZINES •SUPPLIES&#13;
We also feature...&#13;
POSTERS, CANDLES, GREETING CARDS&#13;
GGLOT LfLE ELU EG EGGGG tfGLUG LGEGGIJGG G CUiB&#13;
TEXT BOOKS &#13;
UW takes steps to ensure&#13;
equal employment&#13;
Wed., Feb. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
MADISON, Wis. -- Steps to&#13;
ensure equal employment opportunities&#13;
to minorities and&#13;
women in the University of&#13;
Wisconsin System were announced&#13;
Friday by System&#13;
President John C. Weaver.&#13;
In a memorandum to chancellors&#13;
of the 13 universities, the&#13;
center system and extension,&#13;
Weaver praised them for&#13;
progress already made on the&#13;
campuses and said:&#13;
"Just as we have historically&#13;
set precedents in academic excellence&#13;
and innovation, we must&#13;
continue to live up to our high&#13;
standards by making a more than&#13;
adequate response to the current&#13;
national emphasis upon equal&#13;
opportunity....&#13;
"It is not enough for me to&#13;
simply reaffirm that we will do&#13;
that which legally we must and&#13;
which morally we should.&#13;
Rather, it is my conviction that&#13;
this reaffirmation must carry&#13;
with it a broad outline of specific&#13;
objectives which will be applicable&#13;
to all units and pertinent&#13;
to all of the classes of individuals&#13;
whose right to equal employment&#13;
opportunity is protected by law&#13;
and dictated by good conscience.&#13;
"It is the policy of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
to provide equal opportunity in&#13;
employment through the&#13;
prohibition of discrimination&#13;
against all applicants and employees&#13;
because of age, race,&#13;
color, creed or religion, sex&#13;
handicap, ancestry or national&#13;
origin, and to take affirmative&#13;
action to eliminate any barriers&#13;
which have traditionally limited&#13;
employment, compensation and&#13;
advancement of women and&#13;
minorities."&#13;
Primary responsibility for&#13;
developing and implementing&#13;
policies on equal employment&#13;
opportunity is being placed by&#13;
Weaver with the chancellors and&#13;
with Donald E. Percy, a senior&#13;
vice president of the system.&#13;
Percy will serve as Equal Employment&#13;
Opportunity Officer to&#13;
oversee and coordinate aflirmative&#13;
action programs for&#13;
the entire system, Weaver said.&#13;
Sharing with Percy in the&#13;
leadership role Weaver has&#13;
assigned to the central administration&#13;
staff will be Joseph&#13;
W. Wiley and. Marian Swoboda&#13;
assistants to the president for&#13;
affirmative action for minorities&#13;
and women, respectively. They&#13;
will be responsible for providing&#13;
guidelines and technical advice&#13;
to the universities, center system&#13;
and extension.&#13;
Objectives set by Weaver for&#13;
the chancellors and for central&#13;
administration include:&#13;
1. Submission by July 15,1973 of&#13;
a written affirmative action&#13;
program.&#13;
2. Analysis of utilization of&#13;
women and minorities in each&#13;
department.&#13;
3. Determination of problem&#13;
areas and remedial action.&#13;
4. Setting specific goals and&#13;
timetables to overcome underutilization&#13;
of minorities and&#13;
women wherever it exists.&#13;
5. Pinpointing responsibility for&#13;
minitoring the effectiveness of&#13;
each affirmative action program.&#13;
Smith print&#13;
on display&#13;
Moishe Smith, visiting&#13;
professor of art at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, has been&#13;
notified that his print "Almonds&#13;
of Andalusia," currently on&#13;
display in the Eighth Dulin&#13;
National Print and Drawing&#13;
Competition at the Dulin Gallery&#13;
of Art in Knoxville, has been&#13;
chosen for a traveling exhibition&#13;
of 65 works.&#13;
The touring show is under the&#13;
auspices of The Smithsonian&#13;
Traveling Exhibition Service and&#13;
will be exhibited at the National&#13;
Collection of Fine Arts in&#13;
Washington, D.C., March 23&#13;
through April 22.&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
2nd National&#13;
( Formerly Shakey's)&#13;
Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
featuring&#13;
Live Entertainment &amp; Dancing&#13;
&gt;7 Nights a Week_&#13;
PRESENTING THIS FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY:&#13;
GLEN BENSON&#13;
&amp;&#13;
THE COUNTRY LEGENDS&#13;
; Starting at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
6208 GREEN BAY ROAD&#13;
NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
John W. Harbeson, associate&#13;
professor of political science, is&#13;
the author of a new book, "Nation&#13;
Building in Kenya: the Role of&#13;
Land Reform," published by&#13;
Northwestern University Press.&#13;
A New York City art excursion&#13;
is planned for the weekend of&#13;
March 16-21. The cost of $90.55&#13;
includes three nights lodging,&#13;
Amtrak round trip and the art of&#13;
New York s Museums.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
Robert Cadez, instructor of art or&#13;
Mrs. Ella Toiggo of the&#13;
Humanities Office. Phone 553-&#13;
2331.&#13;
An orientation program will be&#13;
held Feb. 22 from 7:30-9 p.m. in&#13;
room 103 of Greenquist Hall.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present its first night time&#13;
Whiteskellar Thursday, Feb. 22.&#13;
The 7:30 show will feature Dave&#13;
Duffeck a rhythm and blues&#13;
artist. The show is free as&#13;
always.&#13;
Sigma Pi would like to announce&#13;
that on Thursday, Jan. 25,&#13;
new officers were elected for this&#13;
fraternal organization. The new&#13;
officers are as follows: President&#13;
(Sage) - Jay Fisher, 1st Counselor&#13;
- David Rohde, 2nd Counselor&#13;
- Tom Jennett, 3rd Counselor&#13;
- Gary Meyer, 4th Counselor&#13;
- Dan Duchesneau, and Herald -&#13;
"^at McDevitt. These newly&#13;
lected officers will preside&#13;
roughout the semester and into&#13;
ie summer months.&#13;
Tm h for st&#13;
^ent J^nhT • W1Shing t0 P^ctice&#13;
each during the Fall Semester,&#13;
1973, are due in the Division of&#13;
Education Office, Greenquist&#13;
Han 318, by Thursday, March 1,&#13;
Kubly named&#13;
writer&#13;
in residence&#13;
Herbert Kubly, professor of&#13;
English at Parkside, has been&#13;
named writer-in-residence for&#13;
the second consecutive summer&#13;
at The Rhinelander School of&#13;
Arts.&#13;
Now entering its tenth year, the&#13;
school has become one of the&#13;
major writers' workshops in the&#13;
nation. The school is sponsored&#13;
by UW-Extension Arts in&#13;
cooperation with the Wisconsin&#13;
Regional Writers Association the&#13;
Northern Arts Council and'the&#13;
Rhinelander Board of Education.&#13;
The 1973 program, which includes&#13;
creative writing, painting&#13;
and drawing, and creative arts&#13;
for children, will be held July 23&#13;
to August 3.&#13;
Kubly, who is widely known for&#13;
his travel books, including&#13;
"American in Italy" which won a&#13;
national book award, also has&#13;
credits as a fiction writer&#13;
playwright, critic and journalist.'&#13;
A native of New Glarus, he was&#13;
on the faculties of S an Francisco&#13;
State College, Columbia&#13;
University, The New School for&#13;
Social Research and the&#13;
University of Illinois before&#13;
coming to Parkside.&#13;
$&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
MON.&amp;TUES. EVENING, 5:00-8:00&#13;
(No matter how much of our piz2a, chicken, potatoes&#13;
and salad you eat, the price is only $ 1.7 5)&#13;
Children under 3 Free — Children 3-9,10 Cents a Year&#13;
PIZZA PA&amp;L0&amp;&amp;&#13;
ye PUBLIC house&#13;
Lathrop and 21 st (Almost)&#13;
SHEER&#13;
The Marine Corps Officer&#13;
Selection Team will be on&#13;
campus Feb. 26 and 27 t o inform&#13;
any interested students of the&#13;
programs ^leading to a commission&#13;
as a Marine Officer.&#13;
OHJ EXCUSE ME IF I CON'T GET (JPIl&#13;
808 ROHAN HERE WITH "THE CARTOON&#13;
CONTEST RE6ULTS!! SURE" WAS A HARD&#13;
SCRU0BIN6 DECISION.'! AFTER CLEAN/NG O UT&#13;
THE PlRTT ENTRIES, .&#13;
"THREATENING NOTES AND&#13;
»Se» KLEENEX.&#13;
" AFTER THIS (sump .SLUBP) I'M SOING&#13;
down to the marsh foe a coune&#13;
COLO ONES 11 6(?a_&#13;
OF LJIS.&#13;
ANDREA'S SINCE 1911&#13;
ONE OF ENGLAND'S&#13;
FINEST PIPES&#13;
GBD EBONY&#13;
Dark Matt •Take-off' Finish&#13;
$12.50&#13;
PENTHOUSE&#13;
Light and Dark Matt&#13;
Bowl, fancy Mouthpiece -&#13;
$10.00 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Feb. 21, 1973&#13;
Audio-Visual Review&#13;
Summer tuition&#13;
Learning by doing reduction»&#13;
announced here&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
I Do, I Understand, is a film in the Learning Center which deals with&#13;
learning by doing.&#13;
I hear and I forget&#13;
I see and I remember&#13;
I do and I understand&#13;
The children in the film are not sitting quietly in desks but are seen&#13;
standing around talking in groups. They had been given a problem and&#13;
were expected to work it out by trial and error. The teacher instead of&#13;
standing in front of the class and teaching like a drill sergeant was&#13;
walking around the room giving the students individual help.&#13;
According to the narrator, this teaching process is not interested in&#13;
right answers but in the student understanding what he's doing.&#13;
"Teaching by telling is unsuccessful. When you actually do it, it&#13;
sticks."&#13;
The idea of the film was good but the way in which it was presented&#13;
was far from stimulating. It was a black and white film that looked as&#13;
if it was somewhere around ten years old. It never came out of the&#13;
classroom. Most of the time was spent watching the children work.&#13;
As I said, this teaching process seems to be a good idea. The children&#13;
were having so much fun they didn't seem to realize they were actually&#13;
learning something.&#13;
In search of ancients&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Are we alone in the universe? There are many reasons to believe we&#13;
are not, and never have been.&#13;
"In Search of Ancient Astronauts," a video-taped television&#13;
program narrated by Rod Serling, explores the fascinating riddles&#13;
which our ancestors left for us to solve.&#13;
Were there ancient astronauts? The possibility is not unlikely. If life&#13;
can exist on this planet, why not on any of the billions and billions of&#13;
other planets whirling through space around us? If there is life, it may&#13;
as well be intelligent, and if man can invent space travel, why not&#13;
they, too?&#13;
We have the clues to these ancient riddles in the ruins left by Incas,&#13;
Mayans and Egyptians. Were the beings these people worshipped&#13;
actually gods, or spacemen?&#13;
Some of the Incan and Mayan gods were said to have come from the&#13;
sky. The legends tell of them teaching the people the use of their&#13;
fabulous calendar, the cultivation of corn, and then returning to the&#13;
sky, always with a vow to come back.&#13;
The most striking of all clues are those left carved in the rocks or&#13;
built with great stones. There are strange pictures and carvings on the&#13;
walls of caves and temples which resemble men wearing space gear.&#13;
One particularly graphic example is a carving in a Mayan temple&#13;
which depicts a man seated in what appears to be a space capsule. The&#13;
man is operating controls on a large instrument panel, and there is a&#13;
jet of flame coming out the back of the machine.&#13;
Another thought-provoking sight is a plateau upon which there are&#13;
many meaningless lines. Meaningless at least until one views them&#13;
from the sky, then the lines become clear pictures: one of a spider,&#13;
another of a peacock, still another of an eagle. Who made these lines?&#13;
For what reason? Are they the markings of an ancient airport?&#13;
Perhaps they are, because the tops of nearby hills have areas leveled&#13;
off which look like runways and landing strips.&#13;
I could not help feeling chills run up my spine as I viewed these&#13;
weird phenomena. This is partially due to Serling's spectral voice,&#13;
which is commonly associated with the "Twilight Zone." I do not feel&#13;
this quality detracts from the program, it enhances the mysterious,&#13;
thought-provoking effect.&#13;
While the narrative strongly suggests the possibility of Earth having&#13;
been visited, the program is not necessarily an attempt to prove that&#13;
we have been invaded. It is a highly interesting look at the curious&#13;
relics which have come down to us from antiquity.&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHUITZ BUICK-OPEL&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3S14&#13;
'2,373°&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
Substantial reductions in&#13;
tuition for the 1973 summer&#13;
session at Parkside were announced&#13;
last week.&#13;
Students who are Wisconsin&#13;
residents will pay from $12 to $20&#13;
less than last summer, depending&#13;
on how many credits they take.&#13;
Officials estimate the average&#13;
student will pay $16 less, a&#13;
savings of 20 percent from 1972.&#13;
The range of savings is from 8 to&#13;
49 percent.&#13;
Fees also have been reduced&#13;
significantly for out-of-state&#13;
students, although they will&#13;
continue to pay more than twice&#13;
that of Wisconsin residents.&#13;
The new fee policy will save the&#13;
more than 1,600 students expected&#13;
at Parkside this summer&#13;
approximately $26,000. Summer&#13;
enrollment last year was 1,547.&#13;
Parkside's summer fee&#13;
schedule is expected to be one of&#13;
the lowest among the 13 degreegranting&#13;
campuses in the UW&#13;
•System. The 1973 summer&#13;
schedule for state residents by&#13;
credits carried, with a comparison&#13;
to last year, is:&#13;
0-1 credit: $21 ($41); 2 credits:&#13;
$42 ($ 60); 3 credits: $63 ($79); 4&#13;
credits: $84 ( $98); 5 credits: $105&#13;
($117); 6-9 credits: $124 ($137);&#13;
over 9: $178 ($194).&#13;
The lower summer fee&#13;
schedule at Parkside results&#13;
from a combination of the UW&#13;
System Regents reducing the&#13;
instructional portion of the fee at&#13;
all campuses except those which&#13;
grant doctoral degrees, Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee, and the prorating&#13;
of the non-instructional&#13;
portion of the fee at Parkside&#13;
according to number of credits&#13;
carried. The non-instructional, or&#13;
segregated, fee is essentially a&#13;
user charge for such services as&#13;
health, student activities,&#13;
recreation facilities and parking.&#13;
College M en&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 552-8355&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
CHICAGO - LONDON&#13;
May 28- July 13 $199&#13;
June 13 - July 11 $215&#13;
includes:&#13;
Round Trip 747 Charter Jet&#13;
Transfer to Downtown London&#13;
Applications available:&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
Parkside Trio&#13;
The Parkside Trio, a new faculty musical group, will&#13;
present its first public concert on campus at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 25, in Room 103 Greenquist Hall. Members&#13;
of the trio are Maria Mutschler, violinist; Harry Lantz,&#13;
cellist, and Edward Rath, pianist. They will play Trio in&#13;
C Minor, Op. 1, No. 3 by Bee thoven, Miniatures by the&#13;
20th century composer Frank Bridge and Trio in C&#13;
Minor, Op. 101 by Brahms. The program is free.&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS!&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
meoS&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage B ombers&#13;
Fret Delivery it Parkside Vil lage&#13;
5021 30th Anna* Phone 657-SI91&#13;
PISCES&#13;
Feb. 20 - March 19&#13;
MONDAY N IGHT&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
5&#13;
OLD TIME MOVIES .&#13;
CHESS-CHECKERS-CARDS 7^&#13;
REDUCED DRINKS&#13;
^Tuesday Night-Ladies'Night&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
FUNNIES&#13;
For the following two weeks: Five Blind Mice&#13;
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393145th St. OPEN 7 p.m. -1 a.m.&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK 652-8711&#13;
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"RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL&#13;
/t-u standings&#13;
(Through Sun., Feb. 11)&#13;
National Basketball League&#13;
Eastern Division&#13;
Olympians 3-1&#13;
Herblius Superblius 3-1&#13;
Rebels 2-1&#13;
Warriors 1-2&#13;
Privateers 1-3&#13;
Western Division&#13;
Flash 2-1&#13;
Big K 2-2&#13;
Sheeters 1-2&#13;
Sigma Pi 1-3&#13;
Rat Patrol 0-4&#13;
American Basketball League&#13;
Capitol Division&#13;
Bold Ones&#13;
Soccer Team&#13;
Starry Eyed Gang&#13;
Central Division&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
3-0&#13;
1-2&#13;
1-2&#13;
3-0&#13;
1-2&#13;
0-3&#13;
Individual&#13;
Ron Schmitz&#13;
Larry Wade&#13;
Dean Cristensen&#13;
Pete Wood&#13;
Sonn Tag&#13;
Tom Hart&#13;
Bob Moe&#13;
Bill Cairns&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Team&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Rebels&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Sigma Pi&#13;
Privateers&#13;
Total Points&#13;
59&#13;
58&#13;
55&#13;
50&#13;
50&#13;
48&#13;
31&#13;
30&#13;
Individual&#13;
Mitch Arents&#13;
Hal Henderson&#13;
Everett Hyde&#13;
Scott Nelson&#13;
P. Pevonka&#13;
John Pena&#13;
Ed Hopkins&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Team&#13;
Bold Ones&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Soccer Team&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Total Points&#13;
46&#13;
45&#13;
44&#13;
39&#13;
36&#13;
34&#13;
33&#13;
UW-P athletes vie for spots&#13;
By Helmut Kah&#13;
Parkside athletes are again&#13;
vying for positions as&#13;
representatives of the U.S. at the&#13;
1973 World University Games to&#13;
be held in Moscow, Russia,&#13;
August 15-25. The World&#13;
University Games are conducted&#13;
similar to the Olympics although&#13;
not as many sports are included.&#13;
The Games sports are track and&#13;
field, swimming and diving,&#13;
tennis, water polo, basketball,&#13;
volleyball, gymnastics, and&#13;
fencing. To be eligible a student&#13;
must attend a university and be&#13;
under 28 years of age. The Games&#13;
are held every two or three years.&#13;
The last World University&#13;
Games were in 1970 at Turin,&#13;
Italy. John Hanzalik of the&#13;
Parkside fencing team made the&#13;
U.S. team that went to Turin.&#13;
Hanzalik won two and lost three&#13;
matches.&#13;
Eligibility for the Games is&#13;
tough; take fencing for example.&#13;
A fencer wins eligibility points&#13;
through three tournaments: the&#13;
Martini-Rossi in New York, the&#13;
Chicagoland Open, and' the&#13;
Nationals for fencing. At the&#13;
Nationals the top 15 contenders in&#13;
each weapon (foil, epee and&#13;
saber) fence off. The top three in&#13;
each weapon, plus two chosen at&#13;
the discretion of the United States&#13;
Selection Committee for the&#13;
World University Games, will&#13;
compete at the 1973 Games in&#13;
Moscow. Eligibility is just as&#13;
tough in the other sports.&#13;
Coach Loran Hein of fencing&#13;
believes that the fencing team&#13;
has two or three good contenders&#13;
for the 1973 Games. The cost of&#13;
sending an athlete to Moscow is&#13;
estimated at $500. Since the&#13;
university does not give financial&#13;
assistance for supporting&#13;
athletes at the games, the money&#13;
must be raised by the persons&#13;
directly involved. Coach Hein&#13;
requests that interested students&#13;
help the athletes by purchasing a&#13;
patch or pin with the World&#13;
University Games insignia on it.&#13;
The price is $2. Patches and pins&#13;
may be purchased from Coach&#13;
Loran Hein or at the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg. issue room.&#13;
Wrestlers even season record&#13;
by Bruce Rasmussen&#13;
Parkside wrestlers evened&#13;
their season record with a pair of&#13;
dual meet victories this past&#13;
week. Parkside is now 5-5-1 on the&#13;
season.&#13;
Last Wednesday Parkside eked&#13;
out a narrow 24-20 victory over&#13;
Uw-Oshkoshatthe P.E. Building.&#13;
Leading the way over the Titans&#13;
lor Parkside were Rico Savaglio&#13;
and Randy Skarda who won their&#13;
matches on pins. Savaglio is now&#13;
12-1 for the season and Skarda&#13;
has won seven of his last eight for&#13;
a 7-4 record.&#13;
Bill Odders won his match at&#13;
134 pounds by a decision, and&#13;
John Savaglio won at 118 pounds&#13;
on a forfeit.&#13;
Ken Martin and Bill West were&#13;
each moved up a weight class for&#13;
this meet and Martin had to settle&#13;
for a draw and is now 15-1-1, while&#13;
West lost to undefeated Dick&#13;
Beattle for just his second setback&#13;
against 14 wins.&#13;
Last Saturday the wrestlers&#13;
took a small vacation as they&#13;
trounced the University of&#13;
Illinois-Chicago Circle 47-3.&#13;
Parkside won nine of the ten&#13;
matches. The 47 points were the&#13;
most ever scored by a Ranger&#13;
team.&#13;
Winning on pins for Parkside&#13;
were Rico Savaglio, West,&#13;
Martin, Arlyn Fredrick and Dave&#13;
Rohde. Scoring on decisions were&#13;
Odders, Skarda, Kyle Barnes,&#13;
Dave Baron and Joe Getty took&#13;
the heavyweight division on a&#13;
forfeit.&#13;
Chicago Circle had finished&#13;
19th in the NCAA College Division&#13;
national meet last year, but have&#13;
been hurting with injuries lately.&#13;
Next on the wrestlers agenda&#13;
will be the NAIA National&#13;
Tournament for the grapplers&#13;
who qualify. This years meet will&#13;
be held in Sioux City, Iowa,&#13;
March 8-10.&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch C reated&#13;
Sandwiches &amp;&#13;
Charcoal S teaks&#13;
North &amp; South Sheridan ltd.&#13;
lee's $uti&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER iy&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
T h u r s d a y 1 1 -8&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches!&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool 1 ables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
Wed., Feb. 21, 197 3 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
It has come to my attention that most people are unaware of what&#13;
kata is. This is not unusual, because most people do not practice judo&#13;
. As pointed out by my friend and co-editor Kris Koch, I am a judo nut&#13;
or in more proper terms, a judoka. All this really means is that I&#13;
practice judo. I also practice kata.&#13;
Kata is a formalized judo exercise. There are seven complete katas&#13;
in judo, the three with which I am familiar being Nage-No-Kata,&#13;
Katame-No-Kata, and Ju-No-Kata. Of these I am currently practicing&#13;
Nage and Katame.&#13;
Nage-No-Kata is the kata of the throws. In this kata there are five&#13;
categories of throws: arm, hip, foot and back and side sacrifices. Each&#13;
category contains three throws, done both left and right, for a total of&#13;
30 throws.&#13;
Nage is the first kata I became familiar with, seeing it demonstrated&#13;
at a tournament I attended. Kata is required of all judokas who&#13;
practice for any length of time and hope for rank advancement.&#13;
However, it is not as important for men as competition, unless they&#13;
have chosen to take the noncombatitive course of promotion. Women&#13;
frequently do not compete in areas other than kata, but shiai, combatitive&#13;
contest, is becoming more prevalent.&#13;
A kata team is a Tori, who does the technique; and an Uke, who&#13;
receives the action. These two people must learn their part of the'kata,&#13;
each as important as the other, and practice it together regularly!&#13;
When one watches kata, one rarely appreciates the work behind the&#13;
finished routine.&#13;
When I first began practicing Nage, I discovered how difficult it is to&#13;
coordinate the throws. There always seems to be something left over,&#13;
like an arm, or a leg, or a foot...or a body. After a certain amount of&#13;
frustration and practice, my Uke and I will have a fairly decent kata to&#13;
take to tournaments.&#13;
At a tournament, the team is evaluated on each partner's ability to&#13;
perform her part of the kata. Tori is graded on how well she carries out&#13;
the technique, and Uke on how well she puts up with it. No emotion&#13;
should be shown. This is difficult, especially when a technique really&#13;
gets messed up.&#13;
My partner and I also decided to practice Katame-No-Kata. In this&#13;
kata I am the Uke. I would pick that kata to be the Uke, too, because it&#13;
is a kata of mat techniques and chokes. I detest being choked.&#13;
I wish to extend my congratulations to Jackie Blaha and Nancy&#13;
Konecny, who recently placed second at the Wisconsin State Kata&#13;
championships, and wish them "Good luck" at the national tournament&#13;
in Atlanta, Ga.&#13;
Maybe with a heck of a lot of practice I'll be there next year.&#13;
Fencers lose three&#13;
to nationally ranked foes&#13;
UW-Parkside's fencing team&#13;
lost three matches last Saturday,&#13;
losing to the Big Ten leader&#13;
Illinois 16-11, to Detroit 20-7 and&#13;
to Wayne State 17-10 at Champaign,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Parkside's record on the&#13;
season falls to 8-7 after the&#13;
disastrous weekend of play.&#13;
Individual results in foil were&#13;
Kim Nelson 5-4, John Tank 4-5&#13;
and Mark Mulkins 0-9. In saber,&#13;
Don Koser was 4-5, Peter&#13;
Shemanske 2-7 and David&#13;
Baumann 1-8.&#13;
In epee, Bernie Vash was 8-1,&#13;
and- Mark Boatright and Bill&#13;
Schaefer each 2-7.&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
Live Entertainment &amp; Dancing&#13;
&gt;7 Nights a Weeki&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
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PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
Mon.-Fri.&#13;
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M&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. M89&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
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PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Mon.&amp;Tues. j-gg&#13;
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ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'FISH&#13;
FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed.&amp;Fn. *-gg&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
W MO-JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers &#13;
8 THE PARKSID E RANGER W ed., F e b. 2 1 , 1 9 7 3&#13;
Cagers lose 44-40 to Green Bay&#13;
Gary Cole (50) shows h is le aping ability by hitting&#13;
the boards against UW-Green Bay last Saturday night.&#13;
Bill Sobanski (52) is ready to rebound.&#13;
Merritt, Rosa take firsts&#13;
Keith Merritt and Lucien Rosa&#13;
grabbed first places for the&#13;
Parkside track team last&#13;
Saturday at the Titan Invitational&#13;
in Oshkosh.&#13;
Merritt, a junior, set a school&#13;
record in the triple jump with a&#13;
leap of 46-10% while Rosa took&#13;
top honors in the mile in 4:17.0&#13;
and two mile in 9:17.6.&#13;
M rritt also tied the school&#13;
mark in the pole vault, taking&#13;
third at 13-6 while teammate Tim&#13;
Martinson was fifth at 13-0.&#13;
7 minute&#13;
OIL CHANGE&#13;
$-|99&#13;
includes o il &amp; labor&#13;
PIT STOP&#13;
3314-52nd S t.&#13;
Other Ranger placers included&#13;
Herb DeGroot and Cornelius&#13;
Gordon, tied for fourth in the 440;&#13;
DeGroot, third in the 300; and&#13;
Chuck Dettman, second in the&#13;
880.&#13;
Parkside will compete in the&#13;
UW-La Crosse Invitational this&#13;
weekend.&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
The Ranger cagers smelled&#13;
upset in their rematch with UWGreen&#13;
Bay last Saturday in the&#13;
Phy. Ed. building, but they&#13;
couldn't quite pull it off, losing to&#13;
the Phoenix 44-40 in the final&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Green Bay, who had trounced&#13;
the Rangers in an earlier meeting&#13;
this year, met up with an&#13;
awesome defense this time&#13;
around that held them to one of&#13;
their lower offensive outputs of&#13;
the year. The score was tied with&#13;
2:00 left in the game when Mike&#13;
Hanke committed two personal&#13;
fouls that ended up in the four&#13;
point spread that the Phoenix&#13;
won by.&#13;
The Rangers started off the&#13;
'ame with some superb defense&#13;
i at held the visiting team to only&#13;
nine field goals in the first half.&#13;
The Rangers took a 25-20 lead into&#13;
the locker room at intermission.&#13;
The second half turned out to be&#13;
a different story though, as Green&#13;
Bay started to find the range that&#13;
they had lacked in the first&#13;
period. The Rangers saw their&#13;
lead vanish for the first time with&#13;
8:10 left in the game and after&#13;
that it was a see-saw battle. The&#13;
Rangers continued to put up a&#13;
stingy defense, but as Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens put it, "Our weak&#13;
spot was not being able to hit the&#13;
key basket."&#13;
It was still anybody's game&#13;
down until the final two minutes&#13;
when the four free throws by&#13;
Green Bay made the difference in&#13;
the final outcome.&#13;
The leading scorers for the&#13;
Rangers were Chuck Chambliss&#13;
with 13 and Bill Sobamski, who&#13;
pumped in 12.&#13;
The Rangers played The&#13;
College of Racine last night in&#13;
their last home game of the&#13;
season and they will face the&#13;
University of Missouri St. Louis&#13;
this Saturday in St. Louis and&#13;
their last game of the season will&#13;
be against UW-Milwaukee in&#13;
Milwaukee next Tuesday night.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
WANTED — Persons with car to drive to&#13;
Zion, III., on business for the Ranger. Will&#13;
pay $2.85 per trip which is approximately 35&#13;
miles, and takes about one hour from&#13;
Parkside. Contact Tom Petersen in the&#13;
Ranger office, LLC D194.&#13;
FOR SALE - 1972 Honda CB350, excellent&#13;
condition, $625. 1832 Clair St., Racine, after 8&#13;
p.m. weekdays or leave number to call.&#13;
WANTED — Student who has car&#13;
and wants to earn 10 percent&#13;
commission selling advertising&#13;
for the RANGER. Person who&#13;
knows Racine area would have a&#13;
great opportunity. If interested&#13;
call 553-2295 or stop in at LLC D194&#13;
a nd ask for Jerry Murphy. If&#13;
he's not there, leave your name&#13;
and telephone number.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $.&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.'&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
DATE.&#13;
PHONE NO.&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication.&#13;
Lake Forest College produced&#13;
yet another win for the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Rangers last Tuesday, Feb. 13.&#13;
The Rangers won the game quite&#13;
handily by a score of 63-52.&#13;
Parkside started off the game&#13;
as though it would be another&#13;
romp, jumping to a 22-8 lead with&#13;
over eight minutes left in the first&#13;
half. The Rangers took the&#13;
opening tip-off and scored five&#13;
unanswered points on a hook shot&#13;
by Bill Sobanski, a free throw by&#13;
Mike Hanke, and a tip-in by Gary&#13;
Cole. Lake Forest then started an&#13;
effective offense of their own,&#13;
coming back to within 10 at&#13;
halftime. The score at intermission&#13;
was 30-20.&#13;
During the second half, Lake&#13;
Forest began picking up&#13;
momentum and the Rangers soon&#13;
saw their 10 point lead dwindle to&#13;
four. With only 3:33 left in the&#13;
game, Parkside was up by 52-48.&#13;
This time the Rangers came&#13;
back, outscoring their opponent&#13;
11-2 in the final three minutes of&#13;
play.&#13;
Top scorers for Parkside were&#13;
Hanke with 19 points, Cole with 17&#13;
and Chuck Chambliss, who&#13;
rimmed 13.&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Feb. 23,7:30 p.m Missouri-St. Louis at St. Louis&#13;
Feb. 27,7:30 p.m UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee&#13;
Swimming&#13;
Feb. 21,4 p.m at Carroll College&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
Feb. 23,3 p.m Mankato State at Mankato&#13;
Mar. 2,3 p.m Tritton&#13;
Mar. 3,2 p.m at Macomb, 111.&#13;
Hockey&#13;
Feb. 24 at Loyola University&#13;
Feb. 25,6 p.m Northeastern Illinois at Wilson Park&#13;
Mar. 4,6 p.m Marquette at Wilson Park&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
Feb. 24 LaCrosse Invitational at LaCrosse&#13;
Mar. 3 Illinois Open at Champaign&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Feb. 24 Oberlin&#13;
Mar. 3 Milwaukee Tech at Milwaukee&#13;
Discount Records and Tapes&#13;
^Records5.?8 for 3.7?&#13;
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              <text>UW-P, Dynamatic cooperate</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
Heating-chilling plant here&#13;
rates nearly pollution-free&#13;
Wednesday, February 28, 1973 Vol. I, No. 19&#13;
UW-P, Dynamatic cooperate&#13;
Parkside has returned again to&#13;
its "14th avenue campus," the&#13;
Dynamatic Division of Eaton&#13;
Yale and Towne, Inc.&#13;
For the third straight year&#13;
Parkside's School of Modern&#13;
Industry is bringing one of its&#13;
courses to Dynamatic engineers&#13;
at their own plant.&#13;
The relationship began during&#13;
the 1970-71 school year after&#13;
Ralph Jaeschke, chief engineer&#13;
at Dynamatic, and UW-P faculty&#13;
discussed ways in which&#13;
Parkside could relate directly to&#13;
local industries. Jaeschke&#13;
suggested that a course in analog&#13;
computation, which was offered&#13;
on the campus, be offered at&#13;
Dynamatic at a time convenient&#13;
to its engineers.&#13;
It was, a 21 students -- two&#13;
regular engineering science&#13;
students and 19 Dynamatic&#13;
employees - signed up. It was&#13;
agreed that Dynamatic would&#13;
pay the tuition for its employees&#13;
upon successful competion of the&#13;
course.&#13;
The reaction was so favorable&#13;
that Parkside took a second&#13;
course to Dynamatic last year,&#13;
"Theory and Operation of&#13;
Computing Machines."&#13;
Discussion this year centered&#13;
on the desirability for an accounting&#13;
course geared to the&#13;
special needs of engineers and, as&#13;
might be expected, "Accounting&#13;
for Engineers" was the result. It&#13;
is being taught by Claude Renshaw,&#13;
a management science&#13;
faculty member, who explains&#13;
that the course combines&#13;
beginning, managerial and cost&#13;
accounting but emphasizes the&#13;
decision making aspects of accounting&#13;
rather than nuts and&#13;
bolts procedures involving debits&#13;
and credits.&#13;
The 27 engineers who enrolled&#13;
particularly like the convenient&#13;
scheduling. The 3 to 5:45 time slot&#13;
on Fridays means that half the&#13;
three-credit course is taken on&#13;
company time and meets just&#13;
once a week.&#13;
William A. Moy, dean of the&#13;
School of Modern Industry, said&#13;
Parkside can offer such special&#13;
courses for industry under a&#13;
"special topics" category&#13;
provided they meet two basic&#13;
Haack withdraws&#13;
resignation&#13;
after vote&#13;
of confidence&#13;
At the PSGA meeting called&#13;
last Thursday to consider&#13;
resignations, Tom Haack,&#13;
president, withdrew his&#13;
resignation pending a vote of&#13;
confidence. The vote received&#13;
was 9-1, in Haack's favor.&#13;
Haack's resignation was not&#13;
"effective immediately," as all&#13;
resignations must come before&#13;
the PSGA for consideration and&#13;
approval.&#13;
The only other resignation&#13;
under consideration was that of&#13;
Laurie A. Thompsen, senator,&#13;
which was read and approved.&#13;
LIFETIME LEARNING - For the third straight year,&#13;
Dynamat i c i s serving as an outreach campus under the&#13;
watchful eye of Chief Engineer Ralph Jaeschke (left).&#13;
This semester the Dynamat i c engineers are taking a&#13;
specialized accounting course geared to their needs.&#13;
With Jaeschke, who was instrumental in establishing&#13;
the program in 1970, are (from left) UW-P's Claude&#13;
Renshaw, who teaches the course , Anthony Amort, a&#13;
computer analys t , and Richard Derks, a mechanical&#13;
engineer.&#13;
requirements: that they are&#13;
broad enough to justify inclusion&#13;
in the university's academic&#13;
curriculum, and are of interest&#13;
and available to Parkside's&#13;
regular degree-candidate&#13;
students.&#13;
Renshaw said three regular&#13;
Parkside students are enrolled in&#13;
the current course at Dynamatic&#13;
and find that the classroom interaction&#13;
with practicing,&#13;
professional engineers is an&#13;
enriching experience in itself.&#13;
Another course in the regular&#13;
UW-P curriculum, "Reading&#13;
Improvement," is being offered&#13;
in Racine for the third consecutive&#13;
year for members of the&#13;
Manufacturer's Association of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Moy said such courses are the&#13;
result of increasingly closer ties&#13;
between Parkside and local&#13;
companies, many of whom are&#13;
paying tuition for employees&#13;
taking job-related courses on the&#13;
Parkside campus. He said&#13;
Parkside staff are exploring&#13;
additional opportunities to&#13;
provide on-thespot courses and&#13;
urged any company interested in&#13;
such a program to contact him.&#13;
In addition to course offerings,&#13;
Parkside has established student&#13;
intern programs with American&#13;
Motors and Anaconda American&#13;
Brass.&#13;
A number of Parkside faculty&#13;
have volunteered to provide&#13;
service to business, industry and&#13;
governmental units and a&#13;
directory listing their areas of&#13;
expertise has been distributed to&#13;
about 1,200 firms in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and is available from&#13;
the Public Information Office.&#13;
The new heating and chilling&#13;
plant well into its first heating&#13;
season, is getting high marks as a&#13;
virtually pollution-free facility&#13;
from state engineers.&#13;
"One of the cleanest plants in&#13;
the state," is their verdict.&#13;
The current energy crisis,&#13;
which has resulted in the heating&#13;
system being switched from its&#13;
primary natural gas fuel to a&#13;
back-up of light blended oil fuel&#13;
more frequently than was anticipated,&#13;
has not significantly&#13;
affected efficiency of the&#13;
operation, according to Roger&#13;
Allen, director of the physical&#13;
plant at Parkside, and Norman&#13;
Madsen, power plant superintendent.&#13;
In response to a request from&#13;
Gove. Patrick Lucey, the temperature&#13;
in all campus buildings&#13;
also has been reduced to 68&#13;
degrees with additional cuts on&#13;
evenings and week-ends to&#13;
conserve fuel. Under nonemergency&#13;
conditions a 72 degree&#13;
temperature is maintained.&#13;
The fuel system and burners in&#13;
the plant, which went into&#13;
operation this fall serving all&#13;
buildings in the central academic&#13;
complex at Parkside, exceed&#13;
federal standards for air&#13;
pollution control, according to&#13;
James Galbraith, director of&#13;
planning and construction.&#13;
Natural gas and light oil are the&#13;
fuels least likely to offend with&#13;
pollutants and the combination of&#13;
equipment, high operating&#13;
standards and fuels used in the&#13;
new plant make it one of the&#13;
cleanest in the state, Galbraith&#13;
added.&#13;
"If you see something coming&#13;
out of our flues, it's water vapor,&#13;
visible because of atmospheric&#13;
conditions," said Madsen.&#13;
The plant has a total high&#13;
pressure steam generation&#13;
capability of 136,000 pounds per&#13;
hour, produced by two 60,000&#13;
pound per hour boilers and two&#13;
8,000 pound per hour boilers. The&#13;
boilers are used in various&#13;
combinations to most efficiently&#13;
maintain the temperatures&#13;
required. At the normal 72 degree&#13;
operating temperature thte&#13;
system uses 200 gallons of fuel oil&#13;
per hour on a 20 to 25 degree day.&#13;
Water used in the heating&#13;
process, like that in the companion&#13;
chilling operation, is&#13;
recycled through an underground&#13;
tunnel system that liks the plant&#13;
with the major academic&#13;
buildings. About 92 percent of&#13;
water in the heating system is&#13;
recycled.&#13;
Galbraith pointed out that&#13;
recycling of water used in both&#13;
the heating and chilling&#13;
operations is an important&#13;
contribution to the conservation&#13;
of natural resources. In some&#13;
areas of the country, he said,&#13;
massive, one-time-only use of&#13;
water-particularly for air&#13;
conditioning-has resulted in the&#13;
lowering of water tables.&#13;
Checks are also made with&#13;
each change of shift on water&#13;
circulating in the boiler system&#13;
and samples are analyzed in a&#13;
small laboratory at the plant, to&#13;
determine the presence of any of&#13;
several minerals or dissolved&#13;
gasses which could harm the&#13;
heating system.&#13;
(continued on page 5)&#13;
Norman Madsen, power plant superintendent, left,&#13;
and Roger Allen, physical plant director , inspect controls&#13;
which monitor operation of one of the 60,000 pound&#13;
per hour boilers which heats buildings in the central&#13;
academic complex&#13;
2nd semester enrollment up 5%&#13;
Tom Haack&#13;
Second semester enrollment is&#13;
up five percent over last year at&#13;
this time, continuing the new&#13;
campus' growth pattern in the&#13;
face of generally stabilizing&#13;
enrollment trends elsewhere.&#13;
A total of 4,143 students&#13;
enrolled second semester, 199&#13;
more than the 3,944 last winter.&#13;
Although system-wide&#13;
enrollment for all 13 degreegranting&#13;
UW campuses is not yet&#13;
available, Parkside's increase is&#13;
expected to be one of the&#13;
greatest. At least two campuses,&#13;
UW-Platteville and UWWhitewater,&#13;
have announced&#13;
enrollment drops from second&#13;
semester last year.&#13;
Higher retention is also encouraging&#13;
to UW-P officials. The&#13;
usual decline in enrollment from&#13;
first to second semester was only&#13;
five percent (223 students)&#13;
compared to nine percent (399&#13;
students) the year before.&#13;
Parkside has remained in a&#13;
growth situation despite a state&#13;
and national trend downward in&#13;
the rate of increase. Parkside&#13;
was one of only five of the 13 UW&#13;
campuses to show fall enrollment&#13;
increases for the past two years&#13;
and one of six projected to increase&#13;
again next fall.&#13;
Longer range projections show&#13;
Parkside increasing 34 percent in&#13;
the next 10 years, from last fall's&#13;
4,366 to 5,857 in 1982. That is the&#13;
largest percentage increase&#13;
projected for any campus in the&#13;
UW System, and the absolute&#13;
increase of 1,491 students is&#13;
second only to UW-Milwaukee's&#13;
gain of 4,547. The System is expected&#13;
to increase 4 percent&#13;
during that period although&#13;
several campuses are slated for&#13;
drops.&#13;
Parkside currently has more&#13;
undergraduate students than&#13;
Green Bay, Platteville, River&#13;
Falls and Superior, and is&#13;
projected to pass Stout and&#13;
LaCrosse by 1982. Last fall's&#13;
enrollment compared with that&#13;
projected for 1982 (including&#13;
graduate students except at UWP&#13;
and Green Bay; by campus is:&#13;
Parkside, 4,366-5,857; Eau&#13;
Claire, 8,701-8, 791; Green Bay,&#13;
3,625-4, 789; LaCrosse, 6,785-6,&#13;
123; Madison, 34,866-35,350;&#13;
Milwaukee, 23,293-27, 840;&#13;
Oshkosh, 11,312-11,569; Platteville,&#13;
4,345-4,222; River Falls,&#13;
3,933-3,531; Stevens Point, 8,701-&#13;
8,055;Stout, 5,245-5,131; Superior,&#13;
2,836-2,897; Whitewater, 8,410-&#13;
7,729.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANKER Wed. , Feb. 28, 1973&#13;
^ The ParkskJe —&#13;
GRANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion-&#13;
Another group of high school&#13;
students yawned and sniffled&#13;
their way through ACT tests last&#13;
Saturday. I'm sure Parksiders&#13;
hope that most of those students&#13;
will join us next year. That may&#13;
happen, but that wasn't the only&#13;
interesting thing that has happened&#13;
in the past week.&#13;
Although PSGA's Winter&#13;
Carnival didn't have an overwhelming&#13;
number of participants&#13;
in its games, those who did&#13;
participate seemed generally&#13;
pleased and with a little more&#13;
effort, next time it should work a&#13;
little better. Jim Rea, PSGA&#13;
Treasurer and committee&#13;
chairman, deserves a lot of&#13;
thanks for the work he did to try&#13;
to make it a success.&#13;
A party was held on behalf of&#13;
the basketball team last&#13;
Tuesday. The social affair was&#13;
held in Tallent Hall and Shirley&#13;
Schmerling, Auxiliary Enterprises,&#13;
was the hosteds of quite&#13;
a successful venture. Staff and&#13;
faculty paid a dollar a head to&#13;
hear the Parkside Stage Band&#13;
play some swinging music and be&#13;
able to fill their beer glasses at&#13;
will. The idea originated with&#13;
Charles Kugel, Gifted Students&#13;
Program, and rolled to success&#13;
from there. The planners of that&#13;
party hope to make it an annual&#13;
affair.&#13;
Off the social scene and into&#13;
politics, the Faculty Senate, last&#13;
week, voted to oust Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie from his usual role of&#13;
chairman of the meeting. The&#13;
faculty have appointed their own&#13;
and only time will tell what affect&#13;
the Chancellor's new ex-officio&#13;
and non-voting status will be. He&#13;
still has ultimate veto power and&#13;
noy he simply won't have as&#13;
much direct input into the group&#13;
as usual.&#13;
Enough said about last week&#13;
until next week.&#13;
Tom Haack is still the President of the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. At the Senate meeting held last Thursday he first&#13;
withdrew his resignation and then received a nearly unanimous vote&#13;
of confidence (8-1).&#13;
Haack, who stated that he was not receiving the cooperation he&#13;
would like, which was evidenced by the heavy number of resignations&#13;
and the absence of certain senators who did not even attend the&#13;
meeting, suggested the establishment of some typeof executive board&#13;
to assist him. This motion passed unanimously.&#13;
President of the Student Government Association is a very wearying&#13;
job. It seems after a time that every organization on campus requires&#13;
that the President be present at all their meetings if the student body&#13;
is to be given any input to the situation at all.&#13;
However, the President of PSGA cannot possibly be present at all&#13;
meetings that require his attendance, and due to the silly way many&#13;
committees are organized, he cannot send a proxy to vote in his place.&#13;
One such committee is Campus Concerns.&#13;
One man cannot possibly do it all. He needs help. He needs people&#13;
who are willing to pitch in and get things done. If he tries to do it&#13;
himself, take it all on, he can only fail. We need a strong, working&#13;
person in the office of president, yes, but we also need strong, willing&#13;
people to help him in the Senate.&#13;
This is the last issue of the paper prior to elections. There will be no&#13;
opportunity to publish candidate platforms. Publicity for candidates is&#13;
being arranged through the elections committee and will appear this&#13;
week in the form of a rap sheet.&#13;
I still hope that we can achieve a large voter turn out. But, no matter&#13;
how many people vote, 100 percent or only 10 percent, the people you&#13;
elect will be there to serve you. What they do might not agree with&#13;
your own opinions or even with the opinions of a majority of the people,&#13;
but they are your representatives and will serve you.&#13;
It is up to you to see that the best people are chosen for the job. You&#13;
vote is as important as anyone elses. If you don't believ.e your opinion&#13;
is worth anything then don't vote. More than 84 percent of the student&#13;
body last Fall had opinions that weren't worth anything - they didn't&#13;
vote.&#13;
Whoever is in charge of setting the clocks on campus is failing badly.&#13;
Once again Parkside is operating three minutes behind the rest of thw&#13;
the world.&#13;
Why can't the lower level doors to the library be kept open longer&#13;
hours? At the very least they should be kept open from eight to five.&#13;
Why can't a bulletin board be set up in a conspicuous place and be&#13;
used by student organizations only. A four-sided one right in the&#13;
middle of Greenquist concourse would really be nice.&#13;
EDITORS&#13;
NOTEBOOK&#13;
By Rudy Lienau&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View-&#13;
Loop Road traffic&#13;
could lead to tragedy&#13;
The Loop Road is becoming busier every day with&#13;
persons being picked up and dropped off at various&#13;
points by private vehicles and, of course, the shuttle&#13;
buses.&#13;
The usage of the Loop in this busy manner has made&#13;
pedestrian use dangerous and it should stop.&#13;
A sufficient walk-way exists and should be used. It&#13;
would be helpful if there were fewer puddles though.&#13;
Near misses have occurred on the Loop and we hope it&#13;
doesn't take a tragedy for Parksiders to realize the&#13;
danger.&#13;
THORN&#13;
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by Gary Huck&#13;
By Konkoi&#13;
^ Parkside-&#13;
GRANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Librarv-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
WRITERS: Ken Konkioi, Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert , Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah Rit.&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmussen, Terri Gogola, Geoff Blaesing "eimut Kah, Bill .&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck, Bob Rohan, Amy Cundari&#13;
^I°°™PHERS: Ke n Konkol, Bill Noll, Dennis Doonan, Grea Syston =5I^,,F,Fred&#13;
f,, REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING RY ^&#13;
Nitiontl Educational Advertising Services, Inc. y&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. i\ 10017 I&#13;
Wed./ F eb. 28, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Winter Carnival results announced&#13;
The results of the Winter&#13;
Carnival events are as follows:&#13;
Tapper Contest; 1) Mike Zanotti&#13;
32.0 sec. 2) George Bodren 24.8&#13;
sec., 3) Tom Hughes 16.0 sec.&#13;
Cherry Pie Eating Contest; 1)&#13;
Dale Martin (Sigma Pi), 2) tie&#13;
Larry Block and Greg Baker&#13;
(both Sigma Pi). Longest Kiss&#13;
Contest; 1) Jim Maderra and&#13;
Diane Mulvey 1 hr. 35 min., 2)&#13;
WANTED:&#13;
Frank Szarzynski and Kris Lowis&#13;
3) Walt Shirer and Rita Petretti&#13;
(Sigma Pi). Beer Dunk; 1)&#13;
Randy Franke 2 min. 31.3 sec., 2)&#13;
Larry Block (Sigma Pi) 2:20.7, 3)&#13;
Mike Miller (bartenders) (Sigma&#13;
Pi) 2:17.1. Over all results: 1)&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity 27. 2) Vet's&#13;
Club 18, 3) Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
Fraternity 4.&#13;
Group event results: Intramural&#13;
Swim Meet; 1) Sigma&#13;
Pi, 2) Rugby Club, no third place.&#13;
Broomball Vets 3 Sigma Pi 1.&#13;
Dogsled Race; Vets won the 250&#13;
yd. course by 10 yds. over Sigma&#13;
Pi. However, the judges thought&#13;
the Sigma Pi sled was more&#13;
realistic. Cheer Contest was&#13;
messed up due to errors on the&#13;
posters. Points were divided&#13;
equally with Alpha Kappa&#13;
Lambda and Vets tied for first,&#13;
and Sigma Pi second.&#13;
Alice in Dairyland&#13;
WANTED: Unmarried women&#13;
between 19 and 25 years of age,&#13;
with pride in her appearance, a&#13;
pleasing personality, and ability&#13;
to speak effectively. Must have&#13;
been a Wisconsin resident for at&#13;
least one year, and be willing to&#13;
devote a year of time to state&#13;
service. Salary $7500 plus tra el&#13;
expenses.&#13;
Successful applicant will&#13;
become one of Wisconsin's best&#13;
known young women, experienced&#13;
in all phases of&#13;
marketing and public relations.&#13;
She will also become a&#13;
professional communicator and&#13;
polished speaker, adept in&#13;
making TV and radio appearances.&#13;
She will familiarize&#13;
herself with Wisconsin's internationally&#13;
famous food industry,&#13;
and tell its story&#13;
throughout the state and nation.&#13;
As a full time civil service employee&#13;
of the Wisconsin Department&#13;
of Agriculture, she will&#13;
work closely with staff personnel&#13;
in implementing innovative&#13;
promotional programs. She will&#13;
also be Wisconsin's official&#13;
hostess at many state and&#13;
national functions. The job&#13;
provides experiences in a broad&#13;
spectrum of human relations by&#13;
meeting and working with&#13;
children, youth groups,&#13;
agricultural, business and civic&#13;
leaders, and national celebrities.&#13;
Interview dates and sites are:&#13;
Saturday, March 31 in Milwaukee&#13;
and Eau Claire, and Saturday&#13;
April 7 in Madison and Green&#13;
Bay. For further information&#13;
contact: Wisconsin Dept. of&#13;
Agriculture, Marketing Division,&#13;
801 W. Badger Rd., Madison,&#13;
53713.&#13;
Ranger interviewed the&#13;
current holder of the above job,&#13;
whose official title is "Alice in&#13;
Dairyland." "Alice" has been&#13;
visiting Wisconsin college to&#13;
leave applications for the&#13;
position, and she discussed her&#13;
impressions of the job to clarify&#13;
for any interested Parkside&#13;
students just what its all about.&#13;
"Its not a beauty contest," she&#13;
was quick to point out. There is no&#13;
swimsuit or talent competition.&#13;
The job itself is demanding and&#13;
the girl has to know what she is&#13;
talking about. They choose her&#13;
based on interviews and then&#13;
train her.&#13;
The interviews cover such&#13;
questions as what you have been&#13;
doing, why you entered the&#13;
contest and what you think of&#13;
women's liberation. In the finals&#13;
of the contest the girls spend&#13;
three days with the judges so they&#13;
can get to know each as a person,&#13;
and also to test how each holds up&#13;
under pressure.&#13;
Once selected, a woman&#13;
doesn't have to worry about being&#13;
molded to fit an image. Each&#13;
year's "Alice" is different in&#13;
more than just superficial appearances.&#13;
And she writes her&#13;
own speeches, which are not&#13;
edited by someone else before she&#13;
delivers them.&#13;
Each year Alice in Dairyland&#13;
travels out of state at least ten&#13;
times to promote Wisconsin&#13;
products. She often does TV&#13;
appearances, ranging from&#13;
children's shows to educational&#13;
television to consumer shows.&#13;
"Alice" gets about sixty hours of&#13;
media time in a year, and can&#13;
often get college credit in&#13;
Communications by writing of&#13;
her experiences.&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Women unite! This is to inform&#13;
Parkside people of what happened&#13;
at the organizational&#13;
session of the "United Women&#13;
Students of Wisconsin" in&#13;
Whitewater Feb. 17. The women&#13;
students attending found a&#13;
positive group working to create&#13;
a network of vitally interested&#13;
women, represented by their own&#13;
women's organization on each&#13;
campus.&#13;
The establishment of the&#13;
Women's Information Center&#13;
with headquarters at UW-&#13;
. Whitewater was unanimously&#13;
approved. All campuses will be&#13;
supplying much needed information&#13;
to the Center, which&#13;
will distribute it to others on&#13;
request. The Center will provide&#13;
source material on financial aids,&#13;
women and the law, women in&#13;
minorities and much more.&#13;
The main emphasis of&#13;
discussion was the appalling lack&#13;
of a central location at most&#13;
campuses for women to have the&#13;
opportunity to educate themselves&#13;
about their own concerns&#13;
and interests. This glaring information&#13;
gap seems to be the&#13;
root of many women students'&#13;
anxieties about their own&#13;
e d u c a t i o n a l p r o g r ams&#13;
realistically supporting them&#13;
upon entering the larger society.&#13;
The needs of women which were&#13;
discussed include realistic career&#13;
counseling, guidance concerning&#13;
contraceptives and abortions,&#13;
and discrimination in athletic&#13;
funding.&#13;
The Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
was well represented at the&#13;
meeting, and gained valuable&#13;
ideas for our Women's Day&#13;
program. Our own Jean Koehler&#13;
will be introducing the agenda for&#13;
the next session on March 17 at&#13;
Stevens Point. It will include such&#13;
items as rape, health services,&#13;
interracial relations, and child&#13;
care. Interested women are&#13;
urged to contact a member of the&#13;
Women's Caucus or it's advisor,&#13;
counselor Wendy Musich.&#13;
Phyllis Lindberg&#13;
Racine Junior&#13;
the&#13;
Movemenl&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement is a regular feature in the Ranger&#13;
dealing with women's concerns at Parkside and in society in general.&#13;
Guest writers are invited.&#13;
by Marcia Schwartz&#13;
On June 30, 1966, 28 women met in Washington, D.C. and formed&#13;
N.O.W., the National Organization of Women.&#13;
The purpose of N.O.W., as avowed in their Statement of P urpose is&#13;
"to take action to bring women into full participation in the mainstream&#13;
of American society, exercising all the privileges and&#13;
responsibilities thereof in truly equal partnership with men.&#13;
It is, in effect, a civil rights organization for women which initiates&#13;
or supports actions which will end discrimination against women in&#13;
every field of importance in our society.&#13;
N.O.W. further realizes that women's problems are indivisibly&#13;
linked to many broader questions of social justice and supports equal&#13;
rights for all who suffer discrimination and deprivation."&#13;
N.O.W. is dedicated to a "full revolution for human rights and to&#13;
making this world a humane place in which to live."&#13;
More specifically, N.O.W. is concerned with ten basic rights. They&#13;
are: * jg oiuc&#13;
1. Equal Rights Constitutional Amendment&#13;
2. Enforce Law Banning Sex Discrimination in Employment&#13;
3. Maternity Leave Rights in Employment and Social Security&#13;
Benefits&#13;
4. Tax Deduction for Home and Child Care Expenses for Working&#13;
Parents&#13;
5. Child Care Centers&#13;
6. Elimination of Discrimination in Education&#13;
7. Anti-Poverty Measures Which Protect Human Dignity&#13;
8. The Right of Women to Control Their Reproductive Lives&#13;
9. Equal Access to Public Accommodations and Housing&#13;
10. Partnership Marriages of Equalized Rights and Shared&#13;
Responsibilities&#13;
On Jan. 17, 1973, N.O.W. finally came to Kenosha. A local chapter&#13;
has been formed and is eagerly accepting members.&#13;
The local group provides information about and supports national&#13;
actions of N.O.W. and is further concerned with the problems of&#13;
women locally.&#13;
Some of the task forces being formed now will deal with&#13;
discrimination against women at the Kenosha Youth Foundation,&#13;
unfair hiring practices of the local newspapers, sexism in our local&#13;
schools, formation of more Child Care Centers, petitions supporting&#13;
the Equal Rights Amendment in the state constitution, local university&#13;
discrimination and more, in the fields of poverty, taxes, volunteerism,&#13;
politics and marriage and divorce laws.&#13;
The local chapter also provides weekly consciousness-raising rap&#13;
sessions at members' homes to increase their trust in each other and&#13;
to awaken in them a full awareness of their roles in American society.&#13;
For further information about the Kenosha N.O.W., or how to join,&#13;
contact: Bonnie Stelnicki, President, at 652-8184 or Barbara Phillips,&#13;
Membership, at 551-9330.&#13;
Woodwind quartet performs&#13;
The Wingra Woodwind Quintet&#13;
of UW-Madison, and Richard&#13;
Blum, violist, will be in concert&#13;
this Sunday, March 4, at 3 p.m. in&#13;
Gr. 103. General admission $2,&#13;
student and staff $1, and under 12&#13;
free.&#13;
The Cartoon Strip&#13;
The distinguished quintet wil&#13;
perform "Trio Sonata in C" by J&#13;
J. Quanta, "Three Pieces" b}&#13;
Walter Piston, "Quartet" b]&#13;
Alvin Etler, "Pieces en Trio" b}&#13;
Jacques Ibert, and "Quattor" b;&#13;
Jean Francaix.&#13;
by Bob Rohan&#13;
I NgvER NEEOEO NO foU CATioN1.!!&#13;
m SSwe -me east wing of ms&#13;
crnese 1n im t* heao man!!&#13;
DA BiG CHEE SE!.'&#13;
I QUIT S CHOOL APlER VHRO &amp;&amp;Ve N&#13;
WENT To WOR K! Meooy ewe ME&#13;
Nomi'N'-l I EARNED IT! »IMpuJTM&#13;
gUii-PlM W ENTIRE EAST WWfi&#13;
OF OlS HERE C OLLEGE!!!! '&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Feb. 28 , 1973&#13;
'Summer of '42'&#13;
here Friday,&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Although a misty, lonely beach&#13;
on a summer colony-island, a&#13;
man walks slowly among the&#13;
sandpipers. On this solitary&#13;
morning stroll, he relives a&#13;
summer on the island, the&#13;
summer of 1942. He was 15, a boy&#13;
named Hermie, on the threshold&#13;
of mahood.&#13;
Thus begins "Summer of '42,"&#13;
a nostalgic excursion for some&#13;
and an open door to a generation&#13;
ago for others. But for everyone,&#13;
it is a simple human comedy with&#13;
a timeless feeling. It's as true&#13;
today as it was in '42, as it will be&#13;
tomorrow. Only the calendar&#13;
changes.&#13;
The story is one of g rowing up,&#13;
of three boys spending the&#13;
summer with their families on&#13;
the island, of their adolescent&#13;
yearnings and fumblings, their&#13;
hesitant forays into the mysteries&#13;
of the opposite sex.&#13;
The film stars Jennifer O'Neill,&#13;
Gary Grimes, Jerry Houser, and&#13;
Oliver Conant, and will be shown&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
in the Student Activities Building&#13;
on Friday, March 2 at 8 p.m. and&#13;
again Sunday, March 4 at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Admission is 75 cents and&#13;
Wisconsin and Parkside I.D.s are&#13;
required.&#13;
Big Sur poet&#13;
reads here today&#13;
Big Sur poet Ric Masten will&#13;
present his own particular&#13;
version of a poetry reading,&#13;
which includes guitar backing for&#13;
some of his own poetry, at l:3ol&#13;
p.m. today in the second floor&#13;
library lounge.&#13;
The program is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Poetry Forum and&#13;
is open free to the public.&#13;
Since 1968, Masten has given&#13;
readings and concerts in more&#13;
than 400 colleges and universities&#13;
in 46 states, Canada and England,&#13;
traveling under the auspices of&#13;
the Unitarian Universalist&#13;
Association.&#13;
Masten, who says he writes his&#13;
poetry to be heard rather than&#13;
read, has written on a myriad of&#13;
subjects and selects his readings&#13;
on the spot, editing as he goes&#13;
along.&#13;
College M en&#13;
PART TIME&#13;
WORK&#13;
Call 5 52-8355&#13;
1yI*V * FOR&#13;
1 * * INCUMBENT&#13;
0;: W * ¥&#13;
14TH WARD ALDERMAN&#13;
¥ ¥&#13;
• ¥ ¥ MICHAEL&#13;
fr v¥ ¥ BALTES&#13;
fc ¥ ¥ Paid for by M. Baltes&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
THE GRAND WAZOO&#13;
Frank Zappa &amp; The Mothers&#13;
(Bizarre M.S. 2093)&#13;
Generally speaking, one would probably have to be under 16 or over&#13;
19 to become attracted to the sounds of the Mothers. The Mothers don't&#13;
supply the violent force necessary to satisfy pure hard rock addicts. I&#13;
remember myself thinking, about 2Vz years ago, that I would only&#13;
allow my ears to receive hard rock vibrations. I thought the only instruments&#13;
permissable were guitars, bass, and drums. But then I&#13;
remembered all the mind-expanding music from a few years prior,&#13;
that included horns and violins and all sorts of taboo stuff for hard&#13;
rock. And then along came a dude named Paul Kanter with a&#13;
STARSHIP, who proved that without a doubt, it doesn't have to be&#13;
hard to be heavy. So along with that and my Parkside education my&#13;
mind became liberated, which left me free to explore any type of&#13;
anything. That didn't mean goodbye to hard vibes; hard vibes when&#13;
produced in a right manner are still to me the most desirable. But hard&#13;
rock is worn and faded from countless mediocre attempts, except for&#13;
obvious dexterous survivors.&#13;
How does this fit in with Frank Zappa? Maybe it doesn't and maybe&#13;
I'm wasting your time on an ill-founded ego-trip. But Frank Zappa&#13;
sent the message via alpha brain waves. He told me that's the way it&#13;
should be.&#13;
Frank is very proud of his new album. He is very proud of his tale&#13;
about "Calvin" who picks up hitch-hikers. This is a mysterious&#13;
sounding zanyness. Please note special percussion effects during one&#13;
break followed by grunts and moans from horns. I still haven't figured&#13;
out what "Calvin" does with the hitch-hikers he picks up.&#13;
Behold "THE GRAND WAZOO". a carefree type of levitated insanity.&#13;
Another big band composition which is crazy, but not smashing&#13;
or driving. With the right mood it is extremely enjoyable. Special spots&#13;
are reserved for Frank's funky guitar solos.&#13;
The B side is generally in the same vein, but not quite as impressive.&#13;
"Cletus Awreetus &amp; Calvin" has some familiar Mother's lunatic&#13;
verbal passages. "Cletus" also has a wild barroom piano from a&#13;
western scene in there someplace. The parting number, "Blessed&#13;
Relief", is a little too mellow and casual to hold any attention.&#13;
THE GRAND WAZOO features free-floating insanity. It is silly. If&#13;
you are a strict hard rock lover and you find that a copy of THE&#13;
GRAND WAZOO has somehow mysteriously appeared in your hands,&#13;
remember not to listen to it superfically. You must become absorbed.&#13;
If you find yourself enjoying it like I do, there may be no hopes.&#13;
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT A SALES&#13;
CAREER ... and afraid to ask. Get the facts about Prudential's&#13;
job preview program — the first step toward a growth&#13;
career in sales and sales management. Part-time while&#13;
obtaining your degree; full-time upon graduation. Immediate&#13;
openings in Racine and Kenosha. Phone Mr. Cohen,&#13;
633-2427 in Racine. Equal opportunity - M-F.&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
IjiJTIES BOARD&#13;
im SERIES&#13;
In everyone's life there's a&#13;
SUMMER OF '42&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Parkside8. Wise. I .D. ' srequired&#13;
Fri .-Mar. 2-8:00p.m.&#13;
Sun. - Mar. 4-7:30p.m.&#13;
e d Adm.75c&#13;
Audio-Visual Review&#13;
i 'A&#13;
America: Sick or Solvent&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
"America: Sick or Solvent?", a cassette tape, is an interview with&#13;
four young people.&#13;
The interview was conducted by Edwin Newman, whom I find&#13;
somewhat abrasive. I do not believe that he thought the young adults&#13;
he was interviewing were capable of adhering to the subject at hand,&#13;
or of following clear lines of thought. He frequently prompted and&#13;
guided them when it may not have been necessary. This made the&#13;
recording difficult to listen to at times, primarily because it interrupted&#13;
the flow of the conversation, and sometimes obscured the&#13;
main points of what had been said.&#13;
An attempt must have been made to include a cross section of&#13;
American youth, as the group included a woman and a Black militant,&#13;
as well as a "hippie." All of these people share one thing: they are&#13;
young. After that, they only seemed concerned about the problems&#13;
which have most directly affected them. This is natural, but it lent to&#13;
the tape the air of a gripe session.&#13;
Although the young woman opened the interview, she was not&#13;
particularly outspoken. This often happens when a group consists of&#13;
one woman and several men. For some reason the men tend to&#13;
dominate the discussion. The fact that she was given the "ladies first"&#13;
treatment by Newman bothered me a bit. It seemed to suggest "O.K.,&#13;
little girl, say it now, and then don't bother us."&#13;
The Black man was the most articulate; unfortunately, he was also&#13;
the most bitter. At every opportunity presented him, he began to rant&#13;
about oppression. He seemed too negative. I'm inclined to believe that&#13;
he hates White people in general, and hate will never be the answer to&#13;
our racial problems.&#13;
The other two young men hardly impressed me with anything other&#13;
than the fact that they were griping about something.&#13;
I think that I have reached the point where I am tired of l istening to&#13;
what is wrong with everything around me. After awhile the griping&#13;
becomes monotonous, and depressing. Innovation and change are the&#13;
things to stress after the grievances have been aired.&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record C enter&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
RAC INE 553-2150&#13;
TIEACHERt&#13;
"Washington Square"&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant 6208 Green Bay Road&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
Wednesday Night Square Dance &amp; Polka to:&#13;
&amp; BILL &amp;&#13;
Friday &amp; S aturday Nights:&#13;
GLEN BENSON &amp; THE COUNTRY&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'LUNCH&#13;
PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
Mon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
^89 $-|59&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'FISH FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed. &amp; Fri. r1Qq&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'SUPPER&#13;
PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-JO'S A&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues. j .gg q CHICKEN&#13;
^e S £ w MO-JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Your favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
Wed., Feb. 28/ 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Com Arts Bldg. set for May completion Heating-chilling&#13;
Professor named to plant&#13;
historians' committee&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
Slated for completion in the&#13;
latter part of May is the Communication&#13;
Arts Building,&#13;
located off the southwest corner&#13;
of the Library Learning Center.&#13;
The building, bid at a construction&#13;
cost of $3.6 million, has&#13;
as general contractor, Korndorfer&#13;
Construction of Racine.&#13;
The go-ahead for construction&#13;
was given the eighth of Aug 1971,&#13;
and has as the scheduled completion&#13;
date the thirty-first of&#13;
January, this year. However, due&#13;
to early inclement weather, the&#13;
construction hit snags and fell&#13;
behind schedule.&#13;
The building, which is slated to&#13;
be primarily a humanities&#13;
facilty, has high emphasis on the&#13;
art and music fields. In addition&#13;
to a number of regular —&#13;
multipurpose classrooms, the R00H&#13;
building houses facilities for&#13;
special lecture rooms, audiovisual&#13;
and art laboratories.&#13;
A main feature of the building&#13;
is the 692 capacity auditorium&#13;
and theater. 492 of the seats exist&#13;
in the main theater section, the&#13;
first eight rows of which will have&#13;
the special side-folding type&#13;
armchair which will enable the&#13;
auditorium to be used as a large&#13;
lecture hall.&#13;
The theater will have a standard&#13;
20x40 p roscenium stage as&#13;
well as an ellipsoid thrust stage&#13;
which can be lowered to form an&#13;
orchestra pit. Adjoining the main&#13;
floor are a scene shop, a 40x50&#13;
studio theater for class work and&#13;
small or experimental productions,&#13;
and dressing rooms.&#13;
A more unique feature of the&#13;
auditorium is, however, the two&#13;
rear balconies which seat 100&#13;
people each. These can be used as&#13;
part of the theater, but can also&#13;
be enclosed by sliding screens&#13;
and used as intermediate size&#13;
lecture rooms. This seating&#13;
compares with the 106 and 226&#13;
person capacities of the lecture&#13;
halls in Greenquist.&#13;
The area between the two&#13;
balcony sections will house the&#13;
upper level foyer as well as the&#13;
projection and control room&#13;
which is an integral part of the&#13;
multi-purpose aspect of the&#13;
theater.&#13;
Other special aspects of the&#13;
building include auxiliary support&#13;
facilities for the Learning&#13;
Center. In this group are&#13;
specialized audio visual&#13;
production centers which include&#13;
film, sound and video tape&#13;
production studios. These will&#13;
provide the capability for&#13;
production of educational&#13;
filming.&#13;
Art studios include specialized&#13;
areas for drawing and painting,&#13;
graphics and printmaking,&#13;
textiles, ceramics, sculpture,&#13;
plastics, and welding. Music&#13;
studios include a large rehearsal&#13;
room for band, orchestra and&#13;
chorus plus individual and ensemble&#13;
practice rooms.&#13;
Language and speech&#13;
laboratories are also featured.&#13;
In addition to classrooms and&#13;
specialized facilities, the L2 level&#13;
of the building will have office&#13;
space for nearly fifty faculty as&#13;
well as the office for the Dean of&#13;
the College of Science and&#13;
Society.&#13;
RANGER'S thanks to James&#13;
Galbraith, Director of Planning&#13;
and Construction, who made the&#13;
facts on construction available.&#13;
Next week: The Classroom&#13;
Building.&#13;
Eshleman to speak here&#13;
Poet-translater-Editor Clayton&#13;
Eshleman will read from his new&#13;
book Coils at 8 p.m., Mon., Mar. 5&#13;
in the second floor library lounge.&#13;
This free program is sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Poetry Forum.&#13;
In connection with his Parkside&#13;
reading. An exhibit of his&#13;
writings will be on display in the&#13;
Library Special Collections&#13;
room.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
•- BOTH UNDER SAME OWNERSHIP —&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" • 12" - 14" - 1 6"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
• GNOCCHI . RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
. SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
"YOU RING&#13;
DELIVERY&#13;
WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 6th AVE.&#13;
^ ^ &lt;5&#13;
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j" &amp; j" &gt;*•&#13;
* A&gt; v\ 0&lt;&gt;&#13;
&lt;Y 4'4-&#13;
Thomas C. Reeves, associate&#13;
professor of history at Parkside,&#13;
has been appointed to the&#13;
program committee for the 1974&#13;
annual meeting of the&#13;
Organization of American&#13;
Historians to be held in April in&#13;
Denver.&#13;
Other members of the committee&#13;
include Profs. Clyde&#13;
Griffen of Vassar College,&#13;
Samuel F. Wells Jr. of the&#13;
University of North Carolina,&#13;
Richard Bushman of Boston&#13;
University, Joel Tarr of Carnegie-&#13;
Mellon University, Anne&#13;
Scott of Duke University and&#13;
Robert Kelley of the University of&#13;
California at Santa Barbara.&#13;
Reeves, who received his Ph.&#13;
D. at UC-Santa Barbara, joined&#13;
the Parkside faculty in 1970 after&#13;
four years at the University of&#13;
Colorado. He is an authority on&#13;
the life of President Chester A.&#13;
Arthur and the author or editor of&#13;
several books, including the&#13;
recently published, "Mc-&#13;
Carthyism," a book of readings&#13;
on the Wisconsin senator and the&#13;
movement which bears his name.&#13;
(continued from page 1)&#13;
All water coming into the&#13;
system from the Kenosha city&#13;
line is treated before it gets into&#13;
the boiler to remove calcium.&#13;
(Water that is perfectly all right&#13;
for human consumption may&#13;
disagree with a boiler, said&#13;
Madsen.) The water also is&#13;
treated to remove any excess&#13;
oxygen which might cause&#13;
corrosion.&#13;
Galbraith added that he is&#13;
pleased with the esthetic&#13;
qualities of the plant as well as&#13;
the quality of its operation. Built&#13;
at a total project cost of $3.5&#13;
million (including construction of&#13;
the underground distribution&#13;
system which carries heating,&#13;
chilling and electrical conduits),&#13;
the major portion of the structure&#13;
has gray glass walls on the north&#13;
and south exposures giving the&#13;
principal work area an open, airy&#13;
appearance totally unlike most&#13;
people's mental image of a&#13;
"boiler room."&#13;
The centralized utility system,&#13;
he concludes, is economical,&#13;
efficient, architecturally interesting-&#13;
and CLEAN.&#13;
isH orb vcS&#13;
WWiVWWWWM COUPON&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
50* OFF ON ANY&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
Expires&#13;
Mar. 7, 1973&#13;
BWWVWAWWW.V&#13;
ITALIAN FOOD A S PECIALTY&#13;
SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
DRINKS A VAILABLE F ROM THE BAR&#13;
COUPON"&#13;
MON.8.TUES. EVENING,5:00-8:00&#13;
W ry^hs: l/ i&#13;
(No matter how much of our pizza, chicken, potatoes&#13;
and salad you eat, the price is only $ 1.7 5)&#13;
Children under 3 Free — Children 3-9,10 Cents a Year&#13;
PIZZA FABL0B&amp;&#13;
ye PUBLIC house suurs Lathrop and 21 st (Almost)&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER W e d . , F e b . 2 8 , 197 3&#13;
The Ranger asks-— Should students have a say&#13;
in the hiring, firing and review of teachers?&#13;
Ruthann Olsen, Sophomore,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"Definitely, Well, they're our&#13;
instructors, we ought to have&#13;
some say as to who we have, and,&#13;
if they're any good and&#13;
evaluating them, stuff like that."&#13;
Ernie Lianas, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"Sure I think they should, like&#13;
they're paying all the tuition. I'd&#13;
like to think if your going to be&#13;
taught by someone I'd like to&#13;
think you'd have some say as to&#13;
who's going to be teaching you.&#13;
And I think too much emphasis is&#13;
placed on reasearch; not enough&#13;
on teaching itself."&#13;
Robin Strangberg, Senior,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"Yes, well how can Wyllie or&#13;
somebody judge a teacher if they&#13;
never sat in his class. I mean- the&#13;
students know the teacher; and&#13;
for firing how can a person that&#13;
isn't a student evaluate a&#13;
teacher."&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
Whiteskellar presents Ranger&#13;
cartoonist Bob Rohan singing&#13;
country folk on Thurs., March 1&#13;
from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. It's free, as&#13;
always.&#13;
There will be an open meeting&#13;
for all girls interested in forming&#13;
a sorority on campus Fri., Mar. 2&#13;
at 12 p.m. until 3 p.m.&#13;
Persons qualified to discuss&#13;
.what a sorority could mean for&#13;
the individual and for Parkside&#13;
will be present.&#13;
Come and find out, and bring&#13;
your friends.&#13;
The Nickelodean will present&#13;
three films today at 12:30 p.m.&#13;
Mae West stars in "I'm No&#13;
Angel", Rudolph Valentino in&#13;
"Idol of the Jazz Age" and&#13;
Charlie Chaplin in "The Tramp."&#13;
A new anthology of poetry&#13;
titled "The Broken Horn" has&#13;
been published by students of&#13;
Parkside. The book contains 36&#13;
poems by 19 students.&#13;
Co-editors are Freddie Lott of&#13;
Racine and Eric Olson of&#13;
Kenosha and art editor is Simeon&#13;
Lagodich of Kenosha. The&#13;
editorial staff includes Jan&#13;
Mazelis, William Usher,&#13;
Frederick Bultman, John&#13;
Stracke Jr., and Timothy Dumas,&#13;
all of Racine.&#13;
YOUNG DRIVERS W ELCOME&#13;
INSURANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS - CYCLES - SCOOTERS&#13;
All Forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Service&#13;
With The Better Co's&#13;
Fire - Life - Hospital - Boats&#13;
Packaqe Policipc&#13;
-DIAL nSF&#13;
5520 6th AVE. KENOSHA&#13;
Music students of Parkside will&#13;
present a free public concert at 8&#13;
p.m. on Wed., Feb. 28, in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room.&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Peggy&#13;
Simmer, Salem, and Edward&#13;
Munz, Kenosha, and instrumental&#13;
soloists will be Susan&#13;
Lasco, alto saxophone, Salem;&#13;
Mary Manulik, cello, Kenosha;&#13;
Richard DeLabio, xylophone,&#13;
Kenosha; and Marty Fettes,&#13;
cello, Racine.&#13;
Also programmed is a trumpet&#13;
. quartet composed of Tom Rome,&#13;
Burlington, Rick Smith,&#13;
Kenosha, Bob Desmarais,&#13;
Kenosha, and Barry Boettcher,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
meet Sun., March 4 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Student Activities Building.&#13;
"The Wizard of OZ," starring&#13;
Judy Garland will be shown&#13;
tonight at 7:30 in Gr. 103.&#13;
A beginners course in the&#13;
Chinese language will be offered&#13;
by University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Extension beginning Satu., Mar.&#13;
3. Emphasis will be given to&#13;
vocabulary building and oral&#13;
work through pronunciation,&#13;
reading aloud and conversation.&#13;
Each session will center on a&#13;
topic related to Chinese culture&#13;
and customs.&#13;
Mrs. Bessie Tang, instructor&#13;
for the course, has lived in Hong&#13;
Kong and Taiwan, and is&#13;
presently a librarian at Parkside.&#13;
The class will meet for 10&#13;
weeks on Saturdays at 10 a.m. at&#13;
the Parkside Wood Road Campus.&#13;
Registrations are being&#13;
taken by University Extension at&#13;
phone 553-2312.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
The Comedy of&#13;
EDMONDS&#13;
&amp;&#13;
CURLEY&#13;
Plus th e si nging o f T ony, Jumbo &amp; Garry&#13;
SATURDAY, MARCH 3&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Adm. $1.50&#13;
Parkside 8. Wise. I .D.'s required&#13;
VAIEOS&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Frti Delivery t e Pa rkside V illage&#13;
S021 SOth Avenue Rhone 6S7-S191&#13;
Jackie Mohammed, Sophomore,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"No I think faculty should know&#13;
really."&#13;
Paul Bussey, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"They should have a partial&#13;
say, but they shouldn't have&#13;
anything definite. I mean they&#13;
shouldn't make the final say so,&#13;
but should just have some consideration."&#13;
Editors' Note: These comments were also received but no&#13;
pictures were available due to technical difficulty.&#13;
Jim Lois, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"Students should have a say in&#13;
it because we're the ones that&#13;
have to put up with 'em. And who&#13;
has a better idea how good you're&#13;
learning something from a class&#13;
than if you're in it."&#13;
Pat Vcrnezze, Senior, Kenosha&#13;
"Yes, and why, because a lot of&#13;
these teachers are on tenure and&#13;
so there's no way of getting them&#13;
off. And who's suffering but it's&#13;
the kids. And the kids are the&#13;
ones that have to learn."&#13;
Sherry Nelson, Freshman,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"Yes, I don't know, it's hard to&#13;
say."&#13;
Mary Shamshoian, Senior,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"Yes, they're the ones that&#13;
have to sit and listen to them and&#13;
learn from them. So they might&#13;
as well have a say in who they&#13;
have to listen to. They're paying&#13;
for it."&#13;
Sturino SCTOOAPC HIta° lian Food&#13;
... Cocktails&#13;
1 543 22nd Avenue Phone 55 1-9999&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday th ru&#13;
Thursday 11-8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
Wed., Feb. 28/ 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
The Parkside- RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Track&#13;
Swim Club&#13;
TEAM PRACTICE&#13;
3:30-6:00&#13;
6:00-8:00&#13;
3:30-6:00&#13;
Dally&#13;
Daily&#13;
Daily&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday&#13;
Tuesday 8. Thursday 11:30-1:30&#13;
Friday 11:30- 2:30&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 11:30 - 3:30&#13;
Thursday 5:30 10:00&#13;
5:30-7:00&#13;
Saturday 9:00 •10:00&#13;
Sunday 10:00-5:00&#13;
1:30-10:00&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
• 10:30 1:30 (2 courts open)&#13;
3:30 - 6:0 0 (1 court open)&#13;
.6:00 -10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
Saturday except Tuesday 8. Thursday closed from 10:30 - 12:00 for classes&#13;
Sunday ' 8:00-5:00&#13;
• 1:00-10:00&#13;
-8:00a.m. - 10:00p.m.,&#13;
Rosa, Merritt take lsts&#13;
Trackmen 6th at Oshkosh&#13;
The Parkside track team&#13;
placed sixth out of 12 teams&#13;
competing in the La Croswe&#13;
Invitational. Parkside racked up&#13;
a score of 19 points compared to'&#13;
the winning total of 66 by&#13;
Oshkosh, The low Ranger score&#13;
was partly a result of a portion of&#13;
the team missing the team bus,&#13;
consequently not making the trip.&#13;
Individual standouts for&#13;
Parkside were Dennis Biel, who&#13;
Lifters dominate&#13;
Parkside weightlifters competed&#13;
in a meet at the Illinois&#13;
State Penitentiary last weekend.&#13;
Joe Gemignani placed first in&#13;
the 181 lb. class with a bench&#13;
press of 375 lb. a squat of 440 lb.&#13;
and a dead lift of 555 lb. for a total&#13;
of 1370 lb. Seconds were taken by&#13;
Rick Maulden in the 132 lb. class&#13;
with a total of 750 lb.; Louis White&#13;
in the 165 lb. class with a total of&#13;
lOlOnlb.; Leonard Palmer in the&#13;
198 lb. class with a 1290 lb. total;&#13;
Paul Gray in the 220 lb. class with&#13;
a total of 1138 l b. and Jim Greco&#13;
in the Super Heavy-weight class&#13;
with an 1120 l b. total.&#13;
leers lose 7-5&#13;
The Uw-Parkside hockey team&#13;
was defeated last Saturday night&#13;
by Loyola 7-5 in Chicago.&#13;
The Rangers kept the game&#13;
close, even though they weren't&#13;
able to pin their second victory&#13;
against Loyola this year.&#13;
Parkside had defeated Loyola in&#13;
late November here.&#13;
The highlight of the game for&#13;
the Ranger pucksters was the&#13;
performance of Gordie Bradshaw&#13;
who had three goals for the night.&#13;
The Rangers record for the&#13;
season fell to 7 victories 3 loses&#13;
and 1 tie. Next on the schedule the&#13;
hockey team plays March 4 at&#13;
Marquette and March 18 at home&#13;
against Uw-Milwaukee.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Screen Classics&#13;
presents&#13;
WVEQm&#13;
E FEE".&#13;
VClililiLlit £sLj&#13;
liL.lt i. $»g£|&#13;
Hit! IrLiJ&#13;
placed fifth in the mile event with&#13;
a 4.22:4 output; Keith Merrit&#13;
vaulted to a second place in the&#13;
pole vault and also set a field&#13;
house record in the triple-jump&#13;
with a leap of 46'6". His vault, by&#13;
the way, was 13 feet, six inches.&#13;
Cornelius Gordon raced to a&#13;
fourth place in the 440 yard run in&#13;
a 53.7 second output and Olympian&#13;
Lucien Rosa swept the two&#13;
mile event with a field house&#13;
record time of 8 minutes and 58.5&#13;
seconds.&#13;
The Ranger racers will be on&#13;
the road again this weekend&#13;
traveling to Champaign, Illinois&#13;
to take part in the Illinois Track&#13;
Club Open on March 3rd. A week&#13;
later they will be back to Illinois&#13;
to compete in the North Central&#13;
Invitational at Naperville,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Fencers win pair&#13;
Parkside's fencing team broke&#13;
a three meet losing streak with a&#13;
pair of victories over the&#13;
weekend.&#13;
First the Rangers defeated&#13;
University of Chicago 19-8 and&#13;
then Oberlin College 27-0 on&#13;
forfeit in a triangular meet in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
This boosts the Ranger record&#13;
to 10-7 with their next meet&#13;
March 3 against Milwaukee Tech&#13;
in Milwaukee.&#13;
In the saber, Rangers Peter&#13;
Shemanske, David Baumann and&#13;
Don Koser all were 6-0. In epee,&#13;
Bill Schaefer and Bernie Vash&#13;
were both 5-1, Mark Boatwright&#13;
was 3-3.&#13;
In foils John Tank got back on&#13;
the winning track after going 4-5&#13;
two weeks ago to 6-0 this week,&#13;
Mark Mulkins was 5-1 and Kim&#13;
Nelson 8-1.&#13;
SCHEDULED&#13;
Fencing&#13;
March 3 UW-Milwaukee, Chicago, Milwaukee Tech. at Milwaukee&#13;
Tech&#13;
March 10 Great Lakes Champions at Parkside&#13;
Gymnastics&#13;
March 2, 3 p.m. Tritton&#13;
March 3, 2 p.m. Macomb, Illinois at Macomb&#13;
Hockey&#13;
March 4,6 p.m. Marquette University at Wilson Park&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
March 3 Illinois Open at Champaign&#13;
March 10 North Central Invitational at Naperville, 111.&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
March 8-10 NAIA National Tournament at Sioux, Iowa&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
I'm sitting here before my typewriter full of sorrow and woe,&#13;
because I have just learned that I have lost my other half. Kathy&#13;
Wellner, former co-sports editor has been promoted (more or less) to&#13;
news editor; a job recently vacated by Geof Blaesing (former sports&#13;
editor). No longer will the Rangers readers consume the works of two&#13;
befuddled sports editors, because now I have the whole damn mess to&#13;
myself. Well, I may as well not be a stick in the mud by complaining so&#13;
good luck in your new position Kathy.&#13;
I was quite depressed at the paltry turnout of fans at our last home&#13;
basketball game. It was a big game for the Rangers and the way they&#13;
played they deserved to have a large crowd cheering for them. They&#13;
overwhelmed the College of Racine-Lakers 74-59 in one of the best&#13;
rebounding and defensive efforts of the year. It also assured the&#13;
Rangers of a place in the W.I.C.A. tournament.&#13;
As long as we're on the subject of basketball, I thought you might be&#13;
interested in the team statistics so far this year.&#13;
Chuck Chambliss presently leads the Ranger scoring attack with 349&#13;
points in 22 games, followed by Mike Hanke with 309 points in 22&#13;
games, Gary Cole is close behind with 305 points in 21 games and Bill&#13;
Sobanski has netted 258 tallies in 22 games.&#13;
Gary Cole leads the team in rebounding with 246, an average of 11.9&#13;
per game, followed by Sobanski with 236, an average of 10.7 p er game&#13;
and Mike Hanke has grabbed 173 caroms for a 7.8 average per game.&#13;
The Rangers have sunk 683 field goals out of 1499 attempted for a&#13;
.455 shooting percentage while holding their opponents to 629-1442 for a&#13;
.436 shooting clip.&#13;
Everyone on the Ranger squad has scored a point except Tim&#13;
Hubbard, but I'm sure he'll get what's coming to him (did I say that).&#13;
Anyway, this column is not likely to appear every week from now on,&#13;
because I do go to school at times here and now that I'm carrying the&#13;
full load of sports editor (awww poor kid) I will not have the time to do&#13;
all of this hard, back-breaking, monotonous, boring, time consuming,&#13;
profitless reporting (not really). Seriously though, if anyone would&#13;
like to help write spring sports, give me a call at 553-2295 or come down&#13;
to the Ranger office and ask for me.&#13;
Win ted!&#13;
people&#13;
who can:&#13;
If you can spend some time,&#13;
even a few hours, with someone&#13;
who needs a hand, not a handout,&#13;
call your local Voluntary Action&#13;
Center. Or write to "Volunteer,"&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20013&#13;
Wh need you.&#13;
The National Center for&#13;
Voluntary Action.&#13;
7 «dverliting contributed lor the public good&#13;
y Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant f e a t u r i n g&#13;
Live Entertainment &amp; Dancing&#13;
Wednesday Night Square Dance &amp; Polka to:&#13;
BLACKY &amp; BILL&#13;
&amp; THE RHYTHM MASTERS&#13;
Presenting This Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
GLEN BENSON &amp;&#13;
THE COUNTRY LEGENDS&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEH SCHIIITZ BUICK-0PEI&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
1900&#13;
S t a r t i n g a t 8 : 3 0 p0m.&#13;
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NO COVER CHARGE&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE R ANGER Wed., Feb. 28, 1 973&#13;
Rangers drop C of R 74-59&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
UW-Parkside put on a&#13;
devastating show of rebounding&#13;
power against Dominican on&#13;
February 20 in overwhelming the&#13;
Lakers 74-59. The Lakers had&#13;
fought to within three points with&#13;
only 3:51 to go in the game when&#13;
scoring ace Herrin Baskin fouled&#13;
out on technicals. Baskin committed&#13;
three technicals during&#13;
the course of the game which led&#13;
to five Ranger points and seemed&#13;
to take something away from the&#13;
Lakers morale as the Rangers&#13;
pulled ahead by 15 in the closing&#13;
minutes.&#13;
The game proved to be one of&#13;
the more physical of the year&#13;
with elbows and firsts flying at&#13;
will. Rebounding seemed to be&#13;
the key to the Ranger success as&#13;
they out rebounded the Lakers 28&#13;
to 8 in the first half alone. On the&#13;
game Parkside picked off 48&#13;
rebounds to Cominican's 24. Bill&#13;
Sobanski and Mike Hanke&#13;
provided the bulk of the Rangers&#13;
rebounding grabbing 14 and 13&#13;
respectively.&#13;
Parkside grabbed the opening&#13;
tipoff and Ken Peyer connected&#13;
on a 15 foot jumper to give the&#13;
Rangers a lead that was never&#13;
relinquished. After a retaliating&#13;
basket by Baskin for the Lakers,&#13;
the Rangers ran off a 12-6 spurt&#13;
that forced Dominican to call a&#13;
timeout. The Rangers then&#13;
outscored the Lakers 8-4 and&#13;
Racine called another timeout,&#13;
being behind by a score of 22-12.&#13;
After their second timeout&#13;
Racine started on a come back&#13;
drive that brought them to within&#13;
five points at 26-21, but the&#13;
Rangers, not to be outdone, ran&#13;
off a 12-2 spurt to take a 36-23 lead&#13;
into the locker rooms at halftime.&#13;
fit second half was fairly even&#13;
as iar as scoring went ... for the&#13;
fiv~t five minutes. Then Racine&#13;
slaved chipping away at the&#13;
Range ead and with 5:46 left in&#13;
the game, Racine brought the&#13;
score to within three at 56-53. Two&#13;
Parkside baskets later, Baskin&#13;
committed his second technical&#13;
foul of the game, which&#13;
automatically ousted him but&#13;
before he left the court he was&#13;
tabbed with a flagrant technical&#13;
for some extra-curricular activity&#13;
that is considered a no-no&#13;
for basketball players, such as&#13;
j^nting to "box" on the&#13;
7 minute&#13;
OIL CHANGE&#13;
$"|99&#13;
includes o il &amp; labor&#13;
PIT STOP&#13;
3314-52nd St .&#13;
basketball court.&#13;
After Herrin was finally&#13;
escorted off the court, the&#13;
Rangers threw up an offensive&#13;
barrage of their own to sink the&#13;
Lakers and gave them such a&#13;
defensive effort that they had a&#13;
hard time getting the ball past&#13;
half court. Parkside now leads&#13;
the rival series 4-1 winning the&#13;
last four games.&#13;
In talking with Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens after the game, he&#13;
commented, "The first half was&#13;
played very well and in the&#13;
second period when Cole got his&#13;
fourth (personal foul), John&#13;
Youngquist filled in very well. We&#13;
played a fine game against good&#13;
personel and I felt that it was an&#13;
overall good performance. It was&#13;
a big game for us, since we had a&#13;
tournament berth at stake and it&#13;
was a very physical game. The&#13;
reserves responded to the&#13;
pressure by playing well. With&#13;
Hutter gone again, Dolan and&#13;
Peyer filled in extremely well.&#13;
Our rebounding was excellent&#13;
and I think we should hold the&#13;
number two spot going into the&#13;
tournament."&#13;
Chuck Chambliss said, "There&#13;
was a great difference between&#13;
this years and last years games. I&#13;
think I scored more points last&#13;
year, but this one meant a lot&#13;
more because we had a tournament&#13;
berth at stake. J-^hink&#13;
that we'll do well in tournament&#13;
because we have the momentum&#13;
going now and we'll be playing&#13;
some good ball."&#13;
Bill Sobanski felt good; "I felt&#13;
we played well tonight and I feel&#13;
good about the way I played and I&#13;
think that we'll do well in tourit,"&#13;
Bill Sobanski (52) reaches for a rebound as Ken Peyer&#13;
(22) looks on.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
WANTED — Student who has car&#13;
and wants to earn 10 percent&#13;
commission selling advertising&#13;
for the RANGER. Person who&#13;
knows Racine area would have a&#13;
great opportunity. If interested&#13;
FOR SALE -- 1972 Honda CB350, excellent call 553-2295 or stop in at LLC Dcondition,&#13;
$625. 1832 Clair St., Racine, after 8 194 and ask for lerrv Mnrnhv If&#13;
p.m. weekdays or leave number to call. Jerry Murphy. 11&#13;
he's not there, leave your name&#13;
and telephone number.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
annnPQc nATF&#13;
riTY PHDIMF NO&#13;
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Mike Hanke (40) banks one off the glass for two as&#13;
assist* ChambMSS (24) and Ken Peyer stand ready to&#13;
Cagers fall to Mo.-St. Louis, meet&#13;
Lakeland in Thursday playoff&#13;
Parkside dropped a very close&#13;
game to the University of&#13;
Missouri-St. Louis 66-65 on&#13;
Friday night in St. Louis. The&#13;
Rangers came roaring back from&#13;
a 40-33 halftime deficit to come&#13;
within one at 66-65 with 15&#13;
seconds left on the game clock&#13;
and possession of the wall.&#13;
The Rangers stalled down the&#13;
final seconds and Gary Cole&#13;
lofted a 15 footer that went in and&#13;
out handing the Rangers their&#13;
10th defeat against 13 wins thusfar&#13;
this season.&#13;
Parkside played without the&#13;
services of starting forward Mike&#13;
Hanke who was out with a throat&#13;
infection, but is expected to be&#13;
back for tournament play.&#13;
Cole led the Ranger scoring&#13;
attack with 21 points, while Time&#13;
Dolan rimmed 16 and Bill&#13;
Sobanski meshed 14. Chuck&#13;
Chambliss was held to only nine.&#13;
Ranger Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
commented after the game,&#13;
"Hankes absense hurt us in that&#13;
we lost our second hjghest scorer&#13;
and a strong rebounder. We&#13;
played a good game and could&#13;
have won it if Gary could have&#13;
made the last shot. He (Cole) had&#13;
a nice 15 footer that just didn't&#13;
drop."&#13;
Parkside received its rating for&#13;
tournament on Sunday night;&#13;
going into playoffs with a 3rd&#13;
place berth instead of the hoped&#13;
for 2nd spot. The Rangers will&#13;
play at Lakeland on Thursday&#13;
March 1st in the opening game of&#13;
the WICA playoffs.&#13;
The Rangers played their last&#13;
regular season game last night&#13;
against Uw-Milwaukee. Coach&#13;
Stephens related, before the&#13;
game "If we can keep a sharp&#13;
offense, get some strong&#13;
rebounding, and take the good&#13;
shots we can make a good game&#13;
of it."&#13;
Se/utiMtf lit* fyinedt&#13;
Motion fyootU&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 551-7171&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM,&#13;
Discount Records and Tapes&#13;
(FecwdsS.98 for 3.77&#13;
Roach CUPA | IncffNsB&#13;
IY/AT(R8EPS&#13;
[Black lights&#13;
TAPrsrrr&#13;
OI L LAWS&#13;
Cnwd I r s&#13;
"Poster,*&#13;
Pipes&#13;
Patches&#13;
Papers&#13;
AND&#13;
MUCH&#13;
MORE&#13;
OPEN&#13;
Men.- Ffu.&#13;
10-00'W&#13;
Sat,&#13;
10-3Q-7-0C&#13;
Son. rcao - c-oc</text>
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              <text>Jose Greco and Company to appear here next week</text>
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              <text>Jose Greco and Company&#13;
to appear here next week&#13;
Spanish Dancer Jose Greco and&#13;
his Flamenco Theater will appear&#13;
in concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, March 13, in the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
The company will also present a&#13;
free public lecturedemonstration&#13;
at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Monday March 12, in Tallent&#13;
Hall, first floor south.&#13;
Concert tickets are on sale at&#13;
the Information Center in Tallent&#13;
Hall, Cook-Gere in Racine and&#13;
Bidinger's House of Music in&#13;
Kenosha. Parkside student and&#13;
staff admission is $1 in advance&#13;
and $1.50 at the door and general&#13;
admission is $2 in advance and&#13;
$2.50 at the door.&#13;
With 1973 marking his twentieth&#13;
annual visit to the United&#13;
States, Jose Greco establishes a&#13;
record for consecutive tours in&#13;
America that is unmatched in the&#13;
history of dance companies.&#13;
Greco began his career in&#13;
Spain as a partner of the "immortal&#13;
Argentinite" and, after&#13;
her death, as co-star with her&#13;
younger sister Pilar Lopez&#13;
touring throughout Europe. His&#13;
career continued with the&#13;
organization of his own company&#13;
and again, an extensive tour - this&#13;
time across Great Britain as well&#13;
as the Continent.&#13;
In 1953 h e made his American&#13;
debut in a tour across the U.S.&#13;
This was the first in the series&#13;
that reaches its recordmaking&#13;
total of two decades this season.&#13;
Nana Lorca, prima ballerina&#13;
with the Jose Greco Company on&#13;
several recent tours throughout&#13;
the United States and abroad,&#13;
now co-stars with Mr. Greco.&#13;
She has appeared as soloist&#13;
with the Pilar Lopez Company&#13;
and triumphed with her own&#13;
ballet at the 1964 New York&#13;
World's Fair Spanish Pavilion.&#13;
She has also appeared as guest&#13;
artist at the Gran Sileo Theatre of&#13;
Barcelona and has been&#13;
unanimously acclaimed in&#13;
concert throughout the Continent.&#13;
A choreographer as well as a&#13;
performer, she is accomplished&#13;
both in Classical Spanish dance&#13;
and flamenco.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, March 7, 1973 Vol. I, No. 20&#13;
Tutorial service&#13;
in full operation here&#13;
by Carol Benson&#13;
The new Parkside tutorial&#13;
service, headed by Isom Fearn,&#13;
is in full swing. Tutors have been&#13;
selected, and the service is&#13;
available Monday through&#13;
Friday from 8:00 A.M. to 4:30&#13;
P.M. Many students are coming&#13;
for tutoring on a regular basis,&#13;
while others come in only to&#13;
review for an exam, or to get help&#13;
with a specific problem.&#13;
There are several reasons why&#13;
a student might wish to use the&#13;
tutoring service. A person is&#13;
exposed to many new and strange&#13;
experiences when he enters&#13;
college. The college student is&#13;
often thrust into an unfamiliar&#13;
situation, one that can almost&#13;
paralyze his efforts unless he&#13;
adjusts properly and constructively&#13;
to it. He must&#13;
discipline himself to impose&#13;
order on the clutter of his&#13;
thoughts, and he must be able to&#13;
communicate his ideas with&#13;
precision and clarity. A student is&#13;
expected to listen attentively&#13;
(while furiously taking notes), to&#13;
read critically, and also&#13;
demonstrate through written&#13;
examinations the range of his&#13;
knowledge and his ability to&#13;
explore a subject on his own, to&#13;
organize the results, and to&#13;
translate them into essays and&#13;
reports, both long and short,&#13;
which others can read with easy&#13;
comprehension.&#13;
The tutorial service can help to&#13;
alleviate many of the problems&#13;
that a student must deal with.&#13;
Because the tutors work with the&#13;
students on a one-to-one basis,&#13;
the student has the advantage of&#13;
learning in a relaxed atmosphere,&#13;
without the pressure&#13;
of the classroom environment.&#13;
The student receives individual&#13;
instruction, and he progresses at&#13;
his own rate. If the student does&#13;
not understand a particular&#13;
formula or concept, the tutor will&#13;
continue to work with that&#13;
problem until it is resolved.&#13;
There are two types of tutors in&#13;
the tutorial program: core tutors,&#13;
who have regular hours; and oncall&#13;
tutors, who are available on&#13;
short notice if a student requests&#13;
help. Every effort is made to find&#13;
a tutor that will be available at a&#13;
time convenient to the student.&#13;
Because the tutors are also undergraduates,&#13;
they have experienced&#13;
most of the problems&#13;
and frustrations that the students&#13;
are presently confronting, so the&#13;
tutors are able to empathize with&#13;
the students who currently need&#13;
help.&#13;
Essay exams often represent a&#13;
real difficulty to students. We all&#13;
know that we can, and do, talk for&#13;
hours without saying anything&#13;
substantive - and without suffering&#13;
any particular embarrassment.&#13;
But an essay exam&#13;
is another matter. The student is&#13;
expected to say something&#13;
significant, to perform, to be&#13;
interesting and articulate about a&#13;
subject of major importance.&#13;
More forbidding yet, he must&#13;
perform before an almost certainly&#13;
critical audience, his&#13;
professor. It is not enough to&#13;
propose a judgment concerning a&#13;
subject. The student must be able&#13;
to support, defend, or prove in his&#13;
essay his assertions. A tutor can&#13;
help a student by explaining what&#13;
a good essay exam answer might&#13;
include, how a question should be&#13;
approached, how to study for the&#13;
exam, etc.&#13;
The ability to set down in a&#13;
concise, logical, and orderly&#13;
manner materials obtained&#13;
through research is a must for a&#13;
successful term paper. There are&#13;
tutors available who can offer&#13;
valuable assistance in this area.&#13;
Sometimes a student experiences&#13;
difficulty in a course&#13;
and does not really know why he&#13;
is having problems. A tutor can&#13;
often help the student pinpoint&#13;
the source of his trouble. The&#13;
tutor may make suggestions on&#13;
how to read for retention of&#13;
knowledge, how to take notes, or&#13;
acquaint the student with other&#13;
services available at Parkside,&#13;
such as the Learning Center. The&#13;
important thing to keep in mind is&#13;
that the tutorial service has only&#13;
one purpose: to help the students.&#13;
It is available to every student at&#13;
Parkside at no cost. All the&#13;
student has to do is come to the&#13;
tutorial services office, located in&#13;
room 280, Tallent Hall, and tell&#13;
Isom Fearn, counselor, that a&#13;
tutor is needed. He will make&#13;
every effort to find a tutor who&#13;
can help.&#13;
Deadline Changed&#13;
The deadline for&#13;
dropping classes has been&#13;
extended from March 9 to&#13;
March 14, according to&#13;
Don Gunderson, re gistrar.&#13;
Jose Greco and Nana Lorca&#13;
ON THE INSIDE&#13;
The Day Care Center&#13;
(Page 3)&#13;
'Love to Kill'&#13;
(Page 4)&#13;
Construction ahead of schedule&#13;
(Page 5(&#13;
UW-P campus designed&#13;
with ecology in mind&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Did you ever dream of taking a&#13;
trip through time, back to the era&#13;
before white men ever inhabited&#13;
this land? This seemingly impossible&#13;
trip is now being made&#13;
possible right here at Parkside.&#13;
This campus was designed with&#13;
an ecological purpose in mind:&#13;
Restoring plant species&#13;
originally found in Wisconsin&#13;
before the coming of the plow.&#13;
Parkside is unique in this aspect&#13;
because most other campuses&#13;
are unable to undertake such a&#13;
project either because of urbanization&#13;
or limited land mass.&#13;
One university that has adopted&#13;
as similar approach to landscaping&#13;
is Southern Illinois&#13;
University at Edwardsville. It&#13;
however, does not have the&#13;
variety in species available at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The local masterminds of this&#13;
project are Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, Science Division&#13;
Chairman, and James Galbraith,&#13;
Director of Planning and Construction.&#13;
The plan was originally&#13;
conceived in Madison though,&#13;
before the first faculty member&#13;
ever arrived here.&#13;
Citing John T. Curtis' book, The&#13;
Vegetation of Wisconsin, as the&#13;
"bible" from which this campus&#13;
was conceived and has been&#13;
developed, Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
outlined the progress of this plan&#13;
from its conception. The first step&#13;
was an inventory of plant species&#13;
already existing on the campus&#13;
site. This complete, it was then&#13;
determined which species would&#13;
have long-range value and which&#13;
were of limited value and could&#13;
give way to buildings or other&#13;
species without sacrificing the&#13;
over-all goal. The master plan&#13;
shown here was developed based&#13;
on the findings of this study. The&#13;
campus was, therefore, built&#13;
around the existing landscape&#13;
rather than substituting an artificial&#13;
landscape later, as is&#13;
usually the case.&#13;
(Continued on page 3) &#13;
2 THE PARKSlDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 7, 1973&#13;
C The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Day Care Center&#13;
needs campus site&#13;
The Parkside Daycare Center has been providing a&#13;
great service for Parkside for over a year and all&#13;
evidence shows that the demand for their service will b e&#13;
growing in the future. Now located in the Parkside&#13;
Baptist church, off campus, the center needs and&#13;
deserves a facility on campus.&#13;
The Daycare Center now serves about 75 families&#13;
with some 70 children. Their registration is increasing.&#13;
Representatives of the center have talked to administrative&#13;
officials in an attempt to arrange for oncampus&#13;
facilities, but no arrangements could be made.&#13;
This is the type of service and involvement which the&#13;
school should make every attempt to support. A good&#13;
number of students have helped to make this venture&#13;
work. They need success in this venture as much as the&#13;
parents of the children they work with.&#13;
The center should be large enough for expansion and&#13;
on campus, so it is more convenient for its users.&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
The budget for the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee has been&#13;
reduced by 25 percent for the next year. That is at least a step in the&#13;
right direction. All we have to do now is get it obliterated entirely.&#13;
No committee which is controlled by either administration or&#13;
faculty should be allowed to spend student money. And the segregated&#13;
fee portion of t uition, out of which LFA receives its funding, is student&#13;
money; and L&amp;FA is also very definitely a faculty committee, with a&#13;
token student membership, yes, but still a faculty committee.&#13;
The most recent presentation Lecture and Fine Arts has put on was&#13;
the Eliot and Elisabeth Janeway presentation, Feb. 15. This appearance,&#13;
at the evening lecture, which cost the students $2,000, only&#13;
had 250 people in attendance. An equal number saw them during the&#13;
day.&#13;
I don't think the students of Parkside can afford to pay $8.00 or even&#13;
$4.00 a piece for programs of such limited interest. It is about time a&#13;
stop was made to such frivolous insanity in throwing away student&#13;
money.&#13;
If the committee is to continue to function, then at least it should&#13;
prepare programs that are of interest to a majority of the students&#13;
here. That's right, a majority of students. They are the ones who must&#13;
pay and are therefore the ones who should be served.&#13;
Speaking of wasting student money, the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee is not the only group to head the blame in this area. The&#13;
Parkside Activities Board does a pretty fair job itself.&#13;
The Activities Board, which some feel is too closely associated with&#13;
the administration-run Activities Office, is having a money-wasting&#13;
operation of their own March 13.&#13;
Yes, I'm speaking of those "internationally acclaimed Flamenco&#13;
dancers Jose Greco &amp; Nana Lorca" who are appearing here on that&#13;
day. This troupe of "Spanish dancers, musicians and singers" cost&#13;
$12,500 a week, but, thanks to arrangements with other campuses and&#13;
organizations, Parkside's share of the bill comes to a paltry $2,500.&#13;
Our portion of the two-day festivities, Monday and Tuesday would&#13;
normally cost $4,500 but thanks to the National Endowment for the&#13;
Arts, which takes up $2,000 of the cost, Parkside's share is cut to $2,500.&#13;
Doing some quick calculations, we find that it will be necessary to&#13;
sell 1,400 tickets, at $2 a head, just to break even. Our gymnasium&#13;
holds, 1,200 in the bleachers.&#13;
I don't care how it's done, there is no way we're going to get 1,400&#13;
people here on a Tuesday night to see a band of Flamenco dancers.&#13;
There isn't that much interest in either dancing or Spanish culture in&#13;
the whole of Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
The Activities Office knew that they would lose money when they&#13;
first made the arrangements. This is tudent money they are losing.&#13;
And the presentation isn't even for the students.&#13;
Student money should be spent for one purpose - for the students. It&#13;
should not be spent on faculty, administration or the community.&#13;
Both the Activities Board and the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
should provide programs that are student-oriented. The only exception&#13;
is programs that do not cost the students anything, programs&#13;
that would make a profit. Generated profits could go toward other&#13;
student-oriented programs.&#13;
The great Activities Board - Student Union Committee controversy&#13;
seems to have died off due to the death of the Student Union Committee.&#13;
The chairman has not called a meeting since the members&#13;
were elected last Fall.&#13;
The faculty firings haven't raised much controversy this time&#13;
around. Students are not aware of the names of teachers being terminated.&#13;
If teacher terminations were made public, students could&#13;
give some assistance to those outstanding teachers who have been&#13;
canned. Student opinion should be carefully considered by the appeals&#13;
board.&#13;
This is the last day of the Student Government elections. If you&#13;
haven't yet voted, do it now while you're reading the rest of the paper.&#13;
The polling place is in Greenquist concourse.&#13;
Candidate platforms have been out for over a week, you should have&#13;
apretty good idea about who you feel will make the best representatives&#13;
for the student body.&#13;
the&#13;
MovemenI&#13;
Editor's Note: "The Movement" is a regular feature in the&#13;
RANGER dealing with women's concerns at Parkside and in society&#13;
in general. Guest writers are invited. This week's article is entitled&#13;
"Billboard Betsy: The Image of Woman in the Media."&#13;
by Lynn Swiden&#13;
There she is. That big-busted babe with her tan and tantalizing smile&#13;
can be seen just ahead as you drive down the highway. Bikini-clad and&#13;
lying on her side, she stares at you from her permanent place on the&#13;
billboard. The lettered message may read "Visit Sunny Florida&#13;
(California, Las Vegas...)" or she may be pushing soft drinks of&#13;
tanning lotion. The instantaneous message she conveys to each male&#13;
is: I am female. My position is horizontal. I am open to you, to&#13;
suggestion. I can please you. I am here for the taking. Notice me- it is&#13;
my function to be noticed, to be categorized. To each woman she&#13;
seems to say: I am woman. I am competition. You want to be like me;&#13;
you can be like me. Just follow the message on this billboard.&#13;
Most passing males would like to "be with" this broad. Most females&#13;
would like to be this girl. I use the terms "broad" and "girl" advisedly.&#13;
They denote the attitudes each sex has toward the female on&#13;
the billboard. He would like to be involved sexually in the excitement&#13;
of a new and different, possibly vulgar, escapade. She would like to&#13;
view herself in terms of youthful beauty and the dependency (this is in&#13;
and of itself reinforcing) of being seen as a desired yet relaint female,&#13;
a "girl." They are both stereotyping this particular bill board model,&#13;
and, with her, Womahood. They are defacing her name by being enticed&#13;
by her come-on smile and her scanty clothing and voluptuous&#13;
body. They are making her a prostitute and a whore. They are making&#13;
her a sex symbol.&#13;
Our advertising agencies have done a good job of selling their&#13;
products. Billions of dollars are spent each year on advertising&#13;
research, the development of ads and the ads themselves. It is no&#13;
secret that advertisers use goodlooking women to promote their&#13;
products on the premise that female sexuality-to them, a pretty face&#13;
and body-brings in sales. Since the advertisers have made billboard&#13;
figures into sex symbols (as has the public by its acceptance of them)&#13;
we should have proper insight into this deed. A symbol is, by Webster's&#13;
definition: "That which suggests something else by reason of&#13;
relationship, association, convention, etc.; especially a visible sign of&#13;
something invisible, as an idea, a quality; an emblem..." This&#13;
definition suggests that the moment we see this object or symbol, we&#13;
think of something else. It is indeed unfortunate that the response to&#13;
woman, wehther scantily dressed or not, has generalized to the immediate&#13;
connotation in man's mind of SEX. Even more unfortunate&#13;
women are guilty of allowing this attitude to prevail by trying to fit the&#13;
image of the woman on that billboard. Woman has accepted and in&#13;
many instances, welcomed, desired, and even coveted this image.&#13;
Men and women must make a determined effort to be cognizant of&#13;
the subtle influences that surround us. Billboards are only symptomatic&#13;
of our mass illness. We must render this billboard and our&#13;
existing attitudes obsolete by retaliating against media tactics - bv renfar&#13;
fi t"8 t0 ?if&#13;
nge our ideals&#13;
"&#13;
Jt is to be hoped that in the&#13;
near future the billboard Betsy does not symbolize sex in the sun to the&#13;
k f J u ! P&#13;
asserfey is not engulfed with envy or guilt&#13;
feelings about her body, her face, her age, and most particularly her&#13;
sex. '&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
year6 b^thf sfuSs 7 rJfn ^ thr&#13;
°&#13;
Ughout the&#13;
Kenosha, Wiseons.n 53140 n«w erS&#13;
' y&#13;
°&#13;
f Wis«»sin-Parkside,&#13;
^ ®r? Telephone ^414) 553-2295°Ca " °"&#13;
194 Library&#13;
"&#13;
reflected!^c'otanTfnd 'editori^^T neWSpaper Gpinions&#13;
omciai ierr^°d&#13;
Srd&#13;
eS^bXyee°d&#13;
r T S ~ «&#13;
letters for length and good taste All letter/LTh™, /&#13;
igh&#13;
i t0 edit&#13;
address, phone number and sturW * t i- ? signed and Include&#13;
be withheld upon request The editnrt °&#13;
r i&#13;
ty rank&#13;
' Names wil1&#13;
print any letters d&#13;
"°&#13;
rS reserve the ri8&gt;" h&gt; re fuse to&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request,&#13;
f O'TOR-IN-CI-HEF: Ru d y Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
cmaiLATi™ ag; STSSE.&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva ' Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
?&#13;
*miSlNTI&#13;
D FOR NAT IONAL ADVERTISING BY ifc&#13;
N.t.on.l Educnion.l Advertising Service!, Inc. 8&#13;
560 Lexington Ave., Now York, N. i. 10017 I &#13;
Wed., Mar. 7, 1973 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Campus designed with ecology in mind&#13;
(Continued from page 1)&#13;
There are many benefits&#13;
resulting from a natural landscape.&#13;
The first and probably&#13;
foremost in many people's minds&#13;
is cost. The expense involved in&#13;
•nitiating and maintaining such a&#13;
landscape is minimal compared&#13;
to that arising from the planting&#13;
and maintenance of various&#13;
oriental or other foreign species&#13;
in exact geometrical patterns.&#13;
1 he species used on this campus&#13;
are, for the most part, already&#13;
here. They sometimes merely&#13;
need to be relocated in a more&#13;
desirable place. Maintenance&#13;
will involve little more than&#13;
removal of diseased plants and&#13;
an occasional burning-off to&#13;
maintain prairie areas.&#13;
Another benefit of using&#13;
natural species is their intrinsic,&#13;
year-round beauty. It may,&#13;
however, take some eyes a little&#13;
time to appreciate the aesthetic&#13;
qualities in what they had formerly&#13;
considered weeds, and to&#13;
adjust to the absence of neatly&#13;
cut lawns and hedges usually&#13;
associated with public buildings.&#13;
The master plan shown here&#13;
FIOUBf »I1&#13;
LANDSCAPE ANALYSIS&#13;
DENOTING LOCATION Of fOU«&#13;
MAJOt VfOITATION TYFIS&#13;
^ DESIRABLE VIEWS&#13;
ti&amp;iSZB EXISTING VEO ETATION&#13;
I I MAJOt OFEN SPA CE&#13;
1 ACADEMIC FACILITIES&#13;
J SINGLE STUDENT MOUSING&#13;
3 MARRIED STUDENT HOUSING&#13;
« APPLIED RESEARCH FACILITIES&#13;
5 PHYSICAL PLANT FACILITIES&#13;
8 PARKING&#13;
T ATHLETIC FIELDS&#13;
0 RECREATION AREA&#13;
» BOTANICAL INSTRUCTION AREA&#13;
TO ARBORETUM&#13;
1' UNIVERSITY RELATED FACILITIES&#13;
outlines the appearance of the&#13;
campus in its final stages. The&#13;
whole site will be a botanical&#13;
instruction area, with species&#13;
native to various parts of&#13;
Wisconsin found in locations most&#13;
suitable to their survival. The&#13;
cmpus will be, in essence, a miniWixconsin.&#13;
&#13;
If you are unable to picture this&#13;
diagram fo the future-past from&#13;
what Parkside looks like now,&#13;
don't be too surprised- some&#13;
aspects are different. As an&#13;
example, the widening of the&#13;
Pike River into a lake is still in&#13;
the planning stage, and is&#13;
dependent on the purity of the&#13;
Pike. The pond just west of Wood&#13;
Road, which is not shown in the&#13;
plan, was added when it was&#13;
found to be a perfect drainage&#13;
area, entirely suitable to the&#13;
over-all plan. The "swamp" as it&#13;
has come to be called, will have&#13;
marsh-type vegetation and the&#13;
"pier" will aid students in investigating&#13;
these species.&#13;
Some stages of the plan have&#13;
already been completed.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz has seeded some&#13;
areas in natural species and will&#13;
be doing more this spring. As is&#13;
shown, much of the campus will&#13;
be covered by tall prairie grass.&#13;
High use areas, however, such&#13;
asplaying fields and outdoor&#13;
classroom facilities, will be&#13;
seeded with shorter, more conventional&#13;
species. As&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz said, "We're&#13;
hoping to become agents of&#13;
nature."&#13;
CAMPUS DEVELOPMENT AT 25,000 STUDENTS&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a recent issue of THE&#13;
RANGER there was an article by&#13;
Jane Schliesman in which she&#13;
pleaded for a good five cent&#13;
contraceptive. The article might&#13;
well have been titled "Ms.&#13;
Schliesman's Lament."&#13;
With the hope that I might&#13;
come up with some helpful idea, I&#13;
dug up my old files and found the&#13;
one captioned "Personal &amp;&#13;
Confidential. Sex." The contents&#13;
go back over a period of fifty&#13;
years to the days which some of&#13;
us Senior Citizens nostalgically&#13;
(and sometimes laughingly)&#13;
refer to as "The good old days"&#13;
and I can assure you that there&#13;
never was a time during that&#13;
period when you could get&#13;
anything reliable for five cents.&#13;
The best you could do was two for&#13;
a quarter by mail or three for&#13;
fifty cents at a drug store. And&#13;
with inflation, you're just out of&#13;
luck in getting anything for a&#13;
nickel these days.&#13;
However, I did come across a&#13;
page torn from a Sears, Roebuck&#13;
Catalogue on which is advertised&#13;
an item called the "Venus&#13;
Chastity Belt" (Cat. No. BR 1250.&#13;
Price 47 cents). Its reliability is&#13;
guaranteed providing it is used as&#13;
directed. A small padlock comes&#13;
with the package. So you might&#13;
check up on this at Sears. (I&#13;
wonder how that page got into my&#13;
file!)&#13;
A couple of other suggestions&#13;
which might relieve some of Ms.&#13;
Schliesman's frustrations would&#13;
be that she talk with some of our&#13;
ZPG authorities...or get to know&#13;
her druggist better...or have a&#13;
heart-to-heart talk with our&#13;
campus health department, Mrs.&#13;
Isenberg. Tell her Mr. Gruhl sent&#13;
you.&#13;
Oh yes...there's one more&#13;
method you might try. It works&#13;
fine but it's very volatile and&#13;
often hard to manage. It's called&#13;
"Self Control."&#13;
Good luck!&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
UW-O sponsors foreign study&#13;
The University of WisconsinOshkosh,&#13;
Department of Foreign&#13;
Languages, will sponsor a Vienna&#13;
Study Abroad Program for the&#13;
third time during the 1973-74&#13;
academic year. Students from&#13;
other state universities who have&#13;
lad at least one semester of&#13;
aniversity level German are also&#13;
nvited to apply.&#13;
A resident director from&#13;
Jshkosh will accompany the&#13;
group, private housing will be&#13;
arranged with Austrian families,&#13;
and students will attend classes&#13;
at the University of Vienna.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
credit is granted for all courses.&#13;
For additional information&#13;
please write to: Vienna Study&#13;
Aborad Program, Dept. of&#13;
Foreign Languages, University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Oshkosh, Oshkosh,&#13;
Wisconsin 54901.&#13;
Day Care Center in financial trouble&#13;
after one year of operation&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
Parkside's Day Care Center&#13;
has been in operation one year as&#13;
of last January. It is currently&#13;
located at Parkside Baptist&#13;
Church on County trunk E. The&#13;
Day Care Center was created to&#13;
care for children of Parkside&#13;
students and charges a fee of 50&#13;
cents per hour for each child&#13;
placed in its custody. Currently&#13;
70 children a week are being&#13;
cared for. The center is licensed&#13;
for a maximum of 30 children per&#13;
hour and is open from 8 a.m. to 4&#13;
p.m., Monday through Friday.&#13;
Three teachers, five teacheraids,&#13;
and two janitors are employed&#13;
by the Day Care Center at&#13;
present. The teacher-aids and the&#13;
janitors are working on&#13;
Parkside's Work-Study program.&#13;
The center was granted WorkStudy&#13;
funds last fall.&#13;
Lecture set on&#13;
trans med&#13;
A public introductory lecture&#13;
on "Transcendental Meditation"&#13;
will be given UW-Parkside,&#13;
Thursday, March 8, at 2 p.m.&#13;
Greenquist Hall D-136 and at 7:30&#13;
p.m. Library Learning Center,&#13;
D189.&#13;
The lectures are free and open&#13;
to the public, and are sponsored&#13;
by Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society.&#13;
Persons wishing more information&#13;
may call Andrew&#13;
Goodman, 639-2647.&#13;
Elaine Birch, Director of the&#13;
Day Care Center, says she hopes&#13;
to have it moved to an on campus&#13;
location soon. Two possible sites&#13;
are the first floor of Tallent Hall&#13;
and the Modulux building. The&#13;
basic problem with it being&#13;
located in the church is that all&#13;
the toys and equipment must be&#13;
moved on Friday evenings to&#13;
allow set up for weekend activities.&#13;
Sunday night everything&#13;
is shifted back, enabling the Day&#13;
Care Center to operate promptly&#13;
Monday morning.&#13;
There is also a financial&#13;
problem according to Ms. Birch.&#13;
The only source of income is from&#13;
the fees charged for the children.&#13;
The center is in need of a lawyer&#13;
and an accountant. It is licensed&#13;
but is not filed with the U.S. Tax&#13;
Bureau. It is intended that the&#13;
center be filed as a non-rpfoit&#13;
organization.&#13;
Ms. Birch added that the center&#13;
could not have survived without&#13;
the work-study students. She also&#13;
said volunteer workers have been&#13;
most helpful in the past and&#13;
volunteer time offered by anyone&#13;
would be extremely appreciated.&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
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Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
jyww.wwvwvwuI C O U P O N Rwwvwwwwww,&#13;
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50* OFF °Pn&#13;
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ITALIAN FOOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
March 14, 1973 DRINKS AVAILABLE FROM TH E BAR&#13;
VWWV.viyi'iyi 1f WWVWWWWW7 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 7, 1973&#13;
Bogart film&#13;
to be shown&#13;
here Wednesday&#13;
TREASURE OF SIERRA&#13;
MADRE will be shown by the&#13;
Parkside Film Society on&#13;
Wednesday, March 7, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist 103. This is among&#13;
the best of the Bogart movies, in&#13;
which three down-and-out&#13;
Americans hope to atrike it rich&#13;
in the rugged Sierra Madre&#13;
Mountains. It is a hard-hitting&#13;
drama of the influence of greed&#13;
on the character of man. Three&#13;
prospectors in Mexico, having&#13;
spent years accumulating enough&#13;
gold to buy security and happiness&#13;
for life for each of them,&#13;
begin to covet more than their&#13;
share of the riches. The ensuing&#13;
struggles among the men and&#13;
within themselves are a fine&#13;
portrayal of the ways in which&#13;
greed can distort and destroy&#13;
human relationships. The picture&#13;
was winner of three Academy&#13;
Awards and a nomination for&#13;
Best Picture.&#13;
KUSTOM KAR KOMMANDO,&#13;
Kenneth Anger's short about hotrod&#13;
freaks, will also be shown.&#13;
Admission is 60 cents.&#13;
Carmen Vila&#13;
in lecturerecital&#13;
here&#13;
Carmen Vila, internationally -&#13;
known concert pianist, and Artist-in-Residence&#13;
at Parkside,&#13;
will appear in four lecturerecitals&#13;
sponsored by The&#13;
University of WisconsinExtension.&#13;
&#13;
The recitals will feature explanations&#13;
of the forms of the&#13;
Great Masterpieces of piano&#13;
literature, as well as their performance.&#13;
Selections will include&#13;
compositions by Beethoven,&#13;
Chopin, Brahms, DEbussy, and&#13;
others.&#13;
Spanish-born Carmen Vila, in&#13;
her fifth season at Parkside, has&#13;
appeared in concert to critical&#13;
acclaim throughout Europe, the&#13;
Middle East and South America.&#13;
The lecture-recitals will be&#13;
given on Wednesdays, March 7&#13;
through April 4, 7:30 p.m., at&#13;
Parkside Wood Road Campus,&#13;
Kenosha. Contact University&#13;
Extension at Parkside for&#13;
registration information (phone&#13;
553-2312).&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
Moving Waves&#13;
Focus&#13;
(SAS-7401)&#13;
Focus encompasses Thijs van Leer on organ, harmonium,&#13;
mellotron, piano, and soprano and alto flute; Jam Akkerman on&#13;
guitars; Cyriel Havermans on bass; and Pierre Van der Linden on&#13;
drums. Sporadic voices are from Thijs vwn Leer and Cyriel Havermans.&#13;
It would be safe to assume that Focus is a German band.&#13;
Focus is one of the bands that work with classical-style rock. The&#13;
problem is that we can't know for many years if MOVING WAVES is a&#13;
classic (denotation according to Webster's Seventh Collegiate Dictionary)&#13;
or not. Personally interjecting, I would say no. It is somewhat&#13;
interesting and enjoyable, although it isn't completely successful with&#13;
its intent. At this time it appears that "Satisfaction" will be considered&#13;
more of a classic from rock than "Long Winding Road." Fair enough?&#13;
"Hocus Pocus" is guitar rock jam that breaks about every minute&#13;
for brief yodelling. The final break includes a harmonium and&#13;
whistling. But if Focus really wants to integrate rock and oldtime&#13;
standards, they should present the yodelling and the guitars&#13;
simultaneously instead of alternating them.&#13;
Following "Hocus Pocus" is a long, soft stretch that includes "Le&#13;
Cleohard," "Janis," and "Moving Waves." The first and the last of the&#13;
aforementioned three seem too soft, sensitive and delicate. The title&#13;
song, "Moving Waves," presents the idea that the waves, like every&#13;
individual action, is motivated by the "desire to reach outwards."&#13;
This is good philosophical reasoning, but waves are seldom as light as&#13;
the music here portrays them to be. "Janis," the middle cut of three&#13;
now being discussed, is a more absorbing and effective piece that is&#13;
basically a flute solo.&#13;
"Focus" is the final statement on side 1. It is an alma mater style&#13;
instrumental. The guitar will make you stand up tall, proud, and&#13;
majestic, so that you can climb to the top and reach the peak. The&#13;
final, faint, echo-voice, is a magnificent departure.&#13;
Side 2 is one main composition entitled "Eruption." On an eight&#13;
track or cassette, the beginning will seem like a continuation of&#13;
"Focus." Shortly a churchy organ appears. Tinkling sparkles appear&#13;
from the casket and the grand canyon is again envisioned. Next comes&#13;
a mellotron passage; Emerson, Lake, and Palmer style. Then a lead&#13;
guitar comes in slowly and gradually goes faster and faster until the&#13;
tigers turn into butter. The "Eruption" finally breaks, preparing for a&#13;
couple of crescendos.&#13;
A f inal note to keep you up all night thinking: I noticed that the&#13;
guitar, in some spots of "Eruption," sounded like Ted Nugent. Since&#13;
Jan Akkerman probably never heard of that Detroit lad and vice&#13;
versa, who could they both have listened to? (Record Courtesy of J&amp;J*&#13;
Tape and Record Center)&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
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Additional Seats&#13;
Available No&#13;
EASTER BREAK&#13;
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plus $20 tax&#13;
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For information and applications contact&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
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FDITT It* • Monday, March 12&#13;
Lecture-Discussion, 2 p.m. Tallent Hall&#13;
AcccUo-^Vc4u^l&#13;
rtudfo-tVUuat 'Review&#13;
Actctio^Vteual fteviet*&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Love To Kill is a twenty minute clip from the movie Bless The&#13;
Beasts And Children.&#13;
Love To Kill is a complete story in itself. Its about some boys at a&#13;
camp who try to stop some hunters, one of which is their counselor&#13;
from slaughtering a herd of buffalo. They sneak out of camp one night&#13;
and tear down the gate which is holding the buffalo in the corral. Instead&#13;
of running the buffalo start grazing a short distance away. By&#13;
this time it is morning and the boys notice that the hunters are coming.&#13;
One of the boys jumps in a truck and drives it into the herd honking&#13;
and screaming causing the buffalo to stampede. The hunters try to&#13;
shoot out the tires of the truck but instead kill the boy who's driving it.&#13;
Even though the story moves rather quickly its done so well that its&#13;
very easy to get into. The boys feel so strongly about what they're&#13;
doing that the viewer can't help but to take on the same attitude. It's a&#13;
very emotion arousing film.&#13;
The film is really well down. It is obvious from the set-up of the&#13;
scenes and the camera work that this came from a professionally&#13;
made movie.&#13;
The ending is very effective. The group of boys and the group of&#13;
hunters just stand looking at each other in a silent confrontation. The&#13;
camera goes in for a closeup on their faces. After the violence of th e&#13;
preceeding scene this was more hard-hitting than any amount of&#13;
dialogue would have been.&#13;
Love To Kill is very worthwhile viewing. The theme is good and is&#13;
handled beautifully in the film and beside that its only twenty minutes&#13;
long.&#13;
mm&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Frit Delivery to P arkside V illage&#13;
SOU 30th Anon Phone 657-S191&#13;
Having a hard time locating these books? Well, search&#13;
no further than Martha Merrell's Bookstore, offering&#13;
the widest selection of books in town. Paperbacks for&#13;
the discriminating reader. Prompt special order&#13;
service.&#13;
\fenjoAhu,&#13;
6,14-59^5*;&#13;
6£e-36&gt;e-2_&#13;
s&#13;
{acurn,&#13;
3I2-—&lt;5*&#13;
Ms+.&#13;
632-SI9S" &#13;
Wed., Mar. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Classroom Building is ahead of schedule&#13;
It's What's&#13;
Happening&#13;
The Data Processing&#13;
Management Association is offering&#13;
the Kenneth O. Mann&#13;
Scholarship of $300 for the 1973-74&#13;
academic year. Full-time upperclassmen&#13;
in good scholastic&#13;
standing who are residents of&#13;
Racine or Walworth counties,&#13;
majoring in a field related to&#13;
Data Processing, such as&#13;
busin ess, a c c o u n tin g,&#13;
mathematics are eligible. For&#13;
further information please&#13;
contact the Office of Financial&#13;
Aids.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
Fraternity has organized an&#13;
income tax seminar and&#13;
workshop to take place on&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday March 6&#13;
and March 8, at eleven o'clock&#13;
a.m. and will last until two&#13;
o'clock p.m. in room D-174 LLC.&#13;
The seminar will include two&#13;
parkside instructors, Mr. Harold&#13;
Heser and Mr. Claude Renshaw,&#13;
who will answer questions and&#13;
aid in the filling out of your income&#13;
tax forms. Both state and&#13;
federal forms will be provided.&#13;
The Archives are still in need&#13;
of th e Vol. 5, No. 8 Oct. 25, 1971&#13;
issue of Newscope. Anyone with&#13;
access to this issue, please bring&#13;
it to the Ranger office L-LC D194.&#13;
&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
. The Classroom Building, which&#13;
end&#13;
eof&#13;
g&#13;
r&#13;
0nStrUCted off ihe north&#13;
J p&#13;
reenquist Hall, is well&#13;
ahead of schedule on the contract&#13;
completion date of Sept. 30&#13;
Camosy Construction of&#13;
Kenosha, which has had previous&#13;
experience at Parkside as the&#13;
general contractor for&#13;
Greenquist, Tallent Hall, and the&#13;
Physical Education Building, is&#13;
breaking all records by com-&#13;
! ",g r buildinS four months&#13;
ahead of schedule.&#13;
The building will be completed&#13;
in May after a construction time&#13;
of only 17 months. According to&#13;
James Galbraith, director of&#13;
Planning and Construction at&#13;
Parkside, "a fast job is a&#13;
profitable job from the standpoint&#13;
of overhead and supervision&#13;
alone It is also good for the&#13;
school.&#13;
The building, constructed at a&#13;
cost of $3.3 million, has four&#13;
working levels which will contain&#13;
specialized instructional areas&#13;
and laboratories for such&#13;
disciplines as AST, management&#13;
s c i e n c e, a n t h r o p o l o gy and&#13;
geology, in addition to 30 general&#13;
purpose classrooms.&#13;
Other features of the building&#13;
include a 180 seat auditorium as&#13;
well as a number of faculty and&#13;
administrative offices. The&#13;
building is a Greenquist-type&#13;
facility which will house the 'dry'&#13;
labs, while Greenquist houses the&#13;
'wet' labs.&#13;
Data processing facilities will&#13;
be linked to the main computer&#13;
system in the Communication&#13;
Arts building by a conduit which&#13;
has been laid through all&#13;
buildings for such purposes.&#13;
These main facilities in CommArts&#13;
will have both academic&#13;
and administrative capabilities.&#13;
-J&#13;
*&#13;
L1&#13;
Is. *&#13;
A feature of the building that&#13;
many instructors may enjoy is&#13;
the availability of 7,500 square&#13;
feet of research space. Research&#13;
has been difficult in the past due&#13;
to crowded or unavailable conditions.&#13;
&#13;
The Classroom building is the&#13;
second largest building on&#13;
campus with a total net floor&#13;
space of 74,352 square feet,&#13;
making it larger than Greenquist&#13;
with its 69,326 square feet. These&#13;
trail the Library Learning Center&#13;
which is the largest building with&#13;
143,893 feet. CommArts makes a&#13;
distant fourth with 63,196 fe et of&#13;
useable floor space.&#13;
An important announcement to every&#13;
student in the health professions:&#13;
NEW SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.&#13;
THEY COVER TUITION AND&#13;
RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN&#13;
ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL.&#13;
If a steady salary of $400 a&#13;
month and pa id -up tuition&#13;
will help you continue your&#13;
pro fession al tr aining, th e&#13;
scholarships just made possible&#13;
by th e Uniforme d&#13;
Services H ealth Profe ssions&#13;
devitaliza tion Ac t of 19 72&#13;
deserve your close attentio n.&#13;
Because if you a re now in a&#13;
medical, osteopathic, dental,&#13;
veterinary, podia try, or optome&#13;
try school, or are working&#13;
toward a PhD in Clinical&#13;
Psychology, you may qualify.&#13;
I P e m a k e i t ea * y t o r y o u t o&#13;
c o m p l e t e y o y r nt n d i i e * . You're&#13;
commissioned as an officer as&#13;
soon a s you ente r the pr ogram,&#13;
but remain in student&#13;
sta tus until gra dua tion. And,&#13;
during each year you will be&#13;
on ac tiv e duty (wit h extra&#13;
pa y) for 45 days. Natura lly,&#13;
if your ac ad emic schedule&#13;
requires that you r ema in on&#13;
campus, you stay on campus&#13;
- an d still receive your active&#13;
du ty pay.&#13;
A c t i v e d u t y r e q u i r e m e n t *&#13;
a r e f a i r . Basically, you serve&#13;
one ye ar as a commissioned&#13;
offi cer fo r each yea r you've&#13;
particip ated in the program,&#13;
with a two yea r min imum.&#13;
You may apply for a scholarship&#13;
with eith er the Army,&#13;
Navy or Air Force, and know&#13;
that upon en te ri ng ac tive&#13;
d u ty yo u'll have ran k and&#13;
duties in k eeping with y our&#13;
professiona l training.&#13;
The life's work you've chosen&#13;
for yourself requires long,&#13;
har d, expensive tr ain in g.&#13;
Now we are in a position to&#13;
give you some help. Mail in&#13;
the coupon at your earliest&#13;
convenience for mor e detailed&#13;
information.&#13;
n At-meil K urn's Srholar*hi|.»&#13;
I Bos A&#13;
| l'nivrr&gt;al City. Texas 7SI4S&#13;
| 1 ,l.-.i i .• information for the&#13;
I Arntv 7i Navy H Air forre&#13;
| "1 Mriln a! (Mmimlhic . : Dental&#13;
• : V et,.,,narv J C.MlmtrV&#13;
' ~ tithe, ,.1'lea-e specify I&#13;
"C C N 3 3~~!&#13;
I t&#13;
1 please print )&#13;
t.School)&#13;
tfn lv "f bi&#13;
1 Month 1 (Year) 1 Drt-rr ,)&#13;
tfn lv "f bi&#13;
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available in Air Koree I'rour&amp;.n.&#13;
*!C 3 mr "etc&#13;
3203-52nd St.&#13;
Visit O ur New&#13;
Wine &amp; Beer M aking&#13;
Department&#13;
Thick Pieces o f&#13;
Pepperoni 29&#13;
lb.&#13;
We would like you to visit our newly remodeled&#13;
Liquor Store &amp; stop in &amp; see The Midwest's''&#13;
Finest Selection of Imported Pasta — Italian&#13;
Foods.&#13;
Stroh's&#13;
Beer qqc&#13;
6-Pack 33&#13;
No Deposit&#13;
Old Style&#13;
Export&#13;
6 cans *139&#13;
12 cans *269&#13;
Coca-Cola&#13;
8-isoz. ygc&#13;
Drewry's&#13;
Draught o r R eg.&#13;
A Case&#13;
24-12 o z.&#13;
$269&#13;
3 cases&#13;
$]99&#13;
Smash Wine $1&#13;
19&#13;
fifth&#13;
T.J. Swan (Appleberry)&#13;
has just arrived at Tenuta's!&#13;
Paul Masson&#13;
Brandy $A69&#13;
Quart&#13;
Special Sale!&#13;
Z APPLE 4Q fifth&#13;
WINE 12... w &#13;
6 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 7,. 1973&#13;
The Ranger asks----- Who should decide how segregated fees are disbursed?&#13;
ISCaunfRcCoRDS&#13;
Hm&#13;
/TTAPesfAY &gt;\&gt;&#13;
JlnCEnSE &gt;V&#13;
WA+ERBE&amp;S M /Comics \&#13;
nPiPE.S + PflPFftS.&#13;
tatliLULajt&#13;
Ell ILL. Lit&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Europe&#13;
loooool&#13;
DOOOlj&#13;
CHICAGO - LONDON&#13;
May 28-July 13 $199&#13;
June 13 - July 11 $215&#13;
includes:&#13;
Round Trip 747 Charter Jet&#13;
Transfer to Downtown London&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Ron Wilson, Racine, Junior.&#13;
"Part of the Student Government.&#13;
And the faculty should&#13;
have a say in that. You're a&#13;
student here, so you should say&#13;
how much goes for bussing,&#13;
activities, etc."&#13;
Julie Udell, Racine, Freshman&#13;
"Students and the faculty." Gary Matye, Kenosha, Senior.&#13;
"No Comment."&#13;
Phyllis Lidberg, Racine, Junior&#13;
"It should be a combination of&#13;
the students, administration and&#13;
faculty, because they are all&#13;
involved in some way or other in&#13;
the student activities."&#13;
Jeannette Helland, Waukegan,&#13;
Senior.&#13;
"As far as I am concerned, it&#13;
should be a conglomerate of who&#13;
makes the decisions. It should&#13;
have students and faculty and&#13;
Student Government in on&#13;
everything. But the problem is&#13;
that whatever students or&#13;
Student Government have to say&#13;
isn't really that important. It's&#13;
kind of like the administration's&#13;
already decided. That's the way I&#13;
feel about it."&#13;
I&#13;
Applications available:&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
*"• M M&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number ot checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
bCUYLL&#13;
i l l&#13;
'"liliLrLi.&#13;
LiSLLEb&#13;
semester and summer school&#13;
UW-OSHKOSH&#13;
1972-73&#13;
POST-SESSION INTERIM&#13;
MAY 21 - JUNE 8&#13;
(campus housing ava ilable)&#13;
for further information, mail coupon to, or&#13;
call: COLLEGE OF CONTINUING EDUCATION&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-OSHKOSII&#13;
OSHKOSH, WISCONSIN 54901&#13;
phone: (414) 424-1136 or 424-1137&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
(SCHOOL)&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. R acineJ &#13;
Granger&#13;
Sports&#13;
INTRAMURAL STANDINGS, STATS&#13;
American Basketball League&#13;
Capitol Div. Won Lost&#13;
Bold Ones 3 1&#13;
Starry Eyed Gang 2 2&#13;
Socc er Team 1 3&#13;
National Baskethaii i&#13;
Eastern Divisfnn"" Lea&#13;
«e&#13;
Central Division&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
indiv.&#13;
1) Hal Henderson&#13;
2) Jack Geisler&#13;
3) Everett Hyde&#13;
4) Scott Nelson&#13;
5) Ed Hopkins&#13;
6) Lawson&#13;
7) P. Pevonka&#13;
8) John Pena&#13;
9) Mitch Arents&#13;
Won Lost&#13;
4 0&#13;
2 2&#13;
0 4&#13;
Team&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Soccer Team&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Bold Ones&#13;
Total pts.&#13;
64&#13;
59&#13;
54&#13;
51&#13;
51&#13;
50&#13;
48&#13;
48&#13;
48&#13;
Fencing meet&#13;
here&#13;
The Parkside fencing team will&#13;
host the 7th annual Grest Lakes&#13;
Championships at 9 a.m.&#13;
Saturday at the Physical&#13;
Education Bldg. There is no&#13;
admission charge. The tournament&#13;
will end approximately 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Most of the Midwest's top&#13;
fencing schools are entered in the&#13;
meet, which serves as a warmup&#13;
for the national collegiate meet a&#13;
week later and is a renowned&#13;
championship affair in its own&#13;
right. Included among the entries&#13;
are defending national collegiate&#13;
champion Detroit, undefeated&#13;
Wayne Staete, the favorite with a&#13;
ame, Illinois-Chicago Circle,&#13;
Chicago, Case-Western Reserve,&#13;
Milwaukee Tech, Oberlin and the&#13;
University of MichiganDearborn.&#13;
&#13;
Parkside has always done well&#13;
in the Great Lakes and should be&#13;
among the top four squads this&#13;
year, according to Coach Loran&#13;
Hein. Top man for the Rangers is&#13;
foilist John Tank, who will have&#13;
plenty of competition in a field&#13;
that includes two 1972 Olympians.&#13;
Trackmen were&#13;
5th at Oshkosh&#13;
The UW-Parkside track team&#13;
actually finished fifth in the Titan&#13;
Invitational Feb. 24 at Oshkosh&#13;
instead of sixth as reported in the&#13;
last issue of t he RANGER. Loras&#13;
College's point total was&#13;
corrected from 21 to 15 four days&#13;
after the meet and the Rangers,&#13;
with 19 points, moved up to fifth&#13;
in the season's first big indoor&#13;
meet.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
SERVED IN THE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
OF THE&#13;
— BOTH UNDER SAME OWNERSHIP&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
'.RIBS • SPAGHETTI&#13;
GNOCCHI . RAVIOLI&#13;
- 14" - 16"&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
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SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING . . . WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 6th AVE&#13;
Average&#13;
18.0&#13;
16.7&#13;
13.5&#13;
12.7&#13;
12.7&#13;
12.5&#13;
12.0&#13;
12.0 iio&#13;
oasket&#13;
Eastern Division&#13;
Herblius Superblius&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Rebels&#13;
Privateers&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Western Division&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Flash&#13;
Rat Patrol&#13;
Sigma Pi&#13;
Big K&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Indiv.&#13;
D Tom Hart&#13;
2) Larry Wade&#13;
3) Sonn Tag&#13;
4) Dean Christenson&#13;
5&gt; Ron Schmitz&#13;
6) Dezek&#13;
7) Pete Wood&#13;
8) Kevin Sorenson&#13;
9) Marino&#13;
10) Casebolt&#13;
Won&#13;
Won&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
Team&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Rebels&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Lost&#13;
l&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
Lost&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
Total pts.&#13;
148&#13;
144&#13;
110&#13;
107&#13;
99&#13;
97&#13;
75&#13;
72&#13;
70&#13;
70&#13;
Average&#13;
24.6&#13;
24.0&#13;
18.3&#13;
17.8&#13;
16.5&#13;
16.1&#13;
12.5&#13;
12.0&#13;
11.6&#13;
11.6&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
tea&#13;
Swim Club 3&#13;
:&#13;
in&#13;
h6&#13;
f&#13;
m&#13;
-Da&#13;
''&#13;
V&#13;
3.30 - 6:00 Dai|y&#13;
„ . RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Poo l&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday&#13;
Tuesday 8. Thursday&#13;
Friday .11:30-2:30&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday !!!!!!!!!!! I&#13;
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Thursday c ™ ™&#13;
5:30 - 7:0 0&#13;
Saturday.:::::::::;::::;;;::&#13;
Sunday. 10.00-5.00&#13;
y 1:30-10:00&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday 10:30 -1:30 (2 courts open)&#13;
3:30 - 6:00 (1 court open)&#13;
6:00 -10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. -10:00 p.m.,&#13;
except Tuesday 8. Thursday closed from 10:30 -12:00 for classes&#13;
S&#13;
a,U!"&#13;
dav 8:00-5:00&#13;
S u n d aV 1:00-10:00&#13;
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GOOD FOR 2 FREE D RY CYCLES WITH ANY&#13;
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ONE COUPON PER WEEK PER CUSTOMER&#13;
NAME &amp; ADDRESS&#13;
Wed., Mar. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
Well gang basketball season is finally over. The UW-Parkside&#13;
Rangers lost in first round tournament playoffs to Lakeland last&#13;
Thursday mght 62-55. The only bright spot of the whole game was tha&#13;
year history P&#13;
05&#13;
'"&#13;
86350" ba&#13;
sketball game for Parkside in it's four&#13;
, ™S ™!Tn&#13;
"&#13;
U1 c&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
'&#13;
inue 10 aPI»ar on a weekly basis don't groan so&#13;
H \ 1 not be writlng it every week (don't cheer so loud&#13;
mwif' ^&#13;
he&#13;
R&#13;
wnt,nS responsibilities will now be shared, along with&#13;
S y7?!"ULCe Rasmussen&gt; Bi» Blaha and Helmut Kah These gentlemen (..&#13;
) have kmdly consented to help me out with the sports&#13;
myTob&#13;
5&#13;
' Oh well'&#13;
alS&#13;
° haVG Unkindly consented t0 try and take over&#13;
By the way, in my last weeks column I improperly spelled Geoff&#13;
®a&#13;
„TsngG E oV p7&#13;
by&#13;
corT'm^&#13;
elf&#13;
; hi'na^ei^d wl&#13;
about that Geoff &lt;pr&#13;
°&#13;
n0Uncted Jeff&#13;
'&lt;* all yon illiterates). Sorry&#13;
The Fencingteam is hosting the Great Lakes open at Parkside on&#13;
Saturday March 10. A rather excited fencing team member stumblS&#13;
the^eeMnTh116&#13;
^ ^ l&#13;
° m3ke SUre that 1 said something about&#13;
mPPMn fh .W 1SSUe&#13;
" He also mumbled something about the&#13;
eet in this weeks issue. He also mumbled something about some of&#13;
the participants being members of the Olympic team at one time&#13;
fhPvTy ,S P™bably ^ big8&#13;
est meet of the year for the team and&#13;
they have a good reason to be excited about it&#13;
t0 have the official sta&#13;
"stics on the members of&#13;
scorer for fhP AS ll SltS&#13;
"°&#13;
W Chuck ch&#13;
ambliss is the high&#13;
scorer for the second year in a row, followed by Gary Cole Mike&#13;
Hanke, Bill Sobanski and Tim Dolan. Leading rebounder is Cole&#13;
followed by Sobanski, Hanke and Chambliss&#13;
W^ACLC^&#13;
a u&#13;
bUSS W3S piCr&#13;
6d by W I C A" coaches for the first all&#13;
^£pH f ^,' °&#13;
ne 10 P&#13;
layers Picked. Out of five players&#13;
ThPQp J honorabl® ment&#13;
ion, Parkside placed three on the squad&#13;
These players were Gary Cole, Bill Sobanski and Mike Hanke&#13;
1 Jf&#13;
n&#13;
Jl on&#13;
e reason, Coach Steve Stephens has taken his 4-18 team of&#13;
f °&#13;
m&#13;
,'&#13;
1 into a fine 13-11 regular season record and&#13;
part cipated in first round tournament playoffs. Congratulations to a&#13;
fine team and best of luck in the future.&#13;
wa&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHIUTZ BUICK-0PEI&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514&#13;
*2,873"&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
1900&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
(No matter how much of our pizza, chicken, potatoes&#13;
and salad you eat, the price is only $ 1.7 5)&#13;
Children under 3 Free — Children 3-9,10 Cents a Year&#13;
gffmrgnanuuiit&#13;
NIAAAAIH A m Ye PUBLIC house&#13;
Lothrop and 21 st (Almost) &#13;
8 T HE PARKSIDE RANG ER Wed., Mar. 7, 1 9 73&#13;
Cagers dumped by Lakeland in W.I.C.A. playoff&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
The Parkside cagers lost in the&#13;
first round of WICA tournament&#13;
play last Thursday night to&#13;
Lakeland College by a score of 62-&#13;
55. This turned out to be the last&#13;
game of the season for the&#13;
Hangers, who compiled a 13-12&#13;
season record and a regular&#13;
season standing of 13-11.&#13;
The Rangers were tied with&#13;
Lakeland at half-time 32-32, but&#13;
they were outplayed in the second&#13;
half and consequently wound up&#13;
on the low end of the final score.&#13;
The Rangers played desperate in&#13;
the second half as three players&#13;
fouled out of the game.&#13;
Gary Cole led the Ranger&#13;
scoring column with 16 points,&#13;
followed by Chuck Chambliss&#13;
with 14 before fouling out, and&#13;
Bill Sobanski with nine. Mike&#13;
Hanke was held to seven and Ken&#13;
Peyer anddTim Dolan managed&#13;
only nine points between them&#13;
before they both fouled out.&#13;
Chuck Chambliss was named to&#13;
the All-WICA team by the WICA&#13;
coaches and Hanke, Cole and&#13;
Sobanski landed in three of the&#13;
five honorable mention spots.&#13;
The loss resulted in the last&#13;
game of a fine season for the&#13;
Rangers as they came off a 4-18&#13;
mark of last year's team to&#13;
compile a 13-12 overall mark for&#13;
this year and advanced into the&#13;
playoffs for the first time in&#13;
Parkside's history.&#13;
Hopefully, both Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens and his fine squad will&#13;
be back next year for another fine&#13;
season of basketball.&#13;
Three questionable calls in the&#13;
last 21 seconds of the game&#13;
proved to be Parkside's doing in&#13;
last Tuesday night against UWMilwaukee.&#13;
The Rangers lost 62-&#13;
60 in almost pulling off one of the&#13;
major upsets of the year.&#13;
With 8:42 left in the game, the&#13;
Rangers were down by 10 points&#13;
and looked as though they would&#13;
not be able to come back, but the&#13;
sharp shooting of Gary Cole, Bill&#13;
Sobanski and Tim Dolan brought&#13;
the Rangers roaring back to take&#13;
a 60 to 58 lead with 28 seconds left&#13;
in the game. Then the bad breaks&#13;
for Parkside started; with 21&#13;
seconds left a foul was called on&#13;
Sobanski and George Tandy&#13;
plopped two free throws through&#13;
the net to tie up the game. Then&#13;
as the Rangers Mike Hanke was&#13;
bringing the ball upcourt he was&#13;
hemmed in and forced out of&#13;
bounds, but the officials ruled'&#13;
that he stepped out thus turning&#13;
the ball over to Milwaukee. Again&#13;
it was Tandy who scored this&#13;
time on a jumper from the corner&#13;
to give UWM a 62-60 lead with&#13;
nine seconds left. A long pass&#13;
down court to Gary Cole resulted&#13;
in disaster as Cole and a UWM&#13;
player tangled under the basket&#13;
as officials looked on without&#13;
calling a foul on either player.&#13;
While all this was happening,&#13;
time ran out and Milwaukee had&#13;
notched it's 18th victory of the&#13;
season while handing Parkside&#13;
it's 11th loss.&#13;
Parkside Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
said of the game, "There were&#13;
three bad breaks in the final 21&#13;
seconds that sunk us. We were&#13;
down by as many as ten in the&#13;
second half and we came back to&#13;
take the lead with 40 seconds left&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch C reated&#13;
Sandwiches &amp;&#13;
Charcoal Steaks&#13;
North &amp; South S heridan R d.&#13;
and we couldn't get off a shot. I&#13;
feel that we played much better&#13;
defense than they did and hustled&#13;
more, but we lost in the last nine&#13;
seconds of the game. We made&#13;
them play the kind of basketball&#13;
that we wanted to play for 35 of&#13;
the 40 minutes. Milwaukee has&#13;
two real quick guards, probably&#13;
the quickest that we've come up&#13;
against all year and they are a&#13;
good tough rebounding club&#13;
although no tougher than some of&#13;
the other teams that we've&#13;
played."&#13;
Stephens was optimistic about&#13;
tournament play, commenting&#13;
that, "If the players don't let the&#13;
Milwaukee game get them down&#13;
too much and they continue to&#13;
play the way that we have played&#13;
the last few games, we should do&#13;
well. We have never beat&#13;
Lakeland on their home court,&#13;
but if we can combine good&#13;
defense with good shooting and&#13;
steady rebounding we can beat&#13;
them."&#13;
Gary Cole led the Ranger&#13;
scoring attack with 20 points&#13;
along with grabbing 19 rebounds.&#13;
Mike Hanke, back from a bout&#13;
with strep throat, scored 12 points&#13;
and grabbed nine rebounds. Bill&#13;
Sobanski and Chuck Chambliss&#13;
each scored 10 tallies and&#13;
Sobanski also swept 11 caroms&#13;
from the boards.&#13;
The Rangers grabbed the lead&#13;
going into intermission 30-26,&#13;
hitting 48 percent of their shots&#13;
from the field as compared to a&#13;
frigid 29 percent Milwaukee&#13;
count. In the second half it was&#13;
just the opposite though, as the&#13;
Rangers cooled down to a 34&#13;
percent clip and Milwaukee&#13;
blazed to a 49 percent average.&#13;
Parkside outrebounded their&#13;
hosts, 49-39, bu t couldn't seem to&#13;
turn the caroms into points of&#13;
their own. The Rangers did a&#13;
good job of containing&#13;
Milwaukee's guards, although&#13;
they did score 24 points between&#13;
them. Harold Lee made only five&#13;
shots in 17 attempts and Mike&#13;
Ewing cashed in on only seven of&#13;
19. The Ranger guards did not&#13;
fare as well as that though&#13;
scoring only 18 points among the&#13;
three of them. Tim Dolan and&#13;
Ken Peyer only amanged four&#13;
points apiece, while Chambliss&#13;
was held to 10, almost eight below&#13;
his season average.&#13;
Both teams shot a paltry 38&#13;
percent average for the game&#13;
from the field, while Parkside hit&#13;
at an 82 percent clip from the&#13;
charity line and Milwaukee&#13;
connected on 67 percent of their&#13;
gift tosses.&#13;
Wrestlers prepare for NAIA tourney&#13;
Coach Jim Koch will lead the&#13;
Parkside's wrestling contingent&#13;
into Sioux City, Iowa, tomorrow&#13;
for the NAIA National Tournament.&#13;
The meet runs through&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Representing Parkside will be&#13;
Ail-American Ken Martin, Bill&#13;
West and Rico Savaglio.&#13;
Martin, who is a repeater at&#13;
this tournament, is achieving a&#13;
distinction that no other Ranger&#13;
grappler has ever had. He will be&#13;
seeded number one at this&#13;
tournament, by virtue of being&#13;
the highest placing wrestler in his&#13;
weight group returning from last&#13;
year. That means that he will be&#13;
the man that everyone else is out&#13;
to beat.&#13;
Koch also expects both West&#13;
and Savaglio to do very well and&#13;
to pick up points for Parkside.&#13;
Since each team represented at&#13;
the meet will l^g just a couple of&#13;
The gym in the Physical Education&#13;
Bldg. will be closed each day from&#13;
3:30 to 8 p.m. because of track,&#13;
baseball and tennis practice.&#13;
qualifying wrestlers to place&#13;
their hopes on, the determining&#13;
factor in how well a team finishes&#13;
doesn't depend on team strength&#13;
but individual performance.&#13;
Koch said earlier in the year&#13;
*:hat he felt that he had the&#13;
wrestlers to give Parkside a&#13;
finish possibly as high as the top&#13;
ten, and he then singled out these&#13;
three wrestlers as the ones that&#13;
were going to have to perform up&#13;
to their full capability if Parkside&#13;
were to finish that high.&#13;
They did, and now they have to&#13;
prove their coach a proficient&#13;
soothsayer one more time in&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
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CAREER ... and afraid to ask. Get the facts about Prudential's&#13;
job preview program - the first step toward a growth&#13;
career in sales and sales management. Part-time while&#13;
obtaining your degree; full-time upon graduation. Immediate&#13;
openings in Racine and Kenosha. Phone Mr. Cohen,&#13;
633-2427 in Racine. Equal opportunity - M-F.&#13;
lee? $ub&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER iy&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday th ru&#13;
Thursday 11-8&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
UNCONSTRUCTED BLAZERS&#13;
BAGGIES&#13;
BOW TIES&#13;
SHRINK SWEATERS&#13;
FOR GALS-LOW RISE JEANS&#13;
AND MONSTER BELLS&#13;
^ ^ 308 6th. St. DOWNTOWN RACINE&#13;
AUTO &amp;&#13;
TRUCK&#13;
PARTS GORDON&#13;
AUTO PARTS, INC.&#13;
Comple te Machine Shop Servic e&#13;
Pa int &amp; Body Shop Suppli es&#13;
High Pe rformanc e Work.&#13;
1400 Milwaukee Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 7:30 9:00&#13;
Saturday 7:30 5:30&#13;
Sunday 9:00 1:00&#13;
Discount to Pa rkside Students&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club Sly neph.&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
National&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
Phone 654-048&#13;
nment &amp; Dancing&#13;
Night Squore Dance &amp; Polka to:&#13;
l THE RYTHAA MASTERS&#13;
&amp; S aturday Nights:&#13;
&amp; THE COUNTRY LEGENDS&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'LUNCH&#13;
PIZZA, CHICKE N, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
Mon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
$^89&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'SUPPER&#13;
PIZZA, CHICK EN, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues.&#13;
Nites&#13;
189&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'FISH&#13;
FISH, PIZZA, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed.&amp;Fri. c1Qq&#13;
from 5 p.m. T*&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
J0 KIN DS SERV E D ALL THE TIME&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
W MO-JO'S S E R V ED ALL THE Til&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 1, issue 20, March 7, 1973</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>SMI Building revived</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
$50,000 Appropriated&#13;
SMI Building revived&#13;
The SMI building was revived&#13;
last week in a decision by the&#13;
State Building Commission&#13;
providing $50,000 in advance&#13;
planning money. The vote was 7-1&#13;
with only Senator Milo Knutson&#13;
(R-LaCrosse) opposed.&#13;
The University is required to&#13;
review its space needs before the&#13;
funds are provided, but State&#13;
Representative George Molinaro&#13;
(D-Kenosha) said this would not&#13;
be a major hurdle.&#13;
"We could start digging by&#13;
1975," Molinaro told a group of&#13;
Kenosha County Supervisors.&#13;
The University and the Board&#13;
of Regents had earlier recommended&#13;
$3.1, million be put in the&#13;
1973-74 state budget in order to&#13;
complete the building but later&#13;
changed their minds and&#13;
deferred the project entirely for&#13;
this biennium.&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie said he is "extremely&#13;
pleased" by the action, especially&#13;
so since the initiative came from&#13;
the community rather than the&#13;
campus.&#13;
"This action says something&#13;
important," Wyllie said, "It says&#13;
that the campus has arrived in&#13;
the sense of public understanding&#13;
of its functions and of its importance&#13;
in providing opportunity&#13;
for young people and&#13;
future economic development for&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
If the measure is approved in&#13;
full, the building might be ready&#13;
by the fall of 1977. However, if no&#13;
action is taken until next year, it&#13;
would be 1978 before the building&#13;
could be in use.&#13;
Lake alert&#13;
Lake Michigan Alert, a conference&#13;
on the problems of the&#13;
lake, will take place Saturday at&#13;
Tallent Hall. Three problem&#13;
areas will be discussed: the&#13;
Federal Water Pollution Act '72,&#13;
Nuclear Power Plants, and&#13;
Shoreline Erosion. Preregistration&#13;
has been extended.&#13;
For further information, contact&#13;
the University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
at 553-2312.&#13;
PSGA announces&#13;
election results&#13;
The results of the recently held&#13;
PSGA elections show that 335&#13;
members of the student body&#13;
voted. This is 8.08 percent of the&#13;
voters at Parkside.&#13;
Running unopposed for&#13;
Recording Secretary, Kathryn&#13;
Wellner received 261 votes. The&#13;
seven new Senators are Patrick&#13;
McDevitt, 161; Nancy Lee, 143-&#13;
Helmut Kah, 140; David Otto'&#13;
137; Charles Stephen, 133;&#13;
Thomas Hughes, 121; and Lorri&#13;
Tommerup, 120. Also running,&#13;
but not receiving enough votes&#13;
were, George Kis, 108; and&#13;
Raymond Waldie, 65.&#13;
Wednesday, March 14, 1973&#13;
Vol. 1, No. 21&#13;
Distinguished teaching award&#13;
nomination in progress&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Award&#13;
Nomination Forms have been&#13;
mailed to all students.&#13;
According to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students, the money for the&#13;
award is made available to the&#13;
University by the Standard Oil&#13;
Corporation of Indiana.&#13;
Last year there was $1,000&#13;
available for awards, and two&#13;
$500 awards were given. This&#13;
year only $500 was received from&#13;
Standard Oil, so the Teaching&#13;
Awards Committee is trying to&#13;
locate another source of money.&#13;
Hopefully tfiere will be enough&#13;
money to present two awards&#13;
again this year.&#13;
"The award is based purely on&#13;
classroom teaching, not on&#13;
publishing or other scholarly&#13;
pursuits," said Ms. Echelbarger.&#13;
Students needing nomination&#13;
forms may pick them up in the&#13;
Information Office or Ms.&#13;
Echelbarger's office.&#13;
Career counseling available Mini-folk festival&#13;
to be held here Sunday&#13;
The First Parkside Mini-Folk&#13;
Festival will be happening on&#13;
Sunday from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. at&#13;
the Studnet Activities Building.&#13;
The event is FREE and sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. If the weather is good, the&#13;
concert will be outside on the&#13;
courtyard; otherwise it will be&#13;
held indoors.&#13;
The Hazlewood Tavern Band&#13;
will be here from Milwaukee, as&#13;
will Nancy Price, who has played&#13;
in the Whiteskellar. Other perinclude&#13;
Dave Dufek, Terry Elliot,&#13;
John Graham, Dennis Lindgren,&#13;
Bob Rohan, Charlie Udell and&#13;
Steve Miller.&#13;
Any student attending&#13;
Parkside who has not decided on&#13;
a major or occupation can seek&#13;
help in the Career Counseling and&#13;
Information Office, Tallent Hall,&#13;
room 284.&#13;
Students who want to talk with&#13;
a career counselor should call&#13;
553-2122 for an appointment.&#13;
Those who wish to browse are&#13;
encouraged to stop by Tallent&#13;
Hall and look through material on&#13;
employment trends, salary&#13;
ranges, job descriptions, and&#13;
requirements anytime from 8:30&#13;
a.m. to 4:30p.m. Monday through&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Some students face indecision&#13;
with confidence, optimistic that&#13;
things will work out. Others are&#13;
concerned about their lack of&#13;
specific educational goals; a&#13;
concern so deep for some that&#13;
they ask themselves "Why am I&#13;
in college if I d°n't know what I&#13;
want to Study?''&#13;
Current college trends indicate&#13;
that about half the freshmen who&#13;
enter college are undecided about&#13;
their choice of majors. Of the&#13;
other 50 percent, many change&#13;
their minds about their majors,&#13;
some more than once.&#13;
A new service available to&#13;
students this semester is&#13;
discussion on Mondays from 11&#13;
a.m. to 3 p.m. with a career&#13;
extern.&#13;
Irish writing symposium set for Saturday&#13;
Irish Writing Today, a symposium,&#13;
sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum and the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee,&#13;
will be presented Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
The symposium will be a series&#13;
of readings, speeches, lectures&#13;
and workshops, culminated by a&#13;
dance in the Student Activities&#13;
Building at 8 p.m. Saturday.&#13;
Starting off the program,&#13;
William Cotter Murray will read&#13;
prose in the 2nd floor Library&#13;
lounge at 1 p.m. Murray will be&#13;
followed at 1:45 p.m. by Knute&#13;
Skinner's poetry reading.&#13;
Janet Dunleavy will give the&#13;
keynote address "Irish Writing&#13;
Today" at 2:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 103. A panel&#13;
discussion on Irish writing today&#13;
with Dunleavy, Murray, Skinner,&#13;
Tom Churchill and James Liddy&#13;
(moderator) will take place after&#13;
the keynote, starting at 3:15 p.m.&#13;
in Greenquist 103.&#13;
"The Informer," a film, will be&#13;
shown at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
103. There will be no admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
A poetry workshop with&#13;
Skinner and Liddy, at 10 a.m. in&#13;
LLC D-174, will be first on&#13;
Saturday's activity agenda.&#13;
Running concurrently will be a&#13;
prose workshop with Herbert&#13;
Kubly, Murray and Churchill in&#13;
LLC 3314.&#13;
The Big House, a drama studio&#13;
production by Brendan Behan,&#13;
will be presented in Main Place&#13;
at 2 p.m. Also in Main Pla.ce will&#13;
be an Irish poetry reading by&#13;
Liddy, followed with Irish songs&#13;
by James Runnels.&#13;
Herbert Kubly &#13;
2 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 14, 1973&#13;
The ParksideRAIMGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Community helps&#13;
revive SMI&#13;
A substantial group effort was successfully applied in&#13;
order to acquire $80,000 in planning money for the&#13;
Science and Modern Industry (SMI) building.&#13;
Assemblyman George Molinaro (D-Kenosha), along&#13;
with a host of others, brought Parkside's case to the UW&#13;
system and the system responded. Labor unions,&#13;
political figures, the democratic party of Kenosha,&#13;
school administrators and many other entities of the&#13;
community combined to renew hopes for the on-time&#13;
construction of the SMI building.&#13;
It is a credit to the school that it could muster so much&#13;
allied strength with which it could reach a usually hard&#13;
to reach system.&#13;
The local support which was evidenced in this venture&#13;
will doubtless be of help in the future. But, for now we&#13;
should concern ouselves with the help the community&#13;
has given us this time. We extend our thanks to those&#13;
people who spent time in meetings and hearings to bring&#13;
about the desired outcome.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
R P£ f£CT EXOTPLE&#13;
OF DCmocRAM&#13;
IN EDUCATION IS&#13;
THE CONCEPT OF&#13;
FREEDOIT] OF&#13;
EXPRESSION.&#13;
IN ALL mq CLASS&#13;
LCCTURCS AND&#13;
EXAms i&#13;
ENCOURAGE.&#13;
STUDENTS TO&#13;
EXPRESS AS rrawq&#13;
DIFFERENT OPINIONS&#13;
ASTHEH UISH&#13;
AS LONG AS THEAte&#13;
m m e t ! ! !&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
Jose Greco is here and gone. Whatever money lost on the performance&#13;
is lost forever and cannot be recovered. Once more the&#13;
students of Parkside have seen their money spent, not as it should beon&#13;
the students, but elsewhere in an endevor that will profit the large&#13;
majority nothing. ..&#13;
Student money will continue to be so immoderately spent until&#13;
enough of a voice is raised against such a system, until both the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee and the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
realise that money received from the segregated fee should be spent&#13;
for one purpose only-for the student.&#13;
It has been stated that programs financed using student money&#13;
should be exclusively oriented towards the student. An exception can&#13;
be made only when a non-student-oriented program is featured to&#13;
make a profit. Such profits then may be used on the students in other&#13;
ways.&#13;
A program which does not going to cost the students a cent, yet may&#13;
very well be of general interest, is being offered Tuesday, April 17.&#13;
The title of the program is 'Flying Saucers ARE Real' and will be&#13;
presented by Stanton T. Friedman, a nuclear physicist and the only&#13;
space scientist devoting full time to the science of "Ufology."&#13;
Friedman, who's educational backround includes a B.S.c. and&#13;
M.S.c. in Physics from the University of Chicago, has a 14 year&#13;
backround dealing with applications of nuclear science from&#13;
powerplants to rockets.&#13;
He is the director of t he California UFO Research Institute and was&#13;
one of t welve scientists contributing to the Scientific Symposium on&#13;
UFO's held by the U.S. Congress in 1968. H e has given hundreds of&#13;
lectures and talks on the subject since 1967.&#13;
This talk, which is not going to cost the students, will be paid for&#13;
entirely by gate receipts, Mr. Friedman receiving a percentage of t he&#13;
gross. Students will be charged $1.00 and general admission will be&#13;
$1.50.&#13;
The method of h aving performers work for a percentageof the gate&#13;
is a good one and should be used much more often at Parkside.&#13;
The quality of student here at Parkside has been decreasing each&#13;
semester as far as general interest goes. During the recent Student&#13;
Senate elections only 335 or 8.1 percent of the student body even&#13;
bothered to vote.&#13;
When 3,808 students out of 4,143 don't even bother to state a&#13;
preference in the people who will be representing them, something is&#13;
very very wrong.&#13;
By Gary Huck&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
KenniS w- stud&#13;
?&#13;
nt&#13;
?0 °&#13;
f The Unive&#13;
rsity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295&#13;
JS®* ^&#13;
arksid&#13;
f RanS&#13;
er is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
eflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the officia&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subiect o&#13;
ie ffvne°d&#13;
SanHeHtS,Ki&#13;
aCUlty Staff must be ***** to 250 words a&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edi&#13;
add™ °nh&#13;
ength and&#13;
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taJTi Pu"&#13;
e nUmber and student status «'MUlty rank Names wU&#13;
print anj^ letters! Tte edit&#13;
°&#13;
rs theVht to™l&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
^P^.&#13;
ERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
WRITER S: Ken Konkiol, Gary Jensen, Marilvn Srhuhnrt ,&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmussen, Terri Gogola, Geoff Blaesina Sma&#13;
' He lmu t Ka h&#13;
-&#13;
Bil 1&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck Roh Pnh.n a ®la es, n 9&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ken Konkol, Bill Noll Denn^D^nan'c V°&lt;°&#13;
S&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence Ken Kn^f. « Gr&lt; »&#13;
Sv s,o n&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
$ v^SSnB110 NA™°NAL ADVERTISING BY 2&#13;
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' 360 UKinaton Avt„ New York, N. i\ 10017 I &#13;
Wed., Mar. 14, 1973 THE PARKS IDE RANGER 3&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BILLION DOLLAR BABIES&#13;
Alice Cooper (BS2685)&#13;
Mice CooDPr"^ """ "1 h3rd r&#13;
°&#13;
Ck gardens can def&#13;
'nitely be proud of&#13;
As thjS 1S Alice Cooper's sixth album, it brings her-him-them to a&#13;
pomt of consistent quality. BILLION DOLLAR BABIES is less fSceful&#13;
TO mKiS &gt;1"^' but&#13;
"&#13;
ot in &lt;&#13;
he same vein !TLOVE,T&#13;
considerable worth fn putdone their previous works, it is of&#13;
noct o j anyone who was moved by Alice CooDer of the&#13;
past. Alice's vocal performance on this record is Lmewhat llss&#13;
histrionic than it has been, while the lyrics still intend to shock The&#13;
music ,s more involved with classical flirtations.&#13;
alhi mewh°iPer CP&#13;
ntm"&#13;
es t0 have a diversified sound from album to&#13;
to th?' tu mak&#13;
l&#13;
ng them a11 seem coherent with certain references&#13;
piece on SCHOO?^OTT^fhT8 appa&#13;
,&#13;
rent with ^ West Side Story piece on SCHOOLS OUT that was also done, although in a less&#13;
fnrmpH manner&#13;
- on their first album. On their latest, lyrical slices&#13;
m y usedare parts of new compositions. "My Stars" and "feeling&#13;
"KILZV?&#13;
111™- M,°r&#13;
^&#13;
1S done with&#13;
"&#13;
babies&#13;
" and the "dead," while&#13;
Reflected is reworked as a new single&#13;
vouwTnnH^fih&#13;
1&#13;
^ lyric&#13;
.&#13;
sheet that is P&#13;
r&#13;
inted on the inside sleeve,&#13;
you will notice that the first song, "Hello Hooray," was written bv a&#13;
non-member named Rolf Kempf. This has a B^dway setting and&#13;
Alice proclaims, "God, I feel so strong." g&#13;
"Raped and Freezin' » is from one of their traditional bags. It was&#13;
inspired by "Be My Baby" which was inspired by "Honky Tonk&#13;
;&#13;
hlC was insP.&#13;
ired by Hank Williams. In some lines lead&#13;
notes and vocal notes are juxtapositioned. A Spanish style shuffle ends&#13;
Next comes ^Elected," a single that was intended to smash the&#13;
charts in time with the national elections. The true Alice Cooper freaks&#13;
PRETOIsFORYOTl°Th&#13;
0fh&#13;
he&#13;
i,&#13;
tUne is&#13;
;:&#13;
Reflected&#13;
" from that cut on&#13;
oivi h 7 background horns are perfectly mixed. He&#13;
gives his campaign speech with his promises about school and&#13;
acknowledges that people all over the country have problems He&#13;
fades off with, "and personally, I don't care."&#13;
Billion Dollar Babies" has a chorus tune that was sung by some&#13;
pop non-rock star from a long time back, whom I can't recall now.&#13;
"Unfinished Sweet" tells about the sad life of a bubble gum and&#13;
effecKm^&#13;
C&#13;
a0 con&#13;
^ms their familiar style of instrumental sound&#13;
notes are on^part® ** g J&#13;
"&#13;
St ** ^ dUrati&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
" Spy thriller&#13;
K Ki&#13;
LL^&#13;
ER r&#13;
W£&#13;
S Alice Co&#13;
°P&#13;
er&#13;
'&#13;
s simulation of the Stones, then the&#13;
S&#13;
S1AdeH° BILLION DOLLAR BABIES is their version of the&#13;
a' f' f on Allce&#13;
'&#13;
s P&#13;
38* albums, one can see many&#13;
[muLlfTih !S&#13;
C c 1S t0 be down on any band that can skillfully&#13;
identity Stones and the Beatles&#13;
-&#13;
whiJ&#13;
e retaining their own&#13;
immediately after flipping the disc over, it is apparent that "No&#13;
Beatles1S Wlth Ahce s smoother singing, is similar to the&#13;
tv,'&#13;
GeS&#13;
tl&#13;
°&#13;
n&#13;
l&#13;
L,f&#13;
nd&#13;
?&#13;
i&#13;
!&#13;
e&#13;
" contains a deep message about Alice and&#13;
other billion dollar babies." Long verses of d ialogue are followed by&#13;
a brief chorus. A harmonica followed by a burning guitar concludes it.&#13;
J&#13;
n Sk* Things one can vividly feel the personae from the leader of&#13;
the Blue Meanies." Alice recites, "I eat my things, What love it&#13;
brings, Come here, my things, Don't fear my things." Then there is a&#13;
musical section similar to the one in "Yellow Submarine."&#13;
"Mary Ann" is Alice as the sentimental Paul McCartny and Alice&#13;
says "Mary Ann, I thought you were my man." The tender piano solo&#13;
adds the right effect.&#13;
The concluding number is for vampire lovers, with Alice saying&#13;
"While friends and lovers mourn your silly grave, I have other uses for&#13;
you, Darling. The beautiful chorus will have you singing everwhere&#13;
you go, "I Love The Dead."&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Live Notes&#13;
Milwaukee is an exciting place»at least it was Wednesday, Feb. 28&#13;
On the way up to the Auditorium .to see Uriah Heep, our car barely&#13;
escaped total disaster from a sideswiper, and once downtown we were&#13;
able to view a real live street fight. At the concert the crowd was&#13;
stomping and shouting-more for turning the lights off than for the&#13;
arrival of Uriah Heep (so they could smoke dope, of course). The band&#13;
presented an exciting and definitely loud sound with tunes from most&#13;
of their albums. Their arrangements were good except for some&#13;
overly long crescendos. The guitar man was alternately playing&#13;
skillfully and just pounding on it and doing his version of Mark Farner.&#13;
In the end many minds were blown.&#13;
Tony, Jumbo and Garry thrilled the audience at the Activities&#13;
Building to the bone Saturday, March 3rd, with their new dimensions&#13;
provided by a drummer, bassist and keyboard player. They did Jethro&#13;
Tull as well as their usual C,S,N,&amp;Y. Tony, Jumbo and Garry got&#13;
second billing to the Edmunds and Curley comedy team.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
There has been a recent&#13;
development at the P.E. Building&#13;
that deserves some attention. It&#13;
appears that the person in charge&#13;
of setting up time schedules is not&#13;
doing so in the best interest of the&#13;
average Parkside student. If you&#13;
are an early riser, and you have&#13;
some time to kill between 8:30&#13;
a.m. and 11 a.m., you will not be&#13;
able to do it in the P.E. Building.&#13;
This time is allotted to the tennis&#13;
class. But could not a third of the&#13;
Pre-Law Club&#13;
gym be sectioned off for general&#13;
use?&#13;
What is the matter with using&#13;
the gym at 11 a.m.? Nothing,&#13;
except that you have to be out at&#13;
3:30p.m.and stay out until 8p.m.&#13;
Once again the entire gym is&#13;
closed, not for a class, but for&#13;
three varsity sport teams. The&#13;
total number of the teams&#13;
comprises less than 4 percent of&#13;
the Parkside populace. This is&#13;
unfair to all the students at&#13;
Parkside, the majority of the&#13;
students are allowed six and one&#13;
half hours to use this facility,&#13;
while a minority of the students&#13;
have priority for seven hours.&#13;
Come on, Mr. Athletic&#13;
Director, let us not be so biased&#13;
with the use of t he P.E. Building.&#13;
There are more than a few&#13;
hundred "privileged" students&#13;
going to this school. At least&#13;
section off a portion of the gym&#13;
for general us6. Maybe I am an&#13;
untalented athlete, but I am also&#13;
a Parkside student, entitled to as&#13;
much use of the facilities here as&#13;
anyone else.&#13;
Thomas R. Hughes&#13;
Parkside student&#13;
Group discusses abortion&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
'State statutes on abortion&#13;
arose in the mid-19th century and&#13;
were based on three factors:&#13;
Victorian attitudes, lack of&#13;
safety, and protection of unborn&#13;
life." Thus began a round-table&#13;
discussion on abortion with two&#13;
Kenosha attorneys-Robert&#13;
Bramscher and Michael Kehoesponsored&#13;
by the Pre-Law Club&#13;
recently&#13;
The recent Supreme Court&#13;
decision legalizes abortion on&#13;
demand in this country for the&#13;
first six months of pregnancy.&#13;
The Court found that "Victorian&#13;
attitudes" were not a good basis&#13;
to sustain abortion laws. Further,&#13;
medical statistics showed that&#13;
abortion is not unsafe in the first&#13;
three months. Risks are&#13;
somewhat higher during the next&#13;
three months, so the Court said&#13;
states may regulate abortion&#13;
procedures (by requiring a&#13;
physician or a clinical environment,&#13;
for example) for this&#13;
period. Only in the final three&#13;
months could states prohibit&#13;
abortions.&#13;
This latter stipulation, that&#13;
states could pass legislation&#13;
controlling abortions after the&#13;
sixth month, seems to indicate&#13;
that the Supreme Court was not&#13;
prepared to remove states&#13;
completely from this area.&#13;
Legally, the fetus is not a person&#13;
under the Constitution so has no&#13;
rights, but the Court says that&#13;
states do have an interest in&#13;
protecting a viable'fetus. "The&#13;
question is why this state interest&#13;
can supersede the mother's&#13;
right," Bramscher remarked.&#13;
"The constitutional right to&#13;
privacy supersedes states' rights&#13;
to legislate for the health of the&#13;
mother, since abortions are no&#13;
longer unsalfe.&#13;
"The legislative intent of the&#13;
states when the laws were&#13;
originally passed was the health&#13;
and welfare of the mother, rather&#13;
than the imposition of r eligious or&#13;
moral beliefs," Bramscher said.&#13;
"The Court's decision includes&#13;
little discussion of morality&#13;
except to reject the validity of&#13;
Victorian values. Justice&#13;
Rehnquist's dissenting opinion&#13;
never says he is opposed to&#13;
abortion, but only to the theories&#13;
used by the Court in the majority&#13;
decision," he added.&#13;
Kehoe, in commenting on&#13;
Wisconsin's abortion law, said&#13;
that "prior to 1969 abortions&#13;
weren't allowed after quickening&#13;
of the fetus. In 1969 t he law was&#13;
changed so that no abortions&#13;
were allowed from the time of&#13;
conception. The law went backwards."&#13;
&#13;
"The Supreme Courts's&#13;
decision is so broad it wipes out&#13;
existing state laws on abortion,"&#13;
Bramscher concluded. "But it&#13;
doesn't stop states from passing&#13;
new legislation regulating&#13;
abortion from approximately the&#13;
sixth month on."&#13;
He does not feel that this poses&#13;
serious problems though, except&#13;
in the vague wording "approximately&#13;
the sixth month."&#13;
Essentially he believes it is a&#13;
decision capable of la sting a long&#13;
time and later decisions will&#13;
further clarify it. The majority of&#13;
those who lobbyed for legalized&#13;
abortion are not too upset at the&#13;
restrictions after the sixth&#13;
month, he feels. Those opposed to&#13;
the Court's decision will lobby for&#13;
a Constitutional amendment to&#13;
prohibit abortions, but Bramscher&#13;
doubts they will be successful.&#13;
&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHIIITZ BUICK-OPEl&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514&#13;
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J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Re cord Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. , Mar. 14, 1973&#13;
Naturally, the best thing to do would not be to rely solely on the book,&#13;
but to spend a few weeks studying the book, and listening to the tape.&#13;
The course is set up with the expectstion that the user is a traveler,&#13;
and does not intend to write the language, or speak it extensively.&#13;
Therefore, there is a minimal emphasis on grammar. The basic&#13;
technique of the course is memorization. So, anyone who has difficulty&#13;
memorizing would be well advised to avail themselves of a copy of the&#13;
book to refer to on their trip.&#13;
The book has a comprehensive section on eating out, a shopping&#13;
guide to help one find just about anything one might need and, in case&#13;
of emergency, there are sections on car trouble, doctors, dentists,&#13;
hospitals, and even a place for emergency telephone numbers. One&#13;
never hopes to use such information, but it is always wise to have it&#13;
available.&#13;
Though I don't care much for crash memorization in learning, there&#13;
really is no other answer for the traveler, and I believe the Berlitz&#13;
course is excellent in all other respects.&#13;
Happy travels.&#13;
tNl' HOU WILL flUQ -THE&#13;
S1fl6£TS ARE GUAR- R60ED,&#13;
ey vNrrtQ SWAKE&#13;
* SARDINES// w* --&#13;
{ I'M GONNA TLU. YOU PUNKS&#13;
THIS ONCE, So you BETTER C£R&#13;
\T THE FIPST TIME. IF IT&#13;
WASNV fofi THE UNITED STATES&#13;
MARINE COR PS, YOU wouldn't&#13;
BE HERE tf NOW BEAT IT/,&#13;
OTTO vs.&#13;
THE U.S.&#13;
1 ,&#13;
MARINE C ORPS! Vo you \ THINK HE'S ^ Rl&amp;HT OTTO A/&#13;
7 I O UNNO, ^&#13;
I'LL H AVE TO&#13;
ASK My WOM. rHE.4 LOOK1 \ / WAR ! THEKE'S SOMES,&#13;
LiTS so&#13;
°VeR&#13;
MARINES TRViw' I A N' GIVE 'EM TO DO SOME &lt; Tit R AZZ\! /&#13;
I necRuiTiN'//T^_^&#13;
The Comic Strip By Bob Rohan&#13;
iSTEN CREEPf you MAKE ON E MOR E UH tSUE&#13;
or MY S HAPE AND I'LL KNOCK *&gt;uR HEAD g&#13;
O FAR To THE RIGHT yfou'U Be TAKIN P&#13;
ES WITH YOU R /—- X&#13;
MOUTH!!"" T&#13;
...STILL TRYING lb MAKE&#13;
8ACOM WIT H THAT W OMENS&#13;
_ LIS ACTIVIST , -&#13;
( GeoRGe.7&#13;
!'? J&#13;
GULP?&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
T h u rs d ay 1 1 - 8&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches,&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tabl es&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
FID E L I T Y U N I O N LIF E&#13;
Your COLLEGEMASTER&#13;
representative&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
TOM KRIMMEL&#13;
4906-7th Ave.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
654-2142&#13;
652-1424&#13;
Kenosha (formerly Shakey's)&#13;
INSURANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS - CYCLES - SCOOTERS&#13;
£ D ancing Wednesday Night Sguare D ance &amp; PQ&#13;
SANDY &amp; THE WES1HAIRS St. Patrick's PayK Jp&#13;
Special J&#13;
in the S tudent A ctivities B uilding&#13;
Green Beer &amp;'&#13;
ye &amp; Free P opcorn!&#13;
( 2 - 6 p . m . )&#13;
Friday - Saturday, M arch 16 -17&#13;
All Forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Service&#13;
With The Better Co's&#13;
Fire - Life - Hospital - Boats&#13;
Package Policies&#13;
A LL Y OU C A N EAT&#13;
P IZ Z A, C H ICK E N , S A L A D, M O -JO 'S&#13;
11:30-1:3 0&#13;
Mon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
FIS H, P IZ Z A. S A L A D, M O -JO 'S&#13;
Wed.&amp;Fri. j.,s&#13;
from 5 p.m. I / "JipfuJfHl&#13;
&gt;**/ Jmm a&#13;
J. R. MULICH&#13;
CARL H. JENSEN&#13;
A LL Y O U C A N EAT Z N LLH&#13;
BUNCH O'SUPPER % 2 0 *'NDS SERVED A LL THE TIM E&#13;
P IZ Z A, C H ICKEN, S A L A D. M O -JO'S A&#13;
Mon.&amp;Tues. $-89 y CHICKEN&#13;
Nites I Q W M O -JO 'S SERV ED A LL T H E TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Rationalities, Irrationalities, &amp; Absurdities&#13;
Math prof to lecture here&#13;
An authority on mathematics&#13;
curriculum development,&#13;
Professor Wade Ellis, dean of the&#13;
Horace H. Rackham School of&#13;
Graduate Studies at the&#13;
University of Michigan, will&#13;
lecture on "Rationalities,&#13;
Irrationalities and Absurdities"&#13;
during a two-day visit to&#13;
Parkside March 22 and 23.&#13;
Mathematics teachers from&#13;
junior and senior high schools&#13;
and colleges throughout&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin have&#13;
been invited to the lecture, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on March 22 in Room 103,&#13;
Greenquist Hall. During his&#13;
subsequent day on campus, Prof.&#13;
Ellis will meet with Parkside&#13;
math students.&#13;
Ellis has worked extensively&#13;
with School Math Study Group&#13;
(SMSG) and has directed a&#13;
number of National Science&#13;
Foundation summer institutes&#13;
for high school and college math&#13;
teachers.&#13;
He also has worked with the&#13;
Office of Scientific Research and&#13;
Development, the Radiation&#13;
Laboratory at Massachusetts&#13;
Institute of Technology and the&#13;
U.S. Air Force Lab at Cambridge.&#13;
&#13;
He received his B.S. degree at&#13;
Wilberforce College, his M.A. at&#13;
New Mexico and Ph.D. at&#13;
Michigan. He taught at Fisk&#13;
University, Boston University&#13;
and Oberlin College before&#13;
returning to Michigan in 1967. He&#13;
also has been a faculty fellow in&#13;
India and France and a visiting&#13;
professor in Peru.&#13;
His visit is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside science division and is a&#13;
part of the Mathematics&#13;
Association of America Visiting&#13;
Lecturers Program. Persons&#13;
wishing additional information&#13;
on his lecture should contact&#13;
Donald T. Piele, assistant&#13;
professor of mathematics.&#13;
By Jeff Vukos&#13;
/htdto--1/Uu&lt;zt 'Review&#13;
ftcidia-fVc&lt;uial "tRevcecv&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Are you going to Spain during the Easter break?&#13;
Lucky you, but can you speak Spanish? If not, the Learning Center&#13;
has a Berlitz Spanish course for English-speaking travelers. This&#13;
course is designed to teach you common words and useful phrases&#13;
which will help you in ordinary situations, as well as in emergencies.&#13;
The course is taught with the aid of a small paperback book, and a&#13;
cassette recording. The book is set up with a logical system of&#13;
presentation, and color coded so that one may easily find the word or&#13;
phrase for the situation at hand. I believe the color coding is especially&#13;
handy, because the book contains 2,500 phrases and 3,000 words. If one&#13;
had to search through the entire book trying to find the appropriate&#13;
word, it might take all day. This would be an inconvenience in normal&#13;
situations, and, in an emergency, it could be disastrous. &#13;
Wed, Mar. 14, 197 3 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
0 the&#13;
Movement&#13;
DO WOMEN KNOW WHEN THEY'RE BAD OFF?&#13;
BY Shawn Northrup&#13;
Apparently not, according to syndicated columnist Roscoe&#13;
Drummond, in a recent Racine Journal-Times column He eoes on Z&#13;
say that if "one of the greatest reforms of the century " the Fnn i&#13;
Rights Amendment, is not ratified, then some of the blame is ours&#13;
Results of one opinion poll indicate that 75 percent of American men&#13;
consider the position of women in society to be either "good" or&#13;
"excellent." Seventy-one percent of women agree Therefore the&#13;
majority of women conclude that there is little injustice or&#13;
discrimination against them. The E.R.A. is imperiled by ignorance&#13;
and misinformation.&#13;
J 6&#13;
Drummond points out, for example, that college-educated women&#13;
receive an average annual income of $7,400, while men with the same&#13;
education earn $13,000. Four years ago the median earnings of women&#13;
who worked full time was 42 percent lower than that of men Since then&#13;
the gap has widened. Last year, the ratio of women in the U S Senate&#13;
was 1-99. Now it's 0-100. Conditions aren't getting better&#13;
Some women are content with things the way they are Thev have&#13;
found, or hope to find, their niche in the socially approved role of&#13;
housewife-mother-wife. And even though they need not utilize the&#13;
rights the E.R.A. will give them, some of these women choose to denv&#13;
them to others.&#13;
3&#13;
Because they are content, they will not vote to end discrimination&#13;
against other women in such areas as politics, jobs, property pension&#13;
and divorce. They would continue to deny basic rights to women&#13;
outside the stereotyped role: working mothers, unmarried or childless&#13;
women, and the mother who raises her children alone because she has&#13;
been widowed, divorced or deserted.&#13;
Some of us are bad off and some of us aren't. But the tragic fact is&#13;
that some of us have no compassion for our sisters.&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
The Hoy Nature Club will offer&#13;
"Your Birds" in cooperation with&#13;
the University of WisconsinExtension.&#13;
The course begins&#13;
March 27 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in&#13;
the Wadewitz School Auditorium,&#13;
2700 Yout St., Racine. There will&#13;
be five weekly meetings and two&#13;
or three field trips. The fee is $3&#13;
for families, $2 single, and $1 for&#13;
students. Registration is at&#13;
Tallent Hall until March 20. For&#13;
further information call 552-2312.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board will&#13;
present "Play Mistry for Me"&#13;
Friday, March 16 at 8 p.m. and&#13;
Sunday March 18 at 7:30 p m. in&#13;
the Student Activities Building.&#13;
Wisconsin and Parkside I.I.'s&#13;
required. Admission 75 cents.&#13;
The film stars Clint Eastwood&#13;
and Jessica Walter. Eastwood&#13;
makes his directional debut with&#13;
this suspense story of a popular&#13;
disc jockey who brings trouble on&#13;
himself by obliging a fan who&#13;
constantly requests that he "play&#13;
Misty" for her. Thrills mount as&#13;
he becomes involved in a very&#13;
special love-triangle, and&#13;
discovers that someone is a sore&#13;
loser.&#13;
Are you thinking of transfering&#13;
to UW-Madison? If so, you will be&#13;
faced with the problems of being&#13;
one of 40,000 students from all&#13;
over the world.&#13;
If you don't know what to expect,&#13;
but would like to, a group of&#13;
Parkside students are going to be&#13;
sharing their experiences and&#13;
advice about Madison.&#13;
For further information, write&#13;
Greg Klema, 1624 Franklin St.,&#13;
Racine, 53403 or 2209 4 y2 Mile&#13;
Road, Racine, 53402.&#13;
On Wednesday, March 14, the&#13;
Nickelodeon presents "The Great&#13;
McGonical and Champs of the&#13;
Chase," from 1 to 3 p.m. in the&#13;
Whiteskellar. The movie stars&#13;
W.C. Fields and there is no admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
*************&#13;
Parkside Actiy£&#13;
Feature Fit&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Mar. 16&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount P rices!&#13;
5707 - Sixth A ve.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Mar. 18&#13;
7:30p.m.&#13;
Student Act. WLi:&#13;
'PARKSIDE I.I&#13;
required&#13;
C O U P O N&#13;
SPECIAL f or P arkside s tudents o nly&#13;
2-Audio Magnetic Corp.&#13;
Cassette Tape Cartridges&#13;
FOR ONLY...&#13;
Offer good fill April t, 1973 #&#13;
BRANDTS' DISTRIBUTORS, INC.&#13;
Monument Square, Downtown Racine&#13;
^w.-.. - -•••.w.w.Bgai3a!guv...w..&gt;%vvv.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
50« OFF&#13;
ITALIAN FOOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
SPAGHETTI ~ RAV|0LI - LASAGNA&#13;
March 21, 1973 DRINKS AVAILABLE FROM TH E BA R&#13;
w—-—•••••&#13;
E&#13;
^v.v^rw&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 FREE D RY C YCLES W ITH ANY&#13;
WASHLOAD AND 1 EXTRA FREE PUNCH ON&#13;
YOUR D RY CLEANING DIVIDEND CARD&#13;
WITH AN 8 LB. L OAD OF DRY CLEANING&#13;
GOOD AT THESE LOCATIONS:&#13;
NORGE VILLAGE 7313-45 AVE., KENOSHA&#13;
WESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 OHIO ST., RACINE&#13;
RAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 RAPIDS DR., RACINE&#13;
ONE COUPON PER WEEK PER CUSTOMER&#13;
Expires Sept. 5, 1973&#13;
NAME &amp; ADDRESS &#13;
6 T HE P ARKSI DE R ANGER Wed., Mar. 1 4 , 1973&#13;
Prof publishes music book with text&#13;
"Music for Movement, Music&#13;
for Rest," a book of piano&#13;
compositions by Frances Bedford,&#13;
assistant professor of music&#13;
at Parkside, has been issued by&#13;
Stipes Publishing Company,&#13;
Champaign, 111.&#13;
The book includes 36 compositions&#13;
accompanied by a text&#13;
relating ideas for their use in the&#13;
classroom to stimulate rhythmic&#13;
movement and to enrich storytelling&#13;
through the development&#13;
of "sound pictures."&#13;
Mrs. Bedford teaches keyboard&#13;
musicianship at Parkside and is a&#13;
member of the Parkside Baroque&#13;
Players, a facuty chamber&#13;
group.&#13;
An accomplished harpsichordist,&#13;
she is soloist for the&#13;
harpsichord selections on three&#13;
Pleiades recordings of&#13;
Renaissance music recorded as&#13;
part of the Historical Anthology&#13;
of Music published by the Harvard&#13;
University Press.&#13;
She was harpsichordist with&#13;
the Collegium Musicum at&#13;
Southern Illinois University,&#13;
where she received her graduate&#13;
degree and also taught harpsichord,&#13;
and appeared with the&#13;
Southern Illinois University&#13;
Orchestra.&#13;
She has been a member of the&#13;
Parkside music faculty since&#13;
1970.&#13;
Gottesman publishes two books&#13;
on Upton Sinclair&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, professor&#13;
of English and humanities, is the&#13;
author of two new books on Upton&#13;
Sinclair, the prolific 20th Century&#13;
novelist, reformer, pamphleteer&#13;
and political figure.&#13;
The volumes are "The Literary&#13;
Manuscripts of upton Sinclair,"&#13;
published by Ohio State&#13;
University Press, and "Upton&#13;
Sinclair: An Annotated&#13;
Checklist," published by Kent&#13;
.State University Press.&#13;
The latter work includes a&#13;
chronological listing of Sinclair's&#13;
publications and a list of tapes,&#13;
discs and films featuring Sinclair,&#13;
a list of h is work in foreign&#13;
translation and a section on&#13;
bibliographical sources, selected&#13;
reviews and other criticism and&#13;
unpublished material about&#13;
Sinclair.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside last&#13;
summer, Gottesman was an&#13;
associate professor at Rutgers&#13;
University and Upton Sinclair&#13;
Archivist for the Lilly Library at&#13;
Indiana University, where he&#13;
also has been a faculty member&#13;
and received his Ph. D. degree&#13;
with a dissertation on Sinclair.&#13;
An authority on American&#13;
literature and film, Gottesman's&#13;
work has been widely published&#13;
in professional journals. He also&#13;
has served as consultant on a&#13;
documentary film on Sinclair and&#13;
is general editor of Prentice&#13;
Hall's Spectrum Film Focus&#13;
series. He is general editor of the&#13;
forthcoming multi-volume&#13;
Norton Anthology of American&#13;
Literature, designed as a companion&#13;
to the Norton Anthology of&#13;
English Literature.&#13;
Poetry corner&#13;
WE&#13;
Sterile white people in antiseptic&#13;
Rags make bad vibrations and&#13;
Empty quotations.&#13;
They honor credit cards but&#13;
Not us. All those nobodies who&#13;
Think they are everybody in order&#13;
To be somebody. They smoke their&#13;
Cigarettes and wear Brooks Bros.&#13;
Suits and gowns as banners of&#13;
Imaginary dignity. Their&#13;
Jesus saves S&amp;H green stamps.&#13;
Show off more money one more&#13;
Purchase. It is late too late&#13;
To join the human race. So many&#13;
Family trees are decorated with long&#13;
Haired corposes dangling by Sunday&#13;
School ties. Female skins all painted&#13;
Mascara-ed shaved and rouged shine&#13;
Bright as Nazi lampshades in the light&#13;
Of the silvery moon in June as they&#13;
Swoon. Y Yes brothers and sisters we&#13;
Too are sterile white people in&#13;
Antiseptic rags.&#13;
By Dave Myer&#13;
Carthage College Student Activities Board&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
''It's A Beautiful Day&#13;
1 1&#13;
Sunday, March 18, 1973 Also Introducing&#13;
8:00 P.M. SILVESTER &amp;&#13;
Carthage Fieldhouse THE HOT BAND&#13;
Tickets $3&#13;
50 General Admission&#13;
Available at: Bidingers Music (Kenosha), Cook Gere Music&#13;
Team Electronics(Elmwood Plaza), Carthage College Center Office&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
SHAKE9S PI***&#13;
'&#13;
&lt; i a 1&#13;
IN RAC INE&#13;
LATHROP A ND 2 1st (A LMOST)&#13;
TeltccfaA&#13;
3203-52nd St.&#13;
Visit O ur N ew&#13;
Wine &amp; Beer M aking&#13;
Department&#13;
Oca TteivCcf,&#13;
gDe(ic4te44M&#13;
•Sliced Roast Beef&#13;
•Sliced Breast of Turkey&#13;
THICK&#13;
PEPPERONI$129&#13;
PIECES 1 lb&#13;
Meister&#13;
Brau&#13;
Bock 87&#13;
c&#13;
Beer 6 c ans&#13;
Drewry's&#13;
Draught o r R eg.&#13;
A Case 3 cases&#13;
24-12 o z. 1 ^99&#13;
Import ed Ge rman,&#13;
Spanish or Fr ench °&#13;
r&#13;
WI N E $5&#13;
00&#13;
Cold I D I JCK 5500&#13;
Whisky&#13;
We have these popular wines:&#13;
• Akadema Plum or Light Red&#13;
•Bla ck or.Col a Be a r&#13;
• Boone s Apple or Str awbe rry&#13;
• T.J. Swann&#13;
• Annie Gr e en Spring &#13;
i,&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
~~ ~ " Sports&#13;
Great Lakes fencing&#13;
championship&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
The weather may have been&#13;
foggy last Saturday afternoon,&#13;
but everything was clear inside&#13;
the P.E. Building as UWParkside&#13;
hosted the 7th annual&#13;
Great Lakes Fencing Championship.&#13;
Detroit, last year's&#13;
NCAA fencing champion, was&#13;
defeated in a surging upset by&#13;
Wayne State, 69-61.&#13;
The meet, a warmup for the&#13;
national collegiate (NCAA) meet&#13;
to be held at John Hancock&#13;
University in Baltimore, had&#13;
most of the top Midwestern&#13;
fencing teams present.&#13;
Coach Loran Hein of Parkside&#13;
said before the meet that he felt&#13;
his squad would finish in the top&#13;
four of the team field, which it&#13;
did, scoring 51 points behind&#13;
Wayne State, Detroit and Notre&#13;
Dame, which had 57 points.&#13;
Wayne State not only dethroned&#13;
Detroit for the day's championship&#13;
with another face off&#13;
next week, but also took all three&#13;
first places in foil, epee and&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Wayne's Greg Benko defeated&#13;
Detroit's Tyrone Simmons in a&#13;
battle of 1972. O lympians 5-3 in a&#13;
fence off for first place in foil.&#13;
Benko was 76-2 on the season to&#13;
Simmons's 38-2. John Tank of&#13;
Parkside lost a heart-breaker to&#13;
Benko 5-4 to take 3rd place and&#13;
close his season with a record of&#13;
Charles Schneider and Steve&#13;
Donosi of Wayne State took the&#13;
pee and sabre championships&#13;
respective. The highest the&#13;
Rangers could place in these&#13;
events were David Baumann 6th&#13;
m epee and Don Koser 7th in&#13;
sabre.&#13;
The day went by but something&#13;
rf&#13;
GXp&#13;
-&#13;
ted Was going on as for&#13;
the first time women competed in&#13;
the Great Lakes events with&#13;
Wayne State winning with 34&#13;
P°&#13;
in&#13;
u&#13;
ts to the University of&#13;
Michigan-Dearborn's 26.&#13;
This ends the fencing season&#13;
here at Parkside, eventhough the&#13;
Rangers will be competing for&#13;
honors in New York on March 23-&#13;
25 and possibly in Tucson, Ariz.&#13;
June 23-30 in the nationals, but as&#13;
Hein stated, "the cost ofr each&#13;
individual could run from $400-&#13;
$500 if you include room, transportation&#13;
and lose of pay from&#13;
work, so we'll decide on that in&#13;
phe future." Each Ranger would&#13;
have to pay his own way to&#13;
Tucson.&#13;
The Rangers won't compete in&#13;
the NCAA fencing tournament&#13;
since the school is a memberof&#13;
the NAIA.&#13;
Extramural&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Competing in the First Annual&#13;
Parkside Extramural Basketball&#13;
ournament last Sunday were&#13;
teams from Carthage, College of&#13;
Racine, and Parkside.&#13;
The tournament was played in&#13;
three rounds for a total of seven&#13;
games. Parkside's Olympians&#13;
won the final game, beating the&#13;
Dons of Carthage 77-63.&#13;
The Olympians had wellbalanced&#13;
scoring in the championship&#13;
game with Ed Vantine&#13;
and Mike Madsen leading the&#13;
way with 14 points each, followed&#13;
by Larry Wade with 10.&#13;
The Dons were leading at the&#13;
half 38-35, but superior rebounding&#13;
pulled it out for the&#13;
Parksiders.&#13;
Fencing&#13;
David Baumann of Racine won&#13;
the saber championship in the&#13;
wider 20 fencing meet for the&#13;
state of Wisconsin last Sunday&#13;
mght. Bill Schaefer also participated&#13;
for the Parkside&#13;
Rangers in the competition.&#13;
These two will now be able to go&#13;
to the Midwest Championship&#13;
meet at Niles, Illinois in May&#13;
They both qualified for the epee&#13;
and the saber. There also is a&#13;
possibility that they may go to the&#13;
Nationals in Tucson, Arizona but&#13;
the cost will determine that.&#13;
The Rangers fencing record&#13;
remains at 10-7 because of a&#13;
cancellation of the meet&#13;
Milwaukee over the weekend.&#13;
in&#13;
Rugby&#13;
00A&#13;
SIRLOIN&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Northern Illinois University&#13;
stomped the Ranger Rugby Club&#13;
30-0 in the season opener at&#13;
DeKalb Sunday. The Parksiders&#13;
were no match for the veteran&#13;
Huskies.&#13;
Parkside's next match will be&#13;
Saturday against the University&#13;
of Wisconsin at Madison.&#13;
SC/6 - 7*&#13;
'/AT&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery to Parkside Village&#13;
5021 30th Anna* Phone 657-5191&#13;
Wed., Mar. 14, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by B.D. Rasmussen&#13;
S",&#13;
W3S r&#13;
J&#13;
ght for once&#13;
' BeIieve " or not&#13;
- once though. A credibility gap does exist in the media. Just in me though so&#13;
£&#13;
S&#13;
!&#13;
do&#13;
.&#13;
n 1 co™* dowi&#13;
\ t0&#13;
° hard on my colleagues Walter Cronkite,&#13;
rom Tiede, and Howard Cosell. And its not so much that politics has&#13;
become sport (although it could be classified as such), but that sport&#13;
has often involved diplomacy.&#13;
I have just returned from staring at the medicine cabinet in the&#13;
bathroom and have decided that an overdose pf Children's Sucrets&#13;
won t solve anything. There comes a time in the life of every budding&#13;
fS ? £ To°&#13;
Wer (&#13;
T th0Se of you who aren&gt;t heP&gt; he&#13;
'&#13;
s&#13;
^e Sports&#13;
v!T ?u&#13;
CT Joumal-Times), when a mistake is made. And&#13;
like John Wayne talking to the suddenly reformed bad guv it takes a&#13;
big man to admit he made a mistake. I made a big mistake In two&#13;
separate parts yet, and over a period of ten days, I made one. (I'm&#13;
npHnH fTm&#13;
^f^acy) • yet I feel that I could hide under the&#13;
period at the end of this sentence. Little Big Man? It is a good day to&#13;
die....of embarrassment. 3&#13;
And because getting rolled by the wrestling team isn't my idea of&#13;
tun, here s my sad story.&#13;
The last time that I talked to wrestling coach Jim Koch, about ten&#13;
Zllriil k lr&#13;
NAf^ Na&#13;
?°&#13;
naI Tournamen&#13;
t, he told me that Rico&#13;
Savagho, Ken Martin, and Bill West all had excellent chances of&#13;
scoring many points, and possibly to bring home a championship at&#13;
mln Iff I?&#13;
6, £&#13;
ep 1 m making a big mis&#13;
take. I interpreted this to&#13;
mean that these three were the only three UW-P wrestlers going I'm&#13;
supposed to be objective and not interpret anything. Broken taboo 2&#13;
I&#13;
e&#13;
I fy&#13;
ft&#13;
aty&#13;
°"&#13;
d0n 1 lnterpret If 1 hadn&gt;t been stricken by a massive&#13;
case of the inefficiencies, I would have called Coach Koch back and&#13;
tbat be would have been more than glad to tell me that&#13;
wrestlers Randy Skarda, Kyle Barnes, Arlyn Fredrick, and Gary&#13;
Peterson also qualified for the trip to Iowa. But I didn't.&#13;
So despite my best efforts, these wrestlers are going to get the&#13;
recognition that they deserve. I'm sure that they practiced just as&#13;
hard and sweated just as much as the next person. And they should be&#13;
congratulated for a fine outstanding season.&#13;
Jrfpfr Kris Koch just informed me that I also get fifty lashes&#13;
with a Ranger dateline. I will receive cold, professional-like stares&#13;
from my Ranger colleagues, and lots of razzing and ridicule from my&#13;
friends. But I'll live. 3&#13;
But this could also prove to be the big break that I have been waiting&#13;
F^IpwJT^ ^ And5&#13;
SOn column on Sen. Thomas Eagleton. Jack could have hidden behind his periods then&#13;
Anyhow congratulations Randy, Kyle, Arlyn, and Gary, on a fine&#13;
season and fine performances at the NAIA National Tournament.&#13;
•ONE SUI EE"fi&#13;
•iscount RccardsI&#13;
iApteSl-AY Y%.\&#13;
'InCEnSC&#13;
JJA+ERBEDS Comics&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
'o?&#13;
L&#13;
aDt&#13;
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^"'Pped, ideal&#13;
Brand n'ew tTkeTan™^' Camper&#13;
' boat&#13;
'&#13;
,ake lf anywhere. $50 . 637-1591. A T TEN TIO N W O M E N WHO W R ITE&#13;
poetry! The Women's Caucus is looking for&#13;
participants for a poetry reading, to be part&#13;
of this year's Women's Day. Contact Jane&#13;
Schliesman, c-o Ranger, LLC D194.&#13;
734*1 anyt?me apar,ment near camP&#13;
us with garage. Utilities paid. Call 654-&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDE R FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $.&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
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ADDRESS DATE.&#13;
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One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication. &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., M ar. 14, 197 3&#13;
TTWT 1 3 i Trackmen third&#13;
wrestlers 9th in nation in Midwest relays&#13;
by B.D. Rasmussen&#13;
Junior Ken Martin won the 134-&#13;
pound class title NAIA National&#13;
Tournament at Sioux City, Iowa,&#13;
over the weekend as the Rangers&#13;
took ninth overall at the meet.&#13;
Martin decisioned Tom&#13;
Svendsen of St. John's University-Minnesota&#13;
9-6 to take the title&#13;
and ended with a season record of&#13;
22-1-1. Martin has now finished&#13;
second, third, and first respectively&#13;
over the last three years&#13;
and has been named All-America&#13;
all three times.&#13;
Parkside took ninth with 32.5&#13;
points, which was the highest&#13;
total ever scored by a Wisconsin&#13;
school in the tournament.&#13;
Adams State College of&#13;
Colorado took the team championship&#13;
with 62.5 points. Second&#13;
went to Central Washington&#13;
College with 48.5 and third was&#13;
Huron College of South Dakota&#13;
with 46.&#13;
UW-La Crosse was 14th;&#13;
Carthage, which had an individual&#13;
champ in Tom Adams,&#13;
was 15th. UW-River Falls was&#13;
22nd and UW-Stevens Point 23rd.&#13;
Bill West provided the other&#13;
individual highlight for Parkside&#13;
when he wrestled his way into the&#13;
finals only to lose to Philip&#13;
Gonzalez the defending champ&#13;
from the University of NebraskaOmaha,&#13;
on a 9-6 d ecision. West's&#13;
season record finished at 22-3 and&#13;
he was also named an AllAmerica.&#13;
&#13;
Rico Savaglio lost his first&#13;
match to James Wolfe of York&#13;
College. Randy Skarda won his&#13;
first match, then lost to Randy&#13;
Jirkovich of UW-Superior. Kyle&#13;
Barnes lost in the opening round&#13;
The Parkside Indoor Track&#13;
team placed third in the 34th&#13;
Midwest Relays held at&#13;
Naperville, Illinois on Saturday.&#13;
Loras won the meet with 79&#13;
points. Loyola came in second&#13;
with 66 points and Parkside took&#13;
third with 63.5 points.&#13;
Lucien Rosa won the&#13;
Fredenhagen Award for Individual&#13;
High Scorer with a total&#13;
of 18 points. Rosa set a new meet&#13;
record in the two mile with a time&#13;
of 9:09.6. The old record was 9:14.&#13;
Rose also placed first in the mile,&#13;
third in the 1000 yard run, and&#13;
second in the two mile relay with&#13;
Chuck Dettman, Raul Medina&#13;
and Dennis Biel.&#13;
Other individual Parkside&#13;
winners were Keith Merrit with&#13;
first in the triple jump, second in&#13;
the pole vault, and fourth in the&#13;
long jump; Mike Kopczynski with&#13;
second in the long jump and third&#13;
in the 60 yard dash; Tim Martinson&#13;
tied for third in the pole&#13;
vault; and Dennis Biel took&#13;
fourth in the mile.&#13;
Parkside relay teams took&#13;
second in the two mile relay&#13;
third in the mile relay, the fourth&#13;
in the four by two relay. The two&#13;
mile team was Lucien Rosa,&#13;
Chuck Dettman, Raul Medina&#13;
and Dennis Biel. The mile relay&#13;
team was Keith Merrit, Herb&#13;
Degroot, Dennis Biel, and Cornelius&#13;
Gordon. The four by two&#13;
team was Mike Kopczynski&#13;
Degroot, Tim Martinson, and&#13;
Gordon.&#13;
Cagers end season&#13;
with loss to Lakeland&#13;
FRONT ROW (Left to Right) Ken Martin, Bill West,&#13;
Rico Savaglio&#13;
BACK ROW Randy Skarda , Arlyn Fr edrick, Gary Peterson&#13;
Coach Jim Koch, not pictur ed - Kyle Barnes&#13;
to Gary Billy of Huron College.&#13;
Arlyn Fredrich lost to Tom&#13;
Compenaro of the University of&#13;
Minnesota-Mo rris. Gary&#13;
Peterson was decisioned in the&#13;
first round by Dave Hartman of&#13;
Western Montana.&#13;
Since Coach Jim Koch's arrival&#13;
at Parkside two seasons ago, the&#13;
Rangers have been constantly&#13;
improving in the national competition.&#13;
They have finished 21st,&#13;
17th, and now ninth.&#13;
Koch said that Parkside's&#13;
performance at the NAIA was the&#13;
result of g reat team effort. About&#13;
Martin's individual performance&#13;
he said, "Ken's march to the&#13;
nati ona l cha m p ion shi p&#13;
establishes him as one of the&#13;
great ones to participate in this&#13;
meet."&#13;
With almost all of the team&#13;
returning for next season, he&#13;
couldn't help but add, "I'm really&#13;
looking forward to next year!"&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
cagers lost in the first round of&#13;
WICA tournament play last&#13;
Thursday night to Lakeland&#13;
College by a score of 62-55. This&#13;
turned out to be the last game of&#13;
' he t season for the Rangers, who&#13;
compiled a 13-12 season record&#13;
and a regular season standing of&#13;
13-11.&#13;
The Rangers were tied with&#13;
Lakeland at halftime 32-32, but&#13;
they were outplayed in the second&#13;
half and consequently wound up&#13;
on the low end of the final score.&#13;
The Rangers played desperate in&#13;
the second half as three players&#13;
fouled out of the game.&#13;
Gary Cole led the Ranger&#13;
scoring column with 16 points,&#13;
followed by Chuck Chambliss&#13;
with 14 before fouling out, and&#13;
Bill Sobanski with nine. Mike&#13;
Hanke was held to seven and Ken&#13;
Peyer and Tim Dolan managed&#13;
only nine points between them&#13;
before they both fouled out.&#13;
Chuck Chambliss was named to&#13;
the all Wica team by the Wica&#13;
coaches and Hanke, Cole and&#13;
Sobanski landed in three of the&#13;
five honorable mention spots.&#13;
The loss resulted in the last&#13;
game of the fine season for the&#13;
Rangers as they came off a 4-18&#13;
mark of last years team to&#13;
compile a 13-12 overall mark for&#13;
this year and advanced into the&#13;
playoffs for the first time in&#13;
Parkside's history.&#13;
Hopefully both Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens and his fine squad will&#13;
be back next year for another fine&#13;
season of basketball.&#13;
PRE-INVENTORY SPECIALS&#13;
Art P rints&#13;
Rej.&#13;
'800 SALE *6.49&#13;
Special G roup O f&#13;
Novelty Candles&#13;
Special G roup Of&#13;
*&#13;
SPORTSWEAR SPECIALS&#13;
H ks&#13;
Special G roup Of&#13;
Set m v&#13;
R#j. P ric« Sato Price&#13;
VOUTtf T SHIRTS *1.55 *1.09&#13;
JUVENILE S WEATSHIRTS *2.05 *1.39&#13;
vs *3.80 *2,49&#13;
ADULT SHIRTS *3.90 *2.59&#13;
TRI - C OLOR J ERSEY *4.95 *3.29&#13;
SAtE STARTS WED., M ARCH 14,1973 - ENDS WED., MARCH 21,197</text>
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              <text>"73-74" Financial aids behind schedule</text>
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              <text>"73-74" Financial aids behind schedule&#13;
Madison — Students who need&#13;
financial aid to go to college next&#13;
fall have grounds for anxiety this&#13;
spring.&#13;
Chances are they won't know&#13;
how much aid, if any, they'll be&#13;
getting, until late this summer,&#13;
because the rules which govern&#13;
aid programs are up in the air,&#13;
suspended in budget debates at&#13;
the state and federal level.&#13;
Aids packages&#13;
Financial aids administrators&#13;
on the University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
campus are looking at&#13;
the legislative process a little&#13;
glumly these days. "At this time,&#13;
we should be putting together&#13;
student financial aid packages,&#13;
but we're unable to do so at all,"&#13;
said Wallace H. Douma, director&#13;
of student financial aids.&#13;
Douma's office is usually&#13;
scrambling this time ofyear,&#13;
piecing grants, loans and workstudy&#13;
employment together so&#13;
that aid recipeints will know how&#13;
they'll finance the coming year of&#13;
school.&#13;
This year, "instead of giving&#13;
them a package that says 'you're&#13;
going to get $500 in a grant, $500&#13;
in a loan, and $500 in a job,' we're&#13;
only going to be able to say,&#13;
'you're eligible for $1,500, but we&#13;
don't know what form it will be in&#13;
-or if you'll get it.""&#13;
Revamp of aids&#13;
Nationally, President Nixon&#13;
has proposed revamping of aid&#13;
programs established during the&#13;
1960's. He would replace the&#13;
Educational Opportunity Grant&#13;
Program (EOG, funding $210&#13;
million in 1972-73) with a Basic&#13;
Opportunity Grant (BOG,&#13;
proposed funding $622 million for&#13;
1973-74). BOG's "entitlement&#13;
concept" would give $1,400 to&#13;
every student who goes on for&#13;
post-high school educationminus&#13;
whatever the family&#13;
contribution should be, as&#13;
calculated by a formula.&#13;
Smaller grants&#13;
"It appears to me that BOG&#13;
will give smaller grants to more&#13;
students," Douma said. "While&#13;
there's going to be more money&#13;
available, it's going to be&#13;
distributed in a different way.&#13;
Generally, in terms of aid, I think&#13;
students will be as well off as this&#13;
year."&#13;
Douma likes the BOG idea, but&#13;
adds, "at this point, there are no&#13;
rules, no appropriations, no&#13;
nothing for this program, and&#13;
registration is going to start&#13;
August 20."&#13;
Under the Administration's&#13;
plan, National Defense Student&#13;
Loans (totalling $286 million this&#13;
year) would be eliminated, and&#13;
private credit unions, banks, and&#13;
savings and loans would take up&#13;
the lenders' role under the&#13;
guaranteed loan program.&#13;
Work-Study&#13;
Finally, the College WorkStudy&#13;
Program would be pared&#13;
for $270 million to $250 million.&#13;
Under the program, federal&#13;
money pays 80 percent and te&#13;
local employer (the University or&#13;
a non-profit concern in the&#13;
community) 20 percent of a&#13;
student's wages. Richard E.&#13;
Corbett, who handles the&#13;
program here, estimates that the&#13;
dollars-and-cents loss here would&#13;
reduce the number of UWMadison&#13;
students getting workstudy&#13;
aid from this year's 1,100 to&#13;
900.&#13;
Consequently, Douma, Corbett,&#13;
and other state financial aid&#13;
administrators are pushing for a&#13;
state companion to the federal&#13;
work-study program. They feel it&#13;
would help offset the effect of the&#13;
federal cut (aggravated this year&#13;
by newly eligible schools lining&#13;
up for a share of the pie), and also&#13;
help students who've established&#13;
need, but follow other, porrer&#13;
students on the work-study&#13;
priority list.&#13;
The alternative to work-study&#13;
for these students may be a loanand&#13;
loan indebtedness. A student&#13;
adviser to the Wisconsin Higher&#13;
Education Aids Board (HEAB)&#13;
testified before the Joint Finance&#13;
Committee of the state&#13;
legislature recently that one in 10&#13;
1972 seniors left UW System&#13;
schools over $3,000 in debt.&#13;
(continued on page 4)&#13;
The ParksideWednesday,&#13;
March 21 ,1973&#13;
Vol. 1 No. 22&#13;
Interdisciplinary course offered&#13;
The Burlington Brass Works&#13;
Leonardo da Vinci must be&#13;
smiling. Not just one of those&#13;
enigmatic Mona Lisa smiles, but&#13;
a broad approving grin.&#13;
"The most scientific artist"&#13;
would doubtless endorse an&#13;
unusual course being offered this&#13;
sen}ester should he hear of it on&#13;
some heavenly hotline.&#13;
Predicated on the idea that&#13;
there's art in chemistry and&#13;
chemistry in art, the two-credit&#13;
interdisciplinary course is titled&#13;
"Aesthetics and Properties of&#13;
Materials." Students can enroll&#13;
for credit in either art or&#13;
chemistry.&#13;
The course is the joint creation&#13;
of two Parkside faculty members,&#13;
John Murphy, an assistant&#13;
professor of art wjiose work as a&#13;
ceramist has attracted national&#13;
attention, and Michael Marron,&#13;
an assistant. professor of&#13;
chemistry, whose particular field&#13;
is molecular structure and&#13;
kinetics of chemical reactions.&#13;
They believe the course is unique.&#13;
It is designed to give students&#13;
"hands on" experience in&#13;
working with glass, ceramics,&#13;
metals and plastics as well as&#13;
theoretical and historical perspectives.&#13;
&#13;
The purpose of the course,&#13;
according to Murphy and&#13;
Marron, is to increase students'&#13;
awareness of creative&#13;
possibilities of the materials,&#13;
provide a unified basis for understanding&#13;
material properties,&#13;
establish a connection between&#13;
science and art and point out&#13;
areas of overlap between&#13;
creative and technical applications&#13;
of the materials,&#13;
(continued on page 5)&#13;
Capsule college&#13;
offered in April&#13;
The 1973 Capsule College at&#13;
Parkside will be a two-day event,&#13;
April 25 and 26, with registrants&#13;
given an option of attending for&#13;
one or both days.&#13;
The initial Capsule College in&#13;
1971 attracted about 400 women&#13;
from throughout southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin and the 1972 event&#13;
drew more than 600. Both&#13;
previous "colleges" were oneday&#13;
events.&#13;
The 1973 program will offer&#13;
four two-and-one-half hour&#13;
workshops and 27 75-minute&#13;
seminars each day. Participants&#13;
may elect to attend either a&#13;
workshop and two seminars or&#13;
four seminars each day.&#13;
Brochures outlining the&#13;
program and registration blanks&#13;
will be available in about two&#13;
weeks.&#13;
Capsule College is sponsored&#13;
by Parkside, University Extension&#13;
and the Kenosha, Racine&#13;
and Walworth Extension Offices.&#13;
Liddy concludes festivities Niebuhr named to 1974 convention&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
The cheerful personality of&#13;
James Liddy climaxed the St.&#13;
Patricks day festivities that&#13;
happened in the LLC with Irish&#13;
Poetry reading. The Poet-inResident&#13;
gave the reading at&#13;
Main Place at 3 p.m. Sat., Feb.&#13;
17. Liddy felt that it was fitting to&#13;
conclude all of this "foolishness"&#13;
with poems written by his friends&#13;
from Ireland where "poetry is as&#13;
common as being drunk." "On&#13;
this day," he explained, "only St.&#13;
Patrick exists and God doesn't,&#13;
and St. Patrick never existed&#13;
anyway."&#13;
He began with material from&#13;
the Dublin World War II scene&#13;
when "booze was rationed" and&#13;
where "love always was&#13;
rationed." Liddy read various&#13;
works from Patrick Kavangh,&#13;
Michail Collins, Brian Linch, and&#13;
Michael King some of which were&#13;
friends that he "quarreled so&#13;
often" with. Some of these&#13;
disputes ended up with two&#13;
parties "not speaking to each&#13;
other for a year."&#13;
He concluded his reading with&#13;
a couple of his own poems.&#13;
Immediately following the&#13;
Irish Poetry reading, Jim&#13;
Runnels a Professor at Carthage&#13;
College presented his Irish folksinging.&#13;
The songs he performed&#13;
were written about those involved&#13;
with the Irish civil war.&#13;
Prior to these activities was a&#13;
poetry workshop, a prose&#13;
workshop, and a production of an&#13;
Irish play, "The Big House." The&#13;
poetry workshop was run by&#13;
Liddy and Poet Knute Skinner in&#13;
LLC D-174 at 10 a.m. At the same&#13;
time as the Poetry wordshop,&#13;
Herbert Kuble held a prose&#13;
workshop in LLC 3314. The Big&#13;
House was put on by Parkside&#13;
students and directed by Pat&#13;
Engdahl.&#13;
planning committee&#13;
William R. Niebuhr, Coordinator&#13;
of Student Life has been&#13;
named to the 1974 Convention&#13;
Planning Committee of the&#13;
National Entertainment Conference&#13;
(NEC) and nominated&#13;
for ele election to the NEC board&#13;
of directors.&#13;
Niebuhr's prime responsibility&#13;
for the 1974 convention, to be held&#13;
in February at Houston, Texas,&#13;
will be the development of all&#13;
sessions dealing with university&#13;
travel programs.&#13;
Over the past three years&#13;
Niebuhr has developed group and&#13;
charter travel programs to&#13;
London, Rome, Acapulco, Amsterdam,&#13;
Hawaii, the French&#13;
Alps and the Spanish Riviera and&#13;
has established an on-campus&#13;
travel information center at UWP.&#13;
&#13;
Niebuhr, also a member of the&#13;
NEC's Travel Committee, is&#13;
currently ending a two year term&#13;
as NEC Unit Coordinator for&#13;
Wisconsin and Upper Michigan.&#13;
The NEC is composed of over 650&#13;
colleges and universities and&#13;
serves the individual campus by&#13;
providing programs and services&#13;
in the areas of film, theatre,&#13;
lectures, contemporary and&#13;
classical music, art and exhibits,&#13;
video programming and travel.&#13;
Also appointed to the Planning&#13;
Committee were P. Gus Geil,&#13;
Wittenberg University; Philip&#13;
Bowman, Grand Valley State&#13;
College; Karen Nixon, University&#13;
of Missouri-Columbia; Carol&#13;
Barta, Duquesne University;&#13;
Austin Cooper, University of&#13;
Houston, Frank Baird,&#13;
University of Georgia; and Jim&#13;
E. Duffy, Essex Community&#13;
College! Willi am R. Ni ebuhr, &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 21, 1973&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Aids mixup causes&#13;
delay&#13;
Once again financial aids, loans, grants and&#13;
workstudy notifications will be late. The problem isn't at&#13;
the local level but is spread across the nation in a mass&#13;
of undefined rules.&#13;
President Nixon set forth new budget proposals which&#13;
are seemingly larger, but include more institutions,&#13;
therefore each university may receive less overall.&#13;
The state of Wisconsin, along with states across the&#13;
nation, is trying to decide how available funds are going&#13;
to be dispersed. It is still trying to find out how much&#13;
morvey w ill be available.&#13;
Parkside officials seem to feel that there will at least&#13;
be as much financial aid available as last year and the&#13;
Financial Aids Office thinks it is not a month behind in&#13;
its job a s UW-Madison says it is.&#13;
We hope that the students poncerned are not inconvenienced&#13;
too much. Indeed, we hope financial aid&#13;
statements are on time for next year and that students&#13;
who hope to work or go to school thib summer, with state&#13;
or federal funds, receive those funds.&#13;
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EDITORS&#13;
NOTEBOOK&#13;
The Activities Board presentation&#13;
of Jose Greco was indeed a&#13;
success even though there was a&#13;
loss in money.&#13;
The concert holds Parkside's&#13;
all-time attendance record for a&#13;
fine art event and may conceivably&#13;
hold the record for attendance&#13;
of students and faculty.&#13;
At this stage of Parkside's&#13;
development of activities and&#13;
fine arts, programs like this are&#13;
major breakthroughs. Over&#13;
1,5000 students, faculty and&#13;
community members took part in&#13;
the two performances last week.&#13;
There was definitely interest.&#13;
More importantly, there was&#13;
interest in the university's activity&#13;
and not just the act.&#13;
The local media gave the Greco&#13;
concert widespread postconcert&#13;
coverage. That is unusual for this&#13;
area, but the public relations&#13;
contained in those media are&#13;
certainly welcomed by the&#13;
school.&#13;
It is hard to assign dollar&#13;
amounts to the cultural value of a&#13;
fine arts program, but it seems&#13;
that a well-developed program of&#13;
fine arts events will be very&#13;
valuable. The extent to which fine&#13;
arts programming is developed&#13;
at Parkside will be tempered by&#13;
available dollars. The simple loss&#13;
of money on one concert, or even&#13;
a number of programs, should&#13;
not bring ridicule of the whole&#13;
program or series.&#13;
One must be very short-sighted&#13;
or be wearing blinders not to be&#13;
able to see the great value of even&#13;
a money-losing venture when it&#13;
has great cultural value.&#13;
Programming of fine arts&#13;
events will continue and must be&#13;
maintained by funds available if&#13;
this university is to live up to its&#13;
responsibility as an institution of&#13;
learning. Once the fine arts&#13;
programming at Parkside is&#13;
established the money losers will&#13;
be few and far between. Until&#13;
then the university is responsible&#13;
for the cultivation of the students,&#13;
faculty, staff and members of the&#13;
community who will, in the long&#13;
run, more than support fine arts&#13;
programming here. They will&#13;
help develop and mold that&#13;
programming for the future.&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
The Activities Office reports that it did not lose as much money on&#13;
the Jose Greco performance as they had expected. Attendance was a&#13;
surprisingly high 1,036,383 of them students. Total receipts were about&#13;
$1,700, which means after expenses, the students of Parkside only lost&#13;
$1,200 or so on the deal.&#13;
There are approximately 4,150 students at this university, which&#13;
means only 9.2 percent attended the performance. The whole student&#13;
body paid the dollars so that each student present could receive a little&#13;
culture. The final cost breakdown shows that each student attending&#13;
was subsidized to the tune of $3.24.&#13;
Not every presentation that is presented by the Activities Board&#13;
loses money. It just seems that way sometimes. Some programs are&#13;
actually of such general interest that they make money. What we need&#13;
is more of the latter and less of the former.&#13;
If the programs put on by the Board were substantially money&#13;
making presentations, the profits received could be plowed back into a&#13;
worthwhile enterprise, such as redicing the debt on the Union&#13;
Reserve.&#13;
Since the budget modification to the segregated fee, there will not be&#13;
as much money going into the reserve because of the redistribution of&#13;
funds from the summer session. This money would go in portion to the&#13;
Activities Office, which seems to have to put on a number of losing&#13;
ventures each year just to balance the books.&#13;
If discretion was utilized in programming, not all the money&#13;
allocated to the Activities Office need be spent. Monies left over as&#13;
surplus at the end of the year would be used in the Union Reserve.&#13;
Debt reduction in the reserve account should be a priority, since the&#13;
sooner the debt is paid off, the less money will have to be spent by the&#13;
students of Parkside in additional interest payments.&#13;
More information on the Stanton Freidman performance, April 17-&#13;
Friedman will be arriving at Parkside Tuesday morning and will be&#13;
available during the day for participation in classes where interest is&#13;
expressed in Ufology. Interested faculty should contact the Activities&#13;
Office now and avoid the rush.&#13;
The evening performance, which will take place at 8 p.m. in the P.E.&#13;
Building, will include a slide presentation of actual UFOs. Discussed&#13;
will be the Air Force's report on project bluebook, which Friedman&#13;
accuses of deliberately deceiving the public regarding UFOs.&#13;
It should be good.&#13;
A couple of weeks ago I received a form for use in my nomination of&#13;
a faculty member for the annual Distinguished Teaching Award. It&#13;
was the first I had heard that the Awards Committee was even in&#13;
operation. But this committee always has been pretty secretive.&#13;
Ever since awards selection was taken out of the handsof the&#13;
students, there has been dissent on how appropriate the awards&#13;
procedure was. Last year less than three percent of the student body&#13;
participated.&#13;
Now we fine that the method used last year remains.essentially •thei&lt;-&#13;
same. The committee is very sensitive about the procedures used&#13;
Two years ago when the present format was first utilized the committee&#13;
went so far as to destroy all records so that their methods might&#13;
not be questioned.&#13;
I am pleased to say that one suggestion I made earlier in the year is&#13;
being followed, that faculty teaching evaluation forms be utilized in&#13;
making the evaluations. I am also pleased to see the main emphasis is&#13;
being placed on teaching.&#13;
There is a higher proportion of students on the committee this year,&#13;
but they are still the minority. The hand-picking aspect of choosing&#13;
students to be on the committee also leaves much to be desired. If&#13;
more publicity was given the results of committee actions, I'm sure&#13;
that any slightly ambiguous aspects of committee operation could be&#13;
cleared up.&#13;
r&#13;
_ By Gary Huck&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibrarvLearnmg&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
rJw S&#13;
arksid&#13;
f Ran8&#13;
er is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
view of The IJniversity^f Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
606853&#13;
"&#13;
1^ ^ °&#13;
ffidal&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
co^JVc&#13;
RE ED,T0R: -"ane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry MurDhv&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmus^e^TertrGogo^Gwff 5 ^36^' Jeannine SiP&#13;
sma&#13;
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CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck Boh Rnh.„ a Basing&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ken Konkol am Noll ^&gt;&#13;
mv Cu n d a ri&#13;
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ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence ' KeT^n^T^' ^ Sy S ,0 n&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva w r e&#13;
"ce, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
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D FOR NATIONAL A DVERTISING BY&#13;
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360 Lexington Avt., New York, N. x\ 10017 I &#13;
Wed., Mar. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Several people have auestioned&#13;
my veracity about there really&#13;
being a "Chastity Belt" such as I&#13;
mentioned in my recent letter&#13;
There certainly is such a device,&#13;
and it's been in use for a lone&#13;
time. &amp;&#13;
I remember back in 1189 when&#13;
my liege, Richard the LionHearted,&#13;
was organizing what&#13;
would go down in history at being&#13;
The Third Crusade. (That was&#13;
during one of my "other lives."&#13;
I've lost count of the number of&#13;
reincarnations I have lived&#13;
through. I vaguely recall having&#13;
lived once as a Viking and in&#13;
another life I was a college&#13;
professor.)&#13;
Well anyway, my buddy, Sir&#13;
Henry the Hammer had talked&#13;
me into joining the Crusade&#13;
Movement. My name at that time&#13;
was Arthur the Brave. ("Sir&#13;
Arthur" for short.) Henry and I&#13;
had a mutual friend named Cecil&#13;
the Chicken-Hearted. We gave&#13;
him that name because he said he&#13;
was a conscientious objector and&#13;
didn't want to be a Crusader.&#13;
On the morning we were to&#13;
leave Cecil came to see us off. It&#13;
was a touching moment when Sir&#13;
Henry said to Cecil, "Old friend&#13;
you know that Lady Jane and I&#13;
have been going steady and last&#13;
night, as a pledge of her fidelity,&#13;
she allowed me to fasten and lock&#13;
a certain kind of belt around her&#13;
beautiful slender waist." (That&#13;
was the first time I'd ever heard&#13;
of that kind of a belt.)&#13;
"Only this morning" continued&#13;
Sir'Henry, talking to Cecil, "did I&#13;
learn that The Holy Land is a&#13;
helluva long ways from here and&#13;
I shall not be back in a fortnight&#13;
as I had planned. Now I don't&#13;
want to lose the key while I am off&#13;
fighting the infidels and I am&#13;
asking you to take care of my&#13;
Lady's honor while I am away so&#13;
I am placing in your hands this&#13;
key which is for the belt Lady&#13;
Jane is wearing. Guard it with&#13;
your life. And if I don't return,&#13;
well...."&#13;
Sir Cecil accepted the&#13;
responsibility with great humility&#13;
and I was deeply moved as the&#13;
two Knights shook hands.&#13;
The next day, while Richard's&#13;
entourage was halted for an aleOtto&#13;
&#13;
THERE'5 N OT f GET A ^&#13;
ENOUGH / CHAIR F ROM&#13;
CHAIRS&#13;
HERE.&#13;
break, a horseman was observed&#13;
coming our way at a fasfclip To&#13;
our surprise and relief we soon&#13;
recognized the dust-covered rider&#13;
as being Cecil the ChickenHearted.&#13;
&#13;
He pulled his horse up short&#13;
where Sir Henry and I were&#13;
standing and he was out of the&#13;
saddle and on the ground before a&#13;
page had a chance to grab his&#13;
horse's bridle. Obviously he was&#13;
over-flowing with indignation&#13;
w u ?&#13;
e s&#13;
' Han k &gt;" he s a i d ... " -&#13;
Whats the big idea?...You gave&#13;
me the wrong key!"&#13;
I'll make believers of you yet!&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I read the Marilyn Schubert&#13;
article on the ecology-mindness&#13;
about Parkside (3-7-73). This&#13;
article gave the impression that&#13;
the trend of this school was to&#13;
soon become an area of wooded&#13;
land, like no other in the state.&#13;
The image is false for it has been&#13;
scarred before it has begun.&#13;
The present plants within the&#13;
building are not healthy and not&#13;
pruned. Perhaps the personnel&#13;
who are planning their massive&#13;
array of forestry could take a&#13;
look in their own hallways at the&#13;
shriveling, dusty plants.&#13;
After investigating, I found&#13;
that the present floor is not&#13;
sealed, making the air and&#13;
surrounding areas dusty and&#13;
difficult to clean. These conditions&#13;
are presently causing the&#13;
plants to die. Many plants are&#13;
located where unconcerned individuals&#13;
brush against them.&#13;
I am not an over-avid botanist,&#13;
nor do I feel this is a topic of&#13;
world-binding importance.&#13;
Rather, plants are extremely&#13;
expensive, and create a relaxed&#13;
atmosphere, so some action&#13;
should be taken.&#13;
The natural look of brick must&#13;
be sacrificed, and though it is an&#13;
expensive process, the floor must&#13;
be sealed. In the long run, it&#13;
would be more practical for&#13;
cleaning purposes, as well as&#13;
maintaining the true natural&#13;
image of Parkside.&#13;
R S.K&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
To Ken Konkol&#13;
Regarding the portion of your&#13;
"Editorial-Opinion" which appeared&#13;
in the Parkside RANGER&#13;
on Wednesday, March 7, 1973,&#13;
blaming the Activities Board for&#13;
conducting a "money-wasting"&#13;
operation by sponsoring the&#13;
"internationally acclaimed&#13;
Flamenco dancers, Jose Greco&#13;
and Nana Lorca", is an unfair&#13;
charge. Culture and art should&#13;
not be considered "frivolous",&#13;
but rather an important part of&#13;
life and education. I am sorry&#13;
that you failed to mention the&#13;
informal and free public lecture&#13;
demonstration on Monday,&#13;
March 12 at 2 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall, conducted by Jose Greco.&#13;
You may be correct in stating&#13;
that "There isn't that much interest&#13;
in either dancing or&#13;
Spanish culture in the whole of&#13;
Racine and Kenosha," and the&#13;
Latin community (which is&#13;
sizeable) is keenly aware of this&#13;
indifference. Therefore, I am&#13;
happy that the University is&#13;
trying to do something which is&#13;
positive and constructive by&#13;
providing opportunities of artistic&#13;
and cultural value for all&#13;
people to share.&#13;
It is unfortunate that you&#13;
profess student, faculty, administration&#13;
and community&#13;
isolation. This is a state&#13;
university which is largely&#13;
supported by the community.&#13;
Many of the students attending&#13;
UW-Parkside are also active&#13;
members of the communities of&#13;
Racine and Kenosha, Instead of&#13;
attacking constructive activities&#13;
on the basis of "profit", please&#13;
deal with what can be done by&#13;
the University and the community&#13;
to enhance mutual trust,&#13;
understanding and development.&#13;
Wayne Ramirez&#13;
by Jeff Vukos&#13;
by amy cundari&#13;
"sr©"&#13;
© the&#13;
Movemeni&#13;
Parkside, Women's studie s, and Dr. Vopat&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
What is Women's Liberation? The media have presented it to us as&#13;
a frenzied, strident conglomeration of crazies, Lesbians and bra&#13;
burners, but we know life is far more complex than that." So begins&#13;
Carole Vopat, Instructor in English, in the course description for&#13;
American Language-Women's Liberation in Literature She goes on&#13;
to say that class discussions will deal with "women's role her image&#13;
our society, ourselves, love, sex, life, death, birth and abortion "&#13;
When one investigates Women's Studies at Parkside, she or he finds&#13;
out a very curious thing-Vopat is Women's Studies at Parkside' In&#13;
addition to her American Language course, she conducted a senior&#13;
seminar and an upper division English course last semester dealing&#13;
with women writers. She's doing it because she wants to, not because&#13;
she was hired or asked to do it.&#13;
This writer has sat in on a number of sessions of Vopat's American&#13;
Language course this semester-some have seen animated discussion&#13;
explode like many sticks of dynamite scattered through the roomothers&#13;
have been more subdued. All have been enlightening and&#13;
productive. Raising consciousness is the thing, and this class has&#13;
attracted all kinds of people: The avid feminist, the curious "I just&#13;
want to know more about it" type, the "it's ok for others but I don't&#13;
need.it set, the sympathetic men, and the male hero-saviours who&#13;
enrolled to have a little fun upsetting the libbers and defending the&#13;
honor of masculinity. Committed, uncommitted, or skeptical, they are&#13;
learning more about themselves and their own feelings toward the&#13;
sexist society we live in.&#13;
One session opened with a discussion of an essay by Kate MilletSexual&#13;
Politics (In Literature)". Besides being concerned with&#13;
drawing out the basic message of the article, Vopat was aiming for&#13;
practical applications-"What can we do about sexual politics&#13;
7&#13;
" At&#13;
one point, two class members attempted to role-play a situation where&#13;
boy meets girl and comes on macho-strong. But later, participation&#13;
lagged and many seemed hesitant to discuss this potent essay and its&#13;
implications. The consensus of opinion was, though, that one can't&#13;
change things alone.&#13;
This led to a discussion of the women's movement, and speculation&#13;
as to why a lot of women aren't involved. Fear seems to be a prevalent&#13;
reaction.&#13;
"This is one struggle where people distrust the movement," Vopat&#13;
remarked. A lot of women are comfortable with the way things are&#13;
and feel they would have a lot to lose. Many married women who get&#13;
involved eventually face divorce, because they can't stand it any more&#13;
and their partners can't change. Consciousness-raising hurts-a&#13;
woman gets lonely, confused and angry. Everywhere she looks she&#13;
sees evidence of oppression, and many women are content just not to&#13;
know." J&#13;
The class then offered reasons why women should join a women's&#13;
movement. This led to a discussion of the "bra-burning" stigma the&#13;
movement in general has. The symbol is a result of a protest at the&#13;
"Miss America" pageant, where women burned their "harnesses" to&#13;
point up women's oppression as sex objects, their being paraded like&#13;
sides of beef inside the convention hall.&#13;
The image of lesbians which has become attached to feminists was&#13;
also analyzed. It connotes "crazyness" or "abnormality." Many think&#13;
that because some women don't accept a man as the center of their&#13;
existence, because they are aggressive and not submissive, because&#13;
they don t fit into the "norm" of women, they are lesbians.&#13;
As a result of this discussion of the women's movement&#13;
representatives of five groups were invited to address the class last&#13;
week. Counselor Wendy Musich talked about the Parkside Women's&#13;
Caucus and counseling services available for women on campus.&#13;
Student Jean Koehler spoke of the recently formed United Women&#13;
Students of Wis. (UWSW), a statewide group investigating segregated&#13;
fees allocations, health programs, athletic funding and women's&#13;
studies. Plans are to use the group as a statewide force for change on&#13;
the campuses.&#13;
The Kenosha chapter of N.O.W. was discussed by member Marcia&#13;
Schwartz, who invited interested people to attend their next meeting&#13;
on March 28, 7:30 p.m. at the West Kenosha State Bank, on Hwy. 50.&#13;
Sandra Peterson of the Racine Women's Center at the YWCA talked&#13;
of the great progress made in Racine in the last three years in&#13;
women's movements. The center acts as an information service and&#13;
referral agency, among other things, and "encompasses all groups&#13;
and gives them a facility to work out of."&#13;
The Racine Women's Political Caucus was represented by Molly&#13;
Canary, who talked of the problems the Caucus is facing now, as-well&#13;
as its past activities. She finds it encouraging that women are&#13;
beginning to do things on their own, not just under the auspices of the&#13;
group. "They're attending county board meetings and school board&#13;
meetings, and joining the Democratic or Republican parties and&#13;
listening to what's being said," she remarked.&#13;
Vopat, in her constant attempt to get people thinking about the&#13;
myriad of issues involved in women's concerns, had at one point asked&#13;
her class what they would like to see at Parkside in this regard. "More&#13;
women s studies courses," came the reply from a number of students&#13;
Right on, sisters! &#13;
4 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 21, 1 9 73&#13;
Traffic violations&#13;
carry heavy fines&#13;
Contrary to what may be&#13;
believed by some, Parkside is not&#13;
a juvenile institution. I have just&#13;
been informed that the Parkside&#13;
campus is subject to the same&#13;
traffic regulations as the big-time&#13;
highway systems.&#13;
Sgt. Krogh of the Safety and&#13;
Security system said the traffic&#13;
rules and penalties for Parkside&#13;
are the same as those of the state&#13;
highway system. Running a stop&#13;
sign carries a penalty of $30, plus&#13;
$7 court costs for the first offense.&#13;
Anyone who has a second offense&#13;
within a year is fined between $50&#13;
and $100.&#13;
Sgt. Krogh remarked that the&#13;
way students ignore stop signs&#13;
and speed is "just ridiculous." He&#13;
is surprised that there haven't&#13;
been more accidents. "You can&#13;
see it when you're parked by&#13;
Wood Road for just a short time,"&#13;
said Sgt. Krogh, reflecting on the&#13;
gross number of traffic&#13;
violations.&#13;
Krogh issued a warning to all&#13;
Parkside students that the&#13;
Security force will begin&#13;
cracking down on traffic&#13;
violators very soon, in order to&#13;
prevent the situation from&#13;
becoming even more hazardous.&#13;
This rigid enforcement will start&#13;
approximately the same time&#13;
that these words you are now&#13;
reading appear in print.&#13;
What this means, for all those&#13;
who drive in the Parkside&#13;
domain, is that you must begin&#13;
obeying stop signs, speed limits,&#13;
and all other traffic regulations.&#13;
Otherwise, you will be arrested&#13;
and have to go through the court&#13;
procedures which will waste&#13;
much of your precious time and&#13;
money.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
receives national recognition&#13;
The colony of Alpha Kappa&#13;
Lambda fraternity at Parkside&#13;
became a full-fledged chapter of&#13;
Aopha Kappa Lambda fraternity,&#13;
a national fraternity numbering&#13;
over 10,000 men. This colony&#13;
officially became the Beta&#13;
Lambda chapter on March 10,&#13;
1973.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda came&#13;
into existence at Parkside on&#13;
February 26, 1971. It was the&#13;
second fraternity colony&#13;
established at Parkside, the first&#13;
was Zeta Beta Tau, which folded&#13;
about the same time Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda began. Since then&#13;
only Sigma Pi has established a&#13;
colony on campus.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda held an&#13;
installation banquet and&#13;
ceremony on March 10 at which a&#13;
charter incorporating, the newly&#13;
installed fraternity was&#13;
presented. Robert Stewart, the&#13;
fraternity's national president,&#13;
presented the charter.&#13;
This new chapter is only a&#13;
beginning, a foundation, for other&#13;
fraternities and sororities to be&#13;
born on campus. Alpha Kappa&#13;
Lambda is the start of the&#13;
established "Greek System" at&#13;
Parkside, which will grow as&#13;
Parkside grows.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-258-2&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHUITZ BtllCK-OPEl&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
1900&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BIRDS OF FIRE&#13;
Mahavishnu Orchestra&#13;
(KC 319%)&#13;
Welcome to an encounter with the Mahavishnu Orchestra. The name&#13;
just turns me off. And the cover, with birds flying gracefully&#13;
surrounded by soft tones of red and yellow, is a sure indication of a&#13;
loser. Now if the band was named the Slicing Daggers and there was a&#13;
photo of five super-ripped dudes on the front, my ears would anxiously&#13;
await their feast.&#13;
But behold the structure of this sound. This is a rock and roll band&#13;
that has recently begun to attract live audiences. The instruments:&#13;
double-barrel guitar, keyboard and moog, violin, bass and drums are&#13;
manipulated by very skillful beings. McLaughlin can play his guitar&#13;
hard and fast. The bass and drums, always supporting superbly, get&#13;
their chance to appear naked in "One Word." The violin if compared&#13;
to Papa John Creach, sounds more eastern than western.&#13;
The music is intricately composed, while it can drive and tear. Instruments&#13;
blend together, each one having its turn to surface as they&#13;
swirl around each other. It is often impossible to determine the point&#13;
that one changes into another. There are enough details in these&#13;
musical creations so that even after countless playings new aspects&#13;
can be realized.&#13;
Visions and images are called forth by the multitudes. "Birds of&#13;
Fire" begins as a misty setting that is followed by the action being&#13;
raised up into the clouds where the gods have their battles. "Celestial&#13;
Terrestial Commuters" has some fire feedback interwoven in a moog&#13;
and the rest of the orchestra. "Sapphire Bullets of Pure Love" is 21&#13;
seconds of outer space computer blurbing. "Thousand Island Park"&#13;
portrays a melancholy Spanish setting for the "Hope" that is to follow.&#13;
The "Hope" carries anyone miles above the earth. Side 2 contains&#13;
more similar visions, along with some mellower passages with&#13;
clearer, sparkling guitar tones. "Sanctuary" is quite mournful. "Open&#13;
Country Joy," after a few seconds of softer vibes, is sharply contrasted&#13;
by more fire music.&#13;
BIRDS OF FIRE then, is a title that accurately describes the sound.&#13;
The music burns and also raises one with the smoke, to newer&#13;
dimensions. It supplies the physical force along with mental&#13;
enlightenment. Its structure is complex enough to prevent it from&#13;
becoming boring. The one and only weak point--no vocals.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
"OpRrrnotf*! "'"'&#13;
f i°. ^WelhRvf* «* *•- .«»i k j ,.v&gt;.n.o&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Monday&#13;
March 26&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Tallent H all&#13;
Adni: 50° student/staff&#13;
'1.00 general&#13;
Financial aids&#13;
(continued from page 1)&#13;
Then too, there's the current&#13;
controversy over who --HEAB, or&#13;
individual UW-System campuses-should&#13;
have power over&#13;
distribution of state aid to&#13;
students.&#13;
Madison campus administrators&#13;
favor local control,&#13;
arguing that centralization would&#13;
mean inflexibility. Gov. Lucey&#13;
and HEAB have hailed state&#13;
control as the answer to&#13;
discrepancies among campuses,&#13;
and a means of increasing the&#13;
student voice in the final say on&#13;
how aid is distributed.&#13;
Meanwhile, the 1973-74 school&#13;
year approaches, and students&#13;
must Weigh plans for it. If aid&#13;
enters the picture, things blur.&#13;
"We are now one month behind&#13;
schedule and every day pushes us&#13;
back further," Douma said. He&#13;
noted that last fall the University&#13;
was willing to waive late&#13;
payment penalties for students&#13;
who couldn't pay tuition due to&#13;
last-minute rule changes in the&#13;
guaranteed loan program, and it&#13;
would probably be willing to do so&#13;
again.&#13;
"That's fine for tuition, but for&#13;
the landlord who wants his&#13;
money Aug. 1, or for buying&#13;
groceries, waiving tuition&#13;
temporarily doesn't help,"&#13;
Douma points out.&#13;
Next week - how the financial&#13;
aids at Parkside are being effected.&#13;
&#13;
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JELLY BEAN&#13;
... not just a sad sugar bean&#13;
that's sweet and tasteless.&#13;
My smooth candy coating&#13;
comes in eight sparkling&#13;
colors and each one&#13;
identifies a satisfying fruit&#13;
flavor such as yellow for&#13;
lemon, orange for orange,&#13;
green for lime, pink for&#13;
strawberry and white for&#13;
pineapple... as well as the&#13;
e v e r -op ula r lico ric e&#13;
flavored black Jelly Bean.&#13;
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secret of my success... the&#13;
reason I'm a genuine Jolly&#13;
Jelly Bean. You've guessed&#13;
it... soft, tender, pectin-jell&#13;
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for you. I hear all kinds of&#13;
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and how soft and tender I&#13;
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24th Ave. - 60th St.&#13;
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Wed., Mar. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Interdisciplinary course offered&#13;
(continued from page!)&#13;
Parkside is a natural place for&#13;
the germination of such a course&#13;
both because of its encouragement&#13;
of interdisciplinary&#13;
studies and because of its&#13;
"special mission" of training&#13;
students to live and work in an&#13;
urban, industrial society.&#13;
The eleven student!^ in the&#13;
present class include eight&#13;
enrolled for art credit and three&#13;
enrolled for chemistry credit.&#13;
For art students, Murphy feels&#13;
the course will help to discourage&#13;
an overspecialization which has&#13;
infiltrated thinking in the art&#13;
community much as the family&#13;
doctor has given way to the&#13;
specialist in medical practice.&#13;
Through the centuries, from&#13;
the time of the great classical&#13;
masters to about the 1920s, artists&#13;
customarily worked in a number&#13;
of media and consequently&#13;
gained familiarity with a wide&#13;
variety of materials and their&#13;
properties, Murphy points out.&#13;
Da Vinci, for example, was a&#13;
painter, sculptor and architect&#13;
(and a scientist, musician and&#13;
philosopher as well).&#13;
Murphy feels that superspecialization&#13;
is self-limiting and&#13;
sees the course as a way to encourage&#13;
art students to experiment&#13;
with a variety of media&#13;
by pointing out the creative&#13;
possibilities of various materials.&#13;
"Chemistry students similarly&#13;
discover something of the range&#13;
of both industrial-technical and&#13;
aesthetic possibilities in working&#13;
with varied materials by&#13;
examining their properties.&#13;
Many of the abstract concepts&#13;
learned in the classroom come to&#13;
life in a way quite different from&#13;
the standard chemistry&#13;
laboratory experience," Marron&#13;
said.&#13;
"What we're trying to do is give&#13;
art students an appreciation of&#13;
the chemical make-up of commonly&#13;
used art materials and to&#13;
introduce chemistry students to&#13;
the creative possibilities inherent&#13;
in the same materials," Murphy&#13;
added.&#13;
The process takes students&#13;
from campus lecture halls and&#13;
laboratories to artists' studios,&#13;
museums, a brass foundry and a&#13;
plastics plant.&#13;
Along the way, art students&#13;
meet tools traditionally reserved&#13;
to the scientist such as the&#13;
scanning electron microscope&#13;
and spectrophotometric equipment&#13;
and the chemistry students&#13;
get a nodding acquaintance with&#13;
the ceramists' kiln and the art of&#13;
glass blowing.&#13;
Students first observe an&#13;
operation, such as metal casting&#13;
or vacuum forming, then try&#13;
their own hands at it.&#13;
With any luck at all, one of&#13;
them may one day produce a 20th&#13;
century LaGioconda. And maybe&#13;
even tell us why she's smiling.&#13;
North Carolina choir to appear&#13;
The concert choir of North&#13;
Carolina Central University will&#13;
perform at Parkside Monday,&#13;
March 26, at 8 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Described by some as among&#13;
the very best choral ensemble in&#13;
the country, the 50 v oice group&#13;
will perform a variety of music&#13;
including folk songs of Creole,&#13;
Russian, and black origins, as&#13;
well as traditional compositions&#13;
by Black composers. There will&#13;
'also bb three fffdVemdnte from&#13;
Contata 150 by J.S. Bach, "Nach&#13;
dir Herr zerlanget mich" ("Lord&#13;
My Soul Doth Long for Thee").&#13;
Songs from the black church will&#13;
complete the selections.&#13;
The choir is also appearing at&#13;
other University of Wisconsin&#13;
campuses under the auspices of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Committee on Cooperation with&#13;
Developing Universities (CCDU),&#13;
a program of interinstitutional&#13;
cooperation with&#13;
three black universities-North&#13;
Carolina A &amp; T at Greensboro,&#13;
North Carolina Central&#13;
University at Durham and Texas&#13;
Southern University at Houston.&#13;
Parkside has an exchange&#13;
student program with North&#13;
Carolina Central. It is a statesupported&#13;
co-educational institution,&#13;
one of the 16 campuses&#13;
of the University of North&#13;
Carolina System. The student&#13;
population is 4,000 and the school&#13;
grants bachelor's degrees in&#13;
selected areas. It is located in the&#13;
circle of academic institutions&#13;
which includes Duke University&#13;
in Durham and the University of&#13;
North Carolina in neighboring&#13;
Chapel Hill.&#13;
Choir conductor Charles H.&#13;
Gilchrist has been director of the&#13;
NCCU choir for the past five&#13;
years. He has received degrees&#13;
from North Carolina Central&#13;
University and Indiana&#13;
University. He is presently&#13;
enrolled in the Doctoral program&#13;
at U.N.C., Greensboro.&#13;
This year's spring tour takes&#13;
the choir to the East coast before&#13;
heading to the Midwest. The&#13;
choir will be performing at&#13;
Washington, D.C., Baltimore and&#13;
New York. It will then travel to&#13;
Cleveland before completing its&#13;
tour in Wisconsin.&#13;
Their appearance here is&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. Tickets are $1 for&#13;
general admission, 50 ce nts for&#13;
Parkside students and staff, and&#13;
are available at the Information&#13;
Center, Tallent Hall 201.&#13;
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT A SALES&#13;
CAREER ... and afraid to ask. Get the facts about Prudential's&#13;
job preview program — the first step toward a growth&#13;
career in sales and sales management. Part-time while&#13;
obtaining your degree; full-time upon graduation. Immediate&#13;
openings in Racine and Kenosha. Phone Mr. Cohen,&#13;
633-2427 in Racine. Equal opportunity - M-F.&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
'Review&#13;
s4ucUo.-?l/i&amp;ctcit IRevieca&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
"Can a presidential candidate really be sold like deodorant?" This is&#13;
the question that the tape The Selling of a President tries to answer&#13;
The tape is an interview with Joe McGinnis who wrote the book The&#13;
Selling of a President. This deals with image building of the candidates&#13;
in the 1968 election. Mr. McGinnis was inspired to write the&#13;
book after hearing a member of the Democratic Party state "We're&#13;
going to turn Humphrey into Abraham Lincoln by November." He&#13;
contends that the people vote for an image and not the man&#13;
During most of the tape Mr. McGinnis talks about the Nixon campaign.&#13;
He said that members of the party were afraid to expose Nixon&#13;
directly to the press because they didn't want him to ruin his image&#13;
So, they hired the producer of the Mike Douglas Show to stage supposedly&#13;
impromptu press conferences. He went around the country&#13;
picking people to be on panels being very careful not to choose anyone&#13;
who could ask a penetrating question. He also picked reporters having&#13;
little or no experience as political critics.&#13;
The Republican Party also had trouble finding people to be in their&#13;
advertisements. Even some actors and actresses who were out of&#13;
work and really needed the money refused to be in an ad for Nixon&#13;
One time they sent photographers to Harlem to get some pictures of&#13;
happy black store owners posing in front of their stores. After the&#13;
crowd that had gathered found out who the photographers were hired&#13;
by, the happy black store owners were no longer very happy and&#13;
neither was the crowd.&#13;
Mr. McGinnis also said that the party had enough money so t hat&#13;
Nixon never had to meet any hostile forces, they bought all the time&#13;
they needed to communicate the image. All of Nixon's appearances up&#13;
until two weeks before the election were completely controlled by the&#13;
party. Even the cameramen were hired by the Nixon staff.&#13;
Did Nixon really win the '68 ele ction or was it the image that his&#13;
supporters developed for him?&#13;
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%Wisc. &amp; Parkside I. D. 's Required&#13;
2 Student Activities Bldg. 9 p.m.&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
&gt;\°i&#13;
SHRKEas&#13;
A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP AND 21st (ALMOST)&#13;
A A &#13;
6 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 21, 1 9 73&#13;
The Ranger asks—&#13;
Should amnesty he given to draft evaders ?&#13;
Connie Adams, Sophomore,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"No, in a general way, no,&#13;
because the guys that have&#13;
worked, that have been sent&#13;
overseas and have worked in Viet&#13;
Nam, most of them went because&#13;
they felt that's what they had to&#13;
do. And those that didn't go, alot&#13;
of them had the money to go to&#13;
Canada, they wanted to get away&#13;
so they didn't want to do their&#13;
job; they had the money they&#13;
went somewhere where they&#13;
didn't have to work. And if&#13;
they're poor, like if I had been a&#13;
guy and if I would have had to go&#13;
to Viet Nam, I would have gone, I&#13;
wouldn't have gone to Canada.&#13;
Even if I had had the money to&#13;
skip out I wouldn't had done it. I&#13;
think it's unfair to the people who&#13;
have served to give the draft&#13;
evaders amnesty."&#13;
Linda Servais, Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"Yes, and no; there's two sides&#13;
to it really. There's pros and cons&#13;
for it and you could talk about&#13;
both of them, andyou can say I&#13;
think it should because why&#13;
should they fight in a war that&#13;
really has no meaning, then&#13;
again it is breaking the law."&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
Restaurants&#13;
Ranch C reated&#13;
Sandwiches &amp;&#13;
Charcoal Steaks&#13;
North &amp; South S heridan R d.&#13;
It's the real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
Judy Burris, Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"Yes, I do, well I think they&#13;
thought they were doing what&#13;
was right; they considered what&#13;
they were doing was right. And to&#13;
not let them come back to their&#13;
country, I don't know why they'd&#13;
want to though, but if they want&#13;
to, they should be able to. But I&#13;
don't unow why they'd want to."&#13;
Rick Ponzio, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"I think the people that have&#13;
left the country altogether should&#13;
be let back, with some sort of&#13;
service waiting for them; in some&#13;
way they have to function to&#13;
serve the time they would have&#13;
spent if they would have gone in.&#13;
And the people who spent time in&#13;
jail should be let free."&#13;
Mike Jenrette, Senior, Racine&#13;
"Yeah, I think it could be, but I&#13;
think there should be some&#13;
penalty if they come back, like&#13;
maybe having them all in&#13;
volunteer service or something&#13;
like that. They should be made to&#13;
serve the two years, because&#13;
Ibelieve, you know, you shouldn't&#13;
fight for something you don't&#13;
believe in, because if I was in Viet&#13;
Nam I wouldn't want someone&#13;
next to me that didn't really want&#13;
to be there, taking a chance of the&#13;
both of us getting shot up. But I&#13;
think they should be able to come&#13;
back, and if they do they should&#13;
have some penalty to pay."&#13;
Women's Caucus&#13;
gets reserve shelf&#13;
A reserve shelf has been set up&#13;
in the library for the Parkside&#13;
Women's Caucus. It contains a lot&#13;
of data on the Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment as well as various&#13;
clippings and pamphlets on other&#13;
women's concerns. A complete&#13;
bibliography of the library's&#13;
holdings on the subject of women&#13;
in many realms is also available,&#13;
as is a referral list of speakers&#13;
and sources of i nformation. Back&#13;
copies of Ms. magazine are there&#13;
too.&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11-8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15f&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Table s&#13;
Air Conditioning .Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
VAieos&#13;
PIZZA mem&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery te Parkside Village&#13;
5021 30th Annus Phone 657-5191&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
There will be a foosball tournament&#13;
held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building April 9-15. There&#13;
will be prizes awarded to the best&#13;
teams playing. There is a $1&#13;
registration fee per two-person&#13;
team and the deadline for&#13;
registering is April 6. You can&#13;
register at the SAB or at the&#13;
Activities office in LLC D-197.&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity would like&#13;
to announce that there are now&#13;
openings for interested students&#13;
that are concerned in becoming&#13;
involved in a dedicated, active&#13;
fraternity. For further available&#13;
information see any Sigma Pi&#13;
member, Ken Oberbruner&#13;
(Tallent Hall Rm. 237, Ext. 2481)&#13;
or Wayne Dannehl (P.E.&#13;
Building, Ext. 2245).&#13;
The Learning Center will&#13;
sponsor a free showing of the film&#13;
"To Die in Madrid," a&#13;
documentary covering the&#13;
Spanish Civil War. The showing&#13;
will be in Tallent Hall, first floor&#13;
south, Thursday at 7 p.m.&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity would like&#13;
to extend congratulations to&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda Fraternity&#13;
on their achievement of National&#13;
Recognition. Anything can be&#13;
accomplished if given enough&#13;
time!&#13;
There will be a Vet's Club&#13;
meeting Sunday, March 25 at 7&#13;
p.m. in the Student Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Anyone interested in forming&#13;
Spanish group should attend th&#13;
organizational meeting Thursda&#13;
at 11:30 in D-110 of the librarj&#13;
Questions? Call Jan Feifer at 69'&#13;
3419.&#13;
"Circus" will provide the&#13;
music for the dance sponsored b&gt;&#13;
the Student Activities Board this&#13;
Saturday. The dance will be in&#13;
the Student Activities Building&#13;
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Admission&#13;
$1.50, Wisconsin and Parkside&#13;
I.D.'s required.&#13;
TeUotfaj,&#13;
3203-52nd St.&#13;
START A NEW HOBBY&#13;
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Wed./ M ar. 21, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
L The Parkside £ RANGER Hockey, growing sport in UW system&#13;
Spring Rugby Schedule&#13;
March 24 - Chicago Lions - Parkside&#13;
March 31 - Purdue North Central - Indiana&#13;
April 7 - Northwestern - Evanston&#13;
April 14 - Illinois Valley - Parkside&#13;
April 15 - Milwaukee School of Engineering - Parkside&#13;
May 5 - Marquette - Milwaukee&#13;
May 12 - Dodge County - Parkside&#13;
All home matches begin at 1:30.&#13;
INTRAMURAL STANDINGS, STATS&#13;
(asof Wednesday, March 7)&#13;
American Basketball League&#13;
Capitol Division Central Division&#13;
Bold Ones 5-1 Mercury Comets 5-1&#13;
Starry Eyed Gang 3-3 Deke's Boys 3-3&#13;
Soccer Team 1-5 Faculty Fossils 1.5&#13;
Sports&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Individual&#13;
D. Staffon&#13;
Mitch Arents&#13;
Hal Henderson&#13;
jack Geisler&#13;
Ed Hopkins&#13;
John Pena&#13;
Everett Hyde&#13;
Scott Nelson&#13;
Bob Lawson&#13;
p. pevonka&#13;
Team&#13;
Starry Eyed Gang&#13;
Bold Ones&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Mercury Comets&#13;
Soccer Team&#13;
Faculty Fossils&#13;
Deke's Boys&#13;
National Basketball League&#13;
Eastern Division&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Herblius Superblius&#13;
Privateers&#13;
Rebels&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Scoring Leaders&#13;
Individual&#13;
Tom Hart&#13;
Larry Wade&#13;
Ron Schmitz&#13;
Dezek&#13;
SonnTag&#13;
Dean Christenson&#13;
Kevin Sorenson&#13;
Marino&#13;
Pete Wood&#13;
Casebolt&#13;
Western Division&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Flash&#13;
Rat Patrol&#13;
Big K&#13;
Sigma Pi&#13;
6-1&#13;
5-1&#13;
4-3&#13;
3-3&#13;
3-4&#13;
Team&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Olympians&#13;
Warriors&#13;
Rebels&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Herb. Superb.&#13;
Sheeters&#13;
Total&#13;
Points&#13;
110&#13;
95&#13;
94&#13;
86&#13;
86&#13;
85&#13;
84&#13;
78&#13;
6 6&#13;
56&#13;
Total Points&#13;
178&#13;
144&#13;
124&#13;
113&#13;
124&#13;
107&#13;
84&#13;
81&#13;
75&#13;
72&#13;
Average&#13;
18.3&#13;
15.9&#13;
15.7&#13;
14.3&#13;
14.3&#13;
14.1&#13;
14.0&#13;
13.0&#13;
11.0&#13;
9.3&#13;
Average&#13;
25.3&#13;
20.6&#13;
17.8&#13;
16.1&#13;
17.8&#13;
15.3&#13;
12.0&#13;
11.6&#13;
10.8&#13;
10.3&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
Once upon a time a couple of&#13;
years back Parkside started up a&#13;
hockey team, or a group of young&#13;
men did. Once upon a time about&#13;
10 years back the University of&#13;
Wisconsin returned to hockey.&#13;
Today Parkside plays in a&#13;
small ice ring in Milwaukee&#13;
called the Wilson Park Arena.&#13;
Marquette and others also play&#13;
there. Today the Wisconsin&#13;
Badgers devour opponents in the&#13;
beautiful, spacious Dane County&#13;
Coliseum in Madison.&#13;
Parkside's record the last two&#13;
years was 18-2-1 in 1971-72 and 9-3-&#13;
1 in 1972-73 with one game&#13;
remaining. Fewer games were&#13;
played this year because of&#13;
several cancellations.&#13;
Parkside is coached by a&#13;
considerate man who doesn't&#13;
teach at the university. His name&#13;
is Ludvick Podlogar, who took&#13;
the job of being hockey coach&#13;
because a friend told him about&#13;
the Rangers problems of getting&#13;
better organized. Lud just said,&#13;
"I'll take a look at em and try to&#13;
help develope them as hockey&#13;
players. I'm a hockey fanatic&#13;
anyway."&#13;
Does Lud resent driving in his&#13;
spare time to Milwaukee, to&#13;
coach a group of college students&#13;
who want to play the game? "I&#13;
don't when it's for such a great&#13;
group of g uys. This has got to be&#13;
the finest group of young men&#13;
I've ever been associated with,&#13;
they really care and pull for each&#13;
other," Lud exclaimed.&#13;
NCAA champs&#13;
Coach Bob Johnson at Madison&#13;
doesn't have to worry about his&#13;
opinion on hockey there, his&#13;
program isn't in jeopardy.&#13;
Johnson has the hockey facility&#13;
compared to almost none for&#13;
college, 24 hockey players on&#13;
scholarship, the school athletic&#13;
department 100 percent behind&#13;
him, students behind him some&#13;
8,430 for each game, national&#13;
recognition from Sports&#13;
Illustrated, and now the NCAA&#13;
championship hockey trophy for&#13;
his collection. This the Badgers&#13;
received last Saturday be&#13;
defeating the University of&#13;
Denver 4-2 in Boston.&#13;
Lud has between 200-300 loyal&#13;
fans in the 3,000 seat areana. Lud&#13;
has a good balanced offense and&#13;
defense. Lud has a group of 15&#13;
guys from different areas of the&#13;
country; who play because they&#13;
were bit by the hockey bug.&#13;
Blood and teeth&#13;
Lud said, "It's not personal&#13;
pride, I really can't explain why&#13;
these guys want to play hockey,&#13;
totally." How do you explain a&#13;
player like Tom Krummel who&#13;
lost two teeth in a heated hockey&#13;
contest. He comes skating over to&#13;
me, asks me to hold on to the&#13;
bloody teeth and returns to action.&#13;
How do you explain that?&#13;
What's the Ranger's problems&#13;
concerning hockey? Lud said&#13;
calmly, "the support from the?&#13;
school and the athletic department."&#13;
A meeting between that&#13;
•department and Lud was&#13;
scheduled for this week to&#13;
possibly talk of future hockey aid.&#13;
The comparison made between&#13;
the Bdgers and the Rangers isn't&#13;
to say that Parkside should go in&#13;
that direction, but that with •&#13;
Wisconsin's showing of hockey&#13;
interest and success, possibly it&#13;
could happen here.&#13;
Financial problems&#13;
Last year the team members&#13;
had to go out and raise between&#13;
$1,500 and $,800 to cover the&#13;
hockey costs. They did it by&#13;
selling advertisements for the&#13;
hockey programs. In years past&#13;
hockey members had to pay for&#13;
almost the total hockey costs.&#13;
Lud said, "luckily this year they&#13;
didn't have to pay anything out of&#13;
their own pockets."&#13;
Here at Parkside basketball is,&#13;
supposed to reign big? But the&#13;
hockey club keeps on hoping that&#13;
their wishes of University support&#13;
will someday join them with&#13;
the other better funded varsity&#13;
sports.&#13;
While they wait, Lud and&#13;
company will keep on enjoying&#13;
the game of hockey.&#13;
j j (f y y -f C3 li&#13;
J UW-Parkside&#13;
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Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers &#13;
&lt;T&gt;&#13;
8 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 21, 19 73&#13;
Co-ed tracksters victorious&#13;
The Parkside coed tracksters&#13;
had four standouts in a victorious&#13;
trip to Whitefish Bay last Friday&#13;
night. The Rangerettes were first&#13;
in team scoring behind the individual&#13;
performances of Sue&#13;
Von Behren, who caputred firsts&#13;
in the high jump and long jump&#13;
for Parkside while Eileen Reilly&#13;
placed first in b«th the 880 y ard&#13;
run and the mile walk along with&#13;
picking up a second in the mile&#13;
run.&#13;
The 400 yard run was&#13;
dominated by Sandy Kingsfield&#13;
who also placed second in the&#13;
long jump, and Trudy Buehrens&#13;
was the victor in the shot put,&#13;
while also gaining a fourth place&#13;
in the 50 y ard hurdles.&#13;
Team scores were; Parkside&#13;
44, Milwaukee Track Club 26 and&#13;
Fox Valley 13.&#13;
On March 10, the girls track&#13;
team participated in the&#13;
University of Chicago Track Club&#13;
Relays and received some good&#13;
individual performances from&#13;
three coeds.&#13;
Sandy Kingsfield leaped to a&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
The Parkside trackster s&#13;
placed well at the Wisconsin&#13;
State AAU Championships at&#13;
Whitefish Bay last weekend.&#13;
Lucien Rosa took first in both&#13;
the mile and two mile runs with&#13;
4:20.5 and 9:19, respectively.&#13;
In the quarter mile, Herb&#13;
DeGroot took first with 53.8 while&#13;
Cornelius Gordon came in&#13;
second.&#13;
The mile relay team of&#13;
DeGroot, Gordon, Keith Merritt,&#13;
and Chuck Dettman won. Merritt&#13;
also took second in the triple&#13;
jump with a distance of 45 fee t 8&#13;
inches. Dettman was second in&#13;
the 880 with a time of 2:02.2.&#13;
Three gymnasts from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will compete this weekend in the&#13;
National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletic national championships&#13;
at UW-LaCrosse.&#13;
Coach Geza Martiny will take&#13;
Kevin O'Neil, Bryon Petschow&#13;
and Tom Brannon to LaCrosse&#13;
for the preliminary action&#13;
Friday. Finals follow on Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
O'Neil, a sophomore from&#13;
Kenosha (Tremper) will be&#13;
making his second appearance in&#13;
as many years for the Rangers in&#13;
the NAIA. Again, as last year,&#13;
he'll be competing on the rings&#13;
only.&#13;
For Petschow and Brannon,&#13;
both freshmen out of Racine Park&#13;
High School, Martiny sees the&#13;
meet as a great opportunity for&#13;
them to gain experience and&#13;
confidence. Petschow, who cocaptained&#13;
the young Parkside&#13;
squad with O'Neil, was recently&#13;
selected most valuable in a vote&#13;
of his teammates and will go in&#13;
the long horse vault at LaCrosse.&#13;
Brannon, who enrolled at&#13;
Parkside only in January and did&#13;
not work out with the team until&#13;
then, came on strong at the&#13;
season's close and qualified with&#13;
Petschow on the long horse vault.&#13;
"We're very proud that three of&#13;
our young gymnasts can make it&#13;
to the national meet," Martiny&#13;
said. "We're hoping that they'll&#13;
gain a lot of experience in this&#13;
meet that will help them in the&#13;
future."&#13;
!50&#13;
( Coupon&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 FREE DRY CYCLES WITH ANY&#13;
WASHLOAD AND 1 EXTRA FREE PUNCH ON&#13;
YOUR DRY CLEANING DIVIDEND CARD&#13;
WITH AN 8 LB. LOAD OF DRY CLEANING&#13;
GOOD AT THESE LOCATIONS:&#13;
NORGE VILLAGE 7313-45 AVE., KENOSHA&#13;
WESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 OHIO ST., RACINE&#13;
RAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 RAPIDS DR., RACINE&#13;
ONE COUPON PER WEEK PER CUSTOMER&#13;
Expires Sept. 5,1973&#13;
NAME &amp; ADDRESS&#13;
Sophomore guard Chuck&#13;
Chambliss of Racine has been&#13;
selected by his basketball&#13;
teammates as the squad's most&#13;
valuable player for 1972-73.&#13;
It was the second straight year&#13;
that Chambliss was so honored&#13;
by his teammates.&#13;
Chambliss, 6-2 Racine Park&#13;
product, averaged 15.3 points per&#13;
game this past season in leading&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens's Parkside&#13;
squad to a 13-12 season mark and&#13;
a berth in the Wisconsin Independent&#13;
College Assn. playoffs.&#13;
He earlier has been named to&#13;
the all W.I.C.A. team.&#13;
Tim Hubbard, 6-3 freshman&#13;
forward out of Kenosha Bradford,&#13;
was selected the team's&#13;
most improved player.&#13;
Sophomores Chuck Chambliss&#13;
of Racine, and Joe Hutter of&#13;
Chicago have been elected 1973-74&#13;
basketball co-captains by their&#13;
teammates.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
1969, CAMARO, economical, 3-speed,&#13;
Drange, Black vinyl top. $1295.00 634-6277.&#13;
REWARD: If you saw someone kick a yellow&#13;
1970 V.W. Karmen Ghla on Tuesday 3-13-73,&#13;
collect a substantial reward. Call Tom at 632-&#13;
7803 a fter 6 o'clock.&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
2667.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 c ents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Rangef&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK FNOT-OfiFD FOR .f&#13;
DATESfS1&#13;
) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
riTY PHONE NO.&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Two Ranger Fencers to&#13;
compete in World meet&#13;
third place in the long jump and&#13;
also picked up a sixth place in the&#13;
60 yard dash. Sue Von Behren&#13;
vaulted to a third in the high&#13;
jump while teammate Eileen&#13;
Reilly was sixth in the 880.&#13;
The 880 re lay team consisting&#13;
of Kingsfield, Reilly, Maria&#13;
Breach and Trudy Buehrens also&#13;
took a fifth.&#13;
The Rangerette tracksters next&#13;
meet will be against Carthage&#13;
College on March 24.&#13;
Two UW-Parkside fencers,&#13;
John Tank and Joe Bieblel, have&#13;
been invited to compete in the&#13;
Martini-Rossi International&#13;
Invitational for the second&#13;
straight year.&#13;
The Invitational will be held&#13;
March 23-25 in New York and is&#13;
considered one of the top international&#13;
tournaments in the&#13;
world. The meet will bring&#13;
together about 60 fencers from&#13;
around the world in each of the&#13;
three weapon classifications, foil,&#13;
epee and sabre.&#13;
Uw-Parkside Coach Loran&#13;
Hein commented that only about&#13;
15 college and university fencers&#13;
from the United States will be&#13;
invited in each weapon.&#13;
Tank and Biebel are both&#13;
natives of Wauwatosa and both&#13;
compete in the foil classification&#13;
of the sport. John, a junior and&#13;
Joe, a sophomore, are considered&#13;
among the brightest young&#13;
prospect in the country. Biebel&#13;
made it to the quarter finals last&#13;
year before being elininated and&#13;
Tank made it to the quarter finals&#13;
in the U.S. National Championships.&#13;
&#13;
Both athletes started fencing&#13;
under the direction of Ed Sampon&#13;
at the Wauwatosa Rection&#13;
Department and have taken&#13;
turns beating each other in major&#13;
competition. Tank has won the&#13;
state foil championships the last&#13;
two years, while Biebel captured&#13;
the Midwest title in 1971 when&#13;
Tank came in third in the 19 and&#13;
under division, and also won&#13;
against him in the 1972 Great&#13;
Lakes championships. Each has&#13;
been named to the All-Midwest&#13;
Intercollegiate honor team.&#13;
Beibel was inelligible for intercollegiate&#13;
competition this year&#13;
after transferring from&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College, but Tank finished the&#13;
regular season with a 53-7 record&#13;
John Tank&#13;
Hein who has turned Parkside&#13;
into a Midwestern fencing power&#13;
in the schools four year history,&#13;
feels that both have excellent&#13;
chances to make the list of the 15&#13;
who will be invited to the final&#13;
tryouts in Tucson, Arizona, in&#13;
June.&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
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AUTO PARTS, INC.&#13;
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1400 Milwaukee Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 7.30 9:00&#13;
Saturday 7 30 5. 30&#13;
Sunday 9:00 1:00&#13;
Discount to Parkside Students&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication. </text>
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              <text>UW President Weaver visits Parkside</text>
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              <text>UW President Weaver visits Parkside&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
The last time the president of&#13;
the Uw System John Weaver&#13;
visited Parkside he was greeted&#13;
by angry students upset about the&#13;
possibility of 27 teacher firings.&#13;
Though the schedule was full at&#13;
last week's visit, it was decidedly&#13;
less heated.&#13;
Weaver met with faculty,&#13;
students, and the press in the four&#13;
hours that were alotted for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
In the press conference he&#13;
fielded questions about the School&#13;
of Modern Industry (SMI)&#13;
building financial aids, his&#13;
Outreach program, and technical&#13;
school cooperation.&#13;
"I think we still have a fighting&#13;
chance for planning money,"&#13;
Weaver said concerning the SMI&#13;
building. He didn't know if the&#13;
planning money would be forthcoming,&#13;
but said the best could&#13;
be hoped for was that planning&#13;
money would be available in this&#13;
biennium and that construction&#13;
money would be sought in the&#13;
next biennium.&#13;
He said the lack of the building&#13;
would be a "hinderance" and&#13;
would "cripple" Parkside's work&#13;
toward its mission, but felt that&#13;
work would continue.&#13;
"The budgetary intent in&#13;
Washington," is the most serious&#13;
phase of the financial aids&#13;
problem according to Weaver.&#13;
"The budgetary intent in&#13;
Washington," is the most serious&#13;
phase of the financial aids&#13;
problem according to Weaver.&#13;
The ParksideFinancial&#13;
aids&#13;
Student aid funds delayed&#13;
by Kathy Wellner&#13;
The financial aids situation at&#13;
Parkside is no better than&#13;
anywhere else for 1973-74.&#13;
According to Jan Ocker,&#13;
Director of Financial Aids and&#13;
Placement, students in need of&#13;
aid will not know how much&#13;
money they will get for next year,&#13;
or if they will get anything at all.&#13;
The Financial Aids Office&#13;
usually sends out a letter by May&#13;
1st to incoming Freshmen, and&#13;
by June 1st for continuing&#13;
students, telling them how much&#13;
aid they are to receive, and in&#13;
what form it will be.&#13;
This year, due to the proposed&#13;
revamp of the aids programs,&#13;
and the resultant uncertainty&#13;
Women's Day&#13;
about funds, the aids people won't&#13;
know what is available until July&#13;
1st, or later. Therefore, students&#13;
eligible for aid will be getting a&#13;
letter informing them simply as&#13;
to whether or not they are eligible&#13;
for aid, and how much they are&#13;
eligible for. The other thing that&#13;
will not be known is what form&#13;
the aid will be in: grant, loan, job&#13;
or combination.&#13;
Ocker recently received a&#13;
letter from David Obie of the&#13;
Supplemental Appropriations&#13;
Committee in which Obie stated&#13;
his belief that it is likely that the&#13;
current programs will be funded&#13;
for '73-'74, and that the Basic&#13;
Opportunity Grant (BOG) would&#13;
not be implemented.&#13;
In the meantime, because 70-75&#13;
percent of Parkside's financial&#13;
aids funds come from the federal&#13;
aid programs, students might not&#13;
know how they stand financially&#13;
until late this summer. The&#13;
Financial Aids Office is not even&#13;
sure that the money will be&#13;
available in time for registration.&#13;
The only thing that could clear&#13;
any of this up would be if&#13;
Congress fights the implementation&#13;
of the BOG and gets&#13;
appropriations for the current&#13;
programs.&#13;
For students waiting to get the&#13;
word on their '73-'74 aid, crossed&#13;
fingers is the only certainty.&#13;
Traveling with the President&#13;
were: Dallas Peterson, Associate&#13;
Vice President for Academic&#13;
Affairs; Robert Polk, Associate&#13;
Vice President for Academic&#13;
Affairs; Albert Beaver, Program&#13;
Coordinator, Agricultural and&#13;
Life Science; Richard Greiner,&#13;
P r o g r a m C o o r d i n a t o r,&#13;
Engineering and Physical&#13;
Science; Karen Merritt,&#13;
Program Coordinator, Arts and&#13;
Humanities; Robert Doyle,&#13;
Director, University Relations;&#13;
Harold Robinson, UW Central&#13;
Administration and Allan Hershfield,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor, UW&#13;
Center System.&#13;
The High Education Aids&#13;
Board (HEAB) would be appropriated&#13;
$10 million under the&#13;
governor's budgetary plan.&#13;
Weaver has spoken against this.&#13;
If the money were plugged into&#13;
HEAB Weaver felt sure it would&#13;
come back to the university&#13;
system, but the immediate&#13;
jurisdiction would rest with the&#13;
governor and HEAB.&#13;
Weaver has also spoken&#13;
against Lucey's proposed centralized&#13;
financial aids system. He&#13;
does not know what the plan&#13;
would mean, but feels that&#13;
existing funds could best be&#13;
distributed by personnel on&#13;
campus.&#13;
The conference was short, but&#13;
most reporters seemed to have&#13;
had their questions answered.&#13;
Wednesday March 28, 1973&#13;
Vol. 1 No. 23&#13;
Brakhage to speak&#13;
on Brakhage&#13;
Stan Brakhage&#13;
Stan Brakhage, one of the most&#13;
influential and prolific filmmakers&#13;
of the American underground,&#13;
will present a lecturedemonstration&#13;
incorporating&#13;
short films interspersed with&#13;
commentary at 8 p.m. Tuesday&#13;
(Ap. 3) in Greenquist Hall room&#13;
103.&#13;
Titled "Brakhage on&#13;
Brakhage," the projgram is free&#13;
to the public. In addition to the&#13;
public lecture, Brakhage will&#13;
meet informally with students&#13;
and faculty on Wednesday&#13;
morning in room 175 of the&#13;
Learning Center from 10-noon.&#13;
Maker of such major works as&#13;
"Dog Star Man" and "Window&#13;
Water Baby Moving," Brakhage&#13;
directed his first film at 18.&#13;
Continued on page 3&#13;
Caucus to present lectures, and sympsia&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
"Anatomy is destiny," Sigmund Freud once&#13;
said. The Parkside Women's Caucus begs to&#13;
differ with him, and will endeavor to prove their&#13;
point with the second annual Women's Day t&gt;n&#13;
Wednesday, April 4. Taking as its theme&#13;
"Anatomy is NOT Destiny!, "the group have&#13;
planned a number of lectures and sympsia&#13;
throughout the day and evening.&#13;
The rationale behind the idea of a Women's&#13;
Day is to provide an opportunity for people on&#13;
campus as well as in the community, to better&#13;
inform themselves about some of the issues&#13;
involved in women's controversial place in&#13;
society. The women's liberation movement&#13;
denotes different things to different people, but&#13;
the day's program attempts to accommodate a&#13;
variety of interests.&#13;
The keynote address at 9:30 a.m.-entitled&#13;
"Anatomy is Not Destiny"~will be delivered by&#13;
Carole Vopat, assistant professor of English. Her&#13;
talk will deal with what it means to be a woman,&#13;
the difference between what is feminine and&#13;
what is womanly, and the image of the women's&#13;
movement.&#13;
Abortion and Problem&#13;
Pregnancies&#13;
Birth control, abortion and problem&#13;
pregnancies will be discussed at 10:30 a.m. by&#13;
Ms. Helene Dilulio, R.N., and Rev. Donald Ott of&#13;
the Milwaukee Area Clergy Consultation on&#13;
Problem Pregnancies. Ms. Dilulio is with St.&#13;
Luke's Birth Control Clinic; Ott is associate&#13;
minister at Christ United Methodist Church in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
A talk on sexism in education will be given at&#13;
11:30 a.m. by Teresa Harris, assistant professor&#13;
of education. She will deal with the often unobtrusive&#13;
aspects of sexism in schools, both in the&#13;
curriculum and in teacher attitudes and expectations.&#13;
&#13;
Women's Liberation Debate&#13;
A videotape of the Germaine Greer-William&#13;
F. Buckley "Debate on Women's Liberation"&#13;
will be shown at 12 p.m., followed by a&#13;
discussion.&#13;
At 12:30, careers for women in science and&#13;
math will be discussed by Parkside women of the&#13;
science and math faculties. Speakers will include&#13;
Virginia Parsons, assistant professor of&#13;
psychology, Diane Pyper, assistant professor of&#13;
earth science, Virginia Scherr, assistant&#13;
professor of chemistry, and Charlotte Chell,&#13;
assistant professor of mathematics. Anna Maria&#13;
Williams, associate professor of life science, will&#13;
speak on opportunities for women in medicine.&#13;
"Rape: Protection fofor the Victim" is the title&#13;
of a 1:30 talk by Mary Gram, UW-M student and&#13;
coordinator of Community Safeguard in&#13;
Milwaukee. Ms. Gram is also chairperson of the&#13;
women's studies committee at UW-M, and involved&#13;
in Zero Population Growth (ZPG).&#13;
Poetry, Play readings&#13;
Play readings at 2:30 p.m. will include "Three&#13;
Women" by Sylvia Plath, and "But What Have&#13;
You Done For Me Lately?" by Myrna Lamb.&#13;
They will be followed by a session of poetry&#13;
reading at 3:30 p.m. Stella Gray, chairperson f&#13;
the Humanities Division, and Carole Vopat,&#13;
assistant professor of English, will show the&#13;
transition in women poets from the days of Anne&#13;
Bradstreet, Emily Dickenson, and Edna St.&#13;
Vincent Millay to more modern poets like Diane&#13;
Wakoski, Denise Levertov, Anne Sexton, Sylvia&#13;
Plath and Sandra Hochman. Students are encouraged&#13;
to bring their own work and read it or&#13;
have it read by others.&#13;
From 4-5 p.m. a discussion of women in politics&#13;
is scheduled. Participants include Betty Rowley,&#13;
Racine city councilperson, who is active in the&#13;
area of consumer protection, and Lynn Hoff of&#13;
the Racine Women's Political Caucus.&#13;
WOMEN'S DAY SCHEDULE - WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4&#13;
9:30-10 a.m. Keynote address: Dr. Carole Vopat "Anatomy is Not Destiny" 2nd floor library&#13;
lounge '&#13;
10-10:30 a.m. Discussion with Dr. Vopat, LLC D 174&#13;
10:30 12 p.m. Birth Control, Abortion and Problem Pregnancies: Helene Dilulio, R N and&#13;
Rev. Donald Ott, LLC D 173&#13;
11:30-12:30p.m. Sexism in Education: D.R Teresa Harris, LLC D 174&#13;
12-1:30 p.m. Videotape and discussion of Germaine Greer-William F. Buckley "Debate on&#13;
Women's Liberation," Learning Center Red Room&#13;
12:30-1:30 p.m. Careers for women in science, medicine and math: Parkside women science&#13;
and math faculties, LLC D173&#13;
1:30-2:30 p.m. "Rape: Protection for the Victim": Mary Gram, LLC D 174&#13;
2:30-3:30 p.m. Play Readings: "Three Women" by Sylvia Plath, and "But What Have You&#13;
Done for Me Lately?" by Myrna Lamb, LLC D 173&#13;
3:30-4:30 p.m. Poetry Reading: Dr. Stella Gray, Dr. Carole Vopat, LLC D 173. Students may&#13;
read own work also. '&#13;
4 5 p.m. Women in Politics: Betty Rowley, Lynn Hoff, LLC D 174&#13;
7 8 p.m. Women and the Law: Attorney Sandra Edhlund from Milwaukee, LLC D lu4&#13;
7-10 p m,. Assertive Behavior Clinic: D.R Walter McDonald, 2nd floor library lounge (Preregistration&#13;
necessary-call Information Center)&#13;
Continued page 5 &#13;
2 T H E PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. , Mar. 2 8, 1973&#13;
The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Pay parnad y&#13;
you find a spot&#13;
Presently, all those who work here; taculty, statf and&#13;
civil service workers pay $35 for the "privilege" of&#13;
parking in a parking lot.&#13;
It is clear that the fee presently paid will increase and&#13;
that, next year, students will be paying a premium user&#13;
fee for the same privilege. This seems incongruent for a&#13;
campus which is doing its best to attract the commuter&#13;
student.&#13;
One way of attracting commuter students is to make it&#13;
easier and cheaper for the commuter to attend. The user&#13;
fee is obviously a step in the wrong direction.&#13;
The parking facilities which we presently have are a&#13;
costly venture to maintain and costa lotto build. We will&#13;
very soon need more of the same. Buses are costly too.&#13;
These things must be paid for.&#13;
But a great many people are all too aware of the effect&#13;
of us er fess on their budget. For the student the fee is an&#13;
added tuition cost. Most students drive to school and&#13;
must have a place to park. It is that simple. It is the&#13;
same for faculty, staff and civil service workers. All of&#13;
them must have a place to park, but the university does&#13;
not feel it has the responsibility to provide the space&#13;
without capital outlay of the users.&#13;
Every effort must be made to stop student user fees&#13;
before they start. Fees for those who work here should&#13;
be re-examined so that the fees paid actually buy&#13;
something. Presently, faculty and staff pay $35 to&#13;
receive the space they find open when they get here. A&#13;
student, who has his fee included in his tuition has just&#13;
as much chance for a space.&#13;
We suggest funds be solicited from the legislature to&#13;
help solve our problem.&#13;
We also suggest that a new look b e given at the policy&#13;
of " forced fees" for commuter parking. New ideas are&#13;
needed and should come from those affected as well as&#13;
the administration which will seemingly, very soon, be&#13;
adding more and greater parking fees.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
TH£US. ISSOOMTO&#13;
BE. CHVIN§ AID&#13;
TO N ORTH VIETNAM.&#13;
IT'S NICE TO KNOU&#13;
THAT AS RmCRfCA&#13;
CONTINUES To&#13;
PROTECT FRE&#13;
NATIONS&#13;
F R OM&#13;
C o m m i t K / I ST&#13;
AGGRESSION j&#13;
T H AT UH L N T H L&#13;
FINILLTARH A ND&#13;
Po l i t i c s f a i l&#13;
uz C A N rlurh's&#13;
FAL L b a c k o n&#13;
T H £ SSCRET NEPFO N&#13;
TH/AT M f tDZ T n i5&#13;
comntrh &amp;mr!&#13;
IF MOU CA-N'T&#13;
B £ A T T H e m . . .&#13;
guj TH € t ri l l!&#13;
f EDITOR'S ^&#13;
I NOTEBOOK&#13;
^^b^^udy^ieriaa^^&#13;
A great reconstruction period&#13;
is coming up. The Ranger will be&#13;
shut down for the summer but&#13;
will start anew next fall.&#13;
This is being written early&#13;
because it will take a long time&#13;
for all the people who may be&#13;
interested in newspapering to be&#13;
informed that they can be&#13;
helpful.&#13;
In a university like ours, a&#13;
newspaper is just about all that&#13;
can hold the campus together.&#13;
The thing most people don't&#13;
realize is that as long as they&#13;
want to help, even if they have no&#13;
background whatsoever in&#13;
journalism, their assistance can&#13;
be as important as any other staff&#13;
member.&#13;
Having that one extra reporter&#13;
so the news editor may assign a&#13;
story instead of doing it helps&#13;
take the pressure off. That extra&#13;
person who volunteers to drive to&#13;
Zion with copy when we are in a&#13;
pinch helps take the pressure off&#13;
the managing editor. If we need&#13;
plenty of pictures for a picture&#13;
page, it's easier when there are&#13;
plenty of photographers. Even&#13;
helping to get papers circulated&#13;
to on and off-campus drop-off&#13;
spots is one of the details of a&#13;
paper that anyone with some&#13;
interest can help with.&#13;
The Ranger has a long way to&#13;
go to match the journalism excellence&#13;
of some of the college&#13;
papers of this state, but we feel&#13;
we have taken a giant step&#13;
toward the kind of ethics in&#13;
journalism that this campus&#13;
deserves. The Ranger is&#13;
something worth being proud of&#13;
and it will serve as a strong&#13;
foundation for newcomers to be&#13;
proud of in the future.&#13;
The Ranger has proven that a&#13;
Parkside publication can remain&#13;
financially solvent. We are&#13;
solvent and that position makes&#13;
us all the more flexible than&#13;
publications of the past. That&#13;
flexibility should make the paper&#13;
even more attractive to aspiring&#13;
journalists.&#13;
As planning begins for next&#13;
semester, perhaps some serious&#13;
thought should be given the&#13;
newspaper. It is a practical and&#13;
responsible., outlet for one's&#13;
creativity, energy and responsiveness.&#13;
&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Kon kol&#13;
In answer to Wayne Ramirez' fine letter in last weeks issue I can&#13;
only reiterate. If money from the student segregated fee is not spent&#13;
exclusively for students, it is wasted. If the community wishes to put&#13;
on a cultural performance, let them spend their own money to support&#13;
it, not the students.&#13;
In rebuttle to editor Lienau's 'Editors Notebook' I must make the&#13;
statement that neither the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee or the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has ever put on a fine arts performance that&#13;
did not lose money. Members of each board admit that they can think&#13;
of n o program which could be brought to Parkside that would not lose&#13;
money.&#13;
It makes absolutely no sense in my mind to make the statement,"Once&#13;
the fine arts programming at Parkside is established the&#13;
money losers will be few and far between." The fine arts programs&#13;
have been established for four years already. Parkside will not be able&#13;
to economically support a fine arts program until twice as much interest&#13;
is shown in the performances, or until enrollment doubles&#13;
which is projected for 1990.&#13;
One performance the Activities Office is putting on I support entirely.&#13;
This is the Stanton Friedman performance I have been mentioning&#13;
the past couple weeks.&#13;
There are openings left in Friedman's schedule during the day. He&#13;
does not restrict these informal discussions to queries on UFOs. Other&#13;
topics he could give discourse on include, travel to the stars, scientific&#13;
approach to the unknown, and discussion on man's place in the&#13;
universe.&#13;
Remember the date, April 17, Tuesday,and get your requests in for&#13;
Mr. Friedman's time to the Activities Office.&#13;
Some members of the student senate are concerned with President&#13;
Haack's actions the past week,&#13;
It seems that because of publicity raised by the Indian-Government&#13;
battle at Wounded Knee, Haack decided to send a telegram to&#13;
President Nixon, among others, protesting the government's actions&#13;
in the affair. This is not bad in itself, only he signed Parkside Student&#13;
Senate to the telegrams.&#13;
This, also would not be bad in itself, but he first did not get the ok of&#13;
the Student Senate to take such an action. He made no attempt to even&#13;
contact a majority of the Senate to approve the action. This was a&#13;
clear case of overstepping authority which does not even come under&#13;
President 311 phraSG m the constitution explaining the duties of the&#13;
I am afraid Tom has himself confused with Richard Nixon, who also&#13;
pays no attention to his legislative branch.&#13;
By Gary Huck&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
year' by te sSs Vjft&#13;
1 WeeWy «ademic&#13;
Kenosha, Wisetnsta3140oLe^r™&#13;
, Learning center, Telephone (firsts '&#13;
6&#13;
" D"&#13;
194 Llbrary&#13;
"&#13;
Y r e f l e L / i n cl m n T f n d editorii!ldePendent new s P&#13;
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less, typed and double-spacS The °&#13;
nflned to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and good taste Anionic re&#13;
*&#13;
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vethe ri8ht to edit&#13;
address, phone number and studpnt J t s»gned and include&#13;
be withheld upon request The °&#13;
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' Name&#13;
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print any letters q 6dlt&#13;
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rS reserve the ri«&#13;
h&#13;
t to refuse to&#13;
Classified and displayed rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR IN-GHIEF: Rudy Lienau " ^qUOSt.&#13;
•MANAGIN-GiADiTOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
S£URE ED IT0R: J^e Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry MurDhv&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
He,mut Kah&#13;
'&#13;
Bi&#13;
"&#13;
ADVISER: Don Koprlva a w r*nce, Ken Konkol, Rudy L , (. n 8 u .&#13;
^°&#13;
R n&#13;
,&#13;
a7&lt;&gt;&#13;
nal advertising by if&#13;
Naomi Eductt.on.1 Advertising Services, Inc. 9&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. 10017 I &#13;
©&#13;
the&#13;
Moveincn 1&#13;
deaHnr^.l&#13;
016&#13;
'' "&#13;
ThC Movement&#13;
" is a regular feature in RANGER&#13;
almg with women s concerns. Guest writers are invited.&#13;
THE WISCONSIN EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT&#13;
by Susan Burns , . " *&#13;
de'n?ed&#13;
Unr&#13;
tJhl=g5&#13;
tS IT' .&#13;
protection ™d&lt;* the law shall not be denied or abridged on the basis of sex."&#13;
Dlav'oH0&#13;
,? '!* W°&#13;
rdS&#13;
"&#13;
equality&#13;
" and&#13;
"j&#13;
us«&#13;
aa&#13;
" have purportedly&#13;
ft,&#13;
6 Pa&#13;
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Ur nation&#13;
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' we haye "«ver fully&#13;
consatutionaTm®"&#13;
1&#13;
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8&#13;
. ru W°&#13;
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nly reCently have we&#13;
^tended&#13;
and the non gl&#13;
JI&#13;
aranteca of dllman r&#13;
'ghts to the minority race groups&#13;
o&#13;
d&#13;
J!&#13;
P0 f ' r.&#13;
the&#13;
"&#13;
ew Equal RiShts Amendment, we&#13;
propose to offer equality to women.&#13;
™L&#13;
E-K;A. is designed to eliminate the so-called "protective&#13;
protection'' to"Sdetea" W°&#13;
men&#13;
' 38 35 eX'&#13;
end&#13;
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"&gt;&#13;
Hpniln6 E ?:&#13;
A,' 1S P388&#13;
*&#13;
1 on APril 3&gt; women will no longer be legally&#13;
omn? 1 loans and mor&#13;
tgages or equal access to educational and&#13;
employment opportunities. Men will no longer be denied a minimum&#13;
wage and overtime, special retirement benefits on the death of their&#13;
ployment&#13;
F pr0tect,on of their health&#13;
- safety and welfare in emThe&#13;
Wisconsin E.R.A. will be effective immediately after passage&#13;
and will enable men and women to seek redress from local courts&#13;
regarding discrimination.&#13;
In other words, the E.R.A. is not just a "women's rights" amendment-it&#13;
proposes to extend the present constitutional rights and open&#13;
the door to other Human Rights amendments. The E.R.A cannot&#13;
insure the lack of discrimination, but it can insure the right of every&#13;
citizen to legal action if they have been discriminated against.&#13;
There have been misunderstandings about just what this amendment&#13;
will do. Opponents of E.R.A. have offered misleading arguments&#13;
concerning the cost of equality.&#13;
Some of the questions these arguments have provoked are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
(1) Will women be drafted?&#13;
Answer: Not because of a Wisconsin E.R.A., since the draft is a&#13;
federal, not a state government procedure.&#13;
(2) Will divorced women be deprived of alimony and child support'&#13;
Answer: Wisconsin law already specifies that alimony, child support&#13;
and child custody be awarded according to the best interests of&#13;
the child and the financial capabilities of both spouses.&#13;
(3) Will restrooms and correctional institutions be integrated?&#13;
Answer: No more than at present. Reasonable separation of the&#13;
sexes is protected by the constitutional right to privacy.&#13;
(4) Will rape laws be repealed?&#13;
Answer: No. In fact, the Wisconsin E.R.A. guarantees equal&#13;
protection to men and boys in cases of rape and child molestation.&#13;
(5) Will women lose protective labor legislation?&#13;
Answer: Federal regulations have already made Wisconsin's&#13;
protective hours laws for women unenforceable. A Wisconsin E.R.A.&#13;
will extend other protections by giving state agencies clear authority&#13;
to protect men as well as women, and to enforce minimum wage and&#13;
overtime for all workers.&#13;
Other questions and more detailed answers are available at the&#13;
Woman's Caucus reserve shelf of the library. Ask at the circulation&#13;
desk if you're interested in more information about this very important&#13;
amendment.&#13;
Brakhage&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Sheldon Renan, historian of&#13;
underground cinema, calls him&#13;
"the major transitional figure in&#13;
the turning away of 'experimental'&#13;
film from literature&#13;
and surrealist psychodrama and&#13;
in its subsequent move toward&#13;
the more purely personal and&#13;
visual."&#13;
Of the 249 films in Jonas&#13;
Mekas' "Anthology Film Archives"&#13;
in 1971, Brakhage made&#13;
24-almost 10 percent-of the films&#13;
termed "essential." Critical&#13;
assessments rank Brakhage and&#13;
Andy Warhol as the poles against&#13;
which and within which the&#13;
"structural cinema" of the last&#13;
six years has developed.&#13;
Marks of the Brakhage style&#13;
include the bobbing hand-held&#13;
camera movement, the transformation&#13;
of object and mood by&#13;
distortion and rapid cutting and&#13;
the titles scratched directly on&#13;
the film.&#13;
Many of his films deal with&#13;
childhood and the behavior of&#13;
very young children. He also has&#13;
filmed a number of landscape&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1973-74 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight hours per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
studies including "The Dead,"&#13;
"White Eye," and "Black&#13;
Vision."&#13;
His appearance is being&#13;
sponsored by Lecture-Fine Arts&#13;
committee.&#13;
to submit details of his&#13;
journalistic experience&#13;
and a statement of his&#13;
plans for the RANGER to&#13;
Don Kopriva, Adviser to&#13;
Student Publications, by&#13;
Friday, April 13, at D-194&#13;
LLC.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates&#13;
Tuesday, April 17, and&#13;
announce its selection&#13;
before spring break.&#13;
We get letters...&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to bring this letter&#13;
to the attention of Mr. "Thorn"&#13;
(Ken Konkol). In the last two&#13;
issues of the RANGER you&#13;
criticized the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board for "immoderately&#13;
spending" the&#13;
Parkside students' money "in an&#13;
endeavor that will profit the large&#13;
majority nothing." You attacked&#13;
the two groups for bringing Jose&#13;
Greco and his company to&#13;
Parkside, saying that there is not&#13;
enough interest in Spanish&#13;
culture or Spanish dance in&#13;
Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Were you at the performance,&#13;
Mr. "Thorn"? Did you notice that&#13;
the bleachers and the rows of&#13;
chairs lined up in front of the&#13;
bleachers were all filled?&#13;
I guess you put your foot in&#13;
your mouth this time. The performance&#13;
was superb and the&#13;
audience's response was fervent.&#13;
You should have been there~you&#13;
might have enjoyed it!&#13;
S. Mikaelian&#13;
Senior&#13;
P.S. I am soon going to be one of&#13;
the "large majority... nothing,"&#13;
A "nothing" — that hurts, Ken.&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
%™7/ "Washington Square&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe •&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
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Paid Order Forms too;.&#13;
COLLEGIATE RESEARCH GUIDE&#13;
1 N. 13th St. Bldg. Rrn 706&#13;
Phila., Pa. 19107&#13;
HOT-LINE (215) 563-3758&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
. To The Editor:&#13;
The editors and staff of&#13;
Parkside's Poetry Book, The&#13;
Broken Horn, would like to give&#13;
our thanks to Rita Petretti,&#13;
Parkside's Coordinator of&#13;
Publications, for the tremendous&#13;
amount of work she put into&#13;
making our publication a reality.&#13;
Our names were in the book and&#13;
the newspapers but without Rita&#13;
we would have never gone to&#13;
press. Thanks Rita!&#13;
We would also like to urge the&#13;
University of continue to support&#13;
a Poetry Book. "The Broken&#13;
Horn" far surpasses, any other&#13;
poetry book put out in this area&#13;
and with some work and better&#13;
contributions, we can equal any&#13;
put out in this state. . ,&#13;
Eric J. Olson&#13;
Fred A. Lott,&#13;
Editors&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Since your RANGER ASKS&#13;
reporter did not come to ask me&#13;
my views on amnesty I give them&#13;
now.&#13;
To insist a deserter do time in&#13;
some type of alternative military&#13;
service is labeling his values and&#13;
moral judgements as something&#13;
worthless. By alternative service&#13;
a deserter would be&#13;
strengthening, thereby supporting,&#13;
the same military&#13;
system which commits the acts&#13;
he so strongly disaproves of.&#13;
It's an absurd proposal to offer&#13;
the 50,000 draft evaders and&#13;
deserters who long ago made&#13;
their own peace of mind. To force&#13;
a person to renig on his own&#13;
conscience or face imprisonment,&#13;
is a far cry from&#13;
American democracy.&#13;
D.S. Friedell&#13;
Kenosha, Sophomore&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
F00SBAU TOURNAMENT&#13;
APRIL 9 -15&#13;
PRIZES F OR B EST TEAMS&#13;
Entry Fee: *1 for 2 person teem&#13;
Register by April 6&#13;
Register At SAB. or&#13;
Student Activities Office LLC D197&#13;
Sponsored by P.A.B.&#13;
!50&#13;
c Coupon&#13;
1&#13;
GOOD FOR 2 FREE DRY CYCLES WITH ANY&#13;
WASHLOAD AND 1 EXTRA FREE PUNCH ON&#13;
YOUR DRY CLEANING DIVIDEND CARD&#13;
WITH AN 8 LB. L OAD OF DRY CLEANING&#13;
GOOD AT THESE LOCATIONS:&#13;
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NAME &amp; ADDRESS. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., M ar. 28, 19 73&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BYRDS&#13;
(SD 5058)&#13;
, , Parkside shows talent&#13;
Jtiign schoolers&#13;
compete in at recent folk fest&#13;
design contest&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
Thirty-six individual and team&#13;
entries have been received in the&#13;
First Annual University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Engineering&#13;
Design Contest for High School&#13;
Students.&#13;
Their quest: to build a better&#13;
egg container.&#13;
Judging and awarding of p rizes&#13;
to the two top entries will take&#13;
place on Saturday, May 5, at 1:30&#13;
p.m. following an "Egg Drop" in&#13;
which raw eggs (supplied by&#13;
Parkside) will be placed in the&#13;
student-designed containers and&#13;
subjected to a 15-foot free-fall.&#13;
The competition will be in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center Main&#13;
Place.&#13;
Containers encasing eggs&#13;
which survive the fall intact will&#13;
vie for awards based on size and&#13;
volume-the less of both the&#13;
better.&#13;
Following the competition, the&#13;
students have been invited to tour&#13;
Parkside engineering science&#13;
facilities and to take a dip in the&#13;
pool-possibly to wash the egg off&#13;
their faces.&#13;
High schools with students&#13;
entered in the competition are&#13;
Bradford and Tremper of&#13;
Kenosha; Horlick, Washington&#13;
Park, Case and Prairie of&#13;
Racine; Martin Luther, Bay&#13;
View, Thomas Moore and Pulaski&#13;
of Milwaukee; Whitnall of Hales&#13;
Corners; Hamilton of Greenfield;&#13;
St. Bona venture of Sturtevant;&#13;
and Franklin of Franklin.&#13;
Individual entries also have&#13;
been received from Franksville,&#13;
West Allis and Lake Geneva&#13;
students.&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
Parkside may become a new&#13;
breeding ground for talent. About&#13;
ten different acts were presented&#13;
at the free folk fest Sunday,&#13;
March 18, between 2 and 6 p.m.&#13;
Brandy Wine, Parkside's best&#13;
blues band, began the show and&#13;
performed such classics as&#13;
"Little Red Rooster" and "Casey&#13;
Jones." Dave Rogers played&#13;
well, sang sour, and created a&#13;
humorous and friendly atmosphere.&#13;
The brothers Gregory&#13;
(Marti &amp; Mike), a guitar and&#13;
banjo duo, were likewise a gas.&#13;
Fred Bultman, the barefoot poet,&#13;
recited a medly of his own poetry&#13;
and "21st Century Schizoid&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
T h u rs day 11-8&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches.&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables |&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine &lt;&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
SERVED IN THE ATMOSPHERE&#13;
OF THE&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
- BOTH UNDSR SAMS OWNERSHIP —&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
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Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE 6208 Green Bay Road&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
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a FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
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Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers &#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING&#13;
Wed., Mar. 28, 1973 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
There will be a meeting of all&#13;
faculty members interested in&#13;
developing an evaluation form&#13;
for interdivisional use this&#13;
semester, Thursday, March 29, at&#13;
3 p.m. in Greenquist room 103&#13;
(lecture hall). Interested&#13;
students may also attend.&#13;
•&#13;
Yoga classes will be offered by&#13;
a certified yoga instructor, Carol&#13;
Merrick, in the fencing room of&#13;
the Physical Education Building&#13;
beginning Monday, April 2. The&#13;
eight-week, no-credit course will&#13;
be held from noon until 12:30&#13;
starting Monday.&#13;
•&#13;
The Student Activities Board&#13;
will present a free mini-concert,&#13;
featuring Tony, Jumbo and&#13;
Garry. The concert will be in the&#13;
Student Activities Building,&#13;
tonight, at 9 p.m.&#13;
The University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
will offer a workshop&#13;
course in letter and report&#13;
writing. The course is called&#13;
Effective Business Communications",&#13;
and will begin&#13;
Thursday, April 12 from 7 p.m. to&#13;
9 p.m. at Starbuck Junior High&#13;
School, 1516 Ohio Street, Racine.&#13;
The workshop will include&#13;
lectures, films, slides, sample&#13;
letters, aids, and exercises. The&#13;
instructor will be William R.&#13;
Gerler, President, General&#13;
Communications, Racine, an&#13;
advertising, public relations, and&#13;
association management firm.&#13;
There will be six weekly&#13;
meetings for a fee of $25 (including&#13;
materials.) Interested&#13;
persons should register by April&#13;
6. For further information call&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
.Hi i 1H1 W&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Europe&#13;
CHICAGO - LO NDON&#13;
May 28- July 13 $199&#13;
June 13 - July 11 $215&#13;
includes:&#13;
Round Trip 747 Charter Jet&#13;
| Transfer to Downtown London&#13;
Applications available:&#13;
Travel Center LLC D-197&#13;
553-2279&#13;
11 1 M M&#13;
Women's Day&#13;
The Chamber Singers, a select&#13;
14-member vocal group of&#13;
Tf&#13;
3 iqfi n' W!&#13;
U PreSGnt 3 Pr&#13;
°Sram of 19th Century German Lieder&#13;
Pa&#13;
f&#13;
tsong&#13;
s at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, March 28, in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hall. The concert&#13;
is free and open to the public&#13;
The News Election Service is&#13;
sponsoring scholarships in&#13;
Journalism in the name of the&#13;
Wisconsin County Clerks'&#13;
Association. There are four $500&#13;
scholarships available in the&#13;
state. The award will be based on&#13;
academic ability, financial need,&#13;
and participation in community&#13;
and school activities, especially&#13;
the school newspaper. Parkside&#13;
Communications Majors are&#13;
eligible to apply. For further&#13;
information, contact the&#13;
Financial Aids Office.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present a comparative wine&#13;
tasting experience, made&#13;
available through the California&#13;
Wine Growers Association.&#13;
There will be six California&#13;
wines and four European which&#13;
will be tasted without the taster&#13;
knowing which wine it is. Each&#13;
participant will get eight&#13;
separate glasses of wine to taste,&#13;
and there will be cheese and&#13;
crackers at all the tables.&#13;
"This is not intended to be a&#13;
drunk! It is intended to be an&#13;
informative session," said Anthony&#13;
A. Totero.&#13;
Other campuses around the&#13;
state have had wine tasters, but&#13;
most of them have utilized local&#13;
suppliers.&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Assertive Behavior Clinic&#13;
Two evening sessions are planned, beginning&#13;
at 7 p.m. One, an assertive behavior clinic for&#13;
women, will be conducted by Racine&#13;
psychologist Walter McDonald. He explained in&#13;
an interview that "for years in Western culture&#13;
there have been secret societies, each grouped&#13;
on the basis of some special interest. These&#13;
societies always have cryptic rituals which are&#13;
closely guarded, for to use them conveys power&#13;
and one must be initiated into the group before&#13;
exercising that power. Formal, secret societies&#13;
have nowadays disbanded or degenerated into&#13;
Elks clubs and the like; but there does still exist&#13;
an enormous secret society called MEN, who&#13;
have a set of rituals carefully guarded form&#13;
outsiders (women). One of these powerful rituals&#13;
is assertiveness."&#13;
The few women who have managed to uncover&#13;
this secretand use it have been at the very least&#13;
reprimanded for not knowing "their place".&#13;
"The idea," McDonald commented, "is to be&#13;
assertive without getting ostracized." He was&#13;
careful to distinguish between assertiveness and&#13;
aggressiveness, and remarked that "hatred&#13;
turns people off-learning to be assertive can&#13;
overcome hatred." He cited the Germaine&#13;
Greer-William F. Buckley debate on Women's&#13;
Liberation, saying that Greer was extremely&#13;
aggressive and could have made more converts&#13;
by cutting these techniques at times in favor of&#13;
assertion.&#13;
McDonald plans to deal with specific&#13;
problems, in his session. He believes one should&#13;
start small and experience success at assertion&#13;
in little things, which will be reinforcing and&#13;
facilitate the process in more difficult situations.&#13;
Some suggested problems are: Dealing with&#13;
repairmen who either ignore your call ofr help or&#13;
belittle your intelligence when they get there;&#13;
questioning a speaker without getting hung up&#13;
worrying if your question will come out intelligent&#13;
and well-framed; handling male&#13;
machismo rather than passively submitting to&#13;
it; and discussing women's liberation with&#13;
someone who may not be sympathetic.&#13;
Because too large a group would make it&#13;
impossible to effectively help anyone, participation&#13;
in this session will be limited to 40&#13;
women. Registration is necessary-call the Information&#13;
Center, 553-2345, before 4 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, April 4.&#13;
Women and the Law&#13;
The other evening program features a talk by&#13;
Milwaukee attorney Sandra Edhlund concerning&#13;
the legal rights of women. She will discuss how&#13;
the law affects women with respect to family&#13;
relations, employment, credit, consumer rights,&#13;
pensions and property.&#13;
Ms. Edhlund is a member of Women in&#13;
Transition, Women's Law Project, and the&#13;
Wisconsin Civil Liberties Committee on&#13;
Women's Rights. She received her B.A. cum&#13;
laude from Milwaukee Downer College, her M.A.&#13;
in political science from UW-M, and her J.D.&#13;
from UW-Madison.&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
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"=3&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents&#13;
Comparative&#13;
WINE&#13;
TASTING&#13;
Experience&#13;
(6 California &amp; 4 European Wines)&#13;
Wed., April 4 7:30 P.M.&#13;
TALLENT HALL - NO ADMISSION CHARGE&#13;
ADMISSION LIMITED TO&#13;
THE FIRST 100 PEOPLE WHO&#13;
REGISTER AT&#13;
„ Student Activities Office LLC RM. D197&#13;
ONDAY NITE&#13;
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SHAKE a 5&#13;
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IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP A ND 21st ( ALMOST)&#13;
SPRING PRICE THAW&#13;
Martha Merrell's stores&#13;
are having a huge book&#13;
sale. Don't miss this&#13;
chance to pick up&#13;
valuable books at a&#13;
fraction of their regular&#13;
prices. Savings up to 83&#13;
Percent!&#13;
SAVINGS UP TO 83%&#13;
Hundreds of titles to choose from including&#13;
history, sports, antiques, crafts, nature, herbs,&#13;
birds, occult, travel, reference, photography,&#13;
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religion, philosophy, art and many, many more.&#13;
AT BOTH STORES!&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 28, 197 3&#13;
The Ranger asks What is your opinion&#13;
of the Parkside Student Government Association?&#13;
Lois Wick, Freshmen, Racine&#13;
"I don't think it's very good, I&#13;
don't really have a good opinion&#13;
because I don't think they do&#13;
anything for the students. I don't&#13;
think they really represent the&#13;
students as a whole."&#13;
Joseph Orlowski, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I don't know that much about&#13;
it."&#13;
Janet Sabol, Junior, Racine&#13;
"Well, I think the problem with&#13;
the PSGA is the nature of the&#13;
university begin with - you know&#13;
it's a comuter school and the&#13;
students don't care really. You&#13;
know, you ask students what they&#13;
think of student government and&#13;
they say, T didn't know it&#13;
existed.' And so if you have an&#13;
apathetic student body you're not&#13;
going to accomplish anything;&#13;
also students can never get&#13;
enough students united on one&#13;
issue to ever make any kind .of a&#13;
policy change. So it exists but it&#13;
doesn't really accomplish much&#13;
of anything, I don't think, as far&#13;
as doing some good if it's doing&#13;
what it's supposed to do. The&#13;
people on the student government&#13;
are very disorganized themselves,&#13;
they don't show up at&#13;
meetings, some of them, they&#13;
cah't organize their forces&#13;
cohesively and try accomplish&#13;
something for set policy&#13;
whatever it is they want to do.&#13;
And they kind of meander&#13;
around, well the university's&#13;
screwed up we should do&#13;
something about it, well what are&#13;
they going to do? They say we're&#13;
going to do this and then no one&#13;
shows up at the meeting, and&#13;
they're - not presistent enough&#13;
with the administration."&#13;
Tashe Bozinovski, Freshmen,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I don't even know nothing&#13;
about it."&#13;
Diane Rosenfeldt,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I haven't any."&#13;
Senior,&#13;
Editors' Note : These comments&#13;
were also received but no&#13;
pictures were available.&#13;
Thomas Hillmer, Junior,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"No thoughts."&#13;
Robert Bush, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"Do I think it's benefitting the&#13;
students? From what I do know, I&#13;
think it's benefitting, and&#13;
sometimes I don't agree with all&#13;
their demands, but basically I&#13;
think it's doing a hell of a lot of&#13;
good for the school."&#13;
Gretchen Goebel, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I really don't know anything&#13;
about it."&#13;
Denise Anastasio, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I think it's doing alot of good,&#13;
but I think that when they're&#13;
having an election there should&#13;
be more issues debated. All they&#13;
say is that they think I'm the best&#13;
representative because I know&#13;
what the people want, and the&#13;
other one says I'm the best&#13;
representative. But they don't&#13;
seem to debate any issues that&#13;
you could really take a stand on.&#13;
And I think Tom Haack is really&#13;
doing a good job."&#13;
Dale Phillips, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Doesn't seem to be doing&#13;
much. I'm not following it, but I&#13;
don't hear of anything they do&#13;
really."&#13;
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Fri. - Mar. 30&#13;
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Review&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Could you make a life and death decision?&#13;
Imagine that you are the captain of an oceanliner which has just&#13;
sunk. You and the survivors are in an overburdened lifeboat. Would&#13;
you have the ability to decide which of those people must die to save&#13;
the others?&#13;
"The Right to Live: Who Decides?", a film clip from the movie&#13;
"Abandon Ship", raises this and other questions.&#13;
The clip itself tells the story of how the captain of a sunken&#13;
oceanliner decides that some of the people in his lifeboat must be put&#13;
over the side. It is a difficult choice. His criteria are those of strength&#13;
and endurance: The strong survive, the weak must perish.&#13;
The passengers react with horror to the captain's decision, wnad&#13;
will not comply with his orders unless forced at gunpoint. This leaves&#13;
the captain complete responsibility.&#13;
A day later, after several people had been put over the side so that&#13;
the remaining passengers could row to Africa, a ship is sighted and the&#13;
survivors are rescued.&#13;
The reaction of the remaining passengers is that of washing their&#13;
hands of the affair. It is the captain's responsibility. He alone must&#13;
face the consequences.&#13;
One asks oneself what our own reaction would be under such circumstances.&#13;
Could we accept such an awful responsibility alone?&#13;
Would we have the courage?&#13;
And what about the other life and death decisions which are made?&#13;
Who should decide to have an abortion, or that a person should have&#13;
the right to die instead of b eing kept alive by machines and medicines?&#13;
I believe this film poses some stimulating questions which we can&#13;
not afford not to answer.&#13;
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imm'p 1 SAV &gt; ""7 WHAT V 1 SAW&#13;
W.&#13;
The ParksideWed.,&#13;
Mar. 28, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
RAIMGER Martin selected most valuable&#13;
• UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
1973 TENNIS SCHEDULE&#13;
April 7 Carthage. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
April 13 Elmhurst, Wheaton, Carthage and Carroll&#13;
April 17 Milton. HOME 12:00&#13;
April 23 Whitewater Invitational. Whitewater at 12:00&#13;
April 25 Marquette. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
April 28 Green Bay. HOME 12:00&#13;
May 5 St. Norbert. HOME 1:00 p.m.&#13;
May 12 Green Bay - Green Bay at 12:00&#13;
May 14 Milton - Milton at 12:00&#13;
May 18 and 19 District 14 - O shkosh at 9:00 a.m.&#13;
College of Racine to be added later.&#13;
Sports&#13;
Carthage, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Junior Ken Martin of Coleman,&#13;
the first Parkside athlete to win&#13;
an NAIA individual championship,&#13;
has been selected most&#13;
valuable wrestler at the school by&#13;
a vote of his teammates.&#13;
Martin, who compiled a 22-1-1&#13;
mark enroute to the NAIA 134-lb.&#13;
title at Sioux City, Iowa, recently,&#13;
has never lost to a Wisconsin&#13;
wrestler. His career mark after&#13;
second, third and first places in&#13;
NAIA competition stands at 6 2-6-&#13;
2.&#13;
by amy cundari&#13;
Martin, who also co-captained&#13;
the team with NAIA 126-lb.&#13;
runner-up Bill West of Kenosha,&#13;
led the Rangers to a ninth place&#13;
finish nationally, highest among&#13;
any Wisconsin colleges.&#13;
He's never lost to anyone who&#13;
hadn't already gained NAIA or&#13;
NCAA all-America status.&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday 11:30-1:30&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday 11:30 - 2:30&#13;
Friday 11:30-3:30&#13;
Monday,.Tuesday, Wednesday 5:30-10:00&#13;
Thursday 5:30-7:00&#13;
9:00-10:00&#13;
Saturday 10:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:30 • 10:0 0&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday 10:30 -1:30 (2 courts open)&#13;
3:30 - 6:00 (1 caurt open)&#13;
6:00-10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday ,8:00a.m. - 10:00p.m.,&#13;
except Tuesday 8. Thursday closed fro-n 10:30-12:00 for classes&#13;
Saturday 8:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:00.10:00&#13;
Iff B^ITTTT'TM 1' ii&#13;
1 l»n&#13;
SPECIAL for P arkside students only 3j|&#13;
2-Audio Magneti c Corp. m&#13;
Ca ss e tt e Tape Cartridges fS&#13;
FOR ON LY . ..&#13;
Offer good till April 1, 1973 MjP cjj&#13;
m BRANDTS' D ISTRIBUTORS, INC. S&#13;
Vil Monument Square, Downtown Racine VU&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
T h at's you. landing mo r e than a million dol lars worth of&#13;
jet aircraft at 150 miles p er hour, within 3 seco n ds and 200 feet&#13;
T h at's you after an i nvalu able educat ion , the finest there is&#13;
complim e nts of tth e Navy.&#13;
T h at's you with your wings of gold, with all the prestig e and&#13;
privil eges of a Naval Officer and aviato r.&#13;
Merrill Lync h c an be pretty exciting in a different way.&#13;
But right n ow y ou'v e got that one ch a n c e in your life to swing wide&#13;
a s the se a , a nd as h igh a s the sky .&#13;
It you're going to be something, why i,u: be something special?&#13;
THE NAVY OFFICER INFORMATION TEAM&#13;
WILL BE ON YOUR CAMPUS:&#13;
*+-5 April 1973&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
: SCHULTZ BUICK-0PEL&#13;
1021 - 60th S treet, K enosha&#13;
654-3514 *2,373°°&#13;
1973 0PEI&#13;
1900&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA KtTCHBN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery to Parkside Vi llage&#13;
5021 50th Annus Phone 657-5191&#13;
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith&#13;
will never be like this. &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Mar. 28, 1973&#13;
Speaking&#13;
of Sports&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
In 1971, Paul Williams and Roger Nichols wrote-a song called, "I&#13;
Won't Last A Day Without You." The soft-singing rock group the&#13;
Carpenters recorded the song. After listening to the words, I changed&#13;
the you to mean sports, instead of a lover's boy or girl friend.&#13;
The first part of the song goes, Day after Day I must face a world of&#13;
strangers Where I don't belong I'm not that strong It's nice to know&#13;
that there's someone I can turn to Who will always care You're always&#13;
there...&#13;
Well sports are always there, no matter how irrepressible they get. I&#13;
state my case of not the sport's statistics, but more the words and&#13;
sounds that have probably missed most sports page readers.&#13;
Case 1: The wife of O hio State's football coach Woody, Anne Hayes&#13;
said, "I count my blessings. While he's abosrbed with 80 boys and their&#13;
problems. I don't have to worry about one thin blonde in an apartment&#13;
somewhere."&#13;
Case 2: Brian Piccolo's ending to a happy story. I'm sure most&#13;
people remember Brian. I know I will because of t he good fortune of&#13;
watching the movie "Brian's Song" with a good-sized group of college&#13;
kids in Eau Claire. There were no words or sounds to be heard during&#13;
the movie, but after more than one person's eyes were crying. Brian&#13;
was quite a man. Remember what Gale Sayers said continuously in&#13;
the movie, "Oh Pic." Well, "OH PIC" your worries are over; after&#13;
three years your wife has found someone to take care of your three&#13;
beautiful children. Joy Piccolo was married in a private ceremony two&#13;
weekends ago. Pic would have wanted it that way.&#13;
The author of B rian's story, A Short Season, Jeannie Morris wrote&#13;
last week in the Chicago Today, "You had to know that somewhere --&#13;
perhaps over a golden glass of Gatorade - Italian eyes were smiling."&#13;
Case 3: The story of Bungalow Bill Walton, UCLA's towering redheaded&#13;
basketball star, whose brother was aked if Bill was qualified to&#13;
be drafted as a hardship case by the pros. Bruce put tongue in check&#13;
and said, "I'm hoping to get a job in pro football so we can get off&#13;
welfare." Bruce played football at UCLA and was drafted by the&#13;
Dallas Cowboys.&#13;
Case 4: The continuous story of girl's success in athletics. Sue&#13;
Palmer debuted the first girl to enter a California junior college&#13;
basketball game. The only trouble was Sue's men opponents, had&#13;
longer hair. Denise Long a cute, small 5-11, 38-28-36, was drafted&#13;
several years back by the professional basketball team Golden State.&#13;
Jim Murray, a LA-Times columnist, said, "If arena's had doors in the&#13;
showers she might still be playing, besides she looks a lot better&#13;
running around in her underwear than Wilt Chamberlain." Eileen&#13;
Reilly, girl track star at Parkside, who was asked at last year's prom.&#13;
Was that you I saw running yesterday? Good bet, if you guessed she&#13;
was.&#13;
Case 5: The basketball play least likely to be repeated. It happened a&#13;
couple of weeks back in the Northwestern vs. Minnesota game. NW&#13;
had just sunk two free throws, when after the second one, a NW player&#13;
grabbed the ball and threw it to another NW player. The ball should&#13;
have been in Minnesota's possession, but at the time they were too&#13;
busy playing defense. Well, NW scored after an alert player realized&#13;
they were headed in the wrong direction. Of course, Minnesota won the&#13;
protest and the two points were subtracted from NW's score.&#13;
Case 6: On St. Patrick's day Notre Dame played Southern California&#13;
in the NIT basketball tournament. With the luck of the Irish, or maybe&#13;
of a leprechaun, Steve Honzo and Tom Casey were put in charge as the&#13;
referees. The Irish won 69-65 sinking 23-33 free throws to USC's 1-2.&#13;
Oh, I almost forgot the end of the song went... I won't last a day&#13;
without you...&#13;
C O U P ON Nwwwwwvwvw.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
50* OFF °P'!i&#13;
aI»&#13;
t&#13;
ITALIAN FOOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
DRINKS AVAILABLE F ROM THE BAR Expires&#13;
April 4, 1973&#13;
WWAVWVW.V COUPON"&#13;
Henderson heads&#13;
soccer coaches&#13;
Hal Henderson, soccer coach,&#13;
has been elected president of the&#13;
National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) Soccer Coaches&#13;
Assn.&#13;
i wmm&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Hal Henderson&#13;
The first year Parkside coach&#13;
was named NAIA soccer chief at&#13;
the association's recent annual&#13;
convention in Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
His responsibilities in the job&#13;
include the chairing of all&#13;
meetings and conventions, the&#13;
supervision of all-America&#13;
selections and the direction of the&#13;
district, area and national&#13;
tournaments.&#13;
Henderson has also served two&#13;
years each as vice president,&#13;
secretary-treasurer and area&#13;
chairman in the soccer&#13;
association. He will be president&#13;
until March, 1975.&#13;
Henderson has coached college&#13;
soccer eight years, including&#13;
tours at Rockford College, the&#13;
University of Colorado and Park&#13;
College, his alma mater.&#13;
The Carthage College co-ed&#13;
tracksters eked out a win over the&#13;
Rangerettes, 40-36 l ast Saturday&#13;
at Carthage.&#13;
The Parkside team received&#13;
some fine individual performances&#13;
from several members.&#13;
Sandy Kingsheld gathered&#13;
in a first place and two seconds,&#13;
those coming in the 220 yard&#13;
dash, the long jump and the 60&#13;
yard dash respectively.&#13;
Maria Breach settled for a&#13;
second in the shot put while&#13;
Teammate Trudy Buehrens took&#13;
first in the shot and a first in the&#13;
60 yard hurdles. Sue Von Behren&#13;
rounded out the Rangerette&#13;
scoring with a first in the high&#13;
jump.&#13;
The womens next meet will be&#13;
on April 7 at the U.S. Track and&#13;
Field Federation Indoor Meet at&#13;
Madison. The mens track team&#13;
will also be competeing in that&#13;
meet.&#13;
The UW-Parkside soccer club&#13;
will hold a team meeting and&#13;
practice at 4 p.m. Wednesday at&#13;
the Physical Education Bldg.&#13;
The Parkside Rugby team lost&#13;
to the Chicago Lions ten to four.&#13;
All scoring was done in the&#13;
second period when the Lions&#13;
made two penalty kicks and a&#13;
lone penalty kick was made for&#13;
Parkside by Mark Barnhill.&#13;
The next game will be played at&#13;
Prudue Northcentral April 1.&#13;
Kevin O'Neil finished third in&#13;
the National association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics last&#13;
weekend at LaCrosse. O'Neil&#13;
qualified for the finals on the&#13;
rings with a score of 8.60. His&#13;
total combined score was 17.35.&#13;
Bryon Petschow finished 32nd&#13;
and vaulting while Tom Brannon&#13;
finished 37th.&#13;
The whole team qualified with&#13;
132 points. 130 acre necessary.&#13;
Parkside entered two runners&#13;
in the Racine Park High School&#13;
Invitational College Mile.&#13;
Lucien Rosa won with a time of&#13;
4:19.1, and Dennis Biel came in&#13;
third in 4:23.3.&#13;
Rosa and Biel defeated a field&#13;
of runners from Marquette,&#13;
Carthage, and UWM.&#13;
So says t he YA...&#13;
by&#13;
How Rt rids&#13;
I JUST LEARNED&#13;
FROM THE. VA "WAT&#13;
I CAN GET MORE&#13;
BENEFITS UNDER&#13;
THE NEW PENSION&#13;
LAW.'&#13;
Y7 NEWS IS &gt;&#13;
SURE StOW&#13;
IN YOUR&#13;
PART OF&#13;
THE COUNTRY;&#13;
For information, contact the nearest VA office (check&#13;
yoor phone book) or write Veterans Administration.&#13;
232X. 810 Vermont Ave . NW. Washington D C 20420&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
Folding bicycles fully equipped ideal for&#13;
apt., dorm, car trunk, boat, brand new, take&#13;
it everywhere 637-1591.&#13;
European 10-speed bicycle. Brand-new&#13;
means and ladies models 637-5661.&#13;
1969 Camaro economical, 3-speed, Orange,&#13;
black vinyl top. $1295.00, 694-6277.&#13;
For Sale: 1970 Camaro Rally Sport, 21,000&#13;
miles, snow tires included. Call Parkside&#13;
extension 2360.&#13;
Termpapers Typed: contact Kris Wright 632-&#13;
0150 after 5 p.m.&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
'667.&#13;
Tough&#13;
club a&#13;
to get W&#13;
into. V&#13;
The Marines&#13;
are looking for&#13;
Apply now for leadership teaming this summer&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCT.nfiED FOR $&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
APPRFSS °ATE&#13;
riTY PHONE NO.&#13;
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication. </text>
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              <text>Amin discovers new worm specie</text>
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              <text>12th issue *"*•******"** 12 pages •&#13;
PAB sponsors Derby Day lodging&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
A big bash is coming up soon in&#13;
Kentucky - May 5 is "Derby&#13;
Day," and Parkside Activities&#13;
Board is sponsoring a Kentucky&#13;
Derby Weekend Special.&#13;
For the 98th running of the&#13;
Kentucky Derby last year, over&#13;
130,000 people crowded historic&#13;
Churchill Downs in Louisville.&#13;
Many thousands of them were&#13;
students who saw the Derby as&#13;
the ideal and quite unique climax&#13;
to a fun and care-free weekend&#13;
(sometimes called the "Mardi&#13;
Gras" of Kentucky). Since the&#13;
University of Louisville is located&#13;
only about a quartermile from&#13;
Churchill Downs, out-of-state&#13;
students have traditionally&#13;
sought economical refuge at this&#13;
campus.&#13;
Last May, the University of&#13;
Louisville Union for Student&#13;
Activity realized a need to&#13;
provide something beyond overcrowded&#13;
Greek houses, residence&#13;
halls, lawns, shrubbery, fountains&#13;
and halls of ivy to lodge in&#13;
or upon. It opened the doors of the&#13;
"Red Barn," a university rock&#13;
theater converted from a&#13;
nineteenth century tank factory.&#13;
The Red Barn provided a rather&#13;
unique but quite suitable place&#13;
for several hundred bedrolls.&#13;
Shower facilities were arranged&#13;
with a gymnasium and a&#13;
residence hall close by. Each&#13;
student registering in the Red&#13;
Barn paid a nominal fee of $1 per&#13;
night and received an "Official&#13;
Crash Pass" and information on&#13;
Derby Weekend.&#13;
This year it's all happening&#13;
again. Parkside Activities Board&#13;
has a special package deal for the&#13;
weekend: $5 for infield ticket at&#13;
the Derby, $2.50 advance ticket&#13;
for Derby's Friday night concert&#13;
with Dr. Hook and the Medicine&#13;
Show and the Brownsville Station&#13;
(tickets will be $4 at the door),&#13;
and $1 a night for lodging on the&#13;
Louisville campus. Coffee and&#13;
donuts and a shower are included&#13;
in the $1 fee; students must&#13;
supply their own sleeping bags.&#13;
They will be staying with&#13;
students from many other parts&#13;
of the country.&#13;
It is possible to buy just part of&#13;
the package as well as all of it.&#13;
Students must supply their own&#13;
transportation, but travel information&#13;
is available at Student&#13;
Activities Office, LLC D 197.&#13;
People can sign up for tickets at&#13;
the same place, but should do so&#13;
soon to secure them.&#13;
Aho to speak on&#13;
ESP Friday&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday April 4, 1973 Vol. 1 No. 24&#13;
Amin discovers new worm specie&#13;
To the untrained eye, Parksidei&#13;
isn't much to look at.&#13;
But to its discoverer, the small&#13;
parasitic spiney-headed wormits&#13;
proboscis or snout covered by&#13;
neat rows of thorn-like hooks-is a&#13;
thing of beauty and a scholarly&#13;
joy forever: a new biological&#13;
species.&#13;
The organism, formally entered&#13;
in scientific literature as&#13;
"Acanthocephalus parksidei," is&#13;
named Parkside by its&#13;
discoverer, Egyptian-born Omar&#13;
M. Amin, an assistant professor&#13;
of life science.&#13;
Academic tradition gives the&#13;
discoverer of a new species the&#13;
right to name it, Amin said- "for&#13;
anyone or anything he wants to,&#13;
but generally the name chosen&#13;
should add something to the&#13;
descritpion of the organism."&#13;
And since the discovery of a&#13;
new species is a relatively rare&#13;
event, the christening deserves&#13;
some careful deliberation.&#13;
Amin has two reasons for&#13;
naming his find "parksidei."&#13;
"The name reflects both the&#13;
fact that it was discovered at&#13;
Parkside-in fish from the Pike&#13;
River which flows through the&#13;
northwest corner of the campusand&#13;
Parkside's institutional&#13;
commitment to the ecology of the&#13;
area," Amin said.&#13;
Parksidei is the third distinct&#13;
species of the genus Acanthocephalus&#13;
discovered in North&#13;
America. It is distinguished from&#13;
the other two species principally&#13;
by being smaller (parksidei&#13;
females are an average of 4.3&#13;
millimeters long and males an&#13;
average of 1.9 millimeters) and&#13;
by having fewer rows of hooks&#13;
and fewer hooks per row on its&#13;
tubular proboscis.&#13;
Thus far, parksidei has been&#13;
found in the intestines of creek&#13;
chubs and white suckers, both&#13;
fish native to the Pike River and&#13;
other southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
waterways.&#13;
Further studies will be&#13;
necessary to determine the effect&#13;
Omar Amin&#13;
of the parasite's presence on its&#13;
fish-hosts and to document its life&#13;
cycle, which involves an intermediate&#13;
host, probably an&#13;
arthropod, Amin said.&#13;
Amin points out that&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin is virgin&#13;
territory for the study of fish&#13;
parasites-one of his major&#13;
research interests and the subject&#13;
of his Ph. D. dissertation at&#13;
Arizona State University.&#13;
Although Wisconsin's fish have&#13;
been the subject of numerous&#13;
studies-both by academics and&#13;
by anglers-most of the work has&#13;
been done in the North, Amin&#13;
said.&#13;
The Southeast also is prime&#13;
territory for pursuit of Amin's&#13;
other major research interestarthropod-&#13;
borne diseases. Arthropods&#13;
are a broad group of&#13;
organisms with jointed legs and&#13;
segmented bodies including&#13;
spiders, mites, ticks, centipedes,&#13;
crayfish and similar crustaceans&#13;
and insects.&#13;
Amin currently is engaged in&#13;
the first systematic study of such&#13;
organisms in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
His interest in arthropods and,&#13;
their public health implications&#13;
dates to work in his native Egypt&#13;
with the Department of Medical&#13;
Zoology of the U.S. Naval&#13;
Medical Research Unit and to his&#13;
subsequent studies on ticks as a&#13;
post-doctoral research associate&#13;
at Old Dominion University in&#13;
Virginia and a visiting fellow at&#13;
the National Center for Disease&#13;
Control in Atlanta, Ga.&#13;
Now, his work on both fish&#13;
parasites and arthropod disease&#13;
carriers is centered on the&#13;
woodlands, fields and streams of&#13;
the 700-acre Parkside campus,&#13;
which Amin describes as "a&#13;
natural laboratory" for his&#13;
studies.&#13;
"I can go out the back door and&#13;
start collecting specimens," he&#13;
said.&#13;
Actually, the process is considerably&#13;
more systematic. Amin&#13;
has mapped the northwest area&#13;
of the campus bisected by the&#13;
river into a grid pattern for&#13;
identification of the precise&#13;
source of his specimens.&#13;
fle can sometimes be spottedthrough&#13;
the early-morning mists&#13;
checking his live-traps to collect&#13;
the ticks, mites, insects, etc.,&#13;
which have gathered on small&#13;
mammals such as rabbits and&#13;
chipmunks which are placed in&#13;
the traps.&#13;
Summers find him "giving my&#13;
arms to science" to determine&#13;
which varieties of mosquitoes&#13;
bite humans-and therefore may&#13;
transmit disease from lower&#13;
animals to man. (If you thought&#13;
all mosquitoes bite humans, it&#13;
only seems that way.)&#13;
Specimens are then brought&#13;
back to the laboratory for study.&#13;
Is it worth it?&#13;
Yes, says Amin. There's&#13;
always at least an outside&#13;
chance-especially in a&#13;
geographic area only recently&#13;
subjected to scientific study-that&#13;
another new species may be&#13;
awaiting discovery on the stage&#13;
of the microscope.&#13;
Of no less importance, is the&#13;
exploration of the ecological&#13;
interactions between parasites&#13;
and their hosts including man,&#13;
Amin added.&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
Wayne S. Aho, Founder and&#13;
President of The New Age&#13;
Foundation Inc., which has&#13;
charters nationwide and abroad,&#13;
will appear here Friday, April 6 to&#13;
speak on extrasensory perception.&#13;
"Major," Aho, who prefers the&#13;
title INNERsensory perception,&#13;
has traveled over a million miles&#13;
as a lecturer on ESP and the Age&#13;
of Aquarious, among other&#13;
topics.&#13;
The theme of his talk includes a&#13;
higher understanding for the&#13;
world with principles proven&#13;
through throughout the ages. He&#13;
feels that our nation and the&#13;
world is in great crisis and that&#13;
there must be a blending of true&#13;
science with the best of religion to&#13;
bring forth a golden age upon the&#13;
planet. "Where there is no vision,&#13;
the people perish."&#13;
The Major has been a speaker&#13;
at some forty space conventions&#13;
and has served as Master of&#13;
Ceremonies at many. At the first&#13;
annual Aquarian Age Conference&#13;
held in Hawaii in 1972 he was a&#13;
featured speaker.&#13;
Aho has appeared on television&#13;
and radio programs throughout&#13;
the country and has garnered&#13;
favorable reviews from colleges&#13;
throughout the country, The&#13;
University of Minnesota and&#13;
Hawaii, to name two.&#13;
The tallents he demonstrated&#13;
for a group at the Minnesota&#13;
Scoeity for Parapsychological&#13;
Research excited the students'&#13;
interest because of his conviction&#13;
Lake Alert&#13;
Wayne S. Aho&#13;
that all bf us have these tallents&#13;
in some degree.&#13;
Psychologists have made th&#13;
statement that man uses only 5&#13;
percent of the capacity of his&#13;
mind. Major Aho goes further to&#13;
say that man's capacity could be&#13;
increased 2500 times if he should&#13;
realise his potential.&#13;
The presentation, which is&#13;
being sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association,&#13;
is scheduled for 8 p.m. in Tallent&#13;
Hall. Admission at the door will&#13;
be 75 cents for students with IDs&#13;
and $1 for general admission. The&#13;
reason for the low price being a&#13;
hope to attract a greater&#13;
proportion of students for a fine&#13;
arts-lecture type performance.&#13;
Scientists discuss reactor&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
There were three major issues&#13;
discussed at the Lake Michigan&#13;
Alert Conference held recently at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The dominant issue, with two&#13;
speakers devoted to it, was&#13;
nuclear power plants. Henry S.&#13;
CCole, assistant professor of&#13;
earth science at Parkside participated&#13;
in the conference and he&#13;
believes that the problems of&#13;
nuclear power plants are the&#13;
most important.&#13;
This article, the first of a three&#13;
part series, will cover the&#13;
problem of nuclear power plants.&#13;
Power Plant Safety&#13;
Speaking to the conference on&#13;
nuclear power plant safety was&#13;
James J. MacKenzie, who has a&#13;
Ph. D. in nuclear physics and is&#13;
chairman of the Union of Concerned&#13;
Scientists.&#13;
MacKenzie pointed out in his&#13;
speech that the Atomic Energy&#13;
Commission (AEC) has been lax&#13;
in its testing of nuclear power&#13;
plant safety systems, yet has still&#13;
pushed the use of these plants in&#13;
spite of the dangers inherent in&#13;
their operation.&#13;
The dangers being referred to&#13;
are those of accidents which&#13;
release radioactivity into the&#13;
environment. There are a&#13;
number of ways for this to&#13;
happen, but the accident which&#13;
was described in the most detail&#13;
to the conference was a loss of&#13;
coolant accident (LOCAL These&#13;
accidents are the most serious&#13;
which can occur in a nuclear&#13;
reactor according to the AEC.&#13;
Nuclear reactors must constantly&#13;
be cooled in order to keep&#13;
the power producing reaction&#13;
under control. If the coolant&#13;
supply is interrupted for any&#13;
reason, the temperature in the&#13;
reactor begins to rise.&#13;
Emergency Systems&#13;
The fuel which is used in light&#13;
water nuclear reactors is&#13;
uranium. In order for this fuel to&#13;
be usable, it must be encased i n a&#13;
material called Zircaloy, which&#13;
melts at 1850 degrees Centigrade.&#13;
This temperature can be reached&#13;
within about one minute if the&#13;
Emergency Core Cooking System&#13;
(ECCS) does not begin to cool the&#13;
reactor. No full-scale LOCA has&#13;
occurred to date, but the&#13;
possibility of such an accident is&#13;
one in 1,000.&#13;
When an extreme enough&#13;
temperature is reached dueto an&#13;
LOAC, radioactivity can be&#13;
released in a number of ways.&#13;
The pipes and even the reactor&#13;
itself can be ruptured by steam&#13;
and hydrogen explosions. The&#13;
dispersal of radioactivity would&#13;
depend on wind direction and&#13;
velocity, but could be up to 100&#13;
miles. Eventually, the fuel core&#13;
itself would melt down and go&#13;
into the earth in the direction of&#13;
China (This is referred to as a&#13;
"MELTDOWN" OR "China&#13;
accident").&#13;
Continued on page 7&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 4, 1973&#13;
THORN&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
We 've built a strong&#13;
foundation&#13;
There have been comments that in t he course of the&#13;
year the Ranger hasn't taken the firm editorial&#13;
initiative it should have to effectively bring change to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
This is probably a true generalization. We have found&#13;
ourselves so engrossed in producing a strong and&#13;
respectable paper that we seldom had the time to get&#13;
into str1 ng editorial writing. But we have attained one&#13;
goal.&#13;
The goal we have reached is that of reasonable&#13;
believability and strong financial positioning. We know&#13;
we are well read because of the substantial increase in&#13;
business of our advertisers. Most organizations on&#13;
campus use the Ranger to reach the Parkside populace&#13;
and most have found it effective. Our reporting has been&#13;
as objective as possible and we feel our readership&#13;
recognizes that.&#13;
Financially we are also doing well. We have managed&#13;
to buy some equipment, pay our printing bills and allot&#13;
meager salaries to the editorial staff. Our outstanding&#13;
debt is the old Newscope Corporation's debt which we&#13;
took over. We will be paying that debt off in installments&#13;
for a number of years.&#13;
Most importantly, we will be in the black at the end of&#13;
the year and this 12-page issue of t he Ranger marks an&#13;
all-time high in ad sales in the community and service to&#13;
the school. *o".W;A.; .... ...... ... . {:&#13;
We have built a strong foundation for journalists of the&#13;
future. We only hope the success which we achieved this&#13;
year will be continued by more new staff members and&#13;
their contributions.&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
First to get rid of old business concerning the Jose Greco performance,&#13;
I must reply to Miss S. Mikaelian's letter in last week's&#13;
issue:&#13;
I am certain that if I had been at the performance, I would have&#13;
enjoyed it. For the $4,500 it cost, it should have been good. However,&#13;
prior commitments with the Naval Reserve have my Tuesday&#13;
evenings pretty well tied up for the next 23 years.&#13;
I have never stated that any performance put on by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board was not worthwhile-from a cultural standpoint. I&#13;
must state again, since you seemed to have missed it, that all&#13;
programs put on by the PAB should at least attract enough response to&#13;
break even financially. This one was a very long way from doing that.&#13;
Please read what you are complaining about more carefully. And&#13;
please stop trying to put words in my mouth, the foot is in yours.&#13;
In relation to the Haack-telegram incident mentioned last week, a&#13;
motion was introduced at the last Student Senate meeting which would&#13;
prevent any member of the senate or officer of the senate from signing&#13;
the name of the Parkside Student Government Association or the&#13;
Student Senate to any political correspondence which did not directly&#13;
concern the University of Wisconsin. The motion was defeated by a&#13;
large majority.&#13;
This is the last chance faculty have to reserve Stanton Friedman's&#13;
time for Tuesday, April 17. Interested groups should contact the Activities&#13;
Office. Do it now!&#13;
Tickets are now on sale for the Friedman performance. Cost is $1.00&#13;
for students and $1.50 for general admission. Besides being available&#13;
at the Activities Office, tickets can be found at Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and Bidinger's in Kenosha.&#13;
I have mentioned that I totally support bringing in entertainment for&#13;
the students which would not lose money from the student segregated&#13;
fee. I think most students agree with this. Another such program is the&#13;
Wayne S. Sho presentation on extrasensory perception which is being&#13;
presented this Friday.&#13;
Like the Stanton Friedman performance, "Major" Aho is being paid&#13;
through a percentage of the gate, and any profits could be plowed back&#13;
into programs benefiting students at Parkside. If enough participation&#13;
is shown in both the Aho and Friedman programs, this type of&#13;
arrangment might be looked on favorably and agreed to by other&#13;
performers appearing here.&#13;
In case you've missed other notices about the performance, Major&#13;
Aho will be appearing at Tallent Hall this Friday, April 6 at 8 p.m.&#13;
There will be no advance ticket sales. Admission at the door will be 75&#13;
cents for students with I.D. cards and $1 general admission. At those&#13;
prices how can you go wrong?&#13;
At the rate of $1.65 an hour, it would cost $2,376 to keep the lower&#13;
level doors of the library open from 8 to 5 sixteen weeks of each&#13;
semester during both the fall and spring semesters. That's $2,376 total.&#13;
I know it sounds like a lot of money, but experiences so far seem to&#13;
prove it would be worth it.&#13;
A near riot resulted last Wednesday at the Activities Building&#13;
performance of Tony, Jumbo and Gary. It seems that when somebody&#13;
tried to close the performance down at 11 p.m., the enthusiastic crowd&#13;
didn t want to leave until the management agreed to an encore Some&#13;
have blamed poor planning in the affair and others wonder where any&#13;
fault would he. J&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
The Ranger staff has wanted to go to a 12-page paper for a long time&#13;
because ads were really cramping us for space. This 12-page edition&#13;
was possible because our ad manager has been doing a superior job&#13;
and marks the beginning of a better Ranger-in quality and quantity.&#13;
We hope to have more 12-page editions in these last few weeks and I&#13;
hope they are enjoyed.&#13;
I hadn't allowed a 12-page paper earlier in the year because we&#13;
didn't quite have enough ad revenue to support it. Now we have passed&#13;
the dollar amount needed to pay for a larger paper with all its&#13;
overhead. As long as we continue to pull in the ad revenue necessary to&#13;
pay for 12-page papers, we will continue to produce them. We are&#13;
reasonably certain, judging from the amount of holdover copy each&#13;
week, that we can successfully produce interesting and important&#13;
copy for our readership in the 12-pager.&#13;
We will be able to change our inside format because of increased&#13;
flexibility. I hope the poets, creative writers, artists and other craftsmen&#13;
take advantage of the opportunity to publish their work.&#13;
I feel we will be able to more successfully cover all the events which&#13;
concern our campus with more thoroughness and, I hope, in a manner&#13;
which is pleasing to our readership.&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1973-74 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight hours per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
to submit details of his&#13;
journalistic experience&#13;
and a statement of his&#13;
plans for the RANGER to&#13;
Don Kopriva, Adviser to&#13;
Student Publications, by&#13;
Friday, April 13, at D-194&#13;
LLC.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates&#13;
Tuesday, April 17, and&#13;
announce its selection&#13;
before spring break.&#13;
ic Th e Parkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subiect of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
wfthhPiH0nenUm aPd siudent status or tacultyrank' Names will&#13;
prim any letters. rCSerVe the right t0 refuse&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
WRITER:,: Ken KonkioL Gary Jensen, Marilyn Schubert, Jeannine Sipsma, Helmut Kah mil&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmussen, Terri Gogola, Geotf Blaesing Helmut Kah, Bill&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Gary Huck, Bob Rohan, Amy Cundarijim Vukos&#13;
R™™RAPHERS: Ken Konkol&lt; Bi" Noll, Dennis Doonan, GraaSyston&#13;
STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva f,, ^REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. y&#13;
360 Lexington Av«., Ntw York, N. »\ 10017 I&#13;
Wed. , April 4, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Tutorial service growing&#13;
After eight weeks of operation&#13;
the Parkside tutorial service has&#13;
raised the number of students&#13;
being tutored from three per&#13;
week in the first week to 71 per&#13;
week.&#13;
The program offers tutorial&#13;
help to students in all the basic&#13;
academic areas.&#13;
According to Isom Fearn,&#13;
counselor, a goal or limit has not&#13;
been set on the eventual number&#13;
of students tutored. He said the&#13;
facility and number of rooms will&#13;
be the limiting factor. The service&#13;
is presently located in&#13;
Tallent Hall offices.&#13;
"We may extend ourselves to&#13;
evenings and weekends if the&#13;
need warrants, Fearn said.&#13;
He also said faculty have been&#13;
very good in that they have&#13;
referred people to the service.&#13;
For more information contact&#13;
Fearn in room 280 at Tallent Hall.&#13;
Trio ex pands&#13;
Local group proves professionalism&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
All from the Racine are they&#13;
are; Chris. Inloes (Jumbo), 20,&#13;
Tony Bresette, 21, Gary Wolk, 20,&#13;
Michael Harmon, 21, and&#13;
sometimes Tommy Fell, 22.&#13;
Jumbo plays acoustic and&#13;
electric guitar plus harmonica.&#13;
Tony plays acoustic and electric&#13;
guitar and congas. Garry plays&#13;
piano, acoustic and electric&#13;
guitar, flute, and mandolin.&#13;
Michael plays bass and Tommy&#13;
is the occasional drummer.&#13;
Vocals are supplied by Tony,&#13;
Jumbo, and Garry.&#13;
It all began in March of 1972&#13;
when Tony Bresette and Chris&#13;
Inloes (Jumbo) got together for&#13;
the first time. Thanks to encouragement&#13;
from Tony Totero,&#13;
coordinator of Student&#13;
Programming, and Bill Niebuhr,&#13;
coordinator of S tudent Life Tony&#13;
and Jumbo kept playing and&#13;
joined with Gary Wolk in Sept.&#13;
Michael Harmon assimilated&#13;
with the group in Dec., when they&#13;
also added the electric act. About&#13;
a month ago Tommy Fell joined&#13;
as a part time drummer.&#13;
The main influences of the&#13;
Tony, Jumbo, and Garry sound&#13;
are Crosby, Stills, Nash and&#13;
Young. Besides performing the&#13;
songs of their favorites they also&#13;
do a considerable amount of&#13;
Jethro Tull and any occassional&#13;
other song that fits their style.&#13;
The group has perfected a style&#13;
and they choose material acceptable&#13;
it.&#13;
In addition to this, the boys&#13;
have recently began writing their&#13;
own material. Although they&#13;
haven't done it as ofyet, they now&#13;
have cumulated enough original&#13;
substance to sustain a whole&#13;
show. Tony has written "In My&#13;
Dreams," "Waterman," and&#13;
"But Don't I Know You."&#13;
"California" is a composition by&#13;
Garry; and Jumbo wrote the&#13;
lyrics for "Shining Horses" that&#13;
are set to a melody by John&#13;
Dorsey.&#13;
The band concentrates on the&#13;
type of music in which vocals and&#13;
vocal harmonies are the major&#13;
accent. "We try to convey our&#13;
own feelings through music so&#13;
toher people may interpet them&#13;
as we do," said Jumbo.&#13;
"We find it very hard to produce&#13;
polished vocals without constant&#13;
practice"'&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
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mecj ALL ARG SUFFCRINC*&#13;
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LACK oFxdeJit^S'i...&#13;
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ALL THt. SAMC !!J(&#13;
Tony, Jumbo, and Garry&#13;
usually play at college concerts&#13;
and coffee houses. They are&#13;
available as an alternate&#13;
acoustic-electric set, or as either&#13;
only acoustic or only electric.&#13;
They are usually the featured act&#13;
and prices range from $150 to $500&#13;
a concert. Profits are usually&#13;
higher for them when they are a&#13;
back-up band&#13;
They are happy about the way&#13;
performances are being received&#13;
and are especially pleased with&#13;
Parkside support. Jumbo expressed&#13;
a desire to record with&#13;
the group someday, but felt that&#13;
this is a remote possibility as of&#13;
make some sort of career out of&#13;
music.&#13;
Wednesday, March 28, they put&#13;
on a free concert at 9 p.m. at the&#13;
Student Activities Building. They&#13;
sounded exceptionally fine, as&#13;
usual, and left the audience of&#13;
about 200+ a hair's width from&#13;
ecstasy. There was also "Ohio,"&#13;
which always produces their best&#13;
crowd reaction. For an encore&#13;
they presented three by Jethro&#13;
Tull: "Thick. As a Brick,"&#13;
"Locomotive Breath" and&#13;
"Windup."&#13;
Parkside students should feel&#13;
honored by the free concert&#13;
because Tony, Jumbo, and Garry&#13;
are worth a hell of a lot more.&#13;
the&#13;
Movement&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement" is a regular feature in RANGER to&#13;
deal with women's concerns at Parkside and in society in general.&#13;
Guest writers are invited. This week's article comes from the&#13;
University News and Publications Service in Madison.&#13;
WOMEN CREATE "DO-IT-YOURSELF," ALTERNATIVE&#13;
FEMINIST MEDIA&#13;
Wohien in communications are "underutilized, underpaid, underrepresented,&#13;
underestimated, undercover, unreported, excluded from&#13;
decision-making, from the significant events, the prestigious old boys'&#13;
clubs, and from the monetary and other rewards of the profession "&#13;
according to Prof. Kathryn F. Clarenbach of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison.&#13;
But rather than bemoaning the problems that do exist, women are&#13;
taking stock of solutions already available and those in the offing.&#13;
These solutions, Ms. Clarenbach says, loosely fall into "three&#13;
avenues," or categories media women are utilizing to avoid being "a&#13;
winter rerun of the story of women everywhere else in American&#13;
society."&#13;
"Women everywhere else" is a topic on which she is thoroughly&#13;
knowledgeable through her extensive activities within the women's&#13;
movement. Besides being a professor of political science, she is a&#13;
specialist in women's education within University Extension,&#13;
chairperson of the Governor's Commission on the Status of Women'&#13;
arid a founder of the National Organization of Women (NOW).&#13;
NOW and a multitude of women's groups around the country&#13;
strongly support the alternative feminist press Ms. Clarenbach lists as&#13;
one answer to the exclusion of women from communications, both as&#13;
participants and as subjects. This condition, she says, "deprives 53&#13;
percent of our population from the right to be represented, to speak for&#13;
themselves, and not to be spoken for by others."&#13;
The feminist "do-it-yourself" press, on the other hand, issues its own&#13;
pressreleases, has its own information Clearinghouse (KNOW, Inc.)&#13;
its own publisher (The Feminist Press, Washington D.C.), and its own&#13;
wide range of periodicals and newsletters, national and local, from&#13;
Ms. to Madison's own Whole Woman. This self-sufficiency lends to the&#13;
movement the opportunities to raise the most crucial issues, provides&#13;
• outlets for talent, arid creates the network of information "essential to&#13;
any social movement."&#13;
Within the traditional establishment press-the second avenue of&#13;
women in communications, believes Ms. Clarenbach-the "heroic&#13;
Boswells" of journalism have persuaded their papers to publish&#13;
feminist material and helped to make things happen rather than just&#13;
waited to report them.&#13;
The third avenue lies in the unlimited possibilities of communications&#13;
women's own inventiveness. Among the examples she&#13;
cites are the Feminist Theater in Washington where women handle all&#13;
the technical jobs, from carpentry and set design on up; similar&#13;
examples in film, radio and publishing; and the new presence of&#13;
women in the political sphere. Here politicians like Bella Abzug and&#13;
Shirley Chjsholm are exchanging roles with communicators like&#13;
Gloria Steinem.&#13;
American society may persist in asking what the female of the&#13;
species has to say that anyone wants to hear, says Ms. Clarenbach, but&#13;
women in communications now know their alternatives and are&#13;
pursuing them.&#13;
We get letters • • •&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Ken Konkol asks, in his column&#13;
THORN, issue of Feb. 28, why the&#13;
lower level doors to the Library&#13;
cannot be kept open longer hours-&#13;
-at the very least, he suggests,&#13;
from eight to five.&#13;
The answer is economy. To&#13;
keep a door open, there must be&#13;
someone at the door to function&#13;
as an exit guard. We figure that&#13;
.to staff one station full time&#13;
amounts to $8-9,000 a year: a&#13;
costly operation especially since&#13;
the exit guard cannot do other&#13;
kinds of productive work.&#13;
At the beginning of the year, we&#13;
closed the lower level door&#13;
completely. This, it soon became&#13;
evident, was inconvenient. Then&#13;
we recalculated, found that the&#13;
busy hours were nine to four; and&#13;
so we compromised on these.&#13;
That the lower doors should be&#13;
shut at all is undesirable. But&#13;
we'd rather put exit guard money&#13;
into cataloging staff, so we can&#13;
get the books on the shelves&#13;
quickly; into reference staff, so&#13;
we can have professional help&#13;
available as much as possible for&#13;
the confused patron; and into&#13;
ti rj l instructional staff, so we can give By Gary Huck classes in library use.&#13;
Economics is the allocation of.&#13;
scarce resources. You can never&#13;
do everything. We thought thisallocation&#13;
of funds made sense.&#13;
Philip M. Burnett&#13;
Director of Libraries&#13;
To Parkside Student Body:&#13;
I want to thank you for communicating&#13;
your concern about&#13;
the situation at Wounded Knee&#13;
and about Indian affairs.&#13;
You may be sure that your&#13;
views are appreciated and have&#13;
been carefully noted.&#13;
I am enclosing a statement by&#13;
Secretary of the Interior Rogers&#13;
C B. Morton which I am sure you&#13;
will find of interest.&#13;
Marvin Franklin&#13;
Asst. to the Secretary&#13;
For Indian Affairs&#13;
Editor's Note: PSGA President&#13;
Tom Haack sent a message&#13;
expressing concern about the&#13;
treatment of Indians and the&#13;
situation at Wounded Knee. The&#13;
statement by Secretary oft the&#13;
Interior referred to in the above&#13;
letter is on file in the Student&#13;
Government office and is&#13;
available for scrutiny.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I was sitting down at the&#13;
student government office&#13;
reading a book and a student&#13;
came in with an unusual request.&#13;
He wanted to know if we could put&#13;
the Parkside flag at half mast. I&#13;
asked him why and he told me a&#13;
girl in one of h is classes had died&#13;
of cancer. He further told me that&#13;
he went to see Asst. Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn about the flag.&#13;
The student only knew her&#13;
name and that she died. But&#13;
because he cared he wanted to do&#13;
more to show his concern than&#13;
just a thought. So when you see&#13;
the flag at half-mast stop and&#13;
think about caring. The Student&#13;
Government and the students ol&#13;
Parkside offer our deepest&#13;
sympathy to the family of Mary&#13;
T. Jenn, a freshman from&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Patrick McDevitl&#13;
Senator, PSGA&#13;
4 THE PARKSI DE RANGER Wed./ Ap r i l A , 1 9 7 3&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
New dorm-living concept conceived&#13;
COSMIC WHEELS&#13;
Donavan&#13;
Epic (KE 32156)&#13;
curreTmus^Thpln^ defin*ely established within the realm of&#13;
an esoteric^nahiTp hnf nf mUS1C bandS 3nd their Products are still of&#13;
demand Pink Sn i AT are*l&amp;\8 indicating a growing consumer&#13;
^JfPinJ F1fyd and Amon Duul maintain a steady appeal while&#13;
S"!: :8 NGW f°rCeS SUCh as ui-cnestra are emerging within this scene. Mahavishnu&#13;
he reason that this phenomena exists is quite interesting Once&#13;
upon a time there was a bunch of kids who grew up reading Captain&#13;
in thdrifte^dollarneand °f fiCti°n COmiC b°°ks- Then'&#13;
f ? . Ce'they turned onto Timothy Leary's philosophy&#13;
furtheSitr tab'e quantities 01 **D. Now these minds seek&#13;
fnrlu f in a more natural (?) form. Hence, the blame&#13;
for all of us crazies rests in the hands of the creators of Spider Man.&#13;
^beii°talamaSS °ff?ese mind-expanders are in sharp contrast to the&#13;
Svp ft audience of toe strictly metal music makers. The star seekers&#13;
rtaltt frt teamt ?°nSC!SuS and unconscious. but they still confront&#13;
reality from time to time. The only reality for a downer freak is death&#13;
Aicordmg to Greg Shaw of PRM (Phonograph Record Magazine)&#13;
space music breaks down into two categories-space rock and cosmic&#13;
music Space rock is music left in its original pattern with a new&#13;
element added. This element is usually a synthesiser or a weird&#13;
sounding organ. Against this is cosmic music which is derived from&#13;
various sources. Hawkwind is an example of space rock while Pink&#13;
t&gt;^ u Mahavishnu Orchestra are representative of cosmic music.&#13;
I d have to go along with this breakdown but not with Shaw's appraisal&#13;
of each. He claims space rock is better because it is more&#13;
commercial More commercial it may be but space rock, in his&#13;
definition (which he received from Ohr music), is not superior to&#13;
cosmic music. Cross-breeding always creates healthier offspring I&#13;
ma!"tai" that "sPace Odyssey" by the Byrds is a fantastic composition&#13;
for the very same reasons Shaw says it fails. Hawkwind as of&#13;
yet maintains the power to create imaginative effects and liberate&#13;
minds. This is accomplished by repetitive, simple guitar, bass and&#13;
drum playing that develop into climaxes, all the while submerged in a&#13;
sea of synthesiser effects. Hawkwind is sensational now and I cherish&#13;
their present products. But, in time, if they are held rigidly within&#13;
these limits, they will become boring, suffocating from lack of fresh&#13;
air.&#13;
Donavan should offer additional proof of the superiority of cosmic&#13;
music. He got everyone smoking banana peels a few years back and&#13;
following this he turned many onto meditation. Since everything&#13;
changed, today nothing is as unhip as that passive flower child. He was&#13;
left to thrill the hearts of 14-year-old girls.&#13;
When I first encountered COSMIC WHEELS, I had in mind a strict&#13;
folk singer type. But, being enticed by its cosmic cover and thinking of&#13;
"Hurdy Gurdy Man" at the time, my curiosity got the best of me.&#13;
The package material is black and white but somehow evokes color&#13;
The inside of the open-up jacket contains a sketch of some fantasyland&#13;
with the invitation to get out your crayons and color it.&#13;
The music is ecletic and produces a most unique form of cosmic&#13;
vibrations. "Cosmic Wheels" has Donavan strumming an acoustic&#13;
guitar while singing with a mysterious and appealing voice. This is set&#13;
to a good beat, with a violin added. High-pitched choir voices are like&#13;
ghosts approaching from the background. The total effect is teasingly&#13;
scary.&#13;
"Earth Sign Man" is a blues done in an outer space fashion. It has a&#13;
break with a lead guitar and a sax, that depicts movement in the Milky&#13;
Way. The sax is played by Bobby Keyes.&#13;
Donavan introduces "Sleep" with a high-reaching voice that settles&#13;
into his usual one. Bobby Keyes is in here again, along with some&#13;
metal guitar chords. Donavan trails off a couple lines with his&#13;
quivering voice style that sends chills up your spine.&#13;
The only sore spot on side one is "Maria Magenta," with its accordian&#13;
that makes it sound like the Lawrence Welk rock show.&#13;
Perhaps the most sensational cut is "Wild Witch Lady." Built upon a&#13;
simple go-go guitar riff, it also features more soprano-apparition&#13;
voices. Donavan sing-screams the chorus lines as if he was an affected&#13;
teenage Lucifer. There also is his quivering vocals that follow the end&#13;
of some lines. "...Lady" would be the best bet for a single release from&#13;
the album.&#13;
"The Music Makers" is a rocker that has funky-soul roots. A guitar&#13;
reminiscent of the early Kinks is also a part of it. It develops into a&#13;
rock chant at the end.&#13;
The sensational substance gives way at this point. "The Intergalactic&#13;
Laxative" is a Scottish folk song about the problems of&#13;
human waste in outer space. Humor is the only adhering quality.&#13;
"I Like You" is Donavan as his most sentimental, love-singing&#13;
person. It is either very touching or very irritating, depending on your&#13;
mood.&#13;
The remainder is reserved for "Only the Blues" and "Appearances."&#13;
"Only the Blues" is a country-type number and "Appearances"&#13;
is another super-tender piece.&#13;
COSMIC WHEELS IS Donavan's attempt to get back into the pop&#13;
scene by entering the space race. While a little more than half of the&#13;
material would probably be favored by the general pop audience, this&#13;
larger portion contains some of the most outstanding space music.&#13;
What is needed is a little publicity and the release of a single from this&#13;
disc. When this happens Donavan may again become a guru of modern&#13;
youth.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tapes and Records)&#13;
MADISON - A new concept in&#13;
dormitory living at UW-Madison&#13;
may go a long way toward&#13;
alleviating study problems as&#13;
well as closing the gap between&#13;
social and academic aspects of&#13;
student life.&#13;
Beginning next August, Gilman&#13;
House, an 80-student unit of&#13;
Kronshage Halls, located on the&#13;
shore of Lake Mendota, will be&#13;
reserved exclusively for&#13;
engineering and nursing&#13;
students.&#13;
"It is unusual in present dor-&#13;
Republican results&#13;
mitory practice to have students&#13;
with a common academic interest&#13;
together," says College of&#13;
Engineering Associate Dean&#13;
Fred 0. Leidel.&#13;
The Gilman House situation, he&#13;
explains, will encourage a concentration&#13;
of nursing and&#13;
engineering students (particularly&#13;
now, since men are now&#13;
entering the nursing field and&#13;
women are going into&#13;
engineering). These students, in&#13;
other housing, have had little&#13;
opportunity for contact with&#13;
those in their own fields.&#13;
With the new concentration,&#13;
Leidel says, "it will be convenient&#13;
for faculty members and&#13;
student groups to make themselves&#13;
available for advising and&#13;
information, and for providing&#13;
tutoring services and guest&#13;
speakers."&#13;
Gilman House, which is being&#13;
co-sponsored by the College of&#13;
Engineering and the UW Division&#13;
of Residence Halls, with the&#13;
cooperation of the School of&#13;
Nursing, joins a variety of other&#13;
coeducational dormitories which&#13;
already exist on the Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
Convention starts process&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
For the average voter, political&#13;
activity probably begins and ends&#13;
with the election. For those active&#13;
in party politics, however,&#13;
this could not be further from the&#13;
truth. The election is the climax&#13;
of months of campaign activities,&#13;
primaries, fund-raising events,&#13;
and especially at this time of&#13;
year, party conventions.&#13;
Parkside is represented at the&#13;
state conventions of two&#13;
Republican groups this month,&#13;
the Wisconsin College&#13;
Republicans and the Wisconsin&#13;
Federation of Young&#13;
R e p u b l i c a n s . C o l l e g e&#13;
Republicans consists of a number&#13;
of c olleges who broke away from&#13;
Young Republicans several years&#13;
ago. Their convention took place&#13;
March 16-18 in Wausau. Young&#13;
Republicans consists of people&#13;
from the ages 14-35, including&#13;
some colleges who chose not to&#13;
leave the federation. This convention&#13;
was held last weekend in&#13;
Brookfield with the theme&#13;
"MiGovern Down and Lucey to&#13;
Go."&#13;
A typical convention includes&#13;
district caucuses, meetings of&#13;
committees such as resolutions,&#13;
constitution, rules and credentials,&#13;
election of officers, awards&#13;
banquets and, of course, parties!&#13;
The caucuses and most of the&#13;
committee reports deal with&#13;
internal workings of the&#13;
organization. The resolutions,&#13;
however, may be of more&#13;
widespread interest. Young&#13;
Republican resolutions were not&#13;
available at the time of this&#13;
printing. College Republicans&#13;
considered over 50 resolutions,&#13;
the more notable among them&#13;
involved the following:&#13;
Reinstitution of the death&#13;
penalty as outlined by President&#13;
Nixon - Pass&#13;
Opposition to the Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment - Pass&#13;
Legalization of marijuana -&#13;
Defeat&#13;
Recommend immediate&#13;
prosecution of lawbreakers occupying&#13;
Wounded Knee, South&#13;
Dakota, and condemnation of&#13;
Attorney General Kliendienst for&#13;
his poor handling of the situation -&#13;
Pass&#13;
No unconditional amnesty -&#13;
Pass&#13;
Opposition to abortion except in&#13;
cases of harm to mother - Pass&#13;
Open contraceptive policy -&#13;
Pass&#13;
Commendation of President&#13;
Nixon and Henry Kissinger on&#13;
their handling of the war in&#13;
Vietnam - Pass&#13;
Retention of tenure system -&#13;
Defeat&#13;
Among those elected to College&#13;
Republican offices were&#13;
sophomores Ross Workman and&#13;
Caesar Geiger as Southeastern&#13;
Area Coordinator and Deputy&#13;
Coordinator, respectively. Kathj&#13;
Stokley Matz of UW-Superior was&#13;
elected Chairman.&#13;
Parkside delegates to the&#13;
Young Republican convention&#13;
included seniors Ken Axelson and&#13;
Alan Bryner. Official election&#13;
results were not available&#13;
However, Muriel Coleman ol&#13;
Madison was running unopposed&#13;
for Chairman as was freshman&#13;
Marilyn Schubert foi&#13;
Southeastern Area College&#13;
Coordinator.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
QMiat'. 2&#13;
cA/ew&#13;
Qussycat ?&#13;
Wednesday, April 9&#13;
Gr. 103 - 2:00 &amp; 8:00 p.m.&#13;
50 cents admission&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
UVE BiTEBTMIK? I BANOING&#13;
River City&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'LUNCH ZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-Ji&#13;
11:30-1:30&#13;
lon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Si&#13;
*159 $189&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'FISH FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed.&amp;Fri. j«gg&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
W MO-JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
Wed. , Apri l 4, 1973 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
Film Society presents&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENNING 'Woman in the Dunes&#13;
Approximately 200 nomination&#13;
papers have been turned in for&#13;
Parkside's outstanding teacher&#13;
awards. The awards committee&#13;
urges all students who think they&#13;
have an outstanding teacher to&#13;
write a nomination paper and file&#13;
it with that committee. •&#13;
"How Body Language Talks"&#13;
will be offered by the UWExtension&#13;
on the Wood Road&#13;
campus Wednesday, May 2 and 9&#13;
from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
Gestures, postures, facial&#13;
expressions and other forms of&#13;
nonverbal communicationusually&#13;
unconscious--can&#13;
enhance or change the meaning&#13;
of what you are saying. This is&#13;
known as body language. The&#13;
course will help you to become&#13;
aware of body language as you&#13;
and others use it to express attitudes&#13;
and emotions.&#13;
The instructor will be Scott&#13;
Baudhuin, assistant professor of&#13;
communication.&#13;
Fees for the course are $4.50, $7&#13;
for a married couple.&#13;
Registration deadline is April 25.&#13;
For further information phone&#13;
553-2312. •&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
sponsor a dance Thursday, April&#13;
19 from 9 p.m. to l a.m in the&#13;
Student Activities Building. The&#13;
band will be Blood Money and&#13;
admission will be $i 50&#13;
Wisconsin and Parkside I D's&#13;
required.&#13;
Applications for the $200&#13;
Scholarship offered by the&#13;
Business and Professional&#13;
Women's Club of Kenosha are&#13;
available in the Kenosha Campus&#13;
Student Services Office (Room&#13;
135). To be considered, applicants&#13;
must be single female&#13;
residents of Kenosha County who&#13;
are in their sophomore or junior&#13;
year of college and plan to continue&#13;
their studies. Students from&#13;
any major field of study are&#13;
eligible to apply. Deadline for&#13;
returning applications is Friday,&#13;
April 13.&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
meet Sunday, April 8 at 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Student Activities Building.&#13;
There will be a nomination of&#13;
officers and Bill Kemp, Outreach&#13;
counselor for the Vets Administration&#13;
Regional Office, will&#13;
speak.&#13;
Beta Lambda chapter of Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda fraternity here at&#13;
Parkside is proud to announce&#13;
the acceptance of three new&#13;
members. They are: Jim Filipek,&#13;
Mark Holler and Chuck Stephen.&#13;
A second pledge class this&#13;
semester will begin this week. If&#13;
interested, contact George Kis&#13;
(632-4742) or Jim Gaastra (634-&#13;
6461) or any member at large.&#13;
Extension offers course&#13;
on Latin America&#13;
A look at the complex and&#13;
fascinating continent of Latin&#13;
America will be taken in a class&#13;
offered by the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Extension.&#13;
Prof. Jose Ortega, instructor&#13;
for the class, calls Latin America&#13;
an almost unknown continent,&#13;
where everything is immense.&#13;
Prof. Ortega has traveled, lectured&#13;
and published materials on&#13;
Latin American countries, and is&#13;
a Parkside faculty member. He&#13;
will cover the land and the&#13;
people, the economy; institutions:&#13;
church, army,&#13;
oligarchy; the culture;&#13;
revolutions, coups and&#13;
guerrillas; and Latin America's&#13;
relationship to the world.&#13;
The class will meet on the&#13;
Kenosha Campus, 3700&#13;
Washington Road, on five&#13;
Wednesdays beginning April 4, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Registrations are being&#13;
taken by University Extension at&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
Telephone 652-8662&#13;
3315-52nd St.&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA HITCH BN&#13;
Chicken &amp; It alian Sa usage Bombers&#13;
Free Delivery t o P arkside V illage&#13;
SOU SOth Anna* Phone 6S7-S191&#13;
Friday&#13;
Safety and Security will again&#13;
offer a state certified defensive&#13;
driving course Saturday, April 7&#13;
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Room 101. To register&#13;
call Safety and Security at Ext&#13;
2455.&#13;
How to get to Europe, how to&#13;
get around when there, and what&#13;
and how to see it will be discussed&#13;
in a University Extension class&#13;
entitled "Prelude to European&#13;
Travel."&#13;
Dennis Dean, an instructor&#13;
from the Parkside faculty, has&#13;
spent some time on the continent&#13;
and is an experienced traveler.&#13;
His emphasis will be thoroughly&#13;
practical, balancing comfort and&#13;
convenience on one hand against&#13;
expense on the other. Class&#13;
participants will learn how to get&#13;
the most for their money and how&#13;
to get the most out of every day.&#13;
The class will meet for six&#13;
Tuesdays beginning April 3, at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on the Wood Road&#13;
Campus. For registration information&#13;
contact University&#13;
Extension, 553-2312.&#13;
What's New Pussycat? will be&#13;
shown by the Activities Board on&#13;
Monday, April 9, at 2 p.m. and 8&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist 103. The film&#13;
stars Peter Sellers, Woody Allen&#13;
and Ursula Andress. Studentfaculty-&#13;
staff admission is 50&#13;
cents.&#13;
Woman in the Dunes, a 1964&#13;
Japanese film about a man and&#13;
woman trapped at the bottom of a&#13;
sand dune, will be shown Friday&#13;
April 6 at 7:30 by the Parkside&#13;
Film Society, in Greenquist 103&#13;
New York Times film critic&#13;
Bosley Crowther describes it as a&#13;
"strangely poetic drama" which&#13;
encompasses "a disturbing&#13;
allegory of the fate of man in the&#13;
world-a strong expression of the&#13;
enslavement of the spirit by all&#13;
the demands of environment."&#13;
Named Best Japanese Film of&#13;
1964, it is also a Cannes Film&#13;
r estival award winner, New&#13;
York Film Festival sellout, and&#13;
Montreal Film Festival award&#13;
winner.&#13;
The short, Gerald McBoing&#13;
Boing, a 1950 Academy Award&#13;
winner narrated in rhyme, will&#13;
also be shown. Admission is 60&#13;
cents.&#13;
Forum benifit planned&#13;
A "Two-Bit Poetry Forum"&#13;
will be staged as a benefit for the&#13;
Harlow B. Mills Scholarship&#13;
Fund from noon to 1:30 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday in the Whiteskellar by&#13;
the Parkside Poetry Forum.&#13;
Minimum donation is two bits&#13;
(what else?).&#13;
Faculty members participating&#13;
in the forum will include&#13;
Stella Gray and Richard&#13;
Carrington presenting an Emily&#13;
Dickinson dialog, John Van&#13;
Willigen reading Tagore, Susan&#13;
Craig reading e.e. cummings,&#13;
Norbert Isenberg reading&#13;
Schiller and Whitman, Carole&#13;
Vopat reading several modern&#13;
woman poets, and Andrew&#13;
McLean reading John Donne and&#13;
Giuseppe Ungaretti.&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Cen ter&#13;
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1400 Milwaukee Ave.&#13;
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Mon Fri . 7.30 9.00&#13;
Saturday 7 30 5:30&#13;
Sunday 9 00 1 00&#13;
Discount to Parks ide Student s&#13;
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The Mills Scholarship Fund&#13;
was established in memory of the&#13;
late UW-P professor of life&#13;
science, poet and humanist, who&#13;
was the first acting chairman of&#13;
the College of Science and&#13;
Society.&#13;
I&#13;
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balance required&#13;
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and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Member ot Federal Fteserve System&#13;
Member Federal Deposit insurance Corp&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
6 T H E P a r k s ,DE RANGER Wed., Ap r i l 4, 1 9 7 3&#13;
Correspondent Childs&#13;
to speak at Madison&#13;
in May&#13;
MADISON - Marquis W.&#13;
Childs, Washington correspondent&#13;
for the St. Louis Post-&#13;
Dispatch, will be the headline&#13;
speaker when the UW-Madison&#13;
School of Journalism and Mass&#13;
Communication dedicates its&#13;
JT_of Vilas Communication&#13;
Hall May 11.&#13;
An all-day program will pay&#13;
tribute to the school's former&#13;
directors, Willard G. Bleyer,&#13;
Grant M. Hyde, and Ralph o!&#13;
Nafziger; offer seminars on&#13;
Government and the Press" and&#13;
"Advertising and Consumerism";&#13;
include dedication&#13;
of a journalism court honoring A.&#13;
Matt Werner, Sheboygan, former&#13;
UW regent; feature presentation&#13;
of special awards to&#13;
distinguished alumni and tours of&#13;
the new facility.&#13;
Friends and alumni of the&#13;
school are invited to attend.&#13;
The array of participants will&#13;
include:&#13;
Madison campus Chancellor&#13;
Edwin Young; Don Davies,&#13;
Madison, president of the&#13;
school's alumni association; Don&#13;
Anderson, former publisher of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Journal,&#13;
Madison; Prof. Harold L. Nelson,&#13;
director of the school; Carl&#13;
Steiger, Oshkosh, former UW&#13;
regent; Helen Matheson Rupp of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Journal;&#13;
Courtland R. Conlee, retired vicepresident&#13;
of the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal; and Robert Wright,&#13;
Montello, vice-president of the&#13;
Wisconsin Press Association.&#13;
A mosaic, "Freedom of&#13;
Communication," by Prof.&#13;
James S. Watrous of the campus&#13;
art history department, will be&#13;
unveiled, and the University&#13;
Singers will present a concert.&#13;
Two years in the building, Vilas&#13;
Communication Hall was opened&#13;
last fall for use by the school,&#13;
communication arts department,&#13;
WHA and WHA-TV, the Compass&#13;
Theatre, and the Daily Cardinal.&#13;
Other dedication programs are&#13;
being planned by these groups.&#13;
The $10.7 million six-story&#13;
structure, located in the heart of&#13;
the campus, contains&#13;
classrooms, research facilities,&#13;
theaters, laboratories, studios,&#13;
seminar rooms, rehearsal areas,&#13;
production units, and maintenance,&#13;
repair and storage&#13;
areas.&#13;
The school is the oldest continuing&#13;
journalism education&#13;
program at an American&#13;
university. It was founded in 1905.&#13;
An authority on&#13;
mathematics curriculum&#13;
development, Prof. Wade&#13;
Ellis, visited UW-Parkside&#13;
Thursday and Friday as a&#13;
part of the Mathematics&#13;
Association of America&#13;
V i s i t i n g L e c t u r e r s&#13;
Program. His schedule&#13;
included a lecture for area&#13;
secondary and college&#13;
level math teachers as&#13;
well as talks in UW-P&#13;
classes . Shown at the&#13;
lecture, above, are left to&#13;
right: Denise Kolmos, a&#13;
senior at St. Joseph's High&#13;
School, Kenosha; Donald&#13;
Piele of the Parkside math&#13;
faculty; Dr. Wade; Sister&#13;
C e c e l i a H u d e c , math&#13;
teacher at St. Joseph's;&#13;
and Esther Klemp, math&#13;
teacher at Washington&#13;
Junior High School,&#13;
Racine. Dr. Wade is dean&#13;
of t he graduate school at&#13;
the University of&#13;
Michigan. He has conducted&#13;
seminars for math&#13;
teachers throughout the&#13;
U.S. an d in India, France&#13;
and Peru.&#13;
Conflict Center sees work ahead&#13;
MADISON — T he Center for&#13;
Conflict Resolution at Madison&#13;
believes peace is a way of living,&#13;
not just the absence of war.&#13;
"Although war in Vietnam is&#13;
over, we still have to study ways&#13;
of living so other wars don't&#13;
break out," explains Robert&#13;
Mishacoff, a conscientious objector&#13;
doing alternative military&#13;
service at the Center.&#13;
The Center conducts&#13;
workshops for church and civic&#13;
groups attempting to resolve&#13;
conflicts ranging from interpersonal&#13;
to international. It&#13;
also operates a research&#13;
program providing background&#13;
in the art of conflict resolutionteaching&#13;
people not to be afraid of&#13;
conflict.&#13;
Founded in 1970 as "a peace&#13;
education project," the Center&#13;
now has 14 active workers.&#13;
"We haven't been particularly&#13;
active in the role of mediator.&#13;
Our role is mostly educational so&#13;
people can more successfully&#13;
resolve their own problems,"&#13;
Mishacoff says.&#13;
A chance for real conflict&#13;
resolution came recently when&#13;
three Center members were sent&#13;
by the National Council of&#13;
Churches to be non-violent observers&#13;
at the confrofitation at&#13;
Wounded Knee, South Dakota.&#13;
A unique opportunity to spend&#13;
four weeks in New York City&#13;
studying the United Nations&#13;
through regular UWM credit&#13;
courses, attendance at U.N.&#13;
sessions and meetings with&#13;
delegation and secretariat&#13;
personnel, is being offered to&#13;
undergraduates of eleven participating&#13;
universities of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin system,&#13;
as part of a six weeks, 6-credit&#13;
course. The first two weeks of the&#13;
course will be held on the UWM&#13;
Mishacoff notes the Dayton,&#13;
Ohio police force now has officers&#13;
trained in non-violent conflict&#13;
resolution. The Center is working&#13;
on making inroads in this area in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
The Center is funded through&#13;
private sources, grants from&#13;
companies and private&#13;
U. N.&#13;
campus in preparatory study.&#13;
Each student will enroll in two&#13;
3-credit courses focusing upon&#13;
the U.N. and international&#13;
organization. While in New York&#13;
City, the participants will live in&#13;
dormitories of the New York&#13;
University Medical Center,&#13;
within walking distance of the&#13;
U.N. Expenses are based upon&#13;
regular UWM summer tuition&#13;
and dormitory costs. Admission&#13;
is open to legal residents of&#13;
Wisconsin who will be&#13;
.sophomores, juniors or seniors by&#13;
donations, with the University&#13;
providing only office space.&#13;
Both the Center and the&#13;
University agree the University&#13;
shouldn't provide financial&#13;
support.&#13;
"Although our funding is very&#13;
inadequate...several people work&#13;
here full time and we are unable&#13;
study&#13;
the summer of 1973 at one of the&#13;
participating institutions.&#13;
Candidates should have a substantial&#13;
number of college credits&#13;
in history and social studies, a&#13;
basic course in political science&#13;
(preferably international&#13;
relations), and a grade point&#13;
average of 2.50 or above (between&#13;
B and C).&#13;
Descriptive booklets and application&#13;
blanks are available&#13;
from the Office of the Dean,&#13;
College of Science and Society^&#13;
Greenouist 345.&#13;
to pay them very much...I don't&#13;
think we would look for&#13;
University funding. We wouldn't&#13;
want to be tied down," Mishacoff&#13;
contends.&#13;
Madison Chancellor Edwin&#13;
Young agrees:&#13;
"The Center for Conflict&#13;
Resolution is better as an&#13;
alternative institution. One of the&#13;
Center's values is that it is not&#13;
associated with the University. It&#13;
has greater credibility because of&#13;
it."&#13;
The Center would like to work&#13;
with the University, however, in&#13;
creating an academic program in&#13;
conflict or "peace" studies. One&#13;
course—Conflict in American&#13;
Society-exists, taught voluntarily&#13;
by sociology Prof. Joseph&#13;
W. Elder. A Center founder,&#13;
James M. Struve, is the volunteer&#13;
teaching assistant.&#13;
Elder is hopeful a major can be&#13;
created in conflict resolution.&#13;
"We see beginnings of careers&#13;
in conflict resolution. Marriage&#13;
counselors are just one example&#13;
of this."&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA&#13;
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In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
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FOR GALS-LOW RISE JEANS&#13;
AND MONSTER BELLS&#13;
308 6th. St. DOWNTOWN RACINE&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
Sauced&#13;
An Illustrated Lecture&#13;
/heft*1&#13;
4'-""'STANTON I.&#13;
FRIEDMAN Tues. - April 17&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
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Adm: $1.00&#13;
Tickets Available: Info Center&#13;
EWv9v\U&#13;
Credit offered for&#13;
Wed., April 4, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
"Do we really need all that power? y y&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
Safety Record&#13;
MacKenzie explained that&#13;
while the safety record of the 30&#13;
currently operating plants&#13;
sounds good, it really isn't. The&#13;
power companies claim no accidents&#13;
in about 150 years of&#13;
reactor experience. This sounds&#13;
nice, but as MacKenzie explained&#13;
it, the meaning changed.&#13;
One year of reactor experience&#13;
is defined as having one reactor&#13;
in operation for one year. Having&#13;
one reactor in operation for two&#13;
years yields two years of reactor&#13;
experience, but so does having&#13;
two reactors in operation for one&#13;
year. With our present number of&#13;
reactors, some of which have&#13;
been operating for several years,&#13;
we have about 150 years of experience&#13;
according to this&#13;
definition.&#13;
If t he AEC has its way and the&#13;
United States has 60 percent of i ts&#13;
energy supplied by nuclear&#13;
reactors, we will have to have at&#13;
least 1,000 reactors by the year&#13;
2000. That means one accident&#13;
per year.&#13;
Safety System Testing&#13;
It seems that all this wouldn't&#13;
be so bad if the AEC was trying to&#13;
test and improve the safety&#13;
systems in our present and future&#13;
reactors. But MacKenzie pointed&#13;
out that very few tests have&#13;
actually been done. There was a&#13;
series of tests using computers&#13;
and theoretical stiuations. When&#13;
Viet Vet&#13;
conference&#13;
slated&#13;
MADISON -- A statewide&#13;
conference for Vietnam-era&#13;
vetera s is slated Thursday on the&#13;
UW-Madison campus.&#13;
Sponsored by the Madison&#13;
campus Vets for Vets group, the&#13;
all-day conference is titled&#13;
"Where to Now?" Focus will be&#13;
on the lack of use of the G.I. Bill&#13;
in Wisconsin, veterans' employment&#13;
problems, and&#13;
psychological disorders of&#13;
veterans, according to coordinator&#13;
Steve Harrison,&#13;
discharged from the U.S.&#13;
Marines this January.&#13;
Harrison emphasized that&#13;
anyone interested in the&#13;
problems of veterans is welcome&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Speakers include UW system&#13;
Executive Vice-President Donald&#13;
E. Percy and Wayne D. Horner,&#13;
active in Vets for Vets. Sessions&#13;
are scheduled for the Wisconsin&#13;
Union beginning at 8 a.m.&#13;
Vets for Vets was founded on&#13;
this campus last fall to aid&#13;
returning Vietnam-era veterans.&#13;
the hypothetical LOAC were run&#13;
through the computer, the ECCS&#13;
all functioned. However, in one&#13;
test the only one of its kind, a&#13;
real LOAC was created in a&#13;
model reactor, the core of which&#13;
was heated by electricity. When&#13;
the primary cooling system&#13;
failed, the ECCS began to work,&#13;
but the extreme temperature in&#13;
the core caused the water to turn&#13;
to steam and immediately force&#13;
its way out. The result was a&#13;
failure of the ECCS.&#13;
Test Failures&#13;
These test failures led to AEC&#13;
hearings on whether ECCS&#13;
design criteria are adequate.&#13;
Although the hearings will not be&#13;
completed until sometime this&#13;
year, the AEC has continued to&#13;
license nuclear plants to operate&#13;
with the old ECCS design, and to&#13;
issue construction pursuits for&#13;
new ones.&#13;
The next speaker, Dr. John W.&#13;
Gofman, who has a Ph. D. in&#13;
Nuclear Physical Chemistry and&#13;
is the former AEC scientist,&#13;
discussed the physiological&#13;
impact of nuclear accidents.&#13;
Gofman also, discussed the fact&#13;
that the nation is being presented&#13;
with an even greater danger with&#13;
the development erf the Breeder&#13;
reactor. This reactor actually&#13;
creates more fuel in its reaction.&#13;
This fuel is Plutonium 239, an&#13;
extremely toxic substance. To&#13;
give an idea of how toxic this&#13;
element is, Gofman quoted some&#13;
statistics on its ability to cause&#13;
lung cancer. Gofman stated that&#13;
one pound of Pu-239 could cause&#13;
nine billion cases of lung cancer.&#13;
The AEC proposes to ship this&#13;
material in trucks on the nation's&#13;
highways&#13;
hi addition to the shipping of&#13;
radioactive materials, there is&#13;
also the problem of storing the&#13;
nuclear waste created by the&#13;
plants.&#13;
Current storage is not perfect,&#13;
as the radioactive waste is placed&#13;
in stainless steel containers&#13;
which must be replaced&#13;
periodically because they leak.&#13;
Moratorium&#13;
Gofman's answer to all this&#13;
was to stop. He asked why the&#13;
U.S. should continue to endanger&#13;
the environment and build cancer&#13;
into the lives of future&#13;
generations. Gofman strongly&#13;
believes that there should be an&#13;
indefinite moratorium on nuclear&#13;
reactors. There are other&#13;
possible sources for power, such&#13;
as the unlimited supply of solar&#13;
Artist Concert Series&#13;
to conclude Sunday&#13;
Pianist Marylene Dosse will&#13;
present the final program in the&#13;
University Artists Concert Series&#13;
at Parkside at 3 p.m. on Sunday,&#13;
April 8, in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Ms. Dosse will play an all-&#13;
Saint-Saens program. In April,&#13;
she will begin recording the&#13;
complete works of Saint-Saens&#13;
for Vox records in New York.&#13;
Her Saint-Saens program at&#13;
Parkside will consist of Suite, Op.&#13;
90; Souvenir d'ltalie, Op. 80;&#13;
Minuet and Valse, Op. 56; Three&#13;
Etudes, Op. Ill, No. 2, 1, 6; Six&#13;
Bagatelles, Op. 3; Two Valses,&#13;
Op. 104 and 110; and Theme&#13;
Varie, Op. 97.&#13;
Ms. Dosse has in the past few&#13;
years been artist-in-residence for&#13;
UW-Whitewater and the UW&#13;
Center System.&#13;
French-born, she graduated&#13;
from the Paris Conservatory with&#13;
highest awards both in piano and&#13;
chamber music. She won first&#13;
place in the Salzburg, Austria,&#13;
piano contest in 1962 and the&#13;
French Ministry of Culture&#13;
granted her a special scholarship&#13;
to continue her Salzburg studies&#13;
for the following year.&#13;
Participating in the masters&#13;
class of Alfred Brendel, Joerg&#13;
Demus and Paul Badura-Skoda,&#13;
she was unanimously awarded&#13;
their scholarship and subsequently&#13;
engaged to perform at&#13;
the renowned Salzburg Festival.&#13;
She was a winner in the Casella&#13;
International Piano Competition&#13;
of 1965 in Naples and in the 1968&#13;
Vilas Competition in Madison.&#13;
She has performed throughout&#13;
Europe, North Africa and South&#13;
America and was selected to give&#13;
four concert tours in her&#13;
homeland for the Jeunesses&#13;
Musicales de France.&#13;
Tickets for her concert will be&#13;
available at the door. General&#13;
admission is $2; admission for&#13;
Parkside students, staff and&#13;
immediate families is $1;&#13;
children 12 and under are admitted&#13;
free.&#13;
A concert by the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony at Parkside,&#13;
originally planned for May 10,&#13;
has been rescheduled for Sept. 11.&#13;
8 Lbs.&#13;
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North &amp; South S heridan R d&#13;
power. Even though such a powei&#13;
source couldn't be utilized immediately,&#13;
Gofman stated that is&#13;
only dueto the fact that so much&#13;
talent, money and time has been&#13;
spent on nuclear power. Switch&#13;
all of that talent and money to&#13;
researching the other possible&#13;
power sources, he said, and&#13;
something could be developed.&#13;
Fuel Comsumption&#13;
Finally, Cole has presented&#13;
some statistics on the fact that&#13;
the AEC is misleading people&#13;
about the percentage of power&#13;
which will be supplied by nuclear&#13;
reactors and fossil fuel by burning&#13;
plants.&#13;
According to the AEC, the total&#13;
energy consumption of the U.S.&#13;
will double by the year 2000. The&#13;
comsumption of electricity will&#13;
go up five times. So even if&#13;
atomic power supplies 60 percent&#13;
of the electric power, 40 percent&#13;
will still be generated by means&#13;
of fossil fuels. According to Cole,&#13;
this will be more than is currently&#13;
being generated by fossil fuel.&#13;
Obviously, with supplies of&#13;
fossil fuels running low, other&#13;
sources of energy must be found.&#13;
Cole thinks people must also&#13;
begin asking questions. The&#13;
burden of proof rests with the&#13;
AEC as to whether or not nuclear&#13;
power is worth the risks. If it&#13;
isn't, then the effort would have&#13;
to be made to find new sources of&#13;
• power.&#13;
What To Do&#13;
Also present in the questions&#13;
are being and will be asked, is&#13;
that of "Do we really need all that&#13;
power?" Must the consumption&#13;
of fuel and electricity be so&#13;
phenomenal, Cole asked. If the&#13;
citizens of this country want to do&#13;
something about this problem, a&#13;
start could be to reduce our&#13;
demands of electricity, Cole said,&#13;
lights burning all day in empty&#13;
rooms and doing small tasks by&#13;
hand instead of using the myriad&#13;
of e lectric gadgets found in most&#13;
homes.&#13;
Next week - The Federal Water&#13;
Pollution Control Act of 1972.&#13;
rassyium&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHIHTZ 6UICK-0PEI&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-5514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
1973 OREL&#13;
1900&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
f T H E , ? , t A P aR A N G E R w e d . / A p r i l 4, 1 9 73&#13;
Essay Qn "Mother Russia"&#13;
Education regimented in Russia&#13;
Editor's note: Parkside history student Arthur&#13;
uhl was in Russia recently and has submitted this&#13;
report of his impressions concerning education&#13;
there.&#13;
By Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
Several have asked me, "What did you learn&#13;
about education in Russia?" I'll tell you. But I&#13;
haven't time to be less than candid. So here goes&#13;
Like everything else in Russia, education is&#13;
regimented and run by the state. Not counting preschool&#13;
age kids, one-third of the population of&#13;
Russia, 247 million people, is in school one wav or&#13;
another. 3&#13;
The "universities" are for science. The "institutes"&#13;
are the trade and technical schools. When&#13;
you graduate you get a "certificate." A certificate&#13;
trom an institute has the same face value as one&#13;
from a university.&#13;
There are no degrees like B.A. or M.A. There are&#13;
doctoral degrees but they are for M.D.'s, some&#13;
scientists and the super-smart. Incidentally we&#13;
were told that 60 percent of all of the doctors of&#13;
medicine in the world are Russians and 80 percent&#13;
of them are women.&#13;
Education is free in Russia, all along the line.&#13;
College level students are given "stipends" according&#13;
to grades. A student with five A's gets 40&#13;
rubles a month. One with four A's and one B will get&#13;
36. A ruble is worth $1.20. Thre rubles a month goes&#13;
for room and board in a dorm. The rest is for routine&#13;
needs. The lower the grades, the lower the stipend,&#13;
so slow learners have tough going.&#13;
Students needn't concern themselves about&#13;
placement when they graduate. The jobs are all&#13;
categorized and everyone writes a competitive&#13;
exam for the jobs to be filled. Competition to get&#13;
ahead is brutal. A slightly higher grade might mean&#13;
sharing a bathroom in one's apartment with fewer&#13;
people. They will be told where they are to work.&#13;
There is no unemployment in Russia.&#13;
Society is very stratified in the U.S.S.R. One's&#13;
measure of success is determined by his value to the&#13;
state. Parents are held strictly responsible for their&#13;
children's behavior until they are 18 and-or still in&#13;
school. Goof off and parents and child will all be on&#13;
the carpet before a jury of their peers. For a student&#13;
to try to tell the school administrators how to run&#13;
things is unheard of. And the campus paper is a big&#13;
bulletin board for faculty use.&#13;
If a student does poorly on a final exam, he is&#13;
offered the chance to take the last semester all over&#13;
again, and his stipend will be greatly reduced. Then&#13;
he is given one more chance to take the exam and if&#13;
he flunks a second time he is moved down...and&#13;
down...until he reaches an area which is compatible&#13;
with his zeal and intelligence. And that will be his&#13;
niche until he works himself out of it-up or down.&#13;
But he will never be unemployed.&#13;
The Moscow University&#13;
I stood one morning on the wide plaza approach to&#13;
Moscow University in Lenin Hills. What a layout!&#13;
32,000 s tudents...14 faculties...and the top of their&#13;
main building was obscured by clouds the day I was&#13;
there.&#13;
The men going in and out of the building looked&#13;
like young business and professional men. You&#13;
could easily tell the men from the women. The&#13;
women wore skirts, were well-groomed and looked&#13;
sharp. There was no mingling of men and women.&#13;
Evidently there is no time for socializing on campus,&#13;
and the women are tough competitors here.&#13;
Students Are&#13;
Their Own Custodians&#13;
We walked inside. There was a lot of traffic,&#13;
several lounges, and not an empty can or paper cup&#13;
was to be seen. Tanya, our tour guide (a graduate of&#13;
a language institute), told us that the students were&#13;
responsible for the care and condition of "their"&#13;
building. There are no custodians going around&#13;
picking up after them. Anyone seen littering would&#13;
be pointed out on the spot and wind up policing the&#13;
campus for a week.&#13;
"Heroes" are recognized on campus and offnationwide,&#13;
in fact. Who are their heroes? They are&#13;
the students with superior grades, workers who&#13;
exceed high goals, scientists and artists. The&#13;
"Order of Lenin" is their highest accolade.&#13;
Wouldn't Want To&#13;
Live By Their Rules&#13;
I sure wouldn't wlike to live by some of their&#13;
ground rules but Russia is their country" and they&#13;
think that the world is their oyster. They (the dozen&#13;
or so students I met who could speak some English)&#13;
assume without argument that eventually&#13;
everything will be done their way. That is their idea&#13;
of peaceful coexistence. In the meantime anything&#13;
not being done according to their rules is up for&#13;
grabs.&#13;
They are striving for their goals very openly and&#13;
are using all of the sophisticated tools of our free&#13;
enterprise system to make their system of&#13;
socialism work. The draft of warm air you feel&#13;
behind your ears is probably caused by Tanya and&#13;
Boris breathing down your neck. While smiling at&#13;
you they will try to knock your block off&#13;
academically if given half a chance. They covet&#13;
much of what we take for granted. They are out to&#13;
produce what they expect will eventually be the best&#13;
educated society in the world-all dedicated to the&#13;
proposition that their country comes before self. To&#13;
them, no sacrifice is too great to gain that goal.&#13;
Upturn seen&#13;
in journalism&#13;
vocations&#13;
MADISON - Job-seeking UWMadison&#13;
journalism graduates&#13;
this spring are finding prospects&#13;
considerably brighter than did&#13;
last year's class.&#13;
Notices of job openings are up&#13;
10 percent over last year at the&#13;
School of Journalism and Mass&#13;
Communication's placement&#13;
office.&#13;
Radio-TV news, public&#13;
relations and newspapers offer&#13;
the most openings, according to&#13;
Prof. Lester L. Hawkes, the&#13;
school's assistant director. And&#13;
although newspaper hiring isn't&#13;
up as much as hiring in other&#13;
fields of communication, Hawkes&#13;
expects an upturn in the&#13;
availability of newspaper jobs in&#13;
the next six months.&#13;
During periods of recession,&#13;
Hawkes noted, "Newspapers&#13;
delay filling vacant positions.&#13;
Attrition and retirement take a&#13;
number of individuals during this&#13;
period, and the time is coming&#13;
when people will be needed to fill&#13;
the vacancies."&#13;
Fears of scarcity in the job&#13;
market may be driving more&#13;
journalism students into&#13;
graduate school, Hawkes said.&#13;
"People with master's degrees,&#13;
of course, are in much more&#13;
demand."&#13;
Thirty of the 31 students to&#13;
receive a masters degree last&#13;
year from the UW-Madison&#13;
moved directly into jobs in&#13;
communication with no&#13;
problems, Hawkes pointed out.&#13;
Corporate internal publications&#13;
are the largest recruiters at the&#13;
present time. State and federal&#13;
information positions are also&#13;
attracting a lot of our&#13;
graduates," Hawkes added.&#13;
I UJA.riV "?oo "Vo Go "to .. . .&#13;
ONE Suj§£tT&gt;RLArn&#13;
folSCfmnt Rrr r.gfk&#13;
II //&#13;
(2&#13;
,y&#13;
foA #)£ -finest I/? Pipes .. .&#13;
C.Jtps - -fay- •BaLP/iEmRpsS --m Prors-i^KeRrs- —r .a»Rc-&#13;
MGESt&#13;
LI AjjJte* CoWCS X&#13;
The Ranger asks-—&#13;
What is your opinion of Women's Liberation'&#13;
Wed . , April 4, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
Frank Locante, Senior, Kenosha&#13;
"If they want women's lib let&#13;
them have it. I don't think&#13;
everybody wants it; I think it's a&#13;
selected few. I don't know why&#13;
they want it. It's only a selected&#13;
few that want women's lib. Let&#13;
them be liberated if t hey want to&#13;
be."&#13;
S"? ,Lora» Freshman' Kenosha&#13;
"I'm for it to a certain extent,&#13;
and I think that I don't want to&#13;
become an equal to man. But&#13;
women should have equal rights&#13;
as the men, but I don't want&#13;
them. Like I don't want to get&#13;
drafted."&#13;
Rick Barnhart, Junior, Waterford&#13;
"I'm for it to a certain extent,&#13;
like equal pay and equal rights.&#13;
But I'm against strong women's&#13;
lib like, say you open a door for a&#13;
girl and she slams the door back&#13;
in your face or something, I'm&#13;
against that."&#13;
Kathy Cooper, Staff, Computer&#13;
Center "It's OK; just don't go to&#13;
far with it that's all. We need it&#13;
but we still need the men's ability&#13;
for morale boost, I guess."&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2 573 58th St . a t 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COU RT MILWAUKEE&#13;
P. A.B.&#13;
p r e s entSs PRING FOLK&#13;
'//FESTIVAL Grahm&#13;
Dave Castaneda, Freshman,&#13;
acine&#13;
"I have no opinion on women's&#13;
lib, if they feel they're not&#13;
liberated that's their problem. I&#13;
don't know; just leave them&#13;
alone."&#13;
&lt;S Lindgren&#13;
Mi ke Gregor y&#13;
Tom Rosplock&#13;
Bob Rohan&#13;
Dave Duffeck&#13;
Mone y Price&#13;
SUN.&#13;
APRIL 8&#13;
[m 2-7 p.m.&#13;
Free&#13;
Admi s si on&#13;
"St d . Ac t . Bldg.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
. &lt;&lt;,&#13;
your $1&#13;
per d ay lodging includes&#13;
• coffee, donuts&#13;
• shower&#13;
THE&#13;
KENTUCKY DERBY&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
MAY 4-6&#13;
$5.00 for Derby Ticket&#13;
$2.50 pre-Derby Concert&#13;
advance sale ticket&#13;
($4.00 at the door)&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant&#13;
Dean of S tudents&#13;
"My opinion is that it has some&#13;
value on campus, but that it has&#13;
to be treated justly so that the&#13;
women get fair treatment as well&#13;
as the men."&#13;
bring own sleeping bag&#13;
MUST SUPPLY OWN TRANSPORTATION - TRAVEL&#13;
INFORMATION AND SIGN-UP AT STU. ACT. OFFICE -&#13;
LLC-D-197.&#13;
Candy Bieneman, Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I really agree with the idea,&#13;
but I don't agree with a lot of t he&#13;
way they go about doing it. Like I&#13;
don't think they should push it on&#13;
people and I think they're kind of&#13;
going to the other extreme.&#13;
They're trying to push it on&#13;
people, and a lot needs to be&#13;
changed. You're going to have to&#13;
change the way people think,&#13;
you're going to have to change&#13;
society and that's going to take a&#13;
long time. I think it should have&#13;
happened a long time ago."&#13;
Jim Simmons, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"I really can't say. I like what&#13;
they're doing though."&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
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10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed . , April 4, 1973&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER Baseball opens today&#13;
' Sports&#13;
Rangers strong in Track&#13;
by Helmut Kali&#13;
Parkside has had "a very good&#13;
year so far in track," according&#13;
to head coach Bob Lawson. The&#13;
quality of our trackmen is high,&#13;
but Lawson would like to see&#13;
more students out for track&#13;
ents out for track. '&#13;
Most meets have been&#13;
multiple-team meets (eight to&#13;
twenty teams) with the Rangers&#13;
placing in the top 25 percent.&#13;
Lucien Rosa and Dennis Biel&#13;
started out theyear as All-&#13;
America and have kept a good&#13;
record. Another outstanding&#13;
performer was Keith Merritt,&#13;
who has been setting records in&#13;
the pole vault and triple jump.&#13;
Merritt "should soon be ready&#13;
for national competition in the&#13;
triple jump and the decathlon,"&#13;
says Lawson. The decathlon&#13;
consists of ten events; the 100&#13;
meter, long jump, high jump,&#13;
shot put, 400 meter, lio meter&#13;
hurdle, discus, pole vault&#13;
javelin, and 1,500 meter.&#13;
Chuck Dettman has had a good&#13;
year running the half mile.&#13;
"Two freshmen with a good&#13;
future at Parkside are Herb&#13;
DeGroot annd Cornelius Gordon,&#13;
both of Racine, and both 440 men.&#13;
Also having good potential is&#13;
Mike Kopczynski, a long jump&#13;
sprinter.&#13;
The next meet for the Ranger&#13;
trackmen will be the United&#13;
States Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) State Indoor&#13;
Championships April7 at&#13;
Madison. On the same day,&#13;
Merritt and Dom Cooper will be&#13;
competing in the decathlon and&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
Bob Lawson&#13;
A Parkside decathlon, and&#13;
wMh ™S open events&#13;
will be held May 7 and 8. The first&#13;
ou^oorjneet on the new track&#13;
will be held to deticate the track&#13;
•April 19 and 20.&#13;
Lawson's main goal right now&#13;
is to get Rosa ready to defend his&#13;
national marathon record at the&#13;
JS^URelays' which are the&#13;
USTFF National Championships&#13;
held at Drake University in Des&#13;
Moines, Iowa. John Ammerman&#13;
«s also training to run at Drake&#13;
Rosa took top honors in the Drake&#13;
marathon last year, and Gary&#13;
Lance, a former ParksiriW&#13;
student took tenth. de&#13;
The Parkside Rangers baseball&#13;
club opens up its season, today,&#13;
with a single game against the&#13;
College of Racine. Game time is 1&#13;
p.m. at the UW-P baseball field.&#13;
College of Racine, something of&#13;
a fledging in baseball in recent&#13;
years, has yet to beat the&#13;
Rangers since Ken (Red)&#13;
Oberbruner has coached and&#13;
squad.&#13;
"We haven't lost to them yet,&#13;
and I don't plan on starting this&#13;
year," Oberbruner said.&#13;
C of R (Dominican) lost four&#13;
games to Parkside iast year with&#13;
only one game being decided by&#13;
one run. C of R is led by second&#13;
baseman Ed Granitz, last year's&#13;
most valuable player, and third&#13;
baseman Larry Haskins.&#13;
The Rangers are coming off a&#13;
6-4 record. They had 14 games&#13;
washed out a year ago. This&#13;
year's team will attempt to play&#13;
17 games if the weather will&#13;
oblige. Wisconsin - Madison tried&#13;
to get a early start this year but&#13;
was rained out last Saturday.&#13;
Oberbruner indicated his&#13;
pitching is below last year's with&#13;
only two returning lettermen in&#13;
sophomores Dale Phillips and&#13;
lefty Bob Kosters. Phillips will be&#13;
tried more at first base this year.&#13;
He has hopes that several&#13;
promising newcomers, Kim&#13;
Singleton, Jeff Sexton and Nick&#13;
Ziomek, will be able to help carry&#13;
the pitching load. The Rangers&#13;
will play eight doubleheaders this&#13;
year and good pitching is a must&#13;
for success.&#13;
Oberbruner said that this&#13;
year's team has better over-all&#13;
balance than a year ago, which&#13;
should help any shortcomings the&#13;
pitching may have.&#13;
His infield is set with lettermen&#13;
Tom Gedemer at third (he hit .275&#13;
a year ago), Ron Schmidt at&#13;
second (.300), and either Phillips&#13;
(.255) o r Jim Mohrbacher (.225)&#13;
at first. Oberbruner noted the&#13;
team has two good prospects in&#13;
An important announcement to every&#13;
student in the health professions:&#13;
NEW SCHOLARSHIPS&#13;
ARE AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY.&#13;
THEY COVER TUITION AND&#13;
RELATED COSTS AND PROVIDE AN&#13;
ANNUAL INCOME OF $5,300 AS WELL.&#13;
If a,, steady salary of $400 a&#13;
month and paid-up tuition&#13;
will help you continue your&#13;
professional training, the&#13;
scholarships just made poss&#13;
i b l e by t h e U n i fo r m e d&#13;
Services Health Professions&#13;
Revitalization Act of 1972&#13;
deserve your close attention.&#13;
Because if you are now in a&#13;
medical, osteopathic, dental,&#13;
veterinary, podiatry, or optometry&#13;
school, or are working&#13;
toward a PhD in Clinical&#13;
Psychology, you may qualify.&#13;
We make it eakjj tor you to&#13;
complete your xtudie.k. You're&#13;
commissioned as an officer as&#13;
soon as you enter the program,&#13;
but remain in student&#13;
status until graduation. And,&#13;
during each year you will be&#13;
on active duty (with extra&#13;
pay) for 45 days. Naturally,&#13;
if your academic schedule&#13;
requires that you remain on&#13;
campus, you stay on campus&#13;
-and still receive your active&#13;
duty pay.&#13;
Active duty requirements&#13;
are fair. Basically, you serve&#13;
one year as a commissioned&#13;
officer for each year you've&#13;
participated in the program,&#13;
with a two year minimum.&#13;
You may apply for a scholarship&#13;
with either the Army,&#13;
Navy or Air Force, and know&#13;
that upon entering active&#13;
d u t y y o u ' l l h a v e r a n k a n d&#13;
duties in keeping with your&#13;
professional training.&#13;
The life's work you've chosen&#13;
for yourself requires long,&#13;
hard, expensive training.&#13;
Now we are in a position to&#13;
give you some help. Mail in&#13;
the coupon at your earliest&#13;
convenience for more detailed&#13;
information.&#13;
&lt; Scholarship:&#13;
Mux A&#13;
J'niv'vrsal City. Texas 7H14S&#13;
I desire information for&#13;
C-CN-43&#13;
El&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
n« |&#13;
Army n Navy J~| Air K.irce&#13;
MdliralyOstonpathic H Dental&#13;
V.'Urinary • I'o.liatry*&#13;
Other ( I'lease specify )&#13;
N&#13;
S.ic. S.'i* " ,&#13;
i please print 1&#13;
A.I.I.&#13;
file&#13;
T.. itia.h.ate&#13;
ISi-hoiill&#13;
' Month 1 ( Year) (DeimO&#13;
1 Month 1 (Day) (Year)&#13;
* y n,it a v uilahlt' in Ail- K.ircc I'l-onrcm.&#13;
BASEBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Spring 1973&#13;
April 4, Wed. - Dominican - Away (2) l';00&#13;
April 11, Wed. - D ominican - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
April 14, Sat. • UW-Whitewater - H ome (2) 1$:00&#13;
April 16, Mon. - S t. Norbert - Home (2) 12:00&#13;
April 19, Thurs. • Northland - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
April 30, Mon. - UW-Madison (JV's) - Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 4, Fri. - Waukesha Tech - Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 6, Sun. - UW-Madison (JV's) - Home (2) 12:00&#13;
May 8, Tues. - Milw. Tech (MATIC) -Away (2) 1:00&#13;
May 10, Thurs. - Milw. Tech (MATC) - Home (2) 1:00&#13;
All home games will be played at UW-P baseball field located on campus.&#13;
freshmen Dave Marino and Pete&#13;
Putra for the open shortstop&#13;
position.&#13;
In the outfield, where no one&#13;
has hit consistently this spring,&#13;
the battle ranges between lettermen&#13;
Scott Nelson (.260), Jeff&#13;
Koleske (.290) and freshmen Jeff&#13;
Hamon, Bill Blaha, Mike Cook&#13;
and several other players.&#13;
Oberbruner indicated, "The&#13;
name of t he game in college ball&#13;
is hitting and whoever hits will&#13;
play."&#13;
Oberbruner said his strongest&#13;
position, at this moment, would&#13;
have to be at catcher, where Tim&#13;
Elston and freshman Andy Vacca&#13;
are battling for the starting nod.&#13;
Oberbruner explained that he&#13;
felt the last three weeks have&#13;
been the best weather he has had&#13;
for practices since he became the&#13;
coach. He said the club has a&#13;
good chance to win a "goodly&#13;
number of games" with the&#13;
team's better over-all depth.&#13;
The schedule is in the Rangers'&#13;
favor with the first seven games&#13;
to be played here and only six&#13;
games to be played on the road&#13;
all season.&#13;
Oberbruner feels the stiffest&#13;
opposition this year, will come&#13;
from Whitewater in a&#13;
doubleheader Saturday, April 14&#13;
and then from St. Norbert the&#13;
following Monday plus the pair of&#13;
doubleheaders against the UWMadison-&#13;
JV's.&#13;
Ruggers win 1st&#13;
game of the season&#13;
On April l the Parkside ruggers&#13;
traveled to Purdue - North&#13;
Central in Indiana and there&#13;
picked up their first victory of the&#13;
young season by the score of 20-8.&#13;
Scoring honors go to Keith&#13;
Bosman who scored twice including&#13;
picking up a misplayed&#13;
Purdue ball and racing 80 yards&#13;
for the second of his scores. Other&#13;
tries for Parkside came on runs&#13;
by John Ble§hka and John van&#13;
Vleet. Two of the scores were&#13;
converted, one by Keith Bosman&#13;
and the other by Eric Olson. Two&#13;
tries were scored for Purdue. The&#13;
next game will be played April 7&#13;
at Northwestern.&#13;
IVEEAT&#13;
I N T HE C OMFORT&#13;
OF Y OUR C AR&#13;
"""X &gt;&#13;
• PAPA B URGER . MAMA B URGER&#13;
• TEEN B URGER . BABY B URGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE GALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH $5.00 ORDER&#13;
Vi MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Tennis faces tough schedule&#13;
by B.D. RASMUSSEN&#13;
RECREATION A L HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday.. All extra-curricular play will&#13;
be restricted to times that the&#13;
varsity tennis and gym classes&#13;
will not be using the courts.&#13;
The rules governing play are:&#13;
two, three, or four players must&#13;
occupy the courts: courts may be&#13;
reserved two days in advance;&#13;
and the reservation must include&#13;
the first and last names of the&#13;
participants. Reservations for&#13;
courts one and six may be made&#13;
in person or by phone, but&#13;
reservations for other courts&#13;
must be made in person, and&#13;
players may reserve the courts&#13;
for only one time per day. A ten&#13;
minute "grace period" will apply&#13;
to each court. Any court not&#13;
reserved is open for free play and&#13;
during "prime time" doubles&#13;
players will receive priority.&#13;
Players are not permitted to&#13;
wear street shoes on the court.&#13;
Reservations are to be made at&#13;
the issue desk in the PE Building.&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
30 (2 courts open)&#13;
: 00 (1 court open)&#13;
(restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
8:00a.m.-10:00&#13;
from 10:30-12:00for cle&#13;
except Tuesday &amp; Thursday closed&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday..&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL&#13;
PLAY-OFFS&#13;
Starting Sunday, Spril 8&#13;
6:30 p.m. Olympians vs. Mercury&#13;
Comets&#13;
Herblius Superblius vs. Rebels&#13;
7:30 p.m. Flash vs. Deke's Boys&#13;
Sheeters vs. Bold Ones&#13;
8:30 p.m. Semi-Finals&#13;
Dick Frecka&#13;
With spring sports beginning to&#13;
occupy more of the students time,&#13;
a reservation system has been&#13;
started for the courts just east of&#13;
the PE Building, according to&#13;
tennis coach Dick Frecka. fillip Finals and Consolation Finals&#13;
will be played Wednesday, April&#13;
11. Times will be announced&#13;
later. The&#13;
Mat Maids^ present&#13;
CL Dance&#13;
The Starboys&#13;
SATURDAY APRIL 17&#13;
. 9p.m. -1 a.m.&#13;
$D° ^&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
April l&#13;
North Court - volleyball&#13;
reserved Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
2:00-4:30. Rest of building open.&#13;
April 8&#13;
CYO Swim Meet 1:00-4:30. Pool&#13;
closed until 5:00; rest of building&#13;
open.&#13;
Joe Biebel and John Tank&#13;
traveled to the Martini-Rossi&#13;
world invitational fencing meet&#13;
in New York City the weekend of&#13;
March 24, and when they came&#13;
back, a few more people knew&#13;
where Parkside was.&#13;
Tank made his way to the&#13;
second round before being&#13;
defeated, but it was Biebel that&#13;
caught the most attention as he&#13;
battled his way to the semi-finals&#13;
before submitting defeat. One of&#13;
Biebel's victims along the way&#13;
was Dr. Jeno Kamuti, of&#13;
Hungary, who was the silver&#13;
medal winner in the Olympics at&#13;
Munich last year.&#13;
Wauwatosa, Wis. where they both&#13;
studied under the same coach&#13;
and many times battled each&#13;
April 14&#13;
Don Jacoby concert at 8:00&#13;
building closes at 5:00.&#13;
3l^^^(Parksideand Wis. I.D.'srequired)&#13;
•w Student Activities Building ^ April 15&#13;
Band concert - UWP concert&#13;
band at 8:00; building closes at&#13;
6:00.&#13;
April 17 CLASSIFIED&#13;
Friedman at 8:00; building closes&#13;
at 5:30.&#13;
Tj—'/ Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles (-&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
T^^aaand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Cardffi&#13;
Sx&gt;w/y with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning \2E5&gt;{&#13;
jfflqffi~NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha^®"^&#13;
9/A®?i$-tWi ESTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine j&#13;
*4mRAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 R apids Dr., Racind&#13;
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer \&#13;
Expires Sept. 5,1973&#13;
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished&#13;
apartment near Parkside. Utilities and heat&#13;
included, S130. 654-7341&#13;
1972 Kustom 500 Amp. Excellent condition.&#13;
List $1700. $950 or best offer. Call 633-6191&#13;
after 5.&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
1969 Camaro economical, 3-speed, Orange,&#13;
black vinyl top. $1295.00, 694-6277. Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thursday 11-8&#13;
For Sale: 1970 Camaro Rally Sport, 21,000&#13;
miles, snow tires included. Call Parkside&#13;
extension 2360.&#13;
NAME 8. ADDRESS&#13;
Termpapers Typed&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches 0150 after 5 p.m.&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six Packs To Go&#13;
contact Kris Wright 632&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
CLASSIFIED AD VERTISING O RDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number pf words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
NAME it to run. A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
PHONE NO .&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
— IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP AND 21st ( ALMOST)&#13;
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P.E. Bldg. Schedule ^ *1,73 ™E PARKS'DE RANGER"&#13;
12 ™E PARKS,DE "ANGER Wed., Apri! 4, ,973&#13;
/&#13;
V *&#13;
&lt;$v&#13;
ABC . Atlantic • MGM . Nonesuch . Cadet . Blue Note . Pacific&#13;
Jan . Reprise . Warner Brothers . Elektra . Columbia . Immediate&#13;
• Angel • Turnabout • Vanguard • Sta* • Atco • Gordy • Mace •&#13;
DISTRIBUTORS OVERSTOCK SALE!&#13;
HUNDREDS O F L ABELS &amp; ARTISTS INCLUDING&#13;
Everest . Blue Note . Music Guild . Westminster . Command .&#13;
RCA . Chess . Verve . World Pacific . Ounhill . Westminster Gold .&#13;
Impulse • and many others.&#13;
Thelonius Monk . Cream . B. J. Thomas . Mamas &amp; Papas . John&#13;
Mayall . Laurindo Almeida . Sabicas . Eric Clapton . Joan Baei .&#13;
Aretha Franklin . Odetto . John Coltrane . Louis Armstrong . Fifth&#13;
Dimension • Bee Gees • Pittsburgh Symphony • Dionne Warwick •&#13;
Ramsey Lewis • London Symphony • Julian Bream • Wes Montgomery&#13;
• New York Pro Musica . Tim Buckley . William Steinberg . Josef&#13;
Krips • Eddie Harris . Tom Paxton • and many others.&#13;
It NOW O NLY I.9o Schwann&#13;
Cat. List&#13;
4.98 to 6.98&#13;
J4ZZ&#13;
QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! NO DEALERS PLEASE!&#13;
SCORE AGAIN!! CLASSICAL BOX SET VALUES&#13;
WHILE THEY LAST! HURRY IN TODAY FOR BEST SELECTION&#13;
»VSTRAVINSKY&#13;
HIS FINEST MUSIC&#13;
4 Record Set f&#13;
Value to $24.00 Q&#13;
$&#13;
mn i \u&gt;t n\n&#13;
f t&#13;
BRUCKNER —&#13;
SYMPHONY NO. 7&#13;
2 Record Set m ••&#13;
Value to SI 0.00 / '&#13;
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR&#13;
5 Record Set&#13;
Value to S25.00 L *f8&#13;
TCHAIKOVSKY&#13;
HIS FINEST MUSIC&#13;
3 Record Set only • ol&#13;
Value to SI 8.00 5&#13;
JULIAN BREAM&#13;
THE CLASSICAL GUITAR&#13;
3 Record Set&#13;
Value to $15.00 4 TB&#13;
* vS»-X\&amp;.&#13;
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AN ANTHOLOGY&#13;
FOLK MUSIC&#13;
5 Record Set&#13;
Value to $25.00&#13;
OF&#13;
AaAnthaiotcyttiYt&amp;t Music&#13;
SALE STARTS WED., T ODAY AND ENDS APRIL 18&#13;
BEETHOVEN SYMPHONI&#13;
8 Record Set only _ ,&#13;
Value to $44.50 9&#13;
THE BEST OF THE BLUES&#13;
3 Record Sat&#13;
Value to $18.00 £ .f 8&#13;
JOHANN STRAUSS&#13;
3 Record Set only _&#13;
Value to $18.00 4&#13;
HW1</text>
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              <text>The Big Band Sound comes to Parkside</text>
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              <text>The Big Band Sound conies to Parkside&#13;
North Texas State Band&#13;
Tr . North Texas State&#13;
University's world-famous Lab&#13;
Band, winner of 38 awards for&#13;
bands and individual performers&#13;
aLnaVonal Jazz festivals and&#13;
official "Big Band" at the 1970&#13;
Montreux, Switzerland, International&#13;
Jazz Festival, will&#13;
appear in concert at Parkside&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
gymnasium at 2 p.m. on Sunday&#13;
April 15.&#13;
General admission is $2; admission&#13;
for persons with student&#13;
ID is $l. High school groups interested&#13;
in arranging block&#13;
seating should contact Ed&#13;
Knestmg, Office of School and&#13;
Campus Relations, at Parkside.&#13;
Tickets are available at the&#13;
Parkside Information Center and&#13;
at the door.&#13;
The Parkside Stage Band&#13;
directed by Robert Thomason,'&#13;
who received his masters degree&#13;
from North Texas and is a former&#13;
Lab Band member, will present a&#13;
"pre-concert concert" prior to&#13;
ihe Lab Band performance.&#13;
The Texas Lab Band, directed&#13;
by Leon Breeden, has a number&#13;
of "firsts" to its credit including&#13;
first big band from a university to&#13;
perform by presidential invitation&#13;
at the White House (with&#13;
Duke Ellington and Stan Getz as&#13;
guest soloists), first jazz group of&#13;
any kind to perform for the&#13;
National Assn. of Secondary&#13;
School Principals national&#13;
convention and first big band&#13;
from a university to perform at&#13;
the Music Educators National&#13;
Conference national convention.&#13;
Jazz saxophonist Gerry&#13;
Mulligan called it "the best big&#13;
band I have ever heard" and&#13;
orchestra leader Duke Ellington&#13;
paid the supreme compliment: "I&#13;
wish it were mine."&#13;
The band has toured Mexico&#13;
and Germany and has appeared&#13;
at the Venezuelan Embassy and&#13;
the State Department&#13;
Auditorium in Washington, D.C.,&#13;
at the new Music Center of the&#13;
Los Angeles Center for the&#13;
Performing Arts and at jazz&#13;
festivals throughout the country.&#13;
The group is presently on a&#13;
Midwestern tour and will appear&#13;
at UW-Madison on April 12 and at&#13;
Northwestern University on April&#13;
14 be fore ending the tour with its&#13;
Parkside appearance.&#13;
The Lab Band is an outgrowth&#13;
of the pioneering jazz education&#13;
program began 25 years ago at&#13;
North Texas State University, the&#13;
first school in the nation to offer&#13;
the bachelor of music degree with&#13;
a major in dance band.&#13;
Says jazz trumpeter Clark&#13;
Terry, a featured member of the&#13;
NBC Tonight Show Orchestra, "It&#13;
is impossible to think of the&#13;
progress of jazz in the last 20 to 25&#13;
years without thinking of North&#13;
Texas State University. NTSU is&#13;
the one school that really stuck&#13;
its neck out and made a&#13;
respectable lady out of jazz...And&#13;
look at all the others that have&#13;
followed suit."&#13;
Parkside's "day of music" will&#13;
conclude Sunday evening with a&#13;
free public concert by the&#13;
Parkside Concert Band, directed&#13;
by Bernard Stiner, at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Phy. Ed. Building.&#13;
UW-P concert band&#13;
The 60-member Parkside&#13;
concert band will present its&#13;
annual spring concert at 8 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, April 15, in the&#13;
Physical Education Building.&#13;
BernaVd H. Stiner, assistant&#13;
professor of music, will conduct.&#13;
The band will play Russell&#13;
Alexander's "The Southerner"&#13;
march, Hector Berlioz' "Beatrice&#13;
and Benedict" overture, Modest&#13;
Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an&#13;
Exhibition," Gabriel Pares' "Le&#13;
Voltigeur," Caesar Giovannini's&#13;
"Chorale and Capriccio," Robert&#13;
E. Jager's "Second Suite" and W.&#13;
Francis McBeth's "Masque."&#13;
Parkside's highly regarded&#13;
percussion section will be&#13;
showcased on "Masque," which&#13;
was commissioned in 1967, is&#13;
characterized by intricate rhythm&#13;
arrangements, and was&#13;
featured recently in "Percussion&#13;
Arts Society" magazine.&#13;
He has served as guest conductor,&#13;
clinician and adjudicator&#13;
for many music education groups&#13;
around the country and last&#13;
summer was guest conductor and&#13;
clinician at the noted Interlochen&#13;
(Mich.) Arts Academy. #He has&#13;
been an invited lecturer and&#13;
director at the Universities of&#13;
Illinois, Wisconsin-Madison, and&#13;
Indiana and at Louisiana State&#13;
University.&#13;
Stiner, who took his undergraduate&#13;
work at Southwestern&#13;
(Kans.) College and his&#13;
graduate degree at the&#13;
University of Oklahoma, has&#13;
served on the board of directors&#13;
of the National Band Association&#13;
and is a member of numerous&#13;
p r o f e s s i o n a l m u s i c&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Moy named Dean of SMI&#13;
Wednesday, April 11, 1973 Vol. I, No. 25&#13;
The appointment of William A. Moy as Dean of&#13;
The School of Modern Industry and professor of&#13;
industrial engineering, effective July 1, was approved&#13;
in Madison Friday by the UW System Board&#13;
of Regents.&#13;
Moy has been acting Dean of The School of&#13;
Modern Industry since January, 1972. He came to&#13;
Parkside from the UW-Madison campus where he&#13;
was professor and chairman of the Industrial&#13;
Engineering Department. As a member of the&#13;
Madison faculty since 1958, Moy received four&#13;
"outstanding teaching" awards by engineering&#13;
students.&#13;
The School of Modern Industry (SMI) contains&#13;
interdisciplinary programs in Divisions of&#13;
Engineering Science, Management Science and&#13;
Labor Economics, and is the heart of UWParksideJs&#13;
"industrial society mission," providing&#13;
an educational home for programs which relate&#13;
directly to the dominant economic activity of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
(continued on page 9)&#13;
Friedman to lecture&#13;
here on 'Ufology'&#13;
Dean Wi l l iam Moy&#13;
"Flying Saucers Are Real," an&#13;
illustrated lecture, will be given&#13;
Tuesday, April 17 at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
P.E. Building by Stanton T.&#13;
Friedman, a nuclear physicist,&#13;
lecturer and the only space&#13;
scientist devoting full time to the&#13;
science of "Ufology."&#13;
More than 13 years of study and&#13;
investigation have convinced&#13;
Friedman that Earth is being&#13;
visited by intelligently controlled&#13;
vehicles. His talk covers data&#13;
from several UFO studies,&#13;
misconceptions about UFO's,&#13;
travel to the stars, "humanoids,"&#13;
the arguments of the "educated"&#13;
non-believers, and the "Condon&#13;
Report."&#13;
Friedman took both his&#13;
bachelor and master of science&#13;
degrees in physics from the&#13;
University of Chicago in 1955-56.&#13;
His professional background&#13;
includes 14 years of experience&#13;
concerning nuclear aircraft,&#13;
nuclear rockets, fusion rockets&#13;
and nuclear power plants for&#13;
space and earthbound applications.&#13;
Friedman's professional affiliations&#13;
include the American&#13;
Physical Society, the American&#13;
Nuclear Society, the American&#13;
Institute of Aeronautics and&#13;
Astronautics, and the Air Force&#13;
Assn. He is also director of the&#13;
California UFO Research Institute.&#13;
He has published and presented&#13;
many technical papers and has&#13;
also published articles on Flying&#13;
Saucers in both the popular press&#13;
and professional journals.&#13;
Tickets for the lecture are $1.50&#13;
and are on sale at Bidinger's in&#13;
Kenosha, Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and the Information Center in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
3rd annual Capsule College here a two-day event&#13;
The third annual Capsule Comnlete The third annual Capsule rePiKtratinn in. t„.: , .. . . .._ **&#13;
College at Parkside has been&#13;
expanded into a two-day event-&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday, April&#13;
25 and 26. This is during spring&#13;
break, and students as well as&#13;
people in the community are&#13;
encouraged to attend one or both&#13;
days.&#13;
Capsule College is sponsored&#13;
by Parkside and the University&#13;
Extension. It offers intellectual&#13;
stimulation in the areas of personal&#13;
development, family&#13;
concerns, community and selfunderstanding.&#13;
Deadline for registration is&#13;
Friday, April 13. The registration&#13;
fee of $4.50 for one day or $9 f or&#13;
both includes coffee breaks and&#13;
luncheons. Each day's programs&#13;
will begin at 8:45 a.m. and at 3:30&#13;
p.m. Sessions will be in&#13;
Greenquist Hall and LLC.&#13;
Complete registration information&#13;
is available from the&#13;
University Extension Office in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Program offerings include six&#13;
workshops (2% hours each) and&#13;
40 seminars (75 minutes each) on&#13;
a wide range of subjects. Last&#13;
year's program, which drew&#13;
more than 600 women to the&#13;
campus, offered 19 topics.&#13;
Workshops offered both April&#13;
25 and 26 are: "Is Your Estate&#13;
Tailor-Made?" conducted by&#13;
Louise Young, UW Extension&#13;
specialist in home management&#13;
and family economics; "Exercise&#13;
and Fitness" (including an&#13;
optional dip in the pool) conducted&#13;
by Robert W. Grueninger,&#13;
assistant professor of physical&#13;
education and director of&#13;
P a r k s i d e ' s P e r f o rma n c e&#13;
Laboratory; and "The Language&#13;
of Intimacy," conducted by Jane&#13;
B. Tybring, Extension specialist&#13;
in family relations.&#13;
"The Modern Novel: What&#13;
Next" is a workshop to be offered&#13;
April 25 only, by Robert E.&#13;
Najem, director of the National&#13;
Humanities Series, Midwestern&#13;
(enter, and UW Extension&#13;
professor of French.&#13;
"Why Still Woman's Lib? A&#13;
Woman Philosopher's View" by&#13;
Mary Helgren Johnson, assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"Modern Japanese Culture" by&#13;
Donald Mokelke, Curator of&#13;
Education, Kenosha Public&#13;
Museum, and a teacher of art.in&#13;
Japan for nine years;&#13;
"Handwriting Analysis" by&#13;
Stan Sherman, certified graphoanalyst;&#13;
And, "Removing Roadblocks to&#13;
Education and Careers, or, How I&#13;
Found a New Me Buried Under a&#13;
Pile of Dirty Dishes" by a panel&#13;
including Dorothy Rath, Career&#13;
Planning Director, Carthage&#13;
College; Betty Fearn, Extension&#13;
Adult Education Counselor;&#13;
Joanne Rattan, homemaker&#13;
doing post-baccalaureate work at&#13;
Parkside; Ramona Koch,&#13;
homemaker and Parkside&#13;
student; and Wendy Musich,&#13;
panel moderator and counselor at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Seminars offered April 26 o nly&#13;
are:&#13;
"What's New in the Field of&#13;
OB-BYN?" by Elizabeth Allen&#13;
Steffen, MD, Racine obstetrician&#13;
and gynecologist;&#13;
"Slaying Dragons: Some Insights&#13;
Into Becoming an Effective&#13;
Political Participant" by&#13;
Ann Harbeson, a UW political&#13;
scientist and author of a course in&#13;
American National Government;&#13;
"Ancient and Modern Egypt'''&#13;
by Omar M. Amin, assistant&#13;
professor of life science at&#13;
Parkside, and his wife, Magda El&#13;
Sayed Amin;&#13;
"How to Lead a Group and Like&#13;
It" by Virginia Harnett, an experienced&#13;
speech teacher with a&#13;
background in theater work;&#13;
"Montessori Education" by&#13;
Sister Ruthanne Reed, Rosehart&#13;
Montessori School, Racine;&#13;
"The Single Parent Family" by&#13;
Samuel Stellman, Director,&#13;
Extension Center for Social&#13;
Service;&#13;
"Adding Life to Years" by the&#13;
Rev. Carl A. Becker, Executive&#13;
Director, Lincoln Lutheran of&#13;
Racine;&#13;
(continued on page 8)&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 11, 1973&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Congress must take&#13;
lead on food prices&#13;
Meat is good. Being able to buy it is even better.&#13;
The recent meat boycott dropped meat sales in some&#13;
areas by 70 percent. Though its effectiveness is&#13;
questionable, the fact that so many people joined in the&#13;
effort to lower meat prices indicates the fantastic&#13;
widespread support of this nation's populace.&#13;
Everyone In th is area knows how much the price of&#13;
meat affects his weekly grocery bill. When the prices&#13;
become so high that millions of people are willing to&#13;
sacrifice meat from their week's diet, it is time for&#13;
everyone who can do something about lowering prices to&#13;
do so.&#13;
President Nixon has seen fit to try to stop the rise in&#13;
meat prices. It is time for Congress to take the initiative&#13;
the President didn't have the backbone to take.&#13;
Congress must pass measures to have the price of all&#13;
meat and other food items lowered.&#13;
Congress has proponents of such legislation and it&#13;
may pass. But, the White House has indicated that this&#13;
type of legislation would be vetoed.&#13;
Congress must fight back.&#13;
This is one of the most elemental gripes of almost&#13;
every politician's constituency. This is the one issue that&#13;
all representatives can get together on to over-ride a&#13;
presidential veto.&#13;
We need good food to eat at reasonable prices. We&#13;
hope legislators realize that they now have the support&#13;
to carry out what they want to do-lower food prices.&#13;
4-bi-A-hl-l-SBY&#13;
[Rudy LiENati&#13;
This week's Editor's Notebook has a new look thanks to Amy Cundari,&#13;
a staff artist and very good friend.&#13;
But this week the look won't be the only difference. I'd like to&#13;
mention a few ideas which concern both the paper and the reader.&#13;
Our advertisers have been experimenting with many types of ads. A&#13;
popularly used gimmick is the coupon. In many cases coupons have&#13;
been very effective, but in all cases coupon ads have been a savings to&#13;
those readers who have used them.&#13;
In these days of high prices it behooves every reader to use any&#13;
money-saving ad to its optimum. It makes sense to use all the media&#13;
and advertisements contained in those media when buying products or&#13;
services.&#13;
Every week the RANGER offers many bargains. Some are&#13;
available because the advertiser has decided to give the Parkside&#13;
student a break. In other cases advertisers have decided to use the&#13;
RANGER as a supplemental outlet for their advertising.&#13;
In both cases the advertiser is spending money on a service to the&#13;
RANGER reader. Without them we would not exist.&#13;
It will benefit all concerned to use coupons and patronize RANGER&#13;
advertisers.&#13;
Applications for the&#13;
position of editor-in-chief&#13;
for the 1973-74 RANGER&#13;
are now being accepted by&#13;
the newspaper's advisory&#13;
board.&#13;
All Parkside students&#13;
who will be carrying at&#13;
least eight hours per&#13;
semester are eligible to&#13;
apply for the position,&#13;
which is made on a September&#13;
to May basis.&#13;
Each candidate is asked&#13;
to submit details of his&#13;
journalistic experience&#13;
and a statement of his&#13;
plans for the RANGER to&#13;
Don Kopriva, Adviser to&#13;
Student Publications, by&#13;
Friday, April 13, at D-194&#13;
LLC.&#13;
The advisory board will&#13;
interview candidates&#13;
Tuesday, April 17, and&#13;
announce its selection&#13;
before spring break.&#13;
Bingo!?&#13;
Women are free-to play bingo! (Men, too.) Wisconsin&#13;
citizens decided two issues last week, voting to legalize&#13;
bingo and voting against the proposed constitutional&#13;
amendment reading, "Equality of rights or equal&#13;
protection under the law shall not be denied or abridged&#13;
on the basis of sex."&#13;
We find it deplorable that this latter proposal was&#13;
rejected. Carole Vopat, assistant professor of English,&#13;
in her keynote address for Parkside's Women's Day,&#13;
spoke of " freedoms which must be voted into existence&#13;
because up to now they have not existed." Today, April&#13;
11, 1973, t hey still do not exist.&#13;
The failure of this amendment to pass has a number of&#13;
roots. Opponents said it would undermine the traditional&#13;
roles of the family unit and nullify statutes designed to&#13;
protect women from sexual and job abuse. This simply&#13;
would not have been true. The state would not interfere&#13;
in a viable marriage or family situation; protection&#13;
statutes would not be nullified but expanded to include&#13;
men.&#13;
What many people failed to realize was that this Jaw&#13;
would have provided a constitutional guarantee that&#13;
men and women would be treated as individuals, with&#13;
unique capacities, preferences and abilities, and not as&#13;
members of separate classes, divided by gender. The&#13;
principle of equal justice under the law which has&#13;
guided this country for almost two centuries has not, in&#13;
fact, ever been fully realized.&#13;
Are people afraid of admitting that all members of the&#13;
human race are equal in worth and therefore deserve&#13;
equality of opportunity? Do people honestly believe that&#13;
one person should have greater rights under the law&#13;
than another? A country that allows its ideology to be&#13;
undermined by such practices is creating an&#13;
aristocracy, an elite, and perpetuating a class division&#13;
that is polarizing our society in terms of sex.&#13;
Where do we go from here? The federal Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment (which Wisconsin voters have already&#13;
ratified) will take a number of years yet to be enacted&#13;
and indeed appears to be in trouble due to a misguided,&#13;
uninformed backlash. While women are not the sole&#13;
benefactors of such human rights as this would provide,&#13;
they are the ones who most feel that the forces of oppression&#13;
are proceeding with amazing diligency. The&#13;
women's movement, in an attempt to create a counterbacklash,&#13;
may become more militant and impatient. We&#13;
feel they would be justified, for until this nation extends&#13;
to everyone in practice what it claims for them in&#13;
theory, we are living a lie.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphy&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred Lawrence&#13;
s,psm"Hel™'Kan'0,11&#13;
A D ? S ? ! V l N S E S T A F K F e n £ G r w X i t o n&#13;
ADV^E^tf Don Kopriv. ^ K*" ««"»' • ""dvTl.Su&#13;
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Lexington Ave., New York, N. x\ 10017 !&#13;
Wed., April 11, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
THORN&#13;
By Konkol We get letters...&#13;
'°thC Segreg3ted WhiCh&#13;
2i3F cultural nature 1^?™mittee sP°nsors performances on campus of a&#13;
stadem orienteH P u a™,!' y duPlicates student-oriented Parkside Activities Board the efforts of the more&#13;
~7n*£^S PU' °" by 'he L&amp;FA c°«""i"ee have not&#13;
th,is column' due t0 la&lt;* °f ®Pa«&#13;
,, y' so ^ue a bit of reluctance on my part to discuss the&#13;
Whin V pe°? wh,°feel stron§1y in fav°r of the L&amp;FA Committee.&#13;
of the llnir S3 C!! " °f this type' you tend t0 bruise the feelings&#13;
"took* nn «? • er. ousslon and some people tend to take my attacks&#13;
on their previously aloof citadels personally&#13;
wnVnh flly tK,P°J)U,1f,r °pinion' 1 d0 not stick thorns in people just to&#13;
riahfc * S JUSt that as self-aPPointed crusader for student&#13;
21 sojJ}etimes my pen leaves spatters of blood. I hold the opinion&#13;
that anything which is bad for the students must be disposed of and&#13;
any bastion which trys to withhold or take something away from the&#13;
students must be stormed.&#13;
To return from digression, I was discussing the L&amp;FA Committee.&#13;
Afterholdmg off to steel myself for the confrontation, I finally contacted&#13;
Frances Bedford, Chairperson of the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Brakhage6 relati°n t0 150111 1116 Irish P°ets program and Stan&#13;
She thought I might be disappointed because both these recent&#13;
performances were "not costing the students one red cent." From&#13;
what I gather, they were funded by university money but not through&#13;
the segregated fee. Just where the money came from, if indeed any&#13;
was spent, is uncertain since the business office has no record of anv&#13;
such expenditure.&#13;
Contrary to the thought that I might be disappointed by the news, I&#13;
was happy to hear it. I am all for bringing programs to Parkside that&#13;
do not cost money. "&#13;
So, instead of sticking it to the L&amp;FA Committee this week, I must&#13;
give them a well-deserved well done for this method of operation. This&#13;
method of operation is to be commended and should be pursued.&#13;
I was talking to Marty Gregory, who coordinates the programs in&#13;
the Whiteskellar, and he would like to point out that to date this school&#13;
year, there have been about 44 hours of entertainment put on at the&#13;
cost of about $479 with about 1,200 students attending, at a cost to&#13;
students of about 40 cents each. These programs are put on as a service&#13;
to students primarily during the school day. All programs should&#13;
be as cheap.&#13;
The distinguished teacher award nominations have achieved twice&#13;
as much response as last year. This is a participation level of about 1V2&#13;
percent. So far, not so good.&#13;
Keep Tuesday-evening open on your calendar. That is for the lecture&#13;
by Stanton Friedman. Tickets cost a reasonable $1 for students and&#13;
are available at the Information Center in Tallent Hall or through the&#13;
Activities Office. General Admission is $1.50 and these tickets are&#13;
available through Cook-Gere in Racine or Bidinger's in Kenosha.&#13;
Those people who would like to hear Friedman talk during the day&#13;
may get his schedule through the Activities Office.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
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To IT AS XA^AS S { If&#13;
By Gary Huck&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
While visiting the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Pa rkside Library on&#13;
Friday, March 30,1 inadvertently&#13;
left my wallet and prescription&#13;
glasses in a public area of the&#13;
library. By the time I discovered&#13;
my loss and returned to search&#13;
for them, they were gone.&#13;
The following morning,&#13;
Margaret Williamson, a Parkside&#13;
student from Kenosha, called at&#13;
my home in Madison to tell me&#13;
she had found them. My relief&#13;
and appreciation of her integrity&#13;
in this must not, I feel, be left&#13;
unheralded.&#13;
Thank you, Margaret, for&#13;
reaffirming my feeling of pride&#13;
and appreciation of humanity in&#13;
general, and students in particular.&#13;
Nancy H. Marshall&#13;
Director, Wisconsin Interlibrary&#13;
Loan Service&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
WHEREAS our banner was&#13;
demolished and;&#13;
WHEREAS our attempt to&#13;
confiscate the bell was thwarted;&#13;
BE IT RESOLVED that the&#13;
brothers of Sigma Pi Fraternity&#13;
of the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside do formally declare&#13;
war on the Brothers of Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda Fraternity.&#13;
ARTICLES OF WAR:&#13;
I. All Alpha Kappa Lambdas&#13;
are "RATS" and shall be called&#13;
Same by all Sigma Pi's.&#13;
II. All Alpha Kappa Lambda's&#13;
shall be soundly beaten about the&#13;
head on all competition between&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda and Sigma&#13;
Pi.&#13;
III. Since all Alpha Kappa&#13;
Lambdas are "RATS" humane&#13;
treatment is not called for.&#13;
IV. Prisoners of War shall&#13;
receive cheese and water only.&#13;
V. Termination of this war&#13;
shall be contingent upon PEACE&#13;
WITH HONOR.&#13;
Signed,&#13;
The Brothers of Sigma Pi&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
If you will most graciously&#13;
grant me your undying attention&#13;
for but a few moments, I will&#13;
report to you a subject that will&#13;
take but, only a few brief&#13;
moments to describe. The main&#13;
reason being for the statement&#13;
made above, is undoubtedly&#13;
because of the lack of substantial&#13;
material and adequate accomplishments&#13;
by the subject in&#13;
question. The subject of course, is&#13;
the so-called, semi, part-time,&#13;
active Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
Fraternity. Now, as I have beard&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda is the more&#13;
established, or should I say, more&#13;
ancient fraternity on campus,&#13;
simply because they have been&#13;
on campus longer and also&#13;
because, of their outdated,&#13;
roaring 20's ideas concerning&#13;
fraternal accomplishments ancf&#13;
student activities. Now truthfully,&#13;
I have no right to hassle this&#13;
so-called, highly established&#13;
organization, consisting of an&#13;
awesome amount of 23, or is it 22&#13;
members? I mean, if their idea of&#13;
a heavy student activity is an&#13;
income tax helping session, in&#13;
relation to a blast in the Union&#13;
with the Convention on a&#13;
Saturday night, well, then that's&#13;
their bag, Kiddo, you know, 23&#13;
skidoo and all that hep, neato&#13;
stuff. But, seriously now and with&#13;
kidding aside, if you want to join&#13;
a fraternity with ideas and&#13;
reforms that resemble those of&#13;
medieval Europe, then join Alpha&#13;
Kappa Lambda. It's the cat's&#13;
meow.&#13;
John Sacket Jr.&#13;
Publicity Chairman&#13;
Sigma Pi Fraternity&#13;
To the Ranger:&#13;
November 7th was a day of&#13;
infamy. Now once again a large&#13;
number of fools and macho bigots&#13;
went to the polls and voted for&#13;
inequality, pseudo-morality and&#13;
just plain stupidity. The defeat of&#13;
the Wisconsin Equal Rights&#13;
Amendment is a victory for the&#13;
mentally backward or culturally&#13;
handicapped. But to a lot of&#13;
progressive people we all are&#13;
brothers and sisters with brains,&#13;
feelings, human needs and a soul.&#13;
Don't think for a minute that&#13;
this setback will slide either, for&#13;
you who said "no" to this&#13;
amendment have only&#13;
strengthened the will of those&#13;
oppressed and held back by&#13;
sexism and greed. The women&#13;
and men believing in basic&#13;
human dignity and personal selfdetermination&#13;
will fight all the&#13;
harder against the continuing&#13;
forces which hold everyone back&#13;
from fulfillment and happiness.&#13;
We apparently need a reeducation&#13;
and a turning away&#13;
from selfishness. .&#13;
The voters feef gambling with&#13;
Bingo cards comes before fair&#13;
treatment under law. April 3rd is&#13;
now another day of infamy. But,&#13;
we have lost a battle but we will&#13;
win the war.&#13;
Dave Myer&#13;
© the&#13;
Movement&#13;
Editor's Note: "The Movement" is a regular feature in RANGER to&#13;
deal with women's concerns. Guest writers are invited. This week's&#13;
article is from UW-Madison's News and Publications Service.&#13;
MOST WOMEN STILL 'SKIRT' ENGINEERING ATUW-MADISON&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Madison College of Engineering, like&#13;
others across the country, has a problem women's liberation may help&#13;
solve. The problem is shrinking enrollment.&#13;
In September,'1965, there were 736 freshmen in a College of&#13;
Engineering undergraduate student body totalling 2,456.&#13;
Last fall, of 1,913 engineering undergraduates, 348 were freshmenand&#13;
only 23 were women.&#13;
Nonchalance within engineering faculties over the scarcity of&#13;
women in their classes and among their peers is changing to concern,&#13;
for women represent an almost untapped pool of potential engineering&#13;
students: last spring, United States schools of engineering averaged&#13;
out to being only .82 percent female.&#13;
But steering women to the engineering,campus isn't easy, says&#13;
engineering education Prof. Lois Greenfield, lone woman on the UWMadison&#13;
College of Engineering faculty, because the steering-away&#13;
process begins early.&#13;
"In our society, little girls are given dolls to play with, not erector&#13;
sets," she notes. Young women who excel in math or science in high&#13;
school meet with " 'Aha! You should be a nurse!' or 'Aha! You should&#13;
be a science teacher,' always the traditional roles. Often, counselors&#13;
never consider the prospect of a girl going into engineering."&#13;
The UW engineering faculty seeks to attract freshmen by means of&#13;
an informal outreach program in state schools. But tbe professors who&#13;
speak before bleachers full of high school students are usually men.&#13;
"I don't think we know how to present our work properly for girls,"&#13;
muses Associate Dean John L. Asmuth.&#13;
"Role models," (women other women copy), for would-be women&#13;
engineers are hard to come by. Hiring women to fill faculty positions&#13;
in the College of Engineering would be desirable, Asmuth says, but&#13;
points out that parsimonious budget-makers aren't likely to be impressed&#13;
by pleas for more professors to teach declining numbers of&#13;
engineering students.&#13;
Then, too, there's no glut of women engineering professors to hire.&#13;
If a woman were determined to find reasons not to go into&#13;
engineering, she could. "Current myth has it that the 'half-life' of an&#13;
engineer-the time it takes for half of what he learned in school to&#13;
become obsolete--is from five to 10 years," says Prof. Greenfield.&#13;
"That means a woman who's serious about her profession can't take&#13;
a complete time-out for five to 10 years while she gets her family&#13;
started. She has to look at the possibility of continuing in a professional&#13;
role at least part-time while her children are young;"&#13;
But refreshing stale knowledge, will be imperative for male&#13;
engineers, too, in the future. "Technical renewal is becoming painfully&#13;
necessary," says Dean Asmuth. "I think engineering is going to&#13;
have to face the re-training problem for engineers of both sexes, at&#13;
about the same time"&#13;
Jaclyn Horsfall, 21, of Madison, originally planned to be an English&#13;
teacher. "But one day my father (a state civil engineer) said to me,&#13;
'Look, kid. One-half the drivers in the world are women, but all the&#13;
road designers are men.' He wanted me to design roads with a&#13;
'woman's touch,' " she recalls.&#13;
"For a long time, I said 'No way,' but the more I thought about it, the&#13;
better it looked," she says. She's now a junior in civil and environmental&#13;
engineering.&#13;
This year the governing organization of student professional&#13;
engineering societies, Polygon Board, elected its first woman&#13;
president, Cheryl Brandt of West Allis, a chemical engineering senior.&#13;
Several members of the engineering faculty sent the National&#13;
Science Foundation a proposal early this year. They wanted money to&#13;
conduct a special summer engineering clinic for high school girls&#13;
whose propensities in math and science might lead them to consider&#13;
engineering as a career-if they found out about it in time.&#13;
The NSF, with budget troubles of i ts own, turned down the grant last&#13;
week, says Prof. Greenfield.&#13;
4 t h e PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 11, 1973&#13;
Water Pollution Control covered in Lake Alert conference&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
The first topic covered at the&#13;
Lake Michigan Alert Conference&#13;
was the Federal Water Pollution&#13;
Control Act Amendments of 1 972.&#13;
According to the Water&#13;
Pollution Control Handbook by&#13;
Barbara Reid and Gus Speth, The&#13;
Project on Clean Water of the&#13;
Natural Resources Defense&#13;
Council was established to&#13;
monitor the implementation of&#13;
this act and to watchdog the U.S.&#13;
Environmental Protection&#13;
Agency which is charged with the&#13;
bulk of the federal responsibility.&#13;
The Project also intends to&#13;
offer advice and assistance to&#13;
citizens around the country who&#13;
desire to monitor the per-&#13;
Wisconsin poet Edna Meudt of&#13;
Dodgeville, the author of four&#13;
volumes of poetry and winner of&#13;
numerous awards and honors for&#13;
her work, has scheduled&#13;
programs at two area institutions.&#13;
She will read from her work at&#13;
8 p.m. on Thursday in the second&#13;
floor library lounge in a program&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum and will conduct a&#13;
workshop at 10:30 a.m. on Friday&#13;
in the International Room at&#13;
Dominican, The College of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mrs. Meudt's books include&#13;
"Round River Canticle," "In No&#13;
Strange Land," "No One Sings&#13;
Face Down" and the justpublished&#13;
"The Inelectable Sea."&#13;
She also is represented in a&#13;
Parkside pianist&#13;
in recital&#13;
here Thursday&#13;
Pianist August Wegner of&#13;
Parkside music faculty will be&#13;
joined by guest artists&#13;
Christopher M. Bonds, violinist,&#13;
and Phyllis Bonds, soprano, in a&#13;
free public recital at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday in Room 103,&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Wegner, who joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty last fall, has&#13;
performed a number of solo piano&#13;
recitals and has made several&#13;
appearances at composers'&#13;
symposia. He received his MBE&#13;
and MA degrees in choral music&#13;
and piano at Central Michigan&#13;
University and an MFA in&#13;
composition and piano and a Ph.-&#13;
D. in composition at the&#13;
University of Iowa where he&#13;
taught prior to coming to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Mr. Bonds, who also is a&#13;
composer as well as a performing&#13;
artist, is acting chairman of the&#13;
music department at Carroll&#13;
College. He has been violinist&#13;
with the Phoenix Symphony and&#13;
concertmaster of the Elmira&#13;
(N.Y.) Symphony. He received&#13;
bachelors and masters degrees in&#13;
music from Arizona State&#13;
University and a Ph.D. from the&#13;
University of Iowa.&#13;
Ms. Bonds, who has performed&#13;
at Arizona State, Elmira and&#13;
Carroll, received bachelors and&#13;
masters degrees at Arizona and&#13;
studied with former Metropolitan&#13;
Opera performer Josephine&#13;
Antoine and with Louise Baker&#13;
and Lois Fisher.&#13;
formance of their state water&#13;
pollution control boards and&#13;
agencies which are also given&#13;
powers under the Act.&#13;
Reid, head of Clean Water&#13;
Project of the National&#13;
Resources Defense Council, read&#13;
the basic goals of the act, which&#13;
are "to restore and maintain the&#13;
chemical, physical and biological&#13;
integrity of the Nation's waters."&#13;
After reading the goals, Reid's&#13;
speech concentrated mostly upon&#13;
the explanation of the standards&#13;
for waste emissions and the&#13;
permits which will be issued of&#13;
dischargers of waste under the&#13;
Act. She also frequently urged&#13;
that people take it upon themselves&#13;
to assist the imnumber&#13;
of anthologies and&#13;
journals.&#13;
She is a member of the faculty&#13;
of The Rhinelander School of&#13;
Arts, one of the country's major&#13;
summer writers' workshops, and&#13;
has been featured poet at the&#13;
Deep South Writers Conference&#13;
and judge of many national&#13;
poetry writing competitions.&#13;
She is a charter member of the&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Writers&#13;
Stanley Russell Craig Jr., a&#13;
Parkside student from Kenosha,&#13;
has been awarded an honorable&#13;
mention in competition for the&#13;
1973 Danforth Foundation&#13;
Fellowships. The fellowships are&#13;
awarded annually to outstanding&#13;
students who plan to complete&#13;
doctoral degrees with the career&#13;
goal of teaching in higher&#13;
education institutions.&#13;
Craig, one of Parkside's first&#13;
four Danforth nominees, was&#13;
among six students from&#13;
Wisconsin universities who&#13;
received honorable mention. The&#13;
others are from UW-Oshkosh&#13;
(one), UW-Madison (two) and&#13;
Marquette University (two).&#13;
Wisconsin's only 1973 Danforth&#13;
fellow, David Krause of Hartford,&#13;
also is from Marquette.&#13;
MAY 4-6&#13;
&gt; Tickets&#13;
$5.00 for Derby Ticket&#13;
^$2.50 pre-Derby Concert&#13;
advance sale ticket&#13;
($4.00 at the door)&#13;
piementation of the Act.&#13;
"Public participation in the&#13;
development, revision, and enforcement&#13;
of any regulation,&#13;
standard, effluent limitation,&#13;
plan or program established by&#13;
the Administrator or any state&#13;
under this Act shall be provided&#13;
for, encouraged, and assisted by&#13;
the Administrator and the States.&#13;
The Administrator, in&#13;
cooperation with the States, shall&#13;
develop and publish regulations&#13;
specifying minimum guidelines&#13;
for public participation in such&#13;
processes." (FWPCA Section&#13;
101(e))&#13;
Reid explained the effluent&#13;
requirements, the 1977 and 1983&#13;
deadlines and the technologically&#13;
based standards set up by the&#13;
Act.&#13;
Assn. and of the Wisconsin&#13;
Fellowship of Poets. She also has&#13;
been an officer of the National&#13;
Federation of State Poetry&#13;
Societies, Inc., the National&#13;
League of American Pen Women&#13;
and the American Poetry&#13;
League.&#13;
In 1970, she was the recipient of&#13;
the Governor's Award in the&#13;
Arts.&#13;
uraig will graduate from&#13;
Parkside in May with a double&#13;
major in chemistry and&#13;
management science. He plans&#13;
graduate studies in chemistry&#13;
and has been offered teaching&#13;
assistantships at both Princeton&#13;
and Harvard Universities.&#13;
Craig, his wife Susan and their&#13;
young son live at 1715 - 19th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha. Mrs. Craig is a member&#13;
of the Parkside English faculty.&#13;
His parents, the senior Craigs,&#13;
live at 311 Wilnette Spring Drive,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
The Danforth Foundation this&#13;
year awarded about 100&#13;
fellowships and 265 honorable&#13;
mentions from among more than&#13;
2,000 candidates nominated by&#13;
undergraduate institutions from&#13;
throughout the United States.&#13;
Lodging t hru the&#13;
co-opergtion of the&#13;
University of Louisville: (&#13;
$1 per day includes&#13;
• coffee, donuts &lt;&#13;
• shower&#13;
• bring own sleeping bag1&#13;
Section 301 of the Act&#13;
establishes national deadlines for&#13;
the achievement of certain levels&#13;
of pollution control from all&#13;
major sources of pollution. The&#13;
first deadline requires that industrial&#13;
sources of p ollution must&#13;
achieve the "best practicable&#13;
control technology economically&#13;
available" and municipal&#13;
facilities must attain "best&#13;
practicable waste treatment&#13;
technology." This deadline is set&#13;
for July 1, 1983.&#13;
According to Reid, the Environmental&#13;
Protection Agency&#13;
(EPA) has the authority to define&#13;
effluent standards for each industrial&#13;
category, such as steel,&#13;
or papermills. There are 27&#13;
major categories.&#13;
The EPA's final guidelines will&#13;
be available in October '73.&#13;
The technologically based&#13;
standards will insure that if&#13;
pollution is capable of being&#13;
cleaned up, industries and&#13;
municipal systems must do it.&#13;
Reid also stated that the&#13;
highest water quality standards&#13;
set for a river or stream must be&#13;
required under the Act, the more&#13;
stringent limitations required by&#13;
water quality standards must be&#13;
achieved by the mid-1977&#13;
deadline.&#13;
All states have water quality&#13;
standards that are federally&#13;
approved for interstate waters&#13;
Many states have water quality&#13;
standards set for intrastate&#13;
waters as well. States are&#13;
allowed to set more stringent&#13;
limitations than the federal&#13;
minimums required for&#13;
technological controls.&#13;
Therefore, if a state water&#13;
quality standard for a particular&#13;
stream requires greater than the&#13;
best practicable technology, in&#13;
order to achieve that standard,&#13;
the stricter state standards&#13;
apply-&#13;
In addition, a new national&#13;
water quality standard goal has&#13;
been set for 1983. This goal is the&#13;
achievement of a water quality&#13;
which provides for the protection&#13;
and propagation of fish, shellfish&#13;
and wildlife and provides for&#13;
recreation in and on the water&#13;
(swimming). (FWPCA section&#13;
101(a)(2))&#13;
Present water quality standards&#13;
are required to be&#13;
reviewed and upgraded at least&#13;
once every three years with a&#13;
requirement for public hearings&#13;
before a state revision of standards.&#13;
Next week-Shoreline Erosion&#13;
Parkside Activities Board presents&#13;
THE&#13;
KENTUCKY DERBY&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
MUST SUPPLY OWN TRANSPORTATION - TRAVEL&#13;
INFORMATION AND SIGN-UP AT STU. ACT. OFFICE -&#13;
LLC-D-197.&#13;
Anything on the Menu&#13;
ViPrice&#13;
3315 -52nd SL Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
To Parkside Students&#13;
with I.D. C ards&#13;
" 'Expires' April l«,f 1973&#13;
He*******************************&#13;
S Parkside Activities Board jt&#13;
« presents j*,&#13;
A una&#13;
featuring&#13;
*&#13;
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*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
MM+&#13;
$***&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
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****************************&#13;
Sat., Apr. 14 9:00 p.m. -1:00 a.m.&#13;
Stu. Act. BIdg&#13;
Adm.: * 1 Pa rkside St udents *150 Guests&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wise. I.D.'s&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
•FREE MUSIC*&#13;
Wed. - Fri • * Sf l t i&#13;
No Cover&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'LUNCH •&#13;
P I Z Z A , C H ICKEN , SALA D , M O - J O 'S ^&#13;
1 1 : 3 0 - 1 : 3 0 A&#13;
Mon. -Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun. Z&#13;
$ " | 8 9 J&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'FISH F I S H , P I Z Z A . SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed. &amp; Fri. $199&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
•&#13;
PIZZA I&#13;
2 0 K INDS SERVEDALLTHETIME # •&#13;
P IUS N ( l l i r Fa v n r i l o&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
WMO J O'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
i rv _' «_ _ . . . .&#13;
Poet Meudt here Thursday&#13;
Stanley Craig awarded&#13;
honorable mention&#13;
Wed. , Ap r i l 11, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Vopat talks of destiny, liberation&#13;
Pnrtlif S™°te: Women's Day. sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus, was held last Wednesday-&#13;
Many people from the communities as well&#13;
as from Parkside attended the dozen sessions on the&#13;
p r o g r am. The k e y no t e a d dr e s s , "An at omy I sn o t&#13;
Destiny was delivered by Carole Vopat, assistant «—-«&#13;
53-fS? ''Anatomy isLstiliy^^m^^gotog&#13;
^ ^ fema^af^of my life'but&#13;
don t know what a woman really is. I know all too&#13;
well what I have been told I am; but I Tm still fin°&#13;
ding out, beneath all the role playing and con&#13;
.sk,;?.""" *&lt;"•'«• I- •Fssgs&amp;xsssgss, pemses are worth more than people with vaginas&#13;
There are a few more flourishes to it -like, people&#13;
ave,penises are therefore suited by nature to&#13;
thrust and conquer and dominate, to be aggressive&#13;
rrJll ogt and hard and firm and erect and&#13;
emnfvVe' Pfi?Ple With vaSinas are filled with&#13;
empty space; they have receptacles instead of&#13;
s words, and as the vagina was created to accept the&#13;
penis, so the female is by nature receptive, passive&#13;
Because she has !ute"fs&#13;
destined to be a mother; because she has a vagina&#13;
she is destined to accept and serve men.&#13;
Man is dominant; woman to be dominated; man&#13;
to rule and woman to serve. People with penises are&#13;
superior to people with vaginas; people with penises&#13;
were meant to rule people with vaginas; people with&#13;
penises are the norm and the standard; people with&#13;
vaginas are wounded, castrated, imperfect, inferior-&#13;
female.&#13;
We are born into a male world, raised in a male&#13;
culture, shown male images of ourselves, taught&#13;
male standards. We live in a world in which&#13;
MALENESS is the norm, and what is UNMALE,&#13;
that is, female, is inferior, different and therefore&#13;
less. We live in a world in which we are the second&#13;
sex.&#13;
Whether the- theory comes from biology,&#13;
psychology, sociology, anthropology, or religion,&#13;
toe ideal is the same; that there is in woman in&#13;
irreducible natural component which can be&#13;
characterized as passive, receiving, unassertive&#13;
and submissive-by implication, non-intellectual,&#13;
illogical and emotional. Women are by nature unfit&#13;
to direct either the way of the world or their own&#13;
lives. Women who are assertive and intellectual,&#13;
who are not like this stereotype, are not "natural"&#13;
women; they are sick, or homosexual, or rejecting&#13;
their sexuality, or suffering "penis envy." In some&#13;
way they're unnatural and disturbed, for woman,&#13;
given her natural characteristics, given what all&#13;
men know is her very nature, finds her only real&#13;
fulfillment in the home and motherhood.&#13;
Most men want to be husbands and fathers but no&#13;
man is raised to be a husband and father and no&#13;
man would ever conceive of those relationships as&#13;
his prime function in life, his destiny, his identity,&#13;
his total fulfillment. Yet every woman is raised,&#13;
still, to believe that being a wife and mother is her&#13;
prime function in life, and her instinctive choice.&#13;
For what else are a vagina and a uterus for?&#13;
Anatomy is destiny.&#13;
Women who are told that what they fundamentally&#13;
WANT and NEED is to be wives and&#13;
mothers as distinguished from being anything else,&#13;
women who are told that their childbearing and&#13;
housewifely obligations supercede all other needs,&#13;
ARE BEING LIED TO. For all human beings, male&#13;
or female, have within them a great driving force of&#13;
energy which is the basis of all human life, and that&#13;
energy expresses itself as a driving human need for&#13;
self-assertion and for self-fulfillment. Yet women&#13;
are raised as martyrs in a world which offers&#13;
martyrs no rewards save martyrdom; women are&#13;
trained to deny their personal selves, their egos,&#13;
their personal needs, to serve those of their&#13;
husbands and their children. They are trained to be&#13;
masochists, and then told masochism is their&#13;
nature, their inherent essence, as well as their&#13;
destiny.&#13;
For a person with a vagina needs the same things&#13;
a person with a penis does: needs self-fulfillment,&#13;
identity, self-respect, needs in short, a self, to be&#13;
taken seriously, to speak and to be heard.&#13;
There is nothing inherent in woman which makes&#13;
her less of a human being, with less of a human's&#13;
needs, than a man. We are the victims not of&#13;
biology, not of our anatomy, but of our culture,&#13;
which trains us that anatomy is destiny, that&#13;
woman inside is only empty space: without intellect,&#13;
without creativity, without potential,&#13;
without energy and life and force save that which is&#13;
planted in her uterus by man.&#13;
The basis of the theories of woman's natural&#13;
submissiveness, her inherent inferiority, is not fact&#13;
but myth-and the myth is that of MALE&#13;
SUPREMACY. Male supremacy has taken varied&#13;
Carole Vopat&#13;
iorms throughout history; its single purpose,&#13;
however, has always been to maintain control over&#13;
the other half of humanity.&#13;
I cannot argue about hormones or biology. But the&#13;
moral argument is simple and clear cut-&#13;
DOMINATION OF ONE GROUP BY ANOTHER IS&#13;
IMMORAL. OPPRESSION OF ONE GROUP BY&#13;
ANOTHER IS WRONG. DISCRIMINATION&#13;
OPPRESSION, REPRESSION AND SUPPRESSION&#13;
OF ONE HALF OF HUMANITY IS&#13;
MORALLY WRONG. IT IS WRONG!&#13;
••• What does it mean to be liberated? It means quite&#13;
simply to be FREE. To be without compulsion for&#13;
the very first time: toe compulsion to be dainty, to&#13;
be sweet, to be sexy, to be shy, to compete&#13;
aggressively with other women, to flirt and be&#13;
helpless with men so they'll like you; the compulsion&#13;
to please-like a dancing doll or rouged up&#13;
puppet-to be daddy's darling and hubby's baby,&#13;
their sweet, their precious, their baby girl. And it&#13;
means not having to disguise your strengths as&#13;
weaknesses: to be smart and play dumb; to be wise&#13;
and play silly; to be intellectual and play sexy; to be&#13;
proud yet play humble; to be independent and in&#13;
control and disciplined, yet to act helpless; to be an&#13;
adult yet play the child. And worse, not to know you&#13;
are playing a role: to be smart and think you are&#13;
stupid; to be strong yet convinced you are weak; to&#13;
be wise but deem yourself silly; to be valuable and&#13;
perceptive and capable yet paralyzed by an insecurity&#13;
so deep and vicious that life for you is a&#13;
constant state of feeling threatened and anxious and&#13;
small; to be beautiful yet to hate your reflection in&#13;
the mirror; to be stately and rich, yet to set yourself&#13;
up as a little girl, or a whore, or a gypsy, or&#13;
whatever you're supposed to look like that year. The&#13;
waste, the tremendous cost in human lives and&#13;
human potential! I have been there and I know that&#13;
pain of feeling so totally inadequate, worthless,&#13;
unimportant, so completely NOT ENOUGH.&#13;
I see women here, women who are my friends,&#13;
beautiful and capable women, who look at themselves,&#13;
and despise themselves-because they are&#13;
female and to be female is just not enough.&#13;
Liberation means ACCEPTING YOURSELF and&#13;
saying IT IS ENOUGH. IT IS GOOD. I AM&#13;
ENOUGH.&#13;
You, just you, are fine and lovely and you don't&#13;
need pretense-not fake manners or fake makeup or&#13;
fake clothes or fake images. You don't have to&#13;
pretend to be anything, because you, just you, all by&#13;
yourself, you're enough.&#13;
You don't need a home and a dishwasher and a&#13;
husband and a child and a sewing circle or a degree&#13;
or a title to complete you, to give you worth or value&#13;
or dignity or importance, because you, just you,&#13;
you, by nature, are not inferior. You are by nature&#13;
ENOUGH.&#13;
Does liberation mean hating men, blaming men?&#13;
In no way, at no time, can hate or blame ever be&#13;
liberating. Anger can free us, because what anger&#13;
means is self-respect; it means we don't deserve to&#13;
be treated this way and get your foot off my neck.&#13;
Anger is good because first one cannot be angry&#13;
unless she feels she is valuable. But blame and hate&#13;
are only destructive and self-destructive. Surely we&#13;
know that each person conceives of him or herself&#13;
as a hero; that no one deliberately and maliciously&#13;
in full cruel spirit sets out to destroy another.&#13;
However, toe situation began-whether back in&#13;
those prehistoric caves or on the Mayflower or&#13;
whenever-the situation of oppo.oppression is here&#13;
now and must be changed. I have faith in education;&#13;
I have made education my life. I have faith that&#13;
when people are shown that they are pursuing a&#13;
destructive and self-destructive course of action,&#13;
they will themselves want to change it, because&#13;
people want to be good and to be fair. I have faith&#13;
that if men and women are educated to the issues&#13;
involved in our struggle, that society will change, as&#13;
society has changed to give blacks more-not&#13;
enough by any means and not as much as whites&#13;
have, but more. And in our personal struggles, I&#13;
believe that men and women mean well; that if t hey&#13;
had the choice, they would rather not exist towards&#13;
each other in a relationship of oppression, resentment,&#13;
suspicion and hatred; not in a power struggle&#13;
but in a marriage of true minds and true hearts and&#13;
souls and bodies.&#13;
I believe if people are shown toe right and just&#13;
path, they will choose to walk on it; that people,&#13;
men and women, act as they do out of ignorance and&#13;
not maliciousness. Situations are complex, but I&#13;
believe, as Anne Frank once said, facing a struggle&#13;
and an oppression greater perhaps than any of us&#13;
here have witnessed, that "people are basically&#13;
good at heart." I do not believe the women's&#13;
movement wants to blame and hate men; but that it&#13;
wants to raise our consciousnesses, uplift us, both&#13;
men and women, so that we can exist together in a&#13;
blessed state of peace, and work together for the&#13;
common good. It disturbs me that men are afraid or&#13;
threatened by the women's movement; for their&#13;
fear and suspicion will close off their minds and&#13;
education will not take place. It disturbs me that my&#13;
sisters believe that the movement wants to destroy&#13;
them, to reach into their homes and blight their&#13;
children and their marriage beds, for their&#13;
suspicion and fear will close their minds also and&#13;
education will not take place.&#13;
I cannot allay all of t hese fears, for some of them&#13;
are certainly well-founded fears, for once education&#13;
takes place, there's no going back and nothing is&#13;
ever toe same again, and the security of that old&#13;
warm world is lost forever, in which men were men&#13;
and women were women and everyone knew his or&#13;
her place. I have already spoken to you of toe&#13;
tremendous personal cost of liberation, and of&#13;
having to make your own place in a world where&#13;
places are hard to come by. But I d o firmly believe&#13;
that what we will get is far greater than what we&#13;
will give up; that the world of equality and opportunity,&#13;
of liberty, towards which we aspire is far&#13;
greater than the world of oppression and&#13;
stereotyping that we leave behind; that education&#13;
and consciousness raising are their own rewards,&#13;
and that it is better to live in a confusing and insecure&#13;
universe as a free woman and a free man,&#13;
than to exist chained in a safe yet smothering world!&#13;
I believe in working towards a world and an&#13;
America where each will be all he or she is capable&#13;
of becoming; and where all of us-male, female&#13;
black, white-will fulfill the fullest potential of our&#13;
humanity.&#13;
Well, I have so many more stories to share with&#13;
you, as you have to share with me. So much we have&#13;
realized, and pieced together alone and with each&#13;
other. But that will have to wait for another time.&#13;
We have all of t he rest of our lives to come to know&#13;
and love each other and ourselves.&#13;
The total speech is available on tape in the&#13;
Learning Center along with tapes of many Women's&#13;
Day sessions.&#13;
HE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 1 1 , 1 9 7 3&#13;
Tapes, films, cassettes form&#13;
16 mm films&#13;
ANGKOR-THE LO ST CITY&#13;
ALBRECHT DURER&#13;
APPEALS TO S ANTIAGO&#13;
ART NOUVEAU&#13;
BABOON EC OLOGY&#13;
BABOON SOCIAL ORGANIZATION&#13;
BALLET MECHANIQUE&#13;
blueEanAGELPRESSURE FLAKING&#13;
BOSCH, GARDEN OF DE LIGHTS&#13;
BUILDING OF TH E BOM B&#13;
TOM LIN E BEHAVI0RISM AND THE BOTTHE&#13;
CABINET OF DR. CA LIGARI&#13;
CHEMICAL BONDING&#13;
CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMALITIES - THE&#13;
SEX CHROMOSOMES&#13;
CHROMOSOMAL ABNORMALITIES - THE&#13;
AUTOSOMES&#13;
SIDERA"8^8 " °ENERAL C°N"&#13;
CIVILISATION SERIES&#13;
COLONIAL SIX&#13;
CORNER OF W HEAT&#13;
THE CURE&#13;
DEAD BIR DS&#13;
THE DEHUMANIZING CITY AND HYMIE&#13;
SCHULTZ&#13;
THE DESERT PEOPLE&#13;
EDISON ALBUM&#13;
ENZYME DEFECTS AND DNA MEDICAL&#13;
GENETICS&#13;
FACE T O FAC E&#13;
FOUR FAM ILIES&#13;
FUTURE SHOCK&#13;
GENES AND P ROTEIN SYNTHESIS&#13;
GERMAN LA NGUAGE FILM&#13;
GIACOMETTI&#13;
THE GOLD R USH&#13;
GUTEN TAG&#13;
THE HADZA: THE FOOOD QUEST OF AN&#13;
EAST AFRICAN HUNTING AND GATHERING&#13;
TRIBE&#13;
THE HERITAGE OF TH E UN COMMON MA N&#13;
HIROSHIMA NAG ASAKI: AUGUST, 1945&#13;
THE HO LY GHOST PEOPLE&#13;
HUMAN RE PRODUCTION&#13;
THE HUNT ERS&#13;
HYDROGEN ATOM: LONG V ERSION&#13;
I DO , AND I UND ERSTAND&#13;
THE IMMIGRANT&#13;
INFANTS SCHOOL&#13;
INTOLERANCE&#13;
ISHI IN TWO WORLDS&#13;
IT'S A GIFT&#13;
LAST LAUGH&#13;
11:59 - LAS T MINUTE TO C HOOSE&#13;
LIFE AND DEATH OF A HO LLYWOOD EXTRA&#13;
LONELINESS AN D LO VING&#13;
LOVE T O KIL L&#13;
M&#13;
MARVELS OF ME LIES&#13;
THE MED IA CEN TER IN ACTION&#13;
THE MEDICINAL GENETICS SERIES&#13;
MISS GOODALL AND THE WILD CHIMPANZEES&#13;
MONKEYS, APES AND M AN&#13;
MY COUNTRY, RIG HT OR WRONG&#13;
NANOOK OF TH E NORTH&#13;
NOSFERATU&#13;
THE NUER&#13;
ODESSA STEPS&#13;
ONE A.M .&#13;
THE PHANTOM OF TH E OPERA&#13;
PIAGET'S DEVELOPMENTAL THEORYCLASSIFICATION&#13;
PIAGET'S DEVELOPMENTAL THEORYCONSERVATION&#13;
POET I &amp; II&#13;
POTEMKIN&#13;
POTTERS WORLD&#13;
THE PRE-NATAL DIAGNOSIS BY AMNIOSYNTHESIS&#13;
PRIDE AND PRINCIPLE&#13;
PSYCHO&#13;
THE REAL SECURITY&#13;
THE RIGHT TO LIVE: WHO DECIDES&#13;
THE RINK&#13;
SEARCHING FOR VALUES SERIES&#13;
A SENSE OF PURPOSE&#13;
SHAPES AND POLARITIES OF MOLECULES&#13;
THE SIXTIES&#13;
A SMALL THINGS CLASSROOM&#13;
SO THAT MEN ARE FREE&#13;
SPANISH SERIES&#13;
SUBMERGED GLORY-STUDY IN STONE&#13;
TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD&#13;
TEACHING SKILLS&#13;
THIRTY NINE STEPS&#13;
TITANS, U.S.A.&#13;
A TRIP TO THE MOON&#13;
TROUBLE WITH THE LAW&#13;
UPTOWN: PORTRAIT OF THE SOUTH&#13;
BRONX&#13;
VD&#13;
VIOLENCE: JUST FOR FUN&#13;
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF...&#13;
WHEN PARENTS GROW OLD&#13;
WHETHER TO TELL THE TRUTH&#13;
WHY LEGER?&#13;
WILLIAM HARVEY AND THE CIRCULATION&#13;
OF THE BLOOD&#13;
WISCONSIN - TRAIL OF NATIONS&#13;
WONDERING ABOUT THINGS&#13;
YOU, YOURSELF, INCORPORATED&#13;
Video tapes&#13;
THE ADVOCATES JOURNAL&#13;
THE AFRICAN QUEEN&#13;
ALL THE KING'S MEN&#13;
THE AMERICA SERIES&#13;
APOLLO 17 SPACE FLIGHT&#13;
ART IS&#13;
ATTACK&#13;
BILL MOYER'S JOURNAL&#13;
THE BILL OF RIGHTS - INTERROGATION&#13;
THE BILL OF RIGHTS - SEARCH PRIVACY&#13;
BIRTH OF A NATION&#13;
THE BOAT&#13;
BONNIE AND CLYDE&#13;
THE CAVE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES&#13;
CITIES OF THE FUTURE&#13;
CITIZEN KANE&#13;
DAMES&#13;
DEBATE ON WOMEN'S LIBERATION&#13;
DER GOLEM&#13;
THE FALL OF BABYLON&#13;
FAUSTUS&#13;
THE FORBIDDEN CITY&#13;
FIRST TUESDAY IN FEBRUARY, 1973- THE&#13;
WIFE OF A POW.&#13;
FOOTLIGHT PARADE&#13;
THE GENERAL&#13;
THE GRAPES OF WRATH&#13;
THE HIRED HAND&#13;
HORSE FEATHERS&#13;
THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME&#13;
IF YOU GIVE A DANCE, YOU GOTTA PAY&#13;
THE BAND&#13;
IN COLD BLOOD&#13;
IN SEARCH OF THE ANCIENT ASTRONAUTS&#13;
THE INHERITANCE&#13;
THE JAZZ AGE&#13;
ROBERT KENNEDY REMEMBERED&#13;
KING HENRY V&#13;
KING KONG&#13;
KNIFE IN THE WATER&#13;
KRAKATOA&#13;
LAST MOON LANDING&#13;
VAIECS&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery to P arkside Village&#13;
SOU 30th Annul Phone 657-S191&#13;
LIFE AND HEALTH OF THE AMERICAN&#13;
WOMAN&#13;
LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT&#13;
LULLABY OF BROADWAY&#13;
THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS&#13;
THE MALTESE FALCON&#13;
THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER&#13;
MOTIVATION AND PRODUCTIVITY&#13;
ODD MAN OUT&#13;
OF THEE I SING&#13;
ONCE UPON A MATTRESS&#13;
THE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC&#13;
POST ELECTION PROGRAM&#13;
PSYCHO&#13;
RASHOMON&#13;
REACTION TO THE VIETNAM CEASE FIRE&#13;
THE RESTLESS EARTH&#13;
ROMEO AND JULIET&#13;
RULES OF THE GAME&#13;
SESAME STREET&#13;
SET INDUCTION&#13;
A SHOT IN THE DARK&#13;
STREET OF THE FLOWER BOXES&#13;
STAGECOACH&#13;
TEN DAYS&#13;
THEORY X, THEORY Y&#13;
TOM JONES&#13;
A TRIBUTE TO BEETHOVEN&#13;
UBERFALL&#13;
UPTOWN: PORTRAIT OF THE SOUTH&#13;
BRONX&#13;
VERTIGO&#13;
THE VIOLENT EARTH&#13;
WHAT ABOUT TOMORROW?&#13;
WILD STRAWBERRIES&#13;
WINESBURG, OHIO&#13;
THE WITCH DOCTOR&#13;
YOGI BEAR&#13;
Editor's Note: Instead of the regular A&#13;
contains information about the operation&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Director of the Le&#13;
its objectives and purposes as follows- (&#13;
the learning process (2) To be used as&#13;
learning (3) To be concerned with the ne&lt;&#13;
individuals (4) To be used as a commui&#13;
cooperative arrangements with other ir&#13;
and region.&#13;
Phillip Quetschke, Assistant to the Dire&#13;
the Learning Center work as a team&#13;
responsibilities it's hard to make j&#13;
described the Learning Center as bein&#13;
students, faculty, and residents of Racir&#13;
come in and use the Learning Center o&#13;
enrolled at Parkside. As far what kinds &lt;&#13;
out of the Learning Center Quetschke s&#13;
restrictions on the use of any of the matt&#13;
just about anything." Mr. Quetschke al;&#13;
Center can handle almost any format of&#13;
equipment is made to be easily operable U&#13;
Sandra Thomason, Specialist of the A.&#13;
and faculty with audio-visual projects. T&#13;
located in the basement next to the Ai&#13;
become part of the Comm. Arts building&#13;
workshop is now being used mostly by f;&#13;
but that anyone is welcome. She is ther&#13;
equipment involved in making such things&#13;
strips, and transparencies. All the thini&#13;
workshop eventually become part of the&#13;
person pays for the materials, in which ca&#13;
According to Thomason, the room in wl&#13;
will eventually become a sort of master &lt;&#13;
Library and Learning Center will be hooke&#13;
be able to push a button and the material&#13;
from the control room up to the carrel.&#13;
Johanna Herrick, Media Librarian, car&#13;
ago to fill a newly created job. Her dutie;&#13;
dering new materials, organizing materi&#13;
use, and making materials accessabie&#13;
Herrick, all requests for new materials m&#13;
are considered and usually ordered.&#13;
Sound filmstrips&#13;
ALCOHOL: THE SOCIAL DRUG-THE SOCIAL&#13;
PROBLEM&#13;
AMERICA! THE POETRY OF A NATION&#13;
AMERICAN GOTHIC: HAWTHORNEMELVILLE&#13;
THE AMERICAN HUMORISTS&#13;
THE AMERICAN POOR: A SELF+PORTRAIT&#13;
THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY&#13;
ANATOMY OF U.S. POLITICAL PARTIES&#13;
THE BLACK ODYSSEY: MIGRATION TO THE&#13;
CITIES&#13;
CITIES: USA&#13;
THE CITY AND THE MODERN WRITER&#13;
CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE&#13;
CONCORD: A NATION'S CONSCIENCE&#13;
A CONTROVERSIAL FILM&#13;
DARE TO BE DIFFERENT&#13;
EDGAR ALLAN POE&#13;
ENVIRONMENT1 CHANGING MAN'S&#13;
VALUES&#13;
RAGINEI&#13;
7~£ACHCR1&#13;
PARKSIDE CAMPUS OFFICE&#13;
219 TALLENT HALL&#13;
553-2150&#13;
^JHION// "Washington Square&#13;
5200 Washington Avenue&#13;
Raciqe&#13;
PHONE: 634-6661&#13;
J &amp; J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
Wed., A p r i l 11, 1973 THE PARKS I D E RANGE R 7&#13;
n coroe f Learning Center&#13;
ir AV review, this week's column&#13;
tion of the Learning Center,&#13;
i Learning Center, listed some of&#13;
's: (l) To facilitate and improve&#13;
I as a resource for teaching and&#13;
3 needs of students and faculty as&#13;
munity resource (5) To develop&#13;
ir institutions in the community&#13;
Director, stated that the people in&#13;
am. Because of the overlap in&#13;
;e job distinctions. Quetschke&#13;
being a service organization to&#13;
lacine and Kenosha. Anyone can&#13;
er or the Library without being&#13;
nds of materials can be checked&#13;
ke said, "We don't want to put&#13;
materials. We can be talked into&#13;
e also stated that the Learning&#13;
at of non-print material and the&#13;
We to encourage student use.&#13;
e A.V. Workshop helps students&#13;
ts. The workshop is temporarily&#13;
le Archives but will eventually&#13;
Iding. Thomason stated that the&#13;
by faculty and student teachers&#13;
there to train people to use the&#13;
hings as slide presentations, film&#13;
things which are made in the&#13;
' t he Learning Center unless the&#13;
ch case he may keep the project,&#13;
in which the workshop is located&#13;
iter control room. Carrels in the&#13;
looked up so that the student will&#13;
erial he wishes will be projected&#13;
Tel.&#13;
i, cam e to Parkside three weeks&#13;
iuties involve such things as oraterials,&#13;
scheduling of machine&#13;
able to students. According to&#13;
ils made by students and faculty&#13;
THE MIGRANT WORKER&#13;
NATIONALISM&#13;
OPEN HOUSING&#13;
OUR CREDIT ECONOMY&#13;
THE PEOPLE PROBLEM&#13;
STAND?AL C0MMITMENT: WHERE DO YOU&#13;
THE WORLD OF MARK TWAIN&#13;
YOUR PERSONALITY: THE YOU OTHERS&#13;
KNOW&#13;
FRESHMAN&#13;
OF EMILY&#13;
PORTRAIT OF A&#13;
CONGRESSMAN&#13;
PREJUDICE!&#13;
THE PRIVATE WORLD&#13;
DICKINSON&#13;
THE RECKLESS YEARS: 1919-1929&#13;
REVOLUTION&#13;
THE SEARCH FOR BLACK IDENTITYMALCOM&#13;
X&#13;
THE SEARCH FOR BLACK IDENTITYPROUD&#13;
HERITAGE FROM WEST AFRICA&#13;
SEX DETERMINATION AND SEX LINKAGE&#13;
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS: TO CHANGE A&#13;
NATION&#13;
SPEAKING OF LANGUAGE&#13;
MAN'S NATURAL ENVIRONMENT: CRISIS&#13;
THROUGH ABUSE&#13;
STATE GOVERNMENT IN ACTION&#13;
STIMULANTS&#13;
STREETS, PRAIRIES AND VALLEYS- THE&#13;
LIFE OF CARL SANDBURG&#13;
THE THIRD HOUSE: WASHINGTON LOBBYISTS&#13;
AT WORK&#13;
TRANSPORTATION: WHERE DO WE GO&#13;
FROM HERE?&#13;
URBAN AMERICA AS WE SEE IT&#13;
VENEREAL DISEASE: A PRESENT DANGER&#13;
THE VISION OF STEPHEN CRANE&#13;
ERNEST HEMINGWAY, THE MAN&#13;
ERNEST HEMINGWAY, THE WRITER&#13;
THE EXPATRIATE WRITERS&#13;
THE EXPLOITED GENERATION&#13;
THE FARM QUESTION&#13;
FOREIGN AID&#13;
FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT: THE&#13;
YEARS THAT CHANGED THE NATION&#13;
THE GREAT DEPRESSION: 1929-1939&#13;
HARD TO FEEL YOU'RE SOMEBODY: DOPE&#13;
IN THE CITY&#13;
THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE AND BEYOND&#13;
THE HONORABLE COURT; THE SUPREME&#13;
COURT OF THE UNITED STATES&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO BIOLOGICAL&#13;
MEASUREMENTS&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO DNA&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO ECOLOGY&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO GAMETOGENESIS&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO MEIOSIS&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO MENDELIAN&#13;
INHERITANCE&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO MITOSIS&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO PROBABILITY&#13;
INTRODUCTION TO THE WATER CYCLE&#13;
JACK LONDON: A LIFE OF ADVENTURE&#13;
JOB ATTITUDES: WHY WORK AT ALL?&#13;
THE LITERATURE OF PROTEST&#13;
MASS MEDIA: IMPACT ON A NATION&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents:&#13;
Video cassettes&#13;
ARTIST IN RESIDENCE&#13;
B.F. SKINNER&#13;
BOSCH: GARDEN OF EARTHLY DELIGHTS&#13;
DEMAGOGUES AND DO-GOODERS&#13;
ELIOT PORTER&#13;
EXITS AND ENTRANCES&#13;
HELLO DARWIN&#13;
HOMAGE TO THE SQUARE&#13;
IDEA OF THE CITY&#13;
IDEAS ON THE THEATER&#13;
INFORMATION PROCESSING&#13;
LEARNING&#13;
PICNIC IN SCIENCE&#13;
PRIMER OF THE UNIVERSE&#13;
ROOTS OF A COLD WAR&#13;
THE SENSORY WORLD&#13;
SENTINEL: WEST FACE&#13;
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY&#13;
A T IME FOR LEARNING&#13;
UNDER THE COULDS OF WAR&#13;
UNDERSTANDING COMPUTERS&#13;
WHAT MAKES MAN HUMAN&#13;
WHY MAN CREATES&#13;
THE WRITER AND THE CITY&#13;
Super 8 mm sound film loops&#13;
APOLLO 11&#13;
THE CASABLANCA SUMMIT MEETING&#13;
CHARLES LINDBERGH&#13;
THE CRIMEAN CONFERENCE&#13;
D DAY&#13;
DEMOCRATIC RESURGENCE&#13;
EAST WEST SUMMIT&#13;
ECONOMIC REVOLUTION&#13;
EISENHOWER INAUGURATION&#13;
FDR: BIOGRAPHY&#13;
FDR: MASS MEDIA&#13;
FATEFUL TRIP TO TEXAS&#13;
FOUNDING OF THE U.N.&#13;
HARDING AND COOLIDGE&#13;
HERBERT HOOVER: BIOGRAPHY&#13;
I HAVE A DREAM&#13;
ISOLATION OR INTERVENTION, PTS. 1 &amp; 2&#13;
JFK: BIOGRAPHY&#13;
JFK: JOSEPH R. MCCARTHY&#13;
KOREAN WAR, PTS 1&amp;2&#13;
LATIN AMERICAN DILEMMA&#13;
MAKERS OF THE "A" BOMB&#13;
THE POLITICAL PUZZLE&#13;
POLITICS OF WAR&#13;
REACTION AGAINST LABOR&#13;
RICHARD M. NIXON: INAUGURATION&#13;
SIBERIA&#13;
STRUGGLE FOR RACIAL EQUALITY&#13;
SUMMIT DIPLOMACY&#13;
Super 8 mm silent film loops&#13;
DECIDUOUS FOREST: PLANT AND ANIMAL&#13;
ADAPTATIONS&#13;
ECOLOGY AND ECOSYSTEMS&#13;
ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES&#13;
THE EVERGLADES&#13;
MACROMOLECULAR BIOSYNTHESIS: DNA&#13;
REPLICATION&#13;
MACROMOLECULAR BIOSYNTHESIS: RNA&#13;
TRANSCRIPTION&#13;
PROTIEN TRANSLATION&#13;
POND: FOOD WEB&#13;
POND COMMUNITY&#13;
8 mm silent film loops&#13;
FORMATION OF SHOCK WAVES&#13;
RADIOACTIVE DECAY&#13;
SCINTILLATION SPECTROMETRY&#13;
Mark IV autotutor programs&#13;
BASIC COMMUNICATION SKILLS: COMMUNICATION&#13;
THEORY&#13;
BASIC COMMUNICATION SKILLS: ORAL&#13;
COMMUNICATION&#13;
BASIC COMMUNICATION SKILLS: WRITTEN&#13;
COMMUNICATION&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: DECIMAL&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: FRACTIONS&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: PERCENTAGES&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: RATIO AND&#13;
PROPORTION&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: WHOLE NUMBERS:&#13;
ADDITION AND SUBTRACTION&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: WHOLE NUMBERS:&#13;
COMPLEX OPERATIONS&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: WHOLE NUMBERS:&#13;
DIVISION&#13;
CAREER ARITHMETIC: WHOLE NUMBERS:&#13;
NULTIPLICATION&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: CLAUSES,&#13;
FRAGMENTS, RUN-ONS&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: IMPROVING YOUR&#13;
PUNCTUATION&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: IMPROVING YOUR&#13;
WRITING&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: MODIFIERS&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: SENTENCES AND&#13;
PHRASES&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: SENTENCES, NOUNS&#13;
AND PRONOUNS&#13;
CAREER ENGLISH: VERB USAGE&#13;
HOW TO WRITE EFFECTIVE REPORTS&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: FOLLOWING&#13;
DIRECTIONS&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: READING&#13;
INTERPRETATION I&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: READING&#13;
INTERPRETATION II&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: REFERENCE&#13;
SKILLS&#13;
READING COMPREHENSION: REFERENCE&#13;
SKILLS (LIBRARY)&#13;
Slides&#13;
FEDERICO FELLINI, 1950-1969&#13;
JEAN-LUC GODARD, 1951-1969&#13;
JEAN RENOIR, 1924-1939&#13;
ORSON WELLES, 1941-1969&#13;
S.M. EISENSTEIN,&#13;
33DL&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
• OUR •&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
Starr ing&#13;
ROBERT MITCHUM&#13;
Fr i . Apr . 13,8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sun. Apr . 15, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Stu. Act. Bldg.&#13;
75 cents adm.&#13;
Wise. &amp; Parkside I.D. req.&#13;
3Cees $ub&#13;
1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER iy&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Th u r s d a y 1 1 - 8 i&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches&#13;
Foosball 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Cold Six. Packs To Go&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Ap r i l 1 1 , 19 7 3&#13;
Capsule College...&#13;
IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENNING&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee has planned&#13;
an outing at Deal's Lake State&#13;
Park Sunday, April 15 from 7&#13;
a.m. until dark. Spend the day&#13;
hiking, climbing and picnicking,&#13;
i he cost is $1.50, which includes&#13;
transportation and one meal. The&#13;
outing will leave from and return&#13;
to the Tallent fall parking lot.&#13;
Sign up in L-LC-D197.&#13;
Parkside Philanthropist Club is&#13;
sponsoring a lecture entitled&#13;
"The Phoenix and the Cross:&#13;
Military Dictatorship in Greece,"&#13;
a presentation by Andreas&#13;
Kazamias, professor of&#13;
educational policy studies at UWMadison.&#13;
Kazamias, who has been to&#13;
Greece several times in the past&#13;
few years since the military took&#13;
over, has visited prisons, talked&#13;
to prisoners and seen student&#13;
demonstrations asking for&#13;
freedom and better education.&#13;
The lecture is on Wednesday,&#13;
April 18, at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 101. Admission is&#13;
free. Refreshments, will follow,&#13;
and discussion with kazamias&#13;
and Herbert Kubly, professor of&#13;
English, who has also been to&#13;
Greece and has written about the&#13;
country and its government.&#13;
The Financial Aids Office has&#13;
moved to Tallent Hall. They are&#13;
now located in rooms 286 and 288.&#13;
The entire Physical Education&#13;
Building will be closed all day&#13;
April 15, due to two concerts that&#13;
day.&#13;
The tutorial service will be&#13;
available during the week of the&#13;
Spring Break, Monday through&#13;
Friday from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.&#13;
(through the lunch hour.)&#13;
Core tutors in the areas of&#13;
mathematics and English will be&#13;
available at all times. Students&#13;
needing help in other areas must&#13;
call first ext. 2289, or stop by for&#13;
an appointment. Help will be&#13;
found for them in their specific&#13;
area.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present Ryan's Daughter in&#13;
the Student Activities Building,&#13;
Friday and Sunday, April 13 and&#13;
15 at 8 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Admission&#13;
is 75 cents and Wisconsin&#13;
and Parkside I.D.'s are required.&#13;
There will be a dance, sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, in the Student Activities&#13;
Building Saturday, April 14.&#13;
Music will be provided by&#13;
Homesweet. Admission is $1 for&#13;
Parkside students and $1.50 for&#13;
their guests. Wisconsin and&#13;
Parkside I.D.'s required.&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECOUPS&#13;
TAPIS&#13;
Discount P rices!&#13;
5707 - Sixth Ave.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
All faculty and staff are asked&#13;
to return any large inter-campus&#13;
envelopes which they no longer&#13;
need to the Mailroom at D-218&#13;
LLC or call ext. 2385 for pickup.&#13;
i§-&#13;
Members of the Guitar Society&#13;
at Parkside will present^a free&#13;
public concert at 8 p.n&amp;stdday, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall Room" 103.&#13;
The program will (consist of&#13;
works from the 17th through the&#13;
20th century:&#13;
Students taking part Will be&#13;
Kurt Harff, 8917 22nd Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Floyd Hanson, 6929&#13;
14th Ave., Kenosha; Gary Wolk,&#13;
1906 Lydian Drive, Racine;&#13;
Rochelle Host, 6620 19th Ave.,&#13;
Kehosha; and Ken Rogers,&#13;
Marshfield.&#13;
All are music majors at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Monday's snow storm&#13;
necessitated the cancellation of&#13;
the Activities Board showing of&#13;
What's New Pussycat. It has&#13;
been rescheduled to be shown&#13;
today in Greenquist Hall room&#13;
103, at 2 p.m., and room 101 at 8&#13;
p.m. Admission is 50 cents.&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda week at&#13;
Parkside will begin April 11 and&#13;
end April 18. The purpose will be&#13;
to answer any and all questions&#13;
about fraternities and promotion&#13;
of fraternities at Parkside. A&#13;
booth will be set up in Main&#13;
Place. Feel free to mingle.&#13;
So you plead ignorance to the&#13;
question of what has the Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
done or doing? Educate yourself&#13;
April 12 and 13 during PSGA&#13;
information days. A booth will be&#13;
set up in LLC for students to stop&#13;
and ask questions. Give them any&#13;
grievances you have and provide&#13;
us with some suggestions.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Outing Committee has a bike hike&#13;
planned for Sunday, April 28 from&#13;
7 a.m. until dark. The cost is $1,&#13;
which includes a picnic lunch and&#13;
a beverage. The 25-mile hike is to&#13;
Fox River Park by Silver Lake,&#13;
and leaves from and returns to&#13;
the Tallent Hall parking lot. The&#13;
PAB will supply the lunch and&#13;
beverage. Sign up in L-LC-D197.&#13;
In the March 28 issue the&#13;
Ranger asked, "What is your&#13;
opinion of the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association?" The&#13;
answers that were received&#13;
ranged from, "I haven't any" to&#13;
"I don't even know nothing about&#13;
it."&#13;
Because of the lack of&#13;
knowledge, students have about&#13;
their Student Government, the&#13;
P.S.G.A. will have a table set up&#13;
in Main Place this Thursday and&#13;
Friday to inform students about&#13;
what is being accomplished in&#13;
student government and to accept&#13;
any grievances students&#13;
may have about Parkside.&#13;
Grievance boxes or "Bitch&#13;
Boxes" as they have been named,&#13;
will be put up around Parkside&#13;
foi students to air their complaints.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D. I .C.&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
ITALIAN F OOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
^SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
IExpire DRINKS AVAILABLE F ROM THE B AR&#13;
A p r l Us 5 0 ' OFF ANY&#13;
- - c 5 0 ?&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
"Home Wine-making for Fun"&#13;
by John J. Zwiebel, wine hobbyist;&#13;
"Consumerism" by Rep. R.&#13;
Michael Ferrall (D-Rac.);&#13;
And, "The Science-Religion&#13;
Conflict" by Wayne Johnson,&#13;
assistant professor of philosophy&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
"Biological Recycling of&#13;
Resources" by Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, professor of life&#13;
science, and chairperson of the&#13;
Parkside Science Division;&#13;
"Reproductive Engineering"&#13;
by Surinder P. Datta, associate&#13;
professor of life science at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"Body Language: The Other&#13;
Dimension" by E. Scott&#13;
Baudhuin, assistant professor of&#13;
communications at Parkside;&#13;
"Birds and Wild Flowers of&#13;
Wisconsin" by members of the&#13;
Hoy Nature Club;&#13;
"Power and Politics: A View&#13;
From the Outside" by Eunice&#13;
Moss, Program Associate for&#13;
Urban Affairs, Human&#13;
Development and Minority&#13;
Citizen Needs, the Johnson&#13;
Foundation;&#13;
"Parkside Poetry Circus,"&#13;
readings by Parkside faculty and&#13;
students;&#13;
• " The Environment: Where Do&#13;
We Stand?" by Louise Erickson,&#13;
citizen environmentalist from&#13;
Racine;&#13;
"Academic Counseling and&#13;
Conversation" by the Parkside&#13;
counseling staff ;&#13;
"How to Be Happy'' by Jane B.&#13;
Tybring, Extension specialist in&#13;
family relations;&#13;
And, "Be Ready for Tax Time&#13;
Next Year" by Louise Young,&#13;
Extension specialist in home&#13;
management and family&#13;
economics.&#13;
Seminars being offered April 25&#13;
only are:&#13;
"Ask a Gynecologist Anything"&#13;
by William J. Madden, MD,&#13;
Racine obstetrician and&#13;
gynecologist;&#13;
"Transactional Analysis and&#13;
Interpersonal Relations" by&#13;
Roger T. Williams, Extension&#13;
specialist in adult education and&#13;
mental health;&#13;
"Gardening in Containers" by&#13;
Leland C. Smith, Kenosha County&#13;
horticultural agent;&#13;
"The Impact of Female Employment&#13;
on the Family" by&#13;
Richard W. Stoffle, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"So You'd Like to Sell What&#13;
You Write" by Bill Nelson, freelance&#13;
writer and copy editor, The&#13;
Milwaukee Journal;&#13;
"Issues in Food Quality" by&#13;
Mary E. Mennes, Extension&#13;
associate professor of food&#13;
science;&#13;
Two workshops are scheduled&#13;
April 26 only. One is "Master-&#13;
Slave: The Meaning of Power,"&#13;
which deals with the meaning of&#13;
destructive behavior and will be&#13;
conducted by Richard B. Arnesen,&#13;
MD, Service Chief,&#13;
i Mendota State Hospital Child-&#13;
Adolescent Service, and clinical&#13;
instructor in psychiatry, UW&#13;
School of Medicine. The other is&#13;
"Parental Roles: Coping With&#13;
Teen-Agers" by Samuel D.&#13;
Stellman, ACSW, professor and&#13;
director of the Extension Center&#13;
for Social Service.&#13;
Seminars being offered April 25&#13;
and 26 are:&#13;
"An Introduction to Yoga" by&#13;
Carol Merrick (Yogini Sri&#13;
Gargi), who is certified by&#13;
Swananda Yoga Ashram;&#13;
"Arts and Crafts: Use Them in&#13;
Your Home" by Kathryn A.&#13;
Harle, Extension furnishings and&#13;
design specialist;&#13;
"Woman As Writer, Woman As&#13;
Poet, Or, Where Have All the&#13;
Flowers Gone" by Carole Vopat,&#13;
assistant professor of English at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"How to Cope With&#13;
Catastrophic Illness" by Ann L.&#13;
St. Louis, RN, Director of&#13;
General Education, St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital, Kenosha;&#13;
"Mysticism and Mythology"&#13;
by Robert W. Schrader, instructor&#13;
of philosophy at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
"Witchcraft: An Anthropologic&#13;
View of the Old Religion" by&#13;
Parkside students, Dan Paulson&#13;
and Bill Zupek, who have just&#13;
conducted a study of witchcraft&#13;
in the Milwaukee area;&#13;
"Good Music is Forever," a&#13;
lecture-demonstration by Pianist&#13;
Carmen Vila, Artist-in-Residence&#13;
at Parkside;&#13;
"Parents' Guide to Children's&#13;
Literature" by Judith Hamilton,&#13;
instructional materials librarian&#13;
at Parkside;&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
A°&lt; A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
SHftKE*JS ** " PAR LO»&#13;
IN RACINE&#13;
U. LATHROP AND 21st ( ALMOST)&#13;
The Ranger asks-- Are you&#13;
participating in the meat boycott?&#13;
Diane Resch, Freshman, Racine&#13;
"Yes; well I know it's not&#13;
possible for the economic&#13;
situation but at least you're&#13;
voicing your opinion."&#13;
Chris Roland, Freshman, Racine&#13;
"No; I've been still eating&#13;
leftover corned beef for my&#13;
sandwiches at lunch, and then&#13;
having lunch from Sandy's being&#13;
brought over to where 1 work, so I&#13;
haven't been participating in it. I&#13;
keep getting reminded in the&#13;
evening news but during the day I&#13;
just forget."&#13;
Paul Kleine,&#13;
Education Division&#13;
Chairman,&#13;
"Yes; we have not purchased&#13;
at all since Monday. I think it's&#13;
one of the few kinds of populist&#13;
movements that have arisen&#13;
where people feel strongly&#13;
enough about something that&#13;
they can get it organized without&#13;
a formal group. Simply, as I saw&#13;
it, a group of housewives getting&#13;
together with a television camera&#13;
and solicited enough response&#13;
that it's having a nationwide&#13;
effect. I think that's good; it&#13;
allows the nation to respond&#13;
quickly without a big structure.&#13;
And secondly, I don't know how&#13;
else our economic system is&#13;
supposed to work in any other&#13;
way than supply and demand. If&#13;
prices get too high, I think it&#13;
behooves the consumer to&#13;
scream and to cut back."&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewicz, Chairman,&#13;
Science Division&#13;
"Sure, my wife doesn't buy so I&#13;
don t eat."&#13;
Sue Goetz, Junior, Racine&#13;
"Yes; I am, I don't think it will&#13;
do any good but it can't do any&#13;
harm. Because after it's over the&#13;
people who can afford eating&#13;
steaks will go back to eating&#13;
them. And the people who can't&#13;
afford to eat steaks, if the prices&#13;
don't go down when it's over,&#13;
won't eat them anymore anyway.&#13;
It's sort of an enforced boycott&#13;
with the prices enforcing the&#13;
boycott."&#13;
Norman Pietras,&#13;
dock Lake&#13;
Senior, Pad-&#13;
"No; I'm not. The way I figure&#13;
it I really don't think it will do&#13;
that much good. What the&#13;
President is doing about the meat&#13;
prices, putting a freeze on them,&#13;
will do more good."&#13;
hW&#13;
Cindy Barnes, Staff, Learning&#13;
Center&#13;
"Yes; I haven't bought any&#13;
meat here since the beginning of&#13;
the week. I just want to see what&#13;
happens, if it has any effect."&#13;
Myra Sadker, assistant professor&#13;
of education.&#13;
"Yes; I think that meat prices&#13;
are too high and traditionally one&#13;
way to get prices down is to&#13;
boycott them. I like it also&#13;
because it's the first movement&#13;
I've seen people into since Nixon&#13;
got in; it's just the feeling of&#13;
people doing something that I like&#13;
also."&#13;
Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
aand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Card&#13;
yjJ with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning&#13;
:NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
Wed., April 11, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
Moy named Dean&#13;
of SMI&#13;
(continued from page 1)&#13;
Moy's background includes experience in private&#13;
industry with Proctor and Gamble, St. Louis; Toro&#13;
Manufacturing Co., Minneapolis; Oscar Mayer &amp;&#13;
Co., Madison; and 3M Co., St. Paul. He earned his&#13;
Ph.D. degree' in industrial engineering and&#13;
management science at Northwestern University&#13;
and his bachelor's and master's degrees in industrial&#13;
engineering from the University of Minnesota.&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie said that Dean Moy's&#13;
appointment will greatly strengthen the mission&#13;
thrust of Parkside.&#13;
"Because of Professor Moy's effective leadership&#13;
we have been able, during the last 15 months, to&#13;
improve the variety and quality of our course offerings,&#13;
sharpen the focus of our specialized&#13;
programs, and substantially strengthen our faculty&#13;
in The School of Modern Industry," Wyllie said.&#13;
"Dean Moy's personal interest in students and his&#13;
dedication to teaching excellence will surely attract&#13;
students to his school in increasing numbers in the&#13;
years ahead.&#13;
"His experience in private industry has already&#13;
been helpful in developing contacts and working&#13;
relationships with area industry. The full&#13;
development of those relationships holds the key not&#13;
only to the success of the school but also to the&#13;
success and well being of UW-Parkside itself."&#13;
Accepting his new assignment, Moy said, "I am&#13;
extremely pleased to be a part of the development&#13;
of The School of Modern Industry. Our goal is to&#13;
make available to our students a variety of&#13;
programs in technology, business and labor&#13;
relations that will assist them in preparing for&#13;
careers in a modern industrial society. I am fortunate&#13;
to begin with an excellent faculty and a large&#13;
and growing student population. I especially look&#13;
forward to working with the business and industrial&#13;
community on the development of programs that&#13;
jointly meet their needs and those of our students."&#13;
Moy is a member of numerous professional&#13;
associations, including the American Institute of&#13;
Industrial Engineers, American Society for&#13;
Engineering Education, Institute of Management&#13;
Sciences, Operations Research Society of America,&#13;
American Statistical Association and the&#13;
Association for Computing Machinery. He is a&#13;
registered professional engineer in Wisconsin and&#13;
has published in a number of professional journals.&#13;
MEDITATION WORKSHOP&#13;
Wed., April II at 7 :00 p.m.&#13;
Speaker: Mr. Loren Ritacca&#13;
..^.^LLC-D-174 onsore^b^Baha^sClub&#13;
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RAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 Rapids Dr., Racine]&#13;
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10 THE PA«KSIDE RANGER Wed., April 11, ,973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen ILS improves with TWX use&#13;
HOUSES OF THE HOLY&#13;
Led Zeppelin&#13;
(SD7255)&#13;
We are now deeply into the&#13;
strange year of 1973. The original&#13;
Byrds have surprisingly made a&#13;
successful reunion and Donavan&#13;
attempts to regain a role as a&#13;
hero of the pop youth culture.&#13;
Rumors about the Beatles are&#13;
almost running amuck. Did you&#13;
know that if "Strawberry Fields"&#13;
is played backwards it says,&#13;
"Beatles in '73"? In the midst of&#13;
all this delicious insanity, Led&#13;
Zeppelin's new grooved&#13;
plasticware has finally arrived&#13;
after many moons of heated&#13;
anticipation. The long wait&#13;
maybe could be accounted for as&#13;
Led Zeppelin using one of the&#13;
Stones' formulas, which consists&#13;
of announcing an arrival date for&#13;
a new product and then postponing&#13;
it several times. If my&#13;
theory is correct, this is done to&#13;
get the customers wanting.&#13;
A fairly decent collection of&#13;
vibrations these are, but they&#13;
may not be what is expected by&#13;
some. There is nothing as tearing&#13;
and chaotic as "Black Dog."&#13;
There are no cuts as novel as&#13;
"Whole Lot of Love," "Stairway&#13;
to Heaven," and "When the&#13;
Levee Breaks" were. Robert&#13;
Plant, conceived by many as a&#13;
sexy vocalist," is getting weaker.&#13;
Much of what is meant to be&#13;
singing appears as lazy, inat;&#13;
tentive mumblings. Maybe this is&#13;
supposed to convey an exhausted,&#13;
wasted feeling, but a lot of&#13;
Plant's blurpings are detracting&#13;
and almost irritating on HOUSES&#13;
OF THE HOLY. However, even&#13;
having to bear with that, competent&#13;
musical composing makes&#13;
the album enjoyable.&#13;
Jimmy Page demonstrates his&#13;
skill on guitar right off the bat in&#13;
"The Song Remains the Same."&#13;
He gives some chords a patented&#13;
Keith Richard treatment and&#13;
then proceeds to churn up a lead&#13;
solo in which the notes have&#13;
transcendental Byrd-like ring.&#13;
Another guitar is overdubbed,&#13;
creating a slightly thunderous&#13;
effect.&#13;
"The Rain Song" features a&#13;
Mellotron along with a violin.&#13;
Together with the guitar they&#13;
depict a gloomy, cold day in&#13;
Hawaii, despite the fact that no&#13;
such situation ever exists. "Over&#13;
the Hills and Far Away" has an&#13;
impressive, mellow climax.&#13;
YOUNG DRIVERS W ELCOME&#13;
INSURANCE FOR&#13;
AUTOS - CYCLES - SCOOTERS&#13;
All Forms Of Insurance&#13;
Professional Service&#13;
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J. R. MULICH&#13;
CARL H. JENSEN&#13;
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Heavy thumping drumming&#13;
begins "The Crunge" and all&#13;
superheavy freaks will expect a&#13;
blasting rocker. Not so. The&#13;
music promptly settles into a&#13;
funky-soul, Archie Bell and the&#13;
Drell's "Tighten Up" sort of&#13;
thing. - • '&#13;
"Dancing Days"-"are here&#13;
again" and Plant tells of&#13;
"flower...power." It rocks fairly&#13;
heavy but the tune is as dull as,&#13;
uh.. .Racine? Kenosha?&#13;
The thudding drum starts up&#13;
again and grinding metal is&#13;
anticipated. Disappointment&#13;
once again? "D'yer Mak'er" is a&#13;
bopper straight out of the 50's. It&#13;
is a higher quality number&#13;
though; Robert is sounding&#13;
sensuous.&#13;
"No Quarter" is my fave rave.&#13;
Quiet e6rie spots build up to&#13;
climaxes with electric fuzz in one&#13;
channel and a Synthesiser in the&#13;
other. Plant's moaning is most&#13;
fitting and touching as he portrays&#13;
the feeling of being on the&#13;
last hinge of desperation. Additional&#13;
voices join in the final&#13;
departure.&#13;
"The Ocean" is metal-funk, a&#13;
millimeter above mediocre, that&#13;
keeps seeming as if i t is going to&#13;
turn into "Good Times, Bad&#13;
Times!"&#13;
Led Zeppelin didn't bomb out&#13;
but they had trouble shaking the&#13;
clinging mud of inactivity. This&#13;
kept them from being sensational&#13;
enough to top LED ZEPPELIN 4&#13;
and so they made a lukewarm&#13;
cake.&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape&#13;
and Record Center)&#13;
by Helmut Kah&#13;
The Parkside library has&#13;
improved its Interlibrary Loan&#13;
Service (ILS) system with the&#13;
installation of a Teletypewriter&#13;
Exchange Service (TWX) terminal.&#13;
Parkside now has a line to&#13;
any library in the USA, Canada,&#13;
or Mexico which also has a TWX&#13;
terminal.&#13;
Under the ILS system the&#13;
librarian can obtain books or&#13;
photocopies which the Parkside&#13;
library does not have in its&#13;
holdings. The Wisconsin ILS&#13;
permits students to get books and&#13;
photocopies from the UWMadison&#13;
library and faculty&#13;
members to obtain them from&#13;
any library participating in ILS.&#13;
ILS is thereby an aid to persons&#13;
doing research because it enables&#13;
them to have access to almost&#13;
any book or photocopy they may&#13;
need.&#13;
Before Parkside installed the&#13;
teletype terminal the librarian&#13;
would have to type up a book&#13;
request form and mail it, with a&#13;
time lag of two or more days&#13;
between sending and delivery.&#13;
TWX has eliminated this time&#13;
lag.&#13;
The TWX method of obtaining a&#13;
book at first seems more complicated,&#13;
than the mail method. It&#13;
may be, but the benefits make it&#13;
much superior.&#13;
In ordering a book or photocopy&#13;
with the teletype the librarian&#13;
first types all necessary information&#13;
on the terminal which&#13;
simultaneously produces a printout&#13;
and a coded paper tape with&#13;
the same information. *&#13;
If t he librarian is satisfied with&#13;
the order as it is printed, she then&#13;
dials the number of the ap-&#13;
Kathryn Wellner demonstrates the TWX&#13;
propriate library and transmits&#13;
the message by running the tape&#13;
through the terminal. As the&#13;
paper tape is run through the&#13;
teletype a print-out is&#13;
automatically produced on both&#13;
the transmitting and receiving&#13;
terminals. This allows transmission&#13;
errors to be detected by&#13;
the person sending the message.&#13;
It also allows the person&#13;
receiving the message to reply&#13;
the same day, thereby speeding&#13;
up communication.&#13;
The message transmission is&#13;
carried over phone company&#13;
wires and line use is charged on a&#13;
per minute basis. Tne encoded&#13;
paper tape runs through the&#13;
terminal at one hundred words&#13;
per minute, thus saving considerable&#13;
expense over direct&#13;
transmission. The advantage of&#13;
using TWX over calling on the&#13;
telephone is that TWX eliminates&#13;
second-guessing about what a&#13;
person has said.&#13;
• The Parkside librarians who&#13;
are presently learning to use the&#13;
teletype are Judy Hamilton and&#13;
Dave Knowles. If you want a book&#13;
which the Parkside library does&#13;
not own they can help you get it.&#13;
Snyder awarded Young&#13;
Humanist Fellowship&#13;
A. Aaron Snyder, an associate&#13;
professor of philosophy, has been&#13;
awarded a "Young Humanist&#13;
Fellowship" by the National&#13;
Endowment for the Humanities&#13;
for studies on "Criminal&#13;
Responsibility" at Yale&#13;
University Law School where he&#13;
will be a visiting scholar, on leave&#13;
from UW-Parkside for the 1973-74&#13;
academic year.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside last&#13;
fall, Snyder taught philosophy at&#13;
UW-Madison.&#13;
His recent research includes&#13;
studies on the standard insanity&#13;
tests in law and an attempt to&#13;
formulate a general nonresponsibility&#13;
defense which is&#13;
justifiable on both philosophic&#13;
and policy grounds. He plans to&#13;
pursue these studies at Yale.&#13;
Snyder, 34, received his undergraduate&#13;
degree magna cum&#13;
laude from Princeton University,&#13;
which he attended on a National&#13;
Merit Scholarship, and was&#13;
his Ph.D. at Cornell University.&#13;
He was a Woodrow Wilson&#13;
National Fellow at Harvard&#13;
University and a visiting scholar&#13;
at the invitation of Yale Law&#13;
School.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents.&#13;
An Illustrated Lecture&#13;
'umu o""—«. ARE REAL!"&#13;
nuclear physicist&#13;
- lecturer&#13;
Tues. - April 17&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Adm: $1.00&#13;
STANTON T&#13;
FRIEDMAN Tickets Available: Info Center&#13;
Dry $&#13;
8. . Cleaned&#13;
LDS. only&#13;
Free Pre-Spotting&#13;
Drop Off Service&#13;
WE&#13;
Wash - Dry - Fold&#13;
20*&#13;
o$&gt;v&#13;
* *$&lt;•&#13;
vV&#13;
Lb.&#13;
$^50&#13;
MINIMUM&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open 8 a tn to8p.m&#13;
6814 Fourteenth Avenue Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
LOUCHE&#13;
"2 8 * 0&#13;
A" # .&#13;
FRIDAY.&#13;
SATURDAY,XT&#13;
SUNDAY W&#13;
Wed . , April 11, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
TheParkside RAIMGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
Soccer club a winner this spring&#13;
"Hey, Ray!"&#13;
"Yeah, Sugar?"&#13;
"Did you know that Parkside&#13;
took third place in a 16 team&#13;
soccer tournament last month?"&#13;
"Groovy, far out and all that&#13;
.other right on revolutionary&#13;
radical rhetorical rap! How come&#13;
I don't hear about it until now?&#13;
Hey, Sugar. Wait a minute. What&#13;
you trying to pull? I may not&#13;
know much about soccer, but last&#13;
month was March, and soccer is&#13;
a fall sport."&#13;
Not at Parkside is soccer&#13;
limited to being a fall sport. It is&#13;
played here in the spring in club&#13;
form, according to Rick Kilps,&#13;
soccer club vice president. The&#13;
club has a full schedule of&#13;
tournaments and games enough&#13;
to keep Pele happy right through&#13;
to the end of May. The games are&#13;
regulation length and are&#13;
governed by collegiate rules.&#13;
The club members are just&#13;
about the same as the players&#13;
who comprised the UW-Parksidd&#13;
varsity team last fall, but now&#13;
they only play to keep (heir skills&#13;
sharp and for fun, since&#13;
recognition for soccer is practically&#13;
nil to begin with, and&#13;
drops below that when it is played&#13;
on the club level.&#13;
Kilps also said that part of the&#13;
reason soccer receives the little&#13;
publicity is that the game still&#13;
seems as foreign as its origins to&#13;
many people, so they don't bother&#13;
to watch the game, because they&#13;
have made no effort to understand&#13;
it.&#13;
Soccer club members think&#13;
that's dumb.&#13;
"It's now very much an&#13;
American game," said Kilps.&#13;
"It's becoming very big on the&#13;
collegiate level of competition,&#13;
and there are more clubs being&#13;
formed all the time."&#13;
To remedy this lack of understanding&#13;
about the world's&#13;
most popular spectator sport (the&#13;
Parkside version; through' no&#13;
fault of its own, usually draws&#13;
massive crowds composed of&#13;
parents, wives and-or girl friends&#13;
and an occasional drunk wandering&#13;
over from the student&#13;
union, the club is now making&#13;
available to all you Archie&#13;
Bunkers out there a free booklet.&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA&#13;
ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
Uf*.&#13;
— BOTH UNDIR SAMt OWNIRSHIP —&#13;
In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" • 16"&#13;
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• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
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CARRY-OUTS&#13;
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DELIVERY&#13;
WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
In this handy little blue booklet&#13;
is everything you always wanted&#13;
to know about soccer but were&#13;
afraid to ask. The novice to the&#13;
game will find an explanation for&#13;
the game's basic terminology,&#13;
skills, the rules of the game, and&#13;
the team's roster. How many of&#13;
you know that it takes 11 players&#13;
to field a team? This booklet is&#13;
available through club members.&#13;
Other club officers are Rick&#13;
Lechusz, president; Mike&#13;
Jenrette, secretary; and Coach&#13;
Hal Henderson, the club adviseras&#13;
well as Parkside's regular&#13;
soccer coach.&#13;
Last weekend the club won five&#13;
big games. The club defeated&#13;
UW-Whitewater Saturday at&#13;
Whitewater, as Mitch&#13;
Nedeljkovic notched four goals in&#13;
the 6-5 decision.&#13;
The club won the Oshkosh&#13;
Indoor Tournament Sunday as it&#13;
defeated UW-Green Bay for the&#13;
first time in Parkside soccer&#13;
history, 1-0, as Nedeljkovic&#13;
scored the winning goal.&#13;
Following the game, UW-Green&#13;
Bay coach Tom Griffith warned&#13;
of the battle that's imminent&#13;
when the squads meet in regular&#13;
competition in the fall: "Wait&#13;
until the outdoor season. It won't&#13;
be a game; it will be a war."&#13;
The Rangers, with Nedeljkovic&#13;
again leading the way with six&#13;
goals, won their first three games&#13;
of the tournament, whipping&#13;
Marinette 5-1, Fox Valley Center&#13;
5-1 and Fox Valley Bombers 1-0.&#13;
The club makes its home debut,&#13;
weather permitting, at 3 p.m.&#13;
today against Carthage. Other&#13;
home games are scheduled for&#13;
April 21 and April 28. The club&#13;
will host an eight team tournament&#13;
May 5.&#13;
In the rest of t he world, soccer&#13;
is so popular that it isn't uncommon&#13;
for eager spectators to&#13;
get trampled to death in a rush&#13;
for tickets. The soccer club isn't&#13;
for that but asks that you, please,&#13;
bring a friend.&#13;
Fencing coach Loran Hein (right) started his drive to&#13;
raise money for the World University Games to be held&#13;
this summer in Moscow by selling a World Games patch&#13;
to Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie. The World Games include&#13;
competition in ten sports but Hein is, naturally enough,&#13;
most concerned with fencing and his own foilist, junior&#13;
John Tank of Wauwatosa, whom the Parkside coach is&#13;
confident can make the U.S. team.&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
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OF Y OUR CAR&#13;
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Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
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FREE GALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH $5.00 ORDER&#13;
1/2 M ILE &amp;ORTH OF&#13;
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ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
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HOURS: DAILY T1 A.M. TO 11 P.M.&#13;
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Go "to . . . ,&#13;
ONE oLQEgf&#13;
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12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 1 1 , 1 97 3&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
" ~ Sports&#13;
Netters fall to Carthage&#13;
in opener&#13;
by B. D. RASMUSSEN&#13;
Ruggers lose twice&#13;
The Parkside Ruggers suffered&#13;
two defeats last weekend. The&#13;
first came at the hands of Northwestern&#13;
University by a score&#13;
of 24-8. P arkside's two tries were&#13;
scored by Eric Olsen and John&#13;
Wilcox. Outstanding Parkside&#13;
player of the game was John van&#13;
Vleet. Parkside's second defeat&#13;
came at the hands of Codrics&#13;
Rugby Club of Milwaukee 24-0.&#13;
The next game will be this&#13;
Saturday at 2 p.m. against&#13;
Illinois Valley.&#13;
The weather last Saturday was&#13;
poor and so was Parkside tennis&#13;
as the Ranger netters dropped&#13;
their season opening dual meet&#13;
by a 9-0 score to Carthage on the&#13;
Parkside courts.&#13;
Carthage started the assault&#13;
with Scott Engholt defeating Rick&#13;
Bedore in No. one singles by a&#13;
score of 10-4. In the twos pairing&#13;
Rick Johnson defeated Gary&#13;
Christensen 10-3, Bob Simpson&#13;
took Dave Herchen 10-5, and&#13;
Mark Henderson, Chris Teezan,&#13;
and Mark Hale beat Mark Haase,&#13;
Todd Nelson, and Calvin Jensen&#13;
respectively, all by 10-3 scores to&#13;
complete the singles sweep.&#13;
Carthage continued the trend in&#13;
doubles. The team of Simpson-&#13;
Henderson beat the Ranger duo&#13;
of Christensen-Herchen by a 10-3&#13;
score; so did Teezen-Engholt&#13;
similarly beat Bedore-Andy&#13;
Peterson. Johnson-Hale asserted&#13;
Carthage's tennis supremacy of&#13;
the Pike River region by downing&#13;
Nelson-Jensen 10-5.&#13;
Parkside will try to change&#13;
things Friday when it travels to&#13;
Carthage to participate in a&#13;
double dual with Wheaton and&#13;
Elmhurst. The meet will start at&#13;
10:30 a.m. On Monday Carroll&#13;
College will be in town for a-1&#13;
p.m. meet.&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
Pool&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Ice facility planned for Kenosha&#13;
The dream of many Kenoshans&#13;
to have an indoor ice skating&#13;
facility in this area will become a&#13;
reality this November. Bob&#13;
Riley, president of the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Hockey Assn., announced&#13;
plans to build the Kenosha Ice&#13;
Arena.&#13;
Rosa takes 1st&#13;
Lucien Rosa took first in the&#13;
two mile run at the Wisconsin&#13;
Indoor Track and Field&#13;
Federation Championship at&#13;
Madison last Saturday with a&#13;
time of 9:13.1.&#13;
Taking second in the 440 was&#13;
Cornelieus Gordon in 51.7. Also in&#13;
the 440 was Herb DeGroot, taking&#13;
fourth.&#13;
Tim Martinson took second in&#13;
pole vaulting, Mike Kopczynski&#13;
was third in the long jump, and&#13;
Raul Medina placed fifth in the&#13;
half mile.&#13;
The relay team of Dennis Biel,&#13;
DeGroot, Kopczynski and Gordon&#13;
placed second in the 880, and with&#13;
Medina running in place of&#13;
Kopczynski for the mile, they&#13;
took third.&#13;
Keith Merritt won the&#13;
Whitewater Decathlon with 5736&#13;
points.&#13;
The year-round skating facility&#13;
will measure 120 feet wide by 245&#13;
feet long, and will have a seating&#13;
capacity of 920. The arena will&#13;
also contain a concession stand,&#13;
pro-shop, four team lockers, and&#13;
ample lobby space. The location&#13;
for the arena will be in the&#13;
vicinity of Highway 50 and 60th&#13;
Ave.&#13;
It is expected that the Parkside&#13;
hockey team will be playing its&#13;
home games in the arena this&#13;
fall. The team had previously&#13;
been going up to Milwaukee to&#13;
play and practice. Bill&#13;
Westerlund, manager of the&#13;
Parkside Hockey Club, has been&#13;
selected as rink manager for the&#13;
new arena.&#13;
Construction is slated for&#13;
completion by Nov. 1.&#13;
Gemignani second&#13;
in lift&#13;
Joe Gemignani lifted a total of&#13;
1,320 pounds to place second in&#13;
the Wisconsin State Power Lifting&#13;
Championship last weekend.&#13;
Gemignani lifted in the 181 pound&#13;
weight class. He benched 350&#13;
squatted 430, deadlifted 540, and&#13;
he was outlifted by only five&#13;
pounds.&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHULTZ BUICK-0PEL&#13;
1021 - 60th Street, Kenosha&#13;
654-3514&#13;
*2,373°°&#13;
1973 OPEL&#13;
1900&#13;
GO FAR ON A&#13;
LITTLE MONEY&#13;
Monday &amp; Wednesday 11 '30.-1 '30&#13;
Tuesday &amp; Thursday . 11:30-2:30&#13;
Friday ^ -30-3"30&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 5 30-10 00&#13;
Thursday 5-30-7-00&#13;
9:00-10:00&#13;
1°:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:30-10:00&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday 10:30-1:30 (2 courts open)&#13;
3:30-6:00 (1 court open)&#13;
6:00-10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday 8:00a.m.-10:00p.m.&#13;
. except Tuesday &amp; Thursday closed from 10:30-12:00 for classes&#13;
Saturday a 00-5-00&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished&#13;
apartment near Parkside. Utilities and heat&#13;
included, $130. 654-7341&#13;
1972 Kustom 500 Amp. Excellent condition.&#13;
List $1700. $950 or best offer. Call 633-6191&#13;
after 5.&#13;
TERM PAPERS papers neatly typed. 50&#13;
cents per page. Call for and deliver. J.&#13;
Konke, 694-2776 after 5:30.&#13;
WANNA BUY a nice looking Swede? My 1969&#13;
SAAB 96 might be her! Call Jerry, 654-7181&#13;
for info.&#13;
1969 OPEL Station Wagon. Excellent condition,&#13;
25-30 miles per gallon. 654-8888.&#13;
RIDE WANTED to Boston or New York over&#13;
spring break, April 20-29. Will share expenses.&#13;
Call Kathy at 637-3738.&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632&#13;
:667. J&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADV ERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHF.DK FNCT.CRFD FDR $&#13;
DATESfSl TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
annnpcc datf&#13;
CITY PHONF NO&#13;
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Two Shows 7:00 p.m.&#13;
in Racine Memorial Hall&#13;
Richie Havens&#13;
BEN SIDRAN&#13;
former accompainist with R olling Stones&#13;
STEVE MILLER BAND&#13;
ERIC CLAPTON&#13;
Gen.&#13;
Adm.&#13;
Tickets A vailable At:&#13;
All J &amp; J RECORD STORES&#13;
BEAUTIFUL DAY RECORDS&#13;
THE EARTH WORKS&#13;
DUBEES BAR&#13;
Presented b y&#13;
America Theatre&#13;
Productions</text>
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              <text>Students present concert today</text>
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              <text>The Parkside-&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
Wednesday April 18, 1973 Vol. 1 No. 26&#13;
Parkside music students will&#13;
present a free public concert at 8&#13;
p.m. today at the Kenosha&#13;
Campus Fine Arts Room.&#13;
The program will include&#13;
awarding of the first Lillian&#13;
James Scholarship to an outstanding&#13;
music student. The&#13;
scholarship was established by&#13;
the music faculty last fall to&#13;
honor Mrs. James, who retired at&#13;
the end of the 1971-72 school year.&#13;
Mrs. James, who lives at 2419&#13;
Carmel Ave., Racine, will&#13;
present the award.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will be&#13;
Debbie Peronne, piano, 7938 38th&#13;
Ave., Kenosha, and Phillip Ince,&#13;
violoncello, 3130 Southwood&#13;
Drive, Racine. Vocal soloists will&#13;
be Christine Jenkins, soprano,&#13;
1808 25th St., Kenosha; Ron&#13;
Benedict, baritone, 1809 Ellis&#13;
Ave., Racine; Chris Roland,&#13;
baritone, 1910 Grange Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Trudy Sheridan, alto,&#13;
11727 Washington Ave., Sturtevant;&#13;
Bea Jacobson, soprano,&#13;
614 Washington Circle, Waterford;&#13;
and Fred Luft, tenor,&#13;
Fredonia.&#13;
Soprano Judith Lanning, 2514&#13;
Rosalind Ave., Racine, also will&#13;
sing, accompanied by a cello&#13;
quartet including Mary Manulik,&#13;
7830 38th St., Kenosha; Ince;&#13;
Marty Fettes, 1431 Thurston&#13;
Ave., Racine; and Sue&#13;
Kraschnewski, 3304 Valley&#13;
Forge, Racine.&#13;
Also programmed are a&#13;
saxophone quartet including&#13;
Mailing &amp; Duplicating&#13;
services available&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
There are several services&#13;
available to students, staff and&#13;
faculty down in D218 of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
The Central Mailroom is open&#13;
from 7:45 a.m., through the lunch&#13;
hour, until 4:30 p.m. Deliveries&#13;
are made to the post office from&#13;
Parkside at 12:30 p.m. and 3:15&#13;
p.m.&#13;
According to Richard L.&#13;
Flahive, supervisor, the&#13;
mailroom will be a postal substation&#13;
which can sell stamps in&#13;
both row and book form by July.&#13;
Personal mailing may be done&#13;
through the mailroom. Persons&#13;
receiving packages through the&#13;
mail should leave an area where&#13;
they may be reached. A name,&#13;
division and telephone number&#13;
are helpful in notifying persons of&#13;
receipt of their package.&#13;
There is United Parce Service&#13;
available through the mailroom,&#13;
but since there is a fee, use of the&#13;
service must be authorized&#13;
through some department or&#13;
division, said Flahive.&#13;
Also available is the&#13;
duplicating service. In the area of&#13;
self-service, there is a mimeo&#13;
duplicator and a wet copy&#13;
process which will copy books.&#13;
These are not meant to replace&#13;
the vending type copiers, but if a&#13;
student can get authorization&#13;
from a department or division to&#13;
do duplicating related to a&#13;
project or other school related&#13;
activity, he may use the service.&#13;
The Duplicating Shop, not a&#13;
printing shop, is classified by the&#13;
state as class C, which limits the&#13;
tasks which may be performed&#13;
there. For example, Flahive&#13;
explained that they are limited in&#13;
the number of copies they may&#13;
make per master.&#13;
Small programs and posters&#13;
can be done through Duplicating.&#13;
The item to be duplicated must be&#13;
ready for shooting, which means&#13;
it must be in black, because the&#13;
electrostatic master maker only&#13;
picks up black.&#13;
If assistance is needed setting&#13;
up a poster or program, help is&#13;
available at the Duplicating&#13;
Shop. For assistance with&#13;
graphic arts, such things as the&#13;
logo and its use, Rita Petretti&#13;
should be contacted.&#13;
According to Flahive, the turnaround&#13;
rate at Duplicating is&#13;
eight hours. A l arge job, like 55&#13;
masters, 25 copies each, must be&#13;
scheduled. However, one master&#13;
for 25 copies can be taken care of&#13;
quickly.&#13;
Again, this duplicating service&#13;
is available with departmental&#13;
(divisional) authorization.&#13;
The size limitations on items&#13;
which may be done at&#13;
Duplicating are from 3x5 cards to&#13;
13V4X8V2.&#13;
There will be no RANGER next week because of&#13;
spring break. The next RANGER will appear May 2.&#13;
The RANGER staff wishes you a happy spring vacation.&#13;
SusanLasco, Rt. 2, Salem; Mark&#13;
Maney, 20320 Kathrine St., Wind&#13;
Lake; Chris McMahon, 6723 22nd&#13;
Ave., Kenosha; and Jeffery&#13;
Christman, 8064 47th Ct.,&#13;
Kenosha; a flute duet including&#13;
Miss Lasco and Linda Truax, 5815&#13;
Pershing Blvd., Kenosha; and a&#13;
seven-clarinet ensemble including&#13;
Sr. Mary Dunstan, Box&#13;
310, Kenosha; Susan Johnson,&#13;
1726 27th St., Kenosha; Hermina&#13;
Jaeger, 325 Lincoln, Wausau; Pat&#13;
Engal, 2435 S. Chicago, South&#13;
Milwaukee; Susan Friederich,&#13;
1121 Jefferson, St., Racine; Mark&#13;
Redlin, 417 Blaine Ave., Racine;&#13;
and Tom Zager, 6845 Hy. 31,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Bookstore hours&#13;
The following are the&#13;
Bookstore's Spring Break hours:&#13;
Friday, April 20 - 9 a.m. to noon;&#13;
Saturday and Sunday, April 21-22&#13;
- closed; Monday through&#13;
Thursday, April 23-26 - 9 a.m. to&#13;
4:30 p.m.; Friday, April 27 - 9&#13;
a.m. to 1 p.m.; Saturday and&#13;
Sunday, April 28-29 - closed; and&#13;
Monday, April 30 - resume normal&#13;
hours.&#13;
Lake alert&#13;
Professors awarded&#13;
fellowships&#13;
Students present concert today&#13;
Two assistant professors of&#13;
engineering science in the School&#13;
of Modern Industry, Walter Feldt&#13;
and John Zarling, have been&#13;
awarded NASA-ASEE (National&#13;
Aeronautics and Space Administration-&#13;
American Society&#13;
for Electrical Engineering)&#13;
Summer Faculty Fellowships.&#13;
The fellowships will support&#13;
participation by the pair in the&#13;
Stanford-Ames Engineering&#13;
Systems Design Program at&#13;
Stanford University June 18&#13;
through August 31. They will join&#13;
a team of 20 scholars from&#13;
throughout the United States at&#13;
Stanford to develop an advanced&#13;
design for forest-fire fighting in&#13;
cooperation with the U.S. Forest&#13;
Service and the California&#13;
Division of Forestry.&#13;
Both Feldt and Zarling are&#13;
registered professional engineers&#13;
in the state of Wisconsin. Feldt&#13;
earned his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Northwestern University and&#13;
Zarling at Michigan&#13;
Technological University.&#13;
See Inside&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
Special Travel Feature&#13;
page 7&#13;
Shoreline erosion discussed&#13;
By Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Shoreline erosion, a problem of concern for many&#13;
Racine residents, was last of the three issues to be&#13;
discussed at the Lake Michigan Alert Conference.&#13;
Curt Larsen of the Lake Michigan Federation&#13;
presented a series of slides depicting various things&#13;
associated with erosion.&#13;
Erosion, Larsen explained, is a natural process&#13;
which occurs for many reasons. There are four&#13;
main variables kgown to increase shore erosion:&#13;
lake level fluctuations, denial of sediment to the&#13;
shore by dam construction, frequency of low&#13;
pressure cells which cross the lake, and man-made&#13;
shore structures.&#13;
The first two of these variables can be considered&#13;
negligible in Lake Michigan. No great amount of&#13;
sediment has been furnished to the lake since late&#13;
Pleistocene times, and although the lake levels are&#13;
commonly blamed for erosion, they have actually&#13;
undergone an overall decrease.&#13;
In the Great Lakes, Lake Michigan-Huron offers a&#13;
case where only two of the four variables appear to&#13;
be active.&#13;
Recent studies by Fox and Davis (1970) have&#13;
looked critically at the effects of changes in atmospheric&#13;
pressure. There is a close relationship&#13;
between wave height and wind direction with shore&#13;
erosion. A drop in atmospheric pressure is followed&#13;
by increased wave height and a change in wind&#13;
direction. Rapid erosion may result from a single&#13;
severe storm.&#13;
In a longer period of study, Seibel (1972) has&#13;
shown that the frequency of low pressure cells&#13;
crossing the lake have remained relatively constant&#13;
during the recorded history of the region. Periods of&#13;
intense erosion may be connected with the passage&#13;
of a low pressure cell. This meteorological variable&#13;
is nearly constant, and may be considered&#13;
separately from cultural ones.&#13;
Most of Larsen's discussion of erosion centered&#13;
around the cultural variable of man-made shore&#13;
structures.&#13;
Larsen explained to the conference that if the&#13;
critical distance at which a wave breaks off shore is&#13;
responsible for the magnitude of erosion or&#13;
deposition at the beach, then erosion will continue&#13;
until a beach platform and-or bar system is formed&#13;
at that point. When this happens, the amount of&#13;
sediment supplied to the beach by incoming waves&#13;
is about equal to the amount removed.&#13;
In Lake Michigan, there is a general north to&#13;
south movement of sediment due in part to northeastern&#13;
on-shore winds. To maintain a beach in&#13;
this location, there must be a near constatn volume&#13;
of sediment moving along the shore. If this&#13;
sediment is restricted or diverted, erosion will&#13;
result. This would occur naturally during severe&#13;
continued on page 4&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER W ed. / A pri l 1 8 / 1 973&#13;
The Parkside "RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Safety precautions&#13;
needed for cyclists&#13;
Spring is sprung/&#13;
The grass is riz;&#13;
we wonder where&#13;
The bikers is.&#13;
Vacation necessary now?&#13;
Spring break begins in two days and it is hard to&#13;
fathom why we would have a vacation with only two&#13;
weeks of school left.&#13;
If only one day were allotted for Easter, the rest of the&#13;
time could be chopped off t he end of the year. A longer&#13;
summer break would be very welcome.&#13;
The summer break wouldn't be the only good point. If&#13;
there were no long break for Easter, finals would follow&#13;
with more continuity. That long break gives students the&#13;
tendency to put things off until later.&#13;
Another possibility is to hold a break sometime in&#13;
March. That is approximately midway in the second&#13;
semester.&#13;
But now that we do have a break coming up and the&#13;
Ranger has offered a couple of s uggestions that might&#13;
reform the vacations in the future, we would like to wish&#13;
everyone a happy and healthy vacation.&#13;
Wherever they are, we feel sure that bike riders will&#13;
soon be out en masse, as will motorcyclists and hikers&#13;
And since nothing could be more of a bummer than&#13;
getting knocked off by some hot-shot in a Super-Chevy&#13;
and spending the summer in a body cast, we feel a&#13;
moment's reflection on safety is in order.&#13;
All we're really asking for is common sense from&#13;
everybody. Anyone who has or had a driver's license&#13;
knows how to watch out for others; it's just a matter of&#13;
applying the knowledge. But, too, it involves restraint&#13;
for some who would play juvenile games with human&#13;
lives for the sake of amusement. We refer to those&#13;
cyclists who weave back and forth across the road, or&#13;
ride no hands," or those motorists who get their kicks&#13;
from passing pedestrians or bike riders with a quarter&#13;
of an inch to spare.&#13;
Around Parkside we have some special problems to&#13;
watch out for. We already have an excessive number of&#13;
cars arriving and leaving throughout the day; we can&#13;
expect a large number of b ikes also. Because we are out&#13;
in the county, speed limits on surrounding roads are&#13;
higher than in the city. Wood Road is both narrow and&#13;
winding but very popular with cyclists. These factors&#13;
and others call for increased caution from all. Whatever&#13;
your mode of getting here, we hope you each make it in&#13;
one piece.&#13;
Yoo gotta be&#13;
Wander&#13;
Manic Mage,&#13;
Speed Queen,&#13;
Hot-Ripped)&#13;
Loose-lipp*d)&#13;
Constantly «n&#13;
Heat, and&#13;
) Sexually&#13;
Flexible.&#13;
That's vat ya&#13;
gotta d© ta&#13;
be a&#13;
rock musician!&#13;
Money and jobs seem tighter than ever before on campus. The&#13;
present budget period runs out June 30, a nd department heads are&#13;
hard-pressed to make job commitments without knowing the status of&#13;
the next budget.&#13;
For many readers the upcoming summer will be very frustrating in&#13;
the area of jub-hunting. If i ndications prove to be reliable, this summer's&#13;
job market will be worse than that of last year. That will be&#13;
remarkably bad.&#13;
Those readers who have jobs are rather lucky, especially if they&#13;
aren't phased out of their job in the nar future. Those without jobs will&#13;
have a rough time of it.&#13;
Between the President's slashes in educational grants and Governor&#13;
Lucey's innept view of what value public education has, government&#13;
has all but stilfed the educational ambitions of thousands of students.&#13;
This campus has been hit as hard, if not harder, than any school in&#13;
the system. I don't know of a department that is well off enough to take&#13;
on more student help. There are departments which are waiting for&#13;
people to quit so that their payroll burden decreases. The empty&#13;
position would, most likely, not be filled.&#13;
"Austerity" is a dirty word to people who have to employ students in&#13;
order to keep their operation going. If t he UW system wants to attract&#13;
students to its schools, it had better start playing ball with the&#13;
students. The system must put the kind of money necessary into the&#13;
hands of the people who must hire students. The state just cannot&#13;
quarrel that that would be a return investment.&#13;
The Parkside RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of&#13;
Kenosha, Wis consin 5 3140. Offices are located AT n IQA T H&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295 Library-&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Rudy Lienau&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Kathryn Wellner&#13;
MATURE EDITOR: Jane Schliesman&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Kris Koch&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Jerry Murphv&#13;
WPITPP4 ' irl! ! ' Feed Lawrence&#13;
SiPSm3' He,mUt K3h' Bi"&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva wrence, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau ?V..'"P:,ESTBD F* NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. V&#13;
360 Lexington Avt., New York, N. i\ 10017&#13;
rH-i-H-i&#13;
ev .&#13;
Rudy LiENaq.!&#13;
Wed., April 18, 1973 T HE PARKSIDE KANUtK J&#13;
THORN By Konkol&#13;
THORN has accomplished something. Long ago, maybe as long ago&#13;
as last semester, I mentioned that there were student organizations on&#13;
campus that needed office space and that there were a lot of office&#13;
spaces on the third floor of the library that needed tenants. Finally,&#13;
through the efforts of PSGA, this has been accomplished. Those&#13;
organizations which can justify the need for campus office space may&#13;
apply for some through the president of PSGA.&#13;
There is a clear and present need for a check cashing service on&#13;
campus. The bookstore cannot perform this service since they do not&#13;
keep that kind of money on hand. Maybe the business office would&#13;
have something to suggest.&#13;
Due to an unfortunate run of circumstances, the Archives is short&#13;
one copy of the December 3, 1970, issue of NEWSCOPE. If any of you&#13;
readers happen to have a spare copy lying around that you no longer&#13;
need to hold on to, I and Nicholas Burckel would appreciate you&#13;
dropping it off.&#13;
Being a writer for a newspaper can be frustrating at times. There&#13;
are always deadlines to meet, sources to consult and people to interview.&#13;
And after all that, there is the pouring of the soul into writing&#13;
a piece to appear.&#13;
After it is all done, you have reached a plateau where you rest until&#13;
the next time, a plateau where the rest is sometimes not very long, due&#13;
to what happens when the article is submitted. The editors get hold of&#13;
it.&#13;
It can be frustrating at times to have poured your soul into what you&#13;
think is a very good piece of writing, only to have an editor come along&#13;
and change your whole meaning with a word change he feels is more&#13;
appropriate.&#13;
At times I have had to argue half an hour over a minor change which&#13;
would have changed the whole idea I had spent half a page in&#13;
developing, only to have an editor destroy a good part of the foundation&#13;
with what he feels was a minor correction.&#13;
I have had the most important parts of articles deleted for space by&#13;
editors who are in a hurry, with the result that all the important information&#13;
was nicely cut while all that remained was a lot of&#13;
meaningless drivil, foundation on which rested no structure.&#13;
To avoid a lot of die anguish, I just don't write as much as I used to.&#13;
At times in the past my stories and articles might have taken up 2xk&#13;
pages of an eight-page newspaper. These days, I restrict myself to&#13;
doing the photography for the paper and this column.&#13;
As far as the photography goes, my editor and I are of varying&#13;
philosophies. He feels credit should be given only on certain types of&#13;
photos, while I feel that every picture, no matter what it is of, should&#13;
have the source listed — eve n if that source is only the Public Information&#13;
office. After all, how are you gonna attract more&#13;
photographers if they aren't going to get credit for their work? Also, it&#13;
is a small ego trip to see your name in pri nt.&#13;
I think it makes most people who work for the paper feel good when&#13;
complete strangers come up to them to comment on an article they&#13;
wrote or something else which appears in this paper. It does me, every&#13;
time. Most people like to get credit for things they've worked hard on.&#13;
I for one would like to get credit for every picture of mine that appears,&#13;
including those in "Ranger Asks."&#13;
I have stated that my editor has a philosophy different from mine in&#13;
how a story or article should be written. I tend more to letting a writer&#13;
express himself in his own style in articles which are not strictly of the&#13;
informational type. My editor would like to see the whole paper&#13;
maintain a uniform style.&#13;
Style is something which largely depends on the whim of the person&#13;
in charge. No two papers in the country have styles which are exactly&#13;
alike. At times, this seeming arbitrary way of doing things gets on my&#13;
nerves. In my opinion I feel an article of this type, in which the author&#13;
is personally responsible for every word which appears, should consist&#13;
of entirely the words of the author, without change of content by the&#13;
editor. Such changes interfere with the writer's established style.&#13;
An example of a minor change which happened last week which&#13;
might have changed the inferences drawn in some reader's mind was&#13;
the changing of the term "chairman" to "chairperson."&#13;
In my mind, chairman is the head of a committee. "Chairwoman"&#13;
may be allowed where the committee by its very makeup would&#13;
always have a woman at its head. Using such reasoning, Gloria&#13;
Steinem is chairwoman of a woman's liberation group while Francis&#13;
Bedford is chairman of the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
There is no such thing as "chairperson." By my definition such a&#13;
thing would have to be in charge of a committee, yet be neither male&#13;
nor female. Such a thing does not exist.&#13;
I see no reason for some suffragettes to be offended by the term&#13;
chairman. After all, -man used as a suffix in this instance is a shortened&#13;
form of the word human, and I do not think any woman pictures&#13;
herself as being apart from the human race.&#13;
Gee, I just know what I have said is going to offend a lot of femmlibbers&#13;
who are only going to see the surface of what I wrote and not&#13;
delve into the philosophy behind that statement.&#13;
There is a s logan, "Anatomy is not Destiny," which some women&#13;
hold as sort of the first commandment. I cannot see the point of it. I&#13;
know of no woman who has ever become a father. I rather feel that&#13;
"Each man (or woman) controls his own destiny."&#13;
Course offered to study China&#13;
Madison - An experimental&#13;
course to study education in the&#13;
People's Republic of China will&#13;
be offered for the first time&#13;
during the 1973 sum mer session&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Madison June 11-Aug. 4.&#13;
China specialist Albert H. Yee&#13;
•&#13;
of the department of curriculum&#13;
and instruction and Andreas M.&#13;
Kazamias of educational policy&#13;
studies, an authority on comparative&#13;
and international&#13;
education, will teach the 2-3&#13;
credit course.&#13;
The class is Professor Yee's&#13;
response to the wide public interest&#13;
taken in his recent 16-day&#13;
visit to the PRC. A thirdgeneration&#13;
American whose&#13;
ancestors came from China, he&#13;
was the first American&#13;
psychologist and education&#13;
researcher to visit Mainland&#13;
China after the thaw. He maintains&#13;
that his heritage helps him&#13;
relate professionally and personally&#13;
to both Chinese and&#13;
Americans.&#13;
Professor Kazamias was born&#13;
on Cyprus of Greek parents and&#13;
educated at the University of&#13;
Bristol, England, and at Harvard.&#13;
He offered the first UW&#13;
summer institute in international&#13;
education to study the problems&#13;
in African, Near Eastern, and&#13;
Asian education.&#13;
Professors Yee and Kazamias&#13;
will examine the background and&#13;
development of all levels of&#13;
education in China today,&#13;
devoting some class time to the&#13;
ways elementary and secondary&#13;
teachers can help students learn&#13;
more about China. Films, slides,&#13;
discussions, and readings will be&#13;
included. Students wishing to&#13;
earn three credits will submit a&#13;
written report.&#13;
The course does not require&#13;
prior background in Chinese&#13;
studies, according to Professor&#13;
Yee, who will supply additional&#13;
information at 262-3764.&#13;
We get letters....&#13;
Dear Editors:&#13;
A friend and I traveled to&#13;
Parkside especially to hear the&#13;
"Two Bit Poetry Forum"&#13;
honoring Harlow Mills last week.&#13;
The readings were excellent&#13;
though difficult to hear. The noisy&#13;
food machines and chatting&#13;
snackers were hardly a compatable&#13;
background for the lovely&#13;
word pictures of Tagore, the&#13;
whimsicalities of Emily&#13;
Dickinson, even e.e. cummings!&#13;
Joyce Dana&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Marylene Dosse's Saint-Saens&#13;
Piano Recital on April 8,1973 was&#13;
very exhilerating. I hope such,&#13;
weekend cultural entertainment&#13;
will be continued.&#13;
The recital also made possible&#13;
!an enjoyable encounter with&#13;
three piano students from&#13;
Burlington. The three were a&#13;
woman and her two daughters,&#13;
all with pleasant dispositions,&#13;
who made the day's event more&#13;
satisfying.&#13;
By keeping Parkside's entertainment&#13;
calibre high, many&#13;
good people will be attracted&#13;
here. Quality events will also&#13;
make our mental environment&#13;
less polluted.&#13;
Jerry Jarapko&#13;
Racine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To the members and interested&#13;
pledges of Sigma Pi Fraternity.&#13;
The Brothers of the Beta Lambda&#13;
Chapter of Alpha Kappa Lambda&#13;
Fraternity, congratulate you on&#13;
your observation of AKL activities.&#13;
If this is all the Sigma Pi&#13;
colony does for college service&#13;
and promotion of Greek&#13;
Brotherhood, AKL is surprised&#13;
and astonished. We congratulate&#13;
you on your newspaper reporting.&#13;
~ " Jim Gaastra&#13;
AKL Sergeant of Arms&#13;
P.S. Sigma Pi are you watching?&#13;
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• » &gt; V • , M y / V • ' - - . »&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed.. April 18, 1973&#13;
Movemenl*&#13;
Council Of wL .t.0"' comp,le&lt;1 *&gt;y the Wisconsin Coord inating&#13;
haveten adrdLl ^\EdUCa°0n (WCC«™). Ca.l number!&#13;
A co mplete hihlil^ if6 ^ availab,e from the Parkside library,&#13;
women il lvaUaMe luh^w 0nr,"^ary'8 holdings on the status of&#13;
or from the^omen's^ancu's S "S ^^ "*»*&#13;
LIBERATE YOUR BOOKCASE&#13;
AH RO F0R UNDER SIXTY DOLLARS&#13;
*BEeZ2n'Sif k9„&amp;UP Argai°"aSt the Wa"' Mother- GI«coe. $2.95 d e ' T h e s e c o n d s e x- B a n t a m- 9 5 c&#13;
HQH2(i.BC5ar0line' B°rn Female' ReV' 6d- Pocket Books- $1-25.&#13;
El85.86.'cS°n1' 1116 BIaCk Woman: An Anthology. Signet. 95c.&#13;
DDaavviiss,' FEllitzTabheotthH Gro' u^ld, i TlfhWe FWiormste nS-e xE.a Pwecnegttu. i9n5. c$. 1H.4Q51 426.C65&#13;
Ejlerson, Mette, I Accuse. Award. 95c. HQ46. E38&#13;
HD6W5e.E64Cynthia FUChS' Woman's Place- u- °f Cal- Press. $2.45.&#13;
Sf; Eva,™a!riarchal Attitudes. Fawcett. 95c. HQ1 121 F53&#13;
HQ1426.F28' hUlam"h' The Dialectic of Sex. Bantam. $1.25.&#13;
Friedan, Betty, The Feminine Mystique. Dell. $1.25 HQ1420 F7&#13;
Greer Germaine, The Female Eunuch. Bantam $1.95&#13;
Gormck Vivian, Woman in Sexist Society. Signet. $1.95&#13;
Graves Robert, The White Goddess. Rev. ed. Noonday. $2.25&#13;
Hays, Elinor Rice, Lucy Stone. Tower. 95c&#13;
5ayS'^!.' R"1116 Dangerous Sex. Pocket Books. $1.25. HQ21 H37&#13;
HQmiCH4erger' RUth' Adam'S Rib' Harber-Row Books 95c.&#13;
HQUMJ?' EHZabeth' Man'S WorId' Woman's Place. Delta. $2.65.&#13;
KrarHtnr' LAU?y' T New Feminism. Paperback Library. $1.25&#13;
HQH10 K7' Fr°m 1116 PedestaL Quadrangle. $2.95.&#13;
^ G0'de" NOteb°°k' Ballantine-&#13;
Mo~:".aS:sl"5itinBs From the women's Lib"rati»a&#13;
Ludovici, L.J., The Final Inequality. Tower. 95c&#13;
Millet, Kate, Sexual Politics. Equinox. $2.95. HQ 1154.M5&#13;
Morgan, Robin, Sisterhood is Powerful. Vintage. $2.45. HQ1426.M85&#13;
New York City Commission on Human Rights, Women's Role in&#13;
Contemporary Society. Discus. $2.45&#13;
Roszak, Betty and Theodore, Masculine-Feminine. Harper&#13;
Colophon. $2.45 . HQ115 4.R75&#13;
Schneir, Miriam, Feminism: The Essential Historical Writings&#13;
Vintage. $2.45 6 '&#13;
Stambler, Sookie, Women's Liberation; Blueprint for the Future&#13;
Ace. 95c. HQ1426.S78&#13;
Stannard, Una, The New Pamela; or, Virtue Unrewarded&#13;
Ballantine. 95c&#13;
Tanner, Leslie B., Voices From Women's Liberation. Signet. $1.50.&#13;
HQ1426.T3&#13;
Ware, Cellestine, Woman Power. Tower. 95c. HQ1426.W36&#13;
Wasserman, Barbara Alson, The Bold New Women. Fawcett. 95c&#13;
Time utilization&#13;
studied in&#13;
Madison&#13;
Madison - University of&#13;
Wisconsin System faculty&#13;
members spend from 13 to 15&#13;
hours a week in face-to-face&#13;
teaching of students, according to&#13;
the first study made of faculty&#13;
time utilization in the new&#13;
system.&#13;
In addition to face-to-face&#13;
contact, which includes time&#13;
spent both in teaching organized&#13;
credit classes and in individualized&#13;
credit instruction,&#13;
faculty spend an additional 32 to&#13;
35 hours a week in the primary&#13;
activity associated with teaching.&#13;
This includes course preparation,&#13;
student evaluation, academic&#13;
advising, committee and&#13;
departmental work, and&#13;
development of courses. Thus,&#13;
for every hour spent in actual&#13;
teaching, another 2% hours is&#13;
spent in activities supporting that&#13;
teaching, the study indicates.&#13;
The study shows that time&#13;
devoted to teaching occupies by&#13;
far the greatest amount of faculty&#13;
time at all ranks and at all&#13;
campuses-from an average of 85&#13;
percent at the doctoral campuses&#13;
to an average of 95 percent at the&#13;
primarily undergraduate&#13;
campuses. On the doctoral&#13;
campuses, professors devote an&#13;
average of 44 hours a week to&#13;
teaching responsibilities, and&#13;
associate and assistant&#13;
professors both 48. On the&#13;
primarily undergraduate&#13;
campuses, professors devote an&#13;
average of 53 hours a week to&#13;
teaching duties, associate&#13;
professors 52 hours, and assistant&#13;
professors 51 hours. A tht ef reshman&#13;
- s o p homo r e campu s e s ,&#13;
professors report an average of&#13;
48 hours, associate professors 53,&#13;
and assistant professors 54.&#13;
The other activities counted in&#13;
an average faculty work week&#13;
are time spent on sponsored&#13;
research, extension courses and&#13;
public service activities, and&#13;
other scholarly pursuits. When&#13;
these hours are added to the time&#13;
spent related to teaching, the&#13;
faculty work week throughout the&#13;
system averages a total of fro m&#13;
54 to 56 ho urs.&#13;
L&#13;
[[) J f?&#13;
BWCAVOhl CAN&#13;
RAISE THE SAVAGE OfFr olOmhl OTRHAE MPCBEP TFe To&#13;
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UNCERTAINTY&#13;
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Ranch C reated&#13;
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Charcoal Steaks&#13;
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TAURUS&#13;
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SUNDANCE&#13;
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storms when sediment is carried to deep water by&#13;
abnormal wave action. A man-made structure such&#13;
as a jetty or groin can leave the same effect.&#13;
Larsen showed several diagrams of how jetties&#13;
and groins can affect erosion. One diagram&#13;
depicted the result of a series of g roins.&#13;
When a structure is built out into the lake, it&#13;
causes sediment to be deposited on t he north side.&#13;
As one progresses southward, the amount of&#13;
sediment available decreased with each jetty or&#13;
groin constructed and the time it takes to fill the&#13;
groin gets longer. At some point downshore there is&#13;
no longer enough sediment to maintain a beach, and&#13;
erosion occurs.&#13;
After Larsen's presentation, the conference&#13;
moved into workshops, one for each of the three&#13;
areas discussed.&#13;
During the workshop on sh oreline erosion, many&#13;
lakefront property owners wanted to k now, "How&#13;
can I save my property, house, etc.?"&#13;
According to Lee Botts, executive secretary of the&#13;
Lake Michigan Federation, the solution must be one&#13;
arrived at by a coalition of lakefront property&#13;
owners, since if each person tries to protect his&#13;
piece of la nd by a jetty, groin or seawall, someone&#13;
farther downshore will have an even greater&#13;
problem.&#13;
\ v *i&gt; -&#13;
I'm getting my shirts&#13;
decorated at the&#13;
BUCKLT&amp;HTS&#13;
V/AT£G&gt;BET&gt;5&#13;
IWc e ws s&#13;
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Wed./ April 18, 1973 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Report on "outside activities&#13;
completed&#13;
Job study underway&#13;
Madison - A preliminary report&#13;
on "outside activities" of&#13;
University of Wisconsin System&#13;
faculty members was announced&#13;
Tuesday by the system's central&#13;
administration. Seven percent of&#13;
the ranked faculty reported such&#13;
outside work.&#13;
Donald E. Percy, a senior vice&#13;
president, said that the report&#13;
had been compiled by the central&#13;
staff and provided to the Board of&#13;
Regents and the Legislature's&#13;
Finance Committee.&#13;
The report defined faculty&#13;
outside activities as "gainful&#13;
activity of an extensive recurring&#13;
or continuing nature apart from a&#13;
faculty member's work&#13;
obligation to the university" and&#13;
stated that such activities are&#13;
beneficial to the community,&#13;
state and nation as well as to&#13;
faculty members and their&#13;
students.&#13;
"The University System encourages&#13;
its faculty members to&#13;
carry their expertise, knowledge&#13;
and research to the public and&#13;
private sectors, and to benefit, in&#13;
turn, through practical experience&#13;
in the work-a-day world&#13;
of their professions," the report&#13;
said.&#13;
It added that reports are kept&#13;
"to guranatee that each faculty&#13;
member who engages in outside&#13;
activities not only avoids conflicts&#13;
of interest but also meets all&#13;
university obligations-student&#13;
advising, preparation for&#13;
teaching, and committee work,&#13;
as well as meeting with classes."&#13;
A tabulation of reports from the&#13;
campuses and UW Extension for&#13;
the calendar year 1972 showed&#13;
that:&#13;
1. A total of 481 or 7 percent of&#13;
the 7,150 full time, ranked faculty&#13;
members reported a variety of&#13;
"outside activities" to which they&#13;
devoted five or more working&#13;
days a year and received more&#13;
than "token" payment in addition&#13;
to their university salaries.&#13;
2. Most of those reporting ~ 60&#13;
percent to 78 percent - reported&#13;
no more than 14 week days spent&#13;
on such outside work during the&#13;
year.&#13;
3. The 481 reporting consisted&#13;
of 169 full professors, 117&#13;
associate professors, 142&#13;
assistant professors and 53 instructors.&#13;
4. More than half (255) of the&#13;
faculty members served as&#13;
consultants, technical advisors&#13;
and expert witnesses, while 63&#13;
engaged in classroom or individual&#13;
instruction or participated&#13;
in workshops, seminars&#13;
and clinics not connected with&#13;
their campuses, and 163 were,&#13;
paid for other activities such as&#13;
professional practice, writing&#13;
and editing, testing, judging and&#13;
officiating, public speaking, and&#13;
music directing, teaching and&#13;
performing.&#13;
Among the examples of outside&#13;
activities reported were the&#13;
following:&#13;
Director of research project for&#13;
county, researcher for U.S.&#13;
Bureau of Mines, local census&#13;
worker, physics teacher at&#13;
vocational school, giving music&#13;
lessons, teaching in a high school,&#13;
conducting clinical psychology&#13;
practice, doing legal work,&#13;
writing children's books, writing&#13;
and editing book on architecture,&#13;
directing a choir, officiating at&#13;
high school and college football,&#13;
basketball and baseball games,&#13;
serving as city alderman, serving&#13;
as pastor of a church.&#13;
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little schooling to qualify for a&#13;
4 better job is the subject of a&#13;
major study by two Madison&#13;
educators.&#13;
David L. Featherman,&#13;
professor of rural sociology, and&#13;
Prof. Robert M. Hauser,&#13;
sociology, will employ a National&#13;
Science Foundation grant of over&#13;
$1 million to study opportunities&#13;
for social mobility in the U.S.&#13;
"When we talk about 'social&#13;
mobility,'" Featherman says,&#13;
"we mean the extent of opportunity&#13;
within the structure of&#13;
society for a man to obtain&#13;
higher-status jobs, income and&#13;
education than was possible fpr&#13;
his father,"&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Sy faeph&#13;
Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
IJKyaand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Cardj'&#13;
yjJ with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning&#13;
NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha'&#13;
^-JRwECTGAlE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine&#13;
V^RAPIDS DR- POLYCLEAN 2400 Rapids Dr., Racinej&#13;
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer&#13;
Expires Sept. 5, 1973&#13;
NAME 8. ADDRESS&#13;
850' COUPON.&#13;
AUT O &amp; TRUCK W liiflft&#13;
PARTS GORDON Mon Fri. 7:30 9:00&#13;
AUTO PARTS, INC. Saturday 7 30 5 30&#13;
Sunday 9:00 l 00&#13;
Complet e Machine Shop Service&#13;
Pain t &amp; B ody Shop Supplies&#13;
High Performance Work.&#13;
1400 Milwaukee Ave.&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
Discount to Parks ide Student s&#13;
3203-5211(1 St.&#13;
Finest i n&#13;
Imported&#13;
and Domestic&#13;
START A NE W HOBBY WINE MAKING&#13;
SEE OUR NEW D EPT&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
-I WISCONSIN CHEESE&#13;
Old Milwaukee $259&#13;
Brandy $43,?&#13;
Gettlemen Beer&#13;
o depo&#13;
3 no deposit ngc&#13;
quarts Qg&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 1 8 , 1 97 3&#13;
More on Learning Center materials&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
Audio Cassettes&#13;
ABSOLOM! ABSOLOM!&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ACROSS THE COLOR LINE&#13;
ADVENTURES OF AUGIES MARCH&#13;
THE AFRICAN CONNECTION&#13;
THE AGE OF INNOCENCE&#13;
AGNEW vs. THE PRESS&#13;
ALICIA L. JOHNSON&#13;
ALCOHOL AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR&#13;
ALCOHOL AND DEPRESSANT DRUGS&#13;
(BARBITUATES)&#13;
AN ALIEN CONVICT&#13;
ALLEN GINSBERG&#13;
ALLNESS&#13;
AMERICA: ARK OF CIVILIZATION&#13;
AMERICA: SICK OR SOLVENT&#13;
THE AMERICAN DREAM AND THE SANDBOX&#13;
AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT&#13;
AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT&#13;
THE AMERICAN WILDERNESS&#13;
AMERICAN YOUTH IN REBELLION&#13;
CAMPUS IN CRISIS&#13;
THE CANDIDATE&#13;
CANDIDATES AND THEIR QUALITIES&#13;
CANDIDE&#13;
CANE&#13;
CATCH 22&#13;
CATCHER IN THE RYE&#13;
THE CELESTIAL RAILROAD&#13;
THE CHAIRS&#13;
CHALLENGE OF PRISONS, 1 &amp; 2&#13;
THE CHANGING BLACK CITIZEN&#13;
CHINA WATCHING&#13;
CIVIL LIBERTIES vs. POLICE POWER&#13;
CIVIL RIGHTS DECISIONS&#13;
CLARENCE DARROW FOR THE DEFENSE&#13;
COME BACK, DR. CALIGARI&#13;
THE COMMUNICATIONS CHASM&#13;
COMMUNISM: THE IDEOLOGY OF LENIN&#13;
AND MARX&#13;
CONCEPTS OF THE UNIVERSE&#13;
CONDEMNED TO DEATH&#13;
CONFESSIONS OF NAT TURNER&#13;
CONGRESS: OBSOLETE OR RELEVANT?&#13;
A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S&#13;
COURT&#13;
THE CONTAMINATED HUMAN&#13;
A CONVICTED DRUG ADDICT - TALKS&#13;
ABOUT HIS LIFE OF CRIME&#13;
THE COURT AND TOMORROW&#13;
CRIME AND MENTAL DISORDERS&#13;
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT&#13;
CRIME, CALENDARS AND WEATHER&#13;
THE CRIMINAL: A SCIENTIFIC VIEW&#13;
THE CRIMINAL AND SEX DRIVES&#13;
THE CRIMINAL PERSONALITY&#13;
CRIMINAL STEREOTYPES&#13;
THE CRY FOR CONSERVATION&#13;
CULTURE AND CRIMINAL ACTS&#13;
DANGER FROM WITHIN 1&#13;
DANGER FROM WITHIN 3&#13;
THE DARLING&#13;
DARWIN TURNER&#13;
DAY OF THE LOCUST&#13;
DEATH AND DYING&#13;
DEATH OF A S ALESMAN&#13;
DEATH OF OUR BIOSPHERE&#13;
THE DEATH OF OUR CITIES&#13;
DELIVERANCE&#13;
DEMOCRACY AND ARISTOCRACY&#13;
THE DESPAIR OF POVERTY&#13;
DIANE WAKOSKI&#13;
DIRECTIONS IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL&#13;
SCIENCE&#13;
DIRECTIONS IN SCHOOL ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
DIRECTIONS IN STAFF RELATIONSHIPS&#13;
THE DIRTY WORD "DEMOCRACY"&#13;
DRUGS AND CRIMINAL ACTS&#13;
DWELLERS IN SCIENCE&#13;
THE ECOLOGICAL SPECTRUM&#13;
AN EDITH HAMILTON TREASURY&#13;
EFFECTS OF SCHOOL FAILURE ON THE&#13;
LIFE OF A CHILD&#13;
THE EIGHTH DAY&#13;
THE EISENHOWER ERA&#13;
THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE&#13;
EMOTIONS AND CRIME&#13;
EMPOROR JONES-ENCOUNTER WITH&#13;
CLEMENT ATLEE&#13;
ERIC SOLDMAN DISCUSSES THE TRAGEDY&#13;
OF LYNDON JOHNSON WITH ROBERT&#13;
CROMIE&#13;
THE ESSENTIAL GHANDI&#13;
THE ETHNOLOGICAL CRIMINAL&#13;
THE EXERCISE OF POWER&#13;
EXPLORATION OF URBAN HOUSING&#13;
THE EXPLOSIVE SOCIETY&#13;
EYEWITNESS AT MYLAI&#13;
FACT-INFERENCE CONFUSION&#13;
FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER&#13;
FAMINE AND POPULATION CONTROL&#13;
FAREWELL TO ARMS&#13;
THE FEDERAL PEN&#13;
A FEMALE PRISONER&#13;
FERLINGHETTI&#13;
51 nays - 45 ayes&#13;
FIRST NUCLEAR STRIKE&#13;
FIVE METAPHORS OF THE MODERN&#13;
REPERTORY&#13;
FIVE SMOOTH STONES&#13;
FLOYD McKISSICK SPEAKS OUT&#13;
FOCUS ON ARTHUR BURNS&#13;
FOCUS ON BAYARD RUSTIN&#13;
FOCUS ON BEATRAND RUSSELL&#13;
FOCUS ON EUGENE MCCARTHY&#13;
FOCUS ON FRANZ JOSEPH STRAUSS&#13;
FOCUS ON KARL MENNINGER&#13;
FOCUS ON MELVIN LAIRD&#13;
FOCUS ON STUART UDALL&#13;
FOCUS ON VAN WYCK BROOKS&#13;
FOCUS ON WHITNEY YOUNG&#13;
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS&#13;
A FORMER CONVICT TALKS ABOUT THE&#13;
LIFE OF A PAROLEE&#13;
FREE SPEECH&#13;
FREE SPEECH: THREAT TO LIBERTY?&#13;
FREE LAND AND ABUNDANT RESOURCES&#13;
FROM MARIJUANA TO LSD&#13;
GENERAL SEMANTICS AND THE SELF&#13;
GENERAL SEMANTICS: THEORY AND&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
GEORGE HICKOCK&#13;
GHETTO LAW AND ORDER&#13;
THE GLASS MENAGERIE&#13;
THE GOLDMANN PROPOSALS&#13;
GOVERNING THE METROPOLIS&#13;
GREAT EXPECTATIONS&#13;
THE GREAT GATSBY&#13;
GREETINGS&#13;
GARY OWNES&#13;
HALLUCINOGENS (LSD)&#13;
A HARDENED CRIMINAL TALKS ABOUT&#13;
THE HIGH DRAMA OF A PRISON BREAK&#13;
HEDDA GABLER&#13;
HENRY JAMES&#13;
HEDDA GABLER&#13;
HENRY JAMES&#13;
THE HEREDITARY CRIMINAL&#13;
THE HISTORY OF AMERICAN PURITANISIM&#13;
AN HOUR WITH IVAN ILLICH&#13;
HOUSE OF SEVEN GABLES&#13;
HOW ORGANIZATION CAN MAKE THE&#13;
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS MORE&#13;
HUMANISTIC&#13;
HOW WE CHOOSE A PRESIDENT&#13;
HUCK FINN&#13;
HUMANISTIC VALUES AND SCIENTIFIC&#13;
LIVING&#13;
HUNGER&#13;
I CAN'T HEAR YOU, I'VE GOT POLLUTION&#13;
IN MY EARS&#13;
THE ICEMAN COMETH&#13;
THE IDENTITY CRISIS&#13;
THE IMPERFECT WORLD&#13;
IMPERIALISM: IT'S CHANGING FACE IN&#13;
HISTORY&#13;
INDIANS&#13;
INDISCRIMINATION&#13;
INSTRUMENTS FOR FREEDOM&#13;
INTERNATIONAL ORIENTATION&#13;
INTOLERANCE&#13;
THE INVISIBLE MAN&#13;
JAMES BALDWIN DISCUSSES TELL ME HOW&#13;
LONG THE TRAINS' GONE&#13;
JAMES DICKEY&#13;
JESSE STUART&#13;
JOHN CIARDI&#13;
JOHN HAINES&#13;
THE JOHNSON RECORD&#13;
JONATHAN KOXOL DISCUSSES DEATH AT&#13;
AN EARLY AGE&#13;
A JUVENILE CONVICT TALKS ABOUT HIS&#13;
ENTRY INTO A LIFE OF CRIME&#13;
THE JUVENILE OFFENDER&#13;
KASPAR&#13;
KATTIE M. CUMBO&#13;
KENNEDY-NIXON: FACE TO FACE, 1,2,3,4&#13;
KILL THE DRAFT&#13;
LSD: PRO AND CON&#13;
LAST OF THE MOHICANS&#13;
LATER PESSISMISTIC WRITINGS OF MARK&#13;
TWAIN&#13;
LEAR&#13;
LEGALIZING MARIJUANA&#13;
LEGENDS OF LINCOLN AND LEE&#13;
LIFE AS A S LAVE&#13;
LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI&#13;
LIGEIA&#13;
LIGHT IN AUGUST&#13;
LITERATURE AS A METAPHOR&#13;
LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT&#13;
LOOK BACK IN ANGER&#13;
LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL&#13;
LORD JIM&#13;
LOSING BATTLES&#13;
LOST HORIZONS&#13;
MACBETH&#13;
MADWOMAN OF CHAILLOT&#13;
MAGGIE: CRANE&#13;
THE MAGNA CARTA&#13;
MAIN STREET&#13;
MAJOR MOLINEAUX&#13;
MAJORITY RULE&#13;
MALCOM&#13;
"THE MAN WHO..."&#13;
MAO: AN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE&#13;
MARIJUANA&#13;
MARIJUANA&#13;
MARIJUANA MYTH AND REALITY, PTS. 1&amp; 2&#13;
MARKETING THE CANDIDATE&#13;
MARTIN LUTHER KING AND INTEGRATION&#13;
MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH&#13;
THE MAYOR OF WATTS&#13;
MEANING IN POETRY&#13;
MEASURE FOR MEASURE&#13;
MENTAL DEFECTS AND CRIME&#13;
METAPHOR AND SOCIAL BELIEF&#13;
METAPHOR: A STUDY IN METHOD&#13;
METAPHOR: THE UNDERGROUND&#13;
METAPHOR OF THE WORLD AS AN INSANE&#13;
ASYLUM&#13;
METHODOLOGY IN PRACTICE&#13;
A MID-SUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM&#13;
A MIDDLE-AGED CONVICT TALKS ABOUT&#13;
HIS GOALS AFTER 22 YEARS OF CONFINEMENT&#13;
A MIDDLE-AGED CONVICT TALKS ABOUT&#13;
HIS REPEATED CRIMES AND SOCIAL&#13;
VALUES&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
Wed./ April 18/ 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Spring and Summer travel on its way&#13;
Getawayitis is ^vowing* dissasG&#13;
By Jane Schliesman&#13;
Taking off? About this time of&#13;
year many students seem to&#13;
become chronically afflicted with&#13;
getawayitis, so the campus&#13;
Travel Center in LLC D197 is&#13;
ready to help minimize the&#13;
hassles of departure. This writer&#13;
stopped by a few days ago, trying&#13;
to decide whether to head east&#13;
towards Boston or north towards&#13;
Canada after turning in that last&#13;
blue book in a couple of weeks.&#13;
The maps, brochures, guidebooks&#13;
and so forth kept me busy for&#13;
quite awhile, and it seemed a&#13;
good idea to share with other&#13;
itinerant students just what the&#13;
Travel Center is all about.&#13;
Most people are probably&#13;
familiar with the fact that group&#13;
charter flights are arranged at&#13;
semester breaks to such places&#13;
as Paris, Hawaii, Rome, the&#13;
Spanish Riviera, Acapulco,&#13;
Zermatt in Switzerland, Courchevel&#13;
and Chamonix in France.&#13;
The past three years have seen&#13;
over 1000 participants in these&#13;
programs.&#13;
But not everyone doing Europe&#13;
or Mexico or anywhere else&#13;
necessarily wants to go the group&#13;
charter route. There is helpful&#13;
information and advice available&#13;
about biking, hiking, flying,&#13;
driving or railroading your way&#13;
through Europe, Mexico, Canada&#13;
and the U.S.&#13;
A myriad of application forms&#13;
— including international&#13;
passport, international certificate&#13;
of vaccination (they can&#13;
tell you which countries require&#13;
this), international driver's&#13;
license, and car lease and car&#13;
rental forms for Europe — can be&#13;
obtained here. It also has forms&#13;
to apply for Eurail and Student&#13;
Rail passes, which provide an&#13;
economical way to see Europe by&#13;
train. The Eurail system&#13;
operates in 13 countries&#13;
throughout continental Europe.&#13;
The Student Railpass provides&#13;
unlimited second-class rail transportation&#13;
for two months for $130.&#13;
Second-class rail travel is a great&#13;
way to meet European students&#13;
who wouldn't consider going any&#13;
other way. Many save on lodging&#13;
expenses by traveling at night&#13;
and sleeping on the trains. The&#13;
regular Eurailpass is available at&#13;
varying costs for varying periods&#13;
of time.&#13;
Our Travel Center is also the&#13;
official issuing office for this area&#13;
of the state for the International&#13;
Student and International&#13;
Scholar IDs ($2) and the&#13;
American Youth Hostel Card&#13;
($10). In addition to Parkside&#13;
students, it serves Gateway,&#13;
Carthage, College of Racine and&#13;
area high schools.&#13;
These cards are a sound investment,&#13;
especially for students&#13;
planning to go to Europe this&#13;
summer. American Youth Hostel&#13;
Association belongs to the International&#13;
Youth Hostel&#13;
Federation. Their hostels are&#13;
located in 47 countries and&#13;
provide clean, inexpensive&#13;
lodging for members.&#13;
The International Student ID&#13;
(for college students) and International&#13;
Scholar ID (for high&#13;
school students) also provide&#13;
access to hostels. In addition,&#13;
they are useful for reduced or&#13;
free admissions to student tourist&#13;
kinds of places — museums, art&#13;
galleries and theaters — a s well&#13;
as for reduced meal costs.&#13;
Discounts vary from country to&#13;
country and place to place,&#13;
Summer jobs available&#13;
in Austria&#13;
Any student wishing a summer&#13;
job in the country of Austria&#13;
should apply now. Paying student&#13;
jobs are available on a first&#13;
come, first served basis to any&#13;
student aged 17 through 27. The&#13;
majority of jobs are in hotels,&#13;
mountain and lakeside resorts,&#13;
and restaurants. Standard wages&#13;
are paid - plus free room and&#13;
board. This means that only a few&#13;
weeks on the job easily earns&#13;
back the cost of the school&#13;
charter flight or youth fare air&#13;
ticket.&#13;
Most jobs do not require&#13;
knowledge of a foreign language,&#13;
and experience counts less than&#13;
willingness to work, ability to&#13;
adapt to foreign life, and the&#13;
maintenance of an open mind.&#13;
Opportunities for this practical,&#13;
inexpensive way to spend time in&#13;
Europe are given out as fast as&#13;
students apply, and the working&#13;
papers are processed. Jobs are&#13;
matched as closely as possible to&#13;
each student's choice. This work&#13;
is done by the SOS - Student&#13;
Overseas Services, a Luxembourg&#13;
student-run organization&#13;
specializing in helping American&#13;
students in Europe for the past 15&#13;
years. SOS also provides a brief&#13;
orientation in Europe to insure&#13;
each student worker a good start&#13;
on the job in Europe.&#13;
Students interested in obtaining&#13;
a summer job in Austria&#13;
may obtain application forms,&#13;
job listings and descriptions, and&#13;
the SOS handbook on earning a&#13;
trip to Europe by sending their&#13;
name, address, educational institution,&#13;
and $1 ( for printing,&#13;
postage, addressing and handling)&#13;
to: Summer Placement,&#13;
SOS, Box 5173, Santa Barbara,&#13;
Calif. 93108.&#13;
Photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
though.&#13;
Reference materials in the&#13;
Travel Center include guides to&#13;
domestic hotel and motel accommodations,&#13;
including rates&#13;
and facilities; student guides to&#13;
New York, London, Amsterdam,&#13;
Paris, Canada and the U.S.; a&#13;
bike touring reference book; a&#13;
guide to study abroad; and camp&#13;
grounds and trailer parks in the&#13;
U.S. There is also a sheet&#13;
covering your rights on domestic&#13;
airlines if you become stranded&#13;
between points because of a late&#13;
flight or a missed connection.&#13;
This summer the center is&#13;
expanding its reference section&#13;
and stocking up with more information&#13;
about travel within the&#13;
U.S. They will have fares and&#13;
schedules for buses, Amtrack,&#13;
and all domestic airlines including&#13;
flights to Mexico and&#13;
Canada. They can advise you&#13;
about stand-by fares for domestic&#13;
flights and low-cost options to&#13;
London and Paris. If they don't&#13;
have the specific information&#13;
you're seeking, they'll check it&#13;
out for you.&#13;
Meanwhile, this writer is still&#13;
trying to decide — Boston or&#13;
Toronto?&#13;
Switzerland has welcome&#13;
mat out for tourists&#13;
Editor's note: This article is&#13;
from the Swiss Student Travel&#13;
Office, a non-profit organization&#13;
which every summer welcomes&#13;
thousands of American college&#13;
students at its Student Reception&#13;
Service in Zurich and Geneva.&#13;
Well, what do you get from&#13;
Switzerland?&#13;
All the comforts and conveniences&#13;
you can want in the&#13;
world are there—inexpensive&#13;
hotels, youth hostels, student&#13;
hotels and dorms, goo i home&#13;
cooking, delicious fondue, great&#13;
wine, pure water, clean&#13;
surroundings, friendly natives,&#13;
straightforward prices and one&#13;
mugging per year in the whole&#13;
country.&#13;
What a dull place. And th&#13;
scenery?&#13;
Oh, y'know, the usualmountains,&#13;
lakes, plains, "(ties,&#13;
rivers, glaciers, the National&#13;
Park. Climate? Chilly on the&#13;
mountain tops (above 10,000&#13;
feet), don't need a sleeping bag in&#13;
high summer in the south, like in&#13;
Ticino, because of the heat.&#13;
What do they speak over there?&#13;
To tell you the truth, you never&#13;
know what language they're&#13;
going to speak to you in, in&#13;
Switzerland. Some kind of&#13;
German dialect is the main&#13;
language, with French in second&#13;
place and Italian a good third. In&#13;
the hotels and diners you can&#13;
often make yourself understood&#13;
in Spanish too (Castillian, not&#13;
Mexican). English? No problem.&#13;
Everyone learns it in school and&#13;
the Swiss will take your arm and&#13;
show you the way to the dorm if&#13;
you don't understand the&#13;
directions.&#13;
How d'you spend your time&#13;
there?&#13;
Well, it's a big country for its&#13;
size. You can just lounge around&#13;
in the sun on a lakeside (they've&#13;
got 1,500 lakes crammed into that&#13;
little country!). Or, if you're the&#13;
energetic type, you can swim or&#13;
mess around in boats. Lake&#13;
Geneva's favorite place: hire a&#13;
boat on the French side, it's&#13;
cheaper, and sail the whole 50&#13;
miles of the lake, camping right&#13;
on the edge of the water.&#13;
Or, you can work off your beer&#13;
fat on some of those mountains&#13;
they have over there. Real&#13;
big'uns, like the Matterhorn or&#13;
the Jungfrau, around 16,000 fe et.&#13;
They're for the experts though. If&#13;
you don't fancy the idea of&#13;
sleeping on a rock face hooked up&#13;
to a couple of pitons, you can put&#13;
on a backpack and start out&#13;
almost anywhere for a day's hike&#13;
down an easier trail. You don't&#13;
have to worry, the tracks are well&#13;
marked. Choose your altitude,&#13;
2,000 feet or 10,000 feet up. If you&#13;
want to, you can pitch your tent&#13;
when you've had enough or make&#13;
it to the next village where you're&#13;
pretty sure of finding a dorm for&#13;
a dollar or so. Lots of fun in the&#13;
evenings too. You make friends&#13;
easily, y'know, they even like&#13;
Americans!&#13;
Look, you can't just climb&#13;
around mountains and swim&#13;
lakes every day. What's the scene&#13;
in the cities?&#13;
Like Zurich and Geneva and&#13;
Basle? Well, they're quite a&#13;
surprise. You leave your billfold&#13;
on a wall somewhere and go back&#13;
to look for it an hour later. Sure,&#13;
it's gone! Cool it, when you get to&#13;
the Lost and Found Office&#13;
someone's handed it in. Beat&#13;
that!&#13;
But that's just by the way. The&#13;
country is simply full of gorgeous&#13;
old towns and villages-like the&#13;
Bernese Oberland where they&#13;
have all those enormous old&#13;
wooden chalets with carved&#13;
balconies and geraniums. Never&#13;
seen so many flowers as in&#13;
Switzerland.&#13;
Or, take a place like Lucerne.&#13;
Fantastic scenery, and the&#13;
houses in the old section are all&#13;
covered with old paintings on the&#13;
outsides, even the pharmacy.&#13;
And then there's that famous&#13;
covered bridge that you must&#13;
have seen pictures of.&#13;
Or Ticino-that's in the south of&#13;
the country where they speak&#13;
Italian. It's just like being in the&#13;
south of France there, only less&#13;
expensive. And from there you&#13;
can go over the San Bernardino&#13;
Pass and get to see all those&#13;
classy ski resorts like St. Moritz.&#13;
Not expensive though. You see,&#13;
the student outfit they have over&#13;
there-some funny long name in&#13;
German-they have a whole chain&#13;
of really inexpensive hotels&#13;
throughout the country. Zermatt,&#13;
Zurich, Geneva, Lucerne, Davos,&#13;
Klosters, Leysin (they run&#13;
French courses there in summer),&#13;
Lugano, San Bernardino,&#13;
Scuol-you name it, they've got a&#13;
student hotel there. All clean,&#13;
inexpensive and friendly.&#13;
In summer they have special&#13;
Student Reception Services in&#13;
Zurich and Geneva. Best place to&#13;
go when you hit the town. They'll&#13;
find you a cheap place to stay and&#13;
give you a program about what's&#13;
on.&#13;
And you get to meet the locals.&#13;
This student organization-SSR&#13;
they call it-holds fondue parties&#13;
every week in Zurich and&#13;
Geneva. You have to have been to&#13;
one of those parties to believe it.&#13;
When you leave it you've made&#13;
some friends for life. This SSR is&#13;
a student-run organization, nonprofit&#13;
making, so you get all the&#13;
best rates on everything.&#13;
They put on special student&#13;
sightseeing trips too, and you'll&#13;
be amazed at the number of&#13;
fantastically cheap charter&#13;
flights they operate throughout&#13;
Europe and the Mediterraneanand&#13;
even as far afield as Bangkok&#13;
and East Africa. You can join one&#13;
of their special tours to places&#13;
like Russia or Japan. No hassle&#13;
about membership requirements&#13;
if you're a student.&#13;
Tell me more, kiddo, tell me&#13;
more!&#13;
Can't, sorry, had my rucksack&#13;
with all my brochures in it stolen&#13;
in Central Park, N.Y. But why&#13;
don't you write to them? I kept&#13;
the address in my left sock. It's&#13;
this:&#13;
S S R - S W I S S S T U D E N T&#13;
TRAVEL OFFICE, Leonhardstrasse&#13;
19, 8001 Zurich, Switzerland,&#13;
or&#13;
SOFA - European Student&#13;
Travel Center Ltd., 136 East 57th&#13;
Street, Suite 1205, New York,&#13;
N.Y. 10022, USA.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., April 18, 1973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
Thirty Seconds over Winteriand&#13;
Jefferson Airplane&#13;
( BFL1-0147)&#13;
In one of his most recent interviews Paul Kanter said the new Jefferson&#13;
Airplane album would be half-live, half-studio, but would wnSS-oTAiSJvW-m?,teriaL However- WINTERLAND THIRTY S ECONDS O VER is all-live, nine-tenths old. In spite of this, the only&#13;
bad aspect of the new disc is that it is not all new. Perhaps it is intended&#13;
as a bridge between the old and something new that won't be&#13;
prepared for release for awhile.&#13;
Besides being a flexible rock band, Jefferson Airplane are first-rate&#13;
musicians Four of the seven songs on this live record are written by&#13;
Pau1 Kanter, composer of "Ballad of You and Me Pooniel " "We&#13;
Should Be Together," "War Movie," and many other Airplane&#13;
classics. One could search the earth high and low, and then probably&#13;
still not find a bass player to match Jack Casady. Jorma Kauauken is&#13;
equally competent on guitar. Papa John Creach added a fresh life to&#13;
the Plane when he joined them with his funky violin. He provided them&#13;
with new cosmic criteria besides cooking country sounds for Hot Tuna&#13;
Grace Slick surely deserves the title of best female rock vocalist. If&#13;
you missed LONG JOHN SILVER, then you missed some of Grace's&#13;
most adrenalin-activating singing. Her wailing for the climax of&#13;
"Alexandra" leaves one nothing short of breathless. David Frieberg is&#13;
a new vocalist. Singing is David's only job here but he is not a soloist,&#13;
the only supports Grace and Paul.&#13;
Starting the show is the only new song, "Have You Seen The&#13;
Saucers?" Composed by Paul Kanter, it is done by one of the most&#13;
professional psychedelic bands in the world. It is one of those high&#13;
rising tunes and Grace Slick holds the notes and makes them ascend&#13;
stairways to other galaxies.&#13;
"Feel So Good," being 10 or so minutes long, is Jorma's most&#13;
elaborate number on the disc. Jorma's voice sensuously touches the&#13;
word "I" and then pretty soon he goes on to several minutes of jamming&#13;
with Papa John and Jack. Jack gets a solo spot on his bass and&#13;
then Jorma returns at the most precise moment followed by Papa&#13;
John. All together they form a most superior version of a locomotive&#13;
train with wings.&#13;
"Crown of Creation" keeps up the pace and when the line "they&#13;
cannot tolerate our minds" comes along, Grace add-libs "I can't&#13;
either." This creates a humorous side to their radical politics. The&#13;
final ah... settles like dew reflecting every color in the spectrum.&#13;
On side 2 th e majestic "When the Earth Moves Again" excels the&#13;
BARK version, preparing the way for "Milk Train" which is Grace's&#13;
erotic anthem. Her voice fades some, like normal live vocals, but is&#13;
tense and moving.&#13;
Jorma's "Trail by Fire" is almost equal to the studio version and&#13;
following it comes the splendid "Twilight Double Leader."&#13;
"...Leader" starts off like a bullet and is another Kanter song. Intead&#13;
of swelling with "feel it in the street time" like the studio version,&#13;
Grace exchanges the lines with Paul and David. Towards the end, way&#13;
deep in the background (which is a reason why loud volume is needed&#13;
for total enchancing of listening pleasure) Grace is yelling like a&#13;
maniac "rock and roll everybody," or something to that effect. The&#13;
guitar and bass dance around each other and one of the most efficiently&#13;
focused, masterpieces of caos comes to an end. It brings with&#13;
it a vote for Jefferson Airplane as best contemporary American hardrock&#13;
band. (Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
Dry $&#13;
8- - Cleaned&#13;
Lbs. °niY 2 00&#13;
Free Pre-Spotting&#13;
Drop Off Service&#13;
WE&#13;
Wash - Dry - Fold&#13;
20 i «1 5 0&#13;
Lb. MINIMUM&#13;
Vets club plans&#13;
dance for&#13;
Thursday&#13;
The Parkside Vets Club will&#13;
sponsor a dance in the Student&#13;
Activities Building Thursday&#13;
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Blood&#13;
Money will provide the music.&#13;
Admission is $1.50 all proceeds&#13;
will go to the Racine-Parkside&#13;
bus service. Wisconsin and&#13;
Parkside I.D.'s required.&#13;
Film Society to&#13;
show 'Nothing&#13;
but a Man'&#13;
Parkside Film Society will&#13;
show NOTHING BUT A MAN, a&#13;
1964 film starring Abby Lincoln&#13;
.and Ivan Dixon, Wednesday,&#13;
April 18 at 7:30 in Greenquist 103.&#13;
Admission is 60 c ents.&#13;
Independent film-makers&#13;
Michael Roemer and Robert&#13;
Young made this moving drama&#13;
of the personal struggle of a&#13;
Southern black man and his wife&#13;
in a society hostile to them. A&#13;
young railway worker gives up a&#13;
good job to settle down and&#13;
marry the preacher's daughter, a&#13;
schoolteacher. Essentially it is a&#13;
drama of the emotional adjustment&#13;
of a man to the age-old&#13;
problems of earning a livlihood,&#13;
supporting a family, and living in&#13;
peace and dignity. In this case&#13;
the problem is intensified&#13;
because the man is a black and&#13;
will not play the expected Negro&#13;
role, despite the warnings of his&#13;
fellow workers, the urgings of his&#13;
father-in-law, and the tensions&#13;
created in his marriage. Free of&#13;
the usual sentimental cliches and&#13;
blatant messages, NOTHING&#13;
BUT AMAN is one of the few&#13;
films which succeed in presenting&#13;
black people as human&#13;
beings instead of as symbols.&#13;
Also to be shown is the Norman&#13;
McClaren short NEIGHBORS,&#13;
about how two neighbors and&#13;
friends become mortal enemies.&#13;
The film effectively comments on&#13;
aggression, the "terrirorial&#13;
imperative" and the nature and&#13;
causes of war and conflict.&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open8 a.m. to8p.m.&#13;
6814 Fourteenth Avenue Kenoshaf Wis.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN&#13;
•u&#13;
- BOTH UNDID SAMF OWNCDSHIP —&#13;
In Four Siies 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
• GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
"you DING .&#13;
DELIVERY&#13;
Wf BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
\ by Fred Bultman&#13;
Space Cadet&#13;
Robert A. Heinlein&#13;
Ace Books&#13;
I don't like "relevant" books very much-especially when you're&#13;
looking for something good to read on the ol' book rack and all you can&#13;
find are collapsed ocean liners and mafia, mafia, mafia. What is so&#13;
important about the mafia anyway? However, there is hope. While our&#13;
bookstore does carry a lot of mafia-type books and other junk, they&#13;
also devote a rack to the irreverant and wacky glories of such authors&#13;
as Bradbury, Heinlein, and Asimov.&#13;
While science fiction is not really the escape literature it used to be&#13;
(too much of it has come true, or is possible) it does provide a release&#13;
from the daily grind and it won't insult your intelligence.&#13;
Robert Heinlein, unfortunately, is little known except for Stranger in&#13;
a Strange Lad, which is a shame as his novels are considered by us&#13;
devotees to be the funniest and most far out of any author. Space Cadet&#13;
is a case in point.&#13;
While it isn't his best book (the bookstore doesn't have Glory Road)&#13;
it is a beautiful example of his writing. Plots are not his strong point;&#13;
they don't have the originality and eerieness of Bradbury. Rather, he&#13;
concentrates on his characters. They are real people and face real&#13;
hassles. Even though the setting is the 21st century, the heroes have no&#13;
miracle solutions and no super powers and must muddle through, just&#13;
like you and me. Best of all is the humor. Most sci-fi book are way too&#13;
serious anf full of unrelieved gloom, which can be a drag these days.&#13;
No so Heinlein; he keeps you chuckling even in the gloomiest of&#13;
scrapes.&#13;
Once you've read Heinlein, you're either hooked or repelled. I'm&#13;
glad to say I'm addicted, and I feel sorry for those who cannot enjoy&#13;
something like Space Cadet.&#13;
(Book courtesy of the Parkside Bookstore)&#13;
EAT IN T HE C OMFORT&#13;
OF Y OUR C AR&#13;
• PAPA B URGER • MAMA B URGER&#13;
• TEEN B URGER • BABY B URGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE R EADY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE G ALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH S5.00 ORDER&#13;
1/2 MIL E NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W R OOT B EER D RIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
HOURS: DAILY 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M.&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail B ar and Restaurant 6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
[friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
"RADIO"&#13;
No Cover&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'LUNCH&#13;
PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
11:30 - 1:30&#13;
Mon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
S"|59 $"|89&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 KINDS SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT&#13;
BUNCH O'FISH FISH, PIZZA. SALAD, MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed. Si Fri. j.gg&#13;
from 5 p.m. I&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
WMO JO'S SERVED ALL THE TIME&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
The Ranger Asks...&#13;
What changes would you like to see at Parkside ?&#13;
Wed., April 18, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
Richard Schoene. Freshman,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I'd like to see more room in&#13;
the cafeteria, a lot more room.&#13;
And another thing, they could&#13;
bring the Union over here, with&#13;
the beer stand and that type of&#13;
thing."&#13;
Cindy Rasmussen, Sophomore,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"They should offer a lot more&#13;
courses. They don't have enough&#13;
courses here, that's my main&#13;
complaint."&#13;
Chuck Myers, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I think they need more tables&#13;
in the cafeteria, either that or a&#13;
big, old, hairy cop, or something,&#13;
to kick people out because it's so&#13;
hard to find a table to eat at."&#13;
Kaye Kronholm, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"More people getting together&#13;
and doing things like those trips&#13;
they've got planned. Just more&#13;
things to do on campus."&#13;
rfutUfr-tf/idual IRevtecv&#13;
/kidia-1/c4ual IReviecv&#13;
by Jeannine Sipsma&#13;
Freshman, Kenosha&#13;
I d like to see a separate room&#13;
for sleeping inbetween class, with&#13;
beds where people can go to&#13;
sleep."&#13;
So That Men Are Free is a film about how the Indians&#13;
living in Vecos, a valley in Peru, became a free people. As the film&#13;
stated, "All sane men are equal including Indians." This was not a&#13;
very widely ^ield view in Peru. Ever since the Spaniards came and&#13;
made them their slaves, the Indians were considered an inferior&#13;
people. Life was so bad for them that a dead child was buried with joy&#13;
because he didn't have to go through the pain of living.&#13;
A group from Cornell University came in to help these people and&#13;
give them a new identity. I thought this was rather disgusting because&#13;
I thought I was actually going to see a group of people from another&#13;
country pulling themselves up without the help of the United States.&#13;
But, there was the "white father" showing the poor little Indians how&#13;
to live. I don't deny that the group from Cornell did some very good&#13;
and very needed work but the film was not what I had expected to see&#13;
with the title So That Men Are Free.&#13;
Cornell spent a total of $5,000 dollars helping the people in Vecos.&#13;
This was not a large sum of money considering that aid is usually&#13;
given to other countries by the millions of d ollars. Medical assistance&#13;
was brought into Vecos. The Indians built a school all by themselves&#13;
except of course that the materials were bought by the people from&#13;
Cornell. The head of the project said that the Indians didn't build the&#13;
school because of their great desire for education as much as to show&#13;
their gratitude for the help they were receiving.&#13;
There is no doubt that the Indians of Vecos are much better off than&#13;
they ever were before. They used to be used for free labor but after the&#13;
landlord's lease ran out they started renting the land themselves.&#13;
They are now working for themselves, and working with the hope that&#13;
they can raise nough money to make the down payment necessary to&#13;
buy the land. They did do it all by themselves. They go aid, but then&#13;
again, they never asked for any help.&#13;
Candy Hess, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I'd like to see a few changes in&#13;
the major requirements for&#13;
certain majors, like Economics."&#13;
Lorretta Hughes, Junior, Sturtevant&#13;
"I'm not really into that right&#13;
now, I was asked to be on a&#13;
committee but I'm not going to be&#13;
here next fall. I think it's a very&#13;
good school."&#13;
If there are any changes you'd&#13;
like to see at Parkside write to:&#13;
The RANGER Asks, LLC D194.&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
• OUR *&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
Dave Willems, Junior, Kenosha&#13;
"The students could get more&#13;
involved in student government.&#13;
They're too apathetic, which I&#13;
probably am too. There could be&#13;
different policies for the Phy-Ed&#13;
building, during the day students&#13;
can't get in too much because&#13;
clubs always have it tied up.&#13;
Students becoming more involved&#13;
at Parkside would be a&#13;
good thing."&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
MITALIAN FO OD A SPECIALTY&#13;
^SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
DRINKS A VAILABLE F ROM THE B AR&#13;
5 0c OFF ANY 50'&#13;
|Exp&#13;
April 25, 1973&#13;
The Truth About Greece!&#13;
Prof. A ndreas Kazamias&#13;
Greek-Cypriot&#13;
speaks o n&#13;
"THE PHOENIX &amp; THE CROSS:&#13;
MILITARY DICTATORSHIP&#13;
III nonrpc »&#13;
rf&gt;e ,r/P "0n y°u&#13;
3 M«&gt;&#13;
. '&lt;W&#13;
IN GREECE."&#13;
Wed., April 18&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Greenquist&#13;
Rm. 101&#13;
•' •"J*4 &gt;Wl&#13;
San.&#13;
.. f V, "c h '" //• •5"&gt;w&#13;
"4y . . S ? . s , v i 0 , ' u u , 't i e *&#13;
.jv '°n'b0r f-'aUo ohhe*«&#13;
y'cu..? r*r, ,Vso „- ° v „ "&#13;
&gt;/7/ fr'0ro.&#13;
fr 'Ou. ,f rtl /. «&gt;S0 "'"'I " • fn&gt;/4*?? £&gt;*7*7» ,,*. «, '&gt; lc,u;*' o, *» w '"&gt;n£ frit' n;/?s'°'&gt; , ' s' It :t&lt;&gt; "rV,v/ a,&#13;
J! ** hv'VS % n'" y' *c'&#13;
"Cf? &lt;o "I * •?» ***&#13;
?*;&gt;„0•'"*"/* **-is»?-4» t '-y&#13;
Refreshments &amp; Discussion will follow.&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Apri l 1 8 , 197 3&#13;
Toynbee reviews&#13;
book on self&#13;
KENOSHA - Noted British&#13;
historian Arnold Toynbee&#13;
favorably reviews a book about&#13;
himself and his work written by a&#13;
UW-Milwaukee professor in the&#13;
spring issue of CLIO, a scholarly&#13;
journal published at Parkside.&#13;
Editors of CLIO consider the&#13;
Toynbee on Toynbee" piece an&#13;
indication of the increasing&#13;
stature of the new interdisciplinary&#13;
journal of&#13;
literature, history and philosophy&#13;
of history, which was founded&#13;
last year by Parkside faculty.&#13;
In the piece, Toynbee comments&#13;
on the recent book, "Arnold&#13;
J. Toynbee, Historian for an&#13;
Age of Crisis" by Roland M.&#13;
Stromberg, a professor of history&#13;
at UWM since 1967. (The book&#13;
was published in 1972 in the U.S.&#13;
by Southern Illinois University&#13;
Press and in England by Feffer&#13;
and Simons, Inc., London.)&#13;
Toynbee, whose best-known&#13;
work is the monumental ' Study&#13;
of History," writes that&#13;
"Professor Stromberg's appraisal&#13;
of me and my work has&#13;
been more helpful to me than any&#13;
critique or appreciation that I&#13;
have previously read, and I am&#13;
grateful to him...I can think of&#13;
only one important point that&#13;
Professor Stromberg has hot&#13;
brought out, namely, the enduring&#13;
(and still increasing)&#13;
effect on me of the deaths of my&#13;
contemporaries in World War&#13;
I...these deaths account for the&#13;
change in my attitude towards&#13;
nationalism to which Professor&#13;
Stromberg rightly draws attention."&#13;
Toynbee says that he first&#13;
viewed nationalism as a concept&#13;
of "some positive value" and,&#13;
subsequently, as meriting "my&#13;
militant hostility."&#13;
"Photographs of my friends&#13;
who were killed in 1915-16 are on&#13;
the mantelpiece of the room in&#13;
which I am writing, but the&#13;
deaths, in the same war, of&#13;
French, German, Austrian, and&#13;
American contemporaries,&#13;
whom I did not know personally,&#13;
are also on my mind," Toynbee&#13;
writes.&#13;
In addition to changing his&#13;
attitude toward nationalism, the&#13;
deaths also account in part for&#13;
"my obsessive industriousness as&#13;
a writer," according to Toynbee.&#13;
"Having been spared, by an&#13;
accident, from sharing my&#13;
contemporaries' fate, I have felt,&#13;
ever since, that it has been laid&#13;
upon me to be one of the&#13;
representatives of this decimated&#13;
generation-though I am aware&#13;
that some of my friends would&#13;
have 2 been among my critics if&#13;
they had survived," Toynbee&#13;
writes.&#13;
STEAK&#13;
AT HA MBURGER&#13;
PRICES&#13;
V SIRLOIN STRIP STEAK&#13;
V RIB-EYE STEAK&#13;
V T-BONE STEAK&#13;
V CHOPPED STEAK&#13;
V STEAK SANDWICH&#13;
. FRIED CHICKEN&#13;
* SHRIMP PLATTER&#13;
. FISH PLATTER&#13;
* BONANZA BUHGF.H&#13;
* CHILD'S PLATTER&#13;
* CHEESEBURGER&#13;
* PIES AND QTHER DESSERTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD FOR&#13;
ORDERS TO CO&#13;
652-8662&#13;
3315 52nd St., At 34th Ave.&#13;
CHUCK HUJIK MGR.&#13;
While accepting Stromberg's&#13;
verdict that "I have tended to&#13;
twist the past to fit my prejudices&#13;
and that I have been blind at&#13;
times to the evident state of&#13;
things," Toynbee adds that "I&#13;
have acted in good faith and have&#13;
not been blind wilfully."&#13;
But he takes issue when&#13;
Stromberg votes for "abandoning&#13;
the holisitic vision as an impossible&#13;
dream."&#13;
"All religions present precepts&#13;
for the conduct of human life, and&#13;
this practical service is the&#13;
raison d'etre for their holistic&#13;
panorama," Toynbee maintains.&#13;
Toynbee holds that the holistic&#13;
vision, which ' emphasizes the&#13;
organic and functional relation&#13;
between parts and wholes, "Is&#13;
the necessary setting for the&#13;
passage from birth to death that&#13;
every human being has to make.&#13;
No human being understands the&#13;
mysterious Universe more than&#13;
partially; yet every human being&#13;
has to find his way about in the&#13;
Universe as best he may. He can&#13;
fare better with a chart than&#13;
without one.&#13;
"Human beings will continue to&#13;
have holistic visions so long as&#13;
mankind survives. We may&#13;
recognize that the best of these&#13;
visions are no more than partial&#13;
glimpses, but I do not believe that&#13;
we can, or should, eschew them,"&#13;
Toynbee concludes.&#13;
Review&#13;
Changes&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
Changes, a versatile folk trio, performed at the&#13;
Student Activities Building Tuesday, April 10, at&#13;
12:30 p.m. The group played for free to a scattered&#13;
audience of 22 persons for 2 hours.&#13;
The group is from Chicago and consists of one&#13;
female, Robin Farrell (vocals, guitar), and two&#13;
men, Robert Taylor (vocals, percussion) and&#13;
Nicholas Tesluk (Vocals, guitar and flute).&#13;
Most of the material Changes performed was&#13;
their own and was skillfully executed. Guitar&#13;
changes were needed between most of the songs to&#13;
adapt the sound to particular styles. Their music&#13;
encompassed a great deal of the Folk spectrum as&#13;
they did contemporary folk, Spanish Flamenco and&#13;
Greek bouzoukia music. Some of the songs&#13;
developed from these different blends displayed a&#13;
form of classical rock.&#13;
The only thing lacking from this competent band&#13;
was a little emotion or character. Naturally, it must&#13;
have been arduous for Changes to get fired up when&#13;
only about 5 members of the scant audience observed&#13;
them with any amount of concentration.&#13;
However, it seems that a fresh approach or some&#13;
kind of unique personae would have helped considerably.&#13;
"Legends That We Know" is a half hour-long&#13;
madrigal song containing 210 l ines of poetry, that&#13;
the band did in two parts. Changes unsuccessfully&#13;
tried to generate interest with its many references&#13;
to literature in this song that college students should&#13;
have read. No matter how great they may be, lyrics&#13;
alone will not suffice on the entertainment level.&#13;
Vivid changes of mood or tone are needed to accent&#13;
dynamic phrases.&#13;
The one nice thing about folk singers is that they&#13;
always play for free. As a general rule this is&#13;
because folk singers are such good-natured,&#13;
generous people and because nobody listens to them&#13;
otherwise.&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAYS&#13;
A0*&#13;
A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
SHBK6SS&#13;
IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP AND 21st ( ALMOST)&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
Wed., April 18, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
RANGER Tracksters prove good performers&#13;
Sports&#13;
Baseball schedule jammed&#13;
The Rangers baseball team&#13;
will attempt to pen their season&#13;
today with a game against&#13;
Dominican and possibly on&#13;
Thursday with a doubleheader&#13;
against Northland.&#13;
After two weeks of rain and&#13;
snow which made the baseball&#13;
diamond too wet to play on, the&#13;
Parkside team had to cancel six&#13;
games. This will result in a heavy&#13;
schedule for the last four weeks&#13;
of classes, including the spring&#13;
break.&#13;
It was reported earlier that last&#13;
year's team had 14 games&#13;
washed out.&#13;
While Rip Van Winkle may&#13;
have slept for twenty years in the&#13;
Catskill Mountains, from the&#13;
fictitious story by the same name&#13;
written by Washington Irving,&#13;
the Rangers have continued their&#13;
daily practices under the watchful&#13;
eyes of coashes Red&#13;
Oberbruner and Morley&#13;
Torgenson.&#13;
Girls place second&#13;
The team practiced for the two&#13;
weeks in the confines of the P.E.&#13;
building which had much to be&#13;
desired for baseball.&#13;
For example, last Friday the&#13;
team had the privilege of practicing&#13;
while the Parkside band&#13;
was getting ready for its Sunday&#13;
performance. It resulted in&#13;
mishaps that resembled the&#13;
opening of the old television&#13;
show, F-Troop. Baseballs were&#13;
dropped, directions were not&#13;
heard, and it turned out to be&#13;
almost a total wasted day for the&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
There was some question from&#13;
the opening article on the&#13;
baseball team as to where the&#13;
batting averages came from, as&#13;
several were said to be in error.&#13;
Coach Oberbruner pasted on&#13;
those figures and they were not&#13;
made up by the reporter.&#13;
Once again if mother nature&#13;
permits the opener will start at 1&#13;
p.m. today on the Parkside&#13;
baseball field.&#13;
The Parkside Rangerette track&#13;
team traveled to Carroll College&#13;
last Saturday and wound up in the&#13;
middle of a triangle. They placed&#13;
second in a triangular meet,&#13;
racking up 38 points to Carroll's&#13;
52 and UW-Waukesha's 11.&#13;
Sue Von Buehren was top point&#13;
winner for Parkside taking first&#13;
in the long jump, first in the high&#13;
jump and second in the 50 yard&#13;
hurdles.&#13;
Trudy Behrens was first in the&#13;
shot put and also took a third&#13;
place in the 50 yard hurdles.&#13;
The 440 yard run was captured&#13;
by Maria Breach, who also putted&#13;
the shot well enough for a fourth&#13;
place.&#13;
Eilleen Reilly dominated the&#13;
880 yard run and was second in&#13;
the mile.&#13;
The four women mentioned&#13;
above also made up the&#13;
Rangerettes four-lap relay which&#13;
placed second.&#13;
On Saturday, April 7, the&#13;
Rangerettes traveled to Madison&#13;
with the men's team to compete&#13;
in the U.S. Track and Field Meet&#13;
and had four women gain individual&#13;
honors.&#13;
Sandy Kingsfield was second in&#13;
the long jump, second in the 440&#13;
yard run and fourth in the 60 yard&#13;
dash.&#13;
Trudy Behrens took a fourth in&#13;
the 70 yard hurdles.&#13;
Sue Von Buehren captured the&#13;
high jump and the long jump;&#13;
and Eilleen Reilly placed sixth in&#13;
the 880 yard run.&#13;
The 440 relay team of Von&#13;
Buehren, Kingsfield, Breach and&#13;
Reilly was second, giving the tern&#13;
good overall balance.&#13;
valeo's&#13;
PIZZA HITCH EH&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian S ausage B ombers&#13;
Free Delivery to Parkside Vi llage&#13;
5021 50th Avenue Phone 657-5191 •••••••••»••••••••••••••&#13;
3Ltt$ Sub 1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER 15&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thu r s d a y 1 1 - 8&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches]&#13;
Foosball 2 Poo l Tables&#13;
Air Conditioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Col d Six Packs To Go&#13;
by Kris Koch&#13;
The Ranger tracksters&#13;
traveled to Stevens Point last&#13;
Saturday and received some&#13;
outstanding performances from&#13;
seven individuals.&#13;
Lucien Rosa won the six-mile&#13;
event with a time of 30 minutes&#13;
22.3 seconds. Chuck Deltman was&#13;
third in the six mile with a time of&#13;
31:04.6. The outstanding times by&#13;
these two runners ranked them&#13;
third and fifth respectively in the&#13;
national rankings. Lucien Rosa&#13;
also ran to a third place in the&#13;
three mile event.&#13;
Keith Merrit won the triple&#13;
jump with a leap of 45'3" and also&#13;
placed third in the pole vault.&#13;
soaring 13'6", his best collegiate&#13;
jump.&#13;
The relay team of Dennis Biel,&#13;
Mike Kopczynski, Herb Degroot&#13;
and Cornelius Gordon collected&#13;
two second places. They raced to&#13;
a 1:32.2 time in the 880 relay&#13;
setting a school record and also&#13;
took a second in the sprint relay.&#13;
These same runners picked up a&#13;
fourth in the 440 relay and a&#13;
fourth in the mile relay. In the&#13;
mile relay, Raul Medina ran in&#13;
place of Kopczynski.&#13;
Tim Martinson leaped to a fifth&#13;
place in the pole vault and&#13;
Kopczynski was fourth in the long&#13;
jump with a leap of 21'1".&#13;
Dennis Biel was elected team&#13;
captain by his teammates after i I1LU 5 SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
running some outstanding anchor&#13;
legs in the relays. Biel is usually&#13;
a miler.&#13;
Coach Bob Lawson commented&#13;
that the team performed a good&#13;
overall job in their first outdoor&#13;
activity of the year.&#13;
This Friday, the Rangers will&#13;
host their first outdoor track&#13;
meet of the year, dedicating the&#13;
new outdoor track, proclaimed to&#13;
be one of the best in North&#13;
America. Lawson said that he&#13;
hoped that some of his athletes&#13;
would be able to qualify for&#13;
nationals.&#13;
Parkside will also be hosting&#13;
Decathalons this Thursday and&#13;
Friday starting at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Thursday and 10 a.m. on Friday.&#13;
The Parkside bowling team&#13;
will be traveling to the NAIA&#13;
tourney in Kansas City on May 3-&#13;
5. The Rangers fired the second&#13;
highest qualifying score in the&#13;
country to earn the berth.&#13;
The Rangers became one of&#13;
eight teams qualifying for the&#13;
tournament. Parkside was the&#13;
champion of the Madison&#13;
regional this year.&#13;
Mike Peratt of the Rangers&#13;
blasted a 1,269 for six games to&#13;
take first place individual honors.&#13;
Parkside's Mike West was&#13;
second with 1,194 and Dick Kenny&#13;
third with 1,176. Other Ranger&#13;
qualifiers were Jim Mohrbacher&#13;
and Mike Jenrette.&#13;
The Rangers totaled 5,872 pins&#13;
for six games or an average of 193&#13;
per man.&#13;
Chris Andacht waded through a&#13;
field of 18 competitors to win&#13;
Parkside's first one-on-one&#13;
basketball tournament. The oneon-&#13;
one tournament consisted of&#13;
two players playing each other to&#13;
a game of 20.&#13;
All of Andacht's games were&#13;
close, as he beat each opponent&#13;
by 4 points. In the first game he&#13;
defeated John St. Peter 20-16; in&#13;
the second game he defeated&#13;
Greg Veltus 24-20; in the semifinals&#13;
he defeated Tom Hart 20-&#13;
16; and for the championship&#13;
Andacht defeated Ed Van Tine&#13;
20-16. Van Tine was the runner-up&#13;
in this first annual affair.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
AFRO dance classes: YWCA 8th 8. College&#13;
Ave. Racine instructor Betty Briggs call 633&#13;
3503 A. Dowman Starting 4-11-73&#13;
Wanted: Part-time waitresses. Some&#13;
experience preferred, but will train. Work&#13;
for hourly wages. Call hostess at&#13;
Meadowbrook Country Club, 637-7461.&#13;
WANTED • Used 5- or 10-speed men's&#13;
bicycle. 140orsowil! be considered. Call 553-&#13;
2295 and leave message for Jerry.&#13;
1969 OPEL Station Wagon. Excellent condition,&#13;
25-30 miles per gallon. 654-8888.&#13;
1970 Maverick 6-stick, red, Ex. cond.,&#13;
economical, dependable, new tires, must sell&#13;
632-3385.&#13;
632-0150^ PaP6rS COn,act Kris Wri9ht&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
,zo67.&#13;
TERM PAPERS papers neatly typed. 50&#13;
cents per page. Call for and deliver. J&#13;
Konke, 694-2776 after 5:30.&#13;
CLUB&#13;
INTRIGUE&#13;
1446 Frederick St., R acine • 634-9280&#13;
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. 9 p.m. - 1 a.m.&#13;
by Milwaukee's&#13;
Billie Soul A&#13;
The Changing Times&#13;
"New Blues" &amp; "Rock" B and&#13;
Unescorted Ladies No Cover&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCLOSED FOR $.&#13;
DATES(S) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
date.&#13;
_PHONE NO..&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show" spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication.&#13;
Golf Schedule&#13;
April 17 Northern Illinois University Kenosha -1 p.m.&#13;
UW-Milwaukee&#13;
UW-Oshkosh&#13;
April 19 Loyola University Kenosha - 1 p.m.&#13;
Lake Forest&#13;
April 22 Spring Trip to Gulf Hills - Ocean Springs&#13;
April&#13;
April 22-28 Spring Trip to Gulf Hills - Ocean Springs, Mississippi&#13;
April 30 Carthage College Kenosha - 1 p.m.&#13;
Carroll College&#13;
UW-Green Bay&#13;
May 2 Northern Illinois University Dekalb&#13;
May 5-7 District No. 14 Tournament - Green Lake&#13;
June 4-9 or June 11-16 South Dakota&#13;
P.E. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
RECREATIONAL HOURS&#13;
Pool&#13;
Monday 8. Wednesday 11:30-1:30&#13;
Tuesday 8. Thursday 11:30-2:30&#13;
FridaV 11:30-3:30&#13;
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 5:30-10:00&#13;
Thursday 5:30-7:00&#13;
9:00-10:00&#13;
10:00-5:00&#13;
Sunday 1:30-10 00&#13;
Gym&#13;
Monday thru Friday 10:30-1:30(2 courts open)&#13;
3:30-6:00 (1 court open)&#13;
6:00-10:00 (restricted play)&#13;
Handball Courts&#13;
Monday thru Friday 8:00a.m.-10:00p.m.&#13;
except Tuesday 8. Thursday closed from 10:30-12:00for classes&#13;
Saturday 8 00-5-00&#13;
Sunday i-00-10-00&#13;
POOL HOURS - EASTER VACATION, APRIL 20-30&#13;
April 20 - Building closes at 12 noon.&#13;
April 21 - 10 a.m.-l p.m., 1-5 p.m.&#13;
April 22 - Building closed.&#13;
April 23 - (Monday) 12 noon-2:30 p.m., 2:30-5:30p.m., 5:30-10 p.m.&#13;
April 24 - (Tuesday) 12 noon-2:30 p.m., 2:30-6 p.m., 6-10 p.m.&#13;
April 25 - (Wednesday) 12 noon-2:30 p.m., 2:30-6p.m., 6-10 p.m.&#13;
April 26 - (Thursday) 12 noon-3 p.m., 3-6p.m., 6-10 p.m.&#13;
April 27- (Friday) 12 noon-2:30 p.m., 2:30-5 p.m.&#13;
April 28 - (Saturday) 10 a.m.-l p.m., 1-5 p.m.&#13;
April 29 - (Sunday) 1:30-5 p.m., 5-10 p.m.&#13;
WED. MAY 2&#13;
Two Shows&#13;
7:00 &amp; 9:30 p.m,&#13;
in Racine Memorial Hall&#13;
BEN SIDRAN&#13;
former accompainist with&#13;
ROLLING STONES&#13;
_ STEVE MILLER B Af&#13;
ERIC CLAPTON&#13;
Gen Tickets Available At:&#13;
Adm All J &amp; J R ECORD ST0F&#13;
BEAUTIFUL DAY RECOR&#13;
THE EARTH WORKS&#13;
DUBEES BAR&#13;
Presented b y&#13;
America Theatre P roductions&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens and his golf troops. (Names not available.)&#13;
Golfers ready for season&#13;
One senior, four juniors, five&#13;
sophomores and three freshmen&#13;
make up Coach Steve Stephens&#13;
golf ranks this spring. One of the&#13;
freshmen, John Lehmen, out of&#13;
Kenosha Tremper, was cocaptain&#13;
and Most Valuable&#13;
Player of his high school team in&#13;
1972. John Aiello is the other&#13;
freshmen prospect. He gained&#13;
MVP at St. Joseph's High School&#13;
and was Independent High School&#13;
State Champion in 1972.&#13;
Returnees for the spring roster&#13;
include sophomores Dave and&#13;
Don Fox, brothers out of Kenosha&#13;
Tremper; Dan Leissner who&#13;
prepped at Racine Case and Pete&#13;
Nevins from Jefferson&#13;
Wisconsin. Stevens also has&#13;
juniors Richard Willems out of&#13;
Kenosha St. Joseph, Jim Vakos&#13;
from Racine Horlick, Tom Bothe&#13;
former MVP at Kenosha&#13;
Tremper and James Dreifke also&#13;
from Tremper returning. The&#13;
lone Senior returning this spring,&#13;
is Mark Schweke from Marshfield,&#13;
Wisconsin. Schweke&#13;
prepped at Marshfield High and&#13;
was elected Most Valuable&#13;
Athlete in 1969.&#13;
Also joining the ranks are Dave&#13;
Karr, a transfer from UWMadison,&#13;
and A1 Pavonka, a&#13;
freshman from Clintonville.&#13;
The Ranger golfers hosted&#13;
their first meet of the season&#13;
yesterday at Petrifying Springs.&#13;
They were up against Northern&#13;
Illinois, UW-Milwaukee and UWOshkosh.&#13;
Their next meet will be&#13;
tomorrow against Loyola&#13;
University and Lake Forest at&#13;
Petrifying Springs at 1 p.m.&#13;
District tournament will be&#13;
held May 5 through 7 and&#13;
Stephens figures that the key to&#13;
the tournament will be putting&#13;
together six good rounds the first&#13;
day and at least five of six on the&#13;
second.&#13;
He also commented that, in&#13;
order for the team to be considered&#13;
contenders, a lot depends&#13;
on the performance of new&#13;
players Leissner, Pevonka and&#13;
Karr.&#13;
The Rangers lost their number&#13;
one stroker in Tom Feiner, who&#13;
turned pro after last season. But,&#13;
they have prospective talent and&#13;
returning lettermen to create&#13;
depth for their smallness in&#13;
number.&#13;
The clubsters have three home&#13;
meets scheduled for the spring&#13;
season (all to be held at&#13;
Petrifying Springs Golf Course)&#13;
and four away meets, one of&#13;
which will take them to Ocean&#13;
Springs, Mississippi.&#13;
The Physical Education&#13;
Department has announced that&#13;
the pool will be closed for a two&#13;
week period, Starting May 11, for&#13;
repairs.</text>
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              <text>Schliesman names editor</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
Ef fect ive next fal l&#13;
Schl i e sman named edi tor&#13;
The RANGER has a new&#13;
Editor-in-Chief. Her name is&#13;
Jane Schliesman.&#13;
The Advisory Board to the&#13;
RANGER recently considered&#13;
three applicants for Editor-in-&#13;
Chief. They were Schliesman,&#13;
Kathryn Wellner and Ken&#13;
Konkol. Applications were&#13;
written and submitted by April&#13;
13, and the interviews were held&#13;
April 17.&#13;
As Editor-in-Chief, Schliesman&#13;
has many goals for the&#13;
RANGER. She believes that the&#13;
Editorial Board of the RANGER&#13;
must take a strong stand on the&#13;
many real issues on this campus.&#13;
"Decisions are being made&#13;
which may or may not be in the&#13;
interests of this university in the&#13;
long run, and we must also worry&#13;
about the quality of education&#13;
being provided at present. The&#13;
RANGER Editorial Board should&#13;
research these questions and&#13;
come up with reasoned&#13;
arguments for or against&#13;
proposals," said Schliesman.&#13;
"For example," she added,&#13;
"questiors of faculty benefits&#13;
affect students, for they affect&#13;
the caliber of teaching we will&#13;
have; administrative decisions&#13;
on space utilization affect student&#13;
organizations; program&#13;
decisions (both educational and&#13;
entertainment) are affected by&#13;
budget decisions, and have an&#13;
effect on students in turn."&#13;
According to Schliesman, there&#13;
are many technical problems&#13;
facing the RANGER:&#13;
disorganization; lack of consistent,&#13;
coherent style; a&#13;
multitude of typographical errors&#13;
each week; and lack of&#13;
photographs, to list a few. More&#13;
frequent staff meetings will be&#13;
necessary, and a larger staff&#13;
would enable the RANGER to&#13;
solve many of its problems. "A&#13;
campaign for writers,&#13;
photographers, lay-out people, ad&#13;
salespeople, help, is needed," she&#13;
stated.&#13;
"I feel that people will come to&#13;
us once we are established as&#13;
more than a schlock rag, a tool of&#13;
the administration, a jive&#13;
publication. We have already&#13;
started to accomplish that," said&#13;
Schliesman.&#13;
Wedne s day, May 2, 1973&#13;
Vol . 1 No. 27&#13;
Photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Jane Schliesman&#13;
Parksiders aid handicapped&#13;
at a normal rate but could speed&#13;
the process for those using both&#13;
hands.&#13;
Another student, William&#13;
Liggett, a 29-year-old senior from&#13;
Kansasville, is developing&#13;
learning curves relating to rate&#13;
and efficiency of learning by the&#13;
handicapped in various tasks&#13;
which promise to be useful in the&#13;
Workshop's work evaluation and&#13;
training division, through which&#13;
all handicapped referrals&#13;
initially pass.&#13;
Liggett has special empathy&#13;
with the problems of the handicapped,&#13;
having once suffered&#13;
partial paralysis as the result of a&#13;
eonsttuction crane accident.&#13;
Shirland also has coordinated&#13;
formation of a managementconsulting&#13;
team of SMI students&#13;
who are studying the Curative&#13;
Workshop operation to identify&#13;
additional projects on which to&#13;
work.&#13;
Shirland became involved with&#13;
the Curative Workshop last&#13;
November after taking over cochairmanship&#13;
of the community&#13;
service committee of the&#13;
American Institute of Industrial&#13;
Engineers' Southeast Wisconsin&#13;
Chapter, which was seeking&#13;
volunteer projects in which their&#13;
members could become involved.&#13;
"That mix of experience is&#13;
exactly what our students are&#13;
getting both in the classroom and&#13;
at the Workshop," he said.&#13;
Finkler agrees. "We have&#13;
changing jobs and requirements&#13;
which expose students to a lot of&#13;
different kinds of problems," she&#13;
said. "We appreciate the help&#13;
from the Parkside people and&#13;
AIIE and feel our needs are&#13;
naturally geared to cooperative&#13;
programs of this kind."&#13;
In addition to student involvement&#13;
with the Workshop,&#13;
Shirland and another&#13;
management science professor,&#13;
Leroy Cougle, have applied for a&#13;
$10,000 federal research grant to&#13;
study and improve the evaluation&#13;
and training of the handicapped,&#13;
using the Racine facility as the&#13;
model.&#13;
The Racine Curative Workshop&#13;
currently serves about 70&#13;
physically and emotionally&#13;
handicapped persons in its&#13;
vocational division. It also has a&#13;
medical services division.&#13;
Design of a tool which enables workers with the use of&#13;
only one arm to assemble a vacuum cleaner fan is one of&#13;
the projects undertaken by Parkside management&#13;
science professor Larry Shirland (second from left) and&#13;
student Robert Unger (seated) of Kenosha at Racine's&#13;
Curative Workshop. Unger demonstrates one of the&#13;
devices using one arm, while William Liggett (right) of&#13;
Kansasville, a Parkside student who is conducting&#13;
learning studies at the Workshop, times him. Frances&#13;
Finkler, manager of the Workshop's vocational division,&#13;
observes the operation.&#13;
A Parkside professor and his&#13;
students are literally lending a&#13;
helping hand to handicapped&#13;
workers at Racine's Curative&#13;
Workshop.&#13;
Larry Shirland, assistant&#13;
professor of management science&#13;
in Parkside's School of Modern&#13;
Industry (SMI), and Robert&#13;
Unger, 20, a sophomore from&#13;
Kenosha, have designed devices&#13;
to enable workers with the use of&#13;
only one arm to assemble a small&#13;
fan used in a vacuum cleaner.&#13;
The fan assembly job is from&#13;
Amatek-Lamb Electric of&#13;
Caledonia, one of about 20 area&#13;
companies which at any given&#13;
time have jobs contracted to the&#13;
Curative Workshop.&#13;
The initial design, by Shirland,&#13;
worked well enough, enabling a&#13;
one-armed worker to tuck the&#13;
fan s six blades into the housing&#13;
one at a time. Unger, however,&#13;
felt he could improve upon&#13;
Shirland's effort and is completing&#13;
a tool which promises to&#13;
tuck in all six blades at the same&#13;
time.&#13;
Frances Finkler, manager of&#13;
the Workshop's vocational&#13;
division, said it appears Unger's&#13;
model not only will enable the&#13;
one-handed to assemble the units&#13;
Spain trip included added surpri s e&#13;
Beloit poe t&#13;
here Thursday&#13;
Beloit College English&#13;
professor and writer-in-residence&#13;
Chad Walsh will present free&#13;
public readings of his poetry on&#13;
Thursday (May 3) at Parkside&#13;
and at the Unitarian-Universalist&#13;
Church in Racine, which&#13;
arranged his local visit.&#13;
Walsh will read at a Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum session at 1:30&#13;
p.m. in the second floor library&#13;
lounge. His 8 p.m. program at the&#13;
church is titled "How Poems Get&#13;
Born" and will include a reading&#13;
of his poems and commentary on&#13;
their genesis.&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
A Capitol International DC 8&#13;
"stretch" delivered 98&#13;
Parksiders and 83 other charter&#13;
passengers to sunny Spain on the&#13;
Costa del Sol a week ago Sunday.&#13;
I was one of the passengers.&#13;
This is being written in the&#13;
hopes that it can make a Monday&#13;
morning deadline. As I zoom&#13;
along at 31,000 feet heading for&#13;
home, I know the trip is worthy of&#13;
coverage. It was a learning experience&#13;
that cannot be surpassed&#13;
by teaching in the&#13;
classroom.&#13;
Armed Guards&#13;
Immediately after landing at&#13;
the Malaga airport it became&#13;
obvious that there existed a&#13;
totally different social norm. As&#13;
we taxied toward our terminal,&#13;
passengers saw many members&#13;
of the Gaurdia Seville (dictator&#13;
Franco's army) lining the&#13;
perimeter of the airport with submachine&#13;
guns. They were smarly&#13;
uniformed, but the uniform&#13;
couldn't nullify the obtrusiveness&#13;
of the armed guard.&#13;
We were bussed from the&#13;
terminal to the customs building&#13;
and the guard became less&#13;
evident. The brown and grey hues&#13;
of the flat landscape were plain&#13;
colors for the sharp, green&#13;
uniforms to blend into.&#13;
Once we had walked off the jet&#13;
we were hit with the shock of time&#13;
disorientation and the awareness&#13;
that we were speaking the foreign&#13;
language and our only link with&#13;
the Spaniards was through our&#13;
guide or our own ingenuity.&#13;
Guides and Guards&#13;
All the guides spoke with a&#13;
heavy Spanish accent and it took&#13;
a couple of days before we could&#13;
make any amount of sense of&#13;
what they were saying.&#13;
Leaving the guides for a&#13;
moment our bus ride to the hotel,&#13;
some thirty miles away, was&#13;
scary in many respects. The most&#13;
apparent scare came with the bus&#13;
ride. People drive at maniacal&#13;
speeds in Spain, and the horn&#13;
seems to be their signal of right of&#13;
way. Even zipping along at that&#13;
speed hundreds of guards with&#13;
sub-machine guns were seen&#13;
lining the cliffs along the road to&#13;
the hotel. My impression was that&#13;
this was the way a dictatorship&#13;
was run. That, too, scared me.&#13;
My worries were arrested&#13;
when our guide talked about the&#13;
guards and the fact that Franco&#13;
was in the area. They were his&#13;
guard. The thing that made it all&#13;
worth it was when police sirens&#13;
started blasting. The bus came&#13;
quickly to the side of the road,&#13;
and President Franco sped by in&#13;
his limousine. It was an electrifying&#13;
moment that no one had&#13;
counted on. I had seen my first&#13;
benevolent dictator.&#13;
Continued on page 7&#13;
&gt; • *sV . . v , , , , v&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Jyril 14, 1973&#13;
To the Hit or:&#13;
alitor of What? Certaluly NOT of the Library&#13;
Learuiug Ceater.&#13;
Certaialy aot of higher educatloa.&#13;
Certalaly aot upliftiug educatloa.&#13;
It would take oaly the poorest caliber to 133IT each&#13;
a weird, crude, brash cartooa uader the guise of&#13;
learaiag or aaythiag else - for etudeats aad their&#13;
youager oaes uho hope to attead the Uairersity some day,&#13;
If this is the ead result of your learaiag - It is a&#13;
sad world we have.&#13;
WHY a ot put out some upliftiag high staadard cartoon?&#13;
This situatloa Is critical.&#13;
The lowest la brain matter put th&lt;s out aad those ia&#13;
charge should ceacor what is edited aad NOT meruit such&#13;
crap - aad that is all it is.&#13;
Wake up. We iatead to briag this up with the right&#13;
people. It is shameful aad so are you to permit it.&#13;
Stop this aad help the world iastead of further&#13;
fulaiag it for the youngsters who uust be confused&#13;
bythe "educated* oaes. This Is pitiful. 01 is it&#13;
Y0U1 persoaal portrait?&#13;
(Ooples)i To proper people.&#13;
A taxpayer/busiae sanaa.&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
?T T0 « FflgDuT Rb£K CONCERT&#13;
THlStdteKCMD. feroue, UftVlNG.&#13;
To D RIVC THERE So me FRJ&amp;NDS&#13;
Awo X SmoKap flBour TWO&#13;
Our\CCS OP uOPC flHDDfiflN/K,&#13;
B Case, oF PNO&#13;
BOTTUS orbJtNi* ffiwzsrsgig0"*&#13;
SmSSSfeSPr&#13;
RLAWTNflj- X Cj f S3 TU3T GCTTIN^-&#13;
ofA * ^ ^ •*'&#13;
HI Tttft£U/UPo»jTH£.&#13;
FEOPLP. fk{ crqut fiT fl\F&#13;
cr^&#13;
. Rv Gary Huck\&#13;
Rep l y&#13;
Dear Taxpayer-Businessman:&#13;
We don't usually answer letters that are unsigned,&#13;
especially those that come postage due. But we thought&#13;
we could make an exception with this one.&#13;
The letter to the editor and the cartoons with comments&#13;
appearing on this page were sent together by a&#13;
nameless reader.&#13;
The cartoons are called "crap" and the reader feels&#13;
"those in charge should censor (sic) what is edited."&#13;
That seems to be a rather anti-Constitutional view of&#13;
freedom of the press.&#13;
The RANGER is a corporation, separate from the&#13;
university and only bound by state and" local laws. Our&#13;
advisor has never censored us and that is the way it&#13;
should be. The advisor serves only as a resource person&#13;
and would only attempt to stop us from printing&#13;
something if it were libelous.&#13;
These cartoons, along with any other cartoon we print,&#13;
are very simply the expression of the cartoonist's&#13;
thoughts. Doubtless you would have this cartoonist&#13;
silenced and put in his place. We feel the campus&#13;
community can take more than some candy-coated&#13;
picture of the world.&#13;
Most people on campus can recognize satire, which&#13;
the cartoons obviously are. They can see the humor in&#13;
the satire and usually catch the underlying meaning.&#13;
Evidently you didn't.&#13;
practice."&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View honorea&#13;
because To.&#13;
are worth a i,.&#13;
year6 bv' ispub'isheci weekly throughout the academic&#13;
Kenosha, Wise8 /isconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Learning rpntw t i I 0fflces are &gt;°cated at D-194 Li brary-&#13;
ThP P if"? ' TelePhone (414) 5 53-2295.&#13;
reflectedTn^nifir^no"86^ iSj-an •independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
^Lettersfto th"^T* " ^ °ffidal&#13;
less^yped^n^dou'^6^'^' ^usA!e'corrfined1 to MO^onis or&#13;
l^ters for lenc^ arff?lt 5fCe?' The editors reserv* the right to edit&#13;
address n hone nnmk j ! 1AI1 letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withheld upon re mies?'The'SV8tatU80r fac ulty rank' Names wil1 print any le tters editors reserve t he right to refuse to&#13;
Classified and display ad rates will be furnished upon request.&#13;
M?NTA0GfNGCEHDfTORRUTd0VmLrtaU&#13;
NEWS EDfTORDl^hr;n°^eF;|en,eerrSen&#13;
SPOR I Df foRORKr'sanKocShhlieSman&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: K en Peslka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER- F redV^^* WR ITERS: Ken Konkiol G e ci Lawrence Blaha, B ruce Rasmu's°sen aTeri?'^n!^ar,ilvn. Schubert' Jeannlne CARTOONISTS: Gary HuckBoho '' Ge°" Blaesinb Sipsma, Helmut Kah. Bill&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS K en Konfni n ^"' AmV Cun dari&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF FrM ? l^r 'De n n i SDo o n a n 'Gr«Syston&#13;
ADVISER: Don Kopriva Lawr en«, Ken Konkol, Rudy Lienau&#13;
0 1°* NATIONAL ADVERTISING »Y A'&#13;
y National Educational Advertising Services, Inc. y&#13;
360 Lexington Ave.. New YoeW. N »'. 10017 1&#13;
Wed./ May 2, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
We get letters THORN&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Next semester I plan to start or&#13;
try to start an informal rap group&#13;
dealing with sex roles and how&#13;
men relate to women and each&#13;
other. It will be a consciousnessraising&#13;
type group and each&#13;
member will be given six minutes&#13;
of undivided attention. All over&#13;
the country, men's liberation&#13;
groups are forming but haven't&#13;
received the media exposure of&#13;
women's groups. We will NOT be&#13;
a counter force to the feminist&#13;
movement but work side by side&#13;
to eradicate sex based myths,&#13;
habits and beliefs. This will break&#13;
down barriers between men and&#13;
women and the deep ones between&#13;
men and men, too.&#13;
Some psychologists feel that we&#13;
created the concepts of&#13;
"masculine" and "feminine" to&#13;
hide certain emotions and&#13;
thoughts we are afraid to&#13;
acknowledge. Also, this sex&#13;
gender division has political,&#13;
economic and psychological&#13;
implications which play havoc in&#13;
a society allegedly based on&#13;
equality and freedoms the Bill of&#13;
Rights spells out. Men's&#13;
imaginary supremacy over&#13;
women, like white "supremacy"&#13;
over black and Third World&#13;
peoples is a mass self-illusion&#13;
which I know will backfire on&#13;
men with a vengeance.&#13;
Anyone, women are welcome&#13;
too, who wishes to start a group&#13;
like this write to: 953 Wood Rd.&#13;
Apt. 112, Kenosha, Wis. 53140.&#13;
Please don't write after May 20th&#13;
as I am moving out.&#13;
I hope to see several people at&#13;
the first meeting because there is&#13;
a great need here for this kind of&#13;
group. That was evident by the&#13;
lack of interest for the Equal&#13;
Rights Amendment and its&#13;
meaning for both sexes.&#13;
Dave Myer&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Regarding the editorial in the&#13;
last issue of Editor's Notebook, I&#13;
have a possible solution. There is&#13;
a nonprofit organization in both&#13;
Racine, run by myself, Rita&#13;
Overberg-and Kenosha, run by&#13;
Lonnie Aulwes, called Youthpower.&#13;
Youthpower is an&#13;
organization sponsored by different&#13;
companies in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha. Its function is to help&#13;
young people, ages 16-21, find a&#13;
full or part-time job for the&#13;
summer.&#13;
Youthpower opens on June 4 at&#13;
the Junior Achievement&#13;
Building, 604 - 6th Street in&#13;
Racine and at the Kenosha Youth&#13;
Foundation, 720 - 59th PI. in&#13;
Kenosha. There will also be a&#13;
Youthpower Jamboree on June 2,&#13;
to sign up applicants. Watch the&#13;
respective papers for details.&#13;
Rita C. Overberg&#13;
Manager, Racine Youthpower&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Did you think politics was an&#13;
instrument to enlarge the conscience&#13;
and sensibility of man?&#13;
I'm pessimistic and depressed&#13;
over our social, economic, environmental&#13;
scene. You guessed&#13;
it. The Abbie Hoffmann of&#13;
capitalism is at it again! He has&#13;
just institutionalized "facts"&#13;
coated with middle class sentimentality&#13;
and the work ethic;&#13;
and the media will absorb it allmake&#13;
it all fashionable and innocuous.&#13;
Having begun to mold the&#13;
American adult in the Nixonian&#13;
image, the President has now&#13;
sprung out at the kids. To begin&#13;
with, he and his appointee, Mr.&#13;
Wrather of the Corporation for&#13;
Cartoonist's Eye View&#13;
THE R ANGES R ECEIVED&#13;
AN ANONYMOUS LETTER&#13;
(JRITTEN IN THE UCKST&#13;
OF TASTE. ACCUSING&#13;
MY CARTOONS OF BQNG&#13;
IN T HE WORST OF TASTE&#13;
THE LETTER MAUGNED&#13;
^irlcTz® f&amp;,Clous&#13;
FOR BEINGINSULTINIJIT&#13;
SEEMS TOME&#13;
TRECNLY D LFFERANCE&#13;
BETWEEN&#13;
His LETTER&#13;
AND MV&#13;
CARTOONS&#13;
IS THAT AFTER'&#13;
BEING- MALICIOUS)&#13;
CRITICAL, AMD INSULTING&#13;
I ALWAYS SIG-NMY&#13;
NAME!!!&#13;
f?S. THANKS For THE&#13;
NEW MATERIAL&#13;
(WHOEVER HOU ARE)&#13;
XXX C&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
Public Broadcasting, have&#13;
decided that "Zoom" is too much&#13;
fun and likely to give children the&#13;
ridiculous notion that life can be&#13;
enjoyable. To replace "oom" how&#13;
about a series of functional facts&#13;
based on Dickens Hard Times.&#13;
"Teach these boys and girls&#13;
nothing but Facts," said Mr.&#13;
Gradgrind. "Facts alone are&#13;
wanted in life. Nothing else will&#13;
ever be of service. This is the&#13;
principle on which I bring up my&#13;
own children. Stick to the facts."&#13;
With Mr. Wrather's and Mr.&#13;
Shakespeare's (U.S.I.A.)&#13;
cooperation, we may program a&#13;
generation of humorless&#13;
Gradgrinds. For "no little&#13;
Gradgrind had ever seen a face in&#13;
the moon. No little Gradgrind had&#13;
ever learnt the silly jingle&#13;
'Twinkle, twinkle, little star, how&#13;
I wonder what you are!' No little&#13;
Gradgrind had ever known&#13;
wonder on the subject, each&#13;
having at five years dissected the&#13;
Great Bear like a Professor&#13;
Owen."&#13;
Facts indeed, Mr. Nixon-why&#13;
not start with "Sticks and Bones"&#13;
and Julia Child and the French&#13;
soybeans and genuine American&#13;
organic D.E.S. bread, endorsed&#13;
by your axiom of inflationary&#13;
survival "just eat less," or pieces&#13;
with honor speeches etc. In any&#13;
case, if you have had it with the&#13;
antics of this dutiful, dictating,&#13;
deceitful idiot-write the P.B.S. to&#13;
save "Zoom," "Firing Line" or&#13;
what have you. Who knows,&#13;
maybe McCord will link Nixon&#13;
directly responsible for the&#13;
Watergate malfeasance and he&#13;
will end up in a cell next to&#13;
Clifford Irving. Wouldn't that&#13;
provide material for an interesting&#13;
factual series?! Norman&#13;
Mailer said we must bring&#13;
out the psychopath in us all if we&#13;
are to survive in an insane world.&#13;
At least this is one thing Nixon&#13;
has done for us.&#13;
Reprehensibly,&#13;
Stacy Postler&#13;
Racine Freshman&#13;
Food costs&#13;
reduced&#13;
on cam puses&#13;
The United Council of&#13;
University of Wisconsin Student&#13;
Governments today announced&#13;
that they were very pleased by&#13;
the action of the State Joint&#13;
Finance Committee in the&#13;
exemption of S tate Sales Tax for&#13;
students purchasing food in&#13;
dormitories on meal plans.&#13;
This action will save the&#13;
student about $20 per year in&#13;
meal costs. United Council&#13;
worked extnesively for this&#13;
revision.&#13;
Rod Nilsestuen, President of&#13;
the United Council, stated "We&#13;
feel that this is a long overdue&#13;
step. Previously, students were&#13;
the only residents of the State of&#13;
Wisconsin who paid sales tax on&#13;
meals served in their own&#13;
residences. We are very pleased&#13;
that this inequity has been&#13;
corrected."&#13;
Nilsestuen also said that the&#13;
Joint Finance Committee had&#13;
accepted the United Council&#13;
suggestion to handle the student&#13;
employment section of the budget&#13;
as a separate decision item in the&#13;
next biennial budget. This will&#13;
make it easier for the students to&#13;
calculate the exact amount of&#13;
employment aid. Previously&#13;
information concerning the&#13;
number of student jobs provided&#13;
in by the budget has not been&#13;
readily accessible.&#13;
By Konkol&#13;
As you know, the RANGER has been looking for a new editor as&#13;
announced in the last two issues. Well, we found one. Applications&#13;
were turned in by a number of people including a seventeen year old&#13;
teenie-bopper and a middle aged (according to some) muckraker.&#13;
Two meetings were held to narrow the field. At the first, contestants&#13;
were given a chance to air their views on how a paper should be run.&#13;
This was held on April 17. At this meeting a great many radical&#13;
proposals were brought forth, including such unheard of things as a&#13;
more representative editorial policy, more coverage of campus&#13;
events, and (get this), actually paying staff members who do exemplary&#13;
work.&#13;
At the second meeting, held two days later, the members of the&#13;
RANGER advisory board got together and finally selected Jane&#13;
Schliesman (formerly Feature Editor) as our new Editor-in-Chief, to&#13;
the congratulations of many and the relief of some.&#13;
OK gang, I admit it, I m not infallable, even though I sometimes&#13;
would like to be. I write this column the week before the paper comes&#13;
out, and though I might come pretty close in predictions I have made&#13;
m the past, this one struck a little wide of the mark. I wrote it three&#13;
weeks before this issue.&#13;
Oh, alright I was wrong. There was no second meeting on April 19&#13;
where the final decision was made, there was no need for one. The&#13;
advisory board made the decision the same day they interviewed the&#13;
candidates for the position. But, I was right, Jane Schliesman is still&#13;
the new editor.&#13;
I for one am wondering what our new editor will be like. After&#13;
having six different ones the past four years here, you'd think I'd be&#13;
used to the changes. But, you gotta remember, now I h ave to learn a&#13;
whole new system.&#13;
Jane definately has some strong opinions on topics which to me are&#13;
of not so much importance, and this could conceivably change some of&#13;
the content of this paper. While I believe I can assure you "the&#13;
Movement" will not be expanded and moved to page one, I honestly&#13;
don't know what to expect.&#13;
Speaking of suffragettes, I'd like to enlarge on a few things about the&#13;
female liberation movement. I think we have all been affected by this,&#13;
I know I have.&#13;
There used to be a time when I would actually open a door or give up&#13;
my seat on a bus for a member of what then was the "weaker" sex. I&#13;
have ceased to do that except as in cases of extreme need. Now I have&#13;
sort of a guideline to follow. If I wouldn't do it for a guy in similiar&#13;
circumstances, then to comply with the idea of equality, I'd better not&#13;
do it for a girl either.&#13;
Which brings us to the Wisconsin equal rights amendment and why&#13;
it failed.&#13;
I have a theory which seems to be supported by the facts. The equal&#13;
rights amendment failed because the women of this state voted&#13;
against it. That's right, I said the women defeated it.&#13;
After conducting an independent poll of some of the men around this&#13;
area, I found that better than 60 percent said they voted for the&#13;
amendment. If such a case is generally true, where did all those no&#13;
votes come from?&#13;
Women of voting age are more numerous than men in this state, so if&#13;
even the great majority of men voted no the women could still carry it&#13;
off by voting together. Obviously the women didn't vote together, and&#13;
instead voted against equal rights.&#13;
I v oted in favor of the bill, I felt it was about time I g ot some equal&#13;
rights. I'm all for woman coming down off her imagined pedistal to go&#13;
through life side by side with man.&#13;
Seems most women felt they had a good thing going without equal&#13;
rights. They're right. Just take a look at the law books in this state and&#13;
you will find that women are highly favored in the eyes of the law. The&#13;
men are the ones being discriminated against. .&#13;
Those office spaces in the library were struggled hard for. They&#13;
were finally won after a discussion with the president of the university&#13;
during his visit here. Another problem discussed was the question of&#13;
tenure. Seems that some students feel that some teachers who have it,&#13;
shouldn't. I guess some sort of test case is being worked up to find out&#13;
how to dispose of the problem.&#13;
Two performances have been put on lately that deserve some note.&#13;
One was the Wayne S. Aho performance on ESP which was sponsored&#13;
by the Student Government Association. Another was the UFO lecture&#13;
by Stanton Friedman put on by the PAB.&#13;
These were both unique in that neither one cost the students money.&#13;
Both Aho and Friedman were paid out of the gate receipts.&#13;
While Aho was sponsored as sort of a service to the students with a&#13;
small admission charge, not many Parkside students showed up. The&#13;
audience was made up mostly of members of the community. But this&#13;
time the community did not see a performance paid for by student&#13;
money, they paid for it themselves, with 58c off every head going to&#13;
Aho.&#13;
The I* riedman affair was well-attended as evidenced by the nearly&#13;
full bleachers. While there were not a great deal of advance tickets&#13;
sold, enough impulse buyers attended to make the show a financial&#13;
success.&#13;
Lm going to mention the Lecture and Fine Arts Committee again&#13;
shnnldn'fhp i TStS by s pe nd in8 student shouidn t be. I t hink most of us agree that its funds shomulodn ebye ,c aunt do ffi t&#13;
This does not necessarily mean it must cease to function. It can continue&#13;
its existence by putting on such shows as Aho and Friedman&#13;
were, shows for which the performers have no set fee but must rely on&#13;
their popularity for their income.&#13;
This is not to say L&amp;FA should restrict themselves to this type&#13;
^rfom«TwoKTreeS™ '° Pl" °" Sh°WS at Wh'Ch 1,16&#13;
4 THE PA RKSIDE R ANGER Wed. , May 2 , 1973&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gar y Jense n&#13;
Space Oddi ty&#13;
David Bowie&#13;
(LSP-4813)&#13;
David Bowie sure tried his hardest to become freaky. He chopped off&#13;
his hair, dyed it carrot orange, and changed his name to Ziggy Stardust.&#13;
Previously he had publicly worn a dress and openly admitted to&#13;
being gay. Ziggy Stardust and his Spiders from Mars are now&#13;
receiving a ridiculous amount of publicity for such mediocre talent&#13;
compare David to another pervert, someone like Mick Jagger. Mick&#13;
as the ability to cast male or female roles in their strongest sense and&#13;
various shades of both - the ultimate in bisexualism. David Bowie&#13;
remains a simple ordinary transvestite. Fag lovers need not feel too&#13;
proud of Bowie.&#13;
SPACE ODDITY is a Bowie re-issue containing some old stuff&#13;
dating as far back as 1969. It is a record of David Bowie as a folk singer&#13;
often with considerable orchestral accompanyment.&#13;
"Space Oddity" opens this collection as being the reason for this&#13;
album. Here David comes off as a freaked-out Bee Gee stranded in&#13;
outer space with a catchy tune. Several musical transitions make it&#13;
somewhat psychic.&#13;
David has a spot as a hard rocker with "Unwashed and Somewhat&#13;
Slightly Dazed." Upon his announcing "I'm a phallus in pigtails" the&#13;
song changes from its folky beginning to a chugging rhythm rocker.&#13;
"Cygnet Committee" is a long drawn out thing but inspite of this it&#13;
somehow manages to be one of the most emotion stirring cuts. It&#13;
emerges a while after the start into a preacher drone characteristic&#13;
Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone." For this number, reading the&#13;
lyric sheet along with it is very helpful. Bowie has tried so hard to&#13;
make wierd lyrics but these are his most intriguing on the record.&#13;
These words are a critical, sympathetic, and confused look at the&#13;
history of the hippie culture.&#13;
The rest is mostly stuff sounding like Cat Stevens on acid, some&#13;
sounding wretched enough to make one puke. "The Wild Eyed Boy&#13;
From Freecloud" could be David's Broadway production. One of his&#13;
folk ballads is about an old lady shoplifter who consoles herself with&#13;
"God Knows I'm Good."&#13;
The last slot is reserved for the "Memory of a Free Free Festival."&#13;
It drags on for several minutes with a funeral organ and David&#13;
reciting a tribute. Then it becomes a growing repetitive chorus in the&#13;
"Hey Jude" fashion but seems grossly inferior by comparison.&#13;
at this point in this ocean of ambivalence I gaze at the David Bowie&#13;
"thinker" photo that is the background for the lyric sheet and say, yes&#13;
David you do have talent, even Truman Capote says so.&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
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/&#13;
What Wed., May 2, 1973 THE PARKS I D E RANGER 5&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee of the Parkside&#13;
otudent Government Association&#13;
is in the process of distributing&#13;
their teaching evaluation forms&#13;
to iaculty members. Those&#13;
faculty who have not as yet&#13;
contacted the committee are&#13;
asked to do so through the PSGA&#13;
offices D193 LLC so that the&#13;
proper number of computer&#13;
evaluation forms may be&#13;
prepared.&#13;
A new feature of the RANGER&#13;
will be a column of original&#13;
poetry. This feature will appear&#13;
in the last issue of the RANGER,&#13;
and continue next year. Anyone&#13;
with poetry to submit should&#13;
come down to the RANGER&#13;
office, LLC D194, at least one&#13;
week before the item is to be&#13;
printed. •&#13;
The Racine Community&#13;
concert Association will conduct&#13;
its annual membership campaign&#13;
starting May 21st. This years&#13;
concerts in Racine will include;&#13;
Bridgadoon, The Warsaw&#13;
Philharmonic Orchestra, and a&#13;
singing group called Songs by&#13;
Six, conducted by Robert&#13;
DeCormier. Three or four concerts&#13;
are also planned in&#13;
Kenosha. The cost for students is&#13;
$5.00 and it includes admission to&#13;
all of the concerts. Campaign&#13;
headquarters is located at the&#13;
Racine YMCA with phone calls&#13;
taken at 634-7953.&#13;
The Earth Science Department&#13;
will hold an "end of the&#13;
semester" picnic at the home of&#13;
Dave Krogh on Sunday, May 20&#13;
for all Earth Science students&#13;
and faculty. Besides celebrating&#13;
"the end," the picnic strives to&#13;
build student-faculty relations.&#13;
Special features include the&#13;
performance of a faculty skit and&#13;
enning&#13;
the presentation of characteristic&#13;
"gifts" to the faculty.&#13;
For more information or&#13;
reservations, E.S. students and&#13;
faculty may go to the Earth&#13;
Science lab, GR116.&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board&#13;
will present a concert featuring&#13;
Bob Rohan and the Country&#13;
Band Sunday at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Admission will be general public&#13;
$1 a nd Parkside Students 75c.&#13;
Mr. Bruce Burgy, General&#13;
Plant Manager for the&#13;
Dynamatic Industrial Drives&#13;
Division of Eaton Corporation in&#13;
Kenosha will present "Business,&#13;
People, and Profits" Wednesday&#13;
Night, May 2 in 221 Greenquist&#13;
Hall from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
uMlcH one of THESE 6bg RoUasl&#13;
Cflemt mwoezs tfe A boojl O F&#13;
fftRttapes ceeAM O F onton&#13;
SooP?'&#13;
Theatre nearing complet ion&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Parkside's new theatre,&#13;
located in the Communications-&#13;
Arts Building, is scheduled to be&#13;
finished June l. Lighting and&#13;
other equipment will hopefully be&#13;
installed soon after.&#13;
The theatre is of a conventional&#13;
design and can be used for many&#13;
purposes. One of its special&#13;
features includes an elevator&#13;
platform to the front of the stage&#13;
which can be lowered to an orchestra&#13;
pit or raised as a 16-foot&#13;
projection of the stage. A very&#13;
sophisticated system of lighting&#13;
will also be used. It can be&#13;
o p e r a t e d m a n u a l l y ,&#13;
automatically by use of a tape, or&#13;
by a combination of the two&#13;
methods. The walls are accoustically&#13;
designed with wood&#13;
slats backed by a metal speaker&#13;
grill. Sound thereby travels&#13;
through the grill to the wall&#13;
behind and is then reflected. Don&#13;
Rintz, assistant professor of&#13;
Communications, said he hoped&#13;
this arrangement would make&#13;
the theatre tuneable to the&#13;
various activities presented. He&#13;
cited the possibility of installing&#13;
different materials behind the&#13;
grill, depending on whether a&#13;
musical or speech-related performance&#13;
was being given.&#13;
Another facet of the theatre&#13;
which makes it even more -ver-&#13;
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satile is the handling of the&#13;
balcony space. The main floor&#13;
seats approximately 500 with an&#13;
additional 100 i n each of the two&#13;
balconies. Current planning calls&#13;
for sectioning off the balconies&#13;
into two separate lecture halls.&#13;
The sectioning should be done in&#13;
such a way that when closed, the&#13;
balconies will be invisible and&#13;
inaudible from the main floor,&#13;
and when open, appear to be an&#13;
integral part of the theatre. Since&#13;
about half of all the seats will&#13;
have hide-away desk tops, the&#13;
theatre may be transformed into&#13;
three lecture halls capable of&#13;
operating simultaneously.&#13;
When asked who would be able&#13;
to use the theatre, Rintz said it&#13;
would be available to all parts of&#13;
the university, e.g., visiting&#13;
lecturers, music events and, of&#13;
course, theatre productions, as&#13;
well as for class lectures. He also&#13;
said a Parkside Community&#13;
Theatre group was being formed,&#13;
which would be open to all&#13;
university students interested in&#13;
the various aspects of theatre, as&#13;
well as people from the community.&#13;
They plan two productions&#13;
next year, one in November,&#13;
to be directed by Rintz, and&#13;
another in March by Richard&#13;
Carrington.&#13;
Planning for the theatre was&#13;
done by an advisory committee in&#13;
1970. Our theatre is basea on the&#13;
theatre at Rockford College.&#13;
Rintz said, "They spent as much&#13;
on their theatre as we spent on&#13;
the whole Comm-Arts Building.&#13;
For the money, we're getting a&#13;
tremendous plan."&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 19 7 3&#13;
Anni v e r s a ry Fr i day&#13;
Kent State students remembered&#13;
Sadkers&#13;
to keynote&#13;
conventions&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
This Friday, May 4, marks the&#13;
third anniversary since the&#13;
deaths of four Kent State students&#13;
at the hands of the Ohio National&#13;
Guard. Being three years since&#13;
that fateful week, when&#13;
demonstrations over the United&#13;
States' invasion of Cambodia and&#13;
the shootings at Kent State&#13;
brought almost all of the major&#13;
colleges to a standstill, makes&#13;
now a good time to look back and&#13;
recount what had happened.&#13;
In May of 1970, demonstrations&#13;
were being held all across the&#13;
country denouncing President&#13;
Nixon's decision to expand the&#13;
war into Cambodia. At Kent State&#13;
the National Guard had been&#13;
called in and martial law&#13;
declared, (with all demonstrations&#13;
being banned) following&#13;
three days of violent demonstrations&#13;
which had included the&#13;
burning down of the Army ROTC&#13;
building. At noon on May 4, a&#13;
demonstration was held on the&#13;
campus commons, only a few&#13;
hundred students were involved&#13;
but the crowd swelled as many&#13;
students were taking their lunch&#13;
break and going to and from&#13;
classes.&#13;
A National Guard jeep drove&#13;
onto the commons and an officer&#13;
ordered the crowd to disperse.&#13;
Then several canisters of tear&#13;
gas were fired, and a platoon of&#13;
guardsmen, armed with loaded&#13;
M-l rifles and gas equipment,&#13;
moved across the green chasing&#13;
the main body of protesters. As&#13;
the guard marched from one end&#13;
of the commons to a practice field&#13;
and back, the crowd never did&#13;
disperse but ended up following&#13;
the guard while hurling rocks and&#13;
insults at them. Many of the&#13;
students, already angered by the&#13;
guards' presence on campus,&#13;
acted as if they were watching a&#13;
show by standing around and&#13;
cheering as the tear gas canisters&#13;
were being tossed back and forth.&#13;
The guardsmen then began&#13;
marching back up a small hill at&#13;
one end of the commons with&#13;
their backs to the students. When&#13;
they reached the crest of the hill&#13;
they suddenly turned, formed a&#13;
skirmish line, and without&#13;
warning, opened fire on the&#13;
students. Many students took&#13;
cover while others remained&#13;
standing in disbelief, thinking&#13;
they were firing blanks, until&#13;
they saw other students lying on&#13;
the ground bleeding.&#13;
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In all, 13 students were hit; four&#13;
of them, Allison Krause, Sandra&#13;
Lee Sheuer, Jeffery Glenn Miller&#13;
and William K. Scroeder, were&#13;
killed by guardsmen's bullets.&#13;
Why did the guardsmen shoot?&#13;
The initial report was that they&#13;
were returning sniper fire, but&#13;
they then had to admit that there&#13;
was no evidence to support this&#13;
claim. Other reasons were that&#13;
the students had surrounded the&#13;
guard and were closing in on&#13;
them, so that they were in fear of&#13;
their lives. A grand jury report&#13;
exonerated the guard on those&#13;
grounds, but a later FBI report&#13;
showed with pictures that the&#13;
guardsmen were not surrounded.&#13;
They could have easily kept on&#13;
marching in the same direction;&#13;
they found that the students were&#13;
not any closer than some 50 yards&#13;
away at the time of the shooting.&#13;
Other guardsmen, when&#13;
questioned, did not specifically&#13;
say that they felt their lives were&#13;
in danger but merely started&#13;
firing when others did because&#13;
they assumed an order to fire had&#13;
been given.&#13;
A private study released over a&#13;
year after the shootings went so&#13;
far as to say that certain guardsmen&#13;
had planned in advance to&#13;
shoot and had even picked out&#13;
specific students to shoot.&#13;
The President's Commission on&#13;
Campus Unrest probably summed&#13;
up the events best by saying,&#13;
"The actions of some students&#13;
were violent and criminal and&#13;
those of some others were&#13;
dangerous, reckless and&#13;
irresponsible. The indiscriminate&#13;
firing of rifles into a crowd of&#13;
students and the deaths that&#13;
followed were unnecessary,&#13;
unwarranted, and inexcusable."&#13;
If factions on both sides could be&#13;
held responsible, then why was&#13;
no official action taken?&#13;
A Portage County (Ohio) grand&#13;
jury exonerated the guardsmen,&#13;
indicting 25 students, nonstudents&#13;
and a Kent State professor on&#13;
criminal charges. There can be&#13;
no denying that some of the&#13;
students were looking for a&#13;
confrontation, to be beat up and&#13;
arrested. But why was no action&#13;
taken against the guardsmen who&#13;
fired into a crowd which included&#13;
many innocent bystanders?&#13;
Not until the parents of the&#13;
dead students, along with the&#13;
ACLU, attempted to sue the state&#13;
of Ohio for negligence and&#13;
wanton misconduct for sending&#13;
armed National Guardsmen on&#13;
campus was any action taken&#13;
against the guard. The students'&#13;
cases were dismissed when it was&#13;
found to be nearly impossible to&#13;
prosecute them. The case against&#13;
the state of Ohio was dropped&#13;
when a federal court decided that&#13;
the state could not be held&#13;
responsible for the guardsmen's&#13;
actions.&#13;
The saddest part of the whole&#13;
tragedy is the attitude of some of&#13;
the American people who said&#13;
that, "they (the students)&#13;
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deserved what they got," and&#13;
"they should have shot more of&#13;
them." It's strange how those&#13;
killed at the Boston Massacre in&#13;
1770 under somewhat the same&#13;
circumstances are called&#13;
patriots, but the students with&#13;
different political beliefs are&#13;
labeled bums.&#13;
Now, three years later, with the&#13;
Vietnam war over, we can look&#13;
back and ask if anything came&#13;
out of the events on May 4. One&#13;
thing for certain was that it kept&#13;
the war on everyone's mind and&#13;
possibly helped push towards&#13;
being even more determined to&#13;
end it. The pointless deaths of the&#13;
four Kent State students gave an&#13;
example of just how pointless the&#13;
deaths of American soldiers in&#13;
Vietnam were. It also brought a&#13;
further awareness to whites what&#13;
the blacks had to face when their&#13;
sons and daughters can be shot&#13;
down and there's nothing they&#13;
can do about it.&#13;
Two members of Parkside&#13;
education faculty who are&#13;
authorities on sexism in&#13;
education will keynote state&#13;
education conventions in Florida&#13;
and Arkansas during May.&#13;
Myra and David Sadker will&#13;
give a joint keynote address at&#13;
the Florida Education&#13;
Association convention, which&#13;
has sexism in the schools as its&#13;
theme, on May 11 in Tallahassee&#13;
and Myra Sadker will keynote the&#13;
Arkansas State Education&#13;
Convention on the same theme&#13;
May 4 i n Little Rock.&#13;
She is co-author, with former&#13;
Newsweek writer Nancy Frazier,&#13;
of a new book, "Sexism in School&#13;
and Society", just published by&#13;
Harper and Rowe and was one of&#13;
eight education writers invited by&#13;
the National Association of&#13;
Elementary School Principals to&#13;
participate in a "Meet the&#13;
Author" program introducing&#13;
significant new books in&#13;
education at the association's&#13;
convention in Detroit on April 15.&#13;
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Wed. / May 7 , 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Meetings held for H.S. s tudent&#13;
Students in an atmospheric science course a oart of&#13;
the environmental concentration within the Earth&#13;
Science major at Parkside, prepare to launch a helium&#13;
filled balloon, above, to measure vertical distribution of&#13;
wind direction and speed, which change at different&#13;
heights Raw data recorded by students using a&#13;
theodolite, which incorporates a telescope mounted on a&#13;
tripod, is fed into a computer program which&#13;
automatically converts the data into wind directions and&#13;
speeds. The balloon is visible up to about 15,000 feet on a&#13;
clear day. Winds aloft are important in determining how&#13;
air pollution will disperse on a given day, according to&#13;
meteorologist Henry Cole, assistant professor of earth&#13;
science, who teaches the course. Conditions for pollution&#13;
dispersion are worst when deep layers of low wind&#13;
speeds exist, Cole said. Students shown are, left to riqht-&#13;
Jeff Koleske, 1705 Edgewood Ave., Racine; Ken Rizzo,&#13;
4603 - 23rd Ave., Kenosha; Bruce Bendel, 53 Jewell St.'&#13;
Williams Bay; and Wayne Valukas, 2904 Mt. Pleasant&#13;
St., Racine.&#13;
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiuiiiiiiimiiimiiimiiiiiiimimimiiiimiimmiiiiimmiiimiiiimmiiii&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
T h e S e m e s t e r ' s L a s t D a n c e&#13;
Featuring&#13;
SAT., MAY 5th&#13;
9:00 - 1:00 a.m.&#13;
Adm: $1.00 Parkside c+llHon+&#13;
c. Student&#13;
Students Activities&#13;
$1.50 Guests Bldg.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wise. I.D.'s required. Illlllllllllll|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||j|||||||||,||||„||m||||q||||||||m|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||&#13;
Dry $&#13;
81 • Cleaned LOS. only 2 00&#13;
Free Pre-Spotting&#13;
Drop Off Service&#13;
WE&#13;
Wash - Dry - Fold 20f&#13;
Lb.&#13;
g^50&#13;
MINIMUM&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open 8 a.m. to8p.m.&#13;
Fourteenth Avenue Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
Information meetings for high&#13;
school students considering&#13;
careers in education and in&#13;
engineering science and business&#13;
management, their parents and&#13;
high school counselors have been&#13;
scheduled at Parkside. The&#13;
meetings also are open to&#13;
prospective transfer students and&#13;
part-time adult students. No&#13;
registration is required for either&#13;
session.&#13;
The session for students interested&#13;
in engineering and&#13;
business will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Both faculty members and&#13;
students from Parkside's&#13;
engineering science and&#13;
management science (business)&#13;
divisions will be available to&#13;
answer questions dealing with&#13;
the functional areas involved in&#13;
the two majors, requirements for&#13;
employment at the entry level of&#13;
industry, academic requirements&#13;
for the majors and the job outlook&#13;
in the two fields. William Moy,&#13;
dean of the School of Modern&#13;
Industry, will present the introduction.&#13;
The session for students interested&#13;
in elementary, secondary&#13;
of special education will be&#13;
held Wednesday, May 16, at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in Room D-134 of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
Faculty and students from the&#13;
division of education will conduct&#13;
the session and will answer&#13;
questions about the program,&#13;
requirements for educational&#13;
certification and the job outlook&#13;
in education. Professor Paul&#13;
Kleine, chairman of the&#13;
education division, will give the&#13;
introduction.&#13;
Charles F. Kugel, Director of&#13;
School and Campus Relations at&#13;
Parkside, said that both&#13;
programs are designed to&#13;
Spain t ri p&#13;
Continued from page 1&#13;
The Sights&#13;
That whirlwind run- from the&#13;
airport to the hotel gave us only a&#13;
glimpse of the sights that were to&#13;
be seen.&#13;
The terrain is mostly hilly and&#13;
mountainous. Starting from the&#13;
beautiful beaches of the Costa del&#13;
Sol there is a contrast of the&#13;
beautifully clean, clear water&#13;
and the clean brown sands.&#13;
Flowering plants and palms&#13;
abound. Delicate wild flowers&#13;
and tuberous, succulent plants&#13;
line the costal area.&#13;
High terraces are spotted with&#13;
beautiful white bungaloes. The&#13;
bungaloes are the exception to&#13;
the rule.&#13;
Immediately along the coast&#13;
are modern high rise apartments&#13;
and hotels. We stayed at one of&#13;
the seventeen Sofico hotels. Our&#13;
particular complex as callled Los&#13;
Aolympos.&#13;
The hotel structures have not&#13;
yet ruined the natural beauty of&#13;
the Costa del Sol, but with the&#13;
great amount of construction&#13;
going on, it shouldn't take long&#13;
before the now pleasant coast is a&#13;
bit too commercialized. With&#13;
some planning it can be beautiful&#13;
for a long time.&#13;
meos&#13;
PIZZA mem&#13;
Chicken &amp; I talian Sa usage B ombers&#13;
Fret Delivery to Pa rkside Vi llage&#13;
5021 30th Avenue Phone 657-5191&#13;
provide general information&#13;
about the three professional&#13;
areas as well as specific information&#13;
about Parkside&#13;
programs in management&#13;
science, applied science and&#13;
technology and education.&#13;
The coast is described here&#13;
only in part and there are still the&#13;
grey, granite wall mountains&#13;
covered with olive and almond&#13;
trees. There are the cities with&#13;
their pesty shoe shine men,&#13;
beautiful churches, and impoverished&#13;
areas.&#13;
We're just about to touch down&#13;
at O'Hare so I must stop. Next&#13;
week I will try to wrap up what&#13;
was a very successful trip to&#13;
Spain.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Member o&lt; Federal Bewve System&#13;
Member Federal Depot*! Insurance Corp&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1 9 7 3&#13;
Sciences offer&#13;
environmental&#13;
concentrat ion&#13;
Parkside students are&#13;
preparing themselves for&#13;
specialized training in environmental&#13;
science and&#13;
resource management through&#13;
an "environmental concentration"&#13;
of courses within&#13;
UW-P's interdisciplinary earth&#13;
science major.&#13;
This environmental option is&#13;
built around a common core of&#13;
earth science courses but allows&#13;
individual students maximum&#13;
flexibility in selecting environmentally-&#13;
related courses&#13;
reflecting the student's particular&#13;
area of interest.&#13;
A student choosing the environmental&#13;
concentration would&#13;
take 11 required credits, including&#13;
"Man and his Physical&#13;
Environment," and, with the help&#13;
of faculty advisers, select the&#13;
remaining 29 credits required for&#13;
the major from environmentallyrelated&#13;
courses.&#13;
In addition to "Man and his&#13;
Physical Environment," these&#13;
courses include "Environmental&#13;
Geology," "Energy and the&#13;
Environment," "Water and the&#13;
Environment," "Hydrogeology,"&#13;
"Oceanography," "Atmospheric&#13;
Science (Meteorology)," and&#13;
"Problems in Atmospheric&#13;
Pollution."&#13;
Students in the environmental&#13;
concentration also are encouraged&#13;
to get a strong&#13;
background in basic science and&#13;
math and to acquire basic&#13;
research, field and instrumental&#13;
skills in such areas as computer&#13;
science.&#13;
One of the special strengths of&#13;
the program is an emphasis on&#13;
encouraging independent investigations&#13;
by students as well&#13;
as opportunities for interaction&#13;
with faculty members on a&#13;
research level, according to&#13;
professors Henry S. Cole and Lon&#13;
C. Ruedisili, faculty advisors for&#13;
the program.&#13;
In addition to preparing&#13;
students for specialized graduate&#13;
and technical training in environmental&#13;
fields, the program&#13;
develops an understanding of&#13;
man's physical environment&#13;
which is essential to the proper&#13;
shaping of a modern, industrial&#13;
society," Cole said. -Focus on the&#13;
unique problems of such a society&#13;
is the special educational mission&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
Among student-faculty&#13;
research projects currently&#13;
underway are a comprehensive&#13;
study of the Pike River waterway,&#13;
pinpointing possible&#13;
pollution sources and assessing&#13;
methods of eliminating them; an&#13;
examination of Lake Michigan&#13;
shoreline problems including soil&#13;
erosion, high water levels and&#13;
water pollution in Racine's&#13;
Southside Revitalization area;&#13;
and a study of the effect of Lake&#13;
Michigan on air pollution in the&#13;
heavily industrialized Kenosha-&#13;
Racine-Milwaukee area.&#13;
Detailed information on the&#13;
environmental concentration is&#13;
available from the Division of&#13;
Science office at Parkside.&#13;
Good for 2 Free Dry Cycles&#13;
with any wash load&#13;
ijand an Extra Free Punch On Your Dividend Card&#13;
j-JJ with an 8-pound Load of Dry Cleaning&#13;
NORGE VILLAGE 7513 - 45th Ave., Kenosha&#13;
ISTGATE POLYCLEAN 1258 Ohio St., Racine&#13;
RAPIDS DR. POLYCLEAN 2400 Rapids Dr., Racinel&#13;
One Coupon Per Week Per Customer&#13;
Expires Sept, 5,1973&#13;
NAME &amp; ADDRESS&#13;
50c C OUPON.&#13;
Would you like&#13;
to spend a year&#13;
in Copenhagen ?&#13;
The Univ e r s i t y of Wisconsin&#13;
Copenhage n Center o f f e r s cour s e s i n :&#13;
e d u c a t i o n&#13;
pol i t i c a l s c ienc e&#13;
h i s to ry&#13;
Eng1ish&#13;
a r t&#13;
psychology&#13;
geography&#13;
s o c iology&#13;
economi c s&#13;
For ad d i t i o n a l informa t i o n wr i t e :&#13;
Dr. Wi11i a m Ro mos e r&#13;
Dir e c t o r of Copenhage n S t u d i e s&#13;
Univ e r s i t y of Wisconsin - River Fal l s&#13;
River Fal l s , Wisconsin 5^02 2&#13;
p r e f e r e n c e given to j u n i o r s and s e n i o r s&#13;
%&#13;
Facul ty edi t&#13;
book&#13;
R. W. Gatterdam and K. W.&#13;
Weston, mathematics professors&#13;
at Parkside, are co-editors of a&#13;
book on the proceedings of an&#13;
international mathematics&#13;
conference which was held last&#13;
June at Wingspread, cosponsored&#13;
by UW-P and the&#13;
Johnson Foundation. Gatterdam&#13;
and Weston were co-chairmen of&#13;
the conference.&#13;
The 188-page book, "Conference&#13;
on Group Theory," has&#13;
just been published by Springer-&#13;
Verlog (Berlin-Heidelberg-New&#13;
York) as part of a series entitled&#13;
"LectureNotesin&#13;
Mathematics," dealing with new&#13;
developments in mathematical&#13;
teaching and research.&#13;
The book contains 22 papers&#13;
presented at the conference by&#13;
mathematicians from the United&#13;
States, Canada and England,&#13;
including four papers by&#13;
Parkside professors Nelo D.&#13;
Allan, Franklin Lowenthal,&#13;
Ricardo B. Quintana Jr., and&#13;
Gatterdam.&#13;
Holidays mean the most when&#13;
you're celebrating what you've&#13;
found yourself.&#13;
—Rod McKuen&#13;
ADVENTURE CANOE TRAILS&#13;
Outfitters tor Quetico Park&#13;
BOX 208, ATIKOKAN, ONTARIO&#13;
CANADA, POT ICO&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-258-2&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
TEN 2-week&#13;
round-trip charter flights,&#13;
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC&#13;
MILWAUKE E&#13;
to&#13;
LONDON&#13;
AUG-SEPT-OCT,&#13;
from $209.38 to $311.24&#13;
CALL or WRITE:&#13;
TRAVEL GROUP CHARTERS&#13;
6260 S. Lake Drive&#13;
Cudahy, WI 53110&#13;
(414) 764-3210.&#13;
TWO SHOWS&#13;
7:00 &amp; 9:30 P.M.&#13;
IN RACINE MEMORIAL HALL Tonight&#13;
Richie Havens&#13;
$4 Gen.&#13;
Adm.&#13;
ALSO BEN SIDRAN&#13;
former a ccompainist w ith&#13;
* ROLLING STONES&#13;
* STEVE MILLER BAND&#13;
* ERIC CLAPTON&#13;
Tickets Available At:&#13;
All J &amp; J RECORD STORES&#13;
BEAUTIFUL DAY RECORDS&#13;
THE EARTH WORKS&#13;
DUBEES BAR&#13;
Presented b y&#13;
America Theatre&#13;
Productions&#13;
GOLF COURSE&#13;
HO TRESPASSING&#13;
Petrifying Wed., May 2, 19 73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER »&#13;
I have an appointment with spring. She come* tn •&#13;
me, and I go forth an hour or two earlier than usual W,ndow to wake&#13;
-Henry David Thoreau&#13;
To appreciate the natural&#13;
world requires no schooling in&#13;
biology or zoology; only sensitivity.&#13;
Nor is it enough to notice&#13;
nature casually.&#13;
The meaning of a tiny spruce&#13;
seedling, pushing its way towards&#13;
a glorious sun, is found in the&#13;
observer's introspection and&#13;
contemplation of life, of others, of&#13;
one's self.&#13;
Knowledge has its place. We&#13;
are responsible for needless&#13;
litter, garbage, pollution,&#13;
bombing and destruction of the&#13;
natural world. Upon a sensitive,&#13;
caring knowledge of the effects&#13;
rests our hope for the continuance&#13;
of the universe.&#13;
— Debra Friedell&#13;
(Parkside student)&#13;
Ranger photos by Debra Friedell&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973&#13;
Scientis t theorizes&#13;
Fr iedman speaks on UFO's&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
Tuesday, April 17 was a night of&#13;
genuine interest for all the space&#13;
minded in the Kenosha area.&#13;
Stanton T. Friedman unfolded a&#13;
convincing argument supporting&#13;
the existence of UFOs at&#13;
Parkside's P.E. building.&#13;
Friedman's attitude was not the&#13;
I-am-a-believer one which was&#13;
characteristic of Wayne S. Aho&#13;
for his lecture on E.S.P., but&#13;
rather was an attitude of, I-as-anintelligent&#13;
- scientist - can - not -&#13;
help - but - realize - the - obvious -&#13;
truth - implied - by - the - data.&#13;
Friedman broke down UFO&#13;
sightings into three categories.&#13;
The first are IFOs or those&#13;
sightings which are identified as&#13;
earth-oriented vessels after&#13;
further investigation. The second&#13;
category are those sightings&#13;
which have insufficient information&#13;
to be placed in one of&#13;
the other categories. The third is&#13;
competent reports that remain&#13;
unidentified after thorough investigation-&#13;
the real UFOs.&#13;
Friedman proceeded to interpet&#13;
data, while visually aiding&#13;
the audience with charts&#13;
projected on the screen. He&#13;
pointed out that the better the&#13;
quality of the report the more&#13;
likely it is to be classified as&#13;
UFO. Most UFO reports are&#13;
made by respectable, welleducated&#13;
citizens who have observed&#13;
the phenomena for sufficient&#13;
lengths of time under good&#13;
viewing conditions. He also&#13;
knocked the Condon Report and&#13;
re-evaluated the data produced&#13;
by that study.&#13;
None of the educated nonbeliever&#13;
arguments hold together&#13;
under careful scrutiny. There are&#13;
excellent UFO pictures showing&#13;
no evidence of fakery, some of&#13;
which Friedman had projected&#13;
on the screen. UFOs have been&#13;
reported scientists, astronomers,&#13;
pilots, policemen, orbiting&#13;
astronauts, and control tower&#13;
operators. Observations have&#13;
been made in cities and in the&#13;
country, at night and during the&#13;
day, on the ground as well as the&#13;
air. Many observations last for&#13;
more than 30 minutes and there&#13;
have been many multiple witness&#13;
reports and also simultaneous&#13;
radar-visual reports. Consider&#13;
these high-quality reports along&#13;
with the fact that there are&#13;
published scientific studies which&#13;
show that round trips of 50 years&#13;
between the earth and nearby&#13;
stars are possible with man's&#13;
present knowledge. It makes&#13;
UFO visitations seem very&#13;
possible since it is all too likely&#13;
that more advanced civilizations&#13;
do exist somewhere.&#13;
STEAK&#13;
AT HAMBURGER&#13;
PRICES&#13;
SIRLOIN STRIP STEAK&#13;
RIB-EYE STEAK&#13;
T-BONE STEAK&#13;
CHOPPED STEAK&#13;
STEAK SANDWICH&#13;
• FRIED CHICKEN&#13;
• SHRIMP PLATTER&#13;
• FISH PLATTER&#13;
• BONANZA BURGER&#13;
• CHILD'S PLATTER&#13;
• CHEESEBURGER&#13;
• PIES AND OTHER DESSERTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD FOR&#13;
ORDERS TO CO&#13;
652-8662&#13;
3315 52nd St., At 34th Ave.&#13;
F E L I C E SCOZZARO, MGR.&#13;
It is believed by Friedman that&#13;
the earth is being visited by intelligently&#13;
controlled vehicles&#13;
whose origin is not from earth.&#13;
The reason for his belief is the&#13;
design and behavior of UFO's.&#13;
They are round, symetric craft of&#13;
two basic designs. The larger&#13;
number are disc shaped,&#13;
metallic, often with&#13;
protuberances resembling antennae.&#13;
A smaller number of&#13;
craft are larger and cigar shaped&#13;
which causes some fantasizing of&#13;
"Mother Ships." Their&#13;
maneuverability enables them to&#13;
hover, fly vertically and&#13;
horizontally at very high speeds,&#13;
and to make sharp right angle&#13;
turns. They are usually silent.&#13;
Because of the nature of the&#13;
preceeding UFO data, Friedman&#13;
prefers to call them EEMs, or&#13;
Earth Excursion Modules.&#13;
Naturally, if UFOs do exist&#13;
there must be a reason for the&#13;
neglect of scientific investigation.&#13;
Friedman gave fi"e.&#13;
Ignorance is an important factor&#13;
- most scientists have not studied&#13;
the data. The "Laughter Curtain"&#13;
is a serious restrainer, as&#13;
about 10 percent of the scientists&#13;
at a recent convention had observed&#13;
UFOs but only .04 percent&#13;
of t hem reported. Most admitted&#13;
the reason for their failure to&#13;
report was the fear of ridicule.&#13;
There is an ego complex because&#13;
believing in UFOs destroys the&#13;
human superiority image. Also&#13;
there is the unwillingness to&#13;
adapt technological beliefs and to&#13;
realize that different physics are&#13;
possible.&#13;
As Friedman concluded his&#13;
lecture he asked for a showing of&#13;
hands from the audience. 45&#13;
hands answered to seeing UFOs&#13;
and only 2 answered to reporting&#13;
them. The space age has arrived&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
The Left Handed&#13;
Gun to show Friday&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will&#13;
show THE LEFT HANDED&#13;
GUN, Arthur Penn's 1958 f ilm in&#13;
which he portrays Billy the Kid&#13;
as a tormented adolescent whose&#13;
inability to accept the compromises&#13;
and inadequacies of the&#13;
law leads to a life of violence.&#13;
When his kindly employer is&#13;
murdered, Billy (Paul Newman)&#13;
vows to avenge his death. Billy's&#13;
compulsive pursuit drags a trail&#13;
of violence through the lives of&#13;
his few close friends. Hunted&#13;
down by law officers from all&#13;
parts of the West, he realizes that&#13;
he has nowhere left to turn. When&#13;
he is confronted by Sheriff Pat&#13;
Garrett (John Dehner), his&#13;
former friend, Billy draws from&#13;
an empty holster and Pat shoots&#13;
him.&#13;
THE LEFT HANDED GUN,&#13;
Uncle Bob's comics&#13;
like nearly all of Penn's films&#13;
(BONNIE AND CLYDE, THE&#13;
CHASE, LITTLE BIG MAN),&#13;
features an intensely emotional&#13;
performance by the lead and a&#13;
somber, brooding atmosphere.&#13;
Billy has no doubt about the&#13;
mission which he adopts at the&#13;
opening of the film; by the end, it&#13;
has turned into a self-destructive&#13;
course, which Billy is unable to&#13;
control or understand.&#13;
Shown with feature will be the&#13;
Chaplin classic, THE IMMIGRANT.&#13;
As a passenger en&#13;
route to America, Charlie&#13;
befriends a lonely girl and her&#13;
mother. Ashore he is involved in&#13;
one of the funniest restaurant&#13;
scenes ever filmed.&#13;
The films will be shown Friday,&#13;
May 4 at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist&#13;
103. Admission is 60 cents.&#13;
by Bob Rohan&#13;
W0M6MS LIB MeetlNGS!.'&#13;
WOMEN&amp; LIB SALLYS"&#13;
wOMgN's LI 8 cLfteses!!!&#13;
Wed . , May 2, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
Golfers win first&#13;
had the medalist in Tim Schwob&#13;
(70) while Parkside and 394 and&#13;
UW-Milwaukee 397.&#13;
Leissner was Parkside's top&#13;
finisher, two strokes off the&#13;
winner's pace, with a 74, while&#13;
Jim Vakos had a 76 and John&#13;
Lehmann a 78. Dave Fox carded&#13;
an 82 while Pete Nevins shot an 85&#13;
to round out the Hanger scoring.&#13;
Next action for the golfers is&#13;
scheduled for today at DeKalb,&#13;
111., against Northern Illinois.'&#13;
The Rangers will compete this&#13;
weekend in the NAIA District 14&#13;
tourney at Green Lake. Parkside&#13;
was second last year to UWLaCrosse&#13;
but Stephens figures&#13;
the Rangers have enough&#13;
firepower to overtake UW-L this&#13;
time and make a strong bid for&#13;
the title.&#13;
Parkside's golfers, before&#13;
heading south over spring break&#13;
at their own expense for a week of&#13;
golf and fun in the sum, took on&#13;
some northern opponents in the&#13;
cold environs of Petrifying&#13;
Springs and came out with a first&#13;
and a second in two multi-team&#13;
matches.&#13;
The Rangers totaled 382 f or 18&#13;
holes in dropping Loyola (423)&#13;
and Lake Forest (426) April 19 at&#13;
Pets as Dan Leissner fired a 71&#13;
for medalist honors. Tom Bothe&#13;
carded a 79 for Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' linksmen while Don&#13;
Fox and A1 P avonka added 77's&#13;
and Dave Fox came in with an 83.&#13;
Parkside opened the season&#13;
April 17 at Pets by beating UWMilwaukee&#13;
and losing to tough&#13;
Northern Illinois in a triangular&#13;
match. Northern totaled 371 and&#13;
Parkside co-eds f inish&#13;
high in Judo National s&#13;
Parkside juniors, Nancy&#13;
Konecny and Jackie Blaha,&#13;
returned from the National AAU&#13;
Judo championships held on the&#13;
Georgia Tech campus in Atlanta&#13;
with a fifth place finish in&#13;
Katame-No-Kata.&#13;
This is one of the highest&#13;
finishes ever by Wisconsin Judo&#13;
athletes in the prestigious AAU&#13;
championships and certainly in&#13;
women's competition.&#13;
Ms. Konecny and Blaha earned&#13;
the right to compete in the&#13;
Nationals with a secone place&#13;
finish in the state championships.&#13;
They did gain revenge over the&#13;
winning team since the Wisconsin&#13;
champions placed sixteenth in&#13;
the nationals.&#13;
Ron Hansen, Parkside's judo&#13;
instructor, started both these&#13;
girls in judo. Until they started&#13;
competing for the Parkside judo&#13;
club they competed for the Shu-&#13;
Shin-Kan, a Racine YWCA team.&#13;
Ms. Konecny, a brown belt, is a&#13;
graduate of Racine Horlick and&#13;
has been competing in judo for&#13;
4V2 years while her counterpart,&#13;
Ms. Blaha, has been in the sport&#13;
for three years and is a graduate&#13;
of St. Catherine's High School.&#13;
Both of them are majoring in&#13;
Sociology and Psychology with&#13;
plans on going into Police&#13;
Science.&#13;
Eugene Dee, this year's&#13;
Parkside's Invitational Grand&#13;
Champion from Milwaukee,&#13;
pulled one of the major upsets in&#13;
the tournament by finishing&#13;
second in the 176 pound championships.&#13;
. .Women's Judo Champs Jackie&#13;
Blaha (left) and Nancy Konecny&#13;
(right)&#13;
College Educations Start at&#13;
WEST FEDERAL SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573 58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE: CAPITOL COURT MILWAUKEE&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
TERM PAPERS papers neatly typed. 50&#13;
cents per page. Call for and deliver. J.&#13;
Konke, 694-2776 after 5:30.&#13;
AFRO dance classes: YWCA 8th 8&lt; C ollege&#13;
Ave. Racine instructor Betty Briggs call 633-&#13;
3503 A. Dowman Starting 4-11-73&#13;
Will do typing at my home. Call Nancy. 632-&#13;
.2667.&#13;
1970 Maverick 6-stick, red, Ex. cond.,&#13;
economical, dependable, new tires, must sell&#13;
632 3385.&#13;
BARMAIDS WANTED -Kazaches Turtle&#13;
Club. Apply at 1801 50th St. after 3 p.m.&#13;
YWCA Forum "A Look at Prepared&#13;
Chikldbirth" Thursday May 17, 1973 - 7:30&#13;
p.m. 8th and College Avenues, Racine. $1.00&#13;
per person admission.&#13;
At the Parkside Intramural&#13;
Wrestling Championships held&#13;
April 18, the Track Team took&#13;
first with 17 points, Sigma Pi was&#13;
second with 13, and the Wrestling&#13;
Class came in third with 9.&#13;
In the championship matches,&#13;
John Savaglio, 126 pounds,&#13;
pinned Craig Campbell; Mike&#13;
Kopczinski, 134, pinned Mike&#13;
Wickware; Chuck Dettmen; 142,&#13;
pinned Everret Hyde; Paul&#13;
Weyrauch, 150, pinned Zoan&#13;
Kulinski; Tim Martinson, 158,&#13;
decisioned Mike Grabot 7-6; John&#13;
Peterson, 167, pinned Rick&#13;
Barnhart; Tom Peterson, 190,&#13;
pinned Gary Meyers; and Ed&#13;
Hopkins, heavyweight, pinned&#13;
Mark Madsen.&#13;
Tim Martinson was voted the&#13;
outstanding wrestler of the&#13;
tournament, as he had a first&#13;
period pin and an exciting 7-6 win&#13;
in the finals.&#13;
All-American Bill West made&#13;
the award presentations.&#13;
Parkside will have its first&#13;
Soccer Club Tournament&#13;
Saturday. Eight schools will send&#13;
teams: UW-Whitewater, UWMilwaukee,&#13;
Northwestern&#13;
University, Lewis College,&#13;
Trinity College, Milton College,&#13;
Carthage College, and Parkside.&#13;
There will be play in two&#13;
divisions of four teams. Each&#13;
team will play all the teams in the&#13;
division round-robin fashion. The&#13;
winner in each division will play&#13;
second place of the opposite&#13;
division, and the winners will&#13;
then play for the trophies.&#13;
Division one consists of&#13;
Parkside, UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
Northwestern and Milton, and&#13;
division two is Carthage, Trinity,&#13;
UW-Whitewater and Lewis.&#13;
The schedule of play will be&#13;
Parkside vs. Milwaukee on field&#13;
one at 11 a.m. and Carthage vs.&#13;
Trinity on field two. At 11:45 it&#13;
will be Milwaukee vs. Northwestern&#13;
on field one, and&#13;
Trinity vs. Whitewater on field&#13;
two. 12:30 p.m. will see Parkside&#13;
vs. Milton on field one, with&#13;
Carthage and Lewis battling it&#13;
out on field two. 1:15 p.m. on field&#13;
one will be Whitewater vs. Lewis,&#13;
and on field two will be Northwestern&#13;
vs. Milton. Carthage&#13;
will play Whitewater on field one,&#13;
and Parkside Northwestern at 2&#13;
p.m. Field one will have Trinity&#13;
and Lewis at 2:45 p.m. and field&#13;
two will have Milwaukee and&#13;
Milton. The play-offs will begin at&#13;
3:45 p.m., and the trophies will be&#13;
presented at 5:15 p.m.&#13;
Anyone interested in helping as&#13;
linesmen and time keepers at the&#13;
Parkside Soccer Club's tournament&#13;
Sunday contact Coach&#13;
Henderson at ex. 2311.&#13;
The Annual Varsity Club Picnic&#13;
will be held Sunday from 2 p.m. to&#13;
7 p.m. at Petrifying Springs&#13;
Park. Varsity Club members will&#13;
be admitted free and all others&#13;
$1.&#13;
The Parkside netters whipped&#13;
Milton College 6-3 April 18.&#13;
Singles number one Rick&#13;
Bedore, Parkside, defeated&#13;
Bruce Lindsay, Milton, 8-6 and 7-&#13;
5. Number two Gary Christensen,&#13;
Parkside, defeated Sam Skaggs,&#13;
Milton, 4-6, 6-4 a nd 6-2. Number&#13;
three Dave Herchen, Parkside,&#13;
lost to Kurt Aufderhaar, Milton,&#13;
9-7 and 6-4. Number four Mark&#13;
Haase, Parkside, defeated A1&#13;
Lemke, Milton, 6-0 and 6-4.&#13;
Number five Todd Nelson,&#13;
Parkside, defeated Scott Sawicki,&#13;
Milton, 6-1 and 6-4; and number&#13;
six Cal Jensen, Parkside,&#13;
defeated Dave Bilgo, Milton, 6-1&#13;
and 6-0.&#13;
Doubles number one Bedroe-&#13;
Andy Petersen lost to Lindsay-&#13;
Skaggs 1-6, 13-11 and 15-13.&#13;
Number two Herchen-&#13;
Christensen defeated Aufderhaar-&#13;
Sawicki 6-1, 6-1; and&#13;
number three Nelson-Jensen lost&#13;
to Lemke-Bilgo 6-4, 4-6 and 7-5.&#13;
Maplecrest Country Club will&#13;
be the host of the Winter-Spring&#13;
Sports Banquet this year on May&#13;
9. All the atheletes from the past&#13;
season will be honored at this&#13;
time for their achievements and&#13;
participation.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
Alfredo's Restaurant&#13;
ju 2827 63rd St., Kenosha&#13;
W ITALIAN F OOD A SPECIALTY&#13;
^SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNA&#13;
Expired DRINKS A VAILABLE F ROM THE B AR&#13;
May 9, 1973 5 0' OFF ANY&#13;
&lt; 50*&#13;
lee? Sub 1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
i&#13;
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Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Th u r s d a y 1 1 - 8&#13;
TAP&#13;
BEER iy&#13;
Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches!&#13;
Foosb a l l 2 Pool Tables&#13;
Air Condi t ioning Pinball Machine&#13;
Col d Si x Packs To Go&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Classified Advertising Rate&#13;
5 cents per word up to 25 words for each insertion.&#13;
Payable in advance by check or cash to:&#13;
The Parkside Ranger&#13;
Business Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
CHECK ENCT.CKF.n FOR $&#13;
DATESfS) TO RUN&#13;
To find your cost, multiply the&#13;
number of words times 5&#13;
cents. Multiply that total by&#13;
the number of issues you want&#13;
it to run.&#13;
apprfqs BATE&#13;
r iTY PHONE NO .&#13;
On e word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication.&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 2, 1973&#13;
Rosa repeats as Drake Marathon champ&#13;
Lucian Rosa, Parkside's star distanceman, won his second straight&#13;
Drake Relays marathon championship Saturday in Des Moines, when&#13;
he covered the 26 mile, 385 yard route through Iowa's capitol city in 2&#13;
hrs., 25 min., 18.4 sec.&#13;
He had set the record for the event in 1972 when he clocked 2:22:13.&#13;
For Rosa, it was also a national title. The U.S. Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) recognizes the race as its national championship&#13;
event.&#13;
The race was different from last year in that Rosa held back longer&#13;
and did not move into the lead for good until the 21 mile mark. But&#13;
although he held only a 100 foot lead over Tony Brien of Marymount&#13;
(Iowa) College at that time, he expanded that through the last five&#13;
miles and won by nearly two minutes as Brien was timed in 2:27:03.4.&#13;
"The race seemed easier to me than last year and was a lot more&#13;
fun," Rosa said. "Last year I took the lead at the eight mile mark and&#13;
ran alone for the rest of the race. This year I ran with a group of about&#13;
six or seven other guys and until I took the lead at the 21 mile mark, we&#13;
talked a lot to pass the time.&#13;
"This was a nice workout for me," he added. "I was never worried&#13;
about the outcome. I like this course a lot because of the hills. I'm&#13;
probably best suited for the marathon because I never get cramps.&#13;
"I knew my time was much slower than last year when I was told at&#13;
the 20 mile mark that my time was 1:57. That was time at the 22 mile&#13;
mark last year."&#13;
..National Champ Lucien Rosa&#13;
Rangers dedicate new track&#13;
Parkside's own Lucien Rosa has won the Drake Marathon for the&#13;
second year in a row.&#13;
The Parkside track team made&#13;
its debut on the new outdoor track&#13;
here an auspicious one as the&#13;
Rangers grabbed seven first&#13;
places in the Parkside Open Meet&#13;
held here Friday, April 20.&#13;
Lucien Rosa led the way for&#13;
Parkside, taking first in the three&#13;
mile in 14:38 and top honors in the&#13;
six mile in 30:08.0. But the&#13;
Rangers had other stars as well.&#13;
Dennis Biel clocked 1:57.9 to&#13;
win the 880 yard run while Chuck&#13;
Dettman grabbed a win on the&#13;
3000-meter steeplechase in 9:41.9.&#13;
Cornelius Gordon took honors in&#13;
the 440 in 50.1 and ran the third&#13;
leg on Parkside's winning mile&#13;
relay team with Herb DeGroot,&#13;
Raul Medina and Biel. The&#13;
Rangers' 3:35.4 set a varsity&#13;
record.&#13;
Also winning for Parkside was&#13;
Keith Merritt, with a 44-5V4 triple&#13;
' jump effort. Donn Cooper of the&#13;
Parkside track club won the&#13;
decathlon with 6,070 points,&#13;
highlighted by a 14-3 pole vault.&#13;
Merritt finished second with 6,057&#13;
points.&#13;
Other placers for Parkside&#13;
included Tim, Martinson, fifth in&#13;
the pole vault; Mike Kopczynski,&#13;
second in the long jump; Medina,'&#13;
fourth in the 880 and third in the&#13;
long jump; DeGroot, third in the&#13;
440 and sixth in the 220; and the&#13;
440 y ard relay team, second.&#13;
The meet was the first ever&#13;
held on Parkside's new Chevron&#13;
track, which is only the third of&#13;
its kind in the world. All winning&#13;
efforts automatically became&#13;
track records. Another open meet&#13;
is scheduled for Tuesday (May&#13;
AMERICAN FURNITURE. By&#13;
Helen Comstock. 700 Illus. in&#13;
color &amp; monochrome. Complete&#13;
guide to 17th, 18th and early 19th&#13;
century styles - Jacobean,&#13;
Chippendale, Early Victorian,&#13;
etc., incl. historical backgrounds,&#13;
craftsmen, the regional&#13;
characteristics of New England,&#13;
the South, etc. 8'/2 x ll'/4. Orig.&#13;
Pub, at $17.50. New, complete ed.&#13;
only $5.95&#13;
THE JOY OF EATING&#13;
NATURAL FOODS TIIE&#13;
COMPLETE ORGANIC COOKBOOK.&#13;
New approach to good&#13;
eating for health-conscious&#13;
Americans incl. more than 2,000&#13;
recipes for garden-fresh&#13;
vegetables, luscious home-baked&#13;
breads, raw food menus, etc.&#13;
Pub. at $6.50. Only $1.98&#13;
HAMMOND GIANT WALL MAP&#13;
PACKAGE. Beautiful, accurate&#13;
map of the world and map of&#13;
U.S.A each 3 ft. by 4 ft. prepared&#13;
by outstanding cartographers, in&#13;
magnificient colors with easy-toread&#13;
type. Pub. at $2.00. Only&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
SUCCESSFUL WINE MAKING&#13;
AT HOME, by H E. Bravery, an&#13;
internationally famous wine&#13;
expert tells how to make hundreds&#13;
of delicious wines for less&#13;
than 25 per bottle incl. Fresh fruit&#13;
wines, flower wines, grain wines,&#13;
root wines, dried herb wines and&#13;
liqueurs. Orig. Pub. at $3.50.&#13;
New, complete ed. only $1.00.&#13;
SELECTED TITLES — LIMI T E D QUANTI T I E S&#13;
THE LORE OF SHIPS, by Tre&#13;
Tryckare. Over 1500 illus.,&#13;
hundreds of vivid color.&#13;
Magnificent volume explains and&#13;
illustrates every component of&#13;
every kind of ship - primitive&#13;
dugouts, sailing ships, liners,&#13;
nuclear warships, etc. ll'A x IIV4.&#13;
Pub. at $27.00 ONLY $9.95.&#13;
PICASSO AND THE CUBISTS. 76&#13;
illus. incl. 60 plates in splendid&#13;
full color. Stunning panorama of&#13;
cubist art Picasso, braque,&#13;
Leger, Delaunay, etc., plus vivid&#13;
text. 9n.i x 12. Reduced to only&#13;
$2.69.&#13;
|•• '/'"•ft.ivW&#13;
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THE COLLECTING OF GUNS.&#13;
Ed. by James E. Serven. Hundreds&#13;
of photos &amp; drawings. A&#13;
fascinating biography of guns,&#13;
describing and picturing many&#13;
types in all categories with much&#13;
information on use, collecting,&#13;
history, care, repair, etc. 8'2 x 11 .&#13;
Orig. Pub. at $24.95 New, complete&#13;
ed. only $5.95&#13;
A HISTORY OF ART, FROM&#13;
PREHISTORIC' TIMES TO THE&#13;
PRESENT, by Germain Bazin.&#13;
with 668 illus. in monochrome and&#13;
full color. Man's achievements in&#13;
painting and architecture from&#13;
the cave paintings of&#13;
paleolithic age to the present in&#13;
concise authoritative detail with&#13;
a wealth of pictures from public&#13;
and private collections. Orig.&#13;
Pub, at $9.00 New, complete ed.,&#13;
only $3.95&#13;
THE NEW LAROUSSE ENCYCLOPEDIA&#13;
OF THE EARTH.&#13;
by L. Bertin. 532 illus., 32 in vivid&#13;
full color. Huge comprehensive&#13;
account of the physical&#13;
phenomena that make up man's&#13;
environment formation of seas,&#13;
glaciers and mountains, the&#13;
nature of volcanos and earthquakes.&#13;
climate, etc. over 400&#13;
pages. 8'2 x 11. Import special&#13;
only $9.95.&#13;
THE COMPACT BOOK OF FISH&#13;
AND GAME COOKERY, by L.&#13;
Carver. The fine art of cooking&#13;
birds, game and fish outdoors&#13;
and in the home kitchen with&#13;
easy-to-follow recipes including&#13;
those for vegetables and tips on&#13;
herbs, spices, sauces, sauces and&#13;
wines. Only $1.00&#13;
GRANNIE'S REMEDIES, ed. by&#13;
Mai Thomas. Illus. with&#13;
drawings. Unusual collection of&#13;
remedies for all kinds of ailments&#13;
based on experience of one&#13;
grandmother known for her&#13;
miraculous cures. Orig. Pub. at&#13;
$4.95 New. complete ed. only&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
ROCK GARDENING, bv H.L.&#13;
Foster. Illus. by L.L. Foster.&#13;
Complete guide to growing&#13;
alpines and other wildflowers in&#13;
the American garden incl.&#13;
detailed instructions covering&#13;
nearly every type of terrain.&#13;
Orig. Pub. at $7.00 New. complete&#13;
ed. onlv $1.98&#13;
WINSLOW HOMER WATER-&#13;
(OLORS. by D.F. Hoopes.&#13;
Handsomely illus. with 32 fullpage&#13;
color reporductions. A&#13;
distinguished collection of the&#13;
work of America's most popular&#13;
and influential watercolorist,&#13;
incl. the background and&#13;
development of the artist's&#13;
methods, a brief appreciation&#13;
and chronology of the artist's&#13;
work. 10'1 x 11. Pub at $17.50&#13;
Only $9.95.&#13;
SALE STARTS WED. MAY 2 ENDS FRI . MAY 1 1</text>
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