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              <text>Parkside faculty receive honors</text>
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              <text>The Parkside This is the last issue of&#13;
the RANGER this&#13;
semester. The next&#13;
RANGER will be a special&#13;
orientation issue to be&#13;
published during July. The&#13;
next regular issue will be&#13;
published during the first&#13;
Wednesday, May 9, 1973 Vol. 1 No. 28 week of school.&#13;
Parkside faculty receive honors&#13;
Vopat, Zarling earn&#13;
state recognition&#13;
Two Parkside professors have been awarded&#13;
1973 Kiekhofer-Steiger awards of $1000 each.&#13;
Four of these recognitions are presented annually&#13;
to outstanding teachers from UW campuses&#13;
in Madison, Milwaukee, Green Bay,&#13;
Parkside, the Center System, and University&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Parkside recipients are Carole Gottlieb Vopat,&#13;
English, and John P. Zarling, engineering&#13;
science. Both are assistant professors. A third&#13;
Parkside teacher, John Van Willigan, assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology, received honorable&#13;
mention. Faculty from UW-Madison and&#13;
University Extension received the other two&#13;
awards.&#13;
Vopat received an Emil H. Steiger Award,&#13;
named for the lat Oshkosh business leader and&#13;
University benefactor, while Zarling's award is&#13;
named for William Kiekhofer, late UW professor&#13;
of economics.&#13;
Kiekhofer-Steiger winners are chosen by a&#13;
committee of representatives from the six&#13;
eligible UW units. Herbert Kubly, professor of&#13;
English, has been Parkside's faculty&#13;
representative on the committee since Parkside&#13;
became eligible for the awards in 1970. Parkside&#13;
candidates were proposed by a 17-member&#13;
student-faculty Teacher Awards committee on&#13;
campus. The division chair-persons then compiled&#13;
supporting documents for each nomination&#13;
and forwarded them to the system-wide selection&#13;
committee.&#13;
continued on page 10&#13;
CAROLE&#13;
VOPAT&#13;
JOHN CHELVADURAI&#13;
VAN WILLI GAN MANOGARAN&#13;
JOHN&#13;
ZARLING&#13;
JAMES&#13;
LIDDY&#13;
LEROY&#13;
COUGLE&#13;
Manogaran, Cougle&#13;
win Distinguished&#13;
Teacher awards&#13;
The recipients of this year's Standard Oil&#13;
(Indiana) Foundation Outstanding Teaching&#13;
Awards of $250 each have been announced by the&#13;
student-faculty committee which made the&#13;
selections.&#13;
The outstanding teachers are Chelvadurai&#13;
Manogaran, an assistnt professor of geography&#13;
in the College of Science and So Society, and&#13;
Leroy Cougle, an assistant professor of&#13;
management science (business) in the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
A third faculty member, Irish poet James&#13;
Uddy, a visiting professor of English, was cited&#13;
for honorable mention.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, assistant Dean of Students&#13;
and a member of the committee, commented on&#13;
the process of selection: "Every student was&#13;
sent a nomination form and we got back 143 of&#13;
them. They contained one to two page&#13;
statements-some in poetry form!-and this&#13;
information was combined with the results of the&#13;
divisional teaching evaluation forms given all&#13;
students at the end of each semester. Thus we&#13;
got both sides, not just the favorable one. We&#13;
used hard data-this was not a popularity contest.&#13;
Manogaran, after coming to Parkside in 1970&#13;
has been an active member of the faculty team&#13;
involved in the "Pike River Restoration&#13;
Project," which aims at identifying and eventually&#13;
eliminating pollution sources on the&#13;
stream which runs through eastern Racine and&#13;
Kenosha counties and bisects the campus,&#13;
continued on page 10&#13;
Commencement details given Special hours announced&#13;
Commencement exercises will&#13;
be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, May&#13;
27, in the Phy. E.d. Bldg. gymnasium.&#13;
There are approximately&#13;
350 candidates for&#13;
graduation.&#13;
No tickets are required for the&#13;
ceremony and there is no limit to&#13;
the number of guests an individual&#13;
may invite.&#13;
Parkside alumni will host a&#13;
reception for graduates and their&#13;
guests in Main Place of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center immediately&#13;
after the ceremony.&#13;
The graduation program will&#13;
include remarks by Chancellor&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie and representatives&#13;
of the UW system and&#13;
Parkside alumni. Vice Chancellor&#13;
Otto Bauer and Deans&#13;
Eugene Norwood and William&#13;
Moy also will participate in the&#13;
ceremony.&#13;
Candidates for graduation&#13;
should report to the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Bldg. at 1:15 p.m. Candidates&#13;
with questions about the&#13;
ceremony should call the Public&#13;
Information Office, ext. 2233.&#13;
Question on academic matters&#13;
should be directed to the Student&#13;
Records Office, ext. 2284. Persons&#13;
with questions concerning&#13;
eligibility to graduate with&#13;
honors or with distinction should&#13;
call Charles Kugel, ext. 2391.&#13;
The End" is near&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
Warning! The following information is not intended&#13;
for minors, women, men, members of&#13;
minority groups, members of majority groups, staff&#13;
and management of the Watergate Hotel, and birds&#13;
of a feather flocking together.&#13;
The End is coming Saturday, May 19 and Sunday,&#13;
May 20 to be held in the area in and around the&#13;
Student Activities Building. Food will be sold in the&#13;
patio area, beer in the building and entertainment&#13;
will be presented in a circus tent to be set up in the&#13;
Activities Building parking lot.&#13;
The events planned include the crazy music of the&#13;
Goose Island Ramblers on Saturday, May 19 from 9&#13;
p.m.-l a.m.&#13;
Bruce, Windy and George of the group collectively&#13;
play eight instruments. They are the autobox,&#13;
fiddle, mandolin, dobro, jug, guitar, steel guitar and&#13;
Jew's harp.&#13;
Their repertoire includes such originals as&#13;
Oscar's Cannonball, the story of Wisconsin hogs on&#13;
their way to the Oscar Mayer factory and the&#13;
Hurley Hop. They presently have three albums on&#13;
the market.&#13;
"They are a novelty appealing to beer drinkers,"&#13;
according to Sue Wesley, president of the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. She went on to say Goose Island&#13;
Rambler patches and bumper stickers will be&#13;
available for purchase.&#13;
According to Mike Holmes, assistant professor of&#13;
history, the Ramblers have been a great attraction&#13;
in Madison since the mid-1960's.&#13;
Admission will be 75 cents for Parkside students&#13;
and $1 for guests.&#13;
A f ree concert will be held Sunday from 2 p.m.-&#13;
5:30 p.m. It will feature the folk-rock of Dick and&#13;
Sue Thomas and be rounded out by the Stone Cohen&#13;
Blues Band.&#13;
From 6 p.m. to 1 a.m. the Black Society and&#13;
Circus will perform. Admission will be $1 for&#13;
Parkside students and $1.50 for guests. Dale Irish,&#13;
business office, will coordinate the sale of brats and&#13;
burgers. Staff and faculty interested in helping with&#13;
the sale and cooking of this food should contact Irish&#13;
at ext. 2249.&#13;
The End has become a tradition unique to'&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
When asked to describe The End, Wesley replied,&#13;
"It is a culmination of the year's activities and a&#13;
celebration of the end of finals...It's just a good&#13;
time.&#13;
LIBRARY HOURS&#13;
May 11-May 19&#13;
Monday-Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday&#13;
May 20-June 17&#13;
Monday-Friday&#13;
Saturday &amp; Sunday&#13;
BOOKSTORE HOURS&#13;
May 20-June 17&#13;
Monday-Thursday&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday &amp; Sunday&#13;
7:45 a.m.-12 midnite&#13;
7:45a.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
9a.m.-5p.m.&#13;
1:30 p.m.-12 midnite&#13;
7:45 a.m.-6 p.m.&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
9a.m.-4:30p.m.&#13;
9a.m.-lp.m.&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
FOOD SERVICE AND S.A.B.&#13;
LLC and Kenosha campus cafeterias will observe regular hours&#13;
during final exam week.&#13;
The Student Activities Building will be open Monday, May 14, as&#13;
usual, but may close later in the week if business does not warrant&#13;
remaining open.&#13;
After May 19, the LLC food service area will be operating through&#13;
the noon hour each day. Kenosha campus cafeteria will be closed until&#13;
summer session starts. The Student Activities Building will close for&#13;
about three weeks after "The End" celebration.&#13;
Racine bus schedule SOUTHBOUND&#13;
READ DOWN&#13;
NORTHBOUND&#13;
READ UP&#13;
D0UGIA3 + COULD&#13;
DOUGLAS + HIGH&#13;
DOUGLAS + HAMILTON&#13;
STATE + MACN&#13;
MAIN + 6th&#13;
MAIN + 10th&#13;
MAIN + Ibth&#13;
Ibth + RACINE&#13;
WASHINGTON + PACKARD&#13;
WASHINGTON + GRANGE&#13;
WASHINGTON + HAYES&#13;
WASHINGTON + LATHROP&#13;
LATHROP + 17th&#13;
LATHROP + OLIVE&#13;
LATHROP + DURAND&#13;
PURAND + OHIO&#13;
TALLENT HALL&#13;
GREENQUIST HALL&#13;
a.m. a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m. p.m.&#13;
7:lb 10:lU 1:1b Il:b3 2: b3 b: U3&#13;
7:16 10:l6 1:16 11: bl 2:bl b :bl&#13;
7:18 10:18 1:18 1] :'(0 2:b0 b:b0&#13;
7:19 10:19 1:19 11:39 2:39 b:39&#13;
7:20 10:20 1:20 11:38 2:38 b: 38&#13;
7:21 10:2.1 1:21 11:37 2:37 ' b:37&#13;
7:22 10:22 1:22 11:36 2:36 b: 36&#13;
7: 2b 10:2b 1:2b 11:3b 2:3b b:3b&#13;
7:26 10:26 1:26 11:32 2:32 b: 32&#13;
7:28 10:28 1:28 11:30 2:30 b:30&#13;
7:29 10:29 1:29 11:29 2:29 b:29&#13;
7:30 10:30 1:30 11:28 2:28 b:28&#13;
7:32 10:32 1:32 11:26 2:26 b:26&#13;
7:33 10:33 1:33 11:25 2:25 b:25&#13;
7:3'' 10:3b 1:3b 11:2b 2:2b b :2b&#13;
7:36 10:36 1:36 11:22 2:22 b:22&#13;
7:'l3 10:1(3 1: b 3 11:15 2:15&#13;
b:15&#13;
7:lt5 10:1(5 l:b5&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA N G E R W e d. , May 9 , 1 9 7 3 EDI TORIAL/OPINION&#13;
We have changed&#13;
&lt;HL The Park side-&#13;
Wednesday. Seplember 27. 1972&#13;
EDITORIAL&#13;
Participation the key&#13;
to ending the blues&#13;
Norman Mailer&#13;
here Sunday&#13;
leadav. Vol. 1 N o. 28&#13;
Parkside faculty receive honors ,&#13;
Vopat, Zerlin. e.rr, Me„o«.r«l.. Cou*le&#13;
•Ute recognition wln Dl.tinqulshed&#13;
Teacher awards&#13;
; TZ Counselors form trial workah opa&#13;
— *'_1*'" "* " " "* " ""&#13;
St. Louis Jazz Quartet here&#13;
Commencement details given Special hours announced&#13;
"The End" is near&#13;
hyMMyL&#13;
Racine huH nehedule&#13;
trs.-x: • :'8 '&#13;
xitl&#13;
Sept. 27, 1972 8 pages May 9, 197 3 16 pag es&#13;
Since this is our last issue of the semester we think&#13;
there are many things we mus t say in closing.&#13;
Firs t of all, as you can see , thi s paper has progressed&#13;
rather steadily. It has changed from an eight-page&#13;
paper to a 12 and now 16-page paper . We feel our present&#13;
adver t isers will stick with us and that next year ' s staff&#13;
will cons istently produce quality 12 or 16-page paper s .&#13;
The growing staff can be rightfully proud of its accompl&#13;
i shments . It looks like Jane Schliesman' s staff&#13;
will be able to bring in many new creative members. We&#13;
have al ready made some high sch ool contacts and are&#13;
encouraged by the results.&#13;
We think it i s significant that the first paper which&#13;
tried t o cooperate with student s , faculty , staff and administration&#13;
is the one that has succeeded where&#13;
previous campus papers have failed.&#13;
We have approached the campus with a positive at titude,&#13;
although we have been a constructive force on&#13;
campus , and that that force will strengthen as t ime&#13;
passes .&#13;
Finally, we must thank you, our readers, for sticking&#13;
with us and patronizing our advert i sers . Without you we&#13;
would surely fail.&#13;
Our readers can look for an orientation issue this&#13;
summer and our regular issues to begin in S eptember .&#13;
Until th en, thanks for your cooperation and have a&#13;
beautiful summer.&#13;
BY&#13;
Rudy LiENdH.&#13;
I am personally very proud of the progress that the Ranger has&#13;
made since the beginning of the school year and I would like to&#13;
congratulate Jane Schliesman for having the intestinal fortitude to&#13;
become the new editor of this paper.&#13;
We have gotten better technically, journalistically and financially. I&#13;
would like to thank our advisor, Don Kopriva, for his professional&#13;
jouralism advice. He voiced his opinion but did not censor or control&#13;
the paper in any way. An advisor is an absolute necessity for a college&#13;
paper; when he is the right person he can give a great deal.&#13;
The staff has gained and lost people throughout the year. Mostly&#13;
gained. In that it has not stagnated.&#13;
I think neither students nor administration or faculty have been&#13;
alienated from the Ranger. Each week we try to have something for&#13;
everybody and the speed at which the papers disappear each Wednesday&#13;
is an indication that the Ranger does mean something on&#13;
campus.&#13;
I will be around next year to write a regular column for the Ranger.&#13;
It will truly be strange to be on the other end of the editor's pen.&#13;
I wish Jane good luck and hope she reaps as much personal&#13;
satisfaction as I did. The faculty and staff of the campus should be&#13;
contacted this summer in order that they know we can help them and&#13;
that we can use help.&#13;
I can't wait to see what my new column head looks like, so, until next&#13;
time be good and have a nice summer.&#13;
Ship of state&#13;
floundering&#13;
"The ship of state lies sunk in th e water, " conceded a&#13;
White House official last week in the wake of distrubing&#13;
new Watergate disclosures. The scandal has forced&#13;
more than just Presidential attention away from critical&#13;
domes t ic issues such as inflation; and as Hnery&#13;
Kissinger remarked, the President ' s capacity to conduct&#13;
foreign affairs stands to be diminished to exactly&#13;
that degree that foreign governments believe his&#13;
authority to have been eroded by Watergate. Nixon's&#13;
hold on Congressional Republicans is threatened, and&#13;
thus his precarious balance of pow er on Capitol Hill is in&#13;
jeopardy. There are even mutterings of impeachment .&#13;
The malaise has filtered down through the st ructure of&#13;
government, with unfilled appointment s backing up and&#13;
chains of c ommand coming unlinked.&#13;
Watergate has thus brought down a full-scale crisis of&#13;
confidence upon the Nixon Administration. Recent&#13;
public opinion polls showed that 50-60 p ercent of the&#13;
nation' s population do not believe the White House about&#13;
Watergate . In a country already torn by the divisions of&#13;
war and amnesty, rascism, sexism and economic&#13;
problems, such a pattern of sp ying, lying, bribery and&#13;
payoffs as Watergate now indicates, which derogates&#13;
the ent i re political system, is dangerous as well as&#13;
unworthy of t he democracy we cherish.&#13;
Certainly public faith in the political process has been&#13;
terribly shaken by the idea of a President who at best&#13;
was a victim of dishonest assistant s and at wor s t&#13;
acquiesced in thei r obstruction of justice.&#13;
Nixon, in trying to choose his own t ime to act , further&#13;
aggravated the situation. His hesitancy in appointing&#13;
someone to "clean house," or in doin g t he job himself,&#13;
brought the White House near paralysis. Nixon t r ied to&#13;
ride out the rising s torm, behaving in p ublic as though&#13;
nothing were happening, but the scandal didn' t play his&#13;
waiting game; instead, it kept proliferating to other&#13;
par t s of government and politics, far beyond the thwarted&#13;
robbery that started it al l .&#13;
Last week's resignations and Nixon's speech to the&#13;
nation were obviously designed to dull the political&#13;
repercussions of Watergate. Whether Nixon was lied to&#13;
by his cl ose aides is one of many questions which will&#13;
probably go unanswered for years . But the critical&#13;
question which must be answered is whether or not&#13;
Nixon will truly be able to govern America for three and&#13;
a half moreyears.&#13;
The Parkside— RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of msTons^ar^de&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Librarv-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295&#13;
Jio6* Rarksidf Ran§er is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarilv thp nffinini&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parks^ * 81&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subiect of&#13;
m erest 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 Lndinctode&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank Names will&#13;
print an*y totters! '^ ^^o refuse to&#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 Konkiol, Gary Jensen, Marilvn Schiih^rt in., :&#13;
Blaha, Bruce Rasmussen, Terri Gogola, GeoffB^aesina 'PSma' Helmut Kah&lt; Bi"&#13;
^I2°N,STS: Gary Huck' Bob Rohan- Amy Cundari&#13;
ASSER^fsmG^TAPP^P'31hT Bi" N°"' Dennis Doonan&lt; GrtfcSyston&#13;
ASV«E«?£S S KM Konko1'&#13;
W VT K* NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY&#13;
y Nationi 1 Educational Advertising Services, Inc. 0&#13;
I 360 Lexington Ava., New York, N. i\ 10017 I&#13;
We get letters Wed., May 9, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
• • •&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Congratulations to • Ranger's&#13;
Advisory Board on their wise&#13;
selection of Jane Schliesman as&#13;
next year's editor. Though I know&#13;
Jane only slightly, I've been&#13;
impressed with her energy&#13;
initiative and attitude of independence-&#13;
qualities absolutely&#13;
essential to leading a college&#13;
newspaper.&#13;
The last three years I've seen&#13;
Parkside's newspaper develop,&#13;
ever so slowly, from an illiterate&#13;
collection of post adolescent&#13;
cliches to something which just&#13;
begins to resemble the originality&#13;
and repotorial competence that&#13;
characterizes the best campus&#13;
papers. Responsible iconoclasm,&#13;
as well as the extra effort of&#13;
digging out what's behind the&#13;
news, can make Ranger a strong&#13;
unifying force on a campus that&#13;
needs unifying.&#13;
(I'm confident that Jane&#13;
Schliesman can do it, and that&#13;
her leadership will attract the&#13;
cream of Parkside's talent to&#13;
help Ranger develop its own&#13;
clear voice-the voice of and for&#13;
4200 informed students.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Lynn Hoff&#13;
Senior, Racine&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
All of you who worked on the&#13;
RANGER this year, please stand&#13;
up and take a bow...and accept&#13;
our thanks. 1972-73 was the year&#13;
when our campus paper stopped&#13;
being a gripe sheet and emerged&#13;
as a campus newspaper. You&#13;
even discovered some nice things&#13;
to say about Parkside once in a&#13;
while which was a refreshing&#13;
change. And you grew into 12&#13;
pages and regained solvency&#13;
which is quite an ac:&#13;
complishment these days.&#13;
I want to 'specially mention&#13;
Ken Konkol. He makes a real&#13;
contribution to his alma mater by&#13;
being a chronic needier. Although&#13;
his writing annoyed me at times&#13;
because so often he seemed to be&#13;
picking on someone, I must give&#13;
the man his due...he was right&#13;
most of the time and he signed his&#13;
name. I'm sure that in whatever&#13;
he wrote he had the best interests&#13;
of the students of Parkside in&#13;
mind. Thanks, Ken. You're a&#13;
good thought-provoker and you&#13;
got some things done which&#13;
needed doing.&#13;
Also, I want to compliment&#13;
RANGER on the new humor&#13;
column which appeared this&#13;
year. I refer to "The Movement,"&#13;
of course. Those women!...pretty&#13;
foxy! They manage to get more&#13;
and more of everything by&#13;
constantly talking about how&#13;
much of t he less and less they are&#13;
supposedly getting. (I think that&#13;
their crying on our shoulder is&#13;
really a gimmick to work on our&#13;
sympathy.) Hmmm... Why do&#13;
they want to step down to be&#13;
"equal" when they already have&#13;
us under one thumb and hold the&#13;
world in the palm of their other&#13;
hand. And have you noticed how&#13;
many of them have been trying&#13;
on pants lately? (From my&#13;
history notes...the practice of a&#13;
woman being called "a broad"&#13;
was inadvertently started by the&#13;
first woman who wore a pair of&#13;
pants in public.) Well anyway, let&#13;
'em have their fun with their&#13;
women's lib stuff...just so they&#13;
don't forget that it takes two to&#13;
make the world go 'round. (And&#13;
who is rowing the boat while all of&#13;
this is going on? You, brother!)&#13;
And now for a personal note.&#13;
I'll have 110 credits by September&#13;
with my major and the 10&#13;
required science credits all&#13;
completed...after starting with 38&#13;
credits in 1970. Let's see...now I'd&#13;
like to take something easy for&#13;
my last 10 credits...There's a 3-&#13;
hot-air freeballooning&#13;
in which I might be&#13;
interested (That's listed in the&#13;
catalogue as Advanced-&#13;
Advanced Creative Writing,&#13;
Course No. 476%). The course in&#13;
Karate ought to be fun and I'd&#13;
like a 3-credit course in Sand-&#13;
Castle Design. Also, I expect to&#13;
sign up for the 1-credit course in&#13;
Parchessi which meets on the&#13;
lifth Sunday afternoon of&#13;
alternate months. I've heard that&#13;
the Parcheesi class meets at the&#13;
C hancellor's house...with free&#13;
beer, sometimes. I must check up&#13;
on that. So, Class of 1974, here I&#13;
come! All I have to do is get those&#13;
last 10 credits...and live that&#13;
long!&#13;
As for the rest of you...keep on&#13;
keeping on...Love and Shalom!&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
THORN&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Pertaining to Parkside's Best&#13;
Blues Band, RANGER vol. 1, No.&#13;
23, pg. 4, they were ripped off.&#13;
I hey have tried on numerous&#13;
occasions to get a job playing for&#13;
a Parkside dance to no avail.&#13;
They did, however, play at the&#13;
Parkside Folk Festival. One of&#13;
the arrangers seems to be antirock&#13;
or blues music as they have&#13;
been voted out of future folk fests.&#13;
They feel that unless you know&#13;
someone, kiss someone's ass or&#13;
go with the dean's daughter, you&#13;
lace little chance of making it as&#13;
a band at Parkside. They even&#13;
oflered to play for a free concert&#13;
such as T.J.&amp;G. but still no luck.&#13;
Now B.R. is playing on a Sunday&#13;
night, but of course it's country&#13;
western straight from the book.&#13;
And what about The Hazelwood&#13;
Tavern Band?&#13;
Name withheld upon request&#13;
credit c• ourse in&#13;
by Konkol&#13;
This is the last issue of this school year, except for an orientation&#13;
issue which will come out this summer.&#13;
A l ot has happened during this school year, some good, some bad.&#13;
All in all though, things have improved somewhat.&#13;
Strained relations that used to exist between students and administration&#13;
have eased somewhat and prospects look even brighter&#13;
for the future. Students, who are the only reason for the existance of&#13;
this university, are being taken more into consideration by the powers&#13;
that be, though we still have a long way to go to get the representation&#13;
which exists on other campuses.&#13;
Even faculty-administration relations seem to have eased as&#13;
evidenced by the dissension that was not heard when faculty terminations&#13;
were announced. Two years ago the furor lasted for a&#13;
month.&#13;
We now have the summer to establish ourselves for the next&#13;
engagement.&#13;
The results for the Distinguished Teaching Award presentations are&#13;
announced this issue. There is only one way I can conceive of being&#13;
able to judge teaching ability. That is to have evaluations made by&#13;
comparison on the teaching evaluation form which are mandatory in&#13;
each division. Since it would be difficult to compare the results of one&#13;
evaluation form with another from a different division, the divisions&#13;
would have to get together and design a form which could be used&#13;
interdivisionally.&#13;
If comparisons were made on the hard mathematics of means and&#13;
standard deviations of evaluation forms, instead of upon the judgment&#13;
of a few handpicked committee members, and upon the evaluation of&#13;
17,000 responses instead of 143, then whomever would receive the&#13;
award would know that the award truly would be an award of&#13;
distinction.&#13;
Contrary to rumor, this will not be the last time you will see me in&#13;
these pages. I was contemplating graduation, but decided since I had&#13;
about eight months left on my VA benefits, and since I had no reason to&#13;
leave town in a hurry, that I would come back and try to add&#13;
mathematics, AST (Math) and AST (physics) to the two majors I&#13;
completed this term. Besides, my gradepoint looks pretty crummy&#13;
anyway.&#13;
There is more news. Next fall I will have one, and possibly two,&#13;
brothers attending this university, and both of them like to write!&#13;
Some people have a hard time putting up with one Konkol, can you&#13;
imagine the things that are going to happen around here with three?&#13;
And there are four more yet to come.&#13;
This column has been appearing since way back around October 4.&#13;
Just for curiosity I dug that first one up and read it over. You may like&#13;
to refresh your memory about way back then.&#13;
RANGER was the third paper to appear on campus in as many&#13;
years, but now, thanks to some of that administrative understanding I&#13;
mentioned earlier, it looks like it will be around a long time to come if&#13;
we can hold on to a staff.&#13;
The outlying parking lots here were still dreamed up by someone&#13;
pretty dumb, but at least the Chancellor hasn't had to wait 20 minutes&#13;
for a bus for quite a long while.&#13;
It would still be a better idea to operate our own shuttle bus service&#13;
instead of offering out contracts. The initial cost would be more than&#13;
offset by the money saved yearly.&#13;
Ihe segregated fee is still being divided unfairly, though circumstances&#13;
have improved.&#13;
Too much money is being wasted by bringing programs to Parkside&#13;
which don't attract enough response from students to warrant their&#13;
appearance.&#13;
The vending machines are still ripping off on the cost of food. The&#13;
same sandwiches have even been sold cheaper at Tallent than in the&#13;
cafeteria area.&#13;
The bookstore has shown what can be done with a little effort.&#13;
Things have certainly improved since the fall.&#13;
People are now replacing the sod which died over the winter. Grass&#13;
planting would be still cheaper. Sidewalks still lead nowhere and&#13;
people must still tramp through the mud to get to Greenquist.&#13;
The Student Senate has gotten together and gotten a few things done&#13;
this year. What we need is more support from the students in general.&#13;
People interested in being on committees can contact a member of the&#13;
Senate over the summer.&#13;
Speaking of joining things, the RANGER could use some new people&#13;
on the staff for next year. Those interested may contact the appropriate&#13;
person in the area in which they have interest.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
To Gary Jensen:&#13;
I have been reading your&#13;
record reviews for some time&#13;
now, and I just can't put up with&#13;
them any longer. I am tired of&#13;
having my bowels respond to&#13;
your critiques although I admit it&#13;
is cheaper than laxatives.&#13;
By analyzing your reviews, I&#13;
come to two conclusions:&#13;
A. You should review local&#13;
restaurant entertainment&#13;
programs.&#13;
B. Your favorite groups are as&#13;
follows: l. Bland Punk Railroad&#13;
(Dig.'); 2. The James Gang&#13;
because they make you breath&#13;
heavy! and; 3. The old banjo&#13;
player who used to be at&#13;
Shakey's. Of course everyone&#13;
knows he's trying to imitate the&#13;
Beatles so he can make the world&#13;
more aware of the cosmos.&#13;
Every band doesn't have to&#13;
sound like another band, are you&#13;
so limited in your musical insight&#13;
that you have to compare one&#13;
style with another. No, one group&#13;
doesn't sound like the one the&#13;
members just left; that's why&#13;
they left the old group. By the&#13;
way, how does your coffee&#13;
compare with Mrs. Olsen's?&#13;
As for Alice Cooper, that's one&#13;
of America's most talented and&#13;
creative groups. Alice Cooper&#13;
isn't anything like the Beatles,&#13;
unless you're so burnt out you&#13;
think that In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida is&#13;
a cheap imitation of Handel's&#13;
Messiah played at 16 rpm. Of&#13;
course we all know it's really an&#13;
old Latin love song.&#13;
Focus is from Holland and Jan&#13;
Akkerman doesn't sound like Ted&#13;
Nugent. (I'm still trying to find&#13;
out what Nugent does sound like.)&#13;
To many, David Bowie is one of&#13;
the most progressive of Britain's&#13;
new groups. His music runs a&#13;
wide range from classical&#13;
sounding pieces with smooth rock&#13;
riffs, to brash gutter-groin rock,&#13;
and on into music that uses pure,&#13;
simple melodies and introspective&#13;
lyrics. David Bowie is&#13;
not Ziggy Stardust; he used to be&#13;
David Jones, YOU'RE Ziggy&#13;
Stardust.&#13;
In conclusion, Mr. Jensen, your&#13;
reviews would be a great deal&#13;
more pertinent if you knew what&#13;
you were talking about. So, take a&#13;
walk on the wild side and keep&#13;
going.&#13;
Mike Ward&#13;
©&#13;
MovemenT&#13;
djtor 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 is entitled "An Open&#13;
Letter to an Uninformed Male."&#13;
by Susan L. Burns&#13;
Dear Sir: or-To Whom It May Concern:&#13;
In repl y to the question you asked of me yesterday "What do I&#13;
wnat-as a 'typical feminist'?" I wish to be considered a human being&#13;
Not as a weak, sensitive woman.&#13;
I do not want to be limited in my choice of occupation. I wasn't cut&#13;
out to be a housewife and mother~I hate to vacuum, to dust, to wash&#13;
dishes, to cook three meals a day whether I feel like it or not, to pick up&#13;
after messy children (and husband), to change diapers, etc., etc. etc&#13;
I couldn't possibly be a waitress-not with my two left feet and shaking&#13;
hands. I can t be a secretary: shorthand and typing are not my metier&#13;
(although I am able to utilize the universla hunt-and-peck system of&#13;
typing when I find need). Teach in an elementary school? - NEVER'&#13;
Inagine the noise forty small children can make!&#13;
I want to be considered as capable and intelligent as you are&#13;
assumed to be automatically. I can light my own cigarettes and open&#13;
doors (if you happen to have a match lit or a door open, though I am&#13;
not going to scream "STOP"). I can also put on and take off my own&#13;
coat (I ve been doing it for years). I can order my own dinner, wine&#13;
aperitifs, and after-dinner drinks. I can pay for them also. I can puli&#13;
out my chair and sit without assistance.&#13;
I can discuss politics, sports, cars, and stock market, the national&#13;
economy, and religion reasonably intelligently. I can play baseball&#13;
football, soccer and tennis.&#13;
When I drive into a self-service gas station I don't want the male&#13;
attendant to come out and inquire if I need assistance~I don't. I can&#13;
pump gas, check the oil, and air in the tires, and fix a flat.&#13;
I hate the color pink. I loathe frilly dresses, blouses and negligees I&#13;
don't like slim cigarettes. I don't use makeup. I don't care about&#13;
what s "in" this year. I don't go to the beauty shop once a week.&#13;
I resent it when in answer to my signed letters you reply with a&#13;
greeting of "Dear Sir." I dislike it when men stop discussing "shop&#13;
talk" when I appear - after all, I work in the same "shop " I am&#13;
resentful when you call my office ansd ask for "a man~you know&#13;
someone who can help me." I can help, that's the reason I am there I&#13;
don't like being restricted by overtime laws-I need a little extra&#13;
money too.&#13;
There are times when I would like to be the one who initiates sex-but&#13;
for me to be that aggressive would only scare you away. Who wants a&#13;
butch for a bed partner, eh?&#13;
I don't want you to misunderstand me, though. All that I have said&#13;
seems to revolve around very petty desires-and so they are. However,&#13;
you, as a man, are allowed to do nearly everything that you are able&#13;
and want to do. I, as a woman, am restricted. Granted, you men have&#13;
certain stereotypes and conformities forced upon you and instilled in&#13;
you also. Which is what we in the Movement want to remove. All&#13;
sexual stereotypes can only harm us and keep us from understanding&#13;
each other.&#13;
So, to answer your question (at last!) - I as a "typical feminist&#13;
want to create an understanding between all men and all women&#13;
which will eliminate the fears we have of each other. To be able to&#13;
openly communicate as equals. To be free to be you and me&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Ma y 9, 1 97 3&#13;
Burnett to retire from library&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Philip Burnett, Director of&#13;
Libraries since Parkside's&#13;
beginning, will be retiring June&#13;
30. He was first put on the payrole&#13;
Jan. 1, 1967 a fter seven months&#13;
work in Madison. Under his&#13;
direction the library has grown&#13;
from zero volumes to its present&#13;
total of 200,000.&#13;
Beofre coming here, Burnett&#13;
did graduate work at Columbia&#13;
University, served fifteen years&#13;
with the State Department in&#13;
Washington, D.C. and performed&#13;
five years diplomatic service for&#13;
the United States in Latin&#13;
America. After having served 20&#13;
years with the diplomatic corps,&#13;
he retired and decided to become&#13;
a librarian. This type of work had&#13;
Pre-med students&#13;
always appealed to him and he&#13;
says it did not disappoint him.&#13;
After attending library school at&#13;
U.C.L.A. he was, for two years,&#13;
librarian of the Economics and&#13;
Political Science divisions at&#13;
Indiana University before&#13;
becoming our director.&#13;
Wisconsin statues do not allow&#13;
persons to maintain administrative&#13;
positions after they&#13;
reach 65: teaching positions,&#13;
however, are permitted. For this&#13;
reason, although he is retiring as&#13;
Director of Libraries, Parkside&#13;
will not be losing him altogether.&#13;
He plans to take the summer off&#13;
and return in the fall to teach&#13;
courses in European Diplomatic&#13;
History and International&#13;
Relaions.&#13;
Burnett said he recognizes the&#13;
good support given the library&#13;
from all those concerned. "We&#13;
have had pretty good relations&#13;
with everyone and also had a&#13;
good staff," he said.&#13;
"Even the best library in the&#13;
world is unbearably hard to use,"&#13;
he continued, "because the world&#13;
is complicated, making books&#13;
complicated, which makes the&#13;
library complicated. We have no&#13;
answer for the impatient, but&#13;
anything the library can do to&#13;
make it easier is where a library&#13;
of this type should aim."&#13;
As Director of Libraries,&#13;
Burnett has followed the library&#13;
in all of its many moves. They&#13;
started in a red brick schoolhouse&#13;
on Wood Road, next migrated to&#13;
the Modulux, then to Tallent Hall,&#13;
and finally, to the Library&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
Seven students accepted&#13;
by medical schools&#13;
Seven out of seven is a pretty&#13;
good batting average in any&#13;
league, but in medical school&#13;
admission competition where the&#13;
national average is one student&#13;
accepted out of each 2.6 who&#13;
apply, the record is especially&#13;
impressive.&#13;
And seven out of seven is the&#13;
record established by Parkside&#13;
students completing pre-medical&#13;
studies this spring.&#13;
Five of the students have been&#13;
accepted by Medical College of&#13;
Wisconsin in Milwaukee, one by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Medical School in Madison, and&#13;
one by the University of Illinois&#13;
Medical School.&#13;
Accepted by Medical School of&#13;
Wisconsin are: Thomas James,&#13;
1700 Boyd Ave., Racine; Thomas&#13;
Krummel, 3405 Haven Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Tom Werbie, 1802 - 31st&#13;
St., Kenosha; George Ryback,&#13;
2042 Golf Ave., Racine; and&#13;
Gerald Mich, 6923 - 41st Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, who will work concurrently&#13;
toward an M.D. and a&#13;
Ph.D. in bio-chemistry.&#13;
Accepted by the UW-Madison&#13;
Medical School is Eugene&#13;
Kastenson, 121311 Washington&#13;
Ave., Sturtevant, and accepted&#13;
by the Illinois Medical School is&#13;
Robert Toto, 433 Gillett Ave.,&#13;
Waukegan, 111.&#13;
Anna Maria Williams,&#13;
associate professor of life science&#13;
and academic adviser to premedical&#13;
students at Parkside,&#13;
MIC&#13;
said that of the total of 14 students&#13;
who have completed pre-medical&#13;
studies at Parkside since 1970, 10&#13;
have been accepted by medical&#13;
schools and three, who applied&#13;
simultaneously to medical and&#13;
dental schools, are training tor&#13;
doctoral degrees in dentistry.&#13;
The other student plans to apply&#13;
for medical school on completion&#13;
of military service, she said.&#13;
"I'm very proud of all our&#13;
students," Professor Williams&#13;
said. "This year's seven all did&#13;
well in their medical college&#13;
admission tests. And we've got a&#13;
good crop coming up next year,&#13;
including our first female candidates."&#13;
Professor Williams credits the&#13;
students' good record on admissions&#13;
to hard work and a&#13;
spirit of cooperation on their part&#13;
and an institutional policy of&#13;
continuous and aggressive&#13;
academic counseling for pre-med&#13;
students by the science faculty.&#13;
"The atmosphere here for premed&#13;
students is unusual," she&#13;
said. "They compete for good&#13;
marks in class--they know they&#13;
will need them to be accepted by&#13;
medical schools--but they also&#13;
help each other. I know that if I&#13;
send a freshman or sophomore to&#13;
a junior or senior they'll get help.&#13;
Our active pre-med club is very&#13;
helpful in fostering that kind of&#13;
cooperation."&#13;
THE STUDENT EMPLOYMENT CENTER IS NOW LOCATED&#13;
IN ROOM 288 IN TALLENT HALL&#13;
A large n umber o f j obs are c urrently on file, i ncluding:&#13;
Cooks &amp; Bartenders&#13;
Maintenance Workers&#13;
Cashiers&#13;
Sporting Goods Clerks&#13;
Keypunch Operators&#13;
Car Hops&#13;
Office Clerks&#13;
Factory-La borers&#13;
Drivers&#13;
Inspectors&#13;
Hospital Porters&#13;
Security Guards&#13;
Recreational Aides&#13;
Housework or Yard Workers&#13;
STOP IN &amp; SEE FOR YOURSELF!&#13;
Many summer j ob opportunities are a lso anticipated!!&#13;
D's Set&#13;
OPEN EVERY DAY FROM 3 P.M. to 2 A.M. FEATORING...&#13;
Foos-Ball • Air Hockey • 3 Pool Tables&#13;
BARGAIN NIGHTS!&#13;
Every Sun. , Tues. &amp; Wed. from 3 P.M. to 2 A.M.&#13;
0 Tap be e r s for $| OO&#13;
FOOS-BALL TOURNAMENT SUNDAY, MAY 13th, 1973&#13;
Featuring Racine &amp; Kenosha's Top Players-Starts 4:00 P.M. - Prizes &amp; League Sign-Up&#13;
ROCK DANC&gt;NG E very Fri. &amp; Sat. N ites featuring " The Trendells"&#13;
[j 2130 Racine St . (Hwy. 32) on Racine' s South Side&#13;
Music students&#13;
to give recital&#13;
Two Parkside music students,&#13;
soprano Lois Bower and pianist&#13;
Kathy Devine, will present a&#13;
point recital at 8 p.m. on Thursday&#13;
(May 10) in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Devine, of Rt. 1, Union Grove,&#13;
is a junior majoring in piano and&#13;
studying with Annie Petit at&#13;
Parkside. Her program will&#13;
include works by Chopin,&#13;
Debussy and Mendelssohn.&#13;
Bower, of 947 Grand Ave.,&#13;
Racine, is a senior majoring in&#13;
voice and studying with Lorie&#13;
Langdon at Parkside. She has&#13;
programmed works by Handel&#13;
Mahler, Schumann, Schubert and&#13;
Ives.&#13;
Bower will be assisted by Chris&#13;
Flum, piano, and Roberta Flum&#13;
clarinet, both of 813 Sheridan&#13;
Road, Kenosha; Sue&#13;
Kraschnewski, cello, 3304 V alley&#13;
Forge, Racine; and Lenee&#13;
Stevens, flute and piccolo, of Box&#13;
101, Elkhorn.&#13;
Dry&#13;
0 . . Cleaned o Lbs* only&#13;
$210 0 Free Pre-Spotting&#13;
Attendant On Duty At All Times Drop Off Service&#13;
WE&#13;
Wash - Dry - Fold 20! Lb.&#13;
8^50&#13;
MINIMUM&#13;
Lincoln Village Laundromat&#13;
Open8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 7 Days a week&#13;
6814 Fourteenth Avenue Kenosha. Wis.&#13;
Sturino's COACH&#13;
STOP " 1 543 22nd Avenue&#13;
• PIZZA&#13;
• ITALIAN FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
Phone 55 1 -9999&#13;
TeUuteu&#13;
3203-52nd 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;
H wisco ns In c he es e&#13;
BOONE'S&#13;
STRAWBERRY&#13;
HILL&#13;
44 TOId M i waukee cm&#13;
• QjiLS JtENTY&#13;
• Mr. B oston tA29&#13;
• Qualify Brandf *T qt.&#13;
• n Cold Duck&#13;
3 Bottles&#13;
•&#13;
• t$00&#13;
Summer&#13;
child care&#13;
available&#13;
Review&#13;
Wed., May 9, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
)Frc 4&#13;
Summer session at Parkside&#13;
will be more accessible to the&#13;
families of the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area this year The Parkside&#13;
Child Care Center will be open&#13;
from 7:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. each&#13;
day while classes are in session.&#13;
I here is an initial fee of $4.oo&#13;
($2.00 registration, $1.00 for insurance,&#13;
$1.00 toward art supplies)&#13;
per child. Scheduling for&#13;
each child is done on an individual&#13;
and flexible basis and&#13;
according to the needs of the&#13;
particular parents' work and&#13;
class schedules. Hours so contracted&#13;
are charged at $.50 an&#13;
hour. In addition, a child may&#13;
attend extra hours on a spaceavailable&#13;
basis at a slightly&#13;
higher rate.&#13;
The Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center is a state licensed daycare&#13;
facility operating in the&#13;
Parkside Baptist Church, located&#13;
on Hwy. E between 22nd and 30th&#13;
Avenues. Curriculum is&#13;
developed on the basis of age and&#13;
achievement groups, and includes&#13;
art activities, rhythm and&#13;
music, group games, individual&#13;
and group free play, and&#13;
supervised outdoor play.&#13;
PAR holds&#13;
elections&#13;
Elections were held Monday,&#13;
May 1 for the offices of President&#13;
and Vice-President of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Buzz Faust, a Junior from&#13;
Racine, won in a run-off against&#13;
Keith Kramer, also a Junior from&#13;
Racine, for the office of&#13;
President. The new Vice-&#13;
President will be Chris (Jumbo)&#13;
Inloes, a sohpomore from&#13;
Racine, who ran against Ted&#13;
Paone, a sophomore from&#13;
Kenosha. Terms of office begin in&#13;
late May, and run until May of&#13;
next year.&#13;
She NeedsYour Help&#13;
She's only one of the hundreds&#13;
of thousands of small&#13;
victims of the war in Indo-&#13;
China-many of them maimed&#13;
o r b l i n d e d —who l o o k to&#13;
UNICEF f o r h e l p . Th e&#13;
U n i t e d N a t i o n s C h i ld r e n ' s&#13;
Fund is organizing a massive&#13;
recovery program for youngsters&#13;
desperately in need of&#13;
better food, shelter and medical&#13;
care. Your contribution&#13;
may be sent to U.S. Committee&#13;
for UNICEF, 331 East&#13;
38th St., New York 1001G.&#13;
Havens appears&#13;
at Memorial Hall&#13;
by Gar y Jensen&#13;
Ben Sidrian returned to his former home town to meet a sparse&#13;
audience of which no count was available. Sidrian implied slight&#13;
disappointment but optimistically referred to the gathering as the&#13;
"faithful few."&#13;
Nimble-fingered Sidrian, on the keyboard, led his band into a&#13;
colorful sounding performance. His co-workers were a bassist,&#13;
guitarist and drummer who, all-together with Ben, produced full&#13;
musical experiences as they gracefully worked their notes around and&#13;
in between each other. The sound system was functioning surprisingly&#13;
well at first but some unintentional speaker fizzlings did occur in the&#13;
second and third numbers. But alas, Ben Sidrian was doomed to a&#13;
brief 40-minute show.&#13;
A Woodstock representative, Richie Havens, commenced with his&#13;
theme song which is George Harrison's "Here Comes the Sun." He&#13;
maintained violent strumming on his acoustic guitar with his right&#13;
hand but it's too bad that he didn't learn a few chords to play with his&#13;
left. Of course, if he would've had the background lead audible that&#13;
might have greatly improved the situation. Richie Havens was also&#13;
accompanied by a bass and congos.&#13;
He kept his eyes closed until about the last two songs when he began&#13;
to sing with emotion. Between some numbers he rapped "heavy"&#13;
philosophy which was amusing.&#13;
In one of h is message songs, he sang about the 12 types of people that&#13;
exist on the earth. If you get to know the 12 types you will be able to get&#13;
along better with the world, according to Richie. When he came to&#13;
Virgo and said, "I analyze" I thought, yea Richie, you're right, I'm&#13;
analyzing you and I think you're a nice guy but your performance&#13;
sucks.&#13;
It's not a bad formula though-play at a rock fest where they make a&#13;
movie of it and you're secured in stardom.&#13;
The audience response? Well, they clapped of course and even occasional&#13;
whistles were emitted. One guy later said something about&#13;
having to feel where the performer's head is at. But a group of f ive or&#13;
six were discussing it-"What did you think?" "I don't know,"&#13;
"Well..." and after two minutes a conclusion of "Yeah, I guess he's&#13;
pretty good" was reached.&#13;
Well, $3.50 is a good deal for Ben Sidrian and Richie Havens was&#13;
worth 50 cents, so everyone had a good time for $4.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
§&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#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;
IfSJPul, 1701 N. Main Racine 633-9421&#13;
Special&#13;
Monday thru&#13;
Thu r s d a y 11-8&#13;
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Also Serving Hot Beef Sandwiches;&#13;
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and Shrimp&#13;
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' •2 MILE NORTH OF&#13;
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ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
S h e r i d a n Rd. (Hy. 32) N o r t h&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
HOURS: DAILY ',1 A.M. TO 11 P.M.&#13;
Sales &amp; Service At&#13;
KEN SCHUITZ BUICK-0PEL&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 9, 1973&#13;
Tutor&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen computers&#13;
installed&#13;
in library THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON&#13;
Pink Floyd (SMAS-11163)&#13;
\ by Fred Bultman&#13;
The Learning Center has installed&#13;
15 Mark IV Auto-tutors in&#13;
the Library, southwest side of the&#13;
Dl level. These Auto-tutors are&#13;
sophisticated solid-state electronic&#13;
teaching aids, containing a&#13;
performance memory and binary&#13;
logic system. The computer&#13;
qualities of t he Mark IV enable it&#13;
to perform advanced and complex&#13;
branching maneuvers. The&#13;
machine provides for continual&#13;
motor-response from the learner&#13;
by requiring him to push buttons&#13;
to progress through a program. It&#13;
rewards the learner for right&#13;
answers and corrects his errors&#13;
by offering remedial instruction&#13;
when'he needs it.&#13;
The Tutor programs are&#13;
branched courses on 35mm film&#13;
in cassettes which drop-load into&#13;
the Auto-Tutor. One Tutor&#13;
program may contain up to 1,600&#13;
individual frames. Extensive&#13;
programs may include up to 10&#13;
cassettes. More than 20 Tutor&#13;
programs are available for&#13;
college level work now and new&#13;
ones are continually being added.&#13;
All Tutor programs were&#13;
validated before they were&#13;
released by the Sargent-Welch&#13;
Scientific Company.&#13;
These programs are available&#13;
on a two-hour reserve basis from&#13;
the Library circulation desk:&#13;
Introduction to Computer&#13;
Math, Trigonometry, Basic&#13;
Statistics, Scientific notation and&#13;
significant figures, Slide rule&#13;
fundamentals, Computers,&#13;
Binary logic, Career arithmetic,&#13;
Algebra (Sem. 1, 2, 3), Physics,&#13;
Basic chemistry, Perception,&#13;
Introduction to anatomy and&#13;
physiology.&#13;
Also, Basic map reading, Fourstep&#13;
method of instruction, Effective&#13;
secretarial practices,&#13;
Effective executive practices,&#13;
Introduction to PERT, PERT&#13;
costs, Value analysis-cost control,&#13;
How to write effective&#13;
reports, Career English series,&#13;
Reading comprehension, Basic&#13;
communication skills.&#13;
SANCTUARY&#13;
William Faulkner&#13;
Faulkner is best read on a bright Sunday afternoon. The general air&#13;
of alcoholism, mayhem and corruption that pervades SANCTUARY&#13;
puts ol' Dante to shame. It's really hard to think that Southern society&#13;
in the '20s was as bigoted and drunken as Faulkner would have you&#13;
believe. Maybe it all has something to do with the fact that Faulkner, a&#13;
Mississipian himself, was an alcoholic and was brought up in this&#13;
climate of moral bankruptcy.&#13;
SANCTUARY takes place in Jefferson, Mississippi, the county seat&#13;
of his imaginary Yoknapatawpha County. It revolves around the&#13;
murder of Tommy, the village idiot, and the rape of Temple Drake, the&#13;
"spoiled brat" coed. There is Ruby, the good woman gone wrong for a&#13;
bad man. Lee (the bad man), a moonshiner who was burned to death&#13;
for a murder Popeye committed (Tommy's). Then there is Popeye, a&#13;
psychopath who cuts up cats with a scissors, who raped Temple Drake&#13;
with a corncob (he wasn't a "man"), and was hanged for the one&#13;
murder he didn't commit. And then there's Horace Benbow, maybe&#13;
the most tragic figure of them all: a middle-aged lawyer, a southern&#13;
Babbitt whose last attempt to amount to something is a failure.&#13;
The way Faulkner makes his characters come alive is horrifying.&#13;
They are so real-that such people could exist, brutal and as coarse as&#13;
they are, devoid of humanity-is enough to make you want to resign&#13;
from the race.&#13;
SANCTUARY doesn't really have a proper plot in the sense that his&#13;
LIGHT IN AUGUST has. Rather, it is a series of scenarios revolving&#13;
around two central events, the rape of Temple Drake and the murder&#13;
of Tommy, in which people either get drunk, commit violence or&#13;
scheme. With these pervading themes of violence and alcohol and the&#13;
implied rottenness of our society, SANCTUARY seems a prophetic&#13;
picture of our own times. (It was written in 1931.)&#13;
Book courtesy of t he Parkside Bookstore.&#13;
PIZZA KITCHEN&#13;
Chicken &amp; Italian Sausage B ombers&#13;
Free D elivery to P arkside V illage&#13;
5021 30th Avenue Phone 657-5191&#13;
TAURUS&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
OLD TIME MOVIES&#13;
CHESS-CHECKERS-CARDS&#13;
REDUCED DRINKS&#13;
i Wed. Night - Ladies' N ight&#13;
I CHICAGO&#13;
t EXPRESS&#13;
« Next two weeks:&#13;
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STEAK&#13;
AT HA MBURGER&#13;
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• FRIED CHICKEN&#13;
• SHRIMP PLATTER&#13;
• FISH PLATTER&#13;
* BONANZA BURGER&#13;
* CHILD'S PLATTER&#13;
* CHEESEBURGER&#13;
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CALL AHEAD FOR&#13;
ORDERS TO CO&#13;
OPEN 7 p.m. -1 a.m&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK 3315 52nd St.. At 34th Ave.&#13;
F E L I C E SCOZZA R O , MGR.&#13;
Wed . , May 9, 1973 TH E PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Spain travellers see the sights&#13;
by Rudy Lienau&#13;
Last week's Spain feature almost exclusively&#13;
concerned our surprise siting of Generalisimo&#13;
Franco. This week's feature will touch on the&#13;
people, places and things that help make Spain&#13;
what it is.&#13;
Our travel group was bused to a three building&#13;
complex of hotels. After our nine hour flight from&#13;
0 Hare to Malaga most of us were tired and in a&#13;
hurry to see what our apartments looked like.&#13;
According to the brochures we had looked at we&#13;
were to be given "deluxe lodging." It was just&#13;
that.&#13;
A small foyer was just inside the front door.&#13;
The large kitchen was straight ahead off the&#13;
foyer and the spacious living room was off to the&#13;
right. A balcony was off the living room with a&#13;
view of the Mediterranean coast line and beach.&#13;
A small bathroom was situated opposite the&#13;
living room. Then came the two large bedrooms.&#13;
One of the two bedrooms had a door which&#13;
opened on to the balcony.&#13;
The furniture was beautiful and new.&#13;
Definitely Spanish, it was usually heavy and&#13;
made of wood. The exceptions were two lounge&#13;
chairs and a large couch which could double for a&#13;
bed. They were upholstered in leather and were&#13;
exteextremely soft. Even though there were two&#13;
bathrooms, we soon found that one of Spain's&#13;
deficiencies was a lack of bathroom tissue. This&#13;
may seem trite but it was very important to the&#13;
150 tourists all trying to get their stomachs adjusted&#13;
to the new water and different kinds of&#13;
food.&#13;
In my opinion the food in Spain is inexpensive&#13;
and delicious. Some dishes may have been a bit&#13;
too exotic for some, but their normal four course&#13;
meal, with consomme, perhaps ravioli or pasta&#13;
as a second course, a vegetable with the meat as&#13;
a third and main course and dessert for the&#13;
fourth course was usually exquisite. I'm no&#13;
gourmet but I eat a lot. My palate and stomach&#13;
told me this food was good.&#13;
The first thing that must be adjusted to concerning&#13;
Spanish food is the olive oil which is used&#13;
to prepare almost everything. Olive oil has very&#13;
little taste and that is probably what throws a&#13;
person. When veal was served one tasted veal.&#13;
When potatoes were served one tasted the&#13;
potato.&#13;
Now that I have succeeded at making my&#13;
mouth water I'll move on to another subject.&#13;
As I wrote last time we were staying on the&#13;
Costa Del Sol or Spanish Riviera.&#13;
To stay there would have meant seeing only a&#13;
small fraction of Spain. Most people in the group&#13;
made good use of the many guided side trips&#13;
offered.&#13;
One such trip was to the mountain city of&#13;
Ronda. The bus ride up to that city, some 2,250&#13;
feet above sea level, was half of t he fun. We were&#13;
literally climbing the sides of the mountains as&#13;
we drove the mountain roads. We seemed to be&#13;
the largest vehicle on the road until we started to&#13;
meet the trucks streaming down with their loads&#13;
of granite.&#13;
Depending which side of the bus you were on a&#13;
passenger might look out his window to a drop of&#13;
some 1500 feet. Usually that person couldn't even&#13;
see the curb of the road because he was so far&#13;
over. But if he could stomach it the view of o live&#13;
orchards was breath-taking and great picture&#13;
taking material.&#13;
Looking at the face of the mountain we saw&#13;
scars of granite mining that date back to Roman&#13;
times. The hunks of granite are immense. In the&#13;
Roman times the granite slabs were hauled&#13;
down the side of the mountain by slaves to the&#13;
cities when there was only a foot path to walk on.&#13;
amy cundari continued on page 11&#13;
Uncle Bob's comix by Bob Rohan&#13;
^ ™jgg&#13;
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A &lt;9 0 U JAIST/ C M I )&#13;
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by M ilwaukee's&#13;
Billie Soul &amp;&#13;
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"New Blues" &amp; "Rock" Band&#13;
Unescorted Ladies No Cover&#13;
MONDAY NITE&#13;
IS ALWAY S&#13;
t t&#13;
SHdKESS&#13;
A PITCHER&#13;
OF&#13;
LIGHT BEER&#13;
ONLY&#13;
IN RACINE&#13;
LATHROP AND 21st (ALMOST)&#13;
Simple,&#13;
straight-forward,&#13;
classic-out of step&#13;
with today's&#13;
throwaway culture.&#13;
Refillable cartridge,&#13;
ballpoint or fiber tip&#13;
marker in basic tan&#13;
or navy blue.&#13;
$1.98: not bad for a pen&#13;
you may use the&#13;
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8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed./ May 9/ 1973 Leftovei&#13;
oer photos Wed., May 9, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Ma y 9, 1 97 3&#13;
State awards&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Since 1970, four Parkside faculty have&#13;
received the awards, a total exceeded only by&#13;
Madison's five. Previous Parkside winners were&#13;
Morris Firebaugh, physics, in 1970, and Walter&#13;
Graf fin, English, in 1972.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie said that Parkside's record&#13;
of awards was quite remarkable in light of the&#13;
severity of competition. "We have been fortunate&#13;
to have the right combination of outstanding&#13;
candidates and skillful representation,"&#13;
Wyllie commented.&#13;
Vopat, who joined the Parksidefaculty in 1970&#13;
after earning her Ph.D. at the University of&#13;
Washington (Seattle), has taught courses in&#13;
freshman English, both introductory and advanced&#13;
contemporary literature, modern women&#13;
writers, and Black literature. She has been&#13;
described by many of her students as a vibrant,&#13;
aware force in the classroom, and is known as a&#13;
teacher who gives much time outside of c lass to&#13;
individual students.&#13;
Comments of students and faculty who supported&#13;
her nomination include, "outstanding&#13;
knowledge of her subject...considerate of&#13;
students and respectful of their opinions...&#13;
attempts to know them (students) and treat&#13;
them as individuals worthy of her respect...takes&#13;
no association with a student lightly."&#13;
She was the keynote speaker at the recent&#13;
Women's Day held on campus and was a&#13;
featured participant in last month's Capsule&#13;
College, which attracted 800 women to Parkside.&#13;
Her work also includes several published&#13;
articles on contemporary American literature&#13;
and two books in progress dealing with&#13;
American Romanticism and Woman as Writer.&#13;
Zarling also joined the Parkside faculty in 1970&#13;
after receiving his Ph. D. from Michigan&#13;
Technological University. Before that he taught&#13;
at the two-year Center System campus in&#13;
Kenosha and for Engineering Extension in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
In addition to earning accolades for "making&#13;
textbook material come alive" and being&#13;
"always available to his students," Zarling&#13;
earned praise for his efforts in heading the&#13;
Engineering Science Division's Cooperative&#13;
Education Program which in its first year placed&#13;
12 students in cooperative study-employment&#13;
arrangements with local industry. One student&#13;
called him "a vital link between textbook and&#13;
industry for the young engineering student."&#13;
Through his contacts with area industry,&#13;
Zarling is credited with playing a key role in the&#13;
growing relationship between the industrial&#13;
community and Parkside's School of Modern&#13;
Industry, whose interdisciplinary programs in&#13;
engineering science, business and management&#13;
and labor economics are the direct application of&#13;
the university's special educational mission to&#13;
serve the needs of a modern, industrial society.&#13;
A professional engineer, Zarling is an active&#13;
researcher and has received grants for both&#13;
practical and theoretical aspects of engineering,&#13;
most recently a fellowship to participate in a&#13;
research institute at Stanford University this&#13;
summer.&#13;
2nd National (formerly Shakey's) Cocktail Bar and Restaurant&#13;
6208 Green Bay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
Kenosha' s Newe s t Nightclub&#13;
Friday «£ Saturday&#13;
The Bus Stops&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'LUNCH&#13;
P I Z Z A , C H ICKEN , SALAD, M O - J O 'S&#13;
1 1 : 3 0 - 1 : 3 0&#13;
Mon.-Fri. Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
$-|59 $-|89&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
20 K I N D S SERVED ALL THE . T I M E&#13;
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUNCH O'FISH F I S H , P I Z Z A . SALA D , MO-JO'S&#13;
Wed. &amp; Fri.&#13;
from 5 p.m. $J99&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
W M O - J O 'S S ERVE D ALL THE TIME&#13;
Distinguished teacher awards&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Students have been involved in virtually all&#13;
phases of t he study, which is partially funded by&#13;
a grant from American Motors Corporation, and&#13;
geography students, under Manogaran's&#13;
direction, have mapped the river to pinpoint&#13;
pollution spots, analyzed the water and conducted&#13;
depth, width and flow measurements.&#13;
Born in Malaya, Manogaran is a citizen of&#13;
Ceylon and taught at Jaffna Hindu College there&#13;
before coming to the U. S. in 1966. He returned to&#13;
Ceylon last summer to conduct a study of the&#13;
geographic base, social and economic&#13;
organizations of several villages on the island.&#13;
Results of the study will appear in a 1974&#13;
publication of the University of Stockholm,&#13;
Sweden.&#13;
Manogaran received his master's degree from&#13;
Clark University in Massachusetts and his Ph.&#13;
D. degree from Southern Illinois University-&#13;
Carbondale and taught at those institutions&#13;
before coming to Parkside.&#13;
Couble, who was cited for honorable mention&#13;
in last year's outstanding teacher nominations,&#13;
was a visiting professor of management science&#13;
at Parkside for several years before becoming a&#13;
full-time faculty member last fall.&#13;
Student nominators cited his extensive&#13;
background in private industry as well as&#13;
academe as factors contributing to outstanding&#13;
classroom performance. Cougle has served as&#13;
training supervisor for several major industrial&#13;
firms in Illinois and, with his wife, formed his&#13;
own management consultant firm there.&#13;
He received his master's degree from&#13;
Roosevelt University and his Ph. D. from Loyola&#13;
University and taught at Roosevelt and UWMadison&#13;
before coming to Parkside.&#13;
Liddy, whose home is in County Wexford,&#13;
Ireland, is the author of five books of poetry and&#13;
is represented in a number of anthologies. He&#13;
has held faculty posts at University College&#13;
Dublin and a number of major U. S. institutions.&#13;
At Parkside, he has taught courses in poetry&#13;
writing, Irish culture and Irish literature. He has&#13;
been active in Parkside Poetry Forum programs&#13;
and organized the Symposium on Irish&#13;
Literature which brought a number of Irish&#13;
scholars to campus over the St. Patrick's Day&#13;
weekend.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
informs you tha t&#13;
Plus Your Favorite Mixed Drinks and Beers&#13;
IS COMING!&#13;
an Jet the Big Top&#13;
I and Sun. - May 19th and 20th&#13;
Activities Bldg. Parking Lot&#13;
ALSO:&#13;
Beer, Bra ts and Burgers&#13;
plus FREE Peanuts (Sat. nite)&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wise. I.P.'s required&#13;
'A v «."$ V' A \&#13;
It's What's Happenning&#13;
A two-week summer art&#13;
workshop for high school&#13;
students sponsored by Parkside&#13;
and University Extension has&#13;
* been scheduled for June 25&#13;
through July 6.&#13;
All c lasses will be held in the&#13;
new Communication Arts&#13;
Building at Parkside from 9 a.m.&#13;
to noon. Art studios will remain&#13;
open during the afternoon for&#13;
student use.&#13;
John Murphy, a ceramist, and&#13;
Robert Cadez, a painter, both&#13;
members of the Parkside art&#13;
faculty, will be instructors for the&#13;
workshop which will include two&#13;
and three dimensional media:&#13;
drawing, painting, printing,&#13;
photography and clay construction.&#13;
There is a fee ($17.50) for the&#13;
workshop. Additional information&#13;
and application blanks&#13;
are available from Charles&#13;
Kugel, director of Summer&#13;
Workshops at Parkside, and from&#13;
high school counselors.&#13;
assSiStn Jf°hn Murph5'' an&#13;
assistant professor of art at&#13;
Parkside. is represented by three&#13;
works, a tall covered jar, a bowl&#13;
and a large plate, in the current&#13;
Wisconsin Designer Craftsman&#13;
Show which opened during the&#13;
weekend at the John Kohler Art&#13;
wm r,mmf Sheb°ySan- T Will run for six weeks. he show&#13;
The Milwaukee Symphonv&#13;
Orchestra concert originally set&#13;
for May 10 at Parksidt has been&#13;
rescheduled for Sept. li. Concert&#13;
Pianist Carmen Vila, artisWnresidence&#13;
at Parkside, win ap-&#13;
£.as S0\0lst with the orchestra,&#13;
which will perform in the new&#13;
Theater mCati°n Ar'S Buildin«&#13;
Parkside Music students will&#13;
present a free public concert at 8&#13;
P-m. today in the Kenosha&#13;
Campus Fine Arts Room&#13;
Soloists will be Sue Lasco&#13;
saxophone, Salem; Sue Johnson,'&#13;
clarinet, Kenosha; Christine&#13;
Jenkins, soprano, Kenosha; Jill&#13;
Riech, piano, Racine; Debbie&#13;
Perrone, piano, Kenosha; and&#13;
Judy Kraschnewski, French&#13;
horn, Kenosha.&#13;
The program also will include&#13;
numbers by duo-pianists Kristin&#13;
Gould and Jean Tashoff, both of&#13;
Racine, and by a brass choir&#13;
consisting of Barry Boettcher,&#13;
Tom J arosz and Jeff Zalesak, all&#13;
Racine; John Plovanich, Tom&#13;
Tait and Bob Flood, all Kenosha;&#13;
and Tom Rome, Burlington.&#13;
Accompanists will be Fred&#13;
Wenger, Kenosha, Miss Tashoff&#13;
and Miss Gould.&#13;
Wed . , May 9, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
Spain continued from page 7&#13;
Bridges and walls still stand along the winding&#13;
road. As one moves through the mountains the&#13;
contrast of the many influences in architecture&#13;
are obvious.&#13;
We finally made it to Ronda and entered the&#13;
city over a bridge some 300 feet high. The bridge&#13;
was started in the 1400's.&#13;
Ronda is a quaint and not as commercialized a&#13;
a village, where a person can buy silver and&#13;
leather goods for very reasonable prices, as In&#13;
the rest of Spain, the streets are clean and the&#13;
people seem to have pride in their city.&#13;
Unlike Granada, there were no beggars or&#13;
pestering shoe shine boys. That was a relief.&#13;
This two part feature has attempted to give a&#13;
comprehensive recollection of the sights and&#13;
sounds and feelings of Spain.&#13;
If ever you have the chance, take the time and&#13;
soak in some sun on the beaches of t he Costa Del&#13;
Sol.&#13;
Eating wild plants explored&#13;
How to identify spring edible&#13;
wild plants will be explored in a&#13;
University Extension course&#13;
b e g i n n i n g T h u r s d a y&#13;
evening,May 17. In a similar&#13;
course last fall students collected&#13;
and sampled wild foods which are&#13;
harvestable at that time of year.&#13;
On three Thursday evenings&#13;
the spring class will meet for&#13;
lectures and slides on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus, and on three&#13;
Saturday mornings for field trips&#13;
and preparation and sampling of&#13;
foods gathered. Dr. Eugen&lt;&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, professor of lift&#13;
science at Parkside, instructor&#13;
says that some 12-20 easilj&#13;
recognized wild plants will b&lt;&#13;
collected during the field trips&#13;
Materials needed for the fielc&#13;
trips include a field notebook&#13;
pocket knife or kitchen shears&#13;
and ruck sac or plastic bags. For&#13;
registration information contact&#13;
University Extension 553-2312. A&#13;
special rate of $5.00 will apply for&#13;
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12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER We d . , May 9, 1973&#13;
NEfwPi&gt;m Wwf =PNfV?Yw 1k}ttPt K&lt;iwj£&#13;
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Wed. , May 9, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 13&#13;
Bill Konrad, Salesman-&#13;
MacMillan Publishing Co.&#13;
"I think probably too much has&#13;
been made of it. I sort of agree&#13;
with the guy who said their&#13;
mistake was in getting caught.&#13;
It's wrong but they both probably&#13;
did it. I never1 did have too much&#13;
confidence in politics and I feel it&#13;
was normal, since they were&#13;
caught they should be&#13;
prosecuted."&#13;
Camille Helminiak, Senior,&#13;
Racine&#13;
"I think it's stupid, it seems&#13;
like corruption in the government."&#13;
Jim Cloutier, Junior, Racine&#13;
"I think it's baffling, a very&#13;
strange experience, but it's a&#13;
very important and dangerous&#13;
event that has occurred. In light&#13;
of what has happened it's hard to&#13;
believe what people are saying. It&#13;
hurts world opinion of us when&#13;
other r countries see us with&#13;
corruption this high up in our&#13;
government."&#13;
Leif Petersen, Junior, Union&#13;
Grove&#13;
"Y°u don't know what to&#13;
believe. I think most of the people&#13;
hear so much about it that after&#13;
awhile it just bounces off and&#13;
they really don't pay any attention.&#13;
It s a matter of what you&#13;
want to believe and what you&#13;
don t want to believe. They're&#13;
making a lot of probably very&#13;
little or nothing."&#13;
Terry Kollman, Senior,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I really don't think Nixon&#13;
knew anything about it. He gave&#13;
his men an order, they used poor&#13;
judgement and it got way out of&#13;
hand."&#13;
Marian Hammond, Staff,&#13;
Computer Center&#13;
"I'm really depressed by&#13;
Watergate, it's a bad business.&#13;
It's very hard to feel any trust in&#13;
Nixon's administration, makes&#13;
me glad I didn't vote for Nixon."&#13;
Ann Kavanaugh, Freshman,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I don't think I know enough&#13;
about it politically to say&#13;
anything about it."&#13;
( Sorry no picture)&#13;
Jeff Haman, Freshman&#13;
Racine&#13;
I really don't know too much&#13;
about it but from what I hear the&#13;
Republicans are at fault, and I&#13;
think Nixon's behind it&#13;
somewhat."&#13;
Rick Bouder, Senior, Carthage&#13;
College&#13;
"I think the Watergate has&#13;
been covered up too damn much.&#13;
There's a lot more the public&#13;
really doesn't know about I'm not&#13;
quite certain if Nixon knows&#13;
about the whole Watergate affari,&#13;
"But other officials are covering&#13;
up for it. This is evident by&#13;
certain files that have been&#13;
mysteriously been taken out of&#13;
the cabinets, and how people&#13;
resign all of a sudden and refuse&#13;
to testify because their friends&#13;
are involved in it. A lot of things&#13;
are being covered up, and I think&#13;
unfortunately the whole thing will&#13;
be covered up and nothing will&#13;
ever come of it. They'll never find&#13;
out the whole truth about it-sort&#13;
of lik e the Kennedy affair."&#13;
Linda Hoffman n, Sophomore,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
"I hope they stick to it and get&#13;
to the bottom of the whole deal&#13;
because it seems like&#13;
something's not right."&#13;
John Valaske, Director&#13;
Summer Session and Extended&#13;
Day Programs&#13;
"I'm glad that Nixon made a&#13;
public statement Monday night -1&#13;
feel that it is possible that he did&#13;
know in advance. We have to give&#13;
him the benefit of the doubt that&#13;
he did not know, and accept his&#13;
explanation and move on to the&#13;
greater issues mentioned at the&#13;
conclusion of his speech."&#13;
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14 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., May 9, 1973&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
This years bowling team going to national competition&#13;
in Kansas City are: George Krulatz, Andy Vacca, Coach&#13;
Jim Koch, Mike Jenerette, Mike Peratt and Jim&#13;
Mohrbacher.&#13;
Bowlers finish 8th&#13;
in nation&#13;
The 12th Annual 1973 NAIA&#13;
Bowling Tournament was held&#13;
this past weekend May 3-5 in&#13;
which the Parkside squad&#13;
finished 8th in the nation.&#13;
Tournament winner was the&#13;
College of Great Falls, Montana&#13;
which was given a scare during&#13;
Saturday's round, because the&#13;
Rangers almost pulled off a&#13;
major upset, but to no avail lost&#13;
both games in the final frames&#13;
(920-905) (919-909).&#13;
Top finishers for the Rangers&#13;
were George Krulatz, 8th in the&#13;
nation (190 ave.) and Mike&#13;
Paratt, 13th (185 a ve.)&#13;
Netters edged by St. Norbert&#13;
The Parkside netters came&#13;
within one point of winning their&#13;
second dual meet of the year last&#13;
Saturday against St. Norbert&#13;
College by a score of 5-4.&#13;
In singles Rick Bedore lost the&#13;
no. 1 match by a score of 6-1, 6-0.&#13;
Gary Christensen evened things&#13;
when he beat his opponent 7-5, 6-&#13;
2. Marc Haase lost the no. 3&#13;
match by scores of 6-3.4-6 and 6-3.&#13;
Dave Herchen evened the score&#13;
once again when he won, 3-6,6-4,&#13;
6-3. Andy Peterson lost 6-2 and 6-&#13;
3. Todd Nelson won the last&#13;
singles match for the Rangers 6-&#13;
1, 6-1, which* evened the team&#13;
score at 3-3 going into the&#13;
doubles.&#13;
The team of Herchen-&#13;
Christensen lost 4-6, 6-4, and 6-0,&#13;
as did the pariing of Bedore-&#13;
Peterson, 6-1, 6-4. The team of&#13;
Nelson-Cal Jensen gained a&#13;
measure of revenge for Parkside&#13;
by defeating their opponents 6-2,&#13;
6-3, but it came too late to change&#13;
the outcome.&#13;
Parkside tennis coach Dick&#13;
Frecka summarized the year so&#13;
far by saying, "We've had a bad&#13;
Spring due to the weather and&#13;
injuries." With two dual meets&#13;
remaining the Ranger record is 1-&#13;
6. Both meets will be away, and&#13;
UW-Green Bay and Milton,&#13;
followed by the NAIA District 14&#13;
tournament at Uw-Oshkosh&#13;
May 18.&#13;
on&#13;
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•As an independent businessman, each FTD Member Florist sets his&#13;
own prices. © 1973 Florists' Transworld Delivery Association.&#13;
Rangers 5-1 in Baseball&#13;
by Bill Blaha&#13;
Parkside's baseball team has&#13;
finally finished some ball games&#13;
this year, six to be exact. They&#13;
played a doubleheader in each of&#13;
the last 3 weeks including the&#13;
spring break.&#13;
The results were victories,&#13;
several weeks" back, over&#13;
Dominican (College of Racine) 8-&#13;
3 and 5-1, and a split with St.&#13;
Norbert's, losing the opener 2-1,&#13;
but winning the nightcap 5-0. Last&#13;
Friday, the Rangers defeated&#13;
Waukesha Tech 14-1 and 5-3. This&#13;
puts the team's record at 5-1 for&#13;
the season.&#13;
The strong points of the Ranger&#13;
team has been the exceptionally&#13;
fine pitching from a pair of&#13;
youngsters, Sophomore Bob&#13;
Koster and Freshman Jeff&#13;
Sexton, both out of Kenosha high&#13;
schools.&#13;
Koster has started 3 games,&#13;
winning 2 and losing 1 to St.&#13;
Norbert. He has pitched 2 onehitters&#13;
and the loss came by only&#13;
one run.&#13;
On the other hand, Sexton has&#13;
started two games, but finished&#13;
the second Dominican game to&#13;
pick up a 3-0 record. Sexton also&#13;
pitched the only no-hit, no-run&#13;
ball game in Parkside's young&#13;
history against St. Norbert in&#13;
their second game of the&#13;
doubleheader.&#13;
The leading hitters at this date&#13;
are center fielder Kim Singleton,&#13;
second baseman Ron Schmidt,&#13;
and right fielder Jeff Koleske.&#13;
Because of the rain outs and&#13;
finals, the season will end this&#13;
week with only 6 more games to&#13;
be played.&#13;
The Rangers will have attempted&#13;
to play Milwaukee Tech&#13;
yesterday and also on Thursday&#13;
with the season's finale on Friday&#13;
with Whitewater. Both he *ames&#13;
on Thursday and Friday ill be&#13;
played here at 1 p.m. All games&#13;
this week will be doubleheaders&#13;
Interesting note: While the&#13;
Rangers may get in only 12&#13;
games or less for their season&#13;
according to a AP report Arizona&#13;
State, the number one college&#13;
team in the nation, were 47-5 iast&#13;
week. No wonder that's where the&#13;
Reggie Jackson's, Rick Monday's,&#13;
and Sal Bando's came&#13;
from.&#13;
Parkside and the state of&#13;
Wisconsin have a long way to go&#13;
before big time college baseball&#13;
will be played here as it is in the&#13;
warmer climate areas of the&#13;
country.&#13;
SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Dept. of Physical Education and Athletics&#13;
PROCEDURES FOR ISSUE AREA - SUMMER, 1973&#13;
1. Locks must be returned for deposit reimbursement by May 25. Any locks not returned by&#13;
this time will be removed with loss of deposit. Summer schedule to start May 28.&#13;
2. Summer fees to be as follows:&#13;
PE Uniforms - $2.50. Includes only T-shirt, short, or swim suit.&#13;
ID card stamped and checked in for uniform. Same procedure as in past.&#13;
3. Lock, locker, towel - $4.00 fee. ($3.00 deposit)&#13;
Lock and towel checked out. Towel kept in locker by user.&#13;
User signs card explaining lock and towel must be turned in at designated time or earlier, or&#13;
deposit is forfeited.&#13;
(Designated time will be end of summer session.(&#13;
4. Lock-locker - $3.00 ($2 .00 deposit). Must be returned at designated time or earlier.&#13;
Any locks not returned by this time will be removed with loss of deposit.&#13;
ID card holders who wish to use a towel or swim suit once in a while:&#13;
Towel rental 25c - surrender ID card&#13;
Swim suit rental 25c - surrender ID card.&#13;
DENNIS BIEL&#13;
Parkside trackmen competed&#13;
and placed high in the Fifth&#13;
Annual Northern Illinois Invitational&#13;
last Saturday at&#13;
DeKalb, 111.&#13;
Lucian Rosa set a new meet&#13;
and track record in the six mile&#13;
run with a time of 29:34.3. The old&#13;
record was 29:59.9.&#13;
Dennis Biel set a new meet and&#13;
track record in the 880 y ard run&#13;
with a time of 1:52.5. The old&#13;
record was 1:52.8.&#13;
Dennis Biel set a new meet and&#13;
track record in the 880 yard run&#13;
with a time of 1:52.5. The old&#13;
record was 1:52.8.&#13;
Keith Merritt piaced fourth jn&#13;
the triple jump with a distance of&#13;
Parkside placed ninth of 14&#13;
teams in the meet with 24 points&#13;
while Eastern Illinois won the&#13;
team title with 109 UW&#13;
Milwaukee, the only other&#13;
Wisconsin college in the meet&#13;
scored two points.&#13;
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parkside realty ine&#13;
Developed and Built by U.S. General In,&#13;
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For the session starting Fall, 1973,&#13;
the European Medical Students&#13;
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qualified American students In&#13;
gaining admission to recognized&#13;
overseas medical schools.&#13;
And that's just the beginning.&#13;
Since the language barrier constitutes&#13;
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at a foreign school, the Euromed&#13;
program also includes an intensive&#13;
8-12 week medical and conversational&#13;
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is given in the country where the student&#13;
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In addition, the European Medical&#13;
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students with an 8-12 week intensive&#13;
cultural orientation course, with American&#13;
students now studying medicine&#13;
in that particular country serving as&#13;
counselors.&#13;
Senior or graduate students currently&#13;
enrolled in an American university are&#13;
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For application and further&#13;
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Wed . , May 9, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 15&#13;
Rosa runs in silence&#13;
Lucian Rosa doesn't usually&#13;
hear voices when he runs, but he&#13;
wishes he would.&#13;
Lest you think this is the wish of&#13;
one who isn't playing with a full&#13;
deck, let it immediately be noted&#13;
that Rosa is a marathon runner&#13;
for The University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
He's so good, in fact, that he&#13;
recently won the marathon title&#13;
at the Drake Relays for the&#13;
second straight year. He's also an&#13;
Olympic performer from his&#13;
native Ceylon and a sophomore&#13;
majoring in business&#13;
management at Parkside.&#13;
Now to the voices. Rosa likes to&#13;
hear any voices while he's&#13;
competing on the 26 mile, 385&#13;
yard-grind, whether they be those&#13;
of other runners of of fans along&#13;
the route. At Drake he heard&#13;
them all, but even then for only&#13;
the beginning miles.&#13;
Unlike 1972, when Rosa took the&#13;
lead almost from the start of the&#13;
race at Iowa's state capitol&#13;
building and clocked a record&#13;
2:22:13, the Parkside star began&#13;
slowly this time and enjoyed the&#13;
company of other runners&#13;
through the early part of the run&#13;
while Tony Brien of Marymount&#13;
College built a sizable lead.&#13;
"I like to run with more runners,"&#13;
Rosa explained. "We&#13;
talked about a lot of things, including&#13;
other runners who were&#13;
there and the leader and whether&#13;
he could stay up there."&#13;
But at eight miles Rosa began&#13;
to pull away from the others and&#13;
make his move on Brien. He&#13;
caught him and stayed with him&#13;
until the 21-mile mark, but Rosa&#13;
said that the Kansas marathon&#13;
runner-up didn't seem to want to&#13;
talk much. But fans kept busy&#13;
encouraging Rosa, showing the&#13;
Ceylonese star for the second&#13;
straight year why Drake and Des&#13;
Moines citizens are noted for&#13;
their hospitality.&#13;
"The people on the road knew&#13;
me from last year," Rosa said&#13;
"and I h eard 'C'mon Lucian' and&#13;
'Good luck, Lucian' throughout&#13;
the race."&#13;
Rosa, who slowed down this&#13;
year to a leisurely 2:25:18.4 pace,&#13;
and still beat Brien by almost two&#13;
minutes likes the Des Moines&#13;
course, which after its state&#13;
capitol beginning passes along&#13;
the Drake Relays parade route&#13;
and finally ends on the Tartan&#13;
track in Drake Stadium.&#13;
"I like the course (at Drake) a&#13;
lot because of the hills," Rosa&#13;
said "I like running through the&#13;
town and hearing people&#13;
throughout the race."&#13;
Bob Lawson, who formerly&#13;
coached up the road from Drake&#13;
at Iowa State and is now the head&#13;
man at Parkside, points with&#13;
pride to his distance ace and said&#13;
that Rosa has gained a lot of&#13;
confidence and poise since his&#13;
first Drake win.&#13;
"He's matured a lot as a runner&#13;
and has grown up competitively,"&#13;
Lawson said. "We&#13;
knew he was ready to meet the&#13;
challenge at Drake and we think&#13;
he's ready to meet a real&#13;
challenge next year with the&#13;
Boston Marathon and the Drake&#13;
marathon within two weeks of&#13;
each other.&#13;
"Last year Lucian made&#13;
various tactical errors but he&#13;
didn't make them this year and&#13;
now knows how to run the&#13;
marathon."&#13;
Rosa, one of three Ceylon&#13;
trackmen at the Olympic games&#13;
in Munich, failed to finish the&#13;
marathon at the Games because&#13;
of illness but he did win the pre-&#13;
O l y m p i c M i d - E u r o p e a n&#13;
Championship in the event. He's&#13;
scheduled to run two more 26&#13;
milers this year, with one coming&#13;
May 23 at 6 a.m. at the National&#13;
Assn. of Intercollegiate Athletics&#13;
(NAIA) championships at&#13;
Arkadelphia, Ark.&#13;
"I have to run trials in the three&#13;
mile that same day," Rosa said,&#13;
and although he wants to do well&#13;
in the three and make the finals&#13;
in that event as well as the six,&#13;
Rosa really wants that NAIA&#13;
marathon. He failed to finish last&#13;
year at Billings, Mont., in 98&#13;
degree heat. Only seven runners&#13;
did finish. And more important,&#13;
Rosa will be facing Brien again.&#13;
Rosa will also run Aug. 11 in the&#13;
Paavo Nurmi Marathon from&#13;
Upson to Hurley. But that will be&#13;
it until next fall when he again&#13;
enters the North Central&#13;
Marathon at Naperville, 111.,&#13;
where he finished 16th and fifth in&#13;
his two previous tries.&#13;
Rosa has only run the&#13;
marathon seven times and&#13;
though he's now 29, he thinks he&#13;
won't reach his peak until he's 32&#13;
or 32, which ought to put him&#13;
right on track for the 1976&#13;
Olympic Games at Montreal,&#13;
and, perhaps, a date with longdistance&#13;
racing destiny.&#13;
Rangers 5th in District meet&#13;
by Kri s Koch&#13;
The UW-Parkside golfers met&#13;
with 13 other teams in Green&#13;
Lake Wisconsin last Sunday and&#13;
Monday in the District number 14&#13;
tournament. The Rangers placed&#13;
fifth being defeated by UW-La&#13;
Crosse, who won the meet last&#13;
year, and had a team total of 789.&#13;
Whitewater who had a total of&#13;
798, Oshkosh with an aggregate&#13;
817, Platteville with 821 and&#13;
Parkside with an 828.&#13;
Behind Parkside came Stevens&#13;
Point, Eau Claire, River Falls,&#13;
Superior, Green Bay, Milton,&#13;
Stout and Carrol College.&#13;
The meet medalist was Jeff&#13;
Lehman of La Crosse who had a&#13;
36 hole total of 153. The Rangers&#13;
Dan Leissner was two strokes&#13;
back with a 155 total after picking&#13;
up two bogies and a double bogie&#13;
on the last nine holes.&#13;
Tom Bothe of the Rangers&#13;
finished with a 36 hole total of 166&#13;
while teammate Don Fox&#13;
finished one stroke ahead at 165.&#13;
Jim Vakos collected a 169 two day&#13;
total, and A1 Pevonka finished&#13;
with a 193.&#13;
This was the last meeting of the&#13;
season for the Rangers. Coach&#13;
Steve Stephens commented that&#13;
he was fairly pleased with the&#13;
season but he thought that the&#13;
team could have played better.&#13;
"The weather was a big factor in&#13;
the scores this year, in fact the&#13;
last day of tournament was&#13;
played in a downpour."&#13;
Parkside ended the season with&#13;
a 3-2 record after having some of&#13;
their matches rained out.&#13;
The last dual meet loss came at&#13;
the hands of Northern Illinois on&#13;
May 4. The Rangers were&#13;
defeated soundly 375-403. The&#13;
meet was played without the&#13;
services of Dan Leissner and&#13;
Stephens also "used a couple of&#13;
new kids to see how they'd do."&#13;
Stephens commented that,&#13;
"Mississippi helped the team&#13;
play better golf because of the&#13;
better weather that we incurred."&#13;
He is looking forward to more&#13;
golf this fall. He thinks that there&#13;
will be an extended season and&#13;
possibly the district tournament&#13;
will be held next fall also.&#13;
torn P.&#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;
NEW VERSATILE GROU P seeking&#13;
drummer and female vocalist. Don't be shy,&#13;
call Chuck, 694-1907, after 4 p.m.&#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;
Men and Women: Join the exciting world of&#13;
health! Vita-Life Health Spa now accepting&#13;
applications for immediate employment as&#13;
floor technicians. Apply in person at 5420 S.&#13;
Lakeshore Rd., Racine, Wis. Weekdays 10-&#13;
10. Saturdays 10-6.&#13;
SUPERBUY ! Dynaco FM-5 Tuner -rated the&#13;
best by Stereo Review, 6 months old, perfect,&#13;
$150. Also stereo tape recorder, short-wave&#13;
radio. Call Mike in Racine at 554-9503 after 5.&#13;
You Haven' t Shopped&#13;
A Motorcycl e Store&#13;
Until You've Been To&#13;
HONDA FARM&#13;
• SERVICE&#13;
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rSO YOU WANT TO BE A . . .&#13;
WRITER?&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHER?&#13;
REPORTER?&#13;
LAYOUT ARTIST?&#13;
ADVERTISING SALESMAN?&#13;
mIIm III&#13;
The RANGER needs you for the&#13;
'73-'74 school year.&#13;
We lay h ave just what you're)&#13;
looking for. RANGER - LLC&#13;
16 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Ma y 9, 1 97 3&#13;
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Sale Books - Save up to 75% and more&#13;
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SALE STARTS MAY 9 - ENDS MAY 11&#13;
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TOHNE CONCOURSE&#13;
OUTSIDE THE BOOKSTORE</text>
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              <text>The Parkside&#13;
RAIMGER Student Information Issue&#13;
Wednesday, August 8, 1973&#13;
Advising, counseling important at UW-P&#13;
No. 1 Resourceyour&#13;
advisor&#13;
Students' number one resource when it comes to&#13;
things academic is their advisor. Whether an individual&#13;
has declared a major and had a faculty&#13;
advisor assigned, or is undeclared and relies on the&#13;
services of an Academic Advisor of the Counseling&#13;
staff, the advisor is the person who helps the student&#13;
get through general degree requirements, explore&#13;
different majors or points directions in one's major&#13;
area.&#13;
From the time a student enters Parkside until he&#13;
or she declares a major, the advisor is a member of&#13;
the counseling staff with special knowledge in a&#13;
broad academic division, such as Humanities,&#13;
Social Science, Science, Business or Applied&#13;
Science and Technology. There is also an advisor&#13;
for the large category called "undecided." Students&#13;
can make appointments with the proper person by&#13;
calling the secretary at ext. 2225 and indicating&#13;
which area they are interested in.&#13;
These general advisors look to provide different&#13;
experiences in different areas, lending some&#13;
breadth to a student's scope before a major is&#13;
declared. They work closely with faculty in the&#13;
course selection process and can direct students to&#13;
the right person if there is a question they cannot&#13;
answer. They are available at Orientation,&#13;
Registration and throughout the year to assist&#13;
students.&#13;
When a student reaches a point where he or she&#13;
knows what to major in, a Declaration of Major&#13;
form is filled out and the appropriate Division office&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Members of the Academic Advising and Counseling Staff are, L. to&#13;
R., Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of Students, and counselors&#13;
Wendy Musich, Ken Oberbrunner, Wayne Ramirez and Isom Fearn.&#13;
Not pictured: Clay Barnard and Barbara Larson&#13;
Factory eduf viimZ&#13;
"IS" is an alternative&#13;
Counselors give&#13;
help when needed&#13;
"Anytime something is bothering someone to the&#13;
extent that it interferes with their academic&#13;
progress, then we want to help them out," began&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of Students, in a&#13;
discussion about personal counseling services&#13;
available to students at Parkside. "Very often&#13;
students with academic problems have other things&#13;
on their minds besides school. They need to sort out&#13;
their priorities, and they may need help. We have&#13;
sensitive, talented, professional counselors here if a&#13;
student runs into some obstacle in the course of his&#13;
or her college career." They are located in Tallent&#13;
Hall, at ext. 2225.&#13;
The counselors deal objectively with such concerns&#13;
as interpersonal relationships; making&#13;
friends; getting into activities; the differences&#13;
between ideas and standards upheld at home and&#13;
those expressed at the University; feelings of&#13;
discouragement, unhappiness, nervousness or&#13;
inadequacy; dropping out; planning personal life;&#13;
the need for the sense of direction; and coping with&#13;
problems of alcohol, drugs etc. They have consulting&#13;
and referral resources in Racine and&#13;
Kenosha when help is needed beyond the confines of&#13;
the campus. They make sensitive referrals and&#13;
facilitate getting the person to the level of&#13;
assistance needed.&#13;
Counselor Wendy Musich elaborated on her job,&#13;
commenting that nothing is too trivial if it is&#13;
bothering the student. She said the counselors are&#13;
not there to hold hands" but to engage in genuine&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Parkside freshmen have the&#13;
opportunity this year to be involved&#13;
in a program which will&#13;
exempt them from traditional&#13;
factory education. It's called the&#13;
IS (Industrial Society) Program.&#13;
IS was born from a course&#13;
called "The City," taught last&#13;
year by Carl Lindner, assistant&#13;
professor of English, and William&#13;
Murin, assistant professor of&#13;
political science. Credits for that&#13;
course were available in both&#13;
disciplines. From that idea grew&#13;
IS, which will be taught by six&#13;
faculty of different fields. After&#13;
completing the 18 credit&#13;
program, the student will have&#13;
satisfied both the humanities and&#13;
social science credit hour&#13;
requirements.&#13;
IS was developed as an&#13;
alternative to the old method&#13;
classroom approach. "The idea is&#13;
to make knowledge coherent&#13;
rather than discreet," Lindner&#13;
explained. Traditionally, introductory&#13;
courses do not relate&#13;
to each other. The vocabulary a&#13;
political science major will learn&#13;
does not carry over into English&#13;
or anthropology. This makes for&#13;
disunity and chaos in the freshmen&#13;
collection of courses.&#13;
The theme focuses on industrial&#13;
urban America. One&#13;
hundred twenty students will be&#13;
allowed to participate in the&#13;
program. The 20-1 studentteacher&#13;
ratio brings more personal&#13;
as well as discipline interaction.&#13;
&#13;
As opposed to old institutional&#13;
education where students are not&#13;
expected to learn for themselves&#13;
or feel emotional about what is&#13;
being taught, IS brings a new&#13;
attitude to education. Lindner&#13;
commented that the concept of&#13;
teacher as truth-giver no longer&#13;
stands. Rather than a lot of&#13;
library research, students go into&#13;
society and experience the city.&#13;
To experience, Lindner added,&#13;
one must feel and respond both&#13;
emotionally and intellectually,&#13;
and one must journey into the&#13;
city to feel what it is like.&#13;
No tests or exams will be given,&#13;
but students will be expected to&#13;
submit many papers as well as&#13;
one project. The project involves&#13;
going into the urban community&#13;
and studying, for example, the&#13;
welfare department, welfare&#13;
rights organization, police&#13;
department, or a free health&#13;
clinic. A student can research,&#13;
for instance, attitudes of people&#13;
in a specific area, income&#13;
bracket, or age group.&#13;
"There are no answers in this&#13;
program," said Lindner.&#13;
Students are invited to be involved&#13;
with their education at an&#13;
emotional level; taking pictures,&#13;
writing stories, poems or journals.&#13;
Under this notion it is hoped&#13;
that education becomes a longlived&#13;
knowledge where the&#13;
student can respond, rather than&#13;
a regurgitation at exam time.&#13;
The physical setup for IS is on&#13;
the third floor of the library. One&#13;
large area is provided for the&#13;
entire group and four seminar&#13;
areas have been created where&#13;
students will meet in units of 20.&#13;
The budget allows $1,000 for&#13;
speakers and lecturers to the&#13;
program and $1,000 for films. As&#13;
well as having recorders and&#13;
video equipment available there&#13;
lor students, backup material&#13;
will be used from the Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
The fall semester reading list&#13;
for IS constitutes 15 books. They&#13;
are: The City (lame, Pete Axthelm;&#13;
Manchiid in the Promised&#13;
Land, Claude Brown; Young&#13;
Lonigan, James Farrell; Big City&#13;
Stories, editors Cahill and Cahill;&#13;
Death at an Early Age, Jonathan&#13;
Kozol; The Student as Nigger,&#13;
Jerry Farber; Boss, Mike&#13;
Royko; The Unheavenly City,&#13;
Edward Banfield; The Urban&#13;
Scene: Myths and Realities,&#13;
editor Joe Feagin; Brave New&#13;
World, Aldous Huxley; 1984,&#13;
George Orwell; Looking Backward,&#13;
Edward Bellamy; Prelude&#13;
to Riot. l';r 1 'acobs; Report to&#13;
Engine ( „ pany 82, Dennis&#13;
Smith; and Contemporary Value&#13;
Conflicts, Burton Leiser.&#13;
, With student interest and a&#13;
faculty willing to work as a team&#13;
rather than solo, Parkside can&#13;
expect to see programs such as IS&#13;
develop into a freshmansophomore&#13;
plan. Participants&#13;
need not be A or honor students.&#13;
The selection of students for IS&#13;
ill be based on motivation,&#13;
interest and the effort an individual&#13;
is willing to put forth.&#13;
Students interested in being&#13;
involved are asked to contact any&#13;
faculty member in the program.&#13;
They are: John Buenker,&#13;
assistant protessor of history;&#13;
Mary Johnson. assistant&#13;
prolossor of philosophy; Carl&#13;
Lindner, assistant professor of&#13;
English; William Murin, of&#13;
political science; and Alan&#13;
&gt;1 •; d. assistant professor of&#13;
ON THE INSIDE&#13;
Get involved&#13;
Adults welcome&#13;
(page 3&#13;
(page 4)&#13;
Politics to popular arts&#13;
(page 5&#13;
Campus ecology&#13;
(page 11&#13;
What's the logo? Good&#13;
question. Here is as good an&#13;
answer as could be found.&#13;
The logo is the mark derived&#13;
from two symbols -- The&#13;
anagram UW and the tree forms&#13;
on campus. The symbols have&#13;
been imposed on each other to&#13;
create the mark which is the&#13;
unique identification of Parkside.&#13;
The logo is Parkside's mark. It&#13;
is the element around which the&#13;
university's complete graphic&#13;
What's&#13;
the logo?&#13;
design program is set. The&#13;
complete program is based on a&#13;
book which illustrates exactly&#13;
how letterheads, envelopes,&#13;
pamphlets and any other official&#13;
university graphic design should&#13;
look. That even affects the way&#13;
the logo is placed on campus&#13;
vehicles.&#13;
According to the graphics book&#13;
the logo is to provide instant&#13;
visual identification with&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER Student Information Issue&#13;
Wednesday, August a, 1973&#13;
Advising, counseling important at UW-P&#13;
No. I Resourceyour&#13;
advisor&#13;
tudents' number one resource when it comes to&#13;
things acad mic is their advisor. Whether an individual&#13;
ha declared a major and had a faculty&#13;
advisor assigned, or is undeclared and relies on the&#13;
services of an Academic Advisor of the Counseling&#13;
staff, the advisor is the person who helps the student&#13;
get through general degree requirements, explore&#13;
different major or points directions in one's major&#13;
area.&#13;
From the time a student enters Parkside until he&#13;
or she declares a major, the advisor is a member of&#13;
th counseling staff with special knowledge in a&#13;
broad acadcmi division. uch a Humanities,&#13;
So ial i n ~. . ci nee, Busine or Applied&#13;
i nc and T hnology. Th re i al o an advi or&#13;
for th larg cat gory called "und cided.'' Studen&#13;
can mak appointment with th proper p rson by&#13;
calling th secretary at ext. 2225 and indicating&#13;
which area th y are inter ted in.&#13;
Th general advisors look to provide different&#13;
xpcri nc in different areas, lending som br adth to ·tud nt' scope b for a major i&#13;
Counselors give&#13;
help when needed&#13;
"Anytime something is bothering someone to the&#13;
extent that it interferes with their academic&#13;
progress, then we want to help them out," began&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of Students, in a&#13;
discussion about personal counseling services&#13;
available to students at Parkside. "Very often&#13;
stud nts with academic problems have other things&#13;
on their minds besides school. They need to sort out&#13;
their priorities, and they may need help_. We have&#13;
sensitive. talented, professional counselors here if a&#13;
student run into som ob tacle in the course of his&#13;
or her college car r." They are located in Tallent&#13;
Hall. at ext. 2225.&#13;
d clar d. Th y work closely with faculty in the&#13;
ourse . el tion pro s and can dir t tudents to&#13;
th right p r on if th re is a question th y cannot&#13;
answer. They are available at Orientation,&#13;
R i tration and throughout the year to assist&#13;
stu nts.&#13;
M mber of the Academic Advi ing nd owt eling Staff are, L. to&#13;
R., Jew I Echelbarger, A si tant Dean of Stud nts, and couns lors&#13;
Wendy Musich. Ken Oberbrunner, Wayne Ramirez and Isom F arn.&#13;
'ot pictured: Clay Barnard and Barbara Larson&#13;
Th ounselor d al obje tiv ly with such cone&#13;
rn · a int rpersonal relationship ; making&#13;
friend · g tting into activiti ; the differ nc&#13;
between ideas and standards upheld at home and&#13;
thOl e expr sed at the niversity; feelings of&#13;
discouragement, unhappiness. nervousness or&#13;
inadequacy; dropping out; planning personal life;&#13;
th need for the n e of direction; and coping with&#13;
problems of alcohol, drugs etc. They have con•&#13;
sulting and r ferral r ourc in Racin and&#13;
Kenosha when help is needed b yond the confines of&#13;
the campus. They make sensitive referrals and&#13;
facilitate getting the person to the level of&#13;
a sista.1ce needed.&#13;
Wh n a student r aches a point where h or she&#13;
knows what to major in, a Declaration of Major&#13;
form i. filled out and the appropriate Division office&#13;
,onlinuN! on page 3&#13;
Factory edu~ation?&#13;
''IS'' is an alternative&#13;
Parks1d fr shm n ha\'e th&#13;
opportuntl~ this year to be 1n-&#13;
\' Iv d in a program which will&#13;
. empt th ·m from traditional&#13;
factory education It'. all d th&#13;
l ( Industrial Soci tyl Program&#13;
IS was born from a course&#13;
called •'Th ity." taught last&#13;
y ar b) arl Lindner, assi ·tant&#13;
prof sorofEngli h, and William&#13;
:\turm, a · ·i. Lant prof sor f&#13;
political ·ci nee. rcdits for that&#13;
ur ·e wer available in both&#13;
dis iplin .. From that idea grew&#13;
I , which will be taught by six&#13;
faculty of diff rent field . After&#13;
completing the 18 credit&#13;
program. th student will have&#13;
sati fied both th humaniti and&#13;
social cicnce er dit hour&#13;
requir m nt .&#13;
IS was developed as an&#13;
alternative to the old method&#13;
classroom approach. "Th idea i&#13;
to make knowledg coh rent&#13;
rath r than discreet." Lindner&#13;
explain d. Traditionally, in•&#13;
trodu torv courses do not relate&#13;
to each oth r. The vocabulary a&#13;
polili al s i n major will learn&#13;
do s not carry over into English&#13;
or anthropology. This makes for&#13;
disunity and haos in th fr hmen&#13;
collection of cours s.&#13;
Th theme focus on industrial&#13;
urban Am rica. ne&#13;
hundr d twenty • tudents wi1\ be&#13;
allowed to participate in the&#13;
program. The 20-1 tudentteacher&#13;
ratio brings rnor peronal&#13;
a well as discipline interaction.&#13;
&#13;
As opposed to old institutional&#13;
edu at ion where tud nts ar not&#13;
xpect d to learn for themselves&#13;
or f I emotional about what is&#13;
bein taught. IS bring a new&#13;
ttitud to ducation. Lindner&#13;
comm nted that th con pt of&#13;
t cher as truth-giver no longer&#13;
stand. . Hath r than a lot of&#13;
library re· ar h. s~ud nts go into&#13;
soci ty and expcrienc th cit .&#13;
To ,xpcri nee, Lindn r add d.&#13;
on must f cl and respond both&#13;
emotion, lly and intell ·tually,&#13;
and one must journ y into the&#13;
city to feel what it is like.&#13;
10 test or exam will be given.&#13;
but students will be xpccted to&#13;
submit many papers as well as&#13;
one proj ct. The project involve·&#13;
going into the urban community&#13;
and studying, for example, the&#13;
welfare departm nt, welfare&#13;
rights organization, police&#13;
department. or a free health&#13;
clinic. A stud nt can research,&#13;
for instan e, attitudes of people&#13;
in a specific area, income&#13;
bracket, or age group.&#13;
''Th re arc no answers in this&#13;
program," said Lindner.&#13;
tud nls are invited to be involved&#13;
with their education at an&#13;
emotional level: taking pictures.&#13;
writing stories. poems or jour•&#13;
nals. ndcr this notion it is hopt'd&#13;
that education bt•comes a long•&#13;
lived knowledge wher the&#13;
student c, n rt' ·pond. rather than&#13;
a r gurgitation at xam time.&#13;
'I ht' physical ·etup for IS is on&#13;
the third floor of the library. ne&#13;
larg&lt;' area is provid d for the&#13;
entire group ,.md four seminar&#13;
areas hare b n created where&#13;
students \\ ill me t in units of 20.&#13;
The budg t allow $1.000 for&#13;
speakers ,ind lecturers to the&#13;
program and Sl.000 for films. As&#13;
well as having r cord •r and&#13;
,·id( equipm •nt available th re&#13;
for stud&lt;'nts. backup material&#13;
will IX' usl'&lt;i from the Learning&#13;
'c•nter.&#13;
Th&lt;' fall . em ster reading list&#13;
for JS ·ono.;titute · 15 books Tht&gt;y&#13;
ar • · Tht&gt; Cit~· Game. Pete Axthl'lm:&#13;
,1anrhild in the Prombed&#13;
I.and. Claurl&lt;• Brown: Young&#13;
I.cmigan. Jaml'S Farr 11: Big it)&#13;
Stories. editor Cahill and Cahill:&#13;
Death at an Earl) Age. Jonathan&#13;
Kozol: The Student a :\igger,&#13;
J rry Farber; Bo~~ - l\lik&#13;
.Hoyko: Th&lt;• L'nhea\'enly ('iiy,&#13;
Edward Banfield: The l'rban&#13;
Sl'ene: :\1yths and Realities.&#13;
editor Joe Feagin: Brave New&#13;
World. Aldous Hux! y: 1984,&#13;
eorgC' Or\H'll: Looking Back-&#13;
\Hird. Ed,\ ard B Ila my: Prelude&#13;
lo H iol. I' 1 1 a obs: Report to&#13;
En~int• c ., .pany 82. Dennis&#13;
mith: and ( ·ontempora1·y Value&#13;
Conflicts. Burton Leiser.&#13;
With student interest and a&#13;
faculty willing to work as a team&#13;
rath r than solo. Parkside can&#13;
expect to see programs such as IS&#13;
clrvelop into a fr shmansophomore&#13;
plan. Participants&#13;
need not be A or honor students.&#13;
Th selection of students for IS&#13;
. 111 b based on motivation,&#13;
rnterest and th effort an intli\•idual&#13;
i willing to put forth .&#13;
Stud nts intert'sted in being&#13;
involved ar asked to contact any&#13;
faculty member in the program.&#13;
They are: .John Buenk r,&#13;
a ·sistant prot t•::;sor of history;&#13;
l\lary Johnson. a istant&#13;
prol&lt;'~ ... or of philosophy: Carl&#13;
l.mdn,-r. assistant pr f sor of&#13;
~:n gl 1:--h: William Murin. of&#13;
p11lit 1t·al science : and Alan&#13;
:,t d. a i tant profes or of l·:, _1 , ...&#13;
Counselor Wendy Musich elaborated on her job,&#13;
commenting that nothing is too trivial if it is&#13;
bothering the student. She said the counselors are&#13;
not th re " o hold hand " hilt t9 . P,age in g nuine&#13;
contlnutd on p Qt 3&#13;
ONTHEINSID&#13;
Get involved&#13;
(page 3)&#13;
Adults welcome&#13;
(page 4)&#13;
Politics to popular arts&#13;
(page 5&#13;
Campus ecology&#13;
What's the logo? Good&#13;
question. Here is as good an&#13;
an wer as could be found.&#13;
The logo is the mark derived&#13;
from two symbols -- The&#13;
anagram Wand the tree forms&#13;
on campus. The symbol have&#13;
been imposed on each other to&#13;
reat the mark which is the&#13;
unique id ntifi ation of Parkside.&#13;
The logo is Parksid 's mark. It&#13;
is th elem nt around which th&#13;
univer ity' complete graphic&#13;
(page 11&#13;
What's&#13;
the logo?&#13;
design program is set. The&#13;
complete program is based on a&#13;
book which illustrates exactly&#13;
how letterheads, envelopes,&#13;
pamphlets and any other official&#13;
university graphic design should&#13;
look . That even affects the way&#13;
the logo is placed on campu&#13;
vehicles.&#13;
According to the graphics book&#13;
the logo is to provi.de instant&#13;
visual id ntification with&#13;
Park ide. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. Aug. 8, 1973 EDI TORIAL/OPINION&#13;
An independent&#13;
student paper&#13;
This special Student Information issue of RANGER&#13;
began primarily as a Freshmen Orientation issue.&#13;
However, in compiling the list of articles we found there&#13;
was much information which would benefit all students,&#13;
so we decided to broaden our scope and attempt to more&#13;
fully serve the entire student body. Our main goal is to&#13;
tell you about things you should know concerning your&#13;
University's services: people who can help you, places&#13;
you can go, and activities to get involved in.&#13;
This edition is not, however, the way RANGER will&#13;
appear during the '73-'74 academic year. With this one&#13;
exception RANGER is a student newspaper. The&#13;
Orientation issue originated with the Student Services&#13;
Office; we agreed that an informational issue before the&#13;
semester begins would be very useful. We do not,&#13;
however, want to leave any reader with the impression&#13;
that our paper is normally controlled or censored by any&#13;
of the University staff, faculty or administration. We&#13;
are an independent student newspaper!&#13;
During the coming year RANGER intends to keep the&#13;
students' needs, interests and rights in mind at all&#13;
times. Because our staff is made up entirely of Parkside&#13;
students, it is Parkside students to whom we are committed.&#13;
We also feel a committment to the University, in&#13;
the sense that it should be here to serve the students&#13;
above all else. In order to do that, the administrators&#13;
must hear the clear, honest voice of the students and we&#13;
intend to be that voice.&#13;
RANGER'S philosophy is one of presenting the truth&#13;
as we see it. We will be critical when warranted, but&#13;
such criticism will be based on fact and prompted by&#13;
concern for the University in general and students in&#13;
particular.&#13;
We welcome you all to Parkside for the '73-'74 school&#13;
year, and encourage you to visit our office. We are&#13;
looking forward to an exciting, informative and constructive&#13;
year, and could use your help!&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Dearborn&#13;
Ass't. Chancellor's letter&#13;
The prime function of the University is to educate&#13;
and although by far the bulk of this effort is in the&#13;
classrooms and laboratories, other areas also&#13;
contribute to the total process. It is these student&#13;
services and opportunities which I urge you to seek&#13;
out and make use of in order that you can maximize&#13;
the benefits to be gained here at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Your needs may vary from such things as&#13;
financial assistance and career planning to parttime&#13;
employment, tutoring, or health services. In&#13;
addition you will find staff to assist you in such&#13;
things as forming or joining campus organizations,&#13;
foreign travel, and the planning and production of&#13;
recreational and social events. I hope that you will&#13;
not only partake of these services but through your&#13;
participation that you will greatly add to the&#13;
campus spirit.&#13;
During the past five years it has been popular to&#13;
be indifferent, apathetic, and "anti-establishment"&#13;
but time has a way of effecting attitudinal changes,&#13;
perhaps not as rapidly as in the areas of fashion and&#13;
pop music, but nevertheless as fickle and&#13;
sometimes as drastic. With the slowdown in the&#13;
undeclared war and its divisiveness, we must&#13;
collectively face the challenges of the current&#13;
economic pressures, new job markets, the maintenance&#13;
of our concern for the environment and the&#13;
need to re-establish our country's identity&#13;
especially from within.&#13;
Although, according to recent statistics released&#13;
by the U.S. Department of Labor and others the&#13;
future employment picture for college grads has&#13;
brightened considerably, we should resist the&#13;
temptation to view higher education as solely a&#13;
means to "get ahead." Instead, we should realize&#13;
that there is still a need within us all to seek out new&#13;
ideas as well as to strengthen our knowledge of that&#13;
which exists.&#13;
In looking forward to another year of campus&#13;
progress and growth, it is my hope that all of us can&#13;
"put it together."&#13;
Good luck,&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Ass't Chancellor for Student Services&#13;
Chancellor's letter&#13;
As continuing students and new students I want to&#13;
welcome you to the educational opportunities that&#13;
UW-Parkside provides for young people and adults&#13;
in this part of the state. As a new university we try&#13;
to be different, not in all things, but in those things&#13;
that better serve the individual student. Our earliest&#13;
planning statement, written in February, 1967, said&#13;
that UW-Parkside "will attempt to fit its program to&#13;
the student, rather than the other way around."&#13;
That was a worthy objective then, and it is still&#13;
worthy today. In our self-pacing system, our creditby-examination&#13;
program, the specialized resources&#13;
of our Learning Center, and the new "IS" program&#13;
that will be inaugurated this fall we are making&#13;
special efforts to provide students with individualized&#13;
opportunities and challenges.&#13;
Even in arranging our general course offerings&#13;
our faculty and deans are guided by student&#13;
preferences as expressed in the registrations of&#13;
previous semesters and summers. As consumers,&#13;
therefore, students help determine what is taught,&#13;
and how. But in thinking about new courses and new&#13;
program directions we cannot expect students to&#13;
think of all the exciting new possibilities and options.&#13;
In the matter of academic innovation our first&#13;
reliance has to be on the faculty, the professionals&#13;
who work on the frontiers of knowledge in their&#13;
fields.&#13;
Whether you are here this summer, or plan to be&#13;
with us in the fall,- we want you to feel welcome and&#13;
well-served. We also want you to appreciate our&#13;
individuality, just as we appreciate yours, because&#13;
we too are different.&#13;
Look about you and you will see that UW-Parkside&#13;
is a planned university, not the end product of&#13;
haphazard growth and development. It is a&#13;
physically attractive university, offering students&#13;
(and especially commuters) a most agreeable&#13;
learning environment. The academic program is&#13;
mission-oriented, addressing itself to the&#13;
educational needs of students who will make their&#13;
contributions and live their lives in a modern industrial&#13;
society. In terms of size, UW-Parkside is&#13;
big enough to offer a broad and varied program,&#13;
and small enough to permit easy personal contact&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
and stimulating encounter among students and&#13;
staff. In many standard measures of quality,&#13;
coverng such items as laboratories, library&#13;
resources, and faculty qualifications, UW-Parkside&#13;
has already outdistanced many long-established&#13;
colleges and universities.&#13;
Through a well-informed visitor I learned&#13;
recently that our new Computing Center has more&#13;
computing capacity than is available in all of India.&#13;
Neither the government of India, nor any of its&#13;
businesses or industries, nor any of its universities&#13;
can presently match the capabilities of the Center&#13;
that serves our students and faculty. Astonishing,&#13;
but true.&#13;
This university is young, still pliable, still capable&#13;
of being shaped and formed by those who are in its&#13;
midst. We are glad that you are here, to take advantage&#13;
of what we have to give, and to contribute&#13;
to the building of an even better university for those&#13;
who in another season will follow after you.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
University Regulations Affecting&#13;
Student Life: Chapter VIII, 8.03&#13;
(3)&#13;
"The search for truth is the&#13;
central duty of the University,&#13;
but truth will not be found if the&#13;
scholar is not free, it will not be&#13;
understood if the student is not&#13;
free, it will not be used if the&#13;
citizen is not free. At a time when&#13;
both truth and freedom are under&#13;
attack the University of&#13;
Wisconsin must seek the one and&#13;
_defendiitheiOtherJ[tn^&#13;
with utmost energy the power of&#13;
truth and freedom for the benefit&#13;
of mankind."&#13;
University Regulations Affecting&#13;
Student Life: Chapter VIII, 8.04&#13;
(1)&#13;
"The University regulates the&#13;
time, place and manner of&#13;
conducting political activity by&#13;
students on the campus to&#13;
prevent interference with&#13;
University operations."&#13;
r -VL 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 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
rellected 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;
De w ithheld 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;
Kat'tvrvn WRITERS: Jane Schliesman, Debra Friedell, Becky Ecklund,&#13;
Kathryn Wellner, Rudy Lienau, Tom Petersen Dan Marry&#13;
OTOGRAPHERS, Ken Konkol, David Daniels, Michael Swaningson, Debra&#13;
Friedell&#13;
LAYOUT: Becky Ecklund, Bruce Wagner, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Kenneth Pestka&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopr iva&#13;
? REPRESENTED NATIONAL ADVERTISING »Y&#13;
National Educational Advertising Services, Inc.&#13;
360 Ltaington Ave., New York, N. 10017&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed. Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
An independent&#13;
student paper&#13;
This special Student Information issue of RANGER&#13;
began primarily as a Freshmen Orientation issue.&#13;
However, in compiling the list of articles we found there&#13;
was much information whicb would benefit all students,&#13;
so we decided to broaden ou.r scope and attempt to more&#13;
fully serve the entire student body. Our main goal fs to&#13;
tell you about things you should know concerning your&#13;
University's services: people who can help you, places&#13;
you can go, and activities to get involved in.&#13;
This edition ls not, however, the way RANGER will&#13;
appear during the '73-'74 academic year. With this one&#13;
exception RANGER is a student newspaper. The&#13;
Orientation issue originated with the Student Services&#13;
Office; we agreed that an information al Issue before the&#13;
semester begins would be very useful. We do not,&#13;
however, want to leave any reader with the Impression&#13;
that our paper is normally controlled or censored by any&#13;
of the University staff, faculty or administration. We&#13;
are an independent student newspaper!&#13;
During the coming year RANGER Intends to keep the&#13;
students' needs, interests and rights in mind at a 11&#13;
times. Because our staff is made up entirely of Parkside&#13;
students, it Is Parkside students to whom we are committed.&#13;
We also feel a commlttment to the University, in&#13;
the sense that it should be here to serve the students&#13;
above all else. In order to do that, the administrators&#13;
must hear the clear, honest voice of the students and we&#13;
intend to be that voice.&#13;
RANGER'S philosophy is one of presenting the truth&#13;
as we see It. We wlJI be critical when warranted, but&#13;
such criticism will be based on fact and prompted by&#13;
concern for the University in general and students in&#13;
particular.&#13;
We welcome you all to Parkside for the '73-'74 school&#13;
year, and encourage you to visit our office. We are&#13;
looking forward to an exciting, informative and constructive&#13;
year, and could use your help!&#13;
Chancellor's letter&#13;
As continuing students and new students I want to&#13;
welcome you to the educational opportunities that&#13;
UW-Parkside provides for young people and adults&#13;
in this part of the state. As a new university we try&#13;
to be different, not in all things, but in those things&#13;
that better serve the individual student. Our earliest&#13;
planning statement, written in February, 1967, said&#13;
that UW-Parkside "will attempt to fit its program to&#13;
the student, rather than the other way around."&#13;
That was a worthy objective then, and it is still&#13;
worthy today. In our self-pacing system, our creditby-examination&#13;
program, the specialized resources&#13;
of our Learning Center, and the new "IS" program&#13;
that will be inaugurated this fall we are making&#13;
special efforts to provide students with individualized&#13;
opportunities and challenges.&#13;
EDITORIAL/OPINION&#13;
Assl tant Chancellor Dearborn&#13;
Ass 't. Chancellor's letter&#13;
The prime function of the University is to educate&#13;
and although by far the bulk of this effort is in the&#13;
classrooms and laboratories, other areas also&#13;
contribute to the total process. It is these student&#13;
services and opportunities which I urge you to seek&#13;
out and make use of in order that you can maximize&#13;
the benefits to be gained here at UW-Parkside.&#13;
Your needs may vary from such things as&#13;
financial assistance and career planning to parttime&#13;
employment, tutoring, or health services. In&#13;
addition you will find staff to assist you in such&#13;
things as forming or joining campus organizations,&#13;
foreign travel, and the planning and production of&#13;
recreational and social events. I hope that you will&#13;
not only partake of these services but through your&#13;
participation that you will greatly add to the&#13;
campus pirit.&#13;
During the past five years it has been popular to&#13;
be indifferent, apathetic, and "anti-establishment"&#13;
but time has a way of effecting attitudinal changes,&#13;
perhaps not as rapidly as in the areas of fashion and&#13;
pop music, but nevertheless as fickle and&#13;
sometimes as drastic. With the slowdown in the&#13;
undeclared war and its divisiven s we must&#13;
ollectively face the challenges of the current&#13;
economic pressures, new job markets, the maintenance&#13;
of our concern for th environment and the&#13;
need to re-establish our country's identity pecially from within. '&#13;
Although, according to recent statistics released&#13;
by the U.S. D partment of Labor and others the&#13;
future employment picture for college grads' has&#13;
brightened considerably, we should resist the&#13;
temptation to view higher ducation as solely a&#13;
means to "get ahead." Instead, we should realize&#13;
that there is still a need within us all to seek out new&#13;
ideas as well as to strengthen our knowledge of that&#13;
which exists.&#13;
In looking forward lo another year of campus&#13;
progress and growth, it i my hope that all of us can "put it together."&#13;
Good luck,&#13;
Allen 8. Dearborn&#13;
Ass't hancellor for Student Services&#13;
niversity Regulations Affecting&#13;
Student Life: Chapter Vlll, 8.03&#13;
(3)&#13;
with utmost energy the power of&#13;
truth and freedom for the benefit&#13;
"The search for truth is the of mankind."&#13;
central duty of th niversity,&#13;
but truth will not be found if the&#13;
scholar is not free. it wiJI not be&#13;
understood if the student is not&#13;
free, it will not be used if the&#13;
citizen is not free. At a time when&#13;
both truth and freedom are under&#13;
attack the University of&#13;
Wisconsin must seek the one and&#13;
defend the other. It must em lo&#13;
Univ r ity R gulation Aff Ung&#13;
Student Life: Chapter VIII. 8.04&#13;
(l)&#13;
"The University regulates the&#13;
time, place and manner of&#13;
conducting political activity by&#13;
students on the campus to&#13;
prevent interference with&#13;
ni versity operations."&#13;
ir.. The Petb#Ja&#13;
Even in arranging our general course offerings RANGER our faculty and deans are guided by student&#13;
preferences as expressed in the registrations of&#13;
previous semesters and summers. As consumers,&#13;
therefore, students help determine what is taught,&#13;
and how. But in thinking about new courses and new&#13;
program directions we cannot expect students to&#13;
think of all the exciting new possibilities and options.&#13;
In the matter of academic innovation our first&#13;
reliance has to be on the faculty, the professionals&#13;
who work on the frontiers of knowledge in their&#13;
fields.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie&#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 LlbraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
Whether you are here this summer, or plan to be&#13;
with us in the fall; we want you to feel welcome and&#13;
well-served. We also want you to appreciate our&#13;
individuality, just as we appreciate yours, because&#13;
we too are different.&#13;
Look about you and you will see that UW-Parkside&#13;
is a planned university, not the end product of&#13;
haphazard growth and development. It is a&#13;
phy ically attractive university, offering students&#13;
&lt;and especially commuters) a most agreeable&#13;
learning environment. The academic program is&#13;
mission-oriented, addressing itself to the&#13;
educational needs of students who will make their&#13;
contributions and live their lives in a modern industrial&#13;
society. In terms or size, UW-Parkside is&#13;
big enough to offer a broad and varied program,&#13;
and small enough to permit easy personal contact&#13;
and stimulating encounter among students and&#13;
staff. In many standard measures of quality,&#13;
coverng such items as laboratories, library&#13;
resources, and faculty qualifications, lJW•Parkside&#13;
has already outdistanced many long-e tablished&#13;
colleges and universities.&#13;
Through a well-informed visitor I learned&#13;
recently that our new Computing Center has more&#13;
computing capacity than is available in all of India.&#13;
Neither the government of India, nor any of its&#13;
businesses or industries, nor any of its universities&#13;
can presently match the capabilities of the Center&#13;
that serves our students and faculty. Astonishing,&#13;
but true.&#13;
This university is young, still pliable, still capable&#13;
of being shaped and formed by those who are in its&#13;
midst. We are glad that you are here, to take advantage&#13;
of what we have to give, and to contribute&#13;
to the building of an even better university for those&#13;
who in another season will follow after you.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~nected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University or Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraaed. All letters on any subJect of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
less, typed pnd double-spaced. The editors reserve the ri&amp;ht to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All let ten 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 rlaht to refuse to&#13;
print any letter,.&#13;
Classified and diaplay ad ratea will be furnished upon requ t.&#13;
EDITORS ANO WRITERS: Jene Schllesman, Debra Frledeil, Becky Ecklund,&#13;
Kethryn W•lln&amp;r. Rudy Lleneu , Tom Pet rsen oan Marrv&#13;
PHOTOGRAPr.ERS, Ken Konkol, Oav,d Daniels, M1ch11e1 Swan1nQSOl'I, [)ebl'II&#13;
Friedel!&#13;
LAYOUT: Becky Ecklund, Brue~ Wagner, stall&#13;
IIUSINESS MANAGER· Kenn th p tka&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopr,ve&#13;
'&#13;
,I.IPI.IIINTID l'0l MA TIONAL ADVDT1UNO IY ---&#13;
Nataonal Educational Advertiain1 Service•, Inc. Q&#13;
J60 LHl"lton A•••• Ntw Yotk., N. l', l00l7 &#13;
Involvement&#13;
needed&#13;
A great variety of student activities and&#13;
organizations await students this fall. Politics&#13;
religion, and athletics are just a few examples of the&#13;
diverse types of organizations which exist for the&#13;
education and enjoyment of every student. Besides&#13;
providing entertainment, intellectual stimulation,&#13;
and information, these groups also contribute to a&#13;
spirit of mutuality among students at Parkside.&#13;
Fraternities&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda, a national fraternity, aims&#13;
tor both service and social activities, directing&#13;
these to the campus and the areas from which&#13;
Parkside students come. A fraternity strives to&#13;
develop the individual member both academically&#13;
and socially. It offers the individual the opportunity&#13;
to assume responsibilities and provides him with an&#13;
avenue to acquire knowledge and experience. It is a&#13;
social organization, providing an environment&#13;
where an individual can develop friends who are&#13;
always ready to assist him. For further information&#13;
about Alpha Kappa Lambda, stop at their table&#13;
during registration or contact one of the officersGeorge&#13;
Kis (632-4742), John Sorenson (634-1691), or&#13;
Dave Otto (632-3385).&#13;
The statement of purpose of the Sigma Pi&#13;
fraternity, states, "No other agency in college&#13;
provides a better training ground for future life than&#13;
does the fraternity. Athletics, social affairs, participation&#13;
in community and campus projects, and&#13;
living with other people are as much a part of the&#13;
educational process as the classroom, books, and&#13;
study. No one activity is given precedence in Sigma&#13;
Pi; all are encouraged. A fraternity enables each&#13;
man to broaden his contacts, enhance his opportunities,&#13;
and make the most out of college life."&#13;
For further information, visit the table at&#13;
registration or see Kenneth Oberbruner in Room 237&#13;
of Tallent Hall,,&#13;
Athletic Organizations&#13;
The Parkside Soccer Club is "an integral part of&#13;
the Parkside athletic program, designed to give any&#13;
student or staff member an opportunity to participate&#13;
on a competitive, yet recreational, basis.&#13;
Club sports often involve competition against other&#13;
colleges and universities, without having to follow&#13;
the stringent eligibility requirements of the varsity&#13;
program." This club was organized two years ago;&#13;
the 1973-74 program will include both indoor and&#13;
outdoor tournaments and matches. For further&#13;
information, contact Coach Hal Henderson at extension&#13;
2245.&#13;
The Varsity Club is open to any male or female&#13;
Varsity letter winner or cheerleader. The club&#13;
functions primarily as an organization promoting&#13;
fellowship among the athletes. Club activities include&#13;
monthly meetings, recreational sessions,&#13;
hosting of the annual Sportsfest Dance, concessions&#13;
at athletic events, an annual spring picnic, and two&#13;
annual Awards Banquets. Besides these regular&#13;
activities, the Varsity Club plans to hold several&#13;
fund raising projects in 1973-74. For more information,&#13;
contact Keith Merritt, Mike Kopczynski,&#13;
Kathy DeWitt, or Coach Hal Henderson.&#13;
The Mat Maids are cheerleaders for the Parkside&#13;
Wrestling team; their purpose is to "promote the&#13;
sport of Wrestling and to encourage the team by&#13;
cheering during the meets." The membership of&#13;
this group has increased by 50 percent since its&#13;
organization in 1970. They attend all wrestling&#13;
meets, the NAIA National Tournament, and the&#13;
annual Wrestling Clinic sponsored by Parkside.&#13;
More information can be obtained from Wrestling&#13;
Coach Jim Koch.&#13;
Parkside Christian Fellowship&#13;
Parkside Christian Fellowship is a non-sectarian&#13;
organization which states its purpose as: 1. To&#13;
witness to the Lord Jesus Christ as God incarnate,&#13;
and to seek to lead others to personal faith in Him as&#13;
Lord and Savior; 2. To deepen and strengthen the&#13;
spiritual life of students and faculty by the study of&#13;
the Bible, by prayer, and by Christian fellowship; 3.&#13;
To present the call of God to the foreign mission&#13;
field to help all students discover God's will for&#13;
them at home or abroad, in world-wide&#13;
evangelization.&#13;
The Parkside Christian Fellowships plans for this.&#13;
year include Bible studies, prayer meetings, a book&#13;
table, attending a missionary convention, and&#13;
special meetings with guesi. lecturers. To get more&#13;
information about the PCF, contact Tom Frei (652-&#13;
0002), Sue Dubinsky (652-3042), or Barbara Larson&#13;
(554-7945).&#13;
Students International Meditation Society&#13;
This is a non-profit organization which teaches&#13;
Transcendental Meditation as it is taught by&#13;
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. "Transcendental&#13;
Meditation is a simple, effortless mental technique&#13;
which allows the conscious capacity of the mind to&#13;
experience a field of pure creative intelligence, or&#13;
pure consciousness, the basis of all happiness,&#13;
energy, and intelligence. Simultaneously, as the&#13;
mind settles down to the subtler, more quiet levels&#13;
ol the thinking process, and experiences expansion&#13;
of awareness, the body settles down. A profound&#13;
state of physiological rest is experienced which is&#13;
deeper than deep sleep. This rest permits deeplooted&#13;
stresses and fatigue to be released. As a&#13;
result, students who practice TM regularly for 15-20&#13;
minutes, twice a day, find that they feel fresher and&#13;
more awake, more relaxed and restful during&#13;
dynamic activity. Students get better grades, have&#13;
more harmonious behavior, and enjoy life more.""&#13;
Lectures by the society will be announced by&#13;
Waters; there will be a table at registration, and&#13;
2647 n is available lor questions at 639-&#13;
_ Parkside Young Republicans&#13;
The Parkside Young Republicans state their&#13;
purpose as follows: "To organize and disseminate&#13;
information regarding Republican philosophy and&#13;
candidates, to assist in campaigns of said candidates&#13;
and support the activities and ideals of the&#13;
Republican Party of Wisconsin." The club was&#13;
organized in September of 1972; plans for this&#13;
coming year include boosting membership, holding&#13;
tund-raising activities, and becoming more active&#13;
in state and national organizations. The PYRs will&#13;
have a table at registration. Contact Marilyn&#13;
Schubert (658-8954) or Julie Surendonk (633-0929).&#13;
Parkside ZPG&#13;
"Zero Population Growth is dedicated to the idea&#13;
that a reasonable quality of life for all of the world's&#13;
people cannot be achieved without population&#13;
stabilization. Consequently, ZPG advocates that&#13;
each family limit itself voluntarily to two children&#13;
(on the average), which would ensure that each&#13;
person replaces him-her self. ZPG is working to&#13;
achieve this goal through public education and&#13;
political activity." Future plans include a membership&#13;
drive and revision of the Parkside birth&#13;
control information pamphlet. Come to the table at&#13;
registration or write (through campus mail) to&#13;
Parkside ZPG, Box 127, Student Organizations, UWParkside.&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum&#13;
The Parkside Poetry Forum was founded three&#13;
years ago "to promote interest in poetry." It has&#13;
sponsored student poetry readings, several writing&#13;
workshops, brought in a number of famous guest&#13;
poets (Gwendolyn Brooks, Don Lee), and also held a&#13;
symposia on "Irish Writing Today." Plans for this&#13;
year include a regular bi-weekly series of poetry&#13;
events beginning with a troubador night open to all&#13;
students who can play guitar or banjo. For more&#13;
information, see advisors Alan Shucard or Carl&#13;
Lindner. Officers will be elected in September.&#13;
Parkside Women 's Caucus&#13;
It is the belief of the Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
that "the isolation of women from each other has&#13;
left them individually weak and collectively&#13;
powerless, 'perpetuating passivity and inhibiting&#13;
action. This forced isolation is a major tool in&#13;
maintaining our oppression. To generate strength&#13;
women must unite and organize. The Women's&#13;
Caucus at Parkside exists to bring about sisterhood&#13;
through a maturing collective consciousness,&#13;
manifested through action within the campus&#13;
community and in conjunction with outside groups&#13;
for certain projects.&#13;
A higher level of consciousness comes when&#13;
emotional reality and intellectual realization are on&#13;
the same level. Our meetings are based primarily&#13;
on communication; through sharing our experiences&#13;
we can come to understand our commonality&#13;
and the nature of the myths which&#13;
surround us. Only in this way can we achieve&#13;
freedom from our legacy of guilt and inadequacy&#13;
and find the courage to initiate change in the&#13;
system. Each woman must know that her experiences&#13;
and feelings are valid, and further, that&#13;
she possesses her own values, talents, and individual&#13;
worth, as do each of her sisters.&#13;
To maintain and utilize a developing sisterhood on&#13;
campus, a number of goals have been established&#13;
for this year. First of all, in order to free more&#13;
women to take advantage of their right to&#13;
education, we support the Parkside Child Care&#13;
Center and the Adult Outreach effort by the Student&#13;
Services Office. Secondly, the Caucus feels it&#13;
necessary to watchdog employment procedures and&#13;
hiring practices of the administration, partly to&#13;
insure just application of Affirmative Action&#13;
guidelines. We intend also to work toward the&#13;
elimination of sexist teaching theories by faculty,&#13;
and the subjugation of women by the university in&#13;
general.&#13;
More specific plans include a Womens Day to be&#13;
held on campus and the creation and organization of&#13;
a Womens Studies program at Parkside. We feel&#13;
that we must learn how our oppression evolved and&#13;
maintained itself before we will be free to eliminate&#13;
it from the system. This then, will be an integral&#13;
part of such a program and of the Caucus' general&#13;
orientation."&#13;
For more information or to become a member of&#13;
the Parkside Women's Caucus, contact Debra&#13;
Friedell (554-8535) or leave a message in the&#13;
Student Activities Office (LLC-D197)&#13;
Other groups which were active last year include&#13;
the Art Club, Black Student Union, Parkside Film&#13;
Society, German Club, Indications, Newmann Club,&#13;
Philanthropist Club, Pep Band, Pre-Law Club, UWP&#13;
Pre-Meds, UW-P Psychology Club, Ragtime&#13;
Rangers, Rangerettes, Parkside Rugby Club,&#13;
Parkside Student Government Association, Student&#13;
Wisconsin Education Association-UW-Parkside,&#13;
and United Latin Students Coalition of UWParkside.&#13;
Information about these other groups can&#13;
be obtained through the Student Activities Office.&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
No. 1 resource. . .&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
assigns a faculty advisor. Indictation of a&#13;
preference for a particular advisor may be made on&#13;
the form. Faculty advisors help structure programs&#13;
with an eye toward meeting requirements in the&#13;
major and selecting interesting and appropriate&#13;
electives.&#13;
The student is responsible for making the initial&#13;
contact with their major advisor. Consultation prior&#13;
to each registration is strongly recommended.&#13;
To take an additional major the student should&#13;
contact the divisional office in which the major is&#13;
located to arrange for faculty advising in that field.&#13;
Or it may be noted on the original Declaration of&#13;
Major form when the student initially fills it out.&#13;
Advising for the second major may be done informally&#13;
at the discretion of the Division office.&#13;
If a student who has declared a major decides to&#13;
change it, a Change of Major form must be&#13;
pickedup at the Division office of the original major.&#13;
Filing a Change of Major form will initiate the&#13;
student's transfer to a new major advisor.&#13;
Whether a major has or has not been declared,&#13;
another service available to students is the Career&#13;
Resource Center. Staffed by counselors Barbara&#13;
Larson and Clay Barnard, it is located in Tallent&#13;
Hall, ext. 2122. T he career planning staff help undecided&#13;
students search our possiblities, choose&#13;
relevant courses, define their interests and decide&#13;
on a major. They also help declared majors in&#13;
picking career goals.&#13;
They offer exploratory career interviews and&#13;
computerized career inventory testing, both of&#13;
which assist students in determining career interests&#13;
and objectives. The Center also has a&#13;
comprehensive collection of books, magazines and&#13;
pamphlets with information covering thousands of&#13;
occupations. The career counselors can direct a&#13;
student to materials pertaining to his or her interest.&#13;
They also aid students in reviewing data,&#13;
examining facts gathered, and hopefully formulating&#13;
career goals.&#13;
Applications and preparation books for the&#13;
Graduate Record Exam, Miller Analogies Test,&#13;
Medical College Admission Test, Dental College&#13;
Aptitude Exam and Law School Admission Test are&#13;
also available here. The Career Resource Center is;&#13;
available to students throughout their college life,&#13;
and many students may want to use its services&#13;
often.&#13;
Counselor Clay Barnard aids a student in the&#13;
Career Resource Center.&#13;
help when needed&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
problem-solving sessions with people who want&#13;
help.&#13;
She indicated that students come to her with a&#13;
wide variety of concerns. Some are depressed about&#13;
a death in the family; others have problems in their&#13;
personal relations with friends and family.&#13;
"Sometimes there's a conflict between what your&#13;
head is doing here and what's going on at home,"&#13;
Musich explained.&#13;
Other problems involve identity. "It may sound&#13;
trite, but 'identity crisis' is still a very genuine thing&#13;
for a lot of people. They have hang-ups about their&#13;
sexual identity, their role, their place in the family.&#13;
They ask themselves questions like 'what am I&#13;
doing here, should I be here, am I doing this to&#13;
please someone else?"' said Musich. She went on to&#13;
explain that many students encounter a different&#13;
set of experiences, and all the landmarks they had&#13;
and were guided by are gone. They have to think&#13;
about who they are. They are dealing with new&#13;
kinds of pressures, new inter-personal relationships.&#13;
&#13;
Sometimes, too, there are addiction problems.&#13;
Other times the counselors may be dealing with&#13;
room-mate hassles. "Whatever the problem, our&#13;
job is to aid you in thinking about solutions so you&#13;
can get on with your life," concluded Musich.&#13;
Involvement&#13;
needed&#13;
A great variety of tudent activiti and&#13;
organizations await tudents thi fall. Politics.&#13;
r ligion. and athl ti are just a few exampl of the&#13;
divers typ of organizations which exi t for the&#13;
edu ation and njoyment of very tudent. B id&#13;
providing tertainment. intell tual stimulation.&#13;
and information, these groups also contribute to a&#13;
spirit of mutuality among tud nt at Park ·ide.&#13;
Fraterniti&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda, a national fraternity, aims&#13;
for both service and social activities, directing&#13;
th e to the campus and the areas from which&#13;
Parkside students come. A fraternity strives to&#13;
develop the individual member both academicaHy&#13;
and socially. It offers the individual the opportunity&#13;
to a ume r ponsibilities and provid him with an&#13;
avenu to acquire knowledge and experience. It is a&#13;
social organization, providing an environment&#13;
where an individual can develop friends who are&#13;
always ready to assist him. For further information&#13;
about Alpha Kappa Lambda, stop at their table&#13;
during registration or contact one of the officers: George Kis (632-4742), John SorenS-On (634-1691), or&#13;
Dave Otto (632-3385).&#13;
The statement or purpose of the Sigma Pi&#13;
fraternity, states, "No other agency in college&#13;
provides a better training ground for future life than&#13;
do the fraternity. Athletics, social affairs, participation&#13;
in community and campus projects, and&#13;
living with other people are as much a part of the&#13;
educational process as the classroom, books, and&#13;
tudy. o one activity is given precedence in Sigma&#13;
Pi· all are ncouraged. A fraternity enables each&#13;
m~ to broaden his contacts, enhance his opportunities,&#13;
and make the most out of college life."&#13;
For further information, visit the table at&#13;
registration or see Kenneth Oberbruner in Room 237&#13;
of Tallent Hall ..&#13;
Athletic Organizations&#13;
The Parkside Soccer Club is "an integral part of&#13;
the Parkside athletic program, designed to give any&#13;
student or staff member an opportunity to participate&#13;
on a competitive, yet recreational, basis.&#13;
Club sports often involve competition against other&#13;
colleges and universities, without having to follow&#13;
the stringent eligibility requirements of the varsity&#13;
program." This chJb was organized two years ago;&#13;
the 1973-74 program will include both indoor and&#13;
outdoor tournaments and matches. For further&#13;
information, contact Coach Hal Henderson at extension&#13;
2245.&#13;
The Var ity Club is open to any male or female&#13;
Varsity letter winner or cheerleader. The club&#13;
functions primarily as an organization promoting&#13;
fellowship among the athletes. Club activities include&#13;
monthly meetings, recreational sessions,&#13;
hosting of th annual Sportsfest Dance, concessions&#13;
at athletic events, an annual spring picnic, and two&#13;
annual Awards Banquets. Besides these regular&#13;
activiti the Varsity Club plans to hold several&#13;
fund rai~ing projects in 1973-74. For more information,&#13;
contact Keith Merritt, Mike Kopczynski,&#13;
Kathy DeWitt, or Coach Hal Henderson. .&#13;
The Mat Maids are cheerlead rs for the Parkside&#13;
Wr Uing team; their purpose is to "promote the&#13;
sport of Wrestling and to encourage the teat? by&#13;
ch ring during the meets." The membe':3hiP _of&#13;
this group has increased by 50 percent smce _its&#13;
organization in 1970. They attend all wrestling&#13;
m ts th NAIA ational Tournament, and th&#13;
annual Wr tling Clinic sponS-Ored by Parkside.&#13;
More information can be obtained from Wrestling&#13;
Coach Jim Koch.&#13;
Park. Ide hri tlan Fellowship&#13;
Park ide Christian Fellowship is a non-sectarian&#13;
organization which tates its purpose as: 1. To&#13;
witness to the Lord Jesus Christ as God incarnate,&#13;
and to k to lead others to personal faith in Him as&#13;
Lord and Savior; 2. To deepen and strengthen the&#13;
spiritual life of students and fac~tr by the stu?y of&#13;
th Bibi . by prayer, and by Christian fellowship; 3.&#13;
To present the call of God to the foreign mission&#13;
field to help all students di cover God's will for&#13;
them at home or abroad, in world-wide&#13;
evangelizalion. . The Parkside hristian Fellowships plans for !,his.&#13;
y ar include Bible studies, prayer meetings, a book&#13;
table, attending a mi sionary convention, and&#13;
pecial m ting with gue , lecturers. To get_ more&#13;
information about the P F, contact Tom Frei (652-&#13;
0002), u Dubinsky (652-3042), or Barbara Larson&#13;
&lt; 554-7945 l . Students lnternat.ional ileditation Society&#13;
This is a non-profit organization which teaches&#13;
Transcendental Meditation as it is taught by&#13;
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. "Transcendental&#13;
Meditation is a simple, efforUes mental technique&#13;
which allows the conscious capacity of the mind to&#13;
experience a field of pure cre~tive intelligen~e. or&#13;
pure con ciousnes~, the b~s1s of all happm ,&#13;
energy, and intelhgence. Simultaneously, as the&#13;
mind settles down to the ubtler, more quiet.levels&#13;
of the thinking process, and experiences expansion&#13;
of awareness, the body settles down. A profound&#13;
state of phy, iological rest is experienced which is&#13;
d eper than d p sleep. This rest permits deeprooted&#13;
stre and fatigue t-0 be released. As a&#13;
r ult, students who practic TM regularly for 15-20&#13;
minute . twice a day. find that they feeJ fresher and&#13;
more awake, more relaxed and r tful durh_.g&#13;
dynamic activity. Students get better grades, have.&#13;
more harmoniou · behavior, and njoy life more."&#13;
Lectur by the society will be announced by&#13;
i.,.,.)ter ; lh re will be a table at registration, and&#13;
Andy Goodman is available for questions at 639- 2647. P rk id Young Republican&#13;
The Park 1d Young Republicans tate their&#13;
purpose as follows: "To organize and dis eminate&#13;
information regarding Republican philoS-Ophy and&#13;
candidat , to as i t in c mpaigns of aid candidat&#13;
and support the activiti and id al of the&#13;
Republican Party of Wisconsin." The club was&#13;
organized in September of 1972; plan for this&#13;
coming y ar include boo ting membership, holding&#13;
fund-raising activities, and becoming more active&#13;
in late and national organizations. The PYRs will&#13;
have a table at registration. Contact Marilyn&#13;
Schubert (658-8954) or Julie urendonk (633-0929).&#13;
Parksid ZPG&#13;
"Zero Population Growth is dedicated to the idea&#13;
that a reasonable quality of life for all of the world's&#13;
peopl cannot be achieved without population&#13;
stabilization. Consequently, ZPG advocates that&#13;
each family limit itself voluntarily to two children&#13;
(on the average), which would ensure that each&#13;
person replaces him-her self. ZPG is working to&#13;
achieve this goal through public education and&#13;
political activity." Future plans include a membership&#13;
drive and revision of the Parkside birth&#13;
control information pamphlet. Come t-0 the table at&#13;
registration or write {through campus mail) to&#13;
Parkside ZPG, Box 1Z7, Student Organizations, UWParksi~.&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum&#13;
The Parkside Poetry Forum was founded three&#13;
years ago "to promote interest in poetry." It has&#13;
sponsored student poetry readings, several writing&#13;
workshops. brought in a number of famous guest&#13;
po ts (Gwendolyn Brooks, Don Lee), and also held a&#13;
symposia on "Irish Writing foday." Plans for this&#13;
year include a regular bi-weekly series of po try&#13;
events beginning with a troubador night open to all&#13;
students who can play guitar or banjo. For more&#13;
information, see advisors Alan Shucard or Carl&#13;
Lindner. Officers will be elected in September.&#13;
Parkside Women's Caucus&#13;
It is the belief of the Park ide Women's Caucus&#13;
that "the iS-Olation of women from each other has&#13;
left them individually weak and collectively&#13;
powerless, 'perpetuating passivity and inhibiting&#13;
action. This forced isolation is a major tool in&#13;
maintaining our oppression. To generate strength&#13;
women must unite and organize. The Women's&#13;
Caucus at Parkside exists to bring about sisterhood&#13;
through a maturing collective consciousness,&#13;
manifested through action within the campus&#13;
community and in conjunction with outside groups&#13;
for certain projects.&#13;
A higher level of consciousness comes when&#13;
emotional reality and intellectual realization are on&#13;
the same level. Our meetings are based primarily&#13;
on communication; through sharing our ex- periences we can come to understand our commonality&#13;
and the nature of the myths which&#13;
surround us. Only in this way can we achieve&#13;
freedom from our legacy of guilt and inadequacy&#13;
and find the courage to initiate change in the&#13;
system. Each woman must know that her experiences&#13;
and feelings are valid, and further, that&#13;
she possesses her own values, talents, and individual&#13;
worth, as do each of her sisters.&#13;
To maintain and utilize a developing sisterhood on&#13;
campus, a number of goals have been established&#13;
for this year. First of all, in ord r to free more&#13;
women to take advantage of their right to&#13;
education, we support the Parkside_ Child care&#13;
Center and the Adult Outreach effort by the Student&#13;
Services Office. Secondly, the Caucus feels it&#13;
nee sary to watchdog employment procedures and&#13;
hiring practices of the administration, partly to&#13;
insure just application of Affirmative Action&#13;
guidelines. We intend also to work toward the&#13;
elimination or sexist teaching theories by faculty,&#13;
and the subjugation of women by the WJiversity in&#13;
gen ral.&#13;
More specific plans include a Womens Day to be&#13;
h Id on campus and the creation and organization of&#13;
a Womens Studies program at Parkside. We feel&#13;
that we must learn how our oppression evolved and&#13;
maintained itself before we will be free to eliminate&#13;
it from the system. This then, will be an integral&#13;
part of such a program and of the Caucus' general&#13;
orientation.''&#13;
For more information or to become a member of&#13;
the Parkside Women's aucus. contact Debra&#13;
Friedell (554-8535&gt; or leave a message in the&#13;
Student Activities ffice (LLC·D1971 . th r groups which wer a live last year include&#13;
the Art Club, Black Student Union, Parkside Film&#13;
Society, German Club. Indications, Newmann Club,&#13;
Philanthropist Club, Pep Band, Pre-Law Club, l!W·&#13;
p Pre-Meds, UW-P Psychology Club, Ragtime&#13;
Rangers Rangerettes, Parkside Rugby Club,&#13;
Parksid~ Student Government Association, Student&#13;
Wisconsin Education Association-UW-Parkside.&#13;
and United Latin Students Coalition of UWParksid&#13;
. Information about these other groups can&#13;
be obtained through the Student Activities Office.&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
No. 1 resource . .. continued from ~ 1&#13;
assigns a faculty advisor. Ind.ictation or a&#13;
pr ference for a particular advi or may b made on&#13;
the form Faculty advi or help tructure program&#13;
with an eye toward m eting requirements in the&#13;
m Jor and ·electing intere.tm and appropriate&#13;
el Liv .&#13;
Th student is re pon ible for making the initial&#13;
contact with their major advisor. Co ultation prior&#13;
to i'ach regi tration i trongly recommend d.&#13;
To take an additional major the ·tudent hould&#13;
contact the divi ·ional office in which the major i&#13;
local d to arrang for faculty advising in that fi Id.&#13;
Or it may be noted on th original Declara~ion of&#13;
• fajor form when the tud n! initially fill 1t o~l.&#13;
dvi ing for th ond maJor may b done m•&#13;
formally at the discretion of the Division office.&#13;
If a student who ha d clared a m jor d c1d to&#13;
change it, a hange of Major ro~. mu t . be&#13;
pickedup at the Divi ion offic of the original maJor.&#13;
Filing a hange or :iajor form will initiate the&#13;
student's tran fer to a new major advisor.&#13;
Wh th r a major has or has not been declared,&#13;
another service available to stud nts is the areer&#13;
Resource Center. Staffed by counselors Barbara&#13;
Larson and Clay Barnard, it is located in Tallent&#13;
Hall, ext. 2122. The career planning staff help undecided&#13;
students search our possiblities, choose&#13;
relevant courses define their interests and decide&#13;
on a major. Th~y also help declared majors in&#13;
picking career goals. . . They offer exploratory career mterv1ews and&#13;
computerized career inventory testing, both of&#13;
which assist students in determining career interests&#13;
and objectives. The Center also has a&#13;
comprehensive collection of books, magazines and&#13;
pamphlets with information covering thous~nds of&#13;
occupations. The career counselors can direct a&#13;
tudent to materials pertaining to his or her interest.&#13;
They also aid students in reviewing data,&#13;
xamining facts gathered, and hopefully formulating&#13;
career goals.&#13;
Applications and preparation books for the&#13;
Graduate Record Exam, Miller Analogies Test,&#13;
Medical College Admission Test, Dental College&#13;
Aptitude Exam and Law School Admission Test ai:e&#13;
also available here. The Career Resource Center ts·&#13;
available to students throughout their college life,&#13;
and many students may want to use its services&#13;
o(ten.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Counselor Clay Barnard aid a tudent in the&#13;
ar r Resource Center.&#13;
help when needed&#13;
conlin1Jed from page I&#13;
problem-solving sessions with people who want&#13;
h Ip.&#13;
he indicated that students come to her with a&#13;
wid variety of concern . Some are d pr ssed about&#13;
a death in the family; others have problems in their&#13;
personal relations with friends and family.&#13;
" m times there's a conflict between what your&#13;
head is doing here and what's going on at home,"&#13;
Musich explained.&#13;
Other problems involve identity. "It may sound&#13;
trite but 'identity crisis' is still a very genuine thing&#13;
for a' lot of people. They have hang-ups about their&#13;
sexual id ntity. th ir role, their place in the family.&#13;
Th y ask themselves questions like 'what am I&#13;
doing here, hould 1 be h re, am 1 doing this to&#13;
plea e someone else?"' said Musich. She went on to&#13;
explain that many students encounter a different&#13;
set of experiences, and all the landmarks they had&#13;
and were guided by are gone. They have to think&#13;
about who they are. They are dealing with new&#13;
kind of pressures, new inter-personal relationships.&#13;
&#13;
Sometimes, too, there are addiction problems.&#13;
Other times the counselors may be dealing with&#13;
room-mate ha sles. "Whatever the problem, our&#13;
job is to aid you in thinking about solutions so you&#13;
can get on with your life," concluded Musich. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
Adult outreach begins&#13;
Contrary to what many people may believe, not&#13;
all college students are young people under age 25.&#13;
At Parkside this is especially true. Thirty percent of&#13;
the student body is composed of adult students, who&#13;
attend school full or part-time.&#13;
It is often a difficult decision to come back to&#13;
school after a number of years absence, and once&#13;
the decision to return is made, a myriad of other&#13;
questions present themselves. How do I go about it?&#13;
Who do I see to enroll? What courses should I take?&#13;
Can I get any credit for past college work, even if it&#13;
was taken 20 years ago? Do I still have the brains to&#13;
make it? And what are the kids there going to think&#13;
of me? What about my family? Where is it really&#13;
going to get me?&#13;
Many of the adult students who are here had good&#13;
luck in finding the right people and procedures to&#13;
get started on their new college careers. But the&#13;
Student Services staff at Parkside do not want to&#13;
trust luck. Counselor Wendy Musich, therefore, has&#13;
undertaken counseling of adult students," and her&#13;
office provides an identifiable place for adults to&#13;
come or call with their questions. Located in Tallent&#13;
Hall 275, her phone number is (553-)2225.&#13;
Musich's goal is to assess the higher educational&#13;
needs of the adult men and women in communities&#13;
surrounding Parkside and to respond to them. She&#13;
wants to reach adults who have had some college&#13;
experience as well as those who have had none.&#13;
offices and seek committee appointments, on the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, for example," she added.&#13;
"And an Adult Advisory Board will be instituted,&#13;
to give direct input and suggestions from&#13;
adult students. Anyone interested in serving on this&#13;
board is encouraged to contact me," she said.&#13;
The idea is not to separate the adults from the rest&#13;
of their classmates, for many of them have found&#13;
that a large part of their enjoyable college experience&#13;
is the new contacts they make with&#13;
younger students. But the adults do have special&#13;
problem areas where special help is needed. Not&#13;
only do they have unique enrollment and&#13;
registration problems, but once they are here their&#13;
needs, while similar to those of other students, are&#13;
marked by a different orientation. An on-going&#13;
service program for adults is being developed,&#13;
which will encompass academic advising, career&#13;
planning, study skills, and tutoring.&#13;
Personal counseling will also be an integral part&#13;
of the services offered. Elaine Klemm, a former&#13;
Parkside adult student currently attending&#13;
graduate school in social work at UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
will be doing field work at Parkside in personal&#13;
counseling with adult students. She commented that&#13;
a lot of adults who go through four years at college&#13;
have a major emotional upheaval in their lives&#13;
during that time. It may not necessarily be related&#13;
to the school experience, but she and the regular&#13;
Adult students John Ammerman, Carol Andrea, Phyllis Lidberg and&#13;
Elaine Klemm, with counselor Wendy Musich.&#13;
"The basic question this service has to answer is&#13;
why it is necessary to have a special counselor for&#13;
adults," commented Musich.&#13;
Carol Andrea, one of the adult students helping to&#13;
pull the idea together this summer, replied that&#13;
when she first started at Parkside three years ago,&#13;
she felt older than most of the students here. "Later&#13;
you find they accept you, though," she remarked.&#13;
She went on to say that many adults with families&#13;
have a difficult time.&#13;
"If the family isn't behind you 100 percent, it's a&#13;
real struggle," she said. And the functions here just&#13;
are not geared to adults. "It would be nice if the&#13;
University could include families. If the husbands&#13;
and wives of the students could get together and talk&#13;
and do things, it could lead to more understanding&#13;
and support. And, after all, they deserve consideration&#13;
too," Andrea remarked.&#13;
Musich hopes the program will be effective in&#13;
combating the feelings of insecurity and fear that&#13;
often overwhelm the adult student. She also expects&#13;
it to provide adult social programming, such as&#13;
dinner-dances and family parties. "We also hope to&#13;
encourage them to run for Student Government&#13;
staff of counselors will be available for assistance.&#13;
This summer the service is operating on an&#13;
outreach basis, hoping to contact adults in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha by meeting them in shopping centers,&#13;
at coffee hours hosted by alumni and currently&#13;
enrolled adults, and through evening programs on&#13;
campus. Several clinics will be conducted in&#13;
shopping centers and libraries to inform adults&#13;
interested in continuing their education about&#13;
Parkside. These sessions will be to encourage not&#13;
only those who are interested in the four-year&#13;
degree programs, but also persons interested in just&#13;
taking occasional courses for personal enrichment.&#13;
An Adult Orientation night will be held Tuesday,&#13;
August 21, to provide academic information and&#13;
counseling and campus tours. Discussion groups&#13;
will also be featured, to facilitate personal planning&#13;
regarding coming to school. These will involve&#13;
enrolled adult students who can offer tips on handling&#13;
child care arrangements, credit loads,&#13;
reluctant spouse problems and so on.&#13;
Music groups forming&#13;
Do you like to make music? If&#13;
you do, you might be interested in&#13;
joining one or more of I-'arkside's&#13;
musical organizations.&#13;
In addition to a band and an&#13;
orchestra, there will be two stage&#13;
bands, and also three choral&#13;
groups. These courses are open to&#13;
non-majors as well as the courses&#13;
in Symphonic Literature, Music&#13;
Appreciation, and Fundamentals&#13;
of Music.&#13;
According to Maria Mutschler,&#13;
assistant professor of music,&#13;
there was so much interest in the&#13;
stage band during the past year&#13;
that two stage bands will be&#13;
organized this year. One group&#13;
will serve as a training group for&#13;
the other.&#13;
The music department will&#13;
have two new full-time faculty&#13;
this fall. Steven Swedish, a&#13;
pianist, will teach piano and&#13;
Music Appreciation. David&#13;
Littrell will instruct the lower&#13;
strings, conduct the orchestra,&#13;
and teach Symphonic Music.&#13;
This year, as in years past,&#13;
there will be a number of concerts&#13;
open to the public. Besides&#13;
student performers there are&#13;
several faculty music ensembles&#13;
which perform from time to time.&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony&#13;
coming here&#13;
The Milwaukee Symphony&#13;
under the direction of Kenneth&#13;
Schermerhorn, will be performing&#13;
in the new Communication&#13;
Arts building theater&#13;
Concert time will .be 8 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, September li Tickets&#13;
ElfV50 o&#13;
r&#13;
,&#13;
the general P&#13;
ublic&#13;
-&#13;
$3.50 for Parkside students and&#13;
staff, and are avaUable at&#13;
Bidingers, Cook-Gere, and&#13;
Parkside's Information Yw0&gt;-&#13;
A student votes in last year's PSGA elections.&#13;
PSGA starts&#13;
fourth year&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association has&#13;
been in operation for three years&#13;
on campus. During that time&#13;
much has been accomplished in&#13;
giving students representation in&#13;
the vital function of governing the&#13;
university. This vital function&#13;
will continue during the coming&#13;
school year.&#13;
The governing body of the&#13;
PSGA is the Parkside Student&#13;
Senate. This group is made up&#13;
entirely of student elected officials,&#13;
and as such is the only&#13;
truly representative student&#13;
organization on campus.&#13;
The Student Senate consists of&#13;
five officers and seventeen&#13;
Senators, elected during the&#13;
eighth week of the Fall and&#13;
Spring semesters, who serve&#13;
entirely without recompense for&#13;
the purpose of improving the&#13;
situation of students on campus.&#13;
Of the five officers, President,&#13;
Vice President, Treasurer, and&#13;
Recording and Corresponding&#13;
Secretaries, only the Vice&#13;
President does not normally have&#13;
a vote in the Senate, which is&#13;
chaired by the President.&#13;
All students at Parkside are&#13;
members of the Student&#13;
Government Association, and as&#13;
such have the opportunity to&#13;
address themselves directly to&#13;
the Student Senate during the&#13;
regularly held meetings, usually&#13;
scheduled twice a month during&#13;
the school year.&#13;
Outside of the total senate&#13;
there are various standing&#13;
committees which are open to&#13;
students, chaired by members of&#13;
the Senate. Some of these are the&#13;
Finance Committee, chaired by&#13;
the President, the Publie Information&#13;
Committee, chaired by&#13;
one of the secretaries, the&#13;
Student Union Committee, whose&#13;
members are elected during the&#13;
normal PSGA elections, and the&#13;
Grievance and Clearing House&#13;
Committee.&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee has, during the past&#13;
three semesters, sought the&#13;
participation of faculty in a&#13;
student compiled teaching&#13;
evaluation form. This form, the&#13;
results of which will be available&#13;
during registration, provides&#13;
some basis of comparison for&#13;
students concerning faculty of&#13;
the various divisions.&#13;
This evaluation, in which 60&#13;
percent of the faculty participated&#13;
for the Spring semester,&#13;
will again be in use this coming&#13;
semester. It is hoped by members&#13;
of the Student Senate that&#13;
this will do much to further interdivisional&#13;
faculty and student&#13;
cooperation. Results of the form&#13;
will be available during&#13;
registration at the Student&#13;
Government table, where&#13;
students may also learn more&#13;
about the operation of the Senate&#13;
and express their interest in&#13;
participating in the actions of the&#13;
particular committees.&#13;
TEWBTU'S&#13;
32 unci Ave. &amp; 52nclS^.&#13;
daily 8a.to.to 9p.jjo.,Sal:.4San.8aM.'to8pm.&#13;
DELICATESSEN&#13;
. 8 *to.to 10pm., Sat. &amp; Son. flam.&#13;
Finest i n&#13;
itsnnnami&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
Adult outreach begins&#13;
Contrary to what many people may bel1eve, not&#13;
all colleg stud nts are young people under age 25.&#13;
t Parkside thi is especially true. Thirty percent of&#13;
the student body i composed of adult students, who&#13;
attend chool full or part-time.&#13;
It is often a difficult decision to come back to&#13;
chool after a number of years absence, and once&#13;
the d ci ion to return is made, a myriad of other&#13;
qu lions present themselves. How do I go about it?&#13;
Who do I see to enroll? What courses should I take?&#13;
Can I get any credit for past college work, even If it&#13;
was taken 20 year ago? Do I still have the brains to&#13;
make it? And what are the kids there going to think&#13;
of me? What about my family? Where is it really&#13;
going to get m ?&#13;
Many of the adult students who are here had good&#13;
luck in finding th right people and· procedures to&#13;
get tarted on their new college careers. But the&#13;
Student rvices staff at Parkside do not want to&#13;
trust luck. Couns lor Wendy Musich, therefore, has&#13;
undertaken coun eling of adult students; and her&#13;
office provides an identifiable place for adults to&#13;
come or call with their questioos. Located in Tallent&#13;
Hall Z75, her phone number is (553-)2225.&#13;
Musich's goal is to assess the higher educational&#13;
needs of the adult men and women in communities&#13;
surrounding Parkside and to respond to them. She&#13;
wants to reach adults who have had some college&#13;
experience as well as those who have had none.&#13;
offices and seek committee appointments, on th&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, for example," he added.&#13;
"And an Adult Advisory Board will be instituted,&#13;
to give direct input and suggestions from&#13;
adult students. Anyon inter ted in serving on thi&#13;
board is encouraged to contact me," she said.&#13;
The idea i not to separate the adults from the rest&#13;
of their cla mates, for many of th m have found&#13;
that a large part or their enjoyable college experience&#13;
is the new contacts they make with&#13;
younger students. But the adults do hav pecial&#13;
problem areas where special help is needed. Not&#13;
only do they have unique enrollment and&#13;
registration problems, but once they are here their&#13;
needs, while similar to those of other students, are&#13;
marked by a different orientation. An on-going&#13;
service program for adults is being developed,&#13;
which will encompass academic advising, career&#13;
planning, study skills, and tutoring.&#13;
Personal counseling will also be an integral part&#13;
of the services offered. Elaine Klemm, a former&#13;
Parkside adult student currently attending&#13;
graduate school in social work at UW-Milwaukee,&#13;
will be doing field work at Parkside in personal&#13;
counseling with adult students. She commented that&#13;
a lot of adults who go through four years at college&#13;
have a major emotional upheaval in their lives&#13;
during that time. It may not necessarily be related&#13;
to th school experience, but she and the regular&#13;
Adult students John Ammerman, Carol Andr a, Phyllis Lidberg and&#13;
Elaine Klemm, with counselor Wendy Musich.&#13;
"The basic question this service has to answer is&#13;
why it is nee ary to hav a special counselor for&#13;
adul , " commented Musich.&#13;
arol Andrea, on of the adult students helping to&#13;
pull the idea together this summer, replied that&#13;
wh n he first tarted at Parkside three years ago,&#13;
sh felt old r than most of the students here. "Later&#13;
u find th y ac ept you, though," she remarked.&#13;
She went on to say that many adults with families&#13;
hav a difficult time.&#13;
"lf th family isn't behind you 100 percent, it's a&#13;
real trugg]e," h said. And the functions h re just&#13;
ar not geared to adults. "It would be nice if the&#13;
niv r ity could includ families. If the husband&#13;
and wives of the students could get together and talk&#13;
and do things, it could lead to more understanding&#13;
and upport. And, aft r all, th y deserve conid&#13;
ration too," Andrea remarked.&#13;
Musich hope the program will be ffective in&#13;
combating the foolings of insecurity and fear that&#13;
often overwhelm the adult stud nt. She also expects&#13;
it to provide adult social programming, such as&#13;
dinner-dances and family parti . "We also hope to&#13;
encourag them to run for Student Government&#13;
staff of counselors will be available for assistance.&#13;
This summer the service i operating on an&#13;
outreach basis, hoping to contact adults in Racine&#13;
and Kenosha by meeting them in shopping centers,&#13;
at coffee hours hosted by alumni and currently&#13;
enrolled adults, and through evening programs on&#13;
campus. Several clinics will be conducted in&#13;
shopping centers and libraries to inform adults&#13;
interested in continuing their education about&#13;
Parkside. These session will be to encourage not&#13;
only those who are interested in the four-year&#13;
degree programs, but also persons interested in ju t&#13;
taking occasional courses for personal enrichment.&#13;
An Adult Orientation night will b held Tu day,&#13;
Augu t 21 , to provide academic information and&#13;
counseling and campus tours. Discussion group&#13;
will also be featured, to facilitate personal planning&#13;
regarding coming to school. These will involve&#13;
enrolled adult students who can offer tip on handling&#13;
child care arrangements, credit loads,&#13;
reluctant spouse problem and so on.&#13;
Music groups forming Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony&#13;
coming here&#13;
Do you like to make music? If&#13;
you do, you might be interested in&#13;
joining one or more of Parkside's&#13;
musical organizations.&#13;
In addition to a band and an&#13;
orchestra, ther will be two tage&#13;
bands, and also three choral&#13;
groups. These courses are open to&#13;
non-majors as well as the courses&#13;
in Symphonic Literature, Music&#13;
Appreciation, and Fundamentals&#13;
of Music.&#13;
According to Marla Mutschler,&#13;
assistant professor of music,&#13;
there was o much inter t in the&#13;
t band during the p y r&#13;
that two stage bands will be&#13;
organized this year. One group&#13;
will serve as a training group for&#13;
the other.&#13;
The music department will&#13;
have two new full-time faculty&#13;
this ran. Steven Swedish, a&#13;
pianist, will teach piano and&#13;
Music Appreciation. David&#13;
Littrell will instruct the lower&#13;
strings, conduct the orchestra,&#13;
and teach Symphonic Music.&#13;
This year, as in years past,&#13;
there will be a number of concerts&#13;
open to the public. Besides&#13;
student performer th r are&#13;
ver 1 f culty m ic n mbl&#13;
which perform from time to time.&#13;
tudent vote in la t&#13;
PSGA starts&#13;
fourth year&#13;
The ark ide Stud nt&#13;
Government Association has&#13;
been in operation for thr e year&#13;
on campus. During that time&#13;
much has been accompli h d in&#13;
giving tud nts repre ntation in&#13;
the vital f Wlction or gov ming th&#13;
university. This vital function&#13;
will continue during the coming&#13;
school year.&#13;
The governing body of the&#13;
PSGA i the Parkside tud nt&#13;
Senate. This group is made up&#13;
entirely of stud nt lected officials,&#13;
and as such is the only&#13;
truly representative student&#13;
organization on campu .&#13;
The Student S nate consi t of&#13;
five officer and eventeen&#13;
enators, elected during the&#13;
eighth week of th Fall and&#13;
pring em ter , who erv&#13;
ntirely without r compen e for&#13;
the purpose of improving the&#13;
situation of tudents on campus.&#13;
Of the five officers, President,&#13;
Vic Pre ident, Tr a ur r, and&#13;
Recording and Corre ponding&#13;
Secretaries, only the Vice&#13;
President does not normally hav&#13;
a vote in th S nate, which is&#13;
chaired by the President.&#13;
All studen al Parksid are&#13;
memb r of the Student&#13;
Government Association, and a&#13;
such have th opportunity to&#13;
address themselves directly to&#13;
the Student Senat during th&#13;
regularly held meetings, usually&#13;
cheduled twic a month during&#13;
the school year.&#13;
utside of the total senate,&#13;
there ar various standing&#13;
committ which are open to&#13;
tudent , chaired by members of&#13;
th nat . me of these are the&#13;
Finan ommitt , chaired by&#13;
th Pr id nt, the Publie Information&#13;
Committee, chaired by&#13;
on of the secretaries, the&#13;
tudent Union Committee, whose&#13;
membecs are elected during the&#13;
normal P GA I lions, and the&#13;
Grie ance and Clearing House&#13;
Committ .&#13;
The cademic Policies&#13;
mmittee has, during the past&#13;
lhr mesters, sought the&#13;
participation of faculty in a&#13;
stud nt compiled teaching&#13;
evaluation form. This form, the&#13;
results or which will be available&#13;
during r gi tration, provides&#13;
m b i of compari on for&#13;
stud nts concerning faculty of&#13;
th ariou divi ions.&#13;
Thi evaluation, in which 60&#13;
p rcent of the faculty par•&#13;
ticipa ted for th pring semester.&#13;
will again be in use this coming&#13;
emester. It is hoped by member&#13;
of the tudent Senate that&#13;
this will do much to further in·&#13;
terdivisional faculty and student&#13;
cooperation. ults of the form&#13;
will b available during&#13;
r gi tration 3t th tudent&#13;
Government table, where&#13;
tudenl may also learn more&#13;
about the operation of the Senate&#13;
and expr ·s their interest in&#13;
participating in the actions or the&#13;
particular committ&#13;
TEBUTAj)S&#13;
3Z:n.aAve. &amp;: ·52na.St.&#13;
DELICATESSEN &#13;
American I^nguafrp ?&#13;
politics to popular arts&#13;
"An American Language&#13;
course can be one of the most&#13;
useful that a student will enroll&#13;
in," says Walter Graffin,&#13;
assistant professor of English.&#13;
Th© American Language is a&#13;
course required of all students, a&#13;
decision which was made by&#13;
university faculty and not just the&#13;
English discipline. "It was&#13;
agreed by the faculty that&#13;
students need practice and instruction&#13;
in reading and&#13;
writing," Graffin explained.&#13;
The heart of American&#13;
Language is writing and the&#13;
improvement of writing skills.&#13;
There will be 17 sections offered&#13;
this semester dealing with 13&#13;
different topics. Instructors are&#13;
limited in teaching their&#13;
American Language course only&#13;
by the stipulation that each&#13;
student write a minimum of e ight&#13;
themes. Students should not be&#13;
misled into believing that one&#13;
American Language course is&#13;
easier than another.&#13;
Theoretically, the same amount&#13;
of writing is involved. "Ideally,&#13;
the student will choose that topic&#13;
which he-she finds' most interesting,"&#13;
Graffin added. The&#13;
instructor assumes that students&#13;
enrolled in his-her section are&#13;
interested. If they are, the&#13;
common interest will help to&#13;
create a good rapport among&#13;
students and between the student&#13;
and instructor. In this light, a&#13;
cohesive group feeling is attained&#13;
rather than an institutional class&#13;
environment.&#13;
One problem American&#13;
Language instructors face are&#13;
students who feel that their&#13;
writing style is their own, and&#13;
therefore do not respond well to&#13;
criticism or suggestions.&#13;
Students are advised to select a&#13;
section which seems interesting&#13;
to them and not base that&#13;
decision on schedule times.&#13;
Although American Language&#13;
may be taken any time it is&#13;
recommended for the freshman&#13;
year.&#13;
At least once a semester an&#13;
exemption exam is offered. If a&#13;
student passes the exam he-she is&#13;
relieved of taking the American&#13;
Language course. Graffin noted&#13;
that few students take the exam&#13;
and very few pass as the standards&#13;
are set high. The exam is&#13;
an essay in which a student is&#13;
asked to write on topics such as&#13;
the implications of political&#13;
espionage, what is objectionable&#13;
in today's movies, and others.&#13;
The exam is designed to show&#13;
what a student knows about&#13;
writing.&#13;
Questions concerning the&#13;
American Language exemption&#13;
exam are directed to Walter&#13;
Graffin, Comm. Arts room 222,&#13;
ext. 2424.&#13;
The fall semester American&#13;
Language courses are: SIGNS&#13;
OF THE TIMES: Section 1,&#13;
taught by Roman Schauble, The&#13;
goal of Schauble's course is to aid&#13;
the student in increasing his-her&#13;
proficiency in written discourse.&#13;
Themes will be written in class&#13;
(impromptu) and outside of class&#13;
based on ideas generated by class&#13;
discussion on essays. Certain&#13;
methods of developing a subject&#13;
(cause and effect, comparison&#13;
and contrast, example,&#13;
definition, etc.) will be explored.&#13;
Learning to write a documentary&#13;
paper will also be taught step by&#13;
step. Required books for this&#13;
section are, From Thought to&#13;
Theme, Norton Reader (shorter&#13;
edition), and Research Papers.&#13;
OLD FASHIONED FRESHMAN&#13;
COMPOSITION: Section 2,&#13;
taught by Robert Canary. Old&#13;
fashioned freshman composition&#13;
is to be anostalgic visit to the land&#13;
of rhetoric, with its colorful&#13;
emphasis on the use of Standard&#13;
Formal English, its exercises in&#13;
various rhetorical forms, and its&#13;
insistence on continuous writing&#13;
and revision. The student who&#13;
finishes this course successfully&#13;
will have demonstrated his-her&#13;
ability to do college-level work in&#13;
a variety of writing situations.&#13;
Canary will use Writing Well,&#13;
Hall, in this section.&#13;
INTENSIVE WRITING&#13;
CLINIC: Section 3, taught by&#13;
Peter Hoff. This is a course in the&#13;
college survival skill of selfexpression.&#13;
The student's writing&#13;
will be the main subject matter.&#13;
The course aims to improve a&#13;
student's writing through&#13;
frequent practice, careful&#13;
analysis of its strength and&#13;
weaknesses, and study of advice&#13;
and example from professional&#13;
writers. The goal is a clear expository&#13;
prose style for every&#13;
student: the kind of writing which&#13;
will help a student succeed in&#13;
exams and papers written for&#13;
other courses. Students interested&#13;
primarily in creative&#13;
writing should enroll in a different&#13;
section Required texts for&#13;
this section are Style: Diagnoses&#13;
and Prescriptions, ed. Stoddard&#13;
Malarkey; THE Practical&#13;
Stylist, by Sheridan Baker; and&#13;
any good college dictionary (not&#13;
paperbound editions).&#13;
THE POPULAR ARTS: Section&#13;
4, taught by Donald Kummings.&#13;
This section of the&#13;
American Language will attempt&#13;
to develop the student's&#13;
proficiency in both oral and&#13;
written expression. Oral participation&#13;
will be encouraged by&#13;
means of brief reports and informal&#13;
discussions. Themes will&#13;
be assigned in a variety of&#13;
organizational modes: exemplification,&#13;
cause-and-effect,&#13;
comparison - contrast, extended&#13;
definition, analysis. All&#13;
discussions, speaking assignments,&#13;
and theme topics will&#13;
grow out of a study of t he popular&#13;
arts and American culture.&#13;
The subject area is broad,&#13;
having to do in general with&#13;
various mass communications&#13;
media and popular art forms.&#13;
Specifically, it concerns how the&#13;
popular arts (radio and television&#13;
shows, journalism, advertising,&#13;
motion pictures, popular music,&#13;
photographs, etc.) influence and&#13;
reflect the ideas and taste of&#13;
contemporary culture.&#13;
Overriding issues: the nature,&#13;
role, and significance of art in an&#13;
age dominated by science and&#13;
technology. Kummings will use&#13;
Mass Media and the Popular&#13;
Arts, eds. Frederic Rissover and&#13;
David Birch; The'Popular Arts in&#13;
America: A R eader, ed. William&#13;
M. Hammel; and the Prentice -&#13;
Ball Handbook for Writers, 5th&#13;
Edition as texts for this section.&#13;
WRITING WITH A&#13;
POLITICAL PURPOSE: Section&#13;
5, for honors students or with&#13;
consent of the instructor, taught&#13;
by James Dean. In this section&#13;
students will examine political&#13;
ideas in various literary works.&#13;
Dean requires the following&#13;
texts: The Political Imagination&#13;
in Literature, Phillip Greene and&#13;
Michael Walzer; Writing Themes&#13;
About Literature, 3rd edition,&#13;
Edgar V. Roberts; The Little&#13;
English Handbook: Choices and&#13;
Conventions, Edward P.J.&#13;
Corbett; and a standard college&#13;
desk dictionary.&#13;
THE ESSAY: STRUCTURE&#13;
AND STYLE: Section 6, taught&#13;
by Henry Kozicki. This section&#13;
involves writing short essays on&#13;
contemporary themes. Students&#13;
will read material on such topics&#13;
as Nuclear Catastrophe and&#13;
Ecological Catastrophe, the&#13;
Electronic, Biological and Sexual&#13;
Revolutions, Revolutions in&#13;
Education and Religion,&#13;
Dominant Art Forms, and the&#13;
Future, which are the section&#13;
headings in the anthology&#13;
Apocalypse. This is the only book&#13;
Kozicki will use in teaching this&#13;
section of the American&#13;
Language. Students will write&#13;
short essays on the above-named&#13;
subjects and then will be expected&#13;
to research further a&#13;
narrow topic in a longer paper.&#13;
LANGUAGE AND THE&#13;
WRITER: Section 7, taught by&#13;
Andrew McLean. The goals of&#13;
this course are to improve&#13;
student writing, learning how to&#13;
use a dictionary, learning how to&#13;
articulate ideas orally, and&#13;
analysing and critiquing writing.&#13;
Students will gain insight into the&#13;
writing process and will come to&#13;
know the rudiments of research&#13;
techniques as well as how to use&#13;
the library effectively. Much of&#13;
the material used in this section&#13;
is hand-outs with study questions&#13;
and writing objectives attached.&#13;
The reading requirements are:&#13;
Point of View, Moffet and&#13;
McElheney, eds.; Louse on the&#13;
Head of a Yawning Lord, Alan&#13;
Shucard; Harbrace Guide to the&#13;
Library and Research Paper,&#13;
D.S. Dears; and McLean&#13;
suggests that if a student does not&#13;
own a good dictionary, he-she&#13;
purchase the New American&#13;
Heritage Dictionary.&#13;
PAST AND FUTURE SHOCK:&#13;
Section 8, taught by Alan&#13;
Wallace. This section is based on&#13;
Alvin Toffler's, Future Shock and&#13;
Eilene Power's Medieval People.&#13;
A comparison will be made&#13;
between medieval time when&#13;
change came slowly and contemporary&#13;
society. In modern&#13;
society even major changes are&#13;
frequent. Things happen with the&#13;
acceleration of change in a&#13;
society. Among other topics this&#13;
section will be involved in&#13;
examining the social effects of&#13;
technological change. Students&#13;
will also project as to what things&#13;
will be like twenty years from&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE&#13;
now, benefitting them in many&#13;
ways, including the selection of a&#13;
career.&#13;
BIOGRAPHY AND THE&#13;
CONTEMPORARY SCENE:&#13;
Sections 9 and 12, taught by&#13;
Esther Burnett. This course has a&#13;
dual purpose: to improve the&#13;
student's writing skills and to&#13;
increase his-her appreciation of&#13;
biography, both as a literary&#13;
form and as a means for insight&#13;
into human nature and the&#13;
contemporary scene. In the&#13;
writing assignments the student&#13;
will develop biographical&#13;
materials around his-her own&#13;
interests in selecting subjects for&#13;
research. Burnett will be using&#13;
the following reading material:&#13;
Autobiography of Malcolm X,&#13;
Malcolm X and Alex Haley;&#13;
Zelda, Nancy Milford; Citizen&#13;
Nader, Charles McCarry; Living&#13;
Poor, Moritz Thomsen, Elements&#13;
of Style William Strunk and E.B.&#13;
White; Student's Guide for&#13;
Writing College Papers, Kate L.&#13;
Turabian; and from "The New&#13;
York Times Magazine" (supplied&#13;
by the instructor): "An 18-&#13;
Year-Old Looks Back on Life,"&#13;
by Joyce Maynard; and "My&#13;
Furthest Back Person' 'The&#13;
African' ", by Alex Haley.&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY:&#13;
Sections 10 and 14, taught by&#13;
Angelica Dean. The goal in this&#13;
section is to practice writing as&#13;
well as to appreciate literature,&#13;
in this case through reading&#13;
accounts of voyages of discovery&#13;
in different times and places.&#13;
Dean will use the James Armstrong&#13;
edition of Voyages of&#13;
Discovery; the 3rd edition of The&#13;
Practical Stylist, Sheridan&#13;
Baker; and a standard college&#13;
desk dictionary in teaching this&#13;
course.&#13;
WRITING THROUGH PERCEPTION:&#13;
Section 11, taught by&#13;
Dennis Dean. This is primarily a&#13;
writing course emphasizing&#13;
exposition. The attempt to improve&#13;
verbal skills will be made&#13;
by improving perceptual skills.&#13;
Assignments will involve controlled&#13;
experiments of various&#13;
kinds and analysis of literature&#13;
and art. In-class discussion will&#13;
be stressed. The required&#13;
readings for this section are:&#13;
Here and Now II, Fred Morgan;&#13;
Almayer's Folly (and other&#13;
stories), Joseph Conrad; and The&#13;
Practical Stylist, 3rd edition,&#13;
Sheridan Baker.&#13;
continued on page 15.&#13;
IWBER RIME&#13;
Serving Steaks - Seafood&#13;
Assorted Sandwiches&#13;
OPEN 7 NI GHTS A W EEK&#13;
Monday thru Friday at 5 p.m.&#13;
Saturday &amp; Sunday at Noon&#13;
1-94 E . Frontage Rd. V2 milt N. of Hy. 50&#13;
PLANTS&#13;
all k inds,&#13;
shapes &amp; sizes&#13;
CACTUS&#13;
large &amp;&#13;
small&#13;
Special&#13;
"The U nusual P lant S hop"&#13;
TERRARIUMS&#13;
EXOTIC PLANTS&#13;
MEXICAN POTTERY&#13;
V&#13;
HAM PLANTS&#13;
SCEOTED CANDLES&#13;
DRIED FLOWER&#13;
ARRANGEMENTS&#13;
1710 Washington Ave&#13;
(Highway 20 in Racine)&#13;
Phone: 632-4778&#13;
Parking t o t he E ast o f th e B uilding&#13;
^ THE UNIV ERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKS IDE&#13;
invites you to spend winter break... JAN. 2-9,1974&#13;
in the heart&#13;
of Waikiki&#13;
7 SUN FILLED, FUN FILLED DAYS&#13;
/ [\ W Plus $20 ta x and service&#13;
X w i based on 3 sharing a room&#13;
Round trip jet air to Honolulu from Milwaukee&#13;
7 Nights at the beautiful Outrigger West Hotel&#13;
' 2 Day sightseeing tour of Honolulu&#13;
Traditional flower lei greeting&#13;
Ground transfers between airport &amp; hotel Including Baggage Handling&#13;
Services of tour host throughout trip&#13;
w All tips and takes on above services&#13;
^application form or further information, stop in at LLC D-197 or phone: 553- 2294&#13;
American Language;&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
now, benefitting tJ,em in many&#13;
ways, including the selection of a&#13;
career.&#13;
VOYA E OF DI OVERY:&#13;
politics to popular arts BIOGRAPHY A. D THE&#13;
CO ' TE 1PORARY ENE:&#13;
Section 9 and 12, taught by&#13;
E ther Burn tt. This course has a&#13;
dual purpo e: to improve the&#13;
student's writing skills and to&#13;
increase his-her ppreciation of&#13;
bio~aphy, both as a literary&#13;
form and as a means for insight&#13;
into human nature and the&#13;
contemporary scene. In the&#13;
writing assignm nt the student&#13;
will develop biographical&#13;
materials around his-her own&#13;
int rests in selecting subjects for&#13;
research . Burnett will be using&#13;
the following reading material :&#13;
Sections 10 and 14, taught by&#13;
Ang lica Dean. The goal in this&#13;
ection i to practice writing as&#13;
well as to appreciate literatur ,&#13;
in this case thr ugh reading&#13;
accounts of voyages of discovery&#13;
in diff r nt times and places.&#13;
D an will use the Jame Arm·&#13;
strong edition of Vo ag or&#13;
Di ·cov ry; th 3rd edition of Th&#13;
Practical • tyli. t, Sheridan&#13;
Baker; and a standard college&#13;
d sk dictionary in teaching this&#13;
course.&#13;
"An American Language&#13;
roursc can be one or the most&#13;
useful that a student will enroll&#13;
in," says Walter Graffin&#13;
a sistant professor of English'.&#13;
The American Language is a&#13;
course required of all students a&#13;
decisio~ which was made by&#13;
university faculty and not just th&#13;
English disciplin . " It was&#13;
agre d by the faculty that&#13;
tudents need practice and instruction&#13;
in reading and&#13;
writing," Graffin explained.&#13;
The heart of American&#13;
Language is writing and the&#13;
improvement of writing skills.&#13;
There will be 17 s tlons offered&#13;
thi semester dealing with 13&#13;
different topics. Instructors are&#13;
limited in teaching their&#13;
American Language course only&#13;
by the tipulation that each&#13;
tudent write a minimum of eight&#13;
themes. Students should not be&#13;
misled into believing that one&#13;
American Language course is&#13;
easier than another.&#13;
Theoretically, the same amount&#13;
of writing is involved. ''Ideally,&#13;
th student will choose that topic&#13;
which he-she finds most inter&#13;
sting," Graffin added. The&#13;
instructor assum tha t tudents&#13;
enrolled in his-her ection are&#13;
inte r st d . If they ar , the&#13;
common interest will help to&#13;
create a good rapport among&#13;
stud nts and between the tudent&#13;
and instructor. In this light, a&#13;
cohesive group feeling is attained&#13;
rath r than an institutional class&#13;
nvironment.&#13;
On problem American&#13;
Language instructors fac are&#13;
stud nts who feel that their&#13;
writing style is their own, and&#13;
therefore do not r pond well to&#13;
criticism or suggestions.&#13;
Students are advi eel to select a&#13;
lion which seem interesting&#13;
to them and not base that&#13;
decision on schedule times.&#13;
Although American Language&#13;
may be taken any time it is&#13;
recommend d for the freshman&#13;
y ar.&#13;
At least once a semester an&#13;
exemption exam is offered. If a&#13;
tud nt pas s th exam he- he is&#13;
relieved of taking the American&#13;
Language course. Graffin noted&#13;
that few tudcnt take the xam&#13;
and very few pass as the standards&#13;
are set high. The exam is&#13;
an ssay in which a student is&#13;
asked to write on topics such as&#13;
the implications of political&#13;
espionage, what is objectionable&#13;
in today's movies, and others.&#13;
The xam is d igned to show&#13;
what a tudent knows about&#13;
writing.&#13;
Questions cone rning th&#13;
Am rican Language exemption&#13;
exam are directed to Walter&#13;
raffin , Comm. Arts room 222,&#13;
xt. 2424.&#13;
insistence on continuous writing&#13;
and revision. The stud nt who&#13;
finishe this course successfully&#13;
will have demonstrated his-her&#13;
ability to do college-level work in&#13;
a variety of writing situations.&#13;
Canar_y will use Writing Well,&#13;
Hall, m this section.&#13;
ll'iTE ' IVE WRITING&#13;
LI 'I : Section 3, taught by&#13;
Peter Hoff. This is a course in the&#13;
college survival skill of selfe~pression.&#13;
The stud nt's writing&#13;
will b the main subject matter.&#13;
The course aims to improve a&#13;
tudent 's writing through&#13;
frequent practice , careful&#13;
analysis or its strength and&#13;
weaknesses. and study of advice&#13;
and example from professional&#13;
writer . The goal is a clear expository&#13;
prose style for every&#13;
student: the kind of writing which&#13;
will help a student succeed in&#13;
exams and papers written for&#13;
other courses. Students interested&#13;
primarily in creative&#13;
writing should enroll in a different&#13;
sectJon Required texts for&#13;
this section are tyle: Diagnoses&#13;
and Pre. criptions, ed. toddard&#13;
Malarkey ; THE Practical&#13;
Stylist. by Sh ridan Baker; and&#13;
any good college dictionary (not&#13;
paperbound editions).&#13;
TH POPULAR ART : Sec- tion 4, taught by Donald Kumm&#13;
ings. This section of the&#13;
American Language will attempt&#13;
to d velop the student's&#13;
proficiency in both oral and&#13;
written expression. Oral participation&#13;
will be encouraged by&#13;
means of brief reports and informal&#13;
discussions. Themes will&#13;
be assigned in a variety of&#13;
organizational modes: exemplification&#13;
, caus -and-effect,&#13;
comparison - contrast, extended&#13;
definition, analysis. All&#13;
discussion • speaking assignments,&#13;
and theme topics will&#13;
grow out of a sturly of the popular&#13;
arts and m rican culture.&#13;
The subject area is broad,&#13;
having to do in general with&#13;
various mas communications&#13;
media and popular art forms.&#13;
pecifically, it con&lt;'erns how the&#13;
popular arts lradio and television&#13;
shows. journalism, advertising,&#13;
motion pictures, popular music,&#13;
photographs, etc.) influence and&#13;
reflect the ideas and taste of&#13;
con tern por a ry culture.&#13;
Ov rriding issu : the nature,&#13;
role, and significance of art in an&#13;
age dominated by science and&#13;
technology. Kummings will use&#13;
The fall semester American&#13;
Langua courses are: IG S&#13;
OF TIIE TUES: ection 1,&#13;
taught by Roman Schauble, The&#13;
goal of Schauble' cour e is to aid&#13;
the student in increa ing his-h r&#13;
proficiency in written discourse.&#13;
Them will be written in class&#13;
( impromptu) and outside of class&#13;
based on ideas generated by class&#13;
di cussion on essay . Certain&#13;
methods of developing a subject&#13;
&lt;cause and effect, comparison&#13;
and contrast, example,&#13;
d finition, etc.&gt; will be explored.&#13;
Learning to write a documentary&#13;
pap r will also be taught step by&#13;
step. Required books for this&#13;
section are, From Thought to&#13;
TI1eme. Norton Reader ( shorter&#13;
edition 1, and Research Papers.&#13;
lass t dia and thr Popular&#13;
Art . eds. Fred ric Rissover and&#13;
David Birch ; The"Popular Art in&#13;
America: A R ader, ed. William&#13;
M. Hammel; and lhe Prentic -&#13;
Ball Handbook {or Writer , 5th&#13;
Edition as texts for this section.&#13;
WRITING WITH A&#13;
POI.IT( AL P RPO E : Section&#13;
5, for honors students or with&#13;
consent of the instructor, taught&#13;
OLD FASIIIONED FRESH·&#13;
:\IAN OMPOSITIO ' : Section 2,&#13;
taught by Rob rt Canary. Old&#13;
fa hion d fre hman composition&#13;
is to be a nostalgic visit to the land&#13;
of rhetoric. with its colorful&#13;
mphasis on the use of Standard&#13;
Formal English, iLc; exercises in&#13;
various rhetorical forms, and its&#13;
by James Dean. In this section&#13;
stud nts will examine political&#13;
ideas in various literary works.&#13;
Dean requires the following&#13;
texts: The Political Imagination&#13;
in Literature, Phillip Greene and&#13;
Michael Walzer; Writing Th mes&#13;
.\bout Literature, 3rd edition&#13;
Edgar V. Roberts; The LiUI~&#13;
Eng Ii. h Handbook: hoic s and&#13;
Conventions, Edward P.J.&#13;
Corbett; and a standard college&#13;
desk dictionary.&#13;
THE ES AY: TR CTURE&#13;
AND STYLE: ection 6, taught&#13;
by Henry Kozicki. This section&#13;
involves writing short essays on&#13;
contemporary themes. Students&#13;
will read matericJ on such topics&#13;
as uclear atastrophe and&#13;
Ecological Catastrophe, the&#13;
Electronic. Biological and Sexual&#13;
Revolutions, Revolutions in&#13;
Edu~ation and Religion,&#13;
Dommant Art Forms, and the&#13;
Future, which are the section&#13;
headings in the anthology&#13;
Apocalyp ·e. This is the only book&#13;
Kozicki will use in teaching this&#13;
s ction of the American&#13;
Language. tud nt will write&#13;
hort · ays on the abov -named&#13;
ubjects and then will be expected&#13;
to research further a&#13;
narrow topic in a longer paper.&#13;
LA, 'GU AGE A D THE&#13;
WRITER: Section 7, taught by&#13;
Andrew McL an. The goals of&#13;
this course are to improve&#13;
stud nt writing. learning how to&#13;
use a dictionary , learning how to&#13;
articulate ideas orally, and&#13;
analysing and critiquing writing.&#13;
Stud nts will gain insight into the&#13;
writing process and will come to&#13;
know the rudiments of research&#13;
t hniques as well as how to use&#13;
the library effectively. Much of&#13;
the material used in this section&#13;
is hand-outs with study questions&#13;
and writing objectives attached.&#13;
The reading requirements are:&#13;
Point or View, Moffet and&#13;
McElheney, eds.; Lou on th&#13;
Head of a Yawning Lord, Alan&#13;
hucard ; Harbrace Guid to the&#13;
Library and H earch Paper,&#13;
D.S. Dears; and McLean&#13;
uggests that if a student does not&#13;
own a good dictionary. he-she&#13;
purchase the 'ew merican&#13;
Heritage Dictionary.&#13;
Pi\ST AND F Tl:RE SHOCK:&#13;
. ectlon 8, taught by Alan&#13;
Wallace . This section is based on&#13;
Alvin Toffler's, Future Shock and&#13;
Eilene Power's Medieval People.&#13;
A comparison will be made&#13;
betw n medi val tim when&#13;
chang cam slowly and contemporary&#13;
society. In modern&#13;
society even major changes are&#13;
frequent. Things happen with the&#13;
acceleration of change in a&#13;
society. Among other topics this&#13;
section will be involved in&#13;
examining the social effects of&#13;
technological change. Students&#13;
will also project as to what things&#13;
will be like twenty years from&#13;
Autobiography or Malcolm .&#13;
Malcolm X and Alex Haley;&#13;
Zelda, ancy Milford; Citiz n&#13;
Nad r, harles Mccarry; Living&#13;
Poor, Moritz Thomsen, Element&#13;
of Style William Strunk and E.B.&#13;
White; Student's Guide for&#13;
Writing ollege Papers, Kate L.&#13;
Turabian: and from "The ew&#13;
York Times Magazine" (supplied&#13;
by the instructor): "An 18-&#13;
Year-Old Looks Back on Life, "&#13;
by Joyce Maynard; and "My&#13;
Furthest Back Person' 'The&#13;
African' ", by Alex Haley.&#13;
\\'RITI 'G THROUGH PERCEPTIO.&#13;
: Section 11, taught by&#13;
Dennis Dean. This is primarily a&#13;
writing course emphasizing&#13;
exposition. The attempt to improve&#13;
verbal skills will be made&#13;
by improving perceptual skill .&#13;
Assignments will involve con•&#13;
trolled experiments of various&#13;
kinds and analysis of literature&#13;
and art. In-class discussion will&#13;
be stressed. The required&#13;
readings for this section are:&#13;
Her and Now II, Fred Morgan;&#13;
Almayer's Folly (and other&#13;
stories), Joseph Conrad; and The&#13;
Practical Stylist, 3rd edition,&#13;
Sheridan Baker.&#13;
contlnu~d on p11ge 15&#13;
TIMBER RIDGE Bar &amp;&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
Serving Steaks - Seafood&#13;
Assorted Sandwiches&#13;
OPEN 7 NIGHTS A WEEK&#13;
Monday thru Friday at 5 p.m.&#13;
Saturday &amp; Sunday at Noon&#13;
1-94 E. Fro1tftft R•. 1/2 111111 N. of Hy. SO&#13;
"The Unusual Plant Shop"&#13;
PLATS&#13;
all kinds,&#13;
shape &amp; sizes&#13;
TERRARIUMS&#13;
EXOTIC PLANTS&#13;
SCENTED CANDLES&#13;
• DRIED FLOWER&#13;
CACTUS&#13;
larie &amp;&#13;
small&#13;
AR,GEMENTS&#13;
1710 Washington Ave&#13;
(Highway 20 In Racine)&#13;
Phone: 632-4778&#13;
Parking to the East of the Building&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE&#13;
invites you to spend winter break ..• JAN. 2-9, 1974&#13;
In the heart of Waikiki&#13;
7 SUN FILLED, FUN FILLED DAYS&#13;
$269 Plus $20 tax and service&#13;
based on 3 sharing II room&#13;
• Round trip jet air lo Honolulu from MIiwaukee&#13;
• 7 NIOhts at the beautiful Outrigger West Hotel&#13;
• ', Day siqhtseeing tour Of Honolulu&#13;
• Trad,tlonal flower lei gr~ling&#13;
e Ground transfer,; between 11lrp0rt &amp; hotel lncludlnQ Ba~119e Handffng&#13;
• Service$ Of tour host throughout trip&#13;
• All tips Md t&amp;ku on ab011e service$&#13;
FOi" appl ication form or further information, stop ln at LLC D-197 or pt,one: 553. 2294 &#13;
• i". Schedule) Schedule)&#13;
Doug lis A H igh&#13;
Douglas A H amilton&#13;
State S H ain&#13;
Main A 6th&#13;
|Main a loth&#13;
Main S lath&#13;
14th a R acine&#13;
Washington 8 Packard&#13;
Washington a Orange&#13;
Washington a Ha yes&#13;
Washington 8 Lathrop&#13;
Uthrop 8 17th&#13;
lathrop a O live&#13;
lathrop a Ourand&#13;
Durand a Ohio&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
IGreenquist Hall&#13;
Feature Film Series: (Fri. nites8 p.m.; Sun. nites 7:30 p.m., S.A.B.,&#13;
75 cents):&#13;
Sept. 7 &amp; 9 - French Connection&#13;
Sept. 21 &amp; 23 - Play It Again Sam&#13;
Oct. 5 &amp; 7 - The Candidate&#13;
Oct. 19 8.21 - Johnny Got His Gun&#13;
Nov. 2 8.4 - B utch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid&#13;
Nov. 30 &amp; Dec. 2 - Omega Man&#13;
Dec. 7 &amp; 9 - F illmore&#13;
Second Film Series: (Wed. nites 7:30 p.m., Gr 103, 75 cents):&#13;
Sept. 26 - Joe&#13;
Oct. 10 - Superman&#13;
Oct. 24 - Fritz the Cat&#13;
Specials: (Fine Arts Theatre, 7:30 p.m.):&#13;
Nov. 6 &amp; 7 - Dr. Zhivago&#13;
Dec. 4 &amp; 5 • 2001: Space Odyssey&#13;
Concerts:&#13;
Sept. 30 • H arry Chapin - 8 p.m. Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Nov. 8 - Maynard Ferguson - F ine Arts Theatre -8 p.m&#13;
Plus:&#13;
Sun. Sept. 23 Arts &amp; Crafts Fair - Main Place, LLC&#13;
Oct. 18 - T heatre X - Fine Arts Theatre&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Library&#13;
Aug. 11-Sept. 2:&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 7:45 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. closed.&#13;
Mon. Sept. 3 (Labor Day) closed.&#13;
Remainder of the semester:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 7:45 a.m. - 10 :30 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 7:45 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 1:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m.&#13;
Food Service&#13;
Library.Learning Center:&#13;
Aug. 10-27&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 8:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Registration&#13;
8:30 a.m. 1:30 p.m.; 4:30 -6:30 p.m. except Fri.&#13;
Regular semester hours:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 7:30 a.m. 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 7:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building (SAB):&#13;
No food service during Registration&#13;
Regular semester hours:&#13;
Mon..Fri. 9:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
Aug. 10-31:&#13;
Mon.-Fri. 7:45 a.m. - 4:30 p.m&#13;
Regular semester hoursMon.-Thurs.&#13;
7:45 a.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 7:45 a.m. 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat. 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
Academic calendar 1973-74&#13;
Semester I: Semester IIinstruction&#13;
Begins Sept. 4 Instruction Begins Jan. 14&#13;
Thanksgiving Recess Nov. 22-24 SDrina Recess ADril 12-21 Instruction Begins June 17&#13;
L«. D.V C C,as»S Dec. ,4 S l.y « ClS M, 10 A™' "&gt;&#13;
Final Exam Period Dec. 15-22 Fina, Exam period May 11-18&#13;
Winter Recess Dec. 24-Jan. 4 Graduation May 26&#13;
Graduation Jan. 6&#13;
SCHEDULES&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Aug. 13-26:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m. - 4 :30 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 9 a.m. • 1 p.m.&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. closed.&#13;
Registration Week, Aug. 27-31:&#13;
Mon. 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
Tues.-Fri. 9 a.m. - 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Sat. Sept. 1, 9 a.m. - 1 p.m.&#13;
First week of classes, Sept. 4-8:&#13;
Tues.Thurs. 8 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.&#13;
Sat. 10 aim. - 1 p.m.&#13;
Remainder of the semester (exceptions will be announced)&#13;
Mon-Thurs. 9 a.m.-7 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 9a.m. - 5 p.m.Sat. 10a.m. -1 p.m.&#13;
Bus Schedule&#13;
Shuttle Bus:&#13;
Registration 7 a.m. 9 p.m.&#13;
Regular semester hours:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 7 a.m. - 10:45 p.m.&#13;
Fri. 7 a.m. - 5:15 p.m.&#13;
Sat. 9:45 a.m. - 5:15 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 1:15 p.m. - 10:45 p.m.&#13;
Inter-campus bus (between Kenosha campus and Tallent Hall):&#13;
Registration 8 a.m. 9 p.m.&#13;
Regular semester hours:&#13;
Mon.-Thurs. 7:30 a.m. - 10:30 p m&#13;
Fri. 7:30 - 5 p.m.&#13;
(Departure times from the Kenosha campus are on the hour and 30&#13;
MrkinnlntTrl^ /' DeParture times Tom the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot are 15 minutes after and 45 minutes after the hour.)&#13;
TENTATIVE RACINE-PARKSIOE BUS SCHEDU LE&#13;
SCHEDULES O PERATED MON DAY THRU FRIDAY ON SCHO OL 0AYS ONLY. THIS INCLUDES THE PINAL EXAM P ERI0I&#13;
500THft0U«T " NORTHBOUND&#13;
ft:40 ' 9:4ft&#13;
8:42 9:47&#13;
9:49&#13;
9:50&#13;
8:46 9:51&#13;
9:52&#13;
8:48&#13;
8:50 9:65&#13;
9:57&#13;
8:54 9:59&#13;
8:55 10:00&#13;
6:56 10:01&#13;
8:58 10:03&#13;
8:59 10:04&#13;
9:00 10:05&#13;
9:02 10:07&#13;
9:10&#13;
9:12 10:17&#13;
1:05™ 2:05- 3:05 4:10"&#13;
1:03 2:03 3:03 4:08&#13;
1:01 2:01 3:01 4:06&#13;
1:00 2:00 3:00 4:05&#13;
12:59 1:59 2:59 4:04&#13;
12:58 1:58 2:58 4:03&#13;
12:57 .1:57 2:57 4:02&#13;
12:55 1:55 2:55 4:00&#13;
12:53 1:53 2:63 3:68&#13;
12:51 1:51 2:51 3:56&#13;
12:50 1:50 2:50 3:55&#13;
12:49 1:49 2:49 3:54&#13;
12:47 1:47 2:47 3:52&#13;
12:46 1:46 2:46 3:51&#13;
12:45 1:45 2:45 3:50&#13;
12:43 1:43 2:43 3:48&#13;
12:35 1:35 2:35 3:40&#13;
Physical Education Building&#13;
Hours beginning first semester:&#13;
Pool: 12 p.m.-l :30 p.m. and 6p.m.-9:30 p.m. daily&#13;
Handball Courts: 12 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. daily&#13;
Tennis Courts: daily except 1:30 - 3:30 MW&#13;
Gym: 12 p.m.-l:30 and 3:30 p.m.-6:30 p.m. daily until Varsity&#13;
Athletics start (check with Issue Room after that).&#13;
Weight-Lifting Room: 8:30-10:30 a.m., noon-l:30 p.m. and 3.30-6. JU&#13;
p.m. daily.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. open Sat. 9:45 a.m. - 5:15 p.m.&#13;
Phv. Ed. Bldq.oben Sun. 1:15 p.m. 10:45 p.m.&#13;
BWI I&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
Physical Education llulldlng&#13;
Hours t,eglnning first semnttr: Pool 12P m. 1.30 1 p.m. an&lt;16p.m. f :30p.m da• Y&#13;
Handball Courts 12 Pm. 9.30 p.m da:ly&#13;
Tennis courn. dally •Mcept 1' 30 \:'°30M;'m dally until vers1tv Gym 12 p.m. 1,30 and 3:30 P m · ' t11at)&#13;
we,ght&#13;
Athletu:s 1tart !chKk w1th I.sue Room aft..- end 3.306:30 Lifting Room : S:3010 30 am • nooll 1·30 Pm&#13;
llu1 Schedule&#13;
Shuttle lu"&#13;
Reg,llret,on 7 a m 9 pm Regular )fmc,llff hours&#13;
Mon Thurs 7 • m 10 AS p m Fri 7 • m S 15 pm&#13;
Set. 9 AS a m S· 15 p m&#13;
Sun 1 1S p m 10 AS p m&#13;
tnter-cemp111 bu1 (betilrffn Ketl01ha cempu1 •"d Tallent Hall) : Reg,1trat1on a a .m 9 p.m&#13;
Regular wmestff hOvrs&#13;
Mo&lt;&gt; Thurs 7 30 a .m 10:30 p .m. Fri 7 .30 S p.m.&#13;
l ~rtlll'e limes from the Ken0$ha campu1 arit on the hour and 30 m nutes afltr the hOvr ~parturt limes from the Tallitnt Hall&#13;
park,ng 101 are 1$ m1nu1~ after and 4S mlnutM alter th• hour.I&#13;
T&amp;..1t T4TW, IACl'I •f '-hSlX I~ SOCl.t_(&#13;
ltMlnln CNPtU rt~ N)ll';.A'lf nca 111DA, 111 soa:r.. c.-•s " ' ni11 t""':°l s n.. , 1 11.l rtAM ,t:11,c&#13;
r»E: SOt _. wa1.&#13;
_ _ (,.- '-'•l&#13;
, ... f.1, I Cl t .U&#13;
~l"t I U •&amp;9 tr:Jt a .cs • ~ ?;If 1.16 Ml ,,~ ... 911&#13;
r,;1 • .q • n&#13;
.... :rz rn f~ as, "' T~ rn :~·: '1,.ff 6 H 10.0&gt; t'l/ 1 '9 IOCI '1'J2 t ll) 10 ~&#13;
IIHd t-, {p • • \ct--tdlilt J&#13;
J 'r:D t C: tOC7&#13;
1,~; : :~ ~g :} ,7.1..,11-' _______ ...,, ___ _________ _&#13;
lonl tor 11111 •f'lf W.He Jt1oo lkl1 'J1th Ptrl'.fClt "•card u ,') for 10-rldf c:._.,.t~I"' bocl an ult •t t'\t 1n"o1"11Ntf~ C.,,.t,ttp.m.&#13;
delly. Phy Ed Bldg _,-.s.t.9 45e.m. s. 1sp.m&#13;
P~v. Ed Bld0 OOf'n Sun 1, 15 p.m 10 4S p m&#13;
Academic calendar 1973-74&#13;
Semester I Semester 11 .&#13;
ln1tructlon Begins S.,,t •&#13;
ThanklOivlng Recess Nov. 22 2A&#13;
LUI Day of Cle,_ Dec 1A&#13;
FIMI Exam Period Dec. 15 22&#13;
Winier Recns Dec. 1A Jan. A&#13;
Graduation Jan. 6&#13;
Instruction ~Ins Jen u Sp4"1ng Recns Ap4"11 12 21&#13;
Last Day of ClaSHS May 10&#13;
Final Exam P..-lod May 11 11&#13;
Graduation May 26&#13;
SCHEDULES&#13;
Feature Film sartes: U'rl. nltes I p.m.1 Sun. nltes 7:30 p.m., S.A.11 ..&#13;
7S ctntsl:&#13;
Sept. 7 &amp; 9 Fr!Mlch ConnKIIOn&#13;
Sept 21 &amp; 73 Pley II AQ1ln 5am&#13;
Oct. 5 &amp; 7 Th• Candidate&#13;
Oct.19&amp;21 JohnnyGotHlsGun&#13;
Nov. 2 &amp; , Butch cauldy and the Sundance Kid&#13;
Nov. 30 &amp; Oec. 2 Omega Man&#13;
Dec. 7 &amp; 9 FIiimore&#13;
Second FIim Serles: (Wed. nlm 7:&gt;0 p.m., Or 103, 1s c""tsl:&#13;
Sept 26 Joe&#13;
Oct. 10 Su~rman&#13;
Oct. 2A Fritz lhe cat&#13;
SP"Clals: (Fine Arts Tllfftre, 7:30 p.m.):&#13;
Nov 6 &amp; 1 Dr. Zhlvaoo&#13;
Dec A &amp; 5 2001 Space Odyuey&#13;
Concerts:&#13;
Sept 30 Harry Chapin 8 p.m. Phy. Ed. Bldg&#13;
Nov. I Maynard Fergu10n Fine Arts Theatre 8 p.m&#13;
Plus&#13;
Sun. Sept, 23 Arts &amp; Crafts Fair . Main Place, LLC&#13;
Oct. 1a Theatre X Fino Arn Theatre&#13;
a Wttk Summ..- S.SS!on·&#13;
ln1tructlon eeg,ns June 17&#13;
1n1tructioo Endl A\l!I. 10&#13;
Sponsored by Parkside Activities Board&#13;
LHrnl1111 Center&#13;
Aug 10 31&#13;
1oo1tstore&#13;
Aug 13 26:&#13;
Moo. Thurs. 9 a.m. • ·30 p.m. Fri. 9 a.m 1 p.m.&#13;
Set. &amp; Sun closed&#13;
Re9lstration Wttk, Aug. 27 31 :&#13;
Moo. 9 a .m • ·30 p.m&#13;
Tuel Fri. 9 • m a 30 p.m&#13;
Sat. Sept. 1, t a .m . • 1 p.m&#13;
First week of clusa. Sept • ·• · Tues.Thurs a am • I p.m&#13;
Fri 9 e .m. 5 pm&#13;
Set 10 a m • 1 p m R..-na1nder of the r.emftter (e&gt;&lt;upt1on1 will be announcec:tJ&#13;
Moo Thurs 9 1.m. 7 p.m.&#13;
Frl.te.m. Sp.m.sat 10a.m. 1 p.m.&#13;
Food serv,c•&#13;
L•t&gt;rary Leern,ng Cent..-.&#13;
AUil 10 27&#13;
Library&#13;
Aug. l1 S~t 2 · MOn Fri 7 AS a.m. S Pm.&#13;
sat &amp; Sun clOled&#13;
Moo. St'!)! 3 ( Labor Day I closed,&#13;
Rema,nder of the semester: Mon Thurs. 7 45 • m )O· 30 P m&#13;
Fri 7·45 • m 5 p.m.&#13;
Set. 10 a.m 5 Pm&#13;
Sun 1 30 p.m. 10:30 p.m.&#13;
,w,,, fr, 130am 130pm&#13;
R19,11ranon&#13;
8 JO am I 30p m , 30 6 JOp m .txcept Fri&#13;
R19uler semester hOUrs&#13;
Noon Thu" 7 30 • m 6 JO p m Fri 7 JO am A 30 pm&#13;
StU&lt;ll'nl Act,v,IIM Bu,ld•nQ (SABI&#13;
No fOOd s..-v,ce during R191stration&#13;
R19ular 1emnter hOUrs&#13;
Mon Fri 9 30 • m. 1 30 pm&#13;
Mon Fri. 7,'5 am A.:IO pm&#13;
R19ular semttt@r h0ur1&#13;
/W:Jn Thurs. 7 .1,5 • m 10 p m&#13;
Fri, 7 45 a m • lO p.m .&#13;
Set 10 • m. 2 p m &#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Student Life offers coupons&#13;
The Student Life Office is&#13;
anxious to have students become&#13;
familiar with various enterprises&#13;
on campus, so as an introduction&#13;
to some of these areas the&#13;
Student Life Discount Book has&#13;
been created. To be distributed at&#13;
fall registration to all students, it&#13;
contains more than 20 coupons&#13;
good for free or discounted items&#13;
at such places as the bookstore,&#13;
food service, Student Activities&#13;
Building (S.A.B.), Campus&#13;
Sweete Shoppe, Travel Center&#13;
and Athletics.&#13;
The total value of the book&#13;
comes to over $14. Some coupons&#13;
are valid only for the first few&#13;
days of classes; others may be&#13;
used throughout the month of&#13;
Sept.&#13;
Examples of some of the&#13;
discounts available are: 20 cents&#13;
off the purchase of a pizza at the&#13;
Insurance, health&#13;
services available&#13;
Parkside offers students both a Health Service located on campus&#13;
and a student health insurance program.&#13;
Any student taking 6 or more credits is eligible for insurance&#13;
coverage from Wisconsin Physicians Service (WPS).. Last year 259&#13;
students took advantage of the WPS insurance plan and the benefits&#13;
and premiums will remain the same this year. The premiums are:&#13;
Two semesters Second semester One semester&#13;
and summer and summer&#13;
single&#13;
student and dependent&#13;
family&#13;
$89.25&#13;
$237.00&#13;
$244.80&#13;
$59.50&#13;
$158.00&#13;
$163.20&#13;
$29.75&#13;
$79.00&#13;
$81.60&#13;
The WPS insurance program provides students with comprehensive&#13;
coverage of basic physician and hospital costs. "This plan was&#13;
designed for the young student," remarked Jack Anstadt, a WPS&#13;
Kenosha representative. Parkside's Health Service nurse, Edith&#13;
Isenberg added that it makes an especially good deal for married&#13;
students and adults with a family.&#13;
One of the benefits offered by WPS in this insurance plan is a $10,000&#13;
maximum for physician's service and hospitalization. WPS will pay&#13;
expense, physicians and hospitalization charges, for maternity (a) up&#13;
to $300.00 for normal deliveries (b) up to $600.00 for miscarriage,&#13;
cesarean or Porro-cesarean section. WPS will pay expense for or&#13;
incidental to any procedure for the termination of pregnancy where&#13;
there are clear medical or psychiatric indications for such procedure.&#13;
WPS coverage also includes 80 percent of physicians' charges for1&#13;
psychiatric services while confined in a general hospital and 50 p ercent&#13;
while not confined in a hospital. WPS will pay 80 percent of the&#13;
charges when a subscriber is confined in a hospital or sanitarium for&#13;
nervous or mental disorder. Some dental work is covered. Payment&#13;
will be made for miscellaneous hospital expenses incurred as an&#13;
outpatient if the first visit occurs within 72 hours of the injury. WPS&#13;
also provides $20,000 maximum for major illness benefits.&#13;
Students with the notion that they are covered under their parents'&#13;
policy are asked to check that coverage carefully. Often an insurance&#13;
plan will drop coverage of a dependent individual at age 18, leaving a&#13;
student uninsured&#13;
For further, more detailed information, contact either Parkside&#13;
nurse Edith Isenberg, (553) 2366, a Kenosha WPS representative, 654-&#13;
5774, or WPS in Racine at 552-9746.&#13;
Parkside's registered nurse is in the Health Office, located on&#13;
campus in Library-Learning Center D198. Edith Isenberg has been the&#13;
Parkside nurse for three and a half years, and works closely with Dr.&#13;
Michael Bode, a Kenosha physician and Parkside's medical consultant.&#13;
&#13;
As well as rendering basic first aid treatment, Isenberg is available&#13;
to give health counseling. "The major goal of the health services," she&#13;
explained, "is to teach students to take care of t heir own health. Many&#13;
students have never even made a doctor's appointment."&#13;
The Health Service Office works together with community health&#13;
resources such as Planned Parenthood and the Venereal Disease&#13;
Clinic. If Isenberg cannot help a student she will find someone who can&#13;
and will see the students are referred to the best possible source in the&#13;
area.&#13;
As well as health counseling Isenberg has made printed matter&#13;
available on such things as V.D., cancer, birth control, pollution, acne,&#13;
and calories.&#13;
Isenberg is working with the Learning Center to set up a program&#13;
with tapes and films on health. The 1973-74 RANGER has given space&#13;
to the Health Office to run a column on aspects of health which are of&#13;
concern to students. RANGER readers can look forward to learning&#13;
some interesting facts on insurance, nutrition, health foods and fads,&#13;
community health resources, mono, and other aspects of health.&#13;
Health service at Parkside is free. Students at Parkside Village may&#13;
sign out equipment such as thermometers, hot water bottles, and ace&#13;
bandages. The Health Service Office is open from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.m. and evening appointments may be made by contacting Isenberg&#13;
at ext. 2366, or LLC D198.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
WANTED: Students interested i doing&#13;
investigative reporting, writing,&#13;
photography. Contact WASHINGTON POST&#13;
or PARKSIDE RANGER. Could lead to&#13;
Pulitzer Prize.&#13;
WANTED: Photographers, poets, people&#13;
interested in working on an annual tor the 73&#13;
74 school . year. Those interested please&#13;
contact Ken Konkol or Dave Daniels or&#13;
check the table at registration.&#13;
WANTED: Riders to Torcon II, World&#13;
Science Fiction Convention, over Labor Day&#13;
weekend, Toronto, Canada. Those interested&#13;
please contact Ken Konkol (1232 M arquette&#13;
St., Racine) prior to 22 A ugust.&#13;
S.A.B.; $1/discpunt on a ticket&#13;
for the Harry Chapin concert&#13;
Sept. 30; free coffee or fountain&#13;
drink with purchase of a Ranger&#13;
Special ; $5 off the deposit for the&#13;
Hawaiian Holiday trip; 50 cents&#13;
off on a season pass for Athletic&#13;
events; and 25 percent discount&#13;
for the purchase of Parkside&#13;
mugs at the bookstore.&#13;
Ranger needs investigative&#13;
reporters. What is going on&#13;
behind these doors?&#13;
Comm. Arts,&#13;
Classroom&#13;
bldgs. open&#13;
The growing university&#13;
facilities consist of eight&#13;
buildings. Two are in operation&#13;
for the first time this fall.&#13;
The Communication Arts&#13;
Building is located west of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center. It&#13;
houses art, music and TV labs, a&#13;
700 seat theater, the computer&#13;
center, classrooms and faculty&#13;
offices. Most of this building is in&#13;
operational condition. The&#13;
theater is behind scheduie.&#13;
-The other new building is the&#13;
Classroom Building located north&#13;
of Greenquist Hall. Classrooms,&#13;
labs and faculty offices are&#13;
located there.&#13;
Tallent Hall, adjacent to the&#13;
main parking areas, houses&#13;
various student services and&#13;
administrative offices and an&#13;
information center. The first&#13;
floor is being rebuilt to house&#13;
offices of student services.&#13;
In addition to a collection of&#13;
more than 175,000 books, 1800&#13;
periodicals, 15,000 reels of&#13;
microfilm, 2000 records and a&#13;
large government publication&#13;
series, the Library-Learning&#13;
Center (LLC) houses The&#13;
University Bookstore, a&#13;
cafeteria, administrative office&#13;
and an information terminal&#13;
located in lower main place. The&#13;
LLC is the academic hub of the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Greenquist Hall is located&#13;
north of LLC and houses&#13;
Classrooms, wet labs and faculty&#13;
offices.&#13;
The Student Activities Building&#13;
is located south of Tallent Hall&#13;
and provides students with a&#13;
lounge, patio, TV, games, pool&#13;
tables, table tennis, cards, chess&#13;
sets and the campus beer bar. It&#13;
is the site of dances, a feature&#13;
film series and other activities.&#13;
The Physical Education&#13;
Building makes available a&#13;
variety of recreational opportunities,&#13;
both indoor and&#13;
outdoor.&#13;
Kenosha Campus, located on&#13;
Washington Road west of Wood&#13;
Road, provides more classroom&#13;
and lab space. The continued use&#13;
of this building is in doubt.&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
SO YOU WANT TO BE A . . .&#13;
WRITER?&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHER?&#13;
REPORTER?&#13;
LAYOUT ARTIST?&#13;
ADVERTISING SALESMAN?&#13;
the RANGER needs you for the&#13;
73-'74 school year.&#13;
We may have just what you'r&#13;
looking for. _ LLC D1&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
More fun on&#13;
•^•^1 Ride a Honda to work during the week. Beat the traffic 2 andlhehi^&#13;
hcoslofas&#13;
'^&#13;
henride•'on,heweekend,o&#13;
open air and open country. Only your Honda dealer offers&#13;
• • • you the greatest selection of models in the industry to&#13;
choose from. There's sure to he one just right for you.&#13;
Come bv soon.&#13;
The best deals going&#13;
on the Honda of your ehoiee!&#13;
Wisconsin St.&#13;
in Sturtevant&#13;
886-3306&#13;
:,= . '.,wr •0.- v- • • ;. -&#13;
Student Life offers coupons&#13;
The Student Life Office is&#13;
anxious to have students b ome&#13;
£amiliar with various enterprises&#13;
on campus, so a an introduction&#13;
to some of these areas the&#13;
tudent Life Discount Book has&#13;
been created. To be distributed at&#13;
fall registration to all students it&#13;
contains more than 20 cou~ns&#13;
good for free or discounted items&#13;
at uch places as the bookstore&#13;
food service, Student Activiti~&#13;
Building (S.A.B. ), Campus&#13;
Sweete Shoppe, Travel Center&#13;
and Athletics.&#13;
The total value of th book&#13;
com s to over $14. Some coupons&#13;
are valid only for the first few&#13;
day of classes; others may be&#13;
used throughout the month of&#13;
Sept.&#13;
Examples of some of the&#13;
discounts available are: 20 cents&#13;
off the purchase of a pizza at the&#13;
Insurance, health&#13;
services available&#13;
Parkside offers students both a Health Service located on campus and a student health in urance program.&#13;
Any student taking 6 or more credits is ligible for insurance&#13;
coverage from Wisconsin Physicians Service CWPSJ. Last year 259&#13;
stud nts took advantage of the WPS insurance plan and the benefits&#13;
and premiums will remain the same this year. The premiums are:&#13;
Two semesters Second semester One semester&#13;
and swnmer and summer&#13;
single&#13;
tud nt and dependent&#13;
family&#13;
$89.25&#13;
$237.00&#13;
$244.80&#13;
$59.50&#13;
$158.00&#13;
$163.20&#13;
$29.75&#13;
$79.00&#13;
$81.60&#13;
The WPS insurance program provides students with comprehensive&#13;
coverage of basic physician and hospital costs. "This plan was&#13;
designed for the young student," remarked Jack Anstadt, a WPS&#13;
Kenosha representative. Parkside's Health Service nurse, Edith&#13;
Isenberg added that it makes an especially good deal for married&#13;
students and adults with a family.&#13;
One of the b n fit~ offered by WPS in this insurance plan is a $10,000&#13;
maximum for physician's service and hospitalization. WPS will pay&#13;
expense, physicians and hospitalization charges, for maternity (a) up&#13;
to $300.00 for normal deliveries (b) up to $000.00 for miscarriage,&#13;
cesarean or Porro-cesarean section. WPS will pay expense for or&#13;
incidental to any procedure for the termination of pregnancy where&#13;
ther are clear medical or psychiatric indications for such procedure.&#13;
WPS coverage also includes 80 percent of physicians· charges for&#13;
psychiatric services while confined in a general hospital and 50 percent&#13;
while not confined in a hospital. WPS will pay 80 percent of the&#13;
charges when a subscriber is confined in a hospital or sanitariwn for&#13;
n rvous or mental di. order. ome dental work is covered. Payment&#13;
will be made for miscellan ous hospital expenses incurred as an&#13;
outpatient if the rirst visit occurs within 72 hours of the injury. WPS&#13;
also provides $20,000 maximwn for major illness hen fits.&#13;
tud nts with the notion that they are covered under their parents'&#13;
policy are asked to ch ck that coverage carefully. Often an insuran e&#13;
plan will drop coverage of a depenclent md1vidual at ag 18, leaving a&#13;
student uniru.ured&#13;
For furth ·r. more detailed information, contact either Parkside&#13;
nurse Edith Isenberg, (553) 2.~. a Kenosha WPS representative, 654·&#13;
5774, or WP' in R· cine at 552-9746.&#13;
Parksid · · re~::.ter d uur e i in thP Health Office, located on&#13;
campu in Library-Learning Center 0198. Edith Isenberg has been the&#13;
Parkside nur.,P for thr and a half years, and works closely with Dr.&#13;
Michael Bode. a Kenosha physician and Parkside's medical consultant.&#13;
&#13;
As well as rendering ba i first aid treatment, Isenberg is available&#13;
to give h alth couuseling. "The major goal of the health services," she&#13;
explained, "is to teach students to take care of their own health. Many&#13;
stud nt hav nev r even made a doctor's appointment."&#13;
The Health Service Office works together with community health&#13;
resources such as Planned Parenthood and the Venereal Disease&#13;
Clinic. If I enberg cannot help a student she will find someone who can&#13;
and will see the tudents are referred to the best possible source in the&#13;
area.&#13;
As well as health counseling Isenberg has made printed matter&#13;
available on such things as V.D., cancer, birth control, pollution, acne,&#13;
and calories.&#13;
Isenberg is working with the Learning Center to set up a program&#13;
with tapes and films on health. The 1973-74 RANGER has given space&#13;
to the Health Office to run a colwnn on aspects of health which are of&#13;
concern to students. RANGER readers can look forward to learning&#13;
some interesting facts on insurance, nutrition, health foods and fads,&#13;
community health resources, mono, and other aspects of health.&#13;
Health service at Parkside is free. Students at Parkside Village may&#13;
ign out equipment such a thermometers, hot water bottles, and ace&#13;
bandages. The Health Service Office is open from 9:00 _a.m. to 4:30&#13;
p.m. and evening appointments may be made by contactmg Isenberg&#13;
at ext. 2366. or LLC D198.&#13;
S.A.8.; $11 discpunt on a ticket&#13;
for the Harry Chapin concert&#13;
Sept. 30; free coffee or foun.ain&#13;
drink with purchase of a Ranger&#13;
SpeciaJ; $5 off the deposit for the&#13;
Hawaiian Holiday trip; 50 cents&#13;
off on a season pass for Athletic&#13;
events; and 25 percent discount&#13;
for the purchase of Parkside&#13;
mugs at the bookstore.&#13;
Ranger needs investigative&#13;
reporter . What is going on&#13;
behind these door ?&#13;
Comm. Arts,&#13;
Classroom&#13;
hldgs. open&#13;
The growing university&#13;
facilities consist of eight&#13;
buildings. Two are in operation&#13;
for the first time this fall.&#13;
The Communication Arts&#13;
Building is lo('ated west of the&#13;
Library-Learning Center. It&#13;
houses art, music and TV labs, a&#13;
700 seat theater, the computer&#13;
cent r, cla rooms and faculty&#13;
offices. Most of this building is in&#13;
opera tion..1 J condition. The&#13;
theater is behind S('heuule.&#13;
-The oth •r n w building ii; the&#13;
Classroom ilu1lding locaLPd north&#13;
of Greenqui$l Hall. Classrooms,&#13;
labs and faculty officf's are&#13;
located there .&#13;
Tallent Hall, adjacent to the&#13;
main parking ar as, houses&#13;
various student services and&#13;
administrative offic and an&#13;
information center. The first&#13;
floor is being rebuilt to house&#13;
offic of student services.&#13;
In addition to a collection of&#13;
more than 175,000 books, 1800&#13;
periodicals, 15,000 reels of&#13;
microfilm, 2000 records and a&#13;
large government publication&#13;
series, the Library-Learning&#13;
Center &lt;LLC) houses The&#13;
niversity Bookstore, a&#13;
cafeteria, administrative office&#13;
and an information terminal&#13;
located in lower main place. The&#13;
LLC is the academic hub of the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Greenquist Hall is located&#13;
north of LLC and houses&#13;
la rooms, wet labs and faculty&#13;
offices.&#13;
The Student Activities Building&#13;
is located south or Tallent Hall&#13;
and provides students with a&#13;
lounge, patio, TV, games, pool&#13;
tables, table tennis, cards, chess&#13;
sets and the campus beer bar. It&#13;
is the site of dances, a feature&#13;
film series and other activities.&#13;
The Physical Education&#13;
Building makes available a&#13;
variety of recreational opportunities,&#13;
both indoor and&#13;
outdoor.&#13;
Kenosha Campus, located on&#13;
Washington Road west of Wood&#13;
Road, provides more classroom&#13;
and lab space. The continued use&#13;
of this building is in doubt.&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
WANTED· Stud nts ,nterestl'd , doir19 American State Bank t1'\ VC-$ti9 t1v r porting, wr,tlnQ,&#13;
ohOtOQr,&gt;pny Cont.i cr WASHINGTON POST&#13;
or PARKSIDE R"" GER Could IHd to&#13;
Pul ,tzer Pr11t'&#13;
WANTED. Photogrbf)ht'r~. poet~, people&#13;
,nter~ted in wor1&lt;,nQ on on annual for th 73&#13;
1, ~ch001 year Those n1er&amp;stt'd please&#13;
contacl Ken Konkol or Davr Dan1t'IS or&#13;
che&lt;:k the !able di re1Mlr8tIon&#13;
WANTED : Riders to Torcon 11, World&#13;
sc,ence F,ct,on Conv~t,on. over LabOr Day&#13;
wet,ken&lt;:I, Toronto, Canad11 Those ,nterest&lt;'&lt;I&#13;
pl ase contact Ken Konl&lt;ol t 1237 M~rquette&#13;
~• , Rc,c,nP) pr,or to n AuQust&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582 ~bff F OIC&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
REPORTER?&#13;
. LAYOUT ARTIST?&#13;
ADVERTISING SALESMAN?&#13;
NGER needs you for the&#13;
'73-'74 school year.&#13;
We may have just what you 're&#13;
loo ing for. RANGER - LLC 01&#13;
,... -&#13;
..... --&#13;
Morefunon&#13;
~ ... :~ L~ss gas.&#13;
Rl•de a R1J~ :i Honda 1,, w rk dunng 1he &gt;4tek. Beat the lr-Jlfn:&#13;
Jnd the h1~h 00-,1 ur ga . Then nde II oo the weekend 10&#13;
,,pen ,ur and upen country. Onl~ your Honda dealer orfers Honda "'u rhe )!reate:.t selecuon ,,r lll(.x.ld, in rile industry 10&#13;
.:hex)&lt;,( fn1m. There\ ~urc 10 re one 1u t right for~ u.&#13;
• omc h, ........ )n&#13;
Tiet&gt;'"'•' flt&gt;•f• t•l•r&#13;
en rfw ff••fl• •I r•Nr t&gt;ltoirt&gt;!&#13;
The~ll 41&#13;
. IIIWisi;onsinSt. I I in Sturtevant&#13;
886-3306 &#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
from the managers desk:&#13;
0*0 JM PcRfA 0&#13;
'tE/T Books&#13;
"Trade B«dk:&#13;
All t-e-Gi/we-d 4 \recoimw&amp;Acled iocoici.&#13;
VY\CUic^ (J Sac/ (&#13;
a&#13;
Expa-wdecl Sefecit'oH^ 4 s objects - Weoo bi/-oa&gt;sng au-e&amp;s&#13;
*V old dext books 4 po^Oso- \qojcJcs ,&#13;
SoflCOtSoPRtlES—Wdeassadm&amp;J- &lt;£ "Supplies-, -sp.wJ r)cfebook5,&#13;
bnckvs; V.Uet-s, "~bj(pin&lt;^ -bopp/ies ^aig"'e»:„a Supp/ie&#13;
rt&gt; (Aoub- oton nove&#13;
aP-so \cockJ&#13;
14M -bh'ifih 4 fQl^k^fo/e ^ocvek.v-^Wv,&#13;
J&#13;
a . %u)e-d&#13;
rev i i cji '&#13;
~f tiloTM"S ^ f ^ ,&#13;
J&#13;
h » • I&#13;
MaoazW^ h]&amp;uji&gt; coecJet^S . CUtfmenS- e d UQ-oJftI OH^ /Pl&amp;c^jooc^&#13;
•wow- f§fl&#13;
45~T~kh~-- _::::-t)esi~Vl ';\"u~ owt1 viov&lt;:&gt;_,/t'-:\ ~J,·,1-:::,_ ~ Pw,-k 'f&gt;;de. 0oovec,1; v-- -sh; J~j aY~o ja.,c.':k.J-s ) -s Wea__"i-sh~~) l:f s..\ eA,~v.ts2.'&#13;
1'1AcA~tl 1!4S --- New~ weA"Jd JS_, wom e.1,/~ &gt; e cl uc.aJ,· o~, &gt; /if-e-{t--&lt;R..f ul,f-e.1 Pf o.c~ bo j f moire. , . . :&#13;
I &#13;
\\\&#13;
Otis— po^cu-c^ ovr-cura , "^luoLio rfudi c c&gt;m'i"c&#13;
3&#13;
tonavies "Siudi^ c ^o'f dzs, cuf I &gt; n of"es, ^ CT^'» ~h-fal&amp;&lt;&gt; &lt;&#13;
)&#13;
GfcS^lfcS-T^-- "&#13;
l0&#13;
'lS&#13;
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a%SeS&#13;
j a4r+*u^ o%0&lt;J •scloo! v-mo^..&#13;
° RsTf^S 0 # O^OtES © "fei&gt;RD ft&amp;MtDTYTl^ ©&#13;
T£»rW»dc» U«»versi|y poolcslorc&#13;
j^octyreb )*&gt; TH£- Lihaaiqv LEA a.*'!"*- CemeR&#13;
^ ftcAoss PA-onn Li 3RA&amp;X&#13;
* ~ ± «/ . — A ^ J&#13;
\i *0° yV-J, ._ .&#13;
A* ' ^&#13;
4 *+* S »*„•/ „.- *'\4&#13;
/&gt;V&gt;./V&#13;
&lt;Y 0 0&#13;
f&#13;
H » -P &lt;&lt;* J * V i&gt; &lt; c&#13;
"V &lt;V «&#13;
^ .0° &gt;&gt;VV i A&#13;
OdMING Jtf7RAC#ONS&#13;
/ (-/ i/V /&#13;
5" ^"Record "SALE (o-«d ^»y)&#13;
'&#13;
f ^'BOOK'SAUF C O^eU^vable.)&#13;
a&#13;
°^ ^AKfT^^T'TkcNAOTION (SV* ooltj be. Girealf^&#13;
/ ^ SUPER "BOX^S (Cpv\'+ toe. ^Deaf)&#13;
CJ?EEJIA/1 o~:.s- ~vit~&gt;•pc,"'ruj, "&amp;-fvdio - comi"'.~ ---iii; "G .s;'a.f!P /&#13;
~UfJ(tt:M,,nn..&lt;ts-D;c:f ;~lCU~e~;Siudj 'juirles J ou-tl;.,.e..,.,.J yiofes) m~ -fa.i:&gt;k~,&#13;
SDINftllR$iCIA~~-$-~-W'Uj~J ~\a.~s j Q:1&gt;h ¾~; o~;coJ d oo/ lt-',~J~·&#13;
---· L )oN4r F b.ROET ··----&#13;
c. ~GTttS • ~tr[Fiu,J,s e Curl)tfS o "i(f(!l)f&lt;~ $ ~~ ~f&gt;ffl)II~ e . ·.· /&#13;
~rk~ide Unive~i~ ook ~\ore ,': /&#13;
J.,.oc't-r60 Jt.J TH£ l,a1211&gt;ev L£A12..'NJtvG- Ce,nER : &#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
Library has come a long way&#13;
A student and part-time employee of the library serves as an exit guard by the library doors. The&#13;
sign reads "Please show books here when leaving."&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
The Learning Center is not for&#13;
faculty use only. Students are&#13;
encouraged to use all of the&#13;
Learning Center's facilities.&#13;
According to Beecham&#13;
Robinson, Director, the Learning&#13;
Center is not a "hands-off" place.&#13;
Students are instructed in the&#13;
operation of the equipment as&#13;
they need it. The facilities&#13;
currently include 350 16mm&#13;
films, 3,000 records, 2,000&#13;
cassettes, 200 sound filmstrips,&#13;
200 video tapes, 80 video&#13;
cassettes, 100 filmloops, 2,000&#13;
slides, 6,000 art slides, and all the&#13;
equipment to use them with.&#13;
"The collection is growing very&#13;
fast," said Jo Herrick, media&#13;
librarian.&#13;
Many of these materials can be&#13;
checked out, including such items&#13;
as cassette recorders, instamatic&#13;
cameras, and headphones.&#13;
"Just because the professor&#13;
does not suggest using materials&#13;
from the Learning Center does&#13;
not mean there is not something&#13;
here that can help the student,"&#13;
said Robinson.&#13;
Not only does the Learning&#13;
Center supply students with&#13;
research and enrichment&#13;
material, but it also provides&#13;
entertainment. The collection&#13;
includes popular films, records,&#13;
and video tapes.&#13;
A new feature of the Learning&#13;
Center's services will be opening&#13;
up this fall. The Media&#13;
Production facility is located on&#13;
the D-l level of the Communication-Arts&#13;
building. This&#13;
facility consists' of two audio&#13;
studios, one film studio, one&#13;
television studio, and one audiovisual&#13;
studio. There is also a&#13;
darkroom for professional use.&#13;
Dave Campbell, coordinator of&#13;
the Media Production facility,&#13;
has lots of hopes and plans for the&#13;
facility.&#13;
During the first six months&#13;
Campbell expects that the TV&#13;
area will be producing material&#13;
for faculty and possibly the local&#13;
cable company. Two TV&#13;
students&#13;
productions per week is the expected&#13;
initial capacity.&#13;
"Hopefully, by the first year of&#13;
operation, there will be a TV&#13;
series. This would involve a&#13;
faculty member deciding that&#13;
some of their course material&#13;
would lend itself better to being&#13;
put on TV," said Campbell.&#13;
Such a TV series could be kept&#13;
at Parkside and or duplicated&#13;
and sold to other campuses.&#13;
Another hoped for item is a&#13;
mobile van which could supply&#13;
audio and video services to local&#13;
schools, as well as serving as a&#13;
traveling studio for the&#13;
University.&#13;
After two years the TV&#13;
productions should reach six per&#13;
week.&#13;
Students fit into all this, too. All&#13;
areas of production will need&#13;
crew members to operate the&#13;
equipment necessary to TV, film,&#13;
audio, and audio-visual&#13;
production.&#13;
There will be bulletins around&#13;
when the hiring begins for crew&#13;
members, so interested persons&#13;
should keep their eyes and ears&#13;
open.&#13;
Student checks out material at Learning Center.&#13;
Bicycles - Warehouse Prices!&#13;
Folding Bicycles, C oaster B rake, 3 Speed, 1 0 Speed&#13;
BEC-MAR PRODUCTS 637-1591&#13;
Parkside's library has come a&#13;
long way since its days in the old&#13;
Wood Road schoolhouse.&#13;
After being housed there, then&#13;
in the Modulux, and then in&#13;
Tallent Hall since July of 1969,&#13;
the library finally moved up the&#13;
hill to its permanent home in the&#13;
Library Learning Center building&#13;
last August.&#13;
According to Kenneth Herrick,&#13;
Acting Director, the library offers&#13;
many services to students.&#13;
Among these are interlibrary&#13;
loan, Reference librarians,&#13;
library tours, a map collection,&#13;
Browsing Collection, Government&#13;
Publications, a pamphlet&#13;
file, Sepcial Collections, Seminar&#13;
rooms, typewriters and&#13;
calculators for student use, coin&#13;
operated copying machines, and&#13;
carrels wired for audio and or&#13;
video.&#13;
Parkside's library is a member&#13;
library of the Wisconsin Interlibrary&#13;
Loan Service (WILS).&#13;
If a student is unable to obtain a&#13;
book from the Parkside library,&#13;
he may fill out a WILS request&#13;
card, and his request will be&#13;
teletyped to Madison. Usually&#13;
students are allowed to use books&#13;
from the UW-Madison libraries,&#13;
and faculty may borrow books&#13;
from other participating&#13;
libraries. There is no limit on the&#13;
number of books or the number of&#13;
times a student may use this&#13;
service.&#13;
The Reference librarians meet&#13;
the information needs of the&#13;
library, according to Dave&#13;
Streeter, Head of Reference.&#13;
They, along with the rest of the&#13;
library staff, maintain an information&#13;
desk during most of&#13;
the hours that the library is open.&#13;
If students have any difficulty&#13;
finding the information they are&#13;
looking for, they should ask at the&#13;
desk for assistance.&#13;
Another area of the library is&#13;
the Special Collections, which is&#13;
accessible through Reference.&#13;
This collection consists of books&#13;
which are rare, delicate, might&#13;
cause damage to other books, or&#13;
for some reason tend to be stolen.&#13;
The map collection is located&#13;
on the second floor. In addition to&#13;
atlases of several types, there are&#13;
travel and highway maps. The&#13;
library is also a depository for&#13;
U.S. Geological Survey maps.&#13;
Most of the maps cannot be&#13;
charged out; however, there is&#13;
information available for ordering&#13;
maps.&#13;
A Browsing Collection of&#13;
college-level best-selling books is&#13;
located on the main floor.&#13;
Students hunting for a good novel&#13;
might try this area first.&#13;
The Publications Department&#13;
is a depository for Wisconsin,&#13;
U.S. and UN publications. These&#13;
materials are available through&#13;
Government Publications, but&#13;
are not listed in the card catalog.&#13;
To find these materials one&#13;
should look through the catalogs&#13;
of public documents such as the&#13;
UN Documents index, and&#13;
Wisconsin Public Documents.&#13;
Current periodicals are on the&#13;
D-l level, and are arranged&#13;
alphabetically according to&#13;
subject. Earlier editions are on&#13;
themain floor. Most periodicals&#13;
have cards in the card catalog,&#13;
and there is also a computer&#13;
print-out of all the library's&#13;
periodical holdings.&#13;
A new library service which is&#13;
hoped for in the fall is a book drop&#13;
on the loop road. This would allow&#13;
students to simply drive up the&#13;
hill and deposit the book in the&#13;
book drop, according to Herrick.&#13;
Another change which will be&#13;
made is the Director of the&#13;
library: As of September 1,&#13;
Joseph Boisse will take over that&#13;
office, formerly held by Philip&#13;
Burnett. Boisse was Chairperson&#13;
of the Intellectual Freedom&#13;
Committee of the Wisconsin&#13;
Library Association. He was also&#13;
both Assistant and Acting&#13;
Director of the Library at&#13;
Lawrence in Appleton.&#13;
Girls,&#13;
tall good looking&#13;
Canadian boys&#13;
eat regularly&#13;
at Bonanza.&#13;
What&#13;
does&#13;
mounted police&#13;
really&#13;
to $3&#13;
BON&amp;KZfi SIRLOIN FIT.&#13;
34 &amp; 5 2 St. 11:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Daily&#13;
Great Steak with Student Prices&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. a, 1973&#13;
Library has come a long way&#13;
• A student and part-time employee of the library serves as an exit guard by the library doors. The&#13;
1gn reads "Please show books here when leaving."&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
for students too&#13;
The Learning Center is not for&#13;
faculty u only. Students are&#13;
encourag d to use all of the&#13;
Learning Center's facilities.&#13;
According to Beecham&#13;
Robin. on, Director, the Learning&#13;
Center is not a "hands-off" place.&#13;
Students are instructed in the&#13;
operation of the equipment as&#13;
they need it. The facilities&#13;
currently include 350 16mm&#13;
films, 3,000 records, 2,000&#13;
cassettes, 200 sound filmstrips,&#13;
200 video tapes, 80 video&#13;
ca ttes, 100 filmloops, 2,000&#13;
lides, 6,000 art slides, and all the&#13;
equipm nt to u e them with .&#13;
''The collection is growing very&#13;
fast," said Jo Herrick, media&#13;
librarian.&#13;
Many of these materials can be&#13;
checked out, including such items&#13;
as cassette recorders, instamatic&#13;
cameras, and headphones.&#13;
"Just because the professor&#13;
does not suggest using materials·&#13;
from the Learning Center does&#13;
not mean there is not something&#13;
here that can help the student,"&#13;
said Robinson.&#13;
Not only does the Learning&#13;
Center supply students with&#13;
research and enrichment&#13;
material, but it also provides&#13;
entertainment. The collection&#13;
includes popular films, records,&#13;
and video tapes.&#13;
A new feature of the Learning&#13;
Center's services will be opening&#13;
up this fall. The Media&#13;
Production facility is located on&#13;
the D-1 level of the Communication-Arts&#13;
building. This&#13;
facility consists· of two audio&#13;
studios, one film studio, one&#13;
television studio, and one audiovisual&#13;
studio. There is also a&#13;
darkroom for professional use.&#13;
Dave Campbell, coordinator of&#13;
the Media Production facility,&#13;
has lots of hopes and plans for the&#13;
facility.&#13;
During lhe first six months&#13;
Campbell expects that the TV&#13;
area will be producing material&#13;
for faculty and possibly the local&#13;
cable company. Two TV&#13;
productions per week is the expected&#13;
initial capacity.&#13;
"Hopefully, by the first year of&#13;
operation, there will be a TV&#13;
series. This would involve a&#13;
faculty member deciding that&#13;
some of their course material&#13;
would lend itself better to being&#13;
put on TV," said Campbell.&#13;
Such a TV series could be kept&#13;
at Parkside and or duplicated&#13;
and sold to other campuses.&#13;
Another hoped for item is a&#13;
mobile van which could supply&#13;
audio and video services to local&#13;
schools, as well as serving as a&#13;
traveling studio for the&#13;
University.&#13;
After two years the TV&#13;
productions should reach six per&#13;
week.&#13;
Students fit into an this, too. All&#13;
area of production will need&#13;
crew members to operate the&#13;
equipment necessary to TV, film,&#13;
audio, and audio-visual&#13;
production.&#13;
There will be bulletins around&#13;
when the hiring begins for crew&#13;
members, so interested persons&#13;
should ke p their eyes and ears&#13;
open.&#13;
Student checks out material at Learning Center.&#13;
Bicycles - Warehouse Pricesl&#13;
Folding Bicycles, Coaster Brake, 3 Speed, 10 Speed&#13;
BEC-MAR PRODUCTS 637-1591&#13;
Parkside's library has come a&#13;
long way since its days in the old&#13;
Wood Road schoolhouse.&#13;
After being housed there, then&#13;
in the Modulux, and then in&#13;
Tallent Hall since July of 1969,&#13;
the library finally moved up the&#13;
hill to its permanent home in the&#13;
Library Learning Center building&#13;
last August.&#13;
According to Kenneth Herrick,&#13;
Acting Director, the library offers&#13;
many services to students.&#13;
Among these are interlibrary&#13;
loan, Reference librarians,&#13;
library tours, a map collection,&#13;
Browsing Collection, Government&#13;
Publications, a pamphlet&#13;
file, Sepcial Collections, Seminar&#13;
rooms, typewriters and&#13;
calculators for student use, coin&#13;
operated copying machines, and&#13;
carrels wired for audio and or&#13;
video.&#13;
Parkside's library is a member&#13;
library of the Wisconsin Interlibrary&#13;
Loan Service CWILS).&#13;
If a student is unable to obtain a&#13;
book from the Parkside library,&#13;
he may fill out a WIL.S request&#13;
card, and his request will be&#13;
teletyped to Madison. Usually&#13;
students are allowed to use books&#13;
from the UW-Madison libraries,&#13;
and faculty may borrow books&#13;
from other participating&#13;
libraries. There is no limit on the&#13;
number of books or the number of&#13;
times a student may use this&#13;
service.&#13;
The Reference librarians meet&#13;
the information needs of the&#13;
library. according to Dave&#13;
Streeter, Head of Reference.&#13;
They, along with the rest of the&#13;
library staff, maintain an information&#13;
desk during most of&#13;
the hours that the library is open.&#13;
If students have any difficulty&#13;
finding the information they are&#13;
looking for, they should ask at the&#13;
desk for assistance.&#13;
Another area of the library is&#13;
the Special Collections, which is&#13;
accessible through Reference.&#13;
This collection consists of books&#13;
Girls,&#13;
which are rare, delicate, might&#13;
cause damage to other books, or&#13;
for some reason tend to be stolen.&#13;
The map collection is located&#13;
on the second floor. In addition to&#13;
atlases or several types, there are&#13;
travel and highway maps. The&#13;
library is also a depository for&#13;
U.S. Geological Survey maps.&#13;
Most of the maps cannot be&#13;
charged out; however, there is&#13;
information available for ordering&#13;
maps.&#13;
A Browsing Collection of&#13;
college-level best-selling books is&#13;
located on the main floor.&#13;
Students hunting for a good novel&#13;
might try this area first.&#13;
Th Publications Department&#13;
is a depository for Wisconsin,&#13;
. . and publications. These&#13;
materials are available through&#13;
Government Publications, but&#13;
are not listed in the card catalog.&#13;
To find th s mat rials one&#13;
hould look through the catalogs&#13;
of public documents such as the&#13;
UN Documents index, and&#13;
Wisconsin Public Documents.&#13;
urrent periodicals are on the&#13;
D-1 level, and are arranged&#13;
alphabetically according to&#13;
subject. Earlier editions are on&#13;
thcmain floor. Most periodicals&#13;
have cards in the card catalog,&#13;
and there is also a computer&#13;
print-out of all the library's&#13;
periodical holdings.&#13;
A new library service which is&#13;
hoped for in the fall is a book drop&#13;
on the loop road. This would allow&#13;
students to simply drive up the&#13;
hill and depo it the book in the&#13;
book drop, according to Herrick.&#13;
Another change which will be&#13;
made is the Director of the&#13;
library. As of September 1,&#13;
Joseph Boisse will take over that&#13;
office, formerly held by Philip&#13;
Burnett. Boisse was Chairperson&#13;
of the Intellectual Freedom&#13;
Committee of the Wisconsin&#13;
Library Association. He was also&#13;
both Assistant and Acting&#13;
Director of the Library at&#13;
Lawrence in Appleton.&#13;
tall good looking&#13;
Canadian boys&#13;
eat regularly&#13;
at Bonanza.&#13;
What&#13;
does&#13;
mounted police really&#13;
mean?&#13;
Steak dinners Sl" to S3"&#13;
BON!MZ!&#13;
Sim.DIN PIT.&#13;
34 &amp; 52 St. 11 :00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m. Daily&#13;
Great Steak with Student Prices &#13;
LANDSCAPE ANALYSIS&#13;
OENOIINO LOCATION OF FOUR&#13;
MAJOI VIOIIAIION Pill&#13;
* * DESIRABLE VIIW S&#13;
FXISTINO VIOITATIO N&#13;
I J MAJOR OUR SRACE&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
Free tutoring available&#13;
CAMPUS DEVELOPMENT AT 25,000 STUDENTS&#13;
Agents of&#13;
nature at UW-P&#13;
Did you ever dream of taking a trip through time,&#13;
back to the era before white men ever inhabited this&#13;
land? This seemingly impossible trip is now being&#13;
made possible right here at Parkside.&#13;
This campus was designed with an ecological&#13;
purpose in mind: restoring plant species originally&#13;
found in Wisconsin before the coming of the plow.&#13;
Parkside is unique in this aspect because most other&#13;
camDuses are unable to undertake such a project,&#13;
either because of urbanization or limited land mass.&#13;
One university that has adopted a similar approach&#13;
to landscaping is Southern Illinois University at&#13;
Edwardsville. It, however, does not have the&#13;
variety in species available at Parkside.&#13;
The local masterminds of this project are Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, Science Division Chairperson, and&#13;
James Galbraith, Director of Planning and Construction.&#13;
The plan was originally conceived in&#13;
Madison though, before the first faculty member&#13;
ever arrived here.&#13;
Citing John T. Curtis' book, The Vegetation of&#13;
Wisconsin, as the "bible" from which this campus&#13;
was conceived and has been developed,&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz outlined the progress of this plan&#13;
from its conception. The first step was an inventory&#13;
of plant species already existing on the campus site.&#13;
This complete, it was then determined which&#13;
species would have long-range value and which&#13;
were of limited value and could give way to&#13;
buildings or other species without sacrificing the&#13;
over-all goal. The master plan shown here was&#13;
developed based on the findings of this study. The&#13;
campus was, therefore, built around the existing&#13;
landscape rather than substituting an artificial&#13;
landscape later, as is usually the case.&#13;
There are many benefits resulting from a natural&#13;
landscape. The first and probably foremost in many&#13;
people's minds is cost. The expense involved in&#13;
initiating and maintaining such a landscape is&#13;
minimal compared to that arising from the planting&#13;
and maintenance of various oriental or other&#13;
foreign species in exact geometrical patterns. The&#13;
species used on this campus are, for the most part,&#13;
already here. They sometimes merely need to be&#13;
relocated in a more desirable place. Maintenance&#13;
will involve little more than removal of diseased&#13;
plants and an occasional burning-off to maintain&#13;
prairie areas.&#13;
Another benefit of using natural species is their&#13;
intrinsic, year-round beauty. It may, however, take&#13;
some eyes a little time to appreciate the aesthetic&#13;
qualities in what they had formerly considered&#13;
weeds, and to adjust to the absence of neatly cut&#13;
lawns and hedges usually associated with public&#13;
buildings.&#13;
The master plan shown here outlines the appearance&#13;
of the campus in its final stages. The&#13;
whole site will be a botanical instruction area, with&#13;
species native to various parts of Wisconsin found in&#13;
locations most suitable to their survival. The&#13;
campus will be, in essence, a mini-Wisconsin.&#13;
If you are unable to picture this diagram of the&#13;
future-past from what Parkside looks like now,&#13;
don't be too surprised-some aspects are different.&#13;
As an example, the widening of the Pike River into a&#13;
lake is still in the planning stage, and is dependent&#13;
on the purity of the Pike. The pond just west of Wood&#13;
Road, which is not shown in the plan, was added&#13;
when it was found to be a perfect drainage area,&#13;
entirely suitable to the over-all plan. The "swamp"&#13;
as it has come to be called, will have marsh-type&#13;
vegetation and the "pier" will aid students in investigating&#13;
these species.&#13;
Some stages of the plan have already been&#13;
completed. Gasiorkiewicz has seeded some areas in&#13;
natural species and will be doing more. As is shown,&#13;
much of the campus will be covered by tall prairie&#13;
grass. High use areas, however, such as playing&#13;
fields and outdoor classroom facilities, will be&#13;
seeded with shorter, more conventional species. As&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz said, "We're hoping to become&#13;
agents of nature."&#13;
ACADEMIC FACILITIES&#13;
2 SINGLE STUDENT HOUSING&#13;
3 MARRIED STUDENT HOUSINO&#13;
A APPLIED RESEARCH FACILITIES&#13;
5 PHYSICAL PLANT FACILITIES&#13;
PARKING&#13;
2 ATHLETIC FIELDS&#13;
O RECREATION MICA&#13;
S BOTANICAL INSTRUCTION AREA&#13;
10 ARBORETUM&#13;
11 UNIVERSITY RELATED FACILITIES&#13;
Housing&#13;
Need a place to live? The&#13;
person to contact is Shirley Schmerling,&#13;
Housing Coordinator,&#13;
whose office is located in Tallent&#13;
Hall. The office is currently 215,&#13;
but will be moving downstairs as&#13;
soon as the new office is ready.&#13;
Lists of r ooms, apartments and&#13;
flats are kept for student, staff&#13;
and faculty use. The housing&#13;
service covers both the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha areas, as well as the&#13;
Parkside Village.&#13;
"This year I am allowed to put&#13;
students together as roommates&#13;
at the Village. I also have student&#13;
help at the Village working with&#13;
both the management and myself&#13;
to take care of student&#13;
problems," said Schmerling.&#13;
Persons seeking housing who&#13;
need further information should&#13;
call 553-2320, or stop by the office.&#13;
L&amp;FA sets&#13;
schedule&#13;
"There's more to going to&#13;
school than going to classes,"&#13;
according to Charlotte Chell,&#13;
acting chairperson of the Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts committee and&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
mathematics.&#13;
Guided by this philosophy, the&#13;
committee brings several&#13;
programs to campus each year,&#13;
such as last year's Jose Greco&#13;
performance, Norman Mailer&#13;
lecture and the Joffrey II ballet&#13;
company, among others. But due&#13;
to a lack of University funding,&#13;
Chell indicated that the committee&#13;
will reduce the number of&#13;
offerings to twp or possibly three&#13;
this year.&#13;
During the first semester, the&#13;
new Communication Arts theater&#13;
will be the setting for mime artist&#13;
T. Daniel, a former student of&#13;
world-renowned pantomimist&#13;
Marcel Marceau. Daniel focuses&#13;
his performances in the Marceau&#13;
tradition but also has developed&#13;
his own style by incorporating his&#13;
knowledge of magic, obtained&#13;
from his background in theatre at&#13;
Illinois State University, with the&#13;
technique of pantomime.&#13;
On March 1 the New&#13;
Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Francisco will be here to perform&#13;
one of Sahkespeare's plays. The&#13;
group has appeared before many&#13;
college, high school and public&#13;
audiences, and the players feel,&#13;
according to Chell, that they need&#13;
to get close to their audience.&#13;
They have not as yet selected&#13;
which of Shakespeare's classics&#13;
to present here.&#13;
"In Search of Dracula" is a&#13;
third program being planned for&#13;
this year, with two researchers&#13;
who have been investigating the&#13;
possible reality of the fiend's&#13;
existence. Included with their&#13;
lecture is a film.&#13;
The Parkside Tutorial Service&#13;
offers academic assistance to all&#13;
Parkside students free of charge.&#13;
The service is directed by Isorn&#13;
Fearn of S tudent Services and is&#13;
located in Room 280 of Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
The goals' of the Tutorial&#13;
Service are to provide individualized&#13;
academic help; to&#13;
minimize dropouts through encouragement&#13;
and motivation; to&#13;
provide sociological and&#13;
psychological reinforcement; to&#13;
help students develop selfawareness&#13;
and confidence; and&#13;
to instill a sense of belonging and&#13;
the knowledge that someone&#13;
cares.&#13;
Tutoring is conducted in small&#13;
groups of three to eight students&#13;
or on an individual basis; it helps&#13;
those who are academically&#13;
deficient as well as those who&#13;
need assistance in one specific&#13;
area. Tutoring is available in all&#13;
major courses of study at&#13;
Parkside and also in specialized&#13;
areas such as reading, learning&#13;
and study skills. Audio-visual&#13;
aids are also available at the&#13;
Library-Learning Center.&#13;
Tutors are Parkside students&#13;
who have been selected on the&#13;
basis of grade point average,&#13;
faculty recommendations, interest&#13;
in and enthusiasm for&#13;
helping others, and empathy for&#13;
Isom Fearn&#13;
the problems of students in need&#13;
of academic help. Having faced&#13;
and overcome problems similar&#13;
to those confronting students they&#13;
assist, these undergraduate&#13;
tutors are perhaps more&#13;
beneficial than a professional&#13;
tutor would be.&#13;
Office hours of the Tutorial&#13;
Service are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,&#13;
Monday through Friday; evening&#13;
hours are available by appointment.&#13;
The phone number is&#13;
(553-)2289.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
512 6th Avenue&#13;
Come Alone . . .&#13;
Bring A Friend . . .|&#13;
Either Way \-l y&#13;
MARINA ROOM&#13;
THURS.,FRI.,SAT. 9:00p.m.-1:00a.m&#13;
COLLEGE NIGHT Every Thursday&#13;
PITCHER OF B EER *1 with 1.0.&#13;
1.AtlDSCAl't'. AN.ALYSlll&#13;
Dti.ct11NO lOC.t.TION OIi f&#13;
a,uoe VIOIT•IION n'fU&#13;
.._ ~ 11\MIAMfVlhrl&#13;
-- U:t\,-1"'1 ¥fOl1AltOlil c:=:J .. ..,. .... .,.,,&#13;
r. CAMPUS DEVELOPMENT AT 25,000 STUDENTS •&#13;
Agents of&#13;
nature at UW-P&#13;
Did you ever dream of taking a trip through time,&#13;
back to the era before white men ever inhabited this&#13;
land'? This seemingly impossible trip is now being&#13;
made possible right here at Parkside.&#13;
This campus was designed with an ecological&#13;
purpose in mind: restoring plant species originally&#13;
found in Wi con in before the coming of the plow.&#13;
Parkside is unique in this aspect because most other&#13;
C'.amouses are unable to undertake such a project,&#13;
either because of urbanization or limited land mass.&#13;
One university that has adopted a similar approach&#13;
to landscaping is Southern Illinois University at&#13;
Edwardsville. It, however, does not have the&#13;
variety in species available at Parkside.&#13;
The local masterminds of this project are Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, Science Division Chairperson, and&#13;
James Galbraith, Director of Planning and Construction.&#13;
The plan was originally conceived in&#13;
tadison though, before th first faculty member&#13;
ever arrived here.&#13;
Citing John T. Curtis' book, 'lbe Vegetation of&#13;
Wisconsin, as the "bible" from which this campus&#13;
was conceived and has been developed,&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz outlined the progress of this plan&#13;
from its conception. The first step was an inventory&#13;
of plant species already existing on the campus site.&#13;
This complete, it was then determined which&#13;
pecies would have long-range value and which&#13;
were of limited value and could give way to&#13;
buildings or other species without sacrificing the&#13;
over-all goal. The master plan shown here was&#13;
developed based on the findings of this study. The&#13;
campus was, therefore, built around the existing&#13;
landscape rather than substituting an artificial&#13;
landscape later, as is usually the case.&#13;
There are many benefits resulting from a natW'al&#13;
landscape. The first and probably foremost in many&#13;
people's minds is cost. The expense involved in&#13;
initiating and maintaining such a landscape is&#13;
minimal compar d to that arising from the planting&#13;
and maintenance of various oriental or other&#13;
foreign species in exact geometrical patterns. The&#13;
peci uSed on this campus are, for the most part,&#13;
already here. They sometimes merely need to be&#13;
r located in a more desirable place. Maintenance&#13;
will involve Uttle more than removal of diseased&#13;
plants and an occasional burning-off to maintain&#13;
prairie areas.&#13;
Another benefit of using natural species i their&#13;
intrinsic, year-round beauty. It may, however, ta~e&#13;
some y a little time to appreciate the a~thet1c&#13;
qualities in what they had formerly considered&#13;
weeds, and to adjust to the absence of neatly Cl;lt&#13;
lawns and hedges usually associated with pubhc&#13;
building .&#13;
The master plan shown here outlines the appearance&#13;
of the campus in its final stages. The&#13;
whol ite will be a botanical instruction area, with&#13;
speci native to various parts of Wisconsin found in&#13;
locations most suitable to their survival. The&#13;
campus will be, in essence, a mini-Wisconsin.&#13;
If you are unable to pictW'e this diagram of the&#13;
future-past Crom what Parkside looks like now,&#13;
don't be too surprised-some aspects are_diff~rent.&#13;
an example, the widening of the Pike River mto a&#13;
lake is till in th planning stage, and is dependent&#13;
on the purity of the Pike. The pond just west of Wood&#13;
Road, which i not shown in the plan, was added&#13;
when it wa found to b a perfect drainage area,&#13;
entirely suitable to th over-all plan. The " wamp"&#13;
a it has c me to called will have marsh-type&#13;
v g talion and the "pier" .:Vm aid students in inve&#13;
ligating th e sp ies.&#13;
Some stages of the plan have already ~n&#13;
completed. Gasiorkiew1cz has seeded some areas m&#13;
natural p i sand will be doing more. A is sho~,&#13;
much of the campus wiLI be covered by tall prai_rae&#13;
grass. High use areas, however, such a pl_aymg&#13;
fields and outdoor classroom facilities, will be&#13;
Seeded with shorter, more conventional speci · As&#13;
G iorkiewicz said, "W 're hoping to t&gt;ecome&#13;
agents of nature."&#13;
• ..,,,l (Ufc(M.111C11, 11&#13;
I ,,,o .._ "-•1111 , tl.l TIII&#13;
I ,..-Afl•111tG&#13;
1 AlHl.fflC: 'If DI&#13;
t f'TUWAII Ii&#13;
e 901'AIOC&amp; llttll tl(Mir 11. ,_&#13;
Housing&#13;
Need a plac to live? Th&#13;
person to cont.act is Shirley chmerling,&#13;
Housing Coordinator,&#13;
whose office is located in Tallent&#13;
Hall. The office is currently 215,&#13;
but will be moving downstairs as&#13;
soon as the new office is ready.&#13;
Lists of rooms, apartments and&#13;
fiats are kept for student, staff&#13;
and faculty use. The housing&#13;
service covers both the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha area , as well as the&#13;
Parkside Village .&#13;
"This year I am allowed to put&#13;
students together as roommates&#13;
at the Village. I also have student&#13;
help at the Village working with&#13;
both the management and myself&#13;
to take care of student&#13;
problems," said Schmerling.&#13;
Persons seeking housing who&#13;
need further information should&#13;
call 553-2320, or stop by the office.&#13;
L&amp;FA sets&#13;
schedule&#13;
"There's more to going to&#13;
school than going to classes,"&#13;
according to Charlotte Chell,&#13;
acting chairperson of the Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts committee and&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
mathematics.&#13;
Guided by this philosophy, the&#13;
committee brings several&#13;
programs to campus each year,&#13;
such as last year's Jose Greco&#13;
performance, orman Mailer&#13;
lecture and the Joffrey II ballet&#13;
company, amon others. But ~ue&#13;
to a lack of niver ity funding,&#13;
Chell indicated that the committee&#13;
will redye the number of&#13;
offerings to tw/J or I)OSSibly three&#13;
this year.&#13;
During the first mester, the&#13;
new Communication rts theater&#13;
will be the setting for mime artist&#13;
T. Daniel, a former stud~t _of&#13;
world-renowned pantom1m1st&#13;
Marcel Marceau. Daniel focuses&#13;
his performanre in the Marceau&#13;
tradition but also has dev~lop~&#13;
his own style by incorporating his&#13;
knowledge of magic, obtained&#13;
from his background in theatre at&#13;
Illinois State University, with the&#13;
technique of pantomime.&#13;
On March l the ew&#13;
Shakespeare Company of San&#13;
Franci co will be here to perform&#13;
one of Sahkespeare's plays. The&#13;
group has appeared before ma~y&#13;
collcg , high school and public&#13;
audienc ' and th players feel,&#13;
according lo Chell. that they need&#13;
to get los to their audience.&#13;
They have not as y f selec~ed&#13;
which of Shakespeare s classics&#13;
to present here. ,. . '"In arch of Dracula 1s a&#13;
third program being planned for&#13;
thi year, with two researchers&#13;
who have been investigating the&#13;
possible reality of the fiend'&#13;
xist nc . Included with their&#13;
lecture is a film.&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
Free tutoring available&#13;
goal or th Tutorial&#13;
Servic ar to provide in•&#13;
div1dualized academic help; lo&#13;
minimiz dropou throu h encoura&#13;
ement and motivation; to&#13;
provide ociological and&#13;
psych logical r mforc m nt ; to&#13;
h Ip stud nt dev lop s If•&#13;
awar n .- nd confid nc ; and&#13;
to instill a n, of bel ngin and&#13;
the knowledge that omeone&#13;
car .&#13;
Tutoring I conducted in mall&#13;
group or thr to ight tud n or on an individual basi ; it helps&#13;
tho who ar academically&#13;
deficient a well tho e who&#13;
need assistance in one p ific&#13;
ar a. Tutoring i a ailable in all&#13;
major cours of tudy at&#13;
Park id and also in pecialized&#13;
areas such as reading, learning&#13;
and tud kills. Audio-vi ual&#13;
aids are also available at the&#13;
Library-Learmng Center.&#13;
Tutors ar Park id tuden&#13;
who have been lected on the&#13;
ba i of grad point average,&#13;
faculty recommendations, intere&#13;
t in and enthu ia m for&#13;
h lping oth r , and empathy for&#13;
th prob! m of tud nts in need&#13;
of acad mic help. Having faced&#13;
and ov rcom probl m imilar&#13;
to th ·e confronting tudent.s they&#13;
a i t, these undergraduate&#13;
tutors ar p rhaps more&#13;
ben ficial than a prof ional&#13;
tutor would be.&#13;
ffice hour of the Tutorial&#13;
rvtce are 8 a.m. to :30 p.m.,&#13;
fonday through rid y; v ning&#13;
hour are available by appoi.ntm&#13;
nt. Th phon nwnber i&#13;
(553-)228&#13;
ROCK&#13;
MARINA ROOM&#13;
THURS.,FRI. SAT. 9: 00p.m.-1: 00a.m&#13;
COLLEGE MIGHT Every Thursday&#13;
PITCHER OF BEER $1 with 1.0. &#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
WETTENGEL'S&#13;
BUSINESS MACHINES, INC.&#13;
RICHARD CAMPAGNA, C.E.&#13;
ADLER TYPEWRITERS&#13;
5921 - Gth Ave. "A" Kenosha. Wis.&#13;
Phones 657-9413 - 657-7166&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication."&#13;
*11950&#13;
Texas Instruments&#13;
electronic slide rule calculator&#13;
SR-IO&#13;
Academic organization explained&#13;
Veterans are involved&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
the urban-industrial character of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The&#13;
School contains the Divisions of&#13;
Engineering Science,&#13;
Management Science, and Labor&#13;
Economics.&#13;
Parkside's Industrial Society&#13;
Mission, designed to provide&#13;
students with a grasp of the&#13;
human and technological&#13;
resources demanded in an urbanindustrial&#13;
society, has been&#13;
translated into programs and&#13;
courses in both academic units. It&#13;
is highlighted in the SMI where&#13;
professional programs in&#13;
business and management,&#13;
engineering science and labor&#13;
economics are offered. In the CSS&#13;
students in the arts and sciences&#13;
can focus on the many interrelated&#13;
social, economic,&#13;
educational, environmental,&#13;
political and cultural concerns&#13;
which accompany life in an urban-industrial&#13;
society. The new&#13;
Industrial Society (IS) program&#13;
in the College, instituted this year&#13;
at the Freshman level, is an&#13;
example of this focus.&#13;
There are 25 undergraduate&#13;
majors currently available at&#13;
Parkside veterans needing&#13;
assistance with academic or&#13;
personal problems should look to&#13;
the Veterans Services Office.&#13;
Located in Tallent 237 and&#13;
directed by counselor Ken&#13;
Oberbrunner, the Office aids&#13;
veterans in utilizing the opportunities&#13;
and services&#13;
available to them at Parkside.&#13;
They also work to recruit newly&#13;
discharged veterans to further&#13;
their education through the&#13;
benefits offered to them.&#13;
The Veterans Services Office&#13;
acts as a clearinghouse and a&#13;
source of information regarding&#13;
veterans and their special needs&#13;
on campus. Veterans can count&#13;
on the office for help in getting&#13;
prompt receipt of G.I. benefits,&#13;
along with assisting in locating&#13;
financial aids and part-time jobs.&#13;
Veterans services also organize&#13;
an early registration for vets and&#13;
prides itself on the no "red tape"&#13;
procedures at Parkside. The&#13;
Service includes a personal&#13;
counselor and advisor for veteran&#13;
students; if they can't help with a&#13;
problem they can put you in touch&#13;
with someone who can. Other&#13;
personal programs and services&#13;
are provided at Parkside and the&#13;
Veterans Services Office is&#13;
available to keep vets informed&#13;
about them.&#13;
Another organization which&#13;
aids veterans on campus is the&#13;
Parkside Veterans Club. The&#13;
Veterans Club, which is one of the&#13;
most active organizations on&#13;
campus, involves its members in&#13;
meaningful service activities&#13;
which assist fellow veterans, help&#13;
with campus needs, and work&#13;
with local community&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The Veterans Club has been&#13;
responsible for keeping the&#13;
Racine Bus service alive by&#13;
aiding in the supervision of&#13;
money collection on daily bus&#13;
runs and by raising money to&#13;
subsidize the service through&#13;
dances and selling buttons. Other&#13;
activities on campus have been:&#13;
decorating the LLC Christmas&#13;
tree, acting as ushers for campus&#13;
events, selling POW bracelets,&#13;
There is no charge for classified ads.&#13;
Just fill in this fornj and send it to: Ads will run for one week only.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Renewals can be made by calling&#13;
Business Office the Friday preceding the next&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside ... ..&#13;
Kenosha, Wis, 53140 publ.cat.on.&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS DATE&#13;
and adding support for other&#13;
campus activities. Most important&#13;
to other veterans is the&#13;
club's assistance with academic&#13;
advising and tutoring of fellow&#13;
veteran students.&#13;
The Veterans Club has also&#13;
involved itself in the community&#13;
to give assistance to various local&#13;
organizations. Vets club works to&#13;
organize other veteran students&#13;
not attending Parkside to act as a&#13;
local pressure group which&#13;
supports veteran benefits and&#13;
programs.&#13;
Veterans Club holds bi-monthly&#13;
meetings in the student Activities&#13;
Building; Sunday 7-10 p.m. The&#13;
meetings include agendabusiness&#13;
matters first, then a&#13;
social gathering. Special&#13;
speakers on Veterans affairs&#13;
provide current information for&#13;
Parkside vets at these meetings.&#13;
Further information on&#13;
Veterans Services or the&#13;
Veterans Club can be obtained by&#13;
calling Ken Oberbrunner, ext.&#13;
2481, or stopping in at his office,&#13;
Tallent 237.&#13;
PHONE NO.&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between wordslo show spacing&#13;
Dean Eugene Norwood&#13;
Parkside is organized into two&#13;
major academic units: the&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
(CSS) and the School of Modern&#13;
Industry (SMI). The two are&#13;
closely related through joint&#13;
faculty appointments, crosslisted&#13;
courses and shared&#13;
requirements. Each is further&#13;
divided, not according to&#13;
traditional departments, but&#13;
rather according to divisions&#13;
representing broad fields of&#13;
knowledge. Within these general&#13;
divisions are single discipline&#13;
majors such as English and&#13;
chemistry, and interdisciplinary&#13;
majors like communication, life&#13;
science, and labor economics.&#13;
The CSS, headed by Dean&#13;
Eugene Norwood, includes the&#13;
basic academic disciplines under&#13;
the Divisions of Science, Social&#13;
Science, Humanistic Studies and&#13;
Education. The College reflects&#13;
Parkside's general education&#13;
mission.&#13;
Dean William Moy heads the&#13;
SMI, which focuses on relating to&#13;
Programs for vets&#13;
Dean Will&#13;
Parkside; in addition, students&#13;
planning professional careers&#13;
attend Parkside for preprofessional&#13;
studies such as law&#13;
or medicine. Students can also&#13;
arrange suitable preparatory&#13;
programs to enter such fields as&#13;
architecture, optometry, conservation,&#13;
forestry, veterinary&#13;
medicine and veterinary science.&#13;
The Division of Education&#13;
awards full teacher certification&#13;
for elementary and secondary&#13;
teaching, according to state&#13;
requirements.&#13;
Moy&#13;
When a student's objectives&#13;
cannot be met by courses&#13;
currently offered, the student&#13;
should consult his-her advisor&#13;
about an independent study&#13;
opportunity. This can take many&#13;
forms: independent reading,&#13;
field work, research in&#13;
laboratory or field situations, or&#13;
work at another institution.&#13;
These are some of the&#13;
academic innovations at&#13;
Parkside which were designed to&#13;
improve and individualize&#13;
education and make it more&#13;
relevant and contemporary.&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
Academic • • organ1zat1on&#13;
Dean Eugene orwood&#13;
Parkside i organized into two&#13;
major academic units: the&#13;
College of Science and Society&#13;
&lt; SJ and the School of Modern&#13;
Industry &lt; MI&gt;. The two ar&#13;
closely related through joint&#13;
faculty appointments, crosslisted&#13;
course and shared&#13;
requir ments. Each is further&#13;
divided, not according to&#13;
traditional departments, but&#13;
rather according to division&#13;
representing broad fields of&#13;
knowledge. Within these general&#13;
divisions are single discipline&#13;
majors such as English and&#13;
chemistry, and interdisciplinary&#13;
majors like communication, lif&#13;
science, and labor economics.&#13;
The CS , headed by Dean&#13;
Eugene Norwood, includes the&#13;
basic academic disciplines under&#13;
the Divisions of Science, Social&#13;
Science, Humani tic Studies and&#13;
Education. The College reflects&#13;
Parkside's general education&#13;
mission.&#13;
Dean William Moy heads the&#13;
SMI. which focuses on relating to&#13;
Pro1aams for vets&#13;
the urban-industrial character of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin. The&#13;
School contains the Divisions of&#13;
Engineering Science,&#13;
Management Science, and Labor&#13;
Economics.&#13;
Parksid ·s Industrial Society&#13;
Mission, designed to provide&#13;
students with a grasp of the&#13;
human and technological&#13;
resources demanded in an urbanindustri&#13;
al society, has been&#13;
translated into programs and&#13;
courses in both academic units. It&#13;
is highlighted in the SMI where&#13;
professional programs in&#13;
business and management,&#13;
engineering science and labor&#13;
economics are offered. In the CSS&#13;
students in the arts and sciences&#13;
can focus on the many interr&#13;
lated social, economic,&#13;
educational, environmental,&#13;
political and cultural concerns&#13;
which accompany life in an urban-industrial&#13;
society. The new&#13;
Industrial Society (IS) program&#13;
in the College, instituted this year&#13;
al the Freshman level, is an&#13;
example of this focus.&#13;
There are 25 undergraduate&#13;
majors currently available at&#13;
Veterans are involved&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
students; if they can't help with a&#13;
problem they can put you in touch&#13;
with someone who can. Other&#13;
personal programs and services&#13;
are provided at Parkside and the&#13;
Veterans Services Office is&#13;
available to keep vets informed&#13;
about them.&#13;
and adding support for other&#13;
campus activities. Most important&#13;
to other veterans is the&#13;
club's assistance with academic&#13;
advising and tutoring of fellow&#13;
veteran students.&#13;
The Veterans Club has also&#13;
involved it elf in the community&#13;
to give assistance to various local&#13;
organi1..ations. Vets club works to&#13;
organize other veteran students&#13;
explained&#13;
Dean William Moy&#13;
Parkside; in addition, students&#13;
planning professional career&#13;
attend Parkside for preprofessional&#13;
studies uch as law&#13;
or medicine. Students can also&#13;
arrang suitable preparatory&#13;
programs to enter such fields as&#13;
architecture, optometry, conservation,&#13;
forestry, veterinary&#13;
medicin and v terinary science.&#13;
The Division of Education&#13;
awards full teacher certification&#13;
for elem ntary and secondary&#13;
teaching. according to tate&#13;
requirements.&#13;
When a stud nt's objectives&#13;
cannot be met by courses&#13;
currently offered, the student&#13;
should consult his-her advisor&#13;
about an independent study&#13;
opportunity. This can tak many&#13;
f?rm : indep nd nt reading,&#13;
£1 eld work, research in&#13;
laboratory or field situations, or&#13;
work at another institution.&#13;
These are some of the&#13;
academic innovation at&#13;
Parkside which were designed to&#13;
impro\'e and individualize&#13;
education and make it more&#13;
relevant and contemporary.&#13;
Sturino's&#13;
COACH&#13;
STOP&#13;
•Pizza&#13;
•Italian&#13;
Food&#13;
•Cockta i Is&#13;
Parkside veterans needing&#13;
assistance with academic or&#13;
personal problems should look to&#13;
the Vet ran rvices Offic .&#13;
Located in Tallent 237 and&#13;
directed by counselor Ken&#13;
Oberbrunner, the Office aids&#13;
veterans in utilizing the op•&#13;
portunities and services&#13;
available to them at Parkside.&#13;
They also work to recruit newly&#13;
discharged veterans to further&#13;
their education through th&#13;
benefits offered to them.&#13;
The Veteran Services Office&#13;
acts as a clearinghouse and a&#13;
source of information regarding&#13;
v t rans and their special needs&#13;
on campu . V terans can count&#13;
on the office for help in getting&#13;
prompt rec ipt of G.l. benefits,&#13;
along with a isting in locating&#13;
Another organization which&#13;
aids veterans on campus is the&#13;
Parkside Veterans Club. The&#13;
Veterans Club, which is one of the&#13;
most active organizations on&#13;
campus, involves its members in&#13;
meaningful service activities&#13;
which assist fellow veterans, help&#13;
with campus needs, and work&#13;
with local community&#13;
organizations.&#13;
not attending Parkside to act as a&#13;
local pressure group which&#13;
supports veteran benefits and •&#13;
programs.&#13;
Phone&#13;
551-9999&#13;
. financial aids and part-time jobs.&#13;
The Veterans tub has been&#13;
responsible for keeping the&#13;
Racine Bus service alive by&#13;
aiding in the supervision of&#13;
money collection on daily bus&#13;
runs and by raising money to&#13;
subsidize the service through&#13;
dances and selling buttons. Other&#13;
activities on campus have been:&#13;
de orating the LLC Christmas&#13;
tree, acting as ushers for campus&#13;
events, s lling POW bracelets,&#13;
Veteran Club holds bi-monthly&#13;
meetings in tl1e student Activities&#13;
Building; Sunday 7-10 p.m. The&#13;
meetings include agendabusin&#13;
s matters first, then a&#13;
social gathering. Special&#13;
speakers on Veterans affairs&#13;
provide current information for&#13;
Parkside vets at these meetings. Veterans services also organize&#13;
an early registration for vets and&#13;
p ides itself on the no "red tape"&#13;
procedur at Parkside. The&#13;
rvic includes a personal&#13;
counselor and advisor for veteran&#13;
Further information on&#13;
Veterans Services or the&#13;
Veterans Club can be obtained by&#13;
calling Ken Oberbrunner, ext.&#13;
2481, or stopping in at his office,&#13;
Tallent 237.&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
I&#13;
There is no charge for classified ads.&#13;
Just fill in this fOl'lll and send it to:&#13;
The Park id(' Ranger&#13;
Bu in s Office&#13;
D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Keno ha, Wis. 53140&#13;
NA•----------------&#13;
Ads wlll run for one week only.&#13;
Renewals can be made by calling&#13;
the Friday preceding the next&#13;
publication.&#13;
ADORESS ______________ DATE ______ _&#13;
CITY _______________ PHONE NO. ____ _&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between wordsf o show spacing&#13;
.&#13;
,&#13;
Ads must be submitted one week before publication,·&#13;
l )43 · 22nd Ave Kenosha . Wis&#13;
s119~0&#13;
Texas Instruments I ) r ( .::&#13;
SR-10&#13;
WETTENGEL'S&#13;
BUSINESS MACHINES, INC.&#13;
RICHARD CAMPAGNA. C.E.&#13;
ADLER TYPEWRITERS&#13;
5921 - 6th Ave. "A" Kenosha. Wis.&#13;
Phones 657-9413 - 657-7166 &#13;
Financial aid,&#13;
jobs still&#13;
available&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 13&#13;
The Financial Aids Office still&#13;
has grant money as well as loan&#13;
and work study funds available&#13;
for the '73-'74 academic year.&#13;
Students who need assistance&#13;
may pick up an application in&#13;
Tallent Hall 288 or,call ext. 2291 to&#13;
have one mailed out.&#13;
Parkside recently was notified&#13;
by the Federal Government that&#13;
we will receive twice as much in&#13;
the Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant Fund as last year. Many of&#13;
the restrictions have been&#13;
liberalized so that more students&#13;
are now eligible to receive the&#13;
grant.&#13;
The Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant (EOG) is designed to&#13;
provide grant assistance to&#13;
students in need of funds to attend&#13;
college. It is gift money, not&#13;
a loan, so it does not have to be&#13;
repaid.&#13;
The grant is based on financial&#13;
need with no academic&#13;
achievement levels required.&#13;
Students may receive as much as&#13;
$1500 per year and need only&#13;
carry a minimum of eight&#13;
credits. Entering Freshmen,&#13;
continuing students and transfer&#13;
students are eligible if they&#13;
qualify under the need formula.&#13;
Federal regulations require&#13;
that any dollar amout of EOG be&#13;
matched with a like dollar&#13;
amount either in the form of a&#13;
loan or student employment.&#13;
To apply, it is necessary to&#13;
complete a two part form. The&#13;
student completes one portion&#13;
and returns it to the Fiancial Aids&#13;
Office. The student's parents&#13;
complete the second part and&#13;
send it to College Scholarship&#13;
Service with a small processing&#13;
fee (se lf-supporting and married&#13;
students complete a different set&#13;
of forms). The form is then&#13;
returned by CSS to the Financial&#13;
Aids Office and the application is&#13;
reviewed. The Office then notifies&#13;
students by mail of its decisions.&#13;
Besides grants, other major&#13;
ST? assistance are loans,&#13;
Thfifr&#13;
t '&#13;
PS, rfnd emPIoyment. The National Direct Student Loan&#13;
[&#13;
e&#13;
H&#13;
de&#13;
;f - Wis. Direct&#13;
Student Loan (State) and the Wis.&#13;
Guaranteed Student Loan (Bank&#13;
or Savings and Loan) all have&#13;
similar provisions. Repayment&#13;
and interest are not required&#13;
until nine months after the&#13;
student leaves school. Half-time&#13;
students can qualify.&#13;
Parkside offers a number of&#13;
scholarships to students who&#13;
demonstrate both need and exceptional&#13;
academic&#13;
achievement. Students must be&#13;
enrolled on a full-time basis.&#13;
Both a regular student employment&#13;
service and a College&#13;
Work-Study Program are&#13;
provided here also. The WorkStudy&#13;
program is based on need&#13;
but regular student employment&#13;
services are offered regardless of&#13;
financial circumstances.&#13;
Susan Johnson, Work-Study&#13;
Supervisor, commented that&#13;
there are plenty of jobs available,&#13;
and many employers work&#13;
around the student's schedule.&#13;
Some employment is on-campus,&#13;
the rest in Racine or Kenosha.&#13;
In addition to more commorf&#13;
part-time jobs like clerks,&#13;
laborers, gas station attendants&#13;
and waitresses, some more&#13;
unusual positions are also&#13;
available. These include tour&#13;
guides, flower designing, live-in&#13;
kennel attendant, typing instructor,&#13;
jury duty, houseparent,&#13;
baton instructor, hand arts instructor&#13;
(macrame, painting and&#13;
sculpture) and modelling for art&#13;
classes (some nude modelling&#13;
involved).&#13;
All enrolled students may&#13;
check the job listings as often as&#13;
they like.&#13;
' • i i • in&#13;
The Parkside Ranger has&#13;
positions open for responsible&#13;
people in Business Management&#13;
and Advertising.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER:&#13;
Experience or education in bookkeeping,&#13;
billing, and typing.&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
DIRECTOR:&#13;
Salary commensurate with ability and&#13;
willingness to accept responsibility.&#13;
Experience in sales and copy set-up.&#13;
Commission plus salary.&#13;
Send resume to: Kenneth Pestka D 194 LLC&#13;
J* U.W. Parkside Kenosha Wis. 53140&#13;
Parking rules to be&#13;
strictly enforced&#13;
"Parkside security police will&#13;
enforce the parking rules and&#13;
regulations strictly this year, to&#13;
help ensure the availability of&#13;
parking stalls for students,"&#13;
stated Ronald Brinkmann,&#13;
Director of Safety and Security.&#13;
The Parkside security police&#13;
who make up Brinkmann's troops&#13;
consist of three security officers&#13;
who patrol the buildings and who&#13;
may issue parking tickets, and&#13;
seven police officers who use&#13;
patrol cars and have arresting&#13;
power.&#13;
Some of the rules which "will&#13;
be -enforced more heavily than&#13;
last year" are: parking in an&#13;
area improper for the permit&#13;
which is displayed; improper&#13;
parking in a designated area,&#13;
such as parking outside of a stall;&#13;
parking where there is no&#13;
parking permitted at all; and&#13;
parking without a displayed&#13;
parking permit. These violations&#13;
carry a fine from three to five&#13;
dollars and increase after five&#13;
days.&#13;
Brinkmann noted that the same&#13;
traffic laws are enforced on&#13;
University property that are&#13;
observed on a regular highway.&#13;
Individuals who are caught&#13;
speeding, going through a stop&#13;
sign, or passing illegally will&#13;
have to appear in Kenosha&#13;
County Court. To appeal, one&#13;
must go through the courts. To&#13;
appeal a parking ticket, however,&#13;
Parkside has an Appeals Committee.&#13;
This committee is made&#13;
up of faculty and staff and there&#13;
is a provision for students, yet&#13;
none is a member.&#13;
Although student parking is&#13;
confined, this year, to the east&#13;
and west lots at both Tallent Hall&#13;
and the Kenosha campus, "there&#13;
should be enough space&#13;
available," said Brinkmann.&#13;
"We are trying to encourage car&#13;
pools - from the ecology point of&#13;
view," he added.&#13;
The security police are also&#13;
authorized to help with state&#13;
vehicle registration or license&#13;
problems. The Safety and&#13;
Security office is located on the&#13;
first floor of Tallent Hall, in the&#13;
southeast corner.&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
GRAND&#13;
OPENING&#13;
DECORATED AND FURNISHED&#13;
MODEL APARTMENTS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 1 to 8&#13;
Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
30th Avenue at Birch Road&#13;
THE NEWEST CONDOMINIUM&#13;
HOMES ARE IN KENOSHA&#13;
You're minutes away from a better way of life.&#13;
Birchwood Condominiums. All the advantages of&#13;
home ownership, with the carefree convenience of&#13;
a luxury apartment. A wide selection of home&#13;
styles and sizes, with:&#13;
Air conditioning&#13;
Luxurious carpeting&#13;
Electric range, self cleaning oven&#13;
Frost free refrigerator&#13;
Dishwasher&#13;
Foo.d waste disposal&#13;
Central FM/TV antenna&#13;
Private patio, balcony or townhouse court&#13;
Heated swimming pool&#13;
Country clubhouse, rec center, sauna&#13;
1 and 2 bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
from $19,500 to $27,000&#13;
2 and 3 bedroom Townhouses&#13;
from $28,000 to $34,000&#13;
For a personal appointment or more information&#13;
PHONE 552-9339&#13;
PARKSIDE REALTY INC,&#13;
Developed and Built by United States General Inc.&#13;
Financial aid,&#13;
jobs still&#13;
available&#13;
Toe Financial Aids Office tiJl&#13;
ha grant money as well a loan&#13;
and work study funds available&#13;
for the '73-'74 academic year.&#13;
tudenl who need assistance&#13;
may pick up an application in&#13;
Tallent Hall 288 or call ext. 2291 to&#13;
have one mailed out.&#13;
Parkside recently was notified&#13;
by the Fede~al Go_vernmenl th~t&#13;
we will receive twice as much m&#13;
the Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant FWld as last year. Many of&#13;
the restriction have been&#13;
liberalized so that more students&#13;
are now eligible to receive the&#13;
grant.&#13;
The Educational Opportunity&#13;
Grant (EOG) is designed to&#13;
provide grant assistance to&#13;
students in need of funds to attend&#13;
college. It is gift money, not&#13;
a loan, so it does not have to be&#13;
repaid.&#13;
The grant is based on financial&#13;
need with no academic&#13;
achievement levels required.&#13;
Students may receive as much as&#13;
$1500 per year and need only&#13;
carry a minimum of eight&#13;
credits. Entering Freshmen,&#13;
continuing students and transfer&#13;
students are eligible if they&#13;
quamy under the need formula.&#13;
Federal regulations require&#13;
that any dollar amout of EOG be&#13;
matched with a like dollar&#13;
amount either in the form of a&#13;
loan or student employment.&#13;
To apply, it is necessary to&#13;
complete a two part form. The&#13;
tudent completes one portion&#13;
and returns it to the Fiancial Aids&#13;
Office. The student' par nts&#13;
complete the second part and&#13;
end il to College Scholarship&#13;
Service with a small processing&#13;
fee &lt;self-supporting and married&#13;
tudents complete a different set&#13;
or forms&gt;. The form is then&#13;
r turned by C8S to the Financial&#13;
Aid Office and the application i~&#13;
revi wed. Th&amp; Offlce then notifies&#13;
tudent by mail of it decisions.&#13;
•&#13;
Besides grants, other major&#13;
types of assistance are loan&#13;
schola~hips and employment'.&#13;
The National Direct tud nt Loan&#13;
(Federal), the Wis. Direct&#13;
Student Loan c tatel and the Wis.&#13;
Guaranteed Stu~nt Loan (Bank&#13;
or Savings and Loan) all have&#13;
similar provisions. Repayment&#13;
and interest are not required&#13;
until nine months after the&#13;
stud nt leav s chool. Half-time&#13;
students can qualify.&#13;
Parkside offers a number of&#13;
scholarships to students who&#13;
demonstrate both need and exception&#13;
a I academic&#13;
achievement. Students must be&#13;
enrolled on a full-time basis.&#13;
Both a regular student employment&#13;
service and a College&#13;
Work-Study Program are&#13;
provided here also. The WorJ,-&#13;
Study program is based on need&#13;
but regular student employment&#13;
services are offered regardless of&#13;
financial circumstances.&#13;
Susan Johnson, Work-Study&#13;
upervi or, commented that&#13;
there are plenty of jobs available,&#13;
and many employers work&#13;
around the student's schedule.&#13;
Some employment is on-campus,&#13;
the rest in Racine or Kenosha.&#13;
In addition to more commor1&#13;
part-time jobs like clerks,&#13;
laborers, gas station attendants&#13;
and waitres e , som more&#13;
unusual positions are also&#13;
available. The e include tour&#13;
guides, flower designing, live-in&#13;
kennel attendant, typing instructor,&#13;
jury duty, houseparent,&#13;
baton instructor, hand arts instructor&#13;
macrame, painting and&#13;
sculptme ) and modelling for art&#13;
classes (some nude modelling&#13;
involved).&#13;
All enrolled students may&#13;
check the job listings as often as&#13;
they like.&#13;
• q ,-·&#13;
• The Parkside Ranger has&#13;
positions open for responsible&#13;
people in Business Managemen&#13;
and Advertising.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER:&#13;
Experience or education in book•&#13;
keeping, billing, and typing.&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
DIRECTOR:&#13;
Salary commen urate with ability and&#13;
willingne to accept re pon ihility.&#13;
Experience in sales and copy et~up.&#13;
•&#13;
C&#13;
Commi sion plu alary.&#13;
Send resume to: Kenn th Pestka D 194 LLC&#13;
U.W. Parksid Keno ha Wis. 53140&#13;
Parking&#13;
strictly&#13;
"Parkside security police will&#13;
enfor e the parking rul and&#13;
regulations strictly this year, to&#13;
h Ip nsure the a ailability of&#13;
parking stalls for students,"&#13;
stated Ronald Brinkmann,&#13;
Director of Safety and ecurity.&#13;
The Parkside security police who make up Brinkmann's troops&#13;
consist of three curity officers&#13;
who patrol the buildings and who&#13;
may issue parking tickets, and&#13;
even police officers who u&#13;
patrol ars and hav arr ting&#13;
power.&#13;
Some of the rules which "will&#13;
be -enforced more heavily than&#13;
last year" are: parking in an&#13;
ar a improper for the permit&#13;
which is displayed: improper&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 13&#13;
rules to he&#13;
enforced&#13;
parking in a designated area, such as parking outsid of a stall;&#13;
parking where there is no&#13;
parking permitted at all; and&#13;
parking without a di played parking permit. Toes violations&#13;
carry a fin from thre to five&#13;
dollar and in rea after five&#13;
days.&#13;
Brinkmann noted that the same&#13;
traffic laws are enforced on&#13;
niver ity property that are&#13;
ob erved on a regular highway.&#13;
Individual who ar caught eding, going through a top&#13;
ign, or pa ing illegally will&#13;
have to appear in K no ha&#13;
County ourt. To appeal, one&#13;
mu t go through the courts. To&#13;
appeal a parking ticket, how ver,&#13;
Parkside has an Appeals ommittee.&#13;
This committee i made&#13;
up of faculty and taff and there&#13;
i a provi ion for tudents, yet&#13;
non i a member.&#13;
Although tud nt parking is&#13;
c nfined, this year, to the east&#13;
and w t lo at both Tallent Hall&#13;
and th Ken ha campus, "there&#13;
hould b enough space&#13;
available," said Brinkmann.&#13;
"We are trying to encourage car&#13;
pools - from the ecology point of&#13;
vi w," he added&#13;
Th ecurity polic are al&#13;
authorized to help with state&#13;
vehicle registration or license&#13;
problems. The afety and&#13;
· curity office i located on the&#13;
fir t noor of Tallent Hall, in the&#13;
southca t corn r.&#13;
GRAND&#13;
OPENING&#13;
You're minutes rr-Nay from a better way of life.&#13;
Birchwood Condominiums. All the advantages of&#13;
home ownership, with the carefree convenience of&#13;
a luxury apartment. A wide selection of home&#13;
styles and sizes, with·&#13;
Air conditioning&#13;
Luxurious carpeting&#13;
Electric range, self cleaning oven&#13;
Frost free refrigerator&#13;
Dishwasher&#13;
DECORATED AND FURNISHED&#13;
MODEL APARTMENTS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdavs 1 to 8&#13;
Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
30th Avenue at Birch Road&#13;
::.....--N ~ E r--,-....... 1iii;:::::.L..!l:./ ~irch~ooJ&#13;
·~+[ s&#13;
C)w,,,A,rl "ii• •&#13;
.. 11• .. IIOA!].&#13;
Foo,d waste disposal&#13;
Central FM/TV antenna&#13;
Private patio, balcony or townhouse court&#13;
Heated swimming pool&#13;
Country clubhouse, rec center, sauna&#13;
1 and 2 bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
from $19,500 to $27,000&#13;
2 and 3 bedroom Townhouses&#13;
from $28,000 to $34,000&#13;
For a personal sppo1ntment or more information&#13;
PHONE 552-9339&#13;
PARKSIDE REALTY INC.&#13;
Developed and Built by United Stat!!! Gener I Inc &#13;
14 14 THE THE PARKSIDE PARKSIDE RANGER RANGER Wed Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 &#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 15&#13;
American Language Information Center&#13;
THE MYSTERIOUS AND THE&#13;
OCCULT: Section 13, taught by&#13;
Walter Graffin. This is first and&#13;
foremost a writing course. Most&#13;
of the p apers will be done on an&#13;
individual basis, with the student&#13;
selecting areas within the&#13;
general topic of the mysterious&#13;
and the occult for his-her own&#13;
investigation. Each student will&#13;
be expected to share what he-she&#13;
knows and learns about a special&#13;
area with the rest of the class.&#13;
Graffin has selected the following&#13;
books for this section: Gods from&#13;
Outer Space, Erich Von Daniken;&#13;
Survival Printout; and Heath's&#13;
Brief Handbook of Usage.&#13;
WRITING LABORATORY:&#13;
Section 15, taught by Margaret&#13;
Canary. This section takes place&#13;
in a laboratory setting in that&#13;
students may write, take part in&#13;
group discussion, or talk individually&#13;
with the instructor or&#13;
another class member. The real&#13;
goal is the student's goal. The&#13;
emphasis will be on how to best&#13;
express one's thoughts in writing&#13;
and the development of an honest&#13;
continued from page 5&#13;
writing style. Canary will use the&#13;
following texts: Insight, Emil&#13;
Hurtik; Writing Well, D. Halland&#13;
Text, Sources, and Criticism&#13;
Howe'* 1984&#13;
' 6d Er™S&#13;
WOMEN'S LIBERATION AND&#13;
LITERATURE: Section 16&#13;
taught by Carole Vopat. What is&#13;
women's liberation? The media&#13;
have presented it as a frenzied,&#13;
strident conglomeration of&#13;
crazies, lesbians and braburners,&#13;
but we know that life is&#13;
far more complex than that. This&#13;
section will involve: discussions&#13;
of women's role, her image, our&#13;
society, ourselves, sex, love, life,&#13;
death, birth, and abortion. The&#13;
required readings for this section&#13;
are: them, Joyce Carol Oates;&#13;
Play It As It Lays, Joan Didion;&#13;
Woman in Sexist Society, Vivian&#13;
Gornick; Sisterhood is Powerful,&#13;
Robin Morgan; The Waterfall!&#13;
Margaret Drabble; Elements of&#13;
Style Strunk and White; and the&#13;
MLA (Modern Language&#13;
Association) Style Sheet.&#13;
Day Care Center&#13;
remains off-campus&#13;
The Parkside Day Care Center&#13;
will remain at its off-campus&#13;
location for the 1973-74 academic&#13;
year. Part of the reason for this&#13;
decision is the difficulty in finding&#13;
adequate space on campus,&#13;
but the primary reason is a&#13;
financial one.&#13;
The Day Care Center is&#13;
currently located in the Parkside&#13;
Baptist Church on Highway E,&#13;
just south of the campus.&#13;
Previously, the church has not&#13;
charged rent for the use of its&#13;
facilities; the Center pays only&#13;
for janitorial services. But if the&#13;
Center were to move on campus,&#13;
it, like any other organization&#13;
which charges a user's fee, would&#13;
pay rent and utility costs to the&#13;
university. The center would be&#13;
required to pay union wages for&#13;
janitorial services and would also&#13;
have to purchase an insurance&#13;
policy in its own name.&#13;
In order to meet thi, higher&#13;
cost of overhead, the Day Care&#13;
Center would have to increase the&#13;
rate per child for its services. As&#13;
one of the Center teachers stated,&#13;
such an increase would defeat the&#13;
purpose of the organization~to&#13;
provide a low-cost child care&#13;
service for students, faculty and&#13;
staff who wish to participate in or&#13;
contribute to the educational&#13;
advantages of Parkside.&#13;
For fifty cents per hour per&#13;
child, the Parkside Day Care&#13;
Center provides a staff of trained&#13;
teachers and a state-approved&#13;
environment. All licensed day&#13;
care centers are strictly&#13;
regulated by state law in the&#13;
areas of amount of space (square&#13;
footage inside and outside) per&#13;
child, adult-child ratio, medical&#13;
and personal files on each child,&#13;
nutrition, rest time and teacher&#13;
qualifications. The Parkside Day&#13;
Care Center employs students on&#13;
the work-study program as&#13;
teachers' assistants, but actual&#13;
teachers are required to have&#13;
completed at least two years of&#13;
college, two courses in early&#13;
childhood education at Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute, and four&#13;
hours of in-service training. They&#13;
must be twenty-one years of age&#13;
or over.&#13;
The hours of the Parkside Day&#13;
Care Center for the fall semester&#13;
will be determined by the needs&#13;
of those who register; a tentative&#13;
estimate is 7:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.&#13;
weekdays. Parents pay a&#13;
registration fee and hours per&#13;
week are contracted in advance.&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Esther Letven at 654-3444 or call&#13;
the Center at 552-8322.&#13;
T1BFV&#13;
has the&#13;
Where can you get bread for&#13;
your body?&#13;
Looking for a trained dog act7&#13;
How high is a bus from the&#13;
ground?&#13;
Where does Parkside keep its&#13;
airplane?&#13;
The Information Center,&#13;
located in the kiosk in lower Main&#13;
Place of the Library-Learning&#13;
Center, is responsible for finding&#13;
answers to these and other more&#13;
orthodox questions. To the ordinary&#13;
observer these may seem&#13;
like prank requests, but the Information&#13;
Center staff do not&#13;
make hasty assumptions.&#13;
A few probing questions&#13;
disclosed that the first caller was&#13;
"young, healthy and poor," and&#13;
wished to offer his body to&#13;
science. He'd take the cash now&#13;
and they'd get him later. He was&#13;
referred to University Hospital in&#13;
Madison. The next request, for&#13;
the dog act, came from a lady&#13;
seeking entertainment for a&#13;
child's birthday party. Parkside&#13;
has a number of faculty and staff&#13;
members who accept speaking&#13;
engagements, as well as student&#13;
and faculty musical groups, but&#13;
no trained dog act.&#13;
The question about the height&#13;
of a bus was a bit baffling until it&#13;
was learned that the caller was a&#13;
75-year-old woman who wished to&#13;
attend a concert here, but has&#13;
trouble navigating steps. The last&#13;
call turned out to be a pilot&#13;
looking for a job. Parkside has no&#13;
airplane, though, so the Information&#13;
Center was unable to&#13;
help him.&#13;
Most of what the Center handles&#13;
is not as unusual as all that.&#13;
Its services include current data&#13;
on faculty and staff-their offices,&#13;
extensions and hours; course&#13;
descriptions, ticket sales and&#13;
class cancellations. It also serves&#13;
as a Lost and Found, so if you&#13;
can't find your calculus textbook&#13;
or car keys or whatever, you&#13;
might check there. The phone&#13;
number is (553)-2345.&#13;
Another feature is the&#13;
telephone answering device,&#13;
which handles after-hours calls.&#13;
Each day a series of announcements&#13;
about current&#13;
campus events is taped. Anyone&#13;
calling after the office closes then&#13;
receives information as to time&#13;
and place for activities that&#13;
evening or over the weekend. It is&#13;
expected that this will be even&#13;
more useful when bad weather&#13;
forces cancellation of classes.&#13;
Basically, the Center is a&#13;
referral service. It has general&#13;
information and can tell you&#13;
where to go for specifics. It saves&#13;
students from chasing from one&#13;
office to the next in search of&#13;
someone who can help them, as&#13;
well as providing directions for&#13;
finding rooms and offices. The&#13;
Information Center recently&#13;
moved from Tallent Hall to the&#13;
kiosk in LLC; this central&#13;
location makes it easier to aid the&#13;
students, who spend most of their&#13;
time in the central academic&#13;
complex.&#13;
"We serve as a focal point to&#13;
dispense information, to bridge&#13;
the information gap between the&#13;
University and the public,&#13;
students, faculty and staff. An&#13;
extensive information data bank&#13;
has been created for this purpose,"&#13;
Gail Hinks, Center&#13;
coordinator, explained. "We are&#13;
not an admissions center, a&#13;
treatment center or a counselling&#13;
center. We don't want to&#13;
duplicate what is already here:&#13;
We want to make what is here&#13;
more accessjble."&#13;
She then explained the origin of&#13;
the Information Center, which&#13;
answers&#13;
Gail Hinks in the Information Kiosk.&#13;
was established three years ago.&#13;
Parkside was among the first of&#13;
the nation's universities to create&#13;
such a service, with Harvard&#13;
leading the way. UW-Madison&#13;
has since followed suit.&#13;
"I really feel it's our job to help&#13;
the students and do what we can&#13;
for them if at all possible," Hinks&#13;
concluded.&#13;
Help the students. They really&#13;
do. Why not try them next time&#13;
you don't know where to go or&#13;
whom to see?&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
i presents an&#13;
ORIENTATION DANCE&#13;
r\&#13;
// p&#13;
/V /y&#13;
(H , -W*&#13;
Featuring&#13;
WED., AUG. 22&#13;
9:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m.&#13;
Adm. $1&#13;
00&#13;
Student Activities&#13;
Bldg.&#13;
I D's required&#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 READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE GALLON OF ROOT BEER WITH S5.00 ORDER&#13;
''2 MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W R OOT B EER DRIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
HOURS. DAILY 11 A.M. TO 11 P.M.&#13;
i-1 y 11-1rr n- iv i J '.' Cq (jpq jq&#13;
FREE FREE&#13;
1 Quart of ROOT BEER&#13;
FREE No Purchase Necessary&#13;
w/ coupon Limit one to person. Expires Sept. 8&#13;
Wed., Aug. 8, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 15&#13;
American Language Information Center&#13;
TIIE MY TERIO . D THE&#13;
ocr LT: Section _13,_ ta~ght by&#13;
Walter Graffin. Tiu 1s first and&#13;
foremost a writing course. fo t&#13;
of the papers ~ill ~ done on an&#13;
individual ba 1s, with ':he _student&#13;
electing ar as within the&#13;
general topic of the m ter1ou&#13;
and the occult for his-her o":'n&#13;
inv ligation Each student will&#13;
be expected to share what he- he&#13;
know· and learn. about a special&#13;
area with the rest of the cla .&#13;
Grarfin has selected the following&#13;
books for this section: Gods Crom&#13;
Outer pace, Erich on Danik n;&#13;
Sun·ival Printout; and Heath's&#13;
Brief Handbook or Usage.&#13;
WRITI G L BOR TORY:&#13;
Section 15, taught by Margaret&#13;
Canary. This section takes place&#13;
in a laboratory etting in that&#13;
students may write, take part in&#13;
group discussion, or talk individually&#13;
with the instructor or&#13;
another class member. The real&#13;
goal is the tudent's goal The&#13;
emphasis will be on how to best&#13;
express one's thoughts in writing&#13;
and the development of an honest&#13;
Day Care&#13;
continued from pege 5&#13;
writin~ style. Canary will use the&#13;
follo~mg texts: Insight, Emil&#13;
llurt1k; Writing Well, D Hall·&#13;
and Te t, urce , and r.iticis~&#13;
of Orw II' 1984, ed. Erving Howe.&#13;
WO tE, " IBER TIO 'D&#13;
LIT RAT RE: Section 16&#13;
taught by Carole Vopat. What i~&#13;
wom n's liberation'? The media&#13;
have pr nted it as a frenzied&#13;
strident conglomeration of&#13;
crazi , lesbian and braburner&#13;
. but we know that life is&#13;
far more complex than that. This&#13;
section will involve: discussions&#13;
of "Yomen's role, her image, our&#13;
society, ~urselves, sex, love, life,&#13;
death, birth , and abortion. The&#13;
required readings for this section&#13;
are: th m, Joyce Carol Oates·&#13;
Play It As It Lays, Joan Didion;&#13;
Woman in Sexist Society, Vivian&#13;
Gornick; isterhood is Powerful&#13;
Robin Morgan; The Waterfall:&#13;
Margaret Drabble; Elements of&#13;
St l trunk and White; and the&#13;
'1LA (Modern Language&#13;
As ociation) Style Sheet.&#13;
Center&#13;
remains off-campus&#13;
The Parkside Day Care Center&#13;
will remain at its Off-&lt;!ampus&#13;
location for the 1973-74 academic&#13;
year. Part of the reason for this&#13;
decision is the difficulty in finding&#13;
adequate space on campus,&#13;
but the primary reason is a&#13;
financial one.&#13;
The Day Care Center is&#13;
currently located in the Parkside&#13;
Baptist Church on Highway E,&#13;
just outh of the campus.&#13;
Previously, the church has not&#13;
charged rent for the use of its&#13;
facilities; the Center pays only&#13;
for janitorial services. But if the&#13;
Center were to move on campus,&#13;
it like any other organization&#13;
which charges a user's fee , would&#13;
pay rent and utility costs to the&#13;
tmiversity. The center would be&#13;
required to pay union wages for&#13;
janitorial services and would also&#13;
hav to purchase an insurance&#13;
policy in its own name.&#13;
In order to meet thi , higher&#13;
cost of overhead, the I 1ay Care&#13;
C nter would have to in,;rease the&#13;
rate per child for its services. As&#13;
one of the Center teachers stated,&#13;
such an increase would defeat the&#13;
purpose of the organization- to&#13;
provide a low-cost child care&#13;
service for students, faculty and&#13;
staff who wish to participate in or&#13;
contribute lo the educational&#13;
advantages of Parkside.&#13;
For fifty cents per hour per&#13;
child, the Parkside Day Care&#13;
Center provides a staff of trained&#13;
teachers and a state-approved&#13;
environment. All licensed day&#13;
care centers are strictly&#13;
regulated by state law in the&#13;
areas of amount of space (square&#13;
footage inside and outside) per&#13;
child, adult-child ratio, medical&#13;
and personal files on each child,&#13;
nutrition, rest lime and teacher&#13;
qualifications. The Parkside Day&#13;
Care Center employs students on&#13;
the work-study program as&#13;
teachers' assistants, but actual&#13;
teachers are required to have&#13;
completed at least two years of&#13;
college, two courses in early&#13;
childhood education at Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute, and four&#13;
hours of in-service training. They&#13;
must be twenty-one years of age&#13;
or over.&#13;
The hours of the Parkside Day&#13;
Care Center for the fall semester&#13;
will be determined by the needs&#13;
of those who register; a tentative&#13;
estimate is 7:45 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.&#13;
weekdays. Parents pay a&#13;
registration fee and hours per&#13;
week are contracted in advance.&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
Esther Letven at 654-3444 or call&#13;
the C nter at 552-8322.&#13;
has the answers&#13;
Where can you get bread for&#13;
your body?&#13;
Lookin~ for a trained dog act?&#13;
How high is a bus from the&#13;
ground?&#13;
. Where does Parkside keep its&#13;
airplane?&#13;
The Information Center&#13;
located in the kiosk in lower Mai~&#13;
Place o_r the Library-Learning&#13;
Center, 1s responsible for finding&#13;
answers to these and other more&#13;
o~thodox questions. To the ordinary&#13;
observer these may seem&#13;
like prank requests, but the Information&#13;
Center staff do not&#13;
make hasty asswnptions.&#13;
. A few probing questions&#13;
disclosed that the first caller was&#13;
"~oung, healthy and poor," and&#13;
wished to offer his body to&#13;
science. He'd take the cash now&#13;
and they'd get him later. He was&#13;
referred to University Hospital in&#13;
Madison. The n xt request, for&#13;
the dog act, came from a lady&#13;
seeking entertainment for a&#13;
child's birthday party. Parkside&#13;
has a number of faculty and staff&#13;
members who accept speaking&#13;
engagements, as well as student&#13;
and faculty musical groups, but&#13;
no trained dog act.&#13;
The question about the height&#13;
of a bus was a bit baffling until it&#13;
was learned that the caller was a&#13;
75-year-old woman who wished to&#13;
attend a concert here, but has&#13;
trouble navigating steps. The last&#13;
call turned out to be a pilot&#13;
looking for a job. Parkside has no&#13;
airplane, though, so the Information&#13;
Center was unable to&#13;
help him.&#13;
Most of what the Center handles&#13;
is not as unusual as all that.&#13;
Its services include current data&#13;
on faculty and staff- their offices,&#13;
extensions and hours; course&#13;
d scriptions, ticket sales and&#13;
class cancellations. It also serves&#13;
as a Lost and Found, so if you&#13;
can't find your calculus textbook&#13;
or car keys or whatever, you&#13;
might check there. The phone&#13;
number is (553)-2345.&#13;
Another feature is the&#13;
telephone answering device,&#13;
which handles after-hours calls.&#13;
Each day a series of announcements&#13;
about current&#13;
campus events is taped. Anyone&#13;
calling after the office closes then&#13;
receives information as to time&#13;
and place for activities that&#13;
evening or over the weekend . It is&#13;
expected that this will be even&#13;
more useful when bad weather&#13;
forces cancellation of classes.&#13;
Basically, the Center is a&#13;
referral service. It has general&#13;
information and can tell you&#13;
where to go for specifics. It saves&#13;
students from chasing from one&#13;
office lo the next in search of&#13;
someone who can help them, as&#13;
well as providing directions for&#13;
finding rooms and offices. The&#13;
Information Cent r recently&#13;
moved from Tallent Hall to the&#13;
kiosk in LLC; this central&#13;
location makes it easier to aid the&#13;
tud nts, who spend most of their&#13;
time in the central academic&#13;
complex.&#13;
"We serve as a focal point to&#13;
dispense information. to bridge&#13;
the information gap between the&#13;
University and the public,&#13;
tudents, faculty and staff. An&#13;
xtensive information data bank&#13;
has been created for this purpose,"&#13;
Gail Hinks, Center&#13;
coordinator, explained. "We are&#13;
not an admissions center, a&#13;
treatment center or a counselling&#13;
center. We don ' t want to&#13;
duplicate what is already here.&#13;
We want to make what is here&#13;
more a cess,ible."&#13;
She then explained the origin oi&#13;
the Information Center, which&#13;
Gall Hinks in the Information Kiosk.&#13;
was established three years ago.&#13;
Parkside was among the first of&#13;
the nation's universities to create&#13;
such a ·ervice, with Harvard&#13;
leading the way. UW-Madison&#13;
has since followed suit.&#13;
"I really feel it's our job to help&#13;
the students and do what we can&#13;
for th m if at all possible," Hinks&#13;
concluded.&#13;
Help the students. They really&#13;
do. Why not try them next time&#13;
you don't know wher to go or&#13;
whom to see'?&#13;
. • Parkside Activities Board&#13;
"&lt; . ~· ORIEN;:;;~: DANCE&#13;
&lt;,.,.BUZZ BAND&#13;
\\ ~:-a.- _:.,:: t,.\ Featuring -,;;. -- ' -"' ;, '-~&#13;
j? WED., AUG. 22 ~&#13;
/Y 9:00 p.m. - 1 :00 a.m. . ·:.\ r- /✓ .,....,. '.· .....&#13;
;Y . • Adm. $1 °&#13;
0 • ·r~,,. i'l •. : ~,,II. n \ ,,v Student Activities&#13;
~ .. ·.f · Bldg . ...&#13;
EAT. IN THE COMFORT&#13;
OF YOUR CAR&#13;
I O ·, ,.t&gt;Qu,rra&#13;
• PAPA BURGER • MlMA BURGER&#13;
• mN BURGER • BABY BURGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD • YOUR ORDElt WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE GALLON OF ROOT BUR WITH S5 00 ORDER&#13;
11 MIL£ NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERI DAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER URIVE-IN&#13;
Shtridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
HOURS. DAILY l 1 AM, TO 11 P.M&#13;
a r,&#13;
!&#13;
,1&#13;
, ~1 ~, ~&#13;
. ~1 , I~ ~&#13;
.. , Ir ~&#13;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~{ --------,----,----------------- ----·~&#13;
1 Quart of ROOT BEER&#13;
FREE No Purchase Necessaryl w/ coupon&#13;
• &#13;
16 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 19 7 3&#13;
"Over the river, and through the...&#13;
In case a lot of freshmen (and&#13;
others) are wondering, the 1973&#13;
Raneer Cross Country season&#13;
will be in full stride on August 27,&#13;
according to head coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey.&#13;
Parkside's cross country team&#13;
will have four returning lettermen&#13;
this season. Among them&#13;
are All-American Lucian Rosa,&#13;
Dennis Beil, Keith Merritt and&#13;
Chuck Dettman. "Individual&#13;
honors should go to Lucian Rosa&#13;
ancT Dennis Beil and with the&#13;
addition of Chuck Dettman, the&#13;
Rangers could have the strongest&#13;
1, 2, 3 combination in the&#13;
district," according to Godfrey.&#13;
Success is not an unfamiliar&#13;
word around Parkside and&#13;
Godfrey explains why: "Last&#13;
year we only lost one dual meet&#13;
and finished fourth in the NAIA&#13;
district 14. However, we expect&#13;
our district to be a little stronger&#13;
than last year. Our strongest&#13;
W. The ParksideRANGER&#13;
&#13;
Sports&#13;
Former Racine Case track coach Orby Moss (top right), now&#13;
assistant athletic director at Parkside, talks with three Case track&#13;
stars who will enroll at Parkside this fall. Standing next to Moss is&#13;
Dave Fawver, indoor City and Southshore Conference pole vault&#13;
champion. Seated are Kim Piper (left), 1972 and 1973 mile titlist in the&#13;
girls' state meet and Wisconsin AAU mile and two-mile winner, and&#13;
sprinter Lee Broadway, a two event medalist in the WIAA state track&#13;
meet.&#13;
opposition will come from Loras&#13;
College in Iowa, and LaCrosse&#13;
and Carthage colleges." Incidentally,&#13;
they finished fifth,&#13;
sixth and seventh respectively in&#13;
the national meet.&#13;
Combining a strong, competitive&#13;
schedule with a hardworking&#13;
coaching staff, the&#13;
Rangers again should look forward&#13;
to a successful season.&#13;
If you are interested in trying&#13;
out, report to the athletic building&#13;
or call extension 2245 and get in&#13;
touch with Godfrey.&#13;
Club sports&#13;
SPORT ADVISOR&#13;
Cycling Allan Wallace&#13;
Hockey Tom Krimmel&#13;
0 Karate No Advisor Yet&#13;
• Outing BobGrueninger&#13;
Rugby Vic Godfrey&#13;
Sailing&#13;
Dexter Domahoski&#13;
Skiing John Zarlinq&#13;
•Swimming .... Barbara Morris&#13;
Table Tennis Omar Amin&#13;
Volleyball Geza Martiny&#13;
Weight Lifting Vic Godfrey&#13;
# denotes new sport.&#13;
Head track coach Bob Lawson confers with two freshmen pole&#13;
vaulters, Bob Meekma (center) who took third in the WIAA State Meet&#13;
with a vault of 14'5", and Mike Holton (right) who captured fifth place&#13;
in the meet with a vault of 14'1". Both are graduates of R acine Horlick&#13;
High School.&#13;
Great Lakes Basketball&#13;
Clinic slated here&#13;
The second annual Great Lakes&#13;
Basketball Clinic will be held at&#13;
Parkside's Phy. Ed. Building,&#13;
from August 9-11.&#13;
The clinic, hosted by Athletic&#13;
Director Wayne Dannehl, will be&#13;
conducted by Steve Stephens and&#13;
Rudy Collum, basketball coaches&#13;
at Parkside, and John McGuire,&#13;
,basketball coach at Racine&#13;
St. Catherine's IJigh School.&#13;
Seven mid-western basketball&#13;
coaches will be featured at the&#13;
clinic, including A1 McGuire,&#13;
from Marquette University;&#13;
Johnny Orr, head coach at the&#13;
University of Michigan; and Tex&#13;
Winter who holds the reins at&#13;
Northwestern.&#13;
High School coaches include&#13;
Dave Bartolutti, Goodrich High&#13;
in Fond du Lac; Sam Mills from&#13;
McFarland High; and Charles&#13;
Stimpson from Hirsch High&#13;
School in Chicago.&#13;
Topics at the clinic will include&#13;
lectures on different types of&#13;
offensive and defensive&#13;
basketball.&#13;
A presentation by Jim Chones&#13;
of the New York Nets will be&#13;
given at a smoker at Kenosha's&#13;
Holiday Inn.&#13;
For those cagers interested,&#13;
the cost is ten dollars per player.&#13;
Registration is scheduled for 9&#13;
a.m. on August 9, in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building.&#13;
every&#13;
Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
to Rock &amp; Blues&#13;
by Racines' Best Band&#13;
The Dynamic&#13;
9:30 till 2:00&#13;
Featuring:&#13;
£&#13;
•POOL TABLES&#13;
•FOOS BALL&#13;
•AIR H OCKEY&#13;
'PADDLE B ADDLE&#13;
&gt;ETC. # ETC.&#13;
RATHSKELLER&#13;
Racine's m ost c omplete F un B ar&#13;
Pool &amp; Foos Ball Leagues&#13;
starting this month&#13;
(CHEAP) BEER SPECIAL (CHEAP)&#13;
8 TAP BEERS $1 or PITCHER $1&#13;
every Sunday &amp; Tuesday&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
FREE BE ER t o All Unescorted Ladies&#13;
(Starts at 7 p.m. every Wednesday)&#13;
2130 Racine St. Racine 634-9364&#13;
(only a few minutes from campus — o n the South Side)&#13;
16 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Aug. 8, 1973&#13;
''Over the river, and through the ... ''&#13;
In case a lot of freshmen &lt;and&#13;
oth •rs , ar wondering th 1973&#13;
Hanl!.('r Cros C'ountrv · ai:;on&#13;
will b&lt;' m full stride on Augu. t 27.&#13;
a cordin~ to h ad coach ic&#13;
Godfr v&#13;
Park:•id · cros country team&#13;
will have four returning letterm&#13;
n this s ason. Among them&#13;
are All Am rican Lu ian Ro a,&#13;
D&lt;&gt;nnis 8 ii, Keith Merrill and&#13;
huck Dettman. "Individual&#13;
honor hould go to Lucian Rosa&#13;
an D nni Beil and with the&#13;
addition or Chuck D ttman, the&#13;
Kang rs ould have th strongc t&#13;
I. 2 3 combinalion in the&#13;
di trict," ac ording to Godfr y.&#13;
u cess is not an unfamiliar&#13;
word around Parkside and&#13;
odfrey explains why : "Last&#13;
y ar w only Jost one dual m t&#13;
and finished fourth in th AJA&#13;
distri t 14. However, w expect&#13;
our district to be a little tronger&#13;
than last year. Our strongest&#13;
~~ANGER&#13;
Sports&#13;
1uuwrj l&#13;
Former Racine Case track coach Orby Moss (top right), now&#13;
a. ·lstant athletic director at Parkside, talks with three Case track&#13;
. tars who will enroll at Parkside thl fall. landing next to Mos i&#13;
Dave Fawvf'r, indoor City and 'outhshore Conference pole vault&#13;
champion. eat d ar Kim Piper (Jert&gt;, 1972 and 1973 mile titlist in the&#13;
girls' stale meet and WI consln AA mile and two-mile winn r, and&#13;
sprinter Lee Broadway. a two event medalist in the WIAA ·tate track&#13;
meet.&#13;
every&#13;
Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
to Rock &amp; Blues&#13;
by Racines' Best Band&#13;
,&#13;
Featuring: •FOOS BALL&#13;
opposition will come from Loras&#13;
C-0llege in Iowa, and LaCro&#13;
and arthage colleges." lncid&#13;
ntally, th y fini hed fifth ,&#13;
sixth and . ev nth respectively in&#13;
th national meet.&#13;
Combining a strong, competitive&#13;
schedule with a hardworking&#13;
coaching staff, th&#13;
Rangers again should look forward&#13;
to a uccessful season.&#13;
If you are int rested in trying&#13;
out, report to the athletic building&#13;
or call extension 2245 and get in&#13;
touch with Godfrey.&#13;
Club sports&#13;
SPORT ADVISOR&#13;
Bowll119 . . Jim Koch&#13;
Cycling . . . . • • • • . . .. Allan Wallace&#13;
Hock y • Tom Krlmmel&#13;
• Kara!" • • . . •• . .... No Advi50r Yet&#13;
• Outing . • . . • . . . . . . . Bob Grueninger&#13;
Rugby . . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . .. . v,c Godfro,y&#13;
S1111,ng • • . • .. . . . . . James Dean&#13;
Dex1er Oomah0$k&#13;
Ski ing . . . . • • . . .. . .. •.... John Zarling&#13;
Swimming . . • . . . . . Barbara Morris&#13;
Tnbl,.Tennis . . . ••• .. .. . . .Omar Amin&#13;
votleyMII Geza Mortiny&#13;
Wei ht L ifting Vic Godfrey&#13;
• denotes new spor1.&#13;
--- . Head track coach Roh Lawson confers with two fre hmen Pole&#13;
vaulters, Bob Meekma (center&gt; who took third in the WIM tate teet&#13;
with a vault of 14'5", and Mike Holton (right&gt; who captured rtrth place&#13;
in them et with a vault of 14'1 ''. Both ar graduates of Racine Horllck&#13;
High School.&#13;
Great Lakes Basketball&#13;
Clinic slated here&#13;
The second annual Great Lakes&#13;
Basketball Clinic will be held at&#13;
Parksid 's Phy. Ed. Building,&#13;
from Augu t 9-1 l.&#13;
The clinic, hosted by Athletic&#13;
Director Wayne Dann hi, will b&#13;
conducted by St v Steph n and&#13;
Rudy ollum, ba k tbaJI coach&#13;
at Parkside, and John McGuire,&#13;
,basketball coach at Racine&#13;
St. Catherin 's 1-Jigh $chool.&#13;
ven mid-w t rn bask tball&#13;
coaches will be featured at the&#13;
clinic, including Al McGuire,&#13;
from Marquette University;&#13;
Johnny Orr, head coach at th&#13;
University of Michigan; and Tex&#13;
Winter who holds the reins at&#13;
Northwestern.&#13;
High School coaches include&#13;
Dave Bartolutti, Goodrich High&#13;
in Fond du Lac . am \Jill from&#13;
1cFarland High, and harl&#13;
Stimp ·on from Hirsch High&#13;
h ol in hicago.&#13;
Topics at th clinic will mclude&#13;
I lures on differ nt typ of&#13;
offensive and defensive&#13;
bask tball.&#13;
A pr ntation by Jim Chon&#13;
or the · w York ets will be&#13;
given al a smoker at Kenosha's&#13;
Holiday Inn.&#13;
For those cagers interested,&#13;
th cost i ten dollars per player.&#13;
Registration is scheduled for 9&#13;
a.m. on August 9, in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building.&#13;
RATHSKELLER&#13;
Racine's most complete Fun Bar&#13;
Pool &amp; Foos Ball Leagues&#13;
starting this month&#13;
.. ~&#13;
(CHEAP) BEER SPECIAL (CHEAP)&#13;
...&#13;
..&#13;
or PITCHER s1&#13;
every Sunday &amp; Tuesday&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
FREE BEER to All Unescorted Ladies&#13;
(Starts at 7 p.m. every Wednesday) ..,j&#13;
•AIR HOCKEY&#13;
•PADDLE BADDLE&#13;
•ETC. •ETC.&#13;
2130 Racine St. Racine 634-9364 </text>
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              <text>UW-P will remain undergraduate campus</text>
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              <text>�entral administration prop,osal&#13;
-- uw-p will •&#13;
remaIn undergraduate campus&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
A proposal being submitted this week to the Board&#13;
of Regents by UW's central administration would&#13;
keep Parkside entirely an undergraduate institution.&#13;
Thought had heen given to gradually adding&#13;
graduate programs, beginning in the School of&#13;
Modern Industry, but lbis now seems highly&#13;
unlikely.&#13;
The proposal entails, first of all, lbat new&#13;
missions be written for the schools in the system.&#13;
Parkside's mission has generally been described as&#13;
having an industrial society focus, emphasizing&#13;
programs which relate to the industrial character of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
Furlber, lbe only institutions 10 hold bolb a major&#13;
mission in undergraduate instruction and a mission&#13;
for graduate programs in the arts and sciences and&#13;
teacher education at the masters and specialist&#13;
levels are Eau Claire and Oshkosh. These Graduate&#13;
Centers "would have major regional responsibility&#13;
in cooperation with other Institutions," according to&#13;
lbe proposal.&#13;
The "Special Mission Universities," which would&#13;
offer both unique undergraduate programs and&#13;
masters and specialists programs within their&#13;
missions would be Stout and Green Bay.&#13;
Madison and Milwaukee will remain Doctoral&#13;
institutions. The remaining seven schools would be&#13;
designated as "Primary Undergraduate Institutions.":&#13;
Tbey are Parkside, LaCrosse, Platteville,&#13;
River Falls, Stevens Point, Superior and&#13;
Whitewater. Any of lbese schools with existing&#13;
graduate programs would have them pbased out.&#13;
Wilb respect to Eau Claire and Oshkosh lbe&#13;
proposal states lbat "the structure of Cooperative&#13;
Regional Graduate Centers will entail development&#13;
of a new design for organization and operation. We&#13;
can envision the need for a system of designating a&#13;
graduate faculty wilb some members located atlbe&#13;
tmdergraduate universities."&#13;
In olber words, the proposal does allow for&#13;
development of some types of graduate&#13;
programming at tbe undergraduate insbtutions.&#13;
Parkside could, under the auspices and with the&#13;
cooperation of a masters or docto~al level&#13;
university, offer some graduate courses m certain&#13;
areas. But the basic mission is undergraduate&#13;
teaching.&#13;
Parkside's proposed mission statement, as&#13;
defined by central administration, describes the&#13;
University as being "in tbe process of developing a&#13;
primarily undergraduate academic program lbat&#13;
meets lbe needs of regional and commuting&#13;
students. Areas that reflect economic,&#13;
technological. scientific and cultW'81. nee:!' of an&#13;
industrial society have been empbeetaed.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie. in commenti.ng on this&#13;
redefinition of our mission, said be felt the graduate&#13;
program and research potential of our faculty waa&#13;
overlooked. Further, he said the propolI81 "did not&#13;
clearly state what our mission was. Illalked about&#13;
what was just in lbe process of developing here,&#13;
rather lban clearly and fIaUy slaling lbe nature of&#13;
the mission itself."&#13;
(see page 4 few iDlervle" "iIh Chancellor WyUle)&#13;
TheParksidee--- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1973Vol. II No. 1&#13;
New division heads&#13;
begin terms&#13;
~&#13;
~"&#13;
,."&#13;
RANGER phertOby Ken Konkol&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
-~&#13;
RANGER photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
Paul Kleine&#13;
hy Dehra Friedel!&#13;
Five divisional chairpersons&#13;
have been named to serve for one&#13;
year terms beginning September&#13;
1. Nominations were made by&#13;
their divisional colleagues.&#13;
Marion J. Mochon, associate&#13;
professor of anthropology, will&#13;
head lbe Social Science Division.&#13;
Mochon is the second woman&#13;
selected to serve as a Parkside&#13;
divisional head. As chairperson&#13;
Mochon will oversee the&#13;
disciplines of history, geography,&#13;
political science, sociology,&#13;
economics, and anthropology.&#13;
Mochon will replace Leon Applebaum,&#13;
professor of economics.&#13;
Returning as chairperson of lbe&#13;
Science Division, a post he held&#13;
from 1969 lbru 1971, is Norbert&#13;
Isenberg, professor of chemistry.&#13;
Isenberg will head lbe physics,&#13;
psychology, malbematics, life&#13;
science chemistry and earth&#13;
science' disciplines. Isenberg is&#13;
replacing Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
'professor of life science, in the&#13;
post he held for two years.&#13;
Orpheus Johnson, associate&#13;
professor of French, has been&#13;
named in Humanities. Stella C.&#13;
Gray, professor of English and&#13;
past teaching award wmner, WIll&#13;
step down from her post as !he&#13;
first woman to lead a Parks Ide&#13;
division. She has held that spot&#13;
for four years. Johnson will chair&#13;
the disciplines of art, ~omm&#13;
u n ic a t io ns , En g l l s h ,&#13;
philosophy, Spanish, Fren~h,&#13;
German, music, and humamt!es.&#13;
Reappointed are Paul Kleine,&#13;
professor of education a.nct&#13;
chairperson of the Education&#13;
Division, and Alan B. Grossberg,&#13;
professor of. phYSICS a~d&#13;
engineering SCIence an.d ch~lrperson&#13;
of the Eng ineerrng&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
The list of responsibilities ?f a&#13;
chairperson Include s~ch ~I~gs&#13;
as supervising academic ~~l~les&#13;
and all divisional activit ies,&#13;
coordinating the curriculum,&#13;
helping with divisional budget&#13;
.',.:. '&#13;
creation, presiding over&#13;
divisional executive committees,&#13;
signing of all requisitions, and&#13;
handling personnel matters.&#13;
One professor, when asked why&#13;
a faculty member might seek lbis&#13;
position, responded that "reasons&#13;
range anywhere from the power&#13;
and prestige associated with the&#13;
job to lbe fact that certain people&#13;
just have the natural ability for&#13;
administrative types of roles."&#13;
RANGEa photo by David Daniels&#13;
Norbert Isenberg&#13;
ON THE INSIDE&#13;
Tuition and financial aid&#13;
policies unfair to juniors&#13;
and seniors t editorial)&#13;
"Women and the Arts"&#13;
Learning experiences in theatre&#13;
page 7&#13;
O1anges at the O1ild Care Center&#13;
page 9&#13;
page 2&#13;
page 5&#13;
Racine bus service&#13;
is a possibility&#13;
Late Bulletin: The RacineParkside&#13;
bus -servjce has gone&#13;
into operation. However, more&#13;
riders are needed to keep it&#13;
running through the semester.&#13;
by Jane SChliesman&#13;
Last year about 100 students&#13;
relied on the Racine bus service&#13;
to get them 10 and from Parkside.&#13;
This year, according to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students, "it will lake a miracle"&#13;
to continue the service.&#13;
The problem is money - the bus&#13;
service last year ended up $4000&#13;
short, and operating expenses for&#13;
this year have gone up. Student&#13;
Services wants to employ&#13;
Parkside students as bus drivers&#13;
like last year, which would help&#13;
the bus company as well as the&#13;
students, but even this would not&#13;
be enough to solve tbe difficulties.&#13;
The Vets Club, who worked&#13;
hard last year to support the bus,&#13;
have been trying all summer to&#13;
figure out a way to keep lbe&#13;
service going. They investigated&#13;
buying a bus, but lbe cost for&#13;
insurance was prohibitive.&#13;
They thought lbe problem was&#13;
solved when they negotiated wilb&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute to&#13;
bus Racine students to bolb institutions,&#13;
Initial approval to&#13;
work together was receiVed, but&#13;
then GTI'S Board of Directors&#13;
refused, estimating lbat only&#13;
about a dozen GTI students would&#13;
use the service.&#13;
A tentative plan was worked&#13;
out just in time for registration,&#13;
calting for semester passes to be&#13;
purchased atlbe cost of $45. This&#13;
works out to $3 per week. The bus&#13;
service can be run only if at least&#13;
100 of these passes are bought.&#13;
Anyone interested in further&#13;
information on this situation is&#13;
encouraged to call Echelbarger&#13;
at (553) 2342.&#13;
RANGER will normally be&#13;
released on Wednesdays,&#13;
but due to the Labor Day&#13;
holiday, the printing of thi!&#13;
issue was delayed by on~&#13;
day.&#13;
•&#13;
.:.entral administration proP:_osal&#13;
UW-P will remain undergraduate campus by Jane Schliesman&#13;
A proposal being submitted this week to the Board&#13;
of Regents by UW's central administration would&#13;
keep ParkSide entirely an undergraduate institution.&#13;
&#13;
in cooperation with other Institutions,'· according to the proposal. programming at th und rgraduat nsututions.&#13;
Par ide could. under the a pie and with th cooperation of a ma t rs or docto~al l el&#13;
universit , offer some graduate cou an rtaln&#13;
areas. But the basic mi ·ion i undergraduate&#13;
Thought had been given to gradually adding teaching&#13;
graduate programs, beginning in the School of Modern Industry, but this now seems highly&#13;
unlikely.&#13;
The "Special Mission Universities," which would offer both unique undergraduate programs and&#13;
masters and specialists programs within their&#13;
missions would be Stout and Green Bay.&#13;
The proposal entails, first of all, that new&#13;
missions be written for the schools in the system. Parkside's mission has generally been described as&#13;
having an industrial society focus, emphasizing&#13;
programs which relate to the industrial character of southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
Madison and 1ilwaukee will remain Doctoral&#13;
institutions. The remaining ·even chools would be&#13;
designated as "Primary Undergraduate Institutions."&#13;
They are Parkside, LaCrosse, Platteville,&#13;
River Falls, Stevens Point, Superior and&#13;
Whitewater. Any of these schools with existing graduate programs would have them phased out.&#13;
Park ide's proposed mi ion tat ment,&#13;
defined by central admini tration, d cribe the&#13;
University a being " in the pro of d loping a&#13;
primarily undergraduate academic program that meets the needs of regional and commuting&#13;
students. Area that reflect economic,&#13;
technological scientific and cultural needs of an industrial society have been emphasized."&#13;
Further, the only institutions to hold both a major&#13;
mission in undergraduate instruction and a mission&#13;
for graduate programs in the arts and sciences and&#13;
teacher education at the masters and specialist&#13;
levels are Eau Claire and Oshkosh. These Graduate Centers "would have major regional responsibility&#13;
With respect to Eau Claire and Oshkosh the&#13;
proposal states that "the structure of Cooperative Regional Graduate Centers will entail development&#13;
of a new design for organization and operation. We&#13;
can envision tbe need for a system of designating a&#13;
graduate faculty with some members located at the&#13;
undergraduate universities."&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie, in commenting on this&#13;
redefinition of our mission, said be felt the graduate&#13;
program and research potential of our faculty was overlooked. Further, he said the proposal "did not&#13;
clearly state what our mission was. It talked about&#13;
what was just in the process of developing here,&#13;
rather than clearly and flatly stating fhe nature of&#13;
the mission itself."&#13;
In other words, the proposal does allow for development of some types of graduate&#13;
( ee page 4 for interview with Chancellor Wyllie&gt;&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
RANGER Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1973 Vol. II No. 1&#13;
New division heads&#13;
begin terms&#13;
~&#13;
RANGER photo by Ken Konkol&#13;
Marion Mochon&#13;
RANGER photo by David Daniels&#13;
Alan Grossberg&#13;
RANGER photo by Ke~onkol&#13;
Paul Kleine&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Five divisional chairpersons&#13;
have been named to serve for one&#13;
year terms beginning September&#13;
1. Nominations were made by their divisional colleagues.&#13;
Marion J. Mochon, associate&#13;
professor of anthropology, will&#13;
head the Social Science Division.&#13;
Mochon is the second woman&#13;
selected to serve as a Parkside&#13;
divisional head. As chairperson&#13;
Mochon will oversee the&#13;
disciplines of history, geography,&#13;
political science, sociology,&#13;
economics, and anthropology.&#13;
Mochon will replace Leon Applebaum,&#13;
professor of economics.&#13;
Returning as chairperson of the&#13;
Science Division, a post he held&#13;
from 1969 thru 1971, is Norbert&#13;
Isenberg, professor of chemistry. Isenberg will head the physics,&#13;
psychology, mathematics, life&#13;
science, chemistry and ear~ science disciplines. Isenberg 1s&#13;
replacing Eugene Gasiorkiewicz,&#13;
professor of life science, in the&#13;
post he held for two years.&#13;
Orpheus Johnson, associate&#13;
professor of French, has been&#13;
named in Humanities. Stella C.&#13;
Gray, professor of E~glish a~d&#13;
past teaching award wmner, w1IJ&#13;
step down from her post as the&#13;
first woman to lead a Parkside&#13;
division. She has held that spot for four years. Johnson will chair&#13;
the disciplines of art, :omm&#13;
uni cations, English,&#13;
philosophy, Spanish, Fre_n~h,&#13;
German, music, and humamt!es. Reappointed are Paul Kleme,&#13;
professor of education a_nd chairperson of the Educat10n&#13;
Division and Alan B. Grossberg,&#13;
profess~r of physics a~d&#13;
engineering science an_d ch~irperson&#13;
of the Engineering&#13;
Science Division.&#13;
The list of responsibilities ?f a&#13;
chairperson include s~ch ~i~gs&#13;
as supervising academic po!1~1es and all divisional activities,&#13;
coordinating the curriculum,&#13;
helping with divisional budget&#13;
creation, presiding over&#13;
divisional executive committees,&#13;
signing of all requisitions, and&#13;
handling personnel matters.&#13;
One professor, when asked why&#13;
a faculty member might seek this&#13;
position, responded that "reasons&#13;
range anywhere from the power&#13;
and prestige associated with the&#13;
job to the fact that certain people just have the natural ability for&#13;
administrative types of roles."&#13;
RANG~ photo by David Daniels&#13;
Norbert Isenberg&#13;
ON THE INSIDE&#13;
Tuition and financial aid&#13;
policies unfair to juniors&#13;
and seniors (editorial)&#13;
page 2&#13;
"Women and the Arts"&#13;
page 5&#13;
Learning experiences in theatr&#13;
page 7&#13;
Changes at the Child Care Center&#13;
page 9&#13;
Racine bus service&#13;
is a possibility&#13;
Late Bulletin: The Racint--&#13;
Park ide bu · ervice ha gone&#13;
into operation. HowPver, mor&#13;
riders are needed to kttp it&#13;
running through the eme tf'r.&#13;
by Jane hlie man&#13;
Last year about 100 tudents&#13;
relied on the Racine bus ervice&#13;
to get them to and from Parkside.&#13;
This year, according to Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, As istant Deari of&#13;
tudents, "it will take a miracle' '&#13;
to continue the service.&#13;
The problem i money - the bu&#13;
service last year ended up $4000&#13;
short, and operating expenses for&#13;
this year have gone up. Student&#13;
ervices want~ to em{!loy&#13;
Parksid students as bus driver&#13;
like last year, which would help&#13;
the bus company as well as the&#13;
students, but even this would not&#13;
be enough to solve the difficulties.&#13;
&#13;
The Vets Club, who worked&#13;
hard last y~r to sup1&gt;&lt;&gt;rt the bus,&#13;
have been trying all summer to&#13;
figure out a way to keep the&#13;
service going. They investigated&#13;
buying a bus, but the cost for&#13;
insurance was prohibitive.&#13;
They thought the problem was&#13;
solved when the~ negotiated with&#13;
Gateway Technical Institute to&#13;
bus Racine students to both intitutioru&#13;
Initial approval to&#13;
work together was received, but&#13;
then GTI' Board of Dir to&#13;
r fu, ed, timating that only&#13;
about a doz n GTI tudent would&#13;
use the ervice.&#13;
A t ntativ plan wa worked&#13;
out ju t in time for regi tration, calling for . em ter pa~ es to b&#13;
purcha ed at th cost of 15. Thi&#13;
work ut to $3 per week. The bus&#13;
ervice can be run only if at lea t&#13;
100 of these passe are bought.&#13;
Anyone interested in further&#13;
information on this ituation is&#13;
encouraged to call Echelbarger at (553) 2342.&#13;
RANGER will normally be&#13;
released on Wednesdays,&#13;
but due to the Labor Day&#13;
holiday, the printing of this&#13;
issue was delayed by one&#13;
day. &#13;
Parkside is one of the best undergraduate universities&#13;
in the state of Wisconsin in many respects, and its&#13;
students are proud of that.&#13;
We now have a fantastic Learning Center, a huge&#13;
library, a beautiful Phy. Ed. building, ~ theatre which !s&#13;
most likely the bestJn the state, special art and music&#13;
rooms, plants in the concourses, a classroom building, a&#13;
building for the sciences, sidewalks, grass, a pond or&#13;
two, a vet's club, fraternities, a women's caucus,&#13;
athletic organizations, activities board, a newspaper, a&#13;
day care center, an information center, and mo~e..&#13;
We have Tom Reinert, the new Theatre Speclallst r&#13;
Carl Lindner, an instigator of the IS program; Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of Students; Deans Moy&#13;
and Norwood; chancellors, award winners; well-chosen&#13;
and sympathetic faculty; counselors, tutors,&#13;
secretaries, athletes, cooks, janitors, fish in a science&#13;
room, mice in the mouse house, and ducks on "Lake&#13;
Wyllie." And, of course, we have students -- about 4300of&#13;
them.&#13;
But one of the things we lack is an effective student&#13;
government. Organizations, clubs and individuals need&#13;
a student government to hear them. Our student&#13;
government must be made up of individuals who want to&#13;
represent students and serve the University. We have&#13;
had enough PSGA (Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association) officers who were interested only in&#13;
themselves and their own ideas.&#13;
Our student government must work with faculty and&#13;
staff and through facuity and administrative committees.&#13;
Our rights to be represented will be taken&#13;
away, as some already have, if our student government&#13;
will not respond. For exam pie, on June 20, 1973, ~he&#13;
University Committee, one of the most powerful faculty&#13;
committees on campus, resoived that because of "lack&#13;
of cooperation from the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association in the process of appointing students to&#13;
faculty committees ... the Committee would make the&#13;
appointments at the beginning of the fall semester .:"&#13;
RANGER has been assured that this resolution will be&#13;
nullified if and when student government is willing to&#13;
again live up to their responsibility in this matter, for&#13;
PSGA was originally empowered to make these ,student&#13;
appointments.&#13;
Our student government must interact, care, respond,&#13;
educate, organize and unite around the common needs&#13;
and ideas of Parkside students. They must feed into the&#13;
administration and the faculty these needs and concerns.&#13;
The University, in this light, will be a working&#13;
whole -- each group aware of the other.'&#13;
A lot of reorganization and reordering of priorities will&#13;
be required of this year's PSGA. Nothing can be accomplished&#13;
without widespread action and involvement.&#13;
Weare an action University. We need involved students.&#13;
2 THE PARKStDE RANGER w.d., 5ept. 5. 1973&#13;
'-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Juniors and&#13;
Seniors getting&#13;
a bad deal&#13;
The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
system decided last month to give students a break in&#13;
the cost of their education for the first two years of their&#13;
college careers. On the surface this may appear an&#13;
admirable move, but when these freshmen and&#13;
MlPhomores become juniors and seniors and are faced&#13;
with the increased tuition, just at a time when their&#13;
monetary resources are probably showing great&#13;
depletion, they doubtless won't be viewing the Regents&#13;
as benevolent grandfather figures.&#13;
The Regents may have realized all too well that what&#13;
they are doing, In effect, is providing an incentive to get&#13;
students Into school; after two years they can consider&#13;
most of them hooked and stop worrying about them. If&#13;
the rationale Is anytlng like that of the State's Higher&#13;
Educational Aids Board( H EABl. who administer the&#13;
Wis. Higher Education Grant, It is that once a student is&#13;
halfway to his or her degree he or she will try to stay in&#13;
school whatever the cost.&#13;
In juxtaposing the new tuition policy with some of the&#13;
Financial Aid practices, an interesting fact emerges.&#13;
Juniors and seniors are, by law, receiving less of certain&#13;
types of gift aid than freshmen and sophomores.&#13;
H EAB's regulations governing the State grants, for&#13;
example, require that 70 percent of this money go to&#13;
students at the freshmen-sophomore level. This was&#13;
recently revised downward from 80 percent because a&#13;
new Federal grant program called Basic Opportunity&#13;
Grant (BOG) was instituted this year to provide aid.only&#13;
to freshmen.&#13;
The only type of gift ald-vrnoney that does not have to&#13;
be repaid -- which is given out strictly on the basis of&#13;
need Is the Federal Educational Opportunity Grant.&#13;
this Is supposed to be gradually phased out by the more&#13;
stringent BOG, which eventually will include&#13;
sophomores and then juniors and seniors. But all other&#13;
financial aids, for which all students compete only on&#13;
the basis of need, are self-help programs such as loans&#13;
and work-studv. These funds must be repaid after&#13;
graduation or earned while the student is in school.&#13;
Thus a student who Is getting a Wis. Higher Education&#13;
Grant or BOG money for his first year or two must, if he&#13;
or she Is to complete school, take on a job and or a debt&#13;
In the last two years when studies become more difflcult.&#13;
For some students this means stretching two&#13;
years Into three, taking a reduced credit load while&#13;
working. The financial burden cannot help but seem an&#13;
Insurmountable obstacle to many, even If they are so&#13;
close to graduating.&#13;
this situation Is grossly unfair In and ot itself. cernblned&#13;
with the new tuition polley it Is deplorable. Like&#13;
grocery store deals on china dishes, where the first&#13;
place setting Is such a bargain but then you're stuck if&#13;
you want the rest, the tuition and aid programs are&#13;
promotional gimmicks to gain a potential new student's&#13;
Interest and Increase lfnlverslty enrollment. It is time&#13;
not only for the Board of Regents but also for the State&#13;
and Federal governments to make It easier, not more&#13;
difficult, for college students to complete their&#13;
education.&#13;
Something&#13;
• •• ts missing&#13;
~~ The Pn*lidedll------&#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 33140. Offices are located at 0-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Pa~kside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
~nected In columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
VIewof 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 !SO words or&#13;
less, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the riaht to .edit&#13;
letters for lenath and lood taste. All letters must be sianed and include&#13;
.dd~. phone number aDdstudent statUI or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be. WIthheld upon request. The editors reserve the ri8ht to refuse to&#13;
pnnt any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.IN-CHIEF: J.n~ Scl'tlil!'Sman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom p"te~iien&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: [)@bra F~iedell&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: I(a",~yn Welln~~&#13;
S~RTS EDITOR: o.;n ""'~~y&#13;
COPY EDITOR: R~Cll Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: DaVid Oani~ls&#13;
=,~:~RS: G.~y JenHO, Rudy Lienau, Ma~ilyn Schube~f, Ken KOnkol, Tom DeIOUW, Neil&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS. Jay Salvo&#13;
C"RTOONIST: Amy CUnda~i&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pnlka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: F~ed Law~enc~&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Ken PI!'S'k~, Fred Law~ence Jim M, "&#13;
ADVISOR: Don Kopriva • g~uue~&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 5, 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
~------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Juniors and&#13;
Seniors getting&#13;
a bad deal&#13;
Th Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
y t m d cided last month to give students a break in&#13;
th cost of their education for the first two years of their&#13;
coll ge careers. On the surface this may appear an&#13;
dmlrable move, but when these freshmen and&#13;
ophomores become juniors and seniors and are faced&#13;
with he increased tuition, just at a time when their&#13;
monetary resources are probably showing great&#13;
d pl tlon, they doubtless won't be viewing the Regents&#13;
as b nevolent grandfather figures.&#13;
The Regents may have realized all too well that what&#13;
th y ar doing, in effect, Is providing an incentive to get&#13;
tud nts Into school ; after two years they can consider&#13;
most of them hoo ed and stop worrying about them. If&#13;
th r tionale Is anytlng like that of the State's Higher&#13;
Educ tional Aids Board(HEAB), who administer the&#13;
Wis. Higher Education Grant, it is that once a student is&#13;
h lfw y to his or her degree he or she will try to stay in&#13;
chool whatever the cost.&#13;
In juxt posing the new tuition policy with some of the&#13;
Financial Aid practices, an Interesting fact emerges.&#13;
Juniors and seniors are, by law, receiving less of certain&#13;
types of gift aid than freshmen and sophomores.&#13;
HEAB's regulations governing the State grants, for&#13;
example, require that 70 percent of this money go to&#13;
students at the freshmen-sophomore level. This was&#13;
recently revised downward from 80 percent because a&#13;
n w Federal grant program called Basic Opportunity&#13;
Grant (BOG) was Instituted this year to provide aid.only&#13;
to freshmen.&#13;
The only type of gift ald--money that does not have to&#13;
be repaid - which Is given out strictly on the basis of&#13;
n ed Is the Federal Educational Opportunity Grant.&#13;
This Is supposed to be gradually phased out by the more&#13;
trlngent BOG, which eventually will include&#13;
sophomores and then juniors and seniors. But all other&#13;
financial Ids, for which all students compete only on&#13;
he basis of need, are self-help programs such as loans&#13;
nd or -study. These funds must be repaid after&#13;
gradu tlon or earned while the student is in school.&#13;
Thus a student who is getting a Wis. Higher Education&#13;
Gr nt or BOG money for his first year or two must, if he&#13;
or h Is to complete school, take on a job and or a debt&#13;
In th last two years when studies become more difficult.&#13;
For ome students this means stretching two&#13;
y ars Into three, taking a reduced credit load while&#13;
orklng. The financial burden cannot help but seem an&#13;
Insurmountable obstacle to many, even if they are so&#13;
close to graduating.&#13;
This situation Is grossly unfair in and of itself. Comb&#13;
ned with the new tuition policy it is deplorable. Like&#13;
grooery store deals on china dishes, where the first&#13;
place setting Is such a bargain but then you're stuck if&#13;
you want the rest, the tuition and aid programs are&#13;
promotional gimmicks to gain a potential new student's&#13;
Interest and Increase University enrollment. It is time&#13;
not only for the Board of Regents but also for the State&#13;
and Federal governments to make it easier, not more&#13;
difficult, for college students to complete their&#13;
education.&#13;
Something&#13;
• • • is missing&#13;
Parkside is one of the best undergraduate universiti_es&#13;
in the state of Wisconsin in many respects, and its&#13;
students are proud of that.&#13;
we now have a fantastic Learning Center, a huge&#13;
library, a beautiful Phy. Ed. building,? theatre which !s&#13;
most likely the best. in the state, special art an~ r:nus1c&#13;
rooms, plants in the concourses, a classroom building, a&#13;
building for the sciences, sidewalks, grass, a pond or&#13;
two, a vet's club, fraternities, a women's caucus,&#13;
athletic organizations, activities board, a newspaper, a&#13;
day care center, an information center, and mo~e ..&#13;
we have Tom Reinert, the new Theatre Specialist;&#13;
Carl Lindner, an instigator of the IS program; Jewel&#13;
Echeibarger, Assistant Dean of Students; Deans Moy&#13;
and Norwood; chancellors, award winners; well-chosen&#13;
and sympathetic faculty; counselors, tutors,&#13;
secretaries, athletes, cooks, janitors, fish in a science&#13;
room, mice in the mouse house, and ducks on "Lake&#13;
Wyllie." And, of course, we have students -- about 4300 of&#13;
them.&#13;
But one of the things we lack is an effective student&#13;
government. Organizations, clubs and individuals need&#13;
a student government to hear them. Our student&#13;
government must be made up of individuals who want to&#13;
represent students and serve the University. We have&#13;
had enough PSGA ( Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association) officers who were interested only in&#13;
themselves and their own ideas.&#13;
Our student government must work with faculty and&#13;
staff and through faculty and administrative committees.&#13;
Our rights to be represented will be taken&#13;
away, as some already have, if our student government&#13;
will not respond. For example, on June 20, 1973, ~he&#13;
University Committee, one of the most powerful faculty&#13;
committees on campus, resolved that because of "lack&#13;
of cooperation from the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association in the process of appointing students to&#13;
faculty committees ... the Committee would make the&#13;
appointments at the beginning of the fall semester ... "&#13;
RANGER has been assured that this resolution will be&#13;
nullified if and when student government is willing to&#13;
again live up to their responsibility in this matter, for&#13;
PSGA was originally empowered to make these student&#13;
appointments.&#13;
Our student government must interact, care, respond,&#13;
educate, organize and unite around the common needs&#13;
and ideas of Parkside students. They must feed into the&#13;
administration and the faculty these needs and concerns.&#13;
The University, in this light, will be a working&#13;
whole -- each group aware of the other."&#13;
A lot of reorganization and reordering of priorities will&#13;
be required of this year's PSGA. Nothing can be accomplished&#13;
without widespread action and involvement.&#13;
We are an action University. We need involved students.&#13;
i,r.. The Ptn.1111:aidem------&#13;
R ANGER&#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 Pa:kside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~flected m columns and editorials are not necessarily the of.flcial&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any sub,ect of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or less, typed 1md double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to .edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
addr~ss, phone number aod student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be_ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the ri&amp;ht to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF: Jane SchliHman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Peter sen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Oet,,a Friedel!&#13;
NEWS EDITOR Kathryn Wellner&#13;
S~ORTS EDITOR : D~n Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR · Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
~~!~RS: Gary Jen~. Rudy Lienau. Marilyn Schubert, Ken Konkol, Tom Defouw, Neil&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHE RS Jay Salvo&#13;
CA.RTOO~IST · Amy Cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER · Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION M ANA.GER· Fr ed Lawrence&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Ken Pestk~. Fred Lawrence J im Mag, d ADVISOR . Don Kopriva ' U er &#13;
Point of view&#13;
We get&#13;
-John Zarling, letters&#13;
Where are you? To the Editor:&#13;
I would appreciate it if you&#13;
would print a copy of the&#13;
Icllowmg letter in the RANGER&#13;
whenever possible.&#13;
Local 2180 U.W:Parkside.&#13;
It .looks like' Parkside's&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie is - getting&#13;
ready to rip off $40 from the&#13;
'yearly pay checks 9f The UW-P&#13;
employee. This is so we can park&#13;
in the mud, dust, and holes that&#13;
we already paid for' with our hard&#13;
earned tax dollars.&#13;
I can understand why Parkside&#13;
needs the money so badly. When&#13;
the chancellor tells the power&#13;
plant to throttle up an acre of&#13;
cooling plant to cool a complex of&#13;
buildings that he is the only&#13;
person in on 'Sunday, we can&#13;
understand Why he wants our $40.&#13;
I am sure Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
will purchase his $40 parking&#13;
sticker out of his $36,400 salary to&#13;
put on his state-furnished and&#13;
maintained car.&#13;
I recently had the opportunity&#13;
to sit in on a personnel board&#13;
hearing at Parkside in Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
The hearing was held in regard&#13;
to the appeal of layoff of one of&#13;
our employees. This hearing was&#13;
under the terms of our old union&#13;
agreement. As for my part and&#13;
the union's, the whole thing&#13;
looked like another one of those&#13;
management-owned and&#13;
operated arrairs. The man appealing&#13;
hIS layoff had to battle&#13;
university financial experts and&#13;
their legal hawk. After five hours&#13;
of grilling and nearly to the&#13;
breaking point, the UW's legal&#13;
hawk said they really felt bad&#13;
about laying anyone off. Funny&#13;
thing I didn't hear Chief Br-inkmann&#13;
offer to give up his statefurnished&#13;
car he uses to go&#13;
bowling and shopping with to&#13;
save one of his men's jobs.&#13;
Hats off to officer Mayes for his&#13;
valiant try and we hope the best&#13;
comes of his hearing.&#13;
President Local 2180&#13;
Bruce R. Burman&#13;
Physical Plant&#13;
by Debra Friedell.&#13;
Feature EditorGood&#13;
teachers never die, they just get promoted out of the&#13;
cla~sroo~. This is precisely w~at ha.s happened with John Zarling,&#13;
assistant professor o~ engmeertng SCience, who has been named as&#13;
special assistant to Vice-Chancellor Bauer for the 1973·7~school year.&#13;
He' will be Iilllng t In .for Virginia Scherr, assistant professor of&#13;
chemistry, who is on leave of absence. .&#13;
Zar-ling i~not just a good teacher, but.the winner o{one of last year's&#13;
six state Kiekhofer-Steigej- awards for outstanding teaching. Since he&#13;
will be teaching just half-time this year, he will be reaching only half&#13;
as many students.&#13;
There is no doubt that the appointment of Zarling will do much to&#13;
benefit Bauer and the administration. They have done well in their&#13;
selection. However, contrary to their 'claims, administrators do not&#13;
appear to have present Parkside students in mind by making such&#13;
decisions. The primary function of a university should be education.&#13;
More than this, good classroom learning depends on quality teaching.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie said to freshmen at this year's orientation that at&#13;
Parkside good teaching is emphasized. Students attracted to zarling's&#13;
courses because of his known ability as a good teacher will have to&#13;
expect him to be spending 50 percent of his time this year in assisting&#13;
the Vice-Chancellor.&#13;
This phenomenon is not unique to Parkside, but is known as the&#13;
Peter Principle, something common in our society. It is simply the&#13;
notionthat an individual continues to be promoted until he or she is no&#13;
longer capable of performing the required tasks. Laurence Peter, who&#13;
developed the Principle, called it reaching one's level of incompetence.&#13;
(His book on this subject is caUed The Peter Principle&gt;.&#13;
In other words, when an individual is good at what he or she is doing,&#13;
the individual is rewarded by promotion. Promotion will continue until&#13;
the person reaches a level of incompetence where he or she then&#13;
remains, deserving no further reward.&#13;
This is certainly not to imply Zarling may have reached his level of&#13;
incompetence: he undoubtedly has an able future. But when he is&#13;
obviously such an excellent teacher it cannot help but seem negligent&#13;
to remove him from direct access to as many students as possible.&#13;
Zarling is not the first university professor to leave the classroom&#13;
for an administrative chair. Chancellor Wyllie. for example, was one&#13;
of the most sought after history professors at Madison. What makes&#13;
Zarling's appointment so frustrating is that it was only last spring that&#13;
he was named an outstanding teacher by grateful students. It is a&#13;
shame so many students will not benefit from his talents this year.&#13;
Perhaps students would do better to keep names of the best faculty&#13;
members hushed. Yet, it is Unfair not to give outstanding faculty the&#13;
recognition they deserve; ideally the system should encourage good&#13;
faculty to remain in the classroom, perhaps offering them as much on&#13;
the paycheck as they would receive as administrators.&#13;
Good teachers never die, they just Peter out.&#13;
ImQ')ine.,-he.&#13;
fjre&lt;i llJe.t·Me.)&#13;
, ,-&#13;
Wit-h- eU those&#13;
Y~Clr.s of operience&#13;
behind me!&#13;
Sweetheart,&#13;
You've .90t-~'"&#13;
j&#13;
Wed., 58..t_ 5, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Editor's Notebook is a column that was started by my predecessor&#13;
to enable him to record for posterity (or at least 'til the end of the week&#13;
when everyone threw out their RANGER with the remains of Friday's&#13;
lunch) his own thoughts on events at Parkside.&#13;
My plans for the column are similar, Each week Ihope to use this&#13;
space to provide additional insight into a story or editorial appearing&#13;
in that issue. Sometimes this will be in the form of background&#13;
material too extensive to be included in the article; at other times I&#13;
will be offering my own opinions on a particular situation.&#13;
This week though, it seemed appropriate to point out some of the&#13;
changes which have taken place over the summer. One of the most&#13;
obvious, of course, is that we now have more green and less brown _&#13;
more grass and less mud-than at any time since construction began&#13;
on Greenquist and TalJent Halls in 1967. This was achieved by the toil&#13;
of a few student workers with the grounds crew, who laid down 42,000&#13;
yards of sod. Prairie grass seed was also planted in places, though it&#13;
will be years yet before the results are visible.&#13;
The opening of two new buildings is another step forward. By now&#13;
most students know that CA in the timetable referred to the Communication&#13;
Arts Building, while CL is the new Classroom BUilding.&#13;
Comm. Arts is the home of the Humanities Division. and there is an&#13;
article in this issue detailing the impressive theatre located there.&#13;
Next week the art and music rooms will be featured, as well as the&#13;
Audio-Visual Production Center. The Classroom Building is the&#13;
headquarters for Social Sciences, with the 01 level serving as a&#13;
temporary home for the School of Modern Industry. Greenqursr by the&#13;
way, is facing rennovation to facilitate Its functioning as the SCIence&#13;
building.&#13;
A new parking lot has been provided - just for faculty and staff _&#13;
across the loop road from the Classroom Building This is on the SIte&#13;
where construction will begin next year on the campus Union or&#13;
Student Center. Chancellor Wyllie. incidentally, has told RA. 'GER&#13;
that he plans to keep on parking in his reserved spot down the hill. A&#13;
large new lot is to be constructed on the west side of the loop road&#13;
between the theatre and Phy. Ed. within a year. Plans also call for a&#13;
lot just east of the Student Center when it is completed (it should take&#13;
three years to build). If and when we get our Modern Industry&#13;
building, it's going to be built down the bill where parking is already&#13;
available.&#13;
Tallent Hall is currently undergoing remodelling. Student Services&#13;
offices-which include counselors, financial aids, the tutoring center&#13;
etc. _. will be moving downstairs in Oct.&#13;
The Freshmen are all new, and constitute the largest Freshmen&#13;
class in Parkside's history. At Orientation this year a greater per.&#13;
centage of them showed up than ever before, indicating a high level of&#13;
interest, concern, and hopefully involvement. Some of these Freshmen&#13;
are participating in the Industrial Society &lt;IS) program initiated&#13;
this year to provide a stimulating alternative to traditional education.&#13;
Other changes? Well, we have a new director for our library in the&#13;
person of Joseph Boisse, the Information Center has moved out of&#13;
Tallent and into a large kiosk in lower Main Place, there's bi-Ievel&#13;
tuition and an additional $7 parking fee, the there is an intensive effort&#13;
being made to respond to the needs of the older students on campus&#13;
who've been out of the classroom for awhile. And many of you&#13;
probably remember counselor Steve Bangert - he's left to complete&#13;
his doctoral degree and apparently won't be replaced. The existing&#13;
staff are absorbing his duties.&#13;
The Regents are in the process of approving major changes in the&#13;
organization of the UW system. We will keep our readers informed of&#13;
decisions affecting Parkside, as we have started doing in this issue.&#13;
One final comment -- there'-s a RANGER staff 'meeting at 4 p.m.&#13;
Thursday so if you think you might be interested in joining the paper&#13;
please drop by then for further information. If you can't make it let me&#13;
know and we'll arrange a convenient time to rap.&#13;
The spirit of freshmen - some members of this year's incoming class&#13;
seeking answers at Orientation.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
John Zarling,&#13;
Where are you?&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Good teachers never die, they just get promoted out Qf the&#13;
classroom. This is precisely what has happened with John Zarling&#13;
assistant professor of_ engineering science, who has been named a~&#13;
special assistant to Vice-Chancellor Bauer for the 1973-74 school year.&#13;
He will be filling in _for Virginia Scherr, assistant professor of chemistry, who is on leave of absence.&#13;
Zarling is not just a good teacher, but the winner of one of last year's&#13;
six state Kiekhofer-Steiger awards for outstanding teaching. Since he&#13;
will be teaching just half-time this year, he will be reaching only half as many students.&#13;
There is no doubt that the appointment of Zarling will do much to&#13;
benefit Bauer and the administration. They have done well in their&#13;
selection. However, contrary to their claims, administrators do not&#13;
appear to have present Parkside students in mind by making such&#13;
decisions. The primary function of a university should be education.&#13;
More than this, good classroom learning depends on quality teaching.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie said to freshmen at this year's orientation that at&#13;
Parkside good teaching is emphasized. Students attracted to Zarling's&#13;
courses because of his known ability as a good teacher will have to&#13;
expect him to be spending 50 percent of his time this year in assisting&#13;
the Vice-Chancellor.&#13;
This phenomenon is not unique to Parkside. but is known as the&#13;
Peter Principle, something common in our society. It is simply the&#13;
notion that an individual continues to be promoted until he or she is no&#13;
longer capable of performing the required tasks. Laurence Peter, who&#13;
developed the Principle, called it reaching one's level of incompetence.&#13;
(His book on this subject is called The Peter Principle).&#13;
In other: words, when an individual is good at what he or she is doing,&#13;
the individual is rewarded by promotion. Promotion will continue until&#13;
the person reaches a level of incompetence where he or she then&#13;
remams, deserving no further reward.&#13;
This is certainly not to imply Zarling may have reached his level of&#13;
mcompetence; he undoubtedly has an able future. But when he is&#13;
obviously such an excellent teacher it cannot help but seem negligent&#13;
to remove him from direct access to as many students as possible.&#13;
Zarling is not the first university professor to leave the classroom&#13;
for an administrative chair. Chancellor Wyllie, for example, was one&#13;
of the most sought after history professors at Madison . What makes&#13;
Zarling's appointment so frustra ting is that it was only last spring that&#13;
he was named an outstanding teacher by grateful students. It is a&#13;
shame so many students will not benefit from his talents this year.&#13;
Perhaps students would do better to keep names of the best faculty&#13;
members hushed. Yet, it is unfair not to give outstanding faculty the&#13;
recognition they deserve; ideally the system should encourage good&#13;
faculty to remain in the classroom, perhaps offering them as much on&#13;
the paycheck as they would receive as administrators.&#13;
Good teachers never die, they just Peter out.&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would appreciate it if you&#13;
would print a copy of the&#13;
following letter in the RANGER&#13;
whenever possible.&#13;
Local 2180 U.W. Parkside.&#13;
It looks like Parkside's&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie is getting&#13;
ready to rip off $40 from the&#13;
yearly pay checks of The UW-P&#13;
employee. Thts is so we can park&#13;
in the mud, dust, and holes that&#13;
we already paid for with our hard&#13;
earned tax dollars. I can understand why Parkside&#13;
needs the money so badly. When&#13;
the chancellor tells the power&#13;
plant to throttle up an acre of&#13;
cooling plant to cool a complex of&#13;
buildings that he is the only&#13;
~rson in on Sunday, we can&#13;
understand why he wants our $40.&#13;
I am sure Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
will purchase his $40 parking&#13;
sticker out of his $36,400 salary to&#13;
put on his state-furnished and&#13;
maintained car.&#13;
I recently had the opportunity&#13;
to sit in on a personnel board&#13;
hearing at Parkside in Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
The hearing was held m regard&#13;
to the appeal of layoff of one of&#13;
our employees This hearmg a·&#13;
under the terms of our old umon&#13;
agreement. A for my part and&#13;
the uruon's, the whole thmg&#13;
looked like another one of tho e&#13;
management-owned and&#13;
operated affairs. The man appealing&#13;
his layoff had to battle&#13;
universi y finan ial experts and&#13;
their legal hawk After five hours&#13;
of grilling and nearly to the&#13;
breaking point. the UW's legal&#13;
hawk said they really felt bad&#13;
about laying anyone off. Funny&#13;
thing I didn't hear Chief Brinkmann&#13;
offer to give up his statefurnished&#13;
car he uses to go&#13;
bowling and shopping with to&#13;
save one of his men's jobs.&#13;
Hats off to officer Mayes for his&#13;
valiant try and we hope the best&#13;
comes of his hearing.&#13;
President Local 2180&#13;
Bruce R. Burman&#13;
Physical Plant&#13;
ImQ&lt;_3 ine., he.&#13;
-tired rneJ Me J&#13;
\Jith &lt;tll those&#13;
year .s of C&gt;&lt;ferience&#13;
behin&amp; me!&#13;
Wed., Sept. s, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
b Jane hli man&#13;
Editor's Notebook is a column that wa started b my pred .&#13;
to enable him to record for posterity (or·at least 'til the end of thew&#13;
when everyone threw out their RA! 'GER with the remams of Frida '&#13;
lunch) his own thoughts on events at Parkside.&#13;
1y plans for the column are similar. Each week I hope to us thi&#13;
space to provide additional insight into a tory or editorial appearing&#13;
in that issue. Sometimes this will be in the form of background&#13;
material too extensive to be included in the article; at other tim I&#13;
will be offering my own opinions on a particular ituation.&#13;
This week though, it seemed appropriate to point out some of the&#13;
changes which have taken place over the summer. One of the mo t&#13;
obvious, of course, is that we now have more green and I brown -&#13;
more grass and less mud-than at any time since construction began&#13;
on Greenqu1st and Tal1ent Halls in 1967. This was achieved by the toil&#13;
of a few student workers with the grounds crew, who laid down 42,000&#13;
yards of sod. Prairie grass seed was also planted in plac , though It&#13;
will be years yet before the results are \'i ible.&#13;
The opening of two new building is another step forward By now&#13;
most tudents know that CA in th tim tab! r f r d to th Communication&#13;
Arts Building, v. hile CL I then w la: room Bmldi&#13;
Comm. Arts is the home of the Humamt1e D1v1 ion, and th re I an&#13;
article m thi i sue detailing the impr 1ve theatre locat d there&#13;
• ·ext week the art and mu ic room •111 b f atured, as w 11 a th&#13;
ud10- isual Production Center. The Cla room Bmldmg I th&#13;
headquarters for Social Sc1enc , with the D1 level&#13;
temporary home for the chool of lodern Indu try Gr&#13;
ay, lS facmg r nnovation to facihtat I funct1om&#13;
building.&#13;
n v. parkmg lot ha b n provided - Ju t f r f culty and&#13;
aero s the loop road from the Cla room Bu1ldmg Thi I on th 1t&#13;
where con truction will begm next ear on the campu union or&#13;
~tudent Center Chancellor Wyllie, inc1d nt 11 . ha told R ER&#13;
that he plan - to keep on parking in h1 r en· d pot dov. n th hill A&#13;
large new lot lS to be constructed on the west side of the loop road&#13;
between the theatre and P hy Ed. within a year. Plan also call for a&#13;
lot just east of the Student Center when it i completed (it hould ta e&#13;
three years to build ). If and when 1...-e g t our . lod rn Industry&#13;
building, it's going to be built down the hill where parking i already&#13;
available.&#13;
Tallent Hall is currently undergoing remodelling Student Serv1c&#13;
offices-which include counselors, financial aids, the tutoring center&#13;
etc . - will be moving downstairs in Oct.&#13;
The Freshmen are all new, and constitute the largest Freshmen&#13;
class in Parkside's history. At Orientation this year a greater percentage&#13;
of them showed up than ever before, indicating a high level of&#13;
interest, concern, and hopefully involvement. Some of these Fr hmen&#13;
are participating in tl\e Industrial Society (IS) program initiated&#13;
this year to provide a stimulating alternative to traditional education.&#13;
Other changes? Well, we have a new director for our library in the&#13;
person of Joseph Boisse, the Information Center has moved out of&#13;
Tallent and into a large kiosk in lower Main Place, there' bi-level&#13;
tuition and an additional $7 parking fee, the there is an intensiv effort&#13;
being made to respond to the needs of the older stud nts on campus&#13;
who've been out of the classroom for awhile. And many of you&#13;
probably remember counselor Steve Bangert - he's left to complete&#13;
his doctoral degree and apparently won't be replaced. Th existing staff are absorbing his duties.&#13;
The Regents are in the process of approving major chang in the&#13;
organization of the W system. We will keep our readers informed of&#13;
decisions affecting Parkside, as we have started doing in this issue.&#13;
One final comment -- there's a RANGER taff meeting at 4 p.m.&#13;
Thursday so if you think you might be interested in joining the paper&#13;
please drop by then for further information. If you can't make it let me know and we'll arrange a convenient time to rap.&#13;
The pirit of freshmen - some members of this year' incoming class seeking answers at Orientation. &#13;
4 THI; "ARK.SID~ {lANGI;R Wtd., sept. 5, 1'73&#13;
Wyllie discusses "undergraduate" designation&#13;
by Jane bUnman&#13;
Editor' note: The following is. partial transcript&#13;
01 an Inlervle ... with Ch•• eener Wyllie concerning&#13;
Ou' propo at by \J\o\l' centnl admmJ tratioo that&#13;
the m ion for elch or the universities in the&#13;
) rem be' rewritten and lbat Parllside be grouped&#13;
"ith th e Institullon "hleh would be strictly&#13;
amdtrl"aduate thool. pace doe nol permit Includlng&#13;
the eeure Intenlew bUI pertinent portions&#13;
r r printed bert.&#13;
RANGER: \\-'halls your perception 01how central&#13;
admini tration i redefining our mission? Looking&#13;
Ith&lt;'1rpropooed statement it seems they want us a&#13;
more gtfteraJ undergraduate institution-we still&#13;
haY a general ml ion or the Industrial Society like&#13;
t.h eemmuniu we're in, but it doesn't seem like&#13;
they'c too eoncemed with letting us go 100 much&#13;
rarther WIth lhal. we've got what we've got but&#13;
W 'r not g Ing to go too much rarther.&#13;
\\'YU.IE. FiMlI, I thin!&lt;in any restatement or our&#13;
ml Ion there will be a recognition that we do have&#13;
an obhgalion to do general liberal arts and science&#13;
programming 10 serve the students in this pari or&#13;
th 141. Ther WIll, I ttunk, be a desire that we&#13;
r US thai programming as much as possible on the&#13;
al concern 01th Industrtal Society, so that ills&#13;
IbI 10do arts and science programming that is&#13;
m' lon-f ust'd and ml ion-related.&#13;
Additionally, in any redefinition, there will be an&#13;
tl&lt;1pe&lt;:U uon thai we will do some career and&#13;
pror ional tralning that relates rather precisely to&#13;
buslO and industrial careen-in areas or applied&#13;
sci and technology, business, labor economics&#13;
and labor releuons, that we will be preparing people&#13;
lor dellmte careen in those lines.&#13;
t think th ltuatioo we will be in is one in which&#13;
\III. will ecnunu • even if we are in the undergraduate&#13;
category, to have a mi ion rocus Ior&#13;
thiS mstuuueo, which will continue to be the industrial&#13;
Soct ty mi ion and that it will arrect both&#13;
our liberal arts programs and our career&#13;
preparauoo programs.&#13;
RANGER We can have our Industrial Society&#13;
m Ion and we can approach it like with the Freshmen&#13;
Industrial Soctety program in the College or&#13;
lence and Society, or we can get further&#13;
deYel pments in the School of Modern Induslry-&#13;
"hat the chances of gelling our Modem industry&#13;
bwldini, ror example?&#13;
WYILI E: I continue 10 hope we "ill get the&#13;
lodern Industry building and I would certainly&#13;
hope th I any decision to put us in the lUIdergraduate&#13;
category would not be a first step in&#13;
saymg we don't need that building, because that Is&#13;
quit central to our mission, whether we are a&#13;
graduate or an undergraduate institution. lt's in·&#13;
eon "able to me that we could be an eflective&#13;
m on-oriented 10 titution without it and without&#13;
th r.... rch and public outreach capabilities such a&#13;
bulldmg would proyide.&#13;
RANGER: there Isn't any danger that they are&#13;
gomg to look at us and say that we don't need that&#13;
building because they haye redefined our mission in&#13;
a more general way?&#13;
WYLLIE: Well, I think that danger is present.&#13;
W'hat I'm expressing is the hope that it won't be&#13;
done that way I thin!&lt;II'Spossible that in saying you&#13;
.....all·t hav masters degree programs in yOW"own&#13;
right "'thlO the program scope 01 the School of&#13;
Modern Industry that you have less need or that&#13;
bullding than if you had the programs. I think that&#13;
dang r Is present-in lact, that's one 01the points I&#13;
m.ttftd '1' emphasize in my response to this proposal.&#13;
.... don t "ant thlS 10be the first domino to fall and&#13;
ha ye the n building be the second.&#13;
RANGER Do you think that pressure from&#13;
central admtnistraUon OIlthe number of students&#13;
ha hun Parkside m bemg able to implement our&#13;
m •&#13;
\\-'YU.IE: First. I don't. think there's been any&#13;
PI' (rom centraJ admuustration in cormection&#13;
",th enrollments&#13;
. ER. Well, that is one 01 the bases ror our&#13;
buildinga and so on. so it seems It would be important&#13;
10 koep a groWing enrollment.&#13;
WYLLJE 1agree-that's qwle true. This is what I&#13;
think 0\8" racuJt)' .....arks rorl&#13;
it's what our other&#13;
port taU ""ark. for. it's what our admissIOns&#13;
orrl trl to promote. our Public Information&#13;
nih In any pubhr univ TSlly, it's not just here in&#13;
th part 01 th tate or in Wisennsm Any public&#13;
university gets its money from the legislature&#13;
basically on a formula which is tied to student&#13;
enrollments.&#13;
RANGER: The reason I ask is because I've heard&#13;
a lot of talk about head count but I rarely hear about&#13;
our mission. Iwas wondering if maybe this wasn't&#13;
directly related to why we didn't get a graduate&#13;
school-maybe they weren't satisfied with the way&#13;
we were progressing with our mission; maybe we&#13;
concentrated too much on getting the enrollment&#13;
and getting the buildings, and perhaps they just&#13;
weren't happy with the way we were handling our&#13;
mission.&#13;
WYLLIE: Well, I think that you can't separate&#13;
the questions. Inthe first place, our mission to date,&#13;
as defined by the Coordinating COlUlrUor Higher&#13;
Education, was to provide general liberal art~ and&#13;
science programs for what they called regional&#13;
commuting students, and we've been doing that.&#13;
And along with that, to begin to provide specialized&#13;
programs in business, Applied Science and&#13;
Technology, labor economics and labor relations&#13;
over in the School of Modern Industry, and there we&#13;
started pretty close to ground zero and we've now&#13;
got 28 percent of our students registered in those&#13;
programs, as far as majors go. Ithink on both those&#13;
counts we have been eIIectively fulfilling our&#13;
mission as it has been defined to date. This isn't to&#13;
say that there aren't people around who won't make&#13;
the c1alm we haven't been fulfilling our mission, but&#13;
I think the burden of proof is on them, not on us.&#13;
RANGER: Has the community in general-the&#13;
people who hire our graduates-have they been&#13;
happy and does central administration seem happy&#13;
with what we've been doing with our mission?&#13;
WYLLIE, Well, I can't speak lor central administration&#13;
but I think that in the area the evidence&#13;
is that there has been considerable satisfaction with&#13;
our graduates. We think the employment record of&#13;
the students, especially in the School of Modern&#13;
Industry, is yery good. To the best of our knowledge,&#13;
none of our graduates in the Applied Science and&#13;
Technology or business programs have had any&#13;
difficulty getting jobs and they've gone out at pretty&#13;
good average beginning salaries ....&#13;
RANGER: I'm sure you've got a lot of perceptions&#13;
as to why Green Bay, why Stout, why not&#13;
us. You mentioned geography belore-proximity· to&#13;
Milwaukee. Is that how they based what schoolsWYLLIE:&#13;
They haven't revealed what they've&#13;
based it on.&#13;
RANGER: Well, if they're talking in terms 01&#13;
special missions-graduate programs within the&#13;
special mission of the University-first of all, does&#13;
each campus have a mission statement?&#13;
WYll..JE: Well, they have a mission statement&#13;
bull think oW"S,along with those of Stout and Green&#13;
Bay. are among the more specific in terms of&#13;
special missions ...now what they have said, without&#13;
revealing the criteria, they say, in coming to these&#13;
decisions or these recommendations, that "we have&#13;
examined the history of the university entitlements&#13;
and performances"--in other words what&#13;
authorization institutions had in the past a~d what&#13;
they've done with these authorizations' "have&#13;
examined the past efforts to establish a basis for&#13;
mission differentiation;" and "factors of&#13;
geography;" and l'the rx&gt;tential of regional ser·&#13;
vice," so those are the things presumably that were&#13;
looked at. Now how those weigh out in determining&#13;
the fate of particular institutions we don't know I&#13;
think here ...since this plan calls r~r taking gradu~te&#13;
work a~ay from Whl~ew~ter and since obviously, in&#13;
any regional clustenng m southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Milwaukee is the major campus, I think it would&#13;
have been very difficult at this point in time to have&#13;
tak.en graduate programming away from&#13;
Whitewater and conferred it on us.&#13;
RANGER: Then they may not be relying a lot on&#13;
m~ss!on statements? If you've given a university a&#13;
ml.sslon.and you feel that they're fulfilling it and&#13;
do~ ~gs that you want them to do, it seems that&#13;
you re gomg to want them to continue to grow with&#13;
that. to proceed into graduate programs.&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
, m~r P rksldc 200&#13;
',&lt;.1 I V... l..,· Club&#13;
WYLLIE: Well, I don't think anybody there is&#13;
suggesting that we shouldn't continue with the&#13;
mission we've got. In fact, if there's anything I'm&#13;
confident of at this point, it is that the mission thrust&#13;
of this institution will continue. But the critical&#13;
question is "will it continue into the graduate&#13;
program level," and the answer we seem to be&#13;
getting at the moment is "no," at least not under&#13;
our own auspices.&#13;
RANGER: Well, wasn't that an important part 01&#13;
our general statement of where we were going?&#13;
WYLLIE: Well, we never had any graduate&#13;
authorization or any promise of it...We were asked&#13;
earlier to submit suggestions for graduate program&#13;
areas, and we did...It was always made clear in&#13;
responding to those requests that they weren't&#13;
about to make the big decisions on approving or not&#13;
approving these programs until they had a better&#13;
fix on institutional missions and long-range plans in&#13;
relation thereto.&#13;
RANGER: Would you say then that basically&#13;
geography was the major reason we didn't get a&#13;
graduate program?&#13;
WYLLIE: I'd say, as far as I can see, that&#13;
regional clustering was a central concern here. Our&#13;
regional location close to Milwaukee and close to&#13;
Whitewater handicapped us in making the push into&#13;
graduate work.&#13;
~..&#13;
I&#13;
RANGER photo by Debra Friedel!&#13;
Summer workers unload a sod truck along a&#13;
sidewalk to Gl'eenquist Hall. A total of 42,000 square&#13;
yards of sod have been laid at a cost of $16,800.00.&#13;
Not only· will it enhance the appearance but will&#13;
keep sidewalk areas from getting muddy. Some&#13;
blue and prairie grass have been planted, however&#13;
the wet spring has delayed most planting until next&#13;
year.&#13;
The&#13;
UNION&#13;
Wed., Fri., . &amp; Sun.&#13;
I SEPT, 5, 7, 8, 9, 1;, 14, 15, 16 1&#13;
Kenoslta's Newes' Ni'espo'&#13;
2nd National&#13;
TH~ P RKSIDE. ANG~R W,ct., Sept. s.s,~1if97n31 _____________________________ _&#13;
Wyllie discusses "undergraduate" designation&#13;
b J hll man&#13;
LIVERY&#13;
university gets its money from the legislature&#13;
basically on a formula which is tied to student&#13;
enrollments.&#13;
RANGER: The reason I ask is because I've heard&#13;
a lot of talk about head count but I rarely hear about&#13;
our mi ion. I was wondering if maybe this wasn't&#13;
directly related to why we didn't get a graduate&#13;
school-maybe they weren't satisfied with the way&#13;
·e were progr ing with our mission; maybe we&#13;
concentrated too much on getting the enrollment&#13;
and getting the buildings. and perhaps they just&#13;
weren't happy v.,;th the way we were handling our&#13;
mi ion.&#13;
:nLIE: Well, I think that you can't separate&#13;
the questions. In the first place, our mission to date,&#13;
defined by the Coordinating Council of Higher&#13;
Education, wa to provide general liberal arts and&#13;
cience program for what they called regional&#13;
commuting tudents, and we've been doing that.&#13;
And al ng "';th that, to begin to provide specialized&#13;
program in business, Applied Science and&#13;
Technology, labor economics and labor relations&#13;
ov m the ool of todern Industry, and there we&#13;
tarted pr tty clo e to ground zero and we've now&#13;
got 28 percent of our students registered in those&#13;
program • a far as majors go. I think on both those&#13;
coun we have been effectively fulfilling our&#13;
mi i n as it ha been defined to date. This isn't to&#13;
sa) that there aren't people around who won't make&#13;
the claim we haven't been fulfilling our mission, but&#13;
I think the burden of proof is on them, not on us. RANGER: Has the community in general-the&#13;
people who hire our graduates-have they been&#13;
happy and does central administration seem happy&#13;
·ith what we've been doing with our mission?&#13;
WYLLIE, Well, I can't speak for central administration&#13;
but I think that in the area the evidence&#13;
i that there has been considerable satisfaction with&#13;
our graduates. We think the employment record of&#13;
the tudents, especially in the School of Modern&#13;
Industry, is ery good. To the best of our knowledge,&#13;
none of our graduates in the Applied Science and&#13;
Technology or business programs have had any&#13;
difficulty getting job and they've gone out at pretty&#13;
good average beginning salaries .... RANGER: I'm sure you've got a lot of perceptions&#13;
a to why Green Bay, why Stout, why not&#13;
us. You mentioned geography before-proximity to&#13;
lilwaukee, Is that how they based what schoolsWYLLIE&#13;
: They haven't revealed what they've&#13;
based it on. RANGER: Well, if they're talking in terms of&#13;
pecial mi ions-graduate programs within the&#13;
pecial mission of the niversity-first of all, does&#13;
each campus have a mission statement?&#13;
WYLLIE: \ ell, they have a mission statement&#13;
but I think ours, along with those of Stout and Green&#13;
Bay. are among the more specific in terms of&#13;
pecial mi ions ... now what they have said, without&#13;
revealing the criteria, they say, in coming to these&#13;
deci i~ns or these recommendations, that "we have&#13;
exammed the history of the university entitlements&#13;
and performances"--in other words what&#13;
authorization institutions had in the past a~d what&#13;
they've done with these authorizations· "have&#13;
examined the past efforts to establish a basis for&#13;
mis ion differentiation ;" and "factors of&#13;
g~g:~phy;" and " the potential of regional service,&#13;
so those are the things presumably that were&#13;
loo ed at. ow how those weigh out in determining&#13;
th~ fate of pa_rticular institutions, we don't know. I&#13;
think here ... smce this plan calls for taking graduate&#13;
wo~k av.:ay from Whi~ew~ter and since obviously, in&#13;
an_} region~ clustenng ID southeastern Wisconsin,&#13;
lilwaukee IS th~ ~ajor campus, I think it would&#13;
have been very difficult at this point in time to have&#13;
tak_en graduate programming away from&#13;
\ !hitewater and conferred it on us.&#13;
~GER: Then they may not be relying a lot on&#13;
m! !on taternents? If you've given a university a&#13;
mi_ ion _and you feel that they're fulfilling it and&#13;
do~g thi~gs that you want them to do, it seems that&#13;
:ou re gomg to want them to continue to grow with&#13;
that, to proceed into graduate programs.&#13;
WYLLIE: Well, I don't think anybody there is&#13;
suggesting that we shouldn't continue with the&#13;
mission we've got. In fact, if there's anything I'm&#13;
confident of at this point, it is that the mission thrust&#13;
of this institution will continue. But the critical&#13;
question is "will it continue into the graduate&#13;
program level," and the answer we seem to be&#13;
getting at the moment is "no," at least not under&#13;
our own auspices.&#13;
RANGER: Well, wasn't that an important part of&#13;
our general statement of where we were going?&#13;
WYLLIE : Well, we never had any graduate&#13;
authorization or any promise of it ... We were asked&#13;
earlier to submit suggestions for graduate program&#13;
areas, and we did .. .It was always made clear in&#13;
responding to those requests that they weren't&#13;
about to make the big decisions on approving or not&#13;
approving these programs until they had a better&#13;
fix on institutional missions and long-range plans in&#13;
relation thereto.&#13;
RANGER: Would you say then that basically&#13;
geography was the major reason we didn't get a&#13;
graduate program?&#13;
WYLLIE: I'd say, as far as I can see that&#13;
regional clustering was a central concern her~. Our&#13;
regional location close to Milwaukee and close to&#13;
Whitewater handicapped us in making the push into&#13;
graduate work.&#13;
RANGER photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Summer workers unload a sod truck along a&#13;
sidewalk to Greenquist Hall. A total of 42,000 square&#13;
yards of sod have been laid at a cost of $16,800.00.&#13;
Not only· will it enhance the appearance but will&#13;
keep sidewalk areas from getting muddy. Some&#13;
blue and prairie grass have been planted, however&#13;
the wet spring has delayed most planting until next&#13;
year.&#13;
The&#13;
UNION&#13;
Wed., Fri., . &amp; Sun.&#13;
SEPT. 5, 7, 8, 9, 12, 14, 15, 16 ]&#13;
Kenoslra's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National &#13;
•, r&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
"The Movement" is a regular feature in RANGER. It deals with&#13;
women and the status of women at Parkside, in society and in history.&#13;
Guest writers are invited.&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Shulamith Firestone is a founder of the Women's Liberation&#13;
Movement and the author of The Dialectic of Sex: the case for feminist&#13;
revolution.&#13;
l~ chapter two of that book, Firestone delves into the history of both&#13;
radical and conservative feminism and how that feminism was dealt&#13;
with and oppressed by "the system."&#13;
The movement by the mid-1800's, after being spurred on by the&#13;
Abolitionist struggle and even old decaying ideals of the American&#13;
Revolution, was radical considering its time in history. Family.&#13;
~ur~h and State were being attacked as sexist or oppressing institutions&#13;
and, furthermore, there was organizing being done to unite&#13;
women workers. However, at this point in time American women&#13;
received no rights under the law and this left them without any&#13;
political voice.&#13;
The back of the movement struggle was broken with the impetus of&#13;
th.e Civil ~ar. Women were allowed freedom enough to be involved&#13;
WIth chanty work, but this sort of stimulation left the notion that the&#13;
movement was to be one of reformation rather than change. And it&#13;
was with this idea that women sought the power to vote in this&#13;
democratic system.&#13;
Women were not given, as it is taught in high school, the right to vote&#13;
in 1920. The fight to get the word "male" out of the Constitution cost&#13;
the women of this country 52 years of ceaseless campaigning ...During&#13;
that time they were forced "to conduct 56 campaigns of referenda to&#13;
male voters, 480 campaigns to get legislatures to submit suffrage&#13;
amendments to voters, 47 campaigns to get state constitutional conve~tions&#13;
to write woman SUffrage into state constitutions, zrt cam.&#13;
paigns to get state party conventions to include woman suffrage&#13;
planks, 30 campaigns to get presidential party conventions to adopt&#13;
woman suffrage planks in party platforms and 19 successive campaigns&#13;
with 19 successive Congresses."&#13;
After "baby" came a long way, Firestone examines how the Myth of&#13;
Emancipation anesthetized women's political consciousness.&#13;
The twenties was a time of "Love and Marriage, Love and&#13;
Marriage" .and eroticism, making the idea of any mass movement&#13;
look ridiculous. "The cultural campaign had begun: emancipation&#13;
was one's private responsibility; salvation was personal, not social or&#13;
political. The big word became self-fulfiUment.&#13;
In the forties, thougb, there was a war to think about and tbe individual&#13;
was oversbadowed by !be spirit of tbe War Effort. Women&#13;
were even needed by society to work outside of tbe borne. Once tbe war&#13;
was over, however, jobs were gone and pr:opaganda took their place.&#13;
Fulfillment was in PTA meetings, romance, diapers, diets, soap&#13;
operas, psycbotherapy, Good Hoosekeepmg and Parents magazines,&#13;
propaganda which helped to make the fifties "the bleakest decade of&#13;
all" for women.&#13;
And now, in the 70's, women have "legal freedoms, the literal&#13;
assurance tbat they are considered full political citizens of societyand&#13;
yet tbey have no power. They have educational opportunities, yet&#13;
are unable, and not expected, to employ them. Tbey have the freedom&#13;
of clothing and sex mores that they had demanded-and yet they are&#13;
sexually exploited."&#13;
And still feminism remains "taboo." Firestone ends this chapter by&#13;
saying that the fact that "the scientific revolution has had virtually no&#13;
effect on feminism only illustrates the political nature of the&#13;
problem." The goals of feminism, she affirms, cannot be achieved&#13;
through evolution-only revolution, for no one with power will be&#13;
Willing to give it up without a struggle.&#13;
Poetry contest&#13;
RANGER photo by. Debra Frledell&#13;
Wendy Musich&#13;
Musich&#13;
appointed&#13;
to state&#13;
board&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Governor Lucey has announced&#13;
the appointment of Parkslde&#13;
counselor Wendy Musich to the&#13;
State Educational Approval&#13;
Board. The Board, composed of&#13;
seven members, has been set up&#13;
by the Legislature to inspect and&#13;
certify all private vocational&#13;
schools in the state. They also&#13;
scrutinize any program or institution&#13;
in the state receiving&#13;
G.!. Bill monies, to ensure the&#13;
legitimacy of such programs.&#13;
"The Board tries to certify&#13;
programs and make decisions&#13;
about whether or not they deliver&#13;
services to students that they&#13;
claim they're going to," Musich&#13;
explained. "We also are CODcerned&#13;
with out-of-state schools&#13;
who advertise their courses here.&#13;
We check their credentials so&#13;
students aren't getting ripped&#13;
off." Approximately 150 scbools&#13;
serving 10,000students fall under&#13;
the Board's jurisdiction.&#13;
Board meetings are held&#13;
monthly and are usually in&#13;
Madison or Milwaukee, althougb&#13;
one of the sessions this year will&#13;
be hosted by Parkside.&#13;
Musich, who joined the&#13;
Parkside staff in 1968,earned her&#13;
Masters degree in Psycbiatric&#13;
Social Work from tbe University&#13;
of Chicago. As well as personal&#13;
counseling, her job at Parkside&#13;
includes academic advising for&#13;
persons interested in science&#13;
majors, and the new adult&#13;
student outreach and counseling&#13;
effort. She is also a member of&#13;
the Parkside Women's Caucus,&#13;
having served for two years as&#13;
the group's advisor.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
Students are invited to enter&#13;
their original poems for the 1973&#13;
"Poets of the Year" Awards&#13;
sponsored by Atlantic Press, the&#13;
New York and London book&#13;
publishers.&#13;
There are ten awards totalling&#13;
$12,000in prize money. The first&#13;
prize is for $7,200. This is the&#13;
world's most valuable poetry&#13;
contest and it is open to writers in&#13;
all parts of the world. In 1971 the&#13;
coveted title of "Poet of the&#13;
Year" was won by an Irishman&#13;
and last year the first prize was&#13;
presented to an English poet. The&#13;
likelihood of an American writer&#13;
taking the first place in the 1973&#13;
contest is good because a special&#13;
effort is being made by the&#13;
sponsors to attract many more&#13;
entries from tbe USA.&#13;
All styles of poetry will be&#13;
considered and there is no&#13;
restriction on subject matter. If&#13;
possible, entries should not be&#13;
longer tban 40 lines.&#13;
Poems and requests for entry&#13;
forms and fuller details should be&#13;
sent to: Atlantic Press &lt;Awards),&#13;
520 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY&#13;
10036.&#13;
2200 Lathrop An' .. Racine&#13;
518·56thSf .. Kenosha&#13;
t}t::::~:::;:::::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::t:::}ff:tf:::t:r::r::::::::f:::::rr:::::tt::t::;::::::::::::r::::r::&#13;
fr next week in mf&#13;
~~mt~~;~~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~~;~~~~~f.~~~~~m~~;~~~~~;~~;~;~~~;;;~~i;~;;;~~;~;~~;~:~~~;~~;~~~~;;~~~;~~~~~~~;~;~;;;~~;~~~~~;~;m~~;~;~~~~~;;:~;;:;~~~~;;;~;~;~~~~;~~~~;~;~~~~~&#13;
RANGER--&#13;
"The Psychic"&#13;
Area women&#13;
exhibit art&#13;
by Debra Frledell&#13;
In conjunction with the program on "Women and&#13;
the Arts" the library will be showing works by&#13;
women artists from the area, This exhibit will ron&#13;
from September 5 through September 17. Approximately&#13;
40 artists bave been invited to participate.&#13;
The display will include jewelry, paintings,&#13;
macrame, weaving, ceramics, sculpture, batik, one&#13;
illustrated book, one resin construction, collages,&#13;
wood carvings, and pen and ink drawings.&#13;
The art exhibit will be on the first floor of the&#13;
library and open for viewing during library hours.&#13;
"The "Women and the Arts" program will be held&#13;
on Thursday evening, September 13 and all day&#13;
Friday, September 14, at Parkside. Interested&#13;
persons should pre-register by calling the Information&#13;
Center, 553-2345.&#13;
This program is running concurrently with a&#13;
similar conference at Wingspread where attendance&#13;
is by invitation only. The Wingspread and&#13;
Parkside groups will meet on Friday afternoon for a&#13;
lecture given by the noted New York Times art&#13;
reviewer and critic, Grace Glueck. Glueck will&#13;
speak on tbe topic "Making Cultural Institutions&#13;
More Responsive to Social Needs," in Parkside's&#13;
Fine Arts Theatre.&#13;
Friday's program will open with a keynote on&#13;
women and the humanities, by visiting assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy Deanna McMahon. Friday's&#13;
agenda will also cover workshops and discussions&#13;
on women as writer, women and art, women and&#13;
music, and women and theatre.&#13;
The role of women in tbe arts bas been a topic of&#13;
interest to many social analysts. One assertion is&#13;
that there is a correlation between the stalus of&#13;
women and the artistic productivity of a culture.&#13;
Katbryn Clarenbacb, Madison professor of&#13;
political science and president of the Interstate&#13;
Association of Commisstons on the Status of&#13;
Women, said in a speech on the subject of women&#13;
and the arts, "it is 00 accident that at the very time&#13;
that public attention is focused on the uses of leisure&#13;
time, expanding arts organizations, and discussions&#13;
of the aesthetic society, we are also consumed with&#13;
civil rigbts, the war on poverty, world peace and the&#13;
status of women. For if we are to create the social&#13;
atmospbere in which tbe arts will nourish, we must&#13;
offer tbe fruits and opportunities which will unleash&#13;
the potential for creativity that lies within each&#13;
human being."&#13;
C1arenbach believes that it is necessary not only&#13;
for women to be involved in the arts but to view the&#13;
arts as an important instrument of social change.&#13;
As sexual roles and distinctions diminish,&#13;
C1arenbach feels, so should artistic values of&#13;
feminity versus masculinity diminish. This freedom&#13;
will increase the potential of individuals to make the&#13;
notion of the aesthetic society a reality.&#13;
AMF10-speed Racinl Bike!&#13;
Malle Ihe Golden Haager&#13;
Yair Headquraers lor back 10 school sboPpill---&#13;
Greal lookinl clolbes al reasonable prices ...&#13;
bile jeau - cordlroys-uffed paal'ssporl&#13;
sbirls-swealers-jackel s-t IrtlelecksRlColsl&#13;
riel ed blazers---&#13;
Stop in and register for the lO-speed&#13;
bike to be given away on Sept 22&#13;
or mail us a postcard with your&#13;
name and address ...&#13;
623-1138&#13;
iI 9&#13;
•&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
"&#13;
"The Movement" is a regular feature in RANGER. It deals with&#13;
women and the status of women at Parkside, in society and in history.&#13;
Guest writers are invited.&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Shulamith Firestone is a founder of the Women's Liberation&#13;
Movement and the author of The Dialectic of Sex: the case for feminist revolution.&#13;
I~ chapter two of that book, Firestone delves into the history of both&#13;
radical and conservative feminism and how that feminism was dealt with and oppressed by "the system."&#13;
Th~ . m?vement by the mid-1800's, after being spurred on by the Aboht10mst struggle and even old decaying ideals of the American&#13;
Revolution, was radical considering its time in history. Family,&#13;
~ur~h and State were being attacked as sexist or oppressing institutions&#13;
and, furthermore, there was organizing being done to unite women workers. However, at this point in time American women received no rights under the law and this left them without any political voice.&#13;
The back of the movement struggle was broken with the impetus of the Civil War. Women were allowed freedom enough to be involved&#13;
with charity work, but this sort of stimulation left the notion that the&#13;
movement was to be one of reformation rather than change. And it&#13;
was with this idea that women sought the power to vote in this democratic system.&#13;
Women were not given, as it is taught in high school, the right to vote in 1920. The fight to get the word "male" out of the Constitution cost the women of this country 52 years of ceaseless campaigning ... During&#13;
that time they were forced "to conduct 56 campaigns of referenda to&#13;
male voters, 480 campaigns to get legislatures to submit suffrage&#13;
amendments to voters, 47 campaigns to get state constitutional conventions&#13;
to write woman suffrage into state constitutions, m campaigns&#13;
to get state party conventions to include woman suffrage planks, 30 campaigns to get presidential party conventions to adopt&#13;
woman suffrage planks in party platforms and 19 successive cam- paigns with 19 successive Congresses."&#13;
After "baby" came a long way, Firestone examines how the Myth of Emancipation anesthetized women's political consciousness.&#13;
The twenties was a time of "Love and Marriage, Love and Marriage" and eroticism, making the idea of any mass movement&#13;
look ridiculous. "The cultural campaign had begun: emancipation&#13;
was one's private responsibility; salvation was personal, not social or&#13;
political. The big word became self-fulfillment. In the forties, though, there was a war to think about and the individual&#13;
was overshadowed by the spirit of the War Effort. Women&#13;
were even needed by society to work outside of the home. Once the war&#13;
was over, however, jobs were gone and propaganda took their place. Fulfillment was in PTA meetings, romance, diapers, diets, soap&#13;
operas, psychotherapy, Good Housekeeping and Parents magazines, propaganda which helped to make the fifties "the bleakest decade of&#13;
all" for women.&#13;
And now, in the 70's, women have "legal freedoms, the literal&#13;
assurance that they are considered full political citizens of societyand&#13;
yet they have no power. They have educational opportunities, yet&#13;
are unable, and not expected, to employ them. They have the freedom&#13;
of clothing and sex mores that they had demanded-and yet they are&#13;
sexually exploited."&#13;
And still feminism remains "taboo." Firestone ends this chapter by&#13;
saying that the fact that "the scientific revolution has had virtually no effect on feminism only illustrates the political nature of the&#13;
problem." The goals of feminism, she affirms, cannot be achieved&#13;
through evolution-only revolution, for no one with power will be&#13;
willing to give it up without a struggle.&#13;
Poetry contest&#13;
RANGER photo by, Debra Friedel}&#13;
Wendy :\tusicb&#13;
Musich&#13;
appointed&#13;
to state&#13;
board&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Governor Lucey has announced&#13;
the appointment of Parkside&#13;
counselor Wendy Musich to the&#13;
State Educational Approval&#13;
Board. The Board, composed of&#13;
seven members, has been set up by the Legislature to inspect and&#13;
certify all private vocational&#13;
schools in the state. They also&#13;
scrutinize any program or institution&#13;
in the state receiving&#13;
G .I. Bill monies, to ensure the&#13;
legitimacy of such programs.&#13;
"The Board tries to certify&#13;
programs and make decisions&#13;
about whether or not they deliver&#13;
services to students that they&#13;
claim they're going to," Musich&#13;
explained. "We also are concerned&#13;
with out-of-state schools&#13;
who advertise their courses here.&#13;
We check their credentials so&#13;
students aren't getting ripped&#13;
off." Approximately 150 schools&#13;
serving 10,000 students fall under&#13;
the Board's jurisdiction.&#13;
Board meetings are held&#13;
monthly and are usually in&#13;
Madison or Milwaukee, although&#13;
one of the sessions this year will&#13;
be hosted by Parkside.&#13;
Musich , who joined the&#13;
Parkside staff in 1968, earned her&#13;
Masters degree in Psychiatric&#13;
Social Work from the University&#13;
of Chicago. As well as personal&#13;
counseling, her job at Parkside&#13;
includes academic advising for&#13;
persons interested in science&#13;
majors, and the new adult&#13;
student outreach and counseling effort. She is also a member of&#13;
the Parkside Women's Caucus,&#13;
having served for two years as&#13;
the group's advisor.&#13;
Students are invited to enter&#13;
their original poems for the 1973&#13;
"Poets of the Year" Awards&#13;
sponsored by Atlantic Press, the&#13;
New York and London book&#13;
publishers.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
There are ten awards totalling&#13;
$12,000 in prize money. The first&#13;
prize is for $7,200. This is the&#13;
world's most valuable poetry&#13;
contest and it is open to writers in&#13;
all parts of the world. In 1971 the&#13;
coveted title of "Poet of the&#13;
Year" was won by an Irishman&#13;
and last year the first prize was&#13;
presented to an English poet. The&#13;
likelihood of an American writer&#13;
taking the first place in the 1973&#13;
contest is good because a special effort is being made by the&#13;
sponsors to attract many more&#13;
entries from the USA.&#13;
All styles of poetry will be&#13;
considered and there is no&#13;
restriction on subject matter. If&#13;
possible, entries should not be&#13;
longer than 40 lines.&#13;
Poems and requests for entry&#13;
forms and fuller details should be&#13;
sentto: Atlantic Press (Awards),&#13;
520 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY&#13;
10036.&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St. . Kenosha&#13;
;~J::::::::{,:.:.:.:.:::::.::::::::::::::::·:·······: :·:::.:.:.:.:.:::::::::::::.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.::::::.-:·.·.·:.·.·.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:::.:.:.:~:;:;:;&#13;
tt next week in mt&#13;
RANGER--&#13;
"The Psychic"&#13;
t r.c&#13;
~ -,&#13;
Women and the Arts prol{ram&#13;
Area woinen&#13;
exhibit art&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
In conjunction with the program on "Women and&#13;
the Arts" the library will be showing works by&#13;
women artists from the area. This exhibit will run&#13;
from September 5 through September 17. Approximately&#13;
40 artists have been invited to participate.&#13;
The display will include jewelry. paintings, macrame, weaving, ceramics, sculpture, batik, one&#13;
illustrated book, one resin con truction, collages,&#13;
wood carvings, and pen and ink drawings. The art exhibit will be on the first floor of the&#13;
library and open for viewing during library hour_.&#13;
"The "Women and the Arts" program will be held&#13;
on Thursday evening, September 13 and all day&#13;
Friday, September 14, at Parkside. Intere led&#13;
persons should pre-register by calling the Information&#13;
Center, 553-2345.&#13;
This program is running concurrently with a similar conference at Wingspread where attendance&#13;
is by invitation only. The Wingspread and&#13;
Parkside groups will meet on Friday afternoon for a lecture given by the noted New York Times art&#13;
reviewer and critic, Grace Glueck. Glueck will speak on the topic "Making Cultural Institutions&#13;
More Responsive to Social Needs," in Parkside's&#13;
Fine Arts Theatre&#13;
Friday's program will open with a keynote on&#13;
women and the humanities, by visiting assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy Deanna McMahon. Friday's&#13;
agenda will also cover workshops and discussions&#13;
on women as writer, women and art, women and&#13;
music, and women and theatre. The role of women in the arts has been a topic of&#13;
interest to many social analysts. One assertion is&#13;
that there is a correlation between the status of&#13;
women and the artistic productivity of a culture.&#13;
Kathryn Clarenbach, Madison professor of&#13;
political science and president of the Interstate&#13;
Association of Commissions on the Status of&#13;
Women, said in a speech on the subject of women&#13;
and the arts, "it is no accident that at the very time&#13;
that public attention is focused on the uses of leisure&#13;
time, expanding arts organizations, and discussions&#13;
of the aesthetic society, we are also consumed with&#13;
civil rights, the war on poverty, world peace and the&#13;
status of women. For if we are to create the social&#13;
atmosphere in which the arts will flourish, we must&#13;
offer the fruits and opportunities which will unleash&#13;
the potential for creativity that lies within each human being."&#13;
Clarenbach believes that it is necessary not only&#13;
for women to be involved in the arts but to view the&#13;
arts as an important instrument of social change.&#13;
As sexual roles and distinctions diminish,&#13;
Clarenbach feels, so should artistic values of&#13;
feminity versus masculinity diminish. This freedom&#13;
will increase the potential of individuals to make the notion of the aesthetic society a reality.&#13;
AMF 10-speed Racin2 Bike!&#13;
Make the Golden Hanger&#13;
your Headquarlers for back to school shopping---&#13;
Great looking clothes at reasonable prices ...&#13;
blue jeans -corduroys-cuffed pantssport&#13;
shirts-sweaters-jackets-turtlenecksunconst&#13;
ruct ed blazers---&#13;
Stop in and register for the 10-speed&#13;
bike to be given away on Sept 22&#13;
or mail us a postcard with your&#13;
name and address ...&#13;
308 6th St. Downtown Racine 623-1138&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday ·'t ii 9 &#13;
;' -;.- ...j..... .. , .... f'- .., .,...... :'&lt;'~: &lt;.\&#13;
l .. '-.,.6;";',,. '". ..... " : , :-: •&#13;
,.... ~ ,..- .:' ,·:·t·;· ..&#13;
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i "",\"",', • l.'::~"'· ""i TAPES&#13;
/ • " -=.;. • :,&#13;
.,'/{ 5010 7ill A.'e.} ,.,;~£~,,, .._:.:/ R E CORDS&#13;
....&lt;':!'1{~n;;Shci;Wiscon§I'tl::1S3140 WATER BEDS&#13;
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0" -...4".. . ,.".;,' .&lt;t ):.;, -.:", '&#13;
~~U'""""" AND ALL&#13;
-....~_ ..•:3 ~ .....&#13;
Phone 654-5032 OTHER VITAL&#13;
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NECESSITIE&#13;
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BACK&#13;
VRING -. &lt;:.~&#13;
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EOPE v-"w~i.&#13;
..".....~. ;~t. tOo...~ • I" .'" .. "\ ":' .. .. .··l~""· ' .&#13;
FROM AUG. 31- SEPT. 9 l' .~~.~ \.~~.... t. . '::'"&#13;
~ p.' \'" U. l . ~LL .:,....'EGlJLAll&#13;
ALL WATERBEDS "~'&#13;
AND PIPES ALBUMS (' . ON NEW ~,._.'&#13;
1 0 % OFF RELEASE RACK- o . :'...: iJVL y .... h~ I&#13;
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AND PIPES&#13;
JO% OFF&#13;
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AND ALL&#13;
OTHER VITAL&#13;
LIFE&#13;
NECESSITIE &#13;
Beyond the&#13;
r&#13;
theatre stage&#13;
is a learning experience&#13;
•&#13;
by Debra FriedelI&#13;
Ton: Reinert, technical theatre specialist, in&#13;
speakml1 of our new theatre said that "Galbraith&#13;
(Jam~s Galbraith, Director of Planning and Construc~lOn).a~?&#13;
e~eryone involved have done an&#13;
amazing Job. Reinert went on to explain some of&#13;
the features the theatre has.&#13;
The trap stage has a lot of flexibility. When&#13;
completely open It IS 40 feet wide and 12 feet deep.&#13;
One ,can make actors or part of the set disappear by&#13;
vertical moveme~t of portions of the stage floor.&#13;
Th~ orchestr~ Pit can also be positioned in many&#13;
locations. It might remain even with the stage for&#13;
an act of a play, be used at a lower level as an Ofchestra&#13;
pit for a musical production, or utilized 14&#13;
feet below stage level to haul equipment up or down.&#13;
~ur. theatre ~~s a manual T-track rig system.&#13;
This IS the guiding carriage, Reinert explained,&#13;
~hich has a 60 foot run between the stage and grid&#13;
Iron. The theatre also has 12 hemp (rope) sets which&#13;
"It's going to be fun. I find the people&#13;
around are really terrific. Everyone is&#13;
cooperative. I think the theatre will&#13;
create student interest in the University&#13;
."&#13;
allow things to be carried above the stage at angles&#13;
other than parallel to the stage.&#13;
"Our lighting control is phenomenal," Reinert&#13;
exclaimed. It has an instant memory computer&#13;
board which entails instant record of lighting. Once&#13;
an individual has adjusted specific lights at specific&#13;
moments, it is recorded in the computer. After that,&#13;
all one has to do is punch up the cue number on the&#13;
computer board and the lighting is set to go. "We&#13;
have a capacity of cues far above what we'll&#13;
probably ever use," Reinert said. Our theatre has&#13;
the ability of lighting 204 instruments at the same&#13;
time while varying the intensity of each one. There&#13;
are footlights in the floor of the stage which revolve&#13;
to hide under the stage when they are not needed.&#13;
The scene shop is located directly behind the&#13;
stage and makes access between the two easy. The&#13;
scene shop is where the building and construction of&#13;
sets will take place. This room has a loading dock so&#13;
the arrival of shipped materials will present no&#13;
problem to set builders. The shop also has a paint&#13;
frame which descends through the floor making the&#13;
painting of large items, such as walls, less difficult&#13;
and space-consuming. Storage and rehearsal areas&#13;
are located under the stage.&#13;
There are two make-up and dressing rooms, each&#13;
with individual make-up sta tions and a shower.&#13;
There is also a special dressing room for the guest&#13;
stars to prepare in before going on stage. The Green&#13;
Room, located off stage right, will be used for&#13;
various purposes. It can be a waiting room for&#13;
actors to relax in prior to or after going on stage. Or,&#13;
it can be a chorus dressing room. Reinert will utilize&#13;
the Green Room as his classroom, making travel&#13;
from his lectures to different areas of the theatre&#13;
most convenient.&#13;
Each balcony of the theatre has a folding wall&#13;
which allows for the possibility of shutting each one&#13;
off from the rest of the theatre and designating&#13;
them as lecture classrooms. Each can seat 100&#13;
people. This all adds to the usefulness of tbe total&#13;
theatre.&#13;
Noone is quite sure, at this point, of the acoustical&#13;
quality. under different situations. The theatre was&#13;
designed. to take care of both voice and orchestra,&#13;
but acoustics are one of the areas in theatre about&#13;
.-A&gt;'hichthe least is known. There have been all types&#13;
of elaborate experiments attempted, such as the&#13;
tilting of walls,to make it possible to have both good&#13;
voice and good orchestra sound in the same theatre.&#13;
With ours, Reinert said, "it will be interesting to see&#13;
what happens. The theatre is intimate enough so&#13;
that there sbould be no problem."&#13;
Beyond all the rooms, facilities and capabilities of&#13;
our theatre, there is a lot more involved. People are&#13;
needed. to make sure the stage is prepared for actors&#13;
at show time.&#13;
One very important person is the scene designer&#13;
and technical director. This individual reads the&#13;
script and decides on the total environment in which&#13;
the action of the play takes place. The scene&#13;
designer must indicate the geographic location,&#13;
economic status of the actors, season of the year,&#13;
period of time, time of day, and more. These things&#13;
are also affected by lighting and costumes. For&#13;
example, the audience would be confused if one&#13;
actor entered wearing an overcoat and another in&#13;
shorts and shirt sleeves. It might also be a bit&#13;
perplexing if the audience saw the moon in a&#13;
daytime blue sky. ''If an actor was to go through a&#13;
door, the audience has to know ~h~ere thc~1,actor i~&#13;
Wed., sept. 5, 1973THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Rein ert is theatre specialist&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
"My big payoff is not to see&#13;
scenery build a reality, butlo see&#13;
students do things they've seen&#13;
become, but never thought they&#13;
themselves could do," says Tom&#13;
Reinert, our new technical&#13;
theatre specialist.&#13;
Tom Reinert&#13;
going. Every door and window must have a purpose,"&#13;
explained Reinert.&#13;
Through details of lighting and costuming one&#13;
also must determine if the mood of the production is&#13;
serious, a comedy, or a farce. When the play begins,&#13;
it is essential that the audience know these factors&#13;
so full attention can be placed on what tbe actors&#13;
are saying and doing. The motions the actors go&#13;
through musttben be constant and natural with the&#13;
"Everyone works together, but the&#13;
ultimate artist has to be the actor. The&#13;
initial artist is the writer; the director&#13;
instructs the actor in interpretation and&#13;
the scene designer and technical director&#13;
help the actor."&#13;
envirownent they are in.&#13;
The technical director and scene designer has to&#13;
be an architect, an interior decorator, an historian,&#13;
a portrait painter, an electrician, and sometimes&#13;
even a plumber. Is there a part in the script where&#13;
the actor needs running water or an electrical&#13;
outlet? They must be made available.&#13;
The technical director is responsible for the&#13;
building, setting up, lighting, painting and&#13;
decorating, that which has been designed as the&#13;
production's set. Itis not just the actor who attracts&#13;
the attention of the audience but lighting, sound,&#13;
and movement also are vitally important The&#13;
technical director must heip paint the total picture,&#13;
along with the actor, for the audience, with lights.&#13;
The initial artist is the writer. The director,&#13;
technical director and scene designer, and the actor&#13;
must be able to interpret that which is written. The&#13;
director instructs the actor in interpretation and the&#13;
scene designer and technical director help the&#13;
actor.&#13;
In each production things change. Every play is&#13;
different and there is something new every time for&#13;
everyone involved.&#13;
In October the first major production in our new&#13;
theatre will take place when the curtain opens for&#13;
the premiere of the three act play, "The Virus," by&#13;
Herbert Kubly, Parkside professor of English. It&#13;
will be directed by Don Rirftz, assistant professor of&#13;
, communications.&#13;
RANGER photo&#13;
by David Daniels&#13;
As well as scene designer and&#13;
technical specialist, Reinert's&#13;
position Involves coordinating the&#13;
use and day by day scbeduling of&#13;
the theatre. Reinert explained&#13;
that with the creation of the&#13;
theatre there are problems:&#13;
everyone wants to use it. "My&#13;
philosophy is," he continued,&#13;
"that the facilities should be used&#13;
by many groups as often a.&#13;
possible. They are there to be&#13;
used. "&#13;
Reinert received his undergraduate&#13;
education at&#13;
Calumet Campus, a regional&#13;
campus of Purdue University. in&#13;
Hammond Indiana. Calumet,&#13;
although similar to Parkside in&#13;
many ways. did not have a&#13;
theatre. Reinert told of building&#13;
shows which could fit in a truck&#13;
and be taken to local high schools&#13;
for production.&#13;
He attended Bowling Green&#13;
State University in Ohio Cor both&#13;
his masters degree and Ph. D.&#13;
instruction. Reinert's Ph. D.&#13;
topic, on which he is working, is&#13;
theatrical stage rigging.&#13;
For two summers Reinert was&#13;
scene designer and technical&#13;
director at an outdoor summer&#13;
theatre in eastern Kentucky. In&#13;
that capacity he helped stage&#13;
such productions as "Hello&#13;
Dolly," "The Matchmaker,"&#13;
"Carnival," "Bye Bye Birdie,"&#13;
and "A Funny Thing Happened&#13;
On The Way To The Forum."&#13;
Reinert hopes to be teaching a&#13;
course this fall on stagecraft.&#13;
This would be a sort of "how to&#13;
do" class in which students would&#13;
be instructed in the various&#13;
aspects of building for a show.&#13;
Reinert anticipated shop hours in&#13;
the afternoon for any interested&#13;
students to get practical experience&#13;
in the actual building fe_&#13;
a show. "For anyone who wants&#13;
to participate," said Reinert, " it&#13;
will be both culturally and personally&#13;
broadening."&#13;
In the future, Reinert would&#13;
like to teach a course on scene&#13;
design and stage lighting. This&#13;
course would instruct students in&#13;
the responsibilities of lhe&#13;
designer.&#13;
"The theatre is a learning&#13;
experience," Reinert ended.&#13;
"The technical aspects are really&#13;
a vital learning experience for&#13;
students. That's where I get my&#13;
big thrill. That is Why I have&#13;
chosen as my profession the&#13;
education of theatre."&#13;
,-----r=::=:===:=:===========""&#13;
''THE NIFTIEST&#13;
CHASE SEQUENCE&#13;
SINCE SILENT&#13;
FILMS'"&#13;
- PaulO Zimmerman&#13;
Newsweek&#13;
Parkside Activity Board&#13;
Feature Film Series Presents&#13;
THE FRENCH&#13;
CONNECTION&#13;
Friday, Sept. 7 - 8 p.m.&#13;
and&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 9 - 7: 30 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Admission -75cents&#13;
UWP and Wis. ID Required.&#13;
MemMr F 0 I c.&#13;
Phone 658-2582&#13;
American State Bank]&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St.&#13;
Beyond the theatre stage&#13;
is a learning experience&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
To~ Reinert, technical theatre specialist, in&#13;
speakmg of ow: new _theatre said that " Galbraith&#13;
(Jam~s Galbraith, Director of Planning and Construc~1on)_&#13;
a~? e~eryone involved have done an amazmg Job. Remert went on to explain some of&#13;
the features the theatre has.&#13;
The trap stag~ ?as a lot of flexibility. When&#13;
completely open 1t 1s 40 feet wide and 12 feet deep.&#13;
One _can make actors or part of the set disappear by&#13;
vertical moveme~t of portions of the stage floor.&#13;
Th~ orchestr~ pit can also be positioned in many&#13;
locations. It might rerr,ain even with the stage for&#13;
an act of a play, be used at a lower level as an orchestra&#13;
pit for a musical production, or utilized 14&#13;
feet below stage level to haul equipment up or down.&#13;
&lt;?ur_ theatre ~~s a manual T-track rig system. This 1s the gwding carriage, Reinert explained,&#13;
which has a 60 foot run between the stage and grid&#13;
iron. The theatre also has 12 hemp &lt;rope) sets which&#13;
"It's going to be fun. I find the people&#13;
around are really terrific. Everyone is&#13;
cooperative. I think the theatre will&#13;
create student interest in the University."&#13;
&#13;
allow things to be carried above the stage at angles&#13;
other than parallel to the stage.&#13;
"Our lighting control is phenomenal," Reinert&#13;
exclaimed. It has an instant memory computer&#13;
board which entails instant record of lighting. Once&#13;
an individual has adjusted specific lights at specific&#13;
moments, it is recorded in the computer. After that,&#13;
all one has to do is punch up the cue number on the&#13;
computer board and the lighting is set to go. "We&#13;
have a capacity of cues far above what we'll&#13;
probably ever use," Reinert said. Our theatre has&#13;
the ability of lighting 204 instruments at the same&#13;
time while varying the intensity of each one. There&#13;
are footlights in the floor of the stage which revolve&#13;
to hide under the stage wnen they are not needed.&#13;
The scene shop is located directly behind the&#13;
stage and makes access between the two easy. The&#13;
scene shop is where the building and construction of&#13;
sets will take place. This room has a loading dock so&#13;
the arrival of shipped materials will present no&#13;
problem to set builders. The shop also has a paint&#13;
frame which descends through the floor making the&#13;
painting of large items, such as walls, less difficult&#13;
and space-consuming. Storage and rehearsal areas&#13;
are located under the stage.&#13;
There are two make-up and dressing rooms, each&#13;
with individual make-up stations and a shower.&#13;
There is also a special dressing room for the guest&#13;
stars to prepare in before going on stage. The Green&#13;
Room, located off stage right, will be used for&#13;
various purposes. It can be a waiting room for&#13;
actors to relax in prior to or after going on stage. Or,&#13;
it can be a chorus dressing room. Reinert will utilize&#13;
the Green Room as his classroom, making travel&#13;
from his lectures to different areas of the theatre&#13;
most convenient.&#13;
Each balcony of the theatre has a folding wall&#13;
which allows for the possibility of shutting each one&#13;
off from the rest of the theatre and designating&#13;
them as lecture classrooms. Each can seat 100&#13;
people. This all adds to the usefulness of the total&#13;
theatre.&#13;
No one is quite sure, at this point, of the acoustical&#13;
quality. under different situations. The theatre was&#13;
designed to take care of both voice and orchestra,&#13;
but acoustics are one of the areas in theatre about&#13;
....vhich the least is known. There have been all types&#13;
of elaborate experiments attempted, such as the&#13;
tilting of walls, to make it possible to have both good&#13;
voice and good orchestra sound in the same theatre.&#13;
With ours, Reinert said, ''it will be interesting to see&#13;
what happens. The theatre is intimate enough so&#13;
that there should be no problem."&#13;
Beyond all the rooms, facilities and capabilities of&#13;
our theatre, there is a lot more involved. People are&#13;
needed to make sure the stage is prepared for actors&#13;
at show time.&#13;
One very important person is the scene designer&#13;
and technical director. This individual reads the&#13;
script and decides on the total environment in which&#13;
the action of the play takes place. The scene&#13;
designer must indicate the geographic location,&#13;
economic status of the actors, season of the year,&#13;
period of time, time of day, and more. These things&#13;
are also affected by lighting and costumes. For&#13;
example, the audience would be confused if one&#13;
actor entered wearing an overcoat and another in&#13;
shorts and shirt sleeves. It might also be a bit&#13;
perplexing if the audience saw the moon in a&#13;
daytime blue sky. "If an actor was to go through a&#13;
door, the audience has. to know }V.h!:!r~ that, actor i~&#13;
Tom Reinert&#13;
going. Every door and window must have a pur- pose," explained Reinert.&#13;
Through details of lighting and costuming one&#13;
also must determine if the mood of the production is&#13;
serious, a comedy, or a farce. When the play begins,&#13;
it is essential that the audience know these factors&#13;
so full attention can be placed on what the actors&#13;
are saying and doing. The motions the actors go&#13;
through must then be constant and natural with the&#13;
"Everyone works together, but the&#13;
ultimate artist has to be the actor. The&#13;
initial artist is the writer; the director&#13;
instructs the actor in interpretation and&#13;
the scene designer and technical director&#13;
help the actor."&#13;
enviror.unent they are in.&#13;
The technical director and scene designer has to&#13;
be an architect, an interior decorator, an historian,&#13;
a portrait painter, an electrician, and sometimes&#13;
even a plumber. ls there a part in the script where&#13;
the actor needs running water or an electrical&#13;
outlet? They must be made available.&#13;
The technical director is responsible for the&#13;
building, setting up, lighting, painting and&#13;
decorating, that which has been designed as the&#13;
production's set. It is not just the actor who attracts&#13;
the attention of the audience but lighting, sound,&#13;
and movement also are vitally important. The&#13;
technical director must help paint the total picture,&#13;
along with the actor, for the audience, with lights.&#13;
The initial artist is the writer. The director,&#13;
technical director and scene designer, and the actor&#13;
must be able to interpret that which is written. The&#13;
director instructs the actor in interpretation and the&#13;
scene designer and technical director help the&#13;
actor. In each production things change. Every play is&#13;
different and there is something new every time for&#13;
everyone involved.&#13;
In October the first major production in our new&#13;
theatre will take place when the curtain opens for&#13;
the premiere of the three act play, "The Virus," by&#13;
Herbert Kubly, Parkside professor of English. It&#13;
will be directed by Don Rinh, assistant professor of&#13;
, communicat,ions.&#13;
Wed., Sept. 5, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Reinert is theatre specialist&#13;
bJ Debra Friedel!&#13;
" My big payoff is not to see&#13;
scenery build a reality, but to see&#13;
student do things they've seen&#13;
become, but never thought they&#13;
themselves could do, " say Tom&#13;
Reinert , our new technical&#13;
theatre specialist&#13;
RANG ER photo&#13;
by David Daniels&#13;
Parkside Activity Board&#13;
Feature Film Series Presents&#13;
THE FRENCH&#13;
CONNECTION&#13;
Friday, Sept. 7 - 8 p.m .&#13;
and&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 9 - 7: 30 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Admission - 75 cents&#13;
UWP and Wis. ID Required.&#13;
· well a · :ccne de igner and&#13;
technical ·p ciah t, H in rl'&#13;
po ·ition mvol\'escoordinalir the&#13;
use and day by day scheduling of&#13;
the theatre. Reinert explained&#13;
that with the creation of th&#13;
theatre there arc prob) m. :&#13;
e eryone wan · to u. e it. "My&#13;
philosophy is, ' h continued,&#13;
''that the facilities should be used&#13;
by many group a · oft n a&#13;
possible. They are ther lo b&#13;
used.'&#13;
Reinert reeei\'ed hL· undergraduate&#13;
education at&#13;
Calwnet Campus, a regional&#13;
campus of Purdue Univer ·ity. m&#13;
Hammond Indiana. alumet ,&#13;
although imilar to Park:ide in&#13;
many ways, did not ha,· a&#13;
theatre. Reinert told of building&#13;
shows which could fil in a truck&#13;
and be taken to local high schools&#13;
for production.&#13;
He attended Bowling Green&#13;
State University in Ohio for both&#13;
his ma ters degree and Ph. D.&#13;
instruction. R.einert's Ph. D.&#13;
topic, on which he is working, is&#13;
theatrical stage rigging.&#13;
For two summers Reinert was&#13;
cene designer and technical&#13;
director at an outdoor summer&#13;
theatre in eastern Kentucky. In&#13;
that capacity he helped stage&#13;
such productions as "Hello&#13;
Dolly," "The Matchmaker,"&#13;
"Carnival," "Bye Bye Birdie,"&#13;
and " A Funny Thing Happened&#13;
On The Way To The Forum."&#13;
Reinert hopes to be teaching a&#13;
course this fall on stagecraft.&#13;
This would be a sort of "how to&#13;
do" class in which students would&#13;
be instructed in the various&#13;
aspects of building for a show.&#13;
Reinert anticipated shop hours in&#13;
the afternoon for any interested&#13;
students to get practical experience&#13;
in the actual building f&lt;..&#13;
a show. ·'For anyone who wants&#13;
to participate," said Reinert, " it&#13;
will be both culturally and personally&#13;
broadenjng."&#13;
In the future, Reinert would&#13;
like to teach a course on scene&#13;
design and stage lighting. This&#13;
course would instruct students in&#13;
the responsibilities of the&#13;
designer.&#13;
"The theatre is a learning&#13;
experience," Reinert ended.&#13;
"The technical aspects are really&#13;
a vital learning experience for&#13;
students. That's where I get my&#13;
big thrill. That is why I have&#13;
cho en as my profession the&#13;
education of theatre."&#13;
''THE NIFTIEST&#13;
CHASE SEQUENCE&#13;
SINCE SILENT&#13;
FILMS!" - Pav/ D Z,mmerman&#13;
Newsweek&#13;
American State BankFree&#13;
Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
-mber F O IC &#13;
'''J''''JI!I.~.•~~~~".~I' 8I!lit •.,m&#13;
Activities Board to open&#13;
$&#13;
diifseries&#13;
with "The French Connection"&#13;
"The French Connection" is&#13;
the first film to be shown in this&#13;
year's Feature Film Series&#13;
sponsored by the Parks ide Activities&#13;
Board.&#13;
Feature Films are shown in the&#13;
Student Activities Building, and&#13;
admission is 75 cents. "The&#13;
French Connection" will be&#13;
shown Fri., Sept, 7, at 8 p.m. and&#13;
Sun., Sept. 9, at 7:3() p.m, All&#13;
Feature Film are shown twice&#13;
like tlus&#13;
This week's film stars Gene&#13;
Hackman, Roy Scheider and&#13;
Fernando Rey and portrays the&#13;
exciting, real-hIe tory 01 a pair&#13;
01 dedicated, hardworking New&#13;
York City Narcotics quad&#13;
detectives who played a long-shot&#13;
hunch that eventually led to the&#13;
smashing 01 a $32,000,000 lntemational&#13;
dope smuggling ring.&#13;
The trail proved a long and arduous&#13;
one, and before it ended, it&#13;
mvolved leading citizens 01 both&#13;
France and the U.S., including&#13;
France's most popular television&#13;
personality 01 the day.&#13;
The lilm was produced by&#13;
Philip D'Antoni ("Bullitt") and&#13;
directed by William Friedkin&#13;
("The Boys in the Band"). Critic&#13;
Judith Crist called it "smashing&#13;
entertainment" and "8 supreme&#13;
movie-movie." he went on to&#13;
say that it was "the many things&#13;
that a thoroughly satislying&#13;
movie-movie should be: a topical&#13;
dramatization, a perceptive&#13;
contemporary comment and a&#13;
fine piece of film-making. to&#13;
Director Friedkin said 01 his&#13;
lilm, "This IS a dirty, stark and&#13;
ruthless story, lortunately larded&#13;
with some humor in certain incidents.&#13;
It has to he captured that&#13;
way on film. The main characters,&#13;
be they cops or criminals,&#13;
project their own complex inner&#13;
reality. You know, some are&#13;
actually zombies and monsters,&#13;
and I don't mean just the socalled&#13;
'bad-guys.' 01 course,&#13;
Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider&#13;
carry the load, portraying two&#13;
real-life human beings, heroic&#13;
after their own fashion, who&#13;
happen to be policemen. But il we&#13;
filmed it truly, and with compassio",&#13;
Ithink we will have not&#13;
only an entertaining motion&#13;
picture, but one which also&#13;
makes a contribution to understanding&#13;
the nature of ourselves."&#13;
Extension offers&#13;
and chinese language courses&#13;
The Umverslty 01 Wisconsm·&#13;
Extension will oller three one&#13;
credit science modules this&#13;
semester&#13;
Each module lasts live weeks.&#13;
They all meet on Monday and&#13;
Wednesday lrom 8 p.m. to 7:IS&#13;
p.m. The lint mocklJe oflered willi&#13;
he Fla8ion, Fusion, and the&#13;
Energy Crisis. The course will&#13;
run lrom September 5 to October&#13;
3. Some 01 the topics covered will&#13;
....". projected enerlY aeeds,&#13;
rilsion and fusion reactors,&#13;
physics 01 breeder reactors, laser&#13;
induced IWlion,and solar energy.&#13;
Radiation and Your Body will&#13;
begin October 8 and end&#13;
November 7. Areas covered will&#13;
•&#13;
science&#13;
UlClude tbe general nature 01&#13;
electromagnetic and nuclear&#13;
radiations; eflects on the body,&#13;
uses in diagnostic and&#13;
therapeutic medicine; manmade&#13;
and natural sources in the&#13;
environment.&#13;
Beginning November 12 and&#13;
ending Decemher t2 will he&#13;
Computers·The Emerging&#13;
Tecbnology. Tlus module will be&#13;
concerned with the bistory 01&#13;
computer development, principles&#13;
01 operation, impact on&#13;
industrial society, potential uses&#13;
and abuses 01 computers.&#13;
Cblaese Language Coarse&#13;
Beginning and Intermediale&#13;
Chinese will also be offered t1us&#13;
Iall.&#13;
Bessie C. Tang, B.A. Taiwan&#13;
Normal University and .M.L.S.&#13;
Columbia University will he the&#13;
instructor.&#13;
Beginning Chinese will start&#13;
Tuesday, Septemher lllrom 6:3()&#13;
p.m. to 8:30 p.m. There will he&#13;
ten weekly meetings lor a lee 01&#13;
$25.&#13;
Intermediate Chinese is the&#13;
continuation of Beginning&#13;
Chinese, and will begin saturday,&#13;
September IS from 10 a.m. to 12&#13;
.ooסס&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
the University 01 Wisconsin·&#13;
Extension in Tallent Hall, or call&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
.1 .... " .... 0&lt; ••••••• - •••• __ ••••• -.- ..... ; ~'t~..•.......&#13;
It's what's'&#13;
happening&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 6: RANGER stafl meeting, 4 p.m. RANGER ollice&#13;
(LLC DI94&gt;. All persons interested in working on the student&#13;
newspaper welcome.&#13;
Fri, Sept. 7: Film - "The French Connection," 8 p.m., S.A.B., 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
Sat., Sept. 8: Dance, lea turing Ivory, 9 p.m .. I a.m., S.A.B., $1.50,&#13;
ill's required.&#13;
Sun., Sept. 9: Film - "The French Connection," 7:3()p.m., S.A.B., 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
Mon., Sept. 10: Women's Caucus meets, 7:3() p.m., LLC 0174. All&#13;
interested women welcome.&#13;
Tues., Sept. 11: Milw. Symphony concert with Carmen Vila, 8 p.m.,&#13;
Fine Arts Theatre, reserved seats only.&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12: All -student picnic, 11 a.m-r p.m., in front of&#13;
Greenquist Hall (in case of rain, the event will be held in the S.A.B.).&#13;
COMINGUP&#13;
Thurs., Sept. 13: "Women And The Arts" program: Films and&#13;
discussion of women and films, 7:30 p.m., free.&#13;
Fri., Sept. 14: Women And The Arts Day, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.rn., Iree.&#13;
All items lor IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Wed. prior to publication of the issue in which an&#13;
item is to appear.&#13;
ALL·STUDENT PICNIC&#13;
A lew ingenious people have&#13;
devised a clever solution to a&#13;
couple 01 perplexing problems. A&#13;
pot-luck picnic will happen on the&#13;
grass in front of Greenquist next&#13;
Wed. (Sept. 12) between the&#13;
hours 01 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. All&#13;
students are invited to mingle on&#13;
the lawn and share food and&#13;
conversation. Come for 2 minutes&#13;
or 2 hours, bring bread, salami,&#13;
cheese, whatever. In case it rains&#13;
(it wouldn't dare) everyone is&#13;
asked to go to the Student Ac-&#13;
~vilies Building. The aim is fun,&#13;
~ good lunch, and a place to rest&#13;
your weary bods. Soda will&#13;
hopefully be sold-no alcohol&#13;
please, until we can get some&#13;
state laws changed. If response is&#13;
good this could he a weekly event&#13;
wlule the weather is. decent.&#13;
(J rzr&#13;
0&#13;
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-&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN.PARKSIDE&#13;
invites you to spend winter break ... JAN. 2.9,1974&#13;
Inthe heart&#13;
ofWalklki&#13;
7 SUN FILLED, FUN FILLED DAYS&#13;
$269 Plu, ". tex an&lt;!'e,ui"&#13;
base&lt;! on 3 sharing a rOOm&#13;
• R~ncl trip iet air 10 Honolulu from Milwaukee&#13;
• 7 N,gfIts at the be-autiful OutriQg~ West HOfel&#13;
• '1 Day sightseeing lour of Honololu&#13;
• Treditional 1I000r lei greeting&#13;
• GrOUnd transfers be~ .&#13;
• Services of lour host ....... ~rl ~ hotel Including Baggage Handling "'r-.......... I tnp&#13;
• "'" tips and lakes on above serVices&#13;
ro&#13;
V&gt;&#13;
n&#13;
o&#13;
n&#13;
=r&#13;
3'&#13;
o&#13;
V&gt;&#13;
Activities Board to open&#13;
with "The French Connection"&#13;
It's what 's&#13;
happening&#13;
•&#13;
ruthless storv. fortunately larded with ome humor in certain incidents.&#13;
It has to be captured that way on film. The main characters&#13;
be they cops or criminals,&#13;
proj~t their o.,.,n complex inner&#13;
realitv. You know, some are&#13;
actuailv zombies and monsters, and I -don't mean just the s&lt;r&#13;
called 'bad-guys.' Of course,&#13;
Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider&#13;
ca rry the load. portraying two&#13;
real-life human beings, heroic&#13;
after their o.,.,n fashion, who&#13;
happen to be policemen. But if we&#13;
filmed it truly, and with compa&#13;
ior, I think we will have not&#13;
only an entertaining motion&#13;
picture, but one which also&#13;
makes a contribution to understanding&#13;
the nature of oureh-&#13;
·.''&#13;
Thurs. Sept. 6: RANGER staff meeting, 4 p.m. RANGER office&#13;
(LLC D194). All persons interested in working on the student&#13;
newspaper welcome. Fri, Sept. 7: Film - "The French Connection," 8 p.m., S.A.B., 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
Sat. , Sept. 8: Dance, featuring Ivory, 9 p.m. - 1 a.m., S.A.B., $1.50,&#13;
ID's required.&#13;
Sun., Sept. 9: Film -- "The French Connection," 7:30 p.m., S.A.B., 75&#13;
cents. Mon ., Sept. 10: Women's Caucus meets, 7:30 p.m., LLC Dl74. All&#13;
interested women welcome.&#13;
Tues. , Sept. 11 : Milw. Symphony concert with Carmen Vila, 8 p.m., Fine Arts Theatre, reserved seats only.&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12 : All -student picnic, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., in front of Greenquist Hall (in case of rain, the event will be held in the S.A.B.).&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Thurs., Sept. 13: "Women And The Arts" program: Films and&#13;
discussion of women and films, 7:30 p.m., free.&#13;
Fri., Sept. 14: Women And The Arts Day, 8:30 a.m.-4 :30 p.m., free.&#13;
Extension offers science&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Wed. prior to publication or the issue in which an&#13;
item is to appear.&#13;
and chinese language courses ALL-STUDENT PICNIC&#13;
inchKf the general nature of&#13;
1 tromagnetic and nuclear&#13;
r diation ; effe ts on the body, u in diagno ti c and&#13;
lherap utic medicine; manm&#13;
d and n tural sources in the&#13;
environment. Beginning 'ovember 12 and&#13;
ending December 12 will be&#13;
omputer -The Emerging&#13;
Technology. This module will be&#13;
concerned with the history of&#13;
computer development, principles&#13;
of operation, impact on&#13;
industrial society, potential uses&#13;
and abuse of computers.&#13;
h · e Language Course&#13;
Beginning and Intermediate&#13;
Chinese will also be offered this&#13;
fall.&#13;
Be ie C. Tang, B.A. Taiwan&#13;
'ormal University and .M.L.S.&#13;
Columbia University will be the&#13;
instructor.&#13;
Beginning Chinese will start&#13;
Tuesday, September 11 from 6:30&#13;
p.m. to 8:30 p.m. There will be&#13;
ten weekly meetings for a fee of&#13;
$25.&#13;
Intermediate Chinese is the&#13;
continuation of Beginning&#13;
Chinese, and will begin Saturday,&#13;
September 15 from 10 a.m. to 12&#13;
noon.&#13;
For further information contact&#13;
the University of WisconsinExtension&#13;
in Tallent Hall, or call&#13;
553-2312.&#13;
A few ingenious people have&#13;
devised a clever solution to a&#13;
couple of perplexing problems. A&#13;
pot-luck picnic will happen on the&#13;
grass in front of Greenquist next&#13;
Wed. (Sept. 12) between the&#13;
hours of 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. All&#13;
students are invited to mingle on&#13;
the lawn and share food and&#13;
conversation. Come for 2 minutes&#13;
or 2 hours, bring bread, salami,&#13;
cheese, whatever. In case it rains&#13;
(it wouldn't dare) everyone is&#13;
asked to go to the Student Ac9vities&#13;
Building. The aim is fun, a good lunch, and a place to rest&#13;
your weary bods. Soda will&#13;
hopefully be sold--no alcohol&#13;
please, until we can get some&#13;
state laws changed. If response is&#13;
good this could be a weekly event&#13;
while the weather is decent.&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSI DE&#13;
invites you to spend winter break ... JAN. 2-9, 1974&#13;
in the heart&#13;
ofWaikiki&#13;
7 SUN FILLED, FUN FILLE D DAYS&#13;
$ 2 6 9 Plus $20 tax and service&#13;
based on 3 sharing a room&#13;
• Round trip let air to Honolulu from Milwaukee&#13;
• 7 Nights at the beautiful outrigger West Hotel&#13;
• ', Oay sightseeing tour of Honolulu&#13;
• Trad,l,onal flower lei greeting&#13;
• Ground transfers between al t &amp; h · • Ser . rpar olel Including Baggage Handling v ,ces of lour host throughout trip&#13;
• All lips and lakes on above services&#13;
FM •P!&gt;l k ation fwm °' further lntormat;on, stop in at LLC 0 -197 or phone: SSJ, 229~&#13;
n&#13;
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10 THE PARKSI~ RANGER Wed" sept, S. 1973&#13;
Food service uw-p was answer for three adult students&#13;
problems&#13;
remain&#13;
unsolved&#13;
by Debra FriedeU&#13;
For anyone who eals and is&#13;
concerned about what is being&#13;
done to eliminate the problems in&#13;
the food service area of the&#13;
library, the answer is nothing. In&#13;
facl, the ha les of waiting in line&#13;
to get hot food and then searching&#13;
for a free table and chair are&#13;
gomg to get worse before they get&#13;
better With the closing of the&#13;
Kenosha campus next year, even&#13;
more people will be needing the&#13;
careteri r.ciliti 10 LLC.&#13;
"There is nothing that can be&#13;
done to eliminate the wait" said&#13;
Bill i huhr, Director of tudent&#13;
Lire "The cat ten. wa not set&#13;
up to do what ,t is doing."&#13;
.iebuhr . uggested student.&#13;
utilize eating facllitJ In the&#13;
Student Acttviues Building&#13;
I '.Ul) bee use th ituauon&#13;
w,II have to be lived with until the&#13;
new tud nt n r Is bwlt&#13;
The eampletlcn of th 'tudent&#13;
Center will not how v r benef t&#13;
pr ent Park de ents and Its&#13;
t to open for&#13;
not r lhr&#13;
ot contraet&#13;
t lood&#13;
I t ~&#13;
n I uhr • ed th,s&#13;
r port r The cafeten 's rv,ng&#13;
pproxlm.tel)' 1000people a d.y&#13;
w,th th. bulk between 11a.m .• nd&#13;
I pm , ,ebuhr .dded that we .re&#13;
the only unlverslly in the slate to&#13;
have a cafeteria in our library&#13;
nd there· 8:) a batUe with&#13;
tadison to g t even that&#13;
When a. ked ir 8 uni\"ersity~run&#13;
food service might prOVide&#13;
cheaper eatmg, 'iebuhr said th.t&#13;
It wa more economical for a&#13;
corporation, especially Since they&#13;
buy food wholesale. The prices&#13;
are kept conslstant with those .t&#13;
other tate universities. Canteen&#13;
is also regul.ted by contr.ct to&#13;
serve a required weight of meat&#13;
per serving.&#13;
'I'he UOIversily owns the&#13;
equipment which Canteen uses in&#13;
rood prepar.tion, This equipment&#13;
will be used ,n the tudent Center&#13;
when It is built. That I.eility will&#13;
contain three differeot types of&#13;
eating areas&#13;
There will be a Ralhskellar&#13;
with the traditional ch.rcoal&#13;
grilled brats .nd hamburgers.&#13;
Beer will be served here,&#13;
'MIe eafeteri. wl1l be made up&#13;
01 . tations where an individual&#13;
...,11go to purchase a sal.d, meat,&#13;
a dessert, or other items.&#13;
The new Student Center will&#13;
also have a rormal dining area&#13;
where china plates and table&#13;
cloths .. ill be used. Complete&#13;
dinners are gomg to be served&#13;
nd It 15 the pl.ce where nigbt&#13;
club acts will perform.&#13;
Ho"'ev"", rlgbt now the only&#13;
alternative to eating in the&#13;
crowded cafetena i. a ",.Ik down&#13;
the lull to the S.A B. 'MIi w,lI&#13;
lake cooperation by .n 01 la,&#13;
Campu "'~le hoppe&#13;
" buhr also .nnounced the&#13;
tteallon of a ·tudent run, campus&#13;
w e hoppe wh,ch ",ill open&#13;
th,s fall Th .weete hoppe ,s&#13;
rvlng 40 varietle· or candy&#13;
It m 'n the old lashioned&#13;
potheeary Jars Ice cre.m .. ill&#13;
.Iso be ",ed 'iebohr sa,d that&#13;
th oId·lashloned campus sweele&#13;
• hoppe, has been successrul on •&#13;
lot of unt\:er it)' campuses.&#13;
Park Ide' w,lI be located in&#13;
lam Place, behind the Information&#13;
Cenler kiosk, and will&#13;
be called the Penny Lane candy&#13;
~oppe.&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Each adult student at Parkside is unique in his or her own situation&#13;
and needs. Some of these students had their college careers interrupted&#13;
by marriage, children, military service, economic reasons,&#13;
and SO on. Some may nave felt, upon graduating lrom high school, that&#13;
colJege was not what they needed or wanted at that time.&#13;
The adult student's reasons for returning to or beginning college&#13;
after several years away from school are varied and numerous. A few&#13;
examples of these reasons might be: to work toward • degree; 10-&#13;
follow vocational or- avocational interests; to improve or renew&#13;
leadership skills; to update professional and technical ski1ls; to&#13;
pursue personal interests; or simply to keep the mind working and&#13;
stay alive mentally. Ol course, each adult student has his or her own&#13;
reasons which mayor may not include those mentioned above. .&#13;
In an attempt to acquire some insight into the lives and problems of&#13;
adult students, RANGER conducted personal interviews with some of&#13;
these people.&#13;
Phyllis Lidberg is 33 years old. She'd had no previous college experience&#13;
when she came to Parkside in the spring semester of 1971 as a&#13;
part-time student. Her reason for beginning school at that time in her&#13;
life was simple: pure economic necessity. As a divorced person with&#13;
five young children to support, Lidberg knew that a college degree wa s&#13;
necessary to enable her to get. job that paid ...ell enough to support&#13;
her family.&#13;
Lidberg began planning her college career in Jaauary 011970when&#13;
it became evident that she and her husband were going to get a&#13;
divorce. She went through some vocational testing and also took the&#13;
College Placement Test. when her divorce became final in January of&#13;
1971,Lidberg enrolled at Parkside. In the tall 011971she became. fulltime&#13;
student&#13;
She said that she Ielt strange at lirst because of the age gap between&#13;
herself and the younger students; she felt they treated her differently.&#13;
"I'd been away from that age group for. long time," she explained.&#13;
But once she got to know. few people, she decided that if someone&#13;
wouldn t ta to her because of her age, "it was their loss." In addition&#13;
to feeling tr.nge .round younger students, Lidberg found that "the&#13;
ternunology used 10 the' classroom was a foreign language to me."&#13;
eIther "dult tOOpnt '-en IceS nor the Adult Outreach program&#13;
lSted n 1971, so Lldberg had no assistance in dealing with her&#13;
problems as an adult student The Parkside Child Care Center&#13;
d not exist at the timE' either. so Lidberg took advantage of the&#13;
Racme FarnU) Ser ..lce child care faCIlities.&#13;
Dllnng her college c.reer, Lldberg has received funding from m.ny&#13;
different sources: the federally-funded Soc,al Security Act, the&#13;
Talmage Act. grants and work-study have all contributed to her&#13;
educattonal financing. AId to Dependent Children and Social services&#13;
have helped to support her f.moly and p.y b.bysitting and tr.n-&#13;
"portatlon costs.&#13;
Lidberg is employed by Adult Student Services under the workstudy&#13;
program. (This service, located on the Kenosha campus, is&#13;
deSigned to serve Special adult needs.) he is also an active member of&#13;
the Parkslde Women's Caucus. Lidberg reels tbat her career at&#13;
Parkslde as a communications major (she plans a vocation in personnel&#13;
organization) combined with her involvement in campus&#13;
employm~nt a~ activities, has given her much more than a piece of&#13;
~per ...hich ...ill help her get .... ell-p.ying job. "Widening your .etiVlties&#13;
as a buman being glVes you different perspectives. For a lot of&#13;
3.Qults whose liv~seem t~ be pretty much in a routine and are seeking&#13;
--------&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION OF BOOKS IN TOWN ' ,&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR THE DISCRIMINATING READER&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
N\01IJJ&lt;A MvwitL ~t~&#13;
~ ~~&#13;
614- 59U,.st: .31'2.- 6'" st,&#13;
6S8-3E.S"l.. G3'2-SI9S' _,&#13;
----=--=-- --1!111~,-,----=&#13;
ways to break out, an experience at the university can provide the&#13;
opportunity."&#13;
Cliet Anderson is one of those adult students whose college career&#13;
was delayed. He was "fed up" with school after graduation from&#13;
senior high and decided, to enlist in the.Air Force, since induction was&#13;
imminent anyway. After four years in military service; Anderson felt&#13;
he had matured to the point where college was not only attractive but&#13;
. was also becoming necessary.&#13;
His choice of Parkside was not primarily for convenience (he is a&#13;
Racine resident), but was influenced by the size and locale of this&#13;
campus. He likes Parkside because it is small enough to provide a&#13;
personal kind of education, a place where the student can get to know&#13;
his or her professor ins~de and outside the classroom. He also likes the&#13;
idea of the campus being located in the country where expansion can&#13;
be planned without overcrowding, which is what usually happens&#13;
when a campus is located in a metropolitan area. He likes the&#13;
peacefulness of the wooded country land surrounding Parkside and&#13;
also the open spaces within the buildings, such as Main Place and the&#13;
concourses.&#13;
Anderson is very enthusiastic about Pa~kside's future and potential.&#13;
He can see problems, of course, and not Simply growing pains like the&#13;
lack of dormitories and a good student union, but also vital problems&#13;
within. a~inistration, faculty ~a~d so on. But he also believes that&#13;
Parkside ISyoung enough and flexible enough to correct mistakes and&#13;
make changes.&#13;
Anderson is 23 years old. He plans to be married in November to a&#13;
woman who is also a full-time Parkside student. He has some financial&#13;
problems, since he receives only $220per month for nine months out of&#13;
the year under the GJ. Bill. He holds t...o part-time jobs and a full&#13;
credit load, but ~e in no w~~ regrets the time he must spend working.&#13;
He says that he IS more willing to study and work hard in school since&#13;
he pays for it himself. He also believes that "students who work at a&#13;
job tend to be more at ease and satisfied" because they havea break in&#13;
the school routine. Of course, the money helps, too.&#13;
Anderson is a second semester sophomore majoring in life science&#13;
He plans to go into fish and game management in the research and&#13;
development areas.&#13;
The idea of beginning college study became feasible to Carol Andrea&#13;
when Parkside came into existence as a four year. degree-granting&#13;
university. She explained that previous to that she would have been&#13;
fo:ced to transfer to Mi~wauke.e after two years to finish her degree,&#13;
thiS would have been ImpOSSIble because she has six very young&#13;
children.&#13;
She fin.lly did st.rt school in the spring 01 1970,taking one cl.ss .t&#13;
night (American Language). She wanted to test 'her ability to do&#13;
college level work and at the same time not waste a lot of money&#13;
should she fail the class. She received an "A" in the course.&#13;
After one and a half years of night classes funded from her and her&#13;
husband's savings, Ar:drea ea~ned a scholarship and began attending&#13;
day classes on a full-time basIs~ She enrolled her younger children at&#13;
the Parkside Child Care Center and planned her schedule so that she&#13;
could be home with her f.mily .t night.&#13;
. Andrea is now 34 years old and one credit short of senior status. She&#13;
IS a g.eography major with teacher certification in elementary&#13;
educatIon; she has tentative plans to acquire secondary certification&#13;
also.&#13;
-Andrea's college studies have been funded by loans, work-study, or&#13;
grants. Her work-study requirements .re being fuifilled by employment&#13;
WIth adult student services. She is also on the board of&#13;
directors of the P.rkside Child Care Center.&#13;
Andre. s.id th.t the prospect of switching Irom night to d.y-time&#13;
classes was more fnghtemng than taking her first class. Evening&#13;
c1.sses dr.w. great number of the .dult students so Andre. did not&#13;
feel out of place. ~But most of the students"in ~da~-time classes are&#13;
young and Andrea feared th.t she'would not Iii' in. But her fears&#13;
proved unfounded, she. said; 5ecause .n students' "sh.re the same&#13;
classroom problems."&#13;
. W~en .sked ...h.t she'thougbt h.d .ided her in fitting into college&#13;
hIe, Andrea made thiS comment: "Getting involved gives both adult&#13;
students. and young students a sense o~ belonging."&#13;
~~5-----..,.---.,.--'&#13;
STUDENTc rXVEAWAV. , f , ~&#13;
~1 ... ~·~Kdrf'~s··.h€lS- '~ ';~ .. I&#13;
aJwavS;'Qeen" happy'. .&#13;
, '. .&#13;
to ser.ye U.W. Porkside&#13;
and as a spec"ial welco~e&#13;
back gift offer KORf'S'is g'i.v·ing&#13;
away fREE any single-,rec.ord &lt;ilOum of&#13;
your choice fronT J&amp;J Tapes wi'th any&#13;
'25 purchase of new fall merchandise.'&#13;
Stop by and. ';'eet our'&#13;
friendly sales stoff and&#13;
receive your fREE&#13;
record album.&#13;
" ,&#13;
'" '\'&#13;
. ,&#13;
.'.&#13;
• Foo&#13;
prohl&#13;
rv1c&#13;
m&#13;
r main&#13;
un ol d&#13;
b. D br FriNI II&#13;
UW-P was answer for three adult students&#13;
1 m o ed by dull tu nt ervices under the workr&#13;
m Thi rvice, lo ted on the Kenosha campus, is&#13;
=~,---,.,.•• rv pee al adult need ) he 1s o an active member of&#13;
1 Women' Caucus Lidberg feels that her career at&#13;
Par 1d a a commun1cat.Ions major ( he plans a vocation in peronncl&#13;
organization) combined with her involvement in campus&#13;
mploym_ nt and acuvitie . has given her much more than a piece of&#13;
pa~r which ~ill help_ her get a well-pa),i ng job. "Widening your act1,·1ti&#13;
a h~an bemg gives you different perspectives. For a lot of&#13;
du) h · hv • eem t~ be pretty much in a routine and are seeking&#13;
--------&#13;
WIDEST SELECTION OF BOOKS IN TOWN&#13;
PAPER BACKS FOR THE DISCRIMINATING READER&#13;
PROMPT SPECIAL ORDER SERVICE&#13;
BROWSERS WELCOME&#13;
I,\~ M tAA.li.t~ ~TO'Ub&#13;
614-59Ut5t:&#13;
~&#13;
6S9-3&amp;S'2.&#13;
ways to break out, an experience at the university can provide the&#13;
opportunity."&#13;
Chet Anderson is one of those adult students whose college career&#13;
was delayed. He was "fed up" with school after graduation from&#13;
senior high and decided to enlist in the Air Force, since induction was&#13;
imminent anyway. After four years in military service, Anderson felt&#13;
he had matured to the point where college was not only attractive but&#13;
was also becoming necessary.&#13;
His choice of Parkside was not primarily for convenience (he is a&#13;
Racine resident), but was influenced by the size and locale of this&#13;
campus. He likes Parkside because it is small enough to provide a&#13;
personal kind of education, a place where the student can get to know&#13;
his or her professor inside and outside the classroom. He also likes the&#13;
idea of the campus being located in the country where expansion can&#13;
be planned without overcrowding, which is what usually happens&#13;
when a campus is located in a metropolitan area. He likes the&#13;
peacefulness of the w&lt;;&gt;&lt;&gt;~ed coun~ry_ land surrounding Parkside and&#13;
also the open spaces withm the bmldmgs, such as Main Place and the&#13;
concourses.&#13;
Anderson is very enthusiastic about Parkside's future and potential&#13;
He can see p~obl_ems, of course, and not si~ply growing pains like th~&#13;
Jack of dormitories and a good student umon, but also vital problem&#13;
within administration, faculty, and so on. But he also believes that&#13;
Parkside is young enough and flexible enough to correct mistakes and&#13;
make changes.&#13;
Anderson is 23 years old. He plans to be married in November to a&#13;
woman who_ is also a fu~-time Parkside student. He has some financial&#13;
problems, smce he receives only $220 per month for nine months out of&#13;
the year under the G.I. Bill. He holds two part-time jobs and a full&#13;
credit load, but ~e in no w~)'. regrets the time he must spend working,&#13;
He says that he 1s more w!lhng to study and work hard in school since&#13;
he pays for it himself. He also believes that " students who work at a&#13;
job tend to be more at ease a nd satisfied" because they have a break In&#13;
the school routine. Of course, the money helps, too.&#13;
Anderson is a second semester sophomore majoring in life scienc&#13;
He plans to go into fish and game management m the research and&#13;
development areas.&#13;
The idea of beginning college study became feasible to Carol Andrea&#13;
h n Parkside came mto existence as a four year. degree-granting&#13;
university. She explained that previous to that she would have b n&#13;
fo~ced to transfer to Mi! auke_e after two years to finish her degre&#13;
this would have been 1mposs1ble because she has six very youn&#13;
children.&#13;
he finally did start sc ool in the spring of 1970, taking one cla s at&#13;
night (American Language). She wanted to test 'her ability to do&#13;
college level work and at the same time not waste a lot of money&#13;
should she fail the class. She received an "A" in the course.&#13;
After one and a half years of night classes funded from her and her&#13;
husband's savings, ~drea ea~ned a scholarship and began attending&#13;
day classes on a full-time basis. She enrolled her younger children at&#13;
the Parkside Child Care Center and planned her schedule so that she&#13;
coul~ be home with her family at night.&#13;
Andrea is now 34 years old and one credit short of senior status. She&#13;
is a g_eography major :,vith teacher certification in elementary&#13;
education; she has tentative plans to acquire secondary certification&#13;
also.&#13;
Andrea's college studies have been funded by loans, work-study, or&#13;
grants. Her work-study requirements are being fulfilled by employment&#13;
with adult student services. She is also on the board of&#13;
directors of the Parkside Child Care Center.&#13;
Andrea said that the prospect of switching from night to day-time&#13;
classes was more frightening than taking her first class. Evening&#13;
classes draw a great number of the adult students, so Andrea did not&#13;
feel out of place. But most of the stud_ents in day-time classes are&#13;
young and Andrea feared that she would not fif in. But her fears&#13;
proved unfounded, she said,· because all students "share the same&#13;
classroom problems."&#13;
. W~en asked what ~he thought had aided her in fitting into college&#13;
hfe-, Andrea made this comment: "Getting involved gives both adult&#13;
students and young students a sense of belonging."&#13;
STUDENT G·1v~AW·A y&#13;
• , "Kort'"s· hos&#13;
I always. been· happy·, I&#13;
to serve U .W. Parkside&#13;
and as a special welcorr:e&#13;
back gift offer KOR F'S is giv'ing&#13;
away FREE any single record -all:ium of&#13;
your choice from J&amp;J Tapes with any&#13;
s25 purchase of new fall merchandise·&#13;
Stop by and meet our&#13;
friendly sales staff and&#13;
recei ve your FREE&#13;
record album . &#13;
'-_------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
__ sports __&#13;
Intramural sports getting&#13;
underway&#13;
Are you interested in entering a Tennis Tournament this fall&#13;
maybe the idea of a touch football league aroused your CUriosity' Ii or&#13;
Parkside has the answer for you ...The 1973Fall Intramural Prng..a so,&#13;
The fall. schedule will be kicked off on September 3 when Tou~&#13;
Football sign-up and practice begins, The remaining schedule is as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Touch Football Sign-up and Practice (2 weeks) Sept. 3-Sept. 14&#13;
Touch Football Leagues (6 weeks) Sept 17-0ct 31&#13;
Powderpuff Football (4 weeks) oci I-Qct' 26&#13;
Bowling Leagues Sign-up (3 weeks) Sept lil-sept' 28&#13;
Golf Tournament (Challenge) lkt I-Qct' 26&#13;
Tennis Tournament (Challenge) OCt: I-Qct: 26&#13;
Archery Tournament (jday) OCt 11&#13;
Handball Tournament (Challenge) Oct. IS-Nov: 16&#13;
Turkey Trot (Sunday afternoon) Nov. 4&#13;
Interested students should refer to the Intramural Notice Board in&#13;
the main hallway of the PHY ED BUilding or contact Jim' Koch (553-&#13;
'J:JEl) .&#13;
P.E.Building use policy&#13;
Allfacilities of the University are primarily for University purposes&#13;
of instruction, research and public services. The facilities may be&#13;
made available to non-University groups if meeting and-or activities&#13;
of such groups meet the aforementioned purposes.&#13;
students holding a current ill card from any university in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system may use the facilities at no charge.&#13;
Faculty-Staff are welcome to use the facilities during recreational&#13;
periods at no cost.&#13;
Families (immediate) of staff, faculty and students are welcome to&#13;
use the facilities during recreational periods. They must provide their&#13;
own equipment- lock, clothes, etc. Children may not use the facility&#13;
unless accompanied by the student, faculty or staff member. Do not&#13;
drop children off atthe building and lea ve them unattended.&#13;
Guests are allowed one at a lime when accompanied by a student,&#13;
faculty or staff member and must pay a $1.00 fee at the Issue Room.&#13;
Security will be maintained by periodic checks of ID cards.&#13;
Unauthorized persons will be asked to leave.&#13;
Parking is restricted to the parking lots -there is to be no parking by&#13;
the P.E. Building.&#13;
Listed below is the service fee schedule for 1973-74:&#13;
1. P.E. Uniform: T-Shirt, Shorts, Swim Suit - Laundry; '5.00 per&#13;
Semester, $2.50 for Summer Session.&#13;
2. Lock-Locker-Towel: '5.00 per Semesfee: $2.00 Towel Fee &amp; $3.00&#13;
Deposit for Locker &amp; Towel. $4.00Summer Fee - $3.00Deposit.&#13;
3. Lock-Locker: '3.00 per Semester - $2.00Deposit for Lock. Summer&#13;
Fee is same.&#13;
4. Daily Service: For ID card holders who wish to use a towel or&#13;
swim suit once in a while: Towel Rental: 25 cents - Surrender ID card.&#13;
Swim Suit Rental: 25 cents - Surrender ID card.&#13;
P.E. BUILDING _RECREATIONAL PERIODS&#13;
Fall Semester 1913&#13;
Listed below are periods which the P.E. facilities will be open for&#13;
recreational and independent use.&#13;
POOL:&#13;
Monday 12:00-1:00,6:00.9:00&#13;
TUesday 11:00.1:00,6:00-9:00&#13;
Wednesday 12:00·' :00, 6:00-9:00&#13;
Thursday 11:00-1:00&#13;
Friday 11:01).1:00&#13;
Saturday 11:00.4:00&#13;
Sunday 2:00-9:00&#13;
GYMNASIUM:&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 12:00.1:20.3:30.9:00&#13;
Friday 8:30-3:00&#13;
Saturday 11:00·04:00&#13;
SUnday 2:00.9:00&#13;
WEIGHT ROOM:&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 8:30-10:15.12:00-1:20.3:30·6:30&#13;
Friday 8:30-3:00&#13;
Saturday 11:00-4:00&#13;
SUnday 2:00.9:00&#13;
HANDBALL COURTS:&#13;
Monday through Thursday:. 12:00.9:00&#13;
Friday 8:30.3:00&#13;
Saturday 11:00.4:00&#13;
Sunday 2:00-9:00&#13;
~•••••••••••••••••&#13;
i read the&#13;
! RANGER ~&#13;
...-/t.*.******** ItIe Ie***&#13;
Wed., Sept. S, "73 THE PARKSIDE RANGf!R 11&#13;
RANGER photo hy Pattlck Nowak&#13;
Soccer team kicks off season&#13;
The 1973 version of the&#13;
Parkside varsity soccer team&#13;
opened practice on Aug. 20, with&#13;
22 men reporting to second-year&#13;
Head Coach Hal Henderson. Of&#13;
this group there are nine&#13;
returning lettermen, of which six&#13;
were starters on last year's 2-8·1&#13;
team. The returning lettermen&#13;
include Dieter Kiefer, Rick&#13;
Lechusz, Rick Kilps, Dietrnar&#13;
Schneider, Ray Phanturat, Tashe&#13;
Bozrnovski, Mike Kopczynski,&#13;
Wayne Shisler and Elliott&#13;
Brieske.&#13;
According to Coach Henderson,&#13;
the new students to watch would&#13;
be six freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee: BronoPawlak, Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, Carl Kurtagic, Stan&#13;
Stadler, Dennis Pippin, Aody&#13;
Gutierrez; and two local players:&#13;
Vince Ruffalo and Jim Thomas.&#13;
The Parkside Rangers will&#13;
open their season against a&#13;
Parkside Alumni team on&#13;
SaturdaY,Sept. 8,at2 p.m. on the&#13;
new soccer field behind the P .E.&#13;
Building. The Alumni group will&#13;
include such past team members&#13;
as Mike Jenrette, Tim Marlinson,&#13;
Steve Hagenow, Stan Markovica.&#13;
Chris Andacht, Tom Thomsen,&#13;
Tom Krimmel, with many others&#13;
presently being contacted.&#13;
The regular season will open on&#13;
the new local field on Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 19, at 3 p.m. against Lewis&#13;
College from Illinois. All home&#13;
matches will be played on the&#13;
new field in the bowl behind the&#13;
P.E. Building.&#13;
S&#13;
c&#13;
h&#13;
e&#13;
d&#13;
u&#13;
I&#13;
e&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
(Coach Hal Henderson)&#13;
September&#13;
19 Lewis College - 3 p.m. at Parkside&#13;
22Northern Illinois -2 p.m. at DeKalb, 01.&#13;
26 lIlinois-Chicago Circle - 2:30 p.m. at Chicago&#13;
29 Minnesota - t:3O p.m. at Parkside&#13;
(OCtober and November schedules will be printed at a later tirne.)&#13;
CROSS-COUNTRY&#13;
(Coach Vic Godfrey)&#13;
September&#13;
15Northern Illinois -11 a.m. at DeKalb, 01.&#13;
18Carthage, UW-8tevens Point, UW-Whitewater . 4 p.m, at Parkside&#13;
22l1linois-Chicago Circle -11 a.m. at Chicago, Ill.&#13;
29 Eastern lllinois - 11 a.m. at Parkside&#13;
(OCtober and November schedules will be printed at a later time.)&#13;
d&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS&#13;
(Coach Dick Frecka)&#13;
September&#13;
19 Carthage - 3 p.rn. at Carthage&#13;
29 Whitewater Tourney at Whitewater \; (OCtober schedule will be printed at a later tirne.)&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
There is no charge for classified ads.&#13;
Just fill in this fortlj and send it to: Ads will nm for one week only.&#13;
The Parksicle Ranger Renewals can he made by .. II....&#13;
Business Office die Friday pr ee ed.... the nest 0-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
puhll .. lIon. Kenosha. Wis. 53140&#13;
NAME&#13;
.ADDRESS DATE&#13;
CITY PHONE NO.&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
, I.; : I I J&#13;
•&#13;
, .&#13;
Ads mutt.be sub'mltted one week before- pubhcatioo. .-&#13;
r&#13;
RANGER&#13;
'------------Sports __&#13;
Intramural sports getting&#13;
underway&#13;
Are you interested in entering a Tennis Tournament this fall&#13;
maybe the idea of a touch football league aroused your curiosity? If or Parkside has the answer for you ... The 1973 Fall Intramural Progra so,&#13;
'The fall schedule will be kicked off on September 3 when Tou ~ Football sign-up and practice begins. The remaining schedule is ~ follows:&#13;
Touch Football Sign-up and Practice (2 weeks) Sept 3--8ept 14 Touch Football Leagues (6 weeks) Sept: 17-0ct: 31 Powderpuff Football (4 weeks) Oct l-0 t 26 Bowling Leagues Sign-up (3 weeks) Sept. 10-Se~: 28&#13;
Golf!ournament (Challenge) Oct. I-Oct. 26 Tenms Tournament &lt;Challenge) Oct. 1-0ct. 26 Archery Tournament (1 day) Oct 11&#13;
Handball Tournament (Challenge) Oct. 15-Nov: 16 Turkey Trot (Sunday afternoon) Nov. 4&#13;
Inter~ted students should refer to the Intramural Notice Board in the main hallway of the PHY ED Building or contact Jim· Koch (553- '};};67).&#13;
P.E. Building use policy&#13;
All facilities of the University are primarily for University purposes&#13;
of instruction, research and public services. The facilities may be&#13;
made available to non-University groups if meeting and-or activities&#13;
of such groups meet the aforementioned purposes.&#13;
Students holding a current ID card from any university in the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system may use the facilities at no charge.&#13;
Faculty-Staff are welcome to use the facilities during recreational&#13;
periods at no cost.&#13;
Families (immediate) of staff, faculty and students are welcome to&#13;
use the facilities during recreational periods. They must provide their&#13;
own equipment - lock, clothes, etc. Children may not use the facility&#13;
unless accompanied by the student, faculty or staff member. Do not&#13;
drop children off at the building and leave them unattended.&#13;
Guests are allowed one at a time when accompanied by a student,&#13;
faculty or staff member and must pay a $1.00 fee at the Issue Room.&#13;
Security will be maintained by periodic checks of ID cards.&#13;
Unauthorized persons will be asked to leave.&#13;
Parking is restricted to the parking lots -there is to be no parking by&#13;
the P.E. Building. Listed below is the service fee schedule for 1973-74:&#13;
1. P.E. Uniform: T-Shirt, Shorts, Swim Suit - Laundry ; $5.00 per&#13;
Semester, $2.50 for Summer Session.&#13;
2. Lock-Locker-Towel: $5.00 per Semester: $2.00 Towel Fee &amp; $3.00&#13;
Deposit for Locker &amp; Towel. $4.00 Summer Fee -$3.00 Deposit.&#13;
3. Lock-Locker: $3.00 per Semester-$2.00 Deposit for Lock. Summer&#13;
Fee is same.&#13;
4. Daily Service: For ID card holders who wish to use a towel or&#13;
swim suit once in a while: Towel Rental: 25 cents - Surrender ID card.&#13;
Swim Suit Rental: 25 cents - Surrender ID card.&#13;
P.E. BUILDING . RECREATIONAL PERIODS&#13;
Fall Semester 1973&#13;
Listed below are periOds which the P .E . facilities will be open for&#13;
recreational and independent use.&#13;
POOL:&#13;
MPnday 12:00-1 :00, 6:00-9:00&#13;
Tuesday 11 : 00-1 : 00, 6 : 00-9: 00&#13;
Wednesday 12:00-1:00, 6:00-9:00&#13;
Thursday 11 : 00-1 : 00&#13;
Friday 11 :00-1 :00&#13;
saturday 11 : 00-4: oo&#13;
Sunday 2:00-9:00&#13;
GYMNASIUM:&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 12:00-1:20, 3:30-9:00&#13;
Friday 8:30-3:00&#13;
Saturday 11 : 00-4: 00&#13;
Sunday 2:00-9:00&#13;
WEIGHT ROOM:&#13;
Monday through Thursday : 8:30-10: 15, 12:00-1 :20, 3:30-6:30&#13;
Friday 8:30-3:00&#13;
Saturday 11 :00-4:00&#13;
Sunday 2:00-9:00&#13;
HANDBALL COURTS :&#13;
Monday through Thursday: 12:00-9:00&#13;
Friday 8:30-3:00&#13;
Saturday 11 : 00-4: 00&#13;
Sunday 2:00-9:00&#13;
~················&#13;
a read the&#13;
*&#13;
} RANGER ! . •• ··*********** * ****&#13;
Wed., Sept. S, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
RANGER photo by Patrick Nowak&#13;
Soccer teain kicks off season&#13;
The 1973 version of the&#13;
Parkside varsity soccer team&#13;
opened practice on Aug. 20, with&#13;
22 men reporting to second-year Head Coach Hal Henderson. Of&#13;
this group there are nine&#13;
returning lettermen, of which six&#13;
were starters on last year's 2-8-1&#13;
team. The returning lettermen&#13;
include Dieter Kiefer, Rick&#13;
Lechusz, Rick Kilps, Dietmar&#13;
Schneider, Ray Phanturat, Tashe&#13;
Bozinovski, Mike Kopczynski,&#13;
Wayne Shisler and Elliott&#13;
Brieske.&#13;
According to Coach Henderson,&#13;
the new students to watch would&#13;
be six freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee: Bruno Pawlak, Steve&#13;
Sendelbach, Carl Kurtagic, Stan&#13;
Stadler, Dennis Pippin, Andy&#13;
Gutierrez; and two local players:&#13;
as Uke Jenrette, Tim Martinson,&#13;
Steve Hagenow, tan Markovics,&#13;
Chris Andacht, Tom Thom en,&#13;
Tom Krimmel, with many others&#13;
pre ently being contacted.&#13;
s&#13;
C&#13;
h&#13;
e&#13;
d&#13;
Vince Ruffalo and Jim Thomas.&#13;
The Parkside Rangers will&#13;
open their season against a&#13;
Parkside Alumni team on&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 8, at 2 p.m. on the&#13;
new soccer field behind the P .E.&#13;
Building. The Alumni group will&#13;
include such past team members&#13;
SOCCER&#13;
&lt;Coach Hal Henderson&gt;&#13;
September&#13;
19 Lewis C-0llege - 3 p.m. at Parkside&#13;
22 Northern Illinois -2 p.m. at DeKalb, Ill.&#13;
The regular sea on will open on&#13;
the new local field on Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 19, at 3 p.m. again t Lewi&#13;
College from Illinoi . All home&#13;
matches will be played on the&#13;
new field in the bowl behind the&#13;
P.E. Building.&#13;
26 Illinois-Chicago Circle - 2:30 p.m. at Chicago&#13;
29 Minnesota - 1:30 p.m. at Parkside&#13;
(October and November schedules will be printed at a later time.&gt;&#13;
CRO -COU. 'TRY&#13;
(Coach Vic Godfrey)&#13;
u September&#13;
15 Northern llhno1s -11 a .m. at DeKalb, Ill.&#13;
'\. I&#13;
--&#13;
There&#13;
Just fill&#13;
NAME&#13;
. ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
I ... .. 1,,. : . ,. . ~&#13;
. .&#13;
is&#13;
I&#13;
e&#13;
18 Cartha~e. UW-Stevens Point, W-Whitewater - 4 p.m. at Park! ide 22 Illinois-Chicago Circle- 11 a.m. at Chicago, Ill.&#13;
29 Eastern Illinois - 11 a.m. at Parksid&#13;
&lt;October and November schedules will be printed at a later time.)&#13;
d WO:\tE . . , TE:'\NI&#13;
&lt;Coach Dick Frecka)&#13;
September&#13;
19 Carthage - 3 p.m. at Carthage 29 Whitewater Tourney at Whitewater&#13;
(October schedule will be printed at a later time &gt;&#13;
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ORDER FORM&#13;
no charge for classified ads.&#13;
in this form and send it to: Ads will rwi for one week only.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Renewals can be made by calling&#13;
Business Office the Friday preceding the next D-194 LLC UW-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wis publication. . 53140&#13;
DATE&#13;
PHONE NO.&#13;
One word per space Do not skip space between words to show spacing&#13;
&lt; . . . --1:_··...- .. _. . - .- - - ·.,&#13;
-... .~ - ·- , Ads must be submitted one v.e~ before pubhcation. J &#13;
We Have a&#13;
Great Lineup&#13;
for Fall&#13;
BOOK SALES&#13;
.Art Books .Gift Books .Cook Books &amp; More&#13;
ART PRINT PROMOTION&#13;
.Wide Assortment&#13;
RECORD PROMOTION&#13;
.Classic .Rock .Folk .Popular&#13;
Don't Forget to redeem Your Valuable Coupons~.&#13;
oESIOM BROWSE&#13;
~OUR _ . IN OUR&#13;
11&amp;OUR ClASS SECTION&#13;
IMSlA-OECORAtlMG ' RINO&#13;
CEMlER&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
LIBRARY LEARNING CENTER&#13;
We Have a&#13;
Great Lineup&#13;
for Fall&#13;
BOOK SALES&#13;
-r&#13;
I&#13;
•Art Books •Gift Books eCook Books &amp; More&#13;
ART PRINT PROMOTION&#13;
•Wide Assortment&#13;
RECORD PROMOTION&#13;
•Classic ~Rock •Folk •Popular </text>
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              <text>Some Bookstore prices higher&#13;
Price survey done&#13;
on school supplies&#13;
TheParksidlec--------&#13;
Book ~o~ RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1973Vol. II No.2&#13;
".'~"" h&#13;
,.&#13;
"':"0 -s&#13;
r-&#13;
.a&#13;
on&#13;
,.&#13;
n&#13;
..&#13;
."&#13;
.' "&#13;
..&#13;
~ .,&#13;
.- •&#13;
, .."&#13;
,..&#13;
~&#13;
"&#13;
'"&#13;
.ee&#13;
..&#13;
ttr n _ tiM ...,tnt&#13;
Kenosha teachers&#13;
'1' •• dd _ oM tine 1nt WO.edlUl11 01nt&#13;
... or ~eu"t _ .... e I1IrouJrt. color&#13;
'~'Chu'.". ren;ta&#13;
Owl-8 _t". colo ••&#13;
!l"". (a ...-"ll 8 fluid ouncea)&#13;
typing paper. Anyone buying continue striking paper ~tthe Bookstore. then, has&#13;
no choice of the varied prices&#13;
afforded by different paper&#13;
manufacturers. This same notion&#13;
holds true for index cards&#13;
staplers, ringbinders, file folders:&#13;
and other needed student supplies.&#13;
This ~oes not in any way imply&#13;
that all Items are most expensive&#13;
at the Bookstore. The convienient&#13;
location of the Bookstore on&#13;
campus makes it easier and less&#13;
time consuming to purchase&#13;
supplies. Students are advised&#13;
how~ver. to shop around if they&#13;
a.re mterested in saving money.&#13;
In order to help students save&#13;
as much money as possible while&#13;
going through school, RANGER&#13;
r«ently did a price survey to&#13;
diRCl students to stores in which&#13;
schOOlsupplies were found to be&#13;
least expensive.&#13;
Although University Bookstore .&#13;
priceS were higher in the items&#13;
cbarted the prices corresponded&#13;
with those same items at office&#13;
suppliers, However, it was found&#13;
1IIatoffice supply stores carried a&#13;
variety of brand names while the&#13;
Bookstore relied, for example,&#13;
ooIy on NATIONAL for filler 'and&#13;
notebookpaper and EATON for&#13;
Dtsputes sucbas thls one belw..... neaotl.t .... 1ft&#13;
the Kenosha Slnke ore not lmusual ~ teod1e'&#13;
COIllr.et negoti.tions first began last December&#13;
26th, there's been • gr.dual &lt;leterior Uon in&#13;
bargOlntng. Some 23 JreVlOUl 10IlJ and&#13;
meettngs ..,th media"'" Hennon Toro&amp;lOn lAna 22,&#13;
23. and 24) had resuItoe! 1ft. lAnck&gt;{f tween the&#13;
School Board .nd Kenosh. Educ.tlon.1&#13;
Associatioo&#13;
On september 4th. 3;lS •.m., alter ex~&#13;
proposals for over seven hours w,th th KEA team.&#13;
Gerlach reportedly "b1e.. up .t • KEA count -&#13;
proposal" .nd ..,therew au board pro from&#13;
the Llble.&#13;
In • SUltement ma&lt;le later, GerlKh den&gt;-ed thit&#13;
report. saying It was • miSUDderstandlng beI..--.&#13;
hun and AngiIo Romano. spo man for KEA, 1ft&#13;
..1uch Gerl.ch SOld,"I will ..,thd,..", au propsoll If&#13;
the teachers Sb"'ike."&#13;
The KEA membershIp m June hod .uthon"'" th&#13;
negotiating team 10 call • stnke If nee ry.&#13;
The t2 KEA oIfical were particularly upoel O'er&#13;
the fact that only 1\&gt;'0 board memben were preoent&#13;
at the negoti.tJons. Gerlach .nd Frank Falduto&#13;
". hooI Board member Jaclry Ball had told&#13;
Jamce Verlee (president 01 KEAl that a full boaI&#13;
.. ould be present .t the Labor Day m ling." d&#13;
Anderson, "BUI then she tumoe! .round and told&#13;
board memben not 10 sho ~ ....I ° calloe!&#13;
"These actions by the School Board n oli ling&#13;
commIttee e feel, control the bargairung and do&#13;
not acc tely tdl OIher hoard members what&#13;
proposals were being ma&lt;le." And n chOl'lloe!&#13;
Ball IS responSIble for .ppomtlng the&#13;
memben for th n ouallng committee m.de up of&#13;
1\&gt;'0 board members and three .dml1llStret .....&#13;
Gary Cobellic. public relations, Jerry Uellc per_&#13;
sonnel man.ger. and John Ho&amp;mabC, vic&#13;
supenntendent of schools.&#13;
continued on page 4&#13;
by Mich•• 1OlDy!&lt;&#13;
The Kenosha Education Associatioo was 10 meet&#13;
Monday morning at 6 a.m. with teacbers to consider&#13;
the latest School Board proposals in the four day old&#13;
teachers' strike.&#13;
Afinal meeting of both si~ with Morris Slavney,&#13;
chaIr.person or the Wisconsin Employment&#13;
Relations, 00 Saturday. culminated in • two year&#13;
contract proposal made by James Gerlach, School&#13;
Board negotiating committee chairman.&#13;
The contract specified a 300 dollar increase in pay&#13;
the first year, bringing Kenosha teachers' salary to&#13;
8,050 dollars. and anOlher 300 dollar increase the&#13;
second year. plus additional benefIts.&#13;
This scbool year's calender was also tentatively&#13;
shortened a day, thus ending Friday June 7th, 1Ilstead&#13;
of the following Monday. Students ..'OU1dcome&#13;
back the first Thursday in september and have&#13;
Easter vacation a week. earlier that school year&#13;
Gerlach said he was hopeful that the teachers&#13;
would authorize a setUement, although KEA offiCIals&#13;
were dissatisfied with the offer.&#13;
"From information gathered, I believe IIIpercenl&#13;
of the teachers would adopt the COIllraClif their&#13;
bargaining team ",'OU1dpresent our proposals,"&#13;
Gerlach commented.&#13;
He sited KEA as ''unwilling 10 setUe this thmg"&#13;
by not meeting WIth their memberslup \IIltil Monday.&#13;
A staff member of the WlSCOIlsinEducation&#13;
Association, Jan Anderson, contested Gerlach's&#13;
notion, staling that there wasn't enough time after&#13;
Saturday'S meeting (ended at .:30 p.m.! 10 call&#13;
together the teachers on Sunday.&#13;
Anderson was also pessimistic ahout Gerlacb's&#13;
figures on confirmation of the contract, saying, "It&#13;
was impossible to determine the teachers' voli.r.1g.&#13;
until it occurred. II&#13;
photo by Dave Daniels&#13;
TwoKen .. ha public school students make the most of their extended&#13;
~r vacation while their teachers voted to reject a new offer by&#13;
Jbe K..... ha School Board.&#13;
KEA strike affects&#13;
Parkside students&#13;
For .he purpose 0( .ddlng&#13;
da est tM LUMDt Rf'~&#13;
orftce '" ill be opetI Loda~ rrom&#13;
a.m. lO p.m. Toda) tlle I. t&#13;
da to add II cb '" IthOUl Lbe&#13;
COI1.$("Qt 01 the in trudOt'.&#13;
Thf' r'f' tar mt ttr hours or&#13;
lh~ \WInl R orcl "let art&#13;
7:·U •. m. ~ 11:U a.m. and 12:..&#13;
p.m.·. '31 pm. \land. tIlr p&#13;
Friday.&#13;
some&#13;
by Debra Friedell would not reply. Both she and her cooperating ~ -J&#13;
teacher are crossing lines at Bradford.&#13;
Parkslde students who are either practice or One Parkside graduate of two years, who is now&#13;
.... teaching in Kenosha area public schools have employed by the Kenosba School District at a junior&#13;
-Instructed to stay "neutral" by both UW-P and high school, is a member of the KEA and OIl the&#13;
Jbe Wl8COllsinImprovement Program of Madison picket line. She said that it would be bard not to be&#13;
1I'tichisthedirecting office to state intern teachers. bitter after the strike towards teachers who are&#13;
By staying "neutral," the practice or intern crossing lines. "They will be receiving the same&#13;
~ must stay off of school district property if benefits as those of us who are marching now-when&#13;
lIIaI' Cooperating teacher (supervisor from the the strike is over /' she said. The priocipal of that&#13;
IlIlool in which they are teaching) is marching the junior high was said to have given a cocktail party&#13;
"'t lines. The student must make the decision on Friday night for teachers in his school who were not&#13;
lbetberor not to cross lines however, if his or her honoring the strike. "The only contact I have with&#13;
~ating teacher is. in 'the classroom. Most those who cross is to either say 'we coold use your&#13;
Paibide students find themselves sitting the strike support out here' or I say nothing at aJllO teachlh&#13;
~ at home while their cooperating teacher is who I don't feel can be swayed."&#13;
PlQeting. . Most Parkside students working this semester as&#13;
Tremper High School interns and practice practice or int~rn te~~ers are anxious to begin but ':::,ers heard talk of the strike the day before sympathize WIth stnking teachers and feel that If&#13;
!be . were to start. One intern said that although they had not been instructed to remaon "neutral"&#13;
.~~nnclpa.l had told them to go which every way they would be marching. "Striking is ~. only way"&#13;
__ CO d b were the words spoken by many ondlVlduals who&#13;
bard f nsc,ences dictated and there woul e no 0Ube certified teachers soon and may at some&#13;
" .eelmgs, there were rumors that the WI " .- I" stand&#13;
'OQIOSllaSchool District Director of Personnel had time be faced with taking an unneuu a. .&#13;
~to d aU int.erns and practice teachers to show Although they cannot join a teachers umon until&#13;
.,. tea h Th f d becoming certified, most felt they would become her aU c.' IS particular intern, however, oun m~mbers of a union when they ~gm their teachmg&#13;
''Ibeir eglance was with the striking teacI.JT8. eers It was the general aWlude that the KEA&#13;
boon demands are fair ," she said, "and they have hcaa~legiiimate gri.pes to which the School Board had&#13;
_ getttng such small increases in the past&#13;
""4IIPared to oth f d 'k nyone not been responsive. ch tho er pro essions. I on t now a Neither intern, practice, nor Kenos~ Lea en&#13;
'llti'Ntc'ks harder. I will always honor a strike." etting paid while they are outsIde. of the&#13;
~ altitude was contradicted by a pradice are goo e intern has taken up a JOb al a&#13;
iIIrted ~t Bradford Jlil!h School. who neIther classroom, s ,PThe kids" he said "who come in&#13;
'ktAl'1th the str.iking Kenosha teacher's umon grocery ulsJ~::~are less about the strike or going to&#13;
'"'"Ii nor felt that teachers should ever strike. h;~~~O They just don't want to have to m~,ke up&#13;
~:ked If she thought legitimate demands Sthese~issed school days later m the year.&#13;
. '. ,',\let Withgut a strike tl;1epracti.e teach~~.,&#13;
, " -J,', ,-_, &lt;'~"':' :t~&lt;.,i.1 ~:,&lt;., , '~", , '. " ' .&#13;
Racine bus schedule&#13;
-&#13;
A study IS being done to determine where the Racme bus mlers are&#13;
located, m preparation for • possIble route change to ser"e students&#13;
better and hopefully merease ndership. Jewel Echelbarger ass! lant&#13;
dean of students. says the bus may SWlllg IDto neighborb~ ..'here&#13;
there are a nwnher of nders. to shorten the eIlstonce theae people ho"e&#13;
togo to reach the bus. Sheernpbasized that while thIS may also IIlvolve&#13;
a schedule change. the)' will be careful to see that the bus does reach&#13;
everyone.&#13;
0 rne Bookstore prices higher&#13;
Price survey done&#13;
on scho6l supplies&#13;
The Parkside·--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1973 Vol. II o. 2&#13;
Kenosha teachers&#13;
In order to help students save&#13;
as much money as possible while&#13;
going through school, RANGER&#13;
recently did a price survey to&#13;
direct students to stores in which&#13;
school supplies were found to be&#13;
Jeast expensive.&#13;
- typing paper. Anyone buying&#13;
paper ":t the Bookstore, then, has&#13;
no chmce of the varied prices&#13;
afforded by different paper&#13;
manufacturers. This same notion&#13;
holds true for index cards&#13;
staplers, ringbinders, file folders:&#13;
a~d other needed student sup- plies.&#13;
continue striking&#13;
Although University Bookstore ·&#13;
prices were higher in the items&#13;
charted the prices corresponded&#13;
with those same items at office&#13;
suppliers. However, it was found&#13;
that office supply stores carried a&#13;
variety of brand names while the&#13;
Bookstore relied, for example,&#13;
only on NATIONAL for filler and&#13;
notebook paper and EATON for&#13;
This d_oes not in any way imply&#13;
that all Items are most expensive&#13;
at the Bookstore. The convienient&#13;
location of the Bookstore on&#13;
c_ampus makes it easier and less&#13;
time consuming to purchase&#13;
supplies. Students are advised&#13;
how~ver, to shop around if they&#13;
are mterested in saving money.&#13;
--J__&#13;
photo by Dave Daniels&#13;
Two Kenosha public school students make the most of their extended&#13;
summer vacation while their teachers voted to reject a new offer by&#13;
the Kenosha School Board.&#13;
The Kenosha Education iat.Jon a to m t&#13;
1ondaymorningat6a.m. "thteacbersto id&#13;
the latest chool Board pro in the four da&#13;
teachers' trike.&#13;
A final meeting or both sid :ith torris la rn&#13;
chair_Person or the 'i ·con in Emplo;ment&#13;
Relation , on Saturday. culminated in a t 'O } r&#13;
contract proposal mad by Jam ~rlach.&#13;
Board negotiating committee chrurm n.&#13;
The contract pecified a 300 dollar inc&#13;
the first year, bringing Ke teach&#13;
8,050 dollars, and another dollar in&#13;
second year, plu.s additional benefi .&#13;
This school year's calend al tent.au ·el)&#13;
shortened a day, thus ending Fnda) June 7th mstead&#13;
of the following . 1onday uden 1)U]d come&#13;
back the first Thursda) in September and ha ·e&#13;
Easter vacation a week earlier that school year.&#13;
Gerlach said be "'a hopeful that th t.eac:ners&#13;
would authonze a Uement alth h KE&#13;
ficials were dissatisfied ith the offer.&#13;
"From information gathered , I beli ·e pen:en&#13;
of the teachers \\ould adopt the contr ct&#13;
bargaining team \\ould p rnnnc11k&#13;
Gerlach commented.&#13;
He sited KEA a "unwilli to&#13;
by not meeting ,..,,th their mem&#13;
day.&#13;
A staff member of the&#13;
Association. Jan And n cont&#13;
notion, stating that there asn t&#13;
Saturday' meeting (ended at 4:&#13;
together the teachers on unda) .&#13;
Anderson "'a also pess1M1 • c a&#13;
figures on confirmation of the contract. y&#13;
was impossible to determine th teacbe _' ·&#13;
lD'ltil it occurred.''&#13;
KEA strike affects sonte&#13;
Parkside students&#13;
by Debra Friedell would not reply. Both she and her coo&#13;
teacher are crossing lines at Bradford.&#13;
con lnued on p&#13;
Parkside students who are either practice or&#13;
Item teaching in Kenosha area public schools have&#13;
been~structed to stay "neutral" by both UW-P and&#13;
the_ W1_sconsin Improvement Program of Madison&#13;
"'1ich 1s the directing office to state intern teachers.&#13;
By staying "neutral," the practice or intern =er must stay off of school district property if&#13;
One Parkside graduate of two years, who&#13;
employed by the Kenosha School Di trict at a jun or&#13;
high school, is a member of the KEA and on the&#13;
picket line. She said that it would be hard n t to be&#13;
bitter after the strike towards teachers who are&#13;
crossing lines. "They will be receiving the same benefits as those of us who are marching now-when&#13;
the strike is over," she said. The principal of that&#13;
junior high was said to have given a cocktail part)&#13;
Friday night for teachers in hi school who ere not&#13;
honoring the strike. "The only contact I ha,.·e ith&#13;
those who cross is to either say ·we could use your&#13;
support out here' or I say nothing at all to teach&#13;
who I don't feel can be swayed."&#13;
Racine bu ch&#13;
~ooperating teacher (supervisor from the&#13;
ldiool 1_n which they are teaching) is marching the&#13;
lleket hoes. The student must make the decision on&#13;
lbether or not to cross lines however, if his or her&#13;
COoperating teacher is in 'the classroom. Most&#13;
Parkside students find themselves sitting the strike&#13;
~ at home while their cooperating teacher is&#13;
llcketing.&#13;
Tremper High School interns and practice&#13;
:chers heard talk of the strike the day before&#13;
tJie ~ w_ere to start. One intern said that although&#13;
lbei~rtncip~l had told them to go which every way&#13;
hard cons~1ences dictated and there would be no&#13;
ken feelmgs, there were rumors that the&#13;
osha School District Director of Personnel had&#13;
~ted all in~erns and practice teachers to show&#13;
her teac~. This particular intern, however, found&#13;
'"lb ~llegiance was with the striking teacl.Jrs.&#13;
~ err de~ands are fair," she said, "and they have&#13;
COrn getting such small increases in the past&#13;
lllio Pared to other professions. I don't know anyone&#13;
'lbiWorks harder. I will always honor a strike.''&#13;
~ 8 attitude was contradicted by a practice&#13;
~ ,t Bradford High School, who nei~er&#13;
KF:Ai Ith the striking Kenosha teacher's union&#13;
"heri nor felt that teachers should ever strike.&#13;
~d ~Sked if_ she thought legitimate demands&#13;
Most Parkside students working thi seme ter a&#13;
practice or int~rn t~~ers are anxious to begm b~t&#13;
sympathize with stnking teachers and feel that if&#13;
they had not been instructed to remain ''neutral"&#13;
they would be marching. "Striking !s t?e. only -ay"&#13;
were the words spoken by many 1ndiv1dual ·ho&#13;
will be certified teachers soon and may at me&#13;
time be faced with taking an "unneutra!" ta~&#13;
Although they cannot join a teachers umon until&#13;
becoming certified, most felt the~· w~d beco~e&#13;
members of a union when they begin their teach eers It was the general attitude that the KEA&#13;
~!~ legitimate gripes to which the School Board had&#13;
not been responsive. Neither intern, practice, nor Kenos~ teachers&#13;
are getting paid while they are outside_ of the&#13;
1 ssroom so one intern has tak~n up a JOb at .a c a t' "The kids " he said "who com m grocery s ore. • .k · uld 't care less about the tri e or going to&#13;
h:~~~~ Th~y just don't want to_ have t_o ma:e up&#13;
:hese missed school days later m the ~ear. met Without a strike, the practice teachei: • ' \ \ 1 ~ ~·, -&lt; .... ' .\ .. .. • • • • . • . . .&#13;
a -&#13;
(!\'~Oil •&#13;
dul &#13;
1 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., sept. 11, 1973&#13;
'-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Editoriol/Opinion&#13;
Students are last&#13;
in line again&#13;
As RANGE R has stated before, contrary to their&#13;
claims administrators do not appear to keep students in&#13;
mind when decisions are being made. This was proven&#13;
to us again in the instance of concert tickets for the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony concert, September 11. The&#13;
concert featured pianist and former Parkside artist-inresidence&#13;
Carmen Vila.&#13;
It was decided that: 1. Tickets would go on sale one&#13;
week before students were on campus for registration.&#13;
2. Choice seats would be given to Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and Bldlngers in Kenosha to sell. 3. That less than half of&#13;
the seats would remain on campus to be available to&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Later, when tickets were close to being sold-out at&#13;
Parkside and going slowly at the Cook-Gere and&#13;
Bidinger outlets, some of their choice seat tickets were&#13;
brought back to be sold on campus.&#13;
In no way were the ticket sales for this concert on a&#13;
first-come, first-serve basis. Students never&#13;
received a fair chance at purchasing tickets, and to add&#13;
to the Insult better seats were made available after&#13;
poorer ones were sold.&#13;
This concert marked the opening of our new theatre in&#13;
the new Communication Arts building. Students, faculty&#13;
and staff had as much right to attend as did people in the&#13;
community, and we feel an equal chance at tickets on an&#13;
honest first-come, first-serve basis should have been the&#13;
guiding philosophy. While handsight, of course, is better&#13;
than foresight, common sense dictates that in a&#13;
university which exists to educate and enrich the Iives of&#13;
Its students, its students should have at least as good an&#13;
opportunity to take advantage of a cultural event being&#13;
held on their campus as anyone el~e:_'- .&#13;
-'~&#13;
Shortages plague Ranger, Parkside&#13;
This week RANGER was forced to cut back to eight pages. Iwould&#13;
like to be able to say that this was a noble gesture on our part to conserve&#13;
newsprint in the present shortage, but that's not quite why we&#13;
did it. The truth is, the shortage affecting us the most right now is in&#13;
advertising. We are in desperate need of an advertising manager.&#13;
Production costs of this newspaper are met solely by ad revenues and&#13;
our business manager. Ken Pestka, has been trying almost&#13;
si~lebandedly to seU enough advertising to pay for printing 12pages,&#13;
while sJ~ullaneously managing our other business and attending&#13;
classes 10 between. Anyone who sells an ad for us does receive a&#13;
commission, and if you're interested in a title as well as a good amount&#13;
01cash then see Ken about the ad manager's position.&#13;
Along with all the other shortages people face these days, Parkside&#13;
students face a parking lot shortage and shortage of space in many of&#13;
tile classes they want to get into.There is also a shortage of&#13;
sophomores here this year-speculation on reasons why include the&#13;
lack of a sense of community among students. I agree that this place&#13;
doesn't really hang together like other universities where students live&#13;
on campus, SOit seems that the all-student picnic scheduled for this&#13;
noon !"ight be a good way to establish some connections. If nothing&#13;
else, It should take some of the pressure off in the cafeteria where&#13;
there is a shortage oltables. How about if we leave the food service&#13;
area to faculty and staff on Wednesday noons and go do our own thing&#13;
(or luoch on the lawn in trout of Greenquist? And for the sake of all of&#13;
us, let's hope thooe other shortages are remedied soon, before we lose&#13;
not only next year's sophomores but many of next semester's potential&#13;
students.&#13;
As lonlli.~ I'm mentioning shortages, I can't overlook the lack of&#13;
tick~ on81Da1l¥ consIgned to be sold on campus for' the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony-Carmen Vila concert. One 01 this week's editorials sums up&#13;
that poorly managed situation.&#13;
RANGER slilJ has a shortage in the area of personnel - we need&#13;
gutsy investigative reporters, imaginative feature writers, amy&#13;
layout persons, experienced obituary writers, friendly ad salespeople&#13;
quatified shutterbugs, safe drivers, and anyone else who wants us t~&#13;
discover their talents. There is another get together in our omce (LLC&#13;
0194) at 3:30 Wednesday afternoon, but we'U talk to people anytime&#13;
they venture into 0Uf madbouse so come when you ~an. \ ,&#13;
photo by Jay Salve&#13;
Unrealistic thinking&#13;
aggravates&#13;
parking situation&#13;
Parkside is commonly described as a commuter&#13;
camous. Our students, for the most part, arrive each&#13;
day from Racine, Kenosha, Milwaukee. Burlington,&#13;
northern Illinois and so on. They have purchased&#13;
permits which allow them to use campus parking&#13;
facilities, but there is a problem -- lack of adequate&#13;
parking space to accommodate all the students, faculty&#13;
and staff during peak periods. The result is chaos-cars&#13;
parked "illegally," people late for classes. frustration.&#13;
anger and hostil ity. The need for another lot is obvious,&#13;
but it will be constructed next year when the need is&#13;
extremely acute instead of this year when it is only&#13;
serious.&#13;
. Fortunately, some of the people involved in planning&#13;
_iJa,:¥e .ac;~09'tii!e.!i~,~£litl),a:t}-~.~!:1-: i~~~lP!"~~e.'Puc"F/;l~,y,.•P.ri~w"'M&#13;
workinq on solutions but fundIng·and l:iureauc~a~yane, "&#13;
causing the delays. The money collected from this&#13;
year's parking fees are being saved to buil'd the new,&#13;
permanent lot next year. It also goes to support the bus&#13;
service and maintain exlsrlnq lots.&#13;
Meanwhile, if you are parking in unmarked places you&#13;
are parking illegally. Ticketing was not done during the&#13;
first week of classes, but Ronald Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Safety and Security, indicated that warning tickets&#13;
would soon be issued. He said that violators were new'&#13;
freshmen who didn't know where the stalls were, and a&#13;
personal check by him had revealed plenty of spaces&#13;
available.&#13;
It seems strange that Planning and Construction&#13;
would be working to solve the parking problem if plenty&#13;
of spaces are avallable.lt seems strange that if a student&#13;
wants to yet to class on time and can't find a marked&#13;
stall in which to park he or she should be penalized for&#13;
parking wherever there is a paved place. It seems&#13;
strange that the administr"ation pushed for ever higher&#13;
enrollment while knowing full well that many students&#13;
would not be able to find a parking place.&#13;
The rationale was that once the students were&#13;
registered and found there was this problem, they would&#13;
form their own car pools or resort to buses. For&#13;
ecology's sake this is well and good, but students should&#13;
at least have been warned of the·University's ecological&#13;
mandate before they purchased parking permits. The&#13;
administrative staff knew of this situation well In advance,&#13;
for it affected scheduling of classes.&#13;
Once adds and drops are over, car pools formed, bus&#13;
ridership solidified and classes settling down. then a&#13;
thorough study of parking patterns will be conducted.&#13;
!hen additional parking space will be provided, much of&#13;
~tapparently in places where students are now parking&#13;
Illegally. Better late than never, but some realistic&#13;
thinking earlier rather than just hoping for the best&#13;
would have prevented much ill feeling towards the&#13;
University.&#13;
~.. {&#13;
... . "&#13;
, .&#13;
-, ', '_!~ , :"I., ~&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
........ ------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Students are last&#13;
in line again&#13;
As RANGER has stated before, contrary to their&#13;
claims administrators do not appear to keep students in&#13;
mind when decisions are being made. This was proven&#13;
to us again in the instance of concert tickets for the&#13;
Milwaukee Symphony concert, September 11. The&#13;
concert featured pianist and former Parkside artist-inresidence&#13;
Carmen Vila.&#13;
It was decided that: 1. Tickets would go on sale one&#13;
week before students were on campus for registration.&#13;
2. Choice seats would be given to Cook-Gere in Racine&#13;
and Bidlngers in Kenosha to sell. 3. That less than half of&#13;
the seats would remain on campus to be available to&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Later, when tickets were close to being sold-out at&#13;
Parkside and going slowly at the Cook-Gere and&#13;
Bldinger outlets, some of their choice seat tickets were&#13;
brought back to be sold on campus.&#13;
In no way were the ticket sales for this concert on a&#13;
first-come, first-serve basis. Students never&#13;
received a fair chance at purchasing tickets, and to add&#13;
to the insult be1ter seats were made available after&#13;
poorer ones were sold.&#13;
This concert marked the opening of our new theatre in&#13;
the new Communication Arts building . Students, faculty&#13;
and staff had as much right to attend as did people in the&#13;
community, and we feel an equal chance at tickets on an&#13;
honest first-come, first-serve basis should have been the&#13;
guiding philosophy. While handsight, of course, is better&#13;
than foresight, common sense dictates that in a&#13;
university which exists to educate and enrich the lives of&#13;
its students, its students should have at least as good an&#13;
opportunity to take advantage of a cultural event being&#13;
held on their campus as anyone else.&#13;
horta e plague Ranger, Parkside&#13;
Thi w k R.\ 'GER wa forced to cut back to eight pages. I would&#13;
like to be able to y that this was a noble gesture on our part to conrve&#13;
n ·print in the pre ent shortage, but that's not quite why we&#13;
did it. Th truth is, the hortage affecting us the most right now is in&#13;
dv rti ing . \ e are in de perate need of an advertising manager.&#13;
Pr ct ion co of thi new paper are met solely by ad revenues and&#13;
our bu in manager, Ken Pestka, has been trying al~ost&#13;
in~leh . ndedly to ell enough ~dvertising to pay for printing 12 pages,&#13;
v.hil 1!11ultaneously managing our other business and attending&#13;
I · m between. Anyone who sells an ad for us does receive a&#13;
mmi 100, and if you're interested in a title as well as a good amount&#13;
of c sh then Ken about the ad manager's position.&#13;
Along with aJJ the other shortages people face these days, Parkside&#13;
tudents face a parking lot shortage and shortage of space in many of&#13;
the ct they want to get into.There is also a shortage of&#13;
sophomores here this year- peculation on reasons why include the&#13;
lack of a sense of community among students. I agree that this place&#13;
doesn't really hang together like other universities where students live&#13;
oo campus, so it seems that the all-student picnic scheduled for this&#13;
noon might be a good way to establish some connections. If nothing&#13;
, 1t should ta.ke some of the pressure off in the cafeteria where&#13;
there i a shortage of tables. How about if we leave the food service&#13;
area to faculty and staff on Wednesday noons and go do our own thing&#13;
for lunch on the lawn in front of Greenquist'1 And for the sake of aJJ of&#13;
us, let's hope thoee other shortages are remedied soon, before we lose&#13;
not only next year's sophomores but many of next semester's potential&#13;
tudents.&#13;
. Iona.~ I'm mentioning shortages, I can't overlook the lack of&#13;
bc.k_ ongrnally consigned to be sold on campus for.the Milwaukee&#13;
ymphony-Carmen Vila concert. One of this week's editorials sums up&#13;
that poorly managed situation.&#13;
R · ER till ha a hortage in the area of personnel - we need&#13;
gu y inv tigative reporters, imaginative feature writers, artsy&#13;
layout person , experienced obituary writers, friendly ad salespeople&#13;
quahfted hutterbugs, safe drivers, and anyone else who wants us t~&#13;
discover their talen There is another get together in our office (LLC&#13;
0190 at S:30 Wednesday afternoon, but we'll talk to people anytime&#13;
th y v ntur into our madbouse so come when you ':8"·&#13;
photo by Jay Salve&#13;
Unrealistic thinking&#13;
aggravates&#13;
parking situation&#13;
Parkside is commonly described as a commuter&#13;
campus. Our students, for the most part, arrive each&#13;
day from Racine, Kenosha, Milwaukee, Burlington,&#13;
northern Illinois and so on. They have purchased&#13;
permits which allow them to use campus parking&#13;
facilities, but there is a problem -- lack of adequate&#13;
parking space to accommodate all the students, faculty&#13;
and staff during peak periods. The result is chaos--cars&#13;
parked "illegally," people late for classes, frustration,&#13;
anger and hostility. The need for another lot is obvious,&#13;
but it will be constructed next year when the need ·is&#13;
extremely acute instead of this year when it is only&#13;
serious.&#13;
Fortunately, some of the people involved in planning&#13;
~ffa"': e ac~!:l9Y"'~-~cfa~P.:t~.a.!J~.~~Et·:i~:atpr~~~!:TI .:p;wY,.~f.lr.~ v, ... 1,1&#13;
working on solutions but funding ,and bureaucracy a~e· . ,&#13;
causing the delays. The money collected from this&#13;
year's parking fees are being saved to build the new,&#13;
permanent lot next year. It also goes to support the bus&#13;
service and maintain existing lots.&#13;
Meanwhile, if you are parking in unmarked places you&#13;
are parking illegally. Ticketing was not done during the&#13;
first week of classes, but Ronald Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Safety and Security, indicated that warning tickets&#13;
would soon be issued. He said that violators were new&#13;
freshmen who didn't know where the stalls were, and a&#13;
personal check by him had revealed plenty of spaces&#13;
available.&#13;
It seems strange that Planning and Construction&#13;
would be working to solve the parking problem if plenty&#13;
of spaces are available.It seems strange that if a student&#13;
wants to yet to class on time and can't find a marked&#13;
stall in which to park he or she should be penalized for&#13;
parking wherever there is a paved place. It seems&#13;
strange that the administr"ation pushed for ever higher&#13;
enrollment while knowing full well that many students&#13;
would not be able to find a parking place.&#13;
The rationale was that once the students were&#13;
registered and found there was this problem, they would&#13;
form their own car pools or resort to buses. For&#13;
ecology's sake this is well and good, but students should&#13;
at least have been warned of the -University's ecological&#13;
mandate before they purchased parking permits. The&#13;
administrative staff knew of this situation well in advance,&#13;
for it affected scheduling of classes.&#13;
Once adds and drops are over, car pools formed, bus&#13;
ridership solidified and classes settling down, then a&#13;
thorough study of parking patterns will be conducted.&#13;
:hen additional parking space will be provided, much of&#13;
~t apparently in places where students are now parking&#13;
illegally. Better late than never, but some realistic&#13;
thinking earlier rather than just hoping for the best&#13;
would have prevented much ill feeling towards the&#13;
University.&#13;
.. ' • &lt; ', &#13;
point of view&#13;
Communication gap&#13;
hurts students&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
"To the hest of our knowledge, the Film Society has been ,,~. tat t f can- celled. rms S ernen. came rom Ronald Gottesman, professor of&#13;
English and faculty advisor to the Parkside Film Society.&#13;
An extremely worthwhile student organization one that has offered&#13;
a valuable service to students in the past, is suspending its operati&#13;
f tho • 1 ons. The r.eason or IS seems s~mp e enough: no money. But the vital&#13;
question that must he asked IS why and who is responsible? This answer&#13;
is not SImple: It IS a very complex situation that has yet to be&#13;
resolved. .&#13;
The Film Society advisor produced from his files a copy of a&#13;
memorandum that was sent on May 9, 1973 to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee, the source of funding for student organizations. This&#13;
memo detailed attendance figures and revenues collected from last&#13;
year's film series. It also outlined a program and costs of films for&#13;
1973-74. This budget was proposed in the spring rather than the fall so&#13;
that the films, some of which are in great demand, could be ordered&#13;
early. The memorandwn received no reply. There then followed a&#13;
complex ~eri~ .o~additional memos, and telephone and personal&#13;
conversations initiated by Gottesman. Time passed and still the Film&#13;
Society received no reply as to what action was being taken on the&#13;
matter. Because no films could be ordered without funds, the Society&#13;
has been forced out of existence.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee, represented by its chairperson&#13;
Marion Mochon, tells a different story. Mochon stated that the Film&#13;
Society's memo of May 9, 1973 was, to her knowledge, never received.&#13;
Since the cee officially ends its sessions in April, Mochon explained,&#13;
some member other than herself may have received the memo and&#13;
filedit for consideration at the first fall session.&#13;
Mochon pointed out that the CCC had urged the Film Society in fall&#13;
1972 and winter 1973 to revise their admission prices so that they could&#13;
become a self-supporting organization. (The Society'S 73-74 budget&#13;
proposal is $1137.50'&gt; Gottesman's response to this idea was that the&#13;
admission price would be too high for students to pay. Using last&#13;
year's total attendance figures and this year's budget, a $1 admission&#13;
charge would approximately cover expenses. However, Gottesman's&#13;
understanding of the self-sufficiency proposal was that it was a&#13;
suggestion that was rejected because it was not financially feasible.&#13;
Somewhere in all of this confusion, a large misunderstanding has&#13;
been created by hoth sides. Admittedly, $1137.50 is a lot of money,&#13;
despite the obvious worthiness of the Film Society. And, of course,&#13;
otbwl1ilJldenU9I!g~nj1&lt;il.il&gt;1lIiiJ!a.eJWeand_ financial-boosting. But&#13;
somewhere lliong the line, the CCC has failed to be responsive, to&#13;
communicate openly with the Film Society people.&#13;
So, unfortunately for film-lovers, misunderstanding and bitter&#13;
feelings ahound between the Film Society and the CCC, and "The&#13;
Student" is once again the loser. •&#13;
Something must be done, and soon. The only reasonable solution is&#13;
for the Film Society people and the CCC to sit down tngether and talk&#13;
to each other, face-la-face, and get this horrible mess straightened&#13;
out. Even though the CCC can take no legal action on the money&#13;
problem (a quorum can't be raised), co~munication and rapport&#13;
must be re-established between these parties to ensure that serIOUS&#13;
mistakes like this do nol reoccur.&#13;
~H:.The~&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published wee~y throug~ut th.eacade~ic&#13;
year by the students of The UniverSity of Wlsconsm'Pa~kslde,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0-194 UbraryLearning&#13;
Center Telephone (414) 553-2295. . .&#13;
The Parkside' Ranger is an independent newspa,pe:rih OP~~lo.n~&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily e 0 ICla&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. b t f&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any IU jeC 0&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff m~st be confined~~ ~~Ot~ ~&#13;
less. typed pnd double-spaced. The editors reserve. nd include&#13;
letters for lenath and good taste. Allietten m~t ~ Sl':ne: ~ames will&#13;
address. phone number and studen.t status or acutJ ~ ht' to refuse to&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve t rl'&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
eDnOR.IN·CHIEF: Jane Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FeATURe EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
NeWS eDITOR: Kalhryn Wellner&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Oan Marry&#13;
COPY EOlTOR: Rebecca Eckh,,nd&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: Da"id Daniels k I Tom ()efOUW, Neil&#13;
WRITERS: Gary Jensen. RUdy lienau, Mllrilyn SchuberT. Ken KOI1 o.&#13;
SlIulr&gt;er&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jay Salvo&#13;
CARTOONIST: Amy Cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken PesIk/&gt;&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Fred.Lawrence Jim Magruder&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Ken peslkll. Fred Lawrence.&#13;
ADVISOR' Don Kopriva&#13;
,&#13;
,. } P'}'&#13;
~ '!f;~~-'-:'::"''.';&gt;:'''l~ . '. " 't&#13;
':', ,,:,,"" ...'...~.~ " .... ',&#13;
'_ • to&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
To Faculty and Students of UWParkside:&#13;
In the orientation issue of 8&#13;
August was a report entiUed&#13;
'PSGA starts fourth year'. in&#13;
which mention was made of the&#13;
student compiled teaching&#13;
evaluation form. lention was&#13;
made that results of forms from&#13;
the Spring semester would be&#13;
available at registration. nfortunately&#13;
they weren't,&#13;
Though it had been previously&#13;
understood that the speciallydesigned&#13;
forms could be read by&#13;
presently available computer&#13;
facilities, they could not be.&#13;
Neither could the manuals be&#13;
found to enable a new reader&#13;
program to be written. Thus the&#13;
sheets could not he translated&#13;
into the necessary language to be&#13;
read by the computer.&#13;
At the present time, manuals&#13;
have been found and the reader&#13;
program is being prepared.&#13;
Results will be sent to concerned&#13;
individual faculty when&#13;
available. Students will have the&#13;
opportunity to view all forms and&#13;
compiled results in the Archives&#13;
after submitting the proper&#13;
request.&#13;
Imust personally apologize to&#13;
all faculty and students for the&#13;
delay. I also, as chairman of the&#13;
sponsoring committee, accept&#13;
full responsibility.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Chairman, Academic Policies&#13;
Committee&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In order for Parkside to have a&#13;
Student Government involved&#13;
with the responsibilities of those&#13;
offi~es, the possibility of some&#13;
amount of money being paid for&#13;
those services hould be considered.&#13;
Relating to the article --&#13;
Juniors and Seniors getling a bad&#13;
deal, the students who have&#13;
progressed to the junior and&#13;
senior levels and who feel&#13;
themselves in need of financial&#13;
assistance could consider&#13;
another alternative for a source&#13;
of the money they need. The&#13;
boosting of their capacIty to&#13;
utilize whatever enhanced&#13;
knowledge and awareness they&#13;
may have gained so far. if&#13;
elected, would be of even greater&#13;
value to them&#13;
U there was a ca h incentive,&#13;
for once there would be an ali\·e.&#13;
competitive, meaningful running&#13;
for offices next elections&#13;
If office holders are paid for&#13;
their work the student body 'tself&#13;
would become mote sensluve and&#13;
justifiably critical of their per·&#13;
formances.&#13;
Would a few hundred dollars be&#13;
too much to pay for a tud nt&#13;
Government that finally served&#13;
the University?&#13;
Scott Laskis&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
English is not Hlstory and&#13;
History is not Science aDd&#13;
Science is not Art and Art is DOt&#13;
Music, and Art and Music are&#13;
minor subjects, and English,&#13;
History, and Science are major&#13;
subjects, and a subject is&#13;
something you "take" and, when&#13;
you have taken it, you have&#13;
"had" it, and if you have "had"&#13;
it, you are immune and need DOt&#13;
"take" it again. (The Vaccination&#13;
Theory of Education,)&#13;
from Teaching as a Su.bv~rsive&#13;
Acth'ity&#13;
- '-&#13;
Wed., Sept, 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Edilor' note: "The Mo\ emem" • regular le.tun in RA1' Eft. It&#13;
deal Ytit..hYtomtn and the taw of Ytomtn at PI.-u5de. in IOdfi .Dd&#13;
in bistor). Cue t "rit.en are lavil.ed.&#13;
by Jane l..U maD&#13;
"Being an artist of any sex 15 such a di.fficult busin tNt it&#13;
almost ungenerous and naieve to speak ol the specl8.l problema ollbe&#13;
woman artist. The problems of beceming an artist are the probl ms of&#13;
selfhood. Tbe reason a woman has greater problems becorning an&#13;
arust is because she has greater problems becoming a 11, he can't&#13;
believe in her existence past 30. She can't believe tn her own voice. he&#13;
can't see herself asa grown-up human mg, She can't leeve the room&#13;
without a big wooden pass." (from "The Artist as Housewife" by&#13;
Erica Jong. M , Dec. 1m)&#13;
Parallehng the Woman and the Arts program takIng place al&#13;
Parksroe Thursday evening and all day Friday, the tovernem column&#13;
this week offers a few renections on w·om n's place In the arusuc&#13;
culture of Amenka.&#13;
Culture is the social and aesthetic values of a iely and thelt expressions&#13;
as a maniIestation of group identity In the dominant culture&#13;
Amerika,the Importance of women as a group IS uereccgnued. for we&#13;
are identiCted by the roles we play or the men we associate with And&#13;
the status of many jobs is actually defIned by the which fdls them&#13;
Because Amerika does not esteem the arts, for example, women are&#13;
allowed to enJOYthem. "They can weave, POt. do stitchery. basketry,&#13;
copper enameling. water colors, poetry, to be doers or pa1l'Oll&gt;: uch&#13;
activity is a igned IitUe importance, has virtually no prestige, and&#13;
does not deflect our nation from Its 'true' course. But let "'omCfl&#13;
become serious 10 their creative urge, let them putlhetr own \\or of&#13;
art ahead of domesticity, child bearing or the numerous other rvtce&#13;
roles, and the cultural supports collapse," says Kathryn F. Clerenbach,&#13;
one of the founders of . 'OW and director of the Women's&#13;
Resource Center at the Uruverstty ol WIS.-Extension&#13;
Beyond that, women 10 artistic endeavors ha,,-e a serIOUS problem in&#13;
raising an authentic voice. To achieve authenticity you have to know&#13;
who you are and where you came from and why. "I" ha to m an&#13;
something. not only m lerms of role-playmg bUlatso w,th respecl to&#13;
mner feetmgs and betng. It is hard for women to grasp this authont.c&#13;
sense of self if they see themselves In dependency rol (w,fe, mother,&#13;
and so on) rather than as separate mdlviduals. As Erica Jong po It,&#13;
\\omen ha\le a built-in escape from idenuty.&#13;
Women also have a problem In coming to trust their 0" n VOle&#13;
One's f)"A'n expenence is not as convlOClng (.cceptabl ) as the lal·&#13;
cultural nonn. Women are often paralyzed, unabl to writ for&#13;
example. because they feel therr expene:nce IS trivial Wnhn&amp; outsld&#13;
of their exper'Cflce, they are condemned for not Ing authentic. 1&gt;0&#13;
matter how great theor achiev ment, they are called "wom n artis "&#13;
rather than artIsts,&#13;
Virgm,a Woolfonce wrote lhat the process ol d v lOPInga an artl t&#13;
means at some pomt tran ndlO ender-haVln mpaLhy ror boOt&#13;
sexes, being part of both halves of humaruty and recon~,ltng th m 'n&#13;
one' \\ork&#13;
''t'e are stuck \lrllh the words "m uhne" and "remlnll'K'," Jo&#13;
states. and we don't know what they really mean but a ume them to&#13;
he oppos,tes Jong beheve that radually '" w,lI redenn th m,&#13;
gradually soc,ety ",Ill change Its fal e nollons of male and fernal and&#13;
they "'III cease to he anllthe "Gradually, male xpen ne and&#13;
female expenence Willcease to be &lt;b parat • and then maybe '"&#13;
will not have to w'OlTY'.bout wom n und landing th ,r Own If·&#13;
hatred as a pre·reqw Ite to authentic tteatJv work:' Jon writ&#13;
But 10 the meanume~ Men and 'I4--omenin our 5OC.lety till do hay&#13;
dlHerent hfe patterns and expenCflces "houldn't ch be per·&#13;
mitted an authenuc exp Ion of Its own pe.rience'?," Jo&#13;
The artiSt., she replies, ha an answer. "The arti t is not fInally mil&#13;
or female, bUI both at once".The art.l t lart.S by exploring h h&#13;
partIcular sexual idenuty, bul thi 's only tbe heglMing. It' only a&#13;
necessary way mward. Once women wnters are able to wnle freely&#13;
about being women, they will be abl to wnte freely about in/l&#13;
buman. They will be able to explore the world Withthe confldCflco that&#13;
it really belongs to them-JUst as male wnters have always done It&#13;
Women artIsts cannot escape explonng theor own ualtty, Jo ..&#13;
concludes, because the con.neeuon between sex and InsplraUon is&#13;
intimate. "They are both forms ol mtense energy," she wnt "They&#13;
connect and COl ,espond. Tbe relationship between the artiat and lbe&#13;
luse is a sexual relatiOnship in which It IS impollSlble to tell who II&#13;
fucking and who ISbetng fucked. Ifsex and ~reativ.ty areof~n seen by&#13;
dictators as subversive activities, It's because they lead to the&#13;
knowledge that you own your own body (and with it your own vOl~e),&#13;
and that's the most revolutionary ins'ght ol all."&#13;
The dignity of all human lofe, respect for the talents ol all women,&#13;
mCfland children must become highly valued m cultw-e Amenka Thill&#13;
actually calls for creation of a new culture, growing oul 01 values o(&#13;
feminist culture. certamly the artistic inslght. the oo.man experi~e&#13;
whi~h will transcend masculone-femmine, as expressed in loterature,&#13;
an and music, must begin the re-educallon to a new American culture..&#13;
It must begin with an W'Iderslanding of where we are, women a.nd&#13;
men, leading to a vision of where we're going, bumanity.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Communication gap&#13;
hurts students&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
"To the best of our knowledge, the Film Society bas bee _&#13;
celled." This statemen~ came from Ronald Gottesman prore:socanf&#13;
English and faculty adv1s~r to the Parkside Film Society'. r 0&#13;
An extreme!)'. worthwhile s~dent organization, one that has offered&#13;
a valuable service _to students_ m the past, is suspending its operations.&#13;
The r_eason for this seems s~mple enough: no money. But the vital&#13;
question that_ must ~ ~sked 1s why and who is responsible? This answer&#13;
is not simple: 1t 1s a very complex situation that has yet to be&#13;
resolved. .&#13;
The Film Society advisor produced from his files a copy of a&#13;
memorandum that was sent on May 9, 1973 to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee, the source of funding for student organizations. This&#13;
memo detailed attendance figures and revenues collected from last&#13;
year's film series. It also outlined a program and costs of films for&#13;
1973-74. This budget was proposed in the spring rather than the fall so&#13;
that the films, some of which a_re in great demand, could be ordered&#13;
early. The memorandum received no reply. There then followed a&#13;
complex series of additional memos, and telephone and personal&#13;
conversations initiated by Gottesman. Time passed and still the Film&#13;
Society received no reply as to what action was being taken on the&#13;
matter. Because no films could be ordered without funds the Society&#13;
has been forced out of existence. '&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee, represented by its chairperson&#13;
Marion Mochon, tells a different story. Mochon stated that the Film&#13;
Society's memo of May 9, 1973 was, to her knowledge, never received.&#13;
Since the CCC officially ends its sessions in April, Mochon explained,&#13;
some member other than herself may have received the memo and&#13;
filed it for consideration at the first fall session.&#13;
Mochon pointed out that the CCC had urged the Film Society in fall&#13;
1972 and winter 1973 to revise their admission prices so that they could&#13;
become a self-supporting organization. (The Society's 73-74 budget&#13;
proposal is $1137.50.) Gottesman's response to this idea was that the&#13;
admission price would be too high for students to pay. Using last&#13;
year's total attendance figures and this year's budget, a $1 admission&#13;
charge would approximately cover expenses. However, Gottesman's&#13;
understanding of the self-sufficiency proposal was that it was a&#13;
suggestion that was rejected because it was not financially feasible.&#13;
Somewhere in all of this confusion, a large misunderstanding has&#13;
been created by both sides. Admittedly, $1137.50 is a lot of money,&#13;
despite the obvious worthiness of the Film Society. And, of course,&#13;
otb.ffl-litmlentto.1:ganj~Wi-UlEtSm",Ne andrneed. financial -boosting. Butsomewhere&#13;
along the line, the CCC has failed to be responsive, to&#13;
communicate openly with the Film Society people.&#13;
So, unfortunately for film-lovers, misunderstanding and bitter&#13;
feelings abound between the Film Society and the CCC, and "The&#13;
Student" is once again the loser.&#13;
Something must be done, and soon. The only reasonable solution is&#13;
for the Film Society people and the CCC to sit down together and talk&#13;
to each other, face-to-face, and get this horrible mess straightened&#13;
out. Even though the CCC can take no legal action on the money&#13;
problem (a quorum can't be raised), communication and rapport&#13;
must be re-established between these parties to ensure that serious&#13;
mistakes like this do not reoccur.&#13;
~ANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throug~out ~e acad'er:nfc&#13;
year by the students of The University of W1sconsm-Pa:kside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0 -194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295. . .&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspa_per. Op~~.10.n~&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the O ic,a&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. t f&#13;
Letters to the 'Editor are encouraged. All letters on any sub~ 0&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined ~o ~;0(0 ed~~&#13;
less, typed 11nd double-spaced. The editors reserve_ :cir~nd include&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be sign k N will&#13;
address phone number and student status or faculty ran · a~es t&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to re use 0&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EOITOR-JN .CHIEF : Jane Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debra Friedel!&#13;
NEWS EDITOR : Kathryn Wellner&#13;
SP'ORTS EDITOR , Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR : David Daniels I Tom oe,fOUW, N .. it&#13;
WRITERS: Gary Jensen, Rudy Uenau, Marilyn Schubert, Ken Konko ,&#13;
Seutner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS : Jay Salvo&#13;
CARTOONIST: Amy Cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER : Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER : Fred _Lawrence imMa ruder&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Ken Pestka, Fred Lawrence, J g&#13;
ADVISOR : Don Kopriva&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
To Facultv and tuden~ of W- Park id ; ·&#13;
In the orientation I u or 8&#13;
August wa a report entitled&#13;
'PSGA tarts fourth ,:e r'. in&#13;
which mention wa ma·d of the&#13;
student compiled teaching&#13;
evaluation form. , lention a&#13;
made that results of form from&#13;
the pnng emester ould be&#13;
available at regi tration. Unfortunately&#13;
they weren't.&#13;
Though it had been pre\·10 ly&#13;
understood that the peciall_·-&#13;
de igned forms could be read b ·&#13;
presently a\"ailable compute·r&#13;
facilities, the could not be.&#13;
either could the manuals be&#13;
found to enable a w reader&#13;
program to be written. Thu the&#13;
sheets could not be tran lated&#13;
into the necessal') language to be&#13;
read by the computer.&#13;
At the present time. manuals&#13;
have been found and the reader&#13;
program is being prepared.&#13;
Results will be sent to concerned&#13;
individual fa cult when&#13;
available. Students will have the&#13;
opportunity to view all form and&#13;
compiled results in the Archives&#13;
after submitting the proper&#13;
reque t.&#13;
I must personally apologize to&#13;
all faculty and tudents for the&#13;
delay. I also, a chairman of the&#13;
sponsoring committee, accept&#13;
full responsibility.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Chairman. Academic Policie&#13;
Committee&#13;
Park ide tudent Go ·ernment&#13;
ociation&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In order for Parkside to have a&#13;
tudent Government involved&#13;
with the respon ibilities of tho&#13;
offices. the possibilit_· o some&#13;
amount of money being paid for&#13;
those en;ces hould be conidered.&#13;
&#13;
Relatrng to the article --&#13;
Junio and eniors getting a bad&#13;
deal, the tudent ·ho ha,·e&#13;
progressed to the junior and&#13;
enior level and who fe I&#13;
them elves in need of financial&#13;
a i lance could con ider&#13;
another alternati\'e for a ·ource&#13;
of the money they n ed. Th&#13;
boosting of their capac1t~ o&#13;
utilize whatever enhanced&#13;
knowledge and a ,·ar n th )&#13;
may have gained so far. if&#13;
elected, \:OUld be or even reat r&#13;
value to them .&#13;
If there wa a ca. h me nti\' ,&#13;
for once th re ould be an alh •&#13;
competitive. meaningful runmn&#13;
for office ne t electio ·&#13;
If office hold r.; ar pa id f r&#13;
their work the tud nt bod • 1 IC&#13;
would become more · n ·itive and&#13;
justifiably critical of th r performan&#13;
.&#13;
Would a f w hundred dollars be&#13;
too much to pa · for a tud l&#13;
Government that finall) n·ed&#13;
the ruve it ·?&#13;
!Las&#13;
Keno ha&#13;
English is not H1 tory and&#13;
History is not Science and&#13;
Science is not Art and Art is not&#13;
Music , and Art and 1us1c are&#13;
minor subjects, and English,&#13;
History, and Science are major&#13;
subjects. and a ub1ect 1&#13;
something you "take" and. when&#13;
you have taken it, rou have&#13;
"had" it, and if you have ··had,.&#13;
it, you are immune and need not&#13;
"take " it again . &lt;The \ accination&#13;
Theory of Education .)&#13;
from Teaching a a i;ibH~ h ~&#13;
Acth'ity&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
b &#13;
the 4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 "Three Lives" portrays&#13;
Kenosha teachers. • • female experience&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
"I have the utrnest trust and confidence in them "&#13;
she Slated. '&#13;
One board member, Carrol Rikli, said that he had&#13;
not been called for the Monday meeting and doubted&#13;
whether or not a full board would have everted a&#13;
strike&#13;
"Ithtnk it would have been pompous for a grown&#13;
man .to wait around another two hours Tuesday&#13;
m.ommg for a resolution when one's been negotiated&#13;
WIth them (KEA) over 400 hours the past year and&#13;
gotten nowhere," said Herbert Lepp, another board&#13;
member&#13;
Thus last Tuesday's (Sept. 4th) confrontation&#13;
resulted ~nSlavney meeting with the two parties, in&#13;
Ken ha s County Courthouse, Friday and Saturday&#13;
of la t week. The purpose was to determine if an&#13;
Impasse existed and i ue a fact·fincting report in&#13;
th event that the teachers do not settle on the two&#13;
year contract proposals,&#13;
where she had a baby, lived&#13;
luxuriously. surrounded by&#13;
servants in the Phillipines, tied to&#13;
a man more devoted to his job&#13;
than to their life together; and&#13;
her subsequent freedom&#13;
struggling to stay alive in New&#13;
York.&#13;
Lillian Shreve is a Wholesomely&#13;
reflective, middle-aged woman&#13;
the mother of one of the crew&#13;
mem?ers, who has been happily&#13;
married for twenty three years&#13;
after giving up her career as a&#13;
chemist. She recalls her unhappy&#13;
childhood as the daughter of an&#13;
Italian immigrant.&#13;
Robin Mide, a "liberated&#13;
woman," explains that she left&#13;
her Far Rockaway home when&#13;
she was seventeen to find absolute&#13;
independence in the&#13;
theatre, drugs, sex and her life.&#13;
She leads a completely transitory&#13;
existence, carrying her few&#13;
belongings in three suitcases&#13;
given to her by three lovers.&#13;
"Three Lives" is about the&#13;
complex truth of modern&#13;
womanhood, and does it with skill&#13;
and ~riginality in a medium long&#13;
dommated by the male vision.&#13;
The crew lived together for&#13;
three weeks, concentrating each&#13;
week on the life of one woman.&#13;
During that intense period they&#13;
experienced both the difficulties&#13;
of learning a new technology&#13;
while creating art, and the rapid,&#13;
overwhelming evolution of their&#13;
personal relationships.&#13;
The title of the film is taken&#13;
from Gertrude Stein's novella,&#13;
Three Lives, which dealt with the&#13;
experience of completely ord.inary&#13;
women, persons whose&#13;
lives are generally overlooked or&#13;
disregarded. In the film three&#13;
very different, intelligent, and&#13;
likable women simply present&#13;
themselves to the camera in a&#13;
• succession of autobiographical&#13;
monologues. They talk about past&#13;
conflicts, decisions, and the&#13;
consequences of their actions&#13;
which have led them to their&#13;
present realization of&#13;
womanhood.&#13;
The more "conventional" role&#13;
of women is presented by Mallory&#13;
Millett-Jones, Kate Millett's&#13;
younger sister, who describes her&#13;
experiences in a middle-class, St.&#13;
Paul school where nothing but&#13;
boys interested her; in marriage&#13;
Thursday evening, September&#13;
13, at 7:30 p.m., Parkside will&#13;
open its program on "Women and&#13;
the Arts" with the films "Three&#13;
Lives" and "Crocus."&#13;
"Three Lives" is directed by&#13;
Kate Millett, the author of Sexual&#13;
Politics and is produced by The&#13;
Women's Liberation Cinema&#13;
Company.&#13;
In the summer of 1970 Kate&#13;
Millett as director with a&#13;
volunteer, all-female crew set&#13;
about the making of "Three&#13;
Lives." Neither actors nor the&#13;
film crew had previous exposure&#13;
to movie-making. They shared,&#13;
however, an intense desire to&#13;
give real expression to the female&#13;
experience-what it feels like to&#13;
be a woman. To do this the lives&#13;
of three women were documented&#13;
with the intention that all women&#13;
might identify with their general&#13;
and very individual experiences.&#13;
The intention was to present the&#13;
lives of three individual women&#13;
with sympathy, understanding,&#13;
and reverence for their&#13;
humanity.&#13;
Women and the Arts-Schedule *&#13;
Workshop on "Women and Art"&#13;
by Beatrice Herr, award Winning&#13;
Milwaukee painter and co-owner&#13;
of a Lake Geneva gallery.&#13;
Workshop on "Women and&#13;
Music" including a performance&#13;
by Violinist Marla Mutschler and&#13;
Harpsichordist Francis Bedford,&#13;
assistant professors of music,&#13;
and soprano Lee Dougherty.&#13;
Lecture: "Making Cultural Institutions&#13;
More Responsive to&#13;
Social Needs:' by Grace Glueck,&#13;
assistant metropolitan editor in&#13;
charge of Cultural Affairs, The&#13;
New York Times.&#13;
Discussion on Glueck's lecture.&#13;
Workshop on "Women and&#13;
Theatre" by Penelope Reed of&#13;
the Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theatre who will portray a series&#13;
of women from "Spoon River&#13;
Anthology."&#13;
11:00-12:00 Thursday, September 13&#13;
7:30 p.m. Films, "Three Lives" and&#13;
"Crocus" will be shown and a&#13;
discussion led by the Women's&#13;
Caucus will follow.&#13;
Friday, September 14&#13;
9:00 a.m. Keynote on "Women and the&#13;
Humanities" by Deanna Me·&#13;
Mahon, visiting assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy.&#13;
9:3(HO:OO Discussion on keynote address.&#13;
10:00 - 11:00 Workshop on "Woman ~ as&#13;
Writer": including films on poet&#13;
Anne Sexton and novelist&#13;
V'rrginia WooU by Carole Gottlieb&#13;
Vopat, assistant professor of&#13;
English and receipient of a 1973&#13;
Kiekohofer-Steiger award for&#13;
teaching excellence.&#13;
11:00-12:00Workshop on "Woman as Writer:&#13;
Where Ha ve All The Flowers&#13;
Gone" by Dr. Vopat.&#13;
All udent Organizations which plan on&#13;
petitionlog the Campus Concerns Committee for&#13;
operating money are requested to prepare budgets&#13;
and send them to Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant&#13;
Dean of Students, in Tallent 284 by Friday, October&#13;
5. Echelbarger has budget forms available to assist&#13;
in this lJIsk. Organization representatives are also&#13;
encouraged to coetact ber or Tony Totero, coordinator&#13;
of Student Activities, in lLC D197for help in&#13;
drawing up their budgets if necessary. cee convenes&#13;
October 15 to begin deliberations on the&#13;
granting of these monies.&#13;
1:00-2:00&#13;
2:00 - 3:00&#13;
~~:.~~&#13;
• ~ •• '!""....&#13;
The Racine Symphony Orchestra is&#13;
*&#13;
trying to&#13;
locate playen in the Racine area. Auditions will be&#13;
held early in September-interested persons should&#13;
contact Marcella O'Leary at 633-4088. They will then&#13;
be notified of the place and limes for auditions. For&#13;
the auditions it is suggested a person playa part&#13;
from a composition which will display his or her&#13;
skill and tone quality. They will also be asked to&#13;
i t read from an orchestral selection.&#13;
3:00-3:30&#13;
3:30-4:30&#13;
Postal service available&#13;
on campus&#13;
A Postal Substation is now available for use by all students, faculty&#13;
and staff 10 the Central Mailroom, LLC D218. It can be reached by&#13;
going mto the Library and taking the main elevators down to the D2&#13;
level. The Central Mailroom is located through the door to your right&#13;
when you come out of the Mevator. The Postal Substation is open from&#13;
7:45 a.m, to 3:45 p.m. Monday through Friday.&#13;
~ong the services available are the following: Letters may be&#13;
mailed, packages may be mailed either via Parcel Post or United&#13;
Parcel Services, and stamps may be purchased (rolls and books onlysingle&#13;
stamps Will not be sold), Money orders will be available for&#13;
purchase by the end of September.&#13;
Payment for the above services must be made in cash' checks will&#13;
not be accepted. Information on limitations of weight' and size of&#13;
packages for UPS and how packages should be wrapped can be-obtamed&#13;
from the Central Mailroom.&#13;
Letters and packages are picked up by the Post Office at 4 p.m.&#13;
Monday through Friday. Packages sent via UPS are picked up daily at&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Ranger free classifieds&#13;
~NT~D: 5t~den! Wlt~ car to-prck me up at&#13;
a6gel' Bus Station tn Milwaukee every&#13;
;~e~day and Thursday at 9 a.m. and return&#13;
p.rn. ccntect Mrs. Groseclose at&#13;
Greenquisl 320. WlIl pay well.&#13;
FOR SALE, '71 Norton Commando· 3100&#13;
original miles, custom built··lake over&#13;
payments. Call 632·4183 after noon.&#13;
FOR SALE, Hoffner electric guitar, 90~&#13;
condition, semi.solid body. 540. Call 632...1&#13;
after noon.&#13;
WANTED· Persons with car to drive to .&#13;
III" on business for the RANGE-R W'I~lon,&#13;
$1.85 per trip Which is OJ r .' I pay&#13;
miles and t k PP oll.lrnately 35 tript;om p:r=:i::O~~:~~~:rurfor~her~Und&#13;
in or near Zion. Co~tact To :ersons !&#13;
IYin9&#13;
RANGER office, LLC D19~ etersen In the&#13;
FISHER SUPER GLASS skiis 200em. Never&#13;
used or mounted, S120. Ex. 2295ask for Dave&#13;
FOR SALE: 1963 Chey Daniels.&#13;
.&#13;
perfect runnin .. V II, 6 cvueeer, in&#13;
Call SS3-247J r~:l~~\tlon. Open to any offer.&#13;
Kenneth Weston. or 679-2862 (home).&#13;
.... , "~~'. ',.,,~. ' I ". '.'&#13;
. . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
,". ""'~"'.&#13;
'.'., ,&#13;
" "&#13;
,'" .&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973&#13;
Kenosha teachers.&#13;
t trust and confid nee in them,"&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
b em nt of&#13;
nt everal&#13;
• •&#13;
''Three Lives'' portrays&#13;
f eillale experience&#13;
the&#13;
Thursday evening, September&#13;
13, at 7:30 p.m., Parkside will&#13;
open its program on "Women and&#13;
the Arts" with the films "Three&#13;
Lives" and "Crocus."&#13;
"Three Lives'' is directed by&#13;
Kate , Iillett. the author of exual&#13;
Politic and is produced by The&#13;
Women's Liberation Cinema&#13;
Company.&#13;
In the summer of 1970 Kate&#13;
tillett as director with a&#13;
volunteer, all-female crew set&#13;
about the making of "Three&#13;
Lives." either actors nor the&#13;
film crew had previous exposure&#13;
to movie-making. They shared,&#13;
however. an intense desire to&#13;
give real expression to the female&#13;
experience-what it feels like to&#13;
be a woman. To do this the lives&#13;
o three women were documented&#13;
with the intention that all women&#13;
might identify with their general&#13;
and very individual experiences.&#13;
The intention was to present the&#13;
lives of three individual women&#13;
with sympathy, understanding,&#13;
and reverence for the~&#13;
humanity.&#13;
The crew lived together for&#13;
three weeks, concentrating each&#13;
week on the life of one woman.&#13;
During that intense pe~i~ th_ey&#13;
experienced both the d1fficulties&#13;
of learning a new technolo~&#13;
while creating art, and the rap1~, overwhelming evolution of their&#13;
personal relationships.&#13;
The title of the film is taken&#13;
from Gertrude Stein's novella,&#13;
Three Lives, which dealt with the&#13;
experience of completely ordinary&#13;
women, persons whose&#13;
lives are generally overlooked or&#13;
disregarded. In the film three&#13;
very different, intelligent, and&#13;
likable women simply present&#13;
themselves to the camera in a • succession of autobiographical&#13;
monologues. They talk about past&#13;
conflicts decisions, and the&#13;
conseque~ces of their actio~s&#13;
which have led them to their&#13;
present realization of&#13;
womanhood.&#13;
The more "conventional" role&#13;
of women is presented by Mallory&#13;
Millett-Jones, Kate Millett's&#13;
younger sister, who describes her&#13;
experiences in a middle-class, St.&#13;
Paul school where nothing but&#13;
boys interested her; in marriage&#13;
where she had a baby, lived&#13;
luxuriously, surrounded by&#13;
servants in the Phillipines, tied to&#13;
a man more devoted to his job&#13;
than to their life together; and&#13;
her subsequent freedom,&#13;
struggling to stay alive in New&#13;
York.&#13;
Lillian Shreve is a wholesomely&#13;
reflective, middle-aged woman,&#13;
the mother of one of the crew&#13;
members, who has been happily&#13;
married for twenty three years&#13;
after giving up her career as a&#13;
chemist. She recalls her unhappy&#13;
childhood as the daughter of an&#13;
Italian immigrant.&#13;
Robin Mide, a "liberated&#13;
woman," explains that she left&#13;
her Far Rockaway home when&#13;
she was seventeen to find absolute&#13;
independence in the&#13;
theatre, drugs, sex and her life.&#13;
She leads a completely transitory&#13;
existence, carrying her few&#13;
belongings in three suitcases&#13;
given to her by three lovers.&#13;
"Three Lives" is about the&#13;
complex truth of modern&#13;
womanhood, and does it with skill&#13;
and originality in a medium long&#13;
dominated by the male vision.&#13;
Women and the Arts-Schedule&#13;
Thursday, September 13&#13;
7:30 p.m. Films, "Three Lives" and&#13;
"Crocus" will be shown and a&#13;
discussion led by the Women's&#13;
Caucus will follow.&#13;
Frida , eptember 14&#13;
9:00 a.m. Keynote on "Women and the&#13;
Humanities" by Deanna McMahon,&#13;
visiting assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy.&#13;
9:30-10:00 Discussion on keynote address.&#13;
10:00 - 11:00 Workshop on "Woman as&#13;
Writer": including films on poet&#13;
Anne Sexton and novelist&#13;
Virginia Wooll by Carole Gottlieb&#13;
Vopat, assistant professor of&#13;
English and receipient of a 1973&#13;
Kiekohofer-Steiger award for&#13;
teaching excellence. 11:00-12:00 Workshop on "Woman as Writer:&#13;
Where Have All The Flowers&#13;
Gone" by Dr. Vopat.&#13;
11: 00-12: 00&#13;
1:00-2:00&#13;
2:00 - 3:00&#13;
3:00-3:30&#13;
3:30-4:30&#13;
Workshop on "Women and Art"&#13;
by Beatrice Herr, award winning&#13;
Milwaukee painter and co-owner&#13;
of a Lake Geneva gallery.&#13;
Workshop on "Women and&#13;
Music" including a performance&#13;
by Violinist Marla Mutschler and&#13;
Harpsichordist Francis Bedford,&#13;
assistant professors of music,&#13;
and soprano Lee Dougherty.&#13;
Lecture: "Making Cultural Institutions&#13;
More Responsive to&#13;
Social Needs" by Grace Glueck,&#13;
assistant metropolitan editor in&#13;
charge of Cultural Affairs, The&#13;
New York Times.&#13;
Discussion on Glueck's lecture.&#13;
Workshop on "Women and&#13;
Theatre" by Penelope Reed of&#13;
the Milwaukee Repertory&#13;
Theatre who will portray a series&#13;
of women from "Spoon River&#13;
Anthology."&#13;
Postal service available&#13;
on campus&#13;
Admission&#13;
with Parkside I.D.&#13;
A Postal Substation is now available for use by all students, faculty&#13;
and staff in the Central Mailroom, LLC D218. It can be reached by&#13;
going into the Librar·y and taking the main elevators down to the D2&#13;
level. The Central Mailroom is located through the door to your right&#13;
when you come out of the ~levator. The Postal Substation is open from&#13;
7:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. Monday through Friday.&#13;
Among the services available are the following: Letters may be&#13;
mailed, packages may be mailed either via Parcel Post or United&#13;
Parcel Services, and stamps may be purchased (rolls and books onlysingle&#13;
stamps will not be sold). Money orders will be available for&#13;
purchase by the end of September.&#13;
Payment for the above services must be made in cash; checks will&#13;
not be accepted. Information on limitations of weight and size of&#13;
packages for UPS and how packages should be wrapped can be- obtained&#13;
from the Central Mailroom.&#13;
Letters and packages are picked up by the Post Office at 4 p.m.&#13;
MR. BROWN&#13;
imt~-• Fri. • Sat.&#13;
Monday through Friday. Packages sent via UPS are picked up daily at&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
Ranger free classifieds&#13;
Mark Barnhield, Proprietor&#13;
6 blocks E. of Hy. 31 on Hy. 50&#13;
Hot Sandwiches&#13;
WANTED: Student with car lo,pick me up al&#13;
lra'&lt;mei-- eus Station in Milwaukee every&#13;
Tuesday and Thursday at 9 a.m. and return&#13;
at 4 p.m . Contact Mrs. Groseclose at&#13;
Greenquist 320. Will pay well.&#13;
WANTED - Persons with car to drive to Zion&#13;
111., on busin_ess to~ the RANGER. Will pa; 52:85 per trip wh,ch is approximately 35&#13;
m_oles, and takes about one hour for the round&#13;
trip from P~rkside. Ideal for persons living 1&#13;
n or near Zion. Contact Tom Petersen in the&#13;
RANGER office, LLC 0194.&#13;
FOR SALE :_ 1963 Chevy II, 6 cylinder, in&#13;
perfect runn,ng condition. Open to any offer&#13;
Call 553-2473 (office) or 679-2862 (home). Kenneth Weston. ·&#13;
FOR SALE, '71 Norton Commando · 3IOO&#13;
original miles, custom buift .. take over&#13;
payments. Call 632-4183 after noon.&#13;
FOR SALE, Hoffner electric gui~ .. ~&#13;
32~~C:, condition, semi-solid body. $40. Ca&#13;
after noon.&#13;
FISHER SUPER GLASS skiis 200 cm. Never&#13;
used or mounted, $120. Ex. 229S ask tor oave&#13;
Daniels. &#13;
THE RANGER ASKS Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
•••&#13;
Do you think the Waterp'ate h .&#13;
0' earmgs are a good&#13;
thing for the country or a bad tliimg.?&#13;
It's what's&#13;
happening&#13;
Debby Robinson&#13;
Senior. Kenosha&#13;
I think it's a bad thing because&#13;
it weakens the country in&#13;
general, When your leader and&#13;
chief of your country is not doing&#13;
wbat he should do, and you find&#13;
he is involved in something like&#13;
this, you really don't know who to&#13;
turn to or who to trust.&#13;
John Delao&#13;
Junior, Racine&#13;
For myself, it brings out what&#13;
has been happening for quite a&#13;
while and helps me to understand&#13;
it a little better. It's very important&#13;
to expose people to the&#13;
occurances of such things. They&#13;
don't just happen on television or&#13;
in other countries. It's happening&#13;
here, but aht does not necessarily&#13;
mean that it's prevelant&#13;
throughout our government.&#13;
Dan Haley&#13;
Freshman, Racine&#13;
I think it's a good thing that&#13;
they're bringing things out into&#13;
the open. In the past few years&#13;
there has been a lot of misuse of&#13;
public offices. Also, they are&#13;
uncovering things that have been&#13;
covered up. It's not detrimental&#13;
to our political structure at all. I&#13;
think it will accomplish a lot.&#13;
Maybe nothing yet, but it will be&#13;
something to look back at in the&#13;
next five or ten years.&#13;
Do you think the news coverage&#13;
given hearings will make it less&#13;
likely for those being brought&#13;
to court to get a fair trial?&#13;
Bill Spree berg&#13;
Junior, Racine Student&#13;
Security Officer&#13;
I don't think it will make any&#13;
difference. The truth is coming&#13;
out and at least the public will&#13;
hear everything about it.&#13;
ThrOUgh radio and television&#13;
everyone will hear the truth.&#13;
Bill Mears&#13;
Sophomore, Racine&#13;
It shouldn't make any difference.&#13;
It's going to be a public&#13;
trial anyway. It will be covered&#13;
as it is now. People are going to&#13;
find it all out in the papers if they&#13;
don't find out on television.&#13;
DWight Kirby&#13;
Parks ide student, San Francisco&#13;
Making the effect of coverage&#13;
the central issue, I don't see as&#13;
the way to approach it at all. You&#13;
could spend endless amounts of&#13;
time finding different aspects to&#13;
the case that will have an effect&#13;
" ," " , " " ,,~, " ,,,,&#13;
Cornelius Gordon&#13;
Sophomore, Racine&#13;
On television some parts of it&#13;
seem like a joke. But, they are&#13;
getting to the point where they&#13;
are catching some people in lies.&#13;
on how these trials turn out. It:s&#13;
belaboring points that even their&#13;
relevence is ambiguous, Then&#13;
you get into all those little stalling&#13;
tactics and nonsense. Instead of&#13;
dealing with central Issues. The&#13;
issues are, who is guilty and w~at&#13;
has happened. Papers are gOing&#13;
to do their job just as good and&#13;
just as badly as everybndy else.&#13;
They will affect the situatIon In&#13;
II edne cia). pl. 1% All ludent pleruc 11 a m I p.rn., 10 lronl 01&#13;
Greenqw I Hall ram locaUo tudenl "Uvol' BI )&#13;
photos by Jay Salvo Iledoe clal. pLI%:R.~'GER taffm 10 .'30pm,R\&#13;
orfice tLLC 0194· All pe....... mte ted m "ortun on th&#13;
neV. paper \II lcome&#13;
Tho da) .. pi 13: Women and the Arta-falnu "Th&#13;
Kale .lillet, and. the short. "Croc "f&#13;
Lh&#13;
Frida). pI,I~:llomenandtheArtI;Dal f&#13;
, nday •. ept, II: \'e Clu m n. 7pm, ·tudent Aell III III&#13;
All vets \\ el orne.&#13;
"ooda~,~L.17:Women·scauc mee ,730pm,u..cDl14 11&#13;
mterested wcmee welcome.&#13;
TIIesd.). pl. 1 : Cro Country-&lt;:arthage,',&#13;
\I'M ater at Parils,,!e. ~ p m&#13;
Iledllhda). pl. It: Lecture bl" BIU ndel'S. 'III ..... Jourtllli&#13;
carteorust. 8 p.m., GR 103 Free.&#13;
PIMn, nnd&#13;
Debbie Olson&#13;
Junior, Racine&#13;
Ithink they're good because it&#13;
makes people aware of what is CO&#13;
going on. j'bere's lust too much MIN G UP&#13;
apathy and people should kno,,' Sunday,Sopt.23 B,cl'CleRally.t2noon, eo t parklO 101.. PGfI--ed&#13;
what is going on even if it ha b)' PAB-Ragtime Rangel'll&#13;
been happening for years and&#13;
years. Maybe it bas been, but ,t ncla). pi, 38: Harry Chapin concert. 8 pm, Phy. Ed BI&#13;
shouldn't have been and it's ,-Ti_clt_ets_on...,;sa_le_a_t_th_e_In_f_O_rma __ t,_on_c.._n_t_"'_';.$2~50~a.,;d_1·,:an;;,ce:.:.;;.::.:. .J&#13;
about time people realized iL -&#13;
Iledne ). pl. I': Soccer-ParJu,,,!e v Lewt ColI al&#13;
Parilside, 11 a m.&#13;
ational&#13;
poll reveals&#13;
feelings&#13;
on hearings RANGER&#13;
read the&#13;
In a recent Gallup POU in which&#13;
these two were among questions&#13;
asked, 52 percent believed lbat&#13;
the Watergate hearings were a&#13;
good thing for the country, 4 in 10&#13;
thought them bad, and 7 percent&#13;
were undecided.&#13;
Despite heavy media coverage&#13;
of the hearings, 56 percent&#13;
believed witnesses likely to get a&#13;
fair trail ir they were ever&#13;
brought to court.&#13;
Some reasons for the heanngs&#13;
being good for the country "ere&#13;
that they keep the public informed,&#13;
expose political&#13;
corruption, and help pre ..rent the&#13;
situation from recurring.&#13;
Those who thought the heanng&#13;
bad, gave as reasons such things&#13;
as the)' are bad for the morale or&#13;
the country. the)" are a we le of&#13;
lime - taking away rrom more&#13;
important issues and that&#13;
partisan politician are trymg to&#13;
discredit the ,'j, on ad~&#13;
ministration.&#13;
The enate committee in~&#13;
\'estigatlOg the Watergate and&#13;
other illegal campaign acth·llIes.&#13;
will start hearing Yo Itn~"Ses again&#13;
on September lith.&#13;
Thursday&#13;
evenmg&#13;
Sept. 13&#13;
All day&#13;
Friday&#13;
Sept. 14&#13;
the same way - good wa:-'s and&#13;
bad .....ays. The i ue is not 00""&#13;
the coverage i .it's about who I&#13;
goofing A series of programs for women Interested In lit.,&#13;
art, music, drama and film. Open free of charge&#13;
to students, faculty, staff and community. Denise Frenner&#13;
Junior. Kenosha&#13;
I don't lhink it .....HImake much&#13;
difference because the public i ~' The University of pretty much a.....are or what's .,"'"&#13;
been gOlOgon through the ne". Wisconsin-Porkside&#13;
mf"dia A fair trial will be~h~e~ld;'IIIII::::;;:;::::::::::::::::::;;~'"&#13;
...;&#13;
N£~h~~e;ib~&#13;
~Wttt ~bOppt&#13;
10 Ul. - 4 P.II. LLC LOWEI IIAI.&#13;
DAILY PUCE (easl)&#13;
THE RANGER ASKS&#13;
•••&#13;
Do you think the WaterP-ate h . o· earzng ar a od&#13;
thing for the country or a b d h. a t zng?&#13;
photos by Jay Salvo&#13;
Debby Robinson&#13;
Senior , Kenosha&#13;
I think it's a bad thing because&#13;
it weakens the country in&#13;
general. When your leader and&#13;
chief of your country is not doing&#13;
what he should do, and you find&#13;
he is involved in something like&#13;
this, you really don't know who to&#13;
turn to or who to trust.&#13;
Dan Haley&#13;
Freshman, Racine&#13;
I think it's a good thing that&#13;
they're bringing things out into&#13;
the open. In the past few years&#13;
there has been a lot of misuse of&#13;
public offices. Also, they are&#13;
uncovering things that have been&#13;
covered up. It's not detrimental&#13;
to our political structure at all. I&#13;
think it will accomplish a lot.&#13;
Maybe nothing yet, but it will be&#13;
something to look back at in the&#13;
next five or ten years.&#13;
John DeLao&#13;
Junior, Racine&#13;
For myself, it brings out what&#13;
ha~ been happening for quite a while and helps me to understand&#13;
it a little better. It's very important&#13;
to expose people to the&#13;
occ',ll"~nces of such things. They ?0 n t Just happen on television or&#13;
mother countries. It's happening&#13;
here, but aht does not necessarily&#13;
mean that it's prevelant&#13;
throughout our government.&#13;
Cornelius Gordon&#13;
Sophomore, Racine&#13;
On television some parts of it&#13;
seem like a joke. But, they are&#13;
getting to the point where they&#13;
are catching some people in lies.&#13;
Do you think the news coverage&#13;
given hearings will make it les&#13;
likely for those being brought&#13;
to court to get a fair trial?&#13;
Bill Spreeberg&#13;
Junior, Racine Student&#13;
Security Officer&#13;
I don't think it will make any&#13;
difference. The truth is coming&#13;
out and at least the public will&#13;
hear everything about it.&#13;
Through radio and television&#13;
everyone will hear the truth.&#13;
Bill Mears&#13;
Sophomore, Racine&#13;
It shouldn't make any difference.&#13;
It's going to be a public&#13;
trial anyway. It will be covered&#13;
as it is now. People are going to&#13;
find it all out in the papers if they&#13;
don't find out on television.&#13;
Dwight Kirby&#13;
Parkside student, San Francisco&#13;
Making the effect of coverage&#13;
the central issue, I don't see as&#13;
the way to approach it at all. You&#13;
could spend endless amounts of&#13;
time finding different aspects to&#13;
the case that will have an effect&#13;
on how these trials turn out. It'&#13;
belaboring points that even their&#13;
relevence is ambiguou . Then&#13;
you get into all those lit~le stalling&#13;
tactics and nonsense m. tead of&#13;
dealing with central i ue . The&#13;
issues are, who is guilty and what&#13;
has happened. Papers are going&#13;
to do their job just as good and&#13;
just as badly as every_bod)'. el e.&#13;
They will affect the s1tuat1on m&#13;
ational&#13;
poll r al&#13;
feeling&#13;
on hearin&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 5&#13;
It' what'&#13;
happenin&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
read the&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thursday&#13;
evening&#13;
Sept. 13&#13;
All day&#13;
Friday&#13;
Sept. 14&#13;
/;&#13;
Li.Ill!.&#13;
tli.~&#13;
The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Par side&#13;
. ~£~his ;e@itb~&#13;
35&gt;tueet ~boppe&#13;
10 A . . - P . . LlC LO E AIN&#13;
DAILY PLACE (east)&#13;
11 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., sept. 12, 1973&#13;
Volunteers&#13;
make&#13;
rehabilitation&#13;
Editor's note: This week RANGER begins a serialization or a sci-Ii&#13;
novel by a Parkside student.&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
personal utilities. Most likely&#13;
events and facts of your life will&#13;
come back gradually. Because&#13;
you feel weak, I advise you to&#13;
sleep for a while."&#13;
"That would be good," said the&#13;
bald man, putting his fingers on&#13;
his forehead.&#13;
"G&lt;Kx:I. We'll leave you here.&#13;
This is your own room, if you&#13;
don't remember."&#13;
The bald man turned his head&#13;
to watch the two leave. Both had&#13;
plain black clothing, like&#13;
uniforms. The door closed, and&#13;
lbe bald man sat up on lbe table.&#13;
Besides the long table on wbich&#13;
he had lain, lbe room had a single&#13;
bed, a dresser, a table with a&#13;
lamp, and a door leading into a&#13;
small bathroom. Otherwise it&#13;
was plain and undecorated.&#13;
The bald man slid off the table&#13;
and walked to lbe center of lbe&#13;
room. Feet together, arms at his&#13;
sides, and face staring straight&#13;
ahead, he closed his eyes.&#13;
"You will notice," said the man&#13;
at lbe controls, "that lbe subject&#13;
still sleeps in the same manner as&#13;
before the operation."&#13;
The man who had spoken was&#13;
one of lbose who had talked a few&#13;
minutes before wilb the bald&#13;
man. He now sat before a fourteen-inch&#13;
television screen,&#13;
adjusting dials to sharpen lbe&#13;
image. The picture on the screen&#13;
was of the' bald man standing in&#13;
the center of lbe room.&#13;
Three other men were in the&#13;
room watching the screen. All&#13;
wore. the same black uniforms.&#13;
"Doctor Branwood," one of the&#13;
men standing addressed lbe one&#13;
at tbe controls, "if he is sleeping,&#13;
will it be necessary to anesthetize&#13;
him?"&#13;
"Definitely," said the one&#13;
called Branwood. "We do not&#13;
know yet how deeply he sleeps, if&#13;
his present condition can be&#13;
termed 'sleep.' "&#13;
"Jones is' ready with the&#13;
drainer," said one of the men who&#13;
was watching a light on another&#13;
panel.&#13;
"Good," said Branwood. He&#13;
pushed a button. The men could&#13;
see, on the screen, two tablets fan&#13;
from the ceiling and burst open&#13;
into a steamy vapor. At the flick&#13;
of a switch, a fan buzzed into&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
work&#13;
Chapter one&#13;
"He has awakened."&#13;
'This was the first thing the man&#13;
heard when he opened his eyes.&#13;
He was lying on his back, on a&#13;
table. He gazed upward and saw&#13;
two faces, one on each side,&#13;
looking down at him.&#13;
"How are you?" asked one.&#13;
"You were caught in the ex-&#13;
~ plosion. Dr. Green was killed."&#13;
~ The man on lbe table looked&#13;
from one face to the other. He&#13;
~ was garbed in a featureless black&#13;
:J outfit and was completely bald.&#13;
to His lack of hair, however, did not&#13;
en make him look any older than&#13;
lbirty or so.&#13;
The bald man looked confused.&#13;
"What'?" he asked weakly. "I&#13;
don't remember ... any explosion&#13;
...."&#13;
The two faces hovering above&#13;
lbe man on lbe table glanced at&#13;
each olber. Then they looked&#13;
back down.&#13;
"Can you remember your&#13;
name'?" asked one.&#13;
"Your occupation?" asked the&#13;
other.&#13;
"Your age?"&#13;
"Your status?"&#13;
"Your identification number?"&#13;
"Your priority?"&#13;
The bald man blinked at his&#13;
interrogators. Sweat had begun&#13;
to bead on his forehead.&#13;
"No," he said. "Nothing. I&#13;
remember ...nothing."&#13;
Again lbe two men glanced at&#13;
each other. Then one bent closer&#13;
to lbe bald ooe.&#13;
"You have been hurt in an&#13;
explosion. Your associate, Dr.&#13;
Donald Green, was killed by lbe&#13;
blast. You were doing chemical&#13;
research with volatile'&#13;
hydrocarbons when one of lbe&#13;
solutions ignited. You work for&#13;
lbe Canadian government. You,&#13;
I, and twenty-three olbers work&#13;
in this laboratory on Bank's&#13;
Island in northern Canada." The&#13;
man paused for an instant. "Does&#13;
any of this bring back any&#13;
memories?' •&#13;
"No," replied the bald man. "I&#13;
feel so weak. Why is that?"&#13;
"You have been under a great&#13;
emotional strain," said the other.&#13;
"You seem to have almost total&#13;
amnesia. You remember how to&#13;
talk, obviously, and probably how&#13;
to eat, drink, and perform other&#13;
Ragtime Rangers' President Jim Ruffolo&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
feature fun&#13;
by Marilyn Scbubert&#13;
....ke to bicycle, dance, picnic,&#13;
and have run'? U you do,&#13;
Ragbm Rangers might be just&#13;
whal you're looking lor.&#13;
By lar the largest club 00&#13;
campus and probably one 01 lbe&#13;
m.. t ecuve, Ragtime Rangers&#13;
w organized LQ the winter of&#13;
1970.II was lirst organized as a&#13;
ski club, sponsoring Parkside's&#13;
learn in competitioo wilb olber&#13;
UW campuses. Since lben it has&#13;
evolved Into a general outing club&#13;
and has recently merged wilb&#13;
Parkside Activities Board Outing&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Some 01 the activities sponsored&#13;
in coojunction wilb PAB&#13;
and open to all Parkside students&#13;
.nclude a bicycle rally September&#13;
23,a bus trip 10 lbe Ohio State vs&#13;
Wisconsin lootball game October&#13;
13,a road rally October 21 aod a&#13;
weekend outing in Louisville,&#13;
tlend a&#13;
am 01 3-t hour&#13;
t the RaC.nt Oll,ce&#13;
rn, t30l Grand&#13;
b Prtllram will&#13;
y .~,&#13;
ptember It, t8, and 2$ from&#13;
7 ,)(1.10'00 pm Person&amp; rnC&#13;
rId In th ptember&#13;
tralNllll prGIram or lba.e Inled&#13;
In be~ informed of&#13;
llent 10.. are UI1ledto&#13;
/lOIJly lb Racine Off"", 01 Urban&#13;
Concern. 1lJ7''lS15&#13;
Kentucky. Bolb the rallies will&#13;
include free beer, food and a&#13;
party at !be finish. The Louisville&#13;
weekend features a hayride,&#13;
riverboat party. Churchill Downs&#13;
tour, horse racing and a football&#13;
game wilb a party at lbe&#13;
stadium. (For more details,&#13;
contact Student Activities Office&#13;
D-197 lLC or Ragtime Rangers&#13;
President Jim Ruffolo at 551-&#13;
8850).&#13;
In additioo to being an outing&#13;
club, Ragtime Rangers still&#13;
sponsors the Parkside ski team&#13;
and various events of its own. A&#13;
ovember ski fasbioo show, a&#13;
Colorado ski trip over semester&#13;
break, and two weekend ski trips&#13;
are being planned for club&#13;
members.&#13;
DllcOVertn. knowledge II&#13;
yond lIle power 01 tudentll and&#13;
II. in any c_, none01 lbeir&#13;
IlusIn.-&#13;
!rom T c:ltla. u • SO .... I••&#13;
Uvlty&#13;
The ski team has also made&#13;
progress over the year. In the&#13;
first season they won only one&#13;
race. Since then they have won&#13;
three races, finished second in&#13;
two and last year narrowly&#13;
missed placing third in the state&#13;
finals. Last year's team consisted.&#13;
of a men's "A" and a women's&#13;
"A" division. They hope for "B"&#13;
teams in both categories this&#13;
year, as well. According to&#13;
president Jim Ruffolo, "Anyone&#13;
who can ski can race. It doesn't&#13;
even matter if you've never&#13;
raced before. All you need is your&#13;
ski equipment and the desire to&#13;
learn the sport of ski racing, we'll&#13;
do the rest:'&#13;
STEAK&#13;
AT HAMBURGER&#13;
PRICES&#13;
SIRLOiN STRIP STEAK&#13;
RIB.EYE STEAK&#13;
\ T·BO~E STEAK&#13;
\ CHOPPED STEAK&#13;
\ STEAK SANDWICH&#13;
.. '.1[0 CHICI((H&#13;
.. $HllMP PLAnn&#13;
• 'I$H PLATTU&#13;
.. BO'",'U Btll:CER&#13;
• CHILD'S f'UTn:.R&#13;
.. CII£B£8L RCER&#13;
• PIES A"'D OTHER DESSERTS&#13;
,;•&#13;
Half-Price&#13;
Mixed Drinks&#13;
6 P.M. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
TIIURSDA1 NIHTS WITH P.U. 1.1.&#13;
10t Beers&#13;
CAll AHEAD FOR&#13;
OIltDERS TO co&#13;
652-8662&#13;
331.5 .521\4St.. At 34th A"e.&#13;
FELICE SCOZlARO, MGR.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973&#13;
olunt r&#13;
mk&#13;
rk&#13;
ti n&#13;
Editor' note: Thi week RANGER begins a serialization of a sci-fi&#13;
no,·el bJ a Parkside student.&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
Chapter one&#13;
"He has awakened."&#13;
This was the first thing the man&#13;
heard when he opened his eyes.&#13;
-o He was lying on his back, on a&#13;
~ table. He gazed upward and saw&#13;
2- two faces, one on each side, 0 looking down at him. !]° "How are you?" asked one.&#13;
"You were caught in the ex·&#13;
~ plosion. Dr. Green was killed."&#13;
~ The man on the table looked&#13;
from one face to the other. He&#13;
~ was garbed in a featureless black&#13;
::, outfit and was completely bald.&#13;
C'I&gt; His lack or hair, however, did not&#13;
1/1 make him look any older than&#13;
thirty or so. The bald man looked confused.&#13;
personal utilities. Most likely&#13;
events and facts of your life will&#13;
come back gradually. Because&#13;
you feel weak, I advise you to&#13;
sleep for a while."&#13;
"That would be good," said the&#13;
bald man, putting his fingers on&#13;
his forehead.&#13;
"Good. We'll leave you here.&#13;
This is your own room, if you&#13;
don't remember."&#13;
The bald man turned his head&#13;
to watch the two leave. Both had&#13;
plain black clothing, like&#13;
uniforms. The door closed, and&#13;
the bald man sat up on the table.&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
feature fun&#13;
"What? " he asked weakly. "I&#13;
don ' t remember ... any ex·&#13;
plosion .... "&#13;
The two faces hovering above&#13;
the man 6n the table glanced at&#13;
each other. Then they looked&#13;
back down.&#13;
Besides the long table on which&#13;
he had lain, the room had a single&#13;
bed, a dresser, a table with a&#13;
lamp, and a door leading into a&#13;
small bathroom. Otherwise it&#13;
was plain and undecorated.&#13;
The bald man slid off the table&#13;
and walked to the center of the&#13;
room. Feet together, arms at his&#13;
sides, and face staring straight&#13;
ahead, he closed his eyes.&#13;
306 DN91 Strttt&#13;
OLD T N RACINE&#13;
b) !aril '11 hubert&#13;
Kentucky. Both the rallies will&#13;
include free beer, food and a&#13;
parh' at the finish . The Louis ille&#13;
w · end features a hayride,&#13;
riverboat party, Churchill Downs&#13;
tour, horse racing and a football&#13;
game with a party at the&#13;
stadium. (For more details,&#13;
contact Student Activities Office&#13;
D-197 LLC or Ragtime Rangers&#13;
President Jim Ruffolo at 551-&#13;
8850).&#13;
In addition to being an outing&#13;
club, Ragtime Rangers still&#13;
sponsors the Parkside ski team&#13;
and variou.s events of its own. A&#13;
ovember ski fashion show, a&#13;
Colorado ski trip over semester&#13;
break, and two weekend ski trips&#13;
are being planned for club&#13;
members.&#13;
The ski team has also made&#13;
progress over the year. In the&#13;
first season they won only one&#13;
race. Since then they have won&#13;
three races, finished second in&#13;
two and last year narrowly&#13;
missed placing third in the state&#13;
finals. Last year's team consisted&#13;
of a men's "A" and a women's&#13;
"A" division. They hope for "B"&#13;
teams in both categories this&#13;
year, as well. According to&#13;
president Jim Ruffolo, "Anyone&#13;
·ho can ki can race. It doesn't&#13;
even matter if you've never&#13;
raced before. All you need is your&#13;
ki equipment and the desire to&#13;
learn the sport of ski racing, we'll&#13;
do the re t. "&#13;
STEAK&#13;
AT HAMBURGER&#13;
PRICES&#13;
• fll 10 ClllCl((H&#13;
• SHU P PLATTH&#13;
• flSH PLATTER&#13;
• ao, .\ Z.A. &amp;l RCER&#13;
"Can you remember your&#13;
name?" asked one.&#13;
' 'Your occupation?" asked the&#13;
other. "Your age?"&#13;
"Your status?"&#13;
"Your identification nwnber?"&#13;
"Your priority?"&#13;
The bald man blinked at his&#13;
interrogators. Sweat had begoo&#13;
to bead on his forehead.&#13;
"No," he said. "Nothing. I&#13;
remember ... nothing."&#13;
Again the two men glanced at&#13;
each other. Then one bent closer&#13;
to the bald one.&#13;
"You have been hurt in an&#13;
explosion. Your associate, Dr.&#13;
Donald Green, was killed by the&#13;
blast. You were doing chemical&#13;
research with volatile&#13;
hydrocarbons when one of the&#13;
solutions ignited. You work for&#13;
the Canadian government. You,&#13;
I, and twenty-three others work&#13;
in this laboratory on Bank's&#13;
Island in northern Canada." The&#13;
man paused for an instant. "Does&#13;
any of this bring back any&#13;
memories?"&#13;
"No," replied the bald man. "I&#13;
feel so weak. Why is that?"&#13;
"You have been under a great&#13;
emotional strain," said the other.&#13;
"You seem to have almost total&#13;
amnesia You remember how to&#13;
talk, obviously, and probably how&#13;
to eat, drink, and perform other&#13;
"You will notice," said the man&#13;
at the controls, "that the subject&#13;
still sleeps in the same manner as&#13;
before the operation."&#13;
The man who had spoken was&#13;
one of those who had talked a few&#13;
minutes before with the bald&#13;
man. He now sat before a fourteen-inch&#13;
television screen,&#13;
adjusting dials to sharpen the&#13;
image. The picture on the screen&#13;
was of the' bald man standing in&#13;
the center of the room.&#13;
Three other men were in the&#13;
room watching the screen. All&#13;
wore the same black uniforms.&#13;
"Doctor Branwood," one of the&#13;
men standing addressed the one&#13;
at the controls, "if he is sleeping,&#13;
will it be necessary to anesthetize&#13;
him?"&#13;
"Definitely," said the one&#13;
called Branwood. "We do not&#13;
know yet how deeply he sleeps, if&#13;
his present condition can be&#13;
termed 'sleep.' "&#13;
"Jones is ready with the&#13;
drainer," said one of the men who&#13;
was watching a light on another&#13;
panel.&#13;
"Good," said Branwood. He&#13;
pushed a button. The men could&#13;
see, on the screen, two tablets fall&#13;
from the ceiling and burst open&#13;
into a steamy vapor. At the flick&#13;
of a switch, a fan buzzed into&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
10t Beer Hall-Price&#13;
ixecl Drinks&#13;
HT&#13;
• CHILD ' Pl TTl:R&#13;
• cua EB R ER&#13;
• Pl ,n OTHER OC, CRTS&#13;
ID&#13;
P.U. I.D.&#13;
CALL AHEAO FOR&#13;
ORDERS TO CO&#13;
652-8662&#13;
331 S 52114 St . At 34th An.&#13;
FELICE SCOUARO. MGR &#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
The Raven&#13;
No.10&#13;
The Guess Who&#13;
RCA(APl1·0130l&#13;
"Take it off of My Shoulders," as the introduction to No. 10, is different&#13;
from the last few Guess Who album openers because it is not a&#13;
hard rocker. " ...Shoulders" is a country rooted tune and adds yet&#13;
another perfected style to the list of the wide variety of styles that the&#13;
Guess Who have already done with excellence. Another basically&#13;
country number that is included on No.lO is "Lie Down."&#13;
Hard rockers are still a foremost part of the Guess Who entity&#13;
however. "Musicione' " is a hard, thick boogie that ascends into th~&#13;
clouds in a stair climbing fashion and then settles down over "nor-.»&#13;
thern waters." To be found not far away is "Miss Frizzy," a good time,&#13;
good levin' rocker. "Self Pity" goes through a couple of verses as a&#13;
funky rocker then gives way to a brief orchestration that sounds likeNa&#13;
Na, Na Na, Na Na- followed by a psychedelic patch of "mystery&#13;
train fever," and then it repeats the cycle. Also of noble interest is a&#13;
rock-drama presentation entitled "Cardboard Empire" that hits us in&#13;
the faces with a chorus of "who are the people that you think are?"&#13;
I consider the Guess Who lyrically genius as well as musically&#13;
brilliant. I cannot help but identify myself with Burton Cummings'&#13;
emotional singing and all of the rest that is part of his aura. Burton&#13;
Cummings does what he wants when he wants to because he is tough&#13;
and he knows it because he tells himself so 20 times a day. But watch&#13;
out if you happen to forget the 19th, man it's instant nervous breakdown.&#13;
Egotists like Burton Cummings and myself, in order to alleviate&#13;
insecurity, try to get attention by doing such things as singing in rock&#13;
bands and writing record reviews (respectively, of course). We have&#13;
many beliefs and some often contradict each other like natural living&#13;
and drug taking.&#13;
The root of insecurity may be explained as a sort of "Death&#13;
Consciousness." This feeling is revealed frequently in many of the&#13;
Guess Who's lyrics (old and new), and such songs inserted ra-ndomly&#13;
in the midst of present consciousness songs, accurately portray a life&#13;
cycle that even further pressures my identification with Burton&#13;
Cummings.&#13;
One may realize possibilities for reaching tbe top of life's success&#13;
scale but may also think that by the time be gets there it's almost over.&#13;
One realizing this will probably know that any life time is but a grain&#13;
of sand in the vast desert of eternity. Still one being confused with&#13;
eternal concepts will probably try to elude the idea .by becoming absorbed&#13;
with noWconcerns- But still the feeling comes back like a dark&#13;
Shadow clutching at the back of your brain and the feeling is best&#13;
expressed in Burt's chorus of "Who makes the music when you die?"&#13;
which is from "Musicione."&#13;
Then the cycle may take a retrospective glance as in "Self Pity," a&#13;
spotty sketch of Burton Cummings' life. Now I bear him say that he&#13;
never got into rockin' " 'till somebody's singing Not Fade Away." Hey&#13;
man! He must be talking about Mick Jagger. Wow, just like me except&#13;
I never became a dedicated Stones' freak 'till I was zapped with&#13;
"Mothers Little Helper." Then he goes on with "If you were a lizard&#13;
then you might gone" which is a pertinent comment on Jim Morrison.&#13;
And finally he comes up with "Why mother water are the days all&#13;
gone," calling forth visions of the great unisex god, Br~an Jon~s.&#13;
Now back to the point, if there is one. What is the WISestthing to do,&#13;
forget about tomorrow and enjoy today, or screw up today worrying&#13;
about tomorrow? Someone says Christianity is where the answer ISat.&#13;
Read your bible, take a little blind faith, and the Holy Spirit will fill&#13;
your&#13;
Well, blind faith sounds like self-hypnotism. .,&#13;
Besides, all of this is old hat and everyone knows that Go~ ISmass~ve&#13;
charges of collected energy and the w.a~ to get to heaven IS by having&#13;
120volts of electric acupuncture administered through the lower part&#13;
of the ear lobes. . , I&#13;
Seriously now, let's make a deal. If you find out what truth IS you I&#13;
tell me and if! find out I'll tell you.&#13;
Aw forget it we probably wouldn't believe each other anyway.&#13;
Religi~n is an' infectious psychological disease and .should be&#13;
recognized as such by the individual so he may cure hlms~lf and&#13;
proceed to enjoy hi~self.. Y~ur mind is your own and you can t go to&#13;
hell if you don't believe 10 It. , b&#13;
Meanwhile, if you happen to rob a bank, make s~e don t gra any&#13;
ransom notes because this is all part of the game of life.&#13;
•&#13;
The Psychic&#13;
operation, sucking the gas out of&#13;
the room.&#13;
The young fellow pushing the&#13;
weird apparatus down the hall&#13;
appeared very composed. But&#13;
underneath, he was nervous.&#13;
Sweat glistened on his face in the&#13;
artificial lights, and his eyes&#13;
avoided the upper corners of the&#13;
hall where television cameras&#13;
peered down at him at intervals.&#13;
The contraption he pushed was&#13;
set on a wheeled table. It consisted&#13;
of a black cube adorned&#13;
with thin tubes. From the center&#13;
of one face ran a corrugated hose,&#13;
like that of a vacuum cleaner. It&#13;
was flexible and the same dull&#13;
color as the box. At the end of the&#13;
tube was a bowl, shaped as if to&#13;
fit a human skull.&#13;
In a small tray were a dozen&#13;
capsules of shiny metal, two&#13;
inches long and half an inch&#13;
thick. These were fit one at a time&#13;
into the proper aperature on the&#13;
black cube, Jones knew.&#13;
The machine was an energy&#13;
storer. It could store heat, light,&#13;
sound, and, in this case, mental&#13;
energy. Jones had done it before,&#13;
sapping mind power from the&#13;
bald man when he was unconscious.&#13;
Only this time a different kind&#13;
of operation was planned.&#13;
Jones opened the door. The&#13;
bald man stood motionless. He&#13;
wheeled the cart inside the room.&#13;
Jones put his hand to the&#13;
machine as if to make a&#13;
preliminary adjustment. He&#13;
reached under the top platform of&#13;
the cart and clicked a switch.&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
continued from page 6&#13;
Inside the control room, wbere&#13;
U1efour men were watching the&#13;
proceedings, the screen went&#13;
fuzzy. Branwood twisted dials,&#13;
but received no response.&#13;
Jones rushed to the bald man's&#13;
side, and held a small vial under&#13;
his nose. The hald man grunted&#13;
and opened his eyes.&#13;
"Listen! It said Jones urgently.&#13;
"You were robbed of your&#13;
memory purposely. The men you&#13;
talked to are your enemies. ow&#13;
listen!" Jones emphasized what&#13;
he said next. "You can do things&#13;
with your mind. Look at lhat&#13;
lamp." He pointed.&#13;
The bald man looked.&#13;
"You can destroy it by thinking&#13;
properly. Think. Concentrate!&#13;
Destroy the lamp!"&#13;
The bald man's forehead&#13;
wrinkled. He gazed at the lamp.&#13;
It popped and fell to pieces.&#13;
" ow come on," said Jones.&#13;
"There is one man you must&#13;
destroy, or at least put out of&#13;
action. Come on! If he finds&#13;
you're loose, he can put you right&#13;
back were you were!"&#13;
Jones led the bald man down a&#13;
curved hallway. The two ran side&#13;
by side.&#13;
«He's called 'Big X,'" said&#13;
Jones. "He's behind this whole&#13;
thing. He's trying to use your&#13;
menta] abilities to take over the&#13;
world! Here. Behind this door'"&#13;
The two had come to a broad,&#13;
rivet-studded door. They slopped.&#13;
Jones hit the door with his&#13;
palms. "But how-."&#13;
"Stand back," said the bald&#13;
man.&#13;
~Bill Sanders&#13;
to lecture here&#13;
"An editorial cartoonist should&#13;
be like a horsefly on the back of&#13;
public officials", says William&#13;
Willard Sanders, The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal's ornery and unorthodox&#13;
house cartoonist.&#13;
With that view of his job, and&#13;
with a graphic style suited to&#13;
driving it home, Sanders, 40, has&#13;
huilt a solid reputation among&#13;
readers of the Journal and 50&#13;
other newspapers that take his&#13;
syndicated cartoons, as a horsefly&#13;
whose stinging bite rivals&#13;
that of Herblock. "Sanders'&#13;
keenly honed editorial commentaries,"&#13;
the Saturday&#13;
Review said, "can make the&#13;
opposition gag onils breakfast."&#13;
His reputation for striking out&#13;
in all directions suits Sanders just&#13;
fine. "The serious editorial&#13;
cartoonists generally defy orthodox&#13;
classification," he says.&#13;
To Sanders, the generally divided&#13;
reaction to his cartoons shows&#13;
that his opinions are striking&#13;
home. "I believe," he says, "an&#13;
editorial cartoonist should be just&#13;
that: first an editorialist and&#13;
second a cartoonist. The only&#13;
special quality about us is that we&#13;
can draw. A good cartoonist&#13;
should damn well be able to write&#13;
a good editorial."&#13;
Sanders will be speaking here&#13;
on Wednesday, Sept. 19 at 8 p.m.&#13;
in GR 103. Tbe title of his talk will&#13;
be: "Run for tbe Oval Room,&#13;
They Can't Corner Us There!"&#13;
His lecture is free.&#13;
~Jf' TME UN'VERSITYOF .'SCQHSIN&#13;
... RKSIDE&#13;
WINTER BREAK&#13;
- JAN. 2-10.&#13;
S269 P'.'I1O ........ «e&#13;
84IS«I on 3 to. Room&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
• '2 DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETING&#13;
• GRO "'0 TRANSFER&#13;
• TOUR HOST SERVICES&#13;
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Rw E1ppl,cafoan lo'm&#13;
• CAMPUS TIilAVEL CENTIER&#13;
Jones did so.&#13;
The bald man tared Intently at&#13;
the door. In one spot a hole appeared,&#13;
The metal around it&#13;
turned Iiqwd and dnpped to the&#13;
floor. The hole stretched until il&#13;
was large enough for a man to&#13;
step through.&#13;
"I'll go first," said the bald&#13;
man. He stepped Inside. Jones&#13;
followed.&#13;
No one was inside the offlcelike&#13;
room&#13;
"I felt a presence within just&#13;
before I opened the door. Tbere&#13;
may be a hidden extt." Tbe bald&#13;
man looked around tbe room,&#13;
finally focusing atlention on one&#13;
part of a wall. He moved closer.&#13;
"I sense a deep hollown ." he&#13;
said. He put his hands on the wall.&#13;
"Certain mechanisms," he&#13;
mused aloud, "which I can&#13;
controL .."&#13;
A panel lid upwards. A long,&#13;
seemingly endless tunnel was&#13;
revealed&#13;
"Big X probably wenl in here, II&#13;
said Jones.&#13;
"We will enter the tunnel As&#13;
we go, you will explain exaclly&#13;
what Lhe circumstances concerning&#13;
myself and my condiuon&#13;
are. Come."&#13;
Together, the two walked into&#13;
the tunnel and were consumed by&#13;
the gloom.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
....&#13;
~&#13;
.... en -=&#13;
:z- en :z- ::Ia !!to ~&#13;
-=&#13;
= "'" -:II:&#13;
CJ&#13;
...&#13;
-&#13;
....&#13;
CD&#13;
.... --&#13;
en&#13;
CD&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
..&#13;
Wed., Sept. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
No. 10&#13;
The Guess Who&#13;
RCACAPL 1-0130)&#13;
"Take it off of My Shoulders," as the introduction to No. 10, is different&#13;
from the last few Guess Who album openers because it is not a&#13;
hard rocker. " ... Shoulders" is a country rooted tune and adds yet&#13;
another perfected style to the list of the wide variety of styles that the&#13;
Guess Who have already done with excellence. Another basically country number that is included on No. 10 is "Lie Down."&#13;
Hard rockers are still a foremost part of the Guess Who entity, however. "Musicione' " is a hard, thick boogie that ascends into the&#13;
clouds in a stair climbing fashion and then settles down over "nor- •&#13;
thern waters." To be found not far away is "Miss Frizzy," a good time,&#13;
good lovin' rocker. "Self Pity" goes through a couple of verses as a&#13;
funky rocker then gives way to a brief orchestration that sounds like -&#13;
Na Na, Na Na, Na Na- followed by a psychedelic patch of "mystery&#13;
train fever," and then it repeats the cycle. Also of noble interest is a&#13;
rock-drama presentation entitled "Cardboard Empire" that hits us in&#13;
the faces with a chorus.of "who are the people that you think are?"&#13;
I consider the Guess Who lyrically genius as well as musically&#13;
brilliant. I cannot help but identify myself with Burton Cummings'&#13;
emotional singing and all of the rest that is part of his aura. Burton&#13;
Cummings does what he wants when he wants to because he is tough&#13;
and he knows it because he tells himself so 20 times a day. But watch&#13;
out if you happen to forget the 19th, man it's instant nervous breakdown.&#13;
&#13;
Egotists like Burton Cummings and myself, in order to alleviate&#13;
insecurity, try to get attention by doing such things as singing in rock&#13;
bands and writing record reviews (respectively, of course). We have&#13;
many beliefs and some often contradict each other like natural living&#13;
and drug taking.&#13;
The root of insecurity may be explained as a sort of "Death&#13;
Consciousness." This feeling is revealed frequently in many of the&#13;
Guess Who's lyrics (old and new), and such songs inserted randomly&#13;
in the midst of present consciousness songs, accurately portray a life&#13;
cycle that even further pressures my identification with Burton&#13;
Cummings.&#13;
The Psychic&#13;
operation, sucking the gas out of&#13;
the room.&#13;
The young fellow pushing the&#13;
weird apparatus down the hall&#13;
appeared very composed. But&#13;
underneath, he was nervous.&#13;
Sweat glistened on his face in the&#13;
artificial lights, and his eyes&#13;
avoided the upper corners of the&#13;
hall where television cameras&#13;
peered down at him at intervals.&#13;
The contraption he pushed was&#13;
set on a wheeled table. It consisted&#13;
of a black cube adorned&#13;
with thin tubes. From the center&#13;
of one face ran a corrugated hose,&#13;
like that of a vacuum cleaner. It&#13;
was flexible and the same dull&#13;
color as the box. At the end of the&#13;
tube was a bowl, shaped as if to&#13;
fit a human skull.&#13;
In a small tray were a dozen&#13;
capsules of shiny metal, two&#13;
inches long and half an inch&#13;
thick . These were fit one at a time&#13;
into the proper aperature on the&#13;
black cube, Jones knew.&#13;
The machine was an energy&#13;
storer. It could store heat, light, sound, and, in this case, mental&#13;
energy. Jones had done it before, sapping mind power from the&#13;
bald man when he was un- conscious.&#13;
Only this time a different kind&#13;
of operation was planned.&#13;
Jones opened the door. The&#13;
bald man stood motionless. He&#13;
wheeled the cart inside the room. Jones put his hand to the&#13;
machine as if to make a preliminary adjustment. He&#13;
reached under the top platform of&#13;
the cart and clicked a switch.&#13;
continued from page 6&#13;
In ide the control room. wh r&#13;
the four men were watching th&#13;
proceedings, the een w nt&#13;
fuzzy. Branwood twi ted dial .&#13;
but received no respon .&#13;
Jone ru hed to the bald man '&#13;
side, and held a mall ial und&#13;
hi nose. The bald man grunted&#13;
and opened his eye .&#13;
"Li ten ." said Jones urgentl . "You were robbed of our&#13;
memory purpo el •. The men ou&#13;
talked to are your enemies. , ·ow&#13;
listen !" Jones emphasized ·hat&#13;
he said next. "You can do thing&#13;
'w;th vour mind. Loo at that&#13;
lamp_;, He pointed.&#13;
The bald man looked.&#13;
"You can destroy it by thinking&#13;
properly. Think. Concentrate . Destroy the lamp!.,&#13;
The bald man ' forehead&#13;
wrinkled. He gazed at the lamp.&#13;
It popped and fell to piec .&#13;
' '. ow come on.'' said Jones.&#13;
"There is one man you mu t&#13;
destroy, or at least put out of&#13;
action. Come on ! If he finds&#13;
you're loose, he can pu you right&#13;
back were you were ."&#13;
Jones led the bald man down a curved hallway. The two ran ide&#13;
by side.&#13;
"He's called Big X, ' " said&#13;
Jones. "He's behind this whole&#13;
thing. He's trying to use your&#13;
mental abilities to take over the&#13;
world . Here. Behind this door'"&#13;
The two had come to a broad,&#13;
rivet-studded door. They stopped. Jones hit the door with his&#13;
palms. "But how-"&#13;
"Stand back," said the bald&#13;
man.&#13;
One may realize possibilities for reaching the top of life's success&#13;
scale but may also think that by the time he gets there it's almost over.&#13;
One realizing this will probably know that any life time is but a grain&#13;
of sand in the vast desert of eternity. Still one being confused with&#13;
eternal concepts will probably try to elude the idea _by becoming absorbed&#13;
with now concerns:' But still the feeling comes back like a dark&#13;
shadow clutching at the back of your brain and the feeling is best&#13;
expressed in Bures chorus of "Who makes the music when you die-? "&#13;
which is from "Musicione."&#13;
Then the cycle may take a retrospective glance as in "Self Pity," a&#13;
spotty sketch of Burton Cummings' life. Now I hear him say that he&#13;
never got into rockin' " 'till somebody's singing Not Fade Away. " Hey&#13;
man! He must be talking abol.¢ Mick Jagger. Wow, just like me except&#13;
I never became a dedicated Stones' freak 'till I was zapped with&#13;
"Mothers Little Helper." Then he goes on with " If you were a lizard&#13;
then you might gone" which is a pertinent comment on Jim Morrison.&#13;
And finally he comes up with "Why mother water are the days all&#13;
gone," calling forth visions of the great unisex god, Brian Jones.&#13;
I Bill . Sanders&#13;
to lecture here&#13;
Now back to the point, if there is one. What is the wisest thing to do,&#13;
forget about tomorrow and enjoy today, or screw up today worrying&#13;
about tomorrow? Someone says Christianity is where the answer is at.&#13;
Read your bible, take a little blind faith, and the Holy Spirit will fill&#13;
your&#13;
Well, blind faith sounds like self-hypnotism. . . Besides, all of this is old hat and everyone knows that Go? is mass~ve&#13;
charges of collected energy and the way to get to heaven 1s by havmg&#13;
120 volts of electric acupuncture administered through the lower part&#13;
of the ear lobes. h · 'll Seriously now, let's make a deal. If you find out what trut 1s you&#13;
tell me and if I find out I'll tell you. Aw forget it we probably wouldn't believe each other anyway.&#13;
Religi~n is an' infectious psychological disease and _should be&#13;
recognized as such by the individua! so he may cure h1ms~lf and&#13;
proceed to enjoy himself. Your mind 1s your own and you can t go to&#13;
hell if you don't believe in it. , Meanwhile, if you happen to rob a bank, make s~e don t grab any&#13;
ransom notes because this is all part of the game of life.&#13;
" An editorial cartoonist should&#13;
be like a horsefly on the back of&#13;
public officials", says William&#13;
Willard Sanders, The Milwaukee&#13;
Journal's ornery and unorthodox&#13;
house cartoonist.&#13;
With that view of his job, and&#13;
with a graphic style suited to&#13;
driving it home, Sanders, 40, has&#13;
huilt a solid reputation among&#13;
readers of the Journal and 50&#13;
other newspapers that take his&#13;
syndicated cartoons, as a horsefly&#13;
whose stinging bite rivals&#13;
that of Herbloclt. " Sanders'&#13;
keenly honed editorial commentaries.&#13;
" the Saturday&#13;
Review said, "can make the&#13;
opposition gag on its breakfast. "&#13;
His reputation for striking out&#13;
in all directions suits anders just&#13;
fine. " The serious editorial&#13;
cartoonists generally defy orthodox&#13;
classification," he ays.&#13;
To Sanders, the generally divided&#13;
reaction to his cartoons show&#13;
that his opinions are striking&#13;
home. "I believe," he says, "an&#13;
editorial cartoonist should be just&#13;
TheUNION&#13;
Wed., Fri., . &amp; Sun.&#13;
[ SEPT. 12, 14, 15, 16&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(fo rmerly Shokey's}&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
that: first an editorialist and&#13;
second a cartoonist. The only&#13;
special quality about us is that we&#13;
can draw. A good cartooni t&#13;
should damn well be able to write&#13;
a good editorial."&#13;
Sanders will be peaking here&#13;
on\ edne day. Sept. 19 t 8 p.m.&#13;
in GR 103. Th title of hi talk will&#13;
be : "Run for th o,·al Room,&#13;
They Can't orner Th r . "&#13;
His lecture i free.&#13;
\ I tTER BREAK&#13;
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$269 P vs S20 Tax &amp;. ~v c&#13;
Based on 3 o a Room&#13;
• ROt.; , D TRIP JET&#13;
• i :",IGHT 'TRIGGER&#13;
WET&#13;
• l1t DAY CITY TO 'R&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETI~G • GROU. ·o TR :'&lt; FERS&#13;
• TOUR HO T ERVICE&#13;
• ALL TIPS T XE&#13;
• Fbr apptica ion rm&#13;
. Cil.MPUS TRAVEL CE TE~&#13;
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I. A&#13;
acll.• &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12. 1973&#13;
Fencing hegins&#13;
soon&#13;
Soon the clashing of foils will be&#13;
heard in the Athletic Building as&#13;
the Parks ide fencing learn&#13;
prepares for another season.&#13;
Some of you students who read&#13;
yoW' home town newspapers&#13;
probably know of past su"",,""';&#13;
the team has had in previous&#13;
season~'.This year should be just&#13;
as excrttng.&#13;
With students gradualing&#13;
or. transrerring to other&#13;
uruversitles, there have been&#13;
opening positlons created on the&#13;
team. If fencing sounds interesting&#13;
to you, why not give it a&#13;
try. You might Uke it and become&#13;
another successful Parkside&#13;
fencer.&#13;
U interested, stop over to the&#13;
office of athletles and see Loran&#13;
Hein, he'll be happy to talk to&#13;
you.&#13;
Track meeting&#13;
Thursday&#13;
There wUl be an Important&#13;
meetll1ll for all people interested&#13;
in trying out for the track or&#13;
worn n' cross-ccuntr y team.&#13;
Th meeting wlJl be held in the&#13;
upstairs lounge of the P.E.&#13;
BUIldIng on Thursday September&#13;
13th, at 3:45 p.m. ff you cannot&#13;
attend tlus m ting, please get in&#13;
touch WIth Bob Lawson (553-&#13;
2153)&#13;
__________ RANGERsports-...J&#13;
Intramural sports&#13;
• •&#13;
SIgn-UpS In process&#13;
bowling are encouraged to sign&#13;
up (or the Parkside Intramural&#13;
League. Bowling will be every&#13;
Friday afternoon at 4:00 p.m, at&#13;
the Surf Bowl (on Hwy. 32 between&#13;
Kenosha and Racine)&#13;
starting Oct. 5. Interested&#13;
bowlers should try to form a team&#13;
(4 men and 4 women or mixed),&#13;
or sign up individually and be&#13;
assigned to a team. Bowling will&#13;
be based on a handicap system,&#13;
so the more experienced bowlers&#13;
will not have a big advantage.&#13;
Cost will be $1.50 per session.&#13;
Sign up at the PE Center or at the&#13;
Surf Bowl.&#13;
Sports enthusiasts should start&#13;
preparing themselves for a big&#13;
month of activities in October.&#13;
Championship tournaments will&#13;
be held in four sports: Golf,&#13;
Tennis, Archery, and Paddleball.&#13;
Sign-up sheets will be up shortly -&#13;
read the RANGER for more&#13;
information on these events and&#13;
watch the bulletin boards at the&#13;
PE Center.&#13;
For information on any intramural&#13;
activity contact Jim&#13;
Koch at the PE Center, ext. 2267.&#13;
Men interested in playing touch&#13;
football this fall should sign up&#13;
now, as the action starts next&#13;
Wednesday. September 19. Entry&#13;
blanks for teams are available at&#13;
the Physical Education Center.&#13;
Team Captains are asked to&#13;
complete the entry blanks and&#13;
return them before Monday,&#13;
September 17. Games will be&#13;
played from t2:30 to 1:30 daily.&#13;
Each team will play once a week&#13;
and possibly twice. Individuals&#13;
who are not on a team may sign&#13;
up at the PE Center and will be&#13;
assigned to a team.&#13;
Women interested in playing on&#13;
a touch football team are invited&#13;
to play with the Parkside&#13;
Powderpuff football team. The&#13;
team will practice once or twice a&#13;
week and then play some of the&#13;
other women's teams in the area.&#13;
Interested women sbould atlend&#13;
an organizational meeting&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 13, at 12:30, in&#13;
room 137 of the PE Building, or&#13;
contact Coach Vic Godfrey, ext.&#13;
2310.&#13;
Men and women interested in&#13;
R GER BEAR GOES AFRO! - Parksl&lt;lo's Ronger Bear bas gono&#13;
Afro! The Jcbool'J masc.ot. a pai.Dted OIl a wall in Rudy Collum's&#13;
ofllco III Illo Pby leal EdueaUon BuIIdlng. Is sbown here wilb&#13;
lie ketball u Itlanl Collum (Ie/I) ond bead coacb Seeve Stepbens&#13;
.... 01 whom are hoping tbat No. 13 might prove a lucky omen ,0:-&#13;
Park.alde cage fortunes th.lI year. The modificatioa is not an olncial&#13;
&lt;:bongo. lboul!&gt;.&#13;
NowAppeartng&#13;
IP.M.1O t A.M.&#13;
yUIU""'O Y-FRIDAY ·SAnJRI)AY&#13;
In ....&#13;
MARlNAROQM&#13;
"COLD DUCK"&#13;
AI ..&#13;
IGHTI.Y ENTERTAINME T&#13;
I" OUr Cocklall L~&#13;
FHl\1tlng&#13;
,...... "1 ... 1ttleplano&#13;
COLLEGE NlTE&#13;
Every Thunday&#13;
Plt&lt;:berof&#13;
Beef $1.00&#13;
wlttllO&#13;
of KMOSha&#13;
51256th Ave.&#13;
Overtootl.lng ttte Harbor!&#13;
Rugby Ball&#13;
Sat. Sept, 15&#13;
1st Home Game&#13;
followed by Dance&#13;
Parhidl Y.S. Ueiy. 01 Morthen III. 2:00 p.lII.&#13;
Athletic Field On Wood Rd.&#13;
Daeel IlaurieR TAG 9:00 - 12:45 p.••&#13;
Price $1.50 Parkslde 1.0. Required.&#13;
UW-P Ruggers&#13;
m tourney •&#13;
Labor Day weekend saw three&#13;
members of the Parkside Rugby&#13;
football club traveling to Windsor,&#13;
Ontario to participate in the&#13;
fourth annual Bordererts International&#13;
Rugby Tournament.&#13;
Ernie Llanas, Keith Bosman,&#13;
and Tom Bergo combined with a&#13;
team from Buffalo, New York to&#13;
advance to the semi-finals in the&#13;
26 team tournament before being&#13;
defeated. Llanas and Bosman&#13;
scored decisive trys in two of the&#13;
teams victories.&#13;
Parkside's first home game is&#13;
this Saturday when the&#13;
University of Northern Illinois&#13;
comes to Parkside for combat.&#13;
The game will be on the wood&#13;
road field and starts at 2 p.m.&#13;
Later in the evening the Rugby&#13;
Club will sponsor their second&#13;
annual Rugby Ball at the student&#13;
activities building with music by&#13;
Tag.&#13;
COMING&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
HERE&#13;
SEPT. 30. 1973&#13;
Tickets at&#13;
INFO. CENTER&#13;
(Main Place.-LLC)&#13;
( Spclflsored by P ABl&#13;
Booters defeat&#13;
Alumni 5-2&#13;
The youthful Parkside soccer&#13;
team, starting six freshmen,&#13;
initiated the 1973 Varsity&#13;
schedule by defeating an Alumni&#13;
team 5-2 in the First Annual&#13;
Parkside vs. Alumni soccer&#13;
match on the local Wood Road&#13;
field. Led by newly-elected&#13;
Captain, Junior Rick Lechusz of&#13;
Milwaukee, the Rangers showed&#13;
spurts of cohesiveness that Coach&#13;
Henderson is seeking to establish&#13;
by opening 'day,&#13;
SCoring for the Rangers were&#13;
Lechusz, Dieter Keifer (the only&#13;
Senior on the squad), Ray&#13;
Phanturat (Junior)," Mike&#13;
Kopczynski (Sophomore), and a&#13;
self-made goal by the Alumni&#13;
defense on a scuffle in front of the&#13;
net. Stan Markovic (a 1971&#13;
graduate) scored both goals for&#13;
the Alumni, as they battled the&#13;
younger Rangers to a 2·2&#13;
stalemate at halftime. However,&#13;
the everyday practice of the&#13;
younger Varsity began to show in&#13;
the second half as they pressured&#13;
the veterans with greater consistency.&#13;
In an attempt to find a positive&#13;
combination of younger and more&#13;
experienced players from the&#13;
returning eight lettermen, Coach&#13;
Henderson experimented and&#13;
freely substituted during the&#13;
second half, thereby getting a&#13;
better and longer look at many of&#13;
the 22 man squad now practicing&#13;
daily.&#13;
In hopes of finding the&#13;
strongest line-up for opening day,&#13;
scrimmages have been set up&#13;
with several of the stronger&#13;
amateur teams in the Milwaukee&#13;
area. The Rangers open athorne&#13;
on Wednesday, Sept. 19, at 3 p.rn.&#13;
against Lewis College from Lockport,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Sports shorts&#13;
Swimmen and Diven Needed!&#13;
Men and women who are interested in&#13;
swimming or diving, should contact Barb&#13;
LaWSOl'l in the P.E. Building, or Tom eercoswim&#13;
club presldenf. 654-6789. Your interest&#13;
will be greatly appreciated,&#13;
Hockey Club Meeting&#13;
Tomorrow!&#13;
Anyone interested in joining Parksides&#13;
Hockey Club, should attend this meeting&#13;
which will be held at 7:00 p.m. In the P,E.&#13;
Building. On the Agenda will be a dlscutsion&#13;
about the new hockey rink, schedules,&#13;
returning and new players, Anyone Who Is&#13;
not able to attend can get in touch with Vic&#13;
Godfrey, ext. 2310.&#13;
A Arl $u,,/ill&#13;
;JRICKSONIS COLOR CRAFT&#13;
I I~\ 3214 Washington Ave. ~ ,&#13;
Racine, 632-4162 ' r"~~/l.&#13;
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Complete Line . f"&#13;
FRAMING,G~~,&amp;MA'ITING - ~,{ ~c&#13;
lTime&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
When you own a condominium, more time for relaxation and&#13;
entertaining _re included in the sales price. Someone else&#13;
~k8S.care of,dle lawn, does the exterior maintenance and&#13;
~m wlntef, will do the Inow showli",. Ask the folltl who&#13;
hve there, nodli"g'l easier than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24.500 to $27 000&#13;
Nll~h:.fir~t Bir~h:OOd Townhouses sold quickly and mure art under construction '&#13;
• A.i. ~~~:"in anch Stylt ho~es ale ready and they alll great values, too. Salt~ pricts include:&#13;
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Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends'l to 5&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE '-;-552-9339&#13;
", PARK5IDE REALTY INL&#13;
, Oe_JcPO&lt;l and Huollbv U s. G.~... I.I'I&lt;.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 12, 1973&#13;
F n in&#13;
n&#13;
h gin&#13;
RANGER&#13;
OU&#13;
'I&#13;
___________ Sports __&#13;
Intramural sports&#13;
• • sign-ups zn process&#13;
top ver to the&#13;
and Lor&#13;
ppy to tal to&#13;
tin&#13;
1URD y&#13;
Al10&#13;
.'T&#13;
Rugby Ball&#13;
1 n and women intere ted in&#13;
COLLEGE ITE&#13;
Evwy Thu~ey&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beef St.oo With ID&#13;
of l(enoshe&#13;
Sll56th Ave&#13;
Overl00k1ng the Harbor•&#13;
pt. IS&#13;
1 tHomeGame&#13;
followed by Dance&#13;
Parkside Y.S. U1i,. of Nortltern Ill. 2:00 p.111.&#13;
thletic Field on Wood Rd.&#13;
Da ce feat1ri1g TAG 9:00 - 12:45p.&#13;
Price 1.50 Par id J.D. Required.&#13;
bowling are encouraged to sign&#13;
up for the Parkside Intramural&#13;
League. Bowling will be every&#13;
Friday afternoon at 4:00 p.m. at&#13;
the Surf Bowl (on Hwy. 32 between&#13;
Kenosha and Racine )&#13;
tarting Oct. 5. Interested&#13;
bowlers should try to form a team&#13;
(4 men and 4 women or mixed),&#13;
or sign up individually and be&#13;
assigned to a team. Bowling will&#13;
be based on a handicap system,&#13;
o the more experienced bowlers&#13;
will not have a big advantage.&#13;
Cost will be $1.50 per session.&#13;
Sign up at the PE Center or at the&#13;
Surf Bowl.&#13;
Sports enthusiasts should start&#13;
preparing themselves for a big&#13;
month of activities in October.&#13;
Championship tournaments will&#13;
be held in four sports: Golf,&#13;
Tennis, Archery, and Paddle ball.&#13;
ign-up sheets will be up shortly -&#13;
read the RANGER for more&#13;
information on these events and&#13;
watch the bulletin boards at the&#13;
PE Center.&#13;
For information on any intramural&#13;
activity contact Jim&#13;
Koch at the PE Center, ext. 2267.&#13;
UW-P Ruggers&#13;
•&#13;
m tourney&#13;
Labor Day weekend saw three&#13;
members of the Parkside Rugby&#13;
football club traveling to Windsor,&#13;
Ontario to participate in the&#13;
fourth annual Borderer's International&#13;
Rugby Tournament.&#13;
Ernie Llanas, Keith Bosman,&#13;
and Tom Bergo combined with a&#13;
team from Buffalo, New York to&#13;
advance to the semi-finals in the&#13;
26 team tournament before being&#13;
defeated. Llanas and Bosman&#13;
scored decisive trys in two of the&#13;
teams victories.&#13;
Parkside's first home game is&#13;
this Saturday when the&#13;
University of Northern Illinois&#13;
comes to Parkside for combat.&#13;
The game will be on the wood&#13;
road field and starts at 2 p.m.&#13;
Later in the evening the Rugby&#13;
Club will sponsor their second&#13;
annual Rugby Ball at the student&#13;
activities building with music by&#13;
Tag.&#13;
COMING&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
HERE&#13;
SEPT. 30, 1973&#13;
Tickets at&#13;
INFO. CENTER&#13;
(Main Place -LLC)&#13;
(Sponsored by PAB)&#13;
Hooters def eat&#13;
Aluinni 5-2&#13;
The youthful Parkside soccer&#13;
team, starting six freshmen,&#13;
initiated the 1973 Varsity&#13;
schedule by defeating an Alumni&#13;
team 5-2 in the First Annual&#13;
Parkside vs. Alumni soccer&#13;
match on the local Wood Road&#13;
field . Led by newly-elected&#13;
Captain, Junior Rick Lechusz of&#13;
Milwaukee, the Rangers showed&#13;
spurts of cohesiveness that Coach&#13;
Henderson is seeking to establish&#13;
by opening day.&#13;
Scoring for the Rangers were&#13;
Lechusz, Dieter Keifer (the only&#13;
Senior on the squad), Ray&#13;
Phanturat (Junior), . Mike&#13;
Kopczynski (Sophomore), and a&#13;
self-made goal by the Alumni&#13;
defense on a scuffle in front of the&#13;
net. Stan Markovic (a 1971&#13;
graduate) scored both goals for&#13;
the Alumni, as they battled the&#13;
younger Rangers to a 2-2&#13;
stalemate at halftime. However,&#13;
the everyday practice of the&#13;
younger Varsity began to show in&#13;
the second half as they pressured&#13;
the veterans with greater consistency.&#13;
&#13;
In an attempt to find a positive&#13;
combination of younger and more&#13;
experienced players from the&#13;
returning eight lettermen, Coach&#13;
Henderson experimented and&#13;
freely substituted during the&#13;
second half, thereby getting a&#13;
better and longer look at many of&#13;
the 22 man squad now practicing&#13;
daily.&#13;
In hopes of finding the&#13;
strongest line-up for opening day&#13;
scrimmages have been set up&#13;
with several of the stronger&#13;
amateur teams in the Milwaukee&#13;
area. The Rangers open at home&#13;
on Wednesday, Sept. 19, at 3 p.m.&#13;
against Lewis College from Lockport,&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
Sports shorts&#13;
Swimmers and Divers Needed!&#13;
Men and women who are interested In&#13;
swimming or diving, should contact Barb&#13;
Lawson in the P.E. Building, or Tom Bergoswim&#13;
club president. 654-6789. Your interest&#13;
will be greatly appreciated.&#13;
Hockey Club Meeting&#13;
Tomorrow!&#13;
Anyone interested In joining Parksldes&#13;
Hockey Club, should attend this meeting&#13;
which will be held at 7:00 p.m. in the P.E.&#13;
Building. On the Agenda will be a discussion&#13;
about the new hockey rink, schedules,&#13;
returning and new players. Anyone who Is&#13;
not able to attend can get in touch with Vic&#13;
GOdfrey, ext. 2310.&#13;
A All ,.,,,;,,&#13;
/'RICKSON'S COLOR CRAFT&#13;
~j ~~ 3214 Washington Ave. 1 i', . Racine, 632-4762 ~ -&#13;
"1,,~ OILS, ACRYLICS, WATERCOLORS,&#13;
)l \ BRUSHES, CANVAS, STRETCHERS ~ "•,&#13;
Complete Line ! ' '&#13;
Also .'!!3/r \~ c&#13;
FRAMING, GLASS, &amp; MATTING ~&#13;
Time&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
When you own a condominium, more time for relaxation and&#13;
enterUiining were included in the sales price. Someone else&#13;
takes_ care of _the lawn, does the exterior maintenance and&#13;
!"" winter, will do the snow shoveli1111. Ask the folks who&#13;
hve there, nothing's easier than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style ·&#13;
Condominium Homes $24 500 to $27 ODO&#13;
No;h:fo~t Bir~h;ood Townhouses sold quickly and more are u~der construction '&#13;
• Afr :...:::in anch St&#13;
yle homes are ready and they are great values, too. Sale; prices include:&#13;
e Electric ranoe ~ .!t-ct lux_ur,ous carpetint • Color coordinated tile&#13;
e Dishwaher • food -:,:r;: :,"" • Frost-fr~ refrtgef"ator&#13;
• Central FM/TV antenna • R Sf)OHI • Dr151ina room • Molded tub and shower&#13;
hMted ga,..._ available I • Pe ~ st0r-ve ar~ • Surface parking ( indoor&#13;
• ...._tld swimming pool • rsonC • cony or patio • Private entry ountry clubhousa. with NUna ,&#13;
MORE BIRCHWOOD HOMES READY SEPTEMBER 15 "•t., ~ ~ddroom Townhouses $31,000 3 Bedroom Townhouses $32 000 to $34 000 \ :{.,,_ - room Ranch Style $19,500 to $2J,OOO ' • '&#13;
...,,Y rent when you can own a home&#13;
for about the um. monthly payment.&#13;
IN KENOSHA 30th Avenue at Birch Road&#13;
Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE 1-552-9339 , PA.Rk51DE REALTY INC. Oev-eloPed and Bu,11 b,J US Gene,at, tnc </text>
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              <text>"Affirmative Action" delayed&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The University of Wisconsin·Parkside advertises&#13;
as an equal opportunity employer. Parkside has no&#13;
black faculty member and 8 percent of the faculty&#13;
are women.&#13;
Determining the number of minority civil service&#13;
employees hired by the University was impossible.&#13;
Richard Cummings of the Personnel Office informed&#13;
RANGER that three months ago those&#13;
statistics, as well as racial and sexual breakdowns&#13;
of faculty members, were turned Over to Dean&#13;
Norwood, dean of the College of Science and Society&#13;
and Equal Employment Opportunities Officer at&#13;
Parkside. In a call to Norwood it was learned that&#13;
the statistics were in the hands of Rita Tallent,&#13;
special assistant to the Cbancellor. Tallent informed&#13;
RANGER that the reports were in Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's possession.&#13;
In a meeting scheduled with Wyllie at which&#13;
TaUent and Norwood turned up, it was learned that&#13;
indeed Wyllie had the reports but they are incomplete,&#13;
so he did not reveal their .£.ontents to&#13;
RANGER. To RANGER's knowledge, of the 189&#13;
civil service workers, two are black, three or the&#13;
other Support staff are black-one counselor, the&#13;
assistant athletic director. and the assistant&#13;
basketbaU coach wbo was also recently named&#13;
Coordinator of Educatiooal Opportunity. Cummings,&#13;
whose office recruits civil service workers.&#13;
said tbat "recruitment depends on supply and&#13;
demand" and that 00 special effort has been made&#13;
to recruit minorities when there is a job opening.&#13;
By law every state university is required to set up&#13;
an Mfirmative Action program Which. according to&#13;
Health, Educalion and Welfare (HEW) guidelines,&#13;
requires the employer to "make additional efforts&#13;
to recruit, employ and promote qualified members&#13;
of groups rormerly excluded."&#13;
February Z3 of this year, Tallent told RAI\GER&#13;
that "Parkside administrators are in the process or&#13;
drawing up an Affirmative Action plan for the&#13;
University." That plan is to set goals which see 10 it&#13;
that "no vacant position can be fiUed until the&#13;
campus Equal Employmenl Opportunity Office&#13;
TheParkside!--- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept_ 26, 1973 Vol. II No, 4&#13;
UNIVEIlSITY OF WlSC(lfSIlt&#13;
CHANCES IN KlMOR.ITY tN!lOLLHDtr&#13;
1971-72 to 1972-13&#13;
("hich IS made up of Parkside admmlstraton&#13;
- icrwood, Tallent and RIchard Sarto, penClIlllIlI&#13;
admtnistrator] is sati. Iied that a good faith errort&#13;
bas been made to fina qualified "omen and&#13;
mmonties, It TaJJent said&#13;
The Afflrtnali\e Action plan w.. &lt;kIeat Ce1tra1&#13;
AdminIStration In Madison on July 15, howev ....&#13;
Parkside's is ootyet completed and the University&#13;
bas been given an mdefinlte e tension.&#13;
When asked If Parkside is dolllg anyl/ung In the&#13;
meantime to draw eueortnes, Tallent laid that&#13;
Parkside is complYlllg ...ith HEW rul .. in nding a&#13;
policy statement to area organization which ex.&#13;
plains that Parkslde IS an equal _rtunlty .....&#13;
p1oyer. She added that hiring mlnOlity civil service&#13;
employees in this area is difficult because "the total&#13;
population or minorities III this area is not very&#13;
large." There are "minority contacts m Radnea.&#13;
Kenosha that DIck Sarto penodlcally contacts __&#13;
jobs are open," she said&#13;
In so far as f~ulty members were ClJDOt!j ned.&#13;
Tallent said that Parkslde ..... a "new Instilutlaa&#13;
mterested in getting taffed" and that "the&#13;
techniques used in recruiting minorities and wcmea&#13;
were not as effective as we hoped them to be."&#13;
She said that twice adjustments have been made&#13;
when Itwas learned women faculty ....ere not gl!'ttiIW&#13;
paid on an equal basis with therr male counterpar1ll&#13;
of the same rank.&#13;
There is no way. however. (or RA. GER to&#13;
ascertain the official stausucs on these or any other&#13;
minorities ror the Equal Employment Opportulllty&#13;
officers gave their reports to Wyllie incompleted&#13;
Wyllie has assured RAe'GER that when they a",&#13;
complete, they will be made public.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
• • H·Cl'e••• t total 't total Kin. Enroll. !&#13;
S-s N-' g T enro111J1t. •&#13;
S-S N-' g !&#13;
enl"Ollt1t. ! !!.2.:. ;;~.e 158 "&#13;
T7 104 952 2.~~ )3,94;~ 100 ill "&#13;
113 10a6 ." lSI 61 40 1137 5.1 22 271 1110 247 no ~:~5:;.~~ ~:.~~~:&#13;
" oe ISBI 1643 214 .S 144 2089 3.1 56 220 1870 '"&#13;
113 '" 2661 •• S8 159 ~;ll&#13;
... Clalre 10 7&#13;
"&#13;
16 122 l.4( 8,619) .. • ~ .., ))&#13;
30 12 100 1.1{ B.101) 2L) ( :K • 23 0 60 L7( 3,531) "&#13;
•&#13;
61 3 1ll 3.1( 3,625} 15.0 ( 51 42 12 4 6 64 ,9' 1,009) "&#13;
12 •&#13;
~ ... 6 .0 l.2( 6,115} 25.1&gt; ( 16&#13;
115 &lt;tB 11.312) ~(29&#13;
••&#13;
109 11 26 0 146 l.2( 11,811) lJ7 "&#13;
23 0&#13;
.. l1Il1de 82 34 13 •&#13;
131&#13;
~&#13;
4.343) "&#13;
28 9 10 136 .1 4,366) - .1 ( -I ~ttavUla 90 9 3 S 101 . , 4,708) 121 12 S S 109 .'-{ ',345} . (42 1it"1' rdll&#13;
"&#13;
4 24 2 '9 1.6( 4,255) 17 4 15 1 101 2.7( 3,9)3) .H.I ( ).I UYoI .. Point 20 4 32 1 51 .'( 9,154) 44 S&#13;
"&#13;
1&#13;
"&#13;
.... l.0( ',101) 49.1 ( II IS 1 9 10 91 1.7( 5,231) "&#13;
1 15 10 107 2.0( S,2~5} 11.6 ( 16&#13;
~~l'iOI' )) , 13 3 "&#13;
l.~~ 3.0o;~ 49 •&#13;
15 , .. 3.~~ l.I~~ ~!.~~J~~ h_ter 1" 11 9 7 183 2.1 8 861 150 16 10 •&#13;
,.. 3.4 8 410&#13;
58 1091 1.5 70 592 1029 123 '" 0 1'" l.l 68259 "&#13;
S Totll '" 109 '"&#13;
202 3180 2.5(126812) 2899 &lt;'0 419 'OS 41)) 3.3'176 UI .n n ""&#13;
totAL SYSTEH 2382 '" '"&#13;
NOTE:&#13;
(e)&#13;
(b)&#13;
All figure. al'e head cO\Int and includa U.S. clthan. only.&#13;
LeSl!Ild:&#13;
II Black&#13;
S-S Spanhh-Spaakln.&#13;
N-A Native Ame.rican&#13;
o Orlental ~el'ican&#13;
T Total "- i thit tabla&#13;
UWCenter S,st_ ia not Incl4.ad ln t:~~~~;&amp;f.~ic~t" to~ UW-Uvu 'all. u 72'73. chUa an m&#13;
In addition to the Native AMI' c~~e: tn PZI ('aRlIt 'Education '1"CIf,n.). Native Amel'icanadult. errro&#13;
(0)&#13;
(d)&#13;
Minority enrollment&#13;
up this semester&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Minority enrollment is up this&#13;
year. According to the above&#13;
chart, minority enrollment was&#13;
3.2percent of the total enrnllment&#13;
in '71-'72and3.1 percent in '72-'73.&#13;
The figure is 4.4 percent for this&#13;
fall. The breakdown in each&#13;
5pecific minority group shows&#13;
that Spanish-speaking students&#13;
have increased from 25 in 1972to&#13;
45 this semester, blacks from 87&#13;
to 148,native Americans from 10&#13;
to 13,and Orientals from 9 to 11. :"'e total is 217 minority students&#13;
ID a total enrollment of 4,839.&#13;
According to Rudy Collum,&#13;
Coordinator of Educational&#13;
Opportunity, no minority&#13;
~bnentteam or effort exists.&#13;
'lie hfllSed to make any further&#13;
~lIlents.&#13;
Isom Fearn, advisor in the&#13;
student affairs office, stated thaI&#13;
he and counselor Wayne ~mU'ez&#13;
were asked by Parkslde Administration&#13;
to recrwt ~monty&#13;
students. Apparently thIS was&#13;
du to the decrease In mlnonty&#13;
stu~nts from '71-'72 to. '72·'!3,&#13;
d the fact that the Umverslty&#13;
:Uld not receiv~ Central. Ad·&#13;
ministration minOrIty funds If the&#13;
University co~ld. not st;,oll~~&#13;
increase in minorIty e~&#13;
that It was and-or prove '-t&#13;
'd' g services for mmon Y proVl m&#13;
students. dded that the&#13;
However, Fearn a. . efforts&#13;
request for recrwtmg h'gh&#13;
the area I&#13;
came late, as d dl·.missed&#13;
I had alrea y . schoo s He did not think&#13;
for the summer. 'rez's efforts&#13;
that his and RamI .&#13;
made any signilicant difference&#13;
in the total minority enroUmen~.&#13;
Fearn suggested that there&#13;
were other factors to be con·&#13;
sidered in the increase. of&#13;
minorily students at Parkside.&#13;
Among these factors are low&#13;
tuition (p.. kside and Green Bay&#13;
have the lowest tuition of the&#13;
state universities), the open&#13;
admission policy, and the. fact&#13;
that the Division of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation sends a number of&#13;
adult minority students to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fearn also commented on the&#13;
lack of black faculty al Parkside.&#13;
He said that a numbe&lt; of black&#13;
stildents are dissatisfied with&#13;
Parkside because It offers&#13;
nothing relevant to their lifestyle.&#13;
uw-p fails to m t&#13;
minority needs&#13;
Try.ng to get information from the Admlluslration on minority&#13;
group faculty. minority students, or mInority recrwtment flforta ..&#13;
like trying to have a baby when you'", not pregnant One ha to&#13;
assume thaI the UrnverSIty IS ashamed or afraid of the Ill!ormatioo&#13;
RA 'GER mighl uncover,&#13;
The statistics on sexual and racial backgrounds 0( raculty and IIlaff&#13;
"'ere refused to us by Parkside's Equal Employment OpportunlU ..&#13;
Officers, Dean Eugene Norwood, and Special AS&amp;1stantto the 0Iancellor&#13;
RJta Tallent According to the Secretary 0( the Facully's Office,&#13;
thaI data ISindeed available and in the hands 0( Norwood.&#13;
Rudy Collum, Coordmator of Educational Opportulllty, n!fuaed to&#13;
give out aD)' lII!ormation regarding minonty enrollment exceplto say&#13;
thaI Parkside has made 00 effort to recnnt mmOlity studenta In the&#13;
past and has 00 plans to do 00 III the future_&#13;
It is truly something to be ashamed of wh!," Parbide IS 10000ted in ..,&#13;
area "'i!h ooe 0( the highest mlllOnty population percentagea In the&#13;
state yet no effort bas been made to roe""t or employ studenta,&#13;
faculty and staff v.iUl minonty backgrounds. Just .s disgtaceful Is&#13;
the fact that the Urnvers.ty this ....... t... ntfers ooly three coursea&#13;
which deal exclusively with nunonti .. : a lIteralure cLass on women,&#13;
blacks and Jews, and two anthropology courses-Mexican and Chicano&#13;
Cultures and 'ew World egro Cultilres..&#13;
Parkside's minority student populaUon bas Inc.... Sed to 4.4 percent&#13;
of the lotal enrollment, an increase 0( almost 1.5 percenl smce last f.U.&#13;
Nolhlllg is belng done, however, to keep minonty students at Parblde&#13;
to complete their undergraduate education Any .nterest the AdmlOlStration&#13;
has III enrolhng minority students seems to be generated&#13;
by the stale money they can receive when they do so&#13;
Hopefully, when nunority students do graduate, they will be&#13;
seJectiveofwhere they submit their job applications. Institutions such&#13;
as Parkside apparently do )lol look favorably upon women or&#13;
mioorities when they hire. (Although, of one is a faculty wife, the&#13;
chances are good for riDding employment at Parkside.)&#13;
At any rate. Parkside is oot maklllg a genume, encouraging effort to&#13;
satisfy the educational and employment needs 0( a"", minority&#13;
groups. As best as we can detenriine (rom our own statistics, some of&#13;
which are admittedly unofficial since we wete told no olficial ftgUl'eS&#13;
exISt, this Univ'erslty is doing oolhtng to help counterbaIance the racist&#13;
and sexist practices that have so long oppressed Ion many talented&#13;
and inlelligent people of this country.&#13;
We call on the Administration oot only to complete and implement&#13;
Its Afrrrmative Action plan posthaste, nol only to complete and make&#13;
pubhc its records, but also to demonstrate III concrete ways sensitivity&#13;
and genuine concern for ev... y studenl who applies to and attends the&#13;
l:niverslty. In the case of students with minority backgrounclo, this&#13;
will necessarily involve the teaching of courses relevant to their ex.&#13;
perience, !&gt;ypersons who have shared that experience.&#13;
11 Affi_rmative Action" delayed&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside advertises&#13;
as an equal opportunity employer. Parkside has no&#13;
black faculty member and 8 percent of the faculty&#13;
are women.&#13;
RA "GER. To R . "GER' kno I e, of th l&#13;
civil ervice ·or ers, t\liO ar black, thre of the&#13;
other upport taff are bl c -o cou lor, th&#13;
assistant athl ic director, nd the a • tant&#13;
basketball coach ·ho wa. a recen J named&#13;
Coordinator of Educational Opportunit. . CUmming&#13;
, ·hose office re ruits civil sen i wo ,&#13;
said that "recruitment depen on upply and&#13;
Determining the number of minority civil service&#13;
employees hired by the University was impossible.&#13;
Richard Cummings of the Personnel Office informed&#13;
RANGER that three months ago those&#13;
statistics, as well as racial and sexual breakdowns&#13;
of faculty members, were turned over to Dean&#13;
Norwood, dean of the College of Science and Society&#13;
and Equal Employment Opportunities Officer at&#13;
Parkside. In a call to Norwood it was learned that&#13;
the statistics were in the hands of Rita Tallent,&#13;
special assistant to the Chancellor. Tallent informed&#13;
RANGER that the reports were in Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's possession.&#13;
demand" and that no pecial effort ha. m d&#13;
to recruit minoriti w n there · a job o&#13;
By law every tale Uni\·e ity · required to t up&#13;
an Affirmative Action program ·hich, according to&#13;
Health, Education and Welfare (HEW&gt; guidelin ,&#13;
requires the employer to "ma e addili al !forts&#13;
to recruit, employ and promote qualified m mbcrs&#13;
of groups formerly e eluded."&#13;
February Z3 of this year, Tallent told RA. 'GER&#13;
In a meeting scheduled with Wyllie at which&#13;
Tallent and Norwood turned up, it was learned that&#13;
indeed Wyllie had the reports but they are incomplete,&#13;
so he did not re_veal their contents to&#13;
that "Parkside admini trators are in the proc of&#13;
drav.ing up an Affirmative Action plan f the&#13;
University." That plan i to et goals which see to it&#13;
that "no vacant position can be filled until the&#13;
campus Equal Employment Opportunity Office&#13;
The Parkside,-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1973 Vol. II No. 4&#13;
Nldhon v ulr.ee&#13;
u ota&#13;
B&#13;
758&#13;
885&#13;
1643&#13;
tau Clalre 70&#13;
Green Bey 33&#13;
1..1 Croue 42&#13;
01hkosh 109&#13;
Parkside 82&#13;
Plattevllle 90&#13;
liver Falls 39&#13;
Sttvens Point 20&#13;
Stout 65&#13;
Superior 33&#13;
ltewater 156&#13;
Sub Total 739&#13;
TOTAL SYSTEM 2382&#13;
NOTE:&#13;
(a}&#13;
{b)&#13;
IJIIIVERS ITY OF WlSCOIIS Ill CHANCES IN MINOIUTY PmOLUIDl'r&#13;
1971-72 to 1972-73&#13;
7. total&#13;
s-s N-A .Q T enrollmt. B s-s N-A 63 27 104 9°52 2.8( 33,943} ioo no 63 151 61 40 1137 5.1 22 277 1170 247 l 0 214 88 144 2089 3.7 56 220 1870 391 173&#13;
7 29 16 122 1.4( 8,679} 98 a 30&#13;
4 23 0 60 l. 7( 3,531} 39 a 61&#13;
12 4 6 64 .9( 7,009} 54 12&#13;
11 26 0 146 1.2( 11,811) 137 15 • 23&#13;
34 13 8 137 ~ 4,343) 89 28 9&#13;
9 3 5 107 • ( 4,708) 127 12 5&#13;
4 24 2 69 1.6( 4,255} 77 4 25&#13;
4 32 l 57 .6( 9,154) 44 5 35&#13;
7 9 10 91 1.7( 5,231) 65 7 25&#13;
6 13 3 55 1.8{ 3,004} 49 • 25&#13;
11 9 7 183 2.1 8 867 250 16 10&#13;
109 185 58 1091 1.5 70 592 1029 123 256&#13;
323 273 202 3180 2.5 126 812 2199 520 429&#13;
All f1gureo are head count and lnclude U.S. c1tlzen1 only.&#13;
Legend:&#13;
B Black&#13;
S-S Spanish-Speaking&#13;
N•A Native American O Oriental American&#13;
0 T&#13;
171 IOU S4 lS 1&#13;
227 266&#13;
12&#13;
3&#13;
6&#13;
0&#13;
10&#13;
5&#13;
l&#13;
l&#13;
10&#13;
2&#13;
a&#13;
5a&#13;
215 4111&#13;
(c}&#13;
(d)&#13;
T Total&#13;
UII Center '-" in thil t.oble&#13;
In addition&#13;
System h not included in ~e ~1~':ii.c~ted for UW-Uvcr Falla 111 71/73, di re an 1?6&#13;
to the Native .Americ•1°&#13;
1 Native American _~tui enn; (Parent !dl&gt;catl°" Pn,sru}. adult• en't'o cu n&#13;
Minority enrollment&#13;
up this semester&#13;
by Kathryn Wellner&#13;
Minority enrollment is up this&#13;
year. According to the above&#13;
chart, minority enrollment was&#13;
3.2 percent of the total enrollment&#13;
in '71·'72and 3.1 percentin '72-'73.&#13;
The figure is 4.4 percent for this&#13;
fall. The breakdown in each&#13;
Specific minority group shows&#13;
that Spanish-speaking students&#13;
have increased from 25 in 1972 to&#13;
45 this semester, blacks from 87&#13;
to 148, native Americans from 10&#13;
to 13, and Orientals from 9 to 11.&#13;
'.fhe total is 217 minority students 1n a total enrollment of 4,839.&#13;
According to Rudy Collum,&#13;
Coordinator of Educational&#13;
Opportunity, no minority&#13;
l'ectuibnent team or effort exists.&#13;
He refused to make any further&#13;
COlntnents.&#13;
Isom Fearn. advisor in the&#13;
student affairs office, stated ~at&#13;
he and counselor Wayne ~mir:&#13;
were asked by Par:ks1d_e ~ .&#13;
ministration to recrwt ~monty&#13;
d ts Apparently this was stu en . . · ·t due to the decrease ID rn!noi;i y&#13;
d t from '7l-'72 to 72- 73, stu ens · ·t d the fact that the Univers1 Y&#13;
:uld not receive Central_ Administration&#13;
minority funds if the&#13;
Uru·versity could not shollw ant · ·t enro men increase in mmon Y . that it was and-or prove · rit providing services for mmo Y&#13;
students. dded that the&#13;
However' Fearn ~ting efforts&#13;
request for recr h"gh s the area I came late, a d dismissed Schools had alrea y think He did not for the_ surnmde~mirez's efforts that his an&#13;
made any significant difference&#13;
in the total minority enrollmen~.&#13;
Fearn suggested that ther&#13;
were other factors to be con·&#13;
sidered in the increase . of&#13;
minority students at Parkside. Among these factors are lo&#13;
tuition CP,.rkside and Green Bay&#13;
have the )owe t tuition of the&#13;
state universities). the open&#13;
admission policy, and the . fact&#13;
that the Division of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation sends a nwnber of&#13;
adult minority tudents to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fearn also commented on the&#13;
lack of black faculty at Parkside.&#13;
He said that a number of black&#13;
students are dissati~ied \\1th&#13;
Parkside because 1t offers&#13;
nothing relevant to their lifestyle.&#13;
Editorial&#13;
UW-P fails to ,n&#13;
minority needs&#13;
f &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed.• sept. 26. 1973&#13;
_______A GE&#13;
EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
Investigation&#13;
must continue&#13;
Until lately. Spiro Agnew as Vice President has actually&#13;
been an asset to President Nixon. His presence&#13;
softened the cry of Impeachment directed toward Nixon,&#13;
tor the prospect of Agnew in the White House did not&#13;
thrill too many people in Washington or across the&#13;
country.&#13;
The recent allegations, growing out of a federal grand&#13;
jury probe. that Agnew took political kickbacks have&#13;
made him a liability that Nixon can hardly aHord. There&#13;
have been reports that Agnew is contemplating&#13;
reslgnatlon ..the latest of these indicate that he would&#13;
resign as part of a deal to permit him to plead guilty to a&#13;
lesser charge.&#13;
Agnew. of course, denies he is thinking of any such&#13;
thing. His attorneys say he plans to pursue his full&#13;
defense, beginning with legal maneuvers to halt the&#13;
Investigation. The basis for such a motion has not been&#13;
disclosed. but the investigation must be continued.&#13;
Twice before the Senate committee probing campaign&#13;
activities was convened. attempts to authorize a&#13;
complete Investigation of the Watergate break-in were&#13;
thwarted. To stop the Investigation of Agnew's past&#13;
activities before the truth is ascertained would leave&#13;
doubt In many minds. not only with respect to the VicePresident's&#13;
character but also concerning an already&#13;
frequently denounced system of justice.&#13;
The Constitution seems to support the idea that the&#13;
Vice· President has Immunity against prosecution until&#13;
he Is Impeached. As long as he claims the immunity of&#13;
his office he cannot actively fight the charges against&#13;
him. If he resigns to clear himself, that resignation&#13;
should not be part of a "deal" to reduce the charges. Not&#13;
only would that be a contradiction. but It would be a&#13;
further violation of the trust of public office to use his&#13;
position to barter for leniency.&#13;
Whether Agnew is to resign. be impeached, or be&#13;
cleared of any or all charges, the investigation must run&#13;
Its full course. Like in the Watergate probe, results must&#13;
be made public. The people must continue to exhibit&#13;
Interest and concern in sustaining these and other&#13;
Inquiries. and when the truth is found, we must demand&#13;
appropriate penalties for the guilty. This is our only&#13;
hope for restoring responsibility and helping to alleviate&#13;
corruption in public office.&#13;
--I&#13;
5&#13;
~ TN PiPa.tlta.Ii:':'IIII--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Thor ParkslM Rineer IS publlshed ,,~kJy throughout the academic&#13;
ye r b) the $ludents 01 The Unl\lemty of Wisconsin-Parkslde&#13;
Ktnaah •. V,lSCons,n ~140 orrseee are located .t 0-194 Library:&#13;
~.rnlnc Center. Telephone: (414l w·zas&#13;
The ParulCSe Rancer is an Independent newspaper OPinions&#13;
te'flKttd In colwnns Ind edltorialJ Ire: not ~rily the official&#13;
v...... of Tbe l:rnverllty of W1lConsua·Plrulde&#13;
I".tttrn to lht EdllOl' an encoura.ed AlIletten on .ny subjeCt of&#13;
interest to ,t~ts 'acuity or eurr must be conhned to 2$0 words or&#13;
leu typed ~ double-spaced The editors reserve the nlht to edit&#13;
letten for lencth and aood taste Allletten must be slaned and include&#13;
add,..... phon!! number and student slatus or faculty rank Names will&#13;
be ""lthMld upon f'eQuut The edlton reserve the rilht to refuse to&#13;
pnnl any letten&#13;
IOtTOIIIN CHI.' ..I SdM~&#13;
.... AGING IDITOR , '"~&#13;
.IATU •• IDITO- Dttwa ",..11&#13;
NIWS ID'TOII ... _,. .. w.....&#13;
sf'Oltn 101T0R O" ....rry&#13;
CO,"Y 10iTO. R.-.cO Ee.l ....&#13;
"H01'OORA"HIC COO.OINATOIt 0.'tt4I o.ttieb&#13;
.RITIR' o.v ..I..... Vedll ~. Mk ..... Otuyk. ~rUyft&#13;
~. caff"W,,,, T..., Detww.III.Us.vt-.KeftK ... 04&#13;
"M01oolt."H •• ' Jay Saw.. JIM .vtt.... "'ian ROU... I.... .~.MA C... TOONISTS ..,..y ClMlNfi. ~ry Huck. ......&#13;
LAYOUT T""'~, lefTY K...,. an.c. W ......&#13;
aUSIN!U MAN.. OI •• K.. ~ ...&#13;
ADVaRTI'INO STA". K... "ft Frd l.wrHCe. Jim ~&#13;
AOVISOIt. ~ K.. ''Ia&#13;
Last February I initiated research lor RANGER on Affirmative&#13;
Action, a policy required of all universities and colleges by the&#13;
Department 01Health, Education and Welfare. Its purpose IS not only&#13;
to see that employment neutrality be practiced but "requires the&#13;
employer to make additional efforts to recruit, employ and promote&#13;
qualified members of groups formerly excluded."&#13;
At that time Debbie Friedell, who wrote this week's front page story&#13;
on the lack oi significant minority group representation among the&#13;
faculty and stall 01 Parkside, interviewed Rita Tallent who .coordinates&#13;
Affirmative Action for women here. We both read the existing&#13;
guidelines and were told by Tallent that Parkside's own document on&#13;
an Aflirmative Action plan lor all "groups lormerly excluded" would&#13;
be completed by July 15.&#13;
The first week of school we again started asking questions about&#13;
Affirmative Action, We were told Parkside had been given "an indefinite&#13;
extension" on drawing up a plan.&#13;
Prompted by a question from a student regarding women and&#13;
minorities on the Security force, we found out that the Security office&#13;
employs two women-one a stenographer, the other a dispatcher. The&#13;
Director hastened to point out that there is also an Indian on the force.&#13;
Further investigation revealed that officer Robert Lewis, who normally&#13;
patrols the buildings during the day, is said Indian.&#13;
We started looking at other ollices and at laculty and asked ourselves&#13;
il the University was at least lollowing general HEW guidelines&#13;
even without our own written policy. When we carried this question to&#13;
the Administration, we found the only action, if you can call it that,&#13;
was to send out letters to area agencies such as NAACP, UMOS, WIN&#13;
and the Wis. State Employment Office, stating that Parkside is an&#13;
equal opportunity employer. Perind.&#13;
The student side of the minority issue was brought to our attention&#13;
during registration when we came across the chart reprinted on page&#13;
one. Since that time we had been trying to obtain even preliminary&#13;
enrollment figures. Those figures became available last week. Our&#13;
research on this story involved a number. of phone calls, including&#13;
contact with Rudy Collum, who was appointed Coordinator of&#13;
Educational Opportunity last August. He served last year as Special&#13;
Assistant to Dean Eugene Norwood, as well as being a specialist in&#13;
athletics.&#13;
In a press release announcing Collum's appointment, Vice Chancellor&#13;
Otto Bauer said Collum's principal assignment will be "to observe&#13;
and recommend ways in which UW-Parkside can offer greater&#13;
educational opportunity to its students and area residents. Because&#13;
Parks ide oilers integrated programming and services lor all students,&#13;
including minority students, adults, and others, it is crucial that each&#13;
campus office and activity develop and maintain a sensitivity and&#13;
genuine concern for every student who applies to and attends the&#13;
university."&#13;
As noted in Kathy Wellner's story, no minority recruitment effort&#13;
exists according to Collum. Special, intensive recruitment of adults&#13;
and veterans does exist.&#13;
An interesting thing about Collum-when asked specific questions&#13;
about his new job, he declihed to answer, suggesting we contact Bauer&#13;
or come and see him at some other lime (presumably alter he's had a&#13;
chance to contact Bauer). Along with the few comments he did give us,&#13;
he repeatedly stated that il we quoted him on anything, he would deny&#13;
It.&#13;
Collum several times queried what point we were trying to prove&#13;
and w,hywe wanted to know these things. We are not trying to prove&#13;
anything, one way or another. We started out in quest of some answers&#13;
~o questions w.e and. others. were asking on two separate but related&#13;
Issues-the Aff)rmative Action practices at Parkside and the minority&#13;
enrollme?t. '!ie were given ~n unbelie.vab~e run-around. We gradually&#13;
started piecing together a picture which IS not complimentary bul to&#13;
the best of our knowledge is accurate. We welcome response. from&#13;
s~udents and Administration, but we request that this response be&#13;
direct-no more circularity and non-answers, please.&#13;
*******************************************.&#13;
: Ode to Billie Jean :&#13;
,.&#13;
*&#13;
,.,. : ,. *&#13;
The challenge made, they came to play, ~&#13;
... The woman's name was Court. ~&#13;
.. The fellow's name was Bobby Riggs and tennis was the sport ,.. *&#13;
Bobby played his best 01games or Margaret her worst,' ,.&#13;
: For tn a match of two se.ts straight the name of Riggs was first. !&#13;
Jt The game thus played It proved to him and was for him a symbol-- 1:&#13;
,. She.should not hold a racquet but a needle and a lhimhle ;:&#13;
Jt A pig, a seU·proclaimed one, of the chauvinistic kind . ..&#13;
,.. He soon became a spokesman for the men of such a ~ind ...&#13;
~ And so at last it came to pass he challenged Billie Jean . ~&#13;
,. To a Battle 01tbe Sexes to be played upon the green ;:&#13;
,. Wlthm the Houston Astrodome the best three sets oi five ,.&#13;
~ ~lth one-hundred tbousand dollars to the one who stayed alive ~&#13;
It Iggs was favored 5to 2 by those who seemed t k . .....-&#13;
,. But Billje had a lot 01strength statistics did nO~Shnow, ,.&#13;
: She beat the man In three straight sets 6-4 6-3 6_3&#13;
0w&#13;
. :&#13;
~ The match was won lor women's spor~, a ;"on'Ian;s victory. ~&#13;
,. Kay Zebell ,.&#13;
,. civil service stall ,.&#13;
~ Payroll Office :&#13;
,. ,.&#13;
.******************************************~&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
E&#13;
Investigation&#13;
111ust continue&#13;
Unt I I tely, Spiro Agnew as Vice President has actu&#13;
lly been n ass t to President Nixon. His presence&#13;
softened th cry of Impeachment directed toward Nixon,&#13;
for th prosp t of Agnew In the White House did not&#13;
thrill too many people in Washington or across the&#13;
country.&#13;
The r c nt allegations, growing out of a federal grand&#13;
jury prob , that Agnew took political kickbacks have&#13;
made him II blllty that Nixon can hardly afford. There&#13;
h ve be n reports that Agnew is contemplating&#13;
resign tlon--the latest of th se Indicate that he would&#13;
r lgn s part of a deal to permit him to plead guilty to a&#13;
lesser charg .&#13;
Agn w, of course, denies he is thinking of any such&#13;
thing. His ttorneys say he plans to pursue his full&#13;
defens , beginning with legal maneuvers to halt the&#13;
Investigation. The basis for such a motion has not been&#13;
dlsclos d, but the investigation must be continued.&#13;
Twice b fore the Senate committee probing campaign&#13;
ctlv ties was convened, attempts to authorize a&#13;
comp! te nvestlgation of the Watergate break-In were&#13;
thwar ed. To stop the Investigation of Agnew's past&#13;
actlv ties before the truth is ascertained would leave&#13;
doubt In many minds, not only with respect to the VicePresident's&#13;
character but also concerning an already&#13;
fr quently denounced system of justice.&#13;
The Constitution seems to support the idea that the&#13;
Vice-President has immunity against prosecution until&#13;
he s lmpe ched. As long as he claims the immunity of&#13;
his office he cannot actively f'ght the charges against&#13;
him. If he resigns to clear himself, that resignation&#13;
should not be part of a "deal" to reduce the charges. Not&#13;
only would that be a contradiction, but it would be a&#13;
further violation of the trust of public office to use his&#13;
position to barter for leniency.&#13;
Whether Agnew is to resign, be Impeached, or be&#13;
cleared of any or all charges, the investigation must run&#13;
Its full course. Like in the Watergate probe, results must&#13;
be made public. The people must continue to exhibit&#13;
interest and concern in sustaining these and other&#13;
Inquiries, and when the truth is found, we must demand&#13;
appropriate penalties for the guilty. This is our only&#13;
hope for restoring responsibility and helping to alleviate&#13;
corruption In public office.&#13;
In Ju" hh.- m•11&#13;
Last February I initiated research for RANGER on Affirmative&#13;
Action, a policy required of all universities and colleg~ by the&#13;
Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Its purpose 1s not only&#13;
to see that employment neutrality be practiced but "requires the&#13;
employer to make additional efforts to recruit, employ and promote&#13;
qualified members of groups formerly excluded."&#13;
At that time, Debbie Frieden, who wrote this week's front page story&#13;
on the lack of significant minority group representation among the&#13;
faculty and staff of Parkside, interviewed Rita Tallent who _co_ordinates&#13;
Affirmative Action for women here. We both read the existing&#13;
guidelines and were told by Tallent that Parkside's own document on&#13;
an Affirmative Action plan for all "groups formerly excluded" would&#13;
be completed by July 15.&#13;
The first week of school we again started asking questions about&#13;
Affirmative Action. We were told Parkside had been given "an indefinite&#13;
extension" on drawing up a plan.&#13;
Prompted by a question from a student regarding women and&#13;
minorities on the Security force, we found out that the Security office&#13;
employs two women-one a stenographer, the other a dispatcher. The&#13;
Director hastened to point out that there is also an Indian on the force.&#13;
Further investigation revealed that officer Robert Lewis, who normally&#13;
patrols the buildings during the day, is said Indian.&#13;
We started looking at other offices and at faculty and asked ourselves&#13;
if the University was at least foIIowing general HEW guidelines&#13;
even without our own written policy. When we carried this question to&#13;
the Administration, we found the only action, if you can call it that,&#13;
was to send out letters to area agencies such as NAACP, UMOS, WIN&#13;
and the Wis. State Employment Office, stating that Parkside is an&#13;
equal opportunity employer. Period.&#13;
The student side of the minority issue was brought to our attention&#13;
during registration when we came across the chart reprinted on page&#13;
one. Since that time we had been trying to obtain even preliminary&#13;
enrollment figures. Those figures became available last week. Our&#13;
research on this story involved a number of phone calls, including&#13;
contact with Rudy Collum, who was appointed Coordinator of&#13;
Educational Opportunity last August. He served last year as Special&#13;
Assistant to Dean Eugene Norwood, as well as being a specialist in&#13;
athletics.&#13;
In a press release announcing Collum's appointment, Vice ChanceIIor&#13;
Otto Bauer said Collum's principal assignment will be "to oberve&#13;
and recommend ways in which UW-Parkside can offer greater&#13;
educational opportunity to its students and area residents. Because&#13;
Parkside offers integrated programming and services for all students,&#13;
including minority students, adults, and others, it is crucial that each&#13;
campus office and activity develop and maintain a sensitivity and&#13;
genuine concern for every student who applies to and attends the&#13;
university."&#13;
As noted in Kathy Wellner's story, no minority recruitment effort&#13;
exists according to Collum. Special, intensive recruitment of adults&#13;
and veterans does exist.&#13;
An interesting thing about Collum-when asked specific questions&#13;
about his new job, he declined to answer, suggesting we contact Bauer&#13;
or come and see him at some other time (presumably after he's had a&#13;
chance to contact Bauer) .. Along with the few comments he did give us,&#13;
~ repeatedly stated that 1f we quoted him on anything, he would deny&#13;
1t.&#13;
Collum several times queried what point we were trying to prove&#13;
and w.hy we wanted to know these things. We are not trying to prove&#13;
anythm~, one way or another. We started out in quest of some answers&#13;
~o questions w_e and_ others were asking on two separate but related&#13;
issues-the Affirmative Action practices at Parkside and the minority&#13;
enrollme~t. ":Ne were given an unbelievable run-around. We gradually&#13;
started p1ecmg together a picture which is not complimentary but to&#13;
the best of our knowledge is accurate. We welcome response. from&#13;
s~udents and Administration, but we request that this response be&#13;
direct-no more circularity and non-answers, please.&#13;
*******************************************'&#13;
! Ode to Billie Jean :&#13;
* ,..&#13;
* ,..&#13;
; i ~ The challenge made, they came to play,&#13;
* The woman's name was Court. ,t&#13;
* The fellow's name was Bobby Riggs and tennis was the sport *&#13;
lf- Bobby played his best of games or Margaret her worst, · lf-&#13;
: Form a match oftwos~tsstraight the name of Riggs was first. !&#13;
* The game thus played it proved to him and was for him a symbol-- l:&#13;
* She_ hould not hold a racquet but a needle and a thimble *&#13;
lf- A pig, a self-proclaimed one, of the chauvinistic kind · ,ti&#13;
He soon becaf!le a SPokesman for the men of such a ~ind *&#13;
* And so at last 1t came to pass he challenged Billie Jean · !&#13;
,t- T~ a ~attle of the Sexes to be played upon the green *&#13;
* W!thm the Houston Astrodome the best three sets of five *&#13;
; :.1th one-hundred thousand dollars to the one who stayed alive ~ ~ iggs was favored 5 to 2 by those who seemed t k . ~&#13;
,t- But Bill_ie had a lo_t of strength statistics did no:sh~:w' ,t&#13;
: She beat the man m three straight sets 6-4 6-3 6-3 . :&#13;
* The match was won for women's spor~. a ~o~an;svictory. * : Kay Zebell l&#13;
* civil service staff ,t&#13;
* Payroll Office Jt&#13;
: :&#13;
*******************************************; &#13;
photo by Allen Fredericks.on&#13;
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL cartoonist Bill Sanders, below, was at&#13;
Parkside last Wednesday evening. Before he left he drew the above&#13;
cartoon in the Whiteskeller.&#13;
phOl0 by Allen Freoericks.on&#13;
"·"4&#13;
{/&#13;
We getletters&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
The United Farm Workers are&#13;
engaged in a critical struggle on&#13;
the West Coast. The Teamsters&#13;
are attempting by a variety of&#13;
devices to muscle cesar Chavez&#13;
out of the migrant labor picture.&#13;
Responsible union leaders across&#13;
the country have been appalled at&#13;
the way in which the growers and&#13;
the Teamsters have worked in&#13;
collusion against the field&#13;
laborers' best interests.&#13;
It would help the United Farm&#13;
Workers cause if pressure could&#13;
be applied to Gallo Wine&#13;
products. This corporation has&#13;
repeatedly rejected the idea of&#13;
free union elections. It is siding&#13;
with the Teamsters against the&#13;
workers Chavez represents.&#13;
I appeal to you and your&#13;
readers to boycott Gallo Wines as&#13;
well as non-union lettuce and&#13;
grapes. We must make the Gallo&#13;
Corporation aware of consumer&#13;
resistance to their labor policies.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
on request. Thank you for giving&#13;
this matter your support.&#13;
ErnestT. campbeU, ChaUinan&#13;
New York Interfaith Committee&#13;
To Aid Migrant Farmworkers&#13;
490 Riverside Drive&#13;
New York, New York l00Z7&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a world where issues have&#13;
faded, apathy a way of life, and&#13;
the "love" of the sixties a&#13;
memory, there still remain&#13;
important trials in the human&#13;
battle for equality. The family of&#13;
man is stiU divided by its most&#13;
fatal disease, racism. Strong&#13;
voices survive in man's centers&#13;
of learning where their sole&#13;
purpose is to unite us. And now&#13;
one of these voices is being&#13;
destroyed at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in Madison.&#13;
The University is going to close&#13;
down the Afro-American and&#13;
Native-American centers on the&#13;
Madison campus. It is a decision&#13;
fatal to the cultural growth of the&#13;
campus' minority students. A&#13;
decision that also damages the&#13;
white students' chances of ever&#13;
really learning about his black&#13;
and brown brothers and sisters.&#13;
The centers have offered all&#13;
students a learning opportunity&#13;
new in this country. Black, brown&#13;
and Native-American studies are&#13;
an important part of America&#13;
and should be taught on campus&#13;
and off. The void in America's&#13;
background concerning its understanding&#13;
of its minorities is&#13;
shamefully large. With aids like&#13;
the two Madison centers that void&#13;
is only now beginning to close.&#13;
I want to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the peoples whose&#13;
cultures have been so neglected&#13;
by history. I want to learn from&#13;
the people who took pride in&#13;
studying and researching their&#13;
ethnic backgrounds, from people&#13;
who will be proud to teach it,&#13;
reaching from the past, the&#13;
present and most important,&#13;
looking proudly towards the&#13;
future, There is much to be&#13;
learned from the excited&#13;
minority leaders in their effort to&#13;
build their proper spot in a&#13;
resistant society. I say close not&#13;
the existing center, create new&#13;
ones.&#13;
I hope Parkside students&#13;
sharing this opinion will register&#13;
their disapproval with the&#13;
Regents' decision by writing to&#13;
Regent Edward Hales at 440&#13;
Main Street in Racine. Show your&#13;
support now before there is&#13;
nothing left to support.&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
Parkside graduate, Racine&#13;
~ " J .. :I&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movement" is a regular rea-hIre in RANGER. It&#13;
deals with women and the status of women at Parkskle, la society aDd&#13;
in history. Guest writers are invited.&#13;
. by Barb Hanson&#13;
Why Bobby Riggs Doesn't Matter&#13;
Due to the Thursday noon deadline for "The Movement" column,&#13;
this article was written prior to the match on Thursday night.&#13;
The tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs has&#13;
attracted an amazing amount of attention from the American public.&#13;
Families have divided allegiances, lovers break up rather than switch&#13;
loyalties, and best friends are friendly no more because of the spectacular&#13;
$100,000 winner-take-all match. What is behind all this commotion?&#13;
What convinced ABC to pay $750,000for the TV rights, and&#13;
why did CBS get so mad that they dragged ABC and the match&#13;
promoters to court in an effort to get the rights for themselves'? Why is&#13;
the country so excited'?&#13;
Much of the interest can probably be attributed to Riggs' reputation&#13;
as the foremost hustler in the U.S. today. Riggs is a consummate&#13;
sbowman and has been exploiting the "Lib vs. Lob: The Battle or the&#13;
Sexes" angle for all that he can. To drum up interest in the match,&#13;
Riggs has been making statements that no sane human being would&#13;
ever make, like "A woman belongs in two places, the bedroom and the&#13;
kitchen, in that order," and "The best way to handle women is to keep&#13;
them barefoot and pregnant," and HI plan to bomb Billie Jean King in&#13;
the match and set back the Women's Lib Movement about another 20&#13;
years." As if this match could slow down the Lib movement in tennis&#13;
or in general!&#13;
Two camps have developed out of Riggs' vulgar noise-making:&#13;
those who see Riggs as an obnoxious ass who needs his ears pinned&#13;
back by the greatest woman player on the circuit, and those poor&#13;
misguided fools who see Riggs as the man of the hour, their hope to set&#13;
all the "uppity women" on their collective cans.&#13;
The primary objection I have about this match is this misguided&#13;
emphasis on it being THE "Battle of the Sexes." King has done more&#13;
for the women's tennis circuit Ulan any other person but she does not&#13;
typify the movement in its entirety. nor does every woman identify&#13;
with her. Riggs has made a lot of noise about his fan clubs but he Is&#13;
hardly every man's hero. The real "BatUe of the Sexes" is being&#13;
fought every day by average people who believe in equality versus&#13;
average people who believe in U1eoppression of women. But neither&#13;
side is being offered $100,000to hassle it out in the real world.&#13;
Even accepting the assumption that a tennis match could prove&#13;
something about the relative status of men and women, this match&#13;
never could. King is a superb athlete who happens to be 26 years&#13;
younger than her duck-tooted opponent. If King wins, Riggs up.&#13;
porters will try to diminish her victory by pointing out Riggs' obvious&#13;
physical disabilities and challenge King to playa top male player near&#13;
her own age. King will do no such thing, of course. as neither she nor&#13;
any of the other top women players claim to have the physical pow r&#13;
to play the top men. If King should lose, no one is going to point to&#13;
Riggs' terrible record in the enior Men's circuit or expect him to play&#13;
Pancho Gonzales, who recently turned enior. King says she is playing&#13;
for the honor of the women's circuit (somebody has to. after Riggs&#13;
creamed Margaret Court in the Mother's Day Iassacre) and that the&#13;
money was secondary. Riggs makes no secret of his primary interest,&#13;
his ego and his wallet. to matter who wins. the women's circuit will&#13;
continue growing, King will keep winning, Riggs will keep hustling,&#13;
and women everywhere will continue fighting for their equal place.&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
ceeattve writers. phologrlph.n. InCS&#13;
olMr ,ntenos.led people &lt;Ireinyilltd 10 loIn the&#13;
P ..rll:s.I!H-yr..r!aook 511ft.&#13;
The "ex1 meeting of 1M s.liU will be&#13;
Fnd".,. mom,n,. 10 I.m •• in Dl1~ LlC.&#13;
ReWlrd of 105.00 tor Imall bla&lt;k p",r... losl&#13;
Sept. 17 on lhe third llOCH" of tbe IIbruy.&#13;
Contlin, keys Ind .Ill.t. call lynn I' U2.&#13;
9771, No questions lihd.&#13;
Men Ind women students, P,lrt-lime in.&#13;
venlory work. Ile.x,ble ~rs. $1.01 per hour&#13;
10s.llrt. C.IlI-1OO-2 .. 2..... 1. Genera. B"sil\fl.S&#13;
Service,_ Milwlukee.&#13;
Wantl'd: SI",den' with CIIr to pick me up .f&#13;
Soldier eu. SI.lion In MII.II"k" .....ry&#13;
TlJudlY lind Thu"~y .t , lI.m. Ind "'1",rn&#13;
1'4 p.m. Conilet Mrs. GrOSKIoI., coiled ... I&#13;
MMlison 401-2.))·7009. Will PlY .ell.&#13;
For .-Ie: Stffeo. Moronll., ImlU bu1&#13;
Idequlte lor Smlll .plrtment. Two&#13;
Splulllrrs 115.0. BSR McOonllld UOO&#13;
IIvtomllic hlrnillblll. SlOO com~er.. P'tKIM&#13;
U4--4159. if 1'0 lInlWer een lI,.in I.t.r.&#13;
Typing of ~II kinds ckIne in my nome.&#13;
Experienced. can NlIncy. '-1,.,,,,.&#13;
FOR SALE: PICKET FENCE ]JI'J fHI long&#13;
In) ~ments. incluchng II gllle; Sl s.ll1ndllrd&#13;
pICkets.. ellch 41" x ,~ .. x).··. pllin1ed&#13;
blllCk. Sli. 4).4':1424.&#13;
P."" notllrind on lhe spol. SMM". _etty&#13;
BroilS. Bliliness ""lInll,emenl mllior.&#13;
eyenlng cl~uu. Uo&amp;.1IN.&#13;
I") Chevr.1 Beillir In very 900d medl.&#13;
EAR.NTOP MONEY! Pll"lime promollnl cond.• phone ..n·t740.&#13;
s.tuoent tr.Yel. C.1l or write (include your&#13;
telepl'tone numberl. VAGABOND TOUR.S,&#13;
Box S-49.EVllns."1on.Ill. ~ (311131-.0110.&#13;
HaVing protHems W,ltI .ccovntln,? e.lI SSl.&#13;
,.., ~lt..,. S. lnvtpenslye tulorin, lIIvlIi'.ble&#13;
photo by Allen Frederickson&#13;
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL cartoonist Bill Sanders, below, was at&#13;
Parkside last Wednesday evening. Before he left he drew the above&#13;
cartoon in the Whiteskeller.&#13;
photo by Allen Frederickson&#13;
We get·&#13;
letters&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
The United Farm Workers are&#13;
engaged in a critical struggle on&#13;
the West Coast. The Team&#13;
are attempting by a variety of&#13;
devices to muscle Cesar Chavez&#13;
out of the migrant labor picture.&#13;
Responsible union leaders across&#13;
the country have been appalled at&#13;
the way in which the growers and&#13;
the Teamsters have worked in&#13;
collusion against the- field&#13;
laborers' best interests.&#13;
It would help the United Farm&#13;
Workers cause if pressure could&#13;
be applied to Gallo Wine&#13;
products. This corporation has&#13;
repeatedly rejected the idea of&#13;
free union elections. It is siding&#13;
with the Teamsters against the&#13;
workers Chavez represents.&#13;
I appeal to you and your&#13;
readers to boycott Gallo Wines as&#13;
well as non-union lettuce and&#13;
grapes. We must make the Gallo&#13;
Corporation aware of consumer&#13;
resistance to their labor policies.&#13;
More information is available&#13;
on request. Thank you for giving&#13;
this matter your support.&#13;
Ernest T. Campbell, Chairman&#13;
ew York Interfaith Committee&#13;
To Aid Migrant Farmworkers&#13;
490 Riverside Drive&#13;
New York, New York 10027&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In a world where issues have&#13;
faded, apathy a way of life, and&#13;
the "love" of the sixties a&#13;
memory, there still remain&#13;
important trials in the human&#13;
battle for equality. The family of&#13;
man is still divided by its most&#13;
fatal disease, racism. Strong&#13;
voices survive in man's centers&#13;
of learning where their sole&#13;
purpose is to unite us. And now&#13;
one of these voices is being&#13;
destroyed at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in Madison.&#13;
The University is going to close&#13;
down the Afro-American and&#13;
Native-American centers on the&#13;
Madison campus. It is a decision&#13;
fatal to the cultural growth of the&#13;
campus' minority students. A&#13;
decision that also damages the&#13;
white students' chances of ever&#13;
really learning about his black&#13;
and brown brothers and sisters.&#13;
The centers have offered all&#13;
students a learning opportunity&#13;
new in this country. Black, brown&#13;
and ative-American tudies are&#13;
an important part of America&#13;
and should be taught on campus&#13;
and off. The void in America 's&#13;
background concerning its understanding&#13;
of its minorities is&#13;
shamefully large. With aids like&#13;
the two 1adison centers that void&#13;
is only now beginning to close.&#13;
I want to learn as much as&#13;
possible about the peoples whose&#13;
cultures have been so neglected .I&#13;
by history. I want to learn from&#13;
the people who took pride in&#13;
studying and researching their&#13;
ethnic backgrounds, from people&#13;
who will be proud to teach it,&#13;
reaching from the past, the&#13;
present and most important,&#13;
looking proudly towards the&#13;
future . There is much to be&#13;
learned from the excited&#13;
minority leaders in their effort to&#13;
build their proper spot in a&#13;
resistant society. I say close not&#13;
the existing center, create new&#13;
ones. I hope Parkside students&#13;
sharing this opinion \\ill register&#13;
their disapproval with the&#13;
Regents' decision by writing to&#13;
Regent Edward Hales at 440&#13;
Main Street in Racine. Show your&#13;
support now before there is&#13;
nothing left to support.&#13;
Tom Ford&#13;
Parkside graduate. Racine&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The, lovement" i a regular feat&#13;
deal ith women and the tatu or women at Par&#13;
in hi tory. Gue t writers are in ited.&#13;
• _ by Barb Han on&#13;
Why Bobby Riggs Doesn't Matter&#13;
Du to th Thur dn noon deadline for "The , lovem nt·· column,&#13;
thi article wa wTitt~ prior to the match on Thur da night.&#13;
The tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Rigg. ha&#13;
attracted an amazing amount of attention from the American pu lie.&#13;
Families have divided allegiances, lovers break up rath r than wit h&#13;
loyalties, and best friends are friendly no more beca of the . pectacular&#13;
$100,000 winner-take-all match. What i behind all thi c mmotion?&#13;
What convinced ABC to pay $750 000 for th TV righ , and&#13;
why did CBS get so mad that they dragged ABC and the match&#13;
promoters to court in an effort to get the rights for them elve ? Why i&#13;
the country so excited?&#13;
Much of the interest can probably be attributed to Rig ·' r putallon&#13;
as the foremost hustler in the U S today. Rigg is a c n ummate&#13;
showman and has been exploiting the "Lib v . Lob: T Battle of the&#13;
Sexes" angle for all that he can. To drum up interest in the match,&#13;
Riggs has been making statements that no sane human being would&#13;
ever make, like "A woman belongs in two plac , the bedroom and the&#13;
kitchen, in that order," and "The best way to handle women i to k p&#13;
them barefoot and pregnant," and " I plan to bomb Billie Jean King in&#13;
the match and set back the Women's Lib Movement about another 20&#13;
years." As if this match could slow down the Lib mo ement in tenni&#13;
or in general! -&#13;
Two camps have developed out of Rigg ' vulgar noi making:&#13;
those who see Riggs as an obnoxious ass who needs hi ears pinned&#13;
back by the greatest woman player on the circuit, and those poor&#13;
misguided fools who see Riggs as the man of the hour. their hope to t&#13;
all the "uppity women" on their collective cans.&#13;
The primary objection I have about thi match i thi mi gwded&#13;
emphasis on it being THE "Battle of the Sexes." King has don more&#13;
for the women's tennis circuit than any other pers-0n but he doe nol&#13;
typify the movement in its entirety, nor d ever woman id ntify&#13;
with her. Rigg has made a lot of noi e about his fan clu but he i&#13;
hardly every man's hero. The real "Battle of the Sex " i in&#13;
fought every day by average people who believe in equality ve , u&#13;
average people who believe in the oppre ion of women. But neith r&#13;
ide i being offered $100,000 to ha sle it out in the real world.&#13;
Even accepting the a sumption that a tenni match could pr ·&#13;
omething about the relative tatu of m n and women, thi match&#13;
never could . King i a uperb athlete who happens to be 26 y ars&#13;
younger than her duck-footed opponent. If King in , igg · . up&#13;
porters will try to dimini h her victory by pointing out Ri ' ob iou.&#13;
phy ical di abilitie and challenge King to play a top male play r n r&#13;
her own age King will do no uch thing, of cou e, a n ilh r ·h n r&#13;
any of the oth r top women play r · claim to have th phy ical w r&#13;
to play the top men. If King hould lose, no one i going to point to&#13;
Rigg · terrible record in the mor . Ien' ~ircuit or xpect him to play&#13;
Pancho Gonzales, who recently turned nior. Kin a h i pl )in&#13;
for the honor of the women's circuit &lt; omebody h to, aft r Ri!U(&#13;
creamed :'llargaret Court in the 1 lother' Day !\ta acr &gt; and th t th&#13;
money wa ec ndary. Rigg makes no ecr t of hi primary int r t,&#13;
hi ego and hi wallet. , o matter who wins, the worn n' circuit will&#13;
continue growing, Kmg will k p winning, Rigg will k p h tling,&#13;
and women everywhere will continue fighting fo th 1r equal pla .&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
Creative wr iters, photographer,, and&#13;
other ,ntere-stt'd p,e,ople- u• 1nvititd to 101n the&#13;
Pnks,de yearbook slalf.&#13;
Tht next meetong of !he staff will be&#13;
Friday mom,n • 10 a .m., ,n 0174 LLC.&#13;
Men ,ind -,omen students : P-11rt-time mventory&#13;
work, fle:x,ble hours, S.2.00 per hour&#13;
to start. Call 1--241-4401. General Busineu&#13;
Services. Milwau.ktt.&#13;
Typing of all k,nds done ,n my home.&#13;
E•penenced. Call Nancy, '32-2667.&#13;
FOR SALE : PICKET FENCE 211&gt; fttl long&#13;
,n 3 ~ments including a gale ; 52 slandanl&#13;
p,ckeh, each 42 ' x 2s,•.t x i ,.". pa,nted&#13;
black. Sll. 6~-3'14.&#13;
EARN TOP M0l'iEY! Part lime promol,ng&#13;
sludent travel. Call or wnle ( ,nclude your&#13;
telephone number): VAGAB0N0 TOURS,&#13;
Box 5-49, Evanston, HI. ~CM ( 312):llMllO.&#13;
Reward of ss.oo for small black pur" 10.1&#13;
Sep!. 17 on the third floor of the library.&#13;
Conta,ns keys and wallet Call Lynn at 452·&#13;
9771. No questions asked&#13;
Wanted : Student with car to pick me up al&#13;
llad9tr Bus S!atlon in MilwaukH evuy&#13;
TueS&lt;lay and Thunday at 9 a m. and relum&#13;
ilt 4 p.m . Contact Mrs. Gros•cJos.e, -collttt, at&#13;
-clison 60t-133-7oot. Will pay well.&#13;
For ult: s-. Motorola, small b"1&#13;
adequate for small apartment. Two&#13;
spukus also. BSR Mc0onald HOO&#13;
automatic tumt;able, s1oa complete. Phone&#13;
654...as,. ,f no answer call again later.&#13;
Pa~ not1ri1ed on !he spol. SN Mn. lltlty&#13;
Briggs. llus,ness Management maior,&#13;
even1n51 clauu. 6l4-1'U.&#13;
190 Chevrolet Belair ,n very good mech&#13;
com1 . phone 6ll-t740.&#13;
Havin51 problems w,th accounhng? Call u2. 9462 after s, lnexpensin lutoring ava1l1blt. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Film Society •&#13;
IS&#13;
back •&#13;
In business&#13;
b" Re c:a Ecklund&#13;
The Parks"ie Film Society ;ill&#13;
r ive runcbng for Its first&#13;
tor flIm sen • the result&#13;
01 mpus Conc,,", Committ&#13;
.. m tng on Tuesd.y Sept&#13;
18&#13;
Library plans&#13;
given final approval until •&#13;
telephone ballot was taken of&#13;
missing members.&#13;
nanimous approval was given '0 the proposal by the members&#13;
who "ere present.t the meeting.&#13;
and the telephone voting of&#13;
mi ing f.cuIty proved positive&#13;
also. tece the student members&#13;
could not be located to vote, CCC&#13;
chatrperson Marion Iochon&#13;
con ulted with student government&#13;
members on campus in&#13;
order to get some student input.&#13;
Student government .pproved&#13;
the idea; the S600will be made&#13;
,mmed,.tely available for Film&#13;
ety use.&#13;
second semester films are to be&#13;
funded exclusively from first&#13;
semester revenues, since the&#13;
Committee stated that no further&#13;
money would be allotted to the&#13;
Film Scciery this year.&#13;
research instruction&#13;
b~ K8lhry n \\ enner&#13;
Th I~br.ry is getting mvolved&#13;
,ccordlng to Carl. toffle,&#13;
eerer nee librarian, the library&#13;
tall has pl.nned • 501of goals&#13;
nd ob1&lt;"ti'es, .nd. strategy to&#13;
Impl ment them&#13;
1bC l: 0 major goets are to&#13;
m.ke r.culty. students, staU •• nd&#13;
communIty .... are of .. hat the&#13;
LIbrary ha , and .. hat It can do&#13;
lor them, and to increase skill&#13;
and If·&lt;u!liciency in the use of&#13;
the LIbrary&#13;
Some general obJOCti'es are to&#13;
Increa'te a~ arene s of the&#13;
Ubran" 8 an education {intruCl1~na)).&#13;
~ahonal (nonIn&#13;
trudlonan, and cultural&#13;
facIlity, prepare Llbr.ry patrons&#13;
to find .nd use library materials&#13;
and faclhtH:; reinforce or&#13;
prev Ide upplementary intrueuon&#13;
In research methods;&#13;
nd to brmg .ttent,on to specific&#13;
matenal • n~ items, and new&#13;
seJ"\ I .,,·allabJe In the Library.&#13;
peeinc objeCO"'es are broken&#13;
do .. n f1"'t, 1»' patron category&#13;
and econd. by library&#13;
sop/Ii hcat,on 100'el ithin each&#13;
cat or;&#13;
ObJ clive number one in&#13;
hbrary ""phlSticat,on Level One&#13;
IS to acquaint Inter-ested students&#13;
'" the phy lcal layoot .nd&#13;
r.editi of the LIbrary. so they&#13;
can I te such thtn as the book&#13;
lack. magazines, microfilm&#13;
matenal • gO"'ernment&#13;
pubhcation • card catalog, and&#13;
r t rooms&#13;
The. nd objOctJve IS to&#13;
"quaint students with some of&#13;
lh H1"V1 .,. .. ilable for their&#13;
.... Interhbrary Loan, displ.ys,&#13;
pholoduphcation. Bitch Tickets,&#13;
nd pee,.1 cultural programs&#13;
re a fe"4 x8mpl ,&#13;
AI ~ I Two, students tn&#13;
m.ng I ..el courses learn&#13;
how to develop search trategles&#13;
on thesr Information needs,&#13;
use the card catalog, use the LC&#13;
Sob) I n .. ding LI t. use the&#13;
lonthl at.log to locate&#13;
10\, mm n1 pubbcations, use the&#13;
Rf&gt;ldtr· Guide and similar&#13;
pubhcation, .nd to cIte and&#13;
evaluate sources of inform.tion&#13;
used for. """earch paper.&#13;
U'vel Three is desIgned ror&#13;
tudents enrolled In research or&#13;
bibliography oriented courses on&#13;
an upper drviston level. At this&#13;
level. students learn the types of&#13;
soon:.. : guides to the literature.&#13;
reviews of the literature, abstracts&#13;
and digests,&#13;
bibliographies and indexes.&#13;
dictionaries, encyclopedias,&#13;
directories, government&#13;
publications. atlases, handbooks,&#13;
yearbooks, manuals, and&#13;
penodsca Is.&#13;
Also included on Level Three&#13;
are the principles of a good&#13;
bibliography, specialized&#13;
..&#13;
photo by Jim Ruflalo&#13;
Cyclists celebrate the end or the road. This was the scene at the finish of the Ragtime Rangers-PAB&#13;
Bike Ra1lye last Sunday.&#13;
techniques for locating major&#13;
research materials, search&#13;
techniques for preparing&#13;
bibliographies, speeches, and&#13;
research papers. and the skills&#13;
necessary to use bibliographic&#13;
sources.&#13;
Teaching students in upper&#13;
division courses with library&#13;
related assignments and searcn&#13;
strategy necessary to complete&#13;
the course and the skills&#13;
necessary to use the specific tools&#13;
which apply to the assignment is&#13;
covered in Level Four.&#13;
Half·Price&#13;
Milled Drinks&#13;
6 P,M. - MIDNICHT&#13;
THURSDA~ NICHTS WITH P.U. I.D.&#13;
1~ Beers&#13;
~&#13;
RANGER needs&#13;
SPORTS writers&#13;
+ WATER BEDS&#13;
+RECORDS&#13;
+TAPES&#13;
This Semester&#13;
NtV4 olL-- lle elbt&#13;
~luttt ~boppt&#13;
10 A.M. - 4 P.M. LLC LOWER MAIN&#13;
DAILY PLACE (east)&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Film Society is&#13;
c in business&#13;
gwen final app-o\'al until a&#13;
tel phone ballot was taken of&#13;
missmg members.&#13;
nanimous appro\·al wa given&#13;
to th proposal b) the members&#13;
·who \\ re Jr sent at the meeting.&#13;
and the telephon voting of&#13;
mi ing faculty proved po itive&#13;
. ince the student members&#13;
could not be located to vote, CCC&#13;
chairper on Marion !ochon&#13;
con lted \\;th tudent government&#13;
members on campus in&#13;
ord to g t some tudent input.&#13;
udent go, ernment approved&#13;
th id ; the ·u be made&#13;
immediately a,·adable for Film • Y use. d sem ter film are to be&#13;
funded u ivelv from first&#13;
ter revenu · . ince the&#13;
mmitt tated that no further&#13;
money would be allotted to the&#13;
Film ·ety thi year.&#13;
photo by Jim -Ruffalo&#13;
brary p'lans&#13;
esearch instruction&#13;
~·cli t celebrate the end of the road. This was the scene at the finish of the Ragtime Rangers-PAB&#13;
Bike Rallye last Sunday.&#13;
&amp;h n \\elln r bibliography oriented course on&#13;
n upper divi ·ion level. At thi&#13;
level, . tudents learn the types of&#13;
sou : guide· to the literature,&#13;
r ,·i " of the literature. abtract&#13;
and dige ts,&#13;
b1blio raphie and indexes.&#13;
dictionarie , encyclopedia ,&#13;
d ire c tories government&#13;
publication • aUa es, handbook ,&#13;
vearbook , manuals, and&#13;
penodicals.&#13;
Also induded on Level Three&#13;
are the principles of a good&#13;
bibliography, specialized&#13;
techniques for locating major&#13;
re earch materials, search&#13;
techniques for preparing&#13;
bibliographies, speeches, and&#13;
research papers, and the skills&#13;
necessary to use bibliographic&#13;
sources.&#13;
Teaching tudents in upper&#13;
division courses with library&#13;
related assignments and searcn&#13;
strategy necessary to complete&#13;
the course and the skills&#13;
necessary to use the specific tools&#13;
which apply to the assignment is&#13;
covered in Level Four.&#13;
306 Doclge Street&#13;
OLD TOWN RACINE&#13;
1~ Beers Half-Price&#13;
Mixed Drinks&#13;
6 P.M. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
THURSDAY NIGHTS WITH P.U. 1.D.&#13;
.&#13;
RANGER needs&#13;
SPORTS. writers&#13;
t WATER BEDS&#13;
t PIPES, PAPERS&#13;
tRECORDS&#13;
tTAPES &#13;
Review&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Par~side'~ Learni~g Center, located in LLC D175,is an audio-visual&#13;
paradise of information and entertainment. The material found there&#13;
can serve as an invaluable supplement to research projects or can be a&#13;
primary sO,uTce of ,information in itself. There are also study and&#13;
practice aids available. But besides providing some excellent&#13;
reso~rce ~aterial, the Learnin,g Center offers a great variety of&#13;
movles~ videotapes, cassettes, film strips, records, and so on which&#13;
entertain.&#13;
The Mime of Marcel Marceau is a film both entertaining and in.&#13;
formative. The scenes alternate between Marceau's school of mime&#13;
and one of his live stage. performances. The classroom scenes reveal&#13;
how rigorously and exactly each movement of face, body and hands is&#13;
analysed, practiced, and perfected. Every muscle in the body&#13;
becomes a tool for creating illusion in pantomime.&#13;
Marceau on stage, his face a mask of white accented in black at&#13;
brows, eyes, and mouth, leads his audience into another world where&#13;
illusion becomes reality and reality illusion. Marceau is a white figure&#13;
alone on the stage, surrounded by total darkness: a lonely every-man&#13;
trapped in a hostile world. His mimed characterizations portray the&#13;
technocracized man, battling indifferent machines in a seemingly&#13;
indifferent world. Striving to conquer his environment, every-man&#13;
becomes funny, ridiculous, and sad. Then he discovers beauty in his&#13;
little world: a bird in flight or a flower opening. These moments of&#13;
beauty seem to expand his small piece of darkness into the universe,&#13;
reducing the frustrations of man's machine world to nothing.&#13;
The classroom exercises being practiced by Marceau's students are&#13;
brought to life by the mime master in his portrayal of man the&#13;
machine battler, man the clown, and man the vision of God. Although&#13;
the exercises are highly structured, stylized, and repetitious, they also&#13;
lake on other-world quality, simply because of their style and&#13;
repetition.&#13;
The film is fun, interesting, and very poetic in quality. It's worth&#13;
dropping by the Learning Center to see it sometime.&#13;
L.&amp;FA sponsor mimisf&#13;
Wed,. Sept. 26. 1973THE PARKS/DE RANGER 5&#13;
Harry Chapin&#13;
Chapin in concert here&#13;
Harry Chapin, Grammy&#13;
finalist as best new artist of 1972-&#13;
73, will perform in concert at&#13;
Parkside Sunday, Sept. 30 at 8&#13;
p.m., in the Physical Education&#13;
BUilding.&#13;
Chapin, whose storytelling&#13;
style and poetic lyrics are most&#13;
frequently compared by critics to&#13;
early Bob Dylan, has seen his&#13;
popular appeal begin to catch up&#13;
with his critical acclaim since the&#13;
release of his second album,&#13;
"Sniper and Other Love Songs,"&#13;
about a year ago.&#13;
T. Daniel&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Mimist-rnagician, T. Daniel, is&#13;
presenting two free public performances&#13;
here Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 26, under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts Comrmttee.&#13;
Daniel, who studied und~r&#13;
Marcel Marceau at the master s&#13;
Ecole Internationale de Mime in&#13;
Paris, will conduct a workshop at&#13;
2 p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Studio Theater just east oC the&#13;
main theater and also will perform&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the Theater.&#13;
Before turning his attentions to&#13;
Mime, Daniel was a student of all&#13;
phases of theatre, directing and&#13;
acting in numerous plays as well&#13;
as designing for the theatre.&#13;
While attending Illinois State&#13;
University, he broadened his&#13;
knowledge of performing by&#13;
working with the University's&#13;
Gamma Phi Circus as a Juggler,&#13;
Tightwire Artist and solo&#13;
Unicyclist.&#13;
Also skilled in ventriloquy and&#13;
"escapology," Daniel offers a&#13;
unique style, incorporating the&#13;
mystery oC magic and the Cun of a&#13;
Circus Clown with the beauty of&#13;
~is poenc art. Beginning with a&#13;
collage of Mime techniques,&#13;
Daniel and his audience experience&#13;
laughter, sadness, fun,&#13;
excitement, and the use of the&#13;
imagination until the program is&#13;
brought to a very clever and&#13;
unusual end.&#13;
He has appeared at coUeges&#13;
and clubs throughout the country&#13;
and on television, and was a&#13;
member of the Ctucago Masquers&#13;
renaissance theatre group.&#13;
Since then, he has appeared&#13;
several times on the Tonight&#13;
Show, hosted Midnight Special.&#13;
and has been drawing large&#13;
audiences at club and college&#13;
concert dates.&#13;
Earlier this year he was one of&#13;
the five finalists for a Grammy&#13;
Award as Best New Artist and&#13;
received a Billboard 1973&#13;
Trendsetter Award for "devising&#13;
a storyteUing style of songwriting&#13;
with a narrative impact rare to&#13;
popular music."&#13;
Music critics have given&#13;
Chapin generous praise: Variety&#13;
said "Chapin's story songs are&#13;
among the most original of&#13;
contemporary compositions ...his&#13;
performance of them is electrifying"&#13;
RoUing Stone said "He&#13;
takes the audience up, down and&#13;
then suddenly up again, often&#13;
leaving wet. eyes and aching&#13;
hearts throughout the room"&#13;
Cash Box caUed Chapin "a&#13;
completely original, clearsighted&#13;
talent of major proportion."&#13;
a.apin's first album, "Heads&#13;
and Tales," contained the hit&#13;
single "Taxi" and established&#13;
him as an emerging talent. His&#13;
second, "Sniper and Other Love&#13;
Songs," established his validity&#13;
as a potential pop music&#13;
superstar and initiated the&#13;
honors which have come his way&#13;
this year, His third album is&#13;
scheduled for OCtober release.&#13;
Although Chapin uses drums&#13;
and piano on his records, his inperson&#13;
backing consists of three&#13;
musicians who ha ve been with&#13;
him since the group fonned in&#13;
t970: Tim SCott on cello, John&#13;
Wallace on bass, and Ron Palm""&#13;
on lead guitar.&#13;
Chapm has been a music&#13;
performer, on and off, for abc&#13;
15 years, including stints with '&#13;
brothers and father. He has I&#13;
worked in the film-makin,&#13;
dustry, producillll a docum,&#13;
tary, "Legendary Ouunplona&#13;
which won an Academy AW8I&#13;
nomination in addition to fib&#13;
festival awards ID New York an&#13;
Atlanta.&#13;
General admission prices COl&#13;
the concert are $3 in advance and&#13;
$3.50 at the door. Student prices&#13;
are $2.50 in advance and $3 at the&#13;
door. Advance tickets 8rtavailable&#13;
at One Sweet Dreaf!'"&#13;
and J&amp;J Tape in Kenosha, JI&#13;
Tape, Brandt's, and Beauti&#13;
Day in Racine, 1812 Overture&#13;
Milwaukee, and J&amp;J&#13;
WaUkegan. Students can oblE&#13;
tickets at the lnformation ,..~&#13;
ID 'laID Place, LLC&#13;
~~iiIIIo!:~~ 3 ~~&#13;
Chef~'&#13;
10% OFF ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
J $100&#13;
,&#13;
lOR MORE WITH PARKS IDE ID.&#13;
~ ENDS&#13;
Jj OCTOBER 31&#13;
, AT 'j 3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
f&#13;
AND&#13;
,! 6926 39th AVENUE&#13;
,.....·s~~toO&#13;
•&#13;
Review&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Par~side'~ Learni~g Center, located in LLC D175, is an audiirvisual&#13;
paradise of mformation and entertainment. The material found there&#13;
can serve as an invaluable supplement to research projects or can be a&#13;
pnm~ry so.urce of .information in itself. There are also study and&#13;
practice aids available. But besides providing some excellent&#13;
reso1;1rce ~aterial, the Learnin.g Center offers a great variety of&#13;
movies, videotapes, cassettes, film strips, records, and so on which entertain. -&#13;
The Mime of Marcel Marceau is a film both entertaining and informative.&#13;
The scenes alternate between Marceau's school of mime&#13;
and one of his live stage performances. The classroom scenes reveal&#13;
how rigorously and exactly each movement of face, body and hands is&#13;
analysed, practiced, and perfected. Every muscle in the body&#13;
becomes a tool for creating illusion in pantomime.&#13;
Marceau on stage, his face a mask of white accented in black at&#13;
brows, eyes, and mouth, leads his audience into another world where&#13;
illusion becomes reality and reality illusion. Marceau is a white figure alone on the stage, surrounded by total darkness: a lonely every-man&#13;
trapped in a hostile world. His mimed characterizations portray the&#13;
technocracized man, battling indifferent machines in a seemingly&#13;
indifferent world. Striving to conquer his environment, every-man&#13;
becomes funny, ridiculous, and sad. Then he discovers beauty in his&#13;
little world: a bird in flight or a flower opening. These moments of&#13;
beauty seem to expand his small piece of darkness into the universe,&#13;
reducing the frustrations of man's machine world to nothing. The classroom exercises being practiced by Marceau's students are&#13;
brought to life by the mime master in his portrayal of man the&#13;
machine battler, man the clown, and man the vision of God. Although&#13;
the exercises are highly structured, stylized, and repetitious, they also&#13;
take on other-world quality, simply because of their style and&#13;
repetition.&#13;
The film is fun, interesting, and very poetic in quality. It's worth&#13;
dropping by the Learning Center to see it som!ltime.&#13;
Chapin&#13;
Harry Chapin. Grammy&#13;
finalist as best new artist of 1972-&#13;
73. will perform in concert at&#13;
Parkside Sunday, Sept. 30 at 8&#13;
p.m., in the Physical Education&#13;
Building.&#13;
Chapin. whose storytelling&#13;
style and poetic lyrics are most&#13;
frequently compared by critics to&#13;
early Bob Dylan, has seen his&#13;
popular appeal begin to catch up&#13;
with his critical acclaim since the&#13;
release of his second album,&#13;
"Sniper and Other Love Songs," about a year ago.&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
H rr.) Chapin&#13;
in concert here&#13;
Since then. he has appeared&#13;
several times on the Tonight&#13;
Show. ho ted 1idnight Special.&#13;
and ha been drawing large&#13;
audiences at club and colleg&#13;
concert dates. Earlier this year he wa one of&#13;
the five finalists for a Grammy Award as Best • 'ew Artist and&#13;
received a Billboard 1973&#13;
Trendsetter Award for "devising&#13;
a storytelling style of song,wTiting&#13;
with a narrative impact rare to&#13;
popular music.''&#13;
l&amp;FA sponsor ~irnist&#13;
.fosic critics have given&#13;
Chapin generous praise: Variety said "Chapin 's story songs are&#13;
among the most original of&#13;
contemporary compositions ... his&#13;
performance of them is electrifying."&#13;
Rolling Stone said ''He&#13;
takes the audience up. do\\o-n and&#13;
then suddenly up again, often&#13;
lea\ing wet eye and aching&#13;
heart throughout the room"&#13;
Ca h Bo called Chapin "a&#13;
completely original , clearby&#13;
Michael Olszyk&#13;
Mimist-magician, T. Daniel, is&#13;
presenting two free public performances&#13;
here Wednesday,&#13;
Sept. 26, under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Daniel, who studied und~r&#13;
Marcel Marceau at the master s&#13;
Ecole Internationale de Mime in&#13;
Paris, will conduct a workshop at&#13;
2 p.m. in the CommlD'lication Arts&#13;
Studio Theater just east of the&#13;
main theater and also will per- form at B p.m. in the Theater.&#13;
Before turning his attentions to&#13;
T. Daniel&#13;
Mime, Daniel was a student of all&#13;
phases of theatre, directing and&#13;
acting in nwnerous plays as well&#13;
as designing for the theatre.&#13;
While attending Illinois State&#13;
University, he broadened his&#13;
knowledge of performing by working with the University's Gamma Phi Circus as a Juggler,&#13;
Tightwire Artist and solo&#13;
Unicyclist.&#13;
Also skilled in ventriloquy and&#13;
"escapology," Daniel offers a&#13;
lD'lique style, incorporating the&#13;
mystery of magic and the fun of a&#13;
Circus Clo\\rn with the beauty of&#13;
t,is poetic art. Beginning with a&#13;
collage of • time techniques, Daniel and his audience experience&#13;
laughter, sadness, flD'l,&#13;
excitement, and the use of the&#13;
imagination until the program is&#13;
brought to a very clever and&#13;
unusual end.&#13;
He has appeared at colleges&#13;
and clubs throughout the country and on television, and was a&#13;
member of the Chicago Masquers&#13;
renaissance theatre group.&#13;
ighted talent of major propor·&#13;
tion."&#13;
Cliapin's first album, " H ad&#13;
and Tale ," contained the hit&#13;
ingle ' Taxi' ' and e tablished&#13;
him a an emer m talent. Hi&#13;
nd, " niper and Other Love&#13;
ng ," est bli hed his validity&#13;
a potential pop mu ic&#13;
l % OF&#13;
AT&#13;
3400 SHERIDA ROAD&#13;
AND&#13;
6926 39th AVE1 UE&#13;
?~ &#13;
10 THE PARKS1DE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
PAS presents&#13;
movie IIJoe"&#13;
"Joe" IS ~ me Ii,.,,,&#13;
m_ plctur to deal with the&#13;
unrut and Itlestyle 01 conI&#13;
mporary middle merica,&#13;
Pro&lt;Med by David Gil and&#13;
dlr ed by Jolin Avildsen, the&#13;
mm tello th ollen touching,&#13;
Ir~t1y amusing lOrY 01 two&#13;
Wldel, CClIlIra ung hgur • Joe&#13;
urran (Peter Boyle),&#13;
ho_. bowler, and World&#13;
War D \'deran who eams 1\fIO a&#13;
" nd BIU Compton (DennIS&#13;
PatrICk), a , a·year ad·&#13;
v rl nil ullve. De pole thelT&#13;
ontr lin d grees of&#13;
phlsllcation, they are drawn&#13;
her b)' a common dl lr\lS1&#13;
d vy 01 youth ..... ben Bill's&#13;
d u nter, !elt a rsu an&#13;
randon). becom enmeshed in&#13;
an East Village environment of&#13;
drugs. Bill and Joe lash back with&#13;
a vengeance that is a timely and&#13;
stunning commentary on the&#13;
ceasequences 01 radical violence&#13;
in America.&#13;
PeoPle well may credit the&#13;
makers of "Joe" for having made&#13;
a prophetic liIm. Actually,&#13;
orman Wexler wrote his&#13;
original screenplay nearly two&#13;
years ago. lOtending only to&#13;
e-eate a lanlasy whicb dealt with&#13;
the ramifications of the&#13;
genera'ion and polilical gaps that&#13;
trouble our country·&#13;
Parltside Activi'ies Board is&#13;
ponsoringa showing 01 "Joe" on&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
10 GreenqUl , 103. The admission&#13;
charge is 75 cents.&#13;
Regents&#13;
PUBLIC SERVICE MESSAGE&#13;
The Ci,y 01 Racine needs parttime&#13;
crossing guards 10 relieve&#13;
lull-time guards. Tbis is a paid&#13;
position. Interested persons&#13;
should contact Capt. James&#13;
Jerdee a' the safety Bldg.,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
OK new&#13;
physical&#13;
plant&#13;
Illda lor construction 01 a&#13;
physic a' planl building a'&#13;
ParUtda are expeeled to be&#13;
takftJ m ·O\'e.I1lbe.r and contracts&#13;
ign«I in January, it was&#13;
announced la t Tuesday.&#13;
James GalbraIth, director 01&#13;
P\anrung and Construction, said&#13;
that budget and concept lor the&#13;
1521,000 laciltl)'. which wtll&#13;
pro"de lor centralization 01 all&#13;
phy lcal planl operations under&#13;
one rool. has been approved by&#13;
th UW ystern Board 01 Regents&#13;
and IS expected to clear the Stale&#13;
BUIldIng Comml sion soon&#13;
Construellon should begin early&#13;
nelll year, with occupancy in&#13;
early t975.&#13;
The one-storY strUCture, whIch&#13;
,,1lI be located east 01the central&#13;
H ung and Chilling Plant, ...-ilI&#13;
pro"de 19.975gross square leet&#13;
of space for neet maintenance&#13;
and garage laeiliUes, campus&#13;
torege. mainlenance shop areas&#13;
lor groundsk88PlOg. carpentry,&#13;
IOCDIlllth painting. plumblllll.&#13;
electrical and mechanical&#13;
operauon , and staff o/hoes.&#13;
GalbraIth wd the centralized&#13;
latillty ill result in substantial&#13;
vinIJ In electrical energy and&#13;
fu I and increase work ef·&#13;
fiClenc)', sm~ variOUS physical&#13;
plant operations are now scat-&#13;
'ered 10 lormer residences on&#13;
campus "hich are ill-designed&#13;
and lOac!eqUate lor SllCh luneUOOS&#13;
The 1:I2t. project COOlincludes&#13;
buUdlng. Ite developmenl&#13;
and uuhti costs, as well as&#13;
m abl equipment and variOUS&#13;
contingency and architeclural&#13;
f GalbraIth said the "el·&#13;
haeney" 01 the buildlng, a&#13;
panson 01 gro area 10&#13;
... ble area, is lugh, about 90&#13;
percent, and the conslruction&#13;
coat 01 slIghtly less than 117 per&#13;
quare (001. was "very&#13;
eeonomtcal In splle of innationary&#13;
trends" Economical&#13;
pre-engineered modular struclure&#13;
components ;U be used in&#13;
con trUCtlon ArchitectW'al slyle&#13;
oIth bUlhllng ",II be consistenl&#13;
'&lt;lth oth on tbe campus.&#13;
photo by Allen FrederlcklOn&#13;
A RANGER reader! A student takes time to relax and keep informed.&#13;
SAB under student&#13;
management&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
lanagement 01 the Student&#13;
Activities Building is under an&#13;
experimental setup this year with&#13;
students holding posts previously&#13;
occupied by stafl members. The&#13;
change was necessitated due to&#13;
financial cutbacks, but also with&#13;
the realization that students&#13;
should and can handle some 01&#13;
the responsibilities 01 nmning the&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Four students replace the two&#13;
starr supervisors, that formerly&#13;
ran the building, and are&#13;
responsible lor e"erything that&#13;
goes on to the Activities building,&#13;
Some 01 their duties include:&#13;
security 01 the building,&#13;
managing cash now, scheduling&#13;
in the building. and super.vising&#13;
other student employees. The&#13;
student supervisors also make&#13;
recommendations on purchasing,&#13;
and the hiring of other student&#13;
employees. Itimately they are&#13;
responsible to Dave Bishop,&#13;
Coordinator of Auxillary Services,&#13;
though he would like to see&#13;
everyone working together as a "&#13;
team to run the building.&#13;
Having students in supervisory&#13;
positions is new at Parkside and&#13;
if it succeeds could lead to a&#13;
largely student nUl campus union&#13;
when it's finally completed.&#13;
Through this experiment it is&#13;
hoped that more students would&#13;
be encouraged to get involved in&#13;
some decision making processes&#13;
on campus.&#13;
TAPES&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
RECORDS STEREOS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
t9t9TAYLORAVE DE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DE rYNELSON&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
No" Appearing&#13;
9P l.totA.M.&#13;
URSDAY -FRIDAY - SATIJRDAY&#13;
MARINA ROOM&#13;
'Kerw;lISha"S kfiNi H~rbot N,t. Club"&#13;
"Taurus Rising"&#13;
s.pt 21. 29 &amp; lO&#13;
SIGHTLY E 'TERTAINMENT&#13;
In Our Cockt., LouOOf'&#13;
FNlunng&#13;
COLLEGENITE&#13;
evel'Y Thursday&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
5l2S6IhAve.&#13;
Overlooking the Harbor!&#13;
\\\\ ,etHng III,&#13;
,S\\\RTS 'Ie ,,\ ~"A~&#13;
PARKSIDE 'E,&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
- Coming Next:&#13;
RECORD SALE III&#13;
Bigger &amp; Better Than &amp;erl&#13;
. "&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
movie 11Joe''&#13;
nts&#13;
ne&#13;
lcal&#13;
an East Village en ironment of&#13;
&lt;rugs Bill and Joe lash back with&#13;
a vengeance that is a timely and&#13;
stunning commentary on the&#13;
consequences ol radical violence&#13;
m America.&#13;
People well may credit the&#13;
makers of •• Joe" for having made&#13;
a prophetic film . Actually,&#13;
orman We ler wrote his&#13;
original screenplay nearly two&#13;
years ago, intending only to&#13;
create a fantasy which dealt with&#13;
the ramification of the&#13;
generation and political gaps that&#13;
trouble our country.&#13;
Par ide Acti\ities Board is&#13;
ponsonng a shoOAing of " Joe" on&#13;
Wednesday. p( . 26 at 7:30 p.m. in Greenquist 103. The admission&#13;
charge i 75 cents.&#13;
P BU VI E~E GE&#13;
The City of Racine needs parttime&#13;
crossmg guards to relieve&#13;
full-time guards, This is a paid&#13;
position. Interested persons&#13;
photo by Allen FreclerlcklOII&#13;
hould contact Capt . James&#13;
Jerdee at the Safety Bldg.,&#13;
Racine. A RANGER reader! A student takes time to relax and keep Informed.&#13;
&#13;
nt&#13;
campu .&#13;
SAB under student&#13;
management&#13;
b Tom Peursen&#13;
fanagement of the Student&#13;
Activities Building is under an&#13;
experimental setup this year with&#13;
tudent holding posts pre\i ously&#13;
occupied by taff members. The&#13;
change wa nece itated due to&#13;
financial cutbacks, but also 'Aith&#13;
the realization that students&#13;
·hould and can handle ome of&#13;
the re ponsibilitie of running the&#13;
tud nt Activitie Building.&#13;
Four tudents replace the two&#13;
taff supervisors, that formerly&#13;
ran the building, and are&#13;
respon ible for everything that&#13;
g on in the Activities building.&#13;
me of their duties include :&#13;
ecunty of the building,&#13;
managing ca h now, scheduling&#13;
10 the building. and uperyi ing&#13;
other student employees. The&#13;
student supervisors also make&#13;
recommendations on purchasing,&#13;
and the hiring of other student&#13;
employees. ltimately they are&#13;
re ponsible to Dave Bishop,&#13;
Coordinator of Auxiliary Ser-&#13;
\ices, though he would like to see&#13;
everyone working together as a .&#13;
team to run the building.&#13;
Having students in supervisory&#13;
positions is new at Parkside and&#13;
if it ucceeds could lead to a&#13;
largely student nm campus union&#13;
when it's finally completed.&#13;
Through this experiment it is&#13;
hoped that more students would&#13;
be encouraged to get involved in&#13;
some decision making processes&#13;
on campus.&#13;
RECORDS STEREOS TAPES&#13;
PIANOS ORGANS&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
IIKEURBA.·&#13;
DE. iY • ,ELS(),&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
. ·ow Appearing&#13;
IP .. lolA.M.&#13;
URSD \' - FRIDAY. 11JRDA y&#13;
In ""&#13;
MARL'AROOM&#13;
··Tauru Ri ing"&#13;
Seo v. 29 &amp; 10&#13;
In O..r Coe I I Lounge&#13;
Ffflur ng&#13;
COLLEGE NITE&#13;
Every Thursday&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
1\oe,&amp;a,\ ~~&#13;
of Kenosha&#13;
5125 6th Ave.&#13;
Overlook ing the Harbor!&#13;
\\6 getHng 1111&#13;
1.s\\\RTS D,-e&#13;
,.\ r,4JfJJ&#13;
PARKSIDE ll&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
, Coming Next:&#13;
RECORD $ALE Ill&#13;
Bigger &amp; Better Than Eier!&#13;
' .. &#13;
Ex-DJ&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
heads media production&#13;
Dave Campbell doing his thing.&#13;
by Micbael Olszyk&#13;
The amplified banging of an electrician, along&#13;
with the repeated ringing of a phone, interrupted&#13;
Dave Campbell from reading an article entitled,&#13;
"Audio Report by the Editors of Rolling Stone."&#13;
Campbell is the coordinator of Parkside's new&#13;
Media Production Facility, located on the main&#13;
floor of the unfinished Communications Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Here, students and faculty will be able to have&#13;
media produced in a form that will hopefully convey&#13;
information to their respective audiences. This&#13;
kaleidoscopic center is designed .to encompass&#13;
almost all areas of media, ranging from general&#13;
audio-visual productions to separate film, television&#13;
and sound creations.&#13;
A staff member, for example, wanting to arrange&#13;
a film strip from separate slides, would find a&#13;
drymount press helpful. Other useful items in the&#13;
AV section of the center include a copystand, 28&#13;
video-tape editors, various recording machines,&#13;
overhead projections. transparencies, and more.&#13;
Sandwiched in between the AV production room&#13;
and television studio is a small TV repair shop, for&#13;
closed-cireuit sets at Parkside. The studio itself will&#13;
house full-color video taping in the near future.&#13;
These facilities presenUy are occupied by cartons&#13;
of TVs and tape-marked floors, designating wbere&#13;
equipment will go once it arrives.&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Iponlorl&#13;
Troubador night&#13;
Troubador Night, the first of a&#13;
series of Parks ide Poetry&#13;
Forums, IS scheduled for&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 'EI at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The new theatre in the Comm.&#13;
Arts building will be open to all&#13;
students, guitarists and song&#13;
writers. The essence of poetry is&#13;
song and music; this is the theme&#13;
of Troubador Night. It is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Among students tuning up for&#13;
the festivities are classical&#13;
guitarist and bluesman Dave&#13;
Rogers,.and Clark Anderson who&#13;
will play along with Keith Herbrechtsmeier.&#13;
John Sieger, Bob&#13;
Fitzgerald, James Frere and&#13;
Charley will also be there. Bob&#13;
Canary of the Humanities&#13;
Division is preparing his melodic&#13;
tunes and stringing his guitar.&#13;
too.&#13;
Poetry Forum advisor, Andy&#13;
McLean, said that any student&#13;
who wants to play and-or sing will&#13;
be able to do so. Just truck right&#13;
in and join the fun. This is a&#13;
students' night in the theatre with&#13;
music. Come, stay, play or listen.&#13;
The next Poetry Forum will be&#13;
Oct. 4, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., in&#13;
the back of the third floor of the&#13;
Library. Students wishing to read&#13;
their poems should contact Carl&#13;
Lindner, assistant professor of&#13;
English, in CA218, ext. 2392.Here&#13;
ts a chance to share your poems&#13;
with others.&#13;
"The entire center should be in operation within&#13;
six months to a year," explained Campbell. "Right&#13;
now, however, only the AV portion is open."&#13;
Film production, with editing facilities, will be the&#13;
third area to open, following television. It plans to&#13;
specialize in 16 mm and 8 mm film.&#13;
Last, but not least, to become operational is the&#13;
audio section. Its control room, located between two&#13;
recording studios, hopes to have a 16 microphone&#13;
mixing system, resulting in Brack, quadraphonic&#13;
recording.&#13;
Setting up these facilities is one 01 two major&#13;
concerns of Campbell, who came to Parkside early&#13;
last May, following five years of experience in radio&#13;
and commercial television at Indiana State&#13;
University. When he arrived here, the Media&#13;
Facility had been three-fourths of the way built.&#13;
Unfortunately, several architectural errors had&#13;
been made.&#13;
Perhaps the most serious error is that the installation&#13;
of a lighting console for the (ilm room is in&#13;
one nf the recording studios. Also, the acoustics (or&#13;
audio production were designed to broadcast rather&#13;
than record.&#13;
Campbell mentioned otber flaws, too, such as the&#13;
AV room being without AC current and a badly&#13;
located testing screen in the dark room.&#13;
"Despite various errors in design," commented&#13;
Campbell, "The center is in a good location, acroos&#13;
Earn $$$ selling&#13;
ads for RANGER&#13;
PARKSfDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTS IN CONCERT&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
INFO. CENTER&#13;
Main etece-t.t,c&#13;
UWP STUDENTS&#13;
52.SO advance&#13;
$3.00 al doOr'&#13;
Sun., Sept. 30,&#13;
8:00&#13;
Phy. Ed. 8ldg. GEN. ADM.&#13;
$l.oo advance&#13;
Sl.SG at dOOr&#13;
(rom the art rooms and music department down the&#13;
hall ....&#13;
"Any well-working production (acUity mlat have&#13;
competentstalf members, whidll leel we have," be&#13;
added.&#13;
One of those five stalf members is Dale ~,&#13;
engineer. Before coming to Parkside, King worIted&#13;
on commercial television in Madison for 17 yean.&#13;
Sandy Thomason, who 15 in charge of AV&#13;
production, comes from Texas ,,'here she received&#13;
her master's in radio and lelevision at SOuthern&#13;
lethodist University. Thomason worked lor a While&#13;
on radio station WFAA io Dallas. She plans to train&#13;
students as assistants in running the AV center,&#13;
In charge of film production will be Mille Reid,&#13;
woo is also experienced in media.&#13;
Phil Quetsehke, assistant director of the Learning&#13;
Center, will help Campbell coordinate the&#13;
Production Center.&#13;
Campbell himself would like to instruct mterested&#13;
students in television work, such as cable nmners,&#13;
lighting, and so forth. .&#13;
Referring to his past, and as to why Campbell&#13;
chose to come to Parkside. he stated, "I have a way&#13;
of droppong into things. While m radio at IndIana I&#13;
was a hoss jock. Jay Anthony was my personaltty&#13;
name. During thal time (at five tauons) 1 found oul&#13;
how the hierarchy in broadcasting constantly mess&#13;
up._.They're really a bunch of neurotic money&#13;
mongers. That's all they're concerned with ."&#13;
"In commercial television it's even worse. One&#13;
weekend Iworked for ABC Wide World of Sports&#13;
They were the most incompetent people l.ver met&#13;
The show we did ran something like three mmut ..&#13;
over schedule, which costs around a quarter of a&#13;
million dollars in television.&#13;
"Fed up with commercialism, I decided 10 try&#13;
something different, more creative. 11m bavl.lNlfun&#13;
bere, which is basically what I strive fer in my life."&#13;
Cable television is one thing that Campbe\l hopes&#13;
to experiment with at Parbide. He would like to&#13;
produce half-hour to an hour programa weekly,&#13;
using a wide spectrum of Ideas from studenta, to IeI1&#13;
to cable stations.&#13;
"The implications of cable television ~ infinite,"&#13;
said Campbell.&#13;
Also, since Parkside was designed to worIr,cIoaeIy&#13;
with southeastern Wisconsin's business and inutry,&#13;
Campbell encourag .. outside organizati ....&#13;
to use the (Un.-making facilities for their ~.&#13;
Looking ahead to the fut ..... of mediae produellcJna,&#13;
especially in education, campbe\l predicted It&#13;
would be possible in our time for studenta to ."""0;""&#13;
lectures by TV through dialing any dea1red program&#13;
and respooding to the lecturer at home.&#13;
"In communicatioDS, lhe leJephone is AI&#13;
primitive as the _," campbell remarked.&#13;
·1&#13;
l'S&#13;
.1&#13;
,&#13;
il&#13;
i&#13;
I CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd 5t.&#13;
PhOIM652-'662&#13;
OPEM 11 D.,"-. ,.. 2 Q tW.-.... thrv Set&#13;
0&gt;-- --'.- --- -&#13;
c --- -&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Ex-DJ heads media production&#13;
photo by DA ~ DA&#13;
Dave Campbell doing hi thing.&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
The amplified banging of an electrician, along&#13;
with the repeated ringing of a phone, interrupted&#13;
Dave Campbell from reading an article entitled,&#13;
"Audio Report by the Editors of Rolling Stone."&#13;
Campbell is the coordinator of Parkside's new&#13;
Media Production Facility, located on the main&#13;
floor of the unfinished Communications Arts&#13;
Building.&#13;
Here, students and faculty will be able to have&#13;
media produced in a form that will hopefully convey&#13;
information to their respective audiences. This&#13;
kaleidoscopic center is designed to encompass&#13;
almost all areas of media, ranging from general&#13;
audio-visual productions to separate film, television&#13;
and sound creations.&#13;
A staff member, for example, wanting to arrange&#13;
a film strip from separate slides, would find a&#13;
drymount press helpful. Other useful items in the&#13;
AV section of the center include a copystand, 28&#13;
video-tape editors, various recording machines,&#13;
overhead projections, transparencies, and more.&#13;
Sandwiched in between the AV production room&#13;
and television studio is a small TV repair shop, for&#13;
closed-circuit sets at Parkside. The studio itself will&#13;
house full-color video taping in the near future.&#13;
These facilities presently are occupied by cartons&#13;
of TVs and tape-marked floors, designating where&#13;
equipment will go once it arrives.&#13;
"The entire center hould be in operation within&#13;
six months to a year,"' explained Campbell. ' 'Right&#13;
now, however, only the A\' portion i open."&#13;
Film production, with editing facilities, will be the&#13;
third area to open, following television. It plaru to&#13;
specialize in 16 mm and 8 mm film.&#13;
Last, but not least, to become operational is the&#13;
audio section. Its control room, located between tv.'O&#13;
recording studios, hopes to have a 16 microphone&#13;
mixing system, resulting in 4-tra k, quadraphonic&#13;
recording. Setting up these facilities is one of two major&#13;
concerns of Campbell, who came to Parkside early&#13;
last May. following five years or experience in radio&#13;
and commercial television at Indiana State&#13;
University. When he arrived here, the edia&#13;
Facility had been three-fourths of the way built.&#13;
Unfortunately, several architectural errors had&#13;
been made. Perhaps the most serious error i~ that the_ installation&#13;
of a lighting console for the film room IS m&#13;
one of the recording tudios. Also, the acoustics foe&#13;
audio production were designed to troadca t rather&#13;
than record.&#13;
Campbell mentioned other flaws, too such a the&#13;
AV room being without AC current and a badly&#13;
located testing screen in the dark room.&#13;
"Despite various errors in de ign," commented&#13;
Campbell, "The center is in a good location, across&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
sponsors&#13;
Troubador night&#13;
Earn $$$ selling&#13;
ads for RANGER&#13;
:&#13;
Troubador Night, the first of a&#13;
series of Parkside Poetry&#13;
Forums, is scheduled for&#13;
Thursday, Sept. 'n at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The new theatre in the Comm.&#13;
Arts building will be open to all&#13;
students, guitarists and song&#13;
writers. The essence of poetry is&#13;
song and music; this is the theme&#13;
of Troubador Night. It is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Among students tuning up for&#13;
the festivities are classical&#13;
guitarist and bluesman Dave&#13;
Rogers,-and Clark Anderson who&#13;
will play along with Keith Herbrechtsmeier.&#13;
John Sieger, Bob&#13;
Fitzgerald, James Frere and&#13;
Cbarley will also be there. Bob&#13;
Canary of the Humanities&#13;
Division is preparing his melodic&#13;
tunes and stringing his guitar,&#13;
too.&#13;
Poetry Forum advisor, Andy&#13;
McLean, said that any student&#13;
who wants to play and-or sing will&#13;
be able to do so. Just truck right&#13;
m and join the fun . This is a&#13;
students' night in the theatre with&#13;
music. Come, stay, play or listen.&#13;
The next Poetry Forum will ~e&#13;
Oct. 4, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m., m&#13;
the back of the third floor of the&#13;
Library. Students wishing to read&#13;
their poems should contact Carl&#13;
Lindner, assistant professor of&#13;
English, in CA 218, ext. 2392. Here&#13;
is a chance to share your poems&#13;
with others.&#13;
PARKS IDE ACTIVITIES BOARD&#13;
PRESENTI3 IN CONCERT&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
INFO. CENTER Main Ptace.LLC&#13;
GEN. ADM.&#13;
s3.00 advance&#13;
s3.S0 at door&#13;
UWP STUDENTS&#13;
n .so advanc"&#13;
S3.00 at doOr&#13;
Sun .• Sept. 30,&#13;
8:00&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
from the rt room nd m hall ....&#13;
-&#13;
, THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., sept. 26, 1973&#13;
Brief news&#13;
WbIteoltellar presents the return of Parkside's awn Tony and Jumbo&#13;
wI1ba new piano player, Jimi Holsinger. The show will begin at 1 p.m.&#13;
Inthe Whiteoltrllar, Greenqwst 0201. This will be the grand reopening&#13;
GIllie WbIteoltellar Everyone is invited to bring their lunch and enjoy&#13;
dl8DaeIves on wednesday, Sept. 26.&#13;
P::rk ide's student poetry magaame. The _eD Hara, is preparing&#13;
*&#13;
the flnt of Its three iasues for the 1973-74school year Contributions&#13;
uch a poems and hne drawings are welcome and should be sent to&#13;
Carl LIndner, istant professor of English, 218 Comm Arts. Each&#13;
poem hould be legible and accompanied by a sell·addressed stamped&#13;
envelope lIthe writer wlshe the poem returned. Contributions for this&#13;
lit will be received until October IS, with publication expected by&#13;
ovember 7&#13;
Ire Hockey Oub meetings will&#13;
*&#13;
be beld on Thursdays at the P.E.&#13;
bulIdlna, main gym Workout at 7:00 p.m., business meeting at 8:00&#13;
pm Anyone Interested in playIng, managing. or assistant coaching,&#13;
welcome If unable to attend the meeung. contact Vic Godfrey at ext.&#13;
2310&#13;
*&#13;
Anyone w'ho paid lor a parking ticket at Parkside Village that was&#13;
not I ued oy the Kenosha Sheriff's Department can get the money&#13;
bad by lIOing to supenntendent Art Oaultbelr.&#13;
The Veta invite all men and women vets to bring spouse or friend to&#13;
*&#13;
their meeting of September 30 in the SAB at 6:30 p.m. Beer will be&#13;
served.&#13;
*&#13;
Ally string p1ayen interested in participating in Parkside's or-&#13;
• _a an ,..eIcome to come to practice on Mondays at 3:30 and&#13;
n-day night at 7 :30, in COmm Arts DI1B. For more infcrmatioo&#13;
p1_ call David Littrell at 637·1019or at his office in comm Arts 293.&#13;
On Sept. 30 a man from Dependable Pest Control was working over&#13;
*&#13;
IIone of the Parbide Village buildings. He set a can of deadly poison&#13;
dDwn and left. When be returned, it was gone. Whoever tooIt it is asked&#13;
lDpIeaae dispoee of It quickly and carelulJy, before someone gets burl.&#13;
W\acalain's Kettle Moraine, a prime scenic&#13;
*&#13;
and recreational area of&#13;
Ibe Slate, will be the subject 01 aD Extensioo course. Parts 01 lbe&#13;
....-aiDe are now preserved as the Kettle Moraine State Forest. and&#13;
parts Irt" included in the newly created Ice Age Natiooal Scientific&#13;
Reoerve of the national park system.&#13;
The lormatioo 01 the Moraine. component laDdfonns, bedrock&#13;
(leoIogy, and gJacla1 biatory will be covered, and an all-&lt;1ayfield trip&#13;
can be arranged If desired&#13;
The mstruetor is AIIao SChneider, of Parkside's Earth Science&#13;
viSlOll.Five weekly meetings will begin Wednesday, Sept. 26, 7:30&#13;
,.m. at the wood Road Campus.&#13;
- '" about the Danforth Fellowships, to be awarded by lbe&#13;
*&#13;
..n Foundation of St, LouIS, ltssourl in Marcb 1974,are invited,&#13;
""ding to the local campus representative, Prof. John zarling,&#13;
.;istant to the Vice Chancelor, room 340 Library Learning Center.&#13;
The Fellowships are open to all qualified persons of any race, creed&#13;
_ CItizenship, single or married, who bave serious interest in careers&#13;
If teachiog and-or administration 1D colleges and universities, and&#13;
_"",I,a::o to study lor a PhD in any field 01 study common to the un-&#13;
',#a uate liberal arts curriculum in the Uruted States Applicants&#13;
.. be unde_ lISyears 01 age at the lime application papers are filed,&#13;
and may not have undertaken any graduate or professional study&#13;
beyond the baccalaureate. Persons must be nominated by Liaison&#13;
Ofllcers of their undergraduate IOstitutions by Nov 20, 1974. The&#13;
Danforth Foundation does not accept drrect applications lor the&#13;
P'eIIowships ApproXimately 100Fellowships ,,,ll be awarded.&#13;
~ award is (or one year, and is normally renewable until com·&#13;
plebon of the degree nr for a maximum total of four years of graduate&#13;
!IlUdy Fellollo-ship bpends are based on individual need, but may not&#13;
_ exceed S202Sfor slnRle Fellows and $2200 lor married Fellows lor the&#13;
academic year. plus dependency allowances for children and required&#13;
tioo and lees&#13;
The Danlorth Foundation was created in 19Z1by the late Mr. and&#13;
n Wilham H Danforth of St. Louis as a philanthropy devoted to&#13;
ving aid and encouragement to persons, to emphasize the humane&#13;
ues that com from a religious and democratic heritage, and to&#13;
",gthen the essential quality of education.&#13;
Free music&#13;
performances&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Eleven recitals and concerts by&#13;
faculty and student solo and&#13;
ensemble performers make up&#13;
lbe musical agenda for the lall&#13;
semester at Parkside.&#13;
All 01 the performances are&#13;
free and open to the public and all&#13;
are scheduled for the new&#13;
Communication Arts Theater.&#13;
They are set for 7:30 p.m. except&#13;
the Orristrnas Carol Concert,&#13;
which is at 3 p.m.&#13;
The series will begin OCt. 14&#13;
with a laculty recital by Frances&#13;
Bedlord, harpsichordist, and&#13;
James Yoghourtjian playing the&#13;
classical guitar and viola da&#13;
gamba.&#13;
The next two recitals will introduce&#13;
two new faculty members,&#13;
David Littrell, violoncello,&#13;
who will perform with his wife,&#13;
Mary Ann Littrell as pianist, on&#13;
OCt. 21, and Stephen Swedisb,&#13;
pianist, who will play Nov. 11.&#13;
"An Evening of Jazz" will be&#13;
presented on Nov. 15 by UW-P's&#13;
Jazz Ensembles I and II under&#13;
the direction of Robert Thomason&#13;
and the Parkside Symphonic&#13;
Band directed by Bernard Sliner&#13;
will appear in concert on Nov. 18.&#13;
The Parkside Piano TrIo, a&#13;
newly formed faculty ensemble&#13;
including Marla Mutschler,&#13;
violinist, Littrell and Swedish will&#13;
debut 00 Nov. 29. The Parkside&#13;
Symphony Orchestra conducted&#13;
by Littrell will perform on Dec. 2&#13;
and the Parkside OIorale and&#13;
Chorus directed by Frank&#13;
Mueller will present" Christmas&#13;
Carol Concert on Dec. 9.&#13;
Three student recitals also are&#13;
sdleduled.&#13;
The Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
and other chamber groups are&#13;
scheduled lor Dec. 6; Lenee&#13;
Stevens, flute, witb Sue Anderegg,&#13;
piano, for Dec. 12; and&#13;
Gertrude Sheridan, voice, with&#13;
Everett Kuiper. piano, and Kurt&#13;
Harlf, guitar, for Dec. 13.&#13;
A series of afternoon student&#13;
concerts at 3:30 p.m. ·in Room&#13;
DIl8 01 the COmmunication Arts&#13;
Building are Scheduled lor OCt. 10&#13;
and 31, Nov. 14 and 18 and Dec. 5.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
PAT GARRET &amp; BILLY THE KID&#13;
Bob Dylan-50undtrack (Columbia K C 32460)&#13;
The dominating mood is established with the "Main Title Theme,"&#13;
which introduces the audience to an old tale about the sad fate of a&#13;
wayward boy. This is the first of the "Billys" on this record, and its&#13;
essence is six minutes of melancholy instrumentation. It is formed by&#13;
a typical western outdoor assembly of acoustic guitars and tarnbourine.&#13;
Awalking bass joins in the middle, defining the second&#13;
half ...not extremely gripping ...not terribly dull ...not bad.&#13;
"Cantina Theme (Working for the Law)" brings a fairly intriguing&#13;
arrangement of another instrumental. The pulse is strong-weak,&#13;
strong-weak...interest builds slightly.&#13;
Now the stylus arrives at "Billy I" with feelings of uncertainty. This&#13;
is the first in a large series of vocal Billys. Bob and his familiar harmonica&#13;
companion are featured in this one. The harmonica is the&#13;
sharpest edge here, the song and the singing have little positive or&#13;
negative influence. Lyrically, the line "Billy, they don't like you to be&#13;
so free" supports the whole song in high status ...attention drifts.&#13;
As the light, uninspiring waves of "Bunkhouse Theme" roU in, one&#13;
may decide to head for there ...boredom sets in.&#13;
At the last few threads of side I, a brief but definite improvement&#13;
arrives. The instrumental, "River Theme," releases some affection&#13;
...curiosity is again aroused.&#13;
"Turkey Chase" kicks 011 side 2 with bigh spirits in the style 01&#13;
yahoo hillbilly festivities. Byron Berline demonstrates his lively&#13;
fiddling that temporarily cuts up the melancholy iloilo'01 the album&#13;
with moonshine enthusiasm ...great. ..former opinions are discarded!&#13;
"Knocking on Heaven's Door" rolls in as the highest point, and&#13;
shines out as the true gem of the set. This is the story of a weary&#13;
lawman turning in his credentials as his struggle against crime meets&#13;
a desperate end, and be seeks peace. Tbe mood of this excellent tune is&#13;
portrayed by Dylan most convincingly along with pertinent&#13;
background support in tbe cborus ...fantastic!&#13;
Three aces in a row are set up with the laying down of the "Final&#13;
Theme." A flute is featured hovering above the main weight of this&#13;
instrumental theme ...all-right!&#13;
"Billy 4(Recorded in Mexico City)" is anticipated with disappointment&#13;
as one most likely expects useless repetition. However, Mr.&#13;
Dylan's voice is more touching here than in any of the other&#13;
Billys ...OK +•&#13;
The central message is re-emphasized for the last lime by someone&#13;
with a low-pitcbed voice trying to lay it on solemnly. This moderatinn&#13;
of the main theme is not given more than its true worth as "Billy 7" is&#13;
2:01 minutes long, so the inclusion of this version is justifiable and&#13;
effective ...yes, really.&#13;
This soundtrack may have its dull moments, and needless to say I&#13;
unwarranted repetition. The different Billy versions aren't that wittingly&#13;
distinct. Ifthere are 7 versions of Billy besides the instrumental&#13;
version, one should be thankful that Billys 2, 3, 5 and 6 aren't included.&#13;
After close examination one may suspect another exploitation. One&#13;
basic tune seems to be used in "Cantina Theme(Working for the&#13;
Law)," "River Theme," and "Knocking on Heaven's Door." and&#13;
"Final Theme," make this soundtrack worth every penny 01its price.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; JTape and Record Center) .&#13;
American Can&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
I SEPT. 26, 28, 29, 30 I&#13;
Kenosha's Newes' Ni'espo'&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
f news&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
* t at Park id \'illag that wa&#13;
mon y&#13;
ultheir.&#13;
*&#13;
Th Vets im te au men and women ve to bring pouse or friend to&#13;
their m 'n of ep ember 30 in the SAB at 6:30 p.m. Beer will be&#13;
ted * in participating in Parkside's or- ,....., ... ~~tloDme...t.o, com to practice on Mondays at 3:30 and&#13;
Comm Arts 0118. For more information&#13;
l at 637-1019 or at his office in Comm Arts 293.&#13;
On m n from Dependable * Pest Control was working over&#13;
at o of tb Park ide Village buildings. He set a can of deadly poison&#13;
down and efl. Wh h returned, it was gone. Whoever took it is asked&#13;
to pl d of it quickly and carefully, before someone gets hurt.&#13;
ips, to be awarded by the&#13;
· in larch 1974, are invited,&#13;
tative. Prof. John Zarling,&#13;
Free music&#13;
performances&#13;
scheduled&#13;
Ele •en recitals and concerts by&#13;
faculty and tudent solo and&#13;
en emble performers make up&#13;
the musical agenda for the fall&#13;
sem ter at Parkside. All of the performances are&#13;
free and open to the public and all&#13;
are scheduled for the new&#13;
Communication Art Theater.&#13;
The are et for 7:30 p.m. except&#13;
the Chri tma Carol Concert,&#13;
hich is at 3 p.m.&#13;
The eries will begin Oct. 14&#13;
v.ith a faculty recital by Frances&#13;
Bedford, harpsichordist, and&#13;
Jam Yoghourtjian playing the&#13;
cla ical guitar and viola da&#13;
mba.&#13;
The next two recitals will introduce&#13;
rn o nev. faculty member&#13;
, David Littrell. violoncello,&#13;
'ho will perform with his wife,&#13;
. iary Ann Littrell as pianist, on&#13;
t. 21, and Stephen Swedish,&#13;
piani t, who will play Nov. 11.&#13;
"An Evening of Jazz" will be&#13;
pre"ented on • 'ov. 15 by UW-P's&#13;
Jazz En embles I and II under&#13;
the direction of Robert Thomason&#13;
and the Parkside ymphonic&#13;
Band directed by Bernard Stiner&#13;
will appear in concert on Nov. 18.&#13;
The Parkside Piano Trio, a&#13;
newly formed faculty ensemble&#13;
including Marla Mutschler,&#13;
violinist, Littrell and Swedish will&#13;
debut on Nov: 29. The Parkside&#13;
Symphony Orchestra conducted&#13;
by Littrell will perform on Dec. 2&#13;
and the Parkside Chorale and&#13;
Chorus directed by Frank&#13;
Mueller will present ·a Christmas&#13;
Carol Concert on Dec. 9.&#13;
Three student recitals also are&#13;
scheduled&#13;
The Parkside Guitar Ensemble&#13;
and other chamber groups are&#13;
scheduled for Dec. 6; Lenee&#13;
Stevens, flute, with Sue Anderegg,&#13;
piano, for Dec. 12; and&#13;
Gertrude Sheridan, voice, with&#13;
Everett Kuiper, piano, and Kurt&#13;
Harff, guitar, for Dec. 13.&#13;
A series of afternoon student&#13;
concerts at 3:30 p.m. in Room&#13;
DUB of the Commwiication Arts&#13;
Building are scheduled for Oct. 10&#13;
and 31, Nov. 14 and 18 and Dec. 5.&#13;
nd&#13;
The Rauen&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
PAT GARRET &amp; BILLY THE KID&#13;
Bob Dylan-Soundtrack (Columbia KC 32460)&#13;
The dominating mood is established with the "Main Title Theme,"&#13;
which introduces the audience to an old tale about the sad fate of a&#13;
~·ayward boy. This is the first of the "Billys" on this record, and its&#13;
essence is six minutes of melancholy instrumentation. It is formed by&#13;
a typical western outdoor assembly of acoustic guitars and tambourine.&#13;
A walking bass joins in the middle, defining the second&#13;
half ... not extremely gripping ... not terribly dull ... not bad.&#13;
''Cantina Theme (Working for the Law)" brings a fairly intriguing&#13;
arrangement of another instrumental. The pulse is strong-weak,&#13;
strong-weak .. .interest builds slightly.&#13;
Now the stylus arrives at "Billy 1" with feelings of uncertainty. This&#13;
is the first in a large series of vocal Billys. Bob and his familiar harmonica&#13;
companion are featured in this one. The harmonica is the&#13;
sharpest edge here, the song and the singing have little positive or&#13;
negative influence. Lyrically, the line "Billy, they don't like you to be&#13;
so free" supports the whole song in high status ... attention drifts.&#13;
As the light, uninspiring waves of "Bunkhouse Theme" roll in, one&#13;
may decide to head for there ... boredom sets in.&#13;
At the last few threads of side 1, a brief but definite improvement&#13;
arrives. The instrumental, "River Theme," releases some affection&#13;
... curios1ty is again aroused.&#13;
"Turkey Chase" kicks off side 2 with high spirits in the style of&#13;
yahoo hillbilly festivities. Byron Berline demonstrates his lively&#13;
fiddling that temporarily cuts up the melancholy flow of the album&#13;
with moonshine enthusiasm ... great ... former opinions are discarded!&#13;
"Knocking on Heaven's Door" rolls in as the highest point, and&#13;
shines out as the true gem of the set. This is the story of a weary&#13;
lawman turning in his credentials as his struggle against crime meets&#13;
a desperate end, and he seeks peace. The mood of this excellent tune is&#13;
portrayed by Dylan most convincingly along with pertinent&#13;
background support in the chorus .. .fantastic !&#13;
Three aces in a row are set up with the laying down of the "Final&#13;
Theme." A flute is featured hovering above the main weight of this&#13;
instrumental theme ... all-right!&#13;
"Billy 4(Recorded in Mexico City)" is anticipated with disappointment&#13;
as one most likely expects useless repetition. However, Mr.&#13;
Dylan's voice is more touching here than in any of the other&#13;
Billys ... OK+•&#13;
The central message is re-emphasized for the last time by someone&#13;
with a low-pitched voice trying to lay it on solemnly. This moderation&#13;
of the main theme is not given more than its true worth as "Billy 7" is&#13;
2:01 minutes long, so the inclusion of this version is justifiable and&#13;
effective ... yes, really.&#13;
This soundtrack may have its dull moments, and needless to say,&#13;
unwarranted repetition. The different Billy versions aren't that wittingly&#13;
distinct. If there are 7 versions of Billy besides the instrumental&#13;
version, one should be thankful that Billys 2, 3, 5 and 6 aren't included.&#13;
After close examination one may suspect another exploitation. One&#13;
basic tune seems to be used in "Cantina: Theme(Working for the&#13;
Law)," "River Theme," and "Knocking on Heaven's Door." and&#13;
"Final Theme," make this soundtrack worth -every penny of its price.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
American Can&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29, 30 I&#13;
Kenoslsa's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road &#13;
? ~&#13;
SYCHIC&#13;
stopped the timer . itioi by Rodney Schroeter mechanism." m IOn&#13;
Jones felt his scalp tingle.&#13;
"Where'd it come from? Big X?"&#13;
He carefully put the box in his&#13;
back pants pocket.&#13;
"Hehaditinhis shoe ,t said the&#13;
Psychic, looking out' a large&#13;
Window at the East River. He&#13;
tur,ned to Jones. "The way I&#13;
estImate, the place where I first&#13;
awakened is under that river.&#13;
Quite a way out."&#13;
"And I thought it was Canada ..&#13;
said Jones disgustedly. "Tho~e&#13;
dirty liars."&#13;
"Let's go. IT we meet any&#13;
guards, I'll mentally tell them&#13;
that we don't exist, the same&#13;
thing I did to the guide."&#13;
"Big X never even looked at&#13;
us," said Jones as the two entered&#13;
an empty elevator.&#13;
"I tried to probe his mind&#13;
several times. But I could find&#13;
nothing. As if he had no mind. It's&#13;
possible he is only a pawn, and&#13;
not the true leader of this&#13;
organization as you suspected.&#13;
His attempt to blow up that room&#13;
in the United Nations shows some&#13;
kind of plan. What it is, we can't&#13;
tell right now."&#13;
.The elevator door opened. The&#13;
two men walked out through the&#13;
main entrance into the sunlight.&#13;
The wind flapped through the&#13;
flags of nations from around the&#13;
world.&#13;
"We shall now return to the&#13;
base, the place where I&#13;
awakened.. Doubtless we shall&#13;
learn much more there."&#13;
Jones and the Psychic came to&#13;
the sewer grating where they had&#13;
emerged several hours before.&#13;
The Psychic pulled it aside. Jones&#13;
sat down at the edge and jumped.&#13;
The Psychic did the same. He&#13;
looked up at the grating and&#13;
concentrated. It slid into place.&#13;
The pair made its way through&#13;
the long tunnel without difficulty,&#13;
despite the total darkness. At the&#13;
other end was the office of Big X,&#13;
vacant and with its iron door&#13;
partly melted away, justas it was&#13;
when they had left it.&#13;
"Give me the bomb," said the&#13;
Psychic. "See if anyone else is&#13;
around. Find out if they're in this&#13;
knowingly or if they've been&#13;
deceived, like you have been."&#13;
Jones handed the box to the&#13;
Psychic. "Yeah. All right." He&#13;
climbed through the hole in the&#13;
door.&#13;
The Psychic turned his attention&#13;
to the vast assortment of&#13;
books, folders and typed&#13;
manuscripts. Each folder he&#13;
looked at had a single name on it.&#13;
He looked at several names&#13;
without investigating the insides&#13;
until he found one name that&#13;
interested him.&#13;
On one folder was lettered&#13;
"JONES. "&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
Synopsis: A man has just&#13;
awakened to find he cannot&#13;
remember anything of his past&#13;
life. He finds that he has extraordinary&#13;
mental abilities, and&#13;
names himseif the Psychic. A&#13;
man named Jones tells the&#13;
Psychic that someone named Big&#13;
X is responsible for his amnesia.&#13;
Together the two follow a trail to&#13;
the United Nations building,&#13;
where they find Big X. The story&#13;
continues.&#13;
Cha pter three&#13;
"Those persons holding tickets&#13;
with number forty-two on the&#13;
backs, piease line up at the glass&#13;
doors." -&#13;
"Big X is going on this tour,"&#13;
said Jones in a low voice. "But we&#13;
can't follow him now. We have no&#13;
tickets! II&#13;
Big X had stood up when the&#13;
announcement came. He had a&#13;
large overcoat draped over one&#13;
arm and a newspaper in his hand.&#13;
"Get in line," said the Psychic.&#13;
"Stay close to me and when the&#13;
tour guide approaches, you hold&#13;
out your hand as if you have a&#13;
ticket."&#13;
The guide was a short Chinese&#13;
woman. As she collected tickets&#13;
she said "Thank you" to each&#13;
person. When she came to the&#13;
Psychic, he held out his hand.&#13;
The guide smiled, reached and&#13;
took hold of nothing, and said&#13;
"Thank you." She did the same&#13;
with Jones.&#13;
"what'd you do?" asked Jones&#13;
in a whisper when she had&#13;
passed. "Make her think we had&#13;
tickets?"&#13;
The Psychic nodded slightly.&#13;
The tour had started. The group&#13;
passed through several halls. At&#13;
points the guide would stop to&#13;
explain the origin and&#13;
significance of a painting or&#13;
tapestry.&#13;
"This rug is a donation from&#13;
Iran. Itis largest of its kind in the&#13;
world. The figures on it symbolize...."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Big X.&#13;
This was the man, supposedly,&#13;
who had robbed him of his&#13;
memory. Big X was extremely&#13;
fat, almost round. He faced the&#13;
guide, giving no evidence of&#13;
noticing Jones or the Psychic.&#13;
Jones swallowed nervously. He&#13;
had been watching Big X from&#13;
the start of the tour. He glanced&#13;
at the Psychic frequently, but the&#13;
Psychic's expression told him to&#13;
be patient.&#13;
The guide led the group into a&#13;
large room and told everyone to&#13;
sit down. She began talking about&#13;
the use of the room, and the&#13;
nationality of the architects.&#13;
When the guide finished, the&#13;
group stood up. The Psychic held&#13;
Jones' arm. "Remain&#13;
motionless," he whispered.&#13;
When everyone had left, the&#13;
Psychic walked to the seat where&#13;
Big X had been sitting. He&#13;
reached under the seat and&#13;
brought out a small square box.&#13;
"Huh?" asked Jones. lIWhat's&#13;
that?"&#13;
"A bomb."&#13;
"Uh-yeah? When's it going to&#13;
go off?"&#13;
"Never. I've already deactivated&#13;
it with my mind. It was&#13;
set for forty-eight hours from&#13;
now, at which time an important&#13;
m~ting will be in process, as the&#13;
gUide said."&#13;
"Oh. I wasn't listening."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Jones.&#13;
"Here." He tossed the little box&#13;
to him. "Carry it. It has an antimatter&#13;
nucleus which I want to&#13;
studylater." The Psychic walked&#13;
doWn the steps.&#13;
Jones shook the box. It rattled.&#13;
:'Anti-matter? How strong was&#13;
It?"&#13;
:'Powerful enough to destroy&#13;
thiSroom. And it still is. I only&#13;
Wa1'·'d'" Oa4 21 P'U _u_ O •• -.;.••• c o •• 'e._s&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIOE RANGER 9&#13;
•&#13;
Seated behind a display table at the last Pre-Meds club meeting are Vice-President Rich Eckert&#13;
and Secretary Mike Rizzo. Not pictured is newly elected President O. Brian Smith.&#13;
Pre-Meds plan their year&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Ever think you might like to go into medicine? Do Jim Wishau, who was a delegate to the ational&#13;
you know what it takes to get into medical school? If Pre-Med Convention September 7-9, told of some of&#13;
you have or if you don't, a visit with the Parkside the topics discussed and relayed back intormatJon&#13;
Pre-Meds might prove enlightening. he had gained. He cited the fact that 45,000 uaThe&#13;
Pre-Med Club was organized three years ago, dergraduates apply to medical schools while only&#13;
largely replacing the now defunct Biology Club. 15,000are accepted. Using this one out or three&#13;
Enthusiastically advised by Anna Marie Williams, ratio, he stated that one of these three probably had&#13;
associate professor of Life Science, the club aids no chance of being admitted, and had no business&#13;
students who plan to apply for admission to medical applying, bot that still left one person Who could&#13;
school by bringing in guest lecturers who are have made it through medical school and have&#13;
usually area physicians in varying fields, arranging become a good physician, but had lost the chance.&#13;
tours of Wisconsin's two medical schools, and Also brought to light was the fact that the average&#13;
providing information as to how to apply and be grade point of those being accepted has been and&#13;
accepted by one of them. Their success in this en- still is rising, from 23 percent with 3.6and up in 1971,&#13;
deavor can be measured by the fact that all who to 24percentin 1972.He also outlined the percentage&#13;
applied to medical school last year were accepted. of different majors who were accepted: 26 percent&#13;
Nine alumni of the club are now in medical school. English majors, 26 percent foreign language. 26&#13;
Five attend the Medical School of Wisconsin in percent religion, 22 percent biology, 28 percent&#13;
Milwaukee as freshmen, while four, one senior, two chemistry, 28 percent physical education, and 17&#13;
sophomores and one freshman, attend UW- percent microbiology, to name a few.&#13;
Madison. Coach Stevens' talk on Sports Anatomy was of&#13;
WiJIiams got the year off in the second week of interest to women, men and non-pre-meds He&#13;
school with her "Facts of Life for Pre-Meds" lee- discussed the differences In anatomy, physiology,&#13;
ture and counseling session for new pre-meds. At kinesiology and environment, explai.rung why men&#13;
this time she explained the medical school excel at sr'"T1esports and women at others.&#13;
requirements, outlined a typical program to be Bone an tnt construction were shown to be the&#13;
followed, and told them in no nonsense terms what reasons wh men could generally throw straighter&#13;
they will have to accomplish if they expect to be and run faster than women, and tissue compo ilion&#13;
admitted to medical school. was offered as a hypctbesrs for the fact that young&#13;
Exactly what pre-meds must do in order to be women are USUallythe best swimmers.&#13;
accepted is probably best revealed by attending one Other activities planned for this semester include&#13;
of their meetings. Their first meeting, held Sep- maintaining their reference box at the library and&#13;
tember 19, featured election of new officers, a bringing in additional guest lecturers. Two&#13;
report on the National Pre-Med Convention and a osteophatic physicians will be appearing October&#13;
talk by Steve Stephens, associate professor of 17,and a discussion between a young M.D. and one&#13;
physical education, on Sports Anatlioiim.y•.•••••• w.ho.islire.ti.red.iiis.Piiila.niinediiiiifior.'iiaiiteriiiiiin.liiheiil.ear •.•&#13;
The nerag. Navy Pilot isn't.&#13;
E_,Iyou' ... __&#13;
t&gt;elono, " J'QU ... g&lt;M lhe dearf •• you •• Pullfw.,_,•.&#13;
r--------------------l '--- 1, .. _. :,&#13;
1- ·......·_- I&#13;
, ,&#13;
,- -_.- -- , , ,&#13;
,--- , lc.. l1li_:&#13;
, ,&#13;
le--~- I&#13;
, ,&#13;
1L Ie • SUC:~ In The ..... Nny. :j&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
WEEKDAY MOVIES&#13;
VVednesday, Sept. 26&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
103 GR -7Sc&#13;
? ~ Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
s·YCNIC&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter ~i:~:~~~~eram:H ·g_nition&#13;
Synopsis: A man has just&#13;
awakened to find he cannot&#13;
remember anything of his past&#13;
life. He finds that he has extraordinary&#13;
mental abilities, and&#13;
names himself the Psychic. A&#13;
man named Jones tells the&#13;
Psychic that someone named Big&#13;
Xis responsible for his amnesia.&#13;
Together the two follow a trail to&#13;
the United Nations building,&#13;
where they find Big X. The story&#13;
continues.&#13;
Chapter three&#13;
"Those persons holding tickets&#13;
with number forty-two on the&#13;
backs, please line up at the glass&#13;
doors."&#13;
"Big X is going on this tour,"&#13;
said Jones in a low voice. ''But we&#13;
can't follow him now. We have no&#13;
tickets!"&#13;
Jones felt his scalp tingle. "Where'd it come from? Big X?"&#13;
He carefully put the box in his&#13;
back pants pocket.&#13;
"He had it in his shoe " said the&#13;
P~ychic, looking out' a large&#13;
window at the East River. He&#13;
tur~ed to Jones. "The way I&#13;
estimate, the place where I first&#13;
aw~kened is under that river. Qmte a way out."&#13;
"And I thought it was Canada "&#13;
said Jones disgustedly. "Tho;e dirty liars."&#13;
"Let's go. If we meet any&#13;
guards, I'll mentally tell them&#13;
that we don't exist, the same&#13;
thing I did to the guide."&#13;
"Big X never even looked at&#13;
us," said Jones as the two entered&#13;
an empty elevator.&#13;
Big X had stood up when the&#13;
announcement came. He had a&#13;
large overcoat draped over one&#13;
arm and a newspaper in his hand.&#13;
"I tried to probe his mind&#13;
several times. But I could find&#13;
nothing. As if he had no mind. It's&#13;
possible he is only a pawn, and&#13;
not the true leader of this&#13;
organization as you suspected.&#13;
His attempt to blow up that room&#13;
in the United Nations shows some&#13;
kind of plan. What it is, we can't&#13;
tell right now."&#13;
pl,o •..,. J,m&#13;
"Get in line," said the Psychic.&#13;
"Stay close to me and when the&#13;
tour guide approaches, you hold&#13;
out your hand as if you have a&#13;
ticket."&#13;
The guide was a short Chinese&#13;
woman. As she collected tickets&#13;
she said "Thank you" to each&#13;
person. When she came to the&#13;
Psychic, he held out his hand.&#13;
The guide smiled, reached and&#13;
took hold of nothing, and said&#13;
"Thank you." She did the same&#13;
with Jones.&#13;
"What'd you do?" asked Jones&#13;
in a whisper when she had&#13;
passed. "Make her think we had&#13;
tickets?"&#13;
The Psychic nodded slightly.&#13;
The tour had started. The group&#13;
passed through several halls. At&#13;
points the guide would stop to&#13;
explain the origin and&#13;
significance of a painting or&#13;
tapestry.&#13;
"This rug is a donation from&#13;
Iran. It is largest of its kind in the&#13;
world. The figures on it symbolize&#13;
.... "&#13;
The Psychic looked at Big X.&#13;
This was the man, supposedly,&#13;
who had robbed him of his&#13;
memory. Big X was extremely&#13;
fat, almost round. He faced the&#13;
guide, giving no evidence of&#13;
noticing Jones or the Psychic.&#13;
Jones swallowed nervously. He&#13;
had been watching Big X from&#13;
the start of the tour. He glanced&#13;
at the Psychic frequently, but the&#13;
Psychic's expression told him to&#13;
be patient.&#13;
The guide led the group into a&#13;
large room and told everyone to&#13;
it down. She began talking about&#13;
the use of the room, and the&#13;
nationality of the architects.&#13;
When the guide finished, the&#13;
group stood up. The Psychic held&#13;
Jones' arm. "Remain&#13;
motionless," he whispered.&#13;
When everyone had left, the&#13;
Psychic walked to the seat where&#13;
Big X had been sitting. He&#13;
reached under the seat and&#13;
brought out a small square box.&#13;
"Huh?" asked Jones. "What's&#13;
that?"&#13;
"A bomb."&#13;
"Uh--yeah? When's it going to&#13;
go off?"&#13;
"Never. I've already deactivated&#13;
it with my mind. It was&#13;
set for forty-eight hours from&#13;
now, at which time an important&#13;
meeting will be in process, as the&#13;
guide said."&#13;
"Oh. I wasn't listening."&#13;
The Psychic looked at Jones.&#13;
"Here." He tossed the little box&#13;
to him. "Carry it. It has an antimatter&#13;
nucleus which I want to&#13;
study later.'' The Psychic walked&#13;
down the steps.&#13;
Jones shook the box. It rattled.&#13;
"Anti-matter? How strong was It~"&#13;
'.'Powerful enough to destroy this room. And it still is. I only&#13;
· The elevator door opened. The&#13;
two men walked out through the&#13;
main entrance into the sunlight.&#13;
The wind flapped through the&#13;
flags of nations from around the&#13;
world.&#13;
"We shall now return to the&#13;
base, the place where I&#13;
awakened. Doubtless we shall&#13;
learn much more there."&#13;
Jones and the Psychic came to&#13;
the sewer grating where they had&#13;
emerged several hours before.&#13;
The Psychic pulled it aside. Jones&#13;
sat down at the edge and jumped.&#13;
The Psychic did the same. He&#13;
looked up at the grating and&#13;
concentrated. It slid into place.&#13;
The pair made its way through&#13;
the long tunnel without difficulty, despite the total darkness. At the&#13;
other end was the office of Big X,&#13;
vacant and with its iron door&#13;
partly melted away, just as it was&#13;
when they had left it.&#13;
"Give me the bomb," said the&#13;
Psychic. "See if anyone else is&#13;
around. Find out if they're in this&#13;
knowingly or if they've been&#13;
deceived, like you have been."&#13;
Jones handed the box to the&#13;
Psychic. "Yeah. All right. " He&#13;
climbed through the hole in the&#13;
door.&#13;
The Psychic turned his attention&#13;
to the vast assortment of&#13;
books, folders and typed&#13;
manuscripts. Each folder he&#13;
looked at had a single name on it.&#13;
He looked at several names&#13;
without investigating the insides&#13;
until he found one name that&#13;
interested him.&#13;
On one folder was lettered&#13;
"JONES."&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
Seated behind a di play table at the last Pre-:\teds club meeting are Vice-Pr id nl Ri h&#13;
and ecretary :\1ike Rizzo . . 'ot pictured is ne~ly elected Pre ident O. Brian mith.&#13;
Pre-Meds pla&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Ever think you might like to go into medicine? Do&#13;
you know what it takes to get into medical chool? If&#13;
you have or if you don't, a visit with the Parkside Pre-. /!eds might prove enlightening.&#13;
The Pre- ted Club was organized three years ago,&#13;
largely replacing the now defunct Biology Club.&#13;
Enthusiastically advised by Anna /Iarie Williams,&#13;
associate professor of Life Science, the club aids&#13;
students who plan to apply for admission to medical school by bringing in guest lecturers who are&#13;
usually area physicians in varying fields, arranging tours of Wisconsin's two medical schools, and&#13;
providing information as to how to apply and be&#13;
accepted by one of them. Their success in this endeavor&#13;
can be measured by the fact that all who&#13;
applied to medical school last year were accepted .&#13;
'ine alumni of the club are now in medical school.&#13;
Five attend the 1edical School of Wi con in in rnwaukee as freshmen, while four, one enior, two&#13;
ophomores and one freshman, attend •&#13;
tadison. William got the year off in the _econd we k of&#13;
chool with her "Facts of Life for Pre-, feds" lecture&#13;
and counseling ession for new pre-med . At&#13;
this time she explained the medical chool&#13;
requirements. outlined a typical program to be&#13;
followed , and told them in no non en e term what&#13;
they will have to accompli h if they expect to be&#13;
admitted to medical school.&#13;
Exactly what pre-meds mu t do in order to be&#13;
accepted is probably best revealed by attending one&#13;
of their meetings. Their first meeting, held September&#13;
19. featured election of new officers, a&#13;
report on the ational Pre-Med Convention and a&#13;
talk by Steve Stephens, associate professor of&#13;
physical education, on Sports Anatomy.&#13;
their year&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
WEEKDAY MOVIES&#13;
-~&#13;
The average Navy Pilot isn't. No man who ha.s mut•red tt\e fly,ng&#13;
,lulls II takes to fly and land on• th,p at sea can be called an averaQe pt.lot At\d&#13;
th• sense ot accompl,1timent and sa, sfacl•on&#13;
that he en1oys are aiso above&#13;
average Wtuch ,s Of\ly fight For the rnan&#13;
who would go p1aces as a Naval Aviator&#13;
musl past thrOVQh the most challenO•no&#13;
and demanding uairung program 10 be&#13;
found anywhere&#13;
From AVtal,on Office, Canchdlt•&#13;
Schoot through Fhght Tra,n.ng totneday&#13;
his golden Navy W1~ are awarded, M&#13;
11 tested, dnven. pushed and tested&#13;
again. And tor good ,...'°" TM Navy&#13;
nu learMd that wtthou1 the wtd 10&#13;
suc:cNd, no men c.en be successful Wt11ch tmngs us to you Co you hew&#13;
what ,t tallis1o Uy Navy" Send '" th11&#13;
coupon and find out o, tatk w,th you, local Navy ,ec.ru•ter&#13;
E....,. 1tycM.1.,.,..,.,flowfl&#13;
t,etote . 11 you .e got tM des""•· you re&#13;
h•thw"•ytnet•&#13;
UHDTO: HAYV 0.,,.ffl(.•• l .. il"Oft ....... TfOfo Tl(AW&#13;
11 1 -Ott~ a-a ... ~•Y&#13;
.., 1'-w•..,-• w,.co.,.•• .. ua•&#13;
r--------------------1&#13;
- I I ,.,,._.,...._....,___..,.. I ~ • .,.-. ,...,..oa.c- I&#13;
- I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I c., ______ I .,._ : ~~- _____ ,&#13;
lie a_.. In The New Nny. '&#13;
I L--------------------~&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
103 GR - 75~&#13;
k. rt&#13;
lalo &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed •• Sept. 26. 1973&#13;
A Passion play&#13;
Jethro lull at Chi. Town&#13;
photo by Cr.,g Roberts&#13;
b,·Patrick 'owak&#13;
Thnt ' eems to be an inherent lateness to a concert review when the&#13;
wrrter and the publication only move once a week. Not that there is&#13;
anythIng wrong with that except that a person might like to hear about&#13;
n concert before it is ancient history. when reading a review you must&#13;
keep one Important thing in mind. and that is that what you are&#13;
reading IS an opinion and not the gospel truth. Unfortunately, many&#13;
enuc take their litles too seriously and often more times than not,&#13;
literally They feel that because they are critics, it is their duty to&#13;
criucrze Ihope to place myseJf above this category by commenting&#13;
where I think necessary and giving credit where it is due. Your&#13;
comments on the review will be gladly accepted and any suggestions&#13;
as to whal you would hke to see written in an article of this type will&#13;
also be gladly accepted.&#13;
As with any concert, the problem in parking looms as the biggest&#13;
obstacle. This is particularly true in the city of Chicago. Although the&#13;
concert SItes are large and can accommodate large volumes of people,&#13;
they have a critical parking shortage within a sbort distance of the&#13;
site. So the Stadium in Chicago was not to escape this malady. After&#13;
walking some six blocks from our ear, we arrived at OUT seats.&#13;
All of this seems to be tolerable when the group is one of the caliber&#13;
of Jethro Tull. TuU has been one of the most popular groups on the&#13;
scene loday and have contributed such works as Aqualung, Thick as a&#13;
Brick, LIving in the Past. and their latest album, "A Passion Play" to&#13;
the world of music. The group consists of five very talented musicians.&#13;
The group's leader and singer is Ian Aoderson who plays acoustic&#13;
guitar and Ilute. He is accompanied by Clive Bunker on electric&#13;
guuar, John Evan on piano and organ, Jeffery Hammond on base, and&#13;
Martin Barre on drums.&#13;
After suffering through the first act of local talent, the crowd of&#13;
some 12,000 settled down while the stage was prepared. The ticket stub&#13;
was entitled" A Passion Play" after the group's latest album. A large&#13;
screen was lowered behiod the stage and it became apparent that the&#13;
show to Iollow was to be a visual as well as audio performance. As the&#13;
lights were dimmed. a large ball appeared on the screen. It pulsated&#13;
for about 10 minutes, accompanied by a human heart beat. As it grew&#13;
louder and larger, a figure of a ballerina appeared to grow out of it. As&#13;
she reoched up and out there was a nash of powder on the stage and&#13;
the concert was on.&#13;
lt W8. several seconds later that Anderson made his appearance. He&#13;
Jumped wildly about. acknowledging the crowd and twirling his flute&#13;
ver his head and under his legs better than most baton twirlers. His&#13;
mastery was not JUst limited to throwing it about, as the crowd Soon&#13;
earned AlthoUl!h we could see the group well. we could not see the&#13;
een, mce we were about 90 degrees from stage center. This took&#13;
away from the first 45 minutes of the concert. Twice during this&#13;
riod, the group left the stage and the attention was on the screen.&#13;
This was unfortunate because, not having heard the "Passion Play"&#13;
before. I was m the dark as to its contents and the idea put forth.&#13;
\Ithough I could not see the screen. I could see the group and hear&#13;
them equally as "ell&#13;
-&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
• •&#13;
: UL PUlsi~r MAT MAIDS :&#13;
: Presents a Dance featuring :&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
i)1I:\ ("'I~It' :\ t~ i&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
: SAlHDAY, SEPT. 29 • 9:00 p .•• - 1:00 a... :&#13;
• •&#13;
: Student Activities Building :&#13;
• •&#13;
: hrtsi.e Stde-Is . ~Ielta ... : 'I" :&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
te;&#13;
On stage Tull provides all the visual action your eyes can handle. If&#13;
Ian Anderson was not jumping about, the base player was. The group&#13;
moved well on stage, with none of the members confining themselves&#13;
to anyone section of the stage as some groups do. A large part of a&#13;
group's concert success lies in its theatrical ability o~ the stage.&#13;
Although TuU is not as elaborate as some (example, Alice Cooper),&#13;
they are every bit as exciting to watch. Also, the fact that the group did&#13;
not stop for a break between every song helped to keep the whole thing&#13;
moving in a fast, driving mode. .&#13;
The "Passion Play" over, the second half of the concert could begin.&#13;
After introducing the rest of the group, Anderson commented on the&#13;
little child who felt it necessary to throw a lit sparkler down onto the&#13;
crowd, burning a guy on the back of the neck. He called for the person&#13;
to come down and apologize if he felt he was man enough. The second&#13;
half of the concert began with the second side of "Thick as a Brick"&#13;
which brought thunderous applause from the crowd. A drum solo and&#13;
guitar jam later. the group went into a few cuts from the Aqualung&#13;
album playing the title cut and the entire second SIde which consisted&#13;
of "My God," "Slip Steam," and "Wind Up," which appropriately&#13;
ended the concert.&#13;
The crowd chanted for more and just about anyone who possessed a&#13;
match lit it and held it as long as possible. It was really an impressive&#13;
sight to look out over the stadium and see all the little fires. It took&#13;
about five minutes but the crowd won out. The group came out and did&#13;
a thir-ty-minute encore which co~isted of HLocomo~iv~.~reath .. and&#13;
"Hymn 43," also from the Aqualung album. The group left the stage&#13;
for the final time. With the crowd cheering in total darkness, a small&#13;
phone that had been on stage all through the concert began ringing.&#13;
Out of darkness Ian Anderson appeared and answered it. He put the&#13;
phone down, telling the crowd it was for them, and walked off stage.&#13;
I do not believe any writer can convey a concert as it really happens;&#13;
the large crowd, the music, the good times, or in the case of a&#13;
poor group, the bad times, Those of you who have seen concerts or this&#13;
one by Tull in Milwaukee, know what it is like, and many of us can only&#13;
say, "you should have been there." With concerts like this one, a&#13;
person cannot help but feel that this group is going to he around for a&#13;
long period of time, much to our good fortunes. It seems that really&#13;
good groups are few and far between, and Jethro Tull rates as one of&#13;
the hest.&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
~ne~5 75C&#13;
~,&lt;~G~Admission wilh&#13;
Parkside 1.0.&#13;
RA.R LNE MUSICI&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Larry Lynne Group&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29 • 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 a.m.&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
A Passion play&#13;
• •&#13;
Jethro Tull at Chi. Town&#13;
pl,oto by Cral9 Roberts&#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
AIDS&#13;
Pr featuring&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · • w11. . • • • : SATURDAY, SEPT. 29 • 9:00 p.m. - 1 :00 a.m. :&#13;
• •&#13;
: tud nt Activities Building :&#13;
• •&#13;
: art i• lde11 Gae Um: '1 51 ;&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
On stage Tull provides all the visual action your eyes can handle. U&#13;
Ian Anderson was not jumping about, the base player was. The group&#13;
moved we11 on stage, with none of the members confining themselves&#13;
to anv one section of the stage as some groups do. A large part of a&#13;
group's concert success lies in its theatrical ability o~ the stage. Although Tull is not as elaborate as some (example, Alice Cooper_),&#13;
they are every bit as exciting to watch. Also, the fact that the group did&#13;
not stop for a break between every song helped to keep the whole thing&#13;
moving in a fast, driving mode. . The "Passion Play" over, the second half of the concert could begm.&#13;
After introducing the rest of the group, Anderson commented on the&#13;
little child who felt it necessary to throw a lit sparkler down onto the&#13;
crowd, burning a guy on the back of the neck. He called for the person&#13;
to come down and apologize if he felt he was man enough. The second&#13;
half of the concert began with the second side of "Thick as a Brick"&#13;
which brought thunderous applause from the crowd. A drum solo and&#13;
guitar jam later, the group went into a few cuts ~rom t~e Aqua_lung&#13;
album, playing the title cut and the entire second s1d_e which con~1sted&#13;
of "My God," "Slip Steam," and "Wind Up," which appropriately&#13;
ended the concert. The crowd chanted for more and just about anyone who possessed a&#13;
match lit it and held it as long as possible. It was really an impressive&#13;
sight to look out over the stadium and see all the little fires. It t~k&#13;
about five minutes but the crowd won out. The group came out and did&#13;
a thirty-minute encore which consisted of "Locomotive_ ~reath" and&#13;
"Hymn 43," also from the Aqualung album. The group left the stage&#13;
for the final time. With the crowd cheering in total darkness, a small&#13;
phone that had been on stage all through the concert began ringing.&#13;
Out of darkness Ian Anderson appeared and answered it. He put the&#13;
phone down, telling the crowd it was for them, and walked off stage.&#13;
I do not believe any writer can convey a concert as it really happens;&#13;
the large crowd, the music, the good times, or in the case of a&#13;
poor group, the bad times. Those of you who have seen concerts or this&#13;
one by Tull in Milwaukee, know what it is like, and many of us can only&#13;
say, "you should have been there." With concerts like this one, a&#13;
person cannot help but feel that this group is going to be around for a&#13;
long period of time, much to our good fortunes. It seems that really&#13;
good groups are few and far between, and Jethro Tull rates as one of&#13;
the best.&#13;
,,&#13;
::r&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
r:r&#13;
-&lt;&#13;
Q&#13;
..&#13;
,;;·&#13;
;,o&#13;
0&#13;
if&#13;
l&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
LIVE MUSIC!&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Larry Lynne Orou•&#13;
SEPT. 26, 28, 29 • 9:30 p.m. - 11:30 a.m. &#13;
uw- student&#13;
• • racing pigeons&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
When he was five years old,&#13;
TonY Rossi's father brought a&#13;
coupleof pigeons home to him as&#13;
a gift. Today, Rossi, a Parkside&#13;
sophomore owns about 90 racmg&#13;
pigoons a~d has sold his birds&#13;
throughout the United States and&#13;
the world.&#13;
Rossi won his first pigeon&#13;
ra&lt;:ing contest when he was&#13;
seven. That pigeon made the 300-&#13;
mile race back to the Rossi loft In&#13;
Racine in one day.&#13;
It wasn't until 1967, when he&#13;
was older and could be more&#13;
helpful to his father, that pigeon&#13;
racing became serious to Rossi.&#13;
Breeders were purchased which,&#13;
if "top notch racers," cost&#13;
anywhere from $100to $.500,Rossi&#13;
explained. He has Imported&#13;
pigoons directly from England&#13;
and has some which have come&#13;
from Belgium and France.&#13;
February through April the&#13;
pigoons are bred, each female&#13;
laying two eggs which take 18&#13;
days to hatch. A pigeon is considered&#13;
mature in 'l:l days and IS&#13;
then taken from its parents and&#13;
Wed .• sept. 26. 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
•&#13;
raises&#13;
put in a separate loft with other&#13;
young birds. At this time the&#13;
young birds get used to their&#13;
surroundings and start in on their&#13;
training.&#13;
They are fed a high protein diet&#13;
of dried grains and taken out to&#13;
fly as often as possible. Rossi&#13;
starts the young birds one to two&#13;
miles from home, eventually&#13;
building up to 50 miles. The&#13;
pigeons should be taken out to fly&#13;
at least five times per week,&#13;
Rossi said. "No one knows how&#13;
they navigate home," he added,&#13;
"but it is common to lose birds in&#13;
training." They sometimes hit&#13;
wires or are attacked by hawks&#13;
or cats if they ground to drink.&#13;
Races vary from 100 to 600&#13;
miles. An individual is allowed to&#13;
enter 15 birds in each race.&#13;
Competing pigeons are placed&#13;
together in a trailer and driven to&#13;
the liberating point, to be&#13;
released early the following&#13;
morning. Races are held every&#13;
week from May through October.&#13;
A pigeon can race for approxima&#13;
tely eight years and has&#13;
a life span of about 13.&#13;
Rossi has collected 30 first&#13;
Tony Rossi standing in the doorway of his pigeon loft.&#13;
....... ci.1kind of N8vY Flyer.&#13;
.... N.".I FlightOfficer.&#13;
...hl' ,Ita,k", 10be a NI~II HOII!on~:,.&#13;
sene ,n the cOl,lpon.It ...,11 b"ng you&#13;
the lactS 0, lalk ,I O\til, ...,th ro", Navy&#13;
ree,I,I,'e'&#13;
Whl_' I NI~r pia", " linde'&#13;
_!ecuorllc corlllo!. ,1111 pll ... II In Ihe&#13;
llanasotl NI~al Flillhl OthcI'. NIII,lIIlIr.&#13;
.. acandldat.to, N'~II FIIgl'1torneer&#13;
IraonlngYOI,I'IIneed lome _r spectll&#13;
Cl~lIhcatlon, F'fll. yol,lmust leilly ~&#13;
lOlly.... 11I l/ you'~e ne~er 1I0 ... n tJelotl&#13;
VOO'IIalso neec a college o;I'II'H and tile&#13;
k,,,,, 01mInd that wo'ks well ""itll m.III&#13;
and pI'I....,CS.&#13;
WI'"ng alt"" end olrou, I,"n,nll&#13;
"'09l1m ISI Na~y Commlss,on Ind Itle&#13;
GoIG1nWltlgs01a NI~.I Fltgllt OUoce,&#13;
By IlIenyolI'll be an •• pert If' ..... Ilk.&#13;
Ja''4v,oatlon and JI,"bO'n.eConuol ..&#13;
Iqu'~d 10do rou, lOb"".,.~e' you 110&#13;
BUIwhall!'Yefyou' ,pec,allr. "avel&#13;
wJllbepartol}'(l'llll,f. Jl,nd'o ...oI'&#13;
ellaill •. laspon5lb'!ily, achIevement ano"".. ,,,&#13;
1111111 a It.., ~,nd 01ca"er you"re&#13;
Ioo',n; '0'. ano ,tyol,l monkyol,l_e 1I0t&#13;
SEND TO:&#13;
~:=~Eu~;~~~:§~;~~~;~:-l,&#13;
,-&#13;
i :':~~,"'::_ ' , :&#13;
: "' .... ,.... ,. .. ",. .. ,Ott«.. :&#13;
IN.... - 1&#13;
] .....,... t&#13;
1 s'_ l~ 1&#13;
I""' :&#13;
I C."."'C.' .... ··.. I&#13;
ill•• succ." inTIM~~_N!~J&#13;
,-------------&#13;
It's what's&#13;
happening&#13;
Wednesday, Sept. 26: Mimist T. Daniel will appear 10 the Comm&#13;
Arts Studio Room at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday. Sept_ 26: PAB will present the film "Joe" in Greenqui.St&#13;
l03at 7:30 p.rn Admission charge is 75cents.&#13;
wednesdav. Sept. 26: Tony, Jumbo and Jlmi will appear 10 the&#13;
Whiteskeller &lt;GR D20ll at I p.m. No admission charge&#13;
. Saturday, Sept. 29: Cross Country meet between Parkside and&#13;
Eastern Illinois at 11 a.m&#13;
Saturday. Sept. n: Soccer meet between Parkside and Mmnesota at&#13;
1:30 p.m. .&#13;
Saturday. Sept. 29: Mat Maid's will sponsor a dance WIth the band,&#13;
Blackwater Gold, in the SAB. Dance will be from 9 p.m, until I a.m.,&#13;
admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday. Sept. 30: Harry Chapin concert will be presented in the Phy&#13;
Ed building at 8 p.m.&#13;
Sunday. Sept. 30: Vet's Club will meet in theSAB at6:30 p.rn,&#13;
Monday, Oct. I: From 7-tOp.m. Adult Student Association will have&#13;
a get-acquainted night in LLC 0173.&#13;
Monday. Oct. I: Women's Caucus will meet at 7:30 p.m. in LLC&#13;
Dt74.&#13;
Tuesday. Oct. Z: Cross country meet between Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee at 4 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 2: Women's swimming meet between Parkside and&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Morula)· and Tuesday. Oct. 1 and 2: Orchestra practice in Comm&#13;
Arts 0118. Monday practice at 3:30and Tuesdav at 7:30 D.m.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be suhm_ to&#13;
RAlliGER by nnon Wednesday prior to publication of lbe I ue In whicll&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
place trophies and many top&#13;
place positions. Sunday. Sept. 9,&#13;
one of Rossi's pigeons won a $220&#13;
200-miJe race from Independence.&#13;
Iowa to Racine. On&#13;
June 29, a pigeon Rossi owns won&#13;
the 1973 Wisconsin State&#13;
Championship (the Midwest&#13;
prestige race) in a 500-mile flight&#13;
from Topeka, Kansas. "This&#13;
pigeon is one of the biggest&#13;
money winners this year in the&#13;
state," said Rossi, "winning&#13;
$1200." It is also nominated for&#13;
the United States Hall of Fame&#13;
(the highest honor in pigeon&#13;
racing), in which the winner will&#13;
be named .on Oct. 15.&#13;
Rossi's pigeons have brought&#13;
borne over $2000 this year with 8&#13;
firsts and 8 seconds which is an&#13;
extremely successful record,&#13;
Rossi explained.&#13;
With a month left in this year's&#13;
racing season, Rossi's pigeons&#13;
are up. up and away.&#13;
THREE CmE\lE~T LOUTIO\S:&#13;
U.W. Parkside -- Room ~19, Tallelt Hall&#13;
•&#13;
180 W. OIestllt s, BlI'lilgtOI&#13;
~200 Washilgtol Ave., Raeile&#13;
tilE&#13;
PACK&#13;
SHOP&#13;
For litht-"e'ghf ~Ielc pleldet ~"P""&#13;
... lelhlre • DOIf .. Jlelcets&#13;
• Sleep'ng Big. • M" .... '. Tellis&#13;
• 'Ieb • CoIllPUIII • CaMp Stwll&#13;
AIID .. WE ARE STIU ADDIIIO TO OUR STOCKI&#13;
Come in end gel ncquointed, We speak fluenl&#13;
rock climbing. bock pocking. mounlaineering.&#13;
canoeing and cross counlry skiing .&#13;
son - 6th ,.,.., lCe... hI (414)6~Jn1&#13;
Slert I..n: ..... to •.•.. , •.•.&#13;
,_.·TIl.,.. 10 •.•. - S •.•.&#13;
FtWay to •.•.. ' •.•.&#13;
......, ...... ·6 •.•.&#13;
---&#13;
CD&#13;
CD&#13;
=-&#13;
CI&#13;
a&#13;
-&#13;
--&#13;
-&#13;
CD&#13;
CD&#13;
=-&#13;
CI&#13;
a&#13;
Wed., Sept. 26, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
uw- studen • raises It's vv at'&#13;
• • racing pigeons&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
When he was five years old,&#13;
Tonv Rossi's father bro~~ht a&#13;
couple of pigeons ho_me tpo 1km "d as a gift. Today, Rossi, a ar s~ e homore owns about 90 racmg&#13;
5?:e&lt;ms an'd has sold his birds&#13;
~roughout the United States and&#13;
the world. . . Rossi won his flfst pigeon&#13;
racing contest when he was&#13;
seven. That pigeon made the 300-&#13;
milerace back to the Rossi loft in&#13;
Racine in one day·&#13;
It wasn't until 1967, when he&#13;
was older and could be more&#13;
helpful to his fa the~, that pigeo~&#13;
racing became serious to Ro_ss1.&#13;
Breeders were purchased which,&#13;
if "top notch racers," cost&#13;
anywhere from $100 to $_500, Rossi&#13;
explained. He has imported&#13;
pigeons directly from England&#13;
and has some which have come&#13;
from Belgium and France.&#13;
February through April the&#13;
pigeons are bred, ~ch female&#13;
laying two eggs w~1ch ~ke 18&#13;
days to hatch. A pigeon 1s coi:i·&#13;
sidered mature in '1:7 days and 1s&#13;
then taken from its parents and&#13;
put in a separate loft with other&#13;
young birds. At this time the&#13;
young birds get used to their&#13;
surroundings and start in on their&#13;
training.&#13;
They are fed a high protein diet&#13;
of dried grains and taken out to&#13;
fly as often as possible. Rossi&#13;
starts the young birds one to two&#13;
miles from home, eventually&#13;
building up to 50 miles. The&#13;
pigeons should be taken out to fly&#13;
at least five times per week,&#13;
Rossi said. "No one knows how&#13;
they navigate home," he added,&#13;
"but it is common to lose birds in&#13;
training." They sometimes hit&#13;
wires or are attacked by hawks&#13;
or cats if they ground to drink.&#13;
Races vary from 100 to 600&#13;
miles. An individual is allowed to&#13;
enter 15 birds in each race.&#13;
Competing pigeons are placed&#13;
together in a trailer and driven to&#13;
the liberating point, to be&#13;
released early the following&#13;
morning. Races are held every&#13;
week from May through October.&#13;
A pigeon can race for approximately&#13;
eight years and has&#13;
a life span of about 13.&#13;
Rossi has collected 30 first&#13;
Tony Rossi standing in the doorway of his pigeon loft.&#13;
Whenever a Navy plane 1s under&#13;
e1ec1ron•c c001rot. lhal plane ,s 1n the&#13;
hands ol a Naval Flight Officer Naturally,&#13;
Ha cand1da1e lor Naval Fhgh1 Officer&#13;
1r11n1ng you·u need some •ery special&#13;
quaht,cahons Fusi. you must really 't!!!2! to Hy. even 11 you·ve never flown be lore&#13;
You·11 also need a college degree and the&#13;
kind ol mind that works well ,,,,1h math&#13;
and physics&#13;
Wa,ting at the end of your training&#13;
program ,s a Navy Commission and the&#13;
Golden Wings ol a Naval Fhghl Officer&#13;
By then you·u be an expert ,n areas hke&#13;
Jet Nav1g111on and Airborne Control&#13;
equ,pped to do your 10b wherever you go&#13;
But whatever your specialty, travel&#13;
""''II be par1 of you, l1le. And $0 will&#13;
th111enge. respons,b,l,ty. achievement&#13;
l'1d re'lll'ard&#13;
tf thats the k•nd ol career you·re&#13;
look,ng lor a"d 1fyou thin!.; you·ve got&#13;
SEND TO :&#13;
MAYY O,.-P'I C &amp;.,_ 1,.~~MATIO ... TICAW&#13;
r-~~~E«E~°:·?~:~:~~~---1&#13;
: ~:;:":,: ..... ,.., _, .... - ... ..... : l a.•et lv M•H--•• f t,O" 'Ott,1:-1 :&#13;
I ... I I"'''"'' l I I I AOO•tn I&#13;
l Colr S••ie ht ;&#13;
i Cs•·•••C••·•,. "~ : I I&#13;
: Be• success in _T~~~~-N--~ J l----------&#13;
place trophies and many top&#13;
place positions. Sunday, ept. 9&#13;
one of Rossi's pigeons won a 220&#13;
200-mile race from Independence.&#13;
Iowa to Racine. On&#13;
June 29, a pigeon Rossi own won&#13;
the 1973 Wisconsin State&#13;
Championship (the • lidwest&#13;
prestige race) in a 500-mile flight&#13;
from Topeka, Kansas. "This&#13;
pigeon is one of the biggest&#13;
money winners this year in the&#13;
state ," said Rossi , "winning&#13;
$1200." It is also nominated for&#13;
the United States Hall of Fame&#13;
(the highest honor in pigeon&#13;
racing), in which the .... ;nner \\;ll&#13;
be named ·on Oct. 15.&#13;
Rossi's pigeons have brought&#13;
home over $2000 this year v,.;th 8&#13;
firsts and 8 seconds which is an&#13;
extremely successful record,&#13;
Rossi explained&#13;
With a month left in this year's&#13;
racing season, Rossi's pigeons&#13;
are up, up and away.&#13;
happening&#13;
\\edne day, rpt. ? : iimi t T. Dani will ap r in th C mm&#13;
Art tudio Room at 8:00 p.m.&#13;
\\edn day, ~ept. _ : PAB will pr t the film " Joe" in Gr&#13;
103at7:30p.m. Adm· ioncharge i 75cent .&#13;
Wedne da,;, p . - : Tony, Jwnbo and J1m1&#13;
Whiteskeller (GR D201) at 1 p.m. 'o admL ion&#13;
. ~aturda), pt. _ : Cro Countr m t t&#13;
Erutern Illinoi at 11 a .m.&#13;
turd a) .. ept. _ : occer mee bet\\ een Par'. id and !inn&#13;
1:30 p.m. •&#13;
Saturda . Sept. _ : . lat iaid' "'ill ponsor a danc 1th th nd,&#13;
Blackwater Gold, in the AB. Dance will be from 9 p.m. until 1 .m., admission is $1.50.&#13;
unda). ept. 3 : Harry Chapin concert will be pr ented nth&#13;
Ed building at 8 p.m.&#13;
unda). ept.3: \'et'sClubwillmeetinthe ABat6:30p.m,&#13;
.\tonda). Oct. 1: From 7-10 p.m. Adult tud nt n.,;,..,._".,.tion will ha\' a get-acquainted night in LLC D173.&#13;
. tonday. Oct. 1: Women· Caucu \\ill mee at 7:30 p.m. in LLC&#13;
D174 .&#13;
Tu day. Oct. ?: Cross country meet between Park id nd&#13;
.rnwaukee at 4 p.m.&#13;
Tue day, Oct. 2: Women's s imming meet between Par id and&#13;
tilwaukee. •&#13;
I nda, and Tu dn. Oct. 1 and 2: Or hestra practic in omm&#13;
Arts D118. fanday practice at 3 30 and Tuesdav at, :30 o.m.&#13;
All item for IT' WH T HAPPE. ·1. .G hould be ubm tt .d to&#13;
RA. "GER b) noon Wedne. da pri r to publication of thr I u in "hich an item i to appear.&#13;
NOW PAYING 5.4%&#13;
(Compounds Annually to 5.51 ,~)&#13;
0. REG ·L. R&#13;
P SSBOO y&#13;
SAVI GS&#13;
THREE ro~,E~IE~T L C \Tl ~ :&#13;
U.U. Park ide -- Room 219. Tallent Hall&#13;
180 W. Chestnut t.. Burlington&#13;
5200 Wasbin~on .t,e .. Racin&#13;
TIIE&#13;
PACI&lt;&#13;
SHOP&#13;
For light-•eight hack packi119 1q1ipmellf&#13;
• feature • D•n Jackets&#13;
• Sleeping Bags • Mountain Tents&#13;
• Packs • Compasses • Camp Stwes&#13;
AND,· WE ARE STILL ADDING TO OUR STOCKI&#13;
Come in and get acquainted. We spec fluent&#13;
rock climbing. bock pocking, mountaineering,&#13;
canoeing and cross country skiing.&#13;
5033 _ 6th /we., Kenosha (414) 654-33S1&#13;
Sttte INrt: .. "." 10 •.•. • 9 p .•.&#13;
TIH.-Um. 10 •·•· · S P·•·&#13;
ffWay 10 •·•· · 9 p.•.&#13;
sm,•" 10 •.•. - , P·•·&#13;
..... c::&#13;
u, :a ---r&#13;
m ~ im&#13;
::c m =- m ::c C, ...... a '"" '"" -a &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANG~R III&lt;wt&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1"3&#13;
__________ sports-~ RANGER&#13;
~"YSlCAL aOUCATION .LOG ANO ATHLETIC O.~T SCHEDULE FOR OCTOBER&#13;
T ... :a C7gu.COUf\tt"y V$- \JoN M tw."kIM P.rkSode - ... OOp-.m&#13;
'NoIftiIt" .. Sw 1ft ChIO 'n UW M ..... ukM P.rU« -6 00 p_rn&#13;
.., ..&#13;
Harriers compile&#13;
2-0.record&#13;
by Daa Marry&#13;
This Saturday, Sept. 29,&#13;
Park Ide'S doss cowlry team&#13;
wUI compete against Eastern m.&#13;
in a meet wbicb head coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey describes as "our&#13;
toughe.t dual meet o[ the&#13;
see.... •·&#13;
The Parmde Harriers, who&#13;
have compUed a 2-0 dual meet&#13;
record thuslar, c:roued the finisb&#13;
line Iaot ...e.:OJ1d with ao overwhelmiDg&#13;
victory against lbe&#13;
University 0( m.-Circle campus,&#13;
21 10 40.&#13;
Indivldual wiDners for&#13;
ParUide ....ere fin! place, Lucian&#13;
........ JU" .....&#13;
!l&lt;l5a, who broke lbe tape at&#13;
26:20, which is 1:57 better lban&#13;
lbe old record. !l&lt;l5a beat second&#13;
place Wayne Saunders from&#13;
lliinois, who, incidentally, was&#13;
last year's NCAA Steeple Chase&#13;
Champion.&#13;
In another weekend meet, the&#13;
Spring Bank International 12-&#13;
mUe raco held in London, Ontario,&#13;
Rosa took sixth place,&#13;
averaging 4:47 a mile. Winner o[&#13;
lbe meet was Neal Cusak o[&#13;
Ireland. An interesting [act o[ lbe&#13;
meet is that eight o[ !be 10 men&#13;
who competed in it were in lbe&#13;
1972Olympic Games.&#13;
photo by Brian Rou&#13;
Despite Ute effort put forth by Park-side's Women's Tennis Team. the neUers lost to Ripon 4-3 lISt&#13;
Saturday .&#13;
Women netters dump Carthage&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
The Parkside Women's Tennis&#13;
Team will venture into its third&#13;
meet of the 1973 season this&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 29, at&#13;
Whitewater .&#13;
The Whitewater Tournament&#13;
will give Parks ide's women&#13;
netters their first real&#13;
test of competition, as&#13;
the meet will include&#13;
UW.LaCrosse ... the 1972 State&#13;
Champs.&#13;
Parkside will, however, enter&#13;
the tourney "well anned" with a&#13;
team that consists of four&#13;
returning letter ladies including&#13;
Pat Kekic, captain of this year's&#13;
squad.&#13;
Last week, on Sept. 19,&#13;
Parkside opened its 1973 campaign&#13;
with an impressive victory&#13;
over Carthage College, 6-1.&#13;
Captain Pat Kekic started&#13;
things oU on the right [oot [or&#13;
Parkside, sweeping two sets from&#13;
Nancy Gillelle o[ Carthage, lHl&#13;
and 6-2. Other singles winners&#13;
were Sue Wanggaard (6-1, lHl),&#13;
Joanne Rallen (lHl, lHl), and&#13;
Marilyn Stellberg (7-5, 6-2).&#13;
Bolb of Parkside's douhles&#13;
teams were victorious. Joan&#13;
Fredricksen and' Sandy&#13;
Kings[ield comhined powers to&#13;
overwhelm their opponents, 6-2&#13;
and lHl. Nicolet DeRose and&#13;
Ue9 SlUe-tat&#13;
"ne Ulmal Plait Shop"&#13;
TERRARIUMS&#13;
EXOTIC ,PLANTS&#13;
MEXICAN POTTERY&#13;
UKUSUALGIFT ITEMS&#13;
S&#13;
all kil~S,&#13;
yape sizes&#13;
H IJIG PLANTS&#13;
lat. WOf'!'ItI'l'sCraucoun'f)o()pen·Paro.de 10:OD.. In&#13;
~'toC""CIlI.I"l''"YOc*'l ".r-.sic» H·OD•. m&#13;
GoW Tourn., PerlU.cW 9 3a am&#13;
s.occ- uw ~ P....... '00p.rn&#13;
P... ~ ~I F.at F_' ".rkSiOI"&#13;
MM.' WOfN"'sT~Svt...UW¥&lt;~" Nt.twaUk .. ·:!·OOp.m&#13;
wOlMf't"'$w~mf'l9rtUl¥""'twau4l.ft Mlw ......" ]cOOpm&#13;
.'1 U &gt;Nort*'toTefW'l 'lIS- U'NSteYfMPOtnl "arlUidIt , OOp.m&#13;
er-sCoun''Y No.,..o._ln",ta"ONlI NOtreo.me , OOp.m&#13;
sat IJ 2NI Anra.&gt;at F.lI Gotf TCIU"\"tor women p.r..,. 9 lOa.",&#13;
o.... a., T«tlI4l"ttoeeer tlel4 P.r~ 1O00. rn&#13;
$oCur "'" UW PI.t~llle PI.~,II. II 00 a m&#13;
WO"'I't"'SC;)'lT\I\MtIUYS. UW Mad son P.rb .. l:00p m.&#13;
,&#13;
... It ~'sTeN\ YS c:.~&amp;.UWWt'l,tew.I'" P.rkstoe :J ClOp,m&#13;
... 17 *(.,\'$ UiuFornl P8;rlU. J OOpm&#13;
Pri It $OCC:'" '" Eastern III.fIOIt Un.~'ty Parbi&lt;MI· 3:ooP ffI&#13;
WOfT*'l'sG'I'tnnntIc:SY'S V'N La CI'OQ4I Parbide ,00p.ffI&#13;
~.s Tennb'YS C.rroll~I.P.rkSoeM 12ClOpm&#13;
llWOl'tI4'ft'S ... mrn no rt UW ~ son Parllside 12,00 P m.&#13;
... 14 $«Cft' ~ ~,,. JlMr~ J ClOP rt'l-&#13;
.tl"M WQrnrIfI', S·.'. Tt'f'lftl, Mftt La Cr1:ltY&#13;
lr.cio.C)eoUfhlon&amp;.OpetlMMI Parks ide n OOp",&#13;
S40t 11 0. .,TKfI ~'"9P'''''t ce.occ.',eId ".rlU~10 JO •. "'&#13;
SOCc ".. (,j", Gr..,.. e.'I' (Or..,.. 841., 2,OOp m&#13;
wo.nen S TennIS S'." MMt La &lt;:roue&#13;
wamen ... Gymnal C1YS W """"0'" Pa,UIOe 1 ClOpm&#13;
Ptr IcMDe(atl\tOtl&amp;.TtaOMHt P.rkSOCM 200pm&#13;
MiIIlI 1t wotM""sSwmlTttl'tgYS UW Mr'wOUk" Nt. .....Vl\.M 6.00p.m&#13;
CACTUS&#13;
large &amp;&#13;
small&#13;
SCTD CANDLES&#13;
DRIED FLOWER&#13;
ARIGEMENTS&#13;
1710 Washington Ave&#13;
(Highway 20 In Racine)&#13;
Phone: 632·4778&#13;
Parkitl t, th East ef tile Blildilg&#13;
EUeen Reilly also won their&#13;
match, 6-3 and 6-2.&#13;
Parkside's Women's Tennis&#13;
Team has 5 meets-3 tournies and&#13;
the stale meet on their schedule.&#13;
With an ample squad and one&#13;
victory behind them so far, head&#13;
coach Dick Frecka can look&#13;
forward to a successful year&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS RESULTS&#13;
SOCCER: Parkside lost to Northern minois s-o&#13;
Parkside lost to Lewis College 5-0&#13;
CROSS,COUNTRY: Parkside 21, U. of ill. Circle Campus 40&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS: Ripon College 4, Parkside 3&#13;
'II&#13;
When you own • condominium, mOfe time for ntll)l.ation and&#13;
entertaining were incllJded in the sales price. Someone elsa&#13;
takes care of the lawn. does the ext.lor maintenance and&#13;
this wlntef. will do the 5!lOW shoveling. Ask the folk. who&#13;
liYtlthere. nothing', e.asilll' than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $27,000&#13;
The .first B"irchwDodTownhouses sold quickly and more are under conuroction,&#13;
Now,.B,rch~~od. Ranch Style homes are ready and they Ire great v,lues, too. Sales pritet incl\lllt:&#13;
• Air cO.ndltooRing • luxurious c;arpe1:ing • Color coordiMud tile&#13;
: ~nc range.net Mlf ...... n;ng ovom • FrlKt·fr.. rflrie-ntor&#13;
• Cen........ • Food Waite d;'posa! • Dr_ing room • Molchd tub and ~&#13;
.... ted tral FMlTy antenna • R_ved 51or. arM • Surtae:. p'rItil'lll t lftdoor&#13;
• .... =.,..... an,~ablal • ~a1 balconV Ol' patio • Priute .ntrY&#13;
.... mmlnli pool • Country clubhouw. with&#13;
. .&#13;
"UM .&#13;
MORE BIRCHWOOO HOMES REAOY SHTEMBER 15 "&#13;
2 Bedroom Townhouses $31.000 3 Bedroom Townhouses $32.000 to $34,000 t&#13;
1 Bedroom R.nch Stym $19.500 to $23,000&#13;
i'tfty IlIIlt wMotl YOU elln own 8 110m//!&#13;
for.oovt t!lft _ month/., payment.&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
301h Avenue at Birch·Road&#13;
OE~ORA TO::DAND FURNISHED M'ODELS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANt;J:Q WA.ff&#13;
12 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed., Sept. 26, 1973&#13;
,-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
___________ Sports __ ~&#13;
P VSICAL t!OUCATION llOG A OATHlETIC OEPT. SCHEOUlE FOR OCTOBER&#13;
,rt s&#13;
ht.&#13;
-·&#13;
Ft 12&#13;
Pl P rk,,._ l&gt; OOp&#13;
., .. 17&#13;
,,, It&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
D~pite the effort put forth by Parkside's Women's Tennis Team, the netters lost to Ripon 4-3 last&#13;
Salurda .&#13;
ilk 300pm&#13;
Women netters dump Carthage&#13;
au" 6 00p m&#13;
CJ Country LOr Col eg Iowa Lor.a, 3 00 p m&#13;
Ha~riers compile&#13;
2-0~record&#13;
Rosa, who broke the tape at&#13;
26 :20, which is 1:57 better than&#13;
the old record. Rosa beat second&#13;
place Wayne Saunders from&#13;
Illinois, who, incidentally, was&#13;
last year's NCAA Steeple Chase&#13;
Champion.&#13;
In another weekend meet, the&#13;
Spring Bank International 12-&#13;
mile race held in London, Ontario,&#13;
Rosa took sixth place,&#13;
averaging 4:47 a mile. Winner of&#13;
the meet was Neal Cusak of&#13;
Ireland. An interesting fact of the&#13;
meet is that eight of the IO men&#13;
who competed in it were in the&#13;
1972 Olympic Games.&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
The Parkside Women's Tennis&#13;
Team will venture into its third&#13;
mee of the 1973 season this&#13;
Saturday , Sept. 29 , at&#13;
Whitewater. The Whitewater Tournament&#13;
will give Parkside's women&#13;
netters their first real&#13;
test of competition, as&#13;
the meet will include&#13;
UW-LaCrosse ... the 1972 State&#13;
Champs.&#13;
Parkside will, however, enter&#13;
the tourney "well armed" with a&#13;
team that consists of four&#13;
returning letter ladies including&#13;
Pat Kelcie, captain of this year's&#13;
squad. Last week, on Sept. 19,&#13;
Parkside opened its 1973 campaign&#13;
with an impressive victory&#13;
over Carthage College, &amp;-1.&#13;
Captain Pat Kekic started&#13;
things off on the right foot for&#13;
Parkside, sweeping two sets from&#13;
Nancy Gillette of Carthage, 6-0&#13;
and &amp;-2. Other singles winners&#13;
were .Sue Wanggaard (6-1, 6-0),&#13;
Joanne Hatten (6-0, 6-0), and&#13;
Marilyn Stellberg (7-5, &amp;-2).&#13;
Both of Parkside's doubles&#13;
teams were victorious. Joan&#13;
Fredricksen and · Sandy&#13;
Kingsfield combined powers to&#13;
overwhelm their opponents, &amp;-2&#13;
and 6-0. Nicolet DeRose and&#13;
PLA S&#13;
TERRARIUMS&#13;
EXOTIC _PLANTS&#13;
MEXICAN POTTERY&#13;
CACTUS&#13;
large &amp;&#13;
small&#13;
all kiads,&#13;
sbpe)' sizes&#13;
HtlllG PLANTS&#13;
SCENTED CANDLES&#13;
II&#13;
DRIED FLOWER&#13;
AR,GEMENTS&#13;
1710 Washington Ave&#13;
(Highway 20 In Racine)&#13;
Phone: 632-4778&#13;
Parki11 ta the East of tire Building&#13;
Eileen Reilly also won their&#13;
match, 6-3 and &amp;-2.&#13;
Parkside's Women's Tennis&#13;
Team has 5 meets-3 tournies and&#13;
the state meet on their schedule.&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS RESULTS&#13;
With an ample squad and on&#13;
victory behind them so far, Ilea&#13;
coach Dick Freclca can I&#13;
forward to a successful year.&#13;
SOCCER: Parkside lost to Northern Illinois 5-0&#13;
Parkside lost to Lewis College 5-0&#13;
CROSS-COUNTRY: Parkside 21, U. of Ill. Circle Campus 40&#13;
WOMEN'S TENNIS: Ripon College 4, Parkside 3&#13;
When you own a condominium, ,nore time for relaxation and&#13;
entertaining were included in the sales price. Someone else&#13;
takes care of the l~n. does the exterior maintenance and&#13;
this winter. will do the snow shoveling. Ask the folks who&#13;
live there, nothing's easier than a Birchwood Condominium.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
· _Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $27,00&#13;
The first S-irchwood Townhouses sold quickly and mora are under construction.&#13;
Now._ Btrch~ood_ Ranch Style homes ar~ raady _antl thay ara great values, too. Sales prices include:&#13;
• Air co.nditeon,ng • Luxurious carpeting • Colo, coordinated tile&#13;
: =ge and Mlf-cleaning o~e~ • Frost-free refrigerator .&#13;
• • food waste dJSPOS;al · • Dressing room • Molded tub and ahowtr&#13;
._:=.:;,"•1 FM/TV antenna • R....-vld storage area • Surface part&lt;i119 ( Indoor&#13;
911..._ .avau~ble J • Persona~ balcony·or patio • Private entry&#13;
• Heated swimming Pool • Country clubhouse with sauna&#13;
MORE s1RcHwooD HOMES READY sEn~MBER 1s ·f:&#13;
2 Bedroom Townhouses $31,000 3 Bedroom Townhouses $32,000 to $34,000 ; · 1 Bedroom Ranch Style $19,500 to $23,000&#13;
'1f&gt;y renr when you can own 8 home&#13;
for •bour lhtt sa~ monthly payment.&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
30th Avenue al Birch -Road&#13;
DE~DRAT~O ANO FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to$&#13;
Fo~ more information 2 933&#13;
PHONE 1-55 •&#13;
PARK!ilDE REALf ~;_,~ ()tveloped and Built bV U </text>
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              <text>Bookstore investigated</text>
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              <text>Jennett heads PSGA&#13;
Tom Jennet photo by o.tJn Friedell&#13;
Tom Jennett, one of last year's&#13;
student government (PSGAl&#13;
members, has been appointed&#13;
President of PSGA by the ninemember&#13;
student senate. He will&#13;
retain that post until new elections&#13;
can be held.&#13;
Jennett will replace Tom&#13;
Haack who was elected president&#13;
last fall but who is attending&#13;
school out of state this year.&#13;
According to the PSGA Constitution,&#13;
elections were to have&#13;
been held during the second week&#13;
of O~toberi however, Jennett&#13;
explained that a steering committee&#13;
has been set up to investigate&#13;
problems that PSGA&#13;
h~s had in the past, and determme&#13;
ways in which to solve&#13;
them. The steering committee&#13;
will be made up 01 representatives&#13;
of interested student&#13;
organizations.&#13;
"PSGA recognizes the problem&#13;
with our student government and&#13;
we hope the steering committee&#13;
will help make us more&#13;
representative of the students,"&#13;
Jennett said. "A lot of people are&#13;
coming in and wanting to nul,"&#13;
he added. He hoped that the&#13;
steering committee would have&#13;
its recommendations fmalized by&#13;
the end 01 October and that new&#13;
elections would follow Immediately.&#13;
The nine-member student&#13;
senate has approved the steering&#13;
committee as an advisory&#13;
committee, Jennett explained,&#13;
but it has yet to be approved by&#13;
the Campus Concerns Committee,&#13;
the Dean 01 Students&#13;
Office, and Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Jennett said that the only action&#13;
PSGA is now taking is to&#13;
initiate an interview committee&#13;
to screen students wishing to be&#13;
appointed to student-faculty&#13;
committees. PSG A has also&#13;
organized a student grievance&#13;
committee.&#13;
TheParksidee--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 Vol. II No. S&#13;
Where are the books?&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
by Harvey Hedden&#13;
and Stephen F. Gifford .&#13;
During the first few weeks of classes, many students are laced WIth&#13;
the problem of not being able to buy books for some of their classes.&#13;
Two RANGER reporters investigated this problem, the cost of books&#13;
themselves and tbe bookstore operation as a whole, and got cooflicting&#13;
answers while questioning instructors, the bookstore, and&#13;
Administration officials. .&#13;
In ex laining how the books are ordered, .AsslSt"":t Dean of the&#13;
College ~f Science and Society, Chuck Tinder.' first distnbutes =s.to&#13;
all instructors. When completed, the forms list the title of the , I~&#13;
author, publisher, and the number of students. expected to enroll m&#13;
each course. After the forms are collected by Tinder, they ~ssed&#13;
Ted W d manager of the bookstore. The book are&#13;
~~~y~Ofilled 0:: s~veraI books short of ~(:t::i~n~:I:;~0w'::;;&#13;
count for students droppmg tbe course. di&#13;
individual instructors and division heads, should any ~r::::m~&#13;
between the amount of books to be ordered and the projec&#13;
of studen.ts. adS:, books "You have to order books wherever you can&#13;
. In obta~~ng t eWood The bookstore orders from over two hundred&#13;
find them, says .&#13;
individual publishers.: d ot understand why there should&#13;
Most instructors l!1tervlewed co~l a~val "Teachers aggravate the&#13;
be such a problem m prompt ~ said Sheldon Harsel, instructor in&#13;
problem. by .chan.~,ng books, ks ordered as far in advance as they&#13;
communIcationS, but WIth boof&#13;
blem " According to a contract&#13;
h ulOo't be much 0 a pro. .&#13;
are, there so. U' sity May 15is the expiration date for&#13;
the bookstore has Wlt.hthdef m~e: foll~wing fall semester. Harsel went&#13;
all forms to be submltte o.r t si ificant in introductory classes&#13;
on to say that the proble~ ~ m~edul~1l and in which texts are more&#13;
which run on &lt;lwellorgamz ~c f the class" Harsel believes there&#13;
important for "smooth operatIOn ~ emester because there will not be&#13;
will be even more of a prob~em nex t:nds the oooks have from May 15&#13;
as much time to order. As It now ~ r~essed and shipped. However,&#13;
until September for the orders tOIl b~ cut down to a little under th... e&#13;
for the second semester, time WI&#13;
months, " 'abIes" which could affect delivery of&#13;
wood cited a number.of v~rl ke in noting the correct title, author,&#13;
the books. One variable IS.3 mlS~ be made by either the professor or·&#13;
publisher, or amount, which ca kstore itself. From there. a \'ari3~le&#13;
dering the books or by the dtx;"ed but may be found to be out 01 prmt&#13;
exists such that a book \s or e ' ....h must be conducted to locate.3&#13;
or not in stock. In this case, a sear... .&#13;
Paris Township&#13;
fights power plant&#13;
Two persons engaged in the&#13;
resistance movement to a&#13;
possible nuclear power plant in&#13;
Paris Township (in Kenosha&#13;
County), carried their light into&#13;
Racme last week.&#13;
Speaking at Christ Church&#13;
letbodist at a meeting 01 the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Citizens for the&#13;
Environment (CFE) were&#13;
Regina Goodhall, member of the&#13;
Paris Township Preservation&#13;
Committee and Matthew Quinn, a&#13;
Racine attorney representing the&#13;
committee as well as nuclear&#13;
plant foes in Bunn County, in&#13;
western Wisconsin&#13;
They spoke 01 radioactivity,&#13;
commented on condemnation&#13;
proceedings, and reported a&#13;
gradually growing concern about&#13;
nuclear power plants.&#13;
"We're all guinea pigs lor&#13;
nuclear power," said one participant,&#13;
adding that there are&#13;
alternatives to nuclear power&#13;
that should be probed.&#13;
Goodhall conten&lt;le&lt;lthat the...,&#13;
is no level of safe racliation and&#13;
added that radiation chang es th~&#13;
character 01 body cells&#13;
She went 00 to say that the luel&#13;
plutonium. which would be uaed&#13;
m the fast breeder reacton of a&#13;
nuclear power plant, is the mOlt&#13;
dangerous element knO\ltr"nlO man&#13;
and the wastes would be&#13;
radioacti ve rer hundreds of&#13;
thousands 01 years.&#13;
Quinn reported that he hal&#13;
tarted an acllon challenging th~&#13;
power company's right to """.&#13;
demn property. He would like the&#13;
law changed so that the Public&#13;
Service Commission would have&#13;
to approve condemnation.&#13;
Quinn said that more Ractne&#13;
and Kenosha county people may&#13;
become concerned about th~&#13;
po ibility 01 a Paris nucl.. r&#13;
power plan' when they learn that&#13;
their property may be eyed lor&#13;
right-oC·way for transmission&#13;
lines or installing water pI"""&#13;
between Lake MIchigan and th~&#13;
power plant.&#13;
investigated&#13;
used quantity 01the book through an outsule dealer Other reasons lor&#13;
books not arriving on time would be professors filing thetr lonns alter&#13;
the contract date has exptred, or ineffiCIency on the part of the U.S.&#13;
Postal Service, which is how the books are sent. Also, nght or wrong&#13;
books could be sent to the right or wrong 100001lon.Both Regional&#13;
Manager Ramseth and local manager Wood staled on two different&#13;
occasions that bookstore service was expected to improve for next&#13;
semester.&#13;
CommercillOperltioll&#13;
In order to understand why bookstore costa are as they are, one&#13;
must understand bow the bookstore operates (under a commerCIal&#13;
system), and how the books are resold to the bookstore by IItlIdents,&#13;
The Parkside bookstore is owned by the Follette Corporation, which&#13;
pays rent lor the space the bookstore OCCUPIes,as well as all&#13;
operational costs. In return lor this "give," the Follette Corporatioa&#13;
expects to receive a "take." The bookstore, flJl8Jlced by FoIl~lt., II&#13;
ru1 to achieve a profit. "This IS a profit-malting OI'1lanWotion,"explains&#13;
Wood, "it has to be to operate. Otherwise, somebody's got to&#13;
absorb the loss. When the taxpayers have to, they really getlut hard"&#13;
The only alternative to a commercially-&lt;&gt;peraled bookstore would be&#13;
what is referred to as an "institutional" bookstore, run by the UW·P.&#13;
Soroeof the larger universities operate under such: a system, But then,&#13;
we to size, they can afford to. "I know of one institutional bookstore&#13;
that absorbed a loss of a million dollars lor a single year, and several&#13;
that have been operating at a yearly loss 01over a hundred thousand&#13;
dollars," claimed Wood. Wood clearly mdicated that in Parkside's&#13;
case a commercial system would provide the most efficient operation.&#13;
Despite the faclthat Follette owns the bookstore, they do not control&#13;
the prices of books-in particular, how much a student will realize on a&#13;
return sale. The amount a student "'rill receive is determmed by: 1.&#13;
whether or not the course IS required for a major-thi would influence&#13;
tJle amount Df student enrotlment and thus, the amount of books&#13;
needed; 2. past course ollerings-tlus gIves some Idea 01 how many&#13;
students wIll enroll in a cours~ by looking at its past perfonnance 3.&#13;
potentiality of the course-a lecture course ~ ill draw a much larger&#13;
turnout than the a\'erage 25--32person class; 4 potential. of coune,&#13;
expansion-the possibility of a given course mcreasing from ave-raRe&#13;
cla!'S size to lecture proportions.&#13;
According to Wood. Follette realizes 20 percelll 01 e,ory dollar as&#13;
profit. Ho\\ever, 23 percent 01every dollar s expended IDthe cost 01&#13;
operation. In isolated cases, some books will bring m more than a 2lt&#13;
percent profit margin. However. Wood claims the prOfll is made up by&#13;
continued on page 6&#13;
Jennett heads PSGA&#13;
Tom Jennett, one of last year's&#13;
student government (PSGA)&#13;
members, has been appointed&#13;
President of PSGA by the ninemember&#13;
student senate. He will&#13;
retain that post untH new elections&#13;
can be held.&#13;
Jennett will replace Tom&#13;
Haack who was elected president&#13;
last fall but who is attending&#13;
school out of state this year.&#13;
_Ac~ording to the PSGA constitution,&#13;
elections were to have&#13;
been held during the second week&#13;
of O~tober; however, Jennett&#13;
explained that a steering comm1tt~e&#13;
has been set up to in- vestigate problems that PSGA&#13;
ha_s had in the past, and determine&#13;
ways in which to solve&#13;
them. Th leering committ&#13;
will be made up of repr -&#13;
tative of intere ted tudent&#13;
org tzation .&#13;
_''PSG r niz the prob} m ·1th our tudent gov,emment and&#13;
we pe th t committ&#13;
\\ ill help m e u mor&#13;
representative of the ,tud&#13;
Je~ett ~id "A lot of people ar coming m and wanting to nm "&#13;
he added. He hoped that the&#13;
steering committee \\ould have&#13;
its recommendations finalized b&#13;
the end of October and that ne.:..•&#13;
elections would follow immediatelv.&#13;
&#13;
The ~ine-memb r tudent&#13;
senate _has approved the leering&#13;
comm_1ttee a an advi ory&#13;
committee. Jennett explained&#13;
but it has yet to be approved b):&#13;
the Campus Concern Committee,&#13;
the Dean of tudents&#13;
Office, and Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Jennett said that the onlv acti~n.&#13;
PSGA is now taking ·i to&#13;
irut1ate an interview committee&#13;
to screen tudents wishing to be appointed to student-facult,&#13;
committees. PSGA ha al o&#13;
organized a student grievance&#13;
committee.&#13;
The Parksid~e--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 Vol. 11 No. s&#13;
Where are the books?&#13;
NOT&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Paris Tovvnship&#13;
fights povver plant&#13;
Bookstore investigated&#13;
by Harvey Hedden&#13;
and Stephen F . Gifford&#13;
During the first few weeks of classes, many students are !aced with ·&#13;
the problem of not being able to buy books for some of their cla es. Two RANGER reporters investigated this problem, the cost of books&#13;
themselves, and the bookstore operation as a whole, and got conflicting&#13;
answers while questioning instructors, the bookstore, and&#13;
Administration officials. In explaining how the books are or~ered, _Ass~tan_t Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society, Chuck T1ndei:, first ~stnbutes forms.to&#13;
all instructors. When completed, the forms hst the title of the book, 1~&#13;
author publisher and the number of students expected to enroll m&#13;
each c~urse. Afte; the forms are collected by Tinder. they are passed&#13;
along to Ted Wood, manager of the bookstore. The book orders are&#13;
always filled out several books short c;f expected_ enrollment to account&#13;
for students dropping the course. Wood said he c~nfers with&#13;
individual instructors and division heads, should an~ discrepancy&#13;
between the amount of books to be ordered and the proJected amount&#13;
of students arise. In obtaining the books, "You have to order books wherever you can&#13;
find them," says wood. The bookstore orders from over two hundred&#13;
individual publishers. d&#13;
Most instructors interviewed could not understand why there shoul&#13;
be such a problem in prompt book arrival. "Teachers a~ravate ~e&#13;
roble~ by changing books," said Sheldon H~l. mstructor m p · t· "but wi·th books ordered as farm advance as they commumca ions, ,, di t t&#13;
th h ldn't be much of a problem. Accor ng to a con rac&#13;
are, ere s ou - · · dat f the bookstore has with the University, May 15 1s the exptration e or all forms to be submitted for the following fall _se~ester. Harsel went&#13;
on to say that the problem is most significant_ m introductory classes&#13;
which run on "well organized ~chedfulthes" ~~ ~? ;::i t:~e~: ~~= important for "smooth operation ° e c ru · . be . blem next semester because there will not will be even more of a pro . ds the books have from • fav 15&#13;
as much time to order. As it now stanr~es ed and shipped. Howe~er,&#13;
until September for the ort~ers t?ili:cb~ cut down to a little under three&#13;
for the second semester, 1me v.&#13;
months. . be f "variables" which could affect delivery of&#13;
Wood cited a num r_o . k . noting the correct title, author,&#13;
the books. One variable 15 _a m1sta ~ :ade bv either the profes~or orpublisher,&#13;
or amount, which =kst re its 1{ From there. a ,·anable&#13;
dering the books or by_ the d eel iut may be found to be out of print&#13;
exists such that a boo_k is or er e'ar~h must be conducted to locate.a&#13;
or not in stock. In this case, a s ~&#13;
sesn ter. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIOE RANGER wedll •• dIY. OCt. 3. 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
'- __ ----EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
Power plants vs.&#13;
green plants&#13;
"81g power hurts little people." That is the wording on&#13;
one of many protest signs one sees In driving through&#13;
Paris township In Kenosha County. It Is a double entendre.&#13;
for not only does the power of government and&#13;
big business Infringe on the rights of individual citizens,&#13;
but a specific • ..."ple of this would come in the success&#13;
of a proposal by Wisconsin Electric Power Company to&#13;
build a nuclear power plant In Paris. on 6000 acres of&#13;
farm land now owned by approximately 9S families.&#13;
The fight Is stili going on between the residents of the&#13;
ar a and WE PC. and at a meeting held last week of the&#13;
Racine Kenosha CItizens For Environment. attorney&#13;
Matthew Quinn Indicated that concern over the proposal&#13;
Is growing. He expects more and more area citizens to&#13;
become Involved as they see the potential effects of such&#13;
a f clilty.&#13;
To P rls residents It means over 4Sfarms. located In&#13;
on of the best agricultural areas of the state, would be&#13;
closed down. Nlnety·flve families would have to be&#13;
r located. Health and safety are definite concerns»&#13;
there Is no level at which radiation is harmless and&#13;
scientists and nuclear engineers aCTOSSthe country are&#13;
debating the safety of nuclear power.&#13;
WEPC hints at the possible recreational value of the&#13;
pi nt's cooling pond. but the cooling pond at a plant In&#13;
Dresden. III. Is a dirty. steerny. lnsect-r idden, fog·&#13;
producing mess&#13;
WE PC stresses the power needs of the future. and&#13;
local business and government leaders see the plant as a&#13;
healthy project for Kenosha County in terms of jobs and&#13;
money. But there are alternatives to the Paris site and&#13;
even alternatives to nuclear power until it can be proved&#13;
safe. And sometlmes the economic potential of power&#13;
plants must give way to the humane value of green&#13;
plants.&#13;
Since political clout lies in size and bigness deals in&#13;
terms of expediency, not sympathy, it may be useless to&#13;
argue this question from a humanitarian point of view··&#13;
the uprooting of nearly 100 families from their&#13;
homesteads, some of them the sixth generation on the&#13;
same land. What is needed is a broader base of support.&#13;
Power Is In numbers so all persons interested in&#13;
preventing construction of a nuclear power plant in&#13;
Paris should make themselves visible. Their reasons&#13;
may range anywhere from preventing possible nuclear&#13;
disaster to properly rights to environmental concerns to&#13;
crusading for the little guy. but they have in common the&#13;
same goat and together stand a much better chance of&#13;
achieving it.&#13;
RANGER supports the Racine·Kenosha Citizens For&#13;
Environment, the Paris Preservation Society. and the&#13;
people 01 Paris fighting to keep their community safe&#13;
nd intact. We urge other like-minded persons or groups&#13;
to make themselves heard.&#13;
~&#13;
Communication&#13;
breaking down&#13;
b) ".Gillon!&#13;
aDdHann HHIIlel&#13;
In rft COthe 5tary on the bookstore. there is 00. small&#13;
tonal C1XIU11enlth two reporters ouId like COimpart to their&#13;
.....den ..11cit has no connection ..,th the faet! contained in the ar·&#13;
tlde II merely a reOecbon 01 our ..... experience in researdling&#13;
II m directed n"llnly COcertam mdi"duaJs wjthin the&#13;
:&#13;
~::.:abOn and the Foil Ue CQrllClr1ltionThese persons have &lt;:qUIred th rrustaken belief thaI the article set out wjth the&#13;
ved llItenbOn 01 conduetulg some son 01 attack OIl them.&#13;
nto Cftt810 I..... tonSlSIed 01 ever;1hing ranging&#13;
'.dmlnlstra ' 01 non·information COagile evllS1on. Perl\aps the&#13;
n bon nd an) other persons .. bo might act as sources for&#13;
luture I •need to reminded thai the R.-\l·GER is as Interested&#13;
1ft helpmg them to ooI"e th r problems as it is m helpong the students&#13;
to ,the ,t.nd no problems can be solved or even approached&#13;
n n tmofllhere of plClOnprenils. Suspicion only se.....es&#13;
to (' mot susptClOn \mul there no more communication to be&#13;
I rfl1I of, a commuOlca~on ha brol&lt;en00..'Tl completely. If lJur&#13;
prepara\lOll 01 artI~~ re to " .. as aD)·scale lor measuring&#13;
IJ\lOQlIC cI feer and diItrusl here at Parllside, ...... ould JiI&lt;. to&#13;
Inform our readen that Pa.. .de closer to a communication l:ftak·&#13;
wn than " thl&#13;
Last week RANGER printed a front page stor;: on Affirmative&#13;
Action and hiring practices at Pa r kside. In an editorial RANGER&#13;
charged that UW-P is failing to meet minortty needs In Its hiring of&#13;
faculty and staff. An interesting enncism has ansen at UW-oshkosh&#13;
regarding its recruitment and htrmg efforts.&#13;
An article in the sept. 13, 1973 OSHKOSH ADVANCE·TITAN, UW·&#13;
o's student newspaper. began with the q~estion, lOIs this uni.versi~y&#13;
practicing discrimination against men, 10 ~ene~al, and ~hlteS. ~&#13;
particular?" The qUestion arose when the ~OIverslty advertised to lill&#13;
a non-academic posiuon, listing the criteria for ,the ~ltlOn. and ~e&#13;
statement "in accordance with the State of Wlsconsm Affrrmatlve&#13;
Action Program, only applicants w~o are wo~en or ~embe~ of&#13;
minority groups such as Afro-Am~rlcan. Ar:nencan Indian, !,-~l~:&#13;
American and Spanish Surname, will be consu!ered for the position.&#13;
The sw.:&#13;
y&#13;
goes on to outline UW.o's percentages of minority and&#13;
women faculty: 1.6 percent Afro-American, 1.9 percent Oriental, 0.7&#13;
percent Spanish-American, and 2.6 percent "other" minorities.&#13;
Women coostitute 26.5 percent of the faculty at Oshkosh, compared&#13;
with 8 percent at Parkside. Parkside's statistics on minorities still&#13;
have not been made public so we have no way of knowing for sure at&#13;
this point what percentage of our faculty comes from minority&#13;
backgrounds. We do know Parkside's faculty is 0 percent AfroAmerican.&#13;
UW-OAffirmative Action officer, Roy Heath. said that in order to be&#13;
eligible for lederal lunds, UW-O must meet federal standards for the&#13;
hiring 01 minorities. But he maintained that rarely do more qualified&#13;
applicants get nosed out of a job by a less qualified minority membe r.&#13;
The assistant to the vice-&lt;:hancellor attempted to clarify the&#13;
situation, stating "We are not refusing to hire white males. We are&#13;
interested in securing the most qualified candidates available."&#13;
However, when the University advertises for teachers at graduate&#13;
schools or in professional publications, "We certainly attempt to&#13;
encourage minority people and women," he added.&#13;
The lack 01 minority applicants is what forces the University to&#13;
request only minorities when hiring for some jobs, according to Heath.&#13;
There is also a low number of minority PhD graduates each year.&#13;
It appears UW-O will continue to try and hire minority people exclusively&#13;
for some positions, although if this is not possible a white&#13;
male will be considered. Until the disparity equalizes itself, UW·&#13;
Oshkosh will probably suffer criticism for its hiring practices.&#13;
Oyde DeBerry, assistant to the Chancellor for Multicultural Affairs,&#13;
as well as Affirmative Action Officer for Minorities at UW-o, believes&#13;
such criticism is unfair and commented that "all the institutions in&#13;
this valley are committed by state and federal law to correct historical&#13;
inequities in recruitment. hiring, promotion and retention ... whether&#13;
these institutioos uphold the law is another thing. We are attempting."&#13;
DeBerry was upset by an article in a local paper (the NOR·&#13;
T.H.wESTE~N) th,~t criticized the university's supposedly prejudicial&#13;
hiring practices. Anyone that could make that statement is either&#13;
uninformed, stupid, or racist, or all three, to he concluded.&#13;
The .implications of all this for Parkside? This institution, too, is&#13;
CO~ltted hy state and federal law to correct historical inequities In&#13;
recruitment, hiring, promotion and retention. It is doubtful we can&#13;
honestly claim we are attempting to uphold the law. Our Affirmative&#13;
Actio~ plan is overdue, and in the meantime we are doing no special&#13;
recruiting to encourage minority people and women to apply. Iam not&#13;
advo:cating that we discriminate against white males by refusing to&#13;
consider them when a position is open. But in accordance with federal&#13;
Affirmative ~ction g~delines, we should be making a special effort to&#13;
reach potential candidates from among groups formerly excluded&#13;
from empl~yment and advancement, and when the qualifications of&#13;
these candidates are equaltn the job they should be hired.&#13;
The Parksidc Ranger is publl hed .&#13;
year by the students f T IS ~ee~y throughout the academic&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53l~O ~~fUniversity of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Learning Cenler, Telepho~e (4l14c)~5;~~;ocated at 0-194 LibraryThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger is . d .&#13;
reflected in columns and editor! In ependent newspaper, Opinions&#13;
View of The University of w~tonal~ are no~ necessarily the official&#13;
Letters to the Ed'to Isconsm·Parkslde.&#13;
interest to students I f;c~te encouraged, AllleHers on any subject of&#13;
less, typed Ilnd do~ble-s y or staff m~st be confined to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and g~~ed.. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address, phone number ste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withheld upon reque:~d;~uden,t status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any letters. ,e editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR-IN_CHIEF' J&#13;
_MANAGING EDITOR.a~e M. Schliesman&#13;
FEATURE EDIT .' om Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITO . OR. Debra Frledell&#13;
SPORTS ED.T~·R~athryn Wellner&#13;
COPY EDIT " Dan Marry&#13;
PHOTOGRA~~ic R~~~a Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: StePhenGiff DINATOR: DaVid Daniels&#13;
Jense&lt;'l~Michael OISZYk~r~a~~r~ara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Stapan,an, Carrie Ward, Ken y SchUbert, John Sorensen, Steve&#13;
Bruce Wagner Konkol, Tom Defouw, Neal Saufner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrt '&#13;
J,m Ruffalo, Jay Satvo m, Alle,n Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS' Am&#13;
LAYOUT: Ten! Gel:;,~undari, Gary Huck&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGE~~n, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
ADVERTISING M.AN . Ken Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MAN:g:R&#13;
: Amy Cundari ~"&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF. F~' Gary Worthington&#13;
ADVISOR: Don KOpl'"iv~ ed Lawrence. Jim Magruder&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wednesuy, Oct. 3, 1973&#13;
[ A 2!i!on~&#13;
ower plants vs.&#13;
een plants&#13;
ee•o1 et ylew&#13;
res den s of the&#13;
er.&#13;
recre lonal value o the&#13;
cooling pond at a plan n&#13;
insec • ldden, fog.&#13;
Communication&#13;
brea Ing down&#13;
It Jan~ Schlluman&#13;
Last week RANGER printed a fro!lt page stol")'. o~ Affirmative&#13;
Action and hiring practices at Parksi~. ~ an edito~i~l R~~GER&#13;
charged that uw-P is failing to m~t _mmority n_eeds m its hirmg of&#13;
faculty and staff. An interesting ~iticism has arisen at UW-Oshkosh&#13;
regarding its recruitment and hiring efforts.&#13;
An article in the Sept. 13, 1973 OSHKOSH ADVANCE-TITAN, UW0'&#13;
student newspaper, began _with the q~estion, "Is this uni_versi~y&#13;
iracticing discrimination agamst men, m ~ene:al, and ~hites, ~&#13;
particular?" The question arose when t?e ~mversity adv~:tised to fill&#13;
a non-academic position, listi_ng the criteria for_the ~sition_ and ~e&#13;
tatement "in accordance with the State of Wisconsm Affirmative&#13;
Action Program only applicants who are women or members of&#13;
minority groups' such as Afro-Am~rican, AI_nerican Indian, ~-sianAmerican,&#13;
and Spanish Surname, will be considered for the position."&#13;
The tory goes on to outline UW-O's percentages of minority and&#13;
w men faculty: 1.6 percent Afro-American, 1.9 percent Oriental, 0.7&#13;
percent pani h-American, and 2.6 percent "other" minorities.&#13;
Women con titute 26.5 percent of the faculty at Oshkosh, compared&#13;
"ith percent at Parkside. Parkside's statistics on minorities still&#13;
haH! not been made public owe have no way of knowing for sure at&#13;
thi point what percentage of our faculty comes from minority&#13;
background . We do know Parkside's faculty is O percent AfroAmerican.&#13;
&#13;
UW-0 Affirmative Action officer, Roy Heath, said that in order to be&#13;
eligible for federal funds, UW-0 must meet federal standards for the&#13;
hiring of minorities. But he maintained that rarely do more qualified&#13;
applicants get nosed out of a job by a less qualified minority member.&#13;
The assistant to the vice-chancellor attempted to clarify the&#13;
ituation, stating "We are not refusing to hire white males. We are&#13;
interested in securing the most qualified candidates available."&#13;
However, when the University advertises for teachers at graduate&#13;
chools or in professional publications, "We certainly attempt to&#13;
encourage minority people and women," he added.&#13;
The lack of minority applicants is what forces the University to&#13;
request only minorities when hiring for some jobs, according to Heath.&#13;
There is also a low number of minority PhD graduates each year.&#13;
It appears UW-0 will continue to try and hire minority people exclusively&#13;
for some positions, although if this is not possible a white&#13;
male will be considered. Until the disparity equalizes itself, UWOshkosh&#13;
will probably suffer criticism for its hiring practices.&#13;
Oyde DeBerry, assistant to the Chancellor for Multicultural Affairs,&#13;
a well a Affirmative Action Officer for Minorities at UW-0, believes&#13;
uch criticism is unfair and commented that "all the institutions in&#13;
thi valley are committed by state and federal law to correct historical&#13;
inequitie in recruitment, hiring, promotion and retention ... whether&#13;
these in titutions uphold the law is another thing. We are attempting."&#13;
DeBerry was upset by an article in a local paper (the NOR-&#13;
~ESTE~ ) th,~t criticized the university's supposedly prejudicial&#13;
hirmg practices. Anyone that could make that statement is either&#13;
uninformed, stupid, or racist, or all three," he concluded.&#13;
The implications of all this for Parkside? This institution too is&#13;
comr~itted by Stl_lte and federal law to correct historical ineq~iti~ tn&#13;
recrwtment, hi.nng, promotion and retention. It is doubtful we can&#13;
hon~stly claim we are attempting to uphold the law. Our Affirmative&#13;
Actio~ _plan is overdue, and in the meantime we are doing no special&#13;
recrm~g to encourage minority people and women to apply. I am not&#13;
adv~ting that we disc~in~te against white males by refusing to&#13;
consider ~em "".hen a position is open. But, in accordance with federal&#13;
Affirmative Action guidelines, we should be making a special effort to&#13;
reach potential candidates from among groups formerly excluded&#13;
from empl~yment and advancement, and when the qualifications of&#13;
these candidates are equal to the job they should be hired.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is pub!" hed . . year by the students of T is ~eekly throug~out ~e academic&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140 ~;r University of W1sconsm-Parkside,&#13;
Learning Center, Telepho;e ,41~c,e~5:_r~~ocated at D-194 LibraryThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger · . · reflected in columns and is _an . mdependent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
view of The University of ~~torial~ are no~ necessarily the official&#13;
Letters to the Ed ·to isconsm-Parks1de.&#13;
mterest to students 1 ,:c:te encouraged. All letters on any subJect of&#13;
less. typed ,nd do~ble-s Y or staff m~st be confined to 250 words or&#13;
letters for length and g~~ed. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address. phone number a d ~ted All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withheld upon r ues~ 5 u en_t status or faculty rank . Names will&#13;
print any letters eq · The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF· MANAGING EDITOR~ane M . Schliesman&#13;
FEATURE EDITO .. Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR· t · Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EOITO.R · ~:~yn Wellner&#13;
COPY EDITO . . Marry&#13;
PHOTOGRAP~ic ~::,cca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS : Stephen G~t!ROINATOR: David Daniels JMs.eri M ' 1 Ord, Barbara Ha : ,chael Olszyk, Maril n nson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Stapan,an, Carrie Ward, Ken ,: Schubert, John Sorensen, Steve&#13;
Bruce Waoner onkoi, Tom Defouw, Neal Sautner,&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS· Ron A J,m Ruffalo, Jay saivo ntrlm, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross&#13;
CARTOONISTS · A ' LAYOUT: Terr, G;;Y :=undarl, Gary Huck&#13;
BUSINESS MANAG~~n, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
ADVERTISING MAN · Ken Pestka&#13;
ClltCULATION MAN:g::: Amy Cundari j4&#13;
ADVEltTISING STAFF· F · Gary Worthington&#13;
ADVISOR : Don Kepr,v~ red Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
Armstrong pleads guilty&#13;
An attorney for Karleton Armstrong,&#13;
one of four persons&#13;
charged in a 1970 bombing that&#13;
killed a University of Wisconsin&#13;
researcher. said that his client&#13;
would plead guilty to a reduced&#13;
charge of second degree murder.&#13;
Plea bargaining between the&#13;
defense and the prosecution&#13;
produced an agreement for&#13;
Armstrong to plead guilty to the&#13;
lesser charge in the death of&#13;
Robert Fassnacht. He was&#13;
originally charged with first&#13;
degree murder. Armstrong will&#13;
also plead guilty to four charges&#13;
of arson, according to attorney&#13;
Robert Kellerman.&#13;
Kellerman said the agreement&#13;
would allow Armstrong to&#13;
present his motivations to the&#13;
public at a hearing. "Karl is&#13;
admitting he did these acts and&#13;
he wants the people to understand&#13;
why," Kellerman said.&#13;
The defense attorney called the&#13;
bombing "an act of political&#13;
resistance against the illegal war&#13;
in Indochina." He said the Armstrong&#13;
defense committee hoped&#13;
to "turn this town into a forum for&#13;
renewed anti-war activities and&#13;
demonstrations" when a hearing&#13;
on the guilty pleas is held Oct. 15.&#13;
The guilty plea is the best way&#13;
to bring the issue to the American&#13;
people that its government has&#13;
been shown to be corrupt and&#13;
acting contrary to the wishes of&#13;
the people, Kellerman said.&#13;
State law permits defendants&#13;
who plead guilty .to present&#13;
evidence on the mitigation of&#13;
their guilt. Such evidence could&#13;
not have been presented at a&#13;
trial.&#13;
Kellerman said the evidence&#13;
against Armstrong was substantial&#13;
and that Armstrong&#13;
regretted that Fassnacht had&#13;
died in the early morning bombing&#13;
of the Army Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Sterling Hall&#13;
on the Madison campus&#13;
We get&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It occurs to me that the Affirmative&#13;
Action Program is a&#13;
form of reverse racism. Though&#13;
liberal sentiments disagree, it is&#13;
impossible to rectify the&#13;
mistakes of the past, to repair the&#13;
dreams that racism-sexism has&#13;
crushed. To think that a WASP&#13;
majority can make reparation&#13;
for past mistakes by giving&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority is truly very&#13;
faulty thinking.&#13;
The Affirmative Action&#13;
Program is a repugnant form of&#13;
tokenism, only instead of one&#13;
black, chicano, or woman, you&#13;
employ the current percentages.&#13;
By doing so a company,&#13;
organization, or university can&#13;
chant, "See? We are an equal&#13;
opportunity employer!" Equal&#13;
opportunity for who? (More&#13;
equal for some, perhaps?) A&#13;
system like this does not equalize&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
The bombing, on August 24,&#13;
1970. was one of the last major&#13;
acts of violence on the UW·&#13;
Madison campus, scene of dozens&#13;
of violent anti-war protests&#13;
during the course of the Vietnam&#13;
War.&#13;
Armstrong was arrested in&#13;
Canada in February, 1972 and&#13;
extradited in March of this year.&#13;
He has since been held in the&#13;
Dane County jail in lieu of&#13;
$450,000 bail. The other three&#13;
persons charged in the case are&#13;
still being sought.&#13;
letters&#13;
opportunities, but rather gives&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority. When this&#13;
occurs, racism-sexism won't be&#13;
eliminated but rather&#13;
propagated.&#13;
1 consider a system like AI·&#13;
firmative Action not only unequal&#13;
but also somewhat degrading. 1&#13;
certainly would be offended if I&#13;
was hired only because of skin&#13;
color, or nationality background,&#13;
or because I'm a Speaker. I am&#13;
proud of the fact that I am hired&#13;
for a job because an employer is&#13;
convinced 1am competent to do it&#13;
well. To be hired for any other&#13;
reason is to be used.&#13;
When considering the implementation&#13;
of Affirmative&#13;
Action one should think of all&#13;
ramifications before we jump in&#13;
over our beads like lemmings in&#13;
the sea.&#13;
Tom Speaker&#13;
UWP Sophomore&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
F~ ..H~ T~ ~."" ~&#13;
Coil.,. c.... Ml Dew ..&#13;
l"HL f-Iusn .. TO Gn nCl"~U'&#13;
I ",_Y.1&gt;&lt;t w,,"'o; L""D T ...",,· Nh&gt;E ..&#13;
S,."., To _Li'!&gt;5e'"&#13;
T~" (.O"'f'lCTIT,OIJ&#13;
SIT"'''''''' il"-l"tl"Y',&#13;
BRo o~t.. C; P!o,oF.SSdl:5&#13;
NO'"T"O .,. ...&#13;
t';::~l\~:,.v.~~.~...&#13;
POETRY&#13;
8&lt;rf 500.. l'~G--.""&#13;
.....tI S-~· ..&#13;
0" , F'.~T&lt;. _tI&#13;
,",''''~ t&gt;&lt;lJ;&#13;
.....0 I 0;._ tI ....&#13;
........~ .... l ;n: TY&#13;
0.. '-'~\"',.... ..&#13;
Ra ...... \o.C1l~"&#13;
Ranger classifieds&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
S2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date. 160-page,&#13;
mail order catalog Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (deh'iery lime IS&#13;
I to 2 daysl.&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD.. SUIT[ :2&#13;
L05 ANC£US. CALIF 9002S&#13;
12131477-8474 or 477·5493&#13;
Our resurch "",leri" is sold fat&#13;
rewltch usisunu ani,.&#13;
Income tax preparation, Federal and Sta'e,&#13;
ellperienced. Reasonable. Call 63'·'191.&#13;
Red 1968 Mustang convert. Perfect&#13;
mechlniully, artistically dented, $600. 63'-&#13;
1110(evenings).&#13;
WANTED, Licensed baT"tender who is&#13;
P.rkside student. Call 553-'243'2between 8&#13;
a.m. &amp; 4",30p.m.&#13;
EARN TOP MONEYl p.r~.ti"'.e promofin9&#13;
student travel. call. o~AW~~:~:~IU~J~:&#13;
telephone numbe, rl'lIi 60204. (31'2)3,.-0110.&#13;
Box 5049.Evans on. .&#13;
d peutely need THE&#13;
Some stUdentsGE e~EADER (MusUtine&#13;
BORZO.I ~OLi~itors). If anyone has thil&#13;
and Gnfflth.. . II it leave nlme and&#13;
boOk and is Willing to se, t" n I&lt;iosk.&#13;
phone number at the InlormllO&#13;
Shing.Mei I&lt;ellv·&#13;
.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The Movemen.t" is. regular feature In RANGER. It&#13;
deals with women and women's COIlcerns in society. at Parbkte""&#13;
history_ Guest writers are invited,&#13;
by Barb Han.....&#13;
Ti-Grace Atkinson, radical feminist, spoke at UW-MiIwa,*ee on&#13;
Sept. 26 as part of the Women's Week Activities sponsored by !be&#13;
Campus Women's Information Center. AtklOsoo has been lOvol~ In&#13;
the Women's Movement smce it first organized in 1966.She was in !be&#13;
headlines in 1971when ber comments at Catholic University about !be&#13;
V"ll"ginMary incited Patricia Buckley Bozell to strike ber. Bozell is !be&#13;
sister of columnist William F. Buckley Jr. and New York Senator&#13;
James Buckley. At1tinsonhadn't lectured f'll"a long time becausellhe&#13;
"felt it was a trap, a substitute for action. It She fears the same kind of&#13;
trap in the trend toward rap sessions and consciousness raiainll.&#13;
Although she thinks "the first battle is in ourselves and alone,"&#13;
Atkinson stressed the need for women to make stronger bonds between&#13;
themselves. "We don't expect much of each other because we&#13;
doo't think much of each other."&#13;
"The Women's Movement now is a media dream. You look for the&#13;
reality in the change.c.In seven years, the only major adv~cemeDl&#13;
has been abortion." Atkinson stressed the necessity of buin8 any&#13;
liberalized abortion laws on strong Constitutional grounda. She aa1d&#13;
there are two approaches to justify abortion: privacy and the Fourteenth&#13;
Amendment's guarantee that no SlBte shall "deprive any&#13;
person of life liberty or property, without due process of law."&#13;
Atkinson said u.at "All of me belongs to me-sperm is a 'gift' once it"&#13;
in my body." Atkinson mentioned that in countries where the abortion&#13;
laws have been liberalized, the birth rate drops substantially. "You&#13;
Iind that women aren't as crazy about this motherhood bit as you'd&#13;
thought." Eventually the restrictions return. "One thing I think is&#13;
very important is test-tube babies. Test-lUbe babies are the only&#13;
solution to abortion. [f there is no alternate means of reproduction, the&#13;
restrictions will go back on."&#13;
You can't discuss abortion without mentioning the Catholic Church,&#13;
and Atkinson had plenty to say about that. "Their only new members&#13;
come from women's vaginas. If they lose the women, they lose the ball&#13;
game ..As long as tbe Church stands, women won't be free. They&#13;
(those leading the O1urch) must be wiped out totally. Every stick.&#13;
stone. everything."&#13;
Atkinson asked, "can you be Catholic and Ieminist? Can you be&#13;
religious and feminist?" She asked many other thought-provoltlDll&#13;
questions. but perhaps the most imeresnng was thiS "How do you grt&#13;
women to put themselves on the line? How do you get them to bond'"&#13;
When we discover the answer to that, liberation will be more than juat&#13;
a word.&#13;
••• '''flIrtturn_' ...&#13;
or .... "&#13;
FrIday Oct. 5&#13;
I:" p.lD.&#13;
Swtday oe. 7&#13;
7::11 p.lD.&#13;
Student AetlviU..&#13;
BuI1diflll&#13;
uw ...... Wtt&#13;
1.0_ ,...,"-'&#13;
UNION&#13;
Itt. 3, 5, &amp;, 7&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
K.es"'s IIe.est llltes,.,&#13;
2nd National&#13;
{formerly Shak.y',}&#13;
6'101 Groonbay Road Phono 654-0415&#13;
Armstrong pleads guilty&#13;
An attorney for Karleton Armstrong,&#13;
one of four persons&#13;
charged in a 1970 bombing that&#13;
killed a University of Wisconsin&#13;
researcher, said that his client&#13;
would plead guilty to a reduced&#13;
charge of second degree murder.&#13;
their guilt. Such evidence could&#13;
not have been presented at a trial.&#13;
Kellerman said the evidence&#13;
against Armstrong was substantial&#13;
and that Armstrong&#13;
regretted that Fassnacht had&#13;
~ed in the early morning bombing&#13;
of the Army Mathematics&#13;
Research Center in Sterling Hall on the Madison campus.&#13;
The bombing, on Augu t 24,&#13;
1970, was one of the last major&#13;
acts of violence on the '&#13;
ladison campus, scene of dozen&#13;
of violent anti-war protest&#13;
during the course of the \'ietnam&#13;
War.&#13;
Armstrong was arrested in&#13;
Canada in February. 1972 and&#13;
extradited in larch of this year.&#13;
He has since been held in the&#13;
Dane County jail in lieu of&#13;
$450,000 bail. The other three&#13;
persons charged in the case are&#13;
still being sought.&#13;
Plea bargaining between the&#13;
defense and the prosecution&#13;
produced an agreement for&#13;
Armstrong to plead guilty to the&#13;
lesser charge in the death of&#13;
Robert Fassnacht. He was&#13;
originally charged with first&#13;
degree murder. Armstrong will&#13;
also plead guilty to four charges&#13;
of arson, according to attorney&#13;
Robert Kellerman.&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Kellerman said the agreement&#13;
would allow Armstrong to&#13;
present his motivations to the&#13;
public at a hearing. "Karl is&#13;
admitting he did these acts and&#13;
he wants the people to understand&#13;
why, " Kellerman said.&#13;
The defense attorney called the&#13;
bombing "an act of political&#13;
resistance against the illegal war&#13;
in Indochina." He said the Armstrong&#13;
defense committee hoped&#13;
to "turn this town into a forum for&#13;
renewed anti-war activities and&#13;
demonstrations" when a hearing&#13;
on the guilty pleas is held Oct. 15.&#13;
The guilty plea is the best way&#13;
to bring the issue to the American&#13;
people that its government has&#13;
been shown to be corrupt and&#13;
acting contrary to the wishes of&#13;
the people, Kellerman said.&#13;
State law permits defendants&#13;
who plead guilty .to present&#13;
evidence on the mitigation of&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
It occurs to me that the Affirmative&#13;
Action Program is a&#13;
form of reverse racism. Though&#13;
liberal sentiments disagree, it is&#13;
impossible to rectify the&#13;
mistakes of the _past, to repair the&#13;
dreams that racism-sexism has&#13;
crushed. To think that a WASP&#13;
majority can make reparation&#13;
for past mistakes by giving&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority is truly very&#13;
faulty thinking.&#13;
The Affirmative Action&#13;
Program is a repugnant form of&#13;
tokenism, only instea~ of one&#13;
black, chicano, or woman, you&#13;
employ the current percentages.&#13;
By doing so a company,&#13;
organization, or university can&#13;
chant, "See? We are an equal&#13;
opportunity employer!" Equal&#13;
opportunity for who? (More&#13;
equal for some, perhaps? ) A&#13;
system like this does not equalize&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
POETRY&#13;
F~""KL"I' TME. ~9Ll!M.S o, Cotltf!ll C" Mc. Dow.., T'HE. Huni..c To &lt;i-•1' Tl'I&amp; CL,.ssu r "'~T. n-.c. wo«K Lo"'o T.,.;.T' N,v,k Sul-\5 T o .LeSselr&gt;l T~C C. O..,PEi1TtOIJ&#13;
8EiWS.\N SNtitt.iTS,&#13;
BtlowN wos1"'e,. P,.oft.SSdt:5&#13;
NOT TO N'liN"Tlft-.. 'T~1!.&#13;
G~~l1~:,.v.~~-~y&#13;
Sorry I Woke You Up&#13;
Pardon me but I didn't mean to take your dream&#13;
Away. You know, the one in which_ we&#13;
Live in peace and rid our minds of middle class&#13;
Hang-ups. It flourished in Haight-Ashbury.&#13;
Wetunedin turnedon anddroppedout.&#13;
F1owers beads grass love acid sharing groovy&#13;
Vibes. Woodstock our soul nation Be-ins&#13;
Then the Altamont Chicago Now? cynicism&#13;
Smack sexism and pass the next beer. The&#13;
Reality of teen-age gang war, _Charles Manson,&#13;
Gay-baiting and longhairs for Nixon. The women&#13;
Are in thei; communal kitchens making wheat germ&#13;
Sandwiches for their revolutionary brothers&#13;
Out fighting pigs. Hip Capitalism. We sing&#13;
About beauty and we sing about truth at $10,000&#13;
A show. Jesus Freaks Muhammad Speaks&#13;
Rennie Davis reeks . ?&#13;
What happened to the counter-culture? Was it there·&#13;
Yea, we've all been co-opted or diverted. I got&#13;
8111' soc. .. !u.~ ... ~-- ~!'.I) n,,£.N .,,,.,. ew1tt1u, Cf:'~,s A._.JT"I(.- 11\.0&#13;
Wl'-'-1t""t,&#13;
,.,,..0 'IC."""- C'I-'!;,.&#13;
Wn1'1 .,_.l ~aA... Tl 0,. U'F lN ,.,._t:&#13;
RaJ1o1,,.. \..CR"-D&#13;
L1.,.._E.&#13;
Hip. Sorry I woke you up. _ Dave Myer&#13;
Ranger classifieds·&#13;
Income tax preparation, Federal and State,&#13;
experienced. Reasonable . Call 639-9891.&#13;
Red n68 Mustang convert. Perfect&#13;
mechanically, artistically dented, $600. 639·&#13;
1170 (evenings).&#13;
WANTED : Licensed bartender who is&#13;
Parkside student. Call 553-2432 between 8&#13;
a.m. &amp; • , 10 p.m.&#13;
RN TOP MONEY! Part-time promoting&#13;
!:dent travel. Call_ o~:;~~~:~,u~~J:~:&#13;
telephone numbet r\11 60204 (312)328-0110. Box 549, Evans on, · ·&#13;
d rately need THE Some studentsGE e~ADER (Muscatine&#13;
BORZO_I COLL~itorsl If anyone has this and Griffith, . E · 11 .&#13;
1 leave name and book and is willing to se 1 ' fon Kiosk. phone number at the tnforma ,&#13;
Shing-Mei Kelly.&#13;
opportunities, but rather gives&#13;
minorities greater opportunities&#13;
than the majority. When this&#13;
occurs, racism- exism won't be&#13;
eliminated but rather&#13;
propagated.&#13;
I consider a ystem like Affirmative&#13;
Action not onJy unequal&#13;
but also somewhat degrading. I&#13;
certainly would be offended if I&#13;
was hired onJy because of skin&#13;
color, or nationality background,&#13;
or because I'm a Speaker. I am&#13;
proud of the fact that I am hired&#13;
for a job because an employer is&#13;
convinced I am competent to do it&#13;
well. To be hired for any other&#13;
reason is to be used.&#13;
When considering the implementation&#13;
of Affirmative&#13;
Action one should think of all&#13;
ramifications before we jump in&#13;
over our heads like lemmings in&#13;
the sea .&#13;
Tom Speaker&#13;
UWP Sophomore&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2. 75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-terdate, ISO.page,&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (deliiery I e s&#13;
1 to 2 daysl&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD .• SUITE =2&#13;
LOS A GELES. CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213! 477-8474 or 477-~93&#13;
Our resurc lftllteri.il is sold for re~uc~ us,sunce only&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' note: "Th . to,ement'' i a re ular featun ln R&#13;
deal Vlith ¥iomen and" men' COIie in oc t , at ar&#13;
hi tory. Gu . t "riter are in\'lted.&#13;
a Y.ord.&#13;
The&#13;
• nda • ct. 1&#13;
7: p.m.&#13;
tud tActh1t&#13;
Buldi~&#13;
Ion ?Sc&#13;
UWP...iWI&#13;
10,~&#13;
UNION&#13;
1kt. 3, 5, 6, 7&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nites,ot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
( ormerly Sho ey' s)&#13;
6'201 GrHnbay Road Phone 654-0485 &#13;
. I Sister Colette ill a teacher by profession but finds&#13;
that Campus MinistrY is "one ,:"ay of continuing my&#13;
I&#13;
relation with young people ill a less. structured&#13;
way." .' The campus Ministry people will work ill conjunction&#13;
with Parkside counselors. They are also&#13;
setting up a Newman Club for Parkside students.&#13;
Sister Colette explained the Newman Club as a way&#13;
to "get young people together to form a Christian&#13;
type of community:' which they hope will make&#13;
worship more creative and responsive to the needs&#13;
of young people. It is a way "to bridge what is and&#13;
what could be," she added.&#13;
"We have no specific programs outlined," said&#13;
Father Wayne, "but want the students to initiate&#13;
programs and rap centers. In sharing ideas we&#13;
build a better community in which to live:'&#13;
The two have spent the past three weeks getting&#13;
acquainted with administrators, faculty and staff,&#13;
and getting a feel for the workings of the University.&#13;
"I have a deep respect for young people" said&#13;
Father Wayne, "and they have a lot to give. We&#13;
want to help them channel their ideas." Father&#13;
Wayne and Sister Colette are at Parkside to listen,&#13;
to share, to suggest, or to counsel students.&#13;
Sister Colette will be available on campus on&#13;
Tuesdays and both Sister Colette and Father Wayne&#13;
will be here on Thursdays from noon until 4 p.m. in&#13;
LLC 0185.&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 4, a Campus Ministry kickoff&#13;
rap session has been arranged through which&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette are interested in&#13;
meeting Parkside students. This is an opportunity&#13;
for students to offer suggestions, to talk, or to&#13;
become actively involved in the organization and&#13;
designing of activities for the Newman Club.&#13;
When the campus Ministry people cannot be&#13;
found on campus, students are invited to stop at the&#13;
Newman Center, located on the corner of Highway&#13;
E and JR, or call Sister Colette (552-8526)or Father&#13;
Wayne (657-3408),&#13;
4 THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday. Oct. 3. 1973&#13;
yw-P aHected.&#13;
Canteen increases&#13;
food prices&#13;
canteen cannot change food&#13;
prices whenever it wishes to,&#13;
Niebuhr added. The University&#13;
must approve price decisions and&#13;
increases are agreed upon under&#13;
a contract with Canteen. Cootract&#13;
terms are maintained&#13;
througbout all price changes.&#13;
ReprdIess of the amount of the&#13;
increase, the purchaser will&#13;
receive the same quantity and&#13;
quality 01 a product.&#13;
When comparing Parkside's&#13;
lood prices with thooe of other&#13;
state campuses, Niebuhr&#13;
suggested that the cost of labor&#13;
be considered. Labor is less&#13;
costly in northern Wisconsin than&#13;
in the southeast area of the state,&#13;
be added. Products from our&#13;
vending machines remain equal&#13;
to or lower than those at UWMilwaukee.&#13;
A 25 cent soda tbere&#13;
IS 2Q cents here. Entree meals&#13;
have suffered a 5 to 10 cent increase.&#13;
Pastry items in the&#13;
vending machines have gone up 5&#13;
cents because of the higher cost&#13;
in producing wheat products.&#13;
Because of a "better deal" with&#13;
their supplier, Canteen has&#13;
switched from a half pint of milk&#13;
to a third pint at a cost of 2Q cents.&#13;
Plans have been made which&#13;
will provide vending machines in&#13;
both the Corom Arts building and&#13;
the Classroom Building. ThIS&#13;
sbould ease the crowded conditions&#13;
in the cafeteria area.&#13;
lIy SWpllea S&amp;apoDIaD&#13;
..It'.no lurprile to the school"&#13;
... the comment made by&#13;
William Niebuhr, director of&#13;
Student Life, when asked about&#13;
the rile in lood prices at&#13;
Parltside. Parbide is following&#13;
lUll with other food price inc:na_&#13;
througbout the comllWIlity.&#13;
The prices of dairy. meat and&#13;
peltry .leJDJ were d1acussed by&#13;
the University and Canteen, and&#13;
Canteen recommended price&#13;
alterations. Subs«juent meetings&#13;
bel" n the two and consultation&#13;
with University AdmInistration&#13;
In MadlJon resulted in price&#13;
readjustments. According to&#13;
Niebuhr. the changes were made&#13;
with the understandmg that ,I&#13;
product price go up or down,&#13;
Park .• de will make every attempt&#13;
to hold prices down,&#13;
pM~ bY Mike SwanlftlHn&#13;
Sister Colette and Fatller Wayne'" the aew CamJMls&#13;
Mialstry·&#13;
Campus ministry&#13;
comes to Parlcslde&#13;
by Dellra FrledeU&#13;
"We are in the ministry of presence, that of being&#13;
available to students," said Father Wayne&#13;
Wojciechowski.&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette Zukowski offer&#13;
another dimension to education at Parkside:&#13;
Campus MinistrY.&#13;
Father Wayne is a priest at St. George Church in&#13;
Kenosha. as weIl as working with Sister Colette at&#13;
Parkside, Carthage and Gateway in the field of&#13;
campus Ministry. HOUrconcern is not with 'giving&#13;
the word' but rather with people," he said.&#13;
Passive acceptance is a more&#13;
desirable response to ideas than&#13;
active criticism.&#13;
acquainted with a number of&#13;
basic reference books in political&#13;
science. Many of these are also&#13;
useful to other social science&#13;
disciplines. There is no reading to&#13;
speak of; we work problems out&#13;
by trial and error. Hand-in&#13;
exercises constitute the main&#13;
work. This includes having the&#13;
students themselves make up&#13;
questions in order to perplex&#13;
those who come after them."&#13;
Burnett added: "This course is&#13;
taught in strong collaboration&#13;
with the Library staff. It supplements&#13;
the excellent instruction&#13;
that goes on all the time&#13;
within the Library. Anyone who&#13;
completes the course will know&#13;
things about library use that&#13;
many I many faculty members&#13;
have never found out."&#13;
Political Science 205 may be&#13;
added to your schedule until the&#13;
opening day of the course (Oct&#13;
30).&#13;
AT FIRST ullom&#13;
OF RACIME Library course offered&#13;
from Teaching as a Subversive&#13;
Activity • Mo .ili •••&#13;
hluce re~lired&#13;
• Mo Ii.it to the&#13;
••• ber 01 checks&#13;
yOI write&#13;
Do you sometimes wish the&#13;
Library didn't seem so conIusing?&#13;
Would you like some&#13;
guidance to what's what and&#13;
wbere? Beginning Oct. 30, an 8-&#13;
week course (2 credits) now&#13;
being offered will be offered&#13;
again, if enough people sign up&#13;
for it.&#13;
RESEARCH SOURCES&#13;
(Political Science 205) is required&#13;
for political science majors. But&#13;
it can also be useful to almost&#13;
anyone in the social sciences.&#13;
Meeting time is Tuesday and&#13;
Thursday, 1:30-3:20 p.m., either&#13;
in CL 114or in the Library itself.&#13;
The course ends at the end of the&#13;
semester, on Dec. 13, with the&#13;
final exam (one hour) on that&#13;
day.&#13;
The instructor is Phil Burnett&#13;
professor of Social Sciences wh~&#13;
used to be director of libraries.&#13;
He commented that "We give&#13;
s~ong emphasis to acquiring&#13;
library skills. We also get&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12, 1973&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WPS WISCONSIN PHYSICIANS SERVICE&#13;
AT FIRST MAlIOMAt&#13;
OF RACIME student&#13;
health&#13;
•&#13;
Insurance&#13;
AT FIRST UTIOIAL plan&#13;
OF IACIIE&#13;
.... y •• r Iree cbecki'l&#13;
acc••• t SI•• at&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
s&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
aDd Tru8t Compuly of Racine&#13;
send premium and application to&#13;
Wlscomin Physicians service&#13;
I(eonosha District Office&#13;
P.O. 8&lt;1](869&#13;
Kenosha,Wi~ln SJI«l&#13;
Tel:"1"~-577"&#13;
II&#13;
.. _~_-- -'---"-- 5. WiSCIiSil AYe. Racile&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Od. 3, 1973&#13;
UW-P affected&#13;
Sister Colette is a teacher by profession but finds&#13;
that Campus Ministry is "one way of continuing my&#13;
relation with young people in a less structured&#13;
way." . .&#13;
Canteen increases&#13;
The Campus Ministry people will work m conjunction&#13;
with Parkside counselors. They are also&#13;
setting up a Newman Club for Parkside students.&#13;
Sister Colette explained the Newman Club as a way&#13;
to "get young people tog~ther to form a ~hristian&#13;
type of community:· which they ~ope will make&#13;
worship more creative and responsive to the needs&#13;
of young people. It is a way "to bridge what is and&#13;
what could be," she added.&#13;
food prices&#13;
Canteen cannot change food&#13;
JrtCes whenever it wishes to,&#13;
plloto by Mika Swaningson&#13;
ster Colette and Father Wayne of the new Campus&#13;
Ministry.&#13;
"We have no specific programs outlined," said&#13;
Father Wayne, "but want the students to initiate&#13;
programs and rap centers. In sharing ideas we&#13;
build a better community in which to live."&#13;
'iebuhr added. The University&#13;
m t approve price decisions and&#13;
increa are agreed upon \Dlder&#13;
a contract with Canteen. Contract&#13;
terms are maintained&#13;
throughout all price changes.&#13;
com• Regardl oC the amount of the&#13;
increase, the purchaser will&#13;
r he the same quantity and&#13;
quality or a product.&#13;
Campus ministry&#13;
The two have spent the past three weeks getting&#13;
acquainted with administrators, faculty and staff,&#13;
and getting a feel for the workings of the University.&#13;
"I have a deep respect for young people" said&#13;
Father Wayne, "and they have a lot to give. We&#13;
want to help them channel their ideas." Father&#13;
Wayne and Sister Colette are at Parkside to listen,&#13;
to share, to suggest, or to counsel students.&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No i1i111a&#13;
balance req1ired&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
11 ber of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
ee&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
AT FIRST IA TIOIAL&#13;
Of HCI E&#13;
0,11 y11r free c ecki11&#13;
acce11t s1 at&#13;
First tional Bank&#13;
d Trust&#13;
_&#13;
Company of Racin .............. .._&#13;
-·&#13;
500 Wiscoasi1 Ave. Raciae&#13;
\\'hen comparing Parkside's&#13;
food pri "ith those of other comes to Parkside&#13;
Sister Colette will be available on campus on&#13;
Tuesdays and both Sister Colette and Father Wayne&#13;
will be here on Thursdays from noon until 4 p.m. in&#13;
late campu es, iebuhr U,C D185.&#13;
On Thursday, Oct. 4, a Campus Ministry kickoff ted that the cost of labor&#13;
be considered. Labor i I&#13;
C06tly in northern W1SCOnsin than&#13;
in th southea t area of the late,&#13;
dded. Products from our&#13;
ndmg machin remain equal&#13;
to or lower than tho e at UW1,Jw&#13;
uk . 25 cent oda there&#13;
· 20 c n h re. Entree meal&#13;
uff red a 5 to 10 cent in-&#13;
. P try item in the&#13;
by Debra Frledell&#13;
"We are in the ministry of presence, that of being&#13;
available to students," said Father Wayne&#13;
Wojciedlo,11:ski.&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette Zukowski offer&#13;
another dimension to education at Parkside:&#13;
rap session has been arranged through which&#13;
Father Wayne and Sister Colette are interested in&#13;
meeting Parkside students. This is an opporttmity&#13;
for students to offer suggestions, to talk, or to&#13;
become actively involved in the organization and&#13;
designing of activities for the Newman Club.&#13;
nding ma i hav gone up 5&#13;
becau e r the higher co t&#13;
in produc1 "'heat produ ts.&#13;
Be of " tter deal" with&#13;
Campus , finistry.&#13;
Father Wayne is a priest at St. George Church in&#13;
Kenosha, as well as working with Sister Colette at&#13;
Park ide. Carthage and Gateway in the field of&#13;
Campu , tinistry. "Our concern is not with 'giving&#13;
the word' but rather with people," he said.&#13;
When the Campus Ministry people cannot be&#13;
found on campus, students are invited to stop at the&#13;
Newman Center, located on the corner of Highway&#13;
E and JR, or call Sister Colette (552·8526) or Father&#13;
Wayne (657-3408).&#13;
their upplier, ante n ha&#13;
itched from a half pint or milk&#13;
to a third pint at a co ·t of 20 cents.&#13;
Pl n ha,e been made which&#13;
\\'ill provide vending machines in&#13;
both the omm Art building and&#13;
th Cla room Building. This&#13;
hould ea e the crowded condition&#13;
in the cafeteria area.&#13;
Pa ive acceptance is a more&#13;
desirable response to id€-as than&#13;
active critici m.&#13;
Library course offered&#13;
from Teaching a a ubversive&#13;
ctivit&#13;
Do you sometimes wish the ·&#13;
Library dido 't seem so confusing?&#13;
Would you like some&#13;
guidance to what's what and&#13;
where? Beginning Oct. 30, an 8-&#13;
week course (2 credits) now&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12, 1973&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WlfPS&#13;
•&#13;
WISCO SIN PHYSICIANS SERVICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
insurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
Send premium and a..ppHcation to&#13;
W'sconsin Physicians Sttvico,&#13;
Kmosha Oistrlcl Offico,&#13;
P 0 . Box869&#13;
K"'10Sha, Wiscons,n 531AO&#13;
Tel 414-654 5774&#13;
being offered will be offered&#13;
again, if enough people sign up&#13;
for it.&#13;
RESEARCH SOURCES&#13;
(Political Science 205) is required&#13;
for political science majors. But&#13;
it can also be useful to almost&#13;
anyone in the social sciences.&#13;
Meeting time is Tuesday and&#13;
'.Thursday, 1:30-3:20 p.m ., either&#13;
m CL 114 or in the Library itself.&#13;
The course ends at the end of the&#13;
semester, on Dec. 13, with the&#13;
final exam (one hour) on that&#13;
day.&#13;
The instructor is Phil Burnett&#13;
professor of Social Sciences wh~&#13;
used to be director of libr~ries.&#13;
He commented that "We give&#13;
s_trong emphasis to acquiring&#13;
hbrary skills. we also get&#13;
MR \,Jlll/AMSOpt&#13;
acquainted with a number of&#13;
basic reference books in political&#13;
science. Many of these are also&#13;
useful to other social science&#13;
disciplines. There is no reading to&#13;
speak of; we work problems out&#13;
by trial and error. Hand-in&#13;
exercises constitute the main&#13;
work. This includes having the&#13;
students themselves make up&#13;
questions in order to perplex&#13;
those who come after them."&#13;
Burnett added: "This course is&#13;
taught in strong collaboration&#13;
with the Library staff. It supplements&#13;
the excellent instrtJction&#13;
that goes on all the time&#13;
within the Library: Anyone who&#13;
completes the course will know&#13;
things about library use that&#13;
many, many faculty members&#13;
have never found out."&#13;
Political Science 205 may be&#13;
added to your schedule until the&#13;
opening day of the course (Oct.&#13;
30). . &#13;
by Rodney ,Schroeter .&#13;
synopsis: Havmg stopped Big&#13;
X from bombing a part of the&#13;
United Nations, Jones and the&#13;
Psychic return to the underwater&#13;
complexwhere the Psychic first&#13;
awakened. There, the Psychic&#13;
finds a great number of&#13;
lIIiIluscripts, books and reports.&#13;
The storY continues.&#13;
Chapter Four&#13;
Jones had found nineteen men,&#13;
aD buSY maintaining computers&#13;
er other machinery. He led this&#13;
group to Big X's office, where the&#13;
PsychiC sat studying a pile of&#13;
loiders. .&#13;
The Psychic saw the gathering&#13;
tbroIIgh the hole in the door. He&#13;
.... and stepped through, looking&#13;
1be nineteen over intently.&#13;
1000 any of you know where the&#13;
computer room is?" he asked.&#13;
"Sure," said one. "Most of us&#13;
work down there."&#13;
Thegroup went along a curved&#13;
hall and then down a spiral&#13;
staircase.&#13;
The computer room was large&#13;
and circular. Immense cubes and&#13;
rectangular prisms with tapes&#13;
spinningor crawling within their&#13;
•windowsstood against every part&#13;
01 the rounded wall.' Control&#13;
consoles clustered toward the&#13;
center. Shelves and liling&#13;
cabinetslilled with tapes stood in&#13;
several places.&#13;
The Psychic spent five minutes&#13;
d1eckingthe files. When he found&#13;
me that was locked, he squinted&#13;
his eyes and wrinkled his&#13;
forehead. The little knob beside&#13;
the handle shot off like a bullet&#13;
but hit no one. '&#13;
The Psychic reached inside and&#13;
found twenty computer tapes.&#13;
Each had a name printed on the&#13;
SIde. One name was "Jones."&#13;
"Jones is here. Is there&#13;
someone named Blythe here?"&#13;
'·Yeah."&#13;
"Someone by the name of&#13;
Greunke?"&#13;
"Yep."&#13;
"Grimmins? Satchel? Condie?&#13;
Reuff?'t&#13;
Four affirmative answers.&#13;
"How about Schoettes? Carls?&#13;
Franklin? Besetti? ..&#13;
"No one named Franklin that&#13;
we know of."&#13;
"No Franklin. Hmm. All right.&#13;
Delorme? Watten? Alden?&#13;
Lowell?"&#13;
"Ya. Uh-huh. Right. Here OK."&#13;
"Hohnson? Sacker? Gillis?&#13;
Gorman? Davis?"&#13;
Five affirmative answers.&#13;
"Gentlemen." The Psychic put&#13;
the computer tapes back in the&#13;
drawer. "I have bad news." He&#13;
stared at the floor for a long&#13;
moment and looked up, "You all&#13;
believe-c-or have believed up to&#13;
this point-that you work for the&#13;
Canadian government. This is&#13;
false. You also know something&#13;
of your private lives. At least you&#13;
think you do. It is not an easy&#13;
thing to tell you this; some of you&#13;
will take it badly. Yet teU you I&#13;
must.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y !'t'J.&#13;
1~&lt;, ~&#13;
Member Parkside 200 ?j'J~!1 ~nlt&#13;
National Va"lty Club f1.JV OOif7-&#13;
•&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
The GOLDEN&#13;
HANGER, the&#13;
tashion store tor&#13;
young men is proud to&#13;
announce the addition&#13;
ot&#13;
..TOGETHER" .... A&#13;
JUNIOR SHOP FOR&#13;
GALS.&#13;
• DRESSES&#13;
• LONG&#13;
DRESSES&#13;
• PANTS&#13;
• SWEATERS&#13;
• BLOUSES&#13;
• TOPS&#13;
AND MUCH MORE.&#13;
3086th St.&#13;
632-1138&#13;
.. ~&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Brief news&#13;
.Aproposaf is being considered by the University's&#13;
director of business aflairs Erwin ZUehlke to&#13;
eliminate the weekend shutUe bus service. The&#13;
money saved would be used to provide a third&#13;
shuttle bus during the week, when peak hours find&#13;
many students unable to board a crowded bus and&#13;
get up the hill in time lor their classes.&#13;
ZUehlke justifies the removal of weekend service&#13;
by pointing out that the parking lot across from the&#13;
Classroom Building is available for anyooe to park&#13;
in on Saturdays, Sundays and bolidays. A prublem&#13;
could develop with weekend athletic events lbough,&#13;
he says.&#13;
Since the buses are fmanced with mooey from&#13;
parIting permits, ZUehlke would lilte some Input&#13;
from faculty, staff, and especially students ill this&#13;
matter. Persons with an opinion one way or the&#13;
other are invited to call the Business Office (553-&#13;
)2201, and register their feelings.&#13;
JIAn&#13;
Adult Service Une has been established by the&#13;
Adult Student Program to answer questions of an&#13;
academic or personal nature for evening aod adult&#13;
students. People will he available in Tallent 202,&#13;
telephone 553-2225, 00 Monday and Thursday&#13;
evenings from S:30 to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
There will he a meeting 01 the Parkside Young&#13;
Republicans Wednesday, Oct. 3 from 3:3().5 p.m. in&#13;
0-174 LLC. Leadership Training School, constitutional&#13;
revisions and activities for the year will&#13;
be discussed. Bring ideas!&#13;
*&#13;
Debators! A debate and forensics team is now&#13;
being lormed. If you are interested in joining or&#13;
want more information, see the reference folder in&#13;
the library or call Dick Jones, 8'18-1310 or Maril~ll&#13;
Schubert, 6S8-89S4.&#13;
Now Appearing&#13;
9P.M.toIA.~I.&#13;
THURSDAY -FRIDAY -SATURDAY&#13;
In the&#13;
An exhibition and sale of original graphIc art by&#13;
contemporary and old master artists will be held&#13;
lrom 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, Oct 5, in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center Main Place.&#13;
Co-sponsored by the Parltside Acuvities Board&#13;
and the Racine Art Associatioo, the exhIbotioo will&#13;
include more than 1,000 angInal etchinp.&#13;
lithographs and woodcuts by such artists u&#13;
Picasso, Olagall, MIlO, Dali, Gaya, Renoir.&#13;
Kollwitz and a number of contemporary Amenc:an,&#13;
European and Japanese printm&amp;kera.&#13;
A representative of Ferdinand Roten G&amp;IIerieI 01&#13;
Baltimore, ",ilich llJTanged the abcl.w, wiD be&#13;
present to aDs....er questions OIl grapblc art and&#13;
printmaking.&#13;
Prices 01 work iDcluded ill the exhibiliolllt.n at&#13;
$5 ..ith the majority priced under '100.&#13;
*&#13;
There wiD be an orpaiutionaJ -.. 01 lbe&#13;
Camera Oub on TbundaY. Oct- 4. All iII-.ed&#13;
persons .... encouraged to meet ill tile CaIeuria&#13;
area at 7 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
Whiteskel1ar CoIJ~ will have audi_ for&#13;
new performers OIlWeck&gt;eoday, Oct. 10 III I p.m. All&#13;
inIerested performers sbouId sign ... III lbe&#13;
Parltside Activities Board Room LLC D1I5. 1be&#13;
auditions will he open to the P'blic.&#13;
It&#13;
In the illterests of getting moreSIUdeDIa for the&#13;
lm-74 Parltside yearbook, organiUtlona1 aWf&#13;
members Jay Salvo, Ken Kookol and BruceW_ ask lor interested students to come to the next&#13;
meetings 01 the yearbook.&#13;
These meetings will be held 10 LLC 0174 00&#13;
Thursday and Friday of next week. Signs ",iU be&#13;
posted advertising the lIme of these meetings.&#13;
COLLEGE. lTE&#13;
Every~y&#13;
Pitcher of&#13;
Beer $1. 00&#13;
oIK...-..&#13;
Sl2:56tt1Ave&#13;
~lf'g the Hal'1:l«l&#13;
MARINA ROOM&#13;
"KIl'nOSha's New Harbor N,t.Club'&#13;
"Five Way Street"&#13;
NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
FHturing&#13;
MIKE scon&#13;
~&#13;
- '- -CD ..CIt 0&#13;
.. CD&#13;
me ~&#13;
rn Q CD&#13;
:::s :lID&#13;
Q.&#13;
-&#13;
--------&#13;
New Books tor Football&#13;
and other sports addicts&#13;
are Now at Martha&#13;
Merrills stop in and&#13;
browse in our long&#13;
Sports Section.&#13;
NEW&#13;
Vince LlIIUdi 00 Foo1IIall.............. 5l9.!15&#13;
By Ray Nitschke&#13;
IeaII III s..tay. .......................... SJ.Ii&#13;
National Football Lottery SJ.SI&#13;
By Larry Merchant&#13;
by Howard Cosell&#13;
~I ~J15&#13;
Pro Football Digest ~.!15&#13;
(}JIi1tIItJ(}JIJ's /3~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
614- 59U,St; 312- E,- ~T, _&#13;
658-3bf;~ 63'2-.&gt;195 __&#13;
------&#13;
---&#13;
---------&#13;
~&#13;
--CIt CD ..&#13;
~ CD&#13;
ale&#13;
Q CD&#13;
:::s&#13;
Q.&#13;
by Rodney _Schroeter .&#13;
Synopsis: Having stopped Big&#13;
from bombing a part of the&#13;
nited Nations, Jones and the&#13;
ychic return to the underwater&#13;
complex where the Psychic first&#13;
awakened. There, the Psychic&#13;
finds a great number of&#13;
manuscripts, books and reports.&#13;
e story continues.&#13;
Chapter Four&#13;
Jones had found nineteen men,&#13;
all busy maintaining compute~s&#13;
ar other machinery. He led this&#13;
group to Big X's off~ce, whe~e the&#13;
Psychic sat studymg a pile of&#13;
folders.&#13;
nie Psychic saw the gathering&#13;
through the hole in the door. He&#13;
rose and stepped through, looking&#13;
e nineteen over intently.&#13;
"Do any of you know where the&#13;
computer room is?" he asked.&#13;
''Sure," said one. "Most of us&#13;
work down there."&#13;
The group went along a curved&#13;
hall and then down a spiral&#13;
taircase.&#13;
The computer room was large&#13;
and circular. Immense cubes and&#13;
rectangular prisms with tapes&#13;
pinning or crawling within their&#13;
windows stood against every part&#13;
of the rounded wall. Control&#13;
con oles clustered toward the&#13;
center. Shelves and filing&#13;
cabinets filled with tapes stood in&#13;
several places.&#13;
The Psychic spent five minutes&#13;
checking the files. When he found&#13;
one that was locked, he squinted&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
his eyes and wrinkled his&#13;
forehead. The little knob beside&#13;
the handle shot off like a bullet&#13;
but hit no one. '&#13;
The Psychic reached inside and&#13;
found twenty computer tapes.&#13;
~ach had a name printed on the&#13;
side. One name was "Jones."&#13;
"Jones is here. Is there&#13;
someone named Blythe here?"&#13;
"Yeah."&#13;
"Someone by the name of&#13;
Greunke?"&#13;
"Yep."&#13;
"Grimmins? Satchel? Condie?&#13;
Reuff?"&#13;
Four affirmative answers.&#13;
"How about Schoettes? Carls?&#13;
Franklin? Besetti?"&#13;
"No one named Franklin that we know of."&#13;
"No Franklin. Hmm. All right.&#13;
Delorme? Watten? Alden?&#13;
Lowell?"&#13;
"Ya. Uh-huh. Right. Here OK."&#13;
"Hohnson? Sacker? Gillis?&#13;
Gorman? Davis?"&#13;
Five affirmative answers.&#13;
"Gentlemen." The Psychic put&#13;
the computer tapes back in the&#13;
drawer. "I have bad news." He&#13;
stared at the floor for a long&#13;
moment and looked up. "You all&#13;
believe-or have believed up to&#13;
this point--that you work for the&#13;
Canadian government. This is&#13;
false. You also know something&#13;
of your private lives. At least you&#13;
think you do. It is not an easy&#13;
thing to tell you this; some of you&#13;
will take it badly. Yet tell you I&#13;
must.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
~&#13;
WE'VE HAO AN ADDITION&#13;
The GOLDEN&#13;
HANGER , the&#13;
fashion store for&#13;
young men is proud to&#13;
announce the addition&#13;
of&#13;
"TOGETHER" .... A&#13;
JUNIOR SHOP FOR&#13;
GALS.&#13;
• DRESSES&#13;
• LONG&#13;
DRESSES&#13;
• PANTS&#13;
• SWEATERS&#13;
• BLOUSES&#13;
• TOPS&#13;
ANO MUCH MORE.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Brief news . A proposal is being con idered by the nh: ity'&#13;
director of business affairs, Erwin ZUehlke, to&#13;
eliminate the weekend shuttle bus service. The&#13;
money saved would be used to provide a third&#13;
shuttle bus during the week, when peak hours find&#13;
many students unable to board a cro ·ded bus and&#13;
get up the hill in time for their classes.&#13;
Zuehlke justifies the removal of ·eeJtend rvice&#13;
by pointing out that the parking lot ac - from the&#13;
~assroom Building is available for anyooe to park&#13;
m on Saturdays, Sunday and holiday . A problem&#13;
could develop with weekend athletic events though,&#13;
he says.&#13;
Since the buses are financed with money from&#13;
parking permits, Zuehlke would like some input&#13;
from faculty, taff, and especially students in this&#13;
matter. Persons with an opinion ooe way or the&#13;
other are invited to call the Business Office (553-&#13;
)2201, and register their feelings.&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
Whitest r Coff'ed:aow.e&#13;
new performer on Wear:1esc1a&#13;
interested perf onn should An Adult Service line ha been established by the&#13;
Adult Student Program to answer qu tions of an&#13;
academic or personal nature for evening and adult&#13;
students. People will be available in Tallent 202,&#13;
tele(tlone 553-2225, on onday and Thursday&#13;
evenings from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Park ide Activiti Board Room LLC D1&#13;
audition will be open to p lie.&#13;
In the int&#13;
*&#13;
There v.ill be a meeting of the Park i Young&#13;
Republicans Wednesday, Oct. 3 from 3:30-5 p.m. in&#13;
D-174 LLC. Leadership Training School, constitutional&#13;
revisions and acthitie for the ye.ar v.ill&#13;
be discussed. Bring ideas!&#13;
* Debators! A debate and forensics team i now&#13;
being formed . ff you are interested in joining or&#13;
want more information, see the reference folder in&#13;
the library or call Dick Jones, 878-1310 or aril:,.n&#13;
Schubert. 658-3954.&#13;
, 'o"' Appearing&#13;
9P. I. to l A.M.&#13;
COLLEGE. TrE&#13;
Ey,eryTbunda&#13;
THURSDAY - FRIDAY - TIJRDA Y Pitcher of&#13;
MARI. Beer $1. 00 'A ROOM&#13;
"Five Way Street"&#13;
'IGHTLY E. 'TERTAI. •• IE. "T&#13;
In Our Cockte,I Lounge&#13;
Feetur·ng&#13;
MIKE SCOTT&#13;
--------&#13;
~ -&#13;
New Books for Football&#13;
and other sports addicts&#13;
are Now at Martha&#13;
Merrills stop in and&#13;
browse In our long&#13;
Sports Section.&#13;
NEW&#13;
Vince L bllli on Football.............. s1s.95&#13;
Mean on Sunday .••.•...................... SJ .95&#13;
By Ray Nitschke&#13;
National Football Lottery ................• SJ .ii&#13;
By Larry Merchant&#13;
Cossel ····································· SS.95&#13;
by Howard Cosell&#13;
Pro Football Digest •..•....••••..•••....•. SS.95&#13;
&lt;HI~ &lt;HIJ's /3~&#13;
Gt4-59~-9:&#13;
~&#13;
6S8-3bf;2-&#13;
f{adnl,&#13;
.312-6~~1'. -&#13;
632.-5195' -·&#13;
--- -----· ---------&#13;
•&#13;
~&#13;
---&#13;
CD Cit&#13;
,. .,&#13;
m&lt;&#13;
a&#13;
:s&#13;
CL&#13;
..&#13;
~ (0&#13;
~ C.&#13;
GsJ&#13;
JC&#13;
~&#13;
---&#13;
CD Cit&#13;
,. ..&#13;
me&#13;
a&#13;
:s&#13;
CL&#13;
'--&#13;
0&#13;
~&#13;
ffl&#13;
,a&#13;
'--&#13;
0&#13;
~&#13;
"' ,a &#13;
, THE PARKSIDE Rio GER w.dMsd.y. Oct. 3. 1973&#13;
Bookstore ••• Painter police&#13;
patrol Parkside Village&#13;
Steak dinners $1.69 to $3.69&#13;
coot1nur:d 'tolD pag 1&#13;
ucImt purdla 01 non-t lbook Ilems Beer mugs and ParUide TolIirt&#13;
..1IUId rail under th category. but more ..;deIy purct&gt;ased&#13;
IlftllS would paper. noteboo •and wrillJlg supplies. Concenunll the&#13;
~ lboo Wood ales an elUlmple' "Lel·. take a $15 Physics book. 11&#13;
III 111110be IIIed on campus 11·... uth 17.50 11it's nol going to be&#13;
IIIed .1 h nyv.'beft from no value up 10$3 or $3.50 "&#13;
ed hether the as maltmg a profil. Wood stated thaI&#13;
I not 'olin« t'QODt)':' Upon interviewing a Follette regional&#13;
maDal~'r on Clll go. lhe manager stated that the bookstore was&#13;
operatlD&amp; ,ery profItably and effic.ently.&#13;
~ oU t Coflloral'on 'lJell pnmariJ)' a book dlStributorretail&#13;
• nucldl man IaI'1l" publishing concerns. and the&#13;
Park de Folletle p..-;:hases lhe books which a re, in turn.&#13;
purdlaSed by Par de udents ....'hen the student seI\S the book back&#13;
to Ib boobl&lt;n. the book may be lIOIdand relIOIdso long as it is in&#13;
demand F l\ IInan lOIIle 40 booksto res 00 college campuses&#13;
ch Indude Jolw&gt; H lflI mventlY and the niverslty 01 Coocut&#13;
In bon to .......ilinll. the FoUel\e Coflloration also&#13;
merchand mugs. bumper tickers. etc .... -hich .....&#13;
d.... tI boo and other products geared for the&#13;
mark t. Foll 1\ also publishes textbooks ..-hich are used at all&#13;
01eOIC lion from men"'ry school through high school, with&#13;
th ID I 01 me trade nd technical schools, stoppu&gt;g jusl short&#13;
01 pub! at the coI\eg I 'e\&#13;
T mum to the unmed,ale problem for .tudents. it is now the fifth&#13;
01 c • many tudent. will be ..TillJlg SIX-weeksexams next&#13;
• m InstrUctors are al the poIOl.. he.... they a.... rewriling their&#13;
CllIJ .... sfor th ler, oil use there a"" still a lO1IIlber 01books&#13;
h v not &lt;orne '" yet M""I tudents and faotlty members have&#13;
Ollllft_d&#13;
I I concern over thlll Sltuation. yet AssistAnt Dean&#13;
til to y to th reporters thai ". am not awa .... of any&#13;
Half-Price&#13;
Miled Drinks&#13;
6 P.M. - MIDNIGHT&#13;
THURSDAV NICHTS WITH P.U. 1.0.&#13;
10t Beers&#13;
SORIRZI&#13;
SlIU.OIRPlT~&#13;
3315 52nd ST' Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
by carrie Ward&#13;
There is a man who walks alone at night through&#13;
Parkside Village. He carries a badge, a walkie--&#13;
talkie, and a club. He is a security guard who, until&#13;
recently, was one of Village superintendent Art&#13;
Gaulthier's "helpers." These were the same&#13;
helpers wbo, a few weeks ago, were painting&#13;
apartments. This reporter interviewed Gaullbier,&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, AssislJlnt Dean of Students, and&#13;
students living at Parkside Village, and found a&#13;
great discrepancy of opinions between Gaulthier&#13;
and the students and the school.&#13;
ECHELBARGER: Fintof aU, I think they sbould&#13;
be called security personnel. My concern is Ibat the&#13;
appropriale&#13;
personnel should be cbosen for tbe job.&#13;
By appropriate I mean persons that can communicate&#13;
with students in such a way as to solve the&#13;
problems of disturbing neigbbors with late nigbt&#13;
parties. We'd like to build up respect belween&#13;
residents. The types that might be good for the job&#13;
are veterans and adult students; not leaving out&#13;
YOlDlg students, but this is a group that has obviously&#13;
had dealings with other people and could sit&#13;
down and talk with them. Student guards sbould be&#13;
trained in communication and getting respect from&#13;
othel' students as a security personnel.&#13;
photo by Ron An\rim&#13;
Kevin Allegar, with night stick and walkie-talkie,&#13;
patrols Parkside Village.&#13;
In .a recent interview with Gaulthier about&#13;
secur~ty guard~, he told this reporter that "The&#13;
secunty force IS going to be on every evening&#13;
They'll be getting $2.50 an bour. Eacb guard do~&#13;
not work on his own. He gets his information&#13;
through the walkie-talkies from me-what the next&#13;
step IS that we're going to take. I make the&#13;
decisions, nol the patrol. All they do is patrol and&#13;
see that this place is run in a half·way decent&#13;
m~er. We cannot go on the way we have been&#13;
goJ.Dg.',&#13;
Gaul~ier, commenting on guards' duties said, "A&#13;
guard is one that sees that nothing is going wrong&#13;
around the buildings, takes care of the parking&#13;
Phone 652-8662&#13;
areas, and if there is trouble in the apartm&#13;
notifies the office of what's going on. He show:'t. be&#13;
reporter a cap, badge, patches that said" thts&#13;
guard" on them. He said, "I had "special~lJ&#13;
badges, Ihad to take them back." There also1'01ict"&#13;
long club, Concerning the club, he said "H .... •&#13;
wearing this c1';1bout .in the open wher~ it e'U be&#13;
seen, the only time this club is used is if 00&lt;aIJ bt&#13;
tacked by one or more students," Ill!.&#13;
When questioned as to whether or not the&#13;
guards had to pass some sort of a civil serv~&#13;
or be otherwise qualified, Gaulthier sai d Ice tea&#13;
security guard that was with him added t;";-&gt;' '1llt&#13;
as they did not have a police record any ..&#13;
be a security guard. Later, checking'with °a&#13;
ne&#13;
.....&#13;
security guard company and an ex·FBI a pn,..&#13;
was found to be true. Gaulthier said hediler4&#13;
, thio&#13;
experienced or Irained security guards '::"&#13;
"They (his helpers) know the area and th ..&#13;
what they have to do. You put a stranger OUl~-&#13;
a guard and you'll find him out sleeping' •&#13;
because he wouldn't be out walking this boaIn,~ ..&#13;
reporter asked him about a comment .\;. 1lIiI&#13;
rece~ved from a helper, saying he didn't care -.&#13;
he did as long as Gaulthier paid him. The ......&#13;
guard then said, "You do what you are toldBealrMr&#13;
like this, you don't care either way. YOIllist:&#13;
Il&#13;
!l'&#13;
boss." Gaulthier said, "If I'm right or if l' to ...&#13;
r,ou do it. I am the boss." He also commen~'""""&#13;
If the students thmk they are going to run the ~&#13;
themselves, they are wrong because they .;;-&#13;
gomg to, and the qUicker they get it intoth . ...:&#13;
th~t they are not going to, that's when :'re II&#13;
g?lI1g to be one big happy family."&#13;
The students, for the most part had a I« 10&#13;
about it. This reporter asked th";' if they IIf&#13;
the securIty guard was doing fine as he .. u..::t&#13;
sbould have some training, if th~ ~&#13;
so&#13;
·th tr . . -, ~ II&#13;
meone WI ammg or experience or if ..&#13;
students themselves should pick a pe~ to b..&#13;
SecU~lty guard. Here are some of the .....&#13;
receIved:&#13;
"We should pick our own cop. I think it'ss bi&amp;.&#13;
trIP, so he ,can be the head of Parkside Vou..&#13;
Every man s dream IS to have his little robot_&#13;
controlled by .walki17talkies."&#13;
"11 problems occurred like last year,they'"&#13;
gel someone who knows what they are doiDI. --&#13;
th,s year there doesn't seem to be that mucb......&#13;
on." ~&#13;
"I think that everyone should be able to pick.&#13;
own. Ihope Idon't run into him this weekend."&#13;
"My fiance is a security guard. He hII •&#13;
training. I don't see what good he'd do if SOIll'MI&#13;
happened. I think he should have some trsinullll&#13;
be effective."&#13;
"A professional you could depend on."&#13;
".&amp;l far he seems to be doing a fine job, butsliIdI&#13;
trammg wouldn't hurt:'&#13;
"I think it depends on the budget. Uwecan ~&#13;
one, definitely we should have a trained one."&#13;
"I think he shouldn't have training, and&#13;
shouldn't carry a club. I don't think he needss&#13;
what's he going to do, rap someone onthehead&#13;
makes a lot of noise?"&#13;
6&#13;
15 52nd&#13;
•&#13;
alnter police&#13;
patrol Parkside VIiiage&#13;
DOUAR&#13;
ZALOON&#13;
1 Street&#13;
RACI E&#13;
. .&#13;
P.U. I.D.&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
1bett is a man who walks alone at night through&#13;
Parkside Village. He carries a badge, a walkietalkie,&#13;
and a club. He is a security guard who, until&#13;
recently, was one of Village Superintendent Art&#13;
Gaulthier's "helpers." These were the same&#13;
helpers who, a few weeks ago, were painting&#13;
apartments. This reporter interviewed Gaulthier,&#13;
Jewel Echelberger, Assistant Dean of Students, and&#13;
students living at Parkside Village, and fotmd a&#13;
great discrepancy of opinions between Gaulthier&#13;
and the students and the school.&#13;
ECHELBARGER: First of all, I think they should&#13;
be called security personnel. My concern is that the&#13;
appropriate personnel should be chosen for the job.&#13;
By appropriate I mean persons that can communicate&#13;
with students in such a way as to solve the&#13;
problems of disturbing neighbors with late night&#13;
parties. We'd like to build up respect between&#13;
residents. The types that might be good for the job&#13;
are veterans and adult students; not leaving out&#13;
yoi.mg students, but this is a group that has obviously&#13;
had dealings with other people and could sit&#13;
down and talk with them. Student guards should be&#13;
trained in communication and getting respect from&#13;
other students as a security personnel.&#13;
Kevin AUegar, with night stick and walkie-talkie,&#13;
patrols Parkside Village.&#13;
In _a recent interview with Gaulthier about&#13;
secu1'.tY guard~, he told this reporter that "The&#13;
security force IS going to be on every evening&#13;
They·n be getting $2.50 an hour. Each guard do~&#13;
not work on his own. He gets his information&#13;
through the walkie-talkies from me-what the next&#13;
step is that we're going to take. I make the&#13;
decisions, n?l the pa~ol. All they do is patrol and&#13;
see that this place 1s run in a half-way decent&#13;
m~er. We cannot go on the way we have been&#13;
gomg."&#13;
Gaul~ier, commenting on guards' duties said, "A&#13;
guard 1s one that sees that nothing is going wrong&#13;
around the buildings, takes care of the parking&#13;
Steak dinners s1. &amp;9 to s3_69&#13;
ba, isconsin Phone 652-8662&#13;
areas, and if there is trouble in the apann.-.&#13;
notifies the office of what's going on. He sii;;;, lie&#13;
reporter a cap, badge, patches that said " lti.&#13;
gqard" on them. He said, "I had "speciaj ~ badges, I had to take them back.'' There ._, 'Pdlt::,,fa&#13;
long club. Concerning the club, he said, "He;'•&#13;
wearing this club out in the open where it&#13;
seen, the only time this club is used is if hit~&#13;
tacked by one or more students." 11&#13;
When questioned as to whether or not the&#13;
guards had to pass some sort of a civil servi&#13;
or be otherwise qualified, Gaulthier said ce&#13;
security guard that was with him added that'lO.&#13;
as they did not have a police record anyorre a,&#13;
be a ~urity guard. Later, checking1&#13;
With 8 CDllt&#13;
security guard company and an ex-FBI •Keltllhala&#13;
was fotmd to be true. Gaulthier said he did '&#13;
experienced or trained security guards not&#13;
"They (his helpers) know the area and they&#13;
what they have to do. You put a stranger out bert&#13;
a guard and you'll find him out sleeping ·&#13;
because he wouldn't be out walking this bee~•~&#13;
reporter asked him about a comment lbe&#13;
received from a helper, saying he didn't cut&#13;
he did as long as Gaulthier paid him. 1be&#13;
)&#13;
guikarthid _then said· d, : 'You d~ what you are told-OD""a __ _. e ,, s, you _on t c:aree1ther way. You listen to&#13;
boss. ~aulth1er said, "H I'm right or if I'm&#13;
you do 1t. I am the boss." He also commented&#13;
"H the students think they are going to run lbe&#13;
themselves, they are wrong because they&#13;
going to, and the quicker they get it into ttwir •&#13;
that they are not going to, that's when "''II&#13;
going to be one big happy family."&#13;
The students, for the most part had 8 lot It&#13;
about it. !his reporter asked th~ if they&#13;
the secunty guard was doing fme as he WII, I&#13;
should have some training, if they lbould&#13;
someone with training or experience, or If&#13;
stude!lts themselves should pick a pel'ICJII llt&#13;
security guard. Here are some of the&#13;
received:&#13;
_"We should pick our own cop. I think it'aa 1111&#13;
trip, so he can be the head of Parkside&#13;
Every man's dream is to have his little robat&#13;
controlled by walki&amp;-talkies."&#13;
"H problems occurred like last year, tbeJ&#13;
get someone who knows what they are dailt,&#13;
this year there doesn't seem to be that mucb&#13;
on."&#13;
"I think that everyone should be able to pictown.&#13;
I hope I don't run into him this weekend."&#13;
"My fiance is a security guard. He 1111&#13;
training. I don't see what good he'd do if&#13;
happened. I think he should have some tralaill&#13;
be effective."&#13;
"A professional you could depend on."&#13;
".~ far he seems to be doing a fine job, but a&#13;
trammg wouldn't hurt."&#13;
"I think it depends on the budget. If we cu&#13;
one, definitely we should have a trained ooe.&#13;
"I think he shouldn't have training, ud&#13;
shouldn't carry a club. I don't think heneedu&#13;
what's he going to do, rap someone on the bead&#13;
makes a lot of noise?" &#13;
WEAC organizes&#13;
for faculty&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
'l1le Wisconsin Education Association Council&#13;
(WEAC) is sending professional represenlatives to&#13;
trI campus in the UW system m a three-month&#13;
~tW'ation effort" to organize a union for college&#13;
eduCators.&#13;
John B. Mack, a professional consullantto higher&#13;
education employed by the WEA Council, was at&#13;
Parkside last week. His purpose in being here was&#13;
to meet with individual professors in what he called&#13;
"eyeball-tcH!Yeball"contact, to find out how each&#13;
individualfeels about a teachers' union and to inrorm&#13;
him or her about the WEA. He also hoped to&#13;
inCreasethe size of the orgarnzmg committee that&#13;
noWexists on campus. But Mack's main concern&#13;
was to initiate a movement toward a merger of the&#13;
WEAand TAUWF. The Association of University of&#13;
WisconoinFaculty (TAUWFl represents about 3,000&#13;
collegeeducators in the UW system and has a small&#13;
group at Parkside headed by Dr. William Morrow.&#13;
('l1lelocal TAUWF chapter has not yet discussed or&#13;
taken a formal position on the merger issue.)&#13;
Accordingto Mack, TAUWF doesn't have the kind&#13;
of political machinery t funding or representation&#13;
thatit takes to be a viable bargaining force. "What&#13;
we are saying is that since 1855, the WEA has&#13;
operatedin this slate, building itself into a 45,000-&#13;
member, two-million-dollar operation. We have&#13;
JWOtectedand served the rights and just causes of&#13;
elementary, high school, and vocational-technical&#13;
educators. We have also secured a collective&#13;
bargaining law in the slate of Wisconsin for&#13;
edocators who are not in the realm of higher&#13;
education. Your college professors do not have a&#13;
collectivebargaining law or bill to protect them."&#13;
According to Mack, the passage of a collective&#13;
bargaininglaw for college educators in Wisconsin is&#13;
a major concern of the WEA. "We have a bill&#13;
II"POsedwhich has been refined and worked out,&#13;
and we are ready to promote this cause. But the&#13;
CIlIyway the WEA can promote it is to have a&#13;
Jlzableworking force to represent. Politicians like&#13;
to know who you represent in order to give you an&#13;
interest. "&#13;
The Wisconsin Education Association is a branch&#13;
m the National Education Association. Both&#13;
organizations have become concerned with the&#13;
relative powerlessness of college professors,&#13;
llIpCCiallyin the light of budget decreases and&#13;
termination increases in universities all over the&#13;
llllUIItry.Mack expanded on the goals and&#13;
motivationsof both the WEA and NEA. "We have as&#13;
a loal for this year, to politicize teachers as well as&#13;
educators at the college level for the new&#13;
mational environment that we are in. Because&#13;
there is not a sufficient number of unions at the&#13;
• union&#13;
higher education level, college educators seem to be&#13;
the whipping boys of the present administration.&#13;
Thl~ IS because of past events in the Nixon Ad-&#13;
~lmstratlon: black militants on campus demanding&#13;
black studies departments, young radicals&#13;
refusing to go to th.eVietnamese War. burning draft&#13;
cards and dropping human blood into the administration&#13;
files--eampus unrest. It would seem&#13;
that somebody looked out over the vast area called&#13;
Economic SUpport for Education and decided to do&#13;
a sabotage job in education. And it is faculty that is&#13;
called upon to make the sacrifices which will allow&#13;
the university to exist and to survive during times of&#13;
stress and economic tension."&#13;
"There is some uncertainty on the part of&#13;
professors as to why they should become part of&#13;
WEA, but those professors who are fired fmd out too&#13;
late that they should have."&#13;
Mack listed some of the resources that a Parkside&#13;
branch of the WEA could draw 00 for support:&#13;
lawyers , contract negotiators, professional&#13;
organizers, specialists, political lobbyists, special&#13;
consultants, and a two-million-dollar organization&#13;
with a membership of 45,000 in Wisconsin alone.&#13;
"They would be gaining a national, state, and local&#13;
hookup which would give them an appeal level for&#13;
financing at all levels of government."&#13;
"WEA has the machinery, a political arm-we've&#13;
been dealing in the political arena for a longer time&#13;
than any other group around. We could muster up&#13;
all of this machinery, from specialists to contract&#13;
negotiators to lawyers, to come in and assist in&#13;
salvaging jobs and give professional recognition&#13;
and protection for the good of education."&#13;
Mack urged that students become involved in the&#13;
movement to organize a union for college&#13;
professors. He cited a recent case at UW-Qshkosb&#13;
where a coalition of students was effective in&#13;
reducing the number of faculty terminations "from&#13;
something like 137people to be fired to now about 14&#13;
people to be fired."&#13;
"Your professors are in trouble." concluded&#13;
Mack, Hand your education is in trouble. You are no&#13;
more secure than they are. Administrators ought to&#13;
take note: they are no more secure than the&#13;
students. And if American education at its highest&#13;
level is in jeopardy, then America itself is in&#13;
trouble."&#13;
John Mack can be reached by calling this toll-free&#13;
number: 800-362-8034.WEA Council offices are&#13;
located at 222 West Washington, Madison, 53703_&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.O.I.C.&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
WedDesday, OClober 3: Whiteskellar presents Dave Rogers at 1:30&#13;
p.m. No admission charged&#13;
Thursd.y. Oct. 4: Students are welcome to meet Father Wayne and&#13;
isterColelle in LLC Ot85 from noon until 4 p.m.&#13;
Friday, OCL5: PAB movie "TheCandidale" -8 p.m. m SAD.&#13;
Soturd.y, OCL .: PAB outing • Sparta Trail Bite Hike. M&lt;ft Information&#13;
may be obtained at student \ifeoffice, LLC Otfl.&#13;
Sunday. oes. 1: PAB movie "1beCandidate'· ·7:30p.m. In AB.&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 11: PAB movie "Superman" • 7;30 p.m. 1J\&#13;
klreenquist t03.&#13;
Wednesday. OCL 1': Student music concert - 3:30 p.m. In CA 0118.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 11: Meeting of minority students 10 Greenqwst Hall&#13;
Lecture Room 103at 12:45 p.m.&#13;
3400 SHERIDA ROAD&#13;
A 0&#13;
3mh AVEl UE "&#13;
• .~~P:.liiiiiii:~&#13;
•&#13;
WEAC organizes&#13;
for faculty&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
11ie Wisconsin Education Association Council&#13;
WEAC) is sending professional r~presentatives to&#13;
1 . campus in the UW system m a three-month&#13;
~~~ation effort" to organize a union for college&#13;
educators. . . John B. Mack, a professional consultant to higher&#13;
education employed by the WEA Council, was at&#13;
rkside last week. His purpose in being here was&#13;
~ meet with individual professors in what he called&#13;
.. yeball-to-eyeball" contact, to find out how each&#13;
in&amp;vidual feels about a teachers' union and to inform&#13;
him or her about the ~~- He also_ hoped to&#13;
increase the size of the orgamzmg, com1~11ttee that&#13;
now exists on campus. But Mack s mam concern&#13;
was to initiate a movement toward a merger of the&#13;
WEA and TAUWF. The Association of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Faculty (TAUWF) represents about 3,000&#13;
college educators in the UW system and has a small&#13;
group at Parkside headed by Dr. William Morrow.&#13;
('The local T AUWF chapter has not yet discussed or&#13;
taken a formal position on the merger issue.)&#13;
According to Mack, TAUWF doesn't have the kind&#13;
of political machinery, funding or representation&#13;
that it takes to be a viable bargaining force. "What&#13;
we are saying is that since 1855, the WEA has&#13;
operated in this state, building itself into a 45,000-&#13;
member, two-million-dollar operation. We have&#13;
protected and served the rights and just causes of&#13;
elementary, high school, and vocational-technical&#13;
educators. We have also secured a collective&#13;
bargaining law in the state of Wisconsin for&#13;
educators who are not in the realm of higher&#13;
education. Your college professors do not have a&#13;
collective bargaining law or bill to protect them."&#13;
According to Mack, the passage of a collective&#13;
bargaining law for college educators in Wisconsin is&#13;
a major concern of the WEA. "We have a bill&#13;
iroposed which has been refined and worked out,&#13;
and we are ready to promote this cause. But the&#13;
only way the WEA can promote it is to have a&#13;
sizable working force to represent. Politicians like&#13;
to know who you represent in order to give you an&#13;
interest."&#13;
The Wisconsin Education Association is a branch&#13;
of the National Education Association. Both&#13;
organizations have become concerned with the&#13;
relative powerlessness of college professors,&#13;
especially in the light of budget decreases and&#13;
termination increases in universities all over the&#13;
country. Mack expanded on the goals and&#13;
motivations of both the WEA and NEA. "We have as&#13;
a goal for this year, to politicize teachers as well as&#13;
educators at the college level for the new&#13;
educational environment that we are in. Because&#13;
there is not a sufficient number of unions at the&#13;
• union&#13;
higher education level, college educato seem to be&#13;
th~ w_hipping boys of the present administration.&#13;
nus 1s because of past events in the 'ixon Ad-&#13;
~inistration: black militants on campus demanding&#13;
_black studies departments, young radicals&#13;
refusmg to go to the Vietnamese War, burning draft&#13;
cards and dropping human blood into the administration&#13;
files-campus unrest. It would seem&#13;
that somebody looked out over the vast area called&#13;
Economic Support for Education and decided to do&#13;
a sabotage job in education. And it is faculty that is&#13;
called upon to make the sacrifices which v.ill allow&#13;
the university to exist and to survive during times of&#13;
stress and economic tension."&#13;
"There is some uncertainty on the part of&#13;
professors as to why they should become part of&#13;
WEA, but those professors who are fired find out too&#13;
late that they should have."&#13;
Mack listed some of the resources that a Parkside&#13;
branch of the WEA could draw on for upport:&#13;
lawyers, contract negotiators. profes ional&#13;
organizers, specialists, political lobbyis , pecial&#13;
consultants, and a two-million-dollar organization&#13;
with a membership of 45,000 in Wiscon in alone.&#13;
"They would be gaining a national, state, and local&#13;
hookup which would give them an appeal level foe&#13;
financing at all levels of government."&#13;
"WEA has the machinery, a political arm-we've&#13;
been dealing in the political arena for a longer time&#13;
than any other group around_ We could muster up&#13;
all of this machinery, from specialists to contract&#13;
negotiators to lawyers, to come in and • t m&#13;
salvaging jobs and give professional recognition&#13;
and protection for the good of education."&#13;
Mack urged that students become involved in the&#13;
movement to organize a union for college&#13;
professors. He cited a recent case at UW-Oshk&#13;
where a coalition of students was effective in&#13;
reducing the number of faculty terminations ''from&#13;
something like 137 people to be fired to nov. about 14&#13;
people to be fired."&#13;
"Your professors are in trouble," concluded&#13;
Mack, "and your education is in trouble. You are no&#13;
more secure than they are. Administrators ought to&#13;
take note: they are no more secure than the&#13;
students. And if American education at its highest&#13;
level is in jeopardy, then America itself is in&#13;
trouble."&#13;
John Mack can be reached by calling this toll-free&#13;
number: 800-362~. WEA Council offices are&#13;
located at 222 West Washington, adisoo, 53703.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
\\ t 1:&#13;
Th da,, t.4: ud&#13;
· terColetteinLLCD18Sfromn&#13;
nd&#13;
r da), pm.in&#13;
rda,, t. &amp;: P B outing - rta Trail B H&#13;
formation·m ) be obtained t ud t lifeoffic , l..LC D197.&#13;
. nda , . ,:PABmo - "TheCandid t "-7: p.m. n AB.&#13;
WNln da., ct. It: PAB mO\i " uperman'' • 7: pm. n&#13;
GreenquL t 103.&#13;
Wtdn da), t.l: tudentm ·c&#13;
Th da), t. 11: feeting minorit&#13;
Lecture Room 103 at 12: p .m .&#13;
a 10&#13;
69:.6&#13;
rt -3: pm. in&#13;
SWICieirtts in G&#13;
ROD&#13;
Dll&#13;
Hall&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F 0 .1.c.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Pnside&#13;
Concourse, Greenquist Hall&#13;
Friday, October 5&#13;
1oa.m. t O 5p.m.&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
Oct. 3, 5, 6 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER wedneSdaY. OCt. 3. 1973&#13;
WEEKEND SPORTS&#13;
__________ RANGERSports _-""&#13;
Cagers aim for&#13;
successful season&#13;
by BMK.\\ po&lt;&#13;
Thirty IhI t l\a" taeted&#13;
son ..,...dllloning for th&#13;
1 7~ ball . \lid ...&#13;
the "alchlul Y ol coach eve&#13;
and tant coach&#13;
Rudy ollum Arnone the :J5 an! IX let-&#13;
~n. ho. ~phtns 0 to&#13;
a lrOIlI nuc:1 us lor thIS&#13;
) • tam&#13;
Jonlor IJW'I et.&gt;ck Ownbl ,&#13;
Iaal y r'a VP hnost 'aluabl.&#13;
playtr) rtt~ lrom lbt 13-&#13;
12 t am, ala WIth &lt;tnler Gary&#13;
Cd 01 whom' oays .....&#13;
wn • to ood etbtude"&#13;
m for mOIl 0/ I ytar. )WUOI"&#13;
guard J HUll r IS upt&lt;:ted 10&#13;
rtbouDd to lop form l/u.a year.&#13;
phomort forward Donnie&#13;
Snow and BIll belllti have both&#13;
n unpr 'v In pre eol&#13;
orkou&#13;
lot 0/ &amp;oad penonnel ha,e&#13;
n r crulled from local&#13;
ools, among them Kenosha&#13;
Tr mper'a lQUmldaung 6'7"&#13;
1...- .. Rade lp_~ Rah·&#13;
day) DUlutrlj 'IC,"ho bnng. III&#13;
a 20.0 searing average and is&#13;
peeted to add to the board&#13;
trength of the Rangers.&#13;
"ewcomers Claude Harris.&#13;
Don Lewis, Rosen Chambers,&#13;
Catvin Denson, Malcolm&#13;
labone, Bob Jacobson, Dean&#13;
OmsUanson, TIm Holland and&#13;
Jeff GolUMed are all ......orking&#13;
hard," and according 10&#13;
ephens, "'ill add depth to the&#13;
squad.&#13;
Ho",,-ev«, ",lith all this out·&#13;
standmg personnel, Parkside&#13;
needs balan~ scoring lor them&#13;
to ,,"in games.&#13;
The 1973-74 schedule will be&#13;
lOtI&amp;her,Slated Coach Stephens,&#13;
with many more small college&#13;
powers to be laced, such as UW·&#13;
Green Bay (Dec, 12 and Feb. 16),&#13;
'Qrthem MIchigan (Feb. 2), and&#13;
Missoun-Rolla (Dec. I).&#13;
Drake, ,'orl!lern Illinois, and&#13;
I'M, some of the Midwest's&#13;
majOr college powers, will play&#13;
Parltside on Dec. 6, Feb, 23 and&#13;
Jan 29. respecti,·e!y.&#13;
Henderson optimistic&#13;
with soccer team&#13;
'" ""at ~ abler&#13;
• I'm hiIbly opliml tic that&#13;
'II et on a ""1On~ track thIS&#13;
:' commented soccer coach&#13;
IIal }lend r on "We should&#13;
to WIll the next three or&#13;
four ee ..&#13;
Th Ran~rs an! till lookmg&#13;
for lbeU" rant WID alter sueve&#13;
~ tbacks to Le\\1S&#13;
CoIl and, 0.-.0 IllinoIS&#13;
and to c o,!&gt;-1 "We only&#13;
trailed 1-0 at the hall a.. UISl&#13;
NclrtMrn," Henderson e&gt;:pIauls,&#13;
"but e"- mlJ8ing two key&#13;
men bee 0/ UlJunes, Sieve&#13;
StndeI ch nd Dieter Kiefer,&#13;
and e .. ...., lo~ to play&#13;
delense the whole second hall."&#13;
When asked aboul the per'&#13;
formances of the new freshmen,&#13;
Hmderson said, Ul was very&#13;
pleased "ith SIeve Sendelbach&#13;
and Stan Stadler, who played an&#13;
ucellent second half againsl&#13;
Oticago."&#13;
Dennis Pippin, a lresbman goal&#13;
tender, ".. s also a key player in&#13;
the Oticago game ,..hen he&#13;
Slopped four breakaway shots.&#13;
Coach }lenderson concluded&#13;
the R NGER inlerview by&#13;
saYing that he was experimenting&#13;
\lI·i.th different&#13;
lineupo and that, "The lreshmen&#13;
are beginning to playas a team."&#13;
PAl • Ragtime Rllgers Present&#13;
Wisconsin /mtio State GCIIle&#13;
$10 Includ 1)~~'a~3~~;p ndel&#13;
19 am lrom Tallen HaU Parking Lot&#13;
mv ba atP r ldeat j OOpm.&#13;
n 10"'" W nIWeOlftce·DI97&#13;
Deadline to sign up - Oct. 8, 1913 12:lII-noon&#13;
****************&#13;
10% OFF ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
J $100&#13;
4 OR MORE WITH PARKSIDE ID.&#13;
~ ENDS&#13;
fj OCTOBER 31&#13;
, AT 'j 3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
~ AND "s ~26 7 39tb AVENUE&#13;
...&#13;
Soccer&#13;
captian&#13;
likes it&#13;
at UW-p&#13;
by Neal gautaer&#13;
"Istarted playing soccer when&#13;
1 was eight."&#13;
Unlike other boys, ....ho join.&#13;
major league soccer when&#13;
they're 18,Rick Lechusz joined ar&#13;
the young age of 15.&#13;
In high school he played&#13;
foolball and, like the Green Bay&#13;
Packers' QJester Marcol, was a&#13;
soccer.style kicker.&#13;
During lbe off·season, Rick&#13;
plays lor polonia, a Milwaukee&#13;
area soccer club.&#13;
Some 01 the other guys on that&#13;
team who play with him from&#13;
Parkside are Rick Kilps, Bruno&#13;
Pa....lak and SIan Sladler.&#13;
Since he's been on the team, the&#13;
Poionia team has won three of the&#13;
last seven years that they've&#13;
been in the Slate finals.&#13;
Lechusz was recruited here&#13;
from Milwaukee by former&#13;
soccer coach eeza Marliny on a&#13;
scholarship.&#13;
When asked how he liked il&#13;
here, he stl\led, "I've liked it ever&#13;
since 1 came here. This school&#13;
has goad possibilities, not only in&#13;
soccer."&#13;
}Ie then explained how the two&#13;
soccer coaches dlfIered.&#13;
"eeza Martiny has a European&#13;
background for soccer, and&#13;
played a European game."&#13;
"But in America, they have a&#13;
completely differenlslyle 01 ball,&#13;
and thaI's where Coach Hen·&#13;
derson's experience comes in."&#13;
Not only a fine player and&#13;
captain of the team, Lechusz has&#13;
also had searing honors lor the&#13;
lasltwo years wilh 10 goals, and&#13;
also made most valuable player&#13;
and all-state_&#13;
He then commented about his&#13;
fellow teammates by saying,&#13;
HThis is the first year we've had&#13;
two good goallenders, in Ellioll&#13;
Brieske and Dennis Pippin."&#13;
He also slaled thaI freshmen&#13;
SIeve Sendelbach and Bruno&#13;
Pa ....lak will carry the team in&#13;
later years.&#13;
When asked about Ihe new&#13;
soccer lield, he summed il up by&#13;
saying he was "looking lorward&#13;
to playing on it," and that "It'll&#13;
boost the morale of the whole&#13;
learn."&#13;
Golf team faces&#13;
Fallfest Invitational&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
With the Falllest Invitational&#13;
coming a week from Saturday,&#13;
the golfers' season has had its ups&#13;
and downs, according to coach&#13;
Steve Stephens.&#13;
Many of the ups came in the&#13;
recent match against Marquette&#13;
and UW-Green Bay, with a school&#13;
record for a rive-member team of&#13;
36'7, and with sophomore Dan&#13;
Leissner shooting a four-underpar&#13;
f&gt;1 10 also estahlish a new&#13;
school record.&#13;
The scores for the MarquetteGreen&#13;
Bay match were: Tom&#13;
Bolhe (medalist) 71, Dan&#13;
Leissner 74, Rick Willems 74,&#13;
Randy Driefke 74, and Dave Karr&#13;
74.&#13;
Parkside's golf team is considered&#13;
by many of the NATA&#13;
coaches to be a contender to take&#13;
the districltournament and those&#13;
coaches entering the Falllest&#13;
tournament state that Parkside&#13;
has a very good chance of winning&#13;
it.&#13;
Without defending champion&#13;
Northern Illinois, the linksmen&#13;
will try to bring in 8·10 teams as&#13;
strong competition.&#13;
Among them are in I&#13;
Marquette, Green Ba c Ud"j&#13;
Stevens Point, UW'RiV~' U\I&#13;
UW·Whilewater, UW.Milw[alIs&#13;
Roosevelt University ofOt·Uiot.&#13;
Carthage and, 01 c I~&#13;
Parkside, who will ent OUf1e&#13;
teams. er l&#13;
Stephens concluded thal&#13;
one team has won ou ..&#13;
nament twice and hopes ~ tollRangers&#13;
will be able to br~ IIit&#13;
tradition. IIit&#13;
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S T1tA&#13;
FIELD practice is nowin ib(~'&#13;
week of training lor the first ilIIl&#13;
in the middle of DecemberThose&#13;
who are still in&#13;
in this year's program sh::f"d&#13;
Bob Lawson, track coach,or lot&#13;
extension 2245 fight a'li tal&#13;
begin training for the win: ..&#13;
spring schedules. ...&#13;
-=-~.~~&#13;
Oeff!j&#13;
APRIL 1%·%1,11'11&#13;
10days· 8nights&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 nights in Athe~s&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruist&#13;
• Athens sightseeing . . S"iU&#13;
• Fondue party In&#13;
• Tour escort t&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on llbO'&#13;
J&#13;
For application or inforl1ls&#13;
tJC'l&#13;
Contact. .~rt:JI&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL (f.&#13;
iIm!! .,~~&#13;
• LLC D·19; Cal!:»'&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RA GER ednesdaY1 Oct. 3, 1973&#13;
A GER&#13;
___________ Sports _ _.,&#13;
Cag a m for&#13;
u&#13;
H nderso n optimistic&#13;
w th soccer te a m&#13;
********&#13;
d half."&#13;
PAB Ragtime R gers f&gt;resent&#13;
iscons·n / io State Game&#13;
t. 13 1973&#13;
t. 8 1973 12:00 n&#13;
*********&#13;
Soccer&#13;
caption&#13;
likes it&#13;
at UW-P&#13;
H then explained how the two&#13;
er coach differed.&#13;
"Geza . 1artiny has a European&#13;
background for soccer, and&#13;
played a European game."&#13;
• But in America, they have a&#13;
mpletely different style of ball,&#13;
and that's where Coach Hende&#13;
n' experience comes in."&#13;
, ot only a fine player and&#13;
captain of the team. Lechusz has&#13;
also had coring honors for the&#13;
last two years with 10 goals, and&#13;
also made most valuable player&#13;
and all-state.&#13;
He then commented about his&#13;
fellow teammates by saying,&#13;
"Thi i the first year we've had&#13;
t ·o good goaltenders, in Elliott&#13;
Brie ke and Dennis Pippin."&#13;
He also stated that freshmen&#13;
eve endelbach and Bruno&#13;
Pawlak will carry the team in&#13;
later ~ears.&#13;
When asked about the new&#13;
~er field, he summed it up by&#13;
saymg he was "looking forward&#13;
to playing on it," and that "It'll&#13;
boost the morale of the whole&#13;
team."&#13;
~&amp; •&#13;
Golf team faces&#13;
Fallfest Invitational&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
With the Fallfest Invitational&#13;
coming a week from Saturday,&#13;
the golfers' season has had its ups&#13;
and downs, according to coach&#13;
Steve Stephens.&#13;
Many of the ups came in the&#13;
recent match against Marquette&#13;
and UW-Green Bay, with a school&#13;
record for a five-member team of&#13;
367, and with sophomore Dan&#13;
Leissner shooting a four-underpar&#13;
67 to also establish a new&#13;
school record.&#13;
The scores for the MarquetteGreen&#13;
Bay match were: Tom&#13;
Bothe (medalist) 71, Dan&#13;
Leissner 74, Rick Willems 74,&#13;
Randy Driefke 74, and Dave Karr&#13;
74.&#13;
Parkside's golf team is considered&#13;
by many of the NAIA&#13;
coaches to be a contender to take&#13;
the district tournament and those&#13;
coaches entering the Fallfest&#13;
tournament state that Parkside&#13;
has a very good chance of winning&#13;
it.&#13;
Without defending champion&#13;
Northern Illinois, the linksmen&#13;
will try to bring in 8-10 teams as&#13;
strong competition.&#13;
Among them are .&#13;
Marquette, Green B~nclud&#13;
Stevens Point, UW-Rivi· U&#13;
UW-Whitewater, UW-Milwa&#13;
Roosevelt University of Ch&#13;
Carthage and of 1&#13;
Parkside, who ~ill entou&#13;
teams. er t&#13;
Stephens concluded that&#13;
one team . has won our&#13;
nament twice and hopes tha&#13;
Rangers will be able to hr ;&#13;
tradition. ea&#13;
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN• TR&#13;
FIELD practice is now in 1 ~ l&#13;
week of training for the first&#13;
in the middle of December lneet&#13;
. Th~se who are still int&#13;
m this year's program should&#13;
Bob Lawson, track coach&#13;
t . 'or&#13;
ex ens10n 2245 right aw&#13;
begin training for the wini:!&#13;
spring schedules. 11111&#13;
APRIL 12-21, 1974&#13;
10 days -8 nights&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 nights in Athen&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island crui '&#13;
• Athens sight tting&#13;
. wi!J • Fondue party an&#13;
• Tour escort&#13;
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              <text>Wyllie named to&#13;
advisory council&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie has&#13;
been named to a five-man advisory&#13;
council that will assist the&#13;
University of the State of New&#13;
York educational system in&#13;
conducting a comprehensive&#13;
review of doctoral programs&#13;
offered by the universities of that&#13;
state. The program review,&#13;
which will concentrate on&#13;
questions of quality, need, cost&#13;
and duplication, will lead to the&#13;
development of a new state plan&#13;
(or doctoral education.&#13;
The University of the State of&#13;
New York, which ranks with&#13;
California as one of the country's&#13;
two largest higher education&#13;
systems, has jurisdiction over all&#13;
plblic and private universities,&#13;
graduate centers and medical&#13;
schools, polytechnic institutes,&#13;
community colleges, and various&#13;
p-ofessional schools, numbering&#13;
mote than 100 institutions in all.&#13;
The program authority of the&#13;
regents who govern the s)'!ltem&#13;
extends to the State University of&#13;
New York System (SUNY). the&#13;
City University of New York&#13;
System (CUNY). and such&#13;
leading private universities as&#13;
Cornell. Cohnnbia, Fordham. the .&#13;
Univ.... ity of Rochester.. RensselllE!"&#13;
Polytechnic Institute. and&#13;
Rockefeller University.&#13;
()ther leading educators named&#13;
to the five-man advisory council&#13;
with Wyllie are J. Boyd Page.&#13;
Iftsident of the U.S. Council of&#13;
Graduate Schools, Washington,&#13;
D.C.; Glenn E. Berchtold,&#13;
professor of chemistry,&#13;
Massachusetts Insti tute of&#13;
TechnologYi Jerome Blum,&#13;
history department chairman,&#13;
Princeton University; and Bryce&#13;
crawford, former dean of the&#13;
Graduate School. University of&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
. In 1971 the New York Regents&#13;
:'POtoSeda moratoriwn on all new&#13;
oc ral programs pend' tud ,lnga&#13;
S u Y of national and state&#13;
trends, costs and needs Th&#13;
Regents then established ~ blu:&#13;
~bbon . commission on doctoral&#13;
ucatton, headed by Robben&#13;
FJ~mmg.' president of the&#13;
University ?f Michigan. to&#13;
conduct a. WIde-ranging study.&#13;
~e Fleming commission submitted&#13;
its report and recommendations&#13;
in January of Otis&#13;
year. In line with the commission&#13;
~ecommendations the Regents&#13;
~ssued a new statement of policy&#13;
In August, under the title&#13;
"Meeting the Needs of Doctoral&#13;
Educa tion." The next step in the&#13;
pro~ess was the creation of the&#13;
advisory council on which&#13;
.Chancellor Wyllie has been asked&#13;
to serve.&#13;
Wyllie, who has had extensive&#13;
expe~ien~e in heading&#13;
exammation teams for the North&#13;
Central accrediting association&#13;
said the council's first task will&#13;
be.to recommend personnel and&#13;
procedures for various teams of&#13;
outside experts who will review&#13;
12 doctoral programs in history&#13;
and 18 in cbemistry throughout&#13;
the state. History and chemistry&#13;
were smgled out for initial review&#13;
not only because they are major&#13;
programs in New York, but also&#13;
because they are broadly&#13;
representative of the various&#13;
problems likely to be encountered&#13;
in subsequent review&#13;
of other programs in other fields.&#13;
What is learned in these firstphase&#13;
reviews wIll contribute to&#13;
the development of a model for&#13;
all later reviews, and ultimately&#13;
to the revamping of New York's&#13;
doctoral program authorizations&#13;
and offerings.&#13;
Pilot reviews in chemistry \4i1J&#13;
be conducted at 18 universities lD&#13;
the SUNY and CliNY systems. as&#13;
well as at the Rensselaer and&#13;
Brooklyn Polytechnic In nuees&#13;
and various pri vate institutions&#13;
Chancellor Wyll1esaid that the&#13;
advisory council ",,;U not condoct&#13;
individual reviews, but ",'ill&#13;
during the course of the next 12&#13;
months monitor the review&#13;
process and advise the Umversity&#13;
of the State of ew York in&#13;
regard to future procedure. and&#13;
In regard to recommendations&#13;
that may be generated from the&#13;
reviews.&#13;
New cou..... , faculty&#13;
Changes take&#13;
place in SM'&#13;
b~'Ii ba~10' 1_ k&#13;
The Englneenng eienee&#13;
OWl on IS condoC'u a new&#13;
course thi&gt; faU called . lao and&#13;
HIS TechnolOlU I OIl to&#13;
proVIde non-Iechnol . majors&#13;
""th an undtrstanchng of me&#13;
problem'S ithin their envtronment&#13;
TopiCS the course hopes to d I&#13;
,.,th InClude the energy crws.&#13;
mass transportation DeCfSSltl •&#13;
reese pollulJon.,and the etectreeic&#13;
fe\ olutJon LD commurucations&#13;
"The course In to shed light&#13;
on current problems m tndustry&#13;
that clash With SOClet)'s ''lIlues.''&#13;
said Jobn Zarhng, assistant&#13;
professor of EnglDeerlng&#13;
SCience.&#13;
lartlOg. aIo"l Ith proCessors&#13;
w alt.. Feldt .nd •ling Kuo.&#13;
rotate lectures over various&#13;
topiCS ",thon tbe 16 UJUtsIv.eds)&#13;
of class. As they progress, eadl&#13;
specllllius on a certain area for&#13;
.pproximately n.. weeD.&#13;
Recently the course exanuoed&#13;
me's lJlre&lt;&gt;.hour documellUry&#13;
thonl' _&#13;
enrolled. but" hope to&#13;
up m~ e 0 aJon&amp;." com&#13;
menled ZOrl "The &lt;OUIW&#13;
dra"o up In A 10 it&#13;
lISted on the um l.8b1e but not&#13;
d cribed until r I Irallon.&#13;
throu fly tt&#13;
Deen of the&#13;
lnd r)'. William&#13;
t'It\lt course .. .. lrat'· and&#13;
added It ... an ImPJll1anl part In&#13;
I's expandlllg '0.......&#13;
R l&amp;Inu....In the I ...&#13;
SO percent lhiI or. ahowIIII •&#13;
stead g"",111 s""'. lis betI~illIC&#13;
In 1&#13;
·,TIt fall. forUle fonl UlM, an&#13;
I facull' manbon wUI be&#13;
located In the ...... Claaroom&#13;
The Parksidlec-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973 Vol. II No. ,&#13;
Concern growing over power plant&#13;
by Michael OlszyJ&lt;&#13;
"We nuclear people have made a Faustian&#13;
tBrgain with society. On the one hand, we offer - in&#13;
the catalytic burner .- an inexaustible source of&#13;
energy ...&#13;
But the price that we demand of society for this&#13;
magical energy source is both a vigilance and a&#13;
longevity of our social institutions that we are quite&#13;
1Il8ccustomed to. H&#13;
--Dr. Alvin Weinberg. director of the Oak&#13;
Ridge National Laboratory.&#13;
Science (July 7.1972)&#13;
What Weinberg failed to add though. was that&#13;
F.usllost out on his deal with the devil.&#13;
. Henry Cole, assistant professor of earth science,&#13;
lS one of many concerned environmentalists,&#13;
seriously questioning practical uses of ,,-uclear&#13;
energy and the general public's unYleldmg&#13;
demands for more and more power.&#13;
Coleis strongly opposed to a nuclear power plant.&#13;
):I'Oposed by Wisconsin Electric power Company, to&#13;
be built in the Paris Township.&#13;
~ SUch a plan materialized, southea~tern&#13;
Wisconsin would be trading 6,000 acres of highly&#13;
Jl'oductive farmland for cooling ponds to properly&#13;
operate a 2.000 megowatt giant by the year 1982: "&#13;
. Vlewmgthis problem lias objectively as possible&#13;
18 another environmentalist Morris· Firebaugh,&#13;
~ciate professor of phYSic~. He too sees several&#13;
disadvantages in surrendering nine square miles of&#13;
farmland, especially when its inhabitants have been&#13;
embed,dedin a community for Six generations, as&#13;
those In Paris have. But Firebaugh added thaI&#13;
Wher~er a reactor was located, there would be&#13;
conflict with the landowners who were forced to&#13;
sacrifice their properties for the energy needs of the&#13;
SUrroundingpopula tion ..&#13;
Controversy over the 10000ation of future nuclear&#13;
plantsisn't the only problem besieging WEPC and&#13;
the Ato . . f mlC Energy Commission The questIon 0&#13;
nUclea .' ted r POwer and the environment has crup&#13;
In~ a moratorium of critical concern.&#13;
though a major catastrophe has never occured&#13;
W.E P. STANDS FOR&#13;
~tJATCH&#13;
!;vERY THING&#13;
since commercial nuclear power plants started&#13;
operating in 1957, and chances are estim.ted.t only&#13;
one in 1000reactor years. there sWJ remalos that&#13;
remote possibility.&#13;
The most serious accident Cole descrIbes 8S a&#13;
"meltdown." The reactor core, where fi ion takes&#13;
place has a loss of coolant resullmg from ruptured&#13;
pipes: Thus the temperature of the ruel CUranium&#13;
235) begins to rise rapidly and melts through the&#13;
core within 50 to 100 seconds foUowing the rupture&#13;
An Emergency Core Cooling System desIgned to&#13;
spray or nood this escaping nuclear fuel IS the&#13;
essenlial safety feature that would become ef·&#13;
fective. But if this system failed after the prim.ry&#13;
cooling system did, a radioactive steam cloud v..-ould&#13;
be released into the atmosphere by hydrogen and&#13;
steam explosions. Meanwhile. the reactor core&#13;
would continue melting down until a rna Ive&#13;
molten blob of highly radlOacti\'e matter seeped&#13;
into the soil. _ _ .&#13;
A maximum hypothetical accident m a rea~or&#13;
(about one-sixth of the power o! those now beuli&#13;
built) was simulated m a t95' AEC study .1&#13;
Brookhaven National Laboratory on L~ng I land&#13;
As a result. it was esumat~ _that the maXImum&#13;
would be 3400 killed. 43.000 IOJured. and $7 billion&#13;
property damage.&#13;
While the m.lll nolan a=denl rna ....&#13;
f~ble there should be ca_ fer aI nn oy«&#13;
the f t that Em eacy r I ) tema ha&#13;
) t to be properl)' t ed under I dor coneIIl&gt;on1&#13;
A. mall acal model" ed I&amp;rI In&#13;
1971, in Idaho. The ECCS f.iled 'e&lt;)' oflbe&#13;
test •&#13;
Fortun8tely ror sam DiP th l t '"&#13;
to the ml preselll.8tlon of aclual E&#13;
,n'ohed •• lnch d,.meter ,. IWithone&#13;
... o!lnlet and outlet pi , In th tab k lOthe&#13;
mletl"pe ". mulaled and the atl.mpt ." made&#13;
to mJect ".1.. lOto the pr v 110 tool the&#13;
e1eclrlcal heal mUI.1I the c The " let'&#13;
had to enle&lt; .pmsl the Id I I am pr re •&#13;
steam .nd ater " .... be1n xpelled through the&#13;
bre . It did not "ark In contra t, re tor •&#13;
are from 14 to 22 f t n d,.m t... nd _aU h&#13;
101 of mlel d out Pi &lt;h about 2~ f&#13;
eII.meter&#13;
A n full..,a1 model plant CUM'eltly&#13;
butIt to accurately t Ithe Em rg ncy&#13;
)'Slem In Idaho, .1 the ·.lIona!&#13;
SlatlOD&#13;
Anolher concern of Col.'. th tor.ge 0( nud r&#13;
" e, co UlfI of un .... bl. f procluc&#13;
created wnng th operation of LIl...... dor. and&#13;
CU1lammated equipment sud'l as cloltunc from&#13;
routm. JlO"er plant and reproc lIl&amp; operaUOlUI&#13;
lJusually trucked 011 to "'tAnk f.rms" In I d&#13;
s1uPPUlfl c ·s. th rod"""cu.. t.a.nc&#13;
contmue to decal 0' r • penod of 21.&#13;
called half~ife'&#13;
TIte Ideal methnd lO abandonUlfl these .... t&#13;
to dISpose of them to natural geolo cal formaUOlUI&#13;
such .s salt bed&gt;. v. luch chang only o\'er the&#13;
of geological ume, rather lha.n torag. In h .Iv&#13;
guarded vaults, sensll" to I e TIt. probl~&#13;
here though IS ID !In,lon_ de trable features 01 It&#13;
depoSIts for disposal of nuclear a , Salt min&#13;
UlL~on Kansas underconslderauon \4 ere t1&#13;
found to be un. u'tabl. becaus of ex bol lIlld&#13;
~eol ,eal. 1 till lOkI place the £&#13;
md d If ocaUOn 10 d r l m&#13;
mbs.&#13;
Wyllie named to&#13;
advisory council&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie has&#13;
been named to a five-man ad-&#13;
\1sory council that will assist the&#13;
University of the State of New&#13;
York educational system in&#13;
conducting a comprehensive&#13;
review of doctoral programs&#13;
offered by the universities of that&#13;
tate. The program review&#13;
which will concentrate 0 ~&#13;
questions of quality, need, cost&#13;
and duplication, wi)l lead to the&#13;
development of a new state plan&#13;
for doctoral education.&#13;
The University of the State of&#13;
New York, which ranks with&#13;
California as one of the country's&#13;
two largest higher education&#13;
systems, has jurisdiction over all&#13;
public and private universities,&#13;
graduate centers and medical&#13;
schools, polytechnic institutes&#13;
community colleges, and variou~&#13;
professional schools, numbering&#13;
more than 100 institutions in all. The program authority of the&#13;
regents who govern the system&#13;
extends to the State University of&#13;
New York System (SUNY), the&#13;
City University of New York&#13;
System (CUNY), and such&#13;
leading private universities as&#13;
Cornell, Colwnbia, Fordham, the&#13;
University of Rochester, Ren-&#13;
~aer Polytechnic Institute, and&#13;
Rockefeller University.&#13;
Other leading educators named&#13;
to the five-man advisory council&#13;
with Wyllie are J. Boyd Page&#13;
president of the U.S. Council of&#13;
Graduate Schools, Washington,&#13;
D.C.; Glenn E . Berch told&#13;
professor of che~istry:&#13;
Massachusetts Institute of&#13;
Technology ; Jerome Blum&#13;
history department chairman'&#13;
Princeton University; and Brye~&#13;
Crawford, former dean of the&#13;
Graduate School, University of&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
im In ~971 the ew York Regen&#13;
do:Ore:f a ;i;torium on all ne .&#13;
study of nat i~~:i pending a&#13;
trends, costs and n::f tate&#13;
~gents then establi hed ~ b'{"e&#13;
ribbon commission on d u education, headed b octoral&#13;
Fie · Y Robben U _mm~, president of the&#13;
mvers1ty of Michiga conduct ·d n, to Th Fl a . WI e-ranging study. _e e_mmg commission ubm1tted&#13;
its report and&#13;
me dati. recom- n ons in January of th. year. In line with the com . . is r . ffilSSIOD&#13;
. ecommendatJons the Regents&#13;
~ssued a new statement of policy&#13;
!? A~gust, under the title&#13;
Meeting the Needs of Doct 1· Educati " ora on. The next step in the&#13;
pro&lt;:ess was the creation of the&#13;
advisory council on which . Chancellor Wyllie has been asked&#13;
to serve.&#13;
Wyll_ie, who has had extensive&#13;
expe~ien~e in heading&#13;
exammation teams for the North&#13;
~tral accrediting association&#13;
said the council's first task will&#13;
be to recommend personnel and&#13;
procedures for various teams of&#13;
outside experts who will review&#13;
12 doc~ral programs in history&#13;
and 18 m chemistry throughout&#13;
the st~tE!. History and chemistry&#13;
were smgled out for initial review&#13;
not only because they are major&#13;
programs in New York, but also&#13;
because they are broadly&#13;
representative of the various&#13;
problems likely to be encountered&#13;
in subsequent review&#13;
of other programs in other fields&#13;
What is learned in these fir t.&#13;
phase reviews will contribute to&#13;
the development of a model for&#13;
all later reviews, and ultimatelv&#13;
to the revamping of New York's&#13;
doctoral program authorization&#13;
ew cour , faculty&#13;
Change ta&#13;
place • ,n Ml&#13;
.......&#13;
The Parksidee-------&#13;
RA GE&#13;
Concern growing over power plant&#13;
by Michael Olszy.k&#13;
"We nuclear people have made a Faustian&#13;
bargain with society. On the one hand, we offer - in&#13;
the catalytic burner - an inexaustible source of&#13;
energy ...&#13;
Bu_t the price that we demand of society for this&#13;
magi~! energy source is both a vigilance and a&#13;
longeVIty of our social institutions that we are quite&#13;
maccustomed to."&#13;
--Dr. Alvin Weinberg, director of the Oak&#13;
Ridge National Laboratory, Science (July 7, 1972)&#13;
What Weinberg failed to add though, was that&#13;
Faustlost out on his deal with the devil.&#13;
. Henry Cole, assis~ofessor of earth science,&#13;
15 _one of many concerned environmentalists,&#13;
senously questioning practical uses of nuclear :ergy and the general public's unyielding&#13;
mands for more and more power. Cole is strongly opposed to a nuclear power plant,&#13;
:opo~ed. by Wisconsin Electric Power Company, to&#13;
built m the Paris Township.&#13;
!f such a plan materialized, southeastern&#13;
Wiscon~in would be trading 6,000 acres of highly&#13;
i--oducttve farmland for cooling ponds to properly&#13;
operat~ a 2,0?0 megowatt giant by the year 1982 . . Viewing this problem "as objectively as possible"&#13;
15 an~ther environmentalist, Morris Firebaugh,&#13;
~ciate professor of physics. He too sees several&#13;
f sadvantages in surrendering nine square miles of&#13;
~~and, E:5Pecially when its inhabitants have been&#13;
th _ded m _a community for six generations, as&#13;
w ose 10 Pans have. But Firebaugh added that&#13;
c ~~ver a reactor was located, there would be&#13;
.:'a" .1~t with the landowners who were forced to ;;1hce ~eir properties for the energy needs of the&#13;
Cooundmg population .. pl nt.t:oversy over the location of future nuclear&#13;
:n~t isn't the only problem besieging WEP~ and&#13;
nu I omic Energy Commission. The question of&#13;
c ear Po . ted t wer and the environment has erup&#13;
~t~ moratorium of critical concern. ugh a ma1or catastrophe has never occured&#13;
D5 CR&#13;
ATCH&#13;
ERYTH G&#13;
-&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. Oct. 10, 1973&#13;
....... RANGER&#13;
Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Tenants union&#13;
needed&#13;
Individuals or groups of people with power do not&#13;
normally see fit to share that power or the decision&#13;
making procedures with those over whom they have&#13;
superiority. In order to achieve reforms it is necessary,&#13;
therefore. for oppressed or unhappy individuals to&#13;
organize and gain strength in numbers.&#13;
It seems as if the tenants of Parkside Village would do&#13;
well to organize a strong tenants union. This union would&#13;
be representative of the renters and see to it that a II&#13;
legitimate gripes and needs of the tenants are dealt with&#13;
by either the superintendent or the owner. The union&#13;
wou Id not onIy be a liason between renter and land lord&#13;
but aIso have the power needed to make sure that&#13;
parties on both sides are ge"ing a fair shake and&#13;
humane treatment.&#13;
Some communities in the United States have set up&#13;
rent control boards which not only have power in&#13;
regulating rent prices but oversee housing conditions.&#13;
Owners are still capable of making a profit under such&#13;
conditions but the renter does not have to suHer at the&#13;
feet of the property owner.&#13;
A strong Parkside Village tenants union would give&#13;
renters a device for gaining bargaining power which&#13;
they do not have now.&#13;
This semester there have aIready been numerous&#13;
hassles between the tenants and superintendent and&#13;
owner. Students are justifiably upset over parking fees,&#13;
ticketing, the strict living conditions imposed on them,&#13;
and the way in which they are received in dialogue by&#13;
the superintendent.&#13;
On the other hand. Village management is justifyably&#13;
upset about the vandalism and stealing that takes place.&#13;
It seems as if a tenants union could help both sides.&#13;
Renters would be able to deal with their frustrations in&#13;
ways other than vandalism. Demands could be&#13;
negotiated in a mature. positive. and fair way.&#13;
Interest in a tenants union has been expressed by&#13;
Village residents and organizing is taking place.&#13;
Students living there would benefit by considering what&#13;
they want out of apartment life -- and what they don't&#13;
want __and organize around those issues.&#13;
Carelessness&#13;
creates problems&#13;
RANGER has commented before on the parking&#13;
problems and attempts have been made to ameliorate&#13;
the aggravating situation. But a new issue is developing&#13;
in the east lot which is inexcusable and should be rectified&#13;
immediately.&#13;
11appears as if some individuals are in such a hur~y&#13;
that they find it necessary to bump or smash into other&#13;
cars in their rush. Most of the time the offending driver&#13;
leaves without notifying the owner of the damaged auto.&#13;
There are too many times lately when a tired student&#13;
will return to his or her car late at night to find the door&#13;
caved in. headlight busted, or the body dented or&#13;
scratched. Is it vandalism or just plain carelessness?&#13;
There are remedies to the problem. A traffic guard or&#13;
two could be hired for the sole purpose of patrolling&#13;
parking areas; however, that would cost a lot of money&#13;
which could be used for something more vitally needed.&#13;
Perhaps the parking lots could be re-marked, making&#13;
stalls and lanes much larger and maneuvering of cars&#13;
easier. But then there would be even fewer stalls to park&#13;
in.&#13;
Maybe the best remedy of all is for people to slow&#13;
down and look around and exhibit some concern and&#13;
care for the property of others. If everyone cooperated&#13;
to apply this solution. not only could students trust that&#13;
their cars would be in one piece when they return to&#13;
them, but it would also show how our common, unselfish&#13;
concern for one another works for the good of&#13;
everybody. If people don't cooperate, we're liable to find&#13;
carelessness is contagious.&#13;
.~.. " " .&#13;
. .. .. ... - ....... .. ." " " "&#13;
by Jane SChliesman&#13;
As reported last week, PSGA finally has a chief executive. again, in&#13;
the person of Tom Jennett. This is an important step, even if only an&#13;
interim move until formal elections are held. The word seems to be&#13;
spreading to other campuses about our difficulties with stu,dent&#13;
govenunent: The Badger Herald. a student newspaper at Madison,&#13;
recently reported that Parkside has no student goverr:unent. And a few&#13;
weeks ago RANGER received a call from a UW-Milwaukee student&#13;
interested in hearing how we had abolished OUT student government.&#13;
We explained that the executive was kaput by default, but that and the&#13;
inability to get together a quorum of the Senate had reduced PSGA to&#13;
nil. Now, however, there is a formal body convened again and considerable&#13;
interest has been expressed in PSGA, so it appears there is&#13;
hope for an effective and profitable year. .&#13;
Our problems with student government are not unique -- campuses&#13;
all over the country have been faced with lack of interest. Mter the&#13;
heavy student involvement of the sixties this change of pace was a nice&#13;
breather for college presidents, but even they are beginning to look&#13;
around and wonder if the nostalgia craze includes a decade like the&#13;
passive, inert fifties.&#13;
The thought is frightening, for part of what that era produced was&#13;
the obedient, unquestioning, blind faith attitudes of people like Jeb&#13;
Magruder of Watergate fame. Hopefully, the college campuses in the&#13;
seventies are not spewing out thousands of followers with too few&#13;
inquisitive, innovative, clear-thinking leader-types.&#13;
Meanwhile, back at UW-P we have a make-shift student government&#13;
struggling to keep itself alive. A problem that exists here that many&#13;
other student governments do not have to surmount is an unworkable&#13;
constition. The power it grants PSGA is. nice on paper, but unfortunately&#13;
the docwnent was not drawn up in consultation and concurrence&#13;
with those on campus who presently hold that power -&#13;
faculty and administration. Hence, trying to work through it is impossible.&#13;
The PSGA steering committee, which will be made up of students&#13;
from various organizations and committees including Jennett and&#13;
members of the existing Student Senate, hopes .N-.Propose a solution to&#13;
that problem as well as others of organization, structure and goals for&#13;
PSGA. The 'lim is a working, effective student government, genuinely&#13;
interested in the students' welfare and involved in campus gover- .&#13;
nance. Any of the committee's proposals will need active students with&#13;
vision and empathy to realize them and indeed make it an effective&#13;
and profitable year, and provide a foundation not only for PSGA to&#13;
build on but for the entire university.&#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 0·194 Library:&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553·2295.&#13;
The Pa!"kside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~flected In col~mns. 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 250words 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;
addr~ss, phone.number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be. WIthheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.IN·CHIEF: Jane M. scnuesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra wrteceu&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Katl'lryn Wellner&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: oen Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS: Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Jensen~ MIChael. Olszyk, Marilyn SChubert. John Sorensen, SIeve&#13;
steceoten. Carne Ward, Ken Konkol, Tom oerouw Neal Seutner&#13;
Bruce Wagner "&#13;
P.HOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrlm, Allen Frederickson Brian Ross&#13;
Jim RuffalO "&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Amy Cundari, Gary Huck&#13;
LAYOUT: Terri Getenlan, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Peslka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Gary Worlhington .&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
. ,&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
------- Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Tenants union&#13;
needed&#13;
Individuals or groups of people with power do not&#13;
normally see fit to share that power or the decision&#13;
making procedures with those over whom they have&#13;
superiority. In order to achieve reforms it is necessary,&#13;
therefore, for oppressed or unhappy individuals to&#13;
organize and gain strength in numbers.&#13;
It seems as if the tenants of Parkside Village would do&#13;
well to organize a strong tenants union. This union would&#13;
be representative of the renters and see to it that all&#13;
legitimate gripes and needs of the tenants are dealt with&#13;
by either the superintendent or the owner. The union&#13;
would not only be a liason between renter and landlord&#13;
but also have the power needed to make sure that&#13;
parties on both sides are getting a fair shake and&#13;
humane treatment.&#13;
Some communities in the United States have set up&#13;
rent control boards which not only have power in&#13;
regulating rent prices but oversee housing conditions.&#13;
Owners are still capable of making a profit under such&#13;
conditions but the renter does not have to suffer at the&#13;
feet of the property owner.&#13;
A strong Parkside Village tenants union would give&#13;
renters a device for gaining bargaining power which&#13;
they do not have now.&#13;
This semester there have already been numerous&#13;
hassles between the tenants and superintendent and&#13;
owner. Students are justifiably upset over parking fees,&#13;
ticketing, the strict living conditions imposed on them,&#13;
and the way in which they are received in dialogue by&#13;
the superintendent.&#13;
On the other hand, Village management is justifyably&#13;
upset about the vandalism and stealing that takes place.&#13;
It seems as if a tenants union could help both sides.&#13;
Renters would be able to deal with their frustrations in&#13;
ways other than vandalism. Demands could be&#13;
negotiated in a mature, positive, and fair way.&#13;
Interest in a tenants union has been expressed by&#13;
Village residents and organizing is taking place.&#13;
Students living there would benefit by considering what&#13;
they want out of apartment life -- and what they don't&#13;
want ·- and organize around those issues.&#13;
Carelessness&#13;
creates problems&#13;
RANGER has commented before on the parking&#13;
problems and attempts have been made to ameliorate&#13;
the aggravating situation. But a new issue is developing&#13;
in the east lot which is inexcusable and should be rectified&#13;
immediately.&#13;
It appears as if some individuals are in such a hurry&#13;
that they find it necessary to bump or smash into other&#13;
cars in their rush. Most of the time the offending driver&#13;
leaves without notifying the owner of the damaged auto.&#13;
There are too many times lately when a tired student&#13;
will return to his or her car late at night to find the door&#13;
caved in, headlight busted, or the body dented or&#13;
scratched. Is it vandal ism or just plain carelessness?&#13;
There are remedies to the problem. A traffic guard or&#13;
two could be hired for the sole purpose of patrolling&#13;
parking areas ; however, that would cost a lot of money&#13;
which could be us_ed for something more vitally needed.&#13;
Perhaps the parking lots could be re-marked, making&#13;
stalls and lanes much larger and maneuvering of cars&#13;
easier. But then there would be even fewer stalls to park&#13;
in.&#13;
Maybe the best remedy of all is for people to slow&#13;
down and look around and exhibit some concern and&#13;
care for the property of others. If everyone cooperated&#13;
to apply this solution, not only could students trust that&#13;
their cars would be in one piece when they return to&#13;
them , but it would also show how our common, unselfish&#13;
concern for one another works for the good of&#13;
everybody. If people don't cooperate, we're liable to find&#13;
carelessness is contagious.&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
As reported last week, PSGA finally has a chief executive_ again, in&#13;
the person of Tom Jennett. This is an important step, even tf only an&#13;
interim move until formal elections are held. The word seems to be&#13;
spreading to other campuses about our difficulties with stu_dent&#13;
government: The Badger Herald, a student newspaper at Madison,&#13;
recently reported that Parkside has no student goverr_unent. And a few&#13;
weeks ago RANGER received a call from a UW-Mtlwaukee student&#13;
interested in hearing how we had abolished our student government.&#13;
We explained that the executive was kaput by default, but that and the&#13;
inability to get together a quorum of the Senate had reduc~d PSGA to&#13;
nil. Now however there is a formal body convened agam and considerabl~&#13;
interest has been expressed in PSGA, so it appears there is&#13;
hope for an effective and profitable year. . Our problems with student government are not umque -- campuses&#13;
all over the country have been faced with lack of interest. After the&#13;
heavy student involvement of the sixties this change of pace was a nice&#13;
breather for college presidents, but even they are beginning to look&#13;
around and wonder if the nostalgia craze includes a decade like the&#13;
passive, inert fifties.&#13;
The thought is frightening, for part of what that era produced was&#13;
the obedient, unquestioning, blind faith attitudes of people like Jeb&#13;
Magruder of Watergate fame. Hopefully, the college campuses in the&#13;
seventies are not spewing out thousands of followers with too few&#13;
inquisitive, innovative, clear-thinking leader-types.&#13;
Meanwhile, back at UW .p we have a make-shift student government&#13;
struggling to keep itself alive. A problem that exists here that many&#13;
other student governments do not have to surmount is an unworkable&#13;
constition. The power it grants PSGA is . nice on paper, but unfortunately&#13;
the document was not drawn up in consultation and concurrence&#13;
with those on campus who presently hold that power --&#13;
faculty and administration. Hence, trying to work through it is impossible.&#13;
The PSGA steering committee, which will be made up of students&#13;
from various organizations and committees including Jennett and&#13;
members of the existing Student Senate, hopes tQ_propose a solution to&#13;
that problem as well as others of organization, structure and goals for&#13;
PSGA. The 'lim is a working, effective student government, genuinely&#13;
interested in the students' welfare and involved in campus gover- ·&#13;
nance. Any of the committee's proposals will need active students with&#13;
vision and empathy to realize them and indeed make it an effective&#13;
and profitable year, and provide a foundation not only for PSGA to&#13;
build on but for the entire university.&#13;
~ _Uf/ The Psksicie' -- ~,,.. .&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the acaciemi'c&#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 Pa_rkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~flected 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 11nd double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste . All letters must be signed and include&#13;
addr~ss, phone number and student status or faculty rank . Names will&#13;
be_ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF : Jane M . Sehliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debr a Friedel!&#13;
NEWS EDITOR : Kathryn Wellner&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR : Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS : Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Jensen: M ichael_ Olszy k, Mari lyn Schubert, John Sorensen, Steve&#13;
St&#13;
apanian, Carrie Ward, Ken Konkol, Tom Defouw Neal Sautner Bruce Wagner ' '&#13;
PJ_HOTOGRAPHERS : Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson Brian Ross 1m Ruffalo ' '&#13;
CARTOONISTS : Amy Cundari, Gary Huck&#13;
LAYOUT : Terri Gelenian, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER : Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Gary Worthi ngton ,&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF : Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
We get letters&#13;
I&#13;
To the editors:&#13;
This goddam minority&#13;
recruitment makes college a&#13;
mockery. What makes these lowgrade&#13;
morons so special that they&#13;
will go out of their way to recruit&#13;
thelD and then lower admission&#13;
standards. That's right I should&#13;
have known the government and&#13;
thal money-grubbing administration&#13;
is behind it ail. They&#13;
will slOOPto anything to increase&#13;
enrollment ($). Hoo-haha so all&#13;
men are created equal - baha?&#13;
Well it is a hard act to follow&#13;
whenyou clean up the streets and&#13;
turn these beasts into professors ..&#13;
What have you got up your sleeve&#13;
as a sequal? Since admission&#13;
standards flew out the door and&#13;
offthe floor with your brains why&#13;
not . offer a course in Brain&#13;
Surgery For Fun Or Profit.&#13;
Another killer that gets my gut&#13;
is this bit about these black&#13;
students being dissatisfied&#13;
because Parkside offers as they&#13;
say; "nothing relevant to their&#13;
lifestyle." What do they want a&#13;
course in Head Shrinking Made&#13;
Easy? Madison had courses and&#13;
organizations in Pan-Africansim&#13;
and they went defunct because l.&#13;
lack of student interest 2. it was&#13;
determined that if you cater to&#13;
every whim and whip of one&#13;
ethnic group you are obligated by&#13;
the nature of d&#13;
all other eth ~mocracy to serve&#13;
SUchas G mc groups as well&#13;
erman French J .&#13;
etc.ltisnotthe'Ame" ew~~&#13;
~~~~ocracy ~o.prom~~~:n~r::&#13;
nocentneny Thank God&#13;
fth°rthere are a lot of people unlik~&#13;
e Blacks Mexica J&#13;
who don't 'ba ~, .ews etc. - ve a dlStingu· hi cultural tradiu IS 109 Ion to return to&#13;
When will people realiz~&#13;
Amer,lca has a beautiful tradition&#13;
and histor-y of its own - sometht&#13;
common to one and all '! mg&#13;
Last but not least is this It&#13;
about minority faculty quo':s&#13;
e&#13;
Sure I support Equal Em:&#13;
ployment Opportunities - but not&#13;
at t~e expense of reducing&#13;
requu:ements but rather in increasing&#13;
skills and qUalifications,&#13;
I nope the administration sticks&#13;
to ItS. guns on this policy or&#13;
Par.kSlde won't have a working&#13;
bram cell to its narne!&#13;
. E~cuse me I'm feeling sick and&#13;
the hrst symptom is thinking. .&#13;
Stacy PastIer&#13;
Kenosha Sophomore&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Re your front page article&#13;
'Jennett heads PSGA' in the issue&#13;
of 3 Oct.&#13;
Tom Jennett has not been&#13;
appointed President of PSGA by&#13;
SMIchanges&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Building (second and third&#13;
levels)" said Moy. He added that&#13;
the first floor would facilitate&#13;
engineering science labs later&#13;
this semester.&#13;
Academic changes&#13;
The biggest ehaI)ges, thqugh,&#13;
have occurred academically. In&#13;
the school's second division,&#13;
Business Management, a new&#13;
cooperative program is being set&#13;
up similar to the one already&#13;
existing in Applied Science and&#13;
Technology.&#13;
"The C&lt;HlP is a planned and&#13;
supervised educational program,&#13;
which consists of alternating&#13;
semesters of classroom in·&#13;
struction with off-campus work&#13;
experience," Moy said.&#13;
"Students become eligible for&#13;
this program after the completion&#13;
of their sophomore year."&#13;
Another new expansion in&#13;
Business Management is "the&#13;
internship program." Its purpose&#13;
is to relate courses to outside&#13;
working conditions, during the&#13;
same semester.&#13;
Due to new facilities at&#13;
Parkside, this program, along&#13;
with others, will utilize more&#13;
space here. The School of Modern&#13;
Industry will have an accounting&#13;
lab available to them, plus&#13;
several small production&#13;
equipment labs.&#13;
With continued building, new&#13;
stall members are needed to fill&#13;
these areas.&#13;
One of three recently recruited&#13;
teachers in Business&#13;
Management is Ron Singer, who&#13;
isteaChing Legal Environment of&#13;
Business. Singer, former at·&#13;
torney general of New York&#13;
state, IS also advisor of&#13;
Parkside's Pre-Law Club.&#13;
The first full-time teacher io&#13;
marketing is Richard Yanzito.&#13;
He has done extensive traveling&#13;
pertaining to his field throughout&#13;
Switzerland, Germany, and&#13;
Europe- in general.&#13;
Jim Polczynski, the third new&#13;
instructor, teaches Principles of&#13;
Management. Polczynski&#13;
graduated last year from&#13;
Madison with a MBA in&#13;
organizational management.&#13;
Both divisions of Engineering&#13;
Science and Business&#13;
Management have made sub--&#13;
stantial changes in graduation&#13;
requirements, as outlined in this&#13;
year's 1973-74catalogue.&#13;
"Generally, requirements have&#13;
broadened, so as to avoid over·&#13;
specialization," said Moy.&#13;
An "Ilkredit elective pack"&#13;
highlights these changes. It is&#13;
designed so that students can sit&#13;
down with an advisor, and try to&#13;
put together a set of courses&#13;
corresponding with that student's&#13;
academic goals.&#13;
Field Experience&#13;
Besides on-campus courses,&#13;
field'experience helps in reaching&#13;
these goals.&#13;
In the Engineering division, a&#13;
Computer Control course is being&#13;
offered at Dynamatic in Kenosha&#13;
this fall. Last year an accounting&#13;
course was taught there.&#13;
Field experience in Small&#13;
Business Management, one of the&#13;
school's nine new courses,&#13;
centers on Racine's business&#13;
community. It is sponsored by&#13;
Racine's Environment Committee&#13;
and the Racine&#13;
Manufacturers' Association.&#13;
~e stullent senate. Tom ba been&#13;
osen as ,interim cbatrman of&#13;
the executive commrttee of the&#13;
student senate,&#13;
The President can only be&#13;
elected by the votes of the entire&#13;
s.tudent body in a general election.&#13;
The senate can make no&#13;
such appointment.&#13;
Since there could be no acbon&#13;
taken by the senate without a&#13;
quorum, and since there can exist&#13;
00 quorum because of absence of&#13;
elect~ members. all senate&#13;
meetmgs must adjourn to&#13;
ex~tive session, TIle executive&#13;
session made the choice.&#13;
Tom Jennett is tbe chief&#13;
executive of the Student senate&#13;
not the President of !'SGA&#13;
Kenneth R Konkol&#13;
Senator&#13;
Editor's :"ote: A tbedr; •.ith&#13;
both Jennett and JeYlel&#13;
Echelbargu, As istant Onn o(&#13;
Students and PSG.\ ad\ i or.&#13;
conHrmed thatla t ....rel!:' lor.&#13;
was corred, Jennett is the ~.&#13;
terim President o( PSG,.\,. appointed&#13;
b) the Senate until ne ..&#13;
elections are held. The d2te (or&#13;
elections is indeHnite until •&#13;
special student steff"ing committee&#13;
can make it recommendation&#13;
for student gO\ern·&#13;
ment at Parkside,&#13;
"The class gives people an&#13;
interest in small business and a&#13;
chance to work \\;lh them:' ~toy&#13;
said. "It's Intended (or the gII).&#13;
who 0\\--n5 a small busmess and&#13;
wants to impro\'e iV'&#13;
George Stinsoo from Johnsoll's&#13;
Wax instructs th.ts course.&#13;
Many of SM!'s classes are&#13;
heing held on evenlOgs and&#13;
Saturday mornIngs this )·ear. for&#13;
the first time also, This was to&#13;
give aU students a chance to&#13;
enroll in some of them. expIamed&#13;
Moy.&#13;
Looking ahead to opporturulles&#13;
in technological employment.&#13;
Moy said chances were excellent&#13;
"A few yean beck. in the late&#13;
sixties. fields i.n indu try ....·ere&#13;
overcrowded. so majors In that&#13;
area started droppmg off """.&#13;
hovre\'er, many po5lhons are&#13;
opening up agaIn, but the number&#13;
of graduates to fill them are&#13;
down."&#13;
AC.TIoI'-LlJ', D"Vf..&#13;
I. PREFER To&#13;
UJ.IEVE ..,.Ol.l',:I£&#13;
A Frc;.l"'Iff'lT OF you.R&#13;
O'-JN IMAGINATION!&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5707 - S~_,&#13;
1C.... h&#13;
Wednesdlly, OCt. 10, "73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' _.:"ne _eme ....... ~ ,.IIl_" RA: h&#13;
tie... wtlb Gmnu4_n'lcea«rW:.tedn .•,P............&#13;
Ills&amp;«) , G...... Tiltr$ art Ia,_.&#13;
~8anH .. _&#13;
The Women·, UheralJOn !&gt;lo,-ement .n ID~ly.....-J ud&#13;
political effort. Because at thIS personal , are ol1en .....&#13;
fusmg to ~ not actl ·01)' In,·oI,·ed In th !&gt;lO''''' t (and ev Ia&#13;
those in tho ,anguardsl, In R.btr1b 0' Fe mill m by Judith Hole and&#13;
Ellen Levine, there IS an attempt mado to cJanfy UIl whal Ihe&#13;
. lo,ement IS all a It IS ,aluabl. Ia e' ryo .... In or cuI 01 Ihe&#13;
. tovemenl&#13;
··ThISboolt IS a Sludy of the l'OSIU1l&#13;
ates - a ~ and anal) of&#13;
de,elopment. pIulosophical thinkmg.&#13;
omen' mo\'ement'"&#13;
In Pan two, tlOOfi,e. "R stanc:e to th '&gt;'om n'l Movern&lt;Ill&#13;
the authors c:ons.der _. ndicule IS used to dl&#13;
MO\'ement'&#13;
"The label'bra-bum ... ,' an h oncally IDaccurat one ongmaled&#13;
lth med1a cmerage at the . I Am na prot t dtmon&#13;
'tratlon 10 t . The organIUn at that demonstration had up a&#13;
tra can In ",lueh arocl ·mbohall repr.-&gt;tatl 01 fomiJl ty&#13;
ere Iabe dlSC&amp;rded Bf8SS1 ere 00 01 th ed items&#13;
one of se,..,raJ artlcl .. at cIothinll h,ch' lOct • th act at d rdinI&#13;
them wa meant Ia....... • pohtlcal m phor for the rej 101\ 01 aU&#13;
restr1cllons and Impllot 10 lbe tr.dltlonally a~ dtflDltiona of&#13;
'the femlO1Oewoman' ,The phra ·bra·bum ... • wa fIldmUy&#13;
pro''0C8t1,.• Iamak. headlmes, and ",th d) llI&amp; b) the media&#13;
tele\1 ion. ramo. magaZJ.ne'5,. ne"A-spapel"'S - II eo.:en med an&#13;
IuSloncal ..... lIt) In all ca , Its usa e, tfllllbly a a t 1........ 01&#13;
'(act" or descnpIJon. sen·ed Ia ndlcul ..&#13;
Rtbirtb IS a goldmlDe at &lt;locumen and background Informal*!&#13;
,,1uch are essential Ia make any ratJonal )Udgemen .boul Ihe&#13;
l. 'o\'ement There 15a comprehensl\ cllronolog)' of lmporu.- t'Yeata&#13;
Sl1lCet96l. th.-·declaratlon 01 sentiments" from the I" Sentca Falll&#13;
co.wention. the rer:ommendatlollO from Prelldonl Kennedy'l I&#13;
CommlSSlOnon the tatus 01 '&gt;'omen, the BIll of !Ugh compoeed In&#13;
t by the , 'ational OrgaruZ8uon for Women and the maNf Ia of the&#13;
..... Yorl&lt;.radical famlnlSts.&#13;
RtbirtII is a . ·ew Yorl&lt;.TIm.. boolt 10 auooatlon ..,th CBS&#13;
and has a reporter·, Objecl.Vlty Guy, WIth tend« wholhiDlllbe&#13;
basIS for f..",n1S1l11Sa uOlled dlShke for m n." 111 g Uyben&lt;ftl from&#13;
.. en a cursory examl1lauon at the book The element 01 hoWlIly ol1en&#13;
found In femlOlStlIunture ISrereshmgly l.acltlr~ In Re~,&#13;
In Part t"'O, Section fcur. •·...emlOlSt SocIal Cnuque," the .... of&#13;
chi\'aJry is examined&#13;
"Proper behaVIor for • man demands thai ant show 0IIllfClaI&#13;
c'Ou:rtes) and consu:leration to "omen Anu·' muUs parlIcularly&#13;
Irl&lt;.edby lhe femln t re)&lt;Ction 01 the lO&lt;&amp;lIed 'ruc«IeI •&#13;
The) argue that qutStlOlllDg forma of common coun mche&#13;
tts ho.. ununportanl the "OllIttI' mo' menl IS In femlnlat&#13;
anal) • _ .. er. It IS quIte cI r that the .pphcauon 01 a cIaubW&#13;
standard,andch"·aIry I poht Ifonnul.tiOll. bothanelljii ,'on&#13;
0( and remforum ... t for ·roIe tereotypong, th at lam&#13;
Femuusts also oot. tllat f d~m and for othtn ..... Ia be&#13;
""",all -,-.Iued bolll" Ioral pauern • then court Y. I • opt&gt;1 of&#13;
doors, shauld bo .xtended to all ard1 0( . ..&#13;
Hole and Lt ,ne SlK:c:eed ",.th OYlO colon In ther .tl&#13;
untangle th m of shaulln 'C1I of Uber lion U ,cu&#13;
readon.bookaboutth 10' mentln)ourhf .1 t 'th&#13;
at femnuI'" In lilt n led&#13;
the CJI1IIlIS. IIl2aIiooaI&#13;
.nd Ictlvlti of t.hf. new&#13;
New Extension&#13;
course oHered&#13;
Cor\t.tn Kin, Par&#13;
teachllll the coorso&#13;
'I'\Iesda l·. Oc tober 16&#13;
muu rators club p lden. and oth&#13;
the prl1lClpI at group chsc IOn.&#13;
parllamentaf) proce&lt;lure, ",til tmphasl&#13;
,.,og and dtclSlOll malung&#13;
CAROL Y. COLE, 1. w&#13;
announ,os Ihe opening of office&lt; for the practice of&#13;
eLI 'ICAL OCIAL~· ORK&#13;
JnJIl'.duol :110"101. and 1'...,,,ly COll",dm4&#13;
BeI'OI',oro/ Prot'/ems 01 0,,1.1, en&#13;
s~.. , bin Slr~&#13;
Racine&#13;
Houn ~, ~rromtmcnt&#13;
614·771 t&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the editors: . . This goddam minority&#13;
ruitment makes college a&#13;
~ockery. What makes these lowademorons&#13;
so special that they&#13;
gr th" t . ill go out of err way o recruit&#13;
:em and then lower admission&#13;
standards. That's right I should&#13;
have known the government and&#13;
that mon~y-gr~bb~ng administration&#13;
1s beh_md 1t ~l. They&#13;
will stoop to anythmg to mcrease&#13;
enrollment ($). Hoo-haha so all&#13;
men are created equal - haha?&#13;
Well it is a hard act to follow&#13;
when you clean up_ the streets and .&#13;
turn these beasts mto professors.&#13;
What have you got up your sleeve&#13;
as a sequal? Since admission&#13;
standards flew out the door and&#13;
off the floor with your brains why&#13;
not offer a course in Brain&#13;
Surgery For Fun Or Profit.&#13;
Another killer that gets my gut&#13;
is this bit about these black&#13;
students being dissatisfied&#13;
because Parkside offers as they&#13;
say; "nothing relevant to their&#13;
lifestyle." What do _the_y want a course in Head Shrmkmg Made&#13;
Easy? Madison had cour~es a?d&#13;
organizations in Pan-Africans1m&#13;
and they went defunct because 1.&#13;
lack of student interest 2. it was&#13;
determined that if you cater to&#13;
every whim and whi~ of one&#13;
ethnic group you are obligated by&#13;
the nature of democracy to erve&#13;
all other ethnic group a well&#13;
such a~ German, French, Jewi h&#13;
etc. It is not the American pirit&#13;
of democracy to promote a return&#13;
to ethnocentricity. Thank God _&#13;
for there are a lot of people unlike&#13;
the Blacks, Mexicans, Jews etc. _ who don't have a distinguishing&#13;
cultural tradition to return to.&#13;
Whe_n will people realize&#13;
America has a beautiful tradition&#13;
and history of its own _ something&#13;
common to one and all?&#13;
Last but not least is this line&#13;
about minority faculty quotas. Sure I support Equal Employment&#13;
Opportunities - but not&#13;
at the expense of reducing&#13;
requirements but rather in increasing&#13;
skills and qualifications.&#13;
I hope the administration sticks&#13;
to its guns on this policy or&#13;
Parkside won't have a working&#13;
brain cell to its name!&#13;
. Excuse me I'm feeling sick and&#13;
the first symptom is thinking . ·&#13;
Stacy Postier&#13;
Kenosha Sophomore&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Re your front page article&#13;
'Jennett heads PSGA' in the i ue&#13;
of 3 Oct.&#13;
Tom Jennett has not been&#13;
appointed President of PSGA by&#13;
SMI changes&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Building (second and third&#13;
levels)" said Moy. He added that&#13;
the first floor would facilitate&#13;
engineering science labs later&#13;
this semester.&#13;
Academic changes&#13;
The biggest changes, though,&#13;
have occurred academically. In&#13;
the school's second division,&#13;
Business Management, a new&#13;
cooperative program is being set&#13;
up similar to the one already&#13;
existing in Applied Science and&#13;
Technology.&#13;
"The C(r()p is a planned and&#13;
supervised educational progra_m,&#13;
which consists of alternatmg&#13;
semesters of classroom instruction&#13;
with off-campus work&#13;
experience," Moy said.&#13;
"Students become eligible for&#13;
this program after the completion&#13;
of their sophomore_year:"&#13;
Another new expansion m&#13;
Business Management is "the&#13;
internship program." Its puri:x:ise&#13;
is to relate courses to outside&#13;
working conditions, during the&#13;
same semester.&#13;
Due to new facilities at&#13;
Parkside, this program, along&#13;
with others will utilize more&#13;
space here. The School of Mod~rn&#13;
Industry will have an accountmg&#13;
lab available to them, plus&#13;
everal small production&#13;
equipment labs.&#13;
With continued building, new&#13;
taff members are needed to fill&#13;
these areas.&#13;
One of three recently recruited&#13;
teachers in Business&#13;
Management is Ron Singer, who&#13;
is teaching Legal Environment of&#13;
Business. Singer, former attorney&#13;
general of New York&#13;
late, is also advisor of&#13;
Parkside's Pre-Law Club.&#13;
The first full-time teacher iri&#13;
marketing is Richard Yanzito.&#13;
He has done extensive traveling&#13;
pertaining to his field throughout&#13;
Switzerland, Germany. and&#13;
Europe in general.&#13;
Jim Polczynski, the third new&#13;
instructor, teaches Principles of&#13;
Management. Polczynski&#13;
graduated last year fro!ll&#13;
Madison with a rnA m&#13;
organizational managem_ent. . Both divisions of Engmeenng&#13;
Science and Business&#13;
Management have made ~bstantial&#13;
changes in graduation&#13;
requirements, as outlined in thi&#13;
year's 1973-74 catalogue.&#13;
"Generally, requirements have&#13;
broadened, so as to avoid overspecialization,"&#13;
said Joy. ., An "18-credit elective pack&#13;
highlights these changes. It i_ designed so that students can it&#13;
down with an advi or, and try to&#13;
put together a set of coursE;S&#13;
corresponding with that tudent&#13;
academic goals. Field Experience&#13;
Besides on-campu . cour . '&#13;
field'experience help m reach,&#13;
these goals. . . . . In the Engineering dm ion: a&#13;
Computer Control course ' bemg&#13;
offered at Dynamatic m Keno _ha&#13;
this fall. Last year an accounting&#13;
course was taught the~e. 11&#13;
Field experience in ma&#13;
Business fanagement, on of the&#13;
hool's nine ne\~ coui_- e&#13;
SC • ' bum&#13;
centers on Ra_cme ed bv&#13;
community. It ' sponsor - Racine's Environment Co_m· d the Racine mittee an .. Manufacturers' A oc1ation.&#13;
nator&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5707 - Sin~ •·&#13;
Ke esh&#13;
Wedn sday, Oct. JO, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 3&#13;
th&#13;
0 m&#13;
ew Extens·on&#13;
course offered&#13;
. R&#13;
.4 &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 10, 1973&#13;
Ranger&#13;
classlfleds&#13;
H ••• ". ,t ••••"', w,,_ .((:."11_,, ,....... "at,.... c.atl U1 M62 ..,.... ,&#13;
• oa SAL. o. ~ rK:et'dM'..... I.e&#13;
......... ,. C6M m·"'" aftw ,&#13;
IdtwtMII ~... U" 'ra". ....&#13;
~ ........ 1 ...... c,1t Qtnll S&#13;
....&#13;
................... ...., ..... .-.::==. .....,... lit ... t. .. , wtw...., ....&#13;
~ ... "... h-. MWfl' •• fill ... ,.tt """••• •· ·., ... It.,.. ua a'aay ... ~I ......&#13;
........... dlI&amp;Mf ,.. ItMiNIt .....,..&#13;
Oftk;t LLC0'_&#13;
•• s... K ......... .., "&#13;
~_~ 21a_ ....&#13;
••&#13;
,. s... It'n ""--"" V •• l c......&#13;
~'*' •...., ,1 ...&#13;
"'*"YoM. ca"'f« .. ..- ~&#13;
rr....,..-t '1 ..... flt'M ,"",n&#13;
......... .,. fiKIl en. ""IC.&#13;
• 'U. ("I"" _ ....,.e ,"I&#13;
......... .,. fill ., ' ..&#13;
W1l'."TER BREAK&#13;
• J . 2·10. $2&amp;9 p""mTalla.$«'Yl&lt;t&#13;
8MH on.3 to • Room&#13;
• ROUND TRIP J."&#13;
• 1 NIGHTS OUTRIGGeR&#13;
wen&#13;
• 0." (tTY TOUR&#13;
• Flowl. La, G•• nING&#13;
• gROUND ' •• "iF,.S&#13;
• Toua ttOS"T s•• vlcas&#13;
• "LL TIP' &amp; TAXIS&#13;
For ~k •• 1On fOrm&#13;
CAM.~ 'UVII. CI"' ••&#13;
I,.LC DIn&#13;
Brief news&#13;
In their meeting of October 7, Parkside gtudent Government&#13;
Association IPSGAJ decided to bring to students a referendum which&#13;
I1lCludesthe following changes in the p,sGA constilution. I. Spring&#13;
elections will be held on the second Tuesday and Wednesday io Aprtl&#13;
and tndlviduals will take office on graduation day. 12. A quorum of&#13;
t,,&lt;Hhirds of those elected must be Parkside students. Individuals not&#13;
receiviog enough votes to be elected will become alternates. U a&#13;
quorum cannot be met at any particular meeting an alternate will fill&#13;
in. 3. Both secretaries will be combined into one non~lective office,&#13;
appointed by the President with the senate's approval. 4. The student&#13;
wuco committee will be stricken from the senate.&#13;
Ten per cent of the student body must sign a petition requesting the&#13;
above named referendum. The petition will be out next week .&#13;
Elections for this year's PSGA will be held on November 13 and 14.&#13;
Anyooe ioterested in running for PSGA offices may pick up a&#13;
nominating petitioo in the PSGA office, LLCD 193.&#13;
*&#13;
U you like good music, ~n reserve 8 p.m. on November 8th.&#13;
Trumpet player Maynard Ferguson will be appearing at the Com'&#13;
munication Arts Theater. Tickets will cost $3 for students and $4 for&#13;
the Public. ThISis expected to be a sell out, but students will be given&#13;
rlf'Stchance at buying tickets. The In/ormation center will be selling&#13;
tlckets for one week, starting Oct. 15.After that the remaioing tickets&#13;
... ill be turned over to public outlets.&#13;
TIle first annual that Parkside has ever had&#13;
'"&#13;
will be organized&#13;
starting this Thursday and Friday io Library Learniog center 0·173.&#13;
Students interested in joining may come to any of the two meetings,&#13;
"luch will be held at 4 p.m. 00 Thursday and 10a.m. on Friday.&#13;
TIle meetings "ill be used to elecl ollicers, inform members about&#13;
thell" jobs on the yearbook, talk about plans and set up deadlines for&#13;
copy, and evaluation of the work of publishers' representatives. who&#13;
...ill be at both meetings.&#13;
Students not able to attend the meetings may contact either Ken&#13;
Konkol at 553-2244 or Bruce Wagner at 552·9462, for further ioformation.&#13;
TIle weekend October 26-28 PAS and Ragtime Rangers are spon-&#13;
*&#13;
sormg an ~bng to Louisville, KenluCky. TIle trip includes lodging,&#13;
hayrtde, rtverboat party, Churchill Downs tour, horse raciog, a&#13;
football game and a party at the stadlum. Car pools will be formed All&#13;
of thIS for $7.00 plus gas. Sign up in the Student Activities Olfice LL'C&#13;
0197. '&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop :he._ Racine&#13;
5!8-5ftth St.. Kenosha&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer $2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
()\Mle~s 75C&#13;
G,('~ 1~.issi8. willi v Parksi~e1.0,&#13;
BAR LIVE MUSICI&#13;
W"., Fri., Sat.&#13;
BOOGIE MAN&#13;
Oct. 10, 12. 13&#13;
00 the south side of Hwy SO,east of Hwy 31.&#13;
United Migrant opportunity Service (UMOSl will bold their annual&#13;
*&#13;
meeting and banquet on Sahlrday, October 13 at 7 p.m. 10 Union Hall&#13;
at UW_Milwaukee. 'The mam speaker ~ll be U.S. Senator Gaylord&#13;
Nelson. There will be a dance WIth Mar-iachi Azteca and Oscar Ma&#13;
tinez and Orchestra. 'There are a limited number of tickets availabf"&#13;
and they may be obtained from Wayne Ramierz in Tallent Hall 'l:l5&#13;
e&#13;
Tickets are $5. ~ * .&#13;
TIle Ragtime Rangers are planning a ski trip to Steamboat Springs&#13;
Colorado, January 2 thru 7. Anyone who wants to go but needs SOm'&#13;
extra cash is .invit~ to get together WIth us to wash a North Centra~&#13;
Airlioes Jet 10 Milwaukee. We need about 30 people and we will&#13;
automatically make $801),'The m?ney will be applied to your trip. U&#13;
ioterested sign up in the Studenl LIfe OfIice LLC 0197 .&#13;
'!be Federal Services .Entrance Exam, commonly referred&#13;
*&#13;
to as the&#13;
Civil Service Exam, will be offered saturday (Oct. 13) in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall. 'The test is scheduled to start al 8:30 a.m. No advance signup is&#13;
necessary. Other Civil Service Exams will also be given Nov. 10and&#13;
Jan 12, 1974, at the same time and place.&#13;
For further information, contact the Parkside Placement Office at&#13;
(553-2452.&#13;
*&#13;
The iron list of the law is being strengthened in Racioe County.&#13;
Last Tuesday Racine's city council ,rushed .through an ordinance of&#13;
City Attorney Jack Harvey and Racme Pohce Chief Donald Dodge&#13;
that prohibits drinking of alcoholic beverages on that city's streets and&#13;
sidewalks, as well as parked motor vehicles.&#13;
Dodge, did point ~ut, however. that .~e ordinan~e would be ignored&#13;
on certam days durmg the year when It would be Impossible to arrest&#13;
the great number of people" who would be drinking.&#13;
Harvey and Dodge said the ordinance would help the city clam&#13;
down on crime in certain areas of the city: The problem arises, th~&#13;
say, when persons other than patrons of taverns gather around&#13;
taverns for the purpose of causing trouble. Up until now, Racioe Police&#13;
had little they could do to curb the trouble makers.&#13;
In September the Racioe county board approved a county ordinance&#13;
which prohibits the picketing of an individual's home. TIle ordinance&#13;
does not appear to interfere with picketing at a place of employment&#13;
Rationalization for the ordinance was summed up by Superv~&#13;
Dennis Kornwolf when he said the supervisors were concerned with&#13;
family members io the homes being picketed.&#13;
*&#13;
Tickets will go on sale Wednesday, Oct. 10 for the three act play&#13;
"The Virus" by Parkside Professor of English Herbert Kubly. Tickets&#13;
can be purchased at the Information Kiosk for $1.SO(students) and&#13;
will be sold to the general public starting Monday, Oct. 15 for $3. The&#13;
play will be performed Nov. 1,2,3, and 4 in the Comm Arts Tbeater.&#13;
A volunteer is needed to assist a handicapped student&#13;
*&#13;
in getting in&#13;
and out of an automobile. This would. involve only one hour of your&#13;
time as follows: MWF 9:00 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. and on 'ITH 9:30 a.m.&#13;
and 4: 15p.m. U you can help at any or all of these times please coo·&#13;
tact the Student Health Ollice DI98 LLC. '&#13;
Parkside Young Republicans will be meeting Wed. October 17 at&#13;
*&#13;
3:3Otn LLC 0-174. A Constitution Committee meeting will precede it at&#13;
2:30.&#13;
*&#13;
There will ~ a Debate and Forensics meeting today from 3:30-4:1)&#13;
p.m. and tomorrow, Thursday, October 11 from 4'30-5'30 p m in 0-&#13;
liO of the library. All interested should attend one 6f th;"e ~';'tings.&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
featuring&#13;
Back by Popular Demand&#13;
DADDY WHISKERS&#13;
Sat., Oct. 13 9:00 -1:00&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. J.D.s Required&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Whed;;ne;;sda~;.y ,~OcOcit~. 1110~,119:977331 ______________________________ _&#13;
*&#13;
Ranger&#13;
classlf leds&#13;
ll lTER BREAK&#13;
• J '. 2-10.&#13;
$269&#13;
tt d the m ting may contact either Ken&#13;
Bruce Wagner at 552-9462. for further in-&#13;
*&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
518-56th St .. Kenosha&#13;
CHEAP DRUNK SPECIAL&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
Monday - Beer s2 Mixed Drinks $4&#13;
LIVE MUSIC!&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
BOOGIE MAN&#13;
Oet. 10, 12, 13 on th south id ofH y 50, east ofHwy 31.&#13;
United Migrant Opportunity Service (UMOS) will hol~ their annual&#13;
meeting and banquet on Sat_urday, Octob~r 13 at 7 p.m. m Union Hall&#13;
at UW-Milwaukee. The main s~aker ~ll ~e U.S. Senator Gaylord&#13;
Nelson. There will be a dance wit~ ~ar1ach1 Azteca and Oscar Martinez&#13;
and Orchestra. There are a bm1ted number of tickets availabl&#13;
and they may be obtained from Wayne Ramierz in Tallent Hall 235~&#13;
Tickets are $5. ... *&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are planning a ski trip to Steamboat Springs&#13;
Colorado, January 2 thru 7. Anyone w~o wants to go but needs som'&#13;
extra cash is invited to get together with us to wash a North Centra~&#13;
Airlines Jet in Milwaukee. We need a?out 30 ~ple and we Wi.11&#13;
automatically ma~e $800. The m~ney ":ill be applied to your trip. If&#13;
interested sign up m the Student Life Office LLC D197.&#13;
The Federal Services Entrance Exam, * commonly referred to as the&#13;
Civil Service Exam, will be offered Saturday (Oct. 13) in Room 101&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
The test is scheduled to start at 8:30 a.m. No advance signup is&#13;
necessary. Other Civil Service Exams will also be given Nov. 10 and&#13;
Jan 12, 1974, at the same time and place.&#13;
For further information, contact the Parkside Placement Office at&#13;
(553-2452. *&#13;
The iron fist of the law is being strengthened in Racine County.&#13;
Last Tuesday Racine's city council _rushed .throu~h an ordinance of&#13;
City Attorney Jack Harvey and Racine Pohce Chief Donald Dodge&#13;
that prohibits drinking of alcoholic beverages on that city's streets and&#13;
sidewalks, as well as parked motor vehicles. Dodge did point out, however, that the ordinance would be ignored&#13;
on certain days during the year when "it would be impossible to arrest&#13;
the great number of people" who would be drinking.&#13;
Harvey and Dodge said the ordinance would help the city clamp&#13;
down on crime in certain areas of the city. The problem arises, they&#13;
say, when persons other than patrons of taverns gather around&#13;
taverns for the purpose of causing trouble. Up until now, Racine Police&#13;
had little they could do to curb the trouble makers.&#13;
In September the Racine county board approved a county ordinance&#13;
which prohibits the picketing of an individual's home. The ordinance&#13;
does not appear to interfere with picketing at a place of employment&#13;
Rationalization for the ordinance was summed up by Superviso;&#13;
Dennis Kornwolf when he said the supervisors were concerned with&#13;
family members in the homes being picketed.&#13;
* "Tick~ts ~ go on ~ale Wednesday, Oct. 10 for the three act play&#13;
The Virus by Parkside Professor of English Herbert Kubly. Tickets&#13;
~n be purchased at the Information Kiosk for $1.50 (students) and&#13;
will be .sold to the general public starting Monday, Oct. 15 for $3. The&#13;
play will be performed Nov. 1, 2, 3, and 4 in the Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
* A volunteer is needed to assist a handicapped student in getting in&#13;
and out of an automobile. This would involve only one hour of your&#13;
time as follows: MWF 9:00 a .m . and 10:45 a.m. and on TI'H 9:30 a.m.&#13;
and 4: 15 p.m. If you can help at any or all of these times, please contact&#13;
the Student Health Office D198 LLC.&#13;
Pa_rkside Young Republicans will * be meeting Wed. October 17 at&#13;
3:30m LLC D-174. A Constitution Committee meeting will precede it at&#13;
2:30.&#13;
* There will~ a Debate and Forensics meeting today from 3:30-4:30&#13;
p.m. and tomorrow, Thursday, October 11 from 4·30-5·30 pm in D&#13;
110 of the library. All interested should attend one ~f th~e ~~tings:&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
A DANCE&#13;
featuring&#13;
Back by Popular Demand&#13;
DADDY WHISKERS&#13;
Sat., Oct. 13 •150 9:00 -1:00&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. I.D.s Required &#13;
Pre-Law Oub advisor Ron Singer ()ef~ith&#13;
Tubbergen. student Wayne Van·&#13;
Pre-law strives to inform&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
n asked for more information about his club.&#13;
~w student Wayne Van Tubbergen's first&#13;
pre- 'onwas that the club had been "dead" for the&#13;
rf.8cbtwO or three semesters and was now re-&#13;
:::anizing. RANGER'S search for club news has&#13;
"", .. led this to be the case with many Parkside&#13;
dUbs. ofthe reason for this may be that it doesn't&#13;
~Uch to beCOmean official organization. All&#13;
t is required are the names of three mterested&#13;
:dents and the signature of an adVIsor. Thus. the&#13;
anization exists on paper even though Its :"berS mayhave graduated or lost interest after&#13;
the fll'Stmeeting" .&#13;
()1ce officially organized, however, keepmg a&#13;
dubaclive requires quite a bit of effort on the part&#13;
ci itsmemberSand advisor. Just getting a meeting&#13;
room requires filling out a form. contacting a&#13;
sometimes illusive advisor for his signature again&#13;
and then finding, as Pre-Law did. that the room is&#13;
lodted anyway.&#13;
Publicity also takes planning and sometimes&#13;
sheer perseverance. Duplication of posters means&#13;
filling out another form and, in some cases, obIainin~the&#13;
signature of Assistant Dean of Students&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger. The posters must then be&#13;
clstributed throughout the campus; in many cases&#13;
10 be torn down the day after by students&#13;
cisagreeingwith the purpose of the club (or maybe&#13;
by those who just have need of a paper airplane!).&#13;
RANGERprovides free publicity if the information&#13;
reaches our office before Thursday.&#13;
Pre-Law, however, seemed to have conquered&#13;
Ihesoproblems as tIl,ey got off to a fresh start at&#13;
Iheirmeeting of OCtober 2. They decided not to elect&#13;
permanent officers, but rather to assign responWednesday,&#13;
OCt. 10. 1973 THE! PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
sibilit~ as their activities required.&#13;
A.dvlsor Ron Singer, a lawyer and fanner&#13;
~:~:stant to the. New York state attorney general,&#13;
ed the meetmg to order. He suggested several&#13;
cour~es the group might pursue, which were widely&#13;
recelv~d. The general direction seemed to be inforrnatfonal,&#13;
with tours of local courts. jails and the&#13;
Wisconsin S.upreme Court being planned, as well as&#13;
the schedulmg of speakers of interest both to club&#13;
members and the student body. Other ideas in·&#13;
cluded maintenance of a scrap book of articles&#13;
relevant ~ pre-law students and observation of the&#13;
small claIms cases being brought by Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Although, in many cases there were no definite&#13;
~tatistics available, RANGER was able to get some&#13;
Idea of what being a pre-law student is like. As with&#13;
pre-med there ,is no required undergraduate major,&#13;
but the club Wlll attempt to steer its members into&#13;
courses which may help them on the Law School&#13;
Admission Test or after they have been accepted to&#13;
a law school. The LSAT is unlike the pre-med exam&#13;
m that all information is provided, with the student&#13;
applying his-her knowledge and common sense in&#13;
reaching an answer&#13;
According to Singer. most people with satisfactory&#13;
grades - that is. 3.00 or better and an LSAT&#13;
score of 550 (out of 800) - could be accepted to a law&#13;
school. Some law schools are. of course. considered&#13;
better than others. with the ISO schools accredited&#13;
by the American Bar Association amoog the more&#13;
reputable. "Very few students can pick and choose&#13;
between them - it is competitive," he stated.&#13;
Singer also said that the in-state schools at&#13;
Madison and Marquette were probably tbe best&#13;
chofces since graduation guarantees automatic&#13;
acceptance to the state bar.&#13;
STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10-9&#13;
SUN. 10-6&#13;
Pho... 6~8063&#13;
Itls whatls happening&#13;
"ednuday. Oct. It: The \\o1uteskellar IS ha"na audJUOll5at I pm&#13;
Everyone is 'lli elcome.&#13;
WedMsday. oei. 18: PAB ponsonng the movie ". uperman"&#13;
Creenquist Hall tecrure Room 103 at 7::10 p.m Adm on 7&gt; ct!II&#13;
Thursday. Oct. It: MeetUlll of aU minonly llJden at 12'4$ In&#13;
Greenqwst Hall Lecture Room t03&#13;
Saturday. Oct. 13: PAB sponsonng a dan Wlth"Oadd Wh&#13;
in AB from 9 pm to t am Adm' Ion IS8150 and lO,a requIred&#13;
turday. Oct. 13: PAB·Ragtime Rangers ponJOI" bus trtp to&#13;
Wisconsm vs. OhIO State foocbaU game, Bus ride and pme tid&lt;e\ II&#13;
810. ign up in Student Acuvuies oIfice u.C 0197&#13;
Thursday. Oct. 18: Theatre X 10 Comm Arts Theatre at 8 pm&#13;
Tickets are $1 at the door&#13;
Salurday. Oct. ZlI: gmi PI FraternIty presentinC. dance feolUnng&#13;
"McHenry" atSAB from 9p,m. to 10 m AdmisSion 8150&#13;
Sunday. Oct. %1: Road Railey ponoored by PAB·Ragtlm Rang ....&#13;
Registration at noon l1\ the east 101&#13;
Friday. Salurday. Sunday. Oct. !So!S: Ouung 10 Lou ville. Kentucky,&#13;
For more informabon see BRIEF NEW or conLlet SWclenI&#13;
Activities Ollice u.c D 197.&#13;
All items fOC" IT'S \\HAT' HAPPE~'" 'C boold be .. ballad I.&#13;
RA.'CER by noon "ed. prior'" pubtlcatloa &lt;I tho e In .. 1lIc:~"&#13;
Item i to a~ar_&#13;
Buenker opens&#13;
•&#13;
lecture series&#13;
The CLIO A sociation's&#13;
inaugural lecture series on "The&#13;
Humanities in an Industrial&#13;
Society" will open al Parkside on&#13;
Ocl, 11 "'ilh • ta1It titled&#13;
"Coalition Politics: The Key to&#13;
Progressh'e Era Reform" by&#13;
John Buenker, a odale&#13;
professor of hlStOlj' al '.p The&#13;
7: 30 p_m lecture ","ill be l1\ the&#13;
Library third Door level.&#13;
Buenker. who receved hIS Ph ,-&#13;
D. degree in histor)l £rom&#13;
GeorgetO'M""'D Universit)', i an&#13;
authority on the ProgressIve Era&#13;
and ",as the rectplent of the&#13;
minois LIte Histoncal Society&#13;
award for the most outsl8J1dUlll&#13;
article lltIbllShed l1\ the society's&#13;
JOUrnal dunng 1970,&#13;
The CLIO Association IS an&#13;
international organization&#13;
connected y,.ith 'CLlO: A1110&#13;
terdiscipHnaf}' Journal of&#13;
. ..&#13;
..&#13;
Time ../&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
WhwI '10'1 own a~"IIl. man tt_ tor ~ ..... ~"Inf"'" ~ In fbi pnaI- S-O- ....&#13;
... ~ of tt-.~. doe 1M -~ ...&#13;
a-oS 'lMn ..... at do tbI_ ~ teAl .....&#13;
I.". theft. noth!ftl· • ...., ""'" • e.rcttwood Cundo ..&#13;
RUDY FOR 1••• DlATa OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $27,000&#13;
TtltfIQIBIfd'twoMT................ .... ~&#13;
Now S..,.........- R....-Stytl ...... _rM¥ .. ..,-f"Ul ta&#13;
,...&#13;
• At , L.&gt;t.-_ ...... ~ ........&#13;
• (~r · - • F_ ........ ."._&#13;
~ . , -......, .~-...................&#13;
• e-.lnIFMITV_ • "-",,,,-._ • s.t-~1"""&#13;
...................... , ......-.. ............. ,....~ ....&#13;
• ....... -.-.,... • e-tW'J~ - --&#13;
MORf BIRCHWOOD HOMES READY SEPlE.IER 1S ; ..~&#13;
2 r..--S31. 3...... T_.....m...... S3C.- 4&#13;
1 ~ RaMtl $tytI 11.... t. S2.1._ ....,.._r __ .... ~_. __&#13;
""_rrhe __ ..,,.__ r&#13;
DECORATED AIIlD fURNI$I4£D IIIIOO£U&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
For ""OA' ",fonNl.J(lIn&#13;
PHONE 1-552·9339&#13;
PlUI'K5CJE_ ..... , eo.-. REALTY we.&#13;
Literature, Hi tor)' and the&#13;
Phdosoph)' of HI tory" "'i&gt;ich ..&#13;
publIShed at Parltside and edlled&#13;
b). Parkslde facully memben&#13;
Robert Canary. Henry K.... clu.&#13;
Andr&lt;!w. IcLean and Oem ..&#13;
Dean&#13;
TMOR AVENUE UQUOR&#13;
t86S TIflor M., Racine •.&#13;
Sunple&#13;
slTo j·forword.&#13;
clossiC -001 of step&#13;
WI IodOv's&#13;
lhrowawov culture&#13;
Rehlo ecortridge.&#13;
be point Of fiber lip&#13;
marker IIIbasic on&#13;
Of rv:wv blue&#13;
5198 rot bod fof 0 pen&#13;
.,.ou may use the&#13;
restof~lfe&#13;
S198&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
It's what's happen·ng&#13;
Pre-Law Club advisor Ron Singer (left) with&#13;
Tubbergen. student Wayne Vanpre-law&#13;
strives to inforin&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
sked for more information about his club,&#13;
"~: student Wayne Van Tubbergen's first&#13;
pre·. was that the club had been "dead" for the&#13;
reacu: or three semesters and was now reb:i~izing.&#13;
RANGER'S search for club news has&#13;
:-ealed this to be the case with many Parkside&#13;
sibilit~ as their activities required.&#13;
..,&#13;
:r&#13;
0&#13;
;;&#13;
0-&#13;
"' • ..&#13;
•&#13;
:t&#13;
"'&#13;
:&#13;
t Ip m&#13;
~ 11'\ of the reason for this may be that it doesn't&#13;
taktmuch to becQme an official organi~ation. All&#13;
that is required are the names of th_ree mterested&#13;
J\dv1sor Ron Singer, a lav,,yer and former&#13;
assistant to the New York state attorney general&#13;
called the meeting t~ order. He suggested everai&#13;
cour~es the group might pursue, which were widely&#13;
rece1v~d. The general direction seemed to be info~mati~nal,&#13;
with tours of local courts, jail and the&#13;
W1sconsm S_upreme Court being planned, a well a&#13;
the scheduling of speakers of interest both to chili&#13;
members ~d the student body. Other ideas included&#13;
mamtenance of a scrap book of articles&#13;
relevant L&lt;;&gt; pre-law students and ob ervation of the&#13;
small claims cases being brought by Par ide&#13;
students.&#13;
Buenker opens&#13;
dents and the signature of an advisor. Thus, the&#13;
tu . th gh ·ts anization exists on paper even ou 1&#13;
org mbers may have graduated or lost interest after&#13;
• lecture series me . the first meeting. . . Once officially orga?1zed,. however, keepmg a&#13;
club active requires qwte a bit of effort on the part&#13;
of its members and advisor. Just getting a m~ting&#13;
room requires filling _out a fo~m,_ contactmg _a&#13;
metimes illusive advisor for ~1s signature agai_n&#13;
and then finding, as Pre-Law did, that the room 1s&#13;
locked anyway. Publicity also takes planning and sometimes&#13;
sheer perseverance. Duplication of posters means&#13;
filling out another form and, in some cases, obtaining&#13;
the signature of Assistant Dean of Students&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger. The posters must then be&#13;
distributed throughout the campus; in many cases&#13;
IO be torn down the day after by students&#13;
disagreeing with the purpose of the club (or maybe&#13;
by those who just have need of a paper airplane!).&#13;
RA: ·GER provides free publicity if the information&#13;
reaches our office before Thursday.&#13;
Pre-Law, however, seemed to have conquered&#13;
these problems as they got off to a fresh start at&#13;
their meeting of October 2. They decided not to elect&#13;
permanent officers, but rather to assign responAlthough,&#13;
in many cases, there were no definite&#13;
~tatistics available, RA.i'1GER was able to get some&#13;
idea of what being a pre-law student i like. As "ith&#13;
pre-med there_is no required undergraduate major,&#13;
but the club will attempt to steer its members into&#13;
courses which may help them on the Law Schooi&#13;
Admission Test or after they have been accepted to&#13;
~ law school. The LSAT is unlike the pre-med exam&#13;
m that all information is provided, v..ith the tudent&#13;
applying his-her knowledge and common sense in&#13;
reaching an answer&#13;
According to Singer, most people v.ith sati factory&#13;
grades - that is, 3.00 or better and an LSAT&#13;
score of 550 (out of 800) - could be accepted to a law&#13;
school. Some law schools are, of course, con idered&#13;
better than others, with the 150 schools accredited&#13;
by the American Bar Association among the more&#13;
reputable. "Very few student can pick and choo&#13;
between them - it is competitive," he tated.&#13;
Singer also said that the in- tale at&#13;
Madison and farquette were probably the be t&#13;
choices since graduation guarantee u ma ·&#13;
acceptance to the state bar.&#13;
TA1LOR AVENUE UQUOR&#13;
1865 Taylor /wt., Racine Wise.&#13;
STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10-9&#13;
SUN. 10-6&#13;
Phone 634-8063&#13;
dut wuuet •&#13;
.... - ... o&#13;
Time ../&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
-&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $2,4,500 to$27,000&#13;
3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
AND&#13;
6926 39th AVENUE&#13;
2 a.drNia T-H111•&#13;
1 llecfr-RI&#13;
Mr,.,.,.,..,.. YfNCM __.. ,..,_&#13;
,.,_,,,._ -&#13;
O£COIIAT£0 A O FURJjfSH(O MOOEU&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 eekends 1 to 5&#13;
$198 &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. OCt. 10. 1973&#13;
Power plant •••&#13;
e.... ,~~,...I&#13;
It' tso uneresung to note that at the end of a&#13;
nuclear power plants life time of 40 years, it is&#13;
,mply d. mantled and entombed in a block 01&#13;
Cf'Illenl&#13;
nuclear plant at Pans would have the capability&#13;
of producmg plutoruum 239 out of uranium 238&#13;
through the "breeder" acUIIO.Despite the economic&#13;
value of a lreeder creating its 0\\"11 fuel. it has the&#13;
drawback of not lmowing when to stop. Often&#13;
they will produce an excess 01up to 40 to 100 years 01&#13;
fuel m advance.&#13;
Among the other disadvantages of !he liquid&#13;
socbum-&lt;:ooledlast breeder are the lacts that tmlike&#13;
_Ier-cooled reactors, its fuel is about as higbly&#13;
ennched a 11\ bombs. its core is much more cornpact,&#13;
making great demands 011 coolanl properties&#13;
and !low rate, the very large amount 01 liquid&#13;
.o,bum , lughly combustible and would bum&#13;
lierdy in air or "''ater if us internal atmosphere&#13;
should Iail, and breeder reacton emit more&#13;
radiO' live particles in the air then pressurized&#13;
water reactors do.&#13;
Ra,boactl\'e particles m the air are less than ,&#13;
mllh that come direcu) lrom nuclear plants. The&#13;
,ncreased exposure to the average mdhndual is I....s&#13;
than I percent 01 the overall exposure to radia, ~.&#13;
em,tted lrom sol!, water. and cosmic particles,&#13;
medl al d,agnootic . and lallout lrom weapons teslS&#13;
lh t COMtltule an average of 100 La 150 mill1r'em per&#13;
lear It hould also be tated that coal-lire power&#13;
plant5 emil m urable amounts of radiation due to&#13;
the pr nee 01 naturally radioactive materials in&#13;
th coal&#13;
Firebaugh also added that natural Iossil fuel was&#13;
still more harmful than deadly plutonIum since&#13;
miners had no way 01telling where pOIsonouSgases&#13;
were under the surface. Air poUutlOn ~rom coal&#13;
operated power plants has been responsIble for 18&#13;
deaths per million persons per year, according to a&#13;
survey done for 1967 accidental death ~tatis.u~.&#13;
v.ilereas deaths from radiation and radIOactiVIty&#13;
were reported at zero, at that time.&#13;
Cole found little reasurance over the AEC safety&#13;
reports and said that as more and m?re nu~ear&#13;
reactors were built the chances o( a major accident&#13;
occuring became greater. Today there are 31i&#13;
nuclear power p1anlS in the nation and a predicted&#13;
1000 by !he year 2000. . .&#13;
"We must alllea.rn to use energy more effICIently&#13;
and cut down on as much waste as possible" was the&#13;
echoing statement from bol~ eJ:.lvir.onrnen.talists&#13;
Cole and Firebaugh. "This nation IS nded with too&#13;
heavy cars, low mileage from them, ~~ly lr:tsulated&#13;
glass buildings, not properly functionmg air&#13;
conditioners, and over-lighted cities." .&#13;
"Alternative energy through solar, wind, and&#13;
thermonuclear radiation sbould he looked into. U&#13;
we had spent as much on solar radiation as we did&#13;
on nuclear power we would have had half our&#13;
economy operat~ on solar energy by now,"&#13;
Cole. lncidentaly, the world's largest nuclear plant is&#13;
located in Zion,lllinois operating on 3,300 megawatts&#13;
and capable of transmitting power as far north as&#13;
Racine.&#13;
T&#13;
Also Nightly Entertainment&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
"MIKE SCOTT" ,......,...",....,.&#13;
College ight - Every Thursday&#13;
PItcher 01BEER - $1with J.D.&#13;
of K.notho Sl'U ,t+. Aw&#13;
Theatre X&#13;
to perform&#13;
here&#13;
THEATRE X of Milwaukee will&#13;
be at Parkside Thursday, Oct. 18&#13;
with their production X COMMUNICATION,&#13;
a comic revue of&#13;
satire and experiment.&#13;
THEATRE X is a professional&#13;
touring ensemble now in its (ifth&#13;
season. The company works with&#13;
an unusual combination of&#13;
comedy and modern ex·&#13;
perimental styles, with a goal of&#13;
communicating and sharing&#13;
responses to simple human experiences.&#13;
Many pieces have&#13;
evolved through feedback Irom&#13;
many kinds of audiences, and the&#13;
audience is always invited to stay&#13;
after the show to meet and talk&#13;
with the actors. Another unique&#13;
leature of THEATRE X is its&#13;
communal method of operation.&#13;
Al! members participate jointly&#13;
in performing, directing, writing,&#13;
and administration.&#13;
The THEATRE X tour is jointly&#13;
supported by the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Council and the National Endowment&#13;
for the Arts.&#13;
Their presentation will be at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm. Arts Theater.&#13;
The admission is $1 at the door.&#13;
WHAT'S WRONG PARTNER?&#13;
SHORT ON MONE1?&#13;
C'MON OVER&#13;
TO BONANZA&#13;
The Ral:en&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
GOATS HEAD SOU'P&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
(COC 59101)&#13;
From seeing the title of the album, the. poster, the name ci&#13;
opening song, and from hear-ing the mUSIC, It ~s obvious Uta Ilt&#13;
Rolling Stones are playing with voodoo again. Whether they are t lilt&#13;
so for gimmick or (or belief remams an interesting question AdIirtc&#13;
rate it has helped produce interesting results. . t IDJ&#13;
The first exposure brings a dark jungle scene upon the Iisteoor&#13;
where a strange man is "Dancing With Mr. D." A slow, des&#13;
guitar riflbegins plodding through the denseness and lead gUita,""'!'&#13;
spark ofl 01 peakS. The bass superbly underlies everything ocq,&#13;
Mick's voice evIly.snakes th~ough the who~eSatanic charm. "hiltI&#13;
Just like adjustmg a kale,doscope the Images change lrom .&#13;
impressions and settle down in a calm where the band quieUy~&#13;
tales of "100 Years Ago." Soon the music swells into full in .&#13;
Jagger plays an all-powerful wizard here, at o~ place h~&#13;
vibrantly summons up th~ .wa-wa gwta.r that IS meshed Witbl&#13;
keyboard. They portray VISIons 01 mag'c steam rising lrom lbl&#13;
ground.&#13;
Next we are led into a bluesy field where Keith performs solovOCI!l&#13;
inflecting tones from the downer Side of the mamc-depressive e&#13;
Just the right amou~t ~~ strange horns elaborate certain rearur:&#13;
"Coming Down Agam.&#13;
"Doo Don 000 Don 000. (Heartbreaker)" is a tough city, mil....&#13;
rocker which has Mlck tellIng about a city polIceman whoshOOt.-;:-\&#13;
in a case of mistaken identity. Mick sings, "Heartbreaker 1 ""&#13;
tear your world apart." Here Mick is using his evil powe; for&#13;
ends. It makes one wonder which is which, good or evil. Good and&#13;
are just labels attached to things but things change so no labelCaD&#13;
permanentlY descriptive of anyone thing. Swinging horns&#13;
guitar, and blues guitar help deliver the chorus to great heights'.&#13;
Mick's voice reaches a new kind o( sensitivity in "Angie"-eYenIII&#13;
most rigid 01soft ballad haters will probably find" Angie" touem..&#13;
soft spot in them.&#13;
Hard glitter rock approaches as a "Silver Train," "Silver ram&#13;
falling" and "silver bells" are heard all around. There are ..&#13;
structural reflections from "All Down the Line" but the choruI&#13;
much more developed and elaborated by its several parts.&#13;
"Hide Your Love" is based on old-time rhythm and blues. J&#13;
reacts fanatically to a skin-prickling lead guitar. He sings willi&#13;
grinding jaw as a speed-freak might. In a sense the song's essence&#13;
hyper-sensitive speed·freak orgasm.&#13;
There is even more unreal charm in "Winter," a majestic&#13;
number that has a pleasingly insane quality. Mick's voice is soul&#13;
as he fondles with each word before letting it out and placingit&#13;
suously. He commands a sky of strings punctuated by lead guillr&#13;
needed points. Like an angel in some fairy tale land, he cornel ~&#13;
saying "I just want to wrap my coat around you."&#13;
A clear distant tinkle and a weird flute conjuring Middle~&#13;
images introduce "Can You Here The Music." Then a vibrato rII&#13;
begins the full procession of the music. A croaky voice mock~&#13;
"can you here the music" in a position somewhere beyond.The.&#13;
chorus finds Mick "walking on air."&#13;
•'Star Star," a rocker with Chuck Berry influences, is a a.&#13;
dedicated to groupies. The real title which was changed bec:a.'&#13;
censors, was "Starfucker." The chorus comes out soundingmore"&#13;
"fuck a star, fuck a star, fuck a star." It is a beautifully mekJdiII&#13;
chorus tbat is intended to pay respect to all the quickies thegnqIli&#13;
bad on tours.&#13;
In GOATS HEAD SOUP the Stones are working with m....&#13;
perimental arrangements again, and much SATANIC MAJESTIID&#13;
luster comes through. The Stones are working with the slra,...&#13;
mysterious. Exploration into the unknown is sometimes channiDlsometimes&#13;
ugly. The Rolling Stones seem to have found beillty&#13;
mystery.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
CORRECTION: in last week's column, due to technical err.-&#13;
some sort, there was a fun-on sentence at the end. 'fbis Ib08W&#13;
been a new paragraph and should have read:&#13;
Even so, in another means of analysis, the bright stretch ~ tilt '"&#13;
three songs on side 2, "Turkey Chase," "Knocking on HeaveD'. ()III'&#13;
and "Final Theme:' make this soundtrack worth every peIUIylf.&#13;
price.&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973&#13;
Povver plant ...&#13;
Coll&#13;
Pit&#13;
51lS 61 A••&#13;
T&#13;
Firebaugh also added that natural fossil fuel was&#13;
till more harmful than deadly plutonium since&#13;
miners had no way of telling where poisonous gases&#13;
v.ere under the urface. Air pollution from coal&#13;
operated power plants has been responsibl~ for 18&#13;
deaths per million persons per year, accordin~ ~o a&#13;
urve · done for 1967 accidental death statistics,&#13;
·herea death from radiation and radioactivity&#13;
v.ere reported at 1.ero, at that time. Cole found little reasurance over the AEC safety&#13;
reports and said that as more and more nuclear&#13;
reactors were built the chances of a major accident&#13;
occuring became greater. Today there are 35&#13;
nuclear power plants in the nation and a predicted&#13;
1 by the year 2000. "We must all learn to use energy more efficiently&#13;
and cut down on as much waste as possible" was the&#13;
echoing tatement from both environmentalists&#13;
le and Firebaugh. "This nation is rided with too&#13;
heav) cars low mileage from them, poorly inated&#13;
gla building , not properly functioning air&#13;
cond1ti er and over-lighted cities."&#13;
" ternative energy through solar, wind, and&#13;
th rmonucl r radiation should be looked into. If&#13;
e h d pent a much on solar radiation as we did&#13;
on nu !ear wer, we would have had half our&#13;
m: operating on Jar energy by now,"&#13;
le.&#13;
lncidentaly. th \\Orld' large t nuclear plant is&#13;
locat din Lion, 11linoi operating on 3,300 megawatts&#13;
d c pabl of transmitting power as far north as&#13;
Racine.&#13;
l. II, I:?, 13&#13;
Theatre X&#13;
to perform&#13;
here&#13;
THEATRE X of Milwaukee will&#13;
be at Park ide Thursday, Oct. 18&#13;
with their production X COM-&#13;
• I , 'ICATIO , a comic revue of&#13;
satire and experiment.&#13;
THEATRE X is a professional&#13;
touring ensemble now in its fiftll&#13;
Also Nightly Entertainment&#13;
In Our Cocktail Lounge&#13;
ea n. The company works with&#13;
an unusual combination of&#13;
comedy and modern experimental&#13;
tyles, with a goal of&#13;
communicating and sharing&#13;
responses to simple human experiences.&#13;
fany pieces have&#13;
evolved through feedback from&#13;
many kinds of audiences and the&#13;
audience is always invited to stay&#13;
after the show to meet and talk&#13;
with the actors. Another unique&#13;
feature of THEATRE X is its&#13;
communal method of operation.&#13;
All mem~ participate jointly&#13;
m performing, directing, writing&#13;
and administration. '&#13;
.. •KE SCOTT" ,......, ,_,,.,.&#13;
• igh -E ·ery Thursday&#13;
ofBEER. Sl nth I.D.&#13;
of K•nosho&#13;
The THEATRE X tour is jointly&#13;
supported by the Wisconsin Arts&#13;
Council and tlle National Endo...,ment&#13;
for the Arts.&#13;
Their presentation will be at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm. Arts Theater.&#13;
The admission is $1 at the door.&#13;
WHATS WRONG PARTNER?&#13;
SHORT ON MONEY?&#13;
C'MON OVER&#13;
TO BONANZA&#13;
Steaks $129 ,&#13;
The Rai~P.n&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
GOATS HEAD SOUP&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
(COC 59101)&#13;
From seeing the title of the album, the poster, the na&#13;
opening song, and fro~ he~ing the m~ic, it is obviou:~ o{&#13;
Rolling Stones are playmg with voodoo agam. Whether the at so for gimmick or for belief remains an interesting questi are&#13;
rate it has helped produce interesting results. on. At&#13;
The first exposure brings a dark jungle scene upon th r&#13;
where a strange man is "Dancing With Mr. D." A slow ~ 1Slener&#13;
guitar riff begins plodding through the denseness and lead gu·ta&#13;
spark off of peaks. The bass superbly underlies everyth .&#13;
1 r l10tei&#13;
Mick's voice evily snakes through the whole Satanic charm ing&#13;
Just like adjusting a kaleidoscope the images change f~ .&#13;
impressions and settle down in a calm where the band quiet)m J&#13;
tales of "100 Years Ago." Soon the music swells into full . Y&#13;
Jagger plays an all-powerful wizard here, at one place ~nlensi&#13;
vibrantly summons up the wa-wa guitar that is meshed1 '&#13;
keyboard. They portray visions of magic steam rising f WI&#13;
ground. rom&#13;
Next we are led into a bluesy field where Keith performs sol&#13;
inflecting tones from the downer side of the manic-depr . 0 v&#13;
Just the right amount of strange horns elaborate certain f;~&#13;
"Coming Down Again." u&#13;
"Doo D?O Doo D?O Doo_ (Heartbrea~er)" is a tough cit mil&#13;
rocker which has Mick tellmg about a city policeman who ~ 1&#13;
in a case of mistaken identity. Mick sings, "Heartbreaker 1 8&#13;
tear your world apart." Here Mick is using his evil powe; 1 wa&#13;
ends. It makes one wonder which is which, good or evil. Good ~g&#13;
are just labels atta~h~ to things but thin~s change so no la~ c&#13;
permanently descriptive of any one thmg. Swinging horns&#13;
gui~r, ~nd ?lues guitar help del~ver the chorus to great heights'.&#13;
Micks v01ce reaches a new kmd of sensitivity in "Angie"--&lt;!\·&#13;
most rigid of soft ballad haters will probably find "Angie" tou en&#13;
soft spot in them.&#13;
Hard glitter rock approaches as a "Silver Train " "Silver ra&#13;
falling" and "silver bells" are heard all around.' There are In&#13;
structural reflections from "All Down the Line" but the ch&#13;
much more developed and elaborated by its several parts 01'111&#13;
"Hide You_r Love" is ba~ed ~n old-time rhythm and blues. J&#13;
r~c~ f~atically to a skm-pnckling lead guitar. He sing witb&#13;
grmdmg Jaw as a speed-freak might. In a sense the song's essence&#13;
hyper-sensitive speed-freak orgasm. •&#13;
There is even more u~real _charm in "Winter," a majestic&#13;
number that ha~ a pleasmgly msane quality. Mick's voice is sou)&#13;
as he fondles with each word before letting it out and placing it&#13;
suously. H_e com~ands a sky of strings punctuated by lead guitar&#13;
ne~ed J&gt;&lt;&gt;~nts. Like an angel in some fairy tale land, he comes f&#13;
say mg I Just want to wrap my coat around you."&#13;
. A cl~r distant tinkle and a weird flute conjuring Middle&#13;
una_ges mtroduce "Can You Here The Music." Then a vibrato&#13;
begms the full procession of the music. A croaky voice mock&#13;
"can yo~ here the music" in a position somewhere beyond. Tuer&#13;
chorus fmds Mick "walking on air."&#13;
"~tar Star," a ~ocker with Chuck Berry influences, is a&#13;
dedicated to groupies. The real title which was changed becalllt&#13;
censors, was "Starfucker." The chorus comes out sounding more&#13;
"fuck a star, fuck a star, fuck a star." It is a beautifully m&#13;
chorus that is intended to pay respect to all the quickies the~&#13;
had on tours.&#13;
~ GOA TS HEAD SOUP the Stones are working with m&lt;n&#13;
perunental arrangements again, and much SATANIC&#13;
luster ~omes through. The Stones are working with the stra~e&#13;
myste~1ous. Exploration into the unknown is sometimes charming&#13;
sometimes ugly. The Rolling Stones seem to have found beam)'&#13;
mystery.&#13;
&lt;Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
CORRECTION: in last week's column, due to technical ,.,...&#13;
some sort, there was a run-on sentence at the end. This hOIIW&#13;
been a new paragraph and should have read:&#13;
Even so, in another means of analysis, the bright stretch of tllt&#13;
three songs on side 2, "Turkey Chase," "Knocking on Heaven'&#13;
an~ "Final Theme," make this soundtrack worth every ptnDJ • price. &#13;
b) Rodney schroeter&#13;
ts: The psychic,looking&#13;
SynoPSIfiles of folders and&#13;
through tapes has made some&#13;
puter ' com t discoveries. As the&#13;
Im~rtanpens he is about to tell&#13;
~"'" reo' . th&#13;
:tW'J. teen other men In e&#13;
the nlJlChathe has found.&#13;
blse W&#13;
"your present memory-what&#13;
1l\l row think you know about the&#13;
l l' an iUusion-an artificial&#13;
pas -IS&#13;
ry superimposed upon your&#13;
memo&#13;
mJOd· tit I&#13;
"your true ideo I y, your rea&#13;
memory ...has ... been ... erased."&#13;
Oneman crumpled to the floor&#13;
unconscious. Another began&#13;
O)bbing.&#13;
"These tapes," the Psychic&#13;
kiCked the file, "have your artiftcial&#13;
memories on them. I have&#13;
round. as yet, no records of your&#13;
true lives. But I shall attempt to&#13;
nod these records, if they exist.&#13;
"For now, become familiar&#13;
with this base. Learn how e,:,ery&#13;
machine functions. Ihave driven&#13;
calt the evil ones who have done&#13;
Ibis 10 you. They shall return.&#13;
Whenlite time comes, we shall&#13;
lighl litem."&#13;
I The Psychic turned brusquely&#13;
I to a control panel, at the top of&#13;
which was a fourteen-inch&#13;
screen. He had stated the facts;&#13;
he had no intention of offering&#13;
consolence.&#13;
The first picture which came to&#13;
the screen was the interior of the&#13;
room in which he had awakened.&#13;
Oicking a dial brought a view of&#13;
twonat plates, each about seven&#13;
leet square, and held apart&#13;
vertically by a thin column at&#13;
~ each corner. The distance betIl~een&#13;
the upper and lower plate&#13;
rwas more thap st,lfficjent for a&#13;
I man to stand upright between&#13;
II !hem.&#13;
Another click of the dial&#13;
revealed the exterior of the&#13;
Uniled Nations buildings.&#13;
• A third adjustment brought to&#13;
'. Ylew the exterior of a very old&#13;
II nrehouse. The Psychic stif-&#13;
• Ieoed. Several men were stanII&#13;
ding in the doorway. The&#13;
ilgbtlime shadows obscured the&#13;
• features, but the fat, almost If round body was unmistakable. It&#13;
was Big X.&#13;
: The Psychic adjusted several&#13;
,I knobs, hoping for sound. One&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Stnd for your up-tcrdate 160·page&#13;
lIlIIt order catalog. Ene'lose $1.00&#13;
flOcover postage (deli~ery time is&#13;
fo 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE INC&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOSANGElES, CALIF. 90015&#13;
~lli477·8474 or 477·5493&#13;
Our "'Urch materIal Is sold for&#13;
research assistance onl~.&#13;
knob moved the viewing range&#13;
When he r:noved. it more, he found&#13;
a street SIgn that told him where&#13;
the place was.&#13;
Jones had been looking through&#13;
the tapes on the shelves. "Fi d&#13;
something?" he asked with n a&#13;
catch in his throat. He had suffered&#13;
from shock as much as the&#13;
others had.&#13;
~he P~ychic rose. "1 am going&#13;
~o Investigate something. No one&#13;
IS to accompany me."&#13;
Over the past hours the&#13;
Psychic's mental energy' had&#13;
accumulated. By converting the&#13;
large amount of excess into&#13;
muscular energy, he was able to&#13;
run at a good clip as easily as if&#13;
he were taking a casual stroll. He&#13;
~ntered the tunnel, ran through it&#13;
In a matter of minutes, came out&#13;
at the grating, and ran to the&#13;
warehouse.&#13;
He approached carefully,&#13;
sending out mental probes in all&#13;
directions. The sensation of a&#13;
void appeared above. He glanced&#13;
up in time to see the silhouette of&#13;
a man. The man fell on him. A&#13;
microphone-shaped devi~e&#13;
clattered on the cracked&#13;
pavement: a mind-wave&#13;
deflector.&#13;
The Psychic was hit on the side&#13;
of the head. The blow stunned&#13;
him, but he remained barely&#13;
conscious.&#13;
When his thoughts became&#13;
cleared, he found his legs and&#13;
arms fastened to the wall in some&#13;
manner he could not see. On each&#13;
side of his head was a mind-wave&#13;
deflector--he could not use his&#13;
mental powers to free himself. To&#13;
his chest was taped a box identical&#13;
to the anti-matter bomb Big&#13;
X had tried to use at the United&#13;
Nations.&#13;
Five men stopped running&#13;
when they were two blocks away&#13;
from the warehouse. The fat man&#13;
looked at his wrist, although it&#13;
was too dark to see a watch.&#13;
"Five seconds," he said.&#13;
"Four. Three. Two. One."&#13;
The warehouse erupted in a&#13;
cataclysm of smoke, dirt and&#13;
fire, shattering windows with the&#13;
shock and sending debris flying&#13;
for hundreds of yards.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Tripdetails announced&#13;
. The UW-P office of Student LIfe&#13;
IS. sponsoring three trips abroad&#13;
thts year.&#13;
The. first trip, open to an&#13;
;arkslde students, faculty, staff.&#13;
nd .thelr rrnmediate families is&#13;
an eight day Hawaiian Holiday on&#13;
~aikiki Beach. The cost of S239&#13;
mcludes round trip airfare to&#13;
Honolulu from Milwaukee via&#13;
World Airways DC-8 jet, seven&#13;
mghts at the Outrigger West&#13;
Hotel in the beart of Waikiki&#13;
roundtrip transfers between th~&#13;
airport and hotel, a half day&#13;
sightseeing tour of Honolulu aod&#13;
the traditional Hawaiian n~wer&#13;
lei greeting. Tourists v.;11 leave&#13;
Milwaukee on January 2 and&#13;
return on January 10.&#13;
The second trip, open to&#13;
anyone. is a spring flight to&#13;
Greece. Leaving Chicago on&#13;
April 12 and returning Apnl 21,&#13;
the 99 co. I mcludes round mp&#13;
airfare via WlSS8Ir. even&#13;
nights lodging at Omonia Hotel&#13;
In Athen . eenunental breakfast&#13;
and lunch or dinner daily while in&#13;
Athens, full day Greek Islaod&#13;
cruise, a half day Ightseemg&#13;
tour of Athen , and tour escort&#13;
throughout. The la t rught will be&#13;
spent m Zunch. Switzerland and&#13;
there will be a wi fondue party&#13;
at one of Zurich's fondue&#13;
restaurants.&#13;
Another. lower price spring&#13;
trip I being planned Details are&#13;
not complete as yet but Student&#13;
Life Director William . ·iebuhr.&#13;
anticipated a tour to either the&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
Superman film&#13;
Rocketed to earth as an infant&#13;
when the planet Krypton exploded,&#13;
Superman grew up in&#13;
Small town, U.S.A., to find&#13;
himself endowed with amazing&#13;
physical powers. He could move&#13;
faster than a speeding bullet. He&#13;
was more powerful than a&#13;
locomotive. He was able to leap&#13;
over tall buildings in a single&#13;
bound. But in order to utilize his&#13;
amazing powers. he was forced to&#13;
assume an aJias-oark Kent. a&#13;
mlid-mannered, be-spectacled&#13;
reporter on the Metropolis Daily&#13;
Planet newspaper.&#13;
Since his fIrst appearance in a&#13;
comic strip in 1938. the "man or&#13;
steel" has been impressing&#13;
children with his unceasing battle&#13;
against crime and intolerance.&#13;
for truth and justice. 'ow, four&#13;
half-hour episodes from the&#13;
outstanding television series that&#13;
aired during the 1950's have been&#13;
programmed hack-to-back in a&#13;
unique feature film which 'kill be&#13;
shown Wednesday, Oct. \0 at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in Gr. 103. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board, the&#13;
admission is 75 cents.&#13;
The four titles featured are&#13;
"The Mysterious Cube,"&#13;
"SUperman's Wi£~" "The Tin&#13;
Hero." and "The Town That&#13;
Wasn't. It Each is a classic&#13;
example of the flamboyant action-adventure&#13;
formula that&#13;
,.&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DENNY NELSON&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
STEREOS TAPES&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
t919TAYLOR AVENUE&#13;
Racine. Wisconsin 53403&#13;
made Superman the prototype of&#13;
charismatic super-heroes. And&#13;
each bnngs hack the famliiar&#13;
persooalities of George Reeves&#13;
as Superman: Noell Nelli as Lois&#13;
Lane: Jack Larson as Jlffimy&#13;
Olsen. cub reporter ~ John&#13;
Hamllton as Perry \\11it., edJto&lt;&#13;
of the Daily ptanet: and Robert&#13;
Shayne as Inspecto&lt; Henderson&#13;
cambean or Acapuloco at a coil&#13;
of approximately S275&#13;
Further mformatlon and tnp&#13;
details or appbcatlons can be&#13;
obtamed from th lud&lt;'nt ufo&#13;
Office In U£ DI!17&#13;
~ l\\-P\RK lOt.&#13;
~M~K H¢L1£&gt;AY&#13;
APRIL It-!I. 117.&#13;
\0 day' -8lUghlA&#13;
• Round trip Jel&#13;
• r nights in \.lM&#13;
• fq,h night in Zurich&#13;
! m~als d iJ~&#13;
• Grm LStud cruiw&#13;
• \tht&gt;n Igbl Htng&#13;
• Fondut&gt; pan) In '.'lI.&#13;
• Toul'" n&#13;
• Tip &amp;: tan on _.\t.&#13;
For application or m[onnauon&#13;
Contact&#13;
A.\IPl' T1U VEL ETER&#13;
LLC 0-117 all: $S3-ttN&#13;
THE CARTHAGE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESE. rrs&#13;
The 1973 Homecoming Concert&#13;
~'::o'::"~:::::;;;;;~-~- 'i 3 r~&#13;
cwfB&#13;
10% OFF O~ Pl'RCHASE OF&#13;
J $100&#13;
I OR ~ORE WITH PARKSIOE 10. ~~&#13;
~ E DS ~&#13;
rj OUTOBER 31 I&#13;
, AT&#13;
lj 3400 SHERIDA&#13;
~&#13;
AD&#13;
r, &amp;926 3 UK ·s~~~ ....&#13;
5aturday, October 20&#13;
8:00 P.M. Fieldhouse&#13;
General Admission&#13;
- 52.50 &amp; $3.50&#13;
Also Appeanng&#13;
TIckets Av.llable At·&#13;
• Bldmger _ fuslc Hou.s.e-•&#13;
Downtov.-n Kenosha&#13;
• J&amp;J Tapes. Kenosha &amp; Ra mo&#13;
• carthage Coli 0 Center Ofh~&#13;
8:30 a m. - . hdnlghl dally&#13;
"The Juke Band"&#13;
ROAD&#13;
b) Rodney Schroeter&#13;
• .5. The Psychic, looking&#13;
yn~ts1 riles of folders and&#13;
rou"", tapes has made some&#13;
Puter • Ill t discoveries. As the&#13;
unportan pens he is about to tell&#13;
tor)" :eoteen 'other men in the&#13;
1h nine d&#13;
·e what he has foun .&#13;
••Your present memory--what&#13;
-ou now think you know abo~~ ~e&#13;
t-is an illusion-an artif1c1al&#13;
:emory superimposed up::m your&#13;
11und. . . 1 •·Your true identity, your rea&#13;
m mory ... has ... been ... erased."&#13;
One man crumpled to the floor&#13;
uncon cious. Another began&#13;
sobbing. . •·Toese tapes," the Psychic&#13;
kicked the file, "have your artificial&#13;
memories on them. I have&#13;
found, as yet, no records of your&#13;
true lives. But I shall attempt to&#13;
find these records, if they e~~st.&#13;
"For now, become fam1har&#13;
v.ith this base. Learn how e~ery&#13;
machine functions. I have driven&#13;
out the evil ones who have done&#13;
this to you. They shall return.&#13;
When the time comes, we shall&#13;
light them."&#13;
Toe Psychic turned brusquely&#13;
to a control panel, at the top of&#13;
which was a fourteen-inch&#13;
screen. He had stated the facts;&#13;
he had no intention of offering&#13;
consolence.&#13;
The first picture which came to&#13;
the creen was the interior of the&#13;
room in which he had awakened.&#13;
Oicking a dial brought a view of&#13;
tv,o flat plates, each about seven&#13;
feet square, and held apart&#13;
mtically by a thin column at&#13;
each corner. The distance bet11een&#13;
the upper and lower plate&#13;
·as more than sufficient for a&#13;
man to stand upright between&#13;
them.&#13;
Another click of the dial&#13;
revealed the exterior of the&#13;
t:nited Nations buildings.&#13;
A third adjustment brought to&#13;
vtew the exterior of a very old&#13;
warehouse. The Psychic stiffened.&#13;
Several men were standmg&#13;
in the doorway. The&#13;
mghttime shadows obscured the&#13;
features, but the fat, almost&#13;
round body was unmistakable. It&#13;
v; Big X.&#13;
The Psychic adjusted several&#13;
knobs, hoping for sound. One&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page,&#13;
1 ma I order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
l&#13;
o cover postage (deli~ery time 1s&#13;
to 2 days)&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE INC&#13;
ll941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES. CALIF. 90025&#13;
12!3) 477-8474 or 477 5493&#13;
Ovr re"arch material Is sold for&#13;
rue.,ch assistance only.&#13;
nd&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
knob moved the viewing range&#13;
When he 1:1oved it more, he found a street sign that told him where&#13;
the place was.&#13;
Jones had been looking through&#13;
the tapes on the shelves. "Find&#13;
something?" he asked with a&#13;
catch in his throat. He had suffered&#13;
from shock as much as the&#13;
others had.&#13;
~e P~ychic rose. "I am going&#13;
~o investigate something. No one 1s to accompany me."&#13;
Over the past hours the&#13;
Psychic's mental energy' had&#13;
accumulated. By converting the&#13;
large amount of excess into&#13;
muscular energy, he was able to&#13;
run at a good clip as easily as if&#13;
he were taking a casual stroll. He&#13;
~ntered the tunnel, ran through it&#13;
m a matter of minutes, came out&#13;
at the grating, and ran to the&#13;
warehouse.&#13;
HE: approached carefully, sending out mental probes in all&#13;
directions. The sensation of a&#13;
void appeared above. He glanced&#13;
up in time to see the silhouette of&#13;
a man. The man fell on him. A&#13;
microphone-shaped device&#13;
clattered on the cracked&#13;
pavement: a mind-wave&#13;
deflector.&#13;
Trip details announced&#13;
. The W-Pofficeof tudent Llfe&#13;
is_ ponsoring three trip abroad&#13;
this year.&#13;
The fir t trip. open to all&#13;
Park ide stud nt facultv taff&#13;
and . their immedi~te faml!ie i.&#13;
an eight day Hawaiian Holiday on&#13;
~aikiki Beach. The c t or&#13;
mcludes round trip airfar to&#13;
Honolulu from , lilwau ee&#13;
\~orld Airwa)' - D -8 j t, ven&#13;
nights at the Outrigg r We&#13;
Hotel in the heart of Waikiki&#13;
roundtrip tran fe betw n th'&#13;
a~rport and hotel, a half dav&#13;
sightseeing tour of Honolulu and&#13;
the traditional Hawaiian no .... er&#13;
lei greeting. Touri will leave&#13;
1ilwaukee on Januarv 2 and&#13;
return on January 10 •&#13;
The second trip,· open to&#13;
PAB presents&#13;
Superman film&#13;
~ ..&#13;
- -· -&#13;
1 1&#13;
v~~~K H¢Llt&gt;AY&#13;
B&#13;
The Psychic was hit on the side&#13;
of the head. The blow stunned&#13;
him, but he remained barely&#13;
conscious.&#13;
When his thoughts became&#13;
cleared, he found his legs and&#13;
arms fastened to the wall in some&#13;
manner he could not see. On each&#13;
side of his head was a mind-wave&#13;
deflector-he could not use his&#13;
mental powers to free himself. To&#13;
his chest was taped a box identical&#13;
to the anti-matter bomb Big&#13;
X had tried to use at the United&#13;
Nations.&#13;
Rocketed to earth a an infant&#13;
when the planet Krypton&#13;
ploded, Superman grew up in&#13;
s:nau town, u A , to find&#13;
himself endowed \\ith amazing&#13;
physical powers. He could mo\'e&#13;
faster than a peed.ing bullet. He&#13;
was more powerful than a&#13;
locomotive. He was able to leap&#13;
over tall buildings in a ingle&#13;
bound. But in order to utilize hi&#13;
amazing powers, he was forced to&#13;
assume an alia -Clar Kent a&#13;
mild-mannered. be- pectacled&#13;
reporter on the tetropoli Dail}&#13;
Planet new paper.&#13;
The 1973 Homecoming Concert&#13;
Five men stopped running&#13;
when they were two blocks away&#13;
from the warehouse. The fat man&#13;
looked at his wrist, although it&#13;
was too dark to see a watch.&#13;
"Five seconds," he said.&#13;
"Four. Three. Two. One."&#13;
The warehouse erupted in a&#13;
cataclysm of smoke, dirt and&#13;
fire, shattering windows with the&#13;
shock and sending debris flying&#13;
for hundreds of yards.&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED&#13;
ince his first appearance in a&#13;
comic strip in 1938 the ' man of&#13;
steel" ha been impre - in&#13;
children with hi uncea i battle&#13;
against crime and intoler nee,&#13;
for truth and justice .• 'o", four&#13;
half-hour epi ode from the&#13;
outstanding tele\i ion ri that&#13;
aired during the 1950· have been&#13;
programmed back-to-bac m a&#13;
uniqu feature film ·hich :ill be&#13;
shown Wedn da~ Oct. l0at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in Gr. 103. n or d by the&#13;
Parkside ctmt1es Board, the&#13;
admi ion i 75 cents&#13;
The four title featured are&#13;
"The • ty teriou Cub , "&#13;
"Superman' Wife/' "The Tin&#13;
Hero." and '"The To\\n Th t&#13;
Wa n't." Each i a cla ic&#13;
example of the flam yant eti&#13;
on-adventure formula that&#13;
RECORDS STEREOS TAPES&#13;
PIANOS ORGANS&#13;
MIKEURBA'&#13;
DEN Y EL 0&#13;
owners&#13;
1919TAYLORA\'E .. E&#13;
Racine. Wi con in 53403&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
'TAURUS RISING1&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
I OCT. 10, 12, 13, 14&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
Sa urday, October 20&#13;
8:00 P.M. F eldhouse&#13;
General Admission&#13;
· S2.50 &amp; SJ.50&#13;
"The Juke Band"&#13;
ROD &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 10, 1973&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
suHers loss&#13;
Par Ide'S soccer team 9;ound&#13;
up on the "TOng s de of a 3-1 score&#13;
agaan t liW·MadJson at the&#13;
or field I t eekend&#13;
1b Rang r: all)" score came&#13;
"'th IS mlOul lell in the contest&#13;
on a oaI by Rick Kilps after&#13;
plalO Rick Lechusz crossed up&#13;
tadlson' ddeose with a pa ,&#13;
There h d bHn a controversy&#13;
on • goa) made eeruee In the&#13;
game Parksld "as kicking a&#13;
penallY shot bul il hit the&#13;
crossbar nd looked as If it was 10&#13;
th nt't but the referee saw il&#13;
dlfferenlly&#13;
ch Hal H ndenon comm&#13;
ted th t tN may have cost&#13;
th pm for th Rangers He&#13;
"""linued that "acc:ordmg to the&#13;
Ilatisucs, th Rangers had more&#13;
sholl on ai, more corner sholl,&#13;
and fewer sav". but these only&#13;
count "hen you're ahead "&#13;
Th hooters' next match IS an&#13;
unponant one ""th Plaueville at&#13;
lhelr school, WIth the WIIlIler one&#13;
ep nearer the AlA D1Slrict 14&#13;
playoff&#13;
ph.to byO.voo.nlels&#13;
Pvksl&lt;le' Ray Ph_nl ... _1pre.-r .. lor _ good Iwift kick during lall&#13;
SaUonlay' socc:er malcb wItb Madison,&#13;
Harriers travel to&#13;
N~!!"!ryDame Friday&#13;
To most people, the University Martin, Jim DeVasquez, Joq,&#13;
f Notre Dame is recogmzed as Ammerman, and Chuck Dett&#13;
one of the most powerful football man. "Dettman has made US .&#13;
lieges in the Mid-West. To man stronger this Year u:&#13;
~oss country coaches, however. last ." Godfrey ~aid.&#13;
Notre Dame is thought of as host . With rrnpressive times t&#13;
lor the most competitive meet of 10 by all Parkside ~&#13;
the season '" The Notre Dame combined With a little "1I'IIIl&#13;
Invitational this Friday. luck., Pa!"'Js\u'e~t napes COUld be&#13;
The meet will consist of 30 realized.&#13;
teams coming from as far west&#13;
as N~rth Dakota, and t?e&#13;
majority will come from OhI~,&#13;
Michigan and Illinois. Coach VIC&#13;
Godfrey ~ommented, "this meet&#13;
will consist of some of the&#13;
strongest teams in the MidAmerica&#13;
Conference and the Big&#13;
Ten conference.".&#13;
Favorites in this year's meet&#13;
include Bowling green, Eastern&#13;
Michigan, Michigan, and&#13;
Wisconsin, and Coach Godfrey&#13;
adds, "Our goal is to finish in the&#13;
top 20 this year,"&#13;
To finish in the top 20, the&#13;
Parkside Harriers will have to&#13;
keep up the impressive pace they&#13;
have set so far this season, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa, Keith Merritt,&#13;
Dennis Biel, Wayne Rhode, Dale&#13;
Ranger gymnasts prepare for season&#13;
~ BMlco Wap ...&#13;
The women', gymnastica team is in a stale of&#13;
rebulIdIng this year, Only 11 people have shown&#13;
mterest in the group&#13;
Returnmg gymnll5tS are Julie Weidner, Paris&#13;
WohIllSt. and Jacltie Levonian, According to new&#13;
coach Doug Davies, lbe leam will he working on&#13;
c:ompuJsanes during the first lew meets, which will&#13;
be held here at ParDide, wilb UW-Madisoo on OCt.&#13;
13 and carroll College on OCtober 20,&#13;
The third meet will be one of the hardest, wilb&#13;
UW."lihttewater where Davies was a coach before&#13;
c:oming to Parkside,&#13;
DaVIes came here wbeo lbe athletic departmeot&#13;
was looking for a replacomeot for former coach&#13;
Geza Martiny,&#13;
Curreotly Davies teaches eCHld class in gymna..!!i&lt;:s.&#13;
along \\-;lh advising a men's gymnastics&#13;
club, which. he slates needs personnel badly, He&#13;
added that the women also need more people, but&#13;
will go ,,;th the following: beginners Julie Sherer&#13;
and Mary Up'ari; intermediates Leslie Thompson&#13;
and Julie Weidner; advanced students Jan and&#13;
Jackie Levonian and Lynn Pope,&#13;
Paris Wohlust will be exercising on all levels on&#13;
different equipment.&#13;
Sue Ceeeoni and Mary Claire Freisma will&#13;
specialize on different equipment.&#13;
As an oflshoot 01 the club, Jackie Levonian has&#13;
been assisting with Racine Horlick's gymnastics&#13;
team.&#13;
G1!nerally, there should be some bright spots on&#13;
this year's team, providing more students try out&#13;
and the expected strong members come through,&#13;
Davies states.&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12. 1973&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WPS&#13;
W'!tCON!tIN PHy!tlCIANS SERVICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
•&#13;
Insurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONSOR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
~ Pt""- ..,m""'.,.p.l Q'.en to&#13;
w~,..,~ Wvl&lt;.&#13;
Ktf'IOVl,I 0 ,.fr- Offk.&#13;
PO ...&#13;
K~, W KON.n53UO&#13;
T .. ; .au 4Sol m ..&#13;
$100lor each month 01 tile school year&#13;
It's like a $900 annual scholarship, Ii&#13;
you qualify, you can earn it as· a&#13;
member of the Marine Corps' Platoon&#13;
Leaders Class,&#13;
~0IJ'11 also be earning a Marine&#13;
offIcer's commission through PLC&#13;
5~m~.er&#13;
Virginia.&#13;
training at Quantico&#13;
I ~&#13;
I&#13;
your campus.&#13;
Talk to the Ma rine olllcer who Visits C&#13;
Iookingfor~~&#13;
CAPT. L R. ROBILLA.RD will be d ..&#13;
OCT '1] betwt"efl 9 a.m. and .. p ~ m~ms:ering.Officer aptitude test on 15 and 16&#13;
PaU69ttWay between Greenquist Hallll~; t~ctL~blrn at the USMC display in the&#13;
e I rary Learning Center.&#13;
Last weekend, Parkside WCMI&#13;
own cross country meet ItI&#13;
Marquette, UW-Milwaukee ova&#13;
UW-Milwaukee's track c1.b IIId&#13;
LUCIanRosa finished fi~•. 'f2 ._~.&#13;
ttme 0 5:47 over the five RlUe&#13;
course, while teammate. !leamI&#13;
Biel, Wayne Rhody, and CIucIl&#13;
Dettman placed in second thud&#13;
and fifth places, '&#13;
Jim Devasquez, Keith Mernu.&#13;
and Dale Martm fmished 001 01&#13;
the running m 10th, 13th, and 1'IIIl&#13;
places, adding up ParUidt'&#13;
total to 20 points, I&#13;
Marquette came in second ...&#13;
57 points, wbile crosstown Ji1III&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and their troct&#13;
club finished with 81 IIld •&#13;
points, respectively,&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 10, 1973&#13;
Soccer team&#13;
uffers loss&#13;
Harriers travel to&#13;
N'!!!!, Dame Friday&#13;
photo by OavoOani els&#13;
To most people, the Uni_versity&#13;
of Notre Dame is recogruzed as&#13;
one of the most powerful football&#13;
colleges in the Mid-West. To&#13;
cross country coaches, however,&#13;
otre Dame is thought of as host&#13;
for the most competitive meet of&#13;
the season . . . The Notre Dame&#13;
Invitational this Friday.&#13;
The meet will consist of 30&#13;
teams, coming from as far west&#13;
as North Dakota , and t~e&#13;
majority will come from Oh1?,&#13;
Michigan and Illinois. Coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey ~ommented, " this meet&#13;
will consist of some of the&#13;
strongest teams in the Mi?-&#13;
America Conference and the Big&#13;
Ten conference." . Favorites in this year's meet&#13;
include Bowling green, Eastern&#13;
Michigan , Michigan, and&#13;
Wisconsin, and Coach Godfrey&#13;
adds, "Our goal is to finish in the&#13;
top 20 this year."&#13;
· Ra Phanhu-at prepares for a good swift kick during last&#13;
soet:er m t~h with Madison.&#13;
To finish in the top 20, the&#13;
Parkside Harriers will have to&#13;
keep up the impressive pace they&#13;
have set so far this season, with&#13;
Lucian Rosa, Keith Merritt,&#13;
Dennis Biel, Wayne Rhode, Dale&#13;
Ranger gy111nasts prepare for season&#13;
DEAD INE EXTE OED&#13;
TO OCTOBER 12. 1973&#13;
1973-1974·&#13;
WlfPS&#13;
•&#13;
ISCO St PHYSIC IA S SE VICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
nsurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADOITIO AL I FORMATIO CONTACT:&#13;
HEAL TH OFFICE LC D 198&#13;
Paris Wohlust will be exercising on all levels on&#13;
different equipment.&#13;
Sue Ceceoni and Mary Claire Freisma will&#13;
specialize on different equipment.&#13;
As an offshoot of the club, Jackie Levonian has&#13;
been assisting with Racine Horlick's gymnastics&#13;
team.&#13;
Cknerally, there should be some bright spots on&#13;
this year's team, providing more students try out&#13;
and the expected strong members come through,&#13;
Davies states.&#13;
$l00 for each month of the school year&#13;
I~ 's like~ $900 annual scholarship. If&#13;
;&gt;ou qualify, you can earn it as a&#13;
member of the Marine Corps' Platoon&#13;
Leaders Class .&#13;
~ou·u also be earning a Marine&#13;
officer's commission through PLC&#13;
summer training at Quantico I&#13;
Virginia. '&#13;
Talk to the Marine officer who visits P. C&#13;
your campus.&#13;
TheMarines&#13;
looking fora few good :n.&#13;
CAP": L 1': ROBILLARD w1ll beadrnin' . .&#13;
OCT 13 between 9 a.m . and ' P Coistering _oft,cer aptitude test on 15 and 16 Pa•~- .m . ntact him at th us _,,, .. ay between Greenquist Halt and the L .b e . MC display in the , rary Learning Center.&#13;
Martin, Jim DeVasquez J&#13;
Ammerman , and Chuck ~ man. " Dettman has made u&#13;
man stronger this Year 5&#13;
, • •.&#13;
last. " Godfrey said. ..l&lt;lll&#13;
. With impressive times turn&#13;
m b:( all . Parkside runn&#13;
combined with a little "I&#13;
luck, P ar1&#13;
1S\.dt!"' hopes cou:r&#13;
realized.&#13;
Last weekend, Parkside won&#13;
own cross country meet&#13;
Marquette, UW-Milwaukee ov&#13;
UW-Milwaukee's track cli,b and&#13;
. Lucian Rosa finished first'&#13;
tune of 25 :47 over the five rnlla&#13;
course, while teammates Dennis&#13;
Biel, Wayne Rhody, and ChuQ&#13;
Dettman placed in second third&#13;
and fifth places. '&#13;
Jim Devasquez, Keith Merru.t&#13;
and Dal~ M_artin finished out "&#13;
the runmng m 10th, 13th, and l?!h&#13;
places, adding up Parkside•&#13;
total to 20 points. 1&#13;
Marquette came in second WIiii&#13;
57 points, while crosstown rillk&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and their tract&#13;
club finished with Bl and 11&#13;
points, respectively.</text>
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              <text>"Third World" seeks representation</text>
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              <text>M'nority group formed&#13;
"Third World" seeks&#13;
APproximately 30 Parkside&#13;
minority students were present&#13;
at a "Third World" meeting held&#13;
last Thursday. The meeting was&#13;
called under the premise that "no&#13;
organization on campus addresses&#13;
itself to our needs!'&#13;
In the first Third World&#13;
meeting, chaired by Mustafa&#13;
Abdullah, a Parkside student,&#13;
ways were discussed in which the&#13;
University had been negligent in&#13;
regard to minority needs and how&#13;
minority students might integrate&#13;
into decision and policymaking&#13;
areas of the University.&#13;
Abdullah said. that there was&#13;
little need to separate races for&#13;
organizing purposes because&#13;
"there is no need to have splinter&#13;
groups ' when most of our&#13;
problems are essentially the&#13;
same."&#13;
Students aired complaints over"&#13;
the route the Parkside-Racine&#13;
bus is presently taking, saying&#13;
that it skirts minority communities&#13;
in the city. A group has&#13;
been formed to look into the&#13;
problem. One student complained&#13;
that the $18,000 award by&#13;
the state to Parks ide, which was&#13;
earm~rked to develop programs&#13;
for disadvanta~ed and minority&#13;
students, had Instead gone into&#13;
the library for book purchase.&#13;
She added that the administration&#13;
refused to say where&#13;
the money had gone.&#13;
. In calling for minority student&#13;
Involvement Abdullah said "If&#13;
you don't have anything po~itive&#13;
or constructive to contribute we&#13;
don't need you." Wa'yne&#13;
Ramirez, Parks ide counselor&#13;
added, "You need minority&#13;
students to represent you no one&#13;
will represent you that ';ill help&#13;
you anyway--except maybe&#13;
Student Services." Students&#13;
volunteered to be interviewed by&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
.Association (PSGA) for selection&#13;
to faculty-student committees.&#13;
In considering alternatives to&#13;
what the Univer-sity has to offer&#13;
WEAC representative John Mack (left) talks with Parks ide faculty&#13;
member Ronald Gottesman at the Racine Motor Inn last Friday night.&#13;
Racine Unified&#13;
representation&#13;
photo W, ROf'lArtfnm&#13;
Mustafa Abdullah led the discussion at tbe organna tiona I meeting or&#13;
lbe Third World.&#13;
mmonty tudrnts at the ent&#13;
time, th Idea of uchang&#13;
proaram to Africa Indian&#13;
reserv au • and te co w&#13;
receiv '" "ell by th group .\\&#13;
have to study "here we m&#13;
from and "hal" are all about,&#13;
sard one tudem&#13;
In regard to rae m on th&#13;
campa, Ramu'e:z: commented&#13;
that nol only does it ext t but that&#13;
"tho e feehngs are pres at&#13;
among toden . and all levels of&#13;
Lheadmim tratlee"&#13;
Some of the Immediate goals of&#13;
the Third \\'orld group are to f,nd&#13;
an alternauve 10 pre ent&#13;
edueallon, to create a spea.al&#13;
service department to hear the&#13;
needs of mmortty tude"l f to&#13;
recruit mlOorlll for student&#13;
faculty committees, and to&#13;
edueate tbe lodenl body a to&#13;
~hat minorities are all about&#13;
The next ThIrd World meellng&#13;
will be held on Thursday. Oct 18&#13;
at noon in Greenqurst Hall&#13;
Lecture Room 103.&#13;
TheParksid:ee--------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, oet. 17, 1973 Vol. II No, 7&#13;
WEAC asks faculty&#13;
Sargain or beg?&#13;
"The prestige of the college professor IS&#13;
declining." Jim Innis. Executive Director of the&#13;
Racine Education Association CREA) and&#13;
professional negotiator told a group of about 30&#13;
Parkside faculty members last Friday night. "You&#13;
have to decide if you want to collectively bargain or&#13;
collectively beg," he added.&#13;
The Wisconsin Education Association Council&#13;
(WEAC) has been on campus in recent weeks to&#13;
encourage Parkside faculty members in TAUWF&#13;
(The Association of University of Wisconsin&#13;
Faculty) to merge forces with WEA John Mack of&#13;
WEAC said that, "TAlNlF doesn't have the lund of&#13;
political machinery, funding or representation that&#13;
it takes to be a viable bargaining force." The local&#13;
chapter of TAUWF has not taken a formal po ition&#13;
on the merger issue. The problem that IS ansmg.&#13;
accuse certain TAUWF members, is that WEAC&#13;
has come in to organize faculty rather than en·&#13;
courage the merger_&#13;
William ~tor row, Parks Ide- profe sor or&#13;
psychology and local TAUWF chapter pres d t,&#13;
told . lack Friday that he was "WIlling 10 m rge&#13;
with WEA because II ",11 strengthen th faculty&#13;
&amp;t one thtng that will w eaken all of us, at Park ad&#13;
and in the state. I to engage In sphttUlg lactiC'S '&#13;
. 10000w said "that i destructive and ann faculty&#13;
TAUWF," he added. "can be crnlcued at Parkside&#13;
and on the 'tale level for what It hasn't done and&#13;
even some of \10 hat it has done Park ide- would&#13;
autonomy but WIth the larger body' help ,&#13;
•lack accused TAl:WF of "waiting for things 10&#13;
happen. It warts for demands to be delivered Total&#13;
competition," he said, "IS the AmerIcan v.ay··&#13;
.Iorrow replied that "\ think that's fake Corrupt&#13;
union leadership lrles to Wipe other umons out."&#13;
lorrow added thai" lack told me ,n my o(fice that&#13;
\\'EAC would not try to Orgalllte bUl merge ""th&#13;
TAUWF."&#13;
Afler a short break 10 whIch ever'yone filled the"&#13;
ceft"""" Oft .....&#13;
School Board&#13;
adopts minority quota system&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
Racine's Unified School Board&#13;
lastweek agreed to adopt a quota&#13;
syStem for minority students in&#13;
all regular schools during the&#13;
next two years. The proposal,&#13;
auned at desegregating the&#13;
8chool system, was narrowly&#13;
approved by a 5-4 vote. The policy&#13;
Would allow no school to have a&#13;
minority population more than to&#13;
percent above the proportion of&#13;
a~1 minority students in the&#13;
district. The motion made last&#13;
month, calls for ~chool adrninistrators&#13;
to submi t four&#13;
alternative plans to implement&#13;
the quotas by 1975.&#13;
School officials indic,,"ted that&#13;
one plan is likely to be a massive&#13;
reorganization of the elementary&#13;
schools. That plan, which was&#13;
rejected last year, would call for&#13;
a middle school level of fifth and&#13;
sixth graders and maximu~ a.nd&#13;
minimum quotas for mmorlty&#13;
students.&#13;
. The {JToposal is aimed at&#13;
breaking up heavy concentrations&#13;
of minority students&#13;
in some schools. Racine's black&#13;
and chicano students are con·&#13;
centrated in seven of the&#13;
district's 30 elementary schools,&#13;
with proportions ranging from 42&#13;
to 91 pprcent. The current district&#13;
average is 21 percent. If the pla!l&#13;
were to be implemented now. It&#13;
would mean that no school could&#13;
have over 31 percent minority&#13;
enroUment.&#13;
Rev. Lawrence Hunt, who led&#13;
the stiffest opposilion and is the&#13;
only black on the board, feels that&#13;
by approving the plan they are&#13;
merely putting up a smoke&#13;
screen, they're only dealing With&#13;
integration and not looking at the&#13;
greater problems. More is at&#13;
stake than just housing students,&#13;
they're just Ignoring and excusing&#13;
the poor job tbey've been&#13;
doing with minority students.&#13;
Hunt feels other problems are the&#13;
district's low nwnber of minority&#13;
teachers and lack of emphasis on&#13;
minority curriculum The&#13;
proposal would resegregate&#13;
students when the schools are&#13;
desegregat&lt;!d.&#13;
A contrary point of view is that&#13;
of Re\'. Howard Stanton who feels&#13;
that the law says we must&#13;
desegregate and It'S a way of&#13;
desegregation. not just a quota&#13;
By taking tlus action now he&#13;
bopes that other prohlems such&#13;
as curriculum changes and ad&#13;
ministrative attitudes can be&#13;
worked on. but lhat irs just a&#13;
beginning. Tbe School Board&#13;
can't solve all of the problems&#13;
themselves and with the help of&#13;
other organizations thev can be&#13;
worked out. desegregation is the&#13;
first step to sol,ing these other&#13;
problems.&#13;
'ns'de&#13;
Background of ttle Middle&#13;
East war&#13;
page 4&#13;
"The Virus'"&#13;
Parkside&#13;
infects&#13;
page 4&#13;
Super flea -- a look at&#13;
Racine's infamous flea&#13;
market&#13;
page S&#13;
Red man-white man&#13;
page 10&#13;
Minority group formed -&#13;
11Third World" seeks representat· on&#13;
Approximately 30 Parkside&#13;
minority students were present&#13;
at a "'Third World" meeting held&#13;
la ·t Thursday. The meeting was&#13;
called under the premise that " no&#13;
organization on campus addre&#13;
· es itself to our needs."&#13;
In the first Third World&#13;
meeting, chaired by Mustafa&#13;
Abdullah, a Parkside student,&#13;
ways were discussed in which the&#13;
University had been negligent in&#13;
regard to minority needs and how&#13;
minority students might integrate&#13;
into decision and policymaking&#13;
areas of the University.&#13;
Abdullah said. that there was&#13;
little need to separate races for&#13;
organizing purposes because&#13;
"there is no need to have splinter&#13;
groups · when most of our&#13;
problems are essentially the&#13;
same.,.&#13;
Students aired complaints over&#13;
the route the Parkside-Racine&#13;
bus is presently taking, saying&#13;
that it skirts minority communities&#13;
in the city. A group has&#13;
been formed to look into th&#13;
pr~blem, One tudent complained&#13;
that the 1~,000 award by the state to Park ·ide, which wa&#13;
earm~rked to develop program&#13;
for disadvantaged and minority&#13;
stude!lts, had instead gone into&#13;
the library for book purcha e&#13;
S~e. added that the ad:&#13;
m1mstration refused to say where&#13;
the money had gone.&#13;
. In calling for minority student&#13;
mvolvement Abdullah said ·•u&#13;
you don't have anything po 'itive&#13;
or constructive to contribute we&#13;
don't. need you ." w;yne&#13;
Ramirez, Parkside counselor&#13;
added, "You need minority&#13;
students to represent you no one&#13;
will represent you that ~ill help&#13;
you anyway--except maybe&#13;
Student Services." Students&#13;
volunteered to be interviewed by Parkside Student Government&#13;
.Association {PSGA) for selection&#13;
to faculty-student committees.&#13;
In considering alternatives to&#13;
what the liniversity has to offer&#13;
photo by Debra Frie~II&#13;
WEAC representative John Mack {left) talk with Parks~de fa~ulty&#13;
member Ronald Gottesman at the Racine Motor Inn last Friday rught.&#13;
. tu tafa Abdullah led the d" cu ion at t&#13;
the Third W Id.&#13;
The Parksi e, _______ _&#13;
RA GE&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973 Vol.&#13;
WEAC asks faculty&#13;
Bargain or beg?&#13;
Racine Unified School Board Inside&#13;
adopts minority quota system&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
Racine's Unified School Board&#13;
last week agreed to adopt a quota&#13;
yStem for minority students in&#13;
all regular schools during the&#13;
~xt two yE&gt;ars. The proposal,&#13;
aimed at desegregating the&#13;
School system, was narrowly&#13;
approved by a 5-4 votf'. The policy&#13;
\\ould allow no school to have a&#13;
minority population more than 10&#13;
percent above the proportion of&#13;
all minority students in the&#13;
di5trict. The motion made last&#13;
month, calls for 'school adnunistrators&#13;
to submit four&#13;
alternative plans to implement the quotas by 1975.&#13;
School officials indica.ted that&#13;
one plan is likely to be a ma sive&#13;
reorganization of the elementary&#13;
schools. That plan, which was&#13;
rejected last year, would call for&#13;
a middle school level of fifth and&#13;
sixth graders and maximu!11 a_nd&#13;
minimum quotas for minority&#13;
students.&#13;
. The ~,roposal is aimed at&#13;
breaking up heavy concentrations&#13;
of minority student&#13;
in some schools. Racine's black&#13;
and chicano students are concentrated&#13;
in seven of the&#13;
district's 30 elementary schools.&#13;
with proportions ranging fr?m_42&#13;
to 91 pPrcent. The current d1str1ct&#13;
average is 21 percent. If the pla!l&#13;
were to be implemented now. it&#13;
\\-'OUld mean that no chool could&#13;
have over 31 percent minority&#13;
enroHment.&#13;
Rev. Lawren e Hunt. who led&#13;
the stiffest opposition and is the&#13;
only black on the board, fecL that&#13;
by ·approving the plan the are&#13;
merely putting up a moke&#13;
creen the_·'re only dealin ·1th&#13;
integration and not looking at the&#13;
greater problem fore i at&#13;
stake than ju ·t housing tuden&#13;
they're Just ignoring and e -&#13;
cu ·ing the poor job they've been&#13;
doing with minority udent' .&#13;
Hunt feel other problem, ar the&#13;
di tric:t's low number of minorit_·&#13;
teachers and lack of empha, 1 on&#13;
minority curriculum. The&#13;
B ckground of the Middl&#13;
Ea t war&#13;
"The Virus"&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Super flea --&#13;
Racine'&#13;
market&#13;
p g 4&#13;
infects&#13;
page 4&#13;
pa 5&#13;
Red man-white man&#13;
page 10 &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER wedllesd'y. Oct. 17. 1m&#13;
RA GER&#13;
'- __ ----EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
One dOVln,&#13;
one to go&#13;
Given his amazing facility fM picking able men to&#13;
assist him In governing our country, President Nixon's&#13;
constltutlonal right to nominate a vice presidential&#13;
replacet'nent should not preclude a thorough scrutiny of&#13;
h s nominee by Congress. His success In the past at&#13;
Judging character, as manifested by his faith In such&#13;
characters as John Milchell, H. R. Haldeman, John&#13;
Erllchman, John Dean and, of course, Spiro T. Agnew,&#13;
exhibit not only lack of care in choosing trustworthy&#13;
people for positions of national trust, but raises further&#13;
questions as to his own character if these are the people&#13;
he associates with and approves of.&#13;
Last Thursday, Presidential Press Secrefary Ronald&#13;
Ziegler said Nixon "wants to move as expeditiously and&#13;
rapidly as possible" In sending a nomination to&#13;
Congress. yet some of the voices raised in defense of&#13;
Nixon's choice back In 1968 excuse his Ignorance of&#13;
Agnew's Impropriety by talking of the haste with which&#13;
such choices are made. This, too, in spite of the fact that&#13;
Nixon had four years to evaluate Agnew before&#13;
renominating him In 1972.The point now Is that far from&#13;
saying he wants a speedy replacement, Nixon should be&#13;
exercising great caution and taking the necessary time&#13;
to ensure his nominee will be morally as well as&#13;
politically acceptable.&#13;
There has been considerable speculation that Nixon&#13;
has had his mind made up for weeks who he wants as&#13;
Vice President, In spite of the show he has made to&#13;
request nominations from other political leaders. The&#13;
White House had an admittedly key role in Agnew's&#13;
resignation, the bargain costing Agnew his job but&#13;
saving him a lot of money, a grueling court scene, and&#13;
probably a lengthy prison sentence.&#13;
The lustltlcatlon for this deal seems to be "national&#13;
Interest:' As Attorney General Elliot Richardson put it,&#13;
"I wish to urge consideration and compassion ...tor the&#13;
Vice President, who has rendered a high service by&#13;
resigning and relieving the nation of a long and potentially&#13;
disastrous period of anguish."&#13;
How much higher a service it would have been for him&#13;
never 0 have entered public service or else never to&#13;
have accepted payments or evaded taxes, was not&#13;
mentioned. Agnew's crime goes beyond the specific&#13;
charges and allegations concerning money··his crime Is&#13;
also that he has further eroded the people's contidence&#13;
Inour governmenf by allowing his corrupted self to hold&#13;
the second highest ollice in the nation.&#13;
Even aller the tide of evidence started turning against&#13;
him last Augusf, he outrlghtedly denied the charges,&#13;
calling them "damned lies." As recently as Sept. 29 he&#13;
100 ed an audience of Replubllcan women straight in the&#13;
eyes and stated that he was "unequivocally Innocent of&#13;
the charges against me:' He declared that he would not&#13;
quit, even If indicted. He then attacked the conduct ot "a&#13;
high Individual" in the Justice departmenf regarding&#13;
press IlNl s. calling such behavior criminal, unjust and&#13;
outrageous.&#13;
What was criminal. unjust and outrageous was'&#13;
Agnew's hypocrisy and damned lies and attempts to&#13;
squirm free and clear and preserve his crooked career.&#13;
What Is criminal, unlust and outrageous Is that in order&#13;
to get him out ot office it was necessary to drop federal&#13;
prosecutIon proceedings. And perhaps most frustrating&#13;
of allis that It's only one down··there's stili one to go.&#13;
by Jane Schllesman&#13;
Co tion in government-a phrase that is becoming well-worn&#13;
I telITU.fhattheme runs through this week's editorial on Spiro Agnew&#13;
a':,d r~also charged in the story of the American Indians' struggle to&#13;
control their own lives.&#13;
The interview with an anonymous Indian student developed out of a&#13;
complaint he wished to register With RANGER ahout the blatant&#13;
prejudice being displayed in the classroom by a P":rti~ular profe~sor.&#13;
He ended up talking with us for tw~ ho~rs about hIS life,.his feelings,&#13;
his perceptions of the Indians' plight 10 American society and the&#13;
problems with government and law e~or~em:nt offi~ia1s: We felt his&#13;
story had validity and interest, for the insight It provided into a broad&#13;
social problem is something worth being co~slder:;ct by all of us. Its&#13;
universality in the midst of such "mlOonty Issues as integration In&#13;
the Racine schools, Mfirmative Action, and the meeting last week of a&#13;
coalition of minority group students organizing the "Third World" on&#13;
campus also points up its relevance.&#13;
The student charged that the federal government not only renigged&#13;
on its Indian treaties, but sold land and grazing and mineral rights out&#13;
from under the Indians. The money which accrued from these sales&#13;
was never seen by the victimized Indians. And when they move from&#13;
their shacks on the reservations to ghettoes in the cities, what they see&#13;
is often the white policeman's bloody club.&#13;
Spiro Agnew was a staunch supporter of those same policemen,&#13;
crusading for "law and order" and fighting "crime in the streets."&#13;
The attorney general's office apparently has overwhelming evidence&#13;
that Agnew's crimes came before the streets existed-when he accepted&#13;
kickhacks on paving and building contracts. Perhaps the&#13;
difference lies in violence-serious crime involves actions such as&#13;
brandishing a weapon, assault, beatings, molesting and other such&#13;
activities frequently involved in arrest. Cheating the Indians out of&#13;
land and money, cheating in awarding government contracts,&#13;
cheating on income tax returns, cheating in campaign activities,&#13;
cheating of the public on the part of the government, is not a violation&#13;
of the law and order government professes to maintain. It is in the&#13;
"national interest" to lie, cheat, steal and deal, and get away with it if&#13;
you are a high- ranking, elected, government official.&#13;
Corruption in government. Everyone says they've known it all&#13;
along, "there's DO such thing as an honest politician," and all that. But&#13;
did we really know its extent, or care, or did Watergate and Agnew&#13;
and the Chicago police indicbnents and the sketchy Bureau of Indian&#13;
Affairs investigation catch us with our naive idealism showing? Some&#13;
still display it, cloaked in red, white and hlue, but others of us have&#13;
covered the ugliness with sarcastic, omniscient humor and a new&#13;
pessimism that cuts deep into our political traditions. That may be&#13;
contrary to "the national interest" by the current Administration's&#13;
definition, but it is in keeping with the interests of the people at the&#13;
grass roots level that government be to serve them, not itself.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the. stud~nts of The University o( wisconsln-Parkside,&#13;
Kenos~a. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0·194 LtbraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553.2295&#13;
The Pa:kside Ranger is an independ~nt newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r!nected In columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
View of The University of wtsconstn-Parkslde&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. AU letters on any subject of&#13;
:nterest to students, faculty or staff must be confined. to 250 words or&#13;
l~' typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
~ders for ~ength and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
~ ~~h~donenumber and student status or (acuity rank. Names will&#13;
P&#13;
. t I upon request. The editors reserve the riaht to refuse to&#13;
nn any etters. •&#13;
EDITOR.IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schllesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR:: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDnOR: Debl"a Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR:: Dan Ma rr- y&#13;
COPY EOnOR: Rebecca ECklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS; sandy 8ush. Stt'f)tlen Gifford, 8a ...ba ra Hanson, H.rvey&#13;
HedOen. Ga ...y Jensen, Michael Olsryk, Marilyn Schube ...t, John&#13;
~sen, Steve Stapanlan. Carrie Wa"'d, Tom cesecw. Neal Sautner&#13;
HOTOGRAPt1ERS: Ron Ant"'lm Allen Frede ...l&lt;ko- 8,'.n.au Jim Ruffolo • ....... •&#13;
CARTOONISTS: amy cunda ...i, G....y Huck. Bob Roh.n&#13;
LAYOUT: Terri Gelenian, Ter ...y Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestltoa&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Amy Cund ....i&#13;
;IR&#13;
v&#13;
CULAT10N MANAGER: Gary Worthington&#13;
o ERTlSING STAFF: F...ed law"'ence, Jim Mag ...ude'"&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RA GER Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973&#13;
A GER&#13;
'--------Edi orial/Opinion&#13;
One down,&#13;
one to go&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Corruption in government-a phrase that is becoming well-worn&#13;
1 t 1 That theme runs through this week's editorial on Spiro Agnew&#13;
a e y. Am · Ind" ' t and is also charged in the story of the encan 1ans s ruggle to&#13;
control their own lives. . The interview with an anonymous Indian student developed out of a&#13;
complaint he wished to register with RANGER a~out the blatant&#13;
prejudice being displayed in the classroom by a ~rti~ular_ profe~sor.&#13;
He ended up talking with us fo~ tw~ ho~rs about_ his hfe,_his feelmgs,&#13;
his perceptions of the Indians plight m American_ ~oc1ety and ~e&#13;
problems with government and law e~or~em~nt off1~1als: We felt his&#13;
story had validity and interest, for the ~ns1ght 1~ provided mto a broad&#13;
social problem is something worth b~m~ co~s1der~ b)'. all of ~s. I~&#13;
universality in the midst of such "mmor1ty issues as integration m&#13;
the Racine schools, Affirmative Action, and the meeting last week of a&#13;
coalition of minority group students organizing the "Third World" on&#13;
campu also points up its relevance.&#13;
The tudent charged that the federal government not only renigged&#13;
on its Indian treaties, but sold land and grazing and mineral rights out&#13;
from under the Indians. The money which accrued from these sales&#13;
was never seen by the victimized Indians. And when they move from&#13;
their shacks on the reservations to ghettoes in the cities, what they see&#13;
i often the white policeman's bloody club. piro Agnew was a staunch supporter of those same policemen,&#13;
crusading for "law and order" and fighting "crime in the streets. 11&#13;
The attorney general's office apparently has overwhelming evi9ence&#13;
that Agnew's crimes came before the streets existed-when he accepted&#13;
kickbacks on paving and building contracts. Perhaps the&#13;
difference lies in violence-serious crime involves actions such as&#13;
brandishing a weapon, assault, beatings, molesting and other such&#13;
activities frequently involved in arrest. Cheating the Indians out of&#13;
land and money, cheating in awarding government contracts,&#13;
cheating on income tax returns, cheating in campaign activities,&#13;
cheating of the public on the part of the government, is not a violation&#13;
of the law and order government professes to maintain. It is in the&#13;
"national interest" to lie, cheat, steal and deal, and get away with it if&#13;
you are a high-ranking, elected, government official.&#13;
Corruption in government. Everyone says they've known it all&#13;
along, "there's no such thing as an honest politician, 11 and all that. But&#13;
did we really know its extent, or care, or did Watergate and Agnew&#13;
and the Chicago police indictments and the sketchy Bureau of Indian&#13;
Affairs investigation catch us with our naive idealism showing? Some&#13;
still display it, cloaked in red, white and blue, but others of us have&#13;
covered the ugliness with sarcastic, omniscient humor and a new&#13;
pessimism that cuts deep into our political traditions. That may be&#13;
contrary to "the national interest" by the current Administration's&#13;
definition, but it is in keeping with the interests of the people at the&#13;
grass roots level that government be to serve them, not itself .&#13;
. The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
kear by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
enosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library- Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553.2295&#13;
Th0 e Parkside Ranger is an independ~nt newspaper Opinions re ected in columns d ed' 1 · . f . . an 1tor als are not necessarily the 0Hic1al&#13;
view O The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Letters to th Ed' · e 1tor are encouraged All letters on any subJect of&#13;
:nterest to students, faculty or staff mu~t be confined to 250 words or&#13;
,:~~~ 11nd double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
add r englh and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be ;f:h~~one number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any 1 tutpon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to e ers.&#13;
EDITOR.IN-CHIEF· Jane M . Schllesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Oebl'a Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR · Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR' David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS Sandy Bush, Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Hedden, Gary Jensen, Michael Olstyk, Marilyn Schubert John&#13;
=Tsen, Steve Stepanian, Carrie Ward, Tom OeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
J . ROGRAPHERS Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson Brian Ross, 1m uttolO '&#13;
CARTOONISTS amy cundari, Gary Huck Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT Terri Gelenian, Terry Knop st~ff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER. Ken Pestka •&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER : Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER : Gary Worth' ton ADVERTISING ST ,nc;i AFF· Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
We get letters •••&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students.&#13;
faculty or staff should be confned&#13;
to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
:nd double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letterS must be signed and include&#13;
address. phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
With reference to Stacy&#13;
PastIer, Kenosha Sophomore,&#13;
comments which appeared in the&#13;
OCtober lOth edition, I cannot&#13;
help, despite my better&#13;
judgement, but feel pity and&#13;
sorrow for Ms. Postler, because&#13;
she is obviously a very small and&#13;
lonely individual functioning&#13;
from an eighteen-hundred (800)&#13;
perspective ..&#13;
Ms. Postler is a member of a&#13;
dying breed of White Americans&#13;
that still cannot get it through&#13;
their heads that non-White&#13;
Americans never have had the&#13;
chance of a new beginning and a&#13;
new life when they immigrated to&#13;
this country. That chance which&#13;
European immigrants have&#13;
taken for their right. Likewise,&#13;
this dying breed have failed to&#13;
recognize that the so-called black&#13;
problem is a gross case of&#13;
mislabeling. It is really a White&#13;
problem. It has been a white&#13;
problem all along, a problem of&#13;
white prejudice as harmful to&#13;
Whites as to their Black victims.&#13;
Most Whites have finally been&#13;
forced to confront themselves&#13;
with this terrible inner conflict&#13;
and no one can pretend the&#13;
confrontation did not occur.&#13;
This country and this campus&#13;
will be in much beller shape&#13;
when Ms. Postler and her breed&#13;
dies off. So hurry Stacy, I and&#13;
others are waiting for the day!&#13;
M.Gibson&#13;
Freshman&#13;
To the editors:&#13;
The student government here&#13;
at Parkside has been in a state of&#13;
limbo recently.&#13;
According to sources, the&#13;
PSGAelections are being put off&#13;
\Dltil the steering committee&#13;
(which is not a steering committee&#13;
until CCC does meet)&#13;
givestbem their findings on how&#13;
they should run.&#13;
Well,this is all fine and dandy&#13;
llJt during this time all the&#13;
Parkside student body has is nine&#13;
members of the Student Senate&#13;
who cannot do anything until thev&#13;
firs~ change the constitution by&#13;
getting a referendum before th&#13;
students. If this is done a d ~&#13;
don't. think it will, (n~te n the&#13;
elections held last year and less&#13;
than 10. percent of the student&#13;
POpulatIon voted) student&#13;
government should hold elections&#13;
as SOOnas possible. This will help&#13;
the student government imlement&#13;
~e suggestions made by&#13;
the steering committee.&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
Kenosha sophomore&#13;
To the Editor;&#13;
In response to "goddamn&#13;
minority recruitment" I would&#13;
like to say that minority&#13;
recruitment doesn't make college&#13;
a mockery, but instead a reality&#13;
for those to whom it did not exist.&#13;
Education should not be regarded&#13;
as a privilege extended only to&#13;
the more affluent segment of our&#13;
society, it is a right which should&#13;
be extended to everyone in our&#13;
society regardless of ethnic&#13;
origin, religion, sex, or economic&#13;
background. The fact that admissions&#13;
requirements were&#13;
reduced indicates a concern, by&#13;
the administration, toward&#13;
lessening the discrimination and&#13;
alienation that minority students&#13;
face when entering this&#13;
university.&#13;
I'd also like to add that the&#13;
irrelevencies that minority&#13;
students feel are not only in&#13;
lifestyle, but in curriculum,&#13;
social, and cultural activities as&#13;
well. Instead of a course in "Head&#13;
Shrinking Made Easy," how&#13;
about courses in contemporary&#13;
Black Literature, or the history&#13;
of Mexican-American labor in the&#13;
U.S., or studies in problems of the&#13;
urbanized native-American (the&#13;
list is endless). Also, it's true that&#13;
Uw-Madlsons ethnic centers&#13;
were closed down, but not for&#13;
lack of student interest on the&#13;
part of the minority students.&#13;
Aside from the cultural activities&#13;
they provided, those centers had&#13;
in operation many necessary&#13;
functions, e.g. tutorial and&#13;
counseling services, referral,&#13;
recruitment, and orientational&#13;
services also. Shutting down&#13;
Madison's ethnic centers will not&#13;
only hurt the minority student,&#13;
but also the student community&#13;
as a whole. It's my hope that we&#13;
Parkside students and staff do&#13;
not view UW-Madison as a&#13;
forerunner in minority affairs.&#13;
I'd like to end this leller by&#13;
saying that it's a sad, sad day&#13;
when we as minority students&#13;
have to justify our presence at&#13;
this university.&#13;
Emiliano Contreras&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reply to Stacy Postlers&#13;
letter in the OCtober 10 issue of&#13;
the Parkside RANGER:&#13;
Itseems that at least one of my&#13;
fellow students at Parkside has&#13;
been successfully indoctri.nated.&#13;
through Our Great Society, in the&#13;
belief that White is Supreme.&#13;
Apparently Stacy does not&#13;
realize that admission standards&#13;
were lowered for everyone entering&#13;
school; not just minority&#13;
groups. As far as the administration&#13;
is concerned, I think&#13;
their primary reason for wanting&#13;
more students &lt;thus lower&#13;
standards) is that the school&#13;
receives a certain amount of&#13;
money for each student attending&#13;
for use in its budget. I feel our&#13;
time as active students can be&#13;
better utilized. bitching about&#13;
things such as the distribution of&#13;
tickets for the Milwaukee&#13;
Symphony Orchestra concert. As&#13;
I heard the story, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie distributed the vast&#13;
majority, if not all, tbe tickets to&#13;
his friends. I myseU was here at&#13;
school the night of the performance,&#13;
and the place was&#13;
crawling with elites dressed in&#13;
forma) wear, I was told by a&#13;
student who attended the performance&#13;
that she and her friend&#13;
were the only Parkside students&#13;
in attendance. That's strange&#13;
because I knew several people&#13;
(students) who wanted to attend,&#13;
but weren't able to get tickets.&#13;
Free refreshments were also&#13;
served. A gala affair.&#13;
I have a very strong feeling&#13;
that if I was one of those&#13;
"dissatisfied" blacks, I would be&#13;
more dissatisfied with going to&#13;
the same school with people such&#13;
as Stacy than not having courses&#13;
in Black Culture, History, etc.&#13;
The Black people are a separate&#13;
race, with a different culture, a&#13;
different heritage. but are still&#13;
human beings. supposedly equal&#13;
in the eyes of the God Stacy&#13;
speaks of. As far as our Great&#13;
American (White) Heritage goes,&#13;
Ifeel more ashamed than proud.&#13;
If our government isn't oppressing&#13;
the American Indian, or&#13;
the Blacks or the Vietnamese or&#13;
whoever else they can find, it is&#13;
oppressing we the people. Oppression&#13;
is the one area where&#13;
our government truly does not&#13;
concern itself with racial differences.&#13;
Charles Spurgeon Faris III&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Can it be that there has been a&#13;
deliberate intent to misinterpret&#13;
my letter in last week's&#13;
RANGER? According to your&#13;
addended Editor's note both Tom&#13;
Jennett and Dean Echelberger&#13;
confirmed that the previous&#13;
week's story was correct. Unfortunately&#13;
saying it don't make&#13;
it so.&#13;
Article II. Paragraph F,&#13;
Section 2 of the Student Government&#13;
Constitution states:&#13;
2. In the event beth the&#13;
president and the vice-president&#13;
vacate, the senate shall choose an&#13;
acting president from among its&#13;
members to serve until the next&#13;
scheduled elections.&#13;
Since the Senate is defunct&#13;
because of a lack of quorum, it&#13;
can certainly choose no&#13;
president. Once again. the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
senate chose Tom Jennett as&#13;
acting chairman. there is no way&#13;
it could appoint him President.&#13;
In the future please confirm&#13;
those stories you print, some&#13;
people are gullible enough to&#13;
believe everything they read. It&#13;
should be your responsibility to&#13;
ensure dissemination of the truth.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Senator&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. HI 1973 THE PARI(SJDE R~Gi;R 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor's note: "The Mo,"'ement"Is a regular feature In RAl 'GER, II&#13;
deals with ","omen and ","omen's concerns in soc.lel,), at Par ide and in&#13;
history. Guest writers are invited.&#13;
Man-hating and the Movement&#13;
by Barb Hanson&#13;
Among many feminists there 1S an element of manhating.&#13;
Some people who see this become very upset and have some&#13;
picturesque terms with which to label these Iemuusts (dyke, butch.&#13;
castrating bitch. and so on&gt;. These labels are emotionally charged, a&#13;
are the reactions of many people to the concept of man-hating. After&#13;
being brain-washed all their lives with tbe myth of man the protector.&#13;
it is no wonder that women are shakell by the idea of surviving Without&#13;
him, and men are insulted that anyone would consider them less than&#13;
totally perfect. And if women hate men, what happens to love and&#13;
marriage and the propagation of the species'&#13;
These reactions are gut reactions resulting from years 01 sexist&#13;
propaganda. I would like to rationally show that hatred of men as •&#13;
class by women as a class is a logical resuJl of their roles in thlS&#13;
society. The roles are that of women as oppressed and men as Ol"&#13;
pressor. It is an tmdeniable fact that women are oppressed by men and&#13;
that men reap in the advantages of this oppression all their lives_&#13;
Throoghoot history when there has existed a like situation, the Ol"&#13;
pressed class derived much strength and unity from their collective&#13;
hatred for the oppressing class. It is this hatred which has been the&#13;
downfall of the oppressing class.&#13;
Whoever constructed the form for society learned this historical&#13;
lesson well. Our society, with its love-and-serve-men precept for&#13;
women, has effectively precluded the unifying step of hatred whIch&#13;
woold be its ruin. Until now. These days uppity women are rejecting&#13;
many of the myths men are so fond of. Through this rejection, w'omen&#13;
are moving toward the ultimate step of hatred for their oppressor&#13;
which will be followed by revolution. Come this revolution, a new&#13;
society in which all people are created equal will be forged.&#13;
The question of the fate of love and marriage has not been answered.&#13;
I cannot answer it except in a personal way since it is a very pnvate&#13;
and individual matter, Certainly the institutions through which the&#13;
propagation of the species is effected will change, It is up to each individual&#13;
whether or not you can lovea-member 'JC a class or people you&#13;
hate&#13;
Is Parkside&#13;
professional theatre?&#13;
by Tom Petersen&#13;
Parksides first major play production. "The Virus," again bnngs&#13;
up the question of" hether or not the best interests of the students were&#13;
kept in mind. It seems in all the effort and excitement of wanting to&#13;
make a complete success of the play, someone felt It necessary to&#13;
bring in a Broadway actress. a well as the director and his wife&#13;
having lead roles, to heighten the quality of the play. ThIS 10 Itself&#13;
doesn't seem SOhad until you realize that students have only foor of&#13;
the seven parts in the play.&#13;
I feel the main i ue here is not who has the parts but to re-evaluat&#13;
the main purpose 10 having a theatrical program. hoold the ca t for a&#13;
college play be chosen from only the student body, faculty and&#13;
students. or should participation be open to the commuruty a a&#13;
whole? Or is it necessary to bring in professional actors to achieve&#13;
quality theater and also public recogrution1&#13;
In a school like Parkside it is necessary to receive student upport to&#13;
make anything a success But how can you expect students to try out&#13;
for a econd play if they feel they have to compete agamst prof ional&#13;
actors? How are students encouraged to work to make anythmg a&#13;
success if they think the school will solve [be problem by bringmg 10 a&#13;
trouble shooter to do it for them'? Parkside IS a learnmg Institution,&#13;
and a failure IS Just as much a learning experience as a smashing&#13;
success, which is obviously what they're trying to make this play,&#13;
Having ~1i Jeannette here at Parkside can also be a great benefit lo&#13;
those students in "The Virus" and others inlerested in Dramatics, but&#13;
is that the reason she was brought here?&#13;
Imagine this situation, it's the Ranger's first basketball game ever&#13;
In an attempt to make an impressive showmg, and to put Parkside 10&#13;
the spotlight, they bring in a professional basketball player. Of course&#13;
the Rangers win a whopping victory but is It the team's success or 15it&#13;
the pro's, with the team as merely his extras?&#13;
Xaturally. it's not the same situatIon, but where do you draw the&#13;
line?&#13;
Ran er free classifieds t----&#13;
FOA. SALE F1SCI'tH slolperJl.us sJus, lOt&#13;
em "ever mou"led Of used, '120 Of best&#13;
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We get letters ...&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
ubject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confned&#13;
to JOO words or less, typed 1&#13;
nd double-spaced. The editors&#13;
:eserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
With reference to Stacy&#13;
Postier, Kenosha Sophomore,&#13;
comments which appeared in the&#13;
October 10th edition, I cannot&#13;
help, despite my better&#13;
judgement, but feel pity and&#13;
sorrow for Ms. Postier, because&#13;
she is obviously a very small and&#13;
lonely individual functioning&#13;
from an eighteen-hundred 0800)&#13;
perspective. ·&#13;
Ms. Postler is a member of a&#13;
dying breed of White Americans&#13;
that still cannot get it through&#13;
their heads that non-White&#13;
Americans never have had the&#13;
chance of a new beginning and a&#13;
new life when they immigrated to&#13;
this country. That chance which&#13;
European immigrants have&#13;
taken for their right. Likewise,&#13;
this dying breed have failed to&#13;
recognize that the so-called black&#13;
problem is a gross case of&#13;
mislabeling. It is really a White&#13;
problem. It has been a white&#13;
problem all along, a problem of&#13;
white prejudice as harmful to&#13;
Whites as to their Black victims.&#13;
fost Whites have finally been&#13;
forced to confront themselves&#13;
with this terrible inner conflict&#13;
and no one can pretend the&#13;
confrontation did not occur.&#13;
This country and this campus&#13;
will be in much better shape&#13;
when Ms. Postier and her breed&#13;
dies off. So hurry Stacy, I and&#13;
others are waiting for the day!&#13;
M.Gibson&#13;
Freshman&#13;
To the editors:&#13;
The student government here&#13;
at Parkside has been in a state of&#13;
limbo recently.&#13;
According to sources, the&#13;
PSGA elections are being put off&#13;
witil the steering committee&#13;
(which is not a steering committee&#13;
until CCC does meet)&#13;
gives them their findings on how&#13;
they should run.&#13;
Well, this is all fine and dandy&#13;
but during this time all the&#13;
Park ide student body has is nine&#13;
members of the Student Senate&#13;
who cannot do anything until thev&#13;
firs~ change the constitution by getting a referendum before the&#13;
stu~ents .. If ~is is done, and I&#13;
don t_ think it will, (note the&#13;
elections held last year and less&#13;
than 10 . percent of the student&#13;
population voted) student&#13;
government should hold elections&#13;
as soon as possible. This will help&#13;
the student government imlement&#13;
~e suggestions made by the steering committee.&#13;
Bruce Wagner Kenosha sophomore&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to "goddamn&#13;
minority recruitment" I would&#13;
like to say that minority&#13;
recruitment doesn't make college&#13;
a mockery, but instead a reality&#13;
for those to whom it did not exist.&#13;
Education should not be regarded&#13;
as a privilege extended only to&#13;
the more affluent segment of our&#13;
society, it is a right which should&#13;
be extended to everyone in our&#13;
society regardless of ethnic&#13;
origin, religion, sex, or economic&#13;
background_. The fact that admissions&#13;
requirements were&#13;
reduced indicates a concern, by&#13;
the administration, toward&#13;
lessening the discrimination and&#13;
alienation that minority students&#13;
face when entering this&#13;
university.&#13;
I'd also like to add that the&#13;
irrelevencies that minority&#13;
students feel are not only in&#13;
lifestyle, but in curriculum,&#13;
social, and cultural activities as&#13;
well. Instead of a course in "Head&#13;
Shrinking Made Easy," how&#13;
about courses in contemporary&#13;
Black Literature, or the history&#13;
of Mexican-American labor in the&#13;
U.S., or studies in problems of the&#13;
urbanized native-American (the&#13;
list is endless). Also, it's true that&#13;
UW-Madison's ethnic centers&#13;
were closed down, but not for&#13;
lack of student interest on the&#13;
part of the minority students.&#13;
Aside from the cultural activities&#13;
they provided, those centers had&#13;
in operation many necessary&#13;
functions, e .g. tutorial and&#13;
counseling services, referral,&#13;
recruitment, and orientational&#13;
services also. Shutting down&#13;
Madison's ethnic centers will not&#13;
only hurt the minority student,&#13;
but also the student community&#13;
as a whole. It's my hope that we&#13;
Parkside students and staff do&#13;
not view UW-Madison as a&#13;
forerunner in minority affairs.&#13;
I'd like to end this letter by&#13;
saying that it's a sad, sad day&#13;
when we as minority students&#13;
have to justify our presence at&#13;
this university. Emiliano Contreras&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
In reply to tacy Posll r·&#13;
letter in the October 10 i ue of&#13;
the Park id RA. GER:&#13;
It eem that at least one of mv&#13;
felloY. tudent at Parkside ha.&#13;
been succe full) indoctrinated&#13;
through Our Great c1ety, in th&#13;
belief that White i upreme.&#13;
Apparent!) tacy doe not&#13;
realize that adm1 -ion tandard&#13;
were lowered for "en one entering&#13;
chool: not just ·minority&#13;
group . As far as the administration&#13;
is concerned, I thmk&#13;
their primary reason for wantin&#13;
more tudent &lt;thu lower&#13;
tandards) i that th chool&#13;
receive a certain amount of&#13;
money for each tudent attendin&#13;
for u e m its budget. I feel our&#13;
time a active tudents can be&#13;
better utilized bitching about&#13;
things such as the di tr1bulion of&#13;
tickets for the • lilwaukee&#13;
ymphony Orchestra concert. A&#13;
I heard the story, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie distributed the vast&#13;
majority, if not all, the tickets to&#13;
his friends. I myself was here at&#13;
school the night of the performance,&#13;
and the place was&#13;
crawling with elites dressed in&#13;
formal wear. I was told b a&#13;
student who attended the performance&#13;
that she and her friend&#13;
were the only Parkside tudents&#13;
in attendance. That's strange&#13;
because I knew several people&#13;
(students) who wanted to attend,&#13;
but weren't able to get tic ets.&#13;
Free refreshments were also&#13;
served. A gala affair.&#13;
I have a very strong feeling&#13;
that if I was one of tho e&#13;
"di atisfied" black . I would be&#13;
more dissatisfied with going to&#13;
the same school with people such&#13;
as tacy than not having cours&#13;
in Black Culture, Hi ton·. etc.&#13;
The Black people are a eparate&#13;
race, with a different culture, a&#13;
different heritage, but are tilJ&#13;
human beings, upposed.ly equal&#13;
in the eye of the God tacy&#13;
peak of. far as our Great&#13;
American (White) Heritage o ,&#13;
I feel more a. hamed than proud.&#13;
If our government i n't oppre&#13;
ing the American Indian or&#13;
the Black or the Vietname e or&#13;
whoever el e they can find, it 1&#13;
oppressing we the people. Oppre&#13;
ion i the one area where&#13;
our government truly doe not&#13;
concern it elf with racial differences.&#13;
&#13;
Charle purgeon Fari III&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Can it be that there ha been a&#13;
deliberate intent to mi int rpret&#13;
my letter in la t wee ·&#13;
RA. 'GER? Accordin to vour&#13;
addend d Editor' note both Tom&#13;
Jennett and Dean Echelberger&#13;
confirmed that the previou week· ton· Y.a correct. nfortunateJy&#13;
· aying it don't make&#13;
it so.&#13;
Article II Paragraph F,&#13;
ction 2 of the tud nt Government&#13;
Con titut1on .tat -·&#13;
2. In th event both the&#13;
pre 1der and the ,,,ce-pr ·1d nt&#13;
\'acate, the nate hall choo_e an&#13;
acting pre ident from among i&#13;
member to erve until the ne. t&#13;
cheduled elections.&#13;
ince the enate is d funct&#13;
because of a lac of quorum, 1t&#13;
can certainlv choo e no&#13;
pre 1dent. oice agam, the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Senate cho e Tom Jennett a acting chairman, there i no ,ay it could appoint him Pre-1dent.&#13;
In the future please confirm&#13;
tho e stories you print, some&#13;
people are gullible enough to&#13;
believe everything they read. It&#13;
should be your responsibility to&#13;
ensure dissemination of the truth.&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
Senator&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Is Parkside&#13;
professional theatre?&#13;
Ranger free classifieds&#13;
FOR SALE F,sc ..... SU!MrJI IU ~ s, ,_&#13;
cm, never "" M or used, S12t or Mst er C• 11215 1-4, or .:11.1 l, ask r • .,.&#13;
~ &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 1" 1973&#13;
History of Middle East is conflict&#13;
b) Rtbecca Ecklund&#13;
The war In the tiddle East is erupting into a&#13;
major con!liet once again. It has become almost a&#13;
routln~ event to hear about a border skinnish or&#13;
bombing raid talung place in that part of the world.&#13;
(t h become so commoo.1D fact. that one tends to&#13;
[orget J t "hat all that dyIng is about, and how it&#13;
came about The real reasons [or the Arab-[sraeli conIIiet are&#13;
too deeply rooted 10 the political and social&#13;
prejudiees of both races of people to go into here. A&#13;
rather general history of Palestine should serve to&#13;
return to US 8 sense or perspective.&#13;
Ever since .0. 135, when the Jews were driven&#13;
[rom Jerusalem by Roman """que""", the&#13;
"cllildren o[ Israel" have been scattered throughout&#13;
the W tern and 'ear-Eastern worlds. They have&#13;
literally been a people ""thout a eounlry, conidered&#13;
"[oregnen" no matter where they settle.&#13;
Alter the Romans came eenturtes 01 dilIerent&#13;
Invade". ell new horde destroying the previous&#13;
00 • each Illtent upon eOl'ltrol!lllg Palestine.&#13;
In the late ItlOOS, a group was [ormed called the&#13;
World ZIonist ~anization (WZOl. Spurred into&#13;
acllOO by the bloody anti-5ernitie pogroms carried&#13;
out aiain t ghetto Jews In Russia and Poland, the&#13;
WZ plan was to purchase and rebuild the Jewish&#13;
homeland A1mo t tOO, Jew' were living 10 Palestine by&#13;
1914'"hen World War I broke out. and the Jewish&#13;
homel nd coce again became a battlefield.&#13;
Afler that war was o,..er, Great Britain was given&#13;
1&#13;
J&#13;
control of the Middle East and a dispute arose over&#13;
possession o[ Palestine. The area had been&#13;
promised to the Arabs in \9\5 and also to the Jews m&#13;
the Balfour Declaration of 19\8. That mandate of&#13;
\9\8 was formally approved by the newly-[orrned&#13;
League of Nations in 1923.&#13;
The "double.promised" land&#13;
The "doUble-promised" land became a refuge for&#13;
Jews fleeing the European persecutions of the \9305,&#13;
that is, the anti-semitic vendetta inititated by Adolf&#13;
Hitler and his Nazi party. As a result, Jewish immigration&#13;
increased to half a million by \939, onethird&#13;
of Palestine'S total population.&#13;
Arab hostility was not articulated immediately:&#13;
disorganization, lack of concentrated effort, and&#13;
Iack of any real intellectual leader kept the Arabs.&#13;
inactive until 1936. A rebellion broke out at that time&#13;
but was quicl&lt;ly suppressed by British troops.&#13;
The White Paper mandate of \939 put a definite&#13;
ceiling of 75,000 Jews allowed entry into Palestine&#13;
between 1939 and \945. It was meant to appease the&#13;
Arab nations' complaints and it did just that.&#13;
The entire matter was handed baek to the U.N. in&#13;
1947, and the partitioning of Palestine into two&#13;
separate states was recommended. The Jews were&#13;
willing to accept this idea, but the Arabs were not.&#13;
Then. in May o{.l948,David Ben-Gurion, an active&#13;
Jewish nationalist, and leaders of the WZO announced&#13;
to the world the formation of an independent&#13;
state of Israel.&#13;
Arabian troops immediately attacked Israel: this&#13;
war, interrupted twice by UN-arranged cease-fires,&#13;
lasted for about a year. In early \949, armistice&#13;
agreements were signed by Israel and four Arab&#13;
nations. Itwas a decisive victory for the new Jewish&#13;
nation. "Thesecond of the four wars that have plagued and&#13;
are plaguing the Middle East is known as the Suez&#13;
Conflict. After 1949, sporadic but incessant terrorist&#13;
fighting continued with increasing severity until a&#13;
full-scale war broke out in \956. The Suez Conflict&#13;
lasted only a few days but in that time, Israel gained&#13;
some very important ~erritory (for example, the&#13;
Sinai Peninsula), scormg another swift military&#13;
triumph.&#13;
Six Day War&#13;
A steady escalation of attacks and reprisals and&#13;
continuing border skirmishes triggered the war of&#13;
1967, or the Six Day War.&#13;
President Gamal Nassar of the United Arab&#13;
Republic (UAR) made a show of force by demanding&#13;
in May of \967 that the United Nations&#13;
Emergency Force (UNEFl be withdrawn from&#13;
territory that Israel had gained in 1956. UNEF&#13;
troops were withdrawn, UAR troops moved in and&#13;
Isr-ael ,launched an immediate attack.' The&#13;
retaliation attack by the Jews was so swift and so&#13;
devastating that they succeeded in occupying more&#13;
than double the amount of territory they'd held&#13;
previously. Isr-ael could claim ~other total victory.&#13;
The war that IS raging now m the Middle East is&#13;
no different from the Six Day War or the Suez&#13;
ConDict or the battle for independence:. it is a fight&#13;
to the death of one nation, and winner take all.&#13;
N.Y. actress heads "Virus"·cast&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette. the New York based Broadway-movie--TV&#13;
actress ",-hoheads a student-faculty cast currently in rehearsal for the&#13;
pt'e.miere production of Herbert Kubly's "The Virus," discusses the&#13;
sc.npl a~ve with tbe playwrtght (center) and Director-actor Don&#13;
Rmh (ngbtl.&#13;
232'i-sit.keto»e,w,&#13;
-----$~~/. \&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
Playing November 1-4 at the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater will&#13;
be the Herbert Kubly play, "The&#13;
Virus." Kubly is a parkside&#13;
English professor.&#13;
The play is of the conflicts of a&#13;
bi-racial family as the children&#13;
learn of their heritage and&#13;
themselves. To play the part of&#13;
the mother, Delia, a professional&#13;
actress, Gertrude Jeannette, was&#13;
hired from New York. She has&#13;
appeared in several Broadway&#13;
productions. Some of the plays&#13;
she has been in are "Nobody&#13;
Loves an Albatross" with Robert&#13;
Preston, and "The Amen Corner"&#13;
with Bea Richards and&#13;
James Baldwin, which also&#13;
toured the west coast and London.&#13;
One of her off-Broadway&#13;
productions was •'The Little&#13;
Foxes" with Edward G.&#13;
Robinson, Betty Field and Jerry&#13;
Page. Jeanne!.!e has appeared in&#13;
such movies as "Shaft," "Cotton&#13;
Comes to Harlem," and "The&#13;
Legend of Nigger Charlie." On&#13;
;:v she has played in the special,&#13;
To Be Young, Gifted and&#13;
Black," "The Nurses," and "The&#13;
Defenders," to name a few.&#13;
Don Rintz, Parkside assistant&#13;
professor of communications&#13;
and his wife Annabell will hav~&#13;
lead rol~s also. Rintz, who is also&#13;
the director, will portray&#13;
Laurance, Delia's architect son&#13;
In his capacity as a Parksid~&#13;
teacher, Rintz Instructs Persuasion&#13;
and Introduction to&#13;
Dramatic Arts. The last play h&lt;&#13;
appeared in was the lead role 1D&#13;
"The Error of Sexton Jones," m&#13;
the Robert Grand Theater An·&#13;
nabell Rintz will appear as&#13;
Pamela, Laurance's fiancee ID&#13;
the play. She has appeared in&#13;
previous Parkside productioos&#13;
Four Parkside students are&#13;
also appearing in the play. Rick&#13;
Ponzio, from Kenosha, will&#13;
portray Reuben, scientist sonof&#13;
Delia. Some of his previOU$&#13;
performances were in "Thieves&#13;
Carnival" at Carthage, Kenosha&#13;
Jr. Women's Club Follies, and&#13;
"My Fair Lady" at St. Jose~'s&#13;
High School. Judie Smith, [rom&#13;
Kenosha, portrays Rhnda, sister&#13;
of Laurance and Reuben. Someof&#13;
her previous acting experiences&#13;
were Dorothy in the "WizardrJ&#13;
Oz" and Anne O'Sullivan in "'lbe&#13;
Miracle Worker." She is alsoaD&#13;
accomplished puppeteer, and&#13;
was owner, director and&#13;
producer of Peanut Butter and&#13;
- Jelly Ltd., of Kenosha. Denn~&#13;
Geraghty of Racine, plays Dreo&#13;
GiUford, Rhoda's boyfriend.H'&#13;
has appeared in several hig!!&#13;
school plays. Steve Lott, alsoor&#13;
Racine, portrays Ajax, a black&#13;
student activist.&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the In&#13;
formation Kiosk. The price fer&#13;
students is-$1.50, general publIC&#13;
$3.&#13;
johnny got his gUll&#13;
PAB&#13;
FEATURE F\LM SERIES&#13;
Fri. October 19&#13;
8,OOP.M.&#13;
Sun. October 21&#13;
7'30P.M.&#13;
ADMfSSION 15C&#13;
Student Activities Bldg&#13;
UWP a. Wis. I.D ReqUired&#13;
Dalton TrumbO's controversial film of a r:: .&#13;
mutilated veteran who emerges from&#13;
nothing more than a vegetable, As a oe~a:s'~It'If&#13;
indictment of war. "Johnny Got HiS VuJI ,~&#13;
most shOCKing and powefful af9umen1&#13;
jOl" •&#13;
you'll ever see.&#13;
ry of Middle East is conflict&#13;
~wcaiEckhmd&#13;
The in the Middle East is erupting into a&#13;
major conflict once apin. It bu becGme almost a&#13;
routine event to bear about a border akirmi8h •&#13;
bin&amp; raid takin&amp; place in that part ol lbe world.&#13;
ome 10 common, in fact, lhat one tends to&#13;
fcqet what all that dying is about, and how it&#13;
came about&#13;
The rMl reuona for the Arab-laraell ccnflict are&#13;
deeply rooted in tbe polidcal and IOCial&#13;
prejudices ol both races ol people to ID into here. A&#13;
rather aenera) bmory ol Paleltine should serve to&#13;
retum to us a of perspective.&#13;
since A.D. 135, when the Jews were siven&#13;
from Jeruulem by Roman conqueron, the&#13;
"dillchn ol ael" have been acattered throughout&#13;
Wa~-n and ear-Eastern ~ - 1bey have&#13;
y been • people thout • country. con- "foreipen" DO matter where they leCtle.&#13;
Altlr the Romana came centuries ol different&#13;
a , ch new horde destroying tbe previous&#13;
, each iDtenl upon controlling Pai.tine.&#13;
In tbe late 1 • a an,up formed called the&#13;
arid Zioniat Orpniution &lt;WZO&gt;. Spurred into&#13;
action by the bloody anti-8emitic pocroma carried&#13;
out apimt petto Jews in Russia and Poland, the&#13;
plan to purchase and rebuild the Jewish&#13;
homeland. A1moat I , J livlnl in Palestine by&#13;
l9lfwben arid War I broke out, and tbe Jewish&#13;
homeland once apin became a battlefield.&#13;
After lhat war over, Great Britain a given&#13;
control of the Middle East and a dispute arose over&#13;
possession of Palestine. The area bad ~&#13;
promised to the Arabs in 1915 and also to the Jews m&#13;
the Balfo1r Declaration of 1918. That mandate of&#13;
1918 was formally approved by the newly-fom:ied&#13;
League of atioos in 1923.&#13;
TIie "'double-promised" land&#13;
The "double-promised" land became a refuge for&#13;
Jews fleeing the European persecutions ol the 1930s,&#13;
that is, the anti-Semitic vendetta inititated by Adolf&#13;
Hitler and his az.i party. As a result, Jewish immigration&#13;
increased to half a million by 1939, onethird&#13;
of Palestine's total population.&#13;
Arab hostility was not articulated immediately:&#13;
«lsorganization, lack of concentrated effort, and&#13;
lack of any real intellectual leader kept the Arabs&#13;
inactive until 1936. A rebellioo broke out at that time&#13;
but was quickly suppressed by British troop&amp;.&#13;
The White Paper mandate of 1939 put a definite&#13;
ceiling ol 75,000 Jews allowed entry into Palestine&#13;
between 1939 and 1945. It was meant to appease the&#13;
Arab natioos' complaints and it did just that.&#13;
The entire matter was banded back to the U.N. in&#13;
1947, and the partitiooing of Palestine into two&#13;
separate states was recommended. The Jews were&#13;
willing to accept this idea, but the Arabs were not.&#13;
Then, in Mayol_1948, David Ben-Gurion, an active&#13;
Jewish nationalist, and leaden of the WZO annol.llC:ed&#13;
to the world the formation of an independent&#13;
state of Jsr..el.&#13;
Arabian troops immediately attacked Israel: this&#13;
war, interrupted twice by UN-arranged cease-fires,&#13;
lasted for about a year. In early 1949, armistice&#13;
agreements were signed by Israel and four Arab&#13;
nations. It was a decisive victory for the new Jewish&#13;
nation. The second of the four wars that have plagued and&#13;
are plaguing the Middle East is known as the Suez&#13;
Conflict.&#13;
After 1949, sporadic but incessant terrorist&#13;
fighting continued with increasing severity until 1&#13;
full-scale war broke out in 1956. The Suez Conflict&#13;
lasted only a few days but in that time, Israel gained&#13;
some very important territory (for example, the&#13;
Sinai Peninsula), scoring another swift military&#13;
triumph.&#13;
Six Day War&#13;
A steady escalation of attacks and reprisals and&#13;
continuing border skirmishes triggered the war of&#13;
1967, or the Six Day War.&#13;
President Gamal Nassar of the United Arab&#13;
Republic (UAR) made a show of force by demanding&#13;
in May of 1967 that the United Nations&#13;
Emergency Force (UNEF) be withdrawn from&#13;
territory that Israel had gained in 1956. lJNEF&#13;
troops were withdrawn, UAR troops moved in and&#13;
Israel launched an immediate attack. '1be&#13;
retaliation attack by the Jews was so swift and 80&#13;
devastating that they succeeded in occupying more&#13;
than double the amount of territory they'd held&#13;
previously. Israel could claim another total victory&#13;
The war that is raging now in the Middle Eat ~&#13;
no different from the Six Day War or the Sues&#13;
Conflict or the battle for independence~ it ia a fllbt&#13;
to the death of one nation, and winner take all.&#13;
N. Y. actress heads ''Virus'' -cast&#13;
-g&#13;
....&#13;
.g&#13;
....&#13;
-&#13;
Gertrude JeaMette. the . ·ew York based Broadway-movie-TV&#13;
actres who h\"ads a student-facuhy cast CDl"N!lltly in rehearsal for the&#13;
premiere production of Herbert Kubly's "The Virus," discusses the&#13;
script above •itb tbe playwright (center) and Director-actor Don&#13;
Riatz (right&gt;.&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
Playing November 1-4 at the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater will&#13;
be the Herbert Kubly play, "The&#13;
Virus." Kubly is a Parkside&#13;
English professor.&#13;
The play is of the conflicts of a&#13;
bi-racial family as the children&#13;
learn of their heritage and&#13;
themselves. To play the part of&#13;
the mother, Delia, a professional&#13;
actress, Gertrude Jeannette, was&#13;
hired from New York. She has&#13;
appeared in several Broadway&#13;
productions. Some of the plays&#13;
she has been in are "Nobody&#13;
Loves an Albatross" with Robert&#13;
Preston, and "The Amen Corner"&#13;
with Bea Richards and&#13;
James Baldwin, which also&#13;
toured the west coast and London.&#13;
One of her off-Broadway&#13;
productions was " The Little&#13;
Foxes" with Edward G.&#13;
Robinson, Betty Field and Jerry&#13;
Page. Jeannet,te has appeared in&#13;
such movies as "Shaft," "Cotton&#13;
Comes to Harlem," and "The&#13;
Legend of Nigger Charlie." On&#13;
"f:Y she has played in the special,&#13;
To Be Young, Gifted and&#13;
Black," "The Nurses," and "The&#13;
Defenders," to name a few.&#13;
Don Rintz, Parkside assistant&#13;
professor of communications&#13;
and his wife Annabell will hav~&#13;
lead roles also. Rintz, who is also&#13;
the direc tor, will portray&#13;
Laurance, Delia's architect son&#13;
In his capacity as a Parksid~&#13;
teacher, Rintz instrq_cta .,._&#13;
sua sion a nd lntroductioa II&#13;
Dramatic Arts. The last pJay lie&#13;
appea red in was the lead rde II "The Error of Sexton Joia," II&#13;
the Robert Grand Theater. Allnabell&#13;
Rintz will appear •&#13;
Pamela, Laurance's fiancee II&#13;
the play. She has appeued II&#13;
previous Parkside produclila.&#13;
Four Pa rkside students are&#13;
also appearing in the play. Rim&#13;
Ponzio, from Kenosha, wtl&#13;
portray Reuben, scientist son II&#13;
Delia. Some of his pmi.&#13;
performances were in '"lbieftl&#13;
Carnival" at Carthage, KeDIIIIII&#13;
Jr. Women's Club Follies, •&#13;
"My Fair Lady" at St. J_,.'&#13;
High School. Judie Smith, fra&#13;
Kenosha, portrays Rhoda, 111W&#13;
of Laurance and Reuben. Seine.,&#13;
her previous acting 1:;xpek'iele9&#13;
were Dorothy in the "Wizard II&#13;
Oz" and Anne O'Sullivan in '11111&#13;
Miracle Worker." She is allo •&#13;
accomplished puppeteer, ...&#13;
was owner, director ud&#13;
producer of Peanut Butter ,.&#13;
· Jelly Ltd., of Kenosha. Delllll&#13;
Geraghty of Racine, plays Drfl&#13;
Gillford, Rhoda's boyfriend. He&#13;
has appeared in several billl&#13;
school plays. Steve Lott. al!!&#13;
Racine, portrays Ajax, a -&#13;
student activist.&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the Itformation&#13;
Kiosk. The price f•&#13;
students is· $1.50, general publit&#13;
$3.&#13;
johnny got his gun&#13;
Dalton Trumbo's controversial film Ol 1 ~ mutilated veteran who emerges from 11 nothing more than a vegetable. A•" Ot&gt;',. ..,&#13;
indictment of war, "Johnny Got His viii' ,,,_, ~ most shocking and powerful argument tor&#13;
you' ll ever see.&#13;
PAR&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
Fri. October 19&#13;
8:00P.M.&#13;
Sun. October %1&#13;
7:30P.M.&#13;
ADMISSION 75C&#13;
Student Activities Bldg-&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Seven Mile&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
You can get there by driving&#13;
out Racine's Highway 38 to the&#13;
Seven Mile Road, going (rom a&#13;
wealthy suburbia with row after&#13;
row of two-story homes to (arm&#13;
fields with row after row of corn&#13;
and cabbage. Go past the town or&#13;
Husher and on by vegetable&#13;
stands nestled in the (allen leaves&#13;
of a farmer's front lawn, where a&#13;
city slicker can buy pumpkins or&#13;
peppers. tomatoes, beans. squash&#13;
and cabbage without checking&#13;
them through a grocery store&#13;
line.&#13;
The Seven-Mile Fair starts&#13;
early every Sunday morning o(&#13;
the year. While most people are&#13;
still warm in bed or at Sunday&#13;
morning church, the Seven-Mile&#13;
sellers and buyers have begun to&#13;
move. Shop has been set up,&#13;
whether it be (rom the trunk or&#13;
the car, tbe back of a pick-up&#13;
truck or on card tables. the&#13;
merchandise is out to be sold.&#13;
Pigeons, paper-backs, hall o( a&#13;
wheelbarrow (or $2, pool cues,&#13;
guns and carpeting-you name it.&#13;
most likely it's there at the&#13;
Seven-Mile Fair.&#13;
And the people? All shapes,&#13;
syndrome&#13;
sizes, colors and backgrounds are&#13;
there. Some wear their best suits&#13;
and ties or a Janey dress with&#13;
jewelry and look down at&#13;
everything but a good bargain.&#13;
Others may have furnished their&#13;
homes (rom items they have&#13;
discovered there.&#13;
And those o( us who go just to&#13;
look around at the people and the&#13;
sales will walk for hours,&#13;
fascinated. Horse saddles, office&#13;
supplies. brand new stereo sets,&#13;
clothes, lash whips, guitars. toilet&#13;
paper. tennis shoes. duck decoys.&#13;
old plastic purses, plates. used&#13;
children's games. and more and&#13;
more and more.&#13;
One man tells a prospective&#13;
buyer. "That's why it's cheap.&#13;
Ain't you hand)' at fixin' things?"&#13;
The Seven. 1iIe Fair even has&#13;
Its own produce department The&#13;
southeast corner of the Iatr'&#13;
grounds is reserved (or farm&#13;
produce, poultry. rabbits.&#13;
flowers, ducks. pigeons, and the&#13;
like.&#13;
And asthe day goes on, hundreds&#13;
and hundreds o( people&#13;
visit and file through the (air&#13;
Fathers hold on to a beer and&#13;
mothers to scores o( litUe, dirty&#13;
children Old men and women&#13;
make their way through the&#13;
crowd.&#13;
And the sellers jump to dump&#13;
their goods. One can bargain a&#13;
price. "You offer me 8 IX'lce."&#13;
they will say_&#13;
"Super sex 10sexly~1 25 value&#13;
(or only $1," a woman tells an&#13;
Interested bypasser. " tandard&#13;
sex to sexty-$1 value. only 7S&#13;
cents," she says. For those who&#13;
haven't been out there to kllO'A',&#13;
these are magazines.&#13;
And then there are cans or&#13;
. pray paint, boxes of tools. pIlotOl&#13;
of other people's relatives.&#13;
lamps, socks, puppie , truck .... •&#13;
. afety wallets. "Who's next.&#13;
please,H someone says.&#13;
It's like this every Sunday o(&#13;
the year, ram, hme, $nOW or&#13;
cold. a long a there are people&#13;
there will be a fa,r&#13;
Aller people have joume~·ed&#13;
past the goods, bought some and&#13;
lett others behind (or SOmeone&#13;
else, lhey return to their car and&#13;
home. Back through Husher and&#13;
(all helds of harve ted com, pa t&#13;
a horseback rider or lWo, and&#13;
fmally home lO examee what&#13;
they've bought and hnd a plac&#13;
(or It.&#13;
photos by RANGER pbcccgrapber BriaD Ross&#13;
Wednesday , Oct. 17, 1973 THE PARKSfDE RANGER 5&#13;
Seven Mile syndrome&#13;
by Debra FriedeU&#13;
You can get there by driving&#13;
out Racine's Highway 38 to the&#13;
Seven me Road, going from a&#13;
wealthy suburbia with row after&#13;
row of two-story homes to farm&#13;
fields with row after row of corn&#13;
and cabbage. Go past the town of&#13;
Husher and on by vegetable&#13;
stands nestled in the fallen leaves&#13;
of a farmer's front lawn, where a&#13;
city slicker can buy pwnpkins or&#13;
peppers. tomatoes. beans, squash&#13;
and cabbage without checking&#13;
them throug}l a grocery tore&#13;
line.&#13;
The Seven-. tile Fair star&#13;
early every Sunday morning of&#13;
the year. While most people are&#13;
still warm in bed or at unday&#13;
morning church, the even-. tile&#13;
sellers and buyers have begun to&#13;
move. hop has been . et up,&#13;
whether it be from the trunk of&#13;
the car, the back of a pick-up&#13;
truck or on card tables, the&#13;
merchandise is out to be sold.&#13;
Pigeons, paper-bac , half of a&#13;
wheelbarrow for $2, pool cues.&#13;
guns and carpeting-you name it,&#13;
most likely it's there at the&#13;
Seven-Mile Fair.&#13;
And the people? All hapes,&#13;
sizes. colors and backgrounds are&#13;
there. Some wear their be ·t uits&#13;
and ties or a fancy dr with&#13;
jewelry and look down at&#13;
everything but a good bargain.&#13;
Others may have furnished their&#13;
homes from item they have&#13;
discovered there.&#13;
And those of us who go just to&#13;
loo around at the people and the&#13;
sale will walk for hour" ,&#13;
fascinated . Ho e ddle , office&#13;
upplies. brand new tereo et: ,&#13;
clothe , la h whip·, guitars, toilet&#13;
p.1per. tenni _ hoes, duck deco~. ,&#13;
old pla tic purs ·, plat , used&#13;
children'. game,. and more and&#13;
more and more.&#13;
e man tell a p&#13;
buyer, "That' ·hy it' cheap.&#13;
in't you hand: at ii in' thi&#13;
The ,en-. Iii Fair · n ha&#13;
its own produce d p.1rtment. Th&#13;
outhea. t com r of th fair&#13;
ground i r rved for farm&#13;
produce, poultry, rabbit .&#13;
flo ·ers, due ~, pi eor1-, nd the&#13;
Ii e.&#13;
\nd a .th day goes on, hun·&#13;
dr and hundr of people&#13;
v1. it and file through th fair.&#13;
Fathers hold on to a be r and&#13;
mothers to cores of little, dirt ·&#13;
children. Old men and v.om n&#13;
thro h th&#13;
mp to dump&#13;
photos b)· RANGER photograph r Bri n Ross &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, oct. 17, 1973&#13;
Bargain or beg ----------&#13;
faculty that the AdDunislration must be able to&#13;
prove that there is no money that could be pared&#13;
elsewhere instead of terminating faculty. Ewers&#13;
explained that otherwise the Administration must&#13;
prove a faculty member is incompetent.&#13;
tnnis said that the 15llOteacbers in'Racinewho are&#13;
....'EA members are not looked at as subprofessionals.&#13;
Unionism is nol non_professional.&#13;
"You need things to perform your job, you have to&#13;
collectively bargain for them or coUectively beg or&#13;
individually beg:' Innis said. Hit is time:' ~e&#13;
...-arned "to consider what you want, what you re&#13;
all a~t. and how to go about getting it. You must&#13;
collectively get together ratber than argue for two&#13;
or three more years. The prestige of !be college&#13;
professor is declining."&#13;
Mack explained that each WEA chapter has total&#13;
autonomy and that no one would control a local&#13;
chapter. Twenty-seven (aculty members are&#13;
needed to make the local organization.&#13;
Ron Gottesman, Parkside professor of English,&#13;
said that "whenever !be Parkside Administration&#13;
gets womed over faculty organizing, and whenever&#13;
y&lt;&gt;ugo to Madison and they ask, 'Are they&#13;
organiung down there yet' then !bere's no way&#13;
organiting can be a bad thing."&#13;
One faculty member reminded his coUeagues that&#13;
joining a union does not mean they would all be&#13;
punching m time cards every morning.&#13;
With the meeting's end, many faculty members&#13;
bad s.gned !beir WEA membershiP card, turning it&#13;
in to Mack and going off to encourage other faculty&#13;
to oome to the fIrS! organizational meeting this&#13;
Friday.&#13;
g1a and \t wa announced that Gerald Ford&#13;
W 'IXon' choice for Vic.,.Presldent. members of&#13;
WEAC e to the faculty&#13;
Ben Ew..... , a Racme hIgh school teacher and a&#13;
WEA counoelor to the state executIve oomrnillee&#13;
told 01 WEA' commItment to higher education.&#13;
"WEA IS an organluuon and vehicle by whIch we&#13;
C8JI e pollticall) active," he said Ewen cited&#13;
amp! 01 WEAC glvmg money tn support of&#13;
... ialall campatgn to get people in office who are&#13;
favorable to educauon WEAC abo has legialative&#13;
&lt;GIISUltanu enty·five percent of the money&#13;
~Ing oGlc:auonal IIllItitUtionscomes throUgh&#13;
Madiaon legislation WEAC LSlobbymg. he said, for&#13;
the pow r for teachers to negotiate. It is also supportln&amp;&#13;
bill ln Coogrt!SS which, if passed, would&#13;
give publIC employ a right to stnke Teecbers&#13;
an not t1lglble for unemployment compensation,&#13;
whleh WE IS backlng I gislation to ebange, Ewers&#13;
added Ewers told faculty thaI they had a lot in common&#13;
with th kIndergarten teacher, citing Iayolf,&#13;
tranaler. job security. aneed for grievance&#13;
procedures and program ,need of legal a . lance,&#13;
and oth E10 called on the faculty to stand up&#13;
and y what they thmk and have the power to do&#13;
lOIn lung about it. "We are upportive 01 higher&#13;
educ lion." h nded, "and are w-il!mg to put&#13;
doll behind It ..&#13;
MenllonlJ\ll th "shortfaU" m Os1&gt;koo/llll which S1&#13;
faculty memben w told of their termination for&#13;
budgetary r no. WEAC representatives told the&#13;
AT fiRST ullom&#13;
Of milE&#13;
• I •• i.i •••&#13;
hlam reqaired&#13;
• 10 Ii.il 10 Ibe&#13;
••• ~.r 01 chcks&#13;
yOI wrile&#13;
CHECKIIC&#13;
IS&#13;
QQ&#13;
AT fiRST IAlIOm&#13;
Of milE&#13;
CHECKIIC&#13;
IS&#13;
~&#13;
AT fiRST ullom&#13;
Of milE&#13;
0,•• y.lr 1m c~.cki.l&#13;
atc.III s... al&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
.-nd Tnttlt Comp&amp;.Oyof Badue&#13;
-- -- -&#13;
511 Wisco.si. Ave. Raci.e&#13;
PBSslates specials&#13;
The Public Broadcasting&#13;
Service (PBS) will be showing&#13;
the following programs next&#13;
"eek that might be of interest to&#13;
student , The true saga of Dougal&#13;
RobertsOn, his family and a&#13;
friend who spent 'n days adrift in&#13;
ocean waters after their schooner&#13;
was sunk by attack.ing whales.&#13;
will be on Book Beat, Monday,&#13;
Oct~ 22 at 8:30 p~m.&#13;
Three doctors will discuss&#13;
myths surrounding sexual&#13;
problems of women on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 24 at 8:30 p.m. and&#13;
repeated on Sunday, Oct. 28 at 4&#13;
p.m. This program, it is said,&#13;
dispels many myths surrounding&#13;
sexual problems of women.&#13;
Some of the country's top&#13;
bluegrass musicians will join&#13;
forces on "Bluegrass Country, t1&#13;
Saturday, Oct. TI at 7 p.m.&#13;
All programs are on PBS&#13;
channel 10.&#13;
Environmental quality&#13;
index compiled&#13;
A fourth volume of !be environmental quality index compiled by a&#13;
team of Parkside professors bas just been issued and brings to 1,976&#13;
the total number of reference materials indexed in the southeastern&#13;
WisoonSin study to date .&#13;
Beheved to be the fir.;t index of its kind ever assembled for a region&#13;
of Wisconsin. the work is based on a study supported by American&#13;
Motors Corporation and conducted by Morris W. FirebaUgh, Joseph S.&#13;
Balsano, Frank '. Egerton and Eugene M. Goodman of the Parkside&#13;
science faculty and Gregor)' G. Fowlkes, research assistant.&#13;
All four volumes of the index are available for public use in tbe&#13;
Parkslde Library. Copies of the index abo are provided to the libraries&#13;
of other colleges and universities and public libraries in sotheastern&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
ParksJde Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA&#13;
~-- ~ ?&#13;
7-'ll __'~"'" " 10." - -=:;=. ... .. ,&#13;
THUR.-NOY. B •&#13;
B:lII P.M. 17 /-&#13;
c.. ARTSnlAM&#13;
AIIU3.oo PARISI( STIIDTS*&#13;
"&#13;
$4.00 CEIUAL&#13;
andh"&#13;
*Spe&lt;:laI one week IOct. 15-19) advance student saie on&#13;
r~&#13;
campus Tickets available at Information Center.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
THE JOKER&#13;
TheS\eve Miller Band(SMAS-1l23S)&#13;
In the beginning, Steve Miller t&gt;E:g~nre~ei~i~g positive .public acclaim&#13;
when he demonstrated his VIVIdartIstIc mterpretation talents&#13;
on records in a carefully controlled manner. He ad.vanced to assembling&#13;
unique and energetic treatments of rock in BRAVE NEW&#13;
WORLD. He also attained many additional .merlts of ~ono~ [rom his&#13;
id treatment of blues in NO.5. The tone III Steve Miller s cool-eat&#13;
aCI . id tity A th ner of singing managed to keep a unique I en I . no er part of&#13;
~:~dentity was the concept of being the hippiest, s~ckest, gangstertype&#13;
hero while still fitting into the realm of the basically good aura.&#13;
This latter concept, of course, comes from the anagram of all rock&#13;
singers. . th h f . Recently, Steve Miller has given up e searc 0 trymg to find&#13;
unknown musical substance. He no longer even attempts to explore&#13;
new means of presenting old m~teria1. ..&#13;
Instead Steve Miller bas decided to do old blues III their oldest&#13;
tradition~ fashion. This is wbat the majority of the tracks on THE&#13;
JOKER are concerned with. Some enjoyment of hiS playlllg standard&#13;
blues does shine through but there is really little energetic feeling.&#13;
He is no longer a "space cowboy" or a "gangster of love" but instead&#13;
proclaims "I'm a joker, I'm a smoker, I'm a midnight taker; I&#13;
sure don't want to hurt no one." Some may be hurt, Steve, by your&#13;
decision to quit tapping [rom the vast well of your creative resources.&#13;
PerhapS he has decided that trying to be u~que is too m:rch of a hectic&#13;
game. This seems to be the only poSSIble assumptlon about his&#13;
change&lt;!attitude that can be inferred from THE JOKER.&#13;
Exceptions of the standard on Steve's latest are the title song and&#13;
HSomething To Believe In.'' "The Joker" is an admirable tune whose&#13;
warmth gradually demands attachment to it. The final peg on the&#13;
board is "Something To Believe In," a smooth, romantic ballad.&#13;
Also included on this disc are two live cuts, "Come On In My Kitchen"&#13;
and "Evil." Both appear to this writer as dull blues With the&#13;
slight exception of some lyrical content.&#13;
If one is fond of blues then THE JOKER isn't a bad grab since Steve&#13;
Miller does them expertly. In the end, final worth depends on your&#13;
angle of viewing. Like all blues albums, if you like it, then it's consistent;&#13;
i[ not, it's monotonous.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
CHAPTER SIX&#13;
Synopsis: The Psychic has&#13;
gone to a warehouse to fin~ out&#13;
what Big X is doing there. He is&#13;
ambushed and overcome with&#13;
small mind-nullifying machines.&#13;
Big X binds him to a wall and&#13;
tapes a bomb to his chest. Just&#13;
after Big X and his three helpers&#13;
flee the building, the bomb explodes.&#13;
The story continues.&#13;
Big X walked to the edge of the&#13;
smoking rubble. Three men&#13;
followed him. One was smoking a&#13;
cigarette; the tiny spark stood&#13;
out in the darkness.&#13;
"The subject has been&#13;
eliminated," said Big X dryly. "I&#13;
must now put into effect the next&#13;
phase."&#13;
"Wbat's that going to be?"&#13;
asked the man named Branwood.&#13;
"The elimination of my accomplices."&#13;
The cigarette spark dropped to&#13;
the pavement. The man smoking&#13;
it said, "Huh?"&#13;
Before any of the three could&#13;
move, there was a flash of light&#13;
and that was the last they knew~&#13;
Big X stepped over the c1othin~&#13;
of the three men, dropping a&#13;
small glass bulb which burst into&#13;
flames. The clothing caught fire&#13;
and he moved on.&#13;
Someone ran up to the rubble.&#13;
He was breathing so hard it was&#13;
audible a good distance away. It&#13;
was Jones. When the Psychic had&#13;
seen Big X on the television&#13;
screen and left, Jones watched&#13;
what had happened. He had&#13;
watched until they had caught the&#13;
Psychic and put the bomb on his&#13;
chest.&#13;
Jones coughed and spat. His&#13;
ltmgs burned from running the&#13;
long tunnel to the warehouse. He&#13;
had heard the explosion five&#13;
blocks away.&#13;
Jones ran past part of a wall&#13;
which was still standing. He&#13;
tripped over a board in the dark&#13;
and hit his cheek on some bricks.&#13;
He rose, panting and coughing.&#13;
He looked around.&#13;
"Where are you:" he&#13;
screamed. "Tell me where you&#13;
are! I'll find you!" He staggered&#13;
over to a mass of broken boards,&#13;
brick and plaster. "I'll help you!&#13;
Tell me! Where a re you: " He&#13;
grabbed a thick beam and tried to&#13;
move it. It was too firmly buried&#13;
by other debris.&#13;
Jones coughed. Plaster dust got&#13;
in his eyes. He found smaller&#13;
articles, bricks and boards,&#13;
continued on ,.te '&#13;
........ ,&#13;
I&#13;
faculty that the Achoinwration must be able to&#13;
prove that there is DO money that could be pared&#13;
elsewhere instead of terminating faculty. Ewen&#13;
expained that otbenrise the Administration must&#13;
prove a faculty member is incompetent.&#13;
Innis said that the 1580 teachers in 'Racine who are&#13;
WEA members are not looted at as subprofellionals.&#13;
Unionism is not DOD-pl'Ofessional.&#13;
"You need tbinp to perfonn your job, you have to&#13;
collectively bargain for them or collectively beg or&#13;
indivicually beg," Innis said. "It is time," he&#13;
warned, "to comider what you want, what you're&#13;
all about, and bow to go about getting it. You must&#13;
collectively get toptber rather tbao argue for two&#13;
or lbree more years. 'lbe prestige of the college&#13;
profeaaor is declining."&#13;
Mack aplained that each WEA chapter bas total&#13;
autonomy and that DO ane would control a local&#13;
chapter. Twenty-seven faculty members are&#13;
needed to make the locaJ organization.&#13;
Ron Gottesman, Parbide professor of Eogliah,&#13;
said that "whenever the Part.side Administration&#13;
sets worried over faculty organizing, and whenever&#13;
~~toM•~andlbeyuk.'Arethey&#13;
organizing down there yet' then there's no way&#13;
organising can be a bad thina-"&#13;
Qle faculty member reminded bis colleagues that&#13;
Joininc a union does not mean they would all be&#13;
puncbinc in time cards f/!Very morning.&#13;
Wltb the meeting's end, many faculty members&#13;
had signed their WEA membership card, turning it&#13;
in to Mack and going off to encourage other faculty&#13;
to come to the first orp.nizational meeting this&#13;
Friday.&#13;
slates specials&#13;
Tbe Public Broadcasting&#13;
Senice &lt;PBS&gt; will be showing&#13;
the following programs next&#13;
w that might be ol interest to&#13;
myths surrounding sexual&#13;
problems ol women on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 24 at 8:30 p.m. and&#13;
repeated on Sunday, Oct. 28 at 4&#13;
p.m. This program, it is said,&#13;
dispels many .myths surrounding&#13;
sexual problems of women.&#13;
tudent . The true saga of Dougal&#13;
Robertson, his family and a&#13;
friend who spent Y7 days adrift in&#13;
ocean waten after their schooner&#13;
was sunk by attacking whales,&#13;
will be on Boot Beat, Monday,&#13;
Oct. 22 at 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Three doctors will discus&#13;
Some of the country's top&#13;
bluegrass musicians will join&#13;
forces on "Bluegrass Country,"&#13;
Saturday, Oct. r7 at 7 p.m.&#13;
All programs are on PBS&#13;
channel 10.&#13;
Environmental quality&#13;
index compiled&#13;
A fourth wlume ol the environmental quality index compiled by a&#13;
team of Parkside professon has just been issued and brings to 1,976&#13;
the total number ol reference materials indexed in the southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin study to date.&#13;
Believed to be the fint index ol its kind ever assembled for a region&#13;
ol lsconsin the work is based on a study supported by American&#13;
otors Corporation and concb:ted by Morris W. Firebaugh, Joseph s. Balsano, Frank . F.gerton and Eugene M. Goodman of the Parkside&#13;
science faculty and Gregory G. Fowlkes research assistant.&#13;
All four volumes of the index are available for public use in the&#13;
Parkside Library. Copies of the index also are provided to the libraries&#13;
of other colleges and universities and public libraries in sotheastern&#13;
IICOnSin.&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presertts&#13;
In Concert&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA&#13;
All$ 111A11E&#13;
__ ..,.. PIIISI• SIIIBTS*&#13;
'&#13;
*Special one week (Oct. 15-19) advance student sale 011&#13;
campus. Tickets available at Information Center.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
THEJOKER&#13;
1beSteve Miller Band&lt;SMAS-11235)&#13;
In the beginning, Steve Miller began receiving positive public acclaim&#13;
when he demonstrated his vivid artistic interpretation talents&#13;
on records in a carefully controlled manner. He ad_vanced to asse,n.&#13;
bling unique and energetic treatm~~ts of r&lt;&gt;&lt;:k m BRA VE NEW&#13;
WORLD. He also attained many additional _ments of ~on°!' from his&#13;
·d treatment of blues in NO. 5. The tone m Steve Millers cool-cat&#13;
=.mer of singing managed to keep a unique identity. Another part of&#13;
his identity was the concept of being the hippiest, s~ckest, gangster.&#13;
type hero while still fitting into the realm of the basically good aw-a.&#13;
This latter concept, of course, comes from the anagram of all rock&#13;
singers. · th h f try· · Recently, Steve Miller has given up e searc o mg to find&#13;
unknown musical substance. He no ~onger even attempts to explore&#13;
new means of presenting old matenal.&#13;
Instead, Steve Miller has decided to ~ _old blues in their oldest&#13;
traditional fashion. This is what the ~aJor1ty of ~he tr~cks on THE&#13;
JOKER are concerned with. Some enJoyment of his playmg standard&#13;
blues does shine through but there is really little energetic feeling.&#13;
He is no longer a "space cowboy" or a "gangster of love" but instead&#13;
proclaims "I'm a joker, I'm a smoker, I'm a midnight toker; I&#13;
sure don't want to hurt no one." Some may be hurt, Steve, by your&#13;
decision to quit tapping from the vast well of your creative resources.&#13;
Perhaps he has decided that trying to be unique is too much of a hectic&#13;
game. This seems to be the only possible assumption about his&#13;
changed attitude that can be inferred from THE JOKER.&#13;
Exceptions of the standard on Steve's latest are the title song and&#13;
"Something To Believe In." "The Joker" is an admirable tune whole&#13;
warmth gradually demands attachment to it. The final peg on the&#13;
board is "Something To Believe In," a smooth, romantic ballad.&#13;
Also included on this disc are two live cuts, "Come On In My Kitchen"&#13;
and "Evil." Both appear to this writer as dull blues with the&#13;
slight exception of some lyrical content.&#13;
If one is fond of blues then THE JOKER isn't a bad grab since Steve&#13;
Miller does them expertly. In the end, final worth depends on your&#13;
angle of viewing. Like all blues albums, if you like it, then it's consistent;&#13;
if not, it's monotonous.&#13;
&lt;Record courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
CHAPTERSIX&#13;
Synopsis: The Psychic has&#13;
gone to a warehouse to finsf out&#13;
what Big X is doing there. He is&#13;
ambushed and overcome with&#13;
small mind-nullifying machines.&#13;
Big X binds him to a wall and&#13;
tapes a bomb to his chest. Just&#13;
after Big X and his three helpers&#13;
flee the building, the bomb explodes.&#13;
The story continues.&#13;
Big X walked to the edge of the&#13;
smoking rubble. Three men&#13;
followed him. One was smoking a&#13;
cigarette ; the tiny spark stood&#13;
out in the darkness.&#13;
"The subject has been&#13;
eliminated," said Big X dryly. "I&#13;
must now put into effect the next&#13;
phase."&#13;
"What's that going to be? "&#13;
asked the man named Branwood.&#13;
"The elimination of my ac- complices.''&#13;
The cigarette spark dropped to&#13;
the pavement. The man smoking&#13;
it said, "Huh?"&#13;
Before any of the three could&#13;
move, there was a flash of light&#13;
and_ that was the last they knew'.&#13;
Big X stepped over the clothini&#13;
of the three men, dropping a&#13;
small glass bulb which burst into&#13;
flames. The clothing caught fire&#13;
and he moved on.&#13;
Someone ran up to the rubble.&#13;
He was breathing so hard it was&#13;
audible a good distance away. It&#13;
was Jones. When the Psychic had&#13;
seen Big X on the television&#13;
screen and left, Jones watched&#13;
what had happened. He had&#13;
watched until they had caught the&#13;
Psychic and put the bomb on his&#13;
chest.&#13;
Jones coughed and spat. His&#13;
lungs burned from running the&#13;
long tunnel to the warehouse. He&#13;
had heard the explosion five&#13;
blocks away.&#13;
Jones ran past part of a wall&#13;
which was still standing. He&#13;
tripped over a board in the dark&#13;
and hit his cheek on some bricks.&#13;
He rose, panting and coughing.&#13;
He looked around.&#13;
" Where are you?" he&#13;
screamed. "Tell me where you&#13;
are! I'll find you!" He staggered&#13;
over to a mass of broken boards,&#13;
brick and plaster. "I'll help you!&#13;
Tell me! Where are you?" He&#13;
grabbed a thick beam and tried to&#13;
move it. It was too firmly buried&#13;
by other debris.&#13;
Jones coughed. Plaster dust got&#13;
in his eyes. He found smaller&#13;
articles, bricks and boards,&#13;
continued OIi ,... ' &#13;
Irief news&#13;
'lb DeParunent of Safety and Security is for the second time thi&#13;
~ter offering the National Safety Council's Defensive Drivi IS&#13;
sem for employees who have not taken the course. ng&#13;
cou~e Defensive Driving Cour~e has. been a prerequisite for the&#13;
ration of all state-owned vehicles SInce December, 1970.Parkside&#13;
:'plOYees who intend to use state:owned vehicles are required to&#13;
lete this course before perrmssmn can be granted to drive statecomp&#13;
I ld d owned vehicles (emp oyees are consi ere to be faculty, staff or&#13;
volunteer drivers), .&#13;
'lbe course will he held at the Library Learning Center, Room DI79&#13;
Friday october 26, 1973, starting at 9 a.m. The Course is apon&#13;
ximatcly five hours in duration and should be completed around 2&#13;
~. Please submit to this department as SOOnas possible the names ~ithoseindividuals that will he taking the course.&#13;
*&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are sponsoring .a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
Springs Colorado, Jan. 2 thru 7. The total price of the trip by air is $210&#13;
d by bus $140. The price also includes found-trip transportation five&#13;
:ys lift tickets at Steamboat Springs, and five days lodging. Positions&#13;
onlhe trip are being filled fast. All V.W. campuses are participating.&#13;
Depositof $40 a~d registration must he made by Nov. 21 at the Inrormation&#13;
kiosk 10 MalO Place.&#13;
*&#13;
A new organization, Delta Gamma Phi sorority, is forming on&#13;
campus. One of the organizers is Pat Hill, who describes the group as&#13;
"uniquely Parkside." Further information will be available in next&#13;
week's RANGER, or by calling 552-8472.&#13;
*&#13;
Cellist David Littrell, Parkside assistant professor of music, is&#13;
makinghis first public appearance at Parkside on Sunday, Oct. 21 in&#13;
lheCommArtsTheater at 7:30 p.m. Littrell will be accompanied by his&#13;
wife.The concert is free and open to the pUblic.&#13;
*&#13;
'lbe Parkside Student Senate still has openings for appointments to&#13;
the following committees: honors, campus ceremonies, admissions,&#13;
library and learning, University bookstore, and financial aids.&#13;
Studentsinterested in being considered may appear in person at the&#13;
studentsenate office, LLC 0193 from 9:30 to 11:30, Mon., Wed. and Fri.&#13;
or 11:30-1:00Tues. and Thurs. If these times are inconvenient, call&#13;
2244for an alternate interview time.&#13;
*&#13;
AdultStudent Services is expanding their evening information and&#13;
advising hours. Starting Oct. 17 their hours will he from 5:36-8:30&#13;
Mondaythrough Thursday, in the Information kiosk. Adult students or&#13;
potential students are encouraged to call 553-2345 or drop by dUring&#13;
these hours.&#13;
*&#13;
TheParkside Pre-Med Club will hold a meeting today, Wednesday,&#13;
Ott. 17 at 7:45 p.m. in the faculty-staff lounge in LLC (Library D&#13;
I03A&gt;. Featured will be Dr. Neil Purtell, an osteopath from Racme,&#13;
and Dr. Aprahemian, a radiologist-osteopath from Milwauke~.&#13;
Togetherthey will discuss their practices, radiology and osteopathic&#13;
medicine in general. All persons interest~d are invited to attend. If&#13;
there are any questions I please contact Brian Smith (2448) or Dr. A.&#13;
M.Williams (2389).&#13;
*&#13;
Anyindividual, organization or office holding cafe.teria tr.ays in their&#13;
POSSeSsionis requested to please return them ImmedIately. The&#13;
cafeteria i~missing over 200oftheir food trays at the present time and&#13;
that number is increasing every day.&#13;
~. %~ jJ~&#13;
CheffB&#13;
10% OFF ON PURCHASE OF&#13;
J $100 ~&#13;
lOR MORE WITH PARKS IDE ID. ~~&#13;
~ ENDS&#13;
rJ OCTOBER 31&#13;
, AT&#13;
,~ 3400 SHERIDAN ROAD I AND&#13;
~ 6926 39th AVENUE -.~-.:i_e•~~iiiiii::!! 1JtL::r~&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1'73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
FaCUltysong writer Robert Canary, Parkstde associate professor of&#13;
Enghsh, will sing his songs of love. sex and other good tJungs Thursday,&#13;
Oct. 18 at 7:30 p.m on the third floor library, under the sponsorship&#13;
of the Parks ide Poetry Forum. Canary says that most of Ius&#13;
songs were written to be sung late at night, either to a woman or 8&#13;
drunken party. He will also accompany hunself on the guitar, wlllch he&#13;
has been playing for 15 years without, he claims, any improvement.&#13;
No admission will be charged.&#13;
*&#13;
The Lecture and Fine Arts Committee is bnnging Professor Radu&#13;
Florescu, PhD in European and Slavic History at Boston niversity,&#13;
to Parkside on Friday, Oct. 26.&#13;
Florescu will present a film and lecture 00 Ius search for Dracula.&#13;
He has done a scholarly and historic study 00 how much of the legend&#13;
of Count Dracula is true and what is an elebcreuce. There was actually&#13;
a person, Count Dracula, Florescu says, and he lumself claims&#13;
to he a descendent of Dracula's brother.&#13;
Florescu has written a book entiUed I. Search 01 Dracula.&#13;
The film and lecture are free to Parkside students and $1 for the&#13;
general public. The event will he held in Greenquist Ha.U Lecture room&#13;
103 at 8 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
Harry WaJbruck, Parkside associate professor of German, has&#13;
developed an individual testing program for students wanting to 1&lt;no",&#13;
how large a vocabulary they master in their target language. 'lbe&#13;
program, operating on (our computer levels, can give a student the&#13;
correct picture of his or her stand.ing and points up the areas of&#13;
deficiency. Walbruck was assisted in the program by Jim Wishau of&#13;
the Computer Center.&#13;
*&#13;
Volunteers are needed by the Kenosha COunty Welfare Department&#13;
to assist in three areas. The first of these is the Childreo's Corner,&#13;
where people are needed to act as the caretakers of cbIldren placed&#13;
there by their parents who are in the agency on business. The volunteer&#13;
will guide children througb independent pia)', plan activities for&#13;
the group, assist in maintaining an orderly appearance m the room.&#13;
and clean up at the end of each assignmeot penod.&#13;
"Friendly visitor" volunteers "isit on a regular basis clients who are&#13;
living in a private borne or who are shut-ins or isolated from the&#13;
community. The volunteer "ill talk with and listen to the person and&#13;
establish rapport. He or she may read aloud to Ute client. write leUers.&#13;
shop, or take tbeperson for a drive or to the doctor'somee.&#13;
The third area is the Intake Department volunteer workers, the&#13;
primary function of which is to assist clients m completing a~&#13;
pUcations for assistance at the tIme they contact the agency.&#13;
Interested persons should contact the CoordilUltor of Volunteers at&#13;
654-3591.&#13;
WINTER&#13;
BREAK&#13;
. JAN 2·tO.&#13;
$269 P,~""T.. 'Sm"&#13;
Ba!ord on l to a Room&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
• J NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
• '1 DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETiNG&#13;
• GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
• TOUR HOST SERVICES&#13;
• ALL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
IIFor appltcar,on form&#13;
C",,",PUS T!iUt,VEl CENTER&#13;
LLC 01"&#13;
PSGAsteering&#13;
committee&#13;
formed&#13;
In order to establish an scuve,&#13;
representative. responsIble and&#13;
recognized tudent Gevernm nt&#13;
Association at Parkslde, a&#13;
steering committee has bHn&#13;
formed Which IS respcesible for&#13;
mvestigaung and reporting boel&lt;&#13;
to students and the eJdatillll&#13;
udent Government The areas&#13;
the committee is concerned .. Ilh&#13;
are:&#13;
1 uggested duu&#13;
responsIbilities of the&#13;
Government AssociatJoo.&#13;
2. Means 1»' ",hlch tudent&#13;
Government could be more truly&#13;
representative of various&#13;
(academic and non-academic)&#13;
groups of students.&#13;
3. Ideal lI'UCture 01 Parkside&#13;
Student Gcvernment Association.&#13;
4 Means to implement any new&#13;
structure of Parkside tudent&#13;
GovernmenL&#13;
5 Means by whIch Constitu~on&#13;
of PSGA ",ouId reflect an)' new&#13;
structure, responsibihties and&#13;
representation of PSGA.&#13;
The committee IS composed of&#13;
students represenl1ng AcademIC&#13;
mterests. faculty commlttees.&#13;
ooe member of each student&#13;
organization Wishing to par~&#13;
ticipaLe, and some members of&#13;
the current P GA including&#13;
president Tom Jennett.&#13;
Ser\o1ng as advisors to the&#13;
committee are Je"'el&#13;
Echelberger, Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students. Tom Remer! of the&#13;
facully, and Anthon)' Totero.&#13;
Coordinator of Student&#13;
Programs.&#13;
Other . tudents intel'CSted 10&#13;
pro\-;dmg mput to the commIttee&#13;
are encouraged to contact Jennett&#13;
in the PSGA oIhce or leave&#13;
suggeslJons WIthR\. 'GER whIch&#13;
"'Ill he forwarded to committee&#13;
members&#13;
and&#13;
ludent&#13;
•&#13;
•0.&#13;
. .,&#13;
Time ../&#13;
to relax more.&#13;
~ 't'OllI OW". ~"'" 1It(lr. tNN: '01 NltJtI on ~&#13;
-1IfUlI\IftI ..... 1Mf\ldld 'ft dw' MMa...- ~ ...&#13;
__ ewe ot 1M lIwft." dw'UW'lOf "~ ....&#13;
M_n w ldodw_ ' ", ....&#13;
...."*- -...........8ofcttwood ConcIo- ",&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24.500 to $27,000&#13;
T .., p". '~~l&#13;
1~1t Stylil ..., .... I'-Y .......... *&amp;.' ,OJ&#13;
• ~ • "' _~ • e....~ ..&#13;
• E__ IIItt.--._ • f.-' ............--&#13;
• ~ _ .......... 0.-._ .--&#13;
• c.....FtNlV _ • ~n •• _ • ~_~l ........&#13;
.... tIW~ 1 .......... ....--,._ ......... __&#13;
• ...... ---.,.... • e:-tov~ _tII __&#13;
MORE IIRCHWOOO HO ES READY SEPTEMIER 15&#13;
2 T""""'-- S31,_ J ...... T........ $31._ t.S)4._&#13;
, R." StylI $1'.SOI tl S23.•&#13;
".,...._r ........,c.-_ .........&#13;
t~ ...... ,. __ "'~I ~&#13;
IN KENOSHA&#13;
JOCt!o A~ .... Idt RCNd&#13;
OECOAAnOAlrotO"V1l SHEOMOOE\.S&#13;
OPEN HOUSE&#13;
Weekdays 10 to 8 Weekends 1 to 5&#13;
For ~ "formIhon&#13;
PHONE 1-552-9339&#13;
AUfKSIOE RE"'-'" - tI'lC&#13;
.... ~_.&#13;
trief news&#13;
Th [)epartment of Safet_y and Security is for the second time th.&#13;
rn;ter offering the National Safety Council's Defensive Drivi~&#13;
e for employees who have not taken the course. cours The Defensive . Dnvmg · · Co h b ur~e as_ een a prerequisite for the&#13;
0 ration of all state-owned vehicles smce December, 1970. Parkside&#13;
!ptoyees who intend to use s~te:-owned vehicles are required to&#13;
complete this course before perm1ss10~ can be granted to drive stateowned&#13;
vehicles (employees are considered to be faculty, staff or&#13;
,·olunteer drivers). . The course will be held at the L1b~ary Learning Center, Room Dl79 on Friday, October 26,_ 1973, s_tartmg at 9 a.m. The course is apoximately&#13;
five ~ours ~ duration and should be completed around 2 ?' m. Please submit to thi~ depar~ent as soon as possible the names&#13;
~f those individuals that will be takmg the course.&#13;
*&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are sponsoring _a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
Springs, Colorado, Jan: 2 thru 7: The total price o~ the trip by air is $210&#13;
and by bus $140. The price also m~ludes rou1;1d-tnp transportation, five&#13;
days lift tickets a~ St~mboat Sprmgs, and five days lodging. Positions&#13;
0 the trip are bemg filled fast. All U. W. campuses are participating.&#13;
~posit of $40 a~d reg~stration must be made by Nov. 21 at the Information&#13;
kiosk m Mam Place.&#13;
*&#13;
A new organization, Delta Gamma Phi sorority, is forming on&#13;
campus. One of the organizers is Pat Hill, who describes the group as&#13;
"uniquely Parkside." Further information will be available in next&#13;
week's RANGER, or by calling 552-8472.&#13;
*&#13;
Cellist David Littrell, Parkside assistant professor of music, is&#13;
making his first public appearance at Parkside on Sunday, Oct. 21 in&#13;
the CommArts Theater at 7: 30 p.m. Littrell will be accompanied by his&#13;
wife. The concert is free and open to the public.&#13;
*&#13;
The Parkside Student Senate still has openings for appointments to&#13;
the following committees: honors, campus ceremonies, admissions,&#13;
library and learning, University bookstore, and financial aids.&#13;
tudents interested in being considered may appear in person at the&#13;
tudentsenate office, LLC D193 from 9:30 to 11:30, Mon., Wed. and Fri.&#13;
or 11:30-1:00 Tues. and Thurs. If these times are inconvenient, call&#13;
2244 for an alternate interview time.&#13;
*&#13;
Adult Student Services is expanding their evening information and&#13;
advising hours. Starting Oct. 17 their hours will be from 5:30-a:30&#13;
1onday through Thursday, in the Information kiosk. Adult studen~ or&#13;
potential students are encouraged to call 553-2345 or drop by during&#13;
these hours.&#13;
*&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Med Club will hold a meeting today, Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 17 at 7:45 p.m. in the faculty-staff lounge in LLC (Librar~ D&#13;
103Al. Featured will be Dr. Neil Purtell, an osteopath from Racme,&#13;
and Dr Aprahemian, a radiologist-osteopath from Milwauke~.&#13;
Together they will discuss their practices, radiology and osteopathic&#13;
medicine in general. All persons interested are invited to attend. If&#13;
th re are any questions, please contact Brian Smith (2448) or Dr. A.&#13;
I. Williams (2389).&#13;
*&#13;
ny individual organization or office holding cafeteria tr_ays in their&#13;
ion, is r~quested to please return them immed1at~ly. The&#13;
cafeteria is missing over 200 of their food trays at the present time and&#13;
th t number is increasing every day .&#13;
AT&#13;
3400 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
AND&#13;
6926 39th AVENUE&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
*&#13;
The Lecture and Fine Arts immittee bnngm Prof&#13;
Florescu, PhD in European and lav1c Hi. tory at Boston&#13;
to Parkside on Friday, Oct. 26&#13;
Florescu \\-ill present a mm and lectur on · ar h for D&#13;
He has done a scholar!) and histonc tudy on how much f&#13;
of Count Dracula i true and what · an eJ boration. There&#13;
tually a person, Count Dracula Florescu y and he hi lf&#13;
to be a descendent of Dracula' brother.&#13;
Florescu ha written a book entitled In rch ol Dracula.&#13;
The film and lecture are free to Par ide ud and l for th&#13;
general public. The event will be held in Greenqu· t Hall Leet room&#13;
103 at 8 p.m.&#13;
*&#13;
Harry Walbruck, Par ide a iate pro&#13;
developed an individual testing program for tuden \lo anting to how large a vocabulary the master ·n their target langua . Th&#13;
program, operating on four computer le\e can i" a tudent&#13;
correct picture of his or her tanding and po up the a , of&#13;
deficiency. Walbruck ,,,a a i ted in the program b:, Jim u of&#13;
the Computer Center.&#13;
*&#13;
PS~A steering&#13;
committee&#13;
formed&#13;
READY FOR I ED ATE OCCUPA CY&#13;
WI. 'TER&#13;
BRE K&#13;
- JA: •. 2-10.&#13;
$269 P IUS , Tax &amp; s.,v C&#13;
BaU&lt;I on l a oom&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
• 7 NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
• , , DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETI G&#13;
e GROUND TRA SFERS&#13;
e TOUR HOST SERVICES&#13;
• ALL TIPS &amp; TAXES&#13;
For a ppl ca' .on form&#13;
CAA.'P\JS. TRA E l Cf T( R&#13;
LLC 01'7&#13;
Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 toS27,000&#13;
Of.CORATEOA OfUfl (OUOOf.l S&#13;
OPE HOUSE&#13;
eekdays 10 to 8 ee ds 1 to 5 &#13;
I&#13;
James McKeown&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. t7 • John and Dennis in the Whiteskellar from 1-3&#13;
p.m. Sponsored by the P.A.B. No admission charge.&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 17 _Parkside Pre-Meds Club meeting in tbe LLC&#13;
faculty-staff.lounge of LLC at 7:45 p.rn. Open to tbe public.&#13;
Thursday. Oct. 18 _ Meeting of minority" students at noon in&#13;
Greenquist Hall lecture room 103. .&#13;
Thursday, OCt. 18 _Song wr-iter', guitar player, poet and Parkside&#13;
English professor, Robert Canary will read and sing. Sponsored by the&#13;
Poetry Forum, the event will be held ~n the 3rd floor of the library at&#13;
7:30 p.m. It is free and open to thepubhc. .&#13;
Friday. Oct. 19 _P.A.B. movie "Johnny Got His Gun" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
S.A.B. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday. Oct. 20 _ Sigma Pi fraternity is sponsoring a dance with&#13;
"McHenry" at 9 p.m. in S.A.B. Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday. Oct. 21 - Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a road-raIl&#13;
Registration at noon in the east lot. ey.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 _Cellist and Parkside music faculty member David&#13;
Littrell will present a concert at 7:30 p.m. 10 the CommArts Theater. It&#13;
is tree and open to the public.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 _P .A.B. movie "Johnny Got His Gun" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
S.A.B. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Monday. Oct. 22 _Meeting of the Parkside Women's Caucus at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in LLC D 173.&#13;
Wednesday. OCt. 24 _P .A.B. movie "Fritz the Cat" at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 103. Admission is 75 cents,&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 18 • Theatre X will perform in the CommArts&#13;
Theater at 8 p.rn., sponsored by PAB. Admission is $1at tbe door.&#13;
Prisoners taught sociology&#13;
Every Tuesday night a&#13;
Parkside sociology professor&#13;
goes to prison-voluntarily. .&#13;
He is Prof. James McKeown,&#13;
who is teaching an introductory&#13;
university·level sociology course&#13;
to t 1 inmates at the Union Grove&#13;
camp of the $late Department of&#13;
Corrections~, a mlntmurn&#13;
secunty. pre-release prison.&#13;
The course is on a purely&#13;
voluntary basis both for the inmate&#13;
students and for McKeown,&#13;
who receives no pay for teaching&#13;
the COUJ'\C.&#13;
Students who successfully&#13;
complete tbe course, which is&#13;
graded on the same standards as&#13;
similar courses offered on&#13;
campus, receive regular&#13;
university credit.&#13;
McKeown has conducted&#13;
similar, lhough smaller, classes&#13;
at the Union Grove facility for the&#13;
past several years and 16 other&#13;
Parkside faculty members have&#13;
volunteered to teach courses,&#13;
somet irnes conducted on a one-toone&#13;
basis.&#13;
Several of the inmate students&#13;
who have been released have&#13;
since become full-time students&#13;
at the Parkside campus--&#13;
including one ex-inmate who&#13;
made the spring honors list with&#13;
an A-minus academic average.&#13;
Of students in his camp&#13;
classroom, McKeown comments&#13;
that "the level of ability is about&#13;
the same as in my regular&#13;
classes. I have some excellent&#13;
students at the camp who can&#13;
make their way in any college."&#13;
Both McKeown and Kim&#13;
Baugrud, coordinator of&#13;
University Extension at Parkside&#13;
and one of the originators and&#13;
major forces in organization and&#13;
liaison for the courses, expressed&#13;
nope that eventually&#13;
arrangements can be made so&#13;
that the inmates can come to the&#13;
campus and be in regular classes&#13;
with other students.&#13;
"Under an arrangemtnt&#13;
similar to the Huber Law (which&#13;
allows prisoners to hold regular&#13;
employment while in prison),&#13;
school could be a legitimate&#13;
reason for daytime leave, II&#13;
McKeown said. "It is also in line&#13;
with (UW System President)&#13;
John Weaver's Task Force's&#13;
recommendation on the role of&#13;
institutions of higher learning in&#13;
the corrections program."&#13;
Baugrud points out that&#13;
transportation is a major&#13;
problem. Two of the students in&#13;
the camp class actually had&#13;
permission from authorities to&#13;
attend on-campus clases this fall,&#13;
but no means could be found of&#13;
getting Ihem here, he added.&#13;
Both Baugrud and McKeown&#13;
say camp officials are extremely&#13;
cooperative. The entire undertaking,&#13;
Baugrud adds,&#13;
requires a great amount of&#13;
coordination between the camp,&#13;
the Department of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation, the Social Work&#13;
Department of the State&#13;
Department of Corrections,&#13;
University Extension and&#13;
Parkside Registration and Admissions&#13;
staff members.&#13;
Tuition for the students usually&#13;
is funded through state&#13;
vocational rehabilitation and&#13;
Higher Education Board funds&#13;
and by Extension study grants,&#13;
Baugrud said.&#13;
Baugrud, who has had major&#13;
responsibility for developing the&#13;
service program over the past&#13;
four years, sees the project as&#13;
part of a developing movement to&#13;
use volunteers in prison&#13;
rehabilitation efforts. The classes&#13;
now offered had their beginnings&#13;
in informal rap sessions with&#13;
inmates on education, at which&#13;
opportunities including&#13;
correspondence courses,&#13;
vocational and technical&#13;
education and university level&#13;
training were pointed out, he&#13;
said.&#13;
McKeown capsulizes the attitude&#13;
of Parkside's volunteers&#13;
this way: "As long as it looks like&#13;
one inmate has the interest and&#13;
ability to profit from tutoring,&#13;
counseling or class work, I'll&#13;
continue to go out to the camp."&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
COMINGUP&#13;
Friday. Oct. 26 _Film and lecture on the search for Dracula by&#13;
Professor Radu Florescu of Boston University. Sponsored by Leciure&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee. Greenquist Hall lecture room 103at 8 p.m.&#13;
Free to Parkside students, $1 for the public. \&#13;
Friday, Saturday, Sunday OCt. 26-28 - P.A.B. - Ragtime Rang ...&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office LLC&#13;
Dl97. Monday, Oct. 29 • Poet Diane Wakoski, sponsored by tbe Poetry&#13;
Forum, Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's Caucus at 8 p.m, on the&#13;
third floor of the library. A workshop will be held from 4-5p.m. in Main&#13;
Place lounges D-173 and D-174.&#13;
Nov. 1-4. "The Virus" will be performed in the CommArts Theater&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the Information Kiosk. .&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8 _Maynard Ferguson sponsored by the PAB. at8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Tickets on sale at the Informatioo -&#13;
kiosk for $3. . ;&#13;
January 2-7 _Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat II· •&#13;
Springs, Colorado. See Information Kiosk. Illo I&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submltled ..&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in whkb '!,~&#13;
an item is to appear. ; i&#13;
(i&#13;
i&#13;
•&#13;
Child behavior&#13;
workshop formed&#13;
A new workshop will be offered&#13;
this month to parents of children&#13;
who throw temper tantrums,&#13;
refuse to do chores, tease, fight,&#13;
bully, or who are generally&#13;
diso~t. The six-week&#13;
FREE DELIVER Y&#13;
Member Parkstde 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
THE CARTHAGE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
The 1973Homecoming Concert&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway,&#13;
and The Parkside Players in&#13;
movie, TV actress&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with 1051.50 (Nov.&#13;
2-3-4 Groups of 10 or more, 10~discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine (after Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
Information Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. send stamped. self-addressed&#13;
envelope with check payable to UW.Parkside to&#13;
"Virus," UW-P Info Center, UW-Parkside.&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140.&#13;
Saturday, October 20&#13;
8:00 P.M. Fieldhouse&#13;
General Admission&#13;
- $2.50 &amp; $3.50&#13;
Also Appearing&#13;
Tickets Available At:&#13;
• Bidinger Music House -&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
• J&amp;J Tapes - Kenosha &amp; Racine&#13;
• Carthage College Center Office&#13;
8:30 a.m. - Midnight daily&#13;
"The Juke Band"&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.l.e.&#13;
program, "CHANGING YOUR&#13;
CHILD'S BEHAVIOR" is&#13;
especially geared for parents&#13;
who "have tried everything-but&#13;
nothing seems to work." The&#13;
workshop, directed by Carolyn&#13;
Cole, M.S.W., a clinical social&#13;
worker, will train parents of 4-12·&#13;
year-olds to use a practical, stepby-step&#13;
method to improve the&#13;
behavior of their children.&#13;
Cole, outlining the program's&#13;
behavioral approach, stated that&#13;
parents first learn· to identify&#13;
problems very specifically.&#13;
Through a federally funded&#13;
research project at UW·&#13;
Parkside, Cole conducted&#13;
numerous parent training&#13;
courses last year. "Many par",ts&#13;
in the Parkside classes reported&#13;
not only positive changes in their&#13;
children, but better relations&#13;
within the entire family," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Parents may choose either an&#13;
evening or afternoon workshOP'&#13;
sessions begin Tuesday, Oct. 23,&#13;
7-8:30 p.m., and Friday, Oct. 26,&#13;
1-2:30 p.m. For reservations and&#13;
inquiries, parents may contact&#13;
Cole at the Monument Square&#13;
Building, 523Main St., Racine,1$&#13;
phone 634-7711.&#13;
:1&#13;
=&#13;
;:&#13;
=&#13;
.!. :~"&#13;
~&#13;
Thousands of TopiCS&#13;
$2.75perpage&#13;
Send for your up·to·date,160.pa~&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.&#13;
to cover postage (delivery lime IS&#13;
I to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941WILSHIRE BLVD., SUiTE ~2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213)477.8474OJ 477-5493&#13;
Our research material is sold lor&#13;
research assistanCe only. ........&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973&#13;
It's what's happening - - Wednesday, Oct. 17 - John and Dennis in the Whiteskellar from 1.3&#13;
p.m. Sponsored by the P.A.B. No admission charge.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17 - Parkside Pre-Meds Club meeting in the LLC&#13;
faculty-stafflounge of LLC at 7 :45 p.m. Open to the public.&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 18 - Meeting of minority-students at noon in&#13;
Greenquist Hall lecture room _103. . Thursday, Oct. 18 - Song writer, gwtar player, poet and Parkside&#13;
English professor, Robert Canary will read and sing. Sponsored by the&#13;
Poetry Forum, the event will be held ~n the 3rd floor of the library at&#13;
7:30p.m. Itis free and open to thepubhc.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 19 - P.A.B. movie "Johnny Got His Gun" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
S.A.B. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 20 - Sigma Pi fraternity is sponsoring a dance with&#13;
"McHenry" at9 p.m. in S.A.B. Admission is $1.50.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 - Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a road-rail&#13;
Registration at noon in the east lot. ey.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 - Cellist and Parkside ~usic faculty member David&#13;
Littrell will present a concert at 7 :30 p.m. m the CommArts Theater. It&#13;
1s free and open to the public.&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 - P.A.B. movie "Johnny Got His Gun" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
S.A.B. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Prisoners taught sociology&#13;
Monday, Oct. 22 - Meeting of the Parkside Women's Caucus at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in LLC D 173.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24 - P.A.B. movie "Fritz the Cat" at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist 103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
night a&#13;
profe _or&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
tional Varsity Chili&#13;
that "the level of ability is about&#13;
the same as in my regular&#13;
cla. . I have sotne excellent&#13;
tudents at the camp who can&#13;
make their way in any college."&#13;
Both 1cKeown and Kim&#13;
Baugrud, coordinator of&#13;
niversity Extension at Parkside&#13;
and one of the originators and&#13;
major forces in organization and&#13;
liai. n for the courses, expressed&#13;
hope that eventually&#13;
arrangements can be made so&#13;
that the inmates can come to the&#13;
campus and be in regular classes&#13;
with other tudents.&#13;
" nder an arrangemtnt&#13;
imilar to the Huber Law (which&#13;
allows prisoners to hold regular&#13;
employment while in prison),&#13;
school could be a legitimate&#13;
reason for daytime leave,"&#13;
McKeown said. "It is also in line&#13;
with (UW System President)&#13;
John Weaver's Task Force's&#13;
recommendation on the role of&#13;
institutions of higher learning in&#13;
the corrections program."&#13;
Baugrud points out that&#13;
tran portation is a major&#13;
problem. Two of the students in&#13;
the camp class actually had&#13;
permission from authorities to&#13;
attend on-campus clases this fall ,&#13;
but no means could be found of&#13;
getting them here, he added.&#13;
Both Baugrud and McKeown&#13;
say camp officials are extremely&#13;
cooperative. The entire un-&#13;
~ 1lvdojeph&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
and The Parkside Players in&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Rcserv d seats SJ, Students with ID Sl .50 (Nov.&#13;
2 3 '* Groups of 10 or more, l0~discount)&#13;
Tick ts ava lablc at Bidinger's in Kenosha&#13;
Cook-G re in Racine (after Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
lnformat on Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. Send stamped, self addressed&#13;
cnv lop ·ith chec payable to UW-Parkslde to&#13;
" Virus," UW P Info Center, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140.&#13;
dertaking, I!augrud adds,&#13;
requires a great amount of&#13;
coordination between the camp,&#13;
the Department of Vocational&#13;
Rehabilitation, the Social Work&#13;
Department of the State&#13;
Department of Corrections,&#13;
University Extension and&#13;
Parkside Registration and Admissions&#13;
staff members.&#13;
Tuition for the students usually&#13;
is funded through state&#13;
vocational rehabilitation and&#13;
Higher Education Board funds&#13;
and by Extension study grants,&#13;
Baugrud said.&#13;
Baugrud, who has had major&#13;
responsibility for developing the&#13;
service program over the past&#13;
four years, sees the project as&#13;
part of a developing movement to&#13;
use volunteers in prison&#13;
rehabilitation efforts. The classes&#13;
now offered had their beginnings&#13;
in informal rap sessions with&#13;
inmates on education, at which&#13;
opportunities including&#13;
correspondence courses,&#13;
vocational and technical&#13;
education and university level&#13;
training were pointed out, he&#13;
said.&#13;
McKeown capsulizes the attitude&#13;
of Parkside's volunteers&#13;
this way : "As long as it looks like&#13;
one inmate has the interest and&#13;
ability to profit from tutoring,&#13;
counseling or class work, I'll&#13;
continue to go out to the camp."&#13;
Thursday, Oct. 18 - Theatre X will perform in the CommArts&#13;
Theater at8 p.m., sponsored by PAB. Admission is $1 at the door.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26 - Film and lecture on the search for Dracula by&#13;
Professor Radu Florescu of Boston University. Sponsored by Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee. Greenquist Hall lecture room 103 at 8 p.m.&#13;
Free to Parkside students, $1 for the public.&#13;
Friday, Saturday, Sunday Oct. 26-28 - P.A.B. - Ragtime Rangers&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office LLC&#13;
D197.&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29 - Poet Diane Wakoski, sponsored by the Poetry&#13;
Forum, Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's Caucus at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
third floor of the library. A workshop will be held from 4-5 p.m. in Main&#13;
Place lounges D-173 and D-174.&#13;
Nov. 1-4 - "The Virus" will be performed in the CommArts Theater&#13;
Tickets are on sale at the Information Kiosk. ·&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8-Maynard Ferguson sponsored by the P.A.B. at8&#13;
p.m. in the Comm Arts Theater. Tickets on sale at the Information&#13;
kiosk for $3.&#13;
January 2-7 - Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
Springs, Colorado. See Information Kiosk.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Child behavior&#13;
workshop formed&#13;
A new workshop will be offered&#13;
this month to parents of children&#13;
who throw temper tantrums,&#13;
refuse to do chores, tease, fight,&#13;
bully, or who are generally&#13;
diso~t. The six-week&#13;
THE CARTHAGE ACTIVITIES BOARD PRESENTS&#13;
The 1973 Homecoming Concert&#13;
program, "CHANGING YOUR&#13;
CHILD 'S BEHAVIOR" 1s&#13;
especially geared for parents&#13;
who "have tried everything-but&#13;
nothing seems to work." The&#13;
workshop, directed by Carol)ll&#13;
Cole, M.S.W., a clinical social&#13;
worker, will train parents of 4-12·&#13;
year-olds to use a practical, steJ)-&#13;
by-step method to improve the&#13;
behavior of their children.&#13;
Saturday, October 20&#13;
8: 00 P.M. Fieldhouse&#13;
General Admission&#13;
- $2.50 &amp; $3.50&#13;
Also Appearing&#13;
Tickets Available At:&#13;
• Eidinger Music House _&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
• J&amp;J Tapes - Kenosha &amp; Racine&#13;
• Carthage College Center Office&#13;
8:30 a .m. - Midnight daily&#13;
"The Juke Band"&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.0.1.C.&#13;
Cole, outlining the program's&#13;
behavioral approach, stated that&#13;
parents first learn to identify&#13;
problems very specifically.&#13;
Through a federally funded&#13;
research project at UW·&#13;
Parkside, Cole conducted&#13;
numerous parent training&#13;
courses last year. "Many parents&#13;
in the Parkside classes reported&#13;
not only positive changes in their&#13;
children, but better relations&#13;
within the entire family," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Parents may choose either an&#13;
evening or afternoon workshop.&#13;
Sessions begin Tuesday, Oct. 23,&#13;
7-8:30 p.m., and Friday, Oct. 26.&#13;
1-2:30 p.m. For reservations and&#13;
inquiries, parents may contact&#13;
Cole at the Monument Square&#13;
Building, 523 Main St., Racine, or&#13;
phone 634-7711.&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2. 75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-pa~&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
1 to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE ~2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material 1s sold for&#13;
research assistance only,&#13;
f &#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17. 1973 THI1 PARl&lt;SIDE" RAffGER ,&#13;
It ~ilI not. be long bercre the rul)' morning' "tt&#13;
de" "ill be a frost, lying cold and qulel on lb. era .&#13;
a "arning 01 tht' impending doom of .inlfr Th"&#13;
greeene of Summer i ~IddinR to the brt.pJ.t colon&#13;
or raU: studt. t maples di pia) a hrad of crimWIG&#13;
under full and 10... cold" .. Iber clou . chill rid&#13;
v..itb each breath of the .lad. c.Ultng forl'_1&#13;
animals to prepare a place here they can Ih. tht'&#13;
v. inter oat. comfortably. Early in the moraiDg .• btD&#13;
lb. un is rising and . 'fUeling lIS gold... ray&#13;
lbrouglll'" ml I-shroud'" Ir.... )OU "01 -. a&#13;
change of season ~ldng ".(,f'.&#13;
The Psychic•••&#13;
contlnvecl from page ,&#13;
wttichhe could move. He began to&#13;
pull things out and throw them&#13;
aside.&#13;
Sirens faded in from the&#13;
distance. Jones wiped his eyes&#13;
and looked around. He could see&#13;
red lights flashing along the tops&#13;
of taller buildings before the car&#13;
came around the corner and&#13;
stopped.&#13;
Jones ran toward the car.&#13;
"Hey!" he yelled as a policeman&#13;
stepped out, "you gotta help me&#13;
get my friend out! He's buried&#13;
under that junk! "&#13;
Another police car drove up&#13;
and stopped. Two men got out.&#13;
"Better take him in. Looks like&#13;
he might be hurt. He can tell us&#13;
what happened later. You say&#13;
there's someone buried under&#13;
there, mister?"&#13;
Jones looked at the policeman.&#13;
"Yes. Yes. Come on, we have to&#13;
dig-him out!"&#13;
"You go along with the other&#13;
fellow here. A rescue team's on&#13;
its way now. But I wouldn't expeel&#13;
too much if I were you."&#13;
"No..." Jones said, looking at&#13;
the demolished building. Then he&#13;
choked.&#13;
Above the rubble, the smoke&#13;
had congealed. It formed an oval.&#13;
"What's that?"" said Jones.&#13;
The oval sharpened, with parts&#13;
of a face becoming apparent.&#13;
"What's what?" asked a&#13;
pottceman.&#13;
Tht oval became a bald head.&#13;
The features became distinct. It&#13;
Wasthe face of the Psychic!&#13;
Jones watched in awe. The face&#13;
had an expression of ecstasy. of&#13;
pleasure, of knowledge. The eyes&#13;
beamed at Jones.The lips parted&#13;
and Jones heard it speak.&#13;
"I LIVE AGAIN."&#13;
Then the head faded away.&#13;
Jones screamed as loudly as&#13;
any man could. He stared fixedly&#13;
at the point where the head had&#13;
been. He screamed again and&#13;
again.&#13;
"Take him in," said one&#13;
policeman. "He's just realized&#13;
what's happened to his friend."&#13;
Big X stepped through the door&#13;
from the tunnel to his office. He&#13;
switched on a knob and adjusted&#13;
a dial on his desk.&#13;
"Alternate Plan One has&#13;
failed," said Big X "Subject had&#13;
to be destroyed."&#13;
"It is just as well," said a dry,&#13;
rattling voice from a small&#13;
loudspeaker. "His death will&#13;
simplify matters."&#13;
"I must be told what to do&#13;
next," said Big X.&#13;
A pause. "Do away with all the&#13;
others we have enlisted."&#13;
"It shall be done." Big X&#13;
clicked on a switch and Ilicked up&#13;
a microphone. "All personnel&#13;
report to main computer room.&#13;
All personnel report to main&#13;
computer,computer room.&#13;
"That was Big X," said one.&#13;
"Yeah. What're we going to&#13;
do?"&#13;
"Belter wait 'til the Psychic&#13;
gets back."&#13;
"And Jones, wherever he&#13;
went."&#13;
The only door to the room&#13;
slammed shut. A hissing came&#13;
from the ceiJing.&#13;
"Gas!" shouted someone in&#13;
despair.&#13;
Everyone rushed to the door. It&#13;
was heavy metal, just like Big&#13;
X's door. They had no hope of&#13;
getting it open, but they tried&#13;
nonetheless.&#13;
"Hey! It's giving!"&#13;
Others felt it too, but soon&#13;
realized it had nothing to do with&#13;
their efforts. Everyone stepped&#13;
back. shocked. The door was&#13;
being pushed outwards by an&#13;
invisible force, but the indentation'&#13;
made was a face.&#13;
The face of the Psychic!&#13;
The metal broke in spots.&#13;
Finally it gave-with such suddenness&#13;
and force that the largest&#13;
part of it went through the wall&#13;
across the hall The men ran out&#13;
of the room. A few were gagging&#13;
from the gas.&#13;
The Psychic's head&#13;
materialized in a vacant hallway.&#13;
It opened its eyes and moved&#13;
down the hall. It floated through&#13;
the curved hallways up the&#13;
spiral staircases and to Ute office&#13;
of Big X.&#13;
Big X looked up from a dial he&#13;
was adjusting. He saw the&#13;
luminously white bead but&#13;
remained expressionless. His&#13;
obese body did not move as the&#13;
ectoplasmic head moved through&#13;
it and stopped.&#13;
The Psychic sc reamed-cand&#13;
Big X was ripped apart.&#13;
Some of the men reached the&#13;
door of Big X's office just as the&#13;
head faded away, an expression&#13;
of cosmic ecstasy on its face.&#13;
Then Ihey looked to the&#13;
remains of Big X-the thm layers.&#13;
of £leshtone latex, the insulated&#13;
coils which had maintained a&#13;
body temperature. the glazed&#13;
eyeballs connected to pboton&#13;
receptors. the vessel-like tubes&#13;
through which lubricants had&#13;
flowed. the fiber-glass bones&#13;
which had supported the body.&#13;
the round mass of wires and&#13;
tubes shaped like a small head,&#13;
which kept going click-click.&#13;
cllck-click. c lick-cl ick , clickclick&#13;
....&#13;
TO BE CONTINUED ....&#13;
lakefront Stadium, Kenosha&#13;
Sunday, Oct. 21 1:30 P.M.&#13;
Parkside VS. arqueHe&#13;
Donation 50c&#13;
Proceeds m aid visaally haDd~&#13;
Announcing the Grand Opening of&#13;
~ki nub i'pnrt!i QIqnlrt&#13;
Your Professional Ski and Bike Shop&#13;
Savings&#13;
up to 60% on ski equipment&#13;
and apparel&#13;
Also save on our fall bike specials&#13;
Oct. 19, 20 &amp; 21&#13;
Sole Hours:&#13;
Fri. 6 P.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
Sot. 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
Sun. 9 A.M. 6 P,M.&#13;
5038 - 6th Ave .• Kenosha, Wis. 53140 • 414'{)58-85 15&#13;
The Psychic ... continued from pa9e 6&#13;
wt.ich he could move. He began to&#13;
pull things out and throw them&#13;
aside.&#13;
Sirens faded in from the&#13;
distance. Jones wiped his eyes&#13;
and looked around. He could see&#13;
red lights flashing along the tops&#13;
of taller buildings before the car&#13;
came around the corner and&#13;
stopped.&#13;
Jones ran toward the car.&#13;
"Hey!" he yelled as a policeman&#13;
stepped out, "you gotta help me&#13;
get my friend out! He's buried&#13;
under that junk!"&#13;
Another police car drove up&#13;
and stopped. Two men got out.&#13;
"Better take him in. Looks like&#13;
he might be hurt. He can tell us&#13;
what happened later. You say&#13;
there's someone buried under&#13;
there, mister?"&#13;
Jones looked at the policeman.&#13;
"Yes. Yes. Come on, we have to&#13;
dig·him out!"&#13;
"You go along with the other&#13;
fellow here. A rescue team's on&#13;
its way now. But I wouldn't expect&#13;
too much if I were you."&#13;
"No ... " Jones said, looking at&#13;
the demolished building. Then he&#13;
choked.&#13;
Above the rubble, the smoke&#13;
had congealed. It formed an oval.&#13;
"What's that?" said Jones.&#13;
The oval sharpened, with parts&#13;
of a face becoming apparent.&#13;
"What's what?" asked a policemcln.&#13;
~ oval became a bald head.&#13;
The features became distinct. It&#13;
was the face of the Psychic!&#13;
Jones watched in awe. The face&#13;
had an expression of ecstasy, of&#13;
plea ure, of knowledge. The eyes&#13;
beamed at Jones. The lips parted&#13;
and Jones heard it speak.&#13;
"I LIVE AGAIN."&#13;
Then the head faded away.&#13;
Jones screamed as loudly as&#13;
any man could. He stared fixedly&#13;
at the point where the head had&#13;
be n. He screamed again and&#13;
again.&#13;
''Take him in," said one&#13;
policeman. "He's just realized&#13;
What' happened to his friend. "&#13;
Big X stepped through the door&#13;
from the tunnel to his office. He&#13;
switched on a knob and adjusted a dial on his desk.&#13;
"Alternate Plan One has&#13;
failed," said Big X "Subject had&#13;
to be destroyed."&#13;
"It is just as well," said a dry,&#13;
rattling voice from a small&#13;
loudspeaker. "His death will&#13;
simplify matters."&#13;
" I must be told what to do&#13;
next," said Big X.&#13;
A pause. "Do away with all the&#13;
others we have enlisted."&#13;
"It shall be done." Big X&#13;
clicked on a switch and Qicked up&#13;
a microphone. "All personnel&#13;
report to main computer room.&#13;
All personnel report to main&#13;
computer,computer room.&#13;
"That was Big X." said one.&#13;
"Yeah. What're we going to&#13;
do?"&#13;
"Better wait 'til the Psychic&#13;
gets back."&#13;
"And Jones, wherever he&#13;
went."&#13;
The only door to the room&#13;
slammed shut. A hissing came&#13;
from the ceiling.&#13;
"Gas!" shouted someone in&#13;
despair.&#13;
Everyone rushed to the door. It&#13;
was heavy metal, ju t like Big&#13;
X's door. They had no hope of&#13;
getting it open, but they tried&#13;
nonetheless.&#13;
"Hey! It's giving! "&#13;
Others felt it too, but soon&#13;
realized it had nothing to do with&#13;
their efforts. Everyone tepped&#13;
back, shocked The door was&#13;
being pushed outwards by an&#13;
invisible force, but the indentation·&#13;
made was a face.&#13;
The face of the Psychic!&#13;
The metal broke in pots.&#13;
Finally it gave-with uch uddenness&#13;
and force that the larg t&#13;
part of it went through the wall&#13;
across the hall. The men ran out&#13;
of the room. A few were gagging&#13;
from the gas.&#13;
The Psychic' head&#13;
materialized in a vacant hallway.&#13;
It opened its eye and mo\ ed&#13;
down the hall. It floated through&#13;
the curved hallwa} , up the&#13;
spiral tairca es and to the offic&#13;
of Big X.&#13;
Big X looked up from a dial he&#13;
was adju ting. He av. the&#13;
luminously v. h1te head but&#13;
remained expre ionle . Hi&#13;
obese body did not move a the&#13;
ectoplasmic head mo\ ed throu&#13;
it and stopped.&#13;
The P ychic creamed and&#13;
Big X wa npped apart.&#13;
Some of the men reached th&#13;
door of Big .. , office ju th&#13;
head fad d way, an e. p 10&#13;
of co mic t y on its face.&#13;
Then th · loo ·ed to the&#13;
remains of Big.· -the thin la ers&#13;
of fleshtone l te. , the insulated&#13;
coils which had maintained a&#13;
body temperature th glazed&#13;
eyeball connected to photon&#13;
receptor , the \ 1-h tu&#13;
through v.hich lub 1c n h d&#13;
flowed, the f1ber-gl bon&#13;
which had upported the bod~.&#13;
the round m · o v. ir and&#13;
tube . haped Ii e a mall he d,&#13;
which kept oi chc · 11 •• clic·-chc·, clic·-clic·, clic&#13;
click ....&#13;
TO BE o.m ED ....&#13;
La efr&#13;
Sun y&#13;
V.&#13;
Announcing the Grand Opening of&#13;
@, kt au ~ports 11 let&#13;
Your Professional Ski and Blk Shop&#13;
Savings&#13;
up to 60% on ski equipment&#13;
and apparel&#13;
Also save on our fall bike specials&#13;
Oct. 19, 20 &amp; 21&#13;
Sale Hours:&#13;
Fri. 6 P.M. - 9 P.M.&#13;
Sot. 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
Sun. 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.&#13;
5038 - 6th Ave. • Kenosha, Wis. 53140 • 4--658-8515 &#13;
10:THE PARKSlDE RANGER Wed"es4\tY' OCt. 1T, 1973 Red man's life in a&#13;
white man's world&#13;
building was ours, all but about 25 of the original 200&#13;
Indians which had entered.Ieft The 25 were unarmed.&#13;
Then 300 federal troops beat the shit out of us&#13;
They were armed with M-l6s. A pregnant wom~&#13;
was molested by a federal marshall and there was&#13;
nothing we could do-we were in handcuffs.&#13;
The Indians entered the Bureau of Indian Affairs&#13;
(BIA) in Washington because we wanted the Indians&#13;
to be able to fun it. When the Indians learned&#13;
what was in the records, they found that there was a&#13;
hell of a lot of corruption. Grazing and mineral&#13;
rights on reservation property were handed to white&#13;
ranchers. When land on the reservations had been&#13;
sold, the money, instead of going to the Indians, had&#13;
disappeared. We wanted a complete investigation of&#13;
Editor's note: The following is the story or an&#13;
Indian student at Parkside. as told to Feature&#13;
Editor Debra Friedell. In it he tries to explain the&#13;
degeneration of the American Indian at the hands of&#13;
whites and capitalists.&#13;
The Winnebago Indians were first moved by ~e&#13;
federal government in boxcars to White Earth 10&#13;
.rtinnesota. At that time there were 10,000 Win·&#13;
nebagos. Then they were moved to Blue Earth in&#13;
'ebraska. When they finally moved the Winnebagos&#13;
back to Wisconsin, there were only 4,000&#13;
left.I was born a Winnebago Indian on a mission in&#13;
Black River Falls, Wisconsin. My family was poor&#13;
and we stayed there until I was about ten when we&#13;
moved to Racine. We were no better off here.&#13;
As an Indian in the Racine school system, I grew&#13;
up with a lot of whites. In the neighborhood in which&#13;
we Jived there were whites, blacks and Mexicans,&#13;
and they were all poor. They knew they were stuck&#13;
there and they were helpless over their destiny.&#13;
Even within that poor community there was&#13;
discrimination against me as an Indian boy.&#13;
Parents wouldn't let their children play with me or&#13;
any of my brothers or sisters because we were&#13;
Indians. I quit school in the tenth grade at Washington&#13;
Park High School because I've got pride in myself&#13;
------------- Three hundred federal troops beat the&#13;
shit out of us. They were armed with M16S.A&#13;
pregnant woman was molested by&#13;
a federal marshall and there was nothing&#13;
we could do-owe were in handCUffs,&#13;
------------- tribal at'fairs and corruption, we wanted the white&#13;
man off the reservation and a review of the land&#13;
rights. After Washington, we had proof that the government&#13;
continued to cheat the Indians. What were we&#13;
to do? One answer was a second battle at Wounded&#13;
Knee. The first was in 1890 when the federal&#13;
government, in a planned massacre, murdered over&#13;
200 men, women and children, then stacked their&#13;
bodies in a 4O-footlong pit for burial. A reservation&#13;
is really a concentration camp. Today, hundreds of&#13;
Indians are diabetic, alcoholic, living in an isolated&#13;
area; no running water, toilets are outdoors the&#13;
shacks are nothing but a roof over one's head: and&#13;
the sanitation is deplorable.&#13;
When we took over Wounded Knee, we were&#13;
surrounded by the FBI, tribal police, federal&#13;
marshalls, vigilante groups, and the army at Fort&#13;
Bragg was on stand-by alert. They carried M.jj()s,50&#13;
caliber machine guns, M-I6s, and high-powered&#13;
rifles. I&#13;
After millions and millions of rounds had been&#13;
fired, it was impossible for us to keep on. We never&#13;
wanted to give up, even when the odds were against&#13;
us. We were running out of food, some people had&#13;
been shot, and our ammunition was low. On a&#13;
Monday morning, they made it explicit that they&#13;
were going to bombard us. After two Indians had&#13;
been killed and many wounded, they told us if we&#13;
signed 'the treaty they'd give us amnesty and look&#13;
over our grievances. As of now they have arrested&#13;
many Indians involved in Wounded Knee.&#13;
Sympathizers for the lndians--blacks, Chinese,&#13;
Slavs and whites-who were coming into Pine Ridge&#13;
by train from Kyle were arrested. in groups of three&#13;
on the charge of having unorganized meetings.&#13;
After Wounded Knee I came back to Racine. I just&#13;
wanted to be left alone. People are suffering; whell&#13;
-~--~----~---&#13;
The American Indian has suffered and&#13;
is still suffering horrors of oppression&#13;
while white society continues to take&#13;
away the dignity, pride, and and rights of&#13;
the Indian who was at one time rich in&#13;
pride, land, and able to tend to his own&#13;
future.&#13;
College&#13;
affairs go&#13;
better with&#13;
steak.&#13;
-----------_ ..&#13;
and they left me no dignity. I lost my identity as a&#13;
person. My fatber worked at American Motors but&#13;
he quit because of the way they treated him.&#13;
The American Indian has suffered and is still&#13;
suffering borrors of oppression while white society&#13;
continues to take away the dignity, pride, and and&#13;
rights of the Indian who was at one time rich in&#13;
pride, land, and able to tend to his own future.&#13;
I went to Minneapolis after I quit school. I saw&#13;
that the urban Indians were living in the same&#13;
conditions as those in Racine. There was police&#13;
brutality there; you name it, there was&#13;
discrimination of all sorts. I have photos of police&#13;
heating Indians.&#13;
You get to the point where you see all that. I was&#13;
about 19. The Indians in Minneapolis and St. Paul&#13;
started getting together and developing some pride&#13;
and being glad we were Indian. We were being told&#13;
by the government "you gotta get off the reservation,&#13;
you gotta do this and that. U So the Indians in&#13;
Minneapolis started picking up on their own&#13;
traditions and trying to forget the white.&#13;
But, there is an education problem. Indians came&#13;
(rom reservations or missions to the city and could&#13;
fmd only menial jobs because they have no&#13;
t.ee?"0logical training. No one gives them any hope,&#13;
no Jobs, goals, or education. The Indian knows that&#13;
his family is in the same position and is going&#13;
nowhere. There are a lot of suicides and alcoholics&#13;
in an Indian community.&#13;
In May of 1970we tried to take over an abandoned&#13;
Navy building for an Indian community center in&#13;
Minneapolis. According to an 1868treaty signed by&#13;
the 'lOlted States Government, the Indians were to&#13;
be given all federal property no longer being used.&#13;
We k.newwe had to take it with (orce or we wouldn't&#13;
get It. When we thought this abandoned Navy&#13;
Man&#13;
Is what he&#13;
eats.&#13;
~-----------&#13;
Academically the white man teaches&#13;
what he wants the white man to le.arn.&#13;
Steak dinners 11.69to '3.69. _--._--------- no one will listen what are you going to do? I've got&#13;
it good now: three meals a day, hot water, a toilet,&#13;
and I can read.&#13;
I took a General Education Development Test in&#13;
Minneapolis and got my high school diploma.! have&#13;
a great respect for professional people.&#13;
But some people, one professor at parkside in&#13;
particular, perpetuate and encourage racism and&#13;
prejudice. He'll call people "nigger, II "welback~"&#13;
and "spies." He said once that Indians in&#13;
Menominee County would sell their clothes for a&#13;
drink. When the University lets people like him take&#13;
positions, there is something wrong up there&#13;
Academically, the white man teaches what he&#13;
wants the white man to learn There are 2t}30boOkS&#13;
on Custer in tbe library and only one on chief&#13;
J?seph. The Parkside police carry 357 magnum&#13;
pistols. What are they expecting?&#13;
I just want something for my sons and daughters.&#13;
DIHZI&#13;
smLDllPIT&#13;
3315 52nd. 51. KENOSHA,WIS. Phone 652-8662&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
~\lrne~5 ~~'YP)G~&#13;
BI\R lIVE MUSIC! Wed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
'TAURUS RISINC·&#13;
SURPRISE BAND SUNDAY&#13;
on the south side of Hwy so, eastofHwy 31.&#13;
MONDAY &amp; $1&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
SIB-56thSt., Kenosha&#13;
'"&#13;
Colle"ge&#13;
affairs go&#13;
better with&#13;
steak.&#13;
Man&#13;
Is what he&#13;
eats.&#13;
St ak dlnn rs • 1.69 to '3.69.&#13;
DIHZI&#13;
SDWJlRFIT&#13;
3315 52nd. ST. KE OSHA, WIS. Phone 652-8662&#13;
i&#13;
0&#13;
~&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
0&#13;
,. "&#13;
~&#13;
3&#13;
Red man's life in a&#13;
white man's world&#13;
Editor' note: The following i the tory of an&#13;
Indian tudent at Park ide, a told to Feature&#13;
Editor D bra Friedell. In it he tries to explain the&#13;
degeneration of the American Indian at the hands of&#13;
whit and capitali t .&#13;
The Winnebago Indian were first moved by ~e&#13;
federal government in boxcars to White Earth _m&#13;
linnesota. At that time there were 10,000 Wmnebagos.&#13;
Then they were moved to Blue Earth in&#13;
. 'ebra ka . When they finally moved the Winnebag&#13;
· back to Wi consin, there were only 4,000&#13;
left.&#13;
I ·a. born a Winnebago Indian on a mission in&#13;
Black River Fall . Wi consin. My family was poor&#13;
and w • taved there until I was about ten when we&#13;
moved to Racine. We were no better off here. an Indian in the Racine school system, I grew&#13;
up with a lot of whites. In the neighborhood in which&#13;
·e li\'ed there w re whites. blacks and 1exicans, and th v w re all poor. They knew they were stuck&#13;
th re ruid they were helpless over their destiny&#13;
Ev n ·ithm that poor community there was&#13;
di. criminauon against me as an Indian boy.&#13;
Paren wouldn't let their children play with me or&#13;
any of my brothers or sisters because we were&#13;
Indian&#13;
I quit school in the tenth grade at Washington&#13;
Par High School because I've got pride in myself&#13;
The American Indian has suffered and&#13;
is still suffering horrors of oppression&#13;
while white society continues to take&#13;
away the dignity, pride, and and rights of&#13;
the Indian who was at one time rich in&#13;
pride, land, and able to tend to his own&#13;
future.&#13;
and they left me no dignity. I lost my identity as a&#13;
person. ly father worked at American Motors but&#13;
he quit becaus Qf the way they treated him.&#13;
The American Indian has suffered and is still&#13;
uffering horrors of oppression while white society&#13;
continues to take awa the dignity, pride, and and&#13;
rights of the Indian who was at one time rich in&#13;
pride. land, and able to tend to his own future.&#13;
I went to 1inneapolis after I quit school. I saw&#13;
that the urban Indians were living in the same&#13;
condition as those in Racine. There was police&#13;
brutality there ; you name it, there was&#13;
discrimination of all sorts. I have photos of police&#13;
beating Indians.&#13;
You get to the point where you see all that. I was&#13;
about 19. The Indians in Minneapolis and St. Paul&#13;
tarted getting together and developing some pride&#13;
and being glad we were Indian. We were being told&#13;
by the government "you gotta get off the reservation,&#13;
you gotta do this and that." So the Indians in&#13;
tinneapolis tarted picking up on their own&#13;
traditions and trying to forget the white.&#13;
But, there is an education problem. Indians came&#13;
from reservations or missions to the city and could&#13;
fmd only menial jobs because they have no&#13;
tec!mological training. ? one gives them any hope,&#13;
no Job . goals, or education. The Indian knows that&#13;
hi family is in the same position and is going&#13;
nowhere. There are a lot of suicides and alcoholics&#13;
in an Indian community.&#13;
In lay of 1970 we tried to take over an abandoned&#13;
• ·~vy buil~g for 31:1 Indian community center in , hnn,eapohs. According to an 1868 treaty signed by&#13;
the ~mted States Government, the Indians were to&#13;
be given all federal property no longer being used.&#13;
We kne we had to take it with (orce or we wouldn't&#13;
get it. When we thought this abandoned Navy&#13;
building was ours, all but about 25 of the original 200&#13;
Indians which had entered.. left. The 25 were unarmed.&#13;
Then 300 federal troops beat the shit out of us&#13;
They were armed with M-16s. A pregnant worn~&#13;
was molested by a federal marshall and there was&#13;
nothing we could do--we were in handcuffs.&#13;
The Indians entered the Bureau of Indian Affair&#13;
(BIA) in Washington because we wanted the Indians&#13;
to be able to run it. When the Indians learned&#13;
what was in the records, they found that there wa a&#13;
hell of a lot of corruption. Grazing and mineral&#13;
rights on reservation property were handed to white&#13;
ranchers. When land on the reservations had been&#13;
sold, the money, instead of going to the Indians, had&#13;
disappeared. We wanted a complete investigation or&#13;
Three hundred federal troops beat the&#13;
shit out of us. They were armed with M.&#13;
16s. A pregnant woman was molested by&#13;
a federal marshal! and there was nothing&#13;
we could do--we were in handcuffs.&#13;
tribal affairs and corruption, we wanted the white&#13;
man off the reservation and a review of the land&#13;
rights. After Washington, we had proof that the government&#13;
continued to cheat the Indians. What were we&#13;
to do? One answer was a second battle at Wounded&#13;
Knee. The first was in 1890 when the federal&#13;
government, in a planned massacre, murdered over&#13;
200 men, women and children, then stacked their&#13;
bodies in a 40-foot long pit for burial. A reservation&#13;
is really a concentration camp. Today, hundreds of&#13;
Indians are diabetic, alcoholic, living in an isolated&#13;
area; no running water, toilets are outdoors, the&#13;
shacks are nothing but a roof over one's head, and&#13;
the sanitation is deplorable.&#13;
When we took over Wounded Knee, we were&#13;
surrounded by the FBI, tribal police, federal&#13;
marshalls, vigilante groups, and the army at Fort&#13;
Bragg was on stand-by alert. They carried M-60s, 50&#13;
caliber machine guns, M-16s, and high-powered&#13;
rifles.&#13;
After millions and millions of rounds had been&#13;
fired, it was impossible for us to keep on. We never&#13;
wanted to give up, even when the odds were against&#13;
us. We were running out of food, some people had&#13;
been shot, and our ammunition was low. On a&#13;
Monday morning, they made it explicit that they&#13;
were going to bombard us. After two Indians had&#13;
been killed and many wounded, they told us if we&#13;
signed 'the treaty they'd give us amnesty and look&#13;
over our grievances. As of now they have arrested&#13;
many Indians involved in Wounded Knee.&#13;
Sympathizers for the Indians--blacks, Chinese,&#13;
Slavs and whites--who were coming into Pine Ridge&#13;
by train from Kyle were arrested in groups of three&#13;
on the charge of having unorganized meetings.&#13;
After Wounded Knee I came back to Racine. I ju t&#13;
wanted to be left alone. People are suffering; when&#13;
Academically the white man teaches&#13;
what he wants the white man to learn.&#13;
no one will listen what are you going to do? I've got&#13;
it good now: three meals a day, hot water, a toilet.&#13;
and I can read.&#13;
I took a General Education Development Test in&#13;
Minneapolis and got my high school diploma. I have&#13;
a great respect for professional people.&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
But some people, one professor at Parkside in&#13;
particular, perpetuate and encourage racism and&#13;
prejudice. He'll call people "nigger," "wetback,"&#13;
and "spies." He said once that Indians in&#13;
Menominee County would sell their clothes for a&#13;
drink. When the University lets people like him take&#13;
positions, there is something wrong up there.&#13;
Academically , the white man teaches what he&#13;
wants the white man to learn. Th~e are 20-30 book.&#13;
on Custer in the library and only one on Chief&#13;
J?seph. The Parkside police carry 357 magnum&#13;
pistols. What are they expecting? ()\l--ne~s&#13;
1\(0GX1-\R&#13;
&#13;
MONDAY &amp; $&#13;
TUESDAY 1&#13;
E USIC! ed., Fri., Sat.&#13;
'TAURUS RISIN01&#13;
SU PRISE BAND SU DAY&#13;
on th outh 1de ofHw~ 50, ea tofHwy 31.&#13;
I just want something for my sons and daughters&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
s·uper Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave., Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
;:_ . :..:~-·... k_ ~~~·' &#13;
photo by Oavid Oaniels&#13;
Parkside freshman Leslie Thompson, participating in last week's&#13;
gymoastics meet with UW-Madison, competes at the intermecUate&#13;
level 00 the uneven bars. Parkside won the meet 112--60.&#13;
~RANGER -;- Sports __&#13;
Ski class prepares&#13;
for the slopes&#13;
by Tom DeFouw&#13;
Skiing is offered to Parkside&#13;
students each semester through&#13;
the Physical Education&#13;
kipline. The main objective of&#13;
the class is to get people interested&#13;
in skiing. Free lessons&#13;
will be given by the Wilmot Ski&#13;
School. Asmall fee is required for&#13;
the rental of skies and lift tickets.&#13;
The fan session is aimed at&#13;
Ilreogthening people's bodies so&#13;
theycan be in complete control of&#13;
themselves on the slopes. This&#13;
conditioning helps to prevent&#13;
many serious injuries. A series of&#13;
exercises are set up to help you&#13;
.trengthen your bodies and&#13;
developcoordination.&#13;
The most strenuous of these&#13;
exercises is the warm-up. You&#13;
have III nm a half mile or run in&#13;
place for three minutes. This&#13;
awakens your body and loosens&#13;
the muscles. Tile rest is downhill&#13;
from there. Other exercises are:&#13;
.itupo, pushups, bench presses,&#13;
leg'lIses, body hops, wall leans,&#13;
stall' hops, leg curls and swimrtllDg.&#13;
These exercises are done&#13;
at your own pace, doing as many&#13;
repetitions as you want.&#13;
StudentRon Brower claims, "I&#13;
exercise for 45 minutes and swim&#13;
the rest of the night."&#13;
The fan course will only have&#13;
three ski trips to Wilmot. The&#13;
second semester will have more&#13;
trips since Nature will have&#13;
provided more snow. The spring&#13;
class will end when the snow&#13;
melts.&#13;
Vic Godfrey, the instructor,&#13;
recommends "the class should be&#13;
taken in the spring since there&#13;
will be an ample supply of snow&#13;
to ski on." He adds, "The best&#13;
exercise for skiiers is to run. This&#13;
builds up the lungs and heart. It&#13;
is also good for the legs."&#13;
For those skiers who want to&#13;
start getting into shape, they&#13;
should start running soon.&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
The Parkside Harriers all&#13;
came across the finish line with&#13;
their best times ever I and as a&#13;
result, captured 19th place in the&#13;
Notre Dame invitational last&#13;
weekend.&#13;
Thirty·nve teams competed in&#13;
the meet, which saw the&#13;
University of Wisconsin· Madison&#13;
take top honors with 8t points.&#13;
Individually. Parkside's&#13;
Lucian Rosa placed 4th in the&#13;
meet with a 23:54 clocking. This&#13;
time beats Parkside's old s-mue&#13;
course record of 24:14, Other&#13;
finishers for Parkside and their&#13;
times:&#13;
Dennis Biel - 7Ist . 24:49&#13;
Chuck Dettman - 79th - 24:59&#13;
Wayne Rhode - 122nd - 25: 58&#13;
Keith Merritt - 172nd - 26:00&#13;
Parkside's next meet will be&#13;
against Marquette. at Marquette,&#13;
: on Saturday, Oct. 20.&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 17,1973 THE PARK_SIDE RANGER 11&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
RECREATIONAL PERIODS&#13;
POOL&#13;
MONDAY 12:00-1:00, 6:00-10:00&#13;
TUESDAY 11:00-1:00,3:00-10:00&#13;
WEDNESDAY 12:00-1:00,6:00-tO:00&#13;
THURSDAY 11:00-1:00&#13;
FRIDAY 11:00-3:00&#13;
SATURDAY 11:(1).4:00&#13;
SUNDAY 2:00-10:00&#13;
GY~I:&gt;ASIUM&#13;
MONDAY _ THURSDAY 12:00-1:20&#13;
(liU ·ov. 26) 6:00-10:00&#13;
FRIDAY 8:36-3:00&#13;
SATURDAY 11:(1).4:00&#13;
SUNDAY 2:00-10:00&#13;
WEIGHT ROOM&#13;
MONDAY - THURSDAY 8:36-tO:15, 12:00-t:2O. 3:_:30&#13;
FRIDAY 8:36-3:00&#13;
SATURDAY 9:(1).4:00&#13;
SUNDAY 2:00-10:00&#13;
HA:'iDBALL COURTS&#13;
MONDAY - THURSDAY 12:00-9:00&#13;
FRIDAY 8:36-3:00&#13;
SATURDAY 11:(1).4:00&#13;
lSUNDAY 2:00-10:00&#13;
Game of Rugby explained&#13;
by Bruce Wagner&#13;
American football has a rougher cousin in rugby.&#13;
Originated in England, the game has come to&#13;
Parkside and has been played here for aboot two&#13;
years.&#13;
To refresh your minds about the sport, the difference&#13;
between our game of football and rugby is&#13;
that blocking is illegal and only the ban carrier may&#13;
be tackled. Also no member of the ban cain ... 's&#13;
team may be ahead of the ban carrt ... ; if a teammate&#13;
ahead of the ball carrier an offsides penalty&#13;
will be imposed. The final difference is that no&#13;
forward passing may be done.&#13;
Play is fluid and continuous, with the exceptioo of&#13;
when a penalty is assessed or the ball goes out of&#13;
bounds. If a player is tackled, he must let go of the&#13;
ball, which is immediately in play. and either team&#13;
may play the ball.&#13;
Itis put in play by means of a serum. A serum is a&#13;
group of forwards who try to get ball baelt to the&#13;
other members of the team, by Idclting or dribbling&#13;
the ban through a tunnel formed by these forwards.&#13;
Basically, there are two kinds of serums: the set&#13;
serum, which occurs after an infringement of the&#13;
rules or wben the ban becomes unplayable. The&#13;
second kind is a loose scrwn which occurs after a&#13;
player is tackled or wben aslineout occurs.&#13;
A lineout occurs when the baU is pmted or the ball&#13;
goes out of bounds.&#13;
Scoring for rugby is simple. A player sares 4&#13;
points when he touches the ground with the ball in&#13;
the end zone which is caned a try.&#13;
Other ways to score in rugby are a convenion&#13;
after a try, which would be a dropIdelt through the&#13;
goal posts, a peoalty ltielt, or a drop kielt during the&#13;
game.&#13;
Members of the Parkside rugby squad are: Torn&#13;
Berge, Marty Hogan, Paul Gray, Norman Pietras,&#13;
Rick Pazera, Mark Barnhill, Ernie Uanas, Dietmar&#13;
Schnieder, Tom Beyers, Jim Rea, John B1es1ta,&#13;
~~~ .-.;:~.~~&#13;
CW'J&#13;
Keith Bosman, Torn 011, AI Pevonk.a, Rielt GIov ....&#13;
Dan Mulenberg, Torn Krimmel, Eric Olaen, Daye&#13;
Gregory, Pat Hogan. and Harry Bird.&#13;
This group of roggers has not had a good __&#13;
so far this year, but has made game out of several of&#13;
the matches played so far during the year.&#13;
Three of the four matches played this __&#13;
have been decided by a total oC 8 pomts, acconliJl(l&#13;
to Vic Godfrey, coordinator of club sports. Their&#13;
current reconI is t-3 with a match with bnth&#13;
Marquette and University of MinnesotA corninl up&#13;
ID the future.&#13;
The Marquette match IS sponsored by the&#13;
Kenosha Lions Cub for the second straight year.&#13;
This helps encourage the sport of rugby in Kenosha.&#13;
There was a g~y crowd in attendance last year.&#13;
A Porn Porn squad is going to&#13;
be organi.ed this year at&#13;
Parkside. This group will be&#13;
independent of the Cheerleaders.&#13;
AU women interested in jooninll&#13;
should contact either Barb&#13;
Lawson, instructor in Physical&#13;
EOJcation, at ext. 2251, or student&#13;
Jane Erickson at 312-872-S727.&#13;
within the nen two weeks for&#13;
information regan!.inIl meet~&#13;
and practices. The Urst&#13;
organiutiooal m~ IS ten·&#13;
tatively set for the fll'St wee. of&#13;
November, WIth practices and&#13;
tryOUlll the following week&#13;
'AGE"&#13;
ATTENTION!&#13;
Wrestling practice has started.&#13;
Head coach Jim Koch has announced&#13;
that practices will run&#13;
from 4-1;p.m. every day. All men&#13;
are encouraged to tryout. (The&#13;
team is undermanned at the&#13;
heavier weight classes.)&#13;
nd&#13;
Intramural Bowling. Students&#13;
who are interested in bowling&#13;
should meet at Surf Bowl on&#13;
Friday at 4 p.m. Otherwise,&#13;
contact Jim Koch.&#13;
Wed", Fri., Sat., &amp; SI•.&#13;
I ocr. 17, 19, 20, 21 I&#13;
r...SN'S "ewesf "Ite~&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485 ,&#13;
ROAD&#13;
J&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
The Park ide Harrier all&#13;
came acros the fini h line with&#13;
their best times ever, and a a&#13;
result, captured 19th place in the&#13;
Notre Dame Invitational la t&#13;
weekend.&#13;
Thirty-five teams competed in&#13;
the meet, which aw the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-. tadi on&#13;
take top honors with 81 points.&#13;
Individually, Park ide's&#13;
Lucian Rosa placed 4th in the&#13;
meet with a 23:54 clocking. This&#13;
time beats Parkside' old 5-mile&#13;
course record of 24: 14. Other&#13;
finishers for Parkside and their&#13;
times:&#13;
Dennis Biel - 71st . 24: 9&#13;
Chuck Dettman - 79th - 24:59&#13;
Wayne Rhode - 122nd - 25:58&#13;
Keith 1erritt - 172nd - 26:00&#13;
Parkside's next meet "'ill be&#13;
against Iarquette, at larquette,&#13;
.on Saturday, Oct. 20.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 1973 THE PARK_SIDE RANGER 11&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
RECREATIO AL PERIODS&#13;
Y 12: 1:20&#13;
10:15, 12: 1: , 3:&#13;
photo by o .. vid o.,nlels&#13;
Parkside freshman Leslie Thompson, participating in last week's&#13;
gymnastics meet with UW-Madison, competes at the intermediate&#13;
Jevel on the uneven bars. Parkside won the meet U2~.&#13;
Game of Rugby explained&#13;
b Bruce Wagner&#13;
RANGER American football has a rougher cousin tn rugby. Originated in England, the game ha come to&#13;
Parkside and has been played here for about two&#13;
years.&#13;
To refresh your minds about the sport, the difference&#13;
between our game of football and rugby is&#13;
that blocking is illegal and only the ball carrier ma&#13;
be tackled. Also no member of the ball earner'&#13;
team may be ahead of the ball carrier: if a teammate&#13;
ahead of the ball carrier an off ides penalty&#13;
will be imposed. The final difference is that no&#13;
forward passing may be done.&#13;
'---------::----Sports __&#13;
Ski class prepares&#13;
for the slopes&#13;
Play is fluid and continuous, with the exception of&#13;
when a penalty is assessed or the ball goe out of&#13;
bounds. If a player is tackled, he must let go of the&#13;
ball, which is immediately in play, and either team&#13;
may play the ball.&#13;
by Tom DeFouw&#13;
Skiing is offered to Parkside&#13;
students each semester through the Physical Education&#13;
discipline. The main objective of&#13;
the class is to get people interested&#13;
in skiing. Free lessons&#13;
will be given by the Wilmot Ski&#13;
School. A small fee is required for&#13;
the rental of skies and lift tickets.&#13;
The fall session is aimed at&#13;
strengthening people's bodies so&#13;
they can be in complete control of&#13;
themselves on the slopes. This&#13;
conditioning helps to prevent&#13;
many serious injuries. A series of&#13;
exercises are set up to help you&#13;
strengthen your bodies and&#13;
develop coordination.&#13;
The most strenuous of these&#13;
exercises is the warm-up. You&#13;
have to run a half mile or run in&#13;
place for three minutes. This&#13;
awakens your body and loosens&#13;
the muscles. 'Die rest is downhill&#13;
from there. Other exercises are:&#13;
itups, pushups, bench presses,&#13;
leg_raises, body hops, wall leans,&#13;
~II' hops, leg curls and swimming.&#13;
These exercises are done&#13;
at your own pace, doing as many&#13;
repetitions as you want.&#13;
Student Ron Brower claims, "I&#13;
nd&#13;
exercise for 45 minutes and swim&#13;
the rest of the night."&#13;
The fall course will only have&#13;
three ski trips to Wilmot. The&#13;
second semester will have more&#13;
trips since Nature will have&#13;
provided more snow. The spring&#13;
class will end when the snow&#13;
melts.&#13;
Vic Godfrey, the instructor,&#13;
recommends "the class should be&#13;
taken in the spring since there&#13;
will be an ample supply of snow&#13;
to ski on." He adds, "The best&#13;
exercise for skiiers is to run. This&#13;
builds up the lungs and heart. It&#13;
is also good for the legs."&#13;
For those skiers who want to&#13;
start getting into shape, they&#13;
should start running soon.&#13;
ATTENTION!&#13;
Wrestling practice has started.&#13;
Head coach Jim Koch has announced&#13;
that practices will run&#13;
from 4-6 p.m. every day. All men&#13;
are encouraged to try out. (The&#13;
team is undermanned at the&#13;
heavier weight classes.)&#13;
It is put in play by means of a scrum. A scrum is a&#13;
group of forwards who try to get ball ba to the&#13;
other members of the team, by kicking or dribbling&#13;
the ball through a tunnel formed by these forwards.&#13;
Basically, there are two kinds of scrums: the set&#13;
scrum, which occurs after an infringement of the&#13;
rules or when the ball becomes unplayable. The&#13;
second kind is a loose scrum which occurs after a&#13;
player is tackled or when aslineout occurs. A lineout occurs when the ball is punted or the ball&#13;
goes out of bounds.&#13;
Scoring for rugby is imple. A player scores 4&#13;
points when he touches the ground \\ith the ball in&#13;
the end zone which is called a try.&#13;
Other ways to score in rugby are a conversion&#13;
after a try, which would be a dropkick through the&#13;
goal posts, a penalty kick, or a drop ki during the&#13;
game. iembers of the Park ide rugby squad are: Tom&#13;
Bergo, Marty Hogan, Paul Gray, 'onnan Pietr •&#13;
Rick Pazera, iar Barnhill, Ernie Uana Dietrnar&#13;
Schnieder, Tom Beyers, Jim Rea, John Ble&#13;
Intramural Bo" ling. tudents&#13;
who are inter ted m bowling&#13;
should meet at urf Bowl on&#13;
Friday at 4 p.m. Otherv.ise,&#13;
contact Jim Koch.&#13;
a&#13;
'TAOE"&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
[ OCT. 17, 19, 20, 21 I&#13;
Ke11oslta's Newest Niles,.,&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's}&#13;
a&#13;
A Porn Porn&#13;
be organized&#13;
3400 SHERID RO D ·n&#13;
6926 39th E . E&#13;
•• &#13;
. . .&#13;
. '. . .: :&#13;
. '. .&#13;
__ii" "&#13;
F&#13;
POP&#13;
L&#13;
JAZZ&#13;
5&#13;
A B MS&#13;
o I&#13;
X C&#13;
E&#13;
D&#13;
5&#13;
E&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
BOXED SETS&#13;
VALUES TO $45.00&#13;
Sale Starts&#13;
Wed •• Oct.17&#13;
Sale EndsOct. 26&#13;
r&#13;
F&#13;
POP&#13;
L&#13;
ROCK&#13;
L&#13;
JAZZ&#13;
s&#13;
LBUMS&#13;
0 I&#13;
X C&#13;
E&#13;
SINGLE Al.BUMS&#13;
$ 129 - $ 198&#13;
l~DXED SETS&#13;
$298 - $998&#13;
VALUES TO $45.00&#13;
D&#13;
s&#13;
E&#13;
Sale Starts&#13;
Wed •• Oct.17&#13;
Sale Ends Oct. 26&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE </text>
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                <text>English</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64339">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="64342">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Faculty "outraged" over withheld information</text>
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              <text>PSGA to re-interview ~&#13;
~&#13;
L&amp;FA applicants&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
At their meeting Sunday night&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGAl decided to&#13;
re-inlerview students who apP.l&lt;d&#13;
to be placed on the studentfaculty&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee,to fill the remaining&#13;
vacancy.&#13;
Four PSGA members attended&#13;
the meeting. They were Tom&#13;
Jennett, interim President, and&#13;
senators Ken Konkol, Chuck&#13;
Stephenand Pat McDivitt. Other&#13;
PSGA members who were&#13;
notifiedby both mail and phone&#13;
but did not attend the meeting&#13;
were Dave Otto, Mike Wickware,&#13;
Jan Petzke, Kathy Wellner, Terri&#13;
Appleget, Tom Hughes, Helmut&#13;
Kab, Ernie Llanas, Nancy Lee&#13;
and Rick Ponzio. Wellner. Rah&#13;
and Lee have resigned from&#13;
PSGA but their resignations have&#13;
not yet been accepted.&#13;
Recommendations Approved&#13;
All the student r ecornmendations&#13;
by PSGA to studentfaculty&#13;
committees can hold&#13;
legallyuntil new PSGA elections&#13;
are beld the second week of&#13;
November. However, Konkol&#13;
expressed hope tha t these&#13;
recommendations would stick&#13;
even after the elections, when&#13;
they have to be re-approved by&#13;
the new Senate.&#13;
The PSGASenate has approved&#13;
the recommendations of the&#13;
interviewing and screening&#13;
committee headed by Konkol&#13;
excopt for the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee in which ten&#13;
people were originally interViewed,&#13;
two recommended&#13;
and one position still open. The&#13;
two Iilled positions are held by&#13;
Greg Klema, chairperson of the&#13;
Parkside Activities .Board&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee,&#13;
and Chuck. Perronne a&#13;
junior and Sigmi Pi fratern'ity&#13;
member.&#13;
Konkol suggested the whole&#13;
senate choose between applicants&#13;
Tom Jones, Dick Jones and Jean&#13;
Kiddney for the third position.&#13;
Tom Jones is a sophomore and a&#13;
member of the Third World&#13;
organization. Dick Jones is a&#13;
sophomore and a member of&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity.&#13;
Kiddney is also a sophomore, an&#13;
adult student and involved with&#13;
the Day care Center. McDivitt&#13;
questioned Konkol as to whether&#13;
or not in the interview. Kiddney&#13;
had the point of view that PSGA&#13;
wanted people appointed to have&#13;
regarding Lecture and Fine Arts.&#13;
Konkol replied that he had been&#13;
unable to tell either way.&#13;
It was decided that all students&#13;
who had applied would be reinterviewed&#13;
on Wednesday,&#13;
October 24. "If I call them all in&#13;
again," asked Konkol, "am I&#13;
going to have someone else there&#13;
to help me?" Jennett said, "If&#13;
you let us know when." "I let ~0lI&#13;
know last time," Konkol replied&#13;
sarcastically.&#13;
Interviews to be Taped&#13;
Jennett asked that the interviews&#13;
be taped this time, as&#13;
there was some controversy&#13;
regarding the manner in which&#13;
interviewing was conducted&#13;
before. "Mustafa Abdullah,"&#13;
Jennett said, "had complained to&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger (assistant&#13;
Dean of Students) that he was&#13;
discriminated against because he&#13;
was black." Konkol said that&#13;
continued on page 7&#13;
More vending macbines&#13;
_..... _ ..._------------- ---- ...• _ .._ ....&#13;
The Parkside'-------&#13;
RA&#13;
Wedne.y,&#13;
GER&#13;
Oct. 24, 1973 Vol. II No.•&#13;
Faculty "outraged" over&#13;
withheld information&#13;
Approximately 20 faculty&#13;
members attended the Wisconsm&#13;
Education Association Council&#13;
lWEAC) organizational meeting&#13;
last Friday afternoon.&#13;
The main topic of discuss.ion&#13;
concerned UW-system funds that&#13;
were set aside for undergraduate&#13;
educational improvement grants&#13;
According to several of the&#13;
faculty who were present. the&#13;
annooncement that these funds&#13;
are available was made 00&#13;
August 16, 1973 and received by&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie on August 17&#13;
Parkside faculty members did&#13;
not learn about the available&#13;
funds until October 17, applications&#13;
for the money are due&#13;
on October 31&#13;
Faculty members at the&#13;
meeting agreed to make their&#13;
feelings of "outrage" on II".&#13;
withholding of information&#13;
known to several sources. They&#13;
decided to send a resotuuee. In&#13;
wrating, to the full-facult)&#13;
meeting, the Uruversrty Committee,&#13;
and Central Administration&#13;
(CA) In • tadison&#13;
The protest to CA will be 10 the&#13;
form of a request for an eXlenslon&#13;
Hot food service in SA8&#13;
to be discontinued&#13;
There will no longer be hot food&#13;
service available in the Student&#13;
Activities BuHeling. It is being&#13;
~lOated due to lack of suf-&#13;
~~nt users to justify. main.&#13;
tauung it.&#13;
w~~dent. Life coordinator&#13;
hal J: N,ebuhr said the service&#13;
S n Operating at a 15 per- ""I del· .&#13;
aver ICll this semester. An&#13;
bu age of 30 people per day were not!:: SOmething, but many elid&#13;
y complete meals.&#13;
More vending machines are&#13;
being installed in the S.A.B. to&#13;
provide food for persons still&#13;
wishing to eat lunch there.&#13;
Niebuhr does not anticipate that&#13;
this will have a detrimental C:f&#13;
.&#13;
fect&#13;
on lines and crowded conditions&#13;
, the LLC cafeteria. since very&#13;
}~wstudents were going down ~.~&#13;
hill to eat anyway. and CIV}&#13;
service personnel in Tallent Hall&#13;
can purchase sandwicheS. and so&#13;
th S A B machmes. on from e . ' . .&#13;
Niebuhr added that he .IS&#13;
currently trying to come up With&#13;
a solution to a problem we will&#13;
have next year when the Kenosha&#13;
campus closes The hot food&#13;
service at Kenosha this year lS&#13;
doll'lg very well, he commented&#13;
"When the people using It are on&#13;
the main campus next year we'll&#13;
have to have another area&#13;
besides the existing LLC&#13;
facilities to ser"e them. The&#13;
space is availabJe In S.A.B. and a&#13;
kitchen already there, but&#13;
students won't go there so we've&#13;
got to try and find a suitable area&#13;
up the lull."&#13;
of the apphcauOII deodlme_ It&#13;
least for Parkslde faculty. WEAC&#13;
members .,11 ask that th.&#13;
UroversIty Comrmttee send a&#13;
Similar reque-st tee df'adUot"&#13;
extension to Central Ad·&#13;
mlnlStrahon.&#13;
Alan hucard, as oclate&#13;
professor of Eng! cautioned&#13;
his coIleago es about the at&#13;
hand "{;nW~ ......show a pattern&#13;
of nogli nco, 'OU don't ,..ant to&#13;
.. "" .... te the Import of&#13;
th lDOdenL"&#13;
OlIIer subjec cli5cuued at the&#13;
-.ng ...... 01 oI1ken&#13;
and the formation of a eoerinI&#13;
commit Both acUons&#13;
dela) ed until membonhlp&#13;
rNSed&#13;
DIane Wakoski&#13;
Th. Lecture and Fme Arts Commlllee, the Poetry Forum. and the&#13;
Women's Caucus are sponsonng a poetry worbhop and .... d.m&amp; WIth&#13;
poet Diane Wakoslti \\Cak i IS the author 01 such poetry coli bans&#13;
as Di&gt;&lt;repan&lt;i and \j&gt;parilioa . Greed. 1.0 ide IIoe Blood FaclGry,&#13;
The \tGlore:') de 8e.tra) ...1 Poem • 011 Barba.rolll SbGre. and n~&#13;
PumpkiD Pie or reassu.nK~ are: al •• ) r.he: .ll.bou.gh. e iO\'~&#13;
l/Iem.&#13;
The poetry "T1ling ......-bhop ..i11 be 011Oct 29 from 4 to 5 P m In the&#13;
lam Place lounges Dl;:J and D174 The Wako6lti poetry readlng on&#13;
OCt 29 ""II he at a pm on tho llurd floor of the hl:ral)· Th .\ nl&#13;
all&#13;
PSGA to re-intervievv The Parkside~------&#13;
L&amp;F A applicants&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
At their meeting Sunday night&#13;
Parkside's Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) decided to&#13;
re-interview students who appl_ied&#13;
to be placed on the studentfaculty&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, to fill the remaining&#13;
vacancy.&#13;
Four PSGA members attended&#13;
the meeting. They were Tom&#13;
JeMett, interim President, and&#13;
enators Ken Konkol, Chuck&#13;
tephen and Pat McDivitt. Other&#13;
PSGA members who were&#13;
notified by both mail and phone&#13;
but did not attend the meeting&#13;
\\ere Dave Otto, Mike Wickware,&#13;
Jan Petzke, Kathy Wellner, Terri&#13;
Appleget, Tom Hughes, Helmut&#13;
Kah, Ernie Llanas, Nancy Lee&#13;
and Rick Ponzio. Wellner, Kah&#13;
and Lee have resigned from&#13;
PSGA but their resignations have&#13;
not yet been accepted.&#13;
Rttommendations Approved&#13;
All the student recommendations&#13;
by PSGA to studentfaculty&#13;
committees can hold&#13;
legally until new PSGA elections&#13;
are held the second week of&#13;
, 'ovember. However, Konkol&#13;
expressed hope that these&#13;
recommendations would stick&#13;
even after the elections, when&#13;
they have to be re-approved by&#13;
the new Senate.&#13;
The PSGA Senate has approved&#13;
the recommendations of the&#13;
nterviewing and screening&#13;
committee headed by Konkol&#13;
except for the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee in which ten&#13;
people were originally interviewed,&#13;
two recommended&#13;
and one position still open. The&#13;
two filled positions are held by&#13;
Greg Klema, chairperson of the&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee,&#13;
and Chuck Perronne, a&#13;
junior and Sigmi Pi fraternity member.&#13;
Konkol suggested the whole&#13;
senate choose between applicants&#13;
Tom Jones, Dick Jones and Jean&#13;
Kiddney for the third position.&#13;
Tom Jones is a sophomore and a&#13;
member of the Third World&#13;
organization. Dick Jones is a&#13;
sophomore and a member of&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity.&#13;
Kiddney is also a sophomore, an&#13;
adult student and involved with&#13;
the Day Care Center. McDivitt&#13;
questioned Konkol as to whether&#13;
or not in the interview, Kiddney&#13;
had the point of view that PSGA&#13;
wanted people appointed to have&#13;
regarding Lecture and Fine Arts.&#13;
Konkol replied that he had been&#13;
unable to tell either way.&#13;
It was decided that all students&#13;
who had applied would be reinterviewed&#13;
on Wednesday,&#13;
October 24. "If I call them all in&#13;
again," asked Konkol, "am I&#13;
going to have someone else there&#13;
to help me?" Jennett said, "If&#13;
you let us know when." "I let ~ou&#13;
know last time," Konkol rephed&#13;
sarcastically.&#13;
Interviews to be Taped&#13;
Jennett asked that the interviews&#13;
be taped this time, as&#13;
there was some controversy&#13;
regarding the manner in which&#13;
interviewing was conducted&#13;
before. "Mustafa Abdullah,"&#13;
Jennett said, "had complained to&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger (assistant&#13;
Dean of Students) that he wa&#13;
discriminated against because he&#13;
was black " Konkol said that&#13;
continued on p 1ge 7&#13;
More vending machines&#13;
RANGE&#13;
Wedne&#13;
Faculty "outraged" over&#13;
withheld informa •&#13;
10n&#13;
Hot food service in SAS&#13;
to be discontinued&#13;
Th_ere will no longer be hot food&#13;
service available in the Student&#13;
ctivities Building. It is being&#13;
terminated due to lack of sufr~~nt&#13;
users to justify. main- taining it.&#13;
, l~dent Life coordinator&#13;
hallltam lebuhr said the service&#13;
5 been operating at a 15 per- cent def· · av 1c1t this semester. An&#13;
bu ~age of 30 people per day were&#13;
noi'ng something, but many did&#13;
buy complete meals.&#13;
More vending machines are&#13;
being installed in the S.A.B. ~o&#13;
prov1 'd e food for persons still . h . g to eat lunch there. WIS ID . . th t N. buhr does not anticipate a&#13;
th\: will have a detrimental ~f!ect&#13;
rnes and crowded cond1ttons&#13;
?n ~e LLC cafeteria, since very&#13;
~~w students were going down ~~ hiJI to eat anyway, and c1&#13;
service personnel in Tallent Hall&#13;
can purchase sandwiches_ and so&#13;
on from the S.A.B. machmes . .&#13;
Nl.ebuhr added that he _ is&#13;
P with currently trying to come u&#13;
a solution to a prob! m&#13;
have next ye r wh the • no&#13;
campu cl . The h r&#13;
en•ice at Kenosha th ) r&#13;
doing very ell, he ~~mented. "When the people mg tl&#13;
the main campus next ar 11&#13;
have to ha,·e nother&#13;
be ide- th xLting LLC&#13;
facilitie, to rve them. The&#13;
,pace i available in .A.B. and a&#13;
kitchen already th re , but&#13;
student on't go there so '\e&#13;
got to try and find a suitable rea&#13;
up the htll." &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wedtllliclay. OCt. 24. 1m&#13;
'-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EditorioI/Opinion&#13;
Committee&#13;
appointments&#13;
handled&#13;
badly&#13;
Ope of the duties of the Parkslde Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) Is to set up an Interviewing committee&#13;
as the Initial step in the process of appointing&#13;
students to student-faculty committees. The final&#13;
recommendations are to be a lolnt effort of the Student&#13;
senate. the Chancellor and Vice-chancellor, and should&#13;
be made In a careful and unprejudiced manner.&#13;
PSGA has apparently devised a new system though, In&#13;
which Ken Konkol. senator and chairperson of the&#13;
screening committee (also the only active committee&#13;
member .. If anyone else happened to be in the office&#13;
during Interviews they did listen, which seemed to&#13;
validate the process&gt;. refus!!d to release the names of&#13;
&amp;ny Individuals Interviewed except those he wished to&#13;
see serve on the various committees. As appointees to&#13;
these student.faculty committees are to serve the needs&#13;
and Interesfs of the student body. It Is necessary that all&#13;
of the names and accurate summaries of the affitudes of&#13;
these students be available.&#13;
When RANGER requested this information after&#13;
learning of complaints about the selection process,&#13;
Konkol refused to provide it, claiming confidentiality for&#13;
the applicants and himself. This in spite the fact that he&#13;
had previously voluntarily shown us a list containing the&#13;
names. He said that he would only give us the Information&#13;
If the Senate authorized him to at the next&#13;
PSGA meeting.&#13;
At that meeting he willingly read the names of applicants&#13;
In spite of the presence of two RANGER&#13;
reporters and without receiving the "authorization" he&#13;
claimed he needed. His previous ploy was obviously to&#13;
buy time and prevent RANGER from adequately&#13;
researching a story that appeared would reflect adversely&#13;
on himself. Acting PSGA President Tom Jennett&#13;
admitted at the time that Konkol had absolutely no&#13;
authority to w)thhold the names and should suffer some&#13;
consequences. But he said that short of trying physical&#13;
force there appeared to be no way to make Konkol&#13;
behave responsibly In this matter.&#13;
Working from memory and the list of "appointees"&#13;
Konkol recommended, RANGER called a few students&#13;
who had applied and learned that much of the controversy&#13;
centered on the Lecture and Fine Arts committee.&#13;
It was learned Konkol relected nominees with&#13;
whom his opinion differed. Students explained that the&#13;
first step of the Interview Konkol made clear his wish to&#13;
see this committee abollstled as It presently stands.&#13;
When students were unresponsive to Konkol's&#13;
suggestion they ended up missing from his list of&#13;
recommended appointees. One student left off that list&#13;
said, "I went In because I was Interested. I volunteered&#13;
because I was concerned. My Interview didn't last even&#13;
five minutes."&#13;
Of the nine people applying to the L&amp;FA committee,&#13;
two were chosen and one opening stili exists. One of the&#13;
two appointees Is Greg Klema who chairs the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board Fine Arts Committee. While this may&#13;
at first appear a good credential for L&amp;FA, we question&#13;
whether or not his simultaneously serving on both&#13;
committees Is not a conflict of interest? It certainly Is&#13;
unfair to students to be represented on two separate&#13;
committees of similar nature by the same person, for&#13;
this narrows options In programming possibilities.&#13;
Admittedly. there are a limited number of positions&#13;
available on student-faculty committees. However,&#13;
never should Intelligent, sincere and concerned students&#13;
be rejected because their opinions differ with those of&#13;
the person entrusted with the task of interviewing them.&#13;
Student government officers have a responsibility to be&#13;
fair. open,mlnded and mature.&#13;
RANGER calls on PSGA and the student body in&#13;
general to see that tactics such as those employed in&#13;
committee recommendations are never again used.&#13;
There's a madman&#13;
in the White House&#13;
"Whether ours shail continue to be a gov.ernment of&#13;
f n is now for Congress and ultimately the&#13;
laws ~r 0 pemoepleto decide" So spoke special Watergate&#13;
American . . fl&#13;
t&#13;
r Archibald Cox after being Ired by&#13;
prosecuo . . t~&#13;
P&#13;
'dent Nixon for his perserverance In pursuing II~ r-est . ~.. f t' ... d hts refusal to compromise rus rnves Iga Ion. trutn an III t t ·t t·&#13;
N&#13;
. n's compromise in the Waterga e apes Sl ua Ion&#13;
rxo ld t·t t· I&#13;
was supposedly designed !o evoi a cons I u rona&#13;
f ntation' his recent actions have created the most&#13;
con ro, t· C . I&#13;
. crisis of all, with the Execu rve. ongresslona&#13;
serrous I' ·th· th I&#13;
d J d&#13;
iciary branches all batt Ing WI rn nemse ves&#13;
an u . t· d f&#13;
and with each other, and all being ques lone rom&#13;
without by the people themselves, .&#13;
N' n's termination of Cox and Ruckelshaus and the .'X:ation of Attorney General Richardson illustrate a&#13;
reslg I' t . tal ~. d sperate but arrogant man strugg Ing 0 main am ms&#13;
~wer. Once no one could den~ that Nixon was at least&#13;
politically sophisticated. But. hls demand that Cox cease&#13;
ndermining his compromise was a breach of the&#13;
~greement that Cox would be given complete freedom in&#13;
his investigation. It was obvio~s that. Cox wo~l.d not&#13;
comply and Nixon would find hlms?l! In ? posltion of&#13;
questioned authority. This was poll!lCal ineptitude to&#13;
say the least, and Nixon's degeneration to such a level&#13;
that members of his Administration are resigning over&#13;
his policies or getting fired f?r refusin~ t? follow h~m is&#13;
an indication of his increasingly egotistical, maniacal&#13;
view of a questionable reality.&#13;
Grave questions about Mr. Nixon's balance and&#13;
perception must be asked in addition to the .moral ,and&#13;
legal queries that have been abounding since&#13;
Watergate, He is putting himself in the position of a god,&#13;
beyond the reach of law and the people and the&#13;
American government he is a part of, Before too many&#13;
other people are mesmerized into believing that one&#13;
man rule is indeed a good thing for America, Congress&#13;
must depose King Richard.&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view --------.,-----------,&#13;
l:P"iCu LIKE ACT\Gl,&#13;
INT"'IGiJE.. MYSTER'f.&#13;
n\,I.. tJTn.t: [WW.&#13;
l):I'1:X.l LIKE Mf:£l1tG&#13;
NIfW J'\OPU:,INf'\.UI)l:)II;&#13;
TilE tfSnNY Of THE&#13;
WORlJ),ANl::I M()'lE"(&#13;
LOTS /loNb LOTSa:l'oI£'(&#13;
FM AS ~ 4CU lJ'ST.&#13;
WHY WAIT, ALL TIllS&#13;
"...ID MeRE (}.N BE&#13;
vcuns !l~&#13;
Wfl,ITE ""OO~y Ul&#13;
HI.,,'IE '1OU '" GUY uet. ME&#13;
UlO UtO lQIG UIo\T UTn.E&#13;
eAANS \oIf ~,&amp;uT [)O£'5N'T&#13;
....._Jt~ Uo'tIT To l,,)Okl(!!&#13;
Aff"l,ovEO FOR.&#13;
G£~-'N ""WI.&#13;
CRll'IllI~5!!&#13;
i,~ The Pn.Iid..I-----&#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 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center. Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
renected 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 250words or&#13;
165. typed "nd double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for lefllth and good taste. All IeHers must be signed and include&#13;
addr~. phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be Withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.IN·CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR' Tom Pelersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Diln Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca EcklUnd&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David DanielS&#13;
WRITERS' sandy BUSh,Stephen Gifford, BMbaril Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Headen, Gary Jensen., Michael Olsz:yk, Marilyn Schubert, John&#13;
SOrens.en, Steve Siapanian. CarrieWa.rd, Tom DeFovw, Neal Sautner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrim. Allen Frederickson, Brian RosS,&#13;
Jim RUffolo&#13;
CARTOONISTS: amy cundari, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT, Terri Gelenian, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
AOVERTiSING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Gary Worthington&#13;
AOVERTlSING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed=ne=sda=y~.~Oc=t-.= 24~.~l:97=3~ ---------------~-----------------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
-------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Committee&#13;
• appointments&#13;
andled&#13;
adly&#13;
().\ of h dut e of the Par side Student Government&#13;
c t on ( PSGA) ls to set up an Interviewing com:&#13;
mitt nt lal 1ep n the process of appointing&#13;
tud nt o tudent-faculty committees. The final&#13;
r omm nd t ons re to be a joint effort of the Student&#13;
n t , Ch ncellor and Vice-chancellor, and should&#13;
m d n c reful and unprefudlced manner.&#13;
PSGA h pp r ntly devised a new system though, in&#13;
hlch K n Kon ol, nator and chairperson of the&#13;
nln comm t (also the only active committee&#13;
m m r - I nyon else happened to be in the office&#13;
during nt rvl they did listen, which seemed to&#13;
v I d t th process), refus'!d to release the names of&#13;
ny lndlvldu I Interviewed except those he wished to&#13;
rv on h various committees. As appointees to&#13;
th tud f.f culty committees are to serve the needs&#13;
nd Int r t of the tudent body, it Is necessary that all&#13;
of th n m nd accurate summaries of the attitudes of&#13;
th e tudents be available.&#13;
n RANGER requested this information after&#13;
I rn n of complaints about the selection process,&#13;
Kon ol refu ed to provide It, claiming confidentiality for&#13;
th ppllcant and himself. This in spite the fact that he&#13;
had previously voluntarily shown us a list containing the&#13;
names. e said that he would only give us the inform&#13;
ton If the Senate authorized him to at the next&#13;
PSGA m ting.&#13;
At ha meeting he wllllngly read the names of applicants&#13;
In plte of the presence of two RANGER&#13;
repor r and lthout receiving the "authorization" he&#13;
cl lmecl he needed. His previous ploy was obviously to&#13;
buy ime and prevent RANGER from adequately&#13;
r earchlng a story that appeared would retied adv&#13;
r ly on himself. Acting PSGA President Tom Jennett&#13;
dmltted at the time that Konkol had absolutely no&#13;
uthorlty to wjthhold the names and should suffer some&#13;
consequences. But he sa d that short of trying physical&#13;
fore th re appeared to be no way to make Konkol&#13;
behave responsibly In this matter.&#13;
Wor Ing from memory and the list of "appointees"&#13;
on ol recommended, RANGER called a few students&#13;
ho ad applied and learned that much of the conrover&#13;
y centered on the Lecture and Fine Arts comml&#13;
I was learned Konkol rejected nominees with&#13;
hom his c,pln on differed. Students explained that the&#13;
first tep of the interview Konkol made clear his wish to&#13;
his committee abol st\ed as U presently stands.&#13;
n students ere unresponsive to Konkol's&#13;
ugg t on they ended up missing from his list of&#13;
recommended appointees. One student left off that list&#13;
d, "I nt In because I was interested. I volunteered&#13;
becau I as cone rned. My lnterv ew didn't last even&#13;
fl e m nu s."&#13;
Of hen n people applying o the L&amp;FA committee&#13;
two re chosen and one opening still exists. One of th;&#13;
o ppoln ees s Greg Klema ho cha rs the Parkside&#13;
Actlvltl s Board Fine Arts Committee. While this may&#13;
t fir t appear a good credential for l&amp;F A, we question&#13;
th r or not his s multaneovsly serving on both&#13;
comml no a conflld of Interest? It certainly Is&#13;
unf r o stude ts to be represented on two separate&#13;
comm of similar nature by the same person, for&#13;
n rr c,ptlons In programming possibilities.&#13;
Adm edly, re are a limited number of positions&#13;
v II bl on tud nt-faculty committees However&#13;
hould lntelllgen , sincere and concer~ed student;&#13;
ed b us their opinions differ with hose of&#13;
rson en rus d I thetas of interv ewing them&#13;
n o rnm nt officers ave a responsibility to ~ r, o n-mlnd nd mature.&#13;
RA GER call on PSGA and the student body n&#13;
r I h t tactics such as those employed in&#13;
r commendations are never again used.&#13;
There's a madman&#13;
in the White House&#13;
"Whether ours shall continue to be a government of&#13;
laws or of men is now for Congress and ultimately the&#13;
American people to decide." So spoke special Watergate&#13;
prosecutor Archibald Cox after being fired by&#13;
President Nixon for his perserverance in pursuing the&#13;
truth and his refusal to compromise his investigation.&#13;
Nixon's compromise in the Watergate tapes situation&#13;
was supposedly designed to avoid a constitutional&#13;
confrontation; his recent actions have created the most&#13;
serious crisis of all, with the Executive, Congressional&#13;
and Judiciary branches all battling within themselves&#13;
and with each other, and all being questioned from&#13;
without by the people themselves.&#13;
Nixon's termination of Cox and Ruckelshaus and the&#13;
resignation of Attorney General Richardson illustrate a&#13;
desperate but arrogant man struggling to maintain his&#13;
power. Once no one could deny that Nixon was at least&#13;
politically sophisticated. But his demand that Cox cease&#13;
undermining his compromise was a breach of the&#13;
agreement that Cox would be given complete freedom in&#13;
his investigation. It was obvious that Cox would not&#13;
comply and Nixon would find himself in a position of&#13;
questioned authority. This was political ineptitude to&#13;
say the least, and Nixon's degeneration to such a level&#13;
that members of his Administration are resigning over&#13;
his policies or getting fired for refusing to follow him is&#13;
an indication of his increasingly egotistical, maniacal&#13;
view of a questionable reality.&#13;
Grave questions about Mr. Nixon's balance and&#13;
perception must be asked in addition to the moral and&#13;
legal queries that have been abounding since&#13;
Watergate. He is putting himself in the position of a god,&#13;
beyond the reach of law and the people and the&#13;
American government he is a part of. Before too many&#13;
other people are mesmerized into believing that one&#13;
man rule is indeed a good thing for America, Congress&#13;
must depose King Richard. I Cartoonist's eye view&#13;
00 '1CJJ LIKE KTlC&gt;J,&#13;
INTI\IGUE. MYSTERY&#13;
)'EV,um.,IIIN,ER&#13;
[)o 'lC&lt;.4 LI KE MfETINr,&#13;
LO'T'3 A&gt;Jtl l.01"3 C1F m&lt;E\'&#13;
FOR AS l..oN&lt;; 40&lt; L&gt;,5T,&#13;
WHY \./AIT, A LL T\11S&#13;
AND MalE UN BE&#13;
4 0 UR~ ![ . WP.IT!: "TOt)I' Y L\ (&#13;
U!lrE :&#13;
CORRUPT RX.lllCIAHS&#13;
'jou Kll::\.lWHO WHl'TE HOU SE&#13;
WASMIN'o-_ l)C&#13;
!-Jr.. The Prko11K11ide11t----&#13;
. RANGER&#13;
. The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
icear ~y t~ stud~ts of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
, ~~os a, Wisconsin S3140. Offices are located at D-194 Libraryi..cormng&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553.2295&#13;
TheP ~d . efl teda~ 1 e Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
~e:of ~~ ~rul':1"1ns_tandfed!torial~ are not necessarily the official&#13;
versi Y o Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Letters to the Ed't · interest to stude ls I r :e encouraged. All letters on any sub Jett of&#13;
less typed d ~ •bi3c ty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
lett~rs for le,n th ou e-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
address h ng and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
be withh~d~e n:~ber and studen_t status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any lett~ equest. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
EDITOR IN CHIEF Jane M . Schllesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR R~ca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR · David Daniels&#13;
::;.,TERS sandy Bush, Stephen Gilford, Barbara Hanson Harvey&#13;
SO&lt; en, Gary Jensen. Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schube'rt John&#13;
PH~T~:~·;~~t=r~an. Carrie Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
Jim Ruifolo on Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
~~~6~~ 1;TS: ~~Y cundari, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan err, =len,an, Terry Knop staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER Ken Pestka '&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER, Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULAT ION MANAGER G ADVERTISING STAFF• ary Worthl~ton Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
The first issue of this semester RANGER pn'nted an "&#13;
. OpInIOn con- cerntng the 'promo~~n of good teachers out of the classroom and into&#13;
admInIstrative positions.&#13;
A partial remedy to make this situation more palatable ha bee&#13;
suggested by the re-emergence of Rita Tallent, sP"&lt;'ial assistant to th~&#13;
Chancellor, In an English class as the teacher of an English 010 section.&#13;
A conversation I had with her recently was steered on to the t .&#13;
I d it bee . edi 0PIC of her c ass an I . arne imrn . lately oovious that she enjoys heing&#13;
in the classroom again. She seems to relish her contact with students&#13;
breaking away from the plush penthouse offices to get down where&#13;
things are really at.&#13;
Vice-chancellor Otto Bauer, a professor in Communications also&#13;
came ~own to join the rest ~f~s when he taught a Course last s~ring.&#13;
Most If not all of our admInIstrators, from division heads through&#13;
deans to the Chancellor, had teaching careers prior to "getting kicked&#13;
upstairs." Only the divisional chairpersons keep a foot in the&#13;
classroom, for their administrative positions are by elected term.&#13;
As was mentioned in that article in the first issue, our own Chan.&#13;
cellor Wyllie was "one of the most sought after history professors in&#13;
Madison." A number of Parkside students did not actually know what&#13;
Wyllie looked like until RANGER printed his picture.&#13;
The problem is not only visibility but communication. It could only&#13;
help this university if more students could know the administrators&#13;
and feel free to talk to them as well as about them. Meeting them in the&#13;
classroom and then seeing them in the concourses and cafeteria would&#13;
go far toward that end. Students would learn that "the Administration"&#13;
is made up of human beings, and the people who run this&#13;
university would be reminded of the students' needs, Ieelinas. concerns&#13;
and ideas. Too often someone ina decision-making position finds&#13;
out about student discontent after it has fermented and expanded, and&#13;
can only say, "I didn't know that was a problem."&#13;
The ideal"solution would be for each administrator to teach a course&#13;
in his-her special area. But time, of course, pre-empts ideal soluti9Il\&#13;
But Iwould like to urge that the people who now sit in offices, and n&#13;
with other people who sit in offices, strongly and carefully consi&#13;
priorities and see if they can afford the time to teach a course in th&#13;
old manner and make some friends in the process. At the very lea.&#13;
would they consider periodically guest lecturing in areas they a&#13;
proficient in, to give students and benefit of their knowledge ar.",&#13;
techniques and the opportunity to question them? "&#13;
In conclusion, hats off to Rita Tallent and Otto Bauer for their part-'&#13;
time endeavors as faculty, and a word of praise too for Phil Burnett&#13;
and Charlotte Chell, who as far as I know are the only faculty members&#13;
who also labor as part-time students here. All four of them are&#13;
undoubtedly learning a lot.&#13;
WEP • evasive&#13;
and insulting&#13;
hy Michael Olszyk&#13;
What promised to be an informative press briefing on nuclea: po.wer&#13;
last Wednesday, by the Atomic Industr!~. Forum, r~ulted. In hltle&#13;
more than self-esteem for Wisconsin uhhbes spon~ortng. thiS ~v«:"t.&#13;
The Ramada Inn, Waukesha, gathering -- supplIed WIth brIefmg&#13;
kits, over an inch thick -- sat patiently through four hours of presentations&#13;
from leading men in the field of nuclear energy. ~ professor of&#13;
nuclear engineering, an environmental analyst, the p~esldent of E.~.&#13;
Johnson Associates and an M.D. tackled issues rangIng from atomiC&#13;
, , . t They were power to radiation effects on man and the envlronme.n .&#13;
equipped with graphs, charts, scale modeis, and slIdes of glossy&#13;
detailed information. .. ed b&#13;
Unfortunately though, crucial questIOns raised to ~ answ~ y&#13;
the Forum were suspiciously evaded. An example of thiS OCCW'lngwas&#13;
when Dr Walter Meyer Professor and Chairperson of Nuclear&#13;
. , . . . f ·Ied t me the con- Engineering at the UniverSity of Missouri, al 0 na ., th&#13;
sequences of a "china syndrome" accident, after praising e&#13;
redundancy in safety features on nuclear reactors. 'd.f&#13;
Later a WisconSin ElectrIC offlcal sal a ' .. 'd th t't as sometimes 1- I W ,&#13;
ficult for a scientific-minded person to co~prehend the l~lma~:&#13;
question Perhaps this was the case; however, when one ~Sl. e? nd&#13;
goal of the Forum is to keep the public abreast o~/ nedn;~~~liC&#13;
economic issues one would thmk they would be !D~e a. u the int&#13;
inqUiry. But instead they assume that the public IS ~a;~~rds ~&#13;
where they don't know the difference hetween pote~tia red during the&#13;
by nuclear reactors and atomic bombs, which was Imp 1&#13;
program. h Welcoming Sponsor&#13;
This notion was made further apparent ~ en . Electric Power&#13;
Sol Burstein, Senior Vice President of wJscon~m ental minded&#13;
Company, called the concerns of greater enVlrOnm&#13;
groups "horse shit." . ed States and Arab&#13;
With estranged relations between the Urnt Ttary fuel oil the&#13;
nations plus tapping domestic emergency . :f:el&#13;
fuel source.' The&#13;
urgency grows over the need f?J' an althernt clear power plants,&#13;
question here thoogh, is concerrung a ras 0 nu&#13;
termed "relatively safe."&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are en.&#13;
couraged.. All letters 00 any&#13;
subject of interest t.o students.&#13;
faculty or staff should be coo.&#13;
fined to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced, The editors&#13;
reserve the r:ght to edit letten&#13;
I... length and good taste. AU&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or fa~ulty&#13;
rank. Names will be 'lithheld&#13;
upon request, The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters,&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
The following is an open letter&#13;
to Mr. Bruce R. Burman,&#13;
President - Local 2180, Wisconsin&#13;
State Employees Union.&#13;
Dear Mr. Burman,&#13;
I am a student employed by&#13;
Parkside. Iwish to know whether&#13;
students are eligihle to join your&#13;
union and thereby gain the&#13;
benefits inherent in membership.&#13;
U not, WHY NOT?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
T. Speaker, student employee&#13;
sophomore&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
In response to the response to&#13;
"goddamn minority recruitment,"&#13;
and with reference to M.&#13;
Gibson, Freshman:&#13;
What this "minority quota"&#13;
jazz bolls down to is this: "Well,&#13;
the Blacks, the Women. the Jews,&#13;
the (fill in the blank)s have had a&#13;
tough deal in the past, SQ,.,lel's&#13;
give em a helping hand nO'W.~·&#13;
Well, well, well. Before&#13;
knocking down the "Ionely individual,"&#13;
consider that tbe&#13;
smallest minority of all is the&#13;
individual. The concept of racial&#13;
quotas in jtself is a depraved&#13;
form of racism. Instead of&#13;
treating "them" bad because of&#13;
race, it's treat "them" good&#13;
because of race. Neither is better&#13;
than the other. ( ote: there is no&#13;
evidence which indica tes skin&#13;
pigmentation biologically affects&#13;
brain function.)&#13;
Education is another thing. If&#13;
the owner of a private school&#13;
says," 0 niggers allowed," that&#13;
should he (but is not, in this&#13;
country) his right. (it is every&#13;
man's God·given right to be a&#13;
creep.&gt; See Yo here it gets him.&#13;
But most schools, like&#13;
Parkside, are socialized. so&#13;
everyone who is a taxpayer or the&#13;
offspring of one should be allo....ed&#13;
to go. I don't think educatIon IS a&#13;
"right" that should he gtven to&#13;
everyone. OfIered, yes. Do you&#13;
think it is my "right" to live In a&#13;
casUe, have 100 handmaidens.&#13;
and own 100 sailboats? ure, if I&#13;
shell out my own money for it II&#13;
not, no. Education is like food,&#13;
clothing and shelter··it ain't&#13;
guaranteed. You have to pay for&#13;
it, Just like any other product&#13;
which is the result of someone&#13;
else's labor.&#13;
..... it's a sad, sad day when we&#13;
as minority students have to&#13;
justify our presence at this&#13;
Wliversity, "&#13;
What in hell makes you think&#13;
that yoo do have to justify your&#13;
presence here'? If you're on&#13;
welfare, I would question your&#13;
presence here; when my dad&#13;
works 120r more hours every day&#13;
of the week on a farm and has to&#13;
pay for some welfare kid's&#13;
schooling, and then my own&#13;
expenses! But oth~ise, your&#13;
being here is )'01U' busmess. and&#13;
don't let anyone else tell you it&#13;
ain't.&#13;
I'll he ready with another I...ter&#13;
if need be, so do your wors~.&#13;
Rodney (the Radical) Schroeter&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Parkside Village 1-102&#13;
PARKS/DE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Th. Conoer&#13;
the hush of&#13;
the river&#13;
at 4 a.rn.,&#13;
nsh nipper their bellies across m""",&#13;
trees wallt down to the very shorehne&#13;
thinking nobody IS wa,ching them,&#13;
his paddle darts in and out of&#13;
the water, getting better acquainted&#13;
each lime WIth its own slippery&#13;
texture,&#13;
hands boggle out of the m-er&#13;
offering foam money In the corner of his eye.&#13;
In my own mind&#13;
I change the texture of the river,&#13;
super-imposing on it&#13;
a buffalo. bleeding in the hindquarters,&#13;
not raging but calm and takmg&#13;
the waters. The river dri~ up&#13;
around him, and the skeleton of the buflalo&#13;
....alks down thedried-out bed of an old rtver,&#13;
by DIOM w.o""&#13;
from In Ide til. Blood F.. ...,.&#13;
by Barb Hanson&#13;
Diane \I'akoski will have an anemoon w or hop and evenIng I..,~&#13;
on October 29 Wakoski was born In ~1uttier, Collfonua (juot&#13;
about when Rich3rd Nixon was pracucing law therel he received.&#13;
B.A. from the Universtry of Califorma-Berk.ley in 1960 Alter work~&#13;
as a bookstore clerk for three years, Wakoski got a job t.. cIl~&#13;
English a' .Iurucr High School 22 m zew York CIty. he won 'hr R.obrrt&#13;
Frost Fellowslup m poetry from the Bread Loaf wmees Conference lD&#13;
1966. \I'akoslU's poetry has appeared 10 varices periodicals and been&#13;
published In several t.o::~~t1onS. She proclaims no pohuCI and no&#13;
religion.&#13;
Insid. th. Blood Factor) ....as published 10 1968. R.D. Spector of&#13;
Salurda~ RtvieYl has thiS to say about It·&#13;
.. liss \I'akoski's social comment is ruthless: "All fathrn in&#13;
Western civilization must have a military origin" Her view 01 nabue&#13;
is not kinder than her view of man. she 15 alen to the decaYlnI&#13;
processes of one, 'the ugly processes that make a liVIng body' In the&#13;
other ... To speak of hkIng MISS Wakoski's poetry would....." .... pproprlate;&#13;
to deny it full admlrauon ....ould be dIshonest." .&#13;
Of Th. Motorcycl. Betrayal Poem 119711,Paul Z.....lg of the , no&#13;
York Times Book Rn'iew said:&#13;
"These poems are not declarations of femmlne ondepen~_. Their&#13;
rage is not ideologIcal, as in many Women's Liberation traeu. lllll&#13;
lI'akoski's tractic is different. She dIgs her teeth mto thr sIa riM of&#13;
woman, he cries them aloud "ith such fulmona"ng energy that the&#13;
chains hegin to melt of themselves. Th. rage IS thaI 01 a pruoner&#13;
....hose bitterness is her boodage but also her freedom In many _,&#13;
ho....ever, the anger becomes thon, repetitious. and thIS " perbll,," the&#13;
book's most serious "eakness. All too often, the strIdency doea not&#13;
'urn IOtopoetry; the words are f1Bttened ahn06t on'o helpl_ by&#13;
the very anger the)' express., (Bull at her bes'- and thr beat II&#13;
frequent enough-Diane Wakoski is an Important and movmc poet ..&#13;
Of her style m 01 ropancies and pparitlon, crItic Robert Repn&#13;
said'&#13;
"_.• (Her poetry) IS youthful, paClOUS, unny, .xuberant, exc...t,&#13;
and though nlled ,,,th t""chlng, III free from pedantry, Amona the&#13;
many virtues of her poetry,the rarest and mos, ....onderful •• itl_&#13;
Its grace, .ts naturalness This is not to say that her poetry II.'easy&#13;
Indeed, her surreah tic symbo1J are often .xtremely demand .... bat&#13;
her poems never demand .xertions from the reader ....hom thry do not&#13;
repav WIth ImmedIate and allldlOg JOy."&#13;
obVIOUIy Wako 10 knows her tuff Those who are ontenlltH in&#13;
poetry as an an and prof ,on "ould do ....ell to attend her I t~ CIl&#13;
the 29th. Even .f you don '( like poetry as a rule, Wakoskl may well be&#13;
the exception.&#13;
"1 am not expected to do anythmg&#13;
bu' what I've I""rned;&#13;
and Yo hlch 1 do so well." •&#13;
from "The TIAAtropeWalker" onFaar Young L.dy Poets.&#13;
:J:'-- I ....' ),&#13;
r&#13;
t~Fif:ME D~, .&#13;
~~ff;~~::h1t::'.&#13;
.&#13;
\.~ATER'r~&#13;
- eALL OTHER VITAL .... __~.~ ....&#13;
.J&#13;
,. e&#13;
e&#13;
TAPES/&#13;
RECoRDS i"&#13;
UTE NECESSITIES e PIPES, PAPERS&#13;
"Open 3li5 days a year"&#13;
Phone 654-5032 11lUCK 0 DOWN&#13;
F-::=:=====-'"'l. .-.===.:.==--&#13;
by Jan~ Schllesman&#13;
The first issue of this semester RANGER printed an op· · h ti f ood won con- cern!n~ t e _Promo . ~n o g teachers out of the classroom and into adrmmstrative positions.&#13;
A partial remedy to make this situation more palatable has been&#13;
suggested b~ the re-em~rgence of Rita Tallent, special assistant to the&#13;
Chancellor, man_ English c!ass as the teacher of an English oio sec- tion. A conversation I had with her recently was steered on to the t · 1 d ·t bee . ed" op1c of her c ass an 1 . ame 1mm 1ately obvious that she enjoys being&#13;
in the classroom agam. She seems to relish her contact with students&#13;
breaking away from the plush penthouse offices to get down whe~&#13;
things are really at.&#13;
Vice-chancellor Otto Bauer, a professor in Communications also&#13;
came down to join the rest ~f ~s when he taught a course last spring. Most if not all of our adm1mstrators, from division heads through&#13;
deans to the Chancellor, had teaching careers prior to "getting kicked&#13;
upstairs." Only the divisional chairpersons keep a foot in the&#13;
classroom, for their administrative positions are by elected term.&#13;
As was mentioned in that article in the first issue, our own Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie was "one of the most sought after history professors in&#13;
Madison." A number of Parkside students did not actually know what&#13;
Wyllie looked like until RANGER printed his picture.&#13;
The problem is not only visibility but communication. It could only&#13;
help this university if more students could know the administrators&#13;
and feel free to talk to them as well as about them. Meeting them in the&#13;
classroom and then seeing them in the concourses and cafeteria would&#13;
go far toward that end. Students would learn that "the Administration"&#13;
is made up of human beings, and the people who run this&#13;
university would be reminded of the students' needs. feelim?s. concerns&#13;
and ideas. Too often S!)meone in a decision-making position finds&#13;
out about student discontent after it has fermented and expanded, and can only say, "I didn't know that was a problem."&#13;
The ideal solution would be for each administrator to teach a course&#13;
in his-her special area. But time, of course, pre-empts ideal soluti_QDS.&#13;
But I would like to urge that the people who now sit in offices, and n&#13;
with other people who sit in offices, strongly and carefully consi&#13;
priorities and see if they can afford the time to teach a course in th&#13;
old manner and make some friends in the process. At the very lea.&#13;
would they consider periodically guest lecturing in areas they a&#13;
proficient in, to give students and benefit of their knowledge ar,1:)&#13;
techniques and the opportunity to question them? .,&#13;
In conclusion, hats off to Rita Tallent and Otto Bauer for their part-' .&#13;
time endeavors as faculty, and a word of praise too for Phil Burnett&#13;
and Charlotte Chell, who as far as I know are the only faculty members&#13;
who also labor as part-time students here. All four of them are undoubtedly learning a lot.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
WEP • evasive&#13;
and insulting&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
What promised to be an informative press briefing on nuclea~ po~er&#13;
last Wednesday, by the Atomic In~ustr!~l _Forum, r~ulted. m 1,1ttle&#13;
more than self-esteem for Wisconsm utJhbes sponsoring_ this ~\ ~nt.&#13;
The Ramada Inn, Waukesha, gathering -- supplied with briefing&#13;
kits, over an inch thick - sat patiently through four hours of presentations&#13;
from leading men in the field of nuclear energy. A_ professor of&#13;
nuclear engineering an environmental analyst, the president of E.~ .&#13;
Johnson Associates 'and an M.D., tackled issues ranging from atomic&#13;
power to radiation ' effects on man and th e env1ronme_n · t , The" ., were . equipped with graphs, charts, scale models, and slides of glossy&#13;
detailed information. ed b&#13;
Unfortunately though crucial questions raised to be answ!r Y&#13;
the Forum were suspiciously ' evaded I f th· occunng was . An examp e O is N&#13;
when Dr Walter Meyer Professor and Chairperson of uc 1 ear&#13;
Engineering · at ' · · f ·1ed t ame the con- the University of M1ssour1, a, 0 n . . th&#13;
sequences of a "china syndrome" accident, after prrusmg e&#13;
redundancy in safety features on nucl~r rea~tors. . difLater&#13;
a Wisconsin Electric offical said that it was sometimes , . . . . . t omprehend the layman s ficult for a sc1entif1c-mmded person ° c .d th&#13;
question Perhaps this was the case; however, when one cons,_ e~ ~&#13;
goal of the Forum is to keep the public abreast of techmca abt· . . · k th Id be more attuned to pu 1c economic issues one would thm ey wou . . . to the point inquiry. But instead they assume that the pubhc is ~aIVe ds ed&#13;
where they don't know the diff_erence betw~n pote~:1i::iu:i~i,igthe by nuclear reactors and atomic bombs, which was 1 P&#13;
program. h Welcoming Sponsor This notion was made further_apparent ~ en . Electric Power&#13;
Sol Burstein, Senior Vice President of W1scon~m ental minded&#13;
Company, called the concerns of greater enVIronm&#13;
groups "horse shit." . ed States and Arab&#13;
With estranged relations ~tween the Urut il'ta fuel oil. the&#13;
nations plus tapping domestic emergency - :I1ve' f:;:J source. The&#13;
urgency grows over the need f~r an althernr3 uclear power plants, question here though, is concerrung a ras O n&#13;
termed "relatively safe."&#13;
We get&#13;
letters&#13;
Letters to the edit&#13;
couraged. ll Jette&#13;
ubject of intere t to tud n •&#13;
faculty or tarr h uld be coofinNI&#13;
to 300 words or le , typNI&#13;
and double- pacNI. The edit&#13;
resern the r:ght to Ntit l«ten&#13;
for length and good ta. te. ~ll&#13;
letters mu t be igned and include&#13;
addr , phon number,&#13;
and tudent tatu or facult)&#13;
rank. 'ames will be withheld&#13;
upon requ t. The Nitto re ne&#13;
the right to refuse to print an letters.&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
The follo\\ing is an open letter&#13;
to fr. Bruce R. Burman,&#13;
President - Local 2180 Wisconsin&#13;
State Employees 'nlon.&#13;
Dear tr. Burman,&#13;
I am a student emplo_ ed by&#13;
Parkside. I \\ish to know whether&#13;
students are eligible to join your&#13;
union and thereby gain the&#13;
benefits inherent in membel'!Jlip. If not, WHY • 'OT?&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
T. Speaker, student empJoyee&#13;
sophomore&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
In response to the response to&#13;
" goddamn minority recru itment,"&#13;
and with reference to I.&#13;
Gibson, Freshman:&#13;
\\.bat this "minority quota "&#13;
jazz boils down to is thi : "Well,&#13;
the Blacks. the Women. the J~ ,&#13;
the (fill in the blank)s have had a&#13;
tough deal in the past , let'&#13;
give em a helping hand no . '&#13;
Well, well , well. Before&#13;
knocking down the " lonely individual&#13;
,'. consider that the&#13;
smallest minority of all the&#13;
individual. The concept of racial&#13;
quotas in itself is a d pra\'ed&#13;
form of racism. In tead of&#13;
treating ''them" bad becau e of&#13;
race. it' treat " them" ood&#13;
because of race . . 'either i better&#13;
than the other. (. 'ote: ther i no&#13;
evidence which indicates in&#13;
pigmentation biol~ically affec&#13;
brain function .)&#13;
Education is another thing. If&#13;
the owner of a private hoo1&#13;
says, " 'o nig ers alJo.,,,ed," that&#13;
should be (but i not, in this&#13;
country&gt; hi right. (It i every&#13;
man's God-given right to be a&#13;
creep. ee where it ge him.&#13;
But mo t chool , Ii e&#13;
Parkside, re ocialized o&#13;
everyone who i a ta. payer or the&#13;
off pring of one . hould be all°" ed&#13;
to go. I don't think ed cat.ion a&#13;
"right" that hould be ·ven to&#13;
evervone. Offered, y • Do you&#13;
think it i m~ ''ri ht " to liv in&#13;
ca tie, have 100 handmaid ,&#13;
and own 100 ilboa ? .=ur if I&#13;
hell out my own mon . for it. If&#13;
not. no. Education i Ii e food, clothing and shelter--it a in' t&#13;
guaranteed. You lhav to pay for&#13;
it. JU t like any other product&#13;
wh.ich i the r .::ult of omeon&#13;
el e' labor.&#13;
" ... it's a sad, sad day when \'e&#13;
as minority tudents ha\e to&#13;
justify our pr ence at thi&#13;
universitY."&#13;
What in hell ma e you think&#13;
that you do ha\e to ju tify your&#13;
presence here? If y~u·re o&#13;
welfare, I "ould qu lion your&#13;
presence here: when my dad&#13;
works 12 or more hours e\el') da)&#13;
of the week on a farm and ha to&#13;
pay for some ·elfare kid 's&#13;
schooling. and then my own&#13;
expense ! But oth~ise, yoor&#13;
being here is your business, and&#13;
don't let anyone else tell you 1t&#13;
ain't.&#13;
I'll be ready with another JP'ter&#13;
if need be, so do your wors, .&#13;
Rodney ( the Radical) Schroeter&#13;
· Freshman&#13;
Parkside \'iUage 1-102&#13;
PARKSIDE RANGER&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
the hush of&#13;
the ri\·er&#13;
textur&#13;
hands l)QRgle o of th m r&#13;
offering foam money in th com of h' e) •&#13;
r,&#13;
th buff lo&#13;
nold ri ·&#13;
. r \' ni l dv P t •&#13;
...J • RE&#13;
-·• ALL OTHER \,TAL" _._&#13;
LIFE • "E ITlES • PIP&#13;
··Open 365 day a&#13;
Phone 654-5032 m &#13;
..&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wedne y;-oct. 24, 1973&#13;
t. &amp;0 r , Pat nUl ( Landlng) .l\tarl~ne Wmdt and Marla Breach&#13;
Delta Gamma Phi&#13;
seeks identity&#13;
b) Marlh n . hubert&#13;
Park Ide IS £l'O" U1lI up One of&#13;
the t tHai lithe formation&#13;
of a SOrority, th Della Gam",a&#13;
PIli. which .ts prelldent, Pal Hill&#13;
deserlbe as "uniquely&#13;
Parkslde" Contnbuting to this&#13;
delcrtpllon are the facts tha is&#13;
..a local "'ll'd',zabon W1lh no&#13;
nallonal afffiiations and its goal&#13;
to be a service, as well as social&#13;
oraantzabon.&#13;
Forem .. t among the" goals is&#13;
tile hope to further Parkslde's&#13;
idNI of an ecologically designed&#13;
camplll - tile" colors are sky&#13;
blue and earth green - and to&#13;
fo ter a "ParkSlde feeling"&#13;
8IIIOlW studellU. Some of their&#13;
actJvitJea IIIClude helping with tile&#13;
Vet' Club recycling project,&#13;
flndIng women who will aid&#13;
handicapped students on getting&#13;
on and out of cars, and helping&#13;
with the tutoring program,&#13;
perhapa as a bason belween&#13;
prof.... rs and students who are&#13;
having trouble in class They also&#13;
would like to originate a&#13;
homecoming weekend dunng&#13;
basketball season, since&#13;
Parkaide now does have alumni,&#13;
but this largely depends 00 what&#13;
funds they receive from the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
Delta Gamma PIli is unIiJr.e&#13;
some ..... nlles at other earn-&#13;
~ in that anyone wbo wants to&#13;
be a member can as long as !be Is&#13;
female and a Parkslde student.&#13;
TreaSUJ"'I' Marlene Wendt also&#13;
deSCribed It as a more serious&#13;
oraanlzatiOll which could still be&#13;
, but wouldn't interfere with&#13;
,tudy habits or the member's&#13;
"'"sonal life.&#13;
"'" sorority does not take a&#13;
land one way or another on&#13;
Woman's Liberation. Said Vice&#13;
Pre rdent larla Breach. "You&#13;
are what you are."&#13;
They also bope to work in&#13;
cooperation with Parkside's two&#13;
fraternities, although they are an&#13;
independent .JIl"8anization, unlike&#13;
thi'--91iptr.CPi Little Sisters.&#13;
Pat Hill summed up her&#13;
feelings about the group by&#13;
saying. "We're battling to find an&#13;
identity as an organiz.ation,&#13;
which is difficult because this is a&#13;
commuter campus and everyone&#13;
IS so independenL For the way&#13;
Parkside is now. we don't need a&#13;
social oraanization - people can&#13;
do that at home or come to a&#13;
dance - but we do need service."&#13;
Those interested in joining&#13;
should contact any of the officers&#13;
at 552-8472 • Parkside Village.&#13;
Par's power plant controversy&#13;
WEPstates its case&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Last July the Wisconsin&#13;
Electric Power Company and&#13;
three cooperating Wisconsin&#13;
utilities outiined a ten year&#13;
proposal to help abridge the&#13;
energy needs of an annual 6&#13;
percent population increase here&#13;
in the state. Although this report&#13;
sbowed a reduction of ahout 1&#13;
percent in growth, the companies&#13;
still maintained their early 1972&#13;
desire to build a two unit, per 900&#13;
megawatt, nuclear generating&#13;
station for service by 1980 and&#13;
1982.&#13;
Paris is Best Site&#13;
The main site for this project&#13;
which has been rankled over (or&#13;
the past 18 months, is the familiar&#13;
Paris Township location. A good&#13;
geological foundation, suitable to&#13;
atmospheric dispersion, and an&#13;
industrial population close to the&#13;
plant's transmission lines placed&#13;
the Paris site over and above the&#13;
other considered sites&#13;
The three other sites,&#13;
Koshkonong in Jefferson county,&#13;
Rudolph in Wood county, and&#13;
Glen Haven in Grant county. all&#13;
pose problems in that they are an&#13;
inconvenience to a 900 man&#13;
construction crew, working on a&#13;
plant from four to five years.&#13;
Distance would also make&#13;
completed transmission lines&#13;
more costly and susceptible to&#13;
damage.&#13;
"Relocation is always the&#13;
biggest problem in utilizing an&#13;
area," said So) Burstein, Senior&#13;
Vice President of Wisconsin&#13;
Electric. "Especially when its&#13;
community is an ethnic one like&#13;
that in Paris. But then one also&#13;
has to consider the fact that this&#13;
"U my generation doesn't stop&#13;
cringing. )'OW-S will inherit a&#13;
lawless society .,;"&#13;
-SPiro Agnew.&#13;
June 1. 1969 commencement&#13;
address&#13;
DEADLINE FOR&#13;
DROPPING COURSES&#13;
IS FRIDAY, OCT. 26th&#13;
at Student Records Office&#13;
TALLENT HALL&#13;
Hours: 7:45 - 11:45 a.m.&#13;
12:30 - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
MONDAY &amp; $1&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
--&#13;
..... Fri., SIt~&#13;
SIIPRIS£ BAllI s.y&#13;
OIl the south sideofHwy 50,east of Hwy 31.&#13;
by nuclear generators. Already&#13;
this figure represents a 40 million&#13;
dollar savings in fossil fuels&#13;
claims Burstein. '&#13;
Cost in building a nuclear plant&#13;
at Paris is estimated to be around&#13;
800,000 dollars. Chances though&#13;
of construction are still quit~&#13;
vague to say the least. Burstein&#13;
would like to file a preliminary&#13;
safety analysis report and environmental&#13;
impact report&#13;
(necessary in obtaining a construction&#13;
permit from the Atomic&#13;
Energy Commission) by next&#13;
spring. He contends that it's only&#13;
a matter of when the RacineKenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environrnent,&#13;
plan to stop "fussing&#13;
around."&#13;
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
is also interested in using&#13;
Kenosha lake sh.ore property, for&#13;
a coal operating plant. The&#13;
company believes that both a&#13;
fossil plant and nuclear reactor&#13;
are needed to meet the energy&#13;
needs of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
To date, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
and Wisconsin-Michigan Power&#13;
'Company own a two unit, per 497&#13;
megowatt nuclear station at&#13;
Point Beach, and another 550 new&#13;
unit near completion in&#13;
Kewaunee.&#13;
plant would be of service. to&#13;
nearly 3 million people which&#13;
represents 85 percent of&#13;
Wisconsin's population."&#13;
In regards to possible radia lion&#13;
hazards posed by nuclear plants,&#13;
Burstein stated that they were&#13;
"erroneous assumptions based&#13;
on illfounded fears and&#13;
anguishes. "&#13;
As unlikely an event as it would&#13;
be, Wisconsin Electric provides a&#13;
$193-million insurance coverage&#13;
in the case of a nuclear accident.&#13;
Furthermore, according to&#13;
Burstein the "nuclear exclusion"&#13;
clause in homeowner's policies is&#13;
no different from exclusions for&#13;
landslides, mudslides, earthquakes,&#13;
or flood damages.&#13;
Fossil fuel outlook&#13;
Growth in the nation's consumption&#13;
of dwindling fossil fuels&#13;
is the primary concern for power&#13;
companies lunging into nuclear&#13;
energy developments.&#13;
Domestically availahle oil and&#13;
natural gas supplies are shown to&#13;
peak during the next decade and&#13;
begin to decline thereafter. With&#13;
tile exhaustion of premium oil, it&#13;
is expected that fossil solids will&#13;
be converted to provide transportation&#13;
fuels. Coal exploitation&#13;
then, is asswned to&#13;
triple by the year 2000 and&#13;
likewise taper off, due to environmental&#13;
limitations.&#13;
Energy from uranium, on the&#13;
other hand, will rival with coal&#13;
and domestic oil by the late&#13;
1990'S.Presently, 7 percent of the&#13;
total electric capacity is provided&#13;
-----&#13;
--------&#13;
---&#13;
Racine&#13;
312-6th St.&#13;
632·5195 _&#13;
-----&#13;
--&#13;
---------&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
~~~e~\~&#13;
\\1\\\. lIVE MUSICI&#13;
'TAURUS&#13;
New and Interesting&#13;
Books NOWAt&#13;
MARTHA MERRELL'S&#13;
WATERGATE&#13;
HEARINGS&#13;
by the New York Times&#13;
$2.50&#13;
SECRET LIFE OF&#13;
PLANTS&#13;
$8.95&#13;
WISCONSIN DEATH&#13;
TRIP&#13;
$5.95&#13;
BURIED ALIVE:&#13;
The Biography of&#13;
Janis Joplin&#13;
$7.95&#13;
JOURNEY TO IXTLAN&#13;
$2.95- Paper&#13;
JOHNNY WE HARDLY&#13;
KNEWYE&#13;
$1.95&#13;
SAND COUNTRY&#13;
OF ALDO LEOPOLD&#13;
$14.95&#13;
A new Gift Book Containing&#13;
Photos of The Sand Country of&#13;
WlsconslD&#13;
(}fI1Jf!Ja (}fiJi /3~&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
614·59th St.&#13;
658-3652&#13;
i&#13;
z&#13;
!!!&#13;
=&#13;
:::I ...&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
'"&#13;
~&#13;
Z&#13;
CD&#13;
Ol/lo&#13;
z&#13;
!!!&#13;
...&#13;
i&#13;
CD&#13;
i&#13;
'":::I enS&#13;
I'"&#13;
~&#13;
Paris power plant controversy&#13;
WEP states its case&#13;
r.P tlhl( rla Bru h&#13;
b) . lichael OJ zyk&#13;
La t Julv the Wisconsin&#13;
Electric Poi..·er Company and&#13;
three cooperating Wisconsin&#13;
utilities outlined a ten year&#13;
proposal to help abridge the&#13;
energ_ · needs of an annual 6&#13;
percent population increase here&#13;
in the tate. Although this report&#13;
howed a reduction of about 1&#13;
percent in growth, the companies&#13;
till maintained their early 1972&#13;
de ire to build a two unit, per 900&#13;
megoy,att, nuclear generating&#13;
·t.ation for ervice by 1980 and&#13;
1982.&#13;
Pari i Best ite&#13;
Delta Garn,na Phi&#13;
The main ite for this project&#13;
which ha been rankled over for&#13;
th pa t 18 month , is the familiar&#13;
Pari Toy, nship location. A good&#13;
eol ical foundation, uitable to&#13;
atm ph ric di persion, and an&#13;
indu trial population close to the&#13;
pant' tran mis ion lines placed&#13;
the Pari ite over and above the&#13;
other considered site . eeks identity The three other sites,&#13;
K ~h onong m Jefferson county,&#13;
Rudolph in Wood county, and&#13;
Glen Ha, n in Grant county, all&#13;
nott ea&#13;
p blem in that they are an&#13;
in onv nience to a 900 man&#13;
con tructton crew, working on a plant from four to five years.&#13;
Di tance would also make&#13;
completed transmission lines&#13;
more costly and su ceptible to&#13;
damage.&#13;
"Relocation is always the&#13;
b1gg ·t problem in uWizing an&#13;
area," said ol Burstein, Senior&#13;
Vice President of Wisconsin&#13;
Electric. ''Especially when its&#13;
community is an ethnic one like&#13;
that in Paris. But then one also&#13;
ha to consider the fact that this&#13;
"U my generation doesn't top&#13;
cringing, yours will inherit a&#13;
lawle society ... "&#13;
-8piro Agnew,&#13;
JtDle 7, 1 9 commencement&#13;
addre-s&#13;
DEADLINE FOR&#13;
DROPPING COURSES&#13;
IS FRIDAY, OCT. 26th&#13;
at Student Records Office&#13;
TALLENT HALL&#13;
Hours: 7 :45 - 11 :45 a.m.&#13;
12:30 - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK&#13;
()&lt;J,-110~5 MONDAY &amp; $1 ~c}~ TIISDAY&#13;
BAA. LIVE MUSIC! WN., Fri., Sat~&#13;
'TAURUS RISIN01&#13;
SIIPRISE BAIi SNAY&#13;
on the south ide of Hwy 50, east or Hwy 31.&#13;
plant would be of service . to&#13;
nearly 3 million people which&#13;
represents 85 J?er~,ent of&#13;
Wisconsin's population.&#13;
In regards to possible radiation&#13;
hazards posed by nuclear plants,&#13;
Burstein stated that they were&#13;
"erroneous assumptions based&#13;
on illfounded fears and&#13;
anguishes." . As unlikely an event as 1t would&#13;
be, Wisconsin Electric provides a&#13;
$193-million insurance coverage&#13;
in the case of a nuclear accident.&#13;
Furthermore, according to&#13;
Burstein the "nuclear exclusion"&#13;
clause in homeowner's policies is&#13;
no different from exclusions for&#13;
landslides, mudslides, earthquakes,&#13;
or flood dam~ges.&#13;
Fossil fuel outlook&#13;
Growth in the nation's consumption&#13;
of dwindling fossil fuels&#13;
is the primary concern for power&#13;
companies lunging into nuclear&#13;
energy developments.&#13;
Domestically available oil and&#13;
natural gas supplies are shown to&#13;
peak during the next decade and&#13;
begin to decline thereafter. With&#13;
the exhaustion of premium oil, it&#13;
is expected that fossil solids will&#13;
be converted to provide transportation&#13;
fuels. Coal exploitation&#13;
then, is assumed to&#13;
triple by the year 2000 and&#13;
likewise taper off, due to environmental&#13;
limitations.&#13;
Energy from uranium, on the&#13;
other hand, will rival with coal&#13;
and domestic oil by the late&#13;
1990's. Presently, 7 percent of the&#13;
total electric capacity is provided&#13;
New and Interesting&#13;
Books NOW At&#13;
MARTHA MERRELL'S&#13;
WATERGATE&#13;
HEARINGS&#13;
by the New York Times&#13;
$2.50&#13;
SECRET LIFE OF&#13;
PLANTS&#13;
$8.95&#13;
WISCONSIN DEATH&#13;
TRIP&#13;
$5.95&#13;
BURIED ALIVE :&#13;
The Biography of&#13;
Janis Joplin&#13;
$7.95&#13;
JOURNEY TO IXTLAN&#13;
$2.95 - Paper&#13;
JOHNNY WE HARDL y&#13;
KNEW YE&#13;
$1 .95&#13;
SAND COUNTRY&#13;
OF ALDO LEOPOLD&#13;
$14.95&#13;
A new Gift Book Containing&#13;
P~otos ~f The Sand Country of&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
()J/1111/4, ()J/J; /3~&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
614-59th St.&#13;
658-3652&#13;
Racine&#13;
312-6th St.&#13;
632-5195 -&#13;
-----&#13;
--&#13;
--------&#13;
by nuclear generators. Already&#13;
this figure represents a 40 million&#13;
dollar savings in fossil fuels&#13;
claims Burstein. '&#13;
Cost in building a nuclear plant&#13;
at Paris is estimated to be around&#13;
800,000 dollars. Chances though&#13;
of construction are still quit~&#13;
vague to say the least. Burstein&#13;
would like to file a preliminary&#13;
safety analysis report and environmental&#13;
impact report&#13;
(necessary in obtaining a construction&#13;
permit from the Atomic&#13;
Energy Commission) by next&#13;
spring. He contends that it's only&#13;
a matter of when the RacineKenosha&#13;
Citizens for the Environment,&#13;
plan to stop "fussing&#13;
around."&#13;
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
is also interested in using&#13;
Kenosha lake shore property, for&#13;
a coal operating plant. The&#13;
company believes that both a&#13;
fossil plant and nuclear reactor&#13;
are needed to meet the energy&#13;
needs of Southeastern Wisconsin.&#13;
To date, Wisconsin Electric&#13;
and Wisconsin-Michigan Power&#13;
·company own a two unit, per 497&#13;
megowatt nuclear station at&#13;
Point Beach, and another 550 new&#13;
unit near completion in&#13;
Kewaunee.&#13;
1(111&#13;
i&#13;
m ::I&#13;
• I '" ll&#13;
i&#13;
ffl ::I&#13;
"•&#13;
I"'&#13;
ll&#13;
z&#13;
.. '"&#13;
-&#13;
g&#13;
z&#13;
CD&#13;
z.&#13;
!!!&#13;
..&#13;
i&#13;
z.&#13;
CD &#13;
Merle Hayden Photo by David Da.n.iels&#13;
U of L • a different&#13;
-concept in education&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
For years, alongside a field&#13;
north of Highway K on 1-94, there&#13;
has been a sign reading&#13;
"University of Lawsonomy."&#13;
"What does this mean?" a reader&#13;
asked and a short time later three&#13;
RANGER reporters were&#13;
dispatched to investigate the&#13;
University and answer this&#13;
question.&#13;
Upon arriving at the university,&#13;
the only indications of life&#13;
we saw were a small, one-story&#13;
brick building, a barn, an old&#13;
Cadillac limousine, and a few&#13;
rotted wooden sheds.&#13;
Wehad knocked on the door of&#13;
the building and were waiting for&#13;
an answer when one of my&#13;
colleagues, curious as to the lack&#13;
of response from inside, stood on&#13;
IIer toes and peeked through a&#13;
II1I81I window in the door. At the&#13;
same instant, a small middle-&#13;
.. ed man on the other side of the&#13;
door was doing the same thing.&#13;
When their eyes met, our side&#13;
ocreamed, raced down the stairs&#13;
sod away from the building in a&#13;
manner indicative of a classic&#13;
horror movie. As I stood on the&#13;
Iront steps trying to analyze the&#13;
lltuation, the very man who&#13;
appeared to have driven my coreporter&#13;
to insanity opened the&#13;
door and asked, "What's your&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-tc-date, 150.page.&#13;
l1li11order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
110 2 day~.&#13;
RESEARCHASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVO., SUITE #2&#13;
LOSANGELES,CALIf. 90025&#13;
12131477-8474 or477·5493&#13;
Ovr r.... rc:h materi.l is sold for&#13;
r'''.rc:h 'lSlstince only.&#13;
Wed., Oct. 31&#13;
FREEAdmission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
osfume&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
for the Bestl&#13;
problem?" I identified my&#13;
companions and myself as&#13;
RANGER reporters and asked if&#13;
we might interview him about the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy. He&#13;
agreed and we went inside.&#13;
The main floor consisted of a&#13;
number of offices, fully carpeted&#13;
and decorated with paintings,&#13;
while the basement appeared to&#13;
be divided into a cafeteriamuseum.&#13;
It was here we sat down&#13;
and began what was to be a twohour&#13;
interview. Unfortunately.&#13;
our host, Merle Hayden, was&#13;
more anxious to tell us about the&#13;
principles of Lawsonomy than&#13;
the University itself. But we were&#13;
able to glean an answer to our&#13;
primary question, "What is the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy?"&#13;
Once a classroom institution in&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa, it teaches the&#13;
beliefs of the late inventorphilosopher&#13;
Alfred Lav.'SOll,who&#13;
also founded and financed the&#13;
university The present location&#13;
was originaUy intended to be an&#13;
athletic-farm school for students&#13;
of Lawsooomy. Today it is a&#13;
correspondence school operating&#13;
from the small building we&#13;
visited. University secretary&#13;
Marjorie Hayden told us, "This&#13;
university entered tbe&#13;
educational field 10 introduce a&#13;
number of needed features in this&#13;
advanced period of learning."&#13;
Lawsonomy involves a life--long&#13;
study in philosophy and the&#13;
natural sciences as interpreted&#13;
by Lawson, a system of beliefs&#13;
"establishing the foundation for&#13;
all natural laws. II&#13;
The University is non-profit,&#13;
non-tax exempt, has no salaried&#13;
employees, and charges no&#13;
tuition to its alleged 12,000&#13;
"UNION"&#13;
Wed.., Fri., Sat., &amp; So.&#13;
[ OCT.24, 26, 27, 28 I&#13;
r..esH·s Newest NIfesIe'&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shakey',)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
Wed I&#13;
E RANGER 5&#13;
This ponroil at A1r~ La ...... h..,g&#13;
dining ball of 1M l.'Di\'e"'5.i',..&#13;
students, The Univer sity tS&#13;
primaril)' linanced by contributioos&#13;
and also seUs COPies of&#13;
La,,'SOll'Sboob&#13;
Lawson was conslClered by&#13;
many people to be ahead &lt;Jl his&#13;
time. He buill and Dew the&#13;
world's first 81rliner, published&#13;
America's first popular aviaboo&#13;
magazme, patented a method of&#13;
evaporating smolte and ...TOte&#13;
many books on topiCS such as&#13;
ballistics, ESP, children, religion&#13;
and econom ICS. to menlJon lull •&#13;
r... · 01 Ius aocompllshmen18 H&#13;
books. UlCIden18.Uy,ore in the&#13;
Par de library, On the other&#13;
hand......, or La' .... """&#13;
have been can dered rmpractical&#13;
and ridJculOU$ EIther&#13;
be&lt;:a_ at, or lD spite at thIS&#13;
_bOO, Lawwoo wrote: "1/&#13;
you have UloWIed8e, atrer it to&#13;
oth ..... 1/ Lbey do DOC a&lt;:ctpt u,&#13;
that 15 char as.If&#13;
III&#13;
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Two Bedroom Ranch Style&#13;
Condominium Homes $24,500 to $21,000&#13;
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Weekdays 10 10 8 Weokoncn 1 10 5&#13;
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G!ItI ...... RUU.JY N:..&#13;
0.-_ .... .._&#13;
Merle Hayden&#13;
U of L - a different&#13;
concept in education&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
For years, alongside a field&#13;
north of Highway K on I-94, there&#13;
has been a sign reading&#13;
"University of La wsonomy."&#13;
"What does this mean? " a reader&#13;
asked and a short time later three&#13;
RANGER reporters were&#13;
dispatched to investigate the&#13;
University and answer this&#13;
question.&#13;
Upon arriving at the university,&#13;
the only indications of life&#13;
we saw were a small, one-story&#13;
brick building, a barn, an old&#13;
Cadillac limousine, and a few&#13;
rotted wooden sheds.&#13;
We had knocked on the door of&#13;
the building and were waiting for&#13;
an answer when one of my&#13;
colleagues, curious as to the lack&#13;
of response from inside, stood on&#13;
her toes and peeked through a&#13;
small window in the door. At the&#13;
same instant, a small middleaged&#13;
man on the other side of the&#13;
door was doing the same thing.&#13;
When their eyes met, our side&#13;
screamed, raced down the stairs&#13;
and away from the building in a&#13;
manner indicative of a classic&#13;
horror movie. As I stood on the&#13;
front steps trying to analyze the&#13;
ituation, the very man who&#13;
appeared to have driven my coreporter&#13;
to insanity opened the&#13;
door and asked, "What's your&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, ma,I order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
l to 2 daysl.&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
1213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material Is sold for&#13;
research assistance only.&#13;
proble~?" I identified my&#13;
companions and myself as&#13;
RANGER reporters and asked if&#13;
we might interview him about the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy. He&#13;
agreed and we went inside.&#13;
The main floor consisted of a&#13;
number of offices, fully carpeted&#13;
~d decor ated with paintings,&#13;
while the basement appeared to&#13;
be divided into a cafeteriamuseum.&#13;
It was here we sat down&#13;
and began what was to be a twohour&#13;
interview. Unfortunately,&#13;
our host, Merle Hayden, was&#13;
more anxious to tell us about the&#13;
principles of Lawsonomy than&#13;
the University itself. But we were&#13;
able to glean an answer to our&#13;
primary question, "What is the&#13;
University of Lawsonomy?"&#13;
Once a classroom institution in&#13;
Des Moines, Iowa, it teaches the&#13;
beliefs of the late inventorphilosopher&#13;
Alfred Lav. , 11&#13;
also fol.Dlded and financed lh&#13;
univ er ity. The present location&#13;
was originally intended to be an&#13;
athletic-farm school f uden~&#13;
of Lawsonomy. Today it i a&#13;
correspondence school operating&#13;
from the small building e&#13;
visited. niver ity ecretar&#13;
tarjorie Hayden told u , "Thi&#13;
university entered the&#13;
educational field to introdu a&#13;
number of needed features in lh"&#13;
advanced period of learning."&#13;
Lawsonomy involves a life- ong&#13;
study in philosophy and the&#13;
natural sciences as interpreted&#13;
by Lawson, a s~ tern of belief&#13;
"establishing the foundation for&#13;
all natural lav. . "&#13;
The University is non-profit.&#13;
non-tax exempt, has no salaried&#13;
employees, and charge no&#13;
tuition to its alleged 12,000&#13;
Wed., Oct. 31&#13;
FREE Admission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
Costume&#13;
11UNION"&#13;
Wed . , Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
PRIZE&#13;
for the Best I&#13;
[ OCT.24,26,27,28&#13;
KenosfJa's Newest Hites,.,&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(forme rly Shokey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485&#13;
d.1 s 10 to 8 &#13;
......... -"l":,i"""- ...... r 171~&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BODACIOUS D.F.&#13;
FealDring Marty Balill (RCA APLH2M)&#13;
Generally speaking, this is music made up of funk-rock and soulrocIt&#13;
components with Marty singing in his pretty but serious style.&#13;
Some of the tunes seem to have the group reaJ)y feeling there while&#13;
otben appear as if they had noIfully thought them oul.&#13;
The core of the creative and interpretive energy in this collection is&#13;
"Good Folks," song two on side one. Marly is singing right from the&#13;
bottom of his heart here. It becomes obvious that this theme is the&#13;
indlvl&amp;la1 expression that concerns him most. Background voice-&#13;
-. from soul/uI sounding sisters are punctuated most effectively.&#13;
Th guitar instrumental towards the end is an extremely useful&#13;
comment that is almost in the country flavor.&#13;
The theme of "Good Folks" is that if the good folks back borne knew&#13;
what he did "they would raise the roof and shoulahout il." They would&#13;
say "he'. bad he's always been that way." He goes on to tell "I made&#13;
my money the easy way, f changed my clothes three times a day."&#13;
Thl no doubt IS a reference to his earlier success with Jefferson&#13;
AIrplane. HISdilemma IS that he "spanks his IUd the way good folks&#13;
do." hoping that he won't tum out in a bad way. But Marly himseU&#13;
caMol tand belllll good. So he continues to drink. smoke- cope, eat&#13;
actd occasionally, and regularly attend orgies. In short, since he can't&#13;
stand being good and he feel. guilty being bad, he doesn't feel right&#13;
anywhere.&#13;
Another center of artistic energy is song two on side two. "Second&#13;
Hand Information" i • both mu ically and lyrically, a splendid&#13;
comphmmt of "Good Fo1l&lt;s."This nwnber builds up intensity nicely&#13;
, after verse and also includes tingling slide guitar work. The&#13;
Iyr,cal . nee 1 Marty's private search for truth.&#13;
Also worthy of generous compliments is "Roberta." "Roberta" is a&#13;
love-song and mu really It swings nicely Withan integrated accordian&#13;
that . urpn. '08ly enough, works well.&#13;
RemamIng to be discussed are "Drifting," "The Witcher." "Driving&#13;
te CraIY," and "Twixt Two Worlds." "Drifting is mediocre funkl'ock,&#13;
"Drivin' Me Crazy" is long, lazy, and dull. "Twixt Two Worlds"&#13;
he an evocative chorus but Its almost exciting instrumental passage&#13;
I underdeveloped and monotonous.&#13;
The Ioser of the record is "The Witcher." This is supposedly&#13;
Ipb ar&#13;
mar"Meric of an animalisr'c. passionate lover but its internal 00 t:: Ult: 1__ .. .&#13;
_ 1 .j. -... .....,0; lJU&gt; })OSeless and many parts seem as if they were&#13;
:J' thrown on to waste time. Despite its sloppiness and cboppiness the&#13;
g i n't even chaouc. A1thougb it may appear that I think it goes&#13;
nowhere it really doesn't gel that far.&#13;
.II is now hme to try to wrap the bundle together and come up&#13;
WIth a final appraisal. Marly has brought together a new band,&#13;
namely BODACIOUS D.F .. who come across with some fairly impre.&#13;
IV'ematerial for their first album. But coosidering that it has&#13;
bet&gt;n about four years smee Marty's departure from the Airplane, he&#13;
really ha n'tcome up with enough for such a long wail. It seems Marly&#13;
needs better song....riting talents and more dexterous accompaniment&#13;
SO his wonderful ,'Qlce can be used more effectively. Henee, artistically&#13;
and successfully, it was a mistake for him to leave the Airplane.&#13;
(Record Courtesy of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
PSGA&#13;
referendum&#13;
explained&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government senate is circulating&#13;
a petition that calls for a constitutional&#13;
refernedum, the&#13;
purpose of which is to co~si~er&#13;
some changes in the Constitution&#13;
of the senate.&#13;
The petition outlines four basic&#13;
changes in the present constitution:&#13;
1. requirements for&#13;
raising a quorum will .be'&#13;
rewritten, 2. the Student UnIOn&#13;
Committee will be abolished, 3.&#13;
the positions of Recording and&#13;
Corresponding Secretaries WIll&#13;
be combined into one, nonelective&#13;
position, and 4. election&#13;
times will be changed to Spring&#13;
term with special replacement&#13;
elections in the fall.&#13;
To assure that a quorum can be&#13;
established for senate meetings,&#13;
absent members will be replaced&#13;
by alternates, according to the&#13;
proposed changes. These&#13;
alternates would be students who&#13;
ran for the ollice but didn't&#13;
receive enough votes to be&#13;
elected. If any senator must be&#13;
replaced by an alternate more&#13;
than 3 times, impeachment&#13;
proceedings may be brought&#13;
against her-him.&#13;
If the changes are approved,&#13;
the Student Union Committee&#13;
would no longer be listed in the&#13;
constitution as a regular standing&#13;
committee of the senate. Since&#13;
the Student Activities Board&#13;
serves the same purpose as that&#13;
committee (and does a&#13;
professional, full-time job), there&#13;
is no need for the senate to be&#13;
involved in union functions.&#13;
The changes propose that the&#13;
duties of tbe Recording and&#13;
Corresponding secretaries be&#13;
combined and that the person&#13;
who £ills that one post be a hired&#13;
employee of the senate rather&#13;
than an elected official. The&#13;
secretary would be cbosen by the&#13;
PSGA President and subject to&#13;
Senate approval.&#13;
The proposed change in&#13;
election times would put regular&#13;
elections in the spring semester&#13;
(Aprill: the people elected at that&#13;
time would take office in June.&#13;
Then, should any vacancies&#13;
appear over the summer (a&#13;
senator might move away, for&#13;
example), there is a provision for&#13;
special replacement elections in&#13;
the fall semester. The summer&#13;
recess would serve as an&#13;
orientation period for the incoming&#13;
senate.&#13;
Ranaer free classifieds&#13;
':0. SAL. P'OrtIlb'eNoAlc.o '''- rKOf"der&#13;
w It\ ~nwy ,~~ for 11, Wei;tlS n,ne&#13;
IDa H_ motor .....os. II lmt. \IIIlOf'lL C_II&#13;
1M1...,8r~ u... 1MfWftn. II In. ¥Nt&#13;
.. )IIi P I'r'I c.'l '-311611 ftt Jlt&#13;
Having problems with &amp;ccOlJnting? Tutoring&#13;
Il"ilililble. Can 552·9462after S.&#13;
FOR SALE: G E. Illpe rK'Ol"der with AC&#13;
.s.-pter S20. Call 552.9462after S.&#13;
.AHT.O W.., Iu" USotCI bUt In rusonably&#13;
900d concJ.hon... ,te -....0 1m_hum). (all&#13;
lSI .,....&#13;
FOR SALlE: Ski boors. like new. $25.&#13;
o.ch5~ln. size lQ-Men's. Call 639·S60S lifter&#13;
" .-..&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; -S2nd St.&#13;
Phone 652·8662 • .&#13;
"WI-IERE 1"tiE COWSOYS EAT"&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
~.&#13;
~oo().oo&#13;
@ill~ooooo&#13;
(15~OOooo~o&#13;
cll5.~o ~&#13;
Steak Dinners&#13;
'179 to '369&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 24: 1-3 p.m. Terry Eliot will play and sing in th&#13;
Whiteskellar. No admission charged. e&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24:. PAB will sponsor th~~ovi~ "Fritz the Cat" at&#13;
7 :30 p.m. in GreenqUlst Hall room 103. Admission lS 75 cents,&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersen and&#13;
Company on careers in accounting atlO a.m. in Cia Dl07 and at I p.rn&#13;
in Cia 0105. No admission charged. .&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Harold Burstyn lecture on Technology and the In.&#13;
dustrial Society at noon in LLC D174. Sponsored by Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts. No admission)lhllrged.&#13;
Friday. Oct, 26: Lecture by Radu Florescu entitled "In Search of&#13;
Dracula" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre. Sponsored by the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. Free to students.&#13;
Friday. Saturday. and Sunday Oct. 26-28: PAB-Ragtime Rangers&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office. LLC&#13;
DI97.&#13;
saturday, Oct. 27: Alpha Kappa Lambda is sponsoring a Halloween&#13;
dance in SAB at 9 p.m. Band is "Rasputen" and admission is $1.50.&#13;
Costumes are encouraged..&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29: Poet Diane Wakoski sponsored by the Poetry Forum&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's .Caucus. Workshop from 4-5 p.rn.&#13;
in LLC DI973 and D174. Poetryreading by wakoski at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Library third floor. No admission charged.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 30: CLlllle~ture at 8 p.m. by Parkside English professor&#13;
Peter Hoff on "~eacock's Paradoxes: The Illusion of 'Progress' and&#13;
the Fortunate Foible." Third floor of the library. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
,&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Nov. 14: Play "The Virus" will be performed in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theatre. Tickets on sale at Ute Information kiosk.&#13;
saturday, Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at Phy Ed Building. Contact Jim Koch&#13;
or Bob Lawson.&#13;
Sunday. Nov. 4: Adult Student Association "recreation night" for&#13;
adult students and their families from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Phy Ed&#13;
Building.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson sponsored by PAB at 8 p.rn. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information Kiosk.&#13;
January, 2-7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
~prings, Colorado. See Information kiosk.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
~ANGER by noon Thursday.prter to publication of the issue in which&#13;
pn item is to appear.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
•&#13;
518-56thSt., Kenosha&#13;
is BRAT STOP&#13;
1-94 &amp; Hwy. 50, Kenosha&#13;
presents&#13;
"WINFIELD ROAD"&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, ocrOBER 26 &amp; 'll&#13;
ALL REGULAR MIXED DRINKS 50c&#13;
We serve the BEST'in BRATSandwiches&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
Parkside Players in&#13;
OirKted by Don Rintl&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with 10 $1.50 (Nov.&#13;
2-3-,4Groups of 10~or more, lO"discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine Cafter Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
Information Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. Send stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope with check payable to UW-Parkside to&#13;
"Virus," UW-P Info Center, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. WI 531.40.&#13;
,.,&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
BODACIOUS D.F.&#13;
eaturin fart. BaliJ:1 IR ,\ APLl&#13;
urt y of J&amp;J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
er free classifieds&#13;
Hav,ng problems w ith account,n;? Tutoring&#13;
aea, .. ble Call 552 9"'62 after S.&#13;
FOR SALE : GE. tall@ recorder with AC&#13;
adap!tr S20. Ca ll 552 9-161 after S.&#13;
FOllt SALE Ski boots, li ke new. $25.&#13;
Oechs•e s ze 10-Men's Call 639 S605 after&#13;
2 r,oon.&#13;
PSGA&#13;
referendum&#13;
explained&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government senate is circulating&#13;
a petition that calls for a con·&#13;
stitutional refernedum, the&#13;
purpose of which is to co~si~er&#13;
some changes in the Constitution&#13;
of the senate.&#13;
The petition outlines four basic&#13;
changes in the present con·&#13;
stitution: 1. requirements for&#13;
raising a quorum will _be '&#13;
rewritten, 2. the Student Umon&#13;
Committee will be abolished, 3·&#13;
the positions of Recor~ a~d&#13;
Corresponding Secretanes will&#13;
be combined into one, nonelective&#13;
position, and 4. election&#13;
times \\-ill be changed to Spring&#13;
term with special replacement&#13;
elections in the fall. To assure that a quorum can be&#13;
established for senate meetings,&#13;
ab ent members will be replaced&#13;
by alternates, according to the&#13;
proposed changes. These&#13;
alternates would be students who&#13;
ran for the office but didn't&#13;
receive enough votes to be&#13;
elected. If any senator must be&#13;
replaced by an alternate more&#13;
than 3 times, impeachment&#13;
proceedings may be brought&#13;
against her-him.&#13;
U the changes are approved,&#13;
the Student Union Committee&#13;
would no longer be listed in the&#13;
constitution as a regular standing&#13;
committee of the senate. Since&#13;
the Student Activities Board&#13;
serves the same purpose as that&#13;
committee (and does a&#13;
professional, full-time job), there&#13;
is no need for the senate to be&#13;
involved in union functions. The changes propose that the&#13;
duties of the Recording and&#13;
Corresponding secretaries be&#13;
combined and that the person&#13;
who fills that one post be a hired&#13;
employee of the senate rather&#13;
than an elected official. The&#13;
secretary would be chosen by the&#13;
PSGA President and subject to&#13;
Senate approval.&#13;
The proposed change in&#13;
election times would put regular&#13;
elections in the spring semester&#13;
(April) : the people elected at that&#13;
time would take office in June.&#13;
Then , should any vacancies&#13;
appear over the summer (a&#13;
senator might move away, for&#13;
example), there is a provision for&#13;
special replacement elections in&#13;
the fall semester. The summer&#13;
recess would serve as an&#13;
orientation period for the incoming&#13;
senate.&#13;
Steak Dinners&#13;
'1 79 to '369&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St.&#13;
Phon• 652-8662 .&#13;
•wMERE 1HE COWBOYS FAT"&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24: 1-3 p.m. Terry Eliot will play and sing in th&#13;
Whiteskellar. No admission charged. e&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24:_ PAB will sponsor th~ ~ovi~ "Fritz the Cat" at&#13;
7 :30 p.m. in Greenqu1st Hall room 103. Adm1ss1on 1s 75 cents.&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersen and&#13;
Company on careers in accounting at 10 a.m. in Cla Dl07 and at 1 pm&#13;
in Cla D105. No admission charged. · ·&#13;
Friday, Oct: 26: Harold_ Burstyn lecture on Technology and the Industrial&#13;
Society at noon m LLC D174. Sponsored by Lecture and Fin&#13;
Arts. No admission_,Qlmrged. e&#13;
Friday, Oct. 26: Lecture by Radu Florescu entitled " In Search of&#13;
Dracula" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre. Sponsored by the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. Free to students.&#13;
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday Oct. 26-28: PAB-Ragtime Rangers&#13;
outing to Louisville, Kentucky. Contact Student Activities Office, LLC&#13;
D197.&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 27: Alpha Kappa Lambda is sponsoring a Hallowee&#13;
dance in SAB at 9 p.m. Band is "Rasputen" and admission is $l ~ Costwnes are encouraged. · ·&#13;
Monday, Oct. 29: Poet Diane Wakoski sponsored by the Poetry Forum&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts, and Women's _Caucus. Workshop from 4.5 p.m'.&#13;
in LLC D1~73 and D174. Poe~y _reading by Wakoslci at 8 p.m. on the&#13;
Library third floor. No adm1ss1on charged.&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 30: CLI0,le&lt;;ture at8 p.m. by Parkside English profes or&#13;
Peter Hoff on "Peacock's Paradoxes: The Illusion of 'Progress' and&#13;
the Fortunate Foible." Third floor of the library. No admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Nov. 1-4: Play "The Virus" will be performed in the Comm Ar&#13;
Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at Phy Ed Building. Contact Jim Koch or Bob Lawson.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4: Adult Student Association "recreation night" for&#13;
adult students and their families from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Phy Ed&#13;
Building.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson sponsored by PAB at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Comm Arts Theatre. Tickets on sale at the Information KiOl;k .&#13;
January, 2-7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip to Steamboat&#13;
prings, Colorado. See Information kiosk.&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted lo&#13;
ANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication or the I sue in which n item is to appear.&#13;
J&amp;J&#13;
Tape &amp; Record Center&#13;
Super Low Prices•&#13;
2200 Lathrop Ave .. Racine&#13;
518-56th St., Kenosha&#13;
! BRAT STOP&#13;
1-94 &amp; Hwy. 50, Kenosha&#13;
presents&#13;
"WINFIELD ROAD"&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, OOl'OBER 26 &amp; 'll&#13;
ALL REGULAR MIXED DRINKS 50c&#13;
We serve the BEST 'in BRAT Sandwiches&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
Gertrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
and The Parkside Players in&#13;
Directed by Don Rint1&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Reserved seats $3, Students with ID $1.50 (Nov.&#13;
2-3-4 Groups of 10' or more, l0j(,discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine (after Oct. 17) and UW-P&#13;
Information Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info Center only. Send stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope with check payable to UW-Parkside to&#13;
"Virus," UW-P Info Center, UW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140. &#13;
Jtief news&#13;
Cillbbudgets requested&#13;
--- ide student organizations wishing to receive funds from the&#13;
PafPity St.udentGroup Support account should submit their annual&#13;
U",vers to the Assistant Dean of Students Office 284 Tallent Hall by&#13;
~lS OctOber 30. If you have questions or wish further in-&#13;
'J\I'S'IIIY'ncall 553-2342.The Campus Concerns Committee is eager to&#13;
::~;ai student organization budget decisions as SOOnas possible.&#13;
Tllrkeytrot teams forming&#13;
-&#13;
Men-Womenteams are needed to run for the second Annual Turk&#13;
rrot. Ateam predicts the time in which they both will run and ~~&#13;
lOIImnearest their prediction WInS. The Turkey Trot will be held at _011 Sunday, Nov. 3 In front of the Phy Ed building. It is open to all&#13;
students,staff and spouses or friends, The entrance fee is 50 c ts&#13;
contacteither Jim Koch (2267) or Bob Lawson (2153) of the Ph;nEd /leulty. _&#13;
Phy-Ecicoach injured&#13;
women'S Sports Direc~or Barbara Jo Lawson seriously injur~ her&#13;
bod&lt; in a trampoline accident last Wednesday. No further details are&#13;
Ivailableat this time. -&#13;
HoH to give CLIO lecture&#13;
Pecer Hoff, Assistant Professor of English at UW-Parkside, will&#13;
_at on uPeac~'s Paradoxes: 'I1;IeIllusion of 'Pro~ress' and the&#13;
FortunateFoible" on Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 7:30 p.m. in the Library,&#13;
Ihird floor.&#13;
Hoff'slecture is the second in a series on "The Humanities in an&#13;
lDdustriai Society" sponsored by the CLIO Association, an in-&#13;
_tional organization connected with the Parkside journal CLIO.&#13;
The nextCLIOlecture will be on November 20, when Robert Canary,&#13;
"""",iate Professor of English, will speak on "Science Fiction: Myths&#13;
f« an Iudustrial Age?"&#13;
ASA moves answering service&#13;
The Adult Student Association has moved their evening answering&#13;
servicefrom.Tallent Hall to the Information Kiosk in LLC Main Place.&#13;
The service, geared to adult and evening students who cannot contact&#13;
Parbide offices during regular hours, will now operate Mondays&#13;
1bruugb Thursdays each week when classes are in session from 5:30&#13;
p.m. CD 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Buntyn to lecture here&#13;
bid L.Burstyn, Dean of Graduate and Research Studies at&#13;
Paterson State College Wayne New Jersey will give a free pubhc&#13;
lectare.t t2 p.m. Friw.;y, Oct. 25 in LLC D174. Burstyn's lecture will&#13;
be GIl "The Promethean Paradox Explained, or What the History of&#13;
Tac!moIotIY Can tell us about the Characteristics of Industrial&#13;
Socilty." The lecture is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Olaunittee, the School of Modern Industry and the History Depart-&#13;
_l&#13;
STEREOS TAPES&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
t919TAYLORAVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DENNY NELSON&#13;
owners&#13;
PHONE 637-2212&#13;
PAB FEATURE FILM SERIES,&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
FRITZ THE CAT&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
OCTOBER 24&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
GR 103&#13;
WeclnesUy, Oct. 24,1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Accounting careers dlscuued&#13;
CoOnFriday, Oct. 26 Jack O'Donnell of Arthur Andersoo and&#13;
a mpany, will meet with interested students to dIscuss careers in&#13;
Bccou.nting. His lecture will be presented at 10 a.m. in the Classroom&#13;
BU&#13;
ildmg room DI07 and will be repeated at I p.m. 10 the Classroorn&#13;
uilding room 0105.&#13;
RR to wash airplane&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are planning. ski trip to Steamboat Spnngs,&#13;
Colorado, January 2 thru 7. The trip Includes round trip transportation,&#13;
Iive days lift tickets. and five days lodgIng_ Total price IS&#13;
$210by plane or 5140by bus. Sign up is at ~ Worm.tion kiosk 10 Main&#13;
Place. Students interested in washing an airplane at Milw.ukee's&#13;
Mitchell Field to raise some cash for tbeir trip are asked to sign up 10&#13;
the Student Life Office, LLC Ot97.&#13;
Yearbook meeting today&#13;
Students, faculty and any other persons interested with woriting 00&#13;
an annual are invited to attend a meeting on Wednesday. Oct. 24 at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in LLC 0174. At this meeting the pubtisber foe the yearboolt&#13;
will be selected. Poets, phol&lt;Jgraphers, editors and lay-out personnel&#13;
are needed.&#13;
PSGA------&#13;
continued !rom pag e 1&#13;
Abduilah demanded a seat on the&#13;
committee just because he was&#13;
black. "He is anti-white rather&#13;
than pro-student," Konkol said.&#13;
"I don't want to bring any more&#13;
prejudice into it (the selectioo&#13;
procedures) than there is&#13;
already," Jennett added. Konkol&#13;
replied that "prejudice should be&#13;
personal rather than racial."&#13;
It was decided, witb the&#13;
recommendation brought forth&#13;
by Jennett, that the only 0bjective&#13;
Appeals Board for&#13;
students would have to be ooe&#13;
made up of individuals after the&#13;
new electioos are held, because&#13;
now the Appeals Board would&#13;
consist of the same students who&#13;
are on the interviewing and&#13;
screening committee.&#13;
The other topics dIscusse&lt;1 .t&#13;
Sunday's meeting were the&#13;
constitutional referendwn now&#13;
beIng circulated among students&#13;
and an ejections eommtttee for&#13;
'ovember's PSGA electioos&#13;
Konkol suggested that the&#13;
ActivitIes Board take charge of&#13;
the polls and count ballots "so&#13;
that none of the people who are&#13;
against us can accuse us of im~&#13;
proprieties." Jennett said that&#13;
PSGA did oot ha,.e enough mooey&#13;
to pay for the help and McDlVltt&#13;
and Stephen suggested the&#13;
fraternIties. the soronty or p~&#13;
Law Club's help be solicited&#13;
The meeting was adjourned&#13;
and aootherset ioe this Sunday at&#13;
6:30 p.m. in ILC 0174&#13;
Renew&#13;
Moyle Is&#13;
nostalglo trip&#13;
bode to&#13;
greose oge&#13;
"AMERICAN GRAFFITI"&#13;
by R~ca Edll ...&#13;
If you "ere born .round J&#13;
-\me-riaD Gnnkl tI yoar mOV1~&#13;
Get )'Ourself set for the g.... test&#13;
oostallll. tnp badl to the gres&#13;
age ever to hit the screen.&#13;
The movie l.S set III the SUmmer&#13;
of 1962, 00 • "arm night 1ft •&#13;
medium- ited tewn In northe-n&#13;
Cabfoem. What you .re&#13;
10 this mevie, as ~ Tim&#13;
mag&amp;1IDe pul.S It. is the "lut&#13;
gasp aI an er a." The day the&#13;
BeaUes hit the musIC sceee in&#13;
1963w •• the day the lrock-.androll&#13;
I music died&#13;
Remember how guy. used to go&#13;
out cruISing the boulev.rd (oe&#13;
scooping the loop, as It's ~&#13;
around here) 10 tbetr hot roda.&#13;
grease 10 thetr ha ..., tbetr ba bl&#13;
by thetr .des. tbetr pll of&#13;
Camels rolled up 10 tbetr T-alur!.&#13;
sleeve, O1uck 8erT)I 00 the radio,&#13;
and everytlnng was b,tchm" If&#13;
)"ou do remember, meric:'u&#13;
Graffiti will throw you Into fila of&#13;
esctasy If you don't remember.&#13;
you'll have one hell of • good&#13;
time, • lot aI laughs, .nd )ou'lI&#13;
have seen the 1 Amencan&#13;
movie so far this )·ear&#13;
(Starts Wednesday, October 31.&#13;
.t the M.r&lt;: Cinema 10 Racine )&#13;
Things you have wanted&#13;
the •&#13;
In&#13;
e Greeting Cards&#13;
• Wrapping Paper&#13;
• Pocket Combs&#13;
• Record Promotion&#13;
RATED FOR SALE:&#13;
• Kleenex&#13;
• Cough Drops&#13;
• Toothpaste&#13;
• Anaeln&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
1rief news&#13;
Cl b budgets requested ~&#13;
kside student organizations wishing to receive funds from the&#13;
~r ·ty student Group Support account should submit their annual&#13;
l1!11 \~;\0 the Assistant Dean of Students ~ffice 284 Tallent Hall by&#13;
~ (lg October 30. ff you have questions or wish further in-&#13;
~\ call 553-2342. The Campus Concerns Committee is eager to&#13;
:;: fi~ai student organization budget decisions as soon as possible.&#13;
Turkey trot teams forming&#13;
---fen-Women teams are needed to run for the second Annual Turk&#13;
Trot A team pre_dicts ~e _time _in which they both will run and ~ team nearest their pre?iction wins. The Turkey Trot will be held at&#13;
p)Oll on Sunday, Nov. 3 m front of_ the Phy Ed building. It is open to all&#13;
udents, staff and spouses or friends. The entrance fee is 50 c ts&#13;
eontact either Jim Koch (2267) or Bob Lawson (2153) of the P h;nEd&#13;
t,cuJty.&#13;
~y-Ed coach iniured&#13;
Women's Sports Director Barbara Jo Lawson seriously injured her&#13;
back in a tram~li~e accident last Wednesday. No further details are&#13;
available at this time.&#13;
~off to give CLIO lecture&#13;
Peter Hoff, Assistant Professor of English a t UW-Parkside, will&#13;
speak on "Peacock's Paradoxes: Tl?e Illusion of 'P rogress' a nd the&#13;
Fortunate Foible" on Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 7: 30 p.m . in the Library,&#13;
third floor. Hoff's lecture is the second in a series on "The Humanities in an&#13;
Industrial Society" sponsored by the CLIO Association, a n international&#13;
organization connected with the Parkside journal CLIO.&#13;
Toe next CLIO lecture will be on November 20, when Robert Canary,&#13;
Associate Professor of English, will speak on " Science F iction: Myths&#13;
for an Industrial Age? "&#13;
ASA moves answering service&#13;
The Adult Student Association has moved their evening answering&#13;
service from Tallent Hall to the Information Kiosk in LLC Main Place.&#13;
The service, geared to adult and evening students who cannot contact&#13;
Parkside offices during regular hours, will now operate Mondays&#13;
through Thursdays each week when classes are in session from 5:30&#13;
p.m. to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Buntyn to lecture here&#13;
Harold L. Burstyn, Dean of Graduate and Research Studies at&#13;
Paterson State College Wayne, New Jersey will give a free public&#13;
lecture at 12 p.m. Fri~y, Oct. 26 in LLC D174. Burstyn's lecture will&#13;
on "The Promethean Paradox Explained, or What the History of&#13;
Technology Can tell us about the Characteristics of Industrial&#13;
·ety." The lecture is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee, the School of Modern Industry and the History Depart- ment .&#13;
.. RECORDS&#13;
PIANOS&#13;
STEREOS&#13;
ORGANS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53403&#13;
MIKE URBAN&#13;
DENNY NELSON&#13;
"--- owners PHONE 637-2212&#13;
PAB FEATURE FILM SERIES,&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
FRITZ THE CAT&#13;
WEDNESDAY,&#13;
OCTOBER 24&#13;
7:30 P.M.&#13;
GR 103&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 24, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
Accounting careers discussed&#13;
On FridaY: Oct. 26 Ja O'Donnell&#13;
;°mpa~y, wdl meet \\-ith intere ted tuden to&#13;
Bc&lt;;&lt;&gt;u_nting. His lecture ·ill be presented at 10 .m. in&#13;
Bu~ldding~ room D107 and will be repeated at 1 p.m. in&#13;
ui room D105.&#13;
RR to wash airplane&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers are planning a i trip to t m&#13;
Colora~o. January 2 thru 7. The trip includ&#13;
sportation, five da~ lift tickets. and fi ·e da, l&#13;
$210 by plane or $140 by bus. gn up i at !he inform&#13;
Pl_ace. Students interested m ·ashing an airplane&#13;
Mitchell Field to raise some cash for the r trip are&#13;
the Student Life Office, LLC D197.&#13;
Yearbook meeting today&#13;
Students, faculty and any other persons int&#13;
an annual are invited to attend a meeting on&#13;
7:30 p.m. in LLC D174. At this meeti th pu&#13;
will be elected. Poets, photographers, edito are needed.&#13;
Review&#13;
Movl Is&#13;
nostalgia trip&#13;
bade to&#13;
greas age&#13;
"AMER ICAN GRA FFI I"&#13;
PSGA-----&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
Abdullah demanded a seat on the&#13;
committee just because be wa&#13;
black. "He i anti-white rather&#13;
than pro-student," Konkol said.&#13;
"I don't want to bring any more&#13;
prejudice into it (the selection&#13;
procedures) than there i&#13;
already," Jennett added. Konkol&#13;
replied that " prejudice hould be&#13;
personal rather than racial."&#13;
It was decided, with the&#13;
recommendation brought forth&#13;
by Jennett, that the only objec&#13;
ti ve Appeal Board for&#13;
students would have to be one&#13;
made up of individual after the&#13;
new elections are held, becau e&#13;
now the Appeals Board would&#13;
consist of the same tudents ho&#13;
are on the inten·iewing and&#13;
screening committee.&#13;
Things you have wanted&#13;
in the&#13;
• Greeting Cards • Kleenex&#13;
• Wrapping Paper • Cough Drops&#13;
• Pocket Combs • Toothpa te&#13;
• Record Promotion • Anacin&#13;
RATED FOR SALE:&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 24, 1973&#13;
Sooters&#13;
to meet&#13;
Marquette,&#13;
Green Say ___ -------sports--&#13;
RANGER&#13;
by Neal sautner&#13;
"We have a good shot at&#13;
beating uiem" replied soccer&#13;
coach Hal Henderson concerning&#13;
lonights game against Marquette&#13;
University. "Last year they&#13;
defeated us 3-1, but reports say&#13;
they're not as good as last year."&#13;
This saturday the Rangers&#13;
lake on their traditional rival&#13;
Green Bay. "We've never beaten&#13;
them on the varsity level, but we&#13;
tied them once." Then he added;&#13;
"Green Bay has been ranked as&#13;
high as 5th in the nation this year,&#13;
and they're the only tearn that&#13;
beat the defending NCAA&#13;
national champs; St. Louis&#13;
University." Green Bay's record&#13;
for the year is 5-1.(). Quincy&#13;
College was the only team to&#13;
defeat them.&#13;
Parkside's record (Of the year is&#13;
2-6-0. "Ironically, we've bad the&#13;
same number of wins as last&#13;
year, but then there were three&#13;
games we shouldn't have lost,"&#13;
Henderson said. "We'll keep&#13;
trying."&#13;
Henderson ended the interview.&#13;
saying, "I've been extremely&#13;
pleased with the performances&#13;
of Rick Lechusz,&#13;
Dennis pippen, and Dieter&#13;
Kiefer," who incidentally will be&#13;
playing against Green Bay, after&#13;
suffering from ankle injuries.&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
eRO, 0 lJ!'; 111Y&#13;
The Park. Ide harriers defeated Milwaukee Marquette this weekend.&#13;
malung their dual meet record 5-1.&#13;
","'" Par ide runners all broke the tape with the same time&#13;
125:581, ho"e,."r. ChUck Dettman and Lucian Rosa were given the&#13;
fant place tie Wayne Rhode came in second.&#13;
Other fmlsh.... for Parkside were: Jim DeVasquez - 6th place, Keith&#13;
Morntt.7th place. Dale artin· 11th place, John Ammerman - 12th&#13;
place The ham next meet will be tonIght, against Loras College, at&#13;
LorD&#13;
RlI BY P rOlde's Rugby Club gave an Impressive performance against&#13;
Marquette In the second annual Lions Club Rugby Garne Stmday,&#13;
WIIVIlJlg it 10-4 Polllt- uers for Paro.de were Keith Bosman, and Tom Jaebne.&#13;
ER The Par Ide Soccer Team bad two soccer games since RANGER'S&#13;
laat P . deadline."'e fint game was last Wednesday against Lake&#13;
Fo t III wluch Parkside started oIf on the right foot winning the&#13;
pme~. GoaIJ for Parlullde came from Ray Phanturat, Stan Stadler.&#13;
RIck Lec!l_. Dieter Kiefer. and Warren Lewis.&#13;
ParkaJde secood game occurred on Friday. October 19th, agains&#13;
Eastern IllinoiS who mClClentally were National Champions in 1969.&#13;
ParUide 1000tthiS one 1-0. Head Coach Hal Henderson insists that th&#13;
Eaalern game was "the best team effort all year" by his squad. Coach&#13;
Hendersoo alao added, "Even though we made mistakes. we proved t&#13;
""",,,vee that we can play with the tougberteams."&#13;
The soccer squad'S next game will be "a big one" against arch·rival&#13;
UW~reen Bay.&#13;
_-~------------1 : PRODOCTIONS A 50's REVIVEL1&#13;
1 PRESENTS with:&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
t&#13;
It&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
·1&#13;
I&#13;
OCTOBER26 - 8:00 P.M. 1&#13;
1&#13;
TICKe:n ...VAIVoILIE S2.SO - advance $.1.00 door t&#13;
IN •• (IN. IN KeNosHA 1 tMullM De., OMS-e1 oe.. m Memorial HaU l J"J T~" RKOnI J"J TaPl" Reeont 7th &amp; Lake Ave. Racine&#13;
_______________ J&#13;
•• .-...&#13;
~:&#13;
"&#13;
•,&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
Parltsld Acuvtnes Board ...&#13;
presents&#13;
fnConcert&#13;
~ --~ ?&#13;
MAY~ARDt;- -'\&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA t; /-&#13;
11IOR.-IIV. 8 8:00 P.M.&#13;
~, am llllllE&#13;
• .$Ul PAllSIIl S1\IOTS'&#13;
$4.111GDWL )tt&#13;
~&#13;
''Mr Hom'·&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
A moment's refiection--Sue Wanggaard pauses before&#13;
her tennis match in last weekend's tournament,&#13;
On Sale in the Bookstore&#13;
"Morning Fresh"&#13;
MILWAUKEE SENTINAL&#13;
Enjoy It Daily&#13;
Parkside University Bookstore&#13;
YOU ,&#13;
•&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
KEEP&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• I&#13;
, .,&#13;
,.. , .&#13;
•&#13;
,.&#13;
' '.&#13;
THE&#13;
..&#13;
• .,&#13;
, . •&#13;
" .&#13;
..&#13;
' .'&#13;
,,&#13;
."&#13;
, .&#13;
,• ..•&#13;
'.. " GLASS!&#13;
., ..&#13;
•&#13;
Buy a ...&#13;
Deliciously Satisfying&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
GOLDEN BROWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
"UN" COMMONLY REFRESHING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALL FOR $130&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
Start Your Set Nowl&#13;
6926 39th Ave. .2.&#13;
LOC.4TlONS 3400 Sheridan Road&#13;
--&#13;
• p SIDE ,. Oct. 24, 1ffl&#13;
GER&#13;
~----------Sports _ __,&#13;
nd sports&#13;
t meet will be tonight, apinlt Loras College, at&#13;
Pla1ftntla' ftuCby Cub pve an impreaive performance against&#13;
IWauelte in the NCGnd annual Uom Cub Rugby Game Sunday,&#13;
willllinll tlM.&#13;
IOC~ X:Nl'Ellt~etten for Pubide Keitb Bolman, and Tom Jaebne.&#13;
Soccer Team bad two soccer pmea since GER&#13;
deacline. 1be ftnt pme w lut Wedneaday apinst Lak&#13;
in Paraide started off an tbe ript foot winnin&amp;&#13;
w. Goals for Partraide came from Ray Pbanturat, Stan Stadler,&#13;
-...t9:..:a .. am. Dieta' Kief•, and Wamm Lewis. .., IICDDd pme occurred OD Friday, October 11th, a&#13;
IIUnall who inddmtally National Champions in 1•.&#13;
Puhl.Ila loll tbll one 1 ... H•d Coac:b Hal Hendenon in1ist1 that&#13;
11:Mtsa.... "the tam effort all year" by bia lqllad. Coe&#13;
Hadenaa allo added, "Ewa lboulh made mistakes, we proved&#13;
aun~•U.t can play tb the t.auper teams."&#13;
1be IOCCel' aquad'1 next same will be "a hie one" apinst an:b-ri&#13;
UW'-Gr- Bay.&#13;
----i11's-lfEiiVEI 1&#13;
p rbide llvtties Board&#13;
presen&#13;
lnCon rt&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA /:;&#13;
1:11 P.&#13;
S111UTS·&#13;
ith f&#13;
w f&#13;
'&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
I&#13;
If&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
f&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
Booters&#13;
to meet&#13;
Marquette,&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
by eal Sautner&#13;
"We have a good shot at&#13;
beating them" replied soccer&#13;
coach Hal Henderson concerning&#13;
tonights game against Marquette&#13;
University. "Last year they&#13;
defeated us 3-1, but reports say&#13;
they're not as good as last year."&#13;
This Saturday the Rangers&#13;
take on their traditional rival&#13;
Green Bay. "We've never beaten&#13;
them on the varsity level, but we&#13;
tied them once." Then he added;&#13;
"Green Bay has been ranked as&#13;
high as 5th in the nation this year,&#13;
and they're the only team that&#13;
beat the defending NCAA&#13;
national champs; St. Louis&#13;
University." Green Bays record&#13;
for the year is 5-1-0. Quincy&#13;
College was the only team to&#13;
defeat them.&#13;
Parksides record for the year is&#13;
2-&amp;-0. "Ironically, we've bad the&#13;
same nmnber ol wins as last&#13;
year, but then there were three&#13;
pmes we shouldn't have lost,"&#13;
Henderson said "We'll keep&#13;
trying."&#13;
Henderson ended the interview,&#13;
saying, "I've been extremely&#13;
pleased with the performances&#13;
of Rick Lechusz,&#13;
Dennis Pippen, and Dieter&#13;
Kiefer," who incidentally will be&#13;
playing against Green Bay, after&#13;
Qfering from ankle injuries.&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
A moment's reflection--Sue Wanggaard pauses before&#13;
her tennis match in last weekend's tourna.ment.&#13;
On Sale in the Bookstore&#13;
"Morning Fresh"&#13;
MILWAUKEE SENTINAL&#13;
Enjoy It Daily&#13;
Parkside ~iversity Bookstore&#13;
•&#13;
• • i • • • . . • • • • • •&#13;
• .. • . .&#13;
Buy a ... Deliciously Satisfying&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
GOLDEN BROWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
"UN" COMMONLY REFRESHING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALLFOR $1 lO&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave.&#13;
Stent Your Set Nowl&#13;
• 2 •&#13;
LOC4TIONS 3400 Sheridan Rood </text>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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        <name>lecture and fine arts committee</name>
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        <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
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        <name>Student Activities</name>
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        <name>wisconsin education association council</name>
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