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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Regents to hold hearing on UW-P's proposed mission</text>
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              <text>~&#13;
i&#13;
SIeve Lott. left. who portrays Ajax, and Don Riotz h . ~&#13;
K bl' I "Th V' " h W 0 IS Larry 10 erHrt u Y spay e rrus re earse a Scene in .&#13;
. ht . Ti k preparation for e Thursday mg ...openmg. c ets are on sale at·L In! .&#13;
Lite ormation&#13;
TheParksidee------_&#13;
RA&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
GE&#13;
Oct. 31. 1973 Vol, II No,'&#13;
Regents to hold hearing on&#13;
UW-P's proposed&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
The proposed mission statement for Parkside has&#13;
been written and copies of the draft from Central&#13;
Administration are circulating among administration&#13;
and faculty. A public hearing on the&#13;
missionwill be held at Parkside on Friday morning,&#13;
Nov. 16, at which time persons will be able to voice&#13;
opinions on the document.&#13;
The language as it presently stands mayor may&#13;
not be the exact wording which will provide the&#13;
basis for the hearing; the terminology could he&#13;
changed at the Regents' meeting Nov. 8-9.&#13;
1bere are presently six clauses in the statement&#13;
which delineate the particular goals and responsibilities&#13;
of UW-P. They are:&#13;
(a) The University should offer a distinctive&#13;
academic program which includes liberaJ arts&#13;
degrees and provides specific educational support&#13;
for the economic, technological, scientific, and&#13;
culturaJ needs of an industrial society.&#13;
(It) The University should develop a distinct&#13;
programmatic focus on the economic,&#13;
technological, and managerial needs and interests&#13;
01 industry-based societies.&#13;
Ie) The University should offer undergraduate&#13;
lJ'O&amp;I'ams in engineering technology and business&#13;
adrninistration.&#13;
~d)The University should have a commitment to&#13;
II'OgI'ams directed toward meeting the manpower&#13;
Teaching grant proposals&#13;
• •&#13;
II1ISSIOn&#13;
Chancellor Wytlie&#13;
needs of industrial society and ass: tmg Its&#13;
economic growth.&#13;
(e) The University should support apphcahm of&#13;
problem-solving research to select area, of&#13;
knowledge, especially soctal technol cal a&#13;
environmental problems of modem Jndustnal&#13;
communities.&#13;
(r) The University should develop ba tc graduate&#13;
programs clearly associated wuh areas of un·&#13;
dergraduate emphasis, as justified b} approprlate&#13;
Disagreement caused delay&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
In last week's issue, RANGER reported that a&#13;
IIIIIlher of faculty members were "outraged". by&#13;
what was termed "withholding of information"&#13;
from them by Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
'I'be complaint arose at a Wisconsin Education&#13;
"-ociallon Council (WEAC) meeting, where it was&#13;
l!DeraUy agreed by the 20 faculty present that&#13;
IaIdDa action on grievances would he a more eflaetive&#13;
method of increasing m"",hership than a&#13;
IIllL'b... hip drive. (WEAC is an educator's union,)&#13;
"., major grievance brought forward at the&#13;
~ concerned a letrer from central AdlIllaIsIration&#13;
(CA) in Madison that announced the&#13;
hdabiJity of money for UlIlIerWaduate Teaching&#13;
........ ement Grants.&#13;
~letter, dated Aug. I~,1m,was released to the&#13;
accompanied by two memos and a number&#13;
of "REcEIVED" stamps.&#13;
Obe memo was from Vlce-Qlancellor BaIJtl' to&#13;
lleans Moy and Norwood and it required that&#13;
PI'OIramproposals for gra~ts he in Bauer's office&#13;
by Oct. 29. The othel' memo was from Dean Moy or&#13;
Nwwood to all faculty and it required program&#13;
Pn&gt;posaJs by Oct. 24.&#13;
The complaint made by the WEAC faculty&#13;
DM!mbers was that the original fetter was re~Yed&#13;
Aug. 17 by Chancellor Wyllie but was not receIVed&#13;
by faCUltymembers until Oct. 17, a delay of two&#13;
months, Faculty was left with only one week to&#13;
Jl'epare and submit their proposals for grant money&#13;
to the College or SMI office.&#13;
In an attempt to rill in that two-month gap.&#13;
IIi\NGER talked first with Vice-Chancellor Bauer,&#13;
then with Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Bauer stated that he had learned from Wyllie that&#13;
he (Wyllie) and a number of other chancellors&#13;
Clro\81dthe state were displeased with three poi.ots&#13;
about the manner in which the teaching lmIlI'ovement&#13;
grants were being handled by Central&#13;
Administration.&#13;
The points of disagreement were explamed by&#13;
Wyllie and Bauer:&#13;
LIn the letter, CA outlined the type of person "bo&#13;
should serve on campus screemng eemrmnees The&#13;
chancellors felt that they were more qualified than&#13;
'CA in the selection of comminee memben.&#13;
2. Campus screening committees are to r'"&#13;
proposals from their campus accordJlIl to their own&#13;
priorities, but CA IIltends to use its own lut!gmelt&#13;
about priorities. The chancellors wanted CJlmpus&#13;
committees' recornmendahOll! to be fUlal&#13;
3. The chancellors fel, that the granl mooey c:ouId&#13;
he hancled better if a c..-uin amount was llJveI1 to&#13;
each campus to &lt;lstribure as that campus committee&#13;
saw fit .&#13;
These disagreements were discussed _ CA by&#13;
a group of chancellors _"ne durinc tile fnt&#13;
two weeks of SepCember, (Wylbe did not atteDd )&#13;
CA agreed that point number one ...as reasonable&#13;
but that points two and Ulree were not because&#13;
campus committees might rend to support&#13;
traditional programs aDd not give 8 fau heannc to&#13;
innovative ideas.&#13;
Wyllie said that afrer the meehng WIth CA on&#13;
september. he was "waiting for cIwlges." He also&#13;
explained that copies of the ongmalletter from CA&#13;
should have been sent to Vice-Chancellor Bauer and&#13;
othel' people on campus, hut through some mix"""&#13;
they were not. This mistake was not di.scovered&#13;
immediately.&#13;
The deadline for program proposals has been&#13;
extended to Nov. I: they "'ill he due 10 College and&#13;
SMI orfices at that time.&#13;
Parkside's screening committee ~i.1J be made up&#13;
f six faculty members two adrmOlslrators. and&#13;
~wostudents. The total list includes professors Paul&#13;
Kleine. John Van Willigen, John zarhng. Stella&#13;
Gray Leroy Cougle and . JOlT'S FIrebaugh; admini~lratt)rs&#13;
Beecham Robmson and William. loy.&#13;
and students Arnold Pascale and Dlane Becker&#13;
I eIs of revt ..... and authoriJahOD.&#13;
,,"0 add,ll&#13;
lkasiz'C of the&#13;
of "In&lt;btria)&#13;
on c the&#13;
cultural In&#13;
of modom&#13;
Alan and&#13;
c.-............ II&#13;
Park.... _mc C:., fftlmf'ftC&#13;
0\ ociU10a fP. G. .&#13;
""........ lbo. aU noml ..&#13;
PtuLio ~ rUM Ia l-L( DIn by&#13;
".31 p rD.... 0\.' •• ,alp&#13;
_tn .m bfo heW 0\- .. It, ...&#13;
tl«tlooI 11I ~...... .\, It&#13;
•• 41 It.&#13;
Jazz Ensemble&#13;
goes on tour&#13;
The Parts&gt;de', Jaa ~bIe&#13;
I undeF !be dJrection of PI'of&#13;
Robeot -n.oma-. '101I1 embart ...&#13;
a nun"'our '"" I and 1 ,til&#13;
conce:rLs sl.t~d at two U&#13;
yslem campuses and the an...... 1&#13;
convention or 1M Wisconsin&#13;
Personnel and GUidance&#13;
Assoclahon IVl1'(;A)&#13;
On ,'"" I, the 12-member&#13;
ensemble will perform at the&#13;
liW's Marathon Count)· c..mJlUll&#13;
on Wausau and ,Iso,.ill appear at&#13;
the ~\-erung stSSlOll or tile WPGA,&#13;
On ,'0\' 2, the gnlUp ",til gl\.., a&#13;
concert at the L'W Baraboo-Sa&#13;
Count) Campus on Baraboo.&#13;
Thorn....... ,. bo also directs&#13;
l:W·P·s I~member Jazz Ensemble&#13;
II, said enrollment In the&#13;
jaU program at ParUide bos&#13;
doubled th year .Iemben of&#13;
both ensembles are selected on&#13;
the baSlS of audlhons and play&#13;
arrangements b~i sucb Jan&#13;
IlllnIUne.. tan 1C~"c...&#13;
Iluddy Ridl. C_ 8aIil! and&#13;
~J_&#13;
The ParUide I/'OlIP a~&#13;
IaIl Ina jou1t CGnl:'ftt til&#13;
the InternatIonally acclaImed&#13;
O'Oock Lab S8Dd ~,...&#13;
T a lair liRl cnlty, wtllcIl&#13;
pIOnttnd )au educa at the&#13;
unlverstty Inel&#13;
Thoma .... re&lt;:e'W&lt;1 .... master&#13;
of mu IC educahOn detl at&#13;
• 'orth Texas ~ he"'a a&#13;
member of the One 0 'Oode Lab&#13;
Band as well as the mphony&#13;
Orc:beslra. CODCtf1 Band and&#13;
Graduate Br Oloir&#13;
Thoma.... also played til&#13;
eral commun,ty ymphonlts&#13;
n Te IS and tAnh n~r.l&#13;
'name" dance bands mcluel, ..&#13;
the ....a.,..." Co\ ngton Dan«&#13;
Band&#13;
He )Olned the Parksiclt muolc:&#13;
facult m fall. 1m&#13;
T ePa s· e----------&#13;
'II&#13;
.,&#13;
i&#13;
Steve Lott, left, who portrays Ajax, and Don Rintz h . ~&#13;
Herbert K bl ' I "Th v· " h w O is Larr1.· 1n u y s p ay e rrus re earse a scene in P . ., · ht. · Ti k reparation for lhe Thursday mg opemng. c ets are on sale at th Inf . k e ormahon ki s '&#13;
RA&#13;
Regents to hold hearing&#13;
UW-P's. proposed m1ss1on • •&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
The proposed mission statement for Parkside has&#13;
been written and copies of the draft from Central&#13;
Administration are circulating among administration&#13;
and faculty. A public hearing on the&#13;
mission will b: he!~ at Parkside on Friday morning,&#13;
!'-ov. 16, at which tlffie persons will be able to voice&#13;
opinions on the document.&#13;
The language as it presently stands may or may&#13;
not be the exact wording which will provide the&#13;
basis for the hearing; the terminology could be&#13;
changed at the Regents' meeting Nov. 8-9.&#13;
There are presently six clauses in the statement&#13;
which delineate the particular goals and respon- sibilities of UW-P. They are:&#13;
(al The University should offer a distinctive&#13;
academic program which includes liberal arts&#13;
degrees and provides specific educational support&#13;
for the economic, technological, scientific, and&#13;
cultural needs of an industrial society.&#13;
(bl The University should develop a distinct&#13;
programmatic focus on the economic ,&#13;
tt-chnological, and managerial needs and interests&#13;
of industry based societies.&#13;
(cl The University should offer undergraduate&#13;
programs in engineering technology and business&#13;
administration.&#13;
&lt;dl The University should have a commitment to&#13;
programs directed toward meeting the manpower&#13;
Teaching grant proposals&#13;
Oiancellor \\'~llie&#13;
Disagreement caused delay&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
In last week's issue, RANGER reported that a number of faculty members were "outraged" . by&#13;
what was termed "withholding of information"&#13;
from them by Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
ere pl m by&#13;
on&#13;
The complaint arose at a Wisconsin Education&#13;
Association Council (WEAC) meeting, where it was&#13;
geo_erally agreed by the 20 faculty present that&#13;
laking action on grievances would be a more effective&#13;
method of increasing membership than a&#13;
membership drive. (WEAC is an educator's union.)&#13;
The major grievance brought forward at the&#13;
meeting concerned a letter from Central Administration&#13;
(CA) in Madisoo that ann~ the&#13;
availability of money for Undergraduate Teaching&#13;
Improvement Grants.&#13;
goes on 'tour&#13;
The letter, dated Aug.15, 1973, was released to the&#13;
fatuity accompanied by two memos and a number&#13;
of "RECEIVED" stamps.&#13;
One memo was from Vice-Chancellor Bauer to&#13;
Deans Moy and Norwood and it required that&#13;
Pfogram proposals for gra~ts be in Bauer's office&#13;
t&gt;r Oct. 29. The other memo was from Dean Moy or&#13;
orwood to all faculty and it required program&#13;
llroposaJs by Oct. 24.&#13;
The complaint made by the WEAC faculty&#13;
members was that the original letter was rece!ved&#13;
Aug. 17 by Chancellor Wyllie but was not received&#13;
by faculty members until Oct. 17, a delay of two&#13;
months, Faculty was left with only one week to&#13;
llrepare and submit their proposals for grant money&#13;
to the College or SMI office.&#13;
In. an attempt to fill in that two-month gap,&#13;
R,\. GER talked first with Vice-Chancellor Bauer, th n with Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Bauer stated that he had learned from Wyllie that&#13;
he (Wyllie&gt; and a number of other chancellors&#13;
around the state were displeased with three poi_nts&#13;
about the manner in which the teaching imPl'Ov~n:ient&#13;
grants were being handled by Central&#13;
Administration. &#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 31, 1973&#13;
'-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
Communication&#13;
gap hurts&#13;
students&#13;
At a recent state-wide conference student leaders&#13;
were discussing problems they face on their campuses.&#13;
The one most frequently mentioned was lack of communication.&#13;
on three levels: student-student. studentadministration.&#13;
and institution-community. While all&#13;
three of these exist at Parks ide, a fourth and fifth&#13;
dimension of the problem was highlighted here&#13;
recently: adminlstration·admlnistration and admlnistration.faculty.&#13;
The ultimate victims of this&#13;
communication gap will be the students.&#13;
The specific issue Involved was the two-month delay&#13;
In notlfylng faculty of the availability of money for&#13;
Undergraduate Teaching Improvement Grants. Instead&#13;
of two monfhs to prepare their proposals to vie with&#13;
those of other campuses for funding, Parkside faculty&#13;
were left with a week. A one-week extension has since&#13;
been granted.&#13;
While one month of the delay can perhaps be parfially&#13;
justified by the negotiations some chancellors were&#13;
engaged in with central administration. to alter the&#13;
administrative details involved in dealing with completed&#13;
proposals. the ultimate excuse seems to be lack of&#13;
communication. Even If administrative matters were in&#13;
contention. faculty should have been notified of the&#13;
existing deadline set for submitting proposals.&#13;
The Chancellor apparently thought the ViceChancellor&#13;
and others on campus had received copies of&#13;
the letter announcing the grants. This in spite of the fact&#13;
that no one on campus was listed on his letter as being&#13;
among those receiving a carbon copy. The length of time&#13;
which passed prior to discovery of the error should also&#13;
be a source of great concern.&#13;
As an Institution. Parkslde claims to stress undergraduate&#13;
teaching excellence. Certainly Innovative&#13;
Ideas in undergraduate teaching are important if not&#13;
vital to that claim. When a situation such as this arises.&#13;
which potentially threatens funding of new approaches&#13;
to education at Parkside, it is the students here who wi II&#13;
suffer.&#13;
Comm. major&#13;
needs revamping&#13;
by Debra Frl&lt;.dell&#13;
In the specific mission statement Parkside eeceteed from Central&#13;
AdminLltration two weeks ago. and in general the mission statement&#13;
1M Umvenlly was founded upon in 1M mid-ros. 1M emphasis was and&#13;
IS to be aeadem'" "'ith the modern industrial society distinction.&#13;
In a modern Industrial society, a vital aod ever-growing field&#13;
te&lt;:hnololllcally, SCIefltificaUy, and culturally is thaI of com,&#13;
mUnications&#13;
Consider the folloWing lacts: I. ParllSlde's emphasis is to be undervaduale&#13;
programnting and education. 2. More specificaUy, the&#13;
undergraduate education is stressed in relationship to the modern&#13;
ulClustrlal society 3 CommuDlcations is vast and vital to this society.&#13;
Why does Parl,,"de conl1nue to have such a broad communications&#13;
major' '0 dlstincl programs or majors are offered in such areas as&#13;
journahsm, theatre. broadcasting. cmema, public relations, speech&#13;
"""apy, group tMory. and the lilte, within the broad communications&#13;
dosclpline.&#13;
It IS time to stop using the excuse thaI Parkside is a young and&#13;
growuJC mstJtuUon whenever we find ourselves deficient or negligent&#13;
,n an area It is a malure enough institution and lin. the faculty&#13;
potential, at thlltime, to break down disciplines into distinctive major&#13;
prolll'ams ,n aU 01 its HumanIStic, Social Science and Science&#13;
DiviSIOns&#13;
byJan'" S&lt;:hli"'IDlan&#13;
Last Thursday I received a call from a RANGER staffer to the effect&#13;
that the Russians were mobilizing, U.S. troops were on global ~l~rt,&#13;
and Secretary of State Kissinger. was at that moment. on television&#13;
I&#13;
. 'nO the situation Since this sounded rather serious, I rushed exp aml~"b . .,' . I d'&#13;
to the Learning Center par-kside s audurvlsua para ise, and&#13;
over 'ch K·· , . 'red about the nearest TV set to wat issmger s news con-&#13;
}~:~e. I was told I'd have to go to the Student Activities Building&#13;
down the hill. . C te t on i&#13;
Incredible! Iasked for a radi&lt;r-all the. Learning en r can ge on Its&#13;
di is FM which was playing very DIce muSICwhile for all I knew, ra101, "Ital" Walter Cronkite and fr-iends were doing lOS an an ysis on an mtemational&#13;
ultimatum.. . .&#13;
Do you realize that if president Nixon suddenly went on.nation-wide&#13;
TV to make some dramatic announcement about something or other,&#13;
most of us would not even know about it, and if we somehow found out,&#13;
we'd lose ten minutes getting down to th~ ."~earest TV set" in the&#13;
S.A.B.? If the Russians had been mobilizing and the U.~. had&#13;
retaliated with drastic action, we at parkside probably wouldn t have&#13;
known a thing about it 'tilwe left the campus. Since there are a few of&#13;
us, in the RAN~ER.offi.c~ and els~where, who pra~tica~~ live ?tit&#13;
here the situation IS ridiculous. I ve heard of UJ.1lversIties being&#13;
isolated Irom the real world, but it is absurd to think that with all&#13;
that's been happening in the news these days, a Parkside student must&#13;
be forced to be oblivious.&#13;
A talk with Beechum Robinson, Director of the Learning Center,&#13;
proved him sympathetic. He explained the problem was lack of an&#13;
antenna. A proposal had been made to position one on the theater&#13;
tower but it came too late and the structure IS Inadequate to support&#13;
the weight, The latest idea is to locate it in the w?"ds south 01 LLC&#13;
where it won't interfere with the architectural profile 01 the buildings&#13;
and also shouldn't be visible from outside the woods.&#13;
The problem, 01 course, is dollars. James Galbraith, who directs&#13;
Planning and Construction, estimates the cost at $8·10 thousand. It has&#13;
not been allotted lor in the current biennial budget, so unless the&#13;
University forks over the money from operating funds, it'll be a couple&#13;
of years yet before students can be at Parkside and still keep up with&#13;
the rest 01 the world. Why this wasn't thought 01 in initial planning is&#13;
hard to lathom, but why, now that it has been made apparent, can't&#13;
some provision be made?&#13;
When one considers not only its value in a fast-moving world where&#13;
news breaks at any hour, but also the other educational benefits&#13;
television is now beginning to provide, it seems a TV set in the main&#13;
complex of academic buildings, in an accessible place such as the&#13;
lounge next to the Learning Center, would be a logically provided&#13;
necessity. When one analyzes Ute money being well-spent to equip&#13;
Parkside with modern audio-visual aids and some of the latest in&#13;
communications devices, some expenditure on a method of keeping&#13;
abreast of the world outside would seem natural.&#13;
Robinson promised to check the feasibility of an AM tuner for the&#13;
Learning Center's radio, which is piped into the lounge next door. That&#13;
will help, if it is possible to get one. But some method of monitoring the&#13;
news periodically during the day would then be necessary, to know&#13;
when to switch to AM and let Parkside know what's happening.&#13;
If a way to finance it can be found, an antenna should be constructed&#13;
and a TV. set made available.&#13;
That leaves only one question-if yet another national crisis does&#13;
occur, how can the word be spread throughout the campus:&#13;
The Parkstee Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of wisccnsln-Parkside.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553·2295.&#13;
The Pa~kside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~necled 10 col~ns. and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of wisccnsln-Perkside.&#13;
. Letters 10the 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 find double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and 100d taste. All letters 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 10&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.1N·CHIEF: Jane M. Schtiesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debrlll Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
~~~~~;~.":HIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
Hedd G andy BUSh, Stephen Gifftlrd. Barban Hanson Harvey&#13;
sorene;~ S~;:e J;"sen: Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schube'rt, John&#13;
PHOTOGRAPH~:~~n~an. Cerrie Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
Jim Ruffolo . on Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS' .&#13;
LAYOUT' Terri ~";y ~Undarl, Gary Huck, Bob ROhan&#13;
BUSINeSS MANA~:"~~nKe:,erry Knop, slaff&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGE Pestka&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGE R:: Amy Cundari&#13;
ADVERTISING STA . R: Gary Worthington&#13;
FF. Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
...&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
RANGER&#13;
'--------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Communication&#13;
gap hurts&#13;
students&#13;
At a recent state-wide conference student leaders&#13;
were discussing problems they face on their campuses.&#13;
The one most frequently mentioned was lack of communication,&#13;
on three levels: student-student, studentdmlnlstrahon,&#13;
and Institution-community. While all&#13;
three of these exist at Parkside, a fourth and fifth&#13;
dim nsion of the problem was highlighted here&#13;
recently : adminlstration-administratlon and admintstr&#13;
tlon-faculty . The ultimate victims of this&#13;
communication gap will be the students.&#13;
Th specific issue Involved was the two-month delay&#13;
In notifying faculty of the availability of money for&#13;
Und rgraduate Teaching Improvement Grants. Instead&#13;
of two months to prepare their proposals to vie with&#13;
thos of other campuses for funding, Parkside faculty&#13;
r I ft with a week . A one-week extension has since&#13;
be n granted.&#13;
Whtie one month of the delay can perhaps be partiaUy&#13;
justlf d by the negotiations some chancellors were&#13;
ng ged In with central administration, to alter the&#13;
administrative details Involved in dealing with completed&#13;
proposals, the ultimate excuse seems to be lack of&#13;
communication. Even if administrative matters were in&#13;
contention , faculty should have been notified of the&#13;
xistlng deadllne set for submitting proposals.&#13;
The Chancellor apparently thought the ViceChancellor&#13;
and others on campus had received copies of&#13;
the letter announcing the grants. This in spite of the fact&#13;
that no one on campus was listed on his letter as being&#13;
among those receiv ng a carbon copy. The length of time&#13;
which passed prior to discovery of the error should also&#13;
be a source of great concern.&#13;
As an institution, Parkside claims to stress undergraduate&#13;
teaching excellence. Certainly innovative&#13;
ideas in undergraduate teaching are important if not&#13;
vital to that claim. When a situation such as this arises,&#13;
which potentially threatens funding of new approaches&#13;
to education at Parkside, it is the students here who will&#13;
suffer.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Comm. major&#13;
needs revamping&#13;
to _top ·ing the e cuse that Par ide is a young and&#13;
tution 1'ene r find ourselves deficient or negligent&#13;
rea . It · a mature enough institution and ba'S. the faculty&#13;
I. t th tim • to break down disciplines into disfinctive major&#13;
ll of Humanistic, Social Science and Science&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Last Thursday I received a call from a RANGER staffer to the effect&#13;
that the Russians were mobilizing, U.S. troops were on global ~!~rt,&#13;
and Secretary of State Ki~singer_ was at that moment_ on telev1s1on&#13;
l · · g the situation. Smee this sounded rather serious, I rushed&#13;
exp amm . , d" · I d" d&#13;
t the Learning Center Parkside s au 10-v1sua para 1se, an over o ' h K" · ' · . · ed about the nearest TV set to watc 1ssmger s news con-&#13;
~~~e. I was told I'd have to go to the Student Activities Building&#13;
down the hill. . . Incredible! 1 asked for a radio--all the_ Learm~g Ce~ter can get on its&#13;
d. ·s FM which was playing very mce music while for all I knew, ra 10 1 , d . · t t al · · Walter Cronkite and friends were omg ms an an ys1s on an mternational&#13;
ultimatum. . . . Do you realize that if President Nixon suddenly went on_ nation-wide&#13;
TV to make some dramatic announcement about something or other,&#13;
ost of us would not even know a bout it, and if we somehow found out,&#13;
:e'd lose ten minutes getting down to th~ ."?earest TV set" in the&#13;
s.A.B.? If the Russians had been mo~ilmng and the U.~. had&#13;
retaliated with drastic action, we at Parkside p~obably wouldn t have&#13;
known a thing about it 'til we left the campus. Smee the~e are ~ few of&#13;
us in the RANGER office and elsewhere, who practically hve out&#13;
he~e the situation is ridiculous. I've heard of universities being&#13;
isolated from the real world, but it is absurd to think that with all&#13;
that's been happening in the news these days, a Parkside student must&#13;
be forced to be oblivious. A talk with Beechum Robinson, Director of the Learning Center,&#13;
proved him sympathetic. He explained the problem was lack of an&#13;
antenna. A proposal had been made to position one on the theater&#13;
tower but it came too late and the structure is inadequate to support&#13;
the w~ight. The latest idea is to loca!e it in the w?Ods south ~f ~LC&#13;
where it won't interfere with the architectural profile of the bmldmgs&#13;
and also shouldn't be visible from outside the woods.&#13;
The problem, of course, is dollars. James Galbraith, who directs&#13;
Planning and Construction, estimates the cost at $8-10 thousand. It has&#13;
not been allotted for in the current biennial budget, so unless the&#13;
University forks over the money from operating funds, it'll be a couple&#13;
of years yet before students can be at Parkside and still keep up with&#13;
the rest of the world. Why this wasn't thought of in initial planning is&#13;
hard to fathom, but why, now that it has been made apparent, can't&#13;
some provision be made?&#13;
When one considers not only its value in a fast-moving world where&#13;
news breaks at any hour, but also the other educational benefits&#13;
television is now beginning to provide, it seems a TV set in the main&#13;
complex of academic buildings, in an accessible place such as the&#13;
lounge next to the Learning Center, would be a logically provided&#13;
necessity. When one analyzes the money being well-spent to equip&#13;
Parkside with modern audio-visual aids and some of the latest in&#13;
communications devices, some expenditure on a method of keeping&#13;
abreast of the world outside would seem natural.&#13;
Robinson promised to check the feasibility of an AM tuner for the&#13;
Learning Center's radio, which is piped into the lounge next door. That&#13;
will help, if it is possible to get one. But some method of monitoring the&#13;
news periodically during the day would then be necessary, to know&#13;
when to switch to AM and let Parkside know what's happening.&#13;
If a way to finance it can be found, an antenna should be constructed&#13;
and a TV.set made available.&#13;
That leaves only one question-if yet another national crisis does&#13;
occur, how can the word be spread throughout the campus?&#13;
ir.. lMPe#ka1111;side------&#13;
RAN GER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Pa_rkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~flected in col~ns_ and ed!torials 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 ;ind 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~s, phone number and student status or faculty rank . Names will&#13;
be_ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR : Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR : Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
~~~;~~: ~H~C COORDINATOR : David Daniels&#13;
Hedden Ga/"/ Bush, Stephen GiflOrd, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
sorens~. Ste~e 5;:'s:~; Michae_l Olszvk, Marilyn Schubert, John&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHER~- Ran, Carr_,e Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
J,m Ruttolo . on Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS · amy C d . LAYOUT · Terr: G I . un an, Garv Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
BUSINEs·s MA~A~~~~e:errv Knop, staff&#13;
ADVERTISING MANA Pestka CIRCULATION MA GER : Amy Cundari&#13;
ADVERTISING STA~~GER : Garv Worthington . Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder &#13;
Weget&#13;
T the Editor:&#13;
of years people of goodwill all&#13;
or b trvi the world have een ymg&#13;
OV~ng about One World where&#13;
~ as one human family. could&#13;
we, . Th . together 10 peace. e-&#13;
~n '1 th blemhas been to reconci e e&#13;
:;:erences of two worlds. Now,&#13;
al s RANGER headlmes report&#13;
~t' we have a Third World&#13;
Movement on our campus. The&#13;
organizers represent about two&#13;
reent of our Parkside World.&#13;
1':" boy...now we have three&#13;
orlds with which to deaL.. as&#13;
~gh two weren't enough!&#13;
It appears to me that everv&#13;
time someone whose skm IS&#13;
darker than mine burps some&#13;
campuS administrator jumps&#13;
through a hoop.&#13;
Shucks...whenever I burp all I get&#13;
is a dirty look. And I'm not only a&#13;
student here but I am also a taxpayer.&#13;
I don't like that kind of&#13;
discrimination. Maybe I don't&#13;
complain or demand loudly&#13;
enough but I find so little to&#13;
complain about here that it is&#13;
almost embarrassing. .&#13;
During the past year one of the&#13;
"hoops" through which liThe&#13;
Administration" has jumped was&#13;
to hire a person (Mr. Wayne&#13;
Ramirez and a nice fellow) to be&#13;
the counsellor for the Third&#13;
Worlders. I bope he sees his job&#13;
as being more than passing out&#13;
crying towels whenever one of his&#13;
constituents gripes about&#13;
something. I suggest that he get&#13;
his friends into the mainstream&#13;
of campus activities and not lead&#13;
up some dead-end creek. Where&#13;
were our black classmates when&#13;
they were selecting the cast for&#13;
''The Virus"? (What a turn-&lt;lff&#13;
titie lor a play! ...! just got over&#13;
one.) And, for that matter, where&#13;
were some of our white&#13;
classmates, if faculty people had&#13;
to take the leads?&#13;
Of course, the Third Worlders&#13;
have some understandable&#13;
complaints ... such as the&#13;
Parkside·Racine bus route not&#13;
going dose enough to where you&#13;
live. Well, maybe Mr. Ramirez&#13;
can arrange to use a Parkside&#13;
station wagon to make house-tobouse&#13;
pickups ...and stop at my&#13;
house on Tuesdays and Thursdays&#13;
when making the rounds.&#13;
Iheartily approve of the many&#13;
•pecial helps that are today&#13;
available to all students with&#13;
special problems and I cannot&#13;
help but wonder how my life&#13;
might have been different if such&#13;
services had been available to me&#13;
when for economic reasons I had&#13;
to drop out of Marquette Law&#13;
School back in 1921. I don't&#13;
begrudge anyone special help but&#13;
sometimes I wonder if it is appreciated.&#13;
I want all to know tha t I respect&#13;
the right of others to try to carry&#13;
on the "Lifestyle" of one's&#13;
I""'bearers. Personally, I gave&#13;
up my elfort to do so years ago.&#13;
My grandfather came over here&#13;
lrom Holland in the 18705.I tried&#13;
wearing wooden shoes and got&#13;
slivers in my feet so I said, "To&#13;
heck with it!"&#13;
Here at Parkside we have an&#13;
open SOCietywith room for all&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Panls&#13;
and things!&#13;
614-56IhStreet&#13;
letters&#13;
kinds of people and all kinds of&#13;
lIfestyles ...all colors, all [aces&#13;
a":d.cre.e~. l~ng hair, short hair,&#13;
mlm-mml skirts and pant suits&#13;
loud mouths and quiet mouths'&#13;
~lambouyant attire and blu~&#13;
Jeans. And .a~ open door to every&#13;
stu?ent aCtIvlty. With such a wide&#13;
lahtude of acceptance and&#13;
tolerance I ask ...Why encourage&#13;
a. movement which seems&#13;
disposed to set up its Own brand&#13;
of apartheid?&#13;
At le~s~ once a year 1 renew my&#13;
subscription to the premise that&#13;
mtel~lgence and ability have&#13;
nothing to do with the color of&#13;
one's skin ...I pray that this be&#13;
true and then I wonder ...if it is&#13;
true, then Why is it necessary for&#13;
Some to continually demand and&#13;
get special attention. That&#13;
routine has been going on for&#13;
quite a while now. Isn't it about&#13;
time someone got caught up?&#13;
Iam color-blind when it comes&#13;
to my friends on campus and off.&#13;
I admire the scholarship aod&#13;
goals of many whose skin happens&#13;
to be darker than mine.&#13;
Becoming well-educated is a doit-yourself&#13;
project accomplished&#13;
with the help of a lot of people.&#13;
However, getting a diploma&#13;
based on an assortment of Cs and&#13;
Ds doesn't necessarily make a&#13;
person "educated." And, believe&#13;
me, there is a Jot more to a&#13;
college education than learning&#13;
to shoot baskets.&#13;
Arthur M. Grubl&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In her letter to the RANGER of&#13;
Oct. 10, 1973, Stacy Postier raised&#13;
a number of issues which deserve&#13;
some consideration and&#13;
response. My concern, in this&#13;
letter, is limited to the question of&#13;
new admissions policies and their&#13;
possible effect on the academic&#13;
standards generally at Parkside.&#13;
The new admissions policy&#13;
grew out of a recommendation by&#13;
a faculty committee and was&#13;
adopted by the Faculty Senate,&#13;
after considerable study of and&#13;
reflection on the matter. The new&#13;
policy was then, finally, accepted&#13;
by the SUlte Board of Regents.&#13;
Parkside administration,&#13;
therefore, is not to be held&#13;
responsible for the new policy.&#13;
One of the major concerns in&#13;
the faculty debate was that 01 the&#13;
impact of lower admission&#13;
standards on academic standards.&#13;
Many argued, cogently I&#13;
believe, that academic standards&#13;
are ultImately strengthened or&#13;
weakened by what goes on in ~e&#13;
classroom and in the gradmg&#13;
processes, not by admiSSion&#13;
standards as such. After al.l, ~WMadison&#13;
had an open admlssloos&#13;
policy until 1963,and I think few&#13;
would argue that such a pohcy&#13;
turned Madison into an mstitution&#13;
which generally lacked&#13;
academic mtegnry, Such open&#13;
admlssl~ns policy may have&#13;
resulted. In a substantial rate of&#13;
drop-ou.t and nunk-oul, but&#13;
academic standards did DOtneed&#13;
to be sacrificed.&#13;
Academic standards can be&#13;
sUSlained-or raised or loweredat&#13;
Parkside depending on how we&#13;
as faculty respond to the present&#13;
situation. Many of us feel that the&#13;
question is not ODe of "00 you&#13;
have tbe credentials to get in?".&#13;
but "Do you have the stuff It&#13;
takes to do the job once you are&#13;
in?" I voted, in Faculty Senate. in&#13;
favor or the new policy. I did so&#13;
not believing that all wbo enter&#13;
will have the drive. interest, or&#13;
capacity to earn a degree, but I&#13;
was convinced that everyooe&#13;
with a high school diploma ought&#13;
at least have the opportunity of&#13;
giving the university scene a try&#13;
if they so desire.&#13;
Wayne G. Jobnsoo&#13;
Assoc. Prof. of Philosopb)'&#13;
Editor :&#13;
This letter concems my appointment&#13;
to the UrFA committee.&#13;
I and others feel that It&#13;
was a wise choice. My involvement&#13;
with both committees&#13;
eliminates the duplication of&#13;
presentations and my&#13;
hackground increases my scope&#13;
of the situation. The monies used&#13;
by this committee are taken Irom&#13;
the students' tuition but most&#13;
students are too apathetic to&#13;
care. In the past many of the&#13;
L&amp;FA students didn't even attend&#13;
the meetings.&#13;
Before the editors voice their&#13;
opinions on what goes 00 ....dth the&#13;
L&amp;F A they should send a&#13;
reporter to gather (acts that&#13;
opinions might be based on. The&#13;
next L&amp;FA meetIng will be&#13;
Friday, Oct. 23 (SIC I, at 3;30, an&#13;
interested students are mvited to&#13;
room 295 CA. Will the RASGER&#13;
be there'?&#13;
Greg Klema&#13;
Racine Sel1lClr&#13;
Editor's nott': R"\'GER ••&#13;
there but the meding.a D'l,lt i&#13;
scheduled for Frida~. 'O\.!, DOl&#13;
0&lt;:1. 21.&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Sond foryoulup-1.. cIot •. 1~1f&#13;
mad order eataloi Enclost $100&#13;
10 coyer poslaee delt.,ery I t 1$&#13;
Ifo 2 cloys).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE Bl'/ll. sum =2&#13;
LOS ANGElES. CAlif 'lOO25&#13;
12131471-3474", 4175493&#13;
Out "SUfe Nltf~I.S sOld for&#13;
rtse.n:h U~'S~t 0ftI1.&#13;
NOW PAYING 5.4%&#13;
(Compouds uullly te ~,~I%)&#13;
o REG L R&#13;
PASSBOOK&#13;
SAVI rGS&#13;
THREErom~lE\T LOrtTIUS:&#13;
II.W. Parkside -- Room 219. Talll'lt Hall&#13;
180 W. CIIestlut St .• BlI'lilltol&#13;
5200 Washilgtol ,t~e.. brile&#13;
Wednesday, OCt. 31, 1"3 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' note: "TM '\toVftDe.... • l"e'l"u.larfe.tare- ill ~ CItR. It&#13;
deaJ -ilb"OIDftlucI omf.· C*I«,...... (J.llP ..f"bw. ....&#13;
history. Gu... wrlI .... an "'k«I. .&#13;
Why Michael ~rion Morrison&#13;
Beume John Wayne&#13;
loy Inve M,er&#13;
Idney Harris. a syndIc.oted coIum l did. column 00 the __ •&#13;
movement He sard •• m.... other ~. "Woman'. addPd tabla ill&#13;
the cceuag Ipost-industrial) .. orld could be. trom ndoua lnatnament&#13;
lor peace, lor more humane treatment of one lDOlhor. for tho ....&#13;
derstanding thot proser&gt;'alJOO of W. more Importlnt lbaa the&#13;
pursuIt of troplues So loog as we conllnu. to undo",...... pia&#13;
lpersonahsm and humallllm) women will .,mply tm. to ..........&#13;
'more hlte men,' hlell ..'OU1ddef t the "'_ ...."... of •&#13;
mearungfuJ hberatioo movement." He .rgus thot f.aunwn IhouId&#13;
mean thal men must acqUIr"e "femuune-' traits 01 UlUty, coopendoD.&#13;
gentleness. sensitiVIty, and nurturant lUUftlla. n- ~&#13;
bound traIts, of course, and OIlght to be ~ In ....&#13;
because "male" Inlla of ~, compebUGn. .nd&#13;
authontanamsm. also cuJlurH&gt;ound .... do"",roua .nd deItnJctlve&#13;
m thLSera of Tho Comb and nsmg '101ence oll over the world&#13;
A recent !dO'o'ement column \It'as wnttm by. VtOftLan chara~&#13;
men as an oppressor class and women as an opprea.ed c~&#13;
ibIS prermse she concluded thot hatred of the ~r c... Ia&#13;
healthy and a logICalresult of our roles. Th hatred she c1allUS __&#13;
feel will result 10 a "",oIullon creating. IOty lO .. iudI oll people ....&#13;
created equal. FlISt of aU. women.nd men upy.ll tionI ill the&#13;
class structure. &amp;yond thot If that not hate but • _hubon lIIat&#13;
men and .. omen both .... stunted pl)'dIoIOlPcolly by SUI'''' will lead&#13;
to a socIety ""thout restnctmg roI W. I."., to .. ell other .nd&#13;
make Judgments lU...laooo to our sex roI . W,1ban ."., to .....&#13;
can retate to ... ch other as "e actuall .~lndJ.,duala .. bo neod&#13;
acceptanre, love. "",ogJlIlJon .• nd a of bel ... ful RevoluUGn&#13;
then \\'oo't mean 8 change In the maRlRetneDt of our .nstIbitionI bW •&#13;
change lUIbe nature of our ,.. lues When our ,.. I cha"", U- InlJ'UlJons&#13;
also ",ll FemmLSm holds tbe grea t prom 01 mallbll&#13;
this a better and more humane let)'&#13;
On a concretedaHo-da~ Ie "'I, men.nd om&#13;
relalJOIlS A pmlCcupooon Wllb ma!!CUbm~'on&#13;
LSthe result 01 'OC1ll1 cond,uorung Th enta, ItIpp f r. InS&lt;!CUnty,and&#13;
t... rs FIlm and TV show men punc~, Itllhng.ltnalbll.&#13;
and brntall1IngeachothfftnlOmany,.a,: \hI .nd bualn_mea&#13;
and so man)' males ... elI otI&gt;er a competJUon fer pn m....,.&#13;
and "omen Tho off of a II IbLS a arped I . of humaa iDleracllon&#13;
and uallt) Why a bunch 01 .ad IJlClDo&#13;
laneou feehngs' The manly Ibl to do is bold •• I.n nd devdop&#13;
dn I~ problems, _JOlla! ha -u , u and ,mpot nc nd&#13;
then \lioeexpect "omen to adml~ ,&#13;
Women """et.m encoura thi so both rpelUlt It In&#13;
...ch of our 11., c.n chan ""","" ...... _ of put ...&#13;
culturatlon A the BeaU remmded In I.helr hit Rf'\oI.U. h' ou&#13;
telllD II s the IUSlJtUIJOn.ell. on k • you'd t.,. I your mind&#13;
Instead ..&#13;
c......... food &amp; vondong&#13;
*'"'.&#13;
~&#13;
CANTEEN&#13;
RANGER&#13;
IS ACCtPI. APPWTIIS FII TIl P8SI1_ If&#13;
NEWS EDITOR&#13;
Apphcants should be cour.g........ ont.lhgent, bard&#13;
.. orklng and cooperalJve&#13;
Job lO\'oh predormnantly campus co\ rage." llh some&#13;
loca I and state empha. lS&#13;
Pa)' is neghglble but onla~lble re ..·ards can be ~.t&#13;
SUbmit brief resume 01 expenence and-or reJe\·.nt&#13;
courses ta en to R.-\"GER, u.c 0194, b)' Fn ,'", 9&#13;
All applicants will be intervieWed.&#13;
~ANGER&#13;
We get&#13;
the Editor:&#13;
Tof years people of goodwill all or b tr . the world have een ymg 0ver&#13;
b ·ng about One World where to n ·1 uld 5 one human fami y, co we, a · e The . together m peac . ' 11ve -1 th blem has been to reconci e e&#13;
~~erences of two w~rlds. Now,&#13;
al RANGER headlmes report&#13;
th::· we have a Third World&#13;
1 ement on our campus. The&#13;
• ::nizers represent about two&#13;
~rcent of our Parkside World.&#13;
Oh, boy ... now ~e have three&#13;
. Ids with which to deal ... as wor , h' though two weren t enoug .&#13;
It appears to me that ~vei:y&#13;
ti. e someone whose skm is m . b darker than mme urps. some&#13;
campus administrator Jumps&#13;
through a hoop.&#13;
Shucks ... whenever I burp all I get&#13;
is a dirty look. And I'm not only a&#13;
student here but I am also a taxpayer.&#13;
I do_n't like that kind ~f&#13;
discrimination. Maybe I don t&#13;
complain or demand loudly&#13;
enough but I find so littl~ ~o&#13;
complain about here that it is&#13;
almost embarrassing.&#13;
During the past year one of the&#13;
"hoops" through which "The&#13;
Administration" has jumped was&#13;
to hire a person (Mr. Wayne&#13;
Ramirez and a nice fellow) to be&#13;
the counsellor for the Third&#13;
worlders. I hope he sees his job&#13;
as being more than passing out&#13;
crying towels whenever one of his&#13;
constituents gripes about&#13;
something. I suggest that he get&#13;
his friends into the mainstream&#13;
of campus activities and not lead&#13;
up some dead-end creek. Where&#13;
were our black classmates when&#13;
they were selecting the cast for&#13;
"The Virus"? (What a turn-off&#13;
title for a play! .. .I just got over&#13;
one.) And, for that matter, where&#13;
were some of our white&#13;
classmates, if faculty people had&#13;
to take the leads?&#13;
Of course, the Third Worlders&#13;
have some understandable&#13;
complaints .. . such as the&#13;
Parkside-Racine bus route not&#13;
going close enough to where you&#13;
live. Well, maybe Mr. Ramirez&#13;
can arrange to use a Parkside&#13;
talion wagon to make house-tohouse&#13;
pickups ... and stop at my&#13;
house on Tuesdays and Thurdays&#13;
when making the rounds.&#13;
I heartily approve of the many&#13;
pecial helps that are today&#13;
available to all students with&#13;
pecial problems and I cannot&#13;
help but wonder how my life&#13;
might have been different if such&#13;
rvices had been available to me&#13;
when for economic reasons I had&#13;
to drop out of Marquette Law&#13;
School back in 1921. I don't&#13;
begrudge anyone special help but&#13;
sometimes I wonder if it is appreciated.&#13;
&#13;
I want all to know that I respect&#13;
the right of others to try to carry&#13;
on the "Lifestyle" of one 's&#13;
fore bearers. Personally, I gave&#13;
up my effort to do so years ago.&#13;
My grandfather came over here&#13;
from Holland in the 1870s. I tried&#13;
wearing wooden shoes and got&#13;
livers in my feet so I said, "To&#13;
heck with it!"&#13;
Here at Parkside we have an&#13;
open society with room for all&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
614 - S6lh Street&#13;
letters&#13;
~inds of people and all kinds of&#13;
lifestyles ... all colors, all races&#13;
an_d _er~~- long hair, short hair,&#13;
miru-mim skirts and pant suits,&#13;
loud mouths and quiet mouths&#13;
~lambouyant attire and blu~&#13;
Jeans. And .ru:1 open door to every student activity. With such a wide&#13;
latitude of acceptance and&#13;
tolerance I ask .. . Why encourage&#13;
a_ movement which seems&#13;
disposed to set up its own brand&#13;
of apartheid?&#13;
At le~s~ once a year I renew my&#13;
subscription to the premise that&#13;
intel~igence and ability have&#13;
nothmg to do with the color of&#13;
one's skin ... I pray that this be&#13;
true and then I wonder ... if it is&#13;
true, then why is it necessary for&#13;
some to continually demand and&#13;
get special attention. That&#13;
routine has been going on for&#13;
quite a while now. Isn't it about&#13;
time someone got caught up?&#13;
I am color-blind when it comes&#13;
to my friends on campus and off.&#13;
I admire the scholarship and&#13;
goals of many whose skin happens&#13;
to be darker than mine.&#13;
Becoming well-educated is a doit-yourself&#13;
project accomplished&#13;
with the help of a lot of people.&#13;
However, getting a diploma&#13;
based on an assortment of Cs and&#13;
Ds doesn't necessarily make a&#13;
person "educated." And, believe&#13;
me, there is a lot more to a&#13;
college education than learning&#13;
to shoot baskets.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
ArthurM. Gruhl&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
In her letter to the RANGER of&#13;
Oct. 10, 1973, Stacy Postier raised&#13;
a number of issues which deserve&#13;
some consideration and&#13;
response. My concern, in this&#13;
letter, is limited to the question of&#13;
new admissions policies and their&#13;
possible effect on the academic&#13;
standards generally at Parkside.&#13;
The new admissions policy&#13;
grew out of a recommendation by&#13;
a faculty committee and was&#13;
adopted by the Faculty Senate,&#13;
after considerable study of and&#13;
reflection on the matter. The new&#13;
policy was then, finally , accepted&#13;
by the State Board of Regents.&#13;
Parkside administration ,&#13;
therefore is not to be held&#13;
responsibie for the new policr&#13;
One of the major concern m&#13;
the faculty debate was that of the&#13;
impact of lower a~mission&#13;
standards on academic tandards.&#13;
Many argued, cogently 1&#13;
believe that academic tandard&#13;
. are ultimately strengthen!d or&#13;
weakened by what goes on m ~e&#13;
classroom and in the gi:ad~ng&#13;
processes, not by admt s1on&#13;
standards as such . After al_!, . WMadison&#13;
had an open ad~i ion .&#13;
policy until 1963, and I thmk f~\\&#13;
would argue that such a poh_cy&#13;
turned Madison into an institution&#13;
which generally lacked&#13;
r m&#13;
bet re?&#13;
Editor' note : R&#13;
lher but lb m Nin&#13;
chtdul d ror Fr"&#13;
&lt;kt. - .&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
NOW PAYING 5.4%&#13;
(Compound . an 11} t ~-~1 )&#13;
0. REG L. R&#13;
P BOO&#13;
THREE f0~\E~IE'1 L \Tl ' :&#13;
I .ff. Parkside -- Room 219. all at H II&#13;
180 w. fbe tout St .. Barlia on&#13;
5200 Washington he .. Ruin&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31 , 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
0&#13;
on&#13;
H&#13;
ESD&#13;
RA G&#13;
IS&#13;
rd&#13;
nt&#13;
All applicants ill be int rvi ed. &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Maynard Ferguson comina&#13;
Jau trumpeter Maynard Ferguson and his band will appear in&#13;
concert Nov. 8 (Thursdayl at Parkside.&#13;
The 8 p.m. coocert in the theater of the Communication Arts&#13;
b.lIldmg. will be preceded by an aftemooo workshop conducted by&#13;
Ferguson and hIS band for junior high, high school and college&#13;
ludenls.&#13;
Tickets are now on sale at Brandt's in Racine, Bidinger's in&#13;
Kenosha, and al !be Information Ki08k on campus, but Anthony A.&#13;
Totero, coordinalor 01 student programming, urged those desiring&#13;
tlcltets to act qUicltly. Tickets are $3 lor students and $4 for the public.&#13;
TIle workshop format will include opening and concluding sessions&#13;
WIth the entire orchestra, separated by sessions led by orchestra&#13;
members lealuring percussion, woodwind, brass and string sections.&#13;
TIle workshop will be held in the theater, from 1 to 4 p.m., and $t admISSion&#13;
will be charged to defray expenses. Those interested in the&#13;
workshop should conlact Totem at the Student Life Office, LLC 0197.&#13;
IhkcI World to meet for vote&#13;
On Thursday, Nov. 1, the Third World Organization coordinators&#13;
will present a constitulion to be approved by minority students. Attendance&#13;
01 all mlnority students is vital. Tbe meeting will take place&#13;
al noon in Gt'eenqUi t Hall, room 103.&#13;
UW-PARKSIOE 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;
Reserved seats $3, Students with to S1.SO(Nov.&#13;
23-4 Groups of 10 or more. lO:;4discount)&#13;
Tickets available at Bidinger's in Kenosha,&#13;
Cook-Ge're in Racine (.fter Oct. 17) and UW·P&#13;
tnformatlon Center on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
'nto Center only. Send starnped. serr-eeeresseo&#13;
envelOPe with check payable to UW.Parkside to&#13;
"vreus." UW.P Info Center. uw-Perkstee.&#13;
Kenosha. WI .sJ140.&#13;
P.A.B. FILM SPECIAL&#13;
WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDSI&#13;
DOCTOR ZHi'\1\GO&#13;
-(lWWN£ CWftJN .JUUEOiRISfIE ·lOM mRlOOY&#13;
MC~· ~!kI&lt;£NtiA.. RAJ.Hi ~&#13;
(JJAA 9-Wf !.'SZHmOOJ ROO S1mR .RITAl\.ffi1t'-ffiAM&#13;
TlIS., 1lIIY.6 &amp; WED.,lilY. 1&#13;
1::11 P.M.&#13;
e.. ARTS TllATRE ADM.$1.00&#13;
··UNION"&#13;
Wed .., Fri.,Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
Yearbook announces contest&#13;
Students involved in creating a Parkside yearbook have chosen the&#13;
American Yearbook Company from Cambridge, Maryland to do the&#13;
publishing.&#13;
A contest has been announced for choosing a name for the yearbook.&#13;
The prize is a lree yearbook. All entries must be submitted through&#13;
campus mail to the Yearbook, UW-Parkside. Deadline is Nov. 30.&#13;
There will also bea contest for the best photo submission. All photos&#13;
will become the property of the yearbook. In case of a tie, duplicate&#13;
prizes will be awarded. The prize is a free yearbook. Photos are to be&#13;
at least 5x7. The entry deadline is June t, 1974.&#13;
ASA hOlds recreqtion night&#13;
Recreation night, sponsored by Adult Student Association (ASAl&#13;
will be held on Sunday evening, Nov. 4, 6-9p.rn. at the Phy Ed building.&#13;
All adult students are invited to bring their families or friends to&#13;
relax and loll around the pool, play volleyball, tennis, handball, and so&#13;
on.&#13;
The shuttle bus will be available as well as parking in the lot across&#13;
lrom tbe Classroom building. Student J.D.s, swimsuit, cap and towel&#13;
are necessary.&#13;
Free concert today&#13;
Four Parkside music students will be soloists in a free public concert&#13;
at3:3O p.m. on Oct. 31in the Communication Arts Building, Room&#13;
~IIL .&#13;
They are Peggy Simmer, soprano, of Salem, a student of Lee&#13;
Dougherty, who will sing Marenka's Aria from Smetana's "The&#13;
Bartered Bride"; Mary Manulik, cellist, of 7830 38th St., Kenosha, a&#13;
student of David Littrell, who will playa movement from Brahms'&#13;
Sonata in E major, Op, 38,No.1; Jim Mize, trumpeter, of Great Lakes,&#13;
Ill., a student of Robert Thomason, who will play Barat's Fantasie in&#13;
E-nat; and Patrick Noel. guitarist, of 1301Villa St., Racine, a student&#13;
of James Yogbourtjian, who will play the sarabande and bourre from&#13;
Bach's First Lute Suite in E minor.&#13;
The vocalist will be accompanied by Jean Tashoff, a piano student&#13;
from Racine, and the cellist by pianist Steph-en Swedish of the music&#13;
faculty.&#13;
parking lot closes&#13;
Because there are no lights, no sidewalks, and because of the&#13;
pedestrian problem, the parking lot across from the heating and&#13;
cbilling plant will close to parking. Ronald Brinkman, Director 01&#13;
Safety and Security, assured RANGER that there were enough spaces&#13;
available in the Tallent and east lots, and should the need arise, the&#13;
area across from the beating and chilling plant will again open.&#13;
SAS craCksdown&#13;
Ronald Brinkman, Director of Safety and Security, said that this&#13;
year they are "following right straight through" in parking ticket&#13;
matters. An individual who receives a ticket must pay the fine within&#13;
five days or the fine will double. If someone has removed the ticket&#13;
from the windshield, the offender will receive a zo-dav notice. If not&#13;
paid, notices will again be sent the 40th and 60th day. Brinkman&#13;
warned that after 60 days without a payment, the ticket will be sent to&#13;
the Kenosha District Attorney where a warrant will be issued. for&#13;
arres~. At the present time, approximately 35 tickets "may very well&#13;
be going to the D.A.," said Brinkman.&#13;
Pom Pom squad organizes&#13;
There will be an organizational meeting of the Parkside Porn Porn&#13;
squad on Tuesday. Nov. 6 at 12p.m. in the upstairs lounge of the P.E.&#13;
building. Anyone who ISunable to make it should leave her name and&#13;
phone number with the P .E. office, extension 2245.&#13;
YWCAsponsors MeXico tour&#13;
Th~ Racine YWCAhas announced a tour to Mexico City Guadalupe&#13;
Teotihuacan, Cholula, Puebla, Cuernavaca, Taxco ~nd Toluca'&#13;
December t3-23. The cost of the trip for YWCA members is $395 and&#13;
for n~n-men:~rs, $405. The cost includes round-trip air fare on&#13;
Amencan Airlines, all hotel accommodations, sightseeing and entrance&#13;
lees as scheduled, baggage tips, accident insurance and&#13;
several meals. For more information contact the Racine YWCA. '&#13;
Wed•• Oct. 31&#13;
FREEAdmission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
Costume&#13;
North-South&#13;
exchange&#13;
oHers&#13;
unique&#13;
experience&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Students at Parkside and at all&#13;
other UW system campuses&#13;
have, for the past nine years, had&#13;
the opportunity to experience a&#13;
totally different academic&#13;
cultural and social lifestyle th~&#13;
that of their own experience and&#13;
background.&#13;
This unique experience is&#13;
provided by the North-Soutb&#13;
Student Exchange Program. This&#13;
program sends, at most, two&#13;
students from each campus to 8&#13;
black .lU1iversity in the South.&#13;
Parkside students selected this&#13;
fall will attend North Carolina&#13;
Central University in Durbam&#13;
for the spring semester. '&#13;
NCCU has a student population&#13;
of around 4,000; Durham has a&#13;
population 01 nearly 100,000.Also&#13;
located in Durham is Duke&#13;
University and the University of&#13;
North carolina is located in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill.&#13;
Students who participate in the&#13;
program are technically enrolled&#13;
at Parkside, so they pay regular&#13;
Wisconsin tuition. They will&#13;
receive transfer credits for aU&#13;
work taken at the exchange&#13;
campus. Participation in the&#13;
program will be noted on the&#13;
student's UW transcript, but no&#13;
grades will be recorded.&#13;
Students who will be freshmen&#13;
during participation are Dot&#13;
eligible and seniors are not&#13;
normally eligible. Juniors wiD be&#13;
given priority. Applicants should&#13;
have a cumulative Grade Point&#13;
Average of 2.5.&#13;
UW loans or grants can be used&#13;
for participation in the program,&#13;
except for work-study. The&#13;
Financial Aids Office generally&#13;
makes adjustments to replace&#13;
work-study with a loan or grant.&#13;
Every effort will be made to lind&#13;
campus employment at NeCU&#13;
for exchange students who must&#13;
have this in order to participate.&#13;
A round-trip airline ticket from&#13;
Milwaukee to Raleigh·Durham&#13;
will he provided by the program&#13;
for participating Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Further information about the&#13;
program, the exchange campus,&#13;
applications, and names of&#13;
current and former participants&#13;
can be obtained from Isom&#13;
Fearn, Tutoring Services Office,&#13;
Room 281, Tallent Hall. Applications&#13;
are due Nov. 2.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
classifieds&#13;
LOST-Book. of poetry. "return Me to MY&#13;
Mind" by Stanley Eldridge. 811.. PIImptl'"&#13;
Probably lost in library. Help return,""'"&#13;
offered. 694-2933&#13;
FOR SAL.E: 15 gal. fish tank wittl&#13;
cessortes. Sweepmaster electric bf'OOl'lo&#13;
instant hairseners and iron. till&#13;
i1fter S, or weekends.&#13;
I OCT.31; NOY. 2, 3, 4 1&#13;
Kenosha's Hewes' Hiresp"&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(formerly Shokey's)·&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road Phone 654-~&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Maynard Ferguson coming&#13;
Third World to meet for vote&#13;
. 1, th Thmi World Organlzation coordinators&#13;
titut on to be appro ed b · minority tudents. AtII&#13;
m n ty tu is vital. The meeting will take place&#13;
n i t Hall, room 103.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE PRESENTS&#13;
G rtrude Jeannette, Broadway, movie, TV actress&#13;
nd The Par side Players in&#13;
Premiere 8 P.M. Nov. 1,2,3,4&#13;
Communication Arts Theater&#13;
Res rved ats SJ, Students with ID SI.SO (Nov.&#13;
2 3 4 Group of 10 or more, lOj(,discount)&#13;
Tic ts av II ble a Bldinger's In Kenosha,&#13;
Coo re In aclne ( f r 0c . 17) and UW-P&#13;
Inform tioo Cen r on campus. Mail orders at&#13;
Info C nter only. Send stamped, self-addressed&#13;
envelope with chec payable to UW-Parkside to&#13;
" Viru :• UW-P Info Center, UW,Parkslde,&#13;
Kenosh , WI SJl40.&#13;
P .A.B. FILM SPECIAL&#13;
WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS I&#13;
DOCTOR ZHiVAGO&#13;
(IRNl1 E OM.I · JULIE ~RISTIE · TO CURTENAY&#13;
NEC -~-· .... rn,~ -RAl?rl~&#13;
OOR s-Wilf lA5ZHMOOI ROO SlfilR. RITA 11.ffil~&#13;
TIIS., NOY. 6 &amp; WED., IIJY. 7&#13;
7:JI P.M.&#13;
ARTS THEATRE ADM. $1.(1)&#13;
Yearbook announces contest&#13;
Students involved in creating a Parkside yearbook have chosen the&#13;
American Yearbook Company from Cambridge, Maryland to do the&#13;
publishing. A contest has been announced for choosing a name for the yearbook.&#13;
The prize is a free yearbook. All entries must be submitted through&#13;
campus mail to the Yearbook, UW-Parkside. Deadline is Nov. 30. There will al o be a contest for the best photo submission. All photos&#13;
~ill become the property of the yearbook. In case of a tie, duplicate&#13;
prizes will be awarded. The prize is a free yearbook. Photos are to be&#13;
at least 5x7. The entry deadline is June 1, 1974.&#13;
ASA holds recreation night&#13;
Recreation night, sponsored by Adult Student Association ~A~A)&#13;
will be held on Sunday evening, Nov. 4, 6-9 p.m. at the Phy Ed building.&#13;
All adult students are invited to bring their families or friends to&#13;
relax and loll around the pool, play volleyball, tennis, handball, and so&#13;
on.&#13;
The shuttle bus will be available as well as parking in the lot across&#13;
from the Cla room building. Student I.D.s, swimsuit, cap and towel&#13;
are necessary.&#13;
Free concert today&#13;
Four Parkside music students will be soloists in a free public concert&#13;
at 3: 30 p.m. on Oct 31 in the Communication Arts Building, Room&#13;
D-118.&#13;
They are Peggy Simmer, soprano, of Salem, a student of Lee&#13;
Dougherty, who will sing Marenka's Aria from Smetana's "The&#13;
Bartered Bride" ; Mary Manulik, cellist, of 7830 38th St., Kenosha, a&#13;
student of David Littrell, who will play a movement from Brahms'&#13;
Sonata in E major. Op. 38, No. 1; Jim Mize, trumpeter, of Great Lakes,&#13;
Ill • a student of Robert Thomason, who will play Barat's Fantasie in&#13;
E-nat; and Patrick Noel, guitarist, of 1301 Villa St., Racine, a student&#13;
of James Yoghourtjian, who will play the sarabande and bourre from&#13;
Bach's Fir t Lute Suite in E minor.&#13;
The vocalist will be accompanied by Jean Tashoff, a piano student&#13;
from Racine, and the cellist by pianist Stephlm Swedish of the music&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Parking lot closes&#13;
Because there are no lights, no sidewalks, and because of the&#13;
pedestrian problem, the parking lot across from the heating and&#13;
chilling plant will close to parking. Ronald Brinkman, Director of&#13;
Safety and Security, assured RANGER that there were enough spaces&#13;
available in the Tallent and east lots, and should the need arise, the&#13;
area across from the heating and chilling plant will again open.&#13;
S&amp;S cracks down&#13;
Ronald Brinkman, Director of Safety and Security, said that this&#13;
year they are " following right straight through" in parking ticket&#13;
matters. An individual who receives a ticket must pay the fine within&#13;
five days or the fine will double. If someone has removed the ticket&#13;
from the windshield, the offender will receive a 20-day notice. If not&#13;
paid, notices will again be sent the 40th and 60th day. Brinkman&#13;
warned that after 60 days without a payment, the ticket will be sent to&#13;
the Kenosha District Attorney where a warrant will be issued for&#13;
arrest. At the present time. approximately 35 tickets "may very well&#13;
be going to the D.A.," said Brinkman.&#13;
Pom Pom squad organizes&#13;
There will be an organizational meeting of the Parkside Porn Porn&#13;
squa~ on Tuesday, No~. 6 at 12 p.m. in the upstairs lounge of the P.E.&#13;
building. Anyon~ who 1s unable to make it should leave her name and&#13;
phone number with the P .E. office, extension 2245.&#13;
YWCA sponsors Mexico tour&#13;
Th_e Racine YWCA has announced a tour to Mexico City, Guadalupe&#13;
Teotihuacan, Cholula, Puebla, Cuernavaca, Taxco and Toluca'&#13;
December 13-23. The cost of the trip_ for YWCA members is $395 and&#13;
for n~n-me~~rs, $405. The cost includes round-trip air fare on Amencan Airlines, all hotel accommodations sights · d&#13;
trance fees h d led ' eeing an en- as sc e u , baggage tips, accident insurance and&#13;
several meals. For more information contact the Racine YWCA. '&#13;
North-South&#13;
exchange&#13;
offers&#13;
unique&#13;
exp~rlence&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
Students at Parkside and at all&#13;
other UW system campuses&#13;
have, for the past nine years, had&#13;
the opportunity to experience a&#13;
totally different academic&#13;
cultural and social lifestyle tha~&#13;
that of their own experience and&#13;
background.&#13;
This unique experience is&#13;
provided by the North-South&#13;
Student Exchange Program. This&#13;
program sends, at most, two&#13;
students from each campus to 8&#13;
black university in the South&#13;
Parkside students selected thi;&#13;
fall will attend North Carolina&#13;
Central University in Durham&#13;
for the spring semester. '&#13;
NCCU has a student population&#13;
of around 4,000; Durham has 8&#13;
population of nearly 100,000. Also&#13;
located in Durham is Duke&#13;
University and the University or&#13;
North Carolina is located in&#13;
neighboring Chapel Hill.&#13;
Students who participate in the&#13;
program are technically enrolled&#13;
at Parkside, so they pay regular&#13;
Wisconsin tuition. They will&#13;
receive transfer credits for all&#13;
work taken at the exchange&#13;
campus. Participation in the&#13;
program will be noted on the&#13;
student's UW transcript, but no&#13;
grades will be recorded.&#13;
Students who will be freshmen&#13;
during participation are not&#13;
eligible and seniors are not&#13;
normally eligible. Juniors will be&#13;
given priority. Applicants should&#13;
have a cumulative Grade Point&#13;
Average of 2.5.&#13;
UW loans or grants can be used&#13;
for participation in the program,&#13;
except for work-study. The&#13;
Financial Aids Office generally&#13;
makes adjustments to replace&#13;
work-study with a loan or grant.&#13;
Every effort will be made to find&#13;
campus employment at NCCU&#13;
for exchange students who must&#13;
have this in order to participate.&#13;
A round-trip airline ticket from&#13;
Milwaukee to Raleigh-Durham&#13;
will be provided by the program&#13;
for participating Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
Further information about the&#13;
program, the exchange campus,&#13;
applications, and names or&#13;
current and former participants&#13;
can be obtained from Isom&#13;
Fearn, Tutoring Services Office,&#13;
Room 281, Tallent Hall. Applications&#13;
are due Nov. 2.&#13;
Rc;anger&#13;
classifieds&#13;
LOST-Book of poetry, "return Me to lliY&#13;
Mind" by Stanley Eldridge. Blue ...,mpltltl.&#13;
Probably lost in library. Help return, rt••"'&#13;
offered. 694-2933&#13;
FOR SALE : 15 gal. fish t•nk Willl K&#13;
cessories, Sweepmaster electric br_, 1&#13;
instant hairsetters and iron. Call 6&#13;
;alter s, or weekends.&#13;
Wed .• Oct. 31&#13;
FREE Admission&#13;
with Halloween&#13;
Costume&#13;
11UNION"&#13;
Wed .. , Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
OCT. 31; NOV. 2, 3, 4 ]&#13;
Kenoslta's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
( formerly Shokey' s) .&#13;
Greenbay Road Phone 654-0485 &#13;
Wednesdlly, OCt. 31, 1973 THE PARKS IDE RANGER 5&#13;
Regents- _&#13;
c:ontll'IUecl IrOf'l ...... 1&#13;
ParkSide "all'I.' ••&#13;
. Ire tmngs we asked for "'hn~h are&#13;
unportant. 'l He was especianv happy that It gives&#13;
even m t~ framework of the specific mISSion a&#13;
str~ng ratIonale for a powerful liberal arts faun.&#13;
dation. to the Universil), and also thaI the&#13;
prohibition on graduale programs has ~&#13;
rescmded.&#13;
With respect to the bearmg, 5bucard said "people&#13;
might be put 01110 respond 10 sometlnng they are&#13;
satisfied WIth,bUItt is important 10 respond so that&#13;
we don't lose through complacency what has bee&gt;&#13;
gamed Ihrough considerable eflort ."&#13;
Graduate Programs N.......&#13;
William Moy, Dean 01 the School 01 Modem industry,&#13;
said 01 the draft, "I am very pleased te see&#13;
mcluded a specific mention of englJl&lt;!enng&#13;
tedl~~]ogy and business administration, and also&#13;
spectnc mention of graduate programs ..&#13;
He added that it was "a good mov .... on the pan 01&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie to request inclUSIon of Labor&#13;
Relations.&#13;
Regarding graduate programs, oy commented&#13;
that IIwe're going to serve the business comm\D'Uty&#13;
we need graduate programs in busin&lt;!ss and&#13;
technology for area people who work full-time but&#13;
want to pursue graduate degrees.&#13;
There had been considerable controversy last&#13;
August over a Central Adrnirustratioo proposal&#13;
which placed Parkside and SIXother UW SJ tern&#13;
schools in a cluster or "Primary Undergraduate&#13;
Institutions." The wording of the new nussree&#13;
statement would allow development 01 graduate&#13;
programs related 10 "areas of undergraduate&#13;
emphasis," presumably business and technology. if&#13;
approval and Iunding are received lrom Central&#13;
Administration lor each specific proposal.&#13;
~I&#13;
'~&#13;
~&#13;
the (;01' ..... 1)· comnuU coordlllll1nl laculty&#13;
presen!a~ Anyooe "ish to mea Il.I ",,",t&#13;
must ~ r "lth the O&gt;ancellor'. off ... eel·&#13;
vance This rtgl5tra.!Jon _ not rant an&#13;
opportuOlty to heoIl"lI-tbe R on will d&lt;lennme&#13;
",1'0 10&lt;1' be heard and In ,,-III. orela'&#13;
Tesllmonl· m t be bml'''' to the m.issiOD-d&#13;
the m IOn ~ lor the ... 11re&#13;
..~ •• mi.ssJoD for l tutJona an t.he&#13;
c1uslI!r (those sc:-' In,iousIr d ....&#13;
dergradualel. or th lect on lor '\I.p&#13;
Further 1.nt'onnatlon a\·.11ab11! from the&#13;
cellor's olhce. PSGA or R.' 'GER&#13;
Oral In !alJons are noIto exceed 1m nun&#13;
Bnel wnllen tall'mon marwng dI I&#13;
ness' "·le..... are abo reqmrecl .Dd '\IoTitlft1&#13;
slatrm~nts mal also be bmitted b1 ...&#13;
groups not ontendlll&amp;to k pecta'orI" ill be&#13;
.. come, but will ask'" to roeISla' at the door&#13;
and Indicate "'bother an obIf:" r ... a paf1jC pant&#13;
Lawsonresting comfortably&#13;
room 247. Surgery is scheduled&#13;
lor Wednesday, Nov. 7.&#13;
Her classes are meeting as&#13;
scheduled with the exception 01&#13;
the folk dance class, which has&#13;
been cancelled.&#13;
Women's Sports Director&#13;
Barbara Jo Lawson, who sullore&lt;!&#13;
a back injury Iwo weeks&#13;
.go 00 the trampoline, is&#13;
r&lt;p«ted resting comforlably in&#13;
Kenosha 51.Catherine's hospital,&#13;
Registration Sec::essarl&#13;
The public hearing, which will be chaired by&#13;
Regenl Edwal"ll Hales lrom Racine, is technIcally to&#13;
alfol"llthe public a chance 10 be heard, commented&#13;
Wyllie, but students are welcome to testify also. and&#13;
Thingsyou have wanted&#13;
to see in the&#13;
*&#13;
Qmm[D0UlDQI3&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
• Greeting Cards&#13;
• Wrapping Paper&#13;
• Pocket Combs&#13;
• RecordPromotion&#13;
• Kleenex&#13;
• Cough Drops&#13;
• Toothpaste&#13;
• Anaeln&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP ...&#13;
..&#13;
THE • '.. ..&#13;
.. . .&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
.. ..&#13;
RATEDFOR SALE:&#13;
*And haven't been afraid&#13;
to ask for!&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
Suva ...&#13;
OeIi&lt;inu&gt;ly Solilfying&#13;
• BIGSHEF&#13;
PHONE (4141632-1138 _iiiiii_~~ 308 6th STREET - RACINE. WIS.&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
SPECIAL GROUP&#13;
CUFFED PANTS AND JEANS&#13;
SPECIAL GROUP&#13;
LONG SLEEVE KNIT TOPS&#13;
V2 PRICE&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 't iI 9&#13;
z .&#13;
GOlDEN ItOWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
CO"MONtUEm G&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
$130&#13;
All FOR ~,/fl&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
.2.&#13;
LOC4 TIO.\"S 6926 39th Ave. 3400 Sheridan Road&#13;
~I&#13;
·~&#13;
~ Lawson resting comfortably&#13;
Women's Sports Director&#13;
Barbara Jo Lawson, who suffered&#13;
a back injury two weeks&#13;
ago on the trampoline, is&#13;
reported resting comfortably in&#13;
Ken~a St. Catherine's hospital,&#13;
room 247. Surgery is scheduled&#13;
for Wednesday , Nov . 7.&#13;
Her classes are meeting as&#13;
scheduled with the exception of&#13;
the folk dance class, which has&#13;
been cancelled.&#13;
Things you have wanted&#13;
to see in the *&#13;
CBC!JC!Jru0UC!JQC5&#13;
• Greeting Cards • Kleenex&#13;
• Wrapping Paper • Cough Drops&#13;
• Pocket Combs • Toothpaste&#13;
• Record Promotion • Anacin&#13;
RATED FOR SALE:&#13;
*And haven't been afraid&#13;
to ask for!&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
PHONE (414 ) 632-1138&#13;
308 6th STREET - RACINE WIS&#13;
~~&#13;
25% OFF&#13;
SPECIAL GROUP&#13;
CUFFED PANTS AND JEANS&#13;
SPECIAL GROUP&#13;
LONG SLEEVE KNIT TOPS&#13;
½ PRICE&#13;
Monday &amp; Friday 't ii 9&#13;
.i&#13;
Wedne day, Oct. 31 , 1973 THE PARKSIDE RA GER 5&#13;
Regents-------&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
Buy a ... D . ·ointySa "ify g&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
• II COLA&#13;
ALL FOR $1 JO&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave. • LO&#13;
2 •&#13;
TIO .. 3400 Sheridan Road &#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, OCt. 31, 1973&#13;
Alternate school is UW-P classroom&#13;
by Saady Busch&#13;
No. it's not the local coffee house where one can stop for a chat, or a&#13;
cozy to-getber of the relatives in granny's livingroom. The scene is an&#13;
economics class al Racine's Walden ill High School.&#13;
BeIl18 an alternative school, Walden In is concerned with students&#13;
,.110 have had various dirficulties in adj ... ting 10 conventional public&#13;
high schooL Its program is extensive and flexible; tbe atmosphere&#13;
much more informal.&#13;
Instructing the class are students from Parkside's methods class,&#13;
TeachlJ1g Social Studies 10 Seeondary SChools. Each week a differenl&#13;
tudenl l1!leS ooe 01 many leaching methods to execute instruction of&#13;
ones own chosen topic.&#13;
Walden m was chosen because of its' availability, the need existing&#13;
at Walden 111for an economics class, and the flexibility 01 \be school's&#13;
accommodations.&#13;
The roam thrust of the class is to teach economics. Instructor of the&#13;
methods class, Marvin Happel assistanl professor of education&#13;
commented onoth"" matn objectives: "The purpose is to give people a&#13;
chance 10 see whal a high school social studies class can be from&#13;
heginnu~ 10 end. It provides as realistic a situation as possible in an&#13;
unrealistie setting ..&#13;
TeachIng methods used by \be students are grounded on theoretical&#13;
foundations Theuies and programs are studied and then reshaped for&#13;
...e ,n lhe economics class. Students will then bave made a start&#13;
toward learning not jusl leaching, bul creative teaching.&#13;
The "reshaped" leaching theories are used in the preparation and&#13;
execution by each studenl of a teaching pacl. The pact is based upon&#13;
ones chooen loplC Pef'\alJ1ing to economics, and a specific leaching&#13;
method&#13;
Class begins with a meeting attended by Happel and method&#13;
students. Miscellaneous business is tsken care of, teaching packets&#13;
are distributed, and leaching plans fer the evening are discussed.&#13;
FoUOWUlg the half-bour preliminary meeting is the actual&#13;
economics class. Walden DI students are allowed to come in and sil&#13;
Cartoonist's eye view * * * * * * ** * * ***************** * * ******&#13;
PSGA elections&#13;
•&#13;
are coming&#13;
*·~*~*~*H*H*~·*t**.*+**************************&#13;
where they choose. T~e result is a kind of potpourri in att~nda&#13;
ranging from blue-leaned adolescents 10 polished ed nee.&#13;
The student teacher for the evening immedialely begins to ueat .....&#13;
the lesson, utilizing his or her method. Some examples of less C~d~l&#13;
are: "Economic Justice &amp; Equality"; "Consumeration &amp; Suon&#13;
.ClpIQ&#13;
and "Savings &amp; Investment". Typical methods used are miXedrvl\"al.";&#13;
case studies, and role playing. tnedia,&#13;
The atmosphere is one of serious learning suspended. in informa .&#13;
There exists a feeling of openness along with a desire to lity&#13;
problems; to arrive at some conclusions. SOlve&#13;
Following a short break, Happel, the methods class, and WaId&#13;
volunteers analyze and evaluate the preVIOUS lesson. Suggesti en ID&#13;
accepted in appreciatio~; critic~sm is given in earnest. The ~ ~&#13;
much student-teacher interaction, and a learning experience t 11&#13;
everyone. for&#13;
The appreciation of diversified teaching methods along .&#13;
tensive student-teacher interaction, was expressed by severat~~I"'~&#13;
ill students: """"&#13;
"I think it's a good class because it's really accomplishing wha .&#13;
set out to do-teach the dull subject of economics." t It&#13;
"It helps one understand a variety of teachers. I like it thaI&#13;
stay after and criticize." you CIlI&#13;
"The class gives us a chance to see what people at a higher 1 eI&#13;
school have 10 do. It helps us relate to them." ev of&#13;
Methods students also had favorable comments:&#13;
"Methods courses traditionally have been a bummer. This has&#13;
one of the best courses I've ever taken. It covers a lot more lhabelm&#13;
expected. It D I&#13;
"The class gives us experience with a variety of teaching m&#13;
The chance for interaction with students, and learning their opllU'~'&#13;
helpful." om.&#13;
Happel feels the class includes what a methods course should Del&#13;
successful in regards to both alternative students and .; a II&#13;
students. As for similar classes in tbe future, he predicts this: ,,~&#13;
see any problem lJ1taking a class from Parkside and putting a I&#13;
simllar to this in any other high school. If alternative school ::-&#13;
class for us to teach next semester, Iplan on doing something 8~&#13;
somewhere else."&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
In Concert .&#13;
~-- ~ ?&#13;
..,.-/1 --'~" or ~~ -~ .. '&#13;
MAYNARD;~&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA 17 /-&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31: Student concert a13:3O p.rn. in the Comm AnI&#13;
Building, room DU8. Itis free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday. Oct. 31: Vets Club Halloween party at Dania Hall iD&#13;
Racine. Donations requested.&#13;
Nov. 1-4: Play, "The Virus" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Thealft.&#13;
Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2: PAB movie, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid"&#13;
at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday. Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at the Phy Ed Building. ConlactJim&#13;
Koch or Bob Lawson.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3: PAB dance featuring "Boogie Man" from 9 p.m.&#13;
in SAB. Admission is $1.50 andParkside I.D. is required..&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4: PAB movie, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid"&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4: ASA "recreation night" for adult students and their&#13;
families from 610 9 p.m. in Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 6: PAR movie, "Dr. Zhivago" at 7:~ p.m. inComm&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7: PAB movie, "Dr. Zhivago" at 7:30 p.m, in tbt&#13;
Corom Arts Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
1IIJR.-IIJY. 8 8:111P.M.&#13;
e.. AITS 11lATRE&#13;
AIIU3.111 PARIlSlJ( snmrs·&#13;
$4.111GEIDAI.&#13;
JtEdh~&#13;
~&#13;
·'M.F.Hom"&#13;
COMINGUP&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson workshop for music studeDtI&#13;
in the Corom Arts Theatre from 14 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson concertat8p.m. in the C(IDII&#13;
Arls Theatre. Tickels are $3 and available allhe Information kit&amp;&#13;
Saturday. Nov. 10: Vets club dance featuring "Hounddog Band".l1&#13;
p.m. ID SAB. Advance tickets available for $1.50 from Vets &lt;11*&#13;
members and $1.75 al the door .&#13;
....January 2 ~ru 7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski trip It&#13;
~Ieamboal SprlOgs, Colorado. See the Information kiosk for detaill&#13;
All ilems for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submltlft.&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to pUblication of the issue lD....&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
• ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
• 1 NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
• 1'2 DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
• FLOWER LEI GREETING&#13;
• GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
• TOUR HOST SERVICES&#13;
• ALL TIE'S &amp; TAXES&#13;
The&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN _ PARKSIDI&#13;
*RWRIJ.RN HEJIJI&amp;RY&#13;
8 Fan-FIW Dlpl&#13;
Jill .. " 2 • 10 $269 Plus $20 Tax &amp; Service&#13;
Based on J to a ROOrfl&#13;
~&#13;
HURRY!&#13;
Over 2/3 Filled&#13;
IIFor application lorrfl&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CEHTE'&#13;
LLC 0191 nl.22f4 by Gary Huck TRUCK ON DOWN&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
A ternate school is UW-P classroom&#13;
'th a m ing attended b · Happel and method&#13;
n . ti ll bu i · taken care of, teaching packets 0&#13;
buted, nd t ching plans for thee" ning are discussed.&#13;
th h If our preliminary meeting is the actual&#13;
cla . Wal n III tudents are allowed to come in and sit&#13;
Cartoonl1t'1 eye view••••••••••****************•********&#13;
by Gary Huck&#13;
PSGA elections&#13;
Par ide cth'ities Board&#13;
pre ents&#13;
In Concert&#13;
FERGUSON ORCHESTRA&#13;
'&#13;
/-&#13;
THUR.-NOY. 8 8:00 P.M.&#13;
CtllM. ARTS TIIATRE&#13;
.$3.00 PARKSllE STUDENTS*&#13;
$4.00 6EJWL 'Jtt· ~ "M.F.Hom"&#13;
TRUCK ON DOWN&#13;
where they choose. The result is a kind of potpourri in attenda&#13;
ranging from blue-jeaned adolescents to polished ed nee&#13;
The student teacher for the evening immediately begins to UCatorg&#13;
the lesson, utilizing his or her method. Some examples of less cond~t&#13;
are : "Economic Justice &amp; Equality"; "Consumeration &amp; Suon ~opr~&#13;
and "Savings &amp; Investment". Typical methods used are mixedrvrval'',&#13;
case studies, and role playing. media, The atmosphere is one of serious learning suspended in info .&#13;
There exists a feeling of openness along with a desire :mall . problems; to arrive at some conclusions. 0 sohe&#13;
Following a short break, Happel, the methods class and Wald&#13;
volunteers analyze and evaluate the previous lesson. 'suggesti en lU&#13;
accepted in appreciation; criticism is given in earnest. The ons are&#13;
much student-teacher interaction, and a learning experi:e ult&#13;
everyo!')e, nee for&#13;
The appreciation of diversified teaching methods along .&#13;
tensive student-teacher interaction, was expressed by several~th1 •&#13;
III students: a den&#13;
"I think it's a good class because it's really accomplishing ha . set out to d~teach the dull subject of economics. 11 w t 11&#13;
"It helps one understand a variety of teachers. I like it that&#13;
stay after and criticize." You can&#13;
"The class gives us a chance to see what people at a higher 1 1&#13;
school have to do. It helps us relate to them. 11 eve of&#13;
Methods students also had favorable comments:&#13;
"Methods courses traditionally have been a bummer. This has&#13;
one of the best courses I've ever taken. It covers a lot more thabeen&#13;
expected." n I&#13;
"The class gives us experience with a variety of teaching m&#13;
The chance for interaction with students, and learning their op· e_thods&#13;
helpful.,, 1ruons 11&#13;
Happel feels the class includes what a methods course should nd&#13;
successful in regards to both alternative students and ~ a la&#13;
students. As for s~mila~ classes in the future, he predicts this: .. f~&#13;
see any problem m taking a class from Parkside and putting a c t&#13;
similar to this in any other high school. If alternative school :&#13;
class for us to teach next semester, I plan on doing something 5- a~&#13;
somewhere else." 1m...,.&#13;
It's wh~t's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31: Student concert at 3:30 p.m. in the Comm Ar1s&#13;
Building, room DnB. It is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Oct. 31: Vets Club Halloween party at Dania Hall&#13;
Racine. Donations requested.&#13;
Nov. 1-4: Play, "The Virus" at 8 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre&#13;
Tickets on sale at the Information kiosk.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 2: PAB movie, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid'&#13;
at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 3: Turkey Trot at the Phy Ed Building. Contact J&#13;
Koch or Bob Lawson .&#13;
. Saturday, ~o~. 3: PAB dance featuring "Boogie Man" from 9 pm&#13;
m SAB. Adm1ss1on 1s $1.50 and Parkside I.D. is required.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4 : PAB movie, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid&#13;
at 7:30p.m. in SAB. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 4 : ASA " recreation night" for adult students and their&#13;
families from 6 to 9 p.m. in Phy Ed Building.&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 6: PAB movie, "Dr. Zhivago" at 7:30 p.m. in Comm&#13;
Arts Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7: PAB movie, "Dr. Zhivago" at 7:30 p.m. 1n !ht&#13;
Comm Arts Theatre. Admission is $1.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
. Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson workshop for music students&#13;
m the Comm Arts Theatre from 1-4 p.m.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 8: Maynard Ferguson concertat8p.m. in the Comm&#13;
Arts Theatre. Tickets are $3 and available at the Information kiSat~rday.&#13;
Nov. 10: Vets club dance featuring "Hounddog Band'' alt&#13;
p.m. m SAB. Advance tickets available for $1.50 from Vets c)lj)&#13;
members and $1.75 at the door.&#13;
~ January 2 ~ru 7: Ragtime Rangers sponsoring a ski tnp. to&#13;
::,teamboat Spnngs, Colorado. See the Information kiosk for details&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submiUt41 "&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in •ilcl an item is to appear.&#13;
a Fun-Filled ~r&#13;
Jana,y 2 - 10 $269 Plus s20 Tax &amp; Servoco&#13;
Based on 3 to a Room&#13;
e ROUND TRIP JET&#13;
e 7 NIGHTS OUTRIGGER&#13;
WEST&#13;
e 1'2 DAY CITY TOUR&#13;
e FLOWER LEI GREETING&#13;
e GROUND TRANSFERS&#13;
e TOUR HOST SERI/ICES&#13;
e ALL Ttl'S &amp; TAXES &#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jens~n&#13;
TIME FADES AWAY&#13;
Neil Young (Reprise MS 2151)&#13;
The firSt realiz~tion ~pon bein~ exposed t~the opening song is that&#13;
, live material. Nell Young IS broadcastmg a warning for junk!&#13;
tluSlS d A "Th' ki d ' res&#13;
t&#13;
"TimeFa es way. e]W1 res on t care, of course they' t&#13;
I!Ia hitihth k that i 'lus ndgr&lt;JOvetot s g , ouncyroc er atlsastoneinitself H .&#13;
SIll t t . t' . e IS ing with a eompe en crew consis mg of John Barbata (dr )&#13;
~ Drummond (bass), Ben Keith (slide guitar and vocal), u:;;'~k&#13;
NilZChe(piano), and himself (harmonica, guitar, and vocals).&#13;
",. firSt of the three soft, slow 'ballads that are included on thi&#13;
,..or&lt;! appears as a "Journey Thru The Past." This is Neil Young:s&#13;
personal nostalgia trip, he claims he's "gain' back to Canada" woo S&#13;
be came from, after the tour, and he "won't be back 'til Februa:;&#13;
~;cepicks up shortly with "Yonder Stands The Sinner," The&#13;
,.uP rocks hard, Neil Young tries to push it even harder, and his&#13;
wHee gets a little hoarse, but not ~lstract~?gly so. "The sinner" is&#13;
opparenlly"the Great Pretender (Nixonv), whom Neil Young while&#13;
penonifyingJesus, says "He calls my name without a sound. tt •&#13;
The band continues to rock on Impressively with "L A" which&#13;
r.. tureS Neil as a dramatic prophet of doom for the big city, "The&#13;
mwntainserupt and the valley IS sucked Into cracks in the earth." His&#13;
ca5iivatingvoi~e ~?rk~ a,~toundingly well in the same manner as it&#13;
does in songs like Ohio,&#13;
Theremainder of side 1is reserved for "Love In Mind." This is one&#13;
Iihistender ballads that at times seems to move unbearably slow.&#13;
However,it is short and if one allows himself to focus into the sensitive&#13;
lIllOlionthat is the basic part of Neil Young's aura, he may find his&#13;
lace being drowned in tears,&#13;
Side 2 is filled with only three songs, of which "Don't Be Denied" and&#13;
"l1le Bridge" consume the first half. The first is a slow, hard plodding&#13;
rocker with an infectious chorus sinking in with Neil's earnestswodingvoice.&#13;
The second is the last of his quiet reflections on the&#13;
album.&#13;
1be "Last Dance" departs as the highest volume number while also&#13;
occupyingthe entire second half of this side. Neil forces his voice loud&#13;
and almostchokes sometimes. Graham Nash and David Crosby have&#13;
)llIned the band for this last number. Most of the time is used with an&#13;
daborate instrumental concentrating on the guitars while Jack Nitzdie&#13;
adds piano frills on the edges. The whole scene is symholic of a&#13;
spinning hangover realization that "It's a Monday morning, Time to&#13;
10 to work." Neil Young freaks out a series of "Oh Nos" for the&#13;
_oIic junkies trapped in the life of 4o-hours-a-week factory jobs,&#13;
TIMEFADES AWAY,in its completion, has unfolded a compelling&#13;
lellSitivitywith a well-balanced set. The cover credits reveal that&#13;
these tunes were recorded at several different locations. If this&#13;
coUectionis representative of a single concert, then Neil Young and&#13;
crew merit silver awards in performance.&#13;
IRecordcourtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
IIDracula" lecturer&#13;
traces legend&#13;
by Rodney Schroeter&#13;
Radu Florescu, co-author of In&#13;
...... h 01 Dracula and history&#13;
"",,euor at Boston University,&#13;
Ioctured last Friday evening on&#13;
Dracula, his place in history and&#13;
Ia legend.&#13;
Florescu first became interested&#13;
in Dracula when he read&#13;
BramSlaker's Dracula (whicb he&#13;
~Iy recommends), He&#13;
1lleoIni%ed the names QI villages&#13;
lad trails whicb actually exist in&#13;
Rtimania.&#13;
FIoreacu found manuscripts&#13;
"futen in ancient German,&#13;
IeIling about "Dracula the imllOler."It&#13;
laid of how Vlad Tepes,&#13;
nicknamed "Dracula"&#13;
Ilaughtered Turks by t'be&#13;
IhGuaandain the 15th Century.&#13;
Tbe Turks were constantly in·&#13;
~ Dracula's country and,&#13;
llIe of his many battles&#13;
against them, Dracula is considered&#13;
a national hero by&#13;
Romanians, much as George&#13;
Washington is by Americans.&#13;
What Stoker did, says&#13;
Florescu, was to integrate the&#13;
story of Vlad Tepes WIth the&#13;
vampire legend, for Stoker wa.s&#13;
indeed the first to ever credit&#13;
Dracula with vampirism. Most&#13;
Romanians today know of&#13;
Dracula and vampires, but do not&#13;
associate the two.&#13;
A very few copies of In Search&#13;
or Dracula are still available in&#13;
the bookstore. Florescu's new&#13;
book, Dracula: the Biography or&#13;
the Impaler, will be out around&#13;
HaBoween. A more scholarlx&#13;
approach by several authors IS&#13;
the forthcoming, The Dracula&#13;
Debate.&#13;
Radu Florescu will appear on&#13;
"The Tonight Show" on Oct. 31.&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
feature film series presents&#13;
BUTCH CASSIDY&#13;
AND THE&#13;
SUNDANCE KID&#13;
FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 8:00&#13;
SUNDAY, NOV. 4, 7:30&#13;
S1UIIJlT ACTlYlTIES BUlDllG, AlltISSl* 15'&#13;
UW P &amp; WIs. , 0 ReQuir~&#13;
IF YOU HAVE AN&#13;
UNUSUAl TALENt&#13;
YOU HAVE WHAT IT&#13;
TAkES TO BE A&#13;
BUDWEISER. WORLD&#13;
CHAMPION!&#13;
EARN THIS&#13;
nRRIFIC PATCH,&#13;
7"X6", COLORFUL,&#13;
WASHABLE, WITH&#13;
SPACE FOR WRITING&#13;
IN YOUR SPECIALTY.&#13;
T'h;, (Ine YO\I"O ..-0" It&#13;
cIo'''9 .... IUOWElSf.&#13;
CAN TOTE.So ~Id&#13;
yc* J"., tot. 0 rKOrd&#13;
ftlolmM,of Iud&#13;
CO",, bolOftCed otop 01'-&#13;
O~f, Wlfhovt Ilfti~p.&#13;
for a dtstonce of 25 (Nt&#13;
and eo,,, 0 dandy&#13;
hctw.... , Wo,1d&#13;
ChoMpio. paoch.&#13;
.Ko,d to beot&#13;
••• IV ... '-"'I&#13;
Breathe easy, Earthlings. Budweiser is&#13;
doing something about the current ahortage&#13;
of world champions in the world&#13;
Budweiser is sanctioning 6\'e fnoli h&#13;
events in which world-record setters&#13;
can win prestige plus a handsome&#13;
patch.&#13;
In addition to the thrilling BUD,&#13;
CAN TOTE, there are four others&#13;
Get details at your favorite beer&#13;
store where you see the gaudy "Budweiser&#13;
World Championship" display!&#13;
Do one, beat the record, teU u.s about it on&#13;
a postcard and get your marker pen ready&#13;
for inscribing your particular specially beneath&#13;
where it says "World Champion"&#13;
(Maybe you',.. delecled .hcrt&#13;
this " nOf on offtCiot. rigld~ruI.1&#13;
··cont•••. " But It i,0 Jot of "'n.&#13;
e"'en if you con', break th_&#13;
rKords. You con, 'hOUVh,&#13;
can', you?)&#13;
TO on YOUlt BUDWElSEIl&#13;
WOlllD CHAItlPION PATCH&#13;
(EVEN IF YOU DON'T sa A&#13;
IlICOttD), JUST W1tm YOU.&#13;
NAME, ADDIlISS AND WHAT&#13;
YOU DID ON A P05TCAilD.&#13;
SIND&#13;
IT TO&#13;
NO NOOf Of "'lw;HAII IfOUlt(O C1HU'1000 _lU ~. lID '1"&#13;
Al'lItiLUSU.IUSQl ,1IIe • ST. lO\lIS&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
TIME FADES AWAY&#13;
Neil Young C Reprise MS 21S1)&#13;
The firSt realiz~tion ~pon bein~ exposed t~ the opening song is that .. . live material. Neil Young 1s broadcasting a warning for J.unk. !hi 15 A " Th · k. d ' ies t •·Time Fades way. e Jun 1es on t care of course they . t th3 hi ti. ht b k th · ' ' JUS d groove tot s g , ouncy roe er at 1s a stone in itself H · 11an t t . t· . e 1s ,uig with a compe en crew c~ns1s mg of John Barbata (drums) t~ Drummond (bass?, Ben Keith (s_lide g~itar and vocal), Jack&#13;
che (piano) and himself (harmonica, guitar and vocals) :,iitz ' f l b ' · . The firSt of the t~~e so t, s ow · allads that are mcluded on this&#13;
• record appears as a Journey Thru The Past." This is Neil Young's&#13;
rsonal nostalgia trip, he claims he's "goin' back to Canada" where&#13;
: came from, after the tour, and he ''won't be back 'til February&#13;
comes." · h tl ·th "Y The pace picks up s or Y w1 onder Stands The Sinner " The&#13;
i"&gt;up rocks h.ard, Neil Young tries _to pus? it even harder, a·nd his&#13;
;oice gets a little hoarse, but not ~stract!!1gly so. "The sinner" is&#13;
pparently "the Great Pretender (Nixon?), whom Neil Young, while&#13;
rsonifying Jesus, says "He calls my name without a sound."&#13;
pe The band continues to :ock on impressively with "L A" which&#13;
features Neil as a dramatic p~ophet of ?OOm for the big city. "The&#13;
mountains erupt and the valley 1s sucked mto cracks in the earth." His&#13;
captivating voi~e ~?rk~ a,~toundingly well in the same manner as it&#13;
does in songs hke Ohio.&#13;
The remainder of side 1 is reserved for "Love In Mind." This is one&#13;
of his tender ballads that at times seems to move unbearably slow.&#13;
However, it is short and if one allows himself to focus into the sensitive&#13;
emotion that is the basic part of Neil Young's aura, he may find his&#13;
race being drowned in tears.&#13;
ide 2 is filled with only three songs, of which "Don't Be Denied" and&#13;
"The Bridge" consume the first half. The first is a slow, hard plodding&#13;
rocker with an infectious chorus sinking in with Neil's earnestsounding&#13;
voice. The second is the last of his quiet reflections on the&#13;
album.&#13;
The "Last Dance" departs as the highest volume number while also&#13;
occupying the entire second half of this side. Neil forces his voice loud&#13;
and almost chokes sometimes. Graham Nash and David Crosby have&#13;
joined the band for this last number. Most of the time is used with an&#13;
elaborate instrumental concentrating on the guitars while Jack Nitzehe&#13;
adds piano frills on the edges. The whole scene is symbolic of a&#13;
spinning hangover realization that "It's a Monday morning, Time to&#13;
go to work." Neil Young freaks out a series of "Oh Nos" for the&#13;
alcoholic junkies trapped in the life of 40-hours-a-week factory jobs.&#13;
TI !E FADES A WAY, in its completion, has unfolded a compelling&#13;
sitivity with a well-balanced set. The cover credits reveal that&#13;
lhese tunes were recorded at several different locations. If this&#13;
collection is representative of a single concert, then Neil Young and&#13;
crew merit silver awards in performance.&#13;
(Record courtesy of J &amp; J Tape and Record Center)&#13;
"Dracula" lecturer&#13;
traces legend&#13;
b:&gt; Rodney Schroeter&#13;
Radu Florescu, co-author of In&#13;
arch or Dracula and history&#13;
professor at Boston University,&#13;
I lured last Friday evening on&#13;
Dracula, his place in history and&#13;
legend.&#13;
Florescu first became in·&#13;
ted in Dracula when he read&#13;
Bram Stoker's Dracula (which he&#13;
I hly recommends). He&#13;
1'COgnized the names of villages&#13;
trail which actually exist in&#13;
Romania .&#13;
":)or cu found manuscripts&#13;
ritten in ancient German,&#13;
lell'ng about "Dracula the im1&#13;
r." It told of how Vlad Tepes,&#13;
ni cknamed "Dracula,"&#13;
laughtered Turks by the&#13;
thousands in the 15th Century.&#13;
Th Turks were constantly in·&#13;
ding Dracula's country and,&#13;
~e or his many battles&#13;
against them, Dracula is con·&#13;
sidered a national hero by&#13;
Romanians, much as George&#13;
Washington is by Americans.&#13;
What Stoker did, says&#13;
Florescu, was to integr~te the&#13;
story of Vlad Tepes with the&#13;
vampire legend, for Stoker wa_s&#13;
indeed the first to ever credit&#13;
Dracula with vampirism. Most&#13;
Romanians today know of&#13;
Dracula and vampires, but do not&#13;
associate the two.&#13;
A very few copies of 1~ · ear~h&#13;
of Dracula are still available in&#13;
the bookstore. Florescu's new&#13;
book, Dracula: the Biography or&#13;
the Impaler, will be out around&#13;
Halloween. A more scholarl_y&#13;
approach by several authors is&#13;
the forthcoming, The Dracula&#13;
Debate. Radu Florescu will appear on&#13;
"The Tonight Show" on Oct. 31.&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
feature film series presents&#13;
BUTCH CASSIDY&#13;
AND THE&#13;
SUNDANCE KID&#13;
FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 8:00&#13;
SUNDAY, NOV. 4, 7:30&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING, ADMISSNJN 75c UW p &amp; W,s I O Requiried&#13;
IF YOU HAVE AN&#13;
UNUSUAL TALENT,&#13;
YOU HAVE WHAT IT&#13;
TAKES TO BEA&#13;
BUDWEISER WORLD&#13;
CHAMP,ION!&#13;
EARN THIS&#13;
TERRIFIC PATCH,&#13;
7"X6", COLORFUL,&#13;
WASHABLE, WITH&#13;
SPACE FOR WRITING&#13;
IN YOUR SPECIAL TY.&#13;
doing somelhin&#13;
age of world champio&#13;
Budweiser is&#13;
events in which&#13;
can win presti&#13;
patch.&#13;
In addition to th thrillin BUD&#13;
CAN TOTE, there nrc four othe .&#13;
Get detail a t your f v i r&#13;
store where you the ud "Budweiser&#13;
\\'orld Championship" d" play!&#13;
Do one, beat the record, tell us about it on&#13;
a po tcard and et ·our ma r r d •&#13;
for inscribing your particula r&#13;
neath where it y " 'orld harnpion."&#13;
TO GET YOUR BUDWEISER&#13;
WORLD CHAMPION PATCH&#13;
(EVEN IF YOU DON'T SET A&#13;
RECORD), JUST WRIT£ YOUR&#13;
NAME, ADDRESS AND WHAT&#13;
YOU DID ON A POSTCARD.&#13;
HO nc&gt;Of 0# ,u.l(k.Uf lt-QiW tlD Offt 't VOID tt P'I~ to • " .t.'11 l OW&#13;
4 (USU-I .sCI&lt; C • S!&#13;
.... -., . .. ..&#13;
Dl &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesclay. Oct. 31. 1973&#13;
Weekend sports&#13;
"Omfft' ('ro5 CounU')"&#13;
Park Ide freshman. Kim Piper. came home from a very successful&#13;
w end I t week. Saturday, she competed in a two-mile race at&#13;
La rcsse.which he wen with a time of 11 51&#13;
In the V.ISCOOSUl Stale Champlonslup meet Sunday. Piper won&#13;
again makq hertheAAU Women's tate Champion. She brokelhe&#13;
old 2'. mil CO""" record with a ume ct rs: 19&#13;
or&#13;
Park Ide CO!' Team uffered through a disappoinling weekend&#13;
Jut week. losi", two games&#13;
~ t....1 gam against Marquette. Parkside lost 4-1.&#13;
In the seccee game Saturday, Oct 27. Parkside booters came back&#13;
WIthanother disappointing defeat,this lime at the bands of UW-Green&#13;
Bay The ...., w... 7~&#13;
~ cor leam's neJd game will be tee UW·.! Tournamenl 00&#13;
IUrday, ·ov.3.&#13;
.&#13;
'--RANGER&#13;
sports _-,&#13;
Soccer team to&#13;
face Lewis College&#13;
b. '~.I.utnu&#13;
The Parkslde soccer tearn&#13;
m L...... College Friday al&#13;
11 30 m a series of games at a&#13;
'v.;. hlwaukee Tournament&#13;
Park Ide played LewlSCollege in&#13;
th .. flrsl game of the season and&#13;
w~ d fealed~.&#13;
Henderson dl..,ussed the&#13;
rectlrd of Lewl f&gt;olIege. "ThIs&#13;
year ~"l College is ranked as&#13;
the 7th best learn in the !id'Oesl&#13;
They hav·e the ond and Uurd&#13;
highest scorers 01 the !idweslon&#13;
the .. leam, includlng Gil Armendarez&#13;
With 17goals and John&#13;
Dolinski ... ,th t3 They are also&#13;
the number one learn in District&#13;
20."&#13;
Other leams included in the&#13;
UlA'- hlwaukee TOW11ameol v.ill&#13;
be W-Plalteville and UWMilwaukee.&#13;
The Rangers will&#13;
start the tournament by playing&#13;
Lewis College at 11:30 Friday. Al&#13;
2:00 Fnday. UW-Platteville plays&#13;
lilwaukee. Platteville's record&#13;
is 2·5. as com pared wi th&#13;
Milwaukee's 4-4 record. The&#13;
losers or both games Friday play&#13;
11:30 Salurday, followed by the&#13;
wumers at 2:00.&#13;
When commenting on last&#13;
year's game with Lewis CoUege,&#13;
Coach Henderson said, "They&#13;
were ready and we weren'l." He&#13;
also said "We gave them easy&#13;
goals that we woo't give them&#13;
next time.'"&#13;
b&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
National Cross Country&#13;
to run here on Saturday&#13;
byDanMarry&#13;
•did-America's finest runners&#13;
will compete in the combined 1973&#13;
Women's National Cross Country&#13;
Meet, and tne Men's MidAmerica&#13;
Cross Country Championships,&#13;
here at Parkside this&#13;
Saturday. Starling time for the&#13;
meet will be 10 a.m. for the&#13;
women's competition, and 12:30&#13;
for the men.&#13;
The unique factor of this meet&#13;
is that contestants don't have to&#13;
be on a team to participate. In&#13;
fact, most of the runners aren't&#13;
00 teams .&#13;
II is estimated that between 500&#13;
and 600 runners will participate&#13;
in this year's event, according to&#13;
coordinator of the meet, Vic&#13;
Godfrey. Looking at the women's&#13;
learns, favorites will have to be&#13;
UW.Madison, UW-LaCrosse,&#13;
Iowa State and Texas A&amp;M.&#13;
Looking at the women on the&#13;
teams, Kim Piper, a freshman at&#13;
parkside, who incidentally holds&#13;
the high school record nationally,&#13;
will have a good shot at first&#13;
place, along with other standou~&#13;
including Peg Neppee and Robm&#13;
Evans from Iowa State, Toni S1.&#13;
Pierre from Minnesota, and&#13;
Australian.born Adrienne Beams&#13;
from Texas A&amp;M, who consequently&#13;
held 12 world records&#13;
for her efforts.&#13;
The Men's Mid-America&#13;
Championships also has a&#13;
number of favorites. The&#13;
University of Chicago Track&#13;
Club, which includes Rick&#13;
Whulatter, the 1972 Olympic&#13;
runner who won the half-mile&#13;
event, has an excellent chance,&#13;
along with Notre Dame and&#13;
Parkside music facuJty members August Wegner&#13;
and Robert Thomason, both assistant professors,&#13;
have drawn up a fight song for the University. The&#13;
song is still awaiting the Chancellor's approval to&#13;
make it all official, but Wegner said that everyone&#13;
he's Ullked to about it has said, "Yup, tbat looks like&#13;
a fight song." These are the words:&#13;
Parkside Range ... hats off to thee,&#13;
Brave and strong, united are we,&#13;
Heads held high with spirit and pride,&#13;
Never daunted, ever onward,&#13;
Green and white will show us the way,&#13;
Banners Dying triumph tnday,&#13;
So fight and fight to shew your might,&#13;
And lead us to victory. RAH RAH RAH RY-!&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
Steale Dlnnen&#13;
'1" to '3" • Round trip jet&#13;
• 1 nights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in ZW'ich&#13;
• 2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sig~tseeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz.&#13;
• Tour eSCort&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
• LLC D-197 Can: 553-2294&#13;
~~~KH«J~AY&#13;
APIIIL 12·21, 1S'14&#13;
10 days· 8 nights&#13;
$8 pI", "" 'ax&#13;
&amp; service based on .&#13;
'2 to a room&#13;
includes:&#13;
, R'&#13;
\ I t&#13;
BONINza&#13;
smtQIRPIT~&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St.&#13;
Phone 652.8662&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Individually, Park id&#13;
"powe h .. L SI e. rouse, ucian Rosa&#13;
the defending champion ,~&#13;
could come back with an. and&#13;
replay of last year. II1llla..&#13;
Other learns who will co&#13;
include Lewis Univ mPete&#13;
M t&#13;
. erSlty arque te Umversity Uw '&#13;
Kegonsa Track Club of Mad... ,&#13;
and the Milwaukee Track ~&#13;
There also will he two&#13;
brackets in men's cornpeti~&#13;
The Veterans &amp; Maslers lioo&#13;
petition will include J.mile .....&#13;
for 30 and over, and 4Q..andr:-&#13;
runners. Favorites in er&#13;
category include defenJi'"&#13;
champ Chuck Bradley, a I..':&#13;
at Bradford High, in the 3Gover&#13;
bracket, and Hal HigdonlQd.&#13;
the 4O-and-over brackeL III&#13;
The~e is no admission eharwt&#13;
~or this m~t, so if an)'Onra&#13;
mterest,e? In seeing some fiDt&#13;
competition, you're more tbII&#13;
welcome. Anyone who mightbe&#13;
IOterested m running in the&#13;
should contact Vic Godfrey.1lIOeI&#13;
I&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Oct. 31, 1973&#13;
eekend sports NatiQnal Cross Country&#13;
to run here on Saturday&#13;
m&#13;
RA&#13;
m born from a \ ery uccessful&#13;
com ed in a two-nule race at&#13;
11 :51.&#13;
II be the&#13;
unday, Piper won&#13;
mpi . b e th&#13;
· ppointing ee end&#13;
'-Green&#13;
- I T mament on&#13;
GER&#13;
b) Dan ~larry&#13;
ti&lt;I-America's finest runners&#13;
v.i ll compete in the combined 1973&#13;
Women's , ·ational Cro.ss Country&#13;
feet, and the .fen's MidAmerica&#13;
Cross Country Championship&#13;
. here at Parkside this&#13;
Saturda:y Starting time for the&#13;
meet ill be 10 a.m. for the&#13;
·omen's competition, and 12:30&#13;
for the men.&#13;
The unique factor of this meet&#13;
i that contestants don't have to&#13;
be on a team to participate. In&#13;
fact, most of the runners aren't&#13;
on teams.&#13;
Iowa State and Texas A&amp;M.&#13;
Looking at the women on the&#13;
teams, Kim Piper, a freshman at&#13;
Parkside, who incidentally holds&#13;
the high school record nationally,&#13;
will have a good shot at first&#13;
place, along with other standouts&#13;
including Peg Neppee and Robin&#13;
Evans from Iowa State, Toni St.&#13;
Pierre from Minnesota, and&#13;
Australian-born Adrienne Beams&#13;
from Texas A&amp;M, who consequently&#13;
held 12 world records&#13;
for her efforts.&#13;
The Men's Mid-America&#13;
,__ __________ Sports ___&#13;
It is estimated that between 500&#13;
and 600 runners will participate&#13;
in thi year' event, according to&#13;
coordinator of the meet, Vic&#13;
Godfr y. Looking at the women's&#13;
team ·, favorites will have to be&#13;
UW-, 1adi on, UW-LaCrosse,&#13;
Championships also has a&#13;
number of favorites. The&#13;
University of Chicago Track&#13;
Club, which includes Rick&#13;
Whulatter, the 1972 Olympic&#13;
runner who won the half-mile&#13;
event, has an excellent chance,&#13;
along with Notre Dame and&#13;
Socc r team to&#13;
face ewis College&#13;
n commenting on la t&#13;
year' game v.i th Lev.i College,&#13;
Coach Hend said, "They&#13;
;-ere ready and we ·eren't.'' He&#13;
also _aid " We gave them easy&#13;
oa _ that 11, w 't give them&#13;
next time.''&#13;
Parkside music faculty members August Wegner&#13;
and Robert Thomason, both assistant professors,&#13;
have drawn up a fight song for the University. The&#13;
song is till awaiting the Chancellor's approval to&#13;
make it all official, but Wegner said that everyone&#13;
he' talked to about it has said, "Yup, that looks like&#13;
a fight song. " These are the words:&#13;
Parkside Rangers hats off to thee,&#13;
Brave and strong, united are we,&#13;
Heads held high with spirit and pride,&#13;
, 'ever daunted, ever onward,&#13;
Green and white will show us the way,&#13;
Banners flying triwnph today,&#13;
So fight and fight to shew your might,&#13;
And lead us to victory. RAH RAH RAH RY- !&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
M mber Parkside 200&#13;
'atiooal a rsity Chili&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
~~~K ~Ut&gt;AY&#13;
APlllL 12-21, 19'7(&#13;
10 days - 8 nights&#13;
$499 plus S20 tax&#13;
&amp; service based on · 2 to a room includes:&#13;
Steak Dinners&#13;
•1 79 to '3" • Round trip jet&#13;
CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; 52nd St&#13;
Phone 652-8662 . ·&#13;
"WHERE 1'HE COWBOYS FAT/'&#13;
• 7 nights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
• 2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sightseeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz. • Tour escort&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVELCENTER&#13;
a LLC D-197 </text>
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              <text>State gifts go with job of chancellor</text>
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              <text>p'" car. aIr condltloners. ••&#13;
State gifts go with [eb of chancellor&#13;
by Mike Olszyk&#13;
"11Ieless I know about the chancellor, the better&#13;
cif 1am," was the statement made by one physical&#13;
plantworker when asked to describe Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie'splace of residence. Although this was his&#13;
..... rePly,it seems fair to ~aythat of the university&#13;
rsonne1contacted, a majority expressed similar&#13;
\':.JinIls of paranoia. There was a tendency to shy&#13;
BYfrom what constitutes Wyllie's personal&#13;
~ions, and where state dollars go, in terms of&#13;
"mces provided the chancellor. Wha t follows&#13;
IbeO is as Wyllie himself puts it, "part of standard&#13;
~ure and general maintenance in integrity of&#13;
cJlIlpus ll1ildings.'.' '"&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. IrVIO G. Wylhe live 10 a multi-level&#13;
bolDe&#13;
in a thicld~ wooded section of the University&#13;
IiWisconsin-parkside property. Market valued at&#13;
S42800,the white frame house is on Hy. E., on the&#13;
.... tbe8st boundaries of the university's 690 acres.&#13;
lI'bi1emaking the house adaptable to the family,&#13;
twO rooms were recarpeted and the electrical&#13;
~eII1 upgraded. Installation of an. electric range,&#13;
and three small industrial-sIzed aIr conditioners&#13;
plUSone portable unit, made this necessary. Ex:&#13;
dudingthese major appliances, the Wyllies own the&#13;
refrigerator, dishwasher, and 75-80 percent of the&#13;
boUSe'. furniture.&#13;
Cost to the WliveI'sity :n operating the residence&#13;
011. monthly basis is: electricity, $68.09; and oil&#13;
124.47.11Ie chancellor is also free from property&#13;
taXes aDd maintenance costs.&#13;
Intended to be only temporary, Wyllie describes&#13;
tbe homeas, "the least substantial in camparision&#13;
ONE HOUSE This is th hi&#13;
cellar and Mr~·.·Wyllie re:j~"tte frame home on Hy. E .. ben Cbaewi~h&#13;
cbanceltors' residences throughout the&#13;
university system." Lack of a separate dining&#13;
roo~, limited storage space, and no study. forces&#13;
Wyllie to use the next door "conference bome"&#13;
along with other administrative offici.ls. This&#13;
center hosts conferences, staff meetings, and large&#13;
scale dinner engagements.&#13;
When Parkside purchased land in 1966,to build Its&#13;
architecturally designed odyssey on, it was dooe&#13;
With the understanding that, within three to four&#13;
years, 60 to 80 feet along Hy. E's northern bank&#13;
would be relinquished to the Kenosha County Hlgbway&#13;
Department for road improvements. Presently&#13;
postponed for an indefinite period, chancellor's&#13;
residence and conference center none the less voW&#13;
Segregated fees&#13;
explained&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown&#13;
Union Reserve&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts .&#13;
StudentHealth&#13;
Busing and Parking .&#13;
Athletics .&#13;
InlramuraIs .&#13;
StudentActivities&#13;
StudentGroup Support&#13;
......... .. $38.50&#13;
. 1.50&#13;
.. 2.00&#13;
......... ..18.00&#13;
. .. 9.00&#13;
. '........ . .. 8.00&#13;
............... . 9.00&#13;
............ 2.00&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
A latal of $88 will be taken out&#13;
Iithe tuition this year of students&#13;
enrolled in twelve or more&#13;
tndits. Students carrying less&#13;
than twelve credits will have the&#13;
lIIIlOlDltpro-rated. The money is&#13;
used for financing various&#13;
•• greg.ted fee-supported&#13;
programs.&#13;
The only change that has been&#13;
madethis year is that 50 cents&#13;
.as deleted from the Lecture and&#13;
FineArts Committee and put into&#13;
1he Student Activities fund. That&#13;
dlang. was made because the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Com·&#13;
nuttee is composed. primarily of&#13;
fatuity members, whereas&#13;
tegregated fee money comes&#13;
frOIll the students and it was felt&#13;
lhat IbeStudent Activities Board&#13;
tI more student orientated.&#13;
~ Union Reserve is money&#13;
bemg set aside for Parks ide's&#13;
now Union which will be under&#13;
-netion beginning in the&#13;
Constitutional&#13;
referendum&#13;
Passed&#13;
The results of the Constitutional&#13;
Referendum were&#13;
:,",nced last Friday by PSGA.&#13;
motions passed, with 7 per·&#13;
: of the student body voting.&#13;
t1 QuorumChange, passed 295- c4mDeletIOnof the Student Union&#13;
Co IIlUtee, passed .253-71,&#13;
liernblnmg the positions ot&#13;
cording Secretary and&#13;
~ing Secretary into one&#13;
• ~Uve position passed 274-&#13;
.-:::: the Election time change,&#13;
277-44.&#13;
Total $88.00&#13;
summer of 1974. The health&#13;
allotment is used to pay half of&#13;
the salary of the nurse and&#13;
provides money for health&#13;
supplies and expenses, The intramural&#13;
sports program.&#13;
salaries for coaches involved&#13;
with intramural athletics,&#13;
referees, and other finances&#13;
needed to carry out the in·&#13;
tram ural suports program&#13;
Varsity athletics receives&#13;
segregated fee money for a&#13;
portion of coaches' salaries,&#13;
travel expenses, awards and&#13;
uniforms; other money for&#13;
varsity athletics is received from&#13;
the state. (The state money will&#13;
be discontinued next year,)&#13;
Student Group Support money is&#13;
used to finance various student&#13;
organizations, The division of&#13;
money among student&#13;
organizations is decided by the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
-Inslde-&#13;
"The Virus" reviewed--&#13;
"neither ordinary nor&#13;
extraordinaryJI page 4&#13;
Impeachment and other&#13;
Presidential problems--an&#13;
interview with three&#13;
Parkside political&#13;
scientists page 5&#13;
Film Society reels to roll&#13;
page 7&#13;
"Th~ Raven" and "The&#13;
Mo\'ement" are not included in&#13;
this week's issue due to sll:ortage&#13;
or SDace.&#13;
be torn dolO" 1O'hen th highway ",.d&#13;
Yet 10 1!Jr1, Wylli and the u,wv I&#13;
good Idea to bulId • ..".....te garage&#13;
evenlually-1&lt;&gt;-be-condemned I'Sldence To add 10&#13;
eleetne expenses, they ~Jpped It ,.,th an&#13;
automatic openmg door and ~1ec:1nC!lntmg (not In&#13;
operal1OO • The conf.... rce &lt;:enter has an .ttached&#13;
garage, but it ..... apparently lOC'Ortveru~ 10&#13;
Wylli. to park hIS an the""&#13;
"Gdt Home" to be' Pro\iclf'd&#13;
A "gift home" to be prov"led the ~lIor Is&#13;
Sb!I m the hands of 11S0"'".r, "8. Whllakrr, a&#13;
member of the eomrmuee ~ foe&#13;
eslablisbing Partslde'sloc:auon Willed ptember&#13;
30, 1972,the manston becomes the offlCal ~&#13;
of tbe dIancelkr ",nen the WbltUen pass ...&#13;
Considered by ardutectural Uthontl to be one of&#13;
the finest eumpl of tr.dJOOllal TIdor ...&#13;
chuecruee lD the mid . the hom. f.. _.&#13;
authentic Enghsh mas&lt;lQJ')', "O()(\ pandlJlll and&#13;
garden landscaping. It fae LaIt~ MI(:h an •• t 115&#13;
68th PI m Kenosha&#13;
U the SllustiOll would anse that the chanc:ellor&#13;
forced to move fore the \\:ll1taker t. becomes&#13;
a&lt;:cesstble, be could dra • prwlte !&gt;oualqI&#13;
allowance, monthly, ol appr011.1malelyS7G0.from&#13;
\\-lSCOIlSlOUnlvenIl) President, John Weaver.&#13;
The cost lD mamLe.....nee of the \\bltaker estate&#13;
would probably be substantiaUy tugber com·&#13;
pared 10 W}ih.'s ~nt resIdence Ellllen'btu .....&#13;
&amp;rOtmdWyllie's house a~ S8jd to be ( \It; and mu'KJl"&#13;
mee July, upkeepol h resIdence has .mounted to&#13;
$19921.&#13;
Grounds crev., po lbl. foethe ,.-elJ.kfllllawn&#13;
CODtUruedOD pq. 3&#13;
The Parksidlee-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973Vol. II No. 10&#13;
HearingNov.'6&#13;
Mission statement amended&#13;
The draft of the nev. mission&#13;
statement for Parkside, upon&#13;
which the Regents' 'ov 16&#13;
hearing will be based, has been&#13;
altered somewhat from the one&#13;
printed in last week's RASGER.&#13;
The new language is as follows.&#13;
(aJ The Universlly should offer&#13;
a distinctive academic program&#13;
which includes liberal afts&#13;
degrees and provides specific&#13;
educational support for the&#13;
economiC, technological&#13;
scientific. and cultural needs of&#13;
an industrial society.&#13;
cb) The University should&#13;
develop a distinct programmahc&#13;
focus on the economic.&#13;
lechnolo~cal, and managerial&#13;
need&gt; and mIcros of mduobJ·&#13;
based societies&#13;
4c) The em "ersily should oller&#13;
undergraduate programs In&#13;
engineering technolog~ Bnd&#13;
bUSiness admimstratlon. In·&#13;
cluding I.bor ""Iallon&#13;
•d I The Cni, ersltl hou1d ba'.&#13;
a commitment to program.&#13;
dIrected to",ard meet.ng th~&#13;
manp"" er need&gt; 01 Induotn.1&#13;
.oelet) and a. ~1511ng It&#13;
eL"Ooomlc grov. th&#13;
(eJ The lOnl\ r ity hou1d&#13;
support apphcalloo of scholar!}&#13;
actiVities In . tt"Ct 31rt'3 of&#13;
kno" ledge, e pc lalll oClal,&#13;
cultural. technological, and&#13;
envlronmtnlal probltm. of&#13;
WEAC plan revealed&#13;
The WEAC IWlsconslO&#13;
Education Association). a&#13;
faculty union. will present a plan&#13;
to make all of the campuses '" the&#13;
UW system as equal as possible,&#13;
at campus mission hearmgs In&#13;
November and December&#13;
Parkside's hearing will be on&#13;
Friday mommg, '0\", 16 The&#13;
plan's major recommendauons&#13;
include:&#13;
"\0 program or campus should&#13;
be given preferential treatment if&#13;
the UW system is in fact to be one&#13;
system.&#13;
Students should be able to&#13;
transfer credits among all&#13;
universities within the system&#13;
All diplomas should be- coo·&#13;
ferred by the UW system and not&#13;
by the individual campuses.&#13;
Internal procedures should be&#13;
established to eliminate the&#13;
current climate of mistrust and&#13;
disrespect between the doctoriaJ&#13;
cluler campuses - . 1.dlSOn and&#13;
~lIlwaukee - and the WllH~nlly&#13;
du ter camp s&#13;
Prof ors 'aid oU at oae&#13;
campu.&gt; of the t;W should be&#13;
lured by other campu. ~1th&#13;
vacanCies before the other&#13;
campuses go out Ide for per'&#13;
soonel&#13;
..\tlea t once e\tr) (our )ears.&#13;
me central awmmstratlon and&#13;
mdlvidual campus ad·&#13;
ministrations hould un'ey&#13;
WisconSIn conSumer in&#13;
business. labor. educauon and&#13;
go\·emment as ",ell as alwnnt&#13;
parents and tlJdenlS to see bov;&#13;
well t:\\ p~rams are meetlf1i,&#13;
the needs of society&#13;
The LW should place more&#13;
emphaSIS on contlOuing&#13;
education so that each campus&#13;
could offer undergr.duate and&#13;
graduate courses full tim ... lid&#13;
part time, at rught and dUrIng th~&#13;
SlIffim r&#13;
Th~ t" bould C'O.tlIlUf&#13;
oper.uon 01 etbOlC I&#13;
campu. , IOcludlng th r tI .&#13;
closed nt.... for hi ck luden&#13;
on the lad""" campus.&#13;
Gr du Ie and und rHa.lf&#13;
progr.m hould ",,0 1 th lob&#13;
market more than thel do !IO'o'&#13;
All ludfftt go\"emmeat can&#13;
didat.t art' rrqvnttd to ubmi'&#13;
th, ... pl.tform to R '\GJ::R by&#13;
Thunda,. \ .• in order to&#13;
hale them pubU hed ill. pedal&#13;
campaign I D. the follo .. 1na&#13;
l\tdM:sday. Pictur IN' al.&#13;
rt'q.~ ltd • R. SGER&#13;
plIologr.ph..... ill be ".U.b1.ti1&#13;
lLC 01". Oil 'nlon4ay. '0\.&#13;
rrom 11:.3:31 and Fri4lay •• '.\0.&#13;
f f",AI 1.:.11 :31. e-plet~&#13;
'-taU ar.,.-.. PSG '&#13;
office ..... LL ma.&#13;
JJJ!l.!e« car, air conditioners ...&#13;
5tate gifts go with iob of chance lor&#13;
by Mike Olszyk&#13;
••'J'he Jess I know about the chancellor, the better&#13;
orr 1 am "was the statement made by one physical&#13;
ant w~rker when ~sked to describe Chancellor&#13;
~ Jlie's place of res1~ence. Although this was his&#13;
Y reply it seems fair to say that of the university ov.n ' ed · · rsonnel contact , a maJor1ty expressed similar&#13;
leelings of paranoia. The~e was a te~dency to shy&#13;
away from what constitutes Wyllie'~ personal&#13;
ssessions, and where state dollars go, m terms of&#13;
iX' rvices provided the chancellor. What follows&#13;
:en. is as Wyllie himself p_uts it, "pa~t of standard&#13;
~ure and general mamtenance m integrity of&#13;
campus buildings.'.' . . . Dr. and Mrs. Irvm G. Wylhe live m a multi-level&#13;
11ome in a thickly wooded section of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside property. Market valued at&#13;
$42 800, the white frame house is on Hy. E., on the&#13;
southeast boundaries of the university's 690 acres.&#13;
While making the house adaptable to the family,&#13;
two rooms were recarpeted and the electrical&#13;
,stem upgraded. Installation of an electric range,&#13;
and three small industrial-sized air conditioners&#13;
plus one portable unit, made this necessary. Ex:&#13;
eluding these major appliances, the Wyllies own the&#13;
refrigerator, dishwasher, and 75-80 percent of the&#13;
house's furniture.&#13;
Cost to the university :.n operating the residence&#13;
on a monthly basis is: _electricity, $68.09; and oil,&#13;
$24.47. The chancellor 1s also free from property&#13;
taxes and maintenance costs.&#13;
Intended to be only temporary, Wyllie describes&#13;
the home as, "the least substantial in comparision&#13;
ONE HOUSE Th" · •·• 1 1 the \\bite frame home on H&#13;
cellor and Mrs. Wyllie re ide. .&#13;
with chancellors' re idence throu hout th&#13;
university system." Lack of a separate dining&#13;
room, limited storage pace and no tudy fore&#13;
Wyllie to use the next doo; ''conference' horn "&#13;
along with other ad.mini trative officials. Th'&#13;
center hosts conferences, taff meetin , nd larg&#13;
scale dinner engagements.&#13;
When Parkside purchased land in 1 to build i&#13;
ru:chitecturally designed ody_ : on, it a&#13;
with the understanding that, ¼-ithin three to four&#13;
years, 60 to 80 feet along Hy. E' n rthem ba&#13;
would be relinquished to the Ken ha Count\' H -&#13;
way Department for road improvements. Present!)&#13;
postponed for an indefinite period, chancell •&#13;
residence and conference center none the I ill&#13;
Segregated fees The Parksid e------- ...&#13;
explained RANGE&#13;
Segregated Fee Yearly Breakdown&#13;
Union Reserve ...................................... ..... ..... $38.50&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts ........................................... 1.50&#13;
udent Health .............. . ............... ....... ... .......... 2.00&#13;
Bu ing and Parking ............................................ 18.00&#13;
thletics ................ ... .................................... 9.00&#13;
Intramurals ........................... . ... ... .... ............... 8.00&#13;
Student Activities ..................... .......................... 9.00&#13;
Student Group Support .................... . ..... . .............. 2.00&#13;
by Debra Frieden&#13;
A total of $88 will be taken out&#13;
of the tuition this year of students&#13;
enrolled in twelve or more&#13;
credits. Students carrying less&#13;
than twelve credits will have the&#13;
amoW1t pro-rated. The money is&#13;
u ed for financing various&#13;
gregated fee-supported&#13;
)l'ograms.&#13;
The only change that has been&#13;
made this year is that 50 cents&#13;
w deleted from the Lecture and&#13;
F e Arts Committee and put into&#13;
th ludent Activities fund. That&#13;
change was made because the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committ&#13;
e I composed primarily of&#13;
!acuity members, whereas&#13;
ated fee money comes&#13;
from the students and it was felt&#13;
that the Student Activities Board&#13;
more student orientated.&#13;
Th Union Reserve is money&#13;
lng .et aside for Parkside's&#13;
new Union which will be under&#13;
COO truction beginning in the&#13;
Constitutiona I&#13;
referendum&#13;
Passed&#13;
The results of the Conhtutional&#13;
Referendum were&#13;
I OUIK'.ed last Friday by PSGA. 1 motions passed, with 7 perlbet&#13;
of the student body voting.&#13;
27 Quo~um Change, passed 295-&#13;
Co Deletion of the Student Union&#13;
0 nt~iUee, passed . 2S.3-71,&#13;
R mbining the positions ot&#13;
~cording. Secretary and&#13;
no re ponding Secretary into one&#13;
n-elective position passed 274-&#13;
, and the Election time change,&#13;
pa 277-44.&#13;
Total $88.00&#13;
summer of 1974. The health&#13;
allotment is used to pay half of&#13;
the salary of the nurse and&#13;
provides money for health&#13;
supplies and expenses. The intramural&#13;
sports program.&#13;
salaries for coaches involved&#13;
with intramural athletics,&#13;
referees, and other finances&#13;
needed to carry out the intra&#13;
mural suports program.&#13;
Varsity athletics receives&#13;
segregated fee money for a&#13;
portion of coaches' salaries,&#13;
travel expenses, awards and&#13;
uniforms; other money for&#13;
varsity athletics is received from&#13;
the state. &lt;The state money will&#13;
be discontinued next year.&gt;&#13;
Student Group Support money is&#13;
used to finance various student&#13;
organizations. The division of&#13;
money among student&#13;
organizations is decided by the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee.&#13;
- Inside--&#13;
"The Virus" reviewed--&#13;
"nei the r ordinary nor&#13;
extraordinary" page 4&#13;
Impeachment and other&#13;
Presidential problems--an&#13;
interview with th ree&#13;
Parkside political&#13;
scientists pages&#13;
Film Society reels to roll&#13;
page 7&#13;
"The Ra,·en" and "The&#13;
MO\·ement" are not included in&#13;
this week's issue due to skortage&#13;
of space.&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
Hearing Nov. I 6&#13;
Mission statement amended&#13;
WEAC plan revealed&#13;
The&#13;
system&#13;
WEAC&#13;
A&#13;
· tudent hould ~ abl, t&#13;
transfer credit among all&#13;
univers1tie \\ithm the y t m, All diploma bould b conferred&#13;
by the W S). tern and not&#13;
bY the individual campu&#13;
·1nt,mal proc,dur hould be&#13;
established to eliminate th&#13;
current climate of mi trust and&#13;
clisre peel between the doctorial &#13;
'-'&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973&#13;
RA GER&#13;
'- ---EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
o ential for&#13;
theatre is great&#13;
"The Virus" has come and gone, and appears not to&#13;
h ve been catching. But. words of praise are due for the&#13;
cast. the stage crew and other supportive personnel for&#13;
th or extraordinary efforts in this inaugural production&#13;
at the Cornm Arts Theater. While all did not come off as&#13;
well as was hoped, the potential for theatre at Parkside&#13;
was demonstrated. and that potenllal is great.&#13;
Although two more ma lor productions have been&#13;
planned tor next spring, "Harvey" and "The&#13;
Boyfriend," students have expressed interest In staging&#13;
more original plays such as "The Virus," which was&#13;
written by Parkslde professor Herbert Kubly. One&#13;
suggestion might be that students submit scripts that&#13;
they themselves have written, to a student committee&#13;
which would select a play for production. The student&#13;
committee might also name a student director and stage&#13;
crew. The director would then name his or her own cast&#13;
after lTy.outs. Perhaps credits could be given in English&#13;
or drama to the playwright and director. This then.&#13;
would be a total student effort with only minimal advice&#13;
from faculty.&#13;
RANGE R supports any efiort Parks Ide students make&#13;
to learn, create. work and do on their own. Only when&#13;
they make the attempt to use. on their own, that which&#13;
they've been taught in classes, can real learning take&#13;
place.&#13;
In others' worcl.&#13;
Does merger mean&#13;
hIgher costs?&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
We get&#13;
To 'The Editor:&#13;
The show goes on. The&#13;
American people thrill to each&#13;
new installment of the IORich~d&#13;
Nixon Magic Hour." Tricky DIck,&#13;
as the renowned sleight of hand&#13;
artist is known. mystifies his&#13;
audiences with his ability to&#13;
make congressional appropriations&#13;
vanish into thin air.&#13;
A wave of his hand and poo!!, B·&#13;
52S are rendered invisible (they&#13;
too vanish, into cambodian air).&#13;
Dick is also noted for his memory&#13;
tricks.&#13;
In recent weeks he has stunned&#13;
all observers with some samples&#13;
from his new bag of tricks. In a&#13;
rare Saturday night performance,&#13;
Dick, using a can of&#13;
whitewash as his only prop.&#13;
caused three justice department&#13;
officials to disappear from offices&#13;
that were padlocked and guarded&#13;
by F.B.I. agents (that happened&#13;
later, but it was still a pretty good&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In response to Debra Friedell's&#13;
pomt of view regarding the&#13;
communication major at&#13;
Parkside I share her concern for&#13;
the type of communication major&#13;
we presently have. However I'm&#13;
disaPPOinted in several of the&#13;
Implications from Debra's "point&#13;
of view." As I understand it, the&#13;
cornmunlcatioo major is the only&#13;
"interdisciplinary" major in our&#13;
division and this fact seems to&#13;
make it a desireable alternative&#13;
to very narrow and-or&#13;
specifically structured majors.&#13;
The reason why I think this is now&#13;
a "destreable" alternative is&#13;
simply that many job markets in.&#13;
our economy now call for people&#13;
with a more general or broad&#13;
background in a particular field.&#13;
Were it financially possible for&#13;
us to do so, we would certainly&#13;
like to oller more courses in the&#13;
areas mentioned in Ms. Friedell's&#13;
article. At the present time this is&#13;
nnt possible. As is probably true&#13;
letters&#13;
Ifckl Thinking that this might&#13;
n~ta~aze the people sufficiently,&#13;
he then took nine ordinary tape&#13;
recordings, muttered th.~magic&#13;
wordS HBe-Be Re-Bo-ZO and, 10&#13;
and behold, only seven tapes&#13;
remained. The only ones not&#13;
joining in the applause were the&#13;
rather humorless type~ on the&#13;
House Judiciary CommIttee.&#13;
When people ask Dick where he&#13;
got his mystical JX&gt;wers, he IS&#13;
likely to shrug his shoulders •.and&#13;
reply with ~ impish grm, ,?h,&#13;
executive privilege, I guess.&#13;
Unfortunately for lovers of&#13;
dirty tricks, Richard's recent&#13;
performances h~ve go.tten lousy&#13;
reviews, and his ratmgs have&#13;
dropped alarmingly. We are&#13;
forced to reluctantly conclude&#13;
that the time has come to. bring&#13;
the curtain down on Richard&#13;
Nixon's act. Daniel Nielsen,&#13;
Franksville&#13;
in practically every discipline on&#13;
campus, continuous efforts are&#13;
being made in the communication&#13;
discipline to revise,&#13;
update, and-or add new cours~&#13;
to our curriculum. However, this&#13;
revision of major must, of&#13;
necessity, face the constraints of&#13;
legislative good will since the&#13;
state lawmakers ultimately&#13;
make decisions about financial&#13;
support for higher education. As&#13;
is the case with most discipline in&#13;
our division, we in communication&#13;
are again revising&#13;
our major but changes on paper&#13;
will be meaningless unless we&#13;
have the power (faculty memo&#13;
bers to teach specialized courses)&#13;
to implement the changes or&#13;
revisions in the communication&#13;
major.&#13;
Finally, in reference to the idea&#13;
of "distinctiveness" in a major, I&#13;
must disagree with Ms. Friedell's&#13;
implication that the communication&#13;
major is not distinctive.&#13;
In comparing other comTo&#13;
Tbe Editor:&#13;
Is there sucK' a tb1Dg&#13;
student contract? Iwould: •&#13;
know the limits for teache to&#13;
making assignments. n lQ&#13;
To get specific, I am enroll&#13;
one of Herbert Kubly's I ed 111&#13;
Hehas assigned everyone&lt;: a~&#13;
hi.s cl~~ses to see his pla~~~ or&#13;
Virus, and review it. Thisi Th~&#13;
but it costs $1.50. ,r...&#13;
$1.50 may not seem like&#13;
to most, but if you are a s~Ucb&#13;
working 5 or 10 hours per w ent&#13;
can upset your budget. Even~ II&#13;
doesn't, as a matter of prin "pl n&#13;
don't think any teacher sbo~d01&#13;
allowed to make assign he&#13;
that costs the students m:,eall&#13;
unless this requirement is t)&#13;
clear in the student cataJo;:'de&#13;
at least in the first weJite or&#13;
classes. of&#13;
In this particular case 1 thirt&#13;
Mr. Kubly is trying to helpil1SUl!&#13;
that his play will be a box of!&#13;
success by assigning aU 0( ::&#13;
students to buy tickets for his&#13;
play. Also consider that "ell&#13;
student will probahly bring .1&#13;
least one guest.&#13;
Name withheld upon request.&#13;
(Roprlale4lrom lIle UW·!\I Post&gt;&#13;
Po er Is the name 01. the game and its future allocation to students&#13;
and faculty under the merger implementation bill will be &gt;"rY int~g&#13;
to watch.&#13;
For the faculty here. there will be many de\"lopments, Ulc1udingthe&#13;
formabon 01. tbe UllIverslty'S JIUSSlonstatement. and decisions&#13;
reprdm the adcbbon 01. graduate programs.&#13;
WIUle it .. ill last, the tenure system may undergo some&#13;
modlflcauons The probable future advent 01. collective bargaining&#13;
Into the ystem for faculty members ..ill undoubtedly influence&#13;
higher educat,on m some yet unforseen way'S.&#13;
On conl.ro&gt;..-sial proposal .. ill concern the student rights section&#13;
which th laculty senato has already endorsed. UDlted Council, which&#13;
pusltmg the bU!, a hopeful portent of the pressure of student&#13;
opUUOD Oft tate go,·emments and institutions.&#13;
Workmg out the details IS yet another matter. Already a difference&#13;
In rpr&lt;tabon is d....·e1oplngo\"r the admiJustralJon ol segregated&#13;
f funds G '-'es Ion 36. I~I .. hich gives students, "in&#13;
&lt;anlUltation .. ,th the chancellor," the rigbt to spend those "student&#13;
f .. h,ch consbtute 'lJbstanbal upport for student campus ac·&#13;
1I\It! .. to 1n&lt;'ludesegregated acth'lty rees ....hile the administration&#13;
he _'t&#13;
'I'M ..ordlng 01. the biD clearly gIves students the right to spend&#13;
regated aet1\'lly lees 'The phrase, "in consultatioo With the&#13;
~lIor, .."",,.dea a suffiCIent safeguard to prevent abuse of the "Just onc.e ICJ like to be on t.he&#13;
....luI th bill', unplementabon ",ill take a long time. the .. hole 1~:;~~~~.s~id~e;;;;t;h;;o;t;';S=;W~i;n;n;;ih~9;:!:-:=;;;;;;;=~..&#13;
proctSS ould begm as soon as possible.&#13;
o of the bill houId sene the further I&gt;UfllOS" 01. mobilizing&#13;
tudent op Uan to unnecessary twtlon hikes. In October, the DO YOU h&#13;
CommIt for EconomiC Development ICED) recommended that ave quest-Ion&#13;
tUIUOO and fees be in&lt;:reased ",ithin the next five )-ear5 to pay for 50&#13;
rc-ent&#13;
\er&#13;
of 1t\Str'Udlmal costs&#13;
twtlan for undergraduates, at a rate 01 $413 a semester a ou b t stu ent relghts d&#13;
ould mcru to _ under this proposal. While clea rly mflabonary'&#13;
h an in ......ud also make.t set!m that students 111 a quest f~ and powe r?&#13;
.. t Is rightfully theirs. ar-e the perpetuators of higher costs. This&#13;
impress&gt;on would be Inaccurate Cbance1lor Sauro bas already&#13;
led th propDIBl "morally abilomlnL" C de&#13;
..... Itln h her coots for tudents, whether&#13;
It would be IroniC for a merger" ruch was&#13;
111&#13;
effected to save money to&#13;
tuition ... m fees Or does&#13;
a n Idat es Fo'rum&#13;
po,..r C06t more' Wed., Nov. 14 2:30-4:00 LLCD185&#13;
munication majors througb(u&#13;
the count~y I have found Ihol&#13;
P.ar.ksl?e s major is, indeed.&#13;
d.ish~ctlve and-or innovativeIII&#13;
relation to course offeringsIDd&#13;
our university mission. In short.&#13;
we are trying to keep up withlilt&#13;
'~real world" even though there.&#13;
bound to be a time lag bet_&#13;
the revision of a major and the&#13;
implementation of the ne.&#13;
major.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
E. Scott Baudhuin&#13;
Assistant Professor of Com·&#13;
munication&#13;
P.S. We welcome student.&#13;
about our major.&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Let's clean up Americafor""&#13;
200th Anniversary! 'ThePeoPs&#13;
Bicentennial Commission ..&#13;
planning a birlhday part7&#13;
America will never forget - •&#13;
second American Revolutioallr&#13;
1976.&#13;
'The political fervor oftbo ....&#13;
Woodstock the Watkin" Gloa.&#13;
were just a dress rettearUIf.&#13;
what's coming up. 'Il1e bi&lt;8-&#13;
teonial of the AmenCli&#13;
Revolution comes on the beeb Ii&#13;
Watergate dislocations in to&#13;
economy,' and .increased&#13;
cynicism and alienation 10-&#13;
corporate and political II'&#13;
stitutions in America.&#13;
So put July 4th, 1976 on lcalendar.&#13;
We have three l.... =&#13;
return this country to .' .nd I' revolutionary origins&#13;
make our place in histor)'- 0101&#13;
It's going to take car&#13;
preparation. Firsl, all of~m~&#13;
must be reminded that ~eart •&#13;
nation of people born II!'&#13;
Revolution ..second, wem~&#13;
the groundwork for a new dill&#13;
movement that will turD&#13;
country around. ri&lt;JlS \IlIf&#13;
Join with the newpat . . 101&#13;
build the birthday thai will ~&#13;
around the world. 'Thoma:,.ut&lt;'&#13;
Abigail Adams and&#13;
Henry had their mQl1lOlll&#13;
it's our tur~. B' eat....&#13;
The NIXon ~c a.-I!&#13;
Commission ISspen'::a"&#13;
of dollars to rn&#13;
space for their TarY .....&#13;
With your help wecao--&#13;
Let America" ..&#13;
revolutionaries apeIk&#13;
Peoples Bicentennial ue&#13;
1346 Connecticut A~ ,&#13;
Washington, D.C.&#13;
Room 1025&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973&#13;
a o&#13;
• ea re ea t&#13;
rom facul&#13;
RANGER upports any effort Par side students make&#13;
o I rn, er ork and do on their own. Only when&#13;
h a empt o use, on their own, that which&#13;
n taught in classes, can real learning take&#13;
In others' w o rds&#13;
Does merger mean&#13;
higher costs?&#13;
ud r the t . t P o&#13;
future allocation to tudents&#13;
on bill will be \-ery ininclud·&#13;
the&#13;
and decisions&#13;
We get&#13;
To The Editor: The how goes on. The&#13;
American people thrill to each&#13;
new in tallment of the "Richard&#13;
1. ·on 1agic Hour." Tricky Dick, the renowned sleight of hand&#13;
arti is known. mystifies his&#13;
audiences with his ability to&#13;
ma e congressional ap·&#13;
propriations vanish into thin air.&#13;
-ave of hi hand and poof!, B·&#13;
52.s are rendered invisible (they&#13;
too vanish, into Cambodian air).&#13;
D1 • i al. noted for his memory&#13;
tri . In recent weeks he has stunned&#13;
all o rvers with some samples&#13;
from hi!= new bag of tricks. In a&#13;
rare aturday night per·&#13;
form nee, Dick, using a can of&#13;
whit a a his only prop,&#13;
ca ed three justice department&#13;
officials to disappear from offices&#13;
that ere padlocked and guarded&#13;
by F.B.I. agents (that happened&#13;
lat , but it wa till a pretty good&#13;
To th Editor:&#13;
ln r ·pon. to Debra Friedell's&#13;
poin of view regarding the&#13;
communication major at&#13;
Park ide I hare her concern for&#13;
the t:pe of communication major&#13;
pr ntly have. However I'm&#13;
di!!appointed in everal of the&#13;
implication from Debra's "point&#13;
,iew." As I understand it, the&#13;
communication major is the only&#13;
" in erd" ciplinary'' major in our&#13;
dh·· ion and this fact seems to&#13;
m e it a d ireable alternative&#13;
to very narro and-or&#13;
cifically tructured majors.&#13;
The reason why I think this is now&#13;
a "d ireable" alternative is&#13;
• im~. that many job markets in. our econom. now call for people&#13;
ith a more general or broad&#13;
background in a particular field.&#13;
Were 1t financially possible for&#13;
us to do so, we would certainly&#13;
like to offer more courses in the&#13;
areas mentioned in Is. Friedell's&#13;
article. At the present time this is&#13;
not possible. As i probably true&#13;
letters&#13;
trick). Thinking that this might&#13;
not amaze the people sufficiently,&#13;
he then took nine ordinary ta}?e&#13;
recordings, muttered ~~ magic&#13;
words "Be-Be Re-Bo-Zo and, lo&#13;
and behold, only seven tapes&#13;
remained. The only ones not&#13;
joining in the applause were the&#13;
rather humorless types on the&#13;
House Judiciary Committee.&#13;
When people ask Dick where ~e&#13;
got his mystical powers, he 1s&#13;
likely to shrug his _shoul~ers..3nd&#13;
reply with an impish grm, Oh,&#13;
executive privilege, I guess."&#13;
Unfortunately for lovers of&#13;
dirty tricks, Richard's recent&#13;
performances h~ve go_tten lousy&#13;
reviews, and his ratmgs have&#13;
dropped alarmingly. We are&#13;
forced to reluctantly conclude&#13;
that the time has come to bring&#13;
the curtain down on Richard&#13;
Nixon's act. Daniel Nielsen,&#13;
Franksville&#13;
in practically every discipline on&#13;
campus, continuous efforts are&#13;
being made in the communication&#13;
discipline to revise,&#13;
update, and-or add new courses&#13;
to our curriculum. However, this&#13;
revision of major must, of&#13;
necessity, face the constraints of&#13;
legislative good will since the&#13;
state lawmakers ultimately&#13;
make decisions about financial&#13;
support for higher education. As&#13;
is the case with most discipline in&#13;
our division, we in communication&#13;
are again revising&#13;
our major but changes on paper&#13;
will be meaningless unless we&#13;
have the power (faculty members&#13;
to teach specialized courses)&#13;
to implement the changes or&#13;
revisions in the communication&#13;
major.&#13;
Finally, in reference to the idea&#13;
of "distinctiveness" in a major, I&#13;
must disagree with Ms. Friedell's&#13;
implication that the communication&#13;
major is not distinctive.&#13;
In comparing other comIMPEACH&#13;
&#13;
NIXON!&#13;
"Just onc.e Ic:t Ii ke to be 011 t he&#13;
side thcit:S winning!·&#13;
DO YOU have question&#13;
about student rights&#13;
a nd power?&#13;
Candidates FOrun,&#13;
Wed., Nov. 14 2:30-4:00 LLC D185&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Is there such a thin&#13;
student contract? I woul! rlll a&#13;
know the hmits for teach ike to&#13;
making assignments. ers Ill&#13;
To get specific, I am enroll&#13;
one of Herbert Kubly' l ed&#13;
H h . ca&#13;
e as assigned everyone .&#13;
hi_s classes to see his pla '.n ~ f&#13;
Virus," and review it. Th&amp;;'· 1lie&#13;
but it costs $1.50. 18 fi&#13;
$1.50 may not seem lik&#13;
to most, but if you are a e mu&#13;
working 5 or 10 hours per "~~d&#13;
can upset your budget E&#13;
d , · ven if&#13;
oesn t, as a matter of pr· .&#13;
don't think any teachers~~~: 1&#13;
allowed to make assignm&#13;
that costs the students&#13;
unless this requirement i moo&#13;
clear in t~e student catalo:d&#13;
at least m the first Week or&#13;
classes. of&#13;
In this particular ca e I think&#13;
Mr. Kubly is trying to help 1&#13;
that his play will be a box nrr&#13;
success by assigning all ~ 1&#13;
students to buy tickets f&#13;
play. Also consider that&#13;
student will probably bring&#13;
least one guest.&#13;
Name withheld upon req&#13;
munication majors through&#13;
the co~try I have found tha&#13;
P_ar_ks1?e's major is, ind d&#13;
distinctive and-or innovatne&#13;
relatio? to _course offering 800&#13;
our umvers1ty mission. In&#13;
we are trying to keep up th&#13;
"real world" even though there&#13;
bound to be a time lag bet\\&#13;
the revision of a major and&#13;
im~lementation of the 0&#13;
maJor.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
E. Scott Baudhuin&#13;
Assistant Professor of Co •&#13;
munication&#13;
P.S. We welcome student input&#13;
about our major .&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Let's clean up America £or&#13;
200th Anniversary! The Peopl&#13;
Bicentennial Commis ion&#13;
planning a birthday part&#13;
America will never forget - a&#13;
second American Revolution (er&#13;
1976.&#13;
The political fervor of the s.&#13;
Woodstock the Watltin's Glen&#13;
were just a dress rehearsa! (er&#13;
what's coming up. The btcmtennial&#13;
of the America&#13;
Revolution comes on the heels ol&#13;
Watergate, dislocations tn ':&#13;
economy, and increa&#13;
cynicism and alienation to&#13;
corporate and political 1&#13;
stitutions in America&#13;
So put July 4th, !976 on&#13;
calendar. We have three Y ars&#13;
return this country to&#13;
revolutionary origin 8" d&#13;
make our place in histoi: ef&#13;
It's going to take car&#13;
preparation. First, all of Am 1&#13;
must be reminded that \le art&#13;
nation of people born&#13;
Revolution. Second, we m&#13;
the groundwork for a ne-.r&#13;
movement that will turn&#13;
country around. . Join with the new patnotS&#13;
build the birthday that \\ill~&#13;
around the world. Thoma p tn&#13;
Abigail Adams and • Henry had their moment&#13;
it's our turn. . The Nixon BacenteCommission&#13;
is spen~ ,&#13;
of dollars to mo ~&#13;
space for their Tory&#13;
With your help we can ft&amp;b'&#13;
Let America's . ·es-..1rouL revoluttonari 11...-,&#13;
PeoJ?les Bicentennial C&#13;
1346 Connecticut AVertue,&#13;
Washington. D.C. 2()036&#13;
Room 1025 &#13;
# 9YlP, B .t~it»r$&#13;
i~ol~"o~\&lt;.&#13;
&gt;!1L, _----J&#13;
by Jan .. &amp;hli ..sman&#13;
freebies' Reporter Michael Olszyk, who did the story on all the&#13;
oodies a person gets for bemg chancellor, earns this week's Su r&#13;
~IeuthAward for perseverance above and beyond the call of duty, pe&#13;
H&#13;
is investigation brought him into contact with a slew of I&#13;
th i 'de nd tsid f thi , poop e at&#13;
IIlevels bo msi a ou leo IS institution There&#13;
a ied h b h . were even&#13;
ore&#13;
who he trr to reae I ut e was unsuccessful at rnaki m ' S 1 ing conpections&#13;
Wl~ them. orne peop e ~ere about as talkative as the&#13;
Egyptian sphinx; others opened up like the water gates of th A&#13;
d&#13;
Iasci ti tori e swan Darn- He hear many ascma ng s ones and details and th ~" instaki en comen&#13;
ced the pamsta mg process of verification. That&#13;
f!I Imina ", 'thCh -~ ted In an mterVIew WI ancellor Wyllie himself&#13;
cuThe package deal each UW system chan~enor gets var'ies from&#13;
school to school, but has been under scrutiny (chiefly by student&#13;
newspapers). on a number o~ campuses In the state. The Daily CardiD.lin&#13;
Madison has looked mto the style to which Chancellor Young&#13;
haS become accustomed, and the UWM Post did an article early thi&#13;
semester on the inheritance former Chancellor Joseph Klotsche left ~~&#13;
his successor, Werner Baum.&#13;
11lePost article mentioned such comforts as a 14 room stateowned&#13;
residence donated by Milwaukee industrialist Walter Harnischfeger,&#13;
llSmal1 as far as lakeside rnansions go, 'It does offer the Baums a&#13;
rnagniijcent view of Lake Michigan, along with zero property taxes&#13;
utility and maintenance costs," the article stated, '&#13;
Wyllie'S contract originally called for the state to build him a new&#13;
borne. Then they tried to get someone to donate a house for him. When&#13;
that proved unsuccessful he was given his current home on Wliversity&#13;
property as well as the conference house next door. He says be has&#13;
sinCearranged for the donation of a house to be included in a will so his&#13;
successors will have a roof over their heads.&#13;
In Milwaukee, "The university provides two full time housemaidcooks&#13;
to work at the residence, Some of their duties include preparing&#13;
IJ'eakfast and lunch for the chancellor and his family, general&#13;
tx&gt;useclening, floral arranging and serving when the chancellor entertains,"&#13;
the Post article said. "Baum may draw on an annual $2500&#13;
entertainment budget for use in entertaining official visitors and&#13;
guests of the university, According to Central Administration&#13;
guidelines, use of the fund for gatherings of state employees is not&#13;
penniUed, nor is the purchase of alcoholic beverages."&#13;
UWM's chancellor also gets a car-- "a jet black, late model&#13;
American Motors Ambassador" as well as the gas and mechanics to&#13;
service it.&#13;
UW President Weaver, of course, also gets beaucoup fringe benefits&#13;
such as house and chauffeur-driven car and ahout $45 thousand a year,&#13;
He recenUy turned down a pay raise, which sounds very&#13;
magnanimous until you think of the tax bracket it would have put him&#13;
in.&#13;
lt appears true that money isn't everything. That's why the state is&#13;
so kind as to take it away from the tax-and~tuition payers and convert&#13;
it into usable forms like houses, cars, stoves, refrigerators, and more,&#13;
and donate them to ponr people earning over $30,000 a year working&#13;
ler tbe state, They pay no taxes nn their homes, and by giving them&#13;
these benefits instead of a higher salary they are able to stay in a&#13;
lower tax bracket. Welfare state for the state employees' welfare?&#13;
~If:.The Pltt&lt;i8Illid.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 $3140. Offices are located at 0-194 Uhrary·&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranier is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials art not necesurity the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin·Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraled. Aliletten on any sub)eCt of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff musl be confined to 250.....ords O!&#13;
leu, typed Jlnd double-spaced. The editon reserve the right to teht&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be sianed and include&#13;
address. phone number and student statUI or faculty rink. Names will.&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the riaht to refuse to&#13;
pnnt any letters.&#13;
EDITORIN·CHIEF: Jane M. Schllesm;,n&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Frl~1I&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: RebecCll Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy BUsh, Stephen Gilford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Hedden, Gary Jensen, Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schu~t. John&#13;
SoI"enHn, Steve Stapanian, Carrie Ward, Tom e&gt;eFouw, Neal Sautnfl"&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brran Ross,&#13;
Jim Rufloro&#13;
CARTOONISTS: amy cundari, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
L.AYOUT: Terri Gelenlan, Terry Knop, slaff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken pestka&#13;
"'OVERTISING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCUL.ATION MANAGER: Gary Worlhfngton&#13;
"DVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
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1'E:\C • .-\LTEC • KOSS. SE"...-ItISEH •&#13;
Wednesday. NOY.7. "73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
State gifts&#13;
TIM&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PAIKSIDE&#13;
f+RWRIJ.RN HEJbl&amp;RY&#13;
~n6Jl8i8~&#13;
..... 2-10&#13;
continued from pag e 1&#13;
in sum".ler and snow removal operations in winter,&#13;
~o~ With trades-men-in-residence - who did some&#13;
limited exterior painting this fall - handle most&#13;
~a!nte.nance work. Physical plant also provides a&#13;
janitot-ial .maid. two days a week. Coming from&#13;
Mrs, Wylhe. her orders usually consist of laundrv&#13;
and cleaning. •&#13;
State - ow---ned Car&#13;
T? service the university's 12, state owned&#13;
vehicles.' physical plant maintains a small&#13;
mechanics crew, capable of minor repairs This&#13;
fleel crew is responsible for gassing up and w~sIung&#13;
the chancellor's 1971 American ~otors Ambassador.&#13;
once a week.&#13;
Ea.ch state car comes upholstered with a senes of&#13;
credit cards honored by most gas stations and&#13;
garages, The O1ancellor's is no exceptioo,&#13;
Howev,:", these cards are to be used solely 00&#13;
university autos.&#13;
A report that Wyllie on occasioo once had a&#13;
privately owned Ford serviced by university personnel,&#13;
was disclaimed along with the rumor of a&#13;
three week family vacation in Arizooa, dunng the&#13;
summer of 1972, with a state vehicle. "Untrue"&#13;
expounded Wyllie on both accounts!&#13;
Wyllie does not deny though, having a police radio&#13;
put m hIS state car, for four to five months in late&#13;
1972, which was a physical plant expense 'of S725_&#13;
Used only a total of six times, its purpose was to&#13;
keep Wyllie in touch with a disorganized university,&#13;
due to construction.&#13;
According to a St, P.ul PIoneer Press article&#13;
dated August 5. 1973, Wyllie refused to hand over&#13;
this state vehicle despite orders from UW Central&#13;
Administration and the Governor's office, issued&#13;
September of 1972, Cars leased to the univel'Slty&#13;
system are declared surplus by the Department of&#13;
Administration lDOM after four years of use or&#13;
60,000 miles, whichever comes first. 1bis is a&#13;
standard practice carried out by DOA and the&#13;
vehicles are auctioned off through sealed bIds&#13;
Replacement for WyUie was not receIved, since&#13;
he could not justify t3,5OOmiles anually, nor ..'by be&#13;
should have another Ambassador (a DOA I'\Iliql&#13;
passed down last April 11, states that only for&#13;
medical problems can the state JrOvide an air&#13;
conditioned sedan model. such as an Ambassador),&#13;
Meanwhile, the car was auctioned and sold&#13;
through sealed bids, to a man in Food du Lac,&#13;
Despite this, Wyllie continued to keep lhe vehicle&#13;
and use it for another six months&#13;
Talking to Erwin Zuehlke, Director of Business&#13;
Affairs at Parkside, one gets a s1ighU)' dtUerent&#13;
story. He claims that sealed bids were sent out by&#13;
the Governor's office before Department 01 Purchases&#13;
had delivered to Par-kside a replacement&#13;
Zuehlke makes no reference lO the inability to&#13;
justify 13,500 annual bu iness miles. and neither&#13;
does he say that Parkside requested another air&#13;
conditioned Ambassador It was understood that the&#13;
replacement would be a second line AM model, such&#13;
as the Matador,&#13;
A court inqUisition proved Parkside to be In the&#13;
right. But instead of r-ecewing a ntN.' car. the state&#13;
loaned Wyllie an Identical, used, 7t Ambassador&#13;
Now it appears as though Wyllie ...ilI use one 01 four&#13;
ordered compacl AM Hornets, scheduled to amve&#13;
early next year.&#13;
HWe sympathize with the man who waited for the&#13;
car, but this wasa case where wehad to prove bemg&#13;
right," said Zuehlke. ID regard to the Fond du Lac&#13;
man who waited longer than expected for Wyllie's&#13;
previous vehicle, Wylhe though. "'as not sym'&#13;
pathetic to the polDl of driving hlS own family car&#13;
during the mix up. and coHectlng mileage felm·&#13;
--------.,&#13;
, Earn $$$ seiling'&#13;
, ,&#13;
, ad. for RANGER , a.-------~&#13;
The plaee to go&#13;
lot PInts&#13;
Ind thingsl&#13;
614 • 56th Street&#13;
'" SOTHER H L E - rile C&lt;lGferftl&lt;e _ ,",.t&#13;
door to &lt;be 1I)IUe re IoI.. ee, used I.- ............&#13;
""d Lall meeting _&#13;
bursemenrs at 11 cen lor the fint. nul .. INert&#13;
month and ..,.'en cenlS lor every mile tberelIfter&#13;
c........ 1".,e&#13;
All tJungs COOSIdered, Wyllie contends that there&#13;
really aren't that many extras available to tum ..&#13;
chancellor and m- wt do exist, he feels are&#13;
nee spry in order for. chaDcelJor to Jft:I8It •&#13;
respe&lt;Uble unage to the commUDIty&#13;
As was stated earher ID tIus article, there .. a&#13;
tendency to sby a.... y from .. -hat ~t_&#13;
Wyllle's personal pe&gt;UMs..... , and wber'e state&#13;
dollars go. In rerms of services provided !be&#13;
chancellor Accordtng to zuehlke, Wyllie hM no&#13;
pnvate expense funds, and that anythin&amp; purcburd&#13;
for him is done through the nlvel'Slty'. normal&#13;
stalH'eqU1red, ""lUl5ltiOOl&#13;
ThlS does not explain though. phyoicaJ plaDt&#13;
purchasong special fend ..... aod redwood but&lt;&#13;
chIps, used as mulch around WyU.. •• lJ'HJI&#13;
Although gardelllJl8. a hobby of Wythe'., baa Ium&#13;
domg most 01 the labor and buying gardorI -.&#13;
physical plant still tills the large plol 011J'OWld and&#13;
lays do ..... black v.-o pIaotlC _IIPI&#13;
.. eeds&#13;
Phy lcal plant chrector Rodger Allen has "work&#13;
orders" dra ..... up belore .ny labor IS actually done&#13;
ID and around the campus, lor k~ong !rack of&#13;
lauverslt)' dollars Work done on Wyllie's 1'aI~&#13;
...as not recorded separ.tely until Allen m&#13;
dtrector In February of 1972&#13;
Remodeling and the bUlldlDg of Wyllie's g.rag&#13;
po Ihly .. as paId for through the uruvel'Slty'.&#13;
"fimshlDg funds" 1'hI fund IS 'gned to repair&#13;
na.. ID unIversIty bwldll18 &lt;*.Ie to m .... lculaUOCll&#13;
ID construetJon Earlier thIS year Wylll and the&#13;
plamung dtrector made. contract bid to ,' ......&#13;
Construction to build a 40 loot red..-ood fen&lt;e. WIth&#13;
money from thl lund, to hide the cooll tOWffl of&#13;
the heating and chilhng plan, Estllnated to&#13;
near thousand. the (;(n;ernor's offi In MadiJon&#13;
refused to appropriate the money,&#13;
An enlertlllnment budget 01 annually ..&#13;
granled the chancellor lor rntertalnlllg ofllcal&#13;
VISIror.; or guesta of the unlVerllty Cenrral Ad,&#13;
mIDI.. ratlon guulellnes say thaI uN of theIIe funds&#13;
for gathenngs of state employ I not permuted,&#13;
nor IS the purchase of .lcohollc be ra&amp; '&#13;
Fin.lly. It IS Ulterestong to note that the IloarcI 01&#13;
Regents. ID the last flSC8l year. granted a "50"&#13;
of hYIng adJUSIm nt" to Wyll .. , thus lJnnI the&#13;
chancellor's salary to $36,550,&#13;
IhiN."1 $269 .... To ..&#13;
~.)IOIlIA: ......&#13;
• .OVNO T.IP .II.T&#13;
• 1 "'_GNU OUTIllGOC.&#13;
wE-IT&#13;
• '1 DAYCtTy TOU.&#13;
• FLOWIE.II:ll.' OIl:(I[TI"O&#13;
• GlitOUNO TII: ..... IFI.II:S&#13;
• lOU. Hon 10ElItVICIU&#13;
• ",U. TIPS &amp; ".&amp;X'"&#13;
b) Jane S(hliHman&#13;
freebies! Reporter Micha~! Olszyk, who did the story on all the&#13;
oodies a person gets for bemg chancellor, earns this week's Su r&#13;
gleuth A war? fo~ perseveranc~ a?ove and beyo~d the call of duty_ pe&#13;
His investth1ga_tio~dbroudght thi~d mtfothc?n~ct_ with a slew of people at&#13;
all levels bo ,~1 e an ou s1 e o is msbtution. There were even&#13;
re who he tried to reach, but he was unsuccessful at mak· mo th S 1 mg connections&#13;
wi~ emth. ome pedeop e l~kerehabout as talkative as the&#13;
Egyptian sphinx; o ers op~n . up 1 ~ t e water gates of the Aswan&#13;
Dam- He heard ~a~\~ascmatmg stones and details and then commenced&#13;
the pa1~s ta i~g pr?CthesCsh of verification. That proces&#13;
ulminated in an m erVIew w1 ancellor Wyllie himself&#13;
c The package deal each UW system chan~ellor gets varies from&#13;
school to school, but has been under s_crutmy (chiefly by student&#13;
newspapers)_ on a number o~ campuses m the ~tate. The Daily Cardinal&#13;
in Madison has looked mto the style to which Chancellor Young&#13;
has beeome accustomed, and the UWM Post did an article early this&#13;
semester on the inheritance former Chancellor Joseph Klotsche left to&#13;
his successor, Werner Baum.&#13;
The Post article mentioned such comforts as a 14 room stateowned&#13;
residence donated by M_ilwaukee _industrialist Walter Harnischfeger.&#13;
"Small as far as lakeside mansions go, it does offer the Baums a&#13;
magnificent view of Lake Michigan, along with zero property taxes&#13;
utility and maintenan_c~ costs," the article stated. '&#13;
Wyllie's contract ongmally called for the state to build him a new&#13;
home. Then they tried to get someone to donate a house for him. When&#13;
that proved unsuccessful he was given his current home on university&#13;
property as well as the con~erence house next_ door. He says he has&#13;
since arranged for the donation of a house to be mcluded in a will so his&#13;
successors will have a roof over their heads.&#13;
In Milwaukee, "The university provides two full time housemaidcooks&#13;
to work at the residence. Some of their duties include preparing&#13;
breakfast and lunch for the chancellor and his family, general&#13;
houseclening, floral arranging and serving when the chancellor entertains,"&#13;
the Post article said. "Baum may draw on an annual $2500&#13;
entertainment budget for use in entertaining official visitors and&#13;
guests of the university. According to Central Administration&#13;
guidelines, use of the fund for gatherings of state employees is not&#13;
permitted, nor is the purchase of alcoholic beverages."&#13;
UWM's chancellor also gets a car- 11 a jet black, late model&#13;
American Motors Ambassador" as well as the gas and mechanics to&#13;
service it.&#13;
UW President Weaver, of course, also gets beaucoup fringe benefits&#13;
such as house and chauffeur-driven car and about $45 thousand a year.&#13;
He recently turned down a pay raise, which sounds very&#13;
magnanimous until you think of the tax bracket it would have put him&#13;
in.&#13;
It appears true that money isn't everything. That's why the state is&#13;
so kind as to take it away from the tax-and-tuition payers and convert&#13;
it into usable forms like houses, cars, stoves, refrigerators, and more,&#13;
and donate them to poor people earning over $30,000 a year working&#13;
for the state. They pay no taxes on their homes, and by giving them&#13;
these benefits instead of a higher salary they are able to stay in a&#13;
lower tax bracket. Welfare state for the state employees' welfare?&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-229$. . 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. 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&#13;
less, typed jlnd 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 wil~&#13;
~ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
pnnt any letters&#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 Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR , David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS Sandy Bush, Stephen Gilford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Hedden, Gary Jensen, Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert, JOhn&#13;
Sorensen, Sieve Stepanian, Carrie Ward, Tom OeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian ROSS,&#13;
Jim Ruffolo&#13;
CARTOONISTS amy cundarl, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT Terri Gelenlan, Terry Knop, stall&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
.O.DVERTISING MANAGER : Amy Cundarl&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER . Gary Wor!hlnglon&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
• \K.\1 • DUAL • WATTS e SHURE e JVf' • TECH:"ilCS •&#13;
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518-56th St.. Kenosha • SIIERWOOD • L"R TE.-\C • :\L TE(" • KOSS • SE:"i:"illlS.-, •&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
State gifts&#13;
continued from el&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
614 - 56th Street&#13;
Jeappineu is JCQ6XJii&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER WednesdaY. Nov. 7. 1973&#13;
Review&#13;
Play is IInightmare&#13;
of game-playing"&#13;
f:dkor' nMf': ,-Ttl.,., ira .. bf Herber1 Kubly"'.&#13;
lIIe pr ml.. production in Pork \cit' ne .. Com'&#13;
mUllk lion \rt Theater \l played lor lour alghlS&#13;
, w "andi r~"i edhenby am) c-undarl.Ms.&#13;
(.nd.r~ member of the Putt ide PJa)ers and&#13;
loa .. orktd In Io&lt;al "en ba lbealn lor tblrteen&#13;
an, In ""lin 1,1&lt;Tbntre, Raken Voulh&#13;
~ctlon , and Sl Jowpb' Hlgb booI. She loa&#13;
.. orktd ... '''0 Park kle production a a Ilgbling&#13;
oed pe"'al err tecbnlcl .... She Is a _lor&#13;
ma}orln&amp;1n pb~by aad art. and I R SGER'&#13;
..artl .. ·ln· klen,,:'&#13;
by am &lt;""dart&#13;
'.",.. Virus." by Herbert Kubly, IS a play about&#13;
lh bl... C1 I lamily of a martinet patriarch who&#13;
nooal all.,,,e and luilt punut hIS children and&#13;
black wlI aller b. dealh The play is a nigblDUl!&lt;!&#13;
of m plaY'1\&amp; It remlnda one 01 a Ollistmas&#13;
where no one 101 whal lhey really wanled.&#13;
Th tl menlll of tragedy and susptllSt which&#13;
alletnpllO hold lh pIOlIOBelh... , &lt;hsUllegrate in lhe&#13;
lh.rd acl. The lhlrd act' SUJ'1'UI Ian:e. The&#13;
dw' ct break down dunng lhe crackdown on&#13;
InIlh whIch R""ben bas pressed 10arnve in the t"''O&#13;
preVlO'" aclll Reuben ISlhe proeagooist ollhe play,&#13;
WIth blS pnvate ,.,....,al identity &lt;=loving him&#13;
lrom the black servant role hIS dead lather WIshed&#13;
played out and lhe remo"ed secunties of lhe white&#13;
world be was depcived 01.&#13;
The d1alocue ISmlerestmg in its humor, but awk·&#13;
ward In appbcaUon One can not imagine the&#13;
provlnetal Drew, a compa$SlJlate, but unpresuming&#13;
lawyer. to enter with a continental "Ciao!" at the&#13;
beglnning 01 lhe third acl. Verbal images like&#13;
"b1ack .. a telepbooe," or "Butterfly·boy," when&#13;
uttered by lheir perspective characters did oot&#13;
tie well Wllh the audience.&#13;
ill, lhe aud1ence "'... trealed 10 some good&#13;
moments 01 humor, 10 verbal sexual inference and&#13;
m turn-of-e.. nt action. 1l was amusi.ng to see the&#13;
b1ac:l&lt;, militant Ajax make the high society liancee&#13;
of lh o,·...·beanng Larry come ..,th little per.&#13;
I\Ill .on 10 hIm lor a moment 01 purely physical&#13;
aflection&#13;
The actinglS '-ery good collSldering the sections 01&#13;
tared dialogue, and even If lhe dialogue did render&#13;
Itself at times cumbersome, Kubly's characters are&#13;
well-devtloped and almoal Greek in lheir classism.&#13;
The labulous matrian:h 01 Gertrude Jeannette&#13;
permeates the play ""th nch leeling and honest&#13;
urnent. Don Hintz's portrayal 01 Larry at once&#13;
.ckens us and yet calls lor our understanding. He&#13;
remands us of a .. oak despot ..-hose throne was&#13;
pushed up under hl/Tl. and once rwding bimself 00&#13;
lhls uncomfortable plateau is completely crushed&#13;
by mlemal loneliness The splendid sensual.&#13;
coolnesa 01 AjaX comes aero with nne hwnor in&#13;
e,e LOll's character. Drew, played by Dennis&#13;
Doo Rinl1 as Lury and Judi Smith as Rhoda confront&#13;
one anothel" in a scene from "The Virus." A&#13;
total oll308 people altended the lour perlormances.&#13;
Geragltty, is a warm and subtle sort lor all his&#13;
education, and his love; Rhoda, played by JudIe&#13;
Smith, needs \hiS simple aflection and sincertty to -&#13;
counter her lalling delences and bitter nature&#13;
trought on by emollonal isolatioo. AMabelle&#13;
Current does a line job being the societal Pamela&#13;
Drake, nung into this horrible weekend 01&#13;
revelation. Rick: Ponzio's Reuben is, intense and&#13;
lragile, a rme portrayal 01 a half·breeds attempts to&#13;
grasp identity and secure reality in the midst of&#13;
seething confusioo.&#13;
A very special commendation goes to Mr -Thomas&#13;
Reinert and his crew for a remarkable stage setting.&#13;
The special quality 01 the set and its&#13;
sophisticated construction show that lhere is need&#13;
(oc a more interested renewal of the dramatics in&#13;
\hiS university. Ted Paone and the resl 01 the&#13;
student crew did a line job executing the Reinert&#13;
design. The illusions of unending corridors and lhe&#13;
numerous performing levels which could be utilized&#13;
by the actors speak very well for the technical&#13;
quality we may expect lrom future productions on&#13;
this campus.&#13;
"I don't know how ordinary people live, hut lhey&#13;
don'llive like us!" So says Rhoda in the course of&#13;
the play, to air both her frustration and ours. No,&#13;
\hiS is not the life of ordinary persons or of extraordinary&#13;
ones; it is rather the life chronicles 01&#13;
sham personages. What could not come acrOSS in&#13;
plot and action, had to be delivered by the actors. II&#13;
the play works, it is because 01 the insight of the&#13;
individuals portraying the characters and the&#13;
realities they strove to achieve in a meager plot.&#13;
HOFF ANIS American State Bank&#13;
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MHnbet'" F D.I.C&#13;
armed with questions or just&#13;
listen. 10&#13;
RANGER editor J&#13;
~h1iesman commented that .i.:&#13;
Importance of this election&#13;
cannot he stated too strongly.'II.&#13;
have. to elect serious, hardworking&#13;
and responsible Pl!OpIe&#13;
to PSGA this year, who are inleoi&#13;
on making student government&#13;
viable Iorce. II PSGA does a&#13;
work this year it's aU over:f(l'::&#13;
future. We owe it to ourselves to&#13;
take this last opportUnity 10&#13;
salva~e student power at&#13;
Park~lde, or those coming after&#13;
us will be even more victimized&#13;
than we are and will have \II to&#13;
blame."&#13;
She added that she e"PtCtl&#13;
most 01 the RANGER s!llfllo 110&#13;
at the forums with "some serioua&#13;
questions that should concern UI&#13;
all. "&#13;
. "Since we will not have a pal*'&#13;
coming out between \be time of&#13;
the lorums and lbe electi......&#13;
she concluded, "I bope tbe&#13;
student body will come and ."&#13;
tually hear the candidates lor&#13;
themselves, to enable them to&#13;
vote like their sludant rigbla&#13;
depend on it. Tbey do'"&#13;
Two pre-election forums - one&#13;
for officer candidates and one for&#13;
senatorial candidates -- have&#13;
been scheduled lor next Wed·&#13;
nesday, NoV. 14.The presid.ential&#13;
and Vice-Presidential candidates&#13;
will be available in LLC Dlll5 to&#13;
.nswer questions [rom 2:30-3:15;&#13;
Senate hopeluls from 3:15-4 p.rn.&#13;
Brief (ormal statements by&#13;
candidates are planned at this&#13;
time and platforms will also be&#13;
, k' printed in next wee s paper .&#13;
However, candidates will be&#13;
available prL1'Jlarily to ans~er&#13;
student questions on a Wide&#13;
variety of topiCS. Subjects expected&#13;
to be covered include the&#13;
importance ol PSGA, student&#13;
rights, tbe extent 01 student&#13;
power on this campus, Constltutional&#13;
questIOns, the&#13;
potential (OCUS of ~tudent&#13;
government (academiC, activity.related,&#13;
grievances and so&#13;
on), ways of increasing PSG~'s&#13;
responsibility and contact With&#13;
its constituency, lack of student&#13;
involvement, and feelings about&#13;
participation in a state·wide&#13;
network of student governments&#13;
such as the Uoited Council of&#13;
Student Governments based in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
All students are invited to come&#13;
Candidate forums&#13;
scheduled'&#13;
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THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973&#13;
evlew&#13;
lay •&#13;
IS 'nightmare&#13;
game- laying"&#13;
t,· i a ;arm and ubtle sort for all his&#13;
ti · ·, and Jove; Rhoda, played by Judie&#13;
ith, this 1mple affection and sincerity to&#13;
counter her falling defences and bitter nature&#13;
brought on by em onal isolation. Annabelle&#13;
Curr t · a fine job being the societal Pamela&#13;
Dr e, nu into this horrible weekend of&#13;
re ·elation. Ri Ponz.io' Reuben is, intense and&#13;
fragile, a fine portrayal of a half-breeds attempts to&#13;
asp identity and secure reality in the midst of&#13;
hing c fusion . ry pecial commendation goes to, 1r. Thomas&#13;
Reinert and hi er v. for a remarkable stage settin&#13;
. The pecial quality of the set and its&#13;
· ticated c truction show that there is need&#13;
m r int tee! renewal of the dramatics in&#13;
thi uni •ersity. Ted Paone and the rest of the&#13;
udent ere did a fine job executing the Reinert ·gn. The 1llu ·oo of unending corridors and the&#13;
numerous performing levels which could be utilized&#13;
by the ac peak very ·ell for the technical&#13;
qu lit ·e may peel from future productions on&#13;
th 0 campus.&#13;
" I don t know ho ordinary people live, but they&#13;
don't foe like u '. .. So say Rhoda in the course of&#13;
th pla) , to air both her frustration and ours. No,&#13;
thi not the life of ordinary persons or of extraordinar)&#13;
on ; it i rather the life chronicles of&#13;
sham pe es. What could not come across in&#13;
plo and actio had to be delh·ered by the actors. If&#13;
the pla) wor it 1 because of the insight of the&#13;
individual portraying the characters and the r liti they trove to achieve in a meager plot.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
392&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
-.-FD.I C&#13;
AURUS RISING&#13;
Wed., Fri., Sat., &amp; Sun.&#13;
I NOV. 7, 9, 10, 11 l&#13;
Ke,,.sh's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd National&#13;
(for erlyS 0 ey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay Road&#13;
Candidate forums&#13;
scheduled·&#13;
Two pre-election forums -- one&#13;
for officer candidates and one for&#13;
senatorial candidates - have&#13;
been scheduled for next Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 14. Th~ Presid_ential&#13;
and Vice-Presidential candidates&#13;
will be available in LLC D185 to&#13;
•nswer questions from 2: 30-3: 15;&#13;
Senate hopefuls from 3: 15-4 p.m.&#13;
Brief formal statements ~y&#13;
candidates are planned at thts&#13;
time. and platforms wi,ll also be&#13;
printed in next week s ~per.&#13;
However, candidates w1ll be&#13;
available primarily to ans~er&#13;
student questions on a w1de&#13;
variety of topics. Subjects expected&#13;
to be covered include the&#13;
importance of PSGA, student&#13;
rights, the extent of student&#13;
power on this ca~pus, Constitutional&#13;
questions, the&#13;
potential focus of student&#13;
government ( academic, activity-related,&#13;
grievances and so&#13;
on), ways of increasing PSG~'s&#13;
responsibility and contact with&#13;
its constituency, lack of student&#13;
involvement, and feelings about&#13;
participation in a state-wide&#13;
network of student governments&#13;
such as the United Council of&#13;
Student Governments based in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
All students are invited to come&#13;
armed with questions or J'u t&#13;
listen. lo&#13;
RANGER editor J&#13;
Sew. ane . 1esman commented that "tht&#13;
importance of this election&#13;
cannot be stated too strongly 1&#13;
have. to elect serious, harde&#13;
working and responsible peop&#13;
to PSGA this year, who are int&#13;
on making student government&#13;
viable force. If PSGA does a&#13;
k th" ·t· llOl&#13;
wor 1s year 1 s all over for th&#13;
future. We owe it to ourselv to&#13;
take this last opportunity to&#13;
salvage student power&#13;
Park~ide, or those coming af~&#13;
us will be even more victimized&#13;
than we are and will have us to&#13;
blame."&#13;
She added that she exi&gt;ecta&#13;
most of the RANGER staff to be&#13;
at the forums with "some etiOUS&#13;
questions that should concern&#13;
all."&#13;
"Since we will not have a paper&#13;
coming out between the lime of&#13;
the forums and the elections"&#13;
she concluded, "I hope th&#13;
student body will come and&#13;
tually hear the candidates for&#13;
themselves, to enable them lo&#13;
vote like their student rigb&#13;
depend on it. They do."&#13;
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AT &#13;
Wednesday, Noy. 7, 1'73 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
pM.. by o..aw~ FrMrdri&#13;
Kay Wahnef William Murin&#13;
Impeachment and Presidential ,. •••••*********t ~VOTE:&#13;
• •&#13;
i PSGA i&#13;
: is i&#13;
j!",RS!*t~.!.'.'.&#13;
power discussed&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
When President Nixon fired&#13;
ArthibaldCox, there were many&#13;
wi¥&gt; called for his impeachment.&#13;
11le firing, compounded by the&#13;
PreSident's refusal to turn over&#13;
the controversial "Waterg~te&#13;
tapes" and the ever-growing&#13;
po_ of the office of the&#13;
Presidency have contributed to&#13;
the ftrSl serious moves toward&#13;
impeachment since the&#13;
Presidency of Andrew Johnson.&#13;
Wrinkle said one of the main&#13;
arguments for impeachment is&#13;
"malfeasance in office." "If the&#13;
President knew about the&#13;
Watergate break-in and cover-up&#13;
culmination of the personalized&#13;
Presidency."&#13;
Wrinkle coniended that "its oot&#13;
so much the power of the office,&#13;
its the power the President&#13;
chooses to exert."&#13;
Wabner cited examples of the&#13;
President's growing power. such&#13;
as irnpoundment and the&#13;
President's ability to have his&#13;
vetoes sustained by Congress.&#13;
Wahner and Murin both&#13;
suggested that the Congress&#13;
might use the issue of Gerald&#13;
Ford for the Vice-Presidency to&#13;
reassert itself.&#13;
Wabner felt that. "he (the&#13;
President) should have h...lded&#13;
over the tapes" and that "the&#13;
flI1ng or Cox was a severe&#13;
miscalculation." turin,&#13;
however, stated that he has little&#13;
faith in the tapes as evidence&#13;
because they could he "fixed"&#13;
He also said that in Ius ol"-nion&#13;
the talk of impeachment "'OUlddo&#13;
lillie to "change Mr •"lxon's&#13;
style" and that he "''OUldnot let&#13;
the threat of impeaclunent affect&#13;
his deosroes.&#13;
--------- --------- " the majority of&#13;
politicians are honest;&#13;
however, ltle corruption&#13;
ltlat does exist extends into&#13;
boltl parties."&#13;
"It's not so much the&#13;
power of the office, it's the&#13;
power the President&#13;
chooses to exert."&#13;
--------- --------- --------- Of politics, Wahner said, "1&#13;
beheve strcngly that the m8jonty&#13;
of politicians are honest:&#13;
however. the corruption tha' does&#13;
exist extends into bolb parties"&#13;
Sle Cited the high cost burden of&#13;
campaign fmancing the reason&#13;
for this.&#13;
then that was misprison of a&#13;
felony," he said. All three&#13;
professors concurred, however.&#13;
that there was little chance for&#13;
impeachment because, as&#13;
Wrinkle put tt.vit's such a drastic&#13;
step, its like killing a fly with a&#13;
sledgehammer." For that reason&#13;
it is an ineffective mechanism to&#13;
maintain the system of checks&#13;
and balances.&#13;
Wrinkle explained though, that,&#13;
"Unfortunately, impeachment is&#13;
the only way the Constitution&#13;
really provides for any form of&#13;
sanction against a president."&#13;
As [or the power of the office of&#13;
the presidency I Ml:lrinstate.d that&#13;
it is an "evolutionary kind of&#13;
phenomena that started with&#13;
FDR. Nixon is a natural&#13;
"Unfortunately, i mpeachmentis&#13;
the only way&#13;
the Constitution rea lIy&#13;
provides for any form of&#13;
sanction against a&#13;
president,..&#13;
AT FIRST UlIOIAL&#13;
OF IACI.E&#13;
•••• i.i•••&#13;
hlme re~.ir.~&#13;
••• Ii il 18 Ih&#13;
••• ~.r Df chets&#13;
, •• wril.&#13;
---------&#13;
Our Annual Pre-Holiday&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Three Parkside political science&#13;
II"Dfessors • Robert Wrinkle,&#13;
William Murin and Kay Wabner -&#13;
recently expressed their views on&#13;
unpoachment and presidential&#13;
power in an interview for&#13;
RANGER. Why impeachment?&#13;
begins Nov. 9&#13;
at 5:00 p.rn, in Kenosha&#13;
Nov. 12 at 9:30 a.m.&#13;
in Racine.&#13;
• PAPA BURGER&#13;
• TEEN BURGER&#13;
• MAMA BURGER&#13;
• BABY BURGER&#13;
Exciting Bargains for Everyone! AT FIIST unom&#13;
OF IACIIlE SAVINGS UP T083 PERCENT&#13;
Hundreds of titles to choose from.&#13;
Books are in mint condition and make&#13;
perfect gifts.&#13;
CARRY.OUTS&#13;
CAll AHEAD _ YOUR ORDER WILL 8E READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
Don't miss this opportunity to pick up&#13;
valuable books at a fraction of their&#13;
regular price.&#13;
N\orUL.MwaitL ~~&#13;
,,14-59U,St:&#13;
~&#13;
31"2..-&#13;
~&#13;
~-St. _&#13;
.&#13;
659-5&amp;S1- ~3'2-.s=.r.:&#13;
------&#13;
----------&#13;
'EE GALLON OF ROOT BEER&#13;
;., WITH 15 DRIlR AT FlIST unom&#13;
OF IACI E&#13;
0,•• , ••r Iree chcki'l&#13;
Kc••• 1 SH' al&#13;
11 MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
Ot-l SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404 J&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and TruJR Compa.D7 of Racine&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN -_._----&#13;
HoUrs Sun - Thrs. 511liscnsit An. laci•• 11-7&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. IIto 11 Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Keno5ha&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
William Murin&#13;
Impeachment and Presidential&#13;
power d isC:ussed&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
When President Nixon fired&#13;
:\rehibald Cox, there were many&#13;
'.wro called for his impeachment.&#13;
The firing, compounded by the&#13;
President's refusal to turn over&#13;
the controversial "Waterg~te&#13;
tapes" and the ever-growmg&#13;
IX)W&amp; of the office of the&#13;
Presidency have contributed to&#13;
the first serious moves toward&#13;
impeachment since the&#13;
Pre idency of Andrew Johnson.&#13;
"Unfortunately, i mpeachment&#13;
is the only way&#13;
the Constitution really&#13;
provides for any form of&#13;
sanction against a&#13;
president."&#13;
Three Parkside political science&#13;
irofessors - Robert Wrinkle,&#13;
William Murin and Kay Wahner -&#13;
r ntly expressed their views on&#13;
impeachment and presidential&#13;
power in an interview for&#13;
R . 'GER. Why impeachment?&#13;
Wrinkle said one of the main&#13;
arguments for impeachment is&#13;
"malfeasance in office." "If the&#13;
President knew about the&#13;
Watergate break-in and cover-up&#13;
"It's not so much the&#13;
power of the office, it's the&#13;
power the President&#13;
chooses to exert."&#13;
then that was misprison of a&#13;
felony," he said. All three&#13;
professors concurred, however,&#13;
that there was little chance for&#13;
impeachment because, as&#13;
Wrinkle put it,"it's such a drastic&#13;
step, its like killing a fly with a sledgehammer." For that reason&#13;
it is an ineffective mechanism to&#13;
maintain the system of checks&#13;
and balances.&#13;
Wrinkle explained though, that,&#13;
"Unfortunately, impeachment is&#13;
the only way the Constitution&#13;
really provides for any form of&#13;
sanction against a president."&#13;
As for the power of the office of&#13;
the presidency, Murin stated that&#13;
it is an "evolutionary kind of&#13;
phenomena that started with&#13;
FDR. Nixon is a natural&#13;
• PAPA BURGER&#13;
• TEEN BURGER&#13;
• MAMA BURGER&#13;
• BABY BURGER&#13;
CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL B£ READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
ind Shrimp&#13;
GALLON OF ROOT BEER&#13;
WITH s 5 ORDER&#13;
1 2 MILE NORTH Of&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
552-8404 J&#13;
Hours Sun -Thrs. 11-7&#13;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 11 to 11&#13;
culmination of the personalized&#13;
Presidency."&#13;
Wrinkle contended that "1 not&#13;
so much the power of the office,&#13;
its the power the President&#13;
chooses to exert.·•&#13;
Wahner cited examples of the&#13;
President's growing power, uch&#13;
as impoundment and the&#13;
President's ability to have hvetoes&#13;
sustained by Coog&#13;
Wahner and • 1urm tx&gt;th&#13;
suggested that the Congre&#13;
might use the issue of Gerald&#13;
Ford for the Vice-Pre idency to&#13;
reassert itself.&#13;
Wahner felt that, "he (the&#13;
President) should ha ·e h , ed&#13;
over the tapes" and that " the&#13;
flr1ng of Cox wa a&#13;
miscalculation .'' !uri n ,&#13;
however, stated that he ha littl&#13;
faith in the tapes as ide&#13;
because they could&#13;
" the majority of&#13;
politicians are honest;&#13;
however, the corruption&#13;
that does exist extends into&#13;
both parties."&#13;
---------&#13;
()Jr Annual Pre or oy&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
beg' s ov. 9&#13;
a 5:00 p.m. ·n enosho&#13;
Nov. 12 ot 9:30 a.m.&#13;
in Roc·ne.&#13;
Exciting Bargains for Everyo&#13;
SAVINGS UP T083 PERCE T&#13;
Hundreds of titles to choose from.&#13;
Books are in mint condition and make&#13;
perfect gifts.&#13;
Don't miss this opportunity to pick up&#13;
valuable books at a fraction of their&#13;
regular price.&#13;
fl\OJiJJ&lt;A. MwJ.t). ~lo-U&gt;&#13;
~ f{cuima, •&#13;
614-59th.st: 3l'2..-~-V\St, -&#13;
6S9-3&amp;S-Z- ~32-.S=-=--=&#13;
------&#13;
----------&#13;
I&#13;
PSGA&#13;
•&#13;
AT Fl SJ NU D Al&#13;
OF AC E&#13;
D oar free c ec I 1&#13;
cco t s at&#13;
isc11si1 An. bci11 &#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. Nov. 7. 1973&#13;
Emmett Bedford. a IStant prol_ of English, was taken ill ",;Ib a&#13;
art alia&lt; on ooday, Oct 29 and talten to L Catherine's hospital&#13;
m K ltbough h condition ",-as reported to be serious last&#13;
he tmp ......red ou/rlCi nlly' ever the ",eelt.nd and was expected to&#13;
ta n out of "'t.... V. care on Monday His classeS are being &lt;onIb:ted&#13;
b) Jam Dean Peler Martm and Don RlnU&#13;
lI:,ief neWS&#13;
Bedford III. condition Improve.&#13;
US warm purse carrlen&#13;
CCCbegins budget&#13;
deliberations&#13;
1b~ Campus CoDcerns Com~&#13;
miUef' bas extended the dead~e&#13;
for student organit.ation fundmg&#13;
requests. AU budgets must be&#13;
submiUed to Jewel Echelbarge~.&#13;
istant Dean of Students. tn&#13;
TZSl by noon wednesday, NoV.&#13;
.4.&#13;
taken up by eee was the&#13;
clloosing of a student (or the (ifth&#13;
student position on the cornmittee.&#13;
111at position is to be held&#13;
by the president ot the Student&#13;
Union Committee, but Parkslde&#13;
has no such committee until next&#13;
year. Last year the seat was&#13;
declared vacant by interpretation&#13;
of the regulations by&#13;
the University Committee.&#13;
However. this year students&#13;
expressed their_interest in filling&#13;
that position.&#13;
Echelbarger suggested that&#13;
someone [rom the Union Planning&#13;
Committee or the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board-PAB-be seated.&#13;
She said it was her (eeling that&#13;
the person "best able to serve at&#13;
this time is the president o( the&#13;
Activities Board," adding that&#13;
those students on the Union&#13;
Committee were selected by the&#13;
Chancellor whereas the&#13;
President o( the Activities Board&#13;
had been selected by approximately&#13;
50 students on the&#13;
Activities Board. It was agreed&#13;
by the eee that the P AB&#13;
president. BuZZFaust, would be&#13;
asked to serve on eee.&#13;
The chairperson o( eee was&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(eee) met officially (or&#13;
the first time this semester I last&#13;
Tuesday evening. The ccc has&#13;
the task o( dividing up $7200&#13;
among student organizations at&#13;
Parkside. Those organizations&#13;
have sent budget requests to cee&#13;
lDtal\ing $23,754,so tar.&#13;
Present at the meeting were&#13;
students Phylis Lidberg, Tom&#13;
Jennett, and Sue Fletcher;&#13;
(ae:uJty members Walter Feldt,&#13;
Micllael O'Rourke, Teresa Peck,&#13;
carole Vopat, Bob Cadez. and&#13;
H... bert Kubly; and representing&#13;
the Administration was Jewel&#13;
EcheIbarger, Assistant Dean o(&#13;
Students. Absent were (acuIty&#13;
member Robert Grueninger and&#13;
student Elaine Birch.&#13;
The (nt order o( business&#13;
• 1 lYand lY ishes to . a warning to aU individuals who&#13;
rry puroe ",10 the hbnry. They ask lhat lndt';Wals Iteep traClt of&#13;
tbeIr pune at aU urn pones are belng olen at an average or one&#13;
a cia,&#13;
Tllunday. ov. a. the Parblde Poetry Forum will (.. tore an&#13;
...... "" of twdent poetry. Any student Interested in reading several&#13;
rnay do 10. He or sbe abou1d sunply lW"tt up at the reading,&#13;
w!IIchwill bo8m at 7'30 p.m. In tile oecond l\oor library lounge. This&#13;
tbennI 01poeu will mclude students lrom sumlUfll!ing colleges as&#13;
well II rrom Par1tIIde·&#13;
One-way fare. available on bu.&#13;
Student. to read their poetry&#13;
!.ltma PI take. new pledge.&#13;
SlIm&amp; Pllralemity bas _ed lbat on Thursday. OcL 25. six new&#13;
members weft pledged into their fraternity brolherlJond. The pledges&#13;
are O&gt;arles PeITOnJ, Micbael Kopc:%Y1ISIri,Daryl Vincent, Ricl&gt;ard&#13;
Duby, J_ph Hutten, and William SobanSIti. Sigma Pi extends&#13;
«JIlII"&amp;lulationSto .ts new members.&#13;
third World .ponlOn lecture&#13;
Th.TIurd World OrgaOWluon willspoosor a lecture on Islam today,&#13;
• v. 7 at 12:30 '" Gree&gt;qUlStroom 103.The lecturer will be Ali Razaa&#13;
and (ree and OpeD to the publiC.&#13;
Ranger&#13;
classlfleels&#13;
,~ &amp;ALI .. Soli M'f OI! "'* GtN'&#13;
........ ~._JDr \'1M ."*" ....Iid IJDO call&#13;
"LL. 'fy ....D ....'" ~ cad ~&#13;
.... HO no" .. ~.~ .....&#13;
~ ~ C."t.et SoKand JtW100N • 650'-&#13;
--&#13;
APRIL .2·%•• 1....&#13;
to day •a rughts&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
For PI'IIC lion or informauon&#13;
lacl&#13;
(""Pl TlU\'EL E'TER&#13;
• \'u'I)-'''' all, m-~&#13;
Bud Drinkers, can&#13;
you figure this out?&#13;
Ralph bought a 6-pak of Budweiser. and invited four friends over to share it.&#13;
Since he bought, he expected to have two cans to himself, but unfortunately&#13;
when he returned to the refrigerator for his second, he found it missing. So he&#13;
asked who took it. Al said," Joe drank it." Joe said, "Dan drank it." Dan said,&#13;
.. Joe, that's a lie!" And Bill said, "I didn't drink it." If only one of these&#13;
statements is true, who really drank it?&#13;
I&#13;
then selected by the (&#13;
members present, as atult)'&#13;
are not allowed to VOlestueIoozi&#13;
decision. Feldt as':' dtat&#13;
professor of engin~ing ~lllDt&#13;
was selected and it was ......&#13;
that the position o( ~&#13;
would revolve alPha~&#13;
among eee members. '&lt;lU,&#13;
A sub-cornmitttee was then&#13;
up to decide guidelines, Cri~&#13;
and some procedures to be&#13;
when limiting and cutting -&#13;
from organizational req~&#13;
"Within the state r.gulau:,:'&#13;
said Feldt, "we will ha&#13;
. ve: ..&#13;
restrict even further."&#13;
The eee has the powerIlOl&#13;
to limit money (rom req.... ':&#13;
may also strike items&#13;
within the budget. "Some.::&#13;
get money (rom other .......&#13;
also," said Echelbarg.r ''wlidl&#13;
we wil~ want to keep U; _&#13;
Athletic organiz.ation. fw&#13;
example, may get segregated lot&#13;
allotments (rom lhe A1bIotIr&#13;
Board.&#13;
Echelbarger .slt.d ...&#13;
perhaps some moneybe set ....&#13;
(or orgamzatlons whichmal ..&#13;
created next semester and ....&#13;
some funding.&#13;
' EP SIDE GE 'f, .1, m&#13;
CCC begins budget&#13;
deliberations&#13;
mg to all individua who&#13;
that indi • o.aa eep track of&#13;
olen at an a erage of one&#13;
I&#13;
rm.ation will sponsor a lecture oo Islam today,&#13;
Gnienquist room UX!. The lecturer will be Ali Ra:r.aa&#13;
to the public.&#13;
b O.bra Friedell&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC) met officially for&#13;
the first time this semester. last&#13;
Tuesday evening. The CCC has&#13;
the task of dividing up $7200&#13;
among student organizations at&#13;
Parkside. Those organizations&#13;
have sent budget requests to CCC&#13;
totalling $23,754, so far .. Present at the meeting were&#13;
tudents Phylis Lidberg, Tom&#13;
Jennett, and Sue Fletcher;&#13;
faculty members Walter Feldt,&#13;
Michael O'Rourke, Teresa Peck,&#13;
Carole Vopat, Bob Cadez, and&#13;
Herbert Kubly; and representing&#13;
the Administration was Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger. Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students. Absent were faculty&#13;
member Robert Grueninger and&#13;
student Elaine Birch.&#13;
The first order of business&#13;
taken up by CCC was the&#13;
choosing of a student for the fifth&#13;
student position on the committee.&#13;
That position is to be held&#13;
by the president of the Stud~nt&#13;
Union Committee, but Parkside&#13;
has no such committee until next&#13;
year. Last year the seat was&#13;
declared vacant by interpretation&#13;
of the regulati~ns by&#13;
the University Committee.&#13;
However, this year stude~ts&#13;
expressed their -interest in filling&#13;
that position. Echelbarger suggested that&#13;
someone from the Union Planning&#13;
Committee or the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board--PAB-be seated.&#13;
She said it was her feeling that&#13;
the person "best able to serve at&#13;
this time is the president of the&#13;
Activities Board," adding that&#13;
those students on the Union&#13;
Committee were selected by the&#13;
Chancellor whereas the&#13;
President of the Activities Board&#13;
had been selected by a pproximately&#13;
50 students on the&#13;
Activities Board. It was agreed&#13;
by the CCC that the P AB&#13;
president, Buzz Faust, would be&#13;
asked to serve on CCC.&#13;
The chairperson of CCC was&#13;
r&#13;
'&lt;&#13;
Q&#13;
a&#13;
..&#13;
'&lt;&#13;
:c&#13;
C&#13;
"&#13;
~&#13;
Bud Drinkers, can&#13;
you figure this out?&#13;
Ralph bought a 6-pak of Budweiser _ and invited four friends over to share it.&#13;
ince he bought, he expected to have two cans to himself, but unfortunately&#13;
when he returned to the refrigerator for his second, he found it missing. So he&#13;
asked who took it. Al said," Joe drank it." Joe said, "Dan drank it." Dan said&#13;
"Joe. that's a lie!" And Bill said, "I didn't drink it." If only one of the~&#13;
tatements is true, who really drank it?&#13;
then selected by the fa&#13;
members present, as ~ are not allowed to vote&#13;
decision. Feldt a OIi&#13;
• I professor of engineering&#13;
was selected and it wa&#13;
that the position of 'lreed&#13;
would revolve alpha~&#13;
among CCC members. can,&#13;
A sub-committtee was thea&#13;
up to decide guidelines M'lt-..&#13;
and some procedures t:i be ..... ._&#13;
when limiting and cutti~&#13;
from organizational req&#13;
"Within the state regu1a..__&#13;
said Feldt, "we will ha - restrict even further." ve 11&#13;
The CCC has the power not&#13;
to limit money from l'eQ\leMa&#13;
may also sbike items&#13;
within the budget. "Some ~ get money from other .. ..,.&#13;
also," said Echelbarger ,&#13;
we will want to keep ~&#13;
Athletic organizations&#13;
example, may get llelreaated&#13;
allotments from the&#13;
Board.&#13;
Echelbarger asked&#13;
perhaps some money be let&#13;
for organizations which ma,&#13;
created next semester and&#13;
some funding.&#13;
..&#13;
I&#13;
~~K H¢Llt&gt;AY &#13;
",,,. CIS Clrt&#13;
;.;--&#13;
Wed ... _" Nov. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Film society shows cl • asslcs "'bil. mellar&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Their financial difficult~es&#13;
Ned by an emergency meeting&#13;
SO he Campus Concerns Como!&#13;
I e Parkside Film Society is&#13;
""lie.. l th rolling, on 1t5 way 0 ano er&#13;
SUCcessful year. .&#13;
filmS scheduled for this year&#13;
are' \,aJnpr and Carnival of Souls&#13;
M' nday, November 12. Gospel&#13;
. ~ing to Saint Matthew -&#13;
AI'.ndaY.November 26. Big Sleep&#13;
. Wednesday, December 12.&#13;
'Mlese will all be shown in GR103&#13;
with 75 cents admission&#13;
~ed.&#13;
The films scheduled for&#13;
November 12 were previ~wed by&#13;
Film Society, and co:-chalrperson&#13;
Bob Mainland descnbes them as&#13;
livery eerie and very good."&#13;
Gospel Accordi~g to Sa~nt&#13;
Matthew is described as bemg&#13;
wellmade and a good handling of&#13;
the topic. Big Sleep is a must for&#13;
Humphrey Bogart fans. It is&#13;
desCribed as a good film with&#13;
reaUy good performances by&#13;
Bogart and others.&#13;
Films for second semester&#13;
mclude: Rebel Without a Cause&#13;
and Wild One - Wednesday,&#13;
January 23. Forbidden Games -&#13;
Monday, February 11. Sherlock,&#13;
Jr .• Cops and The Navigators·&#13;
Monday, March 11. Day at the&#13;
1\1&lt;" . Wednesday, March 27.&#13;
Lavender Hill Mob - Spril 10.&#13;
Film Society was organized'&#13;
several years ago and now has&#13;
eight student members with&#13;
RMaid Gottesman, professor of&#13;
English, acting as advisor. They&#13;
had a very successful year last&#13;
year with from 1200-1600 in total&#13;
attendance and shut-out performances&#13;
on two occasions.&#13;
Mainland attributes their success&#13;
to good publicity and good films&#13;
and said he sees no reason why&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send tor yourup·lodate, 160·page,&#13;
Nil orde, catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
la cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
I t.2 daysl.&#13;
RESEARCHASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941WilSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGfLES. CALIF. 90025&#13;
12131477-8474or 477·5493&#13;
OUr rnurch material is sold for&#13;
fnufell assistance only.&#13;
\\ ","e'ida). 0\ r , Ken R.og&#13;
from 1·3 pm. Free.&#13;
II edee ~. 0\.; nurd World rgantzllbOll U present a&#13;
lecturer 011Islam aI12'30 p.m lDGreenq room 1113F&#13;
wedne da~. 0\. ';:P. B movie "Dr ZhJ\ • at 1&#13;
Comm Am Theatre AdmlSSlOn Is $1&#13;
Thn~a~. 0\. :Poe . Forum poosortnIa poe rn&#13;
s.udent poe at;:30 p m on lbe second floor library I • F&#13;
Thur&lt;d.. .'. : .t.ynard Ferguaan pIer m 5t1tdenu&#13;
from 1-4 pm. m the Comm Arts Tbo.lre&#13;
Thu.rsd.a~.' v, : 18~nardFergusonl:XJOCert.l8p m lntbe&#13;
Arts Theatre. 1'1 as are sold OlIt&#13;
Frid.~, 0\. t: ThIrd World CGnsU.ulIon m at 11&#13;
Greenqw t 1113.&#13;
lunla~. 0'. I': \'e\s Club dancel"l11nn&amp; "Hound Doc Band" at&#13;
9 p.m lD AB Advance lJ are a\·.i1abl from \' Club rnernbl!n&#13;
lor $1.50. Tickets at the door ere $I.~ .&#13;
nda~. 0\.11: epbe.n edisha mem rei Parbide's m C'&#13;
faculty will present a free concert a' .:30 pm lR th Comm rtI&#13;
Theatre&#13;
"on~" ~O\. 1%:Film Soclet} presents ··\'.mp~T··and ··Canu\..l&#13;
or Soul at ,'30 p.rn m Greenqu.1Sl 103. Adm' iOD1.5 'Th centa.&#13;
n" ....d.~. 0\. l5: Jan Eosembl land II under the du...,t1on or&#13;
Robert T'bomason. tant pro(es&gt;or .. m c, v.ill p lit a free&#13;
concert m IbeComm Arts Thealreat 7:30p.m&#13;
Frida). '0\. IS=PAR mo\,e t". "tghl of t.be Ll\'t Dead·' at I p m&#13;
SAB. Admi 100 is 15 cents&#13;
larda) ..'0\.17: Dance featonna "'Circuo" oponaored b)"AB n&#13;
SAB a' 9 pm.&#13;
Sancia), :-'0\ •• , PAB mo". ". ',ght .. the J..,j Dead.t 7':10&#13;
pm m SAB AdmissIon IS 75 c",,1S&#13;
So\t:mber It aDd !t: PSGA electioos&#13;
Film Society President Bob Mainland&#13;
they shouldn't be as successful&#13;
again this year.&#13;
The films shown by Film&#13;
Society are different than those&#13;
usually seen at a moviehouse or&#13;
those brought in by Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. They are films&#13;
that have been around for several&#13;
~ears and are classics. Many&#13;
times they are films students&#13;
have seen and have asked to see&#13;
again. Others have usually been&#13;
written about or films clips are&#13;
available, so Film Society&#13;
generally has a fairly accurate&#13;
idea of what kind of film they are&#13;
bringing in.&#13;
Membership in the club is open&#13;
to anyone who wants to belong.&#13;
There is a lot of work to be done,&#13;
but it is split up among the&#13;
members so no one is overloaded.&#13;
Co-chairperson Mike&#13;
McDonald designs posters for the&#13;
various films, which are printed&#13;
on the silk screen apparatus Film&#13;
Society purchased last year. GI""&#13;
Christensen serves as projectionist&#13;
and everyone helps in&#13;
getting the posters distributed&#13;
Asked. why he is involved in&#13;
Film Sociely, Mainland replied,&#13;
"rm interested in seeing a film&#13;
society at Parkside. ost&#13;
colleges and Wliversities do have&#13;
them, and J think by lbe response&#13;
shown, there is a need for one&#13;
here. It is film as Art. &gt;I&#13;
:~"i- l '01\... • ... 1.t&gt;··· .-:!, r· .J\ .-..:. ..:t&#13;
r&#13;
V-1:"1lTERE,J'~E~'vI-n.J':.~: ...~i\~ . "~. &lt; •• ~ ~.F"&#13;
V&#13;
1I"r'"&#13;
~.&#13;
. . '~ . '". ~ .&#13;
L . ""/(50/0 'j'" A",) :'r-'" ~-/KenoJha&#13;
l..&#13;
,. ;&#13;
'a.&#13;
.LEATHER GOODS! .WATER BEDS.. ePAPERS&#13;
eJEWELRY.'~ .' eBEAN BAGS •• TAPES&#13;
eBATH p~.?.l?~CTS~,~ECORD§:",";.!PIPES _&#13;
, ".,~ ''Opel 15 days a year'&#13;
Phone654-3518 Ira OIlIklWl&#13;
Steak dinners&#13;
3315 52nd ST' Kenosha&#13;
Phone 652-8662&#13;
ttmkw4 to&#13;
.. 1Il .. 1dl&#13;
11IB&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
·31&#13;
. .. " . II!&#13;
SalftJidts ~ II IIIiHs&#13;
BRATWL'RSI'O~l 8P IALTY&#13;
FRIDAY,IIV. 9, o.e to "TAG"&#13;
SAl, V. 10, AI. IS"&#13;
Edge ater otor Inn&#13;
. LWs," .&#13;
"" Ili~~P-'I. - I' .&#13;
.l s.. IItl.-It.&#13;
eu'tpt&#13;
WED., FRI. &amp; SAl, IIV. 1, 9, 10&#13;
D3lce to "LIFE"&#13;
Filn, society shows 1 •&#13;
c ass1cs&#13;
b) Marilyn Schubert&#13;
h ·r financial difficulties&#13;
T e1 t· ved bv an emergency mee mg&#13;
1 the campus C~ncerns . Con:i- ol I e Parkside Film Society 1s&#13;
te . to th rolling. on its way ano er&#13;
cessful year. . flms scheduled for this year&#13;
are'. \'ampr and Carnival of Souls&#13;
M nday, November 12. Gospel&#13;
· ~ding to Saint Matthew -&#13;
'~day, November 26. Big Sleep&#13;
. Wednesday, December 1~.&#13;
These will all be shown m GR103&#13;
with 75 cents admission&#13;
charged.&#13;
The films scheduled for&#13;
. ·ovember 12 were previ~wed by&#13;
Film Society, and c~chairperson&#13;
Bob Mainland describes them as&#13;
"very eerie and very good."&#13;
Go pet According to Saint&#13;
"atthew is described as being&#13;
well made and a good handling of&#13;
the topic . Big Sleep is a must for&#13;
Humphrey Bogart fans. It is&#13;
de cribed as a good film with&#13;
really good performances by&#13;
Bogart and others.&#13;
Film Society Pre ident Bob . 1ainland&#13;
Films for second semester&#13;
mclude: Rebel Without a Cause&#13;
and Wild One - Wednesday,&#13;
January 23. Forbidden Games -&#13;
Ionday, February 11. Sherlock,&#13;
Jr .. Cops and The Navigators -&#13;
Monday, March 11. Day at the&#13;
Races · Wednesday, March 27.&#13;
Lavender Hill Mob - Spril 10.&#13;
Film Society was organized&#13;
several years ago and now has&#13;
eight student members with&#13;
Ronald Gottesman, professor of&#13;
English, acting as advisor. They&#13;
had a very successful year last&#13;
year with from 1200-1600 in total&#13;
attendance and shut-out performances&#13;
on two occasions.&#13;
Mainland attributes their success&#13;
to good publicity and good films&#13;
and said he sees no reason why&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page,&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
I to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
0..r research material is sold for&#13;
research uslstance only.&#13;
they shouldn't be as successful&#13;
again this year.&#13;
The films shown by Film&#13;
Society are different than those&#13;
usually seen at a moviehouse or&#13;
those brought in by Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. They are films&#13;
that have been around for several&#13;
)'.ears and are classics. Many&#13;
times they are films students&#13;
have seen and have asked to see&#13;
again. Others have usually been&#13;
written about or films clips are&#13;
available, so Film Society&#13;
generally has a fairly accurate&#13;
idea of what kind of film they are&#13;
bringing in.&#13;
Membership in the club is open&#13;
to anyone who wants tQ belong.&#13;
There is a lot of work to be done,&#13;
Steak dinners&#13;
~179 &amp; UP&#13;
3315 52nd ST· Kenosha&#13;
Phone 652-8662&#13;
but it i&#13;
members so no o&#13;
loaded. Co-chairper on Ii e&#13;
kDonald designs poste for th&#13;
various mm , which are printed&#13;
on the silk creen apparatu FIim&#13;
Society purcha ed la t :ear. Glen&#13;
Chri ten en sen· as projec- tioni t and evervone hel in&#13;
getting the posters d tnbuted.&#13;
Asked why he i tnrnh-ed in&#13;
Film ociety •. lainland replied,&#13;
" I'm interested in seeing a film&#13;
society at Par ide. • lo t&#13;
colleges and universitie do have&#13;
them, and I think by the respon&#13;
shov.rn, there is a need for one&#13;
here. It is film a Art."&#13;
Wednesct.y, ov. 7, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGE&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
Hi&#13;
BR 01&#13;
FRIDAY V. 9, ce to 'TAG&#13;
SAT. 0V. 10 Al. IS&#13;
d at lot Inn&#13;
41&#13;
d&#13;
WED., FRI. &amp; SAT. Y. 7 9, 10&#13;
O.mce to 'LIFE' &#13;
• THE PARKS IDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1973&#13;
Harriers&#13;
__________ RANGERSports _-,&#13;
Sports shorts&#13;
T1Irkf') 1'T'ot With Th nk Illviog still Ihree w eeks away a group of Parkside&#13;
poopl d i&lt;lod10 get into the holiday spirit ea;ly when they competed&#13;
In th annual cr- Country Turkey Trol, beld last Sunday, 'ovember&#13;
thThe rules 01 th race were: I. couples run logether u male, 1&#13;
femal l,2 coupl have to pred&gt;ct the ume II will take them to finish&#13;
the race ~ lhe couple lbal comes etesest to thell' lftdicled time are the&#13;
wlnnft"S Th WInningcouple was EoIIeenReilly and Bob Lawson, who were 10&#13;
nds oR their pred&gt;cted time. second place wenlto Tom Beyer and&#13;
Lura, who were 12secondo off their predicted time. A toIJlI of 8&#13;
coupl competed In the meet&#13;
An lntereshng fact of thi meet was that the prizes were as unique as&#13;
~ra I II FI~lpn1e .... a lurkeytwhalelse?l,secondplacegol&#13;
cluck ,third pn.e wa eggs, fourth was eggnog, the rulb place&#13;
f"ushers got ppl cider&#13;
'atram.' I8a In:lbell&#13;
JIm Koch has announced thai men should start forming learns in&#13;
pre ration for lho Pr~rislmas Holiday Intramural Basketball&#13;
Tournam nl. "lUch wlUlake place the fusllwo weeks of December.&#13;
Thl Y r lwo I g will be formed. a unday note, and a Wed·&#13;
y Nt I gue The d adhnes for lbese SlgnUp sheets is&#13;
Th nkO\llVIng&#13;
Raquet 8011 Th "III a raquet ball tournament soon. For information&#13;
conlact JIm Koch In the Phy Ed. bwldlng.&#13;
W,nUlD IIDk:&#13;
The 1m Parlwde Wr tling Chnic will be held lbis saturday,&#13;
ovemher 10th. and I""..-dmg 10 head wrestling coach Jim Koch, it&#13;
should qUlle a shoW.&#13;
Thll Y ~ clonIC will feature three outstandlng iDdivi~ols in lbe&#13;
port of wrealllng Bill Harlow, wbo WIS runner-up on the world&#13;
w.... lllng charnplonslups, ....iIl be a guesl speaker, along wilb&#13;
Park Ide' Ken Marton, lbe ~ time national cbampion. Bill West, also&#13;
from Park ide and mcidenlaUy a ruMer'Up in the 1973nationals, will&#13;
ak along 10 Ith Koch.&#13;
The ret! Irltion fee for lbe cIlIuc will be SI, and you may regisler&#13;
any hme belween 1:30 and 10 a.m. on saturday. Lasl year, approXlmalely&#13;
600 Ittended lbe cUnic, and Coach Kocb expects another&#13;
fine turnout this year&#13;
SKcu Re u1 The Pa,kside Ranger Soccer Team look third place in the UW&#13;
Milwaukee tournarnenllast saturday, by defeating UW·Plalteville :H.&#13;
Lewl Unlve",ity won the tourney, blanking UW·Milwaukee 2-0.&#13;
PI er Kiefer scored lwo goals for Parkside, and Ray Pbanturat the&#13;
olht'r ThIS101ft leaves Parkslde with a 3-9season record.&#13;
to compete&#13;
In district&#13;
playoffs&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
Eou Claire's the place, and&#13;
with Lucian Rosa setting the&#13;
pace, the results could be interesttng&#13;
in tbe 1973 NAIA&#13;
District 14. CrosS Country&#13;
Playoffs, to be beld this Saturday.&#13;
For the Rangers, the two teams&#13;
that will give them the most&#13;
trouble are Cartbage and&#13;
LaCrosse; however, three of the&#13;
twelve competing teams in the&#13;
dlstricl will go to the national&#13;
toumament. "We reel we have&#13;
made steady progress this&#13;
season, and as a result of the MidAmerica&#13;
tournament last weekend,&#13;
we feel pretty confident that&#13;
we'll make il," head coach Vic&#13;
G&lt;tdfrey remarked.&#13;
Coach G&lt;tdfrey went on to&#13;
explain how the harriers have&#13;
accumulated such an impressive&#13;
7-1dual meet record this year:&#13;
utbe major reason is that these&#13;
guys have worked harder than&#13;
any other group we've had at&#13;
Parkside." Hopefully this hard&#13;
work \\ill pay oCf, because in&#13;
Phy-Ed Bldg. hours&#13;
until further notice there will be varsity athletic pracli ee l&#13;
gy&#13;
mS from 3:30 p.m, ·6:30 p.m. daily and on Sat. 9:00 a . .-\1 III Ill"&#13;
noon. MONDAY, Nov. 5_Gymopen 12:30-1:20, 7:00-10:00 p.m. Pool&#13;
6:00-10:00 p.m. Handball courts open 12:00-10:00 p.m.&#13;
TUESDAY, Nov. 6 - Same as above.&#13;
WEDNESDAY' Nov. 7 . Same as above.&#13;
THURSDAY, NoV. 8 - Same as above, except pool oot IVallable&#13;
during evenings. FRIDAY, NoV. 9 - Women's Gymnastics Meet YS. UW Milwu .&#13;
p.rn. Gymnasiums closed from 12:00 on. WresUing Clinic set-up'r6:00&#13;
p.m. on. pool open 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m, Handball .,.:&#13;
available 8:30 a.m. ·4:00 p.m.&#13;
SATURDAY, NoV. 10 - Parkside WresUing Clinic· The .&#13;
building will be closed (or this event, no recreational periods ertire:&#13;
SUNDAY, NoV. 11- Building open as usual for recreatio~2'OO&#13;
till 10:00 p.m. All areas available. . p....&#13;
order to advance to the nationals,&#13;
they have to be one of the lop&#13;
three teams in their district, or&#13;
individually, one has to be one of&#13;
the lop three runners.&#13;
With that thougbt in mind,&#13;
Godfrey will head into this&#13;
playoffs full force, the team&#13;
consisting of Rosa, Dettman,&#13;
Biel, Rhode, Merritt, DeVasquez,&#13;
and Ammerman. Last week-end&#13;
in the Mid-America Championships&#13;
Parkside took second&#13;
place in the team competition,&#13;
losing only to the tough&#13;
"Chicago 7." Individually, Rosa&#13;
did it again, this' time with a 30:46&#13;
clocking in the 10,000 meier&#13;
event. Other places for Parkside&#13;
were: Chuck Dettman-5th,&#13;
Dennis Biel . 9th, Wayne Rhode -&#13;
26th, Keith Merritt - 31st, Jim&#13;
DeVasquez - 49th.&#13;
There were a tolal of 'iii&#13;
dividuals who competed in ...&#13;
10,000meter race. tho&#13;
In the National Vele&#13;
Competition for 30-39year&#13;
three men from Parkside not"":&#13;
=&#13;
gave away the fact that they~&#13;
over 30, oo.t that they aren't bid&#13;
runners either. Coaches 0rtIt'&#13;
Moss, Bob Grueninger and 8Gb&#13;
Lawson, finished 16th' 18th UlI&#13;
21st respectively. ' ,&#13;
Getting back to tbe IIa"IIf&#13;
Cross Country team, if all _&#13;
go as planned, Coach GodIn,&#13;
and crew wIll be singinglIKaMM&#13;
City here we come" at ...&#13;
National Cross Country CIJaa.&#13;
plOoshlPSto take pIa.. at Sou.,&#13;
Kansas on November 10.&#13;
An&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
Q1.DIES YOU •.&#13;
10 years ago "Fun Fun Fun," by The Beach&#13;
6oys. was on the char1s, and it is available along KEEP •&#13;
'. . .&#13;
with 4500 others in stock.&#13;
·.&#13;
THE ·,&#13;
" .&#13;
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Z' &amp; ?It ~ Sala&#13;
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' .&#13;
,. . .&#13;
..&#13;
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,'&#13;
191!TAYLOR \\~ESCE. RACL"E 63i-!%J:!.&#13;
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2 FoOsBALL TABLES&#13;
25'1&#13;
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Drink at the P&#13;
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25~ T&#13;
T Home of the SHORTY A&#13;
v&#13;
B&#13;
Bar Drinks 45~&#13;
L&#13;
Big Beer&#13;
E&#13;
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Pobst Bud Schlitz&#13;
0&#13;
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Open 7 days a week ~1:~ ~ ~&#13;
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5&#13;
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T&#13;
AiR HOCKt"Y&#13;
Y&#13;
TOP 40 4&#13;
Buy a ...&#13;
Deliciously Sotisfying&#13;
• BIGSHEF&#13;
GOLDEN 8ROWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES&#13;
"UN" COMMONLY REFRESHll'lli&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
All FOR $130&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave.&#13;
StQrtYourS.t Now!&#13;
.2.&#13;
LOC.4TIOSS 3400 Sheridan Rood&#13;
nesclay, Nov. 7, 1ffl&#13;
GER&#13;
~---------Sports _ _,&#13;
ort shorts&#13;
raquet ball tournament soon. For information&#13;
D the Phy Ed. building.&#13;
'de Wrestling uuc will be held th Saturday&#13;
.Noven1ber lCMb, nd ccord1111 to head wrt'Stl~ coach Jim Koch, it&#13;
qute• .&#13;
n cluuc r ture three outstanding indiviG&amp;als in the&#13;
Bill Harlo , bo runner-up in the world&#13;
championships will be • guest speaker, al~ with&#13;
' Ken artin, the 3 time national champion. Bill West also&#13;
from P ide and ancidentally • rumer-up in the 1973 oationab, will&#13;
alcq 1th Koch.&#13;
The registration f for the clinic will be Sl and you may register&#13;
any tune n 1:30 and 10 a m. on turday. Last year approximately&#13;
attended the clinic, and Coach Koch expects a~ther&#13;
ftne turnout this y r. rR&#13;
Tbe Pa&#13;
ll uk&#13;
10 years ago " Fun Fun Fun," by The Beach&#13;
Boys, was on the charts, and it is available along&#13;
with ~ others in stock.&#13;
T&#13;
V&#13;
u ar&#13;
Home of the 2 5 C SHORTY&#13;
Bar Dr'nks 4S"" Big Beer ..,.&#13;
Pabst Bud Schlitz&#13;
0 TAP&#13;
Open 7 days o week&#13;
8:00 o.m. · 1 :00 a.m.&#13;
E&#13;
TOP 40&#13;
Harriers&#13;
to compete&#13;
In district&#13;
playoffs&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
Eau Claire's the place, and&#13;
with Lucian Rosa setting the&#13;
pace, the results could be interesting&#13;
in the 1973 NAIA&#13;
District 14 Cross Country&#13;
Playoffs, to be held this Satu~&#13;
day.&#13;
For the Rangers, the two teams&#13;
that will give them the most&#13;
trouble are Carthage and&#13;
LaCrosse; however, three of the&#13;
t'&lt;Nel e competing teams in the&#13;
district will go to the national&#13;
tournament. "We feel we have&#13;
made teady progress this&#13;
season, and as a result of the MidAmerica&#13;
tournament last weekend&#13;
we feel pretty confident that&#13;
we'll make 1t," head coach Vic&#13;
Godfrey remarked.&#13;
Coach Godfrey went on to&#13;
e plain how the harriers have&#13;
accumulated such an impressive&#13;
7·1 dual meet record this year:&#13;
" the major reason is that these&#13;
guys have worked harder than&#13;
any other group we've had at&#13;
Parkside.'' Hopefully this hard&#13;
work will pay olf, because in&#13;
An&#13;
Phy-Ed Bldg. hours&#13;
Until further notice there will be_ varsity athletic pracuce&#13;
gyms from 3:30 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. daily and on Sat. 9:00 a.111.&#13;
noon. MONDAY, Nov. 5-Gymopen 12:30-1:20, 7:00-10:00p.m.&#13;
6:00-10:00 p.m. Handball courts open 12:00-10:00 p.m.&#13;
TUESDAY, Nov. 6 - Same as above.&#13;
WEDNESDAY - Nov. 7 - Same as above.&#13;
THURSDAY, Nov. 8 - Same as above, except pool not a&#13;
during evenings. FRIDAY, Nov. 9 - Women's Gymnastics Meet vs. UW Milwu. 1, p.m. Gymnasiums closed from 12:00 on. Wrestling Clinic set-up tbae&#13;
6:00 p.m. on. Pool open 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Handball&#13;
available 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. COIU1a&#13;
SATURDAY, Nov. 10 - Parkside Wrestling Clinic _ The&#13;
building will be closed for this event, no recreational periods. estlrt&#13;
SUNDA y, Nov. 11 - Building open as usual for recreation 2.00&#13;
till 10:00 p.m. All areas available. · PJI.&#13;
order to advance to the nationals,&#13;
they have to be one of the top&#13;
three teams in their district, or&#13;
individually, one has to be one of&#13;
the top three runners.&#13;
With that thought in mind,&#13;
Godfrey will head into this&#13;
playoffs full force, the team&#13;
consisting of Rosa, Dettman,&#13;
Biel, Rhode, Merritt, DeVasquez,&#13;
and Ammerman. Last week-end&#13;
in the Mid-America Championships&#13;
Parkside took second&#13;
place in the team competition,&#13;
losing only to the tough&#13;
"Olicago 7." Individually, Rosa&#13;
did it again, this time with a 30:46&#13;
clocking in the 10,000 meter&#13;
event. Other places for Parkside&#13;
were: Chuck Dettman-5th,&#13;
Dennis Biel - 9th, Wayne Rhode -&#13;
26th, Keith Merritt - 31st, Jim&#13;
DeVasquez - 49th.&#13;
There were a total of • dividuals who competed In ii,&#13;
10,000 meter race.&#13;
In the National Veteraa.&#13;
Competition for 30-39 year~&#13;
three men from Parkside not-.&#13;
gave away the fact that u., _, over 30, ~t that they area't llat&#13;
runners either. Coacbea&#13;
Moss, Bob Grueninger and°=&#13;
Lawson, finished 16th 'lath&#13;
21st respectively. ' '&#13;
Getting back to the&#13;
Cross Country team, if an&#13;
go as planned, Coach ~&#13;
and crew will be singing "&#13;
City here we come" 11&#13;
National Cross Country&#13;
pionships to take place at&#13;
Kansas on November 10.&#13;
"Un" -Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE .&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
Buy a ... Delkiously Sot"&#13;
• BIGS&#13;
•&#13;
"UN" COMMONl Y REFRESHING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALLFOR $1 lO&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave.&#13;
StQrt Your Set Now!&#13;
• 2 •&#13;
LOC.4TIOSS 3400 Sheridan R </text>
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              <text>Area industries commen on Parkside and mission</text>
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              <text>The Parkside- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 14,1973 Vol. II No. 11&#13;
Area industries comment&#13;
on Parkside and mission&#13;
by Sandy Busch&#13;
Editor's note: For the past several weeks.&#13;
RANGER has been surveying local business and&#13;
DlPafaduring concerns for their perceptions about&#13;
I'IIrksideand its mission to the Industrial Society.&#13;
"I'd love one-even tomorrow! It's so difficult to&#13;
attend graduate school now, transportation-wise."&#13;
such was the exclamation by Kenosha's LeBlanc&#13;
Co. personnel employee, Parkside graduate John&#13;
Gray.Similar comments have often been expressed&#13;
in the last three weeks. According to a RANGER&#13;
survey of local industrial personnel men and&#13;
women, the majority of many larger area componies&#13;
are in favor of the establishment of a&#13;
graduate program associated with Parkside's&#13;
School of Mndern Industry.&#13;
Those companies contacted were: J. 1. Case,&#13;
Jacoboen Mfg., Walker Mfg., Rexnord Inc.,&#13;
McGraw-Edison, Continental Can, Acme Die&#13;
Casting, and In-8ink-Erator in Racine; and&#13;
American Motors, MacWhyte Wire and Rope,&#13;
Anaconda American Brass, Ocean &amp;pray Cranberry,&#13;
and LeBlanc in Kenosha. Johnson's Wax in&#13;
Racine declined to comment at this time.&#13;
Personnel people were asked if they were in favor&#13;
of the new proposed mission statement for&#13;
Psrkside, upon which the Regent's Nov. 16 hearing&#13;
will be based. The majority were not familiar with&#13;
the proposal. When asked specifically if they&#13;
favored the establishment of a graduate program,&#13;
anoverwhelming majority felt this was an excellent&#13;
lI'oposition.&#13;
Twocompanies fell that due to their smallness in&#13;
siz.e and internal training and promoting, a&#13;
graduate program in the area would not henefit&#13;
them. However, both were aware of local business&#13;
people who definitely favor the establishment of&#13;
such a program.&#13;
Three companies (including the two mentioned&#13;
above) felt the graduate programs already&#13;
established at various colleges and universities in&#13;
Whitewater, Milwaukee and Chicago were sufficient&#13;
for their needs.&#13;
Favorable Attitudes&#13;
Comments by those interviewed reveal the basis&#13;
01favorable altitudes:&#13;
"I would say Within the last two years, we've been&#13;
applying efforts toward people with heavier&#13;
academic programs. A graduate program in the&#13;
area would not only promote the company's growth,&#13;
but individual growth," commented Robert L.&#13;
!'aJJack. Personnel, American Motors.&#13;
"The futlD'e will bring even more people conliauiDg&#13;
on in education. I would certainly favor a&#13;
pduate program at Parkside in order to fulfill the&#13;
future needs of the area," said Walter Spangenburg,&#13;
Personnel Manager, Jacobsen Mfg.&#13;
"With a graduate program at Parkside, the&#13;
locaJitywould be excellent. I would be happy if it&#13;
.... mpled just one of our employees to take advantage&#13;
of a graduate program," felt John&#13;
O'Connor of Personnel at Anaconda American&#13;
Bra ...&#13;
"I would definitely be in favor of a graduate&#13;
II'Ogram.We do have employee interest in graduate&#13;
_k, but due to work schedule versus classroom&#13;
achedule,it's difficult, not only for Walker, but for&#13;
other companies in town," said Jack SChaefer,&#13;
Personnel, Walker Mfg.&#13;
"With a graduate program many managerial&#13;
peoplemay go bn. I feel such a program would be&#13;
beneficial," said Wilma Tennyson of Personnel at&#13;
Ocean Spray Cranberry.&#13;
"I was really disappointed when they started to&#13;
cut down on their graduate plans. There's a heck of&#13;
a lot of industry around here, and I can voucb for the&#13;
tiresomeness of driving all the way to Milwaukee.&#13;
There's a crying need in industry for training. I&#13;
think there's a lot of people just waiting for a&#13;
graduate program," was the comment of Jack.&#13;
Delmore in Personnel at MacWhyte Wire and Rope.&#13;
Undergraduate Program Needs StrengthenIng&#13;
Although very few personnel people seemed to&#13;
have any knowledge of the new proposed mission&#13;
the majority were at least somewhat familiar with&#13;
Parkside's School of Mndern Industry. Three of the&#13;
12 people interviewed had no idea of what training&#13;
the programs offered.&#13;
The School of Mndern Industry is designed to&#13;
prepare business and industry-bound students for&#13;
changing needs of mndern industry. The broadlybased&#13;
and flexible majors of the school were aIfinned&#13;
strengths of the program. A statement bY&#13;
McGraw-Edison personnel manager, Judy&#13;
Bachorz, summarizes this perception: "Parkside's&#13;
graduates are educated very well in a general&#13;
manner; they're probably the best trained in the&#13;
area. This is satisfactory, as they can enter industry&#13;
in various fields, and with hard work and possibly&#13;
some further training, fit in well."&#13;
It was noted by all companies that the-schedu1ing&#13;
of industrial classes is excellent. A sufficient&#13;
number and variety of evening classes are&#13;
available for part-time business students pursuing a&#13;
degree.&#13;
In regard to classes heing offered. several personnel&#13;
people were sattsfied with ParksJde's SChool&#13;
of Modern Industry as it stands presently. Their&#13;
experiences with Parkside graduates have revealed&#13;
to the companies an adequate training bad been&#13;
provided.&#13;
Most other interviewees felt the Division of&#13;
Engineering Science definitely needed expanding.&#13;
Several companies expressed that it has been apparent&#13;
tbat past and present adjustments taking&#13;
place in the division are improving the program.&#13;
Need More Math&#13;
Emphasis was placed on the need for more advanced&#13;
math classes in the program, especially&#13;
statistics. The remark was made bY one personnel&#13;
person that graduates rely too much on computers,&#13;
and not all companies are presently equipped with&#13;
them.&#13;
A definite need for more training in drafting,&#13;
including actual drafting experience. was quoted&#13;
seen in engineering graduates. A program including&#13;
more in-depth classes in this area, would be&#13;
favored.&#13;
One company discovered a lack of knowledge in&#13;
electricity, magnetism, and electromecbanics .&#13;
Again, it was felt more in-depth training was&#13;
needed.&#13;
The needs expressed by the industrial commlrity&#13;
in regard to engineering personnel can be summarized&#13;
with a statement by Spangenburg of&#13;
Jacobsen: "What we need is more people in&#13;
technology with much knowledge in math. An expansion&#13;
of technology classes is a must for the&#13;
future industrial silua tion. "&#13;
Math classes were also the main topic in crilicism&#13;
of Parkside's Division of Management Science.&#13;
MORE MUSIC! Jazz Ensembles I &amp;: II, pictured here in the woods south of LLC. will preseat a free&#13;
roncert at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 15 in The Communication Arts Theatre. Botb ensembles are&#13;
directed by Robert Thomason,&#13;
MUSIC: Members of !be UW-P CoDCert BaDd practlee lor Ill....&#13;
upcoming concert m tile CommaakliU. ArU 11teatre. ne .&#13;
IDld... llle dlrectioD of Bernanl_ .... will piay.. _y. • 1101&#13;
7:31 p.m. Adm.is&amp;ioD is free.&#13;
Several penomel people remarRd thot more&#13;
advanced training in math was needed, specifically&#13;
in accounting, cost. accounting, and statistics. IIwas&#13;
stated that sometimes just one more class would do&#13;
the job. In need of such advanced trainirC are&#13;
prospective employees in occounling, production&#13;
control, and purcbasing.&#13;
Expressed many times was the beUe! that&#13;
Parkside's business management training is too&#13;
generalized: supervisors are unable to manage any&#13;
specific area. There also seem. to be too much&#13;
theory and nO( enough practice, resulting in individuals&#13;
too passive for such a pos.tion&#13;
Labor Ecoaomin Not Well KnOWll&#13;
Few companies ....ere familiar with Parkslde's&#13;
Division of Labor Economtcs. Those commenting&#13;
stated that the recent new requirements were&#13;
positive changes; however. labor relations classes&#13;
still need to be more specific.&#13;
In regard to graduates needing more lO-deplh and&#13;
specific-trairung classe • several personnel people&#13;
felt it was possible that this lack was due to the&#13;
students thernselv-es. and nO( Parkside's program&#13;
One person observed that many of the classes we re&#13;
there. but either students had no desire to take&#13;
them, or they were not aware, for some reason or&#13;
another, that they "'ould need them.&#13;
Cooperothe TrOiDlngProgrom,&#13;
Five indastries contacted were or are presently&#13;
participating in some type of cooperative trolOlOIl&#13;
program WIth Parkside's SChool of Modem Industry.&#13;
Most personnel people w..... generolly&#13;
favorable toward the programs, and expressed a&#13;
desire to pursue furth ... such educational methods.&#13;
TIle majority of the remainlOll compu .... expressed&#13;
interest in cooperative pr&lt;&gt;groms. Sev.... 1&#13;
lmew very htUe of cooperotive trauung oftend bY&#13;
Parkside. Other commentators remarked thot&#13;
e:-t ............&#13;
BULLETIN: Al 1110'Reg..... •&#13;
Imeetlag 10 t Frldoy. tbe&#13;
ollowlng clouse ... oppro .. d&#13;
far oddltloa lG Porkslde', mIaoloa&#13;
!stalement. apoe wblcb the&#13;
lIeorlollllio Fridoy monolal will&#13;
lie bd4:&#13;
"g) Tbe DI.... lty b.. ld&#13;
develop appropriate l.ler·&#13;
lnatltalieolol _rom rdotloa&#13;
sIoIpa wIIIllo Ill. reg.... "&#13;
Election procedures&#13;
outlined 0&#13;
Deadline for Senate undid,te&#13;
petitions has be.. extended to&#13;
noon nursday. Nov. 15. '1bey Ire&#13;
to be turned in to the PSGA office.&#13;
LLC Dl!l3.&#13;
students will vote for only 9 lOdividuals.&#13;
Elections will be held&#13;
ov.19 and 20from 9 a.m. unW 8&#13;
pm. Polling places will be&#13;
located in the Clas room&#13;
building, Main Place, and On the&#13;
Kenosha campus. Student IDs&#13;
will be required.&#13;
KJs also staled that "The&#13;
problem with student government&#13;
is that people say it doesn't&#13;
have enough support The only&#13;
way for PSGA to become effective&#13;
Is 10 have support of&#13;
students. Without support there io&#13;
no power base and nothing can be&#13;
done Students can sho\\' thetr&#13;
concern by voting."&#13;
Next week Parkslde students&#13;
will go to tbe polls in the annual&#13;
PSGA elections.&#13;
George Kis, chairperson of the&#13;
elections comrntttee. explained&#13;
election procedures. Each&#13;
student will vote for one person&#13;
for each of the following offices:&#13;
President. Vice-President,&#13;
Treasurer, and Campus Con·&#13;
cerns Committee. There are 11&#13;
positions open for the Senate. but&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1973 Vol. II No. 11&#13;
Area industries comment&#13;
on Parkside and • • rn1ss1on&#13;
by Sandy Busch&#13;
Editor's note: For the past several weeks,&#13;
RANGER has been surveying local business and&#13;
manufacturing concerns for their perceptions about&#13;
Parkside and its mission to the Industrial Society.&#13;
"I'd love one-even tomorrow! It's so difficult to&#13;
attend graduate school now, transportation-wise."&#13;
such was the exclamation by Kenosha's LeBlanc&#13;
Co. personnel employee, Parkside graduate John&#13;
Gray. Similar comments have often been expressed&#13;
in the last three weeks. According to a RANGER&#13;
survey of local industrial persom:iel men and&#13;
women, the majority of many larger area companies&#13;
are in favor of the establishment of a&#13;
graduate program associated with Parkside's&#13;
School of Modern Industry.&#13;
Those companies contacted were: J. I. Case,&#13;
Jacobsen Mfg., Walker Mfg., Rexnord Inc. ,&#13;
McGraw-Edison, Continental Can, Acme Die&#13;
Casting, and In-Sink-Erator in Racine; and&#13;
American Motors, MacWhyte Wire and Rope,&#13;
Anaconda American Brass, Ocean S_pray Cranberry,&#13;
and LeBlanc in Kenosha. Johnson's Wax in&#13;
Racine declined to comment at this time.&#13;
Personnel people were asked if they were in favor&#13;
of the new proposed mission statement for&#13;
Parkside, upon which the Regent's Nov. 16 hearing&#13;
will be based. The majority were not familiar with&#13;
the proposal. When asked specifically if they&#13;
favored the establishment of a graduate program,&#13;
an overwhelming majority felt this was an excellent&#13;
proposition.&#13;
Two companies felt that due to their smallness in&#13;
size and internal training and promoting, a&#13;
graduate program in the area would not benefit&#13;
them However, both were aware of local business&#13;
people who definitely favor the establishment of&#13;
such a program.&#13;
Three companies (including the two mentioned&#13;
above) felt the graduate programs already&#13;
established at various colleges and universities in&#13;
Whitewater, Milwaukee and Chicago were sufficient&#13;
for their needs.&#13;
Favorable Attitudes&#13;
Comments by those interviewed reveal the basis&#13;
of favorable attitudes:&#13;
"I would say within the last two years, we've been&#13;
applying efforts toward people with heavier&#13;
academic programs. A graduate program in the&#13;
area would not only promote the company's growth,&#13;
but individual growth," commented Robert L.&#13;
Fallack, Personnel, American Motors.&#13;
"The future will bring even more people continuing&#13;
on in education. I would certainly favor a&#13;
graduate program at Parkside in order to fulfill the&#13;
future needs of the area," said Walter Spangenburg,&#13;
Personnel Manager, Jacobsen Mfg.&#13;
"With a graduate program at Parkside, . th_e&#13;
locality would be excellent. I would be lJ;lppy if it&#13;
prompted just one of our employees to take advantage&#13;
of a graduate program," felt John&#13;
O'Connor of Personnel at Anaconda American&#13;
Brass.&#13;
"I would definitely be in favor of a graduate&#13;
program. We do have employee interest in graduate&#13;
work, but due to work schedule versus classroom&#13;
schedule, it's difficult, not only for Walker, but for&#13;
other companies in town," said Jack Schaefer,&#13;
Personnel, Walker Mfg.&#13;
"With a graduate program many managerial&#13;
people may go tm. I feel such a program would be&#13;
beneficial," said Wilma Tennyson of Personnel at&#13;
Ocean Spray Cranberry.&#13;
"I was really disappointed when they started to&#13;
cut down on their graduate plans. There's a heck of&#13;
~ lot of industry around here, and I can vouch for the&#13;
tiresomeness of driving all the way to lilwaukee.&#13;
~ere's a crying need in industry for training. I&#13;
think there's a lot of people just waiting for a&#13;
graduate program," was the comment of Jack&#13;
Delmore in Personnel at Mac Whyte Wire and Rope.&#13;
Undergraduate Program Need Strengthening&#13;
Although very few personnel people seemed to&#13;
have al?y ~owledge of the new proposed mission,&#13;
the maJonty were at least somewhat familiar with&#13;
Parkside's School of Modern Industry. Three of the&#13;
12 people interviewed had no idea of what training&#13;
the programs offered.&#13;
The School of Modern Industry is designed to&#13;
prepare business and industry-bound students for&#13;
changing needs of modern industry. The broadlybased&#13;
and flexible majors of the school were affirmed&#13;
strengths of the program. A statement by&#13;
McGraw-Edison personnel manager, Judy&#13;
Bachorz, summarizes this perception: "Parkside's&#13;
graduates are educated very well in a general&#13;
manner; they're probably the best trained in the&#13;
area. This is satisfactory, as they can enter industry&#13;
in various fields, and with hard work and possibly&#13;
some further training, fit in well."&#13;
It was noted by all companies that the.scheduling&#13;
of industrial classes is excellent. A sufficient&#13;
number and variety of evening classes are&#13;
available for part-time business students pursuing a&#13;
degree.&#13;
In regard to classes being offered, several personnel&#13;
people were satisfied \\-it.h Parks1oe s Schoo&#13;
of Modern Industry as it stands presently. Their&#13;
experiences with Parkside graduates have revea ed&#13;
to the companies an adequate training had been&#13;
provided.&#13;
Most other interviewees felt tbe Division of&#13;
Engineering Science defmitely needed expanding.&#13;
Several companies expressed that it has been apparent&#13;
that past and present adjustments ta ·ng&#13;
place in the division are improving the program.&#13;
'eed More Math&#13;
Emphasis was placed on the need for more advanced&#13;
math classes in the program, especially&#13;
statistics. The remark was made by one personnel&#13;
person that graduates rely too much on computers,&#13;
and not all companies are presently equipped with&#13;
them.&#13;
A definite need for more training in drafting,&#13;
including actual drafting experience, wa quoted&#13;
seen in engineering graduates. A program including&#13;
more in-depth classes in this area, would be&#13;
favored.&#13;
One company discovered a lack of knowledg~ in&#13;
electricity, magnetism, and electron_i~bamcs.&#13;
Again, it was felt more in-Oepth trammg was&#13;
needed.&#13;
The needs expressed by the industrial conummity&#13;
in regard to engineering personnel can be summarized&#13;
with a statement by Spangenburg of&#13;
Jacobsen: "What we need is more people in&#13;
technology with much knowledge in math. An expansion&#13;
of technology classes is a must for the&#13;
future industrial situation."&#13;
Math classes were also the main topic in criticism&#13;
of Parkside's Division of Management Science.&#13;
MORE MUSIC! Jazz Ensembles I &amp; II, pictured here in the woods south of LLC, will present a free&#13;
concert at 7 .30 Th d Nov 15 in The Communication Arts Theatre. Both ensembles are dir .. p.m. urs ay, . ected by Robert Thomason.&#13;
Se•,eral personnel people&#13;
BIJLLETI. ":&#13;
meeting la l&#13;
follo"-UI clau&#13;
ro.- adcll · lO Par&#13;
rill tJi Frid m in&#13;
~ beld:&#13;
Election procedures&#13;
outlined 0&#13;
. ·e. t ·eek Park 1de tuden&#13;
"ill go to the polls m the annual&#13;
PSGA election .&#13;
George Kis, chairperson of the&#13;
e!ectlons committee, explained&#13;
election procedure . Each&#13;
tudent ~;u \·ote for one person&#13;
for each of the following offices:&#13;
President, Vice~Pre ident,&#13;
Treasurer. and Camp Concern&#13;
Committee. There are 17&#13;
posifon:, open for the Senate, b t &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Noy. 14, 1973&#13;
This week is an important one for the future of UW-P, since the&#13;
Regents' hearing on our mission .statemen~ i~Friday morning.&#13;
Numerous groups and individuals Will be testifying at that hearing,&#13;
including RANGER.&#13;
In preparation for this hearing,. reporter Sand~ ~usch h~s been&#13;
polling local industries and businesses on their impressions of&#13;
Parkside-how we are serving them, how we could do better, advice&#13;
for our students, and so on. The results of her research are printed in&#13;
this week's issue, and indicate a generally favorable response to the&#13;
idea of graduate programs here. A copy of her article will be provided&#13;
the Regents at the time of the hearing.&#13;
Undoubtedly, the focus of much of the testimony will be on the&#13;
clause involving graduate programs. RANGER, however, intends to&#13;
direct its remarks to the area of liberal arts programming in&#13;
Parkside's specific mission and to two clauses in the more general&#13;
mission of the University Cluster (which is composed of all institutions&#13;
except Milwaukee and Madison, which form the Doctoral Cluster)&#13;
dealing with meeting the educational and personal development needs&#13;
of students and providing priority emphasis on teaching excellence.&#13;
OUr statement regarding liberal arts at Parkside will pinpoint the&#13;
need for the creative elements of Humanities and the behavioral study&#13;
value of Social Sciences in a technological, scientific, depersonalized&#13;
society. Such humanizing elements are a necessary part of the&#13;
education all individuals, including those with industry majors, must&#13;
have in this technological society. Because of Parkside's modern&#13;
industrial society emphasis, it is essential that the business of self and&#13;
culture and human interaction be as important as the business of&#13;
labor, and it cannot be ignored if the important notion of self is to&#13;
survive.&#13;
Our remarks on the shared mission of all University Cluster institutions&#13;
will be to affirm the need for effective teaching, academic&#13;
advising' and counseling, and bniverslty~sponsorea:' cultural,&#13;
recreational, and extra-curricular programs. Any institution must&#13;
realize a commitment in these areas if it is to succeed in the&#13;
development of human resources.&#13;
Regarding teaching excellence, emphasis must be placed here and&#13;
continual recognition given. Inherent in this is implied the review&#13;
process of which students, who can best ascertain effective teaching,&#13;
need to be an integral part.&#13;
Any individuals or groups wishing to make oral or written&#13;
statements at the hearing are encouraged to contact the Chancellor's&#13;
office, ext. (553-)2211, for information and to register.&#13;
RANGER&#13;
___ ----·EditoriaI/Opinion&#13;
Presidential&#13;
candidate&#13;
endorsed&#13;
by Ranger&#13;
Because of the Importance of fhis year's PSGA&#13;
elections to the present and future students of Parks ide,&#13;
RANGER has taken an active part in promoting the&#13;
elections and publicizing the candidates' views. In attempting&#13;
to make the issues and candidates known, we&#13;
have tried to demonstrate our faith in the students to&#13;
make intelligent decisions but it is also our hope that&#13;
lack of Interest does not pre-empt PSGA, let alone Informed&#13;
voting.&#13;
Because of RANGER's involvement, we have come to&#13;
know all three men who have declared their candidacy&#13;
for the office of President. All are concerned and Interested&#13;
persons but one of them has a unifying potential&#13;
that we fear is lacking in the other two. That Is one of the&#13;
reasons that RANGER has decided to endorse Steve&#13;
Smith for President and his running-mate, Richard&#13;
Pautzke. for Vice-President.&#13;
PSGA to date has contributed to the present disinterest&#13;
and disaffection of the students by its failure to&#13;
act or Its miscalculated actions. Someone who Is&#13;
completely unrelated to last year's government could&#13;
begin with fresh insight and a new base of support.&#13;
Smith is not a previous member of PSGA, which is&#13;
partly why we feel he will be good for PSGA and&#13;
Parkslde. He is, however, a member of the steering&#13;
committee formed earlier this semester to suggest new&#13;
directions for PSGA. and became a member because he&#13;
took the iniative to start investigating student government&#13;
last summer. and voiced his concerns.&#13;
His maturity and realistic outlook are also important&#13;
considerations. He states, in his platform. that Increased&#13;
communication at all levels is necessary and&#13;
this is something RANGER has been saying all year. At&#13;
the present time, students are working against each&#13;
other and against faculty and administration, and this&#13;
division is directly affecting the flavor of the college&#13;
experience. What we need Is representation in our&#13;
student government that. first of all, presents a united&#13;
front, and secondly, realizes that confrontation with&#13;
those who have power will not result in them giving us&#13;
power. Confrontation is not communication. it Is&#13;
alienation.&#13;
Smith realizes that the present Constitution is&#13;
inadequate and a new one must be written. That Constitution&#13;
must give students more control of their&#13;
academic and extra-curricular lives, but Smith also&#13;
seems to realize that such control must be cogently&#13;
negotiated. This is power we are dealing With. and hence&#13;
an exercise In the functioning of the real world. Smith's&#13;
platform indicates his aim to make the decision-making&#13;
processes a part of students' educational experience.&#13;
RANGER implores the students to take a little time to&#13;
read the platforms of ali the candidates. and next&#13;
Monday or Tuesday, take a couple of minutes to mark&#13;
their ballots. If the right people are elected. they could&#13;
conceivably make some progressive and readily apparent&#13;
changes in student life. Many of you may not&#13;
know exactly what changes are needed, but a general&#13;
feeling of alienation. detachment and dissatisfaction&#13;
with your college careers are symptoms of a deeper&#13;
disease, and the cure is available if the right doctors are&#13;
called in.&#13;
by Jane SChliesman&#13;
i,1f:.n.PR..IldCMel-------&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parksidc Ranger is published weekly throughout the academfc&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin·Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at 0-194 LibraryLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Pa.rkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
r~nected In columns and editorials are not necessarily the oHicial&#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;
prtnt any letters.&#13;
EDITDR-IN·CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR' Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: 'Debra s rteoeu&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
~~~;~~:.APHIC COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
Hedde Ii Sandy Bush, Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
sorel'ls:~ s~ry Jensen: Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schuper t, John&#13;
PHOTOGRAe;~~tap~nlan, Carr.ieWard, Tom DeFouw, Neal sevtoer&#13;
Jim Ruffolo RS. Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS' .&#13;
LAYOUT' T : amy ~undan, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
BUS1NES ern Gelenlan, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
S MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
AOVE.RTlSING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANA ADVERTISING GER: Gary Worthington&#13;
STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1973&#13;
Presidential&#13;
candidate&#13;
endorsed&#13;
by Ranger&#13;
Because of the importance of this year's PSGA&#13;
elections to the present and future students of Parkside,&#13;
RANGER has taken an active part in promoting the&#13;
elections and publicizing the candidates' views. In attempting&#13;
to make the issues and candidates known, we&#13;
have tried to demonstrate our faith in the students to&#13;
make intelligent decisions but it is also our hope that&#13;
lack of interest does not pre-empt PSGA, let alone informed&#13;
voting.&#13;
Because of RANGE R's Involvement, we have come to&#13;
know all three men who have declared their candidacy&#13;
for the office of President. All are concerned and interested&#13;
persons but one of them has a unifying potential&#13;
that we fear is lacking in the other two. That is one of the&#13;
reasons that RANGER has decided to endorse Steve&#13;
Smith for President and his running-mate, Richard&#13;
Pautzke, for Vice-President.&#13;
PSGA to date has contributed to the present disinterest&#13;
and disaffection of the students by its failure to&#13;
act or its miscalculated actions. Someone who is&#13;
completely unrelated to last year's government could&#13;
begin with fresh insight and a new base of support.&#13;
Smith is not a previous member of PSGA, which is&#13;
partly why we feel he will be good for PSGA and&#13;
Parkside. He is, however, a member of the steering&#13;
committee formed earlier this semester to suggest new&#13;
directions for PSGA, and became a member because he&#13;
took the iniative to start investigating student government&#13;
last summer, and voiced his concerns.&#13;
His maturity and realistic outlook are also important&#13;
considerations. He states, in his platform, that increased&#13;
communication at all levels is necessary and&#13;
this is something RANGER has been saying all year. At&#13;
the present time, students are working against each&#13;
other and against faculty and administration, and this&#13;
division is directly affecting the flavor of the college&#13;
experience. What we need is representation in our&#13;
student government that, first of all, presents a united&#13;
front, and secondly, realizes that confrontation with&#13;
those who have power will not result in them giving us&#13;
power. Confrontation is not communication, it is&#13;
alienation.&#13;
Smith realizes that the present Constitution is&#13;
inadequate and a new one must be written. That Constitution&#13;
must give students more control of their&#13;
academic and extra-curricular lives, but Smith also&#13;
seems to realize that such control must be cogently&#13;
negotiated. This is power we are dealing with, and hence&#13;
an exercise in the functioning of the real world. Smith's&#13;
platform Indicates his aim to make the decision-making&#13;
prncesses a part of students' educational experience.&#13;
RANGER implores the students to take a little time to&#13;
read the platforms of all the candidates, and next&#13;
Monday or Tuesday, take a couple of minutes to mark&#13;
their ballots. If the right people are elected, they could&#13;
conceivably make some progressive and readily apparent&#13;
changes in student life. Many of you may not&#13;
know exactly what changes are needed, but a general&#13;
feel ng of alienation, detachment and dissatisfaction&#13;
with your college careers are symptoms of a deeper&#13;
disease, and the cure is available if the right doctors are&#13;
called in.&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
This week is an important one for the future of UW-P, since the&#13;
Regents' hearing on our mission statement is Friday morning. Numerous groups and individuals will be testifying at that hearing,&#13;
including RANGER. In preparation for this hearing, reporter Sandy Busch has been&#13;
polling local industries and businesses on their impressions of&#13;
Parkside-how we are serving them, how we could do better, advice&#13;
for our students, and so on. The results of her research are printed in&#13;
this week's issue, and indicate a generally favorable response to the&#13;
idea of graduate programs here. A copy of her article will be provided&#13;
the Regents at the time of the hearing.&#13;
Undoubtedly, the focus of much of the testimony will be on the&#13;
clause involving graduate programs. RANGER, however, intends to&#13;
direct its remarks to the area of liberal arts programming in&#13;
Parkside's specific mission and to two clauses in the more general&#13;
mission of the University Cluster (which is composed of all institutions&#13;
except Milwaukee and Madison, which form the Doctoral Cluster)&#13;
dealing with meeting the educational and personal development needs&#13;
of students and providing priority emphasis on teaching excellence.&#13;
Our statement regarding liberal arts at Parkside will pinpoint the&#13;
need for the creative elements of Humanities and the behavioral study&#13;
value of Social Sciences in a technological, scientific, depersonalized&#13;
society. Such humanizing elements are a necessary part of the&#13;
education all individuals, including those with industry majors, must&#13;
have in this technological society. Because of Parkside's modern&#13;
industrial society emphasis, it is essential that the business of self and&#13;
culture and human interaction be as important as the business of&#13;
labor, and it cannot be ignored if the important notion of self is to&#13;
survive.&#13;
Our remarks on the shared mission of all University Cluster institutions&#13;
will be to affirm the need for effective teaching, academic&#13;
advising and counseling, and University-sponsored cultural,&#13;
recreational, and extra-curricular programs. Any institution must&#13;
realize a commitment in these areas if it is to succeed in the&#13;
development of human resources.&#13;
Regarding teaching excellence, emphasis must be placed here and&#13;
continual recognition given. Inherent in this is implied the review&#13;
process of which students, who can best ascertain effective teaching,&#13;
need to be an integral part.&#13;
Any individuals or groups wishing to make oral or written&#13;
statements at the hearing are encouraged to contact the Chancellor's&#13;
office, ext. (553-)2211, for information and to register.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academfo&#13;
year by th~ stud~nts 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;
reflected m 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 less, typed iind 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;
prmt any letters.&#13;
EDITOR IN-CHIEF: Jane M . Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR : Debra Friedel!&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR : Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR : Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
~~~;~~:.A;;,HIC COORDINATOR : David Daniels&#13;
Hedden G ndY Bush, Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
Sorense~ ary Jensen'. Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert, John&#13;
PHOTOG::e;~~,:~an,an, Carr_ie Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
Jim Ruffolo · Ron Antrim, Allen Frederickson, Brian Ross,&#13;
CARTOONISTS· . LAYOUT· T : amy ~undan, Gary Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
BUSINESS ern Gelen,an, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
MANAGER : Ken Pestka&#13;
~~RVC~~~~:~~ MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
ADVERTISIN MANAGER : Gary Worthington&#13;
G STAFF: Fred Lawrence, J im Magruder &#13;
We get&#13;
The Editor:&#13;
A number of personal objections&#13;
occurred to ~e while&#13;
kimming your latest Issue. To&#13;
~it: Old Artie Gruhl's typical&#13;
lament and Superparkette Brinkman's&#13;
ominous rumblings concerning&#13;
the possible prosecution&#13;
of parking violators. Being a&#13;
generally reasonable human&#13;
being&#13;
Ifound it difficult to grasp&#13;
the exact significance of Artie's&#13;
nrade against the establishment&#13;
of a Third World counseling office.&#13;
or whatever, and was more&#13;
than a little pissed off by Cap'n&#13;
Brink's extortive threats against&#13;
at least 35 students and perhaps&#13;
the entire student body. As a&#13;
former editor (Newscope ) I&#13;
really think you made a grievous&#13;
mistake in not pursuing the&#13;
gendarme'S exact position on this&#13;
matter, whether or not it was&#13;
simply a press release.&#13;
Anyway. In deference to Arbe's&#13;
old, old age (it may be difficult&#13;
for him to Onish this entire&#13;
leiter) I will deal first with his&#13;
somewhat shaky complaint&#13;
concerning the newly established&#13;
counseling office dedicated solely&#13;
(I assume) to handling the more&#13;
or less unique problems facing&#13;
Third World students who attend&#13;
this paragon of integration.&#13;
In the course of his letter,&#13;
Gruhl intimates that the third&#13;
world is a new phenomenon, that&#13;
he has a problem with his&#13;
digestion whose symptom is&#13;
burping, that the administration&#13;
bas been playing a game of&#13;
"hoops" with various minority&#13;
groups, and that he has absolutely&#13;
nothing to complain&#13;
about concerning the· university&#13;
be&lt;ause of such "a wide latitude&#13;
of acceptance and tolerance."&#13;
I.Even though old Art has been&#13;
around for a long, long, long time&#13;
the third world has been around&#13;
longer, whether or not it had a&#13;
I18me. He states that people of&#13;
goodwill "have been trying to&#13;
bring about One World" and that&#13;
the "problem has been to&#13;
reconcile the differences of two&#13;
worlds" (whichever two they&#13;
To the Editor: I bave hesitated until now to&#13;
speak out concerning the policies&#13;
of the Commtmications Department&#13;
in regards to the university&#13;
theatre. I thought that it was only&#13;
fair that their premiere&#13;
pr~duction, The Virus, be given a&#13;
fair and unhindered chance to&#13;
Succeed&#13;
I as theatre and as&#13;
educational policy. After all, it's&#13;
a new play, and it would have&#13;
been impossible to discuss the&#13;
department's choice before the&#13;
performance; and it's a new&#13;
theatre, a new "team" of people--&#13;
both of which deserved the opportunity&#13;
to be tested. I fear that the challenge was&#13;
not well met. The Virus, by any&#13;
staodards, was a very bad play.&#13;
Not only is the Communications&#13;
Department to be faulted for&#13;
ChOO6inga drama that was facile&#13;
and sterile theatre· there is&#13;
something more' seriously&#13;
SU5pect about a play that attempts&#13;
to ride on so selfconscious,&#13;
disbonest and flabby&#13;
an Ideological commitment.&#13;
though the performance was&#13;
what could be expected in such an&#13;
embarrassing context (and the&#13;
set Was excellently crafted!)&#13;
th~re. is also something disap-&#13;
~mtmg in a play in which only a&#13;
little more than half of the cast is&#13;
made up of students.&#13;
.The rest of the proposed (and I&#13;
sincerely hope, tentatively&#13;
proposed) season can be com-&#13;
:nted ~n. Both Harvey and The&#13;
Y Frl.end are inappropriate&#13;
~nd Unfair selections, Harvey is a&#13;
oltenng comedy tha t has seen a&#13;
letters&#13;
may be) . "Now"&#13;
forlornly "we have' th he says&#13;
. h' ree world WIt which to deal"&#13;
s&#13;
~~ agree with the Racine real&#13;
:tte~r s: a unified world is H a fractured one D°rev,er, to paraphrase Bob&#13;
y an ~ou can be in my world if'&#13;
can be m yours' The oo! I . . e pcmt: that&#13;
In one there is many· ev if d ' en&#13;
a&#13;
UOl.ie world (not "one" world&#13;
which seems to me to be a fatuous&#13;
statement since, unless&#13;
I have&#13;
been cruelly misled over these&#13;
last 25 years, there's only one&#13;
a~ound here In the first place (m&#13;
friends agree with me&#13;
0 thY&#13;
,&#13;
n IS&#13;
point) ; even&#13;
a unified world&#13;
then, WOUld.be composed ideally&#13;
o~ ma~y different cultural. attitudinal,&#13;
Psychological&#13;
relIgIOUS, etc" layers each&#13;
corresponding to the individual&#13;
segments of the total population.&#13;
Why, 10 thIS utopia there'd even&#13;
be room for a whole passel of&#13;
Gruhls. The point is, you can't&#13;
launder people as you can money&#13;
an~ expect them to come out&#13;
white.&#13;
2. for his burping problem I&#13;
sug~est Arm and Hammer&#13;
hakmg soda, it's cheaper than&#13;
AIka Seltzer and you can brush&#13;
your teeth with it, deodorize your&#13;
fridge and probably even use it to&#13;
cut cocaine or Geritol.&#13;
3. I for one would like to get in&#13;
on this "hoop" game Artie was&#13;
talking about. Jeez,&#13;
I just love&#13;
haskethall. More seriously, if his&#13;
fmal sentence 'lthere is a lot&#13;
more to a college educa tion than&#13;
learning to shoot baskets" is&#13;
meant to apply to third worlders&#13;
many of whom play on the team: I consider it an insult to all the&#13;
tolerant people Gruhl says atteod&#13;
this campus. As innuendo it&#13;
sucks.&#13;
4. Gruhl has nothing to complain&#13;
about, huh? If that is so,&#13;
then his letter fooled me about 80&#13;
percent of the time.&#13;
Icould swear&#13;
there was' a complaint in there&#13;
somewhere. A wider angle:&#13;
though Gruhl seems to say that&#13;
Parkside is almost perfect, it&#13;
really isn't. There is a certain&#13;
movie version, several television&#13;
showings, and innumerable&#13;
second rate community theatre&#13;
revivals. Must we join them? It&#13;
neither tests nor explores the&#13;
technical limits of our new&#13;
theatre plant, nor the artistic&#13;
limits of our actors and directors,&#13;
both rationale unquestionably&#13;
fundamental to educational&#13;
theatre production. In addition,&#13;
it's being produced at Bradford&#13;
this yea'r. The Boy Friend, again,&#13;
fails to chal1enge on any grounds,&#13;
artistic or technical; further, it&#13;
fails to have any relevance to the&#13;
educational community that&#13;
Parkside should represent or to&#13;
the community in general, that&#13;
SE Wisconsin is, And another&#13;
guideline for educational theatre&#13;
is its intimate relationship with&#13;
the life of its educational and&#13;
social context.&#13;
Of critical strategic im·&#13;
portance is the fact that all of&#13;
these choices were made without&#13;
consulting the body of the&#13;
communication students, or for&#13;
that matter, any of the students.&#13;
Even at UW-Milwaukee, which is&#13;
certainly an elitist theatre&#13;
department-.the students are&#13;
given the opportunity to select&#13;
the plays of the seaso,n fr0f!l a&#13;
proposed list; and theIr ChOICes&#13;
are widely followed, Even at&#13;
UWM there are several student·&#13;
directed productions each&#13;
semester-.special consideration&#13;
is given to encourage them;. at&#13;
Parkside the word is "we're Just&#13;
too busy for students' work."&#13;
That alone is a severe comment&#13;
on the orientation of the depart-&#13;
~YOPIC quality rampant WIthin&#13;
his praise, Pcstde is not perfect&#13;
n?thing is, though Art may self:&#13;
righteously delude himself a&#13;
habit he probably picked up ,,:hen&#13;
he uropped out of law school back&#13;
10 '21.T~i~school has problems.&#13;
many trivial. many significant,&#13;
all of which require Improvement,&#13;
much of which can&#13;
only come about through a goodly&#13;
amount of cnuci m, i.e complaining.&#13;
Parkside most likel,·&#13;
wouldn't even exist were it not for&#13;
'complainers'&#13;
Cap'n Brinkman savs students&#13;
"may very well be gomg to the&#13;
DA" for failing to pay parkIng&#13;
f~nes. Fo.r a goddamn parking&#13;
ticket this fascist Is ready to&#13;
incarcerate some poor student&#13;
wbo can't afford the fine let alone&#13;
the court costs that would arise&#13;
should be contest it. Where the&#13;
hell is this man's priorities~ In&#13;
his glove box? His top desk&#13;
dra-Ner? In his holster" What&#13;
possible constructi ve purpose&#13;
can such an action bring a bout&#13;
besides ruining a student's life&#13;
for a few days? Ah, I know now,&#13;
it's a deterrent. Yeah. that's&#13;
gotta be it.&#13;
As Brinkman scoops the&#13;
campus in his jolly green roadster&#13;
Isuggest that he consider my&#13;
proposal for handling this 0bviously&#13;
dangerous problem in·&#13;
volving mad car criminals&#13;
masquerading as students. Why&#13;
not bust their windshields? Now&#13;
that's a lesson and a deterrent all&#13;
rolled up into ooe neat little&#13;
wback. It also saves on his&#13;
lackeys' precious time since they&#13;
won't have to waste their&#13;
precious litOe talents lrinting in&#13;
their best hand those complicated&#13;
citatiofLC1i. It even provides&#13;
a valid&#13;
form of exercise, something most&#13;
of them are in great need of.&#13;
Perhaps he could even institute a&#13;
tie-in with a local glass company&#13;
with an appropriate percentage&#13;
of the take diverted to bis&#13;
retirement fund.&#13;
I'm sorry this letter is almost a&#13;
lome, but what the hell.&#13;
Jim Koloen&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
ment.&#13;
Harsh critics might accuse the&#13;
theatre faculty responsible for&#13;
this season of seUishness and just&#13;
plain silliness··and be substantiated&#13;
by the production of&#13;
The Virus, and the other&#13;
proposed plays. But I think that IS&#13;
really an unfair and, most of all.&#13;
unnecessary criticism. What i&#13;
necessary is that the present&#13;
plans for the season be suspended&#13;
until decisions can be offered to&#13;
the communication students. and&#13;
a consensus reached. The highly&#13;
personal plans of faculty&#13;
members must be put aside and&#13;
the purposes of educational&#13;
Uleatre realized: to offer to&#13;
students the opportunity to learn&#13;
about theatre art. its past, and to&#13;
prepare them to deal with its&#13;
very troubled present aod future,&#13;
. to experiment and encourage&#13;
innovation not possible in com·&#13;
mercia I theatres; to create a&#13;
theatre that has a social and&#13;
community purpose, posItion and&#13;
point of view.&#13;
It is clear that there are&#13;
limitations here at Parkside:&#13;
there is no theatre departmentand&#13;
there damn well should be.&#13;
We have a small student body&#13;
and staff. We have limited&#13;
resources. I'm not suggesting a&#13;
new integrity, artistic and social,&#13;
in our department. In the face of&#13;
the enormous despair sometimes&#13;
created by the vast university&#13;
machine, we students tend to&#13;
forget one essential fact: it is our&#13;
school and our theatre.&#13;
Jeff Huoter&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Wednesday. Nov, 14 1973 E PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
the&#13;
Movemen&#13;
Editor' ncKt-'Tbe \10\f:mf'DL" t • rrcular&#13;
f turf'1II&#13;
R&#13;
tkals "ith women and.. men: ceece l.n itt, ••&#13;
t Par&#13;
hllOtor r- GU6L wruers are ill'\ltf'd.&#13;
-&#13;
t'R."&#13;
lei. and I.&#13;
b~. L, BIll'1I&#13;
Our Bodie . Ourselv :.\. 800k B, and F« "omf'. 1be Boston&#13;
women's Health Book Collect"e , IIDOO'" bust r ..,. York 1911&#13;
$2 9S . available In the Park Ide nl\f:rsll. BooUtore)&#13;
The IOfonnauon found In Our Bodit , Ou th .. mig na1l&#13;
gathered by a Rroupof .. omen In Bosto in ord~ 10 de lop&#13;
I coune&#13;
{or women about their bod,es 'Thore .&#13;
a m;nad 01 data a, .. Hable&#13;
from anatomy to lesbiarusm to mtnopau~ It is "'nU~ In 5 ·lounderstand&#13;
Amenkan j .,·en when the teclIIucaJ-m&lt;'di 01 terms are&#13;
used • and the sl)·le emplo}ed IS like a discu&amp;i,oo bot" th d~&#13;
and the article&#13;
The boo IS a complete, COOClSe, almost enc)clopedIC ... 1rl about&#13;
women: their bodIes, minds. feehngs, rtSponseIi (t!Ver)thm ),OU&#13;
al\ll·ays \li anted lO know about women. but "·ere afraid toa )&#13;
Our Bodies. Ourselves IS the perfect book for I nnollll coo·&#13;
SClousness--raismg group. a rap group for \li omen lO learn more about&#13;
lhelr bodies, or just for your awn personal library&#13;
I would suggest that allY woman "00 reatius she does not k.-&#13;
everytlung about her body ... an)1bq related to her lconlraCopbv.,&#13;
abortion. psychology. S&lt;'XU.II ~, etc.) get this book V..,'lI&#13;
learn a great deal (and even find some answen').&#13;
To the Edlt«: I agree with&#13;
a rec:enl Editor',&#13;
Notebook column about&#13;
inadequate televisioo facilities&#13;
"on the hill." This summer&#13;
Itned&#13;
unsuccessfully to find&#13;
a TV to&#13;
Witch the Watergate Ileannp&#13;
The set in the Student Union is&#13;
impossible 10 reach durmg a ten&#13;
or fifteen minute break lif you&#13;
could get a spot on the bus., and&#13;
the atmosphere IS pretty JlOlSy&#13;
I&#13;
was told hearmgs could be taped&#13;
and "e,,·ed several hours lat~&#13;
Unfortunately. the fast-breaking&#13;
news IS frequently dated before&#13;
Walter Cronkite gelS It'&#13;
It appears lack of these&#13;
facilities is an o\'erslght or an&#13;
unbudgeted Item rea .... were&#13;
expressed to me that someone&#13;
~ould teal the set or \r,e\llper5&#13;
"ould pend all their Ume "al·&#13;
chIng soap operas Hundreds of&#13;
other schools have uccessfully&#13;
soh·.d bolh the e problems&#13;
Some hotels have alann $} tems&#13;
built into their sets to dlscow-agt&#13;
theft 1 feel these arguments ml the&#13;
"hole problem PubliC affair.'&#13;
program, ne"5cast, pre&#13;
conferences, government&#13;
hearings, stock market and&#13;
buSIness reportS (Ch 321, are a&#13;
To the Editor: Iwant to coovey my thank to&#13;
lour reporler, Sandy Busch. for&#13;
her excellent article, "Alternatt&#13;
Scbool I I:W·P CIa room," 10&#13;
the October 31 Issue. My ... n&#13;
Impre IonS about the c.la have&#13;
been very positive. It ....as nal·&#13;
terlOg to ha\·e an outside ()b..&#13;
sener see the same thmg.&#13;
Some c.lanhcation IS necessary&#13;
since the article inadvertently&#13;
left a somewhat negaUve image&#13;
of Walden III Tlus ctarlhcaUon&#13;
is Important because of the many&#13;
mlsconceplJons about the school&#13;
a!J:I,ady held by the Parkside&#13;
community Although Walden&#13;
students may have had "dlf·&#13;
hculties adjusting to conventional&#13;
public school," this 15 in&#13;
terms of their ovm needs and&#13;
perceptions. Walden tIl is not a·&#13;
school for troublemakers or&#13;
misfits Walden IIIstudents teod&#13;
to be serious secondary students.&#13;
~!any go to Walden because they&#13;
VItal part of a penoo'a total&#13;
tdlJealloo. 'Ilus year II oaI1&#13;
un......&#13;
1 beca_ of llle valume.&#13;
'!be MicHut ar, Waterpte,&#13;
VlC~bal problema and&#13;
heannp, the enet"1Y erlala, are&#13;
cntical nabonlll pcoblema Not&#13;
havq a televwon availlble OIIIy&#13;
encourages people to be out of&#13;
touch.&#13;
The CommunlcaUon.&#13;
Department seems sympathellC&#13;
10 the problem, but sUII nothUllIl&#13;
done According to one mdIvldual&#13;
In the Learning Center. an&#13;
Inexpensive tem,.,.." solutlon&#13;
I to run a cord from the taptnC&#13;
room 10 GreenqulSI through the&#13;
COlling and d ....... the hall to&#13;
a&#13;
larger room Cosl wa e bmated&#13;
to be S2G-&lt;IO 'Thore an amal&#13;
already up. AnolMr hor! tenn&#13;
soIuuon "ould be plplng 10 an all·&#13;
ne" tallOl1 to an u..c room on a&#13;
&lt;GO\1l •• ou ba lS ( WBBlIl)&#13;
. 'either lblhty Ideal&#13;
Exc and ood Inttnuons&#13;
ar not good nou h Th&#13;
Park! Ide tudon nd f cull·&#13;
nd too min hou h 10 be&#13;
so totally out of tou h With orId&#13;
e\;ents&#13;
W c: n't Will tYto )'&#13;
for a n UNonK thJeen "&#13;
Ra lne&#13;
feel th r old tr,el&#13;
their learnlO&#13;
Iy quote bout the m th&#13;
cia. bein "a r Iii tie&#13;
I&#13;
Ilualion as po Ibl in an&#13;
unrealistic ettmg"" 8 not&#13;
mad m reference to Walden III&#13;
It \toia In refe-ence to the fact thai&#13;
any methods cia. IS by Its na lure&#13;
·'unreallstlc." Th leach rlearner&#13;
I not alone £.cu. a eta&#13;
Without any upport.&#13;
Iha'e spent&#13;
many hours the pa t t.. o yea ...&#13;
observing cia rooms In Chicago&#13;
and 10 the Chicago area. It IS my&#13;
lief that Walden III i an&#13;
unusually good hool. not only a&#13;
an alternative school, but as a&#13;
public high school lily admiration&#13;
for the quality or&#13;
Walden III tuden has been&#13;
enhanced through our weekly&#13;
mteracOon With tbe:m In thetr&#13;
economIcs, methods cia&#13;
.larvmJ. Happel&#13;
Assistant Prof of Educauon&#13;
We get&#13;
The Editor:&#13;
number of personal objections&#13;
occurred to ?1e while&#13;
·kimming your latest issue. To&#13;
~-it: Old Artie Gruhl's typical&#13;
lament and Superparkette Brinkman's&#13;
ominous rumblings concerning&#13;
the possible prosecution&#13;
of parking violators. Being a&#13;
enerally reasonable human&#13;
being I found it difficult to grasp&#13;
the exact significance of Artie's&#13;
tirade against the establishment&#13;
of a Third World counseling office,&#13;
or whatever, and was more&#13;
than a little pissed off by Cap'n&#13;
Brink's extortive threats against&#13;
at least 35 students and perhaps&#13;
the entire studertt body. As a&#13;
former editor (Newscope) I&#13;
really think you made a grievous&#13;
mistake in not pursuing the&#13;
gendarme's exact position on this&#13;
matter, whether or not it was&#13;
simply a press release.&#13;
Anyway. In deference to Artie's&#13;
old, old age (it may be difficult&#13;
for him to finish this entire&#13;
letter) I will deal first with his&#13;
somewhat shaky complaint&#13;
concerning the newly established&#13;
counseling office dedicated solely&#13;
(I assume) to handling the more&#13;
or less unique problems facing&#13;
Third World students who attend&#13;
this paragon of integration.&#13;
In the course of his letter,&#13;
Gruhl intimates that the third&#13;
world is a new phenomenon, that&#13;
he has a problem with his&#13;
digestion whose symptom is&#13;
burping, that the administration&#13;
has been playing a game of&#13;
"hoops" with various minority&#13;
groups, and that he has absolutely&#13;
nothing to complain&#13;
about concerning the· university&#13;
beca~e of such "a wide latitude&#13;
of acceptance and tolerance."&#13;
1. Even though old Art has been&#13;
around for a long, long, long time&#13;
the third world has been around&#13;
longer, whether or not it had a&#13;
name. He states that people of&#13;
goodwill "have been trying to&#13;
bring about One World" and that&#13;
the "problem has been to&#13;
reconcile the differences of two&#13;
worlds" {whichever two they&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have hesitated until now to&#13;
peak out concerning the policies&#13;
of the Communications Department&#13;
in regards to the university&#13;
th~atre. I thought that it was only&#13;
fair that their premiere&#13;
Pf?duction, The Virus, be given a&#13;
fair and unhindered chance to&#13;
ucceed, as theatre and as&#13;
educational policy. After all, it's&#13;
a new play, and it would have&#13;
been impossible to discuss the&#13;
department's choice before the&#13;
performance; and it's a new&#13;
theatre, a new "team" of peopleboth&#13;
of which deserved the opportunity&#13;
to be tested.&#13;
I fear that the challenge was&#13;
not well met. The Virus, by any&#13;
~ndards, was a very bad play.&#13;
ot only is the Communications&#13;
Department to be faulted for&#13;
choosing a drama that was facile&#13;
and sterile theatre· there is&#13;
omething more ' seriously&#13;
Uspect about a play that attempts&#13;
to ride on so selfconscious,&#13;
dishonest and flabby&#13;
an ideological commitment.&#13;
Though the performance was&#13;
V.-hat could be expected in such an&#13;
embarrassing context (and the&#13;
set w~s excellently crafted!)&#13;
lh~re&#13;
1s also something disap-&#13;
~mtmg in a play in which only a&#13;
httle more than half of the cast is&#13;
made up of students.&#13;
. The rest of the proposed {and I&#13;
sincerely hope, tentatively&#13;
proposed) season can be com&#13;
-&#13;
:nted ~n. Both Harvey and The&#13;
} Fr1_end are inappropriate&#13;
8nd unfair selections Harvey is a Iott · . ermg comedy that has seen a&#13;
letters&#13;
may be). "Now "&#13;
forlorn) " • he say ·th ~· we have three world&#13;
WI which to deal."&#13;
I too agree with the R .&#13;
:~ter that a unified a~'.~:l~e~~&#13;
er than a fractured However t one. D l ' ' o paraphrase Bob&#13;
Yan you can be in my world&#13;
'&#13;
f . can be · , 1 1 . m yours. The point· that&#13;
m . ~ne there is many: e~en a&#13;
un1_f1ed world (not "one" world&#13;
which seems to me to be a fat&#13;
statement since, unless I :~:&#13;
been cruelly misled over these&#13;
last 25 years there's o l . ' n y one a~ound here m the first place ( my&#13;
fr1~nds agree with me on this&#13;
pomt); even a unified world&#13;
then, would be composed ideal) .&#13;
o! ma~y different cultural. aitit~~&#13;
rn al, psychological&#13;
religious, etc., layers each&#13;
corresponding to the individual&#13;
segmE:nts ~f the total population.&#13;
Why' m this utopia there'd even&#13;
be room for a whole passel of&#13;
Gruhls. The point is, you can't&#13;
launder people as you can money&#13;
an~ expect them to come out&#13;
white.&#13;
2 · for his burping problem I&#13;
sug~est Arm and Hammer&#13;
baking soda, it's cheaper than&#13;
Alka Seltzer and you can brush&#13;
y~ur teeth with it, deodorize your&#13;
fridge and probably even use it to&#13;
cut cocaine or Geritol. 3. I for one would like to get in&#13;
on this "hoop" game Artie was&#13;
talking about. Jeez, I just Jove&#13;
~sketball. More seriously, if his&#13;
fmal sentence "there is a lot&#13;
more to a college education than&#13;
learning to shoot baskets" is&#13;
meant to apply to third worlders&#13;
many of whom play on the team'&#13;
I consider it an insult to all th;&#13;
tolerant people Gruhl says attend&#13;
this campus. As innuendo it&#13;
sucks.&#13;
4. Gruhl has nothing to complain&#13;
about, huh? If that is so,&#13;
then his letter fooled me about 80&#13;
percent of the time. I could swear&#13;
there was· a complaint in there&#13;
somewhere. A wider angle:&#13;
though Gruhl seems to say that&#13;
Parkside is almost perfect, it&#13;
really isn't. There is a certain&#13;
movie version, several television&#13;
showings, and innumerable&#13;
second rate community theatre&#13;
revivals. Must we join them? It&#13;
neither tests nor explores the&#13;
technical limits of our new&#13;
theatre plant, nor the artistic&#13;
limits of our actors and directors,&#13;
both rationale unquestionably&#13;
fundamental to educational&#13;
theatre production. In addition,&#13;
it's being produced at Bradford&#13;
this year. The Boy Friend, again.&#13;
fails to challenge on any ground .&#13;
artistic or technical; further, it&#13;
fails to have any relevance to the&#13;
educational community that&#13;
Parkside should represent or to&#13;
the community in general, that&#13;
SE Wisconsin is. And another&#13;
guideline for educational theatre&#13;
is its intimate relationship with&#13;
the life of its educational and&#13;
social context. Of critical strategic im&#13;
-&#13;
portance is the fact that all of&#13;
these choices were made "'ithout&#13;
consulting the body of the&#13;
communication tudents, or for&#13;
that matter, any of the students&#13;
Even at UW&#13;
-Milwaukee, which is&#13;
certainly an elitist theatre&#13;
department&#13;
--the students are&#13;
given the opportunity to select&#13;
the plays of the seaso_n fro1!1 a&#13;
proposed list; and their choices&#13;
are widely followed. Even at&#13;
UWM there are several studentdirected&#13;
productions each&#13;
semester&#13;
- special consideration&#13;
is given to encourage them;_ at&#13;
Parkside the word is "we're Just&#13;
too busy for students' work&#13;
."&#13;
That alone is a severe comment&#13;
on the orientation of the depart&#13;
-&#13;
myopic quahty ram r.t 1thin&#13;
hi pr I. • P- id i no rf t&#13;
nothin i . though Art m lf:&#13;
rig~teou I delude hi u. a&#13;
ha~1t he probabl_ pie up il&#13;
he uropped out of la\\&#13;
in ·21. Th1.: -chool ha probl ,&#13;
many trivial, mam· I nif1cant.&#13;
all of hich r quire Im•&#13;
provement much&#13;
~·hich can&#13;
only come about throu h 8 oodly&#13;
amount of cnttci m 1&#13;
plaining Park ade ~ l el&#13;
wouldn t even I t&#13;
~·ere it n ( •&#13;
'complamers'.&#13;
Cap'n Brin man \. tud n&#13;
"may very ·ell be o to th&#13;
DA" for faih~ 0 pa . par Im!&#13;
f~nes. Fo_r a goddamn par 1&#13;
~cket thi fa cu i read) to&#13;
mcarcerate some poor tudent&#13;
who can&#13;
't afford the fine let alon&#13;
the court cost that ~uld ari&#13;
should he conte t it. Where th&#13;
~ll i this man's prioriti ? In&#13;
his glo\·ebox? His top de&#13;
dra&#13;
·.ver? In his h ter? What&#13;
possible constructive purpo e&#13;
can such an action bnng about&#13;
besides ruining a tudent' life&#13;
for a few days~ Ah, I know nov.&#13;
it's a deterrent. Yeah that''&#13;
gotta be it.&#13;
As Brinkman scoop the&#13;
campus in his jolly green roadster&#13;
I suggest that he con icier my&#13;
proposal for handling this obviously&#13;
dangerou problem involving&#13;
mad car criminals&#13;
masquerading as students. \\'h,•&#13;
not bust their ·indshields? , ·~&#13;
that's a lesson and a deterrent all&#13;
rolled up into one neat little&#13;
whack. It also saves on his&#13;
lackeys' precious time ince they&#13;
won't have to waste their&#13;
precious little talents printing in&#13;
their best band those complicated&#13;
citations. It even provides a valid&#13;
form of exercise, something mo t&#13;
of them are in great need of.&#13;
Perhaps he could even institute a&#13;
tie-in with a local gl cornpan)&#13;
with an appropriate percentage&#13;
of the take diverted to hi&#13;
retirement fund.&#13;
I'm sorry this letter i_ a)mogt a&#13;
tome, but ·hat the hell.&#13;
ment.&#13;
Harsh critics mi&#13;
theatre faculty&#13;
this ea on of lfi hn&#13;
JimKoloen&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
plain 11line --and be&#13;
·ub&#13;
-&#13;
tant1ated by the production of&#13;
Tht&#13;
\&#13;
'iru and the oth r&#13;
propo ed play&#13;
-. But I think that 1&#13;
really an unfair and, mo t of ll,&#13;
cr1tici&#13;
m. hat&#13;
nee ry i that the pre. t&#13;
plan for the eason be nded&#13;
until deci ions can off red to&#13;
the communication tud n • and&#13;
a con en u reached The hi hi&gt;&#13;
per onal plan of facult ·&#13;
members mu t be put id and&#13;
the purpose of educational&#13;
theatre realized : to off r to&#13;
tudent the opportunity to I arn&#13;
about theatre art, 1t pa&#13;
t, and to&#13;
prepare them to d I with 1~&#13;
very troubled pr ent and (utur ;&#13;
. to experiment and encoura&#13;
innovation not&#13;
~&#13;
-1ble in commercial&#13;
theatre-; to er ate a&#13;
theatre that ha a oci I and&#13;
community purpo · , po it1on nd&#13;
point of view. It I clear that there are&#13;
limitation here at Par . ide;&#13;
there i no theatre departmentand&#13;
there damn well should be&#13;
We have a mall tuclent body&#13;
and staff. We have limited&#13;
resource . I'm not uggesting a&#13;
new integrity. arti tic and social&#13;
in our department. In the face of&#13;
the enormous despair omet1m&#13;
created by the va t univers1t}&#13;
machine, e students tend to&#13;
forget one essential fact: it i our&#13;
school and our theatre.&#13;
JeHHunter&#13;
Keno ha&#13;
y, 0 • E SID G 3&#13;
th &#13;
4 THE PARKSIOE RAI\IGER Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1973&#13;
Whiteskellar provides&#13;
coHeehouse entertainment&#13;
Extensive Communication Needed&#13;
several criticizers of Parkside's School of Modern&#13;
Industry commented that perhaps more communication&#13;
is needed between professors in the&#13;
school and area companies. With Racine&#13;
especially, having a multitude of small industries it&#13;
was felt an interchange of needs and suggestions&#13;
would be beneficial to all concerned.&#13;
Nearly all personnel people interviewed had been&#13;
contacted in some way by Parkside's Placement&#13;
Office for recruiting purposes.&#13;
Five of those commenting were aware of contact&#13;
made by professors in various industrial divisions&#13;
of the. school. Their objective was to gain information&#13;
on company needs, and inform them of&#13;
program offerings.&#13;
According to the remainder of those interviewed&#13;
no communication had taken place with Parkside'&#13;
due to inaction of both the company and the school:&#13;
Several admItted. they realized that they were&#13;
probably not utilizing opportunities at Parkside&#13;
and could not pinpoint exactly why not. One pe~&#13;
continued on page 10 .&#13;
~~ ~IC~=:::::&gt;4~:IC~=:::::&gt;4~ltctc==-~ltctc==-~ltc~=~~I·~=::::::M~Y"--.C~L::-A~S-S-I-FI-E-D-"'" Here They Are' n WILL TYPE term papers. C.II ....&#13;
. u ~:~~:~;~:i~:I.~:':~~S~&#13;
~&#13;
WANTED: Reliable penon to ee- I·J&#13;
ornings. Call 694-3624.&#13;
lOST: Dark green thenna'&#13;
acxet. Call 159-2JS6.&#13;
With a background accompaniment of Jolu1&#13;
Graham genUy thrummmg hIS guitar and singing&#13;
RI\'GER learned about the Whlteskener fron:&#13;
G ry Petersen. a sophomore who chairs the&#13;
Parksllle Activities Board committee on tbe CofI&#13;
house.&#13;
Wlule the W1utesIceller isn't a real coffeehouse&#13;
the entertainment concept it is based on is similar t~&#13;
that of the Kenwood Inn at UW-M or other&#13;
ratMkeU r or cofleehouse establishments.&#13;
To get there. one winds down the stairs at the&#13;
south end of GreenqUlst Hall to the 02 level, then&#13;
through a heavy grey door Imide are many smaU&#13;
round tabl es, and once-white walls now covered&#13;
wIth. too ntart work, poetry, philosophy and&#13;
gralflt, vendin machines provide the refreshment.&#13;
And every Wednesday afternoon lrom 1 'til 3&#13;
th re 1 live entertainment, tree.&#13;
~t rsen exphuned that the idea is to use student&#13;
talent or local RaCIne-Kenosha people, although&#13;
occ lonally a performer IS brought in from&#13;
MIlwaukee.&#13;
Appearing thu lar this year have been: Brian&#13;
K,pp, Tony &amp; Jumbo. Dave Rogers, John &amp; Denny&#13;
(Jolu1 Graham and Denrus Lindgren) Phil&#13;
LiYlngston &amp; Rick Schroeder, Terry Elliot, a~d Ken&#13;
ROllers Thi week. Clark Anderson and Keith&#13;
Herbrechtsme.er are featured. On Dec. 5,&#13;
WlulesIceller will present Monica Cannon lrom&#13;
1.lwaukee. and for Dec. t2 a performance by the&#13;
Rick Schroeder&#13;
It's what,'s happening -&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 14: Clark Anderson will appear in the Whiteskell&#13;
from 1.3 p.rn. No admission charged. ar&#13;
Thursday, NoV. 15: Jazz Ensembles I and II under the direction r&#13;
Robert Thomason, assistant professor of music, will present a f 0&#13;
concert in the Com", Arts Theater at 7:30p.m. ree&#13;
Friday, NoV.16: PAB movie, "Nightof the Living Dead" at 11p.m .&#13;
SAB. Admission is 75 cents. .m&#13;
saturday. Nov. 17: Dance featuring "Circus" sponsored by PAB in&#13;
SAB at 9 p.rn. Sunday. NoV. 18: PAB movie, "Night of the Living Dead" at 8 p&#13;
in SAB. Admission is 75 cents. .rn.&#13;
Monday, NoV.19:.Wisconsin.State Supreme. ~urtJustice Horace W&#13;
Wilkie at2:30 p.m. m Greenqwst 103.No admission charged. .&#13;
Monday and Tuesday, Nov. t9-20: PSGA elections.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21: PAB dance featuring "Eden Slone" at9 p&#13;
in SAB. Admission is $1 lor Parkside students and $1.50 lor guests. ~&#13;
required_&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 22: Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
All items lor IT·S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submilled 10&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue In _hkil&#13;
an item is to appear. -&#13;
Sue Fletcher (Ielt) and Lynn&#13;
WhiteskeUar audJtioos last month.&#13;
Ferruno at Industries----&#13;
local theatrical group "Stuph!" is planned.&#13;
Petersen commented that Phil Livingston of&#13;
Kenosha. who will he a student here next semester.&#13;
is doing a book on southeastern Wisconsin folk&#13;
talent and says the W1uteskeller is one 01 very lew&#13;
ouUets for such talent in the area.&#13;
Auditions lor the Whiteskeller are held once each&#13;
semester. Thirteen performers auditioned at the&#13;
last opportunity; the next auditions will probably he&#13;
the third or fourth week of spring semester.&#13;
Graham, in commenting on the atmosphere from&#13;
the perspective of one who has played there, admits&#13;
it isn't like a coffeehouse. He called it "converted&#13;
servomation-type-a lunchroom with a stage." He&#13;
also mentioned the judgmental, critical audience.&#13;
Petersen said that people don't seem to he coming&#13;
for the entertainment, but for conversation. He feels&#13;
the free admission is part of the reason for this&#13;
since people who don't want to listen to music stili&#13;
come in. He fears the situation may not improve&#13;
until the Union is built and the Rathskeller lor&#13;
which the WhiteskeUer is a temporary prelude' is in&#13;
operation and serving foro and drink. '&#13;
Finally. the other thing the Coffeehouse Committee&#13;
coordinates is the mini-folk festival. The&#13;
Second Annual Folk Festival, leaturing much of the&#13;
Whiteskeller talent and more from southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, will be held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building on Sunday, Nov. 25. There is no admission&#13;
charge and the bar will be open.&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
interest in a cooperative program with Parkside&#13;
has only recently evolved; their companies were&#13;
just beginning to try various educational methods of&#13;
experience. Still others were aware of and have&#13;
taken part in such programs conducted by Gateway&#13;
Teclmical Institute. These people saw no reason&#13;
why similar arrangements could not be worked out&#13;
with Parkside.&#13;
• 1" 1iC- 4- '4" ....&#13;
LESTER&#13;
Late~t Rags!&#13;
by Jerry DubIel&#13;
Sight'n sound&#13;
Audio Consultinl&#13;
.. Discrete, MatriK, CD4, tull lOll'""*:&#13;
are a few of the terms id6fd It&#13;
language by the QuadriphonlCI&#13;
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.. Quad is where it's at .nd till ""&#13;
systems--SQ MatriK [COlufllbl&#13;
•&#13;
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everywhere. Four Chinnel disCI ....&#13;
tapes' are now hitting Ille tOIl&#13;
charts. pUI.r''''&#13;
.. With Quad's increuing. pO I l' 1&#13;
would you be foolish to InYt" f).1&#13;
channel (stereol equipfllenlt&#13;
..&#13;
depends on your budget. A~ I::: t&#13;
better than a poor qUid unit' ,&#13;
channel decoder can alwayS bt Ill""&#13;
later. But to be sure, talk It Oyer-: 1111&#13;
audio consultants a1 Sight'll SOu '&#13;
and Taylor. 1)11I'-&#13;
.. Also visit our brand nelN recll~&#13;
tape department, The leleCliO: I.pIIand&#13;
the prices are cool, I ,ra&#13;
c&#13;
loW as Sl.99.&#13;
211 - 6th Street&#13;
Downtown&#13;
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• Stereo, T.V. •&#13;
• HiFi components •&#13;
• Records. npeS •&#13;
21st and Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
614-49'00&#13;
Open dailY 'tit'&#13;
Sat. and sun. 'til'&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1973&#13;
Whiteskel,lar provides&#13;
coffeehouse entertainment&#13;
e Fl t.cb r &lt;left&gt; and Lynn Ferruuo at&#13;
WhH kellar audition la t month.&#13;
local theatrical group" tuph!" is planned.&#13;
Petersen commented that Phil Livingston of&#13;
Ken ha, who will be a student here next semester,&#13;
i doing a book on outh astern Wi con in folk&#13;
tal t and s&amp;), the \ rtuteskeller is one of very few&#13;
outlet for uch talent in the area.&#13;
udition for the Whiteskeller are held once each&#13;
sem ·ter. Thirteen performers auditioned at the&#13;
I ·t opportunit. ; the next auditions will probably be&#13;
the third or fourth week of pring emester.&#13;
Graham, in commenting on the atmos~here from&#13;
the perspective of one who has played there, admits&#13;
t i n't like a coff ehou . He called it "converted&#13;
·omation-type-a lunchroom with a stage." He&#13;
also m ntioned the judgmental, critical audience.&#13;
Peter.;en said that pe pie don't seem to be coming&#13;
for the entertainment, but for conversation. He feels&#13;
th free admi. ion i part of the rea on for this&#13;
·ince people who don't \\ant to listen to music stni&#13;
come in. He fears the ituation may not improve&#13;
until the Union i built and the Rathskeller, for&#13;
which the White keller is a temporary prelude, is in&#13;
operation and . erving food and drink.&#13;
Finally, the other thing the Coffeehouse Committee&#13;
coordinates i the mini-folk festival. The&#13;
l:Ond Annual Folk Festival, featuring much of the&#13;
Whiteskeller talent and more from southeastern&#13;
Wiscon m, will be held in the Student Activities&#13;
Building on Sunday, Nov. 25. There is no admission&#13;
charge and the bar will be open.&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 14: Clark Anderson will appear in the Whiteskella&#13;
from 1-3 p.m. No admission charged. r&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 15: Jazz Ensembles I and II under the direction t&#13;
Robert Thomason, assistant professor of music, will present a fr 0&#13;
concert in the Comrp Arts Theater at 7 :30 p.m. ee&#13;
Friday, Nov. 16: P AB movie, "Night of the Living Dead" at 8 p.m .&#13;
SAB. Admission is 75 cents. in&#13;
Saturday, Nov. 17: Dance featuring "Circus" sponsored by PAB in&#13;
SAB at 9 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18: PAB movie, "Night of the Living Dead" at 8 p&#13;
in SAB. Admission is 75 cents. .m.&#13;
Monday, Nov.19:_ Wisconsin_State Suprem~ C~urtJustice Horace w&#13;
Wilkie at2:30 p.m. m Greenqwst 103. No adm1ss1on charged. ·&#13;
Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 19-20: PSGA elections.&#13;
Wednesda):', ~ov: 21: PAB dan~e featuring "Eden Stone" at9 P.m&#13;
in SAB. Adm1ss1on 1s $1 for Parkside students and $1.50 for guests. 1~&#13;
required. Thur day, Nov. 22: Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
All item for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted l&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue ln whi :&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Industries---- continued from page 1&#13;
interest in a cooperative program with Parkside&#13;
has only recently evolved; their companies were&#13;
just beginning to try various educational methods of&#13;
experience. Still others were aware of and have&#13;
taken part in such programs conducted by Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute. These people saw no reason&#13;
why similar arrangements could not be worked out&#13;
with Parkside.&#13;
Extensive Communication Needed&#13;
Several criticizers of Parkside's School of Modern&#13;
Industry commented that perhaps more communication&#13;
is needed between professors in the&#13;
school and area companies. With Racine&#13;
especially, having a multitude of small industries it&#13;
. was felt an interchange of needs and suggesti~ns&#13;
would be beneficial to all concerned.&#13;
Nearly all personnel people interviewed had been&#13;
contacted in some way by Parkside's Placement&#13;
Office for recruiting purposes.&#13;
Five of those commenting were aware of contact&#13;
made by professors in various industrial divisions&#13;
of the . school. Their objective was to gain information&#13;
on company needs, and inform them of&#13;
program offerings.&#13;
According to the remainder of those interviewed&#13;
no communication had taken place with Parkside'&#13;
due to inactio~ of both the company and the school'.&#13;
Several adm1tte:&lt;1. !hey realized that they were&#13;
probably not utihzmg opportunities at Parkside&#13;
and could not pinpoint exactly why not. One perso~&#13;
~-- J&lt;- JI0""==::&gt;41,c==)CJC::=::::)CK==::,ctc::=::::&gt;4&#13;
continued on page 10&#13;
y " ..... ..... ,... l«k l«k .... ICKk==&gt;41iCtck==wic1kC::=:)41«1kk==)CliC:-te::=::::,,co-c::=:)41iClkk=::::xl«u ---. C_L_A_S_s-,F-IE_D __&#13;
~ Here They Are ! ~ WILL TYPE term papers. Call ,:14-4161.&#13;
FOR SALE: 15 gal. fish tank w,111 K·&#13;
essorles, Sweepmaster electric br_, I&#13;
~ nstant hairsetters and iron. Call 6J44W&#13;
lter 5, or weekends.&#13;
~ WANTED: Reliable person lo clHO I ·I&#13;
ornings. Call 694-3624.&#13;
LOST: Dark green thermal sWfflllNl1&#13;
acket. Call 159-2356.&#13;
TYPING: Done on IBM electric. c,n '"&#13;
at 654-0030. alter 5.&#13;
i Boogie on down ~&#13;
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211&#13;
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--&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
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by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight'n Sound&#13;
Audio Consultant&#13;
. . Discrete, Matrix, CD4, full 1091,-t!lftl&#13;
are a few of the term• addtt 10&#13;
language by the Quadraphonics IC,.. . . Quad is where it's at and 111t :::&#13;
syslems--SQ Matrix (Columb11l 1&#13;
CD4 Discrete (JVC-RCA) are br1nti:'9 new listening experience to 1ud10 :.,&#13;
everywhere. Four channel do¢&#13;
tapes · are now hitting the IOI' If&#13;
charts. ullr .. With Quad's increasing . pOP 1 1~ I&#13;
would you be foolish to ,nvts T ,,&#13;
channel (stereo) equipment?,.,.o 1&#13;
depends on your budget. A goods nd 1 •&#13;
better than a poor quid unol 1 ,ddfd&#13;
channel decoder can alwav• bf&#13;
later. Butto be sure, talk II ovtr w~ 1111&#13;
audio consultants at Sighf'n soun '&#13;
and Taylor. Cfl(d "' . . Also visit our brand new rt ,,.,,&#13;
tape department. The select•0\''p,, 11&#13;
and the prices are cool, I trick '&#13;
low as Sl.99.&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND • Stereo - T,V- •&#13;
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• Records · Tapes •&#13;
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Racine&#13;
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o pen daily 'Iii'&#13;
Sat and sun. •1,1 • &#13;
..&#13;
President, Vice President&#13;
,..!!.~dents vie for top oHices&#13;
Having been a student senator&#13;
for the past year and just&#13;
recently appointed acting&#13;
sident has helped me to&#13;
~rlY distinguish the problems'&#13;
~ PSGA and the student body in&#13;
eneral. Many of these problems&#13;
~ already being investigated in&#13;
the hopes of making PSGA a&#13;
responsible organization on&#13;
campus this year. I am running&#13;
for the office of President&#13;
because I truly do believe that&#13;
student government can be a&#13;
strong, representative&#13;
organization of the student body.&#13;
However, because of the lateness&#13;
of elections, time is an important&#13;
(actor in the success of PSGA this&#13;
year. The time involved in&#13;
orientating a completely new&#13;
president will be valuable time&#13;
wasted. Therefore, electing a&#13;
president who is already inrormed&#13;
on policy and procedures&#13;
should be of utmost consideration&#13;
in the selection of a presidential&#13;
candidate.&#13;
Coverage of Parkside problems&#13;
in 300 words or less is an impossible&#13;
task, so I will proceed to&#13;
establish my platform on what I&#13;
feel are the major areas of interest&#13;
to the student body. It has&#13;
long been a misconception that&#13;
all policies and procedures&#13;
adopted at Parkside originate in&#13;
administrative meetings. This is&#13;
not true. Many issues which&#13;
involve the students directly&#13;
evolve in faculty committees&#13;
which are biased and lopsided in&#13;
favor of faculty. This is even&#13;
carried to the extreme case of&#13;
faculty. spending student money&#13;
for their Own selfish interest and&#13;
making it look like a favor to the&#13;
students. When asked Why this&#13;
procedure is allowed the usual&#13;
reply is, "because the other&#13;
campuses do it that way." Isay&#13;
then let Parkside be an innovator.&#13;
Let students decide on&#13;
what programs their money&#13;
should he spent. Let students&#13;
decide on policies which involve&#13;
their very future. I feel these&#13;
ideas can and will be accomplished&#13;
if tbe student body&#13;
votes intelligently in the coming&#13;
election. I feel involvement in&#13;
these areas will help to make&#13;
student government the kind of&#13;
organization that is truly&#13;
representative of the student&#13;
oody, an organiza tion which is&#13;
working to protect the rights of&#13;
the students. I will elaborate on&#13;
these and other ideas at the voter&#13;
forum. Please attend.&#13;
***********************************&#13;
Charles A. Perroni&#13;
Vice President&#13;
'Undeniably, the PSGA has not&#13;
been an adequate representation&#13;
III the student body in terms of&#13;
meeting student needs and acting&#13;
as a viable force ·that is strong&#13;
enough to deal with the administration&#13;
and faculty on a real&#13;
basis.&#13;
Mymost important business, if&#13;
elected, is to make PSGA an&#13;
adequate operating force. To&#13;
aCcomplish this, it will be&#13;
necessary to have cooperation&#13;
among members of PSGA and to&#13;
have Support by the student body&#13;
Itself. The PSGA can be the&#13;
strongest voice of students if the&#13;
communication between PSGA&#13;
and the students can be improved.&#13;
I intend to do everything&#13;
llOSsibleto make the students&#13;
.... lize the PSGA is functioning&#13;
and wilt listen to any student's&#13;
problems and hopefully work&#13;
""th all its possible power to&#13;
express tbem.&#13;
No other platform can have a&#13;
higher priority since, without the&#13;
manifestation of adequate&#13;
means, there can be no attainment&#13;
of proposed ends.&#13;
In addition, I support Tom&#13;
Jennett for President for various&#13;
reasons. He is the acting&#13;
President of PSGA and aware of&#13;
its previous problems. He was&#13;
also chairman of the steering&#13;
committee to investigate&#13;
problems of PSGA and most&#13;
importantly, Tom is interested in&#13;
student needs and dedicated to&#13;
them.&#13;
Earn 10%&#13;
commission&#13;
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ads for&#13;
RANGER&#13;
contact Ken Pestka&#13;
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Ken Konkol - President&#13;
Talk is cheap. For the last&#13;
three years, those elected&#13;
President of PSGA have been&#13;
able to out-talk the OPPOSItion,&#13;
and so get elected.&#13;
Past Presidents have been a&#13;
disappointment to me. Tbere&#13;
seemed to be a definite lad&lt; in the&#13;
willingness to go out and get&#13;
things done. There seemed to be a&#13;
reluctance to stick their necks out&#13;
for the fear that tbeywould be cut&#13;
off. None of them seemed to be&#13;
Willing to do the amount of work&#13;
required or spend the time&#13;
needed for the job.&#13;
The office of President IS the&#13;
most important link in the chain&#13;
of student government. A weak&#13;
President, one who is not willing&#13;
to spend the time or Willing to do&#13;
the work, can make student&#13;
government a weak, ineffective&#13;
bodY. A President who is not&#13;
afraid to do more work than&#13;
anyone else on the 8ena Ie is the&#13;
kind of President the Senate&#13;
needs.&#13;
I'll stand on my past performance.&#13;
As a member of the&#13;
Student Senate the past three&#13;
years, I have shown more tnterest&#13;
in the activities than any&#13;
other member. Quite often it has&#13;
been necessary to do most of the&#13;
Senate work myseH since I \liould&#13;
receive no assistance from other&#13;
members even wben they were&#13;
begged for help.&#13;
A case in point was the con·&#13;
stitutional referendum. Even&#13;
though members of the Senate&#13;
agreed unanimously on the four&#13;
points of the referendum, and&#13;
even though seven promised to&#13;
oblam one hundred Ignalu&#13;
each on the peuuoes, ,. ben the&#13;
signatures "ere counted the&#13;
Sunday prior to the referendum It&#13;
was disco, .. red that only CI'lIcI&lt;&#13;
Stephen and Ken Konkolluld kept&#13;
their ,.ord and gouen the I&#13;
signatures The total was 255.&#13;
Bec.ause 01 betng unable to hold&#13;
the referendum wlthoul the&#13;
required 10 percent ol the_I&#13;
body requesting it. the&#13;
referendum "'as set back .... day&#13;
wbile otbers once agam promised&#13;
to go out on Monday and ~t&#13;
sufficient slgJUllures Once aglWl&#13;
It was found thai there ,. re&#13;
insuff ic.lenl&#13;
On the Tuesday before the&#13;
referendum Ken Konkol "ent out&#13;
again to smglebandedJy try to&#13;
save the referendum ....'hen the&#13;
SIgnatures were counted by CCC&#13;
that afternoon, It was found that&#13;
there ,. ere enough to hold the&#13;
referendum because Ken Konkol&#13;
had gotten 0'.... 1umse1f-200&#13;
in two days _'0 other member or&#13;
the Senate. even among those&#13;
running for the office of&#13;
President, got even half or the&#13;
hundred collected by Chuck&#13;
Stepheo In fact. all others&#13;
combmed couldn-t equal that&#13;
total It "as Ken Konkol,. ho got&#13;
CCC to total the peuuees. so&#13;
enablmg the referendum to be&#13;
beld&#13;
The Referendum is only a case&#13;
10 pomt. Other examples are too&#13;
numerous to mentioo m the: space&#13;
aDoted&#13;
Humility is not one of my&#13;
greatest virtues I thlnlt credit&#13;
should be g"en ,. h.... credlt IS&#13;
due_ I knov. of no otber candidate&#13;
for President that has expended&#13;
hal/the elron on the Senate as I&#13;
ha"e Ido not expect you to lake&#13;
my' .. ord for It, JUSt ask other&#13;
members of the Senate ,.ho has&#13;
done the most work ror the&#13;
students whiJe on the $ena le, then&#13;
"ote for the one who has. I"m&#13;
confident that ou" ill vote ror&#13;
me In Lhal case.&#13;
TaUt IS cheap. Elect someone&#13;
,. ho ,.iII do the work&#13;
LET KE.· DO rT.&#13;
Editor' DO&amp;.t: CalNticlatet. were&#13;
req_ted .. try .. OOOlIboe IlIelr&#13;
p1.tform •• _ ...... For ,oal&#13;
re:asoa . k.a BKeHary IGNit&#13;
lhe- Ie-DIlb .1 KeD K...... ·,&#13;
platform. HII &lt;_piece remarlts&#13;
are a,,·.ilable u. Lhe P A oIIke.&#13;
***********************************&#13;
Bruce WagJ1N • Vice Presidenl&#13;
&amp;: Campus COl)('erns CommiUee&#13;
My plnloso~y m running. for&#13;
student government Vlcepresident&#13;
is that students should&#13;
become more invo1\-ed 10 extracurfcular&#13;
activities as a part of&#13;
the1C total education.&#13;
As an extra-curricular activlly,&#13;
the present st~nt government&#13;
has a few ineqwbe5. They have a&#13;
communication gap with the&#13;
student body, with more student&#13;
particIpation needed .nd more&#13;
public.\)' as to'un 01.11&#13;
meehogs .• 'ot enough 01 tIus w ..&#13;
done The student ne" paper&#13;
should be- the "elucle, not • rap&#13;
sheet ,.inch only a f.,. tuden&#13;
see. m whicb PSGA can a&lt;l\'0&lt;11&#13;
these tome&#13;
A major re.ason ror .Ius lad&lt; of&#13;
communication among tudents&#13;
I that "t (meantng Par Ide)&#13;
are a commuter chool A&#13;
sugge ted solullon to Ih.&#13;
problem IS to query local schools&#13;
to find out ,.ha. problems they&#13;
ha"e ,.,th regard to this, .nd&#13;
how, If they lui 'e, the) "ere&#13;
solved&#13;
The steenng committee&#13;
charged ,.,th malnng PSGA a&#13;
better go,.. rnmenta! bodY for all&#13;
students should be eneour ed.&#13;
for once the new members of&#13;
PSGA are elected they m.y lake&#13;
these suggesllons to be excellent,&#13;
for under the nght set-up, a&#13;
student government can become&#13;
truly representative or the&#13;
students.&#13;
But fIrSt. tl IS ~ to you. the&#13;
students of Parkside. Only&#13;
through lOtelligen' vol1ng can&#13;
PSG A be a responsible,&#13;
representative crganu.ation.&#13;
sw,,·~ ..... Prea ....&#13;
.... RIdoanlP •&#13;
VIt~P 1&#13;
The problem I la&lt;.ng lbe&#13;
organlr.a bon and oper.tion ol a&#13;
_ student rnment are&#13;
many We would like 10 ~I&#13;
here a short 'nopoiI 01 our v&#13;
.. they perlalO to the I dershlp&#13;
of our student government&#13;
USOClalJOI1&#13;
We r Imany tudont com.og&#13;
to Park 1M aee O\'ertome Yi1tb&#13;
the unpenona.l tecluuqu ol&#13;
h.ndling I.rge numben of&#13;
people BellC a igned a ... mber&#13;
and told to reg In thnJUlh a&#13;
compuln are I t a toUpie&#13;
exampl of these 1m........ '&#13;
techntq&#13;
One functIon 01 the PSGA&#13;
should be to.. the Initial&#13;
,denllty shocUeit by tudento To&#13;
overtom~ tIus w feel PSGA&#13;
should .. orlt lor tter liMa of&#13;
communlC8uon and rdinaUGn&#13;
be.... n the udenl bod and&#13;
administration To do tbia&#13;
tudent governmentlhould wcwtt&#13;
WIth the adn"nillral_ to _&#13;
all poss.ble lin of &lt;om·&#13;
mUnIcation Con lantly archIng&#13;
for new .,... 01 feed·&#13;
bad&lt; .nd commUnt&lt;abOll, ouch&#13;
as interaCtion ~ bet_ lite&#13;
tudent body, student lovern·&#13;
ment and the dmllua.ratlon. Is&#13;
necessary The ludent ovem·&#13;
ment should also worir. WIth lite&#13;
other orgalUr.abOfWon campoa '0&#13;
help ,.,den the Itope and ....&#13;
\'olvtme.nl of III lucb&#13;
organllAtlons and waR f. I&#13;
tter eoonltnat_ of eIlon&#13;
Cl~ rly d fin, n ar al of&#13;
reoponalbolity.nd ulhonly fe.-&#13;
\' rlou admlnl triton ould&#13;
help .... Iludenla ttl ........&#13;
IIUIWI( who nee&lt;II 10 be fe.-&#13;
,...... tudenta abouId be ttl·&#13;
volved '" the cieo::Ialon-maI&#13;
proc • tI i 11 not allowed to do&#13;
thl the t....... II daaled •&#13;
valuable poTtion 01 hll&#13;
educ Ilona! ex~&#13;
cnllca! lall of g..... th nd&#13;
old .. ark now 10 I"",,ula~ a&#13;
tron Iud t govern"""'t to ad&#13;
in the ona ff ling lite&#13;
development 01 th 'nl&#13;
and m.... Import nt, of YOOlthe&#13;
tudPnt&#13;
In mmary If I I ,W will&#13;
,.ork toward. the ahol hm t 01&#13;
~11ooo~I&lt;al and polillc I tn·&#13;
tompatlblhty n:1 uns .mon&#13;
admlnl tra.,on. ra&lt;ully and&#13;
ludtn~=~--&#13;
RIt~an1 P...... e&#13;
•• ..0•• ~ .., a.rilI o-k&#13;
presfilent, Vice Pr~sident&#13;
Tom ~t!,..~dents· vie for top off. ces&#13;
Having been a student sen~tor&#13;
f the past year and Just or · t d t· recently appom e ac mg&#13;
esident has helped me to . Pf early distinguish the problems&#13;
~f psGA and the student body in&#13;
eneral. Many of these problems&#13;
g e already being investigated in&#13;
:e hopes of maki~g 1:'GA a&#13;
responsible orgamzabon _on&#13;
campus this year. I am runmng&#13;
for the office of President&#13;
because I truly do believe that&#13;
student government can b~ a&#13;
strong, representative&#13;
organization of the student body.&#13;
However, because of the lateness&#13;
of elections, time is an importa~t&#13;
factor in the success of PSGA this&#13;
year. The time involved in&#13;
orientating a completely new&#13;
president will be valuable time&#13;
wasted. Therefore, electing a&#13;
president who is already informed&#13;
on policy and procedures&#13;
should be of utmost consideration&#13;
in the selection of a presidential&#13;
candidate.&#13;
Coverage of Parkside problems&#13;
in 300 words or less is an impossible&#13;
task, so I will proceed to&#13;
establish my platform on what I&#13;
feel are the major areas of interest&#13;
to the student body. It has&#13;
long been a misconception that&#13;
all policies and procedures&#13;
adopted at Parkside originate in&#13;
administrative meetings. This is&#13;
not true. Many issues which&#13;
involve the students directly&#13;
evolve in faculty committees&#13;
which are biased and lopsided in&#13;
favor of faculty. This is even&#13;
carried to the extreme case of&#13;
faculty_ spending student money&#13;
for their own selfish interest and&#13;
making it look like a favor to the&#13;
students. When asked why this&#13;
procedure is allowed the usual&#13;
reply is, "because the other&#13;
campuses do it that way." I say&#13;
then let Parkside be an innovator.&#13;
Let students decide on&#13;
what programs their money&#13;
should be spent. Let students&#13;
decide on policies which involve&#13;
their very future. I feel these&#13;
ideas can and will be accomplished&#13;
if the student body&#13;
votes intelligently in the coming&#13;
election. I feel involvement in&#13;
these areas will help to make&#13;
student government the kind of&#13;
organization that is truly&#13;
representative of the student&#13;
body, an organization which is&#13;
working to protect the rights of&#13;
the students. I will elaborate on&#13;
these and other ideas at the voter&#13;
forum. Please attend.&#13;
***********************************&#13;
Charles A. Perroni&#13;
Vice President&#13;
'Undeniably, the PSGA has not&#13;
been an adequate representation&#13;
of the student body in terms of&#13;
meeting student needs and acting&#13;
ns a viable force that is strong&#13;
enough to deal with the administration&#13;
and faculty on a real&#13;
basis.&#13;
~y most important business, if&#13;
elected, is to make PSGA an&#13;
adequate operating force. To&#13;
accomplish this, it will be&#13;
necessary to have cooperation&#13;
among members of PSGA and to&#13;
have support by the student body&#13;
itself. The PSGA can be the&#13;
strongest voice of students if the&#13;
communication between PSGA&#13;
and the students can be improved.&#13;
I intend to do everything&#13;
po sible to make the students&#13;
realize the PSGA is functioning&#13;
and will listen to any student's&#13;
problems and hopefully work&#13;
with all its possible power to&#13;
express them.&#13;
. No other platform can have a&#13;
higher priority since, without the&#13;
manifestation of adequate&#13;
means, there can be no attainment&#13;
of proposed ends.&#13;
In addition, I support Tom&#13;
Jennett for President for various&#13;
reasons. He is the acting&#13;
President of PSGA and aware of&#13;
its previous problems. He was&#13;
also chairman of the steering&#13;
committee to investigate&#13;
problems of PSGA and most&#13;
importantly, Tom is interested in&#13;
student needs and dedicated to&#13;
them.&#13;
Earn 10%&#13;
• • comm1ss1on&#13;
selling&#13;
ads for&#13;
RANGER&#13;
contact Ken Pestka&#13;
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to cover postage tdeli,ery t,,.,e is&#13;
J to 2 days)&#13;
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LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
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Our resurch material is sold for&#13;
research assistance only.&#13;
Ken Konkol - President&#13;
Talk is cheap. For the la t&#13;
three years. those elected&#13;
President of PSGA haYe&#13;
able to out-talk the oppo ilion,&#13;
and so get elected.&#13;
Past Presidents have been a&#13;
disappointment lo m . There&#13;
seemed to be a definite la in the&#13;
willingness to go out and , et&#13;
things done. There ceemed to be a&#13;
reluctance to lick their neck out&#13;
for the fear that they would be cut&#13;
off. 'one of them seemed to be&#13;
willing to do the amount of work&#13;
required or pend the time&#13;
needed £or the job.&#13;
The office of Pr ident i the&#13;
most important link in the chain&#13;
of student government. A e&#13;
President, one who · n illing&#13;
to spend the time or \l.;llin,g to do&#13;
the work, can make ·tudent&#13;
government a wea , ineffecth·e&#13;
body. A Pr\!sident who · not&#13;
afraid to do more or than&#13;
anyone el e on the Senate is the&#13;
kind of President the enate&#13;
needs.&#13;
I'll tand on my pa t pet'·&#13;
formance As a member of th&#13;
Student enate the pa· t three&#13;
years. I have h0\1.-n more interest&#13;
in the activitie than any&#13;
other member. Quit often it ha&#13;
been necessary to do m t of th&#13;
Senate work my I -inc I ould&#13;
receive no a istance from other&#13;
members even when they '-I.ere&#13;
begged for help.&#13;
A case in point was the constitutional&#13;
referendum. Even&#13;
though members oC th enat&#13;
agreed unanimously on the four&#13;
point of the referendum, nd&#13;
even though ven promised to&#13;
******************************* * *&#13;
Bruce Wagnl'r . \'ice Pre idenl&#13;
&amp; ampu Con l'rn ommiUe&#13;
lv phi!~ ophy n running_ for&#13;
student government vicepresident&#13;
is that tudents hould&#13;
become more invol\ din extra ·&#13;
cuqicular acti,,.iti_es as a part of&#13;
their total education. As an extra-curricular aeti\ity,&#13;
the present student government&#13;
has a few inequities. The}: have a&#13;
communication gap with the&#13;
student body. with more student •• OE.• &#13;
• « • P"PE' .........&#13;
Werve unopposed&#13;
CCCcandidates state views for treasurer&#13;
Charles . Pornel&#13;
Camp" e-.....CommlUee&#13;
When you paid your tuition this&#13;
lall, two dollars was talten aside&#13;
to be &lt;bslributed by the Campus&#13;
Coo&lt;:erns Committee lor student&#13;
group organizati&lt;lo5 nus year&#13;
the cec bu ov~ .... en thousaDd&#13;
dollan to &lt;bslribute. nus lOoney&#13;
bas come eolirdy from student&#13;
tuition. Tbe CCC is a committee&#13;
that bu a majority of lac:uJty&#13;
memben. What is happening is a&#13;
lac:uJty-domioated commiUee is&#13;
distributillll money tbat was&#13;
provided entirely by student&#13;
tuition by means of lbe&#13;
~ated fee. I am in favor of&#13;
at Ieul a lltudent-domiDated&#13;
committee if oot one run entirely&#13;
by students.&#13;
Unlil lbe situation of faculty&#13;
dominance can be changed,&#13;
boweser, J would wor!&lt;in lbe CCC&#13;
for use of its fio&amp;Dce5 to support&#13;
s\UdeDl organizations lbat: 1l&#13;
reach \be most students as all&#13;
students have put in mooey for&#13;
the cec and 2) reed CCC support&#13;
to survive, if lbe particular group&#13;
is essential. such as some type of&#13;
representation of minorities and&#13;
service organizations which are&#13;
vital to student needs. Generally,&#13;
if elected. J intend to push for&#13;
student needs. not lbale of Ad·&#13;
ministration. faculty, staff or&#13;
community.&#13;
Marilya SCb ......&#13;
..... COKen CommlUH&#13;
I am rumin&amp; lor Campus&#13;
Coo&lt;:em5 Committee because J&#13;
wanl 10 take pan ID PariLSIde's&#13;
..... lb ~ club and other&#13;
ntra-curricuJar activities will&#13;
delem\lDO the nte and direction&#13;
of ParItslde's powtb away fnJUl&#13;
Its "extended bilb scbool"&#13;
1maIe, and cec (\etennioea the&#13;
ItIIldiDI and, beoce. 10 a larIe&#13;
_I. the activtbM of tbeae&#13;
orpnIza_. membenhlP ...&#13;
_ C&lt;81U\IIltee_ to be the&#13;
ay of aceomplllltini my&#13;
pi&#13;
Y quallftcatlollS, if there are&#13;
allY odIer than opeo~,&#13;
are that J have been llIvolved&#13;
wltlt many 01 the Of88IliZ8ti ....&#13;
petl\lotlllll the committM lor&#13;
fundi and, ~f_. hope to&#13;
have a preay accurate idea of&#13;
tIteIr neecIo Lut year J was&#13;
p elideDl of ParUide VOUIl8&#13;
R publlcau. a member 01&#13;
Ra8T\Jn RalCen and a mem~&#13;
of the Lee\ure and F\De ArU&#13;
eommll nus y.. r J am in·&#13;
voIved in orgaowllll a Debate&#13;
and ForetWCS team. and as a&#13;
R . R SIaII mem~. am&#13;
do a b,-mootblY column ...&#13;
Par de clubs I have so lar&#13;
lnI~iewed Ra8'J'lme RaIlllen.&#13;
Pre- eda. P'f'e-.Law. Democratic&#13;
Youth Caucaa. Collele&#13;
RopubIIC&amp;D8. FUm Society and&#13;
Dotta Gamma Phi.&#13;
U eiected. I will vote funds&#13;
aee:ord1Illl to the benefits J leel&#13;
the Ofll8JII%8tioo·. activtties will&#13;
briIlll to PariLSlde&#13;
......************* Senate&#13;
platforms&#13;
contInued&#13;
Darryl Dolo • _star&#13;
y objectives are to work wilb&#13;
tudentl and government&#13;
memben to sl.l'eJllllhen PSGA.&#13;
Workiol WltItin the lovemmeot.&#13;
J -.Jd hope to establish bett~&#13;
c:ommuDlclhon betweeo the&#13;
IllUdtDlS and tIteIr acbooI. J would&#13;
liIle to .. students have more&#13;
voice in acbool achvltiea and&#13;
acbooI poIletes, becauoe J feel litis&#13;
Is our acbool.&#13;
U elected to student lov"",,&#13;
menl. Iwill do every\billC witltin&#13;
my poWOI' to belp make PSGA a&#13;
viable. wortdIlll orpnuati .... To&#13;
.. litis, atucIeDIlovemment mllSl&#13;
WWk 10 IInn&amp; cooperatioo and&#13;
UOIIy to all organizati.... 00&#13;
campos. It IS important 10 all&#13;
atucIeol&gt;IO have a atroDi studenl&#13;
aovernm"" 10 help ID clecisioo&#13;
P'O"S" lD a ~ UOIveraity.&#13;
WltItoult!»thoy would be denied&#13;
an lmport.a ..t part of their&#13;
educatioD&amp;l pl'Olel;s&#13;
Mary Clare Werve - Treasurer&#13;
Being treasurer is an important&#13;
position to bold in any&#13;
student government. If elected as&#13;
treasurer of U.W. Parkside's&#13;
st~dent .g?vernment I will&#13;
this position as importsnt ~&#13;
as it is to me. ,-&#13;
Because of my concena&#13;
student-campus affairs aDd r.&#13;
willingness to devote l~ lilt&#13;
effort to work with a ...&#13;
government council I .Iludool . I . mna.&#13;
rung or treasurer of our .,........&#13;
As treasurer, J wiD --&#13;
apparent to lbe Sluden~&#13;
whal our expenditures COIlIlIt....,&#13;
and wbat purposes they are •&#13;
used for.&#13;
J will do my bestlG&#13;
wilb lbe studenl body. :::.-&#13;
Ibe members of sludent •&#13;
ment, to promote and ~&#13;
an organized system tht:-&#13;
benelit lbe welfare 01aU.&#13;
Claarlel pIIan_tar&#13;
I.Charles Stepbao. a" rurtDID8&#13;
lor senator of PSGA to ....,tioue&#13;
my enorts as a representa""e of&#13;
thIS much needed organiza"Jo.&#13;
and 10 tltat the newly-form,,!&#13;
tHriO' (ommittee caD ef ...&#13;
I uvely bnDl lorth ideas to&#13;
benefit s\UdenIS 00 campus. I'm&#13;
hoPIlll that PSGA in the luture&#13;
can ccnunue to be an ear for&#13;
atudenls' problems and corn·&#13;
plain ,not lor only one monlb&#13;
alter electIons. bul every weelt.&#13;
l:mU DoC.uera Jr.&#13;
Sea......&#13;
I belie, tltal tudeol government&#13;
should be ",presentative 01&#13;
the udent bndy as a wbole-&#13;
~lauve ID a sense thai all&#13;
elltDic arou .. be tncluded Wilb&#13;
tIte tncluIiM of mlDor.ty 8J'OUP&#13;
membfon 10 student govern·&#13;
tDeGla) ploce •• es. Parbide will&#13;
be able 10 ""~ a more realistic&#13;
and lnleluled approacb 10&#13;
student politiCS&#13;
1-&#13;
CAN&#13;
"UNCH ..• -"&#13;
.-pty I.od c..... (lWKk-d&#13;
Wlfh _ litancI On 'PO"&#13;
of 1.$ ..coowh. Yo&lt;&gt; Off 1JI&#13;
u,,~"""""'c ..n...&#13;
C-...t record i, .$&#13;
tItw.wh COIl .... n.d&#13;
_tobe*"-l.&#13;
'BUDWEISER.&#13;
ANNOUNCES&#13;
5 KINDS OF&#13;
HORSEPlAY&#13;
IN Wl-IICH YOU&#13;
~~~ CANBEA&#13;
~:, v:r \'\ORLD&#13;
CHAMPION&#13;
•&#13;
3&#13;
IUDWlIHR&#13;
CAN TOTI •••&#13;
motl .mpty Iud coni&#13;
balonced glop one&#13;
enolh .. ond toled&#13;
without m;,hop for 25&#13;
t..,t. Record 10 beat&#13;
i, " (don" lo"''ih&#13;
lill you try ;11,&#13;
4&#13;
IUDMIID tAN&#13;
T05S .•• _&#13;
con'«"'I ... complflfd_&#13;
between two or mOfI&#13;
people, 100cll20 I.. ,.,-.t&#13;
Record ;, 7 (llord 1o&#13;
cOllur.lrolel.&#13;
~&#13;
YOU CAN EARN&#13;
THISSWEll 7''x 6" PATCH! Sad but true: Th.,e',. big'hO""::'*&#13;
of champions in the world. To prove it, count how many you personally know. See? ..&#13;
To ease this shortage, Budweiser is sanctioning five foolish events in&#13;
which bonafide World Championships can be earned. They are described&#13;
above ... The swell Budweiser World Champion Patch is your prize&#13;
... These may not be the ultimate sporting activities on&#13;
~&#13;
PUS' But the~ are the only oncs in which we'll recognize&#13;
record-breakmg performances ... Sure, it's easy to get&#13;
a patch by claiming a fictitious record. But then you&#13;
wouldn't be able to inscribe your specialty beneath the&#13;
words "World C:hampion." (Or would you?) ... Where do&#13;
you get all the empty Budweiser cans you'll need&#13;
to win a World Championship?&#13;
Realty,now!&#13;
5&#13;
BUDWllSll CAN&#13;
PITCH.IN •.. mod&#13;
con.~c",j~e .ucceufullob.&#13;
01 "mpty Bud COnsinto&#13;
'''oulor t.ash cOn from&#13;
di.loftce 01 10'. Reco.d i,&#13;
71 (only had Ihree ca,,,. _..wIo"",~&#13;
10 .'Or! wi'hl. Thi, ~~~nt \';.-&gt;-=&#13;
lI.h rid of th. empliu&#13;
from .. II Ihe olhe ...&#13;
(EVE~O GET YOUR BUDWEISER WORLD CHAMPION';:TCH&#13;
:~:&gt;U DON'T SETA RECORD), JUST WRITE YOUR NAME&#13;
... ~~ ..,.,RESS AND WHAT YOU DID ON A '&#13;
Of ... DI'JfU ~ ~o Out. VOID _1ft ...Ot&lt;tllnD '" l w POSTCARD. i&#13;
1&#13;
. !tn. A .....IOW ,ou. WHl~ fO. DWYfltT&#13;
"'UI(USU·BUSCM. lilt .• ST. tOUI~&#13;
(Moybe you'ye dejected rhol1hil.iJ,ttd:&#13;
officiol, ri9id-rule~ "conlesl." ~I tl ": ....&#13;
of fun, eyen if you can I br~&#13;
records. You c~:'o'l you~&#13;
SEND&#13;
IT TO&#13;
ntlnued&#13;
s e views&#13;
Werve unoppose&#13;
for treasurer&#13;
.Perreal&#13;
Cam eras C.mmk&amp;ee&#13;
When ycu paid your tuition thia&#13;
fall, dol1an taken aside&#13;
to distributed by tbe Campus&#13;
Concerm Committee for student&#13;
11'°'4&gt; orpnizatiom. This year&#13;
the CCC bu over eo thousand&#13;
dollan to distribute. This'IDODey&#13;
come entirely from student&#13;
tuition. The CCC • a committee&#13;
that bu a majority of faculty&#13;
members. t is happening ls a&#13;
facuJty-dominaled committee is&#13;
d tributing money that as&#13;
provided entirely by tudent&#13;
tuition by mean of the&#13;
Ngrepted fee. I am in favor of&#13;
at a udent-«minated&#13;
committee if not one nm entirely&#13;
by students.&#13;
Until tbe situatioo of faculty&#13;
dominance can be changed,&#13;
howeYer, I would work in the CCC&#13;
for use of its finances to support&#13;
student organizations that: 1)&#13;
reach the most students as all&#13;
students have put in money for&#13;
tbe CCC and 2) need CCC support&#13;
to survive, if the particular group&#13;
is essential, such as some type of&#13;
representation of minorities and&#13;
service organizations which are&#13;
vital to student needs. Generally,&#13;
if elected, l intend to push for&#13;
student needs, not those of Administration,&#13;
faculty, staff or&#13;
community.&#13;
Mary Clare Werve - Treasurer&#13;
Being treasurer is an important&#13;
position to hold in any&#13;
student government. If elected as&#13;
treasurer of U.W. Parkside's&#13;
3 IUDWIISIII&#13;
CAN TOTI ..•&#13;
most empty lud con1&#13;
bolonced atop one&#13;
another and loted&#13;
w;thovt mishap for 25&#13;
feet. Record to beat&#13;
is .4 (don't loi,gh&#13;
till you try it).&#13;
BUDWEISER. ANNOUNCES&#13;
5 KINDS OF&#13;
HORSEPIAY&#13;
INWHICH YOU&#13;
~\ CANBEA&#13;
"°RLD&#13;
CHAMPION&#13;
-you CAN EARN&#13;
THIS SW_E~ 7''x 6" PATCH! Sad but true: There'sabigshortage&#13;
of champions m the world. To prove it, count how many you personally kn See?&#13;
T . OW. • •••&#13;
. o ease_ this shortage, Budweiser is sanctioning five foolish events in&#13;
which bonaf1de World Championships can be earned. They are described&#13;
above .. . The swell Budweiser World Champ1·on Patch . . ... Th . _ ~ ~our pnze ese may not be the ultunate sporting acbV1ties on&#13;
campus. But they are the only ones in which we'll recognize&#13;
recorcl-breaking performances . . . Sure, it's easy to get&#13;
8 PBtch by claiming a fictitious record. But then you&#13;
wouldn't be able to inscribe your specialty beneath the&#13;
words "World ~harnpion." (Or would you?) ... Where do&#13;
you get all the empty Budweiser cans you'll need&#13;
to win a World Championship?&#13;
Really, now! ·&#13;
4 -WIISBCM&#13;
TOSS ... - conaecutive c0Mp6ele4,...&#13;
between two o, ,._,.&#13;
people. ooch 20 IHI -&#13;
Re&lt;ord is 7 (hotd to&#13;
concertrotel.&#13;
~&#13;
5 IUDWIISH CAN&#13;
"'CH-IN •.. most&#13;
consec11t,ve successful lobs&#13;
of empty lud cans info&#13;
re9vtor trash con from&#13;
d11tonce of 1 O' Record is&#13;
(Maybe you ·ve detected that this 1J nol OO&#13;
official, rigid-rules "'contest." Bui a" 0 ,:&#13;
of fun, even if you can't b&lt;:.V..,&#13;
records. You c~:~-t Y""?I 72 (onfy had three coses ~...._:,;,_&#13;
to start With). This event&#13;
gets rid of »,e emptie,&#13;
from all the others.&#13;
0 GET YOUR BUDWEISER W .... '&#13;
(EVENc YOU DON'T SET ORLD CHAMPION .PATCH&#13;
A RECORD) JUST W&#13;
~RESS ANO WHAT y ' RITE YOUR NAME&#13;
::_ - .,. DKl •• °'"" •"'• ""''" '""" OU DID ON A POSTCARD , 1 f1) IIITlO IT lAW AUOW POUi WHICS ,o. DfllVHY •&#13;
ANH£usE•-•uSC1t, INC. • sr. Louis &#13;
resent candidate&#13;
V Hedden - Senator&#13;
I\Irve~l~ of the student&#13;
The rent is to serve the needs&#13;
goV&lt;:":ests of the student body,&#13;
~dIn t that it has no real purWllbOUrohe&#13;
effective, PSGA must&#13;
P""'ebe student body what it can&#13;
teI1 'U do for them, The student&#13;
~ .... ust tell the PSGA what it&#13;
bOdY '::one and thus establish the&#13;
~~ for student government.&#13;
I"""'believe&#13;
the PSGA should take&#13;
~e in making sure that lbe&#13;
• 'v""ity is run properly and&#13;
::ctently, Student Government&#13;
!IJ&gt;Ukl make an effort to fmd out&#13;
.... t student opinion is ?n an&#13;
, before they take action on&#13;
~ general, I believe lbat&#13;
I, dent government should&#13;
~e moreinvolvedin stu~ent&#13;
aflairS and at the same time&#13;
_e a greater effort to he&#13;
~tative of the student&#13;
bOdYU f 'I student government al s at&#13;
Parbide it will be a tragedy for&#13;
the student body, Ibelieve that if&#13;
the students will recognize lbe&#13;
PSGAas an effective mechanism&#13;
I...their own representation and&#13;
_ it in that manner l we can&#13;
bave an effective and successful&#13;
student govemment.&#13;
An&#13;
"Un"·Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
Richard Karls ~Senator&#13;
The duty of student senator .&#13;
to keep communication nOWi~&#13;
both upward and downward t&#13;
keep Administrators FaC~lty°&#13;
and students informed as to th~&#13;
goals and objectives of each&#13;
other, and to promote all channels&#13;
of eXchange.&#13;
To develop not only for lbe&#13;
present, but also to form the&#13;
groundwork for the future,&#13;
To work in co-operation with&#13;
and develop the PSGA into&#13;
dynami.c and integral part of th:&#13;
operation of the campus in&#13;
purpose and direction,&#13;
To ,dispel apathy and non.&#13;
direction of the students thru this&#13;
development of a stronger&#13;
student government.&#13;
To bring as many of the&#13;
students educational and sCK:ial&#13;
needs as possible to the forum of&#13;
the student senate,&#13;
And to he available to all&#13;
suggestions, comments and&#13;
ideas of all involved wifu the&#13;
development of Parkside.&#13;
Buya ...&#13;
Oeliciouily Sotistyi"9&#13;
• BIG SHEF&#13;
GOHIl:NUOWH&#13;
• fRENCH fRIES&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave,&#13;
....... , _ 'to&lt;l c.-. _". co"&lt;!Om&gt;nlum&#13;
".. '" ~".,. _ mo:&gt;n,hl.,. ~V"""'&#13;
_ a..... at BirCh ANd&#13;
Thomas Jones . ~.tor&#13;
My platform consists of an&#13;
attempt on my part to be of&#13;
service to all the students on this&#13;
campus.&#13;
~t .present there are no&#13;
mmonty classes, personnel, or&#13;
programs of any size or impact to&#13;
adequately serve the needs of&#13;
mmonty students or wbite&#13;
st~de?~s, In reference to&#13;
rrunortties, Iwant him to live ina&#13;
~al environment that allcws&#13;
him to perform up to his&#13;
capabilities, I need not remind&#13;
you that not only do white tax&#13;
dollars support this institutioa,&#13;
but there are sizable minority&#13;
populations m this state and&#13;
country, It is easy for the whit.&#13;
student to say that minorities&#13;
always need special attention.&#13;
but let him look around and ~&#13;
wbo already has special attentioa&#13;
and seems to think it should and&#13;
always will be that way, Stacy&#13;
I t o&#13;
nam.beh Ir&#13;
more B k. Brvwn, and&#13;
spa to the t wi I&#13;
oetm I, It ollllOre&#13;
oetmeal F\n&amp;lIy I&#13;
10001 prot_ I once d&#13;
auothtr ··can·l .. ~&#13;
In cldIuoo to beIJl&amp; ..in be It.&gt;&#13;
chea I m,nontl daaa Bul&#13;
there II mere H. baa the Iddod&#13;
ex nener of ldUlU II" III In I&#13;
Bla Gbetto, for III nllrt W&#13;
That qwte lmaWl8, ,,-heal yGU&#13;
CGlWder there is I IIudenI lII!re&#13;
.. -ho he1M!' Ulat the Pirbide 10&#13;
Rae ... bu&amp; IbouId nne make more&#13;
tIwi one top l.Il the mua;ty&#13;
DelIlhborl&gt;ooda He cou.Idn'l IllY&#13;
oa the floor ..~ holcin&amp; bis&#13;
brulb tbrouIb mcft than ....&#13;
rnmonty neo&amp;I&gt;I&gt;orilOOd&#13;
College SUJlIlO8OdIy ...-rea&#13;
you for 111•. Ir you Ill'lcluate r......&#13;
this lIDIVer'S1tyand feel you have&#13;
ICCOlDpbshed Ulal. under the&#13;
pre,'IIent tulUOOlt&gt;ove. "Lord,&#13;
Don'I Help You "&#13;
r***************************************************~&#13;
Normal Neoph)1e - Senat.or&#13;
I feel it's important to tell you&#13;
why I am running lor the&#13;
P,S,G,A, The other day a friend&#13;
came up to me complaining,&#13;
about a problem he had, It seems&#13;
he had been walking around&#13;
Parkside feeling constipaled, To&#13;
his great dismay there was no&#13;
place for him to purchase a brand&#13;
name laxative. He expressed a&#13;
great feeling of dejection that so&#13;
moved me I felt I had to act&#13;
Now you might be.saying that&#13;
constipation is a personal&#13;
problem, I agree, but it could go&#13;
much deeper than that. For I&#13;
have beard it saId that the&#13;
student body is not only apathetic&#13;
but constipated as well, So I&#13;
pledge to you, and friend that if f&#13;
am elected, Iwill stock to the hill&#13;
"Ye Old Candy Shop" with&#13;
Pastier is cee such misdirected,&#13;
ignorant and maligned, unkn0v01l&#13;
eemmodity Here, ob,iousl}. is I&#13;
cltiId .. ho believ on the&#13;
dean's lisI ...hUe beng a I&#13;
failure are compatible he&#13;
beheves she can go throullh life&#13;
...,thoul ha\'IDi to deaJ ..,Ib&#13;
Blacks. I S}"ll1palhize for her&#13;
Right DO'o/O we ba\'e 10 admuusInltioa&#13;
1ft 1M inslltutiOD&#13;
that apparently beheves It II ...ell&#13;
schooled in the techniques of _&#13;
to admmi.ster In eWcition to&#13;
people the} Itno..., llOIlDng lbout&#13;
Sbou1d any vacanc,es occur. I&#13;
Imow I lew qualified mdIv,duaIs&#13;
.. -ho sbould ha"e DO trouble&#13;
gelling 00 Ulal adminisIntioo.&#13;
Stacy PootJ ... would be an excellent&#13;
choice. There II lnother&#13;
individual wbo believes that&#13;
speodilll the entire frool page of&#13;
the OcL 17 ISSUe 01 the RAe 'GER&#13;
on minorities, was uncaUed for.&#13;
Still another, Tom Speaker b}'&#13;
laxab\"es and in the c.~ of&#13;
severe constipation gJ\'e awa}&#13;
one lree meal ticket good It&#13;
either parl&lt;S1de caf.tenl, Like lO&#13;
earl~' adolescence. With IIINch&#13;
pa mg}ear comes the am"al of&#13;
more and t'\"en more punp •&#13;
such IS the P .s.GA As 1ft }outh&#13;
.... just ha,'e to gnn and bear It&#13;
but if eleeled, IIfttend to let not&#13;
just as a senator but also .$ an&#13;
enormous tube of OearasU " 0&#13;
oae can den)' Ulal. unfortunately,&#13;
there IS a seXiSl attitude at tbu&#13;
school, so m order to get to the&#13;
heart, 01' If }OU ...ill allo.. me 10&#13;
say. the bladder of the matter. I&#13;
feel posItive actlon should be&#13;
taken to help elunUl8te 1M It·&#13;
titude, So if elected, I pledge to&#13;
.. ork for co-ed bathrooms. .'0&#13;
Jonger shaH ...·e bave signs&#13;
proclaiming men and women but&#13;
The&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE&#13;
f+RWRIt.nN HElbl&amp;RY&#13;
&amp;ppineJl8 i8 ~ii&#13;
-'tJI_fl, 2 • to&#13;
"'1Qt 'I\Cludt ."", conclol,,;,n;ng _ LUllU"OUS elIlpel,ng • elect,,,: &lt;.n~ ~d sell-c\f¥I,ng own&#13;
-F'ost.I, ... If''gerIIO!" _o.sh_he. _food waste d,,~1 .ce"lf.I:':~~e~::;'M&#13;
-Countrv clUbhouiol!, with ,,"una. And many other def,llIn lind conl/'ll!&#13;
SEE OUR DECORATOR FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
PHONE'"i::SS2-9339 PAAK5lDE REALTY INC.&#13;
000... 10_ and 8..,ll 0.. uS (;or.,.'" Inc&#13;
Mullets also 0Pln weekdays 1 to 8&#13;
Of by Plrsonal showing al your convenience&#13;
• aOUMO Tal" JilT&#13;
• 7 fflGMTS OUT.'OO ••&#13;
WEST&#13;
• ''I DAY CITY loua&#13;
• ,,'-ow •• LEI oa.I"NO&#13;
• GaOUIIIO , •• ,U'IE.'&#13;
• TO."I1'- HOST , •• v'CE'&#13;
• Al.L ,."," TAX."&#13;
n theIr p11 I mple&#13;
saymg peopI&#13;
Wlter roun~,n hould be&#13;
replaced lib "'De founlainS&#13;
Tbe rabonal. ror thl lhIt .. Ioe&#13;
bmuIll nd th 6lUdenl body&#13;
need&gt; all the ,muIauon t c&#13;
t&#13;
Th&lt;re I cmatn&#13;
...,.,ent here It Parklide that&#13;
ha b n campl'loln .boul&#13;
_nt lpath To alar'&#13;
mISts Isa Idon't ..... Uy care Ind&#13;
..YOU Ibou.1dn't .. ther Frun&#13;
sam. mOblators there beftl&#13;
~ ol &gt;om bltter tn'f'lh\UC&#13;
betv.e n the arJQIU 1 cl&#13;
commltl To th I.. 10&#13;
.. hal. It '1 ma~ an 11&#13;
If tr1\'W tblngI ouch I Ibis&#13;
mattered then ,I would be Ir·&#13;
fecllng us .nd therefere would be&#13;
I problem I firmly beheve thaI&#13;
one problem IS one 100 many, So&#13;
lei them say .. bal tMy w&gt;lllor ,t&#13;
IS sad but true..... people ....&#13;
)lIS1 bom compla Ulel"I&#13;
I 1m sure you have notICed&#13;
...hat I'd bk to call the ....&#13;
tertJ"nment liP here It ibIS&#13;
liruVefSlt II 11 my LDtenbOft to&#13;
tell _ irrelevanl perl&#13;
to LIke fl' Ind gel _ banda&#13;
lhIt can gel down Ind I' I&#13;
.. ould replace the W uoua VI"",&#13;
w,th the tnflluouo"OIl Calculll ..&#13;
ca.n .. mcentiv all parU would&#13;
l,ven 10 lIudenU&#13;
Finally, It come to m&#13;
IU.entiOft thaI th ochool 00- not&#13;
ha\' I hcJmeComtnl K,OC and&#13;
n If eIeckd. I pr&lt;Idllae to&#13;
at that ... ~&#13;
In &lt;:onc:lu$tOft. then are c:eu.lft&#13;
element on th C llpu$lhlll ...&#13;
tryu,. to mlk thaI I&#13;
f.... ruin th'l\&amp;8 mitt "....&#13;
there Ire th_ ho beJj&#13;
&lt;erUm thin,ol dnn't matt r y&#13;
opuuon 0&lt; tblI "'hole _ Ir&#13;
lllr, bo COl • I don't I&#13;
pro", e 10 ou, my f 110&#13;
QU, lhIt If I 1m elected I&#13;
II _cx'l'l care&#13;
\(or-f: St:o \.~ plauotnu oa pa t'.&#13;
rese&#13;
v Hedden -Senator&#13;
Harv%ie' of the student&#13;
'fhe ent is to serve the needs&#13;
\1:~ests of the student body.&#13;
~d 10 t that it has no real purYl&#13;
1th~0 be effective, PSG~ must&#13;
po the student body what 1t can tell II do for them. The student&#13;
and ~~ust tell the PSGA ~hat it&#13;
bOdY ts done and thus estabhsh the&#13;
~~ for student government.&#13;
r-t,elleve the P8GA should take&#13;
~e in making sure that the&#13;
a ·versity is run properly and&#13;
:ciently. student Govei:nment&#13;
uld make an e~f~rt ~ fmd out ti student opm1on 1s ?n an before they take action on&#13;
it In general, I believe that&#13;
· dent government should&#13;
~e more involved in stu~ent&#13;
affairS and at the same time&#13;
make a greater effort to be&#13;
representative of the student&#13;
t,ody ·1 U student government fa1 s at&#13;
Parkside it will be a tragedy for&#13;
the student body. I believe that if&#13;
the students will_ recognize _the&#13;
PSGA as an effective mec~an1sm&#13;
for their own representation and&#13;
use it in that manner, we can&#13;
have an effective and successful&#13;
tudent government.&#13;
An&#13;
11Un"-Common&#13;
Offer!&#13;
YOU&#13;
KEEP&#13;
THE&#13;
GLASS!&#13;
ca •&#13;
I&#13;
Richard Karls - Senator&#13;
The duty of student senator is&#13;
to keep communication flowing&#13;
both upward and downward to&#13;
keep Administrators, Fac~lty&#13;
and students informed as to th ,&#13;
goals and objectives of eac~&#13;
other, and to promote all channels&#13;
of exchange.&#13;
To develop not only for the&#13;
present, but also to form the&#13;
groundwork for the future.&#13;
To work in co-operation with&#13;
and develop the PSGA into a&#13;
dynami_c and integral part of the&#13;
operation of the campus in&#13;
purpose and direction.&#13;
. To _dispel apathy and nondirection&#13;
of the students thru this&#13;
development of a stronger&#13;
student government.&#13;
To bring as many of the&#13;
students educational and social&#13;
needs as possible to the forum of&#13;
the student senate.&#13;
And to be available to all&#13;
suggestions, comments and&#13;
ideas of all involved with the&#13;
development of Parkside.&#13;
Buy a ... Deliciously Sohsfytng&#13;
• BIG SHEF GOlOENPOWN&#13;
• FRENCH FRIES 'UN' COMMONLY •Eflf:SMING&#13;
• "UN" COLA&#13;
ALL FOR $130&#13;
YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
6926 39th Ave.&#13;
ltt1c.es '"&lt;''udt • Atr condu1oning • Luxurious carpeting • Electric range and s.etf-ctHn,r,9 oven&#13;
•F,011-free rafngerator • Otshwasher • Food waste d1sPo51I • Central ~M;!';'u7~~;;a&#13;
•Courtt,y clUbhouse. with wuN •And manv other design and conwn en&#13;
SEE OUR DECORATOR FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
p°ft ON e'0&#13;
1'.::ss2-sll s&#13;
PARKSIDE REALn' 1· C. o.,..ioo«t afld 8ut1t bv US ~~·~ inc&#13;
deis also open weekdays 1 to 8&#13;
Or by Ptrwnal showing at your convenience&#13;
Thoma J011 .&#13;
ly platform cons·&#13;
atte~pt on my part&#13;
service to !lll the tud&#13;
campus.&#13;
=4-t _pre ent there are no nunonty cla , perso ,&#13;
programs of any h:e or mpact to&#13;
ad_equ~tely serve the ne of&#13;
minority students or ·bite&#13;
st~de~~ · In reference to&#13;
ma~onties, I want him to lh-e in a&#13;
SOCJal environment that all&#13;
him to perform up to his&#13;
capabilities. I need not r mind&#13;
you that not only do 1lite tu&#13;
dollars upport this institution,&#13;
but th~ are sizabl minority&#13;
populations in th' tate nd&#13;
country. It is easy for the -lute&#13;
student to say that minoriti .&#13;
always need pecial attention&#13;
but let him look around and '&#13;
who already has special attention&#13;
and seems to think it should, and&#13;
always will be that ·ay. lacy&#13;
r***************************&#13;
cl&amp;appineu i8 cXar.,aii&#13;
J&#13;
$269&#13;
ND 11McHenry''&#13;
, Fn. &amp;&#13;
ITov. 14, 16, 17, 1a I&#13;
t sh's Ne st II s,.t&#13;
2nd National &#13;
Kurt'lull r . Dator&#13;
RIght n"'" the greatest !undranc&lt;'&#13;
to 81\) ..... 1 prOllr&lt;S' by&#13;
Itudtn a nd the tudent&#13;
nate. It Park Ide I they&#13;
thernaelv&#13;
F.nterlna in the [aU a [res!tman,&#13;
I w appelled b) the&#13;
0' rwh ImIna apathy ot the&#13;
people who enter the UnIVer5Jty'&#13;
build cb day Uk.... . I&#13;
have [(IIUld ,t tra'C. that '0&#13;
o E ha taken it Into their&#13;
inIUall to try to recll/y these&#13;
&lt;GlIdIuona&#13;
In high achooI. I ..... a threey&#13;
r m m~r o[ stud.nt&#13;
I" rnm IllS. so I I I that with&#13;
Ihe lit U rionce that I n0v-&#13;
. 1 can bon tl) do a aood&#13;
)lib. boIh lor m) - II and (or leUow&#13;
....&#13;
The 0Cl thl I ha"C noticed, I&#13;
that thr [r t nuh m to ~&#13;
the. t In h-ed. 10 wbile not&#13;
a/liliated ...,th ther 01 them. I&#13;
.....p.d their m mbe ... , and th....&#13;
~ I eonVle!lon tun.&#13;
evol, [ore lion. I aha11&#13;
try to In th r pport. well&#13;
that 01 other tudents who&#13;
hi, unW now expruaed In·&#13;
dill llC&#13;
M pi Uorm, I[ el ted. will&#13;
enders for senate seat on&#13;
carry out the [011"",ing changes&#13;
lor the student body (and&#13;
geverrcnerm&#13;
1. To better relations writh Ute&#13;
R\ GER so that student council&#13;
mal learn to use it to reach the&#13;
masses of its weddy CJtCU1ation&#13;
2 To publish a mimeograph&#13;
Student Senate Report that will&#13;
be posted and distributed&#13;
(R.\. GER [asruon) on a regular&#13;
baSIS to create some concern in&#13;
tudent government.&#13;
S Mainly, to sincerely try to&#13;
stop the apathy' that bas engulled&#13;
Partside. and its "commuter"&#13;
students.&#13;
a Hold a monthly sympnoium&#13;
on student government and to&#13;
,"Vlte persons and [acuIty to&#13;
enter [orum dISCUSSions.&#13;
b Whil. more a part o[ PAB. to&#13;
sponsor more activities (or&#13;
student so that more Interest&#13;
ean ~ created .. poU\ting the&#13;
cred,t to the tudent senate.&#13;
c. Have a rallle that wiI) raise&#13;
money for student council&#13;
~ork .. and again, draw interest&#13;
toward student senate's causes.&#13;
d. Lobby [or more student&#13;
pnvileg and parking areas&#13;
and I.ss .xorbitant cbarg.s.&#13;
E&#13;
BRAT STOP&#13;
HipWil} 1-94 &amp;. ;jQ&#13;
"" t:. UI. \I I Ul. EltI') Ia)&#13;
Sun stnH Ii all IiII&#13;
BR41WURSf OUR SPE IALTY&#13;
Fit. &amp; SAT. IIJY. 16 &amp; 17&#13;
o.ce to "LIfI"&#13;
Edgewater otor Inn&#13;
lit lAr IIr..'TIl1l lars. IIi .&#13;
"" Iai~~P. . - lUI.&#13;
s.. II \. .- I \.I.&#13;
except Sat. &amp;.&#13;
WED., FII., &amp; SAT., lilY. 14, 16, 11&#13;
... to ''POWEllltUSE' ,&#13;
Kathl .. n (Kay) Sweeney ~&#13;
Senator&#13;
Vital data: Senior in Labor&#13;
Economics; member of the&#13;
Academic policies COmmittee&#13;
and SteerIna Committee o[ the&#13;
Adult Student Association.&#13;
Career plans: labor relations and&#13;
mediahon. Work-Stud) Program.&#13;
Platform: As a young&#13;
universi ty, Parkside has ~he&#13;
abUlty to adapt to the changing&#13;
needs of its students and of the&#13;
community. The Parkside&#13;
Student Government AssoCiation&#13;
has the duty to continually&#13;
detennine student interests and&#13;
relay these to the [aculty and the&#13;
administration. PSGA must&#13;
encourage (and sometimes&#13;
d.mand) n.xibility. The&#13;
'creaking bureaUCracy' that&#13;
exists on some campuses,&#13;
especially the larger ones, must&#13;
never be aUowed to develOP here.&#13;
We are YOUngand growing and&#13;
concerned. w. must stay that&#13;
way. t&#13;
I am running [or gena or&#13;
because I aID concerned. I&#13;
believe PSG A should be concerned&#13;
with all phases of stud~t&#13;
life whether political, social,&#13;
ac~demic or civic. I. win&#13;
specifically ~e i~terested ." the&#13;
Iollc...ing tOpICSif elected: .&#13;
Il Determine whether phYSIcal&#13;
facilities and present serviCes&#13;
are adequate [or handicapped&#13;
students. 2) A study of traflic control on&#13;
and near the campUS. This would&#13;
include the bus system, speed&#13;
limits, parking, accident rates,&#13;
etc. This, or necessity, would be&#13;
done in conjunction with Safety&#13;
and Security and the appropriate&#13;
county authorities.&#13;
3) Greater student input into&#13;
the tim.tabl.s through&#13;
questionnaires, membership or&#13;
advising privileges to ap·&#13;
pl"opriate committees.&#13;
4) Ways of assisting the Day&#13;
Care Center&#13;
5) Removing some of the annoyances&#13;
students discover daily&#13;
For example, .no clocks or improperly&#13;
runnmg ones pooel&#13;
funct~oning elevators, 'lack ~&#13;
pencil sharpeners, lack of&#13;
telephones (inter-campus and&#13;
pay phones), and the hours o[&#13;
food service operation and the&#13;
quality of rood served.&#13;
Education, to me, is exP&lt;lSUrt&#13;
to the widest spectrum of people&#13;
and ideas so one may learn ....&#13;
what to think and instead I..",&#13;
how to think.&#13;
Commuter campuses hay&#13;
grea er commumcation gapt t . •&#13;
than other campuses. PSGAcan&#13;
help remedy this by greater ...&#13;
of publicity, [requent articles 1ft&#13;
the RANGER. and pollinl&#13;
students on their views whenever&#13;
possible. On the oth.r hand, ead!&#13;
student must take the responsibility&#13;
to input into the system It&#13;
reqwres som~ time and energy,&#13;
We are only Impotent if we feel&#13;
we are. Give a damn.&#13;
r****•••••••****************************************~&#13;
Tom Pelersen • Senator&#13;
I [.e1 the [irst problem PSGA&#13;
will have to solve is getting&#13;
students to realize what PSGA is&#13;
and what powers th.y hav,.&#13;
Students have to have some [aith&#13;
that student government can do&#13;
something, the way It'S organiz.ed&#13;
it can't be very effective without&#13;
some student input. Getting&#13;
students involved won't be easy,&#13;
apathy is easy to talk about but&#13;
nol so easy to solv •. PSGA will&#13;
have to k.. p itself in the student's&#13;
eye and work for some sort of&#13;
response. The mistake they have&#13;
mad. in the past is to let the&#13;
students forg.t Student Gov.rnm.nt&#13;
arter they hold an election.&#13;
One of the main responsibilities&#13;
o[ PSG A is the protection of&#13;
student rights, and I [eel this is&#13;
the area upon which it should&#13;
concentrate its ef[orts. PSGA has&#13;
the machin.ry to do something&#13;
but again the problem is to get&#13;
students to come before the&#13;
various committees and voice&#13;
th.ir bitches so PSGA can take&#13;
some action. It's obvious that&#13;
students have hassl.s and what&#13;
PSGA WIll have to do is make the&#13;
students aware that th.y c:ando&#13;
something about th.m.&#13;
The main objective o[ PSGA&#13;
should then he to keep \be&#13;
students in[ormed and hopelully&#13;
to get them involved. As far u&#13;
setting specific policy is con·&#13;
cerned I reel that it's up w \be&#13;
president to initiate it and to then&#13;
work with the S.nate w [ollow&#13;
througb on it. 11elected I woulcl&#13;
tben work to g.t PSGAmovingto&#13;
do the things the constitution&#13;
gives it the pow.r to do.&#13;
***.************************************************~&#13;
Ha)'es D. Norman ~Senator&#13;
I, Hayes D. Norman, as a&#13;
student serving as a Senator on&#13;
the Student Government, ...ould&#13;
represent the student hody as a&#13;
means to get their ideas,&#13;
opinions, and views on anything&#13;
concerning UW-Parkside, to the&#13;
senate meetings. Another duty I&#13;
would participate in is the&#13;
protection and maintenance o[&#13;
the students rights under the&#13;
emstitution. I support a strong&#13;
student government, on. that is&#13;
active and relevant.&#13;
I am also a member o[&#13;
Parkside's Third World&#13;
Organization. This puts me in a&#13;
position o[ availability ...bicb&#13;
minority students could use in&#13;
getting ideas to the student&#13;
government. Some other ideas&#13;
and needs around this scbool&#13;
whicb students have voiced is the&#13;
need [or a stror,ger supportive&#13;
service program. This ...ould be&#13;
'something on the order of a fiveyear&#13;
program to help minorities,&#13;
per se.&#13;
I also feel the need for a hett"r&#13;
[ollow-up on tbe fresbman&#13;
orientation, [eetings beina tItat&#13;
some students com. here wtlb&#13;
hopes o[ melting into the syIlSIl,&#13;
and end up reeling sepsrate IIIlI&#13;
oppressed.&#13;
Finally, I think there should be&#13;
a real student unioo bulldiIlI.&#13;
built by the UDiverslty, 80clllIiI&#13;
...ouldn't have to rent the buiIdlIII&#13;
[or dances, and this buikIIII&#13;
should also contain the ..-&#13;
of a building orientated [or&#13;
student recreational uses,"-&#13;
as possibl •.&#13;
•••••••***••••••***********************************~&#13;
Patrick McDevitt· senator&#13;
I was elected Senator in last&#13;
year's elections. Of the original&#13;
seventeen Senators there are&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
&lt;r~~~KH¢L1t&gt;AY&#13;
APRIL t2-21.t974&#13;
10days - 8 nights&#13;
plus 120 tax&#13;
&amp; sl'fVice based on&#13;
210 II room&#13;
inclVd6:&#13;
! Il Rh I'&#13;
(ht'r ~~Fillt'd&#13;
• Round trip Jet&#13;
• 1 nights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in ZUrich&#13;
• Z m.a1s daUy&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sightSeeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz.&#13;
• Tour escort&#13;
• Tips &amp; laxes on above&#13;
For application or infonnation&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
• LLC 0-197 Call: 553-22!l1&#13;
only a handful lelt. I would say&#13;
this was due in part because&#13;
some people .... re only trying to&#13;
seek a title or just to see i[ they&#13;
could win an election. Also, any&#13;
time you have a group of in·&#13;
dividuals the leadership bas to&#13;
have their cooperation~~our&#13;
Presld.nt o[ last year did not.&#13;
Wbat Stud.nt government&#13;
needs is active and concerned&#13;
students. The Senate can and will&#13;
be the voice and sword of the&#13;
student body. What is also needed !S experience. I have experience&#13;
10 organiz.ations at Parkside and&#13;
in YOUR Student Government. I&#13;
plan, i[ elected, to sbow the&#13;
average student how he can help&#13;
student government and boW ~&#13;
can help him. On. of the biQOll&#13;
problems o[ student governmeat&#13;
at Parkside-Is that the sbJdeatl&#13;
or organizations with probleml.&#13;
don't r.aliz. that there is •&#13;
organization that exists made"&#13;
o[ students with the powertobeIP&#13;
students.&#13;
I would work to h.lp build'&#13;
strong and active Studell&#13;
Government. I have the timeII&#13;
devote and the interest needed II&#13;
do the job o[ Senator. sbldeDl&#13;
government has come a Jongwry&#13;
il! the last six ...eeks undertilt&#13;
n.w leadersbip or Tom JennetLI&#13;
will continue to h.lp build :&#13;
strong stud.nt government&#13;
elected&#13;
T STOP&#13;
Iii&#13;
BR&#13;
\II 18&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. Y. 16 &amp; 17&#13;
Dance to "llfE"&#13;
loto Inn&#13;
Kathi n (Ka~·) weeney •&#13;
t r \ ital data: ~ ior in Labor&#13;
Economic · member of the&#13;
, c demic Policie Committee&#13;
and Stecnng Committee of the&#13;
dull tudent Association.&#13;
r r plan : labor relations and&#13;
medi tion. Woe .Study Program.&#13;
Platform : A a young&#13;
universitv Park ide h the&#13;
btlit to 'a'dapt to the changing&#13;
~ of it ludents and of the&#13;
community. The Parkside&#13;
tudent Go ernment Association&#13;
h the dut. to continually&#13;
de rmine udent interes and&#13;
rel th to the facult and the&#13;
admini tration. PSGA mu t&#13;
encourage (and ometimes&#13;
demand) flexibility. The&#13;
·creakin bureaucracy' that&#13;
e i t on ome campu e ,&#13;
peciall) the larger on • mu t ne r be alto ed to develop here.&#13;
·e are ·oung and growing and&#13;
cemed. We mu t tay that&#13;
en&#13;
way.&#13;
1 am running for Senator&#13;
because I am concerned. I&#13;
belie e PSGA should be concerned&#13;
with all phases of stud~nt&#13;
life whether political, soct~l,&#13;
ac;demic or civic . I. will&#13;
pecifically ~e i~terested .'" the&#13;
following topics if elected. . 1) Determine whether phys!cal&#13;
facilities and present ~erv1ces&#13;
are adequate for handicapped&#13;
students. 2) A study of traffic control on&#13;
and near the campus. This would&#13;
include the bus system, speed&#13;
limits, parking, accident rates,&#13;
etc. This, of necessity, would be&#13;
done in conjunction with Sa~ety&#13;
and Security and the appropriate&#13;
county authorities.&#13;
3) Greater student input into&#13;
the timetables thr:ough&#13;
questionnaires, membership or&#13;
advising privileges to appropriate&#13;
committees. 4 ) Ways of assisting the Day&#13;
Care Center&#13;
se t&#13;
5) Remo ing some of the annoyances&#13;
students discover dat y&#13;
For example, _no clock or irn.&#13;
properly runnmg one , P&lt;&gt;otl&#13;
functioning elevators, Jack of&#13;
pencil sharpeners, Jack of&#13;
telephones Cinter-campu aod&#13;
pay phones), and th hours of&#13;
food service operation and th&#13;
quality of food served. e&#13;
Education, to me, is exp0su&#13;
to th~ widest spectrum of peopt&#13;
and ideas so one may learn J&#13;
what to think and instead learn&#13;
how to think.&#13;
Commuter campuse have&#13;
greater communication gaps&#13;
than other campuses. PSGA can&#13;
help remedy this by greater USe&#13;
of publicity, frequent articles tn&#13;
the RANGER, and polltn&#13;
students on their views whenever&#13;
possible. On the other hand, each&#13;
student must take the respon.&#13;
sibili.ty to input i~to the sy tern. It&#13;
reqwres som~ time and energy&#13;
We are only impotent if we fetl&#13;
we are. Give a damn.&#13;
r*****************************************************•&#13;
response. The mistake they have&#13;
made in the past is to let the&#13;
tud nts forget Student Government&#13;
after they hold an election.&#13;
One of the main responsibilities&#13;
of PSGA is the protection of&#13;
tudent rights, and I feel this is&#13;
the area upon which it should&#13;
concentrate its efforts. PSGA has&#13;
the machinery to do something&#13;
but again the problem is to get&#13;
students to come before the&#13;
various committees and voice&#13;
their bitches so PSGA can take&#13;
some action. It's obvious that&#13;
students have hassles and what&#13;
PSGA will have to do is mak the&#13;
students aware that they can do&#13;
something about them.&#13;
The main objective of PSGA&#13;
should then be to keep the&#13;
students informed and hope{u}J&gt;&#13;
to get them involved. A far&#13;
setting specific policy i COil·&#13;
cerned I feel that it" up to the&#13;
president to initiate it and to then&#13;
work with the Senate to foll&#13;
through on it. If elected I \\Ould&#13;
then work to get PSGA moving to&#13;
do the things the constitution&#13;
gives it the power to do.&#13;
****************************************************~&#13;
Ha\·es D., 'orman · Senator&#13;
I, Hayes D. 'orman, as a&#13;
tudent serving as a Senator on&#13;
the Student Government, would&#13;
represent the student body as a&#13;
mean to get their ideas,&#13;
opinion.5, and views on anything&#13;
concerning UW-Parkside, to the&#13;
senate meetings. Another duty I&#13;
would participate in is the&#13;
protection and maintenance of&#13;
the tudents rights under the&#13;
coostitution. I support a strong&#13;
student government, one that is&#13;
active and relevant.&#13;
I am also a member of&#13;
Parkside's Third World&#13;
Organization. This puts me in a&#13;
position of availability which&#13;
minority students could use in&#13;
getting ideas to the student&#13;
government. Some other ideas&#13;
and needs aro\llld this school&#13;
which students ~ve voiced is the&#13;
need for a stronger supportive&#13;
service program. This would be&#13;
something on the order of a five.&#13;
year program to help minorities,&#13;
per se.&#13;
I also feel the need for a better&#13;
follow-up on the freshman&#13;
orientation, feelings being that&#13;
some students come here with&#13;
hopes of melting into the system,&#13;
and end up feeling separate and&#13;
oppressed.&#13;
Finally, I think there should be&#13;
a real student union build!C,&#13;
built by the University, so cha&#13;
wouldn't have to rent the buildizl&#13;
for dances, and this buildill&#13;
should also contain the elemmll&#13;
of a building orientated far&#13;
student recreational uses, u IOIIII&#13;
as possible.&#13;
·······*••••••••**************************************&#13;
Patrick . le Devitt -Senator&#13;
I was elected Senator in last&#13;
year's elections. Of the original&#13;
seventeen Senators there are&#13;
~~~~K H¢Ll£»AY&#13;
APRIL 12-21, 1974&#13;
10 days -8 nights&#13;
$499 plus S20 tax&#13;
&amp; service based on 2 to a room incl\Jdes&#13;
! IL RRY'&#13;
(1\.-r 1 , Fillrd&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 nights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in Zw-ich&#13;
• 2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sightseeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz. • Tour escort&#13;
• Tip taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
C~IPUSTRAVELCENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-22M&#13;
only a handful left. I would say&#13;
this was due in part because&#13;
some people were only trying to&#13;
seek a title or just to see if they&#13;
could win an election. Also, any&#13;
time you have a group of individuals&#13;
the leadership has to&#13;
have their cooperation--our&#13;
President of last year did not.&#13;
What Student government&#13;
needs is active and concerned&#13;
students. The Senate can and will&#13;
be the voice and sword of the&#13;
student body. What is also needed&#13;
is experience. I have experience&#13;
in organizations at Parkside and&#13;
in YOUR Student Government. I&#13;
plan, if elected, to show the&#13;
average student how he can help&#13;
student government and bow t&#13;
can help him. One of the biggest&#13;
problems of student govemmffll&#13;
at Parkside.-is that the studeri&#13;
or organizations with problems.&#13;
don't realize that there is Ill&#13;
organization that exists made 1'&#13;
of students with the power to help&#13;
students.&#13;
I would work to help build •&#13;
strong and active Student&#13;
Government. I have the time to&#13;
devote and the interest needed to&#13;
do the job of Senator. Studeol&#13;
government has come a Jong ,a&#13;
in the last six weeks under tht&#13;
new leadership of Tom Jen~tt. I&#13;
will continue to help bwld 1&#13;
strong student government&#13;
elected. &#13;
ariel news&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1973THE PARKSIDE RANGER'&#13;
Student work solicited Recycllnfl&#13;
~mmencement date changed&#13;
Graduationc~remonies for graduating seniors this semester will be&#13;
beld&#13;
at 2 p.m. In the Comm Arts Theatre on Sunday, Dec. 16 Candidates&#13;
are asked to get their orders for caps and gowns in io the&#13;
soakstore by Nov. 21. The cost of cap, gown and tassel is $7.50 and&#13;
must be paid when the order IS made.&#13;
-.-date forums this afternoon&#13;
~estions of student power, rights and leadership will be among the&#13;
tcsdiscussedat ~e candid~tes! for~ Wednesday afternoon, Nov.&#13;
tI"'. LLC 0185. Officer candidates w111 be available at 2:30 Senate&#13;
::;fulS at 3:15. All students are invited. '&#13;
IJII1' .tudents in free conc,rt&#13;
Four parkside music students will be s~loists in a free public cooc&lt;rtat3:30&#13;
p.m. on Wednesday (Nov. 14) 10 tbe Communication Arts&#13;
Building Room 0-118.&#13;
They are soprano Melanie Hansen, contralto Lynn Gross, arxl&#13;
soprano Debbie zarletti, all students of Lorie Langdon, and alto&#13;
saxophonist Susan Lasco, a student of Bernard 'Stiner.&#13;
Piano accompanists will be Kris Gould, Debbie Perrone and Jeana&#13;
Ogren.&#13;
.I2&amp;' Interylews to be held&#13;
The American Hospital Supply Company of Waukegan will be on&#13;
campuS Wednesday, Nov. 21. They will be interviewing Business&#13;
Management majors and liberal arts majors who have had some&#13;
bJsiness management courses. Persons interested can sign up for an&#13;
Illlerview at the Placement Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
yw·p fifth in biology bowl&#13;
Parkside placed fifth in the Eightb Annual Wisconsin Biology Bowl&#13;
Nov. 3, at UW-Eau Claire. Students participating were Randy&#13;
Brouinette, Mike Rizzo, Chris Miller, Rich Eckert, Lisa Lichter and&#13;
Bruce Green. UW·l\iver Falls placed first and received a gilded turtle&#13;
shell trophy. This is the first time Parkside bas entered the Bowl.&#13;
Plans are being made to enter next year's Bowl which will be held at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jens('n&#13;
WAKEOFTHE FLOOD&#13;
Grateful Dead &lt;GD~I)&#13;
To be sure, WAKE OF THE FLOOD is not anxiety-release music.&#13;
The music won't grab and shake the listener but rather, for full en·&#13;
joyment, he must allow his mind to immediately sink. dow~ into the&#13;
vibrational substance and remain attached for tbe duration of the&#13;
album. It moves along slow with a mellow feeling which is consistent&#13;
throoghool the entire album. The lead vocalist never creates a ~~&#13;
of absolute excitement but he does maintain enough tenseness In hiS&#13;
transcendental voice so that it contributes a main part to the record's&#13;
mysterious atmosphere.&#13;
The Grateful Dead do a splendid job of making inner-~ind-journey&#13;
ml.llicwithout any aid from electronic gimmjcke~. '.I'hls I~not saylOg&#13;
that electronic exploitation is necessarily bad but It IS saYIng that the&#13;
Grateful Dead create their spacey effects solely by the way they&#13;
combine different musical influences.&#13;
The main trunk of the music is country·rooted and the rest of the&#13;
tree branches out to touch many other musical polarities. TJ:e .other&#13;
musical styles are blended in smoothly but are often dIstinctly&#13;
rteognizable.&#13;
Throughout the course that this album follows, the moods of&#13;
deJression and happiness are dealt with in a strange ~alance. They&#13;
keep the same musical texture, thus they are sometim~s hard. to&#13;
dtstmguish, Although depression is revealed as severe, the lighter SIde&#13;
Glib psychic condition is usually presented as rehef from downer&#13;
reehngs instead of actual positive happiness. ds th t&#13;
In the first song there is a unique contrast of the two moo willi&#13;
happens simultaneously. The lyrical message gives SUIClda.1hints .n&#13;
helpfrom a morose viohn while the foundation of the song IS played I&#13;
a high-spirited vaudeville manner. The violin also causes the song to&#13;
nng up Hot Tuna associations. , . 'Id&#13;
"Let Me Sing Your Blues Away" is a spirit rebUilder m a ":,1.&#13;
lasman, After this "Row Jimmy" seems to go down a couple SPlrltmood&#13;
levels with a message of acceptance that keeps morale ~t ~&#13;
tonstant level. "Stella Blue" continues with the same ~ow and JU~&#13;
alter this pace begins to feel tiring, background VOIces float m&#13;
PtQviding relief between the slow seesaw head bobs. .&#13;
\ow, over on Side 2 the trend is altered slightly because the hap~l::;&#13;
1IlOod, which is domi~ant on this side, is created with more tn~ens~t&#13;
feelings, "Here Comes Sunshine" moves -with a happy, shufflmg tl'&#13;
Tht rays of the sunshine chorus melt out of it softly but exuberanf&#13;
y .&#13;
•'t:-, . .,' ha .er and care ree l:.}el:i of the World" conceive a situation that IS ppl&#13;
also.&#13;
..... lb' . "W th Report Suite" where Ine a urn's fmal statement JS from ea er to be&#13;
the message seems somewhat ambivalent. Part one seem&#13;
t&#13;
• n&#13;
..... I'k h rus Part wo a - ~peralely reassuring with its gospel- lee 0 . " S . h&#13;
helpat . "L t It Grow A pams es the future optimistically. saymg e -&#13;
1Tl00d takes up some of the links in the song's chain of passage'l'f may&#13;
At . "iewon le ter hearing the album completely. tblS musICS \ Id eate joy&#13;
appear to be equally doubtful and reassuring. But It s ou ~r takin&#13;
'n the. listener for the Grateful Dead have succeed"1 t~~ huma~&#13;
r tlOn" and making their version of the true !:'&lt;;sence 0&#13;
Poetry, prose and art work is now being accepted b) R.\ ER for&#13;
pubhcalJon 10 tbe special hohda) i ue Dec. 12. ContribulJonrneed no!&#13;
necessarily be on themes relaung to the -.son allhougb!hi.&gt;&#13;
preferred at t1us time A short story dealmg ,,;th some _t of&#13;
Chfls~as IS ~so wanted. Deadline (or submISSions is Dec S. but&#13;
sooner If poss.ble Bring or send matenal to RA; GER. u.c 0194&#13;
Please Include name, address and grade&#13;
Vet's club&#13;
to hold&#13;
paper&#13;
drive&#13;
IJ..brary bsWI' tRan paper cUnls.&#13;
A Library "Term Paper Clinic" IS being held t!lnKogll tIus&#13;
durmg hbrary hours. A table is set up ",th pamphlets, books and&#13;
handouts on term paper wnung, Help is also available for fl/ldiql&#13;
materials for topics and learrung the baSJcsof researc:lung.&#13;
The Vea Club ha allDOllD&lt;'&lt;d&#13;
lIIal.t ",ill hold • po r dri ve fer&#13;
rec 'c1ina purpose on Wed&#13;
.-loy, 'ov 21 In the T.llent&#13;
pari&lt; lot A lnlIOk from . tmI&#13;
\\' t per Co will he porited&#13;
som In the 101 from •• m·&#13;
S, 30 pm , Ind people m. dr&lt;lp&#13;
aLI their popers&#13;
Oletmlr Schneider II ceeedmalJ&#13;
thio "' III for the \Ie&#13;
Ind SI) lIIat .olW'll ....&#13;
need&lt;d to help In ted per&#13;
m. coil the V 'off&#13;
ext ~2"1, or ' up .t the&#13;
Iro on the 21 "ben they ba.&#13;
some ume to pare&#13;
hn d... IIId !hit pen&#13;
should n.. tly bundled .nd. I!&#13;
ble, m.p ahould not he&#13;
mcluded&#13;
".. \' ,.,IU&#13;
the paper If&#13;
.... _to th dn •&#13;
plan to .... the Pioce«ls to •&#13;
con and poper ree) Urc progr.m&#13;
go If PI. de peopI d not&#13;
e tub t ff1cleDt:mt t In&#13;
=101. pI'Oje&lt;: • the money from&#13;
the po r drh e 111.0 \OVo nl&#13;
upport 01 the RJlcIn ".,,,&#13;
Cgngry to glye CLIOlestur.&#13;
Robert Canary, associate professcrofEnglisb. will pn!5enl the tIurd&#13;
lecture In the QJO Associalioo's series His loplc 18 "Science Flcbon"&#13;
Myths for an Industrial Age'" He will speak 10 the Tlllrd F100r&#13;
Library on Tuesday, 'ov. 20 at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The CLIO Association is an intemalJOIlaI organlll.lIon connected&#13;
with "CLIO: An Interdisciplinary Journal 01 Llter.l1ure, H' tory and&#13;
the Philosophy of History," which is publisbed at Partside.&#13;
State Justice to speals...bJlm.&#13;
On Monday, Nov. 19, the Dlvision of Soc1aJ SCIences ,,-ill present.&#13;
free conoquium by Wiscons1O State Supreme Court Justi&lt;:e, Horace II'&#13;
Wilkie, on the topic, "The Functioo 01 Courts in Contemporar)'&#13;
Society." Tbe event is scheduled to hegm at 2,30 pm. In Greeoqu' t&#13;
Han lecture room 103. There IS 00 admissloo charged and the .. ent&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Table tennis club forml.na&#13;
A table lermis club is now forming under the d1J"'e'CtiOl1 of Omar Amm&#13;
of the Life Science faculty Practice times for the club ~ lmtaUyel}'&#13;
scheduled on Tuesday and Thur&gt;&lt;lay aftemooos Houn fer pradJces&#13;
have not yet been set. For additional m(onnalion contact Amin. GR&#13;
341, ext. 2547. or Vic Godfrey • Club ports. P E buildmg. ext. 22~&#13;
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Home of the 2 5 ~SHORTY&#13;
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CORNER 34th Ave. &amp; S2nd St, )I,q ., ".,&#13;
Phone 652·8662 " I&#13;
&amp;rief news&#13;
d&#13;
Graduation ceremonies for graduating seniors this sem . 11eld at 2 p.m. in the Comm Arts Theatre on Sunda Oester will be&#13;
didates are asked to get their orders for caps and ~~w~· .&#13;
16- Cansc,o1tstore&#13;
by Nov. 21. The cost of cap, gown and lass 1 . m to the&#13;
rnust be paid when the order is made. e is $7 .50 and&#13;
n&#13;
Questions of student power, rights and leadership will be&#13;
topics discussed at 1!1e candid~tes' for1;1111 Wednesday afte~:~"t~e&#13;
14 10 LLC D185. Officer candidates will be available at 2.30 S ·&#13;
oopefuls at 3: 15. All students are invited. · • enate&#13;
111,•, students in free conc,:rt&#13;
Four Parkside music students will be soloists in a free ubli&#13;
certat3:30 p.m. on Wednesday (Nov. 14) in the Communi~tio c ~ Building Room D-118. . n r&#13;
They are ~prano M~lanie Hansen, contraltn Lynn Gross, and&#13;
soprano Debbie Zarletb, all students of Lorie Langdon and alt&#13;
Saxophonist Susan Lasco, a student of Bernard Stiner ' 0&#13;
Piano accompanists will be Kris Gould, Debbie Perr~ne and Jeana&#13;
Ogren.&#13;
J.Qb Interviews to be held&#13;
The American Hospital Supply Company of Waukegan will be on&#13;
campus Wednesday, Nov. 21. They will be interviewing Bus·&#13;
anagement majors and liberal arts majors who have had :::&#13;
bu iness management courses. Persons interested can sign up for an&#13;
interview at the Placement Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
UW-P fifth in biology bowl&#13;
Parkside placed fifth in ~he Eighth Annual Wisconsin Biology Bowl&#13;
, ·ov._ 3, at ~W-E~u Clair~. S~udents . participating were Randy&#13;
Brou1llette, Mike Rizzo, Chris Miller, Rich Eckert, Lisa Lichter and&#13;
Bruce Green. UW-River Falls placed first and received a gilded turtle&#13;
hell trophy. This is the first time Parkside has entered the Bowl.&#13;
Plans are being made to enter next year's Bowl which will be held at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
The Raven&#13;
By Gary Jensen&#13;
WAKE OF THE FLOOD&#13;
Grateful Dead ( G D-01 )&#13;
To be sure, WAKE OF THE FLOOD is not anxiety-release music.&#13;
~ music won't grab and shake the listener but rather, for full en-&#13;
~me~t, he must allow his mind to immediately sink down into the&#13;
Vibrational substance, and remain attached for the duration of the&#13;
album. It moves along slow with a mellow feeling which is consistent&#13;
throughout the entire album. The lead vocalist never creates a mood&#13;
of absolute excitement but he does maintain enough tenseness in hi&#13;
tranM:endental voice so that it contributes a main part to the record's&#13;
my terious atmosphere.&#13;
~e G~ateful Dead do a splendid job of making inner-mind-journey&#13;
music without any aid from electronic gimmickery. This is not saying&#13;
that electronic exploitation is necessarily bad but it is saying that the&#13;
Grateful Dead create their spacey effects solely by the way they&#13;
combine different musical influences.&#13;
The main trunk of the music is country-rooted and the rest of the&#13;
tree_branches out to touch many other musical polarities. The other&#13;
musical styles are blended in smoothly but are often distinctly&#13;
recognizable.&#13;
Throughout the course that this album follows, the moods of&#13;
depression and happiness are dealt with in a strange balance. They&#13;
k P the same musical texture thus they are sometimes hard to&#13;
distinguish Although depression is revealed as severe, the lighter side&#13;
of 1~ psychic condition is usually presented as relief from downer&#13;
f hngs m tead of actual positive happiness.&#13;
In the first song there is a unique contrast of the two moods ~at&#13;
happens simultaneously. The lyrical message gives suicida_l hints w1~&#13;
help from a morose violin while the foundation of the song 1s played m&#13;
a high-spirited vaudeville manner. The violin also causes the song to&#13;
nng up Hot Tuna associations.&#13;
'Let fo Sing Your Blues Away" is a spirit rebuilder in a mi~d&#13;
la hion. After this "Ro¼ Jimmy" seems to go down a couple spmt·&#13;
mood levels with a message of acceptance that keeps morale ~t a&#13;
to!lstant level. "Stella Blue" continues with the same flow and JU. t&#13;
after_ t_his pace begins to feel tiring, background voices float m&#13;
i--n,·idmg relief between the slow seesaw head bobs. .&#13;
ow, over on Side 2, the trend is altered slightly because t~e ha~p_ier&#13;
f OOd, which is dominant on this side, is created with more intensified&#13;
Th hng · "Here Comes Sunshine" moves wit~ a happy, shufflmg bea~.&#13;
E:~ ray· of the sunshine chorus melt out of 1t _softly ~ut exuberantl) ·&#13;
· of the World"' conceive a situation that 1s happier and carefree&#13;
lso.&#13;
lheThe alhum·s fmal statement is from "Weather Report Suite" where&#13;
me sage seems somewhat ambivalent. Part one seem to be&#13;
ti rately reassuring with its gospel-like chorus P?,rt two ~nCip&#13;
tes the future optimistically, saying "Let It Grow. A Spam h&#13;
lllOOd lakes up some of the links in the song's chain of passage .&#13;
a fter hearing the album completely, this music'.s view on life ~ay&#13;
p ar lo be equally doubtful and reassuring But it should create ~O)&#13;
In lbe listener for the Grateful Dead have succeeded in takmg&#13;
'i-:in and making their version o he tr r c;c;ence of the human&#13;
S,tudent work solicit d&#13;
in&#13;
nd&#13;
nd&#13;
edn M 14, 1973 THE PA 10 RAG&#13;
R cycling&#13;
Library bolds term paper c11n1c&#13;
Vet' club&#13;
to hold&#13;
paper&#13;
drive&#13;
Canary to aiye cuo lecture&#13;
Table tennis club forming&#13;
table tenn, club · w fornu un r d&#13;
of the Life ien facult) . Practic um for&#13;
cheduled on Tuesday and Thu ftprn,wv,c:&#13;
have not yet been . For d llonal info&#13;
341, ext. 2547. or \'ic Godfrey -Clu ~ . P&#13;
it****************~&#13;
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Dibll09t pi,y&#13;
Lown! p,kes IU - GUARA TEED&#13;
For • FREE c~ of&#13;
_. mal- ca• C IS Clo COY« pos&#13;
d "'9 lo&#13;
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The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
614 - S6lh S&#13;
PLEASE&#13;
VOTE&#13;
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tubar&#13;
ome o 25e so&#13;
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B"g Bee&#13;
P st Bud Schli z&#13;
ON TAP&#13;
Ope 7 do so&#13;
8:00 a. . - 1 :00 o.m. &#13;
1 THE PAR IDE RA ER eel sda. ov 14. 973&#13;
..&#13;
de craduat ..&#13;
craduat.. are&#13;
on. specifically&#13;
_I, ftlIuoeennI. acODe&#13;
penon ...,aIIed an ex·&#13;
led.. 11aD. .... 1Ped by Partslde's&#13;
ca.:~~:":,,:::, were • .......uy sal1sliedwith&#13;
~ s.veral .-.ned thai ":=~",,,"lIIncI'"" relatively _, bul&#13;
• to be sa-'" 10 far. 11_ aIao noled&#13;
!bal .. al 11"""'1. parllcipalin. in the&#13;
CllGlDOr1Illw "...,-. '"" aiVUII excel1eDl per.&#13;
......&#13;
AIloolI"" '" lIlo IDduIIrieI coolae:ted '"" aware&#13;
'" a ......, IIaor '" ParbIcIe a"p!lunla. Mally were&#13;
IIIrMd ...... due III a lack 01 ....... inp. 11 wu&#13;
-:::' I: ited_a~leo .. nbolDclan&lt;eol&#13;
~ ~ exlaled. s.veraI people m-&#13;
..... sad ..-e bel'nnnw to see sbortaIes in&#13;
.. i", IIld aceountloI applieaDla.&#13;
()lbtr .,..motel were Iwned dowD due 10 a lad&lt;&#13;
'" opeot", 1nJDIDI. MaDy bold in 1ibera1&#13;
arta or .omca and samply cbd not 61 into the induIIrlaI&#13;
bOD. ODe penomeI ponm fell a&#13;
nrnmb... aI apphcanb needed se,-era! years of expel_ICe&#13;
and matwitv or more [ntensrve counIn&#13;
order In diScm'er JUSI what field they&#13;
Su:IWStoti':::- to whal classes students should be&#13;
lakiDI _""antage nf were g,,-en. Industry-boUD&lt;!&#13;
nt should take as many advanced math&#13;
ible. ad\·anced math and cost acCOUI\ung&#13;
d - s are a defmite must [or many&#13;
graduat&#13;
BUSt"" management studenlS should&#13;
pod ......try to gel on-the-job exper·ence.&#13;
Ian personnel people inlervlewed accused not&#13;
onl) pOnstde graduales, but graduales In general,&#13;
01 acqutnng an unrealistic altitude. They remarked&#13;
IIlat student:&gt; som""here get the idea that because&#13;
\bey bold a college degree. they are assured a h.gh&#13;
Ibon ,nIh a sa!ar&gt;' close 10 double olthal wbich is&#13;
....... 1 starting pay On personnel woman observed thal women,&#13;
especIalh' Ieel that because they are women and&#13;
hold a ~ree. they have 00 need to start near&#13;
holtom and \\ork up. veral people tnterviewed believed that students&#13;
cl.. r1j needed to be set stratgbt One suggesled&#13;
some form of instruction in salary and wage&#13;
detemunaLJoo. DespIte an often unrealistic attitude, Parkside&#13;
graduates were commended by several personnel&#13;
people for extraordinary enthusiasm and great&#13;
ambition.&#13;
Sportsfest queen&#13;
to be chosen&#13;
Each Varsily Sport has selected a female&#13;
Parkside studenl to represent lheir sport in the&#13;
Sporlsfeot Qt.een Contest. Sportsfest annually kicks&#13;
olf the Winter Athletic Seasons.&#13;
'l1tis year the Queen will be selected by a popular&#13;
vote of the entire Pmside studenl body.&#13;
Pbolographs 01 the candidates will be on display&#13;
&lt;kuing the voting from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Nov. 19,&#13;
20, 21, 26 and 'D. The Sportslesl Queen will be&#13;
crowned al balf-lime 01 the opening UW-Parkside&#13;
basketball game on Tuesday night, Nov. 'D, when&#13;
the Rangers hosl UW-Whilewater. The queen will&#13;
also reign over the Parkside Wreslling Clinic and&#13;
the Annual Parltside Varsity Club Dance on&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 1.&#13;
The Queen will be escorted al lhe Whitewater&#13;
basketball game by the Captain of the Sport she&#13;
represents.&#13;
RANGE&#13;
"-_-------sports&#13;
Sports shorfs&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
What makes Rosa run? This is a question many a s&#13;
probably asked themselves as they watch him break ta ~1Or&#13;
TheNAIA Dislrict 14 Playoffs was held in Eau Claire lasrs "Ift&#13;
wbich Parkside captured third place out of a total of 10 I .~&#13;
district. UW-LaCrosse was the WInner, and Carthage COUeanas&#13;
II&#13;
second. All year, it seemed that Lucian Rosa has had noli~:f&#13;
anyone's records, probably because all the records he breaks to&#13;
In t~e playoffs, Lucian Rosa won the individual honorsfCl':&#13;
stralght year, and subsequent1~ w~s named the most valuaNt&#13;
of the year. He broke the old dlstrict record by Winningthe f&#13;
meet in 24:29. Rosa can't be given all the credit, however beta&#13;
consistent performances of Chuck Dettman, Dennis Biei and ..&#13;
Rhode have also paid off, and undoubtedly have put Parksldtu-=-.:&#13;
in the position they are now...the National Playoffs in Sal -- ..&#13;
sas. In the district playoffs, Dettman, Biel and Rhode Pia.:'&#13;
and lOth respectively. To add more spice to the rack: the AU&#13;
Team, which co":,is~s 0.£ the top 10 r~rmers in the district. wu&#13;
this weekend. Th.s hst meludes Luc.an Rosa, ChuckDettmao.&#13;
Biel and Wayne Rhode.&#13;
Baseball&#13;
That's right, baseball. Baseball until this year has beea.. -.&#13;
but due to the increased interesl &lt;and funds) lbe sport whidt.&#13;
time was the favorite national pastime, has achieved Vanity&#13;
Under the watchful eye of Head Coach Ken "Red" 0b0I1x&#13;
baseball diamond is "near" completion, and Red is ~&#13;
ticipating a fine spring lurnout at tryouts.&#13;
This fall, Coach Oberbrunner held baseball practi•• fer&#13;
interesled, just to get the guys out there and playing..... bd&#13;
the weather was still nice. "This was not a closed practice....&#13;
Red said. "We are really hoping that a lot of guys didn'tlllli&#13;
way." Red concluded by saying the schedule looks goodfortIiI&#13;
(provided the weather looks good) and if anyone's in.......&#13;
baseball, Red Wants You!&#13;
/&#13;
I,&#13;
s&#13;
D&#13;
· ten unreali tic attitude, Parkside&#13;
mmended bv everal personnel&#13;
r rdinary enthusia m and great&#13;
Sportsfest queen&#13;
to be chosen&#13;
E h Varsity port has selected a female&#13;
Park ide tudent to represent their sport in the&#13;
Sport Jest Qt.een Contest. Sportsfest annually kicks&#13;
off the Winter Athletic Seasom.&#13;
This year the Queen will be selected by a popular&#13;
"ote or the entire Parkside student body.&#13;
Photographs of the candidates will be on display&#13;
during the voting from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m. on Nov. 19,&#13;
20, 21 , 26 and Tl. 'Ibe Sportsfest Queen will be&#13;
crowned at half-time of the opening UW-Parkside&#13;
basketball game on Tuesday night, Nov. Tl, when&#13;
the Rangers host UW-Wbitewater. 'Ibe queen will&#13;
also reign over the Parkside Wrestling Clinic and&#13;
the Annual Parkside Varsity Club Dance on&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 1.&#13;
The Queen will be escorted at the Whitewater&#13;
basketball game by the Captain of the Sport she&#13;
represents.&#13;
TOGETHER&#13;
~ ()~, ?tou., 15 - 24&#13;
11 OGE HER" ... A Junior Shop for Gals&#13;
PECI&#13;
• p&#13;
for G Opening Prizes (We're giving away money)&#13;
- Famous Maker Slacks, reg. to '16 . s9aa&#13;
s • S&#13;
08 6 h S .&#13;
632-1138&#13;
• D esses, long &amp; short&#13;
rs • Bio ses • Coats • Jackets • Body Suits&#13;
• Fos ion Coord·nate Jewelry&#13;
Top of t he stairs&#13;
RANGE&#13;
\._---------Sports&#13;
Sports shorts&#13;
Cross Country&#13;
What makes Rosa run? This is a question many 8&#13;
probably as~ed _themselves as they wa~ch him break tape&#13;
The AJA District 14 Playof~s was held m Eau Claire I 1&#13;
\"hich Parkside captured third p)ace out of a total of 10 1&#13;
district. UW-LaCrosse was the wmner, and Carthage oil&#13;
second. All year, it seemed that Lucian Rosa has had no&#13;
anyone's records, probably because all the records he br&#13;
In the playoffs, Lucian Rosa won the individual honor for&#13;
straight year, and subsequently was named the mo t val&#13;
of the year. He broke the old district record by winmn f&#13;
meet in 24 :29. Rosa can't be given all the credit, however&#13;
consistent performances of Chuck Dettman, Denni. Biei nd&#13;
Rhode have also paid off, and undoubtedly have put Par d&#13;
in the position they are now ... the National Playoffs, in&#13;
sas. In the district playoffs, Dettman, Biel and Rhode, pl&#13;
and 10th respectively. To add more spice to the rack, the All&#13;
Team, which consists of the top 10 runners in the di tric&#13;
this weekend. This list includes Lucian Rosa, Chuck Dettma&#13;
Biel and Wayne Rhode.&#13;
Baseball&#13;
That's right, baseball. Baseball until this year has been 8 c&#13;
but due to the incr~ased i~terest (a!1d funds) the sport, which 11&#13;
time was the favorite national pastime, has achieved Val"I ty&#13;
Under the watchful eye of Head Coach Ken "Red" nn.....__&#13;
baseball diamond is "near" completion, and Red is anx&#13;
ticipating a fine spring turnout at tryouts.&#13;
'Ibis fall, Coach Oberbrunner held baseball practice r«&#13;
interested, just to get the guys out there and playing som, the weather was still nice. "This was not a closed practice&#13;
Red said. "We are really hoping that a lot of guys didn't take&#13;
way." Red concluded by saying the schedule looks good for&#13;
(provided the weather looks good) and if anyone's intffllW&#13;
baseball, Red Wants You! &#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: The name of this weekly column, "Spertst t ...&#13;
Lwint tf" est.v ts .on from the annua WID er spor 5 estival which kicks orr the wi t&#13;
II. . I '11' In er rts season. This co umn WI cover the inside sports of bask tball&#13;
.po . ti dth e. wrestling.fencmg, gymnas res, an 0 er odds and ends pertaining to&#13;
•ports.&#13;
As the old curtain on soccer and cross country draws to a close a&#13;
newlight will shine on hardboards and wrestling mats as the winter&#13;
sports schedule gets underway.&#13;
on the basketball front, Head Coach Steve Stephens, along with a&#13;
crew of five returning lettermen, are obviously looking forward to a&#13;
successful season, but unless injuries to key players are kept to a&#13;
minimum,the Parkside bench might have to work that much harder.&#13;
To give some examples, freshman forward Rade Dimitrijevic has&#13;
been suffering from back problems. along with an ankle injury of Jeff&#13;
Gottfried. To make matters worse, center Gary Cole has just returned&#13;
'fnlm a ten-day vacation at a local hospital, suffered from a dislocated&#13;
andlractured thwnb. This injury will keep him out of action from four&#13;
to six weeks. according to coach Stephens.&#13;
After talking with Stephens. I found that he's still quite optimistic&#13;
despitethese injuries, and with the personnel he is working with this&#13;
year, who can blame him. .&#13;
The Ranger Netmen Will venture mto a much more action-packed&#13;
season than they had last year, and by the looks of things. December&#13;
will hethe true test. "In the month of December. we have all but two of&#13;
curgames on the road. Two of our games are against Green Bay I who&#13;
were in the Nationals last year, and one against Whitewater in our&#13;
home opener on Nov. 26."&#13;
The big word from the wrestling department this year is "polentiat."&#13;
Head Coach Jim Koch will venture into this season with six&#13;
lettermen and an ample supply of freshmen and sophomores.&#13;
Returningthis year will be senior, three-time national champion, Ken&#13;
Marlin. Junior Bill West will also he back. Bill is a tw()-time letter&#13;
wimer, and was second in the NAJA last year. Another junior, Kyle&#13;
Barnes. will return and wrestle in the 150 lb, weight class, Kyle&#13;
ggpj!ed a.l0.5 record as a liOllhop;lpr~.Ricjl.~yaglio, who was the&#13;
eaplaln at Tremper High. will return this season. Rico compiled an&#13;
impressive 14-3 record, besides winning three tournaments last season&#13;
... the Rangers. Rico is a sophomore. Another sophomore letterman&#13;
an tile I'OIlteris Bill Odders. Bill only competed in five matches last&#13;
JUl. but finished the season with a 3-1-1 record. The last letterman is&#13;
..... Tom Beyer. Tom accumulated a 10-5 record as a freshman;&#13;
however, be has sat out the last two seasons for the Rangers. InddentaUy.Tom&#13;
will probably be wrestling in the 177 lb. bracket, whIch&#13;
lIIIkea him the heaviest grappler on the squad.&#13;
1110 lack of strength in the heavier weight categories could he a&#13;
peat disadvantage for the Rangers, but only time will tell. Koch's&#13;
crew opens their regular season, in the Northern Open, which wdl be&#13;
Mid in Madison on Nov. 24.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
PAB Feature Films Presents&#13;
One of the Most&#13;
Chilling Horror Films Ever Made&#13;
Friday, Nov. 16, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 18, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
AmIissioa 15'&#13;
Bed Wetters and people&#13;
prone to nightmares&#13;
please DO NOT attend&#13;
••••••••••• w.ed.MiiSUiiiiY'.No.Yiioil.4,.1.f7JTHE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
Varsity letters&#13;
EDlTOR'S NOTE,&#13;
Students! Are)'ou taking a pecifie ph)' ltd. CCMU"St~ .. migb' alllt to&#13;
let other students in on! Wb) not be. gue- t wrilH ror our ",PORTC'l T&#13;
column'! AU feature torie will ~ printed.. To tum in a.w . bri.IIIa&#13;
them to"the RA.'iGER omce in the L.ibrar) lAarntDg Cf'll~r 4Dl"').&#13;
They Will be greall) apprecial~ ~&#13;
b) Da\ e Oanie&#13;
S.C,D.B.A. - Self-Contained Dnderw aler BreathIDg Appara&#13;
Would you believe that Parkside offers a cia on bQYi.' to use such a&#13;
complicated sounding device? Would you also believe that ou are&#13;
guaranteed you won't drown, or your money back" ch classes are&#13;
held every Thursday night in the great murty depth&gt; 01 Parltslc!e'&#13;
pool.&#13;
In this class, one learns everything from the correct "ay to kIck&#13;
your feet, to the pIlone numher of your nearest hypertleric chamber&#13;
Another interesting point is, this class IS co-edIcabonal1&#13;
Classes are divided into two sections' a lecture class on safety&#13;
preeautions and the laboratOl')· section. The lectures COOSlSt ol te:xt~&#13;
book work; the lab gives the students the actual exper1ence of being a&#13;
regular Lloyd Bridges. PADI certification ISpossIble ,,'hen pa""IDg the&#13;
written test and open water dive. You don't have to be a ~man to&#13;
learn the sport, and the class is worth ever)' penny of the S23 rent.a1 fee&#13;
you have to pay.&#13;
lf any of you have a little extra time next semPSW, "by not gIVe&#13;
scuba diving a try? It may well bewortb your .. -bile.&#13;
....... ..,.~ ....&#13;
A mombe~01 Parkside' "' ..... dlriBg cla practlces_..-&#13;
breathing and w1mmiDg tedlalq_ wltJla ........ -tiel ...."".&#13;
• •&#13;
i Bruce Wagner !&#13;
iis all you need to know:&#13;
: for a good i&#13;
i PSGA vice president. i&#13;
• • • Authorized ond poid for by Students for Bell .... Gove&lt;nrTlef11 •&#13;
• • : B_ Wogner Secretory •&#13;
•&#13;
• 'APA IUI6fI&#13;
• l&amp;Il IUI6II&#13;
• IWU IUI6II&#13;
• WI IUI6tI&#13;
CALl AKlAD TO l ()I.DII Will It I(ADT&#13;
T bs of C och_ F,\.&#13;
....d S nlftp&#13;
Willi If ROOT BEER&#13;
11THs5 II1II&#13;
I MIl( OoI()1:TH or&#13;
.. DeilY TH(An'&#13;
ON SHI' 0"'" lOAD&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp;, W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. tHy, 32) N~&#13;
Kenosba •&#13;
Hours Sun -11Irs 11-7&#13;
Fn_ .. Sat 11 to 11&#13;
awarded&#13;
In Soccer&#13;
The Park Ide Athletlc&#13;
Department anllOUllCfSwt 17&#13;
Va..... ty letter a rdI II be&#13;
P"fO"'ted to pia n 1..-&#13;
1m Acardinl to&#13;
Q&gt;ocb Hendr • Idler awardl&#13;
I'''''' til one or DIec...&#13;
Kleferl, IX [un 0 (Rick&#13;
Lechu z, R ck KII Ray&#13;
Phanll .. at, D1dmar ScbneIder&#13;
Frank uu EJIlon8 I, five&#13;
.c&gt;phom T BozInovIkI.&#13;
M1 Kopel) I Wayne SIslaIero&#13;
....arren Le,,' ,P e G yl and&#13;
five freshmen (8runo Pawlak,&#13;
DenniS PlpptJl, SI&amp;D !adler.&#13;
And) Guuerrn, Carl KUJ18I\CI&#13;
The Parkside Soccer Team&#13;
placed fOW' pia ... the AlA&#13;
Oi5tnct 14 All T am u&#13;
8DrIClUnC«I by Head Coecb Hal&#13;
Hendrnoo The 1W1I .... placed&#13;
lhre&lt;! pia rs ... \be F'tnI Team,&#13;
"'th one makIDg the Honorable&#13;
... tion list MakIlII \be elite&#13;
F'tnI Tum wen! Senior Dleler&#13;
Kiefer 011 olfeme, and OIl deI_&#13;
Jumor Rldt Lech_ and Fnob·&#13;
man 8MmO Pawlak. FzwIlmMI&#13;
Stan Stacller re&lt;e1vec1 Honorable&#13;
Menl&gt;Oll.. a deI&lt;Nl pia,.&#13;
-&#13;
i&#13;
2&#13;
I&#13;
~portsfest1~&#13;
~&#13;
i&#13;
. by Dan Marry §&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: The name ofth1s weekly column "Sportsr t,,. I . t t f • ' es • IS ken from the annua wm er spor s est1val which kicks off the . t&#13;
ta 1'h" I ·11 th · · wm er rts season. 1s co umn w1 cover e ms1de sports of basketb 11 ,p0 · t· d th od a • "restling. rencmg, gymnas 1cs, an o er ds and ends pertaining to&#13;
,p0rts.&#13;
As the old curtain on soccer and cross country draws to a close a&#13;
new light will shine on hardboards and wrestling mats as the winter&#13;
sports schedule gets underway.&#13;
On the basketbal~ front, Head Coach St~ve Stephens, along with a&#13;
crew of five returning lettermen, are obviously looking forward to a&#13;
successful season, but unless injuries to key players are kept to a&#13;
minimum, the Parkside bench might have to work that much harder.&#13;
To give some examples, freshman forward Rade Dimitrijevic has&#13;
been suffering from back problems, along with an ankle injury of Jeff&#13;
Gottfried. To make matters worse, center Gary Cole has just returned&#13;
'from a ten-day vacation ~t _a ~ocal ~ospital, ~uffered from a dislocated&#13;
and fractured thwnb. This mJury will keep him out of action from four&#13;
to six weeks, acc~rding to coach Stephens.&#13;
After talking with Stephens, I found that he's still quite optimistic&#13;
despite these injuries, and with the personnel he is working with this&#13;
year, who can blame hi~. .&#13;
The Ranger Netmen will venture mto a much more action-packed&#13;
season than they had last year, and by the looks of things, December&#13;
will be the true test. "In the month of December, we have all but two of&#13;
oor games on the road. Two of our games are against Green Bay, who&#13;
were in the Nationals last year, and one against Whitewater in our&#13;
home opener on Nov. 26."&#13;
The big word from the wrestling department this year is "potential."&#13;
Head Coach Jim Koch will venture into this season with six&#13;
lettermen and an ample supply of freshmen and sophomores.&#13;
Returning this year will be senior, three-time national champion, Ken&#13;
1artin. Junior Bill West will also be back. Bill is a two-time letter&#13;
winner, and was second in the NAIA last year. Another junior, Kyle&#13;
Barnes. will return and wrestle in the 150 lb. weight class. Kyle&#13;
compiled a 10-5 r~ord as a sophomore. Rico Savaglio, who was the&#13;
captain at Tremper High, will return this season. Rico compiled an&#13;
impressive 14-3 record, besides winning three tournaments last season&#13;
for the Rangers. Rico is a sophomore. Another sophomore letterman&#13;
on the roster is Bill Odders. Bill only competed in five matches last&#13;
year. but finished the season with a 3-1-1 record. The last letterman is&#13;
senior Tom Beyer. Tom accumulated a 10-5 record as a freshman;&#13;
however, he has sat out the last two seasons for the Rangers. Incidentally,&#13;
Tom will probably be wrestling in the 177 lb. bracket, which&#13;
makes him the heaviest grappler on the squad.&#13;
The lack of strength in the heavier weight categories could be a&#13;
great disadvantage for the Rangers, but only time will t~ll. K?Ch's&#13;
crew opens their regular season, in the Northern Open, which will be&#13;
N&gt;lri in M:irlison on Nov. 24.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
Member Parkside 200&#13;
National Varsity Club&#13;
ff~&#13;
~v~oleph&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
PAB Feature Films Presents&#13;
One of the Most&#13;
Chilling Horror Films Ever Made&#13;
NIGHT OF THE&#13;
. CHILLING&#13;
DEAD&#13;
Friday, Nov. 16, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 18, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
Admission 75c&#13;
WARNING:&#13;
Bed Wetters and people&#13;
prone to nightmares&#13;
please DO NOT attend&#13;
Wednesday, ov.14, 1973THE PARKSIDE RAHGER 11&#13;
SPORT&#13;
CUT&#13;
• i Bruce W agn r&#13;
i is all you need to kno,&#13;
: for a good •&#13;
: PSGA vice pre id nt.&#13;
• • • • •&#13;
Authorized ond poid for b&#13;
B.&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) • ·~ K~n ·ha&#13;
• BY&#13;
OTB ER&#13;
552-8404&#13;
Hours -Thrs. ll-7&#13;
Fri. &amp;: - l. 11 to 11&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •&#13;
Var ty letters&#13;
awarded&#13;
In Soccer&#13;
en I~&#13;
c,Q&#13;
OQ&#13;
- -&#13;
~&#13;
~ cc,&#13;
3 ::I:.&#13;
D,) c-,&#13;
= =-=&#13;
,. &#13;
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
••••••&#13;
....,...,&#13;
•••••&#13;
OoKS •&#13;
OS. plANT BOOICS • FUN BOO&#13;
BOOICS • POETIN BOOICS&#13;
BOOICS ·lCNmlNO BOOKS&#13;
PORT BOOKS ANTIQUE BOOKS&#13;
All At Special Prices&#13;
...... Here Are Some Examples: ..&#13;
KS ON DISPLAY NOW *&#13;
U.HH Q.. ." AtIIi""te&#13;
*&#13;
NERSITV BOOICSTOR&#13;
u., _,.... ,1QIIlI, CUC" 10 AIlCMlrJ'E.&#13;
................ n.. ..... -~........~-&#13;
s.,.- ~ ..&#13;
...... ~.............&#13;
SNl- .&#13;
"' --&#13;
............. '.. I~- - ... ., Il o.IllI.OO&#13;
0970U. nq: nEASUIT Of HORSES. By Woll,"" O. Oshom&#13;
~ Potrido H. JoIwnon. ~tIy ilh,lltf'Qt.d with&#13;
~ of pftotoI ~ n PDt-. In tpOl'\Ii", color. A&#13;
pidoNI hittory of ......, ...... of I'Odng. ridirIo and won.·&#13;
..................... 10 !he .-wtt. aY, • 11'''.&#13;
0riI,. ...... tit .t4."- ............... GIlly"'''&#13;
......... ....., Of E4.. '"&#13;
................ _ 0 c. K-tJ-\ ,'"&#13;
... A .-.... ........ ., aIonn "" _ ......... ~ ,_, _ A 0.,.,&#13;
__ '- -.., a-c.. ....... ViI ....&#13;
--..... , ." -........ .... ow, SJ,._&#13;
,........ ' , "~"""'IIMOGW...,.N.&#13;
........ ~ ....... I c..r-.&#13;
............... ~ o .&#13;
.... -_ .-- ~~ .... .....--.. ~&#13;
...... , • at, ....... 111_ o.Iyu...&#13;
'M. • W -.... c. a-.. .., "-"- ....... -...~ ..,. ......... .......,t.~ ...&#13;
.-..... • A'-'- _&#13;
................................. --.&#13;
................... ,..................._ ....&#13;
1l4J'a QIII'" ee- ..... \OlfI.. .. l. " ......&#13;
..................... - ,.&#13;
.r 4~... ~ . I NO'''' &lt;-Olot HI[Ao;U ~rOOt." ~ . . n Of MUSHROOMS AND TOAD.&#13;
.a ... "It. ; ..il &lt;:..- •• '" '0· ... 0"., 1]5 b•• uta ..1 photo,&#13;
0' E.... ~'l.. '''''pot nd I&#13;
~ '_.1_ •• (I, """"0 &lt;rd I 0 oun 01 rn",I\'Ootn&#13;
'" '.. '.;woo ~.n I P ...' G w9&lt;;IlII\ 01 ,nlormGIoon On&#13;
• '0"1:11 .... 'tor, •• ( 9 •• , OnI,S1.t.&#13;
B&#13;
E&#13;
t~M7. lHf WORLD 0' DOGS. 8y W. B_ 150,.,.&#13;
geou' (ondid phOlo' of dog. ond puppies. 37 in ~ ,..&#13;
ColOI'. Cornprehen,i .... pre:.etnlCllton of oW breedt. W~ __&#13;
binotion of ted, onecdote", and beoutihA pic'urft, OM ....&#13;
finest dOOOl boob IIYet' ~ed. BV. lit 11lit.&#13;
$9.9.5 VClIue. 0Rty p..&#13;
GOOl3X. _OMANa Of ntE PATCHWOIK QUILl ..&#13;
!AMER.lCA. By Corrie&#13;
Drawing.. Complete ""kM1&#13;
HoII and Rose Krminget. 17S&#13;
of AIMricon ... -"'t. .......&#13;
= of deilgftl. how their fICIIIIft origlnoted, p&lt;ttterN. ~ -&#13;
foscinciling item'.&#13;
Orig. Pvb. Cit $.5.00. New • ..,.... ... o.I't $I..&#13;
K0651'9. BLOCK AND SflK SCREEN Pl:INTINO. ~ G c:&#13;
be,g &amp; O. JClmeryd. I"UI.• ith photo" ~ &amp; ... MliIr&#13;
and c.ond .. in,tnIc:~' 1ft CJII the bIod - sa&#13;
'"*"&#13;
ftochnique, lnduding ltencik wilh woge.tiCIM for .:;' ,IJI&#13;
Orig. pub. ot $3.9S. New, ..............&#13;
)01123. INCYClOPfDlA Of KNITTIMO AND ~&#13;
511lCHES. lIy f. w.,tfoM. With phoIoi of ...... 300 ~&#13;
weatlh of ideo' for knitting. knitted IGu. ~.,~ ...&#13;
ino how to reod in'trvctioM. c1esc.ripriom of .....&#13;
~ fibrn,. .Ie. o.tf lUI&#13;
Orig. Pvb. 01 $5 ..50. ...., ...,....&#13;
014t73. DECOUPAGEl A Umltleu W..... til ::-.&#13;
"CHI.!y D. HcwTow,"". With 16~"" plcte. CII'ld 72. ....&#13;
.hite iIIu.. The' .. tory ond techniquel of dK~ 11"&#13;
paper Ntovh. with project. for fvn Oftd ptafit.' - .....&#13;
Ofi9. pub .• t $10 95. .... ............. o.tt'&#13;
"'r1, .... COlOl: THAStlly Of M1Ul.uy ..... fOIIIiIII.;&#13;
107uniforrm ill",. iro full &lt;:okM'. UNfor-. "om ~I:;"::'" lilt&#13;
F,ench RepuDlO(. Nopoleon ot the 10.... of II ,,~~&#13;
_ i" .."i1o,m. the O."c.h ~ LaM"''' rtw Ir. I&#13;
World Wo. I. muc:h mo' •. 9 • 11. 0\IlIf,1.-&#13;
......... . ~&#13;
'.'.'&#13;
..••••••••••••••••&#13;
........&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
OKS • BOO&#13;
• PlANT BOOKS • FUN BOOKS&#13;
OOKS • POETIW BOOKS&#13;
AL BOOKS • KNITTING BOOKS&#13;
ORT BOOKS ANTIQUE BOOKS&#13;
••••••••••••&#13;
All At Special Prices&#13;
ere Are Some Examples:&#13;
or.o&amp;S. nn lll.ASUIY Of HOlSES. By Wollff D. O.· be,.., I Potncio H. Joh,,,-. Mognificonlly iHu,lnlted with&#13;
~ of photo, ..duding n pages In &amp;pCWUng color. A&#13;
pctDnal hiolory of _., ......, of NCinQ. riding and wort-&#13;
. hone"- eawst.,... lo lt,o ~ - -~ • 11¾ 0.....,._•11-us . ............. -.o.,y.._;,&#13;
117 OUAT GA1D1NS o, UITAIN ._ .... «I ...... 1ft , .. Color lrililh • vr P, Coott. 290&#13;
-.id, ......... end brought. .... oonlont. .... emy of .... _, .......... ,__, a,,d In supo,t, ...a.- of natural&#13;
Orie- ,._ • $2.S OQ .. ~ gonion,. 9½ • 12½. · · ,_..,._.a.t.-.Oo,ly$US&#13;
~ 1'NI GUIDI TO O.ue&gt;IN SHIIVIS AND - • ,_ TO)'b 498 · .__ ,,.u.,. vy&#13;
w ...... · ap.c,,e, ~·~ 321 in ful Colo&lt;. 500 vorietie,&#13;
... .... - and woodJ, - how lo .-fhom. londKopo,,,._&#13;
,.,._ • SUS. New, _,.... -. 0ftty $US&#13;
ffl1'75 , ...... Te,y p I V-O~LD Of BIROS. 192 • ""°" &amp; '""'•• Fhher'1 THI l,i,,I.......,.. a,,d i,,fo,....,f -~· boo «&gt;lo,. 5tunn~ lre01ury ol .......... l,;ology hob.I"' tho ;e uty ond en"""ou• vonety&#13;
""II of ti,. 1.,;, . or! 0 ! bi&lt;d •otch,nll plui &lt;°'"P&lt;.: ~ of eoc1, l,;,d N l~,t;e, illu,tratod by ,;ti-.tte&#13;
Or,e. Ed. Plrb . at Sn 9S ew. .,_ I • 10¾ format. · · -·· ,..,,,.., e4. 0..1, SJ.ts&#13;
0l4074. MUSHlOOM COo«U ...., lr-.ou and"""' this do5c Y. ly l Reitz. How to c...,._&#13;
-i..- ""'-• ...... are ocy. In odd,6on to tho lnldilional - ..._, a-.:;:"Y dc,11lin11 ....,pme, roui floming&#13;
""*'· • $4.9S '- etc. ...... -,i. .. .... Only $1.49&#13;
t&gt;~t.97. THE WORLD OF DOGS. By W. Bao,e, , ~&#13;
gcou, condid photo, of dog, ond pupf)lel, 37 in tpc&gt; ,..&#13;
Color. Compnehensive pnesonto6on of oW i,,..ds, W~ _.&#13;
binotion of teat, onecdote1, ond beoutilul pi&lt;tum. ON ol&#13;
line,t dog boolts .,,., produced. 8¼ • 11¼.&#13;
$9.95 Volue. Oo,ly SUS&#13;
00013X. ROMANCE OP THE PATCHWORK QUllT&#13;
,AMERICA. By Corrie HGll ond R01e K,.tlinQo&lt;. 175 ,._,....,,;&#13;
Drawings. Complete histo,y of American qwt wo,\ing. ~ of deslgni. how their ftOIMI oriQlnoted, pottom1, in,~ -'&#13;
mcinciling item,.&#13;
Orig. Pub. at $5.00. N-, COfflplele e4. o,,ly p.91&#13;
K065'9. 9lOCK ANO SILK SCREEN PRINTING, ty G&#13;
ber11 &amp; o. Jorneryd. ,nu,. with pholo1, dn,wingl &amp; ...,, 0,,,,&#13;
ond conciM in11ru&lt;tions In all the block ond ,iii prir,hog loalil'I'&#13;
tedtniques including stencita wilh s~,tionl for ct.tlgnl, ,.&#13;
Ori;. pub. ot $3.95. New, co111,W. ..._ o,ly SI.&#13;
J01123. ENCYClOPEOIA Of KNl1TIMO ANO Cl()Ofl&#13;
STITCHES. By f . We1tfoll. With photo, of ovor JOO .... '-&#13;
weolth of ideas lo, knittinQ, knitted loce, crochetino. ..._ - MIil how lo read instructions. descriptions of ,titd,t1, .,.,.... .,,;&#13;
nolvfCll fibrfl, etc. ,.&#13;
Orig. Pub. "' $5.SO. New, _ .... e4, °"" P.&#13;
014173. DECOUPAGE: A llmltlou W..W hi ~&#13;
tlon. ly D. Hcwrowff, Wilh 16 color plolt1 ond 72 bloc1 '&#13;
white illus. The · history ond techniques of do&lt;"'°""8 _.., paper cutouts, with projecll fo, fun ond p,ofit. I~ I l 1&#13;
Orig. pub. at SIO 95. New, -plele-. 0,tly $,lft&#13;
.j 14't0. I Will WAIT· .oll-YOU. ., ~ W,.. $oMfM:.&#13;
i.dion cl 12 photo. ond --to ohoi. witl, ._.. '°" I tt mo11. 6 1/4 • 7 3/.._ M. at $3.00. ()oly S&#13;
/ -.on.- &lt;01 o, i•c &lt; s·oou t - A.UlY OF MUSHROOMS , • • • • A ,~ 0. AND TOAD. Thsoi. COl.01 TIEASUIY 0# MIUTAIY UHi~; 107 uniforms illua. in Full Color. Uniform, from oil - "'° fl}&#13;
French Republic. Napoleon ot the llottle of tt,.olo. ~~ _....., in uniform. the Dutch lengol Lan&lt;etl. tho k~•"" ,........ .. ·&#13;
e..l ""- , ,ct\ Fvfl Cofo, l " e, llS beout,ful ph 1 ~ • , . .. ., \, ,. "ho~ ond t O 0 ' oo,, ... d , ~t·o,w-d p l o,m of n•u,.1\hroo m&#13;
S- ·c.~ ,,.,.. •,1ri o~ h, t "'" o ....,~Ith of in fo,mot1on on \ o,., .,c q • I, Ont, 5 l ,. World Wor I, much more. 9 • 12. o,Jj SI It&#13;
*&#13;
~N DISPlAY NOW&#13;
limited Quanlffi11 Avai/a/,/e *&#13;
NERSITV BOOKSTORE </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 11, November 14, 1973</text>
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              <text>Regents' hearing&#13;
Forty-five people react&#13;
to mission&#13;
Student John DeLao spoke for the Vets' Club at&#13;
the Regents' hearing last Friday.&#13;
Folk Festival here&#13;
to be informal&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Forty five people, including students, politicians,&#13;
business, industry and labor leaders, gave their&#13;
reactions to Parkside's proposed mission at the&#13;
Regents' hearing last Friday. Approximately 160&#13;
persons listened on as the Regents heard varying&#13;
reactions to the proposed mission. For the most&#13;
part, speakers agreed with Chancellor Wyllie who&#13;
opened the hearing statements and said, "I strongly&#13;
recommend Regent adoption of the Select Mission&#13;
statement proposed for UW-Parkside. What we&#13;
need beyond that, in order to maintain momentum&#13;
in our mission development, are follow-up approvals&#13;
of new mission-related academic&#13;
programs, and approval of our request for a School&#13;
of Modern Industry building."&#13;
Wyllie also reminded the Regents that it was his&#13;
judgement in 1966 and "is my judgement today, that&#13;
this university cannot meet its service obligations to&#13;
the people of southeastern Wisconsin if it&#13;
(Parkside) lands programmatically at either extreme&#13;
(liberal arts-modern industry). Students will&#13;
continue to need strong educational preparation in&#13;
the arts and sciences," Wyllie said.&#13;
Business, industry and labor leaders agreed with&#13;
the chancellor, and as William Gardner,&#13;
representing the Kenosha Manufacturers'&#13;
Association said, "there are 400 manufacturing&#13;
firms in the area with 48,000 employees and a&#13;
payroll of 600 million dollars. In an era and an area&#13;
where better educated manpower is needed we&#13;
support complete fulfillment of the mission&#13;
statement and encourage expansion. Parkside&#13;
should provide people to fill supervising and&#13;
managerial positions as well as the demand for&#13;
cultural and social knowledge in a complex modern&#13;
industrial society," Gardner said.&#13;
Georgfe Maddox of American Motors Corporation&#13;
told the Regents that AMC had to recruit its&#13;
engineers from other states, specifically Michigan&#13;
and the East, and this notion was reiterated by&#13;
many area leaders in asking the Regent's approval&#13;
for graduate programs within the School of Modern&#13;
Industry as well as a building to house the School.&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
"The performers will be&#13;
scheduled to show up at a certain&#13;
time, but they can play for as&#13;
long as the audience wants."&#13;
Gary Petersen, coffeehouse&#13;
coordinator, emphasized that&#13;
Parkside's second annual Folk&#13;
Festival will be'as informal as&#13;
possible.&#13;
The Folk Festival will begin at&#13;
1 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 25, in the&#13;
Student Activities Building and&#13;
will run until "the performers fall&#13;
off the stage," said Petersen. No&#13;
other event is scheduled for that&#13;
evening.&#13;
Some of the featured performers&#13;
will be Brian Kipp, Tony&#13;
&amp; Jumbo, Dave Rogers, and Lynn&#13;
&amp; Sue. Other students and local&#13;
people will also perform, and&#13;
anyone is welcome to come in and&#13;
sing or play. Performers will not&#13;
be paid in cash but will receive&#13;
"liquid libations," according to&#13;
John Graham, who is assisting in&#13;
coordinating the event.&#13;
Game tables will be closed,&#13;
televisions will be unplugged, and&#13;
the bar will be open. The event is&#13;
being sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board.&#13;
Student reactions&#13;
to planning sought&#13;
Student reactions to academic&#13;
planning goals are being sought&#13;
by the Ten Year Academic&#13;
Planning Committee. The&#13;
committee has drawn up a&#13;
preliminary draft of planning&#13;
principles and a first and second&#13;
"Five Year Plan," ranking&#13;
proposed new majors in order of&#13;
priority.&#13;
The goals outlined include&#13;
establishment of a reward&#13;
system for faculty which gives&#13;
special recognition to teaching&#13;
excellence, institution of a&#13;
Community Advisory Board,&#13;
implementation of three new&#13;
undergraduate and two graduate&#13;
majors in the next five years and&#13;
three additional undergraduate&#13;
majors by 1983, and equality of&#13;
educational and employment&#13;
opportunities for women and&#13;
minority persons through Affirmative&#13;
Action.&#13;
The academic plan for the first&#13;
five years lists the following&#13;
proposed majors in order of&#13;
p r i o r i t y : En g i n e e r i n g&#13;
Technology; Computing and&#13;
Manageme n t I n f o r m a t i o n&#13;
Systems; Industrial and Environmental&#13;
Hygiene; Business&#13;
Manageme n t ( G r a d u a t e ) ;&#13;
En e r g y Ma n a g eme n t ;&#13;
Futuristics, Technology and&#13;
Teacher Education; Engineering&#13;
Systems Design (Graduate);&#13;
Anthropology; Human Resource&#13;
Development; Developmental&#13;
Change; Industrial Relations;&#13;
Manufacturing Engineering; and&#13;
Visual Communications.&#13;
For the second five years the&#13;
proposals are: Accounting;&#13;
P e r s o n n e l Ma n a geme n t ;&#13;
Production Systems; Marketing;&#13;
F i n a n c e ; Sma l l - B u s i n e s s&#13;
Management; Organizational&#13;
Behavior; Systems Analysis;&#13;
Qu a n t i t a t i v e Bu s i n e s s&#13;
Te c h n i q u e s ; Ge n e r a l&#13;
Management; Governmental&#13;
Administration; Religious&#13;
Studies; and Nursing.&#13;
Students may pick up copies of&#13;
the document at the Information&#13;
Center in Main Place. They are&#13;
asked to send their written&#13;
reactions to the office of the Vice&#13;
Chancellor in LLC (intercampus&#13;
mail may be left at the Information&#13;
Center). Once&#13;
responses are in, the committee&#13;
will meet to consider them in&#13;
preparation for writing the&#13;
finished draft, which is to be&#13;
presented to the Chancellor Dec.&#13;
3.&#13;
Members of the committee,&#13;
which has been meeting since&#13;
last April, include students&#13;
Diane Becker (from the College&#13;
of Science and Society) and&#13;
Arnold Pascale (from the School&#13;
of Modern Industry), faculty&#13;
members Orpheus Johnson&#13;
(Humanities), Leroy Cougle&#13;
(Management Science), George&#13;
P e r d i k a r i s ( E n g i n e e r i n g&#13;
Science), Paul Kleine&#13;
(Education), William Murin&#13;
(Social Science), and Morris&#13;
Firebaugh (Science). Deans&#13;
William Moy (School of Modern&#13;
Industry) and Eugene Norwood&#13;
(College of Science and Society)&#13;
are also on the committee, which&#13;
is chaired by Vice Chancellor&#13;
Bauer. Non-voting members&#13;
include Jewel Echelbarger of&#13;
Student Services, John Zarling&#13;
(Special Assistant to the Vice&#13;
Chancellor), Gary Goetz who is&#13;
Director of Budget Planning, and&#13;
Dave Vogt of Facilities&#13;
Management.&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 21, 1973 Vol. II No. 12&#13;
UW-P administrators attend&#13;
Spanglish workshop held&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
A workshop dealing with intercommunity&#13;
relations and Spanish&#13;
culture alienation in the Racine&#13;
area was w»i? attended by&#13;
various Parkside administrators&#13;
and decision-makers last Wednesday&#13;
evening at the Racine&#13;
YWCA.&#13;
Present at the meeting were&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Otto Bauer;&#13;
A s s i s t a n t - C h a n c e l l o r A l l e n&#13;
Dearborn; Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students Jewel Echelbarger;&#13;
Beechum Robinson, Director of&#13;
the Learning Center; Richard&#13;
Cummings of the Personnel office;&#13;
Wayne Ramirez of the&#13;
counseling staff; Rita Tallent,&#13;
Affirmative Action Officer; and&#13;
various faculty and students.&#13;
The purpose of the workshop,&#13;
said Gladys Benavides .Corbit of&#13;
the Center for Community&#13;
Leadership Development in&#13;
Madison, was to "gather community&#13;
educators and decisionmakers&#13;
and allow them to decide&#13;
for themselves what the issues&#13;
are, identifying for themselves&#13;
the problems of the Latino&#13;
community and to decide then on&#13;
on-going action." Corbit added&#13;
that the workshop instigators&#13;
were "not here as experts to tell&#13;
you what is right or what is wrong&#13;
with your community."&#13;
Anita Herrera, Director of the&#13;
Career Opportunity Programs&#13;
for the Racine Unified School&#13;
District, said that the only&#13;
program now held in bilingual&#13;
education is the head-start&#13;
program.&#13;
Educational Interest Ceases&#13;
The group's general consensus&#13;
was that by the time the Chicano&#13;
child reached the junior high&#13;
level of schooling, interest in&#13;
education had ceased. Motivation&#13;
for learning was lost and often&#13;
times failing grades followed,&#13;
with students dropping out of&#13;
school before graduating. "The&#13;
Spanish-speaking child needs&#13;
help," explained workshop&#13;
participants. "They have been&#13;
ignored all these years by the&#13;
Unified School District. They&#13;
arrive here and receive no help&#13;
with language and they will never&#13;
make it. Tutoring on a voluntary&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Assistant Chancellor, listens attentively&#13;
at the Spanglish workshop.&#13;
basis is not enough." (There are&#13;
10,000 Spanish-speaking people in&#13;
the city of Racine and 3,000 in&#13;
Kenosha).&#13;
Unified School District Administrator&#13;
Leland Johnson&#13;
explained that the ages of&#13;
Spanish-speaking children and&#13;
the schools they attended in the&#13;
system were so diversified that it&#13;
would be difficult to set up&#13;
bilingual classes. In trying to get&#13;
a handle on some of the&#13;
problems, Johnson said, "the&#13;
problem in regards to learning&#13;
that these children have is not&#13;
with language but with the&#13;
cultural environment." Bill&#13;
Folan, Parkside assistant&#13;
professor of anthropology,&#13;
remarked that one cannot&#13;
seperate language from culture.&#13;
Richard Teschner, instructor of&#13;
Spanish here, said that although&#13;
the Unified School District may&#13;
have a lot of children with&#13;
Spanish surnames the School&#13;
District is not aware of how many&#13;
are bilingual. Often, Teschner&#13;
said, "they want to misuse or&#13;
pretend they don't speak it and&#13;
become passive bilinguals."&#13;
Self-imposed Segregation&#13;
Many participants agreed with&#13;
Teschner's viewpoint, saying&#13;
that the Spanish speaking child&#13;
suffers from a "self-imposed&#13;
segregation." This is a result of&#13;
discrimination both subtle and&#13;
overt.&#13;
Reverand Carlos Puig commented&#13;
that "if you can get the&#13;
Anglo to stop being afraid of&#13;
foreign - you can start to build a&#13;
relationship. But, it has to start in&#13;
the first grade before they start&#13;
to segregate." He added that the&#13;
learning motivation is often not&#13;
there because "they come from&#13;
homes with a lower education&#13;
standard. Motivation is not there&#13;
because they do not know how."&#13;
Ramirez explained that it is not&#13;
difficult for the Spanish-speaking&#13;
to pick up English but often times&#13;
it cannot be read or comprehended.&#13;
After breaking into smaller&#13;
groups participants discussed the&#13;
internal hassles at Racine's&#13;
Spanish Center, pride in heritage,&#13;
need for motivation, action which&#13;
could be taken by the Unified&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday/ Nov. 21, 1973&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
^ Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Administrators&#13;
exhibit&#13;
community&#13;
concern&#13;
RANGER wishes to commend those administrative&#13;
staff members who were concerned enough about the&#13;
community in which Parkside is located to participate&#13;
in the Spanglish workshop in Racine last week.&#13;
More than merely participating in the workshop, it is&#13;
evident that the university is capable of offering community&#13;
service and exhibiting genuine human interest&#13;
in this area.&#13;
Perhaps even more commendable is the administration's&#13;
apparent support of its exceptional&#13;
counselor, Wayne Ramirez, who has an unceasing&#13;
determination to right the wrongs of a racist society.&#13;
As RANGER has stated before, in a modern industrial&#13;
society, a modern industrial university has no greater&#13;
service to render than interaction on a human level -&#13;
where administrations may courageously listen,&#13;
communicate and act -- not for money, recognition or&#13;
self-preservation, but instead in a moving and honest&#13;
desire to help make life a little nicer for us all.&#13;
RANGER calls on the Education Division to work in&#13;
coordination with Ramirez on developing a plan for&#13;
bilingual education certification. If such a plan were to&#13;
be implemented we could not only save terminated&#13;
faculty members in the Spanish discipline but could&#13;
provide the community with desperately needed and&#13;
well-trained bilingual graduates.&#13;
Such a program would truly be living up to the&#13;
university's mission in a liberal arts manner. More than&#13;
this, however, it would demonstrate the university's&#13;
initiative to tackle some of society's most complex&#13;
problems, namely peaceful human interaction, in the&#13;
want for a better world.&#13;
It is a fact that students do not have enough impact on the operation&#13;
of this University. It is also a fact that there are times when students&#13;
are offered a chance to provide input in some matter but they fail to&#13;
respond. Such an opportunity exists right now and it i s very important&#13;
that we take advantage of it.&#13;
The occasion is the report of the Ten Year Academic Planning&#13;
Committee (see page one). The importance lies in the direct impact&#13;
these proposals will have on academic programming, university&#13;
governance and community relations. It is incumbent upon all of us,&#13;
even those about to graduate, to look at this draft and react. Even if we&#13;
favor it (and I personally feel it is an excellent document in many&#13;
respects) we should respond, for it still has to be approved at higher&#13;
levels when the committee makes its final recommendations.&#13;
The plan, once adopted, will guide Parkside through the next ten&#13;
years and some effects could be felt as early as next fall. But even&#13;
seniors should be encouraged to respond, for not only have they the&#13;
insight that accrues from spending a number of years here, but many&#13;
of them may find themselves back here at some future time for&#13;
graduate courses or to complete another major or out of some other&#13;
interest. And certainly freshmen, sophomores and juniors, who will&#13;
potentially be affected before they graduate, should see the necessity&#13;
of speaking out for themselves and their futures.&#13;
Copies of the document^jnay be picked up at the Information Center&#13;
and responses are requeued by Monday (Nov. 26).&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confined&#13;
to 300 w ords or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like very much to thank&#13;
the kind young man in the new&#13;
black Gremlin who helped me&#13;
start my car on a very rainy&#13;
Wednesday, November 14.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
Joseph Neville&#13;
Assistant Professor, History&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have an idea for celebrating&#13;
the Mideast cease-fire. We should&#13;
let the president, our senators&#13;
and congress know how we feel&#13;
about the war. Here is my plan&#13;
for a celebration involving many&#13;
different people from all walks of&#13;
life.&#13;
The day of celebration will&#13;
hereby be dedicated to Shalom&#13;
With Honor. To start off the&#13;
festivities we can hire Glen&#13;
Campbell to sing his famous hit&#13;
"Gentile on My Mind" from the&#13;
back of a U.N. jeep. Bumper&#13;
stickers saying; "P.O.W.-M.I.A.&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Attention! ... All you environmentalists&#13;
and ecologists.&#13;
As you know the Alaskan Pipeline&#13;
Bill has been passed. I have some&#13;
inside information in which you&#13;
might be interested. It comes&#13;
from my niece who has a friend&#13;
who works in the mimeograph&#13;
room in the Department of Interior&#13;
in Washington, D.C.&#13;
This usually reliable source&#13;
calls our attention to some of the&#13;
fine print in the Pipeline Bill. It&#13;
directs the President to "impose&#13;
by Executive Order any fuelsaving&#13;
methods which are&#13;
deemed necessary." (This is a&#13;
usual proceedure of Congress - to&#13;
delegate responsibility to the&#13;
President... and six months later&#13;
complain about the President&#13;
exercising too much authority.)&#13;
Anyhow, according to our informant,&#13;
a directive is being&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Disturbing symptoms that sent&#13;
me to the hospital on October 29&#13;
suddenly worsened about an hour&#13;
before my 11:30 a. m. class. My&#13;
mental and physical energies&#13;
were ebbing rapidly. To the aid I&#13;
immediately sought, these&#13;
persons at Parkside responded in&#13;
ways for which I shall always be&#13;
grateful. The telephone operator&#13;
quickly connected me with the&#13;
nurse, whose number I was too&#13;
confused to locate. Darlene May&#13;
of the Humanities Office instantly&#13;
comprehended and&#13;
followed through on my&#13;
minimally worded instructions to&#13;
cancel classes. From the Information&#13;
Kiosk a student worker&#13;
piloted me to the nurse's new&#13;
quarters (following the hallway&#13;
labyrinth alone would have taxed&#13;
me painfully.) Mrs. Edith&#13;
Isenberg immediately saw my&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In an action I find incomprehensible&#13;
Commencement&#13;
day for graduating seniors has&#13;
been moved up from January 6 to&#13;
December 16. De cember 16th is&#13;
the Sunday before final exam&#13;
week!&#13;
I, for one, will be given an&#13;
English take-home exam on&#13;
Friday the 14th which is due&#13;
Monday the 17th. Anyone who has&#13;
had this type of. exam before&#13;
realizes that it isn't something&#13;
you can whip together on a&#13;
Friday night! And there's other&#13;
exams following.&#13;
The sensible thing to do would&#13;
be to skip all the ceremonies&#13;
attached with graduation and,&#13;
instead, stay home and study.&#13;
How many people will have to do&#13;
just that and give up a very big&#13;
day!?!&#13;
I hope that there is a very good&#13;
reason for choosing the 16th for&#13;
commencement day. I feel that&#13;
an explanation is due.&#13;
Terri Appleget&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
Only Cairo Knows" will be sold to&#13;
raise funds to pay back the&#13;
Pentagon for their 2.2 billion&#13;
dollar military aid which made&#13;
Shalom with Honor a reality.&#13;
Refreshments to be served&#13;
throughout the day include&#13;
Victory bagels and Camel&#13;
cigarettes made from camels.&#13;
We will have the show on a big&#13;
stage. Lumber and empty oil&#13;
drums can be donated by Saudi&#13;
Arabia and microphones and&#13;
taping equipment which don't&#13;
exist will come from the United&#13;
States. Later the Israeli Air&#13;
Force can hold a 21 bomb salute,&#13;
prepared to the effect that&#13;
"Inasmuch as the building of the&#13;
Pipeline has been delayed over&#13;
three years by over-zealous&#13;
contributions of free advice, by&#13;
demands for time-consuming&#13;
environmental impact studies&#13;
and similar delaying actions&#13;
(including the signing of petitions&#13;
and-or writing letters provoking&#13;
the fore-mentioned delays) any&#13;
such contributors to the country's&#13;
present Energy Crisis are NOT to&#13;
receive any gasoline or heating&#13;
oil once the rationing of such&#13;
c ommo d i t i e s b e c o m e s&#13;
necessary." However, "In lieu of&#13;
the gas and oil and as an expression&#13;
of the government's&#13;
appreciation for their concern for&#13;
the environment, each such&#13;
person will receive a slice of&#13;
frozen tundra suitable for&#13;
framing.&#13;
The same general rules are&#13;
need for hospitalization and&#13;
alerted the Cardiac Unit at St.&#13;
Catherine's Hospital. Security&#13;
officer, William Carter, quickly&#13;
appeared and with another officer&#13;
carried me on a stretcher&#13;
under oxygen to the Parkside&#13;
ambulance. At the hospital,&#13;
cardiac specialists met the&#13;
ambulance and within moments I&#13;
was under treatment in the intensive&#13;
care section.&#13;
From the very first every&#13;
person at Parkside whose help I&#13;
required performed resourcefully,&#13;
professionally and&#13;
humanely. Undoubtedly my&#13;
successful recovery owes much&#13;
to these individual acts of&#13;
assistance and overall efficiency&#13;
with which the emergency was&#13;
handled.&#13;
Emmett G.Bedford&#13;
Assistant Professor of English&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I was nauseated at the fact that&#13;
$88.00 will be taken out of my&#13;
tuition to support various&#13;
"segregated fee" programs. I&#13;
believe the days of "in loco&#13;
parentis" are past. It is time for&#13;
Parkside to end its economic "in&#13;
loco parentis," which exists in&#13;
the form of mandatory student&#13;
activity fees.&#13;
Students are mature enough to&#13;
spend their own money. Activities&#13;
which cannot support&#13;
themselves through voluntary&#13;
fees or in the open market do not&#13;
deserve to exist at the expense of&#13;
freedom of choice and apparently&#13;
do not contribute enough to the&#13;
university to warrant continued&#13;
subsidy.&#13;
Students who do not want to&#13;
participate in or attend the&#13;
various "segregated fee"&#13;
programs should be able to spend&#13;
their money the way they choose,&#13;
rather than as the administration,&#13;
CCC and SAB&#13;
dictate.&#13;
Kenneth Polzin, Jr.&#13;
Salem&#13;
to be done over the Aswan High&#13;
Dam and Russian Embassy. In&#13;
the evening the audience will be&#13;
treated to a comedy movie: Bob&#13;
Hope and Golda Meir starring in&#13;
Road to Damascus. The film will&#13;
be shown aboard a Lybian&#13;
airliner. And as the Shalom With&#13;
Honor celebration comes to a&#13;
close, our miracle worker Henry&#13;
Kissinger is going to do a spectacular&#13;
water-walk across the&#13;
Sea of Galilee, facing Mecca.&#13;
Now why shouldn't we enjoy&#13;
ourselves? Vietnam was good for&#13;
a few riots wasn't it?&#13;
David Myer&#13;
senior&#13;
being set up for those who have&#13;
been instrumental in causing&#13;
delays in the building of badly&#13;
needed oil refineries and electric&#13;
power plants. And if the time&#13;
comes when electric power must&#13;
be curtailed the plans call for&#13;
shutting off all electric power to&#13;
Paris Township in Kenosha&#13;
County. But instead of getting the&#13;
Frozen Tundra Award the&#13;
Parisians and their collaborators&#13;
will be issued candles made of&#13;
recycled whale blubber.&#13;
I know that if the President&#13;
finds it necessary to implement&#13;
these plans that it will change the&#13;
lifestyle of quite a few of my&#13;
friends at Parkside. And I also&#13;
know that when it happens those&#13;
members of The Committee of&#13;
Lynch the President will come&#13;
charging out with rope in hand.&#13;
Nevertheless, I thought it might&#13;
be helpful if Itip ped you off as to&#13;
what the future has in store for&#13;
you. Good luck!&#13;
ARTHUR M. GRUHL&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
The P*l&lt;side&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
EDITOR -IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: DAvid&#13;
Daniels&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Stephen Giftord,&#13;
Barbara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Jensen, Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert,&#13;
John Sorenson, Steve Stapanian, Carrie&#13;
Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Brian Ross, Jim&#13;
Ruffolo&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Amy Cundari, Gary Huck,&#13;
Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT: Terri Gelenian, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence,&#13;
Jim Magruder, Amy Cundari&#13;
Regents1 hearing&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
a few people, including Manny Brown, a Racine&#13;
attorney and former assemblyman, and Joseph&#13;
Noll, a Kenosha industrialist, complained that the&#13;
statement really made no sense without specifics.&#13;
wnnfniS1?'^1 beljeve this is a l0°p h«le. I do not&#13;
want platitudes and general statements ol purpose.&#13;
We have to have it all spelled out in specifics or we'll&#13;
lose graduate programs." Noll told the Regents that&#13;
unless graduate programs were implemented the&#13;
Regents would be guilty of the immorality of&#13;
abandonment." He cautioned the Regents to "move&#13;
now and quickly before someone with more power&#13;
than the Board of Regents (i.e. the state legislature)&#13;
takes control."&#13;
Alan Shucard, associate professor of English&#13;
representing the faculty, said that the faculty&#13;
generally approve" of the statement; however, he&#13;
questioned clustering of campuses, saying that "a&#13;
maximum of options should be offered to all&#13;
campuses and a "graduate bureaucracy" on the&#13;
Milwaukee and Madison campuses limits the&#13;
others.&#13;
Jane Schliesman, a student representing the&#13;
Parkside RANGER, told the Regents that although&#13;
twenty-eight percent of the declared majors here&#13;
are in the School of Modern Industry one-hundred&#13;
per cent of our students as well as society itself need&#13;
the human knowledge central to liberal arts offerings."&#13;
Schliesman, referring to a clause in the&#13;
core mission which states a "first priority emphasis&#13;
on teaching excellence," questioned the Regents on&#13;
how this is to be accomplished and insured. She&#13;
went on to say that students "can best ascertain&#13;
teaching effectiveness."&#13;
Richard Byrd, representing the Racine and&#13;
Spanglish workshop&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
School District and Parkside,&#13;
integration vs. acceptance, and&#13;
the need to get those Spanish&#13;
speaking individuals who had&#13;
made it back into the communities&#13;
where they are needed.&#13;
Kenosha Teachers Associations, told the Regents&#13;
that there are "many facets to a community and&#13;
they are not all industrial." Byrd emphasized the&#13;
need for graduate programs in the College of&#13;
Science and Society as well as in the School of&#13;
Modern Industry.&#13;
Dan Ramirez, a Parkside sophomore, asked the&#13;
Regents to approve a curriculum relevent to the&#13;
needs of the numerous minority students in the&#13;
university.&#13;
Nearly all speakers in recommending masters&#13;
programs in both the College and the School argued&#13;
that attending graduate school at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
was not acceptable. Said one nursing student&#13;
"commuting is expensive, time-consuming, and&#13;
dangerous."&#13;
Both Regents and members of Central Administration&#13;
appeared interested and concerned as&#13;
individuals filed forward for three hours airing their&#13;
views on the mission statement. Parkside's hearing&#13;
was not as controversial as the one held at UWGreen&#13;
Bay, where students complained about undergraduate&#13;
programs which many said were not&#13;
specialized but a conglomerate. However, many&#13;
Parkside students including speaker Kay Sweeney&#13;
have this same complaint about Parkside's Communications&#13;
major. Green Bay students complained&#13;
that they were unable to find jobs upon&#13;
graduation, where Parkside students did not seem&#13;
to have such a problem.&#13;
Parkside's turn-out for the hearing was much&#13;
more impressive than the one held at LaCrosse on&#13;
Friday where three people turned up to speak on&#13;
LaCrosse's proposed mission.&#13;
Bilingual Education Proposal&#13;
Ramirez suggested that the&#13;
Parkside Education Department&#13;
develop a program in bilingual&#13;
education in which Parkside&#13;
students receive certification and&#13;
graduates are hired within the&#13;
Racine Unified School District.&#13;
Folan suggested that in this light,&#13;
perhaps the "community has to&#13;
accept bilingual as beautiful.&#13;
Millions of dollars are spent for&#13;
teaching the Anglos to speak&#13;
English but the Spanish are&#13;
punished for speaking Spanish."&#13;
Folan also suggested the Spanish&#13;
community "be conditioned that&#13;
bilingual is good and not bad as&#13;
they have been taught."&#13;
In as far as Parkside is capable&#13;
of problem solving, Dearborn&#13;
was very favorable to the&#13;
Ramirez approach, saying that it&#13;
is something that is realistic and&#13;
could be taken up with the&#13;
Education Division. One problem&#13;
brought up at the workshop was&#13;
the need Spanish speaking&#13;
parents have to understand both&#13;
the American language and&#13;
culture to survive in this system.&#13;
Dearborn suggested possible noncredit&#13;
audit courses for Spanish&#13;
speaking adults.&#13;
Dearborn said that as far as&#13;
present Parkside students who&#13;
are Chicanos are concerned&#13;
"what we have to do is keep them&#13;
from dropping out."&#13;
Members of the Dean of&#13;
Students office have, since late&#13;
last spring, been progressively&#13;
involved in identifying the needs&#13;
of minorities in the community&#13;
and Parkside's role in problem&#13;
solving.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Library has Judiaca exhibit&#13;
An exhibit of Judaica loaned by members of the congregation of&#13;
Beth Israel Sinai Temple, Racine, currently is on display in the&#13;
Library in the circulation area on the concourse level. The exhibit is&#13;
open to the public during regular library hours.&#13;
A c ollection of jewelry with a Jewish motif also is included in the&#13;
display.&#13;
Parkside Players seek new members&#13;
membe^rkSide Pl3yerS have annotinced a campaign to gain new&#13;
.hwPreSidf?u 1th? organization, Ray Waldie, has stated that the&#13;
nrn? re jde Players ls to provide exposure to theatre&#13;
production, video-taped productions, and film production.&#13;
the new organization will provide interested students with the&#13;
opportunity to receive instruction in every facet of theatrical&#13;
production; from set building to lighting to camera and video&#13;
opcrHtion.&#13;
meetingl orf Dee TTf 3re inV"ed t0 attend an organizational&#13;
. ,'p '. p.m. in the SAB. For further information&#13;
contact Ray Waldie at 633-1776 or Don Rintz at 553-2437.&#13;
Ed. field exnerlpnr.. fnrmi rtl| r&#13;
students interested in participating in field experience&#13;
uring the spring semester should pick up application forms in&#13;
December 3 applications are due in the Education office&#13;
Here's one not ggina to the da&#13;
On Tuesday, Nov. 13 the state owned Rambler driven by Chancellor&#13;
SkieTheSraC Chd h* illGgal Parkin8 ^hind the Greenquist loading&#13;
rather *e red and white sta rather than the blue municipal plates was ticketed tbey lai cseencsuer iptvla otef-!&#13;
lcer but later voided by Ron Brinkman, Director of Safety and&#13;
ecurity who printed on the ticket "voided ticket-chancellor's car."&#13;
PAB sponsors chess tourney&#13;
The Parkside Activities Board is sponsoring a five round chess&#13;
tournament beginning on Nov. 30. The top four finishers will represent&#13;
Parkside at the regional tourney. Contact the Activities office (LLC&#13;
D195) for further information.&#13;
S&amp;S now LA F&#13;
For those who have lost a watch, wallet, ring, keys, glasses or&#13;
other item, Safety and Security may be holding it. In order to centralize&#13;
the efforts of offices who may be involved in this procedure, lost&#13;
and found is now located in the S&amp;S Building (second building behind&#13;
the faculty parking lot). To claim an article one must either have&#13;
identification or describe the item. Persons finding things are&#13;
requested to leave them at the Information Center which will hold&#13;
articles for one day and then send them to S&amp;S.&#13;
Student and professor research&#13;
Nixon's image&#13;
As the issue of President&#13;
Nixon's "image" began appearing&#13;
again in the newspaper&#13;
headline, a teacher and a student&#13;
here decided to look at that image&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
E. Scott Baudhuin, Assistant&#13;
Professor of Communications,&#13;
and Barb Luther, a senior&#13;
communications student, chose a&#13;
research tool they used successfully&#13;
during the Presidential&#13;
campaign of 1968. Called a&#13;
"semantic differential," the&#13;
questionaire lists pairs of bipolar&#13;
adjectives, such as good-bad,&#13;
fair-unfair, and then asks the&#13;
respondent to place the President&#13;
on one of the seven points along&#13;
the range from one extreme to&#13;
the other.&#13;
With the recent political&#13;
events, which have apparently&#13;
implicated Nixon, it seemed&#13;
logical to conduct a follow-up&#13;
study of his image in order to&#13;
examine any evaluative changes&#13;
that may have occurred between&#13;
these two time frames in his&#13;
career.&#13;
The first study indicated that&#13;
students and other respondents&#13;
thought of Nixon as moderately&#13;
qualified, informed, successful,&#13;
bold, respectful, relevant, intelligent,&#13;
but somewhat biasfed,&#13;
unattractive and ugly. The&#13;
favorable results seemed born&#13;
out by the landslide re-election&#13;
victory that followed.&#13;
The second poll, taken in&#13;
August and September 1973,&#13;
showed that respondents had&#13;
changed some of their attitudes&#13;
since that time. This study&#13;
revealed that people felt slightly&#13;
more negative toward Nixon now&#13;
and feel he is aggressive, bold,&#13;
intelligent, but is also more&#13;
unqualified, bad, less informed,&#13;
inbiased,&#13;
dishonest, irrelevant&#13;
undependable, untrustworthy&#13;
unattractive, ugly and&#13;
compent.&#13;
Although Baudhuin and Luther&#13;
say the poll can't determine if the&#13;
change in attitudes was brought&#13;
about by the Watergate Affair,&#13;
the words chosen, even the&#13;
favorable ones, seem to indicate&#13;
that the President's ciritcs aren't&#13;
alone in their condemnations.&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday , No v . 21, 197 3&#13;
User fees&#13;
appear&#13;
doubtful&#13;
A revision of the estimate of the&#13;
revenue that could be collected&#13;
by the university of Wisconsin&#13;
System in increased user fees&#13;
will be requested of t he governor&#13;
and legislature if the Board of&#13;
Regents accepts a recommendation&#13;
of its central administration.&#13;
The budget act had anticipated&#13;
that $1 million could be generated&#13;
through increased charges to&#13;
students, faculty, and staff for&#13;
"non-instructional" activities.&#13;
However, Governor Patrick&#13;
Lucey told a group at UWOshkosh&#13;
that he doubted that his&#13;
proposed user fee would become&#13;
law.&#13;
The user fee study revealed&#13;
"few viable and untapped&#13;
alternatives are available to the&#13;
chancellors to raise additional&#13;
user fee revenue from students,&#13;
staff, and the public to offset&#13;
general purpose revenue costs.&#13;
The units have already exploited&#13;
all significant revenue opportunities&#13;
to manage budget&#13;
austerity."&#13;
The fee could have forced&#13;
students and faculty as well as&#13;
the general public to pay to attend&#13;
athletic events, to use&#13;
university gymnasiums, to read&#13;
campus newspapers, to use&#13;
placement centers, to attend&#13;
lectures and concerts, to become&#13;
members of s tudent associations&#13;
and to participate in other nonclassroom&#13;
activities.&#13;
: Lucey pointed out that the fee&#13;
was not meant to apply only to&#13;
the universities but to every state&#13;
institution. He added that such a&#13;
fee is used more extensively in&#13;
many other states.&#13;
The user fee which has drawn&#13;
vehement opposition from every&#13;
segment of the university&#13;
community was suggested to&#13;
Lucey to make up for the 1.5&#13;
million reduction (later altered to&#13;
$1 million) that he proposed for&#13;
the 1974-75 UW system budget.&#13;
However, Lucey conceded that it&#13;
appeared that he had "lost that&#13;
battle to the legislature."&#13;
by Jerry Dublel&#13;
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are getting it all together.&#13;
Will quad completely replace stereo in&#13;
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Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 'til 6&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21: Lynn and Sue in the Whiteskellar from 1-3 p.m.&#13;
No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 21: PAB dance featuring "Eden Stone" at 9 p.m.&#13;
in SAB. Admission is $1 for Parkside Students and $1.50 for guests.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 22: Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 25: Parkside's second annual mini folk festival from 1-&#13;
6 p.m. in the SAB. No admission charged and the bar will be open.&#13;
Monday, Nov. 26: Bible Study in LLC D185 from 10:30-11:30.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28: Tony Rolands and Rick Schroeder at the&#13;
Whiteskellar from 1-3 p.m. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28: American Language Exemption Exam in&#13;
Comm Arts 222 from 1:30-4 p.m.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 29: Piano trio recital in the Comm Arts Theater at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 30: The beginning of a five round chess tournament.&#13;
Contact the Student Activities Office for information.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 30: PAB sponsoring the film "Omega Man" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
SAB. Admission is 75 c ents.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 1: Meeting of the Parkside Players at 1 p.m. in SAB.&#13;
All i tems for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of th e issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Robinson to read&#13;
from works of Stuart&#13;
Beecham Robinson, Director of th e Learning Center and Assistant&#13;
Professor of Education will be reading from the works of Jesse Stuart&#13;
for the Poetry Forum on November 27 at 7 p.m. in the Library.&#13;
Professor Robinson has been a student of Mr. Stuart's for many years.&#13;
In 1939 when he was attending a one-room school in Eastern Kentucky&#13;
Jesse Stuart taught him, and when he was a freshman at Georgetown&#13;
College, Mr. Stuart was a visiting professor teaching creative writing&#13;
and Prof. Robinson studied with him again. In 1961 Professor&#13;
Robinson directed a three-act adaptation of Mr. Stuart's The Thread&#13;
That Runs So True, and Stuart and his wife, Naomi Deene came to the&#13;
University of Illinois to attend the opening night performance and visit&#13;
with Robinson again. They have kept in touch, mainly through&#13;
correspondence since then.&#13;
Among the many honors and awards to Jesse Stuart are these: Taps&#13;
for Private Tussie, Book-of-the-Month Club selection and winner of the&#13;
Thomas Jefferson Southern Award; The Thread That Runs So True,&#13;
selected by National Education Association as the best book of 1949,&#13;
the $5,000 award from the Academy of American Poets in 1961 (the&#13;
largest granted to American Poets); and awards from Guggenheim in&#13;
1937, an Academy of Arts and Science in 1941, and Thomas Jefferson&#13;
Memorial Award in 1943.&#13;
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Wednesday , Nov. 21, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Energy crisis means conservation here&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Editor's note: This week RANGER begins the&#13;
first in a three-part series on the "energy crisis"&#13;
and how it affects Parkside.&#13;
The national energy crisis has come to affect&#13;
Parkside, plus many other state institutions&#13;
Enactment of conservation programs are underway&#13;
throughout the Wisconsin University System's&#13;
campuses, with recommendations for future&#13;
savings being studied.&#13;
It was at the request of UW Vice-President Robert&#13;
Winter, issued last June, that Parkside's Physical&#13;
Plant began curtailment of energy consumption and&#13;
utility expenditures, a task which will include&#13;
securing air handling units, pumps, motors&#13;
elevators, lighting levels, thermostat settings, leak&#13;
sources in buildings, automatic combustion' controls,&#13;
etc.&#13;
"For years we were brainwashed into using&#13;
electricity indiscriminately," said Rodger Allen&#13;
physical plant director. "Now we're being asked to&#13;
look into areas where we can cut costs."&#13;
One of these areas pertaining to electricity is&#13;
lighting. All interior lights are secured by&#13;
custodians on the third shift, after completing their&#13;
assigned work. Allen stated though, that it was the&#13;
responsibility of those who occupied classrooms and&#13;
offices, during the day, to turn out lights when not in&#13;
use. According to a survey, conducted by students'&#13;
of Earth Science assistant professor Henry Cole last&#13;
month, 60 percent of all unoccupied rooms were left&#13;
with lights on.&#13;
Walkway lamps have been reduced to every other&#13;
one. Except for minimal security, outside lights are&#13;
secured by timeclock controls at midnight. These&#13;
include walking lights, currently in operation, along&#13;
with every second roadway lamp and those in the&#13;
parking lot area.&#13;
Various air supply and exhaust units, totaling&#13;
approximately 270,000 cubic feet per minute, are&#13;
shut down at 11 p.m. each night, and restarted at 6&#13;
a.m. the following morning. Here, the Physical&#13;
Plant's goal is to double this figure by reducing&#13;
ventilating fans in each building one at a time.&#13;
Tallent Hall is the first to be considered.&#13;
Air compressors located in the seven buildings,&#13;
too, have been halted by tying in the central air&#13;
system. Main air compressors found in the Heating&#13;
and Chilling Plant are equipped with unloading&#13;
valves that reduce greater electrical consumption&#13;
for starting and stopping.&#13;
Controls are said to be, "the latest, most efficient"&#13;
regarding the Heating and Chilling Plant's&#13;
boilers. Automatic controlling of fuel and air ratios&#13;
enables greater conservation of energy.&#13;
Parkside's primary fuel, natural gas, is purchased&#13;
on an "interruptable rate," through which&#13;
the Wisconsin Natural Gas Company may temporarily&#13;
shut off service in severe cold weather.&#13;
Several times last winter the power plant was&#13;
torced to rely on two 40,000 gallon storage tanks&#13;
containing no. 5 fuel oil. This fuel source, considered&#13;
to be m abundance, is readily available from a local&#13;
Mobil Oil dealer. The Wisconsin Natural Gas&#13;
Company also has assured Parkside that 100 percent&#13;
of their fuel supplied last winter will again be&#13;
available this winter.&#13;
Measures for conserving fuel, nonetheless, are in&#13;
full swing. Wherever feasible, temperatures in&#13;
unoccupied areas are lowered to 60 degrees&#13;
farenheit. During the heating season, all thermostats&#13;
are set at 68, and reset in summer, to 78.&#13;
Because most thermostats on campus are adjustable&#13;
the Physical Plant secured lock covers in&#13;
many instances, to prevent tampering. Allen&#13;
recommends that all new buildings (Physical Plant&#13;
and Student Union) be equipped with tamper-proof&#13;
thermostats.&#13;
"Saving energy at the same time helps cut costs,"&#13;
said Allen. "They're both tied in with one affecting&#13;
the other."&#13;
Operating costs last fiscal year at Parkside wereelectricity&#13;
$248,588.76; heating $114,601.70; and&#13;
water and sewerage $13,221.01. The forecast for this&#13;
fiscal year is just under $500,000, which includes&#13;
2300 gross square feet of building expansion. Allen&#13;
was unable to estimate savings from current energy&#13;
cut backs, since further listings of power consumption&#13;
were still being made when this article&#13;
was written. However, the earliest possible conclusion&#13;
of this research is expected no sooner than&#13;
late December or early next year.&#13;
Meanwhile, the Physical Plant is setting an&#13;
example of conserving gasoline by utilizing a&#13;
shuttle-type bus to deliver men and materials to&#13;
various job sites. This eliminates gas consumption&#13;
via the use of individual vehicles. Two cylinder&#13;
Cushman scooters are also being used when individual&#13;
transportation is needed at a savings of&#13;
approximately 25 miles per gallon.&#13;
"Although there are means of energy savings&#13;
without causing any noticeable discomfort to&#13;
people, we should keep in mind that the greatest&#13;
savings of energy comes from curtailing some&#13;
service or convenience, "commented Allen.&#13;
Next Week: How the planning and development of&#13;
UW-P contributed to our current energy problems.&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
The smoke stacks located on the Heating and Chilling Plant are&#13;
responsible for the fuel gas emission of boilers.&#13;
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GUINNESS BOOK OF WORLD RECORDS New ™ Edm» &gt;695&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER W e d n e s d a y , N o v . 2 1 , 1 9 7 3&#13;
Society blind to problems of handicapped&#13;
Editor's note: The following story was told by a&#13;
Parkside senior who is paralyzed from the waist&#13;
down, to RANGER feature editor Debra Friedell.&#13;
Now a practice teacher, the student has spent the&#13;
past four years in the wheelchair where she will be&#13;
for the rest of her life.&#13;
In my dreams I can still walk. Except, once I had&#13;
a dream where I was running and I kept thinking I&#13;
shouldn't be doing this—I shouldn't be doing this.&#13;
I've been paralyzed from the waist down since I&#13;
was seventeen.&#13;
Just before I graduated from high school I started&#13;
getting pretty bad pains in my back. The doctor&#13;
thought it was a disc problem. The last three days&#13;
before I stopped walking I kept losing my balance. I&#13;
couldn't move easily and I had to concentrate to&#13;
make every move. Then I stopped walking completely.&#13;
It was on a Sunday morning. Sunday&#13;
evening I went to the hospital. I didn't have any&#13;
feeling. It was a spinal tumor.&#13;
I thought it was a disc problem and I'd need a&#13;
lousy operation or something like that. But on that&#13;
Sunday I knew that wasn't it. I was nervous, puzzled&#13;
maybe, I had no idea what was going on. There were&#13;
enlarged blood vessels in my spinal column which&#13;
There are very limited places where I&#13;
can live. Doorways have to be wide and&#13;
there can't be any stairs.&#13;
were bleeding and had formed a mass. They had to&#13;
be removed but, when they were, the scar tissue&#13;
remained to block the spinal column.&#13;
I was in the Kenosha hospital from June 11 to July&#13;
14, then I went to a Chicago hospital for two or three&#13;
weeks and finally to a Chicago rehabilitation center&#13;
until the end of September. There I was taught to&#13;
get in and out of a car and how to dress myself and&#13;
things like that.&#13;
I don't know how I got used to it. It was all so&#13;
gradual. Especially at first when they were telling&#13;
me that maybe I'd walk again and then saying&#13;
maybe I wouldn't. It got discouraging.&#13;
In the Chicago rehabilitation center I met a&#13;
woman who had been a model until she broke her&#13;
neck in a diving accident. She had no future, her&#13;
career had been her body and now she was&#13;
married and had two children and that was her&#13;
whole life. She'd been in a car accident-all of a&#13;
sudden-zapped. She was, in general, very angry&#13;
and thought that it just wasn't fair.&#13;
Handicapped people can't organize around issues&#13;
like other groups can. There is no way of getting the&#13;
handicapped in the open. They are shut away in&#13;
institutions and put away in little boxes, out of sight,&#13;
like the Viet Nam war veterans.&#13;
I started going to Parkside the fall after I&#13;
graduated from high school, knowing that I wanted&#13;
to major in French. Now I am practice teaching&#13;
French at Tremper High School in Kenosha. Getting&#13;
around at the Kenosha Campus was easy but out&#13;
here (the main campus) the ramp is way in the back&#13;
of the buildings. The ramps they had before were&#13;
terrible. They were so steep.&#13;
My social life is shot. I want to dance or go to bars.&#13;
That's where the social life is but that's where you&#13;
can't go. If I went people would think that I'm some&#13;
kind of nut. "What's that person doing here." I go to&#13;
movies.&#13;
I don't know what I want to do for a career. I'm&#13;
going to try teaching for a while but I can't just go&#13;
anywhere and take a job. Employers often think a&#13;
handicapped person is sick in other ways. They&#13;
think that the handicapped individual is unsafe or&#13;
will be at home sick a lot. I suppose I could do&#13;
secretarial work and type for eight hours a day but&#13;
that's a miserable prospect. There are very limited&#13;
places where I can live. Doorways have to be wide&#13;
and there can't be any stairs.&#13;
The dependence is the worst part. For me it's&#13;
confining and everything has to be scheduled and&#13;
arranged. For some people it's all right, I don't like&#13;
I w as nervous, puzzled, I h ad no idea&#13;
what was going on.&#13;
it. I prefer to do things myself, like getting around in&#13;
my wheelchair. I need the exercise. Sometimes I&#13;
begin to figit and people think I'm bored. Actually,&#13;
I'm just trying to move around a little.&#13;
Physical therapy, that is, special exercises and&#13;
treatments with a trained physical therapist, are&#13;
important to keep muscles in shape. The problem is&#13;
that one physical therapy session costs about $30&#13;
and should be taken at least once a week. Insurance&#13;
does not cover this. And, as far as I have been able&#13;
to find out, no public funding will pay for physical&#13;
therapy for a person over age 20, unless they are&#13;
unable to get a job. I am not currently having&#13;
physical therapy because we cannot afford it.&#13;
When I was a senior in high school I had plans of&#13;
going East after graduation and bumming around&#13;
for a while.&#13;
The government and people in general are not&#13;
aware of the problems of the handicapped. They&#13;
aren't seen because they can't get out and into&#13;
places where they can be noticed. If they get out,&#13;
there is no place to go. It's a vicious circle.&#13;
Handicapped people can't organize&#13;
around issues like other groups can. They&#13;
are shut away in institutions and put&#13;
away in little boxes, out of s ight, like the&#13;
Viet Nam veterans.&#13;
paralyzed from her neck down. Sometimes she'd&#13;
completely withdraw from the rest of us and would&#13;
say nothing. At least I have my brains. Another&#13;
woman, paralyzed from the neck down, was&#13;
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YOU KEEP THE GLASS!&#13;
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J ' BurgerChef&#13;
6926 39th Ave. • 2 • I.OC I TIO.XS' 3400 Sheridan Road&#13;
Bud Drinkers, can&#13;
you figure this out?&#13;
Suppose Bud® came in 24-oz. bottles that cost 50^ apiece. And suppose the&#13;
12-oz. bottles cost 25^ each. A guy comes up to you carrying two boxes the&#13;
same size. He tells you one box is full of 12-oz. bottles, the other is exactly&#13;
half full of the 24-oz. bottles. One is worth more than the other. Which, one?&#13;
r , „ "uni am rieii ssmi&#13;
I,,noA n0 -xoq „nj ay &gt;p,d noA enns aqmu 'naSia«pna Suhubjuod az,s aulas am&#13;
saxoq om, q,i« noA o, dn aaunoa AnS b aun, ,xaN :,Bnow 1S03 £&#13;
pire "ratwoq zo-ys aanq, no 'saouno ZL u,B,uoa P^om xoq qni-jrv-, au t&#13;
•OO'SSl Woo PIn0M pus 'Sam0q zo-ST aA,8«, uWuoa P1no« xoq nm am Oi»uno&#13;
Ml spioq xoq qoua asoddns noA jj) -qoniu SB bdim, surejuoa ,i asnoaaq xoq&#13;
ITO-j,bM aq, uaq, anoun q,no« sj xoq „nj aHi -aauenajj.p a,„q saqBtu samoq&#13;
aq, jo ,soa no azis aq, 'azts aunas aq, A[Pexa ana saxoq q,oq aauig VaaMSNV&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. • ST. LOUIS&#13;
1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
.Sports&#13;
Marry&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: The name of this weekly column, "Sportsfest " is&#13;
taken from the annual winter sports festival which kicks nff th l •'.&#13;
sports season. This co.umu win cover the&#13;
sports!" gymnaSt,CS' a"d »th"' =&gt;»d ends pertaining It&#13;
While the holiday of ''Tom Turkey" is celebrated across the country&#13;
head Ice Hockey Coach Tom Krimmel will be nrenarina hie P!07&#13;
hopefully a litde celebration of their own, as this year's team Ste sit&#13;
to encounter the Alumni, on Friday November 23&#13;
This year's team will include all the "trimmings", as four members&#13;
of he team are returnees from last year. The four returning playels&#13;
defensive Reggie Carter, a sociology teacher at Parkside Tom&#13;
Oinstenson, who plays at the forward position, Jerry Madala, a'nothTr&#13;
forward, and John Lulewicz, this year's team captain&#13;
This year, the hockey team will play a 23 game schedule. Nine of&#13;
those games will be away. One of the away games includes an&#13;
exhibition game against UW-Milwaukee, at the Milwaukee Arena&#13;
before a Milwaukee Admirals (semi-pro) game.&#13;
This year's schedule will be an easy one for the Rangers, but team&#13;
captain Lulewicz guaranteed us that the squad will put out 110&#13;
percent at every game.&#13;
I might add that all home hockey games are played at the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Arena, and this years squad can use all the support they can eet&#13;
Hope to see you there! s&#13;
To conclude this week's column, I would like to congratulate all fall&#13;
sports participants, and especially the coaches, who make my iob a&#13;
little bit easier with their great cooperation.&#13;
al, students, faculty and staff,during open fwfm hot™ S&#13;
own pace as it is not Olympic training. All swimmers pictured above have swum at least 50 mi^&#13;
since August. One mile equals 7.4 lengths of the pool. at le3St 50 m,les&#13;
Cross Country seventh Need extra m oney? I&#13;
in™! 4^'!! Sa,nger,C!,OSS CTltry Team captured seventh place&#13;
Sace in Cross Country Championships, which took&#13;
place in Salinas, Kansas, last Saturday.&#13;
thC higiJeSt f inish' as a team Champ for the 1973 season is Eastern New Mexico. - National&#13;
Individual honors in the championships went to Tony Brien from&#13;
ftafch hT1 ge in Kansas' while Parkside's own Lucian Rosa&#13;
£ vearrheehm F°T Ludan' this is 1116 second straight year he has been named to the Ail-American team which&#13;
consists of the top 15 finishers of the five mile course.&#13;
sh^wynnrtUulghlW°nder h0W long a P3'1" of cross country&#13;
shoes will last If you happen to ask Parkside's Dennis Biel, his answerwill&#13;
probably be "not long enough." In the race Saturday ben4 X&#13;
was only about 4V2 miles from finishing the race, found he wasn't&#13;
ihli rPGr support3n hls feet&gt; resulting from his shoes ripping (Dr&#13;
Sholz, where were you?) He thus removed his foot wear and proceded&#13;
the co^se bare footed. Dennis finished the race in 35th position&#13;
OOtthhVerr SnPpa rkI sidae p1l ace-g0eft teWrsh atw heer eC:O uWld ahyanvee dRohnoed ew it(h8 0sthho) es Joimn!&#13;
and^Efal^Martbf1 (33(tth)^ Men"m Chuck Dettman (3'12th)'&#13;
See u s—&#13;
RANGER LLC-D194&#13;
^ BONANZA'S Thanksgiving Feast!&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, No v . 21, 197 3&#13;
SPORT.&#13;
CUT EDITOR'S NOTE:&#13;
Students! Are you taking a specific phy ed. course you might want to&#13;
let other students in on? Why not be a guest writer for our SPORTCUT&#13;
column? All feature stories will be printed. To turn in stories, bring&#13;
them to the RANGER office in the Library Learning Center (D194).&#13;
They will be greatly appreciated!&#13;
by Neal Sautner&#13;
Ever since my first day in Fencing Class I've heard it called many&#13;
things-one of them was bar room brawling. Bar room brawling you&#13;
ask? Yes. Fencing used to be a means of se ttling your disputes in the&#13;
back room of bars. They used to strap you and your opponents left foot&#13;
to the floor and then let you stab away.&#13;
Today they lighten, shorten and modify the weapon and call it a foil.&#13;
They also took it out of the bars, civilized it, and now refer to its as&#13;
fencing. But after watching my fencing class sometimes I begin to see&#13;
Sportsfest queen candidates&#13;
Left to right: Pat Kekic (Tennis), Kim Piper (Track), Melanie Hansen (Wrestling) JarkiP&#13;
Levonian (Gymnastics), Joan Krebs (Baseball), Rita Ohm (Basketball), Nancy Michals (Soccet)&#13;
Missing: Debbie LeMay (Golf) and Terri Simo (Fencing).&#13;
photo by Mike Swanningson&#13;
, why ou r instructor, Coach Loran Hein, sometimes refers to us as Die&#13;
stickers and not fencers.&#13;
''Fencing is a thinking man's game," states Hein. "Sometimes its&#13;
referred to as a physical chess." When asked about what qualities a&#13;
fencer should possess he then gave me a list including "alertness&#13;
quickness, extreme mental and physical ability, quickness of the&#13;
mind, and ability to respond instantly." He justifies his last remark by&#13;
adding it just takes one tenth of a second to score a touch, and in&#13;
ofTsecond '' ^ b® SCOml in 38 little time aS one twenty-fifth&#13;
arp°^?f0f rea?on,? Coach Hein people like to take fencing&#13;
^ fuch a challenge to learn, and it holds your interest." He&#13;
thinks that people don't respect an easy sport, and rightly so because&#13;
fencing requires both mental and physical abilities.&#13;
Hem then brought up the fact that fencing is the only sport that takes&#13;
place on the side of you. The reason for this in fencing is that if you're&#13;
target^55 t0 y°Ur °PP°nent you offer him two'thirds less of a body&#13;
I'll say this much about fencing and that's if you're not determined&#13;
enough to win, you won't; and that good fencing comes from practice&#13;
and more practice. K&#13;
?ummed UP fencing by saying that, "You don't need a&#13;
D F D tricks&gt; just a pocket full, but they must be well executed "&#13;
Pete Banaszak summed up the feelings of the fencing class by&#13;
saymg that, Thinking is the name of the game, and if you're not&#13;
thinking all the time you'll lose."&#13;
For all people who would like to take an interesting P E class trv&#13;
fencing. Next semester Coach Loran Hein is starting a beginners&#13;
pe,® and Sabor, where this semester we deal mainly with&#13;
" f°aching an advanced foil class for women.&#13;
Classified&#13;
18 chord organ, walnut wood, reasonable&#13;
Can be seen at 3136 Kearney Ave., Racine'&#13;
after 1:00.&#13;
Wanted: student opinions on how the&#13;
bookstore should be run. Contact Bruce&#13;
Wagner c-o Student Activities office Box 139&#13;
or call 552-9462, after 5.&#13;
FOR SALE: Camaro, 1967, excellent shape,&#13;
new engine, very fast, 327, 4 speed, many&#13;
extras. Call and find out about it. $1,850 not&#13;
firm about it. Mark Havranek, 414-694-0771.&#13;
FOR SALE: Antique Icebox, fair condition,&#13;
best offer. Call Brad, 652-8443.&#13;
TYPING: Done on IBM electric. Call Pat at&#13;
654-0030, after 5 p.m.&#13;
HELP WANTED: Teacher 8, Aids to work&#13;
with preschool children in Parkside Childcare&#13;
Center. Full or half days, experience&#13;
with young children preferred. For info, and&#13;
application, call days 553-2393 or 553-2104&#13;
evenings 652-3996 or 634-4982. Respond by&#13;
Fri. 11-23, work study applications accepted.&#13;
NEED ANY typing done? Call Ginny at 637-&#13;
7796.&#13;
Stafa (fy, cutct cete&amp;wte&#13;
ivitA 04,/&#13;
Join us for Live Entertainment&#13;
and food at...&#13;
Edgewater&#13;
Motor Inn&#13;
410 Lake Ave., Twin Lakes, Wis.&#13;
November 21,22, 23 &amp; 24&#13;
Dance to "Blackwater Gold"&#13;
Open Daily 4 P.M. - 1 A.M. Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 A.M. - 1 A.M&#13;
The Brat Stop&#13;
Highway 1-94 &amp; 50&#13;
Open 9 A.M. - 1 A.M. Every Day Sandwiches served at all times&#13;
"BRATWURST OUR SPECIALTY" All r egular mixed drinks 50&#13;
t TVatcA fat acet Tteiv tya* Sve Speciai)</text>
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              <text>Jennett wins presidency</text>
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              <text>PSGA elections&#13;
Jennett wins presidency&#13;
Chuck Perroni Tom Jennett&#13;
President&#13;
Tom Jennett 229&#13;
Steve Smith 125&#13;
KenKonkol 85&#13;
Dan Nielsen g3&#13;
Write-ins&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Chuck Perroni 235&#13;
DickPautzke 123&#13;
Mustafa Abdulla 112&#13;
Bruce Wagner 49&#13;
Write-ins 1&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Mary Clare Werve 285&#13;
Wilma Jean McCoy 161&#13;
Write-ins 13&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
Chuck Perroni 225&#13;
Marilyn Schubert 116&#13;
Bruce Wagner 99&#13;
Write-ins n&#13;
Senate&#13;
Lynn Pope 248&#13;
Emiliano Contreras Jr 199&#13;
Kay Sweeney 193&#13;
Thomas Jones 182&#13;
Thomas Petersen 178&#13;
Kurt Mueller 171&#13;
David Otto 162&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta 159&#13;
Normal Neophyte 157&#13;
Chuck Stephen 132&#13;
PatMcDevitt 129&#13;
Hayes Norman 129&#13;
Darryl Doss 88&#13;
Michael Hahner 87&#13;
James Smith Jr 87&#13;
Richard Karls 81&#13;
Harvey Hedden 74&#13;
Albert A. Quinn 74&#13;
John Kontz 53&#13;
Write-ins 28&#13;
A t otal of 541 votes were cast,&#13;
which is 11 percent of the student&#13;
body. Jennett received 42 percent&#13;
of the votes cast for President.&#13;
The Senate seat won by Normal&#13;
Neophyte, who included his social&#13;
security number on the ballot&#13;
since "Normal Neophyte" is not&#13;
his legal name, is being contested&#13;
by one of the other candidates&#13;
(whose identity was not disclosed&#13;
to RANGER, although it was&#13;
requested of Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students Jewel Echelbarger, who&#13;
felt compelled to protect the&#13;
party at this time. The question is&#13;
his right to run under other than&#13;
his legal name.&#13;
The top 17 vote-getters in the&#13;
Senate race are to comprise this&#13;
year's PS£A Senate. There is a&#13;
tie for last place between Harvey&#13;
Hedden and Albert Quinn, both of&#13;
whom" received 74 votes. A&#13;
recount was being conducted, but&#13;
the question of Neophyte's seat&#13;
also could bear on the results.&#13;
Larry Gliszinski (left) and&#13;
Dietmar Schneider claim&#13;
RANGER'S contribution to the&#13;
Vets' Club paper drive last&#13;
Old news? Wednesday. The truck provided&#13;
for the drive was only half-full at&#13;
the end of the day, with the bulk&#13;
of the papers coming from&#13;
faculty and administration; six&#13;
students contributed.&#13;
NX The Parkside&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1973 Vol. II No. 13&#13;
Commentary&#13;
Teaching excellence —&#13;
who defines it?&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
Editor's Note: The following article was born&#13;
early in the semester when RANGER started to&#13;
receive both complaints and compliments of&#13;
teachers and courses from students. RANGER set&#13;
out to decipher what impact students have when&#13;
Divisional Executive Committees meet to&#13;
recommend tenure, promotion, or non-renewal of&#13;
their peers.&#13;
Excellence in teaching-what is it? How does one&#13;
rate, define or poll such a concept? In the review&#13;
process, faculty are judged on three criteria:&#13;
teaching, scholarly achievements and community&#13;
service. Chancellor Wyllie told the freshman class&#13;
at orientation that at Parkside, good teaching is&#13;
emphasized. In the proposed mission statement,&#13;
Section C reads that universities should be&#13;
"providing a first priority emphasis on teaching&#13;
excellence." In a resolution passed by the Faculty&#13;
Senate on Oct. 23, 1973 it is written that there must&#13;
exist "a first priority emphasis on teaching excellence&#13;
in all academic offerings with recognition&#13;
of such excellence as the keystone of the institutional&#13;
reward system." The reward is&#13;
promotion or tenure or pay increase.&#13;
. How can students be assured that their faculty&#13;
are being judged on their teaching as a first priority&#13;
and not scholarly or community activities or for&#13;
personal biases or competitiveness or the like? As it&#13;
stands now, the only input students have in the&#13;
review process is the SCAFE (Student Course and&#13;
Faculty Evaluation) forms circulated at the end of&#13;
each semester. Students have no idea what happens&#13;
to the evaluation once it is turned in, for at that point&#13;
SCAFE results are confidential and seen only by the&#13;
individual faculty member and the Executive&#13;
Committee at the time of his or her review.&#13;
How can students be assured that the SCAFE&#13;
results are truly used as a means of judging&#13;
teaching excellence or non-excellence? Chairperson&#13;
of the Humanistic Studies Division, Orpheus&#13;
Johnson, says, "There are a lot of reservations&#13;
about the value of SCAFE. PEople weigh them in&#13;
different ways." Johnson also stated that "a&#13;
Doctor's degree is no indication of teaching ability&#13;
or anything else, only that they've worked hard on&#13;
getting their degree."&#13;
One of the reasons for reservation about the&#13;
SCAFE, says Walter Graffin, associate professor of&#13;
English, "is that there is a sentiment that you&#13;
shouldn't trust students. There is a sentiment that&#13;
students can't distinguish between who is popular&#13;
and who is a good teacher."&#13;
Marion Mochon, Chairperson of the Division of&#13;
Social Sciences, added that "SCAFE results in a&#13;
class with a low enrollment have little significance."&#13;
More input is needed in regard to teaching.&#13;
Social Sciences, along with other divisions, also use&#13;
letters from students, class syllabi and handouts in&#13;
determining good and bad teaching.&#13;
More Criteria Needed&#13;
It appears, however, that more criteria are&#13;
needed to judge a faculty member's teaching.&#13;
Movements are underway in many divisions to&#13;
allow faculty members to judge their peers in&#13;
classroom teaching. Henry Kozicki, assistant&#13;
professor of English, named video-taping and class&#13;
visitation by Executive Committee members as a&#13;
way of getting additional information on one's&#13;
teaching abilities. Mochon commented that the&#13;
notion of classroom visitation was a method that she&#13;
intended to bring up to her Executive Committee.&#13;
She said, however, that it would be used only on a&#13;
voluntary basis as something she thinks would be&#13;
helpful not only in judging at review time but in&#13;
improving teaching methods.&#13;
Graffin stated that the "movement underway is to&#13;
do away with student input and leave it to faculty to&#13;
judge. It is totally subjective although they'll say&#13;
it's more objective. It is said to be an additional tool&#13;
in judging teaching excellence but it is a covert way&#13;
of de-emphasizing student opinions."&#13;
Kozicki, who chairs Humanities SCAFE Committee,&#13;
stated that "a PhD dies after receiving his&#13;
or her PhD. The only way to measure effectiveness&#13;
is by the scholarly work. Competence in scholarship&#13;
implies competence in teaching. It should be the&#13;
only category for reward."&#13;
Contradiction?&#13;
Supposedly, teaching, scholarly achievements,&#13;
and community service are to be weighed equally.&#13;
As comments from Executive Committee members&#13;
show, the general feeling among many faculty is, as&#13;
one faculty member described, "the only time&#13;
SCAFE scores are used is when they are negative."&#13;
Another said, "the Executive Committee will use&#13;
the SCAFE scores when they want to." Complaints&#13;
have arisen from some terminated faculty that nonrenewal&#13;
on the basis of "insufficient scholarly&#13;
achievement" is also unfair. To publish just for the&#13;
sake of publishing does not show or prove competence.&#13;
One individual cited the reason for his&#13;
termination was that he did not belong to any&#13;
faculty committees.&#13;
To RANGER's best knowledge, eleven faculty&#13;
continued on page 3&#13;
Murin heads Racine&#13;
transportation committee&#13;
William Murin&#13;
A joint planning committee&#13;
between the city&#13;
OF Racine and Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin (SEWR Pact Staff)&#13;
has been established to determine&#13;
transportation needs and&#13;
necessities in Racine County.&#13;
Entitled the Racine Mass&#13;
Transportation Technical&#13;
Coordinating Advisory Committee,&#13;
its operation is similar to&#13;
other task forces to be set up in&#13;
Milwaukee County and Kenosha&#13;
County as staff arms to the&#13;
SEWR Pact.&#13;
Racine's branch began their&#13;
six-month study Nov. 19, and&#13;
hope to complete it by early May.&#13;
The specific area it includes is&#13;
Racine County east of 1-94, and&#13;
major generators of transportation&#13;
related to the county,&#13;
such as Parkside and Gateway&#13;
Technical Institute.&#13;
Elected chairperson of this 23-&#13;
member joint committee is&#13;
Parkside assistant professor of&#13;
political science, William Murin.&#13;
Chosen primarily due to his&#13;
previous experience with transportation,&#13;
Murin has served, in&#13;
the late '60s, on the Department&#13;
of Urban Transportation in&#13;
Racine, and in early 1972, on a&#13;
state-wide task force studying&#13;
transit problems. Murin also was&#13;
named by Chancellor Wyllie to&#13;
represent the administration on&#13;
Kenosha's technical task force,&#13;
scheduled to convene in&#13;
December.&#13;
The representative of Parkside&#13;
on the Racine task force is&#13;
director of business affairs,&#13;
Erwin Zuehlke.&#13;
"If the report finds that a cityoperated&#13;
bus system would serve&#13;
the county more effectively than&#13;
the present privately-owned&#13;
system, we may use the report to&#13;
apply for federal grants in&#13;
purchasing capital equipment,"&#13;
speculated Murin.&#13;
Approximately 100 Parkside&#13;
students commute back and forth&#13;
from the campus, on a Jelco line&#13;
operated by the Vet's Club.&#13;
Linsmeier estimated though, that&#13;
over 50 percent of the student&#13;
population is accessible to mass&#13;
transportation in the Racine&#13;
area.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1973&#13;
Election procedures&#13;
need reforming&#13;
RANGER congratulates Tom Jennett, Chuck Perroni,&#13;
and all the other successful candidates in last week's&#13;
PSGA elections. We hope that through the combined&#13;
efforts of these people student government can be&#13;
something all students are aware of, use, and can be&#13;
proud of. We also would like to see those students who&#13;
did not win seats maintain their interest, enthusiasm&#13;
and initiative and remain active, involved members of&#13;
the student body. Hopefully, they will work with the&#13;
existing PSGA to institute the changes all candidates&#13;
had agreed were necessary.&#13;
RANGER would like to suggest a few modifications in&#13;
election procedures to insure a more efficient and fair&#13;
operation in the future. First, the Election Committee&#13;
should be composed of more than one or two people.&#13;
Perhaps the President could appoint a commission of&#13;
five persons, all subject to Senate approval.&#13;
There should be a fixed time for the elections and the&#13;
polls should remain open during the entire pre-arranged&#13;
period. A fixed time and place for counting of ballots&#13;
should also be decided in advance.&#13;
Poll watchers, approved by the presidential candidates,&#13;
should be provided. Their function is not to&#13;
campaign for their favorites but to prevent campaigning&#13;
within the legal limit of the voting box and to&#13;
insure that all regulations with regard to voting are&#13;
adhered to. A provision should also be made for removal&#13;
of any poll worker who is campaigning.&#13;
In an election with a turnout of 11 percent, the location&#13;
of the polling place can be cruciaT. Certainly a booth&#13;
should have been located on the Kenosha campus.&#13;
Originally this was planned, as was a booth in the&#13;
Classroom Building. But, apparently, lack of personnel&#13;
to work these polls prevented their set-up. We suggest&#13;
that various student organizations be contacted to&#13;
provide people to cover these locations. If only one booth&#13;
can be arranged, the logical place is the concourse of the&#13;
Classroom Building so people could vote as they come in&#13;
or while waiting for the shuttle bus.&#13;
Finally, why not collect all candidates' signs and&#13;
materials and recycle them, if possible (after the&#13;
election is over, not before!)?&#13;
This week RANGER looks at the weight given student evaluations in&#13;
the faculty review process. At the end of every semester every student&#13;
in every course fills out at least one form giving an analysis of teacher&#13;
and course. And every year a committee in each division reviews the&#13;
faculty members up that year for merit pay increases, promotion,&#13;
tenure, and retention or non-renewal of contract.&#13;
The question is what effect, if any, students' feelings about a&#13;
teacher's effectiveness have on the outcome of that teacher's review.&#13;
The answer seems to be "not a whole lot." At the mission hearing&#13;
conducted by the Regents, RANGER'S statement alluded to a clause&#13;
in the mission statement which calls for "a first priority emphasis on&#13;
teaching excellence." Implied in this, we said, is a review process in&#13;
which students, who can best ascertain teaching effectiveness (for&#13;
they are the best if not only judge of day-to-day classroom performance),&#13;
must be an integral part.&#13;
The preliminary draft from the Academic Plan Steering Committee&#13;
lists as one of its goals the establishment of "a reward system for&#13;
faculty which duly recognizes excellence in teaching, scholarly activity,&#13;
and public service, but which gives special recognition to&#13;
teaching excellence." It goes on to say that "the responsible faculty&#13;
and administrators" will use the best existing evidence of these&#13;
things.&#13;
What is the best evidence of teaching excellence? There are definite&#13;
reliability problems with the forms presently in use, but the major&#13;
question seems to be whether or not students can be trusted to know a&#13;
good teacher from a not-so-good one. Of course, it all depends on the&#13;
criteria you're using-if a good teacher is someone who publishes a lot,&#13;
for example, then maybe students would not be so aware of that. But if&#13;
a good teacher is someone who comes to class well prepared and gets&#13;
the material across with a minimum of agony due to boredom or incomprehension,&#13;
then maybe we can tell the difference.&#13;
This is an area where I feel student government should definitely&#13;
involve itself. Presently some faculty do also distribute the optional&#13;
PSGA evaluation form, but once you fill it out, nothing happens&#13;
anyway. Perhaps in time, a valid evaluation form can be devised,&#13;
which student government personnel would distribute in all classes',&#13;
tabulate the results, and present them to students, faculty and&#13;
divisions. £ urther, PSGA should start negotiating for serious student&#13;
input in the review process.&#13;
Meanwhile, reviewing has begun for this year and I would urge&#13;
students to make their feelings about faculty members known to the&#13;
powers that be. The most effective thing that could be done at this&#13;
point would be to write letters to the division chairpeople. Tell them&#13;
what you think of the job an individual teacher in that division is doing-&#13;
-good or bad. Even if a faculty member is not currently up for review,&#13;
the letter goes in that person's file. Make your feelings known--&#13;
perhaps you'll help save a good teacher or aid in the removal of a bad&#13;
one!&#13;
TheParkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
Z'Ll" w 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;
rJw,SarkSldie RangerJ is,,an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
• .L®"e.ra t0,th.e Edit,or afe encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
merest Jo students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
an(J douMe-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
iddres^nhn"8 andgood V*51®; A11 letters must be signed and include&#13;
^ withhSn uLnnm ardi!udeJntstatusor faculty rank. Names will&#13;
print any leUers. ' * reSerVC the right t0 refuse t0&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
wr^pp^T COORDINATOR: David Daniels&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Bush, Stephen Gifford, Barbara Hsn™ u, .&#13;
Hedden, Gary Jensen, Michael Olszyk MarHyn Schubert John&#13;
Sorensen, Steve Stapanian, Carrie Ward, Tom DeFouw Npai s'=. •&#13;
SKKTSi Rohan&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
CIRCULATION MANAGER: Gary Worthington&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence. J?m Magruder&#13;
We get letters Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1973 T HE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
"Here's} One Not Going To The&#13;
D.A." was an article that appeared&#13;
in the RANGER in the&#13;
Nov. 21st issue. I was appalled&#13;
that our campus is set up on such&#13;
an unfair and prejudiced basis.&#13;
We are a fine example of a&#13;
growing, open-minded institution,&#13;
that plays favorites&#13;
with the people associated with it.&#13;
I, for one, feel that the voiding of&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie's parking&#13;
ticket is an action that gives&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
This past Wednesday (Nov. 21)&#13;
I (and 400 others) had the&#13;
supreme pleasure of taking a&#13;
grown-up college Bioscience&#13;
Examination. Aside from the fact&#13;
that it ruined my Thanksgiving, it&#13;
seriously crippled my confidence&#13;
in the testing system that goes on&#13;
at this University and particularly&#13;
in the Bioscience Dept.&#13;
Questions such as: which&#13;
spermocyte gives birth to a&#13;
homozygote turd on alternate&#13;
Tuesday afternoons under a blue&#13;
moon just do not impress me as&#13;
intelligent examining of&#13;
someone's basic knowledge.&#13;
Another gem might be: in a&#13;
tobacco gonad which alleles&#13;
could fumigate an inhibited&#13;
gamete quicker with the least&#13;
expenditure of juice. Now such a&#13;
question is, of course, relevant to&#13;
our existence here on earth and&#13;
no one will deny that it will come&#13;
in handy someday for some poor&#13;
support to the recently stated&#13;
criticisms on the untouchable&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
Why do students and faculty&#13;
members have to pay tickets for&#13;
illegal parking, and our Chancellor&#13;
doesn't. It seems to me that&#13;
it s a sad state of affairs when the&#13;
top man, who is supposed to (at&#13;
least in a nostalgic sense) set a&#13;
shining example for those peons&#13;
beneath him, takes unfair advantages&#13;
of the institution of&#13;
which he presides over.&#13;
starving artist slob (who is&#13;
required to take this course)&#13;
when he's hacking away at it 9-5&#13;
every day but, of course, too,&#13;
such a question being so painfully&#13;
simple must be rendered a little&#13;
more challenging by our capable&#13;
men in white coats. When they're&#13;
through fooling around with it,&#13;
the possible multiple guess answers&#13;
now read as follows: a)&#13;
walnuts A A b) cherries bb c)&#13;
none of the above d) some of A&#13;
and Vfe of B e) 62 percent of A and&#13;
a pinch of D f) who the fuck cares&#13;
(Hint: you get extra brownies if&#13;
you pick F).&#13;
Now understanding the basic&#13;
concepts and processes involved&#13;
in Bioscience apparently is a&#13;
worthless pursuit, and anyone&#13;
who seriously wishes to better his&#13;
grade on one of these PhD&#13;
cryptograms would do as well to&#13;
simply turn up that morning in&#13;
his shiny plastic test chair&#13;
plastered out of his mind and&#13;
The thought that comes to my&#13;
mind every time I think about&#13;
this action that was taken in&#13;
behalf of Chancellor Wyllie, is&#13;
this: Before criticizing others of&#13;
their housekeeping, make sure&#13;
you clean off your own back&#13;
porch first.&#13;
Final thought, take heart&#13;
America, Nixon isn't the only&#13;
one.&#13;
Sue Lynn Snyder&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
simply scratch his choice willynilly&#13;
all over the damned computer&#13;
sheet (with his shiny No. 2&#13;
yellow test pencil. My, my).&#13;
In closing, let me just say that&#13;
to draw up a decent test of&#13;
someone's knowledge, one must&#13;
be a teacher who is sensitive to&#13;
the needs and understandings of&#13;
real human students. It goes&#13;
without saying that the teacher&#13;
must, therefore, divert some&#13;
time away from his research&#13;
studies into the sexual perversions&#13;
of the yellow-bellied&#13;
horny necked Kansas nerd and&#13;
put it where it belongs-into the&#13;
mind, heart, and energy of his&#13;
students who, believe it or not,&#13;
are eager to learn given a teacher&#13;
who really cares (the Lord forbid!).&#13;
Correct me, but this is the&#13;
purpose of his employment.&#13;
Better luck next semester,&#13;
everybody!&#13;
Name withheld upon request&#13;
Teaching excellence&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
members were notified last year that the present&#13;
1973-74 school year would be their last. For some,&#13;
terminating reasons were the phasing out of certain&#13;
disciplines, such as foreign languages. Whether or&#13;
not this is in direct contradiction with the Faculty&#13;
Personnel Decision Criteria and Procedures is&#13;
questionable. It is stated, "If the usefulness of a&#13;
faculty member's skills to the furtherance of the&#13;
liberal arts and industrial society missions of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside is considered in&#13;
personnel matters, it is to be considered only at the&#13;
time of initial appointment."&#13;
Alternatives to SCAFE&#13;
The question is how students can have more or&#13;
better input in the review procedure. It is agreed&#13;
that SCAFE is not the answer. A report to the&#13;
Faculty Senate on Oct. 16, 1973 states, "This&#13;
situation leaves much to be desired. These forms&#13;
are widely regarded as unreliable, of limited value,&#13;
and prone to bias. Even when accurately reflecting&#13;
the teacher's ability, they still cover only one aspect&#13;
of a number of activities related to teaching."&#13;
Therefore, students cannot count on the SCAFE&#13;
as a direct and important means by which&#13;
Executive Committees will evaluate teaching excellence&#13;
or non-excellence. One may even question&#13;
the money wasted in putting them out.&#13;
All division heads recommended letters from&#13;
students in regard to faculty and courses. Some&#13;
commented, however, that letters tend to come&#13;
from those who feel either strongly positive or&#13;
negative and a fair picture is not easy to come by&#13;
with this method.&#13;
Excellence in teaching-fact or myth? The fact is&#13;
that there are some excellent teachers-some of&#13;
whom are being terminated. The myth is that&#13;
student input is a factor which is taken into account&#13;
in the review procedure. Although the SCAFE is&#13;
revised almost every year in each division, it is&#13;
considered by most as "generally worthless."&#13;
As faculty committees hold most of the power, it&#13;
is essential that they immediately devise a system&#13;
in which student input will not only be reliable but&#13;
will be used. Until then students are left no alternative&#13;
but to assume that their considerations of&#13;
what constitutes teaching excellence being used in&#13;
the review procedure, is a myth.&#13;
Classified&#13;
ALL KINDS OF TYPING. Call Nancy. 632&#13;
2667.&#13;
LOST: Rimless glasses, in brown case with&#13;
green velvet lining. Lost Nov. 18 in the&#13;
Comm. Arts Bldg. REWARD, call Lisa at&#13;
637 3098.&#13;
NEED ANY typing done? Call Ginny at 637-&#13;
7796.&#13;
TYPING: Done on IBM electric. Call Pat&#13;
at 654-0030, after 5.&#13;
18 chord organ, walnut wood, reasonable.&#13;
Can be seen at 3136 Kearney Ave., Racine,&#13;
after 1:00.&#13;
Wanted: student opinions on how the&#13;
bookstore should be run. Contact Bruce&#13;
Wagner c-o Student Activities office Box 139&#13;
or call 552-9462, after 5.&#13;
FOR SALE: Camaro, 1967, excellent shape,&#13;
new engine, very fast, 327, 4 speed, many&#13;
extras. Call and find out about it. $1,850 not&#13;
firm about it. Mark Havranek, 414-694 0771.&#13;
FOR SALE: Antique Icebox, fair condition,&#13;
best offer. Call Brad, 652-8443.&#13;
TYPING: Done on IBM electric. Call Pat at&#13;
654-0030, after 5 p.m.&#13;
WILL TYPE term papers. Call 634-6365.&#13;
NOW PAYING 5.4%&#13;
(Compounds A nnually to 5.51%)&#13;
m REGULAR&#13;
PASSBOOK&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
UNION&#13;
THREE C ONVENIENT L OCATIONS:&#13;
U.W. Parkside - Room 219, T allent H all&#13;
180 W. C hestnut S t., B urlington&#13;
5200 Washington Ave., R acine&#13;
the e&#13;
MovemenT&#13;
srSSSS? history. Guest writers are invited. ana in&#13;
..?* 52 sex-stereotyped job titles have been adopted in the&#13;
U.S. Census Bureau's Occupational Classifications System. They will&#13;
help eliminate the concept of so-called "men's jobs" and "women's&#13;
jobs, Carmen R. Maymi, director of the U.S. Department of Labor's&#13;
Women s Bureau, said today.&#13;
Maymi called the new job titles "a welcome step" toward&#13;
eliminating sex discrimination in employment.&#13;
The changes were recommended by Women's Bureau and Manpower&#13;
Administration representatives of the Labor Department and&#13;
other members of the Federal Interagency Committee on Occupation&#13;
Classification.&#13;
The suffix "men" has been dropped from most of the occupational&#13;
titles, and replaced by "worker" or "operator."&#13;
"It is not realistic to expect that women will apply for job openings&#13;
advertised for foremen, salesmen or credit men. Nor will men apply&#13;
for job vacancies calling for laundresses, maids, or airline stewardesses,"&#13;
Maymi said.&#13;
The title for the major group, craftsmen and kindred workers, has&#13;
been changed to craft and kindred workers. Other changes include:&#13;
Former Title&#13;
Salesmen&#13;
Cranemen&#13;
Forgemen and hammermen&#13;
Clergymen&#13;
Public relations men&#13;
Credit men&#13;
Newsboys&#13;
Office boys&#13;
Foremen&#13;
Pressmen&#13;
Dressmakers and seamstresses&#13;
Boatmen and canalmen&#13;
Fishermen and oystermen&#13;
Longshoremen&#13;
Chambermaids and maids&#13;
(except private households)&#13;
Busboys&#13;
Airline stewardesses&#13;
Firemen&#13;
Policemen&#13;
Laundresses (private household)&#13;
Maids (private household)&#13;
New Title&#13;
Sales workers&#13;
Crane operators&#13;
Forge and hammer operators&#13;
Clergy&#13;
Public relations specialists&#13;
Credit and collection managers&#13;
Newspaper carriers and vendors&#13;
Office helpers&#13;
Blue collar worker supervisors&#13;
Printing press operators&#13;
Dressmakers&#13;
Boat operators&#13;
Fishers, hunters and trappers&#13;
Longshore workers&#13;
Lodging quarters cleaners&#13;
Waiters' assistants&#13;
Flight attendants&#13;
Fire fighters&#13;
Police&#13;
Launderers&#13;
Private household cleaners&#13;
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4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER W e d n e s d a y , N o v . 2 8 , 1 9 7 3&#13;
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Member Parkside 200&#13;
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Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
The loading dock, between Greenquist and the Classroom Building,&#13;
is not secured from the outside environment.&#13;
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s tudents in gaining admission&#13;
to recognized overseas medical&#13;
schools.&#13;
And that's jus t the be ginning.&#13;
Since the language barrier constitutes&#13;
the preponderate difficulty in succeeding&#13;
at a foreign school, the Euromed&#13;
program also includes an intensive&#13;
12 week medical and conversational&#13;
language course, mandatory for all&#13;
students. Five hours daily, 5 days per&#13;
week (12-16 weeks) the course is&#13;
given in the country where the student&#13;
will attend medical school. •&#13;
In addition, Euromed provides students&#13;
with a 12 week intensive cultural&#13;
orientation program, with&#13;
American students now studying medicine&#13;
in that particular country serving&#13;
as counselors.&#13;
Senior or gra duate stu dents cu rrently&#13;
enrolled in an A merican un iversity ar e&#13;
eligible to pa rticipate i n the E uromed&#13;
program.&#13;
F o r a p p l i c at i o n and f u r t h e r&#13;
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170 Old Country Road&#13;
Mineola. N Y. 1 1501&#13;
Editor's note: This is the&#13;
second of a three-part series on&#13;
the "energy crisis" and how it&#13;
affects UW-P.&#13;
To date, noticable discomforts&#13;
and inconveniences experienced&#13;
by Parkside's population are few,&#13;
with the exception of temperature&#13;
fluctuations in&#13;
classrooms in the Classroom and&#13;
Communication Arts buildings.&#13;
Malfunctions such as these,&#13;
claims Jim Galbraith, director of&#13;
planning and construction, are&#13;
due to the newness of the two&#13;
buildings. A t hree month period&#13;
follows after construction, in&#13;
which necessary "Balancing out&#13;
of systems" is completed through&#13;
different zones and quarters of&#13;
the building. Controls are refined&#13;
which operate thermostats and&#13;
even mechanisms that control&#13;
the controls are adjusted.&#13;
What is termed an "energy&#13;
crisis" undoubtedly hasn't&#13;
reached its greatest impact here&#13;
at Parkside yet. This energy&#13;
problem is expected, over the&#13;
next two years, to influence the&#13;
university's planning and&#13;
development more or less.&#13;
Perhaps if planning engineers six&#13;
years ago had been more energy&#13;
conscious Parkside wouldn't&#13;
have to contend with an energy&#13;
problem today.&#13;
"During the past, illuminating&#13;
engineers weren't impressed&#13;
with the need to conserve energy&#13;
through lighting," said&#13;
Galbraith. "Space designers took&#13;
into account the conservage of&#13;
energy, but were not considered&#13;
the ultimate authorities when it&#13;
came to lights. Engineers would&#13;
tell designers to do a good job of&#13;
illumination, to the point of l ittle&#13;
eye strain or glare."&#13;
Safety and security buffs fell&#13;
into those ranks of illuminating&#13;
engineers. Laws regarding&#13;
minimal security lighting have&#13;
come to eliminate all shadows in&#13;
which a prowler may lurk.&#13;
Evidence though, has been&#13;
substantiated that supports the&#13;
theory of increased thefts in&#13;
poorly lit areas, according to&#13;
Galbraith.&#13;
In the event of a smoke fire&#13;
double fluorescent lights, such as&#13;
those above Greenquist's stairs,&#13;
are needed to evacuate safely, he&#13;
further contended.&#13;
"It is my personal feeling that&#13;
lighting levels have nothing to do&#13;
with eye strain or glare. I believe&#13;
that rooms should be illuminated&#13;
to the extent that the particular&#13;
task there requires."&#13;
Galbraith, whd came to&#13;
Parkside in July of 1968, as&#13;
Greenquist Hall was being&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
Main Place windows create a greenhouse effect during sun-lit hours. Light colored curtains would&#13;
help curtail heat transfer in the evening, if available.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
ergy problems at Parkside&#13;
completed, went on to compare&#13;
the efficiency of various lighting&#13;
fixtures here. "Lights in the&#13;
Library-Learning Center virtually&#13;
eliminate glare due to&#13;
fluorescent lights being distorted&#13;
through parabolic reflectors. The&#13;
other buildings that have&#13;
fluorescent lights use regular&#13;
lens covers to diffuse light. These&#13;
fixtures create greater glare and&#13;
tend to yeHow they *ge"&#13;
Several different architects&#13;
and builders explain the wide&#13;
variation in lighting fixtures&#13;
throughout Parkside's buildings.&#13;
Galbraith stated that it was&#13;
university policy to distribute the&#13;
construction of buildings to&#13;
Taller? Tallent.Grr eCeOnnqtruaicstto, rsa • ndT hthues&#13;
Library-Learning Center, were&#13;
completed by Hellmuth, Obata&#13;
Kassabaum, out of St. Louis; the&#13;
Physical Education Building by&#13;
Will Wenzler and Associates, of&#13;
Classroom&#13;
Building by Stattuck-Siewart, of&#13;
S Communication&#13;
t ? by Hctet-Jacoby&#13;
of Milwaukee.&#13;
Apparently the designer of the&#13;
Classroom Building was trying to&#13;
cut costs, material-wise, rather&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
Spot lights in halls of the Classroom Building are left on throughout&#13;
the day.&#13;
sst^alLlinag one 6l, igehnte rgsyw&gt;i tcbhy pienrclassroom&#13;
as compared to three&#13;
itches in each classroom of&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Galbraith&#13;
replied that this may well have&#13;
neen the case, but added that&#13;
Greenquist was based on a&#13;
predicted modulation of space&#13;
through which classrooms could&#13;
eventually be converted to labs.&#13;
Drfending the design of the&#13;
rlmin?L'm terms *** loss,&#13;
Galbraith pointed out that the&#13;
balance between glass transparency&#13;
and heat transfer in&#13;
windows was better than in most&#13;
buildings of similar design.&#13;
Tinted, thermopane windows on&#13;
exposed surfaces on the&#13;
buildings reduce glare and repel&#13;
heat gained in summer at a&#13;
sayings of 40 to 50 percent of&#13;
chilled water, used to operate the&#13;
cooling system. The plate glass&#13;
windows found in the Main Place&#13;
of th e Library-Learning center on&#13;
the other hand absorb the sun's&#13;
rays during the day thus creating&#13;
a greenhouse affect.&#13;
Buildings checked for leak&#13;
sources are considered to have&#13;
adequate insulation. Windows&#13;
tightly fixed help maintain a&#13;
constant air pressure within the&#13;
structure, which is slightly&#13;
higher than the outside environment.&#13;
The air supply&#13;
system, though, does lose&#13;
pressure in the area between&#13;
Greenquist and the Classroom&#13;
Building where the operation of a&#13;
loading dock exists. Methods to&#13;
secure these jn-coming supply&#13;
doors from the main interior are&#13;
being studied.&#13;
Galbraith also takes note of the&#13;
fact that each building has at&#13;
least one elevator, to transport&#13;
freight from one floor to another.&#13;
Only two of the eleven elevators,&#13;
contends Galbraith, are intended&#13;
exclusively for passengers. They&#13;
are located in the Library-&#13;
Learning Center. The other&#13;
elevators located throughout&#13;
Parkside are intended primarily&#13;
for equipment and the handicapped.&#13;
These, designed to&#13;
carry heavy freight loads, do not&#13;
travel at high speeds. The&#13;
average power consumption&#13;
from this kind of elevator is&#13;
around 20 kw.&#13;
"We do not plan any ct&#13;
controls regarding usv. of&#13;
elevators as long as the essential&#13;
functions of them are not hindered,"&#13;
said Galbraith, referring&#13;
to possible restriction of elevator&#13;
operations because of energy cut&#13;
backs. "We've had little success&#13;
before, concerning people&#13;
obeying signs. In fact they might&#13;
tend to antagonize people rather&#13;
than enlighten them.&#13;
"I would hope that everyone do&#13;
something to conserve energy,&#13;
voluntarily. It's time we realize&#13;
that there are reasonable adjustments&#13;
in our life style that we&#13;
should be willing to make,"&#13;
concluded Galbraith.&#13;
Next week: Mass transit?&#13;
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repel heat gained in summer. Also, limited glass surface area in this&#13;
instance conserves heat in winter.&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER W e d n e s d a y , Nov. 28, 197 3&#13;
Young Democrats reorganize&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
At a time when politics is constantly in the&#13;
limelight, RANGER has interviewed the three&#13;
political organizations at Parkside in regard to their&#13;
activities and the views they take of recent&#13;
developments.&#13;
Parkside Democratic Youth Caucus (PDYC) is&#13;
now re-organizing, the Young Democrats having&#13;
been dormant for several years. The name change&#13;
came about a year and a half ago on the state level&#13;
when members decided to become a year-round&#13;
organization and not be confined merely to campaign&#13;
activities.&#13;
As a club, they plan to sponsor seminars on both&#13;
political parties and on young people's influence in&#13;
the Democratic party. They also plan to lobby on&#13;
the state and local levels and would like to see PSGA&#13;
become more active as a lobbying force where&#13;
student interests are involved. To such ends they&#13;
sponsored four candidates in the recent student&#13;
government elections.&#13;
On the state level they are involved in lobbying,&#13;
especially in an effort to return Indian lands to&#13;
reservation status, and recently co-sponsored a&#13;
mock legislature in Madison with Wisconsin College&#13;
Republicans. They will be holding a state workshop&#13;
in February and convention in March.&#13;
Commenting on the state political scene, PDYC&#13;
chairman Dan Nielson said he didn't think the&#13;
Democrats would have much to worry about in the&#13;
governor's race, since there are no strong&#13;
Republican candidates. He also saw a chance of&#13;
winning Secretary of State and the Attorney&#13;
Generalship; he said that they would not lose the&#13;
Assembly and might take the Senate by a slim&#13;
margin. Nielsen generally concluded that&#13;
Republicans would not beat any incumbant&#13;
Democrat because their money has been dried up&#13;
by Watergate and that the election would involve&#13;
"high power politics with a lot of Democratic money&#13;
being spent."&#13;
On the national scene, Nielson said Watergate&#13;
would hurt the Democrats as well as the&#13;
Republicans, though not as much. "It casts a bad&#13;
light on politics in general ... I can't say it hasn't&#13;
happened in the Democratic party, though I don't&#13;
know of instances where it has."&#13;
He also stated that the firing of Cox strongly&#13;
identified Nixon with the scandal, where before just&#13;
his aides were involved. "You can't disassociate a&#13;
Republican president from the Republican party, so&#13;
this will hurt more than anything before the firing.&#13;
The only way for the Republicans to get out of this&#13;
will be to be independent at convention - to sever the&#13;
ties with Richard Nixon."&#13;
Next time: Reply by College Republicans and&#13;
Young Republicans.&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28: Tony Rolands and Rick Schroeder at the&#13;
Whiteskellar from 1-3 p.m. No admission charged.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 29: Piano trio recital in the Comm Arts Theatre at&#13;
7:30 p.m. Free and open to the public.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 30: The beginning of a five round chess tournament.&#13;
Contact the Student Activities Office for further information.&#13;
Friday, Nov. 30: PAB movie "Omega Man" at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 1: Meeting of the Parkside Players at 1 p.m. in SAB.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. l: Varsity Club sponsoring a dance featuring "Lines&#13;
End" at 9 p.m. in SAB. Admission charged.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 4: PAB movie "2001 Space Odyssey" at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Comm Arts Theater. Admission is $1.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 5: PAB movie "2001 Space Odyssey" at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in Comm Arts Theater. Admission is $1.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 7: PAB movie "Fillmore" at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 8: PAB dance at 9 p.m. in SAB. Admission will be&#13;
charged.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 9: Christmas Carol Concert at 3 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater, Parkside Chorale and Concert Choir. Free and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 9: PAB movie "Fillmore" at 7:30 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is 75 cents.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 2: PAB movie "Omega Man" at 7:30 p.m. in SAB.&#13;
Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Parkside piano trio to give first concert&#13;
The Parkside Piano Trio, a&#13;
newly-formed faculty ensemble&#13;
composed of violinist Maria&#13;
Mutschler, Cellist David Littrell&#13;
and Pianist Stephen Swedish, will&#13;
present its first concert at 7:30&#13;
p.m. on Thursday (Nov. 29) in the&#13;
Communication Arts Theater at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The free public program will&#13;
include Hayden's Trio in G&#13;
major, Beethoven's Trio in D&#13;
major Op. 70 No. 1 ("The Geister&#13;
Trio"), and Mendelssohn's Trio&#13;
in D minor Op. 49.&#13;
Mutschler came to Parkside in&#13;
fall, 1972, and Littrell and&#13;
Swedish joined the faculty this&#13;
fall. All are assistant professors&#13;
of music.&#13;
Mutschler, who previously&#13;
taught at the University of&#13;
Nebraska and Del Mar (Texas)&#13;
College, received her undergraduate&#13;
degree from the&#13;
Eastman School of Music,&#13;
studied under a Fulbright grant&#13;
at the Mozarteum in Salzburg,&#13;
Austria, and received her&#13;
master's and doctoral degrees in&#13;
music at the. University of&#13;
Illinois.&#13;
She has appeared as soloist&#13;
with the Indianapolis Symphony&#13;
and has performed with the&#13;
Rochester Philharmonic, the&#13;
Dallas Symphony and the Aspen&#13;
Festival Orchestra.&#13;
Littrell, who appeared as&#13;
soloist with the Topeka Symphony&#13;
Orchestra at 16, comes to&#13;
Parkside from the University of&#13;
Texas where he is a doctoral&#13;
candidate. He previously taught&#13;
at Texas and at Southwestern&#13;
University.&#13;
He has appeared with a&#13;
number of student and faculty&#13;
music groups at Texas and at&#13;
Kansas State University, where&#13;
he studied under Cellist Warren&#13;
Walker and was assistant&#13;
principal cellist with the Austin&#13;
(Texas) Symphony. He was instrumental&#13;
division winner of the&#13;
Wichita Symphony's Naftzger&#13;
Award in 1970 and was a finalist&#13;
in the Music Teachers National&#13;
Association Contest in Chicago in&#13;
1971.&#13;
Swedish, a native Milwaukean&#13;
whose parents are both&#13;
musicians, previously taught at&#13;
Iowa State University and at&#13;
Texas Christian University&#13;
where he was director c&#13;
chamber music immediate!&#13;
before joining the UW-P faculty&#13;
He began his piano studies at (&#13;
gave his first recital at 9, an&#13;
appeared with the Milwauke&#13;
Symphony at 11.&#13;
Winner of a number of pian&#13;
competitions, he toured severa&#13;
times with chamber orchestra&#13;
and as a result was invited t&#13;
collaborate with famed Cellis&#13;
Janos Starker on a tour which le&lt;&#13;
to their recording of the Italiai&#13;
Sonatas for the Mercury label&#13;
During the current season hi&#13;
has accepted invitations t.&#13;
perform and conduct master';&#13;
classes at several major U.S&#13;
colleges and universities.&#13;
• PAPA B URGER&#13;
• TEEN BURGER&#13;
• MAMA B URGER&#13;
• BABY BURGER&#13;
Energy crisis topic&#13;
of symposium here&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
The energy crisis will be the&#13;
topic of a day-long symposium&#13;
sponsored by the Wisconsin&#13;
Academy of Sciences, Arts and&#13;
Letters and the U.S. Atomic&#13;
Energy Commission for about 100&#13;
science students from&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin high&#13;
schools and their teachers at UWparkside&#13;
on Wednesday (Nov.&#13;
28). f .&#13;
The second of six similar&#13;
regional symposia being held&#13;
around the state, the meeting is&#13;
under the chairpersonship of&#13;
Richard Bliss, science consultant&#13;
for the Racine Unified School&#13;
District.&#13;
The students will hear three&#13;
nationally-recognized experts on&#13;
energy production and use.&#13;
Daniel E. Willard, an environmental&#13;
monitoring expert&#13;
from UW-Madison, will speak on&#13;
"Environmental Costs and&#13;
Trades of Energy Use"; Wesley&#13;
K. Foell of the Department of&#13;
Nuclear Engineering at Madison&#13;
will talk on "Energy and&#13;
Wisconsin - Today and&#13;
Tomorrow"; and William F&#13;
Vogelsang, another UW-Madison&#13;
nuclear engineer, will talk on&#13;
"Power Sources for Electricity -&#13;
Promises and Problems."&#13;
The lectures will precede small&#13;
group sessions where students&#13;
will be invited to provide feedback&#13;
on the talks. The discussion&#13;
sessions will be conducted by&#13;
Parkside Profs. Henry Cole&#13;
Morris Firebaugh and Lori&#13;
Ruedisill; UW-Milwaukee Profs.&#13;
Richard Haney and Donald&#13;
Newman; UW-Whitewater Profs.&#13;
L. Ray Stonecipher and Frank&#13;
Stekle; Carthage College Prof.&#13;
Kenneth Hamm; and College of&#13;
Racine Prof. Gerald Buck. The&#13;
students will be welcomed by&#13;
Norbert Isenberg, chairperson of&#13;
the Division of Science here. Brief news&#13;
Poetry forum sponsors Reigel&#13;
James Reigel, a young Wisconsin poet whose works have been&#13;
widely published, will read some of his new poems in a Poetry Forum&#13;
session Thursday, Nov. 29 at 8 p.m. in the Library.&#13;
A Wisconsin native, Reigel has spent much of the past several years&#13;
traveling in America and Europe. He now resides in Madison.&#13;
Reigel will read from his latest manuscript, On the Surface which&#13;
should appear in print by spring. The reading, free of charge and open&#13;
to the public, will take place in the Overlook Lounge on the second&#13;
floor of the Library.&#13;
Deadline extended&#13;
The deadline for submitting responses to academic planning goals&#13;
has been extended to Thursday, Nov. 29, when written reactions from&#13;
students are due in Vice-Chancellor Bauer's office (LLC)&#13;
Copies of the Academic Planning Committee's preliminary draft&#13;
are available from the Information Center. Goals outlined include&#13;
proposed new majors, a faculty reward system recognizing excellence&#13;
m teaching, a Community Advisory Board, and equality of opportunities&#13;
in education and employment.&#13;
RANGER .Sports&#13;
Awards banquet set&#13;
to honor fail sports participants&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
m QM6CIV MAN&#13;
wmm&#13;
Fri., N ov. 3 0, 8 :00 p.m&#13;
Sun., D ec. 2 ,7:30 p.m.&#13;
75«&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. I.D.s required.&#13;
The Annual Parkside Fall&#13;
Sports Award Banquet will be&#13;
held on Dec. 10, 1973 at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
at Maplecrest Country Club in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Those sports being honored are&#13;
the athletes and coaches from&#13;
cross country, women's tennis,&#13;
soccer and women's gymnastics.&#13;
In each sport the captain and the&#13;
most valuable player will be&#13;
specially honored.&#13;
In the women's tennis program&#13;
are the following first year letter&#13;
winners: Sandy Kingsfield, Joan&#13;
Fredericksen, Joanne Rattan,&#13;
Marilyn Stellberg, and Sue Kloet.&#13;
Second year letter winners are&#13;
Eileen Reilly and Nicolet&#13;
DeRose. Third year letter winners&#13;
are Pat Kekic and Sue&#13;
Wanggaard.&#13;
In women's gymnastics, first&#13;
year letter winners are Sue&#13;
Ceccone, Mary Clair Frisema,&#13;
Jan Levonian, Marilyn&#13;
McGinnis, Lynn Pope, Julie&#13;
Scherer, Leslie Thomsen and&#13;
Mary Uyvari. Second year letter&#13;
winners are Jackie Levonian,&#13;
Julie Weidner, Paris Wohlust.&#13;
In soccer, first year letter&#13;
winners are Bruno Pawlak, Stan&#13;
Stadler, Pete Gadsby, Andy&#13;
Gutierrez, Carl Kurtagic, Warren&#13;
Lewis, Frank Liu, and Dennis&#13;
Pippin. Second year letter&#13;
winners are Tashe Bozinovski,&#13;
Elliott Brieske, Mike Kopczynski&#13;
and Wayne Shisler. Third year&#13;
letter winners are Rick Lechusz,&#13;
Dieter Kiefer, Rick Kilps, Ray&#13;
Phanturat and Dietmar&#13;
Schneider.&#13;
In cross country are first year&#13;
letter winners Jim DeVasquez,&#13;
Dale Martin and Wayne Rhody,&#13;
and third year letter winners&#13;
Dennis Biel, Keith Merritt,&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Chuck Dettman.&#13;
In each sport the highlights of&#13;
the year will be presented by the&#13;
respective coach: Women's&#13;
gymnastics - Doug Davis;&#13;
Women's Tennis - Dick Frecka;&#13;
Soccer - Hal Henderson; and&#13;
Cross Country - Vic Godfrey.&#13;
Athletic Director Wayne Dannehl&#13;
will also give a summary of the&#13;
fall's program and a preview of&#13;
the winter's.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at&#13;
the Athletic Office at $3 per plate.&#13;
TURN THOSE USELESS SKILLS&#13;
INTO HANDSOME&#13;
BUDWEISER. PATCHES&#13;
NO PROOF OF PURCHASE REQUIRED. OFFER VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY IAW. ALLOW FOUR WEEKS FOR DELIVERY. OFFER EXPIRES DECEMBER 31, 1973.&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. • ST. LOU IS&#13;
For example, if you can hug cans pretty good,&#13;
you can wear a Budweiser World Champion&#13;
Patch. Just hug, next to your person,&#13;
a record bunch of empty Bud® cans.&#13;
Record to beat is 38.&#13;
BUDWEISER&#13;
WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS?&#13;
WHAT'S GOING ON?&#13;
(Maybe you've detected that&#13;
this is not an official, rigid-rules&#13;
"contest." But it is a lot of fun,&#13;
even if y ou can't break the&#13;
records. You can, though,&#13;
can't you?)&#13;
TO GET YOUR BUDWEISER&#13;
WORLD CHAMPION PATCH&#13;
(EVEN IF YOU DON'T SET A&#13;
RECORD), JUST WRITE YOUR&#13;
NAME, ADDRESS AND WHAT&#13;
YOU DID ON A POSTCARD.&#13;
SEND&#13;
IT TO&#13;
Oh, happy day. At last someone is doing&#13;
something positive about the current&#13;
world shortage of champions.&#13;
Budweiser is sanctioning five absurd events&#13;
in which college youths can set records and&#13;
earn wonderful, big Budweiser patches&#13;
(7"x6",washable, genuine colors).&#13;
Besides the breathtaking BUD-&gt;CAN HUG&#13;
above, there are four other ways to be a World&#13;
Champion. Get details at your favorite beer&#13;
store where you see the "Budweiser World&#13;
Championship" display!&#13;
Do one, beat the record, tell us about it on&#13;
a postcard and get your marker pen ready&#13;
for inscribing your particular specialty&#13;
beneath where it says "World Champion."&#13;
*&#13;
8 THE PARKSI D E RANGER Wedn e s d a y , N o v . 2 8, 1973&#13;
Winter Sports&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Place&#13;
Rolla&#13;
Des Moines&#13;
St. Louis&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Whitewater&#13;
Date Opponent&#13;
Dec. 1 Missouri-Rolla&#13;
*Dec. 6 Drake&#13;
Dec. 7 &amp; 8 Missouri-St. Louis Tournament&#13;
Dec. 12 UW-Green Bay&#13;
Dec. 14 UW-Whitewater&#13;
Dec. 27, 28, 29 Spring Arbor Holiday Tournament Spring Arbor,&#13;
(8 teams - to be announced) Michigan&#13;
Fencing&#13;
December 1 - Illinois Collegiate Open at Champaign.&#13;
January 5 - Illinois-Chicago Chicago Circle,&#13;
Chicago, Wayne State, at Circle.&#13;
January 12 - Case Western Reserve, Chicago,&#13;
Cleveland, State, or Minnesota at Chicago.&#13;
January 19 - UW-Madison, Indiana at Madison.&#13;
Ice Hockey&#13;
December 1 - UW-Whitewater Madison - 10 p.m.&#13;
December 2 - Northeastern Illinois Home - 6 p.m.&#13;
December 7 - St. Norbert College-Home - 6 p.m.&#13;
December 9 - Illinois State University Home - 6 p.m.&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
(men and women)&#13;
December 21 - UCTC Holiday Meet at Chicago.&#13;
December 29 - UCTC Open Meet at Chicago.&#13;
Men's Gymnastics&#13;
December 7 - UW-Madison at Madison&#13;
December 15 - UW-Stout, 1 p.m. at Parkside&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
November 24 - Northern Open at Madison&#13;
November 28 - Grand Valley State College, 3 p.m. at&#13;
Allendale, Mich.&#13;
December 1 - Wisconsin Intercollegiates, 1 p.m. at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
December 8 - Whitewater Invitational, at&#13;
Whitewater.&#13;
WEEKLY P.E. BUILDING SCHEDULE&#13;
Week of Nov. 28 - Dec. 4&#13;
, ^E1T^SDAYLNOwL2?," Gym °pen 12:3°-1:2° &amp; 8:00-10:00 p.m.; Pool open 12:00-1:00 &amp;&#13;
6:00 10:00 p.m.; Handball courts open 12:00 noon -1:00 p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY: Nov. 29 - Gym &amp; handball courts same as above; Pool open 11:00 a.m - 1 00&#13;
p.m. only.&#13;
FRIDAY: Nov. 30 - Gym open 8:30 - 4 :00 p.m.; Pool open 11:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m.; Handball&#13;
courts open 8:30 - 4:00 p.m. Building closes at 4:00 p.m. on Fridays.&#13;
SATURDAY: Dec. 1 - Gym closed all day - Wrestling Tournament. Handball courts open&#13;
9:00a.m. -4:00p.m.; Pool open 11:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.&#13;
SUNDAY: Dec. 2 - Building open at 2:00 p.m. for recreational use. Building closes at 10:00&#13;
p.m. All facilities available.&#13;
MONDAY: Dec. 3 - Same schedule as Wed. above.&#13;
TUESDAY: Dec. 3 - Same schedule as Wed. above except pool opens at 11:00 a.m.&#13;
when there is a basketball game scheduled in the gym, the entire building will close at&#13;
5:00 p.m. to all recreational use.&#13;
IMPORTANT - There is varsity team athletic practice in the gyms Monday through&#13;
Friday 3:30 p.m. - 6 :00 p.m. and 9:00 a.m. - 1 2:00 Noon on Saturday. There is usually one&#13;
basket open for recreational use during Saturday mornings.&#13;
Highway&#13;
Open 9:00 A.M. to 1 A.M. Daily&#13;
Sandwiches served at all times.&#13;
All regular r«c&#13;
mixed drinks 3U Bratwurst our&#13;
specialty&#13;
Live Entertainment Friday &amp; Saturday&#13;
Adr ian Smi th&#13;
EdgeWater MOTOR&#13;
INN&#13;
410 Lake Ave., Twin Lakes, Wis.&#13;
Mixed Drinks 50°&#13;
except Sat. &amp; Sun.&#13;
Open Daily 4 P.M. - 1A.M.&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10 A.M. - 1A.M.&#13;
Live Entertainment Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
"Fami ly at Max"&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: The name of this weekly column, "Sportsfest," is&#13;
taken from the annual winter sports festival which kicks off the winter&#13;
sports season. This column will cover the inside sports of basketball,&#13;
wrestling, fencing, gymnastics, and other odds and ends pertaining to&#13;
sports.&#13;
They're off! That's right, winter snow has yet to fall, but after&#13;
reviewing the winter sports schedules, who needs snow? With plenty of&#13;
action on tap for the next month, Parkside coaches will have enough&#13;
competition to plow through.&#13;
On the basketball front, Head Coach Steve Stephens and Asst. Coach&#13;
Rudy Collum will steer the Parkside quintet in what might seem an&#13;
endless journey on the road, when they encounter the Missouri-Rolla&#13;
"Miners" on Dec. 1. The Rangers could really feel like they are in a&#13;
forest when they take on powerful Drake College on Dec. 6. Drake&#13;
almost beat UCLA in the Nationals 4 y ears ago, and their starting&#13;
team averages 6'10". From there, it's on to the Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
Tournament, which happens to take place the next day on Dec. 7, and&#13;
8.&#13;
Parkside's "fearsome foilers" will draw blood for the first time this&#13;
season when they match wits and weapons in the Illinois Collegiate&#13;
Open on Dec. 1. Hopefully, it will be a very "touching" experience for&#13;
the Rangers Fencing Team.&#13;
The Parkside Rangers' Men's Gymnastic Team is also scheduled for&#13;
stiff competition, as Doug Davis &amp; Co. match talents with UWMadison&#13;
at Madison on Dec. 7. One point about gymnastics is, you&#13;
never see the same old routine, especially when you have a team with&#13;
the likes of letterman Kevin O'Neil on the still rings. Kevin placed&#13;
third in the NAIA last season, just missing Ail-American honors.&#13;
Asst. Hockey Coach Bill Westerlund summed up the hockey club's&#13;
progress by saying that the potential is high and the hustle is there.&#13;
Last Friday, the Parkside Pucksters battled the old alumni in a game&#13;
which was overwhelmingly won by the Alumni, 17-1. Three hat tricks&#13;
(one hat trick is 3 goals) were scored by the Alumni, coming off the&#13;
sticks of Gordie Bradshaw, Dave Dougall and Bill Westerlund.&#13;
Parkside's goal was scored by Tad "the terror" Ballantyne. Last&#13;
Sunday, Krimmel's crew battled Northeastern Illinois. This game saw&#13;
Parkside lose 5-3, w ith Jerry Simonsen getting all three goals for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
This year's squad, which is made up of 80 perc ent freshmen, will get&#13;
another chance for revenge when they again encounter Northeastern&#13;
this Sunday at the Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
In my last column, I said that this year's hockey club will face an&#13;
"easy" schedule; for some reason, the word "not" did not appear&#13;
before face. Sorry guys!&#13;
BONANZA'S FEAST!&#13;
8I0HT 'n c*&#13;
m by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
One of the first questions the average&#13;
stereo customer asks when he or she&#13;
looks at a receiver is, "How many watts&#13;
output does it have?"&#13;
It seems that the powerful receiver&#13;
has become the "in thing" just like the&#13;
high horsepower car was a few years&#13;
ago.&#13;
But the shady used car dealer who has&#13;
been the subject of many a joke appears&#13;
like a saint when you compare his antics&#13;
with those of the audio industry.&#13;
Let me show you how the power&#13;
ratings on hi-fi equipment can be&#13;
misleading:&#13;
10 WATTS CAN BE THE&#13;
EQUIVALENT OF 300 WATTS!&#13;
(It all depends on the standard of&#13;
measurement.)&#13;
Each Channel Measurement&#13;
300 Watts IPP Peak Power&#13;
100' Watts El A Peak Power&#13;
40 Watts IHF - 1 db&#13;
33 Watts IHF&#13;
22 Watts RMS with one channel&#13;
driven&#13;
18 Watts RMS with both channels&#13;
driven&#13;
12 Watts RMS with one channel&#13;
driven ZO ZOKHZ&#13;
10 Watts RMS with both channels&#13;
driven ZO ZOKHZ&#13;
You've heard the old cliche, "figures&#13;
don't lie but liars can figure." So you can&#13;
see that to make sure you get your&#13;
money's worth when buying stereo&#13;
equipment, deal with those who know&#13;
audio equipment.&#13;
We've got some records and posters&#13;
we're giving away this week (as long as&#13;
supply lasts)-no catch, nothing to buy.&#13;
We just want you to visit our store; and&#13;
while you're here, have a Coke (also on&#13;
us) and listen to a quad demonstration.&#13;
SPEAKING OF RECORDS, THE TOP&#13;
10 ALBUMS THIS WEEK ARE GOING&#13;
FOR $3.79, 8-TRACK TAPES FOR $4 99,&#13;
AND TOP 40 SINGLES FOR 79c.&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo - TV&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
Records - Tapes&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily'til 9 Sat. &amp; Sun'til 6&#13;
Buy 1st&#13;
at R eg. Price&#13;
offer ends Dec. 2, 1973.&#13;
Get 2 nd Half P rice&#13;
wi th coupon&#13;
&amp; your Parkside I.D.&#13;
^•COUPONMi&#13;
Rib Eye Steak Dinner&#13;
•Juicy &amp; tender, broiled to order&#13;
•Hot T exas T oast&#13;
•Fluffy, buttery b aked p otato&#13;
b«,.Ma.Re8.Pric.*t,iS,"',lSr:KSS&#13;
I^F G your Parkside, D&#13;
j315 52nd S t. K enosha, W is. • Phone 652- 86^" ™</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64414">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Is mass transit in Parkside's future?</text>
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              <text>Regent Lavine&#13;
to visit UW-P PSGA meets&#13;
"Neophyte " case&#13;
still unresolved&#13;
Regent John M. Lavine of&#13;
Chippewa Falls has announced&#13;
that he will visit Parkside on the&#13;
afternoon of December 5 as part&#13;
of his continuing effort to visit all&#13;
campuses of the University in a&#13;
two-year cycle.&#13;
These visits are a response to&#13;
the feeling on the part of&#13;
students, faculty, and administration&#13;
that they do not&#13;
have a chance to meet and express&#13;
their views directly to&#13;
members of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Board of Regents.&#13;
Believing that there should be&#13;
this access, and believing that he&#13;
will learn from ideas expressed&#13;
at Parkside, Regent Lavine says&#13;
he wants to solicit "ideas, concerns,&#13;
and solutions about the&#13;
problems in higher education&#13;
that are facing all of us."&#13;
At 32, Lavine is the youngest&#13;
member of the Board of Regents.&#13;
He is also the publisher of three&#13;
Wisconsin daily newspapers at&#13;
Chippewa Falls, Portage, and&#13;
Baraboo.&#13;
When he comes to Parkside on&#13;
Wednesday, December 5, thenewspaper&#13;
man-Regent will hold&#13;
"an informal news conference in&#13;
reverse" from 1:30to 3:30 p.m. in&#13;
room D-185 of the Library-&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
"By a news conference in&#13;
reverse," Lavine said, "I mean&#13;
that instead of me as a newsman&#13;
John M. Lavine&#13;
asking the questions, I would like&#13;
the members of the Parkside&#13;
community to ask me questions,&#13;
to tell me about their concerns, or&#13;
to offer their solutions to the&#13;
problems in education that are&#13;
facing all of us."&#13;
Lavine said that this rap&#13;
session will be informal and&#13;
unofficial."I am not coming to&#13;
Parkside as a representative of&#13;
the Board of Regents," Lavine&#13;
said, "nor will I say that I will&#13;
support or not support the views&#13;
that are put forth at these&#13;
sessions. I just want to gain an&#13;
understanding of what the broad&#13;
concerns are in our universities,&#13;
and learn what ideas for changes&#13;
in Regent policy various members&#13;
of the university community&#13;
are willing to share with me."&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The newly elected Parkside&#13;
Student Government Association&#13;
(PSGA) met as a whole for the&#13;
first time Sunday night and&#13;
discussed the contested seat of&#13;
395-46-2590 (Normal Neophyte)&#13;
and the placing of senators on&#13;
PSGA committees. Absent from&#13;
the meeting were senators Tom&#13;
Jones and Pat McDivitt.&#13;
The allegation that Neophyte is&#13;
"fraudulently misrepresenting"&#13;
the student body by not running&#13;
under his legal name is being&#13;
brought on by some unknown&#13;
person or persons.&#13;
Tom Jennett, PSGA President,&#13;
opened the meeting with a&#13;
statement that the rights of the&#13;
students must be protected, that&#13;
PSGA cannot condone illegal&#13;
acts, and the laws which have&#13;
been set up by state and federal&#13;
governments must be obeyed.&#13;
Chuck Perroni, PSGA Vice&#13;
President, reiterated the charge&#13;
of "fraudulent misrepresentation"&#13;
and said that according to&#13;
state statutes candidates must&#13;
list both first and last names on&#13;
the ballot.&#13;
Kay Sweeney, a senator, said&#13;
that more serious allegations&#13;
than the Neophyte situation have&#13;
come up concerning the legality&#13;
of the elections, such as coaching&#13;
at the ballot boxes and the like.&#13;
Perroni said that in a meeting&#13;
he and Jennett had with Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Assistant Dean of&#13;
Students, and Allen Dearborn,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor, it was&#13;
decided that it was illegal to seat&#13;
Normal Neophyte and "if he is&#13;
seated PSGA is not legal, it won't&#13;
be recognized or be eligible for&#13;
money from the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee."&#13;
With the support of about six&#13;
senators Neophyte read a portion&#13;
of a prepared statement saying&#13;
that "My student identification&#13;
number fulfills the first basic&#13;
requirement of article three of&#13;
the Parkside constitution. In&#13;
order to run for the post of&#13;
senator you must be a Parkside&#13;
student."&#13;
Neophyte went on to say that&#13;
"according to the admissions&#13;
office 'no one can register&#13;
without a number or can be&#13;
considered unless he has a&#13;
student identification number.' I&#13;
also asked if the student ID&#13;
number and and a student's&#13;
name were interchangeable and&#13;
the reply was yes." In talking to&#13;
Philip Coltart, Assistant Director&#13;
of Admissions, and Dave Vogt of&#13;
Facilities Management,&#13;
Neophyte was told that "The&#13;
identification number identifies&#13;
him from the rest of the&#13;
students" as a name does not&#13;
necessarily do. "I have run for&#13;
office under a number that will&#13;
prove beyond a doubt who I am.&#13;
This I feel cannot be contested. I&#13;
won my seat fair and square."&#13;
Neophyte closed his statement&#13;
by asking if all senators must&#13;
then "be 30 years of age, are we&#13;
to ban out of state students from&#13;
holding office or from voting&#13;
because of the residency&#13;
requirements?"&#13;
Senator Jim Smith accused&#13;
Neophyte of "insulting me and&#13;
my intelligence as well as the&#13;
constituency. I th ink it's a stupid&#13;
joke," he said, and he moved that&#13;
there be an immediate suspencontinued&#13;
on page 3&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1973 Vol. 11 No . 14&#13;
Student ext inquished bathroom blaze&#13;
Mark Dalpaos entered the men's washroom by the concourse in&#13;
Greenquist at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 27. To his surprise, a fire was&#13;
blazing vigorously in an overflowing garbage can.&#13;
Dalpaos quickly proceeded to throw water on the fire by using copies&#13;
of the RANGER as a scoop. It took the Kenosha freshman five minutes&#13;
until it was thoroughly extinguished.&#13;
Is mass transit in Parkside's future?&#13;
Editor's Note: This is the third&#13;
in a three part series on the&#13;
energy crisis and its effects at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Commuting to the Parkside&#13;
campus is via auto or bus. Car&#13;
pools consist mainly of lone&#13;
drivers, rather than accompanying&#13;
riders. Mass&#13;
transportation between Racine&#13;
and the university is a renovated&#13;
blue and white Jelco bus.&#13;
Over 50 percent of the student&#13;
body would have access to&#13;
developed mass transportation&#13;
from Racine. Yet today, only&#13;
about 100 riders take advantage&#13;
of the bus operated by the Vets'&#13;
Club.&#13;
John DeLaO, a student and&#13;
member of the Vets', said that&#13;
those who do ride did so simply&#13;
because they had no other means&#13;
of getting here.&#13;
"Our objective is to inconvenience&#13;
the fewest number&#13;
of people possible," contended&#13;
DeLaO. "It's hard to assume this&#13;
though, without a sufficient&#13;
number of buses running."&#13;
Schedules, operated Monday&#13;
through Friday from 7 a.m. to&#13;
5:30 p.m., tri-sect Racine on 45-&#13;
minute runs. The route is set up&#13;
to correspond with main campus&#13;
classes and to connect with the&#13;
inter-campus Kenosha shuttle.&#13;
Inadequacies in this rather&#13;
rigid system occur from lack of&#13;
funds. Self-sustaining fees, from&#13;
which the Vets' Club derives&#13;
nothing, go almost entirely for&#13;
operating expenses.&#13;
Other than semester passes,&#13;
costing $45, the Vets' have been&#13;
successful in raising money&#13;
through dances. Unfortunately, a&#13;
recycling campaign, hoped to&#13;
have been established by spring,&#13;
was dealt a temporary blow by&#13;
the recently ill-supported paper&#13;
drive.&#13;
General purpose revenue,&#13;
allocated by the state legislature&#13;
for exclusive educational needs,&#13;
was used for transportation when&#13;
the Racine Extention was in&#13;
existence. But since the&#13;
"satellite" campus is shut down&#13;
now, the present Racine bus&#13;
service is considered a personal&#13;
expense.&#13;
While lack of funds is the obvious&#13;
reason why Parkside hasn't&#13;
obtained a true mass transit&#13;
system, it isn't totally to blame.&#13;
Lack of ridership also has hindered&#13;
the university's position to&#13;
bid for either a city-operated bus&#13;
or subsidized lease.&#13;
When Wisconsin Coach lines&#13;
ended their service to Parkside&#13;
over a year ago, Jack Taylor,&#13;
owner and operator of Flash City&#13;
Transit, was approached by&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, assistant&#13;
dean of students, in regard to a&#13;
possible city line to be run out&#13;
here.&#13;
Taylor offered a continuous&#13;
daily route to Parkside, provided&#13;
the university guarantees 200&#13;
riders, or a profit margin of 7&#13;
percent, at $10 an hour. The&#13;
university was unable to do so.&#13;
From time schedules to the&#13;
question of subsidy to low&#13;
ridership, it appears that the&#13;
administration has struck at&#13;
each, and is about to be out.&#13;
However, Parkside could well be&#13;
headed for a brand-new ball&#13;
game, due to the fuel shortage&#13;
and the successful emergence of&#13;
mass transportation on two&#13;
Wisconsin University campuses.&#13;
Allen Dearborn, assistant&#13;
chancellor, said, "The precedent&#13;
has been set by Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee in4 obtaining stateexpanded&#13;
dollars for university&#13;
mass transit systems."&#13;
Earlier this year, UWM ran a&#13;
budgeted item through a joint&#13;
finance committee in Madison,&#13;
asking for funds to ease parking&#13;
congestion on its urban campus.&#13;
A motion to delete the cost was&#13;
defeated. Thus the Wisconsin&#13;
State Legislature set aside approximately&#13;
$100,000 for the 1973-&#13;
74 budget year and $200,000 for&#13;
the 1974-75 period for the purpose&#13;
of experimentation in creating&#13;
competitive public transportation&#13;
alternatives to the&#13;
automobile.&#13;
The UBUS route, contracted&#13;
with Milwaukee and Suburban&#13;
Transportation Co., is currently a&#13;
free crosstown bus service to&#13;
campus. The service has&#13;
stabilized parking on a campus of&#13;
approximately 7,250 cars, with&#13;
university accommodations for&#13;
only 2,000 cars.&#13;
"We would like to follow up&#13;
behind Milwaukee in applying for&#13;
state funds, providing bus&#13;
transportation to students who&#13;
don't have transportation&#13;
available for them to Parkside,"&#13;
stated Dearborn. "We would also&#13;
point out its ecological advantages."&#13;
Burt Wagner, a UW attorney&#13;
who has supported the appropriations&#13;
of state taxes for&#13;
university transportation, said&#13;
that Parkside had to estimate the&#13;
cost of an efficient transit&#13;
system, build it into its bi-annual&#13;
budget, and justify the need of the&#13;
service.&#13;
"The time is now to push it&#13;
through the legislature," contended&#13;
Wagner.&#13;
Echelbarger, who for the past&#13;
several years has searched and&#13;
researched, trying to find some&#13;
niche in the university budget&#13;
pertaining to mass transportation,&#13;
believes that before&#13;
Parkside can appeal to the state&#13;
for revenue, there must be some&#13;
common understanding with the&#13;
city of Racine regarding the&#13;
operation of a bus system.&#13;
The Racine Mass Transportation&#13;
Technical Coordinating&#13;
Advisory Committee, a&#13;
recently established task force&#13;
with Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Regional Planning looking into&#13;
transportation needs and&#13;
necessities, Echelbarger called&#13;
"a step in the right direction."&#13;
"I would hope that the project's&#13;
coordinator with city planning,&#13;
Richard Linsmeier, would also&#13;
provide a link of communication&#13;
between Parkside and the city of&#13;
Racine," she commented.&#13;
Chairperson of this committee,&#13;
William Murin, refused to go a&#13;
step further and imply that&#13;
Parkside might derive something&#13;
specific from the group's findings.&#13;
"Rather than drawing sides&#13;
concerning which places should&#13;
receive a transit system over&#13;
another, we are trying to keep a&#13;
universal kind of scope in mind,"&#13;
he stated.&#13;
Concerning the fuel shortage,&#13;
Murin, assistant professor of&#13;
political science here, said that if&#13;
severe gasoline rationing were to&#13;
occur Parkside would virtually&#13;
have to close, due to the large&#13;
percentage of individual motor&#13;
vehicle drivers.&#13;
Manager of the Jelco Bus&#13;
Company in Kenosha, Paul&#13;
Stiles, said that at this point his&#13;
company did not anticipate any&#13;
difficulty in obtaining gasoline&#13;
from their Standard Oil supplier.&#13;
Although asked to cut back by 15&#13;
percent of the gasoline consumed&#13;
last year, Stiles stated that the&#13;
Jelco bus operated by the Vets'&#13;
Club would not be affected.&#13;
Concluding with the national&#13;
energy crisis and how it affects&#13;
Parkside, Dearborn said, "I&#13;
think we are all willing to face up&#13;
to the energy crisis...but I hope&#13;
the horizon is in sight."&#13;
CORRECTION: In last week's&#13;
article on teaching excellence a&#13;
statement was made that some&#13;
faculty members ^ were terminated&#13;
due to "phasing out of&#13;
certain disciplines, such as&#13;
foreign languages." This was not&#13;
correct. Cutbacks of faculty in&#13;
foreign languages are a result of&#13;
lower enrollments and apparently&#13;
no plans exist at this&#13;
time to phase out the majors,&#13;
contrary to what RANGER was&#13;
originally told.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1973&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Who's&#13;
misleading&#13;
who ?&#13;
We get letters&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
All letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confined&#13;
to 300 words or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Nov. 28th issue of the&#13;
RANGER contained an article&#13;
stating that SCAFE (Student&#13;
Course and Faculty Evaluation)&#13;
"results are confidential and&#13;
seen only by the individual&#13;
faculty member and the&#13;
Executive Committee at the time&#13;
of his or her review." In the&#13;
Management Science and Labor&#13;
Economics Divisions of the&#13;
School of Modern Industry these&#13;
results have been available to&#13;
students for the past year and a&#13;
half. They are at the advisor's&#13;
table in Main Place during&#13;
registration and in the dean's&#13;
office (356 Classroom Building)&#13;
at other times. Syllabi for most&#13;
courses in these divisions are also&#13;
available.&#13;
We are interested in students&#13;
receiving maximum information&#13;
concerning our courses and we&#13;
encourage students to utilize the&#13;
information that is available.&#13;
Management Science Faculty&#13;
A very disturbing situation has arisen after the&#13;
publication last week of a commentary on teaching&#13;
excellence. One of the letters to the editor begins "The&#13;
valid subject matter...is marred by inhumerable&#13;
misconceptions, half-truths and errors."&#13;
What is most disturbing is that it is impossible for us&#13;
to determine for sure the truth of the situation. The&#13;
"misconceptions, half-truths and errors," which have&#13;
given rise to doubts about the credibility of a very important&#13;
piece of writing, were information given us by&#13;
faculty members. Now other faculty members question&#13;
the veracity of this information, one of our identified&#13;
sources screams misquote, and the word from the&#13;
Humanities Division chairperson is that people won't&#13;
want to talk to us again. He added that he didn't quite&#13;
know what to say himself because he doesn't know what&#13;
we're going to print!&#13;
To Mr. Johnson and anyone else we have ever talked&#13;
to or may ever wish to talk to in the future: We will print&#13;
what you say, and for your sake as well as for the sake of&#13;
our readers, please say what you mean because&#13;
RANGER reporters are not mind readers.&#13;
Johnson explains the dichotomy in opinions by "too&#13;
many people speaking for the Division." We feel that the&#13;
more people we talk to the more complete and balanced&#13;
a picture we get. Representatives from all ranksdivision&#13;
heads, members of an executive committee&#13;
which makes the review decisions, and terminated and&#13;
non-terminated faculty-were interviewed in the interests&#13;
of getting as much information and as many&#13;
diverse perceptions as possible. The result, unfortunately,&#13;
was chaos, allegations of irresponsible&#13;
reporting, and ultimately dispersions on the credibility&#13;
not only of this newspaper but of a number of faculty at&#13;
this institution.&#13;
It is no secret that much of the university power&#13;
resides with the faculty. It is sad that when they are&#13;
making noises to usurp on paper that which they may&#13;
well already have taken from students in practiceteaching&#13;
evaluation and its relevance in review-some&#13;
apparently fear to be completely honest about it. The&#13;
fact that they did not get their stories together will not&#13;
allow them now to make the reporter their scapegoat.&#13;
We know it is quite common for newspapers to get&#13;
critical feedback on articles, including frequent accusations&#13;
of m isquoting. It is well known to journalists&#13;
that people have trouble accepting how their words look&#13;
in print, but that does not necessarily mean those&#13;
weren't one's words or that they were taken out of&#13;
context.&#13;
RANGER welcomes letters, both positive and&#13;
negative, and has never failed to print such responses,&#13;
but we are concerned about the vehemence in this instance,&#13;
for it is indicative of up-tight faculty who would&#13;
close down communication by their unsubstantiated&#13;
allegations rather than consider the possibility that we&#13;
were mislead by their colleagues. Or were we?&#13;
RAIMGER&#13;
EDITOR -IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHIC COORDINATOR: DAvid&#13;
Daniels&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Stephen Gifford,&#13;
Barbara Hanson, Harvey Hedden, Gary&#13;
Jensen, Michael Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert,&#13;
John Sorenson, Steve Stapanian, Carrie&#13;
Ward, Tom DeFouw, Neal Sautner&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Brian Ross, Jim&#13;
Ruffolo&#13;
CARTOONISTS: Amy Cundari, Gary Huck,&#13;
Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT: Terri Gelenian, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence,&#13;
Jim Magruder, Amy Cundari&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
When printing articles on&#13;
matters of academic policy your&#13;
paper would do well to research&#13;
certain statements before accepting&#13;
them as truth and then&#13;
communicating them to a&#13;
readership which usually admits&#13;
them as gospel. I refer&#13;
specifically to the feature story&#13;
on the Nov. 28 issue, "Teaching&#13;
Excellence-Who Defines It?" In&#13;
the continuation of this article, on&#13;
p. 3, you speak of "the phasing&#13;
out of c ertain disciplines, such as&#13;
foreign languages." Error!&#13;
Parkside currently offers majors&#13;
in three foreign languages:&#13;
French, German and Spanish. As&#13;
of this writing not a one of these&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The valid subject matter of&#13;
your Nov. 28 commentary,&#13;
"Teaching Excellence-Who&#13;
Defines It?" by Debra Friedell, is&#13;
marred by innumerable&#13;
misconceptions, half-truths and&#13;
errors.&#13;
Let me, however, respond to&#13;
just one comment in the article&#13;
by indicating that "the phasing&#13;
out of certain disciplines, such as&#13;
foreign languages" is NOT in the&#13;
Editor's note: In response to&#13;
the letters from Richard&#13;
Teschner and Detief Schied&#13;
RANGER wishes to suggest that&#13;
these faculty members check&#13;
with colleagues in their division&#13;
as to what we were told before&#13;
accusing us of making the errors.&#13;
In preparation for the article Ms.&#13;
Friedell spoke with 14 p ersons in&#13;
the Humanities Division alone&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
I agree with you that students&#13;
should objectively rate teachers&#13;
and that these evaluations should&#13;
be given more consideration than&#13;
they now are-in theory. In&#13;
practice, however, there is a&#13;
quite valid reason for not giving&#13;
them much value. If students&#13;
knew that a set of bad evaluations&#13;
could help get rid of a teacher,&#13;
they would not be rating on the&#13;
basis of quality of t eaching. Their&#13;
rating would instead be reflecting&#13;
whether or not they want the&#13;
teacher around next year, which&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I suppose it is inevitable in a&#13;
hurried interview that something&#13;
gets quoted inaccurately and&#13;
misunderstood. I did not say that&#13;
"the only way to measure effectiveness&#13;
is by the scholarly&#13;
work." I said that scholarship&#13;
should be considered one of the&#13;
has been selected for "phasing&#13;
out." What you might have&#13;
meant to say (and certainly&#13;
should have written) is that all&#13;
three foreign language&#13;
disciplines have experienced&#13;
staff cuts over the past several&#13;
years; thus Spanish, which&#13;
formerly employed six full-time&#13;
instructors, now has just five and&#13;
will have only four next fall. But a&#13;
staff cut is hardly tantamount to&#13;
a termination of a major&#13;
program, as you surely ought to&#13;
know. In similar fashion, the&#13;
abolishment of a major would not&#13;
necessarily entail the "phasing&#13;
out" of t he discipline that offered&#13;
it; some courses would continue&#13;
offing.&#13;
Your assertion that the termination&#13;
of faculty was explained&#13;
in this manner is, I&#13;
believe, erroneous. University&#13;
and, consequently, divisional&#13;
budget cuts were the primary&#13;
reasons for the nonrenewal of&#13;
personnel.&#13;
It seems that responsible&#13;
journalism requires every effort&#13;
on the part of the reporter to&#13;
check and recheck his-her&#13;
and four more in other divisions.&#13;
FriedelPs notes&#13;
of t he interviews substantiate the&#13;
comments made in the article.&#13;
We are sorry if errors were made&#13;
but every effort was made to get&#13;
the truth from those people we&#13;
talked with, and we cannot be&#13;
responsible if they said one thing&#13;
and "meant" something different.&#13;
would probably depend on how&#13;
little work had been assigned and&#13;
how easy the tests had been.&#13;
This happens now, anyway.&#13;
Students who don't attend class&#13;
or do the assigned readings&#13;
usually get D's and F's. They&#13;
may perceive this as a personal&#13;
attack and "get their revenge"&#13;
on the evaluations. If the&#13;
evaluations were given greater&#13;
weight, this effect would be even&#13;
more pronounced. The students&#13;
(some of them) might even hold&#13;
the teacher for ransom for a good&#13;
grade, threatening to get the&#13;
factors m measuring teaching&#13;
effectiveness, whether it is put&#13;
first, middle, or last on the list I&#13;
did not say "it should be the only&#13;
category for reward." I said that&#13;
the main category should be&#13;
Teach,ng Effectiveness." but&#13;
that scholarship should be under&#13;
that heading. And I took great&#13;
to be taught in the particular area&#13;
provided that enrollment so&#13;
justified.&#13;
The next time you write about&#13;
Academe you would do well to&#13;
consult with an academician. It is&#13;
not the charge of a student&#13;
newspaper to print the sort of&#13;
misinformation which is almost&#13;
calculated to give students wrong&#13;
ideas about the True Facts, and&#13;
to send them panting into our&#13;
classrooms, in high states of&#13;
dudgeon, all a-flurry over how&#13;
their majors are about to be&#13;
abolished and their degrees invalidated&#13;
in advance of receipt.&#13;
Richard V. Teschner&#13;
Asst. Professor, Spanish&#13;
material, its foundations and its&#13;
contentions. A check with the&#13;
German discipline would have&#13;
disclosed that more than 40&#13;
majors are currently enrolled in&#13;
that language. This total&#13;
represents the highest number&#13;
ever attained in the program and&#13;
hardly seems cause for your&#13;
"phase out."&#13;
Detief Schied&#13;
Coordinator, German&#13;
A check with the Humanities&#13;
Division indicates that, contrary&#13;
to Schied's figures, 36 students&#13;
have declared a major in German.&#13;
Terminations of faculty in&#13;
all three foreign languages are,&#13;
according to Humanities&#13;
chairperson Orpheus Johnson,&#13;
due to lower enrollment in these&#13;
areas.&#13;
teacher fired by giving a bad&#13;
evaluation if she or he doesn't.&#13;
I agree that students should&#13;
have a voice in evaluation of&#13;
faculty, but paper-and-pencil&#13;
forms will always be vulnerable&#13;
to bias (there are volumes of&#13;
psychological evidence to support&#13;
this). Someone needs to&#13;
think of another way to elicit&#13;
relatively objective student&#13;
evaluations.&#13;
An undergraduate Psychology&#13;
major at UW-Milwaukee&#13;
(Name withheld upon request)&#13;
pains to emphasize that some-- a&#13;
few - die upon getting the Ph. D.,&#13;
and that scholarship is one spur&#13;
to continue research and study.&#13;
Thank you for printing this&#13;
correction.&#13;
Henry Kozicki&#13;
Assistant Professor, English&#13;
More&#13;
letters&#13;
continued from page 2&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Thursday, Nov. 29, a group&#13;
of Parkside students interested in&#13;
starting a school for children met&#13;
under the auspices of the&#13;
Women's Caucus. Although we&#13;
had a relatively small turnout,&#13;
those who did come decided to&#13;
forge ahead and begin working.&#13;
The philosophy of the "New&#13;
School" and the first steps to be&#13;
taken were discussed, and the&#13;
people attending that first&#13;
meeting made plans to begin&#13;
incorporation procedures, search&#13;
for a space to put the school, and&#13;
start collecting sources of&#13;
materials.&#13;
Our major problem now is&#13;
getting a few more people involved.&#13;
If anyone is interested in&#13;
helping, in sending their children,&#13;
or in just finding out more about&#13;
what we're doing, please attend&#13;
the next meeting, Thursday, Dec.&#13;
13 at 7:30 p.m. in D-173, next to&#13;
the Library Learning Center; or&#13;
call me at 639-2728.&#13;
Pamela Cook&#13;
Racine Freshman&#13;
Classified&#13;
ALL KINDS OF TYPING. Call Nancy, 632&#13;
2667.&#13;
WILL TYPE term papers. Call 634-6365.&#13;
TYPING: Done on IBM electric. Call Pat&#13;
at 654-0030, after 5.&#13;
NEED ANY typing done? Call Ginny at 637-&#13;
7796. • • , -&#13;
SILVER-STRIPED racoon fur coat.&#13;
Excellent condition. Like new. Size 12-16.&#13;
Best offer. Call 634-3551. 5322 Wright Avenue,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mustang Advertising is looking for&#13;
dependable salesmen to solicit ads for a desk&#13;
pad to be distributed at UW-P The salesman&#13;
will receive a commission on gross sales. If&#13;
interested contact Ken Pestka, LLC D-194&#13;
for information.&#13;
APARTMENT to sublet: Wanted single girl,&#13;
need not be student. Two roommates in&#13;
Parkside village, Call 552-8317.&#13;
RIDERS WANTED to share gas and ex&#13;
penses to Arizona, '73 van leaving between&#13;
12-17 and 12-21. Phone: 694-0171.&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
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by JaneSchllrsman&#13;
Who runs RANGER? There have been some questions raised lately&#13;
about "advisors" so I thought it might be a good idea to explain our&#13;
definition of a student newspaper.&#13;
The entire content of every RANGER is researched, written (with&#13;
the exception of press releases), edited and layed out by Parkside&#13;
students. No faculty, staff, or administrative personnel see the articles&#13;
prior to publication. While this occasionally results in persons&#13;
crying "misquote" it is obviously the best and most nearly objective&#13;
way to operate. Faculty, staff and administrators have their biases.&#13;
This is not to say students don't also, but students on a newspaper have&#13;
a journalistic responsibility to keep their opinions on the editorial page&#13;
only, as much as humanly possible, and I think the staff of this year's&#13;
paper is bearing that responsibility well.&#13;
With regard to misquotes it inevitably comes down to one person's&#13;
word versus another's, and only one of those people was taking&#13;
notes. As soon as RANGER'S budget can afford it I want to purchase a&#13;
tape recorder .which should reduce the already low incidence of such&#13;
accusations (barring technical difficulties - we don't have a&#13;
Rosemary Woods). We have on occasion borrowed one from the&#13;
Learning Center and find that it tends to inhibit people somewhat, but&#13;
it looks like the only alternative to one on one conflict in print. The&#13;
quotes may be drier and more ambiguous, but the reporters will just&#13;
have to work that much harder in the interview to clarify things!&#13;
Getting back to advisors, there is a RANGER Advisory Board, the&#13;
function of which is to choose the editor-in-chief from among all applicants,&#13;
approve the selection of sub-editors, and advise in legal&#13;
matters. The Board also from time to time may make suggestions to&#13;
the students running the paper (which are followed only at the&#13;
discretion of these students) and deal with any other matters the&#13;
editor or business manager or perhaps a Board member may bring&#13;
up. But, I reiterate, neither this Board or anyone on it or anyone else&#13;
exercises any control over the editors.&#13;
The Board is composed of three faculty, three staff, and six&#13;
students. Sheldon Harsel, Andy McLean and Peter Martin compose&#13;
the faculty contingent ; staff representatives are Walt Shirer and Don&#13;
Kopriva from Public Information and Dewey Neuendorf of the&#13;
Business Office. There are presently two student openings; the&#13;
remaining student positions are held by Geoff Blaesing (who chairs&#13;
the Board), Kenneth Konkol, Kenneth Pestka (RANGER business&#13;
manager) and Kathryn Wellner.&#13;
Students interested in serving on the Board (and interest is the only&#13;
qualification) are asked to send their name, address, phone number&#13;
and class rank to Blaesing, c-o RANGER, LLC D194. A paragraph on&#13;
why you are applying would also be helpful. From among these applicants&#13;
two students will be picked at the next meeting to fill the&#13;
present vacancies. The Board meets next the second week of spring&#13;
semester, and approximately once a month thereafter.&#13;
JOHN W. MERRICK, D.V.M.&#13;
announces the association of&#13;
JOHN WENTLAND, D.V.M.&#13;
and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
Villa C apri S hopping C enter&#13;
North 2 2nd A ve. ( Ohio S t.) R acine&#13;
552-9122 Day and Evening Hours by Appointment&#13;
Models also open weekdays 1 to 8&#13;
Or by personal showing at your convenience&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE 1-552-9339&#13;
PARKSIDE REALTY INC.&#13;
Developed and Built by U S Genetal, Inc.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
PSGA&#13;
continued from page 1&#13;
sion of debate.&#13;
However, senator Mike Hahner&#13;
brought up a Wis. court case,&#13;
Dithmar vs. Bunnell, in which he&#13;
claimed a precedent had been&#13;
set; however, Perroni interrupted&#13;
along with senators Rich Karls&#13;
and Bruce Volpintesta, saying&#13;
that PSGA was not the place for&#13;
making legal judgements.&#13;
Perroni told Neophyte that "if we&#13;
seat you the Administration will&#13;
not recognize Student Government."&#13;
After much debate over what&#13;
student government could or&#13;
could not do the senate decided&#13;
they could allow both sides to&#13;
present their cases at next&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Neophyte charged that private&#13;
meetings were held and decisions&#13;
had already been made by&#13;
Jennett, Perroni and the Administration.&#13;
The seat was declared open by&#13;
the senate despite the fact that&#13;
the constitution gives them no&#13;
power to do so.&#13;
In other business, the senate&#13;
decided to seat both Harvey&#13;
Hedden and Albert Quinn, who&#13;
tied for the 17th senatorial spot,&#13;
until the Neophyte matter is&#13;
cleared up.&#13;
The senate also named people&#13;
to PSGA committees.They are:&#13;
Finance Committee: Jennett,&#13;
Treasurer Mary Clare Werve,&#13;
and senators Albert Quinn and&#13;
Harvey Hedden; Public Information&#13;
Committee: Senators&#13;
Kay Sweeney, Rich Karls, and&#13;
Hayes Norman; Grievance and&#13;
Clearing House Committee;&#13;
Senators Kurt Mueller, Tom&#13;
Petersen, and Mike Hahner;&#13;
Academe Policies Committee;&#13;
Kay Sweeney (senator and&#13;
chairperson), senator Jim Smith,&#13;
and Treasurer Mary Clare&#13;
Werve. Arbitration Committee;&#13;
Senators Kurt Mueller, Harvey&#13;
Hedden, Mike Hahner, Darryl&#13;
Doss, and Bruce Volpintesta.&#13;
The final matter brought up by&#13;
Jennett was the motion to request&#13;
a $300 emergency fund from the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee to&#13;
hire a work study student as&#13;
PSGA secretary. The motion was&#13;
passed and the next meeting was&#13;
set for 6 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 10.&#13;
Fourt h CLIO l ectur e to feature Jqnsl t y&#13;
Rollin Jansky, Associate Professor of Art, will speak on "Current&#13;
Technology in Sculptural Expression," Tuesday, Dec. 11. The lecturedemonstration&#13;
will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Communications Art&#13;
Building, room D 155A. This is the fourth in a series of CLIO&#13;
Association lectures on "The Humanities in an Industrial Society."&#13;
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FRI . DEC. 7&#13;
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IDs Required&#13;
ADMISSION 75c&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG.&#13;
SUN. DEC. 9&#13;
7:30p.m.&#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1973&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 5: PAB movie "2001 A Space Odyssey" at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in the Comm Arts Theater, Admission is $1.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 5: Whiteskellar entertainment at 1 p.m. Free.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 5: The Adult Student Association is sponsoring a&#13;
coffee night for adult students to discuss second semester scheduling.&#13;
The coffee is from 7-10 p.m. in LLC 173.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 6: Men's swimming-Parkside vs. Whitewater.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 6: Potluck and liturgy celebration at the Newman&#13;
Center at 6 p.m.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 7: Parkside vs. St. Norbert in a hockey game at 6 p.m. at&#13;
the Kenosha ice arena.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 7: PAB movie "Fillmore" at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission is&#13;
75 cents.&#13;
Friday and Saturday, Dec. 7-8: St. Louis Basketball tournament at St.&#13;
Louis - UW-P vs. University of St. Louis.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 8: PAB dance at 9 p.m. and SAB. Admission will be&#13;
charged.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 9: UW-P vs. Illinois State in a hockey game at 6 p.m. at&#13;
the Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 9: Hockey Club sponsoring a beer party at Barney's&#13;
Boogie Bar at 8 p.m.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 9: PAB movie "Fillmore" at 7:30 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is 75 cents.&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 9: Christmas Carol Concert at 3 p.m. in the Comm Arts&#13;
Theater. Free and open to the public. Sponsored by music discipline.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 12: Whiteskellar presents acting group "STUPH"&#13;
and guitarist and singer Brian Kipp at noon. No admission charged.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
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OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
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First National Bank&#13;
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itier of fcd eui HMerve System-&#13;
' fedcai D«DOS*I Insurance Cop&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine&#13;
SIGHT'n m&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
Speakers in a hi-fi system are&#13;
somehow like the last pages of a novel.&#13;
The plot generally thickens, the parts of&#13;
the puzzle fall into place and from them&#13;
emerges the solution and the revelation&#13;
of the writer's intents. But, as some&#13;
stories, speakers do not always provide&#13;
a happy ending, sometimes leaving&#13;
questions unanswered, wishes unfulfilled.&#13;
How to Choose Speakers&#13;
The choice of speaker systems&#13;
becomes rather tricky because&#13;
manufacturers' specifications say very&#13;
little about the character of the sound.&#13;
The ideal speaker, of course, would&#13;
reproduce the "entire sound range&#13;
without arbitrarily adding or subtracting&#13;
anything, but such a speaker&#13;
has never and probably never will be&#13;
designed-all speakers have some individual&#13;
habits and idiosyncracies which&#13;
are called "coloration" or "transparency"&#13;
or other such abstract words.&#13;
When purchasing a speaker system,&#13;
the specifications should be used to&#13;
determine the general size, type and&#13;
power range, but the final choice must&#13;
be made based on comparative listening&#13;
tests. The most expensive system or the&#13;
one with the greatest number of&#13;
speakers is not necessarily the one that&#13;
will sound best to you.&#13;
For sound ideas for Christmas giving,&#13;
visit SIGHT 'N SOUND, 21st and Taylor&#13;
in Racine. From portable transistor&#13;
radios ($5,95) to a Hi-Fi Component&#13;
System costing several thousand&#13;
dollars, the audio consultants at SIGHT&#13;
'N SOUND are ready to help you.&#13;
Classical, Country, Easy Listening,&#13;
Rock, Christmas Music—they're all on 8-&#13;
track tapes for $1.99! Where? At SIGHT&#13;
'N SOUND!&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo - TV&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
Records - Tapes&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor&#13;
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634-4900&#13;
Open Daily 'til 9 Sat. &amp; Sun 'til 6&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Typists needed&#13;
Anyone interested in typing resumes and data sheets is asked to&#13;
please contact the Placement Office, Tallent 286, ext. 2452, and state&#13;
fee per page.&#13;
Intramural basketbal l scheduled&#13;
Intramural Basketball Coordinator, Jim Koch, would like to announce&#13;
that the team pairings and the game times for the Pre-Holiday&#13;
Tourney-Opening Round are available and posted in the P.E. Building.&#13;
"Managers, check the sheets and get your team ready for the&#13;
December 9 opener."&#13;
Exit at own risk!&#13;
The shuttle bus drivers have been told to announce that Jelco's insurance&#13;
company feels they're catching too many people in the rear&#13;
doors. Therefore, exiting through the rear doors of the buses is at&#13;
people's own risk.&#13;
Bus t rip to basketbal l game set&#13;
There will be a bus trip going to the Parkside vs. Whitewater&#13;
basketball game in Whitewater on December 14. The round trip bus&#13;
trip costs $2, the tickets will be reserved for $1.50. Interested persons&#13;
are asked to sign up now in the Phy Ed Building office.&#13;
Defensive driving course offered&#13;
The Department of Safety and Security is for the third time this&#13;
semester offering the National Safety Council's Defensive Driving&#13;
Course for employees who have not taken the course.&#13;
The course will be held at the Library Learning Center, Room D179,&#13;
on Saturday, December 8,1973, starting at 9:00 a.m. The course should&#13;
be completed around 3 p.m.&#13;
Please submit to this department as soon as possible the names of&#13;
those individuals that will be taking the course.&#13;
Potluck supper at Newman Center&#13;
At 6 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 6, students, staff and administration are&#13;
invited to share a potluck supper at the Newman Center to celebrate a&#13;
liturgy in anticipation of the Feast of the Immaculate Conception.&#13;
Phone 552-8626 for further information.&#13;
BurgerChef w&#13;
Reg. M4D Value •&#13;
OFFER ENDS DEC. 9&#13;
3400 Sheridan Rd. &amp; 6926 39th Ave.&#13;
"Taurus Rising"&#13;
Wed., F ri., S at., &amp; Sun.&#13;
| December 5 . 7. a, VI&#13;
2i Kenosh id o's Newest Nitespot&#13;
National (formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbay R oad&#13;
Perroni&#13;
chosen&#13;
to go&#13;
to NCCU&#13;
A Parkside student has been&#13;
selected to participate in the&#13;
North-South Student Exchange&#13;
Program, an opportunity which&#13;
will send him to North Carolina&#13;
Central University (NCCU) in&#13;
Durham, North Carolina, for the&#13;
coming spring semester (1974).&#13;
That student is Charles&#13;
Perroni, a 21 year-old history&#13;
major of sophomore standing.&#13;
The purpose of the program, as&#13;
stated in a fact sheet provided by&#13;
Student Services, is to "broaden&#13;
horizons in human relations,&#13;
academic programs, and career&#13;
preparation while attending a&#13;
black university for one&#13;
semester."&#13;
Perroni was elected to the&#13;
positions of vice-president and&#13;
student member of Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee in the&#13;
Student Government elections&#13;
held two weeks ago. When asked&#13;
about the conflict this would&#13;
present, since he will be in North&#13;
Carolina next semester, Perroni&#13;
replied, "No comment."&#13;
Phone 654-0485&#13;
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Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Life in the bottle&#13;
leads to future on the rocks&#13;
Editor's Note: The following article is the third in&#13;
a series of stories dealing with members of groups&#13;
who are usually ignored or shunned by society. The&#13;
first article was on an American Indian, the second&#13;
about a handicapped student, and this week's story&#13;
is that of an alcoholic as told to RANGER feature&#13;
editor Debra Friedell.&#13;
The hardest thing was admitting I was an&#13;
alcoholic and really believing and accepting it.&#13;
I started drinking when I'd get upset or tense,&#13;
reasons like that. Soon I didn't need a reason but I&#13;
contrived all sorts of rationalizations on why I&#13;
should continue drinking. I had this big thing&#13;
against society and blamed it for my problems. It&#13;
made me feel like a martyr, a victim, and somehow&#13;
I liked that feeling. I guess I liked it because it was a&#13;
reason to keep drinking without feeling any guilt or&#13;
shame. I liked to suffer. I wallowed in my misery.&#13;
None of my reasons make much sense to me&#13;
anymore.&#13;
One Friday morning last spring I came to school&#13;
without drinking in the morning. I had that habit for&#13;
about a year. I always shook badly but that particular&#13;
morning it was so bad I thought sure I would&#13;
explode. Before giving myself a chance to suffer the&#13;
DTs (delirium tremens) I left school. I had to drink.&#13;
I was afraid not to. I finally realized that liquor was&#13;
no longer just a craving but something to which I&#13;
was physically addicted.&#13;
With the help and advice of a Parkside counselor I&#13;
entered the A-Center (Addiction Center) in Racine&#13;
the next week and spent over a month there. I&#13;
somewhere without alcohol, or the bars closing&#13;
before I've had enough, or sitting in class or at work&#13;
with that desperate craving. In that light I am truly&#13;
free. It haunts me to think that I can never ever&#13;
have another drink, so I try to live each day as it&#13;
comes, knowing that I can make it through today&#13;
without one.&#13;
I used to be with people who would compete over&#13;
who had the longest blackout. My memory was&#13;
shot; often I could remember only tiny details of the&#13;
previous day and rarely could I remember events of&#13;
the previous week. I can't associate with some of&#13;
the people I used to if I want to stay sober. Some&#13;
people would like to see me degenerate to ease some&#13;
of their own pain.&#13;
Drinking was a real occupation for me. I spent all&#13;
my time thinking about my next drink, drinking,&#13;
and hiding it from my family and friends. I don't&#13;
If I ev er take a drink again it will be a&#13;
symbolic attempt at suicide, because one&#13;
drink might as well be one hundred. I&#13;
can't stop.&#13;
gmer/Gj goina&#13;
dry?.&#13;
I loved being lonely. It gave me another&#13;
reason to be miserable, therefore,&#13;
another reason to drink.&#13;
haven't had a drink since. Honesty was the important&#13;
thing there. Addicts get so used to lying and&#13;
deceiving themselves that the major part of&#13;
treatment (after detoxification) is straightening the&#13;
addict's head out; putting perceptions in the right&#13;
order. A lot of the counseling I received there was&#13;
given by addicts and they knew when I was playing&#13;
games. There were times when I even thought I was&#13;
being truthful and later realized that it wasn't the&#13;
truth at all, just more rationalized lies. It was a very&#13;
gruelling experience but I came to learn that I could&#13;
really love myself. I had feelings and emotions and&#13;
thoughts that were very common and people did not&#13;
to the previous dependency stage immediately. The&#13;
alcoholic's problem is similar to the diabetic individual's&#13;
low tolerance for sugar. One does not&#13;
have to drink all day every day to be an alcoholic.&#13;
Anyone who depends on it as a drug, a chemical, or&#13;
cannot stop after one drink has a drinking problem.&#13;
Some people are alcoholic from their first drink; for&#13;
others it takes years to develop the sickness. Most&#13;
people don't become addicts at all. Those who do&#13;
live a miserable existence.&#13;
I don't have to worry anymore about being stuck&#13;
Treatment is more than detoxification.&#13;
If I had come out of the A-Center with the&#13;
same attitudes and feelings I had when I&#13;
went in, I w ould never be sober now.&#13;
have that problem anymore. I know what I am&#13;
doing and I have nothing to be ashamed about or&#13;
hide. If I did, I would know I was doing something&#13;
wrong.&#13;
Some of t he people in the A-Center were there for&#13;
their second or third time. Some start drinking&#13;
again the day they get out. If I were to have come&#13;
out with the same feelings and attitudes I had when&#13;
I went in, I wouldn't be sober now. Statistics show&#13;
that only one out of every fourteen people who&#13;
receive treatment "make it." If I ever take a drink&#13;
again it will be a symbolic attempt at suicide,&#13;
because one drink might as well be one hundred. I&#13;
can't stop.&#13;
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dislike me for being a human being. I had thought&#13;
that no one liked me. The truth was that I didn't like&#13;
me and if I didn't how could I expect anyone else to?&#13;
A person who has undergone detoxification&#13;
cannot ever drink again. The addict will regress--no&#13;
matter how much time has passed since treatment-&#13;
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broadcasting LIVE&#13;
from ONE SWEET DREAM&#13;
from 9 to 3&#13;
it's Dave Patrick &amp; Ken Rhodes&#13;
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.'TV .. • &amp;.w' **«•$.]*' •**' * ' ^VuiP^* "&#13;
Phone 654-3578&#13;
Open 365 Days a Year&#13;
Sportsfest Wednesday, Dec. 5, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
by Dan Marry&#13;
On the wrestling front, Head Coach Jim Koch will be preparing his&#13;
very impressive group of grapplers for the annual Whitewater&#13;
Warhawk Invitational which will be held at Whitewater this Saturday&#13;
December 8.&#13;
Last weekend, the "Ranger Wrestlers" claimed 4 champions in the&#13;
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Championships, held here in the Parkside&#13;
fieldhouse. The nine team tourney included some exceptional talent&#13;
from UW-Milwaukee, Marquette, Platteville, and Stevens Point to&#13;
name a few.&#13;
The four champs for Parkside were Rico Savaglio in the 126 lb&#13;
weight class; Bill West, who wrestled in the 134 lb. category Ken&#13;
Martin, a 142 pounder; and Randy Scarda, who wrestled in the 130 lb&#13;
bracket. The wins make all four wrestlers undefeated so far this&#13;
season.&#13;
Two other wrestlers who should be mentioned at this time are Rich&#13;
Schamberg, who was decisioned in the finals, 3-2, and Rich Baron who&#13;
took consolation honors in the 167 lb. weight class.&#13;
In what might be old news to some of you, the Parkside grapplers&#13;
won their first dual meet of the season on Wednesday November 28&#13;
against Grand Valley State one of the top NAIA teams in the nation,&#13;
according to Koch. The score in the meet was 27-19, and victories for&#13;
Parkside were scored by Bill West (pin), Ken Martin (pin), Tom&#13;
Beyer (pin), Rico Savaglio (decision), Randy Scarda (decision) and&#13;
Rich Baron (decision). •&#13;
I want to wish all the wrestlers a very successful weekend!&#13;
The Parkside Cagers were defeated by the Missouri-Rolla Miners by&#13;
a score of 61-57 at Rolla last Saturday. This loss gives the Rangers a 0-2&#13;
record.&#13;
The Ranger quint won every statistical category except in points, as&#13;
Parkside's Bill Sobanski pulled in 14 rebounds and 20 points, leading&#13;
the team's performance. For Missouri, it was the hot hand of Ken&#13;
Stalling, who netted 26 points, and the impressive board action&#13;
exhibited by Tom Noe, who had 26 rebounds.&#13;
This weekend, the Rangers head into what Head Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens describes as "our toughest weekend of the season. In the&#13;
Missouri game, we just didn't get the key breaks," Stephens&#13;
remarked. Hopefully, the Rangers will be able to put it all together&#13;
this weekend.&#13;
Parkside's next home game is December 15, in a game against archrival&#13;
UW-Green Bay. Game time will be 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Parkside's Kim Piper won the women's category of the North&#13;
Central Marathon which was held in Naperville, Illinois last Saturday.&#13;
Her winning time for the 26 mile course was 3 hours, 3 minutes and 27&#13;
seconds. This time ranks her 9th in the world in women's competition.&#13;
In the men's competition, Parkside had four qualifiers. Jim&#13;
Devasquez captured 31st place in the race finishing with a 2 hour and&#13;
48 minute time. John Ammerman finished the race in 2 hours and 53&#13;
minutes, giving him 53rd place; Chuck Dettman finished 64th, with a&#13;
time of 2 hours and 57 minutes, Wayne Rhode came in 75th, finishing in&#13;
3 hours and 46 minutes.&#13;
300 runners competed in the 26 mile event.&#13;
hi Ice Hockey, the Parkside Pucksters suffered another disappointing&#13;
weekend but they are closing the scoring gaps.&#13;
On Saturday, December 1, the Ranger Hockey Club battled&#13;
Whitewater to a 3-1 defeat. Jerry Madala, with some help from Bill&#13;
Evans, brought in the lone goal for the Rangers.&#13;
In Sunday's contest with Eastern Illinois, it looked like an instant&#13;
replay of the previous meeting of these two clubs. Northeastern beat&#13;
Parkside by a close score of 5-4. John Lulewicz summed up the game&#13;
by saying "It was a really close game but disputed calls, and a couple&#13;
major penalties, were the deciding factors."&#13;
BurgerChef:&#13;
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A GREAT&#13;
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Mini-bike program&#13;
needs volunteers&#13;
The Racine YMCA is taking&#13;
part in a national outreach&#13;
program for pre-delinquent and&#13;
delinquent junior high school&#13;
youth. The National Youth&#13;
Project Using Mini-bikes&#13;
(NYPUM) program is designed&#13;
to bring about "positive behavior&#13;
changes" while offering an attractive&#13;
type of group recreation&#13;
for youth in the 11 to 14-age&#13;
group.&#13;
The Honda Farm has contributed&#13;
10 mini-bikes for the&#13;
program, and according to&#13;
Thomas McGuire, NYPUM&#13;
director for the Racine YMCA,&#13;
"the program is totally ready to&#13;
roll with the exception that we&#13;
need eight to 10 willing and&#13;
capable leaders."&#13;
Each group of eight youths and&#13;
two leaders will meet for three&#13;
different types of activities.&#13;
The first is the actual riding&#13;
period on the mini-bikes, consisting&#13;
of one to two hours every&#13;
week or every two weeks (activities&#13;
and schedules are&#13;
determined by each group individually).&#13;
The second aspect of the&#13;
program is a weekly meeting&#13;
which will emphasize personal&#13;
and social growth through group&#13;
and leader interaction. The group&#13;
may plan future activities, study&#13;
bike mechanics and safety, use&#13;
YMCA recreational facilities, or&#13;
just get together and talk.&#13;
The third part of the program is&#13;
a special monthly activity, such&#13;
as a campput, a field trip, an area&#13;
mini-bike event, and so on.&#13;
McGuire is asking for volunteers&#13;
for the program, which has&#13;
already established one group of&#13;
eight youth and two leaders. "It&#13;
has been proven in other communities&#13;
that college students&#13;
can be most effective working&#13;
with youth 11 to 14 years of age.&#13;
This appeal is made to all&#13;
students at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside...if you are&#13;
willing to help young people,&#13;
learn with them, share those&#13;
talents you have to improve their&#13;
lives, and have three hours per&#13;
week to put to good use, contact&#13;
Thomas W. McGuire at 637-8325&#13;
before 5 p.m. or at 632-0198 after 6&#13;
p.m., or anytime weekends&#13;
regarding more information or&#13;
questions."&#13;
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paiiy 9H '-laq^id stqog o^ui s^aenb g Suiuieuiaa aq; paanod aq uaqj, uaqaiid&#13;
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And the matted prints, including both print and mat, are attractively priced&#13;
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Quantities Limited&#13;
Size 16" x 20"&#13;
A250 Poucette: Harlequin &amp; Guita r (V)"&#13;
A251 Poucette: Harlequin &amp; Ma ndolin (V)&#13;
A309 Russell: The Alarm (H)&#13;
A310 Russell: Blackfeet and Pidgeons (H)&#13;
A793 Chew: Wisteria (V)&#13;
A794 Chew: Peony (V)&#13;
A1184 Oriental Spring Flowers (V)&#13;
A1185 Oriental Summer Flowers (V)&#13;
A1220 Currier &amp; Iv es: 'Wooding Up' on Mississippi (H)&#13;
A1222 Currier &amp; I ves: American Express Train (H)&#13;
A1451 Picasso: Harlequin with Hat (V )&#13;
A1460 Gris: Still Life with Pears (V)&#13;
A1510 Sloane: Nostalgic Summer (H)&#13;
A1511 Sloane: Cloud Symphony (H) .&#13;
A1514 Sloane: Old Spring House (H)&#13;
A2514 Rembrandt: Christ (V)&#13;
A2516 Kuniyoshi: I'm Tired (V)&#13;
A2517 Kent: Adirondacks (H)&#13;
A2518 Soyer: Waiting for Audition (V)&#13;
A2521 Renoir: Child and Nursemaid (V) -&#13;
A2522 Toulouse-Lautrec: Seated Girl (V)&#13;
A2524 Degas: At Race Track (H)&#13;
A2531 McKenney &amp; Hall: loway Chief (V)&#13;
A2533 McKenney &amp; Hall: Musquakees Chief (V)&#13;
A2534 McKenney &amp; Hall: Chippeway Chief (V)&#13;
A2535 McKenney &amp; Hall: Sioux Chief (V )&#13;
A2555 Remington: Sioux Chief (V)&#13;
A2556 Remington: Army Packer (V)&#13;
A2565 Cosgrave: 'Challenge' ( H)&#13;
A2588 Cosgrave: 'Rattlesnake' (H)&#13;
A2608 Furber: August Bouquet (V)&#13;
A2810 Furber: October Bouquet (V)&#13;
A2613 Rembrandt: Titus (V)&#13;
A2973 Harnett: Munich Still Life (V)&#13;
A2979 Antique Summer Fruit Arrangement (H)&#13;
A2980 Antique Autumn Fruit Arrangement (H)&#13;
A2985 Cassatt: Young Mother Sewing (V)&#13;
A2995 Renoir: Jacques Fray (H)&#13;
A2996 Toulouse-Lautrec Carmen (V)&#13;
A3001 Chardin: Still Life with Pipe (H)&#13;
A3003 Monet: Pleasure Boats (H)&#13;
A3004 Rouault: Holy Face—Passion (V)&#13;
A3006 Van Gogh: L'Arlesienne (V)&#13;
A3008 Rembrandt: Self Portrait (V)&#13;
A3012 Picasso: Harlequin — Son (V)&#13;
A3015 Picasso: Sylvette (V)&#13;
A3016 Picasso: Blue Nude (V)&#13;
A3019 Gallais: Skating in Central Park (V)&#13;
A3020 Gallais: Public Library, Fifth Avenue (V)&#13;
A3052 Renoir: Madame Henriot ( V)&#13;
A3056 Picasso: Boy with Collar (V)&#13;
A3058 Dali: Bacchanalia (H)&#13;
A3060 Van Gogh: Thatched Cottage (H)&#13;
A3061 Cezanne: L'Estaque (V)&#13;
A3063 Gauguin: Dreamer (V)&#13;
A3065 Vlaminck: The River (H)&#13;
A3066 Picasso: Child with Dove (V)&#13;
A3070 Hopper: Lighthouse (H)&#13;
A3080 Dufy: Bay of Angels (H)&#13;
A3082 Cezanne: Half Vase Bouquet (V)&#13;
A3084 Vuillard: Woman Darning (V)&#13;
A3085 Klee: Harbor Scene (H)&#13;
A3086 Goya: Self Portrait (V)&#13;
A3091 Pickett: Coryell's Ferry (H)&#13;
A3097 Cole: The Pic-Nic (H)&#13;
A3112 Gould &amp; Richter: Thaumatias Carndidus (V)&#13;
A3113 Gould &amp; Richter: Amazilia Dumerili (V)&#13;
A3132 Moses: July Fourth (H)&#13;
A3136 Moses: It Snows (H)&#13;
' V—Vertical picture. H—Horizontal picture&#13;
*30,56&#13;
PARKSIDE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE&#13;
Library Learning Center</text>
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              <text>Transportation problem-solving underway for next semester.</text>
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              <text>f-tirfi&#13;
Jt W3^r ^ .&#13;
"rt*« !at " ei J0J° *°t tl aws'si &gt;^:&#13;
h;&#13;
P ,.+h &gt;W tK orar&#13;
Car pools, bus service&#13;
Transportation problem-solving&#13;
underway for next semester&#13;
Tim Wells is a Parkside student&#13;
who is concerned about transportation-&#13;
not just for himself&#13;
but for all students. He was&#13;
thinking about it for a long time,&#13;
and when President Nixon announced&#13;
the apparent fuel&#13;
shortage he decided there was&#13;
something everyone here could&#13;
do to save money and gas-car&#13;
pools.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, assistant&#13;
dean of students, has been&#13;
working with the Vets' Club to&#13;
maintain Racine bus service to&#13;
and from campus. She, too, is&#13;
very concerned about how&#13;
students are going to get to a&#13;
commuter campus if they don't&#13;
have cars or can no longer afford&#13;
to drive them.&#13;
Wells and Echelbarger got&#13;
together and formalized his car&#13;
pool plan. They realized that for&#13;
such an idea to work it will need&#13;
the support of many people, so&#13;
they are providing the initial&#13;
organization, which will depend&#13;
greatly on students themselves&#13;
taking some initiative. Later, if&#13;
the plan proves popular, they&#13;
hope to get computer time to&#13;
correlate potential drivers and&#13;
riders who live in the same area&#13;
and have similar schedules.&#13;
Car Pools For Everyone&#13;
For next semester, though,&#13;
they have prepared cards for&#13;
students as well as faculty and&#13;
staff to fill out during&#13;
registration. Wells divided&#13;
Racine and Kenosha into eight&#13;
areas each, but emphasized that&#13;
this plan is for everyone, including&#13;
those in outlying areas&#13;
like Burlington or South&#13;
Milwaukee or Illinois, who may&#13;
have no other way of getting&#13;
here. A p erson filling in the card&#13;
will indicate where he-or-she&#13;
lives, a daily schedule of arrival&#13;
and departure, whether or not heshe&#13;
has a car, and so forth.&#13;
These cards will then be filed&#13;
according to the area each person&#13;
lives in. Then it is up to the&#13;
participants themselves to check&#13;
the file for others in their area&#13;
whose schedules approximately&#13;
jive with their own, and call these&#13;
people and form the car pools.&#13;
The file will be located at or&#13;
near the Information kiosk&#13;
during registration. Since many&#13;
students will still "be registering&#13;
on Thursday of that week, Friday&#13;
will be the best day to check-a&#13;
phone call will be sufficient, and&#13;
the extension number will be&#13;
available when you turn in your&#13;
card.&#13;
Based On UCLA Operation&#13;
Wells said his plan is based on&#13;
the one in operation at UCLA,&#13;
which is computerized. After&#13;
students register they are sent&#13;
slips with the names of five or six&#13;
others in their area with similar&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 12, Vol. II No. 15&#13;
Elections to be rerun by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association (PSGA)&#13;
voted Monday night to hold a&#13;
special election in January, after&#13;
a two hour many-sided debate&#13;
over the legality of the existing&#13;
PSGA. The special election would&#13;
be run under present PSGA&#13;
election rules and by-laws, would&#13;
be held within 20 days of the&#13;
beginning of the second&#13;
semester, would direct Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, assistant dean of&#13;
students, to appoint a new&#13;
elections committee, and would&#13;
open all positions.&#13;
The resolution for a special&#13;
election was called by senator&#13;
Rich Karls and received&#13;
unanimous approval from the&#13;
senate. Karls' original motion&#13;
was for "Student Government to&#13;
withdraw recognition of the&#13;
administration" saying that "we&#13;
do not want the vice, support, or&#13;
money of the administration." He&#13;
added that Normal Neophyte had&#13;
been unseated from his senate&#13;
seat under state statutes that&#13;
"everyone is in gross violation&#13;
of," and that Neophyte had been&#13;
denied equal protection under the&#13;
law.&#13;
Tom Jennett, PSGA President,&#13;
queried the senate about naming&#13;
an independent group of students&#13;
to investigate all allegations of&#13;
illegal activities pertaining to the&#13;
elections and make a recommendation&#13;
of a solution to the&#13;
senate. However, the idea was&#13;
soon buried when senators called&#13;
on each other to take power and&#13;
use muscles and make decisions.&#13;
Said senator Jim Smith, "PSGA&#13;
can have just as much power as it&#13;
has the guts, to take and is willing&#13;
to use." Karls accused&#13;
Echelbarger and Allen Dearborn,&#13;
Assistant Chancellor, of making&#13;
puppets out of PSGA representatives&#13;
in regard to the unseating&#13;
of Neophyte, and in dictating the&#13;
use of PSGA monies. Senator Pat&#13;
McDevitt warned senators that if&#13;
they chose to withdraw administrative&#13;
recognition they&#13;
would lose PSGA office space, not&#13;
be allowed to put up posters,&#13;
would not be accessible to the&#13;
Bursur's accounting system, and&#13;
would be running away from the&#13;
administration.&#13;
Senator Mike Hahner accused&#13;
Echelbarger and Dearborn of&#13;
"blackmail" in saying that if the&#13;
senate chose to seat Neophyte&#13;
they would receive no CCC&#13;
funding.&#13;
Senator Harvey Hedden said,&#13;
"if the elections were illegal&#13;
(Neophyte had approximately 40&#13;
state statutes regarding elections&#13;
that were violated in November's&#13;
election) we should not be here in&#13;
any way, shape or form."&#13;
Senator Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
accused elections chairperson&#13;
George Kis of irresponsibility,&#13;
continued on page 5&#13;
Wintry willow? Although this photograph may look like it was taken last week it's&#13;
actually from last summer. Photographer Ken Pestka superimposed&#13;
positive and negative to create a scene of chilling beauty.&#13;
schedules.&#13;
He pointed out that with six&#13;
people riding in one car, each&#13;
pays for only one-sixth as much&#13;
gasoline. In addition to saving&#13;
gas and money, he emphasized&#13;
the convenience of being picked&#13;
up and delivered at your door, the&#13;
opportunity for meeting people&#13;
and the greater ease in finding a&#13;
parking place here.&#13;
He reiterated that many people&#13;
are needed to make it a success,&#13;
and it will be necessary for&#13;
people to generalize their&#13;
schedules-come earlier and&#13;
leave later than your first and&#13;
last classes. "That," he said,&#13;
"can help people's grades, if they&#13;
spend the extra time in the&#13;
library!"&#13;
Wells said that even if there&#13;
isn't an energy crisis now, this is&#13;
good conservation and planning&#13;
for the future. And if there is&#13;
rationing, he said, "our lives are&#13;
going to be changed a lot. Car&#13;
pools will become a necessity."&#13;
Bus Service&#13;
Other avenues for those with&#13;
transportation needs include&#13;
buses. Bus service for Kenosha&#13;
students is available on the city&#13;
bus, which stops here every hour.&#13;
The Racine bus, operated by&#13;
the Vefs' Club, will again be&#13;
selling passes at the same rate as&#13;
last semester, $45. Echelbarger&#13;
indicated that "students need to&#13;
make a commitment early, for&#13;
we have to sell enough of these&#13;
semester passes to operate." A&#13;
$10 deposit may be paid at&#13;
registration and the balance&#13;
later.&#13;
The $45 fee is prorated at $3 per&#13;
week for students purchasing&#13;
passes later. A 75 cents one way&#13;
fare has also been instituted.&#13;
The route and schedule for the&#13;
Racine bus is printed below.&#13;
Echelbarger said, "if the&#13;
ridership changes significantly&#13;
we will change the route." She&#13;
defined ridership in this case as&#13;
"those who pay their $45."&#13;
With regard to gas for buses,&#13;
Paul Stiles, the manager of J elco&#13;
Bus Co. in Kenosha, which&#13;
operates the shuttle buses, said&#13;
that he just doesn't know. He said&#13;
the Jelco bus used by the Vets for&#13;
Racine service is fueled at a&#13;
Racine service station so would&#13;
not be affected by any of Jelco's&#13;
cut backs, but could be hurt if&#13;
that station has supplies reduced.&#13;
RACIKE PARKSIDE BUS SERVICE&#13;
Sponsored by Perktlde Vet's Club&#13;
Reed Down A.K.&#13;
SAptdv 1 Kt. Pleasant&#13;
lout a Erie&#13;
Erie a Gould&#13;
Erie * Au^uata&#13;
Erie A K elvin&#13;
Erie a 3 Kile&#13;
Douglaa a 3 Mile&#13;
Touglee a Haraory&#13;
Douglas a Kingston&#13;
Dougles a Rcoayna&#13;
Couglas a Gould&#13;
; D ouglas a High&#13;
Douglas a Hamilton&#13;
• St ate a Main&#13;
Main a 6th&#13;
; Main a 10th&#13;
Main a Hth&#13;
Ittn a Racine&#13;
"ashing!on a Packard&#13;
aeatlngton a Grange&#13;
kashlngton a Hayes&#13;
Washington a Lathrop&#13;
Lethrop a 17th&#13;
Lathrop a Olive&#13;
Dathrop a Durand&#13;
Durand a Ohio&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
GreenGUiet Hall&#13;
7.02&#13;
7:03&#13;
7:05&#13;
7:06&#13;
7:07&#13;
7&gt;06&#13;
7:09&#13;
7:10&#13;
7:11&#13;
7:13&#13;
7.15&#13;
7:17&#13;
7:18&#13;
7:19&#13;
7:20&#13;
7:21&#13;
7:23&#13;
7:25&#13;
7:27&#13;
7:28&#13;
7:29&#13;
7.31&#13;
7:32&#13;
7:33&#13;
7'35&#13;
7: A3&#13;
7.A5&#13;
8.30&#13;
8.32&#13;
8.33&#13;
8.3A&#13;
8.36&#13;
8:37&#13;
8.38&#13;
8.39&#13;
8.AO&#13;
8.A1&#13;
8.A3&#13;
8.A5&#13;
8.A7&#13;
8.A8&#13;
8:A9&#13;
8.50&#13;
8.51&#13;
8.53&#13;
8.55&#13;
8.57&#13;
9.35&#13;
9.37&#13;
9.39&#13;
9&gt;M&#13;
9.A2&#13;
9*43&#13;
9*44&#13;
9.45&#13;
9.46&#13;
9.47&#13;
9.49&#13;
9.51&#13;
9.53&#13;
9.54&#13;
9.55&#13;
9.56&#13;
9.57&#13;
10:03&#13;
8:58 10.04&#13;
8.59 10.05&#13;
9*01 10.07&#13;
9.02 10.08&#13;
9:03&#13;
9.05&#13;
9.13&#13;
10:09&#13;
10.11&#13;
10.19&#13;
9:15 10.21&#13;
Look for Blue a White Bus with Parkside Placard&#13;
Read Op P.M.&#13;
1.19&#13;
1:17&#13;
1.15 lllA&#13;
1.12&#13;
1.11&#13;
1.10&#13;
1.09&#13;
1.08&#13;
1.07&#13;
1.05&#13;
1.03&#13;
1.01&#13;
1.00&#13;
12*59&#13;
12.58&#13;
12.57&#13;
12:55&#13;
12.53&#13;
12:51&#13;
12.50&#13;
12.49&#13;
12.47&#13;
12i46&#13;
12:45&#13;
12.43&#13;
12.35&#13;
3.00&#13;
2.58&#13;
2:56&#13;
2:55&#13;
2.54&#13;
2.53&#13;
2.52&#13;
2*50&#13;
2:48&#13;
2.46&#13;
2.45&#13;
2:44&#13;
2.42&#13;
2.41&#13;
2.40&#13;
2:38&#13;
2.30&#13;
4.14&#13;
4*12&#13;
4:10&#13;
4.09&#13;
4.07&#13;
4.06&#13;
4.05&#13;
4:04&#13;
4:03&#13;
4.02&#13;
4:00&#13;
3.58&#13;
3:56&#13;
3.55&#13;
3-54&#13;
3.53&#13;
3*52&#13;
3:50&#13;
3:48&#13;
3:46&#13;
3:45&#13;
3.44&#13;
3.42&#13;
3&lt;41&#13;
3.40&#13;
3-38&#13;
3:30&#13;
5.29&#13;
5.27&#13;
5.25&#13;
5.24&#13;
5.22&#13;
5.21&#13;
5*20&#13;
5.19&#13;
5.18&#13;
5H7&#13;
5.15&#13;
5.13&#13;
5.11&#13;
5.10&#13;
5.09&#13;
5.08&#13;
5*07&#13;
5:05&#13;
5:03&#13;
5:01&#13;
5.00&#13;
4:59&#13;
4.57&#13;
4.56&#13;
4.55&#13;
4.53&#13;
4.45&#13;
EASE. 145.00 SeBester Pass _ , . . _&#13;
1.75 One-way Pass °* ' *l Information Kiosk, Main Place, Library Learning 1&#13;
Schedules Operated Monday Thru Friday on School Cay. Only&#13;
Tor Information or Assistance call 553-2342&#13;
153 to graduate&#13;
Commencement&#13;
to be held Sunday&#13;
Commencement exercises for&#13;
153 mid-year degree candidates&#13;
will be held Sunday (Dec. 16) at 2&#13;
p.m. in the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater. Forty-five of the degree&#13;
candidates~30 percent of the&#13;
class-will graduate from the&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
(SMI) which highlights&#13;
Parkside's special industrial&#13;
society mission. That is the&#13;
highest percentage of SMI&#13;
graduates in UW-P history.&#13;
The graduates will "hear&#13;
remarks by Chancellor Irvin G&#13;
Wyllie; Regent Edward Hales of&#13;
Racine; Adolph Y. Wilburn, UW&#13;
System associate vice president&#13;
for academic affiars; Thomas&#13;
Jennett, president of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association; and Peter Guinn&#13;
president of the Parkside Alumni&#13;
Association.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Otto F. Bauer&#13;
will preside for the conferral of&#13;
degrees and Dean Eugene L&#13;
Norwood of the College of Science&#13;
and Society and Dean William A.&#13;
Moy of the School of Modern&#13;
Industry will present candidates&#13;
from their respective academic&#13;
units.&#13;
™ ^evfend Jay Humphreys&#13;
of Parkside Baptist Church will&#13;
give the invocation and&#13;
benediction and the Parkside&#13;
Wind Ensemble will play und&#13;
the direction of Prof. Bernai&#13;
Stiner.&#13;
Marshals for the academ&#13;
procession will be Profs. Wayi&#13;
Johnson and Charlotte Chell fi&#13;
the College, Prof. Walter Fel.&#13;
for the School, Prof. Norbe&#13;
Isenberg for the faculty, ar&#13;
Prof. Paul Kleine, chief marsha&#13;
The Alumni Association wi&#13;
host a University reception f(&#13;
graduates and their guests in&#13;
mediately after the ceremony i&#13;
Main Place of the Libran&#13;
Learning Center.&#13;
This is the final RANGER of&#13;
the semester. The first issue of&#13;
the second semester will be&#13;
published on Wednesday, Jan. 16.&#13;
New staff members are&#13;
welcome at any time-we need&#13;
photographers, sports writers,&#13;
news writers, feature writers,&#13;
and especially ad salespeople.&#13;
We are also accepting applications&#13;
at this time for a&#13;
business manager (salary-$20.00&#13;
per week). Contact us in LLC&#13;
D194 for further information.&#13;
We wish everyone a safe and&#13;
enjoyable holiday and look forward&#13;
to seeing you next&#13;
semester.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Seeing through&#13;
the synthetic&#13;
snow job&#13;
For this, the final RANGER of the semester, we&#13;
presented students with the opportunity to share a part&#13;
of themselves with the rest of the campus community by&#13;
contributing their poetry, art work, prose and&#13;
photography. We found that reading through many of&#13;
the poems was a depressing experience: some--a fewcelebrate&#13;
a spirit of love and joy and the light of&#13;
Christmas; many others, however, speak of loneliness,&#13;
suicide, lost love, alcohol and drugs, and commercialism.&#13;
These are not, of course, new themes for&#13;
the poet, yet their juxtaposition with the traditional&#13;
treatment of the season is an effective reminder that&#13;
tinsel and glitter and Peace on Earth Christmas cards&#13;
are a synthetic snow job, and these poets just aren't&#13;
buying.&#13;
We actually find this a hopeful sign, for we know that&#13;
amidst the gloom, these voices are crying out for&#13;
something better and we wish for them and all of us the&#13;
courage to continue the quest, not only at Christmas, but&#13;
throughout the year.&#13;
RANGER thanks all who contributed to this issue and&#13;
we're sorry we were unable to print everything that&#13;
came in. We hope though, that students will feel free to&#13;
continue to submit their work to us for publication, for&#13;
we are committed to presenting our readers with interesting,&#13;
diversified and provocative material each&#13;
week.&#13;
Since this is the last issue of the semester, we want to&#13;
say thanks for your readership. We wish all students the&#13;
best on their final exams and may everyone have a&#13;
happy holiday season.&#13;
|&#13;
fiotfbook&#13;
We get letters&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Before we all pack up and leave for awhile there are a few things I&#13;
would like to say about this RANGER, the continuing saga of that&#13;
fiasco called PSGA, and our return next semester.&#13;
First 1 want to thank everyone who submitted material to help&#13;
make this issue have something for everyone. RANGER people, too,&#13;
put forth something extra to provide special features and pictures. I&#13;
especially want to thank staff artist amy cundari for her extraordinary&#13;
effort in graphics this week.&#13;
PSGA. Well, what can you say? The senators apparently were&#13;
persuaded by Normal Neophyte's arguments, at least to the extent of&#13;
m jj ! ees 3,1 legally seated. Normal apparently was persuaded&#13;
by something or someone to run in the upcoming rerun of last&#13;
month s election-under his legal name.&#13;
The whole hassle over Normal Neophyte was symptomatic of the&#13;
deeper problems with election procedures. You know something is&#13;
wrong when no one even mentions the Election By-laws until after the&#13;
new members have taken office. The committee of one which oversaw&#13;
he recent farce we've been calling an "election" apparently was not&#13;
too seriously concerned with the job entrusted to him by at that time&#13;
acting-President Tom Jennett. He ignored blatant violations of the&#13;
laws of PSGA as well as the state, and is guilty himself of committing&#13;
serious infractions. His attitude of indifference is the very thing some&#13;
people were trying to combat in the student body.&#13;
The solution to the whole mess-a rerun-may be the best possible&#13;
T ?i?r ^circumstances, but discussion on the motion before it passed&#13;
at the PSGA meeting did not once touch on the potential response, or&#13;
lack of it, from the student body. Personally, and I hope I'm wrong I&#13;
foresee many of the too few students who voted last time saying&#13;
they ve seen this one just recently and it's no good. Bad reviews may&#13;
well kill this show. J&#13;
If such were to happen it truly would be a crime, for the students at&#13;
the last meeting seemed genuinely desirous of setting and accomplishing&#13;
some much-needed goals. Most if not all of them can be&#13;
expected to seek office again (incidentally, any other student may file&#13;
for an officer or senate seat by filing the required forms, including&#13;
nomination petition-check with the PSGA office before the end of this&#13;
semester). They should have a mandate from the students that clearly&#13;
shows many of us do want a strong, effective PSGA to present our&#13;
demands and solve some of our problems.&#13;
There's still hope, although with the Normal Neophyte case&#13;
dissipating the only interesting thing about PSGA for some students is&#13;
now gone For me, it only means that Normal is Dennis again (Dennis&#13;
is normal again?) and its time for anything but the normal, dragged&#13;
out, slowly disintegrating, mucked up paralysis of PSGA. If new&#13;
elections will do it, then at least they're doing something.&#13;
On to other things - for next semester RANGER would like to expand&#13;
our coverage of campus events, but can only do so if we get&#13;
enough advertising to pay for more pages. "All the news that fits we&#13;
print, and more will fit if you do yourselves a favor and earn the&#13;
commission for every ad you sell. This is money, folks, in your pocket&#13;
and ours, and our share goes into printing your news, so come and see&#13;
us for rate sheets and contracts.&#13;
Finally, I want to convey my holiday sentiments to everyone at&#13;
Pa rkside. Peace.&#13;
Letters to the editor are encouraged.&#13;
AH letters on any&#13;
subject of interest to students,&#13;
faculty or staff should be confined&#13;
to 300 w ords or less, typed&#13;
and double-spaced. The editors&#13;
reserve the right to edit letters&#13;
for length and good taste. All&#13;
letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number,&#13;
and student status or faculty&#13;
rank. Names will be withheld&#13;
upon request. The editors reserve&#13;
the right to refuse to print any&#13;
letters.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Since I began my studies here,&#13;
I have discovered many instances&#13;
of seeming unfairness&#13;
and totally mucked-up communications&#13;
and relationships&#13;
among administrators, faculty,&#13;
and students. These mysterious&#13;
goings-on raised questions in my&#13;
mind, so I did some investigating&#13;
and talked to staff members,&#13;
professors, and other students&#13;
about these matters. I have&#13;
acquired much information, and&#13;
I have reached a few conclusions.&#13;
Three years ago I was of the&#13;
naive opinion that a university&#13;
was one of the few institutions left&#13;
in which people could be free,&#13;
honest and open with each other&#13;
without having to struggle with&#13;
deception, pettiness, and unconcerned&#13;
authority and power.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have just finished reading the&#13;
letters in this morning's&#13;
RANGER and rereading the&#13;
article on teacher evaluation&#13;
from last week's paper.&#13;
Having shown my interest in&#13;
the evaluations last year and&#13;
again this year by volunteering&#13;
for the PSGA Academic Policies&#13;
Committee, I feel that some sort&#13;
of teacher evaluation sheet for all&#13;
divisions that can be used in&#13;
determining tenure, determining&#13;
whether that person is right to&#13;
teach at Parkside, determining&#13;
whether students would want to&#13;
attend his courses, and deter-&#13;
But when I see the number of&#13;
courses and instructors in certain&#13;
disciplines being reduced&#13;
because of "low enrollment" and&#13;
"Budget cuts" (it doesn't seem to&#13;
make any difference that six&#13;
students in a foreign language&#13;
class may be learning as much&#13;
as, if not more than? fifty students&#13;
in a social science class); when&#13;
students have no more than a&#13;
token means of expressing their&#13;
satisfaction or dis-satisfaction&#13;
with their instructors; when I&#13;
find out that at least one&#13;
professor's career at Parkside&#13;
was apparently terminated for&#13;
personal and-or political reasons&#13;
rather than for evidence of poor&#13;
teaching or failure to comply&#13;
with university policy; when a&#13;
student will probably be denied&#13;
his Senate seat because he chose&#13;
mining what courses he is the&#13;
right person to teach, is&#13;
necessary.&#13;
This university is supposed to&#13;
give one an "education" in&#13;
certain fields. If there is a lousy&#13;
instructor in the front of the&#13;
room, no one will learn. If&#13;
students are left uninformed&#13;
about the instructors here, these&#13;
"lousy" instructors will remain&#13;
at Parkside till who knows when.&#13;
Let's get an equitable student&#13;
evaluation form for all faculty,&#13;
required for all faculty members.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
Bruce Wagner&#13;
Kenosha junior&#13;
to run for office under his social&#13;
security number (question: if&#13;
persons are to be objectified and&#13;
regarded as numbers, why is it&#13;
that a protest arises when a&#13;
student wishes to identify himself&#13;
by his number?); when I am&#13;
brought face to face with these&#13;
things-and there are probably a&#13;
lot more of which I am not aware-&#13;
-I realize that whatever machine&#13;
exists here is often no less&#13;
corrupt and depersonalizing than&#13;
the ones which exist anywhere&#13;
else.&#13;
I suspect that many other&#13;
people may be of a similar&#13;
opinion and have their own&#13;
disgust and disillusionment to&#13;
deal with. Thank you all for&#13;
bearing with me in mine.&#13;
Lorri Tommerup&#13;
Racine Junior&#13;
The Parkside-&#13;
RANGER&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
&gt;ear by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Librarv-&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, ty ped and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
tetters for length and good taste. All tetters must be signed and include&#13;
address phone number and student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
be w ithheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
SPORTS EDITOR: Dan Marry&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
wp?tpocRAcPH'C COORD|NATOR: David Daniels&#13;
Hpnln r ^ BuSh' S,ephen Gi,,ord' Barbara Hanson, Harvey&#13;
slfrlttl'., e? ^fnsen- Mlchaa' Olszyk, Marilyn Schubert, John&#13;
6 staPan,a zsr"5'1 n' Carrie W«a•rd», T om DeFouw, Neal Sautner "y™?NITSTS: ^mv cundari- Garv Huck, Bob Rohan&#13;
LAYOUT. Tern Geleman, Terry Knop, staff&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Amy Cundari&#13;
a'^LU^II0N managER: Gary Worthington&#13;
ADVERTISING STAFF: Fred Lawrence, Jim Magruder&#13;
THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesda y , D e c . 12, 197 3&#13;
New course offerings&#13;
by Harvey Hedden and Carrie Ward&#13;
I he Spring timetables are out and in them are&#13;
many classes not previously offered. With this in&#13;
mind HANGER has attempted to acquaint students&#13;
with some of the new or unusual classes to be offered&#13;
next semester. While it was not possible to&#13;
include all new offerings, efforts were made to&#13;
contact as many professors as possible.&#13;
New Topics in American Language&#13;
Writing, Language and Experience" is a new&#13;
course intended to improve writing skills, play with&#13;
language, and learn to love diction. Assistant&#13;
Professor Emmett Bedford indicated most reading&#13;
will be done from mimeograph handouts but three&#13;
small books are also required.&#13;
Writing as Production and Management" will&#13;
emphasize clarity and accuracy in writing, according&#13;
to associate professor Robert Canary. The&#13;
course is recommended for those going into the&#13;
business field. Texts, assignments and group&#13;
projects will all be oriented toward business and&#13;
industry.&#13;
. Science For Non-majors&#13;
Discovery and Learning in the Sciences" is a&#13;
one-credit seminar course recommended for nonscience&#13;
majors and freshman. Students are to give&#13;
an oral presentation to the class on a scientific topic&#13;
they are curious about. Professor Greenbaum also&#13;
7™^ would be usmg magazines like SCIENTIFIC&#13;
AMERICAN in the course.&#13;
Life Science in Industry, Gardening&#13;
In life science a new course called "Industrial&#13;
Biology will provide a comprehensive overview of&#13;
man-environment-health relationships. How&#13;
modern man interacts with the environment at&#13;
home, at work and in the community will be&#13;
analyzed as to health hazards, the nature of&#13;
problems involved and means of control. In addition,&#13;
the course will utilize field trips and guest&#13;
lecturers employed in the area of protecting man's&#13;
health, according to the instructor of the new&#13;
course, Professor Eugene Gasiorkiewicz.&#13;
A five week life science module will be offered on&#13;
"Organic Gardening." Professor Robert Esser will&#13;
teach the secrets of planting, insect control, fertilization&#13;
and other aspects of Organic Gardening.&#13;
"Concepts in Medical Entomology" will deal with&#13;
the behavior of fleas and ticks as vectors of human&#13;
disease. According to Assistant Professor Omar&#13;
Amin, topics in this one credit course will include&#13;
feeding behavior, host-seeking behavior and&#13;
transmission patterns.&#13;
"Uncertainty, Parity, and Paradoxes in Physics"&#13;
Assistant Professor Thomas Cook will be studying&#13;
some of the complex problems of physics and explain&#13;
them in general terms. The five-week course&#13;
will use no text, but rather reprints from Scientific&#13;
American.&#13;
Comm. Course — Argumentation and Debate&#13;
"Argumentation and Debate" will study the&#13;
theory and practice of argumentation. Instructor&#13;
Corwin King will also be analyzing and discussing&#13;
debate theory.&#13;
"Public Opinion and Propaganda" will emphasize&#13;
the role of opinions and the way they are&#13;
challenged. Instructor Sheldon Harsel will require a&#13;
continued on page 11&#13;
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1 no s first concert on Nov. 29. Members of the Trio are violinist Maria Mutschler, cellist David&#13;
L'ttrel. and pianist Stephen Swedish, of the music faculty.&#13;
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• Round trip jet&#13;
• 1 nights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
• 2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sightseeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz.&#13;
• Tour escort&#13;
• Tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
The Festival of Lights&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 12, THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5 QE3T&#13;
auu , by Sandy Busch&#13;
cekbSnf^f kn°Wn' the on-coming&#13;
Sf Juda S ' u actUal,y a minor holiday&#13;
m,7 ?' ^ajor celebrated days are Pesach&#13;
Passover), Shabuoth (Feast of Weeks or Pen&#13;
Booths) s till Sfhkk°th (FeaSt °f Tabernacles, or&#13;
Booths). stiH others are Rosh Hashana (New Year)&#13;
and Yom Kipper (Day of Atonement).&#13;
Hanukioh, or Chanukah, is known as the Feast of&#13;
Dedica ion, and as the Festival of Lights The&#13;
principle source for the story behind the holiday is&#13;
found m the Talmud, a collection of interpretations&#13;
MedievTrabbTseS °f ** SCriptUrGS C°mpiled by&#13;
Upon revealing the story of'Hanukkah, Rabbi&#13;
KennTh, f !1 °f the Beth Hlllel Temple of&#13;
Kenosha stressed it is not a "Jewish Christmas "&#13;
victory Hanukkah commemorates the&#13;
over tL r Hasm°naens (the Maccabee family)&#13;
HZ £ Greco-Syrian king, Antiochus. For three&#13;
y ars the Syrian-Greeks had persecuted the Jews&#13;
HriW ™Temple With the pagan worship of&#13;
Hellenism The 165 B.C. victory made possible the&#13;
survival of monotheism.&#13;
«nafier *he *emP,e was purified, Judas Maccabeus&#13;
and his brothers instituted celebration of the day of&#13;
RCKKFyu 5® llghting of candles. According to&#13;
Rabbi Harold Markman of the Beth Israel Sinai&#13;
Temple in Racine, this was to celebrate the&#13;
demonstrated victory of the few over the many&#13;
when the few are in the right.&#13;
Following the destruction of the Temple in A.D.&#13;
TO and the loss of Jewish independence, the&#13;
nationalistic character of the festival was modified&#13;
Significance was redirected to legends behind the&#13;
institution of the celebration.&#13;
Rabbi Goldstein told of several legends Within&#13;
the Temple was an Eternal Light which needed&#13;
olive oil to burn. It is said that when the Maccabees&#13;
purified the Temple, although only enough oil for&#13;
one day was available, the light miraculously&#13;
burned for eight days. Another legend claims that&#13;
eight Roman spears were in the Temple at the time&#13;
of it's purification. The spears could have easily&#13;
killed the Jews, but did not.&#13;
Although they tell of diversive significant events&#13;
pertaining to Hanukkah, both legends include as&#13;
important the number eight. Hence, the holiday&#13;
lasts for eight days; from the 25th of Kislev&#13;
(corresponding to Nov. -Dec.) to the 2nd or 3rd&#13;
month of Tebet (the latter part of Dec.). This year,&#13;
the celebration begins at sunset on December 19th!&#13;
and ends at sunset on December 26th.&#13;
The festivities are centered around the family and&#13;
the home. Rabbi Markman observed that aside&#13;
from practices of gift-giving, which are often different&#13;
in various families, the Hanukkah&#13;
celebration is relatively standard.&#13;
On the first eve of the holiday begins the burning&#13;
of eight candles in commemoration of the oil burning&#13;
eight nights. The extreme right candle of a&#13;
seven-branched candelabrum, called a Menorah, is&#13;
lit by an extra candle called a shammes. The&#13;
shammes is used to light an additional candle on&#13;
each night during Hanukkah.&#13;
Prayers are said at each lighting of a candle.&#13;
Rabbi Markman commented that included in the&#13;
prayers is a reminder to the family that all gifts are&#13;
from God. Liturgical verses, such as Maoz Tzur&#13;
(Rock of Ages), are also sung.&#13;
Traditionally, a small token present is given to&#13;
every family member each night after a candle is&#13;
lit, However, due to commercialization, during the&#13;
past 10-15 years more and larger presents have been&#13;
given.&#13;
The Hanukkah celebration includes feasting and&#13;
games, Latkes, or pot pancakes fried in oil (the oil&#13;
symbolizing the historical burning of the oil), is an&#13;
example of traditional foods eaten. Children often&#13;
play with a top similar to one used during the&#13;
persecution of the Jews. This top, called a driedle,&#13;
contains four sides, each with a Hebrew letter!&#13;
Together the letters symbolize in Hebrew, "A great&#13;
miracle happened there".&#13;
In emphasizing the fact that Hanukkah is a minor&#13;
holiday, Rabbi Goldstein revealed that, unlike&#13;
during major holidays, the Jewish continue&#13;
working. No special services are held in the&#13;
synagogue; only the Sabbath service takes place.&#13;
Hanukkah only seems to be of major importance&#13;
due to Christmas and commercialization.&#13;
Such Christmas celebrating and commercializing&#13;
have had much less efect in Israel. Here, all but the&#13;
most orthodox Jews reemphasize military implications&#13;
of the festival. In many family&#13;
celebrations are national overtones in the commemorating&#13;
of the Maccabean triumph.&#13;
Student to teach Extension course&#13;
Jeff Hunter, a senior Communications&#13;
major, will be&#13;
teaching a course for the&#13;
University Extension next&#13;
semester. Entitled Theatres of&#13;
Japan, it will provide an overview&#13;
of the three traditional&#13;
dramatic arts of Japan: the&#13;
ancient Noh drama; the unique&#13;
puppet theatre of Japan,&#13;
bunraku; and the spectacular&#13;
and world-famous kabuki, or&#13;
popular theatre of human actors.&#13;
No previous study in theatre is&#13;
required. The course is introductory&#13;
and will include many&#13;
films, slides, recordings, and&#13;
selected readings from the&#13;
dramatic literature. Humanities&#13;
credits are available for all&#13;
Parkside students, and full-time&#13;
students may enroll at no additional&#13;
cost.&#13;
Hunter, a transfer student&#13;
who has done most of his study,&#13;
in Asian theatre, studied Asian&#13;
music and dance with the&#13;
American Society for Eastern&#13;
Arts in Seattle. He plans to enter&#13;
graduate study in Madison next&#13;
fall for a degree in Asian theatre.&#13;
For further information in the&#13;
UW Extension office in Tallent&#13;
Hall may be contacted, ext. 2312.&#13;
New Fine Arts&#13;
Books available at&#13;
MARTHA MERRELL'S&#13;
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The Artists America&#13;
$19.95 after Christmas .......$ 1 6.95&#13;
Maxfield Parrish: The Early Years&#13;
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$59.95 after Christmas $50.00&#13;
Fantastic Art&#13;
PaPer -.$4.95&#13;
Underground Interiors&#13;
Paper $5.95&#13;
Folk Singer's Word Book&#13;
Paper... $4.95&#13;
Great Songs of Lennon &amp; McCartney&#13;
$17.50 after Christmas. $14.95&#13;
Spellbound in Darkness:&#13;
A History of the Silent Film - Paper... $8.95&#13;
The Gershwins $25.00&#13;
Come to Me in Silence&#13;
by Rod McKuen - ,$4.95&#13;
The New Music Lovers Handbook&#13;
$29.95 after Christmas................. - $24.95&#13;
614-59&#13;
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Elections&#13;
continued from page 2&#13;
saying that after the elections&#13;
people found out about illegalities&#13;
both in the elections and in&#13;
Neophyte's case. He stated also&#13;
that PSGA had election rules and&#13;
by-laws that Kis never bothered&#13;
to check out.&#13;
Jennett allowed Neophyte to&#13;
speak and he said, "PSGA alone&#13;
should have decided to seat me or&#13;
impeach me and I would have&#13;
gone along with its decision." He&#13;
stated, however, that if anyone&#13;
contested his seat in accordance&#13;
with state statutes, other state&#13;
statutes had also been violated.&#13;
He asked that the senate decide&#13;
on whether or not state laws&#13;
pertain to the campus. If so,&#13;
Neophyte said he had Kis on 10&#13;
violations of state statutes. "The&#13;
senate, which represents the&#13;
student body, should decide, he&#13;
ended.&#13;
Karls then withdrew his motion&#13;
to not recognize the administration&#13;
and called for a&#13;
special election. Neophyte&#13;
agreed to run under his legal&#13;
Zeke's&#13;
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404 Main St , ,&#13;
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his Christmas&#13;
g i f t . . .&#13;
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name, Dennis Milutinovich.&#13;
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Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
What is an Audio Salon?&#13;
If you look in the Yellow Pages of the&#13;
phone book, you'll find literally dozens of&#13;
stores under the "High Fidelity &amp;&#13;
Stereophonic Equipment" heading. Not&#13;
all of them are what you're looking for.&#13;
Some are T.V. repairmen who have a&#13;
few record changers to sell. Others are&#13;
appliance or furniture stores interested&#13;
in selling you a console or portable&#13;
phonograph.&#13;
But don't give up. There are stores In&#13;
the area (like Sight 'n Sound) who are&#13;
audio specialists. HERE IS WHAT TO&#13;
LOOK FOR: A HI-FI SPECIALIST&#13;
WILL HANDLE SEVERAL BRANDS&#13;
OF WELL KNOWN COMPONENTS--&#13;
NAMES LIKE MARANTZ, PIONEER,&#13;
SHERWOOD, AND SUPERSCOPE. HE&#13;
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ONLY ONE TO HAVE SEPARATE 2&#13;
AND 4 CHANNEL ROOMS) WHERE&#13;
YOU CAN COMPARE ONE SYSTEM&#13;
WITH ANOTHER BY SWITCHING&#13;
QUICKLY BETWEEN THEM.&#13;
He won't mind you browsing; you&#13;
might buy something someday and&#13;
listening to component high fidelity&#13;
equipment doesn't wear it out. Also, a&#13;
good audio salesman is a patient&#13;
teacher. He's spent years learning what&#13;
sounds good and why, and he won't&#13;
ridicule you because you haven't.&#13;
Selecting the right audio dealer can be&#13;
almost as tricky as picking the right&#13;
dentist. A good dealer can diagnose and&#13;
prescribe to fit your personal needs. A&#13;
bad one can't or won't. A good dealer can&#13;
be a f riend when it comes time to trade&#13;
in your equipment or have it-serviced. So&#13;
it makes sense to select him as carefully&#13;
as you would a doctor or dentist.&#13;
SOME LAST MINUTE GIFT IDEAS&#13;
FM Car Converter $29.95&#13;
Electronic Calculator $29.95&#13;
(This isn't a misprint-you read it right!)&#13;
Digital Clock Radio (AM FM) $29.95&#13;
Speakers (pair) $29.95&#13;
LP's from $1.47&#13;
8-Track Tapes from $1.99&#13;
STEREO SYSTEMS AT SPECIAL PRICES1&#13;
Pioneer AM-FM w-8-Track, 2 Speakers&#13;
$189.95&#13;
Sony 4-channel 8-Track w-4 Speakers&#13;
$199.95&#13;
MGA AM-FM, Changer, 2 Speakers&#13;
$159.95&#13;
Concord Stereo Cassette Deck $139.95&#13;
Masterwork 8-Track Record-Play Deck&#13;
$109.95&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
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Records - Tapes&#13;
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6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesda y , Dec. 12, 197 3&#13;
A short story&#13;
Winter Attendant&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
As she awoke, her dreams faded slowly, filtering&#13;
away into the air, becoming part of the noises that&#13;
had awakened her.&#13;
"Come on, Minnie, time to wake up." The false&#13;
cheerfulness of t he voice had an edge to it. Wake up&#13;
now, it said, or....Or what? Minnie shut her eyes&#13;
tight, partly to shut out the bright unwelcome light,&#13;
mostly to annoy. "Come on, Min!" She gasped at&#13;
the cold as the girl flung back the blankets and&#13;
pulled the old woman's feet off the edge of the bed.&#13;
"Oooo! Look out for them legs, honey. They get so&#13;
stiff, you know." She sat up with effort. "Put on my&#13;
boots, will you honey?" The girl, halfway to the&#13;
door, turned back with an exasperated sigh and&#13;
grabbed the slippers from under the bed.&#13;
"Put them stockins on first. I gotta have them on,&#13;
I get so cold you know. My sweater too, that black&#13;
one there. Is it snowing out honey? The air in here's&#13;
so chill, I thought maybe it was the snow."&#13;
But the girl was already gone, in a hurry to get all&#13;
her patients awake before the breakfast trays&#13;
came.&#13;
Minnie strained her eyes looking for the drifting&#13;
white of snow outside the window. But the&#13;
morning was still too black, and her eyes too poor to&#13;
find anything outside the window.&#13;
Something tugged at the back of her mind--snow,&#13;
what was it, it should snow today-why? She knew&#13;
that she felt the need to see the snow drifting past,&#13;
covering the mud out there, turning the world white&#13;
and lovely. And especially today-today. "That's&#13;
it," she thought. "Today is Christmas."&#13;
She smiled, felt a little warmer. Her mind wandered&#13;
over times past, when her house had been&#13;
full, kitchen warm and fragrant, the tree filling the&#13;
rooms with an outdoor air. She came back to the&#13;
present with a sense of loss and regret. She no&#13;
longer had a kitchen or a house; the tree in the&#13;
Home had no smell of the woods. But most of all, she&#13;
no longer had anyone to do for - no one to cook for,&#13;
to make a Christmas for. She had once given gifts at&#13;
Christmas - gifts of love to people she loved. But&#13;
now...&#13;
how much happiness then.&#13;
Her mind carried her away to happier thoughts,&#13;
happier times, when there had been people who&#13;
cared.&#13;
She watched in silence as the girl in the white&#13;
uniform brought in the cold tray of cold breakfast.&#13;
The girl set the tray down hard, not quite slamming&#13;
it on the table. Her mouth was set in a hard line, her&#13;
eyes red and heavy, tired. She began to set up the&#13;
tray, pouring milk into the metal coffeepot, opening&#13;
and scooping out the eggs, buttering the cold toast.&#13;
Before she could stop herself, Minnie said, "No&#13;
salt on the eggs, honey,"&#13;
The girl slammed down the bowl of eggs and said&#13;
through clenched teeth, "I know, Minnie!" She left&#13;
abruptly.&#13;
Minnie poked at the breakfast with her fork,&#13;
distressed at her own thoughtlessness. That poor&#13;
child, she's got to work on Christmas, her family at&#13;
home without her. And I ain't helping matters any,&#13;
a fussy old lady. Maybe I can chat with her a little,&#13;
when she's putting my hair up. Maybe I can tell her&#13;
about how things used to be, at Christmas—the kids&#13;
out for a sleigh ride, how the bells sounded in the&#13;
woods—the tree at night, lit with candles—the fire&#13;
popping in the fireplace—the smell of the turkey,&#13;
baking all day. Maybe I can tell her how it was when&#13;
the kids woke everybody, shrieking, and happy that&#13;
Santa didn't forget. And I can maybe tell her how&#13;
much love there was in our big house on Christmas,&#13;
Minnie sat in her wheelchair, watching the snow&#13;
drift past the window in the gray light of midmorning.&#13;
She'd had a bath of sorts, given hurriedly&#13;
behind a curtain. She felt a little sticky from the&#13;
soapy water, not really clean. Her hair still hung&#13;
down her back, a white unbrushed tumble.&#13;
She couldn't leave her room yet, not with her hair&#13;
down. Her glasses, handkerchief and bible lay in&#13;
her lap—she was ready to go to the church service&#13;
in the day-room, except for her hair.&#13;
There's time yet, she thought. Church isn't until&#13;
after lunch anyway. I got time yet.&#13;
Time yet to give her gift, her Christmas gift of&#13;
memory, to the silent impatient girl whose duty it&#13;
was to care for the bodies of the forgotten aged. This&#13;
girl had time only for the body, it was what she was&#13;
paid for. There was no time set aside for the mind,&#13;
the memory, the heart. No one was paid for care of&#13;
the soul.&#13;
The girl came into Minnie's room, opened a&#13;
drawer and got out hairbrush, rubber band and&#13;
hairpins. Without a word, she set to work on the&#13;
mass of white hair.&#13;
About to caution the girl to take care and not pull&#13;
out too much or brush too hard, Minnie caught&#13;
herself.&#13;
It's Christmas, she thought. I won't add to her&#13;
trouble. It's better if I don't get too fussy.&#13;
"Don't the snow look nice? I mean, it's more like&#13;
Christmas with the snow. I grew up on a farm, you&#13;
know, right near here. Us kids used to go out in the&#13;
sleigh with our papa, out in the woods to cut a tree.&#13;
He'd cut it down and we'd shake the snow off the&#13;
branches."&#13;
The girl was still silent. She brushed harder,&#13;
laboring over the tangles.&#13;
"We had a great time at Christmas when we were&#13;
kids. Lots of folks would come and we'd have a big&#13;
dinner. And when I had my own kids, it was even&#13;
better. They loved all that stuff—and I loved doing&#13;
all of that for them. That's what was best about&#13;
Christmas for me, doing all that for the kids and&#13;
making them so happy."&#13;
The girl had finished braiding and pinning Minnie's&#13;
hair. She returned the brush to the drawer.&#13;
One her way out the door she said over her shoulder,&#13;
"Lunch will be here in a little while, Minnie."&#13;
Minnie watched her go out of the room. The&#13;
memories that had filled her mind a moment before&#13;
now shattered into a million bright pieces and fell&#13;
in a dusty heap. She stared at the empty doorway,&#13;
her eyes vacant. The beautiful gift she had been so&#13;
willing, so eager to give, the gift that to her had been&#13;
necessary to give—it hadn't even been refused. It&#13;
had just been ignored.&#13;
And the gift that Minnie had so desperately&#13;
wanted to receive the precious gift of a listening,&#13;
caring heart—did it even exist?&#13;
Lunch came, Minnie ate. People passed by her&#13;
door; they went to church. They sang Christmas&#13;
carols in the hallway. A s kinny Santa Claus in a fat&#13;
man's suit strolled by.&#13;
But Minnie sat silently in her chair, watching the&#13;
snow drift by the window, the light fade from the&#13;
day. She would have no more Christmases.&#13;
copyright 1973&#13;
N T&#13;
V e&#13;
"ri&#13;
H&#13;
£&#13;
V&#13;
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N&#13;
£&#13;
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E X I S T E N C E&#13;
e&#13;
T&#13;
N&#13;
T&#13;
"e.&#13;
V&#13;
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t_&#13;
N&#13;
T&#13;
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V&#13;
r N E V £ T NE&#13;
T&#13;
N&#13;
-Kathi Chalekian&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
Santa Claus is Jolly&#13;
Santa Claus is jolly&#13;
He decks his hauls with holly&#13;
But there's no gas to fuel his sleigh&#13;
This year, he'll take the trolley.&#13;
Chorus: Amo, Amas, Aminibus&#13;
From evil, Lord, mass-transit us!&#13;
-Anonimus&#13;
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energy, electrons&#13;
flying, striking, freezing&#13;
into nebula that traps us,&#13;
molecules.&#13;
dimension&#13;
time, space&#13;
surrendering, excepting, existing&#13;
as ducks drounding in oil,&#13;
environment.&#13;
weather&#13;
cold, wind&#13;
raining, sleeting, snowing&#13;
water spots on window pane&#13;
reality.&#13;
Michael Olszyk&#13;
Franksville Freshman&#13;
I will come to hear your song.&#13;
Its tune, a timeless melody,&#13;
sooths my mind.&#13;
So short a life upon the sea--like&#13;
Wind, the waves implored you.&#13;
But, being that single grain of sand&#13;
Your entity remained incorrigible.&#13;
I will come to hear your song.&#13;
It's tune, a timeless melody,&#13;
sooths my mind.&#13;
--Cyndi Jensen&#13;
Kenosha Freshman&#13;
The p lace t o go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and th ings!&#13;
ISERMAMM'S&#13;
THE&#13;
f&amp;mettcan]&#13;
614 - 56th Street&#13;
; . •&#13;
fttev&#13;
Mother&#13;
Child of the roaring years of flappers and gin;&#13;
Adolescent in the lean thirties;&#13;
A young wife in the war-&#13;
How can I ever make the lightyear leap&#13;
into your past?&#13;
I-to whom the Ziegfield Follies rank in antiquity&#13;
with the Olympic Games;&#13;
and FDR with Alexander the Great?&#13;
I-whose remotest memories are of Howdy Doody&#13;
and of Roy and Dale singing "Happy Trails"?&#13;
But I am content,&#13;
And I think you are, too.&#13;
For acceptance is a greater act of love&#13;
than understanding.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
FRIENDS&#13;
One by one,&#13;
Leaves turn different hues.&#13;
Shaken loose by cold changing winds,&#13;
They fall away.&#13;
-Kathi Chalekian&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
Recycled Ecology Poem&#13;
my friends&#13;
out in the woods,&#13;
demonstrated to us&#13;
mischievous faces,&#13;
when their eyes' fell upon&#13;
our ecology bumper stickers.&#13;
Michael Olszyk&#13;
Franksville Freshman&#13;
although the shepherds were blinded,&#13;
they listened to the spectrum,&#13;
and learned joy,&#13;
at the sight of space,&#13;
which told them&#13;
a path,&#13;
was within their distance,&#13;
leading&#13;
in one direction,&#13;
Did we sing the same&#13;
together Messiah song?&#13;
Our voices throaty&#13;
lips touched music soft,&#13;
and evergreen lights dimmed in&#13;
music wreaths were, so&#13;
we loved sang in separate&#13;
unloneliness kissed.&#13;
Oh come all my singer/choir lover&#13;
can we warmth&#13;
and tradition in&#13;
peace on love came earttythristmas you&#13;
and Merry love us&#13;
to me are.&#13;
-Steven Louis Hansen&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
over&#13;
the same route.&#13;
on&#13;
a single road.&#13;
... meanwhile three wise men looked&#13;
for this same source of life.&#13;
but when they found her,&#13;
he was in the form of a nightmare.&#13;
causing them to seek,&#13;
various paths home.&#13;
-Michael Olszyk&#13;
Franksville Freshman&#13;
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8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Dec. 12, 19 7 3&#13;
THE CRYSTAL SHIP, THE GOLDEN&#13;
A tree held the moon&#13;
In its outstretched arms&#13;
While darkness enclosed&#13;
The small sleeping farms.&#13;
Moonlight soon had found&#13;
Its slow, silent way&#13;
To the lonely room&#13;
Where asleep I lay.&#13;
The light touched my face&#13;
With fingers of gold.&#13;
I was awakened-&#13;
The moon's touch was cold.&#13;
From my sleep I came&#13;
To look at the night,&#13;
The moon was hung high&#13;
To serve as my light.&#13;
The moonbeams led me&#13;
To a place up high,&#13;
To a crystal ship&#13;
Anchored in the sky.&#13;
The mast was silver,&#13;
The sails trimmed in gold,&#13;
And stars had been hung&#13;
On the ships black hold.&#13;
The moon steered my course,&#13;
The stars lit my way;&#13;
I feared not a thing »&#13;
Except the bright day. ^&#13;
I sailed the dark skies&#13;
To a distant shore,&#13;
Then my ship was gone&#13;
And I saw her no more.&#13;
I stepped on the shore&#13;
Of the land I'd found,&#13;
I explored the beaches&#13;
And I looked around.&#13;
A wonderous land&#13;
Before me I could see,&#13;
A land of magic,&#13;
A land made of dreams.&#13;
I looked about, but&#13;
No people were seen&#13;
For I was alone&#13;
In my lovely dream.&#13;
A great golden steed&#13;
Was within my sight.&#13;
His mane and his tail&#13;
Were a silvery white.&#13;
His eyes were bright stars&#13;
That beckoned me on&#13;
To ride on his back&#13;
Till we found the dawn.&#13;
My fingers were twined&#13;
In his silky mane,&#13;
As I sprang astride&#13;
It began to rain.&#13;
My horse tried to flee,&#13;
But he knew his fate.&#13;
The moon gave him aid,&#13;
But alas-too late.&#13;
The rain that I felt&#13;
Was only the dew,&#13;
But when it was gone&#13;
Came the sun--I knew.&#13;
The sun killed the stars&#13;
And conquered the night.&#13;
Then the moon was killed&#13;
By the sun's bright light.&#13;
My dreams then faded&#13;
And I looked around.&#13;
I found I had slept&#13;
On the cold, wet ground.&#13;
Tears then filled my eyes,&#13;
I began to cry.&#13;
Why did the sun make&#13;
My golden horse die?&#13;
Still, my crystal ship&#13;
That sailed in the sky&#13;
Was made of a dream&#13;
That could never die.&#13;
The moon, stars, and night&#13;
All died at the dawn,&#13;
But my crystal ship&#13;
Sails forever on.&#13;
-Caroline&#13;
HORSE, AND.OTHER DREAMS&#13;
MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU, TOO&#13;
O come all ye faithful&#13;
A&amp;O Schwartz, New York's LARGEST&#13;
toy store is selling god&#13;
Joyful and triumphant&#13;
at $150; plus tax; and out of state&#13;
delivery charges.&#13;
0 come ye, O come ye&#13;
In six passionate colors&#13;
a toy for all ages&#13;
infinitely entertaining&#13;
A&amp;O Schwartz, on the third floor&#13;
next to the vinyl ladybugs&#13;
where all the butterflies&#13;
are plastic.&#13;
Judie Smith&#13;
Kenosha sophomore&#13;
Christmas...&#13;
And because tradition has it a time of warmth&#13;
And joy&#13;
I try and feel that my own experience now&#13;
Finds it glorious as the Chamber of Commerce&#13;
Yet Christmas Eve I still get a chill&#13;
Around inner warmth&#13;
When I hear a carol&#13;
Or see a lighted tree.&#13;
And new-fallen snow at night excites me.&#13;
Christmas Eve during World War I&#13;
Troops in the trenches allies and enemies.&#13;
Men lay down weapons,&#13;
Come together singing Silent Night&#13;
In German and English, Silent Night.&#13;
Is this a story heard at Grandpa's knee&#13;
Or did I merely dream it?&#13;
He must have told me... did he dream it?&#13;
It matters not. Christmases past coalesce&#13;
In vague impressions&#13;
To serve the present.&#13;
Are we still creating memories&#13;
Or even dreams&#13;
To serve the future?&#13;
I worry about plastic trees&#13;
With canned pine scent&#13;
And cookies "like homemade"&#13;
In a box&#13;
And sales that start before Thanksgiving&#13;
Artificial snow&#13;
Santa Claus on every block&#13;
And Jesus locked in church&#13;
All to save you precious time&#13;
In the hectic holiday rush.&#13;
And save you from those moments of joy&#13;
That yesterday were Christmas.&#13;
It's not too late&#13;
Enough of us remember that chill&#13;
Around inner warmth&#13;
When we hear a carol&#13;
Or see a lighted tree.&#13;
And new-fallen snow at night...&#13;
-J. Schliesman&#13;
Racine Junior&#13;
CHRISTMAS SNOW&#13;
Downy soft and crystaline,&#13;
a fragile constellation&#13;
comes to earth and&#13;
lays her to sleep,&#13;
peace under its warming&#13;
soul and cold blanket.&#13;
Oh Christmas snow,&#13;
sugar coat my memory&#13;
of toys and joys,&#13;
of glitter and gold,&#13;
and of the Babe in a halo&#13;
of choral rapture.&#13;
Christmas snow so special&#13;
to my Santa cause - and&#13;
so beautiful on His night,&#13;
come to still the darkness of night&#13;
in your comforter of white.&#13;
Womb&#13;
nesting place&#13;
following the Moon in changes&#13;
weeping Monthly for lost&#13;
daughter-companion&#13;
in Emptiness.&#13;
nurturing place&#13;
straining, bursting with giving&#13;
reveling in furiously patient&#13;
Blood-unrelenting&#13;
in its growth.&#13;
abandoned place&#13;
Torn and Bleeding after Agony (Ecstacy)&#13;
soon weeping again for lost&#13;
Life-existing like Christ&#13;
Blood of Life.&#13;
-Denise Anastasio&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
Christmas '73...&#13;
Carol singing, cash register ringing,&#13;
"Here's your change. Would you like this gift wrapped?"&#13;
Mutantly singing Christmas Hymns. "Was Christ really born1?'&#13;
"Who cares? Would you like Brandy or Scotch?"&#13;
Amputated trees pass a hungry man by,&#13;
their owners have won the great crusade.&#13;
"It's nice and full this year. Won't it look nice in the parlor."&#13;
"Rejoice! Christmas Spirit has spread it's angelic wings."&#13;
The hungryman's past is his future, with little unknown.&#13;
For as Christ comes he now goes,&#13;
pitching facedown into the sooty snow.&#13;
Passerby remark, "He can't hold his Christmas Spirit."&#13;
-Michael Hahner&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
All my focus clearly abstracts on&#13;
your familiar comfortable,&#13;
so loving poetry describes my&#13;
longing indescribable and&#13;
Mary&#13;
I remember your softness at&#13;
Christmas it was so coldly snow&#13;
but light beauty of soul, your&#13;
heart rendered love was.&#13;
Christmas love wa^is!&#13;
-Steven Louis Hansen&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
NIXON'S EPITAPH&#13;
Here lies a man&#13;
Who thought he stood for America,&#13;
While sitting down,&#13;
To watch a football game.&#13;
-Kathi Chalekian&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
&lt;*&#13;
D tC&#13;
&lt;&#13;
u&#13;
&lt;/&gt;&#13;
X&#13;
&lt;&#13;
u&#13;
The Poet's Dirge For the Road;&#13;
or,&#13;
Booby's Blues&#13;
Suicidea&#13;
thought to hide&#13;
a one-act play, a one-way ride;&#13;
a feeling, I think, that must abide&#13;
somewhere between love and hate&#13;
tears and laughter (the latter late,')&#13;
but wait-&#13;
'No matter where' the poet cried,&#13;
(threw back his tired eyes and sighed)&#13;
The line between is vanishing...'&#13;
Where'er it is, it's there, it isto&#13;
know not where the candle lit is&#13;
is where1 he dares^'o^sw^r o'* ^ tong"e and stared at nowhere (this&#13;
'By Life, I have no honest faith...&#13;
but know I shall care less in death.'&#13;
What answer this? Forsaking fate and blind to blissnow&#13;
meaningless a lover's kiss? no&#13;
'mem'ry serves me well in this-&#13;
Love there was and love will be&#13;
(most probably eternally;)&#13;
You have yours, and Jesus, his,&#13;
to share and all—but as for me&#13;
as for my share, I'm sorry this&#13;
is not the place to set it free—&#13;
suff'ring suffers me let it be.'&#13;
herel (parenftetie'ly) must ask, dear reader, seriously&#13;
What my worth (this lament long)?&#13;
I mean, I have no fear it's wrone&#13;
but—&#13;
Who needs another fucking poet&#13;
Singing just another sad song?&#13;
CO yea, verily I'll flow along...')&#13;
'Though feeling not I do belong,&#13;
(life, you see, seems something wrong,)&#13;
permit me to remember one who must have known to be alone-&#13;
Life to him, too, the substance seemed&#13;
(if serious) something of a dream...'&#13;
(Verily we flow along&#13;
singing just another sad song,&#13;
but sweetly...&#13;
sing now...)&#13;
In my ears, the poet's birth&#13;
sounds not unlike the quiet earth&#13;
after rain... (before the pain&#13;
has washed his innocence to dearth,&#13;
I hear no bitter uttered curses&#13;
strangled into tQrtured verses,&#13;
no; although...)&#13;
there may be whispersechoed&#13;
like cathedral vespers&#13;
from the Heavens' ceiling 'round&#13;
to where (they say) beneath the ground&#13;
the dark and cold of Hell abound-&#13;
(or is it fire? ... but I'm digressinglet's&#13;
get on here with our Blessing:)&#13;
Dust to dust.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 9&#13;
The Steel Vultures&#13;
Gleaming vultures stalk their prey, •&#13;
Pick their victim, scheme and plot&#13;
their movements to replace&#13;
a departing car from the parking lot.&#13;
-Denise Anastasio&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
CARU5&#13;
DEMISE&#13;
it's cold out,&#13;
and the stars are clearly showing,&#13;
moon beams too,&#13;
are frosted like icicles on rain troughs.&#13;
I'll write my book&#13;
and you'll sing your song,&#13;
waiting for the season of winter&#13;
to pass on.&#13;
locked in-our separate cabins&#13;
like ma and pa,&#13;
we sit stranded,&#13;
waiting to spring forth&#13;
from our dreams...&#13;
maybe tomorrow, -&#13;
or the day after&#13;
the sun will wake,&#13;
and melt the snow into tricles of water,&#13;
running down our foreheads...&#13;
-Michael Olszyk&#13;
Franksville Freshman&#13;
Now that, I trust, (here I'm confessing,)&#13;
must be just (though I'm just guessing...&#13;
such distressing questions lust&#13;
in vain, forever, for believing Faithand&#13;
thus a soul will wither,&#13;
weathered by confusion grieving,&#13;
fearing, fading, undelivered...)&#13;
Hearing then the blessed voice,&#13;
the rebel proud proclaims his choice&#13;
in fear and trembling, crying thus&#13;
his Freedom:&#13;
The time to dust&#13;
Has been put in the poet's trust (poets every one of us) and&#13;
Playing God, he has the power&#13;
To become, at any hour,&#13;
part of The Event of Death...&#13;
dust and Earth&#13;
from borrowed breath..&#13;
Christmas with the inhabitants of Joe's Tap&#13;
Grimy coated windows&#13;
diffusing ancient neon lights,&#13;
Santa stands behind the counter&#13;
pouring out the presents&#13;
for all the children,&#13;
Scoop-up the soggy change&#13;
so you can listen to Bing Crosby sing&#13;
"A White Christmas" 8&#13;
between the skips and scratches.&#13;
Just tug at the gaily colored&#13;
stale pretzels.&#13;
Santa keeps on pouring&#13;
'til some of 'em get the nerve to leave&#13;
And blast their guts out on the wall.&#13;
-A1 Morris&#13;
Kenosha freshman&#13;
Four Seasons&#13;
Man's life, the sages say^ equates&#13;
One seasoned year in nature's span:&#13;
The Spring gives birth and nurtures youth,&#13;
Then Summer full-matures the man.&#13;
In Autumn, man his harvest reaps.&#13;
Then winter comes, and man, too, sleeps.&#13;
So many idolize the Spring-&#13;
The dawning year, the bursting bud!&#13;
They choose to close their starry eyes&#13;
Against the ravage of the flood,&#13;
Against the weeds that choke the field,&#13;
Against the mud that will not yield.&#13;
Still others laud the Summer's reign-&#13;
The full-blown rose, the soaring gull!&#13;
They choose to close their starry eyes&#13;
Against the still pre-tornado lull,&#13;
Against the restless nights, sweat-drenched,&#13;
Against the thirst that goes unquenched.&#13;
And some are filled with Autumn's praise-&#13;
The ripened fruit, the crisp, clear breeze!&#13;
They choose to close their starry eyes&#13;
Against the slowly baring trees,&#13;
Against the frost that clouds the glass,&#13;
Against the with'ring, browning grass.&#13;
But almost all the Winter dread-&#13;
The chilling storm, the early dark!&#13;
They choose to close their guileless eyes&#13;
Against the glowing ember's spark,&#13;
Against the sin-forging white,&#13;
Against the quiet, peace-filled night.&#13;
-Margaret Robinette&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
To Susan&#13;
Since I've grown older I need to spend&#13;
My waking hours on things to tend:&#13;
a day-lily beside my door,&#13;
a drift of bright rugs for the floor,&#13;
a robin's nest in yon pine tree-&#13;
And you, so young, must pity me&#13;
for living in a world so bound&#13;
by petty facts of sight and sound.&#13;
Dear child, so young, you only see&#13;
What time and life have made of me.&#13;
You do not know that God is kind,&#13;
When we leave youth and strength behind&#13;
to give us joy in little things:&#13;
the flash of lovely lifted wings,&#13;
the sheets of silvered summer rain,&#13;
the sun glow on the window pane.&#13;
Dear child, I bless each little thing&#13;
God gives me for remembering.&#13;
-Margaret L. Robinette&#13;
Kenosha Senior&#13;
RIditr* note: Margaret&#13;
Robinette is an adult student, 66&#13;
years old, majoring in English&#13;
and is a retired Ohio school&#13;
teacher.&#13;
-bk.feb. '71&#13;
Thoughts:&#13;
Expressed through axiomatic&#13;
Prisms of words often&#13;
Reflect the&#13;
Empty&#13;
Meagreness of lives, that&#13;
Cannot find truth&#13;
-In silence.&#13;
-Cyndi Jensen&#13;
Kenosha Freshman&#13;
Twelve Days Before Christmas&#13;
On the twelvth day before Christmas Cadez gave to me,&#13;
A "C" on a print, on my painting a big fat "D".&#13;
The eleventh day ' fore Christmas, I am not fooling you,&#13;
My Christmas cards came back all stamped with "postage due"&#13;
It's ten days 'fore Christmas, I'll not get it all done,&#13;
When Steve Stephens decides a field trip would be fun!&#13;
Only nine days to go, I'm really feeling swell,&#13;
This double major, mother-student, is sometimes really...well?&#13;
Eight days to go, no time for panic now,&#13;
Four papers, six exams, I'll get it done somehow.&#13;
The big day's drawing near, seven days to go.&#13;
With final papers and exams and now its got to snow!&#13;
I blew Experimental Psych, on six.&#13;
Am I the only one not understanding stix?&#13;
On the fifth day 'fore Christmas the children really schreeched&#13;
I think I'm getting funky, now what Dr. Beach?&#13;
Actually I'm pretty lucky my husband tries to be fair,&#13;
Only on occasion does he shout, "Where in +! ?' s my underwear!"&#13;
Oh well, the kids have settled down, even I can hardly wait,&#13;
The biggest problem now-Christmas cookies and their fate.&#13;
Ah, last day of school, all papers, exams and etc. handed in,&#13;
I've got one thing left to say, "Are you happy now D. Olsen?"&#13;
You can see in the bleary eyes that sparkle, the worst is gotton through&#13;
Now comes time to have some fun, so, Merry Christmas to all of you! '&#13;
-Kathy Proeber&#13;
Milwaukee Senior&#13;
10 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wed n e s d a y , Dec. 12, 1973&#13;
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U.W. Parkside - Room 219, T allent H all&#13;
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5200 Washington Ave., R acine&#13;
New courses Wednesday, Dec. 12/ 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 11&#13;
continued from page 4&#13;
research project or report.&#13;
Economics in Industry and Anthro.&#13;
"Industrial Organization" listed in the timetable&#13;
under economics, will be an applied study of the&#13;
structure and performance of American&#13;
manufacturing industries, taught by Assistant&#13;
Professor Larry Duetsch. "Economic Anthropology,"&#13;
(listed under Anthropology), will deal&#13;
with primitive economy, stone age, rather than&#13;
modern industry. Assistant Professor William&#13;
Folan said students will study how primitive people&#13;
adapt to resources and will be required to write&#13;
reports and discuss them in class.&#13;
Mathematics of Change&#13;
The mathematics of business and social science&#13;
will be of primary concern in this new three credit&#13;
course. According to Associate Professor Nelo&#13;
Allan, topics will include methodology, differential&#13;
calculus, applications, integral calculus, difference&#13;
equations and finite differences.&#13;
Third World, Shakespeare, Death&#13;
"Studies in Comparative Literature of the Third&#13;
World: Society and the Literary Artists in Latin&#13;
America" will be taught by Professor Jose Ortega.&#13;
Students will study newspapers, magazines, slides,&#13;
film strips and examples of handcrafted objects.&#13;
The course will attempt to answer questions such&#13;
as: Has the role of the church declined in Latin&#13;
America, how did the Mexican Revolution influence&#13;
Latin America, at what point have U.S. - Latin&#13;
American relations arrived?&#13;
Shakespeare on film will analyze six&#13;
Shakespearean plays-Henry V, Macbeth, Othello,&#13;
Romeo and Juliet, Midsummer Night's Dream and&#13;
Hamlet-in the film presentation. Assistant&#13;
Professor Andrew McLean will study film&#13;
criticism, theory, and problems of interpreting&#13;
Shakespeare on film.&#13;
The Special Topics course in the Humanities&#13;
Division, Death and Dying, deals with investigations&#13;
of and reflections on death as human&#13;
beings encounter it. Associate Professor Wayne&#13;
Johnson will draw on materials from many&#13;
disciplines including sociology, psychology,&#13;
philosophy, theology, religious thought, literature&#13;
and medical sciences.&#13;
Women Writers&#13;
"Modern Women Writers" will be a close study&#13;
and analysis of four major authors chosen by&#13;
assistant professor Carole Vopat. There are 10&#13;
required readings, a mid-term and final exam, and&#13;
a paper is required. The books include works by&#13;
Joyce Carol Oates, Sylvia Plath, Virginia Woolf and&#13;
Doris Lessing.&#13;
Ethics&#13;
A new philosophy course, "Ethics," will focus on&#13;
three issues in ethics as well as related discussion in&#13;
legal thought: abortion, responsibility and punishment.&#13;
The primary concern in investigating the&#13;
topic of abortion will be to determine its moral&#13;
status. The major concern in the course will be a&#13;
discussion of the conditions for moral responsibility,&#13;
which will include inquiry into what the law&#13;
says about this question. Finally, justifications&#13;
offered in defense of the institution of punishment&#13;
and principles used in determining penalties will be&#13;
examined through a discussion of capital punishment&#13;
and the structure of our penal institutions. The&#13;
course will be taught by Brian McMahon, assistant&#13;
professor of philosophy.&#13;
Politics in History and Wisconsin&#13;
The course "History of American Politics" will&#13;
look into such subjects as why people vote, the&#13;
development of political parties, changes in party&#13;
dominance and the ethnic, religious and economic&#13;
aspects of politics. Professor John Buenker says the&#13;
course will rely mainly upon a series of p aperbacks&#13;
and audio-visual materials.&#13;
"Politics in Wisconsin" will include studies of&#13;
state and local governmental structures, political&#13;
behavior, decision-making processes and what goes&#13;
on behind the scenes, and public policy output in&#13;
Wisconsin. Although the course will be concerned&#13;
primarily with Wisconsin it will also deal with&#13;
relations with the national government, counties,&#13;
towns, villages and cities. The only text Kay&#13;
Wahner, lecturer in political science, will be using is&#13;
the Wisconsin Blue Book.&#13;
New Business Management Offerings&#13;
A new course entitled "Scientific and Technical&#13;
Writing: Reports for Business and Industry," is&#13;
stressing studies and exercises in the organization&#13;
of technical information and the effective&#13;
presentation of it before a variety of audiences. The&#13;
work will consist of eight written reports, two of&#13;
which will be presented orally. The course is listed&#13;
as Comm 340 and will be taught by Assistant&#13;
Professor Henry Kozicki.&#13;
"Law and the Citizen" is aimed at students interested&#13;
in learning about how the law protects the&#13;
average citizen in his everyday life. Assistant&#13;
Professor Ronald Singer will cover areas such as&#13;
constitutional law in relation to the rights of the&#13;
citizen, rights of the property owner, the consumer,&#13;
and the contracting party; legal responsibilities&#13;
imposed on the citizens; and enyironmental law.&#13;
"Commercial Law" is a specialized course&#13;
oriented primarily for the business student. Singer&#13;
will study the law of sales, commercial paper, bank&#13;
deposits and collections. Both of these new law&#13;
courses have no prerequisites.&#13;
"Organizational Structure and Behavior" is intended&#13;
primarily for business majors. According to&#13;
James Polczynski, lecturer in Business&#13;
Management, the course will include such topics as&#13;
organizational size, technology and task; and their&#13;
influence on organizational structures in a business&#13;
setting.&#13;
"Quality Assurance Systems" is designed for&#13;
students with some statistical background who plan&#13;
to work in industry in a technical or managerial&#13;
capacity. Contrary to what the catalogue states,&#13;
this course, taught by Larry Shirland, does not have&#13;
Business Management 325 as a prerequisite.&#13;
"Accounting and Management Action" will be&#13;
taught by Claude Renshaw. Introductory Accounting&#13;
is a prerequisite for this course. It will&#13;
cover taxes, investments, accounting and financial&#13;
systems, financial analysis and other managerial&#13;
aspects of accounting.&#13;
"Marketing Management," taught by Richard&#13;
Yanzito, will not be simply an introductory accounting&#13;
course. Methods and trends in marketing&#13;
management from both quantitative and behavioral&#13;
angles will be studied.&#13;
Classified&#13;
FOR SALE: American Eagle Doorknockers,&#13;
ideal Christmas gift and only&#13;
"•50. Call 694-1873.&#13;
Notary Public: papers notarized on the spot.&#13;
B. Briggs 825 Wisconsin, Racine, 634-2886&#13;
WILL TYPE term papers. Call 634-6365.&#13;
APARTMENT to sublet : Wanted single girl&#13;
need not be student. Two roommates in&#13;
Parkside village, Call 552-8317.&#13;
TYPING: Done on IBM electric. Call Pat&#13;
at 654-0030, afte r 5.&#13;
2667 K'NDS °F TYP,NG Cal1 Nancy, 63',&#13;
SILVER-STRIPED racoon fur coat&#13;
Excellent condition. Like new. Size 12-16&#13;
Best offer. Call 634 3551. 5322 Wright Avenue&#13;
Racine.&#13;
NEED ANY typing done? Call Ginny at 637&#13;
7796.&#13;
Mustang Advertising is looking for&#13;
dependable salesmen to solicit ads for a desk&#13;
Pad to be distributed at UW-P The salesman&#13;
will receive a commission on gross sales. If&#13;
interested contact Ken Pestka, LLC D 194&#13;
•°r information.&#13;
RIDERS WANTED to share gas and ex&#13;
Penses to Arizona, '73 van leaving betweer&#13;
"17 and 12-21. Phone: 694-0171.&#13;
JOHN W. MERRICK, D.V.M.&#13;
announces the association of&#13;
JOHN WENTLAND, D.V.M.&#13;
and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
Villa Capri S hopping Center&#13;
North 22nd Ave. (Ohio St.) R acine&#13;
^ j 22 °av and Evenin9 Hours bv Appoin,ment&#13;
TAYLOR AVENUE LIQUOR&#13;
186S Taylor A ft., Racine W ise.&#13;
STORE HOURS: MON.-SAT. 10-9&#13;
SUN. 10-6&#13;
Phone 634-8063&#13;
Stuph! The theatrical group will perform in the Whiteskellar today&#13;
(Wed.) between 1 and 3 p.m. They call their collection of material for&#13;
the performance "Poop." Pictured left to right are Kris Simpson, Glen&#13;
Christensen, Bill Barke and John Tradeweli.&#13;
Movie review&#13;
Of war &amp; peace &amp;&#13;
a "White Christmas&#13;
starring Bing Crosby, Rosemary&#13;
Clooney, Vera Ellen, Danny&#13;
Kaye, Dean Jagger&#13;
If&#13;
Reviewed by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Ah yes, I'm dreaming of a&#13;
white Christmas, where retired&#13;
army generals have their Vermont&#13;
ski resorts salvaged by&#13;
travelling theatrics and a ton of&#13;
talcum powder which falls,&#13;
miraculously enough, on&#13;
Christmas Eve (that is, it falls on&#13;
Vermont on the night before&#13;
Christmas).&#13;
For some reason this 1950's&#13;
classic of maudlin, sentimental&#13;
drivel is shown on TV every year&#13;
at about this time, and for some&#13;
reason we all watch it and have&#13;
ever since we were old enough to&#13;
stop believing in Santa Claus and&#13;
start staying up past 7:30. And,&#13;
for some reason, most of u s even&#13;
enjoy it!&#13;
The title song is actually from&#13;
another seasonal extravaganza,&#13;
"Holiday Inn," (which starred&#13;
Crosby and Fred Astaire and&#13;
gave birth to a chain of motels&#13;
open year 'round). Irving Berlin&#13;
composed the score for both&#13;
movies.&#13;
"White Christmas" opens with&#13;
a Christmas Eve during World&#13;
War II, with the troops being&#13;
entertained by Captain Crosby.&#13;
The retiring general comes by to&#13;
say Merry Christmas and&#13;
farewell, the scene is subdued&#13;
and then the silent night is split&#13;
apart by mortar fire. Private&#13;
Kaye saves Captain Crosby's life,&#13;
the latter becomes indebted to&#13;
the former and the two team up&#13;
and go into "show biz." The stage&#13;
is set. Enter love interests, in the&#13;
form of two sisters of, naturally,&#13;
an old army buddy. Also,&#13;
naturally they're trying to make&#13;
it big in "show biz." Danny Kaye&#13;
falls hard but Crosby had to play&#13;
hard to get.&#13;
By a few questionable quirks&#13;
the felloes end up accompanying&#13;
the girls to their singing&#13;
engagement at a ski resort. Son&#13;
of a gun, their former commanding&#13;
officer who retired on&#13;
that Christmas Eve in the&#13;
trenches a few years back is the&#13;
owner-operator of said resort.&#13;
And he's in trouble because green&#13;
Decembers in Vermont don't go&#13;
over too well with skiers. So he's&#13;
trying to rejoin the army, which&#13;
thinks he's got to be kidding.&#13;
Our boys, who by now have a&#13;
whole troupe working for them,&#13;
decide to stage a Christmas show&#13;
at the resort and ex-Cap'n Crosby&#13;
manages to go on nation-wide TV&#13;
to urge all the former army&#13;
buddies to leave their families on&#13;
Christmas Eve and help make a&#13;
good time for the old man. Of&#13;
course, they do. Meanwhile, the&#13;
fires of love alternately wane and&#13;
roar and by the time Crosby&#13;
becomes Claus they're burning&#13;
strong. Fortunately for all, it's&#13;
snowing by the end of the movie&#13;
and everyone's dreams come&#13;
true.&#13;
The most dated thing about the&#13;
movie is the choreography, which&#13;
gets tedious at times. The most&#13;
impressive scene is the snow,&#13;
even though you know all along&#13;
it's coming. The movie seems to&#13;
wear well, but of course it's a&#13;
seasonal theme, and what is&#13;
Christmas if it isn't tradition?&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE •HAWAIIAN HOLIDAY&#13;
&lt;3Cappiness is Hawaii&#13;
January 2 -10&#13;
Plus $20 Tax •.Service&#13;
Based on 3 to a Room&#13;
HURRY!&#13;
DEADLINE EXTENDED&#13;
LIMITED NUMBER&#13;
OF TRIP OPENINGS&#13;
STILL&#13;
AVAILABLE&#13;
Sign up today!&#13;
n CAMPUS TRAVEL CENTER&#13;
U LLC D197 $51-2294&#13;
12 THE PARKSI D E RANGER Wed n e s d a y , Dec. 12, 1973&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
Friday, December 21 - Sunday, January 13, the Student Activities&#13;
Building will be closed except for scheduled events.&#13;
s°me fdius,men,s in ,he ori9inal week-end schedule have been made as a result of studies&#13;
ot building use and as a response to suggestions from students. The Student Activities&#13;
Building will be open during the regular school year according to the following schedule:&#13;
Mon Thurs.&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday&#13;
9:00 a.m. • 1 1:00 p.m.&#13;
9:00 a.m. - 10:0 0 p.m. (night of no scheduled events)&#13;
9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. (nights of films)&#13;
9:00 a.m. - 1 :00 a.m. (nights of dances)&#13;
Scheduled events only&#13;
Scheduled events only (6:30p.m. - 11:00p.m. nights of films)&#13;
photo by Brian Ross&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg.&#13;
Dec. 15 building open from 9:30-5&#13;
Dec. 16 building open from 2-10&#13;
Dec. 17 building open from 8:30-10&#13;
Dec. 18 same as above&#13;
Dec. 19 same as above&#13;
Dec. 20 same as above&#13;
Dec. 21 building open from 8:30-4&#13;
Dec. 22 Building closed&#13;
Dec. 23 Building closed&#13;
Dec. 24 Building closed&#13;
Dec. 26 building open 8:30-5&#13;
Dec. 27 same as above&#13;
Dec. 28 same as above&#13;
De&lt;^ 29 Building closed&#13;
Dec. 30 Building closed&#13;
Dec. 31 Building closed&#13;
Jan. 1 Building closed&#13;
Jan. 2 Building open from 8:30-5&#13;
. Jan. 3 same as above&#13;
Jan. 4 same as above&#13;
Jan. 5 Building Closed&#13;
Jan. 6 Building Closed&#13;
Please call the athletic office&#13;
for further information - 553-2245.&#13;
Semester break schedules&#13;
Cafeteria&#13;
Kenosha Campus Cafeteria will close December 21 at 1:30 p.m. and will reopen January 14.&#13;
Library Learning Center Cafeteria will close December 21 at 1:30 p.m. but will remain open&#13;
during the vacation period according to the following schedule:&#13;
Men's Wear&#13;
with a Flair&#13;
318 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
Your Style&#13;
Store for&#13;
Christmas&#13;
Bookstore&#13;
Winter Recess December 22 January 6&#13;
Saturday 9:00 • 1 :00 Dec. 22&#13;
Sun. - Tues. Closed Dec. 23-25&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9:00 - 4:30 Dec. 26-27&#13;
Friday 9:00 - 1:00 Dec. 28&#13;
Sat. - Tues. Closed Dec. 29 - Jan. 1&#13;
Wed. - Thurs. 9:00 - 4:30 Jan. 2-3&#13;
Friday 9:00 - 1 :00 Jan. 4&#13;
Sat. - S un. Closed Jan. 5-6&#13;
Learning Center&#13;
December 22 Saturday CLOSED&#13;
Dec. 26-28 Wed.-Fri. 7:45 a.m. thru 4:30 p.m.&#13;
December 29 Saturday CLOSED&#13;
Jan. 2-4, 1974 Wed. - Fri. 7:45 a.m. thru 4:30 p.m.&#13;
January 5 Saturday CLOSED&#13;
Jan. 7-11 Mon. - Fri. 7:45 a.m. thru 4:30 p.m.&#13;
January 12 Saturday CLOSED&#13;
From January 14 the Learning Center will&#13;
continue its regular hours unless otherwise&#13;
notified.&#13;
LIBRARY HOURS&#13;
FINAL EXAM A ND VA CAT ION PE R IODS&#13;
SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY 1 FRIDAY 2.J&#13;
1:30 - 10:30&#13;
p.m. p.m.&#13;
1°J&#13;
7:1:5 - 10:30&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
A&#13;
7:1:5 - 10:30&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
id&#13;
7:1:5 - 10:30&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
ill&#13;
7:1*5 - 10:30&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
Ill | Last Day&#13;
of Classes&#13;
7:1*5 - 12 Midn.&#13;
a.m.&#13;
L5 | First Day&#13;
of Finals&#13;
9 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
161 Graduation&#13;
1:30 - 12 Midn.&#13;
p.m.&#13;
ilJ&#13;
7:1:5 - 12 Midn.&#13;
a.m.&#13;
ill&#13;
7:1:5 - 12 Midn.&#13;
a.m.&#13;
d&#13;
7:1:5 - 12 Midn.&#13;
a.m.&#13;
i°J&#13;
7:1*5 - 12 Midn.&#13;
a.m.&#13;
sJ&#13;
7:U5 - 10&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
22 | Last Day&#13;
of Finals&#13;
9 - 3&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
23]&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
2U |&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
?5 | Christmas&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
!£j&#13;
7:1:5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
szj&#13;
7:1*5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
d&#13;
7:1*5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
d&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
3Ql&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
A&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
1 I New Years Day&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
3&#13;
7:L5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
J&#13;
7:1*5-5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
d&#13;
7: '*5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
ii&#13;
CLOSED A&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
2]&#13;
7:1*5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
8 1 Registration&#13;
Begins&#13;
7:U5 - 5 .&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
7:1*5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
10J&#13;
7:1*5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
d&#13;
7:1*5 - 5&#13;
a.m. p.m.&#13;
12j&#13;
CLOSED&#13;
BurgerChef&#13;
2/89* WITH COUPON&#13;
OFFER ENDS DEC. 16&#13;
REG. $1.20&#13;
VALUE&#13;
Skipper Treat&#13;
(Our Sp ecial Fi sh S andwich)&#13;
2/89* -r&#13;
(dj&#13;
, 8 1&#13;
' 1 W&#13;
1 V&#13;
1 \ 11&#13;
t 1 fi 1 A 1 V&#13;
1 1I 1 'J IB1i kJm&#13;
*Notonly&#13;
does God&#13;
have an&#13;
outtfaoeous&#13;
imagination,&#13;
but Joseph&#13;
-fell Tor ihat&#13;
W -stony I'/&#13;
Brief newt&#13;
Shuttle service will shut Hn«,n&#13;
January^On-SpS^ ^ through&#13;
ofsprfng SemesterS cla^ses.PUS W'" be®in on *^anuary H the first day&#13;
Commencement date explained&#13;
The change in the commencement date from Jan 6 t o Dec lfi was&#13;
determined with the following considerations in mind, according to&#13;
Campus Ceremonies Committee. Sunday is the preferred day for&#13;
ZkTh'eTn S" ^ Tk SChe,duleS °f b0th *raduates and their&#13;
it tn Ljf!" dat*&gt; over two weeks after the last final exams, was&#13;
felt to be so far into the winter break as to make it inconvenient to&#13;
reassemblei graduates and faculty. Being here on Jan. 6 would in&#13;
terfere with plans for vacations or travel during recess and also&#13;
would be difficult for graduates leaving tci take^bs dsewhere on&#13;
weekends ****' C' 3° a"d 23 b°th C°nfHct with major holiday&#13;
Dec. 16 is the date chosen at other UW campuses, where final&#13;
examinations are also still in progress. The final confirmation of the&#13;
date was made by the Regents, who are responsible for all calendar&#13;
decisions and for standardizing the calendars of the various campuses&#13;
to some degree.&#13;
The committee is aware of the possible conflict with Monday&#13;
examinations and hopeful that this will not prevent anyone from&#13;
participating.&#13;
Free film showing today&#13;
The film, "HARVEST OF SHAME" will be shown Wednesday Dec.&#13;
12, at 12:15 at the Red Room in LLC. The film is about the plight of the&#13;
migrant worker in our society. It is free and everyone is invited to&#13;
come. It is sponsored by Third World Organization.&#13;
Table tennis team sets series&#13;
The Parkside Table Tennis team under the direction of Omar Amin,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Life Science, has set up a series of matches with&#13;
the Racine YMCA.&#13;
All matches will by played on Sunday afternoons with the starting&#13;
time scheduled to be 2 p.m. The YMCA will host the first match of&#13;
the 1974 season on January 20. They will also play the host on March&#13;
17. Parkside will serve as the host at the Physical Education building&#13;
on February 17 and April 21.&#13;
Any Parkside student, faculty or staff member is invited to participate&#13;
in the practice sessions which are held Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
afternoons in the P.E. building.&#13;
For additional information contact Amin 2547 or Vic Godfrey 2245 at&#13;
the Office of Athletics.&#13;
Sigma pi&#13;
collects&#13;
toys for&#13;
Day Care&#13;
Center&#13;
Sigma pi Fraternity, who is&#13;
responsible for the seasonal&#13;
Christmas tree in the Library&#13;
Learning Center, is also sponsoring&#13;
the second annual TOY&#13;
DRIVE for the children at the&#13;
Day Care Center. Through the&#13;
month of December Toy&#13;
collection stations will be at the&#13;
following locations: the information&#13;
desk in the Library&#13;
Learning Center, inside the main&#13;
entrance to Greenquist Hall, the&#13;
corridor between the Library&#13;
Learning Center and Greenquist&#13;
Hall, inside the main entrance of&#13;
Tallent Hall, and also in the&#13;
Student Union and in the student&#13;
lounge on the Kenosha Campus.&#13;
Last year's Toy Drive was a&#13;
resounding success, according to&#13;
John Sacket this year's publicity&#13;
chair-person, and a repeat&#13;
performance is anxiously expected.&#13;
Sigma Pi also announced that&#13;
new officers were elected at the&#13;
last meeting of the fraternal&#13;
organization. They are:&#13;
President (Sage) -- Gary Meyer,&#13;
first Counselor - Barry Cross,&#13;
Second Counselor-Charles&#13;
Perroni, Third Counselor-Daniel&#13;
Duchesneau, Fourth Counselor~&#13;
£erry Evenson, and Herald-&#13;
Kichard Doby. These officers will&#13;
1974 P°SitionS until Apri1,&#13;
Hockey team to battle UW-M&#13;
On Friday Nov. 14 the RANGER Hockey Team will meet UWfor&#13;
halfpTcl after tZ"* *" ^ fa"S may 5kate&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 13&#13;
More&#13;
poetry.&#13;
Census&#13;
Oopsl Enter at own r i . L.&#13;
havereaT'vlr 1". 'aS' we®k',stR,AN0E« "Exit at own risk" should&#13;
nave read enter at own risk." Jelco Bus company has requested that&#13;
by" either S 811 bUS&lt;!S ^ fr°n' d°°r °nly' but they may stiU leave&#13;
First homecoming tef for Fehnmry&#13;
The fraternities and sorority on campus are now planning&#13;
I arkside s first homecoming for next February 8, 9, 10. This "informal"&#13;
homecoming will center around the Grand Valley State vs.&#13;
I arkside Basketball Game on Saturday, February 9th. It will also&#13;
feature the Mission Mountain Band on Friday night, the Parkside&#13;
Stage Band on Saturday night and a University Open House on Sunday.&#13;
Homecoming tickets will be sold for a nominal price. Any student&#13;
or organization that has ideas or would like to help make the&#13;
homecoming a success should contact Delta Gamma Phi Sorority at&#13;
552-8472.&#13;
Film Society slates Boaart film&#13;
"The Big Sleep," a 1946 detective thriller starring Humphrey Bogart&#13;
and Lauren Bacall, will be screened by the Parkside Film Society at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 12, in Room 103 Greenquist Hall. The&#13;
film is open to the public. There is a 75-cent admission charge.&#13;
Based on a novel by Raymond Chandler, the screen play by William&#13;
Faulkner and Leigh Brackett deals with a private detective, played by&#13;
Bogart, hired to protect the daughters of a decadent millionaire from&#13;
blackmail. Bacall plays one of the daughters.&#13;
(A note for nostalgia buffs: in a 1946 review of the film, Bosley&#13;
Crowther of the New York Times, commented that Director Howard&#13;
Hawkes "kept the action racy and raw," that the story "has not a very&#13;
high moral tone and that "students of under-world minutiae will find&#13;
plenty of it here.")&#13;
Soda to suffer inflation&#13;
Effective at the end of the semester the price of a can of soda in the&#13;
vending machines will be increased to 25 cents. The higher price is due&#13;
r C0St? T shlPPmg a°d handling. Director of Student Life&#13;
Bill Niebuhr said that the soda dispensed in cups will remain at 15&#13;
cents and ounce for ounce is a better buy."&#13;
outside the inn,&#13;
gazing out the empty stable,&#13;
the stars,&#13;
all,&#13;
just speckled sequins,&#13;
small like those i begged beneath&#13;
in Pharoah's Egypt.&#13;
and me,&#13;
lonesome for the ruddy,&#13;
muddy Nile,&#13;
and me,&#13;
hungry for hoarfrost&#13;
in the Bethlehem ghetto,&#13;
and me,&#13;
swaddled in rags,&#13;
knotting the cold straw&#13;
in my tired fingers.&#13;
-Michael Guard&#13;
Racine Sophomore&#13;
Editor's note: A poem titled&#13;
"Two Rocks" by Michael Guard&#13;
has been selected for inclusion in&#13;
the Annual Anthology of College&#13;
Poetry. It was chosen from&#13;
among thousands of manuscripts&#13;
submitted by college students&#13;
from across the country.&#13;
The etchings of charcoal&#13;
the scratches of paint,&#13;
against the background grey,&#13;
seem ill-defined and faint.&#13;
Yet these shadows&#13;
so f aded, so worn&#13;
are looking to be deepened&#13;
in the gold of early morn.&#13;
In this way, so like lovethat&#13;
ill-defined, shadowed grey&#13;
becomes so golden and real&#13;
when seen on this new day.&#13;
-—Steven Louis Hansen&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
Ok, uie use&#13;
•Plight pattern&#13;
No.^25. Fly due&#13;
South east.&#13;
Remember&#13;
your linesf&#13;
Oh, yes.&#13;
•Sopranos —&#13;
hold the high&#13;
E,on I&gt;eus;&#13;
SISTERSWE&#13;
HAVE HEED OF&#13;
EACH OTHER AND 1J3VE&#13;
°NE ANOTHER.&#13;
OUR TIME HAS COHE.&#13;
WE W ILL FLY INTO&#13;
BEING- FREER&#13;
SPIRITS AT LAST.&#13;
UNAFRAID. UNASHAMED.&#13;
REVELING COMPLETELY&#13;
IN JOY, TEAPS&#13;
AND&#13;
IDVE.&#13;
AND&#13;
WE W ILL BE ONE&#13;
IN THE SISTERHOOD&#13;
OF WOMAN.&#13;
-Denise Anastasio&#13;
Racine Senior&#13;
• PAPA B URGER&#13;
• TEEN BURGER&#13;
• MAMA B URGER&#13;
• BABY B URGER&#13;
"OPEN YEAR AROUND1&#13;
^ CARRY-OUTS&#13;
CALL AHEAD - YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY&#13;
Tubs of Chicken - Fish&#13;
and Shrimp&#13;
FREE G ALLON O F R OOT B EER&#13;
WITH *5 ORDER&#13;
'2 MILE NORTH OF&#13;
MIDCITY THEATER&#13;
ON SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
w&#13;
r&#13;
it&#13;
H i .H I&#13;
552-8404&#13;
A &amp; W ROOT BEER DRIVE-IN&#13;
Sheridan Rd. (Hy. 32) North&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Hours Sun - Thrs. 11-7&#13;
Fri.&amp;Sat. 11 to 11&#13;
START THE SEMESTER&#13;
OUT RIGHT&#13;
SE88M&#13;
Electronic s lide rule&#13;
, •: a—w-iv with a memory&#13;
wmuill s&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
The works represented here are only a few of the sculptures now on display at the Kenosha Campus.&#13;
These student works were done in the Three Dimensional course of professor John Murphy.&#13;
Professor Moishe Smith instills&#13;
a humanistic approach in the art&#13;
of his printmaking students.&#13;
These representative works from&#13;
Smith's class can be seen in D-140&#13;
of the Comm. Arts Building.&#13;
photos by Ken Pestka&#13;
Cagers&#13;
to face&#13;
Green Bay&#13;
by Neal Sautner&#13;
*After the Ranger cagers' first&#13;
few loss es, they look forward to&#13;
rebounding back for win No 2,&#13;
against UW-Green Bay. During&#13;
pre-season, this year's Green&#13;
gay squad has been ranked as&#13;
high as 13th in the state and 4th or&#13;
5th in the district.&#13;
Commenting on Gary Cole's&#13;
condition, Coach Stephens said,&#13;
"Gary might be playing Green&#13;
Bay, depending on if the doctor&#13;
ok's it. If he thinks that might be&#13;
rushing it, he should be ready for&#13;
the following game against&#13;
Whitewater."&#13;
In the first contest ever against&#13;
Green Bay, Stephens recalls a&#13;
close game. "We lost to them by&#13;
one point with one minute and&#13;
thirty seconds to go." Then he&#13;
added that Green Bay always&#13;
seems to "luck out," and we&#13;
always seem to have someone&#13;
injured." When talking about last&#13;
years contest, he pointed out that&#13;
"we led most of the way," but lost&#13;
to them.&#13;
In concluding the interview,&#13;
Stephens said, "This game&#13;
should be a good defensive battle,&#13;
and we hope Cole is back."&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
WGym opeiC^rtrecr«tionB":30,b''-,20aonlV°n''ht bui,(,'n9 wi" dose at 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:00 noon - 1 :00 p.m. only&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m. 4:00 p.m. only.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.&#13;
F Pooropen^]':(W^.^"^OcTplm8'1 C0Ur'sopen 8:3°a.m. to 10:00 p.m.&#13;
Gym open for recreatioiratTsoI'm ^Tothio'on 9Vm W'" C'°Se ^ 12:00 "00n tiM 3:00 pm'&#13;
Handball courts open 9:30 a.m. 4:00 p m&#13;
Pool open 12:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.&#13;
TUESDAY: Dec. 18th - Same as above, Monday schedule.&#13;
Hockey team splits pair&#13;
whftSlFridai'the ?anger Hockey Team skated off to a good start in&#13;
what seemed an almost certain victory for the loss-prone Rangers,&#13;
e Rangers 3-1 lead was short-lived, for the hard hitting of St. Norbert&#13;
College whittled down the score and finally overpowered the&#13;
Rangers 5-4.&#13;
Sunday's game against Illinois State seemed to be more of a seesaw&#13;
battle. The Rangers rally in the end, consisting of Jerry Madala's first&#13;
hat triqk, insured the win, making the score 5-2. The pucksters won the&#13;
game despite conflicting viewpoints between players, thus making&#13;
their season record 1-4.&#13;
&gt;/&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1973 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 15&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
ONE BEDROOM RANCH STYLE $19,500 to $23,000&#13;
TWO BEDROOM RANCH STYLE $24,500 to $27,000&#13;
TWO BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE $31,000&#13;
THREE BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE $32,000 to $34,000&#13;
Prices include • Air conditioning • Luxurious carpeting • Electric range and sell cleaning oven&#13;
• Fiost free refrigerator •Dishwasher • Food waste disposal •Central FM. TV antenna&#13;
• Country clubhouse, with sauna "And many othci design and convenience features.&#13;
SEE OUR DECORATOR FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
For more information&#13;
Models also open weekdays 1 t o 8 PHONE 1—552-9339&#13;
Or bv personal showing at your convenience PARKSIDE REALTY INC.&#13;
Developed and Budr hy U S General. Inc&#13;
Bill Sobanski scored 17 poi nts in Parkside's game vs. Illinois Institute&#13;
of Technology.&#13;
Ranger netmen&#13;
beat Illinois Tech.&#13;
I he Parkside cagers finally came out on the winning end, as they&#13;
captured consolation honors in the Missouri-St. Louis Tourney last&#13;
weekend Parkside beat Illinois Institute of Technology by a narrow&#13;
margin, 64-63. J 3 I,C"IUW&#13;
The Ranger five, who have lost their first three games to very tough&#13;
teams-Whitewater Drake, and St. Louis-combined the hot shS&#13;
of scoring leaders Bill Sobanski and Chuck Chambliss, who had 17 and&#13;
16 poi nts respectively.&#13;
Wrestlers capture 2nd place&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team captured second place in the&#13;
Whitewater Warhawk Invitational wrestling tourney last weekend,&#13;
and came home with three champions to show for it.&#13;
Ken Martin, Bill West, and Randy Scarda all were victorious&#13;
overall, and all are still undefeated in this early season. At the end of&#13;
the tourney, Ken Martin was voted by the coaches as "The Most&#13;
Valuable Wrestler," and Randy Scarda was awarded for having the&#13;
most pins in the tourney. Randy pinned his first three opponents.&#13;
"We lost a few matches we should have won, still we had the&#13;
strength to take second among some outstanding teams," was the&#13;
comment given by Coach Jim Koch as he summed up his team's&#13;
performance.&#13;
This was the last competition as a team for the grapplers until&#13;
second semester. Ken Martin and Bill West, however, will compete in&#13;
the prestigious Midlands Wrestling Tourney which will take place on&#13;
Dec. 21-22, a t Northwestern University.&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
for&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Hockey Fans&#13;
who attend the&#13;
Parkside vs. UW-Milwaukee game&#13;
Friday, Dec. 14th —6:00p.m.-8:00p.m.&#13;
Can public skate from 8:15 to&#13;
10:15 p.m. at ONE-HALF PRICE following the&#13;
game&#13;
Ice Arena&#13;
7727 60th Ave. # Kenosha, Wis. 53141&#13;
Phone 694 1801&#13;
D$ Vmf M Special [Pipe&#13;
x'or j^| Speclol [Per/on, 3top Down&#13;
©© jFJutoy&#13;
Middle Size No. 10&#13;
BeanBag&#13;
Chair :»!&#13;
m:&#13;
1. Draw an accurate sketch&#13;
2. Specify color.&#13;
3. Allow 5 days for delivery.&#13;
4. Estimate price (if you can't - ask us)&#13;
SO/Lm1%\ 9Wi5th c&lt; oupon&#13;
Finest Selection of:&#13;
• Leather Goods ( Purses Belts Buckles )&#13;
Water&#13;
Mattress&#13;
•Custom Jewelry • Water Beds&#13;
•Tapes •Records *Pipes *Papers&#13;
•All Other Vital Life Necessities&#13;
.»•**&#13;
1Q95&#13;
with c&lt;&#13;
/ ... •. ••y-yjA?&#13;
" ® -P mmmm. mm -1 i - w? m m.&#13;
Two Person Bean Bag&#13;
-Mr -!L'&#13;
\" "V jio ;W&#13;
5010 7&#13;
Love&#13;
/.&#13;
'&lt;tw "Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Seat V.V.h&#13;
#QA95 a with c&#13;
•*"""'&#13;
*'S Phone 654-3578&#13;
coupon&#13;
mm J</text>
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              <text>shucard proposes faculty do advising&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
sal to reorganize the academic advising&#13;
A pro,:; Parkside was made by Alan Shucard,&#13;
system te professor of English, at the last faculty&#13;
ass&lt;JCIameeting. A surprise to the Student Services&#13;
-;Ie hich it directly affects, the proposal calls for&#13;
sta '~ces of academic advising to be staffed by&#13;
u~~ ~embers." At the present time, students&#13;
fa bave declared a major are advised by faculty.&#13;
whO 3400 students who have not currently declared a&#13;
Tb~ receive academic advising from the coun-&#13;
~JOI' tall ofthe Student Services office. Under the&#13;
~~ plan all students would receive advising&#13;
from faculty. .&#13;
A brief discussion followed the reading of the&#13;
posaI and it was sent to the Academic Policies&#13;
P'" 'tlee for further study. The discussion cen-&#13;
::F.round the need for hiring additional faculty&#13;
release those faculty members who are involved&#13;
to demic advising from part of theIr class loads,&#13;
maca f Ity d . d" and as a reward for those ,aell . omg ,3 VISIng.&#13;
In an interview Shucard saId that 10 talkIng to and&#13;
advisingmajors be found they were not adequately .&#13;
advised and that academic advice given by an&#13;
academician who is closest to the reqwrements IS 10&#13;
the best interests of the students. He added that&#13;
academ!c a,dvice is net given to the student early&#13;
eno~~ In his or her college career. "The academic&#13;
advising .system which is most effective for the&#13;
students IStbe one I proposed," be said. When asked&#13;
Wbether.or not the prOposed system may force a cut&#13;
10 posrticns for tbe student services counseling&#13;
staff, Shucard said, "If you have a system that&#13;
doesn't work effectively you have to find a different&#13;
way, not keep an old system to save jobs. "&#13;
James Dean, ChairJ&gt;erson of the Academic&#13;
POhCles Committee, said the committee would&#13;
research SUch factors as cost and the need to hire&#13;
addllIonal faculty. He said he felt that "people are&#13;
not getting good advice" and the "Organization of&#13;
the system as it stands now is not l'eSponsive 10 change."&#13;
AlIen Dearborn, Assistant OlanceUor and Dean of&#13;
StUdents, claimed that contrary 10 the College of&#13;
&amp;ience and Society. the School of Modern In'*'slry&#13;
H&#13;
wants&#13;
to keep Us posted Onall academic revisions.&#13;
They send US everything." Dearborn questioned&#13;
whether or not the new proposal perhaps was&#13;
motivated to save and create faculty positions. He&#13;
said that "if it is an idea that has the students' best&#13;
interests in mind then I'm all for it. II He added,&#13;
however, that if the move is one "for faculty power&#13;
or academic deans' power, I'm not going to support&#13;
It - and 111do aU I can to dIacour ell"&#13;
Dearborn sa'd that no eee " U ta II1Onf7 from&#13;
the Student , (undlng 10 put to .cademlc&#13;
adv etse..ben. "If facult)' arerull)' ...."&#13;
he added, "or "ere lIncere f... the t. t fl. n,&#13;
they should ha, e been I f... mo lUdml&#13;
/"VIces tall It'. I'" to cntlclze than aa...&#13;
~ ... advice. Ex pifor a fN' ... members&#13;
of the faculty I ha, e oev... had • facull member&#13;
ceene to me '""8I1Ung 10 olfer ad "I\lPPO&lt;1 "&#13;
Je"-el Ecbelbarg.... nl an of udell •&#13;
explained thal the colnlellll/l !J ..... III the&#13;
studenl as a '''''iloIe _" not just to academia&#13;
She explamed Illat ber 1la.!J .pproxuna Iy&#13;
per ~nt of tbetr ume 10 acadernic ad whldl&#13;
mvol.es a lot of ume and IaIow "II.&#13;
professJonal responsjbtluy," laid&#13;
Ecbelbarg ... apla1Ded that the C&lt;JUIIIehna IUIf&#13;
ftnd theIr peak 01 academJc ad. .1 the&#13;
~ and the end of the san u 'Well u&#13;
heNeen san~. when f.cuIty areoIlen lltlId.l,.&#13;
papers and exams or ] ..... '·allabl For "' .......&#13;
and pan-t1me Itllden ,advis«'a ...... , ilable b)'&#13;
appomtment and at the Informounn four&#13;
nights per "eel&lt;&#13;
W,Ill regard 10 tudenl "m ha"e not d&lt;clared a&#13;
major, Ecbelbarger lr'esIed the need f... U&#13;
cont""- Of' ... I&#13;
TheParkside!--- _&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974 Vol. II No. 16&#13;
!yCCC&#13;
Student funds allocated&#13;
Or(aalzatlon&#13;
Porbide Village Student&#13;
Aaociation&#13;
Amenian Club&#13;
AdultStudents&#13;
a-Club&#13;
OliId Care Center&#13;
Debaleand Forensics&#13;
I'Irbide Players&#13;
PbolGgraphyClub&#13;
Pre-MedClub&#13;
RInger •&#13;
Third World&#13;
Yearbook&#13;
DellaGamma Phi (sorority)&#13;
Interfraternity Council&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
VeteransClub&#13;
SigmaPi &lt;fraternity)&#13;
Ouistian Fellowship&#13;
NewmanClub&#13;
IledilationSociety&#13;
DemocraticYouth Caucus&#13;
Young RePUblicans&#13;
ftlct;me Rangers&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
SI&gt;im Club&#13;
PomPorn Squad&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
PSGA&#13;
by Haney V. Hedden&#13;
Atthe close of last semester the&#13;
Carnpus Concerns Committee&#13;
ICCC) concluded its&#13;
deliberations on funding of&#13;
stUdentorganizations. Of the 28&#13;
organizations that requested&#13;
fllJIds all received money for&#13;
;:':,hng and duplicating costs.&#13;
'lOg only $6900 to work with&#13;
cec could not possibly satisfy all&#13;
OI'gaJUzahons'requests which&#13;
;anged from $20 to $4103.60. In&#13;
'ct, the total funds originally&#13;
~IIeSled by the organizations&#13;
OlDItedto $22,663.&#13;
.,lYhe. CCC asked these&#13;
~IZations to revise their&#13;
Witht req~ests in accordance&#13;
guider fundIng criteria and&#13;
'nes set up by CCC few&#13;
~zatlons scaled back their&#13;
.... I requests and some did&#13;
COnunl'eapond at all. As a resull, the&#13;
a.-. Itlee was forced 10 reduce&#13;
o.••~orgalUzations'requests and&#13;
~--y appropriated $6,219 for&#13;
Amount&#13;
Requested&#13;
Amount&#13;
Received&#13;
$50&#13;
340&#13;
525&#13;
943&#13;
3104&#13;
779.75&#13;
342&#13;
167&#13;
50&#13;
2515&#13;
875&#13;
3188&#13;
470&#13;
146&#13;
601&#13;
1410&#13;
665&#13;
215&#13;
$25&#13;
25&#13;
150&#13;
25&#13;
BOO&#13;
120&#13;
100&#13;
o&#13;
15&#13;
500&#13;
190&#13;
200&#13;
270&#13;
o&#13;
200&#13;
1410&#13;
100&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
o&#13;
450&#13;
210&#13;
o&#13;
129&#13;
300&#13;
4103.60&#13;
2425&#13;
318&#13;
500&#13;
329&#13;
student organizations. edTfhe&#13;
remaining funds will be us or&#13;
loans to the organizat~ons an~f~~&#13;
mailing and duplicatmg cos .&#13;
all groups. that some&#13;
The reason . d only a&#13;
organizations receive. uest&#13;
all percentage of their req&#13;
~~ nothing at all is in some c~=&#13;
due to their access r t~un~ing.&#13;
sources of Teve~ue ~ed by the&#13;
The money a Dca d fee or&#13;
cce is from the se!p'"eg~~ion of&#13;
"student money alP f ••• per .. A tot 0""" yearly tUItIOn.ar constitutes the&#13;
student per ye d this is broken&#13;
segregated fee, an d' g for the&#13;
down to provide fun In the&#13;
'Id' g reserve, Union bUi In Arl Com- od Fine 5 . Lecture a H Ith BUSing . t Student ea , mit ee, . Athletics, In.&#13;
and parlklOS~~dent Activities,&#13;
tramura S, rt The&#13;
and Student Group S;;~'li~rs' per&#13;
last receIVes two f ece to&#13;
student per year or&#13;
a1lllcate. 'de Village Student The Parksl&#13;
Association received $25, the&#13;
Adult Students $150. and Third&#13;
World $190 for dances, lectures&#13;
and other programs the)" mtend&#13;
to sponsor. In addihon, Adult&#13;
Students can obtain $350 and&#13;
Third World $410 in loans to&#13;
finance their daoces. .&#13;
The Child care Center receIved&#13;
$BOO for equipment and supplies&#13;
necessary for its operation. The&#13;
Parkside Players plan to put on a&#13;
studio production this spnng and&#13;
received $100 and an addIuonal&#13;
$100 loan for that purpose.&#13;
The RANGER recei.ed $400 for&#13;
editors' salaries an~ an additional&#13;
$100 for supplies and-or&#13;
salaries. The .Yearbook&#13;
organization decided It '-"as loa&#13;
late in the school year to publISh a&#13;
yearbook for 19'14 but they dId&#13;
receive $200 for initJal expenses&#13;
for next year's yearbook&#13;
The Vet's Club was the only&#13;
organization to receive. Its to.u:1&#13;
original request, WhlCh was&#13;
$1410. These funds will be used&#13;
for their recycling proJect and to&#13;
genera et money to ehmmate&#13;
their Racine Bus debt.&#13;
Organizations such as the&#13;
Christian Fellowship,. ~he&#13;
N an Club, Medllatlon&#13;
ewm . \. th Society the Democratic au&#13;
• , and lhe Young Caucus ..&#13;
Republicans did not .r~cel\. e&#13;
program funding for POhhca~:;r&#13;
religious reasons. They I.&#13;
however, receive ~e (~dUlg for&#13;
mailing and dup1l~atUlg ~sf~&#13;
Hockey Club receIved $4 .&#13;
. because the AthletIC&#13;
~l~~~~~ent had difficulty in&#13;
Cunding th~~~kside Student&#13;
The ment Association Govern . I&#13;
. d $300 for secret8n3 receive I'&#13;
ograms and supp les.&#13;
costs,. pr De of Students AsSIstant an . ed&#13;
I Echelharger predlcl&#13;
Jewe CCC will set up&#13;
that next y.ear. and criteria&#13;
definite gUldelmes . f ding&#13;
udent orgamzatJon un ..&#13;
for st lubs ",,;U submit theLr&#13;
The c . the faU and money&#13;
requests In .sted in the could be appropn&#13;
spring.&#13;
Hedden appointed&#13;
News Editor&#13;
\heR&#13;
lember,&#13;
&lt;4f;R&#13;
ma)orl&#13;
lIa"'t~ tttdckn&#13;
Th appoonlment of Harv&#13;
Hedden as • 'e" EdItor for Ille&#13;
R.~ G ER " announced by the&#13;
paper at Ille c1... (&gt;( lall&#13;
semester Hedden a freshman&#13;
"00 entered Parks"le and joined&#13;
Getting Mom&#13;
registered&#13;
\lice Itan hom, ont of e\ eral&#13;
mtmbft'1; of thp "-dult tUdent&#13;
oC'iation "bo \oluntttred&#13;
their lime at regi lration, gives&#13;
l,hi dl intt.resled part)· a tour of&#13;
regi lration ~hile- Mom braves&#13;
the computer terminal lines. Also&#13;
pictured is Kay S~tenty, another&#13;
adult student.&#13;
shucard proposes faculty do adv.sing by Debra Friedell&#13;
sal to reorganize the academic advising&#13;
A pro~ Parkside was made by Alan Shucard,&#13;
systeJ? ~ professor of English, at the last faculty&#13;
associa meeting. A surprise to the Student Services&#13;
senate hich it directly affects, the proposal calls for&#13;
staff, ~f es of academic advising to be staffed by&#13;
··the O ~embers." At the present time, students&#13;
faculty declared a major are advised by faculty.&#13;
whO ~e tudents who have not currently declared a&#13;
'lb~ t!:eive academic advising from the counm~Jor&#13;
~ff of the Student Services office. Under the&#13;
i,-opos&#13;
sebng ~ plan all students would receive advising&#13;
from faculty. . brief discussion followed the reading of the&#13;
A sal and it was sent to the Academic Policies&#13;
i,-opo ·ttee for further study. The discussion cen-&#13;
~1round the need for hiring additional faculty&#13;
to rele~ those faculty members wh~ are involved&#13;
. demic advising from part of their class loads, 111 aca&#13;
d reward for those f ac ulty d 01ng · d · · a vismg. 811 In:~ ~terview Shucard said that in talking to and&#13;
advising majors he found ~ey wde~e not_ adequbately .&#13;
advised and that academic a VIce _given Y_ ~&#13;
academician who is closest to the reqwrements 1s m&#13;
the best interests of the students. He added that&#13;
academic advice is not given to the u&#13;
eno~~ in his or her college career. "The advising system which is mo t effecti&#13;
students is the one I proposed," he aid. Wh&#13;
:,Vhether or not the proposed y tern ma force a cu&#13;
m positions for the student sel"'.1c · c 1&#13;
staff, ,Shucard sai~, "If you have a ) em th t&#13;
doesn t work effectively you have to find a different way, not keep an old system to save jobs."&#13;
James Dean, Chairperson of the Academ c Policies Committee, said the committee d&#13;
research such factors as cost and the need to hire&#13;
additional faculty. He said he felt that • people are&#13;
not getting good advice" and the "organization or&#13;
the system as it stands now is not r ponshe to change."&#13;
Allen Dearborn, Assistant Chancellor and Dean of&#13;
Students, claimed that contrary to the College of&#13;
Science and Society, the School of odern In&#13;
"wants to keep us posted on all academic r .- · .&#13;
They send us everything." Dearborn que tioned&#13;
whether or not the new proposal perhaps a&#13;
motivated to save and create faculty positio H&#13;
said that "if it is an idea that has the tuden '&#13;
interests in mind then I'm all for it." He added&#13;
however, that if the move is one " for faculty po&#13;
or academic deans' power, I'm not going to&#13;
The Parkside-------&#13;
R ANGER&#13;
Hedden appointed&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974 Vol. II No. 16&#13;
By CCC&#13;
Student funds allocated&#13;
Organization&#13;
Parkside Village Student&#13;
Association&#13;
Armenian Club&#13;
Adult Students&#13;
Chess Club&#13;
Child Care Center&#13;
Debate and Forensics&#13;
Parkside Players&#13;
Photography Club&#13;
Pre-Med Club&#13;
Ranger&#13;
Third World&#13;
Yearbook&#13;
Delta Gamma Phi (sorority)&#13;
lnterfraternity Council&#13;
Poetry Forwn&#13;
Veterans Club&#13;
Sigma Pi (fraternity)&#13;
Ouistian Fellowship&#13;
1 ewman Club&#13;
Meditation Society&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus&#13;
Young Republicans&#13;
Ragtime Rangers&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Swim Club&#13;
Porn Porn Squad&#13;
Oieerieaders&#13;
PSGA&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
At the close of last semester the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
ICCCJ concluded its&#13;
deliberations on funding of&#13;
tudent organizations. Of the 28&#13;
organizations that requested&#13;
fu~~ all received money for&#13;
~~•hng and duplicating costs.&#13;
•1&lt;1Ving only $6900 to work with&#13;
CCC c?uld not possibly satisfy all&#13;
organizations' requests, which&#13;
~angea from $20 to $4103.60. In&#13;
act, the total funds originally&#13;
reqllf!sted by the organizations am~unted to $22,663.&#13;
When CCC asked these&#13;
~anizations to revise their&#13;
get requests in accordance&#13;
""1&#13;
!h funding criteria and gl.l!del.ines set up by CCC few&#13;
Otganizations scaled back their&#13;
OfiginaJ requests and some did&#13;
:nre~pond at all. As a result, the&#13;
~tttee was forced to reduce&#13;
rlllall llrganizations' requests and&#13;
Y lpPropriated $6,219 for&#13;
Amount&#13;
Requested&#13;
$50&#13;
340&#13;
525&#13;
943&#13;
3104&#13;
779.75&#13;
342&#13;
167&#13;
50&#13;
2515&#13;
875&#13;
3188&#13;
470&#13;
146&#13;
601&#13;
1410&#13;
665&#13;
215&#13;
4103.60&#13;
2425&#13;
318&#13;
500&#13;
329&#13;
Amount&#13;
Received&#13;
$25&#13;
25&#13;
150&#13;
25&#13;
800&#13;
120&#13;
100&#13;
0&#13;
15&#13;
500&#13;
190&#13;
200&#13;
270&#13;
0&#13;
200&#13;
1410&#13;
100&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
450&#13;
210&#13;
0&#13;
129&#13;
300&#13;
. t' ns The stud~n~ orgdsamz~/~e ~sed for&#13;
remammg fun w1 d f r loans to the organ.izat~ons a~ts ~f mailing and duphcating co •&#13;
all groups. that some&#13;
The :eason ·ved only a&#13;
organizations recef\heir request all percentage o&#13;
~; nothing a~ all is in so:e ~~: due to their acces~r funding .&#13;
sources of Tev:fi~~ated by the&#13;
The money ted fee or CCC is from the segrega t' of " por 10n "student money f $88 per · · A total o Yearly twtwn. t'tutes the Year cons 1 student per d this is broken segregated fe~, an ding for the down to provide fun the 'ld' g reserve, Union bu• m . Arts Com- nd Fine Lecture . a H Ith Busing&#13;
m1ttee, · Student ea ' . Athletics, In·&#13;
and Parkinit~dent Activities, tramurals, Support The and Student Group dollars. per&#13;
last receives two for CCC to student per year&#13;
al~cate. 'd Village student The Parks1 e&#13;
Getting Mom&#13;
registered &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
_______ RANGER&#13;
Editoriol/Opinion&#13;
Should defeat&#13;
power play&#13;
proposal&#13;
A proposal to be discussed Thursday at the meeting of&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee (at 1 p.m, in CA 233)&#13;
calls for putting all academ Ie advising In the hands of&#13;
the academic deans' offices and the faculty. At present,&#13;
faculty advise those students who have declared&#13;
malors, and all other advising is handled through the&#13;
Student Services office.&#13;
RANGER urges the faculty and the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee to consider very carefully all the&#13;
ramilicalions of the proposal. which appears to be a&#13;
politically motivated one.&#13;
During the Faculty senate meeting at which the&#13;
proposal was first read, no senate member questioned&#13;
or even mentioned which system might be most helpful&#13;
to students,which It Is to serve. Deplorable enough, what&#13;
turther rankled our sensllivltles was that all discussion&#13;
centered around the need (or opportunity) for more&#13;
money and more faculty to carry out the plan.&#13;
Since that meeting RANGER has spoken with&#13;
students, faculty and Student Services staff. All complain&#13;
about the poor communication lines between the&#13;
office of Student services and the two academic deans'&#13;
offices. However, the problem is most acute in the&#13;
College of Science and Society. It appears that&#13;
notillcation of revisions and changes within the College&#13;
stopped coming to the Student Services office last&#13;
summer. Could it be that the college is trying to embarrass&#13;
Student services by deliberately creating its&#13;
tack of upto-date Information for advising, thus paving&#13;
a clearer way for a power play such as this proposal?&#13;
Dean Eugene Norwood of the college claims the first&#13;
time he heard the proposal was at the December&#13;
Faculty Senate meeting. However, sources say the&#13;
proposal actually originated in Norwood's office.&#13;
RANG E R is skeptical about the plan for other&#13;
reasons, too. Students must be assured that faculty can&#13;
devote the lime to be available during the day and&#13;
evenings (for night students) and throughout the&#13;
semester. By far the heaviest advising load comes from&#13;
the end of finals week through the end of the following&#13;
registration period, a time when faculty are grading&#13;
exams lind then often on vacation. During the semester&#13;
they are, of course, busy with their teaching jobs, as&#13;
well as research and committee work. Also, it is&#13;
essential that faculty members advising undecided&#13;
students be open-minded enough that there is no bias&#13;
and pigeon·holing.&#13;
We suggest that when the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
and Faculty senate consider this proposal, they&#13;
support the system which is best for the students. We&#13;
are conndent that with cooperation and support, the&#13;
present problems experienced in academic advising can&#13;
be solved, and communIcation lines between faculty,&#13;
counselors and students completely opened. But as long&#13;
as major campus groups areat odds with each other, the&#13;
future of a quality University is dimmed.&#13;
o IT'S MY DISCIPliNE&#13;
ouR DEPAlITMENT&#13;
WE'LL PO IT!&#13;
Wf"GET"&#13;
TO DO I ./1&#13;
",;,.(' ~"'NIiL&gt;&#13;
~rr'&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Mr. Ronald Brinkmann must&#13;
be the campus representative, for&#13;
Male Chauvinism.' He certainly&#13;
has the knack (or intimidati~&#13;
women employees on this&#13;
campus.Not only doeshe display&#13;
his qualifications in this area, ~ut&#13;
we understand he caTTleS&#13;
references.&#13;
Oneshouldadmire any person&#13;
who stands on his convictions, but&#13;
when his convictions are&#13;
detrimental to this University.&#13;
we feel concerned opinions&#13;
shouldbe heard.&#13;
First let us turn to page 65,&#13;
verses1 through8 and read aloud&#13;
everything Mr. Brinkmann IS&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Groups of individuals having&#13;
group power persuade American&#13;
society. and one should not&#13;
separate professors from this&#13;
type of association. Any group&#13;
that is not aware of its collective&#13;
power - and living in America -&#13;
is a dying body.&#13;
As the writer Dickens might&#13;
have phrased it: uWe're living in&#13;
the best of times, and we're living&#13;
in the worst of times. II&#13;
If you think your campus is&#13;
secure and administration .is&#13;
about tbe businessof being fair&#13;
and just, then you are living in&#13;
the worst of times; however, if&#13;
youare concernedthat all higher&#13;
education areas are under attack&#13;
and you are about the business of&#13;
doing something about it, then&#13;
you are living in the best of times.&#13;
The agenda of this article is&#13;
addressed primarily to&#13;
professors in Wisconsin. It rises&#13;
most naturally out of the bloody&#13;
struggleto get complacent,selfsatisfied&#13;
educators organized, for&#13;
it is they who are dying-and no&#13;
onecan help them; they have to&#13;
be willing to help themselves.&#13;
The simple fact is that no truly&#13;
basic change for our benefit takes&#13;
place in America unless we&#13;
organize to initiate that change.&#13;
This fact assumes that we must&#13;
have some essential agreement&#13;
on overall objectives, even&#13;
though we may differ on many&#13;
specifics. Therefore, let us come&#13;
together around the crucial&#13;
issues of survival-and control of&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I wouldfirst like to thankall the&#13;
students,faculty and staff persons&#13;
who came down to see the&#13;
performances in the Whiteskellar&#13;
during the first semester.&#13;
Because of you all, we were able&#13;
to put on bigger and, hopefully,&#13;
better shows. This semester&#13;
should be the best yet. Our&#13;
openingshowwill be Bob Rohan&#13;
onthe23rdof Januaryfrom 1-3in&#13;
the afternoon. There will be a&#13;
show every Wednesday from then&#13;
on and everyone is welcome to&#13;
come down for a break from&#13;
cl~ss. On February 6, auditions ",11 be held in the Whileskellar&#13;
for performers for the rest of the&#13;
semester. Anyone who is interested&#13;
in auditioning can stop in&#13;
to the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
office in LLC-D-195and sign up&#13;
for an audition time. Everyone&#13;
should come to this show to give&#13;
the performers a taste of what an&#13;
audIence show is. Again many&#13;
thanks and I hope that my&#13;
committee and myself can give&#13;
you continuing good times.&#13;
GaryS.Petersen&#13;
. Chairman Coffeehouse Commlttee&#13;
. ~ :8. Anyone interested in&#13;
JO~OIngthe Coffeehouse Com.&#13;
mlllee or just helping us out&#13;
please stop in and see me as soo~&#13;
as possible.&#13;
really running around shouting&#13;
(in his circumventive way).&#13;
I Ronald Brinkmann am the&#13;
he~d of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Campus&#13;
police Force. I exhaust and&#13;
enforce every regula~ion I ~an&#13;
possiblyfind. I am doing my Job&#13;
and I demand compliance with&#13;
Police Regulations.&#13;
This should make Brinkmann&#13;
feel swelledwith pride. Now, We&#13;
ask, why he demands students,&#13;
staff, and faculty eooperation&#13;
when in fact, he does not&#13;
cooperate or com~ly wi~ other&#13;
University regulatlOns which are&#13;
directly related to student, staff,&#13;
ourselves as educators.&#13;
The American educational&#13;
system does not work for most&#13;
people unless it is forced to, and it&#13;
cannot be made to work without&#13;
our involvement. In view of the&#13;
realities of our situation as&#13;
educators, we are confronted&#13;
with a choice.&#13;
Will we believe the truth that&#13;
the past has shown us·-or will we&#13;
try to hide?Will the small favors&#13;
some of us have received blind us&#13;
to the larger sufferings of our&#13;
ranks, or will we open our views&#13;
to the testimony of our past&#13;
history?&#13;
For more years than we would&#13;
care to count, we have followed&#13;
the path of dependence on&#13;
political administrators and their&#13;
systems. From the Liberty Party&#13;
in the decades before the Civil&#13;
War to the Republican Party of&#13;
Richard Nixon, we trusted in&#13;
other men and their politics as&#13;
our deliverers. Let there be no&#13;
more of that.&#13;
The challenge is thrown to us,&#13;
to save ourselves. It is the&#13;
challenge to consolidate and&#13;
organize our own ranks as the&#13;
vanguard in the struggle for a&#13;
new academic role. To accept&#13;
that challenge is to move the&#13;
unorganized to the point of being&#13;
organized. There can be no&#13;
equivocation on this issue. The&#13;
spirit of the times leaves us no&#13;
choice.&#13;
Politics has not and cannot&#13;
bring the changes we need unless&#13;
we get involved. We delude&#13;
and faculty.&#13;
We ask why he feelsh&#13;
govern other departments e. c~&#13;
this University whenthe ~lhin&#13;
in compliance with Sty t ....&#13;
U&#13;
·· " .~ DIversity regulations. Wedo'""'-&#13;
revolve around one m lW)t&#13;
Brinkmann, but around ;n'ksiMr&#13;
.&#13;
as a whole unit, doing 0: .dt&#13;
with one goal in mind. to lobs&#13;
this University the best mak,&#13;
Parkside offering th - Wllh&#13;
educationalopportunities'f best&#13;
people. or all&#13;
Are you too husyshiningy&#13;
handcuff tie clip or is til 00r&#13;
h bei ..... uman emg somewhere behind&#13;
that semi-uniform?&#13;
ConcernedParksideWOIIl&#13;
(NameswithheldUponreq"';&#13;
\-- .&#13;
ourselvesIf wethinkthatchang&#13;
can . ~e achieved witbot&#13;
orgamzmg our power. ut&#13;
Relevanceis the key issue&#13;
education. As new paths in~&#13;
education are developingand&#13;
brought to maturity, educatiOllai&#13;
institutions are (aced with the&#13;
need to provide a systemlhat&#13;
facesthe challengesandrealilis&#13;
of the modernworldor die.&#13;
The educatormust seek .ftlr&#13;
an educational experience that ..&#13;
consistent with the rapid&#13;
developments and improvements&#13;
of a modern world. He or •&#13;
must be willing to acceptlite&#13;
many responsibilities that&#13;
academic relevance demudl&#13;
Through the active,intellig"ll&#13;
participation of the educator.&#13;
significant changes can bt&#13;
achieved.&#13;
The Wisconsin Educatioo&#13;
Association Council offers tbt&#13;
professors of the state the vehicle&#13;
with which to organize.The&#13;
WEAChasbeenthehase sllJlllOll&#13;
for educators in Wisconsin sirrt&#13;
1855.&#13;
Membershipin theWEAC CIIl&#13;
benefit professors in the areas of&#13;
economics, bargaining, job&#13;
security and contract mainterrance-along&#13;
with all the othfr&#13;
services available to K-12&#13;
teachers.&#13;
The power is on the campusesit&#13;
must be organizedto be .f·&#13;
fective.&#13;
John Mack&#13;
Higher Education Consultant&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academIC&#13;
year by the. students of The University of Wisconsin·parkSlde,&#13;
Kenos~a. WIsconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-I94 Llbrat)·&#13;
Learnmg Center, 'telephone {414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Pa.rkside Ranger is an 'independent newspaper Oplnlt)ll5&#13;
reflected 10 columns and editorials are not necessarily the ofhCI"&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. -&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subjeCtGf&#13;
interest Jo students, faculty or staff"must be confined to 250words~&#13;
less, typed lind double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to ec!Jt&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and Include&#13;
addr~ss, phone number and student status or faculty rank. ~amesWIU&#13;
be. Withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse\0&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR.IN_CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom· Petersen ~&#13;
. NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Frieden&#13;
COpy EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch. Michael Olszyk. Marilyn Schubert. c.rrle w,rd&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels. Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISIN,G MANAGER: Ken Peslka&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
RANGER We get letters&#13;
"-------Editorial/Opinion&#13;
Should defeat&#13;
power play&#13;
proposal&#13;
hen the Academic Policies Comna&#13;
consider this proposal, they&#13;
hich is best o the students. We&#13;
Ith cooperation and support, the&#13;
n problems ex rienced in academic advising can&#13;
olv d, nd communica ion lines between faculty,&#13;
lors nd ud n complete y opened. But as long&#13;
m for c mpusgroups a eat odds wl h each other, the&#13;
futur o a qu It y Universi y Is di med.&#13;
lT'S M'( OISCtPl.tNE&#13;
OU~ t&gt;EPAfITMENT&#13;
WE'LL l&gt;O IT!&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
Ir Ronald Brinkmann must&#13;
bet~ campus representative_ for&#13;
lale Chauvinism .. He certa~y&#13;
has the knack for intimidat~g&#13;
women employees on this&#13;
campus. Not only _doe~ he display&#13;
his qualifications m this area, ~ut&#13;
we understand he carries&#13;
references.&#13;
One should admire any person&#13;
who stands on his convictions, but&#13;
when his convictions are&#13;
detrimental to this University,&#13;
we feel concerned opinions&#13;
should be heard.&#13;
First let us turn to page 65,&#13;
verses 1 through 8 and read alm~d&#13;
everything Mr. Brinkmann 1s&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Groups of individuals having&#13;
group power persuade American&#13;
society. and one should not&#13;
eparate professors from this&#13;
type of association._ Any gr~up&#13;
that i not aware of its collective&#13;
power - and living in America -&#13;
i a dying body.&#13;
As the writer Dickens might&#13;
have phrased it: "We're living in&#13;
the best of times, and we're living&#13;
in the worst of times."&#13;
U you think your campus is&#13;
secure and administration ,is&#13;
about th business of being fair&#13;
and just. then you are living in&#13;
the worst of times; however, if&#13;
vou are concerned that all higher&#13;
education areas are under attack&#13;
and you are about the business of&#13;
doing something about it, then&#13;
you are living in the best of times.&#13;
The agenda of this article is&#13;
addressed primarily to&#13;
professors in Wisconsin. It rises&#13;
most naturally out of the bloody&#13;
truggle to get complacent, self- .&#13;
satisfied educators organized, for&#13;
ii is they who are dying-and no&#13;
one can help them; they have to&#13;
be \\illing to help themselves.&#13;
The simple fact is that no truly&#13;
basic change for our benefit takes&#13;
place in America unless we&#13;
organize to initiate that change.&#13;
This fact assumes that we must&#13;
have some essential agreement&#13;
on overall objectives, even&#13;
though we may differ on many&#13;
pecifics. Therefore, let us come&#13;
together around the crucial&#13;
issues of ~urvival-and control of&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would first like to thank all the&#13;
tudents, faculty and staff persons&#13;
who came down to see the&#13;
performances in the Whiteskellar&#13;
during the first semester.&#13;
Because of you all, we were able&#13;
to put on bigger and. hopefully,&#13;
better shows. This semester&#13;
should be the best yet. Our&#13;
opening show will be Bob Rohan&#13;
on the 23rd of Januarv from 1-3 in&#13;
the afternoon. There will be a&#13;
how every Wednesday from then&#13;
on and everyone is welcome to&#13;
come down for a break from&#13;
class. On February 6, auditions&#13;
will be held in the Whiteskellar&#13;
for performers for the rest of the&#13;
semester. Anyone who is interested&#13;
in auditioning can stop in&#13;
to the Parkside Activities Board&#13;
office in LLC-D-195 and sign up&#13;
for an audition time. Everyone&#13;
should come to this show to give&#13;
--.. , the performers a taste of what an ' audience show is. Again many&#13;
thank~ and I hope that my&#13;
committee and myself can give&#13;
you continuing good times.&#13;
Gary S. Petersen . Chairman Coffeehouse Committee&#13;
&#13;
. !':S. Anyone interested in&#13;
Jo~nmg the Coffeehouse Commmee&#13;
or just helping us out&#13;
please stop in and see me as soo~&#13;
as possible.&#13;
really running ar~und shouting&#13;
(in his circumventive way).&#13;
I Ronald Brinkmann am the&#13;
he~d of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside Campus&#13;
Police Force. I exhaust and&#13;
enforce every regula~ion I &lt;:an&#13;
possibly find. I am do~ng my J_ob&#13;
and I demand comphance wi_th&#13;
Police Regulations.&#13;
This should make Brinkmann&#13;
feel swelled with pride. Now, We&#13;
ask, why he demands stude~ts,&#13;
staff, and faculty cooperat10n&#13;
when in fact, he does not&#13;
cooperate or comi;&gt;lY wi~ other&#13;
University regulat10ns which are&#13;
directly related to student, staff,&#13;
ourselves as educators.&#13;
The American educational&#13;
system does not work for mo~t&#13;
people unless it is forced to, and 1t&#13;
cannot be made to work without&#13;
our involvement. In view of the&#13;
realities of our situation as&#13;
educators, we are confronted&#13;
with a choice.&#13;
Will we believe the truth that&#13;
the past has shown us--or will we&#13;
try to hide? Will the small favors&#13;
some of us have received blind us&#13;
to the larger sufferings of our&#13;
ranks, or will we open our views&#13;
to the testimony of our past&#13;
history?&#13;
For more years than we would&#13;
care to count, we have followed&#13;
the path of dependence on&#13;
political administrators and their&#13;
systems. From the Liberty Party&#13;
in the decades before the Civil&#13;
War to the Republican Party of&#13;
Richard Nixon, we trusted in&#13;
other men and their politics as&#13;
our deliverers. Let there be no&#13;
more of that.&#13;
The challenge is thrown to us,&#13;
to save ourselves. It is the&#13;
challenge to consolidate and&#13;
organize our own ranks as the&#13;
vanguard in the struggle for a&#13;
new academic role. To accept&#13;
that challenge is to move- the&#13;
unorganized to the point of being&#13;
organized. There can be no&#13;
equivocation on this issue. The&#13;
spirit of the times leaves us no&#13;
choice.&#13;
Politics has not and cannot&#13;
bring the changes we need unless&#13;
we get involved. We delude&#13;
and faculty.&#13;
We ask why he feels h&#13;
govern other departments e. c~&#13;
this University when they ~thin&#13;
in compliance with Stat 8ft&#13;
University regulations. We ~a'-1&#13;
revolve around one man lkll&#13;
Brinkmann, but around p~ks~&#13;
as a whole unit, doing our .&#13;
1&#13;
de&#13;
with one goal in mind . to JObs&#13;
this University the best _ ~~ke&#13;
Parks~de offering the ~ educational opportunities for t&#13;
people. an&#13;
Are you too busy shining YOUr&#13;
handcuff tie clip or is ther&#13;
h b - ea&#13;
uman emg somewhere behu.!&#13;
that semi-uniform?&#13;
Concerned Parkside Worn&#13;
(Names withheld upon reque:&#13;
ou'rselves if we think that chang&#13;
can . ~e achieved Withou~&#13;
organizmg our power.&#13;
Releyance is the key issue In&#13;
edullat~on. As new paths in hi&amp;hef&#13;
education are developing and&#13;
brought to maturity, educatiOlll)&#13;
institutions are faced with the&#13;
need to provide a system that&#13;
faces the challenges and realitia&#13;
of the modern world or die.&#13;
The educator must seek afte,&#13;
an educational experience that&#13;
consistent with the rapid&#13;
developments and improvemen&#13;
of a modern world. He or •&#13;
must be willing to accept the&#13;
many responsibilities that&#13;
academic relevance demands&#13;
Through the active, intelligent&#13;
participation of the educator&#13;
significant changes can be&#13;
achieved.&#13;
The Wisconsin Education&#13;
Association Council offers the&#13;
professors of the state the vehicle&#13;
with which to organize. The&#13;
WEAC has been the base support&#13;
for educators in Wisconsin since&#13;
1855.&#13;
Membership in the WEAC can&#13;
benefit professors in the area of&#13;
economics, bargaining, job&#13;
security and contract mamtenance--along&#13;
with all the other&#13;
services available to K-1!&#13;
teachers.&#13;
The power is on the campusesit&#13;
must be organized to be effective.&#13;
&#13;
John Mack&#13;
Higher Education Consultant&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Library·&#13;
Learning Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an ' independent newspaper. Opmi~&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the offlcia&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside. · of&#13;
. Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any sub)e&lt;:I or&#13;
interest Jo students, faculty or staff· must be confined to 2~0 wordsedil&#13;
less, typed ,ind double-spaced . The editors reserve the right to e&#13;
letters for length and good taste . All letters must be signed and iocl~~II&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank . Names&#13;
be_ withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse 10&#13;
print any letters.&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom· Petersen.&#13;
. NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedel!&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Michael Olsiyk, Marilyn sc11ubert, Carrie ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka &#13;
h)"Jane Schliesm~n&#13;
Y k University in Toronto, Canada is a few years older th&#13;
Paf~ide.It'S much larger than UW-P, divided as it is into half a doz:~&#13;
collegeswith enroUments of about 5,000 each. I spent some time in&#13;
Torontoduring seme~t.er break WIth frt~nds who are York students,&#13;
d tookthe opportumty to learn something of student life there Th&#13;
an dentnewspaper there, Excalibur, is also the Source of some of the&#13;
:owing -inforn:ati~n, ~or I thought it int~resting to compare an~&#13;
conU'astthetwo mstttUh.ons on ~ couple of points.&#13;
11lere was an Excahbur edito~lal r~centl~ .dealing with quality&#13;
teaching versus research and umve~slty politics, the obvious conclUSionbeing&#13;
that students pay the pnce when teaching excellence is&#13;
of less than utmost concern. Many of you will recall a Ranger commentarY&#13;
last semester or;this s~bjec~, as. :"ell as frequent reference to&#13;
itatother times. Itremains a.dlstu~bmg Issu~here and at York.&#13;
Another point of comparison IS regarding adult and part-time&#13;
students.Parkside embarked on an Adult Student program last faU to&#13;
servethe special needs of the, older students and those attending&#13;
schoolevenings, for they C?nst1tute 30 percent of our student body.&#13;
YorI&lt;,withits larger population and facilities (not to mention budget!)&#13;
baS an entire college accommodating these students,&#13;
Thestudents at York demonstrate an ability to get things together&#13;
fir the common good, something which so far seems lacking at&#13;
Parkside.One example is the university-wide boycott of the hot food&#13;
serviceat York, The grievances are prices, food quality, and failure to&#13;
hire students for the part-time cafeteria jobs.&#13;
Anotherexample of involvement is in student government, Much&#13;
like Ranger, Excalibur finds editorial substance in suggesting&#13;
improvementsin student government and constitutional changes, but&#13;
lIllikeherethe paper at York does find much to report on what is being&#13;
done by the Council of the York Student Federation (CYSF). Last&#13;
monthl&#13;
amongother things, CYSF voted to set aside $300 to assist York&#13;
studentsinvblved in litigation revolving around one of the most bitter&#13;
strikes in Toronto's history, which had attracted the support and&#13;
participation (and hence arrest) of many students, clergymen and&#13;
members of city council.&#13;
Studentsolidarity is further evident in CYSF's membership in a&#13;
national student rights union. Parkside Student Government&#13;
associationhas so far not deigned to join even the United Council of&#13;
StudentGovernments in Wisconsin, and now PSGA's future appears&#13;
so Wlcertain that we can question just what collective recourse&#13;
students here have if they feel they are being victimized.&#13;
All inall, it wasan interesting'visit--York has an impressive campus&#13;
w11b new, modern buildings and parking lots primarily around the&#13;
perimeter-but on returning to Parkside and looking around, one sees&#13;
much the same thing here, U's below the surface where the life (or&#13;
death&gt; is that makes for more valid comparisons.&#13;
Womanstudent&#13;
issecurity officer&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Eileen Reilly recently became&#13;
Parltside's first woman security&#13;
oIIicer. According to Ronald&#13;
Brinkmann, director of Safety&#13;
and Security, she is one of the&#13;
first womento operate strictly as&#13;
an officerwithin the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Campus Security&#13;
System.&#13;
~e functions of a security&#13;
Offl~er include protecting&#13;
equipment rooms; checking&#13;
doors in unoccupied areas'&#13;
assisting stUdents, faculty and&#13;
ltaft; aod issuing parking tickets&#13;
to unauthorized vehicles ob-&#13;
!lructingloading docks.&#13;
Altbough the actual per-&#13;
~~ance ofthese duties is new to&#13;
neilly, the exposure and&#13;
knowl""l!eof a security officer's&#13;
~ ISOt. Since October of 1972,&#13;
8Ildhas been employed by Safety&#13;
Secunty as a part-time&#13;
stUdentdispatcher.&#13;
DeDue to changes in the Security&#13;
aefuartmenl'S work schedule,&#13;
'N y, a sophomore will now r:~thr~ days a W";k, filling in&#13;
theiruII-time security officers on&#13;
shift normal days off. The new&#13;
6 191SChedule,implemented Jan.&#13;
~d 4,p~ansto reduce overtime&#13;
for prOVIdeadditional protection&#13;
roal;"hce ofhcers working on the&#13;
lIegarding the ability of a&#13;
:::~; performing the tasks of a&#13;
statedl.~ .Ofhcef' Brinkmann&#13;
800d ' Eileen's been doing darn&#13;
down Work as a radio operator&#13;
~ here at the station. She&#13;
"JJe'WS the same capability and&#13;
"ortence as any other student&#13;
"..: under. me,"&#13;
not as mterested in what&#13;
Eileen Reilly&#13;
others think of me doing this job,&#13;
as I am in performing it to ~~&#13;
best of my capabilitie~,". sal&#13;
Reilly, referring to mdlrect&#13;
comments reportedly made by&#13;
first shift officers unfavorable to&#13;
her new position. bl&#13;
"We're students and p~oba .y&#13;
'11 ha e a better relatIOnship&#13;
WI v th present&#13;
with other stu~ents an" was&#13;
security officers do,&#13;
another viewppint expresse~o b~&#13;
Bill Spreeberg, student emp y&#13;
filling in for' a securIty officer on&#13;
a leave of absence: the third&#13;
Tom Speaker IS d&#13;
d by Safety an&#13;
student employe 1 fUed in for&#13;
Security, a~d has a ~ei~ days off.&#13;
security officers on&#13;
Wednesday. Jan. 16. 1974THE PARKSIDE RANGER 3&#13;
Shucard----------&#13;
Conl,nlJe'd ~ ~ 1&#13;
people to guide students In decISion-malting&#13;
~~ocess~s, Counselor Wendy MUSJch added that&#13;
ademic advising invohres workmg' .... th f I&#13;
and not a' th. -. acu h&#13;
.~amsl em, In a joint effort to he! ~&#13;
student.. However," she said "a lot of um:S&#13;
academic adivsing personal problem. come u~&#13;
~~~~:l~~~,staff is capable of seeing that and able to&#13;
du~~lIiam Moy, Dean of tbe School of .Iodem In.&#13;
y, agreed that poor advice given to students&#13;
was the fault of the commumcatioo lines bet ..-een&#13;
the academic deans' offices and the counsel&#13;
team. Moy was skeptical of the proposal and ;~&#13;
that whereas faculty are discipline-oriented the&#13;
counseling staff are student'«ientated • And his&#13;
business management faculty already ad\ise fiO.8)&#13;
majors each, as the program is set up now. v&#13;
explained. He further worried about facuJtv bia4&#13;
pushed on to students who had DOtyet decl8red a&#13;
major, and felt that students need the dlanee to&#13;
Advice given on careers&#13;
and job placement&#13;
b)' Sand)' Busch&#13;
With tnday's highly compeutive job market.&#13;
employers are more selective than ever One bears&#13;
continuously the despairs of college gradua&#13;
currently seeking jobs. As one former P de&#13;
student put it; "Looking for andacqUlring a job that&#13;
you want is the hardest job there IS Somel1m It's&#13;
even harder than the job you finally end p thP&#13;
•&#13;
Graduating students and alumru ..,lh&#13;
problem will find a istance in Parks de s&#13;
Piacement Office. located in Tallent2ll6. InaddlUOrl&#13;
to Jack Elmore. director and recruiter far&#13;
educational institutions, IS ind "trial recruHtt&#13;
Verna Zimmermann. Counselors CIa. Barnard 800&#13;
Barb Larsen provide career planrun a lance In&#13;
Tallent 284&#13;
According to Elmore, most too&#13;
in the office do not understand the rna tud of&#13;
and job findings. One student exdauned ·'1 didn t&#13;
know what I didn·t knO\\ I&#13;
Students can begIn ttp to becom&#13;
"knowledgeable" durmg earl_ college fur&#13;
through Career Planning Sen ce- The goats of the&#13;
services are to aid student 10 de\elopmg obJfC&#13;
and provide information concermrJg career 0pportunities.&#13;
Students are aided m looking at thm tnt&#13;
abilities, and e~rlence In educet on and ark&#13;
Vocational materials fe\:eal how C'a~ ate'&#13;
organized. taterial 1 available on \liMt typt' of&#13;
jobs are obtainable v.ith ~hat,spedflC ma)Or information&#13;
includes job description .' ptClrlc dUll&#13;
and special qualificallons desIred&#13;
Career Oe\oelopment Coo ..&#13;
Barnard revealed that plllns for a ...,...,..&#13;
development course are noy, at be¢nnu,g la&#13;
Such a class would Incorporate r 1&#13;
tools and career information for rreshrocn and&#13;
sophomores. At the jUnior le\ el ou. d n&#13;
professional orientation and necessar)' mrormauon&#13;
concerning the recrUltmg world and . teps for job&#13;
placement. By the seruor )ear •. tudents v.ouJd&#13;
usually be able to pin do"n a profe-S1on. and up&#13;
independent study program m accordance th&#13;
,....---------;&#13;
The dile&#13;
of being a&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
STUDEr-'T ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
FRI' 8:00 p.M - JA: 18th&#13;
SUN: 7:30 P.M -JA:' 20th&#13;
A.dm, j5 c::enlS&#13;
Midwest Population Center&#13;
312 644-341'&#13;
Il East 01&gt;10&#13;
Chicago. 60611&#13;
A non·pr t orgontzo&#13;
parUodlt a. .... sc I 0 ~&#13;
requ rltd&#13;
Wednesday. J n. 16, 7 THE PARKSIDE A G R&#13;
Shucard---------&#13;
b) Jane Schliesman&#13;
York University in Toronto, Canada is a few years older th&#13;
Parkside. It's much larger than UW-P, divided as it is into half a doz:&#13;
colleges with enrollments of abou~ 5,00,0 each. I spent some time in&#13;
roronto during seme~ter break with fr1~nds who are York students,&#13;
d took the opportunity to learn something of student life there Th&#13;
an dent newspaper there, Excalibur, is also the source of some ~f the&#13;
r:owing infor~ati~n, ~or I thought it int~resting to compare an~&#13;
contrast the two mstitut~ons on~ col:lple of points.&#13;
There was an Excahbur edito~ial r~centl)'. _dealing with quality&#13;
teaching versus research and umve~s1ty pohtics, the obvious conJusion&#13;
being that students pay the price when teaching excellence is&#13;
~f Jess than utmost concer~. Ma~y of you will recall a Ranger commentary&#13;
last semester o~ this s!-1bJec~, as_ well as frequent reference to&#13;
ii at other times. It remains a_ d1stu~bing 1ssu~ here and at York.&#13;
Another point of comparison 1s regarding adult and part-time&#13;
students. Parkside embarked on an Adult Student program last fall to&#13;
cont&#13;
serve the special needs of the_ older students and those attending A d • •&#13;
school evenings, for they c~nst1tute 3~ ~rcent of our student body. VI Ce g I ve n On CO re e rs&#13;
York, with its larger population and fac1htles (not to mention budget!)&#13;
has an entire college accommodating these students.&#13;
The students at York demonstrate an ability to get things together&#13;
for the common good, something which so far seems lacking at d • b ' f&#13;
Parkside. One example is the university-wide boycott of the hot food a n f o p a c em en&#13;
service at York. The grievances are prices, food quality, and failure to&#13;
hire students for the part-time cafeteria jobs.&#13;
Another example of involvement is in student government. Much&#13;
like Ranger, Excalibur finds editorial substance in suggesting&#13;
unprovements in student government and constitutional changes, but&#13;
unlike here the paper at York does find much to report on what is being&#13;
oone by the Council of the York Student Federation (CYSF). Last&#13;
month, among other things, CYSF voted to set aside $300 to assist York&#13;
tudents involved in litigation revolving around one of the most bitter&#13;
strikes in Toronto's history, which had attracted the support and&#13;
participation (and hence arrest) of many students, clergymen and&#13;
members of city council.&#13;
Student solidarity is further evident in CYSF's membership in a&#13;
national student rights union. Parkside Student Government&#13;
association has so far not deigned to join even the United Council of&#13;
Student Governments in Wisconsin, and now PSGA's future appears&#13;
so uncertain that we can question just what collective recourse&#13;
students here have if they feel they are being victimized.&#13;
All in all, it was an interesting·visit--York has an impressive campus&#13;
with new, modern buildings and parking lots primarily around the&#13;
perimeter-but on returning to Parkside and looking around, one sees&#13;
much the same thing here. It's below the surface where the life (or&#13;
death) is that makes for more valid comparisons.&#13;
Woman student&#13;
is security officer&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Eileen Reilly recently became&#13;
Pa~kside's first woman security&#13;
officer. According to Ronald&#13;
Brinkmann, director of Safety&#13;
and Security, she is one of the&#13;
first women to operate strictly as&#13;
ai_ioffice~within the University of&#13;
V.1scons1n Campus Security&#13;
ystem.&#13;
,:tie functions of a security&#13;
ofh~er include protecting&#13;
equ1pm_ent rooms; checking&#13;
doors m unoccupied areas·&#13;
assisting students, faculty and&#13;
taff; and issuing parking tickets&#13;
to unauthorized vehicles obstructing&#13;
loading docks.&#13;
Although the actual per-&#13;
~ance of these duties is new to&#13;
kneilly, the exposure and&#13;
OWledge of a security officer's :k isn't. Since October of 1972,&#13;
has been employed by Safety&#13;
and Security as a part-time&#13;
tudent dispatcher.&#13;
o;&gt;ue lo changes in the Security&#13;
R partment's work schedule e1l) ' Y, a sophomore will now&#13;
:~ thr~e days a w~k, filling in&#13;
th . ull-ttme security officers on sJ;~ _normal days off. The new&#13;
6 1 ~chedule, implemented Jan. ~t'4· P_lans to reduce overtime&#13;
for Provide ~dditional protection&#13;
roar.hce officers working on the&#13;
.,,,.:egarding the ability of a&#13;
se~:~ perfor_ming the tasks of a&#13;
Slated t.r . Olhcel" Brinkmann&#13;
gOO(j ' Eileen's been doing darn&#13;
down work as a radio operator&#13;
Sho here at the station. She ex;~ the same capability and&#13;
ortence as any other student&#13;
"I' ing under me " rn . . not as interested in what&#13;
Eileen Reilly&#13;
others think of me doing this job,&#13;
as I am in perfor~i~~ it } 0 ~~ best of my capabihtie~, . sa t&#13;
Reilly' referring to rnd1rec&#13;
comments reportedly made by&#13;
first shift officers unfavorable to&#13;
her new position. 1 "We're students and p~obab_y&#13;
·11 have a better relationship w1 th resent with other students an R was security officers do, . another viewp~int expressed b)&#13;
Bill Spreeberg, student er:nploye&#13;
filling in for a security officer on&#13;
a leave of absence: the third&#13;
T Speaker 1s om d b Safety and&#13;
student employe I y filled in for&#13;
Security' and has a so . off&#13;
security officers on their days&#13;
P.A.B.&#13;
presents&#13;
OIANAROSS&#13;
§ BILLIE HOLIDAY&#13;
i'f&#13;
SINGS&#13;
THE&#13;
BLUES&#13;
srt.:DE, :,- ACTl\'lTl&#13;
B ILDI "G&#13;
Adm. ;;; cent&#13;
Par s e &amp;. s.c I O&#13;
reciv rC'CI&#13;
The dile&#13;
of being a&#13;
idwest Population&#13;
(312) 10&#13;
1&#13;
11&#13;
en er &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
Drama conciousness is goal&#13;
of Parkside Players&#13;
-rea: Paone ollhe Park-side Players makes lighting adjustments&#13;
ill "r Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Parkside Players has been around since Parkside&#13;
was still the extension in Kenosha, according to Ray&#13;
Waldie who serves as its president. However, he is&#13;
pcesidenl only in the sense that be is the one to fill&#13;
oulthe lorms necessary lor organization. The group&#13;
doesn't have the usual president, vice-president,&#13;
secretary or treasurer. but is led by a board 01 live&#13;
which takes on these lunctions and reports, lor&#13;
example, on linancial activities. This system was&#13;
chosen 10 eliminate competition lor o!lices which,&#13;
Waldie said, tends to be divisive, and also to give the&#13;
members more incentive to be involved.&#13;
Parkside Players is the mainstay lor theatrical&#13;
productions at Parkside. It encompasses people&#13;
lrom all aspects 01 dramatic production - not just&#13;
actors, but also makeup, stagecraft, lighting and&#13;
audio-visual people. The objectives of the group are&#13;
to provide training in all aspects of theatre and to&#13;
develop a company attitude and drama consciousness&#13;
among members.&#13;
Training will be accomplished through productions&#13;
such as Tbe Virus. but the organizers hope it&#13;
will be personally rewarding as well as a means 01&#13;
providing skills. Waldie explained the goal 01 a&#13;
company attitude by describing the theatre company:&#13;
"It is a totally interactive concept," he said.&#13;
"Actors pound nails and everybody works together&#13;
to get the show accomplished. Every person gives&#13;
what he can of himself and appreciates the freely&#13;
given talents of others."&#13;
Board member Amy Cundari said they hoped "to&#13;
form a group that was drama conscious, and would&#13;
say no to things like Harvey!'&#13;
She would like to get diflerent types 01plays being&#13;
performed, for example, Greek plays or&#13;
Shakespeare instead of musicals; or more&#13;
generally, plays in whicb actors could get into the&#13;
psyche of the characters, and those which have&#13;
diflerent types 01settings. "I think they're insulting&#13;
the audience by putting on things like TIJ~Boyfriend&#13;
and Harvey," she continued, "I can't think of a&#13;
student who would want to play an eight loot rabbit.&#13;
"&#13;
She also outlined financial reasons for doing other&#13;
kinds 01 plays, such as Greek or those written by&#13;
Albee. One reason is that these sets are very&#13;
surrealistic and simple, in some cases consisting&#13;
merely 01 a backdrop and spotlight. This she contrasted&#13;
with productions such as The Boyfriend,&#13;
which has many different and complex scenes.&#13;
Costuming in The Boyfriend, she said, is also more&#13;
expensive than in, say, a Greek play, where only&#13;
white robes are required.&#13;
Previous productions staged by the Players have&#13;
included The London Merchant, directed by Don&#13;
Bintz, Firebugs, and SChoollor Wives, both directed&#13;
by Marilyn Ilaxter. These were performed in the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts room at Kenosha Campus.&#13;
The Players have now formed a group within&#13;
themselves to simply read plays and set up a season&#13;
so that there will always be some activity going on.&#13;
They are still in the planning stage, however.&#13;
Cundari said they would delinitely be holding a&#13;
high school workshop, probably in late January.&#13;
Students would be instructed in how to "get into"&#13;
different roles and in studio technique, such as&#13;
lighting, costuming, props, makeup, and set&#13;
building and design.&#13;
Membership is limited to "breathing students."&#13;
However, those who don't wish to join are still invited&#13;
and encouraged to become involved.&#13;
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Tt:\C • ..\1.1'1';(' • KOSS. SE~~IIISER •&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Republicans&#13;
discuss&#13;
Nixon&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Parkside has two Republican groups on campus'&#13;
College Republicans and Young Republicans'&#13;
RANGER has interviewed the leaders 01 both l~&#13;
find out what activities they are planning and how&#13;
they react to recent events on the national level&#13;
College Republicans was organized bere' last&#13;
year. They would like to c,,?perate with the&#13;
Democrattc Youth Caucus 10 bringing in opposing&#13;
speakers as well as civic speakers on the en.&#13;
vironment and other topics.&#13;
Onthe state level, Wiscon~n College Republicans&#13;
recently held a Leadership Training SChoolin&#13;
Madison, featuring National College RepUblican&#13;
Congressional and legislative leaders as speakers:&#13;
They also filled Republican legislative seats in a&#13;
model legislature they co-sponsored with the&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus of Wisconsin, and will"be&#13;
holding fundraising dirmers and a state conventiCXI&#13;
in March.&#13;
While College Republicans is confined to college&#13;
campuses, the Wisconsin Federation of y~&#13;
Republicans has area units in Racine and Kenosha&#13;
as well as at Parkside, The club here plans to&#13;
sponsor a chess tournament, hold memberslup&#13;
drives, and bring in legislative and other speakers&#13;
in a format similar to those of the Dye and CR',.&#13;
They recently sponsored two candidates in Iht&#13;
PSGA elections, and circulated petitions oP~&#13;
Ute impeachment of the president. Two memben,&#13;
Treasurer Brad McCrorey and President Harvey&#13;
Hedden, presented a resolution supporting&#13;
President Nixon and urging the state legislature to&#13;
get back to the business at hand at legislative&#13;
hearings on presidential impeachment held&#13;
recently in Madison.&#13;
As a state organization the WFYR also helda&#13;
Leadership Training School recently and will be&#13;
convening in March. Other activities includea blood&#13;
bank drive and the sponsoring of a South Viet·&#13;
namese child.&#13;
When asked what the effects 01Watergate will be,&#13;
Ross Workman, chairperson of Parkside College&#13;
Republicans, said it would set politics back quite 1&#13;
while and also that in firing Cox, Nixon wastaking 1&#13;
lot of risks and those risks were hurting the&#13;
Republican party a lot. "Kids, especially, are&#13;
turned off on politics," he stated. "Beth parties will&#13;
have to work to overcome this, rather than the&#13;
Republicans going out to screw the Democrats«&#13;
vice-versa."&#13;
Workman did not think Watergate wouldhave'&#13;
marked effect on the local level, but said, "It will be&#13;
difficult to convince people to vote Republican,bUt.'&#13;
have faith in the American people that they wool&#13;
vote on Richard Nixon."&#13;
Young Republican president, Harvey H~~&#13;
responded to the same question by saymgl&#13;
basically belleve Watergate is a symptom of !DO&#13;
much government, as far as the effects go.Ireel ,It&#13;
may contribute to public apathy. I hope the ~bliC&#13;
will be understanding and consider WatergateIn Its&#13;
perspective." He also said he believes tbt&#13;
Republlcan party does and will support tbt&#13;
President. slid&#13;
In regard to the Agnew resignation, Hedden 1M&#13;
he thought it was unfair of Agnew to accept&#13;
Vice-Presidency with that kind 01 "skel~n :::.&#13;
closet," although he commended Agnews&#13;
years of public service. He declined to pre&lt;l&lt;l&#13;
results 01 state elections, saying they. w~&#13;
determined by the attitudes 01 the media -&#13;
people. He appraised Nixon's attack 01the Ill_~&#13;
saying they were not above criticism, ~ tba&amp;'i!&#13;
plained whenever Nixon criticized them. If&#13;
true he concluded, "the media are a greater&#13;
to the United States than Watergate, the&#13;
crisis or the Soviet Union."&#13;
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THE PARKS I DE RA1&#13;
NGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
Drama conciousness is goal&#13;
of Parkside Players&#13;
b ' larityn hubert&#13;
Park de Player has been around since Parkside&#13;
till the extension in Kenosha, according to Ray&#13;
W die who rve ~ it president. However, he is&#13;
pr ident nly in the nse that he is the one to fill&#13;
out the form nece ry for organization. The group&#13;
n't have the u ·ual president, vice-president,&#13;
r tary or tre urer. but i led by a board of five&#13;
ch tak on the e function and reports, for&#13;
mple, on financial activities. Th.is system was&#13;
ch to eliminate competition for offices which,&#13;
W die sa d. ten to be divi ive, and al o to give the&#13;
m mber more inct!lltive to be involved.&#13;
P rk ide Play rs is the mainstay for theatrical&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
productions at Parkside. It encompasses pe~ple&#13;
from all aspects of dramatic production - not Just&#13;
actors, but also makeup, stagecraft, lighting and&#13;
audio-visual people. The objectives of the group are&#13;
to provide training in all aspects of theatre and to&#13;
develop a company attitude and drama consciousness&#13;
among members.&#13;
Training will be accomplished thro~gh produ&lt;:-&#13;
tions such as The Virus, but the orgamzers hope 1t&#13;
will be personally rewarding as well as a means of&#13;
providing skills. Waldie explained the goal of a&#13;
company attitude by describing the theatre company:&#13;
"It is a totally interactive concept," he said.&#13;
"Actors pound nails and everybody works together&#13;
to get the show accomplished. Every person gives&#13;
what he can of himself and appreciates the freely&#13;
given talents of others."&#13;
Board member Amy Cundari said they hoped "to&#13;
form a group that was drama conscious, and would&#13;
ay no to things like Harvey."&#13;
e would like to get different types of plays being&#13;
performed, for example , Greek plays or&#13;
Shakespeare instead of musicals; or more&#13;
generally, plays in which actors could get into the&#13;
psyche of the characters, and those which have&#13;
different types of settings. "I think they're insulting&#13;
the audience by putting on things like The Boyfriend&#13;
and Harvey," she continued, "I can't think of a&#13;
student who would want to play an eight foot rabbit&#13;
'&#13;
She also outlined financial reasons for doing other&#13;
kinds of plays, such as Greek or those written by&#13;
Albee . One reason is that these sets are very&#13;
surrealistic and simple, in some cases consisting&#13;
merely of a backdrop and spotlight. This she contrasted&#13;
~;th productions such as The Boyfriend,&#13;
which has many different and complex scenes.&#13;
Costwning in The Boyfriend, she said, is also more&#13;
expensive than in, say, a Greek play, where only&#13;
white robes are required.&#13;
Previous productions staged by the Players have&#13;
included The London Merchant, directed by Don&#13;
Rintz, Firebugs, and School for Wives, both directed&#13;
by Marilyn Baxter. These were performed in the&#13;
Lecture-Fine Arts room at Kenosha Campus.&#13;
The Players have now formed a group within&#13;
themselves to simply read plays and set up a season&#13;
so that there will always be some activity going on.&#13;
They are still in the planning stage, however.&#13;
Cundari said they would definitely be holding a&#13;
high school workshop, probably in late January.&#13;
Students would be instructed in how to "get into"&#13;
different roles and in studio technique, such as&#13;
lighting, costuming, props, makeup, and set&#13;
building and design.&#13;
Membership is limited to "breathing students."&#13;
However, those who don't wish to join are still invited&#13;
and encouraged to become involved.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Republicans&#13;
discuss&#13;
Nixon&#13;
by Marilyn Schubert&#13;
Parkside has two Republican groups on campus,&#13;
College Republicans and Young Republican ·&#13;
RANGER has in~e~~iewed the leaders of both :~ find out what actlv1ties they are planning and ho&#13;
they react to recent events on the national level w&#13;
College Republicans was organized here· last&#13;
year. They would like to cooperate with the&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus in bringing in opposing&#13;
speakers as well as civic speakers on the en,&#13;
virorunent and other topics.&#13;
On the state level, Wisconsin College Republicans&#13;
recently held a Leadership Training School in&#13;
Madison, featuring National College Republican&#13;
Congressional and legislative leaders as speakers'.&#13;
They also filled Republican legislative seats in a&#13;
model legislature they co-sponsored with the&#13;
Democratic Youth Caucus of Wisconsin, and will be&#13;
holding fundraising dinners and a state convention&#13;
in March.&#13;
While College Republicans is confined to college&#13;
campuses, the Wisconsin Federation of Young&#13;
Republicans has area units in Racine and Kenosha&#13;
as well as at Parkside. The club here plans to&#13;
sponsor a chess tournament, hold membership&#13;
drives, and bring in legislative and other speakers&#13;
in a format similar to those of the DYC and CR's.&#13;
They recently sponsored two candidates in the&#13;
PSGA elections, and circulated petitions opposirl&#13;
the impeachment of the president. Two members&#13;
Treasurer Brad Mccrorey and President Harvey&#13;
Hedden, presented a resolution supporting&#13;
President Nixon and urging the state legislature to&#13;
get back to the business at hand at legislative&#13;
hearings on presidential impeachment held&#13;
recently in Madison.&#13;
As a state organization the WFYR also held a&#13;
Leadership Training School recently and will be&#13;
convening in March. Other activities include a blood&#13;
bank drive and the sponsoring of a South Vietnamese&#13;
child.&#13;
When asked what the effects of Watergate will be,&#13;
Ross Workman, chairperson of Parkside College&#13;
Republicans, said it would set politics back quite a&#13;
while and also that in firing Cox, Nixon was taking a&#13;
lot of risks and those risks were hurting the&#13;
Republican party a lot. "Kids, especially, are&#13;
turned off on politics," he.stated. ''Both parties will&#13;
have to work to overcome this, rather than the&#13;
]:lepublicans going out to screw the Democrats or&#13;
vice-versa."&#13;
Workman did not think Watergate would have a&#13;
marked effect on the local level, but said, "It will be&#13;
difficult to convince people to vote Republican, but ,1&#13;
have faith in the American people that they won 1&#13;
vote on Richard Nixon."&#13;
Young Republican president, Harvey _Hed&lt;I~&#13;
responded to the same question by saying, 1&#13;
basically believe Watergate is a symptom of 00:0&#13;
much government, as far as the effects go. I feel .&#13;
11&#13;
may contribute to public apathy. I hope the ~b!1&#13;
c&#13;
will be understanding and consider Watergate JO its&#13;
perspective." He also said he believes the&#13;
Republican party does and will support the&#13;
President.&#13;
In regard to the Agnew resignation, Hedden S:&#13;
he thought it was unfair of Agnew to ac~&#13;
Vice-Presidency with that kind of "skeleton tn bil&#13;
closet," although he commended Agnew's m:&#13;
years of public service. He declined to predi;~ be&#13;
results of state elections, saying they. w~ die&#13;
determined by the attitudes of the media lit&#13;
people. He appraised Nixon's attack of the media COIi"&#13;
saying they were not above criticism, ~ut tbll'I&#13;
plained whenever Nixon criticized them. If thfdl&#13;
true he concluded, "the media are a greater ra&#13;
to the United States than Watergate, the ene&#13;
crisis or the Soviet Union."&#13;
JAN. 16, 18, 19 , 20&#13;
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Advice "Shakespeare Semester"&#13;
continued from page 3&#13;
d'SCussed. Video tape equipment is&#13;
"",-",IS f~ role playing and resulting instant&#13;
""able&#13;
~ck. us interviews are scheduled to provide&#13;
on-eampand registrants WIth an opportunity to&#13;
""playersutoalinterests. Employers are provided&#13;
jSCl1SSm registrant's credentials upon the&#13;
wIthth~,srequest, and facilities are provided for&#13;
~L5tr~ucting of mtervtews .. Seve~ to ,IO-day&#13;
me, co s to when compames will be interviewing&#13;
1IOI1«5,:n in a glassed·in bulletin board in the&#13;
are ~ Buildingupper concourse.&#13;
(laSS. Iration steps should be taken during a&#13;
:~'s last semester of his or her junior year; no&#13;
n&#13;
thanfaU of the senior year. According to&#13;
Iotef ard although the job market is tbe best it's&#13;
Bal1l in u,ree years, it is still very tight. For this&#13;
~ especially,students should be prepared for&#13;
MUte career plans by the semor year.&#13;
students Must Take Initiative&#13;
samard emphasized that juniors and ~eniors&#13;
DEltakethe initiative to use placements. It IS up to&#13;
lit individual student to seek out contacts&#13;
....... 11' in his job search.&#13;
"I'dliketo see 100 percent of future graduates&#13;
registet' in placements," Elmore commented.&#13;
~enlS don't understand the payoff, both in&#13;
mooeyand job satisfaction, of the best positive&#13;
approach to acquiring a position."&#13;
Although a positive approach may be executed,&#13;
Elm&lt;re stressed placemE;nts does not guarantee&#13;
Old! registrant a position. College may be one of&#13;
many stepstoward a future preferred job. Barnard&#13;
IisO emphasizedthat college is preparation for the&#13;
future; for a future of many possible career&#13;
changes.Placements can help college be a step in&#13;
the right direction.&#13;
Advice For Job-Seekers&#13;
Recruitingpractices bring Placements personnel&#13;
do contact with personnel men and women who&#13;
lifer furthur advice. Elmore discovered: "Peranetpeople&#13;
in education are optimistic. There are&#13;
..... a fewjobs for aggressive, good, professional&#13;
lUalors. Many candidates in the past have been&#13;
.. weak in aggressiveness and ability that they&#13;
..... 1finding jobs. Students must be aggressive."&#13;
"Grade point average is important, but not allImJDrtant.&#13;
It means much less if one's comIIllIlicationand&#13;
personality are poor. Students&#13;
IlaIkl take communication and English classes if&#13;
IlIir abilities to communicate intelligently, both&#13;
tll'bally and in written form, are not proficient,"&#13;
lIIIIDlentedH. D. Mellin, employment manager of&#13;
llIicago'sMarshall Field &amp; Co.&#13;
Likewise,Elmore also stressed the importance of&#13;
Ibe iDdirldual: "Degrees, resumes, and paper&#13;
alDfidentials only get you into an interview. From&#13;
there, theseplus you as a person count in whether or&#13;
lilt they need you."&#13;
Elnure offered additional advice to graduates.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1'74 THE PARKSIDE RANGER S&#13;
His observations have r&#13;
ratio of men to women siani&#13;
I&#13;
ed that at Parkside the underway here&#13;
three to one During th Iglnmgfup for interviews are&#13;
h&#13;
. east ew years .&#13;
ave begun seeking min '1' ' companIes&#13;
requirements. Organiz 0;1 res to meet employment&#13;
women. a IOns are anxious to hire&#13;
Zimmer~ann commented that students should&#13;
get acquamted with someone in PI way a stud t . acements. This&#13;
hiliti en WIth suitable personality traits and&#13;
a I lies can be found r&#13;
specific kind of person. 01 a company desiring a&#13;
In . regard to students in general Elmore&#13;
~,uggested "strongly .that they broaden their&#13;
horizons. Organizations observe the acquiring of&#13;
?ew. a~d-or relevant experiences outside of the&#13;
mstitution and the area as a favorable asset&#13;
Students should seek these opportunities through&#13;
suc~ methods as summer jobs, educational ex.&#13;
perrences, and field work.&#13;
Ad.vice to graduates is not limited to Placement&#13;
Services. One of the best sources of information is&#13;
the current or recent job-seeker.&#13;
"S~udents should get as much field experience as&#13;
possible: broaden their backgrounds. Also, enough&#13;
electives should be taken in order for the student to&#13;
have s.orne other field to fall back on," commented&#13;
Parkside student Kathy Gipp. Gipp's lack of field&#13;
experience J?C~taining to her sociology major&#13;
caused her difficulty while job hunting.&#13;
Bruce Hoffman, January 1973 Parkside graduate&#13;
with a major in math and a minor in computer&#13;
programming, agreed with Gipp, "If I'd had&#13;
anywhere from a month to three months of on-thejob&#13;
experience about six months ago, I'd be a lot&#13;
better off. Iwould advise students to get a part-time&#13;
job in some field related to their major ..&#13;
Past psychology major and 1971 Parkside&#13;
graduate, Charles Monroe, is currently a doclOral&#13;
student of sociology at Marquette, but remembered&#13;
plenty of interviews. He feels pursual of a graduate&#13;
degree is advisable for students in helping&#13;
professions, but offered advice to future jobseekers:&#13;
"Don't come on overly aggressh'e and&#13;
overbearing during an interview; the job market&#13;
doesn't need people with this trait. Personality&#13;
factors are very important."&#13;
Parks ide student Mike Krekling revealed that the&#13;
interview's purpose is not to get a job offer but to&#13;
cooperate, to make a favorable impression, and to&#13;
be called back for a second interview.&#13;
May 1973 graduate John Hanson chose com·&#13;
munication as a major, as it would help him in later&#13;
years. He feels a degree should not be observed as&#13;
an assurance of a future job, but as a desirable&#13;
educational background. Hanson stressed, "College&#13;
helps one see things clearly, ~ .aware. of events&#13;
occurring, and grasp new prmclples, Ideas, and&#13;
terminology. The series of experiences offered by&#13;
college are much more beneficial than, say, those m&#13;
a factory or a store; they aren't as limited."&#13;
A travelmg exlubll from the&#13;
hakespeare Librar 10&#13;
lI'aslnngtoo, DC. includ&gt;ne a&#13;
number of rare man npta is&#13;
the first In a senes 01 f"\ e'1'I&#13;
scheduled dur ing Park Id~'&#13;
"~ake~peare Sem ..&#13;
The exhrbn ,,;U be on dJspIay In&#13;
the library's peciaJ CoIl&#13;
display area on I el lWO from&#13;
Jan. 1~through Feb. I from 74$&#13;
a.m to 4-30 p.rn fonda)&#13;
through Frida,&#13;
Olber e'en planned for lIle&#13;
"Shakespeare s.m ., lDdude&#13;
a prcducuon b\ The .to"&#13;
Shakespeare Company of&#13;
Franeisce on larch I and a&#13;
symposium on "Shakespeare. the&#13;
,Iedia and the Secondar) SChool"&#13;
00 •larch 30. featunr« nat onalIy&#13;
recognized hi espearean&#13;
scholars&#13;
A n"" lhree credit elWlll&#13;
coun;e on "Shakespure and&#13;
Film" ill be offered IhroIlIhOUt&#13;
the semester on ·edntsda and&#13;
Thursda~ boguuung Jan 16 and&#13;
,,;U feature lU rJlms Tbesl!&#13;
millS, though pan of the courst'&#13;
are free and open to the po&#13;
and ",11 open ,Ih Oliv' ... •&#13;
"Hen!')' \, followed by III&#13;
Japanese aclaplauon of' ae,&#13;
belll." Kurosa"a· "~Throne&#13;
of Blood" CFeb. 6 • ca. l\ani's&#13;
"Romeo and Juliel" I.lor 20),&#13;
Classified&#13;
r ........... ' TT~ln .......-.0&#13;
Of'l~,,"'~lp .........&#13;
U.rt ...-rtH '0 INn S ~ ...&#13;
P.- ......... • 10 6U&#13;
Jaf~.P!l'l ,.,.&#13;
~ ftl cetrICI t&#13;
toItfoctWl .. • ... G • ...&#13;
kUP'''' _IRI DteI- ~."s. .. I ...&#13;
Personals&#13;
QLDIBS&#13;
10years ago "Fun Fun Fun:' by The Beach&#13;
Boys.was on the charts, and it is available along&#13;
with 4500others in stock.&#13;
Advice&#13;
continued from page 3&#13;
discussed. Video tape equipment is&#13;
rtsl for role playing and resulting instant&#13;
,,-ailab e&#13;
eediJaCk.pus interviews are scheduled to provide&#13;
()1-C~; and registrants with an opportunity to&#13;
ernpl~) mutual interests. Employers are provided&#13;
~he registrant's credentials upon the&#13;
11~ nt's request, and facilities are provided for&#13;
registra . t . S t ducting of m erv1ews. even o 10-day&#13;
e_ conas to when companies will be interviewing&#13;
n,llce~ven in a glassed-in bulletin board in the&#13;
. ~oom Building upper concourse.&#13;
0:: istration steps should be taken during a&#13;
W:nt's last semester of his or her junior year; no than fall of the senior ypar. According to&#13;
~~rd although the job market is the best it's&#13;
in three years, it is still very tight. For this&#13;
son especially, students sho~ld be prepared for&#13;
MUrt? career plans by the semor year.&#13;
Students Must Take Initiative&#13;
earnard emphasized that juniors and seniors&#13;
t take the initiative to use placements. It is up to&#13;
individual student to seek out contacts&#13;
i!tCfSS3rY in his job search.&#13;
··rd like to see 100 percent of future graduates&#13;
~ ter in placements," Elmore commented.&#13;
-students don't understand the payoff, both in&#13;
ey and job satisfaction, of the best positive&#13;
proach to acquiring a position."&#13;
Although a positive approach may be executed,&#13;
Elmore stressed placem(lnts does not guarantee&#13;
ch registrant a position. College may be one of&#13;
many steps toward a future preferred job. Barnard&#13;
emphasized that college is preparation for the&#13;
ture; for a future of many possible career&#13;
changes. Placements can help college be a step in&#13;
the right direction.&#13;
Advice For Job-Seekers&#13;
Recruiting practices bring Placements personnel&#13;
o contact with personnel men and women who&#13;
dfer furthur advice. Elmore discovered: "PerSOllllel&#13;
people in education are optimistic. There are&#13;
~ite a few jobs for aggressive, good, professional&#13;
educators. Many candidates in the past have been&#13;
Wednesd y, Jan. 16, 1 7 HE PARKSID&#13;
11 Shakespea e Se&#13;
His observations have rev d h&#13;
ratioofmentowome . ~led thatatPark idethe Un erway e Jr,e&#13;
three to one Du · nhsignmg up for interview are h · rmg t e last few ave begun seeking minor·r to years, compani&#13;
requirements. Organiza/ ies meet ~mploym nt&#13;
women. ions are anx1ou to hire&#13;
Zimmermann commented ha&#13;
get acquainted with some t _ ~ students hould&#13;
way a student with . one m lacement! . This&#13;
abilities can be fou~~t~ble personality traits and&#13;
specific kind of per o1 a compar.y d irin a&#13;
1 son . n regatd to students in&#13;
suggested strong! general, Elmore&#13;
"h . " Y that they broaden th ·r&#13;
onzons. Organizations observe the acquiring of&#13;
~e;.t a~d-or relevant experiences outside of th&#13;
ms I u on and the area as a favorable t&#13;
Students should seek these opportunities through&#13;
sue? methods as summer jobs. educational • penences, and field work.&#13;
Ad_vice to graduates is not limited to Placement&#13;
SerVIces. One of the best sources or information .&#13;
th~ current or recent job-seeker.&#13;
S~udents should get as much field e. ·perience a&#13;
poss1_ble; broaden their backgrounds. Also, enough&#13;
electives should be taken in order for the tudent to&#13;
have ~ome other field to fall back on," commented&#13;
Parks_1de student Kathy Gipp. Gipp's lack of field&#13;
experience ~~taining ~o her sociology maj&#13;
caused her difficulty while job hunting.&#13;
_Bruce Ho_ffm~n, January 1973 Parkside graduat&#13;
with a ma!or m math and a minor in computer&#13;
programming, agreed with Gipp, "If I'd had&#13;
anywhere from a month to three months of on-th&#13;
job experience about six months ago, I d be a lot&#13;
better off. I would advise students to get a part-time&#13;
job in some field related to their major."&#13;
Past psychology major and 1971 Park id&#13;
graduate, Charles Monroe, is currentlv a doctoral&#13;
student of sociology at Marquette, but ;emembered&#13;
plenty of interviews. He feels pursual of a graduate&#13;
degree is advisable for students in help&#13;
professions, but offered advice to future jobseekers:&#13;
"Don't come on overly aggressiv and&#13;
overbearing during an interview; the job ma ·et&#13;
doesn't need people with this trait. Personality&#13;
A G 5&#13;
e ter"&#13;
weak in aggressiveness and ability that they&#13;
aren't finding jobs. Students must be aggressive."&#13;
uGrade point average is important, but not allportant.&#13;
It means much less if one's comunication&#13;
and personality are poor. Students&#13;
factors are very important." C I • f • d&#13;
Parkside student Mike Krekling revealed that th Q 55 e •&#13;
interview's purpose is not to get a job offer b to 1-----;:;;..;:;;_,._;:....;;;....;;:;....;=._+-__ ...;;;;...;;;...;~.;;...;;_;,...:::..,:..;;;_,.1&#13;
cooperate, to make a favorable impre ion, and to&#13;
be called back for a second interview.&#13;
~d ta~~ communication and English classes if&#13;
their ab1hties to communicate intelligently, both&#13;
mbally and in written form, are not proficient,"&#13;
~e~ted H. D. Mellin, employment manager of&#13;
~go.s Marshall Field &amp; Co.&#13;
Li~ew_1se, Elmore also stressed the importance of&#13;
_1nd1~1dual: "Degrees, resumes, and paper&#13;
Clllfidenttals only get you into an interview. From&#13;
• these plus you as a person count in whether or they need you "&#13;
Elmore offered additional advice to graduates.&#13;
Q~DIES&#13;
May 1973 graduate John Hanson ch com·&#13;
munication as a major, as it would help him in later&#13;
years. He feels a degree should not be observed&#13;
an assurance of a future job, but a a d irabl&#13;
educational background. Han on tr ~sed "Coll&#13;
helps one see things clearly, be aware of •&#13;
occurring, and grasp new principl • ideas, and&#13;
terminology. The series of experiences offered by&#13;
college are much more beneficial than, y, th in&#13;
a factory or a store; they aren't a limited."&#13;
l0 years ago "Fun Fun Fun," by The Beach&#13;
Boys, was on the charts and it is available along&#13;
with 4500 others in sto~k. &#13;
6 THE PARKISDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
Brief news&#13;
SAB restricted to persons over 17&#13;
oIlhe' tudeDt Activities Building will be restricted to persons t8&#13;
of age and older ,,"ben beer is being served. it was announeed&#13;
~ ooly Urn beer not ser ved is during special events&#13;
&lt;:II are open IDthe public. w hieh are rare&#13;
~ new ~tJoD de\'eJoped as a result of a CODtroI problem in&#13;
th 17 Y r aids .,.."""'t Underage persons were&#13;
and d tbere be aDy' trouble. University personnel as&#13;
ud&lt;nt bamnden and aDyone else providing beer to minors.&#13;
hable lor """"",ution l1timately. the privilege to serve beer&#13;
00 urn c d be ..... oIled&#13;
C rdinator of AuxUuu'y Servi Dave BIShop explained that&#13;
reJao y I Par de ludell!.! are afleeted by this. although there&#13;
ar ho are 17or younger. . Ily high school students taking&#13;
only or Jwo _"...".&#13;
II. ho I t dunn the,. k aD area can be enclooed for beer&#13;
the of lh building kept available to all students But lor&#13;
ad rnaVl uch a d Ignatlon 's ,mp&lt;NlbJe. Bishop leels. so&#13;
lIloJ the new Union built th restriction WIll be Ul loree.&#13;
Information center to cash checks&#13;
~Dg a chc'ck-casluDg servtce at the&#13;
tudell!.!.laculty and stafl beginDing looday.&#13;
ted Ul partiCIpating may' register at the 10·&#13;
Par de 1 0 and ooe other lorm of Identilicatioo m~~~re::~~, m order to regiSleI'. and Par 'de 1.0. must be&#13;
po dt urne a ch k IS c ed PersooaJ checks lor S5 or less&#13;
(00 per day) and there ,.,11 be a lSo&lt;:entservIce charge&#13;
p"r c&#13;
Bill "ebIlbr. D1reetorof ,tUdeDt Ule said a "e&lt;}' striclattitude will&#13;
dopIed lOI' rd noc..wt!c'eIlt lund checIts, A $1 penally will be&#13;
rged In order lor th "Tller of such checks to coolinue using the&#13;
r pUon of lh bad cheek For ludenls who ha"e an&#13;
!.!l:lndulll debt the end of th m ler. grades will be ,.ithheJd&#13;
tu !.!will not be alIo .. ed to regISter lor the next semester&#13;
debt Is pa.d. bubr described the servIce as "taking care of&#13;
nt".o lOX"" by tuden We are not going to be a bank, though.&#13;
Just to help peopl t through the day "&#13;
Costume Shop has openings&#13;
The Parksi The !er's Costume hop ha OpeOUlgS lor people ined&#13;
orklng on costumes. This will ,nclude repair, main·&#13;
aDd truet 00 01 costlDDea Opportunities will exist to&#13;
....."nM~C also t can be obtained lor this .. ork. For&#13;
CCXltaetfaculty members Tom Rel1lert ext 2S&amp;l or 2568. or&#13;
o k Carrington I 2102&#13;
Graduate scores in top one percent&#13;
de graduate lory Anne PietkiVltch 2115 laSalle SI., Racine.&#13;
n no ed that e ored ID the top one percent of the 5.673&#13;
recently tooll the American Society 01 Clinical&#13;
ationa! R"II try E. am lor .Iedical Te&lt;:hnologists, the&#13;
leve! P e lor med teebs&#13;
pnng. 1m medIcal technology grad Pletkivitch interned at SI.&#13;
Luke'. II pial where she nOVo's employed as a med tech, As an&#13;
lDldcrgraduate at Parkslde. she was a M)TOn O. Lawson Foundation&#13;
balarllillp udellt&#13;
Reaents approve mission&#13;
ha roved the select mission statement for&#13;
TheBoardolRegents s app , 1 d t . .ch will 1I0w the UniversIty to deve op gra ua e&#13;
Parkaide '::hll le d';ree programs in fields allied to business and&#13;
programs "as rs s-e " ight bezi .&#13;
industry, or tying into the industrial society miSSIOn, IDt gin In&#13;
the lall 01 1975.&#13;
Foreign athletes need room and board&#13;
. et several foreign athletes from&#13;
Parkside has. an opportumt~o~ldg class athletes, who in many cases&#13;
Sweden and Africa. Thesear~ tries in the Olympics in track and&#13;
have or wo~d repr~ent fthel~C~~fferroom and board for four years&#13;
field. What 15 needed IS a ar:nt Y ted in opening their home to one of&#13;
for these athletes. Anyone meres t Orby MosS Assistant Athletic&#13;
th.ese athl~tes is :~kedE~o~::~g. Lucian R~sa from Ceylon is&#13;
Director. m the y., f gram currently at Parkside through this type 0 pro .&#13;
Film Society to meet&#13;
Th will be an organizational meeting 01 the Parkside Film&#13;
,ere Wed d January 16at7'30p,m, in Dl74LLC. Everyone&#13;
Society on nes ay. .&#13;
is welcome.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building policy&#13;
faCUlty&#13;
receive&#13;
state&#13;
Family Identlflution Card&#13;
1 1 The p"rkSide family identification card is a convenience for the. ;mm:e.d~ate family&#13;
(,\pouw&amp;ttdchildrenonly; of faculty. staff and studenf5 who use the athletiC faCIlities.&#13;
2 When US,ng the athletic fiKlllties. the family of faculty, staff and students may present&#13;
e-,the1' tM' family identification card or the identification card ~ the faculty membe~, staff&#13;
~ or studftlt, Furth"'" proof of Identification may be requIred by those managing the&#13;
'.K,My I "ff' Mo d&#13;
3 Fam,ly identificahon cards may be ~cured trom the physica educa Ion a Ice n ay&#13;
Ihrough Friday Iromla.m, t04 p.m. beginning January 1&lt;1, 1974.&#13;
.. The' charge tor Ihecard will be $1.00 (The charge for the second semester. 1973·14 will be&#13;
~~) Beg,nn,ngwith Ihe ecademic yur 1974·7S, cards will be SOl? on a yearly basis only trom&#13;
September 1 to Augl,4t 31, The charge will be $l.?O r~ardl~s of time of purchase.&#13;
S only one lemily idenf;licatlon card per family will be Issued. .&#13;
6 Family identif,cation cards will list the name (s) of the spouse and children on the card,&#13;
7 ThOSe allow;1'l9 uneuthorlzed persons to use the family ick!ntification card will lose the&#13;
~l f.cat'OI\card and surrender the privilege of using the physical education building.&#13;
• Fam,ly memben mey bring one guest to Ihefacilltyfor a $1.00 charge.&#13;
, ALL PERSONS USING THE ATHLETIC FACILITIES MUST OBEY THE FOLLOWING&#13;
RULES AND REGULATIONS:&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
1 AJ'lyone using the athletic lacilitles must have an I D card.&#13;
'2 The 10 card must be shoWn upon request at the athletic tacility.&#13;
J, Tl'IOH gsi09 the pool and sauna must exerCise special care. The following rules govern&#13;
the.r VSt'&#13;
•. No rvnn 09. pushing or snoving 011 Ihe pool deck or in the pool area.&#13;
b ()nly onle penon at a timle may use Ihe diving board.&#13;
c P~s i" street c\(ltheswill not be allowed on the pool deCk.&#13;
d Food.s protlib,tf'd in the pool area .&#13;
e ArtifiCIal sw m devict'S are not allowed in the pool. The use of fins. masks and goggles is&#13;
pNlhib,le&lt;!&#13;
I NOone ISpermi"ed in Iheguard tower except the lifeguard.&#13;
9 Leaden 01 organiZe&lt;! groups visiting the pool shall assume full responsibility for the can·&#13;
duct of the r groups.&#13;
h Patrons shOuld acQuaint themselves With the various depths of 'he pool.&#13;
I. N09'aucontein.ersareallowed in the bathhouse Or pool area.&#13;
The lifeoguard may expel from the pool anyone violating these rules, or anyone whose can·&#13;
duel s ieopardizing the safety or pleasure of others.&#13;
• Family members mus' provide all clothing, towels and locks. Empty lockers are&#13;
ava,l.ble in locklerareas. No locks may be left on the lockers at Iheend of the day.&#13;
S. PARENTS MUST STAY WITH CHILDREN AGE TWELVE OR UNDER,&#13;
6, ANYONE VIOLATING THE RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE ATHLETIC&#13;
FACILITY WILL BE ASKED TO LEAVE!&#13;
1, l'hoseusng the Sa\Jfla musl strictly adhere to the following instructions:&#13;
a Nt n,mum 01 two people in the Sauna.&#13;
b. Maximum 01 twelve people in Sauna.&#13;
c Swim suits only.&#13;
d Keep hanas off contrOls.&#13;
e L,mit use 10 fillMn minutes.&#13;
f caut,on e-x1ende&lt;l sfay may cause diuiness.&#13;
"" Absolutely no one allowed in the Sauna alone.&#13;
r&#13;
grants&#13;
Parkside has been&#13;
UW Central Adtninis~OlIf""&#13;
members of its facult ~~&#13;
awarded two UndY \e&#13;
Teaching Improve ergra&#13;
totaling $15.224, tnenl ~&#13;
The grants are&#13;
totaling $15925' ha&#13;
,,",,,, , , w Icb&#13;
selected from 105&#13;
submitted by facully rP"PoIolt&#13;
univer-ai tiag and 141'01r1 ~&#13;
Centers in the uw ttr.".,&#13;
Twelve campuses S~&#13;
awards. r~&#13;
Receiving grants art "&#13;
Graflin and Peter II&#13;
assistant professors ol&#13;
$7,979 lor the project "A&#13;
Pacing Program f~&#13;
Composition," and Man&#13;
llappel, assistant pro! ,.&#13;
Education, $7,245,for ~ ....&#13;
"utilization of pa ...nt.~&#13;
Teams in a MUlti!:&#13;
Teacher Education C.....&#13;
The Graflin-Martln pr&#13;
covering the current ~&#13;
summer session .lad&#13;
semester, will focus (II&#13;
truction of a personalW!d,&#13;
pacmg system of instruc.tia&#13;
better teach necessary&#13;
freshman compositiCII&#13;
in a time p"riod nollimlled&#13;
traditional semesler,1be&#13;
will initially he tried •&#13;
sections of English 010, •&#13;
man course for stooenb&#13;
instruction in basic writiDI&#13;
and, if successful, will be&#13;
to all first-year com&#13;
courses and any other&#13;
who may need such help&#13;
Happel's project. w&#13;
being begun this sem_&#13;
supplement an existing&#13;
"Teaching lor the M&#13;
Society." Teacher tra&#13;
enrolled in the COursE'&#13;
taught by a tealn comJlOlM&#13;
Happel and five ~&#13;
representing the cultural&#13;
of an inner city area. Thf&#13;
will be taught at Vi&#13;
Park high school in Ra_&#13;
the parents are Black aodLlIiI&#13;
American.&#13;
liGHT 'n - ·It&#13;
e&#13;
Iii&#13;
by J,rry ~_...-.&#13;
Sight 'n Sound ..._Io~ NoW that the holidaYS' " """..&#13;
your pockets are .bUl9lnG ~ ~&#13;
cash gifts you re&lt;el"'fCl, y041yf1# ...&#13;
wondering hOW to sper!d&#13;
wisely. . QUII'" rtf/I#&#13;
Why not in....esl,lt III ..-. fI'&#13;
equipment? Sight n ~ "" ffII&#13;
suit ants will helP you ",'" •&#13;
gear from suct! famous,P1fI1lI'I-'&#13;
Marantz, Sony, supers.e; '(OIl ....&#13;
many others. We'll urrtf'"&#13;
match components 10 ~"&#13;
present system, take v;::;, ."'"&#13;
in trade on a new sYS ,&#13;
from scratch. ~111'!~&#13;
Best of aiL Sight 'n loI"~'"&#13;
for every ear, a price ,&#13;
"",...... If you woul~ lik~ t~IIII'&#13;
Hi.Fidelity, SIght n PIU",.I' ~&#13;
number 01 AUDIO vtfret ", ..&#13;
$1 25) which yOli can lI·thiS rJ'W ..&#13;
in' and say yOl! seW•&#13;
rt toP'&#13;
RANGE,R. If YO~HI"'¥If I"'"&#13;
electrOniCS CISa ca 'etY ol .w"~&#13;
hOW to join lhe SO&lt;;~e "" ~&#13;
sultants and recel&#13;
ron&#13;
training lor certitica ' r1fII..&#13;
,IDU'I'I - II'&#13;
Need some new 1111'fIIIIII&#13;
Sight 'N sound is Il~u J til ftII'&#13;
reduction ~Ie. Cllt'll' ,.eI •&#13;
others as loW 'S,l';' D&#13;
Tapes as lOW,I· UN&#13;
SIGHT'nsO .1ft'&#13;
Stereo' - ...... TV It""""gA..&#13;
Hi Fi CoP'r-- pt-..&#13;
Rariutf&#13;
21st&amp;Tayl?re&#13;
S.l.'-&#13;
Open Daily tU9&#13;
6 THE PARK SOE RA1 GER Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1974&#13;
s&#13;
Co&#13;
news&#13;
r cted o persons over 17&#13;
h checks&#13;
n top one percent&#13;
,Racine,&#13;
the 5 673&#13;
of Oinical&#13;
the&#13;
Regents approve mission&#13;
roved the select mission statement for&#13;
The ~oard ~f Reg~ts ~fs apfhe University to develop graduate&#13;
Parkside which w a ow . fields allied to business and&#13;
gram ~tasters degree programs m . . "gh be . . fr'Justrv ~; tying into the industrial society m1ss1on, m1 t gm m&#13;
the fali ~f 1975.&#13;
. thletes need ro o m a nd bo a r d&#13;
Fore ig n a&#13;
. to get several foreign athletes from&#13;
Park ide has. an opportumty rid class athletes, who in many cases&#13;
eden and Africa. These ar~ wo untries in the Olympics in track and&#13;
have or \\O~d repr~ent thei.; c~o offer room and board for four years&#13;
field. 1-'hat 1s n eded is a faJ?~ Y sted in opening their home to one of&#13;
for e athlet: · Any~ne 10 e~~ct Orby Moss, Assistant Athletic&#13;
th -e athl~te is as~e Edto Bco 'lding. Lucian Rosa from Ceylon is&#13;
Director m the Ph, . · Ill&#13;
curr nu.'· at Parkside through this type of program.&#13;
film Society to meet&#13;
There will be an organizational meeting of the Parkside Film&#13;
·etyon Wednesday, January 16 at7:30 p.m. in D174 LLC. Everyone&#13;
· welcome.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building policy&#13;
F•mlly Identification Card&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
l An us ng theathlttic facilit ies m ust have an ID card. , e 1O card mus' beshown upon request at the athletic facility.&#13;
3. T e 115lng he pool and sauna m ust exercise special care. The following rules govern&#13;
ATHLETIC&#13;
pens At 8:00a.rn.&#13;
Faculty&#13;
receive&#13;
state&#13;
grants&#13;
Parkside has been&#13;
UW Central Adminis:uri&#13;
members of its facuitv ~ awarded two Und·&#13;
T h. er r2 eac mg Improvem&#13;
totaling $15,224. ent C&#13;
The grants are&#13;
totaling $159,254 W~tc&#13;
selected from 105&#13;
su~mittE:&lt;1_ by faculty r:n&#13;
umvers1t1es and 14 1&#13;
Centers in the W oTwelve&#13;
campuse.&#13;
awards.&#13;
Receiving grants are&#13;
Graffin and Peter&#13;
assistant professors of&#13;
$7,979 for the project&#13;
Pacing Program rO:.&#13;
Composition," and . tan&#13;
Happel, assistant prci&#13;
Education, $7,245, for th&#13;
"Utilization or ParentTeams&#13;
in a .1ulttc&#13;
Teacher Education Cou&#13;
The Graffin-Martin p&#13;
covering the current&#13;
summer session and&#13;
semester, will focu&#13;
truction of a per onal&#13;
pacing system or in&#13;
better teach necessaf)&#13;
freshman compo ition&#13;
iri a time period not limit&#13;
traditional seme ter Tot&#13;
will initially be tried&#13;
sections of English 010 1&#13;
man course for stud n&#13;
instruction in basic wn&#13;
and, if successful, mil be&#13;
to all first-year com&#13;
courses and any other&#13;
who may need such h Ip&#13;
Happel's project&#13;
being begun this em&#13;
supplement an exi Ung&#13;
"Teaching for the lul&#13;
Society." Teacher tra&#13;
enrolled in the course&#13;
taught by a team co&#13;
Happel and five par&#13;
representing the cultural&#13;
of an inner city area. 'The&#13;
will be taught at W&#13;
Park high school in Ra&#13;
the parents are Black a&#13;
American.&#13;
by Jerry OUb&lt;fl&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Aucho '°" Now that the holidays "'&#13;
your pockets are _ooig.n; •&#13;
cash gifts you received, ~&#13;
wondering how to sP""'&#13;
wisely. . n QIII&#13;
Why not invest +t ' od&#13;
equipment? Sight 'n 50" ltCI&#13;
sultants will help you st i,- •&#13;
gear from such fa"'°"' F lfll&#13;
Marantz, Sony, supe~ yf1I&#13;
many others. We'll r,ortfil '{Ill&#13;
match components to ~,i,&#13;
present system, take v"" ., • in trade on a new sySfl!fll,&#13;
from scratch . ,ed ,,,;&#13;
Best of all. Sight 'n ~ r,,rr&#13;
for every ear, a price&#13;
t ,,.rnrrrlff 11 you would lik~ ~nd s,11&#13;
Hi-Fidelity, Sight n pRIMftS&#13;
number ~f AUDIO havttrft #'&#13;
Sl.25) wh+ch you canw '"" fl"'&#13;
in and sav you sa ,re cer. RANGER . If you~ Ylf'J&#13;
electronics as a ~,et~ of t,;ll4i' how to 101n the . rt,&lt; and rectrvf sultants ·rcation&#13;
training for cert1 i&#13;
1 1out11• " Need some new vtnt • 5""&#13;
Sight 'N sound ,s ~:uts • I ";&#13;
reduct ion sale. cu Sl lf •"'&#13;
others as low as ft&#13;
Tapes as 10w as Sl . OU,.O&#13;
SIGHT'n S ...... n&#13;
V f{tCOrv-' Stereo-T - H' Fi cornpontll I cinr• 21st &amp; Taylor•lla_ t&#13;
• ·19 "a · Open Daily ti • &#13;
STAFF MEETING&#13;
Wed. Jan. 23 2:30 p.m.&#13;
RANGER LLC D194 .&#13;
All interested persons welcome&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 16. 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
.. 8&#13;
_LIlt'" 10&#13;
Ia _llidl&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phon 65 -25 -&#13;
J'Dlc..&#13;
NOTICE .....&#13;
SU... lllol.1ICoual&#13;
OF TME nATE Of' II.. yOltk&#13;
COUNTY OJ' "I(W yOalC&#13;
- ,....-&#13;
=&#13;
CV&#13;
....&#13;
OQ_.&#13;
N&#13;
CV&#13;
=-&#13;
-&#13;
Villa Capri Shoppfug Center&#13;
SSz North 22nd Ave. Kenosha; (Ohio St. Racine)&#13;
-1122 Day and Evening Hour5 by APpoin,ment&#13;
announces the association of&#13;
JOHN WENTlAND, D.V.M.&#13;
and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
START THE SEMESTER&#13;
OUT RIGHT&#13;
SE88M&#13;
Electronic slide file&#13;
with a .e or,&#13;
..... -&#13;
.....&#13;
oC'1:I&#13;
GJ[[1[il&#13;
GJGJGJ&#13;
GJGJI2J&#13;
80&#13;
- ,....-&#13;
=&#13;
cv&#13;
....&#13;
OQ_.&#13;
N&#13;
cv&#13;
=-~&#13;
~&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
America&#13;
392 60th t. Phon&#13;
STAFF MEETING&#13;
Wed. Jan. 23 2:30 p.m.&#13;
RANGER LLC D194 ·&#13;
All interested persons welcome&#13;
JOHN W. MERRICK, D.V.M. announces the association of&#13;
JOHN WENTLAND, D.V.M. and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
Villa Capri Shopping Center&#13;
., North 22nd Ave. Kenosha; (Ohio St. Racine)&#13;
•·9122 Day and Evening Hours by Appointment&#13;
START THE SE E&#13;
OUT RIGHT&#13;
SES&#13;
0&#13;
-&#13;
----&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
OIC&#13;
.....&#13;
c:,&#13;
-&#13;
- Cl)&#13;
Cl.&#13;
--&#13;
• THE PARKSIDE RANGER wednesdlly, ".n. 16, 1974&#13;
Sportsfest&#13;
m 11 al borne against tbe Wa)ne Slate&#13;
from ~II, Ilc!l 'Ibis . turday's contesl against Wayne&#13;
I eould IWOvlde e IDtet1'Slillgba etball. a first year coach al&#13;
yn !lob mar an Ict.·ocate of "Blitz Basketball," a press·&#13;
run lorm thai ulihzeo 10-12 players per game. 'Ibis style of&#13;
'-'lkelhaJl Ill' e&gt;el'}'Olle00 hIS and the opponent's team, a real&#13;
koul The fast pace abould be the tnJe lesl foc the Rangers, who&#13;
r\ll m I 10 th a lillIe peed of therr nYo" in QlllCk Qlambliss,&#13;
m I De d Joe HUller, all of whoco have added a hlUe&#13;
10 the olf ,e scorin&amp; pot.&#13;
Croll country ski races&#13;
here Saturday&#13;
Plrk ide's trOSS country&#13;
nmung lr Us will be the SIte 01&#13;
flnl annual Par ide Cr06S&#13;
Qlunlr)' ill~ OlarnPlllllSrups 10&#13;
held turday. January 19&#13;
tllim&#13;
The IllrtlDl line foc the 13&#13;
rae will oppo&amp;Ite Petrifying&#13;
Park ID Kenosha county,&#13;
00 tbe Par de campus. The&#13;
m ..illsIar1 with the Class&#13;
racers cocnpeling 00 the 15&#13;
10m rcourse (9.3 miles). For&#13;
there will also be divisions&#13;
for B, Veterans Collegiate&#13;
and the loUowll~ 1ge dlvisiorlS:&#13;
111-17 14-n, 12·13. and 11 and&#13;
11 and under which will be 2.5&#13;
kIDs.&#13;
Bill Knutti, veteran Kenosba&#13;
skier. ",'ill serve as the race&#13;
director with Vic Godfrey t&#13;
CoordinalOr of Club Sports at&#13;
Parkside, heading up the entries.&#13;
The entry lee is $2.00 with a $3.00&#13;
fee for late entries. Contestants&#13;
must possess a current Central&#13;
United Slates Ski Association&#13;
membership card.&#13;
!edals will be awarded In the&#13;
lOp three in each class.&#13;
The ttl races ",11 be five&#13;
3 I mil I In four&#13;
th the e""",,Uoo of the&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things! HOFF 'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
TAPES&#13;
Discount Prices!&#13;
5107 • Silttl "' •.&#13;
...... 6M - 56th Street&#13;
FREE DEL/FER Y&#13;
44 7 nnd A venue Kenosha&#13;
Wi con in Phone 654-0774&#13;
Cagers&#13;
split pair&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. SchedUI&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE JAN ,&#13;
TE' The gym is usually closed from 3:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Mol'ldey th 1'-12&#13;
NO. t .m' practice. On Sunday and Wednesday evenings 6'''' rv Frilltr ..&#13;
athletiC e . I b 1 th ' . P.m. &amp;rid&#13;
tively u"ntil10 p.m.. intra murals wu e us n9 egyms. IIlIJI&#13;
TUes. Jan. 22 - Gym Open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
Gym Open for recreation&#13;
Intramural basketball&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 17 - Gym Open for recreation&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
Wed. Jan. 16 . The Rangers defealed&#13;
hSSOUri-81.Louis 87-76 Frtday&#13;
night at the Physical Education&#13;
Building behind sop~omore&#13;
center Gary Cole's 24 pOints and&#13;
then 1051 saturday night, 66-61, to&#13;
Southern fllinois·Edwardsville.&#13;
Parkside's record stood at 4-10&#13;
heading Into a game Tuesday&#13;
night at SI. Xavier College 10&#13;
Chicago. The Rangers will meet&#13;
Wayne Slate here Saturday. at&#13;
7:30 p.m. at the Phy Ed BUIlding&#13;
before beading to sQ..uthern&#13;
Illinois and Indiana (or games&#13;
Monday and Tuesday with Indiana&#13;
State-Evansville ~nd&#13;
Southern lIlinois-Edwardsvllle.&#13;
Against UMSL, Parkslde&#13;
jumped off 10 a quick 8-0 lead in&#13;
the first half before UMSL was&#13;
able to get on the board. The&#13;
Rangers, with Malcolm Mahone&#13;
hitting a number of short jurnpers&#13;
and baseline shots, led 24-11&#13;
midway through the half.&#13;
Parkside beld a 42-32 halftime&#13;
lead.&#13;
The Rangers came out fast in&#13;
the second stanza and had upped&#13;
their margin to 18 points before&#13;
UMSL whittled the lead to 12&#13;
midway through the half.&#13;
Parkside rallied and upped the&#13;
lead to 83-64.&#13;
Cole pulled down 18 rebounds in&#13;
addition to his 24 points while&#13;
~Iahone had 18 points and 10&#13;
boards. Chuck Chambliss with 16&#13;
and Joe Hutter with 10were also&#13;
Fri. .ren. 18 - Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
sat. Jan. 19 . Gym Open&#13;
Basketball games&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
sun. Jan. 20 .&#13;
ftNJn. Jan. 21 Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
pool open&#13;
Joe Hutter&#13;
~~~i1'~&#13;
Oelftj&#13;
SUPER CHEF&#13;
~&#13;
, ... 34ll Sb";d'! Rd. "92&amp; 391h....&#13;
~?~~F.~Pa ~ - &gt;~:::ii".liiii::!~&#13;
12:30 p.m .. ':3O P.m.&#13;
a p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m. - 10 e.rn.&#13;
12:30p.m .. " p.m. &amp;6&#13;
P.m. lOp.""&#13;
lO:30a,m""30pm I..&#13;
8:30a.m. 10;30a'm'&amp;'pI'II· 1CI1l111&#13;
11:30 e.rn. _ l:30·p.~. 2:lOp", lI,&#13;
10:30 a.rn. ·5 p.rn&#13;
8:30 e.m. -5 p.m. E~tjr&#13;
11 a.m .. 1:30 p.m. ebtlilOirlgara..1&#13;
9:30 a.m .. 4 p.m.&#13;
JV·S:30 Varslly . 7:)0&#13;
8:30 e.m .. S p.en.&#13;
3:30 p.m .. S p.m.&#13;
but Chambliss' fifth ,.&#13;
SIU's Don Koppeaha&#13;
charity tosses which....&#13;
Ice the game. SIUhit..&#13;
fnul shots and a&#13;
Parkside a baaIili&#13;
Dimitrijevic before1IIe&#13;
out.&#13;
Building open at 2 p.m .. 10 c.m. ~11 lacltiti~ available&#13;
mlramurals in gvmsl -- ...&#13;
12:3Op.m. ·1:3OP.m.&amp;,p,~_.'&#13;
8:30 e.m. _ 10 p.re. "II&#13;
12:30 p,m .. 2 p.m.&#13;
12:30 p.m. -1:3OP.m.&amp;,&#13;
all day except between I:;;' '"&#13;
ll:JOa.m, ·1:3Op.m. &amp;6P",~'~:1J&#13;
• NolIililO&#13;
balance r.'"&#13;
• Nolillilll"&#13;
number of.&#13;
you wrill&#13;
AT FIRST UOF&#13;
RACIIl&#13;
CHECI'&#13;
IS&#13;
~&#13;
AT FIRST NAil'"&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your Ifee --&#13;
account 5011 -&#13;
First Nati~~",&#13;
and Trust Com ~&#13;
..'&#13;
.- "........,..,~&#13;
Cro s country ski races&#13;
here Saturday&#13;
/\I' R&#13;
11 nd under ·hich will be 2.5&#13;
km .&#13;
Bill Knutti, veteran Kenosha&#13;
· , '&gt;I.ill ·e a the race&#13;
dir ctor with Vic Godfrey,&#13;
rdinator of Club Sports at&#13;
Par ide, heading up the entries.&#13;
Th entry fee is $2.00 with a $3.00&#13;
fee for late entries. Contestants&#13;
must possess a current Central&#13;
mted tate Ski Association&#13;
member hip card .&#13;
• tedal will be awarded to the&#13;
top three in each class.&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for Pants&#13;
and things!&#13;
614 - S6lh Street&#13;
· nue K no ha.&#13;
Phone 65 -0 4&#13;
Cagers&#13;
split pair&#13;
The Rangers defe~ted • t Louis 87-76 Friday I n · ti . t at the Phy ical Educa on&#13;
:~ding behind sop~omor~&#13;
center Garv Cole's 24 pomts an n lo t Sa·turday night, 66-6~, to&#13;
th uthern Illinoi -Edwardsville.&#13;
P ·de' record stood at 4-10&#13;
ar I Tu day heading into a game es . night at t. Xavier Co~lege m&#13;
Chicago. The Rangers will me:~&#13;
Warne tale here Satur~y.&#13;
;-30 p.m. at the Phy Ed Building&#13;
b~fore heading to S(!.Uthern&#13;
Winoi and Indiana for _games&#13;
tonday and Tuesday with Indiana&#13;
tale-Evansville ~nd&#13;
Southern Illinois-Edwardsv~e. . t u••SL Parkside gain ,n ' . ·umped off to a quick 8--0 lead m&#13;
fiie first half before UMSL was&#13;
able to get on the board. The&#13;
Ran~ers. with Malcolm Ma~one&#13;
hitting a number of short Jumpers&#13;
and ba eline shots, led 24-11&#13;
midway through the h~lf.&#13;
Park ide held a 42-32 halftime&#13;
I d. f t . Th Rangers came out as m&#13;
the econd tanza and_had upped&#13;
th ·r margin to 18 pomts before&#13;
t L hittled the lead to 12&#13;
m.idwav through the half.&#13;
Par ide rallied and upped the&#13;
lead to 83-64.&#13;
ole pulled down 18 rebounds in&#13;
ddition to hi 24 points while&#13;
1ahone had 18 points and 10&#13;
board . Chuck Chambliss with 16&#13;
and Joe Hutter with 10 were also&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. Schedlll&#13;
HYSICAL EDUCATION BUILDING SCHEDULE JAN . ''-U P ·s usually closed from 3:30 p.m . to 8 p.m . Monday lhr F NOTE : The gym 'rce on Sunday and Wednesday evenings, 6:30 P Ill u t C..,&#13;
athletic teams prac_ 'tr~murals will be us1ng the gyms. lflG&#13;
lively until 10 p.m ., ,n&#13;
Gym Open for recreation 11 :30 p.m.- l :30 P-m. Wed- Jan. 16 . Intramural basketball 8 p.m . 10 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m . · to P-m.&#13;
Pool open 12 :30p.m.- 2p.m. &amp;6p.m lOp&#13;
7 • Gym Open for recreation&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 1 Handball courts open&#13;
Fri Jan . 18 ·&#13;
sat. Jan. 19 ·&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym Open&#13;
Basketball games&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
10 :J0a.m . - 1:J0p.m,&amp;ap IT\.&#13;
8.JOa.m.- 10 :30am. &amp;ll )Op g&#13;
11 :30 a.m .. 1 30 P-m.&#13;
10:30 a.m .. s p.m.&#13;
8:30 a.m .. S p.m. Entiret,u Id 11 a.m .. 1:30 P.m .&#13;
8:30 a.m . . • P-m.&#13;
JV-5:30 Varsity 7 )0&#13;
8:30 a.m . . s P.m.&#13;
3:30 p.m .. s p.m.&#13;
Sun. Jan. 20 ·&#13;
MOn. Jan. 21&#13;
Building open at 2 p.m . · 10 p.m . all facllilies avallablt&#13;
intra murals 10 QYmu, !';,• i.&#13;
Gym open 12 :30p.m.- 1:l0p.m. &amp;apm P&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m .. 10 p.m. · · IOp&#13;
Pool open 12 :30 p.m. 2 P.m&#13;
Tues. Jan. 22 . Gym Open Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
. regarding the above schedule or any scheduling of lht Pt, All queSliohns Id be directed to the departmental office. Building s ou&#13;
in double fig~es for the Ran~ers.&#13;
Against SIU-E Saturday mght,&#13;
a team which had defeated&#13;
Parkside 58-50 on a neutral floor&#13;
in December, Parkside never 1~.&#13;
The Rangers got behind 10-4 m&#13;
the game's early minutes and&#13;
were forced to play catch-up ball&#13;
the rest of the way.&#13;
The Rangers moved to within&#13;
five and three points in the&#13;
waning minutes before SIU&#13;
center Leon Wright hit twice on&#13;
the bonus with 1:36 remaining to&#13;
move SIU ahead 61-57. Parkside&#13;
again narrowed the gap to two as&#13;
Chambliss hit on two free throws&#13;
• No mini111&#13;
balance re,n&#13;
• No limit t1 IN&#13;
number of CICb&#13;
you write&#13;
SUPER CHEF</text>
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              <text>Advising battle continues</text>
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              <text>Will build new road, parking lots&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Parkside students may find it&#13;
easier to park next fall because of&#13;
two new parking lots scheduled to&#13;
be built. The lots will be located&#13;
near the Communication Arts&#13;
Building and the proposed site for&#13;
the new student union and will&#13;
have a combined capacity of 1,045&#13;
vehicles. The lots are needed&#13;
because of increased student&#13;
enrollment, and the eventual&#13;
closure of the Kenosha Campus.&#13;
Work will also begin this summer&#13;
on the new Student Union across&#13;
the loop road from the Classroom&#13;
Building and, as a result, the&#13;
faculty parking lot will be lost.&#13;
The net gain in parking spaces&#13;
will be 225. If this fall it is evident&#13;
that more parking spaces are&#13;
needed, another 450-vehicle lot&#13;
could be constructed behind the&#13;
P.E. Building by the fall of 1975,&#13;
according to James Galbraith of&#13;
Planning and Construction. On&#13;
the basis of estimates that only 46&#13;
percent of the student body is on&#13;
campus at any one time, and with&#13;
increasing reliance on car pools&#13;
and mass transit due primarily to&#13;
the energy crisis, Galbraith&#13;
believes that the 225 space net&#13;
increase should be sufficient for&#13;
next year. Galbraith also stated&#13;
that the "back-up" parking lot&#13;
across the street from the heating&#13;
plant could be put into service if&#13;
the need arose.&#13;
Gil Eagles, "the entertaining psychic," will demonstrate his extrasensory&#13;
perception tonight in the Comm Arts Theater, sponsored&#13;
by the Activities Board. Story on page 3.&#13;
In addition to the new parking&#13;
lots, work may also be started on&#13;
a new outer loop road that would&#13;
be constructed outside the&#13;
present one and would be the only&#13;
access to the two new parking&#13;
lots. Shuttle buses and service&#13;
vehicles would still use the old&#13;
loop road. Plans for the new road&#13;
have not yet been approved by&#13;
the Building Committee, but even&#13;
if they are, Galbraith said he&#13;
doubts that the road could be&#13;
completely surfaced by this fall.&#13;
All of this and more is part of&#13;
the so-called "Master Plan" that&#13;
one day envisions Parkside&#13;
becoming a campus of 25,000&#13;
students. Total costs for this&#13;
phase of the plan, which includes&#13;
the two new parking lots and the&#13;
new outer loop road amounts to&#13;
$776,900. The total costs for these,&#13;
the third lot behind the P.E.&#13;
Building, the completed outer&#13;
loop road, lights and sidewalks&#13;
would be $1,030,000.&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 Vol. II No. 17&#13;
PSGA&#13;
Elections committee named&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
Last semester began like any&#13;
other for the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association.&#13;
Petitions were circulated, candidates&#13;
campaigned and&#13;
caucused and finally, on Nov.&#13;
20th and 21st, approximately 11&#13;
percent of the student body voted&#13;
for the candidates of their choice.&#13;
When the votes were tallied, Tom&#13;
Jennett had been elected&#13;
President, Chuck Perroni to&#13;
C.C.C. and Vice President, Mary&#13;
Clare Werve was elected&#13;
Treasurer, and 17 other students&#13;
were elected Senators.&#13;
The primary issue that faced&#13;
P.S.G.A. was that of Senatorelect&#13;
Normal Neophyte. Controversy&#13;
arose when Neophyte's&#13;
election was challenged on the&#13;
grounds that he violated&#13;
Wisconsin Election Laws by not&#13;
running under his legal name. At&#13;
the first meeting of the newly&#13;
elected Senate, Neophyte was&#13;
refused a seat for that reason.&#13;
After much deliberation&#13;
P-S G.A. unanimously decided to&#13;
abide by P.S.G.A. election laws&#13;
and Wisconsin election laws&#13;
where they apply, and to hold&#13;
new elections in, the Spring&#13;
Semester. Toward that end, the&#13;
Assistant Dean of Students appointed&#13;
a new Elections Committee&#13;
as requested by P.S.G.A.&#13;
Appointed to the committee&#13;
were: Buzz Faust, president of&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board;&#13;
P.S.G.A. President Tom Jennett&#13;
and Senator Bruce Volpintesta&#13;
(neither is running for reelection);&#13;
and Jane Schliesman&#13;
editor of the RANGER.&#13;
At the most recent P.S G A&#13;
meeting, last Friday, Jennett&#13;
announced that future meetings&#13;
would be videotaped by Student&#13;
Life. Jem&amp;tt also asked that&#13;
Senate Committees formed&#13;
earlier in the year meet, organize&#13;
and start working on their&#13;
assigned tasks. The Grievance&#13;
and Clearinghouse Committee&#13;
will meet at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday,&#13;
Jan. 23 in LLCD174;&#13;
students are welcome to attend.&#13;
The only known candidate for&#13;
P.S.G.A. President thus far is&#13;
Lan Nielsen. When asked for his&#13;
candid opinion of P.S G A&#13;
Nielsen said, "It's a mess, I'd like&#13;
to clear it up."&#13;
Advising battle continues&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee met last&#13;
Thursday to debate the issue of academic advising,&#13;
more specifically the' proposal by Alan Shucard!&#13;
associate professor of E nglish, which calls for "the&#13;
offices of academic advising to be staffed by faculty&#13;
members who will be appropriately rewarded for&#13;
advising."&#13;
Last December a recommendation came from the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee in which those&#13;
students who have declared a major or an area of&#13;
interest would be advised by faculty. Those students&#13;
who are undecided would continue to receive&#13;
academic advising through the Student Services&#13;
Office administered by Allen Dearborn, Assistant&#13;
Chancellor and Jewel Echelbarger, Assistant Dean&#13;
of Students.&#13;
Shucard's proposal would place all academic&#13;
advising in the hands of the faculty to be administered&#13;
through the academic Deans' offices&#13;
(Dean Moy of the School of Modern Industry and&#13;
Dean Norwood of the College of Science and&#13;
Society) with "non-academic staff (supposedly the&#13;
Student Services Office} assisting."&#13;
No recommendation came out of Thursday's&#13;
meeting; however, sessions will be held between the&#13;
Deans of the College and the School with Dearborn's&#13;
staff in which it is hoped some agreements can be&#13;
made.&#13;
Most discord appeared to be between the College&#13;
of Science and Society and the Student Services&#13;
Office. Echelbarger said, "Our people are&#13;
professionals who do not see themselves as faculty&#13;
assistants."&#13;
Norwood felt that although Shucard's proposal&#13;
involves the advising of 1200 students, he was&#13;
"baffled that a proposal that says substantially the&#13;
same thing as the proposal the Academic Policies&#13;
Committee originally sent out can cause so much&#13;
controversy...The proposal Shucard has advanced&#13;
eliminates some of the options."&#13;
Shucard claimed that "contrary to opinions that&#13;
have been bandied about, I am not acting as the&#13;
Dean's (Norwood) or Otto Bauer's (Vice-&#13;
Chancellor) messenger boy." (A RANGER&#13;
editorial called the proposal politically motivated in&#13;
order to give more power to the academic deans'&#13;
and create and save faculty positions.)&#13;
No Money Available&#13;
Insofar as financing the operation and hiring&#13;
faculty while present faculty handle advising&#13;
Norwood said, "Money to fund such a proposal is&#13;
not available in the College's budget. That is not to&#13;
say the campus administration, in its infinite&#13;
wisdom, can't find or take money from other&#13;
areas."&#13;
James Dean, chairperson of the Academic&#13;
Policies Committee, questioned those present to&#13;
consider which system gives a higher degree of&#13;
effectiveness.&#13;
Barb Larson of the Student Services staff explained&#13;
that career counseling and academic advising&#13;
overlap. "If you separate the two," she said&#13;
students will suffer." Dearborn added that&#13;
academic advising is often just an excuse for a&#13;
student to enter an advisor's door with personal&#13;
problems. "Academic advising is a blur which&#13;
encompasses many things," he said.&#13;
Moy asked Shucard to elaborate on why the&#13;
faculty is more capable of advising than the Student&#13;
Sei vices staff. Shucard said the career counseling&#13;
could still be handled by the Student Services Office&#13;
while academic advising could be carried out&#13;
through the academic deans' offices bv the facultv&#13;
Moy again asked Shucard, "But what are the advantages&#13;
of faculty advising?" Said Shucard,&#13;
There is a short circuit in communications between&#13;
the Dean's office and the Student Services •&#13;
office. I don't know whose fault it is and I'm not&#13;
interested. I would like to short circuit that communication&#13;
need." Moy questioned whether or not&#13;
the breakdown would not exist between the Dean's&#13;
office-and the faculty as well.&#13;
Vay n e J o h n s o n , a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r o f&#13;
?il?S?.?uy' thcT suS§ested changing the proposal to&#13;
ead, The offices of academic advising are to be&#13;
staffed by faculty as well as the Student Services&#13;
Office....&#13;
Said Dearborn, "If you do that I'll pull out completely.&#13;
I cannot just assign my staff over to the&#13;
Deans administration." Echelbarger added that,&#13;
Our staff are already under an administrative&#13;
structure. It would be very difficult to have them&#13;
report to the academic Deans as well."&#13;
Strictly a Faculty Operation&#13;
Dearborn added, "The proposal makes no&#13;
reference to us, it is strictly a faculty operation I&#13;
am not prepared to tell my staff to be assistants out&#13;
of either of the academic Deans' offices." Dearborn&#13;
said that the original proposal in which Student&#13;
Services advised those students who were undeclared,&#13;
"is working with the School and it can&#13;
work with the College." But under this proposal&#13;
Dearborn said the College would have the Student&#13;
Services staff working whenever the faculty didn't&#13;
want to, such as between semesters, nights and&#13;
during the peak times.&#13;
He continued, "Here we are arguing about&#13;
budgets, Student Services and faculty. We're not&#13;
talking about the students."&#13;
Norwood agreed to a meeting with Dearborn and&#13;
his staff, as Moy and Dearborn had set up earlier to&#13;
work out some agreements and report back to the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee this week.&#13;
In ending, Dearborn said, "I am proud of my&#13;
staff. They are young, and growing. All I ask is give&#13;
us some stature."&#13;
Shucard told Dearborn to "Stick to the issues and&#13;
refrain from imputing other motives as you have&#13;
been doing this past week." Dearborn interrupted,&#13;
tolling Shucard, "If you want to give me a lecture&#13;
come to my office. But I'm not the only one who's&#13;
been thinking those thoughts."&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee will meet&#13;
again on Friday, Jan. 25 at 1 p.m. in Comm Arts&#13;
room 233.&#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974&#13;
RANGER 1— Editorial/Opinion—&#13;
Dangerous&#13;
intersections&#13;
need 4-way stop&#13;
Definite iraffic safety probiems exist at two intersections&#13;
adjacent to the campus. Since Parkside&#13;
came into existence, and with its increasing population,&#13;
the corners of County Trunk A and Wood Road and A&#13;
and County Trunk Y (near the northeast end of the&#13;
campus) have become hazardous.&#13;
At A and Wood Road there is a visibility problem due&#13;
to the hill just west of Wood Road on A. There is also a&#13;
congestion problem when classes let out and a large&#13;
volume of people are leaving at the same time.&#13;
Congestion is even worse at the other intersection, for&#13;
Y is a main route between Racine and Kenosha and not&#13;
only University people use it but many other residents of&#13;
both cities. Cars on A tend to dart out when there is the&#13;
slightest opening.&#13;
A four-way stop at both intersections would reduce the&#13;
.hazards and hasten the flow of traffic, especially for&#13;
cars at A and Y. We suggest that people at Parkside&#13;
request Kenosha County to investigate this situation&#13;
before anyone is injured or even killed. Since we have a&#13;
commuter campus, and since statistics show that most&#13;
accidents happen within 10 miles of home, this is a&#13;
matter of concern to all of us.&#13;
Point of view&#13;
Bad deal&#13;
for terminated&#13;
employe&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Kent Mayes was a police officer with the Parkside Safety and&#13;
Security force from November 1, 1971 until May 23, 19 73. T hen as a&#13;
result of Governor Lucey's announced productivity gain savings and&#13;
low priority requirements for the 1973-75 biennial budget, Mayes' job&#13;
was terminated. His salary of $8376 comprised part of the $16,736&#13;
savings from a 13 percent low priority requirement for Safety and&#13;
Security. (Another $8508 was cut also from this department for the&#13;
productivity allotment.)&#13;
As a civil service employe, Mayes decided to appeal his case to the&#13;
State Personnel Board in early summer. The Board agreed to hear&#13;
Mayes' appeal later that summer on the grounds that the performance&#13;
evaluation he had received as part of his lay-off procedure was considered&#13;
to be invalid.&#13;
A period of four months followed from the August 17 hearing until&#13;
the Board finally issued its opinion on December 20, 19 73. It was a&#13;
rugged time for Mayes who forfeited his unemployment checks; he&#13;
attended Gateway Technical Institute during the day, thus completing&#13;
a degree in police science. But in light of the Board's ruling of "full&#13;
reinstatement immediately," the long wait seems so mehow recon&#13;
ciled, that is until one considers that the Board has no legal recourse to&#13;
enforce its ruling.&#13;
Today Mayes remains unemployed while Parkside appeals the&#13;
Board's ruling. James Greenwald, legal advisor for the Board, said&#13;
that by delaying the remedy the Board had given the employe, the&#13;
chances of that employe returning to his original job grew dimmer.&#13;
This seems especially true and unfortunate now, considering that,&#13;
after an-eight-month layoff, Mayes must go out and hire his own&#13;
counsel to sue Parkside within 60 days of the Board's ruling so that he&#13;
may return to Work.&#13;
|&#13;
f)oti&gt;book&#13;
bv Jane Schliesman&#13;
"When major campus groups are at odds with each other the future&#13;
of a quality University is dimmed."&#13;
-RANGER editorial, Jan. 16,1974&#13;
The Academic Policies Committee meeting last Thursday was at&#13;
best an exercise in frustration, but to this student observer it was a&#13;
disillusioning and disheartening display of academicians thinking in&#13;
circles, chasing themselves round and round the track and revving&#13;
their engines in attempts to lure Assistant Chancellor Allen Dearborn&#13;
out of the pit to show his stuff. When he finally accepted the challenge&#13;
he apparently surprised at least a few persons present with his direct&#13;
driving style and guts. The race was for real and the conflict no longer&#13;
subtle.&#13;
To be fair, it must be stated that a number of committee members&#13;
watched this contest from the sidelines or waved the yellow caution&#13;
flag. While there is solidarity among the Student Services staff, the&#13;
faculty apparently are in a bit of a quandary as to what the whole thing&#13;
is all about.&#13;
I still defend RANGER'S analysis of it last week as a "power play,"&#13;
for it calls for the academic deans to administer the advising, taking it&#13;
away from Student Services. Involved, therefore, is money and&#13;
positions (the overt and covert foci of discussion) and therefore power&#13;
for the deans. Shucard may not have intended this-he seems&#13;
genuinely interested in a good advising system, even if he did say he&#13;
didn't care whose fault the present communication problems in advising&#13;
are-but Norwood is gunning for the checkered flag on this one.&#13;
Confusion is understandable, for I'm still not sure whether Shucard&#13;
or Norwood is the mechanic, and which of them is the driver, but their&#13;
car was frequently seen going off the track into the sidelines of general&#13;
degree requirements, budget, revision approvement process, and&#13;
other potholes. The central issue here-what is best for the studentswas&#13;
referred to as "obvious" and thus summarily dismissed for most&#13;
of the meeting.&#13;
It is my feeling that if they had dwelled on the obvious for a few&#13;
minutes they could have avoided hassles that are likely to leave longlasting&#13;
scars on relations between faculty and counselors. For&#13;
example, Shucard said that faculty doing academic advising would be&#13;
"volunteers who are good at it." If one-third of the full-time faculty&#13;
here volunteered and were good at it (which seems a high estimate),&#13;
there would be 57 faculty advisors. It is obvious that if you turn over&#13;
3400 und eclared or undecided students to 57 faculty, each faculty&#13;
member would be advising 60 stu dents over and above his or her&#13;
declared majors. This would make it difficult for many students to&#13;
even get an appointment, let alone try and walk in without one (not to&#13;
mention the strain on these teachers).&#13;
It is further obvious that these faculty members would be giving up&#13;
vacation time between semesters, since that is when students seek&#13;
advising, in exchange for a "reward" such as a reduced class load&#13;
during the semester. It seems to me that the faculty members who&#13;
would be good at academic advising are those who can establish good&#13;
rapport with students, those who are sought after for classes. To&#13;
"reward" them by letting them work less in their chosen career seems&#13;
rather paradoxical anyway, but also obviously hurts the students who&#13;
could otherwise be exposed to the classroom experience with these&#13;
people.&#13;
Finally, since money does seem to be one of the considerations in&#13;
this proposal, and since most of the cogs in the University wheel are&#13;
facing budget cutbacks or at best holding, it just makes good economic&#13;
sense to upgrade the present system if it is a viable one (which it&#13;
certainly is) rather than start over with a whole new system.&#13;
So this is my personal plea—one voice, but I think I speak for many&#13;
students for I've discussed this with many of them-to both faculty and&#13;
Student Services staff. The present system needs improvement in&#13;
communication, but it is a good system and I would like to see i t&#13;
retained. It keeps the faculty teaching and it provides the students&#13;
with readily available, unbiased, understanding help from trained&#13;
professionals in the field of advising and counseling. What the present&#13;
system needs most is a higher measure of respect for each other on the&#13;
part of the opposing entities in this conflict, and more generally on the&#13;
part of everyone at Parkside-students, staff, faculty and administration&#13;
alike.&#13;
Tell ihe "truth,&#13;
AriDTHE TRUTH&#13;
» , ,Y'L,L 5ET YOU FREE.'&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 TH E PARKSI D E RANGER 3&#13;
UW-P appeals officers reinstatement&#13;
by Michael Olszyk&#13;
Parkside has decided to appeal&#13;
the State Personnel Board's&#13;
ruling on Dec. 20, concerning the&#13;
layoff of police officer Kent&#13;
Mayes. According to Charles&#13;
Stathas, a University System&#13;
attorney, Gov. Patrick Lucey&#13;
was to appoint a special council&#13;
to represent Parkside last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
A petition of review to the&#13;
circuit court was also to have&#13;
been issued Jan. 18, 1974 by the&#13;
University Legal System-within&#13;
30 days of the original Personnel&#13;
Board ruling.&#13;
The Board ordered that, "the&#13;
Respondent (John C. Weaver,&#13;
President, University of&#13;
Wisconsin) immediately reinstate&#13;
the Appellant (Mayes) to&#13;
his former position, without any&#13;
loss of seniority or other benefits&#13;
and with full back pay, from the&#13;
date of his layoff (May 23,1973) to&#13;
the date of his receipt of the&#13;
Respondent's written unconditional&#13;
offer of recall to&#13;
active employment."&#13;
Personal Basis for Layoff&#13;
Mayes, who was laid off due to&#13;
cuts in appropriations, appealed&#13;
to the Board June 5, 1973 objecting&#13;
to the performance&#13;
evaluation he had received as&#13;
part of the layoff procedure by&#13;
Ronald Brinkmann, director of&#13;
Safety and Security. He contended&#13;
that his layoff was based&#13;
on "a very personal basis and&#13;
was not fairly done," citing&#13;
written proof that he was better&#13;
qualified than one other officer,&#13;
Laurence Augustine.&#13;
Based upon the evidence given&#13;
at the hearing Aug. 17, 1973 at&#13;
Parkside, the Board ruled that&#13;
"the Appellant was not the least&#13;
efficient and effective employe&#13;
amongst those employes in the&#13;
layoff group in the police officer&#13;
class."&#13;
"The departure from previous&#13;
Board cases concerning whether&#13;
or not the burden of proof that&#13;
rests upon the appointing&#13;
authority is the same as showing&#13;
discharge for just cause, is the&#13;
procedural question that the&#13;
University plans to appeal the&#13;
case on," said Stathas.&#13;
Procedure is Provided&#13;
At the outset of the Mayes v.&#13;
Weaver hearing, the burden of&#13;
proof rested on the counsel for&#13;
Weaver to prove to a reasonable&#13;
certainty that the facts as relied&#13;
on and stated in the layoff notice&#13;
were in fact true and constituted&#13;
just cause for the action taken.&#13;
The State Bureau of Personnel&#13;
provides for the procedure to be&#13;
used in determining which employe&#13;
shall be laid off when a&#13;
reduction in force is necessary. It&#13;
specifies that the three lowest&#13;
ranking in seniority shall be&#13;
evaluated by their superior based&#13;
upon each employe's services&#13;
and demonstrated competence&#13;
and fitness.&#13;
According to the Board's&#13;
opinion, "the Respondent's only&#13;
proferred evidence on this issue&#13;
was the executed 'Layoff Performance&#13;
Rating Scale' forms for&#13;
the Appellant and Officer&#13;
Augustine, which were prepared&#13;
by Brinkmann on May 16, 1973."&#13;
These forms gave numerical&#13;
values to such "rating factors"&#13;
as quality and quantity of work,&#13;
work habits, work interest, and&#13;
personal relations with the&#13;
director.&#13;
"The Respondent did not try to&#13;
establish by witnesses or records&#13;
why higher ratings were given&#13;
Officer Augustine than the Appellant&#13;
for any of the rating&#13;
factors listed in the form," the&#13;
Board's opinion stated.&#13;
With regard to Mayes' principal&#13;
witness, another police&#13;
officer on the Security force, the&#13;
Board's opinion believed his&#13;
testimony to be "credible and&#13;
plausible," saying that, "it&#13;
constitutes almost the sole&#13;
testimony to the job performance&#13;
of the Appellant and Officer&#13;
Augustine."&#13;
James Greenwald, legal advisor&#13;
for the State Personnel&#13;
Board, said that the Mayes v.&#13;
Weaver case was one of the first&#13;
layoffs in which the "preponderence&#13;
of evidence" rested on&#13;
the employer, rather than the&#13;
employe. This new "standard of&#13;
proof" was based on what he&#13;
called the "landmark" civil&#13;
service law, Dec. 1971, involving&#13;
Reinke v. Personnel Board. This&#13;
law states that "in discharge&#13;
proceedings before the ~ State&#13;
Personnel Board, appointing&#13;
authority has burden of proving&#13;
that discharge was for just&#13;
cause."&#13;
"Prior to this, discharge for&#13;
just cause had to be proven false&#13;
by the employe," said Greenwald.&#13;
Parkside's Personnel director,&#13;
Richard Sarto, has yet to&#13;
acknowledge, according to&#13;
Mayes, the Board order for his&#13;
reinstatement. Mayes was informed&#13;
by Sarto on Jan. 5 of this&#13;
year that the University planned&#13;
to appeal the Board ruling.&#13;
No Way to Enforce&#13;
Greenwald commented that the&#13;
"remedy" the Board gives the&#13;
employe is poor in the sense that&#13;
the statutes do not provide for an&#13;
enforcement provision, in which&#13;
the Board may go to court to&#13;
enforce its ruling, such as the&#13;
Wisconsin Employment Peace&#13;
Act enables the Employment&#13;
Relations Commission to do so.&#13;
Instead, statutes 16.05 (l)(e)&#13;
reads, "any action brought&#13;
against an appointing authority&#13;
by an employe for failure to&#13;
comply with the order of the&#13;
board shall be brought and&#13;
served within 60 days after the&#13;
date of the board's finding."&#13;
"Right now I'm exploring the&#13;
possibility of an act to put into&#13;
force, to affect, implementation&#13;
pending appeal," Greenwald&#13;
said. "When the attorney general&#13;
represents our ruling in court, I&#13;
plan to- ask, 'how can the&#13;
University appeal it without&#13;
applying to it?' "&#13;
Gil Eagles to demonstrate ESP&#13;
Gil Eagles, credited by news&#13;
accounts with driving a car&#13;
blindfolded around a race track&#13;
and through an infield obstacle&#13;
course using the minds of&#13;
passengers as eyes, will&#13;
demonstrate his extrasensory&#13;
perception (ESP) to the public&#13;
Jan. 23 (Wednesday) at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Communication Arts&#13;
Theater.&#13;
Admission for students is $1.50,&#13;
everyone else $2. Tickets can be&#13;
purchased at the Information&#13;
Center or at the door the night of&#13;
the performance.&#13;
Eagles, who has appeared on&#13;
national television but emphasizes&#13;
the college entertainment&#13;
circuit, performed&#13;
his driving feat last April in&#13;
Kingston, Ontario. He was accompanied&#13;
by the city police&#13;
constable and members of the&#13;
press. His eyes were covered by&#13;
silver dollars, adhesive tape, a&#13;
leather blindfold, then more tape.&#13;
He was handcuffed to the wheel.&#13;
"Their minds were my eyes,"&#13;
he was quoted as saying after the&#13;
incident-free trip. "I've never&#13;
done that before," he said. "Kind&#13;
of fun, wasn't it?"&#13;
During his performance, which&#13;
ranges in length from one to three&#13;
hours, "depending on the endurance&#13;
of the audience," Eagles&#13;
demonstrates ESP with members&#13;
of the audience. He identifies&#13;
serial numbers without&#13;
seeing the object, reads minds,&#13;
and sometimes gives psychic&#13;
counselling to audience members&#13;
who pre-submit questions.&#13;
Eagles has been the subject of&#13;
experiments by serious scholars&#13;
who are studying psychic&#13;
phenomena throughout the&#13;
world. He also. conducts communication&#13;
clinics and has had&#13;
considerable success writing and&#13;
adapting his abilities to the industrial&#13;
and trade show markets.&#13;
Reviewers have praised his&#13;
stage presence and entertainment&#13;
ability as well as&#13;
expressing amazement at his&#13;
demonstrations.&#13;
Although Eagles is billed as&#13;
"the entertaining psychic," the&#13;
entire process of physic&#13;
phenomena has been receiving&#13;
considerable attention in recent&#13;
years, much of it serious.&#13;
Commander Edgar Mitchell&#13;
experimented with earth communication&#13;
from the moon, it is&#13;
being studied at university institutes,&#13;
and the Russians claim&#13;
to have advanced the study of&#13;
thought transference through&#13;
ESP. There are even machines&#13;
on the market today to assist&#13;
persons in their every day&#13;
practice of ESP.&#13;
STAFF MEETING&#13;
Wed. Jan. 23 2:30 p.m.&#13;
RANGER LLC D194&#13;
All interes ted persons welcome&#13;
by Walt Ulbricht&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: Beginning this week film student Walt Ulbricht&#13;
will be writing a column of re views in RANGER. His column will focus&#13;
on local offerings in the community as well as at Parkside.&#13;
Ingmar, Orson and Will&#13;
This semester offers an outstanding opportunity for film enthusiasts.&#13;
Ronald Gottesman's Film Directors course, Humanities&#13;
310, a nd Andrew McLean's Shakespeare and Film, Humanities 240,&#13;
will screen cinema masterpieces. Critically acclaimed films of&#13;
Ingmar Bergman, Orson Welles, Laurence Olivier and Akira&#13;
Kurosawa will be shown for both registered students and interested&#13;
friends of film.&#13;
Gottesman specifically examines Bergman's search for Soul and&#13;
Meaning and the enigmatic world of Welles. Seven Bergman films&#13;
profile themes of God, Death and the Individual. Wild Strawberries,&#13;
Virgin Spring, Winter Light and the powerful religious allegory, The&#13;
Seventh Seal trace Bergman's beauty and mystery. Eight films of&#13;
Welles (probably Kenosha's only genius) include the classic Citizen&#13;
Kane, his experimental Macbeth and The Trial, Kafka's nightmare of&#13;
deadly justice.&#13;
McLean explores the problem of cinematic adaptation. Can&#13;
Shakespeare's suggestive imagery be translated into a visual&#13;
language? Nine discriminating and diverse Shakespearean films&#13;
contrast the interpretation and technique of Olivier, Kurosawa, Welles&#13;
and Castellani. The lavish 1935 Max Rheinhardt production of A&#13;
Midsummer Night's Dream with interesting performances by James&#13;
Cagney, Dick Powell and Mickey Rooney can not be adequately&#13;
compared to Kurosawa's Throne of Bl ood, an excellent interpretation&#13;
of Macbeth as a 15th Century Samurai.&#13;
Never before has Parkside assembled a greater collection of&#13;
superlative films. Combined with thfe comfort of th e handsome Comm-&#13;
Arts Theater where most of these films will be shown, this semester&#13;
will indeed be a "Magnum Force." Go to these shows and grow a little.&#13;
Film Directors:&#13;
Welles and Bergman&#13;
Mondays 7:00 - 10:00&#13;
28 Jan. The Stranger&#13;
4 Feb. Lady from Shanghai&#13;
11 Feb. Macbeth&#13;
18 Feb. Mr. Arkadin&#13;
25 Feb. Touch of Evil&#13;
4 Mar. The Trial&#13;
Bergman:&#13;
11 Mar. Smiles of a Summer Night&#13;
18 Mar. The Seventh Seal&#13;
25 Mar. Wild Strawberries&#13;
8 Apr. Virgin Spring&#13;
22 Apr. Winter Light&#13;
29 Apr. The Silence&#13;
6 May Persona&#13;
Shakespeare and Film:&#13;
Wednesdays 7:30-10:00&#13;
6 Feb. Kurosawa's Throne of&#13;
Blood&#13;
13 Feb. Welles' Macbeth&#13;
20 Feb. Burge's Othello&#13;
6 Mar. Youtkevich's Othello&#13;
20 Mar. Castellani's Romeo&#13;
and Juliet&#13;
3 Apr. Reinhardt's Midsummer&#13;
Night's Dream&#13;
24 A pr. Olivier's Hamlet&#13;
8 May Kozinstev's Hamlet&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 Librarv-&#13;
Learnmg Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The Parkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on any subject of&#13;
interest to students, faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
ietters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
address, phone number and student status or faculty rank Names will&#13;
be withheld upon request. The editors reserve the right to refuse to&#13;
print any letters. °&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR: Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch, Michael Olsiyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
E PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974&#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
1 tUTA. *" w-&#13;
'Easter in Athens&#13;
trip organizing&#13;
Ninety people have already&#13;
signed up to spend Easter in&#13;
Athens. The Campus Travel&#13;
Center is coordinating a package&#13;
trip to Greece for not only&#13;
Parkside students, faculty and&#13;
alumni, but for other schools as&#13;
well. The increased scope of&#13;
participatiQn is made possible by&#13;
the fact that the vacationers will&#13;
travel on a commercial airline&#13;
(Swissair) rather than a charter.&#13;
The package includes seven&#13;
nights in Athens, where the group&#13;
will be staying in the Greek&#13;
section of the city at the Omonia&#13;
Hotel. Side trips will include a&#13;
cruise to the islands of Hydra,&#13;
Poros and Aegina, and a sightseeing&#13;
tour of Athens.&#13;
The eighth night will be spent in&#13;
Zurich, Switzerland at the Nova&#13;
Park Hotel on the return leg of&#13;
the trip. The group will attend a&#13;
fondue party at one of the famous&#13;
Swiss fondue restaurants.&#13;
Also included in the package is&#13;
the round-trip flight, two meals&#13;
daily, tour escort, and taxes and&#13;
service. The cost of the trip os&#13;
$499 plus $20 tax and service&#13;
based on two persons per room.&#13;
The group will leave for Athens&#13;
on April 12 and return April 21, a&#13;
time period which encompasses&#13;
Parkside's Spring Recess.&#13;
For additional information or&#13;
SAVE 50%&#13;
7,h*" \ Kenojha&#13;
6 6&#13;
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"Open 36 5 da ys a y ear"&#13;
Truck On&#13;
Kenosha's Finest Condominiums&#13;
Why rent when you can own a condommihome&#13;
for about the same monthly payment&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
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• Country clubhouse, with sauna .And many other design and convenience features.&#13;
SEE OUR DECORATOR FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
Models also open weekdays 1 t o 8&#13;
Or by personal showing at your convenience&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE 1— 552-9339&#13;
PARK5IDE REALTY INC.&#13;
Developed and Built by U S General. Inc&#13;
applications, contact the Campus&#13;
Travel Center at (553-)2294 or&#13;
stop in at the Center, LLC D-197.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: Film Society sponsors the film "Rebel Without&#13;
A Cause" and "Wild One" at 7:30 p.m. in Gr. 103. Admission is 75&#13;
cents.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: Whiteskellar presenting Bob Rohan from 1-3&#13;
p.m. in Gr. D103. Admission is free and open to the public.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23: E.S.P. lecture featuring Gil Eagles and&#13;
sponsored by the PAB. 8-10 p.m. in C.A.T. Tickets on sale at Information&#13;
kiosk for $1.50 students and $2 general public.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 25: Third World Organization sponsoring David Sanchez&#13;
at 1:30 in Gr. 103.&#13;
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 25-27: Ragtime Rangers Mt&#13;
Telemark Ski weekend. Contact Information kiosk for further details&#13;
Saturday, Jan, 26: Hockey, UW-P vs. UW-LaCrosse at 10:30 a m at&#13;
the Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 26: Dance from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in SAB, Admission is&#13;
$1.50 and Parkside I.D. as well as proof of age, is required.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: Vets Club meeting at4 p.m. in SAB.&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: Student recital from 3 to 4:30 p.m in C A T&#13;
and open to the public. ' ' "&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 27: UW-P vs. Illinois State in hockey. 6pm at the&#13;
Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29: Basketball UW-P vs. UW-Milwaukee at 7 30 n m&#13;
in the Phy. Ed. Bldg. p,m-&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Jan. 29: Film on physical fitness from 7-8 p.m. in Gr. 103 No char^P&#13;
wE? . 6n Au?t,ons of new acts Whiteskellar at 1 p.m. ^ the Whiteskeilar in thee&#13;
All items for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted in&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear. n&#13;
Behavior modification&#13;
is vehicle for change&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
William R. Morrow, professor&#13;
of psychology, will again involve&#13;
his Advanced Behavior&#13;
Modification class in the practical&#13;
aspects of clinical experimentation.&#13;
Student volunteers will participate&#13;
in a program that is&#13;
designed to change their&#13;
behavior in one of four ways:&#13;
overcome test anxiety, control&#13;
eating, quit smoking, and&#13;
overcome shyness with the opposite&#13;
sex.&#13;
Morrow's seven students will&#13;
be following the basic procedures&#13;
of behavior modification, adjusting&#13;
those procedures to fit the&#13;
needs of the two or three individuals&#13;
that each student will&#13;
be working with.&#13;
Morrow stressed the point that&#13;
each participant must help him&#13;
or herself, must do the work that&#13;
is involved in overcoming the&#13;
individual problem. The behavior&#13;
modification procedures can be&#13;
used to structure and aid the&#13;
process of changing behavior.&#13;
Basically the same experiment&#13;
was conducted in the spring&#13;
semester of 1973 by Morrow's&#13;
class with a fairly high percentage&#13;
of success. That&#13;
program was the subject of a&#13;
paper submitted by Morrow at&#13;
William Morrow&#13;
the annual meeting last month of&#13;
the Association for the Advancement&#13;
of Behavior Therapy.&#13;
In that paper, Morrow reported&#13;
58 percent of the clients&#13;
m a r k e d l y i m p r o v e d "&#13;
(meaning, for example, in the&#13;
area of smoking, that 58 percent&#13;
quit smoking for at least the&#13;
period of follow-up); 25 percent of&#13;
the clients showed moderate&#13;
improvement (meaning, again in&#13;
the smoking area, at least a 50&#13;
percent reduction in the consumption&#13;
of cigarettes); t:&#13;
remaining 17 percent show&#13;
negligible improvement.&#13;
The program will begin in tl&#13;
fourth week of classes, but a&#13;
pointments and interviews wi&#13;
applicants will be held befo&#13;
that time. Each student volunte'&#13;
will attend a total of eig&#13;
sessions, each session consistir&#13;
of 45 minutes apiece. The timi&#13;
for these sessions will 1&#13;
arranged by the volunteer and h&#13;
or her trainer.&#13;
Students wishing to participal&#13;
in the program can pick up flyei&#13;
at the Information Center or th&#13;
Library Circulation Desk. Boxt&#13;
for dropping off the registratio&#13;
forms will also be available £&#13;
these two locations. Th&#13;
registration forms can also b&#13;
sent to Morrow, Greenquist 35'&#13;
by either inter-campus or U.S&#13;
mail.&#13;
7inn nf "JPersons wi»h car to drive&#13;
oav J ™ °n b.USin6SS for ,he RANGER. Wi&#13;
miU alPfVr'P Which is approximately :&#13;
trii from ia !S ab0Ut °ne h0Ur ,0r ,he r0un&#13;
n or neTr 7 S'de- "deal for persons livin&#13;
RANrt o .I"' Contact Tom Petersen in th&#13;
"ANGER office, LLC D194.&#13;
JAN. 2 3, 2 5, 2 6, &amp; 27&#13;
Kenosha s Newest Nitespot 2nd National OHO 1% (formerly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 Greenbav R oad Rhone 6 54-0485&#13;
Audio visual products Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 5&#13;
Creative new media taking hold&#13;
f, - -by °ebra Friedell&#13;
00™'r rent&#13;
that of showing video tapes-they makeThem 'b™&#13;
"It may be the biggest project vet at thiJ T' , ,&#13;
claim Christensen and Rudy Lienau who works''on&#13;
t h e t e c h n i c a l c r e w . " B u t w e n e e d n P n n! » f&#13;
volved. This is not just fo7eSaXL g6t in"&#13;
but for education and involvement ™ PUrf&gt;°Se&#13;
In starting out, the video committee has selected&#13;
a few films from the library, such as Niirht it It Opera with the Marx Brothers, Buster Keaton molt&#13;
Again and Pardon Us, a Laurel and HarriJ1&#13;
which they will take a film and^mateTp^am&#13;
around it A host will introduce and g,ve S&#13;
background of the film and there will be sufh things&#13;
as advertising and commercials concerning h ngs&#13;
going on at Parkside. Says Christensen, "This wll&#13;
give us a chance to experiment and be creative We&#13;
have writers, performers, directors, producers&#13;
who want to work. Video is a new media and an&#13;
expanding one. We need experience and we want to&#13;
get students ,n on all levels of video production "&#13;
There will also be a spot in the show for talent&#13;
Before the semester is over the committee has&#13;
plans for moving into broadcasting news satires&#13;
Although the ideas have not been fully developed&#13;
Christensen explained hopes for such things as the&#13;
campus news parody, soap opera type of shows on&#13;
campus life, feature shorts on future shock and&#13;
straight reporting of news events. "We are open to&#13;
many ideas in many areas," said Christensen&#13;
These are just things in planning."&#13;
The committee hopes to put monitors in high&#13;
traffic areas on campus to show the tapes and then&#13;
keep them in the Library Learning Center on file for&#13;
later viewing. Said Christensen, "There is a good&#13;
chance of getting closed circuit television within six&#13;
months, and we'd like to get a channel on it."&#13;
The technical crew was trained by Dave Campbell,&#13;
coordinator of the media production facility,&#13;
and Beecham Robinson, director of the Learning&#13;
Center. "Our crew is trained at a much quicker&#13;
pace than anyone imagined," Lienau exclaimed. "A&#13;
lot of doors were open with little red tape, which is&#13;
unusual with a bureaucracy."&#13;
In regard to funding, Lienau explained that the&#13;
Activities Board has given the video committee $100&#13;
and that there is no charge for the use of the&#13;
Homecoming tickets&#13;
now on sale&#13;
Parkside's two fraternities and&#13;
sorority are planning the&#13;
University's first homecoming to&#13;
be held the weekend of Feb. 8, 9&#13;
and 10. The "informal"&#13;
homecoming will center around&#13;
the Grand Valley State vs.&#13;
Parkside basketball game on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 9. A dinner and&#13;
dance will follow the 7:30 p.m.&#13;
basketball game. The Parkside&#13;
Stage Band will perform and&#13;
liquor and beer will be served.&#13;
On Friday night there will be a&#13;
dance at the Student Activities&#13;
Building in which a blue-grass&#13;
band, Mission Mt. Wood Band,&#13;
will be featured.&#13;
Tickets are on sale for $2.50 at&#13;
the Information kiosk in Main&#13;
Place. This ticket allows students&#13;
to receive a reduced price entrance&#13;
to both Friday night's&#13;
dance and Saturday's basketball&#13;
game, besides admission to&#13;
Saturday night's dinner and&#13;
dance.&#13;
All students are invited to&#13;
attend and become involved.&#13;
Promoters emphasize the&#13;
casualness of Parkside's first&#13;
homecoming and encourage all&#13;
students to participate.&#13;
photo by Debra Friedell&#13;
Glenn Christensen, shown here in the control room of the audio&#13;
visual production studio, explained that he has tried to select films&#13;
that offer continuous entertainment--a student may walk in at any&#13;
point and enjoy the program.&#13;
equipment. Money from outside advertising is being&#13;
investigated; however, there may be some legal&#13;
problems involved.&#13;
In a tour of the video production center,&#13;
Christensen demonstrated some of the art&#13;
techniques one is capable of accomplishing when&#13;
working with video. The facility accommodates two&#13;
cameras plus two portapack mobile units. One can&#13;
create all sorts of special effects such as those&#13;
which can be created by CBS, said Lienau. They&#13;
included such things as superimposition, using&#13;
slides and live performance simultaneously,&#13;
dissolves, cuts and wipes.&#13;
The timing is extremely important in audio-visual&#13;
production. Christensen explained that not only are&#13;
the production deadlines so close together but so&#13;
Literary magazine&#13;
published&#13;
many things happen at once during production.&#13;
"The 'we' is very important. Because of the fast&#13;
pace there is a tendency to lose your sensitivity to&#13;
one another," said Christensen. "Everyone has to&#13;
work together as one entity. You can't be anything&#13;
in this media without knowing something about&#13;
people. You learn from others."&#13;
The first show, to be broadcast this February, will&#13;
feature Christensen as producer and Maria Breach,&#13;
a secretary in the audio production center, as&#13;
director.&#13;
Christensen stressed the want and need for more&#13;
students to get involved with all the levels of&#13;
production-from talent to technical. He asked that&#13;
anyone interested stop at the Student Activities&#13;
Office in LLC D195.&#13;
Dwarves, a new locally-based&#13;
literary magazine published by&#13;
many of the same people involved&#13;
in such past literary and&#13;
journalistic endeavors as&#13;
Newscope, Indications and the&#13;
Nickel Bag is now on sale at bars,&#13;
bookstores and in the very wide&#13;
halls of Parkside itself.&#13;
Dwarves includes selected&#13;
poetry by Diane Lawler, Clark&#13;
Anderson and Ryan Higgins,&#13;
short fiction by Jim Koloen, Marc&#13;
Eisen and Paul Lomartire,&#13;
drawings by John Sieger and&#13;
Casey Higgins and photographs&#13;
by Brian Ross.&#13;
Not a "student" literary&#13;
magazine, Dwarves is an offcampus&#13;
publication which will&#13;
continue to afford an outlet for&#13;
serious creative efforts by&#13;
students as well as non-students.&#13;
The price is one dollar per copy.&#13;
Student Activities calendars&#13;
for second semester are now&#13;
available at the Information&#13;
kiosk in Main Place.&#13;
The place to go&#13;
for P ants&#13;
and things!&#13;
ISEftMIANN'S&#13;
THE&#13;
[American]&#13;
614 - 5 6th S treet&#13;
V/ednesd&#13;
Qr. ±o3 Cky, vJcxn. 7:30pm.&#13;
. 1 F 1 c ? / v ^&#13;
- SI GNS OP T H E I R T \VHE S =&#13;
S&#13;
ESIBSk,&#13;
S\&#13;
Brando&#13;
•3 BOB&#13;
6 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday , J a n . 23, 1974&#13;
_Ashortf short&#13;
The End&#13;
by Kurt Alexander Muller&#13;
And God Looked Down Over All&#13;
The Earth And He Was Sick Unto&#13;
His Stomach....&#13;
"O.K." He said, "All right! I&#13;
am fed up...I am disgusted...I&#13;
have had it! Enough is&#13;
enough...Gabriel, blow your&#13;
damned horn! I am putting an&#13;
end to all that crap down there!!"&#13;
"Well, it's about time," Gabriel&#13;
replied, taking his horn out of its&#13;
case. "Do you want a nice&#13;
modern riff or something&#13;
military, like taps, or maybe one&#13;
good long, strong-"&#13;
"I don't care what you blow,"&#13;
said God, "Just blow! Make it&#13;
loud; make it solid and final and&#13;
of a ll eternity-make it ring from&#13;
heaven to hell and back...make it&#13;
reach into all men's souls and fill&#13;
them with the realization that&#13;
this is IT. Make it bang!!"&#13;
"All right," Gabriel said, "All&#13;
right, but don't yell at me. After&#13;
all, I am a musician, not a&#13;
plumber. I've waited a long time&#13;
for this gig and I'm not going to&#13;
goof it. You just tell me how&#13;
you're going to end it and I'll&#13;
come up with something that&#13;
cooks.'' And he fit the mouthpiece&#13;
into his horn. "You going to have&#13;
it rain for forty days and forty&#13;
nights again?"&#13;
"Well," God said, "I haven't&#13;
really given it much thought."&#13;
"Well, if you're thinking of&#13;
having it rain, you'd better forget&#13;
it-they got new drainage systems&#13;
down there!!"&#13;
"Maybe I'll have an earthquake,"&#13;
God said, "that would siewh&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight 'n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
It's simply amazing how electronic&#13;
calculators have become a "must" Item&#13;
for every student (as well as&#13;
housewives, salesmen, businessmen, or&#13;
any guy or gal who has trouble balancing&#13;
the old checkbook).&#13;
What has greatly contributed to their&#13;
popularity of course besides their&#13;
usefulness, Is the low price.&#13;
At $29.95 for a four function model&#13;
capable of doing chain and mixed&#13;
calculations, you simply can't afford to&#13;
be without one. We just received a new&#13;
supply and believe me, they're going&#13;
fast.&#13;
The new Artarantz SQ full logic IC chip&#13;
will be available within the next 30 days,&#13;
we are told and if you don't know what it&#13;
is, let me lay it on you straight... it will&#13;
allow you to listen to stereo records,&#13;
tapes and broadcasts (as well as SQ&#13;
disks) with 4-channel separation so close&#13;
to discrete that I defy you to tell the&#13;
difference.&#13;
I predict that this introduction will&#13;
revolutionize Quad in a number of ways:&#13;
Obviously, any 4 channel receiver not&#13;
equipped with or capable of receiving&#13;
this chip will be obsolete. Just as important,&#13;
this could be the beginning of&#13;
the end for CD 4 --- the four channel disk&#13;
system developed and promoted by RCA&#13;
and JVC. I simply can't conceive that&#13;
anyone will spend the extra $200 or more&#13;
for the extra equipment needed for CD 4&#13;
to gain those extra 4 db's of separation.&#13;
By the way, we've got some terrific&#13;
buys on records and tapes. From cutouts&#13;
at 3 for $1.00 to the latest releases at&#13;
$3.79. 8-track tapes from $1.99 and up.&#13;
Come in and browse -- you're sure to find&#13;
something you'll.like.&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
Stereo-TV&#13;
Hi Fi Components&#13;
Records - Tapes&#13;
21st &amp; Taylor&#13;
Racine&#13;
634-4900&#13;
Open Daily, 'til 9&#13;
Sat. &amp; Sun. 'til 6&#13;
said Gabriel. "I&#13;
I&#13;
get&#13;
really-"&#13;
"No good&#13;
could give you some great&#13;
quakey music-but lots of those&#13;
houses are quakeproof, and&#13;
imagine that you want to&#13;
them all at the same time."&#13;
"Of course, of course," said&#13;
God. "I know that. I wasn't&#13;
seriously thinking of earthquakes...&#13;
a plague is more my&#13;
style-maybe a plague that would&#13;
knock down every living--"&#13;
"They're all vaccinated!"&#13;
"Vaccinated? Hmmm...of&#13;
course...that is a shame,&#13;
though...in the old days you could&#13;
make a plague that would strike&#13;
down everything, Man, woman-"&#13;
"I suppose everything is&#13;
fireproof?" Gabriel interrupted.&#13;
"Everything except the&#13;
slums," said God, "and if you&#13;
burn those out they'll just rebuild&#13;
with modern developments."&#13;
Gabriel fingered his valves&#13;
while God sat back and thought&#13;
for a while. "Listen," God finally&#13;
said, smiling weakly, "what the&#13;
hell. Maybe I'll give them some&#13;
more time-after all, they are my&#13;
own children aren't they?"&#13;
"O.K. by me," said Gabriel.&#13;
"You wanna hear a little&#13;
something any way... I mean as&#13;
long as I already got the horn&#13;
out?"&#13;
More silence.&#13;
"All right," God finally said&#13;
softly, leaning back, "Play me&#13;
some blues!!"&#13;
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&amp;3TZ-SI9SThe&#13;
Raven&#13;
by Mike Winslow&#13;
Wanted Dead or Alive&#13;
David Bromberg&#13;
(Columbia KC 32717)&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: Gary Jensen, who wrote "The Raven" for two&#13;
semesters, is not attending Parkside this semester. His column will be&#13;
written by Mike Winslow and will appear bi-weekly.&#13;
I've never heard David Bromberg before except for his version of&#13;
Mr. Bojangles" which I but dimly remember. What prompted me to&#13;
review his album was the cover, which is a black and white&#13;
photograph of Bromberg clinging to the radio tower of the Empire&#13;
tate Building, clutching an airplane in one hand like King Kong. The&#13;
rear cover shows him as a giant face gazing through a bedroom&#13;
window at a startled girl, with a "King Kong" look on his face.&#13;
first side of the album was recorded in San Francisco using&#13;
some of the local musicians. Side two was cut in New York and three of&#13;
mnsfr. CUtSf T , Since Brombei'g uses so many different&#13;
musicians to back him it wouldn't be practical to name them, but rest&#13;
• f 1 F e g ° ° d ' ° n e 1 ) 0 1 1 1 1 t o n o t e i s h o w t h e y c o m b i n e d a f i d d l e&#13;
rlh°rnnSrajSeVeral °f the songs with g00d results- Another is how&#13;
Bromberg s dry voice fits in with the music&#13;
andhCnrTuTnS Wir5 "T,he H°ldup" Written j°intly ^ Bromberg&#13;
feitimM ? t f fl0"' S 3 fast"paced sonS witb a catchy melody and&#13;
tastv tnimnpf h" S°me °f th° gUltar parts and in a short but&#13;
he'shniT « a' S°ng 1S directed from a bandit to the persons&#13;
holding up and although the words are serious they sometimes&#13;
seem comical when combined with the music. A good song.&#13;
nhc Pmeo"e Else s Blues" is about a guy who has everything "two&#13;
hecks in the mail and a refund on my union dues,...all the dope I can&#13;
smoke, all the chicks I can use." This is followed by "Danger Man " a&#13;
blues shuffle with guitar, sax and trumpet solos plus the Sweet' Inspirations&#13;
singing background vocals. There's a hot jam, but it would&#13;
have been nice if it had lasted longer.&#13;
The last song on the first side, "The Main Street Moan" is done&#13;
fshnrtr3 lhW KtW° gVltars' mandolin and bass. It's a nice tune with&#13;
die street &amp; y°U migHt "ke t0 Sing WhiIe walking down&#13;
Send Me to the 'lectric Chair" (copyright 1927) nnens the COnnnj&#13;
side m a Dixieland style featuring clarinet and cornet solos It tells the&#13;
story of a man who's committed a murder and rather than srLnd his&#13;
hfe in jail pleads with the judge to send him to the 'lectric chaTr 'This&#13;
' Vc®nfination of two more old blues tunes, "Statesboro&#13;
ues - Church Bells Blues." It's Bromberg playing the blues alone&#13;
and improvising some of the lyrics.&#13;
• Wallflawer," a Bob Dylan tune in a country vein is a good song but&#13;
is eclipsed by the next tune, a live version of "Kansas City" which is&#13;
ynamite. The saxes scream and the trumpets wail while the pianist&#13;
improvises the blues and Bromberg plays guitar P&#13;
A fitting conclusion to the album is "The New Lee Highway Blues "&#13;
LitTr fiL?1UeS,deSCribing Hfe on the road eompYet? wlth banjo&#13;
pnH nf'in m J™ minutes of good pickin' and fiddlin' at the&#13;
end of the song. This is one of the best songs on the album.&#13;
This album is David Bromberg "fiddlin' " around with the blues&#13;
Sfl! i t (?3re blUGS but with a different flavor There's a&#13;
blues The °u Dlxl0land&gt; country blues and even "regular" type&#13;
aaflnfkndittyv ffoorr fthheT hb lyu e1sS,n yo3u m11 pdr So°bnagb l0yn ltihkee ailtb. um and if you have an&#13;
(Record Courtesy J&amp;J Tape &amp; Record Center)&#13;
Any hassles, p roblems, c omplaints?&#13;
The PSGA Grievance and Clearinghouse&#13;
Committee will deal w ith them.&#13;
Meeting: Wed., Jan. 2 3, L LC D174&#13;
ESP &amp; PSYCHIC&#13;
DEMONSTRATIONS&#13;
Tonight, Jan. 23rd 8 p.m.&#13;
Comm. Ar t s Theat r e Adm. »2&#13;
Tickets Available:&#13;
InFo Center - LLC Main Place, At Door&#13;
Brief news&#13;
Peace Corps . Vi s t a ^mn„. t^„y&#13;
ACTION'S Peace Corps and VISTA will be on camnm ,,&#13;
programs° "** P°tenUal aPP"CantS t0 the ""&#13;
rtSne?.rraswe,iastK—1&#13;
Moyle explains, "Many people believe that filling out an anniwj&#13;
obligates the applicant to join Peace Corps or VISTA This fi nitt ?&#13;
I t mer e l y g i v e s P e a c e C o r p s a n d V ISTA t h e &lt;tace t o ma£ht J&#13;
plicanfs abilities and talents with the requests from host comm^Ues&#13;
here and overseas. An applicant makes his or her decision al&#13;
tesed on the matching ~&#13;
thlS="e haS t0 P,an ahead «"» " h-He is Just&#13;
Applicants from practically every field of study are needed for the&#13;
training cycles that start m spring, summer and fall This includes&#13;
liberal arts and social science as well as specific studies&#13;
Peace Corps service is overseas for two years and that of VISTA is&#13;
here in the U.S. for one year. All travel, health and living expenses arc&#13;
paid while the volunteer serves the community that requested him.&#13;
Broomball teams organic&#13;
Co-ed broomball teams are being set up now to play at the Kenosha&#13;
Ice Arena on Monday and Friday noons. Skates are not needed&#13;
",'mgXm ?a7rt,Clpatin® sh°uld «»««* Vic Godfrey intte&#13;
S&amp;S becomes L&amp;F&#13;
The Department of Safety and Security has become the central&#13;
collection agency on campus for lost and found items to be claimed or&#13;
turned in. Individuals wishing to claim lost articles may either drop in&#13;
at the security budding or call extension 2455 between Sam and&#13;
midnight on weekdays. Found articles may be turned in at either the&#13;
security building or the Information Center. Articles which are unclaimed&#13;
after 60 days will be sold or turned over to the finder according&#13;
to state law.&#13;
East lot wil l be i n touch&#13;
Due to the isolation of the east parking lot, an inter-campus&#13;
heew f3S installed fere so assistance can be summoned in&#13;
the event of an emergency. The phone is located at the east end of the&#13;
walkway from Tallent Hall. For assistance between the hours of 8 a m&#13;
and midnight, dial 2455 or the operator.&#13;
Racine AAUW to award scholarship&#13;
The Racine Branch of the American Association of University&#13;
Women has announced that applications are now being accepted for&#13;
the $400 scholarship which AAUW awards annually to a Racine County&#13;
woman.&#13;
The scholarship award, which is based on academic achievement&#13;
and financial need, is awarded each year to a Racine County woman&#13;
beginning the first or second semester of her junior year at any accredited,&#13;
degree-granting college or university the fall after the grant&#13;
is awarded.&#13;
Deadline for filing applications is April 1. The scholarship will be&#13;
awarded at AAUW's annual banquet in May.&#13;
Application blanks may be obtained from Mrs. W. Robert Jennings,&#13;
1219 South Main St., Racine, Wis. 53403, the scholarship committee&#13;
chairman, or from deans or student affairs directors at a student's&#13;
college or university.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned to Mrs. Jennings along with a&#13;
transcript of the student's credits for her college work to date.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
OINO'S&#13;
1816 1 6 Street&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
FOR PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOST ACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
Ml l W !•&#13;
Complete Food &amp; Vending&#13;
Service&#13;
SOME LIKE IT HOT&#13;
in January&#13;
Mexican Special&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 29&#13;
Respi ratory exhibi t now i n l ibrary&#13;
Associati^TW1? °ffiCe' irlconjunction with The Wisconsin Lung&#13;
= r?,can Cancer Society and the Pathology Se showPn«f rha Mernal Hospital- opened its first exhibitin&#13;
Sf® ,floor of the library last Monday-Jan- 21.&#13;
three^IrtV i ™ ASm°king and Your Health" and is displayed in&#13;
Svstem ? fo°my, and Physiology of ^ Respiratory&#13;
Have Ri'JhJt r * Smoking on the Body; 3. The Non-Smokers&#13;
^ s, Too. Free educational literature will be available.&#13;
Teaching appl icat ions avai labl e&#13;
durfng1htm4U5^w,UdentS Wh° P,3n t0 intern or student teach&#13;
soon L noss/ht J?","® Urged t0 COmplete aPPdcations as&#13;
Hall ThfrELn ' Apphcat,on forms are available in 210 Greenquist&#13;
WinJSf deadhne for intern applications for Fall Semester 1974 and ^aSmrefoJ^n 19?4" Students who plan t0&#13;
March 1, 1974 SemeStGr 1974 must complete aPPhcations by&#13;
For further information about any of these programs contact&#13;
phonM553)O230S5SOr °f Education Dwayne Olsen, 210 Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Films about rebel lion open^mester&#13;
^,?Uth in rebe,lion- "Rebel Without a Cause" and&#13;
Society at n m 0PS ^ semester of the Parkside Film&#13;
730 Pm- °n Wednesday, Jan. 23 in Greenquist Hall 103&#13;
«^n k\ 2rei?pen t0 publ,c'and admission is 75 cents.&#13;
mirSf iWltbout a Cause." starring the late James Dean, deals with&#13;
"The Wiinn "ag,!rS.revolt PrinciPa"y against their parents.&#13;
JthI \ ? StarS Mar,on Brand0 and Lee Marvin. deals&#13;
niral towiv m° yClegang and the results of its invasion of a small&#13;
Both films are marked by a number of violent episodes (or at least&#13;
what passed for violence when "Wild One" was made in 1953 and&#13;
Rebel in 1955), and both have happy endings, of sorts; cop-outs say&#13;
some reviewers. J&#13;
Remaining films in the series are "Forbidden Games" (Feb 1 1 ) -&#13;
three Buster Keaton films: "Sherlock Jr.," "Cops" and "The&#13;
Navigator" (March 11); "Day at the Races (March 27); and&#13;
Lavender Hill Mob" (April 10).&#13;
Chancello r vi s i t ing Kent Stat e&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie is heading North Central Association&#13;
examining teams which are undertaking complete institutional accrediting&#13;
reviews of Notre Dame and Kent State. Wyllie is in Kent,&#13;
Ohio this week leading a 10-member North Central team at Kent State'&#13;
He will head another 10-member North Central examining team&#13;
March 18-20 at Notre Dame. Both periodic reviews cover the entire&#13;
University operation including academic review of undergraduate&#13;
through doctoral.&#13;
****************-*******************&#13;
Patronize&#13;
our&#13;
Advertisers •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••i t*&#13;
JOHN W. MERRICK, D .V.M.&#13;
announces the association ot&#13;
JOHN WENTLAND, D.V.M.&#13;
and the opening of&#13;
PARKSIDE ANIMAL CLINIC&#13;
Villa Capri Shopping Center&#13;
North 22nd Ave. Kenosha; (Ohio St. Racine)&#13;
552-9122 Day and Evening Hours by Appointment&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
HBUILDING^H&#13;
V&amp; v&#13;
Classified&#13;
WANTED: Senior Chemistry major to&#13;
conduct experiment(s). Includes qualitative&#13;
analysis. Contact Ted, c-o Ranger, LLC&#13;
D194.&#13;
WANTED: Journalism major or someone&#13;
with the ability to write clear legible news&#13;
stories on a very part-time basis. Small&#13;
weekly in Zion, III. needs occasional help in&#13;
covering various municipal functions&#13;
usually in the evening. Pay isn't good and the&#13;
assignments are sometimes dry but the&#13;
experience Is great. Call 312-872-4572 for&#13;
details. Ask for Shirley.&#13;
Proof reader-TY PI ST needed! Call 552-8859&#13;
on Thursday after 7 p .m. and ask for Roger.&#13;
Girl wanted to share 3 bedroom apt. Near&#13;
Parkside via Racine. Rent $100 per mo. 637-&#13;
2080 after 6 p.m. - Price.&#13;
PAPERS NOTARIZED on the spot. See&#13;
Betty Briggs, Business Management major,&#13;
evening classes 6:15-9:15. 634-2886.&#13;
INCOME TAX PREPARATION. Ex&#13;
perienced and reasonable. Discount to&#13;
Parksiders. Call 633-0416 for appointment&#13;
FOR SALE: Stereo FM-AM car radio. Works&#13;
great. 654-0030 evenings.&#13;
AQUARIUM WITH FISH and accessories&#13;
Cheap. Call 552-8584. Ask for Jeff.&#13;
Personals&#13;
HAS ANYONE FOUND my seaweed? I lost&#13;
it at registration. Contact Karen Paal,&#13;
Admissions Office.&#13;
KAY W. IN P.S. We're looking for a circulation&#13;
manager and heard you've got&#13;
experience. 5000 copies per week. Interested?&#13;
Not lucrative but safe. R.S.&#13;
CT3&#13;
mmmm&#13;
03&#13;
&amp;) 5&#13;
3&#13;
go P™&#13;
m&#13;
GO&#13;
•9*&#13;
&lt;73&#13;
-3=&#13;
i mmsmm &amp;) r—&#13;
CO CSSP&#13;
3&#13;
-H&#13;
CO&#13;
CO&#13;
IT*&#13;
P"&#13;
m&#13;
CO&#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday. ja„. 23, 1974&#13;
Phy. Ed. SIdg. Schedule&#13;
Wed. Jan. 16 - Gym open for recreation&#13;
intramural basketball&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 17 - Gym open for recreation&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Fri. Jan. 18 -&#13;
Sat. Jan. 19&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Basketball games&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Sun. Jan. 20 - B|dg open af 2 pm 1Q pm&#13;
Mon. Jan. 21 •&#13;
Tues. Jan. 22 -&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
Gym open&#13;
Handball courts open&#13;
Pool open&#13;
12:30 pm-l:30 pm&#13;
8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-2 pm &amp; 6 pm-10 pm&#13;
10:30 am 1:30 pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10:30 am &amp; 12:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
11:30 am-l:30 pm&#13;
10:30 am-5 pm&#13;
8:30 am 5 pm Entire bldg. closes 5:00&#13;
11 am 1:30 pm&#13;
8:30 am-4 pm&#13;
JV-5:30 Varsity-7:30&#13;
8:30 am-5 pm&#13;
3:30 pm-5 pm&#13;
All facilities available except for&#13;
intramurals in gyms at 6:30 pm-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-l :30 pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
8:30 am-10 pm&#13;
12:30 pm-2 pm&#13;
12:30pm • 1: 30pm &amp; 8 pm-10 pm&#13;
all day except between 10:30 am &amp; 12:30 prr&#13;
11:30 am-1:30 pm 8. 6 pm-10 pm&#13;
Mat men extend&#13;
winning record&#13;
Parkside's wrestling team ran&#13;
its record to 3-0 Saturday, beating&#13;
Western Dlinois at Macomb 29-20.&#13;
Randy Skarda, 150 pounder,&#13;
won his 11th without a loss,&#13;
pinning his opponent in 3:33. Bill&#13;
West at 134 pounds is now 10-0&#13;
after pinning Scott Pickford in&#13;
7:41, and Ken Martin at 142&#13;
pounds is 9-0 for the season on a&#13;
pin over Tom Arlis in 2:55.&#13;
Other Ranger winners were&#13;
Rick Schovan (118) on a pin in&#13;
7:14, and 126-pound Ricco&#13;
Savaglia on a 6-2 decis ion. Tom&#13;
Beyer at 177 pounds drew his&#13;
match 9-9.&#13;
The Ranger mat team is&#13;
RESEARCH&#13;
Thousands of Topics&#13;
$2.75 per page&#13;
Send for your up-to -date, 160-page,&#13;
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00&#13;
to cover postage (delivery time is&#13;
1 to 2 days).&#13;
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.&#13;
11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2&#13;
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90025&#13;
(213) 477-8474 or 477-5493&#13;
Our research material is sold for&#13;
research assistance only.&#13;
ranked fifth in the NAIA midwest&#13;
region.&#13;
Cagers defeat Wayne State&#13;
Parkside's cagers unleashed&#13;
their biggest scoring explosion of&#13;
the year Saturday night at the&#13;
Physical Education Building as&#13;
the Rangers overpowered Wayne&#13;
State 89-65.&#13;
The Rangers, with Gary Cole&#13;
scoring 27 points and pulling&#13;
down 17 rebounds, hit on 37 of 78&#13;
shots from the field for a 47&#13;
percent mark while Wayne could&#13;
only make 23 of 69 for 33 percent.&#13;
Four other Parkside players&#13;
were in double figures. Malcolm&#13;
Mahone had 12, Calvin Demson 11&#13;
and Rade Dimitrijevic and Chuck&#13;
Chambliss 10 each.&#13;
The Rangers never trailed in&#13;
the game. They jumped out to a&#13;
quick 13-6 le ad in the first five&#13;
and one-half minutes of play and&#13;
had pushed the lead to 46-39 at&#13;
half-time. Wayne State had&#13;
threatened late in the half and&#13;
had closed the gap to 33-32 wi th&#13;
5:19 remaining but the Rangers&#13;
hit on seven straight points, three&#13;
by Denson and four by Don Snow&#13;
(seeing his first action since Dec.&#13;
14 after his recovery from a&#13;
broken cheekbone) and were out&#13;
Trackmen&#13;
looking for&#13;
honors&#13;
Three Parkside trackmen will&#13;
compete Friday and Saturday in&#13;
the National Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA)&#13;
indoor championship meet at&#13;
Kansas City.&#13;
Juniors Lucian Rosa and&#13;
Dennis Biel and freshman Jim&#13;
Heiring will be Parkside's entries.&#13;
For Rosa, a junior from Kandy,&#13;
Ceylon, and Biel, a junior from&#13;
Wausau (East), the meet will&#13;
mean another chance for the all-&#13;
America honors each grabbed&#13;
last season. For Heiring, a&#13;
walker from Kenosha (Bradford),&#13;
it's his fi rst trip to the meet&#13;
where Mike DeWitt established&#13;
the Parkside walking tradition by&#13;
taking all-America honors two&#13;
seasons ago.&#13;
Rosa placed fourth in the mile&#13;
and second in the two-mile last&#13;
year and will be aiming at a win&#13;
in the longer distance this time,&#13;
although he'll again be entered in&#13;
both. Biel posted one of the&#13;
NAIA's top 1,000-yard times last&#13;
weekend at Madison in winning&#13;
the USTFF Open at the UW&#13;
fieldhouse and could be the&#13;
favorite in that event at Kansas&#13;
City."&#13;
of danger.&#13;
Parkside stormed out in the&#13;
half and by midway through the&#13;
final stanza had upped its lead to&#13;
18 at 70-52. The Rangers' biggest&#13;
lead of the night came at 3:38&#13;
when Dean Christensen drove in&#13;
for a layup and gave Parkside a&#13;
27-point bulge at 83-56.&#13;
The Rangers outrebounded&#13;
Wayne 58-35 as Mahone had nine&#13;
rebounds, Dimitrijevic seven and&#13;
Snow six in addition to Cole's 17.&#13;
In action Tuesday, Jan. 15,&#13;
Parkside defeated St. Xavier&#13;
College 63-61 at Chicago as Cole&#13;
led all scorers with 19 points.&#13;
Chambliss had 16, Mahone 10 and&#13;
Denson 10 as th e Rangers held a&#13;
35-31 half-time lead, lost it near&#13;
the end and came back on a shot&#13;
by Cole with 1:08 left in the&#13;
contest to grab the win.&#13;
Parkside met Indiana State-&#13;
Evansville Monday and Southern&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville on the road&#13;
as the Rangers attempted to&#13;
better their 6-10 season mark.&#13;
Parkside will play at Aquinas&#13;
College in Grand Rapids, Mich.,&#13;
Saturday night before returning&#13;
home next Tuesday to take on a&#13;
rugged UW-Milwaukee squad at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the Physical&#13;
Education Building.&#13;
Phy. Ed. Building policy&#13;
Family Identification Card&#13;
1 1. The Parkside family identification card is a convenience for the immediate family&#13;
(spouse and children only; of faculty, staff and students who use the athletic facilities.&#13;
2. When using the athletic facilities, the family of faculty, staff and students may present&#13;
either the family identification card or the identification card of the faculty member, staff&#13;
member or student. Further proof of identification may be required by those managing the&#13;
facility.&#13;
3. Family identification cards may be secured from the physical education office Monday&#13;
through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. beginning January 14,1974.&#13;
4. The charge for the card will be $1.00 (The charge for the second semester, 1973-74 will be&#13;
$.50) Beginning with the academic year 1974-75, cards will be sold on a yearly basis only from&#13;
September 1 to August 31. The charge will beSl.OO regardless of time of purchase.&#13;
5. Only one family identification card per family will be issued.&#13;
6. Family identification cards will list the name (s) of the spouse and children on the card.&#13;
7. Those allowing unauthorized persons to use the family identification card will lose the&#13;
identification card and surrender the privilege of using the physical education building.&#13;
8. Family members may bring one guest to the facility for a $1.00 charge.&#13;
9. ALL PERSONS USING THE ATHLETIC FACILITIES MUST OBEY THE FOLLOWING&#13;
RULES AND REGULATIONS:&#13;
Rules and Regulations&#13;
1. Anyone using the athletic facilities must have an ID card.&#13;
2. The ID card must be shown upon request at the athletic facility.&#13;
3. Those using the pool and sauna must exercise special care. The following rules govern&#13;
their use:&#13;
a. No running, pushing or shoving on the pool deck or in the pool area.&#13;
b. Only one person at a time may use the diving board.&#13;
c. Persons in street clothes will not be allowed on the pool deck.&#13;
d. Food is prohibited in the pool area.&#13;
e. Artificial swim devices are not allowed in the pool. The use of fins, masks and goggles is&#13;
prohibited.&#13;
f. No one is permitted in the guard tower except the lifeguard.&#13;
g. Leaders of organized groups visiting the pool shall assume full responsibility for the conduct&#13;
of their groups.&#13;
h. Patrons should acquaint themselves with the various depths of the pool.&#13;
8. No glass containers are allowed in the bathhouse or pool area.&#13;
i. The lifeguard may expel from the pool anyone violating these rules,-or anyone whose conduct&#13;
is jeopardizing the safety or pleasure of others.&#13;
4. Family members must provide all clothing, towels and locks. Empty lockers are&#13;
available in locker areas. No locks may be left on the lockers at the end of the day.&#13;
5. PARENTSMUSTSTAY WITH CHILDREN AGETWELVE OR UNDER.&#13;
6. ANYONE VIOLATING THE RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE ATHLETIC&#13;
FACILITY WILL BE ASKED TO LEAVE!&#13;
7. Those using the Sauna must strictly adhere to the following instructions:&#13;
a. Minimum of two people in the Sauna.&#13;
b. Maximum of twelve people in Sauna.&#13;
c. Swim suits only.&#13;
d. Keep hands off controls.&#13;
e. Limit use to fifteen minutes.&#13;
f. Caution extended stay may cause dizziness.&#13;
g. Absolutely no one allowed in the Sauna alone.&#13;
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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              <text>Terminations concern students</text>
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              <text>PSGA grievance committee meets&#13;
Terminations concern students&#13;
by Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
The Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association (PSGA) met last&#13;
Wednesday to hear complaints&#13;
from students about all factions&#13;
of campus life.&#13;
The meeting, co-chaired by&#13;
PSGA senators Mike Hahner and&#13;
Tom Petersen, dealt with two&#13;
major questions.&#13;
The first discussion centered on&#13;
the power and validity of the&#13;
committee and of PSGA itself,&#13;
considering the fact that the&#13;
November (1973) elections have&#13;
been declared invalid and new&#13;
elections are scheduled for&#13;
March. The senators pointed out&#13;
that they and the other officers&#13;
are acting as an interim student&#13;
government.&#13;
Dennis Milutinovic, also known&#13;
as Normal Neophyte, stated that&#13;
according to state law new&#13;
elections must be held within 20&#13;
days of the first week of second&#13;
semester by (February 8), since&#13;
the elections of last November&#13;
have been declared invalid.&#13;
The second major discussion&#13;
concerned the termination of&#13;
three faculty members in particular,&#13;
and the review procedure&#13;
and status of all faculty in&#13;
general. (RANGER contacted&#13;
the three teachers involved for&#13;
permission to print their names.&#13;
One of them declined to be&#13;
identified).&#13;
Anna Marie Hendricks, a&#13;
student, protested the terminations&#13;
of Alan B. Wallace,&#13;
instructor of English, and&#13;
Kenneth A. Holstein, assistant&#13;
professor of Spanish. Hendricks&#13;
has collected almost 300&#13;
signatures on a petition that&#13;
protests Wallace's termination,&#13;
but came to PSGA in the hope of&#13;
"putting a student voice into&#13;
faculty terminations." She feels&#13;
that, "as one student alone," she&#13;
can do nothing.&#13;
Another student, Glenn&#13;
Christensen, protested the termination&#13;
of a faculty member&#13;
who, RANGER later found,&#13;
prefers to remain anonymous.&#13;
"We are losing some great&#13;
faculty and we must do&#13;
something about it," said&#13;
Christensen.&#13;
Senators Hahner and Petersen&#13;
will attempt to obtain a listing of&#13;
the status of all faculty members,&#13;
and also find out what the&#13;
standards are for review of&#13;
faculty. They also plan to make&#13;
the protests known to those in&#13;
authority.&#13;
Other complaints lodged by the&#13;
seven students at the meeting&#13;
included the charge of 5c by&#13;
Canteen for a cup of hot water,&#13;
the inaccuracy of the clocks on&#13;
campus, and the unavailability of&#13;
the PSGA office.&#13;
Since the meeting, Canteen has&#13;
agreed not to charge for hot&#13;
water (if the student brings his or&#13;
her own cup), and the Physical&#13;
Plant is going to check on the&#13;
clocks. The Grievance and&#13;
Clearinghouse Committee is&#13;
meeting again today (Wednesday)&#13;
in Upper Main Place at&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
Governor to announce&#13;
user fees decision&#13;
The Parkside&#13;
RANGER&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1974 Vol. II No. 18&#13;
Agreement reached on&#13;
academic advising&#13;
by Debra Friedell&#13;
The Academic Policies&#13;
Committee met last Friday and&#13;
unanimously approved a&#13;
proposal on academic advising&#13;
which will now be sent on to the&#13;
faculty senate as a recommendation&#13;
to vote on. The&#13;
proposal calls for the two&#13;
academic deans to be responsible&#13;
for advising of students who have&#13;
declared a major, the Dean of&#13;
Students responsible for the&#13;
advising of students who are&#13;
undecided, and a joint effort&#13;
between the offices of the&#13;
academic deans and the Dean of&#13;
Students to advise students who&#13;
have declared an area of interest.&#13;
The proposal was worked out&#13;
by Allen Dearborn, Dean of&#13;
Students, William Moy, Dean of&#13;
the School of Modern Industry&#13;
and Eugene Norwood, Dean of&#13;
the College of Science, and&#13;
Society.&#13;
The academic advising battle&#13;
began with a proposal made by&#13;
Allan Shucard, associate&#13;
professor of English, at a faculty&#13;
senate meeting which called for&#13;
all academic advising to be&#13;
handled through the academic&#13;
Deans' offices with faculty advising.&#13;
&#13;
Shucard said of the new&#13;
recommendation "it could&#13;
conceivably provide an improvement&#13;
in advising if it works&#13;
out." Shucard added that he&#13;
would "probably" withdraw his&#13;
proposal on the senate floor&#13;
saying he has "no commitment to&#13;
any proposal. If we find an&#13;
arrangement that brings better&#13;
advising then that's fine."&#13;
Norwood said at the Academic&#13;
Policies meeting that the new&#13;
agreement is something that the&#13;
three (Norwood, Moy and&#13;
Dearborn) can work with. "The&#13;
staffing and budget is available&#13;
and makes it possible for all of u s&#13;
to do some specific things to&#13;
improve advising." He emphasized&#13;
the need for a formalized&#13;
organizational structure&#13;
to make sure it works.&#13;
Dearborn agreed and said "I&#13;
think we can make it work and it&#13;
will be better for the students.&#13;
We're going to make some&#13;
mistakes but we're going to try."&#13;
Discussion then turned to ways&#13;
in which to get students in for&#13;
advising who have declared only&#13;
an area of interest. None was in&#13;
favor of a mandatory advising&#13;
system, but student Kay&#13;
Sweeney said, "You can't&#13;
register if you owe a $5 parking or&#13;
library fine. However, students&#13;
are allowed to go through the&#13;
registration line completely&#13;
screwing up in their academic&#13;
area without,being stopped."&#13;
Moy suggested that if "we have&#13;
done a good job in writing the&#13;
catalogue and timetable students&#13;
may not need any academic&#13;
advising. Said Lee Applebaum,&#13;
associate dean of the College,&#13;
"Sometimes students don't read&#13;
the catalogue or may not understand&#13;
it. I might add that&#13;
there are faculty who don't read&#13;
it and aren't aware of what it&#13;
says."&#13;
The proposal will be sent to the&#13;
faculty senate whose next&#13;
meeting will be on February 19.&#13;
by Harvey V. Hedden&#13;
A few months ago, Governor&#13;
Patrick Lucey "line vetoed" one&#13;
million dollars of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin system's budget and&#13;
recommended that the&#13;
Universities raise that sum&#13;
through "User Fees." The&#13;
Assembly subsequently has&#13;
overridden the veto and the User&#13;
Fee proposal. The question now&#13;
awaits action by the State Senate.&#13;
User Fees are collected at the&#13;
entrance of the activity or event&#13;
in addition to standard admission&#13;
and segregated fees. Parkside&#13;
would be expected to raise $70,000&#13;
through this system, but one&#13;
campus source said we could&#13;
actually raise only about a tenth&#13;
of that figure.&#13;
Assistant Chancellor Allen&#13;
Dearborn said the primary&#13;
impact of these fees would be in&#13;
the physical education area but&#13;
that they would be used in many&#13;
other areas. Dearborn stated that&#13;
the only advantage of this system&#13;
would be to the tax-payer,&#13;
because the student would be&#13;
paying more of the share for his&#13;
education. Consequently, this is&#13;
undesirable for the students,&#13;
faculty and staff that use these&#13;
facilities and would have to pay&#13;
this User fee. Dearborn further&#13;
stated that "the cost of administration&#13;
would negate&#13;
anything you would save."&#13;
Dearborn said he has information&#13;
from a very reliable&#13;
source that the Governor will&#13;
back down from his original&#13;
proposal. Both the Regents and&#13;
the central administration have&#13;
voiced their opposition to the plan&#13;
and instead have called for&#13;
"economizing in the area of intercollegiate&#13;
athletics." The&#13;
Governor now has on his desk a&#13;
report from the University of&#13;
Wisconsin in opposition to User&#13;
fees. Its impact will be known&#13;
when the Governor gives his&#13;
budget message today before a&#13;
joint session of the legislature,&#13;
when he will announce his&#13;
decision about User fees.&#13;
C II ast of "Harvey&#13;
announced&#13;
The cast of Harvey has been chosen and rehearsals began on&#13;
Monday, Jan. 28. The part of Elwood will be played by Gregory B.&#13;
Gregory, Dr. Sanderson by Marc Harrison, Wilson by Ted Paone, Dr.&#13;
Chumbley by Mark J. Shimkus, Judge Gaffney by Bruce Wagner, E.J.&#13;
Lofgren by Steve Lott, Veta by Beth Collova, Myrtle Mae by Kris&#13;
Simpson, Mrs. Chauvenet by Carrie Ward, Miss Johnson by Laurel C.&#13;
Hiess, Miss Kelly by Jean Duerst, and Mrs. Chumbly by Ilene Levin.&#13;
All persons who tried out for the play but did not get a part are urged&#13;
to take part in the production in some other capacity, according to Ed&#13;
Huck, student coordinator of publicity for the play.&#13;
Advance tickets are now on sale at the Information kiosk for the Feb. 8 appearance of the Mission&#13;
Mountain Wood Band. The group has been called "one of the world's greatest electric blues bands."&#13;
Originally from Missoula, Montana they have travelled throughout the south picking up bluegrass&#13;
techniques from backwoods musicians. Their repertoire ranges from country to folk rock to straight&#13;
rock to bluegrass. A limited number of tickets are available for the event, which is to be held at the&#13;
Student Activities Building. Beer will be 15 cents per glass between 8 and 9 p.m. Tickets are $1.50. &#13;
2 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1 974&#13;
RANGER&#13;
•Editorial/Opinion.&#13;
Sorority discouraged&#13;
but shouldn't give up&#13;
it&#13;
fcw#&#13;
flotrbvpk&#13;
by Jane Schliesman&#13;
Last week it was announced that the homecoming, set&#13;
for the weekend of Feb. 8, is cancelled. The Interfraternity&#13;
Council which initiated the event and&#13;
began planning it last semester has suffered from internal&#13;
non-cooperation almost from the beginning, with&#13;
much of t he organizational burden falling on the small&#13;
membership of the new sorority.&#13;
"Homecoming" implies an event for which graduates&#13;
return to the campus for a sports event and party, but&#13;
out of 1200 a lumni only a handful responded to the invitation.&#13;
Present students had bought only three tickets&#13;
through last week.&#13;
Numerous changes in plans were made before the&#13;
decision to abandon the event altogether. It was decided&#13;
to lower the price and forego the dinner in hopes of a ttracting&#13;
more students for the game and party, but the&#13;
sorority, discouraged at seeing its efforts amounting to&#13;
nought, felt it could not go through with anything unless&#13;
it had the help of the fraternities and other campus&#13;
organizations. That help was not forthcoming. Hence,&#13;
what could have been a lot of fun for many people has&#13;
withered and died in the sight of apathy.&#13;
The sorority is a small but dedicated group and it is&#13;
sad to see their disillusionment. The Interfraternity&#13;
Council was granted $270 by CCC for homecoming. It&#13;
had arranged for Parkside's impressive Jazz Band to&#13;
play at the event, and the Activities Board had booked&#13;
the Mission Mountain Wood Band as part of the&#13;
weekend's entertainment. The latter group are still&#13;
coming on Friday night (Feb. 8), and the basketball&#13;
team is still playing against Grand Valley on Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
RANGER suggests that perhaps the Interfraternity&#13;
Council could get it together and, at the expense of one&#13;
more change in plans, arrange a simple bash in the&#13;
Student Activities Building after the game, with the Jazz&#13;
Band and beer and free snacks, using its money to rent&#13;
the building and provide the food.&#13;
Since the alumni are apparently disinterested and&#13;
students are notoriously poverty-stricken, such an&#13;
inexpensive evening of partying seems more in order&#13;
anyway. It would take minimal organization and would&#13;
be an event for people now at Parkside, the only cost to&#13;
students being the tickets to the game and later their&#13;
beer.&#13;
We hope all members of the Interfraternity Council&#13;
will consider this suggestion, but even if t hey don't we&#13;
want the sorority to know that it isn't alone in its&#13;
discouragement. RANGER respects their efforts and&#13;
hopes they will survive this hassle and remain concerned,&#13;
involved, do-something students.&#13;
'•Oe VsoaJC&#13;
-Owo-'V NooovL, \au-V oe.&#13;
Wo&lt;L a- \ °~&lt;a^&#13;
Se-\ec.-L\ov\ o-f booVC -&#13;
Wdor vCtL f- S ,&#13;
UlWEJRSl&#13;
or&#13;
O&#13;
&lt;D&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
•&lt;&#13;
*&#13;
"Plagiarize: to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as&#13;
one's own; use (a created production) without cred.ting the source; to&#13;
commit literary theft; present as new and original an idea or product&#13;
derived from an existing source."&#13;
Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary&#13;
There is a letter to the editor in this week's paper which should&#13;
properly be addressed to our readers. It is from Kurt A. Muller and&#13;
was written at my request. I wanted a direet^tement from him&#13;
explaining why a number of people had approached me after reading a&#13;
short story in RANGER last week, claiming they had read it before in&#13;
PLAYBOY. Muller had given us the story to print with his own name&#13;
credited as author (it is a theme he "wrote" for an American&#13;
Language class last semester).&#13;
It is my opinion, after reading the original story by Shel Silverstein&#13;
in the December, 1970 issue of PLAYBOY and comparing it with Mr.&#13;
Muller's version, that "the recesses" of h is mind must not be too deep&#13;
if h e can call up from these "recesses" an almost perfect word-forword&#13;
transcription of th e original article. Aside from the omission of&#13;
three sentences, some modifications in punctuation, and one rewrite of&#13;
a sentence-ending, it is exactly the same story with the same wording&#13;
and not just "similar wording" as Mr. Muller characterizes it in his&#13;
letter.&#13;
Needless to say I and the rest of the staff were appalled when we&#13;
learned of Muller's assinine and galling behavior, and further ired by&#13;
his apparent refusal to acknowledge that anyone might be so intelligent&#13;
as to compare the two stories. To do so can only render his&#13;
letter an insult added to the injury.&#13;
Plagiarism on the part of college students continues to be a problem,&#13;
especially on larger campuses like Madison where it is often&#13;
manifested in the form of purchased term papers. The ethical&#13;
questions here are obvious to most of us who are struggling to make it&#13;
with our own sweat and brainpower. If there were a student court at&#13;
Parkside I would press charges against Kurt Muller, not only as the&#13;
editor whom he deceived but on behalf of all the students who not only&#13;
read the RANGER but compete in the grading system with him. He&#13;
has compromised RANGER'S integrity and offended every decent&#13;
student at Parkside.&#13;
As editor I am ultimately responsible for the content of the paper. I&#13;
accepted on good faith the story Muller submitted just as I did all the&#13;
exceptional student poetry which appeared in our final issue of last&#13;
semester. I hope that all of our readers will excuse me from&#13;
negligence regarding Muller, for as something less than a regular&#13;
reader of PLAYBOY I could not be expected to be aware of the&#13;
existence of the original work.&#13;
I also hope PLAYBOY will absolve RANGER of a ny responsibility&#13;
in this matter. A copy of t his and last week's RANGER, along with a&#13;
letter of ap ology, will be sent to that publication and it as well as the&#13;
true author of "The End" are, of course, free to pursue the issue if they&#13;
wish. The letter will explain RANGER'S lack of knowledge and intent,&#13;
and we'll hope for the best!&#13;
x\ A&#13;
4-c The ParkskteThe&#13;
Parkside Ranger is published weekly throughout the academic&#13;
year by the students of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140. Offices are located at D-194 LibrarvLearning&#13;
Center, Telephone (414) 553-2295.&#13;
The&#13;
^&#13;
arkside Ranger is an independent newspaper. Opinions&#13;
reflected in columns and editorials are not necessarily the official&#13;
view of The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. All letters on anv subject of&#13;
interest to students faculty or staff must be confined to 250 words or&#13;
ess, typed and double-spaced. The editors reserve the right to edit&#13;
letters for length and good taste. All letters must be signed and include&#13;
hS wHhhSrt&#13;
0nenUrn&#13;
^r a&#13;
"&#13;
d student status or faculty rank. Names will&#13;
pri^t any letters ^ " r6SerVe the Tight t0 refuse t0&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Jane M. Schliesman&#13;
MANAGING EDITOR: Tom Petersen&#13;
NEWS EDITOR: Harvey Hedden&#13;
FEATURE EDITOR: Debra Friedell&#13;
COPY EDITOR! Rebecca Ecklund&#13;
WRITERS: Sandy Busch. Michael Olsiyk, Marilyn Schubert, Carrie Ward&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS: Dave Daniels, Brian Ross&#13;
ARTIST: amy cundari&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER: Steve Johnson&#13;
ADVERTISING MANAGER: Ken Pestka&#13;
warn &#13;
THe&#13;
PACK SHOP&#13;
5033-6th Ave., Kenosha, Wis. 53140 (414) 654-3351&#13;
With down clothing, sleeping b ags, cross country&#13;
skis, t ents, c ompasses, b ackpacks, b ooks,&#13;
compact s toves, a nd more...&#13;
Featuring equipment b y:&#13;
ALPINE DESIGN LAFUMA&#13;
CflMP 7 CIIDCKA OPTIMUS&#13;
SVEA tU,M SUVA&#13;
Wednesday, Jan 30, 1974 THE PARKS IDE RANGER&#13;
We get letters&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On Wednesday, Jan. 23, 1974,&#13;
your paper published a short&#13;
story by me, entitled, "The End."&#13;
Basically a story of God's entertainment&#13;
of 'the thought of&#13;
ending the world, it was derived&#13;
from an article by Shel Silverstein,&#13;
Playboy Magazine _ 1970,&#13;
with the same central idea, and&#13;
title, along with similar wording.&#13;
While my intention was not to&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Imagine if you will, the science&#13;
dept. here and at other universities&#13;
teaching courses in&#13;
Alchemy and telling their&#13;
students this knowledge is important&#13;
to them as chemists and&#13;
physicists. Or having Chariots of&#13;
the Gods? by Erich Von Daniken&#13;
be required reading for Anthropology&#13;
and Geology classes.&#13;
But here and everywhere else&#13;
the bulk of material in&#13;
psychology and often sociology&#13;
courses consists of unproven&#13;
theories, Freudian dogma, explanatory&#13;
fictions, subjective&#13;
observation, and information&#13;
useful to professors in their&#13;
research and to students meeting&#13;
requirements, but seldom useful&#13;
to those being studied. The&#13;
following is one of many&#13;
examples I've run into in psych&#13;
and soc classes: "Girls, by&#13;
contrast, although expressing a&#13;
complementary disdain for boys,&#13;
nevertheless carry along a&#13;
romantic vision of d omesticity in&#13;
which they picture themselves as&#13;
brides and even as mothers and&#13;
housewives, but mated to misty&#13;
figures bearing no resemblance&#13;
to the grubby, uncouth boys they&#13;
know in real life. In the same&#13;
vein, girls of this age may enjoy&#13;
"love" movies, whereas boys are&#13;
plagiarize Mr. Silverstein's work,&#13;
I may have inadvertently&#13;
brought about a close resemblance&#13;
while merely trying to&#13;
provide some entertainment to&#13;
the weekly readers of the&#13;
RANGER.&#13;
I sincerely hope that no one was&#13;
offended by this act, and, that the&#13;
RANGER will not be held&#13;
responsible for something that it&#13;
had no knowledge of, and, that I&#13;
volubly disgusted by them. It&#13;
should be stressed that many&#13;
mature young women enter&#13;
marriage in the spirit of the&#13;
young girl's daydreams, with&#13;
almost any presentable male cast&#13;
in the role of groom, and with the&#13;
focus on an elaborate nuptial&#13;
ceremony and reception, with&#13;
what comes later left in the vague&#13;
realm of 'happily ever after'."&#13;
This passage came from a section&#13;
on sex differences and roles,&#13;
in Childhood &amp; A dolescence page&#13;
371 2nd paragraph. Similar&#13;
beliefs are taught to thousands of&#13;
students in countless psych and&#13;
soc classes, all justified by&#13;
"research" and observation.&#13;
Frequent use of undefinable&#13;
phrases and assinine&#13;
overgeneralizations appear in&#13;
this and other books on related&#13;
matter.&#13;
Another example: "The sex&#13;
cleavage shows up too in attitudes&#13;
toward pets. Boys and&#13;
girls both love animals, but with&#13;
a difference. Girls typically love&#13;
puppies and kittens, which some&#13;
would interpret as an expression&#13;
of a maternal instinct, and such&#13;
relatively inert • creatures as&#13;
guinea pigs, rabbits, fish (the&#13;
heroic measures some girls will&#13;
take to keep guppies from eating&#13;
their young are a wonder to&#13;
PSGA GRIEVANCE AND CLEARINGHOUSE COMMITTEE&#13;
Meeting t oday&#13;
Jan. 3 0 2:30 pm UpperMainplace&#13;
NOW PAVING 5.4*&#13;
CREDIT&#13;
UNION&#13;
0&#13;
(Compounds Annually to 5.51%)&#13;
ON REGULAR&#13;
PASSBOOK&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:&#13;
II.W. Parkside ~ Room 219. Tallent Hall&#13;
ISO W. Chestnut St.. B urlington&#13;
5200 Washington Ave.. R acine&#13;
You can't miss us now. . . "&#13;
ge (Dltie J§&gt;toeet ^Roppe&#13;
did not intentionally plagiarize,&#13;
but may have retained in the&#13;
recesses of my mind when&#13;
writing this article.&#13;
In the future, I shall be more&#13;
careful, and continue to look up to&#13;
the RANGER for its maintenance&#13;
of high journalistic quality.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Kurt A. Muller&#13;
Freshman&#13;
Editor's note: "The Editor's&#13;
Notebook" this week provides&#13;
further information on this&#13;
matter.&#13;
behold), and parrots in all their&#13;
varieties. Boys, by contrast, like&#13;
dogs, who can serve as companions&#13;
and stunt artists. Boys&#13;
used to like horses, perhaps in&#13;
identification with cowboy&#13;
heroes, but seem to have transferred&#13;
their affections to&#13;
motorcycles and motorcars.&#13;
Girls on the other hand, love&#13;
horses to the point of mania,&#13;
collecting pictures and figurines&#13;
and begging for riding lessons.&#13;
Girls have been known to select a&#13;
college because it had its own&#13;
stables. Some psychoanalysts&#13;
have interpreted the girl's affection&#13;
for horses as an expression&#13;
of the masculine protest&#13;
and an accompanying penis envy&#13;
(see p. 178). In this view, control&#13;
over such a powerful creature&#13;
would be a symbolic subordination&#13;
(and perhaps&#13;
castration) of the male." pp. 371-&#13;
372 same book.&#13;
We are told this will be useful&#13;
as we teach, counsel, and continue&#13;
our "education." These&#13;
teachings are an outrage to all&#13;
reasoning people who seek out&#13;
factual information of t heir world&#13;
and its people- If we are to be fed&#13;
fiction, let it be called that. I want&#13;
useful and fairly accurate&#13;
material: I paid dearly for it.&#13;
David Myer&#13;
Kenosha senior&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The Parkside Activities Boai&#13;
(PAB) arranged a fine pe&#13;
formance for us Wednesda;&#13;
January 23. Bob Rohan's song&#13;
and the guitar arrangements fc&#13;
both Bob and Larry were a\&#13;
preciated by all who were then&#13;
I'm hoping that the PAB wi&#13;
have Bob and Larry here agai&#13;
real soon.&#13;
Thank you PAJE&#13;
Harry Dingfelde&#13;
Racin&#13;
&lt; —4&#13;
m a;&#13;
C/jm&#13;
m QQ&#13;
mm GO 2 S3 H H&#13;
5)1 m ^ m&#13;
m 2 GO&#13;
2 CD s 30 H0 • mm&#13;
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in rr, I U CO 3 i3i O"&#13;
10 A.M. - 4 P.M.&#13;
DAILY&#13;
"Main Concourse&#13;
between Greenquist&#13;
and LLC"&#13;
FRI. FEB. 1-8:00p.m.&#13;
SUN. FEB. 3 -7:30P.M&#13;
ADMISSION 75c&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
I.D .'S R E Q U I R ED &#13;
4 THE PARKSIDE R ANGER Wednesday, Jan . 30, 1974&#13;
Robert Ulbricht (above) is a licensed animal caretaker. The&#13;
animals he takes care of are white mice and rats. These animals are&#13;
kept m a university-owned house located on County Trunk JR It is&#13;
called, naturally, the Animal House.&#13;
TT.K TUH G H°&#13;
USe haS 136611 in fuU&#13;
°P&#13;
eration for three years and&#13;
Ulbricht, who has a BS degree in biology from Whitewater, has been&#13;
the caretaker for that same length of time.&#13;
The House is funded mostly by the university and partly by the&#13;
Atomic Energy Commission as part of an immunology proiect that it&#13;
supports at Parkside.&#13;
These white rats are only three of the some 400 a nimals that now&#13;
occupy the House. There is a constant turnover in the population at the&#13;
House: just this week, 50 female rats will be used by immunology&#13;
students. Last month, there were 165 rats involved in projects, and 200&#13;
animals were used last year in Racine's Sickle Cell Anemia project.&#13;
Life science and psychology students use the animals for experiments,&#13;
as do instructors. The animals are also available for independent&#13;
study projects.&#13;
At one time, there were as many as 1500 animals at the House, but&#13;
there were also three students working with Ulbricht. The House is&#13;
now suffering severe budget cuts, so Ulbricht can't hire student help.&#13;
"Mouse House" is habitat&#13;
for furry four hundred&#13;
RANGER photos by A l len&#13;
Fredericksen&#13;
Ulbricht holds a young rat which has just been weaned from its&#13;
mother. In his three years at the House, Ulbricht has never been&#13;
bitten.&#13;
The animal caretaker has many, many duties. There is the day-today&#13;
care, of course: filling all food bins and water bottles. Then all the&#13;
cages must be changed and washed twice a week, and water'bottles&#13;
must be changed and sanitized once a week. In addition to all of this&#13;
Ulbricht takes activity wheel measurements, records weights takes&#13;
urine samples, conducts scheduled mating, weans and rehouses the&#13;
offspring, gives injections, keeps file cards up to date, and assists in&#13;
experiments In general, Ulbricht sees to it that the House operates&#13;
smoothly and efficiently. "It's a seven-day-a-week job," he said.&#13;
residence^ The'ra °&#13;
n&lt;L°&#13;
f ^ three ma&#13;
J&#13;
or rooms in the former&#13;
are some rats in fhe 'larger m°&#13;
S&#13;
"&#13;
y miCe&#13;
' th&#13;
°&#13;
Ugh there&#13;
certairfume^urinp^h si™ulat&#13;
^&#13;
d nig&#13;
bt system, which means that at a&#13;
S hght eom&#13;
d&#13;
e&#13;
UJ on *:&#13;
hite flourescent lights go off and a&#13;
scientist to measure K f exP&#13;
lain&#13;
ed that this system allows the&#13;
rodents) without th'p n Vi y rat6S of nocturnal animals (such as&#13;
SndSS exlr lt P™bl6™ ot g&#13;
etti«g "P at two in the morning to&#13;
lightTn the rcZ ^fn;&#13;
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f rodents&#13;
' eyes are red&#13;
-&#13;
the red&#13;
animals. &gt;ltered out and the room appears dark to the&#13;
understrictreeulatf^nh ^&#13;
eilsed by the federal government and is&#13;
Hh&#13;
oe&#13;
uLn&#13;
Sfc^t^ -'i/-med&#13;
C&#13;
a&#13;
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con, recycled air 5 '"T &#13;
All who applied Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1974 THE PARKS"DE RANGER 5&#13;
Eight students accepted by med schools&#13;
Eight Parkside Pre-med&#13;
students have applied to and been&#13;
accepted by both the Madi§on&#13;
Medical School and the Medical&#13;
College of Wisconsin, which is in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Four of the students have&#13;
decided to attend Madison; they&#13;
are James Wishau, Lisa Lichter,&#13;
Michael Rizzo, and Hugh Gately.&#13;
The other four will attend the&#13;
Medical College of Wisconsin.&#13;
Those students are O'Brian C.&#13;
Smith, James Caya, Bruce&#13;
Green, and Christine Miller.&#13;
This is the second year that any&#13;
sizeable number of pre-med&#13;
students from Parkside has&#13;
applied to medical schools. Last&#13;
year, seven students applied and&#13;
all seven were accepted. That&#13;
was the first class of pre-meds&#13;
who had been counseled in their&#13;
field for all four of their college&#13;
years.&#13;
All of the above eight students&#13;
submitted their applications to&#13;
the medical schools between July&#13;
1 and September of 1973, which is&#13;
the proper time to do so. Three of&#13;
the applicants (Wishau, Smith,&#13;
and Caya) asked for early&#13;
decision. This means that the&#13;
applicants have already decided,&#13;
at the time of application, where&#13;
they want to attend medical&#13;
school and are confident that&#13;
their grades and test scores are&#13;
good enough to get them into the&#13;
school they request. Those applicants&#13;
who request early&#13;
decision are considered by the&#13;
schools before any of the other&#13;
applicants and are notified of&#13;
their acceptance or nonacceptance&#13;
before anyone else.&#13;
The first notification date after&#13;
early decision notification was&#13;
December 15, 1973, a nd all of the&#13;
remaining five were notified of&#13;
their acceptance at one or the&#13;
other or both of the Wisconsin&#13;
medical schools on that date.&#13;
All of the students are now in&#13;
their senior year at Parkside and&#13;
have been counseled throughout&#13;
their college career by Anna M.&#13;
Williams, associate professor of&#13;
life science and advisor to the&#13;
pre-med club.&#13;
Pre-med students pictured above are: Top row,1. to r.,Lisa Lichter,&#13;
Bruce Green, and Christine Miller. Bottom row, Michael Rizzo, James&#13;
Caya, O'Brian Smith, and Anna Marie Williams (pre-med advisor).&#13;
Not pictured are Hugh Gately and James Wishau.&#13;
Psychic entertains Parkside audience&#13;
by Carrie Ward&#13;
Does ESP exist? On Jan. 23, Gil Eagles gave a&#13;
performance here to prove that it does. Before his&#13;
show, he talked with students to answer any&#13;
questions they might have concerning ESP or&#13;
hypnosis.&#13;
One of the students asked the psychic how old he&#13;
was when he discovered he had ESP. Eagles answered,&#13;
"I did not discover I had ESP. As I&#13;
remember, I came to a gradual understanding of&#13;
what I had. At about the age of 12 I first heard the&#13;
term ESP. Friends told me that I had it. When I&#13;
went to England, a psychics master was doing ESP&#13;
tests and I scored very highly."&#13;
Another student asked if he could tell the future,&#13;
to which he responded, "Yes, but I don't get involved&#13;
in that. The future is strictly speculaton."&#13;
One question was, what is ESP or telepathy?&#13;
Eagles replied, "I don't know." One question&#13;
concerning hypnosis was whether or not you can&#13;
hypnotize yourself. In answering that question, he&#13;
said, "There is no such defined state as hypnosis .&#13;
Hypnosis is the power of suggestion." Eagles then&#13;
induced self-hypnosis and said that his left hand&#13;
would feel no pain. He took a match and moved it&#13;
closely around his hand, singing the hair on it. Then&#13;
he dramatically ground a cigarette into the palm of&#13;
his hand.&#13;
One student asked why Eagles did not use his gift&#13;
for humanitarian purposes. Eagles replied that it&#13;
was not a "gift" but an ability. "I enjoy taking the&#13;
talent I have and exploiting it onstage, having fun. .&#13;
.to have you laugh, and to amaze all. I wish more&#13;
people were less humanitarian and more selfish,&#13;
would want to help others less. The wars and trouble&#13;
in the world are probably because someone wanted&#13;
to help someone else."&#13;
At the evening performance, the first area that&#13;
Eagles went into was ESP. He had himself blindfolded&#13;
by putting two silver dollars over his eyes&#13;
and covering them with surgical tape, and over that&#13;
he pat a black leather blindfold. He had two&#13;
volunteers choose a colored marker and write a&#13;
word on a black poster. Eagles then proceeded to&#13;
guess the color and the word. The volunteers then&#13;
took items from the audience such as shoes, wallets,&#13;
even a toy mouse, all of which were correctly&#13;
identified. He had trouble with one item, though-the&#13;
psychic described it as a mirror ; it was a picture of&#13;
himself.&#13;
There was a short break, then the hypnosis&#13;
started. Promising not to embarrass anyone,&#13;
Eagles called for 13 volunteers. About 30 people&#13;
mobbed the stage. When he had narrowed the&#13;
number to 13, Eagles hypnotized them. To&#13;
demonstrate to the audience that his subjects were&#13;
under control, he took a girl to the center of the&#13;
stage and told her she would feel no pain in her&#13;
cheek or hand. He held a match to her hand and&#13;
ground a pin into her cheek.&#13;
The psychic then had the group do or become&#13;
various things, such as typewriters and rose bushes.&#13;
Next he informed them that they were going to view&#13;
a new, scientifically-designed movie, geared to&#13;
bring out certain emotions. Eagles told them thfey&#13;
were seeing a comedy and they started howling with&#13;
laughter. When they were told a tragedy was being&#13;
shown, some started crying. Finally a romantic&#13;
movie was "shown", and they fell into each other's&#13;
arms. One couple began necking enthusiastically.&#13;
At one point he had them take off their right shoe&#13;
and put it in their hand. Upon waking they would&#13;
notice that their shoe was gone but would not find it&#13;
until he blew the whistle. They would realize then&#13;
that it was in their hand. They started frantically&#13;
searching for their shoes, one student accused&#13;
another in the audience of having it and grabbed&#13;
him by the foot and turned him upside down on the&#13;
seat to see if he was wearing it. When the whistle&#13;
blew they returned sheepishly to their chairs.&#13;
Eagles next selected three people ~ one to be a&#13;
martian, another a reporter from the RANGER, the&#13;
third to be an interpreter, and they proceeded to&#13;
conduct an interview.&#13;
One subject under hypnosis did an imitation of&#13;
Kung Fu. He told the audience the story of why he&#13;
had to flee his homeland and gave what many&#13;
considered a surprisingly good demonstration of&#13;
Kung Fu.&#13;
Upon telling the audience he would have to stop&#13;
the performance because the buses would stop&#13;
running soon, Eagles was told they would walk and&#13;
wanted him to continue.&#13;
For the final scene Eagles told one student, David&#13;
Daniels, that whenever he heard Eagles stamp his&#13;
feet three times he would leap out of his chair,&#13;
having felt an electric shock given by his friend in&#13;
the audience, Dave Dearborn. The first time he did&#13;
this, Daniels jumped from his chair, looked around&#13;
the audience, and went after Dearborn, demanding&#13;
to know why he had given him the shock. The second&#13;
time he grabbed Dearborn by the collar and told&#13;
him not to do it again. The third time it happened&#13;
Daniels leapt out of his chair and tore off across the&#13;
stage. Meanwhile, Dearborn, apparently thinking&#13;
that discretion was the better part of valor, fled the&#13;
theater.&#13;
This act was billed as pure entertainment and did&#13;
not teach about hypnosis or ESP, nor did Gil Eagles&#13;
seek to give psychic help to anyone. Some people&#13;
later complained that this was a disappointment but&#13;
most of the audience appeared to this reporter to&#13;
have enjoyed themselves and been highly amused.&#13;
2 TEXAS-SIZE SAVINGS&#13;
AT&#13;
00A SIRL01NJW&#13;
IN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
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JA { 5010 7th Are. }&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
New "l|&#13;
"DYLAN" $ 3 4 9 Now&#13;
Reg. *6.98 With This Coupon&#13;
"Open 365 days a year"&#13;
Phone 6 54-3578 Truck On&#13;
Lace Curtain&#13;
FEB. 1 &amp; 2; F RI. &amp; SAT. O NLY!&#13;
Kenosha's Newest Nitespot&#13;
2nd Notional&#13;
(form erly Shakey's)&#13;
6208 G reenbay R oad Phone 6 54-0485 &#13;
6 ^eclriesdayj Jan^lo,' 1974&#13;
Brief news&#13;
..UW-P services directory available&#13;
The 1974 edition of the Parkside Community Services Directory now&#13;
is available at the Parkside Public Information Office and at public&#13;
libraries in Racine, Kenosha, Burlington, Union Grove, Waterford and&#13;
Lake Geneva.&#13;
The directory includes a speakers bureau and a performing arts&#13;
directory listing programs available to area civic, cultural social&#13;
service and professional groups.&#13;
The speakers bureau lists 67 faculty and academic staff members&#13;
available to speak on almost 200 different topics and the performing&#13;
arts directory lists a number of faculty and student musical programs&#13;
poetry readings, film programs and sports demonstrations&#13;
The volume also includes a translation service listing 12 foreign&#13;
languages-Arabic, Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Greek, Italian&#13;
Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish and Swedish-in which staff&#13;
members are fluent.&#13;
Physical facilities available to off-campus groups at Parkside and&#13;
campus tour information also is detailed along with Library-Learning&#13;
resources for public use.&#13;
The directory also contains listings of professors available to advise&#13;
business, industry and governmental units in the areas of their expertise&#13;
and a similar listing of resource professors for the media.&#13;
Yearbook schedules meeting&#13;
The Parkside yearbook will be holding its first meeting of the new&#13;
semester on February 5,1974 in CL 322 at 11:30 a.m.&#13;
interested students wanting to become involved with the next&#13;
yearbook should attend this meeting. If you can't attend, contact&#13;
either Dawn Williams, 637-5474, Bruce Wagner, 552-9462, or Milan&#13;
Miskovic, 634-4810.&#13;
Resource people from all of the areas mentioned on the student&#13;
activities questionnaire will be there to answer any and all questions&#13;
regarding the yearbook. y questions&#13;
Homecoming cancelled&#13;
The Interfraternity Council has announced that homecoming,&#13;
scheduled for Feb. 8,9, and 10, has been cancelled. A spokesperson for&#13;
Delta Gamma Phi, the sorority who originated the idea, blamed&#13;
organizational problems and lack of interest for the cancellation.&#13;
Extension offers courses in Chinese&#13;
Mandarin Chinese, beginning and intermediate language courses,&#13;
will be taught by Bessie Tang as a University of Wisconsin-Extension&#13;
course this semester. Mrs. Tang studied at Taiwan Normal University&#13;
and has her master's degree from Columbia University.&#13;
The beginning Chinese class will meet on Tuesdays, beginning&#13;
January 29, 6 :30 p.m.; and the intermediate Chinese on Saturdays,&#13;
beginning February 2. Both classes will meet once a week for 10&#13;
weeks, at the Kenosha Campus. There is a $25 fee for each course.&#13;
Each session will center on a topic related to Chinese culture and&#13;
customs, and will emphasize vocabulary and oral work through&#13;
pronunciation, reading aloud and conversation.&#13;
For further information contact University Extension at (553)2312.&#13;
Vets ask for paper&#13;
The Vets Club will be sponsoring a paper drive on March 1 to&#13;
generate money for the Racine bus service and to initiate more&#13;
recycling projects. Students, staff, and faculty are asked to save&#13;
papers for the drive.&#13;
Students earn straight A averages&#13;
Ninety-one students with perfect 4.0 (straight-A) gradepoint&#13;
averages head the Dean's List for first semester.&#13;
Students named to the Dean's List must carry at least 12 credits and&#13;
earn at least a 3.25 (B-plus) average. Eighteen of the total of 564&#13;
students on the fall semester list achieved scholastic honors while&#13;
carrying 20 or more credits, including one student, Dennis Kehoe of&#13;
Kenosha, who scored a perfect 4.0 average on 29 credits. Five of the&#13;
straight A students have cumulative averages of 4.0 on more than one&#13;
semester of work.&#13;
Classified&#13;
If anyone knows of any Look Nevada&#13;
bindings and some good 180 CM skis for sale&#13;
please contact Greg 639-1342.&#13;
Typing done in my home. Call Nancv 619&#13;
2667.&#13;
Interested in applications of Hypnotism in&#13;
law? Help design experiments or be ;&#13;
subject. Call Steve, 652-6123, evening&#13;
weekends. *&#13;
WANTED: Senior Chemistry major toi&#13;
conduct experiment(s). Includes qualitative&#13;
analysis. Contact Ted, c-o Ranger, LLC&#13;
D194.&#13;
WANTED: Journalism major or someone&#13;
"with the ability to write clear legible news&#13;
stories on a very part-time basis. Small&#13;
weekly in Zion, III. needs occasional help in&#13;
covering various municipal functions,&#13;
usually in the evening. Pay isn't good and the&#13;
assignments are sometimes dry but the&#13;
experience is great. Call 312-872-4572 for&#13;
details. Ask for Shirley.&#13;
Proof reader-TY PI ST needed! Call 552-8859&#13;
on Thursday after 7 p.m. and ask for Roger.&#13;
Girl wanted to share 3 bedroom apt. Near&#13;
Parkside via Racine. Rent $100 per mo. 637-&#13;
2080 after 6 p.m. Price.&#13;
PAPERS NOTARIZED on the spot. See&#13;
Betty Briggs, Business Management major,&#13;
evening classes 6:15-9:15. 634-2886.&#13;
INCOME TAX PREPARATION. Ex&#13;
perienced and reasonable. Discount to&#13;
Parksiders. Call 633-0416 for appointment.&#13;
FOR SALE: Stereo FM-AM car radio. Works&#13;
great. 654-0030 evenings.&#13;
AQUARIUM WITH FISH and accessories&#13;
Cheap. Call 552-8584. Ask for Jeff.&#13;
Wr&#13;
o9 Urn&#13;
h* GfcS C-D&#13;
QBm &lt;C&#13;
3 Qu&#13;
ooo&#13;
&amp; fit&#13;
Tox&#13;
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—J&#13;
ymmmm Q2 CJ&gt;&#13;
OS&#13;
Q_ 3E&#13;
ooo&#13;
Children's lit, taught bv Extension&#13;
Any student that needs to take Introduction to Children's Literature&#13;
and has a schedule conflict may take it through University Extension&#13;
correspondence as the class has now been reinstated. Contact the&#13;
University Extension Office, 206 Tallent Hall or call 553-2312.&#13;
Collections taken for Jomcc Fine f.mrl&#13;
The Department of Safety and Security, on behalf of Parkside, is&#13;
collecting donations for the widow and three children of slain police&#13;
officer Detective James Fine. Detective Fine of the Racine Police&#13;
Department was shot and killed January 11 while answering a routine&#13;
Tt f/ZoLo mi&#13;
ribUti&#13;
°&#13;
nS throug&#13;
hout the Racine community have&#13;
totaled $2,643. Those interested in raising that total are asked to stop&#13;
by the Information kiosk no later than Friday, February 1,1974.&#13;
Income tax seminar here&#13;
Do you know what deductions you can make? Should you claim one&#13;
dependent or none? What forms are the right ones for you: 1040,1040A&#13;
No. 1, 1A, short forms, long forms, schedules A, C, or E7 These and&#13;
other questions will be answered at the second annual Income Tax&#13;
Help Seminar sponsored by Alpha Kappa Lambda Fraternity. All&#13;
questions will be fielded by Claude D. Renshaw, lecturer of business&#13;
management, on Wednesday, February 6 from 10:30-1:30 or Harold W&#13;
^&#13;
e&#13;
f&#13;
eoA ass&#13;
;&#13;
st&#13;
^nt p&#13;
rofessor of business, on Thursday, February 7 from&#13;
11-2:30 in LLC-D174.&#13;
Federal and state income tax forms and all W-2 slips will be needed&#13;
Extra forms and calculators will be available.&#13;
Olsen heads Clinical Experience&#13;
Dwayne G. Olsen, assistant professor of education, has been named&#13;
to head the Clinical Experience program for teacher trainees.&#13;
Education Division Chairman Paul Kleine, who made the appointment,&#13;
said "the clinical program represents one of the most&#13;
crucial aspects of teacher training, and Professor Olsen has both the&#13;
professional background and personal interest in students to handle&#13;
these new responsibilities well."&#13;
Clinical experience includes the various student teaching, intern&#13;
and field experience programs at Parkside. It has been coordinated by&#13;
Marilyn Scamman, who is leaving because her husband was recently&#13;
appointed Superintendent of Schools at Stevens Point.&#13;
Olsen, 39, earned his Ph. D. and taught in the department of&#13;
secondary education at Iowa State University from 1970 until joining&#13;
the UW-P faculty last fall. He has taught in several Iowa and South&#13;
Dakota secondary schools since 1954, including Ankeny, Iowa where&#13;
in 1968 h e was named Outstanding Young Educator by the'Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commerce and Teacher of the Year.&#13;
He has been active in professional education groups at the local&#13;
state and national level, has several scholarly publications to his&#13;
credit, and has been a member of examining teams for the National&#13;
Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education. His doctoral&#13;
research focused on comparisons of experimental and traditional&#13;
approaches to preparing teachers.&#13;
A native of Estherville, Iowa, Olsen received his B.A. from&#13;
Augustana (S.D.) College and his M.A. from the University of Northern&#13;
Colorado. He is married and lives in Racine.&#13;
Openings in Child Care Center&#13;
I he Parkside Child Care Center has announced that it's license has&#13;
been increased, resulting in more open spots for children of Parkside&#13;
students. Openings exist for both the morning and afternoon and&#13;
urther information is available by calling the center at 552-8322. '&#13;
CONDOMINIUMS&#13;
READY FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY&#13;
ONE BEDROOM RANCH STYLE&#13;
TWO BEDROOM RANCH STYLE&#13;
TWO BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE&#13;
THREE BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE&#13;
PriC?Frt.?^^rSf&#13;
0&#13;
.&#13;
nSsh&#13;
#&#13;
'rr&#13;
5 CarPe&#13;
"&#13;
n9 ' EleC"'&#13;
C rfm9&#13;
e and self-cleaning oven&#13;
^L°&#13;
U&#13;
U&#13;
RF&#13;
0RAT0R FURNISHED MODELS&#13;
OF EACH HOME TYPE THIS WEEKEND 1 TO 6&#13;
Models also open weekdays 1 to 8&#13;
Or by personal showing at your convenience&#13;
For more information&#13;
PHONE 1—552-9339&#13;
PARKSIDE REALTY IMC.&#13;
Developed and Built bv U S General. Inc &#13;
It's what's happening&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30: Dave Duffek at 1 p^m. in the Whiteskellar No&#13;
admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30: PSGA Grievance and Clearinghouse Committee&#13;
meeting at 2:30 p.m. in upper main place. All students&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30: PAB movie "Fanny Hill" at7:30 p.m. in Gr 103&#13;
Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 31: Wrestling-UW-P vs. UW-Milwaukee at 8 p m in&#13;
the phy Ed Bldg. Admission charged.&#13;
y&#13;
' '&#13;
Friday, Feb. 1: PAB movie "Catch-22" at 8 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is 75 cents.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 2: Wrestling-UW-P vs. Northern Michigan at 3 d m&#13;
in the Phy Ed Bldg. Admission charged.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 2: Track and Field—Parkside Indoor Invitational at&#13;
park High School in Racine.&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 2: Dance sponsored by the Parkside Hockey Club at&#13;
9 p.m. in the SAB. Admission is $1.50. Parkside I.D. and proof of age&#13;
required.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 3: PAB movie "Catch-22" at 7:30 p.m. in SAB. Admission&#13;
is 75*cents.&#13;
Sunday, Feb. 3: Hockey--UW-P vs. Western Illinois University at 6&#13;
p.m. at the Kenosha Ice Arena.&#13;
Monday, Feb. 4: Movie "Lady from Shanghai" at 7:30 p.m in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater. No admission charged.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6: Whiteskellar auditions for new acts at 1 p m in&#13;
the Whiteskellar.&#13;
Wednesday, Feb. 6: PAB movie "The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter" at&#13;
7:30p.m. in Gr 103. Admission is 75 cents.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Feb. 7: Ronald Gottesman, Professor of English will present a&#13;
lecture "King Kong: Myth, Monster, Movie" Cl D105 at 7:30 p.m No&#13;
admission charged.&#13;
Feb. 8: Mission Mountain Wood Band at 8 p.m. in SAB. Tickets on&#13;
sale at the Information Kiosk.&#13;
Feb. 10: Faculty recital with David and Mary Ann Littrell. Comm&#13;
Arts Theater at 4 p.m.&#13;
AH it ems for IT'S WHAT'S HAPPENING should be submitted to&#13;
RANGER by noon Thursday prior to publication of the issue in which&#13;
an item is to appear.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1974 THE PARKSIDE RANGER 7&#13;
oiiio's&#13;
1816 16 Street&#13;
PHONE 634-1991&#13;
FOR PICK UP OR&#13;
PIPING HOT FOODS&#13;
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME&#13;
FINE FOODS&#13;
&amp; COCKTAILS&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEAFOOD&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
LASAGANA&#13;
RAVIOLI&#13;
MOSTACCIOLI&#13;
GNOCCHI&#13;
SPAGHETTI&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
BEER&#13;
SOFT DRINKS&#13;
WINES&#13;
American State Bank&#13;
Free Checking Accounts&#13;
for College Students&#13;
3928 60th St. Phone 658-2582&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
7T UW PARKSIDE&#13;
EASTER IN ATHENS&#13;
APRIL 12-21. 1974&#13;
SJAA p|us $2° tax&#13;
#• $JUi &amp; s ervice based on&#13;
™T»Bm B ? to a room&#13;
plus $20 tax&#13;
&amp; service based on&#13;
2 to a room&#13;
include&#13;
• Round trip jet&#13;
• 7 n ights in Athens&#13;
• 8th night in Zurich&#13;
• 2 meals daily&#13;
• Greek island cruise&#13;
• Athens sightseeing&#13;
• Fondue party in Switz.&#13;
• Tour escort&#13;
« Tips &amp; taxes on above&#13;
For application or information&#13;
Contact:&#13;
CAMPUS TRAVELCENTER&#13;
LLC D-197 Call: 553-2294&#13;
Students, faculty, and others&#13;
to present numerous concerts&#13;
The spring concert calendar&#13;
offers a diverse range of&#13;
programs from the classical&#13;
composers to contemporary&#13;
works by Parkside students.&#13;
The 23 programs are open to&#13;
the public. All are free except the&#13;
Jazz Ensemble concert on March&#13;
31.&#13;
Faculty recitals are scheduled&#13;
for Feb. 10, David Littrell, cello,&#13;
with Mary Ann Littrell, piano;&#13;
March 3, The Parkside Piano&#13;
Trio, Maria Mutschler, violin,&#13;
Stephen Swedish, piano, and&#13;
Littrell, cello; April 4, Sonata&#13;
Recital, Mutschler, violin, and&#13;
Swedish, piano; and May 5, Lee&#13;
Dougherty, soprano, and Frances&#13;
Bedford and Frank Mueller,&#13;
harpsichords.&#13;
The Feb. 10 and May 5 recitals&#13;
are at 4 p.m. and the others are at&#13;
7:30 p.m. All are in the Communication&#13;
Arts Theater.&#13;
Guest concerts scheduled&#13;
during the semester are "20th&#13;
r—&#13;
Century Music for Winds" by a&#13;
UW-Milwaukee Wind Ensemble&#13;
under the direction of Robert&#13;
Cesario on March 22 and a "New&#13;
Music Concert" by a group of&#13;
Northwestern University performers&#13;
on April 5. Both&#13;
programs are at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm Arts Theater.&#13;
Parkside student music groups&#13;
have a number of performances&#13;
slated as well.&#13;
Vocal music programs under&#13;
the direction of Mueller include&#13;
the Chamber Singers performing&#13;
Monteverdi madrigals on March&#13;
21, the Chorale performing&#13;
Kuhnhausen's St. Matthew&#13;
Passion on March 28, and the&#13;
combined Chorus and Chorale&#13;
presenting sacred music of Anton&#13;
Bruckner on April 28. All are at&#13;
7:30 p.m. in the theater.&#13;
Instrumental programs include&#13;
the Parkside Jazz Ensembles at 2&#13;
p.m. on March 31 in the Phy. Ed.&#13;
Building, the Concert Band at&#13;
IF WE DON'T HAVE IT WHO DOES?&#13;
QLDIES&#13;
From&#13;
THE ASSOCIATION to THE ZOMBIES&#13;
*D &amp; 'Wt 'Wtuaic SaleA&gt;&#13;
1919 TAYLOR AVENUE, RACINE 637-2212.&#13;
Joseph.&#13;
4437 - 2 2nd Avenue Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsin Phone 654-0774&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
*&#13;
•&#13;
SPANKY'S&#13;
7:30 p.m. on April 7 in the theater&#13;
and the Symphony Orchestra at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on May 9 in the theater.&#13;
The jazz ensembles and band are&#13;
directed by Robert Thomason&#13;
and the symphony by Littrell.&#13;
Original compositions by&#13;
Parkside music students will be&#13;
presented at a Contemporary&#13;
Music Forum at 7:30 p.m. on&#13;
March 24 in the theater and piano&#13;
students will perform "Keyboard&#13;
Music of J.S. Bach," with a&#13;
lecture by faculty pianist Stephen&#13;
Swedish, at 7:30 p.m. on March&#13;
31, a lso in the theater.&#13;
Guitarist Patrick Noe will play&#13;
a student recital on May 1 and the&#13;
Parkside Guitar Society will&#13;
perform on May 8. Both&#13;
programs are at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Gertrude Sheridan will present a&#13;
student vocal recital at 3 p.m. on&#13;
Jan. 27 in the theater.&#13;
Other student concerts for the&#13;
semester, all at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Comm Arts Bldg., Room D-118,&#13;
are Feb. 13, March 13, April 10&#13;
and 24 a nd May 1 and 8.&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
is&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
• No minimum&#13;
balance required&#13;
• No limit to the&#13;
number of checks&#13;
you write&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
CHECKING&#13;
IS&#13;
AT FIRST NATIONAL&#13;
OF RACINE&#13;
Open your free checking&#13;
account soon at&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
and Trust Company of Racine&#13;
Dopot.l Co'D&#13;
500 Wisconsin Ave. Racine &#13;
8 THE PARKSIDE RANGER Wednesday, Jan. 30, 1974&#13;
Biel wins&#13;
national title&#13;
UW-Parkside trackmen placed&#13;
ninth in the NAIA national indoor&#13;
championships last weekend as&#13;
Dennis Biel won the national title&#13;
at 1,000 yards.&#13;
Biel, a junior from Wausau&#13;
(East), covered the distance in&#13;
2:11.5 to win the national crown.&#13;
He was third in the same event a&#13;
year ago so this marks the second&#13;
time he has earned all-America&#13;
honors.&#13;
Freshman Jim Heiring of&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) also earned&#13;
all-America honors with his third&#13;
pl&amp;ce finish in the two mile walk.&#13;
His time for the distance 14:57.6.&#13;
He is the second walker in&#13;
Parkside track history (the other&#13;
was Mike DeWitt) to gain allAmerica&#13;
status.&#13;
Other Parkside placers included&#13;
Racine freshman Walt&#13;
Smith, fifth in the long jump at 23-&#13;
2, a varsity record, and Lucian&#13;
Rosa, sixth in the mile. Racine&#13;
freshman Bob Meekma placed a&#13;
non-scoring eighth in the pole&#13;
vault at 14-0.&#13;
For Parkside, the 19 points was&#13;
a team high in national competition&#13;
and marked the second&#13;
successive ninth place national&#13;
finish for Coach Bob Lawson's&#13;
Rangers. Parkside will host an&#13;
indoor meet at Racine Park High&#13;
School Saturday morning at 10&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Fencers win twice&#13;
over weekend&#13;
Cagers out shoot&#13;
Aquinas College 73-59&#13;
The Parkside cagers scored&#13;
their eighth win of the season&#13;
Saturday night in Grand Rapids,&#13;
Mich., as the Rangers upended&#13;
Aquinas College 73-59.&#13;
Aquinas, a hot-shooting outfit&#13;
which ranked fifth in the NCAA in&#13;
field goal shooting percentage,&#13;
never let Parkside get away to a&#13;
big lead although the Rangers&#13;
held a 34-28 h alf-time lead and&#13;
had maintained a six point&#13;
margin through much of the&#13;
second half.&#13;
Aquinas tied the score midway&#13;
through the second stanza at 50&#13;
but Parkside pulled in front 52-50&#13;
and was able to hold a two and&#13;
four point margin the rest of the&#13;
way.&#13;
"We played one of our best&#13;
total games," Parkside coach&#13;
Steve Stephens said after the&#13;
game. "We were able to work the&#13;
ball inside to Cole and he was&#13;
able to put it in. Aquinas just had&#13;
too much trouble with him and&#13;
that was the difference."&#13;
For the first time this year, the&#13;
Rangers won a game on the freePucksters&#13;
defeat&#13;
Beloit in overtime&#13;
The Parkside hockey team&#13;
came back from a 3-0 deficit&#13;
against Beloit College in the final&#13;
period to score a 4-3 victory with&#13;
:42 left in overtime on a shot by&#13;
Bill Isermann.&#13;
This win gives the Ranger a&#13;
three and two record in the&#13;
Wisconsin Intercollegiate Hockey&#13;
League.&#13;
The Buccaneers from Beloit&#13;
had things going their way until&#13;
the third period when Robin&#13;
Lipski scored on an assist by Bill&#13;
Evans and John Culotta.&#13;
Moments later Jerry Madala&#13;
scored again on an assist by&#13;
Jerry Simonsen and Tad&#13;
Ballantyne.&#13;
George Krulatz tied up the&#13;
Mat men win their&#13;
fourth dual meet&#13;
score two minutes later on a 30&#13;
footer from the angle.&#13;
It was almost 24 minutes later&#13;
that Isermann slapped home the&#13;
winning goal. The Rangers made&#13;
a vicious attack on the Beloit&#13;
goalie in the last period but he&#13;
was up to the occasion until the&#13;
last shot.&#13;
John Burch, the Ranger goalie,&#13;
was also outstanding making 34&#13;
saves. The Rangers have a busy&#13;
week ahead of them playing&#13;
Lawrence at Appleton on Friday,&#13;
UW-LaCrosse at the Kenosha Ice&#13;
Arena at 4:30 on Saturday and&#13;
Illinois State Sunday at 6:00 at&#13;
the KIA.&#13;
Parkside won its fourth dual&#13;
wrestling meet of the season last&#13;
Friday, defeating LaCrosse 30-14.&#13;
LaCrosse is 7th in the NIAA and&#13;
Parkside is fifth.&#13;
Champions for Parkside were&#13;
Rich Schaumberg at 118 pounds,&#13;
Rico Savaglio at 126, Bill West at&#13;
134, Ken Martin at 142, Randy&#13;
Scarda at 150, Rich Baron at 158,&#13;
Brad Frieberg at 167 and Tom&#13;
Beyer at 177.&#13;
On Saturday the matmen&#13;
journeyed to the North Park&#13;
Invitational where they captured&#13;
first place with 77 and a half&#13;
points. UW-M was second with 68,&#13;
Grand Valley third and Carthage&#13;
College fourth in the 8 team&#13;
competition.&#13;
Parkside had five champions in&#13;
this contest: Savaglio, West,&#13;
Martin, Scarda and Baron.&#13;
Martin was voted the meet's&#13;
outstanding wrestler. He has a 75&#13;
and 6 career record.&#13;
On Thursday at 8 p.m.&#13;
Parkside's wrestling team will&#13;
host UW-M. The Rangers are&#13;
counting on Scarda who has a 15&#13;
and 0 record, West with a 14 and 0&#13;
record, Martin with 13 and 0,&#13;
Baron with 12 and 4, Savaglio&#13;
with 10 and 3, Shaumberg with 7&#13;
and 4 and Joel Landers with 5 and&#13;
1.&#13;
On Saturday the wrestlers will&#13;
meet Northern Michigan here at&#13;
Parkside at 3 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 12 has been declared Ken&#13;
Martin night, since this will be his&#13;
last wrestling meet at the&#13;
collegiate level. The Rangers will&#13;
go against Marquette here at&#13;
home in that contest.&#13;
throw line. Parkside converted&#13;
on 13 of 15 free throw opportunities&#13;
and since Aquinas&#13;
had one more field goal, 31, t han&#13;
the Rangers, it made the difference&#13;
with the Tommies&#13;
shooting only 7 of 14 from the&#13;
stripe.&#13;
Cole was the game's top scorer&#13;
with 31 points, a season high for&#13;
him and second on the squad only&#13;
to Bill Sobanski's 32 point out put&#13;
in December against UWWhitewater.&#13;
&#13;
Malcolm Mahone had 14 points&#13;
while Chuck Chambliss added 12&#13;
to bring him with 11 of the 1,000&#13;
point scoring plateau in his threeyear&#13;
Parkside career.&#13;
The Rangers met UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Home Tuesday&#13;
night before heading on the road&#13;
for two contests, a Saturday&#13;
afternoon date at Northern&#13;
Michigan and a Tuesday, Feb. 5,.&#13;
contest at Milton College.&#13;
Both contests will be broadcast&#13;
by WRJN (1400). Game time at&#13;
NMU is 2:30 p.m. Saturday and at&#13;
Milton 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The Parkside fencers traveled&#13;
to Minneapolis last weekend and&#13;
swashbuckled their way to a 17-10&#13;
victory over the University of&#13;
Minnesota, and a 21-6 over&#13;
University of Minnesota-Duluth.&#13;
This victory brings their season&#13;
record to four wins and one loss.&#13;
Individual results on foil were&#13;
John Tank and Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
6-0, and Bret&#13;
Mandernack 4-2. On sabre both&#13;
Rick Moffett and Dave Baumann&#13;
were 5-1. Bernie Vash came up&#13;
with 4-2 on epee, while Mark&#13;
Mulkins was 3-3, and John Babtke&#13;
was 0-6.&#13;
This Saturday Parkside will&#13;
host Milwaukee Area Technical&#13;
College, Notre Dam,e and&#13;
University of Illinois-Circle&#13;
Campus. Coach Loran Hein&#13;
believes it will be a tough&#13;
weekend, as the team has never&#13;
yet beaten Notre Dame, and U of&#13;
I-CC will be looking for revenge&#13;
on a previous defeat at the hands&#13;
of Parkside.&#13;
Those of you who plan on being&#13;
spectators this weekend might be&#13;
interested in the weapons used.&#13;
The electrical foil-ir^foil, the&#13;
target area is the torso which is&#13;
covered with a metalic cloth&#13;
jacket. This serves as a conductor&#13;
to complete a circuit when&#13;
a touch is made. A good touch&#13;
results in a red light on the&#13;
Phy. Ed. Bldg. Schedule&#13;
WHd&#13;
an&#13;
JHah&#13;
n&#13;
a,f" GV,&#13;
m°&#13;
Pen 12:30&#13;
^&#13;
pm"&#13;
1::30P'&#13;
m' '"^murais8p.m.-lOp.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-lO p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30 p.m. - 2 p.m. and 6-10 p.m.&#13;
Thurs. Jan. 31 - Gym open 10:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.&#13;
Wrestling meet here at 8 p.m. 10:30a.m. and 12:30 p.m.-10 p.m&#13;
Swim Meet Here at 4 p .m.&#13;
Fr&#13;
'' F®J?.&#13;
1&#13;
" Gy&#13;
m open 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Building closes at 5 p.m. on Fri&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11 a.m.-l p.m.&#13;
Sa&#13;
.&#13;
t&#13;
„&#13;
Fe&#13;
^.'&#13;
2&#13;
' closed al1 day to recreation Fencing meet at 9:30a m&#13;
Wrestling meet at 3 p.m.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford and Tremper basketball game at 6:30 p m&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30-5 p.m.&#13;
Swimming pool open 12:30-5 p.m.&#13;
Sun. Feb. 3 - Entire building open for recreation 2 p.m.-10 p m&#13;
Intramurals in gym 6:30 p.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
Mond. Feb. 4-Gym open 12:30-1:30 p.m. and 8-10 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open 8:30 a.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 12:30 p.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
Tues, Feb. 5 - Gy m open 12:30 p.m.-l :30 p.m. and 6 p.m.-lO p m&#13;
Track practice in gym 3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Handball courts open all day except 1:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.&#13;
Pool open 11:30a.m.-l :30 p.m. and 6 p.m.-10p.m.&#13;
SPECIAL NOTE: Effective immediately, only I.D. cards that are stamped for the current&#13;
SSS ,0r StUdent USC °&#13;
f the PhVSiCal edUCa,i0n faCMitieSThiS&#13;
to&#13;
DEADLINE&#13;
FEBRUARY 11. 1974&#13;
1973-1974&#13;
WISCONSIN PHYSICIANS SERVICE&#13;
student&#13;
health&#13;
insurance&#13;
plan&#13;
IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT&#13;
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT:&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE LLC D198&#13;
Send premium and application to&#13;
Wisconsin Physicians Service&#13;
Kenosha District Office&#13;
P.O. Box 869&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Tel: 414-654-5774&#13;
scoring apparatus, while a touch&#13;
to the non-target area produces a&#13;
white light.&#13;
The electrical epee: this is the&#13;
only weapon in which&#13;
simultaneous touches are&#13;
counted. A touch may be scored&#13;
anywhere on the fencer, but must&#13;
be made with the tip in order to&#13;
be recorded.&#13;
Sabre: all parts of the body&#13;
above the hips are valid target,&#13;
and touches may be made by&#13;
means of cuts or thrusts. This&#13;
event is officiated by an impartial&#13;
director and two fencers&#13;
from each school who act as&#13;
judges. A judge raises his hand&#13;
when he sees a touch land as a&#13;
signal to the director to halt the&#13;
bout. After polling the judges, the&#13;
director decides whether or not a&#13;
touch is to be awarded.&#13;
The p lace to go&#13;
for Panto&#13;
and t hings!&#13;
JSERMAMM'S&#13;
THE l&amp;meWcan]&#13;
614 - S6th S treet&#13;
SIGHT 'n&#13;
by Jerry Dubiel&#13;
Sight -n Sound Audio Consultant&#13;
ARE YOU PLAYING YOUR RECORDS&#13;
OR RUINING THEM?&#13;
If you're like most music listeners, you&#13;
never think about your records after&#13;
putting them on your record player. You&#13;
just sit back and enjoy the music.&#13;
Chances are you'd be less relaxed if&#13;
you knew that your records might be&#13;
losing something with every play. It's&#13;
something to think about when you&#13;
consider how many hundreds or even&#13;
thousands of doljars you have invested in&#13;
your record collection-and will be investing&#13;
in the future.&#13;
Even the cheapest record changer can&#13;
bring its tone arm to the record and lift it&#13;
off again. But what happens during the&#13;
interim is something else.&#13;
That is why serious music lovers won't&#13;
play their records on anything but a&#13;
precision turntable and frequently&#13;
change the stylus. If you're ready for a&#13;
new needle, bring in your old one and&#13;
we'll allow you $2 trade-in toward a new&#13;
Fidelitone diamond needle. This offer&#13;
ends February 5, 1974.&#13;
LOOKING FOR ANOTHER&#13;
BARGAIN? SUPERSCOPE'S FM CAR&#13;
RADIO CONVERTER CAN LET YOU&#13;
ENJOY YOUR FAVORITE FM&#13;
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homework! Our electronic calculators&#13;
start at only $29.95 for a four-function, 6-&#13;
digit machine that will do chain&#13;
calculations. Works on a 9-volt battery&#13;
or AC, is small enough to fit into shirt&#13;
pocket or purse. Complete selection of&#13;
Texas Instruments including famous&#13;
SR10 electronic slide rule.&#13;
if you have a question about audio&#13;
equipment, call, write or stop in. If it's of&#13;
general interest, I'll discuss it in this&#13;
column. Let's hear from you! OK?&#13;
Are You Playing Your Records&#13;
Or Ruining Them?&#13;
SIGHT'n SOUND&#13;
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• SHERWOOD m TEAC • ALTEC • KOSS • SENNHISER • </text>
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                <text>The Parkside Ranger, Volume 2, issue 18, January 30, 1974</text>
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                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>Text</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
            <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>anna maria williams</name>
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        <name>pre-med club</name>
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